Bulletin Daily Paper 06-07-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $2

SUNDAY June 7,2015

TRAVEL:BLUES , BREWS and BBQin CoosBay, C1 < "There are somanyoptions." — Stephanie Howe,endurancerunner

SPORTS •D1 MORE$4I ~~ THAN • ~

~

INCO OPONS INSI D E

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

e ara er w o

NO phOtO finiSh —Amer-

u s,

ican Pharoaheasily wins the first Triple Crown in 37 years. D1

• Investigators say it maytake ayear for anyresolution to 2014's human-causedfire

4

1,000 apartments-

AFFORDABLE HOUSING

Bend says it's willing to work with parks By Scott Hammers

That's what's planned for Bend: Is the homerental drought coming to anend? E1

The Bulletin

The city of Bend is willing to work with the Bend Park & Recreation District on a proposal to create

Crime-fighting nurses-

incentives for developers to build affordable housing.

Training them to collect evidence in sexual assault.A7

Earlier this year, the city

asked the park district to consider waiving system development charges un-

Head-up display — Asafe way to text behind the wheel? Or just another way to distract drivers?F1

der certain conditions to

encourage the construction of affordable housing units.

The charges, known as SDCs, are levied against new construction to offset the cost of expanding ex-

And a Wed exclusiveThecuriouscaseofthewoman suing eBayover ownership of the sun. bendbunetin.cem/extras

... and it'll take

80 years for this to look

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Campaign logos 2016: A design critique

like it oncedid Joe KliheI The Bulletin

Cyclists racing in last month's Chainbreaker mountain bike race pass through a section of forest bumed in the Two Bulls Fire. A year ago, the fire burned 6,908 acres of mostly private timberland west of Bend and forced the evacuation of about 254 homes on the city's edge.

By Dylan J. DarlingsThe Bulletin

year after the Two Bulls Fire raged near Bend, the human-caused wildfire remains under investigation.

Bloomberg News

As a steady stream of

While investigators have talked to dozens

enters the race, anewritual

of people about the blaze, the investigation

is emerging: the campaign logo reveal.

still requires "significant follow-up," said Jeff

The relative distinctive-

ness of campaign logos is a recent development: There

• Campaign was a time roundup, whenthey A4 all looked basically the same,giveortakeastar,

Bonebrake, investigation and cost-recovery coordinator for the Oregon Department of Forestry in Salem. At least nine or 10 investigators from the agency, the U.S. Forest

often featuring the same

Service and the Oregon State Police have

stylized, waving flag. The 1990s and early

worked to determine the cause and person or

"We will hegin our planting eQorts springof Z016." — Chris Johnson, with Whitefish Cascade Forest Resources, which owns much of the burned forest

for voters' attention, so there

w as less needforcandidates to distinguish themselves through symbolism and color — andperhaps a hesitation to do anything that stood out too much. Instead,

virtually all of them opted for similar shades of red and blue, and used similar

fonts and imagery. It was the 2008 election, and that famous letter "0,"

district's SDCs go toward

building parks and trails, while the city's are used to build new roads and sewer and water facilities

— together they add approximately $17,000 to the cost of a new single-family home. SeeHousing/A5

The Bulletin

About 80 years will have burned last June in the Two Bulls Fire look like

they did before the blaze, said the manager of the timberland. "I wish it was sooner than that," said Chris

Johnson, vice president of timber operations for Whitefish Cascade Forest

Resources. The company, which is based in Singapore and has an office in Sunriver, now owns much of the forest burned by the fire after the February pur-

chase of 33,000 acres west of Bend. About 6,200 acres of the

6,908-acre Two Bulls Fire was on land now held by Whitefish Cascade, John-

son said. See Years/A5

BUII

2000s were a different time,

with less medianoise and fewer shinyobjects vying

modate new residents. The

to pass before the woods

By Alison Elkin presidential candidates

By Dylan J. Darling

isting systems to accom-

Tu a,o Reserv Ir R .

people responsible for the fire.

Area burned in2014

first day of the fire, causing the evacuation of about 254 homes and around 635 people on the west side of Bend. The fast-moving fire close to the city brought comparisons totheAwbrey HallFire,which burned 3,350 acres,ornearly 5 squaremiles,and destroyed 22homes in 1990.

that changed everything, says designer Sagi Ha-

See Leads /A5

WASHINGTON — Like the parent of any toddler

and kindergartner, Jared wants to keep certain things out of reach.

Liquor is stored out of sight in a cupboard. The household cleaners are

safely kept behind childproof locks. And the marijuana is stashed high on a shelf in a fireproof lockbox. Evenings fall into a familiar routine. Family din-

"It relaxes me. And it

12:45 p.m., June 7 — a year ago today. The fires went on to m erge and burn 6,908 acres,or nearly 11 square miles,of mainly private timberland. Most of the spread was in the

The Washington Post

daughters are snuggled in for the night, Jared slips out onto the back deck of their apartment and smokes a (now legal) bowl of weed.

Two BullsFire

lookout on Black Butte spotted smoke from the fires around

By Brigid Schulte

ner. Baths. Then, after their

BLM

"It wouldn't surprise me if we were at least a year out," he said on Thursday. The Two Bulls Fire started as a pair of separate fires burning near each other close to Bull Springs, west of Bend. The

Legal pot is a challenge for parents

helps me get perspective to see the big picture. I find that enjoyable," said Jared,

P RI VAT E LAND

a rare parent in the District /~ Sttyriners 5"

DESMUTES NA3lo 8

~

of Columbia who was willing to talk openly about his marijuana use.

CKB

Source:U.S.Forest Service

SeePot/A6

Bulletin

viv, a partner in the New

York firm Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv who has

designed logos for the Library of Congress, Armani Exchange, and Harvard University Press, among other clients. "Whatever you say about

(Obama's) mark— (it's) maybe a tiny bit cheesy for me — but it has been so

successful and so impactful. It had a huge impact on the campaign," Haviv said. "It was extremely well-used throughout. I think that in some way, it changed the courseofhistoryintermsof designforcampaigns, and everybody is now trying to achieve the same thing." SeeLogos/A4

States fearful of lack of health law contingencies By Rebecca Adams CQ-Roll Call

WASHINGTON — With

the fate of President Barack Obama's top legislative accomplishment hanging in the balance, state officials are increasingly concerned by

the administration's refusal to discuss contingency plans for insurance markets should the Supreme Court strike down 2010 health care law subsidies

for 6.4 million low- and middle-income people. Officials in a variety of

TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 88, Low 54 t~fsi P age B6

states, including many led by Republicans, say they are panicked by the uncertainty a ruling this month against the government in King v. Burwell could unleash. Justices are weighing whether the health care overhaul allows federal

subsidiesforcoverage tobe offered in all states, or just in those that, as the law states, are "established by the state."

Sixteen states, including Oregon, and the District of Columbia have created their own state-run health insurance

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

E1-6 Community Lite C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 82 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts G1-6 Local/State 8 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 113, No. 158,

42 pages, 7 sections

exchanges; the others that rely

on the federal government could see aid disappear. State officials expected the

administration to be publicly tight-lipped about the prospect of a ruling against the law. See Health law/A5

Q Ili/e use recycled newsprint

:: IIIIIIIIIII I o

8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0

7


A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

The Bulletin

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China CapSiZing —Hundreds of bodies retrieved from the Eastern Star pushed thedeath toll above 400, China's state broadcaster reported today, asdisaster teams expandedthe search of theYangtze River for dozens moremissing in China's deadliest maritime disaster in nearly sevendecades. Authorities haveattributed the overturning of the cruise ship late Monday to sudden, severewinds, but also have placed the captain and his first engineer in police custody. Passengers' relatives haveraised questions about whether the ship should have continued its voyageafter the storm started in asection of Hubei province anddespite aweather warning earlier in the evening. The death toll rose to 406 overnight after hundreds of bodies from the Eastern Star were found Friday andSaturday, including that of a 3-year-old girl in the top deck, officials said. Another 36 peoplewere listed as missing, CCTVreported, citing rescue authorities.

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Vice President Joe Bidenshares a hug with President Barack Obamaafter Obama eulogized Biden's son, Beau Biden, during his funeral at St. Anthony of Padua Church in Wilmington, Delaware, onSaturday Politicians, military leaders andcelebrities from across the country came to bid farewell on Saturday to former DelawareAttorney General BeauBiden,

whose death at age 46opened yet another chapter of grief for his father, Vice President Joe Biden. Calling himself part of the Biden clan, President Barack Obamaremembered BeauBiden asa selfless son and consummate public servant in a eulogy. "He did in 46 years what most of us couldn't do in146," Obama said. "He left nothing in the tank."

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CORRECTIONS

By Nedra Pickler

calculus has not fully shifted. We continueto see very conWASHINGTON — P r esi- cerning Russian aggression dent Barack Obama plans to in eastern Ukraine," Obama urge European leaders this deputy national security adThe Associated Press

weekend not to waver from sanctions against Russia, pur-

suing what the White House is calling a "steady as she goes" policy while accusing Moscow of flagrantly violating a ceasefire agreement in Ukraine. For the second year in a row,

Russia's moves on Ukraine are looming over the Group of Seven summit, which is bringing leaders of the world's largest industrialized democracies to Germany for two days of

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Ag Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

viser Ben Rhodes said in a

conference call with reporters to preview the trip. But he argued that continuing sanctions is the right course because they are a deterrent against more aggressive Russian action and need more time to work — noting it took

years of sanctions to bring Iran to negotiations over its nuclear weapons program. "That is why it's so important that sanctions are kept in

Union appear to have little appetite for tougher penalties against Russia. "I don't see any change in policy on Ukraine, nor do I see Ukraine fatigue. I think our general view is steady as she goes on that front," said Charles Kupchan, senior director for European affairs at t h e N a t i onal S e curity

Council. "We hold open the

killed more than 6,400people.

that are then able to be waited out by countries that continue to violate international law and international norms," Rhodes said. "But rather, we

er the Russians will comply with the Minsk agreements, a nd that w e

c a n en d t h i s

diplomatically." At the G-7 meeting at the Schloss Elmau, a o n e-time Bavarian artist retreat turned the leaders of Britain, Germa-

ny, France, Italy, Canada and Japan. The prime ministers of Canada and Japan planned to visit Ukraine on their way to

C anadian P r im e M i n i s - need to maintain the pressure, Germany. ter Stephen Harper told The show that there cannot be Obama plans to open his Associated Press that Russia cracks in the transatlantic uni- tripbymeeting German Chanshould never be allowed back ty, and show that the costs are cellor Angela Merkel and de-

in the G-7 as long as Putin is president. White House officials said

they are concerned by a sudden outburst of violence in eastern Ukraine this week,

despite economic penalties against Moscow and a fourmonth-old cease-fire agreement signed in Belarus. "Clearly, President Putin's

Ukraine CeaSe-fire —In this front-line town in eastern Ukraine, the cease-fire called more than three months agoseems to beonly an insulting guise. Shelling rocks the area sooften that dogs have learned to headfor the basement at the first blast. Everyone wants the shelling to stop, both the town's civilians and the rebels whocontrol it. That weariness points paradoxically toward newviolence. The rebels are itching for an end to the pretenseand wish their leaders would give the order for a full-out assault. "We've askedthemfor permission, but all they say is: 'no, no, no,'" said one rebel sniper, who goes by the call-sign Rzhavy. POpe in BOSnia —Coming to a country whose national anthem has no lyrics because its bickering ethnic groups cannot agree on them, PopeFrancis on Saturday called for greater religious reconciliation and anend to the sectarian conflicts that still threaten Bosnia. The pope praised the progress since the bloody ethnic conflict of the 1990s, and especially since PopeJohn Paul II's visit in1997, when religious tensions were still high. "The cry of God's people goesup once again from this city," Francis said during a Mass inSarajevo, "the cry of all menandwomenof good will: War never again!" TalibaII OffenSiVe —Hundreds of Taliban fighters overwhelmed a remote district in northeastern Afghanistan onSaturday in anarea where the government's influencehaswanedconsiderably over the past two years, provincial officials said. Thegovernor of Badakhshan province said that Afghansecurity forces had retreated about half a mile from their position in theadministrative center of YamganDistrict, a sparsely populatedand mountainous area.TheTaliban hadseizedthe district center lastyear, aswell, before falling back. Theattack began at 4 a.m. Saturdayandinvolved as manyas 300Taliban fighters. PriSOn eSCaPe —Law enforcement authorities said Saturday that two inmates convicted of murder hadescapedfrom NewYork's largest prison overnight by tunneling their way out, setting off an extensive manhunt and prompting Gov.Andrew Cuomo to travel to the facility. The NewYork State Police said Saturday that the inmates, Richard Matt and DavidSweat, hadescapedfrom the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, an all-male maximum security prison about170 miles north of Albany near theCanadianborder. Officials said both menwere "a danger to the public."

possibility that sooner or lat-

meetings starting today. The place, so that they're not just gatheringcomes a year after seen as one-time punishments luxury spa, Obama will join the leaders booted Russian President Vladimir Putin from their group in protest over the Ukraine crisis that now has

Ireland and other countries steamedtoward the waters off Libya on Saturday to rescue the latest wave of migrants from smugglers' boats. British authorities warned that up to 500,000 people could attempt the perilous crossing this summer.Capt. Nick Cooke-Priest, on the British warship HMSBulwark, told reporters aboard: "Indications are there that there are450,000 to 500,000 migrants in Libya who are waiting at the border" for voyage from the North African country's Mediterranean coast in hopes of reaching Italian shores.

livering a speech in the picturesque Alpine village of Krun. European leaders must de- He also plans to meet privately cide later this summer wheth- with British Prime Minister er to extend their sanctions, David Cameron for the first and the White House officials time since Cameron's re-elecsaid Obama's focus will be tion last month, and with Iraqi on encouraging them to take Prime Minister Haider al-Abathat step. But unless there's a di, who is attending to discuss significant escalation of the the IslamicState terror threat crisis, the U.S. and European in his country.

KanSaS judiCiary fight —The fight between Gov.SamBrownback of Kansasandthe state's judicial branch has escalated, with the governor last week signing into law abill that could strip state courts of their funding. Themeasure, at the end of alengthy bill that allocated money for the judiciary this year, stipulates that if a state court strikes down a2014 law that removed somepowers from the state Supreme Court, the judiciary will lose its funding. GIIantaIIamO detaiIIeeS —Guantanamo prison management has expanded its rule forbidding dining with detainees to include Red Cross meetings andother legal visits, a continuing change in policy that beganwith a ban ondefense lawyers breaking bread with their clients. "The modifications address health, safety and security concerns applicable to all detainee meetings conducted in designated Camp Echoand Echo II meeting huts or CampDelta, regardless of the purpose of the meeting," Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Johnson, a spokesman for the remote prison operations in Cuba,said by email.

just going to continue to grow for Russia."

Sex shop field trip —Parents of students at a small Minneapolis private school are demanding the director resign after she led afield trip to a shop that sells sex toys andadult novelties. "We arenot happy with what happened," said SteveStrawmatt, who hasalready removed his 10-year-old son from the school. Strawmatt issued a statement on behalf of about nine sets of parents of kids at Gaia Democratic School who areoutraged that director Starri Hedges took about a dozenmiddle- and high-school-age students to the Smitten Kitten late last week aspart of a sexeducation course. — Fromwirereports

Sau iAra ias oots ownmissie ire rom Yemen By Abdullah Al-Shihri

ident Ali Abdullah Saleh.

The Associated Press

Khamis Mushait is home to the King Khalid Air Base,

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia-

strikes have targeted arms caches and Scud missile sites

In a potentially major escala- the largest such facility in tion of the months-long war, that part of the country. SauYemeni rebels fired a Scud dis on social media reported missile into Saudi Arabia hearing air raid sirens go off I early Saturday. The attack around the city during the lr, j zlr suggests that despite more attack. than two months of airstrikes The Yemeni military was by a Saudi-led coalition, Ye- widely believed to possess men's Shiite rebels, known around 300 Scud missiles, as Houthis, still have the milimost of which fell into the tary firepower to threaten cit- hands of the rebels. In April, ies inside Saudi Arabia. the spokesman for the SauAccording to the official di-led coalition, Saudi Brig. Saudi Press Agency, two mis- Gen. Ahmed Asiri, implied Hani Mohammed/TheAssociatedPress siles launched from a Patriot that the Scud arsenal in Yemeni children chant slogans during a protest against Saudi-led missile battery shot down the Yemen had been seriously airstrikes, in Sanaa, Yemen, on Saturday. Scud before dawn near the degraded as a result of the southwestern city of Khamis airstrikes. "As coalition forces, we Mushait. The agency did not tack was a way for the Houth- f rom Shiite power I ran a s report any casualties in the confirm that all Houthi ca- is and their allies to signal part of a larger proxy war attack, the first use of a Cold pabilities were targeted, fore- that they still have fight left between the Sunni kingdom War-era Scud by the rebels most their ballistic missiles," despite months of airstrikes. and th e I s l amic R epublic since Saudi-led airstrikes tar- Asiri said at the time. The Emirates is a member of across the Mideast. Tehran geting the Houthis began in On Saturday, Asiri told the Saudi-led coalition. and the rebels deny the alle"It is an escalation," Abdullate March. the Saudi-owned Al-Hadath gations, though Iran has acYemen's state news agency news channel that coalition lah said. "It is clear now there knowledged sending humanSABA, now controlled by the forces have destroyed "most has not been a knockout and itarian aid to the Houthis. Houthis, said the rebels fired of" Yemen's Scuds. a complete d emolition o f Saudi Arabia leads a coathe Scud. Abdulkhaleq Abdullah, a Houthi firepower." lition targeting the rebels in The Houthis are allied with professor of political science The Saudis and Western airstrikes in support of Yemilitary and security forces at United Arab Emirates Uni- powers accuse the Houthis men's exiled President Abed loyal to former Yemeni Pres- versity, said Saturday's at- of receiving military support Rabbo Mansour Hadb Those I

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around the country. The coalition responded to

Saturday's attack by targeting and damagingthe Scud launcher, which was located

south of the Houthi stronghold city of Saada, according to SPA.

Y emeni s ecurity

o ffi-

cials said c oalition p l anes

launched at least six airstrikes e a rl y Sa t u rday against a H outhi convoy heading toward Saada. Airstrikes also hit a c onvoy in Amran province,which Houthi and tribal officials said was transporting livestock. The officials spoke on

condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the media.

Saudi Arabia is the world's largest oil exporter. Its major oil fields are located in the

east of the country, far from Khamis Mushait. The United States has pro-

vided logistical support to the mostly A r a b

c o alition.

U.S. military officials in the region had no i mmediate comment.


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, June 7, the158th

day of 2015. Thereare207 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS G7 Summit —Leadersfrom the Group of Sevenindustrialized democracies kick off their meetings in southern Germany.

HISTORY Highlight:In1965, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Griswold v. Connecticut, recognized a constitutional right to privacy as it struck down, 7-2, aConnecticut law used to prosecute a Planned Parenthood clinic in New Havenfor providing contraceptives to married couples. In1769, frontiersman Daniel Boone first began to explore present-day Kentucky. In1892, Homer Plessy, a "Creole of color," was fined for refusing to leave awhites-only car of the East Louisiana Railroad. (Ruling on his case, the U.S. SupremeCourt upheld "separate but equal" racial segregation, a concept it renouncedin 1954.) In1929, the sovereign state of Vatican City cameinto existence as copies of the Lateran Treaty were exchanged in Rome. In1939, King George Vl and his wife, QueenElizabeth, arrived at NiagaraFalls, New York, from Canada on the first visit to the United States by a reigning British monarch. In1954, British mathemati-

cian, computer pioneer and code breaker AlanTuring died at age 41, anapparent suicide. (Turing, convicted in1952 of "gross indecency" for a homosexual relationship, was posthumously pardoned in 2013.) In1955, the quizshow"The $64,000 Question" premiered on CBS-TV. In1972,the musical "Grease" opened on Broadway,having already beenperformed in lower Manhattan. In1981,Israeli military planes destroyed a nuclear power plant in Iraq, a facility the Israelis charged could have been used to makenuclear weapons. In1985,theadventurecomedy "The Goonies" was released by Warner Bros. In1998, in a crime that shockedthenation,James Byrd Jr., a 49-year-old black man, was hooked by achain to a pickup truckand dragged to his death in Jasper,Texas. (Two white menwere later sentenced to death; oneof them, Lawrence Russell Brewer, was executed in 2011.A third defendant received life with the possibility of parole.) Ten years ago:President George W.Bushand British Prime Minister Tony Blair, meeting at the White House, embraced atentative plan to forgive the debt of poor African nations. Five years ago:U.S. defense officials announced that Army Spc. Bradley Manning had been detained in Baghdadin connection with a video posted on Wiki LeaksshowingApache helicopters gunning down unarmed men in Iraq. One year ago:Actor-comedian Tracy Morgan was critically injured after a Wal-Mart tractor-trailer rammed into his chauffeured limousine buson the New JerseyTurnpike, setting off a chain-reaction crash that killed fellow comedian James "Jimmy Mack" McNair.

BIRTHDAYS Movie director James Ivory is 87. Actress Virginia McKenna is 84. Singer TomJones is 75. Actor Ken Dsmond ("Leave It to Beaver") is 72. Former talkshow hostJennyJonesis 69. Actor Liam Neeson is 63. Author Louise Erdrich is 61. Singer-songwriter Prince is 57. Rock musician Eric Kretz (Stone TemplePilots) is49. Rock musician DaveNavarro is 48. Actor Karl Urban is 43. TV personality Bear Grylls is 41. Rock musician Eric Johnson (The Shins) is 39. Actor-comedian Bill Hader is 37.Actress Anna Torv is 36. Tennis player Anna Kournikova is 34. Actor Michael Cera is27. Rapper Iggy Azalea is 25. — From wire reports

DID YOU HEAR?

an eIuS? Oa raa, ee OuI O Startup travel programs like Remote Year and Hacker Paradise offer services that allow select people to travel the world without having to give up their careers with companies big or small. By Jena McGregor

al outpost to the next, taking

The Washington Post

walking tours and lunching

Cassie Utt is about to spend near castles in between softan entire year traveling the

globe, a trip that will indude monthlong stops in 12 exotic locales like Dubrovnik, Croatia, and Ko Tao, Thailand. To

get ready, the 24-year-old has put just about everything she owns in storage, turned in her car that was coming off lease, worked on visa logistics, figured outa new mobilephone planand tried to reassure her somewhat nervous parents.

But one thing she hasn't done is say goodbye to her company.

ware development sessions.

While such do-it-yourself arrangements have become more viable, thanks to tech-

nology, there are those who prefera more structured, coor-

dinated experience — one that feels less like a solo quest and more like a global professional

j~

rotation they can pitch to their

p~ i

+<' ~aff I'

tJ

employer. Hacker Paradise, which just started its third "batch" of trips this week in Tallinn, Estonia,

.

provides co-working spaces and optional accommodation For the next 1 2 m onths, logistics for the roughly 30 tech Utt, a project manager in the workers, freelancers and enhydraulics division of Eaton, trepreneurswho compose it s will continue working for the monthlong trips. Other trips big manufacturing company are planned this summer for through a new outside pro- Barcelona and Berlin, and pargram called Remote Year. ticipants pay a program fee of "Quite a few of my friends are $850 for a month in one locagoing through this right now, tion, which does not include where they're taking a year off housing or travel costs. Remote Year workers at a co-working space in Prague. to travel," she said. "To have me

Part of what Hacker Para-

come along and say I'm going to travel the world and keep

diseoff ersthese professionals, in addition to help with the my job? It's hard for them to logistics of working from anbelieve." other country, is some sense The brainchild of 26-year- of career support once they get old entrepreneur Greg Caplan, there. The program has weekRemote Year is something of ly lunches, presentation days a touroperator for profession- and workshops on topics like als with wanderlust. Or as one negotiating or shaping a busiparticipant described it: "like ness idea. Semester at Sea, but for grownWhile not mandatory, their ups with jobs." aim is to motivate or heartThe program, which just en people who suddenly find kicked off its inaugural trip this themselves without the usual week in Prague, is evidence office routines, familiar time of the evolving landscape of zones or cultural touch points. work. Increasingly, profession- "It's just e nough s t ructure als with dreams of traveling

to know you're not just out

the world have options beyond applying to a huge global company with offices everywhere or quitting their job for a gap year. As working remotely has

there by yourself," said Alex-

For all the planning, there is still the unexpected. What happens if the Wi-Fi goes down'? (Caplan said his program has redundant Internet

a $2,500 early-exit fee.) Or a laptop breaks in the middle of Vietnam? (Caplan said he doesn't offer tech support.) Of course, another big ques-

connections, as well as back-

tion is what happens when

ing hours Utt will need to put in when she'son the other side

of the trip? (Remote Year has

was comfortable with Utt go-

this?" she said. "No."

co-founders.

That kind of structure isn't just attractive to remote work-

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work time to figure it out her-

professional selectivity. self." Smith also likes the idea Caplan said his program of Utt being exposed to tech received roughly 1,500 formal workers from other fields. essay applications, then interHacker Paradise's Komisviewed nearly 300 people to sarouk said he's even heard whittle the pool down to the from a startup and a biotech final 75. The program looked company with a few hundred for individuals who would add employees that are interested diversityto the team and would in offering his trips to workers have a high likelihood of suc- as a company-paid perk. "Over cess working remotely from all time, we've been seeing more corners of the globe, since full- companies OK with this, by either grantingthem a sabbatical time work was a prerequisite. "We didn't want to take peo-

or letting them work remotely,"

ple who just wanted a vacation," Caplan said. "We were looking for people who wanted to advance their careers with new experiences. That's a really important difference. They are all committed to growing professionally."

Komissarouksaid."People are willing to do things to retain highly qualified employees." Lindsay Daniels, who works in communications for San

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Jose-based Polycom, said it wasn't hard to convince her boss aftershe got accepted to

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There are, of course, plenty Remote Year. Not only had she of digital nomads living lo- worked in California while he cation-independent lifestyles was based in Singapore during who have found their own

her first four months on the job,

way to work while traveling the world. Jay Meistrich, for

but her company also makes video-conferencing and conference-call equipment. "This

and then built his own startup while jumping from one glob-

the late-night and early-morn-

ey Komissarouk, one of the

Remote Year have seen a few exchange, it books and covers candidates bow out because the cost of housing in each city they ultimately couldn't get as well as travel insurance and corporate approval, whethtravel logistics between the er from their own bosses or year's 12 stops. The program from HR and accounting. 0thalso secures work hubs with ers, though they finally got Wi-Fi in each locale and plans approval, had to go through a long process of company events and meals to foster a sense of community among box-checking. the 75 participants. Knowing Utt wasn't going Utt and her fellow"remotes," to be the one responsible for as Caplan calls them, indude details like finding reliable Wientrepreneurs, plenty of soft- Fi service or a quiet place to ware developers and design- work, however, was reassuring ers, freelancers, and corporate to Bonnie Smith, a senior vice employees who received bless- president at Eaton who superings from the likes of Micro- vises Utt's boss. The dear prosoft, HP, Polycom and Google fessional orientation of Remote to take their jobs on the road. Year, as well as the structured Perhaps helping their case: Un- accessto work environments, like traditional travel compa- Smith said, "offered comfort to nies, programs such asRemote me. She's not going to be using

example, left a job at Microsoft

and she trusted her to work

' 00

and then $2,000 each month. In

Year have a strong element of

ing because she knew she was a high-performing employee,

up hotspots.) Or if someone Utt's or Daniels' colleagues get of the globe. But "can I have 80 loses their job in the middle the same idea. Smith said she percent of my employees doing

become not only more tech- ers, but to the companies that

nically viable but also more professionally accepted, a growing crop of travel operators have tapped into this new market opportunity. Remote Year, for example, runs participants $27,000 for the year — $3,000 paid upfront,

Greg Caplan via The Washington Post

is what we live and breathe ev-

ery day," she said.

• •

.


A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Dispatchesfrom the campaign: From ridinghogsto tax returns In this coastal hamlet made famousbyGeorgeH.W.Bushand his cigarette boat, it is hard to escape the Bushfamily — but Jeb Bush is trying hard to do so. After festivities this weekend to celebrate his mother's 90th

birthday, Bush will jet overseas for a foreign-policy tour and then launch his 2016 presidential campaign1,500 miles to the south, in Miami. The icon!c family compound here, called Walker's Point, is Charlie Neibergall/The Associated Press a fitting metaphor for what has Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, emerged asJebBush's central a Republican, hopped on his political challenge: howfar to motorcycle for a fundraiser/ distance himself from his family's campaign event sponsored by political legacy. Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst. The past monthhas brought into stark relief the fundamental HOgS in lOwa — Wearing a black leather vest with an eagleon dilemmaposedbyBush'slineage, the back, black motorcycle boots even as his front-runner status fades. He repeatedly stumbled and snug jeans, Sen.Joni Ernst, a to answer quesfreshman Republican from lowa, tions about the began her inaugural pig roast and now-Unpopular motorcycle ride fundraiser SatIraq war started urday by easing her 2009Softail by his brother and Deluxe out of the Big BarnHarley has been visibly Store in DesMoines. conflicted about But she wasnot alone. Ernst, Jeb Bush whether to emwho gained famelast year for brace or play down the policies campaignadsinwhichsherode and reputations of his closest the Harley and reminisced about relatives. castrating hogs, was joined by On paper, JebBush's recordGov. Scott Walker of Wiscons!n two terms as governor of a large and more than 300motorcycle swing state with a conservative aficionados. The somewhat motley crew set governing record — seemsexactly what Republicans would want. out on a 39-mile ride that would But the party faithful are increastake them north to rural Booneon ingly seeking younger, fresher a mild spring day for the part of the program devoted to both red candidates — they're "Bushed out," as Barbara Bushhas told meat (the speeches)andwhite visitors here in recent years. meat (the pork). It madefor a far And so whenJeb Bush's anticigrittier tableau than what often pated presidential bid begins June characterizes Republican events 15, he will seek to set himself apart in this state. And by the time from his brother and father — an they all dismounted here, there effort that will form one of the was scarcely a khaki-and-blazer abiding themes of the impending combotobefoundam!daseaof campaign, according to aidesand leather, facial hair and tattoos. close friends. But that did nothing to scare He will make his announcement off seven Republican presidential at a Miami community college unhopefuls, including Walker, from der the moniker of his nickname, showing up to heappraise on leaving the surnamebehind. There Ernst, who hassaid shewill not probably won't be "Bush" on the endorse before the caucuseshere, "Jeb 2016" campaign parapherand offer all manner of porcine-renalia. On stagewill be h!s Mexilated metaphors. can-born wife, Columba, andtheir "I love a senator who knows three grown children. Neither of how to castrate a pig, ride ahog Bush's parents will attend the anand cut the pork in Washington, nouncement, andaideswon'tsay D.C.," Walker said. if any of his siblings will either. Sens. Marco Rubio of Florida Later, his two sons — not his and Lindsey Graham ofSouth Carolina, former Gov.Mike Huckabee father or brother — areexpected to play active andvisible roles in of Arkansas, former Gov.Rick the campaign. Perry of Texas, the technology Al Cardenas, a longtime Bush executive Carly Fiorina andthe friend, said that polls have tightneurosurgeon BenCarson also ened becausemedia attention made appearances. is too focused onBush's family history and not on his record as O'Malley onimmigrationFlorida governor. "It's about Bush, Democratic presidential hopeful not Jeb," he said. Martin O'Malley stepped uphis But once people learn more efforts to court Latino voters about h!s time asgovernor, Cardelast week, appearing before a nas said, "then it will become Hispanic business group andon Spanish-language more about Jeb, not Bush." television. The former Maryland governor pledged to tackle comprehensive imO'Malley m i gration reform during his f!rst100 days if he makes it to the White House, and hetouted his record in Annapolis, which includes signing legislation that allows undocumented immigrants to get driver's licenses and in-state college tuition rates. While those andother measures havedrawn applause from national immigrant rights advocates — with somedeclaring O'Malley's record the strongest in Pat Sullivan i The Associated Press the Democratic field — Maryland Democratic presidential candilawmakers present a morenudate Hillary Clinton focused on anced view. voting rights last week at Texas Latino legislators and other Southern University in Houston. advocates credit O'Malley with providing help at keyjunctures ClintOn'S path —I-lillary butaddthatonsomeissues,he Rodham Clinton appears to be wasn't doing the heavy lifting. And dispensing with the nationwide at some points, particularly during electoral strategy that won the long, thorny debate over driv- her husband two terms in the er's licenses, O'Malley was atodds White Houseand brought white with the advocates. working-class voters and great As he's positioned himself to run stretches of what is now red-state in a Democratic field dominated by America back to Democrats. Hillary Clinton, O'Malley hasmade Instead, she is po!sed to retrace frequent mention of his record on Barack Obama'sfar narrower path immigration. Heoften recounts a to the presidency: acampaign fobattle last summer with the White cused more onmobilizing supportHouse, when hedenouncedthe ad- ers in the GreatLakes states andin ministration's efforts to return mi- parts of the Westand South than grant children to their homecounon persuading undecidedvoters. tries after they illegally crossed Clinton's aides say it is the only the border from Central America. way to win in anera of heightened And O'Mal leyhasemphasizedhis polarization, when a declining decision to limit Maryland's copool of voters is truly up for grabs. operat!on with federal officials on Her liberal policy positions, they deportations from a state-run jail. say, will fire up Democrats, a less difficult task than trying to win 'Jed,' nOt 'BuSh' — A banner over independents in more hostile in the town square of Kennebunk- territory. port, Maine, says, "Happy90th When Bill Clinton reclaimed the Barbara Bush." Postcards read presidency for Democrats in1992, "Kennebunkport: 2 presidents, 1 his road to the White Houseran town." A local gift shop is selling through Southern-border states unofficial "Jeb Bush2016" magfilled with what were then aprenets. cious commodity: swing voters.

J, ~'m~

Twenty years later, Obama convincingly won asecond term without competing in states like Kentucky, Lou!s!ana, Tennessee orWest Virginia. And because of his appeal among liberals, Obama did so even while losing among independent voters. As Hillary Cl!nton intensifies her campaign for the Democratic nomination, it is clear from her left-leaning policy stances, her hiring and herfocus on data-driven organizing that her strategy is modeled on Obama's, not her husband's. If she were to win, it would validate the ideathat energizing core supporters is more important in presidential contests than persuading those still undecided. "If you run a campaign trying toappeal to 60to 70 percent of the electorate, you're not going to run avery compelling campaign for the voters you need," said David Plouffe, a top Obamastrateg!st. By staking out liberal positions on gay rights, immigration, criminal justice, voting rights and payequity for women, Clinton appears to be embracing the central lesson of the Obama school: that voters turn out when they believe anelection makes a difference andtheir party's standard-bearer is a champion on issues important to them.

1st tax return: Fiorina's — Republican presidential candidate Carly Fiorina's decision to releasetwo years of tax returns this past weekdid more than reveal theformer Hewlett-Packard ch!ef executive's $59 million fortune: Thelong-shot contender's Fiorina move won her propsfor transparency and, more important, increased thepressure on other 2016 contenders to follow suit. Fiorina's attention-getting move has the potential for being a game-changer. Joseph Thorndike, a historian and author who studies the political economy of American taxation, can't recall any other major candidate who hasrevealed somuchaboutpersonal finances this early in the campaign cycle. Not so coincidentally, Fiorina's lavish disclosure comes at a timewhen Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton has beenunder fire for the complexity of her family's financial arrangements. Candidates for federal office and elected officials are legally required to file personal financial disclosures with the FEC to let the public know about any potential conflicts of interest. But the forms are notoriously vagUe(filers list their assets and liabilities in broad categories of value, rather than precise dollar amounts) and loophole-r!dden (spousal income, while included, can prove difficult to parse, and homevalues don't have to be included). Over the years, many candidates for office — usually those with modest incomesand wealthy opponents — havechosento go the extra mile by releasing tax returns. Fiorina stands out because shevoluntarily listed her considerable holdings in exact dollar amounts without being pressured to do so. "There's no law compelling disclosure, but there's a lot of moral pressure weplace on candidates," Thorndike noted. Richard Nixon wasthe first president to release his tax returns (while under investigation), Thorndike added, after which it becamestandard practice for presidents and, increasingly, candidates. — From wire reports

Logos Continued from A1

organizations (NH or IA in the bubble). This is building on the kind of flexible logo sys-

2016 presidential campaign logos

It's true that many of the

candidates who have already announced have taken elements of

tem used so effectively by the

DEMOCRATS

Obama campaign." George Pataki: "This is a case of good design intentions

Bevjna

P r esident Barack

Obama's style as their own.

with unfortunate results. The name is set in a distinctive font, sure, but it's an extremely itchy

The increased attention to

branding makes sense in an era when candidates need attention-grabbing, shareable social media profile pictures for themselves and their supporters, easily recognizable images for browser-tab "favicons,"

and designs to apply to a wide range of merchandise. Among the Republicans, strong branding can also help in the effort to stand out in a crowded field. Haviv said the crop of logos for 2016 candidates reminds him more of corporate iconography than what had previouslybeen the political norm. "There has been kind of a shift in the way that these iden-

tities for candidates have been treated," Haviv said."There's (a) much more kind of corporate or commercial ized approach

Hillary Clinton

Bernie Sanders

was a nice attempt to create a

One of the most striking ex-

amples of that shift is Hillary Clinton's new logo, a complete departure from her previous

kiiRI

CHAFEE

Martin O'Malley

Lincoln Chafee

REPUBLICANS

the Ted Cruz logo. Yes, it's a

Cruz

RAND

Ted Cruz

Rand Paul

Marco Rubio

ForPresldent =

er element, here a star. However, unlike Hillary's design, (which) marries the H and the arrow nicely, this marriage is extremely awkward. The star

looks like it's been slapped on top of the P, and the two elements are fighting each other visually." Marco Rubio: "Funnything is

George Pataki

~s ~

that he's one of the candidates

P NEI I D E N 1

Lindsey Graham

Rick Perry: "Like Hillary's logo, this design is attempting to combine a letter with anoth-

Pataki

GRAHAM

said it's not actually all that important that a logo be liked, es-

they were able to achieve that to some extent."

HUCKABEE.'-2016

questioned whether the red ar-

stead of her last name. Haviv

type are merged beautifully into a single unit. In this case,

Carly Fiorina

CARSOIAIERICA Ben Mike Carson Huckabee

similar diche image of a flame, but what we look for in dealing with typography, and dealing with logos in combination with typography, is a magical moment where the image and the

mamorubio ~

Rick Santorum

to go with her first initial in-

a country!" Rand Paul: "The Rand Paul

logo is, in fact, muchbetterthan

presidential-campaign l ogo, which followed the classic name/billowing flag model. Initially, Clinton's logo was a magnet for criticism. Some row was pointing to the right. Others criticized the decision

highly simplified American flag ... that somehow went terribly wrong. It looks like the top right stripe is missing, which is not something you should do if you're running for president of

***

to the branding — and even us-

ing that word, 'branding,' of the candidates."

and annoying typeface. There

who has a pretty good chance, but it's not going to be because

Rick Perry

of the logo if he wins. Let's start

Tribune News Service

with the good things about it ... the selection of typeface is

pecially right after people see to appeal to that audience. (But) pretty smart. It's a bold sans it for the first time. there's something extremely serif, quite geometric and all "Sometimes it's kind of awk- awkward about the cropping lowercase. He's saying 'I am ward, or maybe kind of rubs of that star. It's kind of a crip- the leader of tomorrow.' Howyou the wrong way the first pled star that is missing some ever, when we're looking for second you see it," Haviv said. of its limbs." what is special ... they kind of "That's what we're looking for, Carly Fiorina: "Here we find stumbled there. They picked ... something kind of unusual, something we haven't seen in the shape of the United States, distinctive." Unusual and dis- other designs, which is a very which is a vast country, right? tinctive, Haviv said, is precise- thin, very light face. It's a mod- In this case they shrunkit to the ly what this cycle's candidates ern face. The lightness brings size of a dot on the "i" and they seem to be striving for. "They in a challenge because it has made it red and it looks like a really are trying now to kind less visual impact and it's hard- little red whale." of claim something distinctive, er to use in small sizes. The Bernie Sanders: "Bernie, I something ownable, some- other problem with this design think, is literally building on thing that will say something is that the focal point is not the (Obama's legacy), right? His about them that nobody else first letter." typography is literally sitting can possibly do, to varying deLindseyGraham: "This de- on top of these stripes that regrees of success." sign is unusual for the Repub- call the Obama stripes. My Haviv said he considers Clin- lican field in that it does not biggest pet peeve with this ton's logo to be one of the suc- feature overt national iconog- design is the interaction becessful ones. Also on that list, raphy. Perhaps there was none tween the 'r' and the 'n,' which with a caveat or two, is Ken- left to claim? Otherwise it is is so awkward. Once there is tucky Sen. Rand Paul's logo. utterly unremarkable, and the something so awkward about Paul made his symbol a torch '16' in the half-circle is baffling. a logo, it is very difficult to give similar to that of the Statue of I wonder about the absence of it a second chance." Liberty, and it utilizes negative the 'for' before 'president' — a Rick Santorum: "His design space between the "A" and the very bold assertion." seems to be an evolution of his "N" in his first name to make Mike Huckabee: "What I see 2012 identity, which similarly the torch's handle; an illustra- here, with his tagline, 'From featured a red eagle — perhaps tion above the name completes hope to higher ground,' and an attempt to emphasize that the torch's base. Haviv said that (then) echoed in the visual, is he has run before. This time the inconsistency between the that this is kind of a reaction- around, the mark is much imuses of positive and negative ary logoto the Obama cam- proved:The type and the imspace confuses things a bit, but paign and ultimately to the age are in better balance with that the liberty torch is a good Obama legacy." each other, the font has more pick for Paul, who incorporates Martin O'Malley: "Here is impact, and the equal emphathe word into so much of his another Democratic candidate sis given to his first and last rhetoric. "I think conceptually, who avoids altogether any liter- name helps to get away from recalling the Statue of Liber- al national iconography. Even his famous 'Google problem.' ty, the idea of liberty, which the colors — and especially All around, notbad." is very much his hallmark, is the blue — are not the typical appropriate." American hues. (But) there Here, in alphabetical order, is a sensible attempt to create is Haviv's take on the full (and a flexible system that allows ever-growing) field. for a visual shorthand (O'M Ben Carson: "I am almost in the bubble) and also for the speechless on this one. First of separate state-level campaign all, the 'A' of America instead of

the 'C' of Carson, or something in his name, again something that could be used for any of

the candidatesbecause they all represent America. But what they did to this letter is criminal." Lincoln Chafee: "It's not terrible but it's not really anything. It looks like they thought that if they throw more stars at it — I counted 13 — it would get better. It didn't."

Hillary Ciinton: "It's extremely effective and well done, in spite of — and maybe because — there is no overt American

iconography in it. The designers were able to kind of go beyond that." Ted Cruz: "There's a clear nod to tradition, a nod to the

conservative audience that he's very much vying for. It is a well-done effort, design-wise,

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Housing

trict's skepticism about being will get the OK on an expanasked to contribute to afford- sion within the next couple able housing relief, and said it's years. "Basically, the pedal is all reasonable for the district to ask the city to jump through a the way on the floor," he said. "A lot of people wanted to profew hoops. "I think those hoops are ap- ceed more slowly, but the compropriate. I think a lot of these mitment was made to get this things are the things the coun- through as quicklyas possible." cil has suggested as well," he The park district has prosald. posed deferring the construcBoddie said no one policy tion of ballfields at Pine Nurschange or incentive is likely to ery Park to offset the revenue reduce housing costs by itself, it would not collect by waiving but in combination, local gov- SDCs. Boddie said the city ernment should be able to help council has not yet identified make affordable housing proj- any city projects that might be ects more attractive to builders. delayed as a result of not colThe northeast Bend proper- lecting SDCs. ty the district sold to the city to Boddie said he thinks the develop affordable housing is park district idea that the two currently being rezoned, Bod- agencies form some kind of die said, and the city intends panel to review the requests to give it to a developer willing of builders looking for an SDC to construct affordable apart- waiver is a good one. What ment units. such a panel might look like Boddie said the city is mov- isn't yet known, he said, but ing as quickly as possible on he expectssomething can be UGB expansion, though it's put in place in time to vet any a slow process by nature. He promising projects. said it's expected the process — Reporter: 541-383-0387,

Continued fromA1 Tuesday, the park board discussed a counterproposal, under which the district would forgo the collection of

up to $500,000 in SDCs over the next two years, provided the city would exempt at least

$945,000 over the same period. The district's proposal sets out a number of conditions for

the city, asking the city to cut or eliminate building permit fees for affordable housing projects, pursue the development of a vacant lot the district sold the city to p rovide af-

fordable housing in 2006, and move aggressively to expand the urban growth boundary in order to reduce or stabilize land costs.

The park board was divided on the proposal introduced Tuesday, and is set to hold a vote on the issue June 16.

Councilor Nathan Boddie, a member of the council's af-

fordable housing committee, said he understands the dis- will be complete and the city

shammers@bendbulletin.com

The AffordableCareActin theSupremeCourt The SupremeCourt will soon rule on acase challenging federal subsidies provided under the Affordable Care Act. Here's a look at howSupremeCourt justices have ruled on other cases involving the health care law.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Ste p hen Sonla Elena Brey e r Sot o mayor Ka g an

I

I I

I I

I I

John Robe r ts

Ant hon y Samu e l Ken n edy A llt o

I I

I I

I I

Anto n l n Scali a I I

Cla r ence T homa s I I I

tl

I

I

I

tl

II

,

,

Majority opinion,

II

Il

I

I

I I

I I

Ruling: "The Affordable CareAct's requirement that certain individuals pay afinancial penalty for not obtaining health insurance mayreasonably be characterized as atax. Because the Constitution permits such atax, it is not our role to forbid it, or to pass upon its wisdom or fairness." I I

I I

I I

I I

I I

I

I

I

II

I

I I

Dissenting

I I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I I

I I

I I

Il

I

Burwell v. HobbyLobby —Decided June 30, 2014 Exempted closely held corporations from the requirement to cover birth control I I

I

I

I

I

I

Dissenting

II

Majority opinion,'

Ruling: "We hold that the regulations that impose this obligation violate the (Religious Freedomand Restoration Actl" I

I

I

I

I

I

II

Il

II

Source: United States Supreme Court

Health law Continued fromA1 But some say they are sur-

prised that, so far, the administration does not appear to be holding private discussions about how to address potential fallout. Affected states

II

0

II

Tyler Davis/Tribune News Service

trying to avoid talk of contingency plans, fearing it would encourage wavering justices to strike down the subsidies. But that appears to have deprived the 34 states that de-

use of Healthcare.gov or another state's technology as a state-run marketplace, or

whether HHS could do so, especially if the state already

"Whatever the administra-

pend on the federal government of legal and technical

Feb. 24 letter to lawmakers that "we know of no administrative actions that could, and

therefore we have no plans

man-caused fire started, Stutler said, "but not who did it." The potential criminal im-

Continued from A1

said it cannot be ruled out. "That is a fairly significant coincidence," he said. The fire does appear to have been human-caused, although he would not go into specifics of how because he doesn't want to jeopardize the ongoing "The fires are suspicious investigation. in nature and the ongoing Other fire investigations investigation indicates sus- in Central Oregon have repicion of potential arson," he mained open for years. The "classic example" that quicksaid in the June 11 release. In the days following the ly came to mind for Joe Stutstart of the Two Bulls Fire ler,a senior adviser for Dea reward fund for informa- schutes County and former tion leading to arrest and county forester, was the Awconviction of the person or brey Hall Fire. people responsible for the Six years after the Awbrey fire formed and grew quick- Hall Fire, the Central Oregon ly. The reward eventually Arson Task Force arrested reached more than $40,000. Aaron Douglas Groshong on The reward money may suspicion of starting that fire still be available, said Capt. and seven other blazes. GroScott Beard of the Deschutes shong, a Bend man who was County Sheriff's Office. a firefighter and owned Wild"If someone were to come cat Firefighting Service, was forward right now, we would convicted of starting one of Four days after the 7wo

Bulls Fire started, Deschutes County Sheriff Larry Blanton put out a news release saying the fire, as well as a small fire along Skyliners Road on June 10, appeared to be arson, or illegal burning.

contact those donors and see

plications of arson are part of why the investigation into the cause of the 7wo Bulls

Fire is moving at the pace it is, Bonebrake said. Other factors include investigators

being diverted to other blazes last year during a busy fire season around Oregon and the restitution aspects of a human-caused fire. "We aretrying to be very, very thorough on this because it is a very serious fire," Bonebrake said.

Someone who intentionally or negligently starts a wildfire may be held accountable for the cost of fighting the fire, said Tracy Wrolson,

district business manager for the Department of Forestry in Prineville. The agency led the fight of the 7wo Bulls Fire, which was contained

on June 14 after eight days of firefighting. While some accounting

the other fires and wound up

if they are still willing to do serving a year and a half in has yet to be completed, he that," he said. Donors range prison before being released said the cost of the fire looks from individuals to businesses and on parole for another to be about $5.4 million. "Two Bulls was one of the to the Sheriff's Office itself. three years. Groshong was The Department of For- never convicted of starting largest ones for us in Central estry has not concluded that the Awbrey Hall Fire. Oregon," he said. the 7wo Bulls Fire was arson, Investigators may quick— Reporter: 541-617-7812, Bonebrake said. But based l y determine how a h u ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Years

Learning the levels

Continued fromA1 Following the f lames, loggers cut timber from

The Two Bulls Fire last Junecaused acrash course in evacuation warning levels for thousands living on thewest side of Bend. As another wildfire season nears, the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office offers this refresher: • Level1:Be ready. Residents should be awareof a danger near them, monitor emergency websites and local medIa, andprepare for a possible evacuation. • level 2:Be set. Dueto asignifIcant danger, people should either voluntarily relocate to ashelter or the home of friends or family outside the affected area, or beprepared to evacuate at a moment's notIce. • level 3:Go. Danger is current or imminent and people should evacuate immediately.

70 percent of the burn area. All the l ogging, which yielded close to 9 million board-feet, is done. "We will begin our planning efforts spring of 2016," Johnson said. Over spring 2016 and spring 2017 the company plans to plant 800,000 ponderosa pine seedlings — Source: OeschutesCounty Sheriff's Office on the land. The seedlings are currently growing in Washington. Skyline Forest. those about 254 homes and There were about 500 Following a dry May, the around 635 people were under acres' worth of green for- woods close to Bend were a level 3, or leave-now, evacuest, pockets of u n b urnt primed to burn last June. The ation warning, Garibay said. trees, within the burn area, Two Bulls Fire spread about 6 While dramatic because of the Johnson said. miles, mostly on the first day, number of homes involved, he "The rest of it is what's said Sgt. Nathan Garibay with said such warnings often hapcalled a sta nd-replac- the Deschutes County Sher- pen duringfireseason in Cening fire," he said. The iff's Office. Given a shift in tral Oregon. "It's not unheard of around fire burned hot, killing wind, the fire had the potential trees and knocking down to push into the west side of here," he said. "Almost evground vegetation. Bend. ery summer we h ave f ires T he fire burned on a

At the peak of the fire, more

that have the potential for

portion of the land the De- than 3,000 homes were under evacuations." s chutes Land Trust h a s at least a level 1, or be-ready— Reporter: 541-617-7812, long sought to turn into the to-go, evacuation warning. Of ddarling@bendbulletin.com

oversees tasks such as eval-

uating applicants' eligibility, overseeingmarketing orhelpadvice on how they could ing to authorize participating would have to address unique comply with a ruling and de- plans to sell coverage. technical and legal quirks as- clare an exchange their own. Another option being floatsociated with covering their Health and Human Ser- ed is establishing a regional residents, as well as political v ices S e cretary S y l v i a marketplace serving severobstacles. Mathews Burwell wrote in a al states. But that would retion might be doing in terms of backup planning, they are not talking to the states about it, and groups like us are not privy to it," said Ron Pollack, executive director of the advocacy group Families USA, which supports the law. "The

on the circumstances of two fires starting near each other close to the same time, he

about 4,000 acres, or about

National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius — Decided June28, 2012 Affirmed the individual health care mandate II

Leads

A5

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •

'

• • Classifigds

quire extensive coordination

and could prove logistically difficult. Many solutions would also

require a state's legislature to sign off, especially those resystem that would be caused quiring new spending or the by an adverse decision." acceptanceof federalmoney. that would, undo the massive damage to our health care

administration — and I really want to emphasize this — is

time setting up their own

States would have a hard

Some states are not allowed to enter into contracts without

marketplaces in time for the

approval from the legislature

confident that it will prevail in

2016 term year because of

court and it doesn't want to do anything to undermine that

time and financial restraints,

or state comptroller, so agreements to use Healthcare.gov

though this week Pennsyl- technology would have to be vania Democratic Gov. Tom done through a different type Governors would face enor- Wolf sent an application to of pact, such as a memo of mous pressure to promptly federal officials seeking the understanding. respond should justices rule option of creating a stateNine states — Arizona, Aragainst the existing system based marketplace. Wolf kansas, Georgia, Missouri, for distributing subsidies. Al- asked thefederal government Montana, New H a mpshire, though Supreme Court Jus- to continue administering N orth Carolina, Utah a n d tice Samuel Alito has suggest- some functions, if the state Wyoming — have prohibied the court might carve out a d oes proceed with it s ow n tions on creating exchanges grace period, health coverage exchange. without legislative approvfor 2016 plan years must kick Delaware also would like to al, according to the National in on Jan. 1. State officials become a state-based market- Conferenceof State Legislaand health plans would have place, Burwell said. tures. Efforts to change the to scramble to come up with Severalstates are consider- status quo could be difficult, alternative coverage frame- ing ways to leverage Health- because most l egislatures works or risk letting people care.gov's technology or that have adjourned for the year. "We don't typically call who lose subsidies become of other exchanges, such as uninsured. Connecticut's, w h i c h h a s special sessions unless there "For the governors, it's been deemed one of the most is agreement coming in," said a tough situation for all o f successful state markets in Monica Lindeen, the Monthem," said Seema Verma, a the nation. tana insurance commissioner consultant who advises sevSome states are discussing and the president of the Naen states. "No one wants to ways to lease technology. Un- tional Association of Insursee people lose coverage.... der onescenario,states could ance Commissioners. "OtherWhat's ironic is that there's give the federal government a wise, it's just a waste of time no discussion from the feder- percentage of a fee assessed and money." al government to say, 'Here's on every insurance policy Against this complicated our plan.' Especially in the sold in the marketplace. The backdrop is the ticking clock. short-term situation, people money is ordinarily used to Insurers in many states are going to look to them to pay for operation of the ex- have already submitted their outline their plan and they change. Under another idea, proposed premium bids for have yet to do that." the federal government could 2016 and are undergoing reA group of 30 state insur- provide it for free. views from regulators. Rate ance commissioners visited Seven states have contacted submissions for the federal marketplaceare supposed to Capitol Hill in late April, and Connecticut to inquire about many askedtheircongressio- the costs of using its technolo- be finalized by Aug. 25 so the nal delegations to pass a law gy, said the exchange director information can be added to this year extending the subsi- there, Jim Wadleigh. Healthcare.gov and insurers dies. Congressional RepubliSome governors are weigh- can ensure the online data is cans are split on that. ing whether they can use ex- correct in time for the start of The administration may be ecutive orders to deem their open enrollment, Nov. 1.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Pot

Recession,poitics an poicy

Continued fromA1 He asked that his full name

not be used because he's concerned about the impact on his children. Jared said he and other pot-smoking parents he knows have one ironclad rule: They

stretc state sc oo u gets By Femanda Santos and Motoko Rich

don't smoke in front of their

kids. Yet what will happen once the kids figure out Dad's

New York Times News Service L

on the balcony getting high? More than half the country supports legalizing marijuaReza A. Marvashti/For The Washington Post na, according to polls. But it's Candace Junkin is the founder and head of the International Womthis question — What about en's Cannabis Conference. It works to share the voices of women the kids? — that provokes un- and mothers for the legalization of marijuana. ease, even outrage, and keeps many pot-using parents uncertain about how to navigate you patience." a substance is legal or illegal the "new normal" of legalized Like Jared, Eidinger keeps is of less concern to us than marijuana. his stash in a safe locked away whether or not it's affecting from his 11-year-old daughter, someone's ability to parent," A cultural shift and smokes out on his condo's she said. "For instance, alcoThe stakes are high for roof deck. But he's been push- hol is totally legal. But if it's both parents and kids. Even ing D.C. to amend the new law, impairing the ability to protect where the drug is legal, pa- which now permits the drug to and careforyour child,that's rental pot-smoking can be be used inside one's home, in when we step in." considered as a factor in child order to allow pot smoking at Sara Arnold co-founded the neglect cases, just like alcohol. special clubs, roof decks, beer Family Law & Cannabis AlliAs aresult,some parentshave gardens or bars. "I don't know ance, a Massachusetts-based been accused of endangering how that's any better for chil- group that monitors and advotheir children and had them dren — having friends come cates for pot-smoking parents' taken awayby Child Protective over to my house and smoking legal rights, in part because Services. weed around my kid," he said. she herself, a medical marijuaThere arefears that if parYvonne Maguire, a stay-at- na user, has been investigated ents reveal their use, teens will home mother of young chil- by CPS three times. "We have actually had inbe more likely to give it a try, dren, was terrified that her a phenomenon supported by District of Columbia neighbors stances of medical marijuana research. And although the would find out she smoked patients in states where medscience is still fairly new, some marijuana to deal with insom- ical marijuana is legal facing studies have found heavy mar- nia and migraines. But now termination of their parental ijuana use in adolescence can that she has moved to Colora- rights," Arnold said. "If a parpermanently disrupt key net- do, where marijuana has been ent had a bottle of wine, no one works in the developing brain legal for recreational use since would be coming to check that associated with memory and January last year, she and her out." processing information. husband have joined groups Though studies show that "Forparents, this is a confus- that activists have put togeth- the majority of marijuana using time. If they're users, how er for pot-smoking parents. ers tend to be lower-income are they going to talk to their "It's really nice," she said. "It's and those with less than a high kids?" said Matthew Kuelhorn, a way for parents to feel more school education, Max Simon, founder of Community Thrive, comfortable." with Green Flower Media, sees a new organization in Colothat changing. Green Flower rado that helps facilitate such Astigma is sponsoring a "Coming Out talks in an effort to prevent Brittany Driver, mother of a Green" campaign ofreports youth substance use. "This is a 3-year-ol d andregularmedi cal and videosof personal stories socialculture change we hav- marijuana user, dispenses ad- to rehabilitate pot's outlaw en't seen the likes of since alco- vice in her Pot and Parenting image, "One of the fastest growing hol prohibition ended." column for the Denver Post. She's also helping to pro- markets we're seeing is the Kathy Henderson, who leads a Parents Against Pot effort in mote an app, called High baby-boom generation," who her Trinidad neighborhood in There, that will help pot-smok- smoked pot in college then quit Washington, said she has no- ing mothers find each other. when they got jobs and now ticed that legalization has al- "Even in Colorado, there's still want to use it again, he said. ready led to a higher incidence such a stigma for parents, it's And most of them are parents. of children "walking around still hard to talk about openly," The group is releasing a new the street openly smoking mar- Driver said. report, "Be Askable," with adijuana and thinking it's OK." Because of t h a t s t i gma, vice for setting family rules "It's very, very dishearten- even when it's legal, some and a "just wait" message to ing," she said. "Our children pot-smoking parents worry helpteens delay any substance have so many challenges to be- that their use will be met with u se until t h eir b r ains a r e gin with, this has really set us the disapproval of others, who developed. back. It's crazy." might ostracize their children. Candace Junkin, co-founder Jared said he doesn't want But what keeps many par- of the International Women's his daughters to use marijua- ents underground, they say, is Cannabis Coalition, is a mothna as minors but he plans to their terror of someone call- er of fourand grandmother of be straight with them when ing Child Protective Services. three who lives in St. Mary's they're older. "When they get to A pot-smoking couple who County, Maryland, where the age of 21, and can make a ran a medical marijuana dis- medical marijuana has been legal choice, theyneedto know, pensary in Washington state, legal since 2014. She suffers honestly, 'What's alcohol like? where medical and recreation- from trigeminal neuralgia, a What's it going to do to me? al marijuana use is legal, had condition that causes excruWhat are the risks? And what's their 5-year-old taken away ciating shooting pains in her cannabis like?'" and placed in CPS protective face. Her doctors initially preIn Jared's' mi nd, cannabiscustody in N ovember when scribed painkillers, but they advocates' preferred term — is he tested positive for THC, made her so disoriented her the substance of lesser harm. the psychoactive chemical in children called her "Mombie." It's less addictive, studies have marijuana. In 2002, she found marijuafound, causes fewer health And in April, CPS took away na eased the pain and began problems and, unlike alcohol, the 11-year-old son of Shona smoking or vaporizing up to no one has ever died using it. Banda, who uses marijuana to six times a day. And he likes the idea that manage Crohn's disease and At first, she was so ashamed regulating the marijuana trade is an outspoken advocate for that she hid her use from her should make it harder for teens medical marijuana in Kansas, children. "But over the years, to acquire. where legalization bills failed the kids started to see that In time, he hopes smoking a earlier this year. After her son when mommy would be hurtjoint will be as unremarkable spoke out about medical mar- ing, she would go in her bedfor parents as cracking open a ijuana in school, police inves- room, and she would come beer at the end of the day. But tigated and found marijuana, out and she would be better," that's not today. drug paraphernalia and a lab Junkin said. Even Jared, who made the for extracting cannabis oil in She decided to share the decision to "out" himself as a the kitchen, within easy reach research she'd done on the pot smoker because he works of children. Banda faces the health benefits of c annabis for the pro-legalization Mar- possibility of child endanger- with them. None of her chilijuana Policy Project, is ner- ment and other charges. dren, the youngest of whom is vous. He hastens to say that Mindy Good, spokeswoman now 17, smokes pot. "One kid is about to go to he never smokes so much he for Child and Family Services couldn't quickly respond to an in the District of Columbia, college. Another is about to emergency with the kids. said officials have been having graduate. One owns her own "There's still so much stig- serious conversations about business," she said. "For a potma," he said. "If I worked any- what marijuana's new legal head mom, I think I've done place else, I wouldn't be talking status will mean. "Whether OK." openly." Advocates for l egalizing marijuanasay there are more pot-smokingparents than most people think. The Pew Re-

searchCenterreported that47 percentofAmericans — about

150million people — have tried marijuana. A group of mothers in Beverly Hills, California, made headlines as the "Marijuana Moms" not long ago when they came dean about using marijuana to deal with chronic pain. And the Global Drug Policy Observatory found that women between the ages of 30 and 50 were among the biggest supporters of legalization in Washington and Colorado. "Marijuana, o f

al l

PHOENIX — In the rural S a ddle M o u ntain

Unified School District 50 miles west of Phoenix,

three new libraries have been locked since last year. In a neighboring county, an elementary school closed last month because t here was no

m oney to

keep it open, even after the district agreed to shift to a four-day week. More Arizona educators are also taking on double duty: In the M iami Uni-

Jarod Opperman/NewYorkTimes News Service

fied School District east of here, the superintendent is

Curtis Smith, principai at Peoria Elementary School, visits a fourthgrade classroom in Peoria, Arizona. Arizona school budgets have been crippled by several years of targeted cuts at the state level and

also a grant writer, and the

voters' repeated refusals to raise property taxes to offsetshorffalis.

principal of the elementary school is also in charge Like many other Republican governors, Ducey has tor of maintenance. shown interest in allowing "We've asked our teach- school funding to follow stuers to double up — every- dents, whether they go to disbody is doubling up," said trict or charter schools. And Sherry Dorathy, super- in May, Ducey tasked a team intendent of th e d i strict, of educators and chief execuwhich is facing a 4 percent tives with finding ways to upcut in next year's budget. date the state's school finance "And we haven't given our formula, which he described teachers a raise in seven as "too rigid for 21st-century years." education expectations." The needs of the nation's On Thursday, he acknowlschools have grown since edged that giving the schools the recession began: There more money is an urgent neare now 458,000 more stu- cessity, given the tough straits dents enrolled in public many of them are in. He proschools than in fall 2007. posed asking voters to grant But while total state reve- schoolsa greatershare ofthe ning as the district's direc-

nues have mostly rebound-

ed to pre-recession levels, state education funding per pupil is still down 3.6 percent across the country, according to an analysis by

years. The account currently

Policy Priorities, a nonpartisan Washington think less per student this school

has $5.1 billion, Ducey said. "As you know, I believe funding is just one part of the equation to improving our schools," Ducey said at a

year than in the year before the economic down-

news conference. "But if we can take u ncertainty over

At least 30 states spent

a cannabis activist in the District of Columbia, who said he

smokes marijuana regularl y for medicalreasons. "It gives

of, you think of how you can take care of everything else." School adm i nistrators have had to be creative. At the Maricopa Unified School District, where the last prop-

erty tax override passed 10 yearsago,the superintendent, Steve Chestnut, negotiated a two-year, $1.3 million donation from the Ak-Chin Indian

Community, a neighboring American Indian tribe, that

paid for five middle-school

get about $1.8 billion over five

the Center on Budget and tank.

safety of the students," Smith said. "When that's taken care

d ividends earned f rom i n - math tutors, five reading vestments made on proceeds coaches for f our e lementafrom the saleand lease of ry schools, and a few ot hstate lands. If the ballot mea- er programs for struggling sure passes, schools would students.

Chestnut has also used some of the money to write small bonus checks to teachers who stay in the district

more than a year, an incentive to reducea high turnover rate

that has plagued school districts all across the state. But other districts are not

funding off the table, then we as fortunate. Apache Junction including Arizona, have will have made significant Unified, which had an overcut per-pupil funding more progress." ride request denied last fall by than 10 percent during Until then, many Arizona local voters, shut Superstition that period. schools are still contending M ountain E l ementary l a st The drop is not simply with challenging times ahead. month, the third school it has a reflection of state econDespite the small increase closed in five years. omies still struggling to for th e E d ucation D epartFearing an increase in class recover. Experts say pol- ment, next year's budget also sizes in a district where some itics and policy have also includes even larger reduc- classrooms already h ave played a role. tions to specific programs, close to 40 students, MinOf the seven states with including a $113 million cut dy Kerkes entered her twin the deepest cuts in educa- to a pot of money set aside 6-year-old girls, first-graders tion from kindergarten to for building maintenance and at the school, in the lottery for 12th grade, six — Arizo- supplies. a charter school nearby. "I hate to go, but I've got to na, Idaho, Kansas, North In Peoria, a suburb northCarolina, Oklahoma and w est o f Ph o e nix , C u r t i s think about what's best for Wisconsin — also cut in- Smith, the principal at Peoria my kids," Kerkes said. turn began, and 14 states,

come tax rates, leading to

Elementary, said he had about

a series of vigorous pro- $42,000 to pay for toilet paper tests and public disputes and printing paper; athletic between lawmakers and

equipment and arts materials;

educators that are still playing out.

and light bulbs, small repairs and cleaning materials for the

Arizona i n

p a r t icular school year that ended May

has been crippled by several years of targeted cuts

22. It amounts to only $68 for each of his 620 students over

at the state level and local

the school year. Next year, Smith will have

voters' repeated refusalsto raise property taxes to offset these shortfalls. In March, Arizona's new

Republican governor, Doug Ducey, provided a slight reprieve. His $9.1 billion budget for the 2016 fiscal year included a 2 percent increase in overall spending for the Education Department — $81 million.

per student.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

ursesurninocrime i ByChristineByers sSt. Louis Post-Dispatch

A7

Painkillers resist ers abuse, but experts are still worried

ST. LOUIS — Ka'Saundra Reynolds was walking her dog just before the sun rose when a shadowy

figure lurking behind some bushes caught her eye.

By AlanSchwarz New Yorh Times News Service

It was a man who, seconds later, knocked her to the ground and ripped her pants. "I just couldn't roll over and play dead," said Reynolds, then 59. "I knew that if he succeeded in raping me, I would never come back from that." "We have so many different

So she dug her nails into

police agencies, prosecutors and crime labs — and every hospital has its own program becauseMissouridoesn'thave its own centralized program.

him as hard as she could,

wherever she could. "All I could think was to

grab, twist and pull." H er f a ithful

Shih T z u,

"In those cities that do, I can

named Baby Cakes, gnawed

still keep my job and be hired to be on call to other hospitals.

at the attacker's ankles as

Reynolds screamed, clawed and struggled her way free. As

We don't cross hospitals here.

Essentially, once you leave the ER, you're SANE career is

she ran, he tried to bring her

down on the steps to her door. When her daughter opened it,

over."

the man vanished.

While waiting for help, the daughter wrapped her mother's bloodied fingertips in bandages. An ambulance deLaurie Skrivan I St.Louis Post-Dispatch livered Reynolds to St. Mary's ER nurse Klra Stearns, right, swabs the mouth of her partner, ER Health Center in Richmond

Heights and the waiting care of Joyce Sanchez. Sanchez was more than an

emergency room nurse. She was one of a growing number of Sexual Assault Nurse Ex-

aminers, specially trained to see a victim like Reynolds as

a portable crime scene as well as a patient. What Sanchez did that March day in 2007

would provide the key to putting Reynolds' attacker in prison about a year later.

Forensicnurses In 1992, 72 registered nurses formed the International As-

sociation of Forensic Nurses, a group that has since grown to 3,000.

Some states, such as Texas, have laws requiring that sexual assault victims be treated by

SANE certified nurses, even if it means a transfer to a hospital that has one. But in areas like St. Lou-

is, proponents say, fractured jurisdictions make evidence

nurse Christina lsringhausen, to collect DNA at a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner certification workshop In Clayton, Missouri.

