Bulletin Daily Paper 08-05-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

TUESDAY August 5,2014

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SPORTS • C1

AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

OBt= NOVEMBER ELECTION bendbnlletin.com/elections

From CrookCounty High to the Elks —It's beena

twisty route, but ZachClose wouldn't change thing. a C1

• $25 million price tag would mean a higher city stormwater fee

over the next 20years, dependingupon how quickly the city implements the rate hike.

By Hillary Bonud

Infrastructure Planning Director Tom Hickmann said on

allow water to drain into the

Space drive-dy — Acomet

The Bulletin

will brush Mars, cosmically speaking, and scientists are excited.A3

The city of Bend has nearly completed a plan that includes 58 new projects and could cost

Monday that most of the proj-

homeowners in any of those

ects are small. "The majority of them,

an estimated $25.2 million

each one seems like not that

to decrease flooding due to storm runoff around the city

big of a deal," Hickmann said of the projects, which

areas that currently get impacted by storms, they would say it's a big deal." The plan would result in the

over the next 20 years.

include structures to capture

Odituary —Jim Brady,a Reagan aidewho became aface of the gun-control movement, dies at

Bend Engineering and

ground. "But if you go talk to

stormwater and well holes to

Non-residential utility customers pay $4 per 3,800 square feet ofimpervioussurfacearea, such as a parking lot, Interim Finance Director Sharon Woj-

da wrote in an email Monday. The City Council is scheduled

monthly residential stormwa-

to vote on the plan at a 7 p.m.

ter fee, which is currently $4, increasingtoasm uch as$6.80

Wednesday meeting. See Stormwater/A4

73.BS

Merkley's past votes looming in campaign By Lily Raff McCaulou The Bulletin

PORTLAND — In Ore-

gon's race for U.S. senator, incumbent Jeff Merkley has something his Republican challenger, Mo nicaWehby, doesn't: a political record. The trail of yeas and nays leftoverthe course of five

years inthe U.S. Senate and, before that, 10years in the

Chigax, frenemy — Those words are among5,000 added to the Scrabble dictionary.A4

Car crashes into • Pilates studio

Ebola's spread — African nations have imposedstrict rules to stem the disease, but enforcement so far hasbeen lacking.A6

ley. Onthepositiveside, itgives

Chartn onA 5

voters a dearpic-

tureof wherehe standsonissues. Butitalsooffersfodder for his rival's campaign. Wehby, apediatricneurosurgeon and first-time politMerkley for being a partisan

Kitzhaber andCylvia Hayesto marry; no date set.B3

Iiberal. In a press release last

week, her campaign called Merkley"one of the most polarizing figures in the nation and arubberstamp for the agenda of extremists."

ln world news —Israel,

A look at Merkley's historyin office reveals a

Klw

I B

Democrat who usuallyvotes alongparty lines but who doesn't focus onthebiggest, loudest issues associated

And a Web exclusiveU.S. wealth gap lasting — perhaps worse — into retirement. benribnnetin.corn/ettaa

sword for Merk-

ical candidate, has attacked

Governorengaged-

Hamas accept Egypt's ceasefire proposal.A2

Oregon House of Representatives, is adouble-edged

='' " fn (~ri

with the Democratic Party. 374 t'f~)1 rp

EDITOR'5CHOICE

At times, Merkleyhas been a vocal critic of the Obama administration, especially for its stance on surveillance and its secrecy regarding counterterrorism efforts.

Marking WWI, eyes

See Merkley/A5

Comingsoon

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".:,",' ";„,tii'~z e:,~"„.'~v, ' l~!vs<

Photos by Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

• How Monica Wehby's platform compares with the GOP's stances

A car crashed through a large

oll ITIodelll I

parallels

window and into Peach Pilates

4 C

in Bend's NorthWest Crossing neighborhood on Monday.

By Alan Cowell

According to police, the driver

New York Times News Service

LONDON — With a

accidentally hit the accelerator

dimming of the lights and ceremoniesacross this country and in Belgium, monarchs, princes, pres-

instead of the brake. 7wo people were transported

idents and citizens com-

memorated the day 100 years ago when Britain

to a hospital with non-life-

'Health care sharing ministries' are growing By Tracy Seipel San Jose Mercury News

entered World War I at

threatening injuries while several

the start of four years of carnage once called the war to end all wars. Religious services and

m ore were treated on scene for minor injuries.

other commemorations

SAN JOSE, Calif. — Go to church, be faithful to your spouse and shun tobacco, booze and drugs. Promisingto adhere to that "biblical lifestyle," more

were held Monday in cathedrals and public places

Read the full story, Page B1.

than 300,000Americans are taking advantage of a

even as conflicts contin-

ued to rage in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Gaza, Libya

little-known provision in the

and Ukraine.

allows them to avoid the

In Liege and Mons in Belgium, ceremonies bringing together representatives of the onetime warring powers were to signify the first day of

new penalties for not having health insurance. Long before June's Supreme Court ruling that allowed private businesses to stop offering certain types

what is still known to some as the Great War, which started Aug. 4, 1914.

ofbirth control, the 4-year-

nation's health care lawthat

old law gave its blessing to Americans to opt out of the insurance mandate if they

Some took the moment

object on religious grounds. See Ministries/A4

to recall more modern crises in the Middle East and

Europe that are rooted in the fighting between 1914 and 1918 that toppled em-

pires and redrew the world map. Some dwelled on a vision of reconciliation among former foes. SeeWWI /A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 87, Low50 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX At Home Business Calendar

01-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby 06 Obituaries C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope 06 S Ort B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1-4 06

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 217

30 pages, 5 sections

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

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8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

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OUR ADDRESS

srae, amas acce ian cease- ire By Josef Federman

continued bloodshed in Gaza

The Associated Press

and the reported execution of

JERUSALEM — Israel and Hamas on Monday accepted

a number of suspected collaborators with Israel, served as

an Egyptian cease-fire proposal meant to halt a bruising monthlong war that has claimed nearly 2,000 lives, raising hopes that the bloodiest round of fighting between the bitter enemies could finally be coming to an end. Still, both sides signaled a rough road ahead, with an Israeli official expressing skepticism given previous failures, and a Palestinian negotiator saying "it's going to be tough."

reminders of the lingering risk

Cuda aCtiViSm —A U.S.program in Cubathat secretly used an HIV-prevention workshop for political activism wasassailed Monday by international public health officials and members of Congress who declared that such clandestine efforts put health programs at risk around the world. Beginning in late 2009, the U.S.Agency for International Development deployed nearly a dozen young people from Latin America to Cuba torecruit political activists, an Associated Press investigation found. Sen.Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said Monday it would be "worse than irresponsible" if USAID "concocted" an HIV-prevention workshop to promote apolitical agenda.

ImmigratiOn ShelterS —TheU.S.government is shutting down

air offensive in response to weeks of heavy rocket fire out

three temporary shelters that had beenopened to house asurge of unaccompanied children from Central America entering the United States across the southern border, officials said Monday.Theshelters at military bases in California, OklahomaandTexas hadprovided housing for more than7,700 children since they were opened in May and June. Tens of thousands of children havecrossed the border with Mexico in recent months, setting off a political debate.

of Hamas-controlled Gaza.

It expanded the operation on July 17 by sending in ground

of renewed violence. After weeks of behind-the-

forces in what i t

d escribed

ous truce that collapsed with-

attacks. Israel says the last of

as a mission to destroy a netscenes diplomacy, and a previ- work of tunnels used to stage in hours on Friday, Israel and the tunnels has nearly been Hamas both announced late destroyed. Monday that they had accept-

The war has taken nearly

ed the proposal for a preliminary 72-hour cease-fire, beginning at 8 a.m. (0500 GMT) today. Egypt was then set to host indirect talks to work out

1,900 Palestinian lives, most of them civilians caught in fighting inside Gaza's crowded urban landscape, according to Hamas medical officials.

a long-term truce over the next

Sixty-four Israeli soldiers have

three days. lence, including a deadly PalThe war broke out on July estinian attack in Jerusalem, 8 when Israel launched an

also died, as well as two Israeli civilians and a Thai laborer

A last-minute burst of vio-

Ahartiah CIIIIICS —Owners of Texasabortion clinics asked a federal judge onMonday to block enforcement of stringent new building and equipment standards, set to takeeffect Sept. 1, that they say could force more thanhalf the state's remaining abortion clinics to shut down. Theclinic owners pressed their caseand state officials defended the newrequirements on the opening day of what is expected to be afour-day trial in Austin. On Monday in Alabama, afederal judge rejected as unconstitutional a provision of that state's law, which mirrors the one inTexas, requiring doctors at abortion clinics to have admitting privileges at local hospitals. Iraq COnfliCt —Iraq's Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has called upon his country's armed forces to help the Kurdish military battle a Sunni militant offensive in northern Iraq that hascausedtens of thousands of people from the minority Yazidi community to flee their homes. It was the first sign of cooperation betweenBaghdadand Irbil, the capital of the semi-autonomous Kurdish region, since Iraq's second-largest city, Mosul, was takenover by the Islamic State group in June, signaling a degree of rapprochement in the face of the country's deteriorating security crisis.

who worked in Israel.

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TURKISH POLITICIANS BRAWL

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Lidya turmOil —Libyan leaders, struggling to keep their country from spinning further out of control, convened a newly elected Parliament for its first session Monday.But raging militia battles in Tripoli, the capital, and in Benghazi, the second-largest city, forced them to hold the meeting in Tobruk, a relatively stable port in the east. And a senior Egyptian political figure suggested Monday that his country might intervene in Libya militarily if calm cannot be restored.

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54t-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

BangladeSh ferry —Aferry overloadedwithmore than 200 passengers sankwhile crossing ariver in central Bangladesh onMonday, and despite rescueefforts by naval forces andfire brigades, at least half the passengersweremissing and presumeddead, officials said. The ferry, which wasmakingthe roughly two-hour journey tothe PadmaRiver port of Mawa,was hit by high wavesandcapsized in the strong current.

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The Associated Press

Legislators from Turkish Prime Minister RecepTayyip Erdogan's party and the opposition Nationalist Action Party brawl Monday at the parliament during a debate onwhether Turkey's parliament should openan inquiry into Islamic militants joining the fighting in Iraq andSyria. The fist-fight injured three legislators and forced the speaker to adjourn debate for the day.

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As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

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COMBINED NOTICE OF FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT AND INTENT TO REQUEST RELEASE OF FUNDS

July 31, 2014 Oregon Housing and Community Services 725 Summer Street NE, Suite B Salem, OR 97301-1271

Western officials: Russia battle-ready on Ukrainian border New York TimesNewsService WASHINGTON — Russia

has roughly doubled its battalions near the border with

Ukraine, Western officials said Monday, and could respond to the Ukrainian government's

gains there by launching a cross-border incursion with little or no warning. Over the past several weeks, Russia has built up 17 battalions — totaling 19,000 to

21,000 troops, according to one Western estimate — into a bat-

tle-readyforce ofinfantry,armor, artillery and air defense within a few miles of the border. In addition, it has vastly ex-

panded itsfirepower, increasing the number of advanced surface-to-air missile units to 14

from eight, and deploying more than 30 artillery batteries, ac-

cording to the officials. The Kremlin's intentions in

increasirg its military abili-

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ties remain undear. President

Vladimir Putin of Russia could be seeking to pressure Ukraine andtheUnited States to agreeto

a political settlement that would grant the eastern provinces of Ukraine maximum autonomy. But Putin, Western officials

fear, may also be developing the option to intervene more directly if it appears that the pro-Russian separatists in Ukraine are

onthevergeofdefeat. U.S. intelligence experts say that the advance by Ukraiman

government forces on Donetsk and other steps that the Ukrainian government is tak-

ing to regain territory in the east from the separatists might prompt Putin to send his forc-

es across the border under the guise of a "peacekeeping operation."

Ukrainian rebels press criminals into support work DONETSK,UkraineWith Ukraine's military tightening a cordon around this city controlled by separatist rebels, OlegGrishin found himself enlisted Monday in one of their schemes for its defense: the forced labor of drunks, drug addicts and curfew violators to dig trenches and build barriers. Donetsk, the rebel capital, is now isolated by the siege, which the Ukrainian Army managed toachieve over the weekend.Government troops appear to have closed a gap inthe encirclement with fighting over the past week nearthe wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Right17, which wasshot down last month, despite appeals by international monitors to refrain from combat near the wreckage and still uncollected remains of somevictims. Encircled, Donetsk is now the main redoubt of the pro-Russian insurgency. It is an apprehensive place. Glum-looking detainees, seized bythe rebel authorities for minor infractions, dig ditches, fill sandbags, clear brush andpeelpotatoes. More serious violations have been metwith summary executions, according to some rebel leaders. — New YorkTimes News Service

(503) 9B6-2000 This Notice shall satisfy the above-cited two separate but related procedural notification requirements for activities undertaken by Oregon Housing and Community Services. RE UEST FOR RELEASE OF FUNDS On or about the date of August 21, 2014, Oregon Housing and Community Services (OHCS) will submit a request to HUD for the release of HOME Investment Partnerships Program funds under Title II of the Cranston-Gonzalez National Affordable Housing Act passed by Congressin October, 1990, and amended by the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992, to undertake a project known as East Lake Village II, SE Corner of NE Forum and Bellevue Drive, Bend, Oregon, for the purpose of new construction of 40 units affordable housing for families. FINDING OF No SIGNIFICANT IMPACT OHCS has determined that the project will have no significant impact on the human environment. Therefore, an Environmental Impact Statement under the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) is not required. Additional project information is contained in the Environmental Review Record (ERR) on file at Oregon Housing and Community Services, 725 Summer Street NE, Suite B, Salem, Oregon, and may be examined or copied weekdays from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. There is never a charge for examining the ERR. Any copying requested may be subject to charges as specified in OHCS Public Records Request policy ¹70-010.01. PUBLIC COMMENTS Any individual, group, or agency disagreeing with this determination or wishing to comment on the project may submit written comments to HOME Program Manager, Oregon Housing and Community Services, 725 Summer Street NE, Suite B, Salem, OR, 97301-1271. All comments received by the date of August 21, 2014 will be considered by OHCS prior to authorizing submission of a request for release of funds. Commentors should specify which part of this Notice they are addressing. RELEASE OF FUNDS

OHCS certifies to HUD that Heather Pate, in her capacity as Certifying Officer consents to accept the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts if an action is brought to enforce responsibilities in relation to the environmental review process and that these responsibilities have been satisfied. HUD's approval of the certification satisfies its responsibilities under NEPA and related laws and authorities, and allows Housing Works to use Program funds. OBJECTIONS TO RELEASE OF FUNDS HUD will consider objections to its release of funds and OHCS' certification for a period of fifteen days following the anticipated submission date or its actual receipt of the request (whichever is later) only if they are on one of the following bases: (a) the certification was not executed by the Certifying Officer or other officer of OHCS approved by HUD; (b) OHCS has omitted a step or failed to make a decision or finding required by HUD regulations at 24 CFR Part 58; (c) the grant recipient has committed funds or incurred costs not authorized by 24 CFR Part 5B before approval of a release of funds by HUD; or (d) another Federal agency acting pursuant to 40 CFR Part 1504 has submitted a written finding that the project is unsatisfactory from the standpoint of environmental quality. Objections must be prepared and submitted in accordance with the required procedures (24 CFR Part 58) and shall be addressed to Attention: Environmental Officer, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 1220 SW 3rd Avenue, Suite 400, Portland, Oregon, 97204-2825. Potential objectors should contact HUD to verify the actual last day of the objection period.

Heather Pate Heather Pate, Certifying Officer


TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY It's Tuesday,August 5, the 217th day of 2014. Thereare 148 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Suitcase dedies — A prosecutor expects to file more charges in the case of two women whose bodies were found in suitcases left along a rural Wisconsin highway.B3

• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day

Comet Siding Spring will sweep past Mars in October, then follow other recent comets around the sun and back into deep space.

HISTORY

Comet Lovejoy 2013 (2013 R1) Made its closest approach to the sun in December.

~ Comet ISON (2012 S1) This sun-grazing comet was widely expected to be spectacular, but it disintegrated ~t e rounding the sun 1ast Thanksgiving.--

Rosetta spacecraft I I I 1 I11

Edola —A second U.S. aid worker infected with Ebola is scheduled to arrive at Atlanta's Emory University Hospital.A6

Comet PanStarrs (official designation: 2011 L4) Passed within 28 million miles of the sun in March 2013, just inside the orbit of Mercury.

Tracking comets

I I

Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko The European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft has been chasing this irregularly shaped - comet for a decade eod-Is scheduled to rendezvous with it later this wetsk. -

. •

Venus Sun

1

I

4 Mercury

Earthinlate May ' Cotnet 209P/Linear Orbits the sun every five , years. In May, it passed , within 5.2 million miles of ,' Earth, making it the,ninth ' closest comet in history. (The closest was Lexeil's comet in 1770, at 1.4 hjillion miles.) \

Highlight:In1914, what's believed to bethe first electric traffic light system was installed in Cleveland, Ohio, at the intersection of East105th Street and Euclid Avenue. Montenegro declared war on Austria-Hungary at the start of World War I. In1864, during the Civil War, Union Adm. DavidFarragut led his fleet to victory in the Battle of Mobile Bay,Alabama. In1884, the cornerstone for the Statue of Liberty's pedestal was laid on Bedloe's Island in New York Harbor. In1924, the comic strip "Little Orphan Annie" by Harold Gray made its debut. In1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt established the National Labor Board, which was later replaced with the National Labor Relations Board. In1964,24 boxers becamethe first inductees into the Boxing Hall of Fame, including Henry Armstrong, Gentleman Jim Corbett, Jack Dempsey,Jack Johnson, Joe Louis andJohn L. Sullivan. In1962, actress Marilyn Monroe, 36, was found dead in her Los Angeles home;her death was ruled aprobable suicide from "acute barbiturate poisoning." South African anti-apartheid activist Nelson Mandela wasarrested; it was the beginning of 27 years of imprisonment. In1964, U.S. Navy pilot Everett Alvarez Jr. becamethe firstAmerican flier to be shot down and captured by North Vietnam; hewas held prisoner until February1973. In1969,the U.S. space probe Mariner 7 flew by Mars, sending back photographs and scientific data. In1974,the White House released transcripts of subpoenaed tape recordings showing that President Richard Nixon and his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, haddiscussed a plan in June1972 to usethe CIA to thwart the FBI'sWatergate investigation; revelation of the tape sparked Nixon's resignation. In1984, actor Richard Burton died in Geneva,Switzerland, at age 58. Ten years age:NewYork City's director of ferries pleaded not guilty to 11 counts of manslaughter in the wreck of a Staten Island ferry. (Patrick Ryan later pleadedguilty to negligent manslaughter and was sentenced to ayear in prison.) Five years age:Journalists Laura Ling andEunaLee arrivedin Burbank, California, for a tearful reunion with their families after a flight from North Korea, where they'd been held for 4t/~ months until

former President Bill Clinton helped secure their release. One year age:A gunman opened fire at a municipal meeting in Ross Township, Pennsylvania, killing three people before he wastackled and shot with his own gun; authorities say the shooting stemmed from a dispute over living conditions at his ramshackle, trash-filled property. (Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty for Rockne Newell.)

BIRTHDAYS College Football Hall of Famer and former NFLplayer Roman Gabriel is 74. Author David Baldacci is 54. Actress Tawney Kitaen is 53. Basketball Hallof-Famer Patrick Ewing is 52. Retired MLB All-Star John

Olerud is 46. — From wirereports

I

Earth I

/

Comet Encke (2P/Encke) Discovered in.1786, it orbits the sun every 3."3-years. A New York Times articiein 1885 joked: "If a small comet like Encke's can be run on schedule time there does not seem to be any reason why other comets should not imitate its example, and cometary travel be thus made safe and trustworthy." j

Comet Lovejoy 2011 (2011 W3) Discovered by an amateur astronomer, this sun-grazing comet flew through the sun's atmosphere in December 2011 and unexpectedly survived.

Expectedposition of cometandplanets on Oct. 14, 2014 •

.

Mars

Comet Siding Spring (2013A1) The comet is expected to speed within 82,000 miles of Mars on Oct. 19. Dust particles in the comet's tail will be moving about 35 miles a second, so NASA plans to shift its orbiters to the far side of the planet to avoid damage.

Comet Siding Spring'sestimatedclosestapproachto Mars RELATIVE SCALE Mars and orbiting '- -' spacecraft 10,000 MILES

'©'

n

Comet Loveloy 2011rounding the suu C o met Loveloy 2013

Comet Encke

The nucleus of comet 67P last Friday

Sources: Nasa; Jet propulsion Laboratory; European Space Agency; Minor planet Center; Solar System Scope

DISCOVERY

At this scale, themoonwould beafoot away,andthe closest known comet'sapproachto Earthwould beabout sixfeet away.

Co m et Siding Spring

Images by E.S.A.IRosetta (Comet 67p) and NASA, Jonathan Corum/ New York Times News Service

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125,000 mph (35 miles per second) they would pierce the One day early last year, the skin of any satellite orbiting the Australian comet hunter Rob- planet. "Essentially, they would ert McNaught spotted some- be like bullets out there," said thing unusual from his post at Richard Zurek, the chief scienthe Siding Spring Observatory tist of the Mars program at NAin the foothills of the Warrum- SA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "This is an entirely unprecbungle Mountains. As a member of ateam spon- edented situation," said James sored by NASA that searches Green, director of NASA's planthe skies for potentially dan- etary science division and of its gerousasteroids and comets, Mars program. "We have an opportunity to he generall y focuseson objects that orbit the sun on the same see what happens when a complane as the planets. But com- et comes so close to a planet," ing up from below that plane he continued. "We can follow was a comet that had apparent- the planet as it responds to ly originated in the Oort cloud, the dust and water and shock, a vast, primordial region that and hope to learn more about surrounds the solar system. how it processes it all. ComComet trajectories are noto- ets have played a huge role riously changeable, and more in transforming planets, and recent projections suggest the now we'll see the process as it's comet, named Siding Spring, happening." is highly unlikely to strike the Comet Siding Spring is esplanetor to do much damage pecially interesting because of

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to the two NASA rovers on its surfaceor the five research satellites orbitingit.

during the early days of the solar system, making it a "long

Still, on Oct. 19, the comet is period" comet with an orbit of millions of years. What's more, it is believed to be what comet specialists call a virgin — one thathas never reached the inthe moon, and much doser to ner solar system. Mars than any comet has come As a result, its icy nucleus (the "dirty snowball" at the to Earth in recorded history. The dust, water vapor and core of a comet) has never been other gases spewed by a com- thawed and reshaped, like et can spread for tens of thou- those of comets that pass by sands of miles, so the upper more regularly. showered by Siding Springperhaps briefly, perhaps more extensively. Shock waves may rockthe atmosphere. The dust particles may be tiny, but w hen t raveling at

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its formation in the Oort doud

expected to pass within 82,000 miles of Mars, a stone's throw in astmnomical terms — one-thitd the distance between Earth and

reaches of th e M a r tian atmosphere are expected to be

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"We've studied the nudei

of comets before but never a long-period comet from the Oort doud," Zurek said. "The

comet may well be bringing us primordial material unchanged since the creation of the solar system."

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

Scrabblersrejoice: 5,000 newwords on the way

Ministries Continued from A1 So many instead are en-

By Leanne Itaiie

excited. Daniel, a clinical psychologist in Toronto, is

The dictionary's last freshening up was a decade ago. Entries in the forthcoming book include texter, vlog, bromance, hashtag, dubstep and selfie were mere twinkles on theracks of recreational players.

among the new words. He's long word to for bonus points. a lexicographer and ediAmong the highest potena champion o f t h e N o r t h tor at large for the Spring- tial scorers among the new American Scrabble Players field, M a ssachusetts-based additions i s "quinzhee," a A ssociation, w h ich h a s a Merriam-Webster. shelter made by hollowing committee that helps MerQajaq, he said in a recent out a pile of snow. Played on riam-Webster track down i nterview w it h D a n iel, r e - the board's top row, ending new, playable words of two to flects the Inuit roots of kayak at the top right through an eightletters. and would require a blank tile existing "u," and a player can "Being able to hook an 'e' since Scrabble sets include score 401 points, including underneath 't' means that I just one Q. But it's a rare word the 50-point "bingo" bonus for can play far more words," ex- starting with "q" that doesn't using all seven tiles. plained Daniel, who practices require a "u." M erriam-Webster did n ' t Scrabble two to four hours To b e i n c luded i n th e identify all 5,000 new words a day. "Sometimes you play 36-year-old book — this is the but released a list of about 30 parallel to a word and you're fifth edition — a word must that also include: m aking t w o - letter w o r d s be found in a standard dicBeatbox, buzzkill, chillax, along the way. I call those the tionary, can't require capital- coqui, frenemy, funplex, jockamino acids of Scrabble. The ization, can't have hyphens or dom, joypad, mixtape, mojim ore two-letter w ords w e apostrophes and can't be an to, ponzu, qigong, schmutz, have, the more possibilities a abbreviation, in addition to sudoku and yuzu. Geocache

But it's the addition of te and three other t w o -letter

word will fit." One woman's te is anoth-

words — da, gi and po — that has Robin Pollock Daniel

er man's "qajaq," one of Peter Sokolowski's favorites

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — To Scrabble

fanatics, big gifts sometimes come in small packages. The word "te" as a variant of "ti," the seventh tone on

the musical scale, is a hardworking little gem among 5,000 words added to "The Official S crabble Players Dictionary," out Aug. 11 from Merriam-Webster.

rolling in "health care sharing ministries" that spread medical care costs among

people of similar beliefs. Participants make monthly contributions to help cover

each other's major health care costs, but forgo coverage for most routine care.

Even as many ChrisLm conservatives fight to repeal Obamacare, the

o b scure

provision has quietly been a boon for the ministries. After th e

l a w k i c k ed

into high gear last fall, "our phones were ringing off the hook through most of

March," said James Lansberry, executive vice president of Samaritan Minis-

was also added, voted into

tries International, one of

flecting the seven tiles players the dictionary by the public draw plus an eighth already during a Facebook contest in on the board they can attach a May.

the three largest U.S. health

being two to eight letters, re-

care sharing ministries. According to the ministries, enrollees jumped by at l east 100,000 over

the last year to more than 300,000 through mid-April,

UPDATE WARTIME INFRASTRUCTURE

the deadline to enroll in an

Penta On sellin — an scrappin — equipment e in A anistan By Ernesto Londono

has worked with the U.S. military to negotiate the tax rev-

The Washington Post

FORWAR D O P E R A TING BASE PASAB, Afghanistan

enue the Afghan government

— Sorting through the rem-

sales. "But we were a bit concerned when they started destroying things. Some of this might be of use in the market and could generate revenue." U.S. military officials say they have donated plenty to Afghan securityforces and

gets to collect on the auction

nants of the U nited States' longest war, Lt. Joe Mannor has seen it all. There are heaps

of old, dusty laptops, tangled telephone cables and battery packs; Danielle Steel n ov-

els and a copy of a "Curious George" children's book; and inexplicable items, including a tiny hand-held drone of mystenous origm and purpose.

other government depart-

ments. But they have balked at turning over sophisticated items such as heavily armored

"After 13 years of war, lots

vehicles and

of stuff is just lying around," s aid Mannor, 31, w h o i s

EmestoLondono/The Washington Post

American soldiers level what used to be residential tents earlier

among the legions of troops this month at Forward Operating Base Pasab in Kandahar provtasked with determining what ince.The base is scheduled to be closed in coming weeks as the will go home and what will U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan continues. be scrapped. "We've had a bit of everything come through here." country with poor roads and months, though, the cost of the As the Pentagon's effort to a latent insurgency is far more two has largely equalized as dismantle its massive war- complex than the wind-down customs tariffs and insecure time infrastructure kicks into of the Iraq war, where the mil- roads have made ground shiphigh gear, defense personnel itary was able to move goods ments costlier. are jettisoning materiel on into neighboring Kuwait with Those challenges have an industrial scale. Since last relative ease. made the shredding of equipDespite the current political ment that was acquired for year, Pentagon contractors in Afghanistan have used crisis in Afghanistan, where a severalbillion dollars a crucial shredding machines to turn disputed, fraud-plagued elec- part of the drawdown. Many vehicles,generators, housing tion has cast a pall over the fu- Afghans are nervous about containers, furniture and oth- ture U.S. role there, the Penta- the fate of their impoverished er items into scrap. gon's drawdown plan remains country in the post-American During that period, they on schedule and on budget. era, and it hasn't always been "Everything is on track," an easy process to explain. have destroyed more than 643 "They should give this stuff million pounds of equipment said Alan Estevez, the Penta— the equivalent of pulveriz- gon's top official who oversees to us," protested Hajji Nibil, ing the Titanic seven times. logistics. "We're in very good 32, who owns a construction By comparison, the Pentagon shape." equipment shop in Kabul and scrapped 563 million pounds When the U.S. military is among the scores of Afghan during the last eight years of drew up plans for the with- businessmen whose work for the Iraq war. drawal here, officials estimat- the U.S. military has dried up The Defense Department ed the price of the drawdown as the force has shrunk. "All also is selling some unneed- would range from $5 billion this is stuff we could use." ed, functional items at auction to $7 billion. Estevez said the Some Afghan officials have to Afghan businessmen for most recent projections indi- reacted incredulously, arguing pennies on the dollar — part- cate that it is likely to cost $6 that the destruction of equiply in response to criticism that billion. ment is especially galling at a there are more sensible alterThat is not to say all aspects time when the Afghan econonatives to scrapping. of the withdrawal have been my, long buoyed by wartime The U.S.-led international easy or predictable.When the spending, is deflating almost coalition has reduced its foot- military began moving items as rapidly as the international print in Afghanistan from a in bulk out of Afghanistan in military footprint. "Sometimes they m ight peak of about 800 bases, in 2013, shipping containers by 2011, to about 60 and intends to land through the Pakistani shred things because they further shrink that to a hand- border was the preferred al- are of absolutely no use," said ful by the end of the year. The ternative, much cheaper than Najibullah Wardak, a senior logistical feat in a landlocked using cargo planes. In recent Finance Ministry official who

Stormwater

believe the Afghans could afford to maintain them.

"They will take everything and anything you give them," said Maj. Rob Wolfenden, 37, who is leading the effort to shut down this base in Kan-

require all new development

projects to be built in such a way that runoff from major storms will be contained on-

site, such as through small landscaped areas where water can filter into the ground.

One large project included in the plan would address flooding problems at the NW Franklin Avenue underpass, below the railroad tracks. said

frequent maintenance has brought those problems under control, and the city will continue to monitor whether it is necessary to proceed with major improvements at the site.

The list of projects does not include any new treatment or filtration for storm runoff that

still empties untreated into the Deschutes River from some

points in the city's stormwater system. Instead, the plan calls for the city to continue

tenance of the well holes into

which storm runoff drains.

Sources: Bay Area News Group reporting

2 3,700 enrollees live i n California.

Samaritan surveyed a requires the ~ est o be augroup of its members and dited annually by an indepenfound they feel so strongly dent accounting firm and, with about the ministries that fewexceptions, have goodtrack almost all were willing to records, he said. give up subsidies under Still, experts point out, the Obamacare that would have plans include practices outdramatically reduced their lawed by the Affordable Care medical costs. Act. "Obamacare has raised Unlike Obamacare, which everyone's awareness of forbids annual or lifetime caps the need for health insur- on medical daims, some minance, or something else that istries impose them. Moreover, will help," said Dr. Andrea the free preventive care guarMiller, medical director and anteed by Obamacare is not vice president of sharing at induded in the ministry plans. Medi-Share Christian Care

And, most i mportantly, the

Ministry."A lot of people are ministries generally refuse to looking at what we can offer enroll people with pre-existing them."

conditions — a practice that

Advocates say the at-

Obamacare ended. Janet Coffman, an associate is threefold: They honor professor of health policy at UC religious beliefs — daims San Frandsco, said that sends a are denied for things such mixed message. "There is a bit of a disconnect as abortion and alcohol- or drug-related injuries or ill- between limiting your enrollnesses. And participants say ment to a mostly healthy poputhey have the personal sat- lation," said Coffman, herself a isfaction of helping out their Protestant. "As Christians, we fellow Christians with major aretaughtto embraceeveryone traction to th e m i nistries

health care costs, confident

— especially those who are the

the same will be done for

least fortunate in one way or

scheduled to close soon. "Part

them in their time of need.

another."

of our job is helping them un-

Also, the plans are cheaper Adopting a philosophy that — but off erlesscoveragebegan in biblical times and that than many health plans. has been marketed in the U.S. "Everyone understands by religious nonprofit health the way traditional insur- care sharing groups since the ance works," said Jeffrey 1980s, most of the plans require Rotsko, a 61-year-old gener- their participants to commit

derstand what they can take care of."

The Pentagon has faced some criticism over its destruction of i conic mine-re-

sistant am b ush-protected (MRAP) vehicles, the hulking, heavily armored trucks that were rushed into Iraq and Afghanistan as the threat of powerful roadside bombs escalated. The Defense Department offered excess MRAPs to al-

lied nations at no cost, provided they could arrange to ship them out of Afghanistan.

Only Croatia has taken the department up on the offer,

acquiring 162. Officials said that if no more such deals are struck between now and the

end of the year, they will have to shred several hundred of the vehicles. In an effort to find a more

al contractor from San Jose

to a "statement of faith" sur-

who signed up for a ministry rounding their belief in the Holy plan in 2007. "For some peo- Trinity. Members are asked to ple, this is a new concept." make a monthly contribution, Critics, however, say that

b ecause the ~ es ar e not considered health insurance companies by about half the states in the country, they are not subject to state

regulations that apply to health insurers. That's generally the case in California, where Department of Insur-

ance officials say based on the ministry plans they've reviewed so far, they do not offer consumers protection that is available to those who

similar to a premium, based on

their desired level of coverage. Theycan choose their own doctors and submit their claims for

medical costs tothe~ es. In return, participants agree to follow a "biblical lifestyle," induding attending church regularly, abstaining from sex outside of marriage and tobacco, in addition to not abusing drugs or alcohol. By agreeing to do this, ministries say, members avoid habits that can lead to higher health

cost-effective way to offload

purchase health insurance. care costs. "My general message

u nwanted e q uipment,

when asked about health

the

Pentagon's Defense Logistics Agency this summer began selling bulk excess equipment

care sharing ministries is very much 'buyer beware,' "

in operable condition to Af-

ect director at Georgetown University's Health Policy Institute. "If the company does not pay your daim or denies coverage for service, or God forbid, they go belly-up, there is no protection for the consumer."

ghan merchants, who then sell it on th e open market.

employees to better under- Previously, the wells often stand their stormwater system became clogged, and that encourage the growth of algae. and plan for its future, Hick- caused flooding. The majority " This can r e sult i n a l - mann said. of stormwater fee revenue still gae-filled channels, odors At first, it appeared the city pays for maintenance of the from decomposing algae, and faced expensive investments, wells, Hickmann said. reduced dissolved oxygen and as much as $172 million to So far, the largest stormwapH levels," consultants wrote $214 million, according to a ter capital project was the $3 in the stormwater plan. "Oxy- city staff r e port. H owever, million in work in 2013 at the gen is taken up in the decom- Hickmann said Bend officials Third Street underpass, which position process, reducing its eventually decided to place the used to frequently flood. Hickavailability for fish, insects, planning effort on hold, be- mann said the city also began and other aquatic life." cause the regulations contin- to filter some — but not allThe Oregon Department ued to change so rapidly that of the storm runoff that flows of Environmental Quality is drafts of the plan kept becom- from pipes into the Deschutes currently developing water ing outdated before the city River since adopting the stormquality rules that could affect could complete it. water utility fee in 2007. Pipes "We finally said, 'Look, let's dump stormwater into the river the city's ability to continue discharging untreated storm see what the final rules are,'" at 28 separate locations. runoff into the Deschutes Riv- Hickmann said. The city reThe pace of work has been er. DEQ staff involved in the started the planning effort ap- slow because city officials do effort were unavailable for proximately ayearago. not want to issue any debt to comment on Monday. Meanwhile, the city formed pay forstormwater projects, The city never had a plan a stormwater utility in 2007 something they regularly do to manage the stormwater and began to charge a storm- for other major work. "We network that included a small water fee to utility customers, only collect a little less than system of pipelines that drain "which essentially then gave $500,000 a year that we can into t h e D e s chutes R iver us theresources to startcom- apply to these capital improveand roughly 5,600 well holes plying with these new rules," ment projects," so it took years where storm r u noff d r ains Hickmann said. to save enough to pay for the into the ground across the city. The fee revenue allowed Third Street project, HickApproximatelya decade ago, the city to improve its main- mann said.

monitoring water quality to determine the impact of storm new Environmental Protecrunoff. This water transports tion Agency rules forced city

Here aresome ofthe treatments, medical conditions, proceduresandservices that are ineligible for reimbursement Under the guidelines of most health care sharing ministries: • Abortion. • Alcohol and drug-related injuries and illnesses. • Sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS. Exceptions aremadefor STDs transmitted via blood transfusions, rape,work-related needlesticks, or sex within marriage. • Any medical condition that results from themember committing a crime. • Medical conditions caused by attempted suicides. • Maternity or pregnancy expensesfor children conceived out ofwedlock. Exceptions aremadefor pregnancies resulting from "verified rapes."

d ahar province, which i s

sediment into the river, and it also contains nutrients that can

Continued from A1 City design standards now

H owever, H i c kmann

g as-guzzling

generators because they don't

Obamacare plan. About

Ministries won't pay thesedills

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

said Sabrina Corlette, a proj-

Since the ministries are

nonprofits, however, complaints can be lodged with states' attorneys general.

Lansberry and o t her ministry executives say the

Struggling to hear? Call for your

plans are solvent and pro-

vide members an opportunitytoresolve any concerns. The federal government also

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Merkley

Nerkley's record in theSenate

VVVVI

Continued fromA1

So far in the113th Congress, Sen.Jeff Merkley has voted 160times. He voted with his fellow Democrats147times, or about 92percent of the time. TheaverageDemocrat votes with party 95 percentof the time.

Continued from A1

Overall in his first term as a U.S. senator, Merkley voted with his party 94 percentof the time. With Against

and today we are friends and

"Jeff fights for what matters

to Oregon's middle class, no matter how many headlines that might garner," said Lindsey O'Brien, a spokeswoman for Merkley's campaign.

113th Congress votes - 160total

party party

There are at least three top-

ics that Merkley has taken up in Salem and then again in Washington: prohibiting discrimination against gays, lesbians and transgender people, cracking down on predatory lending practices and supporting nursing mothers in the workplace. In the Senate, because of his lack of seniority among

Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

Source: Opencongress.org

Nerkley's attendance Since taking office in January 2009, Sen. Jeff Merkley has missed19 of 1,729 roll call votes. At1.1 percent, this is better than the median of 2

percent among lifetime records for currently serving senators. PERCENTAGE OFVOTES MISSED SINCE TAKING OFFICE

Democrats, Merkley doesn't

4 3 2 1

hold any leadership position as powerful as Oregon's senior senator, Ron Wyden, who is

chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance. Merkley

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4Q1 02 03 04 Q'I Q2 03 04 01 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 02 Q3 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Source: GovTrack.us Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin

serves on four committees that address appropriations; banking, housing and urban affairs; environment and public works; and budget. He has

"In 1976, Jeff interned for

Sen. JeffNerkley

been active, introducing or

Merkley, 57, wasborn in Myrtle Creekand raised in Roseburg before moving

sponsoring 96 bills so far in his first term and countless others as astate representative in Salem.

saw a Senate that actually functioned," O'Brien said. "It

voted on bills, allowed debate

to Portland

during elementary school. Theson of a stayat-home momanda millwright, he wasthe first member of his family to attend college. At age19, he took a year off from his studies at Stanford and movedto Washington, D.C., to serve as an intern for Oregon's longtime Republican Senator, Mark Hatfield. After graduating and obtaining a graduate degree in public policy from Princeton,Merkleymoved back to the capital and worked as a security analyst at the Pentagon and theCongressional Budget Office. He returned to Oregon in1991 to run the Portland office of Habitat for Humanity, then theWorld Affairs Council of Oregon. In 1998, hewas elected to the state House ofRepresentatives. Hebecame Democratic leader in 2003, and speaker of the House after Democrats won the majority in the 2006 election. In 2008, he narrowly defeated two-term Republican Gordon Smith. He lives in East Portland with his wife, two children and an Airedale terrier named Sadie.

Here's a look at some of the

issues and laws that make up

Merkley's job history: In 2007, Merkley led Oregon's Legislature to pass a law that banned workplace d iscrimination b ased o n sexuality. As a U.S. senator, he championed a similar law and helped it pass the Senate, 64-

32 in November 2013. He persuaded 10 Republicans to vote for the bill, in part by accepting their proposed changes, such as strengthening exemptions for religious organizations. A House version of the anti-discrimination bill hasn't made it out of committee for a

full vote. In 2007, following reports that there were more payday lenders than McDonald's in Oregon, charging an average annual interest rate of 528 percent, Merkley sponsored a bill in the Legislature that capped interest rates on payday loans under $50,000 at 30 points above thefederal reserve rate.

One year after the law was signed, three out of four payday lenders in the state had

closed up shop. When Merkley was elected to the Senate, in 2008, Oregon

was hard-hit by the recession. He co-wrote an amendment to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street

Reform and Consumer Protection Act, which passed in 2010 in response to the subprime

on amendments, and passed

legislation. When he returned as a senator in 2009, he saw a very different Senate — one

bogged down by partisan paralysis and rampant abuse of the rules. Jeff feels very

strongly we need a Senate that can actually take on the big problems we face as a nation, a Senate that can debate,

deliberate and decide on the issues."

She said Merkley views the rule change as a "modest step" toward filibuster reform.

Though he worked to require a simple vote for them, Merkley has not supported all of Obama's nominees. In 2010, for example, Merkley was one of 11 Democrats and 18 Re-

publicans who voted against

throne, told a ceremony in Belgium, referring to Germany and its allies in two

birth of their first child. It's a n issue s o i m p ortant t o Merkley that he announced

president. The filibuster is a

Abbey, prayers were said in English and German. But today's myriad wars haunted the c o mmemorations, too. "How can we remain neuVirginia Mayo I The Associated Press tral today when a people not British Major Maurice French, 84, stands in front of his uncle's far from Europe is fighting grave, World War I veteran Maurice Dease, during a commemfor their rights?" President oration ceremony Monday at the St. Symphorien Cemetery in Frangois Hollande of France Belgium. The cemetery was established by the German Army as said in Belgium. "How can a final resting place for British and German soldiers killed at the we remain neutral when a battle of Mons.

civilian airliner is brought down, when there is conflict in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Gaza?" A century ago, as hostil-

ate, in the summer of 2007,

at a luncheon banquet for the Nursing Mothers Council for Oregon. Clean energy is another topic Merkley has focused on, but with little success to show

for it. He repeatedly co-sponsored bills that would end tax

near the frequently contested own and others' making, frontier between their nations. Grey, the British foreign sec- their hope of avoiding war The occasion commemorated retary, famously remarked: ever fading," the Very Rev. Germany's declaration of war "The lamps are going out John Hall, the dean of West- on France on Aug. 3, 1914, as all over Europe; we shall minster Abbey, said in a fore- German troops invaded neunot see them lit again in our word tothe order of service tral Belgium — the event that lifetime." Monday. drew Britain into the war a day To echo those words, Prime Many in Britain and else- later. Minister D a vi d C a m eron where expected a quick end Hollande and Gauck on urged Britons to extinguish to the hostilities. But the war Monday were joining dignitarthe lights in their homes at 10 soon bogged down in trench ies from Belgium, Britain and p.m. Mondayto leave a lone warfare that consumed the elsewhere at events in Belgium. light or candle burning by 11 energies and resources of naNo formal ceremonies were p.m. — the precise moment tions at the cost of millions of planned in Berlin, with Gerof the declaration of war on lives. man commemorations focused Germany. Neutral at the beginning, on Gauck's attendance at cerIn London, the lights went the United States formally emonies in lands once conoff at such landmarks as the joined the war in 1917. By the queredby German soldiers.In Houses of Parliament and time of the armistice of Nov. Russia, President Vladimir PuTower Bridge over the River 11, 1918, empires had crum- tin inaugurated a memorial in Thames. At Westminster Ab- bled and the world map was Moscow last week and a musebey, at a late-night ceremony redrawn. um is to open in St. Petersburg. attended by political leaders, The writer H.G. Wells is The scale of commemoraa lone oil lamp at the Tomb often credited with coining tion in Russia was unusual. of the Unknown Soldier was the description of the con- Moscow usually focuses most extinguished at 11 p.m. by flict as "the war that will end of its commemorative efforts

-

bound by the chains of their

war," the title of an essay that

the Duchess of Cornwall, the wife of Prince Charles, the heir to the throne.

his wife, Sophie, on June 28, the time, is said to have re1914 — a killing that resulted marked: "This war, like the

releasedbefore he cast his vote.

Last year, Merkley was one of just two Democrats who joined 31 Republicans in voting against the confirma-

on World War II.

became a jingoistic catchphrase, "the war to end all wars." As the conflict drew to a close, a more cynical

nize or remedy the factors that and difficult recession," Merkley said in a written statement

at a war memorial in the eastern French province of Alsace,

E d ward

the assassination of A r chduke Franz Ferdinand and

0

view overtook that sentiment

when David Lloyd George, the British prime minister at

in a series of alliances that

next war, is a war to end war."

histori ans have described as Europe's stumbling or sleepwalking into a cataclysmic conflict. With war approaching,

The approach of the conflict in 1914 was commem-

orated Sunday when Hollande and President Joachim

Gauckof Germanyembraced

tion of John Brennan to head the CIA. Merkley cited con-

cerns about what he called dangerous violations of civil liberties, including the use of drones and wiretaps without warrants.

Also last year, Merkley spoke out against Obama's reported front-runner to chair the Federal Reserve, Larry

Summers. The Washington Post reported that Merkley called the White House from

the Pendleton Round-Up to voice his concerns about the former T r easury

s e cretary

being too lax on regulation. Facing opposition from other Democrats, Summers lat-

er withdrew his name from consideration.

Merkley has also criticized Obama for his plan to keep n early 10,000 troops in A f -

rorism operations. In 2012,

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •

"most were stumbling into the darkness, increasingly

Reserve chairman. "Bernanke failed to recog-

t a ctic Merkley joined conservative used by the minority party, Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, in in which Merkley could soon proposing an amendment to find himself, if he wins in No- disclose information about vember. Many pundits predict a special court that reviews Republicans will win a majori- applications for electronic surveillance to gather foreign ty in the Senate this year. O'Brien, Merkley's cam- intelligence. The Senate repaign spokeswoman, said the jected the amendment, 54 to senator thinks filibuster re- 37. form isa good idea regardless — Reporter: 541-410-9207, of which party is in charge. lraff@bendbulletin.com

his candidacy for U.S. Sen-

y

world wars. At Westminster

Ben Bernanke's confirmation for a second term as Federal

ghanistan beyond this year. Last s p r ing, M e r kley praised Greg Walden,Orefrustration with t h e h e alth import duties on solar panels gon's only Republican repcare overhaul. assembled in China. Along resentative to Congress, and It turns out Merkley didn't with Wyden, he has been a vo- agreed with the congressman j ust vote for the bill, he cal critic of Chinese currency on his criticism of Obama's helped write a small part of manipulation and other prac- plan to include "chained conit. Teaming up with Sen. Tom tices by the country to pro- s umer price index" i n t h e Coburn, a physician and Re- mote its own manufacturing 2014 budget. The proposal, which Obama later dropped, publican from O klahoma, industries. M erkley added text t o t h e Merkley's most high-profile would have slowed the rate of law to provide support for legislative victory came last increase for Social Security b reast-feeding m o thers i n fall, after years of fighting to payments. Merkley has been espethe workplace. Their amend- limit the Senate's use of the ment requires employers filibuster, a p r ocedure that cially critical of what he has to provide flexible unpaid delays or deters voting until a noted as the administration's breaks and space for pump- 60-votesupermajority agrees tendency toward secrecy. He ing breast milk. It's the fed- to advance. In November, has criticized the adminiseral version of an Oregon law the Senate approved a rule tration's stance on National he helped enact in 2007. change proposed by Merkley Security A gency s urveilMerkley has spoken pub- and Sen. Tom Udall, a fellow lance, its legal defense of the licly about the challenges Democrat from New Mexico. indefinite detention of enemy his wife, Mary Sorteberg, a It passed, 52-48, to require a combatants and its policy to registered nurse, faced when simple majority vote on most permit American casualties returning to work after the n ominations made by t h e abroad d u r in g c o u nterter-

allies," Prince William, the second in line to the British

The fighting a century ago erupted after a series of interlocked events beginning with

paved the road to this dark

mortgage crisis. Merkley's amendment prohibited highrisk trading by banks that accept government-insured breaks and subsidies for large deposits. He also supported oil and gas companies, but the creation of a Consumer none passed. With Sen. Lamar Financial Protection Bureau Alexander, R-Tenn., he proto help prevent predatory lend- posed a bill that would provide ing practices. billions of dollars to develop Wehby has said she would and deploy electric vehicles, have voted against the Dodd- as a step toward weaning the Frank bill, because it does lit- country off foreign oil. That tle to prevent another financial bill n ever g a ined t r action, crisis and gives the country a either. falsesense ofsecurity. Merkley and Wyden proWehby often slams Merkley posed a bill that would prohibfor his support for the Afford- it the U.S. government from able Care Act. Wehby's cam- buying Chinese-made solar paign slogan - "Keep your panels. And he joined Wyden doctor. Change your senator." in criticizing the Obama ad— is banking on Oregonians' ministration f o r l o o sening

I II

"We were enemies more than once in the last century,

ities loomed, Sir

Republican Senator Mark Hatfield (of Oregon), and he

• • Classifreds ~. b e dbulleti .co

A5

Aaron MeyerRockViolinist And His Three Piece Band at Broken Top Club

THURSDAY, AUGUST 7 " 7:00 — 9:00 pm Doors open at 6:00 pyys • Sunrise Patio General Admission Seating C oncert Rock V i o l i n i st A a ro n M e ye r p e r f o r m s c u t t in g e d g e o riginal m u si c an d a r r a n g e m e nts w i t h v i r t u o s it y an d p a s si o n . A aron b r i n g s hi s f r esh an d i n v i g o r a t in g i n s t r u m e n tal st yl e t o t he stage and g e n u i n el y c o n n e cts w i t h a u d i e n ces of al l a g e s .

Tickets on Sale Now $22 per person admission

Everyone is Welcome Food and beverage willbe available for purchase, upon admission Ticketscan be purchased by calling 541-383-8200 or emailing reception@brokentop.com

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

IN FOCUS:THE EBOLA OUTBREAK

n I ica's oa I oicies u axa

ica ion thoughEboacastspa

By Adam Nossiter

Experimental drug given to 2Americans

New Yorh Times News Service

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone

— The house was supposed

Two Americanaid workers infected with Ebolaare getting anexperimental drug so novel it hasnever been tested for safety in humans and was only identified as a potential treatment earlier this year, thanks to alongstanding research program by the U.S.government and the military. The workers, Nancy

to be under strict quarantine.

Meals were to be delivered by the health department. Nobody was to go in or out. But the enforcement of the

government's tough new measures to contain Ebola was

light. Two police officers hung about chatting, out of sight of the house. Visitors came and

went, including family members and well-wishers who were not supposed to be there.

On the front porch sat the Ebola victim's father and mother, in whose arms the young woman had died. They had handled her body,

Samuel Aranda/New YorkTimes NewsService

Doctors Without Borders workers wearing protective clothing disinfect materials last month at a clinic in Teldou, Guinea. West Ebola, but so far enforcement has been spotty.

daughter's death, Anna Conte left to fill her plastic teapot

from the communal water tap used by dozens of others. Her

government mindersseemed not to notice.

Alarmed by the world's worst outbreak of Ebola, West

Africa leaders have dedared e xtraordinary m e asures t o

fight the disease, including closing schools, authorizing house-to-house searches for

infected people and, at least on paper, sometimes vowing to go beyond the standard interna-

tional controls for halting the Here in Sierra Leone, the nation with the most cases of the

disease,the government has decreed abroad state of emer-

gency — telling families to stay at home on Monday for "reflection, education and prayers"

— and has ordered strict new measures, like bans on many public gatherings and the quarantine edict. "The very essence of our nation is at stake," President

Ernest Bai Koroma said in a televised speech Monday

morning.

death toll ever. Hoping to stop the progressi on, Liberia has ing accompanied by loose en- urged people to avoid "public forcement that is deeply worry- amusement and entertainment ing to doctors and health care centers," Nigerian officials are workers trying to stem the rap- screening passengers arriving idspread ofthevirus. by plane, and Sierra Leone is "Ebola doesn't permit a half- demanding that any death in way engagement," said Walter the nation be reported before a Lorenzi, the chief of the Doc- body canbe buried. tors Without Borders' mission The streets of Freetown were here. empty and eerily quiet on Mon"It's not astonishing that it day for the government's "stay is spreading," Lorenzi added, at home day." Most shops and criticizing the local effort to offices were shut, and the pofight it. "You've got to attend to lice stopped infrequent motorthe smallest details." ists at checkpoints. The outbreak was first idenBut t h e go v ernment-ortified in March in Guinea's re- dered isolation of victims and mote Forest region. Since then, careful monitoring of those it has spread with a deadly in their immediate orbit was swiitness, spilling over porous not happening in the impovborders in one of the poorest erished Kissi neighborhood partsofAfrica. of this dense seaside capital. The epidemic also leap- At the unpainted cinder-block frogged by air after an Ameri- bungalow of the Koromas, can working in Liberia flew to who are not related to the presNigeria, Africa's most popu- ident, five members of the famlous nation, and died there last ily were supposed to be under But that tough stance is be-

By Deb Riechmann

ted to renewing the Africa

Associated Press

Growth and Opportunity

W ASHINGTON — T h e A ct, which i s s e t t o e x Obama admin i s tration pire next year. Since 2000,

sought Monday to strength-

AGOA has been at the cen-

e n ties with A f r ica at a n

ter of the U.S. efforts to promote trade and investment

unprecedented summit with

dozens of African leaders, in Africa while opening grappling with issues such new sources of material for

as i nvestment, poverty, t errorism, corruption a n d

U.S. producers. "AGOA has made it pos-

deadly diseases. sible for Ford Motor Co. to Nearly 50 African heads export engines duty-free of state attended the gath- from South Africa, where ering focused on how to Ford has invested over $300 build democracy and raise million so they can supply investment in the continent, engines worldwide," Kerry which is home to some of said. "And the efficiencies of the world's fastest growing that operation have allowed economies and an expand- Ford to create 800 new jobs ing middle class. at their Kansas City plant as Yet an outbreak of dead- part of the global production ly Ebola virus, which has line." killed at least 887 people South A f r ica P r esident in West Africa, cast a pall Jacob Zuma said he wants over the summit. Leaders to see AGOA renewed for from Sierra Leone and Li- another 15 years, with the beria canceled their plans inclusion of South A f rito attend and the U.S. set up ca. South African exports medical screenings for oth- to the United States were er officials traveling from worth $3.6 billion in 2013,

Writebol and Dr. Kent

Brantly, are improving, although it's impossible to know whether the treatment

African nations have declared extraordinary measures to fight

putting them at serious risk of

infection. But days after her

Businessdiscussed at U.S.-Africasummit,

, S I'lC

is the reason orthey are recovering ontheir own, as others whohavesurvived Ebola havedone. Brantly is being treated at aspecial isolation unit at Atlanta's

Emory University Hospital, and Writebol wasexpected to be flown theretoday in the samespecially equipped plane that brought Brantly. In a worrisomedevelopment, the NigerianHealth Minister said adoctor who

those nations.

Those who did attend, including women dressed in brightly colored African wear, crowded hotel lobbies

hadhelped treat Patrick

Sawyer, the Liberian-Americanman whodiedJuly25 days after arriving in Nigeria, has beenconfirmed to have the deadly disease.Tests are pending for threeother people who alsotreated Sawyer andareshowingsymptoms.

and buses. Pickup trucks

— The Associated Press

"The neighbors were there.

That's the concern. They are not isolated," said a nutritionist from the government health

ministry who had come to deliver the family's meals — placweek. government quarantine. But ing food, disposable plates and By Friday, 887 people in the there were at least eight people plastic utensils on the veranda. region had died, according to Sunday afternoon on the tiny She declined to give her name, the World Health Organiza- veranda overlooking a muddy saying she was not authorized tion, easily the highest Ebola slope leading to Cline Bay. to speak publicly.

according to the American Chamber of Commerce. It

said the United States was the biggest destination for South African exports of passenger cars, receiving 42

carrying signs with messag- percent of the total. es like "End Dictatorship in About 600 U.S. companies Ethiopia" cruised downtown do business in South Africa, streets. Traffic was snarled which has one of the biggest and streets were closed economies on the contiaround event sites. nent, but struggles with low Inside the summit venues, growth, labor unrest and top U.S. officials spoke pos- high unemployment. "Almost 95 percent of itively about U.S.-Africa relations and progress on the South African exports recontinent. ceive preferential t r eat"I think something like ment under AGOA," Zuma 10 of the 15 fastest-growing said in a speech at the U.S. countries in the world are in Chamber of C o mmerce. Africa," Secretary of State "We strongly believe that by John Kerry said. "Africa will endorsing the extension of have a larger workforce than AGOA, the U.S. will be proIndia or China by 2040." moting African integration, The Obama adminis- industrialization and infratration says it i s c ommit- structure development."

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

BRIEFING 2 suspected in motel roddery A 24-year-old Bend resident was allegedly hit with a metal pipe and robbed Mondayafter he went to meet with two men at Mt. Bachelor Motel to buy drugs. Bend Police were called to the motel on NE Division Street around 6:10 a.m. Monday, where they met with the man, whosaid he'd agreed to meetJeffrey Doty, 27, andSergei Newlin, 22. But when he entered the room, according to a police news release, the man was hit with a metal pipe and robbed of money and pills. The man suffered non-life-threatening injuries to his face and mouth. Officers, using a search warrant, searched the roomand found scales, methamphetamine, heroin and marijuana, aswell as what they believedwas a pipe bomb. Newlin was arrested at the motel and Doty was arrested by Redmond Police on suspicion of first-degree robbery, second-degree assault and theft, as well as possession of heroin and meth, the unlawful manufacture of a destructive device, and a parole violation. They remained in the Deschutes County jail on Monday evening.

NORTHWEST CROSSING

arwrec s iaessu io • People are hurt; no citations; could havebeen'significantly worse'

— From staff reports News of Record, B2

Haven community event? Sendusdetails Email eventsto communitylife@ bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submit anEvent" onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendar page inside. Contact: 541-a83-0351

have been"significantlyworse" had the car traveled into the

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Police.

The car crashed into Peach

A car crashed into an

Pilates, located at 760 NW

Clint Burleigh. Burleigh said alcohol did not seem to be involved but that "the driver was confused over how to operate

day morning after the driver

York Drive. 7wo people were transported to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries

mistakenly placed a foot on

while several more were treat-

driver was ruled at fault, but the Bend Police Department

the gas pedal instead of the brakes, according to Bend

ed on scene for minor injuries, according to Bend Police Sgt.

said no citations were issued. Deputy Fire Marshal Dan

occupied Pilates studio in NorthWest Crossing on Mon-

her vehicle." Burleigh said the

building slightly further to the right. As it was, the car smashed through a large window, barelymissingthebuilding's main gas line three feet to the right. And the car avoided

harmmg akeystructuralbeam placed above the window. See Wreck/B5

Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit bendbulletln.com/updntes

HAPPENED TO ... •

FIRE UPDATE Beloware the fires reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. More info is online at: • http://lnclweb.nwcg. gov/stnt e/38 • http://centrnlorflre info.blogspot.com • www.nwccweb.us/ information/ flremap.nspx 1. Logging Unit • Acres: 10,447 • Containment: 85% 2. Nene Creek • Acres: 300 • Containment: 0% 3. Haystack Complex • Acres: 1,740 • Containment: 98% 4. South Fork Complex • Acres: 24,085 • Containment: 0%

BEND MONTESSORI SCHOOL

IV

5. Bald Sisters • Acres: 105 • Containment: 0%

By Tyler Leeds ~The Bulletin

Note: Fires listed above were caused by lightning.

Two years after opening its doors, Bend's only Montessori school for elementary-age children has experienced both success and setbacks in trying to persuade parents to continue

More fitunews, B2

their children's alternative education beyond preschool.

RedmondPolice recover stolencar Redmond Police and Deschutes County sheriff's deputies arrested a Salem manSunday morning on suspicion of stealing a carandseveral charges associated with methamphetamine. After 8 a.m., police received a report that a man and womanmight be driving around the city in a stolen vehicle. People who observed the pair at a gasstation noticed the female passenger in the car was acting suspiciously and might be under the influence of drugs, according to a Redmond Police news release. Sheriff's deputies located the manand woman in a silver 2009 Honda Accord, which had been reported to Salem Police asstolen. With assistance from Redmond Police, the sheriff's deputies arrested David Gregory Wickham, 41, of Salem, and lodged him atDeschutes County jail in lieu of $50,000 bail on suspicion of unauthorized use of avehicle, as well as possession, manufacture and distribution of methamphetamine. Wickham was also wanted ontwo warrants: one in Marion County for a parole violation related to dangerous drugs andanother in Wasco County for the same reason, according to the RedmondPolice Department. Passenger Sarah Beth Caward, 23, of Monmouth, was taken to St. Charles Redmond and received treatment for non-life-threatening injuries, and shewas released with a citation to appear in court for possession ofmethamphetamine.

Derlacki said the crash could

Isaac Witham,

8, uses an eye dropper to add soap to a bowl "

to make more bubbles while

.klI

playing with one of the "practical life skills" actlvities at the Bend Montessorl School on Mon-

day. Montessori schools let children of different

ages work with materials spread across

a classroom, essentially learning on their own at their

own pace.

STATE NEWS • Killing spree:Final sentencing for a white supremacist involved in deaths in Washington, Oregon and California,B3 • Iutzhober towed: The governor andhis longtime companion, first lady Cylvia Hayes, are getting married,B3 • Settlement:A historic deal for U.S.Army Corps dam pollution, B3 • State budget:Oregon's chief education officer details her priorities for 2015-17,Bg

• Plus:An82-year-old vet resists a carjacking,B3

Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us! Sunnyside Montessori opened in fall 2012 on the second floor of the First United Methodist Church in downtown Bend, beginning with a kindergarten-through-second-grade class of three students that grew to six by the year's end. Last fall, the number jumped to eight. Over this time frame, the business also grew, purchasing the Bend Montessori School, a preschool

a tuition-paying school. But I think we can eventually get enough stusaid she hasn't yet finalized an ele- dents to buy into the philosophy and mentary class for the coming year, as approach so that (they) may continue on." enrollment hasn't yet justified one. "Parents are fine and happy with A M ontessori education allows Montessorifor preschool,"Born said.

students to direct their own learning,

pacing of subjects is not controlled by teachers or delineated schedules. Practitioners say this approach instills self-motivation and a love of Another aspect that sets Montessori apart is the combination of stu-

La Pine isclearedto create renewal district La Pine to move forward with its plan to form an urban renewal district.

"The projects they're looking forwardto are streetscapes ... to improve the area and give tt a sense of identity. Now when you drive through La Pine, it's basically a big commercial strip." — Elaine Howard, an urban renewal consultant working with the city

funding," Howard said. The urban renewal district, Howard said, will alter the

way La Pine looks when people drive through. "The projects they're looking forward to are streets-

The La Pine City Council passed an ordinance on July 23 to go forward with the urban renewal district, but

property tax revenue and

told commissioners the dis-

drive through La Pine, it's ba-

because some unincorporated

funnel that money to projects

county land is included in the district, the commission got a say in the project.

aimed at improving down-

trict will have wide-ranging effects.

sically abig commercial strip. You drive from one end to the

"It's not a huge plan; it's not

The district will, over the

renewal consultant from the

a hugeamount ofm oney,but it's significant to the city of La

next 20 years, pull $7 million

Portland area working with La Pine to create the district,

Pine in terms of allowing it to do certain things with that

from projectedincreases in

capes, projects to improve the

area and give it a sense of identity," she said. "Now when you

town La Pine. Elaine Howard, an urban

Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-a83-0367 Business..............541-a83-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................54f-a83-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

learning.

"But there is some hesitancy to keep as children engage with materials dents of different ages within one going on with elementary. Plus, it's spread across the classroom based classroom. hard to compete with free, as we are on their own learning. As a result, the SeeMontessori/B6

Bulletin staff report The Deschutes County Commission on Monday passed a resolution allowing

Coll n reporter

sunriver................541-a83-0367

dating back to 1986, and adopting the older school's name. N onetheless, Jessica Born, t h e Bend Montessori School's director,

The Bulletin

other and really don't have a

sense that it is a community that wants you to stop and do your shopping and care for it." See La Pine/B5

Well shot! Reader photos

• Keep sending us your summer photos for the next special version of Well shot! to runin the Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletln.com/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to renderphotosO bendbulletln.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them.We'll choose the best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as

possible — when and where you tookit, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

E VENT TODAY KNOW WWI,A SOLDIER RETURNS: Iraq War veteran SeanDavis will read from his memoir "TheWax Bullet War: Chronicles of aSoldier & Artist"; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-312-1034. GREEN TEAMMOVIE NIGHT:A screening of the award-winning documentary "The HouseILive In" about human rights and the war on drugs; free; 6:30-8:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; www.bendfp.org or 541-815-6504. WILDLIFECONSERVATION & TOURISM IN AFRICA:A GLOBAL CONVERSATION: Map Ives will speak on the importance of wildlife conservation and tourism in Africa; free; 6:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.FrancisSchool,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.naturalmigrations. com, infoIInaturalmigrations.com or 541-382-5174. "DRAGONBALLZ:BATTLEOF GODS":A feature-length anime film about a newpower andthe threat to humanity; $10; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. SHAWNCOLVIN:The award-winning singer-songwriter performs, with John Craigie; $49-$60 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend;www.

ENDA R towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. TWILIGHTCINEMA:Anoutdoor screening of "Cloudy with aChance of Meatballs 2"; bring low-profile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333. MISS TESSANDTHETALKBACKS: The Brooklyn Americana band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

WEDNESDAY BENDFARMERSMARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NW Franklin

and NWOregonavenues; www. bendfarmersmarket.com. VOLUNTEERCONNECTBOARD FAIR:The annual event to explore volunteer leadership positions with 20community organizations; free; 4-6 p.m.; Bend's Community Center,1036 NEFifth St.; www.

volunteerconnectnow.org,betsy© volunteerconnectnow.org or 541-385-8977. ALIVE AFTER FIVE:The soul band Leroy Bell and HisOnly Friends performs; free; 5-8:30 p.m.; Old Mill District, at the north end of Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www. aliveafterfivebend.com. CROOKCOUNTYFAIR: Featuring a

talentshow,danceperformances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; freeadmission; 5-10

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 541-447-6575. MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Livepoprock music by KaylebJames& Split Atom, food vendors andmore; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; SamJohnson Park, SW15th Streetand SW Evergreen Avenue,Redmond;www. redmondsummerconcerts.com or 541-923-5191. "DRAGONBALLZ: BATTLEOF GODS":A feature-length anime film abouta new powerandthe threat to humanity; $10; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. HUMAN OTTOMAN:The experimental world-fusion band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. CONNOISSEUR: TheBayArea sludge-metalband performs, with The Beerslayers and more; free; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. FAILUREMACHINE:The Reno soul band performs, with No Yield; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a

talent show, danceperformances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission;10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 541-447-6575. MUNCH &MUSIC: Featuring indiefolk music by theShookTwins, with Redwood Son; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com. JOHN HIATTAND TAJ MAHAL:The veteran songwriters perform with their bands; SOLDOUT;7 p.m., doors

open 6p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners

Aquatic & Recreation Center,57250 Overlook Road;www.sunriversharc. com or 541-585-5000. NIGHT NURSE:The Portland extreme metal band performs, with Death Agenda andmore; free; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.

FRIDAY FLASHBACKCRUZ:Aclassic car show of vehicles from1979 and earlier, with live music and more; see website for detailed schedule; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-480-5560. CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zoneand more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10

p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280S. Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 541-447-6575. SUNRIVERARTFAIRE: Anart show with more than 65 booths featuring fine arts and crafts, entertainment and food; proceeds benefit nonprofits in Central Oregon; free;10 a.m.-7 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriverartfaire.

com, sunriverartfairecoyahoo.com or 877-269-2580. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenueand Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. JOHN BUTLER TRIO: The Australian jam-rock band performs; $34; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615Athletic Club Drive; www.c3events.com or 541-385-3062. TWILIGHT CINEMA:Anoutdoor screening of "The Princess Bride"; bring low-profile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333. SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL POPS CONCERT: TheFestival Orchestra performs with Storm Large from Pink Martini; $35-$45, $30 for seniors 65 and older, $10 for children 18 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.sunrivermusic. org, ticketsjisunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310.

THE WARREN G. HARDINGS: The Seattle bluegrass band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

SATURDAY FLASHBACK CRUZ:A classic car show of vehicles from 1979 and earlier, with live music and more; see website for detailed schedule; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-480-5560. PEDDLER'SMARKET:Free; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend;

www.tumalofeedcompany.com, copeddlersmarketIIgmail.com or 541-306-8016. TUFF BUTTSPOKERRUN:Featuring a 300 plus mile ride the mountains, forests and badlands, to benefit the Central OregonVeterans andFamilies; 8a.m.; RedmondVFWHall,1836SW

VeteransWay;crazyhorse©coinet. com or 541-280-5161. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh and B streets; 541-546-6778. AVENUE OF THEARTS: Featuring art, crafts, food and live entertainment on CookAvenue; 10

a.m.-5 p.m.;downtownTumalo;

www.centraloregonshows.com, centraloregonshows©gmail.com or 541-420-0279.

WESTERN WILDFIRES

omeS I In saes •

The Associated Press G RANTS PASS —

said. The

spread of a major wildfire in the Siskiyou Mountains along the Oregon-California border has slowed as temperatures

cooled, giving firefighters a chance to build containment lines. But more lightning is predicted, and it could start more fires.

In Southern Oregon The Northwest Interagency Coordination Center in Port-

to box in the fires as they are growing at such an explosive hasn't burned yet, because rate," Head said. "We also the fire blew past it sofast," he want to makesure that if there "So much within the burn

sald. Thunderstorms were

are any evacuation notices, e x - that the residents will listen to

pectedMonday night into this what officials are saying and morning, followed by calmer heedthe warning." weather until the weekend.

In downtown Burney, where

Fire camp was moved to there were road closures, resiHoward

Pr a irie, a cam p -

ground closerto the fire lines, Gugliotta said.

In Northern California

dents on Monday went about normal activities with flames

and smoke asbackdrop. A day earlier, the fires prompted officials at Mayer Memorial Hospital to evac-

land reports a fire 15 miles Wetter weather gavecrews east of Ashland was 20 per- hope in their battle against uate their 49-bed annex for cent contained Monday at 72

two wi l d fires in No r t h ern patients with d ementia and

squaremiles — 57 of them in Oregon's Jackson and Klam-

California that have scorched other conditions requiring more than 100 square miles skilled nursing. The patients ath counties. The rest is in Sis- and were menacing a small were transferred to a hospital kiyou County in California. town on Monday, at a time in Redding, about 55 miles The fire burned six scat- when firefighters in Oregon away,according to the hospitered rural homes last week and Washington state also tal's website. and still threatens 270 more, aim t o c o mbat d estructive The two fires, which beabout 40 of them within the blazes. gan within a day of each othfire perimeter. Structural fire Theblazes ragedmostly un- er in LassenNational Forest taskforces from Linn, Lane controlledwithin miles of each and had expanded into priand Benton counties were sta- other, and the worst of the two vate property, were burning tioned around homes. has burned eight homes and through timber and brush Firefighterswere concerned threatened over 700 more, parchedby California's historthat winds developing in the state fire spokeswoman Capt. ic drought. afternoon could c ause t h e Amy Head said. Plus, resiThey were among about a fire 15 miles east of Ashland dents in the town of Burney dozen fires that had burned to flare up in the large un- in Shasta County, California, some209 square miles across

MarcioJose Sanchez iThe Associated Press

Derek Dellinger, of Redding, California, watches the Eiler Fire burn from a viewpoint outside Burney, California,on Monday. Fire crews are fighting two wildfires near each other in Northern California and Into Oregon.

Gov. Jerry Brown declared a In Washington state state of emergency on SaturMeanwhile, a wi ndday, saying the circumstances whipped blaze d estroyed and magnitude of the wildabout a dozen structures and fires were beyondthe control prompted an evacuation noof anysingle local government tice for about 80 homes in and required the combined Kittitas County, Washington. forcesof regions to combat. Other residents have been told California is 35 pe r c ent to be readyto leave, said Jill above average in the number Beedle, a spokeswoman for of fires it's seen so far this the Kittitas County Emergenyear, state fi re s p okesman cy Operations Center. It's unknown if the strucDennisMathisen said Sunday. burned areas of timber and face possible evacuation. the state and that more than The state is also 44 percent tures that burned were full"Right now we're continu- 7,500 federal and state fire- above average in the amount time residences,summer cabbrush within the fire area, fire spokesmanLou Gugliotta ing to put in containment lines fighters battled, Head said. of land burned. ins or outbuildings.

XEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 8:48 p.m. June12, in the 61400 block of Linton Loop. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at11:18a.m. July 29, in the2600 blockofNEU.S.Highway20. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen and anarrest made at 10:55 a.m. July 31, in the500 block of NE 15th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:38 a.m. July 31, in the 800block of SE Third Street. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was reported stolen at 3:06 p.m. July 31, in the19300 block of Calico Road. DUII —SeanWiliam Creane,42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:05 a.m. Aug. 1, in the61100 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 12:40 p.m. Aug.1, in the areaof Oceanspray Wayand Snowbrush Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:11 a.m. Aug.1, in the1000 block of NW Baltimore Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:55 a.m. Aug.1, in the19700 block of Aspen Ridge Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:33

a.m. Aug. 2, in the1200 block of NE Burnside Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at10:44 a.m. Aug. 2, in the700block of NE Kearney Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at10:34 p.m. July 25, in the61300 block of U.S. Highway97. DUII —Mathew DeanMorkert, 22, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:19 p.m. Aug. 1, inthe area of NW GreenwoodAvenueand NWHil Street. DUII —Matthew Douglas Fries, 39, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 4:27p.m.July 30,inthe 63300 block of U.S. Highway20. Theft —A theft was reported at11:53 p.m.July31, inthe700blockofSE Centennial Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1:18 p.m. Aug. 3, in the1500 block of SE Tempest Drive.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:38 p.m. Aug. 1, in thearea ofNE10th Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:58 p.m. Aug. 3, in the area of N.Main Street.

JEFFERSOM COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —A theft was reported at midnight July 29, in the24300 block of NE GosnerRd. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:30 p.m. July 30, in the area ofCoveState

Park. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 3:19p.m. July 31, in the 3000 block of SWJericho Lane. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:52a.m. Aug.1, in the 8000 block of N. AdamsDrive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 9:14 p.m. Aug. 1, in the15900 block of SW DoveRoad. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:14 p.m. Aug. 2, in the area ofBoise Drive and Ivy Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:51 p.m. Aug. 2, inthe 400 block of 8 Street.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Jennifer Meghan Comin, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:29 a.m. Aug. 2, in thearea of U.S. Highway 20 nearmilepost 2.

DUII —ShaunWalker Garrison, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 10:46 a.m. Aug. 2, in thearea ofU.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost151. DUII —Tyler Arthur Nelson, 25, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:28 p.m. July 31, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 nearmnilepoSt17. DUII —Donald Joseph Boucher, 40, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:38 a.m. Aug. 2, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost l80.

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TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

O cI OO

Of I I I 1 S f e e

• White supremacisist sentenced;deaths spannedOregon,Washington andCalifornia By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

PORTLAND — White supremacistDavid "Joey Peder-

sen offered no apology for a multistate crime spree that left four dead, using his statement

at Monday's sentencing to blast police, prosecutors and American foreign policy in a harangue briefly interrupted by a sister who yelled at him to "shut up."

investigators failed to share

tims, and she was glad that he

information with the defense,

would no longer be able to use the courtroom and the press as his "personal soapbox." Pedersen and Grigsby began their killing spree on Sept.

as required, and that prosecutorsobtained recordings of phone calls made by Pedersen the rampage during nine days that included confidential dein2011as part of a campaignto fense strategy. purify and preserve the white With that leverage, Pedersen race. Grigsby was sentenced to accepted a plea agreement that life in prison last month. netted lighter sentences for a Pedersen wa s s e ntenced couple who helped Pedersen Monday for the carjacking and Grigsby during the spree. murdersofan Oregon teenager Pedersen also personally the couple mistakenly thought benefited from the deal by getwas Jewish and of a blackman ting a grilled salmon dinner in in Northern California. jail, a detail reported by The Pedersen told those in the Oregonian newspaper. Portland federal courtroom Pedersen said during his that the sentencing was "rath- statement that nobody takes er anti-climactic," because he the "so-called criminal justice had already been sentenced system" seriously. As he conto life in prison in Washington tinued, his sister, Holly Perez, state for the deaths of his fa- yelled at him to "shut up." He ther and stepmother. stopped for a moment and conThough there was never tinued for a few more minutes.

Pedersen said he couldn't sit idle while "Western identity is being destroyed by other cultures," and he regretted that police intervened before he did more damage. "I offer no excuses because none are needed," he said. any doubt about Pedersen's Pedersen, 34, and his girl- guilt, the federal case hit a friend, Holly Grigsby, went on snag when it was revealed that

26, 2011, with the deaths of his

father and stepmother, David "Red" Pedersen and Leslie

NO neW name fOr Terri Hnrman —Thestepmother of aPortland boy whosedisappearance in 2010touched off an intense search has failed to persuade ajudge to let her change her name.Terri Horman testified Monday in Roseburg that her life has beenthreatened and that she hasn't beenable to find a job since Kyron Horman vanished from his Portland school. Shesaid a namechange would allow her to start over. JudgeRandyGarrison rejected the request, saying it wasn't in the public interest because aninvestigation remains open. Terri Horman told investigators she droppedoff the 7-year-old for a science fair. Therehasbeen notrace of him. She has not been charged. Sheand the boy's father, Kaine Horman, divorced, and she movedto Roseburg,herhometown.

Pedersen. The couple then

Shots fired in Portland — Amanfiring a rifle andthreatening

drove Red Pedersen's vehicle south into Oregon, where they shot and killed 19-year-old Cody Myersand stolehiscar. They shot Myers, who was

to kill himself early Monday in southeast Portland wassafely taken into custody by police. Several officers heard the shots shortly after 5 a.m. as they arrived at the residence. Police saythe unidentified 32-year-old threw down the rifle and followed commands to get down on the ground. He was taken to a Portland hospital for treatment. Police hadactivated the Special Emergency Reaction Teamand Crisis Negotiation Team,which was canceled after the man went in custody. Officers found evidence of gunfire, but no onewas hurt.

Christian, because his name

sounded Jewish, according to court documents.

Pedersen and Grigsby then headed to Northern California, where Reginald Clark, a 53-year-old black man, was shot to death. Grigsby and Pedersen were arrested Oct. 5, 2011, outside

Yuba City, California, when a Pedersen showed no remorse police officer spotted them in and sympathy for the vic- Myers' car.

SSISm dfnwnlng —Police say divers recovered the body of Matthew Tufts, 16, who drowned in Mill Creek, which flows through Salem, onMonday.FriendssaidhewaslastseenSundayevening getting into the water for a final swim in astretch of the stream behind a mobile homedevelopment. Police say the stretch has some fast-moving water anddepths of 2 to 15 feet.

Earlier, Perez told the court

Historic deal

reachedfor Corps dam pollution

AROUND THE STATE

Willamette diOWnlng —A 24-year-old Albany manwhoslipped off an inner tube drowned in theWillamette River. The Benton County Sheriff's Office identified the man asLeeRoyAllen Dowandsaid he wasn't wearing a life vest when hegot onto the inner tube at aboat ramp Sundayafternoon, went underwater and didn't come up. Divers found his body not far from where he was seen going underwater. — From wire reports

O A( ( . ( ) . .

, .'PHt r , r ' '

4

t'

82-year-old veterangets injured resistingcarjacker

,' 'at I

,Whe S r

The Associated Press The Associated Press PORTLAND — For the first time in its history, the

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will have to disclose the amount of pollutants its

dams are sending into waterways in a groundbreak-

O

ing legal settlement that

could have broad implications for the Corps' hundreds of dams nationwide.

The Corps announced in a settlement Monday it will immediately notify the con-

servation group that filed the lawsuit of any oil spills among its eight dams on the Columbiaand Snake rivers in Oregon and Washington. The Corps also will apply to the Environmental Protection Agency for pollution permits, something

the Corps has never done for the dams on the Columbia and Snake rivers.

The settlement f iled in U.S. District Court in Portland ends the year-old

consolidated lawsuit by the conservation group Columbia Riverkeeper, which said the Corps violated the

(Salem) Statesman Journal filephoto

From rlght, Gov.John Kitzhaber and his longtimepartner, Cylvia Hayes, cut acake honoring Oregon's 153rd birthday in this 2012 photo, with Tyson Raymond, president of the Oregon Wheat League, looking on. There's likely lo be more cake cutting in the couple's future, as Kitzhaber and Hayes are nowengagmL

re On'S irS mu e W i O ieia m a r

Clean Water Act with un-

monitored, unpermitted oil discharges from the eight hydroelectric dams. No one outside the Corps knows how much pollution is being flushed into waterways every day. The agency doesn't have to track it and, before Monday, no one with sufficient authority

compelled them to do so. The settlement reflects the recent tack of the EPA

regulating the environmental impacts of energy. The agency recently came up with r egulations of mountaintop removal for

coal and fracking for oil and gas.

-

used a stun gun to detain him,

Maksaid. 82-year-old man on his Mak described the driver, way to the gym for a morn- who was not identified, as a ing workout resisted a car- military veteran who stays in jacker and suffered mul- shape. "Our suspect kind of picked t iple fractures when h i s minivan's door crunched the wrong guy to prey on," his leg, Medford Police said Maksaid. Monday. Police booked 26-year-old The carjacker got away Christopher Cody Willard on with the vehicle but was robbery and other charges. captured about two hours They say it isn't clear exactly later after a chase and where he lives, but he appears standoff. to be from California. He was The driver was stopped held on $2 million bail. at a red light about 7:30 a.m. Sunday and thought the man approachingthe vehicle was a p anhanMEDFORD

The Associated Press Kitzhaber refers to Hayes SALEM — Oregon Gov. as the "first lady," and she's John Kitzhaber and his long- embraced the role of political time partner, Cylvia Hayes, spouse. She regularly appears are engaged. with Kitzhaber in public and The governor's office con- works on her own initiatives, firmed Monday that Kitzhaber, which include battling hunger who is running for re-election, and poverty. and Hayes have been enThe couple met when Hayes gaged "for a couple of weeks." ran unsuccessfully for the Spokeswoman Melissa Navas Legislature in 2002, against says she doesn't know details, then-Republican Rep. Ben but "the governor and f irst Westlund, of Tumalo (who latlady could not be happier or er was elected state treasurer more excited." as a Democrat). No wedding date has been The engagement was first set. reported by The Oregonian, The marriage will be the which has previously reportthird for both Kitzhaber, 67, ed that Hayes arranged to and Hayes, 46. meet with K i t zhaber, then

the outgoing governor, to talk about whether she should try

An

dler, Sgt. Brent Mak said

Monday. Instead the man brandished a knife, and the two

began struggling. Mak said the driver, still in his seatbelt, kicked the carjacker in

the groin and grabbed his knife hand. But, Mak said, the van rolled and hit a rock that

closed the door on the driver's left leg, causing "extensive broken bones." Mak had no word Monday on the man's condition. Police didn't identify him.

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Officers said they chased

to run again and about how

the vehicle and the driver

to grow her environmental group. Hayes made her mark in green energy and sustainability circles, particularly in Bend, which was then her

pulled over, but for about 90 minutes he refused to get out. Officers eventually

home base. She helped start a

well-recei ved solar and green home tour in Bend. Hayes has said they ran into each other a

C om p l e m e n t s

few times after that, and a relationship slowly blossomed.

w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

Sek

Suitcasedeathsmayinvolve morecharges The Associated Press MILWAUKEE — A prosecu-

ties where the women died. Zelich met the women in online chat rooms and set up

tor in Wisconsin said Monday he expects to file more charges separatedates for sex at hoagainst a man accused of tels, where he said he accidendumping suitcases that con- tally killed them at the end of tained the bodies of two wom- bondage sessions, Walworth en,one of them from Oregon, County Sheriff's Detective along a rural highway. Jeffrey Recknagel testified in Steven Zelich, 52, has been

June. Zelich told investigators

scheduled for an initial ap- thatJenny Gamez, a 19-yearpearance today in a Kenosha old college student from CotCounty, Wisconsin, court, said tage Grove, died in a Kenosha his attorney, Jonathan Smith, Countyhotelin2012.Kenosha, w ho didn't know w hat t h e

charges will be. Zelich, a former police officer, has been charged with hiding a corpse in Walworth County, where the bodies were found in early June. Walworth County officials have

said they expect homicide charges to be filed in the coun-

home andcaruntilearly June, when they began to smell. He

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337

D

0

(gP ga)

0

left the suitcases in Walworth

County, about an hour southwest of Milwaukee, where highway workers cutting grass found them on June 5. Zelich worked for the police department in the Milwaukee

suburb of West Allis from February 1989 until his resignation in August 2001, follow-

ing an internal investigation that found he stalked women

while on duty and used his miles south of Milwaukee. The position to get access to their the county seat, is about 40

other woman, Laura Simonson, 37, of Minnesota, died in a hotel in that state in November,

personal information. His res-

ignation allowed him to avoid discipline and pass state backinvestigators said. No charges ground checks for a private sehave been filed in Minnesota. curity officer's license. He was Recknagel testified that working as a licensed private Zelich hid the women's bodies security officer when he was in suitcases that he stored in his arrested June 25.

212~NE Division St Bend, OR-97701 I (541) 382-4171 641 NW FirAve R nd, GR97756 L~41) 548-7707 •

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HIIAA he Oregon Education Association says its members like the increased rigor of the Common Core State Standards but believe teachers haven't been given enough hme and training to implement them. The union wants a moratorium on the new Smarter Balanced tests, which are aligned with the new standards and due to launch in spring 2015. Rob Saxton, the state's deputy superintendent, rejected the plea to delay Smarter Balanced tests when the union first proposed it in May. But OEA representatives are still promoting it, as they did during a visit last week with The Bulletin's editorial board. We supported Saxton's decision then, and were pleased to hear last week that the state has no plans to reconsider. As Bend-La Pine Superintendent Ron Wilkinson told The Bulletin months ago, "Four years into having the standards, it's time to have the assessment aligned to those standards so we can see how we are doing." What better way to move the process along than to have a test that shows who's doing it well and who isn't'? In addition to the rejected moratorium, the OEA wants the state to support more substantive training forteachers,asw ellasateacher-led study of the best ways to assess Oregon students. That study would develop a system of routine, smaller tests that guide instruction along the way and possibly offer an alternative to Smarter Balanced. We have no reason to doubt that

some districts have done better than others in preparing teachers for this big change. And no matter how good the training, facing a test that compares your results with other states is daunting. It's also one of the huge pluses of the new system. Finally, most of the country is operating on the same standards,with large segments taking the same test. It will allow us to see what works and what doesn't over time and distance and give our students a sense of howthey compare acrossa larger population. In this global world, comparing only with other Oregonians doesn't tell us what we need to know. Teachers unions don't like standardized tests, which they say fail to reflect what children learn and distort classroom efforts by forcing too much emphasis on what's in the test. Resistance is also fueled in this case by the expectation that fewer students will pass Smarter Balanced tests than the older tests. State education leaders should try to address gaps in training and preparation where they exist, but they are wise to move forward with the Smarter Balanced testing.

It's time to research marijuana's unknowns l though m a r ijuana h a s some medicinal properties, it's not like other drugs doctors prescribe. • There are no evidence-based standardsfor how much of what strain will have what effect for an individual patient. • Solid scientific research is lacking on many aspects of marijuana's health effects, including how it interacts with other drugs.

A

• Some people fake or exaggerate symptoms to get pot for recreational purposes. • Marijuana is not sold in pharmacies but in dispensaries. • Marijuana remains illegal under federal law. So it's hardly surprising that many physicians want no part of it, and rightly so. They want to give their patients treatments backed by solid research and experience, and they don't want to be deluged by patients with questionable ailments who really just want to get high. (One exception is in oncology, where patients are suffering serious side effects of treatment

that marijuana has been shown to alleviate.) The result, as The Bulletin's Tara Bannow reported Sunday, is that many local physicians don't want to prescribe marijuana and don't want to talk about it. High-volume marijuana approversfrom otherparts of the state fill the gap. Doctors with local addresses signed fewer than half of the forms for the 4,071 medical marijuana patients in Central Oregon. Despite laws legalizing medical marijuana in more than 20 states, plus newly legalized recreational marijuanain Colorado and Washington, serious scientific research on its effects has lagged. Dr. Herbert Kleber, a Columbia University psychiatrist and drug abuse researcher, told National Public Radio that's because it's hard to get federal approval for studies and hard to get legal supplies. With the accelerating movement to legalize pot, including Oregon's November initiative vote, it's long past time for regulators to facilitate serious research to address the many unknowns.

Nixon's words, legacy live on Ey Dan K. Thomasson McCiatchy-Tribune News Service

ortyyears ago I sat alone in the

F

White House briefing room,

wiped out mentally and physically by the nearly unrelenting pressure of two years of covering the scandal that has come to symbolize

was up ...ttis the words

book that said, "Legacy Tarnished by His Own Words." To which one could only reply: You think? Over the 40 years since his decision that the jig was up and resigna-

on those tapes he should

tion was the only escape from im-

Over the 40 years since his decision that thejig have burned that in the

end haunt hts image.

the worst and the best in America's

history. The worst because of its enormous assault on our democra-

peachment and probable conviction by the Senate, there has been some r ehabilitation based on b oth h i s

undisputed brilliance as a political analyst and his breakthrough with

cy and the best because our institu-

tions, including the press, stood up to the assault. Richard Nixon had just resigned, and I now was vowing silently never to write another word about the event which had become univer-

sally known as just "Watergate," although it covered far more than the break-in at the Democratic ¹

tional Headquarters in the office building of that name. I pretty much kept my pledge even to the extent

of refusing to watch the movie "All the President's Men" — Hollywood's version of the drama that shook the

foundation of our Constitution and based on the book by The Washington Post's Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein.

The other day I heard an acquaintance allege that it was after all just

a third-rate burglary undertaken by rogue political operatives without the president's knowledge or implied consent. Nothing could be further from the truth. It was in fact

not a burglary at all as we define the word. Nothing material was being stolen unless one counts the pre-

his campaign organization to glean China, among other things. But it is information through eavesdropping the words on those tapes he should devices installed in an earlier break-

have burned that in the end haunt

in for thepurpose of political leverage his image. in the 1972 presidential election, as Whether destroyingthe tapes was though Nixon had any actual fear of even possible without creating even losing to a badly divided Democratic more loss of credibility is problematParty. In other words, for blackmail. ic. The disclosure came from White What the "bugs" revealed from House aide Alexander Butterfield the conversations they recorded, during a preappearance interrogaat least from the DNC desk where tion by Republican Senate Investivisiting Democrats were accommo- gator Don Sanders. Sanders once dated on trips to Washington, never confided to me and a colleague, Jim has been revealed. And for good rea- Squires of the Chicago Tribune, that son. In the end, of course, it became he believed that Butterfield was anxclear through Oval Office tape re- ious to reveal their existence. This, cordings that while Nixon may not of course, has generated considerhave known of plans for the actual able speculation about Butterfield's break-in before it took place, he did motivations. afterward and participated in the atIn the end, it was the official investempted cover-up of the scandal. tigatory agencies, including the FBI The revelation of those now infa- and the CIA and the Senate commitmous tapes during the Senate's pro- tee, leaking to an unswerving band longed investigation of Watergate of reporters — of which I was proud was the beginning of the end for to have been one — that nailed shut Nixon. They have over the decades the lid on the Nixon presidency. been endlessl y perused by some of It was a tragic conclusion to what the world's leading historians who could have been a brilliant legacy, a seem to find new material each time. legacy destroyed by a White House Two books now in circulationculture of paranoia and moral decay. one by historians Douglas Brinkley What was gained for a time at least

cious gift of privacy and the sanctity of our political system, which is a far and Luke Nichter and another from was a new awareness of what we alworse theft than anything hereto- a leading Watergate figure, former most lost. fore imagined. presidential counsel John Dean, — Dan Thomassonisan op-ed columnist It was an intrusion carried out by m ark this anniversary ofN ixon's resfor McClatchy-Tribune and a former morally and ethically challenged ignation. I was amused to see a headvicepresident ofScripps Howard presidential operatives at the top of line over a column about the Dean Newspapers.

Letters policy

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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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Anti-poverty programs must a ress c aracter early every parent on earth operates on the assumption

makers would skirt the issue of char-

that character matters a lot to the life outcomes of their children.

ing the victim. Furthermore, most

N

acter. Nobody wants to be seen blam-

sensible people wonder if government Nearly every government anti-pover- can do anything to alter character. ty program operates on the assumpWalter Mischel's famous marshtion that it doesn't.

mallow

Most Democratic anti-poverty programs consist of transferring money, providingjobs or otherwise addressing the material deprivation of the poor. Most Republican anti-poverty programs likewise consist of adjusting the economic incentives or regulatory barriers faced by thedisadvantaged.

ed that delayed gratification skills learned by age 4produce import-

e x p eriment d e m onstrat-

As Richard Reeves of the Brook-

ings Institution pointed out recently

basic talents are fixed and innate. Angela Duckworth has shown how

in National Affairs, both orthodox

important grit and perseverance are

ant benefits into adulthood. Carol

Dweck's work has shown that people who have a growth mindset — who

believe their basic qualities can be developed through hard work — do better than people who believe their

progressive and conservative ap- to lifetime outcomes. College students proaches treat individuals as if they who report they finish whatever they were abstractions whose destiny is begin have higher grades than their shaped byeconomic structures alone, peers, even ones with higher SATs. and notby character and behavior. Summarizing the research in this It's easy to understand why policy- area,Reeves estimates that measures

DAVID BROOKS

generally found hectoring lectures don't help. Instead, sages over the years have generally found at least

mitted by elders. The centrist Demo-

four effective avenues to make it eas-

Every day 10,000 baby boomers turn 65, some of them could be recruited into an AmeriCorps-type program to help low-income families move up the mobility ladder.

ier to climb. Government-supported programs can contribute in allrealms. of drive and self-control influence • First, habits: If you can change academic achievement roughly as behavior, you eventually change dismuch as cognitive skills. Recent re- position. Quality preschools, KIPP search has also shown there are very schools and parenting coaches have different levels of self-control up and produced lasting effects by encourdown the income scale. Poorer chil- aging young parents and students to dren grow upwith more stress and observe basic etiquette and practice more disruption, and these disadvan- smallbut regular acts of self-restraint. tages produce effects on the brain. • Second, opportunity: Most of us Researchers often use dull tests to can only deny short-term pleasures see who can focus attention and stay because we see a realistic path be-

cratic group Third Way suggests the government create a BoomerCorps.

• Fourth, standards: People can

only practice restraint after they have a certain definition of the sort of person they want to be. Research suggests that students at certain charter

schools raise their own expectations for themselves.

tween self-denial now and something better later. Young women who see

Character development is an idiosyncratic, mysterious process. But if families, communities and government can envelop lives with attach-

affordable collegeprospectsaheadare students raised in the bottom quintile. much less likely to become teen moms.

ments and institutions, then that might reduce the alienation and distrust that

on task. Children raised in the top income quintile were 2Yz times more likely to score well on these tests than But these effects are reversible.

• Third, exemplars: Character is

Peoplewho have studied character not developed individually. It is indevelopment through the ages have stilled by communities and trans-

retards mobility and ruins dreams. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New Yorh Times.


TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Vigils for Columbiasalmon

BITUARIES

The Associated Press

April 3, 1931 - Aug. 1, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

Services: A gathering of family 8 friends will be held at a later date.

William Benjamin Hoffman Sr. "Bill", of Madras June 2, 1929 - Aug. 1, 2014 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Memorial Services for Friday, August 8, 201411:00 AM at the Cornerstone Baptist Church in Madras,

Oregon.

caused salmon rundeclines.

HOOD RIVER — Native

American tribes in the U.S. and Canada are holding vigils along the Columbia River to pray for the return of salm-

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

DEATH NOTICES Charles Eugene Scott, of Bend

B5

Thursday in Manhattan. Harun Farocki, 70: Avant-garde German film-

Deaths of note from around the world:

Wilfred Feinberg, 94:Federal appeals court judge in New York who ruled in major cases in- maker and video artist whose work examined volving the Vietnam War, including a Pentagon the ways images are used to inform, instruct, Papers case and the burning of draft cards to persuade and propagandize. Died Wednesday protest the conflict, as well as labor rights cas-

a nd reservoirs that

h a ve over that dam.

La Pine

Death Notices are freeand will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Fax: 541-322-7254

In recommendations for

potential negotiations, the U.S. says the two countries should study the possibility ofrestoring fish passage

— From wire reports

Obituary policy

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com

on migration as the two coun-

tries prepare to renegotiate a treaty concerning the river. The treaty, signed in 1964, governs operations of dams

near Berlin.

es during his five decades on the bench. Died

Phone: 541-617-7825

Tribes are pushing to include salmon restoration to the upperColumbia, above Grand Coulee Dam in northern Washington, in the treaty.

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

Deacllines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,andby9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.

Continued from B1 Of the estimated $7 mil-

lion allocated for urban renewal over the coming 20

ban renewal district might cut into their bottom lines,

years, about $2.4 million would go to help people starting and expanding businesses. Another $1.8 million would go to develop new rec-

she supported it. "(An urban renewal district) can be an incredible benefit back to communities,

reation sites, and still more

fruition and come to an end," she said. "I do very much

of the money would likely be used to remodel a medical and emergency services building. And the city would also offer loans to downtown businesses, allowing them to

ea anai e, unconro a vocae

Commissioner T ammy Baney said although some special service districts worried about how much the ur-

improve their storefronts. Commissioners u n animously supported the plan. "An urban renewal district is one of the only tools that cities have to collect a sizable

and they do actually come to support this process."

La Pine City Manager Rick Allen said a newly formed board will begin meeting this fall to go into greater planning detail. For example, hesaid,the board

can discuss what upgraded storefrontsand streetscapes are going to look like. "Urban renewal is a long process," Allen said. "You don't get any money, really, for years.... For three to four

By Douglass K. Daniel

niversary of the shooting, the

amount ofmoney to move

The Associated Press

Bradys told NPR they were no longer Republicans. "Times

forward on capital investments to improve the city to

change," Sarah Brady said.

be able to be open for future years the amount of money development, which creates is not enough to go do anyfuture taxes," Commissioner thing.... A lot of it's planning Alan Unger said. "It's a great and getting folks to start bebenefit in the end." ing ready."

WASHINGTON — A major trait that endeared Jim Brady

to theWashington presscorps

President Barack Obama

was his sense of humor, espe-

describedBrady as a White House legend, who turned

cially w h en

"the events of t hat t errible

FEATURED

afternoon into a remarkable legacy of service." Thanks to Brady and the law bearing his name, "an untold number of people are alive today who

l s ow n

OB j TUARy of h boss.

When Ron-

ald Reagan was campaigning for president in 1980, Reagan drew scorn from environm entalists fo r

s a y ing t h a t

trees were a greater source of pollution than cars. Aboard the campaign plane,Brady pointed at a forest fire in the distance and yelled, "Killer

President-elect Ronald Reagan introduces Jim Brady as his press secretary on Jan. 6, 1981, in Washington, D.C. Less than three

trees! Killer trees!" to the great

months later, both menwere severely wounded in anassaseina-

amusement of reporters.

tion attempt on the new president.

The AssociatedPressfile photos

After the election, Reagan's advisers appeared hesitant to

appoint Brady press secretary. Nancy Reagan was said to feel the job required someone younger and better-looking than the 40-year-old, moon-

faced, balding Brady. "I come before you today not as just another pretty face but out of sheer talent," Brady

told reporters. A week later, he gotthejob. Brady, who died Monday at 73, would need humor and much more after March

30, 1981. On that day John Hinckley Jr. attempted to assassinate Reagan outside the

The lasting public image of Brady came from the worst day of his life. A news clip of the 1981 shooting, replayed often on television and in documentaries, showed him

sprawled on the sidewalk after severalSecret Service agents had hustled t h e

Wreck

president said in a statement. Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign toPrevent Gun Violence, said in a statement that because of Brady's

Continued from B1 "The building was more structurally sound than we had anticipated finding it," Derlacki said.

work on gun control "there

This isn't the first time the building on the southwest

are few Americans in history who are asdirectly responsible for saving as many lives

it had hit a solid wall, the

whole building would have

to Prevent Gun Violence. Clinton said Monday that

of usto create a more just and

securenation,freefrom handgun violence." The men and women who

also stood at the podium facing the press corps described Brady as a "friend and mentor," a "selfless public servant," and a man who did his job with the "highest integrity." "Jim Brady defined the role

w o u nded in the administrations of Pres-

idents Richard Nixon and Ger-

a year after the shooting, he

the Office of Management and Budget, and as an assistant to

ald Ford: as special assistant to

the secretary of Housing and Urban Development, as special assistant to the director of

was allowed to keep the title of presidential press secretarythe defense secretary. and the $89,500 annual salary He was divorced from the as assistant to the president for former Sue Beh when, in 1973, press relations — until Reagan he courted Sarah Jane Kemp,

away with no citations." Steele said when he heard

Find It All

Online bendbulletin.com

shuddered. But the import-

ant thing is that no one was seriously hurt. If you see the building and the space, it was by the grace of God no one was killed." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

EVERGREEN

In-Home Care Services Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-389-OOOG www.evergreeninhome.com

White House Press Secretary

James Kim Hermsen

Josh Earnest and former press

secretaries Jay Carney, Robert Gibbs, Dana Perino, Scott McClellan, Ari Fleischer, Jake Siewert, Joe Lockhart, Mike

McCurry, Dee Dee Myers, Marlin Fitzwater, and Ron Nessen.

Brady also served as vice chair of the National Organization on Disability and cochair of the National Head In-

jury Foundation. Brady died at a retirement

community in A l exandria, Virginia. Survivors include his wife; a son, Scott, and a

daughter, Melissa. "We are heartbroken to share the news that our be-

loved Jim "Bear" Brady has passedaway aftera series of health issues," Brady's family said in a statement. It said they

were "so thankful to have had the opportunity to say their

farewells."

who ran for president in 1979.

president into his limousine and others had pounced on Hinckley. Although Brady returned to the White House only briefly,

Steele, whose eponymous glass, so there wasn't much architectural firm designed resistance," he added. "If

of the modern White House press secretary," said current

the former Texas governor When Connally dropped out, Brady joined Reagan's campaign as director of public affairs and research. Previously, he had worked

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August 4, 1975 — July 31, 2014 James Kim "Jim" Hermsen of Redmond, OR, passed away unexpectedly on July 31, 2014. He was 38. A Public Viewing will be held 'Ihursday, August 7, 2014 from 3:00 pM -5:00 pM at Autumn Funerals, located at485 NW Larch Avenue in Redmond. A funeral service will be held Friday, August 8, 2014 at 10:00 AM at Highland Baptist church, located at 3100 SW Highland Avenue in Redmond, OR; immediately followed by a gravesideservice at Redmond Memorial Cemetery. Jim was born August 4, 1975 in Seoul, South Korea. He moved to the United Stateswhen he was 8-months old and was raised in Milwaukie, Oregon. He was an active member of the Milwaukie First Baptist Church. He graduated from Rex Putnam High School, where he played 1st trumpet in the high school band. V

Jim played at the goalie position in an amateur ice hockey league in Portland and enjoyed fishing, amongother things. Jim is survived by his son Isaiah Hermsen of Milwaukie, OR; parents Joel and Jane Hermsen of Redmond, OR; sisters SSG Jill M. Hermsen of Fort Lewis, WA and Ianelle (husband Noah) Heinrich of Bend, OR. Other survivors include his grandmother, Evelyn Carlson of Vancouver, WA; his aunt and uncle, Jerry and Susan Isaacson of Vancouver, WA; and nephews, Wyatt and Isaac Heinrich and cousins Ryan and Reid Isaacson. 'Ihe family would like to thank Dr. Russell Massine and his colleagues at Bend Memorial Clinic, the caregivers at St. Charles Medical Center-Bend, RedmondFire and Rescue and the staff ofFresenius Medical Care for their compassion in caring for Jim. Memorial contributions can be made to his son's college education fund at the funeral service. Autumn Funerals-Redmond has been entrusted with the arrangements,

(541) 504-9485.

541-382-4189

t h rough

ing, recalled a car that hit the outside of a stairwell in September 2008. "They hit the building, left the scene bleeding, and were never cited for anything," Steele said. "I have no idea how they got

Brady "transformed his own personal tragedy into an opportunity to inspire change — for more than three decades Jim Brady, with his wife, Sarah Brady, in 2011, was left paralyzed from the would-be aseassin's bullet. Since that incident, the Bradys he and Sarah encouraged all

Everett Dirksen o f I l l i nois, the head before I started hitSen. William Roth Jr. of Del- ting the bricks." aware and John Connally, At the time of the 30th an-

"The car w ent

and is housed in the build-

renamed the Brady Campaign .

his office didn't realize what

corner of NW Mt. Washing- had happened until emerton and Crossing drives has gency vehicles arrived.

Clinton awarded Brady the Presidential Medal of F ree-

Handgun Control Inc., was

i

building barely rattled. "I thought maybe they had done a hard rock blast nearby and we all just went back to work," Steele said, saying

dolences" to Brady's family.

House was renamed in his honor. The following year,

ll

suspected it was noise from nearby construction, as the

been hit with a c ar. Scott

briefing room at the W h ite

P gy

the impact of the car, he

as Jim." In its own statement, the National Rifle Association said it extended "heartfelt con-

dom in 1996. In 2000, the press

Washington Hilton Hotel just two months into the new pres- have been the public faces of America's gun control movement. ident's term. Reagan nearly died from a chest wound. Three others, including Brady, left office. the daughter of an FBI agent were struck by bullets from The TV replays did take a who was working with him in Hinckley's handgun. toll on Brady. He told The As- acongressi onal office. Shot in the head, Brady sociated Press years later that lived through hours of delicate he relived the moment each Reagan'ssupport surgery and then many more time. Sarah Brady became in"I want to take every bit of volved in gun control efforts operationsover the years.But he never recovered the normal (that) film ... and put them in in 1985, and l ater chaired use of his limbs and was often a cement incinerator, slosh Handgun Control I nc., but in a wheelchair. Besides par- them with gasoline and throw Brady took a few more years tial paralysis from brain dam- a lighted cigarette in," he said. to join her, and Reagan did not age, he suff ered short-term Officials at St. Elizabeths endorse their efforts until 10 memory impairment, slurred Hospital i n Wa s hington, years after he was shot. Reaspeech and constant pain. where Hinckley is a patient, gan's surprise endorsement Still, along with his wife, have said that the mental ill- — he was a longtime National Sarah, he went on to become ness that led him to shoot Rea- Rifle Association member and the face and as much as pos- gan in an effort to impress ac- an opponent of gun control sible the voice of the gun con- tress Jodie Foster has been in laws — helped turn the tide in trol movement in the United remission for decades. Hinck- Congress. "They're not going to accuse States. A federal law requiring ley has been allowed to leave background checks for hand- the hospital to visit his moth- him of being some bed-wetgun buyers bears his name, er's home in Williamsburg, ting liberal, no way can they as does theWhiteHouse press Virginia. do that," said Brady, who had briefing room. become an active lobbyist for Nancy Reagan, the former Republican from early on the bill. first lady, said Monday she Brady was a strong RepubThe Brady law required a was "deeply saddened to learn lican from an early age. As a five-day wait and background of Jim Brady's passing today. boy of 12 in Centralia, Illinois, check before a handgun can Thinking of him brings back where he was born on Aug. be sold. In November 1993, as so many memories — hap- 29, 1940, he distributed elec- President Bill Clinton signed py and sad — of a time in all tion literature for Dwight D. the bill into law, Brady said: "Every once in a while, you of our lives when we learned Eisenhower. what it means to 'play the In a long string of political need to wake up and smell the hand we're dealt.'" jobs, Brady worked for Sen. propane. I needed to be hit in

Lastingimage

otherwise wouldn't be," the

www.autumnfunerals.net


B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014

o

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i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH ~

57'

~

Partly sunny

I f' I

ALMANAC

THURSDAY

W EDN E SDAY

LOW

' '

50'

'r vw

Patchy clouds

84' 49'

"~

49

~P YS~

Mostly sunnyandbreezy

FRIDAY

B r eezy with plenty of sun M o stly sunnypland easant

r

Yesterday Today Wednesday

city

Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Abilene 94/69/0.00 94/73/s Akron 85/60/0.00 82/63/pc Albany 82/66/0.07 85/63/pc Albuquerque 83/68/0.00 86/64/pc Anchorage 59/56/0.12 68/56/sh Atlanta 90n1/0.00 90/69/pc Atlantic City 79/68/0.00 84/70/pc Austin 94n1/Tr 94/71/s Baltimore 84/61/0.32 88/66/pc Billings 82/60/0.02 80/58/pc Birmingham 94/69/0.00 93/70/s Bismarck 75/60/0.16 78/60/pc Boise 90/78/Tr 89/67/t Boston 80/62/Tr 82/66/pc Bridgeport, CT 84/68/0.00 84/67/pc Buffalo 80/60/0.05 76/60/I Burlington, VT 84/66/0.09 81/59/t Caribou, ME 79/61/0.00 79/57/1 Charleston, SC 84n3/Tr 87/73/t Charlotte 87/69/0.00 86/67/I 88/53 53 Chattanooga 89/64/0.00 91/68/s 65 5 • FortRock Riley 90/52 YESTERDAY l Cresce t • 86/48 Cheyenne 84/59/0.04 79/58/pc 88/53 84/46 Chicago 87/67/0.1 0 78/59/pc High: 102' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 89/59/0.00 85/65/pc Aug 10 Aug 17 Aug 25 S ep 2 at Hermiston Jordan V gey 66/54 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 89/59 Cleveland 84/60/0.00 79/63/t Low: 52' 84/58 Marsh Lake 87/56 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 83/57/0.01 81/55/pc rr3/45 at Newport Po 0 S5/47 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 88/65/Tr 89/68/pc T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley 67/ a Columbia, SC 91n3/0.00 90/73/t 86/59 Mercury 5:38 a.m. 8: 2 3 p.m. • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 92/71/0.00 93/71/t ach et 57 Medfo d '82/st Gold Rome Venus 4:09 a.m. 7: 1 8 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 88/64/0.00 85/67/pc 95/61 65/ 88/59 Mars 1:16 p.m. 1 1:28 p.m. Klamath Concord, NH 85/58/0.00 84/60/pc Fields • • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 5:12 a.m. 8 : 0 0 p.m. • akeview McDermi Corpus Christi 98n3/0.00 93/74/pc Bro ings S5/6O 89/5 83/51 Saturn 2:08 p.m. 1 2 :16 a.m. 66/5 79/50 82/58 Dallas 95n4/o'.oo 94ns/s Dayton 87/60/0.48 84/65/pc Uranus 10:45 p.m. 1 1 :37 a.m. Denver 88/61/0.00 85/60/pc Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Des Moines 89/68/0.02 84/65/pc city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 86/63/0.12 79/61/t Portland 93/6 5/0.00 85/61/s 81/57/s Duluth 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin 66/56/0.0069/57/pc 68/54/s Ln Grande 95/61/0.00 92/52/pc 89/49/pc 71/58/0.00 76/55/pc Baker City 89/61/0.01 90/49/pc 87/46/pc Ln Pine 88/52/0.00 85/48/pc 83/48/s Prineviiie 93/ 5 8/0.00 91/52/pc 83/51/n El Paso 88n4/0.00 88/70/pc 5 N(~ 7 ~ 7~ N 5 ercckings 61/53/Tr 65/53/pc 69/54/pc Medicrd 9 4 /66/0.00 92/60/pc 94/61/s Redmond 93/ 56/0.00 90/46/pc 87/46/s Fairbanks 76/53/0.00 63/52/sh The highertheAccuWnntberxmmIIVIndex number, eums 93/56/0.00 91/50/t 89/47/pc N ewport 63/5 2 /0.00 63/54/pc 63/51/s Rnneburg 90/ 6 4/0.00 89/59/pc 89/58/n Fargo 79/52/0.00 82/60/pc the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 91/61/0.00 89/54/pc 88/52/s North Bend 63/55/0.00 65/55/pc 66/53/ s Salem 94/61/0.00 86/58/s 86/55/s Flagstaff 74/51/0.09 77/48/pc 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Extreme. Klamnth Falls 86/57/Tr 82/50/t 8 6/50/pc O ntario 91/69/0.02 95/64/t 91/60/c Sisters 91/54/0.00 89/48/pc 86/47/n Grand Rapids 88/64/Tr 79/59/pc Lnkeview 91/55/0.00 84/49/t 86/47/pc Pendleton 100/64/0.0096/62/pc 92/58/pc The Dalles 1 0 0 /71/0.00 92/65/s 88/61/s Greeneuy 74/63/0.02 76/53/pc Greensboro 85/66/0.00 85/67/t Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstcrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-truce,Yesterday data asci 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 82/62/0.02 87/64/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Harffcrd, CT 85/65/0.37 89/64/pc Moderate ~ Lo~w ~Lo~w Helena 80/65/0.02 87/58/I Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577 Honolulu 91/78/0.00 91/77/s ~ os ~ t o s ~ 2 0 8 ~ 3 0 8 ~ 4 0 8 ~ 5 0s ~ 6 08 ~ 7 0 8 ~ 8 08 ~ 9 08 ~t oos ~ttos Houston ~ tos ~o s 92n3/Tr gon4/I Huntsville 93/66/0.00 92/70/s 'cntgu ~~ NATIONAL Indianapolis 85/62/Tr 83/66/I As of 7 n.m.yesterday Jackson, MS 94/71/0.07 93/72/t Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES Jacksonville 85n5/0.01 91/73/t YESTERDAY (for the •

~

i~. Q

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

C rane Prairie 365 6 1 66% 41'yo Wickiup 82193 Crescent Lake 7 1 3 54 82% Ochoco Reservoir 22044 50% Prinevige 113562 76% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 399 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1540 Deschutes R.below Bend 137 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1950 Little Deschutes near LaPine 91 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 76 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 217 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 65 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 12

FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Mod~erate ~ ~ Redmond/Madras~ v e ry~high ~ Sisters ~M o d~erate ~ Prinevige ~v e ry~high ~ La Pine/Gilchrist High Source: USDA Forest Service

"5

are preschoolers.

Continued from B1

instructor at Bend Montessori, SaW her ovvn Son, Wilhelm,

Misha Strunk, an assistant

opportunity to look up to and now 11, successfully transition learn from older students," from Montessori to a traditionBorn said. "And the older stu- al elementary. "He had to learn a differdents get the opportunity to become more solidified when ent lingo in the school, which teaching and have the younger was hard at first," Strunk said. ones look up to them. It's re- "He'd say, 'Oh, I know how to ally beautiful, watching them do this. I just didn't know the work together. I think t h ey words they were using.' But learn much morefrom each besides that, he's done great other than they could from in the transition, and I don't me." think there's anything to be According to the Oregon worried about." Montessori Association, about Louise Wilson, who leads 3,000 students statewide are the elementary program, said enrolled in Montessori pro- she thinks the slow start to grams, up from about 2,500 enrOllment Can be linked tO ua two years ago. However, only mentality that we have great between 600 and 700 of those public schools in Bend.

where you can go K-12 in Montessori, we need to have B orn hopes to build a future for he r k i ndergarten-through-second-grade school in her preschool class, which is currently at capacity "It takes time to grow, and

how Oregon should marshal taxpayermoney for education

munities about what are we

in the 2015-17 state budget.

Those decisions, which

to continue," Born said. "It's

definitely our goal to eventually add 9- to 12-year-olds, so

~IW~

r~v

Similarly, students who at-

improve reading instruction tend school regularly are likefrom preschool through grade ly to learn to read, pass their three so that more third-grad- classesand earn diplomas; ers can read welL students who miss more than In every speech she gives, at 10 percent of ninth-grade are

80/60/t 85/59/t 88/58/t

sgns/s 91/75/t

94n2/pc 80/63/t 92/73/t 95n4/I

94m/pc 97ng/s

84/55/t 91/76/pc 69/50/I 66/51/sh 76/58/pc 77/49/s 91/81/I

sgn7/s

83/65/s 71/49/s 68/56/pc 79/65/s 74/58/t 94/67/s 84/78/t

I

I

Mecca Mexico City

111/85/0.00 109/86/n 76/56/0.05 74/55/I Montreal 82/66/0.00 77/60/I Moscow 84/61/0.00 81/63/pc Nairobi 70/59/0.03 75/54/c Nassau 91/79/0.28 92/79/pc New Delhi 95/82/0.02 90/80/I Osaka 86/73/0.17 87/78/I Oslo 73/63/0.67 70/54/I Ottawa 81/61/0.09 76/53/I Paris 73/59/0.00 78/62/pc Ric de Janeiro 90/69/0.00 71/61/c Rome 84/64/0.00 84/67/n Santiago 61/37/0.00 64/38/pc Snn Paulo 84/61/0.00 63/52/c Snppcrc 86/74/1.19 80/71/r Seoul 84/75/0.10 87/73/pc Shanghai 95/80/0.04 95/81/pc Singapore 86/81/0.44 88n8/t Stockholm 88/68/0.00 83/64/s Sydney 63/45/0.00 66/42/n Taipei 93/81/0.03 91/78/t Tei Aviv 88/73/0.00 88n5/pc Tokyo 93/81/0.01 93/80/s Toronto 82/64/0.18 75/58/I Vancouver 77/63/0.00 75/59/s Vienna 79/64/0.07 79/63/I Warsaw 91/68/0.19 82/64/t

109/84/s 72/56/t 76/58/pc 83/62/s 76/57/c

9Ong/s 90/78/t 87/76/t

70/53/pc 77/56/pc 72/60/t 74/59/s 86/66/s 53/34/r 72/54/s 80/69/sh 84/71/sh

94ng/sh 87/77/t 77/61/I 68/44/s 92/79/t 89/74/s

92/79/pc 76/58/pc 73/57/s 77/61/c 76/63/I

The Blue Crossand BlueShield Federal Employee Programpaystotal cost of 2 Miracle-

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

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she has not yet turned around results of Oregon schools in

' •

' •

ways that can be measured. But she vows she will: "I think

you will see some great stuff." Golden has a small staff,

She doesn't have the power to orderschools to teach reading

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in a particular way, but she plans to highlight proven techniques and the work of successful schools to "create the vision, create the excitement"

for schools to follow suit, she sard. She asked: Given that 75

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79/59/t 87/59/t 74/65/t

Hearing aids atNOCOSTto federal workers, retirees 8 spouses!

kids get to age 4, they might embrace the idea and choose

2015, need to be made soon, and Golden is taking part in near-weekly public meetings in which possibilities are being aired and debated and will

90 percent of the time and get them reading at grade level by But she is also gearing up third grade. for efforts she will push during At least 85 percent of poor the coming school yearreaders who get help before steps she will have to try to ac- third grade can be brought up complish without the sway of to average reading ability; but state millions. 75 percentofstruggling readShe told The Oregonian ers who don't get help until newspaper this week that her after grade three will continue top priorities for 2014-15 are to to have reading problems all inspire and encourage school their life. So says a glossy broleaders to do things differently chure, with footnotes citing the to accomplish two goals: re- research, that Golden hands duce Oregon's sky-high rates out everywhere she goes.

94ns/I 95m/s

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Miracle-Ear Hearing Aid Genter is NOWoffering ...

Pointing to research

be whittled down.

80/60/t 79/53/t

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92/66/0.00 93no/s

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w on't affect s t udents a n d classrooms until September

better results if they can get students to attend more than

94/74/pc

58/50/pc 108/80/s 87ng/r 92/70/pc

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going to focus on communicating with parents about what

"I am going to talk to com- to have a worse absenteeism problem. Only 68 percent of going to do together," she said. students in Oregon's class of 2012 graduated on time — a Research is on her side, she

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA

83/63/0.98 84/69/0.33 86/60/0.01 87/64/0.00 90/66/0.00 87/69/0.00 89/62/0.00 81/62/1.74 92/71/0.00

with the preschool, we're now

PORTLAND — O r e gon's early reading instruction, and nearly20 percent of Oregon chief education officer, Nancy to seek cooperation in finding students missed at least 10perGolden, is busy presiding over ways to quickly improve each cent of the school year in 2012Commtmity'S reSultS, She Said.

Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

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with 18 students.

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 G o lf, C3 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 Motor sports, C2 NFL, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

GOLF

LITTLE LEAGUEBASEBALL

Bend player in U.S. Mid-Am SISTERS —A Bend golfer has qualified for the 2014 U.S.Mid-Amateur Championship. James Chrisman, 45, shot a 2-under-par 70, then survived a three-way playoff for two berths in an18-hole Mid-Am qualifier MondayatAspenLakesGolf Course. Chrisman birdied the par-518th hole to enter the playoff with Luke Bakke, of Seattle, and Joel Johnson, of Portland, and Johnson's triple bogey in the playoff opened the door for Chrisman andBakke. The U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship — which is limited to golfers age 25and older with handicap indexes of 3.4 or lower — will

Ben Nort wins2n strai t • Team is in good position to qualify for semifinals after victory By Landon Negri For The Bulletin

SAN BERNARDINO, Ca-

lif. — It is not as easy as flipping the proverbial switch, but it has certainly appeared Eric Reed / For The Bulletin

Bend North's Andrew Lovejoy takes a swing against Alaska's Eagle River during Monday's Northwest Regional game in San Bernardino, California. North won10-2.

that way. Bend North relied on an

explosive inning for the second consecutive game, scoring four times in the

third inning Monday and then running away from Eagle River (Alaska) Knik for

more hits — he is now hitting.500 with five RBIs in

an important 10-2 victory at the Little League Northwest

state champions racked up 10 hits.

Regional at Al Houghton Stadium. Jackson Murphy went 2 for 2 with two RBIs, Flynn

Lovejoy went 2 for 4 and Evan Scalley added two

the tourney — as the Oregon "One thing leads to another, and then we're rolling," said Murphy, Bend's leadoff hitter. "When we play our game, that's what happens." See Bend North/C4

Nextup Bend North vs. Montana When:4:30 p.m. today Online:ESPN3

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

be held Sept. 6-11 at

Saucon Valley Country Club in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. — Bulletin staff report

TRACK8r FIELD

• As fall practice begins,expectations at Oregonand Oregon State differ greatly

Locals place at Hershey finals HERSHEY, Pa. -

Three Central Oregon track and field standouts competed Saturday at the final Hershey's Track and Field GamesNorth American Finals. Redmond's Jeremiah Schwartz placed fourth in the 9- and10-yearold boys standing long jump, going 6 feet, 10

s•'

% ((ser((.e ~

t/z inches. Lexi Miller, of

Sisters, was fourth in the 9-10 girls100-meter

dash in15.96 seconds. And Bend's Cambree Scott finished11th in

the13-14 girls standing long jump, recording a leap of 7-0t/z.

G

All three local athletes qualified for the championshi p meetby winning local and state competitions. — Bulletin staffreport

WOMEN'5

BASKETBALL Girl, 13, commits to N.C. State RALEIGH, N.C.

Andy Cripe/ Corvallis Gazette-Times

-

Jada Peebleswas a 13-year-old star as a seventh-grader last season. Nowshe isa North Carolina State basketball recruit. Peebles, who accepted a scholarship with the Wolfpack on Friday, will be 14 in October and is expected to graduate high school in 2019. Jada, who stands 5 feet 7, is the daughter of Danny Peebles, aformer Wolfpack football and track star. Monique Peebles, her mother, also is an N.C. State graduate. Jada Peebles is among the younger players ever to makea college commitment. Chris Leak, who starred at quarterback for Florida, was offered a football scholarship as an eighth-grader byWake Forest. "Her age wasthe really big thing during our thought process when we started thinking about her making such a big commitment," said Danny Peebles. "Does a13-year-old really understand what thismeans? Maybe not usually, but this was an unusual situation." Jada's commitment is not binding on her or N.C. State. Shecannot sign a binding national letter of intent until October 2018. — The (Raleigh, N.O) News & Observer

Members of the Oregon State football team warm up during the first day of fall camp Monday in Corvallis.

• Ducks QB Mariota: 'I wanted to come back andenjoyanotheryearwith the guys' By Mark Morical

Monday at Autzen Stadium,

The Bulletin

just before the official start of

EUGENE — For Marcus Mariota, this season is not

the Ducks' preseason camp.

about unfinished business,

Mariota — who passed up the chance to be the possible

and it is not national champi-

No. 1 overall NFL draft pick

onship or bust. Th soft-spoken Oregon junior quarterback, and perhaps the best college football player in the country, is just glad to be back with his boys.

this past spring by returning

"For me,Iw anted to come

back and enjoy another year with the guys," Mariota said

Firstup

By Zack Hall Oregon State vs Portland State When:1 p.m., Aug. 30

to school — leads a Duck team that once again has

high expectations. Oregon is ranked No. 4 in the presea-

son coaches' poll and was picked by the media to win the Pac-12. SeeDucks /C3

• Beavers coachRiley:'W ehavea long way to go to look likefootball out there'

Oregon vs. South Dakota When:7:30 p.m., Aug. 30

The Bulletin

CORVALLIS — Midway

through offensive drills, Oregon State football coach Mike Riley screamed instruc-

tions in the face of a lineman who had just missed an assignment. Luckily for the Beavers, they have 27 more practices to go to get it right. Oregon State opened its preseason camp Monday at the Tommy Prothro Football

Complex, just northwest of Reser Stadium, and the mood was decidedly positive despite the occasional instruction outbursts. "Boy, do we have a long way to go to look like football out there," said Riley on the field after practice on a swel-

tering afternoon in the mid Willamette Valley. "I think there's talent, but

we're not a smooth-operating machine right at this minute."

SeeBeavers/C3

PaC-12POII flORTH:Oregon,Stanford, Washington, Oregon St., Washington St., California SOUTH: UCLA,Southern California, Arizona St., Arizona, Utah, Colorado

BEND ELKS WEEKLY

Close'scareerhasbeendonethe hard way By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

Zach Close is sometimes re-

Inside • Elks stats, and look at the upcoming week,C4

munity College in Salem after playing dub baseball at Central Oregon Community College.

diminutive 5-foot-8, 125-pound

one step, because despite the roundabout nature of his trek

outfielder as a 2008 Crook

has led to what he is today:

minded that, at age 23, he is a

tad old to be a college baseball player. Back at school in Iowa, he

He would not second-guess

says, teammates dubbed him "Dad." But as Close reflects on his journey, he would not change a thing. He would not change the fact

County High School graduate. He would not reverse his de-

an NAIA Gold Glove outfielder, a regular starter for cision to take a year off from the Bend Elks, and a player baseball altogether. Nor does he who has exceeded everyone's regret that he had to try out just expectations.

that he went unrecruited as a

to walk on at Chemeketa Com-

See Elks/C4

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Zach Close uns toward second baseduring a gameagainst Victoria at Vince GennaStadium in Bendearlier this season.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY Time TV/Radio 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. MLB 5 p.m. E SPN2 7 p.m. MLB 7 p.m. Roo t

TUESDAY

Little League, Southwest Regional semifinal MLB, Detroit at N.Y. Yankees

Little League, Southwest Regional semifinal MLB, L.A. Angels at L.A. Dodgers MLB, Atlanta at Seattle SOCCER U-20 Women's World Cup,Germany vs. USA

3:45 p.m. ESPNU

WEDNESDAY BASEBALL

Little League, Midwest Regional semifinal Little League, Southeast Regional semifinal Little League, Midwest Regional semifinal MLB, Atlanta at Seattle Little League, Southeast Regional semifinal Little League, Southwest Regional final MLB, Boston at St. Louis

8 a.m. E SPN2 1 0.m.

ES P N2

noon E S P N2 12:30 p.m. Root 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E SPN2 5 p.m. E S PN

GOLF

U.S. Women's Amateur SOCCER MLS All-Stars vs. Bayern Munich

noon

Golf

6:30 p.m. ESPN2

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF ULTIMATE FRISBEE Storm PlayerS headed to nationalS — SevenSummit High ultimate players haveearned spots on Dregon's select team andwill represent the state Friday andSaturday at the 2014Youth ClubChampionships in Blaine, Minnesota. TheStorm's Cameron Ficher, Chris Williams, RyanSchluter, Carl Akacich, Jaydra Rotalante, Morgan Caldwell and KaiyanaPetrus werechosen for the co-ed all-star team. More information about the Youth ClubChampionships can befound at www.usaultimate.org.

FOOTBALL Family Of Cal player to file wrOngful death Suit — Attorneys representing the family of former California football player Ted Agu are planning to file a wrongful death lawsuit against the Regents of the University of California. Agu died following an offseason training run Feb. 7.Los Angeles-based firm Panish, Shea 8 Boyle said in a news release Mondaythat Cal's training staff took too long to respond to Agu's symptoms of "extreme fatigue" during the run.t. The release mentioned sickling, which would indicate Aguhadsickle cell trait. Asked to clarify Agu's medical condition, family attorney Robert Glassman said moredetails of the casewould be announced at today's news conference. Cal's athletic department said in astatement that it could not comment on thepending litigation becauseofficials haven't seen the lawsuit.

BengalS QBDaltOn SignS multiyear deal — TheCincinnatl Bengals aremakingAndy Dalton one ofthe highest-paid quarterbacks in the league.Dalton signed asix-year extension onMonday. According to multiple reports, the deal is worth up to $115million and will prevent Dalton playing out the final year of his rookie contract.Dalton has passed for more than3,000 yards in each of his three seasons. He led the Bengals to an11-5 record andAFCNorth title in 2013.

BASEBALL WCL Easl Division W L Y akima Valey Pippins 31 1 8 W enatchee AppleSox 26 2 2 W alla WallaSweets 2 4 24 KelownaFalcons 14 33 South Division W L CorvaffisKnights 32 16 BendElks 28 20 MedfordRogues 24 25 K lamath Falls Gems 12 37 Wesl Division W L Beffingham Bell s 34 15 V ictoria Harbourcats 2 2 26 C owlitz BlackBears 2 2 27 K itsap BlueJackets 2 1 26

Pci GB .633 .532 4'/z

Pct GB .667 .583 4 .490 8'/z .245 20'/2

Pct GB .688 .458 11 .449 11'/2

.447 11'/z

Transactions BASEBALL

Xl~

RA 8 12 14 17 15 24

Monday'sGames Oregon10, Alaska2 Washington 5, Idaho2 Today'sGames Wyomingvs.Alaska,8:30a.m. Montan avs.Oregon,4:30p.m. Wyomingvs.Washington, 7p.m. Wednesday'sGames Wyoming vs.Idaho,4:30p.m. Montan avs.Alaska,7p.m. Thursday'sGames No.2seedvs. No.3seed, 2p.m. No.1 seed vs. No.4 seed,6 p.m.

Bend North10, Eagle River(Alaska) Knik 2 Bend North 004 330 - 10 10 2 Alaska 002 000 — 2 5 2 Steelham mer, Scaffey(4), Ruhl(5) andLovejoy; Smith,Olmstead(2),Gray(3), Cambridge(4),Frizzeffe (5), Nevegs (5) andFugere. W—Steelhammer (BN). L- Gray (A).SV- Ruhl(BN).3B—Bend: Murphy.

GOLF Local

BASKETBALL U.S. CutS3 frOm WOrld CUP rOSter — A person with knowledge of the details says the U.S.men's national team hascut John Wall, Bradley Bealand PaulMillsap, leaving the roster at16 players. With Paul George lost to a broken right leg, the Americans will have to drop four more players before theWorld Cup of Basketball later this month in Spain. TheAmericans madethe cuts Monday that had been planned for Saturday but delayedafter George's injury. The remaining players will report to Chicago for practices that begin Aug. 14. — From staffand wire reports

U.S. Mid-AmChampionship Qualifier 18-hole strokeplay Monday atAspenLakesGolfCourse Par:72 Qualifiers 70* LukeBakke,Seatle 70* James Chrisman,Bend Alternates JoelJohnson,Portland 70 JasonWood, Portland 71 MichaelKloenne,West Linn 71 RogerEichhorn,Bend *Wonplayoff

Locals

+fvr/r'//

DEALS

NORTHWESTREGION At San Bernardino, Calif. L 0 1 1 1 1 3

LucieSafaroya(15), CzechRepublic, def.Sorana

Cirstea,Romania, 6-4, 6-2. Magdalena Rybarikova,Slovakia,def. AlisonRiske, UnitedStates,6-1,6-3. DominikaCibulkova(10), Slovakia,def. Francoise Abanda,Canada,6-1,3-6, 6-0. Yulia Putintseva,Kazakhstan, def. FlaviaPennetta

(12),Italy,7-6(5),6-3. SloaneStephens, UnitedStates, def.Aleksandra Wozniak, Canada, 6-3, 6-0.

Little League W 3 2 1 1 0 0

BarboraZahlavovaStrycova, CzechRepublic, def. Roberta Vinci, Italy,7-5,7-5. KlaraKoukalova,CzechRepublic, def.Kiki Bertens, Netherlands, 7-5, 7-6(5). Alize Cornet,France,def. LaurenDavis, United States,6-3, 7-5. Shelby Rogers,United States, def. Ajla Tomljanovic,Croatia,6-4, 7-6(5). HeatherWatson, Britain, def. TerezaSmitkova, CzechRepublic, 6-4,5-7, 6-4.

.298 16

Monday'sGames Medford7,Klamath4 Kitsap6,Beffingham2 Yakima Vaffey11,Cowlilz 8 Today'sGame KlamathFalls atMedford, 6:35 p.m. Wenat cheeatKelowna,6:35p.m. Beffingham at Kitsap, 6;35p.m. BendatCorvaff is,6:40p.m. VictoriaatWala Walla, 7:05p.m. Cowlitz at YakimaValley, 7:05p.m. Wednesday'sGames Wenat cheeatKelowna,6:35p.m. Beffingham atKitsap,6:35 p.m. KlamathFals atMedford,6:35p.m. BendatCorvaff is,6:40p.m. VictoriaatWala Walla, 7:05p.m. Cowlitz at YakimaValley, 7:05p.m. Thursday'sGames Wenat cheeatKelowna,6:35p.m. Beffingham atKitsap, 6:35p.m. VictoriaatWala Walla, 7:05p.m. Bendat Corvaffis, 7:15p.m. Friday's Games WallaWallaatKelowna,6:35p.m. Beffingham atCowlitz, 6:35p.m. CorvaffisatMedford, 6:35 p.m. KlamathFalls atBend,6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Wenatchee,7:05p.m. KitsapatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Saturday'sGames Beffingham atCowliz, 6:35p.m. CorvaffisatMedford, 6:35 p.m. KlamathFalls atBend,6:35p.m. WallaWallaatKelowna,6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Wenatchee,7:05p.m. KitsapatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Sunday'sGames KitsapatVictoria, 1:05p.m. Beffingham atCowlitz, 5:05p.m. Klamat hFaff satBend,505pm. YakimaValey at Wenatchee,6:05p.m. WallaWallaatKelowna,6:05p.m. CorvaffisatMedford, 6:35p.m. End ofRegular Season

Washington Oregon Alaska Montana Wyoming Idaho

6-1, 7-5.

.500 6r/2

Monday'sSummary

Francisco Giants pitcher Matt Cain will haveseason-ending surgery next week to removebone chips in his right elbow. Manager Bruce Bochy said "it was inevitable" that Cainwould have surgery. Bochy said after Monday's 4-3 win over the New York Mets that Cain would have the operation and look forward to getting ready for spring training. The 29-year-old Cain hasn't pitched since July 9. The three-time All-Star played catch at Citi Field on Friday to test out how hewas feeling. Cain was2-7 with a 4.18ERAin15 starts.

CoupeRogers Monday atUniprix Stadium, Montreal Purse: S2.44million (Premier) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round SabineLisicki,Germany,def. SaraErrani(13), Italy,

WESTCOASTLEAGUE AR TimesPDT

BASEBALL GiantS' Cain to get SeaSOn-ending eldOWSurgery — San

WTA

IN THE BLEACHERS

78

ysg~g

AmericanLeague

BALTIMOREORIOLES — Optioned RHP Ryan

Webb toNorfolk(IL). SentRHPUbaldo Jimenezto Norfolkfor arehabassignment. CHICAGO WHITESOX — OptionedRHPTaylor Thompson to Charlotte (IL). Selectedthecontract of RHPMaikelCletofromCharlotte. CLEVELANDINDIANS — Optioned RHP Zach McAffisterto Columbus(IL). HOUSTO NASTROS—SentOFGeorgeSpringerto In the Bleachers@2014 sreve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick QuadCities(MWL) for arehabassignment. KANSASCITYROYALS— AssignedCBrettHayes outright toOmaha(PCL). MINNESOTA TWINS— OptionedLHPLoganDarnell to Roch ester (IL). ClaimedOFJordanSchafer off BASKETBALL SOCCER waiversfromAtlanta. NEWYORKYANKEES— PlacedRHPDavtdPhelps WNBA on the 15-dayDL. RecalledRHPMatt Daleyfrom MLS lkes-Barre (IL). MAJORLEAGUESOCCER WOIBEN'S NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION Scranton/Wi TAMPABA Y RAYS— Released LHPErik Bedard AH TimesPDT AH TimesPDT andRHPJuanCarlosOviedo.Sent28TimBeckhamto Charlotte(FSL)forarehabassignment. EasternConference EasternConference TEXASRANGERS— SentLHP DerekHollandto W L T Pts GF GA W L P c t G B Round Rock(PCL) for arehabassignment. PlacedC Sporting KansasCity 11 5 6 39 32 20 Atlanta 17 10 .630 C hris Gime nezonpaternity leave. D .C. United 11 6 4 37 32 2 1 Indiana 13 15 .464 4'/r T ORONTO BLUEJAYS — Assigned OF Cole TorontoFC 8 7 5 2 9 2 9 2 8 Washington 13 15 .464 4'/r NewYork 6 6 1 0 2 8 3 5 3 3 NewYork 1 2 15 .444 5 Gigespieoutrightto Buffalo(IL). National League Columbus 6 7 9 27 2 6 2 8 Chicago 12 16 .429 5'/r ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS—Sent OFA.J. PolN ew England 8 12 2 26 2 9 3 5 Connecticut 1 1 18 .379 7 lock to Ren o (P C L) for arehabassignment. P hiladelphia 5 8 9 24 34 3 6 WesternConference MILWAUKEE BREWERS— SentLHPWei-Chung Houston 6 11 4 2 2 2 3 4 0 W L Pct GB Wangto theAZLBrewersfor arehabassignment. Chicago 3 5 1 3 2 2 2 8 34 x-Phoenix 23 4 . 8 52 NEWYORKMETS— DesignatedOFBobbyAbreu Montreal 3 13 5 1 4 2 1 3 9 x-Minnesota 22 6 . 7 86I ' /z WesternConference LosAngeles 13 15 .464 tg'/r for assignment.Recalled OFKirk Nieuwenhuis from Las Vegas(PCL). W L T Pts GF GA SanAntonio 1 3 16 .448 11 SANFRANCISCO GIANTS— AssignedINFNick Seattle 1 2 6 2 3 8 3 5 2 8 Tulsa 10 19 .345 14 RealSaltLake 9 4 9 3 6 3 3 2 7 Seattle 10 20 .333 14'/r Noonanoutright to Fresno(PCL). Agreedto terms with LHP JoseDe Paula ona minor leaguecontract. Los Angeles 9 4 6 3 3 3 2 1 7 x-clinched playoffspot Sent OFAngel Pagan to Fresno(PCL) for a rehab FC Dallas 9 7 6 33 3 5 3 1 assignment. Colorado 8 8 6 3 0 31 28 Today'sGames WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — PlacedOF Nate Vancouver 6 4 1 1 2 9 3 1 2 9 Chicagoat Connecticut, 4p.m. Portland 6 7 9 2 7 3 6 3 8 Minnesota McLouthonthe15-day DL,retroactive to Saturday. atlndiana,4 p.m. SanJose 6 8 5 2 3 2 3 2 0 New YorkatWashington,4p.m. RecalledOFStevenSouzaJr.fromSyracuse(IL). ChivasUSA 6 10 5 2 3 2 1 3 4 Atlantaat Phoenix, 7p.m. AmericanAssociation FOOTBALL Tulsa atLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Wednesday'sGame National Football League BayernMunichvs. MLSAII-Stars,atPortland,6:30 p.m. CINCINN ATI BENGALS—SignedQBAndy Dalton Friday's Game to a six-year contract extension. FOOTBALL SanJoseat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. CLEVEL ANDBROWNS— Signed DBRoyce AdSaturday'sGames ams. MontrealatPhiladelphia,4 p.m. NFL Preseason JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— ActivatedCBAlan Toront oFCatColumbus,4:30p.m. Ball fromthe PUPlist. AU TimesPDT ColoradoatFCDallas,6 p.m. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Signed SChris Crocker. D.C.UnitedatRealSalt Lake,7p.m. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — PlacedOTMichaelBowie Thursday'sGames ChivasUSAat Portland,7:30 p.m. on thewaived/injured list. ReleasedLBBrandonDenIndianapolisatN.Y.Jets,4 p.m. SundaytsGames markand WRRonaldJohnson.SignedDTAndruPulu. NewEnglandatWashington,4:30p.m. SportingKansasCity atVancouver,5 p.m. ClaimedOTCoryBrandonoffwaiversfromArizona. San Francrsco atBalttmore, 4.30 p.m. NewYorkat Chicago,5 p.m. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Placed WRJerry Cincinnatiat KansasCity,5 p.m. HoustonatSeatle FC,7:30p.m. RiceJr.onthewaived-injured list. SignedDLJeremy Seattle atDenver, 6p.m. Towns. DallasatSanDiego, 7p.m. HOCKEY NWSL National HockeyLeague NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE BUFFALOSABRES— NamedBryanTrottier,Danny AU TimesPDT TENNIS FlynnandTomCoolen assistant coachesandArturs Irbe goalie coach. W L T Pts GF GA COLLEGE ATP World Tour Seattle 15 1 5 50 45 17 COLOR ADO—Announced freshmantransfer OL F C Kansas City 11 6 5 38 3 6 2 9 RogersCup ShaneCaffahanhasbeendeclaredeligible to compete W ashington 10 8 4 34 3 5 4 1 Monday atRexall Centre, Toronto this fall. Portland 9 7 6 3 3 38 33 Purse: $3.147million (Maslers1000) DARTMOUTH— NamedShannonDoepkingsoftChicago 7 7 7 2 8 25 22 Surface:Hard-Outdoor ball coach. W estern NewYork 8 11 3 2 7 3 7 32 Singles HOFSTRA— NamedDenni sPapadatoswrestling S ky Blue FC 5 8 7 22 22 3 4 First Round Houston 5 12 3 1 8 2 1 3 5 Marin Cilic (15),Croatia,def.DenisIstomin, Uz- coach. LSU —Reinstatedjunior SJalenMigs, Boston 4 14 2 1 4 3 3 4 9 bekistan,6-2,4-6,7-5. MICHIGAN STATE— DismissedfreshmanFKenny JeremyChardy, France,def. FedericoDelbonis, Kami nskifromits men'sbasketball program. Wednesday'sGames Argentina,6-3,5-7,6-4. BostonatFCKansasCity,5 p.m. BenoitPaire,France,def. AlejandroFaffa,ColomHoustonatSeatle FC,7p.m. bia, 6-7(3), 6-4, 6-2. FISH COUNT Saturday'sGames JulienBenneteau,France,def. LleytonHewitt, AusUpstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack FCKansasCityatChicago,5p.m. tralia, 6-1,6-2. SkyBlueFCatHouston,6p.m. Kevin Anderson,SouthAfrica, def.ThanasiKok- chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedon Monday. WashingtonatSeattle FC,7p.m. kinakis,Australia,4-6,6-2, 6-3. Sunday'sGames Chnk Jchnk StlhdWsff hd Tim Smycz ek, UnitedStates, def.TobiasKamke, PortlandatBoston,3:30 p.m. Bonneville 44 1 15 4 3 , 281 1,543 Germany, 6-3,6-2. T he Daffes 713 2 5 3 1 ,512 8 1 7 MichaelRussell, UnitedStates, def.NicolasMahut, J ohn Day 549 1 5 5 1 ,042 5 7 1 France,6-3,6-3. U.S. Open Cup Jo-WilfredTsonga(13), France,def. EdouardRog- Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, AH TimesPDT er-VasselinFran , ce,7-6 (3), 6-1. jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected Ivan DodigCroati , a, def.JohnIsner (10), United ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedon Monday. SEMIFINALS States,6-4,6-7(4), 6-3. Chnk Jchnk StlhdWsff hd Tuesday,Aug. 12 FelicianoLopez,Spain, def. Roberto Bautista Agut Bonneville 352,037 52,335 118,407 59,168 Philadelphia(MLS)at FCDallas(MLS), 6p.m. The Daffes280,594 40,858 60,753 33,260 (14), Spain7-6 , (7), 6-3. Wednesday,Aug.13 Peter Polansky,Canada,def.JerzyJanowicz,Po- John Day 245,506 36,585 37,930 19,399 Chicago(MLS)atSeattle (MLS),7:30p.m. land,7-6(5),6-4. McNary 224,649 32,092 28,423 14,451

MOTOR SPORTS COMMENTARY

NAKARthe i winnerwithJe an juniorontop By Jenna Fryer The Associated Press

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — It was Jeff

Gordon's championship to lose just a week ago after his record fifth win at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Then Dale Earnhardt Jr.completed a season sweep at Pocono, and now HE is the guy to beat.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. won

lose. They are playing with house sum. He does not have a top-10 finmoney, having fun seeing what ish since the last week of June, but

at Pocono on Sunday

they aremade of before the 10-race

it is not unusual for Johnson, much

like a swimmer, to taper off before

and leads the

Chase. For Gordon, the points leader for

Sprint Cup

14 of the last 15 weeks, it is about

standings.

building the confidence of his team and making his teammates believe a championship is possible. There was no doubt after the Brickyard victory, and he followed it by leading a race-high 63 laps Sunday at Pocono before finishing sixth.

everything is on the line. Then there is Harvick, who seems

Matt Stocum/The Associated Press

Jeff and Junior, two of NASCAR's

biggest stars heating up during this lazy summer stretch of racing. NA-

SCAR really could not ask for anything more. Well, it would not hurt i f T ony Stewart threw his hat into the ring

uar

0

N

oi

p

0

too. As of today, it will be one year since the broken leg that ended his

season, and Stewart has now gone 14 months without a victory. He is on the outside looking in on the Chase

for the Sprint Cup championship field.

not as he does), but it might be time jockeying to make the Final Four for him to block his way into Victory showdown at Homestead. Lane. Maybe Stewart makes it, maybe That would give NASCAR the tri-

he does not — and really, he needs

fecta for its highly anticipated Chase, to be in the Chase because the intenwho move the needle for NASCAR, which for the first time will feature sity is always higher when Smoke and he has just five races remaining elimination rounds and a w i nner- is involved — but that is just anothto grab a win he desperately needs take-all finale. Picture the glee on er element of this win-win time for to make him automatically eligible NASCAR boss Brian France's face NASCAR. to race for the championship. For in Phoenix if it i s some combinaThe powers that be cannot ask now, the only noise Smoke is mak- tion of Junior and Jeff, Smoke and for anything more than the 24 arkd ing on the track is his constant snip- Jimmie Johnson, Brad Keselowski, 88 flexing their muscles right now, ing against blocking (do as he says, Kyle Busch and Kevin Harvick all when neither team has anything to Stewart is one of the few drivers

turning it up several notches when to be up front and in contention ev-

ery week, and Team Penske's Keselowski and Joey Logano. They have a combined seven wins arkd eight

poles between them, and all three are locked into the Chase and lookThe win went to Earnhardt, who ingahead to September. used crew c h ief S teve L etarte's But many drivers do not have strategy to complete the Pocono that luxury just yet, including Matt sweep. It was his third win of the Kenseth, who fell just short of winseason — the same number of vic- ning the title last season. tories Earnhardt earned all of 2006 He is winless so far this year, through 2013 — and came just four and like his Joe Gibbs Racing days after Hendrick M otorsports teammates Kyle Busch and Denny announced Letarte'sreplacement Hamlin, he is not at the same perfor 2014. It showed that the 88 team is not

formance level as he was last sea-

letting up, and Letarte is deter-

points — he is fourth in the stand-

m ined to guide Earnhardt to h i s

ings with five weeks to go — no one can take anything for granted. The story lines are changing every week, and in these dog days of summer, a time when nothing used

first championship before he turns him over to Greg Ives at the end of the season. Both will have to contend with Hendrick teammate Johnson, who

may or may not be playing pos-

son. While Kenseth should get in on

to matter in NASCAR, everything is

going right.



C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

NFL

Tackle battle wide open for Seahawks By Curtis Crabtree The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. — Run-

ning back Marshawn Lynch returned to practice for the first time since reporting to

training camp late last week, but who will block for him at right tackle this season re-

mains in question. The Seahawks released Michael Bowie on Saturday after it was determined that

his injured shoulder would require surgery. B owie, who started eight games as a rookie for the Seahawks, was the favorite to win the

team's starting right tackle job entering training camp. H owever, he

r e ported t o

camp 20 pounds overweight, according to head coach Pete Bend North's Dylan Ruhl slides safe into Eagle River, Alaska's Riley Fugere at home in the third inning during the Little League Northwest Regional at Al Houghton Stadium in San Bernardino, California on Monday. North won 10-2.

Carroll, and he injured his shoulder again on the first day of practice.

Bend North

tle for the starting job shifts firmly to second-round pick

Continued from C1

Justin Britt and veteran Eric Winston. Britt has taken nearly ev-

Photos by Eric Reed/For The Bulletin

Dylan Ruhl were especially productive in Monday's win, reaching base in all eight of their plate appearances. "That's the key," Bend North

manager Dan Ruhl said. "Our first couple batters are both leadoff guys, and we can go

Quinton Patton said. "It

consecutive games over the last seven seasons for the

felt pretty good." The 49ers christen

Houston Texans, K a nsas

Levi's Stadium with their

preseason openeragainst the Denver Broncos on Aug.17.

Bend won handily for the

on. There has been since the

blankedCody,Wyoming, 15-0 on Saturday night after falling to Pacific (Washington), 10-2, in Friday's opener. At 2-1 in pool play (11-1 overall), Bend took a significant step toward qualifying for Thursday's Northwest Region

start of camp," Carroll said. get to keep Michael (Bowie), ing tackle Cory Brandon off but wehave to keep moving waivers from Arizona and and keep going here. This is signing veteran guard Wade a very competitive situation with Britt and with Winston in there, and I think Alvin Bailey will be mixed into this

is — or maybe we're tight with completely rained out at this us being on ESPN (ESPN3, tournament since 1983 — and online). Ruhl, the manager, liked the "But we're always confi- reshuffled schedule. Little League World Series in Scalley later scored on anoth- dent we're going to have that The Bend North players Williamsport, Pennsylvania. er error for a 4-0 lead. inning." spent their off day Sunday at "With winning two games, Right-hander Drew Steel- a local water park. Moving Bend then added three runs I feel our team is more ready in the fourth and three more in hammer got the start and Monday's game back to 1:30 to play," Lovejoy said. "We're fifth to break the game open. went 3 '/ innings for the win. p.m. allowed them a chance to "If you look at every game Dylan Ruhl and Scalley both sleep in and rest, Ruhl noted. more confident now that we we've won, we've had one pitched in relief, as the trio He also liked today's shuffled can win." The big inning has been key explosive inning," Dan Ruhl held Alaska (14-2, 1-1 tourna- schedule, which moved Bend's for Bend North, and it came in said. "Usually, it's around ment) to five hits. game against Billings (Mont.) the third frame Monday. the third, fourth or fifth. For Monday's game was moved B oulder-Arrowhead, w h i c h B.B. Logan led off with some reason, we get off to a back from an 11 a.m. start will be key for seeding, from a walk, and w it h on e out, slow start, or (the other team) to 1:30 p.m. to accommodate 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. "We love the rain gods right Murphy walked before Ruhl has their stud pitcher on the two rare postponementssingled in Bend's first run. mound — I don't know what it Sunday saw the first games now," Ruhl said.

Continued from C1 "Seeing how well I've actually done and improved, it just keeps motivating me to go until I can't go anymore," says Close, who in a t eam-leading 45 games with the Elks this summer is batting.247 with a home run and 17 RBIs. "That's basi-

cally what it is. You play until you've got to hang 'em up. You just have to give it your all." Close has evolved into the symbol of perseverance in the eyes of Jim Richards, owner and general manager of the Elks. Four years ago, when Close was an undersized and

Murphy scored on an error on Scalley's grounder to shortstop, Ruhl moved over and came in on a wild pitch, and

A split-squad Bend team, whichwill include anumber of Central Oregon Bucksplayers, hosts a nonleaguecontest against the San Francisco Seals atVinceGennaStadium at 6:35 tonight, while the Elks travel to Corvallis to open a three-game series against the Knights at 6:45 this evening. Corvallis, currently in first place in the South Division, boasts 6-foot-5-inch, 215-pound right-handed pitcher BrandonChoate, arising senior at Washington. Choate went 4-1 with a 2.54ERAin 21appearances with the Huskiesthis past spring andearned the victory in Washington's 4-2 win over Georgia Tech inthe regional round of the NCAAtournament. In15 games with Corvallis this summer —all in relief — Choate (2-0) owns a 0.87ERAwith eight saves. DnFriday, the Elks return to Genna Stadium to host DennisMorton andtheKlamath Falls Gems. Morton, who recently completed his sophomoreseason at Palomar College in SanMarcos, California, wassecond onthe Cometswith a.321 averagewith ateam-high 34 RBlswhile leading Palomar to a fourth straight Pacific CoastAthletic Conferencechampionship.

coaches f r o m

Ch e meketa AIB, a.315hitterwith a confer-

Community College in Salem ence-leadingfour home runs golf course in summer 2009. began to look at the outfield- and a team-high 17 stolen basHe played Xbox during the er. There was no scholarship es, and a captain who guided winter. money available, but they the Eagles to the MCC chamBut in time he grew to miss invited Close to walk on. He pionship game before being baseball, miss the competition. He m issed being out-

did just that, and in his first

doors every day. Most of all, he missed having teammates.

outfielder for the South Region of the Northwest Athlet-

"Playing for the Elks, he proved that he can play at

In spring 2010, after he

ic Association of Community

this level," Richards says. "He

season, he was a first-team

named to the Rawlings-NAIA Baseball Gold Glove Team.

Pitching g Sheets 17 Cohen 17 Gomez 13 Pratt 16 Carter r Blackwell 6

ab

w

1 2 0 4 3 0 Hamatln 9 1 W ilcox 1 5 1 Bennett 16 1 Thompson 8 4 Guzzon 9 4 M CGtlff 1 0 3 Katll 7 1 Schtlieder 8 1 Bauer 4 0 T otals 1 8 9 27

r

I

1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 4 i 2 3 2

h

ip

2b hr

h

r

2 9 . 01 3 4 25 . 1 1 5 5 12 . 1 1 0 4 3 2 . 2 2 61 3 3 2 . 0 2 81 5 7.2 8 4 3 5 . 03 8 1 8 1 7 . 01 5 8 3 5 . 0 3 62 2 43 4 3 8 2 3 3 0 . 2 2 71 9 4 6 . 0 4 43 2 23 . 0 3 3 1 6

little bit, too, so he's a valuable

t ended the familiarity w i t h baseball that he had with the

er bb hbp k 3 3 5 12

1 2 t 3 3 1 1 2 6 5 4

35 37 13 34 20 4 16 13 17 31 46

2b hr era baa whip 0 . 93 1 . 42 1 . 45 2 . 48 3 . 09 3 . 52 3 . 60 3 . 70 3 . 85 4 . 15 4 . 98 5 . 67 5 . 87 6 . 98

athletes, they're done at some point. It happens to everybody. It's just a matter of when."

It is sometimes strange for Close to think back to where he came from, and how he ar-

rived here. He often challenges others to look at team photos from his

Crook County High baseball days and pick him out of the group. Here is a hint, Close offers: "I'm the shortest guy and the skinniest guy in the front row."

Now here he is, six years later, an accomplished small-col-

.134 0.55 lege outfielder who went unre.167 0.72 .208 1.25 cruited, under the radar and .215 1.19 into the spotlight. .224 1.13 "I've definitely surprised .250 1.43 .266 1.17 myself," Close concedes. "But .224 1.18 I know I'm capable of more. I .279 1.60 .239 1.49 feel like I'm still improving ev.235 1.73 ery single day." .250 1.39 — Reporter: 541-383-0307, .347 1.83 .337 2.00 glucasCibendbultetin.com.

1 6.20 .333 z33 4.15 .245 1.39

AIB baseball, Close is known to take freshmen, green in

the ways of collegiate competition, under his wing and pass along his patronal wisdom. After all, Close has been

Elks right into the AIB pro- around the block — several gram. He's got some natural times, actually. "I wish they all had it," talent. When you see the way he roams the outfield, he's got Hunter says of Close's basewheels, he's got instincts, and ball seasoning and his rehe's got baseball savvy." newed passion for the game. "Because he is older, I think "We talk c o nstantly about he understands more t han that with our teams (at George some of these other guys that Fox University, where Hunter you might not play forever, is the longtime head coach). that you should take advan-

We talk about it with these

tage of playing every day,"

guys (the Elks). You try to get

Elks coach M a rt y

very patient with him, mak-

ing sure his body is in great shape and all. We're just going to bring him along," Carlinemen on Monday, claim- roll said.

GSI47il McGuff10, Thompson 8, Carter 7, Guzzon6, Haman n 5, 6ennett 4 Kaul,Schnieder3.S (16): Sheets 9, Cohen 6, Praii1.

play and basically just ex-

shape on his own but needs some time still to work into

sald. Seattle also added two new

2 0 1 1 1 0 4 2 u 8 8 3 3 2 2 0 14 3 6 3 7 5 0 1 15 20 6 1 20 26 8 2 17 25 5 1 29 20 u 49 5 1 15 9 2 12 3 3 1 1 9 a 2 8 1 6 15 10 1 14 3 5 1 34 5 6 6 2 1 3 t 1 20 431.1 419 242 199 181 48 378 62 28

was not overmatched when he went to AIB. He was very comfortable in his ability to

said. "We want to continue to

guy in that regard," Carroll

rbi

3 4 2 9

"We're hoping (they) can bring us something," Carroll

Okung is back to full speed. football shape. "We're going to take our "Alvin has got the flexibility to play a couple different time and make sure that we spots. He's played guard a do that. We've always been

bb h b p i t avg sig obp ops Carpenter 29 113 23 3 7 u 3 28 0 3 23 .327 .504 .398 .902 King 38 1 5 2 2 8 4 6 8 2 23 9 0 24 .303 AOB .342 .750 Gill 5 14 2 4 2 0 1 3 0 3 .286 .429 A12 .841 Erlandson 30 5 3 1 5 15 1 0 6 3 2 18 .283 .302 .345 .647 Newton 37 1 1 5 1 9 3 1 6 1 24 22 13 14 .270 .365 A29 .794 Brooks 3 7 1 3 4 2 3 3 6 6 1 10 16 7 20 .269 .336 .376 .712 Wildung 23 5 8 1 5 15 3 2 9 14 0 23 .259 A14 .397 .80 Close 4 5 1 5 4 2 2 3 8 5 i 17 16 7 20 .247 .299 .343 .642 Osuna 4 1 1 3 7 1 7 3 1 4 2 21 20 4 29 .226 .299 .340 .639 Carroll 2 8 68 11 15 3 3 13 6 4 17 .221 .397 .316 .713 Roque 2 0 48 5 10 1 0 6 8 1 12 .208 .229 .333 .562 Brunson 8 22 t 4 1 0 1 2 0 10 .182 .227 .250 .477 Hurd 8 14 0 2 1 0 2 0 i 4 .143 .214 .200 A14 Ferguson 14 2 1 0 2 0 0 4 3 2 4 .095 .095 .259 .354 Larimei 1 4 34 3 3 0 0 2 0 3 6 .088 .088 .162 .250 Totals 4 8 1 ,651 282 433 80 2 2 244 221 67 308.262 .354 .369 .723 3B (3): King,Newton1. SB-CS(51-15): Close0-0, Cstlna10-3,Erlandson7-1, Newton3-1, Roqtle3-0, Brooks2-0, King,Larimer1-0;Carpenter, Gil, Hurd0-1. B atling g

With the Gems this summer, Morton is batting .336 with10 douso-so ballplayer coming out of bles, four homerunsand 23RBls in 31 gamesplayed. high school, Richards saw him playing at COCC. Richards' one observation: This guy has no chance of playing at the enrolled at COCC, Close re- Colleges. next level. turned to the baseball diaDoors began to open. After Yet here is Close, now at mond. Playing for the COCC his final year at Chemeketa 5 -11 and 173 pounds — a club team, his passion for the in 2013, Close was invited to standout for NAIA AI B Col- game returned. join the Bend Elks. After AIB "I fell in love with it again," coaches saw him play with lege of Business, a Midwest Collegiate Conference first- he says. "I saw that it was go- Chemeketa, Close was ofteam outfielder and a Bend ing to help me get through fered a scholarship at the Iowa-based school, which was Elks standout. school. So I kept pursuing it." "He's going to play baseball While at C OCC, Close preparing for its inaugural as long as he can," Richards learned of the Central Oregon baseball season the following says. "He just takes advantage Bucks, the Elks' developmen- spring. "I kind of opened the eyes of o f whatever opportunity i s tal squad. He played for the handed to him and makes the Bucks in summer 2010 and Chemeketa (coaches)," Close most of it. It tells me a lot about again the following year after says. "They told me I exceeded him." another spring with COCC. their expectations and more." Ignored by college coaches Richards, who d o ubted He heard similar sentiments coming outof Crook Coun- Close's chances from the start, from AIB head coach Chad ty, Close stepped away from had a change of heart. "He's Harris, who, according to baseball. He was upset and surprised me," the veteran Close, recruited the outfielder unsure if he even wanted to baseball man admits today. to be the player he was. But continue his career. So h e During Close's second sum- Close became much more. took the year off. He worked mer with the Bucks, in 2011, He became ateam leader at on the maintenance crew at Sunriver Resort's Woodlands

absence, but he could enter the battle at right tackle once

Elks stats

Elks ondeck

Smith.

thing too, eventually. It's a re- work to make this position as ally good spot for us in that competitive as possible." we do have depth and we do Lynch was limited as he have competition." took just a handful of snaps Left tackle Russell Okung duringMonday's practice.He took part in individual drills did not take part in any offfor the first time after offsea- seasonpractices and missed son foot surgery. Alvin Bailey the first week of t r aining has been taking the first-team camp in a contract dispute. snaps at left tackle in Okung's Carroll said Lynch kept in

Bend North's Drew Steelhammer pitched 3 1/3 innings for the win Monday.

berth and all but clinched the

Elks

— The Associated Press

"It's unfortunate that we don't

semifinals. Pacific, with a 5-2

No. 1 seed. The top four of the six teams in the regional field move on to bracket play, and the survivor there goes to the

An allotted total of 10,000 tickets were dis-

ry. Winston has started 119

second consecutive game — it

win over Lewiston, Idaho, on Monday, clinched a semifinals

nity to mingle with players

afterward.

ery first-team snap at right tackle since Bowie's inju-

City Chiefs and Arizona Cardinals. "It's abig competition going

1-2 with both of them."

SANTA CLARA, Calif.

— The SanFrancisco 49ers are getting readyfor their new house ofenergy and emotion. The teamconducted its first training camp practice at Levi's Stadium on Mondayafternoon, getting familiar not only with its new homefield, butalso thousands of fans who flocked to thestadium for a public practice and then gotan opportu-

tributed for the practice through an internet lottery, and with fans cheering and asound system blaring, the 49ers already were feeling right at home. "As soon as Istepped foot out there, theywere playing music, and I just got to dancing andeverything," wide receiver

With Bowie gone, the bat-

Murphy and No. 2 h i tter

49ers hold1st practice at Levi's

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a point where you don't get to

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C5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

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-.0 1

~

Manufacturing bellwether

1 940.

The Commerce Department reports it latest data on U.S. factory orders today. Economists expect that factory orders rebounded in June after declining in May due partly to falling demand for military and transportation equipment. With the exception of May, U.S. factories have been registering monthly gains in orders most of this year, reflecting an expansion in manufacturing that hit its 13th straight month in June.

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2,000 " 1,920 "

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17,500"

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StocksRecap

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16596.22 16447.20 16569.28 +75.91 DOW Trans. 8153.80 8064.80 8149.08 +28.22 DOW Util. 540.78 528.89 538.66 -2.03 NYSE Comp. 10780.45 10669.42 10766.68 +74.52 NASDAQ 4395.38 4343.03 4383.89 +31.25 S&P 500 1942.92 1921.20 1938.99 +1 3.84 S&P 400 1376.52 1359.48 1374.95 +7.75 Wilshire 5000 20538.23 20302.45 20501.20 +155.19 Russell 2000 1125.54 1108.27 1124.82 +9.96

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD t0.46% -0.04% t0.35% L +10.11% -0.38% V + 9.80% +0.70% +3.52% +0.72% +4.96% +0.72% +4.90% +0.57% L +2 .41% +0.76% +4.04% -3.34% +0.89% V

M J J 52-week range $67.65~ $101.04

Vol.:21.7m (5.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$15.76b

' ";"" Kors shares sink Iw

,'

Price-earnings ratio:

20

Prjce-earnjngs ratlo. 24

52-WEEK RANGE

based on trailing 12 month results

$68

Dividend: $1.10 Div. yield: 1.4%

AP

Source: FactSet

101

Total return

KORS

(Ba sed on trailing 12 month results) S &P 500

Tot a l returns through Aug. 4

YTD

1-YR

-5.2% 1 . 9 % 5.4 15.0

*annualized

AmdFocus

TREX Close:$33.00%4.33 or 15.1% The deck and fencing company's quarterly profit beat Wall Street expectations and it issued better-thanexpected revenue guidance. $35

36.7 % 20.2

Source: FactSet

M

515010 492858 Groupon 458907 iShEMkts 398259 Apple Inc s 388953 iShR2K 330992 Microsoft 330083 PwShs QQQ 308378 SP Util 299223

31.55 -1.47 15.05 +.07 7.02 +.56 44.47 +.41 95.59 -.54 111.66 +.98 43.37 +.51 95.32 +.65 41.19 -.23

MFS NewDiscA m VALUE

MNDAX

B L EN D GR OWTH

Gainers NAME

Pike Corp HutchT CallularBio SynergyRs DurataTh ERBA Diag Quotinet wt Dataram h Trex s PlanarSy

LAST 11.83 3.69 28.49 12.22 15.17 2.86 2.65 3.56 33.00 3.66

CHG +3.87 +.81 +5.50 +1.92 +2.37 +.41 +.36 +.47

%CHG + 4 8.6 + 2 8.1 + 2 3.9 + 1 8.6 + 18.5 + 1 6.7 + 1 5.7

45

63

473

MomingstarOwnershipZone™

e Fund target represents weighted + 1 5 .2 Q

+4.33 + 1 5.1 +.47 + 1 4.7

Losers

c-

average of stock holdings

• Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings

L AST 7.72 12.66

PE : 37.0 Yie ld: ...

Realogy Holdings

R LGY

Close:$37.57%1.47 or 4.1% The real estate and relocation services company reported quarterly profit and revenue that beat Wall Street expectations. $40

J

J

$26.63 ~

M

Mkt. Cap:$1.11 b

J

J

52-week range $34.77~

$51.35

E:4 4 .6 Vol.:4.8m (2.4x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap: $5.49 b

P E: .. . Yield: ...

$43 .43

Vol.:3.1m (5.1x avg.) P

Alere

ALR Insmed INSM Close:$34.75 Y-5.20 or -13.0% Close:$12.66 V-4.59 or -26.6% The medical diagnostics company The bictechnology company said it reported worse-than-expected quar- will move forward with studies on terly financial results and a decline the effectiveness of its drug Ariin its gross margin. kayce for lung infections. $45 $25 40

20

35

15

M

52-week range $29.67 ~

$40.69

Vol.:4.6m (8.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.88 b

PE: . . Yield:..

Impax Laboratories

IPXL

Close:$22.77 V-0.86 or -3.6% The drug developer said theFDA performed a re-inspection of a California manufacturing facility and found potential problems. $35 30 25

M J J 52-week range $79.76~ $2229 Vcl.: 4 .9m (5.1x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$497.2 m

E: . . . Yield: ...

Ligand Pharma. LGND Close:$54.05 %4.97 or 10.1% The drug developer's quarterly financial results met expectations and it raised its full-year profit and revenue guidance. $70 60 50

M J J 52-week range $19.39~ $3 1.64 Vol.:1.5m (2.1x avg.) PE: 1138.5 Mkt. Cap:$1.6 b Yield:...

M J J 52-week range $39.75~ $ 66.42 Vcl.:1.1m (3.5x avg.) P E : 115.0 Mkt. Cap:$1.12 b Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.48 percent Monday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 2 .0 2 . 0 4 .04

52-wk T-bill

.10

L W V

L

~

~

L

.03 .07 .10

2-year T-note . 4 7 .4 8 -0.01 V 5-year T-note 1.65 1.66 -0.01 w 10-year T-note 2.48 2.49 -0.01 w 30-year T-bond 3.29 3.28 +0.01 L

T

L

.30

T T V

w 1.3 6 w 2.60 W 3.69

BONDS

.10

... ...

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.11 3.11 . . . L W W 3.43 BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.53 4.53 ... L W W 5.08

Barclays USAggregate 2.30 2.33 -0.03 L

W

PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.87 5.70 +0.17 L L RATE FUNDS

YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities BalA m 25.8 6 + .12 +3.5 +10.9 +14.4+13.0 8 A A CaplncBuA m 60.14 +.22 +5.2 +10.7 +11.7+10.5 8 A 8 The price of CpWldGrlA m 46.61 +.23 +4.2 +14.1 +14.9+11.5 8 8 D crude oil EurPacGrA m 49.60 +.12 +1.1 +12.2 +10.1 +8.6 A C 8 climbed back FnlnvA m 53. 8 7 +.36+3.6 +14.7 +18.2+14.8 C C C above $98 per GrthAmA m 44.97 +.36 +4.6 +16.3 +19.2+14.8 C 8 D barrel. It was IncAmerA m 21.46 +.87 +5.6 +12.0 +13.8+13.0 A A A just the seventh InvCoAmA m 38.95 +.27 +6.9 +17.8 +19.4+14.8 A 8 C time in the last NewPerspA m38.15 +.16 +1.6 +12.1 +15.1+12.8 C 8 8 27 days that WAMutlnvA m40.82 +.23 +4.4 +13.6 +18.9+16.2 8 C A crude rose. Dodge &Cox Income 13.88 +.81 +4.5 +6 .0 + 4.2 +6.0 A A 8 Gold's price fell IntlStk 46.14 +.30 +7.2 +19.6 +14.8+11.7 A A A Stock 177.80+1.41 +6.5 +18.7 +23.0+17.3 A A A for the fourth Fidelity Contra 98.74 + 1.82+3.8 +16.4 +18.2+16.5 C C 8 time in five ContraK 98.7 3 + 1.82+3.8 +16.5 +18.3+16.6 C C 8 days. LowPriStk d 51.13 +.31 +3.4 +13.2 +18.6+17.4 C D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 68.84 +.49 +6.1 +15.7 +19.9+16.4 B 8 A FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 54 +.81 +6.7 +12.6 +11.8+11.8 A A A IncomeA m 2. 5 1+.81 +7.1 +12.8 +12.4+12.4 A A A Oakmark Intl I 25.83 -.86 -1.9 +5 .9 +16.0+13.1 E A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 41 +.16+3.9 +12.4 +16.1+13.4 D E E RisDivB m 18 . 23 +.13+3.3 +11.4 +15.0+12.4 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 12 +.14+3.4 +11.5 +15.2+12.5 E E E SmMidValA m46.80 +.36 +4.1 +12.1 +15.9+14.0 D E E SmMidValB m38.70 +.30 +3.6 +11.2 +14.9+13.1 D E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.72 + .17 +3.8 +11.1 +18.5+15.0 E C C Exchange GrowStk 53.9 6 + .43+2.6 +18.8 +20.1+17.6 A A A The dollar was HealthSci 64.7 8 +.25+12.1 +25.6 +34.4+26.3 8 A A little changed Newlncome 9. 5 4 ... +4 .3 + 4 .7 + 3.0 +5.0 C C D against many Vanguard 500Adml 179.10+1.28 +6.1 +15.7 +19.9+16.4 8 8 A currencies. It 500lnv 179.88+1.27 +6.0 +15.6 +19.7+16.3 8 8 8 was virtually flat CapOp 50.80 +.34 +8.3 +18.6 +23.9+16.7 8 A 8 against the Eqlnc 30.83 +.13 +5.0 +12.2 +20.1+16.9 D 8 A Japanese yen, IntlStkldxAdm 28.67 +.15 +4.3 +13.5 +9.2 NA A C Mexican peso StratgcEq 32.80 +.20 +6.7 +18.7 +23.1+20.1 A A A and euro. It was TgtRe2020 28.39 +.12 +4.7 +10.7 +11.5+11.1 A A A down against Tgtet2025 16.50 +.87 +4.8 +11.5 +12.5+11.7 8 8 8 the British TotBdAdml 10.81 +4.0 +4.1 +2.6 +4.6 D D D pound, but only Totlntl 17.14 +.89 +4.2 +13.3 +9.1 +8.1 A D C modestly. TotStlAdm 48.76 +.35 +5.3 +15.1 +19.8+16.8 C 8 A TotStldx 48.74 +.35 +5.3 +15.0 +19.7+16.7 C 8 A USGro 29.97 +.27 +4.5 +18.1 +19.3+15.8 8 8 C Welltn 39.58 +.15 +5.6 +11.4 +14.0+12.3 A A A

CATEGORY Small Growth C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * **o o -6.59 -46.1 Insmed -4.59 -26.6 ASSETS $617 million -.71 -18.6 CBD Enn 3.09 EXP RATIO 1.32% Altisrce n 88.65 -15.18 -14.6 MANAGER Michael Grossman -5.20 -13.0 Alere 34.75 SINCE 201 3-12-31 RETURNS3-MO -0.4 Foreign Markets YTD -8.1 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +4.1 Paris 4,21 7.22 +14.44 + . 34 3-YR ANNL +13.4 London 6,677.52 -1.66 -.02 5-YR-ANNL +17.3 -55.94 -.61 Frankfurt 9,154.14 Hong Kong24,600.08 + 67.65 + . 28 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT Mexico 44,594.66 +608.55 +1.38 Constant Contact Inc 2.11 Milan 20,381.39 +18.98 + . 09 1.84 -48.61 -.31 Swift Transportation Co Tokyo 15,474.50 1.73 Stockholm 1,361.03 -.41 -.03 Diana Shipping, Inc. Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -14.30 -.26 Atwood Oceanics Inc 1.73 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr Sydney 5,533.30 Zurich 8,304.04 -1 06.23 -1.26 SciQuest Inc 1.49 redemption fee. Source: ittcrntngstar. NAME ITT Ed

Vcl.:13.2m (35.2x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$377.63 m

52-week range

MFS New Discovery is a smallcap growth fund that Morningstar FAMILY Marhetsummary says is a "capable long-term American Funds Most Active choice," though it may go NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG through periods of underperformS&P500ETF 814652 193.89 +1.39 ing. 8 iPVix rs BkofAm

M J J 52-week range $792 ~ $ 72 57

38 36

30

2-YR

SelectedMutualpunds

AP

PE: 23.9 Yield:...

Trex

lift CVS Caremark's earnings in the first three months of this year. Generics, which are cheaper Footnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are nct included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredcr paid in last 12 months. f - Current than brand-name drugs, provide a Dividend annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafterstock split, rc regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend wider margin between the cost for dividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid tn stock, approximate cash the pharmacy to purchase the value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock ts a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss tn last 12 months. drugs and the reimbursement it receives. Did the trend continue in the April-June quarter'? Find out today,when the nation's secondShares of Michael Kors fell 5.9 percent Monday after percent in its fiscal first quarter, led by strong sales largest drugstore chain reports the company predicted earnings for the current quarter overseas. second-quarter financial results. that fell short of expectations. Kors posted The company earned $187.7 million, or 91 CVS $77.37 the steepest decline in the Standard 8 cents per share, for the three months ended $80 Poor's 500 index. June 28. That compares with $125 million, or $62.17 70 Also weighing on the stock was a decline 61 cents per share, a year ago. That in the company's profit margins, due in part performance was 10 cents better than Wall 60 to an increase in product markdowns. Street had projected, according to FactSet. '14 Those factors overshadowed an Revenue climbed 43 percent to $919.2 50 otherwise strong earnings report. The luxury million, easily outpacing analyst projections of Operating retailer said net income increased 50 $851.8 million. I I EPS *

Michael Kors Holdings(KORS) Monday's close:$77.01

-. 0009

80

NorthwestStocks

2 Q '14

"" /

1.3419

KORS Pike PIKE Close:$77.01 V-4.82 or -5.9% Close:$11.83 L3.87 or 48.6% The retailer's quarterly financial reThe electrical engineering company sults topped expectations, but its agreed to be taken private by its second-quarter profit outlook fell CEO and investment firm Court short of forecasts. Square Capital Partners. $100 $12 90 10

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L NAME TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV J F M A M J v +18. 6 +4 4 .3 1 389 10 0 . 5 0 Alaska Air Group A LK 28.04 ~ 50.49 4 3. 5 0 -.95 -2.1 v w 2014 Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 33.60 3 1. 0 8 -.24 -0.8 V V V +10. 2 +1 1 .6 3 6 3 1 6 1. 2 7 Source: FactSet Bank of America BA C 1 3.60 ~ 1 8.0 3 15.05 +.07+0.5 L W W -3.3 + 0 .5 49286 18 0 . 04 BarrettBusiness B BS I 41 . 96 ~ 102.2 0 55. 49 + . 0 7 +0.1 L L L -40.2 - 22.3 10 6 2 3 0 . 7 2 Boeing Co BA 101.77 ~ 144. 5 7 11 9.93 -.45 -0.4 v w v -12.1 +15.1 2881 18 2 . 92 Cap' boost? Cascade Bancorp C A C B4 .11 ~ 6.50 5.31 -.04 -0.7 T L L +1.5 -9.9 76 5 Wall Street anticipates that Columbia Bnkg CO LB 2 3 .17 ~ 30.36 25. 1 1 +. 2 7 +1.1 L W W -8.7 +1 . 5 24 3 1 8 0 . 56f Disney's latest quarterly earnings ColumbiaSportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 89. 9 6 74.92 +.47 +0.6 L W W -4.9 + 1 6.9 6 2 24 1.12 improved from a year ago. Costco Wholesale CO S T 109.50 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 8.15 + . 27 $.0.2 L L L -0.7 + 1 . 0 1 632 2 6 1 . 42 The media giant, due to report Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 9.25 ~ 18.70 1 1. 8 2 -.41 -3.6 T W T -32.9 +19.3 6 4 58 fiscal third-quarter financial results FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 33. 3 3 +. 3 5 + 1.1 L W V +10. 7 +1. 6 71 3 2 5 0. 4 0 Hewlett Packard HPQ 20 . 25 — 0 36.21 35 .33 + . 14 +0.4 L L L +26.3 +36 .4 6 2 39 1 2 0. 6 4 today, is expected to have Intel Corp I NTC 21.89 ~ 34.83 34.8 5 +. 3 1 t0 . 9 L L L +31.2 t 49. 3 26455 17 0 . 9 0 received a boost from its film K EY 11.05 ~ 14.70 1 3. 2 3 -.12 -0.9 V V V -1.4 + 7 . 9 10934 12 0 . 26 studio division. In April, the studio Keycorp Kroger Co KR 3 5.13 ~ 51.4 9 49. 3 6 + . 1 1 +0.2 L w v +24. 9 +2 5 .8 1 548 17 0 . 66 released "Captain America: The V V +24. 6 +2 9 .9 1 3 26 33 Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 8.84 -.02 -0.3 V Winter Soldier," which has gone LPX 13.29 o — 18.9 6 13 . 82 + . 34+2.5 L w v -25.3 -20.0 3116 21 on to gross more than $700 million LA Pacific MDU Resources M DU 25 . 94 ~ 36.05 31. 4 2 +. 0 8 +0.3 L V V +2.8 +7.1 800 22 0. 7 1 worldwide. Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 20. 0 1 + . 1 9 +1.0 L W W -16.9 - 4.9 38 1 1 6 0 . 20 Microsoft Corp M SFT 3 0 .84 ~ 45.71 43. 3 7 +. 5 1 +1.2 L L L +15.9 +3 8 .7 33008 16 1 . 1 2 Nike Inc B N KE 62.60 ~ 80.26 77.1 6 +. 3 8 +0 .5 L W V -1.9 +17.8 2343 2 6 0 . 96 Nordstrom Inc JWN 54.90 — o 70.71 69 .55 + . 6 0 +0.9 L L L + 12.5 +12 .9 7 6 2 1 9 1. 3 2 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 47.50 43. 3 6 +. 2 9 + 0.7 L W V +1.3 +1.5 204 20 1. 8 4 PaccarInc P CAR 53.07 ~ 68.81 61.8 5 +. 3 8 +0 .6 L V V + 4.5 +11. 2 1 2 41 1 8 0. 8 8 Planar Systms PLNR 1.76 ~ 3.22 3.66 +. 4 7 +14.7 L L L +44. 1 +6 9 .7 7 9 8 6 1 Plum Creek PCL 40.57 o — 50.0 8 40. 7 8 -.39 -0.9 T W T -12.3 -11.8 1172 3 5 1 . 76 Prec Castparts PCP 210.79 ~ 275. 0 9 22 9.18 -.07 ... w v -14.9 + 2. 1 1095 1 8 0 . 12 L +17.9 +53 .8 1 7 46 3 0.92f Safeway Inc SWY 21.90 ~ 36.03 3 4. 3 8 -.08 -0.2 V L Schnitzer Steel S CHN 2 4 .13 ~ 33.32 26. 9 4 +. 3 0 +1.1 L W L - 17.5 + 4. 3 1 8 6 d d 0 . 7 5 Sherwin Wms SHW 166.32 ~ 215. 6 2 28 8.38 +3.62 +1.8 L L L +13.6 +17 .2 5 0 1 2 6 2. 2 0 StancorpFncl SFG 51.98 ~ 69.5 1 61. 2 1 + 1.03+1.7 L w v -7.6 +10.1 2 8 7 1 3 1 .10f StarbucksCp S BUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 77.5 3 +. 5 5 +0 .7 L V L - 1.1 + 6 . 1 3 042 3 0 1 . 04 Triquint Semi TQNT 6.80 — o 18.86 18 .63 + . 26 +1.4 L L L +123 .4 + 129.3 3556 c c umppuaHoldings UM PQ 15.56 ~ 1 9.6 5 16.57 -.01 -0.1 V V V -13.4 - 1.4 87 4 2 4 0 . 6 0 US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 41. 6 4 +. 3 1 +0.8 L W V +3.1 +12 . 2 4 840 14 0 . 98f WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.53 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.87 +.18+0.9 L W V -10.4 -6.2 8 1 6 1 3 0 .44f Spotlight QnCVS WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 0.07 ~ 5 3.0 8 50.99 +.64+1.3 L W W +1 2.3 +16.6 12648 13 1.40 WY 2 6 .64 ~ 33.75 31. 6 1 + . 3 8 + 1.2 L W V +0.1 +13 . 4 2 8 64 2 5 0. 8 8 Growth in generic drug use helped Weyerhaeuser

2Q '13

+.4 ' 1

Michael Kors

"

DOW

Vol. (in mil.) 2,982 1,627 Pvs. Volume 3,729 1,993 Advanced 1942 1686 Declined 1175 1006 New Highs 29 25 New Lows 71 97

/

Stocks rose Monday, helping the Standard & Poor's 500 index to claw back a portion of its losses from the prior week. The index flipped between modest gains and losses early in the day, but its ascent accelerated as the afternoon progressed. Nine of the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500 rose, with the biggest gains coming from energy stocks and raw-material producers. The strong day followed up a 2.7 percent drop for the S&P 500 last week. It was the worst one-week performance for the index in more than two years. The Dow Jones industrial average also rose Monday, but not by enough to bring it back to positive for the year.

"

16,000

1 680

$98.29

StoryStocks

......... Close: 16,569.28 Change: 75.91 (0.5%) "

NYSE NASD

1.5

.

16,400" ""' 10 DAYS "

1,760

seasonally adjusted percent change

2%

16 780 .

16,500" 1,840 "

"" '

-.14

$20.19

Dow Jones industrials

... Close: 1,938.99 Change: 13.84 (0.7%)

1,880' " ""'10 DAYS

Factory orders

08

.

-5 . 90

$1,287.70

58$P 500

Tuesday, August 5, 2014

0 -1.6

QT ~ 2.48%

13 04

1,938.99

h5Q HS

L MoodysAAACorpldx 4.18 4.15+0.03 L W L Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.93 1.92 +0.01 W W L Barclays US Corp 2.96 2.98 -0.02 L W W

FUELS

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

2.44 6.11 4 5. 1 15 .6 3. 3 3

CLOSE PVS. 98.29 97.88 2.10 2.09 2.87 2.87 3.83 3.80 2.72 2.74

%CH. %YTD +0.42 -0.1 + 0.05 + 9 . 9 +0.18 -6.7 -9.4 +0.95 -0.71 -2.2

CLOSE PVS. 1287.70 1293.60 20.19 20.33 1466.60 1463.30 3.24 3.21 856.05 865.50

%CH. %YTD - 0.46 + 7 . 1 - 0.68 + 4 . 4 + 0.23 + 7 .0 +0.94 -6.0 -1.09 +1 9.3

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.58 1.57 +0.58 +1 7.6 Coffee (Ib) 1.91 1.92 -0.96 +72.1 Corn (bu) 3.59 3.53 +1.77 -1 5.0 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.62 +2.29 -24.5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 325.90 324.10 +0.56 -9.5 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.42 1.39 + 2.19 + 4 . 4 Soybeans (bu) 12.33 12.15 +1.44 -6.1 Wheat(bu) 5.44 5.34 +1.82 -1 0.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6854 +.0023 +.14% 1.5287 Canadian Dollar 1.0 9 09 -.0012 -.11% 1.0391 USD per Euro 1.3419 -.0009 -.07% 1.3283 -.00 -.00% 9 8.92 JapaneseYen 102.55 Mexican Peso 13. 1 982 +.0015 +.01% 12.6635 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4163 -.0033 -.10% 3.5643 Norwegian Krone 6 . 2617 -.0031 -.05% 5.9384 South African Rand 10.6703 -.0063 -.06% 9.8469 Swedish Krona 6.8 8 23 + .0243 +.35% 6.6013 Swiss Franc .9068 +.0009 +.10% . 9 289 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.0717 -.0022 -.21% 1.1227 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1785 -.0018 -.03% 6.1342 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7501 -.0000 -.00% 7.7563 Indian Rupee 60.930 +.075 +.12% 61.110 Singapore Dollar 1.2459 -.0009 -.07% 1.2714 South KoreanWon 1032.41 -1.80 -.17% 1123.60 Taiwan Dollar 30.04 + . 0 1 + .03% 3 0 .00


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR WEDNESDAY • Oregon GetYour Business Online: U.S.Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, and experts from Google host this event to help small-business owners create their own websites; register online; free; 9 a.m.-noon; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. gybo.com/oregon • Business Startup Workshop: Two-hour session covers all the basic steps needed toopen a business. Preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. THURSDAY • Ruby Ribbon Dream Big Tour: Seethe fashion company's fall collection of women's apparel; call to RSVP; free; 6 p.m.; Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline RanchRoad,Bend; 541-306-0864. MONDAY • Marketing with Facebook: Two-day class, Aug.11 and13. Learn to use Facebookto market your small to medium business. Must havea Facebookaccount;$69; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend;541383-7270 or cocc.edu/ community-learning. • Basic portrait retouching with Pheteshop: Two-day class, Aug11 and Aug 18,covering portrait retouching; must have basic Photoshop experience; $129; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Coll egeWay,Bend; 541-383-7270 or cocc.edu/ community-learning. TUESDAY • Membership 101Driving Your Membership: Learn how membership in the BendChamberof Commerce canbecomea sales and marketing tool. 10-11 a.m. BendChamber of Commerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200, Bend. RSVP required. Contact Shelley Junker at shelley@ bendchamber.org or call 541-382-3221. • Women's Roundtable Series- Building and Managing Winning Teams: Learn to hire effectively, implement best practices in building an effective teamand to sustain a successful team. 12-1:30 p.m. Bend Golf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; $25 BendChamberof Commerce members; $35 nonmembers; 541-382-3221. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbugefin.cem/bizcal

FEDERAL INVESTIGATION

u rimecar oans ro e New York Times News Service Federal prosecutors have begun a civil investigation into the booming business of subprime auto lending, focusing on the packaging and selling of questionable loans

subprime mortgage crisis. General Motors' finance subsidiary disclosed in a securities filing Monday it had received a Justice Department subpoena for documents on

the origination and the secu-

to investors.

The inquiry is being undertaken amid worries among some regulat orsthatchecks and standards are being neglected as the subprime auto loan market surges, in a small, yet disturbing, echo of the

ritization of subprime loan contracts since 2007. The sub-

poena asks for the underwriting criteria and how the loans were represented to those who

were pooling them and assembling securities to be sold to investors.

Deschutes County • Christine S. Davis to Gail B. and Stanley M. Fridstein, Broken Top,Replat of Lots 311, 312, 313, aportion of lot 314, Phase 3Band Lot 315 Phase3C,Lot 313A, $270,000 • Gail P. Grauer, Valery J. Moe, Kathryn I. Landdeck, Kurt A. Gieschen,Grace E. Phillips and Rebecca S. Sharkey, affiants of the estate of Jennie Farnum Gieschen, to DianaL. Kalanquin, Willows, Phase 2, Lot 24, $192,500 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Dianna K.Wilson, Shevlin Ridge, Phase 6,Lot129, $685,000 • Gregory R. andAngela M. Kooistra to Lori S. Williamson, Stonegate PUD, Phase1, Lot 31, $410,000 • Lisa C. Zeltins, trustee of the Dorothy F.DolanTrust, to Luis A. DeVicente, Mountain View Park, Phase 2, Lot 58, $175,000 • Howard Hansen, affiant of the estate of Carol J. Boynton, to Jeremy A.and Shawna M.Henkemeyer, Juniper Creek, Lots 6-7, Block1, $167,000 • Ron J. and Jennifer J. Reuterto Hilary J. and John L Rich, Westside Meadows, Lot 37, $300,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Jeffrey K. andJennifer B. Hendricks, Lava Ridges, Phase 4, Lot 97,$295,000 • Cody D. Constable, trustee of the BrookeY. Constable RevocableTrust, to Joseph P.and Shannon

The office of Preet Bhar-

the complex securities.

ara, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New

been asked for information,

York, also is looking at other companies, say people

but General Motors Financial also indicated that the

briefed on the matter. In the GM investigation, Bharara is reviewing whether the lender

inquiry was looking broadly at the subprime auto finance industry. "Our understanding is that

sold questionable auto-loan investments to investors, they said; at the center of the inves-

tigation is whether the lender fully disclosed to investors the

It is unclear who else has

the request is focused on the

subprime finance space in general," Susan Sheffield, an

creditworthiness of the bor-

executive vice president at GM Financial, said in an email on

rowers whose loans made up

Monday.

BEND

EXECUTIVE FILE

Commercial vacancies

What:The Lint Doctor What it does: Dryer-vent cleaning Pictured: Bill Lis, owner/operator Where: Bend Employees: One Phoae: 541-382-7235 Wehsite: www.thelintdoctor.com

+

are filling up Bulletin staff report Vacancy rates for commercial space in most areas of Bend fell in the second quar-

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

a t is

o ctor

By Rachael Rees• The Bulletin

When the new dryer Bill Lis purchased seven years ago performed poorly, he climbed under the house, took apart the dryer-vent duct system and discovered a kingsized pillow's worth of lint. "It looked kind of like going

To get clothes dry, Lis said, some residents will run their dry"There was spiderwebs and lots of ers for two or three cycles, which gray lint everywhere." can cause dryers clogged with lint He learned his neighbors and to overheat and catch fire. friends were having similar issues According to a 2012 report from and proceededto cleantheirdryer the National Fire Data Center, an vents, too. It was then he realized estimated 2,900 clothes-dryer his new skill could be a business fires in residential buildings are into a haunted mansion," he said.

and started The Lint Doctor, a

reported to U.S. fire departments

dryer-vent cleaning service. "I was looking for something else to do," Lis said. "I was an in-

eachyear and cause an estimated five deaths, 100 injuries and $35 million in property loss. Beyond reducing the risk of fire, Lis said, maintaining a clean dry-

dependent insurance agent at the 'What can I do where I can make

a living and maybe make a difference as well'?'" Lis cleans both residential and

business dryers throughout CentralOregon. He averagesabout 10 cleanings a week. His basic fee is $110 and has additional charges for second-story laundry rooms and jobs located outside of Bend. Lint builds up, sticks to the inside of the dryer duct and slowly fills up the duct so the hot air can't

escape, he said.

er-vent system saves money on

utility bills by shortening drying time and extending the life of dry-

What is your • favorite part of operating The Lint Doctor? • I've always • liked to work with my hands. And I enjoy the fact that I'm actually doing a valuable service for the people in our community and averting a possible tragedy of somebody having a dryer fire. I can actually say that I've averted quite a few fires from happening.

A

Where do you • hope The Lint Doctor will be in the next five years?

Q•

• I think my

A • business model would beperfect for a franchise. I've actually had a couple people, they were customers, that wanted to know if they could take my name and business model out of the state and do it somewhere else.

ers and clothes.

Signs that a dryer system may need cleaning include: clothes tak-

ing an unusually long time to dry, a laundry room with excessive moisture, or visible lint buildup in and around the vents, Lis said.

He recommends dryers get cleaned at least every year for families of three or more. "I'm 57, and I've done quite a few different careers in my life, but

ter, according to Compass Points, the quarterly market summary by Compass Commercial Real Estate. Only 1.7 percent of downtown retail space that Com-

er int issues'? Q•

time. I was getting tired of the insurance industry and thought,

DEEDS

BRIEFING

pass surveyed was available for lease, according to the summary released Monday. Citywide, Compass found 8.58 percent of 4.5 million square feet of retail space

available for lease in the second quarter. Businesses looking for office space downtown found 6.45 percent of 490,000 square feet available, down from

11.64percent in the first quarter. Downtown office space,

the summary states, "is going to be increasingly difficult to find." Overall, the vacancy rate for Bend office space fell from 12.19 percent to 11.48 percent, "the ninth consecutive drop in a row and the lowest rate

in six years," the summary states.

Overall, the vacancy rate for Bend office space fell, "the ninth consecutive drop in a row and the lowest rate in six years." The amount of industrial

space available in Bend fell to 8.53 percent of 4.1 million squarefeet,accordingto Compass Points. In Redmond, about 6,500 square feet of industrial space became avail-

able for lease, increasing the vacancy rate to 18.3 percent in the second quarter, according

to the survey. Two large tenants, one of them online outdoor-gear retailer Altrec, vacated a total

52,000square feet,accounting

I've got to say, I absolutely do enjoy is filling with cholesterol and even- this most," Lis said. tually gets clogged. That's where — Reporter: 541-617-7818,

trial space in Redmond last quarter, according to Com-

the doctor comes in," he said.

pass Points.

"Think about it as an artery that

M. Rackowski, Crossroads First Addition, Lot 29, $349,999 • Brian Coryat to Aaron M. Goddard, Revised Plat of Meadow Village, Lot 7, Block 3, $359,900 • Ronna Olsen to Eric A. and Patricia L. Moberg, a portion of Cimarron City, Lot 8, Block 2, $245,000 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, which acquired title as Woodhill Enterprises LLC, to Richard L. and Theresa A. Grimes, trustees of the Grimes Family Trust, Hidden Hills, Phase 1, Lot 29, $399,950 • Kristi Jones to Brian P. and Caroline A. Schoonveld, Nottingham Square, Lot14, Block 5, $216,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Jonathan R.andAmanda E. Kelley, Village atCold Springs, Phase 4,Lot113,

$264,415 • Dorothy M. Stream, trustee of the Stream Marital QTip Trust, to Dorothy M. Stream, Township14, Range13, Section 24, $1,049,346 • Steve D. andPatricia A. Larsgaard, trustees of the S&P Larsgaard 2006 Revocable Living Trust, to Peter A. andMichele D. Foran, Wild River, Phase1, Lot1, Block1, $185,000 • Columbia State Bankto Scharpf Investments LLC, Shevlin Center, Phase3, Lots 13-14, $295,000 • Roger G. Worthington to Annette Wilson Christensen, trustee of the Annette Wilson Christensen Living Trust, and ClausFjord Christensen, trustee of the Claus Fjord Christensen Revocable Living Trust, North Rim onAwbrey

rrees@bendbulletin.com

Butte, Phase 3,Lot 57, $500,000 • Stuart G. and Lina K. Johns to Richard A.and Sarah A. Mayes, Lane Knolls Estates, Phase2, Lot 21, $739,500 • Daniel J. and Tambry A. Brose, trustees of the Daniel andTambry Brose Joint Trust, to Cynthia E. Dumler andMarian E. Smith, Awbrey Meadows, Lot 11, $520,000 • SFI Cascade Highlands LLC to James M.andPaula J. Sansburn, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot94, $215,000 • Wesley J. andTeagan N. Johnston to Shelley L. Hall, Vista Del Sol, Lot 9, Block 2, $410,000 • Pronghorn Estates LLC to James E.and JaneA. Klos, trustees of the Klos Living Trust, Estates at Pronghorn, Phase 2,Lot 184, $250,000

• Kaeleen C.Holmgren to Luke J. andApril N. Larsen, StevensBorough, Phase1, Lot11, $284,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Aubry D. Martin Jr. and Frances J. Martin, Aspen Rim, Lot155, $403,770 • Community West Bank NAto Hemlock LLC, Desert Rise Industrial Park, Phase1, Lot 2, $2,500,000 • Kelly A. and Tracie M. Renwickto Cordelia D. Bradshaw andMartha A. Bowersox, Tollgate, Fifth Addition, Lot 244, $325,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Nancy A. Green,Badger Forest, Phase 2,Lot12, $235,000 • Stone Bridge Homes NW LLC toGaylord D. and Erika A.Wetherill, Renaissance atShevlin Park, Lot 24, $675,000

for the rise in available indus-

• Antler Butte Properties LLC to Deschutes County, Townsite of Redmond, Lots1-3, Block4, $600,000 • Harbor Consulting LLC to Kevin J. andMegan E. Harris, Township18, Range12, Section17, $210,000 • Richard B. andTeresa A. Rothschild to JesseT. and Brandie R.Emminger, Aspen Winds, Phase1, Lot 20, $225,000 • T. McDonald Development LLC to Gregory A. andVirginia J. Sharp, McKenzies Meadow, Lot 4, $226,000 • Vanessa F.Velmeden to James L. Edwards, Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot 8, Block17, $355,900 • Pacwest 2 LLC, doing business as MonteVista Homes, to Saundra L.and

Texasis chosen for SpaceX site SpaceX haschosen a South Texassite to build its planned commercial rocket launch facility, Texas Gov.Rick Perry's office said Monday. Texas is offering $2.3 million in incentives to SpaceX from theEnterprise fund, the governor's office said. Founded bybillionaire Elon Musk, SpaceXplans to build the world's first private, commercial vertical rocket launch site. The proposedSouth Texas site, a remotebeach surrounded bywildlife areas about 20miles east of Brownsville, had been competing with sites in Floridaand Georgia for the launchfacility. The facility is expected to create 300 jobs and bring $85 million in capital investment into the economy. SpaceX will continue its NASA-funded launchesat Cape Canaveral in Florida,butMuskenvisions a commercial spaceport focused on business from companies and foreign governments as well as spacetourism.

Textdook renter pens new deal Since going public late last year, Chegg, the textbook-renting

company, hassuffered from a big investor concern: that its signature business was becoming obsolete. On Monday, the company said it has teamed with the Ingram Content Group, a big book distributor, to store and ship those textbooks. The deal is meant to free the company to continue building its digital operations. It is the biggest effort yet for Chegg to prove that it can transform itself into a higher-margin digital services provider, with offerings like e-textbooks, test preparation materials and career counseling.

Time Warner not budging Rupert Murdoch tends to finish what he starts. So from themoment the newsbrokelast month that TimeWarner Inc. had rejected an$80 billion bid by Murdoch's 21st Century Fox,theassumption onWall Street and in the mediaworld was that it was only a matter of time before a deal was struck. Since then, though, Time Warner hasmade it clear it views Fox's approach as ahostile takeover, and it has refused to negotiate with Fox. "I think this deal is not going to be assimple as people first thought," said Michael Nathanson, of MoffettNathanson, the research firm. — From eire reports

Donald C.Bower,Julina Park, Lot 36, $232,137 • Jolene M. Capto David M. Forrest, Forest Grove Estates, Phase 2,Lot 5, $249,000 • Hayden HomesLLC to Michelle A. Lacroix, Lawson Crossing, Lot 20, $170,265 • Karen G. Curtiss and Anthony W. Loughton to John andAlice Gross, Highland Addition to Bend, Lot13, Block 6, $280,000 • Bradley S. andDana C. Reiter to Equity Trust Company Custodian, for the benefit of FredFelde IRA and SheraFelde IRA, Lavacrest, Lot11, $193,000 • Michael D. andRoni J. Carrick, trustees of the Carrick Family Trust, to Adam S. andKathryn N. Bowles, River Bluff Section of Sunrise Village, Lot 4,

Block 7, $585,000 • Ronald B. and Betty L. Berghofer to Zachary E. Webb, LakePark Estates, Lot 7, Block18, $197,000 • Donna L. Severson, trustee of the Donna L. Severson Trust, to Delmar L and Sharon K. Sechler, Ponderosa Pines First Addition, Lot134, $212,500 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, who acquired title as Woodhill Enterprises LLC, to Jeremy T.Leigh, Hidden Hills, Phase1, Lot10, $319,950 • PWD Associates LLC to H. Timothyand Jodi L. Eberly, Points West, Lot10, $429,000 • Eric W. Coats, trustee of the Joyce E.Coats Revocable Trust, to Alden E. and Cynthia Desoto, Township17, Range11, Section 11, $385,000


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

GARDEN

T e importance o removin invasive wee s By Liz Douville

Service, state parks, local

For The Bulletin

businesses and the dedicated help of volunteers.

The days of summer are passing far too quickly for me. Already I'm doing the woulda, coulda, shoulda guilt trip. In particular I am thinking about the group annual weed pull held in

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Berries can excel in savory dishes. Here we paired Summer Berry Vinaigrette with some grilled pork chops.

FOOD

It is considered a family event. What better

hands-on way to teach environmental awareness? In June, 10 weed-pull sites

were scheduled from La

June that I missed. It always sounds like a great event, and the truth is, it's always

Pine to Sisters, several in Redmond, the Borden

more fun to pull someone

west of Terrebonne, plus

else's weeds or clean some-

many sites in Bend. The eye-opener for me is how

one else's house than it is to do your own. To refresh your memory, the Deschutes County Weed Advisory Board and Let's Pull Together event organizers schedule the annual

Beck Wildlife Preserve

extensive the eradication

area is. The volunteers are rewarded for their hard work with a lunch, bever-

event to pull noxious weeds. The eradication event is

ages and prizes. I am sure everyone goes home with the feeling of a job well done.

a partnership with city and county governments, neighborhood and homeowner associations, the U.S. Forest

and why should we care about eradication? SeeWeeds/D4

So, what is a noxious weed

Patrick J. Alexander,hosted by the tJSDA-NRCSPLANTS Database / Submitted photo

Puncturevine's fruit is a woody, spikey bur that is sharp enough to puncture a bike tire.

HOME

• Sweet or savory, Oregon'sfinest will shine By Jan Roberts-Dorninguez eFor The Bulletin

Function first: a Portand housewaresstore owner

ust like a herd of cats, some of my food stories refuse to take direction. By Jess Chamberlain

What began this week,

New Yorh Times News Service

If Brian and Jill Faherty's

for example, as a "saucing

home looks a little like a catalog, there's a good rea-

the berries of summer"

son: Faherty is the owner

instance, is an Ikea sofa. "We added brass-walnut

accentedlegsfora sleeker look," said Brian Faherty,

50. "We like to invest in of Schoolhouse Electric 8 Supply Co., the lighting and some things for enduring housewares company based quality, but a sectional

concept quickly morphed into a "sweet and savory" theme. The

The main piece of furniture in the family room, for

in Portland, and his ranchstyle house is where most of

ts s

saucing idea had its merits, but with so

the catalogs are shot. But it's also where he

many delicious options beyond sweet

tests products in develop-

toppings for lovely fruit, I decided to explore a few.

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Simple Blueberry Sauce is nice over ice cream,

And as you know, now is definitely the cheesecake here, or, waffles.

ment, and where he and his wife are raising three children (J.P., 12; Greta, 11; and Audrey, 6). So while it may look as if everything is arranged just so, in fact the

opposite is true. Things are constantly in flux, and func-

time to do so. Indeed, we're a lucky lot here in Oregon. Our berries are exquisite, plentiful and affordable. From gigantic

tion is more important than

appearance.

couch with three kids-

how long is that going to last before it has to be reupholstered?" He added: "We don't want

to be worried about our couch. We live here."

Even the house was chosen for its utility and for the ways in which it differed from their previous home, a Colonial-style house with great bones but very small rooms. SeeFunction/D4

loganberries and big fat Spartan blueberries, to elegant raspberries and juicy marionberries, we're smack-dab in the middle ofberry season. SeeBerries/D2

TODAY'S RECIPES Berry flavors:Try out these sweet and savory concoctions: Simple Blueberry Sauce,Gratin of Summer Berries with Poured Brulee, Savory Berry Saucewith Grilled Pork Tenderloin andToasted Hazelnuts, SummerBerry Vinaigrette for Your SummerGrill, FoilGrilled Albacore with Gingered Marionberry Sauce,D2

Thinkstock

Book smart:A selection of cookbooks worth checking out, plus these recipes: PeachandPine Nut Tarts with Triple-Cream Cheese (picturedl, FreekehBurgers with Chipotle Mustard, Blueberryand Gin Gelatins, Scallop andBlueberry Seviche,D3

Recipe Finder:Re-creating a classic Baltimore burger,D2


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

FOOD

Re-creating

a classic,bygone Baltimore burger Berries

By Julie Rothman

RECIPE FINDE

The Baltimore Sun

Donna Marsh of Hanover

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman,Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,

and Susan Zeiger of Baltimore both were looking for the recipe for the burge rs that were sold at t h e

Harley's sandwich shops

501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

in and a r ound Baltimore in the '60s and '70s. Marsh

more, MD21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipesfor them to bepublished.

said the Harley Burgers, ground-beef patties simmered in a red sauce and served with lots of onions, were the best.

Baltimore Sun c olumnist Jacques Kelly traced

have been attempts at recipes for some of Harley's favorites. Copper shared a

the history of the Harley's

shops in an April 1993 column. As Kelly tells it, Harley Brinsfield opened his first stand-alone sub shop

recipe for the burgers that he cut from a n ewspaper

Let it go, I chant. Just take it off your summer grill. With a day at a time and enjoy what fresh albacore and salmon in berries I do have time to bring the market, I'm providing a

my pairing of fresh berries and thick, creamy creme bruContinued from 01 lee (with a twist!). It doesn't That means we're experi- into the kitchen. There will be couple of ways to sauce that disappoint. encing the blessing and the m ore summers to continue the won't add a lot of extra fat. Just get to it, because it's a curse of it. First, swooping celebration of this wondrous Just lots of l uscious flavor fleeting pleasure. Berries of in and tantalizing, then fast- gift of nature. and color. one sort or another will stay er than a falling star disapFor now, let's consider that Savory b e rr y sa u ces around through August. pearing from the summer sweet and savory idea. On the also work well with pork — Jan Roberts-Dominguez is a sky — poof! — a delectable savory side, tangy-sweet ber- tenderloin. Corvallis food writer, cookbook but fading glow on my mind's ry sauces are a lovely comFor the sweet side of things, author and artist. Contact: janrd@ palate. plement to the foods coming I encourage you to experience proaxis.com.

Simple Blueberry Sauce

he tweaked the recipe a bit

and has been making these burgers at home for years. others soon followed. Brins- "They come as close as anyfield hosted a popular radio body can to the real thing," show on WBAL and several he said. other stations, which natuCopper told me his trick rally included plenty of ads was to use the thinnest frofor his sandwich shops to zen patties possible. He help spread the word. But likes to serve them on a soft, it was the food that brought bulky roll and top each one people both young and old with lots of the sauce and back to Harley's time and onions. I can't say I ever had the again, and it's the special taste that many still remem- pleasure of eating a Harber fondly. ley Burger growing up, but Bill Copper of Baltimore my husband and his budis one such person. He dies were big fans, and he said he can still remember thought these w ere v ery Brinsfield's late-night radio reminiscent of the original show and driving from his from his teenage days. home in South Baltimore to the Harley's on Falls Road

Request

and Cold Spring Lane for the "greatest subs money

Madeline Johnson from Kelso, Washington, has lost

ever bought." The last Har-

herrecipeforapricotpineapple jam. She has had no luck Brinsfield's death in 1990, locating one from her usual and for many true Baltimor- sources, such as Sure-jell, eans, nothing will ever re- and was hoping someone place Harley's. would have a good recipe to Over th e y e a rs, t h ere share. ley's sub shop closed after

Bill's Harley Burgers Makes 8 burgers. ~/3 C ketchup 1 tsp brown sugar, optional 2 Ig onions, sliced in rings

8 frozen beef patties, as thin

as possible (2 Ibs total) 3 C water 2 TBS A1 Steak Sauce 2 TBS Worcestershire sauce

Salt and pepper to taste 8 soft kaiser rolls

Saute frozen beef patties in a large skillet over medium-high heat, turning once, until cooked about half way. Removepatties from pan and set aside. Drain any fat from pan andadd the water, steak sauce, Worcestershire sauce, ketchup and brown sugar (if using). Bring to a boil, reduce heat andcook and stir for about 2 minutes, then add in the sliced onions. Cover and simmer on low until onions are tender, about 10 to 15 minutes, then place the patties back into the panandcook another 10 minutes or until patties are thoroughly cooked. Place individual patty on roll and top with sauceand lots of onions.

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I

Summer Berry Vinaigrette for Your Summer

Grill Here's a simple sauce that will instantly jazz up your favorite cheesecake, your morning waffles or bowls of ice cream. Makes about 2~/2C This fruity vinaigrette can beused in anarray of game, poultry or pork 2 C fresh (or frozen) blueberries 1 TBS lemon juice dishes as arefreshing alternative to cream- or stock-based sauces. 2 to 4 TBS sugar

1 TBS water ~/s C olive oil

quite a while back. He said

at McMechen Street and Linden Avenue, and many

Thinkstock

~/2 tsp vanilla extract(ori/z vanilla

In a medium-size saucepan, over medium heat, combine the blueber- 2 TBS red wine vinegar ries with the sugar, lemon juice andwater. Gently stir and shakeuntil the 1 TBS balsamic vinegar sugar has dissolved andthe berries are soft, about 5 minutes. 1 tsp fennel seeds, toasted and ground (see note), optional 1 tsp chopped fresh thyme

bean, split andscraped) i/2 tsp salt ~/4 tsp freshly ground black or

white pepper 2 C fresh blackberries,

raspberries, huckleberries or blueberries

In a medium bowl, combine theoil, vinegars, fennel, thyme, vanilla, salt and pepper. Add berries and toss to coat with the vinaigrette. Let stand at room temperature for 1 to 2 hours or cover and refrigerate overnight. Remove thevanilla bean, if using. Note on fennelseeds(consider making ahatch larger than youneed for this recipe):Preheatthe oven to 325 degrees. Put the seedsin a single Thinkstock layer on a jelly-roll pan. Toast in the oven for10 minutes, or until they begin to darken in color, occasionally shaking the pan sothe seedswill toast evenly. Removetheseedsfrom theovenandpourthem ontoacoolpan. Gratin of Summer Berries with Poured Brulee To crack the seeds, use a large knife. With the wide side of the blade, Makes 6 servings. press down on the seeds. Togrind, put them in a spice mill and grind to This recipe departs from the traditional method for preparing creme a powder. brulee. Thecustard is cooked first, then poured over berries and set in the — Adapted from "Wildwood: Cooking from theSourcein the Pacific Northwest," refrigerator to cool before being sprinkled with sugar andbroiled to create by Cory Schretber a crunchy caramelized topping. The combination of creamy cooked custard and uncooked fresh berries creates adelightful contrast. 1~/2 C heavy cream 3 C mixed berries or sliced pitted stone fruit such as

/3 C granulated sugar ~/8 tsp salt 1 tsp vanilla extract

apricots, peeled peaches or nectarines 8 Ig egg yolks

Superfine sugar for caramelized topping

Heat the cream in a heavy-bottomed medium-sized saucepan until it just barely begins to boil, then removeimmediately and set aside. Slice any large berries. Place ~/2cup of fruit in each of six 6-ounce flameproof gratin dishes. Setaside. In a double boiler, whisk together the egg yolks with the granulated sugar and salt over simmering water (do not let the water touch the bottom of the pan). Whisk the mixture constantly until it is thick and lemon-colored and forms a slowly dissolving ribbon on the surface whenthe whisk is raised from the pan. Remove the top pan of the double boiler from the heat. At this point, before you combine theyolk mixture with the cream,temper the eggs by whisking a ladle of the hot cream into the eggs. Keep whisking and repeat with 2 or 3 more ladles of hot cream. Nowwhisk the tempered egg mixture into the hot cream. Return the mixture to the double boiler and adjust the heat so the water in the lower pan is almost at a simmer and cook the custard, stirring occasionally, for 40 to 45 minutes, or until thick enough to coat ametal spoon without running off. Stir in the vanilla extract. Pour the custard over the fruit in the dishes. Coverand refrigerate for at least 4 hours or overnight. Preheat the broiler. Sprinkle eachcustard evenly with 2 to 3 teaspoons superfine sugar. Place the ramekins 2 inches from the heat source for 2 minutes, or until the sugar has melted and caramelized. (Alternatively, you could simply caramelize the sugar with a blow torch, if that's what you are used to doing!) Let cool for a fewminutes before serving.

Foil&rilled Albacore with Gingered Marionberry Sauce Makes 4 to 6servings. 2 to2i/z Ibs fresh albacore loin ~/4 C butter, cut into 4 chunks

Jan's Teriyaki Marinade (see recipe below)

Gingered Marionberry Sauce (see recipe below)

Combine the albacore and Jan's Teriyaki Marinade in a dish or resealable plastic bag. Refrigerate for at least1 hour, up to 3 hours; remove 30 minutes before grilling. When ready to cook the fish, create a foil pan for the fish that is large enough to surround everything and partially enclose the top. Spreadopen the foil. Removethe albacore from the marinadeand place it in the center of the prepared pan.Pour i/2cup of the marinade overthe fish. Pour the remainder of themarinadeinto a pot; youwill boil the marinadebefore serving. Distribute the four chunks of butter around the sides of the fish, then snuggle the foil up and around the fish, leaving the top open so the fish will poach but not steamoverthe grill (or in the oven). Cookover hot coals (or in a 375-degree oven) until the fish is just cooked through, which will take about 30 to 40 minutes, depending on how thick the loin is. Spoon the butter sauce over the fish several times during cooking. Serve alongside the Gingered Marionberry Sauce. Fresh salmon alternative: Choose wild salmon fillets with the skin on. Omit the marinade, but do glug abit of soy sauce or Kikkoman's Tempura sauce into the butter before it hits the grill.

Jan's Teriyaki Marinade Makes about 2~/zcups of sauce; enough marinade for about 2~/zIbs of albacore loin.

— Adapted from "Wildwood: Cooking from theSourcein the Pacific Northwest," 1 C Veri Veri Teriyaki sauce by Cory Schreiber (made by SoyVay) ~/2 C dry sherry or extra-dry vermouth /3 C fresh lemon juice

1 TBS chili garlic sauce (my favorite brand is Lee Kum

Kee) /3 C extra virgin olive oil

Savory Berry Sauce with Grilled Pork Tenderloin and Toasted Hazelnuts

In a dish or resealable plastic bag large enough to hold the albacore Makes 6 servings (about 2~/2 cups sauce). loin, combine the Veri Veri Teriyaki sauce, sherry, lemon juice, chili garlic I love grilled pork tenderloin. But in this case, I start the tenderloins off sauce and olive oil. May be prepared several days aheadand refrigerated in the skillet then move them to the grill after they've produced a bit of until use. tasty juice and cooked-on bits of food that are stirred into the sauceGingered Marionberry Sauce which helps marry the two components. Makes about1s/4cups sauce. 2 pork tenderloins 3 sprigs fresh rosemary This is designed for the Foil-Grilled Albacore with Teriyaki Sauce but Salt and freshly ground black 2 C berries: blueberries, is equally delicious as asidekick to a number of other grilled meats, from pepper raspberries or blackberries pork tenderloin and chicken to salmon, halibut and sturgeon. 2 TBS olive oil ~/4 C balsamic vinegar 1 C red wine 1 C chicken stock ~/3 C brown sugar

2 TBS butter Salt to taste /3 C toasted, skinned and

2 C marionberries (orother caneberry, such asloganberry chopped hazelnuts (see note) or simple blackberry)

Season the pork tenderloins with the salt and pepper. Heat the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Brown the tenderloins on all four sides, just until golden; removethe tenderloins from the pan to aplatter. To makethe herrysauce:Reducetheheatinthepan.Addthebalsamic vinegar and red wine to the panand cook until reduced by half. Add the stock and reduce by half again, then add the brown sugar, rosemary and berries and simmer for 3 minutes. Strain into a bowl, pushing the cooked fruit through with a rubber spatula or woodenspoon. Return the sauceto the pan andwhisk in the butter. Add additional salt to taste, if necessary. Set the sauce nside as youfinish preparing the tenderloins: Place the browned tenderloins on a preheated grill and cook, turning to evenly brown all sides, until cooked to desired degree of doneness. Remove from grill and let the meat rest for several minutes. Slice the tenderloin into '/4- to 1-inch-thick slices. Besure to stir the accumulated meat juices into the sauce. To serve, spoon aportion of the sauce onto eachplate andarrange several pieces in the center of the sauce oneach plate. Sprinkle eachserving with some of the hazelnuts. Note on toasting hazelnuts:Place /3 cup(or more!) raw hazelnut kernels on a baking sheet and place in a 350-degree oven. Toast until the skins begin to crack andthe nuts are becoming very fragrant, about10 to 15 minutes. Removefrom heat and let cool. Place the hazelnuts in a clean towel, cover and shake to remove the skin. Place the nuts back on the baking sheet, then takethem outside andblow awayany remaining skin.

~/4 C dry red wine ~/4 C packed golden brown

~/2 tsp grated zest of lemon 1 TBS fresh lime juice

1 (2-inch) chunk ofginger, peeled and smashed 1 TBS butter

sugar In a medium pot, combine the berries, wine, brown sugar, lemonzest, juice and ginger over medium heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the berries soften and breakdown, about10 minutes. Removefrom heat and let cool about 10 minutes. Discard the piece of ginger and transfer the berry mixture to a blender or food processor; puree until smooth. Strain the sauce by pressing it through a fine-mesh sieveset over a bowl, using a rubber spatula or woodenspoon.

In Sunriver What:The Bulletin's regular food writer and Corvallis resident Jan Roberts Dominguezwill be in Sunriver, exhibiting her watercolor paintings, prints andnotecards andsigning copies of her latest cookbook ("OregonHazelnut Country: TheFood,the Drink, the Spirit") at the Sunriver Art Faire When:10a.m.to 7 p.m. Friday andSaturday,10a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday Where:Village atSunriver Cost:Free Contact:www.sunriverartfaire.com


TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

By Bonnie S. Benwick

If you have

Peach and Pine Nut Tarts with Ripl~ r e a m Cheese

The Washington Post

Faced with a choice between

updating a beach wardrobe or my cacheof cookbooks suited

D3

become

Makes 6 to12 servings (six 5-inch tarts). You'll need six 5-inch tart pans with removable bottoms, or individual small, disposable aluminum pie pans (available at the grocery store).

fond of freekeh-

cracked green

to warm weather, I'll go with the latter every time. Waves

FOR THE CRUST: 1 Ig egg plus1 Ig eggyolk, / C pine nuts, finely chopped wheatof spring and summer ingre- 2 C flour, plus more for the work beaten 1 tsp vanilla extract ls' you'll be dients ebb and flow with such surface 3 or 4 med, ripe peaches looking for urgent appeal that it's all too '/s C sugar FOR THE FILLING: 6 oz Explorateur or other softgood things easy to celebrate them simply, /4 tsp fine sea salt 8 TBS (1 stick) unsalted butter, ripened, triple-cream cheese, to make and mostly unadorned. But an Finely grated zest of 1 lemon at room temperature cut into 6 equal pieces with it. '/s C sugar innovative recipe that involves, 12 TBS (1t/ sticks) chilled, Add these say, blueberries will work its unsalted butter, cut into sm 2 Ig eggs Freekeh t/s C flour way into my gray matter. pieces Burgers In alphabetical order: with ChipoFor the crust:Combine the flour, sugar, salt and lemon zestin a food processor; pulse to blend. Addthe butter tle Mustard "A Change of Appetite: pieces and pulsejust long enough to form acrumbly mix with pieces the size of small peas. Addthe eggand egg to the list. Where Healthy Meets Deli- yolk; pulse just until the dough comestogether. To serve, cious,n by Diana Henry (Mitchell Lightly dust a work surface with flour. Turn the dough out onto it and roll into a ball. Wrap in plastic wrap and put one Beazley; $35).If you're not ac- refrigerate for at least1 hour and upto1 day. on some quainted with this London auArrange the tart pans on abaking sheet. grilled thor's work, this is a fine place Unwrap the dough. Roll out on the floured work surface to athickness of /s inch. (If the dough is too firm, let it bread, with to start. She's smart, detail-ori- sit for 5 minutes before rolling.) Cut into 6 equal pieces; presseachpiece into a tart pan, trimming off any excess; onion and ented, an enthusiast of many the dough can bererolled once. Prick the bottoms with a fork all over, then refrigerate for10 minutes. lettuce. cuisines and doesher own lovePreheat the oven to350 degrees. Line the chilled tart shells with parchment paper andceramic weights, dried ly food styling. beans or raw rice. Bakefor15 minutes or as needed until the tart shells are firm and dry but not browned. Cool Photos by while you makethe filling. Deb Lindsey The Washington "The Better Bean Cookbook: For the filling:Combine the butter and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer or hand-held electric mixer. Beaton Post More Than 160 Modern Reci- low then medium-high speeduntil light and fluffy. Stop to scrapedown thesides of the bowl. pes for Beans, Chickpeas and On mediumspeed,addthe eggs oneat atime until well-incorporated. Stop to scrapedownthe sides of thebowl. Lentils to Tempt Meat-Eaters On low speed,addthe flour, pine nuts and vanilla extract; beat until just combined. and Vegetarians Alike," by JenDivide all the filling among individual tart shells (still in their pans), smoothing the tops. ny Chandler (Sterling Epicure; Cut the peaches in half; discard the pits. Cut eachhalf into thin slices, then arrange them asyou wish, so they $25). The very long subtitle mostly cover the filling of each tart. Bake for 40 minutes, or until the center of the filling feels firm and springs heekeh Burgers with Chipotle Mustard means there'smeat and sea- back when gently pressed. Transfer the tarts (in the pans) to a wire rack to cool for 20 minutes, then remove the food in the book. In addition to tarts from their pans. Makes 8 servings. thistrove of unfussy recipes, Serve with a piece of the cheesealongside eachtart (or tart half). the cooking instructor and food

blogger offers a gemlike glossary and soak/no-soak chart.

— Adapted from '7he Cheesemonger's Seasons:Recipes for Enjoying CheeseWith Ripe Fruits andVegetables," by Chester Hastings (Chronicle)

"The Freekeh Cookbook: Healthy, Delicious, Easy-to-Prepare Meals With America's Hottest Grain," byBonnie Matthews (Skyhorse Publishing; $18).The

"*

"Itsu the Cookbook: 100 Low-Calorie Eat Beautiful Recipes for Health and Happiness," by Julian Metcalfe and Blanche Vaughan, with Angela Dowden (Mitcheg Beazley; $20). The man who has planted a Pret A Manger on hundreds of street corners focuses here on dean Asian eating and simple preparations. "The Cheesemonger's Seasons: Recipes for Enjoying Cheeses With Ripe Fruits and Vegetables," by Chester Hastings (Chronicle; $35). The c hef-author's pairings a r e unexpected; he understands

6 cloves garlic, finely chopped 2 TBS grapeseed oil or vegetable oil, plus morefor the pan

1 TBS chili powder

1 tsp apple cider vinegar

2 TBS onion powder

1 C honey mustard, divided use

2 tsp chipotle powder

2 chipotle peppers in adobo, finely chopped

1 tsp smoked Spanish paprika (pimenton) 2 Ig eggs, beaten

freekeh that she partnered with a producer to grow and sell an organic form of the ancient, cracked green wheat.

summer fruit sare featured.

t/s onion, finely diced

and the cooking step)

'e

former part-t ime Trader Joe's demo cook was so taken with

"Fruftful: Four Seasons of Fresh Fruit Recipes," by Brian Nicholson andSarah Huck(Running Press; $27.50). Propsgo to thefarm-savvyauthors for offering several gooseberry dishes. Skip ahead to the "Putting Up for Winter" chapter, where more

2t/4 C water 1 C dried freekeh (may substitute 2 C cooked freekeh; omit the water above

1 C whole-wheat flour, plus more for dusting Sea salt

15 oz cooked or canned no-salt-

added black beans(if using canned, rinse and drain them)

Combine the water and dried freekeh in a mediumsaucepan over high heat. Once the mixture comes to a boil, cook for 1 minute, stirring. Reduce the heat to low; cover and cook for 20 to 25 minutes, until tender. Transfer to a heatproof bowl and refrigerate until cool. Combine the chili, onion and chipotle powders and smoked paprika in a mixing bowl, along with the eggs, cooked and cooled freekeh, black beans, onion, garlic, oil, vinegar, 2 tablespoons of the honey mustard, 1 tablespoon of the chipotle peppers in adobo, 1cup of the flour and agood pinch of salt. Useyour clean hands to blend well. Dust a work surface and your clean hands with flour. Use the chilled mixture to form 8 balls (about 4/2 ounces each); shape each one into a burger patty and coat it lightly with flour, patting to remove any excess. Whisk together the remaining honeymustard andthe remaining chipotle peppers in adobo in asmall bowl until well-combined. Peach and Pine Nut Tarts are not too sweet, and they pair well with cheese. Heat about i/s inch of the oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Once the oil shimmers, add 2 or 3 patties and cook for 2 minutes, until browned and crisped on the bottom. Turn the patties over and cook the that cheese can play a key role combinations are as appealing far between, so Sterling, the same way on the second side for about 2 minutes. Transfer to a plate; alongside a well-constructed as the photography here: za'at- founder of Los Dos Cooking sprinkle lightly with salt. Repeat with the remaining patties. dish as well as incorporated ar and pecans on broiled figs; School, must know what he's Serve warm or at room temperature, with the chipotle honey muswithin it. Chances are good grilled haloumi cheese with doing. At 500-plus pages and tard. thatyou'llbe seekingout chees- strawberries and herbs. coffee-table size, the book is — Adapted from '7heFreekehCookbook:Healthy,Del icious,Easy-to-Prepare es you've never heard of. sure to be a long-term, definiMeals With America's Hottest Grain,"by Bonnie Matthews (Skyhoise Publishing) "Yucatan: Recipes From a tive reference guide. "Vibrant Food: Celebrating Culinary Expedition," by Dathe Ingredients, Recipes and vid Sterling (University of TexColors of Each Season," by as Press; $60).Endorsements Kimberley Hasselbrink (Ten from Mexican culinary expert Speed Press; $25). Ingredient Diana Kennedy come few and

Blueberry and Gin Gelatins Makes 8 servings. Thin gelatin sheets (approximately 3 by 9 inches apiece) can probably be obtained from a local bakery (for a small fee). Theydissolve without grit and are preferable to powdered gelatin for this recipe. You'll need eight glasses or cups (each 4 to 6ounces), preferably clear. 1/4C tonic water 1 Cgin Finely grated zest and juice of

2 lemons

s/4C sugar /s C water Generous /s oz gelatin sheets

Scant1 TBS Angostura bitters 1s/4 C fresh blueberries, rinsed well and patted dry

(about 9; see above)

Combine thetonic water, gin, lemonzest andjuice, sugar andwater in alarge saucepan over medium heat. Stir to dissolve the sugarwithout letting the mixture come to aboil. Reducethe heat to lowand cookfor about 5 minutes. Meanwhile, place the gelatin sheets in a shallow bowl and cover with cold water; soak for about 3 minutes, just so they soften but do not disintegrate. Drain. Strain the tonic mixture into a cleanglass container; discard the solids. Stir in the Angostura bitters to achieve a uniform pale pink color. Stir the softened gelatin sheets into the warm tonic-Angostura mixture. Divide one-third of the gelatinized liquid among the glasses or cups; distribute one-third of the blueberries evenly amongthem. Refrigerate for about 45 minutes or until slightly firm. (Keepthe remaining gelatinized liquid at room temperature.) Distribute half of the remaining blueberries among the glasses or cups andadd half of the remaining gelatinized liquid; if necessary, gently reheat that portion of liquid in a saucepanover low heat until it is smooth and pourable, being careful not to warm it too much or the gelatin will fail; remove it from the heat to cool for 5 minutes before adding it to the glasses or cups. Refrigerate for about 30 minutes. Repeat the heating step, if needed, and distribute the remaining gelatinized liquid and blueberries among the glasses or cups. The fruit should be suspended throughout the gelatins. Refrigerate for at least 6 hours to set firmly before serving. — Adapted from "AChangeof Appetite: Where Healthy Meets Delicious,"by Diana Henry (Mitchell Beazley)

Scallop and Blueberry Seviche Makes 6 servings. Be sure to usethefreshest scallops you canfind. Diced peaches or nectarines canstand in for the blueberries. Serve with tortilla chips. 1 Ib sea scallops, patted dry, then cut into /4-inch slices

(see note) /2 C finely chopped red onion

1 to 2 serrano chili peppers, stemmed, seeded and finely

chopped 3 strips lime peel (no pith)

Freshly ground black pepper

r

'/s C fresh lime juice 1 C fresh blueberries

/4 C chopped cilantro (optional)

Kosher salt

Combine the scallops, onion, chilies (to taste), lime peel, asmall pinch of salt and afew grinds of black pepper in a large, nonreactive (such asceramic or glass) bowl. Pour in the lime juice andtoss to coat. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate, tossing occasionally, for at least 2 hours or up to overnight (16 hours at most). Just before serving, add the blueberries andthecilantro, if using, and toss to combine. Taste, andadd salt and pepper as needed. Use a slotted spoon totransfer the seviche to individual cocktail (martini) glasses orsmall plates; serve rightaway. Note:Youmight find it easier to slice the scallops if they havespent10 minutes in the freezer beforehand. — Adapted from Fruiff ubFourSeasonsofFresh FruitRecipes,"by Bri an NicholsonandSarahHuck(Running Press)

Restaurant gb L o u n g

61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend, OR 97702 Reservations 541.382.8769 accepted: 5-Close www.scanlonsrestauranLcom


D4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

HOME ck

AR D EN

Next week: New stuff for pets

Weeds Continued from D1 A noxious weed is a nonnative aggressive plant brought to the U.S., mainly from Eu-

rope and Asia. Although not common inourCentralOregon area, the Himalayan blackber-

ry was originally imported for fruit and for live fencing. Anyone living in Western Oregon can tell you how that ended; it grows rampant over much of the Pacific Northwest.

G.A. Cooper courtesy of the Smithsonian Institute / Submitted photo

Dalmation toadflax.

Noxious weeds crowd out and rob native plants of water,

nutrients and light. They increasesoilerosion, and some are toxic to humans and livestock. Humans have been poi-

soned by Western water hemlock, thinking it was wild parsley. Many a bike tire has been ruinedbypuncturevine, aprostrate annual that blooms from

Patrick J. Alexander, hosted by the USDANRCS PLANTS Database / Submitted photo

Field bindweed.

Julyto October. The flowers are small and yellow. The fruit is a woody, spikey bur that is sharp enough to puncture atire. When you look at weed seed viability charts, you can begin

|.

to understand the importance

of the annual Let's Pull Together campaign. The knapweeds, both spottedand diffuse,can produce up to 25,000 seeds per year and re-

v

LarryAllain, hosted by the USDA-NRCS PLANTS Database / Submitted photo

main viable in the soil for up to Perennial ryegrass. eightyears.

Photos by Jeremy Bittermann/New YorkTimes News Service

An outdoor dining area is housed in the interior courtyard of the Fahertys' 3,200-square-foot home in Portland.

Dalmatian toadflax, the perennial that looks similar to

m ustard seeds lastfordecades. Perennial ryegrass has a viaproduce up to 500,000 seeds per bility of up to three years. Anyear and remain viable in the nual ryegrass has a viability of soil forup to 10years. up to nine years. C ommon weeds i n ou r All of the above are good backyard gardens such as examples of why we should do lambsquarter can p r oduce a regular weed-pulling in our more than 500,000 seeds per own backyard. To make weedplant, according to Jed Col- ingmore fun, take atrip toyour quhoun, former Oregon State local thrift store and look for a University weed specialist, and sizable wicker basket to tuck in can remain viable for up to four the garden. They are great for decades. a quick pull and toss. Several Field bindweed, the weed years ago I kept abasket on my that has tendrils that w r ap route to get mail and the paper.

Function

the garden snapdragon, can

around adjacent plants, has a

"There's no wasted space at all."

Continued from D1 As Jill Faherty, 44, a

p roduct developer f o r

And considering that "it's

Schoolhouse Electric, said:

going by so fast with our kids," he said, what's even better is that "it's like the family lodge here: We get to see so much more of them."

"We had a 4,700-squarefoot house, but we'd end up in the 150-square-foot TV

room to be together." Like many of the cou-

With all that open space and

ple's products, their new

3,200-square-foot house has a midcentury foundation, but the design has

been reimagined for modern life. In this case, that involved reconfiguring the The Faherty homehasthree brick fireplaces. layout of the 1958 house, which they bought in 2012 for $785,00, but retaining brick fireplaces. any idea of time or style," its footprint and the three Ben Waechter, a local archi- Waechter said. "Images of tect, created a family-friendly Swedish courtyard farmhous-

It is so easy to pull a weed and toss it in the basket. Eventu-

viability of more than 50years. The mustards are long-lived. ally the basket filled and the Seeds excavated from a monas-

"We live in every square inch of this house," he said.

contents were consigned to the

tery in Denmark were dated to yard-debris container. be 600years old, and11of them — Reporter: dottville@ germinated. Most commonly, bendbroadband.com

So the following floor models must go!

Rn>«r ~ rva Ms) 5+riel

"As much as we think we'd

love to," Jill Faherty said, "we really don't." Brian Faherty objected: "We

do entertain three kids every night, and often their friends." Even so, the custom white-

oak butcher block on the kitchhallways, large windows and The renovation, which was en island is already showing a central living space that completed in five months, cost signs of wear. "It's not perfect, and we like combined the dining room, about $500,000. kitchen, home office and famAlthough (or perhaps be- it like that," Brian Faherty ilyroom. cause) the new house has less said. "We wanted a h ouse "They wanted a single-story space, Brian Faherty said, it that's durable, not fussy." house made of forms and ma- functions better than the large He added: "Don't look in the terials that would transcend house they gave up. garage." floor plan for them, with wide

Summer Floor Model Sale Fall will bring lots of new styles...

an outdoor dining area framed by the house, you would think this would be a good place for parties, too. But the Fahertys, it seems, rarely entertain.

es came to mind."

The Dr. Breus Bed Your Sleep. Your Health. Your Life.™

I •

All Floor Model Dr. Breus Beds k

AOVOpure

The kitchen fits the open theme of the house.

spo o FF!

J

All NovoPure Floor Model Beds

Aii old cover new stock of NovoPure •

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Jha ~ s Even the storage space is open.

An Ikea sectional sofa dominates the living room.

- Spo o FF! ~l

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541-598-3955 www .organicsleepproducts.com

(

Brian and Jill Faherty with their children, from left, J.P., Audrey and Greta, outside their 3,200 square-

foot home in Portland. Tired of their previous, larger home's tiny rooms, they dramatically reconfigured the space here. "We live in every square inch of this house. There's no wasted space st all," says Brian Faherty.


TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

LIVING SMART

House ceanin means t e exterior,too You may be tempted to use for a day before removing it and then scrubbing the stain with laundry detergent. If it's not gone, clean the setting. Water jets can injure people and damage mason- area again, but this time use ry, stucco or wood siding, a power washer and trisodiouse cleaning isn't just and may force water through um phosphate (also known as an inside job. Your sid- seams of vinyl-siding pan- TSP). For rust stains that don't ing, driveway and ga- els. Also, power washing remove easily, apply powrage floor get dirty, too. And alone will not remove mold or dered oxalic acid (also known justas a freshly cleaned car mildew. as wood bleach), and let it seems to drive better, a spicIf you use a pressure wash- stay for a few minutes before and-span exterior feels great er, be sure to wear eye protec- scrubbing and rinsing. tocome home to. tion. Start at the top of your If all else fails, a professionhouse and work down, direct- al may use muriatic acid to Siding ing the water downward and eat away the stained portion You can clean it the tried- going side to side across the of concrete. Be very careful if and-true way, rinsing with a Sldlng. you try this yourself. Use one hose, using a long-handled part of acid to 10 parts water brush to scrub with soapy wa- Concrete driveway and wear protective clothing ter (laundry detergent works) or garage floor and a respirator. and then rinsing well. Concrete is porous and will To discouragefuture stains To remove mildew or al- hold stains if vehicle fluids like from setting, seal your drivegae, consider a hand-pump oil,grease and antifreeze are way after it's been cleaned and garden sprayer and oxygen allowed to linger. Other stains allowed to dry for a few days. If bleach (NOT chlorine, which can come from tires, mold, you do the job yourself, read the can strip color and kill plants). mildew, rust and fungus. instructions and apply evenly Mix powdered oxygen bleach The first step in removing with a sprayer or roller. Don't with warm water, stir and ap- a stain is also the best way to use the driveway for 24 hours. ply with a long-handled brush keep future fluid leaks from To remove tire marks from to dry siding. Let it work for staining: Cover the area with a sealed concrete driveway, about 10 minutes. Use a water a drying agent, such as cat lit- scrub with a small amount of hose to rinse well. ter. Let the desiccant remain degreaser. Or use a solvent or

ANGIE HICKS

a power washer, but use caution and start with the lowest

H

the sealer. Reseal once the

stain is gone.

Asphalt driveway Use care when removing stains from asphalt driveways, since detergents or cleaners that contain petro-

leum-based solvents can damage asphalt. Because oil stains also can damage asphalt, it's wise to follow cleaning with resealing.

Hiring Cleaning your siding, driveway or garage floor is a job you can do yourself, but if you have a multistory home or difficult stains, you may prefer to hire a power washing service. An experienced pro who is highly

The Associated Press file photo

Purslane is foraged and planted on purpose in countries such as Greece and Mexico, where it's part of traditional cuisine. Raw in salads, it has a lively flavor and a pleasant crunch.

rated by local consumers will

know how much pressure to apply and will have tools and products that clean effective-

ly without causing damage to your home or property. — Angie Hicks is the founder of Angie's List, which offers consumerreviews on everything from home repair to health care.

Hard to beat in the garden or the frying pan By Barbara Damrosch

o un in esi n'ss ar e es By Jane Margolies New York Times News Service

In 1976, while Johnny a r c hitec-

ture school, he cooked up a "punk Gothic" kitchen for a friend. It was the opening salvo in his war on cookie-cutter kitchens. With en-

'5

couragement from his aunt,

li

I

as you can learn from a ter-

special To The Washington Post

rific 10-mmute video posted My artist friend Sherry on YouTube (bit.ly/InCDNEt). keeps a handsome garden, It's a matter of paying close her vegetables and herbs attention and calculating the mixed with bright mari- a mount of time and space a golds and neatly composed weed may share with a crop. within wooden frames. L ettuce, planted early, will The day I stopped to ad- be cleaner at harvest time if mire them, her beds were weeds have been given speweedless excial dis p ensacept for scatt ion around i t . tered purslane lt WBS Bri T hese will t h e n seed»ngs a ide a b ath be mowed and p est of h i gh dug under when s ummer

~

that

t hree-qu a r t e r s

appears when blasphemous.... ma ture, just old he ho wea her Gaf deri dogma eno ugh o re

renowned cookbook author and shopkeeper Elizabeth David, he has designed what he calls "sociable kitchens" and promoted the principles

has settled in.

purslane had

place the

tf e a t s BllWee( S

n u t r i-

en t s they've tak-

just spangled as invaders that en f rom the soil. my own gar COmpete With The iversity t at

that make them work. Today

consideredone ofthe world's most influential kitchen experts, Grey, 63 ,

Editor's note:Martha Stewart's column will return. Questions of general interest can beemailed to mslletters©marthastewart.com. For moreinformation on this column, visit www. marthastewart.com.

chemical stripper to remove

DESIGN Q&A

Grey was still i n

D5

4

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den, too. p ' "It'seasierto ~ remove when SP BCe, riutl'Ierits it's big," I re- agd mOiSture

Iatr'r~~~

e stimates

that he has produced more than 500 kitchens, and his company, i n H a m pshire, England, takes on about 20

m arked.

The

" " plants, as they grow, form the Othef' WBP'S tO sPreadingmats lOOk Bt the m that give them the S p anish

projects a year. A recent ex-

ample — a pool house with cooking capabilities in Cambridge, England — piqued our interest during these dog days of summer. (This in-

Glenn Dearing via New York Times News Service

a mix of weeds b ' g to th g de n a lso encourages a diversity of insect life — and a better balance.

I would n 't play thes e games with a super-competitor like galinsoga. name verdolaBut a green lake of ga or "green lake." Grasp purslane, pulledbefore it went each mat's center, where toseed,mightnotbetheworst

terview has been edited and

A pool house with cooking capabilities designed byJohnny Grey in Cambridge, England, is an exam-

the taproot has f ormed,

condensed.)

ple of what Grey calls "sociable kitchens."

then pull; in minutes you garden bed. As a succulent, have a bucket full of purs- would its fat, fluid-filled leaves

p ool h ouse-slashQ •• Akitchen is a surprising pool house, they went back combo. Aren't you supposed to wait an hour after eating before going in the water? • This is not a place to • cook up serious food.

A

It's for small, light meals or

for heating things up: a recreational kitchen to supplement the main kitchen. The clients

say they often have a meal in the main house and then walk over and sit in th e Jacuzzi,

talking and relaxing with a glass of wine.

A

exist?

years. They had been crafted in California to a Japanese

farmhouse design, shipped here in kit form and built out of Douglas fir. When my clients wanted to add a

A

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that had been there about 40

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induction hob. The organic The pool house is con- shape was inspired by wood• n ected to t h e mai n land mushrooms — it's meant house by a walkway, with to look like it's growing out both structures up on stilts of the floor. There were a few over a pond on a wooded site. exciting moments installing Did the pool building already it. • There were three hous• es in an o ld q uarry

lane. You can also hoe compete for moisture? May-

You've h ad some er drawer and a fridge. The • high-profile c lie n ts. to the same company and benches are Corian and proordered another building. vide ambient light. What was the kitchen you deThey asked me to do all the signed for Sting like'? interior design. I had the idea E ven in y o u r n o n• I would call it a sophisof putting in some kind of • pool-house k i t c hens • ticated farmhouse kitchkitchen. you seem to prefer curves to en. He had been brought up in straight lines. a modest house in Newcastle. It's as much a sculptural • S traight l i n es a n d He knew he wanted a Belfast • installation as a f u n c• s harp c o rners a re a sink, those big white ceramtional space. The island, for problem. Cornerstri gger a ic sinks, because his mother instance. subliminal f i ght-and-flight used to bathe him in one. • The bottom is cast con• crete that c a n tilevers o ut into a counter with an

cabinet and benchQ •• The es are also curved.

corners on a center island, people have to be careful to

them when they are large, be. But I've noticed that when skimming just under the w eeds shade the soil, evaposoil surface so the root sys- r a t ion is curtailed and more

tem stays in the ground. moisture is retained. That's But hoeing the tiny ones another reason why larger tends to just move them

o n e s areeasiertopull.

around,ready to regrow as Besides, purslane is not soon as it rains. only tasty to eat but also "What if I just left them

h i g hly nutritious. It's both for-

there'?" Sherry wondered aged and planted on purpose aloud. It was an idea both in countries such as Greece brilliant andblasphemous, a n d M exico, where it's part

and I thought about it over of traditional cuisine. Raw in

response. If there are sharp

Q •• of your childhood'?

the next few days. Garden s a l ads, it has a lively flavor dogma treats all w e eds a n d a p l easantcrunch. Tryit

• W hen my d a d re are rounded, people can eas• t urned from t he w a r , ily flow around the counter. he brought home all these In-

A

as invaders that compete sauteed with onions and hot withyour crops for space, peppers, or dropped into a

It's a more efficient use of

dian carpets — he had been

But there are other ways to garden greens love to grow

space.

stationed in Burma. My parents bought a house that was bomb-damaged, and the first thing my dad did was build the kitchen out of the pack-

look at them.

avoid them. But i f

c o rners

hat's the most Q •• Wc ommon m i s take i n

What about the kitchen

kitchens'? • Having the cook face ing cases from the carpets. • We wanted curves for • the wall, with his or her He was a doctor, but he loved • objects people would back to the room. It's the most making things. I'm a closet come into contact with. If you anti-social thing you can do. carpenter, too. I'm not very only have a bathing suit on, You can't relax if you don't good, but I understand how you are particularly vulner- know what's behind you. A to make things, and that's a able to sharp edges. In the cook should face out into the good start for understanding cabinet, there's a dishwash- space. how to design things.

A

t h i n g that ever happened to a

A

nutrients an d

m o i sture. s o u p to thicken it. Not many in hot summer weather, and

My husband, Eliot, has that alone earns purslane a at timesused red clover pardon. as a living mulch, undersowing a crop such as fall a muddy harvest. The clover stays put i n w i n ter,

protecting the soil against erosion, and is tilled under

BarhTurfSoil.com pRgMp y M L iyfg y

541-389-9663 available nitrogen to the

soil. "Soil is much happier with vegetation on it," Eliot

After air conditioner runs, anodor of cigarettes By Alan J. Heavens The Philadelphia 1nquirer

• Over the last month, af• ter running the air con-

the smell is back. The air con- The smokers removed weathditioner must be drawing in erstripping from the base of

forhistolerance of weeds, but his approach requires very careful management,

their bedroom door, and the

or the floor, and the air conditioning draws it out.

in the house, or in the back

the adjacent house.

with something definitive.

ashtray. alley where cars are parked. Your problem involves a There is no hidden source, Two doors down, there are window air conditioner and like a collection of cigarette smokers, and when we walk nonsmokers on b oth s ides, butts in his room, so the logi- by the front of their house, it however. I'm stumped. I've noticed that when I'm cal thing was to clean the cur- smells like an ashtray. rent air conditioner and see if A while back, we had driving on a hot summer day, it still smelled. • a s imilar s ituationand the air conditioning is L ong story s h ort, w e this one involving a central running, and I pass someone ran an ionizer in hi s room air-conditioning system, and smoking, I can smell tobacwhen he was at overnight the rowhouse neighbors actu- co, but the scent disappears camp and bought a new air ally did smoke. rapidly. conditioner. Experts I consulted suggestTobacco-smoke odor does After running the new air ed reasons why this might be linger, though — for years in a conditioner for two nights, happening. One possibility: lot of cases. Maybe it is present

A•

raises vegetables on two fa™s near Sonoma, California. Cannard is famous

smoke from the outside.

Shower stalls Here's a cleaning tip that

has worked for a Chicago reader. "Use inexpensive shampoo on a rough washcloth or Dobie pad to gently clean shower doors while you're in the

shower. Squeaky-clean hair and glass at the same time. "Smells good, too." — Contact: aheavens@phillynews. conl.

I

friend, Bob Cannard, who

in your son's room, in the paint

I'm just guessing. I'm hopAs far as we know, neither smoke smell seeped through ditioner in my son's room, we neighbor on either side smokes the gaps in the party wall into ing my experts can come up noticed that it smelled like an

says. This brings to mind the philosophy of a n o ther

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

' u an er' rin snoves ovi ran i e TV SPOTLIGHT

(c

"Outlander"

' s .~

premieresSaturday, Starz .s

ByFrazier Moore The Associated Press

NEW YORK — There's an

odd believability you find inside "Outlander" that some-

how makes it feel true-to-life. N ever min d t h a t i t ' s a

rip-roaring fantasy. Claire, a lovely British Army nurse on a s econd honeymoon in Scotland, is

m y sterious-

ly swept from 1945 back to 1743, plopped into a strange and alien existence, including marriage to a dashing Scottish warrior, even as she strug-

Caitriona Balfe, who stars as

hooted Heughan, interrupt-

Claire, during an interview in New York alongside Scottish-born Sam Heughan ("A Princess for Christmas"), who plays the warrior, Jamie, and like Balfe knew nothing of the "Outlander" craze.

ing himself as he pointed to a baseboard of the otherwise

"But I had a funny moment when I went to my local book-

removed. "She's GREAT with horses,"

store in L.A. to buy a copy," Balfe recalled. "When I was paying for it, the clerk said, 'You know, they're making a

Heughan laughed.

TV series out of that. Ronald

in roach-infested New York.

immaculate Associated Press conference room. With that,

Balfe let out a yelp, followed by apologies for overreacting as the roach was swiftly

"I'm even fine with m i ce and rats," said Balfe, who re-

called when she used to live

D. Moore is going to executive-produce it. I wrote my

"I was pretty lucky. I never had a cockroach in five years

thesis about him in college.' I

in Brooklyn. But I was stay-

thought, 'Ahhh, this is a good ing at my friend's place in omen!'" Manhattan one night while Sony Pictures Television via The Associated Press

he was out of town. There was a cockroach in the bath-

" m odern" Caitriona Balfe stars as Claire Randall, a British Armynurse swept times and the husband she left back in time from 1945 to 1743 Scotland in Starz's new TV series "Outlander." behind. Premiering on t h e S t arz

Finding Claire "I thought we would cast Claire first, and that Jamie would be the hardest part to

woke up at 6 the next morn-

network on Saturday at 9 p.m.

cast," said Moore. "But Jamie

ing and had to run out to the

was the first character cast in the entire piece. It happened so

c losest coffee shop just t o

gles to return t o

EDT, "Outlander" is adapted

that don't exist, and creating things that take you outside

" Perceptions are h ard t o fight," he said. "This is the

from Diana Gabaldon's wildly popular novels. Shot in Scot- of your day-to-day reality. So exact opposite challenge that land, the series is lush and the process of putting together we had on 'Battlestar Galactibeautiful. It is as genre-bend- a show that takes place in the ca' on the Syfy channel: How ing as its source material, as 18th century is really not dif- do you get a woman to even it straddles romance, science fiction, history and adventure.

Same andopposite "I've always done period shows," said "Outlander" executive producer Ronald D. Moore, a sci-fi maestro celebrated for his futuristic "Battlestar Galactica," "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" and "Star Trek: The Next Generation."

"I like working in worlds

ferent from a show that takes place in th e f u ture: You're

still creating everything from scratch." Moore knows he's facing a hurdle snagging viewers who aren't already hooked on the "Outlander" books. In particu-

lar, he's got to win over guys, who may not i n stantly see

room, and I couldn't even bring myself to go in there. I

pee."

early it scared us, but once we saw Sam's tape, we said, 'Let's Back to work just grab him while we can.' After a week in the U.S. for And then it took forever to find publicity and Comic-Con, it's look at t h i s p r ogram? But Claire. We needed someone back for a few more weeks' oncethey did,women bought intelligent, funny, empathetic, shooting in Scotland. There, in and loved it. Now we have capable; an actress who could the "Outlander" troupe has the opposite challenge: Look, sustain viewers' interest week been able to toil in a bubble 'Outlander' isn't chick-lit or a after week. since last September, large"Then Caitriona sent her ly shielded from the hubbub romance novel! This is really an adventure story. So, you try tape in, and word roared greeting the show. "This year has flown by," to get men to sample it in the around the office: 'Yeah, that's it!' She was cast just days be- said Heughan. "Our feet havsame way." en't touched the ground." fore she had to go to work!"

the appeal of a romance-laden saga with a woman at its

Buddingpopularity

center.

the job," said Irish actress

" When

"I wasn't aware when I got Roach reproach "There's a

Namin a a ola ea reative Dear Abby:What is the protocol

assumed that people who wish to

use someone's name when naming their child should seek DFP,R permission (whether the person is living or dead)? Obviously, some people will use the name regardless of being granted a blessing or not, but I'm wondering what is appropriate in this situation.

Ag gy

— Pregnant in Illinois

sidered the honor it is intended to

or suicide attempt, and I feel I may

be and not open fresh wounds. If be forced to reveal that very private it would cause pain, perhaps the part of my life in order to defend expectant parents should consider

my actions. I don't know what to

making the name of the deceased do. — Reluctant to Reveal their baby's middle name instead of first name. Dear Reluctant to Reveal:I think Dear Abby:During you should follow your doctor's admy teens, I was di- vice and not be intimidated. You agnosed with d e- have an illness — depressionpression and institu- that, according to the Centers for tionalized following Disease Control and Prevention, a suicide a ttempt.

is shared by about 9 percent of

Depression is something I live with daily. Unfortunately, my parents and siblings have a "don't ask, don't tell" policy when it comes to anything that may stir up

our population. It is nothing to be ashamed of. Because you're afraid of what

your mother will say, explain to those relatives you feel close to

emotions. I feel that it's detrimental

what you need to do and the rea-

Dear Pregnant: In the Jewish to my well-being. faith, it is traditional for a baby to My doctor has suggested cutting be named for a deceased parent my family out of my life. Dealing or grandparent — or at least given with them gives me great anxiety. a name with the same first initial. My mother is a master manipula-

sons for it. I can't guarantee that some of them won't take sides, but

However, if the person who died

some of them are toxic.

tor who denies my suicide attempt

was a child of a close relative, I can ever happened, and I'm afraid she see how that could be very painful will tell my extended family memfor the parents who lost their child. bers (many of whom I have relaThe appropriate thing to do tionships with) that I have "abanwould be to first have a conver- doned the family." sation with the surviving family No one outside my immediate member(s) to be sure it will be con- family knows about my depression

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUES-

I'm sure not all of them will. Sadly,

not all families are functional. Not all parents are good parents, and P.S. Because your struggle with depression is ongoing, I hope you are still under the care of a psycho-

therapist. If you're not, please consider it. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

DAY, AUG. 5, 2014:This yearnoone can sayyouare not creative anddynamic.

YOURHOROSCOPE

Some people seeyouasa solution person. In your personal life, your creativity and adventurous personality mix well. You al ways seem to havesomething going on or are in the midst of cooking up wonderful ideas. If you are single, your magnetism atstsrs showthe kisti tracts others. Your of dsyyos'I havo ability to select the

another from your to-do list. A respected elder or boss will be observing and admiring your abilities. The two of you will havea conversation soon.Tonight:Be a little more docile.

By Jacqueline Bigar

** * * You might be more forthright than you realize. Your imagination is likely to pique others' interest, which could result in a discussion. Look at what is happening within your immediate circle. Try to incorporate some practical insights. Tonight: Clear out

some errands. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * I n the afternoon, you might ** * * Don't put off creative interactions realize that what you want could fall into ** * * * Qynamlc appropriate person for later in the day. You'll want to use the place with ease. Reveal more of your ** * * p ositive for you emerges. morning for that, when your charm levels energy and thoughts, and you are likely ** * Average Youmight go to attract a lot of support and great are much higher. Complete as much as ** So-so through several ideas. You might want to chat with a you can, and know when to go off and people beforeyou find a friend or two. Tonight: Get some * Difficult friend. Tonight: Why not plan a weekend find someoneyou escape? exercise. feel comfortable CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) with. If you are attached, you energize ** * Take news with a grain of salt. ** * * You'll move past a hassle with your significant other. Often you are like Listen to what others share. An idea that easebecauseofwhatsomeonereveals. two kids off on adventure. As a couple, might appear to be frivolous could end up Your creativity could point you in the you find life to be exciting. A fellow LEO being worthwhile if you try to work with it. wrong direction. Test out your thoughts always tries to outshine you. On somelevel,you could betaken by the on someone you respect. This person's ARIES (March21-April19) feedback could be imperative. Tonight: Let wisdom of using this approach. Tonight: ** * * * O thers might be taken aback Only with someone you enjoy. your imagination lead the way. by your energy. You seem to be nearly AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) unstoppable. Good timing adds to your ** * Be more direct, and follow through *** * Refuse to gossip aboutsomeone creative energies and increases the inwho might be disruptive to your plans. on what is needed. Financial availability tensity that surrounds you. Many people Let this person be, and try to understand will be critical in letting a family member would behard-pressed tosay"no" to you. his or her agenda. When the time is know where you stand. You could get Tonight: Use your imagination. right, you can walk away. By that time, tired of the constant feedbackand might TAURUS (April 20-May20) you will have learned a lot of important not be able to pursue the course you ** * * Work with a loved one to get the want. Tonight: Spend time with good information. Tonight: Accept someone's resultsyou desire. Listen to news with invitation. company.

more of anopenmind. If youbecometoo set on havingyour way,you will encoun-

ter failure. If you are open to suggestions, you'll discover even more workable ideas. Tonight: Visit over dinner for two.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

** * * * Y ou won't be dragging for long. By the afternoon, you could be crossing off one finished project after

CANCER (June21-July 22)

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

** * * Your ability to express yourself emerges. You finally will get through to others. The response and supportyou get could be most gratifying. Share your ideas, and be willing to have them critiqued. Friends surround you, no matter which path you choose. Tonight: Your treat.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * *

You'll want to try a different

s h o w pr e -

mieres," Balfe said, "we'll be back in Glasgow. We miss it."

cockroach!"

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l

for naming a baby after a deceased person? If the name you want to use is a deceased family member's name, do we ask his next of kin for approval? Do we say nothing? Is it

the

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 1:05, 3:45, 10:05 • AMERICA (PG-13j 6:45, 9:30 • AND SO IT GOES(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:05, 4:30, 6:55, 9:20 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES (PG-13)3:15,6:15 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES 3-D(PG-13)11:20 a.m., 9:10 • DRAGON BALLZ:BATTLEOFTHE GODS (no MPAA rating) 7 • GET ON UP (PG-13) 11 am., 210, 630, 940 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY (PG-13)12:30,3:30,3:55, 7,9:45, 10:15 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY3-0 (PG-13)1,7:30 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY IMAX3-0 (PG-13)Noon, 3, 6:30, 9:15 • HERCULES (PG-13) 2, 9:50 • HERCULES 3-D (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 7:15 • HOW TO TRAIN YOURDRAGON2(PGj 11:10 a.m., 1:40, 4:05 • LUCY (R) 11:30a.m., 1:30, 1:50, 4:10, 5, 6:40, 7:55, 9, 10:10 • MALEFICENT (PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:30, 4:55 • A MOSTWANTED MAN (Rj11:15a.m.,3:05,6,9:05 • PLANES: FIRERESCUE 5 (PG) 1:20, 3:40, 7:10 • PLANES: FIRERESCUE3-0 8 (PG)11:05a.m. • THE PURGE: ANARCHY(R) 1:10, 3:50, 7:45, 10:15 • SEXTAPE (R) 7:35, 10 • TRANSFORMERS: AGEOFEXTINCTION (PG-13) 11:55 a.m.,4:20,8 • TURBO (PG) 10a.m. • WALKING WITH DINOSAURS(PG) 10a.m. • WISH I WAS HERE(Rj 9:25 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •

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© King Features Syndicate

9 p.m.on 5,8,"America'sGot Talent" —The new episode "Quarter Finals 2" finds another 12 acts trying to keep it together in front of the audience in New York's Radio City Music Hall, as well as millions watching at home. Five of these acts will move forward to the semifinals, as selected by viewers, with the results to be announced during Wednesday's show. Celebrity judges Heidi Klum, Howie Mandel, Howard Stern and Mel B still are on hand to offer feedback, even though the performers no longer live or die based on that quartet's opinions. 9 p.m. on TNT, "Rizzoli 5 Isles" — The team races against a killer's personal schedule to find and protect ayoung witness to the contract killing of a woman outside a nightclub in the new episode "Lost 8 Found." As the tension rises, Jane (Angie Harmon) has little choice but to put herself in the line of fire to save this key witness. Sasha Alexan-

der also stars.

9 p.m. on USA, "Royal Pains" — In the new episode "Oh, M.G.," a performer (Cheyenne

Jackson) whosecareer is jeopardized by his diminishing sense of smell turns for help to Hank (Mark Feuerstein), who also tries to find a specialist who can help Charlotte (guest star Gillian Alexy) with her condition. Evan and Ray (Paulo Costanzo, Jeremy Davidson) hold a grand opening for HankLab, while Divya's (Reshma Shetty) well-intentioned efforts to protect Jeremiah (Ben Shenkman) put a strain on their friendship. 10 p.m. on FX, "Tyrant" —So, it turns out Sheik Rashid actually may well survive that brutal attack by Jamal (Ashraf Barhom), which poses all kinds of nightmares for the latter (think beheading, and that's if he's lucky.)

Meanwhile, Amira(Alice Krige) discloses a secret she has kept for 20 years, and it's something that leads Barry (Adam Rayner) to question everything he ever has believed about his father in the new episode "Preventative Medicine." © Zap2it

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 •

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Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

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24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

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Lost & Found

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Donate deposit bottles/ Pool Table with 1e Slate cans to local all vol., Top. Needs felt. Wood non-profit rescue, for legs, leather pockets, feral cat spay/neuter. 5ft x 8ft. $350 OBO. Cans for Cats trailer Computer desk with at Jake's Dlner, Hwy folding doors by Broy20 E; donate M-F at hill, cherry finish. 5ft 201 Smith Sign, 1515 NE W x 6ft H x 2ft D. Inc 2nd; or CRAFT, Tu- power strip, bulletin New Today malo. Leave msg. for board, shelving, file pick up of large amts, drawer, room for 2 541-389-8420. monitors, pc, printer. www.craftcats.org $325 OBO. audrey© swissfamilykeller.com ENGLISH BULLDOG Puppy, AKC Regis- Recliner w/beige/brwn p tered Male, born hi-lites, exc., $65. HONDA SCOOTER 5/9/1 4, $2000. 541-647-2621 80cc "Elite", gk mi., exc. 541-416-0375 cond., $975. (541) Table and chairs, solid 593-9710 or 350-8711 oak, pedestal table, 4 windsor style chairs. 202 Great condition. $350. Want to Buy or Rent 541-382-6773

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3!ines 12 or' ~e e eks sN Ad must include price of le iie oi $50o a~ or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500.

FAST TREES Log truck loads of Grow 6-10 feet yearly! Juniper firewood logs. $16 - $21, delivered. $900local. www.fasttrees.com 541-419-5174. or 509-447-4181 269 New dark brown 2-pc sofa slip covera by Sure- Gardening Supplies F it, 74'- 9 6 $35. & Equipment 541-382-0673

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REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 Madras 541-475-6889 Prineville 541-447-7178 or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

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Hay, Grain & Feed 1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton.

2001 Silverado 3-horse trailer 5th wheel, 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters (3) Gentle Fox Trotters, well trained, mounO rchard g rass m i x tain experienced, $235/ton, 72 lb. 286 $6500/ea. bales, deliv541-523-0933 Sales Northeast Bend 2-twine ery avail. Call Lee, elkhornfoxtrotters.com 541-410-4495

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Call a Pro Find exactly what Whether you need a Wanted: $Cash paid for e385 a5809 you are looking for in the 541 Place an ad in The The Bulletin vintage costume jew- FRENCHTON PUPS. Bulletin for your gafence fixed, hedges On a classified ad CLASSIFIEDS elry. Top dollar paid for 75% French bulldog, recommends extra rage sale and rego to I oa ton oe n p r trimmed or a house Gold/Silver.l buy by the For newspaper 25% Boston terrier. Call Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com ceive a Garage Sale Quality 1st cutting orproducts or I Estate, Honest Artist delivery, call the built, you'll find Parents on site. Born chasing 541-385-5809 Kit FREE! to view additional services from out of l Elizabeth,541-633-7006 chard grass mix, small professional help in 6/21! 2 left $1350. www.bendbulletin.com Circulation Dept. at photos of the item. l the area. Sending l 541-385-5800 bales $225/ton. Madras, Put your deposit down ' cash, checks, or KIT INCLUDES: 205 The Bulletin's "Call a OR. 541-420-9736 now. 541-279-3588 265 To place an ad, call • 4 Garage Sale Signs I credit i n f o rmation Fishing Reels: Hardy Fly, Building Materials Items for Free 54'I -385-5809 Service Professional" • $2.00 Off Coupon To Iiilin Pin AKC pups. may be subjected to Quick spinning& Penn or email Use Toward Your Directory 2 females left! $400. I FRAUD. For more Int'I, all top shelf, $150Looking for your claaaified@bendbulletin.ccm 2 Kidney bean shaped Next Ad Bend Habitat Born 4/14/14, potty information about an I $450. Jim, 541-771-7700 next employee? 541-355-5809 loveseat, exc. shape, • 10 Tips For "Garage RESTORE advertiser, you may I Place a Bulletin you haul. 541-379-3530 training, shots, microSale Success!" HOWA .338 mag, syn- Building Supply Resale chipped, In La Pine, e call the O r e gon help wanted ad e Couch, leather, Quality at LOW 602-284-4110 ' State Atto r ney ' t hetic s t o ck , 3x 9 today and PRICES good shape. You haul. Weaver scope, $400. PICK UP YOUR I General's O f fi ce reach over Old English Sheepdog Consumer Protec- • 541-419-6295 541-379-3530 740 NE 1st INSTANT GREEN GARAGE SALE KIT at 60,000 readers puppies, 4 males, $500 tion h o t line a t I 541-312-6709 McPheeters Turf 1777 SW Chandler 208 e ach. Please c a l l each week. HUNTERS in S i lvies Open to the public. Lawn Fertilizer Ave., Bend, OR 97702 i 1-877-877-9392. 541-891-0372 ask for Your classified ad Pets & Supplies Hunt Unit. Cabin in Sisters Habitat ReStore S hilo bumper pull 3Denny Hale or Janev, will also running water The Bulletin l pines, Supply Resale horse trailer w/tack room, 5 41-887-6030. Nfi l l l TheBulletin Sersrng Central Oregonsince fggg Sererng Central Oregon since fgiu and amenities, green Building appear on 54iD89-9663 Quality items. like new, more extras, The Bulletin recomsend picture by email yard. 541-589-1130 bendbul!etin.com LOW PRICES! mends extra caution as request. Ready to $5900. 541-923-9758 www.elkridgecabin.com which currently People Look for Information 150 N. Fir. when purc has- go to new homes. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS 270 receives over About Products and 541-549-1621 ing products or serCheck out the Marlin 90 vent rib o/u, Search the area's most Lost & Found POODLEpups, toy. 1.5 million page Services Every Daythrough vices from out of the classifieds online 12 ga., rare 1 937 Open to the public. comprehensive listing of Home raised w/love. views every area. Sending cash, The Bulletin Classlfieds -1958, exc. c o nd., Two 10-ft extension www.bendbulletin.com FOUND C a m elback classified advertising... pups also! month al no checks, or credit in- Schnoodle $395. 541-306-0166 real estate to automotive, ladders, $50 each 541-475-3889 backpack with conUpdated daily extra cost. f ormation may b e 212 541-548-4051 merchandise to sporting t ents o n N W Mt . Protect your dog Bulletin subjected to fraud. P oodle, T oy , m ale Antiques & goods. Bulletin Classifieds Washington D r i v e. 383 266 For more informafrom dangerous Classifieds puppy, ready to go, appear every day in the Call to ID Collectibles rattlesnakes Produce & Food tion about an adverHeating & Stoves Get Results! $300. 541-728-1694 print or on line. (858) 487-2526 tiser, you may call with Rattlesnake Call 541-385-5809 Call 541-385-5809 Antiques wanted: tools, QueenslandHeelers Avoidance classes. Grass fattened natural the O r egon State NOTICE TO Found visor on 7/30, www.bendbulletin.com or place your ad furniture, marbles,early Standard & Mini, $150 Attorney General's Call 541-213-4211 ADVERTISER beef, cut and Shevlin Park, Call to on-line at B/W photography, wrapped at $3.50/lb. Office C o nsumer 8 up. 541-280-1537 Since September 29, identify, 520-260-7123 beer cans, jewelry. The Bulletin bendbul!etin.com www.rightwayranch.wor WIN model 12, 20 ga., 541-480-8185 Protection hotline at Sereng Central Oregon rrncetgte 1991, advertising for 541-389-1578 dpress.com modified, pump, $750. used woodstoves has local. 1-877-877-9392. Call/text 541-419-9961 been limited to modpups AKC, 2 tiny The Bulletin reserves The Bulletin Yorkie els which have been girls, 1 boy, potty train- the right to publish all geretng Central Oregon sincefgte 253 certified by the Orinq, shots, health guar., ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The TV, Stereo & Video egon Department of (8) Snow white doves, $f I 00. 541-777-7743 Environmental QualBulletin Internet web$ 40 cash f o r a l l . Just bought a new boat? site. TV, 5 0 " Sam s ung ity (DEQ) and the fed541-382-2194 Sell your old one in the Plasma, excellent cond, eral E n v ironmental Ask about our The Bulletin $175. 541-977-2505 Protection A g e ncy Adopt a rescue cat or classifieds! Super Seller rates! Sereing Centrel Oregonstnce tggg (EPA) as having met kitten! Altered, vacci541-385-5809 255 smoke emission stannated, ID chip, tested, 215 dards. A cer t ified more! CRAFT, 65480 210 Computers • C oins & Stamps woodstove may be 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM Furniture & Appliances d T HE B U LLETIN r e identified by its certifiSat/Sun. 3 8 9 -8420 Private collector buying quires computer ad- cation label, which is www.craftcats.org. postagestamp albums 8 A1 Washers8 Dryers collections, world-wide vertisers with multiple permanently attached Border Collie-McNab $150 ea. Full warand U.S. 573-286-4343 ad schedules or those to the stove. The Bulreg'd puppies, 5 F's O ranty. Free Del. Also (local, cell phone). selling multiple sys- letin will not k now$600 ea; 3 M's O $500 wanted, used W/D's tems/ software, to dis- ingly accept advertisea. Working parents; 1st 541-280-7355 245 close the name of the ing for the sale of shots, wormed, microbusiness or the term uncertified chipped, Ready 8/1. • G olf Equipment "dealer" in their ads. woodstoves. 541-408-8944 home or Private party advertis714-943-2385 (cell) CHECK YOURAD 267 ers are defined as Fuel & Wood Boxers AKC & Valley those who sell one Bulldogs CKC puppies. computer. $700-800. 541-325-3376 WHEN BUYING 260 Brittany pups, AKC & Antique sideboardl FIREWOOD... American Field ReqisMisc. Items buffet:Walnut, on the first day it runs tered, born 5/31/14. Field beautiful To avoid fraud, detail. Early to make sure it is corChampion bloodlines, Buylng Dlamonds The Bulletin 1900's. Exterior has rect. nSpellchecke and $500. 505-220-2639 recommends pay/Gofd for Cash top drawer & 3 doors human errors do ocment for Firewood Fine Jewelers with original key. Incur. If this happens to Saxon's only upon delivery 541-389-6655 side has 2 shelves your ad, please conand inspection. and a drawer. Meatact us ASAP so that BUYING • A cord is 128 cu. ft. sures 71 x21x36 Excorrections and any Lionel/American 4' x 4' x 8' Flyer cellent cond. Pick-up adjustments can be trains, accessories. • Receipts should only.$800OBO. made to your ad. 541-408-2191. include name, Chihuahua Teacuppup- 415-279-9893 (Bend) 541-385-5809 Includes: phone, price and pies, 1st shots/dewormed. The Bulletin Classified BUYING & S E LLING kind of wood $250. 541-977-0035 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 • Feature item photo/graphic Bed - electric & adjustAll gold jewelry, silver purchased. 246 a ble medical b e d, and gold coins, bars, • Firewood ads • 7 lines of text 541-385-5809 rounds, wedding sets, used, twin 80" KorGuns, Hunting rr I MUST include class rings, sterling sil• Bold headline foam mattress, never & Fishing species & cost per Includes spIo2" in length, with ver, coin collect, vinneeds turning. $500. cord to better serve • Border 541-382-2935 border,full colorphoto, bold Bend local pays CASH!! tage watches, dental N~ihborh9od~a!e gold. Bill Fl e ming, our customers. • up fo 4 days of advertising for all firearms & Fri., 8at., 8« headlineasdprice. Dining Chairs, uphol541-382-9419. Cute, Smart & No ammo. 541-526-0617 8-5pm The Bulletin stered, great cond. Shed. Min-schnauzer C emetery Spac e Serving Central Cregan sincetgte 64686 Wood Ave. $35/ea. 541-548-4601 schnoodles. Tails CASH!! your ad will also appear in: Double depth interLoveseat, oak barrel, docked, 1st shots, & G ENERATE For Guns, Ammo 8 SOM E All year Dependable ment g r ave space queen mattress set, wormed. $500-$600. Reloading Supplies. • The Bul l e tin • The CentralOregonNickel Ads and EXCITEMENT in your with outer burial con- Firewood: Seasoned; 541-408-6900. Good homes only! furniture, tools, • (enfral OregOn Marketpl a Ce e bendbullefin.tsm neighborhood! Plan a tainer built-in. At DesLodgepole, split, del, 541-322-0609 lots of miscellaneous. garage sale and don't Colt SAA 44 spcl, 7 chutes Memorial near B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Doberman pups AKC forget to advertise in 1/2", N.F., 2nd gen Pond Mea d ows. or 2 for $365. Call for *Private party adsasdfundraisers. Deadline I I:00amTuesday. reg. male/fem., $600 classified! NlB. Brass. $1550. NEVER BEEN USED multi-cord discounts!

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E2 TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

476

870

Employment Opportunities

Homes with Acreage B oats & Accessories B oats & Accessories

Bni aRnlh

2 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2 acres, large shop, carport, f enced yard, n e ar La P in e $ 8 4 ,000. 541-771-0'I 43

Construction Mgmt firm in Sunriver seeking highly motivated individual(s) for full-time

Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. CONSTRUCTION DISBURSEMENT AGENT Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Requires 2-yr. experiin construction Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. ence administration or

630

Acreages

Rooms for Rent

870

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12' Aluminum boat with trailer, 3hp motor,

Chaparral 2130SS Clean, well m aintained 2 1 ' fa m i ly 503-307-8570 ski/wakeboard open-bow runabout with new Barewest tower/Bimini. Great 12' aluminum fishsystem, new ing boat, t r ailer, sound dual battery system. motor, fish finder, Stored under cover, accessories, $1200. fresh water use only, 541-389-7234 2nd owner. J u st b ought a lar g e r 13.5' Bayhner Capn 1985, Chaparral! $14,000. 50hp Force motor, trailer, 541-419-9510 very clean, low hrs, accys, $2275. 541-306-1317 875 Watercraft Need help fixing stuff? Call A ServiceProfessional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

good cond, $1200..

5.17 acres. 65694 Old Bend/Redmond Hwy. Mtn view, power, water, septic approved. $174,000 O.B.O. Call commercial lending. Brad 5 4 1-419-1725, Jim, 541-419-4513 WORD/ Excel or Deb 541-480-3956. profiency. EOE. Fax 632 debraIbendbroad resume 541-593-3604 Apt JMultiplex General band.com or e-mail to roberta.moody@ CHECK YOUR AD tetratech.com. Manufactured/ Good classified adstell Mobile Homes the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write New Dream Special from the readers view -not 3 bdrm, 2 bath the seller's. Convert the on the first day it runs $50,900 finished Place a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES on your site. facts into benefits. Show to make sure it ise corfor only$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines J and M Homes rect. nSpellcheck and the reader howthe item will 541-548-5511 *UNDER '500in total merchandise human errors do ochelp them insomeway. OVER'500 in total merchandise cur. If this happens to This 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 your ad, please conadvertising tip 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 tact us ASAP so that 16' Old Town Canoe, brought toyouby :g. *illiust state prices in ad corrections and any 14 days .................................................$33.50 spruce, cedar & canvas, adjustments can be The Bulletin Lake model, 1 owner, 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special Sern'ng Cent alOreg n since tgte made to your ad. 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 very aood cond, w/extras. 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) 541-385-5809 $1000. 541-388-3386 Wakeboard Boat Hotel/Resort The Bulletin Classified I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, ds published in eWa OPENING Senior Apartmenttons of extras, low hrs. tercraft" include: Kay A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Independent Living Full wakeboard tower, aks, rafts and motor SOON!! Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. ALL-INCLUSIVE light bars, Polk audio Ized personal Hampton lnn & 860 * with 3 meals daily speakers throughout, watercrafts. Fo BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) Suites at the Old Motorcycles & Accessories completely wired for Month-to-month lease, "boats" please se Mill District. REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well amps/subwoofers, uncheck it out! Class 870. Come join the team! derwater lights, fish Call 541-318-0450 541-385-5809 as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin finder, 2 batteries cusPart-time Housebendbulletin.com 634 reserves the right to reject any ad at tom black paint job. keeping starting at Serving Central Oregon since $12,500 541-815-2523 AptJMultiplex NE Bend any time. is located at: $10.25/hour. Flexible schedule. 880 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Call for Specials! Contact Matt BlackMotorhomes Bend, Oregon 97702 Limited numbers avail. burn at matt.blackFXSTD Harley 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. burn Ihilton.com Davidson 2001,twin 1997 Bounder 34' W/D hookups, patios cam 88, fuel injected, or 808-430-1836. w/slide. $17,900. PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction or decks. Vance & Hines short Excellent condition, is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right MOUNTAIN GLEN, shot exhaust, Stage I must see! Ford 460 tc accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these 541-383-9313 with Vance & Hines 18.5' Sea Ray 2000 w/Banks, new tires, newspapers. The publisher shall nct be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Garage Sales Professionally fuel management 4.3L Mercruiser, low dual A/C, rear cammanaged by Norris & Classified ads running 7 cr moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. system, custom parts, hrs, 190 hp BowGarage Sales era, triple axle, Onan Stevens, Inc. extra seat. rider w/depth finder, gen, 63k miles. $10,500OBO. 476 476 476 radio/ CD player, rod Garage Sales 648 541-306-9897 Call Today holders, full canvas, Employment Employment Employment Houses for 541-516-8684 Find them EZ Loader trailer, Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Rent General exclnt cond,$9500. TiCk, Tock in Harley Davidson 2003 707-484-3518 Aquatics Coach The Bulletin PUBLISHER'S Anniversary Road King, TiCk, TOCk... (Bend) CAUTION: CDL Truck Driver The Madras Stage 1, pearl white, exNOTICE Ads published in Needed. Classifieds ...don't let time get Aquatic Center All real estate adver- cellent condition, lots of 1997 Reinell 18.5 ft. ski "Employment OpOur wood chip and chrome & extr a s. seeks qualified Aquatics away. Hire a tising in this newspalumber drivers aver541 -385-5809 portunities" include Coach for adult & youth boat, in/out Volvo enper is subject to the $13,999. 541-279-0846 employee and inde- swim, and head coach age 54K annually. professional out i ne, e x c . co n d . F air H o using A c t 421 pendent positions. for water polo teams. 1-3 Off weekends,paid 8000. 541-389-6256 of The Bulletin's which makes it illegal Ads for p o sitions yrs previous swimming vacation, health inSchools & Training Log Truck "any to a d vertise "Call A Service that require a fee or and/or water polo coach- s urance. For 3 5 preference, limitation upfront investment years we have serDrivers Professional" ing preferred. YearIITR Truck School or disc r imination must be stated. With round position; main- viced Eastern Or(Long & Short) REDMOND CAMPUS based on race, color, Directory today! any independentjob tains/coordinates coach- egon, Central OrOur Grads Get JoAs! for logging comreligion, sex, handiopportunity, please ing duties with all facets egon, Sou t hern pany in Florence, 1-888-438-2235 Harley D a v idson cap, familial status, i nvestigate tho r - of aquatic sports pro- O regon an d th e WWW.DTR.EDU 19' Pioneer ski boat, OR. Experience marital status or na- 2006 FXDLI Dyna oughly. Use extra gram including organiz- Boise Valley and • AI tional origin, or an in- Low Rider, Mustang 1983, vm tandem preferred. CDL 454 caution when ap- ing & planning practices you can live in any trailer, V8. Fun & tention to make any seat with backrest, and current medi& game strategies, trainof these locations. plying for jobs onLooking for Employment such pre f erence, new battery, windfast! $5800 obo. cal card. Great line and never pro- ing, health education We run late model 541-815-0936. limitation or discrimi- shield, forward convide personal inforand recruiting of athletes. P etes an d K e n pay and benefits. trois,lots of chrome, ELECTRICAL nation." Familial staCould be 2 positions.) worths all 550 cats mation to any source Year-round, long2007 Winnebago Screamin' Eagle exAds published in the APPRENTICESHIP tus includes children ontact MAC Executive with 13 speeds, our you may not have Outlook Class "C" "Boats" classification term employment. haust, 11,360 miles. OPPORTUNITIES under the age of 18 Director Joe McHaney: researched and trailers are C urtin 31', solar panel, Cat. Well maintained! include: Speed, fishThis notice is to es- deemed to be repuCali living with parents or jmchaneyO vans (no tarps to heater, excellent $8,650 in La Pine ing, drift, canoe, t ablish a P o o l o f table. Use extreme 541-997-8212 legal cus t odians, macaquatic.com with) 4 0'-23' condition, more exhouse and sail boats. (928) 581-9190 Eligible's, not to fulfill c aution when r e - or 1195 SE Kemper Way, deal pregnant women, and doubles year around tras.Asking $58K. For all other types of immediate job open- s ponding to A N Y Madras, OR 97741. For work. We our lookpeople securing cusPh. 541-447-9268 watercraft, please go ings. more information, visit tody of children under online employment ing for long term Can be viewed at to Class 875. ACCEPTING www.macaquatic.com 18. This newspaper ad from out-of-state. drivers, our average Western Recreation 541-385-5809 APPLICATIONS. will not knowingly acWe suggest you call employee has (top of hill) MUST APPLY IN the State of Oregon w orked for us f o r I chasing products orI cept any advertising in Prlneville. PERSON Servin Central Ore on since 1903 Consumer Hotline over 8 years. So if • services from out of • for real estate which is AUGUST 11, 2014 TO Get your at 1-503-378-4320 you are looking for a l the area. Sending in violation of the law. AUGUST 22, 2014 O ur r e aders a r e c ash, checks, o r For Equal Opportuhome, give us a call business Harley Davidson Information about the nity Laws c ontact l credit i n f ormation hereby informed that 541.523.9202 2011 Classic Limprogram may be ob- Oregon Bureau of all dwellings adver• may be subjected to tained at www.hightised in this newspa- ited, Loaded! 9500 I FRAUD. & I n dustry, desertapprenticeship. Labor For more informaper are available on miles, custom paint Civil Rights Division, com an equal opportunity "Broken Glass" by tion about an adver971-673- 0764. Just too many Nicholas Del Drago, tiser, you may call basis. To complain of Call 54 I -385-5809 l the Oregon State 470 new condition, with an ad in collectibles? d iscrimination ca l l The Bulletin to r o m ot e o u r se rvice heated handgrips, Domestic & HUD t o l l-free a t l Attorney General's 541-385-5809 The Bulletin's auto cruise control. a Office C o n sumer a 1-800-877-0246. The In-Home Positions Sell them in $32k in bike, Protection hotline at a toll f ree t e lephone Aggregate Landscaping/Yard Care "Call A Service The Bulletin Classifieds a number for the hear- only $18,000or best I 1-877-877-9392. Experienced Caregiver Add your web address Professional" ing i m p aired is offer. 541-318-6049 Vic Russell Const. Inc. NOTICE: Oregon Landneeded in Sisters for reto your ad and readLThe Bulleting 1-800-927-9275. Aggregate & Paving scape Contractors Law lief 1-2 days per week. 541-385-5809 ers on The Bulletin's Directory Res. & Comm. (ORS 671) requires all 541-598-4527 web site, www.bend663 businesses that adCB¹31 500966MDI bulletin.com, will be TRUCK DRIVER vertise t o pe r form Where can you find a Houses for Rent 541-536-3478 able to click through WANTED Landscape ConstrucMadras helping hand? automatically to your System Administrator Must have doubles tion which includes: website. Are youa geek who can also communicate effecendorsement. Baths & Kitchens From contractors to l anting, deck s , tively with non-technical executives and emLocal run. A 3 bdrm, 2 bath house ences, arbors, yard care, it's all here Call The Bulletin At Truck is parked in on the Flats in Madras.' HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Reid Construction ployees? Would you like to work hard, play hard water-features, and inRider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & $1000 month in The Bulletin's 541-385-5809 in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of Madras.541-475-4221 stallation, repair of ir2 Vance & Hines pipes, Bathroom& Kitchen 541 475 351 9 the state? Then we'd like to talk to you. "Call A Service remodel specialists! Place Your Ad Or E-Mail rigation systems to be $12,500. 541-306-0166 Daniel, 541-788-4676 licensed w i t h the Professional" Directory At: www.bendbulletin.com We are abusy media company seeking an expe- Looking for your next CCB¹200883 employee? Landscape Contracrienced systems administrator who is also a Place a Bulletin help HDFatBo 1996 tors Board. This 4-digit forward thinker, creative problem solver, excel- wanted ad today and The Bulletin number is to be inBuilding/Contracting Serving CentralOregon since fgle lent communicator, and self-motivated profesreach over 60,000 cluded in all adverwhich indiThe Bulletin Circulation department is looking sional. We have 8 locations throughout Oregon readers each week. NOTICE: Oregon state tisements and California. Your classified ad for a District Representative to join our Single law requires anyone cate the business has Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week will also appear on who con t racts for a bond, insurance and Job Res onsibilities: compensabendbulletin.com position. Overall focus is the representation, • Evaluation, construction work to workers selection and deployment of new tion for their employwhich currently Completely sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspabe licensed with the technology and tools Rebuilt/Customized receives over 1.5 per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, • Provide Construction Contrac- ees. For your protec745 expertise regarding system installations, call 503-378-5909 2012/2013 Award special events and news dealer outlets. Daily million page views tors Board (CCB). An tion configurations and ongoing maintenance Homes for Sale every month at Winner responsibilities include driving a company ve- • Install, active license or use our website: configure and administer stable Linux enShowroom Condition hicle to service a defined district, ensuring no extra cost. means the contractor www.lcbistate.or.us to vironments license status Many Extras Bulletin Classifieds newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, • Maintain is bonded & insured. check NOTICE virtual server environments contracting with Low Miles. managing newspaper counts for the district, Get Results! Verify the contractor's before All real estate adverand maintain enterprise network security Call 385-5809 CCB l i c ense at the business. Persons building relationships with our current news •• Monitor tised here in is sub$15,000 doing land scape www.hirealicenseddealer locations and growing those locations Work with team to optimize system performance or place 541-548-4807 ject to th e F ederal maintenance do not across applications, network and databases your ad on-line at contractor.com with new outlets. Position requires total owner- • Help Fair Housing A c t, r equire an LC B l i team troubleshoot and repair both hardor call 503-378-4621. ship of and accountability of all single copy elebendbulletin.com which makes it illegal cense. ware and software The Bulletin recomments within that district. Work schedule will be • Occasional to advertise any preftravel to remote locations mends checking with Aeration/Dethatching Thursday through Monday with Tuesday and erence, limitation or the CCB prior to con- 1-time or Weekly Services W ednesday off . Requires good communication • Participate in on-call rotation discrimination based tracting with anyone. Ask about FREEadded ÃIMIjmai skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift on race, color, reliEssential Ex ertise Needed: Some other t rades svcs w/seasonal contract! 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to • *nix systems administration - Ubuntu, Solaris, gion, sex, handicap, also re q uire addi- Bonded & Insured. multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong familial status or naHD FXSBI 2006 new tional licenses and COLLINS Lawn Maint. service/team orientation, sales and problem OpenBSD, FreeBSD tional origin, or intencond., low miles, Ca/l 541-480-9714 solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: • ZFS/Solaris file servers tion to make any such Stage I download, ex- certifications. • Virtualization and Cloud experience - VMWare, circulation©bendbulletin.com CARLSENG DESIGNS preferences, l imitatras, bags. $8900. XenServer R&T CustomConst. tions or discrimination. Landscape Design, 541-447-0887 • Server Support - Windows Server Fine and Finish CarApplications are available at the front desk. We will not knowingly Consultation 8 Gar2003/2008/2012, Active Directory, Group Policy pentry. CCB ¹179914 Drop off your resume in person at accept any advertisdening. 541-610-6961 • Network administration Switches, routers and 528 Ron & Tammy Berg, 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Tanya Carlsen ing for real estate 541-647-8701 ISPs No phone inquiries please. Loans & Mortgages which is in violation of Allen Reinsch Yard • Firewalls/VPN - pfSense, OpenVPN. Pre-employment drug testing required. this law. All persons Maintenance & Mowing • Domain registrations, SSL certificate manageEOE/Drug Free Workplace WARNING are hereby informed Debris Removal (& many other things!) ment, DNS Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. The Bulletin recomthat all dwellings ad- HD Sportster, 2001 exc Call 541-536-1294or • Google Apps for Business mends you use cau- vertised are available cond, 1 owner, maint'd, JUNK BE GONE 541-815-5313 tion when you proon an equal opportunew t i res, cu s tom I Haul Away FREE YARD MAKEOVERS General Preferred Ex erience: vide personal nity basis. The Bullechrome, leather saddle The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- • Background in the media industry For Salvage. Also Better, cheaper, information to compa- tin Classified bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. Cleanups & Cleanouts day night shift and other shifts as needed. We • Apache and Nginx nies offering loans or Tom, 541-382-6501 Bigfoot Yards currently have openings all nights of the week. • PC and Apple hardware and software support Mel, 541-389-8107 541-633-9895 credit, especially TURN THE PAGE Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts experience those asking for adstart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and •M ySQL, Rubyon Rails,PH P, PERL, VisualStuFor More Ads Masonry vance loan fees or Domestic Services end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpodlo companies from out of The Bulletin sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. • Confluence state. If you have Home is Where the Dirt Is Ellingson Masonry Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a • Telecommunications — Avaya Definity and As9 yrs experience in concerns or quesCustom stone work, 750 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts terisk housekeeping. Refs & lic. bonded insured. tions, we suggest you Redmond Homes HONDA SCOOTER are short (t t:30 - 1:30). The work consists of • Adobe Creative Suites rates to fit your needs. CCB¹ 157238 consult your attorney 80cc "Elite", 9k mi., exc. Call Julie 541-410-0648 loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack541-480-9512 or call CONSUMER cond., $975. (541) ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup We are Central Oregon's most comprehensive or 541-410-1136 HOTLINE, Looking for your next 593-9710 or 350-8711 and other tasks. For qualifying employees we news and information resource. This full-time Painting/Wall Covering 1-877-877-9392. emp/oyee? offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, position is located at corporate headquarters in Place a Bulletin help Handyman 865 short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid BANK TURNED YOU the beautiful resort town of Bend, OR. Do you ALL AMERICAN wanted ad today and vacation and sick time. Drug test is required ATVs love the outdoors? We have activities right out- DOWN? Private party PAINTING reach over 60,000 I DO THAT! prior to employment. Interior and Exterior side your doorstep (literally) that include will loan on real es- readers each week. Home/Rental repairs Family-owned world-class mountain-biking, rock climbing, ski- tate equity. Credit, no Your classified ad Small jobs to remodels Please submit a completed application attenResidential & Commercial ing, fly-fishing, rock-climbing, golfing, hunting problem, good equity will also appear on Honest, guaranteed 40 tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts and mountain hiking trails. We have music and is all you need. Call bendbulletin.com work. CCB¹151573 at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chan5-year warranties seasonal events year-round. This is the place Oregon Land Mortwhich currently reDennis 541-317-9768 Summer Special! dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be everyonecomes to vacation. You couldn't ask gage 541-388-4200. ceives over obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Call 541-337-6149 for a better lifestyle! 1.5 million page LOCAL MONEY:Webuy CCB ¹1 93960 Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Eldred via email (keldred Obendbulletin.com ). views every month secured trust deeds & bed, with ramps. $700 No phone calls please. Only completed appliIf you've got what it takes, email a cover letter WESTERN PAINTING at no extra cost. note,some hard money obo. 541-549-4834 or Door-to-door selling with cations will be considered for this position. No and resume toresume©wescom a ers.com CO. Richard Hayman, loans. Call Pat Kellev Bulletin Classifieds 541-588-0068 resumes will be accepted. Drug test is refast results! It's the easiest a semi-retired paint541-382-3099 ext.13. Get Results! quired prior to employment. EOE. ing contractor of 45 Call 385-5809 or Look at: way in the world to sell. PRIVATE MONEY for years. S mall Jobs place your ad on-line Bendhomes.com short term 1st mortWelcome. Interior & The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 at The Bulletin Classified ServingCentral Oregon since fgte for Complete Listings of gage loans. Strong Exterior. c c b¹51 84. bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 EOE/Drug Free Workplace security 541-480-1670 Area Real Estate for Sale 541-388-6910

Room for rent in Redmond, $450, incl utilities. No smokinq. Mature, responsible, 0& stable. Call

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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, AUG 5, 2014

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will SIIprtz

Tuesday,Aug ust5,2014

Time is money By FRAIaIK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Winning rubber-bridge players say that "time is money." They mean they w ant to p l a y a s m an y d e als as possible to let their superior skill prevail. But I doubt that anyone can come out ahead by rushing. In a money game, North leaped to six spades at his third turn, willing to take the cash at a small slam instead of speculating on a grand. South took dummy's ace of clubs and cashed the ace of trumps, preparing to claim 12 or 13 tricks. He would draw trumps, finesse in hearts, run the diamonds to pitch a heart from dummy and ruff his last heart.

ACROSS 1Deadas a doomail 6 Listings in a daily planner: Abbr. 11Marble (London landmark) 15Justice Kagan 16Book leaf 17Oscar winner Sorvino 18Appeal from Elms, 1956 20 Burden of proof 21 Prom attendee, typically 22 Mine vehicle 24 Clock-setting std. 25 Reassurance from the Beach Boys, 1964 29"If you haven't

you say? ANSWER: Partner has at l east four-card support w i t h o p e ning values or more. Delicate cue-bidding is possible, but a practical course is to bid 4NT, Blackwood. If partner has two aces, bid six spades. If he has three, try SNT. Then, if he shows a king, you can try seven spades; it will depend on a finesse at worst. South dealer N-S vulnerable NORTH 45 A J87

seen , you havent seen New York" (old ad slogan) 32Tennisstar Mandlikova 33 Rapper Wayne

Q953 0 A54

UNMAKABLE

4AJ5

When West showed out, the play EAST slowed down, but with West holding WEST 431096 3 K - J-4 i n h e arts, th e s l a m w a s 43 None 9 10872 QKJ4 unmakable. 0 7 6 3 2 0 108 South must take his time, especially 4863 at an "easy" slam. He loses nothing 4 K Q 10 9 7 4 by ruffing a club at Trick Two. South SOUTH can then take the king and ace of 4KQ542 trumps, ruff dummy's last club, cash QAQ6 the queen of trumps, go to the ace of OKQJ9 diamonds and draw trumps with the 42 jack. He wins four high trumps, four diamonds, a heart, a club and two club S outh W e s t Nor t h Eas t ruffs. 1 45 24 34 Pass 30 P ass 40 Pass DAILY QUESTION 4Q Pass 6 ES All Pa s s Y ouhold: 4 K Q 5 4 2 9 A Q 6

1981

1967

M I T T S A C HO O P E R P S

A N I S E WH Y I S P L I E S P A N I S H F L E A M EN T E N L U L L E D

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org.

L I M P S E T S E E A S T R Y A F I C F L P R O D Y U P S P R I L T S P

RO F L Y A D R K OW A F P I E X D S S

A D S U C SO E R RO F L E L EA

T I S S U E S

2

3

4

6

5

18

1 Sneaker brand

7

8

10

11 1 2

22 25

23 28

32

33

35

34

39

24

26 27

31

40

14

20

21

29 3 0

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17

19

2 Sunburn relief

3 Schoolfounded by Ben Franklin 4 Not neat 5 Iconoclasts break them 6 Jaguars' grp. 7 f av o r 8 Mass of crystallized magma 9 del F uego 10Certain renewable 11"I love," in Latin 12Game similar to hide-and-seek 13 Part of a path left by Hansel and Gretel 14 Done in a rush 19Seaside eagle 23 Vietnam War locale 26 Kojak'8 first name 27 Insect with a stinger 28 Ten-speed, e.g. 29 Skirt hemmed at the calf 30 Elvis'8 middle name 31Divedone with the arms around the knees 35 Classic Ford 36 Doting affection, briefly 37 Quaint food containers

9

16

15

DOWN

44 Impoverished 45 "Modern Family" network 46 Business monthly 47 Bob Marley'8 Love' 48 Movie that introduced the line "Bond, James Bond" SOWentup 52 Plea from the Human League, 1982 56 Decline 57 m at e r 58Young travelers' crash site 62 Ray of light 64 Reproach from the Buckinghams,

E LA L E N D S M OM A L IR A B OB B Y F L A Y

S ST S T 0 5 5 I B EL F T RA F R EN U ND I D E EM E RRO

1

39 Encouragement from Journey,

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

BIZARRO

Pau l (classic 71 Divisions guitar) politiques 36 Start liking 72 Quizzes

67Caprior Wight 68Art house film, often 34 Financial Bdviser'8 69Ward attendant recommendation, in brief 70 Relate

0 K Q J 9 A 2. You open one spade, Opening lead — A K

a nd your p a r tner b i d s 2 N T , a conventional forcing raise. What do

35

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36

41

37 38

42 43 45

46

48 49

47

50

52 53

1

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56

58

57

62

59 6 0

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65 66

67

68

70

71

69

PUZZLE BY GARY CEE

38 Formerly

49 African country known as the Land of a Thousand Hills 50 Bill line 51 Save from danger 52 c ar d 53Very heavy 54Almostany doo-wop song 55 However, for short

40 Collapsible shelter 41 "It's been real!" 42 Eric who played Nero in 2009'8 "Star Trek"

43 Black, to poets 48 Groucho foil Margaret

59 Sailors 60 Formerly, in the past 61 Some jeans 63 Brooks who has won an Oscar, Emmy, Grammy and Tony 65 Small bird 66 "I'm game"

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 386 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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WUMO You're running Mac OS X 10.8, even though 10.9 is available?! How retro! I want to buy your computer and put it next to my tape recorder! Name your price! I have to own it! I also just bought a velocipede... '

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21 Excavation hole 22 Noisy ruckus 23 Captivated 25 Game with checks 26 "CSI" workplace 30 Clic Stic or InkJoy 33 Pieces by pundits 34 Old Roman coins 35 Worldwide

workers' gp. 36 Clears (of) wo ove e

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7 Loads 8 Aries symbol 9 Annual report

graphic 10 Sky-eupporting brother of Prometheus 11 Rah-rah feeling 12 Preminger of film 13 Brewpub order 19 New cadet 21 Second afterthought, in a Itr. 24 Qasi part: Abbr. 25 Ad award 26 Strong-arm 27 Poppy extract

28 "Sea Food

Differently" chain 29 "Crazy" singer

Patsy 31 Justice Kagan 32 Military denial 37 Worldwide anticrime organization 1

2

3

4

38 Deer daughters popped 41 Fall bloomer 42 "On the other hand ..." 45 Pendant with a picture 46 Health supplements co. 48 '508 nuclear experiment

55 Apple player 56 Thinker Descartes 58 Before today

59 Some family docs

ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: D E B A R L YO U T E D I R I C E Y A D

T A L P O B A L Y O U Y O S T S I T B E N T E E D A Y A D A N O N Y UM M Y Y U M A A A O T O P R I S M S O N E E D R C A L L S Y A O B O E S A G B E T S Y N E xwordeditor@aol.com 6

5

34

15

17

18

20

50 Give and take? 51 "Othello" antagonist 52 Musical Guthrie 54 Landlocked African country

39 For whom Popeye'8 eyes

S L U E

S L A K S E T A Y C A Y Y

O J I M O N I G N T T O N A E D S D A D D A A B M U M M Y T R I 0 N U S M S N U M H E A D K Y A K Y A K E E C O T E S S O R E G 08/05/14 11

12

13

29

30

31

32

34

35

55

56

7

8

10

H E L I X

9

16 19

21

22

47 "Psycho" motel

HERMAN

THAT SCRAaoBLEo WORD GAME Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knulek

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one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

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DOWN 1 Swedish automaker 2 "Good point" 3 Assistant 4 Restaurant VIPs 5 L.A. winter hours 6 Island retreat for

1 Passport endorsement 6 Field protector 10 From : s l ight

getting sick of watching that water cooler go past at 10 minutes after nine every morning."

Jb CAMPING 17UE854& THE THLENPERSTORM WABNow arrange the circled letters to form the surprise anowel, ao suggested by the above cartoon.

Print your answer here: (Anowelo tomorrow) S TAND V I O LE T REL E NT Yeotoda 6 ~ Ju mbles: RIVER Answer. Bifocals wole becoming ao popular ao Ben Franklin — ENVISIONED

49 Being aired 50 Venus, to Serena 52 Duke Univ. conference 53 High-ranking Muslim 57 Place to make a splash 59 Freak out 60 Historical periods 61 Gawk at 62 Traffic cone 63 Fortified red wine 64 III-gotten gains 65 Wall Street decline, or

something that might be

associated with 18-, 26-, 44- or 57-Across

23 26

27

24

25

28

33 36

37

38

39

40

42

43 47 50

45

44

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57

53 59

60

61

62

63

64

65

By Ron Toth and C.C. Burnfkel (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

54

08/05/14



E6 TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

11 I

1 1 '»I

II II

List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


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• Food Stamps

$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, AUG 5, 2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

• WIC Vouchers We reserve the right to limit quantities

• Manufacturer's Coupons


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