Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1
WEDNESDAY May6,2015
icin e rooce iver
Newcoursefor
O
t e ain rea er SPORTS • C1
OUTDOORS • D1
e t
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
ru c ar esonresumesin o a enc
Yoga at the airportFlying can bestressful. Some airports are offering a wayto take the edgeoff by providing spaces for yoga. A3
A spring ritual — Hunting rats — andlargemouth bass.01
By Taylor W. Anderson bers of newly unveiled panels
with breaking in the past. The Oregon Liquor Control Commission, which will regulate recreational marijuana,
a legal market will look like when shops open in 2016. A review by The Bulletin of the members' backgrounds
that will create boundaries for
picked 15 members from a
shows several members of
the plant. The state will lean on the
the panels have been en-
work of the rule-making com-
with federal guidelines for states regulating marijuana and sets up a system that works to encourage a supply of recreational marijuana while limiting the black
snared by law enforcement for what at the time were
mittee and subcommittees to
market.
The Bulletin
SALEM — Several mem-
Oregon's legal marijuana mar- pool of 700 applicants to sit on ket are tasked with helping re- rule-making groups that will write laws they were charged study and recommend what
crimes involving marijuana, and most members have
some form of expertise with
make sure Oregon complies
See Pot /A4
Ground shifting under police
Travel Oregon campaign
— Revenueandjob growth in the tourism sector is booming, the state's tourism agency reports.C6
Boxing takes another hit
— Manny pacquiao's injury is just the latest in a series of blows to boxing.C1
Learning ancient
• MBSEF decides atrail runaroundthe parking lot is thesolution to PPPcourse's snow deficit
By Noam Scheiber New York Times News Service
By Mark Modcal
IanguageS — How learning
The Bulletin
Greek andLatin vocabulary helps a group of Redmondstudents perfect English.B1
MOUNT BACHELOR — Organizers for Central
— Early this year,
Oregon's most popular multisport race stared
Louis alderwoman, met with officials of a local police union
And a Wedexclusive-
"Duck Dynasty" keeps tax break as Gov.BobbyJindal cuts Louisiana colleges. benttbunetin.cam/extras
WASHINGTON Megan Green, a St.
up at patches of dirt in between thin snow at the
Inside
base of Mount Bachelor
cuss a • Oregon p r o p osHouse a lf or a OKs body- civilian camera o v e rbills,B1 sight • IJ S AG board
on Tuesday afternoon.
Together, they decided there is not enough snow to stage a nordic ski leg in the 39th annual U.S. Bank
PolePedalPaddle on May
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Statesmove to ground vo)eurlstlc
drone flights
16.
Bloomberg News
It was the blinking
lights outside the 10th-story window of her San Jose, California, condominium that startled Elsvette Buenaventura
from her bed last year. When she drew back the curtain, a small drone
held around the parking West Village Lodge, according to Dan Simoneau, The alpine leg will remain unchanged along the Leeway run, although it will finish a bit higher on the mountain than normal.
"We're not going to have a nordic leg," said Simoneau, the nordic director for the Mount
Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, for which
Such stories have prompted lawmakers
to plow snow off (for the trail run) in a few places. ... The irony." Organizers plan to move some snow and
hom e s. More
what he
was looking for with his camera-drone," said
build some new trail for the 1-mile trail run, which will finish at the former ski-to-bike transition
area. "It's not going to be a smooth, easy trail, so people should bring some good shoes," Simoneau said. "But it'll be a nice
run."
privacy."
includes teams, pairs and individuals racing from
small, remotely operated aircraft are increasingly available on the Internet
and at hobby stores, and some can be equipped with equally affordable high-definition cameras.
The PPP traditionally Mount Bachelorto Bend
Mt. Bachelor'sseason,ahistory
PPP 2015 IIpiagIm
$
,~ ,„ - j ;" . ski c~rse
leg t."st
~ur>
Transition to run W st Village LggeM'. , Trail rutt Transition to bike . . . ,J pa « » g lot Nordictodge
Source: MBSEF
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Mt. Bachelorclosing is earliest in years By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin
Although Mt. Bach-
elor ski area hoped to stay open until Memorial Day, it is set
to close Sunday, citing dwindling snowpack. "This was a difficult decision and one that I wish I didn't have to make," Dave Rath-
bun, Mt. Bachelor's president and general manager, said in a news release."Unfor-
participants.
snow remaining in our base areas, the goal of staying open until Memorial Dayweekend is no longer realistic." Sunday — May
of America's biggest companies — names such as Chevron and BNSF
in Bend.
Railway — are pushing to use drones for everything from pipeline inspection
remains on the Leeway run and the same as last year.
in the sports of alpine skiing, nordic skiing, road cycling, running and paddling. The event usually draws about 3,000 All other stages of the race remain unchanged, including the 5-mile run
At the same time, some
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
MBSEF cycling and nordic race director Chuck Thomas walks along a section of a new1-mile trail run Tuesday afternoon at the Mt. Bachelor ski area west of Bend. The trail run will replace the nordic leg of Pole Pedal Paddle after organizers decided there isn't enough snow for cross-country skiing. The trail run will end at the same transition area the nordic ski leg has in previous years. The downhill ski leg
"We've reached a point
Buenaventura, 32. "All we felt was a violation of our For less than $1,000,
soften her support for the proposal, the union backed an aggressive mailing campaign against her. See Police /A5
ing a 1-mile trail run to be
where we can't beat Mother Nature. In fact, we have
touse states areset drones t o f ollow. "We to spray crops, A4 don't know
misconduct. After Green refused to
In place of the 8-kilometer stage, they are design-
it returned at least three times.
the OK
accusations of police
year of the PPP in 1977.
the PPP is a fundraiser.
• U.S. gives to snoop farmers o n people's
into
race has not included a nordic stage since the first
hovered a few feet away. In the days that followed,
in a half-dozen states to outlaw the Inslde use of drones
Baltimore, would look
marks the first time the
another race organizer.
By Michael Marois
visits
Race organizer Molly Cogswell-Kelley said this
area at Mt. Bachelor's
See PPP /A5
to dis-
tunately, with so little
TOIalS The resort opened Nov.24 with a base of 23 inches. Thetotal seasonal snowfall was 212 inches with a maximum base of 53 inches.
10 — will mark the
earliest Mt. Bachelor has closed since 197677, according to more
than 40 years of records kept by the ski area. That season, the resort closed April 30, 1977.
See Bachelor/A5
Copter
Mt. Bachelor is closing Sundaybecauseof a low snowpack. The total seasonal snowfall at the resort was 212 inches, the lowest onrecord in the last10 years. It's the resort's shortest ski seasonsince 2008-09. The shortest on recordwas1976-77,whenthe mountain was openfrom Jan. 2through April 30, a108-day operating season.
to the ER:
short ride,
big bill
MAY JUNE JULY 2014-15 167 days 2013-14 18 2012-13 16 2011-12 12 2010-'i'i 87 2009-10 178 2008-09 153 2007-08 178 2006-07 185 2005-06 92 2004-05 174 2003-04 193 2002-03 10 2001-02 1e 2000-01 187 1999-2000 201 1998-99 233 1997-98 222 1996-97 249 1995-96 208 1994-95 242 1993-94 201 1992-93 237 1991-92 00 1990-91 21 1989-90 190 1988-89 237 i987-88 218 i986-87 202 1985-86 228 1984-85 1983-84 225 1982-83 200 1981-82 193 1980-81 185 1979-80 25 1978-79 193 1977-78 23 1976-77 108 1975-76 09 1974-75 194 1973-74 171 Source: Mt. Bachelor std area
By Peter Eavis New York Times News Service
Clarence Kendall,
a rancher in Pearce, Arizona, was mov-
ingbales on top of a haystack when he fell 8 feet and struckhis head on the corner
of a truckbelow. His health insurance covered most of the
cost of treatingthe headtrauma caused by the accident. But
there was onebill, for $47,182, that his insurance did not pay. It came from the
company that took Kendall in a helicopter ambulance to a hospital in Tucson on the day of the fall,
nearlytwo years ago. "That initial bill
nearly gave me a heart attack," he said. "I thought they'd have to come and getm e again." See Ambulance/A6
Greg Cross iThe Bulletin
to land surveys.
Their use has pushed lawmakers to weigh the rights of drone pilots against the potential for nefarious intrusions. See Drones/A4
TODAY'S WEATHER Afternoon shower High 52, Low 27
Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1 6 $ n E1-6 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 N'/Movies
AnIndependent
G1 4 D6
Q i/i/e use recycled newsprint
voI. 113, No. 12e,
s sections
0
88 267 0 23 29
1
A2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
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NATION Ee ORLD
T exasattac er e e i n i ital trail 0 extremism By Scott Shane New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Counterterrorism o f f i c ial s on
Tuesday were studying the e lectronic trails left by t w o
men killed by a police officer as they shot at a Prophet Muhammad cartoon contest
in Texas, looking for direct ties to the Islamic State ex-
tremist group in Syria. The group praised the gunmen in a statement as "soldiers of the
convert to Islam with a long linked to the planned carhistory of extremism, regu- toon event in Texas, praised larly traded calls for violence the January shootings at a on Twitter with Islamic State satirical newspaper in Paris fighters and supporters, as and called on jihadists in the well as avowed enemies of United States to follow that Pamela Geller, the organizer example. of the cartoon contest. His Twitter contacts included Junaid Hussain, a B r itish fighter with the Islamic State in Syria known as Abu Hussain al-Britani, and Mohamed A b dullahi H a ssan,
a Somali-American now in Somalia who uses the name building. Mujahid Miski and regularly But any secret ties that offi- promotes the Islamic State. cials might find could be less Both men regularly called important than the public ex- for violence, and Hassan had changes of messages on Twit- suggested the Texas event as ter by one of the gunmen, a possible target. Elton Simpson, in the weeks On April 23, 10 days bebefore the attack. Simpson, a fore the Texas attack, Hassan caliphate," the unified Muslim land that it purports to be
" The brothers f ro m
the
Charlie Hebdo attack did their part," Hassan wrote in the post. "It's time for broth-
ers in the ¹US to do their part." The onslaught of recruitment propaganda has multiplied the number of online enthusiasts for th e I s lamic State in th e U n ited States, vestigators the difficult task
of deciding which are simply fantasizing in public and which might be p lanning violence.
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MEGA MILLIONS
HaniMohammed/The Associated Press
An airport official looks at the wreckage of a military transport aircraft destroyed by Saudi-led airstrikes, at the SanaaInternational airport, in Yemen on Tuesday. A Saudi-led coalition continues to bombShiite rebels, who are also known asHouthis, and allied forces across the country. The campaign of airstrikes, which beganMarch 26, and the ground fighting have killed hundreds and displaced at least 300,000 Yemenis. Elsewhere in Yemen onTuesday, rebels fired rockets and mortars into Saudi Arabia, killing at least three people andpurportedly capturing five soldiers
in an attack showing the insurgents' ability to launch assaults despite the weeks of Saudi-led airstrikes targeting them. Saudi Arabia's national airline canceled flights into the border area of Najran, and schools closed early amid the attack, the first by the rebels to target a civilian area in the kingdom since the start of the airstrikes. Hundreds of families fled the southern Yemeni city of Aden after the Houthis advanced into their neighborhoods, firing indiscriminately as they took over surrounding towering mountains. — The Associated Press
HLjckabee Senate greenlights
ers are reconsidering the broad surveillance powers assumedby the government after Sept. 11, 2001, the lower house of the French parliament took a long stride in the opposite direction Tuesday, overwhelmingly approving a bill that could give authorities their most intrusive domestic spying abilities ever, with almost no judicial oversight. The bill goes to the Senate, where it seems likely to pass, having been given newimpetus in reaction to the terrorist attacks in and around Paris in January. Thoseattacks, which included the offices of the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdoand akosher grocery, left17 people dead. German Spying —About18 months ago, GermanChancellor Angela Merkel was the wronged U.S.ally whose cellphone number was among data sucked up byU.S. intelligence as it kept watch on Europeans. Within the past two weeks, the tide has turned. Merkel is back in the spotlight over spying. This time it is Germany's foreign intelligence service that is being accused of monitoring European companies and perhaps individuals. Further, the reports said it was done at the behest of the National Security Agency, the U.S. intelligence organization. Critics have seized onthe spying allegations, noting a whiff of hypocrisy emanating from Berlin, given the German outrage over the U.S. program. — From wire reports
kicks off a budget blueprint Find It campaign All By Jonathan Weisman W ASHINGTON —
By Trip Gabriel New York Times News Service
HOPE, Ark. — Mike Huck-
abee, who excited evangelical voters in his first presidential
racein 2008 and retainsmuch of their goodwill, said Tuesday that he will again seek the Re-
publican nomination, despite a crowded field of rivals for his natural base in the party. A former Southern Baptist
pastor and Arkansas governor, Huckabee is returning in
hopes of once more dominating among social conservatives, but he is acutely aware he
needs broader support to avoid the snares of last time, when he ran dry of money and failed to appealmuchbeyondthe South. After describing a childhood of school prayer, fishing for catfish and running for student council in Hope, Huckabee said, "So it seems perfectly fitting that it would be here that I
announceIam a candidatefor president of the United States." It was no small detail that
2<© 4Q62Qnoo Q»Q
Hope, where he was born. Its
he declared his candidacy in fame as the hometown of an even better-known Arkansas politician, Bill Clinton, high-
lights a major theme of Huckabee's 2016 pitch — that he is well-suitedtobethenemesis for
Hillary Clinton, if she becomes the Democratic nominee, be-
cause Huckabee spent years in state politics fighting what he calls the "Clinton machine."
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE1
For the plan to take ef-
New York Times News Service
The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
The estimated jackpot is now $126 million.
CamPaign fineS —Penalties levied by the Federal Election Commission for campaign finance violations have plummeted to record lows even aspolitical spending has soared, according to newly released data from the agency. Thestatistics underscore the sharp decline in enforcement at the commission, which has come under fresh scrutiny because of partisan gridlock. Republicans on the commission say they believe the drop in fines shows that campaigns are generally following the law as aresult of better training and compliance programs. Democrats say it is a troubling sign of lax enforcement.
FrenCh SurveillanCe pragram —At amoment U.S.Iawmak-
One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)
By mail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only: Onemonth: $13
Jnint ChlnfS —President Barack Obamatapped a highly respected combat commander as his next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Tuesday, signaling that the battles against al-Qaida and Islamic State militants threatening the Middle East and theWest remain top priorities for the nation's military despite years of trying to change the focus to Asia. Announcing his selection of Marine Gen.Joseph Dunford Jr.duringa RoseGardenceremony,Obama said America's armed forces must be ready to meet abroad range of challenges, and that Dunford has proven to beone of the military's most highly regarded strategic thinkers.
Lynnll VISitS Bnltlmnfn —In her first official trip as attorney general, Loretta Lynch went to Baltimore on Tuesday, offering similar words of praise and reassurance to factions that haveoften had very different views on recent clashes there. Lynch met with the family of Freddie Gray, the young black manwho died April 19 from injuries suffered in police custody; with members of a Police Department deeply unsettled by the criminal charges against six of its own; with an array of government officials; and with community leaders. Her public comments were long onempathy and promises of help, but short on specifics.
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Ferry tn Cnda —The Obamaadministration approved the first ferry service in decadesbetween the United States and Cubaon Tuesday, potentially opening a newpath for the hundreds of thousands of people and hundreds of millions of dollars in goods that travel between Florida andHavanaeach year. BajaFerries, which operates passenger service in Mexico, said it received a license from the U.S.Treasury Department. Robert Muse, a lawyer for Baja Ferries, said he believed other ferry service petitions had also been approved. TheTreasury Department said it could not immediately confirm that, but the Sun-Sentinel newspaper in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, said approvals also were received byHavanaFerry Partners of Fort Lauderdale, United Caribbean Lines Florida in the Orlando area and Airline Brokers Co. of Miami.
giving counterterrorism in-
AIRSTRIKESCONTINUE IN YEMEN
Si sil.AvL
Bnkn Haram —A year ago, a dozenNigerian troops fighting about 200 BokoHaram militants in the town of Chibok exhausted their ammunition and ran, leaving the road openfor the abduction of nearly 300 girls. Today, Nigerian soldiers are rescuing hundreds of kidnapped girls and womenfrom the last forest stronghold of the Islamic insurgents. The reason for the improbably swift shift in fortunes? In the last three months, military forces from neighboring Chad, Niger andCameroon havejoined the battle. In addition, Nigerian troops are finally receiving better arms andweapons, as well as hazard pay that they hadnot received until this year. As aresult, Boko Haram's supply lines are being cut off, creating conditions for the security forces to deliver a potential knockout blow to the extremists who havecreated havoc in northeastern Nigeria for years.
The
Senate gave final approval Tuesday to the first joint congressional budget plan in six years, ratifying a 10year blueprint that would cut spending by $5.3 trillion, overhaul programs for the poor, repeal President
fect, Republican committee c hairmen would h ave t o
Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
draft legislation that would impose the prescribed cuts. But they have made little ef-
fort to do so, and committee leaders in both parties are
already calling for new negotiations on a more bipartisan approach. Barack O b a ma's h e a lth Senate Republicans say care law and ostensibly pro- the budget numbers show duce a balanced budget in a federal deficit finally disless than a decade. appearing for the first time Along party lines, the since 2001. Senate passed the nonbindTo get there, the budget ing blueprint 51-48, with calls for $4.2 trillion in cuts two Republicans voting no: to benefit programs such Sens. Rand Paul of K e n- as Medicare, Medicaid and tucky and Ted Cruz of Tex- food stamps over 10 years.
as. Both are candidates for the Republican presidential
Domestic programs at Congress' annual d iscretion n omination wh o s a y t h e would be cut by $496 billion budget plan did not go far below the limits imposed by enough to shrink the gov- the Budget Control Act of ernment and cut spending. 2011.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It'sW ednesday,May6,the 126th day of 2015.There are 239 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Opengovernmenthearing
— The SenateJudiciary Committee holds a hearing on the Obama administration's efforts to improve opengovernment.
HISTORY Highlight:In1965, after a Rolling Stones concert in Clearwater, Florida, was cut short by rowdy fans, Keith Richards composed theopening guitar riff of "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction," which hecowrote with Mick Jagger. (The song was recorded less than a week later, and the single was released in the United States on June 6.) In1840, Britain's first adhesive postagestamp,thePenny Black, went into circulation five days after its introduction. In1889, the Paris Exposition opened, featuring the just-completed Eiffel Tower. In1910,Britain's Edwardian era ended with the death of King Edward Vll; he wassucceeded byGeorge V. In1915, Babe Ruth hit his first
major league homerun, as a player for the Boston RedSox, against the NewYork Yankees. In1935, the Works Progress Administration beganoperating under anexecutive order signed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In1937,the hydrogen-filled German airship Hindenburg burned and crashed in Lakehurst, New Jersey, killing 35 of the 97 people onboard anda Navy crewman onthe ground. In1942, during World War II, some 15,000 Americans and Filipinos on Corregidor surrendered to Japaneseforces. In1954, medical student Roger Bannister broke the four-minute barrier for the 1-mile run during a track meet in Oxford, England, finishing in 3:59.4.
In1981, Yale architecture student MayaYing Lin was named winner of a competition to design the VietnamVeterans Memorial. In1994,former Arkansas state worker Paula Jones filed suit against President Bill Clinton, alleging he hadsexually harassed her in1991. (Jones reached asettlement with Clinton in November1998.) Britain's QueenElizabeth II and French President Francois Mitterrand formally openedthe Channel Tunnel betweentheir countries. In2002, Dutch politician Pim Fortuyn was shot and killed in Hilversum, Netherlands. (Volkert van derGraafwas convicted of killing Fortuyn and was sentenced to18 years in prison; he wasreleasedon May 2, 2014.) Ten years ngo:President George W.Busharrived in Riga, Latvia, as heopened a fast-paced, four-country journey to mark the 60th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany. Five years ngo: A computerized sell order triggered a "flash crash" on Wall Street, sending the DowJones industrials to a loss of nearly1,000 points in less than half an hour. One year ngo: A federal report said that global warming was rapidly affecting the United States; shortly after the report came out, President Barack Obama usedseveral television weathermen to call for action to curb carbon pollution before it was too late.
BIRTHDAYS Baseball Hall of FamerWillie Mays is 84. Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., is 81. Rocksinger Bob Seger is 70. Actor Richard Cox is 67.Actor Gregg Henry is 63. Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair is 62. TV personality Tom Bergeron is 60. Actress Julianne Phillips is 55. Actor-director George Clooney is 54. Rockmusician Chris Shiflett (Foo Fighters) is 44. Actress StaceyOristano is 36. Actress Adrianne Palicki is 32. Actress GaboureySidibe is 32. Actress-comedian Sasheer Zamata is 29. Actress-singer Naomi Scott is 22. — From wire reports
TRENDING
POLL
e ouroa
Americans
eBIr 0
SUpport
The airport bar isn't the only place to de-stress amid a hectic day of travel. Airports are increasingly
artists' right to offend
settingasidespace foryoga. By Martha C. White New York Times News Service
Sallie J o C u n ningham w asn't expecting a g o od night's sleep. Waiting for her 12:30 a.m. flight out of San
By Christopher Ingraham The Washington Post
• 4$
WASHINGTON — "You
can't draw me!" shouts
Francisco International Air-
the crude caricature of the
port to depart, Cunningham, a business development professional, had resigned herself to a groggy trip back home. Then she visited the airport's yoga room, a dimly lit, hardwood-floored oasis of calm.
Prophet Muhammad, sword raised in one hand. The cartoonist adds one more pen-
cil stroketo the page and responds: "That's why I draw you."
"tg
This cartoon by illustrator Bosch Fawstin was the winner of the "$10,000 Muham-
" I thought it w ould be a
good idea to stop in the yoga room and see what they of-
mad Cartoon Contest and Art Exhibit" held Sunday
j('e '
fered,"she said. The mats,
night in Garland, Texas. Two gunmen were shot and killed by police outside the building
t
blocks and bolsters were useful, but not so much as just
.1
'4
having a quiet place to stretch,
where the contest was held. A fter i n c idents s u c h
practice her flow and unwind. "I can tell you that I actu-
ally did feel quite a bit more relaxed for that flight," Cunningham said. "I was really glad I had the opportunity to do yoga." San Francisco is one of a
growing number of airports that are creating rooms for yoga and meditation. Airports, including O'Hare in Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth and Burlington in Vermont,
all have set aside space for yoga. A temporary yoga room at Heathrow in London proved so popular last year that it was made permanent, and its op-
erator is looking to open one in Hong Kong. Even people in the business
of relaxation, it appears, are not immune to flight-related anxiety. "I definitely have found myself going to the bar and having a glass of wine," said Ritu Riyat, a yoga instructor and life coach who has used airport yoga rooms. "With yoga, I don't need to have that glass of wine." Analysts say the rooms are
a reflection of an increasingly tense environment in airports. "This is a tacit recognition
by airports that travel can be stressful, and they want to do
what they can to help travelers reduce that stress," said Henry Harteveldt, a travel in-
dustry analyst. "Yoga's probably a lot healthier than trying to quell the stress at an airport
bar." The rooms have been particularly well received at larg-
as the Garland shooting, Americans tend to come
down overwhelmingly in favor of free expression. For
Matt Edge Irhe New York Times
Allison Edge andChris Kroon relax in a yogaroom at SanFrancisco International Airport after a flight
instance, a January Pew Re-
from Vietnam lest month. San Francisco's is one of e growing number of airports that are creating
search Center survey found that among Americans who
rooms for yoga andmeditation.
had heard about the Charlie
er airports, where passengers open after traveler response. wait for connecting flights. Now, SkyTeam plans to intro"It really was just the most duce yoga to its lounge in the pleasant layover I think I've Hong Kong International Airever had," said Leslie Wei, an port when the lounge opens ophthalmology fellow from this year. Wisconsin who h appened H arteveldt said t hat a i r across the airport yoga room ports were simply responding when traveling through Chi- to consumers' needs by crecago last fall. "It's like the qui- ating yoga rooms. Travelers etest place in O'Hare. It's re- these days must arrive earlier ally hard to find a quiet place than ever for their flights, esthere." pecially at busy hub airports, O'Hare added its room in leading to more of the hurryNovember 2013, and Midway up-and-wait routine of long Airport followed suit last lines and idle time. And more September. travelers also want to mainWhile a number of airports tain their health and wellness have, over the last couple of routines on the road, whether decades, converted existing that means seeking healthier chapels into interfaith sanctu- food options or finding ways aries that offer a quiet place, to sneak in exercise during yoga rooms — most of which their trip. "This whole trend of how are free and open to allstraddle the line between sec- consumers are expressing ular and spiritual, offering a their health consciousness is quiet place for meditation as one we've been observing by well as a space to stretch or severalyears," said Jim Crawsweat. ford, an executive at a design One exception to these in- firm that does a lot of work clusive facilities is at the Sky- with airports. Team Lounge at Heathrow. Airports with yoga rooms Members of the SkyTeam say that they are working airline alliance have access, hard to make traveler well-bethough other t ravelers can ing a priority, though, and that buy a day pass. SkyTeam be- offering a place for tranquility gan what was intended to be a is an important step toward two-monthpop-up yoga room that goal. "It was installed as part of last year but kept the space
this holistic program to ac-
Hebdo attacks, 60 percent said it was OK for the maga-
tively promote th e
p u rsuit
zine to publish the cartoons,
of healthy lifestyle choices," said David Magana, spokes-
compared with 28 percent who said it wasn't OK. But there were some nota-
man f o r t he Dal l a s-Fort Worth International Airport,
ble demographic differences in the response to this question. Whites were significantly more likely than nonwhites to say publishing the
which added a yoga room in 2012. L ike other a i rports w i th
yoga r ooms,
D a llas-Fort
Worth does not log every trav-
cartoons was OK. Republi-
eler who visits, but Magana
cans and the highly educated were more likely to sup-
estimated that dozens of travelers used the rooms every
port the cartoons than Dem-
day. "We felt that a yoga room
ocratsandthe less-educated. Most interestingly, among age groups, millennials were the least likely to support publishingthe cartoons.
would kind of be an interest-
ing thing that would differentiate our airport," said Doug Yakel, spokesman for the San
A merican support
Francisco airport. "A yoga room seemed to be something that resonated with travelers."
lute. Last year, the First Amendment Center found
San Francisco lays claim to the first airport yoga room,
that nearly 40 percent of
which it opened in 2012. That
Americans say the
room was later relocated to a walkway where Terminals
Amendment "goes too far" in the rights it guarantees, a near-record high.
I and 2 connect to give more
travelers access to it, and a second yoga room opened early last year in Terminal 3. Yakel said the airport was considering adding another room to serve the airport's one remaining terminal.
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Magazineprinted UsingHlv-positive blood By Lenny Bemstein The Washington Post
To make a big point, a small Austrian m e n' s m a g azine printed an entire edition using ink laced with H IV-positive
blood. The idea, said Julian Wiehl, co-publisher of The Vangardist — a "progressive" magazine aimed at young, urban men — was to make a statement about the stigma
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still associated with the virus
that no one could ignore. I think you'll agree they succeeded, wildly. "If you see the magazine ... the first question that comes to your mind is, 'Would I touch it'? Would I take it in my hands?' " Wiehl said in an interview. "And the second ques-
tion is, 'Why would I touch it?' or 'Why wouldn't I touch it'?' "
From a health and safety perspective, picking up the magazine is not a problem. As we've known for many years, the human immunodeficiency virus quickly dies outside the body and can be transmitted only by direct contact with body fluids, mainly blood and semen. To be doubly sure, and to kill any other pathogens,
•
•
• Y ILkl@1 Uk tHI• 15IIIL *Nll IY HILPINO TO KRj • II ON • IOPll' • NIIIOL IT I • OUITt POIIIILt OlVIN CUIIENT MlDIC*L kDYANCf0 - • IIAT ONI IIAT IIIV/AIPl kl11 NlYIO MAKI 'IHI ti j 5 $ 4 OAIN.
The Vangardist via The Washingtonpost
The Vangardist, a small Austrian men's magazine, printed this entire issue with ink laced with HIV-positive blood. The editors said it was an attempt to make a statement about the stigma associated with the HIV virus.
print the magazine. The ink govern transport of blood or used in all 3,000 copies of the blood products across borders, printed edition is I part blood the edition can be ordered only to 28 parts ink, Wiehl said. online. There also is some blue ink to Normally, the 5-year-old highlight its "Heroes of HIV" Vangardist puts out 10 digital theme. issues a year aimed, Wiehl The magazinecomes in a said, at young, progressive V angardist a u toclaved t h e sealed wrapper,forcing the urban men who, he said, don't HIV-positive blood obtained reader to "break the seal to fit gay or straight stereotypes. from threedonors beforemix- break the stigma," Wiehl said. It covers health, fashion and ing it with the red ink used to To avoid violating laws that sexuality, among other topics.
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A4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
Scientists traceEbola'sgenetic path inAfrica By Sheri Fink
tioned, others are looking at
into how to improve the re-
to have infected 25,000. Sci-
New York Times News Service
whether this version of the virus had properties that made
sponse to future outbreaks.
entists have assigned the sequences to three clusters plus
Scientists are using blood
samples collected throughout it more capable of causing the Ebola outbreak to map the infection. virus' spread from country to
S cientists look fo r
v i ral
country by tracking tiny mu- mutations because of their tations in its gene sequences. p otential influence on t h e The picture is not complete, effectiveness of diagnostics but intriguing discoveries or treatments. Researchers have been made. Virus muta- have changed Ebola diagtions detected in Sierra Leone Marcio Jose Sanchez I The Associated Press file photo
At least half a dozen states have outlawed the use of drones to violate privacy in the past two years, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
Drones Continued fromA1 Camera-equipped drones have commercial uses: They can inspect crops, photograph real estate and survey land. As the government figures out how to regulate that activity,
it has begun rapidly granting waivers from federal rules to drones-for-hire.Scores of
companies have obtained permission to fly them. Rules differ for mere enthu-
siasts. Officially, small drones may beflown only by hobbyists who belong to communi-
ty-based organizations such as the Muncie, Indiana, Academy of Model Aeronautics and
who follow its rules. But growing numbers of nonmembers are sending them aloft.
Protecting against
peepingToms Conflict is on the rise. A
New Jersey man last year shot down a drone flying over his neighborhood. Last June, a woman in Connecticut was arrested after she was accused
of assaulting a young man flying a helicopter drone over a public beach. In the past two years, at least seven states have outlawed the use of drones to vi-
olate privacy, according to the National Conference of State L egislatures. California i s considering a bill that would expand trespassing laws to include piloting a drone within 350 feet above private property without permission. "Drones have a lot of po-
tentially useful and extremely innovative uses," said Sen. Hannah-Beth Jackson, D-Ca-
lif., who introduced the bill. "Invading our privacy and property without permission shouldn't be among them. When we're in our backyards,
FarmersOKto use dronesoncrops drone large enoughcarry tanks of fertilizers and pesticides haswon rare approval from federal authorities to spray crops in the United States, officials said Tuesday. The drone, called the RMAX, is a remotely piloted helicopter that weighs 207 pounds, said Steve Markofski ,aspokesman for YamahaCorp. U.S.A., which developed theaircraft. Smaller drones weighing a few pounds hadalready been approved for limited use to take pictures that help farmers identify unhealthy crops. TheRMAX is the first time a dronebig enough to carry a payload has beenapproved, Markofski said. The drone already has been usedelsewhere, including by rice farmers in Japan. TheFAAapproved it for the U.S. onFriday. "I certainly understand their cautious approach," Markofski said. "It's a daunting task given our airspace is complicated." The drone is best-suited for precision spraying on California's rolling vineyards and places that are hard to reach from the ground or with larger, piloted planes, said KenGiles, professor of biological and agricultural engineering at the University of California, Davis. Giles tested the drone in California to seeif it could be usedhere. "A vehicle like this gives you a way to get in andget
inspections.
the U.S. realize the benefits
The states' efforts come as
the federal government is preparing regulations for commercialuse and companies such as Amazon.com consider using them to make deliver-
The National Telecommunications an d In f o rmation Administration has convened
(dronej technology has to offer," he said. — The Associated Press
a group to devise suggested privacy guidelines. Otherlegal concerns have arisen. More than a dozen happening," he said. states regulate when and In Seattle last year, a womwhether a warrant is required an called police to say a drone beforepolice use a drone to was spying into her 26th-floor gatherevidence, according to apartment. In fact, a buildthe American Civil Liberties ing developer had hired an Union. This year, 44 states aerialphotography company are considering another 147 to make images of property drone-related bills. nearby and wasn't peeping into homes.
Misguidedregulations?
In another case, a man from
Drone enthusiasts say the Ulster, New York, was arrestregulations are misguided and ed in July and charged with a that their actions are misinter- felony for flying a small, campreted by a nervous public un- era-equipped drone outside familiar with the technology the windows of examination and its promise. rooms at a medical office. States already protect citThe man, David Beesmer, izens against peeping Toms said in an interview that he regardless of the technology had taken his mother to the involved, said Brendan Schul- office for an appointment and man, an attorney who spe- while he waited was flying his cializes in drones at Kramer drone tocapture images of the Levin Naftalis and Frankel in recently constructed building New York.
virus discovered in Guinea in
interviewing people on the
March 2014. T he t h ree
gl ound. "We can tell you with a
c l usters a r e
slightly mutated descendants high likelihood that this se- of the Guinean viruses, and quence is derived from this they were found circulating othersequence,"said Jeffrey in Sierra Leone two to three Kugelman, the chief of the months later. bioinformatics branch of the One of the most intriguing Center for Genomic Scienc- findings is that viral descenes at the Army Medical Re- dants of what is known as search Institute of Infectious
cluster two have been found
Diseases. Sequencesofviruses from about 250 people were made publicly available during the first year of the outbreak in
in the blood samples of all Liberian Ebola patients whose
West Africa, which is thought
eled from and lived in Guinea.
ry around frustration about those" charges. Another member, Don Morse, ran a dispensary in
have on the committee," Tow-
Washington County that was
highly publicized rules advi-
raided by sheriff 's deputies
sory committee in the history of state government" and reit-
viruses have been sequenced
and made public, and in patients in Mali who had trav-
Pot Continued fromA1 Several members gained expertise in the medical mar-
ijuana market, including by opening clinics and dispensaries. Another member, Anthony Johnson, acted as chief petitioner for
t h e m easure
expungedfrom the record after threeyears if the defendant has followed court guidelines. In 1995, Kenyon pleaded not guilty to two felony charges of delivery of a controlled substance to minors, which were dismissed, and pleaded guilty to misdemeanor delivery of marijuana. Kenyon declinedto com-
in 2012. Morse initially faced
slee said. He said the rule-making committee "may be the most
two felony charges in con- erated that the agency wantnection with the raid. Those ed input from experts within were dismissed, and he was the marijuana industry.
voters passed in November's convicted of m i s demeanor election to legalize marijuana. ment on his criminal history, possession. Johnson will sit on both the but he said, "It's taken a long Morse said he thought the rule-making committee and time to get to this point. I'm OLCC took into account apanother group that will work excited to move forward." plicants' knowledge of the on licensing, enforcement Cedar Grey, a Southern Or- industry along with their and compliance issues. egon grower who produces oil backgrounds before picking The OLCC appointedto from cannabis, was charged the final committees, though the rule-making committee in 2001 for manufacturing he added he had no role in deBrent Kenyon, who founded and distributing marijuana in ciding who was placed on the Southern Oregon Alternative a case that lingered in court committees " I suspect they have to Medicine, a collective of pri- beforeallcharges were dismary care physicians based missed in 2004. A 2007 charge weigh things out: Does this in Medford that state records of marijuana possession was person bring more to the table show has accounted for a dismissed within days. with what we're trying to do high volume of medical marGrey, who is president of and accomplish as opposed to ijuana cardholders. the advocacy group called what he or she may have done Court records show Ken- the O r egon S u nGrown in the past that would exclude yon has a history of illegal Growers Guild, said law en- them under ordinary circummanufacturing, possession forcement in 2001 raided his stances?" Morse said. and delivery, including a fel- medical marijuana grow site As part of the application ony conviction for manufac- and pulled plants out of the process, the OLCC conducted turing hashish in 2001, ac- ground. In 2007, he was ar- criminal background checks cording to court records. rested in Eugene for possess- and was aware of any past Kenyon was convicted of ing hashish that he said he convictions, agency spokesselling marijuana in 2008, possessed in accordance with man Tom Towslee said. "We vetted all of these peoaccording to a 2012 Orego- his medical marijuana card. "The one thing I want to be ple, we know exactly what nian report. Record of that conviction isn't available in clear with you about is those their backgrounds are, and state records. Certain mari- were traumatic incidents for we're perfectly satisfied that juana-related felonies can be me," Grey said. "I still car- those are the best people to
O LCC D i r e ctor St e v e Marks was out of town and
unavailable t o c o m ment on his agency's committee appointments.
Chris Lyons, former head of the OLCC and state Lottery Commission, was ap-
pointed to head the rule-making committee. She declined to comment
on the criminal backgrounds of members of the committee and said generally it's a good thing to have input from a wide array of people. "The more people you have on the committee that understand not only the intent of Ballot Measure 91 but the in-
dustry in general as it's functioned overthe past 30 years in this state, I think having
a wide variety of points of view and perspective of background will really help in the long term," Lyons said. — Reporter: 503-566-2839, tanderson@bendbuttetift.com — Reporter Claire Withycombe contributed to this article.
out and get that treatment
ies, reshape farmland management and make industrial
right to privacy."
the original versions of the
objective endeavor, unlike
FRESNO, Calif.— A
done," Giles said. Brian Wynne, president and CEO of the Association for UnmannedVehicle Systems International, said in a statement that the approval highlights other potential uses. "The FAA istaking an important step forward to helping more industries in
with our families, we have an expectation that we have a
nostic tests and experimental
last spring were found later in treatments based on inforLiberia and Mali, and scien- mation about how the virus tists are examining whether has evolved from previous this resulted from the chance outbreaks to the one in West movements ofpeople across Africa. borders. Genetic mutations are And although some scien- also beginning to serve as a tists think it is unlikely that tool to understand the overthe mutations made a differ- all course of the epidemic, ence in how the virus func- which could offer insights
Tracking changes in the virus' genetic sequence is an
CENTRALOREGOI'8 ORIGINALHOME AID llVING NIAGAZIIE
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in the town, which is about 100
"Many of these state law miles north of Manhattan. proposals are an overreaction, Beesmer, a drone hobbybecause existing state privacy ist and videographer, said he laws already cover the types wanted to give the images to of misconduct that people are the property owner so they most concerned about," he could be used in marketsaid. "It shouldn't matter if you ing materials. He insists he use a tripod or a zoom lens or wasn't peeping on people and a hidden camera placed in a that his camera can't shoot tree. If you're invading some- through tinted glass windows. one's privacy, it's the miscon- He is fighting the charges, duct that should be illegal, and which have been reduced to a not the technology." misdemeanor. "My mistake was not askSchulman added that because of drones' use by the ing prior to shooting, and had military and police, there is a I gone in and asked first, this misconception about how peo- would never have happened," ple use drones and what the he said. "Of course, simply bedevices can do. cause you now have a moving "As soon as you introduce a flying camera, it will make it drone, there is an irrational re- more challenging to protect action where people think that privacy from those who want there is an invasion of privacy to break your privacy."
Mgjfljt-' ll
IMa0aga
talh scssllr,
silI(r
For moreinformation and to subscridecall
541-382-1811 OEQGN MS N I I IN%SI CRORIINGNOME 8
S MRYBIEIIGY~S M
. The Bulletin
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
UPDATE DISEASE STRIKES A RURAL AREA
PPP
a popular Central Oregon race, Mt. Bachelor was com-
Fear am HIVout rea in In iana
Continued fromA1
mitted to running the Pine Marten lift si x d ays after
By Abby Goodnough
fighting a barrage of misin-
New York Times News Service
formation about the virus in
came addicted to painkillers more than a decade ago, when a car w r eck left her
with a broken back and doctors prescribed OxyContin during her recovery. Then came a new prescription opiate, Opana, easily obtained
Austin who have biases about HIV and are contributing to
on the street and more potent
the stigma and subsequent
when crushed, dissolved in water and injected. She did
fear," said Dr. Diane Janowicz, an i n fectious disease
just that, many times a day,
specialist at I ndiana University, who is treating HIV
/
sometimes sharing needles
patients here. "I have to reas-
Aaaron P. Bernstein /The New York Times
Sherry McNeely, right, a nurse,tests a resident for HIV in amobile
close after Sunday but will operate the Pine Marten
closing for the season. "It's such a big community
chairlift on May 16 for PPP
event, and we're committed
alpine competitors only. to being a sponsor," Lomax Bachelorseason passes will said. "We'll be taking care not be valid, according to of the snow and prepping Simoneau. the course. We'll move some "Only PPP participants snow around." will be allowed on the lift," Simoneau said registrahe said. "And you can only tion for the PPP has lagged pre-run the alpine course somewhat compared with from 8 to 9 a.m." the last few years. But he Mt. Bachelor's website expects many more to sign reported 12 inches of snow up now that they know what at the base Tuesday and 75 the new stage will entail. inches at midmountain. Those who were planning to "The base-area snowpack cross-countryski aspartofa is the lowest it's ever been in team might now have to sethistory in early May," said tle for a 1-mile run.
Scott County, where almost all residents are white, few go to college and one in five live in poverty, according to the census. "There are still a significant proportion of people in
AUSTIN, Ind. — She be-
with other addicts. L ast m o n th , t h e th i n ,
Mt. Bachelor ski area will
45-year-old woman learned testing unit in Austin, Indiana, this month. The town is dealing with the unforgiving consequenc- rife misinformation and local health workers who are learning as they can share it. It's OK to eat at es. She tested positive for go in a fight to control an HIV outbreak that has reached 140 cases. the same table. You can use HIV, one of nearly 150 cases the same bathroom."
elor. "We've been looking at it since March and kicking around different ideas. A trail run gave us the best
in t hi s
flexibility. There just wasn't a nordic course. You can't ski
s o cially c o nserva-
tive, largely rural region just north of the Kentucky border. Now a life long hobbled by addiction is, like so many others here, consumed by fear.
the Centers for Disease Con- ers are learning as they go. A treatable condition trol and Prevention, the state Brittany Combs, the public Many of the newly diagand nonprofit groups such as health nurse for Scott Coun- nosed here have strikingly ty, said she was stunned to
high amounts of the virus in
discover from talking to addicts that many were using
their blood, Janowicz said,
she does not want to be spot-
the AIDS Healthcare Foundation. HIV had been all but unknown here, and m i sinformation is rife. Attempts to halt the outbreak have been
t ed entering th e c l i nic o n Main Street,she says, and
hindered by strong but misguided local beliefs about
their arms. Some were in the habit of using nail polish to mark syringes as their own, but with needles scarce and houses full of people frequently shooting up together, efforts to avoid sharing often failed. After the needle exchange program started last month,
She is afraid to start antiretroviral therapy because
the same needle up to 300 t imes, until it b r oke off i n
afraid to learn her prognosis how to address it, accordafter hearing a rumor — false, ing to people involved in the it turns out — that someone response. else with the virus was given Gov. Mike Pence reluctantsix months to live. Other drug ly authorized a needle exusershave refused to be test- change program last month, ed at all. b ut local o f ficials ar e n o t " I thought it w a s j ust a running it according to best homosexual disease," the practices, outside experts say. woman said one recent eve- Austin residents still m u st ning, twisting a tissue in her wait for addiction treatment, manicured hands as tears even though they have been filled her eyes. She asked that given priority. And getting her name not be published those who are HIV-positive out of concerns about being on medication, and making stigmatized. "I didn't ever sure they adhere to the protothink it would be in my small col, has been difficult. hometown." The crisis would test even A need for education a large metropolis; Austin, Officials here say the need population 4,200, is over- for education is urgent and whelmed despite help from deep; even local health work-
C ombs also
l e arned t h a t
half mile of dirt to get there." Because the PPP is such
theless, she said, "If they take their medicine for HIV, this is a chronicdisease, not some-
thing they have to die from." Another complication is that the needle exchange has
faced strong local resistance. Pence, a Republican, generally opposes such programs, saying they perpetuate drug use. Many residents here feel the same.
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
MBSEF events director and Pole Pedal Paddle race director Molly Cogswell-Kelley, left, and MBSEF cycling and nordic race director Chuck Thomas talk Tuesday afternoon about the transition area from the downhill ski portion of the Pole Pedal Paddle to a1-mile trail run at Mount Bachelor west of Bend.
In d i anapolis ing them in their drug habit.
— who have evaluated about
But then I did the research on
50 people with the virus here and started about 20 of them
it,and there's 28 years of research to prove that it actual-
on antiretroviral drugs — are ly works."
Bachelor
But Green won her primary with more than 70 percent of the vote, and the Board of Al-
/; 1
tacked me for it, they more people seemed to rally around me." During the urban crime epidemicofthe 1970sand '80sand the sharp dedine in crime that
„ g/" / »
began in the 1990s, the unions unassailable political position.
'l
'I
l.
