Bulletin Daily Paper 07-06-14

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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

STORM KING MOUNTAIN: 20 YEARS LATER

U.S. SUPREME COURT RULING

FRIDAY: THETRAGEDYI sATURDAY:THE sURYIvoRs ITQDAY:THELEGACY

Local cops see slight cellphone

BraZil —Soccer playedin floating villages.D1

Plus: World Cup — Argentina, Netherlandsadvance.D6

What our facessayEstimating agesandassessing longevity: Researchersare making strides.A3

In the aftermathTheSouth CanyonFirekiled 14experiencedfirefighters; eversince, families haveendeavoredto cope, andofficials haveworked to prevent similar tragedies

impact By Valerie Smith TheBulletin

'4 pQNALO

Locallawenforcement

officialsbelievetherecent U.S. Supreme Courtruling oncellphoneswillhave animpactonhowtheydo theirjobs,butnotasignifi

s How the sagegrouse mayswing Se Senate-

i 1

Candidatesrunning forseats in Montanaand Coloradoare sponsoring legislation.BS

cantone.

Thecourtruledlate lastmonththatunderthe Fourth Amendmentcell-

United States of surrogaCy —Formuch ofthe rest of theworld, the U.S.isthe placeto getababy.A4

phonescannolongerbe searchedbylawenforce-

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mentwithoutawarrant.

Onlyextraordinarycir cumstances wouldallow

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acellphone. Inthe opinion, Chief

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Amelia Earhart — A

Justice John Roberts .

wrotethatcellphones are "minicomputers" that couldalsobe called"cam

eras, videoplayers, rolo-

researcher thinkshe's found anewclue into the aviator's disappearance, thistimeina photo.AS

dexes, calendars, tapere,~'A d

corders, libraries, diaries, albums, televisions, maps ornewspapers."Henoted inhisopinionthatbecause

thephoneshave somuch storage capacity, they're

NSAsurveillance — A Washington Postinvestigation findsordinaryusersare more oftenlistenedto.A4

EDITOR'5CHOICE

At the CIA:

disclosure, then forced departure By Greg Miller The WashingtonPost

WASHINGTON — His

CIAcareerindudedassignmentsinAfrica,AfghanistanandIraq,but themost perilouspostingfor Jeffrey Scudderturnedout tobea two-year stintinasleepy officethatlooksafterthe

agency'shistoricalfiles.

differentfromotheritems

1

r

thatcouldbe foundina TheAssociatedPressfilephoto

On July9, 1994, Jerry McDonald, left, asafetyofficer for the U.S. Forest Servicefromthe Stanislaus NationalForest, looksover the burnedscrubon StormKing Mountain westof Glenwood Springs, Colorado. McDonald was giving a tour to then-U.S. Secretaryof Agriculture Mike Espy, right, of themountainwhere 14firefightersdied July6whilebattling ablaze.

• 'Firefighting changed drastically afterStormI(ing' TheBulletin

earning fromthe deaths of 14fire-

L

fighters 20years ago in the South CanyonFireonStormKing Moun-

tain, wildlandfirefightersarenowmore

willing to speak up if they are uneasy aboutafire. "Firefighting changed drastically after Storm King," said John Maclean, au-

After the fire, some of the survivors revealed they didn't feel safe with their

operationsthatheconclud-

mission that day — digging a fireline

edwerestillbeingstored insecretyearsafterthey

d ownhill, attempting to corral a f i re

Hotshots and five other firefighters.

Scuddersubmittedare-

theycouldn'tseebecauseof theterrain. Maclean isn't the only one to start hislistof changesbroughtbythe South Canyon Firewith firefighters being upfrontif theyareleeryof asituation. Fire

questunderthe Freedomof

crews follow military chains of com-

InformationAct — astep thatanycitizencantake,

mand, andbefore the South Canyon Fire, firefighters were reluctant to ques-

butonethatishighlyunusualfora CIAemployee. Four yearslater,the CIAhas releasedsomeofthosearti-

tion orders. Eric Miller, the new superintendent for the Prineville Hotshots,

SAN JOSE, Calif.— She

isadisheveledwoman, hairmussed,upperteeth

gone,muddywalking canetapedtogether. Butin the Jungle, Maria Esther AndyTullis/The Bulletin

Kathyand Kenny Brinkleyholdthehighschool graduation pictureof their son Levi, whodiedinthe StormKing tragedy, at their homein Burns."There'saholein yourheart • • ." Kenny Brinkleysays.

: :'• Families recalthe l lost, : join in thememorial efforts

Followthis series online at bendbulletin.com/stormking

that Crook County squad to receive a (then) Pac-10scholarshipoffer. "After we won state, Jon goes off to onKelsowasmanythings — firefighter, lifeguard, smokejumper, Oregon State," says Marv, a 74-yearlate-night dune buggy racerold retired middle school teacherwho butahighschoolathletehewasnot. still lives in Prineville with his wife Husky as a child, according to his Anita, also 74."And he sets up an apTheBulletin

mother, Jon managed the football

pointment to see what it takes to be a

team for four years at Crook County High School in Prineville and was

manager at Oregon State. An assistant coach did the interview, and he

calls up (former Crook County coach pionshiprun. Bob) Crofcheck, and Crofcheck says, But, as his father Marv Kelso loves 'Gethimifyoucan.'" to tell, Jon was the only member of SeeStormKing/A7 part of the Cowboys' 1984statecham-

South Canyon Fire.

SeeLessons/A7

TODAY'S WEATHER

ff%

Q

By BeauEastes

said it is one of the main lessons of the

clesandwithheldothers. It

hisFOIArequest. SeeCIA/A5

The AssociatedPress

yon Fire.""I thinkthebiggest change is something that isn't mentioned in any of the reports.... It's a greater willingness on thepart of firefighters to speak up when they think that they are in an overlydangerous situation." Theblowupof the South Canyon Fire in Colorado on July 6, 1994, killed nine

des,hundredsofhist oriesof long-dormantconflictsand

alsohasforced Scudderout. Hisrequestsetinmotion aharrowingsequence. He wasconfrontedandaccused ofmishandlingclassifiedinformationwhileassembling

By Martha Mendoza

thorofthe 1999book"Fireonthe Mountain: the True Story of the South Can-

members of the 20-person Prineville

shouldhavebeenshared

SeeCellphones/A5

Day to day in a Silicon Valley slum

By Dylan J. Darling

Itwastherethat Scudder discoveredastackofarti-

withthepublic. Toget themreleased,

routine searchof someone underarrest.

The Bulletin

INDEX

Sunny High 88, Low53 PageB6

E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6,G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts 61-6 Local/State B 1-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies

Business Calendar Classified

e

e

I

C6 D1-6 C8

Anlndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 187,

4epages, 7sections

Salazarisapersontobe reckonedwith. Hershelter,supported

bytreebranches,isagath eringplace. Inside, friends huddlearoundafolding ta bleinarmchairs, smoking pot, dozing, sharingsto ries, arguing. Outside,they squatbyhercooking fire fryingpancakes orwarmingsoup,handoutsfrom Sundaychurchgroups. Herson Bobbyliveswith

hisgirlfriendjustafew tentsaway. Her weedconnectionhascoffeeready forherinthemorningat histent. It'seasytoforget that the

geeks andWebentrepre neursof Silicon Valleyare makingtheirmillionsjust milesaway. SeeJungle/A6

Q Weuserecyclednewsprint

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NATION Ee ORLD MIDEAST

SOmalia dOmdiug —Four people were killed when acar laden with explosives blew upnearthe parliamentary building in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, a police official said Saturday. The Somali terror group al-Shabab claimed responsibility for the bombing. Capt. Mohammed Hussein said the carexploded at acheckpoint where it had been stopped bySomali troops. Thedead weresoldiers and refugees from an internal refugee campnearthe checkpoint, Hussien said. He said Somali troops had ordered the driver of the car out the vehicle for a search when he detonated the explosives. Sevenchildren from the camp werewounded in the attack.

nres s rea sa er a uo s o r a e e n By Joel Greenberg McCtatchy Foreign Staff

JERUSALEM — Initial au-

topsy findings that an Arab teenager found dead after he

visiting family in East JerusaThe post mortem examlem, also drew criticism from ination of Abu Khdeir's body the Obama administration. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the

was kidnapped in East Jeru- United States was "profoundsalem was burned alive added ly troubled by reports" that Saturday to a growing sense 15-year-old Tarik Abu Khdeir, that I sraeli-Palestinian tena high school sophomore from sions have reached explosive Tampa, "was severely beaten levels. while in police custody." "We are calling for a speedy, Protests over the death of

found "soot in the area of the

breathing airways, windpipes and lungs, which indicates inhalation of this substance

during the burning when he was alive," the statement said. Burns of varying degrees were found on 90 percent of the youth's body, and his head was bruised, according to the

statement. Specimens were vestigation and full account- taken from the corpse for furto Arab communities inside ability for any excessive use of ther laboratory examination. Israel. Youths burned tires force," Psaki said. A spokeswoman for the and hurled stones in Nazareth, The Palestinian Authority's Israeli health ministry and a the largest Arab city in Israel, attorney general, Muhammad police spokesman said they in Arab towns northeast of Abdel Ghani al Aweiwi, said had no knowledge of the preTel Aviv, and along a major in a statement that an autop- liminary findings. The autopeast-west highway flanked by sy showed that Muhammad sy was performed at Israel's Arab villages. Abu Khdeir, who was abduct- f orensic institute w it h t h e The apparent beating by Is- ed early Wednesday outside participation of the chief Palraeli police of an Arab-Ameri- a mosque in East Jerusalem, estinian forensic pathologist, can teen from Florida, who is a died from "burns and their and final results have yet to be cousin of Abu Khdeir and was complications." released. Muhammad Abu Khdeir, 16, spread from East Jerusalem

transparent and credible in-

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Arthur aftermath —North Carolina'spopular beachtowns began returning to thebusiness of recreation Saturday, after Arthur lashed the state's coast with forceful winds andheavy rain andthen churned northward without leaving a trail of significant damage. Arthur was downgraded to tropical a storm early Saturday, but the storm's near-hurricane strength winds slammedinto Canada'smaritime provinces, causing about 250,000 customers to losepower. Thestorm has caused flight cancellations and delays at the region's largest airport in Halifax, while flooding somelocal roads in NewBrunswick. Shark dite —A swimmer was bitten Saturday by a juvenile great white shark that grew agitated trying to free itself from a hook fisha erman had thrown into the water off Southern California's Manhattan Beach Pier, officials said. Theman, who waswith a group of long-distance swimmers when heswaminto the fishing line, was bitten on a side of his rib cagearound 9:30 a.m., said Rick Flores, a Los Angeles County Fire Department spokesman.Theman's injuries were not life-threatening, and hewastaken to a hospital.

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Philadelphia —Fire raced through a rowof two-story homes in southwest Philadelphia early Saturday, killing three4-year-olds and a baby andengulfing at least10 houses, officials said. Awoman and three other children escapedthrough a second-floor window. Theblaze began shortly before 3a.m. andwasbrought under control in about an hour, fire officials said. At least eight row homeswere gutted, leaving behind only charred frames.Thecauseof the fire remains under investigation, but witnessessaid it may have begunona couch ona porch.

UKRAINE CLAIMS VICTORY IN FRACTIOUS EAST

. rIII ,

stage Saturdayafter being sidelinedfor two months becauseof avirus, spinning out songsfromthe Beatles, Wings anda solo career that has spannedmorethan50years.McCartney,whoturned72twoweeksago, looked nonethe worsefor wear. Hemadeno immediate reference tohis absence. He wasbriefly hospitalized in Tokyo in Maybecause of the viral infection. Theillnessforced him tocancel aJapanesetour andaconcert in South Koreaandreschedule half adozenJune dates in the United States before resuminghis "OutThere"tour inAlbany, NewYork. Eg+t fuel prloeS —The Egyptian government sharply raised fuel prices early Saturday, apparently signaling the resolve of the country's new president, Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, to forge aheadwith a series of austerity measures despite official concerns about apublic backlash. In a sign of worry at the public reaction, the increasewas announced just hours before it took effect, at midnight Friday, andraised the prices of onetype of fuel by up to 78 percent. OnSaturday, taxi drivers protested the move byholding strikes in several neighborhoods in the capital. Passengers reported drivers refusing to turn on their meters.

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Trapped ChineSe minerS — Rescuersearly todayworkedto h

free17 miners trapped following a gasexplosion at acoal mine in western China, the country's official news agency reported. Theblast at the mine 70miles from Urumqi, the capital of the sprawling Xinjiang region, happened onSaturday evening, according to the Xinhua News Agency. It said three other people working inside the mineat the time hadbeenrescued. China hasthe world's deadliest mines, although the safety record has beenimproving in recent years as regulators have strengthenedenforcement of safety rules. — From wire reports

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People clear out debris of anapartment building damaged by shelling in Mykolaivka, eastern Ukraine, Saturday. Elsewhere Saturday, Ukrainian troops forced pro-Russian insurgents out of Slovyansk, a key stronghold in the country's embattled east, a significant success that suggested the government mayfinally be making gains in amonths-long battle against a spreading separatist insurgency. As rebels fled from Slovyansk, vowing to regroup elsewhere andfight on, President Petro Poroshenko hailed the recapture of the city as "the start of a turning point" in a battle that has claimed morethan 400

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IslamicState'sleaderappearsin public, exhorts other Muslimsto join him By Nabih Bulos and Patrick J. Mcoonnell Los Angeles Times

All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,Po.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.

lives since April. After a night of heavy fighting that saw heavy artillery fire from Ukraine's troops, government soldiers were in full control of rebel headquarters in Slovyansk, a city of about100,000 that has beena center of the fighting between Kiev's troops andthe pro-Russian insurgents. "It's not a total victory. But the purging of Slovyanskofthesebands,madeupofpeoplearmed to the teeth, has incredible symbolic importance," Poroshenko said in astatement posted on his official website.

BAGHDAD — The secretive head of the Islamic State militant group has made what

appears to be his first public appearance,purportedly speaking from a mosque in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, according to a video posted online Saturday.

The video, uploaded by supporters to websites including YOLII1tbe, appears to show Abu

Bakr Baghdadi, chief of the Islamic State, an al-Qaida offshoot, leading prayers in the Grand Mosque in Mosul, which was overrun by militants last month as part of an offensive

across norlhernIraq. TheIslam-

and then begins to address of Iraq and Syria, for their worshippers in a resolute tone, territorial advances in broad focusing heavily on religious swaths of both Iraq and neighmatters. The 21-minute clip boring Syria. The Islamic was apparently filmed a day State is now running an Isearlier, the first Friday of the lamic caliphate established "after many years of jihad and Ramadan fasting period. The group's release of the patience and fighting the enevideo seems intended to bur- mies of God," Baghdadi said. nish Baghdadi's leadership The speech was less a fiery and religious credentials as sermon than a d e termined head of an al-Qaida break- message dramatizing Baghdaaway faction that has become di's assertion that the Islamic infamous for its brutality, in- State — which has attracted cluding public executions of thousands of volunteers from perceived enemies and "apos- the Middle East, Europe and tates" and the crucifixions of elsewhere — sits at the vansome victims. guard of a global militant As he addressed the crowd, movement. He exhorted other Baghdadi congratulated fight- Muslims to join what he called ers for the group, previously a righteous battle to restore Isknown as the Islamic State lam's lost glory.

ic State stands at the forefront of

a Sunni Muslim uprising that threatens the U.S;backed Iraqi government in Baghdad. Baghdadi, a cleric previously known publicly only through grainy mug shots and audio messages exhorting fellow Sunnis to rise up and fight against "infidels," appears as a plump, bearded figure outfitted in the group's signature black clothing. He dons

a black turban as he speaks in the mosque, famous for its leaning minaret. In the footage, Baghdadi ceremoniously climbs the stairs to the mosque's pulpit

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, July 6, the187th day of 2014. Thereare178 days left in the year.

CUTTING EDGE

HAPPENINGS StOrm —After hitting eastern Canada Saturday, the remnants of Arthur are expected to track northeast through the Gulf of St. Lawrence toward Newfoundland.

HISTORY Highlight:In1944, an estimated168 people died in afire that broke out during a performance in the main tent of the Ringling Bros. andBarnum 8 Bailey Circus in Hartford, Connecticut. (Among the survivors was future actor Charles Nelson Reilly, then age13.) In1483, England's King Richard III was crowned inWestminster Abbey. In1535,Sir Thomas More was executed in England for high treason. In1777, during the American Revolution, British forces captured Fort Ticonderoga. In1854, the first official meeting of the Republican Partytook place in Jackson, Michigan. In1917,during World WarI, Arab forces led byT.E.Lawrence and AudaAbuTayicaptured the port of Aqabafrom the Turks.

A new system uses a complicated algorithm and a growing database of faces to assess how old parts of a person's face appear to be. Researchers behind the system hope to one day link the appearance of aging to estimates of a person's longevity. Here's what the computer said about two Washington Post reporters. HOW IT WORKS 1. A computer places 250 dot "landmarks" on the image to determine target areas.

In1988, 167 North Sea oil

workers were killed whenexplosions and fires destroyed a drilling platform. Medical waste and other debris beganwashing up on New York City-area seashores, forcing the closing of several popular beaches. In1989, the U.S.Army destroyed its last Pershing1A missiles at anammunition plant in Karnack,Texas, underterms of the1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear ForcesTreaty. In1994, 14 firefighters were killed while battling a several-days-old blaze onStorm King Mountain in Colorado. Ten years ago:Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry chose former rival John Edwards to be his running mate. A U.S. fighter pilot who'd mistakenl ybombed Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan in 2002, killing four, was found guilty in NewOrleans of dereliction of duty; Maj. Harry Schmidt was reprimandedand docked a month's pay. Five years ago:Robert McNamara, the Pentagon chief who'd directed the escalation of the VietnamWardespite private doubts, died in Washington, D.C., at 93. President Barack Obamaopened atwoday Moscow summit with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. Doctors at four hospitals in four states (Maryland, Missouri, Oklahomaand Michigan) finished transplanting eight kidneys over threeweeks. One yearago:A runawaytrain carrying crudeoil derailed in eastern Quebec,igniting fires and explosions that destroyed much of thetown of Lac-Megantic and killed 47people. An Asiana Airlines Boeing777from Seoul, South Korea,crashed while landing atSanFrancisco International Airport; of the307 people onboard Flight 214, three Chineseteens were killed.

BIRTHDAYS Former first lady NancyReagan is 93. The14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, is 79. Former President George W.Bush is 68. Actor-director Sylvester Stallone is 68. Actor Geoffrey Rush is 63. Rapper Inspectah Deck (Wu-TangClan) is 44. Rapper 50 Cent is 39.Actress Eva Green is34. — From wire reports

3. Six major regions are considered and

assigned ages. The combination results in a "perceived age," which is basically how old the computer thinks the person behind the face is.

Note: Illustrations are schematic

WHAT THE COMPUTER SAW BY REGION 44.3 years Little creasing.

30.1 years Creases just starting

Forehead Horizontal creases and lines as skin loses elasticity.

48.9 Brow region Faint lines. Vertical lines appear between eyebrows in people who tend to furrow them

In1933, the first All-Star

baseball gamewas playedat Chicago's ComiskeyPark; the American Leaguedefeated the National League, 4-2. In1957, AltheaGibsonbecame the first black tennis player to win a Wimbledon singles title as she defeated fellow American Darlene Hard6-3, 6-2. In1964, the movie "AHard Day's Night," starring The Beatles, had its world premiere in London. TheBritish colony Nyasaland became theindependent country of Malawi. In1971, jazz trumpeter and singer Louis Armstrong died in New York at age69.

'si

2. It connects the dots to make triangles and looks for variations in color and texture within each triangle. More variations than average within an area often indicate an older face.

52.3 No crow's feet, but some fine lines and puffiness.

Area around eyes Crow's feet and bags below eyes can begin to appear in the mid-20s.

28.9 Eyes smooth and young.

47.6 Freckles become larger and denser, but Bahrampour's did not fool the computer.

Nose area The tip of the nose becomes more bulbous with age. Skin texture

26.4 The computer found no

41.7 Small pores,

no deep grooves.

Tara Bahramponr Perceived age: 46.9 years Actual age: 47 years, 2 months

deep creases.

changes, pores enlarge. 30.7 No drooping in cheeks.

Cheeks/Jowls Once-cherubic cheeks start to sag. Wrinkles develop in the cheeks.

51.5 Upper lip is thinner than the lower lip, corners of mouth have begun to turn down.

25.1 In a previous photo, dry lips and beard stubble made computer add 13 years.

Mouth Collagen declines, making lips thinner. Mouths begin to droop at the corners.

By Tara Bahrampour

it has not revealed details of

The Washington Post

its plans or how much it is in-

vesting. Another organization, Human LongevityInc., headcomes to your house and, along ed bythewell-known genomwith noting your weight and ics researcher Craig Venter, blood pressure, snaps a pho- launched this spring with plans to of your face. And that those to build a database of human wrinkles, mottled spots and DNA sequencing to tackle dissaggy parts, when fed into a eases of aging; it raised $70 computer, could estimate how million in an initial round of long you will live. funding. WASHINGTON — Imagine that an insurance underwriter

Facial recognition technol-

is working on a system that

would analyze an individual's prospects based on how his or her face has aged. "We know in the field of aging that some people tend to senesce, or grow older, more rapidly than others, and some more slowly," said Jay Olshansky, a biodemographer at the University of Illinois at Chicago who came up with the idea. "And we also know that the

Robert Samuels Perceived age: 27.4 years Actual age: 29 years, 9 months

Bonnie Berkowitz and James Smallwood i The Washington Post

Sources: Computer scientist Karl Ricanek and public health professor Jay Olshansky of FaceMyAge.com

ogy, long used to search for criminals and to guess how a missing child might look as an adult,may soon become personal. A group of scientists

26.3 No lines.

SELC© COMMUNIT1 r1EDIT UNION

And the National Institutes of Health recently launched an

unprecedented collaborative initiative across 20 of its 27 specialized institutes to address

aging and longevity. National Institute on Aging director Richard Hodes said the NIH

would also like to work on the topic with some of the emerg-

ing organizations. The economic and social implications could be staggering. Not only will living to 100

become more common one day, longevity experts say, but the quality of life in the final decades might also be drastically improved, reducing the burdens imposed by an aging population. Increasing life expectancy by 2.2 years by slowing aging would save $7.1 trillion in

children of people who senesce more slowly tend to live longer than other people." The research is still in its early stages, but the idea of using facial recognition technology disability and entitlement prohas prompted interest from in- grams over 50 years, accordsurance company executives ing to a paper in Health Affairs who see potential for using it co-autbored by O lshansky, in determining premiums, 01- who is also aresearch associate shansky said. There's also a at the University of Chicago's potential benefit for individu- Center on Aging. als: The technology might prod Longevity scientists say the them to change their health key to extending healthy life habits before it's too late. lies in focusing on aging itself The technology involves rather than on aging-related using a computer to scan a diseases. Even minor progress photograph of a face for signs in slowing the aging process of aging. Factoring in the sub- wouldbemoregroundbreaking ject'srace, gender, education than major progress that tacklevel and smoking historyles just one illness, they say. all known to affect longevity In fact, drugs already in use prospects — it would analyze for some age-relateddiseases each section of cheek, eye, may turn out to work because brow, mouth and jowl looking they are delaying aging overall. "We may be at the beginning for shading variations that signal lines, dark spots, drooping of a time when drugs approved and other age-related changes fordiabetesorm aculardegenthat might indicate how the eration are actually working person is doing compared with because they are delaying the others of the same age and onset of aging," said Dan Perbackground. ry, founder of the Alliance for As the United States skews Aging Research, a Washingincreasingly older, research ton-based advocacy group. into extending life span and, in And while it is not yet clear particular, increasing the num- whether humans will one day ber of healthy yearsisa boom live 150 years, as some have topic for public and private predicted, scientists are optientities. mistic that the number of years Google last fall announced of healthy life — or "health Calico, a new enterprise fo- span" — of humans can be sigcusing on aging and associat- nificantly increased and the ined diseases, for which it has firmities associated with aging been recruiting top scientists; reduced.

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

"I submitted a FOIA, and it basically destroyed my entire career. What was this whole

Cellphones

exercise for?"

Continued from A1 The Bend Police Department in most cases has al-

— Jeffrey Scudder, formerCIAemployee

CIA

a spreadsheet outlining his possible pension packages with two figures — one large

Continued from A1 His house was raided by the FBI

and one small — underlined.

He agreed to retire.

a n d h i s f a m i l y 's

computers seized. Stripped of his job and his security clearance, Scudder said he agreed to retire last year after

His FOIA requests have V.

being told that if he refused,

he risked losing much of his pension. In a n

i n t e r view, S c ud-

der, 51, cast his ordeal as a struggle against "mindless" bureaucracy, but

edged that it was hard to see any winners in a case that derailed his CIA career, produced no criminal charges from the FBI, and ended with no guarantee that many of

because we had to obtain a

search warrant," he said. With the Supreme Court

that Scudder had identified as missing despite being cleared for release. The remaining records listed in

timely seizure of cellphones will be more difficult, which can damage usefulevidence. Cellphone data can be erased manually or through a provider in a matter of seconds, ac-

at least some of them on its

the type of evidence we retrieve," he said. "Maybe a

cording to Deschutes County Sheriff's Capt. Scott Beard.

"Since cellphones can be erased so quickly, it hinders

CIA disbanded the Histori-

spouse or friend has access to a suspect's cellphone; they will be able to erase useful in-

cal Collections Division last

formation. That will definitely

basically destroyed my entire year, citing budget cuts, alcareer," Scudder said. "What Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post though officials said its dewas this whole exercise for?" Jeffrey Scudder lost his job with the CIA after he tried to get historical documents released. classification work is being The CIA declined to comhandled by another office. ment on Scudder's case, citDespite losing his security ing privacy restrictions and Reagan administration and daughters into their bed- camera or to remove any of clearance, Scudder landed litigation related to his FOIA worked alongside Scudder rooms as they got dressed, the photos you took ... from a job as a manager at a conrequest. CIA personnel files as a contractor in the Histor- asking probing questions. a s ecure, C I A -controlled sulting firm that pays him a six-figure salary equivalent obtained by The Washington ical Collections Division. "He "It was classic elicitation," environment." Post accuse Scudder of hav- can't stand not doing what he Scudder said. "How has Jeff to what he earned at the end ing classified materials on his thinks is proper." been? Have you noticed any Pastinfractions of his agency career. He and home computer and "a histoScudderled efforts to up- unexplained income? Cash? F inally, th e b o ar d u n - Zaid have written dozens of ry of difficulty in protecting grade the historical collec- Mood changes?" earthed infractions from emails and letters seeking classified information." tion, converting thousands of It was this January, 14 an assignment in A f rica to recoverthe devices seized "The CIA does not retaliate documents to digital files that months later, when Scudder in 1993, including unau- by the FBI. The bureau reor take any personnel action could besearched electroni- was told he wouldn't face thorized foreign travel and turned his daughter's laptop against employees for sub- cally. In the process, he said, criminal charges. By then, "making personal calls us- lastyear and severalstorage mitting (FOIA) requests or he discovered about 1,600 his CIA c areer was over. ing (U.S. government) tele- devices last week, but has pursuing them in litigation," articles that were listed as re- The agency had mounted an phones." The issues hadn't not given back two computsaid CIA spokesman Dean leased to the public but could internal i nvestigation that impeded hiscareer,bu twere ers that Scudder said hold Boyd. "Of course, officers at not be found at the National determined that Scudder's now viewed as part of "a his- p ersonal i n f ormation, i n CIA must also exercise their Archives. Further searching FOIA r e quest "contained tory of difficulty." cluding tax returns and famrights consistent with t heir turned up h u n dreds more classified titles" of CIA artiTwo supervisors submit- ily photos. obligation to protect classi- that seemed harmless but cles and that he had deleted ted character references. S cudder described m o fied material." were stuck in various stages a "TOP SECRET" label from One cited Scudder's record ments of h i s o r d eal t h at of declassification review. one document, according to of volunteering for duty in seemed surreal. In one inIn the cross-hairs Scudder said h e m a de amemo from an agency per- war zones and described stance, he said, FBI agents At a time of renewed de- numerous attempts to get sonnel board. him as "extremely patriotic" pointed to an article he was b ate over th e p r oper b a l - the trove released but was The agency also found and "one of the best project seeking titled "Sad Song ance between secrecy and repeatedly blocked by the photographs of CIA instal- managers" in his field. An- of Norway" an d i n sisted, accountability for U.S. spy Information Review and Re- lations overseas. Scudder other allowed that he might despite his claims to the agencies, Scudder's case l ease Group, the o f fice i n had taken the pictures in be guilty of misjudgment contrary, that its title alone reveals the extent to which charge of clearing materials Iraq and elsewhere while but said terminating such "a remained classified "Secret there can be intense dis- for the public. In 2010, Scud- on assignment as "an of- bright, dedicated and honest NOFORN," meaning not to agreement even inside agen- der took a new assignment in f icial p h otographer f o r officer would be a tragedy." be shared even with allied cies over how much informa- the CIA's Counterintelligence the CIA," according to the Last summer, the board intelligence services. "As I r eflect," Scudder tion they should be allowed to Center but couldn't forget his memo. But "there is no re- recommended that Scudwithhold from the public and unfinished historical collec- cord of you being autho- der be fired. Around the said, "I am hit again by the for how long. tions business. Filing a FOIA, rized to use your personal same time, he was shown absurdity of it all." Scudder's case also high- he thought, might force the lights the risks to w o rkers agency's hand. who take on their powerful Explaining his d ecision spy-agency employers. Se- four y e ar s l a t er, S cudder nior U.S. intelligence officials acknowledged a s tubborn have repeatedly argued that streak that i s n't a l ways

impede on some investigations. We need to come up with

types of lawful ways to get cellphones secured right away." Bronson J. James, an attor-

neywho defended a Linn County man whose case centered on

a warrantless cellphone search and went to the Oregon Court of Appeals, believes cellphone searches have become standardforlaw enforcement, and that the ruling will affect thou-

sands of cases nationwide. "Certainly any case that is currently in the system is going to have to be evaluated in regards to the recent ruling," said James. "It will affect the

cases that are currently in the system. It is not going to retractcases that have reached a

ruling or finality." Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty feels

that in the Linn County case that was appealed in 2010, law

enforcement should have obtained awarrant forthe search. "In that kind of case, we

would have gotten a search warrant," he said. "In our cases, we have usually always gotten consent or supplied a search warrant. I don't thinkthe ruling

will impede on our ability to do justice andprosecute." — Reporter: 541-383-0325, vsmith@bendbulletin.com

aligned with his self-interest.

National Security Agency "I am one of those guys who contractor, should have done has to push that button," he more to raise his concerns in- said. ternally rather than exposing Scudder's FOIA submisAmerica'sespionage secrets sions fell into two categoto the world. Others who tried ries: one seeking new digital to do that have said they were copies of articles already punished. designated for release and Scudder's actions appear another aimed a t a r t i cles to have posed no perceptible yet tobe cleared. He made risk to national security, but spreadsheets that listed the he found himself in the crosshairs of the CIA and FBI.

ruling, there is concern the

are still being withheld, he and Zaid said, although the CIA has agreed to begin reviewing those records and placing sanitized versions of

are seen as setbacks. The

soon. "I submitted a FOIA, and it

"In those cases when we

didn't get consent, it added time to the investigation

Last year, the CIA delivered to th e N a tional A r c hives more than 1 ,400 a r t icles

website. But other developments

the articles he sought will be in the public domain anytime

ways received consent before searching a cellphone, Bend Police Chief Jim Porter said last week.

succeeded, at least in part.

Scudder's FOIA submissions

a c k nowl-

Edward Snowden, the former

• .

~ 5 ~

titles of all 1,987 articles he

Scudder's attorney, Mark

wanted, he said, then had them scanned forclassified

Zaid, described the case as

content and got permission to

an example of "aggressive take them home so he could retaliation against employees assemble his FOIA request who seek to act in the public's

interest and challenge perceived poor managerial decisions.... The system is really broken." The documents sought by Scudder amount to a catalog

on personal time.

Outside FOIA Because of its mission, the CIA has been given broad exemptions from the Freedom of Information A ct ,

w h i ch

of a bygone era of espionage. was enacted in the mid-1960s Among them are articles with to make it harder for govthe titles "Intelligence Les- ernment agencies to hide sons from Pearl Harbor" and i nternal r ecords f ro m t h e "Soviet Television — a New public. The CIA has fielded Asset for Kremlin Watchers." thousands of FOIA requests. Scudder said he discovered Most applicants wait months them after he took an assign- if not years before getting a ment in 2007 as a p r oject response — which is often an manager for the CIA's His- outright rejection. torical Collections Division,

Six months after submit-

an office set up to comb the agency's archives for mate-

tinghisrequest,Scudder was

rials — often decades oldthat can be released without

Counterintelligence Center

posing any security risk.

summoned to a meeting with i nvestigators and a sked t o surrender his personal com-

In recent years, the divi-

puter. He was placed on ad-

sion has organized the release ofrecords on subjects

ministrative leave, instructed not to t r avel overseas and

including the CIA's role in the

questioned by the FBI.

publication of the novel "Doctor Zhivago" and the historic role of women in the CIA

workforce. Scudder was hired by the CIA as a computer expert in

the 1980s and rose through the ranks as a project man-

A5

As his trouble deepened,

Scudder and Zaid filed a FOIA lawsuit seeking to prove the materials he had

taken weren't classified. On Nov. 27, 2012, a stream

of black cars pulled up in front of Scudder's home in ager in various departments. Ashburn, Virgina, at 6 a.m. Colleagues described him as FBI agents seized every comearnest and energetic, an ef- puter in the house, including f ective troubleshooter w h o a laptop his daughter had routinely volunteered for brought home from college assignments in war zones. for Thanksgiving. They took He also ha d a r e p utation cellphones, storage devicfor impatience with agency es, DVDs, a Nintendo Game bureaucracy. Boy and a journal kept by his "He w as excitable a n d wife, a physical therapist in was in almost constant mo- the Loudoun County Schools. tion," said Charles Briggs, The search lasted nearly who served as the No. 3 offour hours, Scudder said. FBI ficial in the CIA during the agents followed his wife and

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

Jungle

Qe

A

Continued fromA1 In the mile-square Jungle — believed to be the nation's

t

largest homeless encampment — Salazar and hundreds of others live in tents, makeshift

shacks, caves and tree houses along polluted Coyote Creek, spending their days and nights under tarps or blankets, in var-

Jil

ious states of mental confusion and intoxication.

Salazar has been either homeless, in jail, or squatting at someoneelse's house for30 years. But that may be about to change. On a cool Tuesday morning in February, Salazar limps out of her fenced compound. A passing social worker, a city

43hgia

Maria Esther Salazar sits with her dog, Chico, in the Jungle. The

Jungle is home at times to asmany as350 residents, almost all San Jose locals, and is believed to be the largest homeless encampment in the U.S. PhotosbyMar cioJose Sanchez/The Associated Press

homeless coordinator and a Tents are set up along a pathway in the Jungle, a homeless encampment in San Jose, California. In

psychologist are making their weekly rounds. "Hey you," she shouts, her voice gravelly beyond her 50 years. "You're supposed to be helping me." They have no answer for her. But when the social worker re-

the surrounding tech enclave, an average homeprice is $1 million, and twobedroom apartments start renting at $1,700.

Silicon Valley, a region leading the country for job growth, income, innovation and venture capital. Tech giants Google, Apple, Yahoo, eBay, Facebook, Intel and many more call the 1,850-square-mile stretch of

deaned out or deaned up. San a staircase into the hillside. He Jose has swept hundreds of builds banisters with castoff encampments in recent years, lumber, and stacks pallets on a and many of those homeless platform for his tent. "It's not so bad," he says in now live in the Jungle, where piles of human waste, cast-off Spanish. "Everyone takes care dothing, discarded food and of everyone." car parts rot. The city's plan is A team of evangelists arto clean it out. No one will say rives, passing out bottles of waexactly when. ter and plastic bags. Bicycles, cigarettes and A sopping wet, powerfully drugs are the key currencies built man nicknamed "D" who in the Jungle. No one has much lives alone on a steep embankcash, and many, like Salazar, ment ties a rope to climb up the subsist on $147 a month in food slick mud. "Any spot is a good spot as stamps and another $200 in general assistance. long as you live right," he says, Pets are crucial in this world, cooking a mixture of potato often eating before their own- chips, Spam, a burrito end and ers. There are cats and kittens, a handful of mushrooms over a dogs large and small, chickens, fire burning in a hole-punched ducks, even a bunny, Dillon, oil can. His hair is shaved to a whose owner pushes him in diamond point; shell-studded a stroller watched over by a arm bands and a golden rope handsome German shepherd over his shoulders make him KayKay. Some dogs, like a look like a ninja. His socks are black, snarling pit bull chained drenched. He has no shoes. "I just don't like society and to a tree, occasionally attack, and KayKay gets fierce if any- everythingwe are becoming," one messes with the bunny. he rambles, talking about powBut most pets, including Sala- er and energy, God and huzar's Chihuahuas, Minneapo- manity. "I will not go up. And I lis and Chico, spend their days don't need shoes." on their owners' laps or skipping behind their heels as they Pilot program

business parks, small cities and

visit friends and take care of

turns to her desk, she finds the

news she had been waiting for: in a county with a seven-year, 2 0,000-person w a i ting

l i st

she'd never top, Salazar had finally qualified for housing support: a new locally funded, $1,295 monthly subsidy aimed at ending chronic homelessness awaited her. Now Maria Esther Salazar, a woman with a criminal re-

cord, two dogs, no phone and no identification has to find an

apartment in one of the most expensive housing markets in the U.S., or the subsidy could disappear. And she isn't sure she wants

to leave.

'We're like nobody' San Jose, America's 10th largest city, is at the heart of the

suburbs south of San Francisco business. home. As tech roars back from Salazar says she likes the the recession, housing costs Jungle. It beats jail. "No one comes down tobothhave soared. An average home price is er us. No cops or nothing," she $1 million, and two bedroom says. "When I'm in jail, I worry apartments start at $1,700. The about my dogs. There's a lot of widening gap between the stressthere.It'sso hectic." wealthiest and everyone else Salazar has a three-foot high is palpable. Here, according to stack of criminal case files at federal data, you'll find one of the county courthouse. She's the largest unsheltered popula- been arrested more than 35 tions in the country; homeless times, convicted of 17 felonies, people camp on corners, under almost all drug related. bridges, along creeks. She was born in Harlingen, Residents of the Jungle are Texas; her mother moved her well aware of the affluent world and her seven siblings to San that lies just outside its borders. Jose when she was a toddler. They call it "going up," walking At 11, everything fell apart. the dirt path up to busy Story Forty years later, recalling Road, where fleets of cars, rum- her abduction and repeated bling delivery trucks, packed bouts of gruesome abuse, she city buses and minivans of

tears up.

When it comes to solving

homelessness, says Jennifer Loving, "We have completely failed." When she was gmwing up, Loving's family ran a church in

dent Shante Thomas. About

three months ago she awoke being beaten up: She was stuck in her right eye with a stick and blinded. There are fenced communes

with "Stay Out" signs, a treehouse built by an out of work carpenter, hand-dug latrines. And — stretching out toward

the freeway in a more open field of what used to be the city

dump — a string of severely mentally ill people who burst from their tents screaming and

punching at unseen terrors. A man staggers by, bleeding from his ear after beinghit with

a shovel. A pregnant woman calls for help on the cold dirt under a tarp, her legs too swol-

Under a deluge

For almost two y ears of

tent and added on with more tarps and construction cast-

offs, building a wooden fence with a swinging gate. "I've got a living room here, kitchen here, master bedroom," she says, pushing tarps aside.

to cookiesand coffee.

Her social worker and hous-

At 1 p.m. on Friday the 13th

ing spedalist James Worley from nonproflt Abode Services

12 washing machines. But her life is beginning to change. A psychiatrist has cer-

ofJune,Salazar'ssocialworker is waiting to meet her "up top" explain that $1,295 vent will auwith her belongings and dogs. tomatically be paid thmugh a But Salazar, haird ean and wet, combination of public and primascara thick and in a new, vate funds. The remaining $20 low-cut tank dress, isn't nearly willbesentfromthe Santa Clara ready. She has four shopping County General Services Agencarts loaded with bags, but cyout ofher account. many more piles of clothes, A leasing manager explains food, pots andpans, bottles and the apartment rules. Smoking is furniture remained. Chico is OK. Pets must be on a leash. No missing. And there's her mar- disruptiveparties. ijuana, her bong, her jointsThen he hands her the keys. "I love it! Everything is so could she bring them? They couldn't have picked white! It's my favorite color!" a more perfect moving day says Salazar, bursting into her — the sky is cloud free, a cool new home, a second-floor, carbreeze waftsthrough the Jun- peted, corner apartment. Her gle, carrying happy screams socialworker carries in a box and laughter from the roller of bread, cheese, cereal and coasteratH appy Hollow across canned spaghetti, a bucket of the street, crowded with school deaning supplies, a twin set of children s t a rting s u m m er bedding, towels, toiletries and a "kitchen starter set." vacation. 'Tmgoingtomake everybody She scrambles into her social worker's car with a few bags take their shoes off when they and Minneapolis, ~ ling come to visit," says Salazar, runaround her lap, licking her ning her hand over the kitchen cheeks. counters, stepping in and out of Ten minutes later, but a world thedoset, turningonthetap. away, they pull into Parkside But now it's time for the social

tified Minneapolis and Chico

Terrace, a dean, neat two-sto-

But what about moving out?

"I can't really see that happening anymore," she says. But the Jungle is feeling grim. A man was found dead in his tent. The police came down,

and the comner. "Can you believe it? There's his body, right there," says Salazar, her eyes wide. Rumors spread in May that city authorities are going to sweep the camp. If Salazar's still there come July, "for reals, I'll take the first thing I can get."

She's still caught up in life in the Jungle. Today is laundry day. This involves fillinga shopping cart with four large garbage bags of clothes and blankets, pushing it up a 100-yard dirt hill and along two blocks to the Laundromat where she fills

worker to leave. And it's time

ry apartment complex tucked for Salazar to move on with her away from busy ~ . S alazar life.

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Now, as executive director of Destination: Home, she is spearheading a new, concerted effort in San Jose to house peo-

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one is about $16,000 a year. "I know this sounds incredibly obvious," she said, '"but we're housing them first."

Once someone has an apartment, a social worker with a

relatively low caseload is assigned the job of keeping them housed. In a 24-month pilot, they've

drought, the Jungle was virtu- housed 630 people, 76 percent ally rain-free. But that changed of whom were still in t heir in March when heavy storms home a year after moving in. rolled in one night. One man slept in a tent, inside One man fell into the creek his apartment, for three weeks. and had to be rescued by fire- Another, an amputee who had fighters. Mud was everywhere, been sleeping in a creek bed, in tents, cooking pots, blankets stopped making his near-daily and dothes. By sunrise, as the trips to the emergencyroom. first rains tapered, shovels Dozens of cities have seen came out and the place was similar results from Housing buzzing with people digging First initiatives, induding New trenches to drain tent floors. York, Los Angeles and Atlanta. One man carried a post-hole Now that it's proving effective digger from campsite to camp- in San Jose, Loving is pitchsite, offering services. A wom- ing a Silicon Valley disruptive an named Heidi pulled a Boy moonshot: $500 million would S cout handbook out of h e r be enough to house the 2,500 backpack and realized she chronically homeless people in needed a tent pole to make a the county, she says. "This is not givingout ablanpeak, not a valley, with her roof. Heidi struggled for hours try- ket and a bowl of soup," said ing to dig a drainage ditch. Loving. "This is solving one of "I'm working like a Hebrew the worst crises we have in the slave," she says, panting as U.S. today."

len to get up. she pauses to chat. "This is the "We're like the scum of the United States of America and earth," says Salazar. "We're we should be helping people like nobody." a whole lot better than what Similar tent cities have we're doing." sprung up in recent years in Salazar's tent wa s w ater places like Ann Arbor, Mich- tight, but she isn't happy amid igan, where law enforcement the omnipresent trash: torn e victed 78 r e sidents f r o m lingerie, a half-eaten corn cob, self-governed Camp Take No- a sticky Starbucks cup, moldtice in the fall. The 30 residents ing bread, a dented deodorant of Camp Quixote in Olympia, aerosol can. "I'll be glad to get out of this Washington, organized into a nonprofit and now live in tiny hell," she says."That was avery cottages with a shared kitchen, rough night." laundry and showers. Window installer Juan Gon-

er's license. She deaned up her

ing homelesspeople.Foryears she tried the traditional model

while the cost of housing some-

idents have dug large moms into steep hillsides. "I'm blessed because every day is ablessing, but the Jungle is tough," says longtime resi-

made an appointment with the DMV to get her very first driv-

She's silent for a few minutes,

She'll miss the Jungle, she petting the dogs and looking around her books and reading says. "Everybody comes to my glasses, melting candles."But house for anything they need. It I'm sure I can do it." just so happens everyone shows up when I'm cooking." 'Up top'

she's dedicated her life to hous-

street never notice the despair

gon, where Vietnamese res-

a doctor, got a medical card,

as "therapeutic companion served as a shelter for anyone dogs." She gives away their who neeied a place to stay;

each person living on the street is estimated about $60,000,

and crying at the same time.

stolen two days later. She saw

Venice Beach California, which

"Now I make ajoke about families heading to Happy Hollow Park and Zoo across the it," she says softly, smiling "I say I'm the president of the below. The Jungle is home at times man-haters club." to as many as 350 residents, Salazar avoided people and almost all San Jose locals. school for years, started smokSnaking trails wind through ing crack at 19, and then began trees and bushes, with Span- getting arrested, over and over ish-speaking sections and again. neighborhoods like Little Sai-

an identification card for the first time in 13 years but it was

puppies and starts imagining a checks out the dubhouse, the home, with furniture and a tele- parkandbarbeque areas, fitness vision,a closetforhershoes. center, community playgmund. "All of this is goingtobe over- The dog mlls on the grass outwhelming for me," she says, sit- side the leasing office while ting with friends in a tent. Salazar nervously helps herself

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Moving out? In April, Salazar's social worker found a studio apartment for her.

No dogs — no dice. Then there was a

m o tel

room. Salazar said no again. "I'd just get back into trouble if I stayed right there on the strip where everyone is hustling," she says. There was a possibility in Gilroy, a farming town an hour south. Toofar,Salazardecided. She got an extension on her Eventually, e nvironmental zalez, who moved into the Jun- housing voucher, and a bus and social concerns prompt gle two weeks earlier, takes pass she used to visit the homehomeless encampments to be advantage of the wet soil to cut less shelter forashower. Shegot

t one

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A7

Lessons Continued fromA1 "There was a lot of people that were uncomfortable with what was going

I

o n, th e

c o nditions," h e

said. "Nothing felt right. Nobody spoke up." The South Canyon Fire

also brought changes to how federal firefighters ensure weather reports make it to fire crews in

.'siQ'~~I"

t

,

'

fhF

the f i eld, i m provements to their fire shelters and

new trainings focused on safety. Firefighters now go through a checklist before digging fireline down a

I

rm

rr

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While the safety of firefighters has always been

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the most important thing

for fire managers, Bill Aney, east -side forest res-

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the U.S. Forest Service in Oregon and Washington,

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said the deaths on Storm

The Associated Press file photo

Parks worker Cindy Svatos trims flowers and bushes in GlenwoodSprings, Colorado, on June 23, 2004, at a memorial dedicated to the firefighters who were killed on Storm King Mountain in 1994.

Storm King Continued fromA1 Jon was offered the job, which wouldhave amounted to a full scholarship by his senior year. "He didn't do it, though," says Marv, who lights up when recounting old stories from his youngest son's youth. "When he found out he'd have to report the first of August, there (would have) went six weeks of firefighting."

Kathy B r inkley, L evi's grieves the same; they just go mother, grieved in a com- through different points." pletely different manner from Levi, a triplet, was one of her husband. "He couldn't talk to me because I didn't want to t alk about it," says Kathy, who

f our brothers born

King "made it real for people." "...If we don't pay attention to the basics, people can die," said Aney, who was an information officer forthe Forest Service

w i thin

13 months of one another. He graduated from Bend's Central Oregon Community College not long before his

The Associated Press file photo

On June 9, 2004, firefighter Eric Hipke hiked the trail on Storm King on the South Canyon Fire Mountain where memorial markers were placed for each of the following the f atalities. 14 firefighters who died. Hipke survived the deadly fire just days

"And here's an example.

earlier on July 6. Poor tactics, miscommunication and a lack of air

And we are not t a lking

support all contributed to the deaths. But investigators discovered

along with Kenny still lives in the same house Levi and death. An avid outdoorsman his three brothers grew up in who loved to fish, hunt, ski just outside of Burns. "I'd get and rock climb, Levi held a up and walk out of the room. I lifelong fascination with Colcouldn't stand to talk about it." orado and had hoped to evenIn addition to Jon K elso tually move there. "People don't really believe and Levi Brinkley, the following Hotshots were l ost this, but before Levi died, he Jon Kelso and 1 3 o t h er on Storm King: Kathi Beck, called us," Kathy says. "It was firefighters died 20 years 24; Tami Bickett, 25; Scott the last time we talked to him. ago today battling the South Blecha, 27; Doug Dunbar, 22; He'd been in California fightCanyon Fire on Storm King Terri Hagen, 28; Bonnie Holt- ing fire and hated it because Mountain n e a r G l e nwood by, 21; and Rob Johnson, 26. he always got poison oak." "Well," Levi said, accordSprings, Colorado, about 160 Smokejumpers Don Mackey, miles west of Denver. Nine of 34; Roger Roth, 30; and Jim ing to Kathy, "I've been to those who perished, includ- Thrash, 44, also died in the hell and I'm on my way to ing Jon, were members of the South Canyon Fire on July heaven." Prineville Hotshots, one of 6, 1994, as did helitack crewMarv an d A n i t a K e l so,

about a crew of inexperi- something else — afirefighting culture that may have prevented enced people, first-or sec- those who died from raising objections and refusing a dangerous ond-year people. We are assignment. talking about the best. We are talking about smokejumpers a n d h ot s h ots zone. Along with the weather, on a fire near Sisters. A fallcrews and helitack people Maclean said communication ing tree hit H a mmack, an who had years and years issues during the fire were experienced logger. He was of experience." eerily similar to Storm King. among 34 firefighters nation"Communications are very wide to die on wildfires last Despite the lessons of the South Canyon Fire, much a work in progress," he year, according to statistics wildland firefighters still sard. kept by the National Interdie on fires. Last year 19 As in the South Canyon agency Fire Center in Boise, members, all but one, of Fire, Maclean said it wasn't Idaho. the 2 0 -person G r a n ite clear who was in charge at The deaths underscore the Mountain Hotshots from the Yarnell fire. Both fires dangers of the job and the P rescott, A r i z ona, d i e d were small but growing and continued need to i m prove on the Yarnell Hill Fire in eventually were taken over training and work practices Arizona. There, a blow- by larger management teams. to increase safety.

the country's elite wildland

men Robert Browning, Jr., 27,

up similar to the one on

firefighting crews.

and Richard Tyler, 33.

Two decades later, the Kelsos and other families are

Both Prineville and Glen-

who both retired soon after Jon's death, initially t hrew themselves into the Prineville memorial and their church.

wood Springs built memoristill struggling to make sense als for the fallen firefighters, When their granddaughters, of one of the deadliest wild- and the Wildland Firefighter Jon's nieces, got older and beland fires in U.S. history. Foundation, a nonprofit ded- gan playing sports, they beMarv, who readily admits icated to helping the families came their biggest fans. "That was good for us," to wearing his heart on his of firefighters killed in action, sleeve, runs through a gam- was created in Boise, Idaho. says Marv about getting out ut of emotions when talking The Prineville Memorial Hot- and cheering on their grandabout Jon, who was 27 when

he died. He laughs out loud when he retells the story about the ol d

shot Run, an annual 10K and 5K fundraiser in M ay, was also set up to honor the fallen.

V o l kswagen Both the Brinkleys and the

Bug Jon and some college buddies converted into a midnight beach cruiser, and he shakeswith anger discussing

Kelsos helped build the Wildland Firefighters Memorial in Prineville, and the Brinkleys served on the board at the

Boise nonprofit. "We like going over there blamed the Hotshots' "can-do (to the Wildfire Firefighter attitude" for their deaths. Foundation) because you get "There's a hole in your to sit down and talk with new heart and the only thing that people," says Kenny, who has will heal that up is death," a tattoo of a purple ribbon, says Kenny Brinkley, 68, the symbol for firefighters the father of Levi Brinkley, who have died in action, on a 22-year-old hotshot from his right forearm. Kathy has Burns who died o n S t orm a set of hearts — one of which King. "Early on, I had to talk is purple — on her ankle. about it (the South Canyon "I've had parents come up to Fire).... If I was talking to me and say, 'You've helped us somebody that didn't want to so much,' and I'm thinking, listen, I'd go find somebody 'What did I say?' There are who would." no magic words. Everyone the South Canyon Fire Investigation report that partially

Here in C entral Oregon,

"There is a risk every time

Storm King caught the crew members as they

John Hammack, a contract you fight a fire," Aney said. sawyer with the Deschutes — Reporter: 541-617-7812,

tried to make it to a safety

National Forest, died Aug. 1

ddarling@bendbulletin.com

and had this black Stetson

make sure we do a turn or

ble it's been 20 years," Anita

(cowboy hat)," Anita recalls, two out there every season." laughing at the memory. "Jon While the families of the

admits. "Deep down, I'm still bothered by it m ore than I

and his f r iend Scott, they

nine Prineville Hotshots who

realized."

children. "We went to an aw-

were both very immature

lost their lives 20 years ago

ful lot of basketball and softball and volleyball and golf

at the time, not the kind of

are scattered throughout the

"But," her husband adds, "we know where he's at."

guys girls come after, but boy, Greg was just the opposite. back into the public where we Well, Jon and Scott decided saw lots and lots of people. they needed cowboy boots That was a healing process and a Stetson, too." for us." Jon, who graduated from The Kelsos are not regular Oregon State University with visitors of the Wildland Fire- a wildlife science degree and fighters Foundation in Boise was going back to school at — "I prefer not to go back and Oregon Institute of Technolorelive it over and over again," gy in Klamath Falls for a civil Marv says — and they did not engineering degree before he go back to Colorado this week died, eventually matured and like the Brinkleys for the 20th grew into the black Stetson. "When he died,Marv took anniversary of the fire. The longtime Prineville couple his Stetson up to a tree where instead has an intensely per- we scattered his ashes in the sonal place in the Ochoco Ochocos," Anita says, "and over the years. That got us

Mountains where they go to remember their son.

Pacific Northwest, the group still stays in touch through e mail an d

— Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletift.com

F a cebook, a n d

many parents gather each year for the memorial run in Prineville. " It's k in d

o f l i k e t h o se

friends you don't see for three or four years, but it's like you were never gone," Marv says, explaining the kinship he has with the other parents

who lost their kids on Storm King. "It's that way with this

group." "It just doesn't seem possi-

that hat's still there."

"I usually go up there in "When Jon's brother Greg the spring as soon as I can," got back from the service, he Marv adds, "and when Greg was duded up as a cowboy and I elk hunt, we always

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AS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

IN FOCUS: ANENDURING MYSTERY

A new due to Ame ia Ear art's

isappearance? By Glenn Garvin The Miami Herald

MIAMI — The photo is, mostly, unremarkable. It shows an airplane looming darkly on a runway at Miami Municipal Airport in the spectral shadows just before dawn — probably a test as the photographer waited for the money shot moments later, when the aircraft would lift off with famed aviator Ame-

Chronic painstatistic underfire from experts By John Fauber

it means debilitating pain af-

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

fects more people than heart M ILWAUKEE — W h e n disease, cancer and diabetes faced with intense criticism combined. for her agency's approval of That number — the equivthe powerful narcotic painalent of more than 40 percent

killer Zohydro, U.S. Food and of the U.S. adult population Drug Administration Com- — is exaggerated and mism issioner M argaret H a m leading, according to pain exburg turned to a sobering sta- perts familiar with how it was tistic: 100 million Americans derived. are suffering from severe It came out of a report orchronic pain, she said. dered by Congress that was The 100 million figure has introduced b y la w m akers become a central part of the who have received hundreds debate over the use of narcot- of thousands of dollars from ic painkillers. drug manufacturers. ComIt is cited in news stories, panies that make pain treatby medical organizations and ment lobbied for the bill. The by drug companies seeking measure also was backed by approval for new opioid ther- pain organizations that get apies. When Hamburg spoke opioid industry funding and, in April at a p rescription in turn, had several of their drug conference, she noted m embersserveon thepanel.

Legislation

a u t horizing port said the 100 million figure was exaggerated and misleading and they raised fordable Care Act — better concerns about how it w as known as the Obamacare re- being used. Their comments forms. It required the federal came at a meeting of pain exgovernment to enter into an perts held at the National In-

the report was rolled into the P atient Protection and A f -

agreement with the Institute

stitutes of Health.

of Medicine "to increase the In a video of the meeting, recognition of pain as a sig- Allan Basbaum, one of the nificant public health prob- reviewers of the Institute of lem in the United States." Medicine report, said he was A Milwaukee Journal Sen-

stunned when he saw the 100

tinel/MedPage Today investigation found that nine of

million figure. "If we are concerned about the 19 experts on the panel the message we are sending, that produced the number we shouldn't exaggerate the had financial connections to message because the eyeballs companies that manufacture narcotic painkillers w ithin

three years of their work on the report.

In February, two experts connected with the pain re-

start to roll," said Basbaum, a

professor of anatomy at the University of California, San Francisco. "The message will be more powerful if people can believe it."

lia Earhart at its controls, unknowingly headed to a mysterious appointment with fate.

— 4W '

. US. Cellular.

Miami Herald

Amelia Earhart and her plane in1937, one of hundreds of such images. Now a researcher believes that one of those images has information that may at last help researchers understand what

Unlimited Talk & Text

caused Earhart, her navigator and her plane to vanish.

per

month Yet the picture — shot by a now-forgotten Miami Herald

Miami for a week while the plane underwent repairs.

photographer just before Ear-

One of them, it appears, was the removal of a specially

hart — who at the time of her

disappearance was married installed window in the rear to former Bend mayor and for- of the airplane that navigator mer Bulletin publisher George Noonan used to take sightings Putnam — departed the Unit-

on the sun and stars, the meth-

ed States on her doomed flight

od by which pilots found their way over unmapped oceans, 1937 — contains an odd de- jungles and desert in the days tail visible on none of the oth- before radar and GPS. The er thousands of photos of her window is clearly visible in plane. photos of Earhart's plane taken There on the fuselage, about in California at the start of her around the world on June 1,

two-thirds of the way from the

trip, and even in some Herald

plane's nose to its tail, is a rect- photos shot after her arrival in angular patch that shines a Miami. peculiar silver on the aircraft's

Switchnew, and we'll pay off your old contract.

But in the photo shot just be-

dusky skin. Could it be a clue fore her June 1, 1937, takeoff — the due — to what happened for Puerto Rico, the window is when Earhart and her navi- gone, replaced by that odd silgator Fred Noonan vanished veryplate. somewhere over the trackless

"I think the window must

Pacific Ocean three months have been broken or comprolater? mised by the hard landing Longtime Earhart investiga- in Miami," Gillespie said. "It tor Ric Gillespie thinks so. He

wasn't standard equipment,

believes that the silvery patch and they found out it would reveals an unrecorded repair take a while to replace it, so performed onEarhart' s plane they just took it out and patched during her stopover in Miami. the fuselage instead." And he hopes that modern

computer enhancements of that part of the photo will link it to a piece of possible airplane wreckage discovered a quarter century ago on a tiny Pacific island in the area where Earhart

disappeared. "If we can match a rivet pattern from the repair in the pho-

From Puerto Rico, Earhart c ontinued t h r ough S o u t h

America, Africa and Asia. On July 2, 1937, as Earhart took off from Lae, New Guinea,

and headed for Howland Island nearly 2,600 miles away, her communications suffered a blow.Photos and home movies of the takeoff show that as

tograph to a rivet pattern on the she taxied down the runway, a wreckage, I think it would be radio antenna on the bottom of beyond dispute that Noonan her plane tore away. and Earhart weren't lost at sea, That might be why Earbut made it to the island," said hart was unable to hear Coast Gillespie, the executive direc-

G uard crewmen who w e re trying to make contact with

tor of the International Group forHistoric Aircraft Recovery her as she neared Howland (TIGHAR). Island 19 hours later. "We are That would bring an indis- circling but cannot see island, putable forensic conclusion to cannot hear you," she radioed one of the greatest and most

as the crewmen listened help-

contentious mysteries in avia- lessly. A series of increasingly tionhistory. It would also mean, distressed messages continued possibly, that the tale of Amelia

for another hour and a quarter

Earhart had an even more trag- before Earhart, in a distraught ic end than we have thought all voice, gave her location: "We these years — that she died not

. US.Cellulaj-'

Verizon and ATg,T

3 lines: s13O * s145 4 lines : .<140 * s'IIO 5 lines: slSO

*

*

*

sl'75 *

6 lines : .slSO * slIO

*

*per month, based on1OGB of data to share

are on the line of position 157

in a single terrifymg instant as dash 337.... We are now runher plane crashed into the sea, ning north and south." but in a long torturous spiral of The rest was silence. starvation, thirst and disease. Some Navy and C oast E arhart was on e o f t h e Guard ships began looking world's most famous and ad- for Earhart right away, but the mired women when she and epicenter of the search, HowNoonan set off from Oakland,

land Island, is in the middle

California, to fly around the of nowhere, 1,700 miles from globe. She was the first woman Hawaii, so it took two weeks to fly across the Atlantic and

for the search to acquire much

the first person to fly solo from Honolulu to Oakland. Her first try at flying around the world (heading west rather than east) ended abruptly after

manpower. Search planes passed over a tiny, apostrophe-shaped tiny patch of coral

the first leg when she crashed on takeoff in Hawaii.

signs of

called Gardner Island, about

400 miles away, and spotted r e cent h abitation.

But Navy records showed Her second attempt, this time that tribes of Pacific Islanders east-bound, also had problems had been living there, which right from the start. She landed seemed to explainthat, and the at the wrong airport in Miami. planes moved on. The search Her landing on May 24, 1937, continued several weeks, but was rough, and she stayed in turned up absolutely nothing.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbujjetin.com/jocaj

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

BRIEFING Fire burnshouse outside of town A fire Friday night at a home in Deschutes River Woods temporarily displaced eight adults and two children, according to a newsrelease from the American Red Cross. Dan Derlacki, deputy fire marshal with the Bend Fire Department, said the residents had attempted without suc-

cess to light a charcoal barbecue onthe back deck then gave upand went to watch fireworks. When they returned, the deck was onfire and was begi nningtomove into the house through a shattered sliding glass door. Derlacki said the residents had almost entirely extinguished the fire using a gardenhose by the time firefighters arrived. The fire caused roughly $20,000 in damage, hesaid, largely smokedamage thatcan be cleaned up. The RedCross is providing lodging to the residents of the house.

Crash injures 2, closes Hwy. 97 Two people were injured Saturday afternoon in a two-vehicle crash on Paulina Lake Road, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Kevin Wong, 63, of San Francisco, was transported to St. Charles Bend by helicopter with non-life-threatening injuries. His wife, Theda Wong, 61, wastaken to St. Charles Bendby ambulance, also with non-life-threatening injuries. Kevin Wongwas eastbound on Paulina Lake Roadnear Newberry Road when hemade an illegal U-turn, the sheriff's office said in a news release.Wong's vehicle was struck by a pickup traveling behind him driven by Melinda Kriner, 34, of Vancouver, Washington. U.S. Highway 97was closed for around 20 minutes to allow a LifeFlight helicopter to land. Kevin Wongwas cited for the U-turn. — From staff reports

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

e e al e

as e e i n s

The city of Bend plans to

begin road closures for the second, more complex phase of the $18.3 million Reed Market Road corridor project this week. David Abbas, the Reed

we'll close the intersection." Crews will begin work Monday to build a roundabout at the intersection of begin work on the stretch of road from Third Street to 15th Street. The project will

ultimately result in bike lanes,

view last week that employ-

clesand acenterturn laneor

ees alreadybuilt a two-lane bypassfordriverstodetour

median on Reed Market Road all the way from Third Street to 27th Street, according to

around the southwest corner of the intersection with 15th Street.

"They've already been out there doing some work this past week," Abbas said. "We

ilso Ave.

Reed Market Road and 15th Street. Soon, they will also

Market Road project manager for the city, said in an inter-

eedM t d.

sidewalks, two lanes for vehi-

a city news release. It will bring a new look and more urban infrastructure to a former county road on which, according to the city, farmers

just haven't impacted traffic

historically brought goods to

yet. Monday, though, is the groundbreaking and when

market.

Roads closed ~

D e tour

r • • • • rLpcsl

traffic only

Fe

SeeReed/B2

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

JEFFERSON COUNTY

e ormanceo acen

• Portland:Late-night July Fourth partying turns deadly,B3 • Also:Cougar found in a tree is euthanized; police want clues about a drive-by shooting; and a woman is accusedof pouring hot grease on her boyfriend,B3 • Salem:Lockdown at the OregonState Penitentiary, one of many this year, is over,B3 • Ashland:Restrictions on vacation-rental homes may loosen,B3 • Echo:City officials are offering up cash rewards in exchange for bags and buckets of invasive weeds,B4 • Aud:Police find a slain doe in WascoCounty and are seeking information,B3

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367

re

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects......541-410-9207 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business ..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Letters andopinions:

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ta

v

Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Maii: My MickersWorth or In MyView P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news©bendbulletin.com, with "CivicCaiendar" inthesubject, and include acontact name

and phonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes:

„V

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Members of the Jefferson County Players — from left, Royce Embanks, John Casey and Mike Ahern — perform the skit "The Sing-

ing Moonshiner of CampSherman" for the crowd during the Crooked River Ranch Independence Celebration on Saturday.