It's been about three years since Sanchez left the work. She often wonders about the victims she treated.

Reynolds wondered if Sanchez knew how much her ac-

tions meant to her, and longed for a chance to thank her. She got that chance recent-

ly. Howard remembered Santhose cases would go without she realizes many of them chez's name. When contacted investigation. have moved away from emer- by a reporter, Sanchez agreed Police Lt. L a t ricia A l l en gency room work, so they can to meet Reynolds, now 67. and Detective Rick Noble ac- no longer use their skills. The women tearfully emknowledge the troubled past Sanchez, now 57, who took braced at a park near Sanbut say t h eir d epartment's a position w it h t h e h o m e chez's home in south St. Loucollaboration w it h f o r ensic health care unit, is among is. They held hands as Reynnurses and the YWCA, which them. And she misses the sat- olds explained how far she trains them, is part of a new isfaction. "I felt like I was real- has come since the day they era. ly doing something important, met. "Where we came from is a and it really felt good when For Sanchez, it was a chernot-so-friendly place," said Al- you found out that DNA that ished opportunity to reconlen, whose command includes you got put someone away," nect with one of the victims the sex crimes unit. "Now I she said. whose names are on her believe our sex crimes unit is In some urban areas, How- prayer list. Some of the listleading the pack." ard said, hospitals and local ings carry reminders of who Noble learned the nurses' governments work together was who. For Reynolds, it was value when he was assigned to to form centralized forensic "Band-Aids." investigate the rape of a wom- nursing units. Some nurses Sanchez smiled as Reynan who bathed before calling. are employed by a state or olds talked of the speeches "I lost all hope for DNA when county to work in free-stand- she gives for the YWCA about I dropped her off at the hospi- ing facilities dedicated to surviving sexual assault. tal," Noble recalled. "You all don't know what crime victims. Some hospitals But at the hospital, Howard pool such nurses to work in you did for me," Reynolds told asked the victim whether she select locations to ensure that her. "It helped me that you all had washed her hair. She said someone is always available. were there for me. I felt like "We don't work that way no. Howard swabbed her ear you all were like the angels and retrieved DNA that made in St. Louis," Howard said. who were protecting me."

handling a bit more hit-andmiss. Hospitals may have a Noble's case. trained nurse available or not.

Kathy Howard, the forensic nursing coordinator for St. Louis U n iversity

Noble r e called

Anthony DiTullio would

dents of southern Indiana contracted HIV, the v i r us that causes AIDS, by shar-

pop a painkiller in his mouth ing needles they used to inbut not just swallow it, as ject Opana, a drug once marintended. He would chew keted as resistant to being it for 30 minutes, grind- liquefied for injection. "I would definitely say ing through its protective coating and waxy unpleas- that OxyContin is harder to antness, because the only abuse than it used to be — it pain he was treating was was a pain in the neck," said addiction. DiTullio, 35, who successfulThe pill was OxyContin, ly addressed his addiction at a painkiller that its manu- a drug-treatment facility and facturer, Purdue Pharma, now operates an auto body says deters abuse by being shop in Keene, New Hampdifficult to chew or l i que- shire. But he added, "No fy into forms that give ad- matter what they do, there's dicts stronger highs, orally always going to be a way for or through injection. Since people to get whatever they adding these features to its want in their system." original and widely abused Nearly 2 million AmeriOxyContin in 2010, the com- cans either abused or were pany has likened the pill to dependent on opioid paina virtual seatbelt to restrain

killers in 2013, with 16,000

the nation's epidemic of prescription drug abuse.

people dying from overdoses, according to the Centers

for Disease Control and dicts still find ways to abuse Prevention. O xyContin a n d si m i l a r Only 1.4 percent of opioid painkillers, called abuse-de- prescriptions filled in 2014 But as thousands of ad-

terrent formulations, some

were f o r

a b u se-deterrent

experts caution that the

formulations, according to protections are m i sunder- Express Scripts, the nation's stood and could mislead largest p r escription-drug both users and prescribers manager. More than 219 into thinking that the under- million prescriptions for opilying medications are less oid painkillers were written addictive. Because abuse-deterrent

in 2014, with sales of $8.85

formulations are relatively new, preliminary data on their public-health implications is limited. Several studies, some sponsored

Health, a health care infor-

by Purdue, have found that

abuse of OxyContin specifically has decreased after its protections were added. 0th-

er reports confirmed those findings but also found that many abusers simply moved on to other opioids, as well as heroin, leaving the overall effect on drugabuse open for debate. The l imi t a tions of abuse-deterrent painkillers

were recently underscored when more than 150 resi-

billion, according to IMS mationcompany. Some lawmakers have pushed for legislation to make the branded drugs cheaper or require that genericversions of older pain-

killers include abuse-deterrent features. Dr. Janet Woodcock, the FDA's director of the Cen-

ter for Drug Evaluation and Research, has testified that there is a limit to protections

that painkillers can carry. "We can't make an impregnable fortress out of the pill," she said in October, "or the patient isn't going to get any pain relief."

H o w ard

telling him, "Maybe you don't

know all things about what H o spital, you're doing, and there are

said the inconsistency is a

things we can show you." Said

shame.

the detective: "It was an epiph-

and it's not part of their orientation to the ER," Howard said.

swabbed the victim's feet after learning her attacker had

ticated, and we're finding it more and more now. You want

got a DNA match.

The idea is to offer a joint interview, so the victim has to describe the attack only once. If the victim chooses to go it

works at St. Mary's Health Center.

"Nurses and p hysicians any moment." don't learn forensics in school, In another case, Howard

"DNA is becoming so sophis- mentioned a foot fetish — and

a nurse who knows where to Training nurses look, how to get it and how to Noble is now a regular at do it properly." the weeklong training sesHelen Sandkuhl remem- sions Howard holds at the bers that when she started YWCA three times a year for her nursing career about four nurses from acrossthe state. decades ago, sexual assault The YWCA provides the room v ictims r eceived a pe l v i c and pays the roughly $300 exam and an offer of emer- cost per nurse. Employers pay gency contraception. Now, as for the nurses' time. director of emergency room During training in March, nursing for St. Louis Univer- Christina Isringhausen, 33, of sity Hospital, she makes sure Godfrey,practiced packaging a forensically trained nurse is and documenting evidence always available. duringa mock exam. "Ihope A victim arriving there goes to feel more confident in my to a private area, with the op- ability to do it correctly and tion of having police and a get a better chance for the vicvictim's advocate respond. tim," said Isringhausen, who Howard hovered over Isringhausen, coaching her just

alone, nurses provide informa- as she had once done with Sanchez. by the YWCA and store rape While examining Reynolds kit evidence in case of a later in 2007, Sanchez had cut the decision to pursue charges. bandages from Reynolds' fin-

tion about counseling offered

An exam with a

f orensic gertips and sent them to the

nurse can take four to five hours, including m edical

crime lab. "She explainedto me why treatment, an interview, pho- they were keeping all of the tographing of injuries and col- Band-Aids and clipping all of lection and documentation of my nails," Reynolds said. "I evidence. thought, 'Boy, she is smart.'" Sandkuhl said she wants to In February2008 — almost expand the evidence collection to include all victims of

a year after the attack — a detective showed up at Reyn-

violent crimes, whose bodies olds' door with a group of phomay have carried in telltale tos. She recognized Marvin clues about their attackers. Akins' face. "I couldn't stop shaking," Occasionally, her nurses have been called upon to examine she said. suspects. Akins, 35, of Ferguson, had "We don't hold c o urt given a DNA sample after viohere," she said. "We're not lating his parole on unrelated judgmental." charges. When his DNA proThe need is growing. Four file hit the police database, it years ago, her hospital han- matched the material harvestdled 10 sexual assaults. In ed from Reynolds' bandag2014, it reached 66. es. In November 2009, Akins St. Louis police have had a pleaded guilty to attempted checkered past in handling forcible rape, robbery and s exual assault cases. A St . tampering with a victim or Louis Post-Dispatch investi-

witness. He was sentenced to

gation in 2005 showed that officers filed informal mem-

30 years in prison. Howard estimates that she

os instead of full reports on some rape calls, meaning

has trained about 500 nurses to think like detectives. But

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AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

IN FOCUS:EUROPEAN POLITICS

Toilets in elevators?Not ascrazy as it sounds By Adam Taylor The Washington Post

Japan's infrastructure ministry announced lastweekthat

Czarek Sokolowski I The Associated Pressfile photo

Poland's President-elect Andrzej Duda celebrates his victory with supporters after winning the runoff election last month. The previously little-known right-wing candidate earned a majority of the

votes from 18- to 29-year-olds, surprising observers.

ee in cane,

the country's elevators may utes to rescue some, officials soon have a surprising new told Kyodo news agency. If a feature: toilets. larger earthquake strikes, the Yes, it sounds odd, but while problemcouldbe farworse.In the idea of a fullyplumbed pot- light of the practical problems ty zoomingup and down the caused by being stuck in an sides of a Tokyo skyscraper elevator for so long, the Japamay seem like Japanese tech- nese government began looknical ingenuity taken a step ing into installing water and too far, in reality this idea is toilet facilities in all elevators. born of reasonable and sensiEarthquakes present a speble practical concerns. cial problem for Japan. The According to Kyodo, the country is located near major Japanese government called tectonic plate boundaries and meetings with the country's has a long history of quakes. elevator industry to discuss It also, however, has a very the idea after a magnitude-8.1 large and constantly growing earthquake struck south of number of tall buildings. This Tokyo last weekend, causing about 19,000 elevators in

0Lin voers 00 0 eri By Rick Lyman

term as prime minister, a rise

New York Times News Service

in young voters in the north was credited with propelling

WARSAW, Poland — Sit-

ting quietly in the bustle of the campus cafe, Daria Zysk paused to find just the right words to explain why she had voted for a presidential candidate whose party's right-wing

the Scottish National Party's rout of the Labour Party, the

policies did not m atch her

tives against each other, Duda

own views. "Young people are com-

seized upon his status as the challenger to position himself

pletely tired of the situation in

to more socially liberal voters

In the recent election for

didate on the left for them to

the Polish presidency, a vote for." largely ceremonial office, the If this political disenchantincumbent, who was a l lied ment among young Europewith the party that governed an voters persists, analysts Poland during eight years of predict the rise of many more prosperity, was trounced by a third parties along the lines much more conservative and of Podemos in Spain and the little-known opponent. National Front in FranceAlmost lost in the surprise

w as the greatestsource ofthe right-wing challenger's support: not Poland's conserva-

parties on differentends of the political spectrum that

share only a sharp rejection of the

order. Michael Poplawski, 21, About 60 percent of voters who is studying finance and between the ages of 18 and accounting at the University 29 supported the challeng- of Warsaw, described him-

elevators paralyzed,according

will never work all of the time,

however, and it remains likely thatpeople willenduptrapped

to Cameron Allan McKean of Next City, and some peo-

in elevators if a large earth-

for almostnine hours after a quake in 2011.

would no doubt make those

quake comes. Toilets, drinkple were stuck up in elevators ing water and other amenities In response to these inci-

people far more comfortable until they are rescued. In fact,

dents, Tokyo created the Japan Elevator Association Kanto

some local governments have

currentfigure stands around

double as toilets" in 2014, with

begun putting portable toilets Branch, a body that conducted in elevators. According to Jiji research that showed thou- Press, Tokyo's Chiyoda ward sandsofpeople could bestuck began putting in "water, blanif an earthquake struck (the kets and emergencyboxes that 17,000). The association de- other parts of Tokyo planning vised a number of methods to follow this tactic.

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media-savvy, American-style of capitalism and said he decampaign made the more cided, in the end, to support staid approach of the incum-

earthquake in 2005 left 64,000

t r a ditional p olitical

tive, churchgoing older people, but its young population.

er, Andrzej Duda, 43, whose

stopping; many didn't restart for an entire day. Another

backup power sources and early-warning systems that help people escape elevators if an earthquake strikes. These technical solutions

150 back instantly.

ing voters in Scotland.

Poland," said Zysk, a 21-year- as the candidate most likely to old political science major. overturn the status quo. "This endless political war "Poles crave change," Kik between the two main parties said. "They didn't shift to the that never produces anything. right as much as the results of They want change. I want the election seem to indicate. change." There just was no viable can-

means that the country has about 620,000 elevators, with

ed in most elevators in Tokyo

to try to avoid this, including

. US. Cellular.

traditional home for left-leanIn Poland, even though the election pitted two conserva-

the city and nearby to stop 150,000 or so in Tokyo alone. working. During big earthquakes, People were trapped in 14 these elevators stop working. elevators and it took 70 min- An earthquake in 1992 result-

Komorowski.

bent Bronislaw Komorowski, But he knows many of his 62, feel a bit creaky. Five years fellow students rejected the ago, 54 percent of young vot- president. "I think it was mostly a proers chose Komorowski. Of those who cast ballots test vote," he said. "A rejecfor the first time, the great

tion of the current president

majority of whom had come of voting age since the last election fiveyearsago,67percent backed Duda, according

and the ruling party, which made many promises in the last election but failed to keep them."

*Per month. Valid as of 4/24/15.

~

ssstssttts

The key, Poplawski saidComing just a week after and many political analysts Ireland legalized same-sex agree — was the surprising marriage and on th e same rise of a third-party challenge day that Spain shifted sharply by a well-known rock star, to the left in local and region- Pawel Kukiz. to Polish election officials.

al elections — results driven

In the first round of voting,

heavily by young votersin early May, no candidate got Poland and its youth seemed over 50 percent, setting up a like cultural outliers, turning

second round between Ko-

right when everyone else was morowski and Duda. But in going left. that first round, Kukiz assemBut that may be a misread- bled a coalition of angry reing of the results, political an- tirees, rowdy anarchists and alysts, cultural historians and disaffected youth that drew many young voters say. 20 percent of the vote, stunDisenchanted and alienat- ning the Polish elite. ed young Poles may not have In the second round, it was veered right so much as they Duda who won most of those embraced a trend that young Kukiz voters even though the voters share across much of platform of his party, Law Europe: A fierce rejection of

and Justice, had virtually no

whatever happens to be the current political order, whether left or right. "Something very serious has happened during these

correlation to the grab-bag of changes that Kukiz had proposed. "Duda presented himself very successfully as the person who represented change," said Andrzej Rychard, a so-

last elections," said Kazimierz

Kik, a professor of political science at the Polish Academy of Sciences. "They reflect a phenomenon that has become increasingly visible across the continent, and es-

political establishment." A surge in new voters, most

emy of Sciences. "Kukiz was the first to recognize that there was something new in the air, t hi s a n ti-establishIn the fall, Poland will hold

parliamentary elections that will result in the choice of a

of them young, was crucial to the passage of a same-sex marriage referendum in Ireland. Young voters flocking to protest parties like Podemos

prime minister, a far more powerful position here than

drove Spain's political shift,

groups are circling around the idea of forming new parties, sensing an opportunity

as they had earlier ones in Greece and Italy.

p

t.

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ciologist at the Polish Acad-

pecially in southern Europe ment energy, and Duda was — a wave of political nega- able to capitalize on it." tion, a rejection of the whole

DOWN

president. Kukiz has vowed to mount a fresh, third-party effort in that race, and other

Even in Britain, where the to break the stranglehold the conservative incumbent Da- two major parties have had vid Cameron won a n other on Polish politics.

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

STATE NEWS Portland Salem

• Salem:A recapof last week in the Legislature,B3 • Portland:Architect builds housewith enhancedacoustics, B3 • Southern Oregon: Fungus blight killing off madrone trees,B4 • Statewiile:DOJsays state police are not prepared to handle complex crimes,BS

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

U Bex ansionmmesinto ois

STATE HOUSE • Rep. KnuteBuahler, R-District54(partof Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep. knutebuehier©state. or.us Web: www.ieg.state. or.us/buehier • Rep. John Huifman, R-District59(part of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep. johnhuffman©state. ol'.Us Web: wwwJeg.state. or.us/huffman • Rep. MikeMcLane, R-District55(Crook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclaneO state.or.us Web: www.ieg.state. or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53(part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE, H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep. genewhisnant©state. 0I;us Web: www.ieg.state. or.us/whisnant

WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON-

• City to begin in-depth testing of 3 plans

G<~P"iD there are differOh B5 ent emphases on how land is used,"

agricultural areas. A request in 2010 to expand

theboundary toaccommodate By Tyler Leeds approval to a steering comprojected growth through The Bulletin mittee composed of the Bend 2028 was rejected, in large The city of Bend will soon City Council, two planning part because the city was get into the nitty-gritty of plan- commissioners and Deschutes asking for land the state said it didn't need. This time around, ning where exactly to expand County Commissioner Tony its urban growth boundary. DeBone. the city has redoubled its This Itresday, city staff, Where the boundary is efforts on infill development consultants and volunteer moved mattersbecause parand, as a result, is planning for technical advisers will gather cels brought inside the line a smaller expansion to accomto go over three expansion could become shopping cenmodate the same amount of scenarios before a summer of ters, new subdivisions or inprojected growth. in-depth research and modeldustrial parks. The state, howBrian Rankin, a city planing. The three scenarios are ever, heavily restricts develop- ner in charge of the boundary based on work the volunteers ment beyond the line. In order process, said he was surprised completed in April, when for the state to approve an by the similarity of the three small teams discussed and expansion, the city must prove different scenarios, which debated how to draft maps of it has a need for new land and were based on the results of an expanded Bend. After the the expansion will make the the workshop. "The geographies are not meeting Tuesday, the scenarmost of the city's available inios will be passed on for final frastructure without harming radically different, though

STATE OF OREGON • Gov. KateBrown,D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.gov • Secretary ofState Jeanne Atkins, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97310 Phone: 503-986-1523 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@ state.or.us • TreasurerTadWheeler, 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 • AttorneyGeneralEllen Rusenbium,D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state. or.us • LaborCommissionerBrad Avakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boii.maii©state. ot'.Us Web: www.oregon.gov/ boii STATE SENATE • Sun. Ted Furriuii, R-District 30(Jefferson, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioii@ state.or.us Web: wwwJeg.state. or.us/ferrioii • Sen. TimKnupp,R-District 27 (part 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 Whitsatt, R-District28 (Crook, part of Deschutesl 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

O www.bendbulletin.com/local

Rankin said.

All three scenarios suggest growing in every direction and focus on eight distinct

areas, including the triangle of land formed by U.S Highways 97 and 20 at the city's northern end, the area west of North-

West Crossing and a pocket on the city's southwest corner.

The consensus, Rankin suggested, was a result of how the workshop functioned. Instead

of volunteers with similar interests teaming up, such as those in the environmental

community or a table of developers, each group had a mix of people. See UGB/B5

un re sc ase eer r ou e nr a r e o n

/I//erkley (D)....... i/l/yden (D)........

a

U.S. HOUSE VOTE

I ,

n

>~l5g*>qi; ~ Photos byJoe KIIne/The Bulletin

Participants in the KegLeg portion of the Bend Beer Chase run toward Silver Moonfor a beer sample Saturday in downtown Bend.

• The secondannual BendBeerChase draws runnersfrom nearandfar away By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

REDMOND — Craft beer

enthusiasts are willingto run dozens of miles for the chance to savor Central Oregon's most

sought-after ales, IPAs and lagers.

in the Bend Beer Chase, a 70mile relay race with stops in Bend, Redmond and Sisters. gl

I

west to Sisters and then back

to Bend. Legs of the race varied, with some as short

Merritt asked Saturday at Wild

as 3t/z miles while the longest

Ride Brewing, one of the stops along the second annual Bend Beer Chase.

measured almost 9 miles. Exchange points in town were

Merritt was one of nearly

stops in more remote areas were sponsoredbybrewers. SeeBeer Chase/B2

800beer drinkers in Central Oregon this weekend running

lerrrrrrrrrrr

Teams of six orfewerstarted at Bend's Worthy Brewing early Saturday morning before headingnorth to Redmond,

ing, right?" Portland's Matt

"Beer'sa form ofcarbo-load-

U.S. SENATEVOTE • After weeks of wrangling that exposed arift between Republicans in the U.S.Houseand Senate, Congressvoted Tuesday to curtail the power of theNational Security Agency to surveil Americans andaccess their phone records. The vote camenearly two years after former NSA contractor Edward Snowden revealedthe massive scale of the dragnet surveillance programs. Oregon's Democratic U.S. Sen.RonWyden called final passageof the act "the most significant victory for Americans' privacy rights in more than adecade." Wyden hadteamed with Republican and presidential hopeful Sen. Rand Paul, of Kentucky, to blockwatered-down versions of the reform favored bySenateMajority Leader Mitch McConnell, also of Kentucky. The legislation passed the Houseduring the second week ofMay, when Reps.Earl Blumenauer andPeter DeFazio were Oregon's congressional delegateswho voted against it.

held at local breweries and

Members of the Sole Brothers team run to the finish of the second annual Bend Beer Chase, which held legs in Bend, Sisters and Redmond with teams from in and out of Central Oregon. Sole Brothers was the first team to finish the relay.

• The Housepassedthe Commerce, Justice, Science andRelated Agencies Appropriations Act on a votethat was largely along party lines, including amongOregon's delegates. The $51.4 billion-spending bill primarily funds the U.S.Department of Justice, which gets more thanhalf. Other agencies fundedin the bill includedNASA, the Drug Enforcement Administration andthe Department of Commerce. Notably for Oregon, the bill included an amendment all the state's delegatesvoted for that seeks to prevent meddling by theDepartment of Justice andDEA into states that legalized and regulated medical marijuana. "I would respectfully suggest that the DEAshould focus their efforts on chasing criminals, the (prescription) pill mills, and the drug dealers, not doctors who haveworked hard to be part of the solution," Blumenauersaidduring debate ontheamendment, which passed. Blumenauer(D) ..... Bonamici (D).......... DeFazio (D)............. Schrader(D)........... i/l/alden (R).............

....... N .......N .......N ....... N .......Y

— Taylor l/IlAnderson, The Bulletin

YESTERYEAR

3-year-old catchesbiggest fish in youth fishing derbyin 1990

began on Friday. With men working at the dam on both

Ball team is organized engaged in clearing on the bench land adjoining, a scene Bend is to have a ball team of activity is presented gladagain this summer, organizadening to all beholders. Other tion having been perfected at work in connection with the a meeting Sunday afternoon. enterprise is going on in the T.M. O'Donnell was reelected woods. captain of the team and Elmer The dam building will take Ward, manager. According to about two months and 30 the plan decided upon at the or 40 men will be employed meeting support for the team continuously. A coffer dam will be sought in monthly subwas first to be built and the scriptions from the businessconstruction of this is now men of the town until the team well along, the crew working becomes self sustaining. from a temporary bridge Following the business which had been put across meeting a game was played

sides of the river and a crew

the river.

Compiled by Don Hoiness

fromarchivedcopies of The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

100YEARSAGO For the week ending June 6, 1915

DambuildingbegunFriday Construction of the dam

across the Deschutes at the Shevlin-Hixon mill site

between teams made up of

married and single men respectively. The single men won the game 13 to 5, the victory being due to in a great measure to the efforts of pitcher Davis.

Memorial Day observed by ceremonies at church With Memorial Day falling on Sunday the general observance of the day in Bend occurred Monday. By direction of the city council, Mayor

m emorial services and the request was generally followed. Both banks and the post office remained closed all day. An audience comprised

chiefly of women attended the services at the Baptist church. Rev.A.S. Black de-

livered the memorial address eulogizing the men who had died to save the Union. He

spoke, also, of General Logan who conceived the idea of forming the Grand Army of the Republic following the

Miller issued a proclamation calling on all business houses close of the war. to close during the time of the SeeYesteryear/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.

Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.

541-420-0279. ARTIST SATURDAYS: A pop-up show with art by more than 40 DOG AGILITY EVENT:Featuring THE OWYHEERIVER JOURNALS: local artists; 10 a.m.; The Armature, dogs and their handlers moving Join author Bonnie Olin for a 50 SE Scott St., Suite 2, Bend; through obstacle courses, hosted by journey into the Canyonlands of the 541-390-7666. Owyhee River; noon; free; Sisters Bend Agility Action Dogs; 8 a.m.-4 .'v Library, 110 NCedar St., Sisters; p.m.; free for spectators; Crook PET PAWLOOZA:Featuring r W www.deschuteslibrary.org/Sisters; County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main contests, adoptable animals, an 541-312-1032. Ask-A-Vet info booth, music, a St., Prineville; 541-280-4198. beer garden, and more; 10 a.m.; REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: HEAVEN CANWAIT SK WALK/RUN: Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia Featuring food, drinks and more; A fun run/walk 5K benefiting Sara's St., Bend; www.brightsideanimals. Project; 9 a.m.; $25-$40 registration 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of org/events or 541-923-0882. required; Drake Park, 777 Riverside SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066. Blvd., Bend; www.heavencanwait. CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY org or 541-706-6996. MARKET:Featuring crafts, music, THE OWYHEERIVER JOURNALS: food and more; 10 a.m.; Across Join author Bonnie Olin for a journey BATTLEBUDDIESOFCENTRAL i n to the Canyonlands of the Owyhee from the Downtown Bend Public OREGON FUNDRAISER: Featuring Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; River; 6 p.m.; free; Downtown Bend Joe Kline 1The Bulletin live music, food and more to 541-420-9015. Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Castmembers rehearse ascene from "A FunnyThing Happened benefit Battle Buddies of Central Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or ontheWay totheForum" on We dnesday eveningatCascades 75TH ANNUALSISTERS RODEO: Oregon; 10 a.m.; Crescent Moon 541-312-1032. Alpaca Ranch, 7566 N. U.S. Theatre in Bend. See the play at 7:30 pm. Friday and Saturday and Featuring a rodeo performance;1 Highway 97, Terrebonne; www. SISTERSRODEO— BARREL June14 at 2 p.m. at Cascades Theatre. and 7 p.m.; $14-$20; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, friendsforlifedogtraining.com or RACE JACKPOT:Featuring barrel 541-306-9882. race jackpot; 6 p.m.; free; Sisters Bend; www.sistersrodeo.com/ or THE MULLIGANBROTHERS:The Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www. 541-549-0121. Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway "WILD, WILD, WILDESTWEST": jcld.org or 541-475-3351. 20, Bend; www.sistersrodeo.com or Americana folk band from Baton AUTHOR PRESENTATION: A family-friendly old-time Western Rouge, Louisiana, performs; 9 541-549-0121. "THE CEMETERY CLUB": A play comedy melodrama, presented by Michelle Lee, author of "Living p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, about three Jewish widows meet Luxe Gluten Free," will speak; 1 the Sunriver STARS; 2 p.m.; $15, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; once a month for tea before going WEDMESDAY p.m.; Newport Avenue Market, $10 for18 and younger, $40/$35 www.volcanictheatrepub.com or to visit their husband's graves; 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; for Saturday dinner show; Sunriver 541-323-1881. 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors MARKET: Featuring www.newportavemarket.com or Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation BEND FARMERS ORGONE:Thefunk-soul band and students; 2nd Street Theater, food, drinksandmore; 3 p.m.; 541-382-3940. Center, 57250 Overlook Road, from Los Angeles performs, with 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Bend; Sunriver; 541-480-7483. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Elektrapod; 9 p.m., doors at 8 p.m.; www.2ndstreettheater.com or www.bendfarmersmarket.com or Jonathan Stewart will speak on his SUNDAYAFTERNOONDANCE: 541-312-9626. 541-408-4998. $12 plus fees in advance, $15at book "Walking Away from the Land: Featuring a dance with The Notable the door; Domino Room,51 NW AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jennifer SISTERSRODEO— PRCA Change at the Crest of a Continent"; Swing Dance and Betty Berger; 2 Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. Hillman-Magnuson will be reading EXTREMEBULLS: Featuring an all 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs p.m.; $5 per person; Bend Senior bendticket.com or 541-388-8111. excerpts from her travel memoir bull rides evening; 6:30 p.m.; $20, Books, 252 W. Hood St., Sisters; Center, 1600 SEReed Market Road, "Peanut Butter and Naan: Stories free for children12 and under; Sisters 541-549-0866. Bend; 541-388-1133. of an American Mom in the Far Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway 20, FRIDAY "INTOTHE WOODS": Anadaptation Bend; 541-549-0121. East"; 8:30 p.m.; Barnes and Noble, SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Americana and bluegrass trio from of Stephen Sondeim's musical about SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: Forum Shopping Center, 2690 Portland performs; 7 p.m.; free; fairytales, presented by Opera Bend; SARAH GERRITSENANDTHE Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. SHADOWCATCHERS:The singerBroken Top Bottle Shop, 1740 NW 3 p.m.; $25-$40; Pinckney Center locall y madegoods and more;2 p.m.; centraloregonwritersguild.com or songwriter performs, with Nick Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www. for the Performing Arts, Central Barclay Park, Hood Street, between 541-548-4138. Foster; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. Oregon Community College, 2600 Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond TANGO ALPHATANGO: The NW College Way, Bend; www. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Portland rock'n' roll band performs; "A FUNNYTHINGHAPPENED St., Bend;www.mcmenamins.com operabend.org or 888-718-4253. ON THEWAY TO THE FORUM": Portland bluegrass and folk trio 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 or 541-382-5174. A musical about Pseudolus, a I'M GONNASING!: Featuring performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hopeand SW Century Drive, Bend; www. "ONE NIGHTFOR ONE DROP": crafty slave who struggles to win songsand hymns, withthe Bend Charity Vineyards, 70450 NWLower volcanictheatrepub.com or Featuring an original performance the hand of a beautiful but slowValley Drive, Terrebonne; www. Camerata and Men's Chorus 541-323-1881. with artists from Cirque du Soleil, witted courtesan named Philia; of Central Oregon; 6 p.m.; free; faithhopeandcharityevents.com or performing for the OneDrop 7:30p.m.; $20, $16for seniors, $13 541-526-5075. Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 Foundation to help raise awareness SATURDAY for students; Cascades Theatre, Brosterhous Road, Bend; www. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jonathan for global water issues; 7:30 p.m.; 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; nativitychoir.weebly.com/ or Stewart will speak on his book EXHIBIT OPENING: GLOW: $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-388-0765. "Walking Away from the Land: Experience the world of Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and 541-389-0803. Change at the Crest of a Continent"; bioluminescence, explore how some JAPHY'S DESCENT: The alternative IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, "THE CEMETERYCLUB": Aplay 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs plants and animals appear to glow band from Arizona performs, with Bend; www.fathomevents.com or about three Jewish widows meet Books, 422SW Sixth St.,Redmond; in the darkandmeetsome ofthese Patrimony; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic 844-462-7342. 541-526-1491. once a month for tea before going special creatures; 9 a.m.; free, with Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, TONY HOLIDAY& THE to visit their husband's graves; the price of admission; High Desert Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com VELVETONES: SISTERSRODEO-LES SCHWAB The blues-funk 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, or 541-323-1881. FAMILY NIGHT:Featuring a rodeo band from Utah performs; 9 Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org and students; 2nd Street Theater, performance; 7 p.m.; $14, free p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; or 541-382-4754. for children12 and under; Sisters 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; MONDAY www.2ndstreettheater.com or Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-312-9626. 20, Bend; www.sistersrodeo.com or Featuring food, drinks, live music NATURAL HISTORYPUB:A W ILD 541-323-1881. 541-549-0121. BOYLESQUESHOW: Featuring a and more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, SOLUTIONFOR CLIMATE CHANGE: 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; performance of the show"Cocked Thomas Lovejoy, conservationist, "A FUNNYTHING HAPPENED THURSDAY 541-546-6778. and Loaded"; 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees will be this season's final Natural ON THEWAY TO THE FORUM": in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic History Pub speaker; 7 p.m.; free; A musical about Pseudolus, a SISTERS RODEOPARADE: LEFT COAST COUNTRY:ThefiveTheatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, HighDesertMuseum,59800 S. crafty slave who struggles to win Featuring a parade; 9:30 a.m.; piece string band from Portland Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins the hand of a beautiful but slowDowntown Sisters, downtown or 541-323-1881. highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond witted courtesan named Philia; sisters, Sisters; www.sistersrodeo. 541-382-4754. SPACEODDITY: DAVID St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 com or 541-549-0121. 541-382-5174. for students; Cascades Theatre, BRIGHTON'STRIBUTE TO DAVID KOTTONMOUTH KINGS: The hipSISTERS ART INTHEPARK: BOWIE:Featuring the retro rock 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; hop and punk rock band performs, BIG BANDJAZZ ENSEMBLE Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, www.cascadestheatrical.org or David Bowie impersonator; 8 p.m.; with Marlon Asher, Chucky Chuck CONCERT: Theensemble performs food and live entertainment, to 541-389-0803. $23-$53 plusfees;TowerTheatre, and C4 Nicky Gritts; 9 p.m., doors traditional and contemporary charts; benefit a local wish from the Make835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. "THE KID WITH ABIKE": A showing open at 8 p.m.; $20 plus fees in 7:30 p.m.; $10, $5 for seniors and A-Wish Foundation of Oregon;10 towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. advance, $25 atthedoor;Domino students with ID; Wille Hall, Central of the grand prize winner of the 2011 a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson "THE ROCKYHORROR PICTURE Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Cannes Film Festival; 7:30 p.m.; free; Street and Highway 20, Sisters; SHOW":The cult-classic musical Bend; 541-388-8111. College Way,Bend; 541-383-7510. Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County www.centraloregonshows.com or

TODAY

TUESDAY

I

1

Beer Chase Continued from B1 "It's a perfect way to see Central Oregon," said Allie Dashiell, who camedown from Portland to help support fel-

Find Your Dream Home In

2015 Bend Beer Chase relay

Real Estate

A group beer relay run that stretches 70 miles from Bend to Redmond to Sisters and back.

Sisters

TheBulletin

low members of her NoPo Run

Clubwho were running in the BeerChase. "You get toseethe Sisters,the city (of) Bend. All three towns (Bend, Sistersand Redmond)really.... The loop hitsup everything." Onceteams made their way back to Bend theyditched their

I •

Redmond

'

is presented; 11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for VIP; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com or 541-410-0975.

june 14 BUCKAROOBREAKFAST-SISTERS RODEO:Featuring a breakfast; 7 a.m.; $10, $5 for kids ages 4-12, free for children 3 andyounger; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway 20, Bend; www.sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. SISTERSARTIN THEPARK: Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, food and live entertainment, to benefit a local wish from the MakeA-Wish Foundation of Oregon; 10 a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson Street and Highway 20, Sisters; www.centraloregonshows.com or 541-420-0279. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAYJAM: All ages welcome, listen and dance; 1 p.m.; free, donationsaccepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif Road,PowellButte;408-858-9437. 75TH ANNUALSISTERS RODEO: The final rodeo performance; 1 p.m.; $12-$17; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway 20, Bend; www.sistesrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. "A FUNNYTHINGHAPPENED ON THEWAY TO THE FORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slowwitted courtesannamed Philia; 2 p m $20 $16 for seniors $13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE CEMETERY CLUB":A play about three Jewish widows meet once a month for tea before going to visit their husband's graves; 3 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors and students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. JOHN CRAIGIEHOUSE CONCERT: The indie-folk singer-songwriter performs, with Bill Valenti, 6-7 p.m. potluck/soaal; 7 p.m.; $15-$20; House Concerts in the Glen 1019 NW Stannium Road, Bend; www.

houseconcertsintheglen.comor 541-480-8830.

june 15 NO EVENTSLISTED.

june 16 REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066.

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team vans and ran the final 2

miles —the Keg Leg — together, a fast-pacedpub crawl that hit four breweries and one ci-

der-maker beforeconcluding at Crow's FeetCommons.

"All thelegs are really runnableandit's just aone-day event,"

The Keg lel ot theBendBeer Chase

malo

said Mary Chen, another member of the NoPo Run Club. 'You

can make awhole weekend out of the mce. It's not like a mam-

Carnm

thonwhereyou canbarely walk the next day. Therecovery time (after acouple of relay legs) is so much quicker. You just follow up the next day with a Bloody Mary and brunch it out." The brainchild of Scott Dou-

0 ra

Bend

e.

START:

Worthy Brewing Ce.

glass,who owns and operates the Cascade Lakes Race Group,

the Bend BeerChase was conceivedand carried out last fall

Opening Country Side Living in Redmond Fall of zozg

SH: Cru tion Project

FINISH:Crux Fermentation Project

in less than two months. The

initial turnout of about 400 peoplewas encouraging, Douglass said, especially sincethe group only advertised the race for about three weeks.This year 120 teams signed up — and approximately 100individuals who just did the Keg Leg — 70 percentof whom,by Douglass' estimate, hailed from outside CentralOregon. "I getphone calls daily about

Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Bend," said Douglass, whose group also stagesthe popular CascadeLakes Relay and the Spokane to Sandpoint Relay. "The beer,the running. We've got teams from Seattle and San Francisco here."

COUNTR S IDE LIVING A Nice Place To Call Home

Chase looks to double again when they normally wouldn't next year to 1,600participants. evenbeopen." "It's been really fun," added Eachbrewery stop willbecom e a mini-festival unto itself, Dou-

Merritt, whose team was using

glasssaid.

theraceas a warmup forthe

"Breweries love it because Hood to Coast Relay. "I mean,

for about three hours they get Highlighted by R u nner's this mass ofpeople," Douglass World as a "Can't-miss craft said."They don't need parking beer race," the B e nd Be er and in some casesit's at hours

you get beer support at every exchange point!" — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastesibendbulletin.com

Specializing in Memory Care TAKING RESERVATIONS: CALL FOR MORE INFO Call: 541-548-3049 j www.countrysideliving.com

THELMA'S PLACE Adult Day Respitefor those living with memory loss Donate your Vehicle to Thelma's Place K Make a Difference in Memory Care! FREE PICK-UP j TAX DEDUCTION j IT'S EASY! Call: 541-548-3049 j www.thelmasplace.org


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

T is astwee int eLe isature: tuition, uns,Wa san Means Retirement

By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

Guns

universities pledged to limit tuition hikes if the Legislature agrees to boost higher education funding over the

Another long-stalled prior-

GreShamkilling — Police arrested amanaccused of fatally shooting his wife at aGresham home. Officer Ben Costigan of the Gresham Police Department says the43-year-old victim died at the scene late Friday. Hernamehas not beenreleased. Her husband,Gerardo Gomez Ventura, 44, wasbooked into the Multnomah County Detention Center on murder charges. Costigan said detectives are trying to piecetogether what happenedbefore theshooting.

A House committee advanced a bill making changes to a gun-control bill signed next two years. University ad- earlier this year by Gov. Kate ministrators have spent most Brown. The original bill reof the year pushing aggres- quires that a b ackground sively for a two-year budget check be run by a licensed of $755 million — $85 million gun dealer any time a firemore than legislative budget arm is transferred or sold writers initially proposed. If between people who aren't they hit their funding target, related. The new bill seeks the universities promise to to make it easier for people use the money to limit across- to temporarily lend guns to

White City fire — A fire early Saturday destroyed amobile home in a White City trailer park. Battalion Chief Myron Harveysaid therewere initial reports that someonemight be inside, but those turned out to be false. Therewere no injuries. The single-wide mobile homewas engulfed with flames whenfirefighters arrived. A tree caught fire and an adjacent mobile homesuffered some heat damage. Fire officials have yet to say what causedthe blaze.

the bill forward, setting up a retirement savings accounts. vote in the full Senate as soon The proponents say the meaas next week. The bill would sure would help Oregonians require companies with at build a nest egg so they don't least 10 workers to provide a have to work until they die or week of paid sick leave each live in poverty as a retiree. But the-board tuition hikes, dole friends for a short amount of year. Smaller e m ployers as they did with the sick leave out more scholarship money time. Instead of running the would have to offer unpaid bill, Republicans said they to the students who need it background check in front of

Wrong way driver — Police in Portland said adriver reportedly trying to leave anaccident scene Friday night wound updriving the wrong way on adowntown street, hitting several parked vehicles, at least one bicyclist and somescaffolding. A police spokesman says it appears there are no serious injuries. Officers took the female driver into custody. Thespokesman said the accident is being investigated and alcohol is thought to be a factor.

leave. The measure is a pri-

are worried about creating

most, and hire more faculty

ority for Democrats and labor unions, who say it would

higher costs for businesses. and academic advisers to en- charge a fee — the bill would Employers would be required sure students can graduate allow the check to be run in a

ensure people can r ecover

to deduct money from their

Remaine feund — Authorities said humanremains werediscovered near abridge crossing the Yamhill River, andfoul play is suspected. Sgt. Chris Ray oftheYamhill County Sheriff's Office said a citizen reported the find Fridayevening. Hesaid the remainswereabout three miles west of the city of Yamhill, near apopular swimming hole. Investigators havebeen unable to tell the age or sex ofthe remains, and Ray said it could takewhile to come upwith a positive identification. The sheriff's office asks for those with information to contact Detective Marc Brodeur at 503-434-7506, ext. 4544.

Paid sick leave

ity for Democrats and labor

officials is advancing after garnering the blessing of the

After months on ice, a bill

requiring many b usinesses to give employees paid sick leave began advancing. Democrats on the Ways and

Ways and Means Committee.

The committeeadvanced a bill that would automatically

Means Committee p ushed

enroll thousands of workers in

a licensed dealer — who can

on time. The plan is backed

telephone call to the Oregon

from illnesses instead of go- workers' paychecks, but they by the Oregon Student Assoing to back to work. Repub- would not have to contribute ciation. Lawmakers in charge licans and business groups their own money. the budget won't say whethsay it will expose businesses er the universities are likely Higher education to new costs and operating to get all the money they are challenges. The presidents of Oregon's seeking.

State Police. It applies only when the gun will be loaned for up to seven days. Gunrights advocates, who bitterly opposed the original bill, said the change was no better.

— From wire reports

Portland residentharmonizedmusic, architecture with customhome By Janet Eastman

Wright saw a symphony as an "edifice of sound" long before early rock producers aimed to create a wall of sound. Sure, architecture relies on musical language. But in Oshatz's houses, you can see the sound waves. Dynamic roofs sweep up. Warm-wood ceilings are as soft as the quietest pianississimo. Cantilevered

The Oregonian

PORTLAND — For his client, a music lover, architect Robert Oshatz orchestrated

a modern, wood-and-glass house that has a curving, ce-

dar ceiling and other acoustic-enhancing shapes and materials.

F ennell floating home, t h e

spond to more of the interior's

Saturday, June 20.

musical flow. The front glass door is

Portland Chamber Orchestra

bowed. Shaped like the letter "D," it pivots to open the round-

and can be purchased at the box office, online or by calling

ededge. A wood ceiling floats on curved laminated beams, like notes on a scale. A flowing, 35-foot-long bank of windows captures the scenery. Frameless glass doors slide into two white rings, creating an 8-foot circular opening. "The tube-like form provides

503-771-3250. Oshatz will be at the houses

Rosenthal residence with giant diamond-shaped windows and the architect's own fun-

There are more swoops and nel-shaped home in Lake Osswings inside. Sway as you re- wego — from noon to 4 p.m.

More t h a n am p hitheater-quality sound, however, platforms d eliver d r amatic the Wilkinson residence, in crescendos. In the Wilkinson a forested part of Southwest home, a projecting deck floats Portland, artfully blends two 25 feet above the ground. "Viewing the architecturfields: architecture and music. It's a long-held idea that the al works of Robert Oshatz goal of both professions is a makes me feel as though I'm composition that b est u ses watching the visualization of harmony, transitions, rhythm a musical composition that is and scale. A musical compos- beautifully balanced and triger creates an aural space; an gers an immediate and satarchitect shapes a physical isfying emotional response," space. says Yaacov Bergman, music Both have build-ups, con- directorand conductor ofthe trasting beats — long and Portland Chamber Orchestra. short, dark and light, solid and Oshatz designed the modairy — and geometrical ratios ern residence on a steep slope that provoke emotions and in 1997 for music appreciator please the soul. Both speak of Roy Wilkinson who wanted low and high volumes. to hear the birds sing. After Music has been called "liq- the house was built in 2004, it uid architecture." Architecture was called a "treehouse" beis "frozen music." Frank Lloyd causeOshatz placed the main •

the house. Here, undulating shinglesof western redcedar were cut and laid by inspiration, not by a mandated grid.

-

-

.&®~>

Randy L. Rasmussen/The OregonianviaThe Associated Press

A circular space pokes out of the kitchen end of the Wilkinson residence, designed in1997 by architect Robert Harvey Oshatz and built in 2004.

Tickets ($40) benefit the

at specific times during tour hours and supporters who

purchase $75 tickets will also be invited to a post-tour reception at Oshatz's home over-

looking the Willamette River. There, he will talk about his design process and members of the chamber orchestra will perform.

a cohesive link that seems to tie

the whole composition together," Oshatz says. "It's a house

Adds Bergman of the Port-

rooms at an elevated, leafy and cylinder shapes. that feels like it's at peace with canopy level and created a A down-turning copper roof its site." floor plan to save all the trees forms a half cylinder. This tube Oshatz serves on the Porton the site. is repeated — a refrain, if you land C h amber O r chestra's But no treehouse is this in- will — throughout the main board of directors, and beventive. Oshatz m i n imized living space, kitchen and med- cause of this link, music and parallel surfaces to improve itation room. architecture appreciators can the sound quality. Instead of Visitors walk down a steep tour the very private Wilkinstraight lines and rectangles, driveway and enter through a son treehouse and three othhe incorporated curves,spirals small courtyard, a prelude of er Oshatz's residences — the •

land Chamber Orchestra: "Such a partnership between architecture and music pro-

vides a platform for an exciting fusion and makes this fundraiser a highly relevant event in support of the Portland Chamber Orchestra, the oldest chamber orchestra in

America." •

DISCOVERTHE VERY BEST CENTRAL OREGON HAS TO OFFER. Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offeredto Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.

/

f

112 WAYS TO DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON -: - "', " ,'+" .,~~++ ~ . IS A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE

r -- ' , - - .

to places, events and activities taking place

throughout Central Oregon during the year.

The Bulletin',:

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

OREGON NEWS

Madrone trees killed byfungus

BITUARIES FEATUREDOBITUARY

DEATH 1VOTIt ES Thomas James Merrick, of Bend Oct. 27, 1936 - May 27, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Services will be held at a later date. Contributions may bemade to:

Band of Brothers, 63460 Vogt Road, Bend, Oregon 97701.

Joe Edmon Hyde, of Prineville April 8, 1934 - May 29, 2015

Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsREDMOND www.autumnfunerals.net 541-504-9485 Services: Memorial Service: 2:00pm, Tue., June 16, 2015 at the VFW Post, 405 N. Main St., Prineville.

Betty Jean Johnson, of Alfalfa Nov. 15, 1938 - June 4, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

Services: A private service will be held at a later date.

Elizabeth (Betty) Thompson

May18, 1910- May 27, 2015

James Bernard Copple, of Madras

By Damian Mann The (Medford) Mail Triburte

June15,1933- May13,2015 Services: June 13, 2015, at 1:00 p.m., at the Desert Inn in Madras, OR (Metolius). Please call his daughter, Debbie with any questions at 541-923-3524.

MEDFORD — The Pa-

cific Northwest's distinctive madrone trees appear

to be dying in droves in Southern Oregon, victims of a fungus blight possibly made worse by the ongoing drought. M otorists

Bonnie Claire Lawrence,of Crooked River Ranch Feb. 26, 1933 - June 4, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:

s"

4'

matic," said Jay Walters, J. Walter Green / rhe Associated Press file photo

Australia syndicate head Alan Bond, right, and Courageous skipper TedTurner, left, shake hands at

www.hosplceofredmond.org OR A homeless shelter of one's choice.

Richard E. Engebrecht of Bend Mar. 13, 1927 - May 30, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home, 541-382 2471 Services: June13 at 1:00 p.m. at St. Luke's Church, Seattle Washington. Celebration of Life will follow in Bend at a later date.

Contributions may be

made to: Lutheran World Relief and local hospice.

Donald Joseph Jackman, of Bend Jan. 14, 1946 - June 3, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592

www.deschutesmemorialchapehcom

Carole Giroux

Betty Thompson, a longt ime r e s i dent o f B en d , March 5, 1961 - May 26, 2015 passed on M a y 2 7 , 2 0 15, w hile r e s i din g a t Ben d Transitional Care. Betty was born inFarmer C ity, I l l i n ois, t o E d w a r d a nd A n n a K i s s l er . S h e was on e o f f i v e s i b l i n gs who pr e c ede d h er rn d eath. Th e f a m il y m o v ed to Red m o n d , O r eg o n , when she was 16 years of a ge. She g r aduated f r om Redmond High School and a ttended P a c ifi c U n i v e r s ity in F o r est G r ove, O r -

egon. Later Betty and her family moved to Bend, where s he m e t an d mar r i e d Howard D. Thompson Oct ober 25, 1936. T hey h a d three d aughters c o m pleting their family. Betty was a very k i n d , l o v in g w i f e a nd mother a n d a g r e a t homemaker to all. During WW II B ett y worked in th e p a yroll d epartment at C amp A b b ott rn Sunriver. A fter the war, she d e v ote d h e r s el f t o r aising her f a m i ly . L a t e r B etty became on e o f t h e f irst employees fo r B e n d T V C a b le . S he r et i r e d from th e C a ble C ompany at age 65. B etty w a s p r e c eded i n d eath by h e r m o t her a n d f ather; hu sband an d s i b l ings; M a r g uerite, L l o y d , Wilfred and Frank Kissler. She i s s u r v i ve d b y he r three d aughters, C h arlyn ( Bob) L e w i s of Car s o n

America's Cup yacht race victory in1983 before going to prison over the nation's biggest corporate

trees." K nown f o r

fraud died Friday in a hospital in the west Australian city of Perth. He was 77.

He was one ofAustralia's wealthiest, until he wasindicted for hefty fraud By Rod McGuirk The Associated Press

CANBERRA,

A u s t r a l ia

Deaths ofnote from around

of death was not reported.

theworld:

Irving Mondschein, 91: National champion, also known

journalist and anti-commu-

as

"Moon

M o n d schein,"

nist dissident whose "Two in the decathlon and high Thousand Words" manifes- jump in the 1940s, a college to became a key document and Olympiccoach and the of the 1968 Prague Spring patriarch of three generareform movement that con- tions of track and field stars. tributed to the Kremlin's de- Died Friday i n H e rshey, cision to invade Czechoslova- Pennsylvania kia. Died Saturday. His place — From wire reports

t h eir o r -

a nge-red t r unk s a n d branches, the evergreen trees have been afflicted with various fungal b lights t hat

a t t ack t h e

waxy leaves. ODF officials have identified the most

common type of blight as being caused by Phacidiopycnis washingtonensis that was noticeable t hroughout Oregon i n

— Alan Bond, the polarizing global entrepreneur who became an Australian hero by bankrolling a historic America's Cup yacht race victory before going to prison over the nation's biggest corporate fraud, died Friday. He was 77. Bond, who had rheumatic fever as a child which weak-

2014 and continues to be

ened his heart, died in Fiona

Stanley Hospital in the west

completely. Sometimes al l

A ustralian city o f

l eaves on

noticeable this year. Usually, the trees rebound after being stricken

by blight. But forestry officials have noticed some branches have died, and

they're unsure whether successive years of blight could cause the trees to die

P erth of

complications following open Rick Rycroft/The Associated Press file photo heart surgery, said his son Alan Bond arrives for his wedding to Diana Bliss in Sydney in 1995. John Bond. The surgery involved replacing a heart valve that had previously been re- prestigious trophy contest. He followed the footsteps placed almost 20 years ago, His fall came in the 1990s of his father, who was a coma nd repairs t o t w o o t h e r when he was bankrupted ow- mercial painter, by becoming valves. ing $1.8 billion Australian dol- an apprentice sign writer at 14 "He never regained con- lars ($1.4 billion), his flagship despite failing a spelling test sciousness after his surgery company Bond Corp. Hold- set by his employer, Fremantle Tuesday and has been on life ings Ltd. collapsed and he was firm Parnell Signs, accordsupport since that time," John sent to prison three times for ing to Paul Barry's biography "The Rise and Fall of A l an Bond told reporters. "To a corporate crimes. lot of people, dad was a largHe pleaded guilty in 1997 to Bond." e r-than-life c h aracter w h o corporatelaw charges relatBond completed less than started with nothing and did ed to the siphoning of AU$1.2 four years of his five-year apso much. He really did expe- billion from one of his compa- prenticeship before starting rience the highs and lows of nies, Bell Resources, to prop a rival business, Nu-Signs, in life. To us, however, he was up Bond Corp. At the time, it Fremantle with his father. just dad — a father who tried was Australia's biggest-ever Bond showed early busihis best to be the best dad he corporate fraud. ness acumen. But his honesty could." Bond won a High Court was always in question. T he f l amboyant, L o n- appeal against his seven-year When he was 18 years old, don-born former sign writer prison sentence and walked he was convicted in a Fr edivided Australians. Some free in 2000 after serving a lit- mantle court of two attemptremember him as a nation- tle more than three years. ed home burglaries. He was al sporting hero who transHe was sentenced in 1996 fined and placed on a good formed his once-sleepy adopt- to three years in prison on behavior bond. ed home of Perth into a global convictions that he had imHe started making big business center. To others, he properly used his position as money in the 1960s, when he will always be an audacious a director of Bond Corp. in branched into property develcorporate criminal who was a series oftransactions that opment around Perth. only exposed when his glob- cost that public company milHe was on e o f A u s traal business empire crashed in lions of dollars and enabled lia's wealthiest people by the Bond's family company to buy 1980s, as Bond Corp. gathered the early 1990s. Perhaps Bond's proudest French impressionist Edouard brewing, media and mining moment came in 1983 when Manet's painting "La Prome- assets around the world. nade" at a discount price. He he headed the Australia II In 2008, Bond made BRW syndicate that won the Amer- was still in prison when he magazine's annual list of Ausica's Cup from the New York pleaded guilty the next year to tralia's 200 richest individuals Y acht Club t hat h a d h e l d the corporate law charges. for the first time in 18 years. it since 1851. Australia II's He was sentenced in 1992 BRW ranked Bond at 157th then-revolutionary w i n ged — the year he was bankrupt- place with an estimated forkeel had ended the longest ed — to two and a half years tune of $255 million through winning streak in the history in prison after being found interests including an African of sport. guilty of inducing a former diamond mineand MadagasBond had already been hon- friend to contribute to the res- can oil fields. ored as Australian of the Year cue of the doomed Rothwells He is survived by his first in 1978 for sponsoring earlier merchant bank while conceal- wife Eileen and their children unsuccessful America's Cup ing a multimillion dollar fee John, Craig and Jody. Bond's family company made challenges. Perth's neighboring port from thedeaL He served only town o f F r emantle, where a few months before he was Bond arrived as a 12-year-old retried and acquitted. with his immigrant family in Bond was born in the Hammersmith district of west London, the second child of Frank and Kathleen Bond.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. paid advertisements submitted Friday for Sunday publication. by families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received Theymay besubmitted by by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to the second dayafter subedit all submissions. Please mission, by1 p.m. Friday for include contact information in Sunday publication, and by all correspondence. 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday For information on any of these publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall services or about the obituary for details. policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

K (. %

t he

a tr e e t u r n

brown by late winter, but the madrone will send out new shoots in spring. Madrones in Jackson County and other areas of Southern Oregon are

a fflicted as well, w i th t he blame p a r tially a t tributed to the stress pro-

duced by last w i nter's c older-than-normal

tem-

peratures as well as three years of drought and low snowpack. Lee Winslow, steward-

ship forester with ODF in Central Point, said h e's seen trees i n n o r t hern

Jackson County and in Josephine County that have

been hit by the blight. Sickly madrones have been seen throughout the

Willamette Valley as well as the central coast range. Winslow said forestry

officials are unsure how much long-term stress a madrone can take before

it dies. Even if the leaves of a madrone die, the affected branches and the

tree itself usually will survive. Winslow said it's diffi-

cult to pinpoint the reasons why there is such a problem wit h t h e t r e es

recently. "The short answer is: It's a combination of mul-

tiple things going on," he said. The tree typically is more dr o u ght-tolerant than other trees and is a

particularly hardy species that is common from California to British Columbia, Winslow said.

Z . tl , .

'

August 26 1938 - May 27 2015 Wilma Mae Leathers of Redmond, Oregon, died peacefully at her home, with her family at her side on May 27, 2015. She was 76.

Obituary policy

Ludvik Vaculik, 88:Author,

ment of Forestry in Rose-

burg. "Those are some poor-looking m a d rone

Carole Alice Giroux, age 54 passed away o n T u esday, May 26th after a long c ourageous battle with a n i llness. C a r ol e w a s b o r n March 5, 1961 in O t t awa, O ntario Can a d a , sh e moved with her brother and parents t o S o u t h ern California in 1968 and obtained her citizenship. C arole w a s a dev o t e d Christian, f r i e n d , and mother to her ow n son as w ell a s t h e m a n y o t h e r c hildren that sh e t oo k i n a nd cared for as her ow n , even into adulthood. S he was h appiest w h en s he was at the ranch wit h h er g r a ndchildren w h e r e she had raised llamas and oats. Her memory will be o rever cherished b y h e r l oving son. Jason D . G i r oux, h e r gr a n d c h ildren; Isaiah, Avalyn, and K o na, h er m o t h er , L a u r ette R . City, NV; Sandra (Chuck) G iroux a n d h e r b r o t h e r , Edward Giroux w hom she Case of Surprise, AZ; and J anice (Larry) C l ark o f s elflessly p r o v i ded h o m e care for over 30 years. Bend, OR. She is also survived b y f i v e g r a n d chil- A lthough, n o w s he i s d ren: She l l ey , K evi n , with her L ord and Savior, fo r e ve r b e r e- 1950, played host to the next Kathleen, Kristr and Kacie; she w i l l and fou r g r e at-grandchil- m embered b y t h e m a n y yacht race in 1987. But Ausp eople s h e l ov e d an d tralia has never again won the dren: Kelley, Nicole, Emiwhose lives she touched. lee and Joshua. A c elebration t o h o n o r A family service was held and remember her life will June 6, 2015. The f a m i l y be held o n S u n day, June wishes to thank th e B end 1 4th at 1 :0 0 p .m . a t t h e Transitional Care staff for t heir w o n d erfu l c a r e & family estate in Bend. Death Notices are freeand D eschutes Mem or i a l c ompassion. Ser vic e s will be run for oneday,but w ere u n der t h e c a r e o f C hapel w a s h o n o re d t o specific guidelines must be Niswonger-Reynolds Fu - serve the family. w ww.desfollowed. Local obituaries are chutesmemorialchapel.com neral Home.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

stewardship f ore ster with the Oregon Depart-

a news conference following Courageous' America's Cup victory, in Newport, Rhode Island, in1977. Bond's family said the global entrepreneur who became an Australian hero by bankrolling a historic

Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd St., Redmond,

Oregon,

t rav e l i ng

along Interstate 5 have reported stands of dying madrones from Sunny Valley to Canyonville. " It certainly i s d r a -

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

A Memorial Service will take place Tuesday, June 16, 2015 at 11:00 AM at Redmond Assembly of God Church, located at 1865 West Antler Avenue in Redmond,OR. W ilma was born August 26,1938 in Cyril,Oklahoma, to Jake and Geraldine (Madison) Williams. On February 14, 1955, she married Donald L. "Mickey" Harden in Nevada. Wilma enjoyed quilting, camping and fishing. She issurvived by her son Donald L. Harden, Jr; and three daughters, Terrill Gooding, Tammy Bayes and Tina McDonald. Other survivors include her sister,Wanda Rickard; 10 grandchildrenand 13 great-grandchildren. She waspreceded in death by her husband,Mickey Harden, both parents; a brother, Ralph Williams and sister, Irene Holcomb. Memorial Contributions in Wilma's memory may be made to St. Charles Hospice, 2275 Doctor's Drive, Suite 3, Bend, OR 97701. Autumn FuneralsofRedmond (541)504-9485 and Waud's Funeral Home (503)842-7557havebeen entrustedwith the arrangements.


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Council toconsiderpossidleurdangrowth doundaryexpansionareas The city of Bend hasdeveloped three urban growth boundary expansion scenarios to consider, varying by area and use. Onceapproved andpossibly tweaked, a team of consultants will spend the summer seeing howeach scenario performs under aseries of tests related to infrastructure and traffic. H C ommercial use C3 Residential area with significant commercial useH Re sidential area

SCENARIO1

SCENARIO2 I

C

I

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. ~

- Butlffr

C

its

SCENARIO3 •

I -:,

— Btftler

I

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.

-

its

-'. I

DOj: OSPnot prepare to an ecompexcases

,; - Btftle

its

r..;.

I

The DOJ offered those charges as an explanation for OSP's fumbling of evidence in a quadruple murder case involving white supremacists, The Oregonian reported.

TheAssociated Press PORTLAND — The state

Department of Justice says Oregon State Police l ack

experience, money and the constitutional l

,J d.

Knytt Rd.

Kn ttRd.

Kn tRd. Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Source: City of Bend

UGB Continued from B1 "I expectedmore birds of a feather to find each other, but

new homes on the city's east side overwhelm the traffic or sewer system'? If you add a new shopping center to the

we didn't try to make it go either way," Rankin said. "I like

to think the similarity reflects a degree of wisdom, common sense and compromise." What's different among the proposals is which land is dedicated to housing, economic activities or a mixture of the two. The impacts of

these differences, Rankin said, will be studied this summer by the consultants. For

example, will having a lot of

Yesteryear Continued from B1 Six members of the G.A.R. and one Confederate veteran

is intended to be finished and ready for the state in 2016. On 'Ittesday, h o w ever,

impacted," Rankin said. "My

Rankin anticipates property owners may lobby to have their properties considered for i n clusion, s omething Rankin said can help "in case we missed anything." "We don't have a huge

experience isthere are often

amount of land need to go

things that become trade-offs, and we have to look for the

around, and there's definitely a speculative value to being

best mix." The scenarios will be tested over the summer, and Rankin said the city hopes to decide

brought into the city," Rankin

that's not what happened, and e ast, could it cut d own o n traffic?

"We also have to look at how people and places withi n the current UGB will be

on a preferred scenario by October. The whole process

said. "We want to make sure the door is open, as this process isn't closed to anyone." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleede@bendbulletin.com

matter.

Shriner, O.H. Norcutt, J.H.

while he was in a Boston hos-

tion, its main objective.

The maneuvers, in which

Tweet and J.C. Thorp. The more than 25,000 men are inC onfederate v e teran w a s volved, end tomorrow. G.W. Triplett.

75 YEARS AGO

1,000 planes aday possible saysFord

Henry Ford say he could For the week ending turn out 1,000 war planes June 6, 1940 a day at his gigantic River Rouge plant, and that he is Pro-Nazi sentiment ready to throw the resources heightens in Japan of this world's largest factory Sentiment favoring Japan's into national defense. active participation in t he Surveys of the plant have European war on the side of already been made by Army Germany — with the Neth- and Navy experts and fighterlands and East Indies the ing ships could be turned out

Clay also has a long memory. He's aware Liston never even paid him a courtesy visit pital following his hernia operation last November. Sonny never even bothered sending him a card. "Liston made a mistake r ight there," said th e m a n

close to Clay. "Cassius kept looking for a card from him b ut it

n ever came. I f L i s -

ton would have sent one it would'vemade adeep impression on Cassius mentally."

Performing service learned in youth

L arry Davis, Bend, i s a

two-profession man. He not

Japanese reward for a totali-

at the 1,000 a day rate without

tarian victory — reached increasing proportions today.

adding any new buildings to it, Ford said.

only teaches school, but shoes

ny informed Japan that she is "not interested in the East

ships, blast f u r naces, and

horses. He teaches the after-

more machine mechanics

noon shift at Kenwood and

Indies problem."

than an y o t h e r i n d ustrial will be at the new Pilot Butte concern in the world, could School when it is completed.

horses. He learned the skill when he was 13, from his Several influential leaders Production facilities would grandfather. Davis has been and a number of newspapers have to be revised, compa- with the Bend School System joined a movement calling ny officials said, but within since graduating from Eastern for abandonment of the Jap- six months the entire plant, Oregon College in 1958. He anese policy of non-involve- covering 1,096 acres and lives on Hayes Avenue with ment, especially after Germa- equipped wit h r a i l roads, his wife, two sons and three

Huge rooms built below Nazi city

be concentrated on output for airplanes, engines and parts.

A vast underground city — large enough to shelter 50 YEARSAGO 2,500,000 people and complete with operating rooms, For the week ending police stations and f o od June 6, 1965 warehouses — has been built secretly under the German

k no w - how

to properly handle complex criminal investigations. fidential defendant-attorney recommended a series of The DOJ offered those calls. Despite the problems, corrections to state police charges as an explanation Pedersen and Grigsby are policies, procedures and for OSP's fumbling of evi- both in prison serving life training. Some of the key dence in a quadruple mur- sentences. recommendations include: der case involving white suIn a 23-page advisory re• Establishing protocols premacists, The Oregonian view released this week, the for taking on complex cases, reported. state Justice D e partment defined as those involving State p o l ic e D e t ective said it found no evidence multiple law enforcement Dave Steele was sentenced to suggest a systemic prob- agencies, victims, defenin December to 18 months lem wit h O S P's evidence dants or jurisdictions; orgaof probation after pleading handling and case manage- nized crime, wiretaps, or imguilty to forgery and official ment. But the review team minent terrorist threats. • Ad opting the M a jor m isconduct related to t h e noted that the department's case. He also resigned. Major Crimes Section was Crimes Section's highest Steele was the lead in- u nderstaffed at t h e s t a r t standards for turning over vestigator into the nine-day of t he mul t i p le-murder evidence helpful to the derampage in 2011 of Joey investigation. f ense, making t hat t h e "As a result, only a single standard for the entire dePedersen and Holly Grigsby that claimed the lives of Ped- detective was assigned as partment, and give regular ersen's father and stepmoth- the lead in the case, despite training sessions for all OSP er, an Oregon teenager the the breadth and complexi- employees on attorney-clicouple mistakenly thought ty of the investigation," the ent privilege. • Adopting a specific polwas Jewish, and a black DOJ team wrote. "And, alman in Northern California. though Det. Steele might icy for the handling and In a supervisory opinion have been the 'best fit' at the disclosure of digital records released last summer, the time the case was assigned, and recordings. • Adopting a policy that trial judge in the federal case he had little experience insaid Steele withheld and de- vestigating capital murder requiresemployees to docstroyed evidence, backdated cases." ument evidence they have reports, and listened to conT he DO J r e v iew t e am received from a third party.

This next visit will be en- to kill the boredom, otherwise Observers said that only tirely different. they were ready to give it up," "That'll be another one he said. scattered lights were visible in the Hawaiian group of is- of my surprises," was the Others had to get by with lands during the simulated onlycomment he had on the a few bites here and there out.

marched in the parade to the attack. Authorities said that church which was led by the the 15 minute blackout "unBend band. questionably proved" the disThe G.A.R. men were G.W. cipline of the civilian populaO'Neil, J.M. Byram, Thomas

B5

Cassiuscapable

capitol, it was revealed today. of genuinecompassion

He says he has only one hobby — his horses.

Robinson figured it Tuesday. This first week is a taxing The only catch was that he five days of training. Smokecame inshortofthe softgrass jumpers are firefighters esat the center of the clearing pecially trained to jump into and crackled his way to the remote forest lands in inaccesto keep up their interest, al- ground through a maze of sible areas, then to march out though the bites weren't al- ponderosa pine branches. of the wilderness carrying 95 "Right at t r ee-top level to 110 pounds of equipment on ways from the fish. Eight-yearold Anthony Heath had to vie there's a little wind," Robinson their backs. with a hungry mink to hang said, assessing his jump as he And while Tuesday's jumps on to his catch. packed away his parachute. "I might have seemed challengThe derby, co-sponsored by think that's what got me." ing to an untrained observer, Bi-Mart, radio station KICE Within a matter of half an they looked easy to a group and Trout Unlimited, wrapped hour Robinson and 14 other of men and women who more up at 10 a.m., and by then the smokejumpers who parachut- often might face a parachute only thing left to decide is who ed into a clearing near Black drop onto the spine of a rocky gets to clean all the fish. For Butte Ranch had stowed away ridge — or sometimes into a Susan Heising, it was an easy their gear and parachutes, dense timber stand. That's why the training choice. heaved their packs to their "He taught them all to fish," backs and gone on their way. involves more than a series "If we're on a fire and they of jumps. At the training she said, pointing at her husband. "So he gets to take care call up and say we are bring- grounds they also practice the of all that." ing in a helicopter to bring you "let down." The "let down" is a contin-

out, it can go even faster," said Mike Fitzpatrick, operations

Smokejumpers

gency plan used when a jumpunravel knots foreman for the smokejumper er ends up caught high in the What better way to work group. branches of a tree, sometimes 'Ittesday's parachute jump more than 100 feet above the out seven months' worth of kinks and stiff muscles than was part of a week long re- ground. It i n v olves attachto parachute out of an airplane fresher course for the veteran ing a 150-foot rope to the at 1,500 feet and aim yourself smokejumpers who staff the tangled parachute, clearing at a forest clearing the size of U.S. Forest Services Redmond away loose parachute lines a baseball diamond. Air Center firefighting base and slowly rappelling to the At least that's the way Jeff each summer. ground.