/
I
s
ir
r' nt Their opposition could cripple political candidates and kill police-reform proposals in gestation. But amid a rash of high-proGahriella Demczuk/The New York Times file photo file incidents involving alle- Pennsylvania state troopers watch as demonstrators celebrate after charges were filed against police gations of police overreach in officers over the death of Freddie Grey in Baltimore. The political context in which police unions have New York; Baltimore; Cleve-
enjoyed a privileged position is rapidly changing, attributable largely to a rash of high-profile inci-
land; Ferguson, Missouri; and dents involving allegations of police overreach. North Charleston, South Car-
the University of Illinois. "The
a local police union chief, ac- Political blowback public would be surprised by cused Mayor Bill de Blasio of In some cases, the union's the level of rational behavior having blood on his hands af- hostility to scrutiny has been ter the shooting death of two
self-defeating. In 2014, the Fra-
police officers in December.
ternal Order of Police declined to endorse Gregg Bernstein, then the state's attorney for
indication, the provocative Baltimore, after members of language has largely served to the union's endorsement comalienate the public and isolate
mittee complained that Bern-
the police politically. According to a Quinnipiac University poll in January, 77 percent of New York City voters disapproved of Lynch's comments. Sixty-nine percent d isapproved of police officers turn-
stein had been too aggressive in prosecuting police misconduct, according to two people briefed on the discussions. Bernstein, who suffered from diminishing support in districts where the union has long been influential, lost his
ing their backs on de Blasio at
was also a short one at Hoo-
egon, the maximum base d oo because of a l ack o f depth of 53 inches reached snow. Hoodoo did not open
olina, the political context in
In New York, Patrick Lynch,
the season Nov. 24, about
than other ski areas in Or-
which the police unions have funerals for the two slain offi- re-election bid to the current enjoyed a privileged position cers, a protest widely believed state's attorney, Marilyn Mosis rapidly changing. And the to have been orchestrated by by, who has made prosecuting unions, long known for their the union. police misconduct a priority. stridency, are struggling to In Baltimore, too, the po- Mosby recently charged six adapt. lice union has been less than Baltimore police officers in "There was a time in this sure-footed in navigating the the death of Gray, the resident country when elected officials more hostile political terrain whose death last month set off — legislators, chief executives of the past few years. The tumultuous protests around — were willingto contextualize union, the Fraternal Order of the city. what police do," said Eugene Police Lodge 3, has responded By contrast to the unions' O'Donnell, a former New York with open resistance to Mayor hard-line public stance, many City police officer and prose- Stephanie Rawlings-Blake's can be pragmatic behind the cutor who now teaches at John proposals to make it easier to scenes when dealing with Jay College of Criminal Justice. remove police officers guilty prosecutors over individual "Andthat time is mostly gone." of misconduct and to give the allegations of misconduct. In city's police civilian review Baltimore, for example, there Hard-line stances board a "more impactful" role have been several recent inIn Baltimore, the local po- in disciplining officers. stances when the police union lice union president accused The union also opposed the declined to fund the legal deprotesters angry at the death decision by Rawlings-Blake fense of an officer whose beof Freddie Gray of participat- and Police Commissioner havior it had concluded was ing in a "lynch mob." In South Anthony Batts to invite the beyond the pale. "People have the impresCarolina, the head of the po- Justice Department in to help lice union representing an offi- overhaul the city's Police De- sion, when it comes to police cer who had shot and killed an partment after an investiga- unions, that there's never an unarmed black man who was tion by Th e Baltimore Sun unwarranted case of p olice fleeing fulminated against produced numerous allega- abuse," said Robert Bruno, a "professional race agitators." tions of police brutality. professor of labor relations at
I f v o t ers' r e a ctions t o Lynch's statements are any
Bachelor got enough snow to have a fairly full ski season. Mt. Bachelor opened for
the same time of year it has for the past five seasons. Other skiareas in Oregon, Drew Jackson, Mt. Bachelor such as Hoodoo Ski Area spokesman. near Sisters and Willamette "This year will not go Pass along state Highway down in the books as being 58, did not have as good of a dry year," Jackson said. seasons. "The biggest factor this year Hoodoo opened Dec. 31 was the warmth. We got a lot and stayed open for the first more rain than normal, es- two weekends in 2015 only pecially at the base." to close Jan. 12 because of Four ski seasons — 1976- a skimpy amount of snow. 77, 1977-78, 2000-01 and On April 20, Hoodoo an2004-05 — brought less snow nounced it was closing for to Mt. Bachelor, according to the season. "The 2014-15 season at the ski area's records. Since Oct. 1, Mt. Bache- Hoodoo Ski Area was one lor has received 212 inches, of unusually warm weathmore than 17'/2 feet, of snow, er, high hopes and very low according to the ski area. snow levels," read a news Historically, Mt . B a chelor release from Hoodoo. "As has averaged 462 inches, much as we hoped, prayed 38t/2 feet, of snow each ski and danced for tons of fluffy, season. white powder, Mother NaAlthough Mt. Bachelor ture had a different plan." faredbetterin terms ofsnow The 2013-14 ski season
Continued fromA1
representing police officers in many cities enjoyed a nearly
— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
and in one patient the HIV has progressed to AIDS. None-
Police
Green said. "The more they at-
s o lve
Registration for the PPP
Continued fromA1 During the last "challenging snow year," the 2004-05 ski season, Mt. Bachelor closed May 15, 2005, said
dermen approved the oversight board. "All that stuff backfired,"
t hey ca n
the r un-or-ski question," Simoneau said. "They know that plan. Teams might have to adjust abit. We're anticipating a very busy next 10 days."
continues through Monday to the nordic center. There's a at www.pppbend.com.
"If you would have asked many addictswere uncomfortable visiting a needle dis- me last year if I w a s for a tribution center that opened needle exchange program, I April 4 on the outskirts of would have said you're nuts," town. So she started taking Combs said. "I thought, just needles directly to users in like a lot of people do, that it's their neighborhoods. enabling — that you're just At the same time, HIV spe- giving needles out and assistcialists f r o m
"Now
Tom Lomax, mountain operations manager at Mt. Bach-
sure them — if your grandkid wants a sip of your drink, you
on the part of union grievance officers."
Feb. 28 was the lowest max-
until Feb. 8, 2014, and was
imum base depth in the ski
But when it comes to what
area's records. The ski area
open for a couple of weeks. Willamette Pass opened in early January but soon
opened in 1958, and its records go back to the 1971-72 closed. By the start of March, ski season. On Tuesday, Mt. the ski area had a message Bachelor reported a base of on its website saying it was 14 inches. done for the season. Although snowpack was — Reporter: 541-617-7812, lower than average, Mt. ddarling@bendbulletin.com
the unionsperceive as larger, institutional threats, they are characteristically unrelenting,
even when a more nuanced response might better serve their long-term interests.
There might be no better example than the creation of New York City's Civilian Complaint
Review Board two decades ago. In September 1992, after a
M oth =
monthslong standoff between
the administration of Mayor David Dinkins and the city's
D ay
police over his proposal for an independent review agency, a union-organized protest degenerated into what the media
called a "riot," as thousands of police officers overwhelmed barricades blocking the steps of City Hall. "It was a very bad inning for
/
the unions," said Christopher Dunn, of the New York Civil Liberties Union. "Most people view that as being the incident
that pushed civilian oversight over the line."
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TH E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
Ambulance
Civil rights groupssay parents whoopt out of tests arehurting kids
more appropriate response for the injuries they suffered. Some patients even contended
Continued fromA1 Kendall has not paid the
that theycould have reached
charge, which he said was equivalent to a year's income.
the hospital more quickly by
a mts~
road than air. One of these patients was
As a result, Air Methods, the
nation's largest air ambulance operator, with more than $1
Diana Kidd, a family lawyer
billion in revenue last year, is
in New Paltz, New York. After a motorcycle accident in
suing him. Kendall's case — and many
July 2012, she was taken to the Catskill Regional Medical Cen-
By Emma Brown
others like it — p r ovides a window into one of the most
ter. From there, an Air Meth-
The Washington Post
ods helicopter transported her
WASHINGTON — A doz-
lucrative booms in health care
to a trauma unit at Westchester Medical Center. The com-
en civil rights groups issued
in recent years. Air ambulance
of schools, actions we have never supported and will never condone." But they said that they rely
on the data from those tests to ing the growing movement of advocate for poor and minoriparents who refuse to allow ty children, who face worse their children to take stan- outcomes on every measure, dardized tests, saying the an- academically and otherwise, ti-test push "would sabotage than their white and affluent important data and rob us of peers. "For the civil rights comthe right toknowhowour students are faring." munity, data provide the By removing an increas- power to advocate forgreater ing number of students from equality under the law," they the testing pool, the so-called wrote. "Until federal law inopt-out movement skews test sisted that our children be inscore data, thegroups argued, cluded in these assessments, making it impossible to gauge schools would try to sweep whether persistent achieve- disparities under the rug by ment gaps are narrowing. sending our children home or a statement 'Ibesday criticiz-
companies, which indisputably Craig Hacker /The New York Times pany charged Kidd $36,646, a save lives, often in dramatic An air ambulance crew from Life Star of Kansas delivers a patient bill that fell to her because her circumstances, have consis- to Stormont-Vail Hospital in Topeka, Kansas, last month. Smaller insurance did not cover ambutently raised their rates and reimbursements from insurers could leave eir ambulance patients lance transportation. aggressively expanded their even more financially vulnerable. She has not paid the bill and networks, adding scores of exis countersuing Air Methods, pensive newhelicopters. which had sued to collect the The model has worked be- lance operators and emergen- earning a sevenfold increase payment. Kidd has calculatcause health insurance has cy care experts. One side effect in profit over the last 10 years. ed that a regular ambulance covered a large share of the might be that smaller, nonprof- By its own calculations, Air would have made it to the traubills. it air ambulance operators, M ethods accounts for nearly ma center in well under the one Now changes in the air am- which make up a significant 30 percent of all air ambulance hour, 55 minutes that she said bulance industry might leave portion of the industry and revenue in the country. she was charged for. "I could patients even more financially might charge less than their Using numbers in the com- have been taken by a mbuvulnerable. Private insurance large commercial rivals, are pany's financial filings, Jon- lance," she said. "There is nothcompanies that offer ambu- findingit harder to survive. athan Hanlon, founder of ing in the record to indicate lancecoverage might notcover Concern about future rev- Research 360, a firm that an- that I couldn't have been." the full cost of air ambulances, enue recently prompted the alyzes companies, calculated Air ambulance companies leaving more patients to pay air ambulance companies to that Air Methods' average bill rarely collect the full amounts the difference. And in recent seek help from Washington. in 2014 was $40,766, compared when they go after patients, months, those insurers, un- The Association of Air Medi- with roughly $17,262 five years and they often say they will derpressureto cuthealth care cal Services, an industry trade earlier. A law that deregulated lower the bill in the hope of costs, have been reducing re- group, is promoting legisla- the airline industry in the 1970s getting something. Kidd said imbursements for air ambu- tion that was introduced in the has prevented states from cap- Air Methods representatives lances. Medicare has typically House of Representatives in ping the amount air ambulanc- offered to cut her bill to $10,000 covered a smaller portion of February. Among other things, es can charge. if she provided information to the bills than private insur- the bill would increase MediAsked about the increase, show that she lacked the monance, and Medicaid even less. care payments to air ambu- Michael Allen, president of ey to pay, which she declined to Air Methods has often re- lance companies. domestic air medical services do. Kendall, the rancher, said sorted to hard-edged legal The association asserts that at Air Methods, said charges Air Methods offered to lower tactics to get paid, according higher payouts are needed to had risen in part to offset the his bill to $33,000, a sum he to interviews and dozens of keep up with costs, and it con- decline in insurance payments. said he thought was still too lawsuits in courts across the tends that a protracted dedine Receiving surprisingly large high. Kendall said that he told country. in revenue could cause air medical bills is not uncommon, the company he would notpay "They hounded us for a long ambulance operators to with- of course. But air ambulance more than $10,000. time," said Marc Dotson, of draw from certain areas. "The charges typically catch paBy using more aggressive Butlerville, Ohio, who filed for reason this bill needs to pass is tients off guard. In emergen- efforts to s ecure payments bankruptcy in 2013 to avoid a that it's about access to health cies, they often have no say in and charging an average of demand for $22,150 from Air care," said Rick Sherlock, the how they are transported, and $40,000, Air Methods might Methods after his wife was in- association's chief executive. to air ambulance companies' be collecting more from pajured. As part of its efforts to credit, they pick up people re- tients than other operators do. collect, the company placed a High demand gardless of their ability to pay. Even so, there are signs that lien on the Dotsons' home, reAs many as 400,000 peothe pressures of the industry cords show. ple are transported each year Copingwiththe stickershock are catching up with the comby air ambulances, the assoSome patients said they were pany. Air Methods' financial Profits threatened ciation estimates. The indus- puzzled why relatively short records suggest that collecting At the same time, profits try has undoubtedly brought rides could cost so much and payments takes longer noware under threat from within. quicker emergency care to cer- added that the bills only con- a trend that might worsen if Strong revenue over the last tain, largely rural, areas of the tributed to more stress during more insurancecompanies redecade fed explosive growth in country, though the safety of their recovery period, when duce reimbursements. the number of air ambulances, air ambulances has also come their injuries prevented them Kendall might be one of the creating an inefficient system under scrutiny in the past, and from returningto work. Others nonpayers. "I refuse to pay in which too many helicopters crashes still occur. questioned whether a regular what I assumed to be an exare chasing too few patients, Air Methods has been at ambulance, a much cheap- tremely exorbitant amount of according to some air ambu- the forefront of the expansion, er option, would have been a money," he said.
''We cannot fix what we cannot measure. And abol-
ishing the tests or sabotaging
to another room while other students took the test. "Hiding the achievement
the validity of their results only makes it harder to iden-
gaps meant that schools would not have to allocate
tify and fix the deep-seated time, eff ort,and resources to problems in our schools," the dose them. Our communities statement said. had to fight for this simple The groups that signed right to be counted, and we the statement included the are standingbyit." Leadership Conference on This year, about t w i ce Civil and Human Rights, the as many civil rights groups NAACP, the National Council signed on to a joint statement of La Raza, the National Dis- asking Congress to maintain ability Rights Network and annual standardized tests in the National Urban League. the next version of No Child Students who refuse tests Left Behind, the main federal are still a tiny minority of all educationlaw. test-takers nationwide, but Federal la w re q uires theirnumbers are growing. schools and school districts The resistance has grown this to ensure that at least 95 perspring as most states have cent of students take annual rolled out tests aligned to the standardized tests. The rule is Common Core academic meant to keep administrators standards. from quietly discouraging Many parents who are re- low performers to stay home fusing to allow their children on exam day, something that to test consider it an act of civil could skew performance updisobedience meant to protest ward and hide racial or sociowhat they say is a destructive economic inequities. emphasis on testing that has Federal money can be warpedpublic schools. withheld from school districts In their j o int s tatement with low participation rates, 'Ibesday, the civil r i ghts but that has not happened, groups said they recognize and it is not clear how or that standardized tests have whether officials might sancbeen "misused over time to tion schools and school disdeny opportunity and under- tricts with low participation mine the educational purpose rates this year.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
BRIEFING Car crashpossibly intentional Authorities responded Tuesday to aForest Service road off the CascadeLakesHighway after a manbelievedto be suicidal intentionally crashed hiscar, according to DeschutesCounty Sheriff's Lt. ChadDavis. The Bendman,29, reportedly drovehis car into an object andsuffered nonlife-threatening injuries. Hewastaken to St. Charles Bend. The incident started
when a caller to 911 said a VolkswagenJetta was driving erratically on Century Drivenear milepost 6. Thedriver pulled overandthe caller contacte dtheman,who said he was"going to kill himself," according to a news release. A short time later, amental health facility called in areport of a patient whowasin his vehicle andsuicidal. Sheriff's deputies, Oregon State Police troopersand officers from Bend andSunriver began searching for theman. About12:40, amotorist reported seeinga crashed vehiclematching the vehicle description off Forest Service Road 4610, about ahalf-mile north of Century Drive. Deputies andofficers arrived in theareaand shut down botheastbound andwestbound traffic on Century Drive, according to thenews release. Negotiators were able to contact theman by phoneanddetermine that he hadcrashedhis vehicle andwas reportedly injured. Officers found him andbrought Bend FireMedics tothe scene to treat him. A negotiator made contact with him, and sheriff's deputies eventually approachedhim in his vehicle, Davissaid, where hewashelped without incident. "As far asface-to-face contact with him, it was very mellow," saidDavis. "He wascooperative."
By Taylor W.Anderson
unless people know their con-
The Bulletin
versation is being recorded. That provision applies to both
SALEM — Under two bills that passed the House on
law enforcement recording
Tuesday, Oregon police departments that use body cameras, including Bend's, would have to create policies that address privacy concerns and
citizens and people who record police, with limited
public disclosure, and citizens
on most cellphones while
would be able to record police in public.
recording video, lawmakers say, people who record police could face legal trouble without changes to the law, which
A provision in state law
says it's illegal to record audio
exceptions.
Because it's difficult or impossible to disable audio
passed after a bipartisan vote. better when they're on cam"One of the reasons I era," Frederick added about support this idea is that in the body-camera bill. my community, we need to The bills come in the wake build up that bank" of trust of waves of national protests between police and the com-
munity, said Rep. Lew Frederick, D-Portland, who said incidents have eroded trust
between communities and police.
that stemmed in part from
high-profile police killings that were captured on video. The death of Eric Garner,
a New York City man who died while in an officer's
"This isn't just because of-
chokehold, was recorded on a
ficers behave better, it's also because everybody behaves
video that was widely shared. A grand jury decided not to
Nore briefing, B3
Scott, an unarmed AfricanAmerican who was shot in
the back and killed while fleeing a traffic stop in South
Carolina. Officer Michael Slager is charged with murder in that case after the vid-
eo, shot by a bystander, was shared widely. SeeCamera bills/B2
OUR STUDENTS
Redmond, Butler seek temporary agreement •Thecitystaffis directed to work on a 1-yeardeal
' fL
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
REDMOND — The city
of Redmond is pursuing a one-year probationary agreement with Butler Aircraft, the Redmond
L.
Airport's aviation-service provider, Redmond Mayor
P
George Endicott confirmed
Tuesday. Two weeks ago the Redmond City Council extend-
ed fromMay 26 to June 30 the deadline it had given Butler to stop aviation
services. On'Itresday, after executive session at a special City Council meeting, Endicott said he and the council were directing city staff to work with Butler on
a one-year deal. "This buys everyone Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Rebecca Locklear, standing on left, calls out different body parts in Latin, while students listen and then point to the body part called out,
during an after-school Latin and Greek programgraduation at the Redmond Public Library last week.
some time," Endicott said. Butler and KC Aero, from whom Butler sub-
leases space at the airport, are involved in separate multimillion dollar law-
suits against the city. The two airport tenants claim the city has breached its contract with them and in
Butler's case, is trying to muscle it out of the Redmond Airport so that the
At about 9:30 p.m.
ers were coldand hungry but in goodcondition; neither waspreparedfor wilderness hiking, the release said.Thesheriff's office did not identify the hikers. Search andRescue gave the hikersfood, water and blanketsand took them back totheir vehicle. Thetwo had informed friendsand family the generalarea in which theyplanned to hike, according to the sheriff's office, whichhelped Search and Rescue.Theoffice recommendshikers plan ahead, tell someonethe route plannedandstick to that route andbring a cellphone, food,water, clothing andblankets.
A video last month captured the death of Walter
AIRPORT
Crook CountySearch and Rescuewent on two searches Monday,and all three targetedmissing people werefound.
Road 42. Both of the hik-
taleo, and protests flared.
OUR SCHOOLS,
2searches find 3 missingpeople
searchers wentto the area of Walton Lake to look for two overdue hikers, according to a news releasefrom the Crook County Sheriff's Office. Thesearch began at the North Walton Lake trailhead, whereoneof the hiker's vehicleswas found. Thesearchteams figured out thedirection in which the hikerswere traveling anddecidedto expand thesearch area to the RoundMountain access road.Searchers found the missing hikers on Forest Service spur 200 off Forest Service
indict the officer, Daniel Pan-
city can take over fuel sales and other services there.
• They arealso learning Latin inthe Sage Elementary after-schoolprogram
classes. Rebecca Locklear, a literacy specialist at Sage Elemngnv~ Q~n Status qua
mentary School in Redmond, teaches Latin and Greek to
operator or FBO in the avi-
ation world — has argued
The Bulletin
architecture.
Although Latin fell out of
before a room filled with
public schools' core curricu-
parents and students, Me-
lum (from the Latin word for a course or a race) long ago, Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Allie Hewitt, left, and Josephine Stevenson, fifth-graders at
schooled student began.
Sage Elementary, display a Latin and Greek poster they made
Because, she continued, more than 60 percentof English words have Latin or Greek root words. When she was little and learning
for instructor Rebecca Locklear last week at the Redmond Public Library.
to spell, words seemed to
there in the word and it clues me in." About two dozen students
have no rhyme or reason. But knowing the root words, she
said, "The definition is right
showed off what they had learned at an event last week
marking the end of yearlong Latin and Greek vocabulary
— known as the fixed-base
holdsafter-school classes for former students and home-
By Abby Spegman
gan Hinton addressed the elephant in the room: "Why are we learning Latin and Greek roots'? Why is it important?" the 18-year-old home-
minimum standards for its aviation-service providers
fourth-graders there and schooled children, incorporating lessons on history and
REDMOND — Standing
The city, which updated its
it wants better service from Butler and that its new minimum standards are on
par with average industry expectations. If a probationary agreement is reached, Butler and KC Aero's lawsuits would
Locklear and her students insist it is still relevant, that once
be dropped without prejudice — essentially shelved.
you learn roots you see them everywhere. Locklear has taught Latin and Greekformore than a de-
Both Butler and KC Aero would have the right to
cade and this year wrote the
"This gives us some time to clear up a number of is-
book "Word Archaeology" for gradesfour to 12.Herstudents this year were her editors,
pointing out which lessons worked and which did not. See Education /B5
bring up the same claims in a later lawsuit.
sues that have been ambig-
uous for quite some time," Redmond City Manager Keith Witcosky said.
SeeAirport/B5
Tumalo Irrigation District's application to transfer water is denied By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
law. Officials also expressed the need for land use informa-
Oregon regulators have de- tion showing how the resernied permanent water storage voirs would be operated. at two small reservoirs near The Tumalo Irrigation Tumalo that developers have
District applied to store about
considered using for water skiing.
125acre-feetofwater— or enough to irrigate22acresof
The Oregon Water Resourc-
es Department determined last week the water-right transfer conflicted with state
farmland — at the reservoirs
instead of at Upper Tumalo Reservoir, which was built in the 1920s and is prone to los-
ing water into the ground. The reservoirs are owned
is going to remain there and not be used to irrigate the
by KC Development Group and are on a former mining
property. Officials also were hesitant
site located off Johnson Road near 'Ibmalo.
to grant approval of the transfer without a statement show-
Regulators based their decision on an interpretation of state law. They determined water can't be transferred from the district's reservoir to the smaller reservoirs if it
activity needed to go through a more rigorous review process instead of being allowed outright. The irrigation district sub-
ing how the reservoirs comply
mitted a new application to the county this week seeking
with local zoning of the area.
permits for water storage and
Deschutes County commissioners decided in March
recreational activity that are
that use of the property for
ments before being approved.
reservoirs and recreational
subject to additional requireSeeWater IB3
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
E VENT TODAY ELLIS:The folksingerfrom Minneapolis performs; 7 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door, $10 for youth; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-549-6185. ARSIS:The melodic death metal band performs, with Existential Depression, Gravewitch, Vanquish the King, Neuroethic and The Desolate; 7 p.m.; $7 plus fees in advance, $9at the door; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; www.j.mp/arsisBend or 541-306-3017. MATT BROWN:Pop-blues;7 p.m .; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "RIFFTRAX LIVE2015: THE ROOM":Featuring a riffing on the hilarious "classic" film; 8 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. com or 844-462-7342. JAKUBI:The Melbourne, Australia, hip-hop and reggae band performs, with Dan Tedesco; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY NATIVE PLANTINTERPRETIVE
Camera bills Continued from B1 Kimberly McCullough, legislative director for the Amer-
ican Civil Liberties Union of Oregon, said questions about
whether it's currently legal to recordpolicecould create a chilling effect that might prevent bystanders in Oregon from recording potential po-
ENDA R GARDEN TOUR:Maril ynneKeyser will lead a tour of Central Oregon's newest and largest Native Plant Interpretive Garden, located at Crooked River Ranch;11 a.m.; Crooked River Ranch, 5195 SW Clubhouse Drive, Terrebonne;
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.
"e
www.fansofdeschutes.org or 541-923-0558. "CESARCHAVEZ: HISTORY IS MADE ONESTEP AT A TIM E":A film about the civil rights leader and labor organizer torn between his duties as a husband and father and his commitment to securing a living wage for farm workers; 4:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 1170 E. Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-318-3726. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Portland bluegrass and folk trio performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www.faithhopeandcharityevents. com or 541-526-5075. LOS LONELYBOYS:The rock-blues band performs; 7 p.m.; $30.50$64.50; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. LIAM KYLECAHILL:Theacoustic folk-rock artist performs; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. ANITAMARGARITA 5 THE RATTLESNAKES: The hillbillyjazz band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis
Submitted photo
The rock-blues band Los Lonely Boys will be performing at the Tower Theatre on Thursday. School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "THE SCHOOLFORSCANDAL": A play about gossips, hypocrites, liars, and lovers; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre,148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. NATHANBRANNON:Portlandbased comedian Nathan Brannon will perform; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111. ALL YOUALL:The rock band
Bill in Salem —House Bill 2571 would require Oregon police agencies to create policies for body cameras that collect video while officers are onduty. All videos collected by body cameras would be kept in secret unless the police said they are in thepublic interest. The bill would also require all faces that appear onvideo to be blurred. Chief sponsors:Reps. Jennifer Williamson, D-Portland, John Huffman, R-TheDalles and LewFrederick, D-Portland; Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland History:The ideaof equipping police officers with body cameras has grown in popularity in the wake ofnational protests over police use of force. Research suggests officers and citizens behave better when they knowthey're being recorded. What's next:Bill will be referred to Senate Judiciary. Online:Readthe bill at https%/lis.leg.state.er.us/liz/2015R1/ Downloads/MeasureDocument/IIB2571/A-Engrossed
performs, with MoonRoom; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY THE SPROUTFILM FESTIVAL: Featuring films by and about individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities;
11:30am;$6-$10for matinee,$10 for evening showing plus fees; The Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-749-2158. POTTERYSHOWANDSALE:
place. House Bill 2571 would require departments using the cameras to createpolicies with guidelines from the proposed law. The groups involved still don't agree on the bill passed Tuesday. The groups disagree on aspects of the bill that allow police to retain camera footage
"THE THEORY OFEVERYTHING": A showing of the film with the 2015 Best Actor winner Eddie Redmayne; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. CHRISROBINSON BROTHERHOOD: The folk-blues artist performs; 8 p.m.$25 plusfeesin advance $28. Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-383-0800. THIRD SEVEN: The experimental cello group performs, with Alex Rios, Mosley Wo tta,W oebegone, Rachel Carmen and more; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
Featuring Raku, ceramic jewelry and pottery from local artists of Central Oregon, to benefit children's art education through Art Station in Bend; noon; Environmental Center, 16 NW KansasAve., Bend; 541-410-5943. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii in the year A.D. 79, right as Mount Vesuvius blows; opening reception 6:307:30 p.m.; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors and students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. THE SPROUTFILM FESTIVAL: Featuring films by and about individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities; 7 p.m.; $6-$10 for matinee, $10 for eveningshowing plusfees;The Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-749-2158. "SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T. Theatre presents a musical based on the words of Dr. Seuss; 7 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. "THE SCHOOLFORSCANDAL": A play about gossips, hypocrites, liars, and lovers; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
SATURDAY POTTERYSHOWANDSALE: Featuring Raku, ceramic jewelry and pottery from local artists of Central Oregon, to benefit children's art education through Art Station in Bend; 10 a.m.; Environmental Center, 16 NWKansas Ave., Bend; 541-410-5943. CRAZY MAMACRAFTFAIRE "MOTHER'SDAY CELEBRATION": Featuring more than 70 vendors, music, food, face-painting, carnival games and more; 11 a.m.; Bend Factory Stores, 61334 S. U.S. Highway 97,
Bend; www.sewsavvymp.wix. com/crazymamacraftfaire or 541-848-0334.
Oregon Association of Broad- Police, adding ewe also undercasters urged lawmakers to
stand that there is a potential
vote against the bill. public interest in footage, and "We are concerned this leg- I expect agencies will fairly islation will inhibit accurate, evaluate these requests." transparent reporting of the Lawmakers say the bill that activities of the police agen- will head to the Senate Judiciacies," the groups said in a joint ry committee is a compromise letter submitted before the that weighs concerns about House vote.
government surveillance and
Police g roups s u pport interests of law enforcement. "This is not a mandate that also included provisions that the bill as what they call a lice misconduct. require police to blur the faces compromise. our law enforcementagencies "If people are afraid to uLaw enforcement and the use body cameras," said Rep. of anyone who appears in a retake those types of videos, or cording, and it allows police to ACLU both are concerned Jennifer Williamson, D-Portif they thought they'd get in decide whether to release vid- about the privacy rights of citi- land. "This simply creates a trouble for taking that video, eos to the public. zens with regardto body cam- policy floor for jurisdictions we wouldn't have gotten to As a result of those provi- era footage," said Kevin Camp- that do decide to use them." see what happened to Walter sions, the Oregon Newspaper bell, executive director of the — Reporter:406-589-4347, Scott," McCullough said. "And including in Bend, which plans — has become an idea that has Publishers Association and Oregon Association Chiefs of tanderson@bendbulletin.com that's a problem we're trying to equip its officers with body found support nationwide. to address." cameras, according to Chief The idea has created a rare The ACLU created an app Jim Porter. The Portland Po- alliance between watchdog that automatically sends vid- lice Bureau is i n a s i m ilar groups and police, who both eos to a database and encour- position. say use of force will decline ages users to record police Bend has been testing cam- if morepolice are recording for up to 30 months. The bill
-;® ®'„"~go 1Seasoqs+
encounters. But the Oregon
eras from different manufac-
their interactions with sus-
chapter's version of the app turers in what Porter has dedidn't include audio because of scribed as a pilot program. questions about the law. Equipping police with body The body-camera bill is be- cameras — which are typicaling closelywatched by police ly worn on an officer's shoul-
pects, and who took the issue
departments across the state,
only if strong policies are in
der or chest while in the field
to the Oregon Legislature this
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.
REDMOMD POLICE DEPARTMEMT Theft —A theft was reported and arrests were made at 5:46 p.m. March 28, in the 2900 block of SW Windrow Court. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 4:16 p.m. April 20, in the 2900 block of SW Windrow Court. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:26 a.m. April 27, in the 17300 block of Kingfisher Drive. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:43 a.m. April 27, in the 900 block of SWVeterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:23 p.m. April 27, in the 300 block of SW Rimrock Way. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 2:41 p.m. April 27, in the area of SW15th Street and SW Highland Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:59 p.m. April 27, in the 300 block of NW Oak Tree Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:40 p.m. April 27, in the 700 block of NW Fifth Street. Theft —A theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at 2:10 a.m. April 28, in the 300 block of NW16th Place. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 8:55 a.m. April 28, in the area of SW 23rd Street and SW Obsidian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:02 a.m. April 28, in the 2000 block of NW OakAvenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at1:33 p.m. April 28, in the area of SWFourth Street and W. Antler Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:01 p.m. April 28, in the 1700 block of SW 33rd Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:37 p.m. April 29, in the 700 block of SW Deschutes Avenue.
Theft — A theft was reported and an arrest made at 6:05 p.m. April 29, in the 3100 block of S. U.S. Highway 97. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:26 a.m. April 30, in the 4500 block of SW Elkhorn Avenue. DUII —Joshua Clay Winfrey, 34, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:15 p.m. April 30, in the 700 block of NE Jackpine Court. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 5:34 p.m. April 30, in the 4500blockofSW ElkhornAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:28 p.m. April 30, in the1600 block of SW Rimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:22 p.m. April 30, in the 2200 block of SW 33rd Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:30 p.m. April 30, in the1200 block of NW Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 8:27 a.m. May 1, in the 900 block of SWVeterans Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 11:53 a.m. May1, in the 1300 block of SW Obsidian Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 2:31 p.m. May1, in the area of N. U.S. Highway 97 and NW Kingwood Avenue. DUII —Kimberly Louise Crain, 20, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:31 p.m. May1, in the area of N. U.S. Highway U.S. Highway 97 and NW Kingwood Avenue. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 4:51 p.m. May 1, in the 600 block of SW Sixth Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at 5:14 p.m. May1, in the area of SW Canal Boulevard and SW Quartz Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:02 p.m. May1, in the 800 block of NW Fifth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:42 p.m. May1, in the1300 block of SW 33rd Street. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:43 a.m. May 2, in the 2700 block of SW Indian Avenue. Vehicle crash —An accident was
~ ' — ~IWW.A5RYM.00M
session. But some supporters say the cameras will be effective
NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG
"~ +W~'i
reported at 4:21 p.m. May 2, in the area of SW11th Street and SW Highland Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 4:58 p.m. May 2, in the 3200blockofSW QuartzAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:34 p.m. May 2, in the3100 block of S. U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:53 a.m.May 3,inthe3200 blockofSW Peridot Avenue. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reportedat3:41 p.m. May3,inthe area of SWSixth Street and SW Highland Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at6:41 p.m. May 3, in the 2300 block of SW23rd Street.
REDMOND FIRE RUNS April 27 11:17 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, area of 17th Street. 11 —Medical aid calls. April 28 4:45p.m. —Unauthorized burning, area of NE17th Street. 14 —Medical aid calls. April 29 7:08 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 197 NEO'Neil Way. 3:17p.m.—Authorized controlled burning, 3715 NWCoyner Avenue. 13 —Medical aid calls. Thursday 2:58 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 214 NW ElmSt. 10 — Medical aid calls. Friday 9:57 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 4700 SW43rd St. 2:30 p.m.— Building fire, 532 SW Rimrock Way. 5:15p.m. — Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 1960 SW 27th Place. 12 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 10:03 p.m. —Authorized controlled burning, 394 NEHemlock Ave. 10 — Medical aid calls. May Sunday 8 — Medical aid calls.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ewar or ma er aance success: ne ewer es aer By Teresa Thomas
nity Colleges and Workforce
(Medford) Mail Tribune
Development.
MEDFORD — High school
"Their math skills especially
juniors taking the Smarter
degrade overtime, and then they enter an institution and
B alanced a ssessment t h i s
spring or next might be spared take that placement test and from taking a two- to three- are placed in the lowest-level hour college placement test math class," she said. if they score high enough on Educators hope that, under the assessment and take col- the new placement option, stulege-level classes their senior dents will be motivated to take year. an Advanced Placement or duThe state's Higher Educa- al-credit English and/or math tion Coordinating Commis- dass their senior year and sion announced the arrange- begin their post-secondary ment, which is beingpiloted for education in a credit-bearing the next two academic years, dass. "Colleges will hopefully see in its March-April newsletter. The arrangement was adopt- better prepared students who ed in February by Oregon's 17 aren't starting out in developcommunity colleges and seven mental education," Mentz said. universities. Having the college placeM any students meet t h e ment test waived is contingent bulk of their high school on scoring a 3 or higher on the graduation requirements by SmarterBalanced assessment, their junior year and slack off which was fully implemented during their senior year, said this spring and will be scored Lisa Mentz, the Core to College Alignment director for the
on a scale of 1 to 4. They would
alsohave to earn a B orbetter state's Department of Commu- in "an appropriate" mathemat-
Oregonian chairman heading to Eugene
ics and/or English language arts course in the 12th grade and enroll in one of Oregon's public universities or colleges immediately after high school. "We expect that about 33
AROUND THE STATE Willamette RiVer reSCue — Three Oregonfirefighters who decided they couldn't wait for a water rescueteamjumped into the chilly Willamette River in aPortland suburb to rescue awoman in the middle of the current. TheOregonian reports the trio brought a life jacket and rope to the womanearly Tuesdayand safely towed her backto shore in Milwaukie. Shewas taken to a hospital for evaluation. Clackamas Fire District1 spokesmanBrandon Paxton said dispatchers alerted firefighters that the womanhadgone into the river late Monday night. A short time later shewas spotted drifting downstream, struggling in the water.
universities do) so when a student comes to us, how will we
physically get their (Smarter Balanced) score from the high school and how will we vali-
Alleged child abuse — Asalem manhasbeenaccused of sexually abusing a boyover adecadelong span that ended last year. Court records filed Mondayshow63-year-old Kevin Woodruff faces chargesofsexabuseandsodomy.Thedocumentssaythealleged abuse started in 2004, whenthe child wasyounger than12. The last alleged contact was in July 2014.Woodruff was arrested Friday and remains in the Marion County jail.
date it?" Bieber said.
"We have thousands of stu-
percent of students this year will get a 3 or higher in math
dents who come from our local
high schools, and we're not set up to look at every high school
(on the Smarter Balanced as-
sessment), and about 41 percent will get a 3 or higher in English/language arts," Mentz said, citing the results of Smarter Balanced field tests in
transcript, and we don't have a
system in place to intake those scores," she said, adding that community college officials will be making a recommen-
21 states.
Inmate tu Sue Cnuntlf —Washington County is facing a lawsuit from the inmate two jail workers admit they hadsexwith. The Oregonian reports the inmate filed notice that he intends to sue, claiming damages related to Brett Robinson andJill Curry having sex with him repeatedly last year. Both former jail workers pleadedguilty to charges related to sexual misconduct, and Curry wassentenced in March to four years in jail. Robinson is in jail until her June 2sentencing. The 25-year-old inmate in the case is agang member and sexoffender currently in state prison for attempted second-degreeassault, among other convictions.
Nonetheless, some students dation to HECC about how to and educatorsare skeptical manage the data. about how the new requireCollege placement tests are ments will be implemented. free and can be retaken once. Kori Bieber, vice president Although some students sufof student services at RCC, fer from test anxiety and some said the philosophy behind the people perceive the placement new arrangement is good, but test as abarrier,it currently there are still a lot of techni-
is the most efficient method
cal challenges that need to be addressed, particularly at the community college level. "Our primary challenge is that we don't require high school transcripts (like the
for determining a student's knowledge in reading, writing and math "so they can be placed in a course where they feel comfortable but
FOrmer paStOrSentenCed —Aformer youth pastor in an unincorporated community north of Salemhasbeensentenced to 33 years, four months in prison after being convicted of repeatedly raping a girl under the ageof16. The (Salem) Statesman Journal in Salem reports that 36-year-old Peter JamesBasswas sentenced Monday after he pleadedguilty to five counts of first-degree rape and waived his right to a jury trial. Hewasarrested Jan. 21.
a r en't
— From wire reports
bored," Bieber said.
CINCO DE MAYO CELEBRATION
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from B1
AlsoMonday,atabout 7:30 a.m., sheriff's deputies received a report of a 42-year-old missing man from the SE Bridge Creek area of Prineville. The man had walked awayfrom his homewith a possible medical issue.Search and Rescueand deputies began searching the area, but at 11:30 a.m. they foundout the manhad no medical problem. Thesearch stopped, and the man later returned home, according to the news release.
V'
The Associated Press PORTLAND
-
The
chairman of The Oregonian Media Group is moving south to take over as
Bend seeksapplicant for arts panel
editor and publisher of The
(Eugene) Register-Guard. N. Christian Anderson III succeeds Tony Baker,
who has been The Register-Guard's editor and publisher for nearly three decades. Anderson, 64, led The O regonian t h rough a
F
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Dancers perform during Cinco de Mayo celebrations in Portland on Tuesday. Ballet Folklorico Mexico En La Piel performed at the annual Portland event accompanied by the band Mariachi Guadalajara
from Jalisco, Mexico.
transition to a digital-first
news organization. The announcement of
his departure comes a month after Steve Moss
joined Oregonian Media Group as president. The Oregonian reportsthere
Volunteers battle invasive plant
a re no plans to f i l l t h e
By Ruth Longoria Kingsland
chairman position being
Grants Pass Daily Courier
bay. The three regularly pull and destroy alyssum plants
ist plant and will take over. Not to mention, it is toxic to
vacated by Anderson. "While I d i dn't antici-
CAVE JUNCTION — More than 20 years ago, it was tout-
that grow at the Illinois Valley Airport and other locations in
pate the timing of this new position in Eugene, it is an exciting opportunity to
ed as a miracle plant — a "hyperaccumulator" able to pull
southwest Josephine County.
livestock. I've heard two bulls died from eating it," he said. The plants' variation of heights when ready to drop
work with the family owners of The Register-Guard in setting a new direction
out of the area's serpentine wildflowers, many of which soil and store it in its leaves. are endangered by the invaAt least that's what was told sive alyssum. "I like wildflowers, but the to then-county commissioners, who approved planting of alyssum crowds them out," yellow-tuft alyssum on eight Taylor said, between pulling plots, totaling more than 50 clumps of alyssum with Lyacres in the Illinois Valley. ford on a r e cent afternoon Now, the flowering inva- trek through th e a i rport sive weed has traveled up and grounds. down the Illinois River and is In addition to b eing a considered a menace that's co-owner of Taylor's Sausage keeping local volunteers on in Cave Junction, Taylor is a their toes trying to control private pilot and spends a lot and eradicate the i nvasive, of time at the airport. self-pollinating, p e r ennial Much of that time is taken plant. up with noxious-weed eradiVolunteers Gordon Lyford, cation efforts, since alyssum Scott Taylor and Wes Brown grows and seeds throughout recentlyreceived the Oregon the year.Some plants are a Invasive Species Council's few inches tall, others nearly
for the company," Anderson said.
The Eugene newspaper has been owned by the Baker family for 88 years, and this will be the first
time a nonfamily member will lead the company. Tony Baker said the family expects a Baker will eventually return to the helm, but Anderson's
skill and experience at ushering newspapers into the digital era is crucial at this time. "Chris has the entrepre-
neurial instincts, business savvy, news background and digital know-how that
make him uniquely qualified," Baker said.
heavy metals, such as nickel,
Ten Fingers in the Dike award for their efforts to coordinate the Alyssum Eradication Task
Force and keep the plant at
The area is known for its bounty o f b e autiful n ative seeds is one reason it is dif-
ficult to harvest or eradicate alyssum, said Larry Graves, Josephine C ounty
a i r p ort
manager. Alyssum is a member of the mustard family and native to
them from setting up shopat a marijuana grow site or within 1,000 feet of a school or another medical marijuana facility. Thecity ordinancealso limits operating hours from 8a.m. to 7 p.m., MondaythroughSunday. As many otherOregoncities, Madras had a one-year moratorium on medical marijuana dispensaries that expired May1.Theordinancepassed last week included a declaration of emergency that allowed the town to institute theordinanceimmediately.
Central Oregonman arrestedin MarionCou~ A Central Oregonman is in Marion County custody after fleeing the scene of an alleged dispute in Redmond on Saturday night, according to RedmondPolice. David AlanMills, 36, wasarrested Monday by Marion County sheriff's deputies on suspicion of methamphetamine delivery alleged to have occurred in Marion County, according to theMarionCountyjail. Police believethere was adispute between Mills and a group at about 9:25 p.m. A firearm wasdischarged in the area of SW 11th Street and Indian Avenue. Another shot was reportedly fired toward the groupas
The city of Bend is seeking applicants for an open position on the Arts, Beautification and Culture Commission. The commission was created by the City Council in 2002 to advise on cultural and aesthetic issues. Thecommission'sseven members are appointed by the City Council. Applications will be accepted until 5 p.m. onFriday, May22, at Bend CityHall, 710NWWall St. For applications or questions, itfled. Mills' case has been sent to the call 541-388-5505 or visit benDeschutesCounty DA'sOffice. doregon.gov/committees. Anyone with information regarding this case isasked to contact DeMades puts limitson marijuanadispensaries tective Lee at the Redmond Police Department at541-693-6911. Madras CityCouncil lastweek — Bulletin staffreporrs set parameters on where, when and how medical marijuana dispensaries mayoperate. The ordinancethe council adopted is in linewith what Oregon already requires of medical marijuana dispensaries, prohibiting
'Ihrkey and elsewhere along the Mediterranean coast. It
was brought to Oregon by a company called Viridian Resources,which later declared
716 SW11th St. Redmond . 541.923.4732
bankruptcy and left the area,
according to Graves.
-trav
jbbend.com
541-382-6223
J0HNsON BROTHERS
'h
KEEP LIFE GOINC™
3 feet tall.
Lyford said there are many reasons to get rid of the plant. "It's a non-native, opportun-
i Friday, May15th at1:00PM1 i
Water
drought due to low snowpack zation, was concerned the m akes the water storage proj- irrigation district could poContinued from B1 ect necessary. About 10 per- tentially pull more water out The irrigation district still cent of the water stored at the of Tumalo Creek because of hopes to store the water at Tumalo Reservoir is lost into the more efficient reservoirs thereservoirsin partbecause the ground. and affect the "struggling fish of their lining, which keeps Property owners adjacent population." water from seeping into the and nearby have opposed the T he o rganization a l so ground. Kenneth Rieck, man- project, offering skepticism opposed the water transfer ager of the irrigation district, about the need for storing wa- because of the precedent it said other options might ter at the site and challenging could set for other streams be available and are being potential recreational activ- and water right issues around pursued to eventually get ities. They have also raised Oregon. "Had this been allowed to approvaL concerns about potential im"It's too valuable for us to pacts to wildlife. go forward it would have crelet it go," said Rieck about the C onservation a n d l an d ated mischief across the state proposed water transfer. "We use advocates groups also and potentially created the opwish it could be completed monitored the decision. Kim- portunity for harm to streams this year. It would have been a berly Priestley, senior policy everywhere," Priestley said. lot of help." analyst w i t h W a t erWatch, — Reporter: 541-617-7820, Rieck said the threat of a Portland-based organitshorackibendbulletin.com
•
j
8 i Saturday, May16th at10:00AM i Join AAA and travel expert Anne McAlpin for tips on how to prepare and pack light for any trip. Including How To: • Pack for a two week trip in an 18lb carry-on • Prepare for airport security • Protect personal data with RFID products • Pack for a cruise
AAA Bend 20350 Empire Blvd, Building A, Suite 5, Bend RSVP: 541-382-1303 or
bend©aaaoregon.com Events are open to the public and iree to attend. Please RSVP,as speceis limited.