• Residents and amateur actors put on a showto mark the county's 100th birthday

U.S. Senate • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkjey. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden. senate.gov

Echo

• Ashland

Be Creek R . The Bulletin

Portland Salem

• Project resumes Monday with work on a new roundabout at 15thStreet intersection By Hillary Borrud

STATE NEWS

Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbuiietin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academicach ievements to youth@bendbuiietin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto buiietin@bendbuiietin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, DeathNotices: By Scott Hammers

100th birthday, performing at commu- the county seat when Jefferson County nity events ineverycorner of the county. split from Crook County in 1914, only

The Bulletin

CROOKED RIVER RANCHhe world's only amateur theater

Jerry Ramsey, president of the Jefferson

to lose the designation to Madras two

County Historical Society, said the per- years later. troupe dedicated to re-creating formancesare afunwa yto engage local Ramsey said Gov. Oswald West inadnotable events in the history of residents with the community's past. vertently created the spat by appointing Jefferson County turned up at Along with the skits, the historical so- a Madrasresident,aCulverresidentand the Crooked River Ranch Independence ciety has assembled a traveling exhibit a Metolius resident to serve as the new Celebration on Saturday, performing of historical photos, maps and other county's commission. When it came two short skits to celebrate the county's documents it's been taking from town to time for their first order of business to centennial. town this summer. name a county seat, the three men all The on-again, off-again "Jefferson The Jefferson County Players per- cast votes for their hometowns and reCounty Players" are on the road this formed two skits Saturday, the first tell- fused to budge. summer to mark Jefferson County's ing the story of how Culver was named SeeJeffersonIB5

Details on theObituariespage inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obitsutbendbuiietin.com

• Community events: Email events to communitylife© bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-383-0358

fjtforu state and other public officials, B2

YESTERDAY

Well shot! Reader photos

• Email good photos of the great outdoors to readerphutssO beudbulletlu.cum and tell us a bit about

where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

earsa o, muc a oa outa missin orse from archived copiesofThe

Compiled by Don Hoiness

the entries many. For town entries Mrs. McIntosh's float

Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

won first place and the Bend Milling & Warehouse second. Out of town, Montelle Coe

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending July 5, 1914

Parade winsmuchapplause The Fourth of July parade was the biggest kind of success. The floats were good and

captured first place and M.S. Miller of Harper second. The cash prizes totaled $30, and the judges were J.J. Klein, L.J. Cody and John Cunningham. The band played throughout the long route, with 16 pieces, and here as elsewhere during the day added greatly

to the enjoyment. C W. Erskine and Miss Lela

Hardware exhibit was a real

which he threw at the audience.

pump pumpingreal water. Pete R.M. Smith had a good McRay on horseback led. Then Lehrman had a forge, Benfloat, using a pair of big nott's was well represented, the logging wheels, and Manncame the machines of Dr. Ferrill and O.C. Henkle, with Laundrywas there and Skuse heimers showed something soldier veterans, and afterthem entered a sure-enough campnew in the line of gilded donChairman Eastes' car with ing scene, with tent, fire and all keys. O'Donnell's auto truck Chief Roberts in the back seat the rest of it. The "Brick Yard was arrayed in sausages, and pulling alongby a cord his little Ponies" were in theparade Barney himself officiated at boy in a decorated go-cart lanext, and Montelle Coe, out-ofthe chopping block. The Bend beled "Hnched for Speeding." townprize winner, appeared Milling & Warehouse CompaBend Lodge 889 of the as the real thing in rubes, driv- ny had a flour exhibit and the Fraternal Brotherhood had a ing a single horse in a rig piled Bend Company a huge log. handsome fl oat,andtheBend high with vegetables, some of SeeYesterday/B4


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

E VENT

ENDA R

TODAY CENTRALOREGON SUMMER MARKET: Featuring a street fair, flea market, farmers market, live music and more; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www. streetfair2014.com, bill@streetfair2014.com or 541-385-3364. SUMMER BOOKSALE:Used books,DVDs, CDs and audio books for sale; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/ or 541-312-1090. VINTAGEFLEAMARKET:Vintage to re purposed goods in the gardens; free;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pomegranate Home 8 Garden, 20410 NE BendRiver Mall Drive, Bend;

www.pomegranate-home.com,jantiques©

bendcable.com or 541-383-3713. AROUND THEBLOCK FIBER ARTS STROLL: Artists display, demonstrate and sell their work in businesses throughout Sisters;

free; noon-4 p.m.;downtownSisters; www.sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org or 541-549-1004. LA PINERODEO: Featuring cowboysand cowgirls of the Northwest; $12, seniors and children $10, children 5 and younger free; 1 p.m.; La Pine Rodeo Grounds, Third Street and Walker Road; www.lapinerodeo.com or 541-536-7500. CERNY BROTHERS: Americana and rock; free; 2:30 p.m., gates open at1 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.com or 541-322-9383. BLITZEN TRAPPER: The Portland country/ folk band performs; $18, $12 for children

ages 6-12, plusfees; 5:30 p.m., doorsopen

4:45 p.m.; Lodge Restaurantat Black Butte Ranch,12930 Hawks Beard, Sisters; www. blackbutt eranch.com or877-290-5296.

MONDAY COUSINCURTISS:The M ichigan band

PUBLIC OFFICIALS Continued from Bf

U.S. House • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoedRiver 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

State of Oregon • Gov. John Kitzhaber, 0 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretaryof StateKateBrown,D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral EllenResenblum,D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • LaborCommissionerBradAvakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. Ted Ferrieli, R-District30 (Jefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District 27 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

House ofRepresentatives • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477

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

performs, with Tyler Robson; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www.crookedriverroundup.com or 541-447-4479. SUPERNOTHING: TheW ashingtonthrashpunk band performs, with Dn The Ground, Sarchasm and more; 8 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; 541-306-3017. DEBORAH CROOKSAND JOHN NASH: The California roots-music duo performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

TUESDAY BE CALM HONCHO: TheSan Francisco, California band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERS MARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between NWFranklin Avenue and NW Brooks Street; www.bendfarmersmarket.com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jane Kirkpatrick will present on the new book"Sincerely Yours" featuring her novella "A Saving Grace"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Live musicby Cheyenne West, food vendors and more; free; 6-7:30p.m.;Sam Johnson Park,SW15th Street and SWEvergreen Avenue, Redmond; www.redmondsummerconcerts.com or 541-923-5191. LIBRARY NIGHT: Hosted by the Bend Elks team; free for children12 and younger; 6:30 p.m.; Vince GennaStadium, Southeast Fifth Street and Roosevelt Avenue, Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org or 541-617-7050. "PANTANI: THEACCIDENTALDEATHOF A CYCLIST":Film screening of the 2014 documentary about cycling champion Marco Pantani; $10; 7 p.m.; Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court; www. pantanifilm.com or 541-549-6878. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: OTELLO": Verdi's opera retelling Shakespeare's tragedy; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. RELAY FOR LIFEBENEFIT: Featuring live music Parlour, proceeds benefiting Relay

Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. MikeMcLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. GeneWhisnant, R-District53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

County Commission • TammyBaney,R-Bend Phone:541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney©co.deschules.or.us • Alan Unger,D-Redmend Phone:541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us • TonyDeBone,R-LaPine Phone:541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©o.deschules.orus

CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThird St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration@co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us

County Court •MikeMc Cade,CrookCountyjudge Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe©co.crook.or.us • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren©co.crook.or.us

JEFFERSON COU5ITY 66 SE DSt., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us

The Bulletin filephoto

Cowboys and cowgirls from across the Northwest compete today at the La Pine RodeoGrounds. for Life and the American Cancer Society; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. SARCHASM:Alternative; 7 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; 541-306-3017. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSE RACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5 includes parking, women free; 7:15 p.m., gates open at 6 p.m.;

Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: citymanager@ci.bend.or.us

City Council • Jodie Barram Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jbarram©ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • Jim CBnton Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • VictorChudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky©ci.bend.or.us • DougKnight Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: dknight©ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: sramsay©ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srussell@ci.bend.or.us

and The Friendly Strangers; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.com. TERENCENEAL:Folk-pop; 6 p.m.; Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Road, Powell Butte; www.brasadalodging.com or 541-526-6865. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Robin Dliveira will present on her book "I Always Loved You"; $5;7 p.m.;PaulinaSpringsBooks,422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSE RACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5 includes parking, THURSDAY women free; 7:15 p.m., gates open at 6 p.m.; QUILTS IN THEGARDEN:Self-guided tour Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., of gardens and homes in and around Sisters, Prineville; www.crookedriverroundup.com quilts will be on display; $15; 9 a.m.-3 p.m.; or 541-447-4479. Gallimaufry,111 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; "RIFFTRAX LIVE:SHARKNADO":Featuring www.sistersgardenclub.com, leweyluv© a new take on the viral movie; $12.50; 8 p.m.; yahoo.com or 541-595-6389. Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW OREGON SUMMER QUILTEXPO: "A Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. Celebration of Fabric Arts" features vendors, BLACK PUSSY: 9 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre exhibits and learning experiences; $10, Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. free for children 15 and younger; 10 a.m.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. 5 p.m.;Deschutes County Fair8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; FRIDAY www.oregonsummerquiltexpo.com or 866-266-3136. OREGON SUMMER QUILTEXPO: "A THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and Celebration of Fabric Arts" features vendors, discuss "The Paris Wife" by Paula McLain; exhibits and learning experiences; $10, noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW free for children 15 and younger; 10 a.m.Deschutes Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ 5 p.m.;DeschutesCountyFair& Expo redmond, reneeb©deschuteslibrary.org or Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; 541-312-1055. www.oregonsummerquiltexpo.com or 866-266-3136. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Elizabeth and Hazel" by David SISTERSFARMERS MARKET:3-6 p.m .; Margoli ck;noon;Downtown Bend Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue andAsh Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. deschuteslibrary.org/bend, reneeb@ VFW DINNER:Fish andchips;$6;3-7 deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1055. p.m.; VFW Hall, 1503 NEFourth St., Bend; AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Robin Oliveira 541-389-0775. will present on her book"I Always Loved CRAWFEST2014:More than 25 bands, You"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, food, art and more; $20 for weekend pass, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. camping included, free for children 6 and MUNCH AND MUSIC: Featuring nuegrass/ younger; 4 p.m.; 16065 SW Alfalfa Road, pop music by Fruition, with opener Will West Powell Butte; www.j.mp/crawfest.

CITY OF LA PINE

71 SEDStreet, Madras,OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2344 Fax: 541-475-7061

P.O. Box 3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462

CITY OF CULVER

CITY OF PRINEVILLE 387 NEThird St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628 Email: cityhall©cityofprineville.com Web: www.cityofprineville.com

200 W. First St., Culver, OR 97734 Phone: 541-546-6494 Fax: 541-546-3624

TheBulletm

636 Jefferson Ave.,Metolius, OR97741 Phone: 541-546-5533

D

716 SWEvergreenAve. Redmond, OR97756 Phone: 541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706

bendbulletin.com

CITY OF METOLIUS

5

CITY OF REDMOMD

Find It All Online

CI T Y OF MADRA S

City Council • MayorGeorgeEndicott Phone: 541-948-3219 Email:George.Endicott@ci.redmond.orus • Jay Patrick Phone: 541-508-8408 Email: Jay.Patrick©ci.redmond.or.us • Tory Allman Phone: 541-923-7710 • Joe Centanni Phone: 541-923-7710 Joe.Centanni©ci.redmond.or.us • CamdenKing Phone: 541-604-5402 Email: Camden.King@ci.redmond.or.us • GinnyMcPherson Phone: 541-923-7710 Fmall:GinnyMcPherson@ ci.redmond.orus • Ed Onimus Phone: 541-604-5403 Email: Ed.0nimus@ci.redmond.or.us

DURING THE 2014 COBA TOUR OF HOME$™ ENTER TO WIN A

CITY OF SISTERS 520 E. CascadeAvenue, P.O.Box39 Sisters, OR97759 Phone: 541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561

City Council

• DavidAsson Phone: 503-913-7342 • Mike Ahern Email: dasson@ci.sisters.or.us • JohnHaffield • WendyHolzman • WayneFording Phone: 541-549-8558 Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: wholzman@ci.sisters.or.us Email: commissioner@co.jefferson.or.us • Brad Boyd Phone: 541-549-2471 CITY OF BEMD Email: bboyd©ci.sisters.or.us • CatherineChildress 710 NWWall St. Phone: 541-588-0058 Bend, OR97701 Email: cchildress©ci.sisters.or.us Phone: 541-388-5505 • McKibben Wemack Web: www.ci.bend.or.us Phone: 541-598-4345 • City Manager EricKing Email: mwomack@ci.sisters.or.us

County Commission

OUTDOOR PATIO SET THERE ARE TWO WAYS To ENTER5 WIN:

lkl

1. STOP BY PATIO WORLD At 222 SEReed Market Road, Suite 200, Bend. Now through July 27 2.VISIT THE MONTE VISTA HOMES, TOUR OF HOMES HOUSE ¹43 at 63347 Kalamata Loop, Bend. During the Tour Of Homes™ July 18-20, 25-27

Q

PRIZEHASNO CASHVALUE. NO PURCHASENECESSARYTO WIN. MUSTBE18 YEARS OLD OROI DERTOENTER. A WINNERWILL BEDRAWN SATURDAY,AUGUST2~ . ONE ENTRYPERPERSON.

g MonteVistaHomes

The Bulletin 31 1 Century Drive 541-389-6234 • OPEN 7 DAYS 9 AM-6 PM

Reed Continued from B1 The ReedMarket Road proj-

ect is the largest and, according to the city, most complex of several projects for which votersapproved a $30 million bond measure in 2011. The city already completed other projects funded by the bond, including roundabouts at Simpson Avenue and Mt. Washington Drive, 18th Street

Brookswood Boulevard and

finish it by wintertime," Abbas

PowersRoad. When the city begins work

sard.

on Reed Market Road from Third Street to 15th Street in the next month or two, it will keep one lane open for east-

through the winter, including the realignment of American

use a detour up Ninth Street, to Wilson Avenue. The city expects to complete the Reed Market Road

at the new intersection with American Lane. The city expects to wrap up work on the

Other work wi ll c o ntinue

Colors of Summer ... let the Fun begin!

Lane and construction of a

newbridge acrossthe Central bound traffic, Abbas said. Oregon Irrigation canal. The Westbound traffic will have to city will install a traffic signal

and 15th Streetroundabout by

and Empire Avenue, and November. "That's the idea, to

projectby November 2015. — Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com

• I


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON PORTLAND

AROUND THE STATE DriVe-dy inVeetlga'tlell —Police saythere werealarge number

aucous ni urns ea in progress. Rescuers located the three victims in a crowd of nearly The Associated Press 26-year-old male. possible suspects. 1,000 people partying to a DJ. PORTLAND — Police offiPolice say four other victims The victims were transported cials say they are treating the — men and women in their Government Island stabbing off the island by boat and tak-

• 1 gunned down outside a strip club; 3 stabbed at a danceparty

shooting outside of a strip club

20s and 30s — have injuries

here as a homicide after one that are not life-threatening of the five injured victims has and are expected to recover. dled.

The victims were not identi-

Separately, authorities say

en to an area hospital. Two of

three men suffered multiple the victims are considered in stabbing wounds, with one stable condition. sustaining serious injuries, at Brandon Richard Cullen, of a large dance party on Gov- Wilsonville, has been charged

Officials say in a statement fied Saturday afternoon. that the victim died after bePolice say the shooting was ernment Island. with three counts of first-deing transported to a n a r ea gang-related and most likely Emergency personnel from gree felony assault. hospital from the Soobie's happened in the club's parking multiple agencies responded The island belongs to the Bar & Grill Strip Club early lot, but they did not immedi- to the island Saturday at about Port of Portland but is run by Saturday. The deceased is a

ately offer any information on

1:45 a.m. on a report of a fight

the state parks department.

Hiker, 44, takeshisown life on trail at Oregon Coast The Associated Press MANZANITA —

Oregon State Police say A u t hor- several citizens reported the

ities are investigating the

point along Highway 101 on next-of-kin notifications. the Oregon Coast, between OsFirstresponders confirmed

death just before 9 p.m. Friday wald West State Park and Manafter hearing a gunshot and zanita in Tillamook County. finding the man at the end of Investigators say the victim

the man died from a self-in-

apparently took his own life on a trail overlooking the Pa- atrail.

was 44 years old. His name

flicted gunshot wound. They said he was still in possession of a handgun. His vehicle was

cific Ocean.

will be r eleased following

found near the trail entrance.

shooting death of a man who

The trail leads from a view-

of witnesses to afatal drive-by shooting on a north Portland street, but they haveshared little information with investigators. A reward of up to $1,000 is offered through CrimeStoppers for information that leads to anarrest in Monday's shooting. Andrew Coggins was hit once, and the24-year-old died at the scene on acurb. Residents reported hearing up to10 shots. Police believe theshooting is gang-related.

ArreSt after greaSedurllS —A29-year-old Portland womanis in jail, accused of pouring hot greaseover her boyfriend while hewas sleeping. Police Sgt. PeteSimpson saysthe 54-year-old boyfriend suffered serious burns to his face, chest andhands. Hewas taken to a local hospital with injuries that were serious but not life-threatening. Shiree Franklin was bookedinto the Multnomah County jail Friday on one count of first-degree domestic violence assault. Bail is set at $250,000. Police werecalled to the North Portland home atabout 2:45 am. Friday. Simpsonsays detectives don't yet know amotive. Franklin is set to bearraigned Monday.

Prison lockdown lifted — Oregon corrections officials lifted a lockdown at the OregonState Penitentiary on Saturday. Thefacility was placed on lockdownThursday after fighting amongabout 30 inmates erupted at the dining hall. No onewas hurt so badly as to require treatment outside the prison. Officials say aninvestigation is ongoing to determine the cause ofthe incident. The penitentiary is Oregon's oldest prison andthe only maximum security prison among 14 institutions. It houses about 2,000 people. Oregon prison officials have reported several instances of inmate fighting in 2014. A Corrections Department statement Saturday said regular visiting will resume today. DOe Shat —Oregon State Police on the Columbia Gorgeareseeking the public's help after the discovery of a slain doedeer inWasco County. The doewasfound by area residents in late June, andevidence shows thedeer wasshot from the roadway and left to waste. Trooper Brent Ocheskey is investigating the discovery and believes the doe also had fawn a in the area. OSPis asking for tips on their poachers hotline at 800-452-7888. Kite-Surfing death — The mankilled in a kite-surfing accident on the OregonCoast was aPortland-area firefighter. Tualatin Valley Fire 8 Rescuesaid Wylie Johnson Jr., 49, whowent by Dale, was killed Thursday near Lincoln City when hesuffered an unspecified accident. He wasfound by afriend, unresponsive, and later confirmed dead. Johnson was a firefighter in Jackson County before joining

IT WAS TOO HOT FORTHE ANIMAL KINGDOM, TOO

TVFR in 1995. — From wire reports

Cougar found intree

1

in Portland iseuthanized — '4

The Associated Press PORTLAND —

The Oregonian

A whole family of elephants at the OregonZoo in Portland spent most of the time in thewater cooling off last week. Lily, the baby, seemedto have the most fun, continuously diving into the water while splashing around and into her mom,Rose-Tu,and brother, Samudra. It was hot across Oregon last week. In the state's northwest corner, complexatmospheric conditions sent temperatures soaring up near 100 degrees before it cooled off into the holiday weekend. ByMonday, in

Portland, it could be 90again. Morezoonews: Doyou know whatitmeanswhenanelephantlowers its head andfolds its trunk underneath it, or when azebra wuffles, or when a redfox screams bloody murder? A veterinarian namedVint Virga does, and he's very likely the only vet in the country whose fulltime job is tending to the psychological welfare of animals in captivity. Story on C7

wildlife officials have euthanized a cougar that was captured in the backyard of a Portland home. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials made the decision to eutha-

One resident reported her cat had been killed by an

nize the animal late Friday. The decision was made for

boro, 20 miles from Portland.

hours in the tree under police

territorial conflicts among

By Vickie Aldous (Medford) Mail Tribune

The Ashland City Council has directed city staff members to draft an ordinance to

loosen restrictions on homeowners who rent out space

"It's at the expense of renters and people who chose to buy in residential zones." — Ellen Campbell, a member of the Ashland Lodging Association

opposed to renting single-family homes to vacationers Opposition

to tourists for short stays, but it remains to be seen whether the council will adopt any changes. The council p r eviously

Councilor Dennis Slattery

homes. They are allowed in multifamily residential zones that accommodate apartment buildings. tasked the Ashland Planning But some homeowners in Commission with investigat- single-family zones said they ing the issue. The commission need the added income from did notmake a recommenda- hosting tourists. "This is a v er y h i ghly tion to loosen rules but instead proposed changes that could charged issue," Dawkins said. lessen impacts if vacation rent-

als are allowed in single-fami- Changes considered ly residential zones. Changes under considerThey are currently barred ation include allowing vacathere, although homeowners tion rentals in single-family often try to skirt th e r ules. zones if owners are on site, Websites that connect trav- allowing only one tourist acelers with homeowners have commodation of one to two made it easier than ever for bedrooms per home, requirproperty owners t o h o st ing the tourist space to be tourists. within the home or attached Planning Commission Vice to the home, and barring the Chairman Michael Dawkins

said Tuesday there is con-

provision of separate kitchen facilities.

cern that allowing more vacation rentals could cut into

commission did not favor al-

Ashland's stock of traditional long-term rentals needed by residents. The Ashland lodging industry largely opposes expanding vacation rentals into single-family residential zones earmarked fo r

work from home because of the Internet and other changes. "People are using their residences in a more multifaceted way," she said.

Dawkins said the planning lowing tourists to rent out whole houses. The planning commission also wants to keep detached buildings — sometimes called mother-in-law units — off-lim-

its to tourists in single-family s t a nd-alone zones. Those buildings are

meant to accommodate relatives and long-term renters.

said he is not in favor of allowing tourist stays in sin-

As for barring separate gle-family zones because that use changes the character of neighborhoods. "We made apromise to peobe used by long-term renters. Resident Ruth Resch said ple who bought in R-1 zones," she favors allowing tourists to he said of the relative peace stay in single-family zones. A and stability people expect in disabled senior citizen, Resch single-family zones. said renting out a bedroom in Ashland Lodging Associaher home to tourists can help tion member Ellen Campbell her remain financially solvent. said there is no reason to allow Resch said allowing people tourist stays in single-family to have legal home-based lodg- zones because lodging options ing businesses helps to main- — including vacation rentals tain economic diversity so that of homes — are plentiful in Ashland does not become an other zones. enclave only for the wealthy. She said rental units in sinCouncilor Pam Marsh said gle-family zones need to be she likely will vote to loosen safeguardedforresidents and vacation rental r ules when Ashland workers. Changes draftchanges come back to would hurt long-term renters the council for consideration. and many homeowners. kitchen f acilities, D awkins said, units with kitchens can

M arsh s ai d

w hen s in-

"It's at the expense of rent-

gle-family zones were created, ers and people who chose people usually left home to go to buy in residential zones," to work. Now, more people Campbell said.

Arts 5 Entertainment ••

Thi Bulletin

animal — the only thing that

remained of the pet was the cat's tail and a paw.

Residents also reported cougar sightings in Hills-

In March, Oregon wildlife public safety because the an- officials euthanized two couimal had become used to the gars in Eugene — the animals city and had lost its fear of were blamed for killing two goats and several chickens. people, officials said. Residents called police just The Department of Fish before 3 p.m. Friday to report and Wildlife has said older the cougar sitting in a tree cougars are not good candiin a densely populated Port- dates for being relocated to land neighborhood. zoos or other facilities, beAfter the cat spent three cause relocation could create monitoring, wildlife officials the big cats and spread distranquilized the animal with ease.The state does relocate a dart and safely removed it from the tree.

cougar kittens.

a cage and euthanized later. Residents have reported

Under Oregon statute, landowners experiencing damage by a cougar may kill the offending animal with-

multiple cougar sightings in

out a permit from state wild-

Portland in recent days, and

life officials.

The cougar was placed in

Ashland mayloosenvacation-rental limits

officials said it might have

O r egon been the same cougar.

,; ll.S,26N,IIIIQ Q,IIMAY Heading over Mt. Hood? Knoxu Be fore You Go and Planfor Delays Construction on U.S. 26 west of Government Camp will require limiting U.S. 26 to one lane open in each direction from July 7-Oct. 31 between east Kiwanis Camp Road and east Mirror Lake. In addition, there will be up to 60 minute closures and 20 minute traffic stops.

Hetr. is how construction will agect your travel

on U,S.26: • Three days a week, rock blasting will require up-to I hour closures of U.S. 26, Monday through Thursdaybetween 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. • Intermittent traffic stops lasting 20-minutes anytime the contractor is actively working. • Intermittent single lane closures and flagging instead of full highway closures • Increased truck traNc on U.S. 26

Visit wwmUS26MtHoodSafety.mgtolearn more

~rarw. TripCheckcom i9e +RYOE@


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Pat V. Sullivan, of Bend Oct. 18, 1928 - June 30, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 8 Gardens is honored to serve the family. 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapeacom

Services: At his request, no services will be held. Contributions may be made to:

American Heart Association Donations Processing Ctr., 1710 Gilbreth Road, Burlingame, CA 94010-1795, www.heart.org or a Charity of one's choosing.

New incentive to root out invasiveweeds

Activist diagnosed NicaragLia'saversion By Stephen Kinzer

a former guerrilla, political Carlos,whohadreturnedhome

big float advertising their insurance, the Bend Sign Company had an amusing float, the American Bakery

prisoner

toted a vast loaf of bread

summer and muddy in winter." A widower he is survived by

New York Times News Service

Emilio Alvarez Montalvan,

s i x c hildren. In 1978, his son

a n d go v e rnment f r o m Vanderbilt University for

official who in the last quar- summer vacation, was killed ter-century of his life was of- by a national guard soldier who ten called the wisest man in

mi s took him for a rebel fighter.

OR April 15, 1971. He atj~ i tend ed Eugene Christian School from K Jon Putney through 6th, then Spencer Butte Jr. High an d S o ut h E u g ene, raduating in 1989. During is junior and senior years, h e was o n t h e g o l f t e a m that won a S t ate Champi-

per editor and tren-

in L o ndon, P aris

chant critic of dic- d e m OCI'aCy tatorship. His death Mii e're l jke brought an o u t - b a y j e S whe n pouring of tributes in Nicaragua. The yOu dOn't

and N e w York. In

commentator Carlos

Fernando Chamorro called him "the country's most lu-

cid and resPected Politician." The novelist Ser-

Change thejr P"'

1949, after a decade

ab r oad, he returned to Nicaragua. The dict a tor Anastasio S o moza Garcia was in power,andin1954Alva-

EmliipA'iyarez rez joined a grouP Montalvan, about Plotting to kill him.

College 1989-1994, where h is f r e shman g o l f t e a m w ent to N a t i onals. A f t e r Linfield Jon moved to Bend. J on lived in B end fo r 2 0 ears, enjoying golf, skiing, h iking, f if shing , con c e rts and multitudes of f r i ends. H e mainly w o r ked i n t h e golf/resort/restaurant industries. He i s s u r v i ved b y hi s daughter, Lily; f a t h er, Jim P utney; m o t her , Jack i e Grosse; sisters, Jill Putney and Jamie Putney; four nephews; and many o t h er extended family members. Memorial con t r i b utions may be made to Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701. A Celebration of Life service will be held 2:00 p.m. A ugust 2 , 2 0 1 4 a t Fi r s t United M ethodist C h urch, 680 NE Bond St., in Bend.

Sharon Henske Rosengarth 1938 - 2014 Sharon was born to Fred and P e a rl e H e n s k e o n January 2 9 , 19 3 8 , an d p assed fro m t h i s l i f e o n June 24, 2014. She was raised in M e t olius, OR, and attended the Metolius Grade School and graduated from M a d ras Union H i g h Sch o o l i n 1956. She married Leo Rosengarth of Bend, OR and had a very b u s y l i f e t h r o u gh out her time. She spent the last years in Aztec, NM. S he is s u r vived b y t w o daughters, Doreen ( V ern) B ooth, K a r l e e n Ros e n g arth, an d a f o s t e r s o n , B uck B o t t s , a b r ot h e r Lowell (Judy) Henske, two s isters, R a c h e l (Ca r r o l / Mac) Mcintosh and Lillian

(Francis) Heck. Her par-

e nts a n d hu s b an d p r e ceded her in death. T here will no t b e a s e r v ice at h e r r e q u est. H e r wish is to h ave her ashes d ispersed w i t h L e o ' s i n and a r o u n d t he r i ve r where they lived while she w as a Park Ranger. B o t h loved th at hi d e - a - w ay where they made and cons idered home f o r n u m e r ous years.

information is the wooden pony assertedly The B en d I n s urance purloined several monthsago.... Later the Agency was there with a horse showed up in La Pine, then in Shevlin,

"investigation" by the district

Miss Castro's charges against

attorney and Sheriff Claude

the Cuban government were "edited in the United States

car and A.L. French was there with an entry. The cars forming the rest of the parade were owned

or driven by the following: H.E. Felton, J.H. Wenandy, Frank Dibble, H.C. Ellis,

John Steidl, Floyd Dement, G.S. Young, E. Austin, M.S. Miller, Mrs. Arnold, C.S.

Hudson, George Hoover,

Bozell, J. McMickle and two cars entered by the Pilot Butte hotel.

w h i ch he helped edit.

Barrios de Chamorro and the In r e cent years Alvarez reSandinista administration of l entlesslycriticizedtheauthorPresident Daniel Ortega. He

i t a r ian O r tega government.

writing and treating patients.

c ent corruption," he said. "Now

declinedthemall. Instead,he "Somoza governed with 80 devoted himself to studying, percent repression and 20 per-

He alsoled several organiza- the percentages arereversed." tions pressing for democracy Alv a rez reserved special and political openness. scorn for Ortega's most ambiIn 1996, at the age of 77, Al- tious project, a proposed intervarez surprised his friends by oceanic canal that is supposed agreeing to become foreign to be built with Chinese monminister. "I had passed by the ey. He saw it as inspired by "a bordello so many times," he

p a r t of our culture called the

dangerous for me because it

t h e l ottery."

explained. "Finally I decided magic sense of life, which tells that I'd like to see what goes us that suddenly we're all goon inside." ing to become rich, suddenly He spent less than two w e 'regoingtohaveanimportyears in that post. "Politics is ant friend, we're going to win requires qualities that I don't He w a s outraged but also have," he said. "I'm more inter- amused by the ways Ortega ested in studying why Nicara-

guaremainssobackward."

u s ed a democratic facade to

gua r antee his permanence in

That interest led Alvarez to publish "The Political Culture

p o w er."Democracy is being u s e d to corrupt democracy,"

try's collective psyche. In i t

t he i r diapers."

of Nicaragua," considered a A l varez said. "We're like baclassic analysis of his coun- bies when you don't change he describes Nicaraguans as outgoing, imaginative, hardworking and compassionate. Among the negative aspects of their national character, he cites short-term thinking, ex-

cessive embrace of tradition, eagernessto cater to foreigners, an impulse to solve prob-

lems through violence, openness to corruption and a weakness for charismatic dictators.

The main reason Nicaraguans have been unable to con-

solidate democracy, he repeatedly argued, is that too many are poor and uneducated.

"You need a large middle class to achieve democracy," he said in one of his last interviews. Emilio Alvarez Montalvan was born July 31, 1919, in Ma-

Obitusry ppllcy 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.

Ukraine's Orthodox Church

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

for more than two decades, leading it through the tu-

Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com

multuous p ost-Soviet p e ri-

Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020

nagua, which he said was then "a village that was dusty in

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world:

itable foundation in Nicole's

PaulAmos, 88:On e ofthree brothers who founded the Aflac insurance company nearly 60 years ago and the man behindits huge success in selling policies at workplaces. Died Wednesday in Columbus, Georgia. Louis Brown Jr., 90: Father of O.J. Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson, who

domestic violence and increase funding for assistance.

was slashed to death in 1994,

Jerusalem and Geneva. Died

and co-founder with another daughter, Denise, of a char-

Saturday.

name to raise awareness of Died Thursday in Southern

California. Volodymyr, 78: Head of

od, after first serving in the Russian church's missions in — From wire reports

Bend, OR97708

McCauley resulted. The district attorney's in-

dren in white, with ribbons Embassy in Mexico." "They contain all the infaand greenery. Sather was formation states that the true well represented, the Bend meaning of the insignia ap- my which imperialism has Hotel had a big decorated pearing on the wooden horse conceived against the Cuban

Two years later

ocratic government of Violeta

— Bulletin news report from1939

the float of Mrs. McIntosh, a "double decker" affair with many pretty little chil-

mer vice president

h e would give up the career of

Cashman store in Bend."

let the matter rest. However as "an immense prison". Fourth of July committeemen At a reception in the Cana"demanded action" and the dian Embassy, Castro said

gio Ramirez, a for-

committed to the democratic armed revolutionary and inidea, which is why his loss is stead become a leader of the so profound for us." opposition Conservative Party. Don Emilio, as he was uniHe r emained a fervent critic versally known, was the only of the Somoza family dictaNicaraguan to have been of- torship, publishing a stream fered high posts by the dictato- of columns in the main opporial Somoza regime, the dem- sition newspaper, La Prensa,

and finally in the display window of the

and the Patterson Drug Company a hugebottle,a dozen feet or so high. Then came the winner,

J.M Judd, A .O. W alker, F.G. Harris, J. Partin, W.D.

lost so many times. He was

"The horse mentioned in the district attorney's

Continued from B1

paniel prtega's Their Plot f ailed, holdonpower and he served 18 months in prison.

of Nicaragua, said Alvarez Somoza was assassinated, and had "witnessed an epoch and Alvarez was again arrested, participated in it," adding: "He although he was not involved. was still making plans to res- Upon his release he decided onship. J on a t t e n de d L i n f i e l d cue the democracy we have that for the sake of his family,

The city says it will pay a

T h i s s m a ll dollar for aplasticgrocery sack

to real democracy

Nicaragua, died Wednesday A t 2 0 , after deciding that in Managua. He was 94. Nicaragua was boring because His family announced his "nothing was happening," Aldeath. varez left to study Alvarez, an ophophthalmology in April 15, 1971 - June 28, 2014 DemOCI'aCy Chi l e a nd A r genthalmologist, was a Jonathan Putney of Bend, ultural hast a n j S t J ejng uSed t ana He later took OR m ad e h i s tr a n s ition p'oma' ne spa to corrupt June 28, 2014. He died af-

Eugene,

into spiky burrs. The weed infests pastures, fields, ditches city in Umatilla County is full of the weed. Residents can and roadsides where it forms taking a new approach to turn in a 5-gallon bucket full of dense mats. It's also painful to weed control: It's offering the weed to City Hall for $5. step on. a bounty to anyone who Puncture vine, also known B ounties in Echo will b e brings in bags of the weed as devil's weed or goathead, paid out until the program's known as puncture vine. has yellow flowers that turn $350budget is exhausted. ECHO —

Yesterday

Jonathan James Putney

ter a brave battle with brain cancer. Jon was born in

The Associated Press

Rose, Wm. Hahaffey, C.I.

75 YEARS AGO For the week ending

July 5, 1939

is unknown "to all p ersons

revolution," Castro said in a

except M.P. Cashman and written statement. one Ah Wing." Also Walter W. Wilson "alias Shorty Wilson, alias White Water Wilson," is

25 YEARS AGO

charged with "unlawfully con- For the week ending cealing" the unbranded wood- July 5, 1989 enhorse.

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending

July 5, 1964

Lots to do in area over 4th By Phil F. Brogan Varied events are on Cen-

Course teaches ancient construction skills Watching Carroll Vogel and his seven students move a 6,000 pound log by tugging at one end of a block and tackle, you begin to understand how the Egyptians built the pyramids. Vogel and the men and women in hisclass grasp a

tral Oregon's 1964 Fourth of July program, with Bend one rope like contestants in a tug of of the few quiet spots on the war, then strain to pull 80 feet tri-county map. of line through the block and But even in Bend there will

tackle — an elaborate system

be some action, as more than of ropes, pulleys and cables. Theft of horse is 150 golfers compete in the an- The log creeps a few inches. investigated "Okay," Vogel says, "Lets nual Mirror Pond Golf TourD eschutes County o f - nament. The tournament, with take another bite," and he adficers were called on this a capacity enrollment, will be justs the block and tackle to morning to investigate the Saturday and Sunday. increase leverage working theft of a wooden horse, In downtown Bend fewplac- against the log. He figures the located in a local display es of business will be open. system multiplies his group's window following its disapOutside of Bend, Fourth of strength by 20 times. pearance from Bend sever- July activities will center at The block and tackle is anal months ago. La Pine, the Warm Springs chored around a tree here at Property of J.F. Van AlReservation, Prineville, and Quinn Meadows Horse Camp, len, the miniature horse Camp Sherman. where mossy fir trees hug the fashioned from t w isted La Pine, celebrating Frontier edges of a grassy alpine meadwoods, disappeared sev- Day, will be in the spotlight. ow in the Deschutes National eral months ago from the Throughout the a fternoon Forest. Virginia Park court just there will b e v a ried enterFiddling with the system adsouth of town, apparently tainment — even a rolling pin mits there are easier ways to "borrowed" by some high throwing contest for women. move a log. "We couldbringsome equipschool boys. It next showed Decks will be cleared in the up at the home of Tom Haw- evening for an old-time dance. ment in here and move that log kins, in La Pine, and when The La Pine celebration is with no problem," he says, "but found was outfitted with planned as that town's biggest then everyone would stand clothes of Mrs. Hawkins. observance of the Fourth of around watching and nobody Next the "horse" found July in years. would learn anything." its way t o S hevlin, and Youth activities will feature And learning is the point from Shevlin was brought the July 4 program at Warm of this workshop which is to Bend by WW. Wilson. Springs, with a daylong pro- being given by the Student In advertising the two-day gram planned. A bar and beef Conservation Association, a stampede,members of the barbecue will be served, fol- non-profit national educationCashman store staff deco- lowing a parade. Youngsters al organization committed rated the horse and placed will participate in games and t o conservation work. T h e it on display, bearing the races. There will be dancing, weeklong session, which ends "brands" of Harold Kline. baseball and supervised dis- Friday, is designed to teach The horse was finally play of fireworks. c onservation w o r kers a n d discovered in the window Camp Sherman residents federal land managers about by Van Allen, whose first will host the second annual methods of construction that thought was to locate the

Ponderosa Pancake Break-

persons who took the horse from his property. Sheriff Claude McCauley was called in to investigate. Following his discovery

fast, at the community hall. mankind's technologies. Last year over 400 persons atDuring the week, the stutended the breakfast.

Even larger crowds are expectedand outdoor service is that none of the people who planned, especially for late arhave had recent posses- rivals. Waiters will be dressed sion of the wooden horse in western attire. During the had anything to do with its breakfast George Churchills theft, Van Allen consented of Bend will keep the aromatic to have his prized "horse" air filled with western music. take a part in the stampede N o special Fourth o f advertising program. July program is planned in Prineville, but Sunday will

Ah, that horse is still with us

Two Central Oregon men charged with "unlawfully making an artificial brand

were among the earliest of dents will construct a bridge,

improve trails, build a rock wall and rehabilitate overused

camping areas — all with only hand tools and their wits.

mark the windup of the 1964 Rockhound Pow Wow. Neither Redmond or Madras

plans any special observance.

on a horse with intent to

Castro finds sister's action

to appear before the De-

Mexico was "very bitter and

convert it for advertising bitter, painful purposes" were at large on Cuban Premier Fidel Castro their own recognizance to- said Wednesday night the deday, but under instructions fection of his sister, Juana, to

• Composition • Ketal • Tile • New Coastrmehon • Mainteaance • "Izeen" Roofs

schutes County coroner in profoundly painful" to him. the absence from the city of It was Castro's first comCircuit Judge T.E.J. Duffy. ment on his sister's flight from The horse mentioned in the island which she described the district attorney's information is the wooden pony

assertedlypurloined several months ago from John Van Allen of the Virginia Auto courts. Later the horse showed up in La Pine, then

in Shevlin, and finally in the display window of the

changingSmiles Denture it Implant Center

Call 541-388-4444 for $100 OFF your new denture

45 54 1 . 8 4 V . 1 0 8 0

Cashman store in Bend. Van Allen at first sought

official action, then, when he discovered that recent

possessors of the wooden horse had nothing to do with its theft, decided to

ce

ssrsrs nwttaalityroofinf. oom r u uum

541 382-6447 i 2090 NE Wyatt Court i Suite 101 Bend OR 97701i bendurology.com

S~SU r olo


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

T HE

B5

ES T

"While we've turned the corner, while we've slowed down this fire, there's still a lot of work ahead of us." — Daniel Berlant, state fire spokesman

nce-ra in ai ornia ires

tame over u wee en S .htt*

.',~'.4jj-''~~~tI'""".'':.g;:g

The Associated Press

J ULIAN, C a l i f . A wildfire that destroyed two

homes left a Southern California mountain town with-

'I

out its popular Fourth of July celebrations, but the blaze,

The Associated Press file photo

along with another in North-

Sage grouse, found here in Colorado (female on the left, male on the right) and in other Western

ern California, remained tame Friday and Saturday, bringing no new destruction, threats or evacuations. The fire near the historic gold mining town of Julian in San Diego County had consumed 217 acres by Friday, a day after it broke out, burned two homes and forced hundreds of evac-

states, are being considered for listing under the Endangered Species Act.

Flames engulf a house as crews scrambled to corral a wildfire near the San Diego County mountain town of Julian, California,

uations that have all been

on Thursday. The blazeeruptedaround10:30 a.m. and prompted

contro o t e • • enate

called off. But the lingering threat of

the mandatory evacuation of 200 homes, before calming down over the weekend.

By Nicholas Riccardi

iswi i r cou swin KNSD-TV/The Associated Press

determine whether Democrats

locally driven solutions. They don't want bureaucrats

two homes, but the fire was

or Republicans control the

burning to the north, away

U.S. Senate in November.

thousands of miles

from th e

The federal government is considering listing the greater sage grouse as an endangered species next year. Doing so could limit development, energy exploration, hunting and ranching on the 165 million acres of the bird's habitat

DENVER — A n

roadsforthe firefightforced the city to take the year off from its festive Fourth of

July celebration that usually draws from 3,000to 5,000

people. The same area near Cleveland National Forest is where

an 11-square-mile blaze destroyed more than 100 mountain cabins just a year ago. Meanwhile, crews gained ground on a fire in rural

conditions.

lant said.

Firefighters held the blaze The fire has damaged nine at 4,300 acres, or about 6 s tructures, i n cluding t h e square miles, and increased containment to 55 percent, thanks to favorable weather conditions that allowed

c o unty's f amed

vineyards. Residents in nearly 200

crews to burn away fuel on the fire's Lake County flank.

homes in a subdivision in the

The fire was no longer threat-

county's Pope Valley were

ening any homes. "While we've turned the

allowed to return after an evacuation order was lifted

Napa County that broke out

corner, while we've slowed

Tuesday and grew initially by several hundred acres

down this fire, there's still a

Thursday afternoon. Neither fire has led to any

an hour because of the dry

"Montanans want

The Associated Press

the fire and the need to use

lot of work ahead of us," state fire spokesman Daniel Ber-

injuries. The causes of both

remained unknown.

o bscure,

chicken-sized bird best known for its mating dance could help

away in Washington, D.C., dictating what

should happen." — U.S. Rep. Steve Daines, R-Mont., who's running for

Sgamma said. Local officials are alarmed, too. Udall and other Colorado

lawmakers pushed for the Obama administration to de-

lay a decision on a far less prevalent species, the Gunnison sage grouse, until after the November elections. Federal

land managers have already declared more than 400,000 acres off-limits to development to protect that bird. The West-

the Senate and campaigning ern Governors Association on the sage grouse last month urged the federal across 11 Western states. government to defer to states Apart from the potential on protecting the bird. economic disruption, which chopped up its habitat and enT he a d m inistration a n some officials i n W e stern ergy exploration erected tow- n ounced last month that i t states discuss in tones usually ers that chased it away from would spend $32 million over reserved for natural disasters, its home range. 10 years helping ranchers in the specter of the bird's listing Rachel Carson warned in Nevada and California preis reviving the centuries-old 1962 of the bird's possible de- serve the bird's habitat. debates about local vs. feder- mise in "Silent Spring," her al control and whether to de-

velop or conserve the region's vast expanses of land.

classic environmental book. Three environmental

Compromise?

Industry leaders and envigroups sued to force the fed- ronmental groups agree that

Two Republican congress- eral government to protect the the grouse can be protected men who are running for the bird after the government de- without serious economic U.S. Senatein Montana and clined to list it as endangered damage.Some pointto WyoColorado, Steve Daines and

i

f( i rc

e

?s

«iii,'~WiX:'fsa ~4~~-

'

.'. ~ x>

Vc'='- .=

in 2005. In a 2010 settlement,

ming, the state with the great-

Cory Gardner, are co-spon- the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Sersoring legislation that would vice agreed to decide on listing prevent the federal govern- by September 2015. ment from listing the bird for a A major factor will b e

est amount of both energy exploration and grouse, which

decade as long as states try to whether the federal, state and protect it. local landowners whose land "Montanans want l o cally it inhabits protect the grouse. driven solutions," Daines said Many environmental groups in an interview. "They don't say the bird is a stand-in for a

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Seat" during the Crooked Rover Ranch Independence Celebration on Saturday. Ahern, a Jefferson County commissioner, plays the part of the Metolius commissioner 100 years ago.

"We do expect a bit of booing and hissing

Continued from B1

in Culver, if not more."

The deadlock continued

over more than two days and

— Jerry Ramsey, with the Jefferson County Historical Society,

280 ballots, Ramsey said, un-

about the second-to-last stop on the group's centennial tour

l isting, either, but t hat

in and cast his vote for Cul-

er true story adapted for the

found just one man, who had taken to singing and talking

ver. Two years later, county small stage by Ramsey. residents voted to establish a Moonshiners were active to himself in an array of voicpermanent county seat in Ma-

throughout Jefferson County

es to alleviate his isolation.

dras, Ramsey said, and a few during the Prohibition years, Jefferson County Commismonths after that county offi- Ramsey said, drawn by light- sioner Mike Ahern — playing cials, joined by a few "good ol' ly populated places where a the part of Metolius resident boys," headed to Culver and still could go undetected that and commissioner John King carted away the records and were still fairly close to the in the first skit and a sheriff's other holdings of the fledg- drinking populations in Bend deputy in the second — said ling county government. and Redmond. his acting skills have slipped Ramsey said there's still Law enforcement did pur- a bit since he was active some low-level resentment in sue and often find outlaw in school plays as a young Culver about the episode, and distillers during those years, student. "But it's a lot of fun; we've he expects to hear about it Ramsey said, including the when his group performs the one who became known as got a good group," Ahern said. skit later this summer at the the singing moonshiner of The historical society's Culver Crawdad Festival. Camp Sherman. traveling exhibit and live per"We do expect a bit of booAs the tale goes, a group of formanceshave three more ing and hissing in Culver, if county sheriff's deputies had scheduled stops this summer: not more," Ramsey said. closed in on a Camp Sher- at the Jefferson County Fair man moonshiner's cabin, but later this month, at the Culver 'Singing Moonshiner' hearing the singing and other Crawdad Festival in August, The troupe followed up the commotion coming from in- and at Spike 8t Rail Day in story of the county seat with side, they retreated to Madras September. "The Singing Moonshiner for reinforcements. Upon — Reporter: 541-383-0387, of Camp Sherman,"anoth- returning to the cabin, they shammers@bendbulletirt.com

the

the House are p roposing that would delay listing the bird would actually undermine locally driven efforts," said Udall spokesman Mike Saccone. The Senate is currently split

• • Classifjeds

that suedto force grouse pro-

Local concerns

the lead. "The states are work-

Part of a 'great landscape'

it, there's sort of a wall that

comes down between people." But environmentalists say the proposal amounts to a

needless delay. Even DemoIndustry groups and state cratswho argue the federal governments worry about the government should defer to cost.

states don't support the Re-

A study by the Western En- publican legislation. ergy Alliance, a Denver-based Gov. John H i c kenlooper, trade organization of i n de- D-Colo., has warned against pendent oil and gas produc- listing the bird and led a task

dependents having a 10-seat ers, estimates that from 5,000 edge over Republicans. But to 31,000 jobs could be lost with some of the majority's should the federal governseats more and more likely to ment take steps to protect the switch hands after the Novem- grouse. ber election, the GOP is within Kathleen Sgamma, t he striking distance of controlling group's vice president of govthe chamber. This conserva- ernment and public affairs, tion issue, alongside others, said that as the federal governmay push voters far enough to ment starts to draw up protechelp Republicans do just that. tions, energy leases are being deferred, drilling projects shut down and bureaucratic hur-

The greater sage grouse is dles raised to any kind of dedescribed in the journals of velopment in the bird's range. "It's another issue that's explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, and it once slowing economic growth and roamed widely across the job development in the West," massive sagebrush plateaus of

force of Western governors

who are trying to deal with the issue. A spokesman said Hickenlooper doesn't support

the legislation because it lacks adequate bipartisan support. Brian Rutledge, vice president of the Audubon Society's Rocky Mountain Region, said no one wants the bird to be

listed but that the Endangered Species Act is working as intended in this case, to push lo-

cal agencies to do conservation. He was dismissive of the

Republican proposal. "A lot of this," he said, "is just pandering."

the West's interior.

The bird is perhaps best known for its unusual springtime mating dance, during which it puffs its bulbous chest and emits odd warbles. But livestock grazing eroded the bristly plant that the bird

depends upon, development

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •

Randi Spivak of the Center for

threat of one is needed to push tection. "And that land has states to protect the bird. been drilled, subdivided."

55-45, Democrats and two in-

til commissioner and Metolius resident John King gave

and helps us advance mean-

in Colorado, oppose the idea. Biological Diversity in Tucson, ing right now very diligently," They say they don't want a Arizona, one of the groups Gardner said. "Once you list

"A bill like what some in

Jefferson

serve the bird's core habitat. "It's based on sound science

ingful conservation of the species," said Jerimiah Rieman, energy and natural resources want bureaucrats thousands vanishing Western ecosystem policy director for Gov. Matt of miles away in Washington, that needs preserving. Mead, R-Wyo. "This is the great landscape D.C., dictating what should Gardner, th e R epublican happen." of America, when you travel congressman from Colorado, Environmentalists and the west and see open spaces. This and others opposed to a listing two Democratic senators be- is all the stuff you grew up point to Wyoming as an examing challenged, John Walsh watching on television," said ple of why states should take in Montana and Mark Udall

From left, Royce Embanks, Mike Ahern and Tom Machala perform in the skit "Choosing the County

has put in place a plan to con-

Low Cost Reverse Mortgage Call Jerry GilmOur (NMLS¹ 124521) 17 years reverse mortgage experience in person, professional consultation

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B6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

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

o

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH

I f '

Plenty of sunshine

I

ALMANAC

MONDAY

TUESDAY

LOW

9Qo

53'

54

~P Y1~

Sunshine andvery warm

Mainly clear

92

WEDNESDAY 0

54

A full day of sunshine

EAST: Plenty of TEMPERATURE sunshine throughout Yesterday Normal Record the area today.Clear 90 79 98' i n 1926 tonight. Hot with 50' 46' 27'in 1977 sunshine tomorrow.

rla /5

Seasid

89'

""

50 '

ir fii

Very warm with a full day of sunshine

87' 47'

Plenty of sun

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

TH U RSDAY

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 96/63 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

o

Yesterday

Today Monday

Yesterday Today Monday

cify

Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 95/72/0.00 92/73/pc 93/74/s Juneau 66/51/0.20 64/50/sh Cannon /65 Ifngton 94/63 portland se/61 Akron 79/52/0.00 81/66/pc 84/68/I Kansas Ci t y 84/69/0.00 97ft4/pc Meac am Loshne 68/59 7/5 Albany 80/58/0.00 83/63/s 87non Lansing 78/53/0.00 81no/pc • w coe /64 PRECIPITATION dl t heaaa 9 1 Albuquerque 90/63/0.08 90/67/I 91/68/s Lss Vegss 99/81/0.08 103/86/I 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL: Delightandy• Anchorage 74/58/0.00 66/57/c 67/55/sh Lexington 82/60/0.00 87/68/pc 92/65 Mc innvig 0.46"in 1948 ful with plenty of Atlanta 86/68/0.00 86/70/I 88/70/s Lincoln 90/69/0.01 98/67/pc Record 6/63 • He p pner Grande • o o Condon 2/60 Atlantic City 81/62/0.00 82/68/s 86/75/pc Litiie Rock 86/65/0.00 90n1/pc 88 55 Month to date (normal) 0.02 (0.09 ) sunshine today.Mainly Mncoin Union o o Austin 92/67/0.00 92/72/pc 94/72/pc Lus Angel e s 86/64/0.00 82/66/pc 76/ Year to date (normal ) 4.54 (5.81 ) clear tonight. Sunshine 69/I Sale Baltimore 82/55/0.00 87/67/s 93/74/pc Louisville 83/57/0.00 9OnO/pc • pray Graniteu Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 1 2" and hot tomorrow. 90/6 • /61 Billings 97/60/Tr 90/63/s 81/59/s Madison, Wl 77/59/0.00 87/68/I 'Baker C Newpo 87/53 Birmingham 89/58/0.00 88/68/pc 91/69/s Memphis 86/64/0.00 90/69/pc SUN ANDMOON /59 • 58 67/57 • Mitch 6 87/50 Bismarck 96/61/0.00 86/59/pc 78/56/I Miami sgns/0.77 88n8/I 0 a m p S e r a n R 6 d WEST: Mostly sunny 89/56 Today Mon. n OrV 6 I6 uu Boise 98/64/0.00 98/66/s 96/67/s Milwaukee 78/56/0.00 84/68/I 69/53 • John Sunrise 5:29 a.m. 5: 3 0 a.m. today with some 89/60 Boston 80/59/0.39 85/67/s 86/73/pc Minneapolis 84/65/0.00 88/66/I • Prineville Day 52 tario Bridgeport, CT 84/61/0.00 83/69/s 85/74/pc Nashville Sunset 8:51 p.m. 8: 5 0 p.m. clouds at the coast. 89/56/0.00 90/68/pc 92/55 • P a lina 9 1/ 5 7 1 /66 o Buffalo 75/52/0.00 Tgnon New Orleans Moonrise 2 :48 p.m. 3:52 p.m. Mainly clear tonight. Floren e • Eugene 80/69/pc ssns/o.oo 92n3/pc 'Ue d a rothers 8954 Valeu Burlington, VT 83/61/0.00 84/63/pc 83/68/1 New York Ci t y 81/63/0.00 85/69/s Mainly sunny tomor70/58 so/ss Moonset 1 2:59 a.m. 1:32 a.m. Su iveru 88/53 98/66 Caribou, ME 59/50/2.43 76/60/pc 81/66/I Newark, NJ 84/62/0.00 87/68/s row. Nysse • 8 8 / 2 • I.a pirte Ham ton MOONPHASES C e Charleston, SC 87n4/0.00 86/73/I gfnnpc Norfolk, VA sanffr'r 87n1/s 4 Grove Oakridge Full Last New First Charlotte 84/60/0.00 87/67/pc 91/71/s OklahomaCity 92/71/0.00 95n2/pc • Burns Junture OREGON EXTREMES 97/60 89/56 /56 Chattanooga 86/66/0.00 88/68/pc 91/68/s Omaha 86/66/1.40 95/68/s • Fort Rock Riley 93/52 YESTERDAY l Cresce t • 91/51 Cheyenne 93/55/0.00 88/58/s 86/54/I Orlando 92/73/0.89 88f/3/I 91/52 88/51 Chicago 77/60/0.00 87/71/I ssnO/pc Palm Springs 107/83/Tr 105/84/I High: 96' Bandon Roseburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 82/56/0.00 86/67/pc stn2n Puoria 77/59/0.05 90n3/pc Jul 12 J u l 18 Ju l 2 6 Au g 3 at Medford Jordan V gey 70/58 Beaver Silver 92/50 Frenchglen 91/62 Cleveland 78/52/0.00 81/68/pc 83/70/I Philadelphia 83/64/0.00 88/69/s Low: 43' 93/57 Marsh Lake 94/52 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 92/56/Tr 91/61/s 90/62/pc Phoenix 102/84/0.01 105/87/I 88/48 at Lakeview Po 0 92/51 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia Mo 79/61/Tr 94/73/I 94n2/I Pittsburgh 78/50/0.00 83/66/pc T he Planets Ris e Set • Paisley 70/ a Columbia, SC 88n1/0.00 91/70/I gsn5/s Portland, ME 77/60/1.29 81/60/pc 96/58 Mercury 4:24 a.m. 7: 1 1 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 90/69/0.00 89/71/I 92/72/s Providence 81/61/0.10 85/66/s Medfo d '89/52 Gold Rome Venus 3:32 a.m. 6 : 3 9 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 80/54/0.00 84/69/pc 87n2/I Raleigh 83/61/0.00 87/66/s 67/ 100/58 Mars 1:54 p.m. 1 2:54 a.m. • Klamath Concord, NH 80/56/0.35 83/57/s 87/66/I Rapid City 91/59/0.00 88/64/pc • Ashl nd • FaNS Jupiter 6:35 a.m. 9 : 3 7 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 92n3/0.29 93/75/I 94/76/pc Reno 97/60/0.00 99/66/s Bro Ings 95/5 92/52 Saturn 4:05 p.m. 2: 1 5 a.m. 70/5 92/54 96/59 Dallas 93/73/0.00 95n5/pc gsns/s Richmond 86/61/0.00 88/68/s Dayton 80/57/0.00 84/68/pc 86n2/I Rochester, NY 80/52/0.00 84/67/pc Uranus 12:43 a.m. 1: 3 5 p.m. Denver 96/58/0.00 95/63/s 95/59/I Sacramento 97/57/0.00 98/60/s Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Des Moines 77/63/1.99 91/68/I 87/67/I Sf. Louis 82/63/0.00 92n6/I city H i/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W C i t y Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W city Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W Detroit 78/54/0.00 83/71/pc SsnO/pc Salt Lake City 97n5/o.oo 98/66/s 70/55/0.00 73/59/pc72/59/s Ls Grande 88/61/0.00 88/55/s 88/56/s Portland 83/6 1/0.0087/63/s 87/64/s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asturis Duluth 82/63/0.07 82/59/I 77/51/c Ssn Antonio 91/71/0.00 92ft4/pc Baker City 88/58/0.00 87/50/s 88/53/s Ls Pine 89/41/0.00 88/51/s 90/54/s Prineviiie 91/ 4 8/0.0092/55/s 90/57/s El Paso 97n6/Tr 94/74/pc 94/76/pc Ssn Diego 83/70/0.00 78notpc 6 N(~ 8 ~ 8~ N 6 Brookings 64/50/Tr 7 0/58/pc 72/60/s Me dford 98/5 8 /0.00 97/62/s 98/65/s Redmond 92/ 45/0.0090/51/s 91/53/s Fairbanks 81/55/0.00 82/62/sh 70/57/c Ssu Francisco 71/53/0.00 73/57/pc The highertheAccuWesiherxmmOVIndex number, Bums 94/49/0.00 93/52/s 94/55/s Ne wport 64/5 0 /0.00 67/57/pc 67/55/s Roseburg 93 / 56/0.00 91/62/s 91/65/s Fargo 93/67/0.08 84/64/I 80/59/1 Ssu Jose 82/57/0.00 87/60/s the greatertheneedfor eyeaudskin protecgon.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 89/52/0.00 90/58/s 89/57/s N o r th Bend 7 0 / 54/0.00 70/60/pc 69/59/s Salem 88/53/0.00 90/62/s 89/62/s Flagstaff 79/52/1.31 77/52/I 78/51/I Santa re 87/60/0.00 87/59/pc 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme. Klamsth Falls 91/50/0.00 92/52/s 94/55/s O n tario 97/66/0.00 100/66/s 98/68/s Sisters 88/48/0.00 90/53/s 91/54/s Grand Rapids 79/53/0.00 82/70/pc 82/66/pc Savannah gfn2/0'.04 88n2/I Lskeview 91/43/0.00 92/54/s 95/60/s Pendleton 92/60/0.00 92/62/s 93/61/s The Dalles 9 3 / 65/0.00 92/65/s 94/66/s Green ssy 79/55/0.00 83/68/I 83/60/pc Seattle 76/56/0.00 81/61/pc Greensboro 83/59/0.00 87/66/s 91/72/s Sioux Falls 90/67/Tr 91/62/pc Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rsin, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow i-ice, Tr-frsce,Yesterdaydata ssof 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 81/58/0.00 85/64/s 92/71/pc Spokane 85/61/0.00 86/63/s G rasses T r ees Wee d s Hsrffurd, CT 82/61/Tr 86/63/s sgn1/pc Springfield, Mo 82/66/0.00 90/71/pc • Hi g~h ~Lo~w ~Lo~w Helena 92/57/0.00 91/60/s 83/56/I Tampa 88/77/0.01 9On5/pc Source: OregonAiiergyAssocistes 541-683-1577 Honolulu 89/74/0.00 ssn4/s ssn4/s Tucson 97/79/0.12 97ng/I ~ g s ~ f g s ~ 208 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ aos ~ 708 ~ ags ~ ggs ~toos ~ff os Houston ~ fgs ~gs 90n3/0.31 gfn2/I gon4n Tulsa 91/72/0.00 95ft5/pc Huntsville 89/57/0.00 89/68/pc 92/69/s Washington, DC 86/64/0.00 88n2/s c Indianapolis 79/59/0.00 84/68/pc 87/71/I Wichita 92/71/0.04 97n3/pc As of 7 s.m. yesterday NATIONAL Jackson, MS 87/63/0.00 91/66/pc 92/69/s Yskima 92/66/Tr 94/61/s Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES 81/61 7 Jacksonville 90n3/Tr 86/70/I 91/71/I Yuma 104/83/0.15 105/86/I C rane Prairie 415 4 1 75% YESTERDAY(for the ulifux Bismarck 6 Port 59'yo 48 contiguousstates) o I Wickiup 117166 as~ 7/81 I SM9 8 87/83 96/83 Crescent Lake 7 4 9 02 86% National high: 107 uruntu Amsterdam 72/64/0.54 73/57/I 70/57/sh Mecca 108/95/0.00 112/84/s Boston Ochoco Reservoir 27636 62% at Thermal, CA Athens 88n2/0.00 gfn2/s 93/74/s Mexico City 69/54/0.71 67/57/I Iuinn oliu • eaee H Auckland 58/53/0.04 58/51/pc 58/51/sh Montreal 81/59/0.00 81/66/pc Prinevige 127334 86% National low: 33 ss/84 • xx xx 8 Baghdad 117/93/0.00 117/83/s 113/80/s Moscow 75/55/0.00 74/54/pc River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. at Boca Reservoir CA Che Bangkok 97/82/0.00 95/80/I 95/80/I Nairobi 75/54/0.00 75/55/c Philadelph Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 442 Precipitation: 2.73" ss/5 9 seijing 87n3/0.20 91/73/pc 88/73/c Nassau 90/79/0.02 90/76/pc iuug Deschutes R.below Wickiup 981 at Bar Harbor, ME Beirut 86nT/0.00 84/74/s 85n5/s New Delhi 102/84/0.00 101/82/I u n a sc u Sa l t Lake ity colu u • Deu 73/57 98/Se Berlin 85/69/0.00 84/69/c 84/69/1 Osaka 79/68/0.07 84/72/sh Deschutes R.below Bend 126 ingluu 9$6 Luu V uu 8 Bogota 66/50/0.05 66/49/c 65/48/c Oslo 79/52/0.14 66/60/r Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2020 Kunua Cny St. uu Budapest 84/59/0.02 87/63/I 90/66/I Ottawa 82/54/0.00 82/63/pc Louiuv e Little Deschutes near LaPine 94 97n4 92n BuenosAires 55/52/0.43 50/40/c 59/41/s Paris 75/63/0.09 69/52/I Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 65 Churiu 'c'cWX++~ I.os Au Csbo SsnLucss 93/76/0.23 94nsn 93/74/pc Riu de Janeiro 88/68/0.00 85/69/s Nashville Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 3 v.v. ~uob x Cairo 91/73/0.00 94n4/s 96/73/s Rome 81/73/0.00 85/66/s Anchorag Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 184 + +(fbgj A l buquerq e 0 uhumu Cify Calgary 73/61/0.04 74/51/pc 73/51/s Santiago 54/43/0.02 58/36/s 66/57 Csucun 90n9/0.12 90/74/pc SOnT/s Ssu Paul o 81/64/0.00 79/63/pc 47 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne ghu 0 Dublin 63/43/0.07 64/46/sh 63/48/sh Sspporo 74/60/0.00 78/65/pc Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0 xx 95/l5 4 Edinburgh 64/47/0.01 65/48/sh 66/49/r Seoul 82/68/0.00 86/69/pc Geneva 79/61/0.01 83/59/I 70/56/I Shanghai 82/73/2.16 85/74/pc o o:t I Hsrsre 70/46/0.00 73/47/s 75/48/s Singapore 86/79/0.15 88n7/r o Oriuuuu Bend/Sunriver High Hong Kong 92/84/0.13 93/84/pc 94/83/sh Stockholm 79/54/0.00 75/58/pc Honolulu Chihuahua %0. Istanbul 81/70/0.00 83/70/s 83/71/s Sydney 62/40/0.00 64/43/s Q ~ L v.v.hkkk k k 88/T4 Redmond/Madras ~ Very i h~ gh .88/64 ' e 'e X X X X <mm x x w w w v. v. v . v. v. Jerusalem 82/66/0.00 81/62/s 82/63/s Taipei 93/82/0.00 95/80/I Mohfur uy: ) 'x sfuvtkv.A<ywv.v.v.v.93/89 W' e ' e 'e'eXv 'exYKWW Johannesburg 64/45/0.00 64/42/s 64/41/s Tei Aviv sen5/o.oo 87n1/s Sisters %%%v.v.v.v. ~M o d~erate ~ '+ '+ '+ V '4 '+ u 'v '+ • vvu'+'+u Lima 69/62/0.00 68/59/c 70/60/pc Tokyo 73/68/0.12 80/72/pc Prinevige ~M o d~erate ~ Lisbon 75/63/0.00 74/59/sh 74/62/s Toronto 81/57/0.00 81/67/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 70/62/0.13 71/54/sh 71/54/c Vancouver 66/57/0.09 72/58/sh La Pine/Gilchrist High T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 90/59/0.00 80/58/I 80/55/pc Vienna 77/64/0.02 84/67/pc Manila 86/75/0.38 86/78/I 85/78/r Warsaw 81/59/0.00 83/64/I Source: USDA Forest Service

69/59

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UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

O

FIRE INDEX

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HiRo/W 64/52/c

95nfn

82/66/pc 105/89/I 89/73/I 92/67/pc 93/74/s 81/65/pc 92/74/I 86/65/pc 91/73/s

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84/65/pc 82/63/pc 91/72/s 90/73/I

90/76/pc 92/75/pc 92/77/pc

96n5/s

89/69/pc 89/74/I 107/85/I 90/71/I

94/76/pc 105/86/I 84/69/I 81/67/I

84/71/pc 96/73/s 83/57/I 101/70/pc

96n5/s 83/69/I 99/62/s

97nsn

96/64/s 94n4/s 75/68/pc 75/59/s 88/60/s 88/62/pc 92/74/pc 81/59/s 84/62/pc 88/63/s 93/72/pc 92/76/I 93/77/I

96ne/s

96/78/pc 98/74/pc 94/63/s 108/86/I 111/84/s 68/55/I 79/66/I 76/57/pc 75/56/c 89/77/pc 102/84/pc 84/74/I 66/60/pc 76/61/I 70/56/sh 85/69/pc 85/67/pc 65/39/s 76/59/c 83/66/s

9On4/s

85/74/c 87/78/r 79/60/pc 64/42/s 94/81/I 87/73/s 80/74/r 81/64/I 76/58/s 87/66/I 86/67/I

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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-6 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

NORTHWESTTRAVEL

Registration open for car show

Next week: The Tri-Cities

Registration for The Summit Assisted Living's Summertime Car Show Benefit is open until Monday. Set to take placeat 127 SE Wilson Ave. in Bend from11 a.m. to1 p.m. July14, the car show will award trophies for its Best of Show, Resident Choice and Best Vintage categories, while plaques will be given for the Best Interior, Best Exterior and Best Work in Progress categories. The car show will also feature live music, a $4 barbecue lunch, a business card drawing and a 50-50 drawing. All proceeds will benefit the Alzheimer's Association.