/ g

PE

J

/

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/

/

P/

25 YEARSAGO For the week ending June 6, 1990

Lidle lass lands largest lunker

It is a network of miles of

Cassius Clay, the world's One of the small fry caught unchallenged master of blus- the biggest lunker Saturday lead to air raid shelters and ter, bravado and baloney, also when more than 50 j u nior is linked at key points with can be capable of genuinely anglers tried their luck in the the city's subway system, it is warm compassion as a pitiBend Jaycees Kids Fishing sard. fully humbled Sonny Liston Derby. Some of the passages, built is due to discover within the T hree-year-old Cind y under canals and under the next two weeks. Heising took home the prize Spree River, lead to woodClay has made up his mind for the biggest fish after landed suburbs where Berliners to "do something" for the ing her trophy — a 13 t/4-inch would be comparatively safe beaten, nearly forgotten Lis- whitefish. In fact Cindy is a from air bombing. ton and plans to pay him a member of the prize-winning These modern catacombs, special visit at Liston's Den- Heising family, which had two designed to permit life as nor- ver home before leaving on a first-place winners in different mal as possible during an air vacation with his wife either age divisions and hauled in a raid, were built with the ut- in South America or the West total of 14 fish. most secrecy and many peo- Indies. Earl Heising said his chil"Nobody cares about him dren owed their success to ple here do not realize that their homes and gardens rest any more, but I do," said Clay, his secret weapon — the fresh above the passages. referring to the broken, dis- caught crawdads he slipped All the average person couraged man he knocked on to their hooks. knew of the underground out in a local ice hockey arena Elsewhere in Drake Park, system was that shelters were last Tuesday night. youngsters were tempting the "I don't want to say any- trout and whitefish with evbeing provided under all new buildings as they were built. thing about him," the cham- erything from worms to white pion snapped when news- corn. All together, the fourMock attackagainst men asked hi m w h ether hourcontestproduced 35 fish, Honolulusuccessful h e thought Liston wa s a l l one pair of pliers and a few A squadron of " i nvad- through now. "You guys will tangled lines. ing p l anes" s u ccessfully take good care of that. But Parents stood by to bait "bombed" Honolulu and part I'm gonna visit him in a week hooks and untie knots, but of the battle fleet in Pearl or so. I got something good it was the little nippers who Harbor during Army maneu- for him. He's really gonna be were doing all the fishing. vers last night although the surprtsed." And when you're that young, city was almost completely Prior to t h eir f i rst f i ght, waiting for a fish to bite can be blacked out. Clay also paid Liston a visit at hard work. "It is if you're a kid. Sitting Aided by bright starlight, his Denver home. Clay came the bombers dropped flares with his entourage late at and waiting is real frustratat their targets. They at- night, horns blaring and arms ing," said Ed Neuwmann, tacked from such a height waving and caused such a whose daughter Kelly brought subterranean passages that

that the noise of their motors

disturbance that Liston had

in a rainbow trout just in the

was inaudible and searchlights could not pick them

to order him and his party off

nick of time.

his front lawn.

"She caught it just in time

J

~ ' l l


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided by ACOH Weather, lnc. ©2015

I

'

i

TODAY

I

TONIGHT

HIGH

MONDAY

TUESDAY

Very warm with plenty of sun

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record High Low

S2 46'

70 40'

Mostly sunnyandvery warm

Clear and mild

50'

i~

95' in 1 926 27' in 1963

EAST:Sunshine will be the rule todaywith high pressure aloft tracking overthe state.

Mostly sunnyandvery warm

I

Seasid 63/52

Cannon 61/52

/

/66

Portland

he Oaa

lington 97/61

es

ew o

Meac am Loehne

dleton '"

9

• • 85/51

J un 24 J u l 1 Tonight'6 sftfr:After sunset, the bright star low in the NW is Capella of Auriga.

High: 97 at The Dalles Low: 39'

Bandon

at Meacham

I

5

3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.

POLLEN COUNT Wee ds L

~

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

Fields • 88/52

• Lakeview

89/53

86/49

Yesterday Today Monday

McDermi 87/49

Yesterday Today Monday

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108

~g e

~g s

Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 424 4 0 77% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 14615B 73% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 7 4 B61 86% 4S contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 29658 67Vo National high: 102 Prinevige 100166 67Vo at Redding, CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low:2e Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 313 at Baraga Plains, Ml Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1450 Precipitation: 2.51" 111 at Garrison, ND Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1S50 Little Deschutes near LaPine 86 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 27 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1S

~1 06

Reservoir C rane Prairie

233 94 11

FIRE INDEX

Bed/v 'e ~ Redmond/Madras ~o Sisters ~ p ne ille ~ Ls Pi ISI h ie ~

88/52

Rome 90/55

Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday

WATER REPORT

Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.

• Burns Juntion

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 71/52/0.00 68/54/c 67/52/pc La Grande 84/48/0.00 87/53/pc92/55/s Portland 88/6 1/0.0089/60/s 88/57/ s Baker City 82/44/0.00 87/49/pc 92/51/s L a Pine 80/40/0.00 87/55/s 91/55/s Prinevige 88/ 40/0.0090/54/s 91/54/pc Brookings 79/57/0.00 71/56/c 70/57/pc M edford 94/5 7/0.00 98/64/s 101/66/pc Redmond 86 / 46/0.0091/52/s 95/54/s Bums 85/50/0.00 88/50/pc92/55/s Newport 57 /46/Tr 62/51/c 61/50/pc Roseburg 93 / 59/0.00 94/62/s 95/63/s Eugene 88/52/0.00 89/55/s 90/54/s No r th Bend 61 / 48/0.00 67/55/c 67/54/pc Salem 91/56/0.00 90/58/s 91/56/s Klamath Fags 83/50/0.00 89/53/pc 93/56/s O n tario 93/55/0.00 93/60/pc 97/63/s Sisters 84/41/0.00 92/52/s 96/54/s Lakeview 81/48/0.00 86/49/pc 90/53/s P e ndleton 90/ 5 4/0.00 94/62/s 98/61/s The Dages 9 7 /64/0.00 97/63/s 99/62/s

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

Crooked R.below Prineville Res.

85/51

86/54

city

The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmtiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low,

G rasses T r ee s ~y h i gh v d t

Klamath

92/5

Yesterday Today Monday

Jordan Vgey

Frenchglen

'eo/53

• Ashl nd 'Falls

71I5

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

Medfo d

Bro ings

UV INDEX TODAY ~ B

• Ch nstmas alley Marsh 87/55 ss/54 • Paisley • Chiloquin 88/50

76I

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

Riley BB/50 88/49

eeaver Sjlver

94/62

Gra 64/ a Gold ach ®

86/57

Roseburg

66/54

0'

B

• FortRock Cresce t • SS/53

67 5

YESTERDAY

Q J un 9 Jun1e

5 I~

Very warm with a blend of sun and clouds

~ 208

~3 03

~4 08

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~ 508

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dd dd

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81/eo

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83/66 P

78/6

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Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 90/66/0.00 92/68/s 92/68/s Akron 77/60/Tr 84/68/pc 79/62/t Albany 71/59/0.48 76/57/pc 74/65/1 Albuquerque 86/64/Tr 87/63/pc 85/62/pc Anchorage 60/46/0.12 61/47/pc 58/47/pc Atlanta 89/69/0.00 eont/t 86/71/t Atlantic City 70/57/0.1 0 73/55/s 79/69/1 Austin 90/66/Tr 91/65/s 92/68/pc Baltimore 80/61/Tr 78/61/s 85/69/t Billings 80/59/Tr 81/60/s 88/62/s Birmingham 90/66/0.00 92/71/s 87/71/t Bismarck 76/63/0.17 83/55/s 87/61/s Boise 89/57/0.00 90/63/t 95/66/s Boston 67/52/0.09 65/49/s 71/62/t Bridgeport, CT 78/58/0.05 70/55/s 73/64/1 Buffalo 67/54/0.00 82/66/pc 73/60/1 Burlington, VT 66/52/0.04 75/58/pc 71/64/r Caribou, ME 64/50/0.05 70/48/s 62/50/r Charleston, SC 91no/0.00 85/68/1 88/Tl/s Charlotte 90/62/0.02 86/67/1 88/69/pc Chattanooga 89/65/0.00 91/70/s 88/68/t Cheyenne 75/52/0.08 65/47/1 74/52/t Chicago 71/52/0.00 80/63/1 80/61/c Cincinnati 80/65/0.03 86/68/pc 77/62/t Cleveland 67/60/0.00 84/68/pc 78/61/t ColoradoSprings 79/54/0.06 73/51/1 72/52/t Columbia, Mo 83/63/0.00 88/69/pc 83/65/1 Columbia, SC 92/67/0.00 89/69/1 eono/s Columbus,GA 91/68/0.00 91/71/t 89/70/t Columbus,OH 79/61/0.25 86/69/pc 78/62/t Concord, NH 74/53/Tr 75/47/s 73/61/t Corpus Christi 91n2/Tr 90/73/pc 91/74/s Dallas 92/71/0.00 93/69/s 93/70/s Dayton 78/64/0.00 86/70/pc 77/63/1 Denver 76/52/0.09 71/51/t 77/55/1 Des Moines 77/66/0.00 84/64/pc 87/65/pc Detroit 72/54/0.00 81/67/t 80/61/pc Duluth 59/43/0.11 75/55/1 77/54/pc El Paso 97n2/Tr 89/67/pc 90/73/t Fairbanks 66/47/0.13 67/47/pc 65/45/sh Fargo 74/62/0.58 78/60/t 82/61/pc Flagstaff 65/48/1.02 72/37/s 77/43/pc Grand Rapids 73/53/0.00 75/62/t 78/56/pc Green Bay 73/44/0.00 77/60/1 77/57/1 Greensboro 87/62/0.00 82/67/pc 86/69/pc Harrisburg 78/65/0.02 78/62/s 84/67/1 Harfford, CT 77/57/Tr 75/51/s 76/64/1 Helena 84/51/0.00 86/57/s 90/59/pc Honolulu 88/72/0.00 86n2/pc 85/73/pc Houston 93n2/0.00 93/70/s 91/72/pc Huntsville 93/65/0.00 91/71/s 87/69/1 Indianapolis 76/61/0.00 86/69/c 78/62/t Jackson, MS 91/71/0.00 91/70/s 90/71/t Jacksonville 89/66/0.00 88/67/t 89/68/t

.O

w York 8/69 ington

e

63/57/0.12 63/48/s 81n2/0.00 75/64/pc Auckland 55/48/0.06 57/49/sh Baghdad 108/82/0.00 106/81/s Bangkok 100/84/0.04 98/82/t Beijing 83/67/0.00 85/60/pc Beirut Teno/0.00 79/71/s Berlin 89/63/0.09 74/52/pc Bogota 66/50/0.09 66/49/1 Budapest 84/50/0.00 86/61/s BuenosAires 72/64/0.04 68/50/s Cabo San Lucas 95/76/0.23 83/74/r

79/57/pc 90/67/0.00 93n2/s een4/s 81/64/0.00 87/68/pc 78/63/t 87/67/0.32 82/60/pc 87/63/s eonu0.05 92n5/pc 91n3/pc 72/58/0.00 80/63/pc 85/65/pc 86/66/0.00 90/73/pc 79/67/t 74/47/0.00 79/61/1 79/58/pc senonr 91n5/s 89n2/pc Miami 87/76/0.02 87n6/t 87n5/pc Milwaukee 63/47/0.00 77/62/1 79/58/t Minneapolis 79/59/0.00 79/62/1 82/62/pc Nashville 91/64/0.00 91n0/s 86/67/t New Orleans 91/73/0.00 91n5/t eon5/t New YorkCity 76/60/0.19 73/59/s 78/67/t Newark, NJ 78/61/0.15 73/56/s 81/68/t Norfolk, VA 77/65/0.00 77/64/s 87n1/s OklahomaCity 90/67/0.00 91/67/s 87/67/t Omaha 85/69/0.39 83/63/pc 87/65/s Orlando 91/69/Tr 89f/1/t 91n1/t Palm Springs 96/66/0.00 101n4/s 106nT/s Peoria 81/58/0.00 85/67/1 84/64/t Philadelphia 81/64/0.05 78/59/s 84/70/t Phoenix 97/73/0.07 99ft6/s 104n9/pc Pittsburgh 76/63/0.00 85/68/pc 78/62/t Portland, ME 73/50/0.06 68/48/s 64/58/r Providence 74/58/0.00 72/48/s 72/62/t Raleigh 88/59/0.00 83/66/s 88/71/s Rapid City 76/59/0.02 78/55/pc 84/60/s Reno 83/49/0.00 88/61/pc 92/63/s Richmond 86/62/0.00 81/63/s 89/71/pc Rochester, NY 64/53/Tr 82/66/pc 75/62/1 Sacramento 89/57/0.00 94/63/s 99/67/s St. Louis 85/62/0.00 91n3/pc 86ne/t Salt Lake City 79/61/Tr 77/58/pc 83/62/s San Antonio seno/rr 91ft1/pc 91n2/pc San Diego 71/62/0.00 73/63/pc 76/65/pc San Francisco 74/57/0.00 72/56/pc 77/58/s San Jose 79/55/0.00 82/61/pc 86/63/s Santa re 85/61/Tr 82/55/pc 81/54/pc Savannah 89/68/0.03 87/68/t 88no/s Seattle 85/56/0.00 83/58/s 82/56/s Sioux Fags 81/66/0.01 79/58/pc 83/62/s Spokane 86/54/0.00 90/63/s 91/61/s Springfield, Mo 88/64/0.00 90/69/pc 82/65/t

93

so

<Wt

Yakima Yuma

d~era e ~ L

L L

Source: USDA Forest Service

8

eon4/t eon5/t

99/73/s 96/74/pc 93ft1/s 87/69/1 80/66/s 87n3/pc 92/70/0.00 92/67/pc 85/66/pc 96/54/0.00 100/63/s 100/62/s 94/66/0.00 totn4/s 103n8/s

Wichita

I

Mecca Mexico City

62/46/pc 76/64/t

61/50/pc 108/84/s 98/82/t 89/66/s

84n5/s

• )

L

73/50/0.00 77/64/t

Tampa Senefrr Tucson 99/68/0.00 Tulsa 93/69/0.00 Washington, DC 85/65/0.00

69/48/s 64/48/c 86/62/s x+8etee 3 64/54/s ej/73 • eshvu Los An les 83/70/c 91/7 arlotw •\ I Cairo 84no/0' . 00 94nsts 101/73/s Phoen Anchorage Albuque ue kl s homa Ci 9 5 • 8 7 Calgary 77/52/0.00 78/54/s 82/50/s • 99/76 9 41/4 n 0 87/63 Cancun 90n3/0.00 89/73/s Sen5/pc Bv Ihehe Atla 7 /43 • Osua El Pa Dublin 59/46/0.07 59/42/pc 56/41/pc 9 1 J es/6 9/6 Edinburgh 55/48/0.15 58/41/pc 57/41/pc 69/ Geneva 88/61/0.40 80/61/1 78/58/t o@nattrlu, New Orleans do Harare 71 /48/0.01 72/45/pc 73/46/s io ' 86/72e w « 3/TO 1/75 Hong Kong 88/81/0.07 90/84/sh 91/84/sh o~ X Chihuehue Istanbul 73/66/0.06 76/65/1 75/64/c 90/ee Jerusalem 76/58/0.00 87/63/pc 96/67/s Monte y 87/49 Johannesburg 56/33/0.00 57/40/s 62/44/s Lima 76/63/0.00 74/65/pc 74/65/pc Lisbon 88/63/0.00 86/67/pc 84/65/pc Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. London 66/47/0.00 67/49/s 65/47/pc T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 91/59/0.00 92/63/pc 92/66/s Manila 97/80/0.00 93/81/t 93/80/1 72/54

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 57/49/0.12 59/46/r 59/44/r 84/66/0.12 86/66/pc 84/64/t

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis

r

Amsterdam Athens

Yesterday Today Monday

City

slifsx 3/43

3/59 iladelphis

Sek eh ehclvco

~ 10 0 8 ~ 1 1 03

Que 71/5

d d d v

%%6

Bots

~a g e ~9 08

' ttedte ~Ttatnder Bay

83/58

89/eo

~7 0 3

d d d d d

78/54

3

Remaining warm with plenty of sunshine

Yesterday Today Monday

• 94/ 2 CENTRAL: Sunshine andy • 97/63 Mc innvie 8/57 Joseph • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" and unseasonably Gove nt • upi Condon 2/57 Cam 87 53 Record 0.44" in 1941 warm air are in store Lincoln 95 union 87I Month to date (normal) 0.2 4" (0.19") today with high pres- 63/52 Sale • pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 5.66 " (5.21 ") sure in control. 90/5 • /62 'Baker C Iilewpo 82/45 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 2" 0/55 62/51 • Ngtcli e 87I49 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Plenty of sun9 0/55 O IV R I 6 SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 90/53 • John shine and high heat 62/51 91/57 • Prineville Oay 6/49 Today Mon. tario will stretch across the 90/64 • Pa lina 87I54 Sunrise 5:23 a.m. 5:23 a.m. 9 60 region today while the Floren e • Eugene 58 • Re d Brothers Sunset S:45 p.m. S:46 p.m. coast remains cool. 66/52 Valee Su iVere 88/54 Moonrise 12:00 a.m. 12:37 a.m. 92/61 Nyssa • 88/ 4 Ham ton C e Moonset 10:50 a.m. 11:59 a.m. La Pine 93/60 Juntura Grove Oakridge 3 Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES last New F i r st Full 91/57 89/55 /56

v

44'

'ity'

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiga Hood 97/62 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

ria

Tigamo •

PRECIPITATION

10 a.m. Noon

44'

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

TH U RSDAY

92cr

LOW

54' i i ' i

WEDNESDAY

O

109/86/0.00 115/90/s 115/90/s 75/59/0.09 78/53/pc 79/52/pc Montreal 68/48/0.00 74/58/pc 74/62/r Moscow 68/43/0.00 77/56/pc 69/51/s Nairobi 71/63/0.24 73/58/c 75/57/pc Nassau 79/76/1.02 84/74/t 85/74/sh New Delhi 106/81/0.00 107/85/pc 110/87/pc Osaka 76/58/0.00 80/63/pc 77/68/r Oslo 61/48/0.42 60/46/pc 58/45/pc Ottawa 66/46/0.00 73/60/pc 75/56/1 Paris 73/55/0.00 72/50/s 70/51/s Rio de Janeiro 82/67/0.00 83/69/s 83/68/s Rome 86/63/0.00 84/64/t 82/63/pc Santiago 66/39/0.00 69/39/s 67/38/pc Sao Paulo 79/59/0.00 78/59/s 77/59/s Sapporo 64/50/0.00 65/57/pc 73/58/c Seoul 82/52/0.00 82/61/pc 80/59/c Shanghai 85/67/0.00 79/70/c 75/69/r Singapore 81/80/0.40 85n9/t 88/79/t Stockholm 66/52/0.02 62/46/pc 60/44/s Sydney 62/51/0.00 69/53/s 71/54/s Taipei 86ne/0'.08 89/79/pc 93/79/c Tel Aviv 80/63/0.00 85n1/pc 95n5/s Tokyo 70/59/0.27 74/67/pc Tenotc Toronto 63/52/0.00 70/63/pc 77/58/c Vancouver 73/55/0.00 73/55/s 73/54/s Vienna 82/59/0.00 86/65/pc 84/60/1 Warsaw 82/50/0.00 79/56/pc 68/53/pc

WEST NEWS

ShoshonePaiute fishers learn traditional spearing By Rocky Barker

ancestors lived for part of the

Idaho Statesman

year. About 1,700 of the more than 2,000 tribal members live on thereservation,which was

BOISE, Idaho — Salmon are svvUTTTT ttng in the Owyhee River forthe firsttime since 1928,

and Shoshone Paiute tribal fishermen are catching them in

Nevada. The historic event, engi-

Switch now to an overall 5-star t Providence MedicareAdvantage Plan.

l

established by presidential order in 1877 and expanded in 1886 and 1910. The location was

i

ti

i

p i cked

in part because of the salmneered in part by Buster Gib- on that swam in the Owyhee son, the vice chairman of the River running through the Shoshone Paiute Tribes Busi- reservation. ness Council, restores for now But development during the the spring chinook salmon that 20th century chipped away migrated into Nevada for cen- at the migration route for the turies before dams cut them off great fish that came from the from the Pacific. Working with Pacific, up the Columbia and the Idaho Department of Fish Snake rivers and finally up and Game and federal fisher- the Owyhee, a nearly 900-mile ies officials, the tribe placed journey. The last run vvas 1928, 199 salmon collected in a trap befOre OWyhee Dam ConstruCbelow Hells Canyon Dam and tion closed off the river. It was held temporarily at the Rapid completed in 1932. River Hatchery near Riggins. Then Idaho Power built The fish were released May Brownlee, Oxbow and Hells 28 after the tribe held a sacred Canyon dams in the 1950s and "first salmon ceremony," the 1960s. The required fish paslast celebrated 87years ago. sage system failed, killing tens "We celebrated with cere- of thousands of salmon headmony, we did it with prayer, we ing for tributaries such as the did it with song," said Shoshone Owyhee. Paiute Business Council chairIdaho Power convinced fedman Lindsey Manning. eral regulators to allow it to Severalelders areoldenough offset the blockage with hatchto have memories of salmon as eries, whichhaveprovided fisha child. But three generations eries throughout Idaho. But the have lost the harvest that pro- deal ended what few salmon vides both spiritual sustenance runs had survived into Nevada. and healthy food, which fed In 2007, then-Senate Majoritheirancestorsforcenturies. ty Leader Harry Reid of NevaWhen the 3-foot-long fish da asked federal regulators to arrived, some of the elders had require Idaho Power to provide tearsin theireyes.The day be- passage to salmon and steelfore,tribal leaders sponsored head above its Hells Canyon a spearing workshop to teach complexon the Snake Riveras traditional fishing methods to part of its new license. members who have not had the Commission officials said in

Our overall 5 stars mean you can switch plans anytime without penalties. Attend one of our meetings to learn more or to enroll,

call 1-855-210-1 588 or visit us at www.ProvidenceHealthPlan.com/centraloregon. Service is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday through Friday (Pacific time).

Redmond Senior Center 325 NW Dogwood Ave. Redmond Wednesday, June 10, 10:30 a.m.

Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road Bend Wednesday, June 17, 2 p.m.

PROVIDENCE Health Plan

same chance to fish salmon as

2005 that Idaho Power would other Idaho tribes, such as the not be required to indude fish

Shoshone-Bannock W eirs were placed on

a

passage in its application for a new 50-year license for the

5-mile stretch of the river south three dams b ecause water of Owyhee, Nevada, on the res- quality above the dams was ervation to keep the released

too poor to support salmon and

salmon there. They are expect- steelhead. But it still has not ised to remain through the end sued a license because of unreof the month, until they spawn

solved issues on water tempera-

and die. Only tribal members ture and water qualityissues. are allowed to fish. Fish and Game was able to The Shoshone Paiute live on complete the necessary prothe 289,819-acre Duck Valley tocols this year, but there is no Reservation 130 miles south guarantee it willcontinue every of Boise, where many of their year.

" Medicare evaluates plans based on a 5-star rating system. Star ratings are calculated each year and may change from one year to the next. Providence Health Plan is an HMO and HMO-POS plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Providence Health Plan depends on contract renewal. A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation

of persons with special needs at sales meetings, call 1-855-210-1588 (TTY:711). H9047 2015PHP129 ACCEPTED


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

Sare.'-" ~4aP.'

Photo by Barb Gonzalez /For The Bulletin

LEFT: Operational from 1934 to 2006, the historic Cape Arago Lighthouse sits

on a desolate island connected to the mainland by anarrow causeway. On the nearby rocks of SimpsonReef, a variety of marine mammals, including sea lions, harbor seals and elephant seals, are often seen. ABOVE: A competitor sauces his barbecued, skin-on chicken thighs before presentation to judges at the BBQ, Blues & Brews fest. Judges ascertain whether the meat is cooked thoroughly by checking that its juice is clear, regardless of whether

there's redness around the bone.

• Annual festival is another reason to explore the CoosBayarea By John Gottberg Anderson«For the Bulletin

Oregon Dunes National Recreation~ Area

PA CIFI C OCEAN

• Glasgow

NORTH BEND• orth Bend

hat carnivoredoesn'tlove a barbecue?

Empire

The aroma of chicken, ribs and brisket, basted in savory sauces and slow-cooked for

Coos Bay

Sunset Bay State Park

hours over charcoal or mesquite, teases one's senses like a honeybee tickles a flower. When

Coos Bay

those smells mingle with maritime scents carried by coastal breezes from Oregon's largest natural

CoosBay

arleston

harbor, the result is an annual festival — in this case, BBQ, Blues 8 Brews by the Bay.

hore Acre State Park

Held beside Coos Bay on Memorial Day weekend, and taking over the spacious south parking lot of The Mill Casino Hotel in North Bend, the 2015 event drew 39 barbecue specialists who came from as

South Slough

O RE G O N •Bend Coos Bay

Cape Arago State Park

far away as Kansas City to compete for $13,000 in cash prizes. Greg Cross / The Bulletin

With music by an Arizona

blues band, and a beer garden that offered samples from 21

regional breweries (Three Creeks' FivePine Chocolate Porter won the people's

choice award), the event drew throngs of local residents and coast visitors.

Learning how

three-hour, Friday afternoon certification course, we

pork ribs, pork shoulder and beef brisket — and scoring

combined.

learned the do's and don'ts of

them for taste, tenderness

adjudicating, which we discovered was a very long way that meat isn't easy. from the backyard grill. Our training was provided We would be judging by the Kansas City Barbeque fourbasiccategoriesofbarSociety. During an intensive, becued meats — chicken,

and appearance. We were prepared in particular for

Simmons told us, "is very subjective and therefore very hard to teach." He suggested keeping in mind the "five tastes": sweet, sour, salty, bit-

My visit, accompanied by photographer Barb Gonzalez, wasn't play. It was work: We were judging. Eating all

things to look for in each cat-

egory, even as scoring was weighted to make taste more important than the other two

Yet taste, instructor Mark

NORTHWEST TRAVEL Next week: Seattle Restaurants

ter and umami, or savory.

SeeCoos Bay/C4 PAID ADVERTISEMENT

JUST A COUPLE

Aut oraimsto rotect icu t-to-reac can ons By Mac McLean The Bulletin

Bonnie Olin spent eight days kayaking through the upper Owyhee Canyonlands with her husband, Mike

Quigley, in 1993. "That was a life-changing event for me," said Olin, who has visited this remote place more than 40 times since her

first trip, wrote a book about her experiences and is now

Oregon. It was once called

and may intentionally or unintentionally damage its fragile desert environment.

the "Grand Canyon of Ore-

But it's also a bad thing, she

gon" byTime Magazine and is home to more than 200 spe-

said, because people are usually less motivated to protect,

cies of wildlife and more than

or encourage their elected

Owyhee River and its tributaries in Idaho, Nevada and

500 archaeological sites that are still visited by members of the Shoshone and Paiute Indians.

working to protect it. "I was

The region is remoteOlin and her husband spend two to three hours making

hooked on the great beauty of the place, and felt compelled

their way down the last 10 to 20 miles of unfinished roads

to write about it."

leading to their favorite put-in or take-out points — and ex-

Located at the junction of Idaho, Nevada and Oregon, the Owyhee Canyonlands is a desert ecosystem that spans more than 9 million acres along the banks of the

tremely difficult to reach.

Olin said the canyonlands' remoteness is a good thing because it limits the number

of people who visit the area

MORE INCHES

officials to protect, areas with

21

which they don't have a direct connection.

Olin and Quigley sought to solve this problem when they wrote and published "The Owyhee River Journals" in January 2013.

"The primary purpose of my book was to raise aware-

Submitted photo

Wearing a red shirt, Bonnie Olin

sits on top of a canyonedge overlooking one of three rivers that flow through the Owyhee

Canyonlands.

ness of the great bounty in

this region in hopes people might find it worthy of pro-

from the area along with

tecting in the future," Olin

journal entries she wrote

said of the book, which features Quigley's photographs

chronicling 15 of their trips. SeeOwyhee/C6

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C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

M $+ESTON

K' + ~ L7

For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinga,nniversary orbirthday announcements are availableatbendbuiietin comimiiestones F.ormsand photos must b e submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestones@bendbulletin.com, 541-633-2117.

D esi nin t e a By Cara Sullivan Martha Stewart Living

All about rentals: Whether you're seeking forks or fire pits, these tips will help you create a singular look for your ceremony, reception and afterparty. A ssess your needs: I f you're having a wedding at home or in a park or backyard, you may have to bring in everything — from chairs and tables to g enerators, bathrooms and tents. Most full-service venues and event

spaces, on the other hand, supply all the basics, plus linens and tableware. "That

doesn't mean you have to use them, though," says Sarah Westervelt, of New England

Country Rentals, in Hanover, Massachusetts.

mos are so last century. For

essentials, see if your venue will charge a fee for working with outside goods (some do, some don't), then peruse the

way, you'll have some idea of the look you're going for, which can inform the website

design. Setting it up on the early side also means you can

reunite withowners

The Associated Press L AS

include the URL on save-the-

Ofelia K i r ke r

dates, if sending. Get personal ... to a point:

wedding rings, but she'll S alas, said the rings were be wearingthe treasured unearthed years later when

Your site will be yet anoth-

jewelry for her 64th wed-

G u t i errez hired someone to

er reflection of you two as a couple, but that doesn't mean posting a dissertation-length bio of yourselves. While it's tempting to gush about your love — getting married, after all, is the sweetest expression of it — showing a little

ding anniversary. "It feels like we're get-

clean her yard. By t h a t time, the Kirkers

ting married again," said

h a d l eft Santa Clara. Gutier-

restraint means those details

you do highlight will resonate even more. Play up your palette: We've said it before, and we'll say it again: Use the same colors

lost he r

inthe 1960swhileshewas living in the Grant Coun-

ty village of Santa Clara, reports

she might get a better deal. As Planning a backyard bash a general guide, you'll spend Partying "en plein air" about 50 cents per plate, $5 for and "chez vous" — comes -

a standard Chiavari chair and

with its own set of challeng-

$10 for a linen tablecloth. Think big for basics, small for special effects: The larger national operations are best for stocking up on the usual suspects, including tables, chairs and tents (they generally carry a wide, and deep, selection). Smaller local companies sometimes specialize in single categories, like lighting or antique china, and typically deliver only within their

es. Bicoastal event designer Lyndsey Hamilton shares how to play up your home advantage. Set a r e alistic budget: "Hosting a wedding at your home, or someone else's, is

area.

existing infrastructure, you

Just remember: If you can dream it, you can probably

have to think about securing things like refrigeration, a

rent it — and for a fraction

caterer-friendly kitchen and

intimate and personal, but,

contrary to popular belief, it's unlikely to save you money. That's because almost every-

thing has to be brought in. Unlike for a venue with an

of the cost of buying it. "Peo- portable restrooms, all of ple are often surprised by the which carry extra costs." quality and style of what's Anticipate rain: "Unless available," says Megan Pro- you're marrying in a place by, owner of 12th Table, an like Napa Valley, where it only rains about three days

pany in Nashville, Tennessee, a year, reserving a tent is a that carries specialty items, must. My policy is, if there's such as fur throws and leath- a 30 percent or higher chance er-toppedcoffeetables. of precipitation five days out, S pend wisely: With s o we'll plan on putting it up. much variety, it's easy to get Tent-company reps can also carried away. But put your help estimate how many peodollars toward items guests ple you can comfortably host, will actually touch, like nap- and ensure that the tent is kins and glasses, suggests placed close enough to power Proby, and scale back on and water sources — a hose doesn't count! If

t h at's not

stationery and signage. As for plants. Have the grass cut photos, what you upload need short the day before so blades not be professionally shot, but aren't poking up through the do choose ones that fit your dance floor and, if guests will site's scheme and don't have be walking on the lawn, put distracting backgrounds. footwear requirements on Cover the basics: In a peryour website." fect world, wedding invitaKeep guests comfortable: tions are kept forever. In re"It's always a nice touch to ality, most are thrown away set out baskets of hand fans, well before the big day rolls plastic heel covers and bug around — and that's exactly spray. For our events, we also why it's important to put the usually spray the yard two who, what, when and where days before, and surround the on your site. tent with citronella candles Add the details: There's no on the day of." need to pad envelopes with Prioritize parking: "First, superfluous information if contact city hall about any you don't have the budget for parking regulations. Then, it. Print your URL on enclospend the money to hire va- sure cards, then guests can lets; they'll ensure the park- go straight to the site for anying operation runs smoothly. thing relevant: directions to And don't forget your neigh- the venue, dress codes for all bors: Let them know your events, hotel and babysitting plans in advance so nobody info, a curated list of things to has a conniption on your day. do in the area — you get the If they're friendly types, have idea. them over for cocktails and Link to your registry: It's ask if they'd be willing to of- bad etiquette to mention your fer use of their driveway or wish list on the invites, which yard. Better yet, invite them to is exactly why you should onthe wedding!" line. Not only will invitees exRent that tent: Reserve a pect to find it there, but you'll tent early, advises Hamilton. also be making their lives "In summer, tent companies easier by supplying links that often sell out — don't wait un- allow them to click through til the month before." and shop. Let guests RSVP: Most sites Building a wedding website let loved ones respond to the The goal of every good site: wedding and all the ancillary Give guests the info they need events, too. Even better, if to prepare for your affairyou're hosting activities that don't include everyone, you and drum up excitement in the process. can customize your site so Launch it right: Start think- only the chosen can see that ing about y ou r s i t e a f t er info.

Guti e r r ez's daughter, Edna

her 83-year-old husband, rez didn't know how to reach Robert Kirker. them, said Salas, so she put It's "unbelievable to be the jewelry in a small blue wearing them again," said box. Ofelia Kirker, 82. "They S alas found that box i n had been gone for so long. April. It's wonderful to h ave "It puzzled me because I them back." knew they weren't my mom's She believes the rings r i ngs," she said. "So I got on tumbled out of her pocket the phone, and I called my

such as orchids and potted

serve in advance and name

She n e v e r d i d , a n d s h e

— It's been decades since never replaced the rings.

up with a luxury BMW, Mer-

cedes or Tesla town car (opoli. com). Unlike other car-service apps, it allows you to re-

you find them.'"

C R UCES, N . M .

your getaway, have Opoli roll

ask your caterer to rent it-

t hings that b lend i nto t h e

you've chosen a venue. That

can suggest ones that won't — and fonts for that matter wilt i n h eat an d h u midity, — that will also appear on

your price, ensuring a smooth If you see something you love, trip to happily-ever-after.

event-design and rental com-

our reams RingsIostfor decades

background, such as table- possible, you'll need a generacloths. Keep in mind, less is tor and portable water." more: "Beautiful foundation Prepare for sun: "A tent can pieces,like sofas,are farmore also be useful on a bright and important to the overall aes- hot day to provide air-conthetic than a thousand tiny ditioning and shade. Station knickknacks," she says. waiters inside to welcome evGet it in writing: Sign a eryone with iced tea and wacontract that clearly spells ter. In a warm climate, avoid out the drop-off and pickup scheduling the event for the times, who is responsible for hottest part of the day (usuwashing dishes before return- ally early afternoon). Instead, ing them and the company's plan to have your cocktail policy on broken or stained hour near dusk — guests can goods. "Damage is common. mingle while watching the Many a guest has stumbled, sun go down — and work merlot first, into the white lin- backward from there." en couch," Proby says. "UsuChoose alfresco-friendly ally the client pays a replace- food and flowers: "Considment fee only if an item can't er catering options that can be repaired." And that's peace be prepared outdoors, like of mind when the wine starts grilled fish and beef. For flowing. flowers, hardier is b etter. Hitch a high-style ride: Li- Work with your florist, who

If you want to order those

wares of local and national businesses, like Classic Party Rentals and Party Rental Ltd.

0

m o m a n d a sked her about t h e r i n gs . Sh e s aid t h o se

w edding rin g s belong to Ofelia

the Las Cruces Its a Sun-News. mjrgCle T hey wer e + • f ~ u nearthed i n a yard there years Our Share ago and h ave Df pUf UpS f inally mad e ~ d d~ y their way back to her t h anks bu t t h iS is to an observant

yard worker, one woman's sharp memory and her d aughter's

Kirker."

She

pas s ed

the box on to the

Kirkers' d aught er-in - law, w ho worked at a local

g rocery sto r e . The b ewildered daught e r - i n -law

Upftgfgg "

k new

noth i n g

about the r i ngs

— Robert Kirker, and called the old-

husband to er couple. "We were all persistence. surprised w h en Kirker had a we got the call," habit of taking the match- Robert Kirker said. But he ing white gold and dia- w a s skeptical that the rings mond rings off and wrap- were actually theirs until the ping them in tissues while daughter-in-law d escribed she cooked, placing the t h em. tissues in her pocket. "I So the Kirkers travelled to said'Bemorecarefulwith Santa Clara to reclaim the your rings or you'll lose r i ngs and meet Edna. "It's a miracle," Robert them,'" said her husband. And then she lost them. Kirker said. "We've had our She r e membered

Ofelia Kirker

h a v - sh a r e of our ups and down,

ing them in her pocket b ut this is uplifting." at church and suspected

Th e c o u ple lost an infant

they had fallen near the d aughter in a house fire and, home of Romana Gutier- l ater, a granddaughter and rez,where the couple al- great-grandson in a 2012 car ways parked before cele- crash. brating Sunday Mass. Salas said her mother, who In a panic, Kirker went i s now 90, was happy for the to Gutierrez's house and

began searching in the

K i r k e r s.

"She closed her eyes and

dlrt.

j ust s m iled. Sh e

was so

"Ofelia told her that she

w i t h t hem now," said Kirker,

"Mrs. Gutierrez came p leased they were finally up to her and said, 'What t u rned over to their rightful are you doing, Mrs. Kirk- o w ner," Salas said. er?'" Robert Kirker said. "I've got to be real careful

lost her wedding rings, w ho will be celebrating her and Mrs. Gutierrez said, 64th wedding anniversary in 'Well, good luck. I hope D ecember. Visit Central Oregon's

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Wells, of Bend, will celebrate their 60th wedding anniversa-

tion for a Southern Califor-

nia technology firm. Mrs. Wells is an alumna of Delta Gamma. She enjoys creating artwork and spending

ry with a trip to California to visit family. The couple were married June 11, 1955, in Long Beach, time with her children and California. They have three grandchildren. sons, Mark (and Suzi), Don They have lived in Bend for Jr. (and Gretchen), all of Bend, 22 years where they have been

earned an MBA, BsC, BA.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

, IleW eC IlOO

Of ISIle cill

C3

W O WS

By HugOMartin eLos Angeles Times

ANAHEIM, Calif.

-

n a rainy spring night, Disneyland technology guru Chuck Davis paced along Main Street, overseeing a rehearsal of a new fireworks and light show for the park's 60th anniversary celebration. Projectors, lasers,fireworks

ny needed to boost attendance

and audio equipment were assembled to create a show that displays well-known Disney characterson the facade of Main Street buildings while

at Disney California Adven-

music blares and f ireworks

the vehicles in the Radiator

I

s

ture, it spent an estimated $1.1 billion to open Cars Land in 2012, stuffing computerized

controls into things such as

rocketover Sleeping Beauty Springs Racers ride. AttenCastle. It is one of three attrac- dance grew nearly 10 percent tions that have been revamped

in 2013 — better than the 1.5

for the celebration. But the music booming

percent increase at neighboring Disneyland, according to

through the outdoor speakers

an estimate by the accounting

was cutting in and out, and the animated images were not perfectly aligned on Main Street's buildings. "If it was easy, everyone would be doing this," Davis quipped as he took notes of the glitches.

and engineering firm Aecom. Hardcore Disney fans say

Sixty years after Walt Dis-

h,'"

they don't mind the use of ad-

Allen J. Schaben/LosAngeles Times

vanced technology in new at- Disneyland debuts its new Disneyland Forever fireworks show in celebration of the theme perk's 60th anniversary. The new show featractions as long as the park tures 3-D projections and a new song. does not alter older rides.

"Let them do some fancy new technology but don't disturb history," said Steve

ney opened a theme park pow- Kwate, an annual Disneyland ered largely by gas engines, pass-holder from Chicago. electric motors, pulleys and Other theme parks have gears, Disneyland is jumping also turned to new digital into its seventh decade with technology to draw in visiheavy use of laser mapping, tors. Universal Studios Hollyhigh-definition pr o jectors, wood and Knott's Berry Farm LED lights and infrared tech- in nearby Buena Park are nology to tell Disney's classic launching their own a t tracstories. tions this summer that rely The heavy reliance on dig- heavily on 3-D projections, inital wizardry gives the park frared targeting systems and the flexibility to upgrade its at- 360-degree screens. "The theme park industry is tractions primarily by installing new software instead of so big," Gurr said. "But they rehaving to tear out steel beams, main dog-eat-dogcompetitive." mortar and plywood. At the same time, park op"It's like a movie house. erators need to avoid the tempYou just change the movie tation to overuse digital gimevery once in a while," said micks and wind up with an Bob Gurr, 84, one of Disney's attraction that has no story or original imagineers and now a plot.

sound engineers and computer land digital server. technicians. The most advanced technol-

Disney officials declined to discuss how much they spent to upgrade its parade, fireworks show and "World of Color"water spectacular for the celebration, which started last month. But Walt Disney

Vls SBld.

Using lasers that scan the

surface of the buildings and structures, technicians created a virtual 3-D landscape that

was uploaded into a Disney-

park attractions dazzle the

created a new "World of Color" show, hosted by actor Neil Patrick Harris and Mickey Mouse, whose images appear on

guests. "In a way, it's no different than when Walt opened Disneyland because he was using technology that was cutting edge at the time," said Tom Staggs, chief operating officer of Walt Disney Co. "That has been our approach since the beginning." When the Burbank compa-

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU

6 4 8 5 1 3 9

72 35 19 98 24 67 43

9 6 2 4 7 1 8

5 1 4 2 3 8 7

3 8 7 6 9 5 2

4 2 5 7 6 9 1

music. At Disney California Adventure, Davis and his crew

I

7 86 5 9 1 3 2 4 ! SUDOKU IS ON C6

At Disneyland, Davis began to piece together the technology for the new "Disneyland Forever" fireworks show 18

months ago. The showrequired

C A S E A D 0 B E T U F T

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

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FEATURING TABLETOP DECOR, PLATES, SERVING DISHES, PITCHERS. CVPS. SALT a PEPPER AND OTHER CERANIC DECOR DOES NOT INCLUDE DECORATIVEDRAWERPUUS

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developing weather patterns on a laptop computer.The show can continue during a rainstorm but the crew won't launch fireworks during heavy wind. All the elements of the show are synchronized with a digital timer that the stage manager starts two minutes before the show is scheduled to begin.

BUS H E L

JUMBLE IS ON C6

B A H B A L I T

DOES NOT INCLUDESEASONALDESIRTNENT

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including pyrotechnic experts,

Answer:

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HomeAccents .'.-'„'";::.-,

WALL a TABLE

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Remember Father's Day!

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SOLUTION TO TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD B O T S

Main Street, where half a doz-

• Decorative Crosses

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE

18 ' 79 63 3 1 85 42 56 ;

2 513 6 4 8 9 7

throb in sync with the parade

Some of the animated imag-

es were borrowed from dassic en men and women sit at comDisney and Pixar movies, but puter terminals and consoles,

watching the show on 14 flat-

WALL a TABLE

Co. reported investing nearIn addition to the new firely $1.2 billion in its domestic works show, Disneyland has theme parks and resorts in launched a new parade that 2014, up from $1.14 billion in uses 1.5 million LED lights atwith the lights pulsating to the rhythm of the music. Infraredtechnology embedded in guests' Mickey Mouse ears triggers lights in the ears that

control room on the second floor of the Lincoln Theater on

• Mlrrors

company in Burbank.

The investment is likely to pay off, especially because Disney plans to present the new attractions through the end of the year. Disney executives say the company has long had a history of investing heavily in advancedtechnology to make

chines were all wired into a

gie from the "Finding Nemo" movie.

WALLa TABLE

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tached to floats and dancers,

into Mount Wannahockaloo-

• Men's Netel, Wood. Resln 8 Ceramlc Decor

emotion and experience has to come first and has to transcend that technology," said Dave Cobb, vice president of creative development for T hinkwell

2013.

other dips were custom drawn forthenewfireworks show, Da-

used toprogram projectors to Vls SBld. "This show is four times the ogy employed in the fireworks cast moving images onto the show is the projection mapping surface of the buildings and technologywe have ever put on used on Main Street buildings attractions to create optical the street," he said. "It's much and other structures in the illusions, such as Winnie the more involved." The projectors, lasers, firepark, such as Sleeping Beauty Pooh bouncingoffa ledge and Castle and the Matterhorn, Da- the Matterhorn transformed works, music and snow ma-

"At the end of the day, the

theme park consultant.

Special software was then

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

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Chicken barbecued by Greg Marshall of Coos Bay's own Elkhorn BBQ & Food Truck won third place against national competition at the BBQ, Blues 8 Brews by the Bay festival. The event raised more than $8,600 for local nonprofits, according to organizers. •a

s Photos by Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

Low tide at Cape Aragoexposes intertidal pools where a variety of life forms — invertebrates, shellfish, crustaceans and small fish — can thrive. Parents and children take advantage of such times to search for life amid the barnacles and seaweed.

CoosBay Continued from C1 Each of the meats was to

be judged according to its own nuances. Chicken, for instance, can be white or dark meat, with or without skin-

but the skin should be crispy and the meat moist. If there's redness around t h e b o n e,

the juice must be clear for a judge to be certain that it isn't undercooked.

Pork ribs are cooked properly if the meat easily pulls a way from t h e b o ne, b u t

doesn't fall off. Mushy is overcooked; anything less than tender is undercooked.

Pork shoulder, which typically is served either pulled (shredded), chopped or sliced, calls for the "top of the mouth test": The meat should fall apart with little effort, but not

dissolve, when one's tongue forces it against the roof of

one's mouth. With beef brisket (specifically not corned beef), a judge may administer a different test: He or she may pick up a slice and stretch it, to see how

easily it pulls apart. Ideally, the meat will not fall apart, but will separate with little effort, indicating that it is tender but

has retained its moisture. In fact, judges were told to

eat only with their fingers. Plastic forks were provided only for serving off larger plates. Yet a prime directive forbids finger licking! Paper towels and water are provided

for cleanup. Judges may not drink alcohol before or during the competition; they must not fraternize with barbecue teams nor consult with fellow judges for their opinions until after they have registered their marks. How strict are th e other

guidelines'? Here's an example: Garnish and sauce are con-

sidered optional in presenting nia sea lions, whose barks may meats, but there are specific be heard for long distances, rules governing both. Green but the most intriguing are the lettuce, parsley and cilantro giant elephant seals, so named Judges register their opinions of pork rib samples —their appearance, taste and tenderness —on are accepted as legitimate gar- for their prominent snouts. Al- score sheets. Ribs are considered to becooked properly if the meat easily pulls awayfrom the bone nishes; kale and red lettuce, though they breed on the cen- but doesn't fall off. among others, are not, and will tral California coast, they haul disqualify an entry. If sauce out at Cape Arago for three is used, it must have been ap- weeks at a time to molt their with exhibit space, a research dren, he said. products carried the economy plied directly to the meat, not fur and upper layers of skin library and bookstore, a theSmoot described the region for decades more. served on the side. Again, this — a necessary step in their ater and a waterfront plaza for as "pretty but gritty." Indeed, The town's biggest attracis grounds for disqualification. growth to 2 tons in weight and maritime demonstrations. Coos Bay (the largest town on tion may be the Coos Bay 15 feet in length, we were told. Museum D i rector F r a nk the Oregon coast with 16,000 Boardwalk. Beginning at the CapeArago T he overlook i s w i t h i n Smoot showed us through the people) and North Bend (with east end of Anderson Street Training was Friday. The Shore Acres State Park, em- color-coded exhibit galleries, 9,500 more) have always been in the heart of downtown, it competition took place on bracing the erstwhile 1920s es- designed to present a variety blue-collar towns. Defined by extends for s everal b locks Sunday. In between, Saturday tate of lumberman-shipbuilder of interpretive "stories" from the largest natural harbor be- along the western edge of the afternoon was the big day for Louis Simpson. At the heart coastal, urban-tidewater and tween Seattle and San Fran- historic waterfront. Interprevisitors, who paid just $1 per of this park is a formal botan- upland regions of Coos Coun- cisco, the region was inhabit- tive plaques describe the bussmall taste from any and ev- ical garden, planted in such a ty. "We want the gallery space ed for thousands of years by tle that occupied this corner erybarbecue tent. manner that flowers are al- to be atrigger for cross-gen- the Coos and Coquille tribes. of Oregon ... especially after But Gonzalez and I u sed ways in bloom. There are daf- erational conversation," said The earliest pioneer settle- the completion of a railroad Saturday to get away from the fodils in late winter, rhododen- Smoot, a recent arrival from ments were established in the from Eugene (via Florence) fragrant smoke and explore drons and azaleas in spring, Wisconsin. 1850s. By 1900, Coos Bay (the in 1916. Until that time, it was other pleasures of the greater roses in summer, and dahlias The new museum is sched- harbor, that is; the town was much easier to reach Coos Bay Coos Bay area. in late summer and early au- uled to be operating on a full originally named Marshfield) by ship than by land: A stageOur first stop was Cape tumn. And during the holiday schedule by the July Fourth had become an important coach road from Roseburg, Arago State Park, at the end season, more than 300,000 col- weekend, Smoot said. Admis- shipping center for lumber only 58 miles east, typically of the 15-mile Cape Arago ored lights illuminate the early sion will be $8 for adults, $6 and coaL By 1950, the coal took 28 hours to negotiate. Highway running southwest evenings. forCoos residents,$4 forchil- mines had closed, but forest Continued next page from the urban centers. We There's no visitor access timed our visit to coincide with to the nearby Cape Arago low tide, when the tidepools Lighthouse, which has a specof the rocky shoreline were tacular location on a desolate fully exposed. Mint-green island connected to the mainsea anemones, juice-purple land by a narrow causeway.

HIGH LAKES WELCOMES

sea stars and other denizens

But the view of the structure

of the not-so-deep sheltered themselves in crevices while

(operational from 1934 to 2006) is great from just south awaiting f u rther p r otection of Sunset Bay State Park, its from onrushing waves. Par- beautifully framed crescent ents and children trod upon inlet a favorite of kayakers as barnacles that encrusted the well as overnight campers. rocks, searching for glimpses Between Cape Arago and of the tiny fish and crabs that Empire, Coos Bay's west-end skittered through the pools. neighborhood, is the l ittle Larger creatures gathered town of Charleston, a working offshore on Simpson Reef, a fishing community. The small series of partially submerged harbor here is packed with rocks just a couple of miles trawlers and other vessels of north. At a roadside overlook, all sizes. Harbor seals lounge volunteer naturalists encour- on the docks where crab and age visi tors to use scopes for tuna boats come t o m o or, close-ups of California and while charter vessels welcome Steller sea lions, harbor seals landlocked anglers who pay and a handful of elephant for a morning on the water. seals. Loudest are the CaliforScheduled to open this summer is the new Charleston

across Boat Basin Drive. The two-story aquarium-museum

will have sections on marine ecosystems and d eep-water species; on the evolution

of whales and other marine mammals; and on the diversity of marine life, from giant squid to tiny worms.

Sights of CoosBay Another new museum is

on the verge of opening its doors near downtown Coos Tugboats are a common sight in Coos Bay, the largest natural harbor on the Pacific coast between Seattle and San Francisco. A fleet of tugboats waits by downtown's boardwalk to escort giant vessels to a wood-chips plant at the mouth of the Coos River.

Bay. The Coos History Museum, located on 4 acres where Front Street meets U.S. High-

way 101, is a $5.3 million, 11,000-square-foot building

Dr. Johnson who has practiced medicine in Central Oregon for 32 years, and the last 15 years'with Johnson at Cade Family Practice, has joined High Lakes Health Care at the Upper Mill Clinic. We are very happy to have him join our team of professionals. When Dr. Johnson is not seeing patient's, he likes playing hockey, soffball and tennis He is also an avid Ducks fan, but his major focus outside of patient care is his family.

To schedule an appointment, call

541-389-7741

Marine Life Center, a project

of the Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, a University of Oregon marine research and teaching facility that is just

HI IAKES H ea l t h C a r e DEDICATED TO SERVING CENTRAL OREGON

Bend Upper Mill Bend Shevlin Park Redmond Sisters


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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A judge's "plate" displays six pieces of barbecued chicken, one bite taken from each, during the competition tasting. Although most chefs offered chicken thighs, a few prepared drumsticks; there was no restriction on white or dark meat, or whether chicken was served with or without skin.

Sea anemones harvest nutrients in a tidepool in CapeArago State Park, 15 miles southwest of Coos Bay. Sea stars and other denizens of the not-so-deep are best viewed during particularly low tides in

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lowa chef "Big Moe" Cason offers up local oysters with his private-recipe barbecue sauce from a grill behind the main festival area. A total of 39 participants from as far away as Kansas City took partin the event at North Bend's The Mill Casino Hotel.

Expenses forfwo Gas:Bendto North Bend, roundtrip, 496 miles at$3/gallon: $59.52 Lodging:TheMill Casino, three nights: $372.60 Dinner:Tokyo Bistro: $62.50 Breakfast: Portland BagelCo.: $15 Gas:North Bendto CapeArago, round-trip, 32 miles at$3/gallon: $7.68 Parking pass:state parks: $5 Dinner:Shark Bites: $25 Movie: Egyptian Theatre: $20 Breakfast: Plank House(The Mill): $35.72 Supper: BBQ fest: $10 Breakfast: Kaffe101: $12 TOTAL: $625.02

LODGING • The Edgewater Inn. 275 E. Johnson Ave.,CoosBay; www. theedgewaterinn.com, 541-2670423, 800-233-0423. Rates from $99 • The Mill Casino, Hotel8 RV Park. 3201Tremont Ave., North Bend; www.themillcasino.com, 541-756-8800, 800-953-4800.

Rates from $100.Restaurants include the PlankHouse;three meals daily, moderate • Red Lion Hotel CoosBay. 1313 N. Bayshore Drive,CoosBay; 541-267-4141, 800-733-5466,

http://redlion.rdln.com/coosbay. Rates from $83

DINING • Benetti's Italian Restaurant. 260 S. Broadway,Coos Bay; www.benettis.com, 541-2676066. Dinner everyday, modIfyoil go erate • The CoachHouseRestaurant INFORMATION • Oregon's Adventure Coast. 8 Lounge. 604Sixth Ave., Coos 50 Central Ave.,CoosBay; 541Bay; www.thecoachhousecoos269-0215, 800-824-8486, www. bayor.com,541-267-5116.Lunch oregonsadventurecoast.com Monday to Saturday, dinner

every day, moderate • Kaffe101. 171 S.Broadway, Coos Bay;www.facebook. com/kaffe-101, 541-267-4894. Breakfast and lunchMondayto Saturday, budget •PortlandBagelCompany.3385 Broadway St., North Bend;www. portlandbagelcompany.com, 541-756-2221. Breakfast and lunch every day,budget • SharkBites Seafood Cafe.240 S. Broadway,CoosBay; www. sharkbitescafe.com, 541-2697475. Lunchanddinner Monday to Saturday, budget to moderate • Tokyo Bistro. 525 Newmark Ave., CoosBay;www.tokyocoosbay.com, 541-808-0808. Lunch anddinnerTuesdayto Sunday, moderate

Shore Acres State Park embraces the erstwhile1920s estate of lumberman-shipbuilder Louis J. Simpson. At the heart of the park is a formal botanical garden, planted such that flowers are always in bloom: daffodils in late winter, rhododendrons in spring, roses in summer and dahlias in fall.

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Don't miss this very popular and requested tourl Spend one night at Spirit Mtn. In Grand Rondel Receive one breakfast, food credits and slot play!

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RENO/CARSON CITY/ VIRGINIA CITY SEPT.12-15 I $319 ppdo Includes historic VT Railroad, receive free slot play/food credits, 3 nights lodging downtown Reno!

ACTIVITIES • Coos History Museum. 1210N. Front St., CoosBay;www.cooshistory.org, 541-756-6320 • Shore Acres State Park. 89814 Cape AragoHwy., Charleston; www.shoreacres.net, 541-888-

FALL FOLIAGE CRUISE SEPT.25-OCT31 I Starting at $1,999 ppdo

The new CoosHistory Museum is scheduled to be operating on a full schedule by July Fourth weekend. The $5.3 million, 11,000-square-foot building, located on 4 waterfront acres, fea-

tures exhibit space, a research

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www.AgateBeachMotel.aoRI From previous page

is displayed in another pavilion. A fleet of tugboats still

a macaroni-and-cheese com- Overall honors went to Roofthat we tackled our first major petition. Three more samples top BBQ of Riverside County, challenge as certified judges were delivered to each judging California. with the Kansas City Barbe- table. At my table, mercifulOur certification now enque Society. ly, only one of the trio left me ables us to work as judges at In fact, this was kind of a wanting a second bite. any KCBS-sanctioned event on big deal for barbecue fanatics. An awards presentation the planet — including seven

lines up astride a wharf at the

Of hundreds of events each

A c h a insaw-carved w a r memorial, installed in 2002, is

at the heart of the boardwalk today. A historic wooden boat

during our recent visit, here

north end of the boardwalk, year in the United States and waiting to escort giant vessels overseas, the KCBS (not the to a wood-chips plant farther San Francisco radio station) up-harbor, at the mouth of the sanctions only three annual Coos River. competitions in t h e P acific In the waterfront plaza be-

are in Renton, Washington, (the first weekend of April)

ute to the city's favorite son,

and in Central Point (the last

Steve Prefontaine (1951-1975), weekend of June) — so there a famed distance runner and was a lot of prestige involved before his untimely death. A couple of blocks away, the newly revitalized 1925 Egyptian Theatre reopened just under a year ago with its pha-

for the winners.

We were assigned to separate tables of a half-dozen

judges each. Treated paper "plates," divided into six sections, served as the vessels

raoh-like art motifs touched

from which we sampled each up and repainted. We visited of the four types of meat subfor areprise of the 1980 John

mitted b y

Belushi-Dan Aykroyd movie, "The Blues Brothers." It seemed more than appropriate for presentation during the BBQ, Blues & Brews event.

Each sample was coded. After taking a single bite (saving room for more), we picked up our scorecard and recorded a score that ranged from 9 (excellent; nothing is perfect) to 2 (inedible). A mark of 6 is considered average.

Judgmentday To the north, The Mill Ca-

sino extends into the bay, marking the otherwise indistinct boundary between the cities of Coos Bay and North Bend. Owned by the Coquille (pronounced "KO-kwel") Indian Tribe, this hotel-casino complex (incorporating an RV park) was opened in 1995 on the site of a former Weyerhauser Corp. sawmill and dock. It was here that we stayed

N wport, O tR 1 0' ' 755-- 7 4

Price subject to airfare availabili

a ' t Segcmotel

European countries and Aus-

each category and present- tralia. No, it doesn't pay. But at ed a grand champion trophy least we know we're well fed! t o the competitor with t h e

— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

highest total from all meats.

Northwest — the other two

side a new visitor center, a stylized monument pays trib-

advocate for amateur athletes

honored the to p s cores in

Private,vintage,oceanfront getaway

t h e c o ntestants.

In fact, everything was bet-

ter than average. I was not in the minority in scoring nearly every sample a 7, 8 or 9. These scores were added up by a special committee that deleted the

worst of the six judges' tallies for a final reckoning. With two dozen filling bites

of meat in our stomachs, we were then submitted to further torture: The BBQ, Blues &

Brews organizers had added

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C6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

SU D O K U

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in eastern California near the border with Nevada 120 miles

"I have my faults," Cy the Cynic told me, "but making mistakes isn't one of them. I agree with that famous expert who defined a mistake as s omething th a t , i n si mil a r circumstances, he wouldn't do." "Everyone makes mistakes," I said mildly. In a money game, Cy found himself partnered with Wendy, our feminist and his mortal adversary. Cy became declarer at five hearts. He ruffed West's king of spades, drew trumps, ruffed dummy's last spade, and led the A-K and a third club. East won with the ten and led the queen, and Cy ruffed. The Cynic next led a diamond to d ummy's queen. East w on and returned a diamond, and when Cy's finesse with the ten lost, he was down one. " You make i t i f y o u p i tch a diamond on my queen of clubs," East pointed out. "You end-play me." "I don't mind admitting I could have done better," Cy growled, "but my playgave me about a 95 percent chance." "It takes a man to admit he's wrong," Wendy piped up. "It takes a woman to prove it. You had a 100 percent play." Could yo u m ak e f i v e h e arts however the East-West cards lie? After South draws trumps, he takes the A-K of clubs, leads a trump to dummy, returns the last spade and

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discards his last club. The defender who wins must give South an 11th trick. If, for instance, East wins and leads a c l ub, South d iscards a diamond. If West has the queen of clubs, South can discard a second diamond on the jack of clubs. If instead West wins the spade and leads a diamond, South plays low from dummy to lose only one diamond trick. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

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Continued from C1 Olin and her husband also developed an hourlong presentation — including a video they shot while on a 2006 kayaking/hiking tour of the region — discussing their trips in the canyonlands that they've given at venues across the Pacific Northwest since

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April 2013. Olin will give such presentations this c oming week at three Central Oregon locations (seeuIf you go").

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©2015 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.

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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3

and then flattened out. At plac-

of moonlight, the landscape their waterways gets any high- es like Artist's Palette, reached awes. On an afternoon walk er, or to survive in sufficient via an undulating one-way into the vast salt flats that look numbers if the water evapo- drive through Candyland-like hills, different minerals reachwest to Tucki Mountain, I felt rates before theymature. a silence as immense as any Death Valley became a ing thesurface have colored on Earth. Nothing interrupted national monument in 1933, the hills pink, green, orange that stillness — not buzzing fly through the efforts of the Pa- and yellow. Mosaic Canyon or flapping bird, not rumbling cific Coast Borax Co. The com- looks as its name implies. And motor or ringing cellphone. pany built the Furnace Creek you can walk on beach-like And a t B a dwater Basin, Inn, a masterpiece of Spanish sand dunes at Mesquite Flats. From North America's lowcrusting salt crystals grew out mission a r chitecture m a de of cracks in the ground like a from stucco and local stone, est spot, Badwater Basin at 282 glittering fractal painting. The as a tourist destination after feet below sea level, it's possisalt seemed to bloom like coral its local mines had closed. The ble to see one of its highest, the in a sea from which all the wa- inn, which opened in 1927, was 11,043-foot Telescope Peak. At ter had been drained. envisioned as a way to contin- thoseelevations,snow precauDeath Valley is a place of ue to use the narrow-gauge tions are advised. extremes — the hottest, driest, railroad the company had built The best months of the year lowest place in North America to transport the mineral to the to visit are December through — and one of the most inhospi- coast. March, when the average high table places I've visited. To promote theinn — and temperatures range from the to 90 degrees. From The names of its natural gain public support for the m id-60s S eptember, attractions — Dante's View, a rea's designation as a n a - May t h rough Devil's Cornfield — evoke tional park — the company the average highs are in the hellish images. Vast swaths also sponsored "Death Valley three digits; the thermometer of the park, the largest in the Days," a radio and, later, televi- reached 129 in June 2013. June lower 48, are beyond reach of sion series about the Old West. is the month the Furnace Creek cellphone service.Several of Its most famous host was Ron- Golf Course traditionally hosts the Heatstroke Open. Distancits prime sites can be reached ald Reagan. I'd never really thought es between the scenic highonly by four-wheel-drive vehicles over washboard grav- much about borax, a white lights are long, and roadside el. It is the only place I've crystal that was found on the services are available only at a ever seen a "urine chart" in a surface at some spots in the few locations, so fill up on gas public restroom, with a col- valley, before my trip. But it and carry water and snacks or-coded index to the stages of was the white gold of the des- withyou. Our favorite hike was up dehydration. ert. Its discovery in the 1880s Andyet. brought miners and mine own- Golden Canyon to a natural There arecomfortable oa- ers to the region. More than a red-wall amphitheater, then ses: The Furnace Creek Resort, century later, it is still used in down through Gower Gulch. with its luxurious inn, favored laundry and hand soaps, as Along the way, we ascended by Hollywood glitterati, and well as toothpaste, and is an partway up a towering cliff its moderately priced ranch ingredient in flame retardants, face, called Manly Beacon, from which we could look out occupying an area that once ceramics and insecticides. housed mine workers, is the That famous brand, Twen- over the badlands to the huge most popular of three settle- ty Mule Team Borax — still salt pan on the valley floor. For sheer e ntertainment, ments to stay overnight. At sold in supermarkets — origithe Furnace Creek Ranch, the nated near Furnace Creek. At though, a visit to Scotty's Caspool is warmed by hot springs. the Harmony Borax Works, tle is worth the 53-mile drive I swam beneath palm trees now preserved, you can see from Furnace Creek. The as the setting sun painted the the old wagons that made the beautiful Spanish revival man165-mile, 10-day trip over the sion is an engineer's dream Funeral Mountains pink and a self-sustaining luxury orange. mountains to the railhead at And the human history of Mojave, pulled by those mas- home in the absolute middle of the park, from its miners and sive beasts. Not preserved are nowhere. It was neither owned nor monopolists to con men and the tents in which some of the criminals, is fascinating. The Chinese laborers lived while built by Scotty — Walter Scott, Timbisha Shoshone were the mining and starting the refin- a con man who today would be desert valley's first inhabitants; ing process. The mine office, scorned and prosecuted for his they are partners with the park the oldest building in the park, fraudulent scheme to attract service in managing the feder- was relocated to the Furnace investors in a fake gold mine. allands, and have ayear-round Creek Ranch, where it houses Rather, it was built by one of those investors, an abstemivillage at Furnace Creek. the Borax Museum. The park also provides an The park service has estab- ous, teetotaling Midwestern unusual vantage from which lished several drives and hikes life insurance magnate, Alto consider global warming: to bring visitors dose to the bi- bert Johnson. When Johnson, As the Earth gets hotter, what zarregeology ofthe region.A who had overcome a nearly happens to the Earth's hot- ranger said she had once used paralyzing back injury in his test place'? The canaries in the analogy that the Grand 20s, insisted on visiting the the coal mine may be the tiny Canyon's sedimentary layers gold mine with Scotty, a sham pupfish, found in only a hand- were like a pack of different gunfight set up to thwart his ful of warm, salty streams in coloredsticks ofgum, stacked. inspection backfired — one of the park, the last remnants At Death Valley, all those dif- the poseurs was accidentally shot — and Johnson realized of a previousgeologic era's ferentcolored pieces of gum lake. The fish may not be able have been chewed up together he'd been duped.

Owyhee

70 71

72 "Just

suspected!"

contrast to the Northeast. Even without the b enefit to breed if the temperature of

64

68 69

67

grees in February, Death Valley offers a bracing midwinter

Lindy YVaahbum/The (Hackenaach, N.J.) Record

Hikers walk along the Golden Canyon trail ln Death Valley National Park, California.

60

63

62

northwest of Las Vegas, it is so otherworldly that George Lucas filmed some of his "Star Wars" scenes there. Remote, weird and a dry 60 to 70 de-

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

Maltltings

ows outlined the strange hills

hidingplaces. Rarely have so many visited a place with such an uninviting name as Death Valley. Situated

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Tribune Content Agency

I I2 Google Groups regular II3 Uno ydosy tres I Ie "Take !n II9 Unapproachable 123 STREAM 20 TORO 12e MOUSE 21 Muslim mystics 128 Hawk's weapon 23 HOT SPOT I29 Float 25 CACHE I30 Savings 27 Outer area? choices,briefly 28 Two-IIme I31 Major road Masters champ 132 Game division Watson 133 Firesoff, say n n 30 Goicha! 134 States 3I Christmas 135 Locale in delivery Dante's fifth 32 Time-tested circle of Hell 34 24-pari epic se Eur. landmark DOWN underwhich I Web crawlers Zeus trapped e.g. Typhon 2 Tombstone 38 SPAM legend

over our heads in a pointillist vision of infinity. Moon shad-

to turn on her ultraviolet light to lure scorpions out of their

By FRANK STEWART

I I I One of fooiball's

ness. The Milky Way stretched

mal life might lurk in this austere setting, the ranger offered

Defining a mistake

109 "Gotcha!

No streetlight or passing headlights pierced the dark-

as I was wondering what aniJUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

ACROSS I Glacier Bay phenomenon 5 Bullets, In Vegas 9 Cake often laced with rum I4 Short spacesaver Ie Wet'R'Wild Hawaii locale I9 Winter runner

of Death Valley National Park.

and crevasses around us. Just

*

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3

98 Disneydoe 100 Apple, for one 101 Exasperated query I03 TABLET Ioe LP Fieldn team

full

moon, a ranger led us across an arroyo and into a canyon where miners camped more than a century ago. The crunch of boots on gravel was the only sound as ourhardyband of visitors headed into the badlands

TILEUD

"COMPUTER GLOSSARY"By C.C. BURNIKEL

ae

By Lindy Washburn

OSCIS Tnbuns CcntsnlAgency, LLC Ag RigMs Rsmned.

DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *

eau in e a

protect the area, Olin said

attempts to have a 1.9 millionacre section of the canyon-

Ifyougo What: Bonnie Olin talks

about her adventures in the Owyhee Canyonlands When: noon onTuesday at the Sisters Public Library, 110 North Cedar St.,

6 p.m. on Tuesday atthe Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NW Wall St.,

noon on Wednesday atthe Redmond Public Library, 827 SW DeschutesAve. Cost: Free Contact: Visit www.deschuteslibrary.org

This would be the third time the federal government has taken steps to protect the

canyonlands. In 1984, the U.S. Congress set out to protect the Owyhee

River's free-flowing character by adding a 120-mile section of it to the bodies of water pro-

tected by the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act of 1968.