B4 T H E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
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overnment could easily become a bittoo much. Too much regulation. Too much taxation. Too much of
•
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saying: Sorry, you can'tdothat. Lastweekin Salem, Truthin Site's attorney made an argument that would be asking government to becometoo muck He was testifying before the Oregon Land Use Board of Appeals in Trulh in Site's challenge to the proposed site of Oregon State University-Cascades Campus. He argues that OSU should be required to submit a master plan for land it does not own before it develops the 10-acre site on Chandler Avenue. Let'sbe dear about a couple of things. OSU-Cascades ownsthe 10 acres. The city does not require a master plan if a development is less than 20 ames. OSU-Cascades does not own the other 46 acres. What it has is an option to purchase that 46 ames. OSU-Cascades mightneverbuyit. And there is another crucial fact: OSU-Cascades has told the city of Bend it will do amasterplanor a special plan district if it does go ahead withthepurchase. So why should the government be telling OSU-Cascades that it must make a plan for land it might never
buy? There's no goodreason.
(Truthin Site's attorney) argues that OSU should be required to submit a master plan for land it does not
own before it develops the 10-acre site on Chandler Avenue. Let's be clear about a couple of things. OSU-Cascades owns the 10 acres. The city does not require a master plan if a development is less than 20 acres. Government shouldnotbe getting into the business of guessing the futureplans of developers. How would the city guess such a thing in the first place'? What if a developer never follows through with the government's guess? Are taxpayers going to pay for mistaken planningorderedbythe city? There are many complications or challenges with the proposed location. And OSU-~ es, the city and the community are going to struggle with them. But let's not ask governmenttobecome toomuch.
The Bulletin's May19 election endorsements Here are The Bulletin's editorial Director, Zone 5, Charley Miller endorsements for the May 19 elecLa Pine Park & R e creation tion in contested races. District: Ballots must be returned to your Director, Position 4, Gary Gorlocalcounty derk'soffice by 8 p.m. don; Director, Position 5, Tobias on Election Dayto be counted. Wilson Crook County Redmond School District: Crook County Park & Recreation Director, Position 1, Rhonda EtDistrict: nire; Director, Position 4, Jane Allen; Director, Position 4 , Kim Director, Position 5, John Land Kambak Sisters School District: DeSChLIteS COunty Director, Position 2, Lachlan Leaver; Director, Position 4, Stephen Bend Park & Recreation District: King Director, Position 1, B radley jeffersonCounty Fuller Black Butte Ranch Service DisJeffersonCounty School Board: trict local option levy: Yes Director, Position 4, Courtney Central Oregon Community Snead; Director, Position 5, Stanley College: Ray Sullivan
anNe a
tional rescue teams to return to their
The Philadelphia 1nquirer
countries, as hope for miracles has
n the collapsed village of Sankhu, tresidents sleep in tents but ignore
faded. Now, thegovernment and people turn toward the question of how to rebuild.
police warnings and enter caved-in brick buildings that lean precarAnd rebuild they must, says Bhesh iously over mounds of rubble. As Narayan Dahal, director general of rescue teams wielded shovels last Nepal's Department of Archaeology. "It is our pride. It is our duty," he week to remove the last of 64 dead bodies, nearby residents salvaged said vehemently, as he paced his ofbricks, stone blocks and timber to fice, waving in frustration a hastily reuse for the eventual and inevitable compiled list of damaged historic rebuilding. buildings. He forecasts that, with in"We have to rebuild. As soon as ternational aid, the country's mediepossible," said Gunkeshari Dangol, val and more recent monuments can 45, standing in the alley next to the be rebuilt in five to seven years. three-story brick house constructed
"Build it back better" is the motto
by her grandfather. Her 10-year-old embraced by urban planners and grandson will lie entombed there disaster experts who have begun until police can safely remove the arriving in Kathmandu to inventory, child's body. assessand make recommendations. In Sankhu and throughout Ne-
W hether a
r e b uilt N e pal w i l l
pal, people are still counting losses. be betterand stronger remains a Death tolls might head to 10,000 or question. more. Six of K a thmandu Valley's
Examples abound of post-disaster
seven UNESCO World Heritage construction built significantly safsites, more than 57 other temples and er, even using low-cost traditional palaces and hundreds of thousands
timber and masonry construction
of houses have been reduced to rub- that can provide more flexibility ble or have suffered deep wounds. and resilience than brittle concrete. The government has asked interna-
By Bill Bodden IN MY VIEW The recent killings of cougars by government officials have prompt- rises in organized crime and the ed protest s from several correspon- costsofenforcement and crueltiesof dents. It is a debate worth having, incarceration. but we would also do well to recogThe dominance of authoritarians nize aspects of this controversy as a and their followers in some locales portrait of the human condition in a appears tohave raised the status of microcosm. police to become judge, jury and exeOn one side we have people who cutioner and relatively minor infracsee violent methods as solutions to tions of the law to become capital ofthe perceived problem of wildlife in fenses. Vindictive penalties imposed proximity to residential areas. Many for relatively minor infractions of people will agree with them. At the laws unnecessarily cost taxpayers other end ofthe spectrum are peo- billions of dollars eachyear. ple who are opposed to violence and In foreign affairs, the U.S. governprefer thoughtful solutions based on ment has been complicit for decades scholarship and humane practices. in the overthrow of democraticalThey, too, have their supporters. In ly elected governments in Central between are, probably, the largest America and their replacement by group of people, who are indifferent repressive regimes. Blowback: milto both positions if they cannot per- lions of migrants trying to escape the
are living as homeless and outcasts
from society. Economists Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes have estimated blow-
back costs of the Iraq war will eventually total in excess of 3 trillion dollars, and a large part of that will be attributable to caring for wounded veterans not abandoned by the system.
Our government's perceived posture of global aggression has encouraged Eurasian nations (Russia, China and others) to form alliances that several observers of this region
see as having the potential of replacingthe United States as the dominant global power and the dollar being reduced in value. How's that for
blowback? So, what can we in Oregon do about this? We could begin by setnightmares in their own countries to ting an example to the rest of the cross the U.S.-Mexico border even at nation by consistency in enlightened risks to their lives. and humane policies. For example, Government policies hostile to we rightly have laws that prohibpeople in the Middle East during the it abuse of some animals but allow latter years of the 20th century have trappers to inflict barbaric cruelty on been credited with inciting the big their victims — intended and uninblowback of 9/11. tended — in the name of recreation. Our wars on Vietnam, AfghaniDouble standards in legislation with stan and Iraq have created blowback detrimental consequences must be in the form of veterans returning rejected. with a variety of physical and menThere is an old saying attributable tal problems of enormously tragic to the Chinese that suggests thatpeoproportions. Many have been unable ple who resort to violence to resolve to live with memories of their experi- a perceived problem do so because ences and committed suicide. Others they lack the intelligence to apply a have expressed their agony in ag- nonviolent approach.
ceive any direct impact on their lives
even though such threats might exist. The presence of wildlife in residential areas and predators attacking live-
stockhave beenproven tobe a consequence of killing predators and prey in the wild by hunting and trapping. This pattern of human nature has
probably existed forever, and it plays out in national and global dimensions where the consequences are more severe and often result in what Chalmers Johnson described in his
trilogy as blowback. Over the last century, authoritarian types tried to force prohibition of
alcohol consumption and drug use on the American people. Blowback: gression against others. Still others
— Bill Bodden lives in Redmond.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
e r e u i t , e t t e ran stron er?
By Lucinda Fleeson 12 miles east of Kathmandu, most
Violence creates low ack
After an earthquake killed 80,000
together. 2005, the local building code was rePersuading people to do this can vised to include traditional methods be a hard sell in a poor country. Since of timber-laced construction. More Nepal's building code was comthan 150,000 houses using traditional pleted in 1994, NSET has provided timber have since been built in that technical assistance to 25 of Nepal's damaged area, says Randolph Lan- 199 municipalities — and the guidegenbach, a California-based interna- lines are not enforced. "Adopting the tional expert on earthquake-resis- building code was very difficult and tant construction. controversial," acknowledged Surya About 80 percent of urban Kath- Acharya, a civil engineer and one of mandu consists of modern struc- NSET's five directors. Nepal has a tures, built over the last few decades, lot of educating to do about building of reinforced concrete or masonry methods. "The masons need to be with concrete. Those buildings al- our messengers," he said. most all survived, with minor cracks, After an earthquake, people often according to the National Society for rush to use concrete, although that is Earthquake Technology. not necessarily the answer. NSET's Acharya speaks with But the other 20 percent — mudbased structures with stone or brick great admiration of the ancient build— were hit hard. Throughout rural ers of Kathmandu's famous palaces villages, where earthquake destruc- and monuments, such as in Bhaktion neared 100 percent, almost all tapur and Durbar Square, many of the houses are built with unfired which suffered collapse or damage. "That building construction is amazbrick and clay mortar. NSET calculates that residents ing," he said with a shake of the head. in the Pakistani part of Kashmir in
"All the monuments were built with
Many of the historical structures even survived the last major earthquake here, in 1934. But materials
weaken dueto age and poor maintenance, he said.
Unfortunately, Nepalese residential-building traditions differ in disastrous ways from construction methods of nearby Bhutan and
Kashmir, reports Langenbach, who has published studies of the region. Nepal's multistory masonry structures lack both complete timber frames or the timber runner beams
seeninKashmir, hesays.Asa result, the corners of the Nepalese masonry buildings are not tied together with
timber laid into walls. They often consist solely of brick glued together by mud, gravity and hope. Residents interviewed in Sankhu
and Nangle said they had never heard ofmethods to create more re-
silient houses. "If government will help, we'll listen," said Jit Badhur Tamang, 28, who
used to live in one of the flattened earthquake-safe technology, 400 houses. "If not, we'll build ourselves." tion costs. Even a minimum of stra- years ago, using timber, brick, stone — LucindaFleeson isaformer tegically placed timbers embedded or mud, and lime. Those buildings Philadelphia Inquirer reporter who was in into walls can provide flexibility to survived many big earthquakesNepal training local journalists a swaying building and help hold it this one was not so big." when the earthquake struck. can build a safer house for 5 percent to 10 percent in additional construc-
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Airport
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 As of April 1, the city had spent $145,000 on legal fees involving the airport dispute and in M arch purchased two aviation fuel tanks for $343,634.61 in case Butler ceasedfueling services. At the end of the one-year period, the two parties could come toa longer-term agreement — or be back in the
DEATH NOTICES Fanchon G. Blake, of Bend May 15, 1921 - April 28, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made
Education Continued from B1 At last week's ceremony at the Redmond Public Library,
to:
students go t
St. Charles Hospice, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend, OR 97701, 541-706-6700, www.stcharleshealthcare.org/
of Bend
Reed Saxon /The Associated Press file photo
June 27, 1920 - May 2, 2015 Arrangements:
Niswonger-Reynolds
Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.nlswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A funeral service will be held Saturday, May 9, 2015 at 1:00 PM in the
Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home.
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Michael Blake accepted the Oscar for best adapted screenplay for
Josh Ozersky, 47: Wellknown food critic whose witty and snarky writing generally focused on his obsession with all things meat. Died in Chicago. A cause of death hasn't
receive $31,000 to help support its homebuyer education program. An additional $41,758 of federal money and U r ba n D e v elopment. will be used to fund a RedHousing Works will receive mond Community Develop$105,033 to purchase land ment Block Grant program for senior citizen housing, administrator. was awarded $31,000 for
Olivia Grande, a fourth-grad- phonos (sound); astronaut er at Sage, explained how from astron (star) and nautus Terrebonne comes from ter- (sailor). Ten-year-old Brighra, for land, and bonum, for and the students pointed to
mathematician and electrical
ton Messner, another Sage no, for Vulcanus, the Roman
for 'DancesWith Wolves' "That i mage
By Steve Chawkins
s omehow
How to submit
Story ideas
Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.) Contact: 541-633-2117,youth@bendbulletin.com Mail:P .O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708 Other school notes: Collegeannouncements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117,bulletin@bendbulletin.com
School news: It emsandannouncements of general interest.
Los Angeles Times
moved me, and I started think-
When Michael Blake was writing his novel "Dances With
ing about it, filling it in with other images. I asked myself,
Wolves," he was living in Los Angeles on friends' couches or, sometimes, in his car. He did occasional odd jobs and finally, with $1,000 borrowed from a pal, headed for Bisbee, Arizona, where he washed dishes in
what if I was on that wagon,
became Lt. John Dunbar and through him, I had the experi-
MILITARY MOTES
a Chinese restaurant for $3.35
ences that I wanted so much to
anhour. Agents and publishers had
have."
Alr Force AirmanWalter Britt has graduated from basic military trainingat Joint Base San Antonlo-Lackland, San Antonio. He lsa 2013 graduate of the OregonYouth Challenge High School ln Bend. Army Pvt.Cory Nlandas has graduated from basic combat trainingat Fort Bennlng, Georgia. He ls the grandson of Ron Burns of Bend.
and that was going to be my new post, what would happen then? The seed was planted
Michael Lennox Blake was
born in Fort Bragg, North Carabout the extraordinary trans- olina, on July 5, 1945, and grew formation of a U nion Army up at various spots in Southern bar into a Comanche warrior named Dances With Wolves. When the novel finally was
California. He attended the University of New Mexico but in his senior year left for Los Angeles, where he wrote for
published, it was only as a pa- the Free Press, an alternative perback with a cheesy cover newspaper. featuring a Fabio-like model. Blake later took film dasses Blake was given $6,500 for it. in Berkeley, California, where At last tally, "Dances With Wolves" has sold more than 3.5
in 1977 he became friends with Jim Wilson, a fellow stu-
million copies in 22 languages. dentwho went on to become a Blake won a 1991 screenwrit- producer. ing Oscar for Kevin Costner's In the early 1980s, Blake was film "Dances With Wolves," back in Los Angeles, writing a which became the first western film about gamblers. The film, to win a best picture Academy "Stacy's Knights," was proAward since "Cimarron" in duced by Wilson and starred 1931. Blake went on to publish
one of his friends, the then-ob-
additional books and advocate scure actor Kevin Costner. for causes related to Native When Blake told Costner Americans, mountain
l i ons his idea for a movie about an
and the disappearing wild horses of the West. Blake died Saturday at a hos-
encounterbetween a former soldier and Indians on the prairie, the actor urged him to write
pice in Tucson, Arizona, after a a novel instead of a screenplay. "I'd written probably 15 long illness, his manager and business partner, Daniel Os- screenplays by that t ime," troff, said. He was 69. B lake told Th e N e w Y o r k Over the years, Blake had Times in 1991. "He said, 'Write battled Hodgkin's disease, a a book. You have a much better form of lymphatic cancer. He chance of reaching somebody also had a double cardiac by- with a book.' He was adamant. pass in 2004. He waseven shaking hisfinger His otherbooks were most- at me as I left the house that ly fashioned around Western night. So a couple of weeks latthemes. They included "The
er, I started writing it."
Although the movie, which
ing With Wolves" set after the cost $18 million to make, recollapse of the buffalo herds ceived a few lukewarm reviews vital to t h e P lains Indians, — the New Yorker's Pauline and "Marching to Valhalla," a Kael said the main character novel in diary form about the should have been called "Plays
final days of Gen. George Arm- With Camera" — much of the strong Custer. He also wrote reaction was stunningly posiautobiographical volumes in- tive. At the box office, it was a cluding "Airman Mortensen," huge success, grossing more about his stint in the Air Force than $424 million worldwide.
COLLEGE NOTES The following students were namedto the 2015 winter dean's listat Eastern Oregon University: From Bend:Daniel Blood, Austin Boswell, VeronIca Hemmerlch, Haley Ryggand Alexis Temple. From Prlnevllle:Tonna Curtis and Kathryn Joyce.From Sisters:Codle Lagao.
TEEN FEATS The Center Foundation announced the following winners of the 2015 scholarship process: Junior Scholarship winners: Kelllan Moore,Culver High School, The Center Foundation Scholarship; Daniel Peplln, Redmond High School, The Center Foundation Scholarship; Shea Booster,Mountain View High School, Dr. Michael and Paula Kendrick Scholarship; Mya Fraley, Summit High School, Bank ofthe Cascades/ Regence Scholarship; Benjamin Mllandln,Mountain View High School, DJO Global Scholarship;Elizabeth Pendergrass,Redmond Proficiency Academy, Rep. Knute and Dr.Patty Buehler Scholarship;Brooke Bennett,Bend High School, Pauline Knlesteadt Memorial Scholarship;Liam Plckhardt, CrookCounty High School, Wells Fargo Scholarship; Sarah Jones,Summit High School, St. Charles Health System Scholarship;Xlao Lln Cellne Kuang,Bend High School, Breg Inc. Scholarship; Cora White,Redmond
Proficiency Academy, Hydro Flask Scholarship;Bradon Boos, Cascades Academy, The Center Foundation Scholarship;Brodle Mead,Summit High School, The Center Foundation Scholarship; Samantha Wegermann,Culver HighSchool,Damlen Bevando Memorial Scholarship; Noah Nagle, Summit High School, The Center Scholarship; andRory Petterson,Sisters High School, the Lt. Col. Andrew L.Cappy Memorial Scholarship. The 2015 High Desert Hero Awards:Bena Wiener, Bend High School;Ella Feldmann, Bend High School;Madison Boettner, Sisters High School;Trevor Rasmussen,Crook County High School;Collin Runge,Rldgevlew High School;Allle Bowlin, Summit High School;Tla Hatton, Mountain View High School; Conrad Parker,La Pine High School;Melissa Ollvera, Madras High School; andStephanle Ollvera,Madras High School. The William K. Worrell Scholarship winner isTrevor Rasmussen, Crook CountyHigh School. All awards will be presented during the 2015 Saluteto Heroes Scholarship Dinner tonight. James Siemens,senioratBend High School, was named 2015 OutstandingYouth Volunteer for Veterans by the Bend Chapter Daughters of the American Revolution. He also wonat the
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
Her family has fond memories of her coming home on leave to share her stories at the family gatherings. Her favorite car "Brownie" was her treasured mode of transportation and the nieces and nephews all had to try it out while she was home.
Long hair and red rtngernairs was a Veronica trademark. 'Ihe nieces enjoyed the fingernail polish and lipstick "makeover sessions by Veronica" when she was home on leave from her navy duty. She retired from the Navy as a Lieutenant Commander and made her home in Oregon City, OR, where she worked as a private duty nurse at all of the hospitals in the Portland area, except one. She also worked with her brother Dr. Patrick Murphy, DMD, at his practice in Portland. Veronica loved animals and always had a dog or cat to care for. She was a very generous lady and was always there for her family and anyone that needed help. Veronica joined the Army Reserves to continue her education and
S t urtevant
Nye's "Plains Indian Raiders."
"In it, an anecdote told about
a wagon driver who had driven
retired as a Lieutenant Colonel after giving service to our country over the years.
out on the frontier to supply an
outpost in western Kansas," Blake wrote in a recollection
As her health declined, she moved to a retirement home in Redmond, OR, in 2008, where her nephew's family; Monte and Linda Murphy have helped with her care. Veronica is preceded in death by her parents, Maurice and Marie
engineer by day and a world- on his website. "But when he class fiddler by night. Died on arrived, he saw that no one was April 24 in Morristown, New there; the only sign of life was a Jersey, of a heart attack. piece of canvas flapping in the — From wire reports breeze.
Murphy; her brothers, Gene Murphy, Joe Murphy, Patrick Murphy, ]ohn Murphy; and her niece, ]ulie Brown. She is survived by fifteen nieces and nephews, twenty one great nieces and nephews, seven first cousins and two sisters-indaw, Donna Murphy in Eugene, OR, and Patricia Murphy Wooddy in Grants Pass, OR.
Long Term Care and Asset Protection
tl KLY EKLy
Will Dennis 541-388-3877
The following students of High Desert Martial Arts recently competed ln the 42nd Annual Northwest Martial Arts Championship:Conan Woermbke,5, yellow belt; Travls Grlfflths,8, red belt; Jackson Clough, 14, brown belt; Finn Howell,8, brown belt; Matt Hicks, 9, brown belt;Amanda Grifflths, 10, green belt;Jason Hicks, 11, black belt; andJonl Ransom, 15, black belt.
October 18, 1927- May 1,2015
he was intrigued by military
Presented by Elder LawAttorney:
YOUTH NOTES
Veronica Marie Murphy passed away peacefully in her sleep on Friday, May 1, 2015. She was born in Lake County, OR, on October 18, 1927,to Maurice and Marie Murphy who ranched in the Warner Valley of Oregon. She attended Adel grade school before going on to graduate from high school at Sacred Heart Academy in Klamath Falls, OR. Veronica earned her nursing degree from St. Joseph's College in San Francisco, CA, before returning to Lakeview to work for Doctor Klever and the Lake County Hospital. She also did nursing in the Bend hospital and Redmond Community hospital. Veronica joined the Navy as a nurse in 1955. She was stationed in several places, including Virginia, Florida, Adak, Alaska, Bremerton, Washington and California.
Wounded Knee." He also said
. Discover what you donot knowabout Medicaid that you needto know . Learn howto pay for long-term care without draining all your assets . Learnaboutyour options for controlling longterm carecosts Time:5:00to 6:30 p.m. Place: Bend Senior Center, 1600 SE Reed Market Rd., Bend, OR97702 Date: Thursday, May7, 2015 Cost: No charge, includes complimentary food & beverage Seatingis limited so pleasecall to confirm your seat.
state, Northwest regional and national levels and will receive hls award during the National Defense Night ln Washington D.C. ln June.
Veronica Marie Murphy
triggered by Dee Brown's 1971 history, "Bury My H eart at historian Wilbur
Email: news@bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Knowof a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: aspegman©bendbulletin.com
for 'Dances With Wolves.' I
no interest in his novel, a story hero named Lt. John Dun-
Phone: 541-383-0354
SCHOOL NOTES
D o w d i e d tury Native Americans was
Monday. Edward Chambers, 85: a lapsed seminarian who succeeded Saul Alinsky as leader of Alinsky's social justice foundation. Died April 26 at a nursing home near his home in Drimoleague, Ireland, of heart failure. B enjamin Logan, 87: A
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.com
the Opportunity Foundation
learned. Parents p i cked them: digitus (finger), manus god of fire. "(It's) something you alwords off a sheet at the front (hand), tergum (back). of the room — lunatic, igniHinton told parents even ways say but you don't know tion, capricious, petroleumnew vocabulary draws on what it means," he said. and students parsed the roots Latin and Greek — telephone — Reporter: 541-617-7837, and meanings. Ten-year-old comes from tele (distant) and aspegman@bendbullet in.com
Won Academy Award
been released. Ellen Albertini Dow, 100: in the 1960s, and "Like a RunFeisty character actress best ning Dog," about his early known for her salty rendition struggles as a writer. of "Rapper's Delight" in "The Blake told interviewers that Wedding Singer." Her agent his fascination with 19th-cenc onfirmed t hat
borImpact was selected to
"Dances with Wolves" at the Academy Awards on March 26, 1991, in Los Angeles. Blake died Saturday in Tucson, Arizona, after a long battle with cancer.
Holy Road," a sequel to "DancDeaths of note from around the world:
job training and education, and HomeSource of Neigh-
good. Next Locklear called fourth-grader, said his favorc e r tificatesout parts of the corpus (body) ite word he'd learned is volca-
and showed off what they'd
Vadabell B. Brumblay,
same place they are now. "We'll see," Endicott said. In other actions Tuesday, councilors awarded three local organizations almost $170,000 in federal grant money from the U.S. Department o f Ho u sing
B5
a~e
aRe o RB UlLO ERe b
Veronica will be remembered by her family and friends as a truly dedicated nurse, veteran and generous lady. Father Todd Unger will pray the rosary on Friday, May8, at 10:30 a.m., and celebrate the Mass at 11:00 a.m., at St. lhomas Catholic Church, 1720 NW 19th Street, Redmond, OR, with burial at 2:00 p.m., at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend. Remembrances may be made in Veronica's name to Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701 and Brightside Animal Shelter, 1355 NE Hemlock, Redmond OR 97756. Deschutes Memorial Chapel in Bend, is i n charge of the arrangements. 541-382-5592.
en d lneadband
~g gs ®kbns
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
B6
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Pleasant with plenty of sunshine
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Partly sunny, breezyand warmer
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Yesterday Today Thursday
Yesterday Today Thursday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 59/46/0.24 59/44/pc64/44/s La Grande 61/45/0.00 58/40/pc 67/38/pc Portland 65/4 8/0.0264/45/pc 72/48/ pc 60/39/0.00 56/32/pc 64/36/pc La Pine 56/27/0.00 50/27/pc 59/31/pc Prinevigs 59/ 3 1/0.0055/28/pc 59/31/pc Brookings 60/45/0.00 59/44/s 62/47/pc M edford 69/5 0/0.00 65/41/pc 72/43/pc Redmond 61 / 26/0.0055/26/pc 64/28/pc Bums 65/33/0.00 56/31/pc 63/35/pc N ewport 57/4 6/0.00 53/41/pc 57/43/s Roseburg 67 / 49/0.00 66/42/pc 72/45/pc Eugene 66/42/0.01 62/37/pc69/40/pc NorthBend 59/45/0.00 57/43/pc 59/45/pc Salem 63/46/0.01 63/40/pc 71/42/pc Klamath Fags 65/29/0.00 55/30/pc 62/35/pc Ontario 74/52/0.00 67/46/pc 70/47/pc Sisters 56/41/0.00 55/26/sh65/28/ pc Lakeview 66/32/0.00 55/35/pc60/37/pc Pendleton 64/47/0.00 63/39/pc 70/41/pc The Dages 6 5 /48/0.00 66/40/pc 77/43/pc
Wee ds A b sent
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
Source: OregonAgsrgyAssociates 541-683-1577
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
~ 1 08 ~
As of 7 a.m.yesterday
08
~ 08
~ 108
Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 502 1 8 91% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 175458 88% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 7 5 0 58 86% 48 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 32530 74vo National high: 100 Prinevige 114444 77vo at Death Valley,CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. National low: 24 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 275 at Embarrass, MN Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1440 Precipitation: 2.08" Deschutes R.below Bend 93 at Wichita Falls, TX Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1860 Little Deschutes near LaPine 94 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 23 Reservoir C rane Prairie
~ 208
~ 308
51/23
8
d1/43
~ 408
~ eca
~ 508
0-"--'-. .
'
•.
7
Billings
d4/45
k v. v,
~7 0 8
' mpoa Q d
X X v. X X X
~ 808
~ 908
~ 100 8 ~ 11 0 8
Que
et/ e aay
/39 's
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City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 74/65/Tr 83/65/t Akron 76/56/0.01 80/58/pc Albany 79/63/0.00 76/47/pc Albuquerque 63/50/0.07 71/48/c Anchorage 54/39/0.00 57/42/s Atlanta 81/59/0.00 82/58/s Atlantic City 79/61/0.00 67/57/1 Austin 83/61/Tr 84/67/1 Baltimore 85/61/0.01 79/56/t Billings 80/45/0.00 61/39/sh Birmingham 83/59/0.00 84/58/s Bismarck 79/50/0.00 69/49/1 Boise 71/52/Tr 65/44/pc Boston 70/57/0.02 72/54/pc Bridgeport, CT 79/56/0.00 66/49/pc Buffalo 69/46/0.03 71/52/pc Burlington, VT 71/56/Tr 77/48/s Caribou, ME 64/50/0.03 63/41/pc Charleston, SC 79/56/0.00 81/62/pc Charlotte 82/56/0.00 84/57/s Chattanooga 84/55/0.00 84/56/s Cheyenne 50/43/0.02 57/38/t Chicago 56/48/0.95 75/59/sh Cincinnati 84/56/0.00 84/61/pc Cleveland 69/54/Tr 73/55/sh ColoradoSprings 50/48/1.76 66/42/t Columbia, Mo 82/62/0.12 81/62/t Columbia, SC 83/54/0.00 85/59/s Columbus,GA 82/57/0.00 83/58/s Columbus,OH 81/61/0.71 83/59/pc Concord, NH 77/66/0.00 78/43/s Corpus Christi 83n2/Tr 84/74/t Dallas 81/61/Tr 80/67/t Dayton 81/62/0.88 83/61/pc Denver 56/47/0.14 64/42/t Des Moines 80/62/0.09 76/62/t Detroit 62/51/0.32 75/56/pc Duluth 71/34/0.00 64/52/t El Paso 80/58/0.01 84/58/s Fairbanks 58/39/0.00 65/37/s Fargo 81/46/0.00 75/59/t Flagstaff 53/41/0.20 58/32/pc Grand Rapids 55/52/0.35 77/58/c Green Bay 66/49/0.00 72/56/t Greensboro 83/59/0.00 84/58/s Harrisburg 78/60/Tr 75/56/sh Harfford, CT 85/62/0.00 76/46/pc Helena 71/42/0.19 64/37/pc Honolulu 83/69/0.02 82/69/pc Houston 82/63/0.13 84/70/pc Huntsville 86/58/0.00 82/55/pc Indianapolis 83/62/0.00 83/61/pc Jackson, MS 84/59/0.00 84/61/pc Jacksonville 80/59/0.00 78/62/c
Hi/Lo/W 81/66/t 84/62/pc 82/55/s 73/48/pc 56/43/s 85/61/pc 69/59/pc 84/68/pc 78/57/pc 57/41/c 86/59/pc 59/34/r 63/45/pc 79/56/s 72/53/s 76/56/s 80/52/s 62/36/pc 78/64/r 81/59/sh 86/58/pc 53/36/1 83/63/pc 84/61/pc 81/62/pc 63/43/c 82/64/t 80/63/sh 86/59/s 84/62/pc 83/48/s 84/75/pc 80/67/t 83/63/pc 59/41/c 79/58/1 82/60/pc 71/46/1 82/60/s 67/41/s 72/38/r 57/29/s 83/62/pc 82/64/pc 82/60/c 80/58/pc 83/54/s 57/36/pc 82/70/pc 86/71/pc 84/57/pc 83/61/pc 87/63/pc 82/61/s
Amsterdam Athens
58/45/c 84/67/pc 70/61/sh 95/66/pc 97/81/t 76/51/s 78/65/s 62/45/pc 67/51/c 73/47/pc 61/47/s 83/64/pc 88/66/s 57/31/c
slifsx 8/45
77 15
SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
•
•
Ski resort New snow Base 0 13-7 5 Mt. Bachelor M t. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 0-54 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 0-0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Source: OnTheSnow.com
36'
stn5/s
53/39/pc 51/31/sh 67/47/pc 78/52/s 88/81/sh 76/57/s 83/57/s 72/47/s 78/67/pc 72/59/s 62/48/pc 83/56/s 96/80/s
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W 61/35/0.00 56/38/pc 80/58/0.04 73/63/1 54/51/0.40 76/56/c 87/65/0.01 84/61/pc 83/58/0.00 83/60/pc
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vsgas Lexington Lincoln
78/59/0.01 Litffe Rock 86/64/0.00 Los Angeles 67/57/0.00 Louisville 85/59/0.00 Madison, Wl 56/49/0.35 Memphis 87/65/0.00 Miami 80/70/0.38 Milwaukee 48/44/0.44 Minneapolis 70/51/0.00 Nashville 87/56/0.00 New Orleans 84/68/0.00 New YorkCity 85/66/0.00 Newark, NJ 86/62/0.00 Norfolk, VA 84/61/0.00 OklahomaCity 74/59/0.48 Omaha 77/57/0.00 Orlando 82/68/0.07 Palm Springs 87/63/0.00 Psoria 84/63/0.13 Philadelphia 85/62/0.00 Phoenix 85/67/0.02 Pittsburgh 75/59/0.30 Portland, ME 75/63/0.00 Providence 77/58/0.00 Raleigh 82/56/0.00 Rapid City 65/38/0.00 Reno 78/45/0.00 Richmond 85/61/0.00 Rochester, NY 67/51/0.00 Sacramento 76/52/0.00 St. Louis 85/67/Tr Salt Lake City 68/55/0.01
Hi/Lo/W 57/44/pc 79/60/1 83/60/pc
76/52/pc 84/60/pc
74/62/1 77/52/1 83/64/pc 87/67/1
68/56/pc 66/55/c 86/65/pc 88/65/pc 79/59/1 81/62/pc 85/66/pc 86/67/pc 82n2/t 85n3/t 62/52/pc 76/60/pc 81/62/1 77/55/1 85/57/pc 87/57/pc
82/68/pc 84no/pc 67/56/pc 76/60/s 70/54/pc 77/57/s 80/60/1 79/64/t 73/62/1 85/67/pc 84/59/s
tt/61/c 77/65/1 76/53/1 87/65/pc 75/56/pc
85/64/pc 86/65/pc 76/57/c 81/60/pc 88/64/c 85/61/s 80/56/pc 85/62/pc 74/49/s 79/47/pc
71/49/pc 77/54/s 84/58/s 83/61/c 61/42/1 63/42/s 85/61/1 72/50/pc 80/54/s
56/35/1 59/43/1
83/60/pc 78/56/s 73/51/1
86/67/pc 85/68/pc 66/50/1 69/49/1 San Antonio sono/o'.og 85//0/t 84nO/c San Diego 68/61/0.00 66/59/pc 65/59/c San Francisco 62/52/0.00 66/52/pc 66/53/pc San Jose 70/50/0.00 70/50/s 68/51/pc Santa re 62/45/0.18 66/39/pc 69/40/pc Savannah 80/57/0.00 81/62/pc 78/62/r Seattle 58/45/0.16 61/43/pc 69/47/s Sioux Fags 70/44/0.05 74/57/1 72/45/1 Spokane 64/42/0.00 61/41/pc 69/43/pc Springfield, Mo 81/59/Tr 74/62/1 79/64/1 Tampa 87/67/0.00 87/69/pc 87/69/pc Tucson 82/57/0.03 85/57/s 83/55/s Tulsa 80/60/Tr 77/67/1 80/66/1 Washington, DC 86/64/0.05 83/63/1 82/62/pc Wichita 78/62/0.04 76/64/t 80/62/1 Yakima 68/36/0.00 67/39/pc 76/42/pc Yuma 89/64/0.00 87/60/s 83/57/s 8
I
Mecca Mexico City
102/79/0.00 105/81/pc 106/81/s 81/57/0.00 80/55/pc 79/53/1 Montreal 68/50/0.00 76/47/s 79/51/s Moscow 61/37/0.00 57/34/s 59/36/s Nairobi 75/61/0.02 79/59/c 78/60/t Nassau 81/70/0.53 85/73/t 84/73/t New Delhi 106/75/0.00 108/81/pc 108/84/pc Osaka 77/55/0.00 76/59/pc 79/59/c Oslo 50/39/0.98 55/47/pc 52/43/sh Ottawa 68/48/0.02 78/47/s 79/52/s Paris 66/59/0.17 62/45/pc 63/48/pc Rio de Janeiro 79/72/0.20 75/68/t 75/67/r Rome 82/57/0.00 77/58/pc 78/55/pc Santiago 73/43/0.00 75/43/s 77/45/s Sao Paulo 68/61/0.06 69/58/1 68/57/1 Sapporo 69/49/0.03 64/54/pc 62/49/pc Seoul 67/41/0.00 67/45/pc 74/49/pc Shanghai 74/53/0.00 77/62/c 82/64/pc Singapore 90/77/0.11 gongn gongn Stockholm 55/45/0.16 64/43/pc 62/42/sh Sydney 82/59/0.00 68/52/s 70/52/s Taipei 75/66/1.17 81/73/sh 83/74/sh Tel Aviv 75/59/0.00 81/63/s 82/65/s Tokyo 68/63/0.00 74/64/pc 76/64/pc Toronto 61/45/0.00 69/50/s 75/52/pc Vancouver 57/46/0.07 59/42/s 64/47/s Vienna 79/59/0.00 71/51/1 70/45/pc Warsaw 75/46/0.00 69/45/r 68/45/pc
llet'
I I'
0
Yesterday Today Thursday
City
i
68/57/0.51 59/47/sh Boston 84/57/0.00 84/67/s • 66/44 54 KXX Auckland 63/53/0.00 71/61/pc XW %v.X<<'eX Volh Baghdad 91/70/0.00 96/69/s XXXXX'e /57. Bangkok 90/82/0.04 97/81/1 x vav eip Beijing 82/54/0.00 73/49/pc 'e tetx x x x 4 /ae olum us~ Beirut 73/63/0.00 78/64/s an ncfscohv. 'e % 6 % Berlin 76/58/0.09 68/48/pc de/52 /59 shin us ne /ea Bogota 68/45/0.01 67/50/pc '~t +++++v.www wwwvA.v.w Budapest 81/57/0.00 81/54/pc WW WWk+pse ruty St. u' v.v.w~gsa ~.' se/ Buenos Ai r es 72/48/0.00 61/45/pc /ef • sshvn Chsrlo 81/62/0.00 82/63/pc LosAn elss Cabo San Lucas 85/5 7 • 6/54 Cairo 82/63/0.00 86/63/s Phoen Anchorage Afbuque ue k h fioarath v 8 64 • Ai Calgary 66/39/0.02 51/23/s • aa/44 7 57/4 II 0 71/48 82/88 Cancun 86n2/0.04 84/75/s air inahs I, 6 /59 Dublin 54/46/0.36 54/37/sh 84/8 6 54/38 4/5 Edinburgh 52/45/1.14 53/39/sh Geneva 68/57/0.25 66/45/c Harare 77/50/0.00 79/51/s i '> w Orleans te Hong Kong 84/77/0.23 88/81/sh Honolulu o~ , Chihuahus 82/68 A.~lk X X X % Istanbul 77/57/0.00 74/58/s 82/49 aa/50 : ePnuwwtxxv Jerusalem 70/53/0.00 83/56/pc Mo M y tro Johannesburg 77/59/0.00 78/49/s Lima 77/65/0.00 79/67/pc Lisbon 66/54/0.00 70/55/pc Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 61/54/0.36 58/47/sh Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 70/55/0.00 72/50/pc gtng/o'.oo 96/81/s Manila
275
Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.
59/38
57/36
City Astoria Baker City
POLLEN COUNT
Crooked R.below Prineville Res.
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
60/36
55/30
Yesterday Today Thursday
4
The highertheAccuW ealher.mm IIV Index number, the greatertheneedfor sysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.
G rasses T r ee s Moderate Moderate
ees/41 Klamath • Ashl nd Falls
59/
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
7
Medfo d
Bro ings
UV INDEX TODAY
• Ch ristmas alley Silver 61/29 Lake 52/29 • Paisley • Chiloquin '67/31 •
Beaver Marsh
66/42
7/ a Gold ach 56/
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
4 I~
49/25
Roseburg
57/43
0' 10 a.m. Noon
Riley 56/31 58/35
Cresce t • 61/27
High: 74 at Ontario Low: 26' at Redmond
73
i
68/39
Rufus 40
4
Mostly sunny with a shower possible
Yesterday Today Thursday
Umatiga
he Oaa
Tigamo
CENTRAL:Partly
Today Sunrise 5:50 a.m. Sunset 8:14 p.m. Moonrise 10 : 53 p.m. Moonset 7:5 3 a.m. last New Fir s t
0
TRAVEL WEATHER
Hood RiVer Portland 644
SUNDAY
7Qo
61'
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.85" in 1921 Month to date (normal) 0.0 0" (0.12") Year to date(normal) 1.76 " (4.25") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 7"
SUN ANDMOON
SATURDAY
Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows.
ria
EAST:Sunshine and patchy clouds today Seasid with a cool breeze. 56/46 Clear to partly cloudy Cannon and chilly tonight. 56/46
TEMPERATURE 57 28'
FRIDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
High
-"'"-
LOW
Partly sunny with a shower this afternoon
i f '1
THURSDAY
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N HL, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 NBA, C2 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
COLLEGE BASEBALL
www.bendbulletin.com/sports
CYCLING
BOXING
Beavers overtake Ducks in Corvallis
TIM DAHLBERG
CORVALLIS — A
five-run third inning allowed the Oregon State baseball team to pull away for a10-2 nonconference victory over Oregon onTuesday night. K.J. Harrison had a two-run single to score Elliott Cary andChristian Donahue in the third just before Billy King belted a two-run double to help give OregonState a 5-0 lead. TheBeavers tacked on two more runs in the fourth inning when Jeff Hendrix hit a shot to left field to drive home CalebHamilton and Joe Gillette. Oregon added runs in the fifth and sixth innings, but couldn't catch up to Oregon State. King belted two doubles and hadthree RBls for Oregon State (27-21), while Cary
r
p
(
LAS VEGASa'
T
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:/
ing $40,000 or more for a ringside seat Saturday night in Las Vegas. And, surely, the bettor who wagered $500,000
t L'
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at the MGM
'(
Grand sports book on Man- • Suit filed ny pacquiao
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Mark Mcrical/The Bulletin
Bill Warburton, organizer of the Chainbreaker mountain bike race, ties some ribbon to a branch while marking the new course for this
Saturday's race.
with the win for the
Beavers as hepitched 5'/3 innings andgave up three hits andtwo unearned runs. Oregon's Josh Grahampicked up the loss after throwing 3/a innings andgiving up10 hits and 7earned runs. — From staffand
— Marv Hubbard, a bruising fullback who made three ProBowls in the early1970s for the Oakland Raiders, died. He was 68. The Raiders said Hubbard died Monday in Livermore. His wife, Virginia, told the Bay Area NewsGroupthat Hubbard had along bout with prostate cancer. Hubbard played in 90 games over seven seasons for the Raiders from1969-75. Healso played oneseason in Detroit. He rushed for 4,544 yards in his career with 23 touchdowns. He also caught 85 passes for 628 yards andone score. Raiders coach Jack Del Rio says Hubbard was one of his childhood heroes andthat he wore No. 44 in high school to honor Hubbard. Hubbard's coach, John Madden, called him a"tough guy" and a "tough runner."
Bulletin golf section coming The Bulletin's annual golf section will be in Sunday's paper, with reviews of every course in Central Oregon, changes for the year, and highlights of the upcoming summer.
dis c losing
injury,C4 the loop. They all thought they were getting the Fight of the Century.
What they got instead was a one-armed Pacquiao chasing Mayweather around the ring for 12
• Fire damage forces organizersto redesignmost of the original routefor the Chainbreaker 2015 ChaindreakerMountainBike Race
Bill Warburton worked fast
:" tr
and efficiently with some loppers and red ribbon. As dust swirled around him, he manicured the trail
r
DESCHUT s N ATI0 N
(
I
Race course
The annual Chainbreaker mountain bike race is getting
( I
a makeover after the Two Bulls Fire of last June and the
•(
(
• ( • (( (•(
e •
(
After cruising over some
ruggedsingletrack,we topped
r
ert, er
e V
tions of the route with yellow pin flags and red ribbon.
I
I
I
out on a ridge, where the de-
r
struction caused by the 7wo Bulls Fire was utterly appar-
rrr ' (I
ent. Ponderosas were burned
(
.ne«"
black and orange, and loose sand covered the area where many damaged trees had been logged. Following an already
Warburton, the race orga-
nizer and cycling program
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
director with Bend Endur-
ance Academy,forwhich the Chainbreaker is a fundraiser, has been hard at work piecing together a new course for one of Oregon's most popular mountain bike races. The
long-runningrace takes place in the Skyline Forest just northwest of Bend. "I've tried to keep as much
2015 Chaindreakermountain dike race Where:Skyline Forest, near Shevlin Park northwest of Bend. When:10:30 a.m. Saturday Registration:www.athletepath.com/chainbreaker. (Online registration closes at noon onFriday. Registration is available Friday at Bend's WebCyclery from 5 to 7 p.m.Race-day registration is available on site from 8 to10 a.m.) Contact: info@bendenduranceacademy.orgor541-335-1346.
trail and feeling from the old
establishedcourse map,
Warburton continued his maintenance, clearing sticks
This year's Chainbreaker, he added, will run a course
one big loop. Different from previous
that minimizes dust, uses ex-
years, the 2015 Chainbreaker
isting singletrack and makes
will be a single-lap race for
blocking certain areas with logs so riders will know which direction to go during the race. As Warburton pieced together the new route with
flags and ribbon, he linked up old singletrack, dirt roads, line, where one side of the forest was a healthy green and the otherside charred black
and gray. SeeChainbreaker/C3
PREP GIRLS LACROSSE
Summit capsperfect regular season Bulletin staff report It was a good day for Summit, and it was especially rewarding for the Storm's four seniors. Cayley Allan, Kyra Hajovsky, Kalie McGrew and Kelsey Asavedo — seniors all — got into the scoring act
ished off a perfect 15-0 regular season for the Storm, including a 12-0 record in South League play. Summit expects to learn Friday of its opponent
Inside
in the first round of the OGLA
Ttiesday for the Storm. Accord-
state playoffs, which is set for Monday.
ing to Summit co-coach Polly
With its undefeated record
Tuesday, helping Summit race to a 17-2 Oregon Girls
and a No. 6 LaxPower state ranking entering Tuesday's
Lacrosse Association South
contest, Summit could be
League victory over Thurston of Springfield. The home-field win pol-
awarded a first-round playoff bye. Ten different players scored
• Summit boys tennis blanks Mountain View. Preproundup, C4 • Prep scoreboard,C4
Purcell, that means every var-
Eric Jamiacn/The Associated Press
Manny Pacquiaogreets fans after his welterweight fight against Floyd Mayweather
Jr., on Saturday inLasVegas.
and rocks from the trail and
and even the 7wo Bulls fire
course as possible, but there
are places that are too far gone from either the fire or the salvage logging," Warburton said.
SeePacquiao/C4
Last week, I rode a few
tl
•
Mayweather.
miles of the new course with Warburton as he marked sec-
( (
r
and sport divisions will race a 23-mile loop, and beginners and juniors will race a 13-mile loop. A separate 1-kilometer course for kids 10 and young-
rounds. The Filipino who normally is a punching machine landed only 18 right jabs and did not even throw as many punches as the defensive-minded
er will also be set up.
FORES
I
ponderosa pine tree.
ensuing salvage logging significantly damaged much of the race course. Despite losing about 90 percent of the original course, the 19th annual race will be staged this Saturday.
C ('44
r(
with some trims here and
there, and he tied some ribbon onto an occasional charred
'nish area
all competitors. Elite, expert
— The Associated Press
GOLF
Jr was not in
of their lives.
The Bulletin
LIVERMORE, Calif.
Pacquiao f o r not
peak condition for the fight
By Mark Morical
Former Raider Hubbard dies
aga i nst
to beat Floyd Mayweather
7wo ftghters who if not in their pnme were at least in
INra r8polts
NFL
he people who paid $99.95 to watch at home had no clue.