Priest David

Zimmerman, program director of the San Francisco

e' cl;.

Zen Center, rings

• c'a

the temple bell, called a densho, to signal the start of zazen meditation.

tt.' cct 1

el

Photos by Barb Gonzalez For The Bulletin

i

'J

Call 541-905-9064

to register for the event or learn more about it. There is a $20fee to register.

Munch 8 Music degins Thursday The 2014 Munch 8 Music lineuphasbeen announced,andthe series will take place every Thursday night from July10 to Aug. 14 in Drake Park. Each evening will feature an opening and headlining band, food, drinks, activities and more. Admittance to each event is free. Only low-backed chairs are allowed, and dogsare not allowed. There's also a new policy regarding alcohol this year: There will be no beergarden, and you can't bring your own, butyoumay roam around freely with purchased beverages. The lineup is asfollows: July10:Fruition (Americana) July17:Too Slim and the Taildraggers (bluesrock) July 24:Nahkoand Medicine for the People (acoustic pop-rock) July 31:Cash'd Out (Johnny Cashtribute) Aug. 7:Shook Twins (indie-folk) Aug. 14:Cooper and The Jam (rock 'n' soul) Contact www.munch andmusic.com.

Tour will feature 7 Tumalo gardens The public is invited to the High Desert Garden Tour, aself-guided tour of seven gardens in the Tumalo areahosted by the OregonState University Extension Service andOSUMaster Gardeners. The tour runs from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. July19 in Tumalo. Tickets are $10 each; kids 16and younger are free. Tickets can be purchased in Bend at Moonfire and Sun GardenCenter, Strictly Organic Coffee Co., Worthy Brewing and Shoe Inn; in Redmond at Schultz Farm and Gardenandthe OSU Extension Service; and in Prineville at the OSU Extension Service. For more information, call 541-548-6088 or visit http://extension. oregonstate.edu /deschutes.

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~M r P ggJPls...

.f I, The Kaisando, or founder's hall, is dedicated to the memory of Shunryu Suzuki Roshi, who came from Japan to establish the San Francisco Zen Center in the mid-1960s. A memorial to Suzuki stands on a hillside above Tassajara, where his ashes were scattered in 1971. Formally named Zenshinji, "Zen heart-mind temple," The Tassajara Zen Mountain Center was established in1967 as the first Soto Zen monastery in North America.

By John Gottberg AndersoneFor The Bulletin

CARMEL VALLEY, Calif.

f I ever decided to get "off the grid" to immerse myself in a life of spiritual study, this would be the place to do it. The TassajaraZen Mountain Center isn't quite in the middle of nowhere, but it comes in a close second. Isolated in a narrow creek gorge in the Santa Lucia Mountains east of California's Big Sur coast, Tassajara (pronounced ta-sa-HA-ra) is a Zen monastery that can be reached only by a winding and mountainous 14-mile gravel road — one that climbs to a chaparral-shrouded ridge then twists rapidly downhill more than 3,500 vertical feet. Guardrails are not included. SeeTassajara/C4

TINY TECHNOLOGY

Heard ofArduino?Just about anyone can build just aboutanythingwith it

Submit yourevent

541-383-0351.

By Mac McLean

people how to make at a series of

The Bulletin

Arduino technology workshops Robson, founder of the Bend he's hosted for the Deschutes Arduino Group, said that behind Public Library system over the this technical-sounding jargon past month. The last of these lies a system just about anybody workshops will take place Sat- can use to build an array of elecurday afternoon at the library's tronic devices regardless of their Redmond branch (See "If you computer programming skills or go.") soldering iron technique. "This device takes a person Pioneered in 2004, Arduino is a rapid-prototype technology with practice about 20 minutes

David Robson turned a knob and the red and yellow lights attached to a small circuit board started flashing in sequence.

— From staff reports

Email events 10days before publication date to communitylife@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bend bulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact:

-

His goal was to catch the lone

and it is, describing a system that anyone can use to build an

yellow light when it was illuminated by pressing a button on his palm-sized device. It played a little tune if he managed to meet his goal. It buzzed loudly and started the process all over again if he failed. "We build this in stages," said

array of electronic devices.

Robson.It' s the game he teaches

Joe Kllne/The Bulletin

David Robson, founder of the

Bend Arduino Group, shows an Arduino circuit board at the Tech Space in Bend. "Arduino"

sounds like technical jargon-

platform that combines a specialized microcontroller with in-

bles C++.

to wire," said Robson of the game

circuit board he held in his hand. terchangeable circuit boards or "For a newcomer it would take shields and an open-source pro- about two hours." gramming language that resemSeeArduino/C6

Ifyou go What:Deschutes Public Library system's Arduino Workshop When:11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday Where:Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond Cost:Free Contact:Visit

www.deschutes libary.org or 541-312-1032 to

reserve a spot or get more information about this class.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

M II ESTON'

ts + ~L 7

v Bendorby For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinganniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatThettugettnt,yyygytrChandlerdve emai l i n g m ilestones@bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must besubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.

ANNIVERSARIES

.!

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Jerry and Susan (Evans) Inman

Inman

Service, where he was a U.S. diplomat for 31 years. With

Jerry and Susan (Evans) In- his wife, he traveled to Washman, of Bend, celebrated their ington, D.C., the Philippines, 60th wedding anniversary Korea, Venezuela, M exico with a dinner and a Northeast and Japan. He returnedto JaOregon tour. pan in 1987, where he worked The couple were married

for The Asia Foundation as

Bruce and Kristi (Fairchild) Dunlap

Mike and Connie (Barger) Preiss

Dunlap

(and Bethany), of Anchorage, Alaska, and Kelsey (and Bruce and K r isti ( Fair- Kenny) Converse, of Bend; child) Dunlap, of Powell and three grandchildren.

Preiss

Mr. Preiss worked as a freightliner i n P o r t land

Mike and Connie (Barger) Preiss, of Bend, will cel-

and retired in 2007. Mrs.

Butte, celebrated their 40th

ebrate their 50th wedding

services for Portland Public

Mr. Dunlap is the own-

wedding anniversary with er of Central Oregon Reala family camping trip in the ty Group and Dunlap Fine Ochocos.

Homes Inc. M rs .

D u nlap

June 19, 1954, in Rome. They a Japan representative for have four children, Todd, of eight years. Mrs. Inman is a

The couple were married works for Central Oregon June 8, 1974, at Powell Butte Community College.

Lebanon, Tennessee, Eric, of Ponder, Texas, Martitia, of

board member for the Sunri-

C hristian

t opher, of

Sunriver Stars Community

ver Music Festival, Cascade Gallitan, Virginia, and Chris- Theatrical Company a nd W a r renton, V i r -

C h u rch. T h e y

They have lived in Central

have two children, Tyler

Oregon for eight years.

Preiss worked in nutrition

anniversary July 10. The couple were married

Schools and retired in 2006. The couple enjoys hot rods, July 10, 1964, in Gresham. bowling and camping with They have two children, friends. Lori (and Kenny) Levias They have lived in Central and Leslie (and Todd) Peter- Oregon for seven years. son; and one grandchild.

ginia; six grandchildren; and Theater. The couple raises three great-grandchildren. alpacas and dachshunds on Mr. Inman graduated from

their farm.

MARRIAGE

Stanford University in 1956 They have lived in Central and joined the U.S. Foreign Oregon for 14 years.

ENGAGEMENT

BIRTHDAY \

Qd s'

Marguerite Redmond

Marguerite Redmond, of

children, Dennis, of Grants

Bend, will celebrate her 102nd birthday with a celebration at

Pass, and Irene Gillette, of

Prestige Senior Living High

Mrs. Redmond worked at

Bend; andthree grandchildren.

Moss Lighting in San FranMrs. Redmond was born cisco.She lovesto play Texas July 11, 1912, in Daly City, Cal- Rummy. Desert.

ifornia. She married the late John Redmond. She has two

She has lived in Central Or-

egon for four years.

DID YOU HEAR?

Thief grabsgifts, and groom goes after him The Associated Press JOPLIN, Mo. — A Kansas

couple who had just renewed their wedding vows got a rude shock when a man tried to steal wedding gifts from the reception and the groom ran after him shouting, "Stop!

"If we hadn't caught the guy, it would have ended an otherwise perfect celebration on a very bitter note."

Thief! Stop!"

Amylia Miller and Casey Brewer

Halfast — Boswell

Miller — Brewer

as a senior manager at the Cheesecake Factory. Jessica Halfast and Jeff The groom is the son of Bob Boswell, of Dania Beach, and Beth Boswell, of Bend. He Florida, were married April is a2003 graduate of Sisters 25 at The B Ocean Hotel in High School and a 2008 gradFort Lauderdale. A reception uate of Oregon State Universifollowed. ty, where he studied business The bride is the daughter management. He works as an of Dennis and Karen Halfast, assistant general manager at of Titusville, Pennsylvania. She is a 2004 graduate of Ti-

the Cheesecake Factory.

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 7 39 6 1 4 8 5 2 " 5 21 9 8 7 3 4 6 8 64 5 2 3 7 9 1 9 47 2 3 5 6 1 8 I

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE

ZQ598LX Answer: A CCENT I N FOR M N E P H E W LOTION G E Y SE R P ER M IT The birthday gifts she received at

2 138 6 9 4 7 5 I 6 4 3 1

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Amylia Miller and Casey

PRESENT COMPANY

SUDOKU IS ON C6

JUMBLE IS ON C6

Get A Taste For Food. Home Sr Garden •

'

The future groom is the son of Steve Brewer, of Tum-

Shepherdsfield in Sisters.

alo, and Brenda Brewer, of

The future bride is the daughter of Michael and

Sunriver. He is a 2010 graduate of Redmond High School C harlene Miller, o f R e d - and works in supply and mond. She is a 2010 grad- distribution at St. Charles uate of R edmond High Redmond.

SOLUTIQI|I To TODAV'8 LAl CROSSVTORD S A D A T S C R A G A B B A

D E P S

A M O C O

Y O U O K

S O U N B L L Y E A L E T S S R E E D A M S T P R O T T O AM L A R O S T O A N A N M O R E S I E T P N S N A R O U D I S T E

at him to stop. But the suspect

wedding a t

began running, and Lightle took off after him.

near Fort Hood, Texas, just before Jared, a combat engineer with the 1st Cavalry Division, was deployed to Afghanistan. The Joplin cer-

"If we hadn't caught the

E N D O R A A R N O E A R P S L G E

D O N E R 0 A R T N C A S H I L T M D A L I R T I N S E G D A U I N T E N O S T A M P I T T T A R T Y E S S C U E A N T G R E S S D S E A

I V A N V I

N I N T E N D T 0 0 K E O M R E I R I I T L I 0 V A E 0 K I

CROSSWORD IS ON C6

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7!6/14

The couple were left with

the hassle of trying to match recovered gift cards and cash tish Rite Temple in d o w n- with the gift-givers. town Joplin when his mother Lightle was pleased that poyelled that someone had tak- liceapprehended the suspect en cards from a gift table in and said it appears justice will the lobby. be served. Lightle said he saw a man The Lightles were renewacross the street with wedding ing their vows to mark the cards in his hand and yelled one-yearanniversary oftheir

ing a traffic accident nearby caught the suspect. Rosario Caruso, 31, was charged with trespassing, larceny and resistingarrest.

S O W T D I E D O G T E W L B A P H A M A I L S S T S T A R A H A G E T Y E B A B P O N C R E A O O T TO T A M P E P S I R E P E R E R S R

TheBulletin

renewing his vows with his wife, Stephanie, at the Scot-

Police who were investigat-

Association.

plan to marry July 19 at

work were a pleasant surprise, thanks to the-

School and a receptionist at Central Oregon Pediatrics

Brewer, both of Redmond,

The couple honeymooned tusville High School and at- in Cancun, Mexico. tended Edinboro University They will settle in Dania in Pennsylvania. She works Beach.

— Jared Lightle

Jared Lightle, of Galena, Kansas, was outside during the reception last month after

Jessica Halfast and Jeff Boswell

a cou r t h ouse

emony, with 175 guests, was

the traditional wedding that the couple planned for when he returned.

"I guess we're going to have guy, it would have ended an otherwise perfect celebration a very unique wedding stoon a very bitter note," Lightle

ry to tell the rest of our lives,"

sard.

Lightle said.

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

WEDDING DECISION

WEDDING ENTERTAINMENT

ree om omar now, w a o wear?

Why listen to aBonJovi cover? The real thing is atouch away By Lowen Liu Slate

It's your wedding recep-

By Sarah Maslin Nir New York Times News Service

The bride wore Carolina Herrera, the other bride wore Ralph Lauren. That was the

tion! Mazel tov. Dinner is

'o

over; the band is playing. Let's visit the couple at Ta-

ble 11: "The band's great, isn't it?" she says. "Yep, it's

big reveal at the wedding of Christine Quinn, the New York City Council speaker, and her longtime partner, Kim Catullo, a products liability lawyer, in a ceremony held in the city's meatpacking district

in May. And with one donning a traditional wedding dress and the other a custom-made pantsuit, the couple elegantly addressed one pressing issue that many lesbians grapple with before walking down the aisle: What

h

Unlike the largely codified pageant of a h eterosexual

Submitted photo/New YorkTimes NewsService

Duffy and Kathy Tucker, of Raleigh, North Carolina, wore suits on their wedding day in Boston. For this couple, dresses were not emotionally significant — but white was. "I wanted our marriage to

are still being written for lesbians. And it goes beyond choosing between things like be as official and real as anybody else's standard wedding," Kathy mermaid or A-line silhouettes Tucker said. or straplessor long-sleeved. For some, there are tuxes and

tails to consider, and those suits must be custom-cut for curves. And there are here-

ask about the spouse-to-be, "So what does he do?" Lesbian brides "need to

tofore unplanned challenges, screen the people they are such as how to fit two cathe-

working with," Smith said. "It

dral trains trailing side by side ends up being an extra level of on the exuberant walk back stress or potential stress when you're shopping." from the altar. The options multiply, rathFor couples such as Sarver than retract, when the two er and her wife-to-be, Smith spouses are the same sex. founded the event-planning Both partners might wear company 14 Stories, which gowns, or perhaps a pair specializes in nonheterosexof suits, or one bride might ual weddings, as well as the choose a gown and the other a Gay Wedding Institute, which suit. (But which one?) trains industry professionals In a news conference at City about the nuances of same-sex Hall, Quinn revealed that her weddings. search didn't stop even after Sarverand Jessica Mullan, she found her trumpet Caroli- 31 and also a lawyer, will both na Herrera gown with its deli- wear lacy strapless gowns, a cately beaded waistband, after decision that posed its own a relatively brief tour of three challenges. The pair used Mullan's sister as a go-between to bridalshops. "They say when you try on analyze each choice and make the right dress, you know it sure the dresses didn't clash right away, and that was ab- for the wedding ceremony in solutely the case," she said. Boston. They have revealed "Though I continued to try on

a whole bunch after that." Quinn said she knew what Catullo was wearing to walk down the aisle but did not

Thinkstock

There are these things called smartphones and IPods, and they play music you actually like, songs that you've hand-picked, beautifully.

tant amount on human la-

do we wear? wedding, the sartorial rules

great," says he. We're all agreed. Everything is great. There's only one problem: This conversation is happening at a table. In the high-stakes debate between live wedding music and recorded, the downsides to hiring a band only seem to multiply every year. Call it the wedding industry's John Henry problem. You spend an exorbi-

alyst. "I've never been married; I wanted to wear white."

White wa s e motionally significant. "I wanted our marriage to be as official and real as anybody else's standard wedding," she said. But they were searching for outfits in January, when white

suits go into hibernation. "Any bride can go to a bridal boutique in any time of year and find a white dress," said Duffy Tucker. "When a bride goes shopping, you have a whole store of people who cater to you." For a suit, she added, "You're

pretty much on your own." In addition, an off-the-rack tux from, say, Men's Wear-

house won't necessarily suit a woman's curves. Jussara Lee, 44, a designer with an atelier

in New York, has a specialty in suits with bridal flair. "You're still a girl, so I think

enough distance so as to not give away the details.

you kind of w ant certain things from the experience," she said, like wearing white, plus a fabric in satin or lace.

"I didn't want one dress tobe

Lee tweaks cummerbunds

tiny pictures to each other on their cellphones, held at a far

a lot more over the top than the with white sequins and adds own gown until the big day. other one and then have one of flouncy jabot collars and flirty Carolina Herrera said she us look like more of the center fluted pleats. "You just spin it a bit and did not want to discuss the spe- of attention," Mullan said. cificdress chosenby Quinnbut When the ceremony starts, add a bit more charm to it," she said she was "honored every they will walk down two sep- sald. time" a bride chose one of her arate aisles toward each othDina Weisberger and Jenny gowns. (Ralph Lauren, who er — getting their first full Greenstein will marry in New designed the suit for Catullo, glimpse of their dresses at that York in late October, followed declined to be interviewed.) moment — and then they will by a more traditional ceremoSome women planning depart together down a cen- ny and party Nov. 3 in Palm same-sexmarriages say they tral aisle. But there are still Springs, California. For the Palm Springs cereadd another step to shopping some wrinkles to work out. "Hopefully there's not any mony, Greenstein, 32, a visuthatmay not be necessary for their straight counterparts. falls or stepping on each oth- al merchandisemanager at Heather Sarver said that er's dresses," Mullan said. "But Ann Inc., has chosen to wear when she embarked on the if there is, that will make for a dress. Not so her fiancee. rite of wedding-dress shop- an even more memorable eve- Weisberger, 40, a senior diping with her mother in the ning, I'm sure." rectorof business operations at ESPN, said she had no desmall-town bridal boutiques in In the case of Kathy and Virginia, where she grew up, Duffy Tucker, from Raleigh, sire to emulate friends who she had her wedding planner, North Carolina, no d resses chose to wear a dress on their Bernadette Coveney Smith, were involved when they were wedding day yet would not be caught dead in one the other call ahead. Smith informed married in 2010 in Boston. "I feel like I'm in drag when I 364 days of the year. the salespeople that Sarver, 31, "Women struggle w ith, a lawyer, is a lesbian, and then wear a dress," said Duffy'Iltckgauged their reaction. er, 46, a bank manager who 'What do I wear?' and 'What The reasons were both met her spouse 22 years ago am I supposed to wear'?' and profound and pragmatic: to when both were in the military. get pulled into that traditional protecther from salespeople Both decided to wear suits, side of wearing a dress." who might be uncomfortable but white was a must. Weisberger's choice? An offshow her s pouse-to-be her

"I was a bride. I didn't con-

in that situation, and to avoid that awkward moment when a

sider myself a groom," said

salesperson would inevitably

Kathy Tucker, 44, a systems an-

bor, for marginal benefit, if about their DJs have gone any, providing your guests most commonly like this: "Did you like your DJ?" with what amounts to sec"He was fine. He didn't play ond-tier dinner theater. Oh, but a band brings the songs we asked for, but it such energy, you protest. was still fun." " What was u p w i t h t h e (Perhaps your deposit is nonrefundable.) It's true! Fleetwood Mac interlude'?" "I have no idea." But such infusion happens only in short bursts — and You may feel reassured by generally during the first the idea of a solo captain pilotfew songs. Then for the rest ing the most important night of the night your guests flit of your life, but in fact it should on and off the dance floor, terrify you. At one wedding as if dipping their toes into I attended, the DJ was dothe water before retreat- ing a fantastic job — until he ing beachside because the abruptly disappeared withocean is, frankly, really out explanation, headphones boring. Near the end of the abandoned on the dais. Anevening, the band — the other continually mixedup the only people in the room do-play list with the do-notbesides your caterers wish- play list and glared scornfully ing they were someplace at the bride every time she ran else — will strike up "Livin'

over to correct him. And every

DJ I've ever seen has at some point drummed up excitement by starting a universally beloved hit, only to yank it away 45 seconds later, eliciting auyou. The limitations of a dible groans. "Take On Me" is wedding band vastly out- not a song that should ever be number i t s a d v antages. stopped before its time. Why not let your guests Your DJ is an artist — and listen to the real Mr. Bon trying to box his immense Jovi, in a crisp, precise stu- talent into a hotel ballroom or dio recording that he no country club dining hall on doubt worked very hard a random Saturday night is on? Not only do we have it, tantamount to putting a wild on a Prayer" and everyone will gamely rush in to shout along over the lead singer's (flat) chorus. Don't let this happen to

but it also has never been

horse in chains. So set him

so easy to play, at any time, free. There is another way. anyplace, with power and And it is as follows: fidelity, through the magic • Collect several hours of of technology. your favorite dance songs on About that: A live band an MP3 player, say the popis completely hamstrung ular over-the-counter brand in its ability to capture the known as iPod. genre that, with its assidu• Play said songs at your ous production, sampling, wedding. That's it. There are levels mixing and mashing, is the truest child of technology: of nuance I don't need to adhip-hop. dress in this space (such as Thus your wedding band whether to use your player's is necessarily a time mabuilt-in function for blending chine — and not in a good songs, or to download a more way. Hire a big band to re- sophisticated app). But the balive the Jazz Age and watch

sic operations are the same. And the results will be uni-

how fast the dance floor quickly clears out, but for a formly superior. The playlist few prancing geriatrics and curated by you and your bethat one couple in their 20s excited to finally make use of their swing lessons. Does all this mean I am N QRTHWEsT encouraging you to hire a DJ instead? Heavens, no. My interviews with friends

-

CROSSING

Aaeard-urinning neighborhood on Bend's cuestside.

trothed will feel like you, and your guests will thrill from the recognition. You'll be able to guarantee the appearance of that one

song you and your friends all heard in a convenience store after that hilariously disas-

trous camping trip, and that you still hum to one another as shorthand. You can throw in a

few for the olds in attendance without letting them take over your big night. The best part: The pitch will always be true, the beat unflagging, the next song prescreened. That will make the couple of honor — that's you! — spend more time on the

dance floor, which is where you should be, shaking out the cobwebs of singledom instead of idly chatting up Aunt Ida by the coat check while some woman screams "Mus-

tang Sally" in the background. Your guests will flock to your glow, moths to a happy flame. At concerts and parties, bands and DJs are the selling points for the event, and the

reason for whatever social alchemy occurs in their presence. But at your wedding, your friends and family already come preinfused with the merrymaking spirit, out of love for you, and the modesty of an iPod will do nothing to diminish that. They don't need

a show, or a reason to party. They already have one. All they need to do is dance.

orlten Carlton was adopted from us 3 years ago and sadly returned because of al l ergies i n h i s household. He is now 13 years young andlooking for a retirement home to call his own. Carlton is declawed, which means he will need to be an indoor only cat. If you think you can give this deserving cat t h e re t irement home he's looking for,com e down to HSCO and take himhomel HUMRNE SOCIETVOF CCNTRAL ORCGON/SPGI ttl170 S.C.27th St. 8END (54I) 381.3531

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white $1,800 custom outfit by

Lee, the New York designer, complete with pants.

Sek

Royal weddingahead,Swedishstyle

D

The Associated Press HELSINKI — The Swedish Royal Court has announced

0

(gP ga)

0

the engagement in June of Prince Carl Philip to Sofia Hellqvist, a former glamour model and reality TV participant. The court said the wedding date hasn't been decided but was to take place during summer next year. It's quite a turnaround for

the bride-to-be. The two started dating in 2010 and have lived together

on the Stockholm island DjurThe AssociatedPress garden since 2011. The 35-year- Who says royais can't have fun? Sofia Heilqvist, the bride-to-be, was old prince is the second-oldest

child of King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia and is third in line to the throne.

a reality TV star on the Swedish version of "Paradise Hotel," where single people competed for staying the longest at a Iuxury hotel without being kicked out, as well as a glamour model. At right is the Swedish prince Carl Philip, pictured at Stockholm Palace.

Sofia used to pose in lightly clad attire in magazines and

once participated in the Swed- age in recent years. She now ain, the monarchy here has no ish reality TV show "Paradise runs a charity organization. ro l e in political affairs, except Hotel" but has changed her im-

Much as it is in Great Brit-

c e r emoniously.

212~NE Division St Bend, OR-97701 I (541) 382-4171 641 NW FirAve R nd, OR97756 !~41) 548-7707 I

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Photos by Barb Gonzalez I For The Bulletin

Tassajara priest Shundo David Haye leads hikers on a trail in the Santa Lucia Mountains, heading for an area called Horse Meadow. A six-

mile loop hike reveals myriad wildflowers and small trees recovering from the 2008 Basin Complex Fire, which devastated the area. A bather relaxes in an outdoor pool at Tassajara Hot Springs.

Tassajara

Enclosed in a Japanese-style bathhouse with separate sides for men and women, the facility includes two hot plunges (104 and 108

Continued from C1

degrees), asteam room, communal showers and creekaccess.

Once you get to this remote r etreat, surrounded by t h e Ventana W i lderness A r ea,

I

jt

you'll find that you have no cellphone or Internet access. For that matter, you'll f i nd electricity to be nearly nonex-

istent: The colony of cabins is provided only with kerosene

iII II I III!

lanterns.

There are touches of comfort — proper beds and flush

, jjl

toilets, three gourmet vegetar-

gNf

ilo~if "

ian meals a day, a swimming pool, a garden, a library and a Japanese-st yle, hot-springs bathhouse built to revitalize body and soul.

tt '

But there are also rattle-

snakes and mountain lions, poison oak bushes around every turn, and a constant threat

of flash floods and forest fires. More than once, uncontrolled flames have threatened the

very survival of this outpost of tranquility. Why, then, is a center for

A small library at the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center encourages students to study the teachings of the Buddha. A small bookstore in the main office sells copies of "Fire Monks: Zen Mind Meets Wildlife," Colleen Morton Busch's widely praised book about the 2008 forest fire.

Zen Buddhist meditation and learning — one that welcomes

summer guests from May through mid-September but

"the stage." A variety of accommoda-

devotes the rest of the year to a strict monastic schedule-

tions — 28 in all, from simple

located so far off the beaten

rooms to private cabinsspread on either side of the

path? And how did it succeed

central office, k itchen and

in attracting California v. Jerry Brown, computer industry

dining area. At the west end of the village are the hot springs, with two separate plunges (104 and 108 degrees) for men Offerings to the image of ameditating Buddha rest upon analtar and women, a steam room, in the Tassajara garden. Tending crops andflowers is one of many and the chilly creek below for jobs assigned to residents on awork-practice schedule. cold plunges. Nearby is a new hall for yoga practice and other retreatsubjects. tion," a lightly bearded resi- open, hands in a mudra pose, A typical day at Tassajara dent named Francis told us. palms cupped and thumbs begins and ends with "zazen" It's also one of prescribed hab- touching. — that is, seated meditation. it. We entered the zendo with We faced the wall, ensurGuests leave their footwear in our left feet first and bowed to ing fewer visual distractions. shelves outside the "zendo," or the room, being careful not to F rancis r e commended w e meditation hall, beside those cross in front of the altar with keep our tongues on the roofs of several dozen residential its Buddha image. We walked of our mouths and follow our students and monks, many quietly to our assigned cush- breathing through our nosof whom live and work here ion on a platform, bowed twice es. "It's OK to think," he said. year-round. more, and sat legs crossed "You can discover yourself When photographer Barb with our hips above our knees through thinking. But don't Gonzalez and I a r r i ved at and our backs straight. hang onto the thoughts." Tassajara for a three-day, twoWe meditated with eyes Continued next page

icon Steve Jobs and rock musi-

cian Jerry Garcia to a study of Zen meditation?

The answer might simply be in its ability to throw off the

distractions of modern life.

Heart-mind temple

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'

In fact, the Tassajara Valley has been occupied for centu- GregFain demonstratesa mudra pose,palms cupped and thumbs ries. The native Esalen Indi- touching, during a meditation at Tassajara. Zen practitioners ans named it "a good place emphasize sitting with eyes open, in a stable and upright posture, to dry raw meat," a label that might lead one to believe there

while following their breathing.

was excellent hunting here for deer, bear and other animals. all guests and other residents Zen masters chuckle that their before standing their ground vegetarian enclave has such a against the encroaching Basin name. Complex blaze. A handful of homesteaders The fire u ltimately deestablished residence in these stroyed more than 162,000 steep hills in the 1870s. One of acres(254squaremiles)ofLos

intermittent,

sno w m elt-fed

Cabarga Creek. The road from Jamesburg comes to an abrupt end at the Stone Office. Visitors

may drive their own vehides to Tassajara, but because of the road's rugged nature, most opt them discovered the creek-side Padres National Forest land. to leave their cars parked near hot springs. In true California But it spared Tassajara. The Carmel Valley Road (Monterey fashion, it didn't take long be- monks succeeded "by greet- County Road G16) and shuttle fore an entrepreneur had estab- ing the fire not as an enemy to into the retreat in a four-wheellished a small resort on the site. defeat but as a friend to guide," drive vehicle, still referred to as By about 1900, visitors were

night weekend visit, our first

order ofbusiness — after a brief tour of the colony — was to learn the proper procedure for zazen.

"The practice is one of

mindfulness and concentra-

0 0 0 0 0

Meets Wildfire." access point to Tassajara — to David Zimmerman, who as "take the healing waters." Tassajara's director was one By all accounts, it was a of the quintet of "fire monks,"

0 0 0 OO

Jamesburg, and still the main

hair-raising journey. A fresh referredto the fire as having team of four horses led each offered "a p r ofound teachstagecoach over th e 5 ,000- ing for me: When everything foot pass at Chew's Ridge and extra is burned away, what's down the grade to the Tassa- truly essential in our lives is jara Springs Resort. So pre- exposed in all its beauty and cipitous was the descent that defenselessness." the stage driver would pause

Remote oasis

pine tree, and chain it to his

Zimmerman, 50, is now the

rear axle to slow the team down. In the mid-1960s, the San

program director at the San

Francisco Zen Center and its founder, Shunryu Suzuki

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

writer Colleen Morton Busch

traveling by stage from the said in her widely praised 2011 James Ranch — nowknown as book, "Fire Monks: Zen Mind

at the top, cut down a 20-foot

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TIRY4VglR QU!IIICK SAADiW4l4CR KAsG

July 11-13 2014

Chemult Mountain Days is a family-friendly summer festival held each July in Chemult, Oregon. Ihe event features a carnival, vendors, food, children's activities, and more! A couple highlights of the festival Ie pie eating contest Mtd music and danang on Frtday & Saturday nights. •

POOIDtT(0 SQ ATi

THIK IES QC Sotr S~AR.:: ' •

Francisco Zen Center. A native of Pennsylvania, he came to California in the late 1980s to work i n A I D S education

Roshi, discovered Tassajara and began studying Zen medas they searched for a moun- itation in 1991. Ordained a tain temple like the remote priest in 2006, he lived at TasBuddhist monasteries of Su- sajarafor eight years before zuki's native Japan. By July returning to his city position. "A lot of people don't recog1967, they had raised funds to purchase the former resort, nize how much we hold in our establishing the first Zen mon- bodies until you get to a place astery in North America and where you can just drop it," formally renaming it Zenshin- Zimmerman told me. ji ("Zen heart-mind temple"). Tassajara is such a place. Sincethen,severalwildfires The 150-acre, solar-powered have threatened the retreat, complex spreads along its most notably in J uly 2 008, namesake creek for perhaps when five monks evacuated a half-mile, on both sides of

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This event partially funded by ~ the Klamath county TransientI room tax grant program.

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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A sturdy bridge crosses Tassajara Creek on the west side of the monastery site. Flowing from the Ventana Wilderness, the creek was well-known to ancient Esalen Indians, who camped nearby to dry their meat and to soak in the hot springs by the creek's banks.

A towering chaparral yucca plant, nicknamed "our lord's candle" or "Spanish bayonet," rises in full blossom beside the Horse

Ifyou go

Expenses for 2

San Francisco Zen Center. 300 PageSt., San Francisco, CA

Gas, Bend toJamesburg, California, 1,239 miles (round-trip) at $3.90/ gallon: $193.28 Lodging en route (onenight each, southbound andnorthbound): $111.76 Meals en route (three ineach direction): $160 Lodging (two nights, all-inclusive), Tassajara Zen Mountain Center: $272 TOTAL: $737.04

94102; 415-863-3136, 888-743-9362,

www.sfzc.org Tassajara ZenMountain Center. 39171Tassajara Road, CarmelValley, CA 93924; 415-865-1899,

www.sfzc.org/tassajara

OREGON

Salinas

Fresh stuffed vegetables make adelicious meatless dinner for Tas-

Meadow trail. Hikers may also see scores of other wildflowers, along with plentiful poison oak and animal scat.

•Bend

sajara guests and residents alike. The monastery serves three full

meals each day, while providing bread, cheese and other fixings for takeaway lunches for hikers andother day-trippers.

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The hammering sound of awooden mallet on a han, or hanging wooden plaque, calls students of Zen to meditation. Zen doesn't supersede one's faith, as it does not address the subject of a creator, so anyone can learn to practice meditation.

From previous page

A day at Tassajara The next morning arrived much earlier than I a m a ccustomed. Just after 5:15 a.m.,

a resident walked the path through the village ringing a wake-up bell. A few minutes later, called by the sound of the han (a wooden plaque), we were seated in the zendo for silent morning meditation. The temple bell, a densho, signaled the start of our practice at 5:50 a.m. It is frowned upon for one to be late, we were told. Meditation ended after a

full hour with another ringing of the densho. It was followed

by a 20-minute ritual service, robed monks leading a chant in Japanese and English. Deep, head-to-the-floor bows and more chanting followed. Breakfast — eggs, bread and cereal, but certainly no bacon

Tassajara Zen MountainCenter Greg Cross/ rhe Bulletin

in the hot springs (clothing-op- is a core practice. The entire tional coed bathing is allowed 24 hoursare allwork practice: only in the late evenings) be- standing, sitting, eating, lying fore more meditation at 4 p.m. down." It also brings more Dinner was at 7; the main money to operate the center, course was stuffed eggplant, as guests pay $68 per day to zucchini and bell pepper with attend. "To really understand Zen, Greek spanikopita, and it was delicious. you have to practice it," Fain We returned to the zen- said. "Zen is body practice. do at8:40 p.m. for a dharma You do it with your whole talk.Dharma h a s se v e ral mind and body. It has very litmeanings, but generally refers tle to do with thinking. "Your breathing will tell you to Buddhist teachings. Some of the subject matter was over where you are. Your breathing my head. Sothe next day I is who you are. There's somesought out Greg Fain, Tassaja- thing very powerful about ra's tanto, or head of spiritual staying connected to your practice. breathing. S tudents s ometimes ask, 'Is it voluntary or

'just sitting'

ie

ra, I have tried to find a few

minutes every morning, after breakfast, to sit quietly with my thoughts or non-thoughts — and to do nothing else but to

"staypresent forw hat arises."

Residents' shoes sit on the steps of aTassajara guest cabin. Although they are lit only with kerosene lanterns, and neither cellphone nor Internet access is available, the cabins feature proper beds and flush toilets, and guests are treated to three vegetarian

meals a day.

See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shadestructures.

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I have made a special effort to

be more mindful of my everyday actions and activities.

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IRI I Q

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O >N DEMA N D

1 ee-7ss-s 74

— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

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involuntary?' The answer is

"My main r esponsibility 'yes.'" is to energize people in their In addition to breathing, (spiritual) practice," said the Fain said, Soto Zen emphasizbespectacled Fain, 57. "A lot es seated posture: stable, balof my work is spent in individ- anced, with an upright spine, ual practice discussion with as if a string were pulling one — was at 9. students. They may ask: 'Am upward from the crown of the An hour later, having as- I doing this right? How will head, pulling one's shoulders sembled a bag lunch of salad, I know'?' I answer, 'You are.' back and opening one's heart. "Thoughts arise and you sandwich a n d ho m e made It's not about getting it right. cookies, we joined Shundo It's about making your best don't need to do anything David Haye, a Tassajara priest effort." with them," he said. "You don't and outdoor enthusiast, on The Zen tradition, Fain said, struggle. You don't grasp, you a moderately strenuous six- dates back more than 1,300 don't push away anything. mile hike through the Horse years to the early T'ang Dy- Just allow it. "If I were asked to distill my Meadows on a hillside above nasty in China. There are sevTassajara. Purple coyote mint, eral schools of thought; at Tas- teaching into just five words, orange lizardeye, crimson sajara, monks follow the Soto it would be, 'Stay present for sage and majestic white towers Zen tradition. what arises.'" "We teach just sitting," said of yucca shared the landscape with California scrub oak, syc- Fain. "Shakyamuni Buddha Nontheistic amore and madrone that were sat under the bodhi tree 2,500 The practice of Zen meditaonly now recovering from the years ago. That is our tradi- tion doesn't negate or super2008 Basin Complex fire. tion. The emphasis is kind of sede one's faith. The Buddhist As we descended to Tas- formless meditation. It's just religion is nontheistic, as the sajara Creek around 2, Haye sitting. It's not sitting and do- Buddha himself did not adled us to a favorite swimming ing something else." dressthe subject ofa creator. hole, a deep pool amid barren The monastery's two anRoman Catholic priest and rocks known as The Narrows. nual teaching seasons, from writer Thomas Merton was Our small hiking party joined September to December and well known for adopting Zen other Zen p r actitioners, in January to April, are "formal, meditation practices, and Zimvarious states of dress and very traditional training peri- merman told me about a Jewundress, swimming beneath ods," Fain said. "There is a lot ish group in San Francisco a waterfall and climbing up a more silence than nonsilence. called "Jewbuus" for the way "Summer is work-practice its members have embraced rock face with the assistance of a dangling rope. season, where visitors can try Buddhism. There was time for a soak (Zen) on and see if it fits. Work Since our visit to Tassaja-

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DURANGO, Colo. — Without railroads and mines, what would the A m erican West

be? Less populous, less prosperous, less polluted. And the

town of Durango might not be anything at all. Durango, sporty and historic, stands 6,520 feet above sea level among the San Juan Mountains of southern Colorado, its downtown streets skirt-

ed by the Animas River. Look past the runners, rock climb-

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

ers, kayakers and fly-fishers, past the rampant Subaru wag-

sunday, July 6r 2014

Bite your tongue By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"I don't know why players are apt to be so critical," Rose said to me. Her kindness and courtesy toward others is admirable. "Bridge is hard. Who among us never goofs up?" "They're often trying to salve a damaged ego," I said, playing the role o f ama t eur p s y chologist. "Critical players are insecure about their own ability." Rose says it's better to bite your tongue than to let it bite someone else. When she was today's East, West led the queen of hearts against South's game, and Rose took the ace, examined the dummy and shifted to the ten of diamonds. Declarer put up the queen, winning. He drew trumps, forced out the ace of clubs and claimed an overtrick, discarding a diamond on ahigh club in dummy. "I can't believe you led from the king of diamonds," West snorted. "How ridiculous." Rose must have wanted to tell West that his remark was idiotic as well as unkind, but she bit her tongue. Rose could see the d efenders would get no trump tricks, one heart and one club. (She had to assume West had the ace.) They needed two diamonds, hence Rose had to place the queen with West — and she had to establish diamond tricks before declarer drew trumps and set up the clubsfor a discard.Moreover, Rose's "honor-trapping" lead of the ten was

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vital in case South's diamonds were J-x-x, Once West didn't find a diamond opening lead, South was always slated to take 11 tricks. Rose made a good play that didn't happen to work. A good partner — which West was not w ould h a v e bee n complimentary, not critical. North dealer N-S vulnerable

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11-month blitz of blasting and

over high and low bridges, all the while climbing until we were 400 feet above the river and snowy peaks dominated the skyline. At Tank Creek, we pausedwhiletheengineerblast-

trestle-construction, this track

ed steam from the locomotive.

moved to Texas.) And one day in 1922, after for decades carried gold and an argument involving Prosilver from the mines outside hibition, the Durango DemoSilverton (45 miles upriver), crat's top editor, Rod Day, shot following a path that clings to to death the Durango Herald's cliff s and squeezes through city editor, William L. Wood. narrow canyons. The big conflicts on the Then, after mining began Herald's front page during my to fade in the late 20th century, the train began its second

visit were a little different. On

By the time we reached tiny, touristy Silverton (population 628), we'd nearly drained our camera batteries and gained almost 2,800 feet of elevation. About Silverton: It's a town

out of time, surrounded by snowy peaks and dominated

one, Durango and Anchorage life, carrying Hollywood film were competing tobe named crews and tourists. Nowadays, the "Best Town in America" it carries hundreds of tourists by readers of Outside magdaily — including Los Ange- azine (only to be eliminated les Times photographer Mark by Provo, Utah, and Duluth, Boster and me in late MayMinnesota). and no ore at all. On another, hundreds of cyThe last major Silverton clists were preparing for the

by Old West storefronts paint-

mine closed in 1991, and the

wallet with an inset buffalo

um from the 1940s through

the '60s, have also shut down. Durango (population: about

43rd Iron Horse Bicycle Classic, a Memorial Day ritual in

which cyclists race the train to Silverton, only to have a snowstorm shorten the route. In a

ed in rainbow colors. In the Train Store, railroad souvenirs. In the Storyteller Indian

Store, jewelry. In the Eagle's Nest, leatherwork.

I got to spend only three hours there (and came this close to buying a $39 leather nickel), but I can understand why some locals are eager to see mining rise again. Without it, just about everything de-

normal year, mountain bike pends on the whims of tourists. salesman Jeremy Thompson I had arranged to take a sort of town that fuels citypeo- told me, "The fast riders al- bus back to Durango (it's ple's semi-rural daydreams. ways beat the train. The fast- faster than the train). But my In the grand old Strater Ho- est guys do the race in about 2 thoughts kept drifting back tel (built in 1887), just above hours and 20 minutes." to the Baker's Bridge area, on

56 English channel 89 One goingon 60 CDand on 62 Bill word 90 L.A. bUS-and64 Some retired rail org. faculty 92 Cacophony 65 Reagan adviser 96 " a RSIny Night": 1981 Nofziger 67 Sauce with sole chart-topper 68 Brew servers 98 Slim candles 69 Dirty Hatty's 100 CatCheS UPWith rank: Abbr. old classmates 70 "Don't look at 101 African insect u me! attracted Io the 7I uII Hammer" color blue 72 Type of acid 103 Pepper picker found In 106 Page of music Brussels 107 Against a thing, sprouts Io a judge 73 Letter after eta 108 Panache u 78 SOSu singers 109 ATM 79 Good earth transactions 80 uII will come 110 Cross inscription surprise ..." 111 Those 82 War On POVerty caballeros Ol'g. 112 Hardware item 83 O.K. Corral 113 Pick In a trick brothers 115 Golfer Isac 85 Justice Dept. 116 FBI agents staffers 119 Soft drink otd. 86 "Just think" 120 Govt. property Ol'g. 88 Bridge opening t s 14

I2

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The train? Its standard oneway journey to Silverton takes

the river about 14 miles above

River Trail (no motors allowed), the supply of runners and cyclists seems endless, many of them students at Durango's Fort Lewis College. At Mountain Bike Special-

the train whistle, gawk at the

Yet from the tracks, it still

blacklocomotive chug around

dle 'round, backed by snowy mountains. Local kids dare

ists on Main Avenue and 9th Street, you can pick up that

a distant curve.

each other to leap into a swim-

On my ride, I shared one of the train's open gondola cars with a man from Texas making his 15th trip; his son, a college freshman making his 10th trip;

ming hole nearby. You've probably glimpsed

a German couple who wore all

se seems to have the outlaws cornered,the moment when

many an August in the 1960s and '70s, writing his Western

Edited by Rich Norris an d Joyce Nichols LeWts

29 Drawing a bead on 32 Light wood 33 ESFN figures 35 Dr. Learl/'s turnon 36 Bible reading 37 CEO, e.g. 39 Formally end 40 Give on the back 41 Univ. staff title 42 Bygone blade 43 One who's all skIn and bones 44 Pindar's Muse 45 Tantalize 47 One in a pack? 51 Cafeteria carrier 52 River of Florence 53 Michener's "The Bridges at

leading into the mountains. the Durango town marshal T his i s t h e r o u t e t h a t shot each other in a dispute brought the town to life in the over who should control local 1880s. Built by t h e D enver gambling. (The sheriff died. & Rio Grande Railway in an The marshal, Jesse Stansel,

author Louis L'Amour spent

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD 16 Panache 17 Broccoli 18 Endlng for residents I9 TV segment? 24 Yamuna River

of an Old West town after a 45-mile ride aboard The Durango 8 Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad.

the Diamond Belle Saloon, you can rent Room 222, where

(C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

93 Yogurt flavor 125 Exodus 94 Dutch challenge astronomerwho 126 Eventually ACROSS lent his nameIo I Final approvals acloud DOWN 7 Had to repay 95 South American I 1978 Peacecofor border lake Nobelist I3 Come into 97 Valentine figure 2 Big name In gas 20 Total 99 Result of 3 Concerned 21 Bread for washing political query burritos? dirty laundry? 4 Some rental 22 Break, as laws 102 They're stuck in agreements 23 Pair of pooches comers 5 Just synchronized 104 Flying A rival 6 uLSIIIbeu 105 "Breaking dash? 7 Prefix with 25 Lee Of POetry Hard IO Do" meter 109 "0 carbs. 0 26 Altar boy 8 Nipmuc home 9 "Bewitched" 27 Broke the tape calories" drink 28 Language of 113 Prompt witch southern ChIna II4 Tramp IO Faculty boss 30 Vegas Iip II7 Trap II There's a statue 3I Angle iron I I8 Course that of him outside 33 Coldresponse covers crop TD Garden 34 Boss' personal circles? 12 v-shaped slit brewing 12I More puffedUp I3 Russian infant ingredient? 122 Way OUI emperor, 1740'41 38 Malachite and 123 Harvey of "The magnetite Piano" I4 Video game 43 Shoves off 124 Joan Fontaine giant 46 "Swans 15 They may be and Olivia de Reflecting Hayilland, e.g. roasted Elephants" I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 artist 48 Dredge,say 20 49 Guiding principles 23 24

ter and the second-home-owners of summer, and you'll notice the narrow-gauge rail tracks alongside the river,

17,000) has evolved into the

Opening lead — 9 Q

uETTRADING" By FRANK VIRZI

Passengers arrive in Silverton, Colorado, to the sights and sounds

old Durango smelter and mill, which processed urani-

SOUTH 4QJ953 9K72 0Q52

Mark Boster/ Los Angeles Times

ons, the snowboarders of win-

IS

19

novels and listening to the ragtime piano player downstairs. (But I'd rather sleep in Room 327 — lots of exposed bricks and woodwork.) On the seven-mile Animas

SRAM 11-speed rear derailleur you've been pining for. Elsewhere along Main, if a storefront doesn't house a brewpub, field-to-fork restaurant or art gallery, it's probably a real estate office. In fact, if you've been to Wyoming, you might say Durango is getting Jackson Hole-ier by the day.

Durango. 3A glorious hours. Why? Upstream, the U.S. Whether or not you rec- Geological Survey has found ognize the trackside scenery old mines leaking a stew of from the dramatic 19th cen- chemicals into the Animas, tury photographs of William reducing fish and bug popuHenry Jackson or old movies lations, and the Animas River such as "Around the World Stakeholders Group has acin 80 Days" (1956), odds are knowledgedelevatedzinccongood you'll sigh at the sound of centrations at Baker's Bridge. coal-burning, steam-belching looks perfect. machinery and then squint The water roars and hisses into the distance like Clint Eastwood, the better to see the

sorts of Harley-Davidson insignia and spoke no English; a tall Frenchman whose red sweater kept sneaking into the corners of my photos; and a professo-

far below. The tall trees hud-

this spot in " Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kidn (1969).

This is the cliff where the posSundance confesses he can't swim and Butch tells him the

fall will probably kill him anyway. Then the two make their

death-defying leap. lengedHolland,who gavevoice The West of old, the West of or some plaque, is bound to (in English) to what everyone movie myth and the imperfect remind you of the many sa- should havebeenthinking. West we now live in — some"What an a mazing land- times, they're three different loons, whorehouses, feuds and shootouts the city once sus- scape!" he said. places. And sometimes they tained. One day in 1906, for inWe glided alongside the river, all come together in a moment stance, the county sheriff and passed stands of aspens, inched on a train. rial man from altitude-chal-

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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C2

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©2014 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.

Arduino

trical system so that it would

Goodrich, who helped orga-

turn his lights on, preheat an

nize the this month's Arduino

Continued from C1

oven or even record his favorite television shows while he's

workshops. Though Goodrich said she

In addition to building the

game that tests a person's at work (or any other place reaction time, Robson has where he can use his laptop). used the technology to build Robson said the possibilities an intervalometer that l ets behind Arduino are endless: his 10-year-old camera shoot A group of Trinity Lutheran time-lapsed photos. He said High School students used the other group members have technology to control their soused Arduino to build a simple lar-powered car'sacceleration device that measures a plant's while other people used it to moisture levels and sends fly their unmanned aerial vethe people a text message if hicles or drones. it needs to be watered or one He said Arduino's ability that tweets them if they left to give people the tools they their garage doors open on the need to invent something and way into work. perfect their inventions is one Austin Meyers, who has of the main reasons the techyears of programming expe- nology has seen a huge boost rience but only started using in popularity with the rise of Arduino 2 t/g months ago, built a wireless-enabled device that turns an LED on whenever he

"the maker culture" or "the maker movement" — which

device up to his home's elec-

nity relations coordinator Liz

didn't understand the technol-

ogy when she first announced the workshop series in May, she's got a pretty good idea of how Arduino works now and what it's capable of producing. She's seen similar results among thefew dozen people who have shown up for the four-hour workshops the li-

brary has held on Saturdays since June 7. With some instruction help

from Robson's group and the Tech Alliance of Central

Oregon, Goodrich said, everyone who has walked into these workshops has walked out at least knowing how the

blinking lights game Robson is focused on building mem- demonstrated worked if they pushes a button on his laptop ber-driven workshops full of didn't know how to build their screen. advanced tools that work to- own Arduino-powered device. "With a few modifications ward the same purpose. "It was amazing," she said, "The library has had a sim- hoping the library can orgayou could run this off the Internet,n Meyers said, explain- mering interest in the maker nize another Arduino-themed ing that with a few more mod- movement for a while," said workshop series this fall. ifications, he could hook this the library system's commu— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C7

ooanimasan eii isconen s — ia nose? By Alex Halberstadt

I saw the fallout of such pho-

New York Times News Service

tographic harassment when

Dr. Vint Virga likes to arrive at a zoo several hours before it opens, when the sun is still

I visited Sukari, a 21-year-old

Masai giraffe at Roger Williams who had developed a fear of men with large cameras. Weeks before she was bolting at the sight of a zoom, Sukari began refusing meals. "Some days she would eat, others she wouldn't, and she got picky about her food," said Rachel McClung, one of Sukari's keepers. "And then there was the licking." Sukari stood licking at her lips, oblivious to the other giraffes, who began to shy away from her. For hours at a time, she licked steel cables. She

in the trees and the lanes are quiet. Many of the animals

haven't yet slipped into their afternoon malaise, when they retreat, appearing to wait out the heat and the visitors and

not do much of anything. Virga likes to creep to the

edge of their enclosures and watch. He chooses a spot and tries not to vary it, he says, "to

give the animals a sense of control." Sometimes he watches an animal for hours, hardly moving. That's because what to an average zoo visitor looks like frolicking or restlessness looks to Virga like a lot more

licked unremarkable w h ite

walls. She licked gates. Over the courseof a few months, herweightdropped from 1,850 pounds to about 1,600. To make matters worse, she also

— looks, in fact, like a veritable Russian novel of t r ucu-

lence, joy, sociability, horniness, ire, melancholy and even The ability to interpret animal behavior, Virga says, is a actually, clinically depressed? IsProzac an answer? function of temperament, curi-

osity and decades of practice. It is not, it turns out, especial-

ly easy. Do you know what it means when an elephant lowers her head and folds her trunk underneath it; or when a

zebra wuffles, softly blowing air between her lips; or when

a red fox screams, sounding disconcertingly like an infant? Virga knows, because it is his job to know. He is a behaviorist, and what he does, expressed plainly, is see into the inner lives of animals. Most behaviori sts are former animal trainers; some come

takin — a h i r sute Tibetan goat-antelope with a not-triv-

ial set of horns — named Chopper.

produce tangible results. Of-

scientists tend to be skeptics. And, in this field,

ten, the animals suffer from afflictions that haven't been

documented in the wild and appear uncomfortably close to our own: He has treated

severely depressed snow leopards and phobic zebras.

across the United States and in Europe, and like most men-

not listening."

inner states," Virga said. "But the thing is, they are reporting their inner states. We're just

tal health professionals, he

A visi tto the zoo

believes his patients possess vibrant emotional lives. His

Last summer, I visited Roger Williams Park Zoo in Providence, Rhode Island, where

Virga was about to begin his all of this means is that Virga rounds. He lives nearby and has embraced notions that has worked with the zoo for until recently were viewed in six years. On my first visit the scientific community as at there, Virga and I found ourof All Living Creatures." What

best controversial and at worst selves in the middle of a comnonsense. motion. Keepers and other asThe notion that a n imals sorted personnel darted down think and feel may be ram- the lanes with a look of disquipant among pet owners, but et. When Virga flagged one it makes all kinds of scientific down, it turned out that the types uncomfortable. "If you cause was an Asian elephant

ask my colleagues whether animals have emotions and thoughts," says Philip Low, a prominent computational

neuroscientist, "many will drop their voices to a whisper or simply change the subject. They don't want to touch it."

Jaak Panksepp, a professor at Washington State Univer-

sity, has studied the emotional responses of rats. "Once, not very long ago," he said, "you couldn't even talk about these things with colleagues." That may be changing. A profusion of recent studies has shown animals to be far

closer to us than we previously believed — it turns out that common shore crabs feel and

remember painand that zebra finches experience REM sleep. In the summer of 2012,

i n d ividuality

animal cognition are fascinat-

ing to consider, they aren't always germane to a behaviorist crouching behind a barn door amid a row of trash cans while being charged by a 700-pound

— Jaak Panksepp, a Washington State University professor who has studied animals' emotional responses tail, a short appendage aou- 11-year-old gibbon at Roger dads use to signal danger and Williams, an awful lot. BaHee bat away insects. The area un- is something of a showman: der her immobile tail became He seems to genuinely envulnerable to infection, and joy contact with visitors and before long the zoo staff made staff members, and in their the decision t o a m p utate. presence he bounds along the Shortly after, Molly began to fence and makes faces. exhibit increasingly alarming Virga began working with behaviors: She grew agitat- BaHee after Gloria, the female ed and twitchy, she began to gibbon who shared his habitat, confine herself to three spots left. BaHee and Gloria were in the exhibit and she became quite the (platonic) couple: frantic when a fly buzzed near His fur was black, hers was her. In the absence of insects, buff, and she played a chiding she stood scanning the air for matronly figure to his teenthem, no longer interested in age brat. The two small apes interacting with the other aou- shared their space for three dads. More distressing, Molly years in mostly affectionate refused to go inside the barn equipoise. and wouldn't allow the keepers to touch her.

Virga watched Molly for days, shot video of her with his

tablet and spent nights replaying the footage on the monitor keeper asked breathlessly. in his study. The initial plan "Alice is blocked." Alice was was to direct her attention c onstipated, and t h e m a n elsewhere, tempting her with brought us up to speed on how items irresistible to most Barthe elephant's keepers and a bary sheep: logs, cinnamon, veterinarian had spent hours endless treats. Molly ignored administering enemas and every overture. What troubled Gatorade. Virga was that he hadn't been Here is t h e t h in g a bout able to interrupt herbehaviors, people who work at zoos, by which signaled to him t h at which I mean the people who Molly was experiencing someactually work with animals. thing beyond ordinary fear. "Fears can be unlearned, Nearly to a one, they like animals, and dote on them, and but phobias can't," he said. enjoy their company to an al- "Conditioning won't work on a most unseemly degree. phobic animal." So, reluctantStill, there's no denying the ly, Virga did what thousands public qualms about the entire of mental health professionals project of keeping our animal have done before — he prefriends captive for education scribedProzac.Wi thin weeks, and profit. Much of the resi- Molly began a gradual return due of mistrust that clings to to her preinjury self. Insects the roughly 250 accredited still sometimes made her fran" You haven't h e ard?" a

full-time vets, antibiotics and

better diets have doubled and about the implications of their in some cases tripled animals' work. "We're on the same page life spans in captivity." in general, but not at all on But can improved condithe specifics," said Panksepp, tions justify captivity? One who was a signatory of the case study turned out to be declaration."As far as science Virga's patient Molly, an aouis concerned, animal thought dad, more commonly known remains at the argumentative as a Barbary sheep. I met her level." Low admits that scien- in the enclosedbarn where she tists have not evenbeen able to spends nights. She had a short agree on a working definition tawny coat and horns roughof consciousness. ly the size and shape of large plantains. Molly had been a Beyondthe science typical 7-year-old when she Though he follows the re- suddenly lost the use of her search, Virga, 56, is not a researcher; his convictions predate the recent science. And while the theories about

it pays to bea skepticif you want to get your research funded."

named Alice.

an unprecedented document, masterminded by Low — "The z oos and aquariums in t h e Cambridge Declaration on United States stems from their Consciousness in Human and less-than-picturesque past. "Zoos have changed incredNonhuman Animals" — was signed by a group of leading ibly in the last 30 years," says animal researchers in the Mark Reed, the executive dipresence of Stephen Hawk- rector of the Sedgwick Couning. It asserted that mammals, ty Zoo in Wichita, Kansas. birds and other creatures like "These days, moats and glass octopuses possess conscious- have replaced cages; there are ness and, in all likelihood, education departments and emotions and self-awareness. conservation initiatives. And I t is not the habit of r e searchersto speculate broadly

and the publicin the debate about animal

address, and he is expected to

animals develop difficulties that vets and keepers cannot

"Scientists often say that we don't know what animals feel because they can't speak to us and can't report their

recent book is titled "The Soul

Avoiding anthropomorphism at all costs may be the main cause of the schism between scientists sentience. "Most reasonable people will be on the side of animals being sentient creatures despite the absence of conclusive evidence. But

Zoos contact Virga when

from other fields entirely. Virga happens to be a veterinarian, very likely the only one in the country whose full-time job is tending to the psychological welfare of animals in captivity. He works with zoos

about animal

began to avoid men in hats

Thinkstock photos

Just like us? Yes, elephants canexperience constlpatlon, glraffes ca n be condltloned to like menagain, and gibbons appear sadafter another glbbon's death, just to name a few actual cases. But can animals — not just pets, but other creatures, too — be diagnosed as

humor.

tic, but she no longer stood

In 2012, Gloria was in her

early 30s and began to exhibit symptoms of a Parkinson's-like illness. After she lost the useof her legs to tremors and routine movements be-

came labored — and treatment proved unsuccessful — the zoo staff decided to euthanize her. Once Gloria was

gone, BaHee withdrew. He ate less, moved less and sometimes refused to go on exhibit.

Most striking, he lashed out and bared his teeth at Kelly Froio, his primary keeper, who took Gloria from the barn on that last day. Virga believed that BaHee

was clinically depressed. The cause was grief, which is the reason Virga didn't pursue an aggressive course of treatment for the gibbon's symptoms, instead prescribing "concern, patience and understanding." The worst of the depression lasted three or four months,

a span similar to the acute phase of human grief after

looking for them when they the sudden death of a family weren't there. Virga repeated member. By the summer of the his efforts to redirect her attention away from the sources

next year, BaHee's symptoms

of her anxiety; this time, aided

When I asked Kim W arren, another of his keepers,

by the medication, she showed

had mostly disappeared.

a more robust response.

about the episode, she said: "BaHee was grieving. You

M edicating the beast

could see it on his face." Then

Virga uses medication as a

last resort. (Molly remains on Prozac, albeit a lower dose.) I asked him whether Molly's distress didn't, in a way, confirm her intelligence. In scanning for flies when there were none, Molly wasn't responding to a stimulus. Instead, I wondered out loud, wasn't she

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she reconsidered. "I shouldn't say that," she said, choosing her words carefully, "because that's anthropomorphism. I

should say instead that BaHee was displaying withdrawal behaviors."

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Talking aboutfeelings

Qo

remembering insects from her Roger Williams told me, pripast and anticipating them in vately, that they felt uncomher future,thereby demon-

fortable talking about what

strating her capacity for memory and prediction? Virga grinned and nodded. Virga claims he doesn't play favorites, but he enjoys spending time with BaHee, an

their animals felt, though they

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Several staff members at

imals experienced thoughts

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and trenchcoats, and after a while, she wanted no part of the public side of the yard. Virga spent entire afternoons with Sukari, trying to teristics to nonhumans, leads get her to eat by offering difus to imbue animals with our ferent kinds of hay. He eased perceptions and motives, re- her closer to visitors and reducing the worldview of an- warded her each time with other species to a bush-league browse (leafy branches), her version of our own. favorite food. Often he simply Yet avoiding anthropomor- spent time with th e g iraffe phism at all costs may be the and waited. Gradually, Sukari main cause of the schism be- began to improve. Her weight tween scientists and the pub- rose, and the licking dropped lic in the debate about animal off. sentience. "Most reasonable Virga knew that he wasn't people will be on the side of likely to cure her — she animals being sentient crea- had been prone to anxiety turesdespite the absence of t hroughout her l i fe. It w a s conclusive evidence," Pank- her nature, he reasoned, just sepp told me. "But scientists as there are people who are tend to be skeptics. And, in prone to anxiety. Yet the gis fear of cameras, and this field, it pays to be a skep- raffe' tic if you want to get your re- the remaining symptoms, consearch funded." tinued to fade. For a behaviorist at a zoo, To feed Sukari, I had to striking a b alance between walk up a steep staircase to hard science and drawing a metal landing, just to be reasonable parallels between level with her head. Followhuman and animal suffer- ing McClung's instructions, I ing may bethe only avenue offered her a branch covered toward e ffectively t r eating with leaves, and she licked patients. Virga told me that en- it clean with her long, pale countering misgivings about tongue. Sukari chewed the a nthropomorphism onc e leaves gamely, working her made him t i mid about ex- jaws with real gourmandise. pressing his convictions. And then her eye strayed to"But we get to a point in our ward the ceiling, and she quit careers when we say, 'This is chewing and slightly turned what I feel.'And now my job is her head. No sound or moveto prove it," he said. ment had distracted her. For The debate between skep- a span of some seconds, her tics and believers, he says, is eyes grew unfocused and an akin to arguments about reli- expression crossed her disgion, and he's not eager to en- tracted face that could only gage."Sometimes a scientist be a passing thought. Or so it will ask me, 'What are your looked to me. data points'?'" he said. "But if Before wrapping up that we accept that animals are visit t o R o ger W i l liams, I self-aware beings and have looked in on Molly, the Baremotions, they are no longer bary sheep. She happened data points. No amount of data to be standing on a rock, her points will explain identity." horns back, looking like the proud mascot of a hedge fund. Peoplewatching atthe zoo Just then, a group of visitors, If you're already feeling young teenagers with Down irritable, watching people at syndrome, wandered into the a zoo may notimprove your exhibit. The adult with them mood. During a trip Virga explained about aoudads, and I took to Central Park and the teenagers, silenced by Zoo, a boy stood by the side Molly's proximity, looked at of an aquarium, pointing, the animal with remarkable and yelled "SEA W I ONS!" seriousness. Molly l ooked approximately 37 times in back. "What is it thinking?" a girl a row. On our way out, Virga and I watched a man asked, but the adult didn't ancharge a red panda with Ken- swer. Everyone stood looking, yan-marathoner velocity and the teenagers at the aoudad nearly bayonet the animal and the aoudad at the teenagwith acamcorder-and-zoom- ers, until Molly hopped down lens combo of early-micro- from the r ock a n d d a rted wave-oven dimensions. away.