It also passed legislation designating three sections of the canyonlands in south-

west Idahowilderness areas in 2009. These three sections — the North Fork Wilderness

Area, the Owyhee Wilderness Area and the Pole Creek Wil-

derness Area — stretch over lands declared a wilderness more than 323,000 acres.

area so it will be around for future generations to enjoy.

— Reporter:541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletitLcom


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C7

oowin t e ootste so ar wainint e wiss s By Christy DeSmith

I found none. She reclined

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

in her chair and awaited the

B ut Rigi K altbad is i n t h e midst of transition. In 2014 the

brand-new Mineralbad 5 Spa Rigi-Kaltbad opened in a glistening modern edifice — com-

performance.

My m other-in-law, Anna,

reads avidly — in a handful of languages. Born in World War II-eraBudapest, she was a bookish girl who grew up devouring Hungarian and

I stammered through "The

Awful German Language," possibly the book's most famous chapter (it was the only one I knew). Then Anna di-

Russian literature. After a stop in Holland, she moved to Lucerne, Switzerland, an idyllic

plete with cantilevered swim-

ming pools hanging off the mountainside. The spa wasn't complete

rected me to a handful of es-

when we visited, yet we were able to linger on its ultramodern veranda and sigh over the framed-up views of the Alps. Rigi Kaltbad proved a fine place to ogle feats of Swiss design. Twain stood there and gaped at Europe's first mountain cog rail, completed on

says Twain wrote after spending some time near Lucerne.

Alpine city set on a crystalline In "The Jodel and Its Native lake, and turned to novels in Wilds,"7wain recounts ascendGerman and Italian, two of the ing nearby Mount Rigi with his country's four official languag- agentin 1878. es. Later, she added English to Anna likes this essay, inpart, her repertoire. because of her affections for Anna's spoken Englishbears Mount Rigi — she can admire traces of her favorite British its grass-covered sl opes from and American writers: Jane the comforts of her garden Austen, Shakespeare and or living room. (All the othMark 7wain. For her, my hus- er mountains in her view are band, Mischa, and I were never baldfaced and jagged.) engaged; we were "betrothed." I started reading aloud: Rigi My daughter's stroller was a is "an imposing Alpine mass, "pram." And she's always ask- six thousand feet high, which ing me to "fetch" her things stands by itself, and commands from the grocery store. a mighty prospect of blue Mischa and I now visit Swit- lakes, green valleys and snowy zerland every summer. mountains — a compact and While we're there, Anna magnificent picture three hunlikes loading me up with liter- dred milesin circumference." ary references to her adopted I felt my face redden. I'm not homeland.She jabbed me in fond of public speaking, but the ribs during an early visitmore than that, the florid prose this was probably 2009 — gasp- embarrassed my Midwestern ing with laughter while point- sensibilities. "For some days we were coning me toward W. Somerset Maugham's mocking descrip- tent to enjoy looking at the blue tion of Lucerne. Lake Lucerne and all the piled"It was true that the lake was

up masses of snow-mountains

absurd, the water was too blue, that border it all around." the mountains too snowy, and

-

Mark 7wain This wasn't what I expect-

its beauty, hitting you in the face,exasperated rather than

ed from 7wain — he seemed thrilled.... Lucerne reminded intoxicated by Switzerland. him of wax flowers under glass Thankfully, the essay takes an cases," the British author wrote irreverent turn, poking fun at Rigi's yodeling shepherd boys, of Lucerne in a short story called "The Traitor." its alphorn players and Twain I loved this passage immedi- himself. After all, it took him ately. It perfectly captured my three days to reach the summit early impressions of Switzer- — most hikers can master genland, a gorgeous but oppres- tle Rigi in less than a day. sively perfect and overachievAn hour later, I was loungingkind of place. ing about Anna's living room, A few years ago Anna hand- dousing my phobias with white ed me a copy of Mark 7wain's wine while gazing out the 1880 book "A Tramp Abroad" window at the soft contours of after dinner. "To hear an Amer- Rigi's kulm (or peak). Anna re-

Mount Rigi in 1871. "It was

planted straight up the mounChristy Desmith/(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

HIkers walk near the summIt of Mount Rigi, a piace Mark Twain aso:nded and wrote about with fondness.

We each ordered a salad and a kaffeecremebefore seating marvel after marvel, miracle ourselves on a patio appointwere hiking the 6.5-mile Mark after miracle." I rolled my eyes. ed with modest wrought-iron 7wain trail just two days later. But as we walked, my eyes furniture. I untied my boots, I quickly learned that Rigi is kept wandering to the blueness wiggled my toes in the fresh steep compared with, say, the of Lake Lucerne and all the air and kicked back to enjoy famous Barr Trail on Colora- toylike steamboats sputtering an immodest panorama of the do's 14,000-foot Pikes Peak, below. Swiss Alps. In this perfect mowriter's route to the top of her favorite mountain. At A nna's insistence, we

which I had hiked in the late

'90s. The first two hours on Twain's trail were punishing: an uphill chmb via rutted paths

and an improvised, earthen staircase. Anna, age 70-plus, fared much better than I did,

though I am younger by four decades. So she scavenged in the bushes for a sturdybranch I

coulduse as my alpenstock. Hiking is an especially beloved pastime in Switzerland,

a nation veined with wanderwegen or footpaths that wind

throughthe surreal landscapes. No matter where you travel in Switzerland, you're sure to find

Mark Twain trail eased into switchbacks. We spent a com-

emerged with yet another liter-

be I ' •

TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS ... that get results!

colorsin thew aterchange and blend and dissolve, producing

As a

t o u rist d estination, ment, I felt my cynicism recede.

I grasped what 7wain meant around the time of 7wain's visit. whenhe wrote that Rigi's views Today Rigi retains the flavors "were as enticing as glimpses of the Belle Epoque, thanks to of dreamland." "I suppose we must have a strict prohibition on car traffic. As we hiked the mountain, stopped oftener to sttetch out 136 years in 7wain's wake, we on the grass in the shade and passeda string ofdairy farms take a bit of a smoke than this without driveways or even boy wasused to,for presently pickup trucks. I marveled at all he asked if it had been our idea the gravity-defying milk cows, to hire him by the job, or by the howthey grazed atop cliffs and year? He said he wasn't in such along steeplypitched meadows. a veryparticularhurry,buthe Alas, no yodelers were seen or wanted to get to the top while heard, though we encountered he was young." —Mark 3vain The trees eventually thinned a different agricultural relic: hand-painted advertisements out, revealing the hazy blue skies of a typical summer day for local alpine cheeses. Mount Rigi saw its heyday

a pleasant wanderweg marked every few meters by triangular At 3,700 feet, right around 11 yellow signs — they're affixed a.m., we came across Felsentor, to tree trunks, signposts, even a spiritual retreat center where privately owned barns. habit-clad n un s ma n euver After we had followed the wheelbarrows around massive yellow signs for two hours, the rock formations and flower

purred, with herpalm pressed

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that leans against a house," he wrote. We encountered few hikers

fortable hour or so marching ary reference to central Swit- a path framed by beech and to chest. She demanded a live zerland: a clip from the Neue spruce trees, encountering the reading. I searched Anna's face Luzerner Zeitung newspaper occasional sign inscribed with for a hint of irony, something I about the new Mark 7wam one of Twain's gushing enoften detect in her expressions. hiking trail, which traces the dorsements:"And of course the ican read Mark 7rvvvain!" she

tain with the slant of a ladder

gardens. Founded in 1999, the center didn't exist in Twain's

day — he only mentions a distinct rock formation in the area

dubbed Felsentor. Felsentor is now home to a guesthouse, a meditation hall and an outdoor

restaurantespecially forhikers.

before reaching Rigi Kaltbad. Now they were everywhere. Visitors like traveling to Rigi Kaltbad via railway or cable car before walking 2.5 miles to the summit. After Rigi Kalt-

bad, there were no more Twainthemed signs to distract us from thirsty mouths or burning

thighs. There was only a thick spread of Swiss, German and British tourists trying to coax

small children up the steep path. We started hiking in silence,

like marathoners conserving energy for the final sprint. Anna occasionally stopped to enjoy the edelweiss and other wildflowers. I paused to wonder about th e h i gh-altitude

birds or to coo over path-blocking mountain goats. We reached Rigi-Kulm a mere eight hours after we started, outpacing Twain by two full days. We mustered just enough energy to snap the obligatory

in central Switzerland. We

top-of-the-world photos for so-

wound our way through mossy scenes before arriving, finally, to a resort settlement called Rigi Kaltbad, located at 4,700

cial media. Mischa pointed east to the high mountains of Graubunden, where residents still

speak Romansch (another of Switzerland's official languagnight there. Anna, Mischa and es). Then the three of us eased Istoppedthere for our second our way to the Rigi-Kulm train lunch around 2 p.m. station, just as Twain had, and The first thing you notice waited for that magical cog rail when you reach Rigi Kaltbad to lower us home. "Well," said Anna, breaking is the architecture: lots of traditional Swiss chalets rising our exhausted daze. "We are in gradient from the slopes. surely fasterthan MarkTwain." feet. 7wain spent his second

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' ower's ars orm rus in rien s i TV SPOTLIGHT

in dozens of TV shows, in- understand, as Sikora came cluding "Boardwalk Empire," to understand in real life, the "Grey's Anatomy" and "True deadly stakes, even as they

"Power" 9 p.m. Saturdays, Starz

D etective," as w el l a s t h e films "Shutter Island" and HBO's "NormaL"

By Frazier Moore The Associated Press

But in his youth he found

couple of complicated men.

amount of time in the streets, he's whispering, 'I don't realhanging out with gang mem- ly want to die,' there's a level

s e c ond s e ason

of "Power" begins, James "Ghost" St. Patrick is plunging everdeeper into the drug trade as a way to save his ritzy New York nightclub and leave the drug world behind, while he juggles life with two powerful women: his gung-ho gangster wife and his rekindled teen love who, unbeknownst to him, is an

bers, from the time I was 12 years old," he says. "I didn't smoke marijuana until I was

Dan Hallman/Tne Associated press

Actors Joseph Sikora, left, and Omari Hardwick have complicated friend and business partner, pasts that help to portray their vulnerability on screen in "Power," Tommy Egan, who savors the the violent drama from Starz.

drug world Ghost is trying to escape.

"We are good puzzle pieces sity of Georgia, minoring in ny-and-ivory love story — a that fit together," says Sikora, drama. I wa s a 2 00-pound love story b e tween G host 38, "and have great trust in defensive back on Saturday, and Tommy, "two guys who each other when the cameras but after the season I was just can't figure out how to start rolling." performing 'Lysistrata' or "We both come from vic'Fences.'" get away from each other," says Omari Hardwick, who tim-y Catholic moms," adds Complicated. stars as Ghost opposite Jo- Hardwick, 41, with a laugh. Acting was likewise in the seph Sikora, who co-stars as "I'm a black Catholic raised blood of Sikora, who as a Tommy. in Decatur, Georgia, which working-class Chicago kid As the two actors discuss was very gang-infested, then g ot an early start i n c o mthe new "Power" season, they I went to an all-white private mercials. Since then he has make it clear that they, too, high school and excelled in logged theater credits in Chihave forged tight bonds since sports, and wrote poetry, then cago, Los Angeles and Broadteaming up on the series. played football at the Univer- way, along with appearing an

well as its film "Middle of No-

where" and features including attraction of the drug trade: I "Kick-Ass," "Beauty Shop" made all this money doing ab- and "Sparkle." But it's been a solutely nothing." long road to reach stardom. "These are things that I He recalls a girlfriend who, didn't know w hen Joe auas she saw him nearing 30 ditioned. But I could look at without much show-biz suchim and know," says Hard- cess, persuaded him to claim wick, who encouraged Siko- a backup career. He became ra to embrace his own back- an L.A. firefighter. "You go to the dishwater ground, not just the scripts' printed pages, in inhabiting to get forks and you only get his character. spoons," says Hardwick, still "I've definitely carried fire- the poet. "For two years I arms," Sikora goes on, "and I was going for something that know that feeling of getting wasn't really in my heart." shot at and hearing that crazy Then he quit. Three hours little voice: 'I could die right later, he says, he learned he now, and I don't want to die.'" had won a role in Spike Lee's Maybe that's what helps 2004 film, "Sucker Free City." give "Power" its power. (Add"Fire department, bye-bye! ing further street cred: Curtis Spike Lee job, got it!" he re"50 Cent" Jackson, who, be- calls. "Then I got n o m ore sides his role as an executive work for a while and went producer, co-stars as Ghost's homeless. But you got to go former overlord now getting through tough times to be sprung from prison.) "Pow- a really solid actor. Otherer" is powered by violence, wise, what are you putting but the two men at its center on-screen?" that small way I could see the

doesn't realize the man she aims to bust is her Jamie. Further complicating things is his lifelong best

is

of vulnerability cemented in

these bad characters." Hardwick has starred in BET's "Being Mary Jane," as

older in life, but I dealt it out, a little bit here and there. In

assistant U.S. attorney who

"Power"

"That's important," says

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Dear Abby: I am a divorced

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11- y ear-old A resource that can be helpful daughter. My boyfriend, "John," would be the Stepfamily Founand I have been together for two dation Inc. (stepfamily.org). Your mother

with

an

years, and we're serious. He is also divorced, with a 13-year-old daughter. We have tried to

be sensitive and understanding about their feelings about our recent divorces and ou r

DEAR

Aggy

former spouses can also ease the adjustment for the girls by remaining actively involved in their lives, curbing their h ostility an d n o t pitting the children against either of you. However, if that's not in the cards, then

r e l a tion-

ship, but both girls are having a difficult time coping with it. We are very loving and inclusive, so it's not as if they should feel resentful or left out. But this is starting to cause a rift in our

spect to my husband. His family seemed to interpret it to mean I think I'm less than an equal in our relationship. This is definitely not

the case. Alex and I both make sure to show respect and appreciation to each other in little ways

throughout the day. This isn't the first instance in

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enlist the help of a licensed family therapist. Blended family counseling, divorce and remarriage counseling may be nec-

change the way I interact with my

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unwelcome opinion'? — Annoyed in Round Rock, Texas

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husband. What I'd like to know is,

how do I nicely shut the conversation down when people give their

thing but normal for them. Dear Abby: My husband, "Alex," Dear Annoyed: It's possible and I are a young couple and have these relatives did not grow up the new norm and get used to it. been marriedfor fouryears.Ire- with the same formalities you are We try t o i n clude each other's cently took a trip with him to vis- used to. If that's the case, smile daughter in shared events, but it it his uncle and met one of Alex's and say, "I consider calling my ends up becoming a forced strug- cousins for the first time. husband 'Sir' a sign of respect. gle. Any advice would be greatly I was helping my mother-in-law That's how I was raised. Don't you appreciated. in the kitchen when Alex called think he deserves it'?" However, if — The New Norm me to come and look at some- the teasing doesn't stop, add, "I'm Dear New Norm: Welcome to thing on his computer. I respond- neither downtrodden nor subserThere comes apoint when they need to understand that this is

the world of blended families. As much as we would wish it, the ad-

ed, "Sir?" His cousin immediately

cause when children are involved,

To me, "Sir" is a gesture of re-

started poking fun at it, and the justment isn't always smooth, be- rest of his family joined in.

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,

In a sense,youare

getting to know each other again. AQUARIUS is a bohemian friend.

By Jacqueline Bigar

others the hows and whys of a decision, but do your best to elaborate. Tonight: Reach out to a loved one.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * Manage what is happening with clarity and directness. Others respect your approach. One-on-one relating will get the best results. Be more subtle in

— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

** * * You seem to have landed in a situation where you feel quite content. You might not be aware of the fact that others are observing you and witnessing you embrace this new opportunity. Tonight:

Takeyourbows.Someoneisgivingyoua lot of applause and praise.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) *** * Help someonecomeout of his

Open doors rather than shut them. Tonight: Relate directly to a child.

or her shell. As a result, you could be surprised by what this person chooses to sayand do. Be more open aboutyour expectations; detach, and askyourself how reasonable they are. Tonight: Catch up on some news with friends.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)

GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

how youapproach apersonal matter.

** * *

Your imagination adds a quality

of amusement toyour day.Unlessyou

want to share, you might want to hide your delight in the moment. Zero in on ** * * You have an opportunity to take what is important, and don't settle for in some news that could affect your view anything less. A friend could be unusually wild. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. of a friendship. Your sense of humor emerges when dealing with a neighbor. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You might not be sure about what to say. ** * * * You could be overwhelmed Perhaps the less said the better. Tonight: by everything you have to do, but you Where the fun is. will accomplish what you want. Pressure TAURUS (April 20-May 20) builds no matter what direction you decide to head in. You inevitably will find ** * Be aware of a commitment you havemade tosomeone.Youcan'tdisapthatyouhave too much to do and too point this person. Maintain a low profile, muchthatyou want to do. Tonight: Use and understand where you need to pitch your instincts. in more. You will gain insight because of LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) your openness and willingness. Tonight: ** * * * I nteracting with a child will Get a head start on tomorrow. make you feel like a kid again. Holding GEMINI (May 21-June20) you back could be nearly impossible, as ** * * You know what you want. Recog- you are likely to start really getting into nize that your perspective on a certain is- a groove. A friend might be jealous of sue could be different from those around the fun you are having. Tonight: Time for you. Sometimes it is difficult to explain to some fun!

ARIES (March 21-April 19)

ly not your business."

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)

YOUR HOROSCOPE

JUNE 7, 2015: This yearyou will feel more creative than you have felt in a long time. Your mind, emotions and energy work like a well-oiled machine. You will have the opportunity to go back to school to learn more or go into a different field of study. If you are single, you will intrigue quite a few people. The real question is: Who will intrigue 8tarsshowthekind you? Ifyouare of day you'8 have attached, your ** * * * O ynamic significant other ** * * Positive expresses a great ** * Average dea l of interest in ** So-so what you say and do, and vice versa. * Difficult

vient — and what I call him is real-

** * * You might not be able to make a sound judgment about a money matter. Postpone any conclusive statements for now. You might need more information. Understand that someone's resistance is there fora reason, as itallows more time for thought. Tonight: Hang out.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * You naturally absorb all the currents that swirl around you, allowing you the opportunity to decide which ones you would like to get caught up in. Be willing to pull back if you do not feel comfortable with a commitment. Tonight: Be as spontaneous as possible.

PISCES (Feb.19-March 20) ** * Know when you're best off saying little. Respond only when you need to. If you can walk away from your Sunday routine, do so. Count your change, and

be aware ofwhereyou areputting your money. Tonight: Take some time away from it all. © King Features Syndicate

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGE OF ADALINE (PG-13) l2:15, 3:05, 6:05, 9:05 • ALOHA (PG-13) 12:50, 3:35, 6:35, 9:45 • AVENGERS: AGEOF ULTRON (PG-13)12:10,3:30, 6:45, 10:10 • CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA (R) 1:10, 4:05, 7:05, 1 0:20 • ENTOURAGE (R) 1:50,4:30,7:30, 10:15 • FAR FROM THEMADDING CROWD(PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:55, 9:15 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) 12:05, 2:35, 5, 7:45, IO:20 • MAD MAX: FURYROAD (R)11:50a.m.,2:50,6:40, IO:05 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD3-0 (R) 1:10, 3:55, 6:50, 9:40 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 6:25, 9:30 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) 12:55, 3:35, 6 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 12:40, 3:25, 6:10, 9:25 • SAN ANDREAS 3-0 (PG-13) 12:30, 3:20, 6:20, 9:10 • SAN ANDREAS IMAX 3-0 (PG-13) 1, 4, 7:15, 10:30 • SPY (R) 12:20, 12:45, 3:15, 3:45, 6:30, 7, 9:20, 9:50 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) 11:50a.m., 12:20, 3:15, 3:45, 6:40, 7:25, 10:15, 10:25 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • • • •

FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 5:30, 9 HOME (PG)1:130 a.m. PAUL BLART: MALLCOP2(PG) 2:30 Younger than21 mayattend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 5 p.m. on NGC, "Ultimate Dino Survivor" — In this new special, fossils reveal the brutal life of the Tyrannosaurus rex and its cousins along with their incredible ability to heal and survive what nature threw at them. Using cutting-edge

technology, the program reveals the source of the various injuries on the dead animal and recontructs the kind of fierce battles for survival these beasts had to fight on a regular basis. One theory suggests that T. rex combined the virtually foolproof immune system of crocodiles with the high metabolism of birds. 8 p.m. on 6, "The 69th Annual Tony Awards" — Two of Broadway's major stars, Kristin Chenoweth (a nominee herself this year for "On the Twentieth Century") and Alan Cumming, team as hosts of the annual celebration of the Great White Way's shows and performances of the most recent theater

season. "AnAmerican in Paris" and "Fun Home" are the most-nominated shows with 12 bids each. The multitalented Tommy Tune receives a Lifetime Achievement honor during the event at New York's Radio City Music Hall. 9 p.m. on 6, 8, "A.D. The Bible Continues" — Saul's (Emmett J. Scanlan) decision to put forth preachings in Jerusalem

doesn't pleaseCaiaphas(Richard Coyle) — to put it mildly — in "Brothers in Arms," the

newest episode of theseries executive-produced by Roma Downey and Mark Burnett. However, others have Caiaphas in their sights, namely James the Just and Peter (Denver

Isaac, Adam Levy).Romealso is a target as the Zealots and the Ethiopians map out a strategy against the city. 10:01 p.m. on 6, 8, "American Odyssey"— From thecategory of "Be careful what you wish for," the new episode "Fubar Bundy" makes Frank (Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje) the captive of Odelle, Aslam and Luc (Anna Friel, Omar Ghazaoui, Gregory Fitoussi). However, now that they have him, they're not quite sure what to do with him. Peter

(Peter Facinelli) connects with Yusuf Qasim (Anthony Azizi). Ruby (Daniella Pineda) realizes she has business to finish. Jake Robinson and Nate Mooney also star. O Zap2it

TOUCHMARK SINCH 1980

•3

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • IRIS (PG-13) 5 • WELCOME TOME(R) 3 • W HILE WE'RE YOUNG (R)7 Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD (R)11:30a.m.,2,4:30,7,9:30 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 11a.m.,1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • SPY (R) 11:15 a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)12:45,3:30,6:15,9 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • ALOHA (PGI3) 1:45, 4, 6:1 5 • EX MACHINA (R) 7:15 • FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)2:15,4:45 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 2, 4:30, 7 • SPY(R) 2,4:30,7 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • • • •

ENTOURAGE (R) 12:10, 2:35, 5, 7:25 INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) 1:05, 3:15, 5:25, 7:35 PITCH PERFECT2 (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:05, 4:35, 7:10 SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 2:10, 4:45, 7:20

Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt.,541-416-1014 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • TOMORROWLAND (Upstairs — PG) 1, 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

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O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GOIMagazine

(541) 38R-3537


Scoreboard, D2 N HL, D4 Sports in brief, D2 Motor sports, D5 MLB, D3 Tennis, D6

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

WCL BASEBALL

ENDURANCE SPORTS

Elks get1st win of the season Nate Hunter pitched seven solid innings, and the Bend Elks built an early lead to overcome six errors in an 8-5 win over the Corvallis Knights on Friday night at Vince GennaStadium. Hunter (1-0) allowed three hits and two walks while striking out two in seven innings, and all three of the runs heallowed were unearned. The Elks (1-1) led 3-0 after the first inning and tacked on two more runs on aTyler Davis triple and aJosh Cherry single in the second. The Knights (1-1) closed the game to6-5 with two unearned runs in the top of the eighth before Christian Cavaness scored on awild pitch and Riley Newman singled homeDavis for his second RBI of the

P

Chris Horner

+ att Pl

CYCLING

igt

i

Connor NcCutcheon

e

P

CYCLING

Qn/8P.

night.

Sam Boonepitched two innings of one-hit ball for the save. The Elks finish their three-game series

Natt Lieto

with the Knights this

afternoon in a1:05 p.m. matinee.

TRIATHLON

— Bulletin staff(aport

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Beaversdismiss Robbinsfromteam

g'eaN

Oregon State forward Victor Robbins has been dismissed from the men's basketball team, The Oregonian reported Friday night. Robbins was cited for DUII in February while already suspendedfor violating athletic department policy. He had also been suspended three games during his freshman season.

>h THE CEtrf~tt t

+ PN(ieaoel5 L' ttieise+ ~ UN

)

g@@gIIII

— Bulletin staff report

NHL PLAYOFFS Lightning use2 goalies to win

Morgan Arritola

Rookie goalie Andrei Vasilevskiy relieves starter Ben Bishop twice to earn the victory as Tampa Bay beatChicago 4-3 in Game 2 ofthe Stanley Cup Final to eventhe series,D4

MOUNTAIN RUNNING

• Endurance pros havemyriad reasonsto live in Central Oregon

NBA PLAYOFFS

Iguodala OK with the bench

Farah will not abandonSalazar Mo Farah said Saturday he will not be ending his relationship with doping-accused coach Alberto Salazar,DS

And it is one of the reasons why Howe and so many other professional endurance ath-

RUNNING

letes — scores of runners, cyclists, triathletes

and cross-country skiers— make Central Oregon their home. She runsforsometimes 20 to 30 mi les They live, work and play here for many of on these training days, pounding the trails the same reasons that weekend warriors do: among craggy volcanic peaks and high alpine quick and easy access to mountain trails and wildflower meadows.

"There are so many options," Howe says. "You can run for 20 miles and not see a soul. You feel like you're in the middle of nowhere.

SOCCER Timbers win 3rd straight

TRACK 8EFIELD

That's one of my favorite things to do."

The Bulletin

The last four summers, Bend's Stephanie Howe has pored over a map and pieced together a variety of routes in the Central Oregon Cascades.

Golden State's Andre Iguodala hadplayed 806 career NBAgames before this seasonwithout coming in as areserve. Now he is coming off the bench and thriving,DS

Fanendo Adi scores two goals in the final five minutes to lift the Portland Timbers to their third straight win, 2-0 over NewEngland, D4

By Mark Morical

Stephanie Howe

roads and a robust, supportive community of

like-minded athletes with whom to train and recreate.

SeeEndurance/D6

HORSE RACING

The Bulletin file photos

SPORTS BUSINESS

pharoah makeshistory look easy A proud sports city muld soon be bereft of sports Hisloricdominance

ELMONT, NY.

A

-

merican Pharoah's feat of racing history looked like this: The

brown horse turned almost

SALLY

JENKINS

black with sweat from effort, yet in full stride he left

such an impression of ease

winner in 37 years will

that he appeared to hover

be remembered forthat

and flutter over the deep

signature sense of supple

TENNIS Two daysto win one match

sand of Belmont Park. His

ease, the limber mobility

jockey, Victor Espinoza, rode such a perfect race he seemed almost motionless,

that made something so difficult look so natural. His

Novak Djokovic will face Stan Wawrinka for the French Opentitle after beating Andy Murray in a match spanning two days,DS

line when he became a flash of turquoise silk, writhing

until he crossed the finish with joy until he threatened

to come out of the saddle on his victory lap. The first Triple Crown

By John Branch

American Pharoah's 5(/2-length victory was the

fourth-largest of the12 Triple Crown winners. Yr Horse Mar g in 973 Secretaria 1 1943 Count Fleet 1948 Citation

25 8

5'/2-length victory Saturday in the Belmont Stakes

2015 AmericanPharoah 5(/2 1919 Sir Barton 5 1977 Seattle Slew 4

was visually striking for

3 tied with

the amount of air between him and his inferiors, and

between his hooves and the ground. SeeTriple Crown/D6

3

Inside • Three keys to Belmont victory for American Pharoah,D6

New York Times News Service

OAKLAND, Calif. — There are times at this ugly concrete

like Thursday when the WarriOrSare raining 3 pOinterS f r o m the rafters of Oracle Aren a , and the opponent and the

complex next to the freeway re f eree's whistle are no match when one wonders for the roar of 20,000 IDSide why anyone would hysterical fans wear• History of rather be anywhere ing matching yellow O akland T sl nr t s else. franchises, Ast h e faithful It happens during Ds Raiders games when congregate again for the costumed inhabiGame 2 of the NBA tants of the Black Hole lustily

Fi n a l s against the Cleveland

cheer, or when the denizens of Section 149 in the outfield

Ca v aliers on this evening, one ca n not help thinking: Is this

bleachers are in full throat

might y Oakland's last hurrah

during another October rush a s one of America's great profor the underdog A's. fessional sports cities'? And it happens on nights SeeOakland /D5


D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY TERRiS

French Open,men's final

Time TV/Radio 6a.m. NBC

PREPS

BASEBALL

NCAA Tournament, Cal State Fullerton at Louisville MLB, L.A. Angels at N.Y.Yankees NCAATournament, TexasA&Mvs. TCU NCAATournament, Missouri St. at Arkansas MLB Baseball, TampaBayat Seattle NCAA Tournament, La.-Lafayette at LSU MLB, St. Louis at L.A. Dodgers NCAA Tournament, lllinois vs. Vanderbilt GOLF PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament, final round LPGATour, Manulife LPGA Classic, final round PGA Tour, Memorial Tournament, final round Champions Tour, Principal Charity Classic, final round

Baseball 9 a.m.

E S PN2

10 a.m. MLB 11:15 a.m. ESPN

noon ES P N2 1 p.m. Roo t 3 or 4 p.m. ESPN2 5 p.m. ESP N 6 p.m. E S PNU 9 a.m. Golf 1 1 a.m. Gol f 11:30 a.m. CBS 2 p.m.

Golf

10 a.m. 11 a.m.

FS1 NBC

State championships At Velcaaoes Stadium, Keizer Saturday'sGames Class4A No.10Scappoose11, No.1Henley6 ClassBA No. 7HoodRiverValley2, No.I Liberty 0 Class6A No. 4Sheldon2,No.6West Linn1

Softball State championships AtOSU SoebaoComplex,Corvaff is Today'sGames Class4A No.2McLoughlin4,No.IBanks0 ClassBA No.1 Putnam 3, No.2Pendleton2 Class6A No. 2Tualatin10,No.1Westview0(5 inn.)

10 a.m. 1 p.m. 2 p.m. 4 p.m.

WCL WESTCOASTLEAGUE AU TimesPDT

Fox Fox E S PNN

SouthDivision W L

FS1

BASKETBALL

NBA playoffs, Cleveland atGoldenState

5 p.m.

ABC

MONDAY BASEBALL

NCAA Tournament, teamsTBA NCAA Tournament, teamsTBA NCAA Tournament, teamsTBA NCAA Tournament, teamsTBA SOCCER Women's World Cup,Swedenvs. Nigeria Women's WorldCup,Cameroon vs.Ecuador Women's World Cup,United States vs. Australia Women's World Cup,Japan vs. Switzerland

10 a.m.

E S P N2

1 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m.

E S PN2 E S PN2 ESP N

1 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 :30 p.m. 7 p.m.

Fox FS2

FS1 FS1

HOCKEY

NHL playoffs, TampaBayat Chicago

MLS

BASEBALL

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Pocono Formula One,CanadianGrand Prix SOCCER Women's WorldCup,Norwayvs.Thailand Women's World Cup,Germanyvs. Ivory Coast MLS, Colorado at RealSalt Lake MLS, FC DallasatSanJose

SOCCER

5 p.m.

N B CSN

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

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Fan hurt by bat at FenWay eXPeCted to SurViVe — Afan hit by a broken bat atFenwayPark is expected to survive after suffering life-threatening injuries during a gamebetweenthe Oakland Athletics and Boston RedSox, Boston Police said Saturday. Tonya Carpenter was struck in the head bythe broken bat of Oakland's Brett Lawrie on Friday night. Carpenter is now in serious condition, her family said in a statement.

BOXING Cotto retainS IBC middleWeight title —MiguelCotto retained his WBCmiddleweight title with a devastating showing of power Saturday night, knocking out Daniel Geale in thefourth round. Cotto landed ahuge left hook early in the round and Gealewent down. Somehow, theAustralian got up, but not for long. Cotto landed a dozen more punches, missed with a fewothers, then put Geale down again with a straight right. RefereeHarvey Dockstopped the bout at1:28 of the round. Next up for Cotto (40-4, 33 KOsiafter his brilliant showing following a one-year layoff could be abig-money fight with Saul "Canelo" Alvarez later this year, afight that is pretty much already lined up.

FOOTBALL 49ers trade P Lee to BroWns — Cleveland acquired three-time Pro Bowl punter Andy Lee in atrade with the San Francisco 49ers and released punter Spencer Lanning onSaturday, movesthat complete a sweep of the Browns' specialists from last season. TheBrowns sent a late-round 2017 draft pick — ESPN.comreported a seventh-rounder — to the Niners for Lee,who madethe Pro Bowl in the 2007, 2009 and2011seasons.HisdaysinSan Franciscowerenumberedwhen the Niners drafted Clemson punter Bradley Pinion this year. Lee,32, has been one ofthe league's most consistent punters for the past decade. Hehasappearedin176consecutivegames — hewasthe longest tenured player onSanFrancisco's roster. Last season, he ranked sixth in the league inaverage yards per punt (46.8), 15th in net (39.6) and ninth in punts inside the 20.

NFL dalkS at Romo-led fantaSy SPOrtSeVent — Afantasy football-themed event in LasVegas headlined byTony Romo was called off after the NFLreiterated a policy banning appearances associated with casinos. A leaguespokesman said Saturday the NFL "reminded the players association" of the policy with the National Fantasy Football Convention event scheduled for July. In astatement on the event's website, organizers said the cancellation was "a direct result of suddenandunexpected opposition taken by the NFL concerning player participation and their perceived association with gambling for an event in LasVegas." They said they were rescheduling for next summer in LosAngeles.

SOCCER BarCelOna WinS ChamPiOnSLeague title — Barcelonawon its fourth UEFA Champions Leaguetitle in the past10 years Saturday by defeating Juventus 3-1 in Berlin. Barcelona's potent offense got on the board in essentially its first attack of the game,when Ivan Rakitic finished a series of sublime passeswith a goal in the fourth minute. Alvaro Morata equalized for the Italian club in thesecond half. But Barcelona wasback ontop in the 68th minute after Luis Suarezput in a rebound off a Lionel Messi shot. Neymaradded athird in injury time.

Canada OPenS CiiP With late Win —Christine Sinclair converted a penalty kick in the second minute of second-half stoppage time, giving host Canada a1-0 win over China on Saturday in the opening match of theWomen's World Cup in Edmonton, Alberta. Sinclair, also the captain of the Portland Thorns of the National Women's Soccer League, slotted the goal past Chinesegoalkeeper WangFei. Also on Saturday, Netherlands beatNewZealand1-0.

U.S. to Play Colomdia in U-20 WOrldCBP— Portugal strode confidently into the knockout rounds of the FIFAUnder-20 World Cup on Saturday, beating Colombia 3-1 for its third-straight win in Group C. Despite the loss, Colombia also progressed to the round of16 with awin,adraw andaloss,whichwasjustgoodenoughforsecond place in the group and ameeting with the United States on Wednesay. — From wire reports

Yakima Valey Kelowna WallaWalla Wenatchee

Begingham Victona Cowlitz Kitsap

Pct GB

1 1 1 2

2 1 1 0

0 1 1 0

1.000 .500 1 500 I .000 I

2 1 0 0

0 1 0 2

1.000 .500 1 .000 I .000 2

Wesl Division W L

Saturday'sGames Bend 8, Corvagis5 Kelowna 5,Victoria 2 YakimaValey10, KlamathFags2 Medford5,Walla Walla 4 Begingham11, Kitsap2 Today'sGames CorvaffisatBend,I:05 p.m. Kelowna atVictoria,1:05 p.m. KitsapatBellingham,3:05p.m. KlamathFals atYakimaValley, 5:05p.m. MedfordatWalla Walla,5:05p.m. Monday'sGame KlamathFalls atMedford, 6:35 p.m.

Eastern Conference

W L T Pts GF GA

D.c. United 8 4 4 28 20 15 NewEngland 5 4 6 21 20 20 TorontoFC 6 5 1 19 19 16 OrlandoCit y 4 5 5 17 19 19 NewYork 4 4 5 17 17 17 Columbus 4 6 4 16 20 21 Philadelphia 4 9 3 15 18 25 Montreal 4 4 2 14 13 15 Chicago 4 7 2 14 17 20 NewYorkCity FC 2 7 5 11 12 18 WesternConference

W L T Pts GF GA 8 4 2 26 20 11 Vancouver 8 6 2 26 18 15 S porting KansasCity 6 2 6 24 22 15 Portland 6 5 4 22 15 14 FC Dallas 6 4 3 21 18 19 Los Angele s 5 5 6 21 15 18 Houston 5 5 5 20 21 19 SanJose 5 5 3 18 14 15 RealSaltLake 4 5 5 17 13 18 Colorado 2 4 7 13 11 12

Seattle

Saturday'sGames

1 1 1 0

Easl Division W L

MAJORLEAGUESOCCE AU TimesPDT

500 500 500 000 I

Pct GB

Pct GB

NewYorkCity FC2, Philadelphia1 Toronto FC2, D.c. United1 Montreal2, Columbus1 SportingKansasCity1, Seatle 0 Orlando City3, Chicago2 Portland2, NewEngland0

Vancouver 1,LosAngeles 0 Today'sGames ColoradoatReal Salt Lake, 2p.m. FC Da la lsatSanJose,4p.m. Saturday,June13 NewYorkCity FCat Montreal, 4p.m. Columbus atLosAngeles,4;30p.m. Seattleat FCDallas, 7p.m. Sunday,June14 OrlandoCityatD.C. United,4p.m.

Women's World Cup AU TimesPDT GROUP STAGE GROUP A W L T GF GA Pts I 0 0 1 0 3 I 0 0 1 0 3

Canada Netherlands China 0 I 0 0 1 0 NewZealand 0 I 0 0 1 0 Saturday'sGames Canada1,China0 Netherlands1,NewZealand0 Today'sGames Norwayvs. Thailand,10 a.m. Germany vs. IvoryCoast,1 p.m. Monday'sGames Sweden vs. Nigeria,1 p.m. Saturday'slinescore C ameroon vs. E c ua dor, 4p.m. Corvaffis 000 001 220 — 5 4 3 UnitedStatesvs. Au stralia, 4:30p.m. Bend 320 001 02x — 8 11 6 Japan vs.Switzerland, 7p.m. Duron,Steindorf (2), Cutsforth(7), Musial(7) and Tuesday'sGames Hamilton;Hunter, Boone(8) andWolf. W-Hunter (1-0). Francevs.England,10 m. L-Duron (0-1). Sv-Boone(1). 38-Davis (1).28-Cherry Colombiavs.Mexico, Ia.p.m. 2(2),Davis1(1),NewmanI (1), Teague1(1). Spainvs.CostaRica,1p.m. Brazil vsSouthKorea7p m Thursday'sGames College Germany vs. Norway,1p.m. NCAATournament Chinavs.Netherlands, 3p.m. AU TimesPDT IvoryCoastvs. Thailand, 4p.m. Canada vs. NewZealand,6 p.m. SUPER REGIONALS Friday,June12 (Best-of-3;x-if necessary) Australiavs.Nigeria,2p.m. Saturday'sGames Switzerlandvs. Ecuador,4 p.m. Cal StateFullerton3,Lou>svile 2,10 innings UnitedStatesvs. Sweden,5 p.m. Miami10,VCU3, Miamiadvances Japan vs.Cameroon, 7p.m. MissouriSt.3, Arkansas1 Saturday,June13 Virginia 5,Maryland4,Virginia advances France vs. Colombia,10a.m. TCU13,TexasA&M4 Englan dvs.Mexico,1p.m. Florida11,FloridaState4, Floridaadvances Brazilvs.Spain, 1p.m. LSU 4,La.-Lafayette3 South Koreavs.CostaRica,4p.m. Vanderbilt13, fflinois0 Today'sGames Cal StateFugertonatLouisvile, 9 a.m. MOTOR SPORTS TexasA&Mat TCU,11:15 a.m. MissouriSt.atArkansas,noon NAluCAR Sprint Cup La.-LafayetteatLSU,3 or 4p.m. Poconu 400lineup Vanderbilt at fflinois, 6p.m. Afler Fridayqualifying; racetodayat Pecone Monday'sGames x-CalStateFuledonat Louisvile, TBA Raceway,Long Pond, Pa. x-La.-LafayetteatLSU,TBA Lap length:2.5 miles x-TexasA&Mat TCU,TBA icar number in parentheses) x-Vanderbilt at fflinois,TBA 1. (41 KurtBusch,Chevrolet,177.599. 2. (19 CarlEdwards,Toyota, 177.55. 3. (78 MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,177.522. 4. 24 JeffGordon, Chevrolet,177.211. BASKETBALL 5. (4)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,171.2. 6. (3) AustinDilon, Chevrolet,176.526. 7. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford,175.967. NBA playoffs 8. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,177.676. NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION 9. (48) Ji m mi eJohnson, Chevrolet,177.385. AU TimesPDT 10. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,177.193. 11. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,176.8. FINALS 12.I5) KaseyKahne,Chevrolet, 176.07. (Best-of-7;x-if aecessary) 13. 31)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,176.036. GoldenState1, Cleveland0 14. 1) JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,176.005. June 4:GoldenState108, Cleveland100,OT 15. 42Kyle Larson,Chevrolet,175.943. Today:at GoldenState,5 p.m. 16. 27I PaulMenard, Chevrolet,175.895. Tuesd ay:atCleveland,6p.m. 17. 17i Ricky StenhouseJr., Ford,175.699. Thursday:atCleveland,6 p.m. 18. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,175.671. x-Sunday, June14:at GoldenState,5 p.m. 19. 20 MattKenseth,Toyota,175.531. x-Tuesday, June16: atCleveland,6 p.m. 20. 88 DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,175.466. x-Friday,June19:at GoldenState, 6p.m. 21. 55 DavidRagan,Toyota,175.418. 22. 10 DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,174.832. Playoff leaders 23. 15 ClintBowyer,Toyota,174.236. Scoring 24. (9)SamHornish Jr., Ford,173.819. G FG FT PTS AVG 25. 43 AricAlmirola, Ford,174.791. Davis,NOR 4 47 32 126 31.5 26. 47 AJAgmendinger, Chevrolet,174.771. Curry,GO L 16 156 77 464 29.0 27. 16 GregBiffle, Ford,174.683. James,CLE 15 167 82 430 28.7 28. 14 TonyStewart, Chevrolet,174.652. Harden,HOU 17 129 163 462 27.2 29. 33 TyDilon, Chevrolet,174.317. Ellis, DAL 5 52 15 130 26.0 30. (51)JustinAllgaier,Chevrolet,174.031. Griffin, LAC 14 140 76 357 25.5 31. 46) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 173.873. Beal,WAS 10 81 49 234 23.4 32. 40) Landon Cassil, Chevrolet,173.772. Butler,CHI 12 94 59 275 22.9 33. 6) TrevorBayne, Ford, 173.695. Paul, LAC 12 95 48 265 22.1 34. 7) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet,173.41. Aldridge,POR 5 37 32 109 21.8 35. 38) DavidGigiland,Ford,172.467. Liffard,PO R 5 39 25 108 21.6 36. (34)Brett Moffitt, Ford,172.437. Nowitzki,DAL 5 38 26 106 21.2 37. 23J.J. Yeley,Toyota,owner points. Rose,CHI 12 93 35 244 20.3 38. 98 Josh Wise,Ford, owner points. Leonard,SAN 7 52 27 142 20.3 39. 35 ColeWhitt, Ford,owner points. DeRozan,TOR 4 32 14 81 20.3 40. 26 Jeb Burt on, Toyota,ownerpoints. Lopez,Bro 6 43 33 119 19.8 41. 83 MattDiBenedeto, Toyota, owner points. Thompson, GOL 16 118 33 317 19.8 42. (32)TravisKvapil, Ford,owner points. Gasol,MEM 11 71 75 217 19.7 43. (62)BrendanGaughan,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. Irving,CLE 13 81 58 247 19.0 Gordon,NOR 4 28 5 7 4 18.5 Rebounds IndyCar G OFFDEF TOTAVG Firestone 600 Howard,HOU 17 62 176 238 14.0 SaturdayatTexasMotor Speedway, Jordan,LAC 14 49 138 187 13.4 Fort Worth, Texas Griffin, LAC 14 38 140 178 12.7 Lap length:1.5 mrles Aldridge,POR 5 21 35 56 11.2 (Startingpositioninparentheses) Duncan,SAN 7 19 59 78 11.1 1. (7)ScottDixon,Dalara-Chevrolet,248. Assists 2.(8) Tony Kanaan,Dagara-Chevrolet, 248. AST AVG 7 G 3.(3) HelioCastroneves,Dalara-Chevrolet, 248. Wall, WAS 83 11.9 4.(5)JuanPablo Montoya,Dagara-Chevrolet, 248. Paul, LAC 12 105 8.8 5. (1 t)MarcoAndreti, Dallara-Honda,248. James,CLE 15 122 8.1 6. 4) CarlosMunoz,Dallara-Honda,247. Harden,HOU 17 128 7.5 7. (9)CharlieKimball, Dallara-Chevrolet,247. Barea,DAL 5 37 7.4 8. (19)RyanBriscoe,Dalara-Honda,247. 9. (12)JamesJakes, Daffara-Honda,247. 10. 20)GabbyChaves, Dallara-Honda,246. WNBA 11. 2) Simon Pagenaud, Dagara-Chevrolet, 246. WOMEN'SNATIONAL 12. 10)SageKaram,Dallara-Chevrolet, 245. BASKETBALLASSOCIATION 13. 1) WillPow er,Daffara-Chevrolet,244. AU TimesPDT 14. (18)Sebastien Bourdais, Dagara-Chevrolet, 244. 15. 6) Graham R ahal, Dagara-Honda,243. EasternConference 13TakumaSato,Dallara-Honda,243. W L P c t G B 16. 17. 22I PippaMann, Dagara-Honda,242. Washington 2 0 1 . 000 18. 21)RyanHunter-Reay, Dagara-Honda,241. Chicago 1 1 .5 0 0 I 19. 23)StefanoColeti, Dallara-Chevrolet, 239. NewYork 1 1 .5 0 0 1 20. (16)TristanVautier,Dagara-Honda,156, mechanical. Atlanta 0 1 ,0 0 0 1r/z 21. (14) JosefNewg arden, Daffara-Chevrolet, 149 Connecticut 0 1 ,00 0 1 ' /2 mechanical. Indiana 0 2 .0 0 0 2 22. (15) EdCarpenter, Daffara-Chevrolet, 147,me WesternConference chanical. W L P c t G B 23. (17)JackHawksworth,Daff ara-Honda,62,me Minnesota 2 0 1 . 000 chanical. Phoenix 1 0 1 , 000r/z Seattle 1 0 1 , 000'/2 RaceStatistics Tulsa 1 1 .5 0 0 1 Winnersaveragespeed:191.940. Los Angeles 0 1 .0 0 0 1 '/2 Time of Race: I;52:47.8511. SanAntonio 0 1 .0 0 0 I ' 4 Margin of Victory:7.8000seconds. Cauhons:1for13 laps. Saturday'sGames LeadChanges:14among9drivers. Washington67, NewYork62 Lap Leaders: Power1-7, Pagenaud8-66, Kanaan Minnesota 78, Indiana69 67-86,Montoya87-102, Kanaan103-138, Dixon139Tulsa101,Chicago93 140, Castroneves 141, Jakes 142-143, Dixon144Seattle86,LosAngeles61 184,Kana an185, Castroneves186-191, Andretti192Today'sGame 193, Di x on194-228, Kimball 229,Dixon230-248. ConnecticutatAtlanta, noon Points:Montoya348, Power313,Dixon305,CasTuesday'sGames troneves 286, Rahal 261,Andretti 255,Bourdais244, Indiana atNewYork, 4p.m. Newgarden 215,Kanaan215, Kimball 214. SeattleatTulsa, 5 p.m.

Formula One

Champions Tour

Canadian GrandPrix lineup After Saturday qualifying; racetodayat Circuit GioesViUeneuve. Montreal, Canada Lap length:2.71 miles Third Session 1. Lewis Hamilton,England,Mercedes, 1 minute, 14.393seconds. 2. NicoRosberg, Germany, Mercedes, 1:14.702. 3. KimiRaikkonen,Finland, Ferrari, 1:15.014.

PrincipalCharityClassrc Saturda yatW akondaClub,DesMoines,lewa Yardage:8,831; Par:72 Second Roundleade PGAChampions-Principal Charity Classic Saturday At WakondaClub Des Moines,lowa Purse:S1.78 miUien Yardage:8,831; Par:72 SecondRound MarkCalcavecchia 67-68—135 68-68—136 Joe Durant PaulGoydos 67-70—137 BrianHenninger 67-70—137 MichaelAllen 67-70—137 Bart Bryant 71-67—138 Kirk Triplett 71-67—138 71-67—138 Jeff Magge rt PeterSenior 70-68—138 RodSpittle 68-70—138 DavidFrost 71-68—139 DavisLoveIII 70-69—139 JohnCook 69-70—139 69-70—139 JerrySmith JoseCoceres 66-73—139 Jeff Coston 67-72—139 JohnHuston 73-67—140 Jeff Freem an 71-69—140 70-70—140 RoccoMediate 69-71—140 MikeGoodes JesperParnevik 68-72—140 Jeff Sluman 68-72—140 GrantWaite 67-73—140 LorenRoberts 73-68—141 DuffyWaldorf 71-70—141 71-70—141 Tommy Armour III MarkBrooks 71-70—141 JavierSanchez 70-71—141 Jim Carter 69-72—141 69-72—141 Jay Don Blake TomPerniceJr. 67-74—141 74-68—142 Jay Haa s PH. Horgan III 73-69—142 SteveLowery 73-69—142 JohnRiegger 70-72—142 ChienSoonLu 70-72—142 DanForsman 69-73—142 69-73—142 GuyBoros Jeff Hart 69-73—142 BernhardLanger 68-74—142 Billy Andrade 66-76—142 73-70—143 DougRohrbaugh LarryNelson 73-70—143 Gil Morgan 72-71—143 RussCochran 72-71—143 TomByrum 71-72—143 GeneSauers 71-72—143 PrankEsposito 69-74—143 69-74—143 CesarMonasterio 69-74—143 GaryHagberg Joel Edw ards 74-70—144 Scott Hoch 73-71—144 Jim Gallagher,Jr. 71-73—144 69-75—144 SandyLyle RogerChapman 68-76—144 Olin Browne 75-70—145 WayneLew 75-70—145 Willie Wood 73-72—145 MarcoDawson 72-73—145 72-73—145 JoeySindelar BobbyWadkins 72-73—145 73-73—146 BobGilder MarkMcNulty 72-74—146 Jim Rutledge 75-72—147 TrevorDodds 74-73—147 PuzzyZoeger 73-74—147 HalSutton 73-74—147 73-74—147 CarlosFranco WesShort,Jr. 73-74—147 FranQuinn 71-76—147 WoodyAustin 75-73—148 MarkWiebe 74-74—148 Bob Friend 72-76—148 Dick Mast 76-73—149 FredFunk 72-77—149 BobTway 77-73—150 EstebanToledo 75-75—150 StevePate 76-75—151 JohnJacobs 80-72—152 76-77—153 NolanHenke TomPurtzer 77-80—157

4. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,1:15.102.

5. Romain Grosjean, France,Lotus,1:15.194. 6. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,1:15.329. 7. NicoHulkenberg, Germany, ForceIndia,I:15.614. 8. Daniil Kyyat, Russia, Red Bull,1:16.079. 9. DanielRicciardo,Australia, RedBull,1:16.114. 10. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,1:16.338. Eliminatedafter secondsession 11. CarlosSainzJr., Spain,ToroRosso,1:16.042. 12. Marcus Ericsson, Sweden,Sauber,I:16.262. 13. Fernando Alonso,Spain, McLaren,1:16.276. 14. FelipeNasr,Brazil, Sauber, I:16.620r Eliminatedafler firstsession 15. Sebastian Vetel, Germany, Ferrari,1:17.344. 16. FelipeMassa, Brazil, Wiliams,1:17.886. 17. RobertoMerhi, Spain, Marussia,1:19.133. 18. WillStevens,England, Marussia,1:19.157. 19. MaxVerstappen,Netherlands, ToroRosso, 1:16.245.

20.JensonButton,England,McLaren,DNS.

GOLF PGA Tour The M emorialTournameat SaturdayatMuirlieldVillageGolfClub, Dublin,Ohio Yardage : 7,392;Par 72(38-38) Third R eIIIIII JustinRose 68-67-66—201 Francesco Molinar 68-67-69—204 DavidLingmerth 67-65-72—204 69-66-70—205 Jim Furyk 71-70-65—206 KevinStreelman Brendon Todd 67-68-71—206 HidekiMatsuyama 64-71-71—206 AndySullivan 70-64-72—206 68-74-65—207 Keegan Bradley Thomas Aiken 69-68-70—207 KevinKisner 67-71-69—207 MarcLeishm an 69-67-71—207 66-67-74—207 JasonDufner 72-71-65—208 DustinJohnson 71-71-66—208 KevinNa PatrickReed 72-68-68—208 Steven Bowditch 69-71-68—208 Erik Compton 68-69-71—208 71-71-67—209 Jeff Overton 70-69-70—209 Matt Kuchar Billy Horschel 70-68-71—209 Vijay Singh 71-67-71—209 RyanMoore 67-67-75—209 72-71-67—210 GeorgeMcNeig 70-72-68—210 Jim Herma n BrooksKoepka 71-70-69—210 WilliamMcGirt 70-70-70—210 68-71-71—210 Jonathan Byrd 72-67-71—210 RorySabbatini 67-71-72—210 HarrisEnglish Jordan Spieth 68-70-72—210 Chris Stroud 70-68-72—210 Graham DeLaet 69-69-72—210 71-66-73—210 TonyFinau CharlesHowell III 75-66-70—211 AdamHadwin 72-68-71—211 RobertStreb 73-67-71—211 72-67-72—211 Carl Pettersson 70-69-72—211 TroyMerritt JohnHuh 72-66-73—211 Brendan Steele 71-67-73—211 GregChalmers 69-73-70—212 70-71-71—212 Biff Haas 70-71-71—212 RetiefGoosen AndrewPutnam 72-66-74—212 ZacBlair 75-68-70—213 Shawn Stefani 70-72-71—213 73-68-72—213 CamiloVilegas 66-74-73—213 RusselKnox l ChessonHadley 74-66-73—213 MattJones 71-68-74—213 Pat Perez 68-70-75—213 69-66-78—213 PatrickRodgers 71-72-71—214 KevinChappeg Stewart Cink 72-71-71—214 James Hahn 71-70-73—214 Bo VanPelt 64-72-78—214 71-71-74—216 JohnSenden 75-67-74—216 JasonBohn Chris Kirk 69-71-76—216 BrianStuard 68-75-74—217 AndrewSvoboda 70-70-77—217 69-73-76—218 SteveStricker 72-68-78—218 Phil Mickelson Sangmoon Bae 74-66-78—218 KenDuke 67-75-77—219 Scott Langley 70-72-77—219 71-72-77—220 NickWatne y 71-70-79—220 Hudson Swafford LucasGlover 68-72-82—222 TigerWoods 73-70-85—228

LPGA Touy' ManulifeLPGACIasslc SaturdayatWhistle Be ar GelfClub, Cambri dge, Ont ario Yardage:6,613; Par:72 (36-36) Third Roun d Suzann Pettersen 66-65-66—197 65-66-67—198 MariajoUribe 63-69-67—199 CristieKerr PernigaLindberg 66-67-68 —201 KatieBurnett 67-68-67 —202 BrittanyLang 65-68-69 —202 68-65-69 —202 YaniTseng 68-69-66—203 So Yeon Ryu KellyTan 70-67-66—203 JacquiConcolino 71-64-68—203 JulietaGranada 65-69-69—203 64-69-70—203 LaetitiaBeck 66-72-66—204 f heeLee VictoriaElizabeth 67-66-71—204 Sei Young Kim 65-73-67—205 ThidapaSuwannapura 68-70-67—205 67-70-68—205 Alena Sharp 71-66-68—205 AlisonWalshe SophiaPopov 66-70-69—205 MinjeeLee 69-66-70—205 HyoJooKim 66-67-72—205 70-70-66—206 Sarah JaneSmith 66-73-67—206 KarinSjodin MiHyangLee 71-67-68—206 Pornanong Phatlum 71-67-68—206 Karlin Beck 68-69-69—206 66-71-69—206 Na Yeon Choi 68-68-70—206 CharleyHull CatrionaMathew 69-66-71—206 HaruNom ura 69-66-71—206 ShanshanFeng 67-67-72—206 70-70-67—207 CandieKung 71-68-68—207 LydiaKo AnnaNordqvist 65-74-68—207 CarolineMasson 72-66-69—207 PerrineDelacour 69-68-70—207 69-68-70—207 AlisonLee 69-68-70—207 InbeePark LizetteSalas 68-69-70—207 JennyShin 67-70-70—207 SandraGal 64-71-72—207 67-66-74—207 Kim Kaufm an 70-70-68—208 JessicaKorda JayeMarieGreen 71-68-69—208 Mo Martin 66-71-71—208 67-69-72—208 ChellaChoi 67-73-69—209 CarolineHedwall 68-71-70—209 DanielleKang JanePark 69-70-70—209 P.K.Kongkraphan 63-75-71—209 NatalieGleadal 68-72-70—210 Wei-Ling Hsu 70-70-70—210 67-72-71—210 BrittanyLincicome SarahKemp 67-71-72—210 Cheyenne Woods 63-73-74—210 Tiffany Joh 67-72-72—211 Sara-Maude Juneau 71-68-72—211 68-70-73—211 Joanna Klaten MikaMiyazato 67-71-73—211 JackieStoelting 69-69-73—211 Kris Tam ulis 69-69-73—211 69-71-72—212 SueKim 69-70-73—212 KarineIcher BelenMozo 69-71-73—213 Kelly WShon 70-70-73—213 AmyAnderson 72-68-74—214 69-71-74—214 KendagDye 70-70-75—215 Sydnee Michaels MariaHernandez 69-69-77—215 AyakoUehara 70-70-76—216

HOCKEY NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AU TimesPDT STANLEY CUP FINAL (Sest-of-7;x-if necessary) Chicage1, Tampa Bay1 June 3;Chicago2, TampaBay1 Saturday:TampaBay4, Chicago3 Monday: atChicago,5p.m. Wednes day:atChicago,5p.m. x-Saturday, June13: atTampaBay, 5p.m. x-Monday ,June15;atChicago,5p.m. xWednesdayJune17atTampaBay5pm

TENNIS Professional FrenchOpen SaturdayatParis Men's semifinals NovakDjokovic(1),Serbia,def. AndyMurray(3), Britain,6-3, 6-3,5-7,5-7, 6-1. Women's championship SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, def.LucieSafarova(13),CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-7(2), 6-2. Men's doubleschampionship IvanDodig,Croatia, andMarcelo Melo (3), Brazil, def. BobandMikeBryan(1), UnitedStates,6-7 (5), 7-6 (5),7-5. W omen's over-45doubleschampionship Kim Clijsters,Belgium,andMartinaNavratilova, UnitedStates,def. LindsayDavenport andMary Joe Fernandez,UnitedStates, 2-6, 6-2,11-9. Juniorboyschampionship Tommy Paul (13), UnitedStates, def. Taylor Harry Pritz (2),UnitedStates,7-6(4), 2-6, 6-2. Juniorgirlschampionship PaulaBadosa(12), Spain, def.AnnaKalinskaya (16),Russia,6-3,6-3. Juniorbeysdoubles championship AlvaroLopezSanMartin andJaumeMunar, Spain, def. WilliamBlumbergandTommy Paul (4), United States,6-4r 6-2. Juniorgirlsdoubleschampionship MiriamKolodziejovaand MarketaVondrousova(1), CzechRepublic, def. CarolineDolehideandKaterina Stewart(6), UnitedStates, 6-0,6-3.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague LOSANGELESANGELS— Recalled18C.J.Cron from SaltLake(PCL). Optioned LHPEdgar Ibarrato Salt Lake. NationalLeague ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Activated3BJake Lambfromthe15-day DL.Designated 0 JordanPacheco for assignment. LOSANGELESDODGERS— ReinstatedOFYasiel Puig fromthe15-day DL.OptionedOFScott Schebler to Oklahoma City (PCL). WASHIN GTONNATIONALS— Selectedthe contract of RHP JoeRoss fromSyracuse(IL). Optioned RHPA.J. Coleto Syracuse. Transferred RHP Craig Stammen tothe60-dayDL FOOTBA LL NationalFootballLeague CLEVEL ANDBROWNS — Acquired PAndy Lee fromSanFranciscoforanundisclosed 2017draftpick. WaivedPSpencer Lanning.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updated Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsohd Bonneville 1,864 23 7 56 21 The Daffes 1,844 18 9 22 6 JohnDay 1,359 13 7 24 7 McNary 1,542 96 18 3 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 232,936 14,576 5,521 2,663 T he Daffes 197,634 12,657 564 20 9 J ohn Day 166,015 11,514 702 37 0 McNary 152,803 8,535 82 1

420


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

GRICHUK GOES LOW BUT CAN'TGET IT

AN TimesPDT

Dodgers 2, Cardinals 0

W L 31 25 30 27 27 30 26 31 25 30

Pct GB .554

St. Louis Cardinals right field-

.526 ft/( 474 41/2 .456 5'/t 455 51/2

Grichuk dives but

W L 32 23 30 23 29 28 27 28 25 29

Pct GB .582 .566 1 .509 4 .491 5

AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

NewYork

Tampa Bay Toronto Boston Baltimore

Central Division

Minnesota Kansas City Detroit Cfeyefand Chicago Houston Texas LosAngeles Seattle Oakland

West Division W L 34 23 30 26 28 28 25 31 23 35

er Randal cannot gettoa single by the Los

Angeles Dodgers' Enrique

.463 6(/(

Pct GB .596 .536 3'/t .500 5'/2

Hemandez duf'Ing Satur-

.446 Bt/( .397 I f t/(

day s game in Los Angeles.

Saturday'sGames

Toronto7, Houston2 Milwaukee 4,Minnesota 2 Texas 4, KansasCity 2 Boston 4, Oakland2 Cleveland 2,Baltimore 1 Detroit 7,ChicagoWhite Sox1 N.Y.Yankees8, LA. Angels2 Seattle 2,TampaBay1

Today'sGam es L.A. Angels(C.Wilson 3-4) at N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia 2-7),10:05a.m. Houston (McHugh 6-2) at Toronto (Dickey2-6), 10:07a.m. Baltimore (B.Norris1-4) at Cleveland(Carrasco7-4), 10;10a.m. Oakland(Graveman 3-2) at Boston(Buchholz 3-6), 10:35a.m. Detroit (Simon 5-3) atChicagoWhite Sox(Samardzila 4-3),11:10a.m. Milwaukee (Fiers 2-5) at Minnesota(Pelfrey4-2), 11;10a.m. Texas (Lewis5-3) at KansasCity (Guthrie 4-3), 11:10a.m. Tampa Bay(Archer6-4) at Seatle (Montgomery0-0), 2:10 p.m. Monday'sGames Miami at Toronto,4;07 p.m. Houstonat ChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. KansasCityatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

Washington NewYork Atlanta Miami Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee Los Angeles SanFrancisco SanDiego Arizona Colorado

East Division W L 30 26 30 27 27 28 23 33 21 36

CentralDivision W L 37 19 30 29 23 20

25 25 31 36

West Division W L

32 24 32 25 29 28 27 28 25 29

Pct GB .536 ,526 t/t 491 2 (/t

.411 7 .368 9(/(

Pct GB .661 .545 6 (/t

.537 7 .426 13 .357 17

Pct GB

.571

561 t/( .509 3(/( .491 4(/t

.463 6

Saturday'sGames Chicag oCubs4,Washington2 Milwaukee 4,Minnesota 2 San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 5 Colorado10,Miami5 SanDiego9, Cincinnati 7 Atlanta5, Pittsburgh4 Arizona2,N.Y.Mets 1 L.A. Dodgers 2,St. Louis0 Today'sGames SanDiego(Despaigne3-3) at Cincinnati (Cueto3-4), 10;10a.m. Pittsburgh(G.cole 8-2) at Atlanta (A.Wood4-2), 10:35a.m. SanFrancisco(Vogelsong4-3) atPhiladelphia(O'Sullivan 1-4),10:35a.m. Milwaukee (Fiers 2-5) at Minnesota(Pelfrey4-2), 11;10a.m. ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 1-2) at Washington(Zimmermann 5-2),1:05 p.m. Miami (Urena0-2) at Colorado (K.Kendrick 2-7), 1:10 p.m. N.Y.Mets(deGrom6-4) at Arizona(Collmenter3-5), 1;10 p.m. St. Louis(Lynn4-4) at L.A.Dodgers (Greinke5-1), 5:08 p.m. Monday'sGames Milwaukee atPittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Miami atToronto,4:07p.m. Philadelphiaat Cincinnati, 4:10p.m. SanDiegoatAtlanta, 4:10p.m. St. LouisatColorado,5:40p.m. Arizonaat LA. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.

Grichuk and the Cardinals lost, 2-0. Mark J. Temll/ The Associated Press

American League

Mariners 2, Roys1 SEATTLE—Austin Jackson's solo home run intheseventh inning broke a1-1 tie asSeattle snapped a seven-gamelosing streak. Felix Hernandezallowedjust one run on two hits in seveninnings. Rookie Carson Smith notchedhis first career savefor Seattle.

Red Sox4, Athletics2

Tigers 7, WhiteSox1

Padres 9, Reds7

BOSTON —Boston'sJoeKelly gave up onerun onfour hits, striking out six andwalking two to snap his career-worst, nine-start winless stretch. HanleyRamirezhit a home runandsingled twice and David Ortiz hit an RBIdouble for Boston, which wonfor the fourth time in six games.

CHICAGO — David Price struck out11 in a five-hitter and Miguel Cabrera homered asDetroit ended an eight-game losing streak. The four-time American LeagueCentral champion Tigers stopped their worst skid since 2005andavoided falling below.500 for the first time.

CINCINNATI —Yonder Alonso's second career grandslampulled San Diegoeven inthe seventh inning, and Matt Kempsingled with the bases loaded inthe eighth to complete thecomeback.

Blue Jays7, Astros2

two hits and scored twice. Washington's Bryce Harper hit his19th homer of the season.

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles pitcher Clayton Kershaw allowed one hit and struck out11 in eight innings against his October nemesis. Yasiel Puig smacked anRBI double to snap ascoreless tie in the seventh in his return from the disabled list. Los Angeles ab r bbi ab r hbi Bourloscf 3 0 0 0 Pedrsn cf 4 0 1 0 Jayph 1 0 0 0 Heiseylf 3 1 1 0 M crpnt3b 1 0 0 0 Puigrf 3 1 1 1 Wong2b 2 0 0 0 JuTrnr1b-3b 3 0 1 1 Hogidylf 3 0 0 0 KHrndz2b 3 0 2 0 JhPerltss 3 0 0 0 Rollinsss 3 0 0 0 Grichkrf 3 0 1 0 Callasp3b 3 0 1 0 Rynlds1b 3 0 0 0 Jansenp 0 0 0 0 Molinac 2 0 0 0Egisc 2 0 0 0 Kozma2b-3b3 0 0 0 Kershwp 2 0 0 0 JaiGrcp 2 0 0 0 AGnzlzph-1b1 0 0 0 T.cruzph 1 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 0 1 0 Totals 2 72 7 2 S t. Louis 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 Los Angeles 000 000 20x— 2 DP — St. Louis 3, Los Angeles 1. LOB—St. Louis 3, LosAngeles2. 28—Heisey (1), Puig (3). S—Ellis. IP H R E R BBSO St. Louis Jai.GarciaL,1-3 7 6 2 2 0 6 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Maness 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Choate LosAngeles KershawW,5-3 8 1 0 0 2 11 JansenS,6-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP —by Kershaw(M.carpenter). T—2:22. A—47,655 (56,000). St. Louis

Dtamondbacks 2,Mets1 PHOENIX —Welington Castillo hit a two-run homer with two outs in the seventh inning for his first hit with Arizona. Castillo, who came to Arizona this week in the trade that sent Mark Trumbo to Seattle, struck out four times in his Diamondbacks debut Friday but lined Bartolo Colon's first pitch just over the left-field wall.