Neither did those spend-
s'
also had two hits with
a double and anRBI. Kyle Nobach, Donahue andHamiltoneachhad two hits for the Beavers. Harrison had three RBls. Jakob Goldfarb led Oregon (27-21) on offense for a 4-for-5 performance and adouble. Starter SamTweedt took his record to 7-1
Pacquiao injury another hit for boxing
"It was really cool for our
BASEBALL
The day Babe Ruth
changed baseball forever By Michael K. Bohn McClatchy-Tribune News Service
As the visiting Boston Red Sox took the field in the bottom of the first inning,
seniors," said Storm co-coach
atall and barrel-chested
Polly Purcell. "They're really the heart and soul of our
pitcher walked to the
team."
5,000 in New York's Polo Grounds and the Yankees
Lauren Gallivan scored a game-high four goals and had three assists for Summit, which led 12-0 at halftime. Also for the Storm, Julia Stites scored two goals, Fiona Dolan
sity player (except the goalies) has scored this season. Allan scored three goals, Hajovsky two, and McGrew had a goal and three assists, and Asavedo one apiece as the and Natalie Shultz, Parker Summit seniors combined for Campbell and Lila Reinecke seven goals. added a goal apiece.
mound. Both the crowd of in the dugout watched the lefthanded George"Babe" Ruth prepare to face leadoff hitter Fritz Maisel. The
game was 100 years ago this week on May 6, 1915,
and it was Babe's first full season in the majors. SeeRuth /C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY TENNis ATP, Madrid Open ATP, Madrid Open
Time T V /Radie 7 a.m. Ten n is 4a.m. (Thu.) Tennis
SOFTBALL
College, Missouri vs. Mississippi St. College, Georgia vs. Mississippi College, TexasA&Mvs. South Carolina College, Tennesseevs. Kentucky College, Texas atBaylor
9 a.m. SEC 1 1:30 a.m. SEC 2 p.m. SEC 4 :30 p.m. SE C 5 p.m. ES P N2
BASEBALL
MLB, Miami at Washington MLB, Baltimore at N.Y.Mets MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels SOCCER Europe, Champions League,Barcelona (Spain) vs. Bayern Munich (Germany)
MLB ESPN
10 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.
Root
1 1:30 a.m.
FS1
BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Chicago atCleveland 4 p.m. NBA playoffs, Los AngelesClippers at Houston 6 :30 p.m. GOLF U.S. Amateur Four Ball 4 p.m.
TNT
TN T FS1
HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, Montreal at TampaBay NHL playoffs, NewYork Rangers atCapitals
4 p.m. USA 4:30 p.m. NBCSN
THURSDAY TENNis ATP, Madrid Open
7 a.m.
Ten n is
HOCKEY
IIHF World Championship, U.S. vs. Belarus NHL, Montreal at TampaBay NHL, Chicago at Minnesota
7 a.m. NB C SN 4 p.m. NB C SN 6:30 p.m. NBCSN
SOFTBALL
College, SEC Tournament,Auburnvs.TBA College, SEC Tournament,Alabama vs.TBA College, SEC Tournament, Florida vs. TBA College, Indiana vs. OhioState College, Stanford at California College, SEC Tournament,TBA vs.LSU College, lowa vs. Rutgers College, UCLA at ArizonaState College, Oregon atArizona GOLF PGA Tour,ThePlayers Championship
8 a.m. 10:30 a.m.
1 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 3 p.m. 3:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
SEC SEC SEC Big Ten Pac-12 SEC Big Ten Pac-12 Pac-12
10 a.m.
Golf
BASEBALL
MLB, Los AngelesDodgers at Milwaukee MLB, Baltimore at NewYork Yankees College, Florida at Vanderbilt College, Mississippi State at Mississippi SOCCER UEFAEuropa, Sevilla vs ACFFiorentina UEFAEuropa, Napoli vs Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk
1 0:30 a.m. M L B 4 p.m. MLB 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 :30 p.m. SE C noon noon
FS1 FS2
7 p.m.
FS1
BOXING
Manuel Avila vs. Erik Ruiz FOOTBALL
Australian, Collingwood vsGeelong
2:30 a.m. (Fri.) FS2
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges madebyTVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
ON DECK Today Baseball: Bend at Ridgeview,4:30p.m.; Summit at Redmond,4:30 p.mqCrookCounty at Molala, 4:30 p.m.;Sistersat Elmira,4:30p.m.; Corbett at Madras,4:30p.m. SoflbalhBendatRidgeview,5 p.m.;Summit at Redmond, 5p.m.;Molala at CrookCounty, 4:30p.m.; Elmira atSisters, 4:30p.m.; Corbett at Madras, 4:30 p.m.;Culverat NorthLake(DH), 3p.m. Boys gelf: Bend,MountainView,Summit, Sisters, CrookCountyat Crosswater,2 p.m. Track andfield: CrookCounty,GladstoneatEstacada, 3:30p.m. Girls lacrosse:BendatSouth Eugene,4 p.m.
Thursday
Sunday Boys tennis: Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 3championshipsatBlackBute Ranch
Pac-12
All TimesPOT
Conf
UCLA ArizonaSt. California SouthernCal Oregon St. Arizona
Oregon Washington St Washington Utah Stanford
0verall
W L Pct. W L Pct. 16 5 .762 34 11 .756 14 7 .667 29 15 .659 15 9 .625 29 15 .659 13 8 .619 32 15 .681 12 9 .571 30 14 .682 11 13 .458 27 18 .600 9 12 .429 27 21 .563 8 13 .381 25 21 .543 9 15 .375 25 21 .543 7 14 .333 16 27 .372 6 15 .286 20 26 .435
OregonSt. 10,Oregon2 (nonconference) Friday's Games Californiaat Campbell, 3 p.m. Utah atOregonSt., 5:35p.m. UCLAatArizonaSt., 6:30p.m. WashingtonatArizona, 7:30p.m. StanfordatSouthernCal, 7:30 p.m. Oregon atWashington St., 7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames CaliforniaatCam pbell,11am. Utah at OregonSt.I:35 p.m. UCLA atArizonaSt., 6:30p.m. WashingtonatArizona, 7p.m. StanfordatSouthernCal, 7 p.m. OregonatWashingtonSt.7 p.m. Sunday'sGames Oregon atWashington St., noon Utah atOregonSt., 12:05p.m. UCLA atArizonaSt.,12:30 p.m. StanfordatSouthernCal, 3 p.m. WashingtonatArizona, 6p.m.
SECOND ROUND
OT goal lifts Flames The Associated Press
er, Backlund's shot from the CALGARY, A l berta blue line through traffic to Mikael B a cklund s c ored beat Frederik Andersen at on a delayed penalty call 4:24 of overtime. in overtime, lifting the lateJ oe Colborne had a
charging Calgary Flames over the Anaheim Ducks 4-3 on Tuesday night. Johnny Gaudreau scored with 19.5 seconds left in the
short-handed goal for Calgary, while Brandon Bollig also connected. But Sam Bennett's shot, which seemed to barely sneak over
the goal line, was disallowed for the Flames, who had an in the third period after a apparent goal disallowed video review. minutes earlier. Also on Tuesday: Anaheim leads the secBlackhawks 1, Wild 0: ST. ond-round Western Confer- PAUL, M i n n . — Patrick
third period to tie the game
ence series 2-1, with Game 4
Kane scored in the first pe-
on Friday night. On the delayed Ducks
riod for Chicago, and Corey
Crawford and t h e B l ackpenalty and w i t h F l ames hawks made the superstar's
g oaltender Karri
R a m o goal stand up for a win over
pulled for an extra attack-
Minnesota.
SOCCER
NBA playoffs
MLS
NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
(Besl-ef-7) Tuesday'sGames Atlanta106,Washington90, seriestied1-1 Memphis97,GoldenState90,series tied1-1 Today'sGames Chicago atCleveland,4p m.,Chicagoleadsseries1-0 LA. ClippersatHouston,630 p m.,LA. Clipperslead series1-0 Friday's Games Cleveland at Chicago,5 p.m. HoustonatLA. Clippers,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames AtlantaatWashington, 2p.m. GoldenStateatMemphis,5 p.m. Sunday'sGames Cleveland at Chicago,12:30 p.m. HoustonatL.A. Clippers,5;30p.m. Tuesday'sSummaries
Tuesday'sGames
Utah15,UtahValley 3 Santa ClaraI, Stanford0 UCLA 10, Pepperdine 2 Uc Irvine8, Southern Cal5
Square Gardenchairman JamesDolan rehired Isiah Thomas —this time to run theWNBA's NewYork Liberty. Dolan's Knicks didn't win a single playoff gameduring Thomas' stint as teampresident from December 2003 to April 2008 despite regularly owning the NBA'shighest payroll. Thomasalso went 56-108 in two seasons astheir coach before being fired. He remainedwith the Knicks in anunspecified role, even after a lawsuit brought by former teamemployee Anucha Browne Sanders that cost MSG$11.6 million. Sanders alleged she was sexua llyharassed byThomas,whomaintained hisinnocence and was never found personally liable. TheLiberty said Tuesday that Thomas will serve asteam president with responsibility for basketball and business operations. Hehas also taken an ownership interest in the team.
NHL ROUNDUP
BASKETBALL
CONFERENCESEMIFINALS
College
(Best-of-7) Tuesday'sGames
Chicago1,Minnesota0,Chicagoleadsseries3-0 Calgary 4, Anaheim3,OT,Anaheimleadsseries2-1
Today'sGames
N.Y. RangersatWashington,4:30p.m. Montr ealatTampaBay,4p.m.,TampaBayleadsseries 2-0
Thursday'sGames MontrealatTampaBay, 4p.m. Chicagoat Minnesota 6:30p.m. Friday's Games Washin gtonatN.Y.Rangers,4p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 6:30p.m.
Gwinnett(IL). CHICAGO CUBS— Placed OFChris Denorfia on the15-day DL.SelectedRH PJamesRussel fromlowa (PCL).Recalled RHPAnthonyVarvarofromlowa. MIAMI MARLINS — Released CJarrod Saltalamacchia. NEW YORK METS —Selected thecontract of C JohnnyMonellfromLasVegas (PCL). SentINFEric Campbell toLasVegas. Transferred OFCesar Puelo
"Be cool. This hole is not easy. It angles off in the shape of one of our legs!"
BASEBALL
All TimesPDT
— From wire reports
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
CLEVEL AND INDIANS — Activated OF Nick Swisherfromthe15-day DL.Optioned OFTyler Holt to Columbus (IL). NEWYORKYANKEES—RecalledINFJosePirela fromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS — Announced OFCody Rossclearedwaiversandwasreleased. TEXASRANGERS— ClaimedLHPMikeKickham off waiversfromSeatle andoptionedhim to Round Rock(PCL).Transferred OFRyanRuafromthe15- to the 60-dayDL TORONTOBLUEJAYS— Recall edINF/OFChris Colabello fromBuffalo(IL). OptionedINFJonathan Diaz.DesignatedLHPJaysonAquinoforassignment. National League ATLANTA BRAVES— DesignatedLHP DonnieVeal for assignment.Recaled RHPBrandonCunniff from
Saturday Track and field: LaPine, Gilchrist at Gilchrist Invite, II a.m.
ISiah ThamaS hired aS Liderty PreSident —Madison
zona Cardinals tight end JohnCarlson announced his retirement from football, a weekshy of his 31st birthday. In astatement released by the team, Carlson said that after "much thought and consideration," he and his wife, Danielle, decided this was thebest decision. The 6-foot-5, 248-pound Carlson playedseven NFLseasons with Seattle, Minnesota andArizona. Hehad a history of concussions before signing with the Cardinals last offseason.
Transactions
Pine(DH),2p.m.;Culver atArlington (DH),2p.m.
Seftbalh Summit atBend,5 p.m.;MountainViewat Rideview,5pm.;Gladstoneat CrookCounty,430p m.; istersatElmira(DH)r4;30p.m.;Eslacadaat Madras, 4:30 p.m.; Pleasant Hil atLaPine(DH), 2p.m. Boys tennis: MountainViewatSisters, 4p.m. Girls tennis: MountainViewat Sisters, 4p.m. Trackandfield: CrookCounty,Sistersat Wally Ciochetti Invitational inCottageGrove, 2 p.mqCulver at RegisTwilight Invitational, 3p.m. Girls golf: Bend,MountainView, Redmond, Ridgeview, Summit at5ASpecial District 2championships atEagle Crest RidgeCourse,8a.m.
NHL playoffs
AriZOna tight end CarlSOR annOunCeS retirement — Ari-
DEALS
Friday Baseball: Summit at Bend,4:30 p.m.; Mountain View atRidgeview,4:30 p.m.; Gladstoneat Crook Couniy, 4:30p.m.;Elmira at Sisters,4:30 p.m.; Madrasat Estacada,4:30 p.m4Pleasant Hil at La
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
FOOTBALL
In the Bleachers © 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclrck www.gccomrcs.corrurnthebreachers
Boystennis:RedmondatRidgeview,4p.m.;Mountain View atBend,4 p.m. Girls tennis: Ridgeview atRedmond,4 p.m.; Bendat MountainView,4p.m.;Junction City, CrookCounty at Sisters,4p.m. Track and field: Madras,Corbettat Molala,TBD; Glide,PleasantHil at LaPine, 4p.m. Girls golf:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeyiew, Summit at5ASpecial District 2championships atEagle Crest RidgeCourse, 8a.m. Girls lacrosse:Rose burgatBend,3 p.m.
HOCKEY
BASKETBALL
Women SecondRound Maria Sharapova (3), Russia, def. Mariana Duque-Marino,Colombia,6-1, 6-2. PetraKvitova(4), CzechRepublic, def.CocoVandeweghe ,UnitedStates,6-4,2-6,6-3. CarolineGarcia, France,def. KarolinaPliskova (14) Czech Republic 6-24-6 6-1 AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova,Russia,def.SaraErrani (15), Italy,3-6,7-6(7), 6-4. VictoriaAzarenka,Belarus, def.Ajla Tom ljanovic, Croatia,6-3,6-3. BarboraStrycova, CzechRepublic, def. Varvara Lepch enko,UnitedStates,6-4,6-2. Ana Ivanovic (7), Serbia, def. Elina Svitolina, Ukraine,6-3,6-4. CarlaSuarezNavarro (10), Spain, def.Julia Goerges, Germ any, 6-3,7-5.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Hawks106, Wizards 90 WASHING TON(90) Pierce5-100-015, Nene0-5 2-2 2, Gortat5-10 0-0 10, Sessions8-14 2-5 21, Beal8-22 2-3 20, Gooden 2-41-2 5, Porter6-121-215, Temple1-4 002,Seraphin0I000.Totals3582814gg. ATLANTA (106) Carroll 9-163-322,Milsap6-165-618, Horford 8-15 2-218,Teague3-123-49, Korver4-110-012, Antic 2-62-2 8,Bazemore3-3 2-210, Schroder2-4 5-69, Muscala0-20-00.Totals37-8622-25106. Washington 20 26 29 16 — Bg Atlanta 28 25 27 26 — 1BB 3-Point Goals—W ashington 12-22 (Pierce 5-8, Sessions3-5,Porter2-3,Beal2-3, Gooden0-1, Temple 0-2), Atlanta10-29(Korver4-11, Bazemore2-2, Antic 2-5, Millsap1-3,Carroll1-4, Muscala0-1, Teague0-3). FouledOut—Gortat. Rebounds—Washington50(Gortat 9),Atlanta54(Milsap11). Assists—Washington21
W L T Pls NewEngland 5 2 2 17 D.C.United 5 I 2 17 NewYork 3 I 4 13 Columbus 3 3 2 11 TorontoFC 3 4 0 9 Chicago 3 4 0 9 OrlandoCit y 2 4 2 8 NewYorkCity Fc I 5 3 6 Philadelphia I 6 3 6 Montreal 0 2 2 2 WesternConference W L T Pls FCDallas 5 2 2 17 Vancouver 5 3 2 17 Seattle 5 2 I 16 SanJose 4 4 I 13 Los Angele s 3 2 4 13 S porting KansasCity 3 2 4 13 Portland 2 3 4 10 Houston 2 4 4 10 RealSaltLake 2 2 4 10 Colorado I 2 6 9
to the60-dayDL. ST. LOUISCARDINALS — Recalled LHPTyler
GF 12 10 12
GA 8 6 8
6 6 10 2
10 10 18 6
12 8 11 1 1 6 8
GF GA 15 1 2 11 9 13 6 9 10
10 9 1 2 12 7 6 1 1 13
7 10 8 8
Tuesday'sGame SanJose1,Houston 0 Today'sGame Los AngelesatRealSalt Lake,6:30p.m. Friday's Games NewEnglandatOrlandoCity, 5p.m. SanJoseatColorado,7 p.m.
TENNIS Professional
Madrid Open Tuesday atMadrid Men First Round GrigorDimitrov(10), Bulgaria,def. DonaldYoung, States,6-4, 3-0, retired. (Beal7), Atlanta30(Teague8).Total Fouls—Washing- United Jo-WilfriedTsonga(12),France,def. LukasRosol, ton 21,Atlanta16.A—18,131(18,729). Czech Republic, 7-5,6-3. GaelMonfils (13),France,def.Viktor Troicki, SerGrizzlies 97, Warriors 90 bia, 6-2,6-0. Albert Ramos-Vinolas,Spain,def.PabloCuevas, MEMPHIS (97) Uruguay, 3-6r6-3,6-4. Allen4-71-1 9,Randolph7-166-620, Gasol 5-10 Nick Kyrgios,Australia, def.Daniel Gimeno-Traver, 5 615, Conle8 y 123 422, CLee5-13 3 315, Udrih Spain,6-2,6-3. 2-8 0-0 4, Koufos1-3 0-0 2, Je.Green4-100-0 6, MarcelGranollers,Spain,def. MartinKlizan,SloCarter1-40-02. Totals 37-8318-2B 97. vakia,5-2,retired. GOLDEN STATE(gg) Leonardo Mayer,Argentina, def. GilesMuller,LuxBarnes4-83-311, D.Green3-118-1014, Bogut embourg, 6-3,6-3. 4 50 08, Curry7193 419,Thompson6-150 013, FernandoVerdasco, Spain, def. GuilermoGarD.Lee0-21-21, Iguodala 2-31-2 7, Ezeli 0-01-21, cia-Lopez, Spain, 4-6, 6-2,6-3. Barbosa5-9 3-314, Livingston0-1 0-0 0,Speights Jack Sock,UnitedStates, def. Pablo Andujar, 0-12-22. Totals31-7422-28 90. Spain,6-4,7-5. Memphis 28 22 23 24 — 97 RobertoBautista Agut(14), Spain, def. MariusCoG oldenState 22 17 24 27 — 9B pil, Romania7-5, , 6-3. 3-PointGoals—Memphis5-15 (Conley3-6, C.Lee Philipp Kohlschreiber,Germany, def. Alejandro 2-4, Allen0-1, Carter0-1, Udrih0-1,Je.Green0-2), FallarColombia,6-1, 6-4. GoldenState 6-26 (Iguodala2-2, Curry2-11, BarRichardGasquet, France,def. IvoKarlovic, Croatia, bosa1-2,Thom pson1-6, Barnes0-2, D.Green0-3). 6-3, 6-4. FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Memphis45(Carter, SecondRound Randolph7), GoldenState52 (Bogut, D.Green12). Milos Raonic(5), Canada, def. JuanMonaco, ArAssists —Memphis19 (Randolph 4),GoldenState16 gentina,6-3,6-4. (Curry6).TotalFouls—Memphis21, GoldenState18. StanWawrinka (8), Switzerland,def. JoaoSousa, Technical— s D.Green.A—19,596(19,596). Portugal7-6 , (I), 7-5.
LyonsfromMemphis (PCL). Optioned RHPSamTuivailala toMemphis. SANDI EGOPADRES— RecalledLHPFrankGarces fromElPaso(PCL). PlacedRHPBrandon Morrow on the15-dayDL,retroactive to May3. WASHING TONNATIONALS—Acquired OFDarin MastroiannifromPhiladelphia forcashconsiderations. BASKETB ALL Women'sNational Basketball Association NEW YORKLIBERTY — Named Isiah Thomas president. FOOTBALL
National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Announcedthe retirement of TE John Carlson. Agreedto termswith CB Cariel Brooks,OTRob Crisp, LBAlani Fua,WRTrevor Harman, LBEdwinJackson,LBAndraeKirk,RBPaul Lasike ,LBGabeMartin,WRDamondPowell,CBC.J. Roberts, WR Jaxon Shipley, TEGannon Sinclair, LB ZackWagenmann and NTXavier Wiliams. Released RB Zach Baumanand CBRocCarmichael. CAROLINAPANTHERS — Announced special teams coordinator BruceDeHaventook a leaveof absenceto dealwith healthconcerns. CHICAGO BEARS—Agreedtotermswith SAdrian AmosandRBJeremyLangfordto four-yearcontracts. KANSASCITYCHIEFS— WaivedJoJoDickson, LS JorgenHus, WRCorbin LouksandQBTerrell Pryor. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—SignedCBJustin Coleman, WR DaVaris Daniels, CTomFarniok, SAnthony Harris, QBTaylor Heinicke,WRJordan Leslie, WR GavinLutman, FBBlakeRenaud, GJesseSomsel and GBobbyVardaro. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— ReleasedCBAlfonzo Dennard,LSTyler Ott andLBDeontaeSkinner. SANDIEG OCHARGERS—ClaimedTEKyleMiler off waiversfromAtlanta. WaivedDTDamikScafe. SANFRANCISCO49ERS— SignedWRsDresAnderson,IssacBlakeney, DiAndreCampbell, DeAndrew WhiteandDarius Davis; OLPatrick Miler; DLMarcus Rush,QBDylanThompsonandSJermaineWhitehead. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — ReleasedG JustinRenfrow, DE Julius Warmsley, CJaredWheeler andFB MikeZimmer.WaivedLBMikeTaylor. COLLEGE NCAA—NamedJ.D. Collins coordinatorof men's basketbaloffi l ciating. IOWA —Announcedsophomore DBMalik Rucker is leaving thefootball program. MISSISSIPPI— Agreedto a four-year contract exte nsionwithmen'sbasketballcoachAndyKennedy through2019. TENNESSEE— Announced men' s basketballF Willie Carmichaelistransferring. TEXASTECH — Named Chad Weiberg deputy athleticsdirector.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updated Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 3,198 170 32 5 TheDalles 3,176 173 15 2 John Day 4,540 23 3 5 3 -I McNary 9,514 255 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 154,033 2,663 4,267 2,298 The Dalles 128,116 2,269 308 157 John Day 106,913 1,990 463 312
McNary 88,004 1,470 61 8
40 1
NBA ROUNDUP
Conley returns toleadGrizzlies overWarriors The Associated Press OAKLAND, Calif. — The masked man came to the rescue for the Memphis Grizzlies.
in the closing minutes, Conley came through again. He made a 3-pointer to give the Grizzlies a 90-80 lead with 2:11
left, silencing the sea of golden yellow Mike Conley returned just eight days shirts for good. after having facial surgery to score 22 During one timeout, the TNT broadpoints, and the Grizzlies used a smoth- cast caught teammate Tony Allen callering defensive effort to beat the Gold- ing Conley "One-Eyed Charlie." Conen State Warriors97-90 on 'DJesday ley, who had threeassists,cramped up night, evening the Western Conference and went to the bench briefly, but by semifinals 1-1. that point, his job had been done. "It felt like I played 50 minutes," ConCurry collected 19 points, six asley, who played 27 minutes, said with a sists and five rebounds but had little weary grin after the game. "I was a lia- help from backcourt teammate Klay bility on defense there for a while, but Thompson, who was smothered by Allen's aggressive play. The Warriors had my teammates lifted me up.e Wearing a clear mask to protect his 20 turnovers and shot just 41.9 percent, swollen face and red left eye, Conley including 23.1 percent from 3-point stole the spotlight from newly mint- range. The Grizzlies had 13 steals. "I thought we lost our poise tonight. ed MVP StephenCurry.He made his first four shots to get the Grizzlies go- We were in such a rush," Warriors ing, and his teammates did the rest on coach Steve Kerr said. defense.
) 4'rt
Golden State had not lost at home
Zach Randolph had 20 points and since a 113-111 overtime defeat to Chiseven rebounds, and Marc Gasol and cago on Jan. 27. The only other home Courtney Lee scored 15 points each
to help Memphis end Golden State's 21-game home-winning streak. The Warriors dropped to 42-3 this season
)
loss came to San Antonio on Nov. 11.
Also on Tuesday: Hawks 106, Wizards 90: ATLANTA
/
— DeMarre Carroll scored 22 points,
at rowdy Oracle Arena, losing for the Kyle Korverbounced back from a misfirst time at home in more than three erable first half and top-seeded Atlanta months and for th e f i rst t ime this held off Washington, taking advanpostseason. tage ofJohn Wall's absence to even the Game 3 is Saturday in Memphis. Eastern Conference semifinals at one When the Warriors started to rally game apiece.
Ben Margot/The Associated Press
Memphis forward Tony Allen (9) and guard Mike Conley react during the second half of Game 2 in
an NBA semifinal playoff gameagainst Golden State in Oakland, California. Conley had 22 points to lead the Grizzlies.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL uutandingS
YANKEES ROLL TOWIN
All TimesPDT
NewYork Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston Toronto
AMERICANLEAGUE East Oivision W L Pct GB 17 10 .630 14 12 13 13
13 12 14 15
17 17 14 9 9
9 10 13 14 16
CentralDivision W L
Kansas City Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland
West Division W L 18 9
Houston
LosAngeles Oakland Seattle Texas
12 15 12 16 11 16 10 16
.519 3
500 31/2
.481 4 .464 4'/r
Pct GB .654 .630 '/z .519 3'/r 391 6'/r .360 7r/r
NATIONALLEAGUE
NewYork Atlanta Miami Washington Philadelphia
17 10 13 14 13 14 13 15 10 18
CentralDivision W L
St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee
LosAngeles SanFrancisco SanDiego Colorado Arizona
Pct GB .630 .481 4 .481 4 .464 4r/r .357 7'/2
Pct GB
20 6 13 12 13 13 12 14 8 19
.769 .520 6'/r .500 7 .462 8 .296 12r/r
W L 17 9 14 13 14 14 11 13 10 14
Pct GB .654
West Division
/
.444 6 .429 6'/r .407 7 .385 7'/r
Tuesday'sGames N.Y.Yankees6,Toronto 3 N.Y.Mets3, Baltimore 2 Boston2, TampaBay0 Kansas City5, Cleveland3 Chicago WhiteSox5, Detroit 2 Oakland 2, Minnesota1 Texas 7, Houston1 LA. Angel5, s Seattle 4 Today'sGam es N.Y.Yankees (Sabathia0-4) at Toronto(Buehrle 3-2), 4:07 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez2-1) atN.Y.Mets (deGrom2-3), 4:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Colome 1-0) atBoston (Masterson2-0), 4;10 p.m. Cleveland (Carrasco3-2) atKansasCity(D.Duffy2-0), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Simon 4-1) atChicagoWhite Sox (Sale2-1), 5:10 p.m. Oakland(Kazmir 2-0) at Minnesota(Gibson2-2), 5:10 p.m. Texas(Lewis1-2)at Houston (Deduno0-0),5:10p.m. Seattle(Elias0-1)at L.A.Angels (C.Wilson1-2), 7;05 p.m. Thursday'sGames OaklandatMinnesota, 10:10a.m. ClevelandatKansasCity,11:10a.m. Detroit atChicagoWhite Sox,11:10 a.m. BaltimoreatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. TexasatTampaBay,4:10p.m. Houston at LA. Angels, 7:05p.m. East Division W L
), I/,- II~Et
lx
IP"
Pot GB .667
.519 3r/r .500 4
.458 5 .417 6
Tuesday'sGames
Cincinnati 7,Pittsburgh1 Miami 2, Washington1 N.Y.Mets3, Baltimore 2 Atlanta 9, Philadelphia0 L.A. Dodgers 8, Milwaukee2 St. Louis7,ChicagoCubs4 Arizona at Colorado, ppd., rain SanFrancisco6, San Diego0
Today'sGam es Miami (Koehle2-2) r at Washington (Scherzer 1-3), 10:05a.m. Arizona(Collmenter 2-3) atColorado(Matzek2-0), 12:10p.m.,1stgame San Diego(Kennedy1-1) at SanFrancisco (Heston 2-2),12:45p.m. Arizona (Ray0-0) at Colorado(Lyles 2-2), 3;40p.m., 2nd gam e Cincinnati (Leake1-1) at Pittsburgh (G.cole4-0), 4:05 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez2-1) atN.Y.Mets (deGrom2-3), 4;10 p.m. Philadelphia(Wiffiams2-1) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 1-0),4:10p.m. LA. Dodgers (Frias2-0) atMilwaukee(W.Peralta0-4), 5;10 p.m. ChicagoCubs(Lester 1-2)at St.Louis (Lynn1-2), 5:15 p.m. Thursday'sGames LA. DodgersatMilwaukee,10:40a.m. ChicagoCubsatSt. Louis,10:45 a.m. Cincinnatiat Pittsburgh,4:05p.m. SanDiegoatArizona, 6:40 p.m. Miami atSanFrancisco,7:15 p.m.
Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE
BATTING —AJones, Baltimore, .396; Ellsbury, NewYork,.358;Vogt,Oakland,.358; Jlglesias, Detroit, .354; Brantley,Cleveland,.351; Micabrera,Detroit, .351; Fielder,Texas, .350. RUNS —Donaldson, Toronto, 22;Trout, LosAngeles,22; Ellsbury,NewYork, 21; KMorales, Kansas City, 21;Travis,Toronto,20; Moustakas,Kansas City, 19; 7 tiedat18. RBI — Ncruz,Seattle, 26;Vogt,Oakland, 25;Travis, Toronto,23;HR amirez,Boston, 22; Teixeira, New York, 22;AJones,Baltimore, 21; KMorales,Kansas City,21. HITS — Altuve, Houston, 40;Ellsbury,NewYork, 38; Fielder,Texas, 36;AJones,Baltimore, 36;Ncruz, Seattle,35;Micabrera,Detroit,34; Donaldson,Toronto,33; Moustakas, KansasCity, 33. DOUBLE — SCano,Seattle,10; Cespedes,Detroit, 10; Longoria,Tampa Bay, 9; Pilar, Toronto,9; 8 tied al8. TRIPLEB —Orlando, Kansas City, 5; Fuld, Oakland,3;Bogaerts,Boston,2;Acabrera,TampaBay, 2; Hosmer,KansasCity, 2; Jlglesias, Detroit, 2; Kiermaier,Tamp a Bay, 2; Marisnick, Houston,2; BMiger, Seattle, 2;SSmith, Seatle, 2. HOME RUNS —Ncruz, Seattle, 14; HRamirez, Boston,10;Teixeira,NewYork,10; Travis,Toronto,7; Valbuena, Houston, 7;Vogt, Oakland, 7; 9tiedat 6.
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Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press
New York Yankees' Jacoby Ellsbury (22) and Brett Gardner celebrates after scoring off an Alex Rodriguez double against Toronto during Tuesday's game in Toronto. Ellsburry, of Madras, finished the night with three hits, two stolen bases and two runs scored in a 6-3 Yankees victory.
American League
Athletics 2,Twins1
Angels 5, Mariners 4
MINNEAPOLIS — JesseChavez struck out seven andallowed one ANAHEIM, Calif.— Carlos Perez unearned run in 7/s innings and capped his major leaguedebut Oakland snapped Minnesota's with a game-ending homer in the five-game streak with a ninth, and the LosAngeles Angels victory overwinning the Twins. Chavez snapped their four-game skid with a victory over Seattle. Erick Aybar (1-2) gave upfour hits and needed just 87 pitches for his first victory and Johnny Giavotella delivered of the season. RBI singles off DannyFarquhar to tie it in the eighth for the AnOakland Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi gels, who had blown aone-run 5 1 2 0 Dozier2b 4 0 1 1 lead earlier in the eighth. Perez, a Burnscf S emienss 3 0 1 0 TrHntrrf 4 0 2 0 24-year-old catcher from Venezue- Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 Mauer1b 4 0 1 0 BButlerdh 4 0 2 1 Plouffe3b 3 0 0 0 la, singled in his first major league Vogtc 3 1 0 0 KSuzukc 4 0 0 0 at-bat. He thenswung at the first I.Davis1b 4 0 1 0 Kvargsdh 4 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 4 0 1 1 EdEscrlf 3 0 0 0 pitch leading off the ninth from Canhalf 4 0 0 0 JSchafrcf 3 1 1 0 Dominic Leone (0-3), dropping it Fuldlf 0 0 0 0 DSantnss 3 0 0 0 Sogard 2b 4 0 2 0 into the bullpens beyondthe leftTotals 35 2 9 2 Totals 3 2 1 5 1 field fence. Perez is the first major Oakland 1 00 001 000 — 2 M innesota 0 0 0 0 0 0 010 — 1 leaguer to hit a walkoff homer in E — I. D a vi s (2). DP —Oakland 1, Minnesota1. his debut since Miguel Cabrera did LOB—Oakland8, Minnes ota5. SB—Burns(1). CSit for the Marlins in June 20, 2003.
Seattle
LosAngeles
ab r hbi ab r hbi S.Smithdh 5 0 0 0 Calhonrf 4 1 2 0 R uggincf 4 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 5 1 3 0 Puiols1b 3 2 2 2 N.cruzrf 4 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 1 1 1 Fthrstnpr-3b 0 1 0 0 Morrsn1b 3 2 3 0 Aybarss 4 0 1 1 Zuninoc 3 0 2 2 Giavtll2b 3 0 1 1 A ckleylf 3 0 0 1 Crondh 4 0 0 0 CTaylrss 4 0 0 0 C.Perezc 4 1 2 1 C owgilllf 2 0 0 0 Totals 35 4 9 4 Totals 3 1 5 8 5 Seattle 0 10 000 030 — 4 L os Angeles 20 0 0 00 021 — 6 No outswhenwinning runscored. DP — Seattle 1. LOB —Seattle 8, LosAngeles 6.
White Sox5, Tigers 2 CHICAGO — Jeff Samardzija pitched seveneffective innings, and the ChicagoWhite Sox snapped a five-game losing streak with a victory over Detroit. Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi G osecf 4 1 2 0 Eatoncf 4 1 1 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 2 1 MeCarrlf 2 1 0 0 Micarr1b 4 0 0 0 Abreu1b 3 1 1 1 VMrtnzdh 4 0 0 0 LaRochdh 2 0 0 1 J Mrtnzrf 4 0 0 0 AGarcirf 4 1 0 1 Cespdslf 3 0 0 0 Gillaspi3b 3 0 2 2 Avilac 4 1 2 1 GBckh3b 0 0 0 0 Cstff ns3b 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 3 0 0 0 R ominess 3 0 1 0 Sotoc 3010 RDavisph 1 0 0 0 MJhnsn2b 3 1 1 0 Totals 35 2 7 2 Totals 2 7 5 6 5 Detroit 1 10 000 000 — 2 Chicago 104 000 Ogx — 5 E—Soto (3), AI.Ram irez (4), M.Johnson (2). DP — Detroit 3, Chicago1.LOB —Detroit 7, Chicago 3. 2B —Eaton (4). 38—Gillaspie (1). HR—Avila (2). SB — Gose(5). CS—Gillaspie(1). Detroit
DodgersB, Brewers2
Braves 9, Phiiiies 0
MILWAUKEE — Zack Greinke allowed one unearned run on two hits in 7N innings to win his career-best10th consecutive decision and Justin Turner hit a three-run homer to pacethe Los Angeles Dodgers to avictory over Milwaukee. Greinke (5-0), who has not lost in 14 starts since Aug. 9 at Milwaukee, wonfor the fourth time this season following a Dodgers loss. Heallowed two singles, striking out sevenwith one walk to improve to 16-2 at Miller Park.
ATLANTA —Shelby Miller threw his third career shutout, Freddie Freeman andKelly Johnson hit homers to spoil ChadBillingsley's first start in more than two years, and Atlanta beat Philadelphia. Miller (4-1) allowed only three hits and one walk with eight strikeouts. He hasnot allowed more than two runs in any of his six starts.
Philadelphia Atlanta ab r hbi ab r hbi Revererf-cf 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 5 0 1 0 Galvisss 4 0 0 0 Ciriaco3b 0 0 0 0 Asche3b 4 0 0 0 ASmnsss 3 2 1 0 LosAngeles Milwaukee Howard1b 4 0 1 0 Fremn1b 4 3 3 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi 3 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 1 1 0 Pedrsncf 3 0 00 CGomzcf 4 0 0 0 Ruflf O Herrrcf 3 0 0 0 JGomslf 3 2 0 0 Roginsss 5 2 1 2 GParralf 4 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 KJhnsn3b-rf 3 1 2 4 H Kndrc2b 4 2 2 0 Braunrf 3 1 0 0 A Gnzlz1b 3 2 1 2 Lind1b 3 0 0 0 CHrndz2b 2 0 1 0 Petersn2b 4 0 2 1 Ruizc 3 0 0 0 Maybincf 4 0 2 1 JuTrnr3b 4 1 3 4 ArRmr3b 4 1 2 1 Ethierrf 5 0 0 0 Gennett2b 3 0 1 0 Blngslyp 1 0 0 0 SMillerp 3 0 0 0 ABlanc ph 1 0 0 0 Grandlc 4 0 1 0 JRogrsph 1 0 0 0 Arauiop 0 0 0 0 Guerrrlf 3 0 0 0 Segurass 3 0 0 0 McGwnp 0000 VnSlykff 1 0 00 Maldndc 3 0 0 0 Sizemrrf 1 0 1 0 Greinkp 4 1 1 0 Garzap 2 0 0 0 Baezp 0 0 0 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 0 3 0 Totals 3 3 9 128 P hiladelphia 00 0 000 000 — 0 Coulomp 0 0 0 0Cottsp 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 200 400 30x — 9 Jeffrssp 0 0 0 0 E—Asche(4), K.Johnson(2). DP—Philadelphia EHerrrph 0 0 0 0 3, Atlanta 1.LOB —Philadelphia 4, Atlanta 7. 28Blazek p 0 0 0 0 Howard(5). HR —Freeman(5), K.Johnson(6). S—S. WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Miller. Totals 3 6 8 9 8 Totals 3 02 3 1 IP H R E R BBBO LosAngeles OOO 003 401 — 8 M ilwaukee 0 1 0 0 0 0 001 — 2 Philadelphia 8 6 5 1 2 E—Pederson(1). DP—LosAngeles1. LOB—Los BigingsleyL,0-1 5 1 2 0 0 0 2 Angeles 7,Milwaukee4. 28—Grandal (5), Greinke Arauio 1-3 1 3 3 4 0 McGowan (1), Ar.Ram irez (5). HR—Roffins (3), A.Gonzalez(9), 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 De Fratus Ju.Turner(4). IP H R E R BBSO Atlanta S .Miller W4-1 9 3 0 0 1 8 LosAngeles —byDeFratus(A.Simmons). GreinkeW,5-0 7 2-3 2 1 0 2 7 HBP 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:23. A—14,451(49,586). Baez Coulombe 1 1 1 1 1 0 Milwaukee Marlins 2, Natioitals1 GarzaL,2-4 6 4 3 3 3 5 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 Wooten — Mat Latos and 2-3 2 3 3 2 1 WASHINGTON Cotts Jeffress 1 0 0 0 0 3 four relievers combined on a 2 -3 2 1 1 1 0 Blazek 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 three-hitter, and Miami beat SteW.Smith T—3;12.A—23,356 (41,900). phen Strasburg and Washington.
Giants 6, Padres0
Strasburg (2-3) left for a pinch hitter in the third inning after allowing two runs and throwing 64 pitches. His departure might have been due to an injury, because one inning earlier the righthander grimaced after throwing a pitch and was visited by the team trainer, pitching coach Steve McCatty and manager Matt Williams.
SAN FRANCISCO — Ryan Vogelsong threw seveninnings of three-hit ball, Joe Panik homered and San Francisco won its fifth consecuti vegame bybeatingSan Diego. Brandon Crawford had three hits and drove in arun for the Giants, who wontheir eighth IP H R E R BBBO straightat home andare agame Washington 22- 3 5 5 5 4 1 over.500 (14-13) for the first time Miami ab r hbi 3 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 since April10, the beginning of an D Gordn2bab5 0r hbi 1 0 Spancf 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 eight-game losing streak. Justin Prado3b 4 0 1 0 YEscor3b 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Maxwell and Matt Duffy, who had Stantonrf 4 0 1 0 Harper rf 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 3 0 0 0 Zmrmntb 3 1 0 0 7 2 2 1 7 two hits, also drove in runs. Bour1b 2 0 0 0 WRamsc 3 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1
Detroit GreeneL,3-2 A.Wilson Tor.Hunter(2). B.Hardy IP H R E R BBSO Nesbitt Oakland Chicago ChayezW,1-2 7 1 - 3 4 1 0 1 7 SamardziiaW,2-2 7 Scribner 0 1 0 0 0 0 DukeH,4 ClippardS,3-4 1 2 -3 0 0 0 0 2 RobertsonS,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Minnesota WP — Robertson. 52-3 5 2 2 2 3 T—2:37. A—16,351(40,615). May L,2-2 Duensing 1 4 0 0 0 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Tonkin A.Thompson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Rangers 7,Astros1 Pressly 1 0 0 0 0 Scribnerpitchedto1 batter inthe8th. HOUSTON —KyleBlankshadthree T—2:43.A—18,135 (39,021).