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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

ccen rics e awin o eirown an s TV SPOTLIGHT "Working the Engels" 9:30 p.m. Thursday,NBC

Jenna, the central character,

I mean, the character Ceil has

is the glue of the Engels, someone whom Rohl describes as the "only one who has her feet on the ground."

a warmth and loves her kids. And like she says in the pilot, 'I'm like a bull in a candy store when it comes to my kids.' I

"She is the rock, I think, that

By George Dickie Zapzit

mean, it's all about them. And Andrea brought this sort of

everybody uses to help them-

warmth and support. Like we in various states of whatever," would have a couple of lines she says. "But she's definitely w here we would have Ceilkind the only one with a solid head of dismiss Sandy or dismiss on her shoulders and the only Jimmy in some way. But Anone who sort of thinks logical- drea always turns those lines ly and practically. And yeah, around to make them supshe does hold everybody to- portive, and it actually made it gether. I think she's the pillar funnier. "And Andrea's such a wonthat everybody holds onto." While Jenna is the pillar, derful actress," Ford continher mother, Ceil, thinks she is. ues. "I love how she approachThough her portrayer, Mar- es everything from finding tin, says there's nothing she the truth of it and from there wouldn't do for her kids. it can get ridiculous. And I

With the stateside success

selves stand up when they're

of such Canadian-made series as "Rookie Blue," "Love It or

List It" and "Top Chef Canada," NBC hopes to catch summer lightning in a bottle with another import from north of the border, "Working the Engels." The half-hour sitcom, which premieres Thursday stars Kacey Rohl ("The Killing," "Red Riding Hood") as Jenna, a young lawyer who inherits her father's legal practice

upon his death. Zap2it It turns out, though, that Azura Skye stars in "Working the Engels" as an druggie slacker Dad wasn't great at paying the turned law firm receptionist. bills, as the practice is $200,000 in debt, so Jenna and the rest of her clan come together to

as the investigator. felt the most fun. I didn't know Katie Ford ( " Desperatewhat I was talking about in That cast of ne'er-do-wells Housewives," "Miss Congeni- terms of pitching a procedural, and craziesis composed of ality"), an executive producer but the rest of it really kind of Ceil (Andrea Martin, "SCTV," who created the series with came to life. "My Big Fat Greek Wedding"), sister Jane Cooper Ford, ex"One of the weird sort of inthe overly dramatic, slightly plains she originally pitched spirations for it, oddly, some narcissistic mother hen who the series to the American net- time ago was 'Dog the Bounty w orks as the firm's paralegal; works as an hour procedural, Hunter,'" she continues. "BeSandy (Azura Skye, "Zoe," but wound up retooling it to a cause to me that was like the "Jack and Jane"), the slacking comedy after getting laughs at only family that was working ex-druggie sister who takes the pitch. together, and all they did was "It was sort of a light drama smoke and pray, but I found it over as the receptionist; and Jimmy (Benjamin A r thur, with the idea that it was real- compelling to watch them. So rescue it from the brink.

Canada's "Less Than Kind," "American Reunion"), the

ly character-based with these

street smarts come in handy

with me and that was what

I thought that'd be fun to actu-

fun, rich characters," she says. ally take that, a family workcareer petty criminal whose "That's what r e ally s tayed ing together, and put that in a narrative."

" I t h in k

t h a t s h e l i v e s think that's part of what is the

through her children," Martin glue of this show, is kind of the says. "I think that she's slightly truth of moments and the huin denial about her own abili- mor that sort of keeps a family ties. I think there is a bit of nar- connected." cissism but I don't think that Rohl, also a Martin fan, that comes first. I think the agrees. "I can't speak for her," love for her family — and fami- she says, "but I don't think ly — comes first. But of course, she's ever been a real fan of she has her own eccentricities, that sort of cut down, laugh-atand probably her husband someone comedy. And I think pampered her a little bit. So that affected the tone of our now she's in the world without show in a really great way." much purpose. He's gone, the Ultimately for the cast and kids are grown.... Freud said crew, "Working the Engels" is there's two things in the world: about family. "I think that we have a show love and work. And now she's able to combine both of them that really does show that posin 'Working the Engels,' so it itive side of family," Rohl says. seems for Ceil it's everything." "That we can all (annoy) each "What I love that Andrea other but still really, really brought to this character," Ford love each other at the end of says, "is she brought a warmth. the day and do it out of love."

Birt aygir o yas s or2n gi

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l

Dear Abby:I am planning to at- husbands are a banker and a busi- creet way to have let the woman tend a birthday party for my friend ness owner. All of us are accus- know there was a problem would "Sophia" who is turning 50. When tomed to dealing with "sensitive" have been for you or your wife to I mentioned to her that I would be

issues.

shopping for her birthday gift, she Awoman at the table next to ours asked that while I was shopping for went to the ladies' room. When she her, that I also pick up a gift for her returned, a short "train" of toilet friend "Stacy." paper was caught

have written her a note and given it to her server to pass to her. That way, she would know there was a problem with the least amount of

embarrassment. Dear Abby:My husband, who is cy only a couple of nearing 60, throws plates of food DEP,R times, and I think it very obvious. There at the wall if he gets upset about was extremely nervy was silence, but a something. It is usually minor and for Sophia to ask me palpable "energy," totally spontaneous. He then leaves to do it. The party so the woman knew it for me to clean up and won't apolis only for her, and I don't see the something was amiss and it might ogize. I am sick of living with a connection. have something to do with her. The 60-year-old going on 4.What can Sophia has done this in the past, tissue "floated" with each step, so I I do'? and I'm trying to think of a way to knew it wasn't weighed down with — Had Enough in Illinois tell her I'd rather not buy a gift for moisture. Dear Had Enough: How long her friend. How should I handle Because I didn't perceive it to be have you been tolerating your this? an imminent public health threat, I husband's explosive outbursts of — No Longer a Doormat joined the silent legion. Did I miss temper'? Has he been breaking Dear No Longer a Doormat:Tell a moral imperative by not letting other things, or raising a hand to Sophia with a SMILE that you are her know? I didn't know how to you? not close to Stacy, don't know her do it discreetly. If this should ever There are several things you can taste and do not feel comfortable happen again, what — if anything do. The first is stop cleaning up afshopping for her. Smiling when you — should I do? ter him. Eat separately if you have say it should prevent your refusal — Manners in Massachusetts to. You could also warn him that from appearing confrontational. Dear Mr. Manners: Imagine if if he doesn't seek help now for his P.S. I agree she had a lot of nerve the person with the paper trail temper that you have had it. If you to ask. was you or your wife. Would you need my permission to go, I am givDear Abby: W e w ent o ut t o want to know, so that when you ing it to you. dinner with another couple. The got up to leave the restaurant all — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com wives are psychiatric nurses; the eyes didn't follow you out? A dis- or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069 I have met

S t a-

in the waistband of h er slacks. It w a s

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014:This yearyou often feel as if you need to make adecision for the group. Pressure to deal with the outside world often conflicts with your personal life. A physical move is a strong possibility. If you are single, you will have an opportunity to stop thinking about a former love. Get to know this new love interest well before getting Stars showthe kind too involved. If you of day you'll have are attached, the ** * * * D ynamic two of you might ** * * Positive make amajor *** Average change on the ** So-so homefront. Often * Difficult you have different opinions from each other. Learn how to compromise. SCORPIO absolutely adores you!

ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * A llow a loved one to steal the stage. You have astrong personality that easily could outshine many people.

Be more responsive to a special request without asking too many questions. Just go with the flow for a change. Tonight: Cater to someone else's needs.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

"no" to. Verbalize what is on your mind. Tonight: Know when to call it a night.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * You have a tendency to overindulge. A loved one might entice you into goingon whatheorshedeems afun adventure. Don't make a judgment — just be willing to revise your plans. Spontaneity can add a delightful element to your day. Tonight: Forget tomorrow; live now.

** * * You might have a problem when dealing with someone who wants to control others. You can try to explain that one cannot control others, but if this person is set on using manipulation, then your words are likely to be powerless. Tonight: Where your friends are.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

** * You'll make your point easily, especially if you are relaxed. Others won't be too reactive. Zero in on what is important for friends when choosing plans. Someone might let you know exactly what he or she wants from you. Tonight: Make it a quiet nightat home.

** * * Now that some of the weekend craziness has died down, reach out to a pal you go out with often. Catch up on each other's news. A parent or older relative might be irritated or angry. Return

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)

** * * You'll perk up by midafternoon. Return calls, and you might be surprised

bysome ofthenewsyouhear.Youcould

feel pressured by someone who wants to ** * * You could be more practical and feel more secure. A loved one is likely to react in his or her normally quirky way. direct if you were not so worried about Tonight: Think about tomorrow. others' responses.Allow someoneelse to take the lead for a change, and all you'll LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * You might wake up feeling as if have to do is simply respond. You could you are unstoppable. By midafternoon, gain a sudden insight into a close loved one. Tonight: So many invitations. some of that exuberance might no longer be present .Relax andenjoy am ore easyGEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You might want to start working going pace. Your sensitivity and openness could make all the difference in an interacon a project thatyou have been putting off for way too long. Loosen up, and enjoy tion. Tonight: Be spontaneous. SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) some downtime. A friend easily could surprise you with an offer you can't say ** * * You could feel energized in the

TAURUS (April 20-May20)

afternoon, which will bring you out of a funk that has been plaguing you for a while. Reach out to someone at a distance who you care about. Catching up on news and gossip could be fun. Tonight: You are the lead actor.

this person's calls assoonaspossible. Tonight: Among the crowds. ** * * Reach out to someone who you weren't able to spend time with this weekend. You tend to enjoy this person more than you do others. Your conversation could involve an unexpected twist, so be sure to listen carefully. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.

PISCES (Fed.19-March20) *** * Catch up onsomeoneelse's news, and make plans to get together very soon. Be willing to indulge a loved one, but be careful, as you could pull the wild card financially. Anything can happen when it comes to money. Tonight: Paint the town red. © King Features Syndicate

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TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 6 p.m. on NGC,"The '90s: The Last Great Decade" —Rob Lowe narrates this new threepart, six-hour miniseries, which premieres tonight and continues through Tuesday. The first installment, "Great Expectations," opens with a look at the Gulf War, a high-tech conflict some dubbed "the video game war" which — in one of its more perverse repercussions — turned the military Hummer into a supersized vehicle for civilians. 9 p.m. on 5, 8, "Miley Cyrus: Bangerz Tour" —Twerking may or may not be offered, but in

any event, thesinger-actress is showcased insequencesfrom

her concert tour in this new twohour special. The highlighted performances were staged in Barcelona, Spain, and Lisbon, Portugal — and the crowds' reactions confirm that Cyrus' popularity extends well beyond American shores. Much of the featured music is from her latest album, "Bangerz," including the hits "We Can't Stop" and "Wrecking Ball." 9 p.m. on 6, "Reckless" — A custody battle keeps Jamie and

Roy(Anna Wood,Cam Gigandet) courtroom opponents in the new episode "Parting Shots." Neither lawyer is prepared for the dangerous turn the case ultimately takes. Roy faces an additional dilemma involving missing footage from the sex tape that implicates some police officers. Vanessa Bell Calloway, SunnyMabreyand MichaelLandes guest star. 9 p.m. on 7, "Masterpiece Mystery!" —A girls school is the location of a murder possibly linked to the site's history in the new episode "Endeavour, Season 2: Nocturne." Morse (Shaun Evans) probes a killing committed with a ceremonial dagger. As he digs deeper, he finds evidence of several other homicides 100 years earlier at the school, making the sleuth wonder if there's a direct correlation between the past and present crimes. 9 p.m. on LIFE, "Witches ofEast End" —The portal to Asgard stands open asthe bewitching

and frequently campysupernatural dramedyreturns for asecond season, anddarkness surrounds

the town as a stranger (new regular Christian Cooke) with ties to the Beauchamp family arrives in town. Killlian and Dash (Daniel DiTomasso, Eric Winter) recover their own warlock powers. © Zap2it

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Scoreboard, D2 Tennis, D4 Sports in brief, D2 Motor sports, D5 MLB, D3, D4 Gol f , D5

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

BASEBALL COMMENTARY

WCL BASEBALL Rogues cruise past Elks 8-2

HIGH DESERT OMNIUM

For M's, is it' ee

MEDFORD — With all

of its scoring in the middle three innings, Medford pulled awayfor an 8-2 West Coast League victory over Bendon Saturday night at Harry and David Field. The Rogues (13-10) scored two runs in the fourth inning, three in the fifth and three in the sixth en route to the victory overthe Elks (1512). The win also moved Medford percentage points over Bendfor secondplaceintheW CL South Division. Brock Carpenter led

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the Elks at the plate with

• Fans are more optimistic in Seattle at the midpoint of the seasonafter years of struggling

two hits. Bend will be off today, but will return to action Monday when it hosts Klamath Falls for a three-game series. — Bulletin staff rsport

TRACK 5 FIELD •

By Larry Stone

The Seattle Times

Maton falls just short of finals EUGENE — Bend's Matthew Maton logged a 3-minute, 58.09-second1,500-meter run at the USAJunior Outdoor Track and FieldChampionships on Saturday, but it was not enough to earn the Summit seniorto-be a spot in today's finals at Hayward Field. The top three finishers from each ofthe two heats automatically qualified for the finals, and the next six fastest times rounded out the

e skeptics, like me, are being won over. The excitement is mounting •

along with the wins. This is Seattle Mariners baseball

the way it used to be, the way s ll

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some were starting to fear it never would be again.

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doom is residing around the corner, that all this is a pleasant mirage. But the legitimacy

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of this Mariners team, of '

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field.

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Maton took sixth in the first heat and held

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managerLloyd McClendon's remarkable melding job, is growing as the All-Star break approaches.

I •

Kevin Mather, barely five months into his stint as team

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president, sensed he might be

I

walking into a situation about •

to blossom. He told the media

II •

the third-fastest time.

Buta speedysecond flight ousted him from contention as all eight of the Heat 2 runners advanced to the finals.

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as much when he was hired in late January, and now he is

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enjoying the Mariners' emergence along with everyone else. "It's been really fun," he

I

Maton finished 14th

said. "Our fan base, they've been patient. It's nice to see

overall in the18-runner field.

them have fun. Every once in a while you walk out and say,

— Bulletin staff report

'Boy, that was a stinker.' But

as a general rule, it's been an

CYCLING Tour de France at a glance

M LS pins hope on a U.S.stan out

behind Kittel.

Today's stage: Stage 2 takes the peloton on a 201-kilometer (125mile) trek from York to Sheffield on anundulating terrain featuring nine climbs andnarrow roads. Overall contenders will be watching each other and riding in front to avoid being caught by a break. For a complete story on Saturday's Tour de France, seeDS. — The Associated Press

SOCCER

By Jorge Arangure Jr.

HARROGATE, En-

gland — A brief look at Saturday's first stage of the 101st Tour de France: Stage: The190.5-kilometer (118-mile) stage took riders on a hilly trek from Leeds to Harrogate over three moderate climbs in Yorkshire. Winner: Marcel Kittel, who started his campaignthesameway he did lastyear when he also won the first stage. The powerful German sprinter avoided acrash about 300 meters from the finish when local favorite Mark Cavendish took Simon Gerrans down. Gerrans escaped uninjured but Cavendish hurt his head, right wrist and right shoulder. Peter Sagan's bid for a third consecutive green jersey got off to a good start with the Slovakian finishing in second place. Yellow Jersey: Kittel. Bend's Chris Horner: Chris Horner finished 65th for his Lampre-Merida team, 26 seconds

New York Times News Service

DeAndre Yedlin had tattoos put on his calves that joined to read, "Always Remem-

16.

Yedlin, 20, helped keep the seemingly

to get better?" The urgency ramped up Friday with the

overmatched Americans in the game from

Oakland Athletics' stunning

his right fullback position after entering the game in the 32nd minute for the injured

acquisition of two front-line pitchers, JeffSamardzijaand

Fabian Johnson. With his speed, Yedlin

Jason Hammel, from the Chi-

slipped past Belgian defenders and ignited the United States' counterattack. Defensively, he played the highly regarded Chelsea forward Eden Hazard to a stalemate. In addition, against Portugal in the group stage, he helped set up a goal by Clint Dempsey.

cago Cubs.

It was a reminder to Yedlin that regardless of where his career was headed — and

soccer team, is receiving a wave of publicity after hie encouraging performance in the World Cup.

of year. Instead of "What's burnmg topic, as the July 31 trade deadline nears, is this:

ber the Beginning."

Jake Naughton/The New YorkTimes

bate has shifted from the one that usually exists at this time

his encouraging performance in the United States' 2-1 extra-time loss to Belgium on Tuesday in the World Cup's Round of

contract with the Seattle Sounders in 2013,

DeAndre Yedlin, of the U.S. men's

And so unexpectedly (to most) successful that the de-

wrong with the Mariners," the

Shortly after he signed a professional

<K

entertaining product."

it appeared to be headed toward stardom — he came from humble beginnings. Yedlin was raised by his grandparents after his teenage mother was unable to handle the responsibilities of being a parent. He grew up not knowing his father. "I was raised to always be humble," said Yedlin, who was raised in Seattle. Yedlin's humility is being tested during the wave of publicity he is receiving after

"What can the Mariners do

It is a fun debate, and more nuanced than it first appears.

Of course, the Mariners could stand to add a bat or two, maybe an arm. But at what cost in

young talent? See M's/D4

See Yedlin /D6 a

SOCCER: WORLD CUP

The Amazon's floating fields

IMD~ ES BASESAK

New York Times News Service

QIRL 8COQTS

CATALAO, Brazil — In this

6:35pmvs. KlamathFolls Gems Pre-gameceremonieswith the Girl Scouts

floating village, there is only one way to travel. Students

Tuesday, July 8

go to school by boat. Pente-

6:35pmvs. KlamathFallsGems

costals go to

• Argentina, Netherlands headed to World Cup semis,B6

pgEE ND gEPH'E$0N

churchby boat. Taxis

WedneSday,July 9 Thursday,July 10

6:35pmvs. Qy,iur ntQH I tnr«»n" Ya kimaValleyPippef)S 6IVBW AVSATTHEG ATEPRE8ENTN8VnnlHCSOURCE ®

fields on land, but they are

submerged now in the annual flooding of the Black River,

aecs «~l ~JC

which meets nearby with the nets, they would be useful this

® 2 7UEsppyf

6:35pmvs. KlamathFallsGems

arrive by b o a t. Even the soccer fi el d is often a boat. There are three homemade

Solimoes to form the Amazon. If the wooden goal posts had

~®R

Monday, July 7

By Jere Longman

Frilay, July 11 ~ ~K E C 6:35pm vs. YakimaValleyPippens IkNk

Mauricio Lima i The New York Times

Young boys play soccer on the dock of a restaurant in Catalao,

time of year only for catching Brazil, last week. The inhabitants of this floating village in the fish. Amazon River basin have adapted their lives, and their passion for See Amazon /D6 playing soccer, around the annual flooding of the Black River.

XXBKE659'

Saturday, JUIY12

.. „„-„,, 6:35pm vs. YakimaValleyPippens nnICE CREAM80nALPIIESENTEQBYE8ERnnrS Q AIIW

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D2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY CYCLING

Tour de France, Stage2

Time TV /Radie 3 a.m. N BCSN

BASEBALL

TENNIS

Wimbledon, men's final

6 a.m.

WCL

E S PN

WESTCOASTLEAGUE

GOLF

ISPS Handa LadiesEuropeanMasters PGA Tour,Greenbrier Classic PGA Tour,Greenbrier Classic Web.comTour,NovaScotiaOpen AIITO RACING NASCAR,Sprint Cup,CokeZero 400 IndyCar, Pocono IndyCar500 NHRA, NHRANationals

8 a.m. 1 0 a.m. noon noon

UHD Go l f CBS Golf

8a.m. TNT 9 a.m. N BCSN 6 p.m. E SPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, Seattle at ChicagoWhite Sox MLB, NewYork Yankeesat Minnesota MLB, TampaBayat Detroit

1 1 a.m. 11 a.m. 5 p.m.

R o ot TBS E S PN

11 a.m. ESPN2 11:15a.m. ESPNU 1 p.m. E SPN2 n oon

ESP N

2 p.m.

FS1

4 a.m. N BCSN

BASEBALL

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN Roo t

5 p.m.

E SPN2

FOOTBALL

Arena, Orlando at Philadelphia

L

Pcl GB .593 .565 1 .556 1 .348 6

Pcl GB .783 .478 7 .458 7'/z .364 9'/z

Klamath Falls12, Corvallis11 Medford 8,Bend2 Kelowna13,Wenatchee4 WallaWalla11,YakimaValley10 Beffingham 3, Cowlitz1 Victoria 7,Kitsap3

Today'sGames VictoriaatKitsap, 3:05p.m. Cowlitz at Wala Walla, 5:05p.m. Wenatc heeatKelowna,6:05p.m. Saturday'sSummary

Bend OBB B1B 100 — 2 7 2 Medford OBB 233 OOX— 8 11 1

CYCLNIG

MLB,New YorkYankeesatCleveland MLB, Minnesota at Seattle

W

CorvaffisKnights 16 11 MedfordRogues 13 10 BendElks 15 12 KlamathFalls Gems 8 15 Wesl Division W L Bellingham Bells 18 5 V ictoria Harbourcats 11 12 C owlitz BlackBears 1 1 13 KitsapBlueJackets 8 14

Pcl GB .583 .538 1 .417 4 .308 7

Rogues 8, Elks 2

MONDAY Tour de France, Stage3

Easl Division W L Y akima Valey Pippins 14 1 0 W enatchee AppleSox 14 12 W alla WallaSweets 1 0 14 Kelowna Falcons 8 18 South Division

Saturday'sGames

BASKETBALL

WNBA, Minnesota at NewYork FIBA U17World Championship, final, TeamsTBA WNBA, Phoeni xat LosAngeles SOCCER MLS, Chicago at Sporting KansasCity EQUESTRIAN JockeyClubRacingTour,Monmouth Park

All TimesPDT

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL HRWOSSet to jOin CliPPerS — The LosAngeles Clippers and free-agent center SpencerHawes onFriday agreed to afour-year, $23 million deal, NBAexecutives confirmed. The executives spoke to the Los Angeles Times oncondition of anonymity becausethey were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly. Hawes,who played for the Philadelphia 76ers andCleveland Cavaliers last seasonand made $6.5 million, will receive theClippers' full midlevel exception, which starts at $5.305 million per year.There havebeen reports that Clippers Coachand President Doc Rivers had beentrying to work a signand-trade deal with Cleveland for Hawes so he could use the midlevel exception to try to get free-agent small forward Paul Pierce.

LakerS NBA'SmOStPrafitable team — Despite amiserable campaign, the LosAngeles Lakers were the most profitable franchise in the NBA-by alarge margin. According to a memodistributed to teams by theNBA,the Lakers project to earn a $158.3 million profit for the 2013-14season, before tax and revenuesharing. The Chicago Bulls, second onthe list, earned less than half that amount, at $75.7 million. The LosAngeles Clippers wereseventh at $30.4 million. The Brooklyn Nets were the least profitable with a loss of $51.5 million, before tax and revenuesharing. The Memphis Grizzlies will receive a league-high $23.1 million in revenuesharing, followed by the Charlotte Hornets (formerly the Bobcats) at $22 million. Twenty-one teams project to finish with a positive cash flow, up from17 before taxes and revenuesharing.

McGuff,Albrecht (4), Wilcox(6)andFinfer,Ferguson.Hardy,Dilda(8), Ouarterley(9) andTeel. W — Hardy .L— McGuff .28— Bend:Carrol.HRMedford:Garcia.

TENNIS Wimbledon Saturday Al The All EnglandLawnTennis fk Croquet Club London Purse:S42.6million (GrandSlam) Surface:Grass-Outdoor Singles Women Championship Petra Kvitova(6), CzechRepublic, def. Eugenie Bouchard (13), Canada,6-3, 6-0. Doubles Men Championship Vasek Pospisil,Canada,and Jack Sock,United States,def.BobandMikeBryan(1), UnitedStates, 7-6 (5), 6-7(3),6-4,3-6, 7-5. Women Championship SaraErraniandRoberta Vinci (2), Italy,def.Timea Babos,Hungary, andKristinaMladenovic(14), France, 6-1,6-3. Mixed Semifinals NenadZimonjtc, Serbia, and SamStosur(15),Australia, def.Aisam-ul-HaqOureshi, Pakistan,andVera Dushevin(16), a Russia, 7-5,6-2. Max Mirnyi, Belarus,andChanHao-ching (14), Taiwan,def. Daniel Nestor, Canada,andKristina Mladenovic(5),France,7-6(4), 7-5.

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'S NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PDT

EasternConference W L Pcl GB

Atlanta

12 5 9 10 8 10 8 10 7 12 6 11

Connecticut Chicago Indiana Washington NewYork Phoenix Minnesota SanAntonio Los Angeles Seattle Tulsa

. 7 06 . 474 4 . 444 4'/z . 444 4'/z . 3 68 6 . 353 6

WeslernConference W L Pcl GB 12 3 13 5 10 9 7 9 8 12 7 11

. 8 00 . 7 22 '/z . 526 4 .4 3 8 5'/z . 400 6'/z . 389 6'/z

Saturday'sGames

SanAntonio71, Indiana70 Atlanta86,Washington 73 Connecticut78,Tulsa 76 Seattle80,Chicago73

BASEBALL

Today'sGames

AthletiCS finaliZe dlockbuster trade With Cuds — The Oakland Athletics finalized their blockbuster trade with the Chicago Cubs, strengthening their starting rotation with a bold movethat cost the AL West leaders acouple of top prospects. Oakland acquired right-handers Jeff Samardzija andJason Hammelfrom Chicago for minor leaguers Addison Russell, Billy McKinney, Dan Straily and a player tobenamed.ThedealwasannouncedonSaturday.Samardzija and Hammeljoin Scott Kazmir, Sonny GrayandTommy Milone in one of the majors' best rotations. Samardzjja has a2.83 ERAin 17 starts this year, while Hammel is 8-5 with a 2.98ERA.Aninjury sidelined Russell earlier this season, but the shortstop is batting .333 with three doubles, one homer,eight RBls andthree steals in13 games for Double-A Midland. The19-year-old McKinneywasthe A's first-round pick last year.

FOOTBALL BrOWnSIR Charged With DWI —Police say Cleveland Browns wide receiver JoshGordon wasarrested and charged with driving while intoxicated after speeding down astreet in Raleigh, N.C. Police spokesmanJim Sughrue said Gordonwas taken into custody after being pulled over for going 50 mph in a 35mphzone onU.S. 70 in northwest Raleigh around 3a.m. Saturday. Gordon was released on bail. Court records did not list an attorney. The 23-year-old Pro Bowl wide receiver hasbeen introuble before off the field. He missed two games last season for violating the NFL'ssubstance-abuse policy and reportedly failed another drug test during the offseason, which could lead to aseason-long ban. Browns General ManagerRayFarmer said the team isaware of the arrest and is disappointed. Hedidn't comment further. — From wire reports

Minnesota atNewYork,11 a.m. PhoenixatLosAngeles,1 p.m.

GOLF PGA Tour The GreenbrierClassic Saturday

At The OldWhite TPC While SulphurSprings, W.Va. Purse: SB.B million Yardage: 7,287;Par70 Third Round Billy HurleyIII 68-63-67—198 AngelCab rera 68-68-64—200 KevinChappel 67-65-69—201 Michae lThompson 66-72-64—202 Cameron Tringale 72-66-64—202 Will Wilcox 68-69-65—202 Joe Durant 65-71-66—202 CamiloViffegas 68-67-67 —202 66-68-68—202 SteveStricker 66-66-70—202 ChrisStroud 65-70-68—203 Jim Renne r Bill Haas 69-70-65—204 72-67-65—204 HudsonSwafford 68-68-68—204 DavidHearn 67-69-68—204 LukeGuthrie 68-67-69—204 BubbaWatson 67-68-69—204 DavidLingmerth 72-61-71 —204 TroyMatteson 67-73-65—205 DavisLoveIII 69-70-66—205 SteveMarino 71-68-66—205 KyleStanley 69-69-67—205 AndrewLoupe 71-67-67 —205 Brendon Todd 65-72-68—205 JasonBohn JonasBlixt 64-73-68—205 67-70-68—205 RobertAllenby 70-67-68—205 George McNeil Keegan Bradley 67-69-69—205 J.B. Holmse 68-68-69—205 Sang-MoonBae 66-74-66—206 TrevorImmelman 69-70-67—206

ScottLangley 68-71-67—206 MichaelPutnam 67-72-67—206 RichardH.Lee 71-68-67—206 TroyMerritt 66-72-68—206 CharlesHowell III 67-71-68—206 DavidToms 69-69-68—206 OliverGoss 70-68-68—206 Matt Bettencourt 70-68-68—206 PatrickCantlay 69-68-69—206 Bronson LaC ' assie 70-66-70—206 BriceGarnet 68-66-72—206 Shawn Stefani 73-67-67—207 71-69-67—207 WebbSimpson AndresRomero 72-68-67—207 70-69-68—207 HeathSlocum 70-69-68—207 Brendon deJonge 71-68-68—207 TomWatson 71-67-69—207 Justin Leona rd 69-68-70—207 BudCauley 66-70-71—207 KevinNa 67-69-71—207 CharlieBeljan 67-69-71—207 PatrickReed 65-71-71—207 DannyLee Johnson Wagner 68-68-71—207 PatrickRodgers 65-75-68—208 TedPotter,Jr. 70-70-68—208 GaryWoodland 69-70-69—208 JoshTeater 69-69-70—208 StephenAmes 69-68-71—208 AndrewSvoboda 72-68-69—209 RobertStreb 68-72-69—209 J.J. Henry 70-70-69—209 WesRoach 69-71-69—209 RobertoCastro 72-68-69—209 70-70-69—209 Jason Gore 70-69-70—209 ScottStaffings GonzaloFdez-Castano 68-71-70—209 71-68-70—209 CarlPettersson 72-67-70—209 KenDuke 68-71-70—209 Tim Wilkinson 66-73-70—209 ChadCollins 67-70-72—209 TyroneVanAswegen 65-69-75—209 Chris Kirk Made cutdid netfinish 68-72-70—210 WoodyAustin 72-68-70—210 Scott Brown Martin Flores 70-70-70—210 Pat Perez 66-69-75—210 JohnDaly 68-72-71—211 Jeff Magge rt 69-70-72—211 Steven Bowditch 68-70-73—211 DerekErnst 71-69-72—212 GregChalmers 69-69-74—212 ScottGardiner 70-67-75—212 JamieLovem ark 68-72-73—213 D.A. Points 65-75-74—214 MarkWilson 68-72-74—214 BrendanSteele 70-68-77—215 James Hahn 65-74-78—217

6. (27)Jame sHinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda,222.544. 7. (3)HelioCastroneves,Dallara-chevrolet,222.517. 8. (10)TonyKanaan, Dallara-chevrolet, 221.97. 9. (28)RyanHunter-Reay, Daffara-Honda,221.95. 10. (8)RyanBriscoe,Dallara-chevrolet,221.565. 11. (77)SimonPagenaud, Dallara-Honda,221.547. 12. (7)MikhailAleshin, Dallara-Honda,221.221. 13. (20)EdCarpenter,Dalara-chevrolet,221.019. 14. (15)GrahamRahal, Dallara-Honda, 220.747. 15. (9)ScottDixon,Daffara-chevrolet,220.604. 16. (19)Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda,220.439. 17.(83)CharlieKimball, Dallara-chevrolet, 220.377. 18. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-chevrolet, 219.741. 19. (17) Sebastian Saavedra, Dallara-chevrolet, 218.502. 20. (18)CarlosHuertas, Dalara-Honda,216.261. 21. (67)JosefNewgarden,Dallara-Honda. 22. (98)JackHawksworth, Dalara-Honda.

Formula 1 British GrandPrix Lineup Afler Saturdayqualifying; race today Al SilverstoneCircuit Silverstone,England Lap length: 3.66miles Third Session 1. Nico Rosberg,Germ any, Mercedes, 1 minute, 35.766seconds. 2. SebastiaVe n tel, Germany, RedBull,1:37.386. 3.JensonButton,England,McLaren,1:38.200. 4. NicoHulkenberg, Germany, ForceIndia,1:38.329. 5. KevinMagnussen,Denmark, McLaren,1:38.417. 6. LewiHa s milton, England,Mercedes,1:39.232. 7. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,1:40.457. 8. DanielRicciardo,Australia, RedBull,1:40.606. 9. Daniil Kvyat, Russia, ToroRosso,1:40.707. 10. Jean-EricVergne,France,Toro Rosso,1:40.855. Eliminatedafter secondsession 11. RomaiG nrosjean, France,Lotus,1:38.496. 12. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia,1:38.709. 13. AdrianSutil, Germany, Sauber, NoTime. Eliminated afler first session 14. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,1:45.318. 15. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,1:45.695. 16. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,1:45.935. 17. Max Chilton, England, Marussia,1:39.800. 18. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Ferrari,1:46.684. 19. Marcus Ericsson, Sweden, Caterham,1:49.421. 20. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,1:44.018. 21. KamuiKobayashi, Japan,Caterham,1:49.625. 22. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,1:40.912.

14. MartinElmiger,Switzerland,IAMCycling, same time. 15. SamuelDum oulin, France,AG2RLa Mondiale, same time. 16. SimonClarke,Australia, OricaGreenEdge, same time. 17. GerainTh t omas,Britain, Sky,sametime. 18. AndreGreipel, Germany, Lotto Belisol, sametime. 19. KoendeKort, Netherlands, Giant-Shimano,same time. 20. JurgenVandenBroeck, Belgium, LottoBelisol, sametime. Also 21 Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, :14.

22. AlbertoContador, Spain,Tinkoff-Saxo,sametime. 24. AlejandroValverde, Spain, Movistar, sametime. 32. TejayvanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, same time. 34. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy,Astana,sametime. 44.AndySchleck,Luxembourg,TrekFactoryRacing, same time. 60. FrankSchleck,Luxembourg, TrekFactory Racing, sametime. 65. ChristopherHorner, UnitedStates, Lampre-Merida,:26. 70.PeterStetina, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, same time. 84. Matthew Busche,United States, TrekFactory Racing, same time. 90. DanieNa l varro, Spain, Cofidis, sametime. 97.BenjaminKing, United States, GarminSharp, :43.

133. AlexHowes, United States, GarminSharp,1:00. 160.JoaquinRodriguez, Spain, Katusha,1:16. 166. Danny Pate, United States, Sky,1:30. 184. Edw ard King, UnitedStates, Cannondale, 2:29. 194. AndrewTalansky, UnitedStates, Garmin Sharp, 4:15.

Stages Saturday— First Stage:Leedsto Harrogate, England,flat(190.5km-118.3 miles) Today — SecondStage:YorktoSheff ield,England, hilly (201-124.8) July 7 —Third Stage:Cambridgeto London,flat (155-96.3) July 8 —FourthStage:LeTouquet-Paris-Plageto Lille Metropoleflat , (163.5-101.5) July 9 —FifthStage:Ypresto Arenberg Porte du Hainautflat/cobbledroads(155.5-96.6) July10 —SixthStage:Arrasto Reims, flat (194120.5) July 11 —Seventh Stage: Epernay to Nancy, flat (234.5-145.6) NHRA July 12 —EighthStage:Tomblaine to Gerardmer La Mauselaine,mediummountain(161-100) NATIONALHOT ROD ASSOCIATION July 13 —NinthStage:Gerardmer to Mulhouse, Saturday mediummountain(170-105.6) At SummitRacingEquipment Molorsporls July 14 —10th Stage:MulhousetoLaPlanchedes Park BellesFiles, highmountain (161.5-100.3) Norwalk, Ohio SOCCER July15 —Rest Day, Besancon Pairings basedonresults in qualifying, which July16 —11thStage:Besanconto Oyonnax, meendedSaturday.DNGslisted belowpairings. World Cup diummountain(187.5-116.4) Tep Fuel July 17 — 12th Stage: Bourg-en-Bresseto 1. Shawn Langdon, 3.745seconds, 325.22mph GUARTERF INALS vs. 16. Terry McMillen, 3.906, 324.36. 2. Doug Saint-Etienne,mediummountain(185.5-115.2) Saturday'sGames July18 —13thStage:Saint-Etienne to ChamrousKalitta, 3.746, 327.82vs. 15. Richie Crampton, Argentina1,Belgium0 highmountain(197.5-122.6) Netherlands 0, CostaRica0 (Netherlandswins 4-3 in 3.905, 302.21. 3. Antron Brown,3.763, 323.04 se,July19 — 14thStage:Grenoble to Risoul, high vs. 14. ClayMillican, 3.880, 315.42. 4.BobVanshootout) mountai n(177-110) dergriff,3.777, 322.73vs. 13. Pat Dakin, 3.875, July 20 —15thStage:Talard to Nimes, flat (222313.66. 5. J.R.Todd,3.783, 319.52vs. 12.Troy SEMIFINALS Buff, 3.853, 311.49. 6. Steve Torrence, 3.792, 137.9) Tuesday'sGame July 21 — Rest Day, Carcassonne 324.67vs. 11.Larry Dixon,3.839, 322.65.7. Tony Brazilvs.Germany,1 p.m. July 22 — 16th Stage:Carcassonneto BagSchumacher,3.794, 324.12vs. 10. Khalid alBaWednesday'sGame neres-de-Luchon, highmountain (237.5-147.5) looshi, 3.832, 316.97. 8.SpencerMassey,3.800, Argentinavs.Netherlands,1p.m. July 23 — 17thStage:Saint-Gaudens to Saint324.12 vs. 9. Brittany Force,3.814, 324.98. Did Not Qualify:17. CoryMcclenathan,3 921,29887. Lary Plad'Adet,highmountain(124.5-77.3) THIRDPLACE July 24 — 18thStage:Pauto Hautacam,high 18. Leah Pritchett, 3.996,309.42.19.Luigi NovelSaturday, July12 li, 4.006, 286.92.20. Chris Karamesines,4.134, mountain(145.5-90.4) Semifinallosers,1 p.m. July 25 —19thStage; MaubourguetPaysdu Val 265.12. d'AdourtoBergerac,flat (208.5-129.5) FunnyCar CHAMPIONSHIP July 26 —20th Stage:Bergeracto Perigueux, indi1. DelWorsham,Toyota Camry, 4.000, 321.88vs. Sunday,July18 trial (54-33.5) 16.Jeff Diehl,ToyotaSolara,4.343,289.20.2.John vidual time Semifinalwinners,noon July 27 —21stStage:Evry to Paris Champs-ElyForce,FordMustang,4.016, 322.04vs.15. TimWilkerson ,Mustang,4.180,307.65.3.TommyJohnsonJr., sees,flat(137.5-85.4) Total —3,663.5km-2,275.2miles MLS DodgeCharger,4.030, 319.67vs.14. TonyPedregon, MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Camry,4.170,303.57.4. MattHagan,Charger, 4.044, All Times PDT 318.69vs.13.JeffArend, Charger,4.158, 299.93. 5. DEALS RonCapps,Charger, 4.048, 316.15vs. 12.Courtney EasternConference Force,Mustang,4.106,321.42.6. RobertHight,MusTransactions W L T P l s GF GA tang, 4.050,310.91vs. 11.CruzPedregon, Camry, D.C. 8 5 4 28 24 18 4.077, 308.21. 7.ChadHead, Camry, 4.052, 318.02 BASEBALL S porting KansasCity 7 5 4 2 5 22 14 vs. 10.AlexisDeJoria, Camry, 4.076, 311.49. 8.Jack AmericanLeague NewEngland 7 7 2 23 23 23 Beckman, Charger,4.064,317.94vs.9.BobTascaIII, BOSTONREDSOX— RecalledLHPTommyLayne TorontoFC 6 5 3 21 19 18 Mustang,4.065,315.12. DidNotQualify: 17.Terry fromPawtucket (IL). NewYork 4 5 8 20 26 26 Haddock,6.994,275.51. LOS ANG ELES ANGELS — Acquired LHPJoe Columbu s 4 5 8 20 19 19 Pro Stock ThatcherandOFTony Campana fromArizonafor OF Houston 5 10 3 1 8 18 34 1. Erica Enders-Stevens,ChevyCamaro, 6.523, ZachBorenstein andRHPJoeyKrehbiel. Philadelphia 4 8 6 18 26 30 212.63vs. 16.Travis Mazza, Ford Mustang, 7.365, OAKLANDATHLETICS— OptionedLHPTommy Chicago 2 4 9 15 23 26 200.86. 2.ShaneGray, Camaro, 6.527, 211.69vs. Milone toSacramento (PCL). Montreal 3 8 5 14 16 27 15.Mark Hogan,Pontiac GXP,6.738,206.23.3. TORONT OBLUEJAYS—ClaimedOFColeGillesWesternConference Allen Johnson,DodgeDart, 6.532, 211.89vs. 14. pie off waiversfromSeatle. DesignatedOFKenny W L T P l s GF GA LarryMorgan,Mustang,6.698, 210.77.4. ChrisMc- Wilsonforassignment. Seattle 11 4 2 3 5 33 24 Gaha,Camaro, 6.546, 211.53vs. 13.JohnGaydosh National League RealSaltLake 7 3 7 28 27 23 Jr, GXP, 6.677,208.26. 5. VincentNobile, Cama ro, ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — RecalledLHPEury Colorado 7 5 5 26 24 19 6.551,211.69vs. 12.ShaneTucker, Camaro, 6.603, De laRosafromReno(PCL). FCDallas 7 7 5 26 30 29 211.56. 6.JegCoughlin, Dart,6.554,212.03vs. 11. CHICAGO CUBS—AcquiredINFAddisonRussell, Vancouver 6 3 7 25 26 22 RodgerBrogdon,Cam aro, 6.574, 211.23. 7. Dave OF BillyMcKinney,RH PDanStraily andaplayerto be LosAngele s 5 3 6 21 19 13 Connolly,Cam aro, 6.557, 211.00vs. 10.GregAn- namedfromtheOaklandfor RHPsJeffSamardzija and Portland 4 5 9 21 30 30 derson,Cam aro, 6.566,211.39.8. JasonLine, Ca- JasonHammel. ChivasUSA 5 7 5 20 17 26 maro, 6.564,211.20vs.9. JonathanGray, Camaro, COLORADOROCKIES— ActivatedLHPBooneLoSanJose 4 7 4 16 15 16 6.566,211.69.DidNot Oualify:17.V. Gaines,7.639, gan fromthe15-day DL.OptionedINFRyan Wheeler NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. 190.40. to Colorado Springs (PCL). Pro StockMotorcycle PllTSBURG HPIRATES—0laimedINFDeanAnna Saturday'sGames 1. EddieKrawiec, Harley-Davidson,6.844, 195.05 off waiversfromthe NewYork Yankeesandoptioned D.C.United2, Toronto FC1 vs.16. ElviraKarlsson,Suzuki,6.984,188.81.2. Hec- him toIndianapolis(IL). Vancouver1,Seatle Fc 0 tor Arana Jr, Buell, 6.859,196.33vs. 15.JimUnderWASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Agreedto terms ChivasUSA1, Montreal 0 dahl, Suzuki6.981, , 193.24. 3. Jerry Savoie, Suzuki, with RHP TomasAlastre, RHPPedro Avila, LHPGilToday'sGame 6.865,195.48vs.14. SteveJohnson, Suzuki, 6.952, berto ChuandRHPChristian Floreson minor league ChicagoatSporting KansasCity, noon 193 05.4.ChazKennedy, Bueff,6 867,194 27vs. 13. contracts. Friday's Game MichaelRay,Buell, 6.943,192.03.5. HectorArana, BASKETBALL D.C. UnitedatSanJose,8p.m. Buell ,6.871,196.93vs.12.Shawn Gann,Bueff , National Basketball Association Saturday, July12 6.933, 192.60.6.ScottyPoff acheck,Buell,6.873, OKLAHOM A CITY THUNDER —SignedF Mitch Columbus at NewYork, 4p.m. 195.03vs.11.AngieSmith, Buell, 6.928,193.79. 7. McGary. ColoradoatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. JohnHall,Bueff ,6.882,194.63vs.10.AndrewHines, FOOTBALL HoustonatToronto FC,4p.m. Harley-Davidson, 6.913, 193.16. 8. Matt Smith, National Football League Chicag oatNewEngland,4:30p.m. Buell ,6.909,193.88vs.9.AdamArana,Bueff ,6.912, ATLANTAFALCONS— PlacedWRDrewDavison SportingKansasCity atMontreal, 4:30p.m. 196.07. DidNot Qualify: 17. Justin Finley,6.994, the trainingcampPUPlist. ChivasUSAat Vancouver,7 p.m. 192z14,18,JoeDeSantis, 7.002,191.76.19. Wendel CanadianFootball League RealSaltLakeat LosAngeles,7:30 p.m. Daniels,broke. EDMONTONESKI MOS— NamedJoeNixonoff enSunday,July13 sive assistantcoach. PortlandatSeattle Fc,7p.m. HOCKEY CYCLING National HockeyLeague COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— Signed DDavid NWSL Tour de France Savard to atwo-yearcontract. NATIONAL WOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE NASHVILL EPREDATORS— SignedDJoePiskula Saturday All Times PDT to a one-year contract. Al Harrogale, England COLLEGE First Stage Saturday'sGame MEMPHIS — Name d Blake Smart men'sgolf A118.3-mile, flat ride fromLeeds, Englandto Western NewYork4, Houston1 coach. Harrogate, with oneCategory4and apair of Today'sGames Category 3climbs FcKansasCityatSkyBlueFC,3p.m. 1. MarcelKittel,Germany,Giant-Shimano,4 hours, 44 FISH COUNT BostonatSeatle FC,4 p.m. minutes,7seconds. 2. PeterSagan,Slovakia, Cannondale, sametime. Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack 3. Ramunas Navardauskas,Lithuania, Garmin Sharp, chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected MOTOR SPORTS same time. ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonFriday. 4. Bryan Coquard, France,Europcar,sametime. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd IndyCar 5. Michael Rogers, Australia, Tinkoff-Saxo,sametime. B onneville 2,495 6 7 7 1 ,357 7 5 5 6. Christopher Froome,Britain, Sky,sametime. The Dalles 2,891 6 8 3 6 5 3 304 PoconoIndycar BBBLineup Afler Saturdayqualifying; racetoday 7. Alexander Kristoff, Norway, Katusha,sametime. John Day 1,813 34 2 3 5 9 19 8 At PoconoRaceway 8. Sep Vanmarcke,Belgium, Belkin ProCycling, same McNary 1,551 1 8 2 263 119 Long Pond,Pa. time. Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chiLap length: 2.5 miles 9. Jose Joaquin Rojas, Spain, Movistar, sametime. nook, jackchinook, steelheadandwild steelhead (Car numberin parentheses) 10. MichaelAlbasini, Swilzerland,OricaGreenEdge, at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon 1. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, Dallara-chevrolet, same time. Friday. 223.871mph. 11. FabianCancellara, Switzerland, TrekFactory RacChnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd 2. (12)Wil Power,Daffara-chevrolet,223.725. ing,8 seconds behind. Bonneville 270,241 42,528 20,483 8,093 3. (34Carlo sMunoz,Daff ara-Honda,223.083. 12.Paul Voss,Germany,NetApp-Endura,:09. The Dalles 209,651 32,574 7,164 3,143 4. 14 13. GregVan Avermaet, Belgium, BMCRacing, same John Day 180,813 28,716 7,307 2,986 ITakumaSato,Daffara-Honda,222.798. 5. (25)MarcoAndretti, Dallara-Honda,222.715. time. McNary 160,728 25,171 4,209 1,597

Weidman gets unanimous decision over Maehida at UFC 175 en's bantamweight champion MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Ronda Rousey stopped AlexLAS VEGAS — Chris Weid- is Davis at 16 seconds of the Rousey rocked Davis with a not going to keep my fingers man unanimously outpointed first round. Rousey improved solid right, secured an imme- crossed,butthankyou,IappreLyoto Machida at UFC 175 on to 10-0 with all wins by way of diate judo toss and landed nine ciate it." Saturday night to retain his submission, KO or TKO. This punches, knocking out Davis Weidman and Machidalandmiddleweight title. was her fourth consecutive ti- and forcing the referee to stop ed big shots in the first round, The judgeshad Weidman tie defense. The former Olym- the fight in what became the with neither taking time to feel ahead 49-46, 49-45, 48-47 over pic Judoka was praised during second-fastest knockout in out their opponent. Weidman Machida (21-5). This was Weid- her post-fight interview for her UFC title bout history. pressedforward formost ofthe man's second title defense after improved striking skills and Rousey, jeered by fans foi- second round, keeping Machishocking the MMA world with replied, "I box six days a week lowing her past UFC victories, da on his heels and got a takea victory over long-time cham- and grapple four days a week. I received a loud ovation from down against the fence with pion Anderson Silva one year have more to catch up on strik- most in attendance. just under a minute left. "I'm not sure if they'll keep ago. ing, so that's what I train the Weidman was able to land a In the co-main event, wom- most. I think I can do better." cheering me," Rousey said. "I'm few shots to the grounded MaBy Adam Berchin

chida ashe rose justbefore the

thing, he doesn't."

The Associated Press

bell. "I just had to keep moving forward and keep pushing,"

Weidman opened things up in the third round, slamming Machidatwice and landingtwo big straight rights that stunned

Weidman said. "This is MMA. I'm confident standing and I

the challenger and sent him

knew kicks were going to be a into survival mode. Machida part of the game." stuffed most of Weidman's Machida's awkward style

takedown attempts throughout

and solidkicks kept Weidman's offense in check for most of the first half of the fight. "He's as good as I thought. He's really tricky in there," Weidman said. 'When you think he's going to do some-

the fight and dazed the champ with a straight left halfway through the fourth round. Ma-

chida added a few kicks and punches to clearly gain the momentum in what was his best roU11d.


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL cntandingS

allowed two runs andthree hits, all in the first inning. Hethen watched the bullpen almost completely unravel.

ON THE BALL

AH TimesPDT

AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

Baltimore Toronto NewYork Boston Tampa Bay Detroit

Kansas City Cleyeland Chicago Minnesota Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston

W L 47 40 47 42 43 43 39 48 40 50

Central Division W L 48 36 45 41 42 44 41 47 39 47

West Division W L 54 33 50 36 48 39 38 49 36 53

LosAngeles Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi Puigrf 5 2 2 1 Rutledgss 4 1 1 0 HRmrzss 5 2 2 2 Dickrsnlf 4 2 2 1

Pct GB .540 .528 1 500 31/2

.448 8

.444 8'/2

T , jjj2wxL

Pct GB

.571 .523 4 .488 7 .466 9 .453 10

7, Cincinnati3. 2B—Gennett(21), Lucroy(30),C.Gomez(21),K.Davis(22), Cozart (14). IP H R E R BBBO Milwaukee GarzaW,6-5 9 2 0 0 2 9 Cincinnati BaileyL,8-5 8 7 1 1 4 8 Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—2:47. A—38,754(42,319).

Pirates 3, Phiiiies 2

PITTSBURGH —EdinsonVolquez allowed one run in sevensharp inningsandAndrew McCutchen hit a two-run homer in the first to lead Pittsburgh to a victory over Philadelphia. Volquez (7-6) had an RBI groundout with the bases loaded in the second inning asthe Pirates moved aseason-high five games over.500 at 46-41. The IP H R E R BBSO Pirates could've added to the 3-0 lead but Gregory Polanco Starling 51-3 10 8 8 0 8 Marte each flew out with menon 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 second and third.

CRonsnph 1 1 1 1 Massetp 0 0 0 0 H owellp 0 0 0 0 Loganp 0 0 0 0 DGordnph-2b1 0 1 0 Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 LeMahi 2b 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 7 8 5 Totals 3 48 12 8 Los Angeles 20 0 000 500 — 7 — 8 Colorado 203 0 1 2 Ogx E—Stubbs (4), Rutledge(7). DP—Los Angeles 2, Colorado 1.LOB —Los Angeles 7, Colorado3. 28 — Puig (22), H.Ramirez(23), A.Elis (5),Dickerson (14), Morneau (20). 38—Culberson (2). HR—Dickerson (11),Stubbs(7). SB—D.Gordon (42), Stubbs (10). — S Haren.

Pct GB

.621 .581 3'/2 .552 6 .437 16 .404 19

Saturday'sGames Boston3, Baltimore2,1st game Minnesota 2, N.Y.Yankees1,11 innings Seattle 3, ChicagoWhite Sox2,14 innings Tampa Bay7, Detroit 2 Cleveland 7, KansasCity3 Baltimore7, Boston4, 2ndgame Texas 5, N.Y.Mets 3 L.A. Angels11,Houston5 Oakland 5,Toronto 1 Today'sGam es KansasCity (Duffy5-7) at Cleveland(Kluber7-6), 10:05a.m. Texas (Tepesch3-3) at N.Y.Mets(Za.Wheeler 3-8), 10:10a.m. Baltimore(Gau sman3-2) atBoston(Peavy1-7),10:35 a.m. N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 5-6) at Minnesota (Nolasco 5-6),11:10a.m. Seattle (TWalker1-0)at ChicagoWhite Sox(Noesi 2-6),11:10a.m. Houston(McHugh4-7) atL.A.Angels (Richards9-2), 12:35p.m. Toronto(Hutchison6-6) at Oakland(Samardzija 0-0), 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay(Price 7-7) at Detroit (Porcello11-4), 5 p.m. Monday'sGames BaltimoreatWashington, 4:05p.m. N.Y. YankeesatCleveland,4:05p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Boston,4:10 p.m. Kansas CityatTampaBay,4:10p.m. Houstonat Texas, 5:05p.m. SanFranciscoatOakland,7:05p.m. TorontoatL.A.Angels, 7:05p.m. Minnesota atSeatle, 7:10p.m.

AdGnzl1b 4 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 0 1 Kemplf 4 0 0 0 Mornea1b 4 1 1 0 Uribe3b 5 0 1 1 Rosarioc 3 1 2 2 Ethiercf 3 0 0 0 Stubbscf 4 2 2 2 A .Ellisc 2 1 1 0 Barnesrf 4 0 1 0 Rojas2b 2 1 0 0 Culersn2b 4 1 1 1 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 Harenp 1 0 0 0 JDLRsp 2 0 1 0 JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 Blckmnph 1 0 1 1

Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 1 7 1 Totals 2 80 2 0 M ilwaukee 1 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 C incinnati 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 DP — Milwaukee1, Cincinnati1. LOB —Milwaukee

LosAngeles HarenL,8-5 J.Wright Howell League

Ann Heisenfeit /The Associated Press

New York Yankees center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury, of Madras, does asomersault after catching a fly to center by Minnesota Twins' Chris Parmelee during the eighth inningof Saturday's game in Minneapolis. The Twins beat the Yankees 2-1 in11 innings.

vid Freesealso homered against the Houston bullpen in theAngels' eight-run seventh inning as Los Angeles beat theAstros for their ninth straight home win. Pujols' 511th homer tied him with Mel Ott for 23rd place onbaseball's career list.

1 0 0 1

1

2 2 3

3

1 0 0 1 HawkinsS,15-16 1 0 0 0 0 Massetpitchedto 4battersin the7th. Loganpitchedto 3battersin the7th.

3 1

T—2:48.A—24,481(42,487).

Twins 2,Yankees1(11 innings) MINNEAPOLIS— Yankees catcher Francisco Cervelli madea throwing error in the 11th inning that allowed Josh Willingham to score from second base,giving Minnesota a victory over New York. With the basesloaded, Trevor Plouffe hit a dribbler to reliever Matt Thornton (1-1 j.The left-hander flipped it to Cervelli for the forceout at home.

3 4 4 1 1 1 1 2

WP—League,Logan. PB—Rosario. Balk—Haren. T—3:25.A—32,926 (50,480).

Braves10, Diamondbacks 4

0 0

Philadelphia Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Reverecf 3 0 0 0 GPolncrf 4 1 1 0 Rollinsss 3 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 0 0 0 Utley2b 3 0 1 0 AMcctcf 4 1 1 2 Howard1b 3 0 0 0 I.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4 1 1 1 GSnchzph-1b1 0 0 0 Asche3b 4 1 1 1 JHrrsn2b-3b 4 0 1 0 DBrwnlf 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz3b 3 1 1 0 Ruppc 3 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 0 0 0 0 CHrndzph 1 0 0 0 Mercerss 2 0 2 0 D Bchnp 2 0 0 0 CStwrtc 2 0 0 0 Mayrryph 1 0 1 0 Volquezp 2 0 0 1 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Sniderph 1 0 0 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 3 0 3 6 3 P hiladelphia 00 0 100 001 — 2 Pittsburgh 2 1 0 0 0 0 ggx— 3 DP — Pittsburgh 1. LOB—Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 5.28—Mercer 2 (14). HR —Byrd (17), Asche

ATLANTA — Andrelton Simmons drove in four runs, Aaron Harang won his third straight start and Atlanta beat Arizona for its season-high ninth straight victory. E—Pearce(1), Lester (2), Pedroia(2), Bogaerts Justin Upton added a two-run ho(6), A.Mccutchen (13).SB—J.Harrison(9). (12). DP —Baltimore 1, Boston2. LOB —Baltimore IP H R E R BBBO 4, Boston 8. 2B —Bradley Jr. (16). HR —Drew(1). mer and a third RBI for the Braves, Philadelphia S—D.Ross. who have won11 of12and are11 D.BuchananL,4-5 6 6 3 3 1 3 IP H R E R BBSO games over.500 for the first time Giles 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 Baltimore Bastardo 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 M.Gonzalez 8 7 2 1 2 6 this season. Pittsburgh Schoop2b 3 0 1 0 D.Rossc 3 0 0 0 BrdlyJrcf 3 1 2 0 JHerrrph 1 0 1 1 Totals 33 2 5 0 Totals 3 2 3 9 2 B altimore 002 0 0 0 000 — 2 Boslon 020 000 001 — 3 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored.

LosAngeles ab r hbi ab r hbi McFarlandL,1-2 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 VolquezW,7-6 7 4 1 1 4 5 Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 Calhonrf 5 2 3 0 Boslon Arizona Atlanta WatsonH,22 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pct GB J castroc 5 1 3 1 Troutcf 5 0 0 0 Lester 8 5 2 0 0 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi MelanconS,16-19 1 1 1 1 0 2 .563 Springrcf 4 1 0 0 Pujols1b 5 2 3 3 UeharaW,4-2 1 0 0 0 0 2 Inciartcf 4 1 1 1 Buptoncf 5 2 2 1 HBP—by D.Buchanan(C.Stewart).PB—C.Stewart. .547 U/2 M Dmn3b 4 1 2 0 JHmltnlf 4 1 0 0 H BP — by M .G onz al e z (Pe droi a ). WP — M .G onz ale z. DPerltlf 4 1 1 0 ASmnsss 5 1 2 4 T — 2: 4 0. A — 37,821 (38, 3 62). .483 7 Carterdh 3 1 1 4 Aybarss 5 2 3 1 T—2;40. A—35,714(37,071). Gldsch1b 4 1 1 1 FFrmn1b 5 3 2 1 .437 11 Singltn1b 4 0 0 0 HKndrc2b 4 1 2 2 MMntrc 4 1 3 1 J.Uptonlf 3 1 2 3 .425 12 K Hrndzss 3 0 0 0 Crondh 5 2 2 3 Marlins 6, Cardinals5 4 0 1 0 Heywrdrf 4 0 1 1 CentralDivision DoSntnrf 3 0 0 0 Congerc 3 0 0 0 NewYork Minnesota Orioies 7,RedSox4(2nd Game) Prado3b A.Hill2b 4 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 0 0 W L Pct GB MGnzlzph 1 00 0 JMcDnl3b 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi GParrarf 3 0 2 1 LaSte02b 3 2 2 0 Milwaukee 52 36 .591 ST. LOUIS —Jeff Baker's RBI hit Hoeslf 3 1 1 0 Freeseph 1 1 1 2 Jeterss 5 0 1 0 Dozier2b 5 0 1 0 Baltimore Boslon Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 Bthncrtc 5 1 3 0 St. Louis 47 41 .534 5 Presleyph 1 0 1 0 Greenpr-3b 0 0 0 0 BRorts2b 5 0 1 0 KSuzukc 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi with two outs in the ninth inning Bolsngrp 2 0 0 0 Harangp 3 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 46 41 .529 5'/2 Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 3 9 111411 Ellsurycf 5 0 1 0 Parmel1b 4 0 0 0 M arkksrf 4 1 1 0 Holt3b 4 1 1 1 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Smmnsp 0 0 0 0 helped Miami rally to beat St. LouCincinnati 44 42 .512 7 Houston 005 000000 5 P earcedh 5 1 2 1 Navarf 3 0 1 1 Teixeir1b 4 0 0 0 Colaegph 1 0 1 0 S titesp 0 0 0 0 Chicago 38 47 .447 12'/2 Los Angeles10010081x — 11 A.Jonescf 5 1 2 0 Pedroia2b 3 0 0 0 Beltrandh 4 0 1 0 KMorlsdh 5 0 0 0 is. Casey McGehee fouled off five C.Rossph 1 0 0 0 West Division LOB —Houston 7, LosAngeles8. 2B—J.castro (14), I Suzukirf 5 1 1 0 Wlnghlf 4 2 1 1 N.Cruzlf 5 1 5 2 D.Ortizdh 3 0 1 0 full-count pitches from Cardinals EDLRsp 0 0 0 0 W L Pct GB Calhoun(12), Pujols(18), Aybar(21). HR—Carter A Sorinlf 4 0 0 0 Arciarf 3 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 Napoli1b 3 1 0 0 Totals 3 3 4 9 4 Totals 3 7101410 closer Trevor Rosenthal (0-4j LosAngeles 50 40 .556 (15), Pujols(19),Cron(9), Freese(4). SB—Springer Gardnrlf 0 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 J Hardyss 5 0 1 1 Drewss 4 1 1 2 Arizona 300 010 000 — 4 SanFrancisco 48 39 .552 '/2 (5), Aybar Machd3b 5 1 20 JGomslf 3 0 0 0 2(10). Cervellic 4 0 2 1 EEscorss 4 0 0 0 before getting the tying hit, with Atlanta 101 602 10x — 10 SanDiego 39 48 448 9'/2 IP H R E R BBSO Z eWhlr3b 3 0 0 0 Fuldcf 4 0 2 0 Hundlyc 5 1 1 2 Przynsc 4 1 1 0 E—Gregorius (4), Goldschm idt (7), A.Simmons Donovan Solano running from Colorado 37 51 .420 12 Houston S choop 2b 5 1 2 0 Betts cf 4 0 1 0 KJhnsn ph-3b1 0 0 0 Arizona 36 53 .404 13'/2 Feldman 2 (8). DP —Atlanta4. LOB —Arizona 4, Atlanta 10. first and just beating a relay to the Totals 43 7 16 6 Totals 3 1 4 6 4 6 6 2 2 0 5 Totals 40 1 7 1 Totals 3 8 2 7 1 Goldschmidt (32), A.Simm ons (9), F.Freeman 000 2 1 4 000 — 7 28 — BassL,1-1 BS,2-4 2-3 4 4 4 0 1 New York 0 0 0 010 000 00 — 1 B altimore Saturday'sGames (25), La St e l a (7), Be t h anc ourt (1). 38—B.Upton(5), plate that catcher Yadier Molina Boslon 0 00 400 000 — 4 Sipp 0 1 3 3 2 0 Minnesota 0 0 0 000 100 01 — 2 FFreeman (3). HR —Inciarte(1), J.Upton(17). CSMiami 6,St.Louis5 1-3 1 1 1 2 2 E—Napoli (3), Nava(4). DP—Baltimore1. LOBZeid Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. couldn't quite handle. Washin gton13,ChicagoCubs0 D.Downs 1 2 1 1 0 1 E—Cervelli (1), Plouffe (7). DP—Minnesota 1. Baltimore11,Boston6. 28—Markakis (18), N.Cruz Heyward(4). S—Harang.SF—J.Upton. IP H R E R BBSO Pittsburgh3, Philadelphia2 LosAngeles LOB —NewYork8, Minnesota9. 28—Colabello (11). 2 (16),Machado(8), Holt (16),D.Ortiz (14). HR —N. Miami Bt. Louis Arizona Atlanta10, Arizona4 H.Santiago 5 6 5 5 3 7 HR — Willingham (8). SB—Jeter (6), I.Suzuki (6). Cruz(27),Hundley(2), Drew(2). SB—N.Cruz(3). ab r hbi ab r hbi 2 5 Colorado 8, L.A.Dodgers7 IP H R E R BBSO BolsingerL,1-5 3 2 -3 10 7 5 RothW,1-0 2 0 0 0 0 2 CS—Ful(1). d 11-3 0 0 0 1 2 Yelichlf 5 2 2 3 MCrpnt3b 4 0 0 0 Delgado Milwaukee1, Cincinnati 0 Jepsen 1 0 0 0 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO Baltimore Stites 1 1 2 1 0 1 S olano2b 5 1 3 0 Hogidylf 2 2 1 1 SanFrancisco5, San Diego3,10 innings U.Jimenez 32-3 5 4 4 6 4 Grilli 1 2 0 0 0 1 NewYork 5 0 1 0 SRonsnlf 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 2 2 Stantonrf Texas 5, N.Y.Mets 3 1 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 0 E.DeLaRosa 2 Sipp pitched to 3baters in the7th. Phelps 7 3 1 1 2 3 BrachW,3-0 M cGeh3b 5 1 3 2 Craig1b 4 1 1 2 Today'sGam es HBP—by H.Santiago (Springer). WP—Feldman, Kegey 0 0 2 Atlanta 2 2 0 0 0 4 Tom.HunterH,2 1 2-3 0 0 4 0 0 0 JhPerltss 5 1 2 1 9 4 3 1 1 GJones1b Milwaukee (Gagardo5-5) at Cincinnati(Latos1-1), Zeid,H.Santiago. 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 HarangW,8-6 8 ThorntonL,0-2 1 2-3 2 1 0 1 1 MatuszH,11 O'DayH,13 1 0 0 0 1 0 JeBakrph-1b1 0 1 1 Descalspr 0 0 0 0 10:10a.m. 1 0 0 0 0 2 SSimmons T—3:36.A—40,479(45,483). Minnesota O zunacf 5 0 1 0 YMolinc 5 0 2 1 Delgado. PB—Bethancourt. Balk—Bolsinger. Texas(Tepesch 3-3) at N.Y.Mets(Za.Wheeler 3-8), 0 0 0 0 0 WP — Pino 6 3 1 1 2 3 Z.BrittonS,13-15 1 L ucasss 4 1 1 0 Jayrf 3010 T—3:00.A—30,405 (49,586). 10:10a.m. Guerrier 1 1 0 0 0 0 Boslon Mathisc 3 1 2 0 Bourjoscf 4 0 1 0 Jays1 Arizona(Miley3-6) at Atlanta(A.Wood 6-6), 10:35 Athletics 5, Blue 5 1 - 3 10 5 5 1 11 Fien 1 1 0 0 0 1 LackeyL,9-6 Heaneyp 2 0 0 0 M.Ellis2b 4 1 1 0 a.m. 3 2 2 0 0 Natienais13, Cubs Perkins 1 0 0 0 0 2 BadenhopBS,2-3 0 0 JaTrnrp 0 0 0 0 SMillerp 1 0 0 0 ChicagoCubs(Arrieta 5-1)at Washington (Zimmer- OAKLAND, Calif.— Josh DonaldLayne 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Burton 1 1 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 mann6-4), 10:35a.m. 12-3 2 0 0 0 1 DuensingW,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Mujica son hit a home run, Scott Kazmir SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Neshekp 0 0 0 0 WASHINGTON — Gio Gonzalez Philadelphi(A. a Burnett5-7) atPittsburgh(Locke1-1), Breslow 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 HBP —by Thornton (Arcia), byPhelps (Arcia). WPBourph 1 0 0 0 MAdmsph 1 0 1 0 10:35a.m. allowed three hits over seven Badenhop pitchedto 3battersinthe 6th. Kegey,Pino. pitched eight sparkling innings MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Miami (H.Alvarez 5-3) at St.Louis(Gonzales 0-1), T—3:36. A—36,468(37,499). T—3:41.A—36,514 (39,021). innings and Oakl a nd beat Toronto. Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 and Ryan Zimmerman tied a 11:15a.m. SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 Coco Crisp, Craig Gentry andJed L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 5-5)at Colorado(Flande0-1), career high with four hits and Totals 4 1 6 146 Totals 3 4 5 105 National League Rays 7, Tigers2 1:10 p.m. Lowrie drove in runs for the A' s , drove in three runs asWashMiami 100 003 002 — 6 San Francisco(Lincecum7-5) at SanDiego(Hahn Bt. Louis 1 00 400 000 — 6 who won their third straight and Giants 5, Padres3 (10 innings) ington roughed upthe Chicago 4-1),1:10p.m. DETROIT — Tampa Bay' s Chris DP — M iami 1. LOB —Miami 9, St. Louis 9. Monday'sGames seventh of 10 overall. Cubs without recently traded Jeff 2B — Ozuna (11), Jay(11). HR —Yelich(7), Craig(7), Archer camewithin two outs of a Baltimore atWashington, 4:05p.m. SAN DIEGO — Brandon Belt hit a Jh.Peralta (13). SB—Jay (3). S—S.Miller 2. Samardzija. Jayson Werth and AtlantaatN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. complete game, holding Detroit Toronto Oakland two-run homer in the 10th inning IP H R E R BBBO ChicagoCubsatCincinnati,4 10 pm. Anthony Rendonaddedthree hits ab r hbi ab r hbi to six hits in the Rays' victory. Miami to give SanFrancisco awin over Philadelphiat a Milwaukee,5:10 p.m. R eyesss 4 1 1 0 Crispcf 5 0 1 1 The Rays broke thegameopen 32-3 8 5 5 3 1 and two RBls for the Nationals on Heaney PittsburghatSt. Louis,5:15 p.m. M ecarrlf 4 0 2 0 Gentrylf 4 0 2 1 San Diego. Belt, in his second Ja.Turner 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 SanDiegoatColorado,5:40p.m. a day the Cubs were forced to start Bautistdh 4 0 1 0 Cespdsdh 4 0 0 0 with three runs in the fifth inning S.Dyson 2 0 0 0 0 3 game back from the disabled list, Miami atArizona,6:40p.m. Encrnc1b 1 0 0 1 Dnldsn3b 4 1 1 1 Carlos Villanueva (4-6) following M .Dunn W ,6-4 1 1 0 0 0 0 and four in the sixth, and the SanFranciscoatOakland,7:05p.m. homered off Dale Thayer (3-3) Lindpr-1b 3 0 0 0 DNorrsc 4 0 1 0 CishekS,19-21 1 1 0 0 0 0 the trade of Samardzija, the schedTigers never mounted much of DNavrrc 4 0 0 0 Freimn1b 4 1 1 0 Bt. Louis after Hunter Penceled off with CIRsms cf 3 0 0 0 Lowrie ss 4 1 2 1 uled starter, and JasonHammelto S.Miller 51-3 9 3 3 1 2 a rally against Archer (5-5j. The American League a double. Belt, who missed 50 Glennrf 2 0 1 0 Callasp2b 4 1 2 0 ManessH,2 12-3 2 1 1 0 2 the Oakland Athletics. 25-year-old right-hander allowed JFrncs3b 3 0 0 0 Sogard2b 0 0 0 0 games with a brokenthumb, hit NeshekH,13 1 0 0 0 0 1 Mariners 3,WhiteSex2 K awsk2b 2 0 0 0 Vogtrf 3120 solo homers to AlexAvila in the 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 ChoateH,5 his10th homer of the season into Chicago Washington (14 innings) Totals 30 1 5 1 Totals 3 6 5 12 4 seventh and J.D.Martinez in the RosenthalL,0-4 1- 3 2 2 2 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi the right-field stands. Toronto 1 00 000 000 — 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 S .Freema n L akecf 4 0 0 0 Spancf 4 1 1 0 HBP—by ninth. Oakland 001 200 02x — 5 S.Dyson(Jay), byHeaney(Holliday). CHICAGO — Brad Miller hit an Rugginrf 4 0 2 0 Hairstnph-If 2 0 0 0 LOB—Toronto5, Oakland 8. 28—Bautista (16), T—3:31. A—45,445(45,399). San Francisco S a n Diego Rizzo1b 3 0 0 0 Rendon2b 4 3 3 2 RBI double in the14th inning, and Lowrie (21), Callaspo(10). HR—Donaldson (19). TampaBay Detroit ab r hbi ab r hbi G rimmp 0 0 0 0 Werthrf 4 2 3 2 S—Kawasaki. Seattle beat the ChicagoWhite ab r hbi ab r hbi Pencerf 4 1 2 0 S.Smithlf 4 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 McLothph-rf 1 0 0 0 Interleague IP H R E R BBBO DJnngscf 5 0 1 1 AJcksncf 4 0 1 0 Belt1b 4 1 1 2 Venalerf 5 0 0 0 Sweenylf Sox for its fifth win in the past six Toronto Scastross 3 0 1 0 LaRoch1b 4 1 1 1 Zobristss 5 0 2 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 1 0 Poseyc 4 0 1 0 Headly3b 4 0 1 0 Castilloc 3 0 1 0 Frndsn3b 1 1 1 1 Rangers 5,Mets3 games.MichaelSaundersreached BuehrleL,10-6 6 10 3 3 1 3 Joycedh 4 1 1 0 Micarr1b 3 0 0 0 S andovl3b 0 0 0 0 Grandlc 4 1 2 0 Olt3b-1b 3 0 0 0 Zmrmn3b-1b 5 2 4 3 1 0 0 0 0 2 S Rdrgzph-dh1 0 1 0 JMrtnzrf 4 1 1 1 Arias3b 5 0 0 0 Goeert1b 3 1 1 1 on an infield single against Ronald Redmond Coghlnlf 3 0 1 0 Harperlf-cf 3 0 1 0 Santos 0 2 2 1 0 0 Longori3b 3 1 1 0 TrHntrdh 4 0 2 0 Morself 5 1 1 1 Maybincf 3 0 0 1 NEW YORK — Robinson Chirinos Wrghtp 0 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 1 2 2 Belisario (3-5j and swiped second Cecil 1 0 0 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 1 0 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 Casillap 0 0 0 0 Conrad2b 2 1 1 0 Barney2b 3 0 0 0 WRamsc 5 1 2 1 hit an early three-run homer, Oakland G uyerlf 3 0 0 1 Avilac 2 1 1 1 GBlanccf 4 2 1 1 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 before Miller hit a drive into the Viganvp 1 0 0 0 GGnzlzp 3 1 1 0 KazmirW,10-3 7 3 1 1 2 8 Forsyth2b 3 2 2 2 AnRmnss 3 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 0 0 Streetp 0 0 0 0 Adrian Beltre connected again Rusinp 1 0 0 0 Espinosph 1 0 0 0 gap in left-center for a ground-rule GregersonH,14 1 2 0 0 0 0 Hanignc 2 1 0 0 RDavislf 4 0 0 0 Panik2b 2 0 1 1 Quentinph 1 0 0 0 and Texas ended asix-game Value n3b 1 0 0 0 S t mmnp 0 0 0 0 Abad 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kiermrrf 4 1 3 3 double. It was Miller's first hit in THudsnp 1 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 0 5 0 Totals 4 1 131912 losing streak with a victory over Santospitchedto 2baters inthe 8th. Colvinph 1 0 0 0 Amarstss 3 0 1 0 Totals 34 7 117 Totals 3 2 2 6 2 sixat-bats on the day. Chicago 000 000 000 — 0 PB — D.Navarro. Balk—Kazmir. T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 3 4 000 — 7 Machip 0 0 0 0 Despgnp 1 0 0 0 Washington 01 6 0 0 2 40x— 13 the New York Mets. Alex Rios had T—2:37. A—20,236(35,067). Affe ldtp 0 0 0 0 Medicaph 1 0 0 0 Detroit 000 000 101 — 2 D P — C hicago 1, Wa shington 1. LOB —Chicago three hits, including an RBIdouSeattle Chicago DP —TampaBay1,Detroit3.LOB— TampaBay B.Hicksph 1 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 4, Washington9. 28—Rendon 3 (21), Werth 2 (19), ab r hbi ab r hbi Romop 0 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 7, Detroi t 7. 28 — K in sl e r (26). 38 — K ierm a i e r 2 (4). indians 7,Royals3 Zimmerman 2 (15), W.Ramos (8). SB—Rendon(8). ble off longtime Texasnemesis J .Jonescf 6 0 0 0 Eatoncf 6 0 1 0 HR — Forsythe (3), J.Martinez(11), Avila(6). SBJ .Perezlf 0 0 0 0 Falu2b 2 0 0 0 CS — S.Castro (2). S—Harper,G.Gonzalez. Bartolo Colon in a four-run first, Blmqstlf 3 0 0 0 GBckh2b 6 0 0 0 Totals 34 5 7 5 Totals 3 3 3 6 3 Longori a (4). SF — G u ye r. IP H R E R BBSO Enchvzph-If 4 0 1 0 JAreu1b 4 0 0 0 CLEVELAND — T.J. House al IP H R E R BBSO San Francisco 010 000 101 2 — 6 and Colby Lewis (6-5j pitched six Chicago Cano2b 5 1 2 0 LeGarcpr-rf 2 0 1 0 San Diego 0 0 0 001 200 0 — 3 TampaBay V iganueva L, 4 -6 2 5 4 4 1 2 steady innings to help the RangHartdh 4 0 1 0 A.Dunndh 5 0 0 0 lowed three runs over 6/s innings ArcherW,5-5 E — D e sp aigne (1). DP — Sa n F ra nci s co 1, San 81 - 3 6 2 2 4 4 Rusin 32-3 9 5 5 1 4 ers win for only the third time in Ackleypr-dh 2 1 0 0 AIRmrzss 6 0 0 0 for his first major leaguewin and Balfour 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Diego1.LOB— San Francisco 7,San Diego 5. Grimm 1 5 4 4 1 3 Seager3b 5 0 0 0 Gillaspi3b 4 1 1 0 28 — Pence (18), Posey(15), Hea dley (9), Grandal Detroit Cleveland beat the KansasCity. 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 17 games. Zuninoc 5 0 0 1 Viciedorf 3 0 1 1 9). 38—Goebbert (1). HR —Belt (10),),Morse(14), WWright A.Sanchez L,5-3 5 2-3 6 7 7 4 1 House (1-2j scattered nine hits, Morrsn1b 6 0 3 0 Sierrapr-rf 0 1 0 0 .Blanco (1). CS — B elt ( 1). S — T .H udson. SF—Pan- Washington Coke 11-3 2 0 0 0 1 G .Gonz a e l z W, 6 4 8 4 0 0 1 7 Texas NewYork MSndrsrf 5 1 3 1 Konerkph-1b 2 0 0 0 struck out three and didn't walk a Chamberlain 1 0 0 0 1 0 ik, S.Smith,Maybin. 1 1 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi BMigerss 6 0 1 1 DeAzalf 5 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Stammen McCoy 2 -3 2 0 0 0 0 batter. The rookie left-hander was B.Hardy Viganueya pitchedto 3battersin the3rd. Choolf 5 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 5 0 2 1 Flowrsc 4 0 0 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 San Francisco WP —Villanueva,Rusin. Soriap 0 0 0 0 DnMrp2b 5 0 1 0 Totals 5 1 3 113 Totals 4 7 2 4 2 making the eighth appearance, T.Hudson 6 3 1 1 0 4 WP—A.Sa nchez. Andrusss 5 1 1 0 DWrght3b 4 0 1 0 Seattle 0 0 0 000 002 000 01 — 3 and seventh start, of his career. MachiBS,1-3 2 - 3 2 2 2 1 1 T—3:10.A—38,473 (41,408). T—3:05.A—38,087 (41,681). R iosrf 4 1 3 1 BAreulf 3 0 1 1 Chicago 000 000 020 000 00 — 2 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Affeldt E—B.Miger (12). DP—Chicago 1. LOB—SeABeltre3b 4 1 1 1 CYoungph-If 0 0 0 0 RomoW,4-3 1 1 0 0 1 1 Brewers1, Reds 0 Cleveland Red Sex3, Orioies 2(1st Game) CasillaS,2-5 L Martncf 3 1 0 0 Duda1b 3 0 1 0 attle11, Chicago6. 28—B.Miler (7), Viciedo(19). KansasCity 1 0 0 0 1 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Chirinsc 4 1 2 3 Campgph-1b 0 0 0 0 38 — Gilaspie (3). SB—Cano (6), M.Saunders (3). San Diego L cainrf 5 1 1 0 Bourncf 3 2 1 1 CINCINNATI — Matt Garza threw C.Pena1b 3 0 1 0 Lagarscf 4 0 0 0 SF — Zunino, Flowers. Despaigne 6 2 1 1 4 2 BOSTON— Nelson Cruzwent a Odor2b 4 0 1 0 dArnadc 4 1 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO H osmer1b 5 1 1 1 Avileslf 0 0 0 0 A.Torres 0 0 1 1 2 0 a two-hitter for his fourth career career-best 5 for 5, including a S.Perezc 4 0 1 0 ACarerss 5 0 2 0 Lewisp 3 0 1 0 Tejadass 4 1 1 0 Beattle Quackenbush 1 0 0 0 0 0 shutout, and Milwaukeeended its Cottsp 0 0 0 0 B.Colonp 3 1 0 0 F.Hernande z 8 3 2 2 1 8 AGordnlf 3 0 1 0 Brantlylf-cf 5 1 3 1 solo home runand abad-hop sinBenoitH,15 1 0 0 0 0 1 Infante2b 4 0 2 1 CSantn1b 5 1 2 0 S hTgsnp 0 0 0 0 Edginp 0 0 0 0 Medina 1 0 0 0 1 1 treetBS,1-24 1 2 1 1 0 1 four-game losing streak by beatgle that scored the go-ahead run S DRrtsnph-If 1 0 1 0 Germnp 0 0 0 0 Furbush 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 BButlerdh 4 0 2 0 Kipnis2b 4 2 2 1 ThayerL,3-3 1 3 2 2 0 2 ing Cincinnati. Despite a slump Niwnhsph 1 0 1 0 Farquhar 12-3 1 0 0 0 3 Valenci3b 4 1 3 1 Chsnhll3b 3 1 2 1 in the sixth inning, and Baltimore A.Torrespitchedto 2battersinthe 7th. WilhelmsenW,1-1 2 0 0 0 0 2 AEscorss 4 0 1 0 Swisherdh 4 0 1 2 WP—A.Torres.PB—Grandal. Balk—Quackenbush. that matched their longest of the Totals 36 5 11 5 Totals 36 3 9 3 beat Boston to earn a split of a JDysoncf 3 0 0 0 DvMrprf 4 0 1 1 Texas 4 01 000 000 — 6 RodneyS,25-27 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:44. A—36,127(42,302). season, the Brewers maintained N ew York Kottarsc 4 0 0 0 day-night doubleheader. TheRed 002 1 0 0 000 — 3 Chicago the best record in the league E—A.Beltre(9). DP—Texas1, NewYork1. LOBQuintana 7 2-3 4 0 0 1 10 Totals 36 3 12 3 Totals 3 7 7 14 7 Sox won the opener3-2 on JonaRockies 8,Dodgers7 City 10 0 001 100 — 3 Texas6, NewYork 8. 2B—Andrus (20), Rios(17), 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Kansas Petricka and a comfortable lead in the NL — 7 than Herrera's one-out, broken-bat C .Pena (1), Granderson(15), D.Wright (21), NieuwenSurkamp 0 0 1 1 1 0 Cleveland 0 0 3 0 3 0 01x Central. DP — Cleyeland2. LOB—KansasCity 8, Cleyeland RBI single off T.J. McFarland in the DENVER huis (5). HR —A.Beltre (11), Chirinos(8), d'Arnaud PutnamBS,1-2 1 3 1 1 0 0 — Drew Stubbs hit a —L.cain (16), Kipnis (14).HR—Valencia (2), (5). SB—R ios(14). Guerra 2 1 0 0 2 2 9. 2B two-run homer, Jorge De La Rosa bottom of the ninth. IP H R E R BBBO —L.Cain(8),A.Escobar(21). Milwaukee Cincinnati BelisarioL,3-5 3 3 1 1 0 1 Bourn(3).SB IP H R E R BBBO pitched six strong innings before ab r hbi ab r hbi Texas Surkamp pitchedto1 batter inthe9th. WP—F.Hernandez,Medina. KansasCity Baltimore Boston Gennett2b 4 0 1 0 BHmltn cf 4 0 0 0 Lewis W, 6 -5 6 8 3 2 0 7 giving way to ashaky bullpen T—4:38.A—23,113 (40,615). GuthrieL,5-7 4 11 6 6 2 5 ab r hbi ab r hbi Braunrf 1 0 0 0 Frazier3b 4 0 0 0 CottsH,9 1 0 0 0 1 2 and Colorado snapped afiveBueno 3 1 0 0 0 2 Markks rf 4 0 1 0 Holtrf 40 1 0 LSchfrrf 3 0 0 0 Votto1b 4 0 0 0 Sh.Togeson H,4 1 0 0 0 1 0 C.coleman 1 2 1 1 1 0 Pearce 1b 4 0 0 0 Navalf 3020 Lucroy c 3 1 1 0 Phillips 2b 2 0 1 0 SoriaS,16-17 1 1 0 0 0 1 game skid by holding off the NL Angels11, Astros5 Cleveland N.Cruzdh 4 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 30 1 0 CGomzcf 3 0 1 0 Brucerf 3000 New York West-l eading LosAngelesDodgHouseW,1-2 6 2 - 3 9 3 3 0 3 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 Napoli1b 3 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 2 1 Mesorcc 3 0 0 0 B.ColonL,8-7 7 8 5 5 2 3 11-3 1 0 0 1 0 12-3 3 0 0 0 1 ShawH,11 C.Davi3b s 4 0 0 0 Przynsdh 4 0 0 0 KDavisIf 3 0 1 0 SchmkrIf 2 0 0 0 Edgin ANAHEIM, Calif.— Albert Pujols ers. The Rockies are3-16 since 1 2 0 0 1 1 JHardyss 4 0 0 0 Bogarts3b 4 0 0 0 MrRynl1b 3 0 0 0 Cozartss 3 0 1 0 Germen 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 hit a go-ahead, two-run home run, Allen June16 — with De LaRosa(9-6j Guthriepitchedto 4baters in the5th. DYong If 3 1 0 0 Drewss 3 1 1 1 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Baileyp 2 0 0 0 Cotts pitched to 1batterin the8th. and C.J. Cronand pinch-hitter Da- WP — Allen. CJosph c 3 1 2 0 JGomsph 11 1 0 accounting for each win. Thelefty Garza p 3 0 1 0 B.Pena ph 1 0 0 0 T—3:10. A—24,418(41,922). NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 49 38 Washington 47 39 Miami 42 45 NewYork 38 49 Philadelphia 37 50

Houston

1

Colorado J.De LaRosaW,9-6 6 3 Masset 0 Logan 0 OttavinoH,13 2

\


D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

M's

MLB COMMENTARY

A -Star Game cou use twea s By Paul Sullivan Chicago 7/ibune

And one in which the Mariners

Nextup

the other.

MLB All-Star Selection Show nub Day, more commonly referred to as All-Star selection When: Today,4p.m. TV: ESPN day, is here again. While some may focus on the actu- Mesozoic Era. If your team has no al makeup of the All-Star teams, the All-Star-caliber players, blame manmore interesting stories are often the agement. If this is really more than guys with deserving stats who have to an exhibition game, the best players stay home. should be on the field. 7ypically the snubbed players say • The current system allows for 34 they really need the break and care playersfor each league — 12 pitchers only about helping the team win in the and 22 position players. There's no second half. But it's all a lie. This isn't need for that many, and several don't the Pro Bowl, where players line up get to play. Cut the rosters to 28 — nine with excuses not to go. pitchers and 19 position players. Participating in baseball's All-Star •Keep thefan votebecause they'r e Game is considered a privilege by the ones watching, but stop letting most, with exceptions such as Gar- players, managers, coaches and league ry "If I ain't startin', I ain't departin' " officials choose the nonstarters and Templeton. pitchers. Some are clueless and vote on Yet as much as we enjoy the All-Star reputation alone. With advanced stats Game, it could use some tinkering to becoming the norm to evaluate playmake it even better. Here are a few ers, let wins above replacement (WAR) changes I'd make: act as the unbiased decision-maker for • Instead of giving the winning everyone but the starting lineups. league home-field advantage in the After the fans choose the starters, World Series, give it the right to play the first nine backup spots (one for by its league rules. In other words, a each position, including DH in the AL) designated hitter in every game if the should automatically go to the remainAL wins and no DH at all if the NL ing players with the top WAR number wms. at their respective positions. This idea was first mentioned to me The top remaining players, again by the late umpire Marty Springstead, based on WAR, are placed in the Final who believed home-field advantage Vote category, which now would be should be reserved for the team with strictly reserved for hitters. But instead the better record, forcing division win- of only one player being selected, sevners who clinch early to play hard to eral players could make it, depending the final pitch. Playing for league rules on how many are automatically in via instead of home-field advantage would fan voting or best WAR number. make World Series strategy more inFor example, the Angels' Erick teresting, putting the pressure on the Aybar and the Royals' Alcides Escomanagers. bar had the top two WAR numbers • Move the game from Tuesday to enteringthe weekend among AL Wednesday. That would be the side shortstops. Derek Jeter's selection by day for any pitcher who starts on the fans would push Aybar to the reserve Sunday before the break, making all spot and bump Escobar to the Final starters eligible to pitch at least one Vote ballot. The White Sox's Jose lnIllng. Abreu ranked fourth in WAR among • End the rule that states every AL first basemen and also would team has to have one representative. have to make it on the Final Vote balThis made sense when there were lot. But both Abreu and Escobar could eight teams in each league during the make the team now, instead of one or

S

"The three or four that are really trying to move, they think they're the only ones moving," Continued from 01 The give-and-take of "going for he said. "So we're going to be it" now, balanced against the po- patient. We're going to be smart. tential to disrupt the future, is an Jack's been great about that. I'd eternal dilemma this time of year. like to make the playoffs four

As of the latest voting, nine of the 17

players in the starting lineups had the highest WAR (or top three among outfielders) at their respective positions. The ones who didn't were Jeter, Yoenis Cespedes, Robinson Cano and Matt Wieters for the AL and Yadier Molina,

Chase Utley, Andrew McCutchen and Aramis Ramirez for the NL.

The nine-man pitching staffs would consist of six starters and three relievers. The starting pitchers would have the top WARs in their leagues — Felix

Hernandez and Clayton Kershaw as of Friday — so there's no need to debate. Relative unknowns such as the In-

dians' Corey Kluber (fifth in WAR among AL starters) and the Braves' Julio Teheran (sixth among NL starters) would get the nod over excellent pitchers such as the Rays' David Price

and the Dodgers' Zack Greinke. Sorry, but it's a numbers thing. Ditto for the bullpens, where Yankees middle reliever Dellin Betances

(first in WAR among AL relievers) would make the cut while Mariners

closer Fernando Rodney (24 saves) would stay home. • Let fans in on the Home Run Der-

by. Instead of having "captains" pick the sluggers, it should be done via fan vote. If a player declines, the one with

the next-highest vote total gets the opportunity to participate. Instead of having the participants

bring in their own guy to pitch, let fans of each team compete for the chance to throw. Each team holds a lottery and

picks eight finalists, then lets them throw a first pitch before a home game before fans vote for a winner, "Ameri-

can Idol" style. If your team's slugger is selected for the Home Run Derby, the lucky fan

gets to groove pitches to him in front of a packed ballpark and a national TV audience. How cool would that be?

• Have Vin Scully call the game for Fox. We get enough Joe Buck on baseball and NFL games all year. It's time to honor the best there ever was.

out of the next five years. So let's

have come out on the wrong end make smart long-term decisions too many times. and make sure we're not selling Mather says, emphatically, our souls for '14, because we've that the Mariners have the figot young talent. Other clubs are nancialresources to enhance the interested in our young talent." roster, despite speculation to the Again, it is a delicate balance. contrary. The Mariners remember Adam "I've heard national reporters Jones for Erik Bedard, Shin-Soo have said that Jack (Zduriencik, Choo for Ben B r oussard and the general manager) has no flex- Adrubal Cabrera for Eduardo ibility, that's why he's trading like Perez as much as you do. We (salaries) for like," Mather said. will not even get into ancient "One day, I called him in and I history like David Ortiz, Jason said, 'You know, we have flexi- Varitek and Derek Lowe. They bility.' He said: 'I know. Kevin, it's are very cognizant of the danjust part of the negotiations.'" ger of giving up top prospects Mather added:"We have flex- now and watching them blosibility. Our owners are excited som elsewhere later. The A's are where we are." facing that risk in the Cubs' deal Mather said t h e M a r i ners by giving up shortstop Addison were going hard after free agent Russell, one of the top prospects Kendrys Morales as the draft in baseball, as well as last year's approachedin early June, after f irst-rounder, o u tfielder B i l l y which other teams could sign McKinney. him without giving up draft-pick But a sniff of the playoffs can compensation. be alluring, especially for a franMorales wound up signing chise that has been shut out for 13 with the Minnesota Twins for a years. "It would be nice for the fans," reported $7.4 million — roughly the prorated portion of the Mather said. "It would be nice $12.1-million qualifying offer that for this community, the whole Morales had turned down from Northwest." the Mariners in the offseason. And so the debate will continMorales also turned down a "real ue through July — beef up, or sit offer" the Mariners made last tight'? And at what cost? "The one thing that gives us September, Mather confirmed. "As the draft got closer and an advantage — we have flexcloser, we were the only ones in ibility," said Mather, who was a good spot to sign him," Mather interviewed Thursday, before said. "We had numerous conver- the Oakland deal. "I'll take that sations with his agent. Whether it player, and I don't have to give up was miscommunication, whether as much because I'm taking the he was representing he could get money as well. Because we have more than he ended up getting, flexibility, we're in a pretty good I don't know and I don't want to spot. And this little run of good say. But we think he's a heck of baseball we're playing puts us in a hitter. We would have loved to a pretty good spot, because there have had him." will be more sellers than buyers, Mather notes that the second hopefully, in the next two or three wild-card team has made it so weeks." that most of the teams are conThe ensuing debates over posvinced they are still contenders, sible trades are going to be fun. It complicating trade negotiations. sure beat the alternative.

TENNIS' WIMBLEDON

Young Americansshowing promise was "never boring." Kozlov, despite being youngWIMBLEDON, England er,turned professional years "It's not pretty at t he ago, saying college was never moment, but the cavalry is somethinghe considered. "I would love to go to colcoming," Patrick McEnroe By Ben Rothenberg

New York Times Service -

said last month of the state

of U.S. men's tennis. Though no American

because they're looking for right thing to do for me," he that next person who is going said, adding, "Nadal and Fed- to be the future of American erer, I don't think those guys

tennis," he said. "But I also feel

like that somewhat hinders some of our development as

louder last week on the soft

Taylor Harry Fritz, 16, a Californian who lost to Rubin

well, especially people who in the semifinals, said he had get the most attention." "That's a lot of pressure," not decided about college. But Fritz, whose 133 mph serve

Fritz added.

overshadows a thoughtful, ar-

happened to Donald Young.

spisil, his first-time partner, ticulate nature, understands over the top-seeded twins why the spotlight has turned Bob and Mike Bryan, 7-6 to his generation with the cur(5), 6-7 (3), 6-4, 3-6, 7-5, on rent drought at the profession-

They're the future, the next best thing. It's just a lot to live

al level. He also understands

In the boys' singles draw, how that spotlight might burn

By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

LONDON — Petra Kvitova plays so much

Court grass with her right thigh heavily bandaged, displaying defensive skill that she's not necessarily known for. It was telling that

better at the All England Club than anywhere Bouchard lost in such a lopsided manner deelse, and now she owns two championships to spite fourunforced errors. "I mean, (a) few shots was really incredible, prove it. In one of the most dominant performances in and I really couldn't believe that I made it, actua women's final at Wimbledon, the sixth-seed- ally," said Kvitova, who was within two points ed Kvitova of the Czech Republic overpowered of defeat against Venus Williams in the third and overwhelmed13th-seeded Eugenie Bouch- round. "I said, 'Oh, my God, this is good!'" ard of Canada 6-3, 6-0 in only 55 minutes SatThe match was played under a heavy cover urday to add to her 2011 title at the grass-court of clouds, and it seemed as if Bouchard's best Grand Slam. chancetoregroup would be arain delay. "I know," Kvitova said, "this is the best tour"I don't know," Bouchard's mother, Julie nament for me." Leclair, said, "if there was much she could've Absolutel y true.He rcareerrecord of26-5 at done." Wimbledon translates to an .839 winning perA shower arrived minutes after the brief-ascentage,compared tohermarks of .667 atthe could-be final concluded. Before the trophy prethree other majors and.681 at all other events. sentation, the retractable roof was closed, and In 2014, Kvitova lost in the first round at the both players left the court for a bit. Bouchard hard-court Australian Open, and in the third was told to wait in the room used to engrave round at the clay-court French Open. But get champions' names. "I was watching them work," Bouchard said, her on the grass court, and those speedy serves "wishing one day — dreaming — that he'll and flat forehands really shine. "For sure, she was on," Bouchard said. "We write my name somewhere." know that when she's on, she's very tough to The previous time a runner-up won only beat. Especially on this surface." three games in the Wimbledon final was 1992, On Saturday, the 24-year-old Kvitova cer-

tive toward our generation,

lege, but I think that pro is the

went to college."

Saturday.

Kvitova scores second title

making people more atten-

round in singles at Wimbledon, the hoofsteps got

Nebraskan, won the men's doubles title with Vasek Po-

Sang Tan /The Associated Press

now isn't the best, and it's

man reached the fourth

grass. Jack Sock, a 21-year-old

Petra Kvitova celebrates defeating Eugenie Bouohard in their women's singles final at Wimbledon, London, on Saturday.

those who are not ready for it. "I feel like how the pros for the Americans is going right

"That's what

up to. I wouldn't want people saying that, and me having to go out every single time I play and live up to this."

seven of the last 16 were Americans. Three of the

four semifinalists were Americans as well, as are both finalists, Noah Rubin and Stefan Kozlov. It will be the f i rst W i m bledon

boys' singles final between two Americans since 1977, when Van Winitsky beat Eliot Teltscher.

r

Rubin, 18, who is from R ockville C e ntre, N e w York, and Kozlov, 16, who

was born in Macedonia, are closefriends who of-

9

II •

ten room together. Rubin, who said he was deciding

between Wake Forest and

Virginia for college, said sharing space with Kozlov

Find It All

Online bendbulletin.com

Widgi Creek G OL F C L I J B

1 8707 SW Century ~r.,

end

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when Steffi Graf beat Monica Seles. Before

tainly was "on." Oh, was she ever. Pretty much that, it hadn't happened since 1983, when anperfect in every way. other Czech lefty, Martina Navratilova, defeatThe left-hander hit serves that reached 113 ed Andrea Jaeger. mph (182 kph) and earned easy points. WalJust 10 times in the history of a women's loped big, deep returns that left Bouchard little tournament first played in 1884 has a champitime to react. Smacked flat groundstrokes off on ceded fewer games in the final than Kvitova both wings that zipped right where she intend- dld. ed, often skidding near lines, helping accumuKvitova, who was thrilled to have nine-time late a 28-8 edge in winners. Won 11 of 14 points champion Navratilova present Saturday, reshe played at the net. mains the only player born in the 1990s to win Most surprisingly, even to Kvitova herself, a major singles title. Bouchard, 20, would have was the way she motored around the Centre been the second.

nl e

6

C' i i r

i

i

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE

D5

GOLF ROUNDUP

Kittecaims Tour's irststa einEn an By Jamey Keaten

tal career victories, to 60 for

The Associated Press

Kittel, according to the Tour's Web site.

HARROGATE, E n g land Mark C avendish w ent down in a late crash. Marcel Kittel's hands went up in vic-

As the sprinters battled it out Saturday, the two favorites for victory in the three-

tory. And British royals who

week race, Alberto Contador

turned out for the Tour de

and Chris Froome, finished

France debut in England witnessed new signs of a changing of the guard among two of the world's top sprinters.

safely in the trailing pack that clocked the same time as Kittel.

A second German excelled too: Veteran Jens Voigt took the polka-dot jersey as the race'sbestclim ber,afterget-

For many British fans, with

cycling's greatest race making a rare start in England on Saturday, Stage 1 wasn't supposed to end this way: They wanted British speedster Cavendish to get his first race leader's yellow jersey and 26th career Tour stage

ting out early on a three-man breakaway that first cleared

three low-grade hills, including Buttertubs pass. At 42, the Trek rider is the oldest

competitor this year: This is his 17th Tour, equaling the record. The nervous first day in-

win after the 190.5-kilometer

(118-mile) ride through Yorkshire countryside. But with the pack swelling in intensity and his rivals up front as the finish neared, Cavendish leaned his head to his left into Australia's Si-

cluded other mishaps. Un-

told tens of thousands of fans turned out in such big Peter Dejong /The Associated Press

German sprinter Marcel Kittel, second right, crosses the finish line ahead of second place Peter Sa-

mon Gerrans, and their bikes gan of Slovskia, third from right, third placed Ramunas Navardauskss of Lithuania, right, and fourth t umbled to th e g r ou nd with the Briton coming down

place France's Bryan Coquard, left, to win the first stage of the Tour de France over 190.5 kilometers

(118.4 miles) in Harrogate, England, Saturday.

G ermany's

K i t te l t h e n

made it look easy by dusting three other rivals at the finish. Cavendish got up gingerly and cruised across, cradling his right arm, and got into an ambulance. Tests

showed a separated right shoulder. His team said it would be decided today if Cavendish rides in Stage 2 from York to Sheffield. Contrite despite the pain,

Cavendish said he was "gutted" about the crash. "It was my fault. I'll per-

sonally apologize to Simon Gerrans as soon as I get the chance. In reality, I tried to

find a gap that wasn't really there. I wanted to win today,"

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Montoya wins Indy pole at Pocono

he said in a statement. "Sor-

Nextup

ry to all the fans that came out to support — it was truly

Tour de France(Stage 3) When: Monday, 4a.m.

Saturday "robust" discussion will go

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.— The day

into setting the 2015 schedule.

race at Daytona International Speedway ended up atnight. And now the night race will go off during the day. Steady rain forced NASCARto postpone the Sprint Cup raceat Daytona International Speedwayon Saturday night. It's the second race at Daytona this year delayed by rain. The season-opening Daytona 500 was stopped for more than six hours because of rain andended under the

son, coupled with NBC taking over the

comprehensive look at what the best

Pocono Raceway. Driving for Team Penske

schedule will look like," he said. France also noted multiple weather

in his open-wheel return after

delays this year at several race tracks as

seven years in NASCAR, the Colombian knocked offPenske

reason for considering tweaks. Saturday night's scheduled race at Daytona

teammate Will Power on the fi-

was postponed until today because of

nal qualifying run Saturday.

rain, and the season-opening Dayto-

erage of 223.871 mph for both atrackrecord and hisfirstcareer IndyCar pole.

na 500 was stopped for more than six hours.

Bristol had a significant rain delay in March and Texas was postponed a day

Montoya won a Pocono pole in NASCAR in August 2012.

in April.

He also won 14 open-wheel

as you well know, in the last several

poles in CART in 1999-2000.

years at Bristol as an example, and then some other things that we would naturally look at as we go along in the

Carlos Munoz joined Montoya and points leader Power on the front row. Takuma

"There's been some weather issues,

lights.

"We seem to have alittle bad luck with the weather," said Joie Chitwood

III, the track president. "We had it in February and wehave it right now." The Coke Zero 400 will start at11

a.m. today, about14 hours after officials postponed theevent. The forecast calls for more rajn today, but Chitwood said scheduling anearly start gives NASCAR a "bigger window of time to get It in." — The Associated Press

schedule, and now that the Chase for-

mat is changed, there's additional inter-

James Hinchcliffe completed

est to move from one place to another,"

the second row. Montoya had the good for-

he said. lower series. But,France said there are no current Although NASCAR officials talked plans to award a coveted Sprint Cup about potentially implementing a rule race to Iowa Speedway. The track was in February, France said Saturday that acquired last year by NASCAR sis- nothing is on the horizon. "That's always a question," he said. ter company International Speedway Corp., but only hosts the Nationwide "When a Cup driver gets in and has a Series, Truck Series and IndyCar. lot of success — Mark Martin did that "We're working with the state repre- for a long time in the Nationwide — and sentatives and others to help us build there's always that balance. But where racing in Iowa to the highest level that we usually come out on that is that the we can," he said. "But they've got a nice younger drivers gain valuable expefull schedule with IndyCar and Na- rience even if somebody gets on a run tionwide, and I think that's where that and tends to win more events than is

a turn atop the leaderboard. Helio Castroneves, Andretti, Sato and Power all set the

one-lap track record and held the provisional pole. Montoya snagged it when it counted. Also on Saturday: Rosberg takes pole position at British GP: SILVERSTONE,

England — Formula One championship leader Nico Rosberg claimed pole position for the British Grand Prix, sur-

passing Mercedesteammate Lewis Hamilton on the last lap

of a shock-filled and rain-hit qualifying session. Langdon sets track record in Top Fuel qualifying: NORWALK, Ohio — Defending s eason c h ampion

S h awn

Langdon had a track-record run in the Summit Racing Equipment NHRA Nationals

to lead Top Fuel qualifying for the third time this season. Del Worsham topped the Funny Car field, points leader Erica Enders-Stevens was the fastest in Pro Stock, and Eddie Krawiec led the Pro Stock Mo-

torcycle lineup.

remains."

ers, most of them, almost all of them, like to figure out where they're at on the

extend through 2024.

"We've liked the fact that to do it in South Florida, the weather is great that

sound as if it's close to limiting Cup drivers to a certain number of starts in

normal.

ers not just on Sundays. We tend to let the events unfold the way they unfold."

day to extend his advantage to two strokes over Angel Cabrera entering the final round of

the Greenbrier Classic. "I've been working for a long time to win on the PGA

Tour," Hurley said. "I figure if I shoot the lowest score tomorrow, I can't lose."

Hurley never relinquished the lead he has held since midway through the second round

Kasey Kahne won the last two Nation-

touched on Saturday at Daytona: wide races and there wasn't the same Driver limits? Sprint Cup regular fan uproar. "It's never an individual issue," he Kyle Busch has won all five Truck Series races he has entered this season said. "It's true that if a Cup driver domand been nearly as dominant in the inates in a lower division, it's undersecond-tier Nationwide Series, posting standable why people will shake their 12 top-five finishes in 13 starts. Fans head. We balance that against the idea have taken notice, with many of them that fans like to see the younger drivers crying foul play. But NASCAR doesn't with the veterans, and the younger driv-

He had a 12-under 198 total. No third-round leader has

won the Greenbrier Classic, now in its fifth year. Playoffs have decided the tournament twice. Cabrera shot 64. He's look-

and credits the emphasis placed on

at 9 under after a 69. Steve

winning for an uptick in action. There have been 10 winners through 17 races,

Stricker had a 68 to top the group at 8 under. There will be more than a trophy to raise and a $1.2 mil-

and NASCAR this season has set a win-

and-get-in model for the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. The 16-driver field will be set follow-

ing the September race at Richmond, so there are nine more opportunities for drivers to gain berths into the field.

"I think we can all see the benefits of changing the winning importance, and it in fact has changed the racing on the track," he said. "The drivers are telling us that. They're taking different kind of chances. They're going for wins when they would have played it safe otherwise.

"I think that's just going to get more intense as we close in on Richmond and w e seedthe field here." Dover dilemma: Dover International

Speedway had swaths of empty seats last month, continuing a trend of declin-

on the PGA Tour.

Kevin Chappell was third

lion winner's check available

today. The four best finishers not previously eligible for the British Open among the top 12 on the final leaderboard will earn spots in the July 17-20 tournament at

R o yal

Liverpool. Hurley finished his fiveyear Navy service in 2009 and would still be a naval officer if golf wasn't keeping him busy. He returned to the PGA Tour

this year after playing on the Web.com Tour in 2013. He said nerves won't play a

part in how he gets ready for what could be a memorable

that's under"a lot of pressure." Dover has two races annually, and with attendance sagging, it's unclear

Sunday. "I'm going to keep doing what I'm doing," he said. "I just want to put my mind in position so that I can play well. I slept fine last night. The benefit of the Navy if you learn how to sleep anywhere. I think I'll

how long NASCAR will continue with

sleep fine tonight, too."

that model. Several other tracks, including Las Vegas, Iowa and Road America, would love to add a Sprint Cup race. "Well, we don't have a timetable on

Old White sets up nicely for Cabrera's long drives and he

ing attendance at the Delaware track.

Longtime observers said the crowd was the smallest in years, and France

that and we don't like to think of it that way," France said. "We like to think

that historically important events work themselves out over time, and some of

that is on us, too. We've got to constantly figure out how to make our racing tighter, better. I mean, that's why I spent

so much time telling you that we are zeroed in on that.

outcome."

Souvenir sale: France acknowledged France also doesn't think the issue is NASCAR is exploring new ways to sell specific to Busch, who seems to draw souvenirs, which are done at race tracks

time of year, it's a good market for us," the ire of fans whenever he wins in the he said. lower divisions. Kevin Harvick and Here are five other things France

The former U.S. Navy officer shot a 3-under 67 on Satur-

ing for his first non-major win

"So we try to balance that out, but "I think we don't put a timeline on France also indicated the season finale is staying put for the "foreseeable fu- we lean on the side of the greater expe- that. We're working with our track opture" at Homestead-Miami Speedway. rience for the younger drivers to get a erators, the ones that have more chalThe track recently extended its spon- chance to compete against, and also for lenges than others, and we'll just have sorship agreement with Ford Motor Co. our fans to want to watch the elite driv- to work through it and try to get a good through at least 2019, with an option to

round lead for the first time on the PGA Tour.

skill curve." Chase changes: France is so far pleased with the on-track competition

acknowledged that Dover is a market

Sato, Marco Andretti and

tune of going out last after one driver after another took

much rest sitting on a third-

before dropping a stroke on the par-3 15th.

Sprint Cuprace postponed

A revamped format to the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship this sea-

W HIT E SUL PHUR SPRINGS, WVa. — Billy Hurley III doesn't plan to lose

at Old White TPC. He birdied the par-5 12th and par-4 13th

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — NASCAR Chairman Brian France said

The Associated Press

how to top the speed chart at

Montoya had atwo-lap av-

The Associated Press

2015 schedule changes to be discussed

open wheel or a stock car, Juan Pablo Montoya knows

LONG POND, Pa. — In

Yorkshire, th e l a r gest county in England, has paid

NASCAR NOTEBOOK

By Jenna Fryer

extends

altogether.

for me to beat Mark Caven- richly for the right to host the incredible." dish ... in his home country." Tour. The peloton sped by ab"It's not nice to have Mark The sprint specialist from TV:NBCSN beys in ruins and sights like the Isle of Man had a lot ridcrash. Nobody wants that," 14th century Bolton Castle, ing on this stage: His mother have wanted to be in Kittel's he added. near Leyburn, before finishis from Harrogate. He had pedal-clip shoes when Kate, Early signs that Britain's ing in Harrogate, known for said winning Saturday was the Duchess of Cambridge, sprint king may be losing its spas. one of his key goals this year. handed the yellow jersey to his crown came at last year's In recent years, Britain has And he had a bit to prove: the German, and she, hus- Tour, when Kittel beat him in been cycling-crazed: Prime Kittel, a 26-year-old rising band Prince William and similar circumstances. Do- Minister David Cameron was star in sprinting, won four Prince Harry flanked him, ing it at two Tours in a row in the crowd on Saturday too. Tour stages last year, to Cav- clapping, on the winner's po- suggests that he really does England hosts the first three endish's two. Many Britons dium in Harrogate. have Cavendish's numberstages of this 101st Tour be"Before the stage, I said it although there are still plenty fore riders enter France on wanted him to win gold in the road race at the London was one goal, maybe, to be of chances at this Tour for the Tuesday. In all, the 198 riders 28-year-old Briton to come are tocover 3,664 kilometers Olympics, but that quest also with Kate on the podiumended in disappointment. and also, of course, Harry back, if healthy. (2,277 miles) of road before Cavendish surely would and William," said K i t tel, Cavendish still has 116 to- the July 27 finish in Paris.

second half of the television schedule next season, gives NASCAR an opportunity to make scheduling changes. "There will be a robust discussion that will be for those reasons a more

The Associated Press

who also won Stage 1 at last year's Tour. "It was not a goal

Hurley lead at Greenbrier

numbers that a train service shuttle between the start and finish towns was crammed, a nd some had to w ait f o r

90 minutes or even longer to get aboard — or gave up

hard.

Chris Tilley/The Associated Press

Billy Hurley Iil looks over his putt on the14th green during the third round of the Greenbrier Classic in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., on Saturday.

in rows of haulers located outside of the

made four birdie putts of 19

feet or longer. "I was able to get the speed of the greens, and that was the

big difference," Cabrera said. Also on Saturday: Stadler takes lead to four in France: SAINT-QUENTIN-EN-YVELINES, France — American Kevin Stadler shot a 1-over 72 in windy and rainy conditions to increase

his French Open lead to four strokes. Thailand's Thongchai Jaidee (69) and France's Victor Riu (73) were tied for second. U.S. Open champion Martin Kaymer (70) was fourth, six strokes behind Stadler. Winds lead to postponement

facilities. Reportedly under discussion is overhauling the entire experience

in Nova Scotia: HA LIFAX,

and creating a sort of super store — a tent that would include all driver mem-

from Tropical Storm Arthur

orabilia in one spot. "We really want to have higher quality merchandise available in more places and make it more convenient for our

Nova Scotia — High wind forced Web.com Tour officials to postpone the third round of the Nova Scotia Open. En-

vironment Canada measured wind gusts topping 72 mph

fans," France said. "We do think there's

in Halifax. The tour will try

probably some newer, better ways that we can merchandise to our fans."

to complete 36 holes today at Ashburn Golf Club.


D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

Amazon

level of water recorded in the

Continued from D1 So young players and adults improvise.They play soccerat a community center that has a roof but no walls. They play on the dock of a restaurant. And they play on a parked ferry, a few wearing life jackets to cushion their falls on the metal deck and stay afloat while retrieving the ball from

sald. As scientists study the im-

the river.

Rio Negro, in 2010, Schongart

Amazon basin, and the cool-

ing and warming of the Pacific Ocean, extreme patterns observed over the last 25 or 30

years raise an important unanswered question, Schongart said: "Are these trends hu-

man-induced climate change, or can we explain this with

far, chased it with a canoe.

go of Rio de Janeiro, on her outboard motor. She flies

Finally, though, the players gleefully jumped in the

the team flag every time she

river after the ball. As they

launches herboat. dripped water, the center's "My father loved Flamengo, floor became as slippery as an so I do, too," de Sousa said. ice rink. Players collapsed in Apart from soccer and laughter as they tried, often fuschool, there is not much for tilely, to stay on their feet. "I like it here, but the land is children to do here during the wet season except to fly small better because when you fall kites, some made from the you don't hurt yourself," said plastic of supermarket bags, Aldenei Texeira, 14. the strings wrapped around Near dusk, as adults arcans of soda. rived from work in Manaus, "We don't like dominoes or the pickup game moved to the cards," said Ferreira Viana, tiny dock at the Paracambi the soccer organizer. "We only Restaurant. "It's like two sports in one-

like football." The Amazon River basin,

swimming and football," said

the world's largest, drains

Raimunda Ferreira Viana, 51,

the community president and contiguous United States. And the mother of its chief soccer because the houses, the school organizer. and even the provisional socFour or five years ago, the cer fields in Catalao are built local owner of a construction to float, the yearly flooding company began off ering the has historically been accom- use of other makeshift fields: modated with relatively mini- ferries that carry vehicles and mal impact. heavy equipment on the river. "The h i gher t h e w a t er, Small wooden goals are the closerwe are to God," placed on the deck, and some an area nearly the size of the

said Laercio da Silva, 43, a carpenter.

players wear soccer cleats.

Games are usually held in late Yet in Catalao, residents afternoon because the iron have been confronted with the surface can be blistering in effectsof a recent trend of in- equatorial heat. creasing floods and droughts On a recent Saturday, three in the Amazon basin. A white teams of five players gathered ringpainted around atreerep- on an aging, rusty ferry that resentsa record levelofwater was nearly 200 feet long and reached during flooding in about 50 feet wide. An aban2012. doned gasoline canister was used to scoop rainwater off the The high-water mark in the Rio Negro this year was deck. Daniel Camilo Viana, 22, a the fifth highest in more than a century of measurements woodcutter, wore a life jacket. taken at the Port of Manaus

If he had to jump into the Rio

— about a foot and a half be- Negro for the ball, he said, "I low the 2012 record of 98 feet 4 don't want to go too deep." Gilcivane da Silva, 24, a inches, said Jochen Schongart, an expert on flood prediction housewife who has lived in models at the National Institute of Amazonian Research.

Catalao for o nly

a m o n th,

at the Manaus airport. A lo-

played on the ferry for the first time and won three games as a defender. "Very cool," she said, but there was no chasing

cal state of emergency was declaredas a preventive mea-

the ball in the water. "I think an animal will catch me."

Before the World Cup, heavy rain caused flooding

Not to worry, said Ferreigames at Arena Amazonia ra V i ana, t h e c o m munity were affected. president. "The caimans don't bite us," Three consecutive y ears of severe flooding around she said. "They're our friends. sure, though none of the four

Manaus came after the lowest

Continued from 01 Yedlin, who made his de-

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HassanAmmar /The Associated Press

Netherlands' goalkeeper Tim Krul saves the last penalty kick during the World Cup querterfinel soccer match between the Netherlands and Costa Rica in Salvador, Brazil, on Saturday. The Nther-

landswon 4-3 onpenalty kicks.

We live in the same water."

U C ci e S 0 0 OLl,

a vance OSemiinaS ROUNDUP

SALVADOR, Brazil — L ouis van Gaal made the call, and Tim Krul made the saves. In another move that will only add to his reputation as a tactical mastermind, the Netherlands coach led his team into the World Cup

In the semifinals, the Netherlands will face

Lionel Messi and his Argentina teammates in Sao Paulo on Wednesday. Although Krul made the decisive stops in semifinals after bringing on Krul with sec- the shootout, it was Costa Rica goalkeeper onds remaining in extra time. Keylor Navas that was the star of the match. Moments later, Krul saved two penalties in Navas made a string of saves to keep the a 4-3 shootout victory over Costa Rica, mak- attacking Dutch scoreless for 90 minutes of ing the Manchester United-bound Van Gaal regulation time and 30 minutes of extra time. again look like a football genius. His night, however, will forever be over"It worked out," Van Gaal said Saturday af- shadowed by Krul, and by Van Gaal. "I never saw something like that," Costa ter his team played Costa Rica to a 0-0 draw through extra time. "That was beautiful. I'm a Rica midfielder Celso Borges said of the goalbit proud of that." keeping change. "But they were right, he did Jasper Cillessen had started in goal for the his job." Dutch team, but Van Gaal made the decision Also on Saturday: to pull him after 120 minutes of scoreless footArgentine 1, Belgium 0: BRASILIA, Brazil ball and replace him with Krul. — Argentina reached the World Cup semifiThe Newcastle goalkeeper, who really only nals for the first time in 24 years after striker touched the ball twice all game, saved the sec- Gonzalo Higuain scored his first goal of the ond and fifth penalties, and guessed the cor- tournament against Belgium. Argentina conrect way on all five. trolled the match after Higuain's eighth-min"We thought it all through," Van Gaal said. ute goal, more due to disciplined defending "We all thought that Tim Krul was the best than sparkling attack. The Napoli striker keeper to stop penalties. He is taller and has fired home Angel Di Maria's deflected pass a longer reach. We prepared for the Costa just inside the area, beating Belgium goalRica penalties just as we prepared for our own keeper Thibaut Courtois with a low shot to the penalties." far corner of the goal as he turned.

Injury suckslife out of Brazilians Dom Phillips

and captain Thiago Silva, suspended for a sec-

The Washington Post

0nd

yellow card — will be underdogs against

RIO DE JANEIRO — There was no escap- t he Germans on Ibesday.

ing the serious injury that took Brazil's young To win the World Cup they think is rightstar, Neymar, out of the World Cup Friday. f ully theirs, the Brazilians will have to prove A senseofanger and injustice washed over t hemselves real champions and overcome social networks. Hopes of a sixth World the odds. Because even if they can beat Cup title had been piled high on the Germany, then there is the specter of a 22-year-old's shoulders, and he himself possible final against Argentina and has been talking for years about his Messi at the Maracana. "Want to believe in a miracle? Withdream of winning the World Cup in Brazil. out Neymar, favoritism became smoke. Now, after a flying jump and knee Neymar The team stops playing for him and can to the spine from Colombian defender pull a rabbit out of the hat," wrote MarJuan Camilo Zuniga that cracked his los Mendes, a journalist for Rio tabthird vertebrae, Neymar was taken Ne X t uP loid 0 Dia on his personal Facebook offthepitch on astretcherand rushed Brazil vs on Saturday. "Fred and Hulk have the to hospital in te~ Some of the joy G chance to overcome themselves and wassuckedoutof Brazil's2-1 victory. +~™~y become heroes. I say this because I don't understand anything about footPresident Dilma Rousseff issued a public letter to Neymar and Brazil's T d 1 ball and because I believe in tragic 0

technical commission Saturday, ad-

storylines. And the tragic hero has to

dressing the player as "darling Neymar" and praised his "uncommon strength."

go to hell before he reaches heaven." Mendes could have been talking about one " Your face of pain yesterday," she wrote, of Brazil's enduring heroes — Ronaldo, known " injured my heart and the heart of every i n Brazil as simply "The Phenomenon." After Brazilian." h is unexplained bad turn in the 1998 World " I know like every Brazilian you never

Cup final in which Brazil lost to France, after

give up and, more quickly than you imagine, t he horrendous knee injuries that would have will be back filling our souls with happiness e nded the careers of many athletes, Ronaldo and our history with successes," Rousseff b attled doggedly back to fitness and won the concluded. 2002 World Cup for Brazil with two goals in Neymar's Facebook page was pinging every t he final against the same team they will face few seconds Saturday morning with messag- Tu esday: Germany. es ofsupport.He recorded video messages of Now Brazil needs a hero like him — not just thanks for fans and support for teammates. So t o score, but to fill the space that Neymar ocdominant a subject was his injury and its re- cu pied in the Brazilian imagination. But who? percussions that it even entered TV coverage Despite Mendes's comments, Hulk has yet of Argentina's game against Belgium. t o really show the strength of the comic book D uring the first half, Brazilian television

h ero for whom he is named. Jokes about him

FIFA's email address to send complaints. Bon- m any more individual talents than us at the

Mauricio Lima/The New Yorkrimes

licity campaign to turn him into the face of the league has been like one of his runs: swift, calculated and effective. In 2 I/2 whirlwind days in New York, Yedlin visited ESPN, Sports Illustrated,

"Good Morning America," "CBS This Morning," Al-Jazeera America, CNN

modity for a league still trying to gain a foothold with the mainstream U.S. audi-

ence. He is affable, handsome and, unlike the more reserved Dempsey and Michael Bradley,exceedingly media-friendly and image-conscious. Before a photo shoot Friday, Yedlin, whose hairstyles have attracted much attention, received a touch-

up haircut from his "hair tailor," who goes by the name Valentine. Yedlin, who is of Latvian, African-American, Native

American and Dominican descent, was so busy Friday that he hardly had time to eat. In th e

a fternoon,

between appearances, he went to a

T i mes Square

r estaurant for a q u i ck sandwich. While he ate, the quarterfinal match be-

tween France and Germany played on a TV. Yedlin rarely looked up, the loss to

Belgium still too painful. "It definitely leaves a lit-

tle cold spot in my heart," he said. Yedlin's performance in Brazil has also created a complicated situation for MLS. While the league would like to market Yedlin

as one of the its more promising players, he is surely going to attract the attention

of European teams. It is believed that the Italian team

AS Roma and Belgium's RSC Anderlecht are inter-

ested, though Yedlin said he had not been contacted by any European teams.

commentators described images of Neymar a nd Brazil' sunder-performing centerforward leaving the team's training ground in an am- F redrebounded on socialnetworks. "Brazilalbulance, to take a helicopter back to his family r eady had the Hulk," joked one, over a picture house in the Sao Paulo beach resort of Gua- o f the midfielder. Underneath was a picture of ruja. They had to keep broadcasting pictures F red. "Now it has the Invisible Man," read the of the match, they explained, but at halftime, p unch-line. they promised, they would show Brazil the Some suggested David Luiz. The Paris Neymar pictures everyone wanted to see. Saint-Germain defender has been pivotal to Luiz Bonfim,40, sat watchingthe Argentina B razil' s games and scored the second goal game on a central Rio de Janeiro street on an fr om a free kick with a shot that curled high enormous television someone had balanced on o ver the Colombian wall on Friday. Is he big a wall. "It was aggressive," he said of Zuniga's e nough to fill the gap? knee-in-the-back. "He should be punished." Commentator Juca Kfouri, during an ESPN Bonfim suggested the Colombian should be b roadcast Friday night, said he believed the suspended for as long as Neymar was out of p layers have it within them. "Something tells a ction. On Facebook, Brazilians exchanged m e that, knowingthat we will face a team with

Laercio da Silva, e carpenter, uses the trunks of felled trees to build new homes in Cataleo, Brazil, in June.

Since Yedlin returned from Brazil, the MLS pub-

Yedlin is a valuable com-

I

The Associated Press

match.

and Fox Sports, among others.

bt A

somewhere.

must make its own accommoDuring a recent school holdations. For years, locals said, iday, seven boys played on they played on a mothballed the small wooden floor of the oil tanker in the Rio Negro un- community center, which has til it was sold and taken away. a roof but only railings to keep "India bought it," said Alex- the ball in play. andro Ferreira Viana, 35, the School desks were stacked organizer of soccer activities in a corner atop a rusty pool in Catalao. "I heard it sank." table. A wooden backstop The passion for soccer is ev- was s t rategically p l aced ident throughout the village. along a gap in the railings. A Brazil jerseys hang on laun- long, narrow piece of lumber dry lines. Green and yellow blocked another opening. streamers flutter on porches. Barefoot, players ran deftly In one classroom, each mem- around posts that held up the ber of Brazil's World Cup team ceiling, dribbled expertly in is pictured with a star on the the tight space and fired hard national flag. shots against the railings that Geane de Sousa, 27, who served as goals. When the ball owns a small convenience went into the water, which store near t h e s u bmerged was often, players slapped at it fields, has the name of her with a pole or, if it strayed too favorite club team, Flamen-

Yedlin

w A L L k ,k ,S , A A Q

pact of deforestation on the

"We have tokeep playing, natural variability?" having fun, wherever that is," In Catalao, villagers said said Jailson da Silva de Sou- that passing boats sometimes za, 23, a woodcutter in this knocked down power lines village of about 100 families during periods of exceptionjust across the enormous Rio ally high water. And while the Negro from Manaus, one of soccer fields are usually avail12 cities hosting World Cup able for about half the year, games. "Otherwise, we'll get the landhas recentl y been dry a belly, and women don't like enough for only four or five that." months of play. "We don't have a place for The wooden houses in Catalao float on the trunks of the children to play," said felled trees. Chickens navigate de Sousa, the shop owner. logs and planks as they wan- "They are stuck in the houses, der from their floating coops. bored." Cars are kept across the Rio The most a dventurous, Negro in Manaus. The ceme- though, will f ind a g a me tery, too, is there. And soccer

SOCCER: WORLD CUP

fim remained optimistic. "We will be champi- M ineirao onZlresday, it is possible," he said. "It ons anyway," he said. 1s possible to rip out of the soul a victory that But there was an increasing, and sobering, w ould be epic." realization that Neymar's injury changed evIn football, and especially in this, the least erything. Now, instead of being clear favorites p redictable, most thrilling World Cup in def or the Cup, the Brazilians — without Neymar cades, anything seems possible. Even this.

"If the situation is right, I

could see a move to Europe in the future," Yedlin said. "But MLS is a growing league. Europe might not make the most sense." His club t eam f u t ure

is just one of the tough choices Yedlin now faces because of his newfound

fame. Heis also considering whether to reach out to his father, Larry Rivers Jr.

Although he has never met him, Yedlin has a photo of his father on his phone. "He looks exactly like him," Valentine said. W hen Yedlin wa s

1 3,

he asked his mother if he could meet his father. She told him to wait until he was older. Now that he is about to turn 21, Yedlin is thinking about it. "That's something I'm

going to take slowly and talk to my mom about," Yedlin said. His m o ther,

R e becca

Yedlin, who had been in and out of trouble as a teenager, decided to shield the boy from his father, DeAndre Yedlin said. After a short attempt at

raising the child, Rebecca, then 19, decided her son had a better chance of suc-

cess with her parents, Vicki Walton and Ira Yedlin. " It was too m uch t oo

soon," said Dylan Walton-Yedlin, Reb e cca's brother. Walton-Yedlin, who was 10 when DeAndre moved in, became the boy's best

friend and e ncouraged him to play soccer. Yedlin quickly became one of the area's best players, and he signed with the Sounders' academy as a teenager. After two years in Ohio at the University of Akron, Yedlin signed a professional contract with Seattle in January 2013. He was an MLS All-Star as a rookie.

Now, Yedlin's professional and personal lives are thriving. He sees his mother and his 18-yearold sister, Jenea, regularly, each moment with t h em

a reminder of his humble beginnings.


Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

Set upyour success

Moving a business from shops to the Web

By Caroline McMillan Portillo

By Celeste Smith

The Charlot te Observer

The Charlot te Observer

company for global It's no easy task to juggle

For designer Amanda

aworkforce acrossfive

Carroll, her "aha" moment

countries. Especially when they're as varied as China,

came ayear ago in July, when she suddenly saw her decade-plus-old business, Bead Boutique, the way a customer might. She had a"Sage" sign

India, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates and the United States. But for small-business

owner David Moore of Phantom Consulting, running a global operation is keyto his operation — and his selling point.

in her storefront window.

That's the name of her jewelry design venture, a brand she was cultivating separately from the bead store.

The Charlotte, North

She realized she was

Carolina-based company works as a behind-the-

sending a mixed message: that perhaps her brick-and-

scenes IT service provider

mortar business was com-

— hence the "Phantom" in the name — for clients

peting with her other enterprise. "It was such a turning point," Carroll said. So Carroll,47, made a key

around the world. And the

varyingtime zonesensure that he has staff on the clock at all times.

Moore, now 39, founded the company in 2010 after

Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin

Spencer Knowles, owner of HighMountain Mist, exhales vapor from an e-cigarette Thursday afternoon while sampling different varieties with patrons in his Bend business.

selling a small ad agency, City Rewards Network, to a private equity firm.

decision: She would close her store and take her Sage

business venture online. Bead Boutique wasn't what it used tobe. Since

the recession, she noticed changes in her customers'

spending habits. No longer were they filling up shopping baskets with beads and notions, regardless of price. While customer purchases dipped, costs for maintaining her 2,400-square-foot store in

In the purchase, the firm

decided not to buy the IT arm of the company, which consisted of several dozen software developers. "So I'm sitting in my office, and we have about 35 software developers, and I'vegotabunch ofm oney and nothing to do," Moore said. So he started another company. Phantom Consulting (formerly known as Direct Response Concepts) has tackled projects ranging from

Matthews, North Carolina,

stayed the same, Carroll said, at "thousands of dollars a month."

Going exclusively online would mean relying on

SEE

the contacts she built since

opening her storefront in

the Novant Health iPhone app to the U.S. National Whitewater Center website,

2001. And it eventually would lead Carroll to creat-

and served the service pro-

ing various other divisions with online platforms to

viders of companies such as

cover all she wanted to do

— from jewelry design to representing artists to filling bulk wholesale orders. But she hasn't regretted

electronics giant Epson. The Charlotte Observer spoke with Moore about

howhe manages the logistics of an intercontinental

her decision to liquidate her inventory and downsize

operation — from hiring to travel, team-building to

to an 800-square-foot stu-

monitoring — and what

otherbusiness can take away from the international learning curve. • Vetyour overseas vendors: When trying to set up

dio based in her Concord, North Carolina, home.

She creates, fills orders

By Rachael Reese The Bulletin

and updates her websites

an office in the UAE, Moore

wo new Bend businesses want to cash in on the growing e-cigarette market — but not by

needed to hire a local law firm that could file the pa-

simply selling them.

perwork. An online search

netted dozens of seemingly reputable firms, so Moore selected one that, based on

the website, appeared tobe polished, well-established and large enough to offera range of services. But after Moore wired the firm more than $6,000

and sent all of his company's information, he grew anxious: "Some filings we'd paid to get done didn't get done," he said. "Phone calls didn't get returned.

Emails didn't get returned. So I went over there to check it out."

SeeGlobal/E2

They make the liquid that contains the nicotine and other ingredients that's heated to create the vapor that users inhale, and the owners have created lounges — or vape shops — where consumers can test different e-cigarette flavors and watch TV or play board games. The e-cigarettemarket has been

booming, with sales doubling annually in some years. Unlike traditional cig-

access to them, but the proposed legislation died in committee.

Spencer Knowles, owner of High

arettes, the electronic versions are not

Mountain Mist, a new vape shop on NE

regulated. But that's likely to change soon.

Division Street, considers the lack of regulation a selling point for his liquid,

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra-

which he makes in Arizona.

tion proposed rules in April that would extend the agency's authority to e-cig-

"It's an unregulated industry, which means people can make e-liquid in a

arettes, and the Oregon Legislature

factory in China. But there is no gov-

considered bills in the 2014 session to tax e-cigarettes and to restrict minors'

ernment or customs department to make sure what (the manufacturers)

say is on the label is actually in the bottle," he said. "We bypass all of those questions by making our own e-liquid. We're self-regulating to the point where we can say exactly what is on our bottle is in our e-juice." Knowles and his store manager, Gavin Zamora, said they believe the FDA should regulate ingredients and the labeling of e-liquid and set an age limit for consumption. SeeVaping/E2

from a brightlylit space with a mannequin, one of her beaded jewelry lines displayed on a wall and classical music playing in the background. Carroll shared her story of what she's learned in the year since taking her business online. Her storyhas been edited for clarity and brevity:

A glorified job I'm anentrepreneur at heart. I went into the storefront with big expectations,

and probably a little naive. And I learned. You're basically working to pay the landlord. In essence, you're no longer a business owner. You've created a

glorified job. SeeWeb /E5

Bein marrie to ourwor int emost itera sense By Hanah Cho

as husband-and-wife entre-

The Dallas Morning News

preneurs and findbalance

Business partners often joke that they're married to one another.

it's a continual process," said

business partnero. Consider husband and wife

Jeremy, 35. "We're at a really good stage right now." Along the way, they've

Jeremy and Lila Stewart, who

nurtured Hari Mari into a

launched flip-flop brand Hari Mari in Dallas two years ago. They knew that combining home life and work life canbe fraught with landmines. But

premium flip-flop brand that is

therearealsosuccessfulcouples who have built household brands together.

in the first three months of 2014

the challenges of working

Lila Stewart started their flip-flop companytwo years ago in Dallas.

He didn't have a dedsion. I told

« ~~ t

carried in 270 stores across 39 states. Hari Mari recently cele-

brated a milestone: It got picked up by national brands Jack Spade and Urban Outfitters. And sales are growing rapidly: Hari Mari sold more flip-flops

Stewarts learned to navigate

Husband-and-wife team and Hari Mari co-founders Jeremy and

professional lives. "You have to work on it, and

What happens when you

Through some missteps, the

him I would handle sales," said Lila, who previously worked as The transition from husband a sales executive for AEG Live. and wife tobusiness partners Lila handles sales and marwasn't always easy, though, the keting while Jeremy oversees couple say. design and manufacturing. The simple part was knowThe couple says their coming that they would work plementary skills help run together to launch Hari Mari the company's day-to-day after the couple saw a void in operations. the flip-flop market: a lack of In the early days, though, color, character and comfort. the couple struggled with reThebrand also has a social solving office conflicts. They mission, giving $3 for every first tried to handle business pairpurchased to apediatrics disagreements like they did cancer fund at Cook Children's personal ones. That meant Health Care System in Fort having unfiltered, unvarWorth, Texas. nished conversations, which "Jeremyis the genius behind don't always translate well in Hari Mari. I jumped on board a professional setting, the couthe second I saw the flip-flops. ple acknowledged.

between their personal and

actually are married to your

justas there are horrorstories,

I can't imagine doing it with anyone else," said Lila, 33.

than it had for all of last year. "It's been an absolute blast

working with my husband.

Brad Loperl Dallas Monting News

See Married /E5


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

B USINESS TUESDAY Membership101 — Driving Your Membership:Connect with new and

current membersandlearnabout

the opportunities available through the Chamber. RSVPrequired; free; 10 a.m.; Bend Chamber ofCommerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221 or shelley©bend-

chamber.org.

FRIDAY ConstructionContractorCourse:

Live 'test prep' class approved by the Oregon Construction Contractors Board that satisfies the educational requirement to become a licensed contractor in Oregon. Prepayment required; $305, includes

END A R

Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvtv.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

Oregon Contractor's Reference High Desert Hats Social Bash: Manual; 8:30 a.m .-6 p.m .Friday and 25th Annual Oregon High Desert Saturday; Central Oregon Communi- Classics, a hunter/jumper horse ty College, Boyle Education Center, show and fundraiser for J Bar J 2600 NWColl egeWay, Bend;541Youth Services. Registration re383-7290 or ccb©cocc.edu. quired; $10 Bend Chamber members, $15 community members; 5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 July 15 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-3891409. Membership101 — DrivingYour Membership:Connect with new and current members and learn about the Ju11/17 opportunities available through the Chamber. RSVPrequired; free;10 QuickBooksSeminar:Designed a.m.; Bend Chamber of Commerce, to train business owners on basic 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-382- functions needed for accurate 3221 or shelley©bendchamber.org. accounting records; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway July 16 97, Suite A, Bend; 541-389-5284 or Women's Roundtable Seriesadmin©joyof quickbooks.com.

July22

July 23

Jull/ 31

Professional EnrichmentSeries: Featuring Dino Vendetti with Seven Peaks Ventures. Registration required; $25 Bend Chambermembers, $30 community members; 11:30a.m.; Bend Golf andCountry Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437. RFP Analysis 8 ProposalWriting Skills/Understandingthe RFP

Business After Hours:Network and celebrate the 25th Annual Oregon High Desert Classic. Registration required; free; 5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541-389-1409.

QuickBooksSeminar: Designed to train business owners on basic functions needed for accurate accounting records; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite A, Bend; 541-389-5284 or admin©joyofqui ckbooks.com.

Process: Classof feredbytheGovernment Contract Assistance Program

(GCAP)andCentral OregonCommunity College Small Business Development Center. Preregistration required; free; noon-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmondcampus, 2030 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541-736-1088 or www.gcap.org.

Jull/ 25 QuickBooksSeminar: Designed

Aug. 6

to train business owners on basic functions needed for accurate accounting records; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite A, Bend; 541-3895284 or admin©joyofquickbooks.

com.

Business Start-Up Workshop:Twohour session covers all the basic steps needed to open abusiness. Preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building,1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837290.

Robert A. and Joan K. Nosler, Tetherow, Phase 3, Lot175, $377,000 • Weston Investment Co. LLC to Donald N. Bauhofer, Tetherow, Phase 1, Lot 261, $220,000 • Delia J. Kirsch, who acquired title as Deila Costley Jones, also known as Delia Costly, to Megan andCraig Langer, Township 17, Range12, Section 25, $285,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Brett M. Waldron, Gleneden 2, Lot 46, $226,029 •HaydenHomes LLC toJeffreyS. Hawley, Lawson Crossing, Lot 2, $179,435 • David T. and Julie R. Stuben to James J. and MarciaJ.Snavely, Quail Pine Estates, Phase 6, Lot 38, $299,000 • Suzanne and Alexandra S. Arch to Seth Lefkowitz, Three Pines PUD, Phases1-4, Lot 29, $585,000 • Steve Del Rosso to R. DeanKine,

Woodriver Village, Lot 6, Block 3, $300,000 • James D. and Elizabeth A. Meskill to Peter Schrey and Elizabeth Gray, Second Addition to Bend Park, Lot 9, Block 157, $340,000 • Pacwest 2 LLC, doing business as MonteVista Homes LLC, to George F. Rasco, Eagles Landing, Lot38, $288,242 • Jaclyn M. and Roger E. Trahan to James and Elizabeth Meskill, Elkhorn Ridge, Phases 3-4, Lot 40, $384,000 • Brian E. Brady and Colette M. Guckian-Bradyto Gregory J. Rahn andDianaS.Mock,RidgeatEagle Crest 43, Lot15, $330,000 • SFI Cascade Highlands LLC to Kelly Development Corporation, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 99, $230,000 • Matthew Singer and Jennifer B. App to Brooks H. and Sheryl M. Hilton, trustees of the Brooks and Sheri Hilton Trust, Compass Gardens, Lot 7, $360,000

DEEDS Deschutes County • Olive Eng, trustee of the Olive Eng Revocable Trust, to Linda J. Tibbitts, Terrango Glen, Phase 4, Lot 69, $235,000 • Lawrence L. and Eda-Louise Burton to Michael Johnson, Brightenwood Estates 3, Lot1, Block 4, $223,000 • Jeffrey B. Costello to Brian T. Coop and Kathleen E.Meehan Coop, Heritage Place, Lot 4, $290,000 • PaulS. Rossto CarlW.and Christina R. Christoferson, Shevlin Meadows, Phases1-2, Lot 7, $340,000 • Larry W. Peterson and Joan L. RecktoPatrickA.and JillM. Hartley, Sundance East, Phase1, Lot 6, Block 7, $415,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Peter D. Kunen, Bridges atShadow Glen, Phase1, Lot 38, $325,000 • Andrew and Anne Codding to Michael E. Baldree, Canyon Park, Lot 9, Block 3, $237,000

Vaping

• Patricia A. Nippert, trustee of the PatriciaA. Nippert Revocable Trust, to Robert A. and Mary Powell Enderle, River Glen, Lot 8, $1,100,000 • Thomas W. Nordyke, also known as Thomas William Nordyke, to Lawrence C.and Rose M.Young, NorthWest Crossing, Phase13, Lot 656, $450,000 • Martin and FayEtcheverry to Raymond L. and Sanna J.Etcheverry, trustees of the Raymond andSanna Etcheverry Family Trust, Revised Plat of Portion of Meadow Village, Lot 8, Block 4, $258,000 • Signature Homebuilders LLC to Raymond D. andApril C. King, Riverrim PUD, Phase10, Lot 374, $570,400 • Robert A. and Tamara Nieri to Mitchell 0. and Katherine L. Peterson, Timber Creek 2, Phase4, Lot 83, $525,000 • Lands Bend Corp,successor by

reason of conversion from Lands Bend LLC, to Franklin Brothers LLC, South Deerfield Park, Lot 22, $257,500 • Franklin Brothers LLCto Kenneth R. and Karen B. Waltz, South Deerfield Park, Lot 22 $257,500 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC to Pacwest 2 LLC, Partition Plat1992-7, Parcel A, $1,024,000 • Pacwest 2 LLC to Anna Neill Baker, Madison Park, Lot 20, $219,947 • Hollis H. and Lois J. Smith to Steve C.andVicky L.Rath,PineMeadow Villa ge,Phase2,Lot98,$360,000 • Amy K. Moll to Andrea S. Walterscheid, Keystone Terrace, Lots 11-12, Block 7, $265,800 • Patrick A. and Jill M. Hartley to Eric P. Black and Jennifer L. Woolley, Sandalwood, Phase I, Lot1I, $415,000 •Floyd G.Johnson to ScottH.and Cindy L. Morgan, CL8 DRanch Tract, Lot13, Block 8, $238,500

Global

l~

Continued from E1 "This industry has been

•HaydenHomes LLCto ScottM.and Sarah C. Acarregui, South Point, Lot 20, $201,115 • Brenna E. Lopez-Oteroto Duane A. and Robyn A. Ragland, Awbrey Park, Phase1, Lot 29, $775,000 • Brad A. and Shannon R. Evert to James D. andNancy A. Brady, Cascade Village PUD,Lot 7, $262,650 • Timothy J. and B. Cristine Fissori to David R. and Johanna J. Trass, Township17, Range13, Section 32, $367,500 • Michael D. and Leslie L. Crew to Signature Homebuilders LLC, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot 84, $225,000 • Anna B. Gordon to Spain Exchange LLC,West Canyon Estates,Phase 1, Lot 4, $217,400 • Suzette M. and David M. Hayesto Gloria J. Snipes andChristina M. Hiquera, Odin Falls Ranch, Phase1, Lot 31, Block1, $610,000 •SFICascade HighlandsLLC to

g

ir

.u'

Continued from E1 Visiting i n per s on,

around nine years now, and there are studies that show it's

Moore saw that the large, well-established firm he'd

about a $2 billion industry," to test it already? There's tens

hired was actually just one guy in a small office. Moore then called the UAE's department of eco-

of thousands of Americans in-

nomic development, which

gesting it." Those who opposee-cigarettes say theypose a danger of poisoning from drinking or directly inhaling the e-liq-

connected him with a reputable firm.

uid, and they point to a lack

o mmends starting

of standardsfor the level of nicotine and other chemicals in theliquid. They also say the flavorings and vapingdevices make e-cigarettes appealing

government referrals and official sources.

Knowles said. "Why hasn't the FDA taken it upon themselves

For o t her

I

with I

I

"But honestly, the best

way to do it would be to lay eyes on the company,"

to teens.

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

But advocates for the bat- Spencer Knowles, owner of HighMountain Mist in Bend, holds tery-operated devices say they one type of advanced personal vaporizer, or e-cigarette, with three are a healthier alternative to others on the counter. cigarettes and canbe a tool to help smokers quit. Regardless, the number of Venturi said Vape Game also health affects of e-cigarettes e-cigarette retailers and sales makes and sells its own e-liq- cannotbe determined because of the product are on the rise. uid. He sells 30 flavors in his there is insufficient data. E-cigarettes are t a k ing Bend store, and the business "While e-cigarette aerosol about 1 percent of the total to- makes 15. may contain fewer toxicants "It's less expensive, and we than cigarette smoke, studies baccoshare, making it around a $1.9billion industry, accord- wanted to hit the whole sales evaluating whether e-cigaing to a March report from market," he said. rettes are less harmful than Wells Fargo Securities AnaKnowles of High Mountain cigarettes are in c onclusive," lyst Bonnie Herzog. Mist started on the manufac- according to publications from While sales of traditional turing side of the e-cigarette FDA staff. "Some evidence sugcigarettes have been declining industry. Heco-owns Sonoran gests that e-cigarette use may about t3o 4percentayear,the Vape Solutions, he said, a lab facilitate smoking cessation, report states, the e-cigarette located in Phoenix that started but definitive data are lacking." While the FDA may need market has been growing. three months ago. He hopes to The rate has slowed, but it's eventually open a lab in Cen- more i n formation, s o me still estimated at more than 20 tral Oregon. smokers have found e-ciga"I went ahead and took the rettes to be an effective way to percent annually,according to the report, which says the con- liberty of designing a juice line wean themselves from nicosumption of e-cigarettescould specifically for Bend and went tine, according to the Consumsurpass conventional ciga- for flavors that we thought er Advocatesfor Smoke-free rettes within the next decade. would begood for a new mar- Alternatives Association. " There is a lso a l o t o f E-cigarettes come in sev- ket where people are new to eral models. Some, called it," he said. "We have a lot of real-world evidence and even cigalikes, look like regular tobaccos and menthols, but somestudies that stronglyindicigarettes. Others, known as also your fruits and desserts." cate that e-cigarettes are an efadvanced personalized vaporKnowles sells 16 different fective alternative to smoking," izers,have more controls and flavors at his Bend store and the association's website states. a high-tech look. They canbe named most with references However, according to the refilled with different flavors. to Central Oregon, including association, the majority of While retailers surveyed in Paulina Peach and Central Or- e-cigarette users treat the dethe Wells Fargo report were egon Caramel Cheesecake. In vices as an alternatesource concerned FDA regulation addition to e-liquid, the vape of nicotine and not as a nicocould hinder the growth of shop sells batteries and tanks, tine-cessation program. vaporizers and vape shops, which range from $15 to $175, Bend resident David MontBrennan Venturi, co-owner along with other accessories. gomeryis one of those users. of Vape Game on NE Third But for both Knowles and For 22 years, Montgomery Street, said he's not worried. Venturi, their shopsare more smoked cigarettes, but for the "The smaller ones (ciga- than just businesses. They're past year and a half, he's been likes) have a really low battery places for smokers who want puffing on an e-cigarette. "I didn't get into it to quit rating, and they just don't last to try an alternative to cigas long," he said. "Realistical- arettesand find a sense of smoking," said Montgomery ly, they're both vaporizers. community. as he sat at the tasting bar at They're both doing the same Knowles said he plans to High Mountain Mist. "I got thing; it's just oneis a higher have board games like chess into it for an alternative." quality than the other." during the week and DJs on A cheaper, healthier alterHe said Vape Game only weekend nights, while Venturi native, headded. Montgomery sells vaporizers, and agrees said Vape Game has sporting said he's gone from spending with experts that the marketis events on TV and offers vid- $200 on cigarettes a month, going in that direction. eo games. Both locations are to about $50 on e-cigarette Venturi opened the first of aiming to have a lounge vibe. supplies. "Vaping was the only alter"I feel better than I did when three Oregon Vape Game locations in Springfield in Au- native that worked for me, and I was smoking cigarettes," gust. The store has gone from it turns out it's a lot of fun as he said. "I don't have that ... about 20 to 60 transactions a well," Venturi said, referring to smoker's cough anymore." day. his battle to quit smoking. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, Like High Mountain Mist,

c o m panies

considering setting up operations overseas, he rec-

According to the FDA, the

rreesibendbulletin.com

Isabella Bartolucci i Charlotte Observer

David Moore, the president of Phantom Consulting in Charlotte,

North Carolina, says running a global operation is key to his opera• Require a U.S.-grade tion — and his selling point. b ackground check: T o Moore said.

be consideredfor a job at

Phantom Consulting, pro- any other employee is workspective employees must ing on. Employees can even have a U.S. visa. pull up what Moore himself is It's not a foolproof test working orL Clients also have — applicants still must go the opportunity to log into through the interview pro-

cess — but it's a critical seal of approval from the U.S. government, Moore sard. Plus, he added, it's a

practical test, ensuring that employees will be

park created by the government of Dubai as a free economiczone and regionalbase for companies such as Nokia, Microsoft, IBM andCisco. the system to verify hours for The group took lots of billing. photos, and many of the em"We make sure people ployees wanted to pose with get what they're paying for," Moore. Moore said. After returning to the U.S., •M ake timeforface-to-face Moore logged into the monteam experiences: While trav-

itoring system to check out

eling to his satellite offices, able to travel to the U.S. if Moore organizes a number of team-building outings, from needed. • Pay well — andappro- dune jumping topicnics in the priately: Determining what desert. to pay employees overseas In February t hi s y ear, can be difficult, Moore Moore made a visit to Phansaid, because you need to tom Consulting's UAE office pay a competitive salary to and took hi s employees to get top talent, but you can't Dubai I nternet City, an I T

the goings-on of his Dubai contingent. Moore said he was

surprised to see that one of the lower level employees had saved pictures of himself with

Moore on his desktop, even making one his screensaver. "I had no idea (the trip) even mattered," Moore said. "It was

kind of cool to see that."

disrupt the local economy

either. So Moore studiespublic data and usually pays five to seven times the nation's median income. So just as a U.S.-based

IT worker usually fits in among the top earners, a Phantom employee in a foreign country is also making in the top 1 percent in the respective economy. It's a high enough salary

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that the best candidates ap-

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ply, but it's not so high that the officebecomesa target of crime or government

scrutiny, Moore said. To pay more than five to seven times would require

more paperwork, more hired security and more raised eyebrows — not what you want when your headquartersis in the U.S., he said. • Invest in m o nitoring

software: One of Moore's best tips for operating offices overseasis investing in monitoring software; it bridgesthe distance in real time and offers a level of international transparency. At any time, he and 75

employees can see what

184

t ~~ iz~~

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q(~ r

180

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541-389-4212 5 4 1-585-2446 dan(kcolmcommercial.com


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E3

Why startups aresharing ideaswithout legal protection "Think through who you are sharing your ideas with," said Patrick Riley, head of Global Accelerator Network, a group of50 startup acceler-

By Eilene Zimmerman«New York Times News Service

n 2011, Andy Moeck was looking for

ators worldwide. "Unless the

investors for Moeo, a Los Angeles startup

investor is very well-known, have a reference or two. People will say they are investors when they aren't, so ask what other deals they have done,

he was building that makes mobile gaming apps based on real-time sporting events. A friend

and then call those compa-

introduced Moeck to a partner at the Silicon Valley

nies to ask about the deal. Do they trust this investor?"

venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield

Messing advised making sure an investor does not have potential conflicts or overlapping investments. Reputable investors, he said, "have much to lose by stealing your idea." • Consider filing for a provisional patent.

Byers, and at their first meeting, Moeck asked the partner to sign a nondisclosure agreement. Such agreements, known as NDAs, are designed to

of entrepreneurship at the

prevent an idea or technol-

the declining use of NDAs "is

ogy from being stolen and copied. Moeck was especially

certainly not in the interests of entrepreneurs. It favors the

concerned because the ven-

VC." Although it is rare that

ture capital firm was already backing Zynga, another gaming company. "We knew theydidn'thave a mobile or sports strategy," he said of Zynga. "I didn't want to

an investor steals an i dea,

pitch Kleiner about what we

said, "they've made the easier

New York City who regularly counsels investors and start-

ups, said the reluctance to sign NDAs is one factor driv-

Ruhe said, it does happen. "But in the skewed echo

J. Emilio Flores /The New York Times

Andy Moeck, whose startup Moeo is developing mobile gaming appsbased on real-time sports sycophantical networks that events, went ahead with a pitch to Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers even though they refused to sign a aspire to be just like them," he non-disclosure agreement — aonce-routine measure that more and more venture capital firms now chamber of the Valley, and the

were doing and have them go and less morally defensible back and say to Zynga, 'This is position — no NDAs — the how Moeo does it.'" coin of the realm." But the K l einer Perkins Even if a startup manages investor refused to sign an to get an agreement signed, NDA, leaving Moeck to de- it can be tough to enforce, cide whether to proceed with said Aaron Messing, a lawhis pitch. yer with OlenderFeldman in It is a common quandary, Summit, New Jersey. "It's very hard to prove that and not just in Silicon Valley. Ten years ago, it was not un- you kept information confiusual for entrepreneurs to re- dential, and it was only disquest and potential investors closed under an NDA," said to signnondisclosure agree- Messing, who represents both ments. But today the agree- founders and investors. "And ments arelargely considered it can be expensive." a thing of the past. In fact, In 2 011, Be n G o o dwin some investors say they walk started using a co-packer to away from a founder who package a probiotic drink for even suggests signing one. his company, which is based This cultural shift, which in Santa C r uz, C alifornia, began in the late 1990s and and now called Obi Probiotaccelerated during the early ic Soda. The co-packer took 2000s, began in Silicon Val- some of Goodwin's ideas and ley, said Victor Hwang, chief went on to make his own proexecutive of T2 Venture Creation, an investment firm in Portola Valley, California.

A ndrew K eisner, a l a w yer with Davis 8r Gilbert in

Kauffman Foundation, said

biotic drink. "I couldn't sue him," Good-

win said. "It was going to "One of the most advanta- come down to a 'he said, she geous things an entrepreneur said.' I have to prove that he can do is talk about their com- definitely took it from me and pany to anyone who will lis- that I am experiencing damten," Hwang said. ages and losses as a byprodNot everyone agrees. uct of his actions. And that Thom Ruhe, vice president means I would need the legal

balk at.

ing startups toward patent protection.

"If you're far enough along that you've developed an app or a prototype, there is a big advantage to filing a provisional application," he said. That is what Brian Nick-

and financial resources to pursue that route, which isn't really practical for a small business." Investors say signing such agreements is impractical for

When Moeck was told that

Kleiner Perkins does not sign NDAs, he decided to pitch his startup anyway. "I felt OK about it because

erson and his co-founders at Below are some guidelines Chippmunk, a coupon search to consider. They apply when engine, did. Before talking engaging not just investors, to investors and closing a but also manufacturers, part- $750,000 investment round last December, the Los Angeners and even customers. • Do not a sk u nless you les company filed a provisional patent application for its have something to protect. Chris Schultz, an entrepre- search algorithm. • Proceed gradually. neur and partner in the anWhen discussing a startgel investment fund Voodoo Ventures in N e w O r l eans, up, founders should walk a said, "Everyone thinks their fine line, conveying sufficient idea is extremely unique, but i nformation about w hat i s the idea is really 1 percent of unique and proprietary, but yet to persuade any to do so.

the investorwas referred by them, too. "VC firms and an- a trusted friend and Kleiner gels are looking at so many is a very well-known firm," he more deals today, that they sard. could freeze themselves out Moeck also felt that even of a given area by signing if Zynga did learn what he an NDA w it h one person," was doing, the company had said Peter Wendell, a faculty become too big to execute member at Stanford Gradu- quickly. "I thought, regardless of ate School of Business and the founderand a managing what Zynga heard or thought, the value. The value is in the not d i sclosing i n f ormation that would let someone replidirector of Sierra Ventures,a we had the better chance of execution." tech-oriented venture firm in being successful in our catePaul Jones, co-chairman cate the business. For examgory," he said. Silicon Valley. of the Venture Best practice ple, said Messing, the lawyer, Each tim e a n N D A is He was also hoping that group at the law firm Michael an entrepreneurcoulddisclose signed, it stalls the conversa- disclosure might open doors. Best & Friedrich in Milwau- "what an algorithm can do, tion for a week because of the " Although w e d i d n't w a n t kee, said there is no reason but not the algorithm itself." W endell o f S i e rr a V e n legal work involved, Hwang Zynga to copy us," he said, to shareproprietary informasaid, and over time, that can "we did want them to be tion during an initial 20-min- tures said founders should give a competitor the oppor- aware of what we were doing ute pitch anyway. "And I've reveal information as if they tunity to enter a market first. in case there was an opportu- never known a r e putable are peeling an onion. "It's a "In the life of a startup com- nity to partner with them." investor to steal an idea and gradual process, as the entrepany," he said, "you might In the end, Kleiner did not create a company around it," preneur increasingly engages the investment firm. You have to sign 30 to 50 NDAs. offer financing to Moeo, al- he said. That's a week each time and thoughthecompany did man• Know your audience. need to make a few peels for Before making a pitch, re- it to be clear that this is an ina year of holdups. The risk of age to raise$500,000 from going slow is bigger than the angels. It continues to ask in- search the background of teresting opportunity and a risk of being copied." vestors to sign NDAs, but has whoever you are pitching. good fit."

o re uest too ar e — orsma — orconcier eservice By Jennifer Wang

vice for butlers, nannies and

ner with independent travel

The Orange County Register

executive assistants.

agents and contractors, as 80

An annual membership

percent of the company's busimembers will be able to par- ness revolves around luxury take in a new retail business travel. Later this s ummer, L .A .

to Element Lifestyle's luxu-

ry concierge services will set you back $36,000. But for that

L-'

that Quintessentially is work-

sum, a member — or his or her

executive assistant — can get 24/7 support for any and all gegal) requests. On Element's fulfilled list:

organizing a custom 10-day version of " The A mazing Race" across nine European countries; finding a rare Faberge golden egg; and producing a Sweet 16 party with rapper duo LMFAO.

IIIII

«i\i//\

'iI'

For the 1 percent, that fee

might even seem like a bargain. In fact, some pay for m emberships wit h m o r e than one concierge service, to increasechances that a re-

quest will be completed, said Element co-founder Joubin BraL Members are kept anony mous, but the i ndustry i s

clearly expanding in Los Angeles, given Element's steady growth and a recent push into the area by Quintessentially, a globally recognized concierge service. "Someone who's extremely wealthy just wants it to get

done, and one place may have better access than the other for certain things."

Bral, a former premium ticket broker, started the company in November 2009 with

Edgar Estrada, who took care of elite passengers for American Airlines, and

M i chael

Albanese,a former concierge at high-end hotels in New York City. Through their relationships with premier hoteliers and restaurateurs and

other luxury-minded businesses around the globe, the eight-person team fields and fulfills requests for its nearly 100 members — on average, 10 to 20 requests per hour.

In the end, the value proposition is just human empathy and old-fashioned customer

service, Albanese said. Element has hired an accounting manager, travel coordinator,

Ed Crisostomo/Orenge County Register

G rowth shouldn't be

too

ing on in partnership with Fred Segal, which will facilitate high-end gift giving among agencies and studios, and source hard-to-find luxury items for personal shopping requests. "It's completely organic

challenging. Capgemini and the Royal Bank of Canada released its annual World Wealth Report

President Jon Goss said. "The

$52.6 trillion in 2013.

earlier this month and report-

ed that the number of "high net worth individuals," or people with $1 million or more to growth, a natural extension of invest, grew by 15 percent. what our clients are request- Their total net worth grew by ing the most," Senior Vice 14 percent to a record high of way we see is our business is

According to a survey by

as a platform that enhances a

research firm The Harrison

lifestyle." Group, the wealthy spend an In April, Element Lifestyle average of $14,548 on vacapurchased a loft space in the tions every year, and many Arts District i n d o w ntown of them spend far more than L.A., where the plan is to part- that.

Element Lifestyle's personal concierge service has seen considerable expansion in recent months and showsno signs ofslowing down. director of client management tra-exclusive, u l t r a -unique, eral tiers of membership, from and director of business de- and come at an ultra cost," virtual assistant-like "dedicatvelopment. Most of Element's Johnson said. "There have al- ed" memberships ($5,500), to team is under 35 and paid ways been people who want "global elite" memberships (up on salary or as independent to have the best, and if these to $60,000per year)thatoffer contractors. companies can deliver experi- an entire on-call team. "Say a client is getting off a ences that (the wealthy) can't The company also works safari in Africa and wants fish get on their own, the fee struc- with hundreds of brand partand chips in England. A tradi- tureseems quitereasonable." ners to take care of clients tional travel agency will just A recent survey of Travel from major corporations such book and send a confirma- Leaders Group agents report- as HSBC and Jaguar. It recenttion, but I'll be up making sure ed nearly30 percent ofluxury ly announced a partnership their suite is ready for a 6 a.m. clients listed either "unique with Ferrari. arrival." Starting at an extra activities" and "exclusivity" The company moved in No$5,000 a day, Element team of experiences as the most vember from a tiny, four-permembers also will travel with important component when son satellite office into 4,000 the client to ensure a seamless spending money on travel. square feet on Sunset Bouexperience. L.A., of course, doesn't lack levard. Membership, though "Luxury concierge is an for wealth. In 2012, Capgemini capped in any one city at interesting company catego- ranked the city second-high- 5,000, has grown 200 percent ry that makes a lot of sense," est in millionaires — meaning to 300 percent in the past three said Eric Johnson, founder of people who have at least $1 months. marketing agency Ignited and million to invest — with more Although the lifestyle conco-presidentof media, market- than 255,000 calling the city cierge business is core to ing, and advertising collabora- home. Quintessentially's West Coast That's one r eason U .K.- expansion, the company has tive ThinkLA. At t heir c o re, c oncierge based Quintessentially, a also begun operating standservices guarantee VIP treat- 1,500-person luxury lifestyle alone sister businesses, as ment anywhere in the world group known globally for its they do in Europe, where they — particularly in an unfamil- "lifestyle management" ser- boast more than 30 divisions iar city where the client has no vices, has made L.A. the foot- spanning high-end publishcontacts. hold for its West Coast expan- ing, real estate, hotels, wine, " These services ar e u l - sion. The company offers sev- florist s— even a sourcing ser-

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Web

Married

Continued from E1 When you're renting in a common space like we were, your insurance, your taxes and

Continued from E1

common area

let personal squabbles affect

each other at home," Jeremy said. "And it's surprising and off-putting to everyone else, outside of us." Through t hose e a rly disagreements, they learned not to give unsolicited advice. They also work hard to defer to the other's expertise or focus.

costs are a substantial part of your overhead. I also had four part-time employees when we dosed. It's a lot. You don't realize. I was ready for something different. I was sick of retail. I had no time for anything creative.

Recently, the team was

choosing color combinations for the brand's 2015

Diversifying I really like the Sage name. Sage, for me, is about being wise. It means being open to opportunities, and recognizing them when they're staring at you. For me, it also means having multiple streams of income.

line. As the creative one,

Jeremy wanted wildand bright colors, such as a black andpink combination for men. Lila leaned more conservative because she has to

Without the store, this became

possible immediately.

Celeste Smith/The Charlotte Observer

I now have several divisions

Carolina, where, after closing up shop at her retail store, she runs

and founditnecessary to cre- her online business. atea new company tomanage

cial jewelry line to benefit the nonprofit.

Alot of days are out in the field, ketplace I use, too. The more of at networking events, bou- these you can be on, the more tiques, stores and farmers mar- exposure you get. They're sukets to see artists' works. I'll per-easy to create, and there's look at Etsy for artists in North Carolina.

portunities such as the South-

ern Christmas Show. Sage Relying onnetworks Jewelry Supply fills bulk orI had built up relationships dersfrom wholesalers. over the years. One of my old The Sage Art & Craft Show bead vendors who used to is a twice yearly retail show do trunk shows at my store held at the Ballantyne Hotel emailed me, asking if I'd do a in Charlotte, North Carolina, show. That led to the art and that features juried artists who craft show. make pottery, handbags, clothBecause of t h e s uppliers ing, woodworking and more. I'm able to work with, I don't The next show is Dec. 6. It's a have to keep a large stock to way for up and comers to get fill big orders. So if somebody out there and be seen, and it's orders 50 feet of ball chain, I also affordable. can have that shipped by the manufacturer.

A calmer routine

no HTML to worry about.

I'm a big advocate of conI also work on lines and up- tinuing to learn as much as I date the websites regularly. I can, through webinars, and have a big calendar with tasks business and p r ofessional laid out months in advance. classes. One ofthe bestcours-

Sage Jewelry Arts sells handcrafted jewelry online, I researched how to take including sterling silver cuffs photos that show off jewelry with inspirational messages, well. When I run into a proband participates in retail op- lem, I ask Google.

Lila and Jeremy Stewart's

strongly disagreed," Lila said. I n th e

them. Sage Resource LLC en-

compasses four businesses: Sage Resource Group designs jewelry lines, and also represents other jewelry lines for wholesale sales. This division is working with Mothering Across Continents on a spe-

sell the line to customers. "I tried to nix it, and he

Amsnde Carroll at work in her home studio in Concord, North

e nd , t h e t w o

agreed that Lila would make decisions for women's colors and Jeremy for

men's colors. It also helps the business to have a third partn er, John V e atch, w h o

tween Jeremyand Lila. "It's a t ough p o si-

called "Getting to the Core

tion that they're in, and

of Your Business." She asks: What's your vision? Are you

I've definitely noticed a marked improvement in

the business, or do you have

the way they maintain the

a business'? If something happens to you tomorrow, does

professionalism and not blur the line," said Veatch, who handles advertising, marketing and other creative decisions. The line between pro-

fessional and personal is-

a lotmore gross revenue with

sues is clear. While it took time, the couple has made

brick and mortar. My net prof-

a concerted effort not to

it is more now. A lot of money

I was a member of a lot of My store schedule was 24/7. organizations, and used that Nine a.m. to 8p.m. was my day networkto join forums and dis- Advice from Amanda • "Listen to your inner voice. at the store; I'd come home and cussion boards and do a lot of make notes for the next day. research on how to go online. I I t always knows w hat i t ' s Here, I just have a nicer routine. discovered it's better to join an talking about." • "Always continue to learn." I include regular breaks from online platform with a force "Be o pen t o n e w being hunched over some- behind it, rather than create a thing. I make time to meditate. site. So I created SageJewelry- possibilities." "Always keep a notepad I have days dedicated to re- Arts.com through Storenvy, a searching potential markets marketplacerun through Pay- with you, especially beside the and stores across the country. Pal. OpenSky is another mar- bed."

professional: Maintain busi- a productivity killer. There's ness-related talks and emails, plenty of time to settle those preserving a consistent style differences later at home. of communication across all work relationships. Where Buyers • Help each other: Divide

And Sellers Meet

the labor and be understanding about the amount of work

Classifieds

COLDWELL BANKER MORRIS REAL ESTATE

as a mediator. Veatch said he uses humor to defuse tension be-

coming in doesn't mean anything if the bottom line is not profit.

• Leave personal problems

Ke ep c o m m unications at home: Doing otherwise is

opinion and at times acts

lotte-based business strategy expert) Sherese Duncan,

ue'? She continues to be a good business coach for me. Looking back a year later, gross revenue does not tell an honest picture. I was making

toward.

tips on working together:

provides an independent

es I ever took was with (Char-

your business close or contin-

the other is doing and help out when you can. • Strike a balance: It may go back home and it resumes, vary from couple to couple. but again, it's beneficial to ev- For some, it may mean workeryone and to ourselves to not ing at home or discussing bring the extra baggage to work at home in moderation. theoffice,"Jeremy said. For us, rigid rules haven't The challenges of work- worked. Instead, we've ading with a spouse have been opted a flexible approach to minimal compared with the work at home on an "as-needupside of bringing up their ed" basis. Find what works professional "baby" together. for you. The experience also has been • Remember to compliment: good for the marriage, the Not unlike marriage, it's imcouple say. portant to let your co-workers "You see your spouse in know when they're doing a a totally different light, and great job. It's no different when it's attractive," Lila said re- that co-worker is a spouse. cently from their new Dallas • Celebrate successes: It's headquarters. i mportant t o b a l a nce t h e Jeremy added: "I think so, daily grind with wins and too." successes when they arise. It serves as a good reminder of Making it work what you're working together their work life. "There are times where we

"We were talking in the office like we would talk to

m a intenance

E5

TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980

Welcomes

grant LuCkeick Principal Broker Grant Ludwick, principal broker, comes to Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate with seven years of experience in the Bend real estate market. Born and raised in Santa Barbara, CA, Grant and his wife Amy have been in Bend for eight years by way of Seattle, WA. Grant prides himself on his refreshing service, honest advice, and proven results. Whether you are a first time homebuyer, a seasoned investor,Or a weekend visitor, Grant believes that the Bend region will be defined by the people who inhabit it and he is excited to help foster the areas positive growth. In addition to practicing real estate, Grant has also been the head coach for the Bend High boys tennis team for the last seven years. In his free time, Grant enjoys exploring Central Oregon's vast array of adventures with his family.'Ihe outdoor recreation opportunities and the tight knit community feel are what drew Grant to Bend eight yearsagoand they continue to anchor his passion for the region.

grant LuCkui,ck Principal Broker Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate 541-633-0255 grantgbendproperty.com

MORRIS REAL ESTATE

Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY

TICKER

salix Pharma Ltd SLXP Regeneron Pharm RE G N Jazz Pharmaceuticals JAZZ S outhern Copper SCCO T eck Resources Ltd TC K H ilton Wwde Hldgs HLT Micron Tech MU Paccarlnc P CAR Netflix Inc NFLX FMC&G FCX NetApp Inc N TAP Gilead Sciences G ILD Avago Technologies AVGO Illttmina Inc I LMN Yahoo Inc YHOO

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

FRIDAY C L OS E

$CHG %CHG %CHG 1WK 1WK 1MO

139 . 5 8 311 .1 6 162 . 8 2 32.71 24.41 24.80 33.73 67. 2 5 47 2 .3 5 38.51 37. 8 3 87. 9 0 75.1 8 18 2 .8 6 36 . 1 4

16. 7 7 13. 7 33. 8 7 12. 2 16. 8 2 11.5 2.96 9 .9 2.01 9 .0 1.99 8.7 2.2 2 70 4.35 6 .9 30. 2 7 6 .8 2.4 4 6 .8 2.35 6 .6 4.96 6 .0 4. 2 4 6. 0 10. 1 6 5.9 1.89 5.5

% RTN 1YR COMPANY

2 8.2 0.8 1 2.2 11.8 10.8 7.7 1 6.2 5.2 1 0.3 10.8 4.7 6.2 46. 11.4 3.4

105. 4 33.5 132. 4 17.9 20.1 0.0 135.9 21.5 110.8 40.9 -1.5 66.8 95.8 145. 7 43.6

TICKER

Verso paperCorp VR S R adius Health lnc RDU S China Natural Rescs CHN R A micus Therapeutics FOLD Hallador Energy Co H NRG EDAP TMS

E DAP

Ardelyx Inc Vitacost.com Inc P rovectus Biopharma Basses Furn Isle Capri Casino Liberty Ventures 6 Zagg Inc A ratana Therapeut G lycoMimetics Inc

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Exelon Corp Trimble Nav American Airlines Gp Pub svc Ent Gp Entergy Intuitive Surgical FirstEttergy Corp MRG Energy Inc Tesla Motors lnc Wisconsin Energy

Globalmarkets

ARDX

VITC PVCT BSET I SLE LV NT B Z AGG PE T X GL Y C

FRIDAY C L OS E

2.75 15.11 4.55 4. 0 2 12. 3 8 5.77 20. 4 4 7.98 1.11 15. 4 5 10. 21 80. 0 2 5.87 17.90 9.21

INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

0.8 0

41.0 4.29 39.6 1.13 3 3 . 0 0.9 9 3 2 . 7 2.89 30.5 1.33 30.0 4.48 28.1 1.7 1 2 73 0.24 2 73 3.15 25.6 2.06 25.3 15. 3 3 23. 7 1.01 20.8 2.99 20.1 1.52 19.8

9.1 88.6 31.1 44 . 1 35.3 5 9.0 44.9 24.3 85.0 13.4 47.5 0.0 24.9 2 7.1 36.4

114.0

94.9

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

E XC

33.9 7

-2.32

-6.4

- 9.3

1a 6 Huttig Bldg Pdts

HBP

4.51

-0.94

-172

1.3

T RMB

34. 8 9

-2.21

-6.0

-7.1

29. 9 Synthesis Ettgy Sys

SYMX

1.63

-0.32

-16.4

0.6

AAL P EG

41.62

-2.38

-5.4

-1.9

0.0 Ohr Pharmaceutical

O HRP

38.1 6

-2.11

-5.2

-2.3

ETR

76.97

-4.21

-5.2

- 2.1

40 4 . 04

-19.36

-4.6

9.5

32.50

-1.49

-4.4

-6.0

N RG

35.5 1

-1.54

-4.2

- 2.6

TSLA

229 . 25

-9.81

-4.1

10.8

44.91

-1.88

-4.0

-2.1

ISRG FE

WEC

27. 5 Staar Surgical

1a 2 Tekmira Pharm -19.5 BlueLinx Holdings -4.2 Amphastar Pharm 39. 0 Veritiv Corp 94.7 M irati Therapeutics 16. 0 2 2nd Century Grp

8.12

-1.51

-15.7

-14.1

S TAA

14.1 5

-2.54

-15.2

T KMR

11. 6 3

-1.99

-14.6

-8.3 -8.1

0.0 -3.7

s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

25.8 Amsterdam 97.1 Brussels Madrid 5.6 Zurich 120. 4 Milan 0.0 Johannesburg Stockholm

Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times 4.6 Sydney All Ordinaries 3z 2 Taipei Taiex 1 89 . 3 Shanghai Composite -40.5 0.0 87.1

BXC

1.26

-0.21

-14.3

-1.6

9.07

-1.43

-13.6

3.7

V RTV

32.5 0

-4.90

-13.1

-17.7 0

M RTX XXI I

18.9 9 3.00

-2.80

-12.8

-9.1

-93.7

-0.42

-12.3

-2.3

2 51 . 8

I s'der Title:Founder and CEO of Fullscreen Hls outlook: Offers insight on the developing world of online video

George Strompolos

419.53 +3.68 3197.43 +31.14 1133.25 +7.45 8694.32 +87.12 21884.60 +206.02 5191 8.44 +34.73 1409.44 +21.33

+0.88% L +0 98'/ L +0.66% L +1.01% +0.95% +0.07% +1.54%

4

+52. 07%

4 4 L

+2.19% +4.39 % +11.64 %

4 42% 9 36%

L L

t11.98% +5.99% i16.56%

+12.24% +5.74%

ASIA

.0

2010.97

-4.31

3273.15 + 9 . 24 5479.50 +37.80 9526.23 +41.27 2063.23 + 3 . 81

-0.02%

-0.21% +028% T +0.69% +0.44% +0.19%

V

+3.34% +2.36% %10.62% 2 49%

Quotable

"Since February, this has now become a textbook jobs expansion. It is both broad and accelerating." — Patrick O'Keefe,director ot economic research at the consultancy CohnReznick, as the unemployment rate fell to 6.1 percent, the lowest since September 2008

Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).

Dollars follow

FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD +0.55% L L +7.42% +I 19'/ L L +5 00% +0.72% +1.72% -0 08% +0 97% +1.02% +4.51% -0.14% -5.79% T

65 .1 SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA 53.0 Aires M erval 8198.27 +43.04 +0.53% X X 110.1 Buenos Mexico City Bolsa 43660.70 +381.22 + 0 .88% L 4 0.0 Sao paolo Bovespa 53768.00 +749.22 + 1 .41% 4 4 -5.6 -2.68 -0.02% L A Toronto s&p/Tsx 15207.11 54.7 /AFRICA -7.2 EUROPE

AMPH

I arge media companies like Disney, Time Warner and DreamWorks Animation are starting to look to YouTube channel operators for a creative spark and access to young audiences. After Dlsney's recent acquisition of Maker Studios and DreamWorks' purchase of AwesomenessTV, industry watchers are wondering whether channel network Fullscreen might be next. The network has 40,000 content creators, 425 million subscribers and generates 3.5 billion views each month. In June of last year, it scored a reported $30 million in investment from media companies The Chernin Group, Comcast and advertising agency group WPP. Thedeals valued the company at

LAST FRI. CHG 1985.44 +1 0.82 10029.43 +118.16 6865.21 +48.84 -18.18 23531.44 4489.88 +45.16 15348.29 -21.68

When do you say, 'We are as blg as viacom?' It's tough to know. It's never going to be an apples-to-apples comparlson because we're talking about views in What Is your vlslon for Fullscreen? social video. We started the company to empower We may say, "We have a billion the next generation of content creators. views." And they may say, "Well, what We're supporting about 40,000 are they worth?" And in fact we have creators around the world. That grows about 3.5 billion views per month. Irs by hundreds per day. Directionally we massive scale. So that'll continue to like to say we're going to create the grow to 4 billion, 5 billion, 10 billion next Viacom, the next NBCUnlversal, someday. the next Disney. The goal was not to sell to those companies. The goal was What will It take for advertisers to to create one ourselves. shlft TV spendlng to online video? The media business has changed. Do you nmd investment? Creative is coming from all around the No. We raised capital last year and world now. Fullscreen Is at the epicenter now we're a profitable business. of that. There's a strong degree of a reported $110 million. Fullscreen founder and CEO George Strompolos recently spoke wlth The Associated Press.

interest from traditional media, including the big studios. They're taking note of where youth are spending their time. The dollars follow the eyeballs and they want to be part of that. Someone told me that a media buyer can wake up at 8 a.m., plan out their TV media buy, be in the office by 9 a.m. and do something different. It's established, turnkey, you're buying spots and dots. When you come into the world of digital media, it's fragmented. There are different ad formats, platforms, creators. The desire is there but you have that kind of tyranny of choice. As the format simplifies and the industry standardizes, that will get better and better. Interviewed by Ryan Nakashima. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changes for the weekending Thursday, July 3, 2014

+

17,068.26

+216.42

Nasoaa ~ 4,485.93

880 0

S&P500

+

1,985.44

24 48

RUSSELL2000 I,208.15

+

+18.65

WILSHIRE5000

+

21,107.54

+261.54


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

UNDAY D

R

ue -e ieien

o i V e e S ineS Inconsistentconduct from cruise control

By Barry Spyker The Miami Herald

The all-new 2014 Corvette

Stingray — yes, the Stingray name is back — is an amazing, fully redesigned sports

By Brad Bergholdt

or transmission gear, vehide speed, battery voltage or en• The cruise control is gine speed are out of allowable • i ntermittent on m y range. If you have not seen an 1998 Buick Regal LS, which illuminated "service engine has 130,000 miles. Outside soon" light, it's fairly safe to

McClatchy-B.ibune News Service

Q

car. With its 6.2-liter V-8, it is

loaded withrawpower — more than any Corvette ever. Carbon composite underpanels contribute to a 5 0/50 weight

soft leather and

REVIEW m i c r o s u e d e accents. But I'm going out on a limb here and leading this column

The 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray revives the legendary moniker of the1963 Corvette Stingray.

2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray

system that has great feedback has tire-pressure monitoring and grip that is nothing less and run-flat tires. But OnStar is than exceptional. The stiffer there if you need it. frame andrevised suspension There are two trim levels: system work to keep it stable. the base and Z51 performance And 20-inch wheels in the rear group. There are also subtrims and 19-inchers up front im- called LT1, LT2 and LT3. prove maneuverability. The base gets leather seats, Stingray is equally pleasing xenon headlights, keyless enon the highway. It is comfort- try and eight-way power seats. able and smooth enough for And it gets plenty of electrontrips as well as short jaunts. ics, induding the 8-inch touchGive some credit here to screen display and nine-speakChevy's effort to greatly im- er sound system with two USB prove the interior, something ports. many saw as a weakness of the Get the Z51 package for the C6. Seating is new, more sup- bigger wheels, revised tranportive and comfortable, and ny gear ratios and limited-slip adjusted with eight-way power rear differential.

Base price:$53,000 As tested:$73,525 Type:Two-door coupe sports car with convertible option Engine:6.2-1!ter V-8 engine with a seven-speed transmission for manual w/OD and six-speed for automatic w/OD andauto-manual Mileage:17mpg city, 29 mpg highway

hood, composite fenders, doors

and rear quarter panels. But the real credit likely goes to the cylinder deactivation system. Hit the Eco mode and it seam-

lessly turns that beefy V-8 into a well-mannered 4-banger. You won't notice it, but your wallet will.

Official EPA figures are 17 460 pound-feet of torquempg city, 29 highway. I hit 30 than ever before. And most of on one commute, and that was with the lower-mileage auto-

that torque is the racing kind:

controls. Optional competition

low-end torque for great early matic tranny. Once outside, I punch. looked back to make sure I was A drive mode selector on the still driving a Corvette. center console lets you choose Available in a coupe and your driving mood, with five convertible, the 'Vette's exteri- options ranging from Touring or has sharper edges, function- to thetop-performance Track al inlets and Bigfoot tires give mode. And there's nothing it an aggressive, almost angry phony about it: They are discharacter. tinct rides as the system adAnd it backs it up on the justs steering response, agility road, punching out 0-60 fig- and throttle response. ures in under 4 seconds. The Tackling corners is done in cast-aluminum V-8 offers more confidence with a variable-rapower — 455 horsepower and tion rack-and-pinion steering

s

nician. He would like to

intermittent c r u ise

A

If that doesn't quite cut it,

'

possible interest to others.

mittent operation.

Your Buick's cruise control system consists mainly of

erates correctly at times, we'll

the cruise control module/ actuator unit located on the left strut tower, the control switches, the brake pedal

Since your cruise system opassume thereare no faults in the mechanical linkage connected to the throttle. Have

yourson obtain the very clear release switch and cooper- one-page cruise control sysation with the powertrain tem wiring diagram via Alldacontrol module, or PCM. ta or On-Demand-5, hopefully The cruise control module online at a public library. A is the place to go for testing, shopping list of module terand thankfully it's easily minals and expected voltages accessed. I tell my students can be determined to check a control module is like a switch and PCM inputs. Obtrain station — all the trains serving good test values would come and go from it. be very helpful before checkThe Buick's PCM shares ing the same circuits when it's vehicle speed input with the acting up. It's anyone's guess cruise control module and where the intermittent conneccan orderthe cruise control tion may lie, but testing at the to stand down if diagnostic module will narrow this down trouble codes are present quickly.

seats offer more side support the racer third-gen Z06 is on on hard cornering. the horizon, due out early next Interior space is good even year. Itstires are around 3 inchfor six-plus footers, with 38 es wider and it's expected to inches of headroom, 43 in leg- give NASA a run for its money room and 54 in hiproom. And with a supercharged engine thereisdecent cargo space in pounding out 625 horses and the trunk of the coupe — 15cu- 635 pound-feetoftorque. bic feet, enough for small suitThis year's new Corvette cases and groceries. Stingray is everything we The convertible, however, could have hoped. It maintains gets less space at 10 cubic feet. its distinctive styling edge, ups Safety features indude four the ante on power and vastly air bags plus side-impact bags, improves the interior. Just don't traction and stability control, forget to brag about your mileand rear-view camera. It also age to the tree huggers, too.

' •

s y stem

check for heat expansion is the brake pedal release causing a short or break in (cruise inhibit) switch. Next the circuit but needs a"road time the cruise control acts map." Whereisthe speed up, try sneaking a toe beneath sensor located? Maybe he the brake pedal and pull back can follow the wiring to the slightly, then attempt to re-entrouble spot. gage the cruise. If this restores Y our help would b e operation, the pedal switch greatly appreciated. I am is out of adjustment or faulty. 90 and want to make this Another thing to try: With the Buick my last car. cruise working normally and — Ray Forrester engaged, wiggle and twist the • Ray, I'm g oing to m ultifunction lever, or t u r n • try to help you sort signal arm, checking to see if this out, but I need to keep you can make it cancel. If so, things fairly general so that frayed wires or a flaky switch the information will be of may be the cause of the inter-

Alan Vanderkaay i McClatchy-Tritrune News Service

the mileage! Each day in the C7 (seventh generation) Corvette I found myself shaking my head on achieving either near 30 or even just over 30 mpg on the highway. These are Toyota Camry numbers, you understand'? How did Chevy do it? Well, they used more lightweight materials like a carbon fiber

assume there are no current

diagnostic trouble codes or OK if the temperature is vehicle speed sensor issues. below about 75 degrees. Troubles with th e v ehicle In the mid-80s, there is no speed sensor, or VSS, would control. This started shortly also show up in the speedomeafter the coolant change at ter/odometer functions. 100,000 miles. The first thing I always My son is an airline tech- check with an inoperative or

balanceand exceptional road behavior. Inside, it is greatly improved over last year, with finer materials, carbon fiber,

with what really dazzled me:

temperature seems to determine if it operates. It works

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

JOHN COSTA

Inspiring leadership in

II •

n an Independence weekend,

O

it's sobering to consider the last time the nation believed itself imperiled, and inspiring to consider the remarkable leadership that

saved it. That time, according to historian

David Kaiser, was the period that preceded and concluded World War II.

Kaiser, who has taught history at Harvard University, Williams Col-

lege and the Naval War College, is the author of a very interestingbook, "No End Save Victory: How FDR Led the Nation into War."

The broad and basic storyline is familiar. The nation is politically, economi-

cally and socially stressed. Its Army barely exists, its Navy is a shadow of what it will become, and

its air forces are in their infancy. There's very little political stom-

ach for America's inclusion in a war against Hitlerism — or against any ism for that matter — even if the fate of Britain and the whole of Europe is

up for grabs. Roosevelt, as Kaiser describes, is

very deftly walking a tightrope, balancing his desire to help the British and the Russians with the very slim

support for his policies among voters and in the Congress. Of course all of this changes definitively on Dec. 7, 1941 with the Japa-

nese attack on Pearl Harbor. But there is a year beforehand-

the focus of Kaiser's book — when Roosevelt and his leadership team begin to prepare the nation, its econ-

omy, its manufacturing capacity, its manpower, its labor force and its organizational structure for World War II.

The details in Kaiser's book are

k

4

riveting, but so are the personalities,

principal among them Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Marshall, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Harold

e

Stark, Secretary of State Cordell Hull and Secretary of War Henry

e •

Stimson.

k k

e

e

e •

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e

And, of course, there are countless advisers and agency leaders who directed and controlled the domestic

war-making capacity of the United States.

By Vivek Wadhwa

They didn't all agree, but FDR, according to Kaiser, held them together

n a distant part of the galaxy, 300 years in the future, Starship Enter-

and used their sometimes-vehement

disagreements to advance his vision of how the country should — and must — get ready for war. Some of their planning turned out to be prescient. Some was dead wrong, but largely because, as Kaiser indicates, it was close to impossible to predict the full extent of the

century, that Roosevelt brought to

the leadership of the nation had a capacity to define a problem, argue out their conflicting views, arrive at

I

prise Capt. James T. Kirk talks to

his crew via a communicator, has his medical officer assess medical conditions through a hand-held device called a tricorder, synthesizes food and physical goods using his replicator, and travels short distances via a

war and the U.S. role in it.

Kaiser's observations are particularly interesting given the state of the body politic today. The generation of individuals, most of them born in the late 19th

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Special to The Washington Post

New YorkTimes NewsService file photo

This fake bacon wasn't edible then, and certainly wouldn't be now, but this 3-D-printed version of "food," created in 2012, is a sign that the "Star Trek"

replicator is on its wayto becoming a reality.

a solution, see it through or amend it

transporter. Kirk's successors hold meetings in virtual-reality chambers, called holodecks, and operate alien spacecraft using displays mounted on their foreheads. All this takes place in the TV series "Star Trek"

4s (

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and is of course science fiction.

We mayhave been inspired

This science fiction is, however, becoming science reality. Many of the technolo-

by your flip phone, Captain Kirk, but we're light-years ahead of your hand-held communicator now.

gies that we saw in "Star Trek" are begin-

ning to materialize, and ours may be better than Starfleet's. Best of all, we won't have to wait 300 years.

— without a lot of recrimination. And, without cellphones, person-

Take Kirk's communicator. It was surely an inspiration for the first generation of flip phones, those dunky mobile devices that we used in the 1990s. These have evohred into

al computers, satellite intelligence and communications, or any other modern assetofwarfare, they helped

lead the Allies to worldwide victo-

smartphones, far more advanced than the science-fiction communicator. Kirk's device

ry three and half years after Pearl Harbor.

didn't receive email, play music, surf the Web,

We, as Kaiser points out, were different as a people. Roughly speaking, our population

provide directions or take photos, after all. It

also didn't sweet-talkhim as Apple's Siri does when you ask her the right questions.

was half the size it is today, and we

Soon, our smartphones will also add the

were far more homogeneous. The folks at home were willing to make extraordinary sacrifices in

m edical-assessment features ofa tricorder, and it won't need to be a separate device.

their lives to support the war effort, not the least of which were the high,

provide a platform for medical-sensor data that will be displayed by an application called

new taxes FDR engineered to under-

Health. Google, Microsoft, Samsung and oth-

Apple recently announced that iOS 8 will

write in part the war effort.

ers are all racing to build their own platforms and medical devices. We will soon see a new

The Associated Pressfile photo

Kaiser's conclusion is that this was all possible because the nation deep

So we have toacknowledge

generationofwearable devices such asbrace-

down believed that its civilization

"Star Wars" here, too. This

was at risk. It's impossible to say how we

special effectsmasterof

lets, watches and dothing that use external sensorsto perform electrocardiograms and

"Star Wars" and "Harry Pot-

measure our temperature, blood oxygenation

would respond today, but it's certain

ter" fame, PaulHolman,cre-

The original "Star Trek" cast visited a mock transporter at the Smithsonian in1992. Since then, breakthroughs in quantum teleportation ...

and othervital signs.

wait a minute,wouldanyone

that the independence we enjoy is due in great measure to that generation.

ated this real-life hologram

— John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com

TheAssociated Pressfile photo

— almost adecadeago.

See Trek/F5

really trust that to work in real life?


F2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

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revolution is going on in our high schools. It rests on

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the belief that high school and college courses can

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be merged in high school classrooms without any

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loss in educational value. While we certainly agree that education credits alone don't make a good teacher, this plan puts another hole in the fabric designed to maintain academic standards. Other states have grappled with the same problem, but many have focused on helping more teachers earn the credentials before they take on these challenging assignments. Many Central Oregon high schools also provide pathways to college credits by having students for decades but has been growing go toCOCC and take regular colfast as districts nationwide seek to lege classes as if they were already mitigate high tuition costs and mo- matriculated. At Bend High, Intertivate more students to seek college national Baccalaureate students degrees. can earn college credits by passA look at current practices sug- ing internationally standardized gestsa good idea isbeing expand- tests. ed far beyond what research and In Bend-La Pine Schools, high common sense can justify. We risk schoolstudents earned 7,074 coldumbed-down degrees and poorly lege credits in 2013-14, up from educated graduates. 4,937 in 2009-10. (International Does high schoolreally have Baccalaureate credits are not yet so little value'? And how does this available for the past year, but 49 mesh with the frequent complaint were earned in 2009-10.) that we send ill-prepared high school graduates to college where Many methods they need remedial help? Across the nation, thousands of Imagine this model already in variations on the dual credit theme use at Mountain View High School are in practice. in Bend. A high school teacher, in The goals are laudable: a high school classroom, teaches a • Help students earn college decollege course to high school stugrees sooner and at substantially dents including: lower cost. • Some who will e arn h igh • Encourage students who don't school credit only. think of themselves as college ma• Others who will earn high terial by giving them encourageschool and college credit from ment and confidence, as well as an the sponsoring college, most of- inexpensive head start. ten Central Oregon Community But theresearch,though posiCollege. tive, is not definitive on the details: • Still others who will earn high •Hundreds ofstudiesshow stuschool credit and take a nationally standardized Advanced Place- dents who earn college credit in ment test in hopes of scoring high high school are more likely to go to enough that the college they attend college and earn degrees. • Unfortunately, only a small will award credit. subset of the research attempts to Any student can take the class. correct for the fact that many of The high school teacher must those students would have gone to have the same educational qualifi- college with or without dual credit, cations as a college instructor. He thus skewing the results. Still, the or she works with a college mentor results are generally positive. but teaches and grades the course • But each program is differindependently. ent, and the research often can't We suspect there are a few say which variations are effective. spectacularteachers who could For example, one well-regarded pull off such a challenging teach- study found positive results only ing assignment. But it's implausible for the students who went to the to think high school teachers could college campus to take the course routinely maintain college rigor in with other college students. Most a high school classroom with such studies tested the effects of one a wide mix of students. or just a few courses, not a whole two years. Many of those studied Lower teacher qualifications have class entrance requirements More worrisome is a new pilot for students. And the idea worked program that cuts the required better for some subjects than qualifications for the teachers. others. The effort seeks to make dual • An ecdotal accounts from credit classes available in smaller acrossthe country reveal students schools where there aren't enough who conqueredthe academic mateachers with t h e a p propriate terial but had trouble arriving as credentials. college juniors without the necesCascades Commitment recently sary maturity and social experiwon a $450,000 grant from the Or- ence. Others clearly had not expeegon Education Investment Board rienced collegiate rigor in the colto bring five college courses to 11 lege classes they took at their high high schools in Deschutes, Jeffer- schools. son and Crook counties. The stateofOregon encourages The group is working on a plan dual credit, going so far as to score to allow high school teachers to high schools on how many college teach college courses even if they credits their students earn before lack the current COCC require- high school graduation. It's conments: a master's degree in the sidered a crucial tool in the effort subject or a master's in education to encourage more students to go to college by giving them the confiplus 15 credits in the subject. Instead, they will attend a one- dencethattheycansucceed. The political pressure is great to week intensive training session this summer and participate in satisfy the governor's education reregular meetings throughout the form goals by increasing the numschool year with high school and ber of degrees awarded. college teachers. The plan also proHigh school and college comvides tuition for teachers to start bined? For some students, for filling in the gaps in their creden- some courses, it clearly works tials, but meanwhile they could well. But take it too far and we'll start teaching the classes. have meaningless degrees. Local It's part of a one-year pilot to de- educators need to establish firm termine if the teacher-qualification student admission requirements, standards can be relaxed without teacher qualifications and passing losing instructional value. standards. For some students, the fully implemented concept would combine the last two years of high school with the first two years of college. They would graduate from high school with two years of college credit and could enroll as juniorsat a four-year Oregon university. So-called dual credit or dual enrollment programs allow high school students to earn high school and college credit simultaneously. The approach has been around

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Wilderness proposal offers many benefits to the public By Rynda Clark disagree with The Bulletin's re-

IN MY VIEW

claimed in its recent editorial.

It appears that The Bulletin would wilderness and opened to the pub- like to achieve a theoretically perfect dral Rock and Horse Heaven lic, Cathedral Rock would become a outcome and not one that reflects Wilderness Proposal. As a resident tremendous public asset. the willingness of local people to of Central Oregon, a grandmother Until the wilderness proposal is develop real world, on-the-ground and a member of the Great Old passed by Congress, issues of ac- local solutions. Private landowners Broads for Wilderness, a national cess and trespass will prevent the and the public have worked together organization that uses the voices public from enjoying Cathedral for many years to craft a plan that and activism of elders to preserve Rock. There is currently a check- benefits the public and also protects and protect wilderness and wild erboard of public and private land private property rights. Regulating lands, I believe the proposal offers that prevents the public from freely access to Cathedral Rock during far more benefit than The Bulletin's exploring public land at Cathedral winter months, when wet weather editorial suggests. Chief among Rock. There is a lack of public land can make the road impassable, will these is making inaccessible public along Muddy Creek Road that pre- enhance the safety of motorists. Furland accessible to the public. vents the citizens from accessing thermore, The Bulletin argues that The Bulletin's article claims that Cathedral Rock by motor vehicle, private landowners have not gone far "the plan has numerous benefits, and access to Cathedral Rock from enough to support public interests, but its fatal flaw is the moat of pri- the river is prevented due to pri- but letus not forget that the landownvate land that would block most vate ownership of two miles of rivers involved are voluntarily pursuing people from public land that they er frontage. For these reasons, the thisexchange and the accompanycan reach now." While I agree that current situation deprives the public ing wilderness designation. plan has numerous benefits, I be- from experiencing Cathedral Rock. It would be a shame to let pursuit lieve that The Bulletin misunderPassage of the wilderness pro- of a theoretically perfect outcome stands the public's ability to access posal will provide the public with stand in the way of a collaborative, the area at present and has mischar- several new ways to access Cathe- well-designed solution developed acterized the outcome of this wilder- dral Rock: Muddy Creek Road will after a lengthy process that has ness proposal. be open to the public during the worked to address numerous conLast August, I participated in a eight months out of the year that cerns. The opportunity to designate Broads hike to Cathedral Rock. Be- anyone is likely to visit the area; riv- Cathedral Rock and Horse Heaven cause there is not currently public er access will be opened thanks to as wilderness and enhance pubaccess, we had to request permis- the exchange of two miles of river lic access for recreation is simply sion from the private landowner frontage from private land to public; the common sense solution. This in order to take this hike. We ex- and land consolidation will more legislation deserves to advance in ploredMelendy Ridge and gained a than double the number of acres the Congress. breathtaking view of the John Day public is able to access without tres— Rynda Clark isthe co-leader of River. Our group marveled at the passing. This access will benefit the Central Oregon Bitterbrush Broadband beauty and tranquility of the area public, especially hikers and huntand Great Old Broads for Wilderness. and agreedthat once protected as ers, contrary to what The Bulletin She lives in Bend.

t

cent editorial about the Cathe-

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.

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P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Stuckintraffic? Blame goes to a Congress stuck in 'Park' Ed Rendell and Roger Dow

More than three out of four do-

Special To The Washington Post

It's infuriating that the average

mestic trips are for leisure, which merica i s c h o ck-a-blockmeans they're ostensibly optional. with l a n dmarks, b e ach- Direct spending on this travel toes and mountains — if you taled $621.4 billion in 2013, genercan reach them. If you're traveling ating $9L9 billion in tax revenue. If this weekend, you'll inevitably face our roads and transportation projmind-numbing congestion, flight de- ects are gridlocked, Americans will lays and rail interruptions. And our avoid the headache and just stay headaches are going to get dramati- home, which will hurt our economy cally worse if Congress doesn't tack- and our quality of life. le infrastructure modernization. We deserve better. Americans The Highway Trust Fund shouldn't have to choose between which pays for our nation's roads, staying at home, sitting in traffic or bridges and highways — is about to hitting the road at 3 a.m. just to beat run out of money. Here's why: The the rush. Trust is funded by the federal gas Unfortunately, numerous reports tax, set at 18.4 cents per gallon for about increased traffic, structurally the past 21 years. deficient bridges, inadequate public But since then, cars havebecome transportation and potholed roads

American commuter w asted 38

much more fuel-efficient. That, plus inflation, has stretched the fund

haven't spurred Congress to act. But

public to tell Washington to get America moving again and to take

way too thin.

their constituents, they might finally take notice.

action to immediately replenish the

when they're stuck in t raffic, on the tarmac or in a train. The pre-

— Ed RendeII is the former governor of Pennsylvaniaand the co-chairman of Building America's Future; Roger Dow is president and CEOof the US. 73avel Association.

This is terrible news for travelers. American air travel infrastructure

is in such bad shape that Thanksgiving-like passenger congestion will be a year-round reality at nearly all of the top 50 U.S. airports within the decade. Labor Day-like traffic

if officials hear directly from you,

hours and 19 gallons of fuel sitting in traffic in 2011, and that cities

don't have enough money to upgrade or expand their overburdened transit systems. Congestion costs the average American commuter

$818 a year, including time lost at work and at home with our families. How can we expect to compete

in a 21st century economy when we don't have 21st century transportation systems?

America needs a long-term plan to modernize and build top-notch transportation systems that make

our commutes reliable and allow goods to move more efficiently across the country. It's time for the

Highway Trust Fund. By downloadThat's why we created the "I'm ing the free app, which runs on both Stuck" app (for Apple and Android Android and Apple devices, frusphones), which allows people to no- trated commuters can get out the tify their representative or senator message: "I'm Stuck!"

will soon plague U.S. highways on set message demands action on the the average day of the week. Highway Trust Fund. You can add It's also bad for the economy. your own comments or just hit send.


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

ama wants out o n his first term, Barack Obama all but declared victory in Ameri-

East struggles. t Asca'sheMiddle precipitously pulled out

VICTORDAVIS HANSON

all U.S.peacekeepers from Iraq, the president had his own "Mission Accomplished" moment when

new softpower rhetoricalapproach declaring the c ountry " stable," sought to win over the hearts and "self-reliant" and an "extraordinary minds of the Arab Street, and thereachievement." by deny terrorists popular support. Those claims echoed Vice PresTo grade that policy, survey the ident Joe Biden's earlier boast that current Middle East, or what is left Iraq somehow would prove Obama's of it: Egypt, the Gulf monarchies, "greatest achievement." Iraq, Iran, Israel and the PalestinAfter the death of Osama bin Lad- ians, Libya, Syria and Turkey. It is en, and during Obama's re-election fair to say that America has somecampaign, the president also pro- how managed to alienate friends, claimed that al-Qaida was a spent embolden enemies and multiply radforce and "on the run." ical Islamic terrorists. But what exactly was the new So what happened? Obama strategy that supposedly In short, the Obama administrahad all but achieved a victory in the tion put politics and ideology ahead larger war on terror amid Middle of a disinterested and nonpartisan East hostility'?

Fuzzy euphemisms replaced supposedly hurtful terms like "terrorism," "jihadist" and "Islamist." The

administration gave w ell-meaning speeches exaggerating Islamic achievement while citing past Amer-

ican culpability. W e tilted toward Turkey a n d the Palestinians while sternly lecturing Israel. Military victory was

caricaturedas an obsolete concept. Leading from behind was a clever substitute.

Middle Easterners gathered that a bruised America would limp away from the region and pivot its forces elsewhere, saving billions of dollars to be better spent at home. The

THOMAS

FRIEDMAN

could be just as easily lost if the U.S. pins in Guantanamo for an alleged did not leave behind peacekeepers American military deserter in in the manner that it had in all its Afghanistan. past successful interventions — the A series of empty Middle East Balkans, Germany, Italy, Japan, the red lines, deadlines and withdrawal Philippines, South Korea. dates likewise reinforced the idea of Likewise, the once-derided "war American abdication. on terror" measures — GuantanaWe warned Syria of air strikes mo, the Patriot Act, military tribuand then backed down. We surged nals, preventive detentions, rendi- in Afghanistan only to simultanetions and drones — by 2009 had ously announce a withdrawal date largely worked. Since 9/11, America for our troops. We issued Iran lots had foiled dozens of terrorist plots of deadlines to stop enriching uraagainst our homeland and neu- nium, only to forget them and end tralized terrorists abroad, killing sanctions in hope of negotiations. tens of thousands in both Iraq and

As was the case with Russia, at

Afghanistan. Obama for a while privately ac-

first there were few consequences to such reset diplomacy and promises cepted that truth and thereby contin- of easy victory. Al-Qaida had been ued many of the very protocols that nearly wiped out in Anbar province he had once derided. in 2007-08 and was still regrouping. But there was again one problem. Iranhad been crippled by sanctions Obama kept posturing to the world and was wary of U.S. intentions. Terexamination of the actual status of that he would close Guantanamo rorists didnot wish to end up at Guanthe 2009 Middle East. and substitute civilian trials for mil- tanamo or in a military tribunal. The more Obama campaigned itary tribunals. He continued to say But newly emboldened terrorists in 2008 on a failed war in Iraq, a that he did not enjoy using rendi- gambled that the ol d d eterrence neglected war in Afghanistan, an tions or drones — even as he upped was stale and now existed mostly as i ll-considered war o n t e rror a n d the latter's deadly missions tenfold. Obama's reset rhetoric. They gaman alienated Middle East, the more The results were contradictory bled that it was a great time to go on those talking points were outdated messages that encouraged radical Is- the off ensive.They may have been and eclipsed by fast-moving events lamists. The conclusion radical Isla- right. on the ground. mists drew was that even the Obama Once more in the Middle East, By InaugurationDay in January administration had admitted its an- Obama is looking to blame others 2009, the hard-power surge had ti-terrorism protocols were either for a mess that has grown since largely defeated al-Qaida in Iraq. It morally questionable or ineffective. 2009. But mostly he just wants out had won overmany of the Sunnis Blaming a video maker instead of the lose-lose region at any cost and had led to a U.S.-enforced co- o f immediately taking out t h e and wishes that someone would just alition government, monitored by known jihadists who had murdered make all the bad things go away. American troops. Americans in Benghazi only re- — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and But there remained one caveat: inforced that mixed message. So historian at the Hoover Institution and What had been won on the ground did exchanging five terrorist kingStanford University.

Fate of Ukraine matters Y

ou can'tmake this up. The Guardianreported last week that Ukrainians have crowd-

funded the first "people's drone" to help their army stem infiltration by Russian-supported rebels in Ukraine's

easternprovinces thatborder Russia. "Last week, Ukraine's crowdfunding site 'The People's Project' said that

it had received enough donations to fund a drone," The Guardian reported. "The organizers had originally hoped to buy a state-of-the-art Israeli drone — for $165,000 — or a cheaper American one costing $120,000. In the end, however, they managed to build the droneforjust$35,000.A designerand other volunteers built the airframe, with a Ukrainian military institute

chipping in technical equipment." Good for them. The fate of Ukraine

matters — asmuch, if notmore, as Syria and Iraq. We don't have to search for "moderates" in Ukraine. Millions

there have alreadyboth fought for and voted to align their country with the

free markets and free people of the European Union. In Brussels, the newly elected Ukraiman president, Petro Poroshen-

ko, signed a trade pact with the Euro-

Colleges and First Amendment rights

pean Union that will lower tariffs on Ukraiman exports to the 28-nation EU market in return for Ukraine implementing anti-corruption, t r ans-

parency and quality-control reforms designed to bring its economy up to Western standards. It was the same

Robert Shibley Special To The Washington Post

PHILADELPHIAeptember 17lastyear was apretty bad day for the Constitution

S on our campuses. Robert Van Mnen of Modesto Junior College in

California was prevented from passing out copies of the Constitution outside of his college's tiny "free speech zone." Near Los Angeles, Citrus College student Vinny Sinapi-Riddle was threatened with removal from

campus for the "offense" of collecting signatures outside his college's tiny ment to dismantle its unconstitutionfree speech area for a petition against al rules. And Tuesday, Sinapi-Riddle NSA domestic surveillance. I men- and plaintiffs at three other schools tion September 17 because that was filed federal lawsuits asserting their Constitution Day. rights as part of a major new litigaThese attempts to silence students tion campaign from the Foundation are all in a day's work for today's col- for Individual Rights in Education lege administrators. Thanks to the (FIRE, where I work) to finally end continuingmenace of campus speech speech codes on public campuses. codes — rules restricting what stu- More casesare planned in the comdents may say and where they may ing weeks and months. say it — these sorts of offenses hapThe nature of the lawsuits shows pen every day on our nation's college the authoritarian bent of campuses and university campuses. The only today, where every sector of a studifference between the above cases dent's life is festooned with regulaand hundreds or thousands of others tions. Two of Tuesday's suits, at Ohio is that these students decided to stand

University and at Iowa State Univer-

up for their rights in court. That's sity, have to do with unconstitutional about to become a lotmore common. regulation of the content of student Modesto quickly settled, paying group T-shirts — one because of a $50,000 and signing a binding agree- suggestive joke, the other because it

advocated marijuana legalization. If portantly, they also believe that the you area student or parent worried former group is more likely to sue about the fact that college costs are than the latter.) And they're under up 80 percent in the last 10 years and more pressure than ever to censor; continue to rise, the fact that cam- with the explosion of social media, puses are paying people to act as demanding that i nstitutions punT-shirt police for their adult students ish or silence people when they say offers little reassurance. something "outrageous" has practiThe remaining suit shows how cally become our national pastime. free speech and academic freedom The movement to include expresfor faculty are threatened, as well. sion-chilling "trigger warnings" in Administrators at Chicago State Uni- curricula and this year's disgraceful versity evidently are unable to accept spate of commencement address the idea that people might criticize controversies involving figures such their alleged mismanagement on- as CondoleezzaRice and IMF head line. So Chicago State has engaged Christine Lagarde only push colin increasingly ridiculous stunts to leges further toward enforcing a stitry to silence the professors who au- fling uniformity of opinion. thor the CSU Faculty Voice blog, the Sixyearsago,79percentofAmermost recent of which involved rush- ica's largest and most prestigious ing to pass a "cyberbullying" policy public universities chilled student it immediately used to target them. speech with laughably unconstituThis threatens not just free speech tional codes. Today, thanks to inbut also academic freedom, which to creasedawareness of the problem, be meaningful must include the right that number is down to 58 percent. of profess orsto speak outon m atters That's a real improvement, but it's of public concern — like the univer- still far too high when the law resity's well-publicized problems with quires that number to be 0 percent. finances and graduation rates. Higher education cannot live up to Why is this happening? The main its fantastic (and now, fantastically problem is i ncentives. Colleges expensive) promise if this pervasive fear those who demand censorship culture of censorship doesn't change.

deal that Poroshenko's predecessor, Viktor Yanukovych (under pressure

more than they fear those who demand they follow the Constitution

of newly empowered citizens, he can enjoy the same "sphere of influence"

and their own written policies. gm-

— Robert Shibley, a civil liberties attorney, is seniorvice president of the Foundation forIndividualRightsin Education.

Sharing economy highlights evolution of trust m one of those people who t thought 'work. Airbnb would never I thought people would never rent out space in their homes to near strangers. But I was clearly wrong. Eleven million travelers have stayed in Airbnb destinations, according to data shared by the company. Roughly 550,000 homes are now being shared by hosts. Airbnb is more popular in Europe than it is even in the United States. Paris is the

largest destination city. And Airbnb is only a piece of the peer-to-peer economy. People are renting out their cars to people they don't know, dropping off their pets with people they don't know, renting power tools to people they don't know. In retrospect, I underestimated the power of a few trends that make the

peer-topeer economy possible.First, I underestimated the effects of mid-

dle-class stagnation. With wages flat and families squeezed, many people have to return to the boardinghouse

model of yesteryear. They have to rent out rooms to cover their mortgage or rent. Second, I underestimated the power that liberal arts majors would have on the economy. Millions of people have finished college with a hunger for travel and local contact, but without much money.They would rather

stay in spare rooms in residential neighborhoods than in homogenized hotels in commercial areas, especial-

from President Vladimir Putin of Rus-

sia), refused to sign last November. That set off the revolution in Kiev's

main square that toppled Yanukovych and ignited a rebellion by Putin-directed separatists in eastern Ukraine. Which is why only hours after the deal was signed, Russia's deputy foreign minister, Grigory Karasin, was quoted by the Interfax news agency as ominously warning that the EUUkrame accord would have "serious consequences."

I had argued in May that Putin had "blinked" when, in the wake of Western sanctions and the threat of more,

he pulled back troops from Ukraine's border where he had massed them

— hoping first to block Poroshenko's election and then the signing of the EU deal. But maybe Putin just winked. Although he did not invade, he has

shoveledarms and proxies into eastern Ukraine to foment separatism in

Russian-speaking areas. In denying Ukrainians the right to choose their economic and political

path, Putin showshowdumb andcleverhe is at the sametime. He is dumb in believing that, in this connected world that Russia had in Central Europe in

the days of the czars. Sorry. If a leader wants to havea sphere ofinfl uence today — in this age of "people of influence" — he either has to earn itbyhow he behaves or take it all by force. In Ukraine, Putin is incapable of the for-

mer and — for now — doesn't dare do the latter. The czars never had to deal

DAVID

BROOKS ly if they get to have breakfast with

Economically, there are many m ore people working as freelancers. These people are more individualistic in how they earn money. They often don't go to an office. They have traded dependence on big organi-

economy has not relied on much is government regulation. The people

with people of influence who could crowdfund their own drone.

who use these companies may be

But Puhn is also clever. Or as Russian analyst Vladimir Frolov put it in

mostlypolitical progressives, but they are operating in a lightly regulated economic space. They vote left but

dick right. people they can talk to and negotiate As this sector matures, governAnd the big thing I underestimat- arrangements with directly. They be- ment is getting more involved. City ofed was the transformation of social come accustomed toflexible ad-hoc ficials have clashed with Airbnb and trust. In primitive economies, peo- arrangements. Uber on a range of issues. But most ple traded mostly with members of The result is a personalistic cul- city governments don't seem inciined their village and community. Trust ture in which people have actively to demand tight regulations and was face to face. Then, in the mass lost trust in big institutions. Strang- oversight. Centralized agencies don't economy we've been used to, people ers don't seem especially risky by know what to make of decentralized bought from large and stable cor- comparison. This is fertile ground for trust networks. Moreover, in most porate brands, whose behavior was peer-to-peer commerce. cities, people seem to understand this made more reliable by government Companies like Airbnb establish is a less formal economy, and caveat regulation. trust through ratings mechanisms. emptorrulesto agreaterdegree. But now there is a new trust cal- Their clients are already adept at Meanwhile, companies like Airbculus, powered by both social and evaluating each other on the basis of nb and evenUber seem indined to economicforces.Socially,we have each other's Facebook pages. People compromise and play nice with city large numbers of people living loose, in the Airbnb economy don't have the governments. They're trying to esunstructured lives, mostly in the 10 option of trusting each other on the tablish reputations as good citizens, years after leaving college and in the basis of institutional affiliations, so to play nice with bureaucrats and co10 years after retirement. they do it on the basis of online signal- op boards; they can't do that with inThese people often live alone or ing and peer evaluations. Online rat- your-face, disruptive tactics. We're probably entering a world in with short-time roommates, outside ings follow you everywhere, so peobig institutional structures such as ple have an incentive to act in ways which some sectors, like energy, retain top-down regulatory regimes. Other universities, corporations or the set- that will buff their online reputation. tled living of family life. They become As companies like Airbnb, Lyft sectors, like bake sales, are unregulatvery fast and fluid in how they make and Sidecarget more mature, they ed.But more sectors,like peer-to-peer, social connections. They become ac- also spend more money policing their exIstin agrayzoneinbetween. customed to instant intimacy, or at own marketplace. They hire teams to As mechanisms to establish private least fast pseudo-intimacy. People are hunt out fraud. They screen suppliers. trust become more efficient, governhungrier for human contact and more They look for bad apples who might mentplays a smaller role. tolerant of fluid, easy-come-easy-go ruinthe experience. — David Brooksis a columnist relationships. The one thing the peer-to-peer for The New Yorh Times. the hosts in the morning.

zational systems for dependence on

The Moscow Times: "President Vladimir Putin may fail to secure his goal of derailing Ukraine's association agreement with the EU, but at home he has

already cashed in on his Ukrainian political strategy by completely resetting Russia's national conversation. His principal achievement has been to eliminate any meaningful debate on alternative futures for Russia. Less than a year ago, there was still political space to advance democratic alternatives to Putin's system." However, Frolov added, the Russian

seizure of Crimea and its proxy war in Ukraine "transformed the national conversation from a healthy debate on

Putin's presidential performance into a toxic discussion on war and Russia's enemies. Moscow's propaganda has successfully painted Ukraine's popular uprising against state capture by a corrupt dique as a 'U.S.-sponsored

fascist coup.'" Therefore, if Putin"is fighting Nazis in Ukraine, then by extension anyone

who disagrees with him could be a Nazi collaborator and an enemy of Russia. This doses the political space

for all alternativevisions for Russiaexcept as a revisionist empire hostile to the West." — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weeklyranks the best-sellers for theweekthat ended June29. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Invisible" by JamesPatterson and David Ellis (Little, Brown) 2. "Top Secret Twenty-One" by Janet Evanovich (Bantam) 3. "Silkworm" by Robert Galbraith (LB/Mulholland) 4. "Mr. Mercedes" by Stephen King (Scribner) 5. "Written in My OwnHeart's Blood" by DianaGabaldon (Delacorte) 6. "All Fall Down" by Jennifer Weiner (Atria) 7."The Goldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 8. "The Matchmaker" by Elin Hilderbrand (Little, Brown) 9. "The One &Only" by Emily Giffin (Ballantine) 10. "The Target" by David Baldacci (GrandCentral) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "HardChoices" byHilary RodhamClinton (Simon 8Schuster) 2. "Blood Feud" byEdward Klein (Regnery) 3. "One Nation" by BenCarson (Penguin/Sentinel) 4. "Good Call" by JaseRobertson (Howard Books) 5. "Instinct" by T.D.Jakes (FaithWords) 6. "Capital in the TwentyFirst Century" by ThomasPiketty (Harvard/Belknap) 7. "Think Like aFreak" by Steven Levitt and StephenDubner (William Morrow) 8. "Everything I Need toKnow I Learned from a Little Golden Book" by DianeMuldrow (Random/Golden Books) 9. "America" by Dinesh D'Souza

(Regnery)

10. "Grain Brain" by David PerImutter (Little, Brown) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService

inner in e mazon warA'"'"" Novel' is By Brooks Barnes New York Times News Service

LOS ANGELES — Proba-

bly few much from Edan Lepucki's debut novel. Her pub-

by Ian Doescher (Quirk

'

'Lh\l %

l % l

"The Quick: ANovel" by Lauren Owen (Random House, 544 pgs., $27)

almost no experience. Was there a marketing budget'?

/4

By Joy Tipping

How cute of her to ask.

Then, seemingly out of nowhere, Lepucki, 33, won the literary Lotto.

A few weeks ago, late night television host Stephen Colbert began attacking Amazon for discouraging customers from buying titles from

The Dallas Morning News

Two summers ago, I struggled to write a review of Gillian Flynn's "Gone Girl," a n a s t onishingly good book that is virtually impossible to discuss without giving away its biggest,

4i)

1<

f er

lt('

gi ( ll (,

ge go f e

si Ai( g'

his publisher, Hachette Book

Group. But Colbert picked another Hachette authora startled Lepucki — as the

most enjoyable twist. Now

ge

<-h

] a

focal point of his campaign against Amazon. "We will not lick their mo-

Leah NashiNew YorkTimes News Service

nopoly boot," he said of Ama- Edan Lepucki, author of the debut novel "California," won the literary lottery when Stephen Colbert zon on "The Colbert Report" before exhorting viewers to

picked her, a fellow Hachette Book Group author, as the focal point of a campaign against Amazon.

preorder Lepucki's postapocalyptic "California" from in- Gregg Fienberg and Killer dependent bookstores. The Films. Little, Brown and Co.,

Colbert's promotion of "Cal- A dark imagination

may not be able to avoid the

did it again a few nights later, this time challenging viewers to buy enough copies to get the novel on The New York Times best-seller list. (It is not there.)

feeling deserted, remains behind on their family's de-

He also recommended "California" to his 6.6 million Twit-

"Occasionally, my b rain

would overheat, and I'd forget

how to write," she said of her signing session. "My signature is like a squished spider."

lacky break How Lepucki ended up as perhaps the only author to ben-

efiting from this fight," Lepuc- efit fromthe Amazon-Hachette ki said. "At the same time, the spat over pricing is a tale of alopportunity to reach readers is most unbelievable luck And it a fantasy." has a twist: Her husband, Pat"I did still wonder wheth- rick Brown, is employed, in a er anyone would care," she sense, by Amazon. He works added. for Goodreads, asocial netOh, they care. "Califor- work and peer recommendania," which arrives '111esday, tion engine for books; Amazon is one ofthe most preordered acquired it last year. "Amazon has historically debut titles in Hachette history, according to a company been a bully, and I don't shop spokeswoman. there," Lepucki said. "But I Lepucki's agent is nego- love Goodreads. For the retiating rights with producer cord. And my marriage."

a few advance copies of books which are a striking shade of by debut authors to peruse. blue, had a tendency to flash "California" was on the top mischievously. "I have a darker imaginaof the stack. "I honestly suspected it tion than most people," she wasn't going to be my kind of said. "If you don't ponder the book — too earnest," Alexie end of the world on a regular said in a telephone interview. basis, I don't think you're real"But I started reading it, and ly human." it turned out to be an earnest Lepucki w inced w h en page turner." asked if the couple in "Califor-

The charmed c ollaboration between the Bard of Avon and

Ian Doescher, of Portland, has come to an entertaining end with the latest "Star Wars" parody, "The Jedi Doth Return." Here, Doescher adapts "The Return of the Jedi," the last ep-

isode of the series. As in the film, "The Jedi Doth Return" starts with Darth

Vader telling the errant commander, Moff Jerjerrod, that

he's behind schedule in buildingthe second Death Star. "Cease to

p e rsuade, my

grov'ling Jerjerrod, "Long-winded Moffs have ever sniv'ling wits," growls the Lord of the Sith. Then later Vader says, in a

soliloquy, "It is the role I play, my destiny"The grand performance for which I am made. "Come, author of the dark side of the Force, "Make me the servant of thy

quill and write the tale wherein my son and I are seal'd, As

one." Since "Return" is full of nonspeaking parts — Jabba the Hutt, his space monkey pet, Salacious Crumb, droids like R2-D2 and of course an army

of Ewoks, Doescher has a great deal of fun putting words in their mouths. Wicket the Ewok prods Prin-

cess Leia with a spear while dedaiming, "A buki buki, Luki, luki, Issa creecher, Nuki, nuki!" Her tart response: "Desist at once, thou furry little imp!"

D oescher's afterword i s worth reading for the decisions he made when writing his trilogy. Yoda speaks in haiku, Han and Leia in "rhyming quatrains" when with each other,and Jabba's courtjester, Salacious Crumb, comments in

straight English.

wa111ed.

"The Quick" centers on dose-knit siblings James Norbury and his older sister, Charlotte. As the book

opens, the socially awkward James, a would-be writer,

heads to London after finishing his degree at Oxford. Poor spinster C h arlotte, crepit country estate.

DuringJames'last days at Oxford, he overhears two lovers in the library in-

volved in a whispered tryst. His poet's imagination takes over: "Another kiss," Owen

writes, describing James' eavesdropping entrance-

nia" is modeled on her and her

ment. "He would be fair

husband. It is an easy guess to make, especially since she

fiction.

became pregnant with their

also, James thought— barely older than she, innocents both, Daphnis and Chloe in a grave green forest of books. The lovers, as he had

With its postapocalyptic set-

But Lepucki sees it as a love 3-year-old son, Dixon Bean, story. A young couple, Frida while writing. and Cal, have fled the ruins of But no. "I'm madly in love Los Angeles to make a home with my husband, but it's not in the wilderness. Everything us,"she said."People seem to changes when Frida becomes hate Frida, so I hope I'm not pregnant, and they leave iso- her." (Her mother-in-law's relation for a strange settlement sponse to the book: "I'm sad filled with threats. she killed me in a blizzard.")

By Tish Wells William Shakespeare can now stop twirling in his grave.

spoiler. Consider yourself

ting, "California" mines a very busy vein in contemporary

Books, 165 pgs., $14.95) McClatchy Washington Bureau

along comes England's Lauren Owen with her accomplished debut, "The Quick," andI facethe sameproblem. I suspect the novel's game-changing 100-pages-in revelation will get out rather ... er, quickly. This book thoroughly deserves the huge attention it's going to get, though, so you

ifornia" started with Sherman It seems impossible that a Amazon-Hachette brawl, Col- the Hachette division behind Alexie, an a n ti-Amazonian story with such dark underbert explained, "is toughest on "California," has increased the and a National Book Award currents could spring from young authors who are being initial print order and doubled winner for " T h e A bsolute- someone so l aid-back and published for the first time." the length of her author tour. ly True Diary of a Part-Time gregarious. Lepucki, watching TV at Lepucki was in Portland Indian." Over breakfast in Los Anhome in suburban San Fran- last week to sign 10,000 copies Colbert invited Alexie on his geles, where she grew up, cisco, watched Colbert hold up of her novel for independent show and asked him to bring a the freckled Lepucki dis"California" with a mixture of superstore Powell's Books, book by an author penalized played a surferish vibe, right elation and nausea. (She had where "California" hit No. 1 on by Amazon's refusal to take down to the wet blond hair beenalerted afew hoursin ad- the best-seller list after Colbert Hachette preorders. Alexie that she twisted to the side vance to watch.) And then he directed viewers there. said that he asked Hachette for as she spoke. Still, her eyes,

"I felt kind of icky to be ben-

"William Shakespeare's The Jedi Doth Return"

< I

assigned to an editor with

ter followers.

Wherefore art thou, Han Solo?

t

lisher planned a first printing of 12,000 copies. She was

an exquisite page-turner

'Virtual Unreality': Online,the lying iseasy

seen them in many different

names and guises, in many stories and songs." He's brought out of his ro-

mantic reverie by the girl's sneeze, makes a noise himself and gets caught. "You

may as well come out," the man says. "We can hear you breathing." That might seem like a throwaway line, but it turns out to be the most important

distinction among the major characters of the book:

"Virtual Unreality: Just BeLehrer": the title of hell's own cause the Internet Told You, news hour. How Do You Know It's True?" by Charles Seife(Viking, 248 Avirtual pathogen In "Virtual Unreality," Seife pgs., $26.95 delivers a short but striding By Dwight Garner tour of the many ways in New York Times News Service which digital information is, Charles Seife is a pop histo- as he puts it in a relativelyrare

to those who were sick. He writes: "Three hundred thou-

en created to lure lonely men) and the primordial idiocy of

sand deaths might be the most

sites like Foursquare, which

extreme consequence of a Google search gone wrong."

encourage you to tell people where you are to earn meaningless badges. "People don't think twice," he writes, "about reflexively

Sock puppetry Seife is witty on the many

varieties of sock puppetry, the transmitting t h ei r wh e r erian who writes about math- moment of rhetorical overkill, dismal online art of pretend- abouts to a company that's ematics and science, but his "the most virulent, most con- ing to be, for personal gain, trying to bend your mind and abiding theme, the topic that tagious pathogen that human- someone other than who you make you a frequent visitor to makes his heart leap like ity has ever encountered." are. One variety of yourlocalPizzaHut,Hessgas one ofJules Feiffer's dancers Mostly, he has a this is to cower un- station, or RadioShack." in the springtime, is human lighter touch, though der a pseudonym He has more to say about credulity. every so often, he while shivving your social media sites. "A decade In "Sun in a Bottle" (2008), pounds his ideas so enemies. Witness ago, if a corporation asked for he observed the scientists who remorselessly that the British historian the email addresses of all of chased low-temperature fu- he makes you wonOrlando Figes, who your friends and family memsion down the rabbit hole. In der why we online attacked his rival's bers, you'd almost certainly " Proofiness: The Dark Ar ts a ddicts aren't a l l books on Amazon, have refused," he says. "But of Mathematical Deception" twitching and frothwhile writing glow- nowadays, people are hap(2010), he delivered his thesis ing at the mouth like ing reviews of his py to hand their entire email in his first sentence: "If you Gwyneth Paltrow in own. He was found contact list over to LinkedIn want to get people to believe "Contagion." out and h u m iliated, or Facebook or Google or Pinsomething really, really stuOne of Seife's bedand he agreed to pay damages terest or any other site that rock themes is the Internet's to some of his victims. convinces people to sell out pid, just stick a number on it." Seife's new book, 'Virtual dismissal, for good and ill, of Then there are sock puptheir closest acquaintances in Unreality," is about how dig- the concept of authority. On peteers who fabricate phony hopes of increasing their own ital untruths spread like con- Wikipedia, your Uncle Iggy personas to acquire authority social status." tagion across our laptops and can edit the page on black or sympathy. It has become While little in this volume is smartphones. The author is holes as easily as Stephen so common for bloggers to new, Seife is an adept consolunusually qualified to write Hawking can. Serious report- fabricate young people with idator of information, and he on this subject, and not merely ing, another form of author- terrible diseases, the author has a choosy shopper's knack because his surname is nearly ity, is withering because it's notes, that this syndrome now for selectingfresh anecdotes an anagramfor"selfie." so easyto cut and paste facts has a name: "virtual factitious and examples. I've been burned enough A professor of journalism at from other writers, or simply disorder" or "Munchausen by New York University, Seife is to provide commentary, and Internet." times by bad online informaa battle-scarred veteran of the then game search engine reSeife sums up how these tion (fake quotations, bogus new info wars. When Wired sults so that readers find your stories tend to go: "Create a tweets, GPS glitches, Wikimagazine wanted to investi- material first. sock puppet or two, give it a pedia howlers) that I'd like to gate the ethical lapses of its Seife worries about how tragic problem that will gar- think I don't require Seife's contributorJonah Lehrer,for easily fringe ideas find pur- nersympathy,and then com- advice to pay close attention example, it turned to Seife, chase on the Internet, where mit 'pseuicide.' It's almost while surfing. My hokum dewhose report pinned Lehrer, previously they'd have per- guaranteed to cause a big tector is mostly set at Defcon wriggling, to the plagiarism ished from lack of oxygen. He stir." 1 or2. specimenboard. writes about how the South Seife also dilates here upon Once a month or so, I'm Seife has also been tar- A frican g o vernment w a s scam artists, photo manipula- burned anyway. "Virtual Unpersuaded by HIV-denialist tors, flashtrading on the stock reality" is a talisman we gullgeted, unsuccessfully, by the conservative sting artist websites to forgo providing market, the promulgation of ible can wield in the hope that James O'Keefe. "O'Keefe and essential antiretroviral drugs "bimbots" (fake online wom- we won't get fooled again.

Some are breathing, or "quick," as in the Bible's distinction between "the quick

and the dead," and many, in the worst possible way, are not.

Once in London, James ends up sharing rooms with Christopher Paige, the

"Daphnis" of the Oxford library meeting. James vicariously enjoys the trappings of Christopher's family wealth, and the Paiges introduce James to the myste-

rious Aegolius Club (named for a small genus of owls). Charlotte,

m e a nwhile,

eagerly awaits every next letter from James. Then the correspondence comes to a

dead stop. Panicked, Charlotte travels to London in

search of him, and what she finds completely, tousepresent-day vernacular, blows

her mind (as it will readers'). She's soon immersed in a blood-drenched search for not only her brother, but for

justice and a semblance of sanity as well. "The Quick" is that rare book that reviewers and readers live for: both plot-

and character-driven, a stay-up-all-night-reading romp ofmore than 500 pages that you'll desperately wish were double that. This is elegant, witty, force-ofnature writing, and Lauren Owen should have a long andillustrious careerahead

ofher. For those like me who are dismayed to see the book

end, I'm pleased to report that she's said she's at work on a sequel, which can't

come fast enough. Lauren, we beg of you: Be quick


SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN F 5

ar aimso s a e What elsehappened • Former D.C. UNUSUAL HISTORY

in Americain 1776? "West of the Revolution: An Uncommon History of 1776"

of geographic misconceptions and imperial anxiety made

by Claudio Saunt (WW. Nor-

colonization of t h e

ton, 284 pgs., $26.95)

basin," Saunt explains.

By Carolyn Kellogg

Fully established in Mex-

Los Angeles Times

As

C alifor-

nia coast appear essential to Spain's survival in the Pacific

A m e r ica's f o u nders ico, Spanish forces moved

gathered in Philadelphia in 1776, two Franciscans named Francisco Atanasio Domin-

guez andFrancisco Silvestre Velez de Escalante began a

rain, they had no idea that 13 colonies were at the same time

though the soldiers' fort re-

Britain, asserting the right to

life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, creating a country that would one day encompass much of the continent. In "West of the Revolution: A n Uncommon H istory o f 1776," historian Claudio Saunt

evokes this shadow saga of America's founding year in landscapes distinct from the 13 colonies. This is a history more terrible than wondrous,

mained intact.

To be interrogated by a Spanish soldier was as bad as being taken captive by a Russian fur trader. Military Gov. Fernando Rivera y Moncada wrote in his diary that he told prisoners, "I must know ev-

erything; that I have a medicine to make them tell the truth; that it is not nor am I like their Indian witch doctors who

peddle so many lies; that my medicine is punishment, and the great pain will force them"

a necessary counternarrative to confess. Saunt shows that to our enlightened Revolution. no answer satisfied the angry Saunt focuses on nine loca- governor — which was partictions across North America: ularly tragic for one of the earAlaska's Aleutian Islands, San liest converts, who had been his godson. Diego, San Francisco, North Saunt's stories of the AmerCarolina, New Mexico, Saskatchewan in Canada, South ican frontier largely involve D akota's Black

H i l ls, t h e

encounters between Native Americans and Old World im-

Osage country along the Mississippi River and the Creek migrants or their descendants. lands in Georgia and Flori- We know now that things endda. He also brings in outside ed badly for the Native Amerevents, such as the 1763 Treaty icans, who lost territory, auof Paris, to develop interesting tonomy, culture, language and whole populations. Yet in the connections. B y 1776, R ussians h a d 18th century, much of North moved into the Aleutian Is-

America's interior was entire-

trade. They were dependent on the Aleutians to help them

looks to trade as the way to

lands for the lucrative fur

ly their domain. For the most part, Saunt

survive, but there was violence explain shifts in allegiances and distrust on both sides. and power. He has created a The Russian mode of busi- sweeping narrative of nonconesstherewas brutal:Stay for lonial America in 1776. But he months or years to reap the is at his most colorful when largest fur harvest possible, he finds i ndividual stories, take hostages and slaughter such as that of the Frenchman whole communities. floating down the Arkansas Rumors of Russia's incur- River with "one severed head sions into the Aleutian Islands and the corpses of two of his reached Spain, spurring the companions." Crown to extend its missions The strangeness of pronorth of Baja into Alta Cali- to-American history may be fornia. This "combustible mix found in the details.

Trek

behavior, the city's politicians still look for his endorsement.

Despite his unpredictable New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — The

three-day waiting period for marriage licenses when

more attacked, burning the mission to the ground — al-

declaringindependence from

By Andrew Siddons

Diego, the effort to convert

tiating with Native Americans

and faltering over harsh ter-

going through, they can learn from me." Barry's story is a by-thebootstraps account of his path to power, at least as told in his book. gts official title is "Mayor for Life: The Incredible Story of Marion Barry Jr.")

City Council was consid-

journey west from Santa Fe, but by 1775, more than 100 New Mexico, hoping to find a had been baptized. Then one way to the Pacific Coast. Nego- November night, hundreds

said. "Whatever storm they're

mayor wants to be remembered for more than 1990 crackarrest

north by sea, setting up missions along the coast. In San the local Kumeyaay Indians had gotten off to a slow start,

ise a

In t hi s

e ring whether to en d a Marion Barry Jr., a councilman who set the b ar

for bad mayoral behavior long before Rob Ford came along in Toronto, wondered if three days would be enough time for people to get blood tests. "There's no longer a blood test,

M r . B a r r y,"

Tommy Wells, a fellow District of Columbia councilman, gently reminded him. "I'd want a blood test," Barry, 78, responded. "I'll

give them my blood test, too." And then, as the room

erupted in laughter, Barry added, "I know how clean I am." Barry, the infamous for-

mer mayor of Washington who in 1990 was caught on camera in a hotel smoking crack cocaine, has been speaking out these days about his long career of highs and lows. Barry had led this city for three terms

when he was arrested by the FBI on drug charges. And after he served six

y e ar's D emocratic

mayoral primary, candidates including Jack Evans vied for Barry's endorsement. A mem-

ber of the City Council, Ev-

Gabriella Demczuk/ New YorkTimes News Service

ans represents the very white

Marion Barry, former Washington D.C. mayor and now a council-

man, has a new book, "Mayor for Life." fighting to keep himself relevant in a city that has changed drastically. He himself has remained in many ways the same. In the 1970s, when Barry

was a young civil rights activist about to begin his ascent to the mayor's office, the District's population was 70

percent black. Today, a 50.1 percent black majority holds on by the slimmest of margins as Washington's white population grows. Cranes are silhouetted against the skyline, helping to build the sleek new condominiums and office

complexes that are reminders of the demographic shift. The people whom Barry represents see themselves pushed to the sidelines. "For b lack

f o l ks , t h o se

cranes mean displacement and gentrification," Barry said. As a councilman, he rep-

resentsawardfrom eastofthe Anacostia River, a geographic

for being pulled over by the police multiple times, incidents he describes as "driving while black." Twice in recent years he has been censured and stripped of committee chairmanships by his Council colleagues, once for accepting money from contractors and once for directing a $15,000 contract to a girlfriend.

Georgetown and the rapidly gentrifying L ogan C i rcle, where pawnshops have been replaced with fine dining, and prostitutes have given way to parents strolling with

children.

t h eir

"I always like to have Marion Barry's support in whatev-

er I do," Evans said in a phone interview.

Barry's support ultimately went to Mayor Vincent Gray, who lost the Democratic pri-

During his 2012 campaign, mary to Councilwoman MuBarry drew ire for referring riel Bowser. But Gray won to Asian-owned restaurants by large margins in Barin his ward as "dirty shops." ry's ward and other parts of He apologized, sort of. "I nev- town that are home to moster intended to identify or label ly middle- or lower-income all Asian-American business African-Americans. owners as bad people," Barry Bowser, her victory in Nowrote in his book. vember all but guaranteed in His book, which Marc Fish- this heavily Democratic city, er of The Washington Post de- does not seem to be taking scribed in a review as both sa- Barry's turf for granted, as she lacious and "a mess," includes recentlyannounced her intena moment in the 1980s when tion, if elected, to create a posiBarry was offered cocaine by tion of "deputy mayor for east an unidentified woman and of the river affairs." "She can't lose touch with tried it for the first time. It "felt like I had ejaculated," Barry the people like Vince Gray did," writes. "The cocaine was a Barry said in the interview. In one modern embrace, powerful stimulant that went straight to my penis." He had Barry has taken his outspo-

months in jail, he managed divide that is also shorthand in 1994 to w i n a n other for the gulf between the city's term, cementing his nickhaves and have-nots. His name "Mayor for Life," the ward's neighborhoods have sex with the woman and add- ken views to Twitter, where he title of his new autobiog- some of the country's worst ed, "From that point on, you offersa stream-of-consciousraphy. In his latest act, the unemployment rates, around chase that same high and sex ness feed that veers from polnow three-term councilitics to pop culture. 20 percent, despite the rapid that you felt the first time." man is trying to rewrite his growth elsewhere in the city. When asked in the interH e w i stfully n o te d t h e legacy so that he might be When Barry is in the news, view if his personal travails end of this spring's televiremembered for more than it is not usually because of have stifled the progress of sion season: "Well no more the fateful night at the Vis- legislation he has introduced. the people he has tried to help, ¹GameofThrones ¹ S c andal ta Hotel. In recent years he has made Barry framed it differently. ¹HouseOfCards for a while," "The Vista doesn't define headlines for continued prob- "I serve as an inspiration for Barry posted. "I guess we have me," Barry said during an lems with drugs and alcohol, those who are going through to just entertain ourselves with interview in his office in for stalking a girlfriend and all kinds of things," Barry real politics for now." the John A. Wilson Build-

ing, the seat of the local government, a few blocks from th e W h it e H ouse. "The Vista is just a little sliver."

But Barry's book, written with Omar Tyree, has landed at a time when he is

and Capt. Kathryn Janeway through quantum tunneling use, ours use free Facetime — without transmitting matter

Continued from F1

and Skype apps that run on or energy through the space smartphones and laptops. Ho- intervening. This led to hopes by lessobtrusive sensors in lodeck-typevideo conferences that we might one day see a skin patches, tattoos and even- have also been possible for "Star Trek"-like transporter tually microchips embedded several years. I spoke via holo- that can beam our atoms from in our bodies. As well, we will gram, in 2011, to a bunch of en- one place to another. I am not have cameras and heat, gas trepreneurs in Uruguay using waiting for this one, however, and sound sensors in our bath- technology that a small com- as there is no way that I will rooms, kitchens and living pany there, Holograam, had willingly allow my atoms to be rooms that constantly monitor developed.Remember the ho- disintegrated in one location our health and lifestyle. lographic message from Prin- and reassembled in another. I What are making these cess Leia to Obi-Wan Kenobi, would worry about a software health sensors possible are in "Star Wars"? That's how my bug or a hardware crash. We miniaturized mech a n ical beamedimage looked. saw these, too, in "Star Trek." and microelectromechanical Startups such as Oculus, I'll just stick to the self-driving (MEMS) elements made using which Facebook r ecently cars that will become commicrofabrication technology. purchased, are developing mercially available by the end Similar advances in microflu- virtual-reality goggles that of this decade. idics and nanofluidics are en- simulate the real world. 0thThe most exciting " Star abling development of labs on erscompanies are developing Trek" marvel of all — the thumbnail-sized chips. Nano- three-dimensional p r o jec- Starship Enterprise — may biosym, for example is develop- tors that beam images onto also be on its way. ing a device, called GENE-Ra- screens that make a person In discussion at Fox Studios dar, that can identify, within look as though physically in March 2012, Elon Musk told minutes, a range of illnesses, present. These technologies me that he planned to retire on including AIDS, malaria, tu- are in their infancy, but watch Mars. He said he was inspired berculosis and cancer. Such them grow and add touch and by "Star Trek" and planned devices will also be ubiquitous smell capabilities. We will be to build a spacecraft like the and immediately identify a meeting each other through Starship Enterprise to take broad range of disease mark- virtual reality, and it will feel him there. I really thought he ers. Unlike the "Star Trek" as if we are really there. was joking — or had had too tricorder, which is used occaThe u n iversal t r a nslator much to drink. But after that, sionally, they will constantly be that Kirk used to talk to alien his company Space Exploramonitoring our bodies. species is also in development. tion Technologies Corp., or When you lookat the ad- Google Translate already SpaceX, successfully docked vances that have already hap- does a great job of translat- a spacecraft it had built, called pened in 3-D printing, you ing pages of text from one the Dragon, with the Internabegin to realize that this is human language toanother. tional Space Station and rethe making of the "Star Trek" And earlier this year, Micro- turned with cargo. On Dec. 3, replicator. 3-D printers can soft demonstrated a real-time, 2013, SpaceX launched a comcreate objects in plastic, metal, voice-based, language inter- mercial geostationary satellite glass, titanium, human cells preter that works on Skype. I using Falcon rockets. SpaceX and yes, even chocolate from don't expect any progress on says it is planning a Dragon/ a design. Today's 3-D print- alien languages until we en- Falcon 9 flight in 2015, which ers are painfully slow, and it counter some alien species, will have a fully certified, hutakes many hours to print a but a commercially available man-rated, escape system usbreadbox-sized object; but in virtual real-time translator (a able during launch. I'll bet that Musk does dea decade, they will become as virtual interpreter) for human common, fast and inexpensive languages isn't so far away. velop a version 1 of the Enteras our laser document printScientists r e c ently an- prise. And he may well be our ers. In about two decades, we nounced they ha d m a de first real-life Captain Kirk. will be 3-D printing our dinner breakthroughs in quantum — Vivek Wadhwais a fellow as well as our electronics. teleportation. They were able at Rock Center for Corporate We already have "Star Trek" to show a promise of quantum Governance at Stanford University, and "Jetsons"-like video-chat information transmissiondirector ofR esearch atD uke capabilities. Rather than re- showing the duplication in the University, and distinguished quire the large, dunky moni- spin state of an electron bescholar at Singularity and Emory tors that we saw George Jetson tween one place and another, universities. These will later be replaced

79

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F6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014

Ghostwriter

avi a in as rawin n onesia

becoming a scholar on youth

New York Times News Service

passed up any ambi-

be a few little islands of

By Amy Kaufman

tion to pin the vast ar-

air-conditioned, steel-

Los Angeles Times

NEW YORK — One day. That was all the time Maya

Sloan allowed herself to Google reviews of the dystopian young adult novel she ghostwrote for Kendall and Kylie

By Emily Brennan When E l i zabeth

Buddhist temple complex on the island is Borobudur. Less P i sani well-known is another stun-

set out to research her book, "Indonesia, Etc.: Exploring

ning complex of Hindu temples called Prambanan.

the Improbable Nation," she

Jakarta, the capital, used to

chipelago nation down in a pithy manner. "We

and-glass s p l endor that rose out of these

don't even know how

rat-run back s t reets, l ittle l o w - rise c o b -

many islands there are," Pisani said. Some Pisani

Not surprisingly, Internet trolls had it out for the youngest sisters of the Kardashians — lampooning the idea that two teenage models who have yet to graduate from high

bled-together houses. Very neighborhoody. Now that's almost all gone, narily difficult thing for even replaced with a lot of marbled its own government to get its malls, 7-Elevens, high-rishead around, let alone an out- es, and everyone's walking sider like me." around with their iPad. Which is why Pisani made just one rule for herself during Where can you see a her travels there: Say yes to • different side?

school wanted to be taken se-

any invitation, whether it was

riously as authors. But Sloan, 37, didn't escape unscathed,

to a wedding or "to have tea • relatively a cc e ssible, with that dog liver and glass and they bring together the of rice wine," she said. "That things that are really captook me into very interesting tivating about the country. directions." There's fantastic snorkelBelow are edited excerpts ing and diving. And there's from a conversation with history: It is where the coloPisani. nial enterprise all started.

Jenner.

either.

"Maya Sloan must have a ser ious need f o r

money to submit h erself t o

this

kind of public humiliati on,"

officials say 17,000; others, 15,000. "It's an extraordi-

Q•

A

• The Banda Islands are

They're th e

Sl oan

posted one Gawker.com commenter about her role as the Jenners' writer. Yeah, so maybe this wasn't

the response she envisioned after five years toiling away on two writing MFAs. It cer-

tainly wasn't what her family imagined; relatives regularly email her job openings at places such as the prestigious Iowa Writers' Workshop and suggest she try submitting her fiction to literary journals instead of ghostwriting. "I'velearned to check my

Q•

A

is home to nearly 60 percent

still cannons on the side of

of population. The largest

the road. You can still see the

"Friendship"

By Michiko Kakutani

want to slit your wrists. I'm

New York Times News Service

writing for a living, and it's a gift to be a working writer."

Webster's New World Dictio-

month's arrival of the Jenners' "Rebels: City of Indra," now comes "Rich Kids of I n sta-

gram," a novel Sloan co-wrote

"Overshare" was chosen by nary as the "word of the year" in 2008, and no one overshared more that year than

the blogger Emily Gould. In a very long, often very

same name. Sloan, a self-proclaimed lov-

azine that May, Gould — a f ormer e ditor a t G a w k er

and offers her own take on the

novelistic form. Just as H elen Fielding used a journal to tell the sto-

ry of "Bridget Jones's Diary" and Jennifer Egan included a chapter full of PowerPoint slides in her P ulitzer Prize-winning "A Visit With the Goon Squad" — not to mention the many attempts at Twitter novels — Sloan's use of

Tumblr entries and Instagram photosas source material for "Rich Kids of Instagram" is one moreexample ofhow popular culture and social media are influencing fiction. In this case, Sloan, who normally stays in the background, is the public face for a co-author who doesn't want to be identified. The creator of the "RKOI" Tumblr cites legal

a painting that depicts this.

practice their English present themselves as guides. Since There is a t in y m useum There are 700 languag- the beginning of recorded called Rumah Budaya Ban• es spoken in Indonesia. history, you've got people goda Neira, and they've made a Do you need an interpreter? ing through the islands. The real effort to present colonial • Everyone speaks some earliestrecords come from history. One of the things • o f t h e n a t i onal l a n - Chinese t r avelers. T h a t 's the Dutch did in establishing guage, Indonesian, but not made Indonesians very weltheir monopoly was genocide, many speak English. If you coming, very outward-lookand they did it with the help of get even a little off the beaten ing, and drives this amazing Japanese samurai, and there's track, students who want to hospitality.

Q•

A

find themselves comparing sion of a Comme des Garqons ments, many of them dismis- "Friendship" to two current wallet, a pair of Worishofer sive or disgusted — with both television shows concerned sandals, a fridge with Moher and The Times. One read- with young women trying to roccan oil-packed sun-dried er referred to her as a "snarky make ends meet in Brook- tomatoes in it"? Bev is worlittle trollop." Another wrote: lyn while looking for love, ried about becoming a sin"Wah ... wah ... wah .. . I meaning and sex in the city. gle mother after a disastrous certainly one-night stand leaves her need attention ... I've tattooed "Friendship" is myself ... now I relentlessly more s o p histicated pregnant. blab on my blog and searching than Depicting Amy and Bev in PLEASE pay CBS's cartoonlike the third person gives Gould "2 Broke Girls." But a measure of perspective on a ttention t o me ! PLEASE!!!" it doesn't have the — and distancefrom — her In Gould's awkraw, original voice characters, enabling her to w ard b u t of t e n that Lena Dunham depict their follies and foibles sharply observed brings to H BO's with a mixture of sympathy first novel, "Friend"Girls," a complex and humor.The novel form ship," Amy, one series with a funny, (or perhaps the editing proof the tw o h erovisceral senseofthe cess) also accentuates Gould's real. strengths as a writer, while ines, shares some b iographical d e A my and B ev playing down the liabilities tails with Gould's have just crossed a mi- apparent in her l ogorrhemuch-chronicled earlier self crogenerational line into their ic blogs. Whereas the blogs and she also shares some 30s, and there's a self-con- tended to create a self-portrait traitsGould has been accused scious, faintly melancholy of the author as human word of embodying. tone to "Friendship": the girls' processor (automatically slicAmy once had a "great sense of looking back on the ing, dicing and churning exjob" at a site "mocking New turmoil (and, in Amy's case, perience into prose), "FriendYork City's rich, powerful, hubris) of their swiftly reced- ship" isn't the simple spewcorrupt, ridiculous elite," but ing 20s with both alarm and ing (or venting or whining goes "from being a rising nostalgia, worried that things or knee-jerk reacting) of an star to being an untouchable are starting to add up, that the obsessive oversharer. Rather, in a matter of days." Amy is clock is ticking more loudly at its best, it points to Gould's vulnerable and amusing at now, that the arithmetic of abilities as a keen-eyed notictimes, but she can also be nar- their lives is changing. er and her knack for nailing cissistic, entitled, self-dramaAfter quitting her latest down her ravenous observatizing, snide, self-pitying and job (at a small, struggling tions with energy and flair. frequently petty, prideful and blog with a "modern Jewish Some readers may well envious. She is cast as Lucy, angle," located "not quite in ask why anyone should be with her best friend, Bev, as- Manhattan"), Amy finds her- interested in the minutiae of signed the less fashionable self worrying about being Amy's and Bev's daily lives role of Ethel. unemployed and homeless, (how Bev realizes that she is Readers who aren't busy though she does ask herself wearing a jacket and a skirt c omparing Amy with t he how "a d estitute homeless that "were slightly different Gould of blog infamy may person" could "be in posses- shades of black," how Amy

258 pgs. $26)

i rritating cover a r ticle f or

the mysterious figures from the blog's featured pictures

Dutch East India Co. logo on wrought-iron gates.

ited more than 1,200 com-

by Emily Gould (Farrar, Straus and Giroux,

with the anonymous creator of the popular Runblr site of the er of hypertext, fictionalizes

Prambanan, a ninth-century Hindu temple complex.

'Friendship': ALucyand Ethel for a post-blogging age

ego," Sloan said. "Ego will get you a teaching job in Iowa grading freshman comp papers, or a 9-to-5 editing promotional material where you

A busy one, too: After last

o n l y n a t u ral

Where do you begin home of nutmeg, and the • in a country as vast as first of the Europeans to arIndonesia? rive there looking for this • Java is a natural place to spice were the Portuguese, • start. It makes up only 7 then the Spaniards, the Brits, percent of the landmass, but then the Dutch. There are

New YorkTimes News Service file photo

Elizabeth Pisani recommends visitors to Indonesia start on the island of Java, where they can see

The New York Times Magand a compulsive personal blogger ("Emily Magazine," "Heartbreak Soup") — wrote about her almost biological impulse to post her thoughts

and experiences online. She wrote about writing about a boyfriend who didn't want to be written about. She wrote

about writing about "the symptoms and probable causes of a urinary tract infection." She wrote about writing about sometimes wanting to

kill her mother. ("The thing that keeps her alive is how incredibly sad I would be if she died.") She wrote about the nasty comments posted about her by others — who regarded them as a kind of "karmic comeuppance" for her own aggressive violations of other people's privacy — and she wrote about trying to become

a recovering blogger. The magazine article elic-

threats among his reasons for opting to remain anonymous.

passes the time "mindlessly scrolling through Tumblr, liking photographs of food and animals"), or the minute-by-minute fluctuations in their emotional temperatures. But then, something simi-

lar could be asked about the heroes in Nicholson Baker's

early novels — acclaimed for their detail and comic pointillism — which recount the mo-

mentous happenings during one man's lunch hour ("The Mezzanine") and one father's afternoon giving his baby a bottle ("Room Temperature"). A lot more eventually hap-

pens to Bev and Amy and, along the way, Gould holds a mirror to their meandering

journey toward something resembling adulthood. The contrived plot o f

architecture, and there are

some creaky, stage-managed events — like the introduction of an older, married woman

named Sally as a potential adoptive mother for Bev's unborn baby. Still, Gould does a credible job of evoking her two selfabsorbed heroines' daily existence, hoping that noncommittal

Sloan personally multiple

mates, hoping that terrible

temp jobs are really temporary pit stops on the way to some sort of real vocation.

As for Gould, she seems intent with this book on rebooting her own career — not as a

blogger, but as a novelist.

times. Between the Jenners and

her anonymous co-author, u n i n tentionally

become a youth scholar. To understand the wealthy adolescents behind "Rich Kids,"

she crashed their parties in the Hamptons; to inform the characters in the sci-fi-

themed "Rebels," she spent time gossiping about boys with Kendall and Kylie. "People are going to want to say I'm a YA author now, but it's not like one day I can't write a literary novel — what-

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

ever literary means," she said. "As if there are these Greek

gods dictating what literature is? None of the students I teach read — even the really

smart ones. They read magazines and blogs; everything is becoming really visual. So I can talk to you about Tolstoy and I can talk to you about 'Divergent.' I refuse the

snobbery." S he's even proud of t h e sure-to-becontroversial cover

of "Rich Kids of Instagram," which features a realistic tex-

tured line of cocaine on a $100 bill. "You know some of those

rich kids are going to be snorting coke off that line, which I think is hysterical," she said. "I

don't judge."

boyf r i ends

might turn into more perfect

A Free Public Service

He did, however, meet with

Sloan ha s

" F r i end-

ship" has a cliched, chick-lit

I

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ig or use the • l 33 0 QKg©Zgg) service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs.

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If this happens to rel, takes .38 special computer. with many a t tach(PNDC) Must support no-kill (128 shells) $ 550. your ad, please conments and i nstrucNikon Coolpix digital philosophy. Experi541-447-7676 tact us ASAP so that tions. Porter Cable 257 ence in fundraising & TheBulletin camera, w/ card. $80. 4nx8n belt/disc bench 280 286 corrections and any recommends extra ' Illlusical Instruments recruiting volunteers a 541-548-8913 adjustments can be sander. Central MaEstate Sales Sales Northeast Bend plus! 541-280-3172. i caution when purTop Pin Archery made to your ad. chinery 4nx6 n belt/disc chasing products or, Piano Kimball console, Pro Shop 541-385-5809 bench sander; Sears PEDDLERS MARKET services from out of I qood condition, $750 We Now Have 8~/4n slide compound Sat., July 12, 8 -3 ** FREE ** the area. Sending I~ The Bulletin Classified firm. 541-317-9063 Bowtech! Tumalo Feed Co., miter saw. AMT 4600 Garage Sale Kit cash, checks, or P eople giving p e ts Archery Lessons for 246 scroll saw; B ench Hwy 20. PATIO SET 260 Place an ad in The i credit i n f ormation away are advised to all ages. Antiques, crafts, Glass table with 6 grinder; Router table Guns, Hunting Bulletin for your gabe selective about the may be subjected to Misc. Items 16TTSouth 1st St., vintage, and more. with Sears r o uter; chairs and cushions, rage sale and renew owners. For the i FRAUD. For more & Fishing Redmond, (541) 306-8016 umbrella & stand, Makita router; Ryobi ceive a Garage Sale information about an g protection of the aniAre you in BIG trouble 541-316-1784 copeddlersmarketo $200. t able w i t h Se a r s Kit FREE! mal, a personal visit to advertiser, you may i Bend local pays CASH!! with the IRS? Stop gmail.com router; Makita router; the home is recom- / call t h e Or e gon / for all firearms & wage & bank levies, Call 951-454-2561 Ryobi tri m r o uter; KIT INCLUDES: ' State Atto r ney ' ammo. 541-526-0617 mended. liens 8 audits, unfiled 247 Seigle family estate • 4 Garage (in Redmond) Router bits; B ench Sale Signs i General's O f f i ce tax returns, payroll issale 52020 Read Loop, • $2.00 Off Coupon To Sporting Goods various clamps. The Bulletin Consumer Protec- • Beretta 12 g a. , o / u, sues, & resolve tax Reduce Your Past Tax vise; La Pine. July 4, 5 & 6, Use Toward Your gervingCenerel Oregoneince Cggg 541-549-9383 - Misc. tion h o t line a t i M/F, 28" barrel, good debt FAST. Seen on 8-5. Big Shop/house- Next Ad by as much as 75 condition $450. Call CNN. A B BB . C a ll Bill hold items. 2 snowmo- • 10 Tips For "Garage Pet crate 2'x2'x3' HD i 1-877-877-9392. Percent. Stop Levies, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Kneeboard, O'Brien wire, collaps/, gd. cond or text 541-419-9961. 1-800-989-1278. biles with trailer. fully Sale Success!" Liens and Wage GarTournament Plus, $50. 541-280-1797 i TheBulletin > (PNDC) loaded mec h anics gervrng Cenrrei Oregon since tggg nishments. Call The Door-to-door selling with $15. 541-388-3879 Good classified ads tell truck, grader, 2000 AlPOODLEpups, toy. Auto Accident Attorney: Tax DR Now to see if fast results! It's the easiest pine hauler/rec. veh. PICK UP YOUR the essential facts in an older pup to adopt. Qualify way in the world to sell. INJURED I N AN you 248 GARAGE SALE KIT at 212 interesting Manner. Wri t e Schnoodle pups also. AUTO A CCIDENT? 1-800-791-2099. 282 1777 SW Chandler from the readers view -not Health & 541-475-3889 Antiques & (PNDC) Call InjuryFone for a The Bulletin Classified Sales Northwest Bend Ave., Bend, OR 97702 the seller's. Convert the Beauty Items Collectibles free case evaluation. QueensiandHeelers Check out the facts into benefits. Show 541-385-5809 Never a cost to you. The Bulletin Standard 8 Mini, $150 classifieds online Serving Central Oregonsince igng TO 30 Don't wait, call now, Walker antique the reader howthe item will LOSE U P & up. 541-280-1537 Shaw www.bendbuiietin.com help them insomeway. POUNDS in 60 Days! 1-800-539-9913. 265 file cabinet, $60 www.rightwayranch.wor dbl. 541-647-2314 This Once daily appetite (PNDC) Updated daily Building Materials Sat & Sun, 8-5, 2802 NE dpress.com advertising tip suppressant burns fat i love, sex), art, shoes Great Horned Pl. Carpet The Bulletin reserves brought toyouby and boosts energy for Buying Diamonds Storage cabinet, 52 nW STUD SERVICEBend Habitat (Women 7), Blazers shampooer, floral rug, x20"Dx26"H, $25. the right to publish all healthy weight loss. iGoid for Cash Yorkie Silky 8 Ibs, RESTORE I (Women 8), party Brother sewing machine, 541-647-23'I 4 The Bulletin ads from The Bulletin Saxon's Fine Jewelers $350. 541-416-1615 60 day s u pply Building Supply Resale I decorations, chairs security gate, dog ken541-389-6655 newspaper onto The $59.95. R e s tncted nel & pen, lots of house- Yorkies, small females, Swamp cooler, heavy Quality at LOW Saturday/Sunday, Bulletin Internet webcalorie diet and reguPRICES hold & misc. Women's & CASH!! duty, like new, 3ft. x BUYING cute, playful, shots & site. lar exercise required. men's clothes. Children's docks, parents on site. For Guns, Ammo & 740 NE 1st 3 ft., p o rtable o r Lionel/American Flyer Call: 8 0 0-315-8619 games, books & toysReloading Supplies. 541-312-6709 $550. 541-536-3108 or trains, accessories. s tationary. $3 7 5 . The Bulletin (PNDC) ages 3+ and up. 541-408-6900. Open to the public. text to 541-91 5-5754. 541-408-2191. 541-382-6773 •

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advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12

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G2 SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809

T HE N E W

Y O R K T I M E S C R O S SW O R D

DOWNRIGHT TRICKYI

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BY BYRON WA L DEN / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

ACROSS

I It may be cut by an uppercut 5 Drink cooler 12 Map feature 17 Nurse 20 "From Here to Eternity" setting 21 Stage4Iiving locale 22 More than willing 23 For 24 Stoker of fear? 25 Notflator sharp 26 Lay 27 Politician with a like button? 28 Adorns 30 Minnesota player, familiarly 31 Microwaveable snack 33 Dress that drapes 34 Hall-of35 Highly desirable to Uncle Sam? 36 Wine-list heading 37 Competitor in some county fairs 40 Offer to buy unspecified stocks, say 42 Lean-meat source 44 Shortstop-turnedESPN analyst Garciaparra 45 "Thanks a !" 46 Stylebook concern 49 Area with XY coordinates? 51 Routine checkup 57 Desire 58 Stay inactive over the sumrner Online subscriptioutu Today's puzzle aud more than 4,000 past puzzles, uytimes.com/trosswurds

($39.95a year).

60 Paris street 61 Vend 62 Moderator of the first Obama/ McCain and Obama/Romney debates 64 Early Chinese dynasty 65 Graph's x-coordinate 67 Statement after long deliberation 72 Relayed 75 Son of Aphrodite 76 Common pool or store posting 80 Word with house or boy 81 Type 82 "The Education of a Golfer" autobiographer 85 What might give you a big head? 86 Hollywood and Bollywood, e.g. 89 Material in the hats of Buckingham Palace guards 91 Byes 92 Litter member 93 Do-nothing 95 Grp. battling consumer fraud 96 1980s video garne spinoff 100 Drag staple 103 Et 105 Surf sound 106 Ones trapped in boxes of their own making? 107 Connecticut Ivy 109 Southern grocery chain 111 Harry Potter mark

112 Downloader's directive 115 Agents' org. 116 Black 117 Post-Weimar period 119 Terrace-farming pioneers 120 Mantel piece 121 "Walk Away " (1966 hit) 122 "Absolutely Fabulous," e.g. 123 "JAG" spinoff 124 Fail to keep up 125 Beyond piqued 126 Allow to continue 127 H.S. proficiency exams

15 Part of a hockey goalie's 24 equipment sum" 29 16 "Cogito, 17 Ray-finned fishes of 33 the Southwest U.S. 18 Ticked off 37 19 Versifiers 29 Health care giant 42 43 with a Tree of Life logo 50 32 Major African humanitarian 57 concern of the 2000s 34 Hollywood setting: Abbr. 38 Like the contents of many attics 72 7 3 74 39 Traitor Aldrich 40 Nastiness 80 41 Tour transport 42 Actor Jannings 87 DOWN 43 Chess ending 91 1 salad 45 '80s TV star who later pitched 2 Proverbial 96 Snickers speedsters 47 Sorne square 3 "That's what my 103 104 dancers Spidey sense told 48 " Enchanted" me" 109 110 gSH film) 4 Quince, e.g. 50 1982 holiday 115 116 5 Reassuring reply country hit by Alabama 6 Reasons tosay no 120 121 52 1960s pop singer 7 Subj. of a thought Sands experirnent 124 125 53 Tiny battery 8 Lament about 54 Laud modern men 55 LAX, O'Hare and 9 When cornputers others "Celeste Aida," for work 56 "Of course!" one 10 Trade cross words 59 Grammy74 Enterprise for nominated 1998 11 CaHreO Morton hit for Alanis 12 European coastal Bad way to be Morissette plant once caught 63 New Year's thought to be an 78 Eats 66 Bill's parlner aphrodisiac 79 Collect on 13 Pachelbel classic, 68 Jell-0 maker the surface, in 69 Actress Moore familiarly chemistry 70 Highland tongue 14 When Taturn Floor O'Neal won her 71 "Right away, boss" Dadaism pioneer Oscar 72 Kaput

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84 Up to snuff 87 AOL, e.g., for short SS Item for a houseguest 90 Fast-food chain with the Ultimate Angus sandwich 94 One who drills, fills and bills: Abbr. 97 Up 98 Directing a shell 99 Down Easter 100 Rogue

101 The Mets 102 Half a star, rnaybe 103 Label for pans'? 104 House entered near the autumnal equinox 106 "All In" network 108 Spanish hero whose 113-Down is represented enigmatically six times in this puzzle

1 10 Tor re s , four-time Olympic

swirnrning gold medalist 112 Press 113 Moniker

114 Colleen 118 Green: Prefix

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place 8photo in your private partyad for only $15.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 267

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Fuel & Wood

Livestock & Equipment

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

All Year Dependable Firewood: Seasoned; Lodgepole, split, del, Bend, 1 f o r $ 1 95

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or 2 for $365. Call for multi-cord discounts!

308

Call a Pro

Farm Equipment & Machinery

Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges Kubota B7100 HST-D trimmed or a house (4WD) Diesel Tractor, 1 built, you'll find owner, 202 hrs. Snow professional help in blower Mid-Mount Mower Rototiller Have serial ¹. The Bulletin'3 "Call a $7800/offer. Call/text Service Professional" 541-41O-f 1 09 or 541-419-9961 Directory 541-385-5809 325

541 -419-5174.

Pine & Juniper Split

Hay, Grain & Feed 1st Quality mixed grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 54f -549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters

PROMPT D ELIVERY

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-305-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

541-389-9663 269

Gardening Supplies & Equipment BarkTurfSoil.com PROMPT DELIVERY

542-389-9663

Edger:Sears Craftsman, electric, works great! $f 0. 541-388-3879 INSTANT GREEN McPheeters Turf Lawn Fertilizer •

542-389-9683

Prompt Delivery Rock, Sand & Gravel Multiple Colors, Sizes

Instant Landscaping Co.

341

541-389-9663

Horses 8 Equipment

270

17" Aussie saddle, good condition, $245 .

Lost 8 Found FOUND kayak paddle July 2nd at Sparks Lake. Call to identify 541-977-7040

FOUND: young Puggle, vicinity of S E 2 7 th. Call to iden t ify 541-382-1178

REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend

541-548-0875

,

54'I -475-6889

Prineville 541-447-7178 or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

/j

00

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[jg o+~ SELL,,:YOURI

Get a roomier gPAD" ancI~pad

APA

6 00

2001 Silverado 3-horse trailer 5th wheel, 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. 521,90th OBO 541-420-3277

541-385-5809

54'I-382-3537

Redmond 541 -923-0882 Madras

I I I I I I I I

I

541-420-3484.

Log truck loads of Juniper firewood logs. $900 local.

Reg. mini donkeys for sale, $ 2 0 0 up, Add your web address D ID Y O U KNOW MACHINISTS DESIRED OpenCampus 541-548-5216 The Bulletin to your ad and readNewspaper-generParker Hannitinl Education I Recommends extra ers on The Bulletin's a ted content is s o Custom Cylinders CNC Coordinator TV APPUAN E caution when pur0 Lathe Operators Oregon State Univervaluable it's taken and web site, www.bendchasing products or I bulletin.com, will be repeated, condensed, Must have 5-7 years ox- sity Division of OutSales Support l INil « services from out of broadcast, t weeted, perionce. Will read blue- reach and Engageable to click through Customer Service I the area. Sending automatically to your discussed, p o sted,prints and perform com- ment is recruiting for (part-time) c ash, checks, o r copied, edited, and plex set ups to very close a part-time (0.75 website. tolorancos. 2nd shift. Ex- FTE), f i x ed-term, Comejoinour team! I credit i n f ormation emailed c o u ntless Standard TV & Appli• may be subjected to times throughout the cellont compensation & Education Coordiis the largest, I FRAUD. package, 401 K, n ator f o r day by others? Dis- benefit Op e n ance independently owned & Pension Plan. 29289 For more informaTV APPUAN E cover the Power of Airport Rd . Campus to provide appliance retailer in rion about an adverNewspaper Advertis- 97402; E-mail: E u gene local and regional the Pacific NorthI riser, you may call 476 ing in SIX STATES Lcourtno O arksr.com leadership, coordiDelivery Driver / west. Wo need prothe Oregon State with just one phone nation, and foster Employment Warehouse fessionals who have I attorney General's call. For free Pacific partnerships needed Worker opportunity employer/ Opportunities experience deliverOffice C o n sumer 5 Northwest Newspa- VEVRAA Federal Cont o a dvance a n d Standard TI/ & Aping excellent cusProtection hotline at I per Association Net- tractor - "Minority/Female/ s ustain the O S U pliance is looking for tomer service both in I 1-877-877-9392. work brochures call DisabilityNeteran" Open Campus goals CAUTION: a delivery drivor. This person and on the 916-288-601 1 or and purpose. This position is full-time Ads published in phone. Must have L~"'-BU and requires hoayy email position will be lo"Employment O p strong ren-key and c ated i n Cro o k l e adership, cecelia©cnpa.com Masonry portunities" include lifting, data entry s k ills, professional appear(PNDC) County. To review employee and indeLaborers great attitude and ance and ability to posting and apply, pendent positions. Need ro get an professional appearPeople Lookfor Information Needed! Saturdays and please visit Ads for p o sitions work ance. Varying shifts ad in ASAP? Sundays. D r i vers About Products and Must have http://oregonstate.e that require a fee or nights and need recent oxperiYou can place it Services Every Daythrough du/jobs. Po s t ing including upfront investment valid ODL. weekends. Apply in ence driving a box ¹0012648. Closing must be stated. With The Bvlletin CI858ifiedS online ar: Wage DOE. person a t 6 3 7 36 truck and must be indate: 0 7 /25/2014. any independentjob Paramount D r ive, www.bandbulletin.com surable with no more Apply between OSU is an opportunity, please Bend, OR 97701 or 3 moving viola8 a.m. -2 p.m., AA/EOENets/ i nvestigate th o r - than DRIVERS online at tions. Must also pass Disabled. 541-385-5809 Mon. Fri., at oughly. Use extra h ~tt:// t d dI d a background check, caution when apLocal moving al lance. 63026 Lower ~ lift test/physical and plying for jobs ona licanl ro.coml obs/ company seeks drug screen. Apply in Meadow Dr., TRUCK DRIVERS line and never proerson at: 6 3 736 Class A and Class Suite ¹200, Are you tired of being vide personal inforaramount Dr., B CDL Drivers. away from home? Get your Bend. marion to any source Bend, OR 9770f or Must be able to Looking for steady, you may not have business online at work hard, pass Tick, Tock year-round work? researched and www.slandardtv U/A and backMOTEL- Housekeepinq Come and work with deemed ro be repuarda lance. ~ TiCk, TOCk... ground check. us! Local hauls, home Staff, Full-time. Expen- e ROW I N G table. Use extreme a licanl ro.com/'obs No experience ence helpful bur not daily. Trucks are c aution when r e ...don't let time get necessary. Apply in pernecessary. based in Redmond, s ponding to A N Y DID YOU KNOW 144 with an ad in away. Hire a son at front desk, SugOregon. If you have a online employment million U.S. A dults arloaf Mountain Motel The Bulletin's good driving record, professional out Call Bill, ad from out-of-srare. 62980 N. Hwy 97, Bend. read a N ewspaper a CDL with doubles "Call A Service We suggest you call 541-383-3362 of The Bullerin'3 print copy each week? endorsement, and 2 the State of Oregon for more info. Professional" Discover the Power of Call The Bulletin At "Call A Service years experience, Consumer H otline PRINT N e wspaper 541-385-5809 Directory give us a call at at 1-503-378-4320 Professional" Advertising in Alaska, Education 541-41 9-1 125 or Place Your Ad Or E-Mail For Equal OpportuIdaho, Montana, Or- The Unitarian UniverDirectory today! 541-546-6409 nity Laws contact egon, U t a h and salist Fellowship of AI: www.bendbulletin.com Oregon Bureau of Washington with just C entral Oreg o n Labor & I n dustry, one phone call. For a (UUFCO), a liberal reCivil Rights Division, FREE adv e rtising ligious congregation, 97f -673- 0764. network brochure call seeks, a Director of 916-288-6011 or Religious Education The Bulletin servirtecentral oraeon sincesaes email f or C h ildren a n d 541-385-5809 cecelia©cnpa.com Youth. This position di(PNDC) rects a program for Children and Youth ages 0-21, and coor- your wallet'at the same time. 'General dinates with the Adult CROOK COUNTY RE Committee. 15-20 EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES hours per week with paid benefits. See full Crook County Sheriff'8 Office job description and reSTARTING AT BOR DEPVTY quirements at (ShorePatrol on Bureau of Reclamation www.uufco.org lands around the Prineville Reservoir) $25.00 per hour HOTEL/RESORT S688onallfull time (No benefits) The Riverhouse Closes: Open until filled is seeking: • Experienced HouseMust be at least 21 years of age and a U.S. keeper -Qualified canCitizen; Must have a valid Oregon Driver's ItemPriced Al: your Total Ad Cost On didate will have at least License with a satisfactory driving record; No one year of previous het • Under $500.........................................................$29 th t~ u c~ L~~ criminal record; Pass a detailed background housekeeping exper. Datk italian sott leather • $500 to $999.....................................................$39 investigation. Must have prior Law Enforce- • Houseman -must be cgair, ottoman andcouch ment experience. MUST USE SHERIFF'S able to lift 50 Ibs & • $1000 to $2499................................................ $49 The Bulletin set. Excellent condition: OFFICE APPLICATION. Serving Central Oregon sincesaaa have a friendly and • $2500 and over................................................. $59 no teats, stains.Very compositive attitude. Up to Applications and full job description can be $10/hr. Iotta hla.Wa s$1600 new, Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, found at www.co.crook.or.us . otreting for only bold headline and price. Some restrictions apply Must be willing to work $760 flexible hours/days. Please apply at the 541-000-0000 Yourad will also apputsr in: Pre-employment drug Crook CountyTreasurer'8/Tax Office testing required. 200 NE 2 St. • The Bulletin • The CentralOregonNickel Ads Apply in person at: Prineville, OR 97754 • (enfrol Oregon Marketplace + bendbullefin.tom 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend 5ar1-al47-6554 or apply online at EOE 'Privateparly merchandiseonly - exdvdes pets& livestock,aulos, Rys,mo torcycles,boats, airplanes, andgarage salecutegories. www.riverhousa.com

REDUCED! 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good cond. Logan Coach Inc. $4200 obo. 305-794-0190


TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 632

Employment Opportunities

Independent Positions Business Opportunities Apt JMultiplex General

Sales Help Wanted: DID YOU KNOW 7 IN CHECKyOUR AD E nergetic kio s k 10 Americans or 158 TRUCK DRIVERS sales person needed million U.S. A d ults DCT Chambers USA, a leader in the trans- immediately for the read content f r om n ewspaper m e dia portation of wood-re- Bend-Redmond sidual products, has area. Secured loca- each week? Discover Power of the Paan opening for an tions, high commis- the cific Northwest News- on the first day it runs OWNER OPERATOR sions paid weekly! paper Advertising. For to make sure it is corlooking for steady, For more informa"Spellcheck" and free brochure call rect. year-round work pull- t ion, p l ease c a l l a human errors do oc916-288-6011 or ing our trailers. Must Howard cur. If this happens to at email have a reliable 3 or your ad, please conYou cecelia@cnpa.com 4-axle truck tractor. 541-279-0982. tact us ASAP so that c an a l s o em a i l (PNDC) Your truck will r un corrections and any loads out of Central tcoles©yourneigh- DID YOU KNOW that adjustments can be Oregon. All trips leave borhoodpublications. not only does newsmade to your ad. com for more infora nd return o n t h e 541 -385-5809 paper media reach a mation. same day. The Bulletin Classified HUGE Audience, they Call 541-419-1 125 or also reach an EN541-546-6489 Senior ApartmentGAGED AUDIENCE. Independent Living R9EI(jiXHN Discover the Power of Looking for your next ALL-INCLUSIVE Newspaper Advertis® Rhml h rsm employee? with 3 meals daily ing in six states - AK, Place a Bulletin help ID, MT, OR, UT,WA. Month-to-month lease, wanted ad today and check it out! For a free rate broreach over 60,000 Call 541-318-0450 chure call readers each week. 916-288-6011 or

00

Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809

or place

your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 486

Independent Positions Sales

Earn over $1,000

a week!

email cecelia@cnpa.com 528

(PNDC)

Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

Bxi9nlh

. 0 0

Small clean studio close to library, $550 mo., $525 dep. All util pd. No smoking/no pets. 541-330-9789

Have an item to sell quick? 630 If it's under Rooms for Rent '500you can place it in Large furnished master The Bulletin bdrm + bath, full use of Classifieds for: house & appliances, all utilities included. Close '10 - 3 lines, 7 days to Walmart in Redmond. $500. 541-815-1171 '16- 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only) Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of 634 Area Real Estate for Sale Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

BANK TURNED YOU Welcome toYOUR DOWN? Private party NEIGHBORHOOD will loan on real esPUBLICATIONS. tate equity. Credit, no We are establishing problem, good equity a branch in is all you need. Call Central Oregon. Oregon Land Mort631 Call for Specials! We are looking for gage 541-388-4200. Condo/Townhomes Limited numbers avail. responsible and 1,2&3bdrms for Rent ambitious individuals to LOCAL MONEYrWebuy w/d hookups, sell subscriptions to secured trust deeds & patios or decks. The Bulletin at note, some hard money Desirable modern 3 bd/ Nfountain Glen 2.5 ba townhome near loans. Call Pat Kellev established sales 541-383-9313 541-382-3099 ext.13. NWX, w/d. No smoklocations. ing. Pets neg. $1795 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc. mo . 971-227-3471. 573 Control what you earn by working a Business Opportunities designated local General territory and essentially WARNING The Bulletin CROOK COUNTY build your own recommends that you EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES business! i nvestigate ever y phase of investment Crook Countyl Wellness& Education Board To learn more about opportunities, espeof Central Oregon (MrEBCO) this new c ially t h os e f r o m Quality Program Coordinator out-of-state or offered employment Salary Range: g70,553 - $74,883DOE by a person doing Full-time with benefits opportunity business out of a loplease call us at Closes:August 12, 2014 af 5:00 p.m. cal motel or hotel. In458-206-0905 vestment o ff e rings WEBCO is a governmental non-profit agency or email us at must be r e gistered that acts on behalf of Local Mental and Public paperman09@hotmail.com with the Oregon De- Health Authority for Crook, Deschutes and partment of Finance. Jefferson Counties. This position develops, Your Neighborhood We suggest you con- implements and c oordinates the q u ality Publications sult your attorney or improvement system and p rograms for call CON S U MER WEBCO. Requires Master's degree and prior TURN THE PAGE HOTLINE, work experience as a Licensed Clinical Social For More Ads 1-503-378-4320, Worker or other clinical licensure experience. 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. The Bulletin Work is performed in our Redmond office and frequent tri-county travel is required.

Applications and full job description can be found at www.co.crook.or.us .

Central Oregon Community College has openings li s te d bel o w . Go to https:I/jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer.

Please apply at the CrookCounty Treasurer'slTax Office 200 NE 2 Sf. Prineville, OR 97754 541-447-6554 EOE

FACILITIES i MAINTENANCE ll POSITION

Part Time Accounting Assistant Support accounts payable and provide general office assistance to the Fiscal Services Dept. A s sociates + 2 -yrs exp. 30hr/wk. $1 2.38-$1 4.74/hr. Closes July 7.

Crook County School District has an immediate opening for a Facilities I Maintenance II position. Full-time with excellent benefit package. Starting salary: $18.03 to $19.85 per hour DOE.

AcademicAdvisor, Pre-Nursing Part Time Provide academic advising for new and continuing college students, with a focus on pre-nursing students. Bachelors + 1-yr. exp. $1 8.43-$21.94/hr. 30 hr/wk. Closes July 7.

Comprehensive facilities maintenance background with 10 or more years in general construction and maintenance experience. Heavy emphasis on HVAC/R, communications, data, and electrical.

BusinessSystems Programmer Responsible for programming and maintaining the college enterprise and resource planning system. Participate in MIS projects, provide technical support, and data analysis. Current programming exp., Linux/Unix + PUSQL and SQL exp. $55,000-$71,000/yr.C loses July 9. Information Office Assistant, Part-Time Represent the employer by greeting and directing guests, answer phones for general information lines, and manage campus photo ID system. Strong customer service and clerical support exp. req. 30hr/wk afternoon shift. $1 2.38-$1 4.74/hr. Closes July 9. Latino MS Program Coordinator (Part Time, Temporary) Serve as primary coordinator of COCC's Latino Middle School Program. Establish goals and objectives, recruit and advise students in proram. B a c helor's + 2-yr. req. t 9.32-$23.00/hr. 20hr/wk. Open Until Filled. EMT Practical ExamTest Proctor Seeking test proctor for EMT testing stations, during National Registry EMT practical exam on July 12. Current CPR + EMT Cert req. $20/hr. Temporary, non-benefited position. Closes July 11. Part-Time Instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https:I/jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The Bulletin

ServinyCentral Oregon since 19IB

Apply on-line through TalentEd Recruit & Hire at https:I/crookcounty.cloud.talentedkt 2.com/hire llndex.aspx. Open until filled. Call 541-447-5099 with questions. CCSD is an EOE. Admissions Advisor Oregon State University-Cascades in Bend, Oregon is accepting applications for an Admissions Advisor. R esponsibilities include implementing OSU-Cascades recruitment activities and new student programs in support of campus enrollment goals; representing OSU-Cascades at prospective student events which requires extensive travel; counseling and advising prospective students and their families.

648

745

Houses for Rent General

Homes for Sale

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such pre f erence, limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and

people securing cus-

For a complete position description and to review additional minimum and preferred r equirements, use th e f o llowing link t o view o r app l y for this pos i tion http:I/oregonstate.edu/jobsl U se po s ting number 0012684 (or the location of "Bend") to apply on-line. The closing date is 07/13/14. OSU is an AA/EOENets/Disabled.

The Bulletin Serwng Central Oregonsince l9IB

The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for the district, building relationships with our current news dealer locations and growing those locations with new outlets. Position requires total ownership of and accountability of all single copy elements within that district. Work schedule will be Thursday through Monday withTuesday and Wednesday off .R equires good communication skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, sales and problem solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: circulation©bendbuffetin.com Applications are available at the front desk. Drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; No phone inquiries please. Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE/Drug Free Workplace Must be insurable to drive company vehicle.

All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, amilial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

C O B B

E M I L P F F T A

H I AH RA E D S A H M U A N TC E H A S RA I L A T M L I I N B I R N A G

N I U M M O E C K R I O G C N O C A V H E R E R I VE S E D T I M I N A S S P A I R N D I A S R E A N

C E C U B O S H P I N P I T C S V I K F A M E A L L E R M A R E Y E A S T I V A HS I A M A D E A O N L K S A D U S T R P U P C M A N O A R M X I E S I N K N N E E B G R Y C

E T H E R

S E A H O B L M I L R L Y T E

C A N O N I

A G E T E N

P R A D E C I E RO S M S N E I E S I D P A D D I M E S C A R A Z I E R I T C O N D O

H U B S A B L E

L E E R G G P O A DB U Y S E S C I O N O D EA E R D B Y NS A M E

S P I K E D A C E S

I R K E D

P O E T S

C R I S G E I A L S L L I S A N D O G S A F R O R F U R B B B R A A L E T A L L I N C A N C I S G E D S

tody of children under W I 18. This newspaper 746 F R will not knowingly accept any advertising Northwest Bend Homes U O for real estate which is Exceptional NW in violation of the law. L N location, skyline O ur r e aders a r e views and privacy. hereby informed that PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 all dwellings adverCustom craftsman Tour Home borders tised in this newspa775 860 860 per are available on Quail Park by Awbrey Manufacturedl Motorcycles & Accessories llllotorcycles & Accessories Golf. Interior upan equal opportunity Mobile Homes basis. To complain of grades, Courtesy to d iscrimination ca l l Realtors. $575,000. HDFatBo 1996 HUD t o l l-free at 2772 NW Rainbow Reduced TO $30,000! 2006 Super G o od 1-800-877-0246. The Ridge Dr 541-848-0040 Cents 1296 sq.ft. 3 toll f ree t e lephone bdrms, 2 full baths, number for the hear750 walk in closets, all ing i m p aired is Redmond Homes appl., plus freezer. 1-800-927-9275. Triumph Da ytona Very clean, must be Completely 2004, 15K m i l es, moved 541-382-6650 652 Looking for your next Rebuilt/Customized perfect bike, needs FIND IT! Houses for Rent 2012/2013 Award nothing. Vin emp/oyee? Btiy tTI Place a Bulletin help Winner ¹201536. NW Bend Showroom Condition wanted ad today and SELL IT! $4995 reach over 60,000 Many Extras Desirable modern 3 bd/ Dream Car The Bulletin Classifieds Low Miles. 2.5 ba townhome near readers each week. AutoSales Your classified ad NWX, w/d. No smok $'I5,000 f 801Division, Bend ing. Pets neg. $1795 will also appear on 541-548-4807 DreamCarsBend.com mo . 971-227-3471. bendbulletin.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665 which currently re658 ceives over 1.5 million page Houses for Rent views every month Redmond at no extra cost. Classifieds D esirable sg l le v e l Bulletin Get Results! HD Sportster, 2001 exc 3br/2ba, lots of upCall 385-5809 or 860 cond, 1 owner, maint'd, grades, pets neg. No place your ad on-line new t i res, cu s tom Motorcycles & Accessories smoking $1200 mo at chrome, leather saddle 415-596-2006 bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. V ictory T C 2 0 0 2 , bendbulletin.com Tom, 541-382-6501 40K mi., runs great, Very nice SW Redmond s tage 1 kit, n e w 3 b d rm/2 bath home, 755 Honda Goldwing 1985 tires, rear brakes 8 1134 sq ft, h ardwood Sunriver/La Pine Homes ©60,000 miles. Has more. Health forces floors, upgraded appli$4,00 0 . minor body damage s ale. ances,fenced yd, under- 56090 Snowgoose Rd, but runs well $1500 541-771-0665 ground sprinklers, 2-car new 3/2, 3-car gaO BO. Ca l l J o h n attached garage. $850/ rage, approx /2 acre, FXSTD Harley mo + security dep. Tak- $279,000. K i m 541-306-76'I 5 Davidson 2001,twin at cam 870 ing applications now; call 541-954-3069 88, fuel injected, 541-419-1917. Boats & Accessories Vance & Hines short Advertise your car! shot exhaust, Stage I 762 Add A Picture! with Vance 8 Hines Reach thousands of readers! Homes with Acreage fuel management Call 541-385-5809 - 9 &ieRs custom parts, The Bulletin Classifieds Custom built contem- system, extra seat. Pm Wh porary raised ranch $1 0,500 OBO. Honda Rebel 250, 1986, for sale by o wner. Call Today gets 60 mpg, excellent 12' Aluminum boat 2706 sq . f t . 3-4 541-516-8684 commuter, 7213 miles, bdrms, 2~/~ baths, with trailer, 3hp motor, $1300. 541-788-6276 spacious kitchen and good cond, $1200.. dining room, wet bar, Just too many 503-307-8570 PiaggioNespa 3-wheel granite and heated collectibles? MP3 scooter 2009 744 stone, new c arpet, with only 400 miles. Find It in p rivate study, o a k Open Houses Sell them in Not a scratch! Like The Bulletin Classiffeds! cabinets, newer heat new! $ 5900. fir e places,The Bulletin Classifieds brand Custom quality home in pump, 541-385-5809 520-360-9300, owner Pozzi wood windows. heart ofNW Bend. on 4.6 h i ghly s eOpen Sunday, 12-3. cluded, heavily 541-385-5809 1296 NW Ogden g'YEs c w ooded acres b e - Harley Davidson 2003 Priced reduced to t ween Bend & T u - Anniversary Road King, DESCHUTESCOUNTY $489,500, + $2K for malo, 3-car garage, Stage 1, pearl white, exclosing. 541-678-5004 < CAREER OPPORTUNITIES irrig.system and wa- cellent condition, lots of ter feature. $589,900 c hrome 8 Where can you find a extr a s. 541-410-2098 or Sr- $13,999. 541-279-0846 helping hand? siewert© bendbroadFrom contractors to BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III, band.com yard care it's all here 763 Supervisor, Redmond Office (2014-00034). in The Bulletin's Recreational Homes Full-time position. Extended Deadline:OPEN "Call A Service & Property UNTIL FILLED. Professional" Directory Cabin hidden in woods Harley D a vidson 2006 FXDLI Dyna on trout stream, 637 BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III, Low Rider, Mustang Open 12-3 acres, 75 mi. from seat with backrest, 20600 Cougar Bend, $695k. Supervisor, Intensive Community Support 541-480-7215 new battery, windPeak Dr. (2014-00036). Full-time position. Extended shield, forward conSuperb Single Level 771 trois,lots of chrome, in Hidden Hills Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. Lots Screamin' Eagle exRob Davis, Broker haust, 11,360 miles. 541-280-9589 Beautiful building lot just Well maintained! BUILDING SAFETY INSPECTOR III, (2014steps from Meadow $8 650 in La Pine 00073). Full-time position. Deadline: Lakes Golf Course in (928) 581-9190 Prineville. $90,000 Theearnereroup.com SuNIIaV,OTyvn4. 541-480-3937

00

<g [pgig Open 12-3 2629 NW Crossing Dr. Gorgeous

Townhome Across From Park Shelley Griffin, Broker 541-280-3804

Theearnereroup.com

Position is 12-month, full-time, with a salary

range of $30,700 - $52,100 (typically, the starting salary is at the lower end of the salary range). Minimum r equirements include Bachelor's degree in discipline of choice as well as 1 — 2 years of college or university work experience.

NOTICE

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

Open 12-3 62712 Larkview Rd. Great Family Home And Neighborhood Phyllis Mageau, Broker 541-948-0447

Theearnereroup.com

OPEN HOUSE Sunday,July 6, 12-3pm

773

HUMAN RESOURCES SPECIALIST(201400070). Full-time position. Deadline:

Acreages 5.17 acres. 65694 Old

Bend/Redmond Hwy, Mtn view, power, water, septic approved. $174,000 O.B.O. Call Brad 541-419-1725, or Deb 541-480-3956. debra@bendbroad band.com 775

Manufacturedl Mobile Homes

SuNIIaV,OTIOsn4. Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049

FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes

A

PSYCHIATRICNURSEI OR II (PHNII) (201400040). Will consider full or part-time equiValent, tW0 POSitiOnSaVailable. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER - Adult

Treatment Program (2014-00001). Will consider any full or part-time equivalent. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED.

SENIOR SECRETARY(2014-00071). Fulltime position. Deadline:SUNDAY,07/13fl4.

541-548-5511

The Bulletin

HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & 541-385-5800orgoto 2 Vance & Hines pipes, DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS www.bendbulletin.com $13,500. 541-306-0166 APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR

Community LibrarianOutreach

THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT tNNLdeschutes.

org/jobs. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application Are you aPrOaCtiVe,CreatiVe,SerViCe status after the recruitment has closed oriented l i b r ar y pro f essional? and applications have been reviewed. 2299 NINLolo Drive CheCk Out thiS unique OPPOrtunity in NW Crossing Notifications to candidates are sent vja email Just Listed. Beautifully to work in a fun environment and Only. If you need aSSiStanCe, PleaSe COntaCt designed, light filled home with spectacu- to make a differenCe in the liVeS lar finishes on a won- of children, teens, and a d ults. the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 derfully l a ndscaped NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701, lot. A peaceful oasis Deadline: 2:00 on July 24. with 3 bdrm + office, (541) 61 7-4722. 2.5 b a th, g o u rmet http://www.deschuteslibrary.Org/ kitchen & 4 car gaDeschutes County encourages qualified rage. Don't miss the about/employment for m or e d eopportunity to tour this persons with disabilities to participate jn home. $819,000 tails, application, and supplemenits programs and activities. To request Berkshire Hathaway tal questionnaire. Or call (541) 312Home Services information in an alternate format, please Northwest Real Estate 1025 for assistance. EOE Chris Sachs, Broker call (541) 617-4747, fax to (541) 385-3202 970-81 9-1 1 64 or send email to accessibility©daschutas. 745

Ol'g.

Homes for Sale • FSBO- Move-inReady! 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq ft., new oversized back yard. Quality home at a quality price. A must see! 541-279-8783

D ESC tt U T E S

PUBLIC

L I BRA R Y

EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER

Women, minorities, and the disabled are enCOuraged to aPPly.


G4 SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 • THE BULLETIN 870

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 875

880

880

882

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

870

Boats & Accessories Boats & Accessories

12' aluminum fish-

ing boat, t r ailer, motor, fish finder, accessories, $1200.

Ads published in the Ads published in nWa "Boats" classification tercraft" include: Kay include: Speed, fishaks, rafts and motor ing, drift, canoe, Ized personal house and sail boats. watercrafts. Fo For all other types of "boats" please se watercraft, please go Class 870. to Class 875. 541-385-5809 541-385-5809

+>44-:

AEEEN REINSCH

Will Haul Away

+ FREE®

The Bulletin

30' 2004

w ith l i ving r o o m slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.

'

; Any Location. ,4 Removal Also Cfeanups j;

'

COLLINS

.

48I CleanOuta' ~

I®L

Aetatiott/llethatching Ask aboutFREE added services with seasonal contract! • Spring Clean-up

Handyman

I DO THAT!

• MOWing eEdging • Pruning «Wenedeating • FertiliZing «Hauling

• GrOundS Keeping One4ttte or tteeNyserukes ttftrttsN FREE ESTIMATES

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $23,995.

Call tsotnio scbedtsle!

541-383-3503

j41-4$0P714 BONDED & IN URED Z~d@8QnaÃisp

Small Jobs to

ZacV<C4f t /,~,

-

'

'e&

Tierra LandSCaying, LLC

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water 8 sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $28,500Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, Or. 206-715-7120

Maintenance, Cfean-ups, Pavers

Full Irrigation, Water Features, Bark Installation, Fire Pits, and more! Lcstt9267 Lic., Bonded, Insured

541 n981 n8386

European Professional Painter Repaint Specialistl Oregon License ¹186147 LLC

541-815-2888

KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 541-4947-4805

Bend/Redmond/PowelButte l Tertebonne/Crooked River Ranch Senior f VeteranDlscattnts

Bret Stormer

Csil:(503) 302-2445 Oflice:(54 I ) 923-4324

541-388-B910 Faxt 5414884787 CotNS184

your ad, please contact us ASAP so that

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater 8 air conditioning seldom used; just add water and it's ready to go! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

Financing available. 541-268-3333

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW T/RES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008

micro/oven, genera-

tor, furn/AC, outside shower, carbon dioxide & smoke detector, fiberglas ext., elect. step, cruise control, CB radio, 60k miles, awning, TV antenna w booster, flat screen 23" TV. AM/FM/CD stereo. $2 7 ,500. 541-548-2554

WHEN ONLY THE BEST WILL DO!

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Buick Skylark 1972

Peterbilt 359 p o table 17K orig. miles. Please water t ruck, 1 9 90, see hemmings.com for 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bo- 3200 gal. tank, 5hp details. $20,900. nanza A36, new 10-550/ p ump, 4 - 3 e hoses, 541-323-1898 prop, located KBDN. camiocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-820-3724 $65,000. 541-419-9510 933 www.N4972M.com Pickups 925

trailer with large gear box, new wheels and t ires, $ 80 0 O B O . Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003,1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround ueen+ sofa/bed, oads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700. 541-389-9214

541-548-3761

1/5th interest in 1973

2005 Diesel 4x4

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer.

Big Tex

Utility Trailer 5'x8', drop ramp. Perfect for hauling your dirt bikes, motorcycle, quads, etc!

541-408-7826

$995 Obo.

~

"

Utility Trailer,

5'3 n wide x 10' long

2013 R-Vision 23RBS Trail-LiteSport by Monaco - Expedition pkg, Sport Value pkg, convenience pkg, elec. awning, spare tire, LED TV/ent. system, outside shower, elec. tongue jack, black flush sys, beautiful interior, huge galley, great storage, 1/2-ton towable,

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition~ More pix at bendbulletin.com

$25,500

541-419-3301

altoys, queen bed.

x 33" high. has cranking tongue jack, and 2x6 decking, Tows great, very nice condition. $795.

1974 Bellanca 1730A

hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

931

RV CONSIGNMENTS

WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-548-5254

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809

or place your ad

on-line at bendbulletin.com 882

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed

sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition. $36,000 obo. Call Peter,

• • e Et

5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,

Sell for $3500. OR For Hire Call for quote Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293

Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle, 2WD, 55,000 miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285

Flexible vehicle tow hitch, $275. 541-815-4811 932

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

$1000 tires. $3000 obo. 541-633-8951

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

MONTANA 3585 2008,

Price Reduced! Komfort Pa c i fic Ridge 27 ' Like NEW deluxe NW des ign, 15 ' Su p e r Slide, priv . b drm, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, always stored inside. A MU S T see! $23,500 obo! Call Pam 541-788-6767 or Bill 541-480-7930

Chevy 3/4ton 1982, built 350 with 450 HP and

541-977-9944 or 541-318-0068

2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Likenew, asking $21,900 Gordon, 541-382-5797

e

tire carrier, HD trailer hitch, water heater,

916

$150,000

(located O Bend)

TOW EQUIPMENT Brake Buddy, $500;

Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideII outs, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. FLEETWOOD 17 e Flat Screen, PACE ARROW, 1999 Surround s o u nd, Updated interior, 36', 2 shdes, 42,600 miles, V10 camera, Queen bed, mattress, Awas, 5000 watt generator, Foam ydraulic levelers, auto ning, Generator, Insteps, back-up camera, verter, Auto Jacks, washer/dryer, central vac, Air leveling, Moon ice m a ker, l o a ded, roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, excellent condition. $27,500 541-620-2135 $74,900 541-460-6900 (SeeCraigsiist

1/3 mferesf m

Columbia400,

Antique & Classic Autos 1976 Cessna 150M Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 hrs since out of frame major, Horlon Stol Kit. Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS & additional radio (4 frequencies can be monitored at once). Transponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digital density, temp & amp monitor. Nice paint & upholstery w/memory foam seat bottoms. Oil filter & block htr. 1 owner past 14 yrs; always hangared, no damage history. N9475U.$26,000. 541-480-4375 3000 sq. ft. Hangar Bend Airport west side. 60' wide by 50' deep with 55' wide by 16' high bi-fold door, 14'x14' door rear side. Upgraded with painted floor, windows, sky lights, 240V/50 amp outlets. $195,000. (520) 360-9300, Owner

Ford F150 2009 XLT,

5.6L engine, canopy. 65,000 miles. Local, clean title. $23,900. 208-995-4408

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. Seeto believe! $14,000 or best offer. 541-923-6049

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Sullefin Classifieds

CAR AUCTION

Sat., July 12, 2014

Roseburg Oregon I Douglas County Fairgrounds Call For Info! 541-689-6824

Ford F150 LIGHTNING 1993, 500 miles on rebuilt engine. Clean interior & new tires. $7000, OBO. 541-647-8723

petersencollectorcars.com

J

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

WILL DELIVER RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Fifth Wheels

LCB g!6n

—Rlchard Haymana seml-retlred palntlng contractor of 45 years. Small jobs welcome. Interlor & Exterlor

8 Service

Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerc raft. 1 96 8 A e r o lines, 541-593-2597 Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, Pontiac full panel. $23,000 Firebird 1998 obo. Contact Paul at Alcohol Funny Car 541-447-5184. Current certification, race-ready. T-Hangar for rent $25,000 obo. at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 541-388-1929

541-379-3530 172 CessnaShare Komfort Ridgecrest 23', IFR equipped, new axle 8'x5'9n box, 2008, queen bed, avionics, Garmin 750 Single 3' sides + e x tras, sleeps 6, micro & AC, Kit Companion 1994, touchscreen, center good cond. 26' with full awning, living $465. 541-548-2731 Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 stack, 180hp. one slide, $4500 obo. room slider, yule with camper s hell, Exceptionally clean 541-389-5788 tables, outside good cond., $1500 8 economical! shower, 4 closets, OBO. 541-447-5504. fiberglass frame, as $13,500. Laredo 30' 2009 new, $11,500. La Pine Hangared in KBDN call 541-914-3360 Call 541-728-0773

or email trainwater157@ mail.com or ca 858-527-8627

Winnebago Sightseer 27' 2002. workhorse gas motor, Class A, 8' slide living rm/dinette, new tires. spare

Western Palntlng Co.

human errors do occur. If this happens to

a~se roo s.com

¹4470374489)

k ucensed 4 Bonded 4 Insuted • repedallzlng In FlrePerlmeterClearlng • Mowlnf/llhtd Dstalllng Servlees •WeedeatlnglchainsawWork • Landseepe,Construcdonllnstmlls • Feneng sNore!

Aircraft, Parts

Utility Trailers

Too many options to list here! For more information go to ~ mne

541-447-8664

MAVERICK DSCAPING

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own air-

rect. nSpellcheckn and

16' open bed utility

TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K.

Full Service

MARTIN JAMES

on the first day it runs to make sure it is cor-

Travel Trailers

Bigfoot 29 2003, sleeps 5, walk-around queen bed, 57K mi, 7.3L power Landscape stroke t u rb o di e sel Quality, Honest Work Management w/Banks power pak incl auges, torque lock & Dennis 541-317-9788 ake brakes. Power ev- Ready to makememories! ccsn StS73 aonrtedllnsnrert 541-390-1466 erything, auto leveling Top-selling Winnebago jacks, air ride w/90psi 31 J, original owners, noncompressor, 3.6kw pro- smokers, garaged, only Landscaping/Yard Care Experience p ane gen set. V e r y 18,800 miles, auto-levelCommercial clean, no pets, no smkrs, ing jacks, i2) slides, upNOTICE: Oregon Landaraged. N o sl i des. graded queen bed, bunk scape Contractors Law & Residential beds, micro, (3) TVs, 36,500. 541-548-3985 (ORS 671) requires all sleeps 10! Lots of storbusinesses that adage, maintained, very vertise t o p e r form clean!Only $67,995!ExLandscape Construc- Painting/Wall Covering tended warranty and/or fition which includes: nancing avail to qualified p lanting, deck s , buyers!541-388-7179 fences, arbors, water-features, and in- All American stallation, repair of irPainting Dodge rigation systems to be «~ • r g l icensed w it h th e • Interior and Exterior Brougham 1978, Landscape Contrac15', 1-1on, clean, • Family.OWned tors Board. This 4-digit 69,000 miles. • Residential !I't number is to be in$4500. Commercial Winnebago Advencluded in all adverin La Pine, turer 2005 35t/~', gas, tisements which indi• 40 years experience call 541-602-8652 less than 20,000 miles, cate the business has • Senior Discounts excellent condition, 2 a bond,insurance and • 5.year Warranties workers c ompensaslide-outs, work horse tion for their employchassis, Banks power itsk aboutour ees. For your protec- SUMMER SPECMI,I brake system, sleeps tion call 503-378-5909 5, with al l o p tions, or use our website: Call 541 337.6149 $62,000 / negotiable. CCB41ct3960 www.lcb.state.or.us to Call 5 4 1-306-8711or check license status email a ikistu@bendFleetwood Discovery before contracting with 40' 2003, diesel, w/all cable.com Just bought a new boat? the business. Persons options - 3 slide outs, doing land scape Sell your old one in the 2 TV's, W/D, maintenance do not classifieds! Ask about our satellite, etc., 32,000 m i les. Super Seller rates! r equire an LC B l i Wintered in h eated 541-385-5809 cense. shop. $82,000 O.B.O. Ettrlre RoomRemodels Garage Orgttstisation Home tttsPectiott RePairs

908

CHECKYOUR AD

881

Guardian rock shield, $200; Roadmaster 5000 tow bar, $450; OR $900 for ALL. Call 541-548-1422

A •

ffandymss/Remodeliag Residential/Commercial

Call Dick at 541-408-2367

541-548-5254

Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812

For SalvaLrek.

$27,900

Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

Allegro 28' Class A 2008 Ford V10 gas, 50K miles, 2 slides, satellite, 2 TVs, Onan gen, rear & side cameras, hydraulic levelers, 300w solar panel with inverter. Original owner. $49,500. 541-420-4303

Serving Central Oregon sincetete

Antique & Classic Autos

Sightseer

The Bulletin The Bulletin

NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone 0: who con t racts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contractors Board (CCB). An active license — Providingmeans the contractor is bonded & insured. Yard Maintenance Verify the contractor's & Clean-up, CCB l i c ense at Mowing, Thatching, www.hirealicensedPlugging contractor.com or call 503-378-4621. & much more! The Bulletin recomCctntact Allen, mends checking with 541-536-1294 the CCB prior to contracting with anyone. 541-815-SN Some other t rades also req u ire addi- BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS tional licenses and Search the area's most certifications. comprehensive listing of classified advertising... Debris Removal real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

932

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Winnebago

Jayco Grevhawk 26SS 2005 6K miles, 1 slide, sleeps 4, full bath in 14' alum boat w/'09 Merrear, no bdrm, outside Serrin Central Ore on since 1903 shower & BBQ, cury mtr, low hrs, $2500 CANOE: used REI Naback-up camera, awobo. 541-815-8797 O'Brien 2 person tube, v arro O t t er , wi t h ning, solar panel, t owable HD , e x c . paddies, exc. cond., brand new tires, new very lightweight: 58 $50. 541-388-3879 15' tri-hull fiberglas engine battery, protecIbs, 14'6 n long, $950. tive sealants in/out, fishing boat, 1971 541-595-1125 Tow rope for tubes and lots more! Exc. cond, walk-thru, fish finder, toys, brand new $10. Ocean Kayak 11' model $38,000 541-815-2737 full top cover, 45 hp 541-388-3879 Evinrude, tr a i ler, Malibu2, w/seat back spare tire, access., rests $325 541-389-9919 good cond. $1200 875 obo. 541-408-3811 Watercraft 880 Motorhomes Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Provrdence 2005 classifieds! Ask about our Fully loaded, 35,000 Super Seller rates! miles, 350 Cat, Very 541-385-5809 clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side Old Town Canoe, 16.2' 1987 Barron Ma- 16' refrigerator with ice cedar & canvas, rine, i/o, top cover, spruce, maker, Washer/Dryer, Lake model, 1 owner, 2007 Winnebago $4,500 obo verv good cond, w/extras. Outlook Class "C" Flat screen TV's, In 541-419-5731 motion satellite. $1000. 541-388-3386 31', solar panel, Cat. $95,000 heater, excellent 16' Cobra Triple sit on 1994 Yamaha Wave 541-480-2019 condition, more extop Kayak w/ all acRaider exc. cond, low tras. Asking $58K. cessories, $950 OBO. miles, $2250. RV Ph. 541-447-9268 541-548-3761 541-480-3937 CONSIGNMENTS Can be viewed at WANTED Western Recreation We Do The Work ... (top of hill) You Keep The Cash! in Prineville. On-site credit • • I approval team, C all 5 4 8 5- 5 0 web site presence. to r om ote o ur s e r v i c e We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care 541-389-7234

908 e

WILDERNESS 28' 2000, heat, A/C, shower,queen bed, nice condition. $8775. 541-548-0875 885

Canopies & Campers

a

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Eagle Cap 850, 2005 with slideout, AC, micro, frig, heater, queen bed, wet bath, exlnt cond, $16,900. 541-388-3477 leave message. LEAR CANOPY 2003 blue, fits Ford F-350 Arctic Fox 29' 2003, covered storage, slide- s hort b o x , $5 0 0 . out, exc. cond inside & 541-410-4354. outside 2016 tags, $14,500. 541-678-1449 SNUG TOP or 541-410-8849 Pickup canopy for F250 short bed, Challenger 32' 2005, 3 white in color, slide-outs, A/C, newer like new, TV/V C, st ereo, e tc. $675. Good tires, oak interior. 541-416-9686 $21,000. 541-410-3292

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Yourad will also appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central OregOn MarketPlaCe

• The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbulletin.fom

*Privatepartymerchandiseonly


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 6 2014 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 933

935

Pickups

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

Ford F-150 XLT 2006Su er Cab

975

975

975

975

975

975

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Audi A6 Quattro 2008

Vyy Jetta GLi2012 Ci

BMW X3

Looking good for $13,998 Bargain Corral Vin¹851951

ROBBERSON~ ~

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 Ford F250 Lariat 2008Crew cab

6.4L V8, Diesel, 4WD, automatic, 65k mi. Vin¹A32746 $33,977

Chevrolet Tahoe 2009 LT1

5.3L V8, 4WD, auto, 69k miles, 20 MPG Hwy, Vin¹103597

ROBBERSON i

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541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

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Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Automatic, S-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread $11,995. Call 541-598-5111

541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

black w/ leather seat trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 miles. vin¹362484 6.977 ROBBERSON I INCCIN ~

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541-312-3986 dlr ¹0205 940

Vans Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags, $5995. 541-610-6150

$14,979

s U B A RU. SUBCRUOMIRHD.OOM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821

Ford Ran er 2005

Ready for some yard work! RWD, automatic, 78k miles $9,977 Vin¹A70560

ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~

mssss

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab

~AS+Extra nice 4x4, great

mpg. Only $19,977

Vin¹541238

ROBBERSON M

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

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Nissan Frontier 2013, SV model, Crew cab, 4x4, 5 speed trans., pw, pdl. VIN ¹715664 Stock ¹44326A

$25,979

©

s u a aau

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 N Say Ngoodbuy

to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds

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Ford Bronco ii 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662

$15,979 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

$4,977

Vin¹239718

ROBBERSON mmm s

Infiniti l30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900.00 obo.

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

541-420-3277

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© suamu

Ford Fusion Sport

P1 i!!jiifrc-

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Spotless! 3.6L V6, 4WD, automatic, 28k miles. Must See!

2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, automatic, 45k miles, 36 mpg Hwy Vin¹448537

201'I 3.5L V6, AWD, auto. AWD, 45k miles, 24 MPG Hwy, Vin¹190537

$29,977

$12,977

ROBBERSON

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ROBBERSON'L

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Need to sell a Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! A s k about our "Wheel Deal"!

f o r private party l advertisers

L'"'" " " For More Ads The Bulletin

Toyota Tundra Limited 2012

5.7L V8, 4WD, auto., 2 2k mi., 1 7 m p g hwy, Vin¹220384

$42,977 ROBBERSON m ss s a

(541) 312-3986 dlr¹ 0205 935

Sport Utility Vehicles VolvoS60T5 2013

Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated lnternet advertising, we make every attemPt to enSure that PrOduCtS SOld in our ClaSSifiedS are

from a valid source. AWD, less than 11k mi., auto, 6 spd. vin ¹202364 $30,977

ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~

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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

J

TURN THE PAGE

5 41-385-580 9

I I II C NNI ~

s U B ARU MISBRUOC3SHD.ODM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

© s u aaARu

Kia Forte EX2011

2.5i 2011

Loves snow and ice!

Toyota Sienna 2011, LE model, 7 passen- Chrysler 200 LX 2012, ger, stow-n-go seat- pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. VIN ¹292213 ing, alloy wheels. Jeep Wrangler 2007 Stock ¹83014 Vin ¹019106. 4 dr, silver, hard 8 soft Stock ¹43981A $16,979 top, new tires/ brakes Mazda Miata 1991 $24,999 runs great, $18,450. © s u a ARU. fun car, good shape, 541-536-9281 5 spd. $3500. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-410-7282 877-266-3821 Want to impress the 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 relatives? Remodel Dlr¹0354 your home with the help of a professional Check out the classifieds online from The Bulletin's www.bendbuiietin.com "Call A Service Updated daily Professional" Directory Mazda RX-8 40th Anniversary Dodge Avenger 2013, 975 Edition 2008 pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. Gray Mica Paint, Automobiles Vin ¹535474 Red & Black Leather Stock ¹83015 Interior, Bose j $16,979 Sound, Sunroof, o'v 4-Door, 6-Speed © s U B ARU Auto. Trans. JEEP WRANGLER 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. w/Paddle Shifters. 2009 hard top 877-266-3821 Original Owners. 18,000 miles. autoDlr ¹0354 34,000 Miles. Subaru Outback 2012 matic, AC, tilt & 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, Call The Bulletin At $17,000. cruise, power win541-588-6670 auto. trans., AWD, dows, power steerN385 N5809 541 leather heated seats, ing, power locks, alAWD, power moon Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Mercedes Benz e320, loy wheels and r oof, a n d mor e ! At: www.bendbulletin.com 1999 wagon, white running boards, 25,600 miles. Below Ford Focus 2006 ZX3, 120k mi., incl. studgaraged. KB O $2 7 ,500 $23,900. 5-spd, newtires, AC, CD, ded tires, exc. cond., 541-344-5325 541-419-5980 miles, great mpg, $4500. 541-318-4502. annie2657@yahoo.com 91K $5000. 541-526-5477

JeepWrangler Sahara 2012

Subaru Impreza

©

lication. If a n e rror 63K miles, manual trans, may occur in your ad, 40mpg, new tires, 4 exp lease contact u s tra s t udded s n ows, and we will be happy $8300. 541-389-7365 to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next d ay, S a t. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. fphoto for illustration only) 541-385-5809 Eiantra 201 1, The Bulletin Classified Hyundai Touring, leather, auto, CD, pw, pdl. Chevy Cavalier Vin ¹090677 2000 Stock ¹82995

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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

Automobiles WHEN YOU SEE THIS

Call 541-385-5808 toplaceyour adtoday.

BSSl 1C S

Automatic, 52k miles, Vin¹511494

$16,998

ROBBERSON I INCOIN ~

On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

VW Beetle 2007

$23,979

CHECK YOUR AD on the first day of pub- Honda Fit Sport, 2008,

Inspected & Ready! Bargain Corral

$19,977 ROBBERSON y

975

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

Subaru Outback 3.6R Limited 2011, moon roof, AWD, pw, pl, leather, Vin ¹381548 Stock ¹44184A

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

9B

Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

Vin¹108574

The Bulletin classifieds MarePiXat BerjdbjjletirLCOm

Olds 98, 1990, runs excellent studded tires, new batt, great gas mileage. $1200. 541-389-9377

ssu a

SUBCRUOm H HD.OOM

Ford F350 Super Duty Find exactly what Crew Cab 2001, big you are looking for in the lift, AWD, pw, pdl, tilt; CLASSIFIEDS Vin ¹A1 7200 Stock ¹82918B

Dlr ¹0354

Well cared for Great on gas! Vin¹076238 15,998 ROBBERSON

Buick LeSabre 2002 w/cloth seats, $4695; and 1995 w/leather seats, $2999. Both auto., loaded, 130k miles 541-419-5060

(photo forillustration only)

©

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

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ROBBERSON

$20,000 541-318-6368

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Sporty, Fun and a manual trans.

Fax it to 541-322-7253

SIHIBRUOSBmD.OOM

Nissan Murano SL 2011

~SOO . 3

Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT VOLVO XC90 2007 Limited 2005, loaded, AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, leather, roof, a l loy power everything, wheels. grey on grey, leather VIN ¹210360 heated lumbar seats, Stock ¹42935A 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al$14,979 ways garaged, all Sueaau maintenance up to SUBBRUOSSSHD.COM excellent cond. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Adate, STEAL AT$13,900. 877-266-3821 541-223-2218 Dlr ¹0354

Honda Civic LX 2010

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FordF-350 Lariat 2007 Crew Cab

6.0L V8, Diesel, 4WD, auto.„55k miles, vin¹A49325 $33,977

with hard & soft top silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

$17,979 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Nissan 300zx 1993 Glass T-tops, 5-speed n/t, 41,000 miles, black with tan, Stillen upgrades, high performance tires & battery, excellent condition. For more information go to www.buffalois.com/

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

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is given that the un- will be honored only at 63377 Jamison St., dersigned trustee will the discretion of the Bend, OR. Items on the agenda include: on September 19, beneficiary or if r e2014 at the hour of quired by the terms of election of new officthe fire departence is made to that 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in the loan documents. ers, c ertain t rust d e e d accord with the stan- In construing this no- m ent r e port, th e Wildfire report, made by Scott Harrin dard of time estab- tice, the singular in- aProject policy update on by ORS cludes the plural, the and Jennifer Harrin, lished meetings conduct, a 187.110, at the folword " grantor" i n tenants by the e nlowing place: inside cludes any successor discussion of stratetirety, as grantor, to goals, the status of Western Title and Es- the main lobby of the i n interest t o t h e gic Deschutes C o u nty grantor as well as any various projects and a crow Company, as review of draft perCourthouse, 1164 NW other person owing an trustee, in favor of obligation, the perfor- formance evaluations. Mortgage Electronic Bond, in the City of meeting location Registration Systems, Bend, County of Des- mance of which is se- The Inc. solely as nomi- chutes, State of Or- cured by said trust is accessible to perand theNwords sons with disabilities. nee for American Bro- egon, sell at public deed, kers Conduit, its suc- auction to the highest "trustee" and benefi- A request for interfor the hearing cessors and assigns, bidder for cash the ciary" include their re- preter as beneficiary, dated i nterest in th e d e - spective successors impaired or for other accommodations for 05/18/07, r e corded scribed real property in interest, if any. The person with disabili05/23/07, in the mort- which the grantor had trustee's rules of aucshould be made gage records of Des- or had power to con- tion may be accessed ties ww w .northwest- at least 48 hrs. before chutes County, Or- vey at the time of the at meeting to: Tom egon, as 2007-29142 execution by grantor trustee.com and are the Fay 5 4 1 -318-0459. incorporated by this and Re-Recorded on of the trust deed, to8 /1 7/2007 as A F ¹ : gether with any inter- reference. You may TTY 800-735-2900. 2007-45436 and sub- est which the grantor also access sale staLEGAL NOTICE ww w .north- TO INTERESTED sequently assigned to or grantor's succes- tus a t sors in interest acwesttrustee.com and OneWest Bank, FSB PERSONS quired after the exwww. USA-Forecloby Assignment rePierre J. De S antis ecution of the trust sure.com. For further corded as has been appointed information, p l ease A dministrator of t h e 2010-26183, covering deed, to satisfy the Bre a non estate o f t he f o llowing d e - foregoing obligations contact: L a u reen Nort h west DeSantis, deceased, scribed real property thereby secured and Miller situated in said county t he costs and e x - Trustee Services, Inc. by the Circuit Court, and state, to wit: The penses of sale, in- P.O. Box 997 Belle- State of Oregon, DesN orth Half o f th e cluding a reasonable vue, WA 98009-0997 chutes County, Case Southwest Quarter of charge by the trustee. 425-586-1900 Harrin, N o. 14PB0053. A l l the Northeast Quarter Notice is further given Scott and J e nnifer persons having claims 752 3 .22778) against the estate are (N 1/2 SW 1/4 NE 1/4) that for reinstatement (TS¹ of Section 20, Town- or payoff quotes re- 1002.268760-File No. required to p resent ship 18 South, Range quested pursuant to them, with vouchers LEGAL NOTICE 13 East of the Wil- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d NOTICE OF PUBLIC attached, to the Adlamette Meridian, De- 86.789 must be timely ministrator at 250 NW HEARING c ommunicated in a schutes County, OrAve n ue, The Desc h utes Franklin written request that egon, E X CEPTING County Pla n ning Suite 402, Bend, Orc omplies with t h a t T HEREFROM th e Commission will hold egon 97701, within East Quarter (E 1/4) statute addressed to a Public Hearing on four months after the thereof P ROPERTY the trustee's "Urgent T hursday, July 2 4 , date of June 29, 2014, A DDRESS: 6 0 6 5 6 Request Desk" either 2014, at 5:30 p.m. in the first publication of Gosney Road Bend, by personal delivery the Deschutes County t his notice, o r t h e to the trustee's physi- Services Center, 1300 claims may be barred. OR 97702 Both the cal offices (call for ad- NW W a l l St r e et, Additional information b eneficiary and t h e trustee have elected dress) or b y f i r st Bend, to take testi- may be obtained from to sell the real prop- class, certified mail, mony on the following t he records of t h e erty to satisfy the obli- r eturn r e ceipt r e - item: FILE NUMBER: court, the A dminisquested, addressed to TA-14-5. SUBJECT: trator, or the lawyer gations secured by the trust deed and a the trustee's post of- A n a p plication t o for t h e Pe r sonal notice of default has fice box address set amend the Sunriver Representative/Adbeen recorded pursu- forth in t his n otice. Community General ministrator, P a t ricia Due to potential con- District (SUCG) zone Heatherman. ant to O regon Revlsed Statutes flicts with federal law, to allow wireless telePUBLIC NOTICE 86.752(3); the default persons having no communication faciliState of Oregon, for which the foreclo- record legal or equi- ties as a conditional The Department of Transs ure i s m a d e i s table interest in the use. AP P LICANT: portation, will sell the grantor's failure to pay subject property will B usch La w F irm property NAs when due the follow- only receive informa- P LLC f o r AT8 T. following Is" by sealed bid. ing sums: monthly tion concerning the STAFF C O NTACT: Minimum bid required payments of $327.38 lender's estimated or Cynthia Smidt, Cyn- is $56,000. Bids will beginning 02/21/2012; actual bid. Lender bid thia.SmidtodesJuly 14, i nformation is a l s o chutes.org. Copies of be accepted plus late charges of 2014 7, $422.11 b e g inning available a t the the staff report, appli- 2014. We August must be in web s ite, cation, all documents 03/08/2012; plus cor- trustee's receipt of your bid no www.northwestporate advances of and evidence sub- later than 5:00pm on $2,812.50; t o gether trustee.com. Notice is mitted by or on behalf August 7, 2014. The with title e x pense, further given that any of the applicant and total area to be sold is costs, trustee's fees person named in ORS applicable criteria are . 64 acres with C 3 and attorney's fees 86.778 has the right, available for inspec- zoning. A large COI at any time prior to i ncurred herein b y tion at the Planning bisects the parreason of said default; five days before the Division at no cost Canal cel. Buildable area on any further sums ad- date last set for the a nd can b e p u r - east side of c anal vanced by the benefi- s ale, to h av e t h is chased for 25 cents a only. Parking allowed ciary for the protec- foreclosure proceed- page. The staff re- on the west side of tion of t h e a b o ve ing dismissed and the port should be made canal. described real prop- trust deed reinstated available seven days erty and its interest b y payment to t he prior to the date set Located at the corner therein; and prepay- beneficiary of the en- f or the hearing. I n - of NW Canal Blvd. & tire amount then due ment penalties/premiformation about E Larch Ave. i n ums, if applicable. By (other than such por- pending land use ap- N Redmond. (near Hosreason of said default, tion of the principal as plications can be ac- pital) Assessors Map: the beneficiary has would not then be due cessed o n line a t 1 5-13-10B Tax L o t d eclared all s u ms had no default oc- http://www.deschutes. 303. Parcel access is owing on the obliga- curred) and by curing org/Community-Ded e fault velopment/Planning/C from NW Canal Blvd. tion secured by said any o t her trust deed i mmedi- complained of herein urrent-Planning.aspx. For information on ately due and pay- that is capable of be- Click on "Pending h ow to bid, o r f o r ing cured by tenderable, said sums being Land Use A pplicaing the performance tions" (opens in new questions regarding the following, to wit: this sale, c o ntact: $85,199.99 with inter- required under the window). Kelly.J.Atkinson Oodo tr u s t est thereon at the rate o bligation o r t.state.or.us LEGAL NOTICE of 4.25 percent per deed, and in addition R EFER T O FIL E AUCTION annum be g inning to paying said sums PUBLIC Mail: auction to be ¹ 6983018 01/21/2012; plus late or tendering the per- Public ODOT-Right of Way Friday, July 18, charges of $422.11 formance necessary held Section MS¹2, 4040 at 10:30 A.M., at beginning 03/08/2012; to cure the default, by 2014 paying all costs and Jamison Street Self Fairview Industrial Dr. plus corporate adStorage, 63177 Jami- SE, S a lem, OR vances of $2,812.50; expenses actually in97302-1142 P hone: on St., Bend O R together with title ex- curred in enforcing the s (Unit B-043 & 5 03-986-3619. Bi d pense, costs, trustee's obligation and trust 97701. Unit C-013, Kaidee instructions and addifees and a ttorneys deed, together with tional information on and Pike-Howard). fees incurred herein trustee's subject parcel is loby reason of said de- a ttorney's fees n o t LEGAL NOTICE the The regular meeting cated on ODOT webfault; any further sums exceeding site: www.odotpropadvanced by the ben- amounts provided by of the Board of Di- erty.com eficiary for the protec- said OR S 8 6 .778. rectors of the Destion of the above de- Requests from per- chutes County Rural scribed property and sons named in ORS Fire Protection Disits interest therein; 86.778 for reinstate- trict ¹2 will be held on and prepayment pen- ment quotes received Tuesday, July 8, 2014 Just bought a new boat? a lties/premiums, i f less than six d ays at 11:30 a.m. at the Sell your old one in the applicable. WHERE- prior to the date set North Fire S t ationclassifieds! Ask about our FORE, notice hereby for the trustee's sale c onference r o o m, Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE File No. 7523.22778 R e f e r-


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