San Diego Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Venalecf 5 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 1 1 0 Detroit Chicago DeNrrsc 3 3 1 0 Votto1b 2 3 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Uptonlf 2 2 1 0 Frazier3b 5 1 3 3 Oakland Boston R Daviscf 6 0 1 0 Eatoncf 4 0 0 0 K emprf 4 2 3 5 Brucerf 5 0 1 1 TampaBay Seattle ab r hbi ab r bbi Kinsler2b 5 1 2 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 2 1 Alonso 1b 5 1 3 4 B.Pena c 5 0 2 1 ab r bbi ab r hbi Burnscf 4 0 1 1 Pedroia2b 3 0 1 0 Micarr1b 4 1 1 2 Abreudh 4 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b-ss-3b3 0 1 0 Leake pr 0 0 0 0 New York Arizona Kiermrcf 3 1 2 0 AJcksncf 4 1 2 1 Zobristlf 3 0 0 0 B.Holt3b 3 1 1 0 4 2 2 0 AvGarcrf 4 0 0 0 Solarte 2b-3b 5 0 0 0 Cozartss 5 1 1 1 ab r bbi ab r hbi JButlerdh 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 0 0 V ogtc 4 0 0 0 HRmrzlf 5 2 3 2 Cespdslf JMrtnzrf 5 0 1 1 LaRoch1b 3 0 2 0 Barmesss 0 0 00 Schmkrl f 2 0 0 0 Grndrsrf 3 0 1 0 Inciartrf 4 0 1 0 DeJesslf 3 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 4 0 2 0 BButlerdh 4 0 0 0 Rcastllrf 0 0 0 0 Cstgnsdh 5 1 1 0 GBckh3b 3 0 0 0 Amarstss 3 0 0 0 Lornznp 3 1 2 0 Teladass 3 0 1 0 Pollockcf 4000 Forsyth2b 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 3 0 0 0 R eddckrf 2 0 1 0 Ortiz dh 4 1 1 1 J Mccnc 5 1 3 1 Sotoc 2000 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0Matthsp 0 0 0 0 Duda 1b 4 0 0 0 Gldsch 1b 3 0 0 0 SouzJrrf 4 0 0 0 Trumodh 4 0 0 0 Lawrieph 0 0 0 0 Napoli1b 3 0 2 1 JoWilsn3b 5 1 4 1 CSnchz2b 2 0 0 0 Maurerp 0 0 0 0 Cingrnp 0 0 0 0 Cuddyrlf 4 0 2 0 Tomas 3b 3 0 1 0 Acarerss 2 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 2 1 1 0 Fuldpr-rf 0 0 0 0 Bogartsss 4 0 1 0 5 0 3 2 Bonifaclf 3 1 1 0 Almontph 1 1 1 0 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Lagars cf 4 1 2 1 Lamb 3b 1 0 0 0 Elmore3b 3 0 1 0 Ackleypr-If 0 0 0 0 S emienss 3 0 1 0 Bettscf 3 0 0 0 Jlglesisss Totals 44 7 187 Totals 2 9 1 5 1 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Negronph 1 0 0 0 M uno2b 4 0 1 0 DPerltlf 3 0 1 0 Frnkln1b 3 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 4 0 3 0 Muncy3b 4 0 0 0 DeAzarf-If 4 0 1 0 Detroit 0 00 050 110 — 7 Spngnrph 1 0 0 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Campll3b 4 0 2 0 Owings2b 3 1 1 0 Riverac 3 0 0 0 Blmqstss 3 0 1 1 Canha1b 4 1 1 1 Swihartc 4 0 1 0 Chicago 0 01 000 000 — 1 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 BHmltncf 2 0 0 0 Reckerc 3 0 0 0 Wcastgc 2 1 1 2 Zuninoc 2 0 0 0 Sogard 2b 4 1 1 0 E — C e sp ede s (4). DP — D etroi t 3, Chi c ago 1. Cecilinph 0 0 0 0 Pnngtnss 3 0 0 0 Totals 29 1 3 0 Totals 3 0 2 9 2 Cashnrp 2 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 5 2 Totals 3 3 4 114 LOB —Detroit 12, Chicago3. 28—J.Martinez (12), Gyorko2b 2 0 0 0 B .colonp 3 0 1 0 Reedp 0 0 0 0 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 — 1 Oakland 0 01 000 100 — 2 J.Mccann (8), J.l g l e si a s (6), AI.R a m irez (12), Bon ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 Seattle 000 100 10x — 2 — 4 Totals 3 6 9 109 Totals 3 4 7 117 Boston 202 000 Ogx —Mi.cabrera(12).SB—R.Davis(13). DP —TampaBay1,Seattle1.LOB— TampaBay4, S an Diego 0 0 0 1 2 0 420 — 9 Roblesp 0 0 0 0 CAndrsp 2 0 0 0 DP — Oakland 1. LOB—Oakland 7, Boston11. ifacio(1). HR IP H R E R BBSO Seattle 8.28—A.Jackson(6), S.Smith (13). 38—Ki- 28 — C incinnati 301 2 0 1 000 — 7 Lthrschp 0 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Reddick (8), Ortiz(12), Napoli (7), Swihart(4). Detroit E—Schumaker (1). DP—Cincinnati 1. LOB—San MyryJrph 1 0 0 0 Ahmedss 1 0 1 0 ermaier(4). HR —A.Jackson(3). SB—Kiermaier2(4). 38 — Burns (3). HR—Canha (7), H.Ram irez (13). PriceW,5-2 9 5 1 1 2 1 1 CS — Ackley(2), Morrison (1). Diego 8, Ci n ci n nati 8. 28—Kemp (11), Almonte (2), Totals 33 1 101 Totals 2 9 2 6 2 SB — Betts (9). CS—H.Ramirez(3). IP H R E R BBSO Frazier2(14), B.Pena(7). 38—Votto (2). HR —Kemp N ew York 010 0 0 0 000 — 1 IP H R E R BBSO Chicago D anksL,3-5 423 11 5 5 2 3 TampaBay (2), Alonso (2), Cozart (7). CS—Schumaker (1). SArizona 000 000 20x — 2 Oakland D.Webb 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 E — B .col o n (1), W. castillo (3). DP—NewYork Colome 6 7 1 1 3 2 Phillips, B.Hamilton. ChavezL,2-6 5 10 4 4 1 5 Noesi 3 6 2 2 0 0 Geltz L,1-2 2 2 1 1 1 2 IP H R E R BBSO 1, Arizona 4. LOB — N ewYork8, Arizona5. HR 11-3 0 0 0 3 2 Pomeranz Seattle San Diego Lagares(2), W.castillo (3). 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 T—2:54. A—28,368(40,615). Scribner F.Hernandez W,9-2 7 2 1 1 3 6 O'Flaherty Cashner 52-3 8 7 7 5 2 IP H R E R BBSO 2-3 0 0 0 2 0 LoweH,3 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fe.Rodriguez Quackenbush 1 - 3 2 0 0 0 0 New York 1-30 0 0 0 0 National League Ca.SmithS,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Boston MaurerW,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 B.colon L,8-4 7 5 2 2 1 7 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 WP — F.Hernandez. BenoitH,9 1 0 0 0 0 2 A.Torres J.KegyW,2-4 6 4 1 1 2 6 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 T—2:45. A—31,106(47,574). KimbrelS,13-14 1 1 0 0 1 2 Robles OgandoH,6 1 1 1 1 1 0 Ctlbs 4, Nattonats 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati Leathersich 2-3 0 0 0 1 2 LayneH,3 Lorenzen 6 6 3 3 3 5 Arizona M.BarnesH,1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 WASHINGTON— Chicago' Rangers 4,Royats2 sJason Mattheus 2-3 1 3 3 2 2 C.Anderson 52 - 3 8 1 1 1 6 UeharaS,13-15 1 0 0 0 0 1 CingraniBS,2-2 1- 3 1 1 1 1 0 DelgadoW,3-2 1 1 -3 0 0 0 1 1 Ogando pitchedto 1 batterin the8th. Hammel improved to 9-0 with a KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Wandy Ro- WP —Pomeranz. Ju.DiazL,2-1 1 2 2 2 2 2 ReedH,4 1 1 0 0 0 1 3.01 ERA in11 starts against the Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 1 Z iegler S,6-8 1 1 0 0 0 0 T—3:10.A—36,713 (37,221). driguez gaveuponerunandsixth T—2:40. A—30,265 (48,519). T—3:12.A—40,946(42,319). Nationals andDexter Fowler had

hits in seveninnings asTexaswon for the seventh time ineight games. Shawn Tollesongaveupa homerun to Salvador Perez inthe ninth but picked up hisseventh save.Yordano Ventura continued tostruggle early for KansasCity, allowing four runs in the first two innings

TORONTO — JoseReyesstole three bases and got two hits as the Toronto won its season-high fourth in a row. Reyes scored a run, drove in one andalso walked.

Giants 7, Phillies 5 PHILADELPHIA— Madison

tnterieague

Brewers 4, Twins2

Bumgarner struck out11, overWashington ab r hbi ab r hbi coming a grandslam byJeff FranMINNEAPOLIS —Milwaukee's F owlercf 4 2 2 1 Spancf 3 0 0 0 coeur to pitch SanFrancisco past Carlos Gomezwent 4-for-4 with Rizzo1b 4 0 2 1 Zmrmn1b 4 0 0 0 Bryant3b 4 0 1 1 Harperrf 4 1 2 1 Philadelphia. a walk, tormenting his former MMntrc 2 1 0 0 Rendon3b 3 0 0 0 team again with three RBls over Lakerf 4 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 1 1 1 San Francisco P h i ladelphia Texas KansasCity Houston Toronto Coghlnlf 4 0 0 0 CRonsnlf 4 0 1 0 the final three innings. Gomezhit ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r bbi ab r hbi ab r h bi ab r bbi Szczurlf 0 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0 Aokilf 3 1 3 2 Reverecf 4 1 1 0 a two-run tie-breaking single in DShldslf 4 0 0 0 AEscorss 5 0 0 0 Leaders Springrrf 4 0 0 0 Reyesss 4 1 2 1 JHerrr2b 4 1 2 1 Espinos2b 2 0 1 0 Panik2b 5 1 1 0 CHrndz2b 3 1 0 0 Choorf 5 1 2 2 Mostks3b 4 0 1 1 Altuve2b 4 0 3 1 Dnldsn3b 3 0 0 1 Hammlp 4 0 0 0 J.Rossp 1 0 0 0 the seventh and anRBIdouble in AMERICANLEAGUE Pagancf 5 0 1 1 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Fielderdh 3 1 2 0 L.caincf 4 0 0 0 BATTING —Fielder, Texas, .356; Kipnis, Cleve- Smlnskpr-dh 0 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 2 0 T uckerlf 4 0 0 0 Bautistrf 3 2 1 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Poseyc 5 1 1 0 Franco3b 4 1 1 0 the ninth. Gattisdh 4 0 2 0 Encrncdh 3 0 1 1 S tropp 0 0 0 0 Riverop 0 0 0 0 land, .332;Ncruz,Seatle, .326;Micabrera,Detroit, Belt1b 3 0 0 1 Ruf1b 3 0 1 0 Morlnd1b 4 0 2 1 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 CIRsmscf 2 00 0 Smoakph-dh 1 0 1 2 ARussllss 3 0 0 0 ugglaph 1 0 0 0 .325; Moustakas,KansasCity,.314; Pedroia,Boston, Gallo3b 5 0 1 0 AGordnlf 4 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 4 1 1 0 Utleyph 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Minnesota Mrsnckph 1 0 0 0 Colae01b 5 1 1 0 THigp 0 0 0 0 .311;AJones,Baltimore, .309. MDuffy3b 5 2 2 1 Francrrf 4 1 2 4 2 0 0 1 S.Perezc 4 1 2 1 ab r b bi ab r h bi RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota,47; Donaldson,Toronto, Andrusss 2 0 0 0 Valencilf 3 1 1 0 Totals 3 3 4 7 4 Totals 3 12 5 2 G Blancrf 4 1 1 0 Aschelf 4 0 0 0 LMart ncf 4 0 0 0 C.colon2b 4 0 0 0 Valuen3b CGomzcf 4 0 4 3 Dozier2b 4221 Carterph-1b 2 0 0 0 Carrerlf 0 0 0 0 Chicago 0 00 120 001 — 4 Bmgrn p 4 0 2 1 Galvis ss 3 0 0 0 46; Trout,LosAngeles,41; Kipnis, Cleveland,40; Gardner, Corprnc 3 1 1 0 JDysonrf 4 1 3 0 Lucroyc 5 0 1 0 SRonsnlf 3 Jcastroc 2 0 0 0 DNavrrc 3 1 1 0 W ashington 01 0 0 0 0 001 — 2 M axwgph 1 0 0 0 Ruizc NewYork,38; Cain, KansasCity,37;Bautisla, Toronto,36. 3 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 1 2 1 Mauer1b 4 00 02 01 Alberto2b 4 1 3 0 RBI — Teixeira, NewYork,45; Donaldson,Toronto, Totals 3 4 4 114 Totals 3 7 2 9 2 C ongerph-c 1 0 0 0 Pillarcf 4 1 2 2 DP — Chicago1,Washington 1. LOB—Chicago4, Casigap 0 0 0 0 SGonzlzp 0 0 0 0 Lind1b 4 0 1 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 MGnzlz1b-3b3 1 1 0 Goins2b 3 0 0 0 Washington5. 28—Rizzo (17), Espinosa(9). HR 40; Fielder,Texas,40; Ncruz,Seattle,39; Vogt,Oakland, Texas McGwnp 2 0 0 0 220 000 000 — 4 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 0 TrHntrdh 3 0 1 0 Villarss 3 1 2 1 Harper(19),W.Ramos(4). 39; Micabrera, Detroit, 38;KMoralesrKansasCity,38. K ansas City 0 0 0 0 0 1 001 — 2 Araulop 0 0 0 0 HPerez3b 0 0 0 0 ERosarrf 4 0 2 0 HITS — Fielder, Texas, 79; Kipnis, Cleveland,74; 32 2 8 2 Totals 3 2 7 107 IP H R E R BBSO E—Corporan (3), Andrus (12), Alberto (2), Totals DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 G Parralf 4 0 0 0 Hrmnnc 2 0 0 0 Houston 0 01 000 010 — 2 Chicago Ncruz,Seatle, 71;Pedroia, Boston, 70;Altuve, Hous- Ventura(2). DP—Texas 1, Kansas City 1. LOB ABlancph-2b 1 1 1 1 Segurass 4 1 2 0 KSuzukph 1 0 0 0 130 010 02x — 7 HammelW,5-2 8 5 2 2 2 7 Totals 3 9 7 126 Totals 3 1 5 6 5 ton, 69; Donaldson,Toronto,68; Micabrera,Detroit,66. Texas10, KansasCity 8. 28—Choo (11), Alberto Toronto S Petrsndh 1 0 0 0 Hickscf 3 0 0 0 E—Ma.Gonzalez (4). DP—Toronto 2. LOBH.Rondon 0 0 0 0 1 0 San Francisco 204 000 100 — 7 HOME RUNS—Ncruz,Seattle,18; Teixeira,New 1), A.Gordon(12), J.Dyson(2). HR—S.Perez (7). Houston 4,Toronto 10.28—Smoak(4), Colabego(9), StropS,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 2 P hiladelphia 00 0 4 0 0 010 — 5 JRogrsph-dh1 1 0 0 DSantnss 3 0 0 0 York,17;Donaldson,Toronto,15; Trout,LosAngeles, 8—Gago(1), J.Dyson(6). S—DeShields. SF2b 2 1 0 0 Valencia(9), Pilar(12). HR —Vilar(1). SB—Reyes3 Washington 15; Puiols,LosAngeles,14; HRamirez,Boston,13; 5 Andrus. E—C.Hernandez (4). DP—San Francisco 1. Sardins 33 4 104 Totals 3 1 2 7 2 J.RossL,0-1 5 6 3 3 0 4 LOB tied at12. (7), Donaldson (3), Bautista (2). CS—Altuve(6). S—San Francisco 11, Philadelphia 1. 28—M. Totals IP H R E R BBSO Valen M ilwaukee 1 0 0 0 0 0 201 — 4 cia,Goins.SF— Donaldson. Rivero 3 0 0 0 1 2 STOLEN BASES—Altuve,Houston,16; Egsbury, Texas Duffy (7). HR —Francoeur (4), A.Blanco(1). SFM innesota 0 0 0 0 0 1 010 — 2 IP H R E R BBSO THill 1 1 1 1 1 2 NewYork,14;Gardner, NewYork,14; RD avis, Detroit, W.RodriguezW3-2 7 6 1 1 0 4 Houston Belt. E — G arza (1), Pl o uffe (5). DP —Milwaukee2, Hammel pi t ched to1batter i n the 9t h . 13; DeShields,Texas,13; Springer,Houston,12; ScheppersH,5 2- 3 1 0 0 0 0 OberholtzerL,0-1 32-3 6 4 IP H R E R BBSO Minnesota 2. LOB —Milwaukee 7, Minnesota5. 2 3 2 H.Rondon pitchedto1batter in the9th. Burns,Oakland,10; Marisnick,Houston,10. S.Freeman H,4 1- 3 0 0 0 0 0 J.Buchana San Francisco 28 — C .G om ez (12), Dozi e r (18), E.Rosario (2). 22-3 2 1 1 1 2 WP — Strop. PITCHING —FHernandez, Seattle, 9-2; Keuchel, Sh.Togeson S,7-7 1 2 1 1 0 1 Thatchern BumgarnerW,7-2 8 6 5 5 0 11 HR — Braun (13), Dozier(11). SB—C.Gomez (6). 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 T—2:52. A—38,214(41,341). Houston,7-1; Pineda,NewYork, 7-2; Gray,Oakland, KansasCity C asiga S, 1 7-20 1 0 0 0 1 2 CS — S.Peterson (1). S —Sardinas, S.Robinson, 7-2; BuehrleToronto, , 7-4; Carrasco,Cleveland,7-4; VenturaL,3-5 3 1 2 2 2 1 2 6 4 4 2 3 J.Fields Philadelphia Herrmann. Salazar,Cleveland,6-1; McHugh,Houston, 6-2; Ar- Blanton 31-3 3 0 0 0 4 Toronto S.GonzaleL, z2-2 2 2-3 7 6 6 1 5 Braves 5, Pirates 4 IP H R E R BBSO 1 1 5 cher,Tamp aBay,6-4. Morales 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 HutchisonW,5-1 6 1-3 6 1 McGowa n 31-3 2 0 0 2 3 Milwaukee ERA— Gray,Oakland,1.65;Keuchel,Houston, E 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 1 Loup Araulo 1 2 1 0 0 1 GarzaW,4-7 7 6 1 1 0 3 Delabar 2 -3 2 1 1 0 1 ATLANTA — Atl a nta' s Christian 1.85; Archer,Tampa Bay, 2.01; Odorizzi, TampaBay, Frasor 1 1 0 0 2 0 De Fratus 1 0 0 0 0 0 BroxtonH,B 1 1 1 1 0 2 Osuna H,7 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Bethancourt lined Vance 2.47; Chavez,Oakland,2.51; FHernan dez, Seattle, HBP—by Ventura(Corporan). Worley' s Papel b on 1 1 0 0 0 1 Fr Rodriguez S,10-10 1 0 0 0 1 0 Cecil 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.51; Santiago, LosAngeles,2.55. T—2:50. A—37,924(37,903). H BP — by B um ga rn er (C. H e rn ande z), by S. G onz a le z first pitch in the ninth inning over Minnesota HBP—by J.Buchanan (Donaldson). WP —J.BuchanSTRIKEOUT S—Kluber, Cleveland, 105;Archer, (Aoki,B.crawford).Balk—S.Gonzalez. Graham 4 6 1 1 0 3 an. PB — D .N a va rro. TampaBay,97;Salazar,Cleveland,81;FHernandez, the right-field wall for his first ca- T—2:53.A—29,102 (43,651). Pressly L,3-2 2 2 1 1 3 1 T—3:16.A—31,809 (49,282). Seattle,81;Sale,Chicago,79; Pineda,NewYork, 76; Indians 2, Drioles1 reer homer. Bethancourt had three A.Thompson 1-30 1 1 1 0 Carrasco, Cleveland,74;Price, Detroit, 74. 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 Boyer SAVES —Perkins, Minnesota, 20; Street, Los CLEVELAND hits. Pittsburgh's Gregory Polanco Rockies10, Marlins 5 — Danny Sal a zar Yankees 8, Angels 2 Stauffer 1 1 1 0 0 2 Angeles,17;AMiger,NewYork,17; Boxberger, Tampa also had three hits, including a Presslypitchedto 1baterin the 7th. Bay, 15;Gregerson, Houston, 15;Soria, Detroit, 15; struck out10 in seven-plus inDENVER — Wilin Rosario homtwo-run single off Jim Johnson WP — Garza, Stauffer. NEWYORK— NewYork's Brian Britton,Baltimore,15. nings and Carlos Santanahad a ered twice and Carlos Gonzal e z T—3:22. A—38,707 (39,021). NATIONALLEAGUE McCannhit a two-run homer that in the eighth that tied the score tie-breaking double for Cl e veland. BATTING —DGordon, Miami, .365;Goldschmidt, hit a three-run shot asColorado at4-4. helped chaseGarrett Richards ina Ariz ona,.343;LeMahieu,Colorado,.339;AGonzalez, Salazar, who began the season in History shrugged off another rain delay. LosAngeles,.337;Harper,Washington,.333;Rizzo, the minors, hasn't lost since May six-run first inning asthe Yankees THIS DATEIN BASEBALL Chica go,.328;Aoki,San Francisco,.324;Pollock, Pitlsburgh Atlanta 5, a span of six starts. Baltimore's stretched their winningstreakto five. Colorado Arizona,.324. ab r h bi ab r h bi Miami RUNS —Harper, Washington, 44; Goldschmi dt, onlyruncame on MannyMachaab r hbi ab r hbi June 7 Polancrf 4 1 3 2 Maybincf 4 1 2 1 LosAngeles NewYork DGordn2b 5 1 20 Blckmncf 4 2 3 0 1885 — The AmericanAssociation allowed Arizona,43; Fowler,Chicago,40; Pollock,Arizona, do's third-inning homer. SMartelf 4 0 0 0 ASmnsss 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r bbi Prado3b 4 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 5 2 3 1 pitchers tothrowoverhand. 39; upton,SanDiego, 38; Mcarpenter, St. Louis,37; McCtchcf 4 1 1 2 FFrmn1b 2 0 1 1 Aybarss 4 0 1 0 Gardnrcf 4 1 2 2 Stantonrf 5 1 1 0 Arenad3b 4 1 1 2 1936 —TheNewYork Yankeesand the CleveAGonzaleLos z, Angeles,37. NWalkr2b 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 0 0 0 RBI — Stanton, Miami, 47;Goldschmidt, Arizona, Baltimore Troutcf 4 1 1 1 Headly3b 5 1 1 0 JHrrsn3b 4 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 3 1 1 1 JBaker1b 5 0 2 2 Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 land Indiansplayed16 innings without recordinga Cleveland Ozunacf 5 1 3 0 Paulsnph 1 0 0 0 strikeout.TheYankeeswon5-4. 46; Harper, Washington, 46;Arenado, Colorado, 42; ab r bbi ab r hbi Pulols1b 3 0 1 0 ARdrgzdh 1 1 0 0 Worleyp 0 0 0 0 Ciriaco2b 1 0 0 0 Calhonrf 3 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 3 1 1 2 Yelichlf 4 1 1 0 Betncrtp 0 0 0 0 1938 —Clevelandpitcher JohnnyAllen walked Braun,Milwaukee,39; AGonzalez, LosAngeles, 39; MMchd3b 4 1 2 1 Kipnis2b 1 1 1 0 PAlvrz1b 3 0 0 0 uribe2b-3b 4 0 1 0 Mathisc 4 0 1 1 CGnzlzrf 4 1 2 3 off themoundin thesecondinning anddidn't return Bcrawford, SanFrancisco, 38. DYongrf 4 0 1 0 CSantn1b 3 1 1 1 Freese3b 4 0 1 0 BMccnc 5 1 2 2 Cervellic 3 1 1 0 JGomslf 3 1 1 0 HITS — DGordon,Miami,84; Aoki, SanFrancisco, A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 Brantlylf 4 0 1 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 2 1 WRosr1b 5 3 3 3 after plateumpireBil McGo wanwanted Allen's danJ oycelf 3 1 1 0 Beltranrf 4 1 2 1 Mercerss 3 1 1 0 Bthncrtc 4 2 3 2 Phelpsp 1 0 0 0 McKnrc 5 0 2 1 68; Goldschmidt,Arizona,68; Pollock, Arizona,68; C .Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Mossrf 2 0 0 0 lannettph 1 0 0 0 CYoungrf 1 0 0 0 Lockep 2 0 0 0 Tehernp 2 0 0 0 gling sweatshirt sleeveto becut off becauseit was Rienzop 1 0 0 0 Descalsss 4 0 1 0 distractingBostonRedSoxhitters. Allen wasfined AGonzaleLos z, Angeles, 67;JhPeralta, St. Louis, 65. Wietersdh 4 0 1 0 Swisherdh 3 0 2 1 Crondh 3 0 0 0 Gregrsss 4 1 2 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 DSolanph 1 0 0 0 BBarnslf 4 0 0 0 HOMERUNS —Harper, Washington, 19;Stan- Pearcelf 3 0 1 0 Chsnhll3b 4 0 0 0 CrPerezc 4 0 0 0 Drew2b 4 0 0 0 K angph 1 0 0 0 Grigip 0000 $250 bymanager Ossie Vitt andtheshirt endedup M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Rusinp 3 1 1 0 in theHall ofFame. ton, Miami18; , Pederson, LosAngeles, 17; Frazier, JHardyss 3 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 2 0 G iavtg2b 1 0 0 1 RFlorslf 4 1 1 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 1946 —Chicagopitcher ClaudePasseau won Cincinnati, 16; Goldschmidt,Arizona,16;Arenado, Flahrly2b 2 0 0 0 Bourncf 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 0 2 5 2 Totals 3 58 117 SRdrgz3b 0 0 0 0 KFlorsp 0 0 0 0 Ynoaph-3b 1 0 1 0 ISuzukiph 1 0 0 1 his owngamewith a two-run game-ending homerin Colorado,13;Braun,Milwaukee,13. Josephc 2 0 0 0 JRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Los Angeles 000 011 000 — 2 Totals 32 4 6 4 Totals 3 1 5 9 5 — 8 Totals 4 0 5 135 Totals 4 0 101710 STOLENBASE S—BHamilton, Cincinnati, 23; Avilesph-ss 1 0 0 0 New York 010 0 0 0 0 1x P itlsburgh 0 0 0 2 0 0 020 — 4 the ninthinningagainst Brooklyn.TheCubswon2-0. DP — New York 1. LOB—Los Angeles 6, New Atlanta 1950 —TheBostonRedSoxcollected 42total DGordon,Miami,20; Polanco,Pittsburgh,16; Pol- Totals 29 1 6 1 Totals 2 7 2 7 2 0 11 100 101 — 0 Miami 0 10 100 003 — 5 lock, Arizona,14; Aoki, SanFrancisco,12; Blackmon, B altimore 001 0 0 0 000 — 1 York10. 28 —Freese(12), Joyce(10), Gregorius (6), No outswhenwinningrunscored. Colorado 401 5 0 0 ggx— 10 bases,includingsix homerunsand23 hits ina20-4 LOB —Pittsburgh 1, Atlanta 6. HR—Mccutchen E—Mathis (1), Descalso (5). DP—Miami 1. rout of theSt. LouisBrowns.Boston sent10 mento Colorado,12;Revere, Philadelphia,12. Cleveland 0 0 1 0 0 1 Ogx— 2 R.Flores(1). HR—Trout (15), B.McCann (9). SBDP — Baltimore 3, Cleveland3. LOB —Baltimore Gardner —Miami 10, Colorado8. 28—D.Gordon (12), the plate inthefirst, second,third andsixth innings. PITCHING —Wacha, St. Louis, 8-1; Gcole,Pitts(14).SF—Giavotela, Teixeira. (8), C.Johnson (1), Bethancourt (1).SB—Maybin(9), LOB 1902— SteveGarveyoftheLosAngelesDodgburgh,8-2; Bcolon,NewYork, 8-4; Shields, SanDi- 4, Cleveland10. 28—A.Jones (9), C.Santana(9), IP H R E R BBSO J.Gomes (1). CS—Polanco (4). S—Teheran. SF—F. Stanton(8), Ozuna(12), LeM ahieu (5). 38—Prado ego, 7-0;Bumgarner, SanFrancisco,7-2; 7tiedat 6. YGomes (2). HR—M.Machado (9). SB—Kipnis (8). LosAngeles Freeman. (1), Hecha varria (2), Arenado (2), McKenry (1). HRers became the fifth majorleaguerto playin1,000 ERA —Scherzer, Washington,1.85; SMiger,Atlan- S—Joseph, Bourn. RichardsL,5-4 2 - 3 5 6 6 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO Ca.Gonza lez(5), W.Rosario 2 (4). consecutivegames. 2 -3 2 1 1 0 0 1983 — Philadelphia'sSteveCarlton struckout ta,1.89;Gcole, Pittsburgh,1.90;Greinke,LosAngeIP H R E R BBSO C.Ramos Pittsburgh IP H R E R BBSO 32-3 2 0 0 0 3 Locke les, 1.97;Wacha,St. Louis, 2.18;Burnett, Pittsburgh, Baltimore Santiago 6 1-3 7 4 4 2 4 Miami LonnieSmith of theSt. LouisCardinals inthethird 2.20; deGrom, NewYork, 2.41. U.Jimenez 5 6 1 1 6 5 J.Alvarez 2 0 0 0 1 1 Bastardo 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 PhelpsL,2-3 32- 3 11 9 9 0 3 inning forcareerstrikeout No. 3,522, overtaking 21-3 1 1 1 1 4 11-3 2 1 1 1 1 NolanRyanasthecareer strikeout king. St. Louis, STRIKEOUT S—Kershaw, Los Angeles, 101; BrachL,3-2 Bedrosian 1 2 1 1 2 1 J.Hughes 1 1 0 0 0 1 Rienzo Shields,SanDiego, 92;Scherzer,Washington, 90; Cabral 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 NewYork WorleyL,2-4 0 1 1 1 0 0 Morris 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 however,beatthePhilies, 2-1. 21-3 3 0 0 1 0 HamelsPhi , ladelphia,84;Liriano,Pittsburgh,81; Har- Cleveland WarrenW,4-4 62 - 3 4 2 2 3 2 Atlanta K.Flores 1989 —ErnieWhitt hadthreehits anddrove in vey,NewYork, 80;Gcole, Pittsburgh,79. SalazarW,6-1 7 6 1 1 1 10 Ju.Wilson 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Teheran 7 1-3 5 4 4 0 5 Colorado threerunsastheToronto BlueJaysbeatthe MilwauSAVES —Storen, Washington, 18;Rosenthal, St. B.ShawH,B 1 0 0 0 0 0 Capuano 1 0 0 0 0 2 Ji.Johnson BS,3-5 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 RusinW,2-0 7 7 2 2 2 8 kee Brewers4-2 in thefirst gamein major league Louis, 18; Melancon,Pittsburgh, 17; Casiga, San Allen S,13-14 1 0 0 0 1 2 HBP —by Santiago(A.Rodriguez), byWarren(Cron). Grigi W,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Kahnle 1 1 0 0 0 0 history playedindoors andoutdoors onthe same Francisco,17;Familia,NewYork, 16; Grigi, Atlanta, Salazarpitchedto1batter in the8th. WP — Richards. Worleypitchedto1 batter inthe9th. Betancourt 1 5 3 3 0 0 day. With the threat of rain, theSkyDom e's $100 15; KimbrelSan , Diego,13. T—2:44. A—24,939(36,856). T—3:05.A—40,096(49,638). T—2:44. A—33,268(49,586). T—2:59.A—30,373 (50,398). million retractableroofwasclosed. Chicago


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

ate oas A i The Associated Press

i veTim erst eir r strai tvictor

Bobby Shuttleworth making

PORTLAND — Fanendo Adi

Portland forward Fanendo Adi, middle, celebrates his goal with teammates Nat Borchers, right, and Liam Ridgewell against the New England Revolution in Portland on Saturday night. Adi scored two goals as the Timbers won, 2-0.

some outstanding saves. The best came in the 74th minute, when Adi's header found Maximilliano Urruti for a driving header, but

scored two late goals and the Portland Timbers beat the New England Revolution 2-0 on Sat-

urday night for their first three- Shuttleworth dove to punch the game winning streak since join- ball clear. Shuttleworth finished ing MLS in 2011. with three saves. Adi scored aheader offofJorge Portland's Adam K w a rasey Villafana's free kick in the 86th had a much quieter night for his minute, then stretched to knock

Don Ryan/TheAssociatedPress

sixth shutout. New England's best

Alvas Powell's cross past goal- opportunity came in the first half, keeper Bobby Shuttleworth three courtesy of Kelyn Rowe. A shot minutes later to seal the victory. by the midfielder crossed up the Portland (6-5-4) moved into Timbers goalkeeper, who tried fourth place in the Western Con- to grab the shot, but saw the ball ference. New England (5-4-6) bounce off his hands and spin out is winless streak in six games. for a corner kick. The Revolution are second in the The Timbers lost Dairon AsEastern Conference. prilla to an apparent leg injury in New England frustrated Port- the 65th minute. The midfielder land for much of the night, with

Nextup Houston at Portland When:7:30 p.m. June 20TV: None

was taken off on a stretcher.

STANLEY CUP FINAL

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

Dixon dominatesfield at crash-freeTexasrace

/.rrpW.

The Associated Press

pole, and the 2011 Daytona

FORT WORTH, TexasScott Dixon was still moan-

5 00 champion won i n

his

ing 30 minutes before the

ARCA Series debut. Bayne entered the race at Pocono

race about the extra down-

Raceway for more practice

force planned for his car. After his dominating vic-

time ahead of today's NASCAR Sprint Cup race. Even

tory at Texas, in a crash-free

with 71 career Cup starts,

and record-setting race with

Bayne had never turned a lap

new aero kits, Dixon certain-

at the 2t/~-mile tri-oval track.

ly had no complaints with his Bayne is 31st in points with No. 9 Chevrolet that he said no top-10 finishes in his first was "basically on rails." full Cup season. Dixon won by 7.8 seconds Hamilton wins Canadiover Chip Ganassi Racing an pole: MONTREAL teammate Tony Kanaan on Saturday night in the fast-

est IndyCar Series race ever at high-speed, high-banked time. Hamilton posted the Texas track. The New Zea- fastest qualifying lap of 1 lander led 97 of 248 laps and minute, 14.393 seconds over won with an average speed the 2.71-mile course on the

I I

of 191.940 mph.

"In hindsight, I'm glad," Dixon said. "They understood what they were doing. That's why they do what they

/

,I

=

1

do and I just drove the car." After anxiety about how

Bruce Bennett/ pool via The Associated Press

Tampa Bay's J.T. Brown, left, watches as Cedric Paquette's shot goes by Chicago Blackhawks goalie Corey Crawford during the first period Saturday in Tampa, Florida. The Lightning won 4-3 to tie the best-of-seven Stanley Cup Final at1-1.

The Associated Press

BULCKHAWKS1, LIGHTNING1

TAMPA, Fla. — Andrei Vasi-

levskiy had no warning before Ben Bishop skated over to the

Tampa Bay bench and went

(

c

a Iql

up the tunnel. Just like that,

a 20-year-old Russian rook- Game1: Blackhawks 2, Lightning1 ie was playing goalie for the Game 2: Lightning4,Blackhawks 3 Lightning in the third period of Monday atChicago 5 p.m. a tied Stanley Cup Final game. Chicago 5 p.m. Vasilevskiy barely had time Wednesdayat June 13 at Tampa Bay 5 p.m. to feelany nerves before the Lightning scored. Bishop re- x-June15 at Chicago 5 p.m. turned — and then left again, x-June17 at TampaBay 5 p.m. apparently struggling with an All Times PDT; x-if necessary undisclosed injury. But with hi s Tampa Bay

teammates playing ferociously in front of him, Vasilevskiy had nothing to fear as the Lightning tied the series. Jason Garrison scored the tie-breaking power-play goal with 11 minutes, 11 seconds

to play, Vasilevskiy made five

saves in a strange 9:13 of relief

work, and the Lightning beat the Chicago Blackhawks 4-3 in Game 2 on Saturday night to

even the series. "Nervous? Just maybe a little bit," Vasilevskiy said. "But

Ile Notre-Dame. Mercedes

teammate Nico Rosberg was second, about one-third of a second behind. It's the 44th

pole of Hamilton's career and his sixth in seven races this season. He leads the

the cars would handle on the championship standings by IA-mile track with the new 10 points over Rosberg. aero kits, especially after Brown takes No. 1 spot three Chevrolets went airin Top Fuel qualifying: ENborne during practice for the GLISHTOWN, N.J. — AnIndianapolis 500, there were

By Greg Beacham

Lewis H a m i lton e a r n ed the pole for the Canadian Grand Prix for the fourth

tron Brown raced to his third

no accidents. consecutive No. 1 qualifying There were only one cau- position in Top Fuel in the tion, excluding the first lap of Toyota NHRA Summernathe race when the initial start tionals at Old Bridge Townwas waved off because the ship Raceway Park. Brown, 23-car field wasn't properly from nearby C hesterfield, aligned. pushed his dragster to the Also on Saturday: No. 1 spot with a 3.725-secBaynewins Poconotuneup: ond run at 317.57 mph. The LONG POND, Pa. — Trevor 2012 series champion has Bayne dominated from the two victories this season.

I'mready,and Ikeep my head tonight, as well." ready for the game, and that's While a promising prospect, it.... First time, maybe more Vasilevskiy is greener than the nervous. But second time, just Chicago River on St. Patrick's play and that's it." Day: He has 16 regular-season Tyler Johnson and Cedric games of NHL experience, Paquette also scored, but the and he had played in just two Lightning's revived offensive games since March 31. But the effort was somewhat overshad- Russiancame in for92 seconds owed by three goalie changes beforeGarrison scored the goin the third period. ahead goal, and he returned Vasilevskiy earned his first to finish the game with 7:41 to careerplayoffvictory,and the play. Lightning refused to say exNikita Kucherov had a goal actly what happened to Bishop and an assist for the Lightning, or give any indication of his who played with all the aggresprognosis. sion they lacked in the third pe"No one really knew what riod of Game 1 when Chicago was goingon," Tampa Bay cap- rallied late to win. tain Steven Stamkos said. "We The Lightning didn't say were kind of listening to the why Bishop left the game, announcements for who was came back and left again. He in net for our team a couple of times. But depth has been

complained of interference on

Brent Seabrook's tying goal after the first couple shots, I a partfor our success allsea- early in the third period, but feel myself better. Every game son, and it showed in the net played on for several minutes.

Ralph Lauer/The Associated Press

Scott Dixon takes the checkered flag to win the IndyCar race at

Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday. The New Zealander led 97 of 248 laps.

GOLF ROUNDUP

Rose rises tothe top of the Memorial leaderboard The Associated Press

a little comfort going into the

io — Suzann Pettersen took a

one-stroke lead in the Manulife Rose made an early surge Sat- 201, three dear of Francesco LPGA Classic, making an eaurday at the Memorial, when Molinari and David Lingmerth. gle and four birdies on the first it seemed as though everyone Woods was in a peculiar po- 11 holes and closing with seven except Tiger Woods was mak- sition after the worst score of pars for a 6-under 66. Pettersing a move. Rose kept right on his pro career. When he tapped en had a 19-under 197 total at going until he posted a 6-under in for quadruple-bogey 8 on the Whistle Bear Golf Club. 66 and emerged with a three- final hole at Muirfield Village, Calcavecchia leads at Prinshot lead. he had an 85 and was in last cipal Charity Classic: DES DUBLIN, Ohio —

Darron Cummings/The Associated Press

Justin Rose, of England, tees off on the15th hole during the third round of the Memorial in Dublin, Ohio, on Saturday. Rose holds a three-shot lead at Muirfield Village.

J u stin final round. He was at 15-under

konda Club. The 54-year-old Calcavecchia has two victories on the 50-and-over tour after winning 13 times on the PGA

Tour, including the 1989 British Open. Noren leads Stenson at Nordea Masters: MALMO,Sweden — Sweden's Alex Noren shot a 5-under 67 to take a two-shot

lead in the Nordea Masters,

Five years after he first had place. For the first time, he will t hat handshake w it h J a ck tee off as a single. Woods did

MOINES, Iowa — Mark Calcavecchia made a 15-foot birdie

Nicklaus after winning his

notspeak to reportersafterthe

tournament, Rose put himself

round.

putt on the final hole for a 4-un- son had a 68 to pull within five der 68 and a one-stroke lead in strokes. Noren, the 2011 winner

in great position by missing only one green — just barely-

Also on Saturday: the Champions Tour's Principal at Bro Hof Slott, had an 11-unPettersen on top at LPGA Charity Classic. Calcavecchia der 205 total on PGA Sweden Classic: CAMBRIDGE, Ontar- had a 9-under 135 total at Wa- National's Lakes Course.

on the back nine and creating

and local favorite Henrik Sten-


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D5

NBA FINALS

ormer —tar uo aat rivin innewroeasa reserve By Josh Dubow

WARRIORS 1,CAVALIERS 0

CavsguardirvIngundergoessurgery

The Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. — Andre

Iguodala's impressive resume heading into this season fea-

tured an Olympic gold medal, an All-Star app earance an d

(II<na 4 Game1: Warriors108, Cavs100

f irst-team A l l - Today at Golden State 5 p.m. NBA d e fensive Tuesday atCleveland 6 p.m. team honors. June 11 at Cleveland 6 p.m.

CLEVELAND — Cavaliers All-Star guard Kyrie Irving has undergone surgery to repair his broken kneecap, aninjury sustained in Game1 of the NBAFinals. The team says Irving had theoperation Saturday at theCleveland Clinic. The surgery was performed byteam physician, Dr. Richard Parker with two other doctors assisting. Theteamsays Irving will need three to four months before hecanresume "basketball activity."

One of the few x-June14 atGoldenState 5p.m. Iguodala thi n gs I g u odala had not done x-June16 at Cleveland 6 p.m. since entering the league as a x-June19 atGoldenState 6p.m. body else," Bogut said. "When first-round draft pick in 2004 All Times PDT; x-if necessary you have David Lee (not playwas come into a game off the ing) and have Andre Iguodala bench. est shots per game as a pro. backing up a third-year player So when Iguodala easily The players on the deep bench in Harrison Barnes and all acceptedthat role as a reserve had no complaints when they these kinds of things and not for the Golden State War- went from key contributors to complaining, you don't have a riors back in training camp, not playing depending on the right to complain." it helped set the tone for the matchups. Including the playoffs, Igteam's success. But it started when first- uodala had played 806 NBA David Lee also went from year coach Steve Kerr decided games before thisseason and All-Star to reserve without a to start Harrison Barnes over had never come in as a repeep. Andrew Bogut did not Iguodala. serve. In fact, no player in that "There's no excuse for any- span had played more games bristle when he had his few-

— The Associated Press

want to make an impact when

fall-away jumper at the end

you're in the game, so you

of regulation that helped the Warriors send the game to overtime. "Andre is able to act before

have to pick and choose when to force up a shot, when to let

the offense come to you, when to be aggressive. That is probably the hardest part." Iguodala has handled it well, but perhaps never as well as he did in Golden State's 108100 overtime win in Game 1 of the NBA Finals against Cleve-

land on Thursday night. Iguodala hit 6 of 8 shotswithout being a reserve across including a 3-pointer while the entire league. wearing only one shoe — for After a l i t tl e adjustment, 15 points. Iguodala has taken quickly to P erhaps m o r e imp o r t his new role. ant was his defense against "Usually you can let the LeBron James. Despite scorgame come to you starting," he ing 44 points, James had trousaid. "You don't have to force ble when matched up with any shots. I know I'm going Iguodala, shooting just 4 for to get my shots here. I know

13 in that matchup with only

my rhythm will come to me. two made baskets inside the I know I'm always going to 3-point line. be loose. But coming off the And it was Iguodala who bench, you're a little stiff. You forced James into a tough

Continued from D1 "They could lose all three teams, no question, and it would be a great blow," said Art Spander, who has spent

San Francisco Examiner, and has lived in Oakland for about

c'

have." It was not long ago that this

that boast at the time.

Now it is a place to flee. The riors are all looking to get out, seeing greener grass beyond their concrete-and-blacktop complex. It is possible, if not likely,

ABOVE: Fans at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California, watch the national anthem being performed before Game1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday. The Warriors have131 consecutive sellouts dating to December 2012. They have what is generally regarded as the NBA's best

that the Oakland of 2020 will have no major teams.

The Warriors have plans to move back to San Francisco, to a glassy waterfront arena,

home-court advantage,measured by noise (110decibels by one reading a couple of years ago) and standings (39-2 this past regular season). LEFT:The

as early as 2018. The Raiders and the A's, trying to disconnect from each other and

from the decaying stadium they share, are threatening

Oakland Coliseum and Oracle Arena are next to each other

to leave, too — the Raiders

back to Los Angeles, the A's to San Jose or anywhere else

off an Oakland highway. Soon, both stadiums might be without professional sports teams, with the Warriors moving to San Francisco as early as 2018, the Athletics looking for a new baseball park and the Raiders

that welcomes them to a better

ballpark. Oakland was once the most successful sports city in the

nation. The A's won three consecutive World Series from 1972 to 1974. The Warriors won the NBA title in 1975. The Raiders won the Super Bowl at the end of the 1976 season.

and the arena were built about 50 yards apart, connected by a small plaza, surrounded by a sea of parkingplaces, and easily spotted from the freeway. It has hardly changed since, a time capsule left unburied. But the landscape is shifting. On Friday, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver planned

Pro franchisesinOakland There hasbeenat least onefranchise in thefour major sports in Oakland sincethe Raiders wereoneof the charter franchises of the American Football League,which beganplay in1960. With the Athletics looking for anewstadium, theWarriors moving to SanFrancisco as soon as2018andthe Raiders again looking to movesouth, Oakland might soon bewithout any major pro sports properties. League Team Years Titles 1968- resent MLB A t hletic NFL Raiders 1960-81, 1995-present 2 NBA Warriors 1966-67, 1971-96, 1997- resent NHL Seals/Golden Seals 1967-76 0 Total 143 total seasons to themselves that the night

would be better if only the game were somewhere else. The proposed site is across

Their popularity also made itreasonable to search for an arena that was not nearly 50

years old.

"It's unfortunate, but that's life in th e w o rld o f s ports now," said Rick Barry, the

Hall of Fame player who led the Warriors to their last NBA title, after the team moved to

Oakland from San Francisco. "They want to go back to

the arena will be privately fi-

where their roots are, and you A's, cast as scruffy contrasts can't blame them. Where they to their upright San Francis- are is antiquated."

nanced,the Warriors said,but

co counterparts, the

ground has not been broken. "This team needs a new

and the Giants. The Warriors,

appear headed to divorce as

who moved to San Francisco

co-inhabitants of what is now

riors from the Raiders and the

4 9ers

from Philadelphia in 1962, are a blend of those divided fan day's game, though it was bases, unbound by geographvery likely that few in atten- ic boundariespartly because dance for Golden State's 108- they are the area's only NBA 100 overtime victory thought team. arena, there is no doubt about that," Silver said before Thurs-

En-

Oregon Project, in investigations by ProPublica and the BBC.

F arah, t h e worl d and Olympic 5,000 and 1 0,000-meter cham p i on from Great Britain, is Salazar's star athlete and believes that his name is

beingtaintedby the claims. "I'm really angry at this situation," Farah said. "It's

not fair, it's not right. I haven't done anything but my name is being dragged through the mud. "It's something t h at's not in my control. I want to

know answers." Farah said he spoke to

Salazar on Friday.

hoping to movesouth again.

" I said to h i m , 'Alberto, what's going on'? I want some answers,'" the 32-year-old Farah said. "He

The Associated Press file photos

said, 'Mo, I can prove this to

you, these are just allegations. I can show you some evidence.'"

San Francisco Bay, but about 20 miles, over the Bay Bridge, to meet with Warriors execu- by car. "From the league standtives to discuss progress on an arena envisioned in San Fran- point, we've always seen this cisco's Mission Bay neighbor- team as the Bay Area's team," hood, a resurgent area south Silver said. of downtown and about a mile That distinguishes the Warsouth of th e Giants' AT&T Park. It is private land, and

h a ve

made deep championship runs.

the Portland-based Nike

Raiders, the A's and the War-

opened in 1966. The stadium

teams like ours wh o

ing his own reputation. Salazar has been accused by his former assistant of using doping practices for his athletes at

jor League BasebalL Only six other U.S. cities could make

land-Alameda County Arena and Coliseum Complex

in the NBA because careers are at stake, money is at stake, egos," Kerr said. "That's, I think, what separates a lot of the really good teams and

the American are damag-

the NBA, the NHL and Ma-

ty of those teams. The Oak-

and it's not easy to sacrifice

despite his concerns that doping allegations against

all four major sports: the NFL,

charm was — and is, for now — the geographic proximi-

"Depth is great as long as guys are willing to sacrifice,

with coach Alberto Salazar,

When the Warriors arrived in 1971, Oakland had teams in

Part of Oakland's unique

land's bench 34-9 in Game 1.

BIRMINGHAM,

be.

door soccer, among others.

reserves outscored Cleve-

gland — Double Olympic champion Mo Farah said Saturday he will not be ending his r e lationship

too gentrified, was a place that sports franchises wanted to

World Team Tennis and in-

en so valuable all season for the Warriors. Golden State's

The Associated Press

diverse, troubled and revered port city by the bay, at turns derided and defended, consideredtoo crime-ridden and

land Oaks (of the American Basketball Association) and the Oakland Seals (NHL),

Iguodala has been the key on a second-unit that has prov-

reputations

r

San Jose and Silicon Valley

that also welcomed the Oak-

cerebral in that way. "

allegations hurting

ing for the likes of The San Francisco Chronicle and The

They were anchors to a city

playing against well. He's very

Salazar

decades in the Bay Area writ-

cisco, or the young turks that

coach Ron Adams said. "I think he understands who he's

TRACK AND FIELD

Oakland

50 years. "Oakland doesn't have the cache of San Fran-

something happens r ather thanjustreact, " assistant

The Raiders and the A 's

ing one near the water in Oakland (a mirrored hope,

of the former Hollywood Park

perhaps, of what the Giants

racetrack. With momentum building

have across the bay), and

to return an NFL team to Los

have a persistent suitor i n San Jose. But Major League

Angeles, it seems that some combination of those three

Baseball says that San Jose, franchises — one or two of at the southern edge of the them — could move there in bay, is Giants territory, leav- the next couple of years. NFL ing the A's stuck for now. owners will discuss the topic They signed a lease extension at meetings in August. "How much more disrespect last year that binds them in Oakland through 2018, and can Oakland tolerate from its they have invested money in ungrateful three sports francoliseum upgrades, like new chises?" Dave Newhouse, a video boards, to nudge the fa- retired longtime columnist for cility out of the 20th century. The Oakland Tribune, wrote Part of what makes O.co recently in an essay published Coliseum a relatively inhospi- in Bay A rea newspapers. table place to watch baseball "There isn't another sports is the wall of seats and suites town anywhere that has enbuilt 20 years ago to entice the joyed more success or endured Raiders to return from L os more grief from its sports tenAngeles, where then-owner ants than Oakland, the carpetAl Davis took them in 1982. bagger capital of America." They block what had been a That backdrop permeates serene view of the Oakland what might be a high point in hills beyond the outfield and Oakland sports history. The eliminated the type of pavil- Warriors sit three victories ion that so many new ball- away from their first champiparks now relish. onship in 40 years, and from The Raiders, now run by bringing Oakland its first maDavis' son, Mark, could be jor pro sports championship the first of the three teams to since the A's won an earthleave Oakland — again. With quake-interrupted World Seno serious alternatives clos- ries in 1989. er to home, the Raiders have That championship came

called O.co Coliseum. Each would like the other to leave, connected with the San Diego then find a way to build a one- Chargers in a stadium bid in sport stadium of its own. Carson, a Los Angeles suburb. The A's have tinkered with The St. Louis Rams have eyes other stadium sites, includ- on Los Angeles, too, at the site

over a team from San Francisco. Interesting if the next one

— what could be the last one — is won by a team headed back there itself.

Farah said he won't be breaking his ties with Salazar because he has not seen

any "clear evidence," but he would the "first person to leave him" if the allegations areproven. Salazar, who has denied

any wrongdoing, is an endurance consultant for UK Athletics In the story by ProPubli-

ca and the BBC, Salazar was accused by his former assistant, Steve Magness, of violating anti-doping rules and encouraging doping by one of his top runners, Galen Rupp. Rupp won the silver medal in the 10,000 m eters a t t h e L o n d on

Olympics in 2012, finishing behind Farah. Rupp also denies any wrongdoing. The story said U .S. Olympic distance runner Kara Goucherand atleast six otherformer Salazar athletes and staff m e m-

bers have gone to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency with their concerns. It said USADA has not confirmed or

denied any investigations. The story said no doping accusations have been made against Farah. Salazarisa former track

and field coach at the University of Oregon, is considered America's most pow-

erful running coach.


D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

TENNIS: FRENCH OPEN

Triple Crown Continued from D1

Rested Wawrinka awaits Djokovic in Frenchfinal

All week, trainer Bob Baff ert had t a l ked a bout t h e

good "vibe" around his horse, and that's what he ran like,

a weightless emanation that left a crowd of 90,000 roaring with appreciation, not just be-

cause they were lucky enough to seehistory,butbecause he was beautiful. "As soon as I sit

in the saddle, it was such power," Espinoza said. How long can 90,000 people scream with their mouths wide open'? Several minutes

By Howard Fendrich

gli K~ '

The Associated Press

PARIS — Novak Djokov-

ic squeezed his eyes shut and raised both arms, a ratherreserved celebration

worth. That's what racing his-

tory sounded like, a sustained throbbing wave for the horse,

Il

jockey and t r ainer. It b u ilt

at the conclusion of his up-

i

down the backstretch and then hit a sustained peak as he crossed the finish line.

e'I

"All I did was just take in

the crowd," Baffert said. "It

Chang W. Lee /New York Times News Service

was thundering." Ridden by Victor Espinoza, American Pharoah races home to win the 147th Belmont Stakes in Elmont, On 12 previous occasions New York, on Saturday. Breaking e 37-year drought, Pharoah enters the pantheon of horse racing as since 1978, horses had come to the Belmont with a chance to win the Triple Crown, and all of them had failed. Baffert, at 62 with a sweep of hair white

as sea foam, had trained three of those failures. "It's caused

me a lot of misery," he said. Good horses, maybe even great horses, had been defeated by the combination of Belmont's ankle-deep sand, the mile-and-a-half distance

and a fresh field of horses who had sat out the Preakness and w ere more rested. All of rac-

ing wondered whether the Triple Crown just wasn't achievable anymore — maybe the horseswere too finely bred or needed more rest. Even American Pharoah's

connections weren't sure it could be done — they only hoped it could. No one was

more deeply experienced in Triple Crowns, or in Triple Crown disappointment, than

Baffert. He had been here t hree times before w it h

the sport's 12th Triple Crown winner. knew was that the horse had an "It" factor.

Pharoah'skeystovictory THE START So many racesare lost at the breakwhen ahorse stumbles or hits the starting gate. JockeyVictor Espinoza knowsthat from hard experience. His first Triple Crown try in 2002 endedwhenWar Emblem stumbled badly and finished eighth. Noworries this time. American Pharoahgot awayclean and immediately glided over to the rail. PRESSURENEVERMATERIALIZED As expected, Materiality tried to prompt the pace.TheFlorida Derby winner ranged into second, to American Pharoah's outside. Materiality was unable to hook the leader asAmerican Pharoah maintained his high cruising speed, holding that rival comfortably at bay on the run downthe backstretch. PLENTY LEFT IN TANK Turning for home,American Pharoahwas rolling along on a two-length lead whenFrosted picked upthe chase. For afleeting moment, it appeared the gray colt might take a run at American Pharoah. And just a quickly, it was over.American Pharoah kicked away as Joel Rosario implored Frosted to keeppace. No wonder. American Pharoah ranthe final quarter mile in 24.32 seconds, even faster than Secretariat's 25-second final quarter in his record-setting Belmont victory in1973. — The Associated Press

chance to sweep, with Silver Charm in 1997, Real Quiet

pulled tightly shut, to prevent American Pharoah was raccameras from disrupting the ing for the fourth time in eight had been full of confidence. horse's peace. At other barns, weeks, whereas the last nine in 1998 and War Emblem in 2002. On those occasions, he

doors stood open and activity

Endurance

activity and getting going on

Continued from 01

do most of my training from

Belmont winners had not run

6-3, 5-7, 5-7, 6-1, on Saturday

way he moves," Espinoza said. "It really don't feel like he goes

in the resumption of a sus-

fast. It feels like slow motion,

but he's passing other horses." As post time approached, the senseof occasion steadily built and maybe American Pharoah sensed it, d espite Baffert's efforts to keep him

quiet. If nothing else, surely the horse could smell the commotion. The air was a mix of

Macanudo cigar smoke, grill fumes, mustard and spirits,

along with sweet hay and other things that ferment at a track.

He was cool in the paddock, still as a statue. Baffert studied him and told Espinoza:

"He's ready. Go ahead and ride him with confidence." When he got on to the track

he began to throw his head around and dodge sideways, even thrusting his mouth at

the lead pony. He was antsy. His owner, A h med

Z ayat,

to the next one. Being able to

Crown winner."

he wasn't wrong. But how to tell the indefinable difference

and stride and temperament

an all-time immortal who be-

to join the immortal 11 others. American Pharoah galloped into history. "It's a great

longs in the select group of Triple Crown winners? All American Pharoah's people

name," Baffert said. — Sally Jenkinsis a columnist

doors endurance community in Central Oregon is thriving

of big to have that."

Light traffic and stoplights

with The Washington Post.

triathlete who moved to Bend

hours with no stoplights or

10 years ago from Danville, California. He also enjoys the variety of trails on which to train so close to his home.

lots of traffic or anything ... it's just invaluable training. Other places you've got to stop at lights and stop signs, and people aren't as courteous as they are in Bend."

community also coaches masters swim- The endurance "As a triathlete at times train-

that set when they returned,

but Djokovic was superb in the fifth, and Saturday's play took 61 minutes, bringing the total count to 4 hours, 9

minutes. "No different from a ny

Steffi Graf with 22. — The Associated Press

other match that we played against each other. It's always a thriller, always a the U.S. Open. marathon," Djokovic said. B eat Wawrinka for t h e "Wasn't a physically easy 18th time in 21 meetings, and match, that's for sure, but I Djokovic also would be the think I will be fine for the fi- first man since Jim Courier nals. Whatever I have left in me I will put out on the court

tomorrow, and hopefully it can be enough." He already owns eight major titles, but none from Roland Garros, where he lost

in 1992 to win the Austra-

lianOpen and French Open consecutively, putting him halfway to the first calen-

dar-year Grand Slam in 46 years. Wawrinka won his semifi-

nal against Jo-Wilfried TsonRafael Nadal, the nine-time ga on Friday, as scheduled, champion he eliminated in so he enjoyed a less-stressthis year's quarterfinals. ful Saturday than Djokovic. Today, less than 25 hours In 2014, Wawrinka won his after finishing off Murray, first major title at the AustraDjokovic will face No. 8 Stan lian Open, then showed up Wawrinka with a chance to in Paris and promptly lost in become only the eighth man the first round. in tennis history to own at Now he will make his least one trophy from each French Open final debut of the sport's four most pres- against Djokovic, who has so t igious t o u rnaments. H e much to play for. "For sure, we're both going already owns five from the the 2012 and 2014 finals to

Australian Open, two from

to be nervous," Wawrinka

Wimbledon and one from

said. "That's a fact."

round. I feel there's very few places that have all of those things. We can really get out and have amazing terrain for almost all endurance sports." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletirtcom

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there's a lot more traffic, and

and solitary," says Lieto, who

ming and triathletes in Bend.

day night because of an incoming storm. Murray took

PARIS —Overcoming a mid-match lull and a third-set deficit, Serena Williams won herthird French Opentitle and 20th major singles trophy by beating 13th-seeded Lucie Safarova of the Czech Republic 6-3, 6-7 (2), 6-2 on Saturday. The top-ranked Williams took the last six games andadded to her championships on the red clay of RolandGarros in 2002 and 2013. She stretched her Grand Slamwinning streak to 21 matches, following titles at the U.S. Open last September and Australian Openin January. Only two womenin the century-plus history of Grand Slamtennis have won moremajor titles than the 33-yearold American: Margaret Smith Court with 24, and

in the U.S. professional road

"I did three laps (up and race championship in Chattadown) of Black Butte the oth- nooga, Tennessee. "The riding is amazing," er day and that was tough," Howe says. "You don't have to McCutcheon says of Central go that far to find that terrain." Oregon. "Being able to just Matt Lieto is a professional go ride for like four or five

trails and roads to run and ride: flat, twisty, iiber-hilly,

The semifinal was halted at 3-all in the fourth set Fri-

tral Oregon is also home to several professional mountain community in Bend "pretty bikers and climbers. laid-back and humble." Howe says she was drawn "Whether i t b e c y c l ists, to Bend by all the opporturunners, kayakers, triathletes nities for d i f ferent outdoor or mountain climbers, some- sports. "OriginallyI did cross-counhow Bend seems to draw the ones with good heads on their try skiing, and I came here shoulders who know when to because I loved that, but then leave the competitive nature I found there was also great at the front door and just chill," mountain biking, great runLieto explains. "The diversity ning, good places to paddle," is also great for a triathlete, as Howe says. "There's just so I have friends who are great much you can do all year

matter what sport, you can single-sport athletes that I can always find someone to go ex- train with in swim, bike and Bend. "I don't get sick of the June 2 8 Ir o n ma n C o e ur plore with," Arritola, 29, says run." same trails. Especially in the d'Alene (Idaho) triathlonof Bend. summer, I can get up in the which includes a 2.4-mile Howe says she sees athletes Variety of sports Cascade lakes. For me, the swim, a 112-mile bike ride and from Bend at races all over the Even single-sport endurbiggest thing is I can go from a 26.2-mile (full marathon) country. ance athletes like to mix up "The community is pretty their training by trying difmy doorstep and I can be on run — he can train for the cymany different trails. I don't cling leg on local roads with amazing," Howe notes. "We ferent sports and activities. always have to drive. It's a relatively light traffic and few just have a great community Mountain biking, paddling, huge advantage." stoplights. The opportunity to of people, and there's always rock climbing, and open-water Howe, who grew up in Min- ride on such roads is one rea- someone to ru n w i th . Y ou swimming are just a few other nesota and moved to Bend son some elite cyclists say they have a team camaraderie al- outdoor sports that are options in 2010 by way of Bozeman, choose to live in Bend. most. It's really cool. It's kind near Bend. Incidentally, CenMontana, and Eugene, adds Among them are 2013 Vuelthat one drawback to the trails ta a Espana winner Chris near Bend is that they are rela- Horner and his teammate on tively flat. When she requires the Airgas-Safeway cycling training on steeper terrain, team Connor McCutcheon, 24. she simply heads to Smith McCutcheon moved to Bend Rock State Park near Terre- from Big Bear, California, in bonne or Black Butte outside 2010. He recently finished 15th

"We have lots of different

pended match to stretch his winning streak to 28.

Lieto calls the endurance

As Lieto prepares for the

ic reached his third French

the ease of his stride, "The

"We'll just get him ready, As they turned for home, and if he's great, he'll get it Baffert p repared h i mself done," Baffert said, almost — he'd seen his horses lead shrugging. only to be caught and passed Baffert thought he had before. But finally, here was great horses before — and the horse with the right build

between a great horse and

serving energy was key. The No. 1-seeded DjokovOpen final the hard way, gettingpastNo. 3 Murray, 6-3,

bottom of the Belmont track.

to say the least. the front door makes for a Morgan Arritola, a former Access to trails schedule with a l i t tle more Olympic nordic skier and now Howe, 31, will look to de- time spent with the feet up." a professional mountain runfend her title in the prestigious Lieto, 37, recently finished ner, splits her time between Western States 100-mile En- second at the Wildflower TriBend and Ketchum, Idaho. She durance Run on June 27 in athlon south of San Francisco. recently won the elite women's Northern California. Easy ac- Another triathlete from Bend, division of the U.S. Bank Pole cess to a wide variety of trails Jesse Thomas, won the event, Pedal Paddle, Bend's popular outside Bend helps her train which included a 1.2-mile multisport race. "There are amazing athfor such ultramarathons. swim, a 56-mile bike ride and "There's a diverse number a 10.9-mile run. letes at every age and level of of trails," says Howe, who ability and seriousness, so no

Sisters.

pionship at Roland Garros and complete a long-sought

According to E s pinoza, what gave them all belief was

was evident: laundry flapped in the Preakness. And he was turned to his wife. "Get ready on lines and grooms hosed untested over the deep sandy to be the owner of the Triple

age expectations "The horse is doing well," he down horses. But at American said, "but we still have to get Pharoah's barn, the only acaround there." tion was an occasional breeze Baffert nursed his h orse ruffling the geraniums. carefully all week; American Gawkers stood outside starPharoah's leg wraps looked ing at nothing much, catching rich and sumptuous enough an occasional glimpse of a for Cleopatra. On the after- stablehand walking a brownnoon of the race, their barn faced creature in a slow circle. was pin-drop quiet and a As Espinoza said, "A lot of semi-fortress. A phalanx of things can go wrong in a tenth black Escalades formed a bar- of a second." rier in front of the barn and the There just were so many green metal-siding doors were numbers against the horse.

also works as a coach and nutritionist at Recharge in

ing to collect his first chamcareer Grand Slam, and con-

a

This time, every public statement was an attempt to man-

and-down, two-day, five-set French Open semifinal victory over Andy Murray. There is one more match for Djokovic to win if he's go-

SerenaWilliams wins 26ihmajor

As a professional athlete, having a large group of peers

ing near 30 hours a week, it's with s i milar i n t erests and all about logistics and getting goals can only enhance a carecovered from the previous reer and a lifestyle. The out-

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

Facebook roof mirrors company's workplace culture

r

Developers' plan tofill the void

, Monte Vista Apartments

Builders have filed plans to construct more than 1,000

apartment andtownhome units in Bend inthe coming years. Someprojects arecurrently under construction

(136 units)

and others are still in the planning stages.

eottfer Pointe (96 units)

O

8o/ ~

Apartments

Daggett lane

,arkat R~

Moonlight Drive (54 units)

looking Ljp

Eastlake Village

(at its tiles)

Townhomes

(9 units)

NorthWest

Crossing

By Queenie Wong

(130 units)

Phase 2

San Jose Mercury News

(40 units)

MENLO PARK, Calif.

By Rick Romell Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

— Facebook employees looking for a break from sitting hunched over a computerdon'tneed to

MILWAUKEE — It's almost areflex now when

venture far from the com-

pany's new office space. They just need to walk

llnnea BellevueDrive Apartments Apartments

Summerlake Apartments

upstairs — to the roof.

A 9-acre green roof sits atop the tech firm's new Frank Gehry-designed building across from its main headquarters, filled

(208 units)

(12 units) eed Market R

(153 units)

John Tesensky walks into a building. "The first thing I do," he said, "is look up." When you're running a companythatmakes decorative ceiling tiles installed in places from Yonkers, New York, to Perth, Aus-

Seasonsat Farmington Reserve

with a plethora of native

trees and flowers, lawn furniture, white boards, viewing decks and a half-mile walking trail overlooking the city's

Tinyfirm has the world

tralia, you keep an eye out for every opportunity. Tesensky is the recently installed president of

(228 units) Pete Smith I The Bulletin

Source: City of Bend Community Development Department

Above View, a Milwaukee

firm that is small (just nine employees) and little

o re a n r o ose in

marshlands. It's more

like a park than the top of an office and big enough to accommodate a large number of the 2,800 employees who are expected to eventually fill up the

newly opened building, even on a warm summer's

day. Walking meetings are

ren a s en

known, but which has left

its mark on ceilings in four continents. Walk into a casino in the

United States and there's a decent chance you'll see Above View tiles. Nearly 2

million square feet worth of them hover in gambling halls — enough to cover about 35 football fields.

a tradition for the social

Over 31 years, the firm

networking company and a common sight on

has carved out a niche as a producerofplastercom-

By Joseph Ditzler •The Bulletin

In thePipeline

ments, SWSummer Lake Place,12 units, site plan under At least10 newapartment projreview ects are in various development • Linnea Drive Apartments, stages in Bend: 2001 NELinnea Drive, 208 • Eastlake Village, Phase2,680 units, site plan underreview NE BellevueDrive, 40units, • Bellevue Drive Apartments, under construction NE BellevueDrive, 153 units, • Boulder Pointe, 969 NE site plan under review Warner Place, 96units, under • Discovery Park Drive, Northconstruction West Crossing, 130units, • Debron Apartments, 2345 NW pre-application conference Debron Lane,nine units, build• Monte Vista Apartments, ing permit under review 20720 EmpireAve., 136units, • Seasons at Farmington Repre-application conference serve, 61550Alstrup Road, 228 • Moonlight Drive/Daggett units in two phases,building Lane Townhomes, NE Daggett permits under review Lane, 54 units, pre-application • Summer LakePlaceApartconference

Silicon Valley tech cam-

puses, including LinkedIn, Apple and Oracle, where

slip of paper pinned to a message

a simple conversation

could spark the next big idea. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, the late Apple founder Steve Jobs and other tech titans are

known for holding meetings on foot. Aside from the health benefits, a 2014 study by Stanford University researchers found that walking also boosts creative thinking. But this green rooftop

board Tuesday in Ramona Gonzales' office at CR Property Management Inc. on NE Revere Avenue told the story. It's the one, rare property Gonzales had available to lease: a four-bedroom, four-

Architecture, which

helped design Facebook's green roof. And that's exactly what

Facebook employees did on a recent windy Friday morning during an exclusive tour of the green roof for the San Jose Mercury

known," said Dan Doran,

senior project designer at Tandem, a Las Vegas-based interior design firm. But just a few months

ago, Above View was thrown into crisis when the company's two found-

rental property in Bend in April was 2.4 percent for

Development Department. Some builders are

vermiculite, perlite and

a house and 0.8 percent

in early discussions with city planners, some have building permits under review and two projects are under construction. The projects range from government-subsidized public housing to high-end mar-

fiberglass, yielding tiles

month. She expected it would rent quickly. "I haven't had a vacancy in three months," Gonzales

said. The vacancy rate for

for a duplex, according to the Central Oregon Rental Owners Association annual

survey. Between 1.4 percent and 1.6 percent of all Bend apartments surveyed, about

400, were available to rent. That number's expected to change in the coming year. After a long drought, a flood of apartment construction is starting to flow

News. With a blue sky

in Bend. Financial con-

above and a bird's-eye

straints that kept builders

view out to the horizon, they walked and talked. Some sat with their

away from the multifamily market have improved to the point that building apartments, particularly, may turn a profit.

laptops to work on the viewing deck while a few scribbled notes on a white board and others relaxed on the grass. See Facebook/E5

into intricate shapes yet are light enough to be hung in suspended ceiling frames. "They're very well-

ers, Nina Kuper and Janis Kalnajs, died within 90 days of each other. An artist schooled in the craftofdecorativeplaster, Kalnajs developed a patented system that opened up new possible uses for fancy plaster ceiling tiles. His method involved mixing plaster with

bathroom home on NW Fifth Street at $1,995 a

above the three-level

Facebook building takes open space to new heights — literally. "Work has become more mobile and fluid so you can actually step away from your desk and have a small conversation with people," said Chris Guillard, a founding partner of CMG Landscape

posite tiles that are molded

In all, more than 1,000 units of multifamily hous-

ing, meaning apartments and townhouses destined

for the rental market, are

in various phases of development inBend, according to the city Community

that could still be molded

intricately but weighed 60 percent less than their all-plaster counterparts.

It was a good idea — the foundation of the company.

ket-rate apartments.

But Kalnajs had no head for business. That was Ku-

Nov.'P;,.e

"This is a huge amount of multifamily housing activi-

per's domain. For decades, she handled marketing and sales while he oversaw design and production in

ty all at once," wrote Aaron

Henson, city senior planner, in a recent email. "To put things in perspective, there was virtually no new multifamily housing built in Bend during the 10-year period from 2004 to 2013." Projects in the city include Boulder Pointe, at NE

Boyd Acres Road and NE Ross Road, where big yellow excavators are moving

o'

Excavators clear the site of the future Boulder Pointe apartment

their little factory. Then, last October, Ku-

complex adjacent to the Sage Springs apartments, background, on

per died, at age 67. Kalnajs

NE Boyd Acres Road.

was left adrift.

Andy Tullie i The Bulletin

soil and rock to prepare the

project in Bend, the 104-unit

building site. That project calls for 96 apartments on

Sage Springs. That complex was fully leased before build-

"When Nina passed away, my uncle was like, 'Oh my gosh, what do I do? I don't have the business sense,'" Linda Wilhelms

4.7 acres. It's adjacent to the one recently built apartment

ers finished it last year.

sald.

See Rentals/E2

SeeTiles /E5

mazon'smusicservice a stoa i erent eat By Jay Greene The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — A few dozen

people crowded into a meeting room at Amazon.com's Seattle

to a random survey of 2,002 Prime Music. Much like Saint Americans conducted in JanMotel, Boom is trying to gather uary and February, Edison an audience in a world where Research found that only 7 there are plenty of alternatives. percent used Amazon's music Boom, the head of Amazon

headquarters last month for

It won't be easy. Prime Mu-

one ofthe nice perks ofwork-

sic, which debuted last June, is competing against entrenched rivals with loyal followings and deeper musicselections.

ing at the giant online retailer: a free concert. The emergingindiepop band, Saint Motel, ripped through a four-song acoustic set, including "Cold Cold Man," a tune theyperformed two weeks earlier on "Jimmy Kimmel Live." Like so many bands, Saint Motel was working overtime to build a following, stopping by Amazon before its sold-out show that night. In the front row at the Amazon performancesatSteve

And while Amazon is wellknown as a retail site, and is

beginningto rival Netflix as a streaming-video service, it lacks the hip credibility that

can draw young music fans who are the core audience for streaming music. The chall enge forAmazon is that it's not yet standing out from the crowded field of rival

streaming services. According

and Spotify, said Tom Webster, Edison's vice president

of strategy and marketing. The biggestband of Amazon Prime Music users are 35 to 44

that includes advertising, led

years old, Webster said. It's not a demographic that sets music

with 45 percent of the respon-

trends.

dents saying they had used the service. And the 800-pound gorilla of the digital-music business, Apple, is prepping a revamped

And that makes sense. Prime Music customers gen-

version of its Beats streaming

service, which offers two-day

audio service, perhaps with its iTunes branding, that could

shipping at no extra cost. Amazon has never disclosed

come as soon as this month. What's more, Amazon's

details about those customers,

service. Pandora, a free service

erally come to the service

becausetheyaremembers of Amazon's $99-a-year Prime

biggest audience isn't the

but they are likely to skew older, with disposable income

hardcore music fan, the 18- to

and homes to stash all the stuff

34-year-old demographic that drives use on Pandora, iTunes

they get from Amazon. SeeAmazon/E3

Ellen M. Banner/The Seattle Times

Saint Motel performs at a private concert at Amazon inSeattle. Steve Boom, the head of Amazon Prime Music, wants to bring the live performances at Amazon to Prime Music as well. The Saint Motel acoustic set should be available for viewing in June.


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

BUSINESS TUESDAY Online Marketplace Symposium: Learn how you makee-commerce part of your company's growth plan; 6 p.m.;$249;Redmond COCC Campus —Technology Education Center, 2324 NECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.

WEDNESDAY Young Professionals Network: The Bend Chamber's Young Professionals Network Council is holding a meeting to hear the needs and challenges young professionals in our community are facing; 5 p.m.; $10, members; $12, nonmembers;

END

The Oxford Hotel,10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.bendchamber.org or 541-382-3221.

SATURDAY Homebuyer Education Class: Learn about home buyer education and coaching services that can help you walkthrough the process ofpurchasing a home;9a.m.; $45 per household; Redmond Neighborlmpact Office, 2303 SW First St., Redmond; www. neighborimpact.org/homebuyerworkshop-registration/or 541-323-6567.

june 16 Online Marketplace Symposium:

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0323.

Learn how you makee-commerce part of your company's growth plan; 6 p.m.; $249; RedmondCOCC Campus— TechnologyEducation Center, 2324 NECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.

can be better protected; 11:30 a.m.; $20, members; $35 nonmembers; St. Charles BendCenterfor Health & Learning, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; www.cityclubco.org or 541-633-7163.

June 22

June 18

Build a Business Website with WordPress Intermediate:Learn basicHTML and CSS,howto make customizations to your WordPress site with child themes andhow to best protect your site from spammers,hackersandmalware; Continues through July1; 6 p.m4 $179; registration required; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270.

Business Startup:Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you; 11 a.m.; $29; registration required; Redmond COCCCampus — Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. Privacy and Security, Obsolescent Values in the Digital Age:This forum will discuss digital theft, your exposure to it and howyour privacy

June 23

June 30

Online Marketplace Symposium: Learn how youmakee-commerce part of your company's growth plan; 6 p.m.; $249;Redmond COCC Campus — Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop,Redmond;www. cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.

Online Marketplace Symposium: Learn how you makee-commerce part of your company's growth plan; 6 p.m.;$249;Redmond COCC Campus— TechnologyEducation Center, 2324 NECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 54 I-383-7290.

June 25 Meet with Haggen Leaders: Haggen invites those interested to discuss selling their wares on Haggen shelves, for nonprofits to learn about the community giving program, small businesses can explore co-marketing programs; 5 p.m.; COCC Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.haggen.com/or 502-250-4750.

JDIY 7 Real Estate Broker License Course:This course prepares you to qualify for the OregonReal Estate Broker's License Exam in just 10 weeks andmeets the150 hour requirement of the OregonRealEstate Agency (OREA); 6p.m.; $600; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270.

DEEDS Deschutes County • Triple KnotAssociates LLCto Charles L. andAnnV.Frazier, trustees of the Charles FrazierandAnnFrazier Revocable Trust, GolfHomesatTetherow, Lot 41, $662,189.55 • George E. andCarol M.Dodd,trustees of the DoddFamily LivingTrust, to Suzanne Lewallen,MountainPinesPLI.D., Phase1, Lot 95, $315,000 •VRE CrescentLLC,aMissouri limited liability company, to MichaelA. Monticelli, Tetherow,Phase6, Lot 297,$275,000 •William E.andDeborah M.Burkto Doug and ErinBurk, Partition Plat 2003-29, Parcel1, $480,000 •John L. andSybila M. Steenport to Mark J. Kastantin and Katherine J. Lew,Shevlin Ridge, Phase 2, Lot43, $609,500 • Douglas J.Ashley to BryanC.andJane N. Paxson,Eagle-Air Estates, Lot3, $370,000 • Bonny MargaretRobins, whoacquired title as BonnyScharff, to BrendanD.and Kayla H.Layden, Poplar Park, Lot12, $395,000 • Dean H.andVickie G.Levis to Cameron T. andKathleenE.Glogau, Northpointe, Phase 3,Lot111,$255,000 • Susan B.Huntington, acting personal representative ofthe estateof Lawrence A. Johnson, to Terry A. Vollertsen, trustee of the VollertsenLivingTrust, Township 15, Range13,Section 5,$150,000 •Wood Hill HomesInc. to Robert A. Beattie, Reed Pointe, Phase1,Lot24, $254,950 •Timothy W.andDeanaD.Tucker to David WaylandandAnnie Yilik, SunMeadow, Lot18, $289,000 • Collins andSonsInc. to ShannonK. Shely, VillagePointe, Phase1,Lot5, $246,500 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to Joshua and Mariah H. Smith, Township14, Range 13, Section 8,$260,000 •Pahli schHomesInc.toTawnaR.Fenske and Craig D. Zagurski, LavaRidges, Phase 4, Lot144, $278,500 •Andrew C.Sommer, trustee of the Andrew C. SommerRevocableTrust, to

Laurie and Terry Mazzotta, First Addition to WhisperingPinesEstates, Lot24, Block 4, $376,000 • Charles R.Hoytto RheubenProperties LLC, Partition Plat1990-62,Parcel2, $485,000 • Tim Andereggto CraigGribskov, trustee of the CraigGribskovTrust, RiverRidge Two Condominiumsof Mt.Bachelor Village StageD, Unit 506,$324,900 • Relco TankLine Inc., a Nevada corporation, toSteveL. andRobin M. Rodgers, StarrRanch,Lot17, Block1, $154,573 • David Goodwinacti , ng personal representative oftheestateof Robert H.Goodwin,toJacobP.andJulieM. Kampmann, Starwood,Lot5,Block3, $257,000 • Stephen D.andCarol S. Dixonto Michael E.andDeniseL.Treadaway, GlazeMeadowHomesite Section Twelfth Addition of BlackButteRanch, Homesite No. 397,$620,000 • Jeffrey R. andHelen K.Bontempsto Joel M. Blatt, Mill Quarter Industrial Way, Lot 5, $675,000 • William G.andSusanB. Parksto Timothy J.and Kristin S. Holmberg, Awbrey Ridge,Phase1, Lot14, $475,000 • Ryan G.andAudra M. Rossto David L. and KarenJ. Distler, Stonehedgeonthe Rim, Lot 26,$327,500 • Richard S.andElizabeth M.Murphy, trustees ofthe RichardS. Murphy RevocableTrust, to Michael W.andLaura M. Blossey,AwbreyButte Homesites, Phase13, Lot12, Block14,$521,700 • V W.B.D., apartnership consisting of David E.Waldron, SteveVartan, Jeff Brennerand EdDobbs, to Donald Woolley, trustee ofthe DonnaP.Woolley Trust, GlazeMeadowHomesite Section Third Addition, Lots206-207,$187,850 • David A. and Kathy L. Jonesto Philip A. and Emily S.Tracy, Traditions East,Lot 46, $222,000 •HaydenHomesLLCto RicardW.and Joyce L.Martin, Cold SpringsSouth, Lot 5, $256,990 • Evie M. Waddelto l StevenA. Fitch, Fourth Addition toAndersonAcres, Lot7,

Rentals

ing at right now were in play; end up another Aspen," he they just weren't quite as said. "We're going to end up strong." with not a single barista, fireFor instance, rents ha ve man, policeman, you name risen to a point where devel- it, living in town. They'll be operscan profit from building commutingin." apartment complexes. Rent Gonzales, the property for a two-bedroom apartment manager, said she's seen a in Bendhas increased from typical three-bedroom, tvvoan average $629 in 2012 to bath rental home go from $847 this year, according to $1,400-$1,600 per month to the Central Oregon Rental $1,700-$1,900per month. "Most people are frustratAssociation surveys. That's a rise of nearly 35 percent. ed that they're having to pay Average rent for a three-bed- higher prices,"she said. room house went up m o r e Nonetheless, demand for than 55 percent in the same rentals is high, and prospecperiod, from $871 to $1,354, tive renters exist in a competaccording tosurvey data. Employment is also a key

Contlnued from E1 In NorthWest Crossing, a

Portland development firm plans to build 132apartments

in six, three-story buildings on Discovery Park Drive, NW

Crossing Driveand NW Clearwater Drive. Those plans are in the first phaseof city review. NorthWest Crossing Gener-

al ManagerDavid Ford said Thursday that THA Architecture, of Portland, which drew

upthe plans for the Downtown Bend Public Library and the High Desert Museum, is de-

signingthe complex. Tom Cody,managing part-

Block 3,$207,000 • Sharon M.Studdard, alsoknownas Sharon MariePreston, toAaronC.Bloom, Township 18,Range12, Section13, $725,000 • PacWestII LLCto BenjaminHyatt, Eagles Landing,Lot 65,$304,947 • Andrew Ochs,trustee of theAndrew Ochs Trust, toSeanM.Easly, Partition Plat 2002-24,Parcel1, $989,000 •MicahL.andTammyL.Burkleyto Sharon M. andZachary D. Preston, Partition Plat1996-22,Parcel1, $339,900 • Kenneth R. andDebora A.Anderson to ChristopherPonder,SunsetWestSecond Addition, Lot 5,Block4, $272,000 • Craig R. and Belinda B.Downieto Leslie M. and JohnW.Jenks,RidgeatEagle Crest 54, Lot50, $235,000 • Dunlap FineHomesInc. to Robert K. Murray Jr.,EmilyEstates, Lot 7,$190,125 • RodneyG.and Doris E.Sauerto Robert andElaineMahan,VistaMeadows,Phase 1, Lot3, $195,000 • C-97 LLC, aCalifornia limited liability company, toConcourse97 LLC,a California limitedpartnership, toBarbara J. Tate,Partition Plat1994-38, Parcel1, $575,000 • Pineriver Homes LLCto Scott R.and Susan J.Asla, DeschutesRiver Recreation Homesites,Unit 9, Part 2, Lot17, Block 46, $327,995 • Parsons Construction Inc. to Gary J. Cornett, DeschutesRiver Woods,Lot 61, Block PP, $359,470 • Mark A. Woll, personalrepresentative of the Estateof Betty D.Woll, to Phillip M. Kelleher,Tollgate EighthAddition, Lot 399, $285,187.50 • PacWestII LLCto Shaun W.andSarahA. Tucker,Eagle's Landing, Lot30,$304,947 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Cynthia L. KaneandGregory M.Zath, EighthStreet Cottages,Lot 24,$266,000 • Brian andJessica Yarbroughto Levi W. Tickner, BendCascadeView EstatesTract 2, Unit 3, Lot102,$170,000 • Bill E. andLouise F.Walker to Gordon and BrandieFoster, RimrockWestEstates

Replat, Lot 9,Block2,$284,000 • Lassie A.Cullen to MatthewA. Reeves and Heidi L.Slominski,WestsidePines, Phase 3,Lot7,$420,000 • Carol K. Ehlen,trustee of the Kate ElizabethEhlenGrandchild Exemption Trustand NicholasRobertEhlen GrandchildExemptionTrust, to Leland and HollyHamilton-Dake,BrokenTop, Lot 293, $1,050,000 • Kevin T.and IdaB.Lafky, andP.R. and Michelle F.Frederick, to GregoryG. and DeniseL. Kahofer, RiverRidgeTwo Condominiumsof Mt. BachelorVilage Stage A,Unit 616,$490,000 • Kathleen M.Harvey,trustee ofthe Kathleen M.HarveyRevocableTrust, and ClarenceD.andMargaret E.Myers, trustees ofthe MyersJoint Trust, to Mike A. andJamieM.Wilder, MountainVilage, Lot14, Block10,$344,000 • Mike A. and Jamie M.Wilder to Mike A. andJamieM.Wilder, trustees of the Wilder FamilyTrust, MountainVilage, Lot 14, Block10,$344,000 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to EricW. and SarahA.Werner, DorschAcres, Lot6, Block 2,$209,000 • PacWestII LLCto Martin T. andEmily L. Stukel ,Eagle'sLanding,Lot32,$305,000 • TetherowGlen58LLCto David and Elise Burrus,Tetherow,Phase2, Lot 44, $320,000 • Provident FundingAssociates LPto James J.andStacey L. Lynch,Township 17, Range12,Section14, $395,000 • Hollis L. Menfeeto GunneviHumphries, trustee ofthe GunneviHumphries Living Trust, FairwayCrestVilage 5,Lot 8, Block 23, $260,000 • Ronald D.andKimE.Peckto Wayne E. WhitlockandGaybrielle M. Dunham, Deschute sRiverWoods,Lots42-43, Block GGG,$274,900 • Marvin T.andCailynn G.Brinkerhoff, trustees ofthe Marvin T. Brinkerhoff and Cailynn G. Brinkerhoff Trust,Scott OversonandHeather Overson, BrentF. and Beckie L.Goodfellow andBrent J. and Chantelle D.Goodfellow, toToddL. and Julie A.Hilyard, trustees of theTodd

Lyle andJulie Ann Hilyard FamilyTrust, Mountain VillageEast III, Lot 5, Block15, $411,000 • Kenneth L. Knighten, trustee ofthe Kenneth L Knighten1982Trust, doing business asKnighten Enterprises, to Roy K. Fenn,Pilot Butte ParkDevelopment, Phase 2,Lot 2, $320,000 • Christine G.Hicks to Patricia L. Johanson,trusteeof the Patricia L. Johanson Trust, Miller Heights, Phase1, Lot 6, $685,000 • Dennis P. Callahanto DamonN. Hebert, Glacie rRidge,Phase2,Lot34,$293,000 •Alasdair andJennifer L. Pentland to Brian andFernandaGrisetti, River Canyon Estates, Lot66,$325,000 • Charles G.andVicki L Smith to Robert L. andMichelle R.Bunting, Deschutes River Woods,Lot15, BlockCC,$163,275 •Arbor Builders LLC to JamesW. Roberts, trustee ofthe JamesW. Roberts RevocableTrust, LakesidePlace, Lot4, $404,178.69 • Lands Bend Corp. to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada,Phase1,Lot 29,$299,900 • Franklin Brothers LLC to David Heald, Mirada, Phase1,Lot29,$299,900 Jefferson County • Sterling R. andKimberly D.Otley to Nicholas D.Lewallen andMegan Mansfield, CrookedRiver RanchNo.7,Lot 225, $187,500 •Arvin E. and Judith L. Smallto Cliff D. Pardue,CrookedRiver RanchNo.10, Lot 213, $183,000 •Timothy H.andAnnette M.Goodto Murray BrooksandMarion Brandt, CrookedRiverRanchNo.10, Lot 229, $220,000 •Angela L Squierto Tiffany A.Lang, CrookedRiverRanchNo.8, Lot177, $182,600 • Brian M.andMartin DeRodeff, trustees of the Martin DeRodeffandMargaret DeRodeff 2000 Trust to RonaldJ. Hollingshead,MorningCrestEstates, Phase 3,Lot 32,$195,000 •James S.Robinson, trusteeof theJames S. RobinsonTrust to AnthonyL. Americh, trustee oftheAnthonyL. Americh RevocableLivingTrust, Township10,

Range12,Section1, $752,675.60 • Central OregonLandHoldings LLCto Sage BuildersLLC,Yarrow, Phase2, Lots 79, 81-83and85-87, $423,467.34 • Federal Home LoanMortgage Corp. to Roger B.andLinda C.Reed, Township13, Range12,Section22, $342,000 •GaryandJoanR.CrossleytoJamesand Carolyn Freeman,CrookedRiver Ranch No. 3, Lot55,$176,000 • Bert andJudy K.Wells to Tiffany M. Neiber andNicklas C.Markell, Crooked River RanchNo.7,Lot132, $174,500 • Marc andBonita E.Newvineto Dean and HuguettePollack, CanyonView Subdivision, Lot53,$325,000 • Monica R.Mumperto Robin R.andLori J. Galusha,CrookedRiver RanchNo.10, Lot 28, $169,900 • Scott W. Knutz,acting aspersonal representative oftheestateof Larry VernonKnutz, toAndrewandTracy Gunther,Township12,Range12,Section 34, $280,000 • Jack Properties LLC to Marion L and Eda J.Westfall, Bitterbrush Estates, Lot 10, $313,000 • Marion L. andEdaJ. Westfall to Nicholas J. and LisaK.Sphatt, CrookedRiver RanchNo.11,Lot 33,$425,000 •NealJ.WardtoLindseyEvensonand Lynn E.Wiliamson, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 6, Lot64,$154,900 • Larry L. andMaxineF.Hulseyto Clark L. and Jodi R.Hulsey, Township9, Range13, Sections 32-33,$235,000 • Julie Bettendorf to Anne J. andGregory G. Turek,CrookedRiver Ranch,Lot159, $169,000 • M and YLLCto Matthew E.Merritt, CrookedRiver RanchNo.3, Lot355, $175,000 • Jim Adkinsto Wilmington Trust Co., as successortrustee toCitibank N.A., as trusteefor the Merill Lynch Mortgage Investors TrustSeries2007-HE2,Lot1, Block11, Parcel 2,$260,584.37 • High DesertTransformations LLCto FrederickWahlandYelyzaveta Kobzar, CrookedRiver RanchNo.3, Lot74, $160,000

itive environment. Leasing a place sight unseen is not uncommon. "They're walking in with

and has plans for a nine-unit

of that firm's Aspen Reserve subdivision. Pete Mann, di-

townhouse project on Daggett Lane in northeast Bend. Other d evelopers s a y their applications filled out," they're targeting more afGonzalessaid. fluent prospects: retirees, or people who Some de velopers, E u - empty-nesters gene-basedParadigm Proper- can afford to buy but choose ties,for one, aim for so-called to let someone else take workforce tenants, those who care of building and yard work in middle-class jobs or maintenance. seeapartment living as a step On Alstrup Roadin south-

the apartment complex, de-

scribesthe prospective tenant as "the modern explorer," Ford said, "not somuch a demographicas a psychographic, individuals or people with

sion, but it's also moved into

growth territory, according to the Oregon Employment Department. The unemploy-

the department.

Cody did not return a call Many of those jobs are seeking comment. filled by newcomers to Bend. Across town, de veloper Portland St a te Un i v e rsity PacWest II is in the planning projects nearly 10,000 new arrivals this year, and 16,000

"We have to skand behind it. 7he majoriky of this community supporfs ik." Julie Miller Executive Vice President and Oregon Regional President, Bank of the Cascades

"I think it 's safe to say the

mentGroup LLC, ofVancou- story around town is all the ver, Washington, is te nta- same:Housing is in a massive tively planning 228 units in shortage." a project called Seasons at — Reporter: 541-617-7815, Farmington Reserve, a part jditzler@bendbufletirLcom

recovered most of the jobs lost during the Great Reces-

complex on EmpireAvenue. by 2020. Housing is already And a Seattle development a problem for many of them, firm is planning 208 units at and employers complain that the foot of Pilot Butte on NE some new employees are Linnea Drive. That develop- commuting to Bend from as er, Evergreen Housing Devel- far as Prineville. "It's hard enough for us opment Group,describes the project as "high-end, profes- to find software developers. sionally managed" and de- They're in extreme high designed to attract clients who mand," said Pr eston Callirentby choice. cott, CEO of Five Talent, a The sudden surge in multi- software company in Bend. family projects indicatesthe "Onceyou getthem, and they bottom-line calculations in cometo town, they start sayBend are starting to pencil ing, 'Well, I can't find a place out, developers said. to live.'" "We like the market funCallicott said he sometimes damentals in Bend that we're calls real estate brokers lookseeing right now," said An- ing for unlisted vacancies, drew Brand, director of de- and,in one case, put up a new velopment for Evergreen hire and his familyin his own Housing Development Group. home while they looked for a "A year agosomeof the same placeof their own. "I'm afraid we're going to fundamentals that we're look-

"The demand fo r a p a rt-

ments hasreached an all-time high in Bend," Mann said.

east Bend, Hoviss Develop-

ment ratein Deschutes County dropped to 5.6 percent in but they're very active and April, its lowest point since very passionate about being November 2007,according to

stage of a 136-unit apartment

said the project will include a clubhouse, dogpark and trail system. Hoviss' building permit application is under review by the city.

Housing Works, the Central Oregon public housing authority, is building 40 units at its Eastlake Village complex on NE Bellevue Drive

higher income or net worth, active."

land development for Hoviss,

to homeownership.

ner with de velopment f i r m indicator, Brand a n d o t h Project PD X, o f Po r t l and, ers said. Not only has Bend

which plans to build and own

rector of construction and


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

E3

Re in's i to overt rowtra itiona ro erssti u By Sanlay Bhatt

CEO and co-founderof Seat-

list-side, up from 18 percent in

The Seattle Times

tle-based Estately, an Internet

2008.

brokerage launched in 2007.

Seattle-area resident Eden Riddell said she and her hus-

SEATTLE — Redfin began

a decade ago as a new kind of residential real estate broker-

More than 90 percent of homebuyers use the Internet

band chose Redfin to list their

age: It would use the Internet today when shopping, and half to streamline homebuying, do it from a mobile device, acslash the commissions paid cording to a survey by the Naby buyers and upend a staid tional Association of Realtors. "I actually recommend my industry that ran on personal

home because of its customer service, its technology and the convenience of touring other

homes within 90 minutes of a request.

connections and closely held clients use Redfin," said Ben information. Kakimoto, a broker and pubBut w h il e I n t ernet-based lisher of The Seattle Condo

• I)I • III

companies in many fields Blog. "Redfin has the best onhave dethroned old-school line home search there is." industry giants, Redfin after Yet the Internet hasn't killed 10 years still has less than a demand for realestate agents: 3 percent market share on its 88 percent of buyers in NAR's home turf. survey bought their home And despite its revolution- through anagent,up from 69 ary aspirations, Seattle-based percent in 2001. Redfin has become a lot more like its rivals, while they have

The couple sold their home

(g)l5 •

5

Il

recentlyfor $449,950, about 6 percent less than what Redfin

INI

listed it for in February. Rid-

dell said she was fine with the price because they had another home under contract and

needed a quick close. Despite moving toward the traditional model, Redfin still

Discounter stirredbacklash

embracedWeb technology. Redfin's earliest i n vestor These days, said Waleed was Seattle-based Madrona Muhanna, a business profes- V enture Group, which h a s Erika Schultz i The Seattle Times sor at Ohio State University backed a string of online suc- Kelly Bridgeman, wIth SIgn Pros, installs a Redfin sign in Madrona, Washington. Redfin has less than who studies the Internet's ef- cesses like retailers Amazon. a 3 percent market share on Its home turf. fect on industries, "The same

com, travel search tool Fare-

technology that allows Redfin

cast and discount stock broker Sharebuilder.

to enhance the efficiency of

the process is also available readily to traditional real estate agents." As it has introduced more

personalizedservice, Redfin has raised its prices and re-

bated less of its commission to buyers. "They're very close to a traditional model at this point,"

said Sam DeBord, a managing broker who's a director at Se-

The discount brokerage The real estate industry, alsohas raised its charge for however, has proved more dif- listing a home. ficult to disrupt than some othRedfin initially charged er businesses. sellers a $2,000 flat fee, later Plane tickets and stocks doubling it. In 2010, it switched are standardized commodi- to a 4.5 percent commission ties that consumers purchase instead — keeping 1.5 percent many times over a lifetime. as the listing agent and giving But every home has unique 3 percentto thebuyer'sagent. quirks, and people buy one Though that's less than the infrequently. typical 5 to 6 percent commis"This is one of the largest sion traditional brokerages purchases a person makes in chargesellers,Redfin adopted

attle King County Realtors, a trade group. their lifetime," Muhanna, the Redfin CEO Glenn Kelman business professor, said. "For disagrees, saying the broker- first-time buyers, they want age offers consumers "a radi- a competent buyer agent, cally different way" to buy or someone who can help them sell a home. "What no one re- navigate the intricacy of the ally understands about Redfin process." is the basic secret sauce of the

business isn't technology. It isn't service. It's this combination of the two."

Shifting power

Another obstacle to revolutionizing the industry is that

home sales usually involve two brokers — the buyer's bro-

ker and the seller's broker. In its early radical days,

Privately held Redfin, which Redfin tried to wi n m a rket says its annual revenues are share by offering lower pricmore than $100 million, em- es than competitors. Initialploys more than 1,000 real ly, it rebated to buyers about estate agents in 6 7 m etros three-quarters of the customnationwide. ary 3 percent commission a Industry watchers credit the buyer's agent gets on a home company — and other early sale. online real estate ventures Buyers would attend open such as Zillow — with shifting houses and do their own repower to consumers by giv- search, then ask Redfin to ing them one-click access to write up the offer and close the data to which only agents once deal. were privy. After a year of industry "The consumer today shop- backlash, Redfin backed off its ping for a home knows more aggressive buyer's rebate. Its than the real estate agent did typical rebate in Seattle metro 30 years ago about market is now about one-third of the dynamics," said Galen Ward, buyer's agent commission.

Amazon Continued from E1

the very fee structure it had

once criticized. "When it comes to discount brokerages, there's a big pool of dead startups," said Ward, Estately's CEO. "It costs mon-

ey to run a brokerage." Nevertheless, Redfin says its customers have saved more than $200 million in commissions. And it's still deeply discounting in select markets: In

the District of Columbia area, Redfin's site recently offered to list a home for a 1 percent

commission.

High-volumebusiness In the Seattle area, Redfin stresses tours on demand and top-notch service in a TV com-

mercial that's aired on and off since October. Its agents,

says the ad, "aren't paid on c ommission but o n y o u r happiness." But there's another differ-

ence from traditional brokers the ad doesn't highlight: Redfin buyers don't necessarily work with the same

lose money on streaming mu- And for now, McQuivey besic in the same way that Best

lieves that the service feels a Buy, years ago, could sell CDs bit like an afterthought.

"In the patchwork quilt that at significant discounts. Music graphic is different than other was simply a way to get cus- is Amazon, this is a patch that s treaming services," A m atomers through the doors to hasn't gotten a lot of attenzon's Boom acknowledges. buy other items. tion," McQuivey said. "The Prime member demo-

That means Prime Music users hew more toward rock

"That loss-leader concept is

F or starters, Prime M u -

sic's music selection is skeland country genres than they ternet," said Casey Rae, an ad- etal compared to offerings do electronic dance and urban junct professor at Georgetown from rivals. That's largely hip-hop, Boom said. Prime University and chief executive because Amazon hasn't come Music subscribers also tend of the Future of Music Coali- to terms with Universal Muto listen to more full albums tion, an artist advocacy group. sic Group, the world's largest than users of some of the other F or Amazon, Prime M u label, whose roster includes services. sic gives it an opportunity to Katy Perry, Taylor Swift, Lady come in contact with custom- Gaga and wilki.am. When Retaining subscribers ers even more often than any Prime Music launched, BillF or n ow , P r i m e M u s i c of the other Prime benefits. board reported that Universal doesn't need to be hip. The ser- People listen to music through- balked at the fees Amazon vice isn't yet trying to compete out the day, when they're eat- offered. "We'll add Universal to the with Spotify and Pandora. ing breakfast, commuting to "It's more about adding val- work, as background noise s ervice when we t hink t h e ue to the Prime membership in the office and even during time is right," Boom said. so they become even more their after-work jog. Those freAnother challenge is that loyal Prime members," Boom quent "touches" help persuade the nascent service doesn't alsard. Prime subscribers to renew w ays makeiteasy to discover In addition to the music ser- membership, said James Mc- new artists. McQuivey also vice and two-day shipping, Quivey, an analyst with For- said it doesn't do a good job of Prime members get access to rester Research. anticipating the next songs a "It's a really great way to user might want to hear. Amazon's Netflix-like Prime Instant Video and the oppor- place some glue between you McQuivey thinks one of tunity to borrow books from and your customers," said Prime Music's big challenges the Kindle Owner's Lending McQuivey, who has studied is that Amazon doesn't have Library.Those benefits have Prime Music. much of a device business to helped lure more than 40 mildrive music listening. The serlion subscribers, by some an- Remaining relevant vice was announced a week alyst estimates, to the service. Prime Music, though, isn't before the company unveiled They are subscribers that just a way t o r etain prime its Fire Phone, which, despite Amazon is keen to retain be- members. Amazon is also the company's hype, bombed cause they are among the trying to remain relevant as with customers. "Had the phone been a company's most loyal shop- the music business continues pers, frequently buying goods to be roiled by digital disrup- runaway hit, that would have from Amazon's retail site to tion. Last year was the first been a great home for Prime justify the annual fee. Con- year that the industry's global Music," McQuivey said. sumer Intelligence Research digital revenue, at $6.9 billion, asa feature Partners, which tracks Prime matched so-called physical M usic still very much alive on the In-

data, estimates that P r i me

format sales, CDs and vinyl

members spend2.5times as

albums, according to the In-

much on A m azon as n onPrime members.

ternational Federation of the

Phonographic Industry. That upends the existing As those sales continue to business model for streaming slow, Amazon needs to come music. Pandora hopes to make up with a successful digital money through advertising, music business model to rewhile Spotify wants to build place it. a huge subscription business, That said, P r im e M u sic even as itoffersan ad-support- won't succeed unless the sered model. But Amazon can vice appeals to music fans.

person through the entire process. They're assigned to a contract-writing agent, tour homes with multiple junior

volume you end up doing." Even the highest performing Redfin agent tops out due to its salary model, making it hard for the brokerage to hold

agents and work with a trans-

action coordinator to manage the paperwork and close the deal. Kelman said the team approach is part of Redfin's way of providing "real estate as an on-demand service for a

on to top performers, he said. Both Vogt and Silverstein

said they believe Redfin hasn't expanded its market share

maintains a t e chnological edge, Kelman said. "We've just gotten better and better at figuring out who's really interested in your

property," he said. "You don't need 10,000 buyers for your house. You need four or five, and it's really nice to know

there are six people who have looked at your property more than 20 times in the past 24

hours, especially if

tour is standard with Redfin's listing service and lets prospective buyers get24/7access to a home's layout.

more rapidly because it hasn't paid as close attention as com- Generating referrals petitors do to cultivating reRedfin's revised business last-second economy, where lationships with clients that model shows it's rejected the people want to get into houses generatereferrals and repeat idea that brokers aren't needed right away." business. in an Internet-enabled world. "Redfin is about being more The division of labor, howBut all things being equal, ever, comes with much higher clever than the rest and bring- technology features and lower caseloadsfor Redfin's agents ing new ideas to the business, pricesmay not be as compelthan peers at traditional bro- whereas the traditional mod- ling to real estate consumers kerages — a system that can el is about brute force — the as an agent's competence and lead to burnout and high attri- number of contacts that you trust, Muhanna said. For Redtion among its top-performing make, the number of people fin to grow, he said, its agents agents. that you touch," Silverstein will need to prove themselves "Your Redfin agent is going sard. and generatereferrals — just to do three to four times as Traditional bro k erages like anyone else inthe industry. "Until that happens, wordmany deals as a typical (full- can support more boots on time) agent, who is going to do the ground too because their of-mouth is likely going to 10 to 20" a year, said real estate agents, working as indepen- work in favor of existing playbroker Adam Vogt, a Redfin dent contractors, don't cost ers," Muhanna said. "There agent in the D.C. metro area them much. are moreofthem and they've from 2012 to 2014. In the Seattle area, broker- been in the game for a lot Vogt said he found the pace age Windermere has about longer." at Redfin incompatible with 2,260 agents; John Scott and Kelman recognizes that. raising his son, so he switched Coldwell Banker, more than At the end of the day, Redto a t r aditional brokerage 1,100 agents each. fin isn't just about some cool where agents are independent They compete against Red- tech venture, he said, but "doc ontractors, work o n c o m - fin's 220 agents. ing the bare-knuckled work of mission and can have more hiring and training real estate High-tech listings autonomy. agents, hanging yard signs Former Redfin agent Harry While Redfin's roots are on and showing properties." Silverstein left the Boston area the buyer side, representing As if t o u n d erscore the office last year. He saw an op- sellers is now the faster grow- transformation, he a dded, portunity to make a lot more ing part of its business. Last " What I'm proud of now i s money at a traditional broker- year, nearly 30 percent of the what I used to be self-conage, but said Redfin is "a great 1,775 Seattle-area home sales scious about, which is that place to learn because of that it helped broker were on the we're real estate agents."

specific songs.) liveperformances atAmazon "We're trying to raise its to Prime Music as well. Right profile now," Boom said. now, live gigs at the compaThat means expanding the ny by artists such as Brandi catalog, improving "discover- Carlile and The Head and the ability" and bringing the ser- Heart are available only as vice tomore devices,Boom streaming video on Amazon's said. Amazon recently added Prime Stations to its Android

Front Row website. The Saint

Motel acoustic set should be available for viewing this

app, giving subscribers with Android devices the ability to

month. Even if Prime Music is an

it's shown with so many of its businesses, Amazon has

plenty of patience to let Prime Music develop a following. By making music a feature of its Prime membership, Amazon may well give itself an advantage over rivals hoping to make money off the music itself. "If I look five years out, the

tune in to programmed music in specific styles streamed unfinished product in a mar-

advantages are going to lie

ad-free. Boom wants to bring the

other paths to profit," said Georgetown University's Rae.

ket with e ntrenched rivals, analysts won't write it off. As

with the companies that have

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with its low profile, "millions" use it each month, making it the second most used on-de-

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Tiles

mineral used by many gardeners) and perlite (a white

Continued from E1 Wilhelms is K a lnajs' niece, and as a longtime residential real estate inves-

rock that looks like bits of Sty-

tor, had a wealth of business

pure plaster, the tile would weigh about 25 pounds," said plant manager Mark Szocik. Upstairs, in a w o rkshop

rofoam) a 2-foot by 2-foot tile weighs 8'/2 to 9 pounds. "If we made the tile out of

experience. Her husband, +

Dan, meanwhile, had recently sold an information lf

technology firm, Symmetry Corp., that he started in

r' *

bathed in northern light from a

long bank of windows, Szocik and co-worker Andres Bec-

1996.

Dan Wilhelms advised Kalnajs to contact Tesensky,

Dai Sugano/ Bay Area News Group

Fscebook employees visit the company's 9-acre green roof at their new building in Menlo Park, California. The green roof contains a half-mile walking path, chairs and tables for work and various California native plants and drought-resistant plants, functioning

as a social setting andworkplace for employees.

Facebook ployees would thrive in than anything else," said Lauren

Gehry, a wo r ld-famous architect, is known for his eclectic titanium-clad buildings such as the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles and the Jay Pritz-

Swezey, Facebook's sustain-

ker Pavilion at

ability and community outreach manager.

Park in Chicago — consid-

Continued from E1 "It was more about creating an environment that our em-

M i l lennium

ered one ofthe world's largest r o oftop's ex- green roofs at 24.5 acres bepanse are 23 unique spaces cause it sits above a train yard Across the

named after natural wonders and parking garages. Helping to foster Facebook's ing the Argentina mountain work culture isn't the only range Aconcagua and Ore- benefit that the g reen roof gon's Three Sisters. brings. The roof absorbs heat "Someone can say, 'Hey, and rainfall, helping the commeet me at Pinnacles,' so you pany cut down on energy use can see that's number 18," said and runoff. In these droughtSwezey, pointing to the num- plagued times, many of the bered location on a map of the plants atop the roof can surgreen roof. vive in dry weather, Facebook Facebook's new building sald. and green roof contrasts with Located along the Pacific its main headquarters across Flyway, the roof will also prothe street, which includes vide a place for birds to land an urban street inspired by during their migrations, and downtown Palo Alto with a Facebook has partnered with Philz coffee, street art and nearby Audubon societies to more for employees to gather. help study what birds take ref"One is much more about the uge on the roof. They are also interface between the build- using the space to hold events ings and the space and people with the community, city offirunning into each other. The cials and employees. gardenismore ofa refugein a Swezey said that other tech lot of ways," Guillard said. firms such as Samsung have Eventually, the roof will also looked at incorporating green include eating areas, including roofs in the design of their a sandwich shop called From- buildings to make the spaces age, staffed by the company's more eco-friendly. But Facechefs and culinaryteam. Since book's new space is differthe new building, which spans ent in that it isn't just a basic more than 430,000 square feet, garden. "It's taking it beyond the tratook up most of the available land's space, creating an open ditional green roof, which is area on the roof made sense. often just grass and succulents The highest point of the build- and not made to be used. This ing is slightly more than 72 is really an area that is made feet, according to Facebook. to be used," Swezey said. throughout the world, includ-

c

"Who

c ould

hav e

w ere disruptedas far as sales

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10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Medivation Inc Intel Corp GMS Engy Chesapk Engy Int Flav Frag Western GasEqty Srncker, JM R eynolds American Altria Group Entergy

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The changing state of luxury

Faith Hope Consolo Chairman, Retail Group, Douglas Elliman Real Estate

For more than 30 years, Faith Hope Consolo, now chairman of Douglas Elliman Real Estate's retail group, has handled deals with luxury retailers and seen the ups and downs of the market for baubles, fashion and pricey shoes. Consolo helped establish a U.S. presence for a string of designers, including Giorgio Armani, Christian Dior and Jimmy Choo. Luxury sales have recovered since 2011, but shoppers are being choosy about where they want to spend their money. They're more likely to splurge on a vacation or a pair of shoes, than a new dress. Still, the luxury business has more than recovered since the downturn. According to MasterCard SpendingPulse data, which tracks sales across all kinds of payments, luxury sales hit $12.7 billion in the U.S. last year, compared to $11.4 billion in 2007.

photographs available on request.

l.

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INDEX

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LAST FRI. CHG 2092.83 -3.01 11197.15 -143.45 6804.60 -54.64 27260.16 -291.73 -66.39 4920.74 20460.90 -27.29

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What's the state of Iuxury now? It's bastardized. I think people equate luxury just with price. Luxury before was different. Luxury (in the 1980s and 1990s) was less available. It was more about quality than quantity. Now, luxury is not only mass produced, every designer lends hisname. You can buy the "Oscar"name for a bottle of perfume.

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— Ken Ammon,chief strategy officer of Xceedium, commenting on China-based hackers suspected of breaking into the networks of the U.S. govelnment personnel office

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).

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tran design tile patterns. Above

View has about 100 designsGothic Tegular, Mayan Flower who had been a consultant Rick Wood / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and English Lamb's Tongue to m an y M i l w aukee-ar- Hector Rodriguez pours wet plaster into a mold at Above View, a Mil- among them. The masters, ea companies, induding waukee companythat makesdecorative ceiling tiles that have been made of pure plaster, rest in Symmetry. installed in gambling halls and other buildings in four continents. cases in the workshop. Tesensky had n e ver The shop can produce as heard of Above View, which many as 300 tiles a day. intrigued him. Here was a thought," she said of the un- and marketing." Howland is looking to go local firm with an unusual usual chain of events. "I mean, They pour the mix of water, beyond casinos and get Above product and strong standing honestly, this came out of the plaster, fillers and fiberglass View tiles in places such as in its field, operating below blue. At first I was astounded, into rubber molds that are wet- high schools, universities and the radar. but onthe otherhand, I was just ted down so the finished tiles government structures. She'll also be probing for Reasons for the anonym- extremely excited." release easily. It takes about ity soon emerged: Above Tesensky was interested, nine minutes for the mixture more business at HD Expo, a View's approach to market- too. Since 2004, he had worked to set, with workers placing trade show for hospitality ining had been relatively ca- at Lauber CFOs, which pro- the molds briefly on a vibrat- dustry design profess ionals, sual. The most recent print- vides financial officers to ¹ i ing table to eliminate tiny air which was recently held in Las ed literature dated to 1995. ent companies on a consulting bubbles. Vegas. "We're kind of on a mission Many of the photos on the basis. Above View looked like The fiberglass binds and website were more than 15 a promising firm to guide on strengthens the finished prod- to remove the bland, barren years old. The firm's stand- a more-permanent basis. Wil- uct. With the vermiculite (a ceilingtiles," Tesensky said. ing ad in Metropolis, a lead- helms hired him as president. ing architecture and design To handle sales and marketmagazine, hadn't changed ing, they brought in Margaret since the mid-'80s. Howland, who had been marAnd with Kuper gone, keting director at Brass Light the company — which does Gallery, an interior lighting business as Above View but manufacturer, fornineyears. formally is named Tiles Inc. One constant has been — clearly needed attention Above View's long-tenured protosales. duction staff. "The guys in our plant have Tesensky was helping Kalnajs chart a course for- been here I think an average of • • I • ward when, in January, 18 years, with the plant managKalnajs died, too. He was er comingup on a 29th anniver70 and had no children. The sary," Howland said. "They've business went to Linda Wil- been continuing to make the helms, his oldest niece. product all along while things

15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS T ICKER

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a certified public accountant

Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers COMPANY

E5

an experience still shines.

Texas....Chicago. Boston is a little sleepy.

Which luxury brands do you most Emerging markets for luxury? admire and why? Which brands are Denver and Seattle. facing the biggest challenges? Hermes and Chanel, because they have How has deal-making changed? remained true to themselves. They didn't It's become more challenging. There's so introduce bridge or even lower priced lines to much good product around, whether it's on attract the dollars of the aspirational shopper. Main Street or in the malls. It's not just And thus they didn't lose those dollars durlng about the product, but it's about the price Luxury sales, hammered by the Great the downtum. Tiffany, on the other hand, of the property, of the location. You have to Recession, have recovered since 2011. courted that customer, and literally paid the represent the best companies with the But is the shop-'til- you-drop mentality price during the downtum. It still is. Let's see best products with the best financials. A lot back? what will happen in the timepiece sector as of these companies look wonderful from It will never go back. The shift in the trend is they react to the Apple Watch and if Apple's the outside. But from the inside they're not not that fashion is out. It's about entertainluxury version will succeed. so great. ment. It's about going on very luxurious holidays ... immersing in ridiculous events What are the hot real estate markets Interviewed by Anne O'Innocenzio. with food and fashion. It's about the right now? Answers edited for clarity and length. experience. So a retailer that can give you New York, Miami, L.A. and anywhere in AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, June 5, 2015

17,849 ~A6

+

NaSDaa ~

S&P500

5,068.46

2,092.83

+

14 I

RUSSELL2000 1,261.01

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W ILSHIRE 5D00 ~ 9 2 22,167.66

ll4


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

UNDAY D

R

ass moves, o-ro a i u e

Is Ford's EcoBoost engine worth its cost?

By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News

Hot rods shred the night By Brad Bergholdt

with h i gh-octane outbursts t hat sound like a c ivil w a r

Tribune News Service

erupting in the front yard.

Q

• What's your take on

— eliseat,

The great ones thunder and

• Ford's EcoBoost en-

pop with back-alley malice, occasionally singeing streets

gine and others that supposedly deliver big-engine power while using small-engine gas? Do the long-term savings justify the higher take valve carbon buildup. upfront cost? I'm looking If my math is right, you'd at new F-150s and trying to need to put a r ound 40,000 sort out the engine choices. miles on the truck before the • I c e r tainly a d m i re fuel savings of the EcoBoost • the engineering and would justify choosing it over efficiency built into these the V-8 standard engine. Each engines and their perfor- additional 55,000 miles would mance is impressive. The bring you about $1,000 ahead. power delivered by a techie I'd hope durability issues engine can be double that wouldn't wipe out your savings of an identically sized, old- somewhere down the road. I school engine and perhaps should add the V-8 engine has 30 percent better than an some great performance/efidentically sized current ficiencyfeatures such as four but lower-tech sibling. In valveheads and variable valve a nutshell, a boosted V-6 timing. engine delivers V-8 power while using about 15 per• Is there a way to make cent less fuel. The attribute • my turn signals louder? I find most appealing is the My RV is fairly noisy and I am significant increase in mid- a bit hard of hearing.

with an errant flame or two

from their open, oversized exhausts. But I absolutely love those

s44 VIL 5 ',

snarling, fenderless brawlers — the dark, dangerous coun-

A

terparts to to-

REVIEW day's whirring, computer-controlled boremobiles.

So howinblazes did abunch Courtesy Jaguar via Tribune News Service of guys in England of all places The Jaguar F-Type is Jag's first attempt at a real two-seat, high-end sports car since the XKEs of the manage to stuff a ragged, rag- early1960s and is a serious head-turner. ing '32 highboy into the svelte 2015 Jaguar F-Type S? Don't get me wrong. I liked Beats me. But put the top and it delivers a huge, steady down on the F-Type, push a surge of power. In fact, if you the black interior in the F-7ype button on the console to open switch off the traction control I had and thought it fit the car's its angry exhaust and you'll Base price: $81,000 like some fools do, you will richly volatile personality pretswear you're headed down be busy keeping it pointed tywell. Astested: $103,488 Highway 1 in Doane Spencer's straight. But if you need a lot of plush Qpe: Two-passenger, seminal highboy hot rod. The engine never loafs. Step for the old tush, you might rear-wheel-drive, luxury Initially, the F-Type I had down on the car's accelerator want to lookelsewhere. sports car seemed too p r etty t o be at any rpm and it responds inSmooth leather, for example, Engine: Supercharged bare-knucklebad, especiallyin stantly, churning out buckets coveredthe roadster's dramat5-liter V-8 with 495 horse"firesand orange." of power through a sophisticat- ic sloping dashboard — sliced power and 460 pound-feet The F-7ype is Jag's first ated, quick-shifting eight-speed in the middle by a big center oftorque tempt at a real two-seat, highautomatic. stack that appeared to be slidMileage:16mpg city, end sports car since the stunIf you let the engine wind to ing off the dash. 23 mpg highway ningly beautiful XKEs of the its 6,500 rpm red line, 60 flashB ut i t w a s s i m ple a n d early 1960s. es by in a scant 3.6 seconds, ac- straightforward. Based on a modified XF-secording to Car and Driver. The center stack and broad dan platform, the F-7ype seems out gracefully, juiced up with a The only weakness I found console gave the interior a all long hood, short trunk slight power dome in the center in the engine was its old-school cockpit feel, which made it and sensuously curved sides that hinted at Pretty Boy's sav- thirst, which might have been seem pretty snug. squeezed into a relatively small age 495-horse engine. exacerbated by the bozo beA smallish, flat-bottom steerpackage. hind the wheel. ing wheel looked and felt good, Though not as long and lan- Asteadysurge of power Though rated at 16 miles per and the door panels were covguid as the XK-E, the sleekly Order the S model of the gallon in the city and 23 on the ered in the same smooth black muscular F-7ype has become a F-7ype and you get a super- highway, the car often regis- leather as the dash. Subtle, serious head-turner. charged, all-aluminum five-li- tered 12 mpg during my time smooth leather also doaked And with good reason. The ter V-8 that belts out its 495 with it. the seats, which were stitched proportions and stance of horsepower with the punch of But let'sbehonest. Does any- in contrasting firesand orange. F-Type I had recently looked an 18-year-oldboxer. one who can afford a $103,000 I never tired of climbing bepretty close to perfect to my Generally, engines heavily F-7ype really give three hoots hind the wheel — a comment I hick eyes. Although the front squeezed by superchargers or about its economy? would make about most Jags. end is a bit blunt, long, flat turbochargers require so much But the F-Type emits a really headlamps cut deeply into the electronic i ntervention t h at Acockpitfeel different vibe. It wants to pick a front fenders. they end up with flat spots. The F-7ype didn't feel espe- fight with a Porsche, and then Likewise, the hood stretched Nail the F-Type, however, cially luxurious inside or out. do a couple of smokyburnouts.

2015 JaguarF-Type S Cemrertidle

'

them on schedule (important with any engine, really). Clean, high-quality oil and cooling system maintenance are both key to keeping a pair of turbochargers happy. Top-tier fuel is also a must for direct injected engines in order to mitigate in-

range torque. It's interesting that the 3.5-1iter EcoBoost

enginegets the same combined gas mileage as its lower-tech, displacement sibling. My main concerns are that these modern engines are fussy and less forgiving of abuse. Indeed, there have been a few teething issues with the EcoBoost system. The heart of this is di-

rect fuel injection and twin turbochargers. Though the system delivers outstand-

ing performance, I'm still unconvinced regarding its long-term durability. Furthermore, the cost to repair these engines will be higher

A • Older vehicles using a standardflasher unit can of• Yes, this can be done.

ten be retrofitted with a sim-

ple plug-in replacement that is designedto be easier to hear. Newer vehicles often use a

more complicated and proprietary flasher unit making this upgrade less likely. Any vehide can be modified by adding an inexpensive tone generator. Doing so would require accessing the left and right turn signal wires beneath the instrument panel and splicing in the tone generator, along with a pair of isolating diodes. In some cases this is easier to talk

about than to do, as the wiring may be difficult to identify and than for standard 3.5-liter access. Seeifyou can find a reor 5-liter engines. Owners pair shop with a sharp and inneed to be certain to use

novative tech willing to do this

exactly the right lubricants at reasonable cost, then go pick and coolant and change up the parts yourself.

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletln.com/oplnlon

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

JOHN COSTA

Bring skepticism to sports

T

here was a story in the Thursday Bulletin that was — still is

— almost too good to be true. It had all the elements that appeal

to me professionally, and I couldn't put it down.

It is the story of a lone wolf, intrepid reporterwho took on organized crime

whenno one elsewould and spent years toppling one of the great corrupt houses of cards in international sports.

If you haven't read the story, which was written by Washington Post reporter Michael E. Miller, you

can find it on Page A6 of Thursday's print Bulletin or at www.bendbulletin.com/independentreporter.

It is the story of Andrew Jennings, a 71-year-old independent reporter whose crusading work led to the

arrest of seven top FIFA soccer officials, charging them and others, as The Post reported, with operating a

$150 million criminal racket based on bribes, payoffs, vote buying and a variety of other outrageous acts. The story is an important and refreshing one for many reasons. Journalism is an undertaking under the throes of change.

Navady via The New York Times

Devices such as Navdy,the transparent head-up display seen onthe right, claim to minimize risk by projecting information from a smartphone into a driver's line of vision. But some experts worry the additional stimulus will be too distracting.

There is enormous pressure to re-

duce newsroom expenses, even when very few leaders in the industry would dispute the notion that content

is king, and content costs money. A nd the dwindling resourcesare under pressure to drive up the num-

bers of digital visits to their work by constant updating of the material. Unless the challenging economics of digital and print journalism settle out for the better, the future of longform, investigative journalism is going to be a challenge. Most of that work has been done in traditional newsrooms, which are

very expensive to operate. And the heaviest part of that is dedicating severalreporters to the research un-

derpinning a story or series of stories that could appear six months or a year in the future.

That's hard to do and satisfy the

constant, quick turnaround material that the digital world demands in

order to engage readers and bring them back frequently. It's not impossible to do, but it is

getting more difficult. This is what is interesting to me.

By Matt RichteleNew York Times News Service

In a widely watched YouTube video, a man is driving around Los Angeles when his phone rings. On a small screen mounted on the dashboard, an image of the caller, the man's mother, appears. But there's an optical twist: The image actually looks to the driver as if it's floating just at the front edge of the car, right above the roadway. The man answers the call with a gesture of his hand. "Hi," his mother says over the car speakers. "I just wanted to say I love you." "I love you," the man responds, and then, before signing off, "I'm making a video right now."

Pre-digital, it was the major institutions that could support the overhead that produced the great

investigative pieces. But the Jennings model suggests that intrepid reporting can be sus-

tained by independent journalists

That video — the one posted on You-

Tube — was a promotion commissioned by Navdy, one of a handful of startup companies bringing a futuristic spin to the debate over distracted driving and

with little or no overhead, at least compared to the costs of an old-fash-

how to curb it.

ioned newsroom. Jennings, according The Post

tion and data streamed from a smartphone into a driver's field of view. There

story, has built a great career around

are several versions of this nascent technology, but they generally work by using a projection device that wirelessly picks up information from the phone and uses sophisticated optics to allow

his crusading books and television appearances, etc. It's a hard and lonely professional path, but it is apath, and in Jennings' case, a very successful one. There is a second part ofthe Jen-

nings storythatis equallyimportant. It's about sports. I'm not saying anything that hasn't been saidbefore, but sports has become an enormous business whose economic reach and impact affects us

all — one way or another. We are spending billions in tax dollars to keep professional athletes and

their owners happy, not to mention the unbelievable amount of moneypouringinto universities to maintain, as an

Oregonuniversitypresident told The Bulletin editorial board, entertainment cartels that have little or nothing to do with education.

Drug-enhanced performance,

violent assaults, cheatingto win and

horrific long-term health impacts for athletes have become constant story

themes in newspapers. It is only recently that major news organizations are looking at the underside of this sports complex, while the industry is consistently establishing barriers to anything other than the most flattering coverage. Jennings'work should inspire journalists to brings that same healthy

skepticism to the world of sports as they do to virtually every other huge and influential element of our society. — John Costais publisher of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, orjcosta@bendbulletin.com

The devices project driving informa-

the information — maps, speed, incom-

ing texts, caller identification and even social media notifications — to hover above the dashboard. Hand gestures or

voice commands allow drivers to answer a call or hang up. Navdy's device isn't shipping until later this year, and it's not clear if it will work as seamlessly as presented in the

video when used in less perfect real-life conditions. But, broadly speaking, the Navdy device falls into a booming category of in-car gadgetry that might be fairly categorized as "you can have your cake and eat it too." Drive, get texts, talk on the phone,

even interact on social media, and do it all without compromising safety, according to various makers of the socalled head-up displays, repeating a position taken by a growing number of automakers who sell monitors set into the dashboard or mounted on it. Some carmakers also display basic driving information, like speed and turn-byturn directions, within a specialized windshield so a driver can remain look-

ing ahead and not down at the instrument paneL Google, with Android Auto, and

Apple, with CarPlay, have also leapt into the evolving business. Each allows phones to be plugged into a car's USB port so that information streams to a monitor set into the dashboard. IHS Automotive, a company that analyzes

car industry trends, expects many

Morgan Schweitzer /The New York Times

automakers to integrate these systems. IHS consumer surveys indicate drivers want systems that provide maps, music,

sively to expect them to stop, said Nagraj Kashyap, senior vice president for ventures and innovation at Qualcomm Ventures, an investing arm of the telecom giant, which recently injected $3 million into Navdy. "To completely eliminate it is a pipe

news and social connection. Theseemerging display deviceshave become part of a debate over whether technology can provide safer ways for people to multitask while driving. Safe- dream," Kashyap said of motorist multity advocates argue that technologies tasking. "The best way to handle it is to that try to minimize the dangers of mul- make it as safe as you can." titasking are based on the false premise that drivers can safely attend to the

road while juggling social communication — and are, in turn, encouraging a risky behavior. The argument on the other side boils

The federalgovernment has issued

nonbinding guidelines that govern car "infotainment systems," and one of

its main messages is that performing certain nondriving tasks interferes in-

down to a simple notion: Drivers are

herently with a driver's safety. Experts in the science of attention say that some

going to do it anyway, so why not minimize the riskiest kinds of multitasking, like looking down at the phone or handling it'? People use their phones too compul-

of the new head-up displays may be raising risks that are so plain that you don't need to be a driver's mother to appreciate them. SeeDriving/F6


F2

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M& ~eep '~ c T N e .'2 MeVL.....

ere's one thing to keep in mind as July 1 rolls

around: Oregon's law legalizing marijuana is not a license to do exactly what one wants, where and when one wants, with weed. There are rules, as Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel notes, and they will apply. Among the most important: Marijuana is for grown-ups. As is the case with alcohol, possession of marijuana by someone under the age of 21 will continue to be illegal, as will selling it to someone who is underage. There are other rules,asw ell: • It will be illegal to buy marijuana forsomeone who is underage, just as it is now illegal to purchase alcohol for a minor. • The law allows for possession of only 8 ounces or four plants per residence, not per individual. A house occupiedby eight pot-smoking college kids may have only as much weed on hand as a house occupied by a single little old lady and her cat. • It will be illegal to possess more than an ounce ofmarijua-

na in public, and it will be illegal to use any amount of it in public. Forget taking your stash to Drake Park on July 4. • Marijuana cannot be carried legally across state lines, even to Washington state or C olorado, where it already is legal to use. • Driving while impaired by marijuana will be illegal, as will driving while impaired by a combination of drugs including marijuana. Police may not send a motorist they suspect of being impaired to a hospital for a blood test, to be sure, but they're likely to put a suspect through a field sobriety test. • It's important to remember, too, that possession of recreational marijuana may become legal for adults July 1, but it may not yet be legal to sell it by that date. Lawmakers continue to try to find a way to establish legal markets for it this year.

— asca esnee s to resent a master an regon State University cur-

O

State needs tosell mileage tax to voters regon's h i ghways n e ed help. So, too, do city streets and county roads. All are funded, at least in part, by money from the state Highway Fund, and it's taking in less than it used to. It's no wonder, then, that the Oregon Department ofTransportation is looking for alternatives to the state fuel taxes motorists pay every time they fill their gas tanks. The most likely option under discussion is a 1.5-cent mileage tax, which will be tested by some 5,000 motorists this summer. Assuming the test goes well, the state then faces perhaps its largest hurdle: It must sell the tax to a majority of taxpayers or face the possibility of losing a potential referendum vote on it. So far, polling on th e l i kely change has shown decidedly mixed results. There are good reasons, however, for Oregonians to favor the switch, assuming testing goes well. Chief among them: The state simply does not have the money to keep its roadways in shape. The highway fund, which supplies about 60 percent of money for road maintenance and improve-

O

ment in Oregon, comes largely from fuel taxes on cars and light trucks and from weight/mile taxes paid by large carriers. It also receives title and registration fees and those paid on drivers licenses. But by the end of this year, state fuel tax revenue will have fallen by 7 percent in the last five years, and that trend is expected to continue. Even today's gas guzzlers are more efficient than their ancestors, and the growing use of hybrid and all-electric vehicles have combined to drive fuel tax revenue down. Federal fuel taxes are dropping for similarreasons. The mileage tax offers what appears tobe the best way to make up forlost revenue, and Oregon has worked with the ACLU to lessen privacy concerns about track-

ing mileage. Oregon drivers — and voters — need to know that. They need to know, too, that a mileage tax will not simply become a new way to extract money from reluctant taxpayers. And they need to be taught just how bad highways will become if State Highway Fund revenue continues to drop.

IN MY VIEW

By Bill Eddie

rently owns 10 acres on Bend's city building code would allow such west side. University officials a huge construction project to protell us that this will be the site where ceed without a master plan. a great institution will be founded, So what are OSU's options for providing Central Oregon with cul- expansion'? They presently have tural growth and educational oppor- the option to expand west onto a 46tunity into the foreseeable future. acre parcel that previously served as But a great institution of high- a pumice mine. The problem here is er learning requires far more land that remediation of the large pit and than just 10 acres, and spokespeo- removal of existing debris would be ple from the school haven't told a prohibitively expensive use of taxthe community how they plan to payer dollars. expand.Many citizens ofBend are A second option would be purvery concerned that this lack of chasingvarious parcels on the west transparency and the absence of side and somehow piecing togetha master plan will lead to an inad- er a contiguous university campus. equately built school that will be a Since we currently have OSU classpoor fit for the community. rooms at COCC and a graduate cenWhy, one may ask, didn't OSU ter on Colorado Street, proposing a initially purchase the necessary third site on the corner of Chandler acreage to provide the potential for Avenue and Century Drive seems the full build-out of the university? disjointed and poorly planned. Cer-

one that we can all be proud to have in Bend. There isn't enough land on the west side for the full build-out of

a first-class university. There is not enough affordable housing on the west side to accom-

modate the number of students projected to be enrolled upon completion of the campus (5,000). Roads, roundabouts, bike paths and walking paths would require thoughtful and expensive modifications to

handle increased traffic. The whole idea of inserting OSU-Cascades into an already vibrant residential and

commercial area of Bend makes little sense. The obvious solution to this ongo-

ingdilemmais for OSUto select a superior location for the school. Ideally this would be a large parcel where a full campus could be constructed in conjunction with affordable housing and other amenities. The east and

northeast sections of Bend are prime locations would be less than ideal, forsuch anendeavor. does not require a master plan. This promoting far more automobile trafIt is long past time for OSU repgives OSU the ability to start the fic between buildings than a single, resentatives to hold public forums, project on a small parcel without well-planned campus. A rumored answer questions that have not providing the critical impact studies third option would be to expand been prescreened by a PR firm, and normallyrequired for such a large north onto the old county landfill site, present some form of a master plan, development. The thinking here is which would require a federally sub- whether they are legally obligated that if "the camel's nose" is under sidized cleanup prior to construction. to or not. It is time to do the right the tent, then surely the camel will I believe that none of these op- thing for the west-side community The most likely reason is that any project sited on less than 20 acres

tainly a university built at multiple

be allowed to enter at some point. It

tions are viable if we truly want OSU-Cascades to be a great school,

is simply incomprehensible that our

of Bend. — Bill Eddie lives in Bend.

Letters policy

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Ran Paul'sha ito hyper olicgran stan ing p oliticians talk a l ot, and the

more a politician talks, the greater the risk he or she will

say something regrettable. If you run your mouth for 11 hours at a stretch,

CHARLES LANE

(

as Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., is wont to

do, the chance of putting your foot in it goes up correspondingly. So maybe it was statistically inev-

itable that Paul would cover himself in the opposite of glory by declaring, during his Monday Senate speech against National Security Agency counterterrorism surveillance, that "people here in town think I'm mak-

combined with a

aggressiveness, is not incidental to Paul's political style but essential'? This is hardly the first time the pres-

idential candidate has found himself explaining away an impolitic surfacing of his internal monologue. At its best, libertarianism is a

markets.

might have strayed into "hyperbole" The Republican Party could well and "impugning people's motives." benefit from adding such approachThen again, what if hyperbole, es to its platform on issues from gay

ment lapse, if we don't just let everybody pass out warrants." No one says this, or anything close to it. What Congress has been having, for the most part, is a debate about the age-old tension between

security and freedom and how to brings a strangely acute sense of manage it, realistically, without jectives — fighting terrorism, saypersonal grievance and encourages shredding the Constitution. Then, but positively haunted by spies, war voters to get in touch with their inner over here, you have Rand Paul. "hawks" and maybe killer drones. "The point I was trying to make is victims, too. "I'm not going to take it Paul has tried mightily to main- any more!" he cries. that I think people do use fear to try stream his brand of politics, distinIs Paul actually listening to his to get us to give up our liberty," Paul guishing it from that of his father, own words, as he regularly implies noted in further explanation of his Ron, who, at last check, was pro- that the U.S. government is a greater remarks about "some people's"sem oting an investment firm in T V threat to its people than al-Qaida and cret wish for a terror attack they can commercials by warning of a pend- the Islamic State combined? blame on him. "Some people are so fearful, ing economic apocalypse that will No doubt. Another thing people supposedly be "especially rough on they're like, how could we get terror- do with fear is inflame it and direct seniors." ists?" he mused in another moment it, recklessly, against "the spy state" As the makers of those Ron Paul of hyperbolic motive-impugning the or "the Washington Machine," withTV ads understand, the American other day. "We'll be overrun with ter- out offering practical alternatives public is genuinely troubled in these rorists, and ISIS will be in every drug — then hit you up for a campaign uncertain times. Objectively, though, store and in every house in America contribution. we remain prosperous, free and if we don't get rid of the Constitution, — Charles Lane is a member powerful — especially in compari- if we don't let the Fourth Amendof The Washington Post's editorial board.

not just concerned by government c ertain passive- overreach in pursuit of legitimate ob-

ing a huge mistake. Some of them, I cheerful, optimistic approach to think, secretly want there to be an at- politics, brimming with confidence tack on the United States so they can about what men and women can blame it on me." achieve when left to their own deAmid the fury of his Republican vices, and, accordingly, with fresh colleagues, who were the implicit ideas about how to meet social goals targets of this self-pitying smear, through individual initiative and free Paul admitted on Fox News that he

rights to law enforcement. Demo- son with almost every other nation crats could, too, for that matter. on Earth. There's a bright future As is becoming increasingly ap- ahead, if we stay focused on our parent, however, Paul represents a many advantages and adopt practidarker, angrier corner of the liber- cal solutions to our many challenges. tarian imagination, the part that's To this difficult-but-hopeful situation, the Kentucky ophthalmologist


SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

c ross e o orthern and central Italy are

N of refugees from Africa, Asia and the not on the southern Mediterranean. But somehow thousands

MiddleEast are everywhere hereas is true of much of the European

Union. Some sleep on park benches. Many peddle knock-off electronic goods and counterfeit watches. An-

gry Italians shoo away refugee beggars from tour groups. The Greek islands near the coast

of 'Ihrkey are likewise flooded this summer withdispossessed refugees from countries such as Afghanistan

to and Syria. Apparently a bankrupt Greekgovernment lacks theresources to patrol its vast coastline.

A similarrush has overwhelmed America'ssouthern border. In the last two years, tens of thousands of Central American and Mexican citizens have sensed that the Obama administration has suspended border

enforcement. Illegal entry into the United States won't result in punishment, but instead in an array of so-

cial services unimaginable in Latin America. So, what explains this constant

rush of the world's poor families into the West? And why aren't China,

Russia, Iran and Cuba, for example, flooded with illegal entrants? The human exodus to Western

countries is not always explained by a lack of natural wealth elsewhere. Iraq and Venezuela,forexample, are

awash in oil. Mexico has lots of oil, minerals and fertile soil.

Paul a or e r ?What Ehrlich got

rean government end up dead. Western decadence as the antithesis Refuges flood the West not just VICTOR of Islamic decorum. for economic opportunity but also DAVIS So why, then, do millions risk their forWestern-stylefreedom. The state lives to get into America, Europe and restricts free speech in China and in HANSON other Western nations by hook or by much of the Middle East. crook'? Academics in the West maypreach Wars may have driven scores of The Western poor enjoy a level of past U.S. sins to impressionable Afghans, North Africans and Syr- state support and access to technol- 18-year-old students. But refugees ians from their homelands to the ogy, health care and security that from Latin America assume that West, but most of Latin America is at would make them relatively rich in once they cross the border into the relative peace. the Third World. Even a poor for- U.S., they will have freedoms, legal The allure of the West is certainly eign-born peddler in Florence, Italy, protections, compassionate social not due to Europeans and Americans has access to clean waterand issafe services— and respect — ofthe sort constantly brainwashing the world in a way unknown to most residents that is impossible at home. about their supposedly superior cul- of Syria or Afghanistan. Millions have decided that it is far ture. Just the opposite is true. AmerIn the West, sexism means some- better to be immigrants of illegal staican media and universities constant- thing like the glass ceiling that tus in America than native-born citily harangue about the race, class and makes it harder for professional zens inside Mexico. gender shortcomings of Western women with children to match the What, then, explains the magnetcivilization. President Obama has re- career trajectories of their alpha cor- ic attraction of the often-criticized told countless Western historical sins porate male counterparts. Not so in West'? and offered apologies for them while the non-West,where women are not Add up the right to free expresabroad. always even guaranteed a right to sion, human rights, religious tolerNor are Western economies cur- vote or to divorce. At worst, gender ance, constitutional government, an rently booming and thus short of bias is a matter of genital mutila- independent judiciary, separation of labor. The European Union faces tion, arranged marriages and sexual church and state, free-market ecomassive debt. America never quite slavery. nomics and the protection of private recovered from the Great Recession Gays demonstrate over the right to property — and everyday life beof 2008-2009and is currentl y expe- marry in the West; in Iran they can comes simply farbetter. riencing negative economic growth. be stoned to death. There is one final irony. Many immigrants arrive without exThere may be riots in Baltimore The richer, freer and more techpectation of joining the labor force. and soccer thuggery in Britain. But nologically pampering that life beNor do millions of refugees hear that is child's play in comparison to comes for self-critical native Westnice things about the West from their the medieval environment elsewhere erners, thewhinier theybecome — as own governments. in the world. Boko Haram has car- if their West is not good because it is State media t h roughout L atin riedout massacres and other atroc- not perfect. America routinely trash Yanqui ities in North Africa. The Islamic — Victor Davis Hansonis a classicist neo-imperial ism and arrogance.The State films its near-daily prehistoric and historian at the HooverInstitution, Middle East is one big anti-American beheadings. Critics of the North KoStanford University. megaphone that constantly ridicules

wrong By Justln Fox Bloomberg News

t

t is difficult to make predictions about the future.

Any aphorism that gets attributed to both Niels Bohr and Yogi Berra (as well as Samuel Goldwyn, Mark Twain and others), has got to have something going for it. It is difficult to make predictions about the future.

That alone seems to be a good reason to cut some slack for Paul Ehrlich, whose 1968bestseller "The Population

Bomb" forecast the imminent breakdown of the world's ability to feed itself. Not that Ehrlich himself makes this

easy to do. In a just-released New York Times mini-documentary on the book

and its aftermath, the Stanford biologist, now 83, says insufferable things like, "One of the things that people don't understand is that timing to an ecologist is very, very different from timing to an average person." Then why write a book clearly aimed at average people that confidently predicted that in the 1970s hundreds of mil-

lions would die of famine? Still, I figured I'd give the book itself a chance, and I have to say it surprised me. First of all, half of Ehrlich's prediction came true. He forecast in the book

that global population, about 3.5 billion at the time, would double by 2005.

U.S. should follow France on nuke deal w

hen it comes to nuclear negotiations with Iran, which

are nearing a June 30 dead-

line, those who want a solid deal

shouldbe saying"Vive la France!" The French are taking the tough-

4eam.

TRUDY RUBIN

He was only six years off on thatworld population hit 7 billion in 2011 — which I figure counts as getting it right. What Ehrlich famously got wrong was the planet's carrying capacity. Sure, global population doubled. But thanks to the Green Revolution, peracre grain yields went up much faster than that.

Here's the interesting thing, though

— Ehrlich was well aware that this

est stand of any of the six countries

was a possibility. New rice, wheat and

(known as the P5+I) that are negoti- ed onMarch3: "We want adeal.They ating with Tehran. Paris insists that need a deal. The tactics and the reany accord must permit continuing sults of the negotiation should reflect inspections of all Iranian nudear in- this asymmetry." stallations, including military sites. In other words, Iran wants and

corn varieties, he wrote in 1968, "have the potential for at least doublingyields

This demand has been put forward

needs this deal so badly — in order to

bythe entire P5+I (the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany), but it has been rejected by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Many observers suspect U.S. officials will be willing to water down inspections in order to

rebuild its economy and extend its influence in the region — that the West

close a deal before the deadline. France, on the other hand, insists

has the leverage to hold out for provi-

sions that prevent cheating. The June 30 date is not carved in stone. The P5+I can walk away if Iran demands

anunacceptable price. While I support a deal in principle, I believe the French position on nego-

the June 30 date is not sacred. French tiating strategy is spot on. Now is the Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius says

moment to hold firm. his country won't sign unless Tehran The United States has already

gives international inspectors full

made substantial concessions in per-

access.

mitting Tehran to retain a limited capacity to enrich nudear fuel. It has

Clearly, the French are more familiar than the White House with thebasic tenet of bargaining in the Mideast

also accepted a sunset provision that

under proper growing conditions." They were, he concluded, the world's best shot at averting mass famine.

But while he was "hopeful" about the prospects for an "agricultural revolution," there were all kinds of things that that Iran cannot cheat on its commit-

Of course,President Obama is ments, as it has done in the past. openly eager for this deal, which he Yukiya Amano, the head of the hopes will prevent a nudear arms U.N.'s atomic watchdog agency, the race in the Middle East. His hopes International Atomic Energy Agen- maybe exaggerated. cy, said last week that this would reSunni Arab states intheregion fear quire Iran to accept snap inspections that sanctions relief for Tehran will at any location, induding military finance even greater Iranian interfersites. It would also require Tehran to ence in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, the Gulf, finally respond to the U.N. agency's and Yemen. A deal with Iran may long-standing questions about sus- even prod Saudi Arabia to start buildpected work on the development of ing the infrastructure for a nudear nudear weapons inprevious decades. pr ograII1.

could go wrong, so he didn't think anybody should bank on it. That's a pretty reasonable position. Productivity bursts, in agriculture as in other economic endeavors, have

always been hard to predict. You wouldn't want to take the earliest

signs of one as evidence that you could stop worrying. The same goes for almost all the environmental concerns voiced by Ehrlich in the book. Sure, he's awfully

gloomy about the U.S.'s smoggy skies

The State Department still insists that the administration wants an ac-

If Obama really wants to prevent

and befouled waterways. But the en-

anuclearracein theregion,he needs

bazaar: If you want a good deal, you to 15years. cordby June 30.No doubtthe White must be ready to walk away from a The argument for some conces- House is concerned that Congress

to convince Arab leaders he won't be rolled by the merchants in Tehran.

vironmental laws that began to remedy these problems for the most part

merchant who sets his price too high. The French believe that the United

sions has merit: If there is no deal, the Iranians

might vote to undercut a deal if the

And he needs to convince Tehran that

deadline is extended. But this is no

he isn't a patsy — at a time when Iran

States has been too eager to make concessions to Tehran. They argued that setting a March 30 deadline for a framework accord put more pres-

could soon ramp up nuclear-fuel pro-

excuse to waffle over nailing down verification mechanisms or the tim-

is showering funds and arms on its Syrian and Iraqi proxies and inflam-

sure on the P5+I to make compromises than it did on the Iranians — and

they feel the same about the June 30 deadline. The French ambassador to Washington, Gerard Araud, a longtime expert on the Iran nudear issue, tweet-

will lift most of those limitations in 10

duction to a point where they could "break out" in a few weeks — that is,

ing of the phase-out of sanctions. This ing the civil wars in both countries. produce enough highly enriched ura- is no time to water down provisions IfTehran demands more concesto "snap back" sanctions if inspectors sions to meet the June 30 deadline, nium to make a nudear weapon. A nuclear accord, in theory, would find violations. U.S. negotiators should stand with guarantee that, at least for the next 10 to 15 years, the time required for

It's time to listen to Fabius, who said

their Parisian counterparts and just

France would reject a deal "if it is not say "Non!" "break out" would be one year. Yet clear that inspections can be done at — Trudy Rubinis a columnist such an accord wouldbe meaningless all Iranian installations, induding and editorial board member unless inspections are so intrusive

military sites."

for the PhiladelphiaInquirer.

hadn't been enacted yet in 1968 — and

I find it a little hard to fault a guy for not anticipating wise, forward-looking moves by Congress. It was only when he got around to people and their reproductive rates that Ehrlich went over the edge-

those sections of his book sound misanthropic and scarily authoritarian to modern ears. "Population control, of

course, is the only solution to population growth," Ehrlich wrote. Slowing population growth in a few developed countries was nothing more than "short-term fluctuations" in apparent-

ly inexorable demographic trends. He advocated luxury taxes on diapers

Is the Motor City getting its groove back? By Joe Nocera New Yorh Times News Service

DETROITom K artsotis, th e w e althy co-founder of Fossil, has no connection to the Motor City. He lives in Dallas, where he now oversees a handful of ventures he's

company called Shinola. It has eight retail outlets and employs around 375 people, most of them in Detroit. Although those stylized watches are

its biggest sellers — the company expects to sell between 150,000 and 180,000 this year — it also designs and makes bicycl es, leather goods invested in. In early 2011, he decided and other well-crafted, high-end to build a small watch factory that products. Not only are those products would sell high-quality watches that built in Detroit, but Shinola also tries were priced, as he puts it, "at the en- to buy the parts it needs from other try point of luxury." American companies. Its leather, for He also wanted to make these instance, comes from the Horween watches in America. "So many big LeatherCo.,a Chicagotannery more companies have sourcing infrastruc- than a century old. Its bicycle frames tures whose knee-jerk reaction is to are shipped from a companyrunby a head to China," he said. He couldn't fourth-generation Schwinn. compete with China at the low end Although it was a philanthropic of themarket — nobody can.But he

impulse that moved Kartsotis to set

felt that the kind of watches he had up shop in Detroit, it has turned out to in mind— priced between $450 and be a very good business decision. The $600 at the low end, with a distinctive space Shinola needed to build its facbut dassic design — could be made tory was cheap. There was also plencompetitively in the United States. So

ty of talent — engineers, for sure, but

he decidedtoputhis newfactoryhere also former auto assembly-line workin Detroit, a city once renowned for ers, people eager to work who Shi-

they placed tiny, intricate parts inside unemployment rate is dropping. Once-abandonedbuildings arebeing theunassembled watches. Indeed, to spend any time in De- reoccupied. Something very good is troit these days is to be amazed at happening here, and it's largely the the extent to which it is humming result of private-sector activity. with entrepreneurial activity. Dan Shinola's products are well-deGilbert, the founder and chairman of signed and made. They are selling Quicken Loans — which he relocated briskly. But they are not cheap, and never be mass produced. I've to Detroit — has bought more than they'll 70 buildings and is converting some written before about how even big of them into office space for small manufacturers like Caterpillar and businesses. There are other buildings General Electric employ far fewer with common workspaces and tools workers than they used to thanks to like 3-D printers than can be shared. automation. Shinola offers a different The city'sgovernment and, espe- twist on that idea. It's not automacially, its foundations are focused on tion that is restricting the number of helping people who want to start a workers but rather the niche appeal new business. I spoke with a woman of its products. I'm not sure its examnamed Julie James, who, with her ple is particularlyreplicable. foursisters,m anufactures abrand of As for Shinola, Kartsotis is readyjuices they call Drought. It employs ing its next product: Shinola-style 32 people. New companies like this headphones that can compete with high-end models like those from are starting every day. Kartsotis told me that "creating

a few hundred jobs isn't going to move the needle." He's right about

nola could train to be watchmakers. When I visited the watch factory re-

that, of course. But, collectively, all

or more children in India, adding, "Coercion? Perhaps, but coercion in a

good cause. What if anything does this teach us about our current global population situation'? There is little of the popula-

tion angst that prevailed in the 1960s and 1970s, largely because of a widespread belief that global population will plateau this century as country after country becomes wealthier and

birth rates plummet. You can see this from the United Nations' latest population projections

— if high fertility rates continue, global population will pass 10 billion in 27 years and 15 billion in 73 years. It is only if the trend toward having fewer chil dren continues and spreads to many more countries that population

will stabilize or even drop. The idea, then, is that the spread of affluence will solve the world's population dilemma. Instead of coercion, we can rely on college tuition and expensive urban real estate to keep fer-

Beats. He told me that he has just

tility rates in check. This is a ton more

completed a round of financing and hopes to take the company public one day. Which will be good for him — and

attractive than Paul Ehrlich's prediction of either chaos or government-im-

these small companies do seem to recent times, has needed all the help be helping to bring Detroit back. Detroit. it can get. cently, I saw rows of employees bent Young people are moving in to the That original idea turned into a over their desks, focusing intently as downtown and midtown areas. The its manufacturing prowess that, in

and cribs in the U.S., and endorsed forced sterilization of fathers of three

— Joe Nocera is a columnist for The New York Times.

posed population control. Will it turn to out to be any more accurate? Not

sure. Predicting is hard. Especially about the future. — Justin Fox is a columnistfor Bloomberg.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended May31.

HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Radiant Angel" by Nelson DeMille (GrandCentral,

$28)

2. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95)

e ove au oi' u umeon er aes oo an su ose ina oui' "In the Unlikely Event" by Judy Blume (Alfred A. Knopf,416 pages, $2795)

3. "All the Light We Cannot

See" by Anthony Doerr (Scribner, $27) 4. "Piranha" by CliveCussler and Boyd Morrison (Putnam, $28.95) 5. "14th Deadly Sin" by James Patterson andMaxine Paetro (Little, Brown, $28) 6. "Memory Man" by David Baldacci (GrandCentral, $28) 7. "Gathering Prey" by John Sandford (Putnam, $28.95) 8. "Seveneves" by NealStephenson (Morrow, $35) 9. "Beach Town" by Mary Kay Andrews (St. Martin's, $26.99) 10."The Liar" by NoraRoberts (Putnam, $27.95) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 2. "The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough (Simon & Schuster, $30) 3. "Legends 8 Lies" by Bill D'Reilly and David Fisher (Holt,

$32)

4. "And the GoodNewsIs" by Dana Perino (Hachette/ Twelve, $26) 5. "American Wife" by Taya Kyle (Morrow, $27.99) 6. "The Road toCharacter" by David Brooks (Random,

$28)

7."The Whole30"by Melissa Hartwig and Dallas Hartwig (HMH, $30) 8. "Sugar Impact Diet Cookbook" by JJ Virgin (Grand Central/Life 8 Style, $28) 9. "It's a Long Story" by Willie Nelson (Little, Brown, $30) 10. "A Lucky Life Interrupted" by TomBrokaw(Random,

$27)

— Tirbune NewsService

To Cooper's daughter, Amanda, then 12, the perfect Judy age, the choice was obvious: "Dad, call Judy Blume." "Two days after the first

1

'I

By Karen Heller The Washington Post

date, we moved in together," Cooper says. "What can I say? It was the '70s."

NEW YORK — The wom-

en, and even a few men, of so many ages, line the hallway of her publisher's offices, waiting to hold her hand, to claim an autograph, to envel-

Her 'final' book For all Blume's success, the writing gets no easier. "Sum-

op themselves in her latest

mer Sisters," she recalls, "was

work. To them, she is Margaret, absolutely, but also Sally

rejected by a lot of people, including my long-term pub-

J. Freedman and Rachel Rob-

lishers. And I was just in a

inson (though not Fudge, never Fudge), but always, inimitably, Judy Blume, beloved author of 29 books, with an astonishing 86 million copies

terrible place. I didn't know exactly what I was doing with

in print. "In th e

it."

Baron, her editor, came along and worked with her o n draft after draft, 20 i n

U n l ikely E vent,"

published Tuesday, is Blume's

j

she made it right." The initial

first in 17 years, since "Summ er Sisters." Many o f

her

grown-up readers were once her YA readers, and before

Photosby Jesse Dittmar/For The Washington Post

Judy Blume signs copies of her book at the Alfred A. Knopf offices in Manhattan. The popular author swears that this will be her last book tour — and last book. But she has said that before.

Baron crows, "It sold 600,000 "I kept them quiet, but I al-

always and forever hers. As Blume is prone to saying, "I am their childhoods," partly because she has constantly mined her own. She is

ways had stories, very dramatic stories, melodramas, from the time I was 9. I would

simultaneously a creature of

her youth (the 1950s, though she had not written specifically of that period until this

book) and that of her readers (the '70s, '80s and every decade since). That's in part because she can so easily access her childhood. "I used to think I lived at age 12," she

says. She has never forgotten how awkward and important that time can be.

Judy Blume's latest novel, "In the Unlikely Event," is based on three plane crashes in the1950s in her hometown of Elizabeth,

New Jersey.

Blume writes books for young readers about subjects that other

w r i t ers f i ercely

avoid — menstrual periods; sex, all sorts of sex; religion. (Readers remember "Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret." for dealing with men-

which only seems to make t hem sell more and to f u r -

Including, o f

cou r s e, es from dentalrecords, is the After two years of rejection, model for this book's charm- she became a published auShe tends to establish im- ing Doctor Osner. Cooper can thor in 1969. She eventually mediate intimacy, sharing also be found between the shed the husband, kept the health concerns and hugs. covers. He contributed the name. She married briefly, Being around Blume and her novel's Elizabeth newspaper divorced again. And she kept admirers is like attending a articles by Uncle Henry, who writing book after book after literary slumber party, sum- — spoiler alert! — ultimately book. mer camp with books. lands a job at The WashingThen, Cooper. It was CooShe inspired Chelsea Han- ton Post. per's ex-wife who provided a dler's woozy 2008 homage "In the Unlikely Event" is list of three women he might "Are You There, Vodka? It's

written in simple, direct lan-

Me, Chelsea." (Appearing on

guage, a feast of declarative sentences.

tial Blumian candor, "I didn't

conversational and

Rhimes is writing

a book The Associated Press NEW YORK — Shon-

da Rhimes' first book will have a positive message. The awa r d-winning showrunner and creator of "Grey's Anatomy" and "Scandal" has an agreement with Simon & Schus-

n ever like you for a little while, but then I loved you.") Blume is precisely what admirers exoften in the 1,000 letters she pect — instant girlfriend. sensational. What readers tell her so

receives each month is, "I felt

like you were talking directly to me." Blume helped t r ansform

this publishing crowd, here for her first signing of the

newborn.

w ith an

through Simon & Schuster, Rhimes said she had not planned to tell about her

year of challenges. But, in the spirit of taking chances,

Jennifer Weiner and Curtis Sittenfeld. "It's hard. There's

so much attention being paid. It's embarrassing." Also, she's an improbable 77.

mon & Schuster's suggestion to write a book. "I had no choice — what

c onversation; many o f t h e books, like this l atest one,

else could I say but yes?" she said.

are dedicated to him), a non-

Rhimes' book has a simi-

lar title to a popular release

Columbia law professor. He says of Blume's "Summer Sis-

from 2006, "The Year of Yes," in which Maria Dha-

ters" tour, the one she thought would be the last, "It was a

vana Headley writes of agreeing to go out with every man who asks her for a date.

have a lot of creative energy. I know I'm going to be involved creatively," she says. "I think, with this book, I've kind of

I' ~

She was never scared to fly,

"and I was the most anxious kid. My mother was the most

i n i t ial p r i nting of

da, Blume heard the novelist

Rachel Kushner speak about how her f irst novel, "Telex

from Cuba," was inspired by her mother' sstoriesofthe'50s. "The '50s!" Blume gasps. "And that was it. I

h ave a

be a story about people." She story! I've been a writer for adds, "I think a nyone can 4 0-something years, a n d write a good sentence, but to here's t hi s v e r y dr a m atbe a good storyteller, that is ic, tragic story, and I never priceless." thought about it." From that The novel is Blume's most point on, she couldn't let the heavily researched work, re- story go. sulting in color-coded binders of drafts. If a babysitter Becoming a writer makes 50 cents an hour in the Writing was "easier in the book, that's because it was beginning" of Blume's career. the going rate in 1952. Many "I didn't have expectations, of the plane passengers are and no one else had them, eibased on actual victims. ther. I had so much inside me. The book boasts a sprawl- It needed to come out. All this ing assemblage of characters, stuff that was in there. I didn't Trollope in the Jersey burbs, have an outlet for it. So I went but the heroine, unsurpris- from book to book to book to ingly, is Miri Ammerman, a book," Blume says, shaking smart, perceptive young teen. her nest of curls. "I wanted to There's a little bit of Blume write the books that I think I in almost all her books. (She would have liked when I was says that "Starring Sally that age." J. Freedman as Herself" is During the childhood and her most autobiographical. adolescence that she has ac-

last.

With her is George Cooper, her adored husband of 35 years (his name salts her

she couldn't turn down Si-

vows, is it. "I do want that time to do whatever I want to do. I still

Blume had forgotten about

positively swears will be her

fans, including Meg Wolitzer,

s t atement issued

come herback. But this,she

~~ ANilMIQAE.

the crashes. She's not given to introspection that way.

Blume, trust me.' This wi ll

writers who remain ardent

In a

other book, another story to tell, her fans thrilled to wel-

r eason w h y

a teenager can't read this book," Blume says. "I don't like categories, that you have to be published in a certain place."

tour, which she absolutely,

for one year say yes to unexpected invitations.

Rhimes was inspired to

curred over two months in

"I don't take this for grant- 210,000 copies, Knopf betting ed. Ever," says Blume, a wren that it will be a big book of of a woman who inked her the season. looping signature 18,000 Says her editor, Carole Baron: "I told people, 'It's Judy times in advance of the book

dared in December 2013 to

ann o unced

three plane crashes that oc-

'Summer Sisters,' too." So here Blume is, with an-

ing and he was on sabbaticaL said everything."

the early 1950s, when Judy anxious mother, ever." Blume promotional tour, into life- Sussman was a young teen, never told her children about long readers. Around Blume, in her childhood home town the crashes, either, includthere's none of that Manhat- of Elizabeth, New Jersey, kill- ing her daughter, Randy, tan ennui: They're visibly ing more than 100 people. who became, of all things, a elated. One young woman exIt might have been a tough commercial pilot and later a claims, "I've loved your books sell, an u n likely summer therapist. since I was a kid," clutching read, if it w eren't a Blume Then, at a literary event at Blume's latest volume like a book and hence being birthed her home in Key West, Flori-

write the book, coming in November, after she was

publisher Tuesday.

"In the Unlikely Event" is based on the true story of

date in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where the writer was liv-

on says. "She said that about

novel before she launches her

"I'm never doing another book tour. I really feel this is it," says Blume during an interview after the signing. The month of June is devoured by events, many with younger

ter for"Year of Yes," the

Mining her past

" There's no

copies net." In addition t o s w e aring that this i s he r f i nal t our, Blume claims that "In the Unlikely Event" will be her last

bounce a pink Spaldeen ball bigbook. against the side of the house Really, Judy Blume? Her every afternoon and let the agent, Suzanne Gluck (her stories run around. And then, previous two, Claire Smith the next day there would be and Owen Laster, have both different stories." died), has been a Blume fan She studied early child- from her days at summer hood education at New York camp. "When I was first working University, married, had two children. (Her son, Larry, with Judy, she told me, 'Full directed and co-wrote with disclosure: I'm not sure I'll Blume the 2012 movie "Tiger write another book,'" Gluck Eyes," based on her YA nov- recalls. "Fine, but a girl can el.) She took an NYU con- dream." tinuing education class on Her editor doesn't believe writing from tweens to teens. her. "Yeah, yeah, yeah," Bar-

Blume.

ther endear Blume to her fans Handler's t elevision s h ow, for going there, writing in a Blume said, with quintessenstyle that is direct, familiar,

printing for that book was 65,000, but her publishers had underestimated the demand.

that her young readers, but

mixed marriages, religious bigotry and lack of faith.) Her books have been frequently banned by school libraries,

Shonda

, gl

fourth novel for adults, her

struation, but it's also about

Richard Shotwell I TheAssociated press

all. "And it all came pouring out," the novelist says, "and

pO .

fiction author

a n d f o r m er

"When I was 9 and 10, I was

cessed so deftly for stories

a lot like Sally — curious, and those indelible, uncomlovefest. We had to keep box- imaginative, a worrier," she fortable feelings, no one told es of Kleenex on the table be- writes on her website.) Her her that she was a writer. "We didn't have creative cause everyone was breaking father, a dentist who helped into tears." identify victims of the crash- writing classes," she recalls.

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SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015• THE BULLETIN

F5

A conventiona memoir Film pioneersdescribe earlydays wit ac im "Primates of Park Avenue: A Memoir" by WednesdayMartin (Simon & Schuster, 248 pages, $26) By Janet Maslin New Yorh Times News Service

No book inrecent memory has been as splashily misrepresented as W e dnesday Martin's "Primates of Park Avenue." It is supposed to have blown

the lid off the darkest secrets of the wealthy, glamorous Upper East Side wife-and-mommy set. M a r ti n u n earthed

these secrets — including that of the buzzed-about "wife bo-

nus," which her book barely mentions — by living among and m asquerading as one of those rich RoboMoms

since the former owner is only moving upstairs to the pent-

cally accost women who don't. She stakes ou t c e r t ain

house. Surely, they'll meet on

apartment buildings and store

the street or in the building's

entrances and stands there

lobby. Martin encounters the horribly unfriendly mothers at the private school to which she sends her older son. Predict-

with coffee, doing more "fieldwork" to verify this thesis. ("My inner social researcher wanted more data.") She also claims to have herself been ably, these mothers dress iden- "charged" by a Birkin-bearing tically and give her the deep dowager. Far from allowing freeze. She is on very tired this behavior to sully the Birterritory as she describes their kin's reputation, she fondly outfits, snootiness and ability remembers Mike the chimp, to act as if they haven't heard who dragged around empty a word she's said (Play date? kerosene canistersto assert What play date'?), since this is his dominance and sustained a mix of voyeurism and chick- alpha status for five years this lit without any new ingredient. way. Ergo, her husband must What does give this anec- buy her a Birkin, too. dote some gasp-worthiness is Only briefly does Martin get the way

whi le

also doing "fieldw ork"

in

an -

pe < W.ATKS

thropology and primatology, like

af

PAR:K AV KNU'8'

an urban J ane Goodall with an i nterest i n so -

cial-climbing and fashion. M artin's

de -

scription of her book as a "strange r-than-f i c t i o n

story" is fair — but only because fiction usually makes sense.

i m mic

M a r t in

to the economic heart of these

solves her popularity problem: by flirting with one of the most desirable and pow-

matters. She works, so she is

e rful me n

who

has a child her son's age. That she sees this as

not entirely dependent on her

husband's largesse, but she still has to ask for that bag as a gift. And she does notice that women who earn their own

money are in a better bargaining position than women who expect men to pay for their upkeep. But money and its sourc-

a great way to solve her entree es should have been crucial issue might have to this book about immense warranted more privilege. Her very slenderbibt hought than i t liography might have leaned gets here. more heavily in the direction But Martin's best argu- of Leslie Bennetts' "The Femments take the form of hurl-

inine Mistake," about the im-

ing achimp or bonobo athu- portance of women's financial man situations in the name of independence, and less toward Instead of a t ell-all, "Pri- maintaining the title's scien- seemingly irrelevant titles like mates of Park Avenue" is a tific conceit. Martin doesn't "Maya Children: Helpers at conventional memoir with a care whether the analogy is the Farm." "Primates of Park Avenue" gimmick. Martin frames it as germane. a scientific report on a certain In an otherwise funny diends with a heartbreaking unnamed island (Manhattan's atribeabout the excesses of personal story. It should nevlongitude and latitude are giv- East Side exercise classes, er have been used as a cheap en) that is divided into four she suddenly starts musing on trick. But the book uses it to quadrants along up-down and exercise outfits: "Sure, we all show that suffering can solve east-west axes. wore the same tight exercise social problems, not only Martin, who grew up in pants, sometimes with lines among lower primates but Michigan and once studied crisscrossing the derriere, even among those who spend science but now bills herself drawing attention to our botlong hours perfecting their as "a cultural critic at large toms in a way that put me in wardrobes and coiffures. The in high heels," migrated here, mind of the bright pink estrus book's ending is still more married and lived for years in displays of nonhuman female tragic than happy, but it does the lower part of the island. primates. 'Look at me! I'm in bring Martin two changes she "Down," as she labels it, was heat!' our spandex-encased, sees as positive. She ultimately considered "primarily a place highlighted bottoms seemed breaks that Park Avenue ice. for pre-reproductives, cultural to scream. But the similarities And she moves to the Upper 'outsiders,' feasting and ecended there." West Side. static nighttime rites." Then why are we reading But after the Sept. 11 at- about them? Because sometacks, she and her prosperous one has a book to fill and a husband decided to move their

in 'My FirstTimein Hollywood' "My First Time in Hollywood Stories From the Pioneers, Dreamers and Misfits Who Made theMovies" by Cari Beauchamp (Asahina 4 Wallace, 358 pages, $25.99)

By Susan King Los Angeles Times

don't know," she said. "To me

it's important to always put the spotlight on how truly collaborative (filmmaking) is. Everyone had to bring

it was — how t hey k new each other, how they reflect-

ed upon each and how they counted on each other for

different things." She also noted that there is Beauchamp casts the spot- "always a dash of serendiplight on c i nematographer ity" in their stories, as well Karl Brown, who got his first as hustle, determination and big break as the assistant to perseverance. "These peoD W. Griffith's cinematograple were greeted their best."

Everyone's first time was different. Screenwriter Ben H echt pher, Billy Bitz-

said his first day in Hollywood in 1926 was "like a year in Siberia." Screenwriter Frances Marion arrived

er; set decorator W infrid K a y Thackrey, who was determined

in 1912 and was shocked when she tried to find an

to per s u ade s tudios to h i re apartment. a woman; and "There were vacancies ga- e ven Val e r i a lore, but tacked over many of B elletti, S a m the rental signs was this om- uel Goldwyn's

inous edict: 'No Jews, actors or dogs allowed.' My blood boiled." Hecht and Marion's reminiscences are included in the newbook on the early days of filmmaking, "My First Time in Hollywood: Stories From the Pioneers, Dreamers and Misfits Who Made the Movies," edited and annotated by film historian and writer

Cari Beauchamp, whose previous work includes the book "Without Lying Down: Fran-

young secretary who helped get beau Gary Cooper his first major film. When Gish arrived with her sister and mother in 1913, Los Angeles had about

actors as Mary Pickford, Harold Lloyd, Lillian Gish, Gloria Swanson and Colleen Moore, directors Cecil B. DeMille and King Vidor and screenwriter Anita Loos

recalling their first impressions of Hollywood, their determination to find work and

their love and passion for filmmaking. Beauchamp had a couple of overarching goals in choosing subjects for her book: She wanted half of them to be women. And she

time again and they kept coming back" she sard. Though most of the people featured in the

'p'lI'g (' rI

book arrived on the West Coast

in their teens and 20s, Beau-

champ included a few veterans like Maurice Leloir, a well-known French

painter, designer and illustrator who came to Holly-

300,000 residents with "wide wood in his late 70s in 1928 to supervisethesetsand cosSpanish-style houses," she tumes for historical accuracy wrote in an excerpt taken on Douglas Fairbanks' "The boulevards, churches and

from her 1969 memoir, "The M ovies, Mr. G r i ffith, a n d Me." "Nearby were ocean

and desert, snow-capped ces Marion and the Powerful mountains and green valWomen of Early Hollywood." leys, Spanish missions and Culled from autobiogra- fruit farms." When a teenage Mary phies,letters,speeches, oral histories and memories, "My Pickford came out west in First Time" f eatures such

w ith th e w o r d ' no' t i m e and

1910 to work with D.W. Griffith, she noted in a bit taken

Iron Mask." Leloir, who had never traveled outside of France, was

so smitten with Los Angeles that he wrote the book "Five Months in Hollywood With

Douglas Fairbanks." As for Moore, one of the

biggest stars in t he '20s in such films as "Flaming

Youth" and "Lilac Time," she found love at first sight when "Sunshine an d S h adows": she arrived in 1916 as a star"Studios were all on open struck 15-year-old with a sixlots — roofless and without month contract.

from her 1955 autobiography,

walls, which explains the origin of the terms 'on the lot.' Our studio consisted of an acre of ground, fenced in, and a large wooden platform, hung with cotton shades that were pulled on wires over-

head. On a windy day, our clothes and curtains on the set would flap loudly in the breeze." wanted only a third of them Compiling these accounts, to be actors; for the rest, she Beauchamp said, "you realwanted crew — "people we ize what a real community

"The trip t o

C alifornia

took three days and three

nights.... When we came out of the desert into California, I ran out to the observation platform to stare at the snow-

capped mountains, the green orange groves, the palm trees, and the brilliant sky,"

she wrote in an excerpt from her 1968 autobiography, "Silent Star." "I knew this was

my land. There was where I belonged."

theme to stick to, regardless

family Up and to the East, to a of whether it has any point. region known for "perceived Martin is actually much betformality and conservatism." Not to mention elite private

schools, expensive everything,ababy boom and mothers with perfect blond hair. M artin, who happened tobe

thin and blond to begin with, presents herself as having

ter when she writes about the

absurd use of "thug" among SoulCyclers, who use certain ly out in the Hamptons. But the book's most egre-

gious logical whopper is its

been totally naive about the

attempt to justify the author's

Upper East Side and its mysterious ways. So she describes her arrival as if she had just landed from Mars. Real estate "shamans" teach

craving for an expensive Birkin bag in the name of a hapless Goodall chimp named Mike. First w e

m u s t h e ar

about the glories of the Birkin in endless detaiL And if you or at least how to stop dress- don't know what these things ing like her funky former are, this isn't the time to find her how to convey authority, self. The lissome owner of

out. Let's just say that they are

the apartment she winds up buying asks whether they'll

pricey and highly identifiable handbags and that Martin

meet at the Breakers in Palm

swears she has seen "UES"

Beach or in Aspen — which

(Upper East Side) women who own them using them to physi-

seems a nonsensical question,

New 'Fifty Shades'book already topsbest-sellers By Carolyn Kellogg

James offers a fresh perspec-

Los Angeles Times

tive on the love story that has enthralled millions of readers around the world."

On Monday, E.L. James announced that she would publish another book in her "Fifty

A sneakpeek at the next CentralOregon Living coming 3une 27th... Chefs onTour Learn about the third annual pre-Tour of Homes™event and how it has evolved since 2013. Find out which builders and restaurants will be participating.

Tour ofHom es™ Preview A showcase of some of the finest homes in Central Oregon. Get t e what, when and where plus the history and what to look for this year.

"OutdoorLivinl" Features • Outdoor kitchens • BBQ innovations • Backyard trends 8 must-haves • High desert gardening

In rocketing to the top

Shades of Grey" series. And as of 'Iiresday morning, based on preorders, "Grey" is at the top of Amazon's bestseller list. "Fifty Shades of Grey" is, of course, the erotic bestseller in which innocent college stu-

of Amazon's bestseller list,

dent Anastasia Steele falls

has dropped to No. 3; the thriller "The Girl on the Train"

for billionaire Christian Grey, who introduces her to the sexual pleasures of bondage. That novel, and its sequels — "Fifty Shades Darker" and "Fifty

CENTRALOREGOI'8 ORIGINALHOME AID llVING NIAGAZIIE

gang affectations with impunity, at least when they're safe-

"Grey" has shaken a few other books loose. The self-help book "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" has moved to No. 2; the children's board book "First 100 Words" has fallen to No. 6; David Mc-

Cullough's "The Wright Brothers" has moved down to No. 7.

MQj4-'

Two other summer books

still only available as preorSteele's point of view. ders — "Go Set a Watchman" "Grey" will return to that by Harper Lee and "Finders story, told from Grey's side. Keepers" by Stephen King"See the world of Fifty Shades have also been bumped down, of Grey anew through the to No. 8 and 9, respectively. eyes of Christian Grey," the When readers finally do get book's Amazon page reads. "Grey," they'll have plenty to "In Christian's own w o rds, enjoy: The paperback is 576 and through his thoughts, re- pages. "Grey" will be released flections, and dreams, E.L. June 18.

ly

Shades Freed"— are told from

IMa0aga "'lli( SCBSNI(,

siif"

For moreinformatioo and to subscridecall

541-382-1811 OEQGN MS N I I IN%SI CRORIINGNOME 8

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

••

TheB u lletin

S MRYBIEIIGY~S M

. The Bulletin


F6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015

u issi s oc in uswi e rsex a "The Doctor Is In: Dr. Ruth on Love,Life, and Joie de Vivre" by Dr. Ruth Westheimer

(Amazon Publishing, 206pages,$14.95) By Nora Krug The Washington Post

On the eve of her 87th birthday, Ruth Westheimer is still talking about sex.

office in New York, she talked about her books, her philosophy and (a bit) about her personal life. (This interview has been edited for length and clarity) How have people's prob• lems changed since you began offering sex advice in

have been Q •• Questions raised about your comments last week on (public radio's) the "Diane Rehm Show" about when it's appropriate for a woman to say no to a

Q•

man. Can you elaborate? • Loud and clear: In the • Jewish t r a d i tion, i t says that if that part of the

A

the early 1980s?

to me she was menstruating.

And I do remember a book at my parents' house, "The Ideal Marriage." I went up on a ladder to look at that book; they were hiding it. I saw some pictures of people having sex. must ask about Q •• People your sex life. What do

• People are more knowlA • edgeable. Women in this great country have learned

male anatomy is aroused, the you tell them? brain flies out of the head. It • Next question! enough blood for two heads.

about her own romantic entanglements. Her first boyfriend was nicknamed Putz, she tells us, and she lost her virginity on a kibbutz (not to Putz). As a young patient at a hospital in then-Palestine, Westheimer

that they must take responsibility for their sexual satisfaction. Even if they love the guy, he can't guess what she needs. Yet I get a lot of the same questions. Sex is boring. The relationship is not good. People bringing their worries into the

dishes, she had a "brief but in-

bedroom. I say leave the wor-

In her new memoir — her second — called "The Doctor Is In," Westheimer shares a bit

also says a man doesn't have What does it mean'? If a man and a woman — or two men

started a line of Q •• You l ow-alcohol w i ne.

and two women — are naked Why? inbed together, there is no way • Y es, V i n ' d'amour. I t that, in the middle, he or she

A

• wasn't v e ry

su c c ess-

can say, "Ichanged my mind" ful. It was very sweet. I want and leave. I think people have people to relax a little, but I to take the responsibility that

tense love affair" with a male riesoutsidethebedroom door. nurse. We know that girls menstruA few

A

don't want them to be drunk.

if they are in bed together, they So, take a drink, relax a little, are willing to have some kind leave your worries outside

o ther d etails you ate atan earlierage so we have

of sexual experience. She has

might not know about Dr. an obligation to give sex eduRuth: At age 10, Westheimer cation.Children are exposed

no business in bed with him,

your apartment.

was taken on a kindertrans-

to so many sexual pictures.

and he has no business in bed with her if they don't have an

your secret to Q •• What's long life?

port from Germany to an orphanage in Switzerland. Her family perished in the Holocaust. Later, she trained to be a sniper in the paramilitary organization Haganah. "As a four-foot-sevenwoman,

Parents have to be an "askable

understanding that they will

parent" so that a child can ask those questions and get correct information.

have sex.

A• secret: good luck. I am

I would have been turned away

Q •• book that y ou o nce

Y ou mention i n y o u r

Why do you say you're • old-fashioned? • I don't believe in hook• ing up. I don't believe

Q•

thought you were too short to

by any self-respecting army Amazon Publishing/Submitted photo anywhere else inthe world," she in sex on the first date. I want Dr. Ruth Westheimer's new memoir is "The Doctor Is In." writes, "but I had other qualities people to have a relationship that made me a valuable guer- before they have sex. I can't rilla." Among them, "a knack say how long before. Also, you proves my point: Women do I a m w o r r ie d a b out for putting bullets exactly don't have to share your fanta- get aroused by sexually ex• the Internet because where Iwant themto go." sies. If you have sex with your plicit material. It's not required young people think they can Dr. Ruth — twice divorced partner, and the woman thinks reading. I tell people to make retrieve what they put upand a widow — teaches at Co- about a whole football team sure you turn the page if you like naked pictures — but lumbia,has a strong presence in bed with her, that's OK, but read something you don't you can't. Once it's out there, on social media (85,000 follow- keep your mouth shut about it. like. It's the same with "Lady it's out there. The other thing ers @AskDrRuth), and in the Chatterley's Lover" or "Fear of that worries me: I see couples summer will publish, with her W hat d o y o u th i n k Flying." walking holding hands and co-writer, Pierre Lehu, a chil• of E.L. James' "Fifty in the other they are holddren's book, "Leopold," about a Shades of Grey"? How h a s t h e In t e r- ing a phone. We are going to turtle who overcomes its fears. • I read all three books. • n et c ha n ged o ur lose the ability to have a good In a phone interview from her • I didn't see the film. It relationships? conversation.

A•

Q•

A

Q•

Driving

on the phone at the same time. I skied until the age of 80.

get pregnant. What are some of the myths about sex that In your book you write, " As far a s I ' m c o n continue to plague people? • There are s till p e o- cerned, I'm still becoming Dr. • ple who believe in the Ruth." What more can you

Q• •

A

G-spot. Until we get scientifically validated data that

t here's something like

a

G-spot, we shouldn't worry

be? • I mean I am still very

A• curious to learn. I am still teaching. I taught at Yale

about it. And there are plenty and Princeton. I go to lectures. of other myths that still need I am not satisfied by standing to be buried.

How did yo u

still. I still want to learn. I go

to concerts. It's very nice to l earn be Dr. Ruth. I am now a wid-

Q •• about the birds and the

ow for more than 16 years. If I

bees? could find an interesting older • Ido remember as a girl gentleman who can still walk

A less than 10 — a girl explained • in Frankfurt — so I was

and talk, that would be very

nice. I would be very happy.

search at the Virginia Tech There is another concern: Transportation Institute into Head-up technology focused whether the safety benefit on social media and comof having head-up displays munication creates the risk in cars outweighs the risk of of normalizing the behavior distraction; that study is exof multitasking, "as if we're pected to conclude in 2016. telling people it's OK to do Another take on the fledgit," said Deborah Hersman, ling technology comes from t he chief executive of t h e a Vancouver, British ColumNational Safety Council, a bia, startup called DD Technonprofit. nologies — started by two Hersman was formerly the entrepreneurs who said they chairwoman of the National were inspired to build a headTransportation Safety Board, up display after watching an

"It's a horrible idea," said

Paul Atchley, a p s ychologist at the University of Kansas who studies driver distraction.

Attending to the road is much more complex than

having your head turned toward it, he said.

"The technology is driven by a false assumption that seeingrequiresnothing more than having the eyes fixed on the right spot." Navdy, which is based in San Francisco, has r a ised

$26.8 million, said Doug Simpson, th e c o mpany's

where she was involved in

"Iron Man" movie. The com-

the regulation of head-up displays for airlines. That technology, she said, was permitted after extensive testing on

pany's display, Iris, which

founder and chief executive.

the safest practices, but, she explained, "the same i sn't

Simpson is a computer sci-

true for cars."

Even though the company's $299 device isn't shipping until later this year, it has already received $6 million in preorders, Simpson said. Simpson said he got the idea for the device during a trip to Bangkok. Like many visitors, he was trying to fig-

fortunate that I can walk fast and that I can walk and talk

threat.

Continued from F1

entist who spent 10 years at Hewlett-Packard.

• I don't know that it's a

Navady via The New York Times

"Tech and i n novation in

should soon be available in

limited quantities, allows drivers to read the contents of a text.

But the entrepreneurs say they're not encouraging the behavior — well, not exactly.

"We're not saying you the auto industry are moving so much faster than the reg- should be texting and drivulators can keep up with it," ing," said th e c ompany's road. Such distraction makes she said. co-founder D i n o M a r i u tti. i t extremely difficult for a The Department of Trans- "We're saying you should driver to respond to a sudden portation has sponsored re- make it safer."

A photo of Navdy's transparent head-up display, which mounts on adriver's dashboard. slides it across the steering wheel, a gesture picked up by the dashboard device in somewhat the same way a

— like speed or a navigation arrow — there is a modest safety advantage. But the social information

Nintendo Wii console works.

"counteracts, takes away"

The image will look to the driver a bit like a hologram

any small benefit the driver

might get from driving information that is properly ure out a map on his phone of the windshield, Simpson aligned. while driving on unfamiliar said, roughly where the front Another company seeking streets. He narrowly escaped ofthecarmeets the road. to draw the airline paral"It's safer than looking lel is WayRay, which has its rear-ending another car. It's not surprising that down at the dashboard or at headquarters in Switzerland. Simpson's aha moment start- an image on your phone," he It plans to start selling a deed with navigation. Maps, added. vice that displays data that is driving directions and other In theYouTube video com- not just in the driver's line of driving-focused i n f o rma- missioned by Navdy, the driv- sight but, the company said, tion are important features er (who owns the company appears to the driver to be of many of these products, that made the video), says the at a distance from 32 feet all the idea being that any task technology is "just like what the way to the horizon. The that relates to driving should commercial airline pilots use company has $6 million in be done as safely as possi- when they're landing." funding, mostly from Rusble. Part of what has created He adds, "You hear that? sian investors, and it expects an opening for products like Pilots use it. It's safe." to close on another round "Not Navdy is a sentiment among true," c o u n tered from Silicon Valley venture many consumers that the Christopher Wickens, a pro- capitalists by the end of June, navigation and touch-screen fessor at Colorado State Uni- said Vitaly Ponomarev, the systems built into many cars versity and one of the leading company's founder and chief are wonky, and research experts in the country in safe executive. shows that voice command use of head-up displays for He said the emphasis was systems can be so inaccurate transportation. on driving information, while that they create distraction. Wickens said that the head- social media applications are At the same time, though, up displays used by airplanes available at slow speeds. "When the vehicle speed is the developers of head-up show only information critdisplays also are making a ical to flying, like an outline less than 10 miles an hour, we major selling point of aid- of the runway or the horizon, open an additional channel, ing motorists with t asks and, crucially, that informa- our 'infotainment' channel," that have nothing to do with tion is often displayed as a Ponomarev said. "We can driving. visual overlay with the actual push information from any The Navdy device is rough- runway or horizon. applications — Instagram, ly the shape and size of a By contrast, a h ead-up Facebook, Twitter." hand-held CD player and display in the car that gives He said th e i n f ormation mounts on the dashboard. nondriving information that appears slightly to the side so From its top unfolds a small is out of alignment with the as not to interfere with drivtransparent screen through r oad "is th e w o rst o f t w o ing and will be streamlined: which information streamed worlds," Wickens said. "It is "Plain i nformation, plain from the phone is projected: clutter, contributing to po- text, nothing f l ashing that speed, map information and tential failure an d d i strac- distracts." notifications of i n c oming tion contributing to potential But neuroscientists and calls and texts that include failure." s afety advocates said a n y the identity of the sender but He said it appears from his visual clutter disturbs focus not the text itself. research that when the infor- by presenting a cognitive To answer a call, the drivmation projected is related distraction, meaning that the er swipes a hand in the air or to driving and made simple images take the mind off the floating about 5'/2 feet in front

:<t'

At High Lakes Women's Center we~,'

provide personalized, specialize health care services for women I of all ages. Our state-of-the-art CliniCS enable uS tO Serve yau in

0 warm, comfortable atmosphere,' Where We uSe the mOSt advanCed~

medical technologies.

HI IAKES Taking The Time To Care Dr. Gorman is now accepting patients both in the Bend and Redmond clinics. Bend — 541-389-7741 Redmond — 541-504-7635


ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin

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Adopt a great cat or QueenslandHeelers D ish Network - G e t DID YOU KNOW 7 IN two! Altered, vacci- Standard & Mini, $150 LE S S ! 10 Americans or 158 300 Win. Mag Weath- Diving equip., 2 large M ORE fo r nated, ID chip, tested, & up. 541-280-1537 erby Vang u ard, tanks, 1 small tank, 1 Starting $19.99/month million U.S. A d ults more! CRAFT, 65480 www.rightwayranch.wor stainless/synthetic, Viking dry suit - large, (for 12 months.) PLUS read content f rom 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, dpress.com m e dia never b ee n f i r ed. 1 regulator, 1 B C , Bundle & SAVE (Fast n ewspaper 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 Rottweiller 4 - year-old Internet f o r $15 each week? Discover $575. Ruger 270 with gloves, 2 knives, 2 www.craftcats.org more/month.) CALL the Power of the PaPATIO TABLE V XII L e upold 3 x 9 snorkels w/ masks, all Now 1-800-308-1563 neutered male free to cific Northwest News202 RANS Wave recum- scope, very g o od for $250. approved home. OFA 54" Tropitone table (PNDC) paper Advertising. For c a n s/bottles bent. 60" WB, older cond., includes 1000 541-416-9686 Want to Buy or Rent Deposit 4 chairs, tilt obedience titles, needed for local all basic a free brochure call model some wear on Nosler 130 grain secdoes not get along awning, $350. 255 916-288-6011 or volunteer, non-profit with s enior m a le. frame. W e l l main- onds 8 reloading dies. Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-382-6664 KAYAKS (2) Computers email tained. New: c hain $710. 541-410-0429 vintage costume jewelry. cat rescue. Donate at Home visit and referNecky Manitou-14, Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 ences required. Box cecelia©cnpa.com r ings, t i res, s e a t Top dollar paid for Queen Bed, with headSportorized Ar$600. P e r ception T HE B ULLETIN r e E, Bend; Petco in (PNDC) Gold/Silver.I buy by the 2 0633904, c/o T h e board, memory foam, cushion. Cateye Velo 7.65 Prodigy II 14.5 tang entine Ger m a n quires computer adR edmond; Smi t h Bulletin, P O Estate, Honest Artist Box new -1 yr. old., paid 7 computer/odometer. Mauser, model 1891, dem, $700. Werner Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, vertisers with multiple How to avoidscam Elizabeth,541-633-7006 $350 541-504-5224 pa d d le ad schedules or those and fraud attempts rifle made in Berlin. Cypress Bend; CRAFT in Tu- 6020, Bend OR 97708 $800, asking $500. 541-350-6996 WANTEDwood dress$400. 503-936-'I 778 $225. 541-382-6664 malo. Can pick up Ig. selling multiple sys- JrBe aware of internaers; dead washers & amounts. 389-8420. tems/ software, to dis- tional fraud. Deal loSauder entertainment Bend local dealer pays dryers. 541-420-5640 www.craftcats.org the name of the cally whenever poscenter, lots of storage, CASH!!for firearms & Kelty frame pack, $65. close or the term ammo. 541-526-0617 Trapper Nelson frame business $50. 541-923-6596 205 "dealer" in their ads. Jrsible. German Shepherds Watch for buyers pack, $35. Coleman Private party advertis- who offer more than www.sherman-ranch.us Items for Free Sundome 5-man tent ROCKY M O U NTSFIND IT! Standard Poodles, TheBulletin Quality. 541-281-6829 ers are defined as BUY IT! telescoping R4 bike 1 0x1 5, NlB , $ 4 0 . those who sell one your asking price and Beautiful black grand recommends extra Free record player conSansport 3 - p erson Carries single, SELL IT! who ask to have champion bred pups. I ueuuo ne p u - rack. computer. sole. 541-923-6596 $10. American money wired or 13 weeks, fabulous chasing products or I tandem or recumbent The Bulletin Classifieds tent Camper 3-person tent handed back to them. services from out of I bikes up to 78" WB. coats, heathy a nd 208 Find exactly what CASH!! $10. Ice Axe (2) $20 Fake cashier checks happy. Will bring great the area. Sending I Pivoting, push-button For Guns, Ammo & Pets & Supplies each. Chouinard rigid you are looking for in the axle; easy load/unand money orders joy to y our home. cash, checks, , or Reloading Supplies. load. Fits Thule and crampons with size 11 are common. CLASSIFIEDS $2000. 541-601-3049 I credit i n f ormation 541-408-6900. rigid boots. $25. 100 Yakima crossbars. JrNever give out perThe Bulletin recom- Irish Wolfhound Pups! Yellow Lab, AKC Reg- may be subjected to Used twice. $250. ft. climbing rope, $25. sonal financial inforCentral Oregon's mends extra caution Very rare, regal, an- istered, 3M.; $700/ea, I FRAUD. For more 257 541-504-5224. mation. Largest Gun & Knife 541-416-9686 when purc h as- cient breed. 2 stun- 4F; $750/ea, all yel- information about an t Musical Instruments JrTrust your instincts Show! 300 tables! ing products or serning AKC f e males, low. Parent g r eat advertiser, you may 242 248 and be wary of 9wks, ready to go. Ex- hunters. Avail. to go I c all t h e OregonI Exercise Equipment Twice the size vices from out of the The Drum & Guitar someone using an Health 8 Attor ney ' June 6, Sat 9-5 area. Sending cash, cellent lineage, tem- July 4th. 541-934-2423 State Shop now open! escrow service or peraments, sweet and I General's O f f i ce Bowflex Ultimate, all June 7, Sun 9-3 checks, or credit inBeauty Items 63830 NE Clausen agent to pick up your loving. $1500. Call or Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, Consumer ProtecDeschutes County Fair formation may be Rd., Suite 103, Bend a ttachments, $ 1 2 0 merchandise. text 541-337-4328. 1F, adorable, UDT tion h o t line a t I obo. 541-788-7140 & Expo Center subjected to fraud. Got Knee Pain? Back 541-382-2884 shots, health guar., pics i 1-877-877-9392. 3800 SW Airport Way For more informaPain? Shoulder Pain? The Bulletin $500/up. 541-777-7743 NordicTrak EXE cycle, Redmond, OR 260 Serrlng Central Oregon since 1903 tion about an adverGet a pain-relieving I TheBulletin I Admission only $6.00! tiser, you may call $ 50. P roForm L M brace -little or NO cost Misc. Items 210 Seruing Centrei Oregon sincefggg 503-363-9564 treadmill $275. Infrared Sauna, 220-V the O r egon State P eople g iving p e t s to you. Medicare PaFurniture & Appliances 541-416-9686 www.wesknodelgunAttorney General's tients Call Health Hot- BOXES-Great for mov- hook-up, no building, away are advised to 212 shows.com Office C o n sumer be selective about the line Now! 1- ing/storage, $25 cash. $3000 value asking Pre-core EFX 5.17 el5000 series Maytag $1000. 541-536-7790 Protection hotline at Antiques 8 Call 541-318-4577. new owners. For the dryer, like new, 4000 liptical fitness cross Compound Bow w ith 800-285-4609 1-877-877-9392. protection of the ani- series Maytag dryer, Collectibles trainer. Excellent con- case, practice and (PNDC) Buying Diamonds Need help fixing stuff? a personal visit to dition. $899. hunting arrows, like hold 2 queen size /Gofd for Cash Cal l A Service Professional The Bulletin mal, 253 the home is recom- will 360-921-4408 geruing Central Oregon since tgtig Antiques Wanted: tools, new, $240. quilts. $850. Brand Saxon's Fine Jewelers find the help you need. mended. TV, Stereo & Video furniture, marbles, 541-233-6520 new, still under war541-389-6655 245 www.bendbulletin.com beer cans, fishing/ ranty, Whirlpool con4 turkeys, 2 male, 2 fe- The Bulletin vection 5 burner glass sports gear. pre-'40s Golf Equipment DIRECTV Starting at Serving Centrel oregon sincetggg BUYING IOI'IIIS THIS m ale, $35 ea . 1 2 $19.99/mo. FREE In- Lionel/American Flyer M ust sell: s old R V . B/W photography. top stove with warmchickens, laying, $5 3 gas golf carts: 2006 s tallation. FREE 3 R eese 5t h wh e e l 541-389-1578 trains, accessories. ing station. Has Aquoea. 8 geese, African POODLE or POMAPOO months of HBO hitch, 20k p ounds, Y amaha, $200 0 . 541-408-2191. DO YOU HAVE and white, $30 ea. puppies, toy. Stud also list technology. $700. Large antique Older Hyun d ai, SOMETHING TO S HOWTIME CIN used once, $800 obo. 541-475-3889 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d hand-carved carousel 541-815-0686 1996 EMAX, STARZ. FREE BUYING & SE LLING Slide out jack, SOLD. piece, $400. 2 viles of h orse. Replica o f $1000. SELL All gold jewelry, silver 15' 50 amp electric HD/DVR U p grade! $2000. gold nuggets, a little L ooff, 1914. 57 i n . Easy-Go, FOR $500 OR 2015 NF L S u nday and gold coins, bars, c ord, S OLD. T i r e over a gram ea. $45. long, 49 i n . h i gh, Good carts - can deLESS? wedding sets, liver within reason. Ticket Included (Se- rounds, SOLD. Towea. Sterling silver, 24 $500. 541-923-6596 Non-commercial rings, sterling sil- shocks, 541-576-2477 lect Packages) New class ing m irrors, u s ed diamond earrings, still advertisers may ver, coin collect, vinC ustomers Onl y . once, SOLD. King-pin in box, $200. 2 (set) The Bulletin reserves ALL CLUBS R IGHT place an ad CALL 1-800-410-2572 tage watches, dental s tabilizer, SOLD . cubic zirconia sterling the right to publish all H AND F R with our gold. Bill Fl e ming, FL E X , (PNDC) 541-548-7154 silver en g agement ads from The Bulletin G RAPHITE. "QUICK CASH 541-382-9419. 201 5 rings, sizes 7 and 8, newspaper onto The m int T / M spe e d SPECIAL" $50 e a . Mi c hael Bulletin Internet web- blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., 1 week3lines 12 541-589-3092 oi' site. $440. Call a way 280 286 Driver, x2hot, 12-15, ~ee eke 2 N W A G O N T R A IL RANC H The Bulle6n a djustable-h.c p l u s Ad must Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Serulng Centrel Oregon sincetggg include price of tool, $140. Callaway e s • • j • e l e t e o f gepp Titanium five wood, ~ ESTATE SALE: 215 or less, or multiple F riday-Sunday 9 - 4, ** FREE ** $100. Mizuno J PX Coins & Stamps items whose total wedges 54-60, $80 I I II 19704 Poplar St. Ap- Garage Sale Kit does not exceed ea. All c lubs obo. pliances, f u r niture, Place an ad in The Flexisteel s lumber Private collector buying 95'I -454-2561 $500. tools, backing pack- Bulletin for your gasofa, queen. exc. postagestamp albums & I' s II ing 8 prepper items. rage sale and recond., $350. Other collections, world-wide CHECK YOURAD Call Classifieds at ceive a Garage Sale large furniture avail. and U.S. 573-286-4343 541-385-5809 TRACTOR AIII YARD EQIIIPNEIT Kit FREE! including Large desks, (local, cell phone). 282 www.bendbulletin.com • 2803 Kubota B7508 HDS 4WD 16 hp tractor with LA382 loader, diesel, only375 patio swing set, etc. ales Northwest Bend 240 KJT INCLUDES: Queen be d S e a ly hours • Kodiak 40" SD Standard Duty brush hog • 3 pt. 6' CC cultivator • Roto-Hoe • 4 Garage Sale Signs H&R Model 622, .22LR Posture-Pedic ExcepCrafts & Hobbies Cut n' Shred Model5 limb shredder • Craftsman LT 2888 19.5 hp riding Cowgirl Ca$h • $2.00 Off Coupon To revolver, 4" barrel, $120 tional Plush with bed I buy Western & laWn mOWer White LT-13 Riding laWn mOWer, aS iS • Tray-Bitt 1titfy RotO Tiller Use Toward Your on the first day it runs obo. 541-788-7140 frame, SOLD, ex c. COMPLETE POTVintage. Boots, leather, Next Ad to make sure it is cor• Sears 22" lawn mower • Sears pushweed trimer • Sears gas woodsplitter cond., cas h o n l y. TERY SET UP - In• 10 Tips For "Garage jewelry. 924 Brooks, uSpellcheck n and Ruger Single 6 revolver • Yard tools and greenhousesupplies • Ladders Buyers will need to cludes Skutt kiln, two rect. 541-678-5162. Buying Sale Success!" human errors do oc- w/ mag cylinder. 1969 move items. Morn- wheels, clays, glazes, Wed.- Fri. 11-8 & by apt. model, pre-hammer cur. If this happens to SHOP EQUIPI IENT ings only ( T erreb- small library shelves, ad, please con- mod., with G eorge • Trailer mounted Miller225AC/DC model AEAL-208LE welder with Omrn motor onne) 541-504-0056. PICK UP YOUR scales, heat e rs, your L awrence cus t om tact us ASAP so that and air compressor, air grease dispenser • Lincold AC225 amp electric welder USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! GARAGE SALE KIT at GE drop in range, gd tables, booth and too western style holster. corrections and any 1777 SW Chandler much to list. $2,500 or • Oxy/Acet tanks with Victor 315 torch • Campbelll Hausfeld 5 hp str compressor cond. $200 obo. New condition. $750 adjustments can be Door-to-door selling with Ave., Bend, OR 97702 best offer. C ontact Vz" 541- 388-5696. 503-936-1778 • Misc. hand tools • Sears 13" scroll sawe 6" bench grinder • 1IY' chop saw e made to your ad. Rodney at fast results! It's the easiest The Bulletin 541-385-5809 bench drill press • 2008 PSI pressure washer • Central machine 12'/g" auto wood 541-728-0604 G ENERATE SOM E WANTED: Collector Serving Central Oregon since 1903 The Bulletin Classified seeks way in the world to sell. planer • Solaris RotoZip ' Milwaukee SaNzJJII and portable band saw ' Electric EXCITEllllENT in your high quality fishg and battery shop toolse B&D 9" angle grinder • Stlht anrt Porrtan chain saws neighborhood! Plan a ing items & upscale fly Golf clubs for sale, Call The Bulletin Classified arage sale and don't • C Clamps • Nuts, bolts, screws, nail arrd auto supplies for info. Great prices. rods. 541-678-5753, or 288 541-365-5809 orget to advertise in Polishers • Saws 541-749-0156 503-351-2746 Sales Southeast Bend classified! HOUSE AIIIMISCELLANEOUS 541-385-5809. • Newer pillow-top king size box spring arrd mattress • Husqvama portable sewing Repair 8cSupplies Multi Family Sale, Sat. Huge multi-familysale machine • Two letter size 4-drirwer ffle cabinets • Globe Model 158 comercisl meat s s i & Sun., 8-2. 1211 NW hand and power tools, Large fold-away comslicer • CIJlld's bel • Commercial shirt screen printing equipment Trenton Ave. Strollers, antiques, f u r niture, puter desk, $ 1 00. baby gear, clothes, clothing, h ousehold 541-923-6596 Directions:Just southof la Pine, Hwy 97 l mile rarn weston MasrenRoad, go 3miles roWagon Trail Two Viking s ewing toys, designer cloth- items. books, boots, ntzsle nn Ietpp /quilting m a c hines Road, turn left, go 4miles ig ConestogaRoad, turn left arid go2 miigsro Blinker Court, turn right. usgslstggs,oggeonete' NEED TO CANCEL ing 8 shoes, antiques, TVs, art, etc. Fri. & with extras. Very good YOUR AD? Bovi/Tech, Elite, Hoyt, Matthews, PSE Ventana Tandem mtn Sat. 10-5, Sun. 10-2. condition. $700 each The Bulletin bike, skis, racks, ten- 20959 Greenmont Dr. Classifieds Call 54 1 - 706-0448 has an nis & more. see craigslist for info. • High Quality Bows & Accessories June 20- 'Itgmalo • July 25 & 26 - Salem eves or weekends. "After Hours"Line • Bow Tuning and Service • Sept. 25, 26 & 27 Cowboy Collectible Auction & Show. Call 541-383-2371 241 • 30 Yard Indoor Range 284 292 24 hrs. to cancel FoodAvailable www.dennisturmon.com Checkwebsite for photos your ad! Bicycles & • Lessons for Beginners and Adults Sales Southwest Bend Sales Other Areas 10% BUYER'SFEE Terms:Cash,Check,Visa, NIC Q Like us on Facebook • Archery Leagues Accessories Sale: Sat. 8 Sun. 9:30- PRINEVILLE great sale! Find It in 2:30. 61486 Diamond Tons of camPing, 9-5, The Bttllefjtt gassjfiedsfMens Comanche mtn 1611 South 1st Street, Redmond DennisTurmon Romey Car/Cett:sirtAN.0795 Lake Drive. Skate- S a t & S un. 603 SE bike, 21 speed, $75 541-316-1784 54$ 3BBBBO9 541.923.6261 4JS.640.1262 PoweJJ Butte, Oregon97753 F a x: 541.9EJ.6315 boards, iPod, etc. 541-420-5855 Elm, & so muchmore!

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BY TOM MCCOY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 18

Note: When this puzzle is completed, an apt phr ase can be found by starting at the top central letter and reading clochwise. ACROSS 47 Occurringin March 91 Message to one's 13 Not in the dark and September, say followers 1 Choco (Klondike 14 Authorization treat) 50 Shenanigans 92 Portrayer of 15Catcher of some 86-Across in "Elf" 5 School 53 Dietary no-no waves 93 Artifact 10 Items that may be 54 Grey and ochre 16Shake-ups in corps. labeled SMTWTFS 55 "There is i n 85 Rakes 17Champagne holder 15Dog sound team" 97 Cooking-spray brand 18Seasonallinguine 18 Series of numbers? 56 Pleasant 98 ' Ihe Downeaster topper inflection '" (Billy Joel 24 " 20 Kurt Vonnegut's even" "Happy Birthday, 57 Park opened in 1964 song) 29 Expunge June" 100Sleep mode? 59 Easy-peasy task 31 Prepare to tie a 21 Former part of the 106Malt product 60 Chocolate- mint shoelace, say British Empire brand with peaks in 107Bring home the gold 32 Staple of quiz bowls its logo 22 Joe Biden's home: 108 Barely manage 33 Redolence Abbr. 63 Temperature units 109Breakfast-cereal 35 Pro 23 "I expected as much" 64 Muscles worked by maker 36 Coin to pay for 25Towering leg presses 110Hyphenated fig. passage across the 26 Letters of obligation 65 Anti-Revolutionary 111Factions River Styx of 1776 27 Hair piece 112"It was just a joke!" 38 Put another way 66 Gets harsher 28 Currency that, in 113W here writ ing ison 38 Strewn one denomination, 68 An example of itself the walh? 41 Fodder for tabloids featuresa portrait 70 Lacto44 Little bugger of Linnaeus vegetarian DOWN 45 Wise ones 30Garment for tennis, 71 Condemned 1Mai 46 Daughter of Hyperion perhaps 72 Gone 2 Bottom-row key 48 Condition of sale 32 Notas exciting 76 Hockey team with a 3 Capt. Kangaroo's 48 TV's "The 34 Returnfrom a store patriotic name network Today 37When blacksmithing 78 Distraction for many 4 Peak that's known as 50 Bring, as to a repair began an idle person "The Great One" shop 3$ Perfect orbit 80 Bests 5 Rare notes 51 Thoroughfare 40 Fanatical 81 Capacious 6 Crisp bit in a 52 Dog sounds 4166, e.g.: Abbr. 82 Apple desktop stir-fry 54 Collapsed, with "in" 42Nav. rank 83 National Novel 7 Further 57 Ends of letters Writing Mo. 43 Run 8 StringafterB 84 Havana-to-Palm 58 Somebody 44 Boarded 8 Seafood-soup base Beach dir. 58 Words below an 45"Awe-SOME!" 10Series opener 85 Eagerly accept orange on a license 11 Privy to plate Online subscriptions: 86 See 92-Across Today's puzzle and more 12 Attraction that 60 One of24 in a glucose 88 Handled roughly than 4,000 past puzzles, operates under its molecule nytimes.com/crosswords 90 Japanese for own steam? ($39.95 a year). 61 Bagel topper "teacher"

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a list of postal abbreviations 63 Something you might get a kick out of? 64 Steven Wright's "I intend to live forever. So far, so good, e.g. 66 Capital city founded during a gold rush 67 Mariana, e.g.