JBakerph-1b 1 0 0 0 Espinospr 0 0 0 0 Ban Diego Ban Francisco Realmtc 4 1 1 0 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ISuzukilf 4 1 2 1 Uggla2b 3 0 0 1 S pngnr2b 4 0 1 0 Aokilf 5 0 0 0 H chvrrss 3 0 0 0 MTaylrlf 3 0 0 0 Solarte1b 3 0 1 0 Panik2b 4 1 1 1 Latos p 2 0 0 0 Strasrg p 0 0 0 0 K emprf 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 3 1 1 0 Masset p 0 0 0 0 Fister ph 1 0 1 0 U ptonlf 3 0 1 0 Belt1b 2 2 1 0 D unnp 0 0 0 0 Solisp 1000 DeNrrsc 4 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 2 3 1 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Treinenp 0 0 0 0 Venalecf 4 0 0 0 GBlanccf 4 0 0 0 Brigncph 1 0 0 0 CRonsnph 1 0 0 0 hits, including ahomer,andCarlos Mdlrks3b 3 0 0 0 Maxwffrf 4 0 1 1 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 Amarstss 3 0 00 MDuff y3b 4 0 2 1 Peguero added two-run a shot to Barrettp 0 0 0 0 Red Sox2, Rays0 Cashnrp 2 0 0 0 Vglsngp 2 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 back up asolid start by WandyRoQcknshp 0 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 2 6 1 Totals 3 0 1 3 1 Gyorko ph 1 0 1 0 HSnchz ph 1 0 1 0 BOSTON — Mookie Bettshomdriguez asTexasbeat Houston. Miami 0 20 000 000 — 2 V incentp 0 0 0 0 Y.Petitp 0 0 0 0 W ashington 01 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 28 —Cano(10), Morrison2(3), Zunino(3). HR —Pu- ered to lead off the sixth inningTotals 3 1 0 4 0 Totals 3 2 6 104 E —Hecha v arri a (2), Strasburg (1). DP—Miami iols (5),C.Perez(1). SF—Ackley. Texas Houslori SanDiego OOO OOO 000 — 0 IP H R E R BBSO the first hit off Rays starter Drew 1. LOB —Miami 10, Washington 8. 28—W.Ramos ab r hbi ab r hbi — 6 San Francisco 023 010 Ogx Smyly — andadded another in the Choorf 5 1 1 0 Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 3). 38 — D.Gordon (2), Realmuto (2). SB—Stanton Seattle E—Upton (3), Solarte(4). DP—San Diego 1. Paxton 7 4 2 2 3 4 3). S —Latos. Andrus ss 3 2 2 0 Valuen 3b 4 1 1 1 victory LOB — Sa n D ieg o 6, San F r anc i s co 7. 28 — B elt (5), FarquharBS,2-2 1 3 2 2 1 0 eighth to lead Boston to a IP H R E R BBBO Fielderdh 4 0 1 2 Springrrf 3 0 0 0 B.crawford(4). HR—Panik (2). SB—Upton (4). Miami LeoneL,0-3 0 1 1 1 0 0 over TampaBay. B eltre3b 4 1 1 1 Villarlf 10 0 0 C S — G .B lanc o (1). S — V ogels ong. LatosW,1-3 61 - 3 2 1 1 5 6 LosAngeles Blanks1b 4 2 3 1 Gattisdh 4 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO MassetH,1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Richards 7 5 1 1 2 5 TampaBay Peguerlf 3 1 1 2 Carter1b 3 0 0 0 Boston San Diego 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Dunn H,4 J.SmithBS,2-2 1 - 3 4 3 3 0 0 Corprnc 3 0 1 1 MGnzlzss 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi CashnerL1-5 6 7 6 4 3 3 A.Ramos 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 K iermrcf 4 0 1 0 Bettscf 4 2 2 2 DShldscf 4 0 00 Mrsnckcf 3 0 0 0 H,3 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Salas Q uackenbush 1 1 0 0 1 1 CishekS,3-5 1 1 0 0 0 2 StreetW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 SouzJrrf 4 0 2 0 Pedroia2b 3 0 0 0 Odor2b 4 0 1 0 Jcastroc 3 0 1 0 Vincent 1 2 0 0 0 1 Washington Leonepitchedto1 batter inthe9th. Grssmnlf-rf 2 0 0 0 L oney 1b 4 0 0 0 Ortiz dh 4 0 1 0 Ban Francisco HBP —by Richards (Zunino). WP—Paxton,Richards Longori3b 4 0 1 0 Napoli1b 4 0 1 0 S trasburg L2-3 3 4 2 2 2 2 Totals 3 4 7 11 7 Totals 3 0 1 3 1 W,1-2 7 3 0 0 2 4 Solis 3 1 0 0 0 1 3. Texas 4 02 010 000 — 7 Vogelsong DeJessIf 4 0 2 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 0 Kontos 1 1 0 0 0 2 T—2:37. A—33,394(45,957). Treinen 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 00 000 000 — 1 F orsyth2b 4 0 1 0 Craiglf 2 0 1 0 Houston Y.Petit 1 0 0 0 0 2 Thornton 1 0 0 0 0 1 E—Springer(2).LOB—Texas3, Houston 3.28A carerss 4 0 0 0 B.Holtrf 3 0 0 0 T — 2: 2 5. A — 41,35 8 (41,91 5). Barrett 1 1 0 0 0 2 Choo(6), Fielder(8), Beltre(5),J.castro (4). HR JButlerdh 3 0 0 0 Bogartsss 2 0 0 0 Yankees 6,BlueJays3 HBP — by B arr et t (Prado), byStrasburg (Hechavarria). Blanks (3), Peg u ero (1), Val b u ena (7). SB —A ndru s BWilsnc 3 0 1 0 Swihartc 3 0 0 0 WP—Treinen. Totals 34 0 8 0 Totals 2 9 2 5 2 (4). CS—do Or(2). SF—Corporan. Cardinals 7, Cubs 4 T—3:07. A—25,332(41,341). TORONTO — Mark Teixeira hit a IP H R E R BBSO T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Texas Boston 000 001 01x — 2 two-run homer, Michael Pineda ST. LOUIS — Pi n ch-hitter Mark W .Rodri g uez W ,1-1 8 3 1 1 1 8 E—Smyly(1), Porcello(2). DP —Boston1. LOBInterleague matched his career high with 1 0 0 0 0 1 Reynolds doubled off the wall in TampaBay 7, Boston 6. 28—Ortiz (5). HR —Betts2 Sh.Tolleson Houston eight shutout innings and theNew (4). SB —DeJesus(1), Pedroia(1). center field to snap atie in the Mets 3, Orioies2 9 6 6 1 2 IP H R E R BBSO FeldmanL,2-3 3 York Yankeesbeat Toronto. Jaco- TampaBay K.chapm an 3 2 1 1 1 4 sixth inning and St. Louis rallied 2 0 0 0 0 3 from three runs down to beat NEW YORK — Bartolo Colon by Ellsbury, of Madras, had three SmylyL,0-1 6 2 1 1 2 6 Fields 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cedeno 1 1 0 0 1 0 Thatcher became the first pitcher in at least hits, stole two basesandscored the Chicago Cubs, their eighth Frieri 1 2 1 1 0 0 T—2:41. A—20,951(41,574). 100 years to beat the sameoppotwice as the ALEast leaders imBoston straight victory. Matt Carpenter PorceffoW3-2 7 8 0 0 0 6 nent with seven different teams, proved to 11-4 awayfrom home, of St. Louis tied the gamewith National League gandoH,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 stopping Baltimore onceagain the best road record in the league. O a three-run homer off Kyle HenUeharaS,5-6 1 0 0 0 0 0 Porcello. and leading the NewYork Mets Pineda (4-0) allowed five hits and WP — dricks in the fifth and finished Reds 7, Pirates1 T—2:26.A—33,688 (37,673). struck out six to win his fourth past the Orioles. Colon (5-1) took
straight road start, a streak that 3 began in Boston last September. Royals 5, indians The right-hander has road wins KANSASCITY,Mo. — Eric Hosover all four division opponents in mer hit a three-run homer, Jason that span. Vargas shut down the Indians for the second straight start, and KanNew York Toronto sas City went on to beatCleveland. ab r hbi ab r hbi
with four RBls. PITTSBURGH — Marion Byrd Chicago St. Louis homered anddrove in four runs, ab r hbi ab r hbi Todd Frazier belted his National F owlercf 3 0 0 0 Jaycf 3000 Rizzo1b 4 2 3 0 Mcrpnt3b 3 1 1 4 League-leading ninth home run Bryant3b 5 1 1 1 Hollidylf 5 0 3 0 and Cincinnati handled Pittsburgh. Solerrf 4 0 1 1 MAdms1b 3 0 0 0
a shutout into the eighth inning before Manny Machadohit a solo home run with one out. TheMets won after getting blanked1-0 in their previous two games.New York ended its scoreless streak at 21 innings whenDaniel Murphy hit an RBI single in athree-run fourth, and won for just the second time in seven games.
Scastross 5 0 1 2 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Lakelf 5 0 1 0 Soclvchp 0 0 0 0 Castilloc 4 0 1 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Ellsurycf 5 2 3 1 Travis2b 5 0 1 0 Hndrckp 2 0 0 0 JhPerltss 4 1 1 0 Gardnrlf 4 1 1 0 Dnldsn3b 4 0 0 0 Cleveland KansasCity Coghlnph 1 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 1 0 ARdrgzdh-3b5 0 1 2 RuMrtnc 4 1 3 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi NATIONALLEAGUE EJcksnp 0 0 0 0 Molinac 4 1 2 1 BATTING —DGordon, Miami, .422; LeMahieu, Teixeir1b 4 1 1 2 Encrncdh 4 0 1 0 Kipnis2b 4 0 1 0 AGordnlf 3 2 2 1 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 2 3 1 BMccnc 3 1 1 0 Smoak1b 4 0 0 0 CSantn1b 3 1 0 0 Mostks3b 4 0 0 0 D .Rossph 0 0 0 0 Lyonsp 1 0 0 0 Color ado,.392; AGonzalez, Los Angeles, .361; Brantlycf 3 1 1 2 KMorlsdh 3 1 0 0 Newyork Goldschmidt,Arizona,.356; Pagan, SanFrancisco, B eltranrf 4 0 0 0 Pigarcf 3 1 0 0 Cokep 0 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Baltimore Raburnlf 3 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 1 2 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi .350; Mcarpenter,St. Louis,.346; Holliday,St. Lou- C Youngrf 0 0 0 0 Colaelllf 4 1 2 1 ARussll2b 3 1 2 0 Bouriosph 0 1 0 0 Drew2b 4 0 2 0 Goinsss 4 0 1 1 DvMrpph 1 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 M achd3b 4 1 1 1 Grndrsrf 3 0 1 0 is,.345. MHarrsp 0 0 0 0 RUNS —Myers, SanDiego, 25; Mcarpenter, St. G regrsss 4 0 1 1 Carrerrf 2 0 0 0 Mossrf 4 0 1 0 Infante2b 3 0 0 0 Rynldsph-1b 2 0 1 1 Pareds2b 4 0 1 0 Lagarscf 4 0 0 0 Swisher dh 4 0 0 0 Orland rf 3 0 1 0 Louis ,23;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,23;Rizzo,Chi- G.Petit3b 4 1 1 0 Bautistph 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 4 104 Totals 3 3 7 127 AJonescf 4 0 1 0 Duda1b 4 1 1 0 Aviles ss 3 0 0 0 JDyson cf 2 1 1 0 C .Davis1b 4 1 2 1 Cuddyrlf 3 0 1 0 cago, 21;Freem an, Atlanta, 20; Frazier, Cincinnati, Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Chicago 0 01 030 000 — 4 AMiller p 0 0 0 0 Chsnhll3b 3 1 1 1 C.colonss 3 0 0 0 DYongrf 4 0 1 0 DnMrp3b 3 1 2 1 19; Goldschmidt,Arizona,19; Kemp,SanDiego,19; St. Louis 010 0 3 2 1 0x— 7 E — B ry ant (4), Lyons (1). DP — C hic ag o 3. L O B Upton,SanDiego,19. Totals 3 7 6 11 6 Totals 3 4 3 8 3 RPerezc 2 0 0 0 Josephc 4 0 0 0 Floresss 3 1 1 0 RBI — Stanton, Miami, 24;Goldschmidt, Arizona, N ew york 210 0 2 0 010 — 6 Bournph 1 0 0 0 Chicago11,St. Louis8. 28—Rizzo(5), Castillo (2), Sniderlf 4 0 1 0 Plawckc 3 0 1 2 22;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,22;Upton,SanDiego, Toronto 0 00 000 003 — 3 Hayesc 0 0 0 0 A.Russell 2(5), Jh.Peralta(7), Wong(5), Reynolds Ecarerss 3 0 0 0 DHerrr2b 3 0 0 0 E—Donaldson(4). DP—NewYork 1, Toronto Totals 31 3 4 3 Totals 2 9 5 6 5 21; McarpenteSt. r, Louis,20;Frazier, Cincinnati, 18; (4). HR —M.carpenter (5). S—Fowler. SF—Soler, BNorrsp 2 0 0 0 B.colonp 3 0 0 0 Marte,Pittsburgh,18;DanMurphy, NewYork,18. 1. LOB—Ne wYork 6, Toronto7. 28—G ardner (5), C leveland 200 0 0 0 010 — 3 M.carpenter. DeAzaph 1 0 0 0 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 HITS — DGordon, Miami, 46; Mcarpenter,St. A.Rodriguez(5),Travis(7), Ru.Martin 2(7), Colabello Kansas City 3 0 0 0 1 0 01x— 6 IP H R E R BBSO M atuszp 0 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 LOB —Cleveland 3, KansasCity 3. 28—Kipnis Marte(7).SB—Negron(1). CS—Votto(1). S—Pena. Louis ,36;Pagan,SanFrancisco,36;AGonzalez,Los (1). HR—T eixeira (10), Ru.Martin (6). SB—Elsbury Chicago Totals 34 2 7 2 Totals 2 93 7 3 Angeles,35;Kemp,SanDiego,33; Lagares,NewYork, 2 (11). (3). 38 —Hosmer(2), J.Dyson(1). HR —Brantley (2), IP H R E R BBBO Hendricks 5 6 4 4 2 1 B altimore 000 0 0 0 011 — 2 33; AokiSan , Francisco,32; Goldschmidt, Arizona,32; IP H R E R BBBO Chisenhall(2),Hosmer(4). S—J.Dyson. Cincinnati E.JacksonL1-1 2- 3 4 2 2 0 0 NewYork 0 0 3 0 0 Ogx— 3 11-3 2 1 1 0 0 DP — Baltimore1. LOB —Baltimore5,NewYork3. Votto, Cincinnati32. , New york IP H R E R BBBO Lorenzen W,1-1 6 3 1 1 3 4 J.Russell Duda (9), Flores(3), Plawecki (3). HR —MachaDOUBLES —Mcarpenter, St.Louis,14; Tulowitz- PinedaW,4-0 8 5 0 0 1 6 Cleveland Ju.DiazH,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Coke 1 0 0 0 0 1 2B — ki, Colorado,12;DeNorris, SanDiego,11; AGonzalez, D.carpenter 2 3- 3 3 3 1 0 SalazarL,3-1 7 5 4 4 0 9 CingraniH,3 1 0 0 0 1 0 St. Louis do (5),C.Davis (6). CS—Granderson(1). 2 -3 1 1 1 1 0 4 1-3 6 4 3 2 7 LosAngeles,10;Desmond,Washington,9;Duda,New D.carpenter 2-3 3 3 3 1 0 Hagadone A.chapm an 1 0 0 0 3 3 Lyons IP H R E R BBBO 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Pitlsburgh 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Baltimore York, 9;Freeman,Atlanta, 9; Lind, Milwaukee,9. A.Miller S,11-11 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Shaw Maness TRIPLES —Revere, Philadelphia, 3; Trumbo, Ari- Toronto KansasCity LockeL,2-2 7 7 4 4 2 5 M.HarrisW,1-0 1 1 0 0 0 1 B.Norris L1-3 7 7 3 3 1 4 11-3 2 0 0 1 1 Matusz zona, 3;14tied at2. EstradaL1-1 4 2 - 3 8 5 4 0 3 J.vargasW,3-1 6 2 2 2 2 5 J.Hughes 1 2 0 0 0 1 SiegristH,5 1 0 0 0 0 1 HOME RUNS—Frazier, Cincinnati, 9;AGonzalez, Francis 11-3 1 0 0 0 0 MadsonH,3 1 0 0 0 0 Bastardo 1 3 3 3 1 0 SocolovichH,1 2- 3 0 0 0 1 1 Newyork Los Angeles,9; Marte, Pittsburgh,7; Pederson, Los Delabar 1 0 0 0 1 0 K.HerreraH,4 1 1 1 1 0 1 Lorenzenpitchedto 2batters inthe7th. RosenthalS,9-10 1 1 0 0 0 1 B.colonW,5-1 7 2 -3 6 1 1 0 9 Angeles, 7;upton,SanDiego, 7; Votto, Cincinnati, Jenkins 2 2 1 1 1 2 W.DavisS,6-6 1 1 0 0 0 1 HBP —byLorenzen(N.Walker). HBP—byE.Jackson (Jay), byHendricks (Jay,Bour- C.TorresH,5 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 7; Arenado,Colorado, 6; Goldschmidt,Arizona,6; T—2:54. A—21,519(49,282). HBP —bySalazar(K.Morales). T—2;50. A—16,822(38,362). ios). WP —Lyons. FamiliaS,11-11 1 1 1 1 0 1 KJohnson, Atlanta,6; Stanton, Miami,6. T—2:26.A—29,099 (37,903). T—3;13.A—41,613(45,399). T—2:19. A—20,534(41,922).
Chainbreaker
Cincinnati Pitlsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi BHmltn cf 5 2 2 1 Polanc rf 5 0 0 0 Byrdlf 5 1 2 4 Cervellic 3 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 0 2 0 Mcctchcf 4 0 0 0 Frazier3b 5 1 2 1 NWalkr2b 3 0 1 0 P higips2b 4 1 2 0 Martelf 2 1 1 1 Brucerf 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz1b 3 0 1 0 Negronss 3 1 1 0 Kang3b 2 0 0 0 Pena c 3 0 0 0 Mercerss 3 0 0 0 Lornzn p 3 0 0 0 Locke p 2 0 0 0 J u.Diaz p 0 0 0 0 Hartph 10 0 0 Cingrn p 0 0 0 0 JHughs p 0 0 0 0 Mesorcph 0 1 0 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Achpmp 0 0 0 0 SRdrgzph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 7 126 Totals 2 9 1 3 1 Cincinnati 022 O OO 003 — 7 P itlsburgh 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 DP — Cincinnati1, Pittsburgh1.LOB—Cincinnati 6, Pittsburgh9. 28—Byrd(3). HR —Byrd(4), Frazier(9),
logged. Every year out here the trails always oftheold course,wecould seetheburned area tracks in the snow. change and there's always blowdown. You're stretch for miles toward the Cascade foothills. The Chainbreaker is race No. 4 in the OreContinued from C1 always fixing stuff, no matter what. I don't Warburton said he has taken about 15 bike gon Off Road Series. Other races in the series "Some people are going to love it, but some think it's that much more work than a normal rides through Skyline Forest and the race include the Sisters Stampede on May 24, and might complain," Warburton said. "The event, we've just had to get creative with how course over the last few months. He said he Pickett's Charge! near Bend on June 28. Chainbreaker course has always had hard to do it." has seen only a few other people on those — Reporter: 541-383-0318, sections like this, sections that are getting From a higher vantage point near a section rides, but hedid see lots of coyote and cougar mmorlcal@bendbulletirz.com
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
OI'm an Ou arS
Ruth
was more brown than white.
Few players hit home runs beContinued from C1 cause they could not get the The year before, the minor squishy ball to carry. Writers league Baltimore Orioles had gave Frank "Home Run" Baksold Ruth to Boston, and Babe er his nickname for hitting two
on July 6, 1933, at Comiskey Park in Chicago. Midway through the 1934 season, Ruth, the unfailingly positive player, found himself
split his time between the parent club and the minors with
in the 1911 World Series, but he
in a horrible situation. Accord-
had only 11 for the season. In his first full season in the big leagues, Ruth won 18 games and lost eight, batted
ing to his second wife, Claire, his poor fielding distressed
the Providence Grays. In his
run in the first All-Star game
Bulletin staff report gles matches but Bend swept Chandler Oliveira earned the four doubles contests to his 89th win, tying 2014 grad- earn the win. Redmond's T.J
Johnson and Whitney We-
first start of the 1915 season
ber. Jasmine Davalos accounted for the lone victory
uate Liam Hall as Summit's
for Mountain View, a 6-1, 6-1
against Philadelphia, Ruth had given up five runs before .315 in 92 at-bats, and hit four being pulled in the fifth in- home runs. Fifteen of his 29 ning. On April 26, Ruth pitched hits went for extra bases. well and gained a 9-2 win over the Athletics. Although not in the starting rotation, Ruth
Frommound to right field
mayed him, and Yankees manager Joe McCarthy enraged him. "He was unhappy away from the park," she wrote in 1959, "because he was so exhausted and w r acked
Ruth pitched his way to his
with pain he could barely eat."
again got the nod on May 6 in
profession's pinnacle in 1916
Class 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 2 contest. The White
the first of a four-game series
and 1917. The best left-hander
The Yankees released Ruth on Feb. 26, 1935. Yankees own-
in the major leagues, Ruth may have been simply the
match was at No. 3 doubles,
against New York. In 1913, the Yankees had begun renting the Giants' home, the Polo Grounds, when the
owner, Judge Emil Fuchs, had purists, his records for the two negotiated a deal. Once reNational League club was on years speak for themselves: leased, Babe would sign with the road. For the next 10 sea- 23-12, 1.75 ERA in 1916; and Boston as club vice president, sons, the two New York teams 24-13 and 2.01 the following assistant manager and partplayed in the period's most year. In 1917, Ruth completed time player. Boston fans still unorthodox major league ball- 35 of his 41 starts. liked the Babe, and Fuchs park. Although polo had never The move from the mound hoped to raise attendance by been played in the fourth ver- to the outfield took place slow- playing the 40-year-old susion of the stadium, it certainly ly over the 1918 and 1919 sea- perstar. Ruth soon cooled to couldhave accommodated a sons. The transition sped up the arrangementand by midmatch or even a track meet. In when he hit mammoth home May talked of retirement. But the giant, elongated "bathtub," runs or game-winning tri- Fuchs asked him to stay on for home plate lay at one end and ples. It slowed when Ruth the one last road trip. deep center field at the other. It pitcher won important games. E ighty years ag o t h i s was located hard by the Har- Ruth's fights with th e n ew month, on May 25, 1935,at lem River and 115 feet below Boston manager, Ed Barrow, Forbes Field in Pittsburgh the crest of Coogan's Bluff. over regular pitching starts against the Pirates, Ruth enRuth held t h e Y a n kees hindered the move. Injuries joyed one grand and glorious scoreless for two innings and to the rest of Boston's rotation day at the ballpark. He hit his came to bat for the first time in the third. He faced Yankee
also i nterfered. U l t imately,
Smith and Dakotah Schmidt
all-time boys tennis wins leader, as the Storm swept
won at the No. 1 and 4 singles decision over Emily Parlan positions, while Nick Camp- at No. 4 singles. Special District I rival Moun- bell and Jaden Boehme won Cascade 8, Madras 0: tain View at home 'Ibesday, the No. 2 and 3 singles match- T URNER — M a dras w a s 8-0. es for Bend. Max F errins swept by Cascade in the O liveira an d
t h e o t h er and Will Ainsworth won the
three Summit singles play- closest doubles match of the ers (Carter Quigley, Thomas day, beating Kyle Hyte and Buffaloes' most competitive Wimberly and Peter Ruth-
Stephen Keosteopoulous 3-6,
erford) all won their match- 6-3, (10-6). es by scores of 6-0, 6-0. The Cascade 6, Madras 2: matches, but the Cougars put up more of a fight, as Adi
where Jessica Alavez and Jazmine Ike-Lopez pushed MADRAS — M a dras was for two tiebreakers, 6-7(4-7), able to steal a win in singles 6-7(4-7). and doubles in the Class
Wolfenden and Austin Pfeifer
4A/3A/2A/IA District 2 con-
Storm also swept the doubles
Baseball
won five games against even- test. Matt Marcotte won at Irrigon 12, Cuiver 11: IRRItual winners Hudson Mickel No. 2 singles 6-1, 6-3 for the GON — Culver scored seven and Josh Maitre. Mountain
White Buffaloes. Marcotte's
View's Ben Wenndorf and
teammates, Joseph Calica
John Pfister also won five
and Oved Felix, won atNo. 3 doubles, 6-4, 6-0.
runs in the top of the first
inning but could not make the lead stand in a Class games but fell to Nick Ber2A-IA nonleague loss. Joe ning and Cole Younger 6-2, Daugherty and Jack Beeler Girls tennis 6-3. both had three hits and two The Storm are now 17-2 Bend 8, Redmond 0: Bend RBIs for the Bulldogs, who overall in dual matches with swept Redmond in singles led 11-3 after 3/~ innings bejust the district an d state and doubles matches, all hind starting pitcher Adam tournaments remaining. The in straight sets, to earn the Knepp. Knepp struck out Storm went 15-0 against 5A Class 5A n o nconferencefive and allowed four hits opponents and 6-0 against team victory. Sierra Winch and one earned run in three fellow members of Special picked up a win at No. 1 sin- innings of work. The host District 1. gles, 6-0, 6-0, while Jesse Knights won it on a basAlso on Tuesday: Vezo won 6-0, 6-0 at No. 2 es-loaded single with no outs singles for the Lava Bears.
Boys tennis
in the bottom of the seventh. Mack Little added two hits
Nicole Garcia put up the bigSisters 4, Klamath Union 4 gest fight for the Panthers, and an RBI for the Hawks (5(Sisters wins in tiebreaker): falling 6-2, 6-2 at No. 4 sin- 13 overall). SISTERS — J osh K i ssiar gles. Sydney Meeuwssen and Harrisburg 11, La Pine 1: and doubles partners An- Lauren Handley led Bend HARRISBURG — La Pine drew Stengel and Gus Gyor- in doubles with their 6-0,6-0 suffered its fifth M ountain gyfalvy lost their matches win in the No. 1 slot. Mak- Valley Conference loss in a but won a crucial set each to enna Leighty and Jordan five-inning setback to Harrisgive the Outlaws the 10-8 ad- Holmes posed a challenge at burg. Ben Plant had the lone vantage in sets won. Sisters No. 3 doubles for Redmond, hit for the visiting Hawks (3-5 singles players Colin Reinert losing 6-2, 6-1. MVC, 7-10 overall). and Jonny Gurney won their Summit 7, Mountain View1: matches by identical scores The visiting Storm won sev- Softball of 7-6 (7-5), 6-3, while Ben en matches in straight sets Harrisburg 10, La Pine 0: Johnson and Gabe Willitts
did double duty by playing and winning two doubles matches against Union.
en route to the Class 5A Special District 1 team victory.
Summit's Autumn Layden
K l amath won 6-0, 6-0 o ver
Bend 6, Redmond 2: REDMOND — The Lava Bears and Panthers split four sin-
HARRISBURG — Brittany
Ensley tossed a five-inning no-hitter to shut out visiting
O l ivia La Pine. Brenna Carpenter
Webb at No. 1 singles, and got the start for the Hawks in No. I doubles, the Storm's (0-8 Mountain Valley ConferBrooke Finley and Brenna ence, 3-15 overall) and gave Roy won 6-0, 6-4 over Chloe up 18 hits.
PREP SCOREBOARD Girls tennis Class5A Special Dislrict1 Summit 7, Mountain View1 At MountainView Singles — AutumnLayden, S, def. Olivia Webb, MV,6-0,6-0;SienaGinsburg,S,def.Hannah Schiffman, MV,6-0, 6-1;DanieleAxten, S,def. AlexiOverland,MII 6-1, 6-0;JasmineDavalos,MV, det Emily Parlan,S,6-1, 6-1. Doubles—Brooke Finley/Brenna Roy, S, def. ChloeJohnson/Whitney Weber ,MV,6-0,6-4;SonjaKinney/SabrynaAdrianson, S,def.JamieMcCool/Faith Holm,MV,6-4,6-0; Luciana Pabon/Eleni Harrington,S, det Christine Vejhurai/CelineKuang, MV,6-0, 6-0; Caitlin Nichols/CarolineNichols, S,def. AngieVasquez/Kelsey Leighton,MV,6-1,6-2. Special Dislrict 2 Cascade 8,Madras0 At Cascade Singles —SarahTeubner, C,def.Jessica Gonzalez, u, 7-6(7-3),6-1;Jackycruz, c, def.Tiffany Figueroa,u, 6-3, 6-1;GraceMoul, c, def.Karen Correa, M,6-2, 6-1; EricaMitchell, C, det Thalia Olivera, u, 6-2, 6-0. Doubles—Elizabethsuelzle/ Andrea Wood,C,def.Sophie Gemelas/Jenni Young, u,6-3,6-1;Alix Biddington/LaurenHadley, C, def. Melissa Olivera/Stephanie Olivera, M, 6-0, 6-1; HannahPruett/Skylar Gross,C, def.Jessica Alavez/Jazm ine Ike-Lopez, u, 7-6(7-4), 7-6(7-4); Torri Lewis/AbbiPerth, C,def. DaniSchmaltz/Tyra Thomas,M,6-3,6-2. Nonconference Bend 8,Redmond0 At Bend Singles — SierraWinch,6, def.JessicaBrunot, R, 6-0, 6-0;JesseVezo, B, def. BekahDevelter, R, 6-0, 6-0;GracePerkins, B,def. Kali Davis,R,6-2, 6-0; JessieJohnson, B,def. NicoleGarcia, R,6-2, 6-2.Doubles— SydneyMeeuwssen/LaurenHandley, B,def.Marixa Gonzalez/JessicaToledo,R,6-0, 6-0; KylaCollier/RubyLadkin, 6, det YaneliBrambila/IIIIalloryHanson,R,6-0, 6-0; IIIIarilu IIIIorris/Ja-
neaSchaumloeff el,B,def.MakennaLeighty/Jordan Holmes, R,6-2, 6-1; AlexisBenitez/Susie Garcia, B, det SkylarJardine/AshleyGreen,R,6-1, 6-0.
Boys tennis Class SA Special District1 Summit 8, MountainView0 At Summit Singles —ChandlerOliveira, S, def. Grant Miller, MV,6-0, 6-0; CarterQuigley, S,def. Kaedan Wodke,MV,6-0,6-0; ThomasWimberly,S,det Connor Davenport,MV,6-0, 6-0;Peter Rutherford,S,def. BradyBeck,MV,6-0, 6-0. Ooubles— LoganHausler/DaniePi l no,S,def. DerekMiler/Brooks Larraneta, MV, 6-1, 6-2;HudsonMickel/Josh Maitre, S,def. Adi Wolfenden /Austin Pfeifer,MV,6-3,6-2; Jonathan Wimberly/AndyJones, S, dtt SheaBooster/Wyat Baldwin,MV,6-0, 6-1; NickBeming/Cole Younger, S, def.BenWenndorf/John Pfister, MV,6-2, 6-3. Nonconterence Bend 6,Redmond2 At Redmond Singles — TJ. Smith, R,SeanHebert, B,5-7, 6-3, (10-3);NickCampbell, B,det BlaineBiondi, R, 7-5, 6-0;JadenBoehme,B,def.NoahFitzsimmons, 4-6, 6-2, (10-8); Dakotah Schmidt, R, def. Miles Herman, B,6-3,6-3. Doubles—MaxFerrins/Wil Ainsworth, B,def. KyleHyte/StephenKeosteopoulous,R,36,6 3,(106); ZachHite/JasperLadkin, B, def. Conner Lennie/Carlos Jauregui, R,6-0,6-2; Michael Martin/DamonGeorge,B,def.Sam Husband/ EzraPost,6-3,6-0;NickEdmunds/RyanMurphy,B, det Brennen Biondi/Mario Nanota, 7-6(7-3),6-2. Special District2 Cascade6, Madras2 At Madras Singles —SunnyThao, C,det JacobRudd, M, 6-3,6-4; MattMarcotte, u, def.peytonHunt, c, 6-1, 6-3;ManuelFranco,C,def.Jeremy Burgos,M, 6-1, 6-2;chris Lasneski, c, def.RyanLeRiche,u, 6-2, 7-6(10-8).Doubles —NicFarr/JakeNelson, C, def.JeredPichette/ObieEriza, M, 6-2, 7-6(7-3);
Pacquiao
AustinScherrer/DanielSuelzle, C,def. Omar DominUez/ SimonSangha,M,6-3,6-4;JosephCalica/ ved Felix,M,def.J.D. Remy/AdolfoGarcia, C,6-4, 6-0; MichaelBiddington/SamAnthony,C,def. Deon Culpus/SaulJimenez, M,4-6, 6-1, 6-1. Class4A/3A/2AftA Special District 3 sisters 4, KlamathUnion4 Isisters won by sets in tiebreaker,10-8) At Sisters Singles — ColinReinert, S,def. HaydenLam, 7-6(7-5),6-3;GoDosek,KU,detMichaelCommins, S,6-4,6-4;JonnyGurney,S,def.DavidMarsden, KU,7-6(7-5), 6-3; JuanCamacho, KU,def. JoshKissiar,S,7-5,2-6, (10-7). Doubles — GregPinkston/JoshCarringer, KU, detEthanStengel /ShawnHorton,S,6-2,6-2;Ben Johnson/Gabe Willitts, S, def. ConnorSchaab/Bily Bigger,KU,7-5,6-1; BenJohnson/GabeWillitts, S, detMichaelFerns/Adam Rooney,6-2,6-2;Matt Osgood/NicMaurer,KU,def. AndrewStengel/Gus Gyorgyfalvy, S,2-6, 6-1,(10-8).
Baseball Class 3A Mountain ValleyConference (5 ianings) La Pine 1 0000 — 1 1 7 Harrisburg 25 0 13 — 11 9 2 Class 2A/1A IIonleague
711 200 0 — 11 14 5 210 530 1 — 12 11 7
Culver Irrigon
Softball Class 3A MountainValleyConference (5 innings) LaPine 0 0000 — 0 0 6 Harrisburg 0 4 0 33 — 10 18 0
the team. Called Chief be-
third, Ruth faced Guy Bush
and hit number 713, which barely cleared the right field
1918 season, fence, and followed with an
Sox clinched the pennant on
Aug. 30. (World War I and legged Ruth came to the plate. a threat to draft ballplayers Bush was still on the mound,
two hits in the first inning, started Ruth with a low fast-
forced a short season, which
rose to their feet as the soreand the Pirates led 7-5. Bush
ended on Labor Day.) Boston said later, "I'm going to throw won the World Series against three fastballs right by that guy
ball, perhaps hoping the big fella might be taking. Babe the Cubs, 4-2. Ruth won two wheeled on the pitch, sending of the games and extended his it high into the second level World Series scorelessstreak, of the right-field grandstand. one carriedover from the 1916 Babe Ruth had hit his first ma- Series, to a record 29 2/3 conjor league home run. secutive innings. It was not
and see what this crowdwill do
and get my laugh on him." Babe took the first strike,
but on the second pitch he took his customary full bore, uppercut swing. "I never saw The New York Times reuntil 1961 that the Yankees' a ball hit so hard before or ported Ruth that homered W hitey Ford broke thisrecord. since," Bush said. Ruth hit the with "no apparent effort." The Babe staggered baseball ball over the upper deck of the writer Damon Runyon, cov- during the 1919 season when stands in right field. Number ering baseball for the New he broke the major league 714. No one had ever hit a ball York American, gave his take: home run record for a single that far in Forbes Field. "Ruth knocked the slant out "So when he rounds third season — Ned Williamson's 27 of one of Jack Warhop's un- in 1884. On Sept. 24, Babe hit base," Bush recalled, "I just derhanded subterfuges." Babe the record-breaking 28th out look over there at him and he pitched into the 13th inning of the Polo Grounds. The New kind of looked at me. I tipped and lost the game when he York Times reported the "Co- my cap just to say, 'I've seen gave up an RBI single for the lossus of Rhodes catapulted the everything now, Babe.' He just game-winner. pill for a new altitude and dis- looked at me and kind of salutAnother homer on July 21 tance record." Ruth hit his 29th ed and smiled, and that's the garnered national a ttention
and last home run of the sea-
last home run he ever hit."
for the young pitcher-hitter. son in Washington on Sept. 27. Against the St. Louis Browns, Three months later, Frazee
Ruth left the Braves on June 2. Except for a brief and un-
he hit one that deared the right-
productive stint as the Brook-
sold Ruth to the Yankees for
field bleachers in Sportsman's $100,000 cash and a $300,000 lyn Dodgers' first-base coach Park, bounced on the sidewalk loan from Colonel Jacob Rup- in 1938, Ruth sat by the phone across Grand Boulevard, and pert, one of the Yankees' own- and waited for a manager's job then broke a window of a car ers. Ruppert and his partner, thathe had long coveted.None dealership. Certainly a Ruth- Colonel T. L. Huston, bought came. When minor league ian home run, writers estimat- Ruth because they wanted to positions opened up, Ruth emed it carried about 415 feet. turn the perennial doormat phatically declined, "I ain't no Until then, reporters never Yankees into a winning team. busher!" wrote about "tape measure"
When they asked their man-
home runs because major league teams played "scient ific" o r "inside" baseball. Managers played percentages and prized a run produced by timely singles, stolen bases and sacrifice flies.
ager, Miller Huggins, what he amyotrophic lateral scleroneededtocontend forthe 1920 sis, Ruth appeared at the Lou pennant, he answered, "Get Gehrig Appreciation Day on me Babe Ruth."
Once the deal was done, both the owners and Huggins decided immediately to cease Ruth's pitching career. "I will Historians called the time the "dead ball era." Umpires play Ruth in right or left field," kept the same ball in play for Huggins later told the press, the entire game, a practice "probably in right." made easier because so few home runs were hit then. Con- The Babe's last home run tinued use made the ball soft, On aging legs, Ruth strugand many pitchers loaded it gled through his last two seawith dirt and tobacco juice. sons with New York, 1933-34. By the middle innings, the ball His only highlight was a home
asked if it was OK for their fighter to
get a shot to deaden the pain in his shoulder.
was done on the shoulder during training would give him the opoften enter the ring not 100 percent portunity to use the right hand. He because in boxing it is an unwritten deals with the injury and thinks he rule that the fight must go on. conquered it and it was re-injured But this was different. This was again. Happens in football and evthe richest fight ever, a boxing ery sport."
the first inning, career number 712, off Red Lucas. In the
batsmen, 114. Warhop, who had yielded
are another matter. They knew their
of the fight. "We felt the work that
During th e
fourth home run of the year in
Yankees' career record for hit
fighter was damaged goods, but Yet the fight went on. No one out- they sent him into the ring anyway. side the Pacquiao camp knew until The stakes were too high. The two hours before the fight, when money was too big. The richest fight his handlers unsuccessfully sought ever had to go on. "Athletes always fight hurt," propermission from Nevada boxing officials for a shot of Toradol, an an- moter Bob Arum said on the night pain. Fighters are tough guys. They
tional League Boston Braves'
cause his name sounded like Ruth played every day and RBI single in the fifth. "war whoop," he still holds the pitched regularly, and the Red In the seventh, 10,000 fans
officials, not even when specifically asked on the form filled out by Pacquiao just before the weigh-in. They were blindsided when, just before the fight, Pacquiao's handlers
ti-inflammatory used to treat acute
er Ruppert, Ruth and the Na-
best all together. To baseball
Barrow, who had a piece of starter Jack "Chief" Warhop. the gate money, joined Boston A submarine-throwing right- owner Harry Frazee in recoghander, Warhop was in his nizing the increased revenue eighth and last season with when Ruth was in the lineup.
mission form asking him if he had a shoulder injury. He had the weight of an entire country on his shoulders, and he badly wanted to fight. The peoplearound him, though,
Continued from C1 His shoulder had been injured in training. Injured so badly that Pacquiao will undergo surgery this week for a rotator cuff tear.
him, sitting on the bench dis-
By then it was too late. Allowing
the shot without knowing exactly what the injury was would have put Mayweather at a disadvantage, at
the very least. "They had plenty of time to disclose it," said Bob Bennett, execu-
tive director of the Nevada Athletic Commission. The lack of disclosure will probably mean a fine, and possibly a suspension for Pacquiao. He can afford both, with a payday that figmatch so big that the fighters were Turns out there was a r e ason ures to exceed $100 million and a getting paydays that rivaled the trainer Freddie Roach closed spar- lengthy recovery time from shoulgross domestic product of some de- ring sessions a month before the der surgery. veloping countries. fight. Nothing to see but a oneStill, Nevada boxing regulators This was a fight so hugely antic- armed fighter getting ready to fight need to do something. They thought ipated that it demanded the best of the best fighter of his generation. they had done everything possible both fighters. The problem for Pacquiao's camp to ensure a fair fight, but ended up "I wantedto be more aggressive was not in keeping Mayweather in being snookered instead. but it was hard for me to fight (with the dark about the injury. That is But it might give them some conone hand)," Pacquiao said. fair game in boxing, where there is fidence that the next time they are It is hard to blame Pacquiao, even little advantage in letting an oppo- asked to dig deep into their wallets if he lied a day before the fight when nent know about any weakness. they can do so with confidence that he checked the "no" box on a comBut no one told Nevada boxing they are getting what they paid for.
After Lou Gehrig fell ill with
July 4, 1939, at Yankee Sta-
dium. Their relationship had waned years before, but on this occasion, Babe gave Lou a big hug at home plate. In 1946, doctors diagnosed Ruth's head and neck pains as throat cancer. An operation
helped, but his health began a slow decline. The Yankees honored him with Babe Ruth Day on April 27, 1947.
On Aug. 16, 1948, Babe Ruth died.
Suit filedagainstPacpuiaofor notdisclosinginjury LAS VEGAS— Manny Pacquiao and his handlers have beenhit with a lawsuit asking for damagesfor anyone who paid to watch hIs fight with Floyd Mayweather Jr. because hefailed to disclose his shoulder was injured. The suit was filed Tuesday in federal court in LasVegas on behalf of two plaintiffs, identified as StaphaneVaneland Kami Rahbaran. It alleges that the two weredefrauded after paying to watch the fight, and seeks class action status on behalf of anyonewho bought tickets, pay-per-view or bet on the fight.
The suit comes asNevadaboxing regulators are looking into possible disciplinary action against Pacquiao for failing to disclose the injury suffered in training for the fight. Pacquiao, whowould go on to lose aunanimous decision, is expected to Undergo surgery this weekfor a rotator cuff tear. In particular, members of the Nevada Athletic Commission want to know why Pacquiao checked "no" when filling out a state form the daybefore the fight that asked whether hehad ashoulder injury. "Our job is to protect the health andsafety of fighters and the integrity of the sport," commission chairman Francisco AgUilar said. "Weexpect our fighters to be forthright."
Pacquiao's promoter, BobArum, said earlier the injury suffered four weeks before the fight appeared to havesufficiently healed, but Pacquiao's handlers still unsuccessfully sought to get a pain-killing shot in the shoulder in the dressing room before the fight. Pacquiao said he reinjured the shoulder in the fourth round when helanded his best punches of the nIght agaInst Mayweather. Meanwhile, Mayweather said in atext to ESPNpersonality Stephen A. Smith that he would welcome arematch with Pacquiao. "I will fIght him In ayear after his surgery," the text read. — The Associated Press
C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sonday's Businesssection.
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S&P500
N ASDAQ ~ 7 7 50 4,939.33
10 YR TNOTE 2.18%
+
2,089.46
Todap
GOLD
+
i)3
$1,193.20
58$P 500
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Better quarter?
2 1 00 .
Whole Foods Market reports its second-quarter results today. Financial analysts predict the grocery chain's earnings and revenue increased versus the same quarter last year. Whole Foods has been trying to push its more affordable store brands in a bid to keep customers amid growing competition in the market for organic and natural foods.
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NYSE NASD
Vol. (In mil.) 3,720 1,993 Pvs. Volume 3,021 1,628 Advanced 6 40 6 7 1 Declined 2496 2079 New Highs 47 42 New Lows 56 71
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The latest data on mortgage applications should provide insight into how demand isshaping up during the springhomebuying season. The Mortgage Bankers Association's weekly survey of home loan applications has been mixed in recent weeks after jumping sharply in mid-May. Average long-term U.S. mortgage rates rose slightly last week, but remain near historic lows. The MBA releases its latest report on weekly home loan applications today. Mortgage applications survey seasonally adjusted percent change 9.5
8% 4.6 2.3
est
-2.3
-2.3
-4
3/20 3/27 4/ 3
4 / 1 0 4/17 4/24
Week ending source: Factset
Gaming rough patch?
16,800
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. %CHG. WK MO 18086.01 17905.71 17928.20 -142.20 -0.79% DOW Trans. 8737.64 8602.85 8606.47 -144.17 -1.65% DOW Util. 592.78 579.21 580.68 -13.39 -2.25% NYSE Comp. «180.21 «039.97 «049.35 -123.93 -1.«% L NASDAQ 5008.27 4934.34 4939.33 -77.60 -1.55% S&P 500 2«5.22 2088.46 2089.46 -25.03 -1.18% S&P 400 1521.75 1497.67 1500.00 -19.46 -1.28% Wilshire 5000 22325.31 22028.75 22045.38 -268.52 -1.20% Russell 2000 1234.04 12«.78 1215.42 -17.80 -1.44%
QTR YTD +0.59% -5.84% T T -6.05% +1.94% +4.29% L +1 .48% +3.27% +1.73% +0.89%
D J F M A 52-week range $16.D1 ~ $23 .2D
Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 62. 9 7 - 1 .56 - 2.4 T L Avista Corp A VA 30.35 ~ 38.34 3 2. 1 8 -.77 -2.3 T T Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 1 6. 3 5 -.09 -0.5 L L Barrett Business B BS I 18 . 25 ~ 63.45 44. 9 8 +. 8 1 + 1.8 L L Boeing Co BA «6 . 32 ~ 1 58.8 3 14 2.91 -1.11 -0.8 T T — $yCascade Baacorp C ACB 4 .« 5 .65 4 . 7 4 -.06 -1.3 T T L ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.5 4 29.64 - .25 -0.9 T ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 6 4.9 2 56.65 +.02 ... T T Costco Wholesale CO ST «1.61 ~ 156.8 5 14 4.50 -1.25 -0.9 T T Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 $y 17.89 12 .97 -.11 -0.8 T T FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 36.36 3 1. 2 6 - .26 -0. 8 L Hewlett Packard H PQ 31. 00 ~ 41.10 3 3.1 6 - .49 -1.5 T L Intel Corp I NTC 25.74 ~ 37.90 3 2. 6 4 -.55 -1.7 T L Keycorp KEY «.55 — 0 14.74 14 .65 + . 0 2 + 0 .1 L L Kroger Co K R 4 5 .31 ~ 77.74 6 8. 2 1 -1.80 -2.6 T T Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ 8.58 6.23 +. 0 4 + 0.6 L L LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 17.76 17. 1 8 +. 8 8 +5.4 L L MDU Resources MOU 20 . 01 o — 36.0 5 20 . 93 - 1.24-5.6 T T MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 5.4 3 23.55 -.36 -1.5 T T Microsoft Corp MSFT 38.51 ~ 50.0 5 4 7. 6 0 -.64 -1.3 T L Nike Ioc B NKE 71.53 ~ 103. 7 9 16 0.42 -.41 -0.4 T L Nordstrom Ioc J WN 60.20 ~ 83.16 7 5. 4 3 -.61 -0.8 T T Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.81 ~ 52.57 45.1 8 - 1 . 09 - 2 .4 T T L PaccarIoc PCAR 55.34 ~ 71.1 5 6 5. 1 3 -.93 -1.4 T Planar Systms P LNR 1.95 ~ 9.17 5.91 -.11 -1.8 T T Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 4 1. 8 7 -.30 -0.7 T T T Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 26 8.11 -.70 -0.3 T Schoitzer Steel S CHN 1 5 .06 ~ 28.44 17. 2 6 +. 1 0 +0.6 L L Sherwin Wms SHW 195.85 ~ 292. 5 1 27 4.93 -5.11 -1.8 T T StaocorpFocl SFG 57.87 — 0 73.97 72 .80 -.34 -0.5 L L StarbocksCp SBUX 34.57 ~ 52.0 9 4 9. 4 1 -.88 -1.8 T L T UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.3 9 16.92 -.13 -0.8 L US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 3. 2 5 -.29 -0.7 L T WashingtonFedl WA F O 19.52 ~ 2 3.4 3 21.71 -.11 -0.5 L L WellsFargo & Co WFC 46.44 — o 56.29 55 .72 -.01 . . . L L Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 9 .76 ~ 37.04 3 1.1 2 -.47 -1.5 T T
Marhetsummary Most Active NAME
VOL (BOs)
BkofAm S&P500ETF PlasmaTch Vale SA CSVLgCrde Petrobras iShR2K Microsoft Apple Inc s IShJapao
1039037 1027629 604491 575455 519489 506753 498565 490879 481921 459130
LAST CHG 16.35 -.09 208.90 -2.42
5.97 +3.«
8.80 3.85 10.19 120.85 47.60 125.80 12.83
+.77 + .25 +.41 -1.56 -.64 -2.90 -.25
Gainers NAME
PlasmaTch PlasmaTwt GolLNGLtd Nautilus IgniteRest ChuysHldg TobiraTh rs RetailMNot CnEIBras pf Abiomed
LAST 5.97 2.63 45.01 20.47 4.22 26.06 12.72 20.09 3.33 75.47
CHG %CHG +3.« + 1 08.7 +1.28 + 94.8
+7.37 +3.26 +.65 +3.91 +1.83 +2.88 +.46 $-10.33
+ 1 9.6 + 1 8.9 + 1 8.2 + 17.7 + 1 6.8 + 1 6.7 + 1 6.0 + 15.9
Losers NAME
Qualys AcelRx InterCloud Nationstar ModSys
L AST C H G %CHG -18.05 -32.8 37.03 3.04 -1.17 -27.7 -1.07 -26.1 3.03 19.51 -6.66 -25.4 -.55 -19.0 2.35
Foreign Markets NAME
LAST Paris 4,974.07 London 6,927.58 Frankfurt «,327.68 Hong Kong27,755.54 Mexico 45,091.33 Milan 22,576.35 Tokyo 19,531.63 Stockholm 1,595.48 Sydney 5,81 6.20 Zurich 9,024.38
CHG %CHG -1 07.90 -2.12 -58.37 -.84 -292.17 -2.51 -368.28 -1.31 -1 47.14 -.33 -640.82 -2.76
M A 52-week range $3.40~ $ 6.72
Vol.:2.7m (2.1x avg.) P E: .. . Vol.:823.1k (4.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$79.9b Yiel d : 2 .5% Mkt. Cap:$175.63 m
T + 5.4 +36 . 5 99 1 1 3 0 . 80f T -9.0 + 8 . 6 4 2 8 1 0 1 . 32f L -8.6 + 8 .9103904 24 0 .20 L +64.2 - 12.8 153 d d 0 . 88 T +9.9 +13 . 2 3 6 34 1 8 3 . 6 4 T -8.7 -5.1 8 0 53 L +5.2 +23 . 0 16 6 1 8 0 . 72f T +27.2 +32.3 368 28 0.60 T +1.9 +32 . 5 1 736 28 1 . 60f T -2.8 -10.4 4 7 81 T -3.2 -8.8 2453 20 0 . 44 L - 17.4 + 5 . 6 8 654 1 3 0 . 64 L -10.1 +30.0 29237 14 0 .96 L +5.4 +8.9 1 4 923 14 0 . 2 6 T $-6.2 +52 .0 4 0 38 2 0 0. 7 4 T -9.6 -24.3 3961 dd L +3.7 -2.6 6450 dd T -10.9 -35.8 1786 15 0 . 73 T +7.4 +16 . 8 61 4 1 9 0 . 22f L +2.5 +24. 5 49088 20 1 . 2 4 L +4.4 +39 . 6 2 5 26 29 1 . 1 2 T -5.0 + 2 4.8 9 9 6 2 0 1. 4 8 T - 9.5 +«. 6 1 7 9 2 1 1 . 86 L -4.2 +7 . 3 1 5 97 1 6 0 .88a T - 29.4 +189.4 224 2 1 T -2.2 + 0. 6 83 2 3 3 1. 7 6 T -13.6 -17.9 6 1 6 1 6 0. 1 2 L -23.5 - 36.1 330 d d 0 . 75 T +4.5 +40 . 6 714 3 0 2. 6 8 L +4.2 +21. 2 17 9 14 1. 3 0f L +20. 4 +4 4 .5 10541 29 0 . 64 T -0.5 + 8.3 « 8 8 2 0 0. 6 0 T -3.8 +10.2 5401 14 0 . 98 T -2.0 + 1 . 4 6 2 2 1 4 0 . 52f L $.1.6 +15 . 2 16800 14 1 .50f T -13.3 + 9 . 2 3 0 71 2 5 1. 1 6
*annualized
AmdFocus
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P E: . . . Yield : ...
Disney
9
AP
QQ55
20
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
l;:;;"."Macy's to open discount stores
source: Factset
+
1.1195
UBS Martha Stewart Living M S O Close:$21.37L1.01 or 5.0% Close:$5.42 V-0.43 or -7.4% The bank's first-quarter net profit ai- The merchandiseand media commost doubled as money from pany said first-quarter revenue fell wealthy clients flowed into its wealth as it shifted its magazine business managementbusiness. operations to Meredith Corp. $25 $7 6
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DOW
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EURO
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UBS Group
Wall Street expects that Activision Blizzard's first-quarter earnings fell short of its performance a year ago. The video game publisher, DividendFootnotes:6 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 6 -Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. I - Current which is due to deliver its latest annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend financial results today, has said announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash that its sales declined in 2014 value on ex-distrnution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 6 closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. from the year earlier. Investors will be listening for details on how Activision's online expansion of its popular "Call of Duty" franchise The stores will offer products ranging from women's into China is faring, as well as the Macy's plans to open its first four discount stores, clothing to home furnishings. The launch of the free-to-play "Heroes called Macy's Backstage, this fall in New York City as part of a test run. merchandise will include clearance of the Storm." The details, announced Tuesday, goods from Macy's stores as well as ATVI $22.71 come four months after the special buys from name brands at 20 $25 department store chain announced percent to 80 percent off original and it was exploring an Doff-price comparable prices for similar items. 20 retailing business, which would be The move comes as the $19.94 , ''15 similar to T.J. Maxx or a Nordstrom department store chain looks for new Rack. This will be Macy's first avenues of growth in response to 15 discount business. shifting consumer behavior. eSt. Operating I I EPS Maoy'S(M) Tuesday's close:$64.50 T ota l return 1-y r 3-yr* 5-yr* 1Q '14 1 Q ' 15 M 1 6.2% 1 8 . 6 24. 8 52 'wEFK RANQF price eamings ratio. 15 Price-earnings ratio: 20 70 (B a sed on Past 12-month results) Dlv yleld • 1 9% $55 D l v ldend$1 25 based on past 12-month results Dividend: $0.23 Div yield: 1.0%
+
.
NorthwestStocks
Housing barometer
$60.40
The U.S. stock market sank Tuesday, taking a break after a two-day run. Chevron and other oil giants fared better than the rest of the market as crude oil climbed above $60 a barrel for the first time this year, which at the same time raised investor expectations that inflation could be rising and so could interest rates. Overseas, Greece's government remained in a standoff with its European creditors with a debt payment due next week. Greece will have to scrounge for cash to make a payment of 750 million euros, the equivalent of $840 million, to the International Monetary Fund due on May 12.
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NAME
CRUDEOIL
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StoryStocks
. Ciose: 17,928.2O Change: -142.20 (-0.8%)
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17,600.
StocksRecap
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1,960
17980 "
17,760" ""' 10 DAYS "
2,120
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$16.56
Dow jones industrials
... Close: 2,089.46 Change: -25.03 (-1.2%)
2,040' " ""'10 DAYS
2,080 "
SILVER
5 40
SelectedMutualpunds
DIS Sally Beauty Holdings SBH Close:$110.81 V-0.22 or -0.2% Close:$31.47L0.90 or 2.9% The media company's shares The beauty products seller reported reached an all-time high as it posted second-quarter earnings that met better-than-expected results, thanks Wall Street expectations. to its recent hit movies. $«5 $36
«0
34 32
105 F
M
A
F
52-week range $76.54~
$113.30
Vol.:14.6m(2.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$188.33 b
M
$24.09~
$3 5.27
PE: 24.6 Vol.:3.2m (2.9x avg.) Yi e ld: 1.0% Mkt. Cap: $4.98 b
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 25 . 60 -.16+1.8 +8.7 +12.8+«.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.64 -.53 +2.6 +5.2 +10.2 +9.8 8 A A CpWldGrlA m 48.12 -.49 +4.8 +5.6 +14.3+«.1 C 6 C EurPacGrA m 50.95 -.55 +8.1 +4.6 +«.4 +8.5 8 6 C FnlnvA m 53. 2 2 - .62 +3.7 +12.1 +17.1+13.8 C C C GrthAmA m 44.77 -.59 +4.9 +14.0 +18.5+14.0 C A C T. RowePriceDjv.Sm.CapGrowth(PRDSX) IncAmerA m 21.88 -.17 +2.2 +6.3 +«.9+«.2 C A A InvCoAmA m 37.74 -.44 +2.9 +«.3 +17.6+13.5 C 6 C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m38.74 -.48 +6.8 +10.3 +15.0+12.3 A 6 A 43WAMutlnvA m41.19 -.42 +1.0 +9.3 +16.1+14.3 C C A 03 Dodge &Cox Income 13.81 -.61 +0.9 + 2.9 +3.6 +4.7 C A 8 CD $2 IntlStk 45.62 -.38 +6.9 + 2 .5 +15.3+10.0 8 A A Stock 181.49 -2.21 +1.6 +10.1 +20.8+14.7 8 A A $3Fidelity Contra 100. 4 8 - 1.67+3.6 +14.4 +16.3+14.9 C C 8 03 ContraK 100 . 4 4-1.66+3.6 +14.5 +16.5+15.0 C C 8 CI LowPriStk d 52.17 -.48 +3.8 +10.6 +17.3+14.7 8 C A Fideli S artao 500l d xAdvtg 73.79 -.88 +2.1 +13.1 +17.6+14.7 8 8 A FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.45 -.62+2.7 +0.3 +9.3 +8.6 E A A 03 IncomeA m 2. 4 2 - .62+3.0 + 0 .8 + 9.8 +9.1 E A A Oakmark Intl I 25.12 -.20 +7.6 + 0 .2 +16.2+10.9 D A A 473 Oppeaheimer RisDivA m 20 . 63 -.24+0.5 +10.9 +13.8+12.4 C E D MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 70 -.21+ 0.2 +10.1 +12.8+«.4 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 57 -.21+ 0.2 +10.1 +12.9+«.5 D E E OeFood target represents weighted SmMidValAm 49.73 -.56 +2.2 +10.7+17.9+12.2 8 C D average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 41.77 -.47 +1.9 +9.8 +17.0+«.3 C D E • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.9 2 - . 36 +0.7 + 6 .1 +15.0+«.8 E D D GrowStk 55.1 7 - . 68 +6.2 +18.4 +18.1+16.4 A A A CATEGORY:SMALL GROWTH HealthSci 75. 7 1 -1.35 +«.4+41.2 +35.8+29.2 8 6 A Newlncome 9. 6 0 . .. +1 .0 + 3 .5 + 2.6 +4.0 8 C C IBORNINGSTAR RATING~ ***** Vanguard 500Adml 192.91 2.30 +2.1 +13.1 +17.6+14.7 8 6 A 500lnv 192.90 2.29 +2.1 +13.0 +17.4+14.6 8 6 8 ASSETS$1,283 million CapOp 54.37 -.74 +3.1 +19.7 +24.8+15.9 A A A EXPRA TIO .85% Eqlnc 31.56 -.32 +1.8 +9.4 +16.1+15.1 C C A Mlg. INIT.INVEST. $2,500 IntlStkldxAdm 28.16 -.31 +8.6 +1.8 +9.8 NA 8 D PERCEN TLOAD N/L StratgcEq 33.56 -.43 +4.3 +14.2 +21.9+17.6 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.25 -.23 +2.8 +7.4 +10.4 +9.5 A A A TgtRe2035 18.48 -.18 +3.6 +8.5 +13.3+«.2 A A B Return/Rank Tgtet2025 17.63 -.15 +3.0 +7.7 +«.4+10.1 A A B YEAR-TO-DATE +5.3 TotBdAdml 10.85 -.61 +0.7 +3.6 +2.2 +3.9 8 D D 1-YEAR +15.5/A Totlntl 16.84 -.18 +8.6 +1.8 +9.7 +7.2 8 D D 3-YEAR +19.4/A TotStlAdm 52.55 -.65 +2.3 +12.7 +17.7+14.8 8 6 A 5-YEAR t18.0/A TotStldx 52.53 -.65 +2.3 +12.5 +17.6+14.7 8 6 A 3and5-yearretcns areanuaazed. USGro 31.26 -.37 +4.5 +17.5 +18.6+15.7 A A A
+«.62 + . 06 -38.62 -2.36 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption + .30 + . 01 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or -71.44 -.79 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
PE:2 0 . 9 Yield: ...
Build-A-Bear Workshop BBW MGM Resorts Close:$17.02T-1.06 or -5.9% The toy retailer, which lets shoppers stuff their own teddy bears, said first-quarter sales fell due to harsh winter weather. $22 20 18
MGM Close:$20.14 T-1.13 or -5.3% The casino operator reported mixed results. Its second-quarter earnings beat Wall Street expectations, but its revenue did not. $24 22 20
F
M
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52-week range $70.07~ Vol.:1.2m (4.6x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$296.57 m
M
A
52-week range $23.DD
$17.25~
$27.64
P E: 20.3 Vol.:2 0.7m (1.6x avg.) P E: . . . Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap: $9.9 b Yield: ...
Bloorni' Brands
BLMN RetailMel$lot SALE Close:$21.56%-1.44 or -6.3% Close:$20.09L2.88 or 16.7% The companybehind Outback The online coupon company reportSteakhouse and other restaurants ed better-than-expected earnings cut its revenue outlook for the year and revenue during its first quarter. by about $60 million. $30 $25 20
25
15
F
M A F M A 52-week range 52-week range $15.D1 ~ $2 6.25 $13.29~ $3 4.47 Vol.:6.3m (3.2x avg.) PE:3 0 .4 Vol.:4.1m (5.0x avg.) P E:4 1 . 2 Mkt. Cap:$2.67 b Yie l d : 0. 3% Mkt. Cap: $1.1 b Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury edged up to 2.18 percent Tuesday. 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 1 .01 . 0 7 .07
52-wk T-bill
.23
... ...
T L
L
2-year T-note . 6 3 .60 + 0 .03 L 5-year T-note 1.55 1.51 +0.04 L 10-year T-oote 2.18 2.15 +0.03 L 30-year T-bond 2.91 2.88 +0.03 L
L L L L
L .42 L 1.69 L 2.61 L 3.41
BONDS
.22
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Commodities
FUELS
Crude oil moved up to close above the $60 a barrel level for the first time since early December following news that a Libyan oil terminal had closed.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange The dollar weakened against several major currencies including the British pound and the euro. It also fell below the level of 120
Japanese yen per dollar.
h5Q HS
.01 .04 .09
T +0 . 0 1 T
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.76 2.72 +0.04 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.39 4.37 +0.02 L Barclays USAggregate 2.20 2.19 +0.01 L PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.94 5.96 -0.02 L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 3.86 3.82 +0.04 L Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.88 1.85 +0.03 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.07 3.06 +0.01 L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
The Diversified Small Cap FAMILY Growth fund relies heavily on quantitative stock-picking models, AmericanFunds which raises a few caveats but overall Morningstar calls it a worthy holding.
A
52-week range
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 60.40 58.93 1.63 1.63 2.01 1.98 2.78 2.82 2.06 2.03
L L T L L L
L L 3.21 L 4.61 L 2.30 T 5.04 L 4.12 L 1.90 L 2.97
%CH. %YTD +2.49 +1 3.4 -1.78 -0.1 + 1.81 + 9 . 1 -1.45 -3.8 +1.45 +43.8
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD «93.20 «86.80 + 0.54 + 0 .8 16.56
16.42
«48.80 «50.90 2.94 2.92 794.95 782.65
+ 0.85 + 6 .4 -0.18 -5.0 + 0.55 + 3 .6 +1.57 -0.4
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.6 1.51 1.51 +0.48 Coffee (Ib) 1.33 1.32 +0.53 -20.4 -9.0 Corn (bo) 3.61 3.59 +0.70 Cotton (Ib) 0.67 0.67 + 0.12 +« .2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 242.00 245.30 -1.35 -26.9 Orange Joice (Ib) 1.17 1.16 +0.65 -1 6.8 Soybeans (bu) 9.94 9.83 +1.07 -2.5 Wheat(bu) 4.64 4.69 -1.12 -21.3 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5177 +.0059 +.39% 1.6869 Canadian Dollar 1.2 0 69 -.0034 -.28% 1.0951 USD per Euro 1.«95 +.0055 +.49% 1.3877 -.23 -.19% 102.12 JapaneseYen « 9.87 Mexican Peso 15. 3575 -.0814 -.53% 13.0376 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8708 -.0109 -.28% 3.4590 Norwegian Krone 7 . 58« -.0093 -.12% 5.9531 South African Rand «.9780 -.0779 -.65% 10.5361 Swedish Krona 8.3 4 58 -.0347 -.42% 6.5506 Swiss Franc .9262 -.0081 -.87% . 8 776 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.2591 -.0154 -1.22% 1.0776 Chinese Yuan 6.2164 +.0058 +.09% 6.2457 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7519 -.0015 -.02% 7.7522 Indian Rupee 63.322 -.206 -.33% 60.178 Singapore Dollar 1.3316 -.0003 -.02% 1.2501 -.50 -.05% 1027.99 South KoreanWon 1081.54 -.09 -.29% 3 0.10 Taiwan Dollar 30.64
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
BRIEFING Albertsons to become Haggen Beginning at 6 p.m. Sunday, the Bellingham, Washington-based grocery chain Haggenwill begin taking possession of the Albertsons stores in Bend andconverting them to Haggenstores. Deborah Pleva, spokeswoman for Weinstein PR, the firm representing Haggen, said the conversions will be staggered. The store on S. Highway 97 will close at 6 p.m. Sundayas an Albertsons, staying closed Mondaybefore reopening as aHaggen store at 4 p.m. Tuesday. The Albertsons on NE Third Street will follow the same pattern, closingat4p.m. Tuesday and reopening May14, Pleva said. Haggen acquired146 grocery stores as part of the divestment process after the merger of Safeway and Albertsons. The two stores in Bend are the only grocery stores in Central Oregon that will be converted, Pleva said. She said customers can expect to seean expanded produce section, along withnew painting, remodeled flooring and hanging signs designed to highlight Haggen's Northwest offerings. Pleva addedthat the company will hold ameeting June25at which local business and nonprofits will meet with Haggen leadership to discuss selling local products with the grocery store. — Stephen Hamway, The Bulletin
Redfin comesto Central Oregon Redfin, an online real estate search andbrokerage firm, announced Tuesday it's now in Central Oregon. The firm, which pays its agents salaries and bonuses rather than commissions, has created a Webpagedevoted to buying andselling real estate in Bend, Redmond, Sisters, Prineville and LaPine. Thecompanywebsiteis www.redfin.com. The firm, which started nine years ago inSeattle, will be hiring real estate brokers locally, said Jeff Lidikoff, Redfin team leader for Bend. The firm operates a website like Zillow or Trulia that allows users to search for real estate for sale. But unlike those websites, Redfin draws directly from the Multiple Listing Service and refreshes its listings every10 minutes, said Amy Musser, Redfin communications manager. The website allows users to search without registering with the company, but users may register for automatic updates andother features. Thecompany also offers iPhoneand Android mobile apps. Redfin agents are paid a salaryand offered benefits, Lidikoff said. They're paid bonuses based on the results of customer satisfaction surveys, he said. Musser said Redfin agents earn 80 percent to 90 percent of what agents earn working on commission. The company is operating online but plans to open a brick-and-mortar office in Bend, Musser said. Thecompany isin 65 cities around the U.S. — Joseph Oitzlec lhe Bulletin
By Patricia Cohen
On Tuesday, theCommerce
New York Times News Service
Department reported that the
A roof-raisingtrade gap in March highl ighted concerns
trade deficit grew to $51.4bilover February's gap of $35.9 billion. Much of the increase
remained an open wound in a generally improving economy. The flood of importswhich far outpaced U.S. exports — is likely to push
was attributed to the settling
economic activity for the first
of a labor dispute at ports on the West Coast, which allowed a baddog of shipments to be cleared, butsome experts
quarter into the negative range
lion, the highest in 6/2 years, and a 43 percent increase
that the rise of the dollar
against othercurrencieswas weakeningthe economy, chipping away at the ability of U.S. manufacturers to compete abroad while encouraging more imports to fill retailers'
shelves.
warned that the chronic gap between imports and exports
when the government issues its revised estimate this month.
Last week, the Commerce De-
partment posted an initial esti-
into the United States is help-
mate of 0.2 percent growth for January, February and March,
ingpull other nations ahead, it also weighs down the econo-
a feeble showing that was at-
my at home.
tributed largely tobitterly cold
Compared with other major currencies, the dollar has been gaining in value, making foreign goods cheaper for U.S. consumers to buy, while raising the cost of goods produced by United States firms when they are sold abroad.
weather. In some ways, the strength
of the dollar is a sign of how muchbetter the American economy is doing relative to many of its trading partners. But while the flow of goods
Spotlight
<%9N/g''
i
i
-
,
-
'
turns to
'
television merger
a
• y ';te le
By Emily Steel New York Times News Service
Three months after Comcast announced its $45 billion takeover of Time
,r •
Warner Cable last year, rival AT&T announced a $48 Central Oregon visitors Association I Submitted photos
The Central Oregon Visitors Association display gets set up outside AT&T Park before the game Saturday between the San Francisco
billion takeover of DirecTV.
Both deals were poised to create industry behemoths
Giants and Los AngelesAngels.
and transform the country's media landscape. But
ae ourisma en re or s recor revenues
whereas the Comcast trans-
action set off a widespread public outcry and ultimately collapsed last month under
regulatory scrutiny, the AT&T-DirecTV merger proposal has largely avoided intense examination. Until now. The spotlight has turned to AT&T's deal for DirecTV,
which — if approvedwould unite the telecom
By Stephen Hamway
vatedcamper and a half-dozen
giant with the satellite com-
The Bulletin
banners that depicted Central Oregon staples frombiking to
pany to create the country's
time records" in revenue and
breweries. In addition, the visi-
job growth within the tourism
tor. With about 26 million subscribers, it would sur-
up from $9.6billion the year before, said Linea Gagliano, manager of industry and public affairs for Travel Oregon,
tors association partnered with the Giants during the game to give away 30 backpacks with Central Oregon-themed merchandiseand onevacation to Central Oregon. Hughson said the vacation package allows two people
the state's tourism promotion
to take a three-day vacation
proposed. The company argued that a combined
agency. She added that this
they can customize to Central
AT&T and DirecTV would
uptick led to 7,000 more jobs
Oregon any time in the next 12 months.
have the ability and incentive to use its heft to harm online video distributors such as Netflix to protect its
Travel Oregon reported "allsector in 2014.
The state had $10.3billion in tourism revenue in 2014,
in tourism-related fields, such as hotels, restaurants and
"What we're promoting is
tour companies, with 101,000
Biggy, the Central Oregon Visitors Association's newmascot,
that, even though we were
Oregonians employed in these occupations. Central Oregon experienced a record-setting $747 million in direct spending coming to
dons a Giants jersey and stands in front of the crowd at ATST Park in San Francisco.
there during spring, there are activities for all seasons." Hughson said. Although Hughson could not give precise numbers on how manypeoplethe campaign reached, she said"thousands" of fans visited the display in front. Hughson said the message"¹visitcentraloregon" was displayed behind home
the three-county area in 2014,
up from $720 million in 2013, Gagliano said. "That's abig jump for a relatively small region," she said. For Gagliano and Travel Oregon, this increase is the most recent sign that Oregon's tourism economy is back on track
after the recession. She attributed some of the success to tourism campaigns
such as "The Seven Wonders of Oregon," which highlights
"Seven Wonders has really resonated with visitors and Or-
group reached out to the San
egonians alike," Gagliano said. Regionally, the Central Oregon Visitors Association is taking advantage of the improv-
Central Oregon on Saturday in
ing tourism market to launch a
stylized campaign in the San Francisco Bay Area. "It's such a highly populated, expensive media market that we wanted to think outside of the box," said Alana
Hughson, president and CEO
locations across the state, in-
of the visitors association. Instead of the traditional
duding Smith Rock in Central Oregon.
print, radio and television campaign, Hughson said that her
Francisco Giants to advertise and around AT&T Park, when
the Giants played host to the Los Angeles Angels. Hughson said the main thrust of the campaign consisted of a display set up in Lefty O'Doul Plazabetween the
parking lots and the stadium entrance, meaning that a large
portion of the near-sellout crowd saw the display, which included the visitors associa-
tion's mascot Biggy, a Bigfoot replica. The display featured a reno-
BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed April 29 • Kristen W.Timmers, P.O. Box 637,Bend • Norma J. Gerardo, 60911 Tara Lane,Bend • Floyd N. and Lisa D.York, 2825SW28th St.,Redmond Filed April 30 • Clayton R. andSandraR.
Lichtenhahn,P.O.Box1220, LaPine • Justin P. Troxell, 63332 Vogt Road,Bend • Mandrea M. Bennett,1684 NW Fifth St., Bend • Steven J. andDianeL. Schelske,64281 Deschutes Market Road,Bend • Danny R. Cline,532
SW RimrockWayNo.24, Redmond • Holly S. Jackson,1044 NE 12th St., Bend • Kenneth R.Childress, 3910 NW LaMesa Lane, Redmond Filed May 4 • William Ashley, 53910 Seventh St., LaPine
• Dareld R. andBarbaraE. Seaquist, 687Sandstone Place, Prineville • Bobbie L. Tice,61149S. U.S. Highway 97No.421, Bend Chapter13 Filed April 29 • Kellyand Heidi Black,1554 NW Ivy Ave.,Redmond
TODAY • BusinessStartup:Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you. 6 p.m. $29; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edul sbdc or 541-383-7290. • Lunchtime Lecture: How efficient are large corporate firms? Discussion of using
industry life-cycle stages to gauge theefficiency of firms' resource allocation decisions; noon; Cascades Hall, Central Oregon Community College, Bend, 54 I-322-3100. THURSDAY • Nonprofits Open Lab: Search for grants using Foundation Directory Online with assistance from staff; use oneof
our laptops or bring your gwn;1 p.m. Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond or 541-617-7089. SATURDAY • Homebuyer Education Workshop:A service to help homebuyerS understand the buying process,access safe mortgage loans and prepareforthe
the FCC revealed that Net-
flix was urging regulators to reject the AT&T-DirecTV transaction as it is currently
core TV business. The FCC, Netflix said
that AT&T alreadyhad degraded customers' access to Netflix. It also raised con-
cerns about the potential that AT&T would emerge as the country's largest In-
ternetserviceproviderafter its projected investments in
broadband, according to a Netflix filing.
broadcast, which aired on Fox Sports l.
creates new incentives and
"The Giants are such a
pre-eminent franchise, especially in the West, that we were able to reach our target audi-
ence by working with them," Hughson said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamwayirbendbulletirt.com
"Such market power abilities to harm entities that AT&T perceives as competitive threats, and will exacerbate the anti-competitive behavior in
which AT&T has already engaged," Netflix said in the filing.
Bankers, regulatorsvoice fears about bondmarket By Peter Eavis
With the Federal Reserve
New York Times News Service
contemplating a rise in inter-
Wall Street chieftains, huge investment firms and
est rates, turbulence in Euro-
In recent months, they responsibilities of homeownership; 9 a.m. $45 per household; Bend Neighborlmpact Office, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A100, Bend; www.neighborimpact. org/homebuyerworkshop-registration/ or 541-323-6567. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
pass Comcast. On Tuesday, a filing with
plate during the television
top bank regulators are all sounding the same alarm.
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR
largest television distribu-
have been warning that the world's bond markets, where companies and countries bor-
row trillions of dollars, are in danger of breaking down. Their fear is that in an
pean bond prices and currency markets in flux, there is no shortage of places where the next jolt could come from.
A preview of what could happen, the bankers and regulators say, took place one morning in October. In a matter of minutes, the yield on a benchmark Treasury note,
event like a surprise increase in interest rates, trading could rapidly dry up, causing violent movements in bond prices and even disrupting the
which moves opposite its price, mysteriously plunged. The market soon recovered, but the speed and size of
functioning of the market.
stunned.
the move left Wall Street
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing report D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
O«www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
Lift-served biking helps resorts cope in summer
WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6
BRIEFING Cycling tourset for Saturday Cog Wild Bicycle Tours is hosting a family-friendly, leisure-paced cycling tour following the Twin Bridges State Scenic Bikeway route, beginning at Shevlin Park, Saturday from10 a.m. to1 p.m. Participants will learn about several historic sites that are integral to the history of the Tumalo area.The tour includes guided interpretations of the historic sites, food stops and SAGsupport. Admission is free. To RSVP, go to cogwild.com/private-tours or call 541-385-7002.
This event is offered along with many others in recognition of National Historic Preservation Month in May. Visit www.deschuteshistory. org for a full list of events.
• Mountain bike trails offer chance to experiencedramatic Crooked RiverGorge CROOKED RIVER RANCH-
Feeling a bit dizzy from the height, I backed By Daniel DeMay
he cliff walls were completely vertical, away from the edge of the cliff and into the
Bozeman Daily Chronicle
BOZEMAN, Mont.-
and I glanced down and saw the Crook safety of the sagebrush and the sand, got back
This past winter was just a tad on the dry side, eh?
River flowing hundreds of feet below the on my bike and continued along the rocky,
sheer drop-off.
Despite a survivable winter in southwestern Montana — at least accord-
canyon-side path. make the trip to Crooked
ing to Bridger Bowl and Big Sky Resort — all is not well in the world of skiing and
scenery in Central Oregon, and I was eager to experience it by mountain bike. I had
plore the gorges carved over the centuries by both the De-
hiked the trails there, but
schutes and Crooked rivers.
last week to the Otter Bench
this was my first time biking them. The relatively new trail
The Central Oregon High Deserthas some magical places to visit in the spring,
trailhead. From there, mountain bikers can ride the trail along the hillside to the Opal Canyon loop trail. Those two trails are the only ones in that
The trails — about 10 miles in all — include new sections
system on the western edge of Crooked River Ranch was completed and designated in
paths that anglers have hiked for decades to travel down the canyon walls and reach the
Increasingly warm and dry winters, particularly on the West Coast, have left many ski areas struggling to stay in business. Several areas in California and Washington closed
and the Crooked River Gorge
area open to bikes.
2010 by the Bureau of Land
is certainly one of them. Although many folks
The 300-foot-deep, 4-milelong gorge offers some of the
Management's Prineville Dis-
rivers below. See Gorge/D2
through multiple tempo-
most breathtaking desert
hikers, mountain bikers and
River Ranch to golf at the
MARK MORICAL
renowned course there, I drove just a few miles farther
equestrians a chance to ex-
and some reconstructed
other winter sports.
early this season or went
trict. The trail system offers
rary closures, and some in California saw little to no
snow for the fourth year in a row.
Times are tough, indeed, for the multimillion-dollar mdustry. To try to recoup some of the big winter losses, many areas — more every year, it seems — are ramping up summer sports, not the
«:-4 l
~« i;h.
Mt. Bachelor closing Sunday Mt. Bachelor will close for the season Sunday, the resort announcedinanemail Monday evening. The resort hadhoped to remain openthrough Memorial Day but changed plans because of a lack of snowpack, according to a news release. The mountain got 212 inches of snow this season, the least since 2000-01 and far below its 462-inch average. The maximum base depth was the lowest in the mountain's history.
least of which is mountain
biking. Big Sky Resort has
'":L:t
offered downhill trails
4'V '
to mountain bikers for at least 20 years, said Christine Baker, mountain
sports manager for Big Sky. Last summer, the resort went from one chairlift
serving bike trails to two, and it likely will add a third lift next year, Baker
sard. What's more, the area
recently made it into Mountain Bike Parks' 2014 Riders' Choice Awards' top
five mountain bike parks
— Bulletin staffreport
in the Northwest region of the United States.
Nearby Silver Mountain, Idaho, topped the list for
the region, and Whitefish m ade number four onthe list, just above Big Sky. This year, the area is adding a coaching program as well, and Baker hopes to draw more fam-
TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabe Access to adequate snow via snowmobile is no longer possible due to bare ground. Winter trail season has come to a very early end. Cascade LakesHighway (state Highway 46), Road 21 into Newberry Caldera and Road16 to Three Creeksarea are now open for the season. Highway 242 remains closed. The road to Paulina Peakis still closed. Summer trails below 5,800 feet are generally snow-free andaccessible. Avoid muddy sections of trails. Limited trail clearing is underway so expect some downed trees. Wilderness trailheads up to 5,100 feet are snow-free andaccessible. Lava Lands is open seven days aweek, and the interpretive trails and the trail on Lava Butte are open. The trail around Suttle Lake is snow free and in good condition, but, crews are constructing rock walls along the Suttle Lake trail, so please use caution. The rock wall project is expected to continue through early June. The road into Tumalo Falls remains closed during pipeline construction. Access to the falls is open via the Tumalo Creekand South Fork trails or Mrazek andFarewell trails. Parking is available at the Skyliner Trailhead.
F
ilies to the area with the sport. Farther to the west, Dis-
covery Ski Area added liftserved mountain biking to
the fold last year. Discovery's president, Ciche Pitcher, said he sees
it as awayto offer more for the nearby communities of Anaconda and Philipsburg. '
I
ie
But the bottom line for
"Trl
larger ski resorts is that increasing summer offerings canhelp drawvisitors who will likely stay in resort
e;l
hotels,eatin resort restau-
rants and rent resort gear — in addition to buying day I I
orseasonpassesforlift-ac-
cessed mountainbiking. MarkMorical I The Bulletin
Wildflowers along the Opal Canyon Trail above the Crooked RiverGorge.
It's a win-win.
SeeBiking/D3
From rat hunting to largemouthbassfly-fishing ach April, we shoot ver-
E and keep the agriculture organic. Steve McGrath, from
ers. McGrath whipped out the single-burner stove with
min to p r otect alfalfa
Camp Chef, and Jesse Riding, from Rainy's Flies, drive west
~5
GARY
a grill box, and after a few
LE WI S
cordon bleu sandwiches. We might have shot till dusk, but Riding had brought fly rods and a box full of bass flies.
from Utah, and I drive east, and we meet in Crane, where
females with the mews of a
the sage rats are hard at work to wipe out farmers' crops.
deadbeat dad skipping out with the child support check.
We hunted again with Nikki and Justin Aamodt's
Dan and Debbie Goetz,
Diamond A Guides and Seth
of Warne Scope Mounts, were along for Debbie's first
"Rat Squeaker" Franklin, a
hunt of her life. She did not
29-year-old guide who speaks shrink from the work. By her the language. To coax a rat count, she fired more than
minutes heserved up chicken
Franklin pointed the way
deep into those hills north of the Steens, and we found ourselves on his aunt and uncle's
doorstep. The water was low, they told us, and they had just driven their cattle down, and
from its hole, Franklin chirps
500 rounds. We took a break
to mimic the motherless juve-
at noon, and Riding grabbed
the creek was muddy. They didn't inspire a lot of confi-
nile. He smooches the mating
clippers and went out and harvested tails to tie stream-
dence in our prospects. SeeBass /D5
sounds and calls up the big
Gary Lewis/For The Bulletin
This big largemouth bass was foraging beneath a weed bed when it spotted a Warpath Whammy Craw, a crayfish imitation. It was released after a short battle.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
Submit your best work at Qbenlibunetin.cnm/realierphutns.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
, i~'1hr,
Kf
W
agl~
I'
tQ
A WATCHFUL EYE Norm Williams captures a great horned owl after one of its owlets fell from the nest.
Gorge
ttex ench trail sYstem
Continued from D1 While the trails were al-
r z1
ready a bit dusty, I was deter-
La r r Lakp=-
I
mined to get out there during
the spring before the daytime temperatures become uncomfortably ho t
A MAGAZINE DEDICATED TO DEFINING THE FUTURE OF CENTRAL OREGON
i n th e
summer. After riding singletrack along the hillside through juniper and sagebrush for
I
II
I I
It
I,
I
nhtlrhs
DETAII. AREA Deschutes z River
I I
I~I I
about 30 minutes, I arrived at the intersection of the Otter
Lake Billy Chinook
,BIy
Opal , Canyon I,
Slsthrs
T r ail
Crook iver
Thm hhh
Ilenmhhh
Bench, Pink and Opal Canyon trails. The Pink Trail is closed to bikes, so I turned
onto the Opal Canyon Trail, where I was met immediately by an uphill, rocky technical section that required me to dismount my bike and hike.
Bhhh
•
I» — Seasonal barribr
After a short trek, the trail
HOIIOW I
sections where I could get off my bike and walk to the canyon's edge. At one such spot, I walked out to some rocks and peered down. It was such a straight drop that all I could
see below was the river. Back on the bike, I continued on through what some
-•o
•
buggy on the mild, sunny day. Black crows cruised on thermals out over the can-
yon, and twice small bugs met their demise on my sunglasses — and I was not even
going that fast. I also saw a small snake slither into the bushes when it s ensed me
coming. After a mile or so, the trail
looped back up to a higher point on the ridge, then started leading me back toward the Otter Bench Trail. Another trail in the area, the Horny Hollow Trail, i s
A
•
•
MILE
1.5 miles I
Oner
Wildlife seasonalclosureraiea (Feb.1throughAug.31).
~
k 1.7 miles
CROOKED
--
RIVER
R panora~ma
a
•
Trail
I — Seasonal barrier
a Gate I' ' Trailhea
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locals refer to as Central Oregon's mini-Grand Canyon. T he desert was b i rdy a n d
A •
Trail
low. The terrain called for
The trail provided several
•
Horny
o f f ered b r e athtaking
views of the deep, rugged canyon and the river far besome caution on a bike, as I negotiated the rocky trail, which ran along the edge of the canyon, the drop-offjust a few feet away.
-
Crooked River
emerged on the side of a cliff that
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ONerBenchandOpalCanyontrails Directions: Turn west on Lower Bridge Road,off U.S. Highway97 just north of Terrebonne. Follow signs to CrookedRiver Ranch. To find the Otter BenchTrailhead, continue past the golf course to the end of the road, about11 miles from Highway97. Look for a trailhead sign andmap. Parking is free. Features:Dramatic desert scenery and cliff-side riding on singletrack along the CrookedRiver Gorge. Distance: About 7 miles total. Rating:Aerobically easy andtechnically intermediate. For more Mountain BikeTrail Guides, seebendbunetin.cnm/ rideguide
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M any of t h e B L M t r a i l - Bench, is relatively new. Loh eads a t Cr o o ke d R i v e r cated in the Steelhead Falls Ranch — Otter Bench on the Wilderness Study Area, the
hiker-only and is closed from Feb. I to Aug. 31 to protect Crooked River and Steelhead Scout Camp Trail is a way for breeding wildlife that are Falls, Foley Waters and Scout hikers to descend to the Desensitive to human activity. Camp on the Deschutesschutes River. I cruised back toward the are reachable via p ublic But for mountain bikers, parking area on t h e O t ter Bench Trail, the last half mile
roads.
the Otter Bench and Opal
The hiker-only Steelhead
Canyon trails just might be
mostly downhill. I had ridden Falls and Foley Waters trails, about 7 miles in an hour and both popular among anglers, a half and noticed I had some have existed for many years energyleft ,so Irepeated the but are now defined and desloop to make it about a 14- ignated by the BLM. mile, three-hour ride. Scout Camp, like Otter
the best way to experience
the dramaticdesert scenery — and dizzying heights — of the Crooked River Gorge. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
Researcerstrac e usive crittersin M ontana orest By Tom Kuglin
hoe were back on the trail.
(Helena) Tndependent Record
The next two miles produced
HELENA, Mont. — Much of the Continental Divide in winter remains a place seldom
few tracks of interest. The snow
h,
grew deeper requiring, the use of snowshoes as conditions
visited by people — a harsh
continued to soften.
environment, windblown and
In a small saddle a new, larger setof tracks crossed the trail.
seemingly void of w i ldlife. But the area is far from unoccupied,and when an animal
With a frozen under layer, they
punched a few centimeters deep but were clearly fresh. Ingman and Donohoe inspected the tracks, taking measurements and walking along.
travels through, it leaves evi-
dence that to a trained eye can reveal much about the mysterious creatures that call the high
countryhome. A first-year project spon-
One looked more canine while
another more feline. Long strides became short strides,
sored by the Helena National
Forest, Montana Wilderness Association, Winter Wildlands
and claw marks came and
went. Finally, by consensus, a wolf was decided as the most likely candidate. Another 200 yards up the trail, a second wolf joined as
Alliance and others sought to
fill a gap in wildlife information for a portion of the forest west of Helena. The area includes
slopes east of the Continental Divide including the Nevada Mountain Roadless Area.
Project organuers recruit-
the two marched through the
forest, providing more tracks and further evidence of the ani-
as rr.-
mals' identities. With the transect coming to
'r'
ed and trained volunteers under the tutelage of wildlife re-
an end, a few elk tracks plowed
searchers at Bozeman-based Wildthings Unlimited. The data generated will go to the Helena National Forest as it develops a new forest plan.
"It's kind of a unique area in
terms of the Continental Divide on the Helena National Forest," said John Gatchell, MWA con-
through the deep snow, but neiJoe Donohoe measures a wolf track found along the Continental Divide near Canyon Creek, Montana, in March, 2015. Donohoe and other volunteers met in early March to run one of the transects and see what animals were using the Continental Divide as part of a project.
as severalspecies leave tracks
of similar size and shape. A we had a lot of people trained propensity to roam long dis,and then the snow melted and tances, Gehman said.
servation director. "It's proxim- didn't come back," said Steve ity to rich wildlife habitat and Gehman, the project's lead sciwhat we've seen showing up entist from Wildthings. "But with the diversity of life, it's a it was the best response we've neat thing for people to get en- ever gotten to one of our workgagedwith." shops, and we're ready to go. Organizers plan to get the We're really hopeful for better study rolling earlier next year weathernextyear and asimilar to continue to learn about the response from the community." area, he said. On Jan. 10, four teams of volThe early springlike weath- unteers met for training with er was no friend to the wildlife Wildthings. The workshop trackers researching rare for- took the volunteer-trackers into est carnivores such as Canada the study area to look for signs lynx and wolverine. A lack of of wildlife and a first lesson in snow meant difficult condi-
ther lynx nor wolverine was located again this year. Ingman detailed the challenge of track identification,
Tom Kugiin/The Independent Record via The Associated Press
the art of track identification.
tions for finding and discernThree of the four groups ing tracks, and lower-eleva- found exactly what they were tion snow plentiful early in the hoping for, striking a fresh set season was largely absent by of wolverine tracks, possibly mid-March. the same individual based on "It was unfortunate because proximity and a wolverine's
Motion cameras were placed
on an elk carcass in hopes of a reappearance, but other baiting attracting carnivores to camer-
as was abandoned due to recreational trapping in the area, he sald.
Gehman also documented lynx tracks earlier in the win-
ter, indicating the presence of the threatened species.
gram through MWA. As they hiked along a forof snow for Ingman and Dono- ested ridge, coyote tracks hoe as they took to the trail. sprinkled the trail. A quick Temperatures above freezing glance showed the diamond also meant a soft surface, mak- shape and prominent claws of ing for some better than expect- a canine, and the duo kept hiked tracking conditions. ing in search of more tracks. Ingman and Donohoe come Snowshoe hares also made from different backgrounds, al- frequent imprints in the snow though both considered them- along with the occasional selves in the learning stages of squirrel andblue grouse. Continental Divide. A small storm had left a skiff
mountain lion, lynx, wolver-
ine and wolf can all be easily mistaken for one another even
in good conditions. With wind and sun distorting tracks, even
more species come into play for trackers. The hope of finding wolverine and lynx is not only part of the excitement of tracking, but also important as indicator spe-
ciesfor the health ofan area. The mere presence ofthose anAfter the training, volunteers Ingman,aboard member for trees, a line of tracks ventured imals is a good indicator ofhabcontinuing with the study re- Helena Hunters and Anglers, across the trailbefore dropping itat quality for a wide variety of ported findings as they repeat- has spent decades in the study onto the western side of the wildlife, Ingman said. ed the routes, called transects, throughout the winter and into
track identification.
area both recreationally and
From a deep stand of fir
"I think it was really strategic of MWA just involving the cit-
Divide. The delicate outlined
participating in a bear-hair study.
pads,smallersize and absence spring. of claws provided enough eviTwo of t h ose volunteers, Donohoe, an avid outdoor dence to identify this particular Gary Ingman and Joe Dono- recreati onist and conserva- track as that of a bobcat. hoe, met in early March to run tionist, had called Helena home A few quick measurements, one of the transects and see for less than a year when he photographs and GPS markwhat animals were using the heard about the tracking pro- ings, and Ingman and Dono-
izenry," he said. "People want to help and get involved, and it builds advocacy for protecting wildlands while getting people on the ground to see country
theyhaven't seenbefore."
Where Buyers
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"Certainly, for the people who are in the lift business, being able to use that capital investment of time just makes
a lot of sense," McSkimming Adrian Sanchez-Gonzalez/Bozeman Daily Chronicle said. "You've got lifts, you've Lone Mountain, home to Big Sky Ski Resort, seen from the Lost Trails subdivision in Big Sky, Mongot base areas, you've got tana. is devoid of snow inthe summer months. Increasingly warm and dry winters, particularly on the food and beverage. I think it's West Coast, have left many ski areas struggling to stay in business. very attractive for areas to use that infrastructure on a lon-
ger-term basis." Nationwide, mountain bik-
ing in general is a popular sport. Nearly 40 million people take part in mountain biking annually, according to statistics from the Outdoor Industry Foundation.
For resorts looking to draw more summer v isitors, the
guests in as well as local kids, tickets can vary considerably, summertime. "It's a pretty sweet mountain she said. with many trails available for free accessif riders want to
to play on in the summer," she
offered a similar program for climb on their own. five years now, and its popuAt Big Sky, day tickets are larity has grown considerably, $35 — that's almost $90 less just as interest in mountain than a ski lift ticket — while biking in general has grown, the area's maintained trails McSkimming said. (which include cross-country "We're seeing more and as well as downhill) are all
W histler B lackcomb h a s
said. "Mountain biking should be a little bit more affordable way for a family to spend two or three days and have a good
more of this trend of people
free to access. A season bike
sport is fast becoming a big- having mountain bike holi- pass can be added to a winter ger piece of the year-round days and I think 10 to 15 years season pass for $99. package. ago, that wasn't a big thing in D iscovery's b ik e pa r k the travel world," he said. charges Li a day just to ride it A growing piece of the pie At tiny Discovery Ski Area, and a lift ticket on Silver Chief Compared with the zip lines Pitcher isn't hoping to capital- (the only chairlift serving the and Lone Peak expeditions, ize on the mountain biking as area) is $28. mountain biking hasn't made m uch as have more to offerthe At Silver Mountain, in Kelup a big part of summer activ- locals as the sport is growing log, Idaho, bikers can ride the ities at Big Sky Resort, Baker there, too. lifts all day for $34 and add din"Mountain biking is t he ing for a few dollars. said. But she hopes that will change soon. kind of thing that can realWant to go ride Whistler? "We're looking to have bik- ly transform a small town," Bettersave a few more dollars. ing be the same, equal thirds, Pitcher said previously. Tickets there run $53 to $60, in five years or so," she said. depending on time of year, but Easy access? "I think people think it's not athree-lap ticket canbehad for super attainable for everyFor many mountain bikers, $34to get"a taste" of the trails. one, but the technology with the idea of paying to ride was Bikes, too, can be a costly bikes and flow trails is going long unheard of. But as down- investment, but Baker doesn't to make it more like skiing, hill biking has become a more think it needs to break the where more people can access serious staple of the sport, so bank, she said. L ower-end it." too have riders gotten used to bikes can be a good way for W ith the addition of t h e shelling out a few bucks to get kids to get a start and see if coaching program — avail- quick access to often superbly they want to get more serious able as daily sessions or multi- maintained trails. about the sport. And rentals are week courses — Baker hopes But like lift tickets in the always an option to get spinto draw m o r e d e stination winter, mountain bike lift ning on Lone Mountain in the
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THIS WCEKCHD'5 ISSUE
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D4 T H E BULLETIN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
UrDOORS
E 1VD
EQUESTRIAN
BEND CASTINGCLUB: Agroup of fly anglers from around Central Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club meets on the fourth Wednesday of each month; location TBA; 541-3064509 or bendcastingclub©gmail.com. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB: 7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www.sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m .;meets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www.coflyfishers.org.