68 a on e 6$ What's superior to Lake Superior: Abbr. 71Hip-hop's Mos 72Hematophagous creature 73 Buddy 74 Pass 75 Hand source 77Bank to rely on

105

1O9

112

62 It might contain

87

113

78 Soaks (up) 79 Pouting expression 81 Major stockholder? 83 "m" and "n" 85 Hula hoop? 86 Dumbfound 87 Small change 88 June honorees 89 Parts, as blinds 90 Blind parts

94 Highway number 86 Variety of antelope 99 Fiction 101Old White House moniker 102Unit usually seen with the prefix deci103Equal: Prefix 104 Big name incurrent research? 105Point of writing?

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 party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin 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 ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall noi be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 250

263

Misc. Items

Tools

259

Gardening Supplie • 8 E q uipment

315

475

476

475

Irrigation Equipment

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Reduce Your Past Tax Small shop compressor, Cornell electric irrigaBill by as much as 75 $1 00 tion pump, 50 hp, 600 54f -50S-f 554 Percent. Stop Levies, BarkTurfSoil.com CAUTION: gpm, model 2-1/2 Liens and Wage GarAds published in YHB, $1550 or trade "Employment Opnishments. Call The 255 for farm equipment, PROMPT DELIVERY Tax DR Now to see if q uad or guns . portunlties" include Building Materials 542-309-9663 541-362-6146 you Qualify employee and inde1-800-791-2099. pendent positions. Bend Habitat (PNDC) 325 Ads for p ositions RESTORE For newspaper that require a fee or Sell your s t ructured Building Supply Resale delivery, call the Hay, Grain & Feed upfront investment 541-312-6709 settlement or annuity Circulation Dept. ai must be stated. With 541 -385-5800 Wheat Straw for Sale. payments for CASH 224 NE Thurston Ave. any independentjob Open to the public. Also, weaner pigs. NOW. You don't have To place an ad, call opportunity, please 54f -546-61 71 to wait for your future 541 -365-5809 i nvestigate tho r payments any longer! 266 or email oughly. Use extra olannaed@bendbulletin.oom Call 1 -800-914-0942 Heating & Stoves Looking for your caution when ap(PNDC) The Bulletin next employee? plying for jobs onSvrving Central Oregonslncv Snat NOTICE TO Skateboard D a rkStar line and never proPlace a Bulletin 28" black and yellow, ADVERTISER vide personal inforhelp wanted ad Since September 29, $20. 541 -363-2062 mation to any source today and I SPECf/ILS 1 1991, advertising for you may not have SOCIAL S E C URITY used woodstoves has + Raised Bed Soil reach over researched and D ISABILITY B E N - been limited to mod+ Peat Mixes 60,000 readers deemed to be repuE FITS. Unable t o els which have been + Juniper Ties each week. table. Use extreme work? Denied ben- certified by the Or+ Paver Discounts Your classified ad c aution when r e efits? We Can Help! egon Department of + Sand + Gravel will also s ponding to A N Y WIN or Pay Nothing! Environmental Qual+ Bark appear on online employment Contact Bill Gordon & ity (DEQ) and the fed- Instantlandscapintzeom I bendbulletin.com ad from out-of-state. Associates ai eral E n v ironmental which currently We suggest you call 1 -S00-879-3312 to Protection A g ency receives over the State of Oregon start your application (EPA) as having met 270 1.5 million page Consumer H otline today! (PNDC) smoke emission stanviews every at f -503-378-4320 Lost & Found The Bulletin Offers dards. A cer t ified month at no For Equal OpporiuFreePrivate Party Ads woodstove may be ENGAGEMENT STYLE nity Laws contact extra cost. • 3 lines - 3 days identified by its certifi- RING, found in back Oregon Bureau of Bulletin • Private Party Only cation label, which is parking lot of Old Mill, Labor 8 I n dustry, Classifieds • Total of items adver- permanently attached near Cafe Yum. Call Civil Rights Division, Get Results! tised must equal $200 to the stove. The Bul- to ID. 541 -280-f 963 971-673- 0764. Call 541-385-5609 or Less letin will not k nowor place your ad FOR DETAILS or to ingly accept advertis- Lost wedding rings, 55 The Bulletin on-line at PLACE AN AD, ing for the sale of yrs. Of m e mories, 541 -385-5809 Call 541-385-5809 uncertified Mid-May, no idea bendbulletin.com Fax 541-305-5802 woodstoves. w here. REW A R D 541 -31 6-1 736 Wanted- paying cash Add your web address 267 Take care of for Hi-fi audio & stuto your ad and readFuel & Wood dio equip. Mclntosh, your investments ers on The Bulletin's J BL, Marantz, D yweb site, www.bendwith the help from REMEMBER:If you naco, Heathkit, Sanbulletin.com, will be have lost an animal, WHEN BUYING The Bulletin's sui, Carver, NAD, etc. able to click through don't forget to check FIREWOOD... Call 541 -261 -1 808 automatically to your "Call A Service The Humane Society website. To avoid fraud, 261 Bend Professional" Directory The Bulletin 541-382-3537 Medical Equipment recommends payRedmond S UBA R U . ment for Firewood 541 -923-0862 341 Lift chair by Pride mo- only upon delivery Madras Auto -Sales bility, $100, you haul. Horses & Equipment and inspection. 541 -475-6SS9 Sales professional to 541-382-0673 • A cord is 1 2S cu. ft. Prineville Join Central 4' x 4' x S' 541 -447-71 78 Oregon's l a r gest • ., I®, • Receipts should 263 or Craft Cats new ca r de a ler include name, 541 -389-8420. Subaru of B e nd. Tools phone, price and Offering 40fk, profit kind of wood sharing, m e d ical 5250 WattGenerac gas purchased. Deluxe showman plan, split shifts and powered electric gen- • Firewood ads 3-horse trailer Silpaid vacation. Expeerator, Honda motor, MUST include verado 2001 29'xS' rience or will train. fix even with top of species 8 cost per 5th wheel with semi 90 day $2000 guarpickup bed, $ 3 50. cord to better serve living quarters, lots of a ntee. Dress f o r 541-41 9-2971 our customers. extras. Beautiful con- success. P l e ase Big Buddy ceramic apply at 2060 NE dition. $21,900 OBO heater, $65 The BulletinS 541 -420-3277 Hwy 20, Bend. See Servrns Central Oregon slncv SSO 541-50S-1 554 Bob or Devon. Bosch r e c iprocating 308 saw/case, grt shape All Year Dependable Farm Equipment $75 5 41 -508-1 554 Firewood: dry 5(juiln o & Machinery Caregivers Lodgepole, split, del, Delta scroll saw, wanted to join 1 /$1 95; 2/$3 6 5 . CASE 530 diesel trac with stand, $50 Multi-cord discounts! o ur car i n g 541-506-1554 tor with backhoe atcash, check, Visa, MC tachment, $4500. memory care L incoln welder, 2 2 5 541-420-3484, Bend 541-389-7669. community. Ali a mp, a c , $12 5 541-50S-1 554 C.O. mixed wood, Nice Ford SN restored shifts available. semi-dry, split, delivtractor with new tires Sears Craftsman Air 421 M ust b e r e l iered in Bend. 2 for & paint, was $3,200, compressor, 5 HP, 20 $270. Cash, check, able. For more will t a k e $2, 8 00. Schools & Training gallon tank, $ 1 25. Visa/MC accepted. 54f -4f 0-3425 information, or 541-419-2971 541 -31 2-8746 IITR Twck School any questions, S hopsmith Mark V Sno-flake must go. Boy REDMOND CAMPUS model 510, includes Ponderosa pine firebought front loader Our Grads Get Jobs! p lease cal l 1-88~36-2235 e xtras + heat e r wood, split, $160 Sf -SN plus a ttach541-385-4717 cord. 541-419-1871 ments. 530-598-6004 WWW.DTR.EDU $2750. 541-383-7f 24

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Home Delivery Advisor

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time DID Y O U KNO W Concrete Finishers Newspaper-generposition and consists of managing an adult Wanted! a ted content is s o carrier force to ensure our customers receive Roger L a n geliers valuable it's taken and superior service. Must be able to create and Construction Co. is repeated, condensed, perform strategic plans to meet department looking for experibroadcast, t weeted, objectives such as increasing market share enced concrete findiscussed, p o sted, and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a ishers. $23.00 per self-starter who can work both in the office copied, edited, and hour base pay and emailed c o u ntless and in their assigned territory with minimal $ 6.00 p e r ho u r times throughout the supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Fringe pay on priday by others? Dis- with company vehicle provided. Strong vate work. Current customer service skills and management skills cover the Power of BOLI w a g e of Newspaper Adveriis- are necessary. Computer experience is $ 26.97 pe r h o u r ing in FIVE STATES required. You must pass a drug screening base p a y and with just one phone and be able to be insured by company to drive $1 3.43 Fringe pay call. For free Pacific vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we on public work, plus Northwest Newspa- b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o full benefit package per Association Net- advancement within company is available to including health inwork brochures call the right person. If you enjoy dealing with surance, 401(k). We 916-288-601 1 or people from diverse backgrounds and you are are a drug free comenergetic, have great organizational skills and email p any, EE O e m - cecelia©cnpa.com interpersonal communication skills, please ployer, an d an send your resume to: (PNDC) E-Verify participant. The Bulletin Minorities, women c/o Kurt Muller and veterans are Wildland PO Box 6020 encouraged io apFirefighters Bend, OR 97708-6020 ply. Interested appli- To fight forest fires must or e-mail resume to: canis apply at our be 1 Syrs old & Drug kmuller©bendbulletin.com office:62880 Merfree! Apply sam-3pm No phone calls, please. cury Place, Bend. Mon-Thurs. Bring two The Bulletinis 8 drug-free workplace. EOE forms of ID fill out Pre-employmenr drugscreen required. Federal 1-9 form. No ID = No Application

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

'10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

instructor PatRick Corp. 1 1 99 NE Hemlock, Redmond 541-923-0703 EOE

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Advertising Account Executive The Bulletin is seeking a professional and driven sales person to help local businesses succeed through advertising in our Central Oregon Nickel Ads weekly publication. Distributed each Thursday throughout Deschutes, Jefferson, and Crook counties, The Nickel is a classified shopper that delivers results for its advertisers. This full time position requires a background in consultative sales, territory management and aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of media sales experience is preferable, but will train the right candidate. C ompensationpackage consists of base plus commission. Full time, Mon-Fri.

Pre-employmeni drug testing is required. Please send your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Steve Hawes Advertising Manager shawes@wescompapersvcom

You may also drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 or mail it to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 9770S.

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

EOE / Drug Free Workplace

OSU-Cascades, in Bend, is recruiting for full/part-time Instructors to teach on a term by term basis for the 2015/2016 academic year. These are fixed-term appointments. Some of these appointments may be reviewed for renewal or t ransition to a n i n structional position on an annual basis at the discretion of the Dean of OSU-Cascades.

Courses to be taught may include Accounting, American Studies, Anatomy, Anthropology, Art, Ari History, Biology, Business, Chemistry, Computer Science, Counseling, Creative Writing, Digital Arts, Early Childhood Education, Education MAT (Elementary and Secondary), English as a Second Language, Engineering, English, Exercise an d S p ort Science, Geology, Health Psychology, History, Hospitality, Human Development and Family Sciences,Human Physiology, Language Arts and Reading Education, Management Information Systems, Marketing, Mathematics, Natural Resources, Organic Chemistry, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Public Health, Science, Science and Mathematics Education, Sociology, Social Studies Education, Spanish, Speech Communication, Statistics 8 Tourism and Outdoor Leadership. Salary is commensurate with education and experience.

Required qualification is an advanced degree in one of the fields listed (or closely related field) and evident commitment to cultural diversiiy a educational equity. Preferred qualifications include PhD or terminal degree in one of the fields listed (or a related field), teaching experience at the college or university level, a strong commitment to undergraduate education and equity, service to students and a demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. For consideration to teach Fall 2015, applications should be received by 08/10/2015. For all other terms, applications will be accepted o nline throughout the academic year. T o review posting and apply, go to website: http://oregonstate.eduffobs and review posting number 001 4931. OSUis an AAIEOE/Vets/Disabfer1


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

528

Loans & Mortgages

Bsdl laaees

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200. LOCAL MONEyrWebuy secured trustdeeds 8 note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.18.

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F Regional Looking for your next ROBBERSON L Convenience Store employee? • .« « - ~ ~~ U Manager Place a Bulletin help Fast Break of Orad today and Bend Parka T Grand Opening wanted Recreation egon has an immereach over 60,000 « « «« « T 744 E diate opening for a readers each week. Sales position Is Accepting professional, enerYour classified ad $4000-$6000 Open Houses R Applications For: will also appear on getic, sel f -motiguarantee! U v ated l eader t o bendbulletin.com • Lifeguard Rare sales oppormanage several of which currently Open 12-3 • Night Custodian M Y tunity, must have o ur Eastern O r receives over 1.5 1604 NW 2nd St. • Wave Shaper talent, experience, C O I egon loc a tions. million page views Old Bend Charm Forcomplete job and the desire to Large RM Lot Applicant s h o uld every month at 573 S E A R P announcements dress for success! have retail m anno extra cost. Mollle Jurgenson, Business Opportunities K E L V or to applygo to S S agement e x periBulletin Classifieds Broker Call Steve, bendparksandrec.org ence with proven Get Results! 541-815-5248 H O A R S E N O 541-410-3701 or WARNING The Bulletin leadership and Call 385-5809 TheGamerGroup.com Equal Opportunity Greg, 541-240-1421 recommends that you E C R I E D V A N D customer s e rvice or place Employer i nvestigate eve r y L E A F S S M A R T E skills. This position your ad on-line at phase of investment will require preparbendbulletin.com opportunities, espeE A T S R O O M Y C Need to get an ing marketing plans c ially t h ose f r o m Say "goodbuy" N N E LA P U P S K for your region, forad in ASAP? out-of-state or offered 486 to that unused mulating pr i c ing Open 12-3 You can place it A T S E N S E I T by a person doing policies, coordinate Independent Positions business out of a lo2912 NW Celilo item by placing it in online at: R E L I C R O U sales promotion acLane cal motel or hotel. InThe Bulletin Classifieds tivities, s u pervise www.bendbuffetin.com Beautiful Home L E X A H I B E R N N vestment o ff erings Sales Help employees, vendor in Shevlin Crest must be r egistered I N I T E K E B Y I relations, conduct Wanted: En e r541-385-5809 Suzanne Iselln, with the Oregon De541-385-5809 regular i n ventory getic kiosk sales E C T S R E L A X B Broker partment of Finance. counts, and will be person ne e ded We suggest you con541-350-8617 H T responsible for the SEAMSTRESS: Manu- immediately for the TheGarnerGroup.com sult your attorney or HOUSEKEEPERS! profitability of each facturing company in Central O r e gon c all C O N S U M ER PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 n eed of f u l l t i m e area. Secured lolocation. The sucHOTLINE, McMenamins cessful a p p licant seamstresses. P rohigh com1-503-378-4320, 763 860 860 duction sewing expe- cations, Old St. Francis will be experienced 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. paid Recreational Homes Motorcycles & Accessories Itotorcycles 8 Accessories NOIIV HIRING in managing mulrience with commer- missions cial sewing machines weekly! For more DID YOU KNOW that Open 12-3 tiple retail locations, & Property Qualified ap p licants customer s e rvice d esired. Bring r e - information, please not only does news61284 Dayspring must have an open 8 orientated, comfortsume t o 5 3 7 SE c all H oward a t paper media reach a Dr. Cabin in the woods on flexible schedule in- able m ulti-tasking Glenwood Dr, Bend, 541-279-0982. You HUGE Audience, they Nice Family Home trout stream, private, cluding, days, eve- and detail o rienO R between 9 a m can a ls o e m a il also reach an ENNeighborhood Pool off the grid, 80 mi. nings, weekends and tated. Must pass a tcoleseyourneighand 1 pm weekdays. GAGED AUDIENCE. Melody Lessar, from Bend. 638 ac. holidays. W e ar e background check borhoodpublicaDiscover the Power of Broker $849K. Fo r d r o ne H arley Road K i n g Yamaha V-Star 250cc looking for applicants and drug screen. tions.com for more Newspaper Adveriis541-610-4960 v ideo li n k , call Classic 2003, 100th 2011, 3278 mi., exc. who have previous or This is a f ull-time ing in six states AK, information. TheGarnerGroup.com 541-480-7215. Anniversary Edition, cond. $4700 OBO. exp. related exp. and salaried p o s ition ID, MT,OR8 WA. For enjoy working in a 16,360 mi. $12,499 Dan 541-550-0171. caution when pura free rate brochure and is eligible for SNOW BIRD ESCAPE Bruce 541-647-7078 busy customer ser- benefits. P l e ase chasing products or I call 916-288-6011 or Gold Canyon, AZ. v ice-oriented e n v i- e-mail inquires or services from out of ~ email 870 Rm(jjjKI (Mesa area) 1 9 98 Honda Magna 750cc ronment. We are also resume to employ- f the area. Sending cecelia©cnpa.com Hallmark Park mdl. motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 Boats & Accessories willing to t rain! We c ash, checks, o r Open House at menteedstaub.com (PNDC) w/AZ room (total 650 miles, $3250. offer opportunities for or mail to P.O. Box f credit i n f ormation Eagle Crest sq. ft.) Full view su- 541-548-3379 advancement and ex- 850, Klamath Falls, ~ may be subjected to ~ Presented by Vaperstition mtns. cellent benefits for eli- OR 97601, or fax to FRAUD. cant and t u rn-key. gible employees, in- 877-846-2516. For more informa- I KiaKelh $ 62,500. Call J i m : cluding vision, tion about an adver- • EAGLE CREsT' 541-388-3209. r aor e a r r a a medical, chiropractic, f tiser, you may call dental and so much RN - part time, for foot the Oregon State Sunday 771 more! Please apply and nail care busi- I Attorney General's 528 14' Klamath, 15 hp June 7th online 24 / 7 at n ess. Position r e - e Office C o n s umer e Loans 8 Mortgages Lots Johnson, all the ex10:00 am M:00 pm Honda Shadow Sawww.mcmenamins.co quires RN license, will I Protection hotline atI $3 , 250. 2002, 1 100cc, tras, m or pick up a paper pay for training. For I 1-877-877-9392. 541-389-3890 Sits on canyon rim with bre, WARNING Stop by our office excellent condition w/ further info contact a pplication a t an y r iver v i ew . 6 1 0 1 1 extras 13k orig. mi. The Bulletin recom630 and pick up y our at LThe Bulletin McMenamins location. Dawn Snowbrush Drive, in mends you use caum ap and l is t o f battery and new 16' 1976 Checkmate ski Rooms for Rent Mail to 430 N. Killing- 541-788-4785. River Canyon Estates, New tion when you proproperties on tour. front tire. $3100 obo. boat, 90HP Mercury sworth, Portland OR, Bend. 11,326 sq. ft. vide personal 8300 Coopers Furnished room w ith 703-244-3251 97217 or fax : Just too many motor, restored; new with specified buildTruck Driver information to compa- bath, WiFI, TV, small Hawk Dr. 5 03-221-8749. C a l l seats, new c a rpet ing envelope. MLS nies offering loans or pet collectibles? 541-923-9625 FedEx Ground o k a y . Non 503-952-0598 for info floor, new prop, with 201504972. New on credit, especially smoker. $475. plus Line Haul Driver trailer. Have receipts. o n other ways t o market. $235,000 those asking for adSell them in dep. 503-449-0149. R equirements: C u r745 a pply. P lease n o $2500. 541-536-1395 Diana Irvlne, Broker, vance loan fees or The Bulletin Classifieds rent Class A CDL phone calls or emails Homes for Sale companies from out of BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Eagle Crest Properties with 1 year experito individual locations! 541-815-0500 state. If you have Search the area's most FSBO, Turn Key Ready E.O.E. ence; medical card, concerns or quesMoto Guzzi B r eva 541-385-5809 listing of doubles experience tions, we suggest you comprehensive 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 1 100 2 0 07 , on l y classified advertising... sq. ft. Quality home, Expreferred. Must pass consult your attorney real 11,600 miles. $5,950. estate to automotive, Manufacturedl tremely Motivated! drug t e st, b a c kor call CONSUMER General 206-679-4745 merchandise to sporting Mobile Homes HOTLINE, ground check, and goods. Bulletin Classifieds $1 95K. 541-279-8783 17.5' Bass Tracker have clean driving 1-877-877-9392. appear every day in the NOTICE: List your Home 2011, V175, 9 0HP, record. N ight run, print or on line. All real estate adver- JandMHomes.com less than 40 hrs. All Call The Bulletin At full time. Call 541-385-5809 tised here in is subwelded hull. S eats We Have Buyers If interested please 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com ject to th e F ederal Get Top Dollar five, walk-thru windCentral Oregon Community College has contact Perry at Place Your Ad Or E-Mail F air Housing A c t , Financing Available. shield. Folding openings li s te d bel o w . Go to 541-420-9863. At: www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin which makes it illegal 541-548-5511 Two Twin Yamaha tongue, custom cover, https:I/jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply servingcentral oregonsince el8 to advertise any prefTW200 sto c k w i th trolling motor, stored online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, erence, limitation or 632 fatty tires 2007 with inside garage. Surge 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; Instructor, Chemistry Lab, Part-Time discrimination based 1155 miles, 2007 with brakes, new tires and (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Apt./Multiplex General on race, color, reliRad i o/disc 1069 miles. $3600 for spare. Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. Oregon State University - Cascades in Bend is gion, sex, handicap, one or $7000 for two player. 2 Live wells, COCC is an AA/EO employer. CHECK yOUR AD recruiting for a part-time Instructor to teach familial status or naobo. 5 4 1 -588-0068 ski pole, $ 1 6,000. Chemistry lab on a term by term basis for the tional origin, or intenEnrollment Specialist, Bend Campus cell, 541-549-4834 hm 541-410-2426 2015-2016 academic year. This is a fixed-term tion to make any such (Bilingual Skills Required) appointment. Start date: A u gust 1 5 or preferences, l i mitaServe as customer service staff to provide proSeptember 16, 2015. Appointment will be tions or discrimination. spective students information about programs, ~CEs C, reviewed for renewal or transition to an We will not knowingly enrollment, and admissions. 2-yr customer instructional position on an annual basis at the o~ on the first day it runs accept any advertisservice exp + bi-lingual proficiency required. rrr discretion of the Dean of OSU-Cascades. to make sure it is cor- ing for r eal e state 850 $2,301 -$2,740/mo. Closes June 16. rect. "Spellcheck" and which is in violation of CI Snowmobiles Duties include teaching Chemistry lab courses human errors do octhis law. All persons Part Time Latino College and lab preparation and coordination for cur. If this happens to are hereby informed Prep Program Coordinator course instruction. Salary is commensurate your ad, please con- that all dwellings adServe as primary coordinator for students with education and experience. Required tact us ASAP so that vertised are available preparing for p o st-secondary education. qualifications include an advanced degree corrections and any on an equal opportuEstablish goals and objectives of the program. (M.S.) in Chemistry (or closely related field) adjustments can be nity basis. The Bulle$19.32 - $23.00/hr. 30hr/wk. 11months per and an e vident commitment to c ultural made to your ad. tin Classified year. Extended to open until filled. diversity & e ducational equity. Preferred 541-385-5809 4-place enclosed Inter750 qualifications include a Ph.D. in Chemistry (or The Bulletin Classified state snowmobile trailer End User Support Coordinator closely related field), teaching experience at Redmond Homes w/ RockyMountain pkg, Serve as lead technician for EUS team. Small clean studio close t he college or u niversity level, and a Deschutes County job $8500. 541-379-3530 Responsible for project planning, implementato downtown. $575 demonstrable commitment to promoting and tion, troubleshooting, installations, train and Looking for your next mo., $550 dep., All enhancing diversity. opportunities are listed online. assist campus technology users. Associates + 860 utilities paid. No emp/oyee? 2-yrs exp. A+, MCDST and MCSA CertificaPlace a Bulletin help Please visit www.deschutes.org smoking/no pets. For full consideration for the Chemistry lab Motorcycles 8 Accessories tions. $45,755-$53,082/yr Closes June 12. wanted ad today and 541-330-9769 position, applications should be received by for currentopenings, tosign up reach over 60,000 6/19/15 but position is open until filled. Part Time Mazama Gym 634 readers each week. T o review posting and a pply, g o t o for recruitment notifications, and Open Hours Supervisor(2 positions) Your classified ad AptJMultiplex NE Bend http://oregonstate.edu/jobs. Apply to posting Provide supervision of the Mazama Gym and will also appear on 0014931. You will be required to electroniaIIPI3' Fitness Center. Summer schedule June 15 to bendbulletin.com Only aIew left! cally submit a letter of application describing Sept 25. Shift hours are 6:00am-1:00pm which currently reTwo & Three Bdrms experience, qualification and interest in I Deschutes County is an Equal Opportunity Mon-Fri, and 1:00-8:00pm Mon-Thur. your ceives over with Washer/Dryer Chemistry la b i n struction an d d u t ies, Harley Davidson Non-benefited position 10-15hrs/wk. $9.57/hr. 1.5 million page Employer. Women, minorities, veterans and and Patio or Deck. Heritage Soft Tail resume/vita, and names/phone ¹'s of three Open Until Filled. views every month professional references. Please include a (One Bdrms also avail.) Classic 2006, black the disabled are encouraged to apply. at no extra cost. Mountain Glen Apts cherry pearl, Stage 1 statement of teaching philosophy in your Assistant Professor ofH!T Bulletin Classifieds 541.383.9313 tune Vance & Hines documents. Deschutes County provides reasonable Provide classroom and lab instruction in the Get Results! Professionally pipes, always gaHealth Information Technology Program. Call 385-5809 or accommodations for persons with managed by raged. TLC, 8100 OSU ls an AAIEOEIVetslDisabled. Provide student advising and assistance. place your ad on-line miles, new tires, Norris & Stevens, Inc. disabilities. Associate Degree + 1-yr exp. in HIT profesat $11,100. sion. $42,722-$49,202 for 9m o c o ntract. IS 648 bendbulletin.com 541-388-8434 Open until filled. Houses for Rent General Part-TimeInstructor Positions NEW -College Level Writing, PUBLISHER'S Developmental Writing, NOTICE Veterinary& Librarian All real estate adverLooking for talented individuals to teach Help Desk Analyst tising in this newspapart-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our per is subject to the employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Responsible for providing support services to F air H o using A c t Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 Company-wide IS users. D u ties include which makes it illegal class credit), with additional perks. responding to c a lls r egarding computer to a d vertise "any hardware and software related issues, training preference, limitation General users on new t echnology and technical or disc r imination processes and providing technical knowledge based on race, color, to assist with religion, sex, handicap, familial status, Requires a CIS or MIS degree and 1 year marital status or na* experience or a minimum of 3 years' experitional origin, or an inTake advantage of our / * Great Supplemental Income!! ence working in technical support. Must have tention to make any specialmerchandise IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I strong knowledge of computer hardware, softsuch pre f erence, I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI ware, terminology and iSeries. R e quires limitation or discrimipricing starting at • currently have openings all nights of the week.• strong analytical and problem solving skills, nation." Familial staexcellent verbal and written communication tus includes children / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and skills, ability to work in a fast paced environunder the age of 18 / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoment with multiple priorities and excellent living with parents or • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• customer service skills. legal cus t odians, I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI pregnant women, and g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent people securing cus• are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• customer service, with over 450 stores and tody of children under to sell the things you 7,000 employees in the western United States. / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack18. This newspaper no longer use! ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, will not knowingly acretirement and cash bonus. Please go to / other tasks. cept any advertising Feature up to 3 items per ad! Use w ww.lesschwab.com to apply.No phone calls for real estate which is one photo forprint version and up to IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl please. in violation of the law. 4 photos for online version! O ur r e aders a r e I including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Les Schwab is proud to be an hereby informed that eAd runsuntilSO LD or up to 8 w eeks equal opportunity employer. all dwellings adveretkti tised in this newspa(whichever comes first!) ~ Please submit a completed application per are available on attention Kevin Eldred. VIraaea a yh'AB+ General an equal opportunity Applications are available at The Bulletin ifchs, blue y25: Oak Item Priced af: ourTo lAd Cos oni: basis. To complain of front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or Jefferson Count Job 0 or tunltles d iscrimination ca l l an electronic application may be obtained • Under $500 .....................................................................$39 h areae +~' ueraee HUD t o l l-free at upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via Maintenance Worker I • $500 to $999 .... $49 1-800-877-0246. The email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Public Works Department d'$P " aaeaes toll f ree t e lephone • $1000 to $2499.................. ..........................................$59 e els% a„ S2,693.58 to $3,116.94 per month — DOQ I No pho ne calls please. number for the hear• Over $2500.....................................................................$69 Closes June 26th, 2015 ing i m p aired is 1-800-927-9275. * No resumes will be accepted * Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold For complete job description and application headline and price. form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Hu675 Drug test is required prior to employment. man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or EOE. RV Parking call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson your ad will a/so appear in: serving central oregon since 1903 County Application forms to Jefferson County RV space for rent, NE The Bulletin, • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Redmond, quiet setSe««mg Central o«eyon since $03 Madras, OR 97741. Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbulletin.com ting, beautiful canyon views. $350/mo., inSomerestrictions apply JeffersonCounty lsan cludes water & sewer. 'Privateparty merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock,autos, Rvs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, ondgarage sale categories. Equal Employment Opportunity Employer

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G4 SUNDAY JUNE 7 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 870

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870

Boats & Accessories

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Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care LandscapingNard Care LandscapingNard Care Painting/Wall Covering

Spnnkler Aetivetlon/Repeir Sack Flow Testing MLIlVrljtj/ajtjCR • Thatch a Aerate • Spring Clean up • Weekly Mowing at Edgfng • Bwflonthly & MonthlyMaintenance • Bark, Rock, Etc.

IANSSGLPIÃts • landscape Construction • Water Feature Installation/Mairst. • Synthetic Turf • Pavers • Renovations • Irrigations

Landscape

Handyman

Maintenance

Full or Partial Service •Mowing oEdging •Pruning Weeding Water Management

I DO THAT! s

s

SBNING CNNlnalGNNGGN Slnee 2000 Resldenllal 0 Cemmen4al

Installation Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured

Fertilizer included with monthly program Handyman/Remodeli ng Residential/Commercial

Weekly, monthly or one time service.

Small Jobs io Enlire Room Remodels GarageOrganixation Home Inspection Repairs I!ttalny, Honest Work

Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006

eeonfs 541.317.9768

Senior Discounts 541-390-1466 Same Day Response

ccsp151573soirdedlInsursd

17.5' Seaswirl 2002 NOTICE: Oregon LandWakeboard Boat scape Contractors Law I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, (ORS 671) requires all tons of extras, low hrs. businesses that adFull wakeboard tower, vertise t o p e r form light bars, Polk audio Landscape Construcspeakers throughout, tion which includes: European completely wired for l anting, deck s , amps/subwoofers, unences, arbors, Professional derwater lights, fish water-features, and infinder, 2 batteries cusstallation, repair of irPainter tom black paint job. rigation systems to be $12,500 541-81 5-2523 Repaint licensed w i t h the Landscape ContracSpecialist! tors Board. This 4-digit FIND IT! number is to be inOregon License BUT IT! cluded in all adver¹188147 LLC tisements which indiSELL IT! cate the business has 541-815-2888 The Bulletin Classifieds a bond,insurance and workers compensa18' Bayliner 175 Capri, tion for their employlike new, 135hp I/O, ees. For your protec- People Lookfor Information low time, Bimini top, tion call 503-378-5909 About Products and or use our website: Services Every Daythrough many extras, Karawww.lcb.state.or.us to The Bnllnfln Clnsniflnr!0 van trailer with swing check license status neck, current registrabefore contracting with tions. $8000. the business. Persons 541-350-2336 doing lan d scape maintenance do not r equire an LC B l i cense.

54141$4458 LCB¹ 8759

MARTIN JAMES

USE THECLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with

Just boughtanewboat? Sell youroldoneinthe

fast results! It's theeasiest

ClaSSifi8dS!ASkabOut our

SuperSellerrates! 541-385-5809

Way in theWO rld to Sell.

The BulletinClassified 541-385-5809

Central Oregon

REALTORS.

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ssc s tm rmnm

5017 ItfERaleigh Ct. D!rect!omst East on Neff Road, io NE Providence Dr., turn right, 5th street to the

HOSted byl

DORTHY OLSEN right is NE Ea/eigh Ct. Broker, G///, CRS

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RESIDENTIA L

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sages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 8 77-955-5505. (PNDC)

661-644-0384.

A custom home located in desired Three Pines, NW Bend. Spacious tile entry, living room w/gas fireplace & vaulted ceiling. Kitchen features x-large granite 19061 Mt. Hood island, Wolf range, Sub-Zero D!rectionslFrom /ilirXettport Atle, refrigerator, wine fridge, right /Vir Shetrlin Park Rd, left /Vr/r central vac, alarm system. Park CommonsDr, left Mt. Jefferson Wood accents & built-ins Pl,home is on the corner of Mt. throughout, Master suite w/ Hood Place, gas fireplace, two walk-in closets & master bath.

$6gy,ooo

Hosted & Listed byi

JOANNA GOERTZEN

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The Bulletin The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since tgta

Sarria Centra( Crs aa since 1903

19' Pioneer ski boat, 1983, vm tandem trailer, V8. Fun & fast! $5350 obo. 541-815-0936.

Bayliner 185 2006 Eddyline Equinox kayak open bow. 2nd owner for sale, r ed/whlte, mint condition. — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 $1450. 503-347-8444. — Radio 8 Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. 880 $11,590. Motorhomes 541-548-0345.

Creek

541-588-0886

I

Comp a ny 2004 Southwind

ODC1220 2 man in-

REAl ESTATEGROUP iasIt

541-981-0230

Full Service & Repair on Outboard Motors 8 Stern Drives. 20571 Empire Ave Bend 541-647-1377

pg

Desirable west side! N ew c a r p et , p a i n t , refinished hardwood f loors , m a s t e r o n

24' 1988 Sweetwater pontoon boat, runs good, $8000. (661) 599-3852

GRl, E-Pro

541-647-0910

' I

L iving t h e W e s t e r n dream. Three homes ity construction featuring standards that a re o t he r b u i l d e r ' 8 202 NW Saddle Ridge Loop

upgrades. Real hard-

wood flooring, custom Directions: /.8 miles iVorth of Pri neuiile og Mai n Street.

V.ee,eoo

SUNDAY

12-5 PM

1-3 PM

This 1852 sq. ft. home has incredible Cascade mountain views f rom th e k i t c he n 8t dining area. Enjoy the open flow with hardwood floors. Private yard with deck. Sunset views from master

bedroom deck. Deep double car garage with room for your toys.

2041 NW Glassow Dr. Directions: From Portland rtvea North on 9th Sls lefr on ioua Aves right on /Virr Palisades Drs left on /Vyr Glastow Dr. Houseit on the left.

with Ochoco Res at your back door. Open floor

plan with many up grades plus a covered back deck designed for entertaining. 34!6 NE Lake&ont Ln. Come and see this lovely Directions:From Prinetr///e head home! east on Hwy26, turn right onto Home /5on the /eP Lakefront Ln.—

Hosted byi

BETH DAVIES

541-728-19G9

removal. Add'I storage and dedicated parking space.

Dtrectiortst /Veurport/Sheulin park Rd. turn North on Pence then left on /Pionterey Pines, turn inlo comPlex at1925.

$248,500

HOSted 6 L'sted by:

olte properties

LORNA NOLTE Principal Broker

541-408-5758

R 8 A L T 0 R 8

• Tile upgrades in bathrooms

• Fully fenced backyard • Walk-in closets • Walk-in pantry

2423 NE Burks Ct. Ils'recaortsl

$263,000

Hosted 6 Listed by: KATHLEEN McDONALD Broker

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sAT. 6/6

Beautiful w a t e r f ront home with long or shortterm income potential, 1714!ty Blue Heron Dr. daylight basement. Double Directionsl Oregon IVaier detached insulated, heated Wonderland —Snow Gooseto Blue garage. 3 bed, 3 bath. Beron MLS¹ 201503731

Hosted & Listed byi

JOANNA JOHNS Broker

54Z-4vo-4Z11

Beautif ul , li g h t an d b right, 2310 sq. f t. , 3 bedroom, 3.5 baths in a gated community. Tw o master suites and office d ownstairs, l o f t a n d 19477 Ironwood Circle 3rd bedroom u p stairs. Directions:Mount %'ashinglon Vaulted great room, gas

fireplace, 2-car garage, o utdoo r b a c k p at i o . Very wel l m a i n t ained. Amenities available with club membership.

Northwest Real Estate ~

Hosted 6 L!5ted byi JOSePhLane (anettrrOad).

$4W,000

CAREY GREINER

tsmm a.. Nn

541-788-8887 ROB NOREM

Broker

Broker

541-480-1356

I I

THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM

prepped for A/C, 6' cedar fenced, paver drive/patios. 61548 Parrell Road 1672 sq. ft, 3 bedroom, Directions: 1 block south of 2 bath, single story. Brosterhons on Parrell Road. Chief

$274,$00

TEAM DELAY Principal Broker

EDIE DELAY

40 2 lt ! W Ro anoke

investor, OR live in one IIsrectsons.NW on Portland Ave., side and rent the other! A right onto NW 4th St. Continue to MUST SEE! end of block, left onto RoanokeAve.

541-390-3427

I'

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I l' I

$410,000

MRR Mayfield Realty

I' I

I

Enjoy fabulous views d own th e 1 8t h f a i r w ay of B r o ken T o p Golf Course from this beautiful 3 bedroom, 3-1/2 bath townhome yt ! 5 Sci SimpsonAve. w ith 2 - ca r g a r a g e . IstracHottstSimpson rtva, turrt le/I on a corner onto W. Washington, turn right lot inside the gates of

61056 Manhae Loop, Bend Directions:East on Reed/ifar/tet /id a first exit ai rottndabottl ortto 15th, at Road Detour Sign turn le ft on Ferguson. Right at SageCreek Drive, left ttt Manhae Lane, right al Go/dsn Gate.

Homes Starting Mid-$200s Q

$408,000

Hosted 6 Listed byi

LISA COLE Principal Broker

541-749-0047

I I

PahlfscllHOIIles k g k k v o k s

I

THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM Recently finished Pahlisch homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances 2nd all the D!rect!onslNorth on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes is right on Sierra OR north on 18th known for, Now selling Pom Empire,le/I on Sierra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for Slgttt more information, Homes from the

Hosted 6 Listed byi

RHIANNA KUNKLER rtBR, SRS

541-420-2)50

on lo //roiten Top Dr a gateigouse

Bend'S premier g Olf Sta ttri/i/rrcutde rnap lu lrcrna ff community

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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center & 2 miles of walking trails. Tour a variety of single level and 2 story plans.

HOsted 6 LiSted byi

$475,900

HotMsetvieeg

0' I

Desirable new construction. Appreciate the custom features and e n ergy efficiency. Fully landscaped,

to Broken Top Drive.

QI. BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY

LYNDA WALSH Broker, ABR, SRS, 541-410-1359

SAT. R SUN. 1PM - 4PM

11AM - 1PM SUN. 6/7 1PM - 3PM

Come see this delightful home nestled in 2 quiet "Old Bend" neighborhood! Close to downtown Bend & the River Trail, this home is perfect for a family,

SUNDAY 12-4 PM

Hosted & Listed by:

i

I

0

SAT. 8c SUN. NOON - 4PM

541-480-6581

541-419-8380

ii

SATURDAY R SUNDAY 12 - 3PM

sun CountryRealty, Inc. ~

Broker

Realtor LIFESTYLES REALTY

$415,000

Hos!ed 6 Listed by: ROZ EATON

$6sS,000

VALERIE CAMACHO

's4ls

SAT. R SUN. 1PM - 4PM

:4s4'g$

$4ee,ooo

'

ABR, SFR, GRI

2 701 s q . f t . 2 b edro om , 2 bat h p lus o f f i c e ( c o u l d easily be c o n verted into a 3rd bedroom) a nd d en . F a b u l o u s 69961 Meadow View RdnSisters home with great floor Birgctionsi From Sisters,head north on plan. Custom built in Locust 5t. tginch tarns into CampPolk Rd s 1997 to th e h i g hest left on indian Ford Rds left on Meadow standards. ViewRd,Housentontheie/l.

Hosted 6 Listed byi

v.

54Z-y11-4242 541-447-4455

541-41g-7540

SUNDAY

Hosted 6 Llsted by: JULIANNA KREBS

PrinciPal Broker

0

Lovely3bd / 2baih home

just completed. Qual-

cabinets and antique, rustic touches. Large, fully landscaped parcels with water rights. "Dare to Compare"

JUNE 6 8g 7 12PM - 3PM

LAINA RYAN

REAL ESTATE GROUP

• Granite countertops

1933 NW MontereyPines¹4

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Hosted 6 Listed byi

• 3 bed, 2.5 bath • Vaulted ceiling

main, 2 bedrooms up w ith l o ft . Lo w H O A d ues co ve r s e w e r / water, garbage, fitness r oom , e x t m a i n t . , landscaping and snow

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

NEW Creek Company ODC1624 3 man inflatable pontoon boat. N ever used, w a s $ 3000, selling f o r firm. $2000 541-981-0230

s

11 AM-2 PM

tomatic awning, steps and levelers, backup camera, corian counters, microwave/convection combo, many more extras. $50,000.00 or best offer. 928-580-1106 in LaPine,Or.

Su ee~ Motor BoatService

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

I

SAT. 8g SUN.

class A, 32 ft, 2 slides, 12,225 actual miles. Immaculate condition. 5500 watt generator, au-

flatable pontoon boat, s eldom used, w as $ 2000, selling f o r firm. $1000

FUN & FISH!

SAT. 8r. SUN. 1-4PM

Wow! Four bedrooms, o ffic e / d e n , w rap a round deck , 3 c a r garage, RV area w/full hook-up! Stone and wood accents inside 20483 Blue Ridge Lnu Bend and out in this dream h ouse! Stop b y f o r D!rect!omst East on Enott to some Kombucha and Blue Ridge Lnv South on Blue beer samples, and a Ridge to proPerty on right. c hance to wi n s o m e prizes!

Broker

Broker

tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809

For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

I l i

12 - 3PM

t

Meet singles right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange mes-

19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, great shape, call for info. $8500. In Bend

I

SAT. Ijr. SUN.

II

I' '

JOHN FURRQW

Brokers

I

I'

Hosted 6 Listed byi

Listed byi

DOROTHY AND BILL OLSEN

Ron Brown is not responsible for any bills other than his own.

CCBS204918

SSoe,ooo

$279,900

541-480-8997

As of June 1st, 2015,

Call 541 420 7846

SATURDAY 10-2 SUNDAY 11-2

3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1890 sq. ft. at the end of a cul-de-sac. Lovely, well maintained home with upstairs mountain view and a b eautiful fenced backyard.

itsk aftottt our SPRING SPECML!

ds published in aWa

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND JUNE 6 — JUNE 7

Association of

SUNDAY NOON — 3 PM

• interior and Exterior • Family.Owned • Residential R Commercial • 40 years expenence • Senior Discounts • 5.year Warranties

Watercraft

Ads published in th "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats.

Coll 54138 5 5 8 0 9 to Promote your service Advertise for 28 days starting otsl40 irkrssPecialyackagersaacasarlakkaa aarwakseal

NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for Zor/e8 QnaPiep construction work to be licensed with the Zasva Ca/ e /,o, Construction ContracFull Service tors Board (CCB). An Landscape active license means the contractor Management is bonded & insured. Verify the contractor's Spring Clean Up CCB l i c ense at •Leaves www.hirealicensed•Cones contractor.com •Needles or call 503-378-4621. •Debris Hauling The Bulletin recommends checking with WeedFree Bark the CCB prior to con& Flower Beds tracting with anyone. Some other t rades Lawn Renovation also req u ire additional licenses and Aeration - Dethatching Overseed certifications. Compost Top Dressing

875

Boats & Accessories Boats & Accessories

541-506-Oc!59

$220,000s


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY JUNE 7 2015 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880

880

880

880

880

881

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Winnebago Safari 1998 motor-

Aifa See Ya 2006 36' Fleetwood D i scovery Price reduced to 40' 2003, diesel, w/all $68,500! Exc. cond., 1 options - 3 slide outs, owner, 350 Cat diesel, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, 52,000 miles, 4-door etc., 34,000 m iles. fridge, icemaker, gas Wintered in h eated stove, oven, washer/ shop. $78,995 obo. dryer, non- smoker, 3 541-447-8664 slides, generator, invertor, leather interior, The Bulletin's satellite, 7'4" ceiling. "Call A Service Clean! 541-233-6520 Professional" Directory Look at: is all about meeting Bendhomes.com yourneeds. for Complete Listings of Call on one of the Area Real Estate for Sale professionals today!

home 30', low mileage, 300 HP Magnum Cat motor with turbo, always inside, white leather interior, like new, has m any extr a s . $55,000. S e r ious callers only.

G rand Manor b y

Thor 1996, 35' very

good condition, 454 gas engine, 50,050 miles, 2 pop outs, new tires, $18,999. Call 541-350-9916

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

ALLEGRO 27' 2002

58k mi., 1 slide, vacation use only, Michelin all weather tires w/5000 mi., no accidents, non-smokers, Workhorse e n g i ne 261-A, Allison Trans., backup cam e r a, heated mirrors, new refrig. unit., exc. conditioned, well cared for. $3 4 ,000. obo! 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Ford Mot o rhome 1992, 28', exc., low mi., good tires, $9000.

541-389-1188

881

Travel Trailers

Winnebago Journey 2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. Non-smoker, no pets, no c hildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $47,500 541-390-1472.

g a~-

dale

miles, M e rcedes 188hp turbo diesel. New $13 6 ,000, Yours $85 , 000,

541-548-8415

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!

Keystone Sprfng-

Via

2011 25R, 12,500

201 0 , 2 1 ' , sleeps 6, DVD 8 CD player, 60 g a llon freshwater, 7 cu.ft. fridge. Leveling hitch 8 j acks a w ning spare tire, lots of storage. New cond., only 3,000 m iles. Priced below Blue Book, $10,500. Call Rick for more info. 541-633-7017 o

I'•

Extra clean 2005 Forest River (Salem) 25' travel trailer. Sleeps 6. Hard to find rear access storage. Walk around queen size bed. A/C. 1 slide out. Microwave, refrigerator/freezer. Awning. Level jacks. N o rth West package. Must see! $9,950

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

~ ag> ~

We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:

541-548-5254

541-410-2707

541-383-5186

Monaco Monarch 31' 2006, F ord V 10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed &

Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome

Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , speed Allison auto one slide, low mile- trans, 2nd o wner. age, very clean, lots Very nice! $53,000. of storage, $28,500. 541-350-4077 541-639-9411

0

Springdale 2006 26' Winnebago Outlook Heartland Pr o wler bunkhouse, exc. 2007 Class "C"31', 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', cond, 12' p op-out, hide-a-bed sofa, 4k clean, non- smoking like new, 2 slides-liv- stored in RV garage. gen, convection mi- exc. cond. Must See! i ng area & l a r ge Well cared for. Many crowave, 2 TVs, tow Lots of extra's, a very closet. Large enough extras. $13,500 obo. package. to live in, but easy to 541-588-0068, c e l l, good buy.$47,900 PRICE REDUCTION! For more info call tow! 15' power aw- 541-549-4834 home 541-447-9268 ning, power hitch & $59,000. 541-815-6319 stabilizers, full s i ze The Bulletin Winnebago Superchief queen bed, l a rge Need help fixing stuff? 1990 27' clean, 454 To Subscribe call shower, porcelain sink Call A Service Professional C hevy, runs v e r y & toilet. $2 6 ,500. 541-385-5800 or go to I ood. g oo d t i r es, 541-999-2571 find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com 8500. 541-279-9458. www.bendbulletin.com

'

SAT. ttk SUN.

12 - 3PM

no,

Inviting 3612 sq. ft. home on Awbrey Butte. Four spacious bedrooms plus

office, 3.5 baths, two dining areas, fabulous

00 0

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1000 ELEETOIOOO s Gl 1 WIIdernessaw Q 12' slide, 2' L queen bed, IIlng> , pw FSC, cutside s" -1 !Iit ' stabIIIzer Y ur auto>RV rnotorcY er, Ebeen atrplane II tcb,gke new, boat or s 6I ns untllI lt It sells a stored QeeP go,gso or up to coNes first'.) 641-000-000 Cwhlcl ev

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Includes: 2" in length, with border, full some reslriction> apply

54 'T 385 58QQ

Your ad will also appear in:

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The Cenfral OregonNickel Ads + bendjnlljelin.rom

*Privatepartymerchandiseonly

8

R=R

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Ssso,ooo

Hosted & Listed by:

LINDA SCHMITZ Principle Broker

541-382-1662

I 44 4

B rooks Resources Realty

cELL54 1-788-7769

C ommercial

Mountain and Smith 3616 SW Reindeer Ave., R ock v i e w s . N e a r Redmond Di r e c t i o n s : W es t o n park. Salmon Ave., right on 35th, left on Reindeer. Follow signs. HUGE PRICE REDUCAONI

Perfect fo r m e d i c al, 45O NW 4th St. r etail , o f f i c e s o r DirectionsiOchoco Hwy/Route26 government agencies. to prtneI>ille, left on />ptr Deer, le ft Priced to m o ve! SEE on />lyr 4th. Property is onyour left. YOU THERE!

with expansive windows, 5970 NW Northcliff master on the main and an attractive lawn. Serenity just Directions: ML Washingmn Drive to Archie Briggs Rd., left minutes from downtown. on Northctiff.

Hosted by: T ERRI NAI RN Broker

$572,500

Hosted & Listed by:

541-419-6778

baths, master on main. Bonus room, plus loft. Nice views form deck. R iver trail an d g o l f course close by.

$314,999

Principal Broker

541-420-7978

REAL ESTATE

CENTRAL OREGON REALTY GROUP, INC

$22spoo REALTY

Broker

sii

2491 NW Tothls Crest

$52$,000

541-480-1580

pQ

just completed. Quality construction featuring standards that are other

builder's upgrades. Real 202 NW Saddle Ridge hardwood flooring, custom Loop cabinets and antique, Directions: 1.8 miles north o f rustic touches. Large, fully Prinei>tlleffoMain Street. landscaped parcels with water rights. "Dare to

541-419-7540

9ahn k„9caff REAL ESTATE

541-350-3449

l oafin g s h e d an d g reen h o u se. F u l l y fenced with room for RV, hook-up included.

$360,000

Broker

Gi?I, Principal Broker

541-480-2620

541-408-2204

$519,000

Hosted & Listed by: GARY DIEFENDERFER

CFWH4K OREGON RRALTY GROUP, INC.

$2ee,eoo

SAT. R SUN. 12 - 3PM

SUNDAY

B eaut i f u l l i gh t l y l ived in home in t h e popular Shev!In Ridge s ubdivision . C o m e s ee i t S a t u r d a y & Sunday and enter to win a Starbucks gift card. There will be a drawing each day for a $10 Starbucks gift card.

3734 Sq. Ft. 5 BR/3BAwith all the bells and whistles!

1 - 3PM .r a a e 2453NW Skyline Ranch Rd. Directioosileft on Shei>lin /Iieadou> Dr., right on /yyr Skyline Ifanch Rd > house will be on the right. Lookfor balloons.

$675,000

541-410-6812

$486,S00

Upgrades galore! Join us for ice cream sundaes!

Hosted & Listed by: JANE GILLETTE

Hosted & Listed by: MIKE & LISA WETYSTEIN Brokers

Main floor guest suite. Gourmet Kitchen. Upstairs Bonus room w/surrouud sound. Sitting room in Master suite. 20510 Jacklight Lane 2-car tandem garage. A/C, Direclionsi SE Brosterhous, west gas fireplace, cov'd, patio on Jacklight Lane w/ common space behind

Broker

BEND PREMIER

541-848-8354

High Lakes Realty & Property Management

REAL ESTATE

Licensed i» >be s>a>eof orego»

1322 SWBentI,p., Powell Butte

$2W,000

Great potential!

CHRIS McPHEETERS Principal Broker

541-388-2111

Central Oregon Assoc l 3 k l o A Of

Hosted & Listed by:

AssistASell.

I

This 4 bedroom, 3 bath fully updated house offers 2228 sq. ft. of living space, plus a 2-car garage. All new flooring, paint & landscaping. Turn key 1861 NE Altura Dr., house, ready for immediate Bend move in. 1Nrectionsi 27th St> le ft on Neff, right on Eagle, right on KEA/tur>L

SUNDAY 1-3 PM Perfect s e t u p f o r a nimals. Tw o l a r g e outbuildings with att ached s t u d i o a p t . Walk in meat cooler, m eat cu t t in g r o o m ,

I

SAT R SUN 12PM - 3PM

Spacious 4 bedroom home comprises a huge bonus room with pool table & mountain views. Washer/ dryer, frig, f abulous backyard, swing set, pond, 5255 Spring Creek Place garden space, garage Directions:From the Xorth end of shop area & concrete 27!h St> turn East onto Jill Ase, and pad are all i n c ludedcontinue to the end ofthe street. for you! Turn right (South) onto Spring Creekpl,and the home is on Ihe Hosted & Listed by. right just before Aldrich Aue.

BARBARA KRUMWIEDE

l

I

L iving t h e W e s t e r n dream. Three homes

Principal Broker, GRI

$209,500

I

Listed by: NATALKA PALMER L Q I E 5 Principal Broker RESIDENTIA L

Hosted & Listed by: LAINA RYAN

Hosted & Llsted by: BRAD W H IT C O M B

I

541-410-4050

'

stand-

a lone b u i l d i n g w / o ffices & open fl o o r plan. 3622 SF, 12,560 S F lo t w / p a r k i n g .

SAT. 8r. SUN. 1 -4PM

compare!"

JEANNE SCHARLUND

SAT. Sr. SUN. 12PM - 3PM

541-480-9947

SAT. R SUN. 1PM - 4PM

Come see this 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, great room with fabulous kitchen, master on the main, extra den or office area. All new homes in a quiet, peaceful 1216 NE Shane Lane, Bend neighborhood in NB Bend. Directions:Butler to ShaneLane.

Hosted & Listed by:

BEND PREMIER

Direcrionsi West on Portland Ave., right on Arebrey h'd., Hosted by: right on Mt . Washington, GLENDA MACKIE right on Todds Crest. Broker

II SAT. 11AM - 3PM SUN.1PM - 3PM

Principal Broker

'

3 b e d r o om , 3 - 1 / 2

Mayfield Realty ~

RICK COFFIN

Listed by: KATHY HOVERMALE Principal Broker

Retirement living at its

Broker

$e

L

3 large b e d r o o m s, 2 .5 b a t h r o o m s , hardwood floors, gas fireplace, fenced and landscaped backyard.

best! Single level living, 3 bedroom, 2 bath plus 4th bedroom & bath in basement with 2 walk-in storage areas. Large lot. 1195 Victoria Falls Dr. Wonderful landscaping. Directions:Take main entrance to The Ridge at Eagle Crest, right at 1st rtght on Victoria FallsDr, Ioproper0>.

541-410-4756

e

I

Forever views from this immaculate contempor ary style home o n a p rivate wooded Iot I n

SUNDAY 1-4 PM

$410,000

REALTORS.

SUNDAY 11AM - 2PM

1PM - 4PM

Hosted & Listed by: KRIS REES

Association of

SAT R SUN 12 - 3PM

I SAT. 8L SUN.

Central Oregon

I

desirable Wyndemere. 3 br, 2 1/2 bath, 2430 sq. ft.

recreation/fitness room. 2LI10 NW Meldrum Ct. Main level master. Park- Directions:From Ha0>97, head like setting with koi pond, west on ML Washington Dr> le ft on multiple decks, grassy play Summit, right on Farewell Dr. le ft areas. Private cul-de-sac on Meldrum Ct, location. MLSr201505212

i

Qg 'LL1

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND JUNE 6 — JUNE 7 I

U

REALTORS.


G6 SUNDAY, JUNE 7, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

881

908

932

933

935

975

975

975

975

Travel Trailers

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Mercedes Benz E Class 2005,

Subaru Legacy LL Bean2006,

Vin ¹688743 Stock ¹82316

Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹82770

Toyota Corolla 2013, (exp. 6/1 0/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072

CAL LW

TODAYW

Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. $17,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-780-4487

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

Fifth Wheels CHECK YOUR AD

1/5 share in v ery nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 C e s sna 150 with Lycoming 0-320 150 hp engine c onversion, 400 0 hours. TT a irframe. Approx. 400 hours on 0-timed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few C -1 50's t ha t ha s never been a trainer. $4500 wi ll consider trades for whatever. Call J i m Fr a zee,

Estate Sale Olds Cutlass Calais 1981. 14,500 orig. miles, new transmission w/warranty new tires, battery and fluids. Factory bucket seats, console shift, Beautiful condition. Drives like new! $7900. 541-419-7449

541-410-6007

F35 Bonanza. Aircraft is in exc. cond., w/ good paint 8 newer interior. Full IFR. Auto pilot, yaw d amper, engine monitor. 6485TT, 1815SMOH, 692STOH. Hangered in Bend. $32,000 or

CHEVELLE MALIBU 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000

Call Bob Carroll

on the first day it runs to make sure it iso correct. "Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classlfieds HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546

541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

FOUR WINDS 2003 5th wheel 26L, A/C, CD, micro, awning slide

o ut, m u c h mo r e Save money. Learn $9000. 541-876-5073. to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Exc. cond. Tow vehicle also avail.$17,900 obo. More pics. 541-923-6408 Laredo 31' 2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000

or refinance. Call 541-410-5649

RV

CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

Redmond: 541-548-5254

o

925

Utility Trailers Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 sets of straps, exc. c ond., capable o f p ulling a f u l l s i z e pickup truck. If interested we will send pictures. $1000 obo. 951-961-4590 929

Automotive Wanted DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE

BLIND. Free 3 Day V acation, Tax D e ductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care O f. CALL

(PNDC) Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the hu-

mane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1908

& Service

800-205-0599

(PNDC) 931

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

541-548-1448

Ford F-1502007, Super crewcab, 74K mi. VIN ¹C52685. $21,998.

(exp. 6/10/15) DLR ¹366

Financing available.

$125,000

(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333

Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, custom wheels and new tires, only 41K miles, $31,995 541-408-7908

smolichmotors.com

smolichmotors.com Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Writs from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.

Jeep Willys, metal top, big tires, ps, new paint, tow bar, new gauges, etcff. $5500. 541-233-7272

Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at 541-729-4552 940

Vans

The Bulletin SNvlog CooOol Olo roo oooo SIB

(photo forillustration only)

Dodge Grand Caravan2007, auto, 133K mi. VIN ¹192261. $6,888. Ford F-350 Super Cab 2013, 6.7L V-8 cyl VIN ¹A92462. $37,997.

(exp. 6/1 0/1 5) DLR ¹366

(exp. 5/31/1 5) DLR ¹366

SMOLICH

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com VW SunBug 1 974 exc. cond. Total interior refurbish, engine OH, new floor pan, plus lots more! Sunr oof. C l ea n ti t l e. $9500. 541-504-5224 933

Pickups

541-548-1448

smolichmotors.com

935

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile

transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, Chevrolet Silverado navigation, satellite 2009 1500 Crew Cab, radio, extra snow 4x4, 5.3 Itr, 6 speed (Car top carauto, H D t r a ilering tires. rier not included.) pkg, black int, remote $22,500. s tart, 68k, 24 m p g 541-915-9170 hwy. $ 2 5,900. 541-382-6511

Snug Top white canopy for short bed pickup. Chevy1992 % ton L ike n e w , $300. Heavy duty l adder 350 V8, auto., 2WD. clean inside. Good rack for pickup, 6' tires, radio and GPS. tool/parts boxes on $2899/OBO e ach s i de , $ 2 75. 541-419-5060 541-416-9686

$ 2500 down 7 2 m o 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

$ 2000 down, 84 r n . , 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment, plus dealer installed options.

$2600 down 84 mo at 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

payment, plus dealer installed options.

©

$15,979 or $199 mo.,

payment, plus dealer installed options.

©

©

S UBA R U .

SUBAR Ll

©

L'"" " " '

Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 dr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, leather, a/c, like new tires. reg. to 10/16. Runs great, very good c ond., $4800 . 541-385-4790

©

SUBAR Ll

Buick LeSabre 2005 Custom. Very clean, inside & out, only has 96k miles. If you drive it, you'll fall in love!! 32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in t own. $ 5799, o b o cash/credit/debit card. Trade-in considered. Call or Text Ron © 541-419-5060

CHECK YOURAD

GEO Metro 1991 5 spd manual trans., 3 cyl., 40+ mpg, 151k miles. Runs good,. $1500 or best offer 541-419-5060, Ron

V Q LV Q

J

Get your business

541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.com

Toyota Camry Hybrid 2012, 2.5L 1-4 cyl VIN ¹005123.$22,997.

proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment, plus dealer installed options.

SMOLICH

~ The Bulletin ~

$ 2400 down 8 4 m o . 4 .49% APR o n a p -

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

brought to you by

Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023

$11,979 or $155/mo., $16,977 or $199/mo.,

$15,979 or $199/mo.,

This advertising tip

V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978

(exp. 6/1 0/1 5)

PRINT N e wspaper Advertising in Alaska, VolvoXC60 2014, Idaho, Montana, Or3.2L 1-6 cyl egon and WashingSubaru Outback XT VIN ¹522043. $36,997. t on with j us t o n e 2006, (exp. 6/10/15) DLR ¹366 p hone call. Fo r a (exp. 6/10/15) FREE ad v e rtising SMOLICH VIN ¹313068 network brochure call Mustang Conv. 2011, V Q LV Q Stock ¹44631A 916-288-6011 or 6 speed auto, pony 541-749-2156 $11,999 or $149/rn., email pkg 1 500 0 mi $2800 down, 72 mo., smolichvolvo.com ceceliaCtcnpa.com $20,000. 4 .49% APR o n a p (PNDC) 541-330-2342 proved credit. License a nd title i n cluded i n Ford Fusion SE 2012, payment, plus dealer t 2,500+ miles, l i ke installed options. new, $15,900 obo. Vehicle? 541-598-7718 or Call The Bulletin S UBA R U . 541-261-1445 and place an ad 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. today! VM/Passat2014, 877-266-3821 Ask about our 1.8L 1-4 cyl Dlr ¹0354 'Whee/ Deal"! VIN ¹099227. $24,997. for private party (exp. 6/10/15) DLR ¹366 advertisers

Ford Fusion SEL2012, (exp. 6/1 0/1 5) Vin ¹117015 Stock ¹44382A

541-548-1448

541-508-1554

Columbia400,

smolichvolvo.com

smolichmotors.com

Pop-up hitch for Gooseneck on Dodge, $200 1/3interest in

(exo. 6/1 0/1 5) DLR ¹366

SMOLICH

541-548-1448

Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, exc.cond., always garaged. 155K miles, $11,500. 541-549-6407 Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$13,000. Call 541-815-2144

(exp. 6/10/15) DLR ¹366

F ord p i ckup 1 9 5 1 c ustom, o a k b ox. AM/FM cassette, new brakes, 289 V-8, '67 Ford F-150 2007, Mustang engine in this. Super Crewcab Edelbrock intake and VIN ¹C09983. $24,888. carb CFM. 10,461 mi. (exp. 6/10/15) DLR ¹366 on engine. $12,500. 541-610-2406.

541-447-5184.

1-800-401-4106

Aircraft, Parts

Mustang

Hard top 1965, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940

SUBAR Ll oooooooooooo.ooM

(exp. 6/1 0/1 5)

S UBA Rll 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. eoooooovrmm ooo 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr¹0354 DID YOU KNOW 'I44 million U.S. A d ults for illustration only) Find It in Dodge Ram 1500 2009 (Phofo read a N e wspaper HyundaiVeracruz 4 dr., crew cab print copy each week? The Bulletin Classifisds! 2008, 63.8L V-6 cyl VIN ¹711891. $28,998. VIN Discover the Power of 541-385-5809 ¹061266.$17,997.

(Photo forillustration only)

541-550-7382

Add A Picture!

©

541-279-1072

$16,000 for i/~share.

arcarrollg©gmail.com Advertise your car!

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Ford Escape2014, Chevy Malibu 2012, Cadillac eng i ne, 2.0L 1-4 cyl (exp. 6/1 0/1 5) fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low VIN ¹A46674. $24,888. Vin ¹299392 (exp. 6/1 0/1 5) DLR ¹366 Stock ¹44256A mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, $15,979 or $189/mo., $ 2500 down, 84 r n . , n ew wheels a n d 4 .49% APR o n a p tires, You must see proved credit. License it! $25,000 invested. and title i ncluded in $12,000 OBO. payment, plus dealer in541-536-3889 or 541-548-1448 stalled options. 541-420-6215. smolichmotors.com

a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

(exp. 6/10/15) DLR ¹366

SMOLICH V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

MorePixatBendbuletin.com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

P orsche Cayman S 2 008, L i k e new , 14,500 miles, $35,000. 360-510-3153 (Bend) 1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE The regular meeting of the Board of Di(exp. 6/1 0/1 5) rectors of the DesVin ¹198120 Stock ¹44193B chutes County Rural $10,379 or $149/mo., Fire Protection Dis$ 2800 down, 60 r n . , trict ¹2 will be held on H onda Accord S E .49% APR o n ap - T uesday, June 9 , 2006, 99K mi., clear 4proved License 2015 at 11:30 a.m. at title, non-smoker, well and titlecredit. included in the conference room maintained. $ 6 9 95 payment, plus dealer in- in the North Fire Staobo Call Sinclair at stalled options. tion, 63377 Jamison 480-266-7395 (Bend) St., Bend, OR. Items S UBA R U . on the agenda in2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. clude: th e fire de877-266-3821 p artment report, a Dlr ¹0354 presentation of the fire department budget for the 2015-2016 fiscal Lexus ES350 2010, year, a discussion of Excellent Condition capital projects, and a 32,000 miles, $21,000 F ireFree grant r e 214-549-3627 (in quest from Withers. Bend) This will also be a SubaruGT Legacy budget hearing to dis2006, Lincoln LS Sport 2005, cuss Resolution ¹87 V8, Moon-roof, White, (exp. 6/1 0/1 5) approving the budget Vin ¹212960 Excellent condition., for the 2015-2016 fisStock ¹83174 $5,900. 503-781-0360 year. The meeting or 541-593-0130 $14,972 or $179/mo., cal location is accessible $2500 down 84 mo. 4 .49% APR o n a p - to persons with disWhat are you proved credit. License abilities. A request for and title included in i nterpreter fo r th e looking for? payment, plus dealer in- hearing impaired or You'll find it in stalled options. for other accommodations for person with The Bulletin Classifieds S UBA Rll eoooooovrmm ooar disabilities should be 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. made at least 48 hrs. 877-266-3821 before the meeting to: 541-385-5809 Tom Fay Dlr ¹0354 5 41-318-0459. T T Y

will be sold unless p ayment in f ul l i s made prior to the time of the sale. CASH ONLY - NO CHECKS NO CRE D IT CARDS. Units to be sold are: Ewert-Unit 1529; Wisecarver-Unit 301.

Scion TCcoupe 2007,

®

PUBLIC NOTICE Notice of Intent to Award Sole Source Contract

®

The Sunriver Service District intends to make a purchase w hich ha s b e e n determined to qualify as a "Sole Source" purchase made i n ac c o rd ance with O A R 137-047-0275: Sole Source P r o curem ents. The p u r pose of this "Notice of Intent to Award" is to publicly announce the District's intent to award a Sole Source Cont ract for one ( 1 ) 2002 Lifeline Ambulance Remount. The proposal price is $147,000.

Any contractor who does not agree that t he r e mount i s available only from CheCkout the Lifeline Emergency Vehicles, Inc. — declassifiedsonline termined to be the WWfifbeffdbuletiff.CONf sole source — may protest the "Notice Updateddaily of Intent to Award" by contacting the PUBLIC NOTICE Deschutes County AUCTION NOTICE Board of CommisOn Thursday, June sioners, at 1300 NW 1 1, 2015 a t 1 0 : 00 Wall St., Suite 200, AM., there will be a Bend Oregon 97701 f oreclosure sale o f w ithin seven ( 7 ) personal property at days after the publiStorage S o l utions, cation date of this 2669 NE Twin Knolls Notice. Your protest Dr., Suite 109, Bend, must be in writing OR 97701. The con- and describe the tents of these units basis for the protest. 800-735-2900.

Mercedes Benz CL 2001,

(exp. 6/1 0/1 5) on the first day of pubVin ¹016584 lication. If a n e rror Stock ¹83285 may occur in your ad, or $169/mo., p lease contact u s $8,979 1800 down, 48 r n . , and we will be happy $ .49% APR o n a p to fix it as soon as we 4 credit. License can. Deadlines are: proved and title included in Weekdays 12:00 noon payment, plus dealer infor next day, S at. stalled options. 11:00 a.m. for SunSUBAR Ll day; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-385-5809 877-266-3821 The Bulletin Classified Dlr ¹0354

®

Subaru impreza2013, (exp. 6/10/15)

Vin ¹027174 Stock ¹83205

$20,358 or $249/mo., $ 2600 down, 84 r n . , 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in

payment, plus dealer installed options.

®

S UBA RU Nloooooooooo.ooM

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

A dd color photos and sell youl stuff fa s t . In Print Cind Online With The BL!Iletin'5 CICISSifiedS. A dd color photos for pets, real e s t a te , a ut o 8

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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwilln66d. Roomtogrowinyour a t ough V8 engine will gst the job own little paradise! Call now. call right away. $500 done on the ranch. *SPeCial PriVate Party rateS aPPly to

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