SPRING TUNEUP CLINIC: At Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes Road, Sisters; May 9-10, 9 a.m. to noon and1 to 4 p.m. each day; $300 for two full days; local horse trainer Clint Surplus will teach a two-day clinic to include ground work in the mornings and mounted work in the afternoons; 541-9615727;kathyebarnes©gmail.com;
DETROITLAKE FISHING DERBY: May15-17 at Detroit Lake; 6 a.m. to 4 p.m. each day; $15 for adults, $8 for children; adult grand prize is a Smokercraft boat and trailer; girls and boys grand prizes are bicycles; registration will buy three full days of fishing fun with an awards ceremony on the last day; 503-931-1885; DLRABAOhotmail.com; www.detroitlakeoregon.org.
CYCLING CENTRAL OREGON 500+ BICYCLERIDE:June 3-7;fivedays of classic Central Oregon road rides; 100-mile and 100-kilometer ride options each day; rides include Mount Bachelor loop, Crooked River Canyon, East Lake, Smith Rock and McKenzie Pass; one day is $75 and all five days is $325; a benefit for the MBSEF cycling program; to register, visit www.mbsef.org and search under the "events" tab.
truhorsemanship.com.
BIRD WATCH
Find 'little finch' along rivers Wilson's wardler
FULL MOONHIKE: Join a Sunriver Nature Center Naturalist for a guided full moon hike along Lake Aspen, the Deschutes and through a meadow; listen and look for nocturnal creatures; registration required; 8-9 p.m. on June 2, July 2, Aug. 29, Sept. 28, Oct. 27; $6 for adults, $4 for kids; kirstinrea©gmail.com or 541-593-4394.
CENTRALOREGON BASS CLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond; www.cobc.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED: For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeach monthat6 p.m .; 50 SW Bond Street, Bend, Suite 4; 541-306-4509, deschutestu© hotmail.com; www.deschutes. tu.org.
Habitat: During migration, these warblers are found in awidevariety of woodlands and thickets along riparian areas, mountain valleys or the coast. Breeds in thickets along streams or ponds, aswell as in other deciduous woodlands. Food: Gleans insects from leavesand twigs but will also eat berries andseeds. Sometimes catches insects in flight like a flycatcher. Comments: Alexander Wilson, a19th-century ornithologist, first collected and named this species in1811. Wilsonis known asthe father of American ornithology, the greatest American ornithologist before JohnJames Audubon. Born in Scotland, Wilson came to America in1794 and soonbegancollecting and painting images of bird specimens for science. Thesewarblers are often observed in spring migrating in mixed flocks. A group of warblers is known as a"bouquet" or "confusion." The genusnamemeans "little finch," and the species name"pusilla" means "small," in reference to the bird's size.
Scientific name: Cardellina pusilla Characteristics: A small warbler that averages 4t/2 inches in length andhas along, slender tail and ashort bill. The birds are yellowish below andolive-green ontheir backs; their tails and wings are adarker olive-brown color. Maleshaveablackcapandblackeye; females have anolive-colored cap that might have some black to it. Both adults have pinkish legs and feet. Nestiug: The nest cup is made offine plant material and lined with grass or hair. Nests are built on the ground undervegetation or low in a shrub. Femaleslay between two and seven eggs that take almost two weeksto hatch. The young fledge between10 and13 days old. Range: Occurs across North America in migration and breedsmostly in the Westand across CanadaandAlaska. Winters from Southern California into Mexico or Central America.
HIKING
FISHING
To submit an event, visit bendbulletirLcomlevents and click "Add Event" 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifeibendbulletin.com,541-383-0318.
wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
THE BENDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meetsthesecondWednesday of each month; King Buffet, Bend;
DESCHUTES LANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES: Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take in spring
JUNIOROLYMPIC ARCHERY DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM:Open house at TopPinArchery Academy in Redmond on May 7,from 5 to 6 p.m; JOAD meets three times per month,
THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of
— DamianFaganisa COCC Community Leaming instructor and volunteer with theEast Cascades AudubonSociety.Hecan bereachedatdamian. fagan©hotmail.com. Sources: "The Audubon Society Encyclopediaof North American Birds" by John Terres, Cornell Lab of Ornithology's www.allaboutbirds.org and Birds of Oregon" by Burrows and Gilligan.
action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www. pinemountai nposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.hrp-sass.com.
archery; dressagehorsegirl@gmail. com or 760-532-0112. COSSA KIDS:Coaches are onhand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10;10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAINPOSSE: Cowboy
SHOOTING
ohabend.webs.com.
Current viewing: Widespread throughout Central Oregon in woodlands along rivers, in parks and neighborhoods. Checkout Sawyer Park, the Deschutes RiverTrail, CampPolk Meadow Preserve, Hatfield Pondsand the Metolius River Trail for these birds.
focusing onteaching young people
each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.
HUNTING
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service I Submitted photo
Wilson's warbler
Hike up Wagner Butte offers splendid views of Rogue Valley By Thomas Moriarty
is a relatively gentle climb on your right, and though it's around the side of the mounAccording to the sign at unmarked, it would be hard to tain, with increasingly panthe summit, the Forest Ser- miss. oramic views of the Siskiyous vice burned the lookout in The sign for the trailhead is as the tree line fails away. the 1970s when it becameob- now missing, but its post is still Getting to t he top of t h e solete. A few concrete blocks there, marking the entrance butte required a little bit of and rebar are all that's left, just across the roadway from leapfrogging up a pile of boulalong with an old military the parking area. The first ders, and it probably shouldn't ammo can containing a ledger mile of the hike, which has an be attempted by those with r for visitors to sign, but it's the elevation gain of about 2,000 wobbly footing. spectacular views of the val- feet, is a fairly steep climb with The bluff gives 360-degree ley below that make the trip few switchbacks, although it views of the Rogue Valley worthwhile. quickly levels out as it loops and perspective that makes To get there from Medford, around a small meadow. the distant summit of Mount r take U.S. Highway 99 south By the second mile, the trail McLoughiin — nearly 2,300 to Talent and turn right onto crosses the Sheep Creek Slide, feet higher — seem like no big 'v East Rapp Road. Follow Rapp a vast expanse of debris from deaL The elevation also com.jpP,'' Road to Wagner Creek Road a 1983 landslide, now over- presses the appearance of ofand continue for about 6 miles grown with thick grass that fice and industrial buildings, Thomas Moriarty/The (Medford) Mail Tribune after the road turns to grav- has created a landscape seem- making the urban landscape The foundations of a former fire lookout tower and an ammo can el, staying to the left at every ingiy out of a Tolkien noveL appear almost painted on the containing a guestbook reside on the summit of Wagner Butte, fork. The large dirt parking The remainder of the hike valley floor. overlooking the Rogue Valley in Southern Oregon.
TALENT — Wel l -maintained trails are still a novelty to me. On the south coast where I
grew up,a seem inglyendless wall of blackberry bushes made exploring much of the southern Coast Range a decidedly prickly proposition. Since moving to the Rogue Valley six months ago, I've made a point to tackle as many of the
area's less-traveled trails as my work schedule will allow. The other weekend, Mail
Tribune digital copy editor Forrest Roth and I decided to make the trek up 7,140-foot
Wagner Butte, a 5-mile, pointto-point trail south of Talent that ends on the foundations •
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The (Medford) Mail Tribune
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DISCOVERTHE VERY BEST CENTRAL OREGON HAS TO OFFER.
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Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offeredto Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.
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112 WAYS TO DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON -: IS A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE to places, events and activities taking place
throughout Central Oregon during the year.
The Bulletin',:
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Retire orester in s ca in innationa ar ByRIch Landers The (Spokane) Spokesman Review
through a brief introduction of the area's trees and shrubs.
"This is one of my favorites, Ken Hires is living large in the great outdoors, satisfying the Scouler's Willow," he said his equal enjoyment of na- bending down a branch for ture, wildlife and people. all to examine. S ince retiring f ro m t h e After he retired from the Washington Department of state, Hires was f r eelance Natural Resources in 2000, writing when he heard about Hires has hopped around a summer interpretive posifrom the Sonoran Desert to
the High Sierra as an interpretive ranger for the Nation-
al Park Service. "I haven't been home very long in recent years before taking off to another position," he said.
tion with the Forest Service at Mount St. Helens Volcanic National Monument. "My first job with the DNR
was based out of Cougar. I knew the area. They hired me, and I fell in love with be-
He balanced those stints
of oxygen deprivation with seasonal jobs at Organ Pike Cactus National Monument in Arizona.
'Tve been able to stay on
the move and work in the
most beautiful places on earth," he said. "I'm healthy because I'm happy." Four years ago, he lined up a job at Stehekin, where, relatively speaking, he's planted roots. This year he's the Stehekin District supervisory i n ter-
preterin charge of a staffof
ing a ranger." A forestry career that With a few years of intergroomed his naturalist and pretive experience on Hires supervisory skills made him post-retirement resume, Yel-
about six
instantly desirable to parks
and animals. But there's often
lowstone National Park of-
looking for seasonal employ- fered him the job of lead interees who interact with park pretive ranger for the winter visitors. season. "That was a dream of mine, During his 28 years with
v o l unteers and
rangers. He uses free time to focus his camera on the scenery a meeting to attend or a task to do. "I work 80 hours every two
life Program. Tourists are
"I told my wife about the
weeks, but it's not an 8-to-5 job," he said. "If something comes up at an outpost like Stehekin, you have to take
easy to handle after years
job after I said yes." His wife, Sharon, has con-
care of it." A job at Stehekin, which is
tinued to keep up their base
accessible only by float plane
DNR, Hires headed the statewide Timber, Fish and Wild-
of bridging industry with agencies and recreational
to be in Yellowstone in winter,
and to get paid for it," he said.
in Spokane and work at West Hires, 70, relishes the job of Valley High School, but she teaching natural history, as frequently joins her husband one could see tagging along at his scenic locations, whethon a ranger walk he led at his er he's staying in a travel current post with North Cas- trailer, cabin or park-owned cades National Park. He's sta- house. interests.
tioned at Stehekin, virtually
Hires later found a position
surrounded by wilderness, at the end of 55-mile-long Lake Chelan. "In Washington, 57 species
or a 55-mile boat ride from
the city of Chelan, is a privilege, he said. "It's funny: Sharon could
leave from Spokane airport and get to where I was stationed in Organ Pipe on the Mexico border faster than she can leave Spokane and get to
in Kings Canyon National Park in the Sierra Nevada Stehekin," he said. "The ferry ride is awesome Range of California, where he bunked in the two-room log the first 15 times you take it," of creatures depend on holes cabin built at 6,700 feet for the she said, smiling. "But being on this lake and in tree snags," he said, point- original ranger. "The trails ar e i n credi- having this house — what a ing to what could have been a woodpecker nest cavity. bly scenic at that elevation, deal," Hires said looking out He was ushering a group of and significantly steep," he their Park Service housing eight visitors, young and old, recalled. window overlooking the lake.
D5
FISHING REPORT ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: The reservoir will be stocked this week with 2,500 legal-sized trout. The water is very dirty, and fishing has been slow. BEND PINENURSERY:Limit is two fish per day, 8-inch minimum length. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Anglers report good trout fishing and fair fishing for kokanee. Anglers may harvest only one nonfinclipped (unmarked) rainbow trout or one rainbow trout over16 inches. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM:Fishing for trout and whitefish has been good. Anglers are reminded that trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead
FLY-TYING CORNER
andmustbereleasedunharmed. EAST LAKE:Anglers report good fishing for trout. FALL RIVER: Downstream of the falls is closed to fishing. Fishing upstream of the falls is open all year. Restricted to fly-fishing only with barbless hooks. HOOD RIVER:Spring Chinook are present throughout the Lower Hood River, with decent catch rates occurring in the last week. HOSMER LAKE:Hosmer Lake is scheduled to be stocked with rainbowtrout. Anglers report good fishing with large trout being caught. The southern portion of Cascade Lakes Highway is open to Elk Lake. The lake might be frozen during colder weather patterns. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK: Fishing has been good lately, especially for kokanee. Opportunities for bull trout are expected to be good this year. LAVA LAKE(BIG): Angers report good fishing for rainbow trout with large fish being caught. OCHOCO RESERVOIR:Fishing has been fair for trout that average14 to16 inches. The warm water fish should be active with the warm weather. ODELL LAKE:Anglers report good catches of kokanee. Closed to fishing for bull trout, and any incidental caught bull trout must be
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Triple Double Black, courtesy Confluence Fly Shop.
If fish are feeding along the shoreand noapparent aquatic hatch is in place, tie on anant pattern. Moveyour boat or float tube within range andcast. Whentrout are feeding on ants blown out of the trees, the action can be fast. The trick is to employ a pattern that approximates what the fish areeating. Look for bugs on the water. Use a long leader, tapered to 4X or5X, smear on abit of floatation material, and cast to rising trout. If the fish ignore your offering, change colors and sizesuntil the action picks up. Tie the Triple Double Black on aNo.12-14 dry-fly hook. Build the body segments with black mohair dubbing andwrap afew turns of a red/brown dry-fly hackle betweenabdomenandthorax. Finish with a full hackle at the head.Keepant patterns in a variety of sizes andcolors: purple, red, blackand cinnamon. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lake are closed to fishing. PINEHOLLOW RESERVOIR:The reservoir has been stocked, and good fishing has been reported. PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR:Fishing for trout has been slow. The warm water fish should be active with the warm weather. PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHING POND: Trout fishing has been good. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Shevlin Pond is scheduled to be
stocked this week with rainbow trout. Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to juvenile anglers17 years old and
younger. SOUTH TWIN LAKE:Anglers report fair fishing for rainbow trout. WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Anglers report good fishing with large kokanee being caught. Early morning seems to be the best time to catch fish.
Fish andGametraveling trailer gives education in angling in southwestern Idaho She's seen anyone from ward kids, but all ages are wel3-year-olds to a 66-year-old come and should take advanof fishing. A fishing license is woman catch a first fish, and tage of it. not required as long as people the reaction is about the same Shelley Henrikson of Boise sign up at the trailer. from all of them. recently took her 3-year-old "We try to keep it really There's something univer- son, Andrew Thomas, on his simple, and we supply every- sally exciting about feeling a first fishing trip. "My dad was visiting from thing," she said. fish on the end of a fishing rod, The stocking truck usu- and it's one everybody should Seattle, and he always wanted ally stops by shortly before experience at least once. to take his grandson fishing," the event, so there are trout Although the hobby of fish- she said. "It worked out perfect to be caught, as well as oth- ing has traditionally been becausethe trailer was here. er species, depending on the passed down through fami- It's such a great resource." location. lies and friends, some people Fishing is an activity that don't know anyone who fishes all ages enjoy, and it dovetails The trailer is in its fourth season of making the rounds or is willing to show them the with m any o t her a ctivities to ponds and other bodies of ropes, which is why Fish and in Idaho. People love to conwater in the Treasure Valley Game has stepped in to help gregate near water, whether and nearby communities. out. to camp, picnic, swim or just "That's what I l ove about hang out, and nearly all waters Carpenter said they've seen steady growth in people using this program. It's an opportu- in Idaho have fish in them. it, but it's rare that there aren't nity to show people something Fishing is also a lifetime enough rods for people who I love," Carpenter said. sport. You can learn the basics want to fish to use. The program is geared to- in a morning, but most anglers
By Roger Phillips
will lend them a rod, tackle,
Idaho Statesman
bait and show them the basics
M ERIDIAN,
Id a h o
Learning anything new can be a challenge, and fishing is no different. A beginner has to figure out where to go, what to use, what tackle to use and how to catch something that
doesn't want to be caught. "The unknowns can get overwhelming," said Jamie Carpenter, Idaho Fish and Game's aquatic educator. F&G has solved most of that
with its free fishing trailer, which travels to fishing spots in southwest Idaho and pro-
videsalla person needs fora day of fishing. The name is literal — it's free.
All a budding angler has to do is show up and sign up, and Carpenter and her crew
Bass
fly. In Skip Morris' new "Survival Guide for Beginning Fly Anglers," he breaks underwater flies into two categories:
Continued from D1 We stopped the truck on a high spot and looked down on thewater, which was quite abit
small fish imitations — such as the Zonker or Clouser Min-
lower than it would have been in a normal year. We spotted aweed patch close to the dam. I tied on a Warpath's Olive Whammy Craw on a short leader. I cast and stripped it hard, but the
now — and general use with a heavy bead or cone — such as Whitlock's Scorpion or Skip's Brown Trout Minnow.
off the bobber and let the bait
fish, another species to pursue and another body of water
sink to the bottom (with a marshmallow to float it above
that requires a different set of
the weeds). Then it's a matter
skills or presents a different set of challenges.
of watching the rod tip to see
F&G will start beginners out with the most basic setup:
a push-button reel with a bobber, weight and bait. The bobber is fun, especially for kids, because it's visual. A young angler can tell when a fish is biting because the bobber bounces up and down in the water until a fish takes
the bait and submerges the bobber. That's often followed by squeals of delight as a young angler feels the electric pulse of a fish writhing on the
when a fish takes the bait. Those are the gateways to
countless other ways of fishing, which people can learn over time.
Carpenter said the trailer isn't a one-time offer. She's
had people return several times to keep learning, and that's OK with her. But ulti-
mately, F&G's goal is for people to use loaner gear to learn the basics and get comfortable
so they can buy their own gear (and a fishing license) and find their own adventures
in fishing.
end of the line.
Pond can produce some big fish. Bass fishing is hot a lot earlier this year, and the fish are on the prowl. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www.GaryLewisoutdoors.com.
9 ILSONSo f Redmond 541-548-2066
$INCl
IISYREss
G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084
ed into two types. The first
are the hair bass bugs with a brown, yellow, tan or green body (not including the tail) about five-eighths of an inch long. Morris likes a white or yellow face on these bugs. Diving flies include the Dahlberg Diver an d U mpqua Swimming Frog. Diving bugs
bass didn't want to eat it that O n the other side of t h e
weed patch, I pitched the big olive streamer 5 feet from the rock I was standing on. A
fish appeared, swung a semicircle, opened a wide bucket mouth and e x pelled water
have a head or body that tapers from narrow in front to
through its gills, and the fly
broad at the rear. Sometimes a diver is the bug the bass want.
vanished inside. I set the hook
as if it was stuck in a log. Stung, in d i sbelief, the
When the restof us were
fish tried to get back into the weeds, then it streaked out to
finished, Riding wanted to fish five more minutes. Clever.
open water and danced on its
He didn't say five more casts.
tail. I don't know how much it
We watched as his five minutes turned into 25 minutes, the wind died down, and the
weighed, as I was more concerned with getting it back in the water, but it could have
w ater that the big fish wi ll
there's always another way to
Floating flies are divid-
way. One charged in, missed and streaked away.
been the biggest largemouth I've caught on a fly. Maybe I should have eaten it, but I like to think there will be enough
remain challenged by fishing If a bobber and bait don't for most of their lives because entice the fish, you might take
V
GaryLewis/ For The Bulletin
make it through the summer. Jesse Riding, of Logan, Utah, lifts out a largemouth that ate a Fly-fishing for largemouth swimming frog pattern. and fly-fishing for trout do not have a lot in common. Bass are reaction biters, and the bigger off a rock. It took a few min- streamer or popper doesn't the bug, the better. Keep in utes for the wingtips and legs have to know a lot to start. And mind, a largemouth will eat a to disappear inside its mouth. a bass fisherman doesn't have duckling. Once, I watched a A bass angler who wants to be a pretty caster. There is bass consume a bird it plucked to tie into a largemouth with nothing graceful about a bass
water turned to glass. Riding worked his way along the shore with a Schiel's Deep Swimming Frog that swam like an amphibian with kicking legs. He stripped it slow, rhythmically, with long
5
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•
I icluid a t i o n S a l e
> 4/o 0 Booh s
8 r M u si ,c:
4U 4/o J ewelr y
•
8r Gifts
May 8th 8r 9th /9am-6pm
pauses. Bass watched it swim
by,maybe once,maybe twice, then they attacked it. East of the Cascades, if fly-
rod largemouth are on the menu, Davis Lake, Krumbo Reservoir and Prineville Res-
ervoir aregood options.Close to Bend, the Pine Nursery
9 34 N W G a s o l i n e R l l e y D ow n t o w n B e n d (Behind Wells Fargo Bank)
541-389-0888
D6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
' oac ' ries
eren roein' oo ine'
TV SPOTLIGHT
show runner on "Friday Night
Nightmares'?" he said, referring to the short-lived TV Chandler say as much. spinoff. "I ran to the window "Whether he was doing a and shouted, 'I gotcha, you son scene with Connie Britton or of a ...!' Having the tiniest bit of with some random person in a my sandal in the door had me grocery story, he always want- on doud nine. And I'll tell you Lights," isn't surprised to hear
"Bloodline" Netflix By Yvonne Villarreal Los Angeles Times
Kyle Chandler is trying to figure out the game plan. The actor is hoping for insight on the Netflix manner of doing things. The family thriller "Bloodline," in which he stars, unloaded its 13-episode first season on the streaming
ed to find the truth in that mo-
c/''~p~
'iii/!!ili!/(/:il/
// i r/ l / I/I/'
fore this meeting in late March — and it feels as if all the air
Rich Fury/The Associated Press
Kyle Chandler arrives at the LosAngeles screening of "Bloodline,"
"How do we do this'?" he a Netflix series in which he stars, on Monday. asks a reporter at the midcity office of his publicity firm, the Southerncadence of his voice he's in the Netflix end zone ence start to question him and slightly less distinct amid his as one of the central charac- changetheirperceptions was uncertainty. "I'm not sure how ters in its latest original series. so fun to do." this dance goes, darlin.' Have "Bloodline" hails from "DamThe heavy, time-shifting you seen some of the show? ages" creators Daniel Zelman drama, which also features Have you seen all of it? This is and brothers Todd and Glenn Sissy Spacek, Sam Shepard all so different from anything Kessler. It tells the story of a and Ben Mendelsohn, has been I've ever been involved with." seemingly upstanding fami- renewed for a second season. Chandler is best-known for ly in the Florida Keys with a Playing John was a different playing the man who had folks trove of secrets. Chandler plays kind of challenge for the actor. clinging to the idea of clear police Det. John Rayburn, the "There are situations, especialeyes and full hearts as the fa- second of four children, who lytoward the end of the season, therly Coach Eric Taylor on the appears to be the peacekeep- that I have never played behigh school football-family cult er, golden-child son. But as fore," he said."I just neverhave. drama "Friday Night Lights." "Bloodline" develops, so, too, And I wanted to make sure John's actions were earned. If That drama, which ended its does his darker side. "People want to trust him. therehad been any doubt from five-season run in 2011, served as his first brush with Netflix People want to believe him. the beginning about wheth— the uninitiated became part People want to root for him," er the justifications would be of the fold by binge-viewing said Glenn Kessler. "He's there, I would not have agreed the seriesafterthedrama'snet- Coach Taylor! So to move toit." workrun. This time around, though,
and a full bottle of $3 wine." It gets him thinking about huge speech Coach Taylor was the career-defining role in "Frigoing to give — it was half a day Night Lights" — and the page of dialogue. And he was shadow he can't escape and isn't necessarilytrying to. like, 'You know what I think "It doesn't bother me," he Coach would say there'? Nothing.' He fought for the silence said. "Eventually, it will be in because he thought it was the past. I mean, think of some more authentic to what Coach actor whose played an iconic would do." character and is now 80 years After a string of big-screen old. I mean, what can you do? If parts in films such as "Argo," I'm 80 yearsold and people are "Zero Dark Thirty" and "The still calling me Coach, my God, "I remember we cut out this
,iI,
service about two weeks behas been let out of the balloon.
what, that night was just me
ment," Katims said by phone.
him out of that zone as John Rayburn and have the audi-
W olf of Wall Street" in h i s
I'll take it with everything it's
Scott-directed Showtime pilot "The Vatican," which was to
came a few days after NBC an-
post-"FNL" chapter, Chandler worth." was set to headline the Ridley Oddlyenough, his comments
18 years after it went off the air
saidthe actor,who was raised
— with Craig T. Nelson, now 71, reprising his role as Coach Hayden Fox. "I have got to get on that show," Chandler said, noting
in the Chicago area and later in Georgia. "You never know
his two teenage daughters went to school with the kids of Bill
Fagerbakke ("Dauber" on the ABC sitcom). "I think maybe It's then that Chandler leans we can be on boats, fishing, in, as if sharing an embarrass- and we cross paths and have a ing secret, to tell the story of quick five-minute conversation landing his first acting job in on life and coaching and then Los Angeles in the late '80s. move on, because as we've seen with these things. It's always a
8 p.m.on2,9,"TheMiddle"Frankie (Patricia Heaton)wants Mother's Day to be different than usual for her inthe newepisode "Mother's DayReservations." Mike (Neil Flynn) tries to meetherdesire for a special meal, but his efforts to set it up online proveproblematic. He alsotries toensure thatAxl, Sue andBrick (Charlie McDermott, Eden Sher,Atticus Shaffer) get Frankie gifts that she'll truly enjoy.
8:30p.m. on2,9, "The Goldbergs" —Erica(HayleyOrrantia) continuesheraimfora music career byapplying tothe prestigious Juilliard School inthe new episode"Bill/Murray."Beverlyand Adam(WendiMcLendon-Covey,SeanGiambrone)try to help herchancesbydevising amusicvideoshowcasingher. Murray's (JeffGarlin) newfriendship with Lainey's(guest starAJ Michalka)father,Bill (gueststar David Koechner),hasunexpected effects. 9p.m.on5,8,"Law8 Order: SpecialVictims Unit" —Capt. Donald Cragen is back in the new episode "Perverted Justice." His knowledge might help whena woman (guest star Samira Wiley), who did much to get her father sentenced years earlier for rape and incest, wants to recant her testimony and havehim released.
crapshoot. Every single time."
"You know what I did when
Jason Katims, who served
as executive producer and
nounced it was bringing back bygone ABC comedy "Coach"
explore the modern-day political intrigues within the Catholic Church. But the project got killed. "That pilot was the absolute best choice for me at the time,"
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
on 'Bloodline,' my track record
I landed a part in 'Freddy's withboats is not the greatest."
10 p.m. on 2, 9, "Nashville" — Juliette's (Hayden Panettiere) rooftop concert success apparently has her basking in glory again in the newepisode "Is the Better Part Over," but those around her worry that she actually has postpartum depression. Will
(Chris Carmack)gets acouple
ramas ou not erenewe
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f
Dear Abby:My boyfriend of 10 years, "Scott," and I separated last year. I was pregnant and hormonal
Dear Emotional:If you were convinced that Scott has been com-
felt out of sorts. I don't know if I'm
addicted to the caffeine, the sugar or both. I want to be able to go to a
pletely honest, I doubt you would have searched his message history. restaurant on a date and eat like a never get back together. We went As to his relationship with the oth- normal person. I don't know what to do or how to a month w i thout contact, then er woman being a "joke," I doubt reconnected. she was laughing when — after do it. This liquid diet is slowly killW hile Scott w a s hearing she was the ing me,and Ineed help.Ihave exin the process of love of his life and pressed my concerns to my doctors working things out he didn't want to lose and even my therapist. I don't think DFP,R with me, he had a her — he announced they believe me or understand the girlfriend. He made it was over. extent of my problem. What would it seem like not a big You appear to like you suggest? deal, but apparentdrama. You brought — Stuck in South Carolina ly it was more serious. He told her this on when you told Scott the two Dear Stuck:It appears you have she was the love of his life and he of you would "never" reconcile. I do an eating disorder. Because your didn't want to lose her, etc. When think you should take a break un- doctor and your therapist both our daughter was born five months til you are less emotional, because seem unable to understand that later, he told me he was done with the choicesyou have made haven't and help you, consider replacing the other woman. They talked for a been entirely rational. them. You should also consult a limonth after our baby arrived, and Dear Abby:I live on soft drinks. censed nutritionist who is a regisI don't eat real food. I can't remem- tered dietitian (R.D.). then he cut her off. I recently found some old mes- ber the last time I ate a hot meal, Caffeine and sugar withdrawsages between them, and my heart much less vegetables. I exist solely al can both cause the symptoms shattered all over again. Scott on massive amounts of soda — two you describe. Neither withdrawal says it was all a joke, and he never two-liter bottles a day. If I put food is "fun," and both can cause headmeant any of it. The text messages in my stomach, it's usually bread or achesand more.You might have to imply otherwise. candy. wean yourself rather than quit cold I don't know if I should take anI don't binge and purge. Because turkey, and a nutritionist can help other break toclear my head, or I'm never hungry, I don't look at it you to create a personalized eating wait until my heartache passes. as starving myself. The last time program that's right for you. Please help. I tried to get off the soda I got sick — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com — Emotional in the South to my stomach, lightheaded and or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069 at the time and told him we would
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015:This yearyou have the ability to understand some far-out ideas. You might not always agree with them, nor do you need to. The fact that you can discuss these concepts with the people who espouse them is significant. You often will want to entertain at your home and invite close friends over. If you are sin-
gle, you growpast Stars showfhe kind a Problem and are of dey yoe'9 heve able to develoP a ** * * * D yriamic strong relationship ** * * p ositive th i s year, if you so ** * Average cho o se. If you are ** So-so attached, the two * Difficult ofyou enjoyeach other more than in the past. You seem to value each other
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGEOF ADALINE(PG-13)1:05,3:50,7:05,9:55 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13!11:55 a.m., noon, 3:25, 3:45, 6:30, 7:30, 9:45 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON 3-0(PG-13!11:45 a.m., 12:15, 12:30, 3:40, 7:05, 8:30, 10:40 • AVENGERS:AGEOF ULTROff IMAX3-D (PG-l3) 1I:30 a.m., 3:15, 7, 10:45 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:25 a.m., 2:15, 5, 10:45 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT !PG-13)3:20, 6:15 • EX MACHINA (R) 1:30, 4:30, 7:15, 10:30 • FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 11:45 a.m., 3, 6:45, 10 • GET HARD (R) 11:50 a.m., 2:45, 6,9:15 • HOME (PG) 2:20, 3:40, 6:50, 9:25 • THE LONGEST RIDE!PG-13) 12:25, 3:30, 7:20, 10:20 • MONKEY KINGDOM (G) 12:05, 2:25, 4:55, 10:15 • PAUL BLART: MALLCOP2(PG) 12:15, 3:35, 7, 9:30 • RIFFTRAX LIVE: THEROOM(no MPAArating) 8 • UNFRIENDED (R) 11:20 a.m., 9 • THE WATER DIVINER (R) 11:40 a.m., 4:45, 7:50, 10:35 • WOMAN IN GOLD !PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 2:05, 4:45, 7:45, IO:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
By Jacqueline Bigar
getssmothered.By now,you know how to handle these situations, and you are able to flourish without an audience, should
you so choose.Tonight: Along-overdue chat with a partner.
CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * *
You know what you want.
Though youcanbe charming andeasygoing, your determination marks your plans and discussions. You are willing to put in extra time and effort to manifest a goal. The unexpected occurs with an older person. Tonight: A must show.
** * * Too many commitments can wear anyone down — evenyou! Slow down the pace by taking a hard look at what can be discarded. You can't keep adding things without eliminating some. Remember, you
10:30 p.m. onFAM, "Freak Out" —On a newepisode called "Flesh Eating Viruses FreakMe Out!," Ricky, one of the show's hapless marks, is waiting for a friend in a doctor's office where a lockdownisimposed whenone of the patients there is diagnosed with a horrifying — andhighly contagious — disease. In other segments, random people visit an office where they run into an
escapedconvict, andagroup of volunteers who report for cleanup duty after a party in Griffith Park is confronted by anescaped gorilla from the Los AngelesZoo. 0 zap2!t
SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION
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• FOCUS (R) 9 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)6 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) 3 • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
of bombshells, in the form of a surprise visit from his father plus a potential tabloid story. Deacon and Rayna (Charles Esten, Connie Britton) try to deal with the uncertainty generated by his health prognosis.
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
• ADULT BEGINNERS (R) 8 • OF HORSES ANDMEN(no MPAArating) 6
are humanandhaveonly somuchenergy. Tonight: Go shopping.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * You have anadvantage, asyou come off soundingsecure, knowledgeable andreadytotakeaction.Noonecandeny what is going on with you. You might be making a financial adjustment, but don't worry so much. Trust that it all will work out. Tonight: All smiles.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)
** * Listen to news within your immemore andmoreasyou start planning more LEO (Joly23-Aog. 22) ** * * You have an unusually grounded diate circle. You havedemonstrated a weekends away as acouple. SAGITTARspecial ability to absorb information and IUS is very different from most of your perspective of what is needed to makea adjustments. Paceyourself, friends. situation work. Your unhinged imagination make needed and understand thatyou might need to makes the path you're on an exciting one. ARIES (March21-April 19) schedule a break in the near future. Take ** * * * You welcome change without You'll want to see past the obvious to unsome time off. Tonight: Not to be found. derstand what needs to happen. Tonight: resistance and are able to seethat what's Midweek break. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) happening around you is for the best. Your ** * * You might be more driven than imagination flourishes and inspires you VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) topursueuniqueideas.Romanceseems ** * * You remain cool, calm and col- you realize. With a group of friends, you will see how driven you all are to arrive at to be in the air. Embrace it! Tonight: Talk lected even in the face of a surprise or a about your summerplans. demandfrom a higher-up.You have man- a common goal. In fact, others might be aged to detach and gain a perspective that takenabackbyyourinsistence.Youknow TAURUS (April 20-May20) what is happening, and you have anagen** * * * You integrate knowledge with is unique and grounded. Pressure could da. Tonight: Hang with friends. be coming in from others who are making quicknessandease.Your perspective their own demands. Tonight:Head home. allows more give-and-take. Unexpected PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Tension builds as you try to field revelations will take you down a new LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) path. Some of you might be reticent, but ** * * Where your friends are is where some curveballs. You also could decide to you can't stay in the same spot forever. eliminate a responsibility that seems overyou'll want to be. Nevertheless, handling Tonight: Bring new information into a whelming. Others might have a similar some details and managing the fine print discussion. response, therefore delegating it could be could be a problem. Understand where others are coming from. A meeting most difficult. Curb spending if possible. GEMINI (May 21-June20) Tonight: In the limelight. ** * * Others have a way of domineering promises to bemoresupportive thanyou when they want to, while your light style thought possible. Tonight: Hang out. © King Features Syndicate
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THE AGEOF ADALINE(PG-13)4:30,7 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13!4:15,6:30,7:15 • FURIOUS!PG-13) 7 4:30, 7:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13! 6:15 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13!6 • TRUE STORY (R) 6:30 • WOMAN IN GOLD (PG-13) 6:15 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13!2:45,5:40,6:30 • AVENGERS: G AE OF ULTRON 3-0(PG-13!3:20 • FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 4:10, 7:10 • HOME (PG) 5:05 • THE LONGESTRIDE (PG-l3)4,6:50 • PAUL BLART: MALLCOP2(PG) 2:50, 7:25 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13!6:15 • MONKEY KINGDOM (Upstairs — G) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Fifth Wheels
FSBO: Comp l etely FOUR WINDS 2003 5th renovated 1700 sq. ft. wheel 26L, A/C, CD, SALES-Progressive craftsman style home micro, awning slide Purchasingl Sporting Goods Co. in NW Bend on 6600 o ut, m u c h mo r e Receiving based in La Pine is sq. ft. Iot. New granite $9000. 541-876-5073. looking for a self motiPosition countertops, new tile vated individual to fill 19' Pioneer ski boat, Heartland Pro w ler and carpets, new roof, a in-house sales posiFrefghtfiner 1994 Montana 34 ft. 2003, Bright Wood Corpo1983, vm tandem 2012, 29PRKS, 33', 632 freshly painted inside tion. Travel to trade Custom w /2 s lides. N e w ration is looking to fill like new, 2 slides-livtrailer, V8. Fun & and out. 4 bdrm, 2 full t ires, brakes a n d a pur c hasing/re- shows is r e quired.Apt JMultiplex General bath. Close to everyMotorhome i ng area & la r ge fast! $5350 obo. M ust h av e s a l es awning - Very clean ceiving position at Will haul small SUV 541-815-0936. closet. Large enough thing in very desiren j o y CHECKYOUR AD and u nder cover. our h e a dquarters e xperience, or toys, and pull a to live in, but easy to able NW n e ighborpeople and be a quick Freightliner custom $18,500 obo. site in Madras. This trailer! Powered by tow! 15' power awhood. P l enty of learner. Some IndusFUN & FISH! 541-536-5638 or position requires the 8.3 Cummins with 6 5th wheel puller, ning, power hitch & storage w/ new 320 541-410-9299 try experience and or sleeper cab, rebuilt following skills and speed Allison auto stabilizers, full s i ze sq. ft. garage. 1510 College also required. experience. G o od trans, 2nd owner. queen bed, l a rge engine with 20k miles, NW Harfford A v e. computer, t y p ing Salary and benefits Very nice! $53,000. shower, porcelain sink 6.5 generator, 120 cu. i ncluded. Ple a s e on the first day it runs $419,900. and 10 key skills; 541-350-4077 ft. storage boxes - one & toilet. $2 6 ,500. 541-788-1544, RV email resume to 8' long. Gets 10.9 experience u s i ng to make sure it is cor- 541-602-0666 541-999-2571 CONSIGNMENTS Excel, W ord and mpg. All in good rect. "Spellcheck" and WANTED 2006 Smokercraft Find exactly what ERP, good in math, shape. See to apprehuman errors do oc747 We Do the Work, Sunchaser 820 k now how to p ay you are looking for in the ciate (in Terrebonne RV cur. If this happens to Southwest Bend Homes model You Keep the Cash! pontoon boat, attention to details area).$24,000 some your ad, please conCONSIGNMENTS CLASSIFIEDS On-site credit 75HP Mercury and and the ability to trades considered. WANTED tact us ASAP so that Sunrise Village - 2575 approval team, electric trolling moi chasing products or i 503-949-4229 trouble shoot and We Do The Work ... corrections and any web site presence. sq. ft. home for sale tor, full canvas and solve pro b lems. • services from out of • You Keep The Cash! adjustments can be We Take Trade-Ins! by orig. owners, 3 many extras. KEYSTONE COUGAR Prior e x p erienceI the area. Sending On-site credit made to your ad. bdrm/3 bath, 3 -car 5th wheel 2004, 295 c ash, checks, o r Stored inside driving a forklift and 541-385-5809 approval team, BIG COUNTRY RV arage, great room, Polar pkg., 2 slides, Bend: $19,900 cargo van is a must I credit i n f ormation The Bulletin Classified web site presence. 541-330-2495 6 89,000. To m o r exc. cond. $13,900. 541-350-5425 or the ability to learn • may be subjected to We Take Trade-Ins! Redmond: Sandy, 541-385-7932 541-815-1322. 634 this quickly. Position I FRAUD. 541-548-5254 r equires a val i d For more informa- AptiMultiplex NE Bend G rand Manor b y BIG COUNTRY RV 750 Want to impress the tion about an adverdriver's license. You Thor 1996, 35' very Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond Homes relatives? Remodel must be able to work I tiser, you may call Redmond: good condition, 454 Only a few left! 885 the Oregon State 541-548-5254 as a team member gas engine, 50,050 Two 8 Three Bdrms your home with the Canopies & Campers and work with our I Attorney General's miles, 2 pop outs, with Washer/Dryer Looking for your next help of a professional Office C o nsumer s and Patio or Deck. internal and externew tires, $18,999. emp/oyee'? from The Bulletin's Protection hotline at I (One Bdrms also avail.) Place a Bulletin help nal suppliers. Must Call 541-350-9916 Keystone Everest 5th Looking for your "Call A Service I 1-877-877-9392. take and pass a wanted ad today and Wheel, 2004 Mountain Glen Apts next employee? Professional" Directory pre-employment reach over 60,000 Model 323P - 3 slides, 541.383.9313 Place a Bulletin help drug test. We are readers each week. rear island-kitchen, Professionally wanted ad today and an equal opportu4 Stroke 9.9 mercury fireplace, 2 TV's, Your classified ad managed by reach over 60,000 nity empl oyer. CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner will also appear on o utboard moto r , Norris & Stevens, Inc. readers each week. A RCTIC FO X 8 6 0 Starting wage DOE. Wildland Fire $1000. 541-548-5399 w/surround sound, A/C, bendbulletin.com Your classified ad 2003, F S C , s l ide, Apply in the Person648 custom bed, ceiling fan, which currently reFighterswill also appear on rear awning. $10,000 Ads published in the nel Department at: W/D ready, many extras. ceives over Jayco M e l bourne Houses for Cooper Contracting bendbulletin.com "Boats" classification OBO. 541-420-2323. New awning & tires. 1.5 million page 2010 29D Class C, 3 is now hiring entry which currently reRent General include: Speed, fishExcellent condition. Bright Wood views every month slide o uts, 1 2 ,500 level fire f ighters. ceives over 1.5 miling, drift, canoe, $19,750.More pics Corp. at no extra cost. on Ford 450 (No exp. needed). lion page views evPUBLISHER'S house and sail boats. miles Canopyfor short available.541-923-6408 335 Nyy Hess St. Bulletin Classifieds chassis, Immaculate Must be least 18 yrs ery month at no NOTICE For all other types of cond., loaded, f u ll box, lined interior, Get Results! Madras, OR 97741 of age. Starting pay extra cost. Bulletin All real estate adverwatercraft, please go green, good locking Call 385-5809 or body paint, c herry Lsredo 31'2006, $ 10.10/hr., plu s Classifieds Get Retising in this newspato Class 875. system. excellent place your ad on-line cabinets, s t a inless sults! Call 385-5809 $4.02/hr. hazardous 5th wheel, fully S/C RANCH HELP per is subject to the 541-385-5809 shape. $995. at appliances, very or place your ad one slide-out. F air H ousing A c t 541-389-7234. Sisters are a H o r se pay on the first 40 home-like in t e rior. bendbulletin.com on-line at Awning. Like new, Ranch seeks full-time h rs. C a l l Se a n which makes it illegal Serv>n Central Ore on since 790j AutoSeek dish, two to bendbulletin.com to a d vertise "any hardly used. summer Ranch Hand 541-948-7010 TVs, Nav., CD/DVD, schedule and interexperienced in mainpreference, limitation 755 Must sell $20,000 Bayliner 1 85 2006 back up an d s i de Check out the view or f o r m o re or disc r iminationSunriver/La Pine Homes open bow. 2nd owner taining ranch equipor take over payclassifieds online cameras, 500 0 l b. info. 882 ment buildings and based on race, color, — low engine hrs. ments. Call www.bendbulletin.com trailer hitch. $74,500. religion, sex, handi- 15760 Burgess Road, — fuel injected V6 grounds, and comFifth Wheels 541-410-5649 541-312-8974 Updated daily fortable around cap, familial status, $139,900. 712 sq. ft., — Radio & Tower. marital status or na- 2 acres, newer septic. Great family boat horses. Please send ÃIM(jjcc) PINNACLE 1990 r esume t o Bo o k tional origin, or an in- High Lakes Realty 8 Priced to sell. 30' motorhome, ® Rl@ic!KI tention to make any Property keeper, POB 1111, M a n age$11,590. clean. Rear Sisters, OR 97759. such pre f erence, ment 541-536-0117 541-548-0345. walk-around bed. limitation or discrimiNo smokers, no t Smokercraft 17' 1988, • , I t nation." Familial sta775 Say "goodbuy" inboard 4 cyl cobra mildew, no leaks. tus includes children 1998Wanderer by Thor Manufactured/ $8500. $4000. 541-548-5399 Gooseneck to that unused under the age of 18 65000 Mobile Homes 541-306-7268 living with parents or 541-419-3535 item by placing it in 875 legal cus t odians, 528 List Your Home The Bulletin Classifieds Watercraft pregnant women, and JandMHomes.com CHECKYOUR AD Loans & Mortgages people securing cusRV We Have Buyers tody of children under ds published in "Wa CONSIGNMENTS 541 -385-5809 Get Top Dollar WARNING tercraft" include: Kay 18. This newspaper WANTED The Bulletin recomwill not knowingly ac- Financing Available. aks, rafts and motor We Do The Work ... mends you use cau- cept any advertising 541-548-5511 Ized personal You Keep The Cash! Resident Care tion when you profor real estate which is watercrafts. Fo On-site credit on the first day it runs Coordinator vide personal "boats" please se in violation of the law. approval team, to make sure it is corinformation to compa(Bend) O ur r e aders a r e Class 870. web site presence. nies offering loans or hereby informed that rect. "Spellcheck" and Compensation: DOE 541-385-5809 We Take Trade-Ins! human errors do ocRCC position. LPN credit, especially all dwellings adverthose asking for adcur. If this happens to Looking for Michael or multiple years' tised in this newspaBIG COUNTRY RV Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 e xperience as a vance loan fees or your ad, please conare available on Bend: 541-330-2495 Ramsey, contact companies from out of per tact us ASAP so that med aid in an asan equal opportunity Redmond: K arla Lars o n 880 corrections and any sisted l i ving or state. If you have 541-548-5254 basis. To complain of 503-481-6703 adjustments can be memory care. Proconcerns or quesMotorhomes d iscrimination cal l vides direct supervitions, we suggest you HUD t o l l-free a t made to your ad. Looking for someconsult your attorney 541-385-5809 sion of care giving 850 1-800-877-0246. The Need to get an one who knew my within the commuor call CONSUMER The Bulletin Classified toll free t e lephone mom (then) Ruby Snowmobiles ad in ASAP? HOTLINE, nity. Ensures resiKing. Fall of 1967 in number for the hearYou can place it dents are t reated 1-877-877-9392. Cougar 27' 2011, half Redmond. I think she ing i m paired is with respect, dignity BANK TURNED YOU 1-800-927-9275. online at: worked at Peden's. ton towable, queen, r ecognizing i n d i - DOWN? Private party She was fun and Monaco Monarch 31' solar, great c ond., www.bendbulletin.com 24' Coachmen Prism vidual needs and sassy. Very important. 2006, F ord V 10, many extras. Sisters will loan on real esencouraging inde2015 Model G Contact Cheri tate equity. Credit, no Bnnjj miles, 541-270-2962 541-385-5809 Mercedes Diesel engine, 28,900 303-204-0332 pendence. Fosters a auto-level, 2 slides, problem, good equity 18+ mpg, auto trans, h ome-like a t m o - is all you need. Call 4-place enclosed InterVce ©alh queen b ed 8 fully loaded with sphere throughout state snowmobile trailer Oregon Land Morthide-a-bed sofa, 4k double-expando, the com m unity. w/ Rocky Mountain pkg, gage 541-388-4200. and only 5200 miles. gen, convection miI I I Must have experi$8500. 541-379-3530 J J Perfect condition crowave, 2 TVs, tow ence with manag- LOCAL MONEY:Webuy onlv$92K obo. 860 package. ing staff, scheduling, secured trustdeeds 8 Call 541-526-1201 PRICE REDUCTION! experienced in care note, some hard money Motorcycles & Accessories or see at: Call 54I 3855809topromote yourenice ' Advertise for 28dapstartingat'I4! !smseaa>psge r mn~ trrs e ourwew) loans. Call Pat Kellev $59,000. giving. Good written 3404 Dogwood Ave., 541-382-3099 ext.13. 541-815-6319 and verbal commuin Redmond. nication skills. Must be flexible and able • ProPerties for Sale miles, $3250. 3 Cu.ft. fridge for RV. Tick, Tock Building/Contracting Lsndscsping/Ysrd Care Landscaping/Yard Care to work all shifts. N orcold, 11 0 V o l t , 541-548-3379 Safari 1998 motorBenefits after propane or 12 Volt. Tick, Tock... HIGH PROFILE NOTICE: Oregon Land90days. For more $250. 541-549-1736 home 30', low mile- NOTICE: Oregon state LOCATION IN KAWASAKI law requires anyone scape Contractors Law information, or any age, 300 HP Mag...don't let time get or 541-647-0081 DOWNTOWN who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all KLX125 num Cat motor with questions, p lease away. Hire a REDMOND construction work to businesses that adturbo, always inside, call 541-385-4717 2003 be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form professional out white leather integood condition. Construction ContracLandscape Construc2* Free Weeks P %iag~ii rior, like new, has of The Bulletin's $800 obo. Sales Person wanted tion which includes: m any extr a s . tors Board (CCB). An 541-593-8748 of Yard for growing manufac"Call A Service active license l anting, deck s , $55,000. S e r ious Maintenance tured home dealermeans the contractor ences, arbors, callers only. Professional" water-features, and inship. Call Alfa See Ya 2008 36' 541-548-8415 is bonded & insured. 541-548-5511 Directory today! Verify the contractor's Service includes: stallation, repair of irExcellent condition, 1 This commercial CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be owner, 350 Cat diesel, • Mowing building offers exwww.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the 52,000 miles, 4-dr frig, cellent exposure • Edging Medical contractor.com Landscape Contracicemaker, gas stove, along desirable NW • Weed Control or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit oven, w a s her/dryer, 6th Street. iVantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital • Fertilizer The Bulletin recomnumber is to be inYamaha V-Star 250cc non-smoker, 3 slides, Currently housing 2011 & 2015 • Irrigation mends checking with cluded in all adverinv e rtor, The Redmond 2011, 3278 mi., exc. generator, • Blowing tisements which indiinterior, satellite, Ready to makememories! the CCB prior to conSpokesman newscond. $ 4700 OBO. leather Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in tracting with anyone. cate the business has 7'4" ceiling. Clean! paper offices, the Dan 541-550-0171. Enterprise, OR Top-selling Winnebago Some other t rades a bond, insurance and We aiso offer $72,000. 541-233-6520 31J, original owners, non- also 2,748 sq. ft. space is req u ire addiworkers compensa870 perfect for owner/ full-service Med Surg RN Full-Time smokers, garaged, only tional licenses and tion for their employV user. Two private Boats & Accessories 18,800 miles, auto-level- certifications. landscaping ees. For your protecoffices and gener.Variable Shifts - Shift differential applies to ing jacks, (2) slides, upincluding tion call 503-378-5909 i ~ • 12' ous open spaces. Sears aluminum a. nights and weekends. graded queen bed bunk Handyman or use our website: patios, fire pits, Three parking •CPR Certification required boat. Min-kota elecbeds, micro, (3) TVs, www.lcb.state.or.us to water features. i ACLS required within 6 months. places in back+ tric motor w/ v e st sleeps 10! Lots of storI DO THAT! check license status street parking. age, maintained, very .TNCC, PALS Certification preferred. cushions. New trailer, Home/Rental repairs *When signing up for before contracting with never used. $ 575. ALLEGRO 27' 2002 clean!Only $67,995! Ex- Small jobs to remodels •Prior OB & ER Experience. Preferred. the business. Persons $259,000. 58k mi., 1 slide, vaca- tended warranty and/or fi- Honest, guaranteed a f ull s eason o f doing •Excellent Benefits Package. Redmond. land scape Call Graham Dent tion use only, Michnancing avail to qualified 541-548-7137 maintenance. 541-383-2444 maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 elin all weather tires buyers! 541-388-7179 r equire an LC B l i Equal Opportunity Employer Dennis 541-317-9768 14' KLAMATH aluminum w/5000 mi., no accicense. Visit our website at wchcd.org or contact COMPASS, LCB ¹9153 boat w/surry top, tilt dents, non-smokers, Nav/JBlllVYollt8lfCCOS4 Linda Childers O 541-426-5313 Landscapinfyyard Care 541 782 8356 trailer, 9.8 HP motor, Workhorse CPR Property e n g i ne I i~ • newportave oars, padded back rest 261-A, Allison Trans., Maintenance 745 seats. $2800. backup Landscaping cam e r a, jandscapjng.com General 503-936-1778 & Painting Homes for Sale heated mirrors, new CCB¹204254 Znffe4 Qaaifrep 16' 1976 Checkmate ski refrig. unit., exc. conWinnebago Outlook • Spring clean ups House (structure only) boat, 90HP Mercury ditioned, well cared 2007 Class "C"31', 844y<dct 8 Igo. • Aeration/de-thatching for sale in historic dis- motor, restored; new for. $3 4 ,000. obo! clean, non- smoking * Full Service • Lawn repairs trict, $1. 1 Bdrm, 1 I * Great supplemental Income!! seats, new c a rpet 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. exc. cond. Must See! Serving Central • Weekly maintenance Landscape bath. House must be floor, new prop, with Oregon Since 2003 Lots of extra's, a very • Bark mulch IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I r emoved from l o t . trailer. Have receipts. Management Residental/Commercial good buy.$47,900 Call 978-413-2487 I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI Buyer responsible for $2500. 541-536-1395 For more info call • currently have openings all nights of the week.• all moving costs. 536 Sprinkler Spring CleanUp Aerate / Thatching ~ 54 1 - 447-9268• Activation/Repair I Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts NW Colorado Ave. Do •Leaves Weekly Service and start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and not disturb t e nant. Winnebago Superchief Back Flow Testing •Cones Spring Clean-ups! I end between 2:00 a.m.and 3:30 a.m .Allpoksmccord Ilive.com 1990 27' clean, 454 • Needles Free estimates! Allegro 32' 2007, like Mafntenance • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• C hevy, runs v e r y • Debris Hauling COLLINS Lawn Maint. new, only 12,600 miles. i Thatch & Aerate I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI People Look for Information ood. g oo d t i r es, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Cali 541-480-9714 • Spring Clean up About Products and 8500. 541-279-4142. g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg Weed Free Bark 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 transmission, dual ex.Weekly Mowing MOOERS MOWERS • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• Services EveryDaythrough & Flower Beds haust. Loaded! Auto-lev881 Residential/Commercial Wakeboard Boat & Edging I loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackThe Bulletin Clsssifieds I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, eling system, 5kw gen, services for 25+ yrs. 8 Monthly ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and Travel Trailers mirrors w/defrost, Lawn Renovation •Bi-Monthly Eco-friendly options. tons of extras, low hrs. power Maintenance I other tasks. slide-outs with awNOTICE Aeration - Dethatching •Bark, 541-699-7524 Full wakeboard tower, 2 Rock, Etc. All real estate adver- light bars, Polk audio nings, rear c a mera, Overseed IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl Master Gardening tised here in is sub- speakers throughout, traiier hitch, driver door Compost ~Landsca in I including life insurance, short-term & long-term ject to th e Federal completely wired for w/power window, cruise, Quality lawn cutting at Top Dressing •Landscape disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. cheaper prices. F air Housing A c t , amps/subwoofers, un- exhaust brake, central Construction Bigfoot 541-633-9895 which makes it illegal derwater lights, fish vac, satellite sys. Asking Landscape i Water Feature $67,500. 503-781-8812 to advertise any pref- finder, 2 batteries cusI Please submit a completed application Maintenance Installation/Maint. Skyline P ark Painting/Wall Covering attentfon Kevin Eldreok erence, limitation or tom black paint job. B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , 2009 Model w/Loft and Un- Full or Partial Service •Pavers Applications are available at The Bulletin discrimination based $1 2,500541-815-2523 i •Renovations one slide, low mile• Mowing Edging obstructive O c e an front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or KC WHITE on race, color, reli• Pruning i Weeding •Irrigations Installation age, very clean, lots Move in ready. PAINTING LLC an electronic application may be obtained gion, sex, handicap, 1968 Cuddy 21 foot, of storage, $28,500. View. •Synthetic Turf Water Management Asking $55 000. Call Interior and Exterior upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via familial status or na- new outdrive rebuilt 541-639-9411 Benjamin Family-owned email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). tional origin, or inten- motor, many extra Senior Discounts Fertilizer included 541-390-9723 for Residential 8 Commercial tion to make any such parts. Excellent conBonded & Insured with monthly program more details. 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts I No pho ne calls please. 541-815-4458 preferences, l i mita- d ition. 5-Year warranties tions or discrimination. 541-480-1616 $5,75 0 . LCB¹8759 Weekly, monthly SPRING SPECIAL! * No resumes will be accepted * We will not knowingly or one time service. Call 541-420-7846 accept any advertisNeed to get an CCB ¹204918 Drug test is required prior to employment. ing for real estate Managing ad in ASAP? EOE. which is in violation of Fleetwood D i scovery All About Painting Central Oregon this law. All persons 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Exterior, interior, You can place it Landscapes are hereby informed options - 3 slide outs, Cougar 2006 243RKS, deck seal, light maint. online at: The Bulletin Since 2006 that all dwellings adsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, One Owner, Polar Free Estimates. Servmg Central oreyon since $03 vertised are available 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, etc., 34,000 miles. Package, Good Conwww.bendbulletin.com CCB ¹148373 Senior Discounts on an equal opportu- great shape, call for Wintered in h eated dition, priced to sell 541-420-6729 541-390-1466 nity basis. The Bulle- info. $8500. In Bend shop. $78,995 obo. $12,800. 10% Off exterior or 541-385-5809 tin Classified 661-644-0384. 541-447-8664 541-977-2972 Same Day Response interior job booked.
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TH E BULLETIN4 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii Sbprtz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B wedn~day,May6,2015
Louie plays the odds
ACROSS 11925 Pulitzer Prize winner for Edna Ferber
WRONG PLAY? "I know my play defied the odds," Louie shrugged. "A 2-2 club break was 40 percent, the diamond finesse was 50-50. But my f i nesses never
What do you say? ANSWER: If p a r t ner h o lds a minimum such as A 4 3, A Q J 6 5, 4 3 2, J 3, you can probably make 7NT. I would be inclined to jumpshift to three clubs, alerting him that slam is possible so he can cooperate with a suitable hand. If you respond two clubs, you will have to "catch up" laterand may have to make a slam decision without his input. North dealer Neither side vulnerable
QK 0A65 41 A K Q 10 5 4
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DAILY QUESTION Y ouhold: 4 7 6 2 Q K 0 A65 A A K Q 10 5 4. Your partner opens one heart. The next player passes.
SOUTH 43 Q103 9 A1095
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Opening lead — 41 5 (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO IZAIIIIO.COBI
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1
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DOWN 46 dou b le take 1 Clothing item 49Regionoff ht e worn diagonally Cf)te d'Azur p ut i t 51 "Happy birthday! 2"another way ..." Make awish and blow" 3 Be hot under the collar 56 "Sho' nuff!" 4 Well-heeled 57 Spaniard's Marcos? "other" 5 Silencer 58 Boating hazards 6 Atlantic City 62 Speaker of the casino, with lj thej clues for 18-, 24-, 38- and 7 Manhattan 51-Across Project project, informally 65 Brother's keeper? 8True 9 Sign of disuse ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 10Cooper's tool P LA Y A S T I R L I T U P 11Toyota R EM O PA INE IRO NS competitor O N I ON R I N G S T E R R A 12Some of the best M A N HOO D E IRE T E L ones are crazy O WN L A S E R B E A M 13 Really works for A L LO W M I R T H E L L S 19 Links org. T EA HA UL EA R L of "Law & V E R B A L G YM N A 5 T I C S 21Dianne Order" Y ET I EA T S N I H 25 B r' i t h C ON T S EAMY U R I AH 26 Film composer H I GH H O R S E S A E Schifrin A L I ON ES A UGUS T A Big name in S E T I N C O F F E E B A R S 27 audio equipment T R I PE T R EA D ER I E 28 Not electives: E SSA Y S T Y N E NA PA Abbr.
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Louie missed an inference. If West lacked the king o f d i amonds, he could have beaten 3NT by shifting to diamonds at Trick Five. Louie should take the first heart with the ace to lead the queen ofdiamonds.
14Drawing of a bakery? 15Ending with peek 16Onea baby may ciy out to 17Larsson who wrote "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" 18 "Put 'er there, pal!" 20 Insincere 22 Monsters' mouths 23 Rowan of "Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In" 24 "Here, have a drink" 27 Expand 30Welcometo the fold? 31 Wine: Prefix
NORTH
WEST
a classic tongue
twister 34 " Survivor" (2013 war film) 6 Barber's sprinkle 38 "Smell my 10 Gallicgirlfriend cofsege
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "I took the percentage play — for me," Unlucky L o uie sighed after going down at 3NT. West had led a spade, and the defense took four spade tricks. Louie threw a diamond Irom dummy and from his hand, and East let go the three of hearts. West then led a heart. If the missing clubs broke 2-2, Louie could take the king of hearts and A-K of clubs, reach his hand with the eight of clubs, cash the ace of hearts and run the clubs. But if clubs broke 3-1, Louie had to overtake the king of h earts with hi s ac e and finesse in diamonds. He chose to try for the even club break ... and lost a diamond to West's king at the end.
32 Kate's kisser in
NO. 0401
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29 Curtis Mayfield's
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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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1 Common lunch hr. end 6 Lowers, ae lights 10 Drift gently 14 Half an Evergreen State city 15 Fancy entrance 16 Clickabie image 17 Bit of dental work 18 Indian noble 19 On deck 20 Toy with a heating element 23 Like "Ias" in Sp. 24 Out of the reach of 27 Country where Quechua i8 an
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THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
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Unscramble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
PELEO
stage 45 1961 Rick Nelson hit 47 Nightly news fodder, with "the" 49 " only a game" 50 Marshy areas 51 Public figure? 53 Bungler 55 Neither ahead nor behind ... and what 20-, 35- and
45-Across are
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
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M W A E I C D E 6 T O R E C E S S S T E S A E E P L G L E A N S P L A C E O L E C T E S E E L L
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O N T O
E S R C A I O N C O N A P E 05/06/15
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winner Nowitzki 68 Eastern faith 69 Sticky goo
70 Urges (Anowero tomorrow)
2
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59 List-shortening
41 Director Welles abbr. 44 Tablet relative 60 R e p utation 46 Side with the ball 6 1 Marshy area 48 Hot, for now 62 Tu l s a sch. 52 New England named for an collegian evangelist 63" intheArtof 54Born56 "Show Boat" Writing": Ray composer Bradbury 57 Really gets to collection
M M I S S 0 0 N I C T E W I T H T S A M O O D P R O 26 Pop over S U E 27"She loves me B O A D A U B not" piece 28 Greg of "B.J. and R U B B E R T R the Bear" AG H A EA 29 Take on C H O R A L successfully, as a T R A D I N G challenge A N A C 31 Beret bearer S T A M P C O L 32 Pope after John T A R D T M E X 34 Bridge Y O K E S I F measures xwordedltor(aaol.oom
66 Crumbled ice THE AUSTl6ALIAN MARSUPIAL
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energy source
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O'Day
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36 Deep-space
71 Writer Zora Hurston
By Michael Dewey O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
05/06/15
E6 WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 2015 โ ข THE BULLETIN
1000
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Deschutes County, Oregon, which covers the following described real prope rty s i tuated i n Deschutes County, O regon: LOT 3 ,
dential pro p erty should be aware of this potential danger before deciding to place a bid for this property at the t rustee's sale. I n construing this notice, the masculine gender includes the f eminine and t h e neuter, the singular includes plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Deed of Trust, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in i nterest, i f any . Dated: 4/8 / 2015 C LEAR RE C O N CORP 621 SW Morrison Street, Suite 425 Portland, OR
97701, between the spected or obtained to the auction to allow hours of 8 a.m. and 5 on or after May 18, the Deschutes County p.m. Monday through 2 015, at t h e D e s - Sheriff's Office to reFriday. The Budget chutes County Board view bidder's funds. Committee will also of C o m missioners' Only U.S. currency hold meetings and Office, 1300 NW Wall and/or cashier's accept public testi- Street, Bend, Oregon, checks made payable 97701, between the to Deschutes County A public meeting of mony beginning at the Budget Commit- 9 :00 a.m. o n M a y hours of 8 a.m. and 5 Sheriff's Office will be tee of the Black Butte 27th, May 28th, and p.m. Monday through accepted. Payment Ranch Service Dis- May 29th. For further Friday. F o r f u rther must be made in full trict, Desc h utes information, contact information, contact immediately upon the Burk, Loni Burk, close of the sale. For County, State of Or- Loni Financial/Budget more information on egon, to discuss the Financial/Budget at Analyst, at this s al e go to: budget for the fiscal Analyst, www.oregonsheriffs.c (541)388-6536. year July 1, 2015, to (541)388-6536. om/sales.htm June 30, 2016, will be LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE held at the Deschutes LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF NOTICE OF Services Center, 1300 DESCHUTES COUNTY SUNRIVER LIBRARY P ennymac L o a n NW W a l l St r eet, Services, LLC, its 9-1-1 COUNTY COUN T Y SERVICE Bend, Oregon. The SERVICE successors in interDISTRICT DISTRICT m eeting wil l t a k eBUDGET COMMITTEE est and/or assigns, BUDGET COMMITTEE place May 26, 2015, Plaintiff/s, v. Charles MEETING MEETING beginning at 9:00 a.m. Crisp; N o r thwest The purpose of the Community Credit public meeting of A public meeting of meeting is to receive A Budget Commit- the Budget Commit- Union; and Occuthe budget message the of the Deschutes tee of the Sunriver Li- pants of the preand to receive com- tee 9-1-1 County brary County Service mises, Defendant/s. ment from the public County No.: District, Des- District, D e schutes Case on the budget. This is Service 14CV0834FC. NOCounty, State County, State of Ora p u blic m e eting chutes SAL E Oregon, to discuss egon, to discuss the T ICE O F where deliberation of of budget for the fis- budget for the fiscal UNDER WRIT OF the Budget Commit- the year July 1, 2015, year July 1, 2015, to EXECUTION tee will take place. cal June 30, 2016, will June 30, 2016, will be REAL PROPERTY. Any person may ap- to h e r eby held at the Des- held at the Deschutes Notice i s pear at the meeting be given that the Deschutes Serv i ces Services Center, 1300 and discuss the pro- Center, 1300 NW Wall NW W a l l St r e et, c hutes Coun t y posed programs with Sheriff's Office will, Bend, Oregon. Bend, Oregon. The the Budget Commit- Street, meeting will take m eeting w il l t a k e on Tuesday,June 9, tee. A copy of the The p lace on Ma y 2 7 , p lace on Ma y 2 6 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, budgetdocument may in the main lobby of beginning at 2015, beginning at be inspected or ob- 2015,p.m. Desc h utes The pur- 9:00 a.m. The pur- the tained on or after May 3:15 of the meeting is pose of the meeting is County Sheriff's Of18, 2015, at the Des- pose fice, 6 3 33 3 W. receive the budget to receive the budget chutes County Board to and to re- message and to re- Highway 20, Bend, of C o m missioners' message comment from ceive comment from O regon, sell, a t Office, 1300 NW Wall ceive public oral auction Street, Bend, Oregon, the public on the bud- the public on the bud- to the highest bidget. This is a public get. This is a public 97701, between the where delib- meeting where delib- d er, for c as h o r hours of 8 a.m. and 5 meeting of the Budget eration of the Budget cashier's check, the p.m. Monday through eration real property comwill take Committee will take Friday. F o r f urther Committee m only known a s place. An y person place. An y person information, c ontact may appear at the may appear at the 16137 Alpine Drive, Loni Burk, meeting and discuss meeting and discuss La Pine, O regon Financial/Budget 97739. C onditions Analyst, at the proposed pro- the proposed pro- of Sale: P otential grams with the Bud- grams with the Bud(541)388-6536. bidders must arrive g et Committee. A get Committee. A LEGAL NOTICE copy of the budget copy of the budget 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow NOTICE OF document may bein- document may be inDesc h utes COUNTYWIDE LAW spected or obtained spected or obtained the ENFORCEMENT on or after May 18, on or after May 18, County Sheriff's Ofrev i e w DISTRICT 2 015, at t h e D e s - 2 015, at t h e D e s - f ice to (DISTRICT 1) chutes County Board chutes County Board bidder's funds. Only currency BUDGET COMMITTEE of C o m missioners'of C o m missioners' U.S. ca s h ier's MEETING Office, 1300 NW Wall Office, 1300 NW Wall and/or Street, Bend, Oregon, Street, Bend, Oregon, checks made payable to Deschutes A public meeting of 97701, between the 97701, between the the Budget Commit- hours of 8 a.m. and 5 hours of 8 a.m. and 5 County Sheriff's Oftee of the Countywide p.m. Monday through p.m. Monday through f ice will b e ac Law Enf o rcement Friday. F o r f u rther Friday. F o r f u rther cepted. P a yment District (District 1), information, contact information, contact must be made in full Deschutes C o unty, Loni Burk, Loni Burk, immediately upon t he close o f t h e State of Oregon, to Financial/Budget Financial/Budget at Analyst, at sale. For more indiscuss the budget for Analyst, f ormation on t h i s the fiscal year July 1, (541)388-6536. (541)388-6536. sale go to: www.or2 015, to J u n e 3 0 , LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE egonsheriff s.com/sa 2016, will be held at NOTICE OF NOTICE OF les.htm the Deschutes Services Center, 1300 DESCHUTES COUNTY SUNRIVER SERVICE LEGAL NOTICE EXTENSION DISTRICT NW W a l l St r eet, PNC Bank, National BUDGET COMMITTEE Bend, Oregon. The AND 4-H SERVICE Association, DISTRICT MEETING m eeting w il l ta k e Plaintiff/s, v. Estate of p lace on Ma y 2 8 , BUDGET COMMITTEE Norman T. Welch; the MEETING A public meeting of 2015, beginning at Unknown Heirs and the Budget Commit11:45 a.m. The purAssigns of Norman T. A public meeting of tee of the Sunriver pose of the meeting is Welch; the Unknown to receive the budget the Budget Commit- Service District, Des- Devisees of Norman message and to re- tee of the Deschutes chutes County, State T. Welch; Washingceive comment from County Extension and of Oregon, to discuss ton Mutual Bank, FA the public on the bud- 4-H Service District, the budget for the fis- nka JPMorgan Chase get. This is a public Deschutes C o unty, cal year July 1, 2015, Bank; and all Parties meeting where delib- State of Oregon, to to June 30, 2016, will claiming any interest eration of the Budget discuss the budget for be held at the Des- in the Real Property Serv i ces Committee will take the fiscal year July 1, chutes commonly known as place. An y person 2 015, to J u n e 3 0 , Center, 1300 NW Wall 848 NE P rovidence 2016, will be held at Street, Bend, Oregon. may appear at t he D rive, B end, O R meeting and discuss the Deschutes Ser- The meeting will take 97701, Defendant/s. vices Center, 1300 p lace on Ma y 2 6 , the proposed proCase No.: St r e et, 2015, beginning at grams with the Bud- NW W a l l 1 4CV0191FC. N O g et Committee. A Bend, Oregon. The 9:00 a.m. The pur- TICE OF SALE UNcopy of the budget m eeting w il l t a k e pose of the meeting is DER WRIT OF EXdocument may bein- p lace on Ma y 2 6 , to receive the budget ECUTION - REAL message and to re- PROPERTY. Notice is spected or obtained 2015, beginning at on or after May 18, 9:00 a.m. The pur- ceive comment from hereby given that the 2 015, at t h e D e s- pose of the meeting is the public on the bud- Deschutes C o u nty chutes County Board to receive the budget get. This is a public Sheriff's Office will, on of C o m missioners' message and to re- meeting where delib- Thursday, June 11, Office, 1300 NW Wall ceive comment from eration of the Budget 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Street, Bend, Oregon, the public on the bud- Committee will take the main lobby of the get. This is a public place. A n y p erson 97701, between the Deschutes C o unty hours of 8 a.m. and 5 meeting where delib- may appear at t he Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 p.m. Monday through eration of the Budget meeting and discuss W. Highway 20, Bend, Friday. F o r f urther Committee will take the proposed pro- Oregon, sell, at public information, c ontact place. A n y p erson grams with the Bud- oral auction to t he Loni Burk, may appear at t he g et Committee. A h ighest bidder, f o r meeting and discuss copy of the budget Financial/Budget cash o r ca s hier's Analyst, at the proposed pro- document may bein- check, the real propgrams with the Budspected or obtained (541)388-6536. erty commonly known g et Committee. A on or after May 18, copy of the budget 2 015, at t h e D e s - as 848 N E P r o viGarage Sales document may bein- chutes County Board dence Drive, Bend, or obtained of Co m missioners' Oregon 97701. ConGarage Sales spected ditions of Sale: Poon or after May 18, Office, 1300 NW Wall tential bidders must 2 015, at t h e D e s - Street, Bend, Oregon, Garage Sales arrive 15 minutes prior chutes County Board 97701, between the to the auction to allow of Co m missioners' hours of 8 a.m. and 5 Find them Deschutes County Office, 1300 NW Wall p.m. Monday through the in Street, Bend, Oregon, Friday. F o r f u rther Sheriff's Office to rebidder's funds. 97701, between the information, contact view The Bulletin hours of 8 a.m. and 5 Loni Burk, Only U.S. currency Classifieds and/or cashier's p.m. Monday through Financial/Budget Friday. F o r f u rther Analyst, at checks made payable 541-385-5809 to Deschutes County information, contact (541)388-6536. Sheriff's Office will be Loni Burk, LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE accepted. Payment Financial/Budget NOTICE OF Ocwen Loan Servic- must be made in full Analyst, at DESCHUTES COUNTY (541)388-6536. ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. immediately upon the BUDGET COMMITTEE Jeffrey D. Evans; Patti close of the sale. For MEETING LEGAL NOTICE G. E v ans; 2 0 4 78 more information on go to: NOTICE OF RURAL Karch Drive T rust; this s al e A public meeting of LAW ENFORCEMENT Unknown Trustees of www.oregonsheriffs.c the Deschutes County DISTRICT the 20478 Karch Drive om/sales.htm Budget C ommittee, Trust; Mortgage Elec(DISTRICT 2) LEGAL NOTICE Deschutes C o unty, BUDGET COMMITTEE tronic Re g i stration The following units MEETING State of Oregon, to Systems, Inc.; Indy- will be sold at Pubdiscuss the budget for mac Bank, F .S.B.; lic A u ction on the fiscal year July 1, A public meeting of American Family Mu- Thursday, May 21, 2 015, to J u n e 3 0 , the Budget Commit- tual; Citibank, N.A.; 2015 at 12 p.m. at 2016, will be held at tee of the Rural Law Rampart MMW, Inc.; Northwest the Deschutes Ser- Enforcement District and Persons or Par- Storage, 100 SESelf 3rd vices Center, 1300 ( District 2 ) , De s - ties unknown claimB e nd , OR NW W a l l Str e et, chutes County, State ing any right, title, lien, St., 9 7702. Unitยน B77 Bend, Oregon. The of Oregon, to discuss o r interest i n t h e Laura Evans, Unitยน m eeting w il l ta k e the budget for the fis- property described in C176 - Michael p lace on Ma y 2 6 , cal year July 1, 2015, the complaint herein, Holtz. 2015, beginning at to June 30, 2016, will D efendant/s. C a s e 1 3 CV1093FC. LEGAL NOTICE 10:00 a.m. The pur- be held at the Des- No.: pose of the meeting is chutes Serv i ces N OTICE OF S A L E T RUSTEE'S N O to receive the budget Center, 1300 NW Wall U NDER WRIT O F TICE OF SALE TS message and to re- Street, Bend, Oregon. EXECUTION - REAL No.: 02 4 2 70-OR No.: ceive comment from The meeting will take PROPERTY. Notice is Loan ***** * the public on the bud- p lace on Ma y 2 8 , hereby given that the 7852 R e f e rDeschutes C o u nty ence is made to that get. This is a public 2015, beginning at meeting where delib- 11:45 a.m. The pur- Sheriff's Office will, on certain trust deed eration of the Budget pose of the meeting is Tuesday, June 16, (the "Deed of Trust") Committee will take to receive the budget 2015 at 10:00 AM, in executed by JAMES place. An y person message and to re- the main lobby of the L. OMTA AND GAIL may appear at t he ceive comment from Deschutes C o u nty M O MTA, H U S meeting and discuss the public on the bud- Sheriff's Office, 63333 BAND AND WIFE, the proposed proget. This is a public W. Highway 20, Bend, as Grantor, to Flgrams with the Bud- meeting where delib- Oregon, sell, at public DELITY NATIONAL g et Committee. A eration of the Budget o ral auction to t h e TITLE INS CO, as copy of the budget Committee will take highest bidder, f or Trustee, in favor of document may bein- place. A n y p erson cash o r ca s hier's W ELLS FAR G O spected or obtained may appear at t he check, the real prop- B ANK, N.A., a s on or after May 18, meeting and discuss erty commonly known Beneficiary, dated re2 015, at t h e D e s- the proposed pro- as 20478 Karch Drive, 8/31/2005, chutes County Board grams with the Bud- Bend, Oregon 97702. corded 9/1 9/2005, of C o m missioners' g et Committee. A Conditions of S ale: as Instrument No. Office, 1300 NW Wall copy of the budget Potential bidders must 2 005-62725 in t h e Street, Bend, Oregon, document may bein- arrive 15 minutes prior Official Records of LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF BLACK BUTTE RANCH SERVICE DISTRICT BUDGET COMMITTEE MEETING
BLOCK 1, H OWELL'S H I L L TOP ACRES, RECORDED J A N UARY 11, 1971, IN B OOK A , P A G E 451, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. APN: 129653 / 1513070001500
Commonly known as: 48 2 1 NW J ACKSPINE A V ENUE REDMOND, O REGON 9 7 7 5 6 The current beneficiary is: Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the above-described real property to satisfy the obligations secured b y th e Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to ORS 86.752(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: D e linquent Payments: D ates: 05/01/1 4 thru
97205 858-750-7600.
LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O TICE OF SALE TS No.: 01 6 1 29-OR No.: * *** * *
9085 R e ference is made to that certain trust deed (the "Deed of Trust") executed by 02/01/1 5; No.: 10; P ATRICK W H I LL Amount: $1,591.92; AN U N MARRIED Total: $1 5,919.20. MAN, as Grantor, to A MERITITLE, a s Dates: 03/01/15 thru 0 4/01/15; No.: 2 ; Trustee, in favor of Amount: $1,569.39; COMMONW EALTH Total: $3 , 138.78. U NITED MO R T Late Cha r ges: GAGE A DIVISION $186.45. B e n efi- OF NATI O NAL ciary Ad v ances: CITY BANK OF IN$0.00. Foreclosure DIANA, as BenefiFees and Expenses: ciary, dated $ 0.00. Total R e 1/7/2005, recorded 1 /14/2005, as I n quired to Reinstate: $19,244.43. TOTAL strument No. 2005-02194, in the REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: Official Records of Deschutes County, $88,382.32. By reason of the default, Oregon, which covers the following dethe beneficiary has declared all obligascribed real proptions secured by the e rty s i tuated i n Deed of Trust imDeschutes County, mediately due and Oregon: LOT SEVpayable, including: E NTEEN (17) I N the principal sum of BLOCK (5) WEST $80,258.60 toHILLS 5TH A DDIgether with interest TION, RECORDED thereon at the rate M AY 2, 1 970, I N of 5.375 % per anCABINET A, PAGE num, from 4/1/2014 395, DESCHUTES until paid, plus all COUNTY, ORaccrued late EGON. APN: c harges, and a l l 101735 / trustee's fees, fore171230CC04100 closure costs, and Commonly known any s u m s adas: 20 8 8 NW vanced by the benVICKSBURG AVE eficiary pursuant to BEND, O R EGON the terms and con97701The c u rrent ditions of the Deed beneficiary is: GSR of Trust Whereof, MORTGAGE LOAN n otice hereby i s TRUST 2005-AR3, MORTGAGE given that the undersigned trustee, PASS-THROUGH C LEAR RE C O N CERTIFICATES, CORP., whose adSERIES 2005-AR3, U .S. B AN K N A d ress is 621 SW Morrison Str e et, TIONAL ASSOCIASuite 425, Portland, AS TION, OR 97205, will on T RUSTEE, Bo t h 8 /25/2015, at t h e the beneficiary and hour of 11:00 AM, the trustee h ave standard time, as elected to sell the established by ORS above-described 1 87.110, AT T H E real property to satB OND STR E ET isfy the obligations ENTRANCE STEPS secured b y the T O T H E DES Deed of Trust and CHUTES COUNTY notice has been reCOURTHOUSE, corded pursuant to 1 164 NW B O N D ORS 86.752(3). The S T., B E ND, O R default for which the 97701, sell at public foreclosure is made auction to the highis the grantor's failest bidder for cash ure to pay when the interest in the due, the following above-described sums: D elinquent real property which Payments: Dates: the grantor had or 01/01/1 1 thru had power to con0 2/01/1 1; No.: 2 . vey at the time it Amount: $1,618.72; executed the Deed Total: $ 3 , 237.44. of Trust, together Dates: 03/01/11 thru with an y i n terest 02/01/1 2; No.: 12; which the grantor or Amount: $1,585.18; his successors in Total: $1 9,022. t 6. interest a c q uired Dates: 03/01/12 thru after the execution 0 8/01/1 2; No.: 6 ; of the Deed of Trust, Amount: $1,633.83; to satisfy the foreTotal: $ 9 , 802.98. going o b ligations Dates: 09/01/12 thru thereby secured and 0 2/01/1 3; No.: 6 ; Amount: $1,635.75; the costs and expenses of sale, inTotal: $ 9 , 81 4.50. cluding a reasonDates: 03/01/13 thru able charge by the 02/01/1 4; No.: 12; trustee. Notice is Amount: $1,604.41; further given that Total: $1 9,252.92. any person named Dates: 03/01/14 thru in ORS 86.778 has 02/01/1 5; No.: 12; the right to have the Amount: $1,574.72; f oreclosure pro Total: $1 8,896.64. ceeding dismissed Dates: 03/01/15 thru a nd the Deed of 0 3/01/1 5; No.: 1 ; Trust reinstated by Amount: $1,574.73; payment to the ben$1,574.73. Late eficiary of the entire Charges: $254.84. a mount then d u e Beneficiary Ad(other than the porvances: $1 0,443.48. tion of principal that Foreclosure F e es would not then be and Exp e nses: due had no default $ 0.00. Total R e occurred), together quired to Reinstate: w ith t h e cos t s , $92,299.69. TOTAL trustee's and REQUIRED TO attorneys' fees, and PAYOFF: curing any o t her $ 319,144.19. B y default complained reason of the deof in the Notice of fault, th e b e nefiDefault by tenderciary has declared ing t h e pe r for- all obligations semance required uncured by the Deed d er the Deed o f of Trust i mmediTrust at any time not ately due and paylater than five days able, including: the before the date last p set for sale. Witho ut l i miting t h e trustee's disclaimer of r e presentations or warranties, Oregon law requires the trustee to state in this notice that some r e s idential property sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of w h ich a re known to b e toxic. P r ospective purchasers of resi-
2 763 N E Hop e D rive, Bend, O r egon 97701. Conditions of Sale: Potential bidders must arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow the Desc hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to review bid d e r's funds. Only U . S. c urrency an d / or 1 4CV0813FC. N O TICE OF SALE UN- cashier's c h e cks made payable to DER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL Deschutes County PROPERTY. Notice is Sheriff's Office will hereby given that the be accepted. PayDeschutes C o u nty ment must be made Sheriff's Office will, on in full immediately Thursday, June 18, upon the close of 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the sale. For more the main lobby of the information on this Deschutes C o unty sale go to: www.oregonsheriff s.com/sa Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, les.htm Oregon, sell, at public NOTICE o ral auction to t he WLEGAL ilmington T r u s t h ighest bidder, f o r Succescash o r ca s hier's Company, Trustee to Citcheck, the real prop- sor i Bank, N .A., as erty commonly known Trustee f/b/o Holda s 1113 N W 2 2 n d of S t ructured Place, Redmond, Or- ers Mortgage Inegon 97756. Condi- Asset II I nc., tions of Sale: Poten- vestments Bear Stearns Alt-A t ial b i dders m u s t Trust 2006-8, Mortarrive 15 minutes prior age Pass-Through to the auction to allow ertificates, Series the Deschutes County 2006-8, Plaintiff/s, v. Sheriff's Office to reW a l ker; view bidder's funds. Brihana Walker aka Only U.S. currency Matthew S. Walker; and/or cashier's Matthew M ortgage Ele c checks made payable tronic Registration to Deschutes County Systems, Inc.; SeSheriff's Office will be curitynational Mortaccepted. Payment gage Co m pany; must be made in full Porffolio Recovery immediately upon the A ssociates, L L C ; close of the sale. For Advantage Assets II more information on Inc.; Capital One this s al e go to: Bank; Occupants of www.oregonsheriffs.c the property, Defenom/sales.htm dant/s. Case No.: LEGAL NOTICE 13CV0418. NOWells Fargo Bank, T ICE O F SA L E UNDER WRIT OF NA, its successors in interest and/or EXECUTION assigns, Plaintiff/s, REAL PROPERTY. v. Russell Harrison Notice is h e reby given that the Desaka Russell George H arrison; Daw n c hutes Cou n t y Nicole Leroy-HarriSheriff's Office will, son; an d O c c u- on Tuesday, June 9, 2015 at 10:00 AM, pants of th e p remises, Defendant/s. in the main lobby of Case No.: the Desc h utes 12CV1345. NOCounty Sheriff's OfT ICE O F SAL E fice, 6 3 33 3 W. UNDER WRIT OF Highway 20, Bend, EXECUTION O regon, s ell , a t REAL PROPERTY. public oral auction Notice i s h e r eby to the highest bidgiven that the Desd er, for cash o r c hutes Coun t y cashier's check, the Sheriff's Office will, real property comon Thursday, June m only known a s 11, 2015 at 10:00 53091 Loop Drive La Pine, O regon A M, in t h e m a in lobby of the Des97739. Conditions c hutes Cou n t y of Sale: P o tential S heriff's Of fi c e , bidders must arrive 63333 W. Highway 15 minutes prior to 20, Bend, Oregon, the auction to allow the Desc h utes sell, at public oral auction to the highCounty Sheriff's Ofest bidder, for cash f ice to revi e w or cashier's check, bidder's funds. Only the real p r operty U.S. currency commonly known as and/or ca s hier's 2239 Nor t hwest checks made payJ ackpine Cou r t , able to Deschutes County Sheriff's OfRedmond, Oregon 97756. Conditions f ice will b e a c of Sale: P o tential cepted. P a yment bidders must arrive must be made in full 15 minutes prior to immediately u pon the auction to allow t he close o f t h e the Desc h utes sale. For more inCounty Sheriff's Off ormation on t h is sale go to: www.orf ice to revi e w bidder's funds. Only egonsheri ff s.com/sa U.S. currency les.htm and/or ca s hier's LEGAL NOTICE checks made payW ilmington Tru s t able to Deschutes Company, as Trustee County Sheriff's Offor Merrill Lynch Mortf ice will b e a c Investors Trust, cepted. P a yment gage Mortgage Loan must be made in full Asset-Backed Certifiimmediately u pon cates, Series t he close o f t h e 2006-HE5, Plaintiff/s, sale. For more inv . Derek C . L e e ; f ormation on t h is Mortgage Electronic sale go to: www.orRegistration Systems, egonsheriff s.com/sa Inc.; American Mortles.htm gage Express Financial dba M illennium Good classified adstell Funding Group; Robthe essential facts in an ert Ezell S pringleaf interesting Manner.Write Financial S e rvices, from the readers view -not Inc. fk a A m erican the seller's. Convert the General Finance Serfacts into benefits. Show vices, I n c. ; S e l co LEGAL NOTICE the reader howthe item will Community C r e dit U.S. Bank National help them insomeway. Union; Occupants of Association, This the premises, DefenPlaintiff/s, v. Jaseon advertising tip d ant/s. Cas e N o . : W Hamilton and Amie brought to you by 1 4CV0720FC. N O M . Hamilton; et a l , TICE OF SALE UND efendant/s. C a s e The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsince t9t8 DER WRIT OF EXNo.: 13CV0746. NOECUTION - REAL TICE OF SALE UNLEGAL NOTICE PROPERTY. Notice is DER WRIT OF EXWells Fargo Bank, hereby given that the ECUTION - REAL N.A., its successors Deschutes C o unty PROPERTY. Notice is in interest and/or Sheriff's Office will, on hereby given that the assigns, Plaintiff/s, Thursday, June 11, Deschutes C o u nty v. Unknown Heirs of 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Sheriff's Office will, on John C. Lehto aka the main lobby of the Tuesday, June 1 6, John Corey Lehto; Deschutes C o u nty 2015 at 10:00 AM, in D eborah Leh t o; Sheriff 's Office,63333 the main lobby of the Calvin Lehto; NikW. Highway 20, Bend, Deschutes C o u nty kita Lehto; CitiBank, Oregon, sell, at public Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 N.A., successor by o ral auction to t h e W. Highway 20, Bend, merger to CitiBank h ighest bidder, f o r Oregon, sell, at public Federal S a v ings cash o r ca s hier's o ral auction to t h e Bank; State of Orcheck, the real proph ighest bidder, f or egon; Mid Oregon erty commonly known cash o r ca s hier's Occupants of as 21237 S t arlight check, the real prop- FCU; the premises, and Drive, Bend, Oregon erty commonly known the Real Property 97702. Conditions of as 1 7 044 W h ittier l ocated a t 276 3 Sale: Potential bidDrive, Bend, Oregon N ortheast Hop e ders must arrive 15 97707. Conditions of D rive, Bend, O r minutes prior to the Sale: Potential bid97701, Defenauction to allow the ders must arrive 15 egon dant/s. Case No.: Deschutes C o u nty minutes prior to the 14CV0778FC. NOSheriff's Office to reauction to allow the T ICE O F SAL E view bidder's funds. Deschutes C o u nty UNDER WRIT OF Only U.S. currency Sheriff's Office to re- EXECUTION and/or cashier's view bidder's funds. REAL PROPERTY. Only U.S. currency Notice i s h e r eby checks made payable to Deschutes County and/or cashier's that the DesSheriff's Office will be checks made payable grven c hutes Coun t y accepted. P ayment to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will, must be made in full Sheriff's Office will be on Tuesday, June 9, immediately upon the accepted. P ayment 2015 at 10:00 AM, close of the sale. For must be made in full in the main lobby of more information on immediately upon the the Desc h utes this s al e g o to: close of the sale. For County Sheriff's Ofwww.oregonsheriffs.c more information on fice, 6 3 33 3 W. om/sales.htm this s al e g o to: Highway 20, Bend, www.oregonsheriffs.c O regon, sell, a t The Bulletin om/sales.htm public oral auction to the highest bidCall The Bulletin At To SubSC ribe Call d er, for c as h o r 541-385-5809 cashier's check, the 541-385-5800or goto Place Your Ad Or E-Mail real property comAt: www.bendbulletin.com m only known as WWW .bendbulletin.Com LEGAL NOTICE Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as Trustee for WAMU Mor t gage Pass Through Certificates Series 2 006-PR3 Trus t , Plaintiff/s, v. Kevin M. P riest; B renda A . Priest; Occupants of the premises, Defend ant/s. Case N o .: