Bulletin Daily Paper 08-07-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

THURSDAY August 7,2014

BendNorthvs.Alaska

IZ:

YOUR BUSINESS • C6

LITTLE LEAGUEPREVIEW 0 C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

Biking from Bendto D.C.W We're notBeerstate, USA — That's North Dakota. And that's not evenwhere they down the most alcohol per person per day.Getall of the data on U.S. drinking onA3

Wirkkala

QEND (;/TY QQUN(;/L

r ni

sentence:

• Also approved:Controversial development planfor southeast Bend

the next 20 years. Nonresiden-

By Hillary Borrud

impervious surface area, such

The Bulletin

BOrder CriSiS —Texas has deployed not just its National Guard but also state wildlife officials and others who can't make immigration arrests.A4

PAGE B1

The city of Bend has a new $25.2 million plan to decrease flooding due to storm runoff over the next 20 years, after city councilors voted unani-

mously to approve the proposal Wednesday's council meeting. Wednesday night. Initial estimates ranged from The price tag is much lower $172 million to $214 million. than the city estimated when

Bend's monthly residential

it began work on the plan in 2006, Stormwater Program

stormwater fee is currently $4; under the new plan, it will in-

M anager Wendy Edde said at

crease to as much as $6.80 over

25 years

tial utility customers currently pay $4 per 3,800 square feet of

to life

as a parking lot. City Councilor Sally Russell said it made sense to invest in stormwater infra-

By Scott Hammers

structure for a relatively small

The Bulletin

costincrease overtwodecades. SeeStormwater/A5

A Bend man's claim he acted in self-defense when he shot and killed

a guest in his home in February 2013 proved unpersuasive Wednesday, as

Footdall column — Sean Mannion, the fifth-year senior DSU quarterback, has started stepping it up on the field.C1

air time or ro o

Marijuana —Nowatering those plants during California's drought. (People still do).B5

~we

oun

Deschutes

County Circuit Judge Stephen Forte issued a sentence

t

, ~~ ) Wirk k ala

PIUS —D.C.joins the list of pot legalization on theballot. A2

of 25 years to life in prison for Luke Anton Wirkkala. Wirkkala, 33, was

In national news —Hawaii

convicted in June of

braces for not onebut maybe two hurricane strikes — theisland state's first encounter with such strong tropical weather since1992.A2

shooting and killing David Ryder, 31, at Wirkkala's southeast Bend

home in the early morning hours of Feb. 4, 2013. The two men and Wirk-

kala's live-in girlfriend — whom he married later while being held at

And a Wed exclusiveThese U.S. diplomats wield fiddles and dancemoves, not brief casesandcommuniques. bentlbulletin.cnm/extrns

4

the Deschutes County

jail — had spent much of the day before drinking together at a local bar on Super Bowl Sunday. r 'of:

','C.

EDITOR'5CHOICE

„,

SeeWirkkala/A5

'.@w'

e4t gl

Ethicalissue: Who gets Ebola drug?

6 marriage casesmay not go well for gays

Three kids lie with their pigs: counterclockwise from left, Macey Buckett, 10, with Ralph; Josh

By Erik Eckholm

Knight, 9, with Wolverine; and Caleb Knight, 13, with Mongoose. The six of them (plus the other pigs,

New York Times News Service

CINCINNATI — The

steady march of judicial approval for same-sex marriage overthepast year is running into some skepticism here as a threejudge federal appeals panel hears arguments in six same-sex marriage cases from four states.

t,Q

l

By Lauran Neergaard The Associated Press

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

WASHINGTONThe use of an experimental drug to treat two

Americans diagnosed with Ebola is raising ethical questions about who gets first access to

livestock and humans) were waiting for the Crook County Fair to open Wednesday morning. The fair — "Country Pride, County Wide" is the theme- runs through Saturday at the fairgrounds in

unproven new therapies

Prineville. Hours are 10 a.m.-l0 p.m. today, Friday and Saturday. Daily events include the carnival,

forthe deadly disease. But some health

pony and camel rides, and a beer garden. Admissionis free.

experts fear debate

over extremely limited doses will distract from

Online:For a full schedule of events, go to www.crookcountyfairgrounds.com • Saturday's Bulletin: Photos from the fair

tried-and-truemeasures

to curb the growing outbreak — things like more rapidly identifying and isolating the sick.

In three hours of back-

and-forth questioning Wednesday, it appeared neither side could take

victory for granted in the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of

Appeals, where the cases from Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee were heard by two judges appointed by President George W. Bush and one by President Bill Clinton.

Judge Jeffrey Sutton, one of the Bush appointees

and a likely swing vote among the three, repeatedly asked why gay rights advocates wanted to use the courts to hasten an outcome theywere gradually winning through elections and changes in attitude. "I'd have thought the

best way to get respect and dignity is through the dem-

The World Health Or-

'Pleasure'may restrict new tobaccorules By Sabrina Tavernise New York Times News Service

Rarely has the concept of happiness caused so much consternation in public health circles. Buried deep in the federal

government's voluminous new tobacco regulations is a little-known cost-benefit calcula-

tion that public health experts see as potentially poisonous: the happiness quotient. It assumes that the benefits from reducing smoking — fewer early deaths and diseases of the lungs and heart — have to

be discounted by 70 percentto offset the loss in pleasure that smokers suffer when they give

Health news inside

• Health care spending is falling, but not for a positive reason,B1 up their habit. •Morewayscoffeecouldbegood Experts say that calculation for you,B1 wipes out most of the benefits • Add years to your life ... just by from the regulations and could jogging for five minutes?B1 make them far more vulnerable to legal challenges from the • Starting this week, "gluten free" tobacco industry. And it could must actually mean something, DS have a perverse effect, experts said. The more successful reg- against tobacco," Frank Chaulators are at reducing smokloupka, an economist at the ing, the more it hurts them in University of Illinois at Chicathe final economic accounting. go, said of the Food and Drug "This threatens the FDA's

ability to take strong actions

Administration. "If they can't demonstrate that there is a

ganization is convening a meeting of medical ethicists next week to examine what it calls

"the responsible thing

significant economic benefit to doing it, then it makes their job

to do" about whatever

supplies eventually may become available of a

much harder."

On Wednesday, Chaloupka and other prominent econo-

medicine that's never

mists, including a Nobel Prize winner, publicly took issue

been tested in people. At least one country

with the analysis. In a paper submitted to the

involved in the outbreak is interested in the drug.

FDA as the period for public

Nigeria's health minis-

comment on the regulations neared its end Friday, the

ter, Onyebuchi Chukwu,

said at a news conference he had asked the

group said the happiness quotient was way too high and should be changed before the regulations take effect. SeeSmoking/A4

U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

about access. See Ebola/A4

ocratic process," he said,

expressing a view that, in practice, would most likely

TODAY'S WEATHER

deliver a victory to the

states seeking to keep bans on same-sex marriage. SeeGays/A5

+'r %i

Sunny High 83, Low48 PngeB6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 S oI Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1-4 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 219

30 pages, 5 sections

Q l/i/e use recycled newsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

The Bulletin HOW to reaCh US STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

NATION Ee ORLD HAWAII BRACES FOR FIRST HURRICANE IN DECADES

Gaza uPdate —Facing withering international criticism of the Palestinian death toll in Gaza,PrimeMinister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday that Israel deeply regretted every civilian casualty of its monthlong military campaign but that Hamasmust be heldaccountable for the loss of life. Concernedabout world opinion and accusations of possible war crimes, Netanyahutook the rare step of calling in the foreign newsmedia to his office where hemadehis first public remarks the dayafter a 72-hour cease-fire took effect and astalks for a more lasting solution got underway inCairo. Both sides weretaking hard-line positions into today, andmuchjockeying is expected.

541-385-5800 Phonehours:5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F ri.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-eun.

GENERAL INFORMATION

541-382-1811 eijiljn ONLINE

RIISSian rntnliltlnn —Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday hit back hardagainst countries that have imposedsanctions over the Ukraine crisis, ordering trade cuts that an official said would include aban onall imports of agricultural products from the United States. Thefull list of products to be banned or limited for up to one year should published today. President BarackObamasaid in a news conferenceWednesday that U.S. sanctions against Russia over its actions in Ukraine arestraining the Russian economy, which has "ground to a halt."

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N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

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541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X

AfriCa Summit —Though noting persistent challenges, President Barack Obamaheralded Africa as acontinent on the rise and a growth market for U.S. businesses as heclosed a summit in Washington on Wednesday aimed in part at fostering his ownAfrican legacy. The summit also marked arare return to Washington for former President George W.Bush,who has madepublic health issues in Africa a priority since leaving theWhite House. Bushpartnered with first lady Michelle Obamato host a daylong event for spouses of the more than 50 African leaders there. Much of the summit centered on boosting U.S. business ties with Africa, which is home to six of the world's10 fastest-growing economies, aswell as addressing the Ebola crisis.

I

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

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

©

04 ~ O>0~040zs

The estimated jackpot is now $90 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

4s Q~QzQsQsQ s~Q The estimated jackpot is now $6.6 million.

The Associated Press

Shoppers are stocking up onsupplies asthey prepare for what could bethe first hurricane to hit the state in more than 20years. Weather officials said W ednesday anapproaching storm appearstohave strengthened andwill likely maintain its speed asit heads toward the islands. Hurricane Iselle loomedabout 600 miles east, spinning at about 85 mph. It previously hadbeen expected to weakensignificantly before reaching land. The storm is expected to lashthe Big Island today with damaging winds, heavy rains andhigh surf. It's on trackto remain hurricane-strength or weaken only to a strong tropical storm. Hurricane Julio, meanwhile, swirled closely behind atabout 75 mph. Forecasters expect it to pass north of the Big Island this weekend. The last time Hawaii was hit with a tropical storm or hurricane was in1992.

D.C. marijuana —Initiative 71, which would legalize marijuana in the nation's capital, has enoughvalid signatures to appear on November's ballot, a District of Columbia elections panel decided. Adults over 21 would beable to possess up to 2 ounces of marijuana. The initiative also would allow for the cultivation of up to six marijuana plants in a person's home.Separately, the City Council is considering a bill regarding pot's taxation and regulation. A marijuana decriminalization law passed bythe council in the spring took effect in July. Oregon andAlaska will also bevoting on legalization ballot measures. TSA breaCh —A62-year-old woman who madeit through airport security without a boarding passandtook a Southwest Airlines flight from San Jose,California, to Los Angeles haspleaded nocontest to a misdemeanor trespassing charge. Marilyn JeanHartman entered her plea to willfully and unlawfully entering Los Angeles as astowaway on an aircraft, a misdemeanor, in an LA. courtroom Wednesday. Hartman was ordered to 24months' probation and threedays in jail, which she wascredited with serving since her arrest Monday. The Transportation Security Administration on Wednesdaydownplayed this week's incident, even though Hartman, who is homeless, was caught seven times this year trying to sneakaboard flights in San Francisco.

NOAA viaThe Associated Press

Two major storms head for Hawaii in this NOAA — Fromwire lepolfS phototaken early Wednesday.

Bergdahl talks aboutcapture The Associated Press The U.S. Army has begun questioning Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl about his disappearance in Afghanistan that led to five years in captivity by the Taliban, both a spokeswoman and

his attorney said Wednesday. Bergdahl was questioned at Fort Sam Houston in San

Antonio, where he has been

staying since returning to the Bergdahl was advised of his U.S., said his attorney, Eugene rights under military code Fidell. "Sergeant Bergdahl about not making any stateanswered all questions put to

ment to investigators.

him. The interview is proceedFidell said he expected this ing," Fidell said in a telephone would be the only interview interview. Fidell declined to Bergdahl would be giving as comment on what specific part of the investigation into questions were asked. whether Bergdahl faces prosLt. COL Alayne Conway, ecution for possible desertion an Army spokeswoman, said or disciplinary action.

Earthquake tOII —The death toll from an earthquake that struck Yunnan province in southwestern China on Sunday has jumped to 589 as rescuers reached isolated villages and recovered the bodies of179 more victims, state media reported Wednesday.Officials said at least nine people remained missing. Theearthquake, with a magnitude of 6.1, injured nearly 2,900 people anddestroyed more than 12,000 homes in the poor, mountainous region. — Fromwirereports

AFGHANISTAN ANALYSIS

'Green-on-blue' killings raise questionsfor U.S. By Nancy A. Youssef McClatchy Washington Bureau

W ASHINGTON — I n t h e hours after a suspected coalition-trained Afghan soldier

ghans than those deployed there in previous years. According to The Associated Press and NBC, the shoot-

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er, a two-year veteran of the

opened fire at Afghanistan's Afghan army who went by national defense university, just one name, Raftqullah, had killing an American two-star returned to base from patrol general and injuring more shortly before the shooting. than a dozen others, a ques- Unlike his colleagues, he did tion that has plagued U.S. ef- not turn in his NATO-issued forts arose again in quiet mur- M16 assault rifle. Instead, still murs at coalition bases and in uniform, he hid in a bathcamps across that country: room and shot from a window How are we supposed to 100 yards away. According to train people who often want to the Afghan Defense Ministry, killus'? an Afghan soldier rV shot an d k i l led the Attacks by Afghan forces on their coali- • Two-star U.S. attacker. I was an M a r ine Gen. Jotion partners — the g enera er,BS se p h D u nford, the Long Wars Journal e n gine has counted 87 socurrent Afghanistan called "green-on-blue" attacks commander, sought to put in since 2008 — reached a peak new safety measures upon in 2012. That's when the U.S. his arrival two years ago; his military imposed security and confirmation hearing w as education measures intend- consumed by questions about ed to protect coalition troops green-on-blue attacks. from thevery people they are Among the measures was supposed to help. Until Tues- insistence that armed "guardday's attack, those measures ian angels" be stationed at U.S. were thought to have been suc- posts to watch for suspicious cessful; it had been six months Afghan behavior and special since a uniformed Afghan had training for U.S. troops in ways attackedAmerican soldiers. to avoid cultural missteps that But Ittesday's attack raised might offend Afghans. There questions about whether the were also efforts to train troops respite was because of the in- on psychological warning creased security measures or signs that someone could turn. whether it was just the benefit

Citing security reasons, the of the drop in U.S. interactions U.S. military refuses to detail

with Afghan soldiers occa- what other steps have been sioned by the troop drawdown. taken to mitigate the threat. The answer may be important But those on the ground to the safety of the small num- say many of the measures arber of men and women the U.S. en't followed in practice. They plans to leave in Afghanistan note, for example, that in many for two moreyears after combat cases they remove their heltroops leave at the end of 2014. mets and body armor as a sign In the last two years, the of respect when meeting with number of U.S. troops in Af- their Afghan counterparts. ghanistan has shrunk considA joint A fghan-coalition erably. Since March 2013, the investigation has begun. But U.S. headcount has dropped in past instances, answering from 66,000troops to 30,600. why such attacks happen has By the end of the year, the eluded authorities. Often such U.S. troop presence is slated incidents end with either coalito drop to 9,800. What U.S. tion or Afghan soldiers killing troops remain in Afghanistan the attacker, eliminating any have far less contact with Af- chance of asking him why.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

Ebola

plants and then purifies them. Fauci said the manufac-

Continued from A1 CDC Director Tom Frie-

den "conveyed there are virtuallyno doses available" but

turer has told the government that it would take two to three months to produce

even "amodest amount." So canwork, a CDC spokesman the NIH is exploring ways said Wednesday. to ramp upproduction, necPresident Barack Obama essary to attempt formal said Ebola is controllable testing or to consider more and the U.S. and its allies so-called compassionate use. " Everybody's trying t o are working to help overwhelmed public health sys- speed things up," said Fauci, that basic supportive care

IN FOCUS:BORDER SECURITY

rom uar smento amewar ens, exas mo iizes o a ro e ronier By Manny Fernandaz

tems in West Africa take the needed steps.

director of N I H's National

New York Times News Service

Institute of Allergy and In-

Asked about the experimental drug, Obama said

fectious Diseases.

MISSION, Texas — Along the Rio Grande here, the sus-

all the information isn't in:

To help improve diagnosis inaffected countries, the Food

"We've got to let the science and Drug Administration on guide us. Wednesdayauthorized emergency use of an experimental

No'magic' therapy

There is no proven treatment or vaccine for Ebola,

have certainly noticed their adversaries on the water: burly commandos in black-andw hite boats mounted w i t h

ly symptoms — fever, vomiting and diarrhea — can be

.30-caliber machine guns and bulletproof shields. The patches on the officers' camouflage fatigues identify them not as

es significant risk to other

"Vaccine and drug treat- countries and requires more ment right now is not going of an international response. to be the main way you bring The WHO said that parthis to a stop," he added. ticularly in Liberia, health S cientists s t r es s th a t officials face community rethere's no way to tell if the ex-

slip into th e U n ited States

blood test to detect Ebola. Ear-

which so far has infected confused with other illnesses. more than 1,700 people and The test wa sdevelopedbythe killed more than 930 in West Defense Department, and is Africa in what has become only for use in DOD-designatthe worst outbreak of this vi- ed laboratories. ral hemorrhagic fever. "How many times have Worldhealthmeeting we found magic therapies T his week, the WHO is that ended up ... doing more convening an emergency harm than good'?" cautioned committee to determine if University of Minnesota pro- the outbreak warrants befessor Michael Osterholm, ing declared a "public health who advises the U.S. govern- emergency of international ment on infectious disease concern," meaning it posthreats.

pected smugglers trying to

sistance from residents who

perimental drug ZMapp real- fear going to the hospital ly made a difference for two and secretly care for ill loved

federal Border Patrolagents

but asanother breed oflaw enforcement entirely. Texas game wardens. A team of them — whose routine duties include investigating fishing tournament cheaters and making arrests for BUI, or boating under the i nfluence — patrol the R i o

Grande, pulling smuggling suspects from the river and

dodging rocks thrown from the Mexican side. Members of the Texas Rangers have also traded in their familiar white

cowboy hats for camouflage, so they can blend into the brush on covert nighttime operations.

On the border, Texas uses helicopters with infnm d r adar. It monitors motion-detecting

American aid workers infect-

ones at home, thus exposing

ed while working in Liberia.

themselves. Ebola is transmitted only through direct

cameras it installed on private

contact with the blood and

on federal high-altitude surveillance airplanes, Texas bought one of its own, for $7.4 million. Gov. Rick Perry's recent

"We don't even know if it works," stressed Dr. An-

thony Fauci of the National

other bodily fluids of some-

Institutes of Health, which

one who is sick. But health care workers

helped fund research that led to the drug's development. The drug is a cocktail of three antibodies engineered to recognize Ebola

ranches. And rather than rely

have to recognize the virus,

announcement that he was de-

too. Authorities in Nigeria

ploying 1,000 National Guard troops to the border has gener-

have acknowledged they didn't immediately suspect

and bind to infected cells so

Ebola in the first known pathat the immune system can tient to travel to that country. "The bottom line with Ebkill them. People's immune systems make antibodies to ola is we know how to stop fight off various diseases, it: traditional public health,"

and attempts to cull those CDC's Frieden said Wednesantibodies — from the blood day: finding and isolating paof people who survive an tients, finding and educating who's been in contact with illness, or from animals-

ated widespread attention. But it was only the latest step in a

broader, decadelong strategy by Perry and other Republican

with Mexico.

Perry and state officials defend the show of force as a costly but necessary effort to

fection control. "Do those things with me-

stop the smuggling of people

Using modern techniques ticulouscare and Ebola goes to fight Ebola, scientists away," he said. culled antibodies from laboAt least 932 deaths in four

prevent what they call "criminal aliens" from filling up Tex-

ZMapp's maker now grows the antibodies in

t o bacco ported cases.

Smoking Continued from A1 "There's reason to believe that number is much too big,"

said Jonathan Gruber, an economist at the Massachu-

setts Institute of Technology who was an author of the paper. In his view, the agency's analysis cited his past work erroneously.

Cost-benefit analysis The idea of lost happiness

a dangerous precedent that would constrain policymaking for years to come, experts and advocates warned. "This is the single biggest obstacle facing the FDA in executing the job Congress gave it," said Matthew My-

ers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco Free Kids, an advocacy group. "There's no way the FDA can do its

job if this is applied."

Widespreadimpact?

is new for health regulation.

This approach to cost-ben-

But it has surfaced as part of a longstanding require-

efit analysis could also have broader implications for

ment — first codified under former President Bill Clinton

regulations of the food and

beverage industries, which could likewise point to lost regulations with more than pleasurefor sugar, salt or a $100 million effect on the other substances regulators economy needs an analysis seek to limit.

— that every set of federal

to prevent the adoption of

"If this is a beach head into

regulations with high costs this kind of analysis, that and low benefits. should be setting off alarms," The cost-benefit analysis said Lisa Heinzerling, a law is embedded in a proposal professor at G eorgetown from April that would extend the FDA's authority, for the first time, to electronic

University and an author of

"Priceless: On Knowing the Price of Everything and the Value of Nothing," a critique

cigarettesand other tobacco products such as cigars and of cost-benefit analysis. pipe tobacco — with potenThe only previous applicatially large consequences for tion of the happiness loss by the multibillion-dollar tobacco industry. The FDA released a state-

and drugs into Texas and to

frontlines of a border the fed"It's not something the fed-

tainty" surrounding the cal-

culation, and that the agency was helping fund research to

with t r aditional economic theory lay at the heart of the m iscalculation: that m o s t

term pleasure.

political ambitions.

"I'm the governor of the state of Texas," Perry said Sunday on CNN. "My citizens' safety is

action while our border re-

Sometimes the use of peraction on their patrols on the

border. In recent days, one was struck in the head by a rock and another was assaulted as

signs that federal officials in 'Bittersweet situation' Washington disagree with Texas spares no expense. some of Perry's proposals The Pilatus surveillance airand rhetoric. Perry's repeated plane Texas bought in 2012 requests in2009 for federal came loaded with high-dollar officials to put 1,000 National extras, including a $1 million Guard troops on the border thermal imaging system and to help curb what he called $58,000 night-vision goggles. drug-related "spillover vio- Six shallow-water patrol boats lence" were never approved. used by state troopers and Nearly every aspect of Tex- game wardens cost $3.4 milas' border security has been lion. The National Guard dea point of contention. Richard ployment will cost Texas $60 Garcia, the mayor of Edin- million if it lasts five months. burg, in the Rio Grande Valley, In a f i scally conservative questioned the need for the state, whose leaders espouse National Guard, saying crime a low-tax, low-spend mantra, decreased in his city 12 per- the half a billion dollars spent cent last year. on border security has become an exception to the rule. Cross-border crime? "We worry about every In a 2012 interview with dollar that's spent," said state The New York Times, David

Rep. Dennis Bonnen, the Re-

nia, Arizona and New Mexi-

Border Patrol agents answered

threw rocks and fired up to six

scription of South Texas as a

ations. "It's a very bittersweet

co — has made a comparable with a barrage of gunfire, dis- community overrun with car- situation. It's a clear federal investment of money and per- charging 300 rounds. tel-related crime and violence, responsibility, but they choose sonnel. And no other state has

Their response was defend-

as Texas officials often depict

to not do the job, so we have no

a Border Security Operations ed by Texas officials, who said it, was inaccurate. Center, which Texas opened officersfired in self-defense. But officials with the state's in Austin to analyze, map and Game wardens — who carry top law enforcement agency, share border-related intelli- guns and badges as fully com- the Department of Public Safegence with local, state and fed- missioned state peace officers ty, which coordinates border eral agencies. — have no authority to enforce operations, say dozens of slayIn 2010, Bill Richardson, federal immigration laws on ings, assaults, shootings and New Mexico's governor at the border. They instead make kidnappings in Texas have

choice but to fill the holes." Perry and other state offi-

the time, ordered a few dozen

arrests for state crimes, like

been directly related to Mexi-

veillance airplane on the bor-

troops to his state's border after the slaying of an Arizona

human trafficking. "Our guys have the exact same authority as a state trooper," said Mike Cox, a spokes-

can drug cartels. A 2011 report der alone were responsible for by two retired Army generals more than 13,000 arrests, $87 — an assessment that cost Tex- million worth of drug seizures as $80,000 — found that Tex- and the rescue of 137 people, ans were being threatened by a state officials said. "narco-terrorist military-style But high-profile controvercampaignbeing waged against sies have at times overshad-

done in Texas. "It was limited

and it was temporary," Richardson,a Democrat, said of his own deployment. "I think border states have to be careful that they don't over-militarize the border. This is pri-

marily a federal responsibility. I worked with Gov. Perry on border issues. I just think he's

gone a bit too far." The $500 million Texas has

mittee that Texas should be

sion of the rules, it could set

t h e n u mer-

ous other border missions that have focused on fighting drug-rel ated crime and smuggling. And Perry, who is considering running for president again in 2016, has denied his decision to put troops on the border was motivated by his

border with Mexico — Califor-

of a comment period was to

get the best information for But smokers, they said, new regulations before they were different. The vast mabecame final. "Comments jority began smoking before are encouraged and all will age 18, when judgment is be considered," she said. impaired. And many want If the formula for assessing to quit but are addicted and costs and benefits remains forgo the long-term satisfacunchanged in the final ver- tion of better health for short-

deployment, known as Operation Wrangler, Perry said the troops would be forming "12 armed security platoons." The governor and Texas officials have said the new deployment of troops has little to do with the influx of young Central American immigrants flooding the border and will

Aguilar, then the acting com- publican chairman of a House gunshots at officers. The game missioner of U.S. Customs and committee studying the fiscal wardens, Texas Rangers and Border Protection, said the de- impact of Texas border oper-

on border security since 2005. No other state that shares a

spent on border security comes with a caveat. Last month, Per-

would not later regret.

the border, we cannot wait for

he fought with a smuggler resisting arrest. One June morning in 2011 near Mission, drug $500million price tag smugglers trying to protect Texas has spent $500 million a raft loaded with marijuana

people were rational, well-inThe spokeswoman empha- formed market participants sized that the whole purpose making d ecisions t h ey explore the issue.

ment's responsibility to secure

sonnel is jarring. The game wardens have seen high-risk

rancher. But he sees no com-

explanation did not address how much the lost happiness the central assertion made counts. by the economists. An FDA The economists speaking spokeswoman said there is out Wednesday said a basic "still a great deal of uncer- assumption that is consistent

spokeswoman for Perry. "And while Texas taxpayers should not have to bear the burden of fulfilling the federal govern-

cobar, El Paso's Democrat-

ic county judge. "It is such a waste of taxpayer resources, especially when so many fundamental needs are underfunded by the very state leadership that proposes and promotes this waste."

velop its border strategies. Before his 2007 National Guard

what is foremost here."

Dangerouswork

parison with what Perry has

j u st

— From wire reports

eral government has asked him to do," said Veronica Es-

of graphic warning labels on cigarette packagingment Wednesday morning went largely unnoticed, but detailing th e e c onomics the current one is drawing a ttention because of

U.S. will have tosend backsometo badenvironments becausethey don't legally qualify for asylum. Bidenalso said Central American governments areunprepared to makethe tough domestic decisIons needed toaddresssuch problems in their countries.

eral government is responsible mains porous and communifor safeguarding. ties are at risk."

the FDA — to the proposal

behind its analysis, but the

the U.S. by how it treats these children. But BIden warned that the

as jails unrelated to their immigration status. But their opera-

tionshave scoresofdetractors, including some officials in border communities, who say Perry and his supporters have no business using taxpayer dollars to put state officers and National Guard soldiers on the

with football-themed names like Operation Linebacker and Operation Strong Safety. Texas has paid millions of dollars to a private military contractor founded by a retired Armygeneral, John Abrams, to help de-

instead mirror

the U.S. shouldn't think of unaccompaniedchildren showing upat theborderassomeoneelse'schildren,because,hesaidWednesday in Washington, "Theseareour kids." BIden is askIngfor help from attorneys andlegal groups to represent immigrant children apprehended atthe border. Hesaid the rest of the world will judge

as' own version of the Border Patrol on its 1,200-mile border

them and strict hospital in-

countries have been blamed on the illness, with 1,711 re-

Speedy d8pOrtatlOnS —After declaring the surge of Central American migrants crossing the border ahumanitarian crisis, the Obama administration has shIfted sharply to a strategy of deterrence, moving families to isolated facilities and placing them on a fast track for deportation to send ablunt message back homethat those caught entering illegally will not be permitted to stay. Most of the debateoverthe illegal influx has centered onabout 57,000 Unaccompanied minors apprehendedsince October. But the number of minors with parents has increasedevenfaster, nearly tripling to more than22,000 sofar this year from about 8,500 in all of 2013, according to thePewResearch Center. Morethan 40,000 adults and their children — anunprecedented number —were caught along the southwest border, according to the Department of HomelandSecurity. Until recently, most families were released to remain in theUnited States while theIr deportation casesmoved slowly through the courts. But that policy fueled rumors reaching Central America that if parents arrived with young children, they would be givenpermits to stay. Tostop such talk, officials said, they are moving swiftly to expandfamily detention.

Biden These areour kids' —Vice President JoeBIdensays

date back to the 19th cen-

ratory mice, Fauci said, and

include investigating fishing tournament cheaters and arresting drunk boaters.

leaders to patch together Tex-

tury and early diphtheria treatment.

New YorkTimes NewsService

A Texas Department of Public Safety officer patrols the Rio Grande along the U.S.-Mexico border near Mission, Texas, last month. Texas has heavily armed its state officers, some whose routine duties

ry told a congressional com-

man for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, which

oversees game wardens.

With and without the feds

them" by the cartels.

Tom Vinger, a spokesman T exas a u thorities w o r k for the Department of Public closely with the Border Patrol, Safety, said, "The border is coordinating joint operations not secure, and there is amand sharing information. In ple evidence of hundreds of January 2007, when Perry thousands of illegal entries, ordered 600 National Guard multi-ton quantities of drugs, troops to the border — his first stolen vehicles, fugitives and state-initiated border deploy- contraband of every type that ment — some of the soldiers make their way across the were paired with Border Patrol Texas-Mexico border every agents and localpolice officers. single day, week, month and But Texas operates inde- year." Asked if there were inpendently from federal offi- juries or fatalities on either cials, too, often spotting and side of the 300-round barrage responding to suspicious ac- in 2011, he added, "The cartels tivity before the Border Patrol. did not provide a casualty reBorder Patrol officials did not port to law enforcement." Perry's border operations respond to requests for comment about Texas' border op- have a military-style tone in

reimbursedby thefederalgovernment for the half a billion dollars it has spent securing the border dating back to the presidency of Perry's predecessor, George W. Bush. "There can be no national security without border security," said Lucy Nashed, a erations. But there have been

their tactics and equipment,

cials said the effort had made

Texans safer and has led to tens ofthousands of arrests and millions of pounds of drugs seized. The use of state police helicopters and the sur-

owed any success. In 2012, a

state officer in a helicopter, trying to shoot the tires of a pickup truck suspected of carrying drugs nearthe border,killed two unarmed immigrants who were in the country illegally and hiding in the vehicle. Before installing low-cost motion-detecting

cam e ras,

Texas spent millions of dollars on a more advanced video-camera system that allowed

people to watch the live footage on the Internet and report suspicious activity. Known as Texas Border Watch, it resulted in

few apprehensions. The Texas Tribune found in 2010 that the

program led to a total of 26 arrests, which worked out to about $153,800 per arrest.


THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

"l hope every night he closes his eyes, he pictures what happened that night."

Wirkkala

Continued from Af — David Ryder, father of the deceased, about Luke Wirkkaia Wirkkala killed Ryder with a single shot to the neck from a 12-gauge shotgun at close range. Ryder worked at G5 Search rors Wirkkala may have been On Wednesday, Wirkkala's Marketing in Bend as a soft- angry that Ryder had rejected attorneys said he shot Ryder ware engineer. He was mar- his sexual advances, or bein self-defense, describing ried, with a 2-year-old son. cause Ryder was considering Ryder's father, also named moving out of the area. scratches on Wirkkala's neck and bits of W i rkkala's skin David Ryder, addressed the Jurors agreed, convicting found under Ryder's finger- court by phone from Ken- Wirkkala following five hours nails. During the June trial, tucky. He described Wirkkala of deliberation. defense attorney Walter Todd as a "vile human being" with Before announcing Wirkkala's sentence, Forte told the said Ryder was taller than "no regard for human life." Wirkkala and o utweighed "I hope every night he clos- court that despite the asserhim by nearly 50 pounds, and es his eyes, he pictures what tions of the defense team, the argued Ryder was attempting happened that night," the elder jury unanimously rejected the self-defense argument during to force Wirkkala to perform Ryder said. During the trial, prose- the trial. Defense attorneys oral sex on him in the minutes before the shooting. cutorssaid the scratches on maintained that a life sentence In a statement to the court, Wirkkala's neck did not sug- with the possibility of parole Wirkkala maintained his ingest the two men had engaged after 25 years would be disnocence."I felt remorse from in a physical struggle, and proportionate and suggested the second this happened, and that DNA evidence suggested Forte issue a life sentence with every moment since," he said. sexual contact between them the possibility of parole in five "That being said, I believe ev- had been more than "inciden- to 10 years. ery human being has the right tal," as described by Wirkkala. Under Oregon law, life with to self-defense. I was attacked Chief Deputy District Attor- the possibility of parole is in my own home." ney Mary Anderson told ju- the presumptive sentence for

Gays

should not tamper with an

Continued from A1 As they debated the cases, all three judges and several lawyers referred repeatedly to the transformed legal landscape of the past year, in

as marriage, she replied that certificates. bans on interracial marriage Offering poignant props to were also deeply rooted before the argument, three lesbian the Supreme Court found them couples in the case, each with

from other states and to put both parents' names on birth

institution as deeply rooted

unconstitutional. "That was the law across a huge swath of

the Southern states," she said. lower courts and two appeals The third judge, Deborah courts have ruled that gay Cook, another Bush appoincouples have a right to marry, tee, spoke little during the and to the expectation that the unusual proceeding in which Supreme Court would soon one state's case followed anhear the issue. other without any breaks. Sutton did suggest that the But she seemed to favor the arguments offered against right of states to ban same-sex marriageequality were weak, marriage. saying marriage bans would If this court were to rule be hard to defend if subjected againstsame-sex marriage, to the intense "heightened scru- it would create greater prestiny" that courts apply when sure on the Supreme Court to fundamental civil rights are at stake. But he also wondered

rule on the issue to clear up

Court should prevent the panel from declaring same-sex marriage to be a fundamental right deserving court intervention.

In often caustic questions, Judge Martha Craig Daughtrey, the Clinton appointee, left no doubt where she stood. When the lawyer

for Michigan said the courts

Much of the runoff comes from properties with exist-

Also Wednesday night, the City Council voted unan-

retrieving his shotgun from the bedroom, and described the shooting as "no accident."

construction projects to be

mercial development and a

Forte said if not for the ready availability of the shotgun and the two men's heavy drinking leading up to the shootingWirkkala's blood alcohol level

built in such a way that run- park to southeast Bend. Deoff from major storms willbe velopers plan to build Stone

indicated he hesitated before

was measured at 0.08 percent

11 hours after the shooting, and an autopsy put Ryder's

contained on-site, for exam-

Creek on vacant land south

ple, with small landscaped of Reed Market Road and areaswhere water can filter north of Brosterhous Road. into the ground. Neighbors in the area The new stormwater mas- raised concerns that streets ter plan contains 58 new in the area require signifi-

BAC at 0.23 percent at the time

projects, which include struc-

cant pedestrian and bicycle

of his death — the entire episodemight have been avoided.

tures to capture stormwater

improvements in order to be safeforthe increase in traf-

"The combination of alco-

hol and a gun is never, never a good thing," Forte said.

and well holes to allow water to drain into the ground.

fic that will result from the

development. City employees said they are working

Deschutes County jail until he

One major project induded in the plan will address flooding problems at the NW Franklin Avenue underpass,

is transferred into the custody

below the railroad tracks.

erty owner — Lands Bend,

of the Oregon Department of Corrections.

However, Bend Engineering a development company and Infrastructure Planning created by U.S. Rep. Gary Director Tom Hickmann said Miller, R-Calif., and his wife,

Wirkkala will remain at the

— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbullet in.com

well-established fundamental right to marry reflecting shifting social norms, and thus

of the afternoon, their infants

third time this year a U .S.

and again, was whether the The blitz of hearings here federal courts had a right to "is a result of the avalanche overrule the will of the people. "Who gets to decide what of federalcourt decisions on marriage in the last year, all the definition of marriage is?" of them ruling the same way," asked Aaron Lindstrom, solicsaid Susan Sommer, director itor general of Michigan. of constitutional litigation for A second crucial issue in Lambda Legal,which helped Wednesday's hearings and in to represent gay couples from courtsacross the country is Ohio who asked the state to whether same-sex marriage recognize their m arriages is simply an expansion of a

Continued from Af

Other council business: Stone Creek plan approved imously to give final approval to the Stone Creek master plan, which will bring as many as 600 homes, an elementary school, small com-

courtroom gallery for much

senting the states said again

Stormwater ing large impervious surfaces, such as parking lots and driveways. City design standards now require all new

Forte told Wirkkala his own

statements during the trial

alternately cooing and feeding circuit court, the last stage of on bottles. appeal below the Supreme Kentucky and Michigan Court, has considered whethasked the appeals panel to re- er gay couples had a constiverse District Court rulings t utional right t o m a r ry. A striking down their bans on score of lower courts have same-sex marriage, which overturned state restrictions were adopted by voters a de- in the year since the Supreme cade ago. Ohio and Tennessee Court overturned part of the asked the panel to overrule federalDefense of Marriage decisions mandating them to Act, saying it stigmatized gay recognize gay marriages per- families. formed in other states. This week, Utah and a A core issue, lawyers repre- county clerk in Oklahoma pe-

the contradictory decisions whether legalprecedents in the among appeals courts. 6th Circuit and the Supreme

life" sentence with no possibility of parole can be given in cases of aggravated murder.

worthy of constitutional protection, or whether gay couples "seek recognition of a new right," as Kentucky argued. The hearing here was the

a newborn baby, sat in t h e

which more than two dozen

first-degree murder. A "true

on a developmentagreement

with the Stone Creek prop-

earlier this week the city has

Cathleen, along with Harry

recently been able to control these problems through fre-

and Rosalynn Crowell, also of California — to use devel-

opment impact fees Lands mann said the city will con- Bend would have to pay anyquent maintenance. Hicktinue to monitor whether it

way to improve streets in

is necessary to proceed with major improvements at the

and around the project. City Engineer Russell site. Grayson said Wednesday One project not induded on night that Stone Creek dethe list is treatment or filtra- velopers will likely have to tion for untreated storm run- pay more than $2 million in off that still empties into the transportation development Deschutes River from some impact fees alone; there are points in the city's stormwater

also fees for services like

system. Rather, the plan calls sewers and parks. for the city to continue monCity Councilor Russell itoring water quality to de- said it is important for the termine the impact of storm city to keep up with infrarunoff. Stormwater carries structure needs as developsediment into the river and it

also contains nutrients that can encourage the growth of algae, which in turn robs the

ment occurs across the city.

"We don't want to build and get ahead of our capacity," Russell said.

water of oxygen for fish and

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

other aquatic species.

titioned the Supreme Court

for a hearing. More such appeals are expected, and many experts predict the Supreme Court will accept one or more of these appeals this fall, for a

WWII remainsfinally found The Associated Press

decision in 2015. If the Cincin-

BILLINGS, Mont. — U.S.

Remains of 1st Lts. William Bernier, of M ontana,

nati panel or another appeals

military officials have accounted for the remains of

and Bryant Poulsen, of Utah, were ID'd last month through

two World War II airmen 70

DNA and other evidence col-

Court action would be virtual-

yearsafterthey disappeared during a bombing run over

ly certain.

Papua New Guinea.

lected from the Pacific crash site. They will be buried with full military honors.

court rulesagainst same-sex

marriage, resulting in a "circuit split," quick Supreme

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

BRIEFING RedmondAirport starting paving The RedmondAirport will start the first phase

of a two-part runway pavement reconstruction project Aug. 18, according to a news release. The first phase of the project, which will last 90 days, will include reconstruction ofabout 1,300 feet of runway, updating of runway guidance lighting and signs, and runway drainage improvements. The construction contract for the first phase was awarded to High Desert Aggregate and Repaving in the amount of $2.63 million. Phase two of the project will take place in the fall of 2015, andwill include reconstruction of 5,750 feet of runway. The total cost of the project will be about $20 million, said Redmond Airport Director Jeffrey Tripp. Asphalt pavement generally lasts between 20 and 30 years. The last time the airport's runway was reconstructed was in1993. The construction should not causedelays for passengers, but will cause more air traffic to fly over Redmond.

BEND-LA PINE

Sc oosexpecttoa 175stu ents By Tyler Leeds

2009, the district has added

The Bulletin

over 1,000.

Bend-La Pine Schools ex-

pects its student population to grow by 175 this upcoming school year, continuing a trend the district has seen for

The 175 figure is an estimate built on birth rates in the area from five years ago. That cohort, which will enter

kindergarten this year, isn't nearly three decades. the only source of growth. The district has grown The district is also tasked almost constantly since 1986, with estimating how many

into the public system.

closer to 500. Surprises do

"The estimates are generally accurate," said Chief Operations and Financial Officer Brad Henry. "That 175

figure is about a 1 percent increase, so I would say generally we are within a quarter or one-half of a percent.

happen." Henry described estimating the number of families moving to the region during the summer as "more of an art than a science."

"We get a feel for what is happening in the community

There have been years we've

in terms of new homes and

talk to developers to try and

the district and how many

missed by more than that. In the really high growth years,

students will be transitioning

around 2005, we predicted

from private or home school

something like 300 and had

who are buying," Henry said. SeeSchools/B2

with year-to-year enrollment

students will be moving into

dipping only slightly in 2009. Last year, the district added about 260 students. Since

see if it's families or retirees

Krerth + Flls ~(J FIRE UPDATE Beloware the fires reported for Central and Eastern Oregon. More info is online at: • http://inciweb.nwcg. gov/stnt e/38 • http://centrnlorfire info.blogspot.com • www.nwccweb.us/ information/ firemnp.aspx 1. Logging Unit • Acres: 6,644 • Containment: 90% 2. Nene Creek • Acres: 335 • Containment: 60% 3. South Fork Complex • Acres: 35,955 • Containment: 15% 4. Bald Sisters • Acres: 250 • Containment: 0%

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+

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Note: Fires listed above were caused by lightning.

Nonprofit gets $1.1M grant The Heart of Oregon Corps, Inc. will receive a $1.1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Labor, one of 71 YouthBuild programs in the U.S.to receive more than $73 million in federal funding. Heart of Oregon Corps YouthBuild provides classroom and field instruction for kids ages16to 24 so they can work toward their high school diploma or GED, earn college credits and learn job skills. — Bulletin staff reports

x

The Bulletin x ll J

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Andrew Clevenger1 The Bulletin

Friends gather around BobSanders, of Bend, as heconcludes his cross-country fundraising ride. Since Memorial Day, Sanders rode more than 3,900 miles to raise money for Central Oregon Veterans Outreach.

In cross-country bike ride, Bend man raises 6,500 for fellow veterans

STATE NEWS By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

portland Rowena

Eugene

WASHINGTON — At the

end of his cross-country ride to raise money for homeless veterans in Central Oregon,

Bob Sanders got off his bicycle Wednesday with a smile • Rowena:Wildfire threatens 275 homes, B3

• Eugene:University of Oregon President Michael Gottfredson resigns after two years on the job,B3 • Portland:Mayor Charlie Hales says highway tolls are inevitable,B3

Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us!

Sanders, 74, beamed broad- home, Sanders thought about ly as he dismounted, partly be- his commitment to COVO and cause his wife, Kathryn, had his fellow veterans. "Making this also to raise flown in to greet him along

personal glory than honoring his fellow veterans. Other than wearing a fluorescent yellow cycling shirt

with friends who gathered to toast him with champagne at

some money for COVO was a

with "Biking for Vets" written

good motivator," he said. Any time it got particularly hard,

on the back, Sanders said he

he'd just think of those he'd

his fundraising efforts during his trip, but sometimes strangersslipped him cash when

on Memorial Day and biked

the end of his journey. But a large part of Sanders' jubilant mood was knowing he had raised more than $6,500 (and counting) for Central Oregon

more than 3,900 miles over

Veterans Outreach.

on his face. The Bend resident left home

the next 73 days, averaging more than 50 miles a day. Using the Trans Am route popularized during the bicentennial year of 1976, he crossed multiple mountain ranges (Cascades, Tetons, Rockies, Ozarks and Appalachians) and 10 states.

didn't try to call attention to

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

Deschutes............541-383-0367 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 Salem ...................541-383-0367 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Letters and opinions: Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details ontheEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Civic Calendarnotices:

they learned the reason be-

Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, and include acontact name

cross-country ride at the U.S. Marine Corps War Memo-

hind his ride. More often, they

and phone number. Contact:

offered a place to stay, even if

541-383-0354

been on Sanders' bucket list, but turning it into a fundraiser

rial, a nod to the two years

• Schoolnews andnotes:

cemented his resolve to keep going, even in the face of 10 days of headwinds in Wyoming, he said.

Marines. The monument featuresa massive recreation of

it was a horse stall in a barn or a sheepherder's wagon. The proprietor of a fully occupied bed-and-breakfast dragged out a cot and let him sleep in his work shed, Sanders said.

Biking across America had

Any time he thought about

packing it in and heading

be helpingback home, and he kept pedaling. Sanders chose to end his

he spent in Vietnam in the the raising of the U.S. flag in Iwo Jima as captured in the

famous photo, but for Sanders the moment was less about

SeeBike ride/B6

Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to newsCtbendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, DeathNotices:

Well shot! Reader photos

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

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

RedmondSchool District Despite fires, Bend announcesnew principals enjoys dear skies Bulletin staff report The Redmond School Dis-

side recently hired assistant principal Paul Nolan and trict announced Wednesday recently appointed dean of that it has replaced its outgostudents Chad Lowe. ingRedmond High School Current Redmond High principal and Obsidian Middle School assistant principal School principal. Tami Nakamura will take Tony Pupo, assistant prinover as principal at Obsidian cipal at Redmond High, will Middle SchooL She is replactake over as principal. Pupo ing Sandra Harris, who has was originally selected to be accepted a district-level posiplanning principal of the yettion. Additionally, Sam Platt to-be opened Hugh Hartman will replace Andy Martin as Elementary School. He has assistant principal at Obsidibeen assistant principal at the an. Martin resigned last week high school for three years, topursue other professional and has been with the district endeavors. Platt has been an for seven years. educator in the district for Pupo is replacing former eight years. principal Nicole MacTavish, The district has also apwho resigned last week to pointed Rayna Nordstrom as take a position with the Nam- dean of students at Obsidian. pa School District in Nampa, Nordstrom has taught in the Idaho. Pupo will serve alongdistrict for 24 years.

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

While there's plenty of fire around the state and

Northern California, on Wednesday there wasn't

much smoke in Central Oregon. Unless new wildfires

pop up, clear skies should continue today and Friday, said Joe Solomon, a mete-

orologist with the National WeatherServicein Pendleton. West winds caused

the clear skies in Central Oregon and are expected to continue into the weekend.

"It is bringing smoke-free airfrom overtheCascades, basically," he said. Despite fires burning on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation, close to John

Day and near the California-Oregon border, little smoke is making its way to Bend. Checking data from air monitors around Oregon, Greg Svelund, spokesman for the Oregon Department

of Environmental Quality, said most of the state was able to breathe clearly

Wednesday. Burns stood out on themap, though. Smoke from the fires near John

Day blanketed Burns, causing poor air quality. Field burning near Madras started Wednesday, prompting reports of potential new wildfires to

the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville.

SeeSmoke/B2

Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events: Email events tocommunitylife@ bendbulletin comorclickon "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117

Correction In a story headlined "Land donated for Redmond parks," which appeared Wednesday, Aug. 6, on PageB1,the namesofmotherBecky and daughter Betsy Johnson were inadvertently switched. Betsy Johnson is the donor of new parkland to the city of Redmond. The Bulletin regrets the error.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

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

glass or pets; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; CROOK COUNTYFAIR: 541-585-3333. Featuring a talent show, dance SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL performances, live music, bull POPS CONCERT:The Festival riding, barbecue, kids zone and Orchestra performs with Storm more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10 Large from Pink Martini; $35-$45, p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, $30 for seniors 65 and older, $10 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. for children18 and younger; 7:30 crookcountyfairgrounds.com or p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 541-447-6575. NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www. MUNCH 8 MUSIC:Featuring indiesunrivermusic.org, tickets© folk music by the Shook Twins, with sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310. Redwood Son; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake HARDINGS: The Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; THE WARREN G. Seattle bluegrass band performs; www.munchandmusic.com. $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, JOHN HIATTANDTAJMAHAL: 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; The veteran songwriters perform www.volcanictheatrepub.com or with their bands; SOLDOUT; 7 541-323-1881.

TUESDAY

Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; www.sunriversharc.com or 541-585-5000.

WEDNESDAY

TODAY

p.m., doors open 6p.m.; Sunriver

FRIDAY FLASHBACK CRUZ: A classic car show of vehicles from1979 and earlier, with live music and more; see website for detailed schedule; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-480-5560. CROOK COUNTYFAIR: Featuring a talent show, dance performances, live music, bull riding, barbecue, kids zone and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-10 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or 541-447-6575. SUNRIVERARTFAIRE: Anart show with more than 65 booths featuring fine arts and crafts,

entertainmentandfood; proceeds benefit nonprofits in Central Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-7 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriverartfaire.com,

sunriverartfaire©yahoo.comor 877-269-2580. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. JOHN BUTLER TRIO: The Australian jam-rock band performs; $34; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; Athletic Club of Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive; www.c3events.com or 541-385-3062. TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor screening of "The Princess Bride"; bring low-profile chair or blanket, no

Schools

more;$5,21 andolderonly;11 a.m.-7 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. NATIONALS'MORES DAY: Featuring activities, s'mores and more; free; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; Girl Scouts of Oregon and Southwest Washington, 908 NE4th St., No. 101, Bend; www.girlscoutsosw.org, girlscouts@girlscoutsosw.org or 541-389-8146. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS:A fiddle performance; free, donations accepted;1-4 p.m.; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road; 541-462-3736. Bulletin file photo BIGSTOCK 2014: Featuring Lukas Attendees of the 2008 Flashback Cruz in Bend check out the disNelson & POT.R., withthe Jon play of classic cars. This year's car showkicks off Friday. Cleary Trio, Franchot Tone, Lily Meola and Leif James, benefiting Street; sunrise3©coinet.com or punk band Hopeless Jack and The Oregon Adaptive Sports; $100 in SATURDAY 541-536-3007. Handsome Devil plays a benefit advance plus fees; 3 p.m.; Private for Commute Options; $5; 7 p.m.; Residence, Bend; www.j.mp/ FLASHBACK CRUZ:A classic car CROOK COUNTY FAIR: Parrilla Grill, 635 NW14th St., Bend; bigstock2014. show of vehicles from1979 and Featuring a talent show, dance 541-617-9600. earlier, with live music and more; performances, live music, bull CONSIDERTHEFOX: Formerly see website for detailed schedule; riding, barbecue, kids zone and ELTONJOHN— THE EARLY local folk singers Chris Beland free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake more; freeadmission;10a.m.-10 YEARS:Kenny Metcalf recreates and Erin Cole-Baker reunite for Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, a1970s show by the pop star; $8 a concert; $15-$20 suggested Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. m embers, $23 nonmembers,plus donation; 7-9:30 p.m.; The 541-480-5560. crookcountyfairgrounds.com or fees; 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Glen at Newport Hills,1019 541-447-6575. Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. PEDDLERSMARKET:Free; 8 NW Stannium Drive, Bend; org or 541-317-0700. a.m.-3 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., www.j.mp/glenconcertbeland, NORTHWEST CROSSING 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; houseconcertsintheglen© FARMERS MARKET: 10a.m.-2 www.tumalofeedcompany.com, bendbroadband.com or p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. copeddlersmarket©gmail.com or 541-480-8830. Washington and NWCrossing SUNDAY 541-306-8016. drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL or 541-312-6473. TUFF BUTTSPOKERRUN: FLASHBACK CRUZ:A classic car CLASSICALCONCERTI: A tribute Featuring a 300-plus-mile ride to Lawrence Leighton Smith; show of vehicles from 1979 and SUNRIVERARTFAIRE:An art through the mountains, forests and show with more than 65 booths earlier, with live music and more; $35-$70, $10forchildren18and badlands, to benefit the Central see website for detailed schedule; younger; 7:30 p.m.; Sunriver Resort featuring fine arts and crafts, Oregon Veterans and Families; 8 Great Hall, 17600 Center Drive; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; Drake entertainment and food; proceeds a.m.; Redmond VFWHall, 1836 SW www.sunrivermusic.org, tickets© Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., benefit nonprofits in Central Veterans Way; crazyhorse@coinet. Oregon; free;10 a.m.-7 p.m.; The Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310. com or 541-280-5161. 541-480-5560. Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver NORA 8 THE JANITORS: The Drive; www.sunriverartfaire.com, MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET: 9 North Dakota prairie-goth band RUN FOR ACHILD SK:Community sunriverartfaire©yahoo.com or a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh performs, with Lawrence, Jennifer; fun run and fundraiser for 877-269-2580. and B streets; 541-546-6778. Shriners Hospitals for Children; free; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; "THE OLDMAID AND THE THIEF": $25, registration required; 9 AVENUE OFTHEARTS: www.volcanictheatrepub.com or Gian Carlo Menotti's one-act opera a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Featuring art, crafts, food and live 541-323-1881. about the charm of small-town life; Columbia St., Bend; www. entertainment on Cook Avenue; 10 shrinersrunforachild.com. a.m.-5 p.m.; downtown Tumalo; free, donations accepted; 3and 7 www.centraloregonshows.com, p.m.; Central Oregon Community SUNRIVER ARTFAIRE:An art centraloregonshows©gmail.comor College, Pinckney Center for the show with more than 65 booths MONDAY 541-420-0279. Arts, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend; featuring fine arts and crafts, www.cascadiaconcertopera.org or entertainment and food; proceeds MAMA DOLL: The Washington CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY 541-349-0377. benefit nonprofits in Central folk band performs, with Bobcat MARKET:Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking SHAKIN' DOWNTHEHOUSE: Night Oregon; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Rob Armenti; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver lot across from Downtown Bend of DJ music for dancers of all ages; Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Drive; www.sunriverartfaire.com, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com Public Library, 600 NWWall St.; proceeds benefit Unity Community 541-420-9015. and Healthy Beginnings; $10, $15 sunriverartfaire©yahoo.com or or 541-323-1881. 877-269-2580. per couple, $20 per family; 6:30THE DRIP:The Washington metal CHICKENCOOP & GARDEN 9:30 p.m.; High Desert Community BAND TOGETHERBENEFIT: band performs, with Death Agenda, TOUR:Visit 20 different gardens, Grange, 62855 Powell Butte Road, greenhouses, coops and more; Fundraiser for Diane Robbins, who E.F.A., Existential Depression and Bend; www.unitycentraloregon.com needs heart surgery, featuring The $10 per car;10a.m.-3 p.m.; La Hogs Breath; free; 9 p.m.; Third or 541-389-1783. Pine Little Deschutes Grange Hall Rock Hounds, Fun Bobby, Out of Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. No. 939, Morson Road and Third SHOW US YOURSPOKES:Bluesthe Blue, Bobby Lindstrom and

expect growth in the southeast proofofaddress,like a piece

to have plenty of space, but

and northeast, and certainly in

some schools are crowded already, and additional students

of mail or a driver's license.

Continued from B1

the NorthWest Crossing neighborhood. But, again, the quesjority of growth to come from tion is really, 'Who's buying?'" families new to the region. For families who do move to The new kindergarten class the area, the district is urging is projected at 1,209 students, parents to register their chilonly 61 students larger than dren beforeschool starts on the senior class that just grad- Sept. 3. Most of the district's uated, meaning 114of the ex- middle and high schoolswill pected 175 students are part of have registration days listed an influx to the system. on their websites, but for ele-

They should also have immunization records, and if they're on top of that could be diffikindergartners or new to pub- cult for a school.We want to lic schools,they should have a be surewe're ready for allthe birth certificate." kids and have enough materiDoty said every year some als and teachers." kids arrive on day one without Students also directly benbeingregistered, and the par- efit from early registration, ents are required to complete Doty said, as her school inthe same forms before their vites kindergartners for an aschild is placed into a class.If sessment beforeclass begins, Just as important as num- mentary schools,parents can they come on the first day of allowing teachers to create bers, however, is location, as come into their neighborhood school,the student can usual- "balancedclassrooms." "We look at a v a r iety of where families move can af- school any weekday before ly be placed that day, but if it's fect which schools become class starts. later in the year, there is usual- things, such as literacy, math, "There's a packet of paper- ly a day wait. crowded. At the beginning of the ability to follow directions "It ca n c a use p r oblems, and focus," Doty said. "With the last school year, 17 of the work we need to have filled district's 27 buildings were at, out, and parents should plan because, for one, if we don't t hat information, we tr y t o near or over capacity. to be in the school for 20 or know how many students build classrooms that have a "Just from driving around 30 minutes," said La Pine El- are coming,we may nothave variety of students." town, you see a lot of building ementary Principal Tammy enough teachers," Doty said. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, everywhere," Henry said. "We Doty. "They should bring "We're fortunate in my school tleeds@bendbulletirt.com

Continued from B1 "We had a lot of calls on it," said Lisa Clark, dispatch cen-

ter spokeswoman. Field burns typically send up a big, black column of smoke. " (They put) up a lot o f smoke very quickly," she said. While the smoke plumes from the field burns raised alarm, they didn't lower air

quality in Madras, according to DEQ air monitor data. Field-burning season in Jefferson County s t arted July 21 and runs until Sept.

More smoke informationonline The state — along with city, county, tribal and federal agencies — maintains a blog focused onwildfire smoke during fire season. The blog is at oregonsmoke.bl ogspot.com. For more information about field burning in Jefferson County go to the Jefferson County SmokeManagement Program website at www.jeffcosmoke.com.

fields for winter, according to the Jefferson County Smoke Smoke M anagement Pro- M anagement Prog r a m gram, although the first field website. "The fields must reach a burns of the season were held Wednesday. specific point of growth, or 19, said Kristi Fisher, man-

ager of the Jefferson County

"We are in the middle of our

they will not survive the win-

burn season," she said. Rules ter," according to the website. restrict field burning on the

W hile winds the r est of

weekend, holidays and during some events, such as the Air-

the week should keep the air clear in Central Oregon, more

show of the Cascades later this month.

thunderstorms in the forecast

Seed growers burn fields

couldbring new wildfires. The Weather Service ex-

to clear away wheat stubble

pects a slight chance of thun-

and then haveenough time derstorms Friday in Bend. to plant seed crops like grass — Reporter: 541-617-7812, and carrots and prepare the

ddarling@bendbulletitt.com

PUBLIC OFFICIALS CONGRESS • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Bldg. Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RenWyden, D-Ore. 223 Dirksen SenateOffice Bldg. Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden.senate.gov Bendoffice: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142 • Rep. Greg Walden, R-Heod River 2182 Rayburn HouseOffice Bldg. Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBond St., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408

LEGISLATURE • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-District30 (Jefferson, portion of Deschutesi 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp,R-District 27 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR97301

Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whitsett, R-District28 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state. ol;us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett • Rep. Jason Conger, R-District54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger©state. OI'.Us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. JohnHuffman,R-District 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state. oi;us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. MikeMcLane, R-District55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. GeneWhisnant, R-District53 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant©state. ol'.Us

Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

WEDNESDAYSONTHEGREEN: Local practitioners offer massage, astrology, tarot reading and more; donations accepted of nonperishable food items for Neighborlmpact; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; The Cosmic Depot,342 NE Clay Ave., Bend; www.thecosmicdepot.

com, cosmicdepot@msn.comor 541-385-7478. BEND FARMERSMARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Street, between NWFranklin and NWOregon avenues; www. bendfarmersmarket.com. TURKEY FEED:Featuring a smoked turkey feed, a raffle, slideshow and more to benefit the Battle Buddies of Central Oregon; $8, $5 for children 12 and younger; 5-8 p.m.; Redmond VFW Hall, 1836 SWVeterans Way; www.battlebuddiesco.org, cobattlebuddy©gmail.com or 541-390-7956. MUSIC IN THECANYON: Featuring live music by bluegrass band Blackstrap, food vendors and more; free; 5:30-8 p.m.; American LegionCommunity Park,850 SW Rimrock Way, Redmond; www.

musici nthecanyon.com. PICNIC IN THEPARK:Featuring live Cajun rock by Kelly Thibodeaux & Etouffe; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pioneer Park, 450 NE Third St., Prineville. THE PARSON REDHEADS:The

Oregon bandpresents "Songs from Laurel Canyon"; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. THE HOOTEN HALLERS: The Missouri blues band performs, with Death Polka; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

NEws OF REcoRD

The district expects the ma-

Smoke

TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor screening of "Rio 2"; bring lowprofile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road; 541-585-3333. SUNRIVER MUSICFESTIVAL CLASSICALCONCERT II:"My Dearest Clara" featuring all Brahms music; $35-$70, $10for children 18 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Sunriver Resort Great Hall,17600 Center Drive; www.sunrivermusic.org, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310.

POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynew information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theit —A theft was reported at 3:26 p.m. Aug. 2, in the 500block of SE Sixth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 6:33 p.m. Aug. 3, in the 20500 block of Builders Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:30 p.m. Aug. 4, in the1400 block of NW Newport Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at 7:36 a.m.Aug. 5, in the 3000 block of NWClubhouse Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 1:27 p.m. Aug. 5, in the900 block of Bond Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:13 p.m. Aug. 5, in the61300 block of Wild Rapids Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:20 P m Aug 5 inthe800blockof NW

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Wall Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:02 a.m. Aug. 3, in the100 block of NE BendRiver Mall Avenue.

PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:19 a.m. Aug. 5, in thearea of NW Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:37 a.m. Aug. 5, in thearea of NW Harwood Street.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Justin Lee Corley, 28, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at8p.m.Aug.5, intheareaof U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost142.

BEND FIRE RUNS Tuesday 10:19 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 19165 BakerRoad. 20 —Medical aid calls.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

UO president resigns after 2 years By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

SALEM —

U n iversity of

Oregon President Michael Gottfredson stepped down Wednesday effec tive almost i mmediately after j ust t w o

years on the job. In a letter to Board of Trustees Chairman Chuck Lillis,

"President Gottfredson entered into the role as president of the University of Oregon at a critical time in our university's history and led the institution from a state of uncertainty to a path of stability."

our family, so I believe now is the right time to transition

the university's new Board of Trustees. "President Gottfredson en-

tered into the role as president of the University of Oregon at

a critical time in our university's history and led the institu-

— Board of Trustees Chairman Chuck Lillis tion from a state of uncertain-

ty to a path of stability," Lillis,

Gottfredson cited a desire to spend more time with family. He did not give a reason for The board has scheduled a the suddenness of his depar- meeting for today in Eugene to ture. His resignation is effec- discuss its next steps. tive today. Previously a senior admin"My scholarly interests istrator at the University of beckon and Karol and I would California at Irvine, Gottfredlike more time to spend with

wide board that hired him to

the board chairman, said in a statement.

Lillis praised Gottfredson for leading the university ty system. through an NCAA investigaGottfredson was an aggres- tion of its football program, a sive backer of a plan to break statewide debate about highgovernance of the university er education governance and son took the helm at the Uniaway from the state Board labor negotiations with a new versity of Oregon in summer of Higher Education. After faculty union. 2012. His tenure followed the

of not being a team player

KOCh dratherS ad —The debate in Oregon's U.S. Senate contest has, in its early stages, focused more ongovernment spending and the federal budget than onthe health care issues that were expected to dominate. Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley and a conservative group trying to help his Republican rival, Monica Wehby,haveboth highlighted a 2011Senate vote that would have endorsed a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget. Merkley opposed it, and says he'd vote against it again. Wehbysays shewould havesupported it had shebeen inthe Senate. OnWednesday, a political group backed by the conservative Koch brothers, took to the airwaves with its first ad in a blitz that could ultimately cost $3.6 million. The ad attacks Congress for government spending andbudget deficits, pointing to Merkley's vote against the balanced budget amendment and in favor of raising the debt ceiling. "Tell Sen. Merkley: Put Oregon families first. Stop Washington's wasteful spending," a narrator says at the end.

within the statewide universi-

state lawmakers signed off,

But the university was wide-

Gottfredson got a new panel ly criticized this year over its ident who can continue the Lariviere, who was fired in of bosses last month as over- handling of allegations of sexlegacy of this great university," 2011 after he refused to step sight of the university pres- ual assault against three basGottfredson wrote. down. Lariviere was accused ident shifted from the state- ketball players.

the leadership to a new pres-

AROUND THE STATE

rocky departure of Richard

Police:Womanfound deadcommitted suicide The Associated Press

was found wearing the same of the property where her ve- alone to grieve. clothes she wore July 24, the hicle was found, police said. Huston's d i sappearance woman missing for nearly day she vanished. The fuel gauge registered sparked an intense search and two weeks before her body Detectives and the medical full, and there was no evi- extensive Internet speculation. was found along a rural road examiner think the married dence of a crash or damage to Her husband, Kallen Huscommitted suicide by asphyx- mother of two young boys the SUV. ton, told reporters shortly after iation, the state medical ex- died "fairly close" to the time In a s tatement released his wife disappeared that she aminer's office and police said she was reported missing through police, Huston's fam- had complainedofheadaches Wednesday. on July 25, police Capt. Jeff ily said, "Our hearts ache in recent days. The couple Toxicology results are not Kosmicki said in a statement. today. We have lost our first- would have celebrated their yet available for Jennifer Detectives also found a note born child. We have lost a wife 10th wedding anniversary Huston, 38, of Dundee, New- addressed to the woman's and a mother. next week. "We don't know what led berg-Dundee police said. An family. Dundee is about 25 miles empty box of sleeping aids Her SUV was found Tues- Jennifer to this dark place and southwest of Portland. was found at the scene, police day, parked along a rural to this end and perhaps never said. logging road about 25 miles will understand this. "We are incredibly thankful Video footage from the southwest of her home. Her day H uston d i sappeared body was found about 40 to family, friends, community showed her withdrawing a yards from the vehicle. Kos- and media for their searching, small amount of money from micki did not immediately re- supporting and getting the inan ATM, fueling her SUV turn a call seeking additional formation out that led to locatand buying Gatorade, trail details on the report. ing Jennifer's car and finding bendbulletin.com mix and what police earliDetectives have not estab- Jennifer." er described as a nonlethal lished any connection beRelatives said through pohe u et ln amount of sleeping pills. She tween Huston and the owners lice that they wanted to be left

HlghWajl iOIIS —Portland Mayor Charlie Hales saystolls on Oregon highways areinevitable. Hetold KOINthe money is neededfor maintenance, asfederal funding fades. Hales expects tolls could be added to U.S.Highway 26and Interstate 5 in the city. He ran into opposition from businessesandothers in May when heproposed street fees for safety andmaintenance.TheOregon Department of Transportation has madeseveral feasibility studies of tolling and also has studied a GPS-basedvehicle mileagetax as awayto generate revenue. Drug Settlement —Oregon will receive $1.2 million as part of a $35 million settlement with a pharmaceutical giant over the marketing of one of its drugs. Forty-two states are involved in the settlement with Pfizer Inc., the parent company ofWyeth Pharmaceuticals Inc., to resolve allegations that Wyeth misrepresented the usesand benefits of the drug Rapamune.Rapamunewas approved to help patients' bodies prevent the rejection of kidney transplants. The states alleged the company promoted the drug to doctors for uses following other organ transplants, such as livers or hearts, and promoted its use in unapproved drug combinations. Oregonwas oneof two lead states in the settlement. The moneywill go into the state's consumer protection and education account.

PORTLAND — An Oregon

Find It All Online

GraSS Seed yieldS —The grass seedharvest in the mid-Willamette Valley is wrapping up, and local farmers havebegun combining wheat and clover fields. Clare Sullivan, the new seed crops specialist in the Linn County office of the OSUExtension Service, said most farmers she hastalked to report a good — but not stellar — yields. "I haven't heard much grumbling aboutyields, so they must not be too bad," Sullivan said. — From wire reports

%od, Home & Garden In

AT HOME • • Th eBulletin

Denture it Implant Center

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

The Associated Press A n ew

wildfire pushed by gusting w inds i s

th r e atening t h e

small Columbia River Gorge community of Rowena, where residents of 275 homes had

been told to evacuate as of Wednesday night. Fire spokesman Dave Wells

saysthefirem ade arun along the river Wednesday evening. He says as smoke cleared,

flames from the fire were visible from The Dalles, a city of about 14,000 that is about 6

miles from the blaze. Wells says an unknown n umber of r esidents in a n

Mark B. Gibson 1 The Dalles Chronicle

A wildfire is threatening homes inRowena and on the crest above.

outlying The Dalles neighbor- Spokesman Justin de Ruyter says local fire crews battled through hood were told to be ready to

the early morning Tuesday against the brush and timber fire in

leave if necessary. So far, no homes have

Rowena, an unincorporated community of fewer than 200.

b urned. W e ll s

s a i d fi r e -

fighters planned to w o rk more than 30 mph. through the night protecting A section of U.S. Highway residences. Fire spokesman Justin de

30 was closed in the area. Ro-

wena is about 75 miles east of Ruyter says five helicopters Portland. dropped water on the blaze The fire began in brush earlier as winds gusted to Tuesday night and quick-

ly spread to about 200 acres of timber and scrub oak in rocky, steep terrain. It grew on Wednesday but no updated acreagefigure was available pending an i n frared flight scheduled overnight.

Day CarePIOVideiSCanno lOnger hOld

medical marijuanacards, state says By Jonathan J. Cooper

changed course after media re-

the Associated Press

ports highlighted the issue.

SALEM Home-based day care centers are no places

for medical pot, Oregon has decided. That decision on Wednesday

of requirements for people that are using Vicodin," said AnthoD emocratic G o v . Joh n ny Taylor ,an advocateform edKitzhaber has also taken heat ical marijuana patients. "You from his Republican rival, state don't make these kinds of reRep. Dennis Richardson. quirements for people who are "There's a question about using methadone." whether or not somebodywho's The rule takes effect imme-

by a state board was prompted by revelations that the owners under the influence of cannabis of at least five home-based day can really provide that quality carecentershad medical mar- early learning experience," said ijuana cards and were allowed Pam Curtis, chair of the Early to use the drug on the premises. Learning Council, which was One center was already shut appointed by Kitzhaber to overdown for unrelated potential see early childhood education. rules violations, but the own- "What the council said today ers of four others will have to was, 'We don't think so.'" choose between their businessAdvocates of th e m edicinal-pot program objected to es or their marijuana cards. The state had long viewed Wednesday's move, saying medical marijuana as a pri- childcare providers aren'tprovate health manner and did not hibited from usingmedications, disclosethe presence of mar- including narcotics. ijuana to parents, but officials

"You don't make these kind

diately and lasts six months.

The Early Learning Council will consider a permanent rule in January,after voters decide

whether to legalize marijuana forrecreational use. The rule allows others who live in the home — but aren't

licensed child-care providers — to hold medical marijuana cards, but the drug can't ever be stored in the home. It also

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B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

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e e e andidates Knute Buehler and Craig Wilhelm appeared to agree on many issues during their first debate this weekin the race to replace Jason Conger as state representative for House District 54. But it's differences voters will needto explore tomake their choice. Weheardsomehints, whichneed elaboration in future encounters. Cover Oregon: Both candidates bemoaned the disasterof Cover Oregon. But Wilhelm, the Democratic nominee, hinted at support for Obamacare as he talked about the benefit of many people gaining health insurance. He mentioned his brother, who has Type 1 diabetes, getting coverage for the first time as an adult. Buehler, the Republican nominee, stressed the importance of the state's experiment in coordinated care organizations and the advantage of his insider knowledge as a doctor. Leadership: Buehler said leadership is about developing relationships and cited support he's received from former Democratic officials. Wilhelm talked about his military experience, leading from the front and never asking his soldiers to do something he wouldn't do himself.

OSU-Cascades expansion: Both candidates spoke of the important benefits a four-year college will bring and the need to get together to make it happen, but Wilhelm expressed concern about the way the project has been rolled out. The controversial subject of location was never mentioned. Affordable housing: The two agreed onthe need formore affordable housing, but Wilhelm also mentioned the value of using the land we already have available. That's likely a reference to the contentious subject of infill, which emphasizes making the city more densely populated over enlarging the boundaries that limit development. M arijuana legalization: T h e clearest difference between the candidates came on this issue, which will be on the ballot in November. Wilhelm focused on the idea of using marijuana tax revenue for education and being sure small businesses get a share of the action. Buehler said the best way to control something is to tax and regulate rather than criminalize. However,he added that Oregon would be smart to wait a few years to learn from the process now going on in Colorado and Washington. Mental health services: The two candidates agreed that existing mental health services are inadequate. Wilhelm talked about the need to break the stigma of mental illness and help veterans. Buehler said Oregon is one of the worst in the nation on this subject and that adequate state funding is needed.

He cited the CCO model as an approach that might show a way to integrate physical and mental health care. Top-two primaries: Discussing another issue that will be on November's ballot, Buehler was enthusiastically in support, saying the measure would increase fairness and competition. Wilhelm recalled that voters said no to a similar measure in 2008 and said he is worried the change would increase the campaign time frame and therefore inject more money into politics. He also said voters might be confused by the need to have a different process forpresidentialelections, which wouldn't be affected by the change. Oregon Student Opportunity Fund:Buehlerblasted thisproposed effort to make college tuition more affordable. He said it would take up too much of the state's bonding capacity in a risky bet on investments. He favored a private, nonprofit approach such as the current fundraising effort for the Knight Cancer Institute at Oregon Health & Science University. Wilhelm spoke instead about an alternative idea to raise money for tuition, using undaimed funds from dass-action lawsuits that now are returned to corporations. In opening and closing statements, Wilhelm emphasized his combat experience, saying that because he led 200 soldiers in combat, he knows whatit takes tobringfolks together. The West Point graduate served in the military for 14 years, at the Pentagon as well as in Iraq and Afghanistan. He earned amaster's degree in business administration from Duke University's Fuqua School of Business and established his own metals recyclingbusiness. Buehler said he is a "fixer, not a partisan fighter" and promised to listen to both sides and make decisions based on facts. The orthopedic surgeon earned a bachelor's degree from Oregon State University, a master's from Oxford University and his doctorate in medicine from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. The Bend Chamber of Commerce, which hosted the Tuesday debate, offered voters a valuable direct look at the candidates without the filters of campaign ads or news reports. We urge those who organize future candidate events to plan for follow-up questions thatwill help refine the differences hinted at in this first encounter.

Justice system, not schools, should prosecute rapists By Jay Ambrose

There's an alternative f you believe statistics mouthed that's the opposite of

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

t

by your president, and if you still define rape as it has been traditionally defined — sexual in-

dodging the issue, and that's to rely instead on

tercourse without consent, usually

using force — our universities have become some of the most dangerous places in the world.

The argument of the White House and a multitude of others, you see,

expert police officers, well-trained prosecutors, experienced judges and just legal traditions.

is that the male students are raping

an astonishing 20 percent of the female students. In an online article, bly hurtful, although some of what Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the people now insist is rape was conManhattan Institute, cannot help sensual. And while consent under facetiously wondering how mothers certain extreme circumstances may can bear to "send their daughters off be dubious, it is worse than dubious to a crime scene of such magnitude, to paint guilt with the broad bushes unmatched even in the most brutal too many employ. It is in part by this African tribal wars." technique that we get the exaggeratWell, the alarmists explain, it is ed claims, some critics note as they an epidemic, and yes, it is: an epi- also point to d r amatically lower demic of hyperbole, of redefining percentage estimates based on difterms to mean something they have ferent surveys and the federal gov-

themselves. What has emerged are disgracefully amiss, costly campus boards of academics and bureaucrats sometimes ruining lives without granting basic rights and sometimes earning potentially devastating lawsuits in return. There's an alternative that's the

opposite of dodging the issue, and that's to rely instead on expert police officers, well-trained prosecutors,

experienced judges and just legal traditions. Imperfect, yes, but why not turn to the real thing instead of

something foolishly fabricated? Ann Neal, president of the American Council of Trustees and Alum-

ni, is for that. Universities and colleges are fumbling scarily enough with their educational purposes without making them "investigators, juror, executioners," she per-

suasivelycontended on a recent "PBS NewsHour" TV show. Other forces are coming at the

schools from an opposite direction, such as the education department campus rapes. investigating college and univerThese lower estimates are hardly sities that have not found as much definitive, either, but do appear far rape as foretold by the statistical m ore defensi ble and far less a jus- mystics. Also, an outraged group of tification — if there were any at all senators has formulated abill meant — for the Department of Education to make universities still more obedemanding in 2011 that colleges and dient to their regulatory betters even universities address alleged sexual as it hints at some reasonableness. assaults of students by instituting Universities do have obligations their own substitute criminal justice here. As a way to get at issues law system. Skip that duty and you skip enforcement will not address, they federalfunds,said an assistantsec- need stricter campus rules like retary who clearly knew how to get those that really did work once upon

not previously meant, of ultra-casu-

ernment's own record of reported

al "hook-up" sex, of rampant campus drunkenness and, when you inspect some of its supposed solutions,

of a government out of control. If instead of overstatement we got measured reflection, we could still

agree there are real problems and address them more intelligently. Female students have in fact been

subjected to something awful. It includes big-time boozing and starts with a society parts of which have

taught too many of them that freewheeling, emotionally detached sex the attention of administrators. for the fun of it is jim-dandy as long As dictated by the feds, the colas they keep it safe. What obviously lege proceedings could suspend can follow is young men taking ea- and expelthe accused afterdenying ger advantage of the situation. the kind of due process others say The opportunism can be despica- is crucialforthe accused to defend

a time. It wouldn't hurt, either, to tell

a hyperventilating government that campuses are not the most danger-

ous hangouts in America. — Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist forMcclatchy-Tribune.

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Encourage capita ism, not autocracy, in A rica ames Mwangi grew up on the slopes of the Aberdare Moun-

Jlost his life during the Mau Mau uptains in central Kenya. His father

rising against the colonial authorities. His mother raised seven chil-

dren, making sure both the girls and the boys were well educated. Everybody in the family worked at a series of street businesses to pay the bills. He made it to the University of Nairobiand became an accountant.The

big Western banks were getting out of retail banking, figuring there was no money to be made catering to the

poor. But, in 1993, Mwangi helped lead a small mutual aid organization, called Equity Building Society, into the vacuum. The enterprise that became Equity

Bankwould give poor Kenyans access tobankaccounts. Mwangiwould cater to streetvendors and small-scale farm-

and was losing about $58,000 a year.

The future, he continued, belongs to

As Howard French, the author of

illiberal regimes like China's and Sin- "China's Second Continent," points gapore's — autocratic systems that put out, China gives African authoritarDAVID emphasis from mortgage loans to the interests of the community ahead ians an investor who doesn't ask too BROOKS small, targeted loans. of individual freedom. many questions. The centralized modKenyans got richer, the middle class Orban's speech comes at a time el represses unhappy minority groups. boomed and Equity Bank surged. By when the battle of the regimes is play- lt gives local elites the illusion that if 2011, Equity had 450 branches and a widespread growth, even in emerging ing out with special force in Africa. they concentrate power in their own customer base of 8 million — nearly markets. After the end of the Cold War, the hands they'll be able to move decisivehalf of all bank accounts in the counThat theory is under threat. Over number of African democracies shot ly to lift their whole nation. try. From 2000 to 2012, Equity's pretax the past few months, we've seen the upward. But many of those countries This week, President Barack profit grew at an annual rate of 65 per- beginning of a global battle of re- are now struggling politically (South Obama is holding a summit meeting cent. In 2012, Mwangi was named the gimes, an intellectual contest between Africa) or economically (Ghana). of African leaders in Washington. Ernst & Young World Entrepreneur of centralized authoritarian capitalism Meanwhile, authoritarian Rwanda is But U.S. influence on the continent the Year. and decentralized liberal democratic famously well managed. is now pathetically small compared Mwangi has also become a celebrat- capitalism. China's aggressive role in Africa is with the Chinese and the Europeans. ed representative of the new African On July 26, Prime Minister Viktor helping to support authoritarian ten- The joke among the attendees is that entrepreneurial class, which now de- Orban of Hungary gave a morbidly dencies across the continent, at least China invests money; America holds fines the continent as much as famine, fascinating speech in which he argued among the governing elites. Total Chi- receptions. malaria and the old scourges. that liberal capitalism's day is done. nese trade with Africa has increased But what happens in Africa will But Mwangi's story is something The 2008 financial crisis revealed that twentyfold since 2001. When Uganda have global consequences. If African else. It's a salvo in an ideological war. decentralized liberal democracy leads was looking to hire a firm for an $8 nations succumb to the delusion of auWith Equity, Mwangi demonstrated to inequality, oligarchy, corruption billion rail expansion, only Chinese tocracy, we'll have Putins to deal with that democratic capitalism really can and moral decline. When individu- firms were invited to apply. Under Ja- for decades to come. Mwangi told the staff to emphasize customer care. He switched the firm's

ers. At the time, according to a profile by Anver Versi in African Business servethe masses. Decentralized, bot- als are given maximum freedom, the Magazine, the firm had 27 employees tom-up capitalism can be the basis of strongend up steppingonthe weak.

cob Zuma, South Africa is trying to

copy some Chinese features.

— David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.


THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

WEST NEWS

BITUARIES Sherry Larson

Jacqueline Ann

July17, 1937 - August 4, 2014

Morgan Murray

S herry L a r son, b or n i n Salem, OR J ul y 1 7 , 1 937, died from leukemia August 4, 2014. Her family moved to Klamath Falls in 1940, and she g raduated f r o m K l a m a t h U nion i n 1 9 55. W h il e a t tending Portland State, she played softball and participated in two world tournaments. Sherry t r a nsferred to OSU and graduated with a teaching degree in 1959. She taught in G r ants Pass a nd helped s t ar t a g ir l s t rack program, leading t o the first girls' state champs. She spent the last 23 years t eaching a nd coac h i n g sports at C a scade M i ddle School in Eugene. After retiring in 1991 she built a home in LaPine with a rtner, Reda W e bb. S h e

Nev. 26, 1974- June30, 2014

J acqueline (Jackie) M u r ray, 39, of B e nd, Oregon, p assed away o n J u n e 3 0 , 2014 in Spring, Texas. She wa s b o r n i n San Rafael, California Novemb er 26 , 1 974 a n d m oved t o B end, Or egon when she was 6 y ears ol d. She Jackie Murray gr a d uated f rom B e n d S e n io r H i g h S chool i n 1 9 9 3 a n d a t tended Utah V a l ley S t ate University i n O r em , U t ah. She married Aaron Murray in April of 1998. J ackie w a s a devo t e d oved her family, singing, a nd p o etry , w a s a l w a y s mother and friend. She had willing to help anyone, and a strong c o m m itment t o s ervice and w a s v er y i n had a good sense of humor. volved in f un d r a i sing for Sherry is survived by her brother, Ron Larson; sister, the American Cancer SociJeanne Paillette (and hus- ety, most recently with the b and, T e d) ; n i e ce, T r a c i Relay for L i f e i n K l a math Cole (her children, Jarron, Falls, Oregon. Jackie is survived by her Eddie and Saige); nephews, B arry, B r y a n a n d S t e v e husband, Aaron; and three P aillette; p a r t n er , Red a c hildren, K a y a Mur r a y , W ebb; best f r i ends, N i n a S amuel M u r ra y a n d Z o e M urray, a l l of Sp r in g , Edwards and Louise Gano. S herry's f uneral w i l l b e Texas. She is also survived by her parents, B r ent and held 2:00 p.m. Friday, Aug ust 8 a t E t e rnal H i ll s i n Patty M o r g an , a n d her Klamath Falls. Wear casual brother, Burke Morgan, all of Bend, Oregon. She was or camo! predeceased by her grandparents, Willard and Betty Leighton of Bend, Oregon,

Bryce Mathew Rasmussen

Jan. 31, 1997 te Aug. 1, 2014 aka: Buddy

Brycey Boy

Moose B ryce a t t e nde d M o u n tain View High School. He w as 17 y e ar s o l d . B r y c e loved God w ith all h is h e a r t a nd w a s

and Byrnece M o rgan of

Provo, Utah. A memorial service will be h eld for h e r a t 1 : 0 0 p . m . Saturday August 9, 2014 at the LDS Church on Shevlin Park Rd. in Bend, Oregon.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

very passionate about others

knowing Christ. He l oved h i s

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

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

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Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

By Melena Ryzik New York Times News Service

NICE, Calif. — An aban-

doned recreational vehicle was the first clue. In this hamlet two hours north of

San Francisco and barely a mile from the largest

Deathsof notefrom around the world: Dr. Jesse Steinfeld, 07: First

era. Died Tuesday in Pomona,

California, following a stroke last month.

Edward Joyce, 01:Former president of CBS News who in the mid-1980s helped steer the so-called "Tiffany net-

work" through a $120 million libel suit by Gen. William W estmoreland, d eep

s taff

reductions and several takeover threats. Died Saturday at his home in Redding, Connecticut, after being treated for throat cancer for many years.

',ir v',v

n atural f r eshwater l a k e in the state, the trailer sat

on a hill, hidden from the main drag. Behind it rose a flimsy fence, tall enough to shield its bounty: 50 marijuana plants in hastily constructed wooden boxes. "This is common," said Michael Lockett, the chief

building official here in Lake County, giving a tour of the n ow-derelict plot,

where a pipe ran from a stream to a tank.

l a rge water

It was just one of hundreds of illegal marijuana operations in Lake CounJason Henry/New YorkTimes News Service ty, officials said, some of A recently busted marijuana operation in Morgan Valley, California, used a pipe to divert water from a which have been divert-

nearby stream — an illegal but common use of water during California's drought crisis.

ing water for thousands of plants.

Legal pot plants, illegal water

the county also has a tip line to identify violators.

dia, and prefers it to his given the water problem. "A large name, which he asked not be percentage of them are just used.) really not environmentally

"It's verypointedly meant to The scene has been re- stop a lot of what we're seeing Now ensconced in an offpeated across N o rthern — the illegal diversions, dam- the-grid farm in Mendocino California. Amid the state's ming up of creeks, tapping County, Chaitanya and a few crippling drought, many into springs that may be on helpersproduce a small crop communities are fighting someone else'sproperty,"said of medical marijuana plants not the mere cultivation of Kevin Ingram, the principal for an Oakland dispensary. cannabis — which is legal planner for Lake County. Their beds are watered daily in the state, though subject Late last month, federal and from a well fed by a spring on to myriad restrictionsstate agents raided the Yurok the property. but the growers' use of wa- Indian Reservation in a move To minimize the environter. Marijuana is a thirsty requested by tribal elders to mental effect, he said, he recyhalt illegal marijuana farms cles his wastewater. This year, plant, and cultivating it at a time when California res- whose water use threatened he has also reduced the numidents are subject to water the reservation's supply. ber of plants, he said. "Most people we k now restrictions has become a Using Google Earth imsticky issue. agery, the state Department are saying, 'We're growing When a st at e w i de of Fish and Wildlife has esti- less because of impending drought emergency was mated that outdoor marijua- drought,'" Chaitanya said. declared in January, "the na cultivation in Mendocino "We have a responsibility." first thing we wanted to

surgeon general ever forced out of office by the president Bryce Rasmussen~other f ather, si s t er , cou s i n s , after he campaigned hard against the dangers of smokgrandparents, friends and everyone he met. He loved ing during the Richard Nixon to hunt, fish, play football, the outdoors and spending time with h i s f r i ends and f amily. He w il l a l w ays be remembered by the love he had for others. He is survived by his parents, Jon 8 J e n n ifer Rasmussen, his sister, Payton, h is gr andparents, Te d 8 Mary McClung, Ronnie & Janice Rasmussen, and an e xtremely l ar g e l ovi n g family that extended from Oregon to Washington DC. A memorial service w i l l be held Saturday, A u gust 9, at 1:00 p.m. at the Bend Church o f t h e N a z a rene, 1270 NE 27th St., Bend OR 97701. In lieu of f l o w ers, donations may be made to any C hase Bank to t h e sBryce Rasmussen Donation" a ccount.

aiornia i tsi e a waterin o mariuana cro sami

County and Humboldt Coun-

address was water theft ty doubled between 2009 and Growing green and marijuana," said Carre 2012, with what the agency Environmentally minded Brown, a supervisor in describedasdisastrous effect. marijuana growers say that MendocinoCounty,a maA marijuana plant can con- illegal operators and water jor cannabis hub west of sume 5 to 10 gallons of water, guzzlers are giving them a Lake County. depending on the point in its bad reputation. Seth Little, By mid-July, the sheriff growth cycle. By compari- 28, an organic medicinal there, Thomas A l l m an, son, a head of lettuce, another marijuana grower nearthe had already caught grow- of California's major crops, Lake County town of Clearers siphoning water from needs about 3.5 gallons of lake,said neighbors could be springs because wells had water. resentful. "They just think that we're run dry too early in the Not all marijuana growers season. "I have told my are cavalier about their wa- all kind of dooming everymarijuana team, 'I want ter use. Swami Chaitanya, thing," he said, "and stealyou to fly the rivers, fly the 71, has been tending — and ing everybody's water, and tributaries; let's prioritize smoking — cannabis for de- dumping chemicals into the the water diversion,'" Allcades. "I grew my first plants aquifers." man said. in the shadow of the Bank of Little, who has been growIn July, L ake C ounty America in San Francisco ing marijuana for nearly five enacted an ordinance that on Telegraph Hill in the ear- years with a special irrigation demanded that growers ly '70s," Chaitanya said. (He system designed to minimize account for t h ei r w a t er adopted the name Swami water use, said many fellow supply; as in Mendocino, Chaitanya after studies in In- growers had been heedless of

aware; they're not in compli-

ance," he said. But the artisanal ways of L ittle an d C h a itanya c a n conflict with the demands of

the market and, sometimes, the law. Because there are countywide restrictions on

the number of m arijuana plants even legitimate growers may keep, Chaitanya said, they have an incentive to make those plants as robust

as possible — and that means using more water. Chaitanya suggested that the problem was exacerbated by confusing regulations. Allman was skeptical of this. "That sounds like logic

they've made up after smoking a joint," he observed. But, he added, the envi-

ronmentaloffenders are not the stereotypical marijuana

grower. "Old hippies are not our problem — old hippies get it," Allman said. "They're going organic; they're doing water reduction." So are "young hippies," he continued. "I'm talking about people that move here in April, grow

marijuana as fast as they can until October," Allman said. " The 20-year-old ki d w h o wants to make hi s m i l lion

bucks, and he's using these steroid fertilizers. He doesn't

care about how much water he uses, or what he puts in the

soil."

— From wire reports

FEATURED OBITUARY

General killed in Afghan attack wasengineer By Robert Burns

curity Transition Command,

The Associated Press

opening of the Social Cog-

general who became the highest-ranking U.S. military of-

in Kabul. At the time of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Greene was serving at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and when

ficer to be killed in either of

the U.S. invaded Iraq in March

sion of improving the Army's understanding of social, infor-

WASHINGTON — Harold Greene, the two-star Ar my

In 2010, he spoke at t he nitive N etworks

technic Institute with the mis-

America's post-9/11 wars, was 2003 he was a student at the an engineer who rose through Army War College in Carlisle, the ranks as an expert in de- Pennsylvania, at the rank of veloping and fielding the Ar- lieutenant colonel. my's war materiel. He was on his first deployment to a war

mation and c ommunication networks, according to the Ar-

my's account of the event.

Greene flourished in the less

glamorous side of the Army

A c ademic

Research Center, a research facility at Rensselaer Poly-

I

zone. that develops, tests, builds Greene was killed Tuesday and supplies soldiers with when a gunman believed to be equipment and technology. an Afghan soldier opened fire That is a particularly difficult at a military academy near job during wartime, since unU.S. Army via The Associated Press Kabul. More than a d o zen conventional or unanticipat- Maj. Gen. Harold Greene was atwo-star Army general who on other coalition soldiers were ed battlefield challenges like Tuesday became the highest-ranking U.S. military officer to be wounded, including about roadside bombs in Iraq and killed in either of America's post-9/11 wars. eight Americans, according Afghanistan, call for urgent to early accounts of the attack. improvements in equipment. It was among the bloodiest In 2009-11, for example, he and an exemplary work eth- would often go for morning insider attacks of the war in served as deputy command- ic, according to an account runs, The Washington Post reAfghanistan. ing general of the Army's Re- of the promotion ceremony ported. The Greenes' son, MatThe Army's top soldier, Gen. search, Development and En- published by the Times Union thew, also is in the Army and Ray Odierno, issued a state- gineering Command and se- of Albany, New York, which their daughter, Amelia, recentment Tuesday evening say- nior commander of the Natick called Greene an Albany ly graduated from Binghaming the Army's thoughts and Soldier System Center at native. ton University in New York. "In every job I had we got prayers were with Greene's Aberdeen Proving Ground in Greene earned a bachelor family as well as the families Aberdeen, Maryland. During things done that I think made of science degree in materials of those injured in the attack. that tour of duty, he gained the our Army better, and it was engineering and a master's In a 34-year career that be- rank of brigadiergeneral,and done by other people," Greene degree in industrial engineergan at Fort Polk, Louisiana, at his promotion ceremony in was quoted as saying. "All I ing, both from Rensselaer Greene, a native of upstate December 2009 he was lauded did was try to pull people in Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York, earned areputation for his leadership skills and the right direction and they New York. He later studied as an inspiring leader with a ability to inspire those around went out and did great things." at the University of Southern sense of humility. He had been him. Greene and his wife, Susan, California and also attended in Afghanistan since January, Lt. Gen. Stephen Speakes lived in the Washington sub- the U.S. Army Command and serving as the No. 2 man in a applauded Greene for a "sense urb of Falls Church, Virginia, General Staff College at Leavunit called the Combined Se- of self, a sense of humility" where neighbors recalled he enworth, Kansas.

"We're in a fight now with an enemy that's a little bit dif-

ferent and uses different techniques ... and networks are a

key part of that," Greene said. He said finding patterns in the tactics of insurgents was

difficult because of the way networks evolve and otherwise change. So the goal was to bring to light the patterns and determine how to anticipate and influence the actions

of insurgents. "The enemy is every bit as good as we are at using that network to our detriment so this is essential work; this is about defending our country," Greene said. "You must know that there is a d irect application on the battlefield and

we're using it today, but we don't really understand it yet so this is a critical element."

His awards include the Legion of Merit, the Distin-

guished Service Medal, a Meritorious Service Award and an Army Commendation

Medal.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

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Partly sunny

Partly sunny

Some sunshine

TRAVEL WEATHER

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.

ria

EAST: Highpressure TEMPERATURE from the Pacific keeps Seasid Yesterday Normal Record rain at bay with a 64/55 84 83 97' i n 1927 blend of sunshine and Cannon 48' 48' 32'in 1980 cloud cover today. 62/55

MONDAY

82' SQ'

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

SUNDAY

I

r

Yesterday

Umatiga

Hood RiVer

cify

92/58

Rufus

Today

Hi/Lu/Prsc. HiRn/W Hi/Lu/W

• ermiston Meac am Losti ne 88/51 Enterprise dl t, 81/4

Abilene een5/o.oo eens/s Akron 80/65/0.04 78/59/s Albany 81 /64/0.01 76/58/I PRECIPITATION he Oaa Albuquerque 90/65/0.00 88/64/s Tigamo • 87/51 6 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Moresun andy • Anchorage 69/56/0.00 67/57/pc 87/61 69/51 Mc innvig • 0.54"in 1999 than clouds todayas JosePh Agnnfs 92/69/0.00 95/73/I Record • HeP Pner Grande • Gove nt • upi o o Condon 7/51 87 48 Atlantic City 83/69/0.00 83/65/s Month to date (normal) 0.1 2 (0.09 ) an area of high pres- Lincoln Union o o Austin 98no/0.00 een2/s 72/ Year to date (normal ) 5.14 (6.37 ) sure from thePacific 65/53 Sale Baltimore 82/64/Tr 85/62/s Graniteu • pray Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 9" Ocean dominates the 84/ /57 Billings 88/57/0.00 88/61/I a 'Baker C Nawpo 83/50 weathertoday. • 86 Birmingham 97/69/0.00 97n4n SUN ANDMOON 2/50 62/51 • Mitch 8 85/45 Bismarck 70/63/0.16 79/61/pc C a m p S e r a n R 8 d WEST: Plenty of 84I50 Today Fri. n O TV 88I Boise 83/69/0.01 91/63/I 84/47 • John uU Sunrise 6:00 a.m. 6 : 0 1 a.m. sunshine with afew Yach 84/52 Boston 76/61/I 63/53 • Prineville Day 7/47 tario Bridgeport, CT 83no/Tr Sunset 8:22 p.m. 8: 2 0 p.m. passing cloudstoday, 85/68/Tr 82/63/I 86/50 • Pa lina 86 / 5 2 9 57 « Buffalo 76/61/0.00 75/57/s Moonrise 5 :43 p.m. 6:35 p.m. but a few showers Floren e • Eugene ' Ue d arothers Valen 66/53 Burlington, VT 77/64/0.03 73/56/I in the southern Moonset 2:3 2 a.m. 3:3 7 a.m. Su iVern 83/48 • 47 93/61 Caribou, ME 76/59/0.00 75/53/I mountains. Nysse • 83/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 94n6/0.00 95nsn La pine Grove Oakridge Full Last New First Charlotte 88/68/0.17 88/68/I • Burns Junture OREGON EXTREMES Co 91/57 84/51 /50 Chattanooga 92/66/0.00 93/71/I 65 2 • Fort Rock Riley 88/46 YESTERDAY l Cresce t • 85/46 Cheyenne 81/56/0.18 78/55/I 86/49 82/44 Chicago 80/62/0.00 81/64/c High: 95 Bandon Ros eburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 84/65/0.00 82/64/pc Aug 10 Aug 17 Aug 25 S e p 2 at Medford Jordan V gey 65/52 Beaver Silver 86/46 Frenchglen 86/56 Cleveland 75/66/0.00 77/58/s Low: 41' 85/55 Marsh Lake 88/51 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 84/55/0.09 82/55/I 82/43 at Meacham 85/46 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 91 /69/0.00 82/67/I T he Planets Ris e Set • Paisley 67/ Columbia, SC 96n2/0.00 esn5/s 89/55 Mercury 5:52 a.m. 8: 2 7 p.m. Chdoquin Columbus,SA 96/71/0.00 97/74/pc Medfo d '83/51 Gold ach 89 5 Rome Venus 4:13 a.m. 7: 1 9 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 85/68/Tr 83/63/pc 9 91/55 Mars 1:14 p.m. 1 1:23 p.m. • Klamath Concord, NH 82/64/0.05 72/53/I Fields• • Ashl nd Falls Jupiter 5:06 a.m. 7: 5 3 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 98n8/0.00 esns/s Uro ings 89/5 86/49 Saturn 2:00 p.m. 1 2 :08 a.m. 66/5 86/47 87I57 Dallas 100/79/0.00 97ns/s Dayton 80/64/0.00 81/62/pc Uranus 10:37 p.m. 1 1 :29 a.m. Denver 87/59/0.01 85/57/I Yesterday Today F ridny Yesterday Today F riday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 73/67/1.73 73/66/I city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i t y Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W city Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 79/60/0.00 82/60/s 71/59/0.00 67/54/pc 67/54/pc L n Grande 90 / 64/0.00 87/48/s 87/49/s Portland 84/6 3/0.0080/56/s 79/57/pc Duluth 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin 74/56/0.00 75/55/s Baker City 88/47/0.00 85/45/s 86/48/s Ln Pine 83/42/0.00 82/46/n 81/46/pc Prineviiie 88/ 4 6/0.0086/50/s 81/51/n El Paso 95n1/0.00 91/71/s 5 N(~ 8 ~ 8~ N 5 srcokings 67/51/Tr 66/53/pc 68/53/pc Medford 9 5 /59/0.00 93/59/s 91/58/sRedmond 88 / 48/0.0086/46/s 84/46/s Fairbanks 69/51/Tr 71/51/pc The highertheAccuWnniberxmmUVIn dex number, sums 91/57/0.00 88/46/s 89/49/s Newport 64 /55/0.00 62/51/pc 61/51/pc Rnseburg 91/ 5 7/0.0086/56/s 85/56/s Fargo 82/57/0.00 82/63/pc the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 89/54/0.00 85/51/s 85/51/s North Bend 68/57/0.00 65/52/pc 65/53/ pc Salem 85/56/0.00 84/54/s 84/54/pc Flagstaff 78/48/0.00 79/46/s 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exlreme. Klamnth Falls 85/51/0.61 86/49/pc 85/49/s O n tario 88/62/0.00 91/57/pc 93/62/s Sisters 84/54/0.00 84/46/s 83/45/n Grand Rapids 82/60/0.00 84/60/s Lnkeview 82/46/0.00 86/47/pc 87/47/s P e n dleton 9 3/5 9 /0.00 89/57/s 88/57/pc The Dalles 9 0 / 66/0.00 87/61/s 86/60/pc Green 6sy 82/57/0.00 80/55/s Greensboro 89/68/0.01 86/67/pc Wenther(W):s-sunny, pc-pnrfly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-shcwers, t-fhundersforms, r-rnin, sf-sncw flurries, sn-sncw i-ice, Tr-trsce,Yesterdaydata ascf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 80/62/Tr 81/57/s G rasses T r ees Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 83/64/0.22 79/57/I Absent Ab s ent Mo d erate Helena 92/58/0.00 90/57/pc Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577 89/77/0.00 sen7/pc ~ f o s ~ 208 ~ 30s ~dos ~50s ~aos ~706 ~aos ~gos ~toos ~ff os Honolulu ~ fgs ~os ~ o s Houston 94n5/r'r 92/75/I Huntsville 94no/0.02 95/73/I cnlgn NATIONAL Indianapolis 79/63/0.00 79/63/sh As of 7 n.m.yesterday x x Qunb t x Qunb x 73/53 e4n4/o'.oo 92/74/I • i n ipng T nd n r Bny Jackson, MS Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES 76/56 8 2 7 Jacksonville 94n4/0.01 95n44 YESTERDAY(for the

/58

Portland

1/

lington 91/57

• W co9 /59

i~. Q

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

C rane Prairie 363 0 4 66% 40'yo Wickiup 80384 Crescent Lake 7 1 0 40 82% Ochoco Reservoir 21617 49% Prinevige 112686 76% River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 479 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1690 Deschutes R.below Bend 131 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1930 Little Deschutes near LaPine 85 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 76 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 215 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 57 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 11

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

Bismarck

48 contiguous states) National high: 114 at Death Valley,CA National low: 31 at Bodie State Park,CA Precipitation: 3.32" at Audubon, IA

80/56

. 4

• Billings

70/61/0.21 74/57/pc /66 6 95n5/0.02 86/74/c sui • 54/50/0.15 56/50/r I/O . XX'eX X ' 7 <W'e 'e> Auckland Baghdad 108/85/0.00 108/81/s Bangkok eon7/o.os 88/79/c seijing 95n1/0.00 88/67/s Beirut 86/80/0.00 87/75/s n n c incn Sa l t Lake ity 8 C ity 8 4 75%0 Berlin 79/61 /0.02 76/59/c 73/59 ingfng < < Denver uun nie 8 7 Lnn V nn Bogota 63/50/0.18 64/47/pc e 86/67 84+9 100/7 xv.+vsk ou Budapest 79/64/0.49 80/63/c +++4 k Chnrlcu Buenos Ai r es 61/54/Tr 63/38/s b • nnhvn • 92/7" Lnn An lnn 8 8 a Cnbn Snn Lucns 91/78/0.04 93/75/I Cairo eene/o' . oo 98/76/s Pb~x Anchorng Aibuque ue0 hnmn Cif p ++ n+ Calgary 82/55/0.00 73/53/s • 106/8 Afln • ~ 'f(7/57 I ftld I b n 0 88/64 96/7 Cnncun 91n5/0.05 91/76/s ' air inghn 95 /73 9 7 8 Junnnu El Pnn Dublin 70/57/0.02 66/51/pc 97 4 Dnnns 1/71 Edinburgh 68/55/0.85 66/48/pc 82/49 srns <XX'eX'. Geneva 75/54/0.00 75/56/c Hsrnre • r aX 75/47/0.00 77/48/s r Orinnnn 2/78 Hong Kong 91 /82/0.43 91/82/I Honolulu ~ ~ (~ahun Istanbul eon7/0.00 86/74/I ssfrr dFL '> Wnm Jerusalem 84/65/0.00 87/64/s Mnnfnr ny 9W73 Johannesburg 71 /48/0.00 75/47/s .e%g • '+ '+ Limn 66/59/Tr 66/57/c Lisbon 81/66/0.00 81/66/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 77/63/0.39 77/59/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 95/66/0.00 94/67/s Manila 86/77/0.00 87/79/c

81/62/pc 79/59/pc 90/65/pc 67/56/sh

Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wi Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY Sacramento Sf. Louis Snit Lake City San Antonio Ssn Diego Snn Francisco Snn Jose

91/74/I 82/65/s

een2/pc 84/64/s 90/62/I

94n44 83/61/pc 93/67/s 77/63/pc 78/58/pc 75/53/sh

eonsn

86/69/I 90/73/t 76/55/I 78/64/pc 74/66/I 78/61/pc 82/56/pc 86/66/I 93/75/I

94ns/t

80/66/pc 78/54/pc

95ne/pc 99/78/pc 76/65/pc 85/57/pc 76/66/I 80/60/s 77/57/pc 88/69/pc 73/54/s 83/63/pc 79/49/pc 83/59/s 79/57/s 83/67/I 82/60/s 82/59/s

89/57/pc

Srm/r

94n5/pc 92/73/I 70/64/I

94ns/t 95/73/I

9One/r

88/66/pc

Ssnws

79/63/pc 65/47/c 80/61/I 63/44/s

O

93/75/pc

94nws

80/46/I 90/76/pc 63/50/sh

68/53/pc 81/61/pc 77/46/s 91/83/I

ssn44

5:.

83/61/s 71/46/s 67/59/pc 79/65/pc 69/58/r 94/66/s

Srne/pc

77/60/0.00 80/57/s 79/57/s 101/77/0.00 100/76/s 101/76/s

87/66/0.00 83/71/0.21 94n2/0'.00 77/63/0.00 88/68/0.00 81/56/0.00

83/65/pc 77/67/I 82/66/t 90/76/I

81/65/I

94mn

80/65/pc 81/64/pc 84/69/pc 80/71/I 79/60/pc 79/60/pc

94nwo.oo 92/78/I

94/78/I 89/77/pc 89/78/I 75/58/0.00 76/62/pc 77/62/pc 82/62/0.00 80/63/pc 80/66/pc 97/69/0.00 92/72/I eon2/I e4m/0.00 91/76/I 89/76/pc 83/70/0.08 81/66/n 82/67/s 86/71/Tr 84/64/s 85/67/s seno/o.oo 82/66/s 82/68/pc 96/73/Tr 98/75/pc 98/74/pc 75/69/0.46 76/66/I 79/66/I 95/76/1.84 93/74/t 92/75/I fo4nwo.oo102/76/s 101/78/s 79/66/Tr 78/66/I 75/66/I 82/69/Tr 84/64/n 83/65/s 108/84/0.00 106/81/s 103/83/pc 80/64/Tr 79/57/s 80/62/pc 80/66/0.51 74/56/I 78/59/pc 86/68/Tr 79/59/I 80/62/pc eono/o.oo 86/66/pc 85/67/pc 74/63/1.78 80/58/I 79/56/I 82/59/0.00 87/63/I 87/61/I 90/70/0.01 87/65/n 86/69/pc 75/59/0.00 75/55/s 77/55/pc 93/69/Tr 95/64/s 93/62/s ssn2/D.oo 81/71/I 86/70/I 84/63/0.13 75/60/I 84/62/I 100/75/0.00 eens/s 96/76/pc 76/68/0.00 76/68/pc 76/68/pc 77/63/Tr 73/59/pc 72/59/pc 85/66/Tr 79/60/n 79/59/s Santa re 86/54/0.00 84/56/s 85/57/pc Savannah 95n5/o'.oo 97/76/s 95nsn Seattle 78/59/0.00 76/56/s 76/55/s Sioux Falls 67/64/0.65 76/62/c 74/62/I Spokane 88/61/0.00 85/58/s 84/57/s Springfield, Mo 93/69/0.00 88/72/t 91/71/I Tampa 92/79/Tr 91/78/I 89/77/I Tucson 102/75/0.00 99/75/n 95/73/pc Tulsa 94/69/0.00 95nsn 94/76/pc Washington, DC 85/70/0.38 87/69/s 86/69/pc Wichita 97/68/0.04 94/72/pc 91/71/I Yskimn 96/67/Tr 91/56/n 88/55/pc Yuma 105/75/0.00 103/77/s 103/78/s

82/65/s 78/59/s

76/64/r 89/73/s 57/43/sh 110/81/s

Bike ride

eens/pc Juneau

r

Amsterdam Athens

Friday Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W HiRn/W 60/54/0.08 62/49/nh 60/51/r 91/68/1.67 83/69/I 84/67/I

City

I

O

79/Sf

ss/sf

Yesterday Today

Friday

4

94ne/rr

I

Mecca Mexico City

109/91/0.00 110/84/s 74/55/0.20 74/57/I Montreal 77/59/0.01 75/59/I Moscow 86/63/0.00 83/61/pc Nairobi 72/56/0.00 76/57/c Nassau 88/80/0.31 9One/pc New Delhi 95/82/0.13 95/78/I Osaka 90/77/0.29 89/74/I Oslo 73/55/0.00 74/55/c Ottawa 79/52/0.00 76/53/pc Paris 72/63/0.46 77/61/sh Ric de Janeiro 73/63/0.02 79/62/s Rome 90/66/0.00 86/67/s Santiago 54/41/0.52 61137/s Snn Paulo 73/50/0.00 80/57/s Snppcrc 77/71/0.64 77/67/r Seoul 77/75/0.52 82/71/c Shanghai 94/81/0.05 efns/sh Singapore 85/78/0.14 86/77/r Stockholm 81/66/0.15 75/58/pc Sydney 66/37/0.00 64/46/pc Taipei 93/82/0.00 93/81/sh Tei Aviv sens/o.oo 93/73/s Tokyo 91/81/0.00 94/78/s Toronto 77/61/0.00 77/56/s Vancouver 72/61/0.00 72/57/s Vienna 77/64/0.00 78/61/pc Warsaw 73/63/0.00 76/63/I

108/85/s 72/57/I 79/61/pc 77/60/I 76/55/c

9One/pc

95nen

84/76/r 71/54/pc 79/55/pc 78/60/I 78/67/s 85/66/s 69/41/s 68/58/pc 77/67/sh 86/72/pc 89/77/pc 86/80/sh 78/58/pc 65/44/pc 93/81/r 89/71/s 88/79/pc 78/57/s 72/55/pc 80/61/s 75/61/sh

PREMIUM HEARING AIDS

Continued from B1 Other times, he stayed in

at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices

parks or campgrounds, he SBld.

Kathrytt, 1Ong aCCuStOmed

to being separated from her husband for extended periods when he worked as a consultant on i nternational aid

programs beforeretiring to Bend in 2005, said she wor-

ried most when she thought about him navigating the long inClineS and SteeP doWTthillS

crossing the Rockies. But frequent phone calls and sta-

CALL TODAY FOR DETAILS:

tuS uPdateS and PhOtOS ott a

Facebook page dedicated exclusively to his cross-country ride helped reassure her of his well-being. Friends from various periods in Sanders' life gathered to welcome him Wednesday, exchanging hugs and handshakes as they sipped champagne and recalled working together everywhere from Oklahoma City to Uganda. "I cannot tell you how impressed I am," John Gubisch told Sanders as he clapped Photos by Andrew Clevenger /The Bulletin him on the back. Gubisch also ABOVE: BQb SanderS, Qf Bend, takeSQffhi8 helmet One laSt time at the end Of hi8 3,900-mil8 CrOSS-COuntry ride. SanderS, 74, not with Sanders, and he and CrOSSed10 StateS88 h8 raiSed fundS fOr Central OregOn VeteranS his brother Chuck, who also Outreach. attended Wednesday's arrivBELOW: K8thryn SanderS greetS hor huSband, BQb, with Chamal with his wife, Susan, have Pagne tQ Celebrate the 2nd Qf hi8 CrOSS-COuntry ride. H8 left Bend been friends with Sanders for Qn Memorial 08y, 2nd averaged more than 50 miles8 day. more than four decades.

Free Lunch with a Complete Hearing Test!

Freedom 49IE Pair

Save $200! $799 due at time of purchase. I g' o

'

4

Sanders made it all the way across the country without any major mishaps, not even a flat tire, he said. "The worst parts were

a

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when you get on, not the real

backcountry roads where

o

there's really little traffic, but on major county roads with

America Hears

55 mile-per-hour speed limits and no shoulder," he said.

HEARINO AIDS

The closest call came in Virginia, where a truck pulling a trailer passed him and started pulling back to the right before the trailer had

SIS!)7'.~

cleared the bicycle. The trail-

me if I was OK," he said.

er kept creeping closer and closer and almost hit him,

Overall, the trip far exceed- challenge and the emotional ed his expectations, and he challenge," he said. "I'm glad was a tad m elancholy that I did it, but am I going to ride it was over. But that doesn't my bike back? No. It's being mean he'll be back on his bike FedExed."

"It shook me up so much

Rebates are processed 30 days after invoicing. Offers valid through August 31, 2014 or Mrhiie supplies last. Call or Yrlsit for detaiis.

achievement.

Sanders said.

SaV e $ 9 4 9 -a BuyOnmIGetOne! $1899 due at time of purchase. •

served in Vietnam, although

"He'sbeen part ofourfamily forever," John Gubisch offered by way of an explanation for why it was important for them to celebrate Sanders'

Freedom Silver $949 8'.

r,

!' . ::;; o: m

that I went around the corner attd leaned on m y h a ndle- tomorrow. "I wanted the physical barS. Tgtro CarS StOpped to aSk

challenge and

t h e m e n tal

—Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbutletin.com

Heliylyfq Pafyple Hear Better

541-21 3-2294 Monday through Friday 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite ¹10 5 B e nd, Oregon

voEE/V4,

g~, fnvG

www.americahears.com


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 ML B , C3 Sports in brief, C2 College football, C4 MLS, C2

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

WCL BASEBALL •

Elks take 3-1 win aver Knights

LITTLE LEAGUE BASEBALL

s

1

CORVALLIS —A two-run fifth inning helped Bendpull away from Corvallis for a 3-1 West Coast League victory on Wednesday

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night.

The win helpedthe Elks cut into theKnights' lead in theSouth Division of the WCLstandings. Bend (29-21) is four games behindCorvallis (33-17) with four games to play. Thetwo teams play the rubbermatch of their three-gameseries tonight at 7:15p.m.The Elks will thenconclude the regularseasonwith a three-gameseries against KlamathFalls starting Fridaynight in Bend. The Elksarebattling Wenatchee(28-22) for the WCLwild-cardplayoff berth. TheAppleSoxtook a15-8win overKelownain 10inningsWednesday.

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Eric Reed /For The Bulletin 'tr r

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"

Bend North'e Hank Tobias

pitches against Wyoming

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during the Northwest Regional tournament.

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Ben

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— Bulletin staff report •

SWIMMING

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48th Bend Open starts Friday More than 400 swimmers are headed to Central Oregon this weekend to competein the 48th annual Bend Open at the city's Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center. The three-day meet, which is hosted by the Bend Swim Club, starts Friday at 5 p.m.Events begin at 8:30 a.m.Saturday and Sundayand will run until 5 p.m. both days. Organizers expect approximately 435 swimmers from across

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By Beau Eastes

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The Bulletin \

Bend North is right where it wants to be.

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The Oregon 11- and r

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12-year-old Little League state

champions roll into today's .

Northwest Regional semifinal

game in San w

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the state.

4

For more information, go to www.bendswimclub.com.

Bernardino, California,

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— Bulletin staff report •

against Alaska having

ow

won three

straight games since falling to Washington

• •

GOLF

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Bend North vs. Alaska opening When : 2 p.m. contest ofthe today

• •

10 2 in the

Weeds set to tee it up at Valhalla

w •

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• •

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tournament. "We've

LOUISVILLE, Ky. -

Barely able to tie his shoes three daysago, Tiger Woods is ready to tee it up in thePGA Championship. Woods caused the biggest sensation of the week Wednesdayafternoon simply by driving his silver SUVinto the parking lot at Valhalla. He has neverarrived so late for a major championship and had solittle time to prepare — just nine holes atValhalla, which he

been playing better every single game, said Bend North coach Dan

• •

Ruhl, whose club defeated •

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Montana 5-0 on Tuesday to

s •

• •

finish pool-play competition with a 3-1 record. "The kids are walking around with a lot of mojo." Bend, which is the No. 2 seed heading into the semifinals, has given up just two

4

runs in its past three games. The all-star squad from

Central Oregon defeated Wyoming 15-0 on Sunday before besting Alaska 10-2 on

hadnot

seen since winning the PGA Championship in 2000.

T V : ESPN2

Monday and then shutting out Montana on Tuesday. See Bend North /C4

The Associated Press file photo

WOMEN'S BASKETBALL

Butat

least he's playing. That much was in doubt Sunday when he withdrew from the final round of the Bridgestone Invitational because of back pain that made it a chore to switch out of his golf shoes. Woods said he suffered a pinched nerve, but that it was

Schimmel returns to the Northwest • Former Oregon prep star making first pro appearance in Seattle today

not at all related to back surgery he had

By Anne M. Peterson

March 31 that kept him

Shoni Schimmel's distinctive style of basketball first

out of golf for three months. He said his trainer adjusted the areaabove the sacrum. "Once he put it back in, the spasmswent away," he said. "And from there,I started getting some rangeof motion." For a list of tee times for today's first round of thePGA Championship, see Scoreboard, C2. — The Associated Press

The Associated Press

1

2

Schimmel is arguably the

the WNBA's Atlanta Dream describes her version of Rez

WNBA's fastest-rising star. Known as Showtime Shoni,

Stacy Bengs/The Associated Press

always play with heart. Schimmelrode Rez Ballallthe way from a steitar prep career in Oregon to the University of LouTonight, the Dream visit isville and the NCAA title game the Seattle Storm, marking her junior year, and finally to the Schimmel's first game in the progameinthe WNBA. Pacific Northwest as a profes-

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presentedby Smolith Motors

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Saturday, August 9 6:35pm vs.KlamathFalls Gems

Just a rookie, the 5-foot-9

Atlanta Dream guard Shoni Schimmel shoots over Minneeote's Maya Moore last month.

IB ItO lj

6:35pmvs. Klamath FallsGems

of people I know are interested

Oregon. The 22-year-old guard for

5 BASEBALL

Frlday Allgllst8

that Seattle is sold out, and a lot

dian Reservation in Northeast

took shape on the Umatilla In-

Go hard, trust instincts and

~~

"It's pretty awesome. I know

tay

15T H SE A S O N 2 0 0 0 - 2 0 1 4

II

sional. The game is a sellout. Though she has been back to the West Coast beforewhen she was with Louisville — she said tonight's game is special to her. The Storm are planning to honor Schimmel before the game.

because it is like a home game for me," she said. "I have a lot of friends and family coming out."

Ball, as it is known, like this:

~~

Bennie theBeaver Oregoninrh andBandin Rowdytowish Homer HappyRetirement. Homer BoBbleHeadsandT-shirts!

hers is the league's best-selling jersey.

IhmIIMItmEp

Last month, Schimmel

DBBy

Sunday, August 10 5:05pmvs. Klamath Falls

scored a record 29 points and had eight assists as the Eastern

Conference pulled out a 125124 overtime victory in her

Wethankourfansandhostfamiliesfor their support. Lotsof Giveaways!

first WNBA All-Star Game.

0

See Schimmel /C4 $v

h @Ben Base all '


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY Time TV/Ratiio 10 a.m. TN T noon Golf 2 p.m. Golf

GOI.F

PGA Championship U.S. Women's Amateur LPGA Tour, Meijer LPGAClassic TENNIS

Rogers Cup

10 a.m. ESPN2

BASEBALL

Little League, Great LakesRegionsemifinal Little League, Northwest Region, Bend North vs. Alaska Little League, Great LakesRegionsemifinal Little League, Northwest Region semifinal, Washington vs.Montana MLB, ChicagoWhite Soxat Seattle

11 a.m. E S PN 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN Roo t

FOOTBALL

NFL Preseason, SanFrancisco at Baltimore NFL Preseason, Seattle at Denver

4:30 p.m. NBC 5 :30 p.m. F o x

BASEBALL WCL

www.gocomms.com/Imhshleechem

WESTCOASTLEAGUE All TimesPDT

Easl Division W

L

Pct GB .647 .560 4'/~ .500 7/r .286 18

W

L

Pct GB .660 .580 4 .490 8'/z .255 20'/r

Y akima Valey Pippins 33 1 8 W enatchee AppleSox 28 22 W alla WallaSweets 2 5 25 KelownaFalcons 14 35 South Division CorvagisKnights 33 17 BendElks 29 21 MedfordRogues 25 26 K lamath Fals Gems 13 38 West Division W L Begingham Bells 36 15 V ictoria Harbourcats 23 27 C owlitz BlackBears 2 2 29 KitsapBlueJackets 2 1 29

WNBA, Chicago at Minnesota

5 p.m.

E SPN2

7 p.m.

FS1

BOXING

Jerry Belmontes vs. AbnerCotto

FRIDAY MOTOR SPORTS

N ASCARNationwide,WatkinsGlen,practice 6 : 30a.m. FS 1 N ASCARSprintCup,WatkinsGlen,practice 9 : 3 0a.m. FS 1 NASCARNationwide, Watkins Glen, final practice 11 a.m. FS 1 N ASCAR Sprint Cup, Watkins Glen, final practice 1:30 p.m. F S 1 BASEBALL

Little League, Mid-Atlantic Region semifinal Little League, Midwest Region final Little League, Mid-Atlantic Region semifinal Little League, West Region semifinal Little League, Southeast Region final Little League, West Region semifinal MLB, ChicagoWhite Soxat Seattle

8 a.m. E S PN 10 a.m. E S PN n oon ESP N 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. E S PN 7 p.m. Roo t

GOLF

PGA Championship U.S. Women's Amateur LPGA Tour, Meijer LPGAClassic

10 a.m. noon 2 p.m.

TN T Golf Golf

10 a.m., 4 p.m.

E SPN2

6 p.m.

E SPN2

TENNIS

Rogers Cup BOXING Friday Night Fights SOCCER U-20 Women's World Cup,Brazil vs. USA MLS, SanJose at LosAngeles

6:45 p.m. ESPNU 7:30 p.m. NBCSN

FOOTBALL

Australia, GWSGiants vs. North Melbourne

8 :30 p.m. F S 2

Listingsarethe mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER EOCal taurney gOeSOff deSPite Weather — CentralOregon's unpredictable summerweather could not keepthe BendPremier Cup soccer tournamentfromwhat organizers saidwasanother successful year. The three-day event, in its fifth year, took placelast Fridaythrough Sunday atsix locations around Bend.Someharsh weather conditions, including hail andlightning, forced somedelays andschedule changes, but otherwise thetournament went off asplanned. Some180 teamsfrom Oregon, Washington,California, Nevada,Idaho andAlaska— upfrom 156 teams in2013—took part in boysandgirls divisions ranging in age from U9to U19.TaraErickson, technical director for the BendFCTimbers program, notedthat thehost teamsenjoyed considerable success inthe tournament, claiming boyschampionships in the U17-19and U11Gold divisions, andwinning girls titles in the U17-19Gold (White group), U13 Gold andU16divisions. Another BendFCTimbers squad reachedthe final of the boysU12Silver division, and aRedmond club,TeamUSA Redmond,advancedto the final in theboys U11Silver division. Erickson said her goalsfor nextyear's Premier Cupare "to evaluate onthis year and improve the areaswecould work on but continue to growthe tourw nament.

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS JOneS, Cormier regret draWI at PrOmO —Jon Jones and Daniel Cormier both deeply regret their brawl at apublicity stop in Las Vegas earlier this week.Thelight heavyweights also say they would probably do it again in asimilar situation. Jones andCormier kept their rivalry civil Tuesdayduring another publicity appearancefor their title fight next month. Theysat onopposite sides of a stage at a club in downtown LosAngeles, with police officers watching them warily. They'll likely face disciplinary action from theUFCand the NevadaAthletic Commission for a scuffle that started during a photo faceoff in the lobby of the MGMGrand casino.

FOOTBALL CarrOII: StarterS to PlaySOmein DenVer—Seattle Seahawks coach PeteCarroll wouldn't give specifics but hesaid his starters would play some in tonight's preseason opener against Denver. Carroll specifically said rookie linebackerKevinPierre-Louis (oblique) will not play. GuardJamesCarpenter (calf) and backup QBB.J. Daniels (groin) will both dress but it's unknown if they'll play. Second-round pick Paul Richardson (shoulder) should be available to play. Carroll also said injured WRKevin Norwoodhad abonespur removedfrom his foot.

GOLF Stricker selected asassistant captain for RyderCupSteve Stricker will be oneof TomWatson's assistants at theRyder Cup. Watson made theannouncementWednesdayontheeveofthePGA Championship. Stricker will be oneof three U.S. assistant captains working underWatson, whohadpreviously announced Andy North and RaymondFloyd. Stricker has beenastalwart in team competitions, playing three times in theRyder Cupand five times at the Presidents Cup. Hequickly accepted Watson's offer as theU.S. tries to reclaim the Ryder Cupfrom EuropeSept. 26-28 at Gleneagles inScotland.

HOCKEY

0 a m e u

NWSL

0

NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE AU TimesPDT WL T Seattle 16 1 5 F C Kansas City 12 6 5 W ashington 10 8 4 Portland 9 7 6 Chicago 7 7 7 W esternNewYork 8 11 3 S ky Blue FC 5 8 7 Houston 5 13 3 Boston 4 15 2

m u O

Pct GB

.706 .460 12'/z .431 14 .420 t 4'/e

Wednesday'sGames

BASKETBALL

Bend 3, Corvallis1 Wenatchee15,Kelowna8 Bellingham 3-7, Kitsap1-3 Medford8,Klamath Falls 4 Victoria 9,Wala Waga 1 Yakima Valey 7, Cowlitz 6

8 Z C w

The San JoseSharks and LosAngeles Kings are going to take their rivalry outdoorsnextseason.TheNHLannouncedWednesday thatthe Pacific Division foes will meet at the SanFrancisco 49ers' new home on Feb. 21.The$1.2 billion Levi's Stadium seats about 68,500 for football, and theweather in Santa Clara is typically warmer anddrier than in the more scenic SanFrancisco, which is about 45 miles north. — From staffand wire reports

P ts GF GA 53 49 18 41 3 8 3 0 34 35 4 1 3 3 38 33 28 2 5 2 2 2 7 37 32 22 22 3 4 18 22 39 14 34 51

NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint fortie.

c

Wednesday'sGames

Today'sGames Wenat cheeatKelowna,6:35p.m. Begingham atKitsap, 6:35p.m. Victoria atWala Walia, 7:05p.m. Bendat Corvallis, 7:15p.m. Friday's Games WallaWallaatKelowna,6:35 p.m. Bellingham atCowlitz, 6;35p.m. CorvagisatMedford, 6:35 p.m. KlamathFalls atBend,6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Wenatchee,7:05p.m. KitsapatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Wednesday'sSummary

FC Kansas City 2, Boston1 Seattle FC 4, Houston1

Saturday'sGames FCKansasCityatChicago,5p.m. SkyBlueFCatHouston,6p.m. Washingtonat Seattle FC,7 p.m. Sunday'sGame Portlandat Boston, 3:30p.m.

BASKETBALL

"He'll be OK. He just got the wind knocked out of him."

WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION AU TimesPDT

Today'sGames

Elks 3, Knlghts1 Bend 001 020 000 — 8 8 0 Corvallis 100 000 000 — 1 4 1 11:35 a.m.-6:25a.m.— StevenBowditch, Australia; Pratt,Sheets(4), Cohen(7) andBlackwell. CalomeRodPerry,UnitedStates; BenCrane, UnitedStates. ni, Bishop(5), Patito(9)andLata, Ice. 28— Bend: 11:45a.m.-6:35a.m.—DavidHronek,UnitedStates; Gill. Chris Stroud,UnitedStates;JasonBohn, United States. Tee Ne.10-TeeNo.1 Little League 4:35 a.m.-9:45a.m. — Robert Karlsson,Sweden; NORTHWESTREGION FrankEsposito, UnitedStates;Koumei Oda,Japan. — Hidek iMatsuyama,Japan;AnAt SanBernardino, Calit. 4:45a.m.-9:55a.m. gel Cabrera,Argentina; Patrick Reed, UnitedStates. — Shaun Micheel, United W L RA 4:55 a.m.-10:05 a.m. Washington 4 0 11 States; Colin Montgom erie, Scotland; Michael Oregon 3 1 12 Block,UnitedStates. Alaska 3 20 5;05 a.m.-10:15a.m. —RickieFowler, UnitedStates; Montana 1 3 28 Victor Dubuisson, France;ErnieEls, SouthAfrica. Idaho 1 3 26 5:15 a.m.-10:25a.m.—JordanSpieth, UnitedStates; Wyoming 0 4 45 AdamScott, Australia; LeeWestwood, England. 5:25 a.m.-10:35a.m.—JimmyWalker, UnitedStates; Wednesday'sGames lan Poulter,England;JasonDay,Australia. idaho15,Wyoming2 5:35 a.m.-10:45a.m.—PadraigHarrington,Ireland; Alaska6, Montana5 Phil Mickelson,UnitedStates; TigerWoods, United Today'sGames States. BendNorthvs.Alaska,2p.m. 5:45 a.m.-10:55a.m.—Graeme McDoweg, Northern Washin gtonvs.Montana,6p.m. Ireland;BrandtSnedeker, United States;Brooks Koepka,UnitedStates. Saturday'sGame 5:55 a.m.-11:05a.m. — Miguel Angel Jimene z, Championship,1p.m. Spain;CharlSchwartzel, SouthAfrica; JimFuryk, UnitedStates. GOLF 6:05 a.m.-11:15a.m.— Matt Kuchar,UnitedStates; LouisOosthuizen,SouthAfrica; Justin Rose,England. PGA Tour 6:15 a.m.-11:25a.m.— Marc Leishman,Australia; PGAChampionshipTeeTimes Boo Weekley,UnitedStates; BerndWiesberger, At Valhalla Golf Club Austria. Louisville, Ky. 6:25 a.m.-11:35 a.m.— Russell Henley,United AU TimesPDT States;DavidMcNabb, United States; MarcWarThursday-Friday ren, Scotland. Hole 1-Hole10 a.m.-11:45a.m.— Mikko llonen,Finland; Jer4:30 a.m.-9:40 a.m.— BrianNorman, UnitedStates; 6:35 r Smith, UnitedStates;GeorgeMcNeil, United Russell Knox,Scotland; RobertoCastro, United tates. States. a.m.-4:30a.m. —Shane Lowry, Ireland; BobSo4:40 a.m.-9:50a.m.— CharlesHow ell III, United 9;40 wards,UnitedStates; RyanPalmer, United States. States;AaronKrueger, UnitedStates,Joost Luiten, 9:50 a.m.-4:40 a.m.— Charley Hoffman,United Netherlands. States;OustinVolk, UnitedStates; ScottBrown, , tedStates; 4:50 a.m.-10a.m. — Billy HorschelUni United States. JamieBroce,UnitedStates; GeorgeCoetzee,South 10 a.m.-4:50 a.m.— AlexanderLevy, France; Stuart Africa. Deane,UnitedStates; David Hearn, UnitedStates. 5 a.m.-10:10a.m. — Brian Stuard,UnitedStates, 10:10 a.m.-5 a.m.— David Tentis,UnitedStates; BrendonTodd, UnitedStates; PabloLarrazabal, FabrizioZanotti, Paraguay;DannyWillett, England. Spain. a.m.-5:10a.m. — AnirbanLahiri, India; Bill 5:10 a.m.-10:20 a.m.— FreddieJacobson, Sweden; 10:20 Haas,UnitedStates; JohnSenden,Australia. Nick Watney,UnitedStates; BrendondeJonge, 10:30 a.m.-50:20a.m.—VilaySingh,Fiji; DavisLove Zimbabwe . I I, UnitedStates;ShawnStefani, UnitedStates. 5:20 a.m.-10:30a.m.— Matt Every,UnitedStates; 10:40 a.m.-5:30a.m. — CameronTringaler UnitRoss Fisher, England;Kevin Chappeg,United ed States;Scott Piercy, UnitedStates; Kiradech States. Aphibarnrat,Thailand. 5:30 a.m.-10:40a.m.—John Daly,UnitedStates; 10:50 Grace,South Africa; a.m.-5:40a.m.—Branden Mark Brooks,UnitedStates; Rich Beem,United HunterMahan,UnitedStates; ThorbiornOlesen, States. 5;40 a.m.-10:50a.m.— K.J. Choi, SouthKorea; 11Denmark. a.m.-5:50a.m.—Chris Kirk,UnitedStates; Mat ThongchaiJaidee,Thailand; Brian Harman, United Jones,Australia;Seung-yul Noh,South Korea. States. a.m.-6a.m.—JerryKelly,UnitedStates;Tom5:50 a.m.-11 a.m. —Thomas Biorn, Denmark; Kev- 11:10 my Fleetwood,England;HidetoTanih ara, Japan. in Stadler,UnitedStates;Harris English, United 11:20 a.m.-6:10a.m. — Will MacKenzie,United States. States;SteyeSchneiter, UnitedStates; Chesson 6a.m.-11:10a.m.—JamieDonaldson,Wales; Kim Hadley,UnitedStates. Hyung-Sung,SouthKorea; Stewart Cink, United 11:30 a.m.-6:20a.m.— JohanKok,UnitedStates; States. BenMartin,UnitedStates; ChrisWood,England. 6:10a.m.-11;20 a.m.—StephenGallacher, Scotland; 11:40 a.m.-6:30 a.m.— DanielSummerhays, United JasonKokrak,UnitedStates; RafaCabrera-Bello, States;JimMcGovern, UnitedStates; GeoffOgilvy, Spain. Australia. 6:20 a.m.-11:30a.m.— Kevin Streelman,United States; RyanHelminen,United States; Edoardo Molinari, Italy. TENNIS 6:30 a.m.-11:40a.m. — BrendanSteele, United States;RobCorcoran,UnitedStates; Pat Perez, ATP World Tour UnitedStates. 9:45 a.m.-4:35p.m.— Ryo Ishikawa, Japan; Mat RogersCup Pesta,UnitedStates;Rory Sabbatini, SouthAfrica. Wednesday 6:55 a.m.-1:45p.m.—ScottStallings, UnitedStates; At RexaUCentre Eric Williamson, UnitedStates; Mateo Manassero, Toronto Purse:S3.147million (Masters1000) Italy. den; Webb Surface:Hard-Outdoor 10:05 a.m.-4:55 a.m. —JonasBlixt, Swe Simpson,United States; Erik Compton,United Singles SecondRound States. 10:15a.m.-5:05a.m.—GonzaloFernandez-castano, AndyMurray(8), Britain, def.NickKyrgios, AusSpain ;Graham DeLaet,Canada;GaryWoodland, tralia, 6-2,6-2. Jo-WilfriedTsonga(13), France,def.JeremyCharUnitedStates. 10:25 a.m.-5:15a.m.— SergioGarcia,Spain;Steve dy, France, 7-6 (6),6-4. IvanDodig,Croatia, def. AndreasSeppi, Italy,6-4, Stricker,UnitedStates; TomWatson, UnitedStates. 10;35a.m.-5:25a.m. —KennyPerry, UnitedStates; 3-6,7-6(5). RichardGasquet (12), France,def. Ivo Karlovic, RyanMoore,UnitedStates; Henrik Stenson, Sweden. Croatia,5-7,7-6(5), 6-3. Watson,United States; 10:45a.m.-5:35a.m.—Bubba Julien Benne teau,France,def. ErnestGulbis (11), Martin Kaym er, Germany; Rory Mcllroy, Northern Latvia,7-6(4),6-3. Ireland. KevinAnderson,SouthAfrica, def. FabioFognini 10:55 a.m.-5:45a.m.—JasonDufner, UnitedStates; (16),ltaly,7-5,6-2. Y.E.Yang,SouthKorean;KeeganBradley, United Marin Cilic(15),Croatia,def. MalekJaziri, Tunisia, States. 4-6,6-0, 7-6(4). 11:05a.m.-5;55a.m. —LukeDonald, England; J.B. NovakDiokovic (1), Serbia,def. Gael Monfils, Holmes,UnitedStates;FrancescoMolinari, Italy. France,6-2,6-7(4),7-6(2). 11:15a.m.-6:05 a.m.—ZachJohnson,United States; TommyRobredo(17), Spain, def. GilesSimon, DarrenClarke,NorthernIreland; RichardSterne, France,7-5,6-4. SouthAfrica. DavidFerrer(5), Spain,def.MichaelRussell, Unit11;25a.m.-6:15a.m.—TimClark, SouthAfrica; Paul ed States,6-4,2-6, 6-1. Casey, England; Kevin Na,United States. Grigor Dimitrov(7), Bulgaria,def. DonaldYoung

(95), United States,4-6, 6-2,6-3. FelicianoLopez,Spain, def. TimSmyczek, United States,7-5,6-4. Milos Raoni(6), c Canada, def. JackSock, United

States,4-6,7-6(2), 7-6 (4). Tomas Berdych (4), CzechRepublic, def.Yen-hsun Lu,Taiwan,6-7(4),6-4,6-4.

ChicagoatMinnesota, 5p.m. Phoenixat SanAntonio 5 pm Atlantaat Seattle, 7 p.m.

Friday's Games

Washingtonat Indiana,4p.m. ConnecticutatNewYork, 4:30p.m. SanAntonioatTulsa 5p m Atlantaat LosAngeles,7;30p.m.

DEALS

WTA CoupeRogers Wednesday At Uniprix Stadium Montreal Purse: $2.44million (Premier) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound AngeliqueKerber (6), Germany, def. Caroline Garcia, France, 6-4, 6-1. HeatherWatson, Britain, def.DominikaCibulkova (10), Slovakia6-2, , 6-7 (3), 7-6(5). CarolineWozniacki (11), Denmark, def. KlaraKoukalova,CzechRepublic, 6-1, 6-2. Carla Suarez Navarro (14), Spain,def. Karolina Pliskova, CzechRepublic, 6-1,3-6, 6-3. EkaterinaMakarova,Russia, def. ElenaVesnina, Russia,6-3, 6-2. MariaSharapova(4), Russia,def.GarbineMuguruza, Spain4-6, , 6-3,6-1.

LucieSafarova(15),CzechRepublic, def.Magdalena Rybarikova, Slovakia, 6-4,6-2. JelenaJankovic (7), Serbia,def. SloaneStephens, UnitedStates,6-7 (7), 6-4,7-6(4). SabineLisicki, Germ any, def. Madison Keys, United States, 4-6, 6-1,6-4. VenusWiliams,UnitedStates,def.Yulia Putintseva, Kaza khstan, 6-3,6-2. SerenaWiliams(1), UnitedStates,def. SamStosur, Australia,6-0, 6-2. PetraKvitova(2), CzechRepublic, def. Casey Dellacqua,Australia, 6-3,6-2. Coco Vande weghe, United States,def.AnaIvanovic (9),Serbia,6-7(7), 7-6(7), 6-4.

FOOTBALL NFL Preseason AU TimesPDT

Today'sGames IndianapolisatN.Y.Jets,4 p.m. NewEnglandatWashington,4:30p.m. SanFranciscoatBaltimore, 4:30p.m. Cincinnatiat KansasCity,5 p.m. Seattle atDenver, 6p.m. DallasatSanDiego, 7p.m. Friday's Games Miami atAtlanta,4 p.m. Buffaloat Carolina, 4:30p.m. TampaBayatJacksonville,4:30p.m. Philadelphiaat Chicago, 5p.m. OaklandatMinnesota, 5p.m. NewOrleansatSt. Louis,5p.m. Saturday'sGames ClevelandatDetroit, 4:30p.m. PittsburghatN.Y.Giants, 4:30p.m. GreenBayat Tennessee,5p.m. Houston at Arizona,5:30p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AU TimesPDT

EasternConference W L T Pls GF S porting KansasCity 11 5 6 3 9 3 2 D .C. United 11 6 4 37 3 2 TorontoFC 8 7 5 29 29 NewYork 6 6 10 28 35 Columbus 6 7 9 27 26 N ew England 8 12 2 26 2 9 Philadelphia 5 8 9 24 34 Houston 6 11 4 2 2 2 3 Chicago 3 5 13 22 28 Montreal 3 13 5 1 4 2 1

GA 20 21 28 33 28 35 36 40 34 39

WesternConference W L T Pls GF GA

Seattle RealSaltLake Los Angeles FC Dallas Colorado Vancouver Portland

SanJose ChivasUSA

12 6 2 9 4 9 9 4 6 9 7 6 8 8 6 6 4 11 6 7 9 6 8 5 6 10 5

38 36 33 33 30 29 27 23 23

35 33 32 35 31 31 36 23 21

28 27 17 31 28 29 38 20 34

Wednesday'sGame MLSAll-Stars2, Bayern Munich1

Transactions BASEBAL L Major LeagueBaseball MLB —AnnouncedthesuspensionofSanFrancisco minorleague RH PJacob Dunnington (Augusta-SAL) for 50gamesafter asecondpositive test fora drug ofabuseand Cin cinnati minorleagueSSCesar Meiia (Red s-DSL)for 72games after testing positive for ametaboliteofBoldenone. AmericanLeague CLEVELANDINDIANS — OptionedRHP Danny Salazarto Columbus(IL). Recalled RHPC.C. Leefrom Columbus. National League ARIZONAOIAMONDBACKS — Reinstated INF Cliff Penningtonfromthe15-day DL.Optioned RHP Bo Schultzto Reno(PCL). CHICAGO CUBS— ActivatedRHPKyuii Fuiikawa from the60-dayDL. Designated OFNateSchierholtz for assignme nt. COLORADOROCKIES— ActivatedRHPJordan Lylesfromthe 60-day DL.PlacedLHPBret Anderson on the15-dayDLRecaled LHPBrooks Brownfrom ColoradoSprings(PCL). DesignatedOFJason Pridie for assignme nt. SANDIEGO PADRES— Announcedtheresignation of vicepresident/assistantgeneral manager of playerpersonnelChad MacDonald. NamedA.J. Preller generalmanager. WASHING TONNATIONALS—ActivatedLHPMatt Thornton.OptionedRH P BlakeTreinen to Syracuse

(IL).

BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NEWYOR KKNICKS—AcquiredFQuincyAcyand FTravisOutlawfromSacramento for GWayneEgington and FJeremyTyler. FOOTBA LL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Announcedthe retirement ofTEJakeBallard. MIAMI DOLP HINS — Activated RBKnowshon Morenofromthe PUPlist. MINNES OTAVIKING S—WaivedTEA.C.Leonard. OAKLANDRAIDERS— SignedLBSpencerHadley and SLarryAsante. TENNE SSEETITANS— Waived QBTyler Wilson. Agreedtotermswith TEChaseCoffmanand DTLanier Coleman. COLLEGE NCAA—Announcedthe resignation of national coordinator of women'sbasketball officiating and secretary-ruleseditor DebbieWiliamson,to becom e coordinator of women'sbasketball officiating with the American Athletic ConferenceandBig East Conference. ALABAMA — Named Bil Lorenzassistant gymnasticscoach. NORTHCAROLINA STATE— Reinstated junior RB Shadrach Thornton following anindefinite suspension. RUTGER S — Named Anthony Hernandez and JordanOzerassistant directorsof athletic communications. TEXAS-PANAMERICAN — Promoted Chelsea Blakely toassociateathletic directorfor externaloperations,JonahGoldbergto associateathletic director for commu nications, andAdamMendez to assistant athleticdirectorfor eventsand facility operations. WAGNER— NamedBobDunnandTiffanyMorton women'assi s stant basketball coaches. XAVIER (NO ) — Named Joe Fawcet andAllie Woodathletic trainers, Hilary Lobens tein assistant women'svolleyball coachandJimmieWalkeradministrativespecialist.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook lack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 36 3 17 2 3 , 668 1,780 T he Dalles 281 1 1 3 1 , 319 7 1 7 J ohn Day 28 9 12 5 1 , 008 4 9 6 McNary 5 5 5 439 916 448 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 300,309 52,591 124,857 62,328

The Dalles 240,313 41,151 63,433 34,691 John Day 209,546 36,883 39,818 20,266 McNary 194,381 32,690 32,362 16,338

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER ALL-STAR GAME

n gaal givesMLSwinauer The Associated Press PORTLAND — Landon Donovan cel-

Munich

looked down upon for staying here and Caleb Porter's hand. There was speculaplaying here. tion that Guardiola was upset about the "This was a big moment for our league. aggressive play in what was a preseason

ebrated the winning goal in his 14th AllStargame by grasping theMLS badge on And we understand the game doesn't exhibition for his team, but he refused to his jersey before he was swarmed by his count for anything. We know Bayern are talk about it. teammates. in their preseason and their best players Bayern's manager said he didn't see Take that, Bayern Munich.

SharkS, KingS to Play gameat 49erS' neWStadium-

Friday's Game SanJoseat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Montrealat Philadelphia,4 p.m. Toront oFCatColumbus 4:30p.m. ColoradoatFCDallas, 6 p.m. D.c. Unitedat RealSalt Lake,7p.m. ChivasUSAat Portland,7:30 p.m. Sunday'sGames SportingKansasCity atVancouver,5 p.m. NewYorkatChicago,5 p.m. HoustonatSeatle FC,7:30p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

didn't play. But they were still competitive

Porter.

"We certainly didn't mean anything Donovan dribbled the ball at the top of and those guys wanted to win just like we w the box before blasting it past German cllcl. negative," porter s aid. our players World Cup goalkeeper Martuel Neuer in the 70th minute, giving the MLS All-Stars

Bayern's roster included seven mem-

have nothing but the utmost respect for

bers of the World Cup-winning German Bayern."

a 2-1 victory over the Bundesliga champi- national team, but most of them remained While the moment was unfortunate, it didn't dull the celebration in the All-Star ons on Wednesday night. on the bench until about the final 10 "I'm proud to be a part of this league," minutes. locker room. Loud music played and PortDonovan said. "For many years, those of Following the match, Bayern coach Pep land All-Star Diego Vaieri collected autous that were in this league were sort of Guardiola wouldn't shake All-Star coach graphs from his teammates.


THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • THE BULLETIN C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

Baltimore Toronto NewYork Tampa Bay Boston Detroit Kansas City

Cleyeland Chicago Minnesota Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston Texas

64 49 61 54 59 54 55 59 50 63

CentralDivision W L

62 49 59 53 57 57 55 60 51 61

West Division W L

69 44 67 46 59 54 47 67 45 69

Pct GB .566 .530 4 .522 5 482 9'/t

.442 14

Pct GB .559 .527 3'/z .500 6'/t .478 9 455 tu/t

pm GB

HarenW,9-9 7 Howell LeagueH,7 Jansen S,32-36 1

Chicago

1-3 3 1 0 1 0 2-3 0 0 1 0

1 0 0 0

0 0 0 0

4 0 0 2

ShoemakerL,9-4 6 6 2 Grilli 1 1 0 Salas 1 1 0 Street 1 1 0 Howelpi l tchedto1batter inthe8th. WP — Grigi. T—3:06.A—43,669 (45,483).

2 0 0 0

2 0 0 0

5 1 0 0

LosAngeles(A)

.611 .593 2 .522 10 .412 22'/t .395 24'/t

Wednesday'sGames SanDiego5, Minnesota4,10 innings Texas 3, ChicagoWhite Sox1 Tampa Bay7, Oakland3 Seattle 7, Atlanta3 N.Y.Yankees5, Detroit1 Philadelphia10,Houston 3 Toronto5, Baltimore1 Cincinnati 8,Cleveland3 Boston 2, St. Louis1 Kansas City4,Arizona3 L.A. Dodgers 2, L.A.Angels1 Today'sGam es Detroit (Porcego13-5)at N.Y.Yankees(Greene2-1), 10:05a.m. Houston(McHugh 4-9) at Philadelphia(R.Hernandez 6-8), 4:05 p.m. Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 5-6) at Toronto (Happ8-5), 4:07 p.m. Cleveland (House1-2) atCincinnati (Bailey8-5), 4:10 p.m. Boston (Workman1-4) atSt.Louis (Wainwright13-6), 4:15 p.m. Kansas City(Guthrie 7-9)at Arizona(Nuno0-2), 6:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Ryu12-5) at L.A.Angels(C.Wilson 8-7), 7:05 p.m. Minnesota (Pino1-3) at Oakland(Lester 11-7), 7;05 p.m. Chicago WhiteSox(Carroll 4-6)at Seatle (Elias8-9), 7:10 p.m. Friday'sGames TampaBayatChicagoCubs,1:05p.m. Cleve landatN.Y.Yankees,4:05p.m. St. LouisatBaltimore, 4;05p.m. Detroit atToronto,4:07p.m. SanFranciscoat KansasCity, 5:10p.m. TexasatHouston,5:10p.m. Bosto natL.A.Angels,7:05p.m. Minnesota at Oakland, 7:05p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxatSeattle, 7:10p.m.

Rockies13, Cobs 4

DENVER — Carlos Gonzalezhomered, doubled andsingled in his return to the lineup, andColorado snapped a five-game losing streak Los Angeles(N) 02B Ogg 000 — 2 with a victory over the Chicago Los Angeles(A) Ogg Ogg 010 — 1 DP — LosAngeles(A)1. LOB—LosAngeles(N) 8, Cubs. Corey Dickerson hadfour Los Angeles(A)3. 28—Puig (31), Ethier(14). HRKemp (14). SB—C.crawford(14), Calhoun(4). S—A. hits, drove in three andwas ahomer shy of the cycle. Mike McKenEllis. SF —lannetta. IP H R E R BBSO ry also homered for Colorado. LosAngeles(N)

AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division W L

0 ENavrrdh 2 0 0 0 1 Cronph 1 0 1 0 0 Cowgillpr-dh 0 0 0 0 0 Congerc 2 0 1 0 lannettph-c 0 0 0 1 JMcDnl3b 1 0 0 0 Freeseph-3b 2 0 1 0 Totals 3 4 2 9 2 Totals 3 01 5 1

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PROUD PADRE

All TimesPDT

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Jim Mone/The Associated Press

San Diego Padres' Seth Smith is welcomed in the dugout after his decisive solo home run off Minne-

sota Twins relief pitcher AnthonySwarzak in the10th inning of Wednesday's game in Minneapolis. The Padres won 5-4.

Tepesch pitched scoreless ball into the sixth inning, leading Texas over Chris Saleandthe Chicago White Sox. TheRangers, who began the daywith baseball's worst record, havewon consecutive games for the first time since June

Red Sox2, Cardinals1 ST. LOUIS —Xander Bogaerts drove in both runs, including a go-ahead sacrifice fly in the ninth inning, as Boston beat St. Louis. The matchup of Shelby Miller and Joe Kelly, former teammates who were each other's best man, wasa high quality draw that brought out their best. Eachallowed a run in seven innings.

Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi Coghlnlf 3 1 3 1 Blckmncf-rf 3 0 0 0 J.Baez2b 4 0 0 0 Rutledgss 4 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 3 0 0 1 Mornea 1b 4 2 3 0 Scastro ss 4 0 1 0 Kahnle p 0 0 0 0 Valuen 3b 3 1 0 0 Stubbs ph-cf 1 0 0 0 Alcantrcf 4 1 1 2 Arenad 3b 3 2 1 2 Castillo c 4 0 1 0 CGnzlz rf 5 3 3 2 Sweenyrf 4 1 2 0 BBrwnp 0 0 0 0 Arrietap 1 0 0 0 CDckrslf 4 3 4 3 Fujikwp 0 0 0 0 McKnrc 4 2 3 3 Valaikaph 1 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 3 1 1 1 R usinp 0 0 0 0 Lylesp 2 0 0 0 Lakeph 1 0 0 0 Barnesph 1 0 1 1 B elislep 0 0 0 0 Culersnph-1b1 0 0 0 Totals 32 4 8 4 Totals 3 5 13 1612 Chicago 100 210 BOO — 4 Colorado 000 3 0 6 4 0x — 13 DP — Chicago 3, Colorado 1. LOB—Chicago 5, Colorado 4. 2B —Coghlan (16), Arenado(26),

C.Gonzalez(15), Co.Dickerson(19). 38—Coghlan (3), Morneau (3), Co.Dickerson(4). HR —Alcantara (3), C.Gon zalez(11), McKenry (3). SB—S.castro (4). CS — Blackmon(6). S—Arrieta, Rutledge. SF—Rizzo. IP H

R E R BBSO

Chicago ArrietaL,6-3 5 13 9 9 0 3 Fujikawa 1 0 0 0 0 0 Rusin 2 3 4 4 3 1 Colorado LylesW,6-1 6 6 4 4 1 5 Belisle 1 1 0 0 1 0 Kahnle 1 0 0 0 0 2 B.Brown 1 1 0 0 0 0 Arrietapitchedto 7battersin the6th. HBP —by Fujikawa (Blackmon), by Arrieta (Blackmon). T—2:51. A—35,804(50,480).

NewYork g g gg gg 018 — 1 Boston St. Louis Washington 3gg BB3 01x — 7 ab r hbi ab r hbi E—Rendon(11). DP—Ne wYork 1, Washington B.Holt3b 4 0 1 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 1 1 0 Giants 7, Brewers 4 2.LOB—New York6,Washington3.28— Rendon2 Pedroia2b 4 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 0 0 0 (31). HR—L aRoche 2(15), Espinosa(7). SB—Des- Cespdslf 4 1 1 0 Hollidylf 3 0 0 0 MILWAUKEE — Michael Morse mond(12). Napoli1b 4 0 2 0 MAdms1b 4 0 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO Navarf 3 1 1 0 Bourjospr 0 0 0 0 and Pablo Sandoval eachdrove in New york D.Ortizph 0 0 0 0 JhPerltss 4 0 0 0 three runs to leadSanFrancisco NieseL,5-8 6 8 6 6 2 2 BrdlyJrpr-cf 0 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bogartsss 3 0 1 2 Taversrf 3 0 1 0 to a victory over Milwaukee. Ryan Carlyle C.Torres 1 1 1 1 0 2 V azquz c 3 0 0 0 Jay cf 3000 27-28. Vogelsong (7-8j gave upone run Washington Betts cf-rf 4 0 1 0 SMigerp 0 0 0 0 Phillies10, Astros 3 on seven hits in six innings for the J.Kellyp 2 0 1 0 SRonsnph 1000 FisterW,11-3 71 - 3 61 0 0 7 Texas Chicago Thornton 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Mdlrksph 1 0 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Giants to win consecutive starts PHILADELPHIA — Chase Utley Tazawap 0 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Detwiler 1 1 0 0 0 1 C hoodh 4 0 1 0 Eatoncf 1 0 0 0 for the first time since May. T—2:31. A—26,701(41,408). ueharap 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 hit a three-run homer, andBen Andrusss 3 0 2 0 LeGarccf 3 0 0 0 Totals 32 2 8 2 Totals 3 0 1 5 1 Riosrf 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 3 0 Revere hadfour hits, including a Boston Ogg 1gg 001 — 2 San Francisco M i lwaukee ABeltre3b 3 0 0 0 JAreu1b 3 0 0 0 Pirates 7, Marlins 3 triple, to lead Philadelphia to a vicSt. Louis 1g g O gg 000 — 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Arencii1b 3 1 0 0 A.Dunndh 4 0 0 0 DP — Boston 1, St. Louis2. LOB —Boston 6, St. tory over Houston. RyanHoward Pencerf 6 1 2 0 CGomzcf 5 2 2 1 Carp1b 0 0 0 0 Viciedorf-If 4 1 2 1 L ouis 7. 28 — N apoli 2 (18), B oga ert s (21), M. c arpen P anik2b 5 1 3 1 GParralf 2 0 0 0 PITTSBURGH — Josh Harrison Rosal es2b 4 2 2 3 Gigaspi3b 4 0 0 0 had two hits and two RBls with Poseyc 5 2 1 0 KDavisph-If 2 1 1 1 had three hits to extend his hot ter (26).S—S,Miger, SF—Bogaerts. Chirinsc 3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO a double for Philadelphia, which S andovl3b 5 2 3 3 Braunrf 5 1 0 0 Adducilf 3 0 0 0 De Azalf 2 0 2 0 NATIONALLEAGUE streak and Jeff Locke overcamea Boston Romop 0 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 5 0 2 2 DnRrtscf 2 0 0 0 Konerkph 1 0 0 0 had scored just two runs in 35 /s East Division 7 3 1 1 4 2 Ishikaw1b 0 0 0 0 Lucroy1b 5 0 1 0 L Martnph-cf 1 0 0 0 Sierrarf 0 0 0 0 shaky start to pitch seven innings JKelly W L Pct GB Tazawa W,2-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 innings entering Wednesday. The Belt1b 5 0 0 0 Gennett2b 4 0 2 0 GBckh2b 2 0 0 0 as Pittsburgh beat Miami. HarriWashington 61 51 .545 UeharaS,23-25 1 2 0 0 0 0 Phillies topped the Casilla p 0 0 0 0 Kintzlr p 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 3 5 3 Totals 3 1 1 8 1 Astros 2-1 in15 Atlanta 58 56 .509 4 St. Louis M orself 4 0 2 3 Grzlnyp 0 0 0 0 son hit a double andscored twice. Texas 0 20 000 100 — 3 night. Miami 55 58 .487 6r/t S.Miller 7 4 1 1 1 4 innings on Tuesday Chicago 0 00 000 100 — 1 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 He is 20 for 44 during a10-game S.Freema NewYork 54 60 .474 8 n 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Affeldtp 0 0 0 0 Maldndc 3 0 1 0 E—Gilaspie (9). DP—Texas3, Chicago1. LOBPhiladelphia 51 63 .447 11 Texas Maness 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Houston Arias3b 1 0 0 0 Segurass 4 0 3 0 hitting streak, with six doubles, Philadelphia 3, C hi c ago 5. 2 B — A I.R am irez ( 22), De A za (14) . CentralDivision RosenthalL,1-6 1 2 1 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi HR — Rosales2(3), Viciedo(14).CS—Andrus2(12), GBlanccf 3 0 1 0 Gallardp 1 0 0 0 one triple and five home runs. W L Pct GB AI.Ramirez T—3:01. A—42, 7 33 (45, 3 99). Bcrwfrss 3 0 1 0 MrRynlph 1 0 0 0 Altuve2b 5 1 2 1 Reverecf 5 2 4 0 (4). Milwaukee 62 52 .544 Vglsngp 2 0 0 0 Estradp 0 0 0 0 Grssmnrf 4 0 0 0 Rollinsss 5220 IP H R E R BBSO Pitlsburgh St. Louis 60 52 .536 1 J.Perezlf 1 1 1 0 RWeksph-2b 2 0 1 0 Miami Fltynwp 0 0 0 0 utley2b 4 2 2 3 Texas Royals 4, Diamondbacks 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi Pittsburgh 60 53 531 1r/t Carterlf 4 0 2 0 Howard1b 4 1 2 2 Tepesch W,4-7 5 2-3 6 0 0 1 2 Totals 4 0 7 147 Totals 3 9 4 134 Yelichlf 4 1 1 2 JHrrsn3b 4 2 3 0 Cincinnati 58 56 .509 4 San Francisco 300 100 838 — 7 S ingltn1b 4 0 0 1 Byrdrf 311 1 MendezH,2 1 2 1 1 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 1 0 GPolncrf 3 2 0 0 Chicago 48 64 .429 13 Cotts H,16 PHOENIX — Mike Moustakas Milwaukee 1 0 0 g gg 281 — 4 MDmn3b 4 1 1 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 12-3 0 0 0 1 2 Stantonrf 4 0 0 0 RMartnc 3 2 1 1 West Division E — R om o (1). DP — S a n F ra ncisco1. LOB — S an Corprnc 4 0 0 0 CJimnzp 0 00 0 Feliz S,4-5 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 homered anddrove in four runs, W L Pct GB Chicago Francisco12, Milwaukee10. HR—Sandoval (14), McGeh3b 4 0 1 0 I.Davis1b 2 1 1 2 Mrsnckcf 3 0 1 1 GSizmrlf-rf 3 1 0 0 JeBakr1b 4 0 2 1 GSnchzph-1b1 0 1 2 Los Angeles 65 50 .565 Yordano Ventura pitched six solid (17), K.Davis (18). SB—C.Gomez (23), G .Petitss 4 1 2 0 Nievesc 3 0 0 1 Sale L,10-2 6 3 2 2 2 9 C.Gomez Ozunacf 4 0 1 0 SMartecf 3 0 1 0 SanFrancisco 62 52 .544 2r/t D.Webb —Pence(5). Peacck p 2 0 0 0 Asche 3b 3 0 0 0 innings and KansasCity beat Ari1 1 1 1 0 0 Braun(10). CS K Hrndz2b 3 0 0 0 Sniderlf 4 0 0 1 SanDiego 52 61 .460 12 IP H R E R BBSO DDwnsp 0 0 0 0 DBchnp 2 1 1 1 Guerra 1 1 0 0 0 0 GJones ph 1 0 0 0 Mercer ss 4 0 1 1 zona to win its fifth straight series. Arizona 49 65 .430 15'/t Petricka Kraussph-rf 1 0 1 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 San Francisco Mathisc 3 1 1 0 Mrtnz2b 4 0 0 0 Colorado 45 68 .398 19 HBP Vogelsong W,7-8 6 7 1 1 1 3 Kansas City rolled over Arizona in H oesph 1 0 1 0 DBrwnlf 1 0 0 0 —bySale(Arencibia). K oehlerp 1 0 0 0 Lockep 3 0 1 0 0 2 2 2 0 0 J Gutierrez Totals 36 3 10 3 Totals 3 3 10 12 8 T—2:57. A—18,898(40,615). the opener andhadjustenough Wednesday'sGames Affeldt H,16 1 2 0 0 0 0 Solanoph 1 0 0 0 Watsonp 1 0 0 0 Houston 1 00 100 100 — 3 SanDiego5, Minnesota4,10 innings offense for Ventura (9-8) to take Romo 1 1 0 0 0 3 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia 50 0 300 11x— 10 Yankees 5, Tigers1 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Seattle 7, Atlanta3 E—Byrd(2). DP—Houston 1. LOB—Houston 7, Casilla 1 1 1 1 0 2 the second game. SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia10,Houston3 Milwaukee Philadelphia4. 2B—M.Dominguez(17), Rollins(19), Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 3 2 7 9 7 Pittsburgh7, Miami3 G allardo L,6-6 4 9 4 4 4 4 H oward (12). 38—Revere(6). HR —utley(10). SBNEW YORK — Chris Capuano KansasCity Arizona 128 ggg Ogg — 3 Washington 7, N.Y.Mets1 Estrada 3 1 0 0 0 3 Miami Altuve(45),Revere(31). SF—Marisnick, Nieves. ab r hbi ab r hbi outpitched Justin Verlander while — 7 Pitlsburgh 4 g g g gg 3gx Cincinnati 8,Cleveland3 2-3 3 2 2 0 0 Kintzler IP H R E R BBSO E—Hechavarria(11). DP—Miami1. LOB—Miami Aokirf 4 0 0 0 Inciartcf 5 1 1 0 Houston SanFrancisco7, Milwaukee4 Brian McCannand ChaseHeadGorzelanny 1 1 1 1 1 2 5. 28—J.Harrison (22), I.Davis(14), G. WDavisp 0 0 0 0 Pnngtn3b 5 1 2 0 PeacockL,3-8 5 Boston 2, St. Louis1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 4, Pittsburgh Wooten 7 8 8 4 4 ley homered to send the New Sanchez (14). HR —Yelich (9). SB—J.Harrison(14). G Hllndp 0 0 0 0 A.Hill2b 4 1 2 1 D.Downs Colorado 13, ChicagoCubs4 J.Gutierrezpitchedto2 batters inthe 7th. 1 1 0 0 0 1 Infante2b 4 0 0 0 Trumo1b 4 0 1 1 C S — S.M art e (7). S — K oehler . Kansas City4,Arizona3 York Yankees past Detroit. The HBP—byVogelsong(Maldonado). WP—Gallardo2. Foltynewicz 2 4 2 2 0 2 IP H R E R BBSO S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 MMntrc 4 0 3 0 L.A. Dodgers 2, L.A.Angels1 Philadelphia Yankees improved to 2-1 in these T—3:53.A—33,394 (41,900). BButler1b 4 1 1 0 Ahmedpr 0 0 0 0 Today'sGam es Miami D .Buchanan W ,6-5 6 1-3 93 3 0 5 KoehlerL,7-9 6 5 4 4 4 4 A Gordnlf 2 1 0 0 Stitesp 0 0 0 0 Diekman N.Y.Mets(deGrom6-5) at Washington (Zimmermann three straight games started for 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Lcaincf-rf 3 1 1 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Reds 8, Indians 3 Hatcher 1 3 2 2 2 0 1 7-5), 9:35 a.m. De Fratus 1 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit by AL CyYoung Award M.Dunn 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Mostks3b 4 1 2 4 AnMadph 1 0 0 0 San Francisco(Peavy 0-2) at Milwaukee(W.Peralta C.Jimenez 1 1 0 0 0 0 winners. New Yorkedged Max 1 0 0 0 0 3 A Escorss 4 0 1 0 DPerltrf 4 0 2 1 13-6), 11:10a.m. CINCINNATI —Mat Latos pitched S.Dyson WP — P e a c o c k , F o l t y n e wi cz,Diekman. Venturp 2 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 Pitlsburgh ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 2-1) at Colorado(Flande Scherzer on Monday, then David T — 2: 4 5. A — 26,6 91 (43, 651). seven shutout innings and chipped Ibanez ph 1 0 0 0 KschncIf 4 0 1 0 Locke W , 3 -3 7 6 3 3 0 7 0-3),12;10p.m. 1 0 0 0 0 2 KHerrrp 0 0 0 0 Cllmntrp 2 0 0 0 Houston(McHugh 4-9) at Philadelphia(R.Hernandez Price got a no-decision Tuesday in with a hit as Cincinnati opened Watson Melancon 1 1 0 0 0 0 JDysoncf 0 0 0 0 Pachecph 1 0 0 0 Leaders 6-8), 4:05 p.m. in a game the Tigers won in the aseven-game homestand witha EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 T—2;43. A—26,976(38,362). Miami(Cosart0-1)at Pittsburgh(Volquez8-7), 4:05 12th. Through Wednesday's Games Gswsch ph-c 1 0 0 0 win over Cleveland. Zack Cozart p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE Totals 3 2 4 5 4 Totals 3 83 123 Cleveland (House1-2) atCincinnati (Bailey8-5), 4:10 hit a three-run homer off the BATTING —Altuve, Houston, .338; Cano, Seattle, Detroit New york Interleague Kansas City 02 B 1BB 001 — 4 p.m. .332; VMartinez,Detroit, .324; Brantley, Cleveland, Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi left-field foul pole andKristopher OB2 Ogg 001 — 3 Boston(Workm an1-4) atSt.Louis(Wainwright13-6), LOB —Kansas City 4, Arizona11.28—B.Butler .321; Beltre,Texas, .319;Mecabrera,Toronto, .315; R Davislf 4 1 0 0 Gardnrlf 4 1 1 0 Mariners 7, Braves3 4:15 prm. Negron added a two-run shot as Chicago,.313. (23), M.Montero (18). 38—Inciarte(1). HR —Mous- Gillaspie, Kansas City(Guthrie 7-9)at Arizona(Nuno0-2), 6:40 K insler2b 4 0 0 0 Jeterss 4 0 1 0 the Reds won for the third time in RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota, 79; Trout,LosAngeMicarr1b 1 0 0 1 Ellsurycf 3 1 1 0 takas (14).SF—Trumbo. p.m. SEATTLE — Seattle handed AtBrantley,Cleveland,74; Donaldson, Oakland, IP H R E R BBSO les, 78; L.A. Dodgers (Ryu12-5) at L.A.Angels(C.Wilson VMrtnzdh 4 0 1 0 Teixeir1b 3 1 1 1 four games. 74; Mecabrera,Toronto,72;Gardner,NewYork, 72; lanta its eighth straight loss, with KansasCity JMrtnzrf 4 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 0 0 0 0 8-7), 7:05 p.m. Toronto,70;Kinsler, Detroit, 70. Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 Beltrandh 4 0 1 0 VenturaW,9-8 6 8 2 2 1 8 Bautista, Friday'sGames Dustin Ackley and Logan Morrison Cleveland Cincinnati RBI — JAbreu, Chicago,86; Micabrera, Detroit, Holadyc 4 0 0 0 Mccnnc 4 1 1 2 K .Herrera H,11 1 0 0 0 1 1 TampaBayatChicagoCubs,1:05p.m. r hbi ab r hbi hitting home runs in the third inAnRmnss 4 0 2 0 Headly3b-1b 4 1 2 1 Kipnis2b ab W.DavisH,22 1 2 0 0 0 1 84; Ortiz,Boston,82; Trout, LosAngeles,81; DonN.Y.Metsat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. 4 1 3 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 Carrercf 4 0 2 0 Drew2b 3 0 0 0 G.HollandS,32-34 1 2 1 1 0 1 aldson,Oakland,78;Ncruz,Baltimore, 77;Brantley, SanDiegoatPitsburgh, 4:05p.m. D vMrprf 4 0 1 0 Brucerf 4 0 0 0 ning that sent the Mariners to the Cleve land,72;Moss,Oakland,72. Pradorf-3b 3 0 0 0 Arizona St. LouisatBaltimore,4:05p.m. Brantly cf 3 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 2 2 win. Ackley led off the third with HITS — Altuve, Houston, 158; Mecabrera,ToTotals 3 3 1 5 1 Totals 3 25 8 4 C ollmenter L,8-6 6 3 3 3 2 6 Miami atCincinnati, 4:10p.m. Rzpczyp 0 0 0 0 Mesorcc 4 0 0 0 Detroit 100 000 ggg — 1 a home run andMorrison added EMarshag 2 1 0 0 0 1 ronto, 147;Cano,Seatle, 139;Brantley, Cleveland, Washington atAtlanta, 4:35p.m. Raburnph 1 0 1 2 B.Pena1b 4 2 2 0 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 138; Markakis,Baltimore,135;Kinsler, Detroit, 132; New york 000 0 1 0 13x — 5 LA. Dodgers atMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. a three-run shot off Julio Teheran Stites rockttp 0 0 0 0 Heiseylf 4 0 0 0 Baltimore,131. 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 AJones, E—An.Rm oine(8),Jeter(9), Cap uano(1), Drew2 C O.Perez SanFranciscoat KansasCity, 5:10p.m. CSantn1b 4 0 0 0 Negron2b 4 3 3 2 DOUBLES —Micabrera, Detroit, 36; Trout, Los (10-8j for a 5-3 lead. H BP — by S tites (A . G or don). WP — V en tur a. (4). LOB —Detroit 8,NewYork5. 2B—An.Romine(4). Chsnhll3b 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 3 2 2 4 ColoradoatArizona, 6:40p.m. Angeles,33;Altuve, Houston, 32; Plouffe,Minnesota, T—3:02.A—16,157 (48,633). HR—Mccann(13), Headley(2). SF—Mi.cabrera. S wisherlf 4 0 0 0 Latosp 3 1 1 0 31; Kinsler,Detroit,30; Brantley,Cleveland,29; MeIP H R E R BBSO Atlanta Beatlle YGomsc 4 1 2 1 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Cabrera,Toronto,29; Pedroia, Boston, 29. Detroit American League ab r hbi ab r hbi JRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Lecurep 0 0 0 0 Padres 5, Twins 4 (10 innings) TRIPLEB — Rios,Texas,8;Bourn,Cleveland,7; VerlanderL,10-10 Bonifaclf 5 1 1 0 AJcksncf 5 0 1 0 Salazarp 1 0 0 0 Eaton,Chicago,7; Gardner,NewYork, 6; LMadin, B.Hardy Rays 7, Athletics3 L aStell2b 4 0 0 1 Ackleylf 5 2 2 1 ChDckrph 1 0 0 0 Texas,6; 6tiedat5. Coke MINNEAPOLIS —Center fielder FFrmn1b 4 0 3 2 Cano2b 3 2 2 0 Hagadnp 0 0 0 0 HOME RUNS —JAbreu, Chicago, 31; Ncruz, New york J.uptondh 4 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 3 0 1 1 Alexi Amarista made a game-savOAKLAND, Calif.— Kevin KierAtchisnp 0 0 0 0 Baltimore,29;Encarnacion,Toronto,26; Ortiz,Boston, Capuano 62-3 5 1 0 1 8 Heywrdrf 4 0 2 0 Seager3b 4 1 3 1 26;Trout,LosAngeles,25;Donaldson,Oakland,23; ing catch in the bottom of the maier hit a two-run homer to help WarrenW,2-5 1 1 - 3 0 0 0 1 1 Avilescf 0 1 0 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 0 0 Taylorss 2 1 1 1 3 48 108 Gattisc 4 1 2 0 Morrsn1b 4 1 1 3 VMartinez,Detroit,23; Moss,Oakland, 23. Huff 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 3 3 7 3 Totals ninth inning and Seth Smi t h Jeremy Hellickson end a six-start Clevel and BOO BOO B38 — 3 STOLEN BABES—Altuve, Houston,45; Egsbury, WP—Verlander, Capuano. BUptoncf 3 0 1 0 Enchvzrf 4 0 1 0 Cincinnati 830 2 0 0 3gx— 8 followed with a solo homer in the NewYork, 29;RD avis, Detroit, 26;AEscobar, Kansas winless stretch for his first victory T—3:10. A—40,067(49,642). R .Penass 4 1 1 0 Sucrec 4 0 0 0 DP — Cincinnati1. LOB—Cleveland5, Cincinnati City, 23;JDyson,KansasCity, 22;Andrus,Texas, 21; 36 3 103 Totals 3 4 7 127 10th to lift San Diego to avictory in 11 months, andTampa Baybeat 2. 28 — Raburn (7), YGomes (21), Frazier(18), Ne- Totals JJones, Seatle, 20;Reyes, Toronto,20. Atlanta gg3 ggg Ogg — 3 Blue Jays5, Orioles1 over Minnesota. Amarista ran Oakland to avoid asweep. Hellickgron(2). HR —YGomes(16), Negron(3), Cozart (3). PITCHING —Scherzer, Detroit, 13-4; Porcego, 184 B18 1gx — 7 Beatlle IP H R E R BBSO Detroit,13-5; FHernandez,Seattle,12-3; Wchen,Baltibackward on a dead sprint and laid son (1-1) allowed two hits and one D P — A tl a nta1. LOB — A tlant a 8, S e at t l e 7. 28 — F . Cleveland TORONTO — Drew Hutchison reeman (30), B.upton(17), Cano2(27). HR—Ackley out for a brilliant diving catch of a more,12-4;Richards,LosAngeles,12-4; Kazmir, Oakrun in seven innings, struck out SalazarL,4-5 4 5 5 5 0 5 F land,12-4;Tanaka, NewYork,12-4; Gray,Oakland,12(7), Morrison (6). SF—Taylor. came within one out of his secHagadon e 2 1 0 0 0 3 5; Kluber,Cleveland,12-6; Weaver, LosAngeles,12-6. three and walked none. He hadn't IP H R E R BBSO drive off the bat of EduardoEscoAtchison 1-3 3 3 3 0 0 ond car ee r complet e game, Jose bar to keep thegametied. Smith reached five innings in any of his Rzepczynski 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Atlanta NATIONAL LEAGUE Bautista homered and drove 9 6 6 2 5 had two hits and two RBls. Crockett 1 0 0 0 0 1 TeheranL,10-8 6 previous three starts this year or BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado,.340; Puig,Los Russell 23 2 1 1 0 1 i n three runs and Toronto beat Cincinnati Angeles,.316;MaAdams, St. Louis,.316; Morneau, 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 in five outings dating to the endof LatosW,4-3 72 - 3 6 3 3 2 5 Varvaro Colorado,.311;AMccutchen,Pittsburgh, .311;ReSan Diego Minnesota Baltimore, snapping a four-game Ju.Diaz 1 1 0 0 0 2 the 2013 season. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Jaime vere, Philadelphia,.309;Lucroy,Milwaukee,.305. ab r hbi ab r hbi Beatlle losing streak. Melky Cabrera had LeCure 1 1 0 0 0 0 RUNS —Pence, San Francisco, 80; Rendon, C.Young W,10-6 5 7 3 3 1 6 Ecarerss 4 1 1 1 DaSntncf 3 1 0 0 T — 2: 4 4. A — 33,8 63 (42, 3 19). Washington, 79; Goldschmidt, Arizona,75; Rizzo, TampaBay Oakland three hits as the BlueJays closed Beimel 0 1 0 0 0 0 Solarte3b 4 1 0 0 Dozier2b 5 1 1 0 Chicago, 75; CGomez, Milwaukee, 72; Stanton, Miab r hbi ab r hbi WilhelmsenH,5 1 0 0 0 1 2 S.Smithlf 4 1 2 2 Plouffe3b 4 1 2 3 D Jnngscf 5 0 1 2 Crispcf 4 0 1 0 within four games of the AL Medicadh 5 1 2 1 Nunezpr-3b 1 0 0 0 ami, 71;Tulowitzki, Colorado,71. Nationals 7, Mets1 LeoneH,7 1 1 0 0 0 1 East-leading Orioles and handed RBI — Stanton, Miami, 74;AdGonzalez, Los AnZ obristlf 4 1 3 1 Jasoc 3000 Furbush 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 5 0 1 1 KVargsdh 4 1 1 0 Joycedh 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 4 1 1 0 Baltimore its first loss in four Medina 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 V enalecf-rf 5 0 0 0 Arciarf 3 0 0 0 geles,72;Goldschmidt, Arizona,69;Howard, PhilaWASHINGTON — Doug Fi s ter delphia, 67; AMccutchen,Pittsburgh, 67;Desmond, Longori3b 4 0 1 1 Moss1b 3 1 0 0 Alonso1b 4 1 3 0 Parmel1b 4 0 0 0 Beimelpitchedto1 batter inthe6th. games. Washington,66;Braun,Milwaukee,65. Loney1b 4 0 2 0 Reddckrf 4 0 1 2 Grandlc 2 0 0 0 EEscorss 5 0 2 1 took a five-hit shutout into the T—2:53. A—30,770(47,476). HITS — DanMurphy, NewYork, 139;Pence, San YEscorss 5 2 2 0 Cagasp 2b 4 0 0 0 R iveraph-c 0 0 0 0 Fryerc 4 0 2 0 eighth inning, AdamLaRoche Francisco,136;AMccutchen,Pittsburgh,128; McGeC Figur2b 5 1 1 0 Vogtdh 3 0 0 0 Baltimore Toronto Francrrf 2 0 0 0 KSuzukph 1 0 1 0 Dodgers 2, Angels1 hee, Mi a mi ,128;DGordon, LosAngeles, 127; Span, J Molinc 3 1 2 0 Fuldlf 3000 ab r hbi ab r hbi homeredtwiceandDannyEspinoAmarstph-cf 1 0 0 0 JSchafrlf 4 0 1 0 Kiermrrf 4 2 1 3 Sogardss 3 1 1 1 Markks rf 3 0 0 0 Reyes ss 5 0 0 0 Totals 3 6 5 9 5 Totals 3 84 104 Washington,126;FFreeman, Atlanta, 125;CGomez, sa als o connect ed as W ashi ngt on Milwaukee,125. Totals 38 7 137 Totals 3 1 3 4 3 Machd3b 4 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 4 2 3 0 Ban Diego Ogg 102 gg1 1 — 6 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Dan Haren DOUBLE S—Goldschmidt, Arizona,39; Lucroy, T ampa Bay 0 1 8 3 3 8 000 — 7 A.Jon escf 3 0 0 0 Goself 0 0 0 0 beat the NewYork Mets. Fister Minnesota 2BB 011 ggg 0 — 4 pitched three-hit ball into the E — S. S m i t h (1). DP — S an D iego 1. LOB — S a n Milwaukee,37; AMccutchen,Pittsburgh, 32; DanOakland Ogg OB1 002 — 3 N.cruzdh 3 0 0 0 Bautistrf 4 1 3 3 (11-3) allowed oneunearned run E— Sogard(3).DP— Oakland1.LOB— TampaBay C.Davis1b 3 1 1 1 Reimlddh 4 1 1 0 Diego 7, Mi n nesota 14. 28 — S.S m i t h (23)r Gyorko M urphy, Ne w York,31; Puig,LosAngeles,31; Rendon, eighth inning, and Matt Kemp and six hits in 7t/s innings. He JHardyss 3 0 0 0 DNavrrc 4 0 1 1 (8), Alonso 2(19), Fryer(2). HR —S.Smith (12), Washington,31;Scastro,Chicago,30; FFreeman, At11, Oakland 3.28—Zobrist 2 (24), Reddick(9). HRhomered i n t he Los Angel es DodgKiermaie(9), r Sogard(1). S—J.Molina. Loughlf 3 0 0 0 Valenci1b 4 0 1 1 Plouffe(8). SB—Da.Santana(9), Dozier (18), Nunez lanta,30;Span,Washington, 30. struck out sevenand reduced his TRIPLES —DGordon, LosAngeles, 10;BcrawIP H R E R BBSO Flahrly2b 3 0 0 0 CIRsmscf 3 0 1 0 ers' victory over the LosAngeles 6), J.Schafer(2). S—Amarista, J.Schafer. SF —E. ERA to 2.49. Hundlyc 2 0 0 0 Kawsk3b 4 1 2 0 abrera. ford, SanFrancisco,9;Puig,LosAngeles,9;Pence, TampaBay Angels. Andre Ethier had an RBI IP H R E R BBSO San Francisco, 8;Braun,Milwaukee,6; BHamilton, HellicksonW,1-1 7 2 1 1 0 3 Pearceph 1 0 0 0 Goins2b 2 0 0 0 3 45 125 Newyork Washington double in the second inning as San Diego Cincinnati, 6;Revere,Philadelphia, 6; Segura,MilJo Peralta 1 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 2 8 1 1 1 Totals 52-3 8 4 4 3 5 waukee, 1 2 2 2 1 1 Baltimore 010 0 0 0 BOO — 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Despaigne 6; Yelich, Miami,6. Balfour the Freeway Series moved down — 5 Toronto 220 001 ggx Grndrs rf 4 0 1 0 S pancf 4 0 1 0 A.Torres 2 1 0 0 1 1 HOMERUNS —Stanton, Miami, 26; Rizzo,ChiOakland the 1-5 to Anaheimafter the clubs E—McFarland (1). DP—Baltimore 1. LOBDnMrp2b 4 0 2 1 Rendon 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 cago,25;Byrd, Philadelphia, 21;Tulowilzki, Colora3b 4 1 2 0 Vincent GrayL,12-5 41-3 10 7 6 4 3 32-3 2 0 0 0 3 Baltimore 1, Toronto 9. 2B —Me.Cabrera (29), DWrght3b 4 0 1 0 W erthrf 2 1 1 1 split the first two games inChavez QuackenbushW,2-2 1 0 0 0 2 1 do, 21; Duda,NewYork, 20; Frazier, Cincinnati, 20; J.chavez D vis (19), Bautista (22). Duda1b 4 0 2 0 SouzJrrf 1 0 0 0 BenoitS,4-5 1 1 0 0 1 0 Goldschmidt,Arizona,19; Reynolds, Milwaukee,19; Abad 1 1 0 0 1 1 Bautista (22). HR—C.a Ravine. S—Goins 2. HBP—by Hellickson(Jaso), byGray(Kiermaier). dArnadc 4 0 1 0 LaRoch1b 4 2 2 3 Minnesota Jupton,Atlanta,19. T—3:10.A—21,513 (35,067). IP H R E R BBSO NiwnhsIf 3 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 1 1 0 Correia 6 5 3 3 1 3 STOLENBASES—DGordon, Los Angeles,51; Baltimore CYoung ph 1 0 0 0 H arperlf 3 1 1 0 LosAngeles(N) LosAngeles(A) Duensing 0 1 0 0 1 0 BHamilton,Cincinnati, 43;Revere, Philadelphia,31; W.chenL,12-4 5 8 4 4 2 6 Lagars cf 4 1 1 0 Espinos2b 4 1 1 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi BurtonH,12 2 1 0 0 1 1 EYoung, NewYork,26;CGomez,Milwaukee,23;Span, Rangers 3,WhiteSox1 McFarland 3 4 1 1 0 1 Tejadass 3 0 0 0 Loatonc 3 0 0 0 DGordn2b 5 0 0 0 Calhonrf 4 0 1 0 PerkinsBS,4-32 1 1 1 1 1 0 Washington,23;Rogins,Philadelphia,22. Toronto Niese p 2 0 0 0 F isterp 3 0 0 0 P uigcf 3 0 1 0 Troutcf 4 0 0 0 SwarzakL,2-1 1 1 1 1 0 1 PITCHING —Kershaw,LosAngeles,13-2; WPe rHutchisonW,8-9 8 2-3 1 1 1 1 8 Carlylep 0 0 0 0 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 0 0 0 Pujols1b 4 0 0 0 Duensingpitchedto 2batters inthe7th. alta, Milwaukee,13-6; Wainwright, St. Louis, 13-6; CHICAGO— Adam Rosales Janssen 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Campllph 1 0 0 0 Detwilrp 0 0 0 0 HRmrz ss 4 0 1 0 JHmltnlf 4 0 0 0 HBP —byDespaigne(Da.Santana,Da.Santana). PBCueto,Cincinnati, 13-6; Bumgarner, SanFrancisco, homered twice in agamefor the T—2:41. A—33,054(49,282). CTorrs p 0000 Rojasss 0 0 0 0 Aybarss 3 1 1 0 Grandal. 13-8; Ryu,LosAngeles,12-5; Simon,Cincinnati,12first time in his career andNick Totals 3 418 1 Totals 3 2 7 9 7 Kempdh 4 1 1 1 HKndrc2b 3 0 0 0 T—3:45.A—34,567(39,021). 7; Greinke,LosAngeles,12-7.

National League


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

COLLEGE SPORTS

ewrueswou urt erse arate i an sma By Steve Eder

Recruiters fly on private planes, athletes train with top-of-the-line

New York Times News Service

The head football coach at Alabama makes $6.9 million a year, and his staff is handsomely compensated as well. The offensive coordinator makes $680,000 a year and the defensive coordinator reportedly makes $1.35 million. The strength and conditioningcoach makes $395,000. At Ohio State, the football team is

equipment, and teams compete in m ammoth stadiums that are th e

envy of many professional teams. It is not uncommon for a univer-

sity athletics budget to top $60 million. And that is what life looked like

when the schools were playingby the NCAA's old rules.

preparing to move into a brand new The NCAA is expected to adopt $2.5 million, 10,000-square-foot lock- today a new set of looser rules that er room, complete a with a deluxe will allow the sports powerhouses lounge outfitted with HD televisions. that compete in the five biggest conIt also has a waterfall. ferences — the Southeastern ConferLast season, when Florida State ence, the Atlantic Coast Conference, and Auburn qualified for the BCS the Pac-12, the Big Ten and the Big 12 championship football game, their — to spend millions of dollars more conferences each r eceived $18 on sports, a move that some critics million. fear will put an even greater emphaT his is a portrait of l ife in t h e sis on athletics. "It will simply raise the stakes, wealthiest districts of college sports. The denizens of these rarefied quar- raise the salaries, raise the expenters, schools like A l abama, Ohio ditures, raise the professionalism, State and Oregon, are still institu- and ultimately, we will have more tions of higher education, of course. barbells and dumbbells," said GerBut it i s u ndeniable that athletics ry Gurney, president of The Drake have become evermore centralto Group, which pushes for educational their mission — and their bottom reform in college athletics. line — thanks to the juggernaut proSome estimates suggest the new grams that generate hundreds of mil- rules will usher in as much as $5 millions of dollars a year. lion in new spending on sports, de-

pending on the school.

ApriL The schools spend a median of prospects and coaches. The changes that the Big 5 confer$75,000per athlete, up from $41,000 a ences adopt could mark the beginaway from any semblance of these decade ago. athletes being students," added GurAthletics conferences make more ning of a new era. Other schools in ney, an assistant professor and for- money than ever from television con- smaller conferences may follow suit mer athletics executive at Oklahoma. tracts, and some have even launched and change theirrules to keep up Others, though, see today's vote their own lucrative networks. Some with the Big 5, though many of them as an opportunity to bring the rules schools have upgraded their stadi- do not have themoney tocompete on governing college sports up to date, ums to make revenue from corporate that level. Boise State, which has boasted while also sharing more of the pie suites. Donors have also chipped in, with athletes. underwriting construction projects one of the country's best football pro"What we hope is going to happen atschoolsacrossthe country. grams in recent years, competes in out of this is that the structure of the The results of the spending wars the Mountain West, a relatively small NCAA will probably be more reflec- are often seen in recruiting. A school conference. That leaves it outside of tive of 2014, of the status of college might try to get an edge by touting a the Big 5 and this frustrates Bob Kusathletics as it is today, to provide us prominent (and well-compensated) tra, the school's president. "It's a whole series of significant with the ability to make more effi- position coach, or better yet, a shiny new advantages given to these powcient and fluid decisions that benefit new facility. our students in a more timely way," To keep up, plenty of schools are er conferences," Kustra said. He said Mike Alden, the athletic director spending beyond what they bring in. worried that smaller schools like his at Missouri. Only 20 Division I athletics programs would be forced to join the financial even ifitruns contrary to But no one expects the new rules generate enough revenue to cov- arms race, to flood college sports with money er their expenses, according to the the school's financial interest and its — because college sports are already Fulks report. mission. The reforms, Kustra said, "will do drowning in money. The cost of playing in the top tier In the past 10 years, the universi- will only increase. The new rules nothing but place greater pressure ties that compete at the top level in could allow schools in those top con- on athletic budgets and move the football have seen their total athlet- ferences to give players a few thou- ball farther down the field toward ics expenses grow from a median of sand dollars more than what the cur- professionalization." "Enough is enough," Kustra said. $28.9 million in 2004 to $62.2 million rent scholarship rules allow. It also last year, according to a report that could loosen limits on agents and ad- "We already have one NFL on SunDaniel Fulks of Transylvania Uni- visers and reform the recruiting pro- days, we don't need another profesversity prepared for the NCAA in cedures that limit contacts between sional league on Saturdays." "This move will take us farther

The Nannion file

Mannion

Shoni SchImmel Is intro-

Name: Sean Mannion

Continued from C1 Mannion is the only Bea-

duced prIor to the WNBA All-Star basketball

Ht/Wt:6-5,227

ver on the cover of Oregon

Year:Senior From:Pleasanton, Calif.

State's 2014 football media

guide, a sign of just how important he is to this team.

game In July. Schimmel

he completed 66 percent of STATS Cem-Att-Int Yds TD his 603 passes for a Pac-12

grew Up on

Conference r ecord

Reservation

After a season in which

the UmatIlla Indian

4 , 662 2013 400-603-15 4,662 37

yards, his emergence as the 2012 200-309-13 2,446 15 face of the program might 2011 305-473-18 3,328 16 not be a surprise. Blessed with the size and rocket arm the NFL covets, the 6-foot-5-inch, 227-pound

In Northeast

Total 905-1,385-46 10,436 68

Oregon and played high

vers have other concerns on

ton before

school ball et HermIs-

Mannion needs to lead the offense. offense more now than ever, In games in which the a responsibility he admit- Beavers ran the ball well, ted he has not always found such as the Civil War and easy to accept. the Hawaii B ow l a g ainst "Playing q u a rterback,Boise State, the Beavers' in a lot of ways you are di- offense looked nearly unrecting traffic on the field," stoppable. But mostly, the said Mannion, whose 10,436 Beavers struggled to run, career passing yards put ranking 11th in the Pac-12 him on pace to smash Derek with 94.4 yards per game. Anderson's school r ecord Against the league's bet(11,249 yards, 2001-04). "I ter defenses, that lack of think if I can be more voan effectiveground game cal, and more outspoken made Oregon State far too in terms of what guys need one-dimensional and forced to be doing and where they Mannion into too many n eed to be, I think it w i l l

rushed — an d

help get everybody on the same page."

poor — decisions.

The task will not be so

easy. Mannion will pilot an of-

t o o o f t en

Even with the return of Woods and Terron Ward,

the Beavers' two leading rushers from a year ago,

fense with a new offensive the offensive line is at best a work in progress at the seacoordinator — former NFL assistant John Garrett has

son's onset.

replaced longtime coordinator Danny L angsdorf, who was hired during the offseason by the New York Giants — a reworked front

The line already had to replace at least three start-

downs last year before taking his talents to the New

that by the time the season

ers, and all-conference-cal-

iber center Isaac Seumalo has spent the early days of camp limping around in a line, and at least five new starters. boot after offseason foot Oh, and the Beavers have surgery. All of which helps exto figure out how to replace the production of Brandin plain why coach Mike Riley Cooks, who reeled in an seemed concerned after the otherworldly 128 passes for first day of practice. "I still have high hopes 1,730 yards and 16 touchOrleans Saints. The Beavers do have tal-

gets rolling, or shortly into it, that we will be good up front with a solid five starters and

ent at receiver, led by soph- then have the best depth omore playmaker Victor we've had in a long time," the Bolden. Beavers' veteran coach said. "But there is no replace- "This picture can change ment for Brandin Cooks," with the health of Isaac and said Storm Woods, OSU's Grant Bays (who is nursing junior running back, who an injured back) and everyneeds to bounce back af- body else staying healthy ter struggling in 2013. "Not and progressing as players. saying Vic (Bolden) can't This could be a good picture. "It's just average right have a great year like that, but there is no replacement." now. We havea lotofw ork Mannion's answer seems to do if this is the way it's to be the right one. going to be." He said he met daily with Mannion spent last year's his young group of receiv- preseason camp fighting to ers in the offseason, and as beat out senior Cody Vaz the summer wore on, he ex- for the starting job. panded the drills to include He does not have to wormore offensive players. ry about such things these "There was some grow- days. ing pains in spring, I think No, his job during preseathat is fair to say," Mannion son camp is altogether difsaid of hisreceivers. "But ferent this year. "I feel like I've learned you could tell they were

so we can address some of

the missed-assignment issues. That's stuff that can be fixed pretty easily." Even if the passing game resembles the record-breaking attack of 2013, the Bea-

Matt YorkIrhe Associated Press

Schimmel

the WNBA draft. Overall as a

a t th e

in a spring break tournament

minutes per game. The Dream visited.

game — including her dad — wore T-shirts proclaiming

across the streetfrom her

are 24-4 and sit atop the Eastern Conference. The t eam

S eattle is a bout a f o u r hour drive from the Umatilla

has already clinched its sixth straight playoff berth.

Reservation.

Continued from C1 S chimmel's fans "Rez Ball Rules."

Schimmel started the All-

home. She was hooked. Her family moved to Portland with the hope that Shoni — and her sister Jude — would

"I take a lot of pride in it,"

Despite the fact that Shim-

FARMERS

MARKET NorthWestCrossing Neighborhood Center

' NORTHWEST CROSSING

Bend North

North's 2.73 team earned-run

ContInued from C1 Ruhl's squad spent Wednesday racing go-carts and enjoying a barbecue dinner put on by one of Little League's local host parents.

mark in t h e

baseball too much," Ruhl said

their semifinal contests today,

about his club's most recent off day. "We (the coaches) are really toeing that line of being serious and having fun and letting the kids relax."

they would meet in a rematch for the regional championship.

www.nwxfarmersmarket.com

averageisthe second-lowest N o rthwest re-

gional. Washington, which finished 4-0 in pool play, has a 1.20 ERA. If both Bend North

and Washington (Pacific Little League out of the north Seat"We didn't t h in k a b o ut tle suburb of Lynnwood) win

The winner of the Northwest

C enter fielder D y lan

Ruhl

we can win two games.

"We'll have a dogfight in leads the way for Bend North with a scorching .583 average. both contests," he added. "But

This is Mannion's offense

Shortstop Evan Scalley is hit-

we're confident we can get

now. And it will be up to him to keep it running while the

ting.455, and outfielder Logan

there. Our kids really want another shot

rest of the unit sorts every-

Wehrman is batting.429. Ruhl also has been Bend's

ton. I love it. They have some most effective pitcher, allow- hunger."

— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall®bendbulletin.com.

ican Night when the Dream

SATURDAY

try to build off of that, but

thing out.

points and 3.5 assists in 19.7

Schimmel said. "Just haphave a better chance to de- mel is coming off the bench, pening to have the following Dream this season. Not being velop their talent. Schimmel her Native American fans turn I have by being Native Amera starter is the most frustrat- starred at Franklin and was out to watch her play all across ican, it's pretty awesome to ing thing about her rookie named a Women's Basket- the country. see all the Native Americans year, but she understands. ball C o a ches A s s ociation Last week, the Muscogee come out to games like in "In college I was the go- All-American. Creek N a t io n coo r d inat- Phoenix or Minnesota. They to player, and in high school That l e d to L ou i s ville, ed a celebration prior to the even travel to A t lanta and (freshman and sophomore where Schimmel scored 2,174 Dream's game against the Tul- watch games. It's really aweseasons at Hermiston, junior points and had 600 assists sa Shock that featured danc- some to see that." and senior seasons at Frank- over the course of her career. ers from nearly all of Oklaholin High in Portland) I was Her point total is second only ma's tribes. Angel Goodrich, the go-to. So for that to hap- to Dream teammate Angel a second-year guard for the pen this year it's a little dif- McCoughtry's 2,779 with the Shock, is from the Cherokee ferent," she said. "At the same Cardinals.She also made 387 Nation. time, I look forward to going 3-pointers, ranking her fifth Last month, the Minnesoout there and giving whatev- all time among NCAA Divi- ta Lynx partnered with the er I can to my team and help- sion I players. Presented by Harcourts ing us win." The Dream selected SchimThe GarnerGroup RealEstate Schimmel's story is well- mel with the eighth pick in EverySaturday( 10am-2pm Star contest even though she had started only twice for the

one of the older guys, I just also help the young guys coming in."

Prairie Island Indian Comrookie, she is averaging seven munity to host Native Amer-

known in the Pacific Northwest. She first played basketball on a coed team at age 4

Regional earns a trip to the international Little League Bend North enters the semi- World Series, Aug. 14-24 in finals with a.348 team batting Williamsport, Pennsylvania. "It's not a dream anymore," average, through Tuesday's games the best mark in the Dan Ruhl said about qualifytournament behind Wash- ing for the Little League World ington, which is hitting .348. Series. "It's a reality. We know

talented. That's what I ' ve a lot each year I have been r eally tried to d o i n t h i s here," Mannion said. "As

whole offseason is keep calling plays with them, keep breaking the huddle, lining up, running a play,

transferring to Franklin In Portland.

ing no runs over 4'/s innings

in four appearances. Bend

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SOYS 8L GIRLS CLUBS OF CENTRAL OREGON

a t W a s hing-

— Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbuIIetin.com.

~


C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

O» Tc look upindividual stocks, gc tcbendbulletin.ccm/business.Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

NASDAQ 4,355.05

16,443.34

TOdap Eye on borrowing

1 g40.

U.S. consumers have been gradually taking on more debt this year. Consumer borrowing mostly increased through the first four months of the year, peaking in April with a monthly gain of $26.1 billion. Consumers pulled back on credit in May. Economists predict that the Federal Reserve's latest measure of consumer borrowing, due out today, will show credit use eased again in June.

Consumer credit

.

.

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.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

2,000 "

Change: 0.03 (flat)

1 6,360

16,800"

26.1

19.6 18.0

+

22 7p

"

"

"

Close: 16,443.34 Change: 13.87 (0.1%)

"

10 D A Y S "

"

"

16,400"

"

1,850

16,000 "

1,800 1 750

F

M

M

A

StocksRecap NYSE NASD

$30 billion

GOLD $1,306.70

Vol. (in mil.) 3,391 1,769 Pvs. Volume 3,380 1,856 Advanced 1857 1595 Declined 1251 1050 New Highs 28 16 New Lcws 70 72

HIGH LOW CLOSE 16490.70 16372.32 16443.34 DOW Trans. 8047.51 7978.36 8009.82 DOW Util. 531.67 524.82 526.03 NYSE Comp. 10686.40 10601.99 10653.42 NASDAQ 4378.99 4325.04 4355.05 S&P 500 1927.91 1911.45 1920.24 S&P 400 1376.16 1362.74 1370.16 Wilshire 5000 20404.55 20218.44 20319.41 Russell 2000 1131.64 1114.29 1125.55

DOW

CHG. +1 3.87 -49.71 -5.98 -3.90 +2.21 +0.03 +1.61 -1.06 +3.99

%CHG. WK MO QTR »0.08% -0.62% -1.12% -0.04% L »0.05% »0.12% -0.01% »0.36%

YTD -0.80% +8.23% +7.23% +2.43% +4.27% +3.89% +2.06% +3.11% -3.27%

15.9

NorthwestStocks 10

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M

J

Alaska Air Group ALK 28.04 ~ 50.4 9 42. 9 4 + . 2 2 +0.5 v w v +17. 1 +3 9 .2 1 353 10 0 . 5 0 Source: FactSet Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 33.60 3 0. 8 0 -.14 -0.5 V V V +9.3 +10 . 9 45 9 16 1. 2 7 Bank of America BAC 13 . 60 ~ 18.03 15. 2 0 + . 2 0 +1.3 L W W -2.4 + 1.6 88074 18 0.20f V L -40.2 - 22.4 6 3 23 0. 7 2 BarrettBusiness B BS I 4 1 .96 ~ 102.2 0 55 . 4 3 - .06 -0. 1 Appetizing earnings? Boeing Co BA 101.77 ~ 144. 57 118.34 -2.20 -1.8 v w v -13.3 +15.1 6192 18 2 . 92 Wall Street projects that Wendy's Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 11~ 6.50 5.36 +.0 5 + 0.9 L L L +2.5 -11.1 49 5 earnings improved in the second ColumbiaBokg COLB 2 3.17 ~ 3 0.3 6 25.41 +.29+1.2 L W W -7.6 +2 . 2 16 0 1 8 0 . 56f quarter. Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 89. 96 74.98 +.06 +0.1 L W W -4.8 + 1 7.9 7 4 24 1.12 The hamburger chain, due to Costco Wholesale CO S T 109.50 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 9.59 +1.54 »1.3 L L L +0.5 -0.3 2767 27 1 . 42 report its latest financial results Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 9.25 ~ 18.70 11. 5 9 +. 5 6 + 5.1 L L L -29.4 +1 4.8 96 61 today, has been remodeling FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 33. 6 0 +. 2 6 » 0.8 L W V +11. 6 +1. 7 81 7 2 5 0. 4 0 company-run locations as part of a Hewlett Packard HPQ 20 . 25 — 0 36.21 35 .84 -.03 -0.1 W L L +25. 2 +3 1 .9 6 049 1 2 0.64 strategy to position itself as a Intel Corp INTC 21.89 ~ 34.83 32. 8 5 +. 0 3 +0.1 V L L +26. 5 +4 7 .1 27610 16 0 . 90 more premium fast-food chain. Keycorp K EY 11.05 ~ 14.70 13.2 0 +. 0 3 +0 .2 V V V - 1.6 + 7 . 0 6 253 1 2 0 . 2 6 KR 3 5.13 ~ 51.4 9 49. 2 2 + . 5 1 +1.0 v w v +24. 5 +2 6 .0 2 475 17 0 . 66 The move hashelped drive sales Kroger Co Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 7.10 +. 1 4 + 2.0 L V V +29.3 +32 .1 1 4 37 3 4 gains this year, particularly at LA Pacific LPX 12.78 ~ 18.9 6 13. 4 9 + . 5 3 +4.1 L w w -27.1 -22.9 3825 cc established company-operated MDU Resources MDU 25 . 94 ~ 36.05 3 0. 0 1 -.10 -0.3 V V V - 1.8 + 3 . 8 7 5 4 2 0 0 . 7 1 restaurants. Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 20. 3 1 + . 1 9 +0.9 L W W -15.6 -3.9 670 1 6 0. 2 0 Microsoft Corp M SFT 30.84 ~ 45.71 4 2.7 4 -.34 -0.8 V L L +14.2 +3 9 .3 23752 16 1 . 1 2 Nike Ioc B N KE 62.60 ~ 80.26 77.1 4 +. 2 2 +0 .3 L W V -1.9 +17.2 2471 2 6 0 . 96 Nordctrom Ioc JWN 54.90 — o 70.71 69 .34 + . 7 0 +1 .0 L W L +12. 2 +1 2 .6 1 0 16 1 9 1. 3 2 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 47.50 4 1. 9 7 -.63 -1.5 V W V - 2.0 + 1 . 1 1 8 7 1 9 1 . 8 4 V V + 3.0 +11. 9 1 4 51 1 8 0.88 PaccarIoc PCAR 53.07 ~ 68.81 6 0. 9 4 - .45 -0.7 V Planar Systms PLNR 1.76 ~ 3.90 3.67 -.12 -3.2 L L L +44. 5 + 1 09.4 5 92 6 1 Plum Creek PCL 40.29 o — 50.0 8 40. 4 9 -.05 -0.1 T W T -12.9 - 12.0 1038 3 4 1 . 76 Prec Castparts PCP 210.79 ~ 275. 0 9 22 8.50 -.82 -0.4 w w w - 15.2 + 2. 1 7 5 6 1 8 0 . 1 2 Safeway Ioc S WY 21.90 ~ 36.03 34.5 6 +. 1 6 +0 .5 L L L +18.6 +56 .8 2 2 08 3 0.9 2 f Schoitzer Steel SCHN 2 4.13 ~ 33.32 2 6. 7 7 -.08 -0.3 L L L - 18.1 + 4. 3 1 4 6 d d 0 . 7 5 Sherwin Wms SHW 166.32 ~ 215. 6 2 28 7.40 +2.38 + 1.2 L L L +13.0 +17 .1 82 7 2 6 2. 2 0 StaocorpFocl S FG 51.98 ~ 69.51 61. 7 8 +. 5 7 +0.9 L W W -6.7 +13.1 1 4 4 1 3 1 .10f StarbucksCp S BUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 77.1 3 +. 3 4 +0 .4 L V V - 1.6 + 5 . 5 2 928 3 0 1 . 04 Triquiot Semi TQNT 6.80 — o 18.86 18 .51 + . 21 +1.1 L L L +121 .9 + 129.0 1680 c c Umppua Holdings UMP Q 15.56 ~ 19.65 16. 6 9 +. 1 1 +0.7 L W V -12.8 -1.5 1125 25 0 . 60 US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 4 1. 0 8 -.09 -0.2 V W V +1.7 +11 . 6 6 373 14 0 .98f WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.53 ~ 2 4.5 3 20.99 +.17+0.8 L W V -9.9 -6.0 32 2 1 4 0 .44f Publishing beltwether Wells Fargo & Co W F C 4 0 .07 ~ 53.08 50. 0 6 +. 0 1 ... L W W +10. 3 +1 6 .5 15049 12 1 . 40 Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. Weyerhaeuser WY 2 6 .64 ~ 33.75 31. 6 1 + . 1 9 +0.6 L W V +0.1 +14 . 7 2 1 40 2 5 0. 8 8 reports fiscal fourth-quarter financial results today. The mediacompany, which owns The Wall Street Journal, DividendFootnotes:8 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent newspapers in Australia and also annual dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p— Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash publishes books, benefited earlier value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. this year from improved book sales thanks to the "Divergent" series, which was launched as a movie in March. Investors will be looking for an update on how the Ralph Lauren reported that its fiscal Investment Research predicted earnings of $1.75 company'sbook publishing first-quarter net income fell 10 percent, per share. business is transitioning to digital. hindered by higher operating expenses Operating expenses climbed to $799 million

':.";,"" Ralph Lauren earnings

$19

NWSA

$17.63

$16.OO ," 14

17 15

4Q '13

Operating EPS

4 Q ' 14

$0.03

related to its expansion efforts. The clothing designer and retailer earned $1 62 million, or $1.80 per share, for the three months ended June 28. That compares with $161 million, or $1.94 per share, a year ago. Those results still beat analysts' estimates. Analysts surveyed by Zacks

Ralph Lauren (RL)

based cn trailing 12 month results

$1 42

Dividend: none

AP Source: FactSet

from $728 million. Later this month, Ralph Lauren plans to launch Polo for women and open its first Polo flagship store in New York City. Revenue rose 3 percent to $1.71 billion from $1.65 billion. This was a bit short of the $1.73 billion that Wall Street expected. The company maintained its outlook for fiscal 2015 revenue growth of 6 percent to 8 percent.

wednesday's close:$155.88 T

Price-earningsratio:19

52-WEEK RANGE

Price-earnings ratio:lost money

190

otal r eturn

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

Tot a l returns through Aug. 6

YT D - 10.6% 5.1

*annualized

AmdFocus

SelectedMutualFunds

AP

iShEMkts

Groupon

8 iPVix rs 21stCFoxA GeriElec

5.90 -1.38 15.20 +.20 192.07 +.06 59.21 -9.91 5.98 -.57 43.49 -.31 6.17 -.90 33.91 +.12 32.33 +1.03 25.44 +.42

1143605 880738 861657 715516 683660 611239 594397 558777 483164 466424

Janus OverceasT VALUE

JAOSX B L EN D GR OWTH

Qe

Gainers NAME Mind CTI CBD Enn Corcept ARC Docu

LAST 2.86 3.33 2.74 6.56 Enphase 11.06 AirTrnsp 8.52 CarrSrv 17.88 CaesarStne 48.76 FinjanH 4.10 PayccmS n 13.83

CHG +.47 +.52 +.41 +.96 +1.36 +1.00 +1.86 +4.85 +.40 +1.34

Losers NAME

%CHG + 1 9.7 + 1 8.5 o48 + 1 7.6 53 + 1 7 .1 + 14.0 co + 13.3 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 1.6 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 1.0 Q + 1 0.8 average of stock holdings + 10.7 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings

CATEGORY Foreign Large Blend

$96.92

EURO +.0003 1.3377+

-.46 '

StoryStocks The stock market had a calm session Wednesday, after several days of heavy market gyrations. Stocks were little changed after a sizable drop a day earlier, when Russia massed troops near its border with Ukraine. Investors once again focused on corporate earnings, this time from companies such as brewing giant Molson Coors. The stock market's momentum has shifted over the last few weeks. The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 2.7 percent last week. Investors say if geopolitical tensions subside and earnings are strong, the stock market should rebound. WAG

Close:$59.21 V-9.91 or -14.3% The drugstore operator will nc longer pursue a reorganization move that would have trimmed taxes and cut its outlook. $80 70 60

Time Warner

TWX

Close;$74.24%-10.95 or -12.9% Rupert Murdcch's 21st Century Fox abandoned its attempt to take over the rival media company following a rejected offer. $90 80 70

M

J J A 52-week range $46.75~ $76.39

M

J J A 52-week range $6D.D7 ~ $ 88. 13

Vol.:84.1m (11.5x avg.) PE 20.1 : Vcl.:34.5m (4.4x avg.) PE: 1 6 .9 Mkt. Cap:$56.64b Yie l d: 2.1% Mkt. Cap:$65.49 b Y i e l d: 1.7% S Close:$5.90 V-t.38 or -19.0% The cellphone carrier ended its pursuit of a deal with T-Mcbile US and it is replacing its longtime CEO, Dan Hesse. $10

WPX Energy

WPX Close:$22.98 %2.21 or 10.6% The gas and oil company reported a 57 percent jump in domestic cil production and stronger-than-expected natural gas production. $26 24

22 M

J

J

A

M

52-week range 35.83~

Mkt. Cap:$23.27 b

J

J

$16.86~

$ 24.35

PE: . .. Vcl.:10.4m (3.5x avg.) Yield: ... Mkt. Cap: $4.65 b

P E: . . . Yield: ...

Rocket Fuel

FUEL Cognizant Tech. CTSH Close:$17.05 Y-7.70 or -31.1% Close:$43.67%-6.31 or -12.6% The advertising technology ccmpaThe information technology ccmpany lowered its full-year revenue ny cut its annual revenue guidance, guidance, citing a slowdown in adciting a weaker business market vertiser commitments. and longer sales cycles. $100 $55 50

50

45

M

O ND J F M A M J J

52-week range $77.55~

$71.89

Vol.:6.1m (9.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$599.17 m

P E: .. Yield : ..

Activision Blizzard

A TVI

Close:$22.95%0.59 or 2.6% The video game maker reported a drop in quarterly profit that still beat expectations while also slightly raising its outlook. $24

J J 52-week range

$35.55~

A

$ 54.55

Vcl.: 40.7m (10.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$26.57 b

PE : 20.6 Yield: ...

Cerner

CERN Close:$55.91 %1.57 or 2.9% The health information technology company will buy a unit from Siemens and partner with it to develop medical technology. $60 55 50

22 M

J J A M J J A 52-week range 52-week range $16.52~ $23 .78 $45.81 ~ $ 63.67 Vol.:9.3m (1.4x avg.) PE:2 3 .4 Vcl.:4.2m (2.2x avg.) P E:4 6 .2 Mkt. Cap:$16.41 b Yi e ld:0.9% Mkt. Cap:$19.07 b Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.47 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

. 0 2 .01 + 0 .01 W L . 0 5 .05 ... V .09 .10 -0.01 V

2-year T-ncte . 4 6 .4 7 5-year T-ncte 1.65 1.66 10-year T-note 2.47 2.49 30-year T-bond 3.27 3.28

BONDS

~

~

-0.01 V -0.01 V -0.02 V

T T T

L

-0.01 V

V

Barcl aysLongT-Bdldx 3.09 3.10 -0.01 W W BondBuyerMuniIdx 4.53 4.53 ... L W Barcl aysUSAggregate 2.29 2.29 ... L W PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.75 5.84 -0.09 L L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.15 4.18 -0.03 L W Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.92 1.93 -0.01 W W 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2.95 2.95 ... L W 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities BalA m 24.9 3 + .81 +3.0 +10.8 +14.3+13.0 8 A A CaplncBuA m 59.71 -.89 +4.4 +10.4 +11.4+10.5 8 A A The price of CPWldGrlA m 46.11 -.16 +3.0 +13.7 +14.3+11.4 8 8 D crude oil continEurPacGrA m 48.96 -.26 -0.2 +11.3 +9.6 +8.5 A C C ued its sevenFnlnvA m 52. 6 2 - .81 +2.8 +14.5 +18.0+14.8 C C C week long GrthAmA m 44.55 -.83 +3.6 +16.1 +19.0+14.8 C 8 D slump and setIncAmerA m 21.30 -.83 +4.8 +11.6 +13.6+12.9 A A A tled below $97 InvCcAmA m 38.60 -.85 +6.0 +17.8 +19.0+14.8 A 8 C per barrel for NewPerspA m37.83 -.83 +0.7 +11.7 +14.8+12.8 C 8 8 the first time WAMutlnvA m40.48 -.82 +3.6 +13.3 +18.5+16.1 8 C A since Feb. 3. Dodge &Cox Income 13.8 7 ... + 4 . 4 + 6 . 1 + 4.4 +5.9 A 8 8 Oil has dropped Intlstk 45.57 - . 1 3 +5.9 +18.0 +14.1+11.6 A A A Stock 175.4 4 - . 65 +5.0 +17.9 +22.6+17.3 A A A by $10 per barFidelity Contra 98.87 + . 15 +3.1 +16.3 +18.1+16.5 8 8 8 rel since midContraK 98.8 6 + .15 + 3.1 +16.4 +18.2+16.7 8 8 8 June. LowPriStk d 50.82 -.82 +2.7 +12.8 +18.6+17.4 D D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 68.20 +.82 +5.1 +15.5 +19.5+16.4 8 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 52 -.81 +5.9 +12.1 +11.7+11.7 A A A InccmeA m 2.5 0 ... +6 . 7 + 13.3 +12.4+12.2 A A A Oakmark Intl I 25.58 -.20 -2.8 +4 .5 +15.2+13.0 E A A Oppeaheimer RisDivA m 20 . 17 -.84+2.6 +11.9 +15.6+13.4 D E E RisDivB m 18 . 82 -.84+2.1 +10.9 +14.6+12.3 E E E RisDivC m 17 . 91 -.84+2.2 +11.0 +14.8+12.5 E E E SmMidValA m45.51 -.15 +3.0 +12.1 +15.8+13.9 D E E SmMidValB m38.29 -.12 +2.5 +11.2 +14.9+13.0 E E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.4 5 ... +2 . 9 + 11.2 +18.2+14.8 D C C Exchange GrowStk 53.4 4 + .82 +1.7 +18.3 +19.9+17.7 8 A A The dollar fell HealthSci 64.2 4 - . 15+11.1 +25.7 +34.4+26.8 8 A A against the Newlnccme 9. 5 4 ... +4 .3 + 4 .9 + 3.3 +5.0 C C D Japanese yen Vanguard 500Adml 177.44 +.86 +5.1 +15.5 +19.5+16.4 8 8 A and at one point 500lnv 177.42 +.86 +5.0 +15.3 +19.4+16.3 8 8 8 dropped below CapOp 49.76 +.83 +7.8 +19.0 +24.0+17.1 A A A the 102 yen Eqlnc 30.59 +.84 +4.2 +12.3 +19.6+16.8 C 8 A level for the first IntlStkldxAdm 28.29 -.87 +2.9 +12.4 +8.7 NA A C time in a week. StratgcEq 31.75 -.84 +5.8 +18.9 +23.3+20.3 A A A It rose against TgtRe2020 28.22 -.81 +4.1 +10.5 +11.4+11.1 A A A the British Tgtet2025 16.39 -.81 +4.1 +11.2 +12.4+11.8 A 8 8 pound and was TotBdAdml 10.81 -.81 +4.0 +4.3 +2.8 +4.6 D D D flat against the Totlntl 16.91 -.84 +2.8 +12.3 +8.7 +8.0 A D C euro. TotStlAdm 48.36 +.82 +4.5 +15.1 +19.6+16.8 8 8 A TotStldx 48.33 +.81 +4.4 +14.9 +19.5+16.7 C 8 A USGro 29.58 -.13 +3.1 +17.2 +18.9+15.8 8 8 C Welltn 39.25 -.87 +4.7 +11.0 +13.8+12.2 8 A A

h5Q HS

FUELS

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

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

.04 .07 .10

.31 1.39 V 2.64 w 3.73

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

5-YR * 3-YR* 9. 0 % 18 . 8 % 19.6 16.4

L AST C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * N N N -7.70 -31.1 RccketF n 17.05 NuSkin 46.52 -11.40 -19.7 ASSETS $1,647 million -1.38 -19.0 Sprint 5.90 EXP RATIO 0.68% LincEdSv 2.95 -.68 -18.7 MANAGER Brent Lynn -4.05 -18.0 GlobusMed 18.51 SINCE 2001-01-01 RETURNS3-MO +3.3 Foreign Markets YTD +0.5 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +12.2 -25.74 -.61 Paris 4,207.14 3-YR ANNL +2.6 London 6,636.16 -46.32 -.69 5-YR-ANNL +2.6 -59.70 -.65 Frankfurt 9,130.04 Hong Kong24,584.13 -64.13 -.26 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT -.13 Reliance Industries Ltd Mexico 44,425.77 -55.91 8.28 Milan 19,509.84 -542.36 -2.70 8 Tokyo 15,159.79 -1 60.52 -1.05 Li & Fung Ltd 5.2 7 Stockholm 1,344.30 -21.83 -1.60 U nited Continental Holdings lnc Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption -7.50 -.14 Petrclec Brasileiro SA Petrobras ADR 4.11 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feecodeither a sales or Sydney 5,504.00 Zurich 8,290.16 -51.88 -.62 Adaoi Enterprises Ltd 3.64 redemption fee.Source: Moroingstac

A

52-week range $11.47

Vol.:159.1m (9.6x avg.)

Janus Overseas has posted lackluster results in recent years, FAMILY MarhetSummary leading Morningstar to lower its American Funds Most Active analyst rating for expected perforNAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG mance to bronze from silver. Sprint BkcfAm S&P500ETF Walgrn RiteAid

RUDE IL +

+.20

Sprint

52-WK RANGE e CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV

NAME

+

$19.99

Walgreen

15,600

J

ILVER

Dow jones industrials

16,740"

17,200"

"

1,950 "

1,900 "

p2

17,120

........ Close: 1,920.24

1,880' " ""'10 DAYS

seasonally adjusted monthly change

20

+

S8$P 500

Thursday, August 7, 2014

19.6

10-YR T-NOTE 2.47%

S&P 500 1,920.24

CLOSE PVS. 96.92 97.38 1.97 2.09 2.88 2.85 3.93 3.90 2.74 2.72

CLOSE PVS. 1306.70 1284.00 19.99 19.79 1465.20 1455.90 3.16 3.20 849.40 849.25

W W W L L L W

3.46 5 .12 2.37 6.15 4 4. 6 1 5. 7 3.2 6

%CH. %YTD -0.47 -1.5 + 0.29 + 3 . 2 +1.03 -6.5 -7.0 +0.92 +0.89 -1.7 %CH. %YTD + 1.77 + 8 .7 + 0.96 + 3 .3 + 0.64 + 6 .9 -1.14 -8.1 +0.02 +1 8.4

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.59 1.58 +0.06 +1 7.9 Coffee (Ib) 1.91 1.89 +0.77 +72.4 Corn (bu) 3.63 3.56 +1.96 -1 3.9 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.63 +0.80 -24.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 336.30 330.50 +1.75 -6.6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.41 1.41 - 0.18 + 3 . 2 Soybeans (bu) 12.37 12.23 +1.17 -5.8 -6.2 Wheat(bu) 5.68 5.53 +2.81 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6846 -.0030 -.18% 1.5356 Canadian Dollar 1.0 9 22 -.0043 -.39% 1.0367 USD per Euro 1.3377 +.0003 +.02% 1.3305 -.50 -.49% 9 7 .70 JapaneseYen 102.05 Mexican Peso 13. 2496 -.0477 -.36% 12.6568 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4367 +.0096 +.28% 3.5475 Norwegian Krone 6 . 2691 -.0121 -.19% 5.9191 South African Rand 10.7116 -.0487 -.45% 9.9356 Swedish Krona 6.8 9 78 + .0100 +.14% 6.5530 Swiss Franc .9079 -.0014 -.15% . 9 260 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0696 -.0057 -.53% 1.1132 Chinese Yuan 6.1630 -.0080 -.13% 6.1215 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7503 +.0003 +.00% 7.7564 Indian Rupee 61.295 +.195 +.32% 60.791 Singapore Dollar 1.2485 +.0005 +.04% 1.2669 South KoreanWcn 1 034.00 + . 81 +.08% 1114.50 -.02 -.07% 2 9.97 Taiwan Dollar 30.00


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

BRIEFING

BANK OF AMERICA

178mort a

Sprint, T-Mobile deal breaksdown The collapseof Sprint's push tobuy T-Mobil eUScouldmean fresh options in wireless plans andlower prices for U.S. consumers. But in the long run, tougher competition on prices could lead toslower service andslower expansion of coverage. Sprint's chairman, Masayoshi Son,saidthe company wouldshift its focus from "consolidation," i.e. buying up competitors, to "competing aggressively in the marketplace." He ishiring Marcelo Claure, anentrepreneur whohasn't run a wireless carrier before, to be Sprint's newCEO,signaling that Son islooking for a newstrategy. Investors expect a price war to bea part of that strategy, andshares of the four nationwide U.S. wireless companies — Verizon, AT&T,Sprint and T-Mobile —fell Wednesday. Sprint may mimic changes madeby T-Mobile, like dropping the ubiquitous two-year service contract.

Walgreen e sett ement nears says no

By Ben Protess and Michael Corkery

a roughly $9 billion cash penaltyto the U.S. Treasury — last New York Times News Service month, Citigroup agreed to pay Bank of America and the a $4 billion penalty — while Justice Department have providing the remaining monreached a tentative deal that ey in the form of relief to strugwould cost the bank nearly $17 gling homeowners, the people billion to settle an investigation briefed on the matter said. Just into its sale of toxic mortgage a few weeks ago, the bank securities in the runup to the was offering only $3 billion in financial crisis, according to cash, a figure that temporarily people briefed on the matter. caused talks to break down. It is the latest eye-popping reA breakthrough came last buke of a giant bank. week on a phone call between The agreement, which is not Attorney General Eric Holder

with Holder.

final and could still fall apart,

and the bank's chief executive, Brian Moynihan, one of

lawsuits byprivate investors and regulators largely related

the people said. Earlier in discussions, when the two sides were far apart, the Justice

to its Countrywide Financial

Department turned down a

sure of closure to the bank as it

request for Moynihan to meet

concludes the largest remain-

would represent a record for the government. It would be the largest sum the Justice

Department has everextracted from a single company. The bank has agreed to pay

Despite the huge penalty, critics contend that the govern-

ing legal issue fromthe financial crisis. During the talks, the bank

to move

ment crackdown has amounted to little more than a slap on

had arguedwith federalpros-

the wrist. No Bank of America

employee will face charges, and the case against the bank

penalized for mortgages that Countrywide and Merrill had sold before it agreed to buy

is civil, rather than criminal.

those firms in 2008. In the case

The Associated Press

The settlement ends months of on-again, off-again negotia-

of Merrill, the bank argued sured it to go through with the acquisition.

Growing political heat and possible customer backlash helped dissuade Walgreen Co. from trying

But that argument was sig-

to trim its tax bill by reor-

tions between the Justice De-

partment and Bank of America, which has already paid more than $50 billion to settle

and Merrill Lynch units. The deal will bring a mea-

ecutors that it should not be

that federal regulators pres-

overseas By Tom Murphy

nificantly weakened July 30 when Judge Jed Rakoff, of the

ganizing overseas as part

U.S. District Court in Manhat-

gages, calling the scheme a

But experts say they don'texpectothercompanies considering the move to follow Walgreen's lead and stay rooted in the

"brazen fraud."

United States.

tan, ordered Bank of America to pay $1.3 billion for the sale of defective Countrywide mort-

of an acquisition.

Walgreen, the nation's biggest drugstore chain, said Wednesday that it

would no longer consider a so-called inversion, which has become popular among large, multinational health care companies looking to cut U.S. taxes.

The company said it will instead combine with the

Swiss health and beauty retailer Alliance Boots to form a holding company that's based in the U.S.

— From wire reports

Walgreen Co. said in a statement that it was

"mindful of the ongoing public reaction to a po-

PERMITS City of Bend • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20802 NE Sierra Drive, $246,452 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20798 NE Sierra Drive, $246,452 • Norwyn R. Newby Revocable Trust, 1500 NE Cushing Drive, unit not listed, $300,000 • Todd R.Johnson,63268 Cherokee Lane,$250,672 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC, 21336 NE Evelyn Place, $252,490 • Mary J. Thornton,2429 NW SacajaweaLane, $505,178 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC,21340 NE Evelyn Place, $258,005 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC,21332 NE Evelyn Place, $245,229 • Creative RealEstate Solutions, 2266 NW Lakeside Place, $212,406 • Mel McDougal Family Foundation, 20780 NE Horizon Ridge Place, $252,824 • Jill K. Putney, 855 NW Ogden Ave., $359,987 • Robert M. Thompson, 3363 NW Starview Drive, $593,391 • Jeff D. Brewbaker, 60971 Woods Valley Place, $329,386 • Te Amo Rapido LLC, 21205 SEGolden Market Lane, $197,907 • Huettl Family LLC, 2829 NE Sandy Drive, $143,576 • Mary E. Scott, 61685 Woodriver Drive, $579,490

tential inversion" and its

"unique role as an iconic American" retailer.

Walgreen's decision follows a wave of recently announced inversions that have prompted President

Barack Obama and members of Congress to voice growing concern about tax revenue the U.S. government could lose from these moves. Despite Wal-

green's decision, experts say U.S. companies will likely continue to pursue

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Marvin Augustin, of StartLogic, discusses website creation with local small-business owners during aGet Your Business Online event Wednesday at The Oxford Hotel in Bend.

TODAY • Ruby RibbonDream BigTour: Seethefashion company's fall collection of women's apparel; call to RSVP;free; 6 p.m.; Tetherow Golf Club,61240 Skyline RanchRoad, Bend; 541-306-0864. MONDAY • Marketingwith Facebook: Two-day class, Monday andWednesday. Learn to useFacebook to market yoursmall to medium business. Musthave aFacebook account; $69; 9a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeWay,Bend; 541-383-7270 orcocc.edul community-learning. • Basic Portrait Retouching with Photoshop: Two-day class, MondayandAug18, covering portrait retouching; musthavebasicPhotoshop experience;$129;6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270 orcocc.edul community-learning.

• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal

corporatetax reform to solve this problem, and it

oca usinesses e an onine oos a oo eeven

isn't going to happen in an election year," said Donald Goldman, an Arizona

State University professor. Inversions involve a

U.S. company reorganizing in another country by either acquiring or combining with another

business. These deals provide tax relief in a number

By Valerie Smith The Bulletin

them build free websites.

"We have the program run

Liz Gage of Bend Home Builders Inc. attended the Ore-

in all 50 states, and have a central team at Google who

gon Get Your Business Online

works on placing our staff for every seminar," said Melissa Nitti, Google spokesperson. "Googlers are really excited to be here in Oregon. It's like

seminarWednesday tosearch for ways to boost her company's online presence. "We hope to use different methods we learn to have our company nameshow up in the search engine automatically," said Gage, an administrative assistant for the Bend contrac-

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR

inversions because they can still reap big benefits by reorganizing overseas. "We need fundamental

tor. "We want people to find us, and I think right now we're not being found." Gage was one 43 business representatives at The Oxford Hotel in Bend participat-

ing in the Get Your Business Online event, which the

a reward to get to come out to

these GYBO events and help small businesses." U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, invited Google, which partnered with the Oregon Office of Economic and Business Equity, Portland Business Alliance and other organizations to sponsor the event.

"It's part of our effort to

reach out to the high-tech

search giant has offered nacompanies," Wal den said tionwide. The seminars teach Wednesday. "This is a wonderbusinesspeople how to use ful partnership ... and clearly various Google tools and help there is a lot of demand for

Oregon's small businesses to learn how to create abetter online presence." In Oregon,57percentof small businesses did not have

the most of the Web."

A representative from

of ways. They allow companies to transfer money

StartLogic, a Massachusetts

earned overseas to the

company, that partners with Google, guided participants

parent company without paying additional U.S.

a website or online presence,

through the steps to create

taxes.

according to a 2013 Google survey. About 97percent of

their websites. Participating

Inversions also provide some relief from the U.S.

Internet users look online for

hosting and domain name service free for one year.

localproductsand services, according to a 2010 statistic from BIA/Kelsey, an independent market researcher. Whitney Lemon, marketing manager for Google's Get Your Business Online pro-

gram, started Wednesday's seminar by teaching participants how to set a business up on Google Maps in 15 minutes. "Lately, everyone wants to

buy local and support local," said Lemon. "I'm really excited that I can be here to speak to-

day and help Bendbusinesses be found, get online and make

businesses receive the Web After an introductory pe-

corporate income tax rate

of 35 percent, which is the highest in the indus-

riod, the company charges between $5.49-$14.50 a month to renew websites, depending on the hosting and payment plans, according to its website. Renewing a dot-com domain name costs $15.99 a year. Registration and renewal prices

trialized world. The U.S.

for other domains, such as dot-

counting professor at the University of the Pacific.

net and dot-org, vary. For more information about Get Your Business Online, vis-

it www.oregongetonline.com. — Reporter: 541-383-0325, vsmith@bendbulletirt.com

had a competitive tax rate back in the 1980s, but that changed when other

countries started lowering their rates and the U.S.

didn't follow, said Cynthia Eakin, an associate ac"We haven't paid attention to what's going on globally," she said. "We don't really have a global tax strategy."

Location-based technologyconnectspatients, doctors By Bill Toland PittsburghPost-Gazette

Uber's and Lyft's taxilike

available on a limited basis in Manhattan and Brooklyn, but

vey, marketing director at Pager. "Our doctors come to

conferencing, remote health monitoring and, now, house

it could spread to other cities by 2015. The technology for the app was designed by Pager

you. It's on demand."

calls. Insurers want it that way,

Hervey said, explaining the appeal of Pager for both the patient as well as the 20 physicians who are now part of the

trying to drive episodic care away from emergency rooms,

Pager network. Most of them, he said, are current or former

where treatment is most

ER physicians. The house calls cost $199 during the day shift, and $299 during evenings and week-

out'?

co-founder Oscar Salazar,

The same location-based app technology that drives Uber and Lyft may have a fix

who was an engineer on the

The startup and many others in health care see a pendulum that is swinging away from hospital-based careand primary care clinics,

team that built Uber's on-de-

services are built to get you to where you want to go. But

what if you're too sick to go

toward "convenience care."

expensive. And, increasingly, patients

mand ride-share technology. Salazar left Uber in 2010,

That's a category that includes want it that way, too. They don't want to call ahead and episodic treatment at urgent

Pager, which launched in May, is an app that allows patients to order a house call from a physician, using their

then helped two other entre-

care clinics, but many health

schedule an appointment, and

preneurs raise $3.5 million in investment capital for Pager.

care visionaries believe that the most convenient care of

they certainly don't want to sit in a waiting room.

smartphones. The service is

(Uber) DNA," said Toby Her-

for that, too.

"We do share some of that

all takes place in a person's

home, by way of email, video

"It's all of the patient care

and none of the bureaucracy,"

ends. Doctors keep about 80

percent ofthefees,and Pager keeps the rest. The expense of the visit is

reimbursable by most health insurance plans, Hervey said.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Medicine, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

MEDICINE

MONEY

Study: Thankrecession for dip in healthspending By Jason Millman

and 2011, according to

The Washington Post

the authors' analysis of federal data. During those three years, the slumping economy accounted for 70 percent of the spending slowdown, according to a new peer-reviewed study

WASHINGTON — Some

of the best news for health care in a while is also

driving one of its biggest debates: What exactly is behind the historic slowdown

in health care spending these past few years? Just how much credit

should be given to structural changes in the health care system versus the effects of

L ':u

the Great Recession'? The answer has major fiscal implications for the coun-

try's future as the economy improves and millions more gain insurance underthe 2010 health care law. Previous research has tried to answer this ques-

from Northwestern Univer-

sity economists published in the journal Health Affairs. A separate working paper released Monday by the Brookings Institution also says the slowdown largely is the result of the two previ-

ous recessions. One thing the Northwestern study can't answer,

however, is what has contributed to the slowdown since 2011, when major

features of the Affordable

tion, but a new study finds

Care Act started to kick in.

that the recession gets most of the credit for the recent

Notably, the law's major coverage expansion, which

slowdown in the growth of health care spending, suggesting that an improving economy could accelerate health spending again.

took effect at the start of

The annual growth rate

for health care spending averaged 6.6 percent between 2000 and 2007, then

shrank to just 3.3 percent each year between 2008

this year, is expected to drive up health spending. Meanwhile, changes in the law meant to encourage better and more efficient care — which can reduce the

spending pressures from the newly insured — are still in their early stages. SeeSpending/D2

lllustration hy Greg Cross/The Bulletin

NUTRITION

Some surprisingperks of coffee consumption By Barbara Quinn The Monterey County Herald

When I emailed a family member that I was at the annual convention of the

Hawaii Coffee Association, he replied, "A dietitian and nutritionist at a coffee con-

vention? Just curious." Me, too. But, hey, where elsedo you getcoffeebreaks that feature 100 percent Kona coffee? And speakers in Hawaiian shirts'? I was ready

By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin Jacki Gethner contracted hepatitis C while treating a

patient at a hospital in Denver, Colorado, in 1986before

universal precautions protected health care workers from infections.

The 64-year-old Portland resident didn't find out until several years later, when

she tried to donate blood and was rejected. She's uninsured, and for a long time relied on Chinese medicine and acupuncture, that is, until this year, when she

first qualified for the Oregon Health Plan, the state's Medicaid program. After a six-month wait, Gethner finally saw Dr. Atif Zaman, a

Besides the fact that much

of the world does not function in the morning without it, does coffee contain any

redeeming nutritional value? Why, yes, it does. A recent

study at John Hopkins University found that 200 milligrams of caffeine (what we might get in 8 to 12 ounces ofbrewed coffee) enhanced the ability of study participants to remember details. But coffee is

and alert to

more than just

learn.

a vehicle for

For starters,

caffeine, say researchers

hepatologist and hepatitis C o f having to get cirrhosis of of treatment — would take a specialist at Oregon Health t h e liver in order to be able substantial bite out of OHP's & Science University. By to be t r eated with these new drug budget. then, she had already devel- d r u gs," Gethner said last The idea is that the state oped cirrhosis, irreversible we e k before a committee will revisit and loosen the

that Hawaii

at Harvard University. It

is the only coffee-pro-

dreds of different

scarring of the liver that impairs its function.

ducing state in the U.S. Coffee

t ha t discussed the issue.

The proposal being conAs Oregon moves closer si d ered would restrict covto becoming the erage of Sofirst state to re- Ralatad valdi, a new strict accessto • For a look at how the high cost hepatitis C a new hepatitis o f Sovaldi is affecting Medicare, drug that's C drug for most see Friday's All Agessection. prohibitively OHP patients, expensive

restrictions in less than a

year, just long enough for new, more affordable drugs currently under development to be released. "What we need to do now

is just sort of stop the bleeding," said Tom Burns, OHA's director of pharmacy proGethner wonders whether bu t h a i led as a game-chang- grams. "We just need to stop the drug could have prevent- er by patients and advocates, the accidental dispensing of ed her cirrhosis, and wheth- t o only the sickest OHP pathe product so that we can er it could prevent it from t ient s . State leaders say the get a plan in place that will developing in other hepatitis r e strictions are necessary, adequately address this drug C patients, too. as the cost of the drugfor the taxpayers of Oregon." "I really hate the thought $84,000 for a 12-week round SeeSovaldi/D3

I learned

trees love the dense sunshine, plentiful rain and rich volcanic soil of these islands. And coffee growers work hard to produce healthy coffee plants that produce good-tasting coffee. More than 30 varieties are grown in Kona, for example. Coffee labeled "100 percent Kona

coffee" is harvested exclusively from beans grown in this area of Hawaii.

contains huncompounds, Thinkstock including antioxidant substances known to protect cells in

the body from destruction. Coffee also contains the

minerals magnesium and chromium which the body uses with the hormone insu-

lin to regulate blood sugar levels. Recent studies have, in fact, found an associa-

tion between higher coffee intake and a lower risk for Type 2 diabetes. SeeCoffee/D5

W ya aiy5-minuterunmaya yearstoyour i e By Karen Kaplan Los Angeles Times

People who jogged or ran for as little as five minutes

to die of any cause during the course of the study. They were also 45 percent less likely to die as a result of cardio-

a day reduced their risk of premature death by nearly

vascular disease, researchers

one-third and extended their

American College of Cardiology. (These figures were

livesby aboutthreeyears,according to a new study. Researchers examined the

exercise habits of more than 55,000adults in the Dallas area who were monitored for

six to 22 years. About 24 percent of the adults described themselves as runners.

Compared to those who didn't run, those who did were 30 percent less likely

reported in the Journal of the adjusted to take into account

people's smoking and drinking habits, how old they were when they enrolled in the

study, their family's health history and their other exercise habits.) Put another way, nonrun-

ners were 24 percent more likely than runners to die

during the study period. In

f act, the mortality risk asso-

w e ek.

ciated with not running was greater than the mortality

But t h e benefits of running likely to die during the study were p r etty much the same than the nonrunners.

in the lowest groups were less pate in physical activity, this study may motivate more people to start running and risk associated with being for a l l runners, according to In order to reduce the risk continue to run as an attainoverweight or obese (16 per- t h e study. of premature death, all it took able health goal for mortality "Running even at lower cent), having a family history was 30 to 59 minutes of runbenefits," they wrote. People of cardiovascular disease (20 doses or slower speeds was ning per week, the researchwho can't devote 15 or 20 percent) or having high associated with sigers calculated. minutes to moderate phys"This finding has clinical cholesterol (6 percent). FIT N ESS n i f icant mortality ical activity each day may The researchers dibenefits," the reand public health imporappreciate the efficiency of a five-minute run, they added. videdup theroughly 13,000 searchers found. tance," according to the team runners into five groups They also measured runfrom Iowa State University, If all of the non-runners based on how many minutes n i n g in other ways — by total the University of South had taken up running, 16 perthey ran per week. Those in w e e kly distance, frequency, Carolina, Louisiana State cent of the 3,413 deaths that the lowest group ran up to 50 speed and the "total amount University and the Universioccurred during the study minutes over a seven-day pe- of running" (which was ty of Queensland School of could have been averted, riod, and those in the highest c a lculated by multiplying Medicine. the researchers wrote. That "Because time is one of the would have saved 546 lives. group ran for more than 175 d u r ation and speed). In all minutesoverthe courseofa categories, even the runners strongest barriers to particiSeeRunning/D4


D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

MONEY HEALTH EVENTS 541-323-3344.

SATURDAY HEALTHY BEGINNINGS SCREENINGCLINIC: Twelve-point health inspections available to all Central Oregon children ages 0-5 years old who have not yet entered kindergarten, regardless of family income level; free; 9-11:30 a.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www. myhb.org or 541-383-6357.

MOMDAY

Kaiser Health News

LEGAL ANDFINANCIAL PLANNING FORALZHEIMER'S DISEASE:Learn about issues to consider, how to plan and how to access legal and financial resources; free; 3-5:30 p.m.; Sisters City Hall, 520 E. Cascade

wait any longer. For several

Ave.; www.alz.org/oregon or 800-272-3900.

HEALTH FAIR:A variety of local healthcare professionals and other local vendors will offer screenings, tips and information; free; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; Carriage Place, 150 S. Williamson, Prineville; 541-416-0500.

DISPATCHES • Bestcare Treatment Services, of Redmond,hasbeen accredited for athree-year period for its detoxification andresidential treatment programs bythe Commission onAccreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities. BestCareTreatment provides residential andoutpatient drug andalcohol treatment services in Central Oregon. • Step & Splne Physical Ther-

apyis moving to anewfacility on Aug. 18.Thenew4,100-square-foot facility, located at974Veterans Way in Redmond,will nearly triple the

clinic andtreatment spacefor Step & Spine. • Pure Barre Bend,located at 330 SWPowerhouseDrive, No.150, will celebrate agrand opening on Aug.15 from 6-8 p.m.Theevent will feature healthandwellness stations, class demosandmore. • St. Charles Cancer Center will celebrate agrand opening on Aug.14a15:30 p.m.Theevent will feature a ribboncutting, tours of the facility and more.The newoncology wing hasbeenopento patients since July1.

FITNESS EVENTS

SATURDAY BIKRAM YOGA CLASS: Complimentary step-by-step instruction; free; 7 a.m.; Bikram Yoga, 805 SW Industrial Way, Bend; www.bikramyogabend.com,

yoga©bikramyogabend.comor 541-389-8599. REDMOND AREA TRIATHLON OR THE RATRACE: Pool-based sprint triathlon (with an optional duathlon) that consists of a 500-meter swim, a12-mile bike ride and a 5K run; Lil RAT kids race for kids10 and younger; register online or pick up a registration form at the Cascade Swim Center or Trinity Bikes in Redmond; 7:30 a.m.-noon; Cascade Swim Center, 465 SW Rimrock Way; www. racetherat.com, info@racetherat. com or 541-548-7275. FOAM ROLLERCLINIC: Learn basic myofascial release using a foam roller, bring a yoga mat; $5, registration required; 8:45 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568. BIKRAM YOGA CLASS: Complimentary step by step instruction; free; 9 a.m.; Bikram Yoga, 805 SW Industrial Way, Bend; www.bikramyogabend.com,

yoga©bikramyogabend.comor 541-389-8599. NAVY SEALPHYSICAL TRAINING: Join a group of retired Navy SEALs in morning calisthenics; free, 18 and older, liability waiver form m ust be signed;9-10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078. BIG RijN © BIG LAKE:Trail run/ walk; $15 adults, $7 students grade 3-12; 10 a.m.; Ray Benson Snow Park, near Hoodoo Ski Bowl, Sisters. BIKRAM YOGA CLASS: Complimentary step-by-step

PEOPLE • Dr. Brooks Bookerhas joined Bend Memorial Clinic's pediatric department. Dr. Booker has a medical degree from the University of Texas Health Science Center and a bachelor of science from TexasA&M University. • Allison Suran, Zeyla Brendt and Charlotte Watership,of Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, attended a course on evidence-based diagnosis and treatment of dizziness, vertigo and balance dysfunction.

Where Buyers

And Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day

By Sandra Boodman

TUESDAY

WEDMESDAY

FOOT ANDNAILCLINIC FOR SENIORS:Featuring inspection of feet, trimming of nails, massage, proper care education and more; donations accepted; noon1:30 p.m.; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St.; www. bendscommunitycenter.org or

W hen doctors compete, do you win?

instruction; free; 4:30 p.m.; Bikram Yoga, 805 SW Industrial Way,

Bend; www.bikramyogabend.com, yoga©bikramyogabend.comor 541-389-8599. MIKE THE MUGGER:Free self defense workshop for women ages 12 to adult, reserve your spot online; free; 6-9 p.m.; Smash Conditioning Studio, 338 SW Sixth St., Redmond; www. smashconditioningstudio.com or 541-923-8563.

Aug. 14 GOOD FORM RUNNINGCLINIC: Learn about running easier and be injury free, focus on proper mechanics; 5:30-7 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com, angela©footzonebend.comor 541-317-3568.

Aug. 15 PURE BARRE GRAND OPENING: Featuring refreshments, music, health and wellness stations, demos, raffles and more; free; 6-8 p.m.; Pure Barre Bend, 360 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 150; www.facebook.com/ PureBarreBend or 541-678-6478. LIVINGA PEACEFUL AND JOYFUL LIFE:Learn inner awareness through proper breathing, positive focus exercise and silencing the mind; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 6:45-8:15 p.m.; Namaspa, 1135 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www.namaspa.com, angelheartofmotivation©gmail. com or 971-217-6576.

Francisco Velazco couldn't years, the 35-year-old Seattle

handyman had searched for an orthopedic surgeon who

doctors and facilities that offer it, much the

ament in his knee for a price Weber said that about 120,000 he could afford. consumers — Medibid calls them "seekers" — have used the service. Many are unin-

Out of work because of the sured, holders of high-depain and unable to scrape to- ductible plans or enrollees in gether $15,000 — the cheapest faith-based plans, which have option he could find in Seattle grown as a conservative alter— Velazco turned to an un- native to the Affordable Care conventional and controver- Act. Seekers are charged $25 sial option: an online medical for each request or about $60 auction site called Medibid,

for an unlimited number of re-

which largely operates out- quests per year. side the confines of traditional Roughly 6,000 doctors or health insurance. The 4-year- surgery centers and a handold online service links pa- ful of hospitals, most seeking tients seeking nonemergency patients from abroad, have care with doctors and facili- registe red as"bidders";physities that offer it, much the way cians pay a fee ranging from Priceline unites travelers and $50 to bid on one request to hotels. Vetting doctors is left $250 tobid on many. Once a to prospective patients: Medi- bid is accepted, Medibid bows bid does not verify credentials out, and patients work out arbut requires doctors to submit

rangements with the doctor;

their medical license number

many bids are a package deal, covering the facility fee, the Velazco paid $25 to post his surgeon's charge and anestherequest for knee surgery. A sia services. Patients pay the few days later, he had bids for bidder in full, upfront and in the outpatient procedure from cash or by credit card. surgeons in New York, California and Virginia, including Skeptics for patients to check.

details about their expertise.

But critics, who agree that

After accepting the lowest bid hospitals' prices are too often — $7,500, a fee that covered inflated, arbitrary and opaque, anesthesia and related costs express concerns about Medi— he learned that his surgeon bid. They say the service prowould be William Grant, a vides little in the way of qualCharlottesville, Virginia, or-

ity indicators for prospective

thopedist. A few weeks later, patients, something hospitals after several online discus- convey by granting a doctor sions with Grant, Velazco ar- privileges and insurers do by rived in Charlottesville, where accepting doctors on a plan's he had rented a $50-a-night roster. Surgery or procedures room and would spend two such as colonoscopies are weeks recuperating. On Dec. typically performed in phy4, 2013, he underwent knee sician-owned outpatient censurgery, performed in an out- ters, which are more lightly patient surgery center that regulated than hospitals and Grant co-owns. have fewer safeguards for pa"I'm back working four tients. Unlike hospitals, which days per week and dimbing are required to track infecladders," Velazco said recent-

tions, outpatient surgery cen-

Weber, a benefits consultant

And complications are rare-

who said he left his native health care," using the Internet to arrange nonemergency medical care is long overdue. Americans, he says, are increasingly going online to book travel and even find a mate. Medibid enables them

ly coveredunder the terms of Medibid. Medibid "is a phenomenon that is in part being spawned by the absurd, nonsensical and inexplicably unfathomable pricing of A merican health care," said Arthur Caplan, head of the division of bioethics at NYU Langone

to strip away the opacity that

Medical Center in New York.

the same market and can be

guy at the bottom of his class

ly."I'm doing great." ters are usually exempt from To Medibid founder Ralph such reporting requirements. Canada for the United States in 2005 to escape "socialized

surrounds health care pric- "Cheap sounds good, but in ing, Weber maintains, where these auctions you're not getcharges vary wildly even in ting any information: Was the nearly impossible for consum- in medical school?" ers to obtain.

"We introducetransparency and also competition," said Weber, whose company is based in Murfreesboro, Tennessee."We are a disruptive

"In the current world you buy the name — the institu-

How to submit Events:Email event information to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at leas110days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

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of rising deductibles. "I'm a

f i r m b e liever that

nonemergency medical care not like buying a watch on the will be like any other commodstreet or a hotel room online. ity," said Gallups, whose pracThe stakes are much, much tice has 16 offices in the Atlanhigher." ta area and two — soon to be Marty Makary, an asso- three — surgery centers. "We're perfectfor Medibid ciateprofessor of surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital and becausewe controlthe whole the author o f " U naccount- thing," he said. "We have paable," a 2012 book about hos- thologists, anesthesiologists pital quality, agrees. "I have and surgeons." His profit marconcerns about the lack of gin onMedibid cases— hehas good metrics of quality," he done only two surgeries so far said. "How do you know what but hopes to do more — is adyou're getting?" equate, possibly "as little as 10 Weber says that consumers percent." "We can do a $20,000 surare competent to make such decisions without relying on gery for $6,000," Gallups said. a provider directory or the Why th e p r tce t h fference? imprimatur of a hospital. "Is "Greed," he replied. "Hospitals there anything that says the are making a killing." Internet is any worse than Hospital profit margins avera Blue Cross directory?" he age about 5.5 percent, accordasked. "Once they choose a ing to 2012 statistics released physician, we will send them by the American Hospital Asthe license number, and there sociation. Richard Gundling, are a bunch of third-party vice president of the Healthsites" that patients can use to care Financial Management check out a doctor. If a patient Association, whose memis dissatisfied with a doctor af- bers indude financial executer accepting a bid but before tives from hospitals, disputed surgery, Medibid will repost Gallups'contention. "Hospitals provide a commuthe query free of charge. Oklahoma City anesthesiol- nitybenefit and are responsible ogist Keith Smith, co-owner of for cases that can't go to surthe Surgery Center of Oklaho- gery centers," he said. "Hospima, was one of the first to sign tals are providing things like up with Medibid, which dove- shock-trauma units and emertails with his "free-market" gency care services that have to philosophy. be covered 24 hours a day, sev"We'vebeen quoting prices en days a week." for 17 years" to prospective For Bill Lang, an engineer patients, Smith said, "and in Gainesville, Florida, who posting them online for five." has a $2,500 annual deductAbout 125 of the center's pa- ible through a Blue Cross plan, tients have come t h rough using Medibid proved to be a Medibid, for procedures in- boon. cluding hernia repair, gallLang, 66, needed minor sibladder removal and k n ee nus surgery after an earlier replacement. procedure failed. His ENT told Although cost may be the him the procedure would cost initial lure, once prospective $3,000andwouldbeperformed patients "look at our website in a surgery center under anesand see it's a beautiful, new, thesia. Lang thought both the 40,000-square-foot fa c i lity, charge and the anesthetic were they're sold, "he said. excessiveand decided to try So far, no patient has had a Medibid. complication serious enough A few days after his request to requirea transferto a hos- was posted, he received several pital. But, Smith adds, "if bids and chose the lowestsomeone pays $3,000 for a an ENT in Tampa, a two-hour hernia repair and goes home drive away. The doctor agreed and develops a wound infec- to perform the operation in his tion that costs them another office for $362 using a local $3,000, they're still ahead." anesthetic. "The man was well-qualiPrices vary considerably, but the cost of a hernia repair av- fied, and I'd seen videos of this erages about $7,900 or $9,700, procedure on YouIItbe," Lang depending on whether it is said. "To me it's a low-risk properformed c o nventionally cedure." Had he opted for the or laparoscopical ly, accord- first choice, he said, he would ing to New Choice Health, a have owed $2,600 out of pocket Florida-based company with — his $2,500 deductible plus 20 a website that compares hos- percent of the remainder. pital charges. Some hospitals charge as much as $23,000. 0 g

tional reputation of a doctor or hospital. Insurance compaforbusiness nies or hospitals drop people Competing who have high complication Jeffrey Gallups, founder innovation, a fre e -market rates or costs due to errors," of one of the largest ear, nose alternative to Obamacare." he added. "Medical care is and throat practices in the

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way Priceline unites travelers and hotels.

would reconstruct the torn lig-

Using Medibid

Southeast, said he recently signed up with Medibid because he believes the healthcare law will make consumers

The 4-year-old online service (Medibid) links patients seeking nonemergency care with

0

~+ccoolsculpting'

Spending

pared with the previous two years. If the economy hadn't

Continued from 01

nosedived, they calculated, the growth would have slowed trend for health care spending by just 0.8 percentage points to go back up as the econo- overthat time because offacmy recovers could very well tors unrelated to the recession, be offset by the impact of the such as structural changes Affordable Care Act and oth- in the health care system, exer trends that we're seeing in piring patents for expensive health care," said Northwest- brand-name drugs and probern's David Dranove, who ably some effects of the ACA. co-authored the study with So economic effects alone colleagues Craig Garthwaite accounted for 1.8 percentage and Christopher Ody. points of the health spending Using daims data from slowdown, or about 70percent. three major health insurers, Their data, however, do not the economists examined the speak to what's behind the healthspendingof peoplewith slowdown since 2011. Interemployer insurance in met- estingly, the past two quarters ropolitan areas hit especially haven't shown the expected hard by job losses during the increase in health spending recession compared with aras millions more gained ineas that were least affected. surance under the health care They found the hardest-hit ar- law. Health spending actually "It's very possible that the

eas experienced the smallest

shrank 1.4 percent in the first

increases inhealth spending. quarter, which was a major For example, in the Las revision from the Bureau of Vegas area, which suffered Economic Analysis' original greatly during the downturn, projection that it would grow the employment-to-popula- by 9.1 percent. In the second tion ratio fell 5.6 percentage quarter, health spending grew points between 2008 and just 0.7 percent while gross 2009, while health spending domesticproduct grew 4 perincreasedjust5.4 percent be- cent, but these initial figures tween 2007 and 2011. are likely to be revised over Overall, th e N o r thwest- the next few months. ern study authors found that All of that is to say it's still

health-spending growth be-

too early into the era of ex-

tween 2009 and 2011 slowed

panded coverageto determine

2.6 percentage points com- the future ofhealth spending.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

MEDICINE

ow octors e e restoret evision o a in to er By Tom Avril

This time around, the adoption agency told the Cormans Faye Corman was leading Chinese officials no longer conthe little boy with the deep sidered them good candidates, brown eyes across the train Faye Corman said. platform when all of a sudden The reason? Because her he stopped, planted his feet, husband was blind. and refusedto move. Never mind that M i chael "Come on, Jon Paul," she Corman, an accomplished lawurged him. No luck. yer and pianist, was a loving She and her husband had ad- father to his daughter. The foropted the 3-year-old from Chi- eign adoption door seemed to na a few months before, and be dosed. communication was still tricky. Then the family learned There was the language bar- about Madison Adoption Asrier, sure, but also the boy was sociates, a Wilmington, Delablind — and always had been, ware, agency that specializes as far as anyone knew. in finding homes for children He'd just had a second sur- with special needs. The Corgery at Wills Eye Hospital, but mans, who live in Barrington, the doctors did not hold out New Jersey, approached the much hope that he would see. agency about adopting a visuSuddenly, Jon Paul leaned ally impaired child. "We saida lot of prayers," forward, almost as though he were looking at something and said Faye Corman, a product reached down to the concrete steward at DuPont. floor of the PATCO station in It took many months of paWestmont. perwork and advocacy, but He picked up a shiny, silvery finally in February 2011, the gum wrapper. Cormans traveled to Fuzhou, in His mother started to cry. Fujian Province, a few hundred It all started with Camille. miles northeast of Hong Kong,

few years of life, it is possible Levin performed the cataaftercorrective eye surgery ract surgery in June 2011, and for the brain to learn to inter- also enlarged the pupil so at pret the new influx of visual least part of it would be located

The Philadel phia Inquirer

information.

Matthew Hall i The Philadelphia Inquirer

When Jon PaulCorman was adopted from China,he had serious vision problems that required the complete removal of one eye

Sovaldi Continued from 01 Giving the drug to all of the state's hepatitis C patients would have cost $480 million, about half of OHP's drug budget, Burns said. He estimates that narrowing its availabili-

ty to only the sickest patients who meet certain exceptions would drop that to $40 million, which he said the program still doesn't have in its budget. "We are either going to have to make a choice to not cover some other benefit, or go to the Legislature for more money," he said. The OHA convened a panel of hepatitis C experts, led by OHSU's Zaman, to create a list of exceptions that hepatitis C patients would need to meet in

orderto receive Sovaldi,such as certain patients with cir-

rhosis. The OHA's Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee, which sets drug policies for OHP, approvedthe exceptions at a meeting last week.

A temporary fix About 5,600 current OHP

patients have hepatitis C, and more than 13,000 are believed to be infected but don't know it

yet. Hepatitis C is a contagious

liver disease that affects an estimated 3.2 million people in the U.S., according to the

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Because the disease is slow-progressing, baby boomers who contracted it decades ago are just finding out by developing serious liver problems such as cirrhosis or cancer. People contract the disease through sharing needles with infected people, being born to infected mothers or from needlestick injuries

in health care settings. More rarely, it can be transmitted through sexual contact.

Speaking before the Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee last week, Zaman said

he expects cheaper versions of Sovaldi to come on the market within the next six to 12

months, and he hopes the restrictions can be revisited at that time. He said the list of ex-

ceptions his group compiled is meant to cover everyone who

wouldn't be able to wait for the drug without suffering serious consequences.

Zaman said hepatologists from across the country have contactedhim to express con-

cern about his panel's work. "They are quite confused and quite dismayed on why we're being so restrictive," he sald. Members of the panel have

experienced "angst" over their role in restricting access to the drug, Zaman said. But Lorren Sandt, the executive director of the Caring

c ame t h e

optimistic about Jon Paul.

gum-wrapper episode on the

The vision in the boy's left eye was impaired by a thick, doudy cataract, which might have been there since birth. And his pupil was in the wrong place — at the top of his iris instead of dead center. The boy's right eye — the one with the "opacity" — was even more troublesome. Shrunken

train platform. Faye Corman did not know just how well the

boy could see, but evidently he saw something. Things have only gotten better since. Unlike with adult cataract

surgeries, Levin did not put a new lens in Jon Paul's left eye, as it was smaller than normal. Instead, the boy was fitted with

and scarred, it "was essentially

and surgery on the other. Now 6years old, he has 20/200 corrected

a dead eye," Levin said. What's thick-lensed plastic glasses, more, it contained bits of calci- which take the place of his natum — a possible indication of ural lens while also protecting cancer. theeye. That is when things got The Cormans thought they The prescription has been complicated. were taking their son in for tweaked several times in the Alex Levin never gets tired a one-hour appointment. It three years since, and Jon Paul of watching that first moment turned into a full-day affair, has made steady progress. when the bandages come off and Wills Eye oncologist Carol By last summer, his viand a formerly blind child is Shields said Jon Paul's right eye sion was measured at 20/200, meaning that if a person with able to see. w ouldhaveto come out. Chief of pediatric ophthalEven if there were no cancer, 2 0/20 vision could see somemology and ocular genetics at the eye was so malformed it thing from 200 feet away, Jon Wills Eye, he frequently trav- could never see and would start Paul could see it from 20 feet. Farfrom perfect,butgreatfor elsabroad to perform surgery to become painful, she said. on needy children. A month Four days after that first someone who wa s starting ago, he was in the Philippines, appointment, in March 2011, from near zero. With a new where one of his tasks was to Shields removed Jon Paul's prescri ption in March, he now remove cataracts from the eyes right eye and replaced it with appears to be seeing even betof a 6-year-oldboy. an implant. There was no can- ter, said his mother — unable to Increasingly, r esearchers cer, fortunately. But if he was tell the storywithout emotion. "Miraculous," she said. are learning the brain is more ever to have any vision, every"We were very, very blessplastic than once thought. Even thing hinged on the remaining ed," said her husband. if a child is blind for the first lefteye.

vision with help from Wills Eye doctors. Not to worry. Michael Cor-

man, who in 1991 became the first blind graduate of Rutgers University law school in Camden, could help him learn to read Braille. And his wife,

thinking ahead, had already made an appointment for Jon Paul at Wills Eye, founded in 1832 as the country's first eye

hospital. The records from the orIt was hard to know just years they were eager to adopt phanage had said something when to make Jon Paul's apagain. about an "opacity" in one eye. pointment because the final But inthe interveningperiod, But when the couple met their adoption date was uncertain, China and other countries had son, it was dear he was pretty but Faye Corman nailed it. started to have second thoughts much blind in both eyes: run- Four days after landing on U.S. about the large numbers of ning into walls, feeling his way soil, her son went to the big, children headed to the United up stairs, unable to see food on curved-front building on WalStates. his plate. nut Street. The Cormans adoptedher from China in 2005, and in a few

at the center. T he next da y

Still, Levin was not highly

to meet Jon Paul.

Sovaldiexemptions

patients with MELDscores greater than 11 if cleared by Medicaid patients who will an advisory panel. (MELD receive Sovaldi for hepatitis scores measure the severity C if restrictions to Sovaldi are of liver disease to prioritize approved under the Oregon people waiting for transplants. Health Plan: Scores range from 6 (less ill) 1) Patient with the following to 40 (extremely ill). conditions that resulted from 5) Other scenarios can be their hepatitis C infection: considered on acase-by-case • Vasculitis (inflammation of basis. blood vessels) allcases, expected sur• Glomerulonephritis (inflam- 6)In vival from non-hepatitis C-asmation of kidney filters) sociated morbidity should be • Cryoglobulinemia (damage, greater than five years. inflammation of blood vessels -Source: Oregon Health Authority throughout body) • Lymphoma (cancer of the lymph system) 2) Hepatitis C and HIVco-infected patients with cirrhosis (stage 4 liver disease) 3) Patients in the transplant Percentage setting: Condition of patients • Patients for whom the drug who develop: will prevent needing a liver transplant or recurrent hepati- Chronic tis C infection post-transplant. hepatitis C 75% to 85% • Patients with stage 4 fibrosis infection (thickening and scarring of Chronic liver connective tissue). disease • Post-transplant patients Cirrhosis with fibrosing cholestatis 5% to 20% hepatitis (rapidly-progressing over20to 30years liver injury) due to hepatitis C infection. Death from 1% to 5% 4) Cirrhotic (stage 4) patients cirrhosis or with Model for End-Stage llver fatlure Liver Disease (MELD)scores — Source: U.S. Centers for Disease of between 8 and11. Or Control and Prevention, 2014

Progressionof hepatitis Cinfection in yatients

that are prone to rupturing.) the drug, which was later purBy March, he said his hepatichased by Gilead, originally tis C was cured. Nemirow, who planned to sell it for $36,000 per had tried other treatments untreatment. successfully in the past, said he "The large patient population hopes the state can find a way combined with the high price of to get the new drug to more each individual treatment cre- people. "How do you explain to ates a question as to whether payors of health care, induding somebody, 'Your dad didn't M edicareand Medicaid,can qualify for the new hep C treat-

we will catch the most serious-

the company that developed

carry such a load," the Congressmen wrote.

ly ill patients and move them

around the stop sign so they can get treated for this drug so they don't in fact fall into liver

failure." But Sandt insists that if the HERC approves the restric-

tions, people will die. If the state only treats the sickest patients — those who have already de-

ment,'" Nemirow said. "'He

veloped cirrhosis — then it will wasn't sick enough, so we had allow others to develop cirrhoto let him develop really terrible

Implications unclear

sis that could otherwise have

diseases.'It couldbe cirrhosis, it beenprevented. Steve Nemirow, a hepatitis C couldbe cancer." Although only 1 percent to 5 patient who lives in a rural area Burns said it's difficult to put percentofpeople die from ciroutside of Hillsboro, said before his foot down and say there rhosis, it's an irreversible conhe started taking Sovaldi in simply is not enough money in dition that increases a person's January, his energy and mind the OHP budget for this drug. risk of liver cancer and is the "If I thought for one minute most common reasonpeople were deterioratingand he suffered from major bleeding as a that somebody was going to need liver transplants. "When you have cirrhoresult ofhis cirrhosis. (Bleeding die because of this, I would be is a common side effect of liver making a different recommen- sis, you will die prematurely," failure, as the scarringprevents dation," he said. "I've been as- Sandt said. blood from accessing the liver, sured by everybody that there — Reporter: 541-383-0304, creating large, swollen veins are safety valves built in, that tbannow@bendbulletin.com

egon City-based group that ad- like symptoms throughout the vocates for hepatitis C patients, treatment. The side effectswere said she believes if anything, so severe they prevented most the new drugs will be even people from following through more expensive. with the treatment. "Let's

n ot a ssume

t h at

Burns said once new ver-

they're going to get cheaper," sionsofSovaldiarereleased,he she said. hopes to offer exclusive access

Rationing care

to Oregon's OHP population to

one of the companies in hopes Oregon's Medicaid program, they'll cut the state a deal. State like all others in the country, Medicaid programs already operates under a finite bud- receivemore than 20 percent get, so leaders are constantly discounts on new varieties of struggling to delegate care to drugs, but he hopes to get an those who need it the most. The even deeper discount. program is unlike other state Sandt — whose organization Medicaid programs, however, receives unrestricted grants in that the federal government from a number ofpharmaallows it to ration its funds by ceutical companies, including restricting coverage to certain Gilead Sciences, Inc., the makconditions an d t r e atments. er of Sovaldi — said allowing Other Medicaidprograms ra- exclusive access to one comtion funds by limiting who can pany wouldn't work, as one be in the program. drug won't work for all OHP A group called the Health patients. "We need to work with all of Evidence Review Commission is constantly reviewing evi- them," she said. denceand making tough deciGilead has come under sions about which treatments widespread scrutiny in recent will and will notbe covered and months for what critics say is for whom. A HERC subcom- exorbitant pricing on Sovaldi, mittee will make a recommen- which the company reported dation regarding coverage for last month had brought in $3.48 Sovaldi on Friday, and the full billion. Two Congressmen, HERC will take up the issue indudingSen.Ron Wyden of Aug. 14. Oregon, called a joint investiBefore Sovaldi, which re- gation into the company's pricceived Food and Drug Admin- ing. In a letter to Gilead's CEO, istration approval in December the Congressmen pointed out 2013, the drugs prescribed to that U.S. Food and Drug Ad-

Ambassadors Program, an Or- treat hepatitis C caused flu-

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

FjTNEss

Runners find commonground Why elite athletes lose their drive as teamscompete in rural relays once they move on from their sport By Mike Plunkett

By Shawn C.Sorenson

The Washington Post

Special to The Washington Post

To complete a mythical journey, one needs the following:

Question: Twenty years from now, who's more likely to be a regular, healthy exerciser'? A) The all-American athlete, with the ripped physique, seemingly infinite endurance, superhuman strength and supremely tuned agility'? Or B) The decidedly less-impressive s pecimen sitting in t h e

a series of impossible tasks, a

fairly accurate map and, most important, companions united in acommon goal. And if said journey involves a lot of running, make sure to bringclean socks and ripe bananas. Running isn't an activity usuallyseen as quest-worthy or a shared experience. A run is a solitary pursuit, one step and one breath at a time. Ear-

PhotosbyAm erican Odyssey Relay viaThe W ashingtonPost

the spring — or take the off-

season off. For modern athletes, competitive sports are an integral part of life, a major year-round commitment, an opportunity for financial or

exercise, love exercise and exercise habits should be

easy, right? Except, well, it's

200-mile trek through rural back roads or a slice of the

not. In a series of studies,

the first of which was published in the journal Sports Health, my colleagues and I examined the health and

"There's a routine and a life-

vate themselves to go to the

ni from the University of Southern California. They

gym may have trouble translating the highly specialized

tainly, for some athletes, they

included current and for-

do. But that didn't explain the former athletes in our study.

mer student-athletes

We found no association be- demand into a well-rounded

some of whom competed at

tween joint health and exercise

dent-athletes reported being

the restof us to make exercise

a regular habit. This suggests a need for better resources and guidance, from colleges, the NCAA and professional leagues, to help transition them to healthy lives beyond their athletic careers. It highlights that education programs for athletes and nonathletes alike won't make much headway with the message that people should work out because it will help them avoid obesity, disease and pre-

In its 16th year, the race named

"very important" in t heir

coaches, trainers and support

ysseyRelay,a spring racethat owner of a candy company, after Chief Warrant Officer 4 takes about 140 teams of run- would go on to captain his own Tom Brooks, who died from ners 200 miles from Gettys- Ragnar team, run the Marine Lou Gehrig's disease in 1999, burg, Pennsylvania, to Wash- Corps Marathon twice and provides a course, some guideington, D.C. "We may not get participate in several local lines and a mandate: Be at told about it, but you have to be triathalons. the finish line by 11 a.m., as a "What relays do is turn run- team. ready to overcome." Tom's Run "celebrates the Depending on th e r a ce ning into a team sport. I think course, a runner could run a training with other people, things that were important to 3-mile leg through residential the camaraderie with II other Tom Brooks, and it's about us streets or a 9-mile leg along a runners, the van decoration as Coasties," said race direccountry road.There are hills and team spirit are all a part of tor Roger Butturini. "The goal to tackle, fields to run through it. What got me off the couch is to get from Point A to Point and, for those given the most was running with someone B and end up with everybody arduous task, there's the dark else," Burton said. else at the same time. You have of night to beat. Tanner B e l l , 34, the to plan the race backwards. And relay races are more co-founder andpresidentof the It doesn't matter how fast or than just the running. Teams Ragnar Relay Series, has seen how many team members you navigate the complexities of the team dynamic firsthand, have; the key is getting every-

lives (compared with just one in six nonathletes). And

staff. College athletes might have a head coach, position

86 percent met healthy ex-

coach, strength and condition-

the course, switching off at

one to work together." This

40 percent met the healthy

year, 17 teams with nearly 300 runners participated.

exercise guidelines. That's

order. However, a team trav-

races Ragnar offers during the year.He started the races

admittedly twice the na-

great with structure."

because of how it makes us feel,

When that structure disap- how it reduces our stress and pears at the end of an athletic

career, thefreedom can be liberating. "You literally go overnight from being required to be somewhere doing strenuous, structured physical activity

how it offers quality time with people we care about, we're

more likelyto keep doing it. It should also make us wonder about the level of invest-

ment required of today's ath-

ization and external rewards.

chance to run t hrough Antietam National Battlefield at about 2 a.m.," Ferret recalled

It wasn't always this way. home fromworktired, stressed Being an all-American athlete At least two earlier stud- and not at all thrilled by the shouldn't come at the expense ies — one tracking Finnish prospect of trekking alone to of lifelong well-being. athletes who'd competed the gym to do exercise that's for some periodbetween "good for you."

heartbeat in my ears, I became incredibly aware of what the battlefield meant, the lives lost

and spared there and the opportunity we all have to make an impact right where we are. I don't know, maybe I was somewhat delirious, but it was A runner traverses Gettysburg Military Park on the second Ieg of

a spiritual experience for me

the 200-mile 2014 American Odyssey Relay.

and one I won't soon forget."

Most of the adults who were

lete and nonathlete alums reported an average of five hours a week of exercise — most of that cardio. Just

potatoes.

sound of my own breath and

ings of this study would apply to the nation as a whole.

healthy exerciser. Both ath-

together.

in an email. "With only a headlamp to light the way and the

It's not clear that the find-

ingcoach, athletic trainer, physical therapist, dietitian, sports psychologist and academic counselor assignedtothem. "Everything i s tot a l ly were 30 times as likely as nonathlete students to do so. planned out for you — class mature death. People already But among alumni, who scheduling, practice hours, tu- know that — and it's not geton average competed in the toring," says Amanda Smith, ting them off the couch. The 1980s and 1990s, being a a former USC swimmer. "I am evidence suggests that habitual former college athlete had the kind of person who thrived exercise arises from intrinsic nothing to do with being a as an athlete because I did motivation. When we exercise

letes. Yes, intense training can offer benefits for both sports

"In my second year of running AOR (in 2012), I had the

Continued from 01

ercise guidelines: 150 minutesofcardio and two sessions of strength training per week. Student-athletes

tional average, suggesting over 20 hours a week to having that USC alumni as a whole absolutely no obligations to do are relatively active. The anything physical whatsoever," Lushao says. surprise, though, was that the former jocks were just Yet many athletes have trouas likely to become couch ble making the transition to

Annie Ferret, a 32-year-old

els, often in a decorated van with hi s c ollege roommate, marketing director, found or bus, the goal is to get all the who was a runner. He was not, the American Odyssey Remembers to the end. but he became a "Ragnarian lay during a Google search Since the American Odys- convert." for relay races and talked her husband into putting a team

Running

workout routine: including el-

athletes become accustomed to

director of the American Od-

exchange points and making sure each participant runs in

training that modern sports

the Olympics or went on to patterns, and h ealth-related ements ofaerobic endurance, be pros — as well as non- quality of life was similar for muscular strength and power, athletes who never played athlete and nonathlete alums. balance, agility and flexibility. college sports. Something else is going on. So in the end, retired athPredictably, current stuFrom a young age, modern letes struggle just as much as

values of self-sufficiency and teamwork, is more free-form.

from the first race in Utah in 2004 to the 21 road and trail

becomes, 'What am I training

exercise habits of nearly 500 students and a l um- exercise later in life. And cer-

there are obstades," said Bob near my home in Alexandria Fleshner, founder and race (Virginia)." an d t h e

"the sole motivation to exer-

style that you've built around foro)7> "My biggest challenge is exthis sport whenyou've been involved with it since elementary ercising with no clear goal," school," says Jennifer Lushao, saysformer RicehurdlerFrank a former Rice University swim- Miller Jr. "Being healthy in mer. "It just kind of dominates general isn't enough to motiyour life physically, mentally vate me. I need a ball to chase and emotionally." and a score of some kind. I get You might assume that af- bored without a semi-immediter all that training, lingering ate reward." injuries could get in the way of Even those who can moti-

more active, averaging 15 executing a carefully planned hours of weekly exercise, training regimen under conll more than students who stant guidance and oversight. didn'tplay sports. Three out They are supported by an evof foursaid exercise was er-growing infrastructure of

B urton, now 4 1

O k lahoma

and Sacramento State before a career in professional football,

important source of social and cise is their sport. Once that is psychological identity. done, the motivation ends. It

Whatever the preference, a

Day and honors Coast Guard

offensive line at

professional rewards and an

to change that perspective.

t er, I ran a 5K on m y o w n

says Tim Conley, who played

Intuition suggests A. Since athletes know how to have been doing it all their lives, maintaining healthy

most fun are those who accept

were over." "For most former athletes,"

bleachers?

buds in, exertion out. Relay With a bicyclist, a Tom's Run runner exits the Paw Paw Tunnel on races, however, are helping the C&0 Canal in Maryland. sey's creation in2008, Fleshner "The run is important, but has seen wedding proposals at we look at it like an experimarathon course, local race the finish line, veterans with ence. It's a chance to connect organizers are capitalizing missing limbs competing with in unique ways that people on the running boom and hand cranks and runners, vol- wouldn't have done on their athletes' desire to take on a unteers and local townsfolk own," Bell said. "Coming tochallenge. coming together to overcome gether is something we don't It's no wonder that many of adversities. get to do anymore. People these races are branded as an It was during the Ragnar yearnforrealconnection and "odyssey" or an "adventure" D.C. race in 2011 that Dave to make genuine friends. It's in line with Nordic warriors of Burton got the relay running like summer camps; you run old. Running a relay might not bug. As a volunteer, Burton with complete strangers and have the gravitas of conquer- was so taken with the ener- end up being friends." ing foreign lands, but com- gy of the overnight race from Local relays run the gamut pleting such a journey with a C umberland, M a r yland, t o of race structure and support. team — sidestepping potholes National Harbor, Maryland, Ragnar and the American Odand animals in the road, run- that it inspired him to take up yssey Relay are highly strucning through the night with running. tured, well-supported races "Once the race was over, for teams of 12 runners, while little sleep — feels like an accomplishment. I told myself, 'I can do this,'" Tom's Run, which occurs the "The people who have the Burton said. "The day af- first weekend after Memorial

supervised. Gone are the days at Columbia University. "But when Sir Roger Bannister (the from seeing what became of first to run a sub-four-minute myowntrainingpartners from mile) sneaked in training as a college, I think some of them medical school hobby. Once it were motivated by being good was common for fall's football and basically went cold turkey stars to dabble in baseball in when their competitive days

"It is important to promote exercise by stressing the potential harm of inactivity. Warn

patients that inactivity can lead to a 25 percent increase in heart disease and a45 percent increase in cardiovascular disease mortality,

tracked were c ollege-edu- not to mention a 10 percent increase in the cated, middle-class or up- incidence of cancer, diabetes and untold per-middle-class whites. depression." However, the r e searchers noted that the "physiological — Editorial advice from Taiwanese researchers

a world in which they return

1920 and 1965, and the

other looking at NFL players who'd been part of the league during the 1958 season — found former ath-

performance and personal development.But we may be

putting too much value on specialization, professional-

"There's this feeling that all

college athletes are internally motivated," says David Epstein, a sportswriter and for-

Pure. &m/6 Co.

aj. B~ dU

mer middle-distance runner

letes more likely to exercise throughout their lives and

to enjoy health benefits as a result.

So what's changed? In recent decades, athletic training has become more specialized, structured and

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characteristics" of the study

participants were "similar" to those of samples that are

dence of cancer, diabetes and

"It is important to promote

study are "good news to the

Objective:

The study was funded in more diverse. untold depression." part by Coca-Cola Co., which In an editorial that was pubThree of th e e ditorial's has emphasized the role of lished alongside the study, re- f our authors worked on a physical inactivity in the nasearchers from Taiwan urged 2011 Lancet study that found tion's obesity crisis. The ¹ doctors to use this informa- that even 15 minutes of brisk tional I n stitutes o f H e a lth tion to motivate their patients walkingper day could extend helped pay for the study as to exercise, even if it's only for a person's life expectancy. well. a few minutes a day. Both that study and the new exercise by stressing the po- sedentary." "Exercise is a miracle drug tential harm o f i n a ctivity," they wrote. "Warn patients in many ways," they wrote in that inactivity can lead to a 25

the editoriaL "The list of dis-

percent increase in heart dis- eases that exercise can preease and a 45 percent increase vent, delay, modify progresin c ardiovascular disease sion of, or improve outcomes mortality, not to mention a 10 for is longer than we currently percent increase in the inci-

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5

TION

irst e era By Mary MacVean

uten- reere uationta ese ect

ionable," which has helped parts per million of gluten. prompt hundreds of new gluRegulations that tell con- (Another agency regulates ten-freeproducts but also has sumers just what i t m e ans meat and poultry.) One ca- meant that real medical probwhen a product is labeled"glu- veat is that use of the glu- lems are sometimes treated ten free"took eff ectTuesday ten-free label i s v o luntary; lightly, Fasano says. — a "major milestone," says there is no requirement that "For people like myself, one of the leading experts on a package containing gluten this is a medical necessity. gluten disorders. must declare that. My diet is my medicine," says " The gluten-free diet f o r People who have the auto- Beth Hillson, the president of someone with celiac disease is immune disorder celiac dis- the American Celiac Disease like insulin for diabetics," says ease can become very sick if Association. "This labeling rule makes it D r. Alessio Fasano, director of they eat the tiniest amount the Center for Celiac Research of gluten, a protein found in very clear cut. That gives me a at Massachusetts General wheat, barley and rye; there lot more comfort. My son, who Hospital and author of the re- are, however, a range of other is 27, is also celiac, and he's cent book"Gluten Freedom." conditions set off by gluten, out on his own and cooking. The Food and Drug Ad- sensitivities that cause head- That gives me peace of mind ministration has determined aches, intestinal problems and for him as well," says Hillson, that packaged food labeled respiratory issues. author of the upcoming book gluten free (or similar claims Additionally, g l uten-free "The Complete Guide to Livsuch as "free of gluten") can- diets have become "fash- ing Well Gluten Free." n ot contain m ore t han 2 0

Los Angeles Times

People should not "just try

lion, with a counterpart for

out" a gluten-free diet if they

cookies, cakes, pizzas and just suspect problems; a medical about every food containing diagnosis is essential, Fasa- gluten, analysts say. Gluten, no says. For one thing, if the Fasano says, is "nutritionally underlying problem could af- useless," so it's generally fine fect relatives, it's important to for people to avoid it as long know. And it's impossible to as they are careful to get the find the effects of gluten in a vitamins, fiber and minerals person who eats none. found in foods such as bread Fasano writes in his book and pasta. that when he began talking From his perspecti ve, Faabout gluten issues in the Unit- sano says, goals that remain ed States, coming here from are discovering a "safety net" Italy in 1993, people told him treatment, a complement to a celiac disease was almost non- gluten-free diet for people who existent in this country. They inadvertently are exposed, were wrong, he says. About 1 and to find a way to prevent in 133 people in the U.S. now is the disorder. thought to have celiac disease. The new FDA regulation These days, the market for doesn't mean that people gluten-free foods tops $6 bil- who must avoid gluten can

completely relax. A product doesn't have to carry any claim about gluten, unlike requirements for allergens such as nuts and wheat. Although wheat is one of the major foods containing gluten, it is not the only one. And some products that contain wheat have had the gluten removed.

That means some consumers still must read ingredient lists

carefully. Consumers can file complaints about compliance with

the regulation through the FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition by calling 240-402-2405 or by going to www.fda.gov and typing into the search box watch form."

" m ed-

Indulging in a deliciousdessert without the burden of your conscience By Amy King

Nut Butter Cups

The Washington Post

Two years ago, I cut refined sugars, processed foods and gluten from my diet. My goal was to feel better. I've always

Makes12 servings. This riff on those famous peanut butter cups — with a sunflower seed butter alternative — is acinch to makeand nice to haveon handfor snacking. You'll needa12-well muffin pan andbaking cupliners with ridged sides. MAKE AHEAD:The cups can be refrigerated for about1 month. Enjoy Life Semi-Sweet Chocolate MegaChunks arewidely available.

been interested in the rela-

tionship between food and the body. Mostly, that led to eating more vegetables, buying meat from local farmers and putting grass-fed butter instead of milk and sugar in my coffee. It also made me rethink

1 ~/2 C Enjoy Life Semi-Sweet

~/2C coconut Oii, liquefied

Chocolate Mega Chunks (see ys C raw honey headnote) 1 tsp sea salt 1 C sunflower seed butter

dessert.

No longer could I grab half of acookie from the free-food table next to my desk at work,

or a handful of M&Ms on the way to the next meeting. Yet

I still craved the sugar-filled packaged foods, so I went Googling for recipe ideas. I tried searching on "clean desserts" and "paleo treats," as well as "something that tastes delicious but won't make me

feelterrible." I found way too many blogs Deb Lindsey/TheWashington Post with way too many so-called Nut Butter Cups offer a dairy-, soy- and gluten-free option to satisfy your sweet tooth. healthful treats. Finding ways to incorporate sweets was

starting to feel like cheating. Chips, which are dairy-, soy- they do not contain several Wasn't I trying to eat well? and gluten-free, with no resugars and alphabet-soup inI was faced with a choice: fined sugars. I was in. gredients such as TBHQ (a Make treats like those, or stop They are simple to con- preservative) and PGPR (an eating anything sweet at all. struct. I melt th e chocolate emulsifer). Once I saw that I Ever. on the stove, drizzle it into could create something that The latter seemed sad and a silicone baking cups and put good, it made me feel a little little extreme. them in th e f reezer to set. better about my pursuit to Instead, I chose to experi- Meanwhile, I get out the sun- keep some sweets in my life. ment. I went through endless flower seed butter, honey, co- I think the nut butter cups are amounts of honey and co- conut oil and vanilla to create helping me think about food conut oil. I tried xylitol as a the filling; often, there's some in a new way. If I'm going to sweetener; it didn't agree with left over, and this mixture, have a dessert, it's going to be my stomach. I tested batches kept in the refrigerator, makes something I make myself. of sad, flat brownies. I fell in a good snack on its own. The And I do, every month or so. love with frozen bananas, ca- filling goes on top of the first I like to keep them on hand, shew butter and dates. layer of firm chocolate. Then in the freezer, for those times At last, I found a delicious it's back to the freezer to set when chocolate is necessary recipe on an aptly named while I soften the remaining blog: CleanEatingWithAD- chocolate on the stove for the irtyMind.com. It was for nut top layer. butter cups. They seemed After 15 minutes or so of easy, but they looked like can- freezer time, I peel away the dy bars. Candy bars are filled liners to reveal the perfect with the foods I was avoiding. treat for me. They are like This recipe, though, called those famous peanut butter for Enjoy L if e C hocolate cups — but better, because

— which is, at least, at the end

~/2tsp vanilla extract

Heat a few inches of water in amediumsaucepan over medium heat. Place the chocolate chunks in a heatproof bowl seated on top of the saucepan; once they have melted, stir until smooth. Remove the bowl from the heat; reduce the heat to low andkeepthe water in the saucepan warm. Spoon a dollop of the chocolate into eachbaking cup liner in the muffin pan; use the spoon to evenly coat the bottom and halfway up the sides. Transfer to the freezer to firm up, about 10 minutes. You should have more than half of the melted chocolate left over. Meanwhile, combIne the sunflower seedbutter, coconut oII, raw honey, sea salt andvanilla extract in afood processor; pureeuntil well incorporated. Use a spoon to evenly divide the nut butter mixture among the chocolate-lined cups. Return them to the freezer for 30 minutes, until the nut butter mixture is firm. Use a spoon to spread and completely coat the top of each nut butter cup with the remaining melted chocolate. (Return the bowl of chocolate briefly to the saucepan asneeded, to loosen it up.) Return the completely coated cups to the freezer; freezeuntil firm, about15 minutes. Transfer the nut butter cups to an airtight container; store/stack between pieces of waxed orparchment paper, if desired, and refrigerate.

of a long work week and, at

— Adapted from the CleanEating With a Dirty Mind blog.

most, after evening meals. I've brought the nut-butter cups to

the office for potlucks, hoping the trend might catch on. Who

knows? Maybe someday nobody will tempt me with their M&Ms. I definitely consider these

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Frenc TVexec ranc esouttoNort A ca TV SPOTLIGHT

month when fewer French can companies may also have be found in front of their televi- made that easier. "Maybe it's related to the sion sets. Yet this is also a country where chefs and cuisine place where I grew up," she have long been held in high said. "There were no differencesteem. Eventually the show es between the French and mycaught on, and the compa- self. If I had grown up in diffiny produced other successful cult neighborhoods, my experitransplants, like"The Voice." ence mayhave been different." In 2004, she joined FremanRejani, whose marriage endtleMedia France, where she ed in divorce in 2009, tries to go became chief operating officer home early when her 8-yearbefore being appointed chair- old daughter, Sarah, stays with woman of T V P r esse Pro- her, to have dinner and help ductions, a news agency and with homework. Fremantle subsidiary. EmboldThough she has been in-

By Aida Aiami New Yorh Times News Service

PARIS — Bouchra Rejani's

parents had planned her career for her: She would pursue med-

ical studies and become a doctor. At 18, Rejani responded by lowering herself out a window of the family home in Cholet, a small town in western France,

and leaving. For good. She has been on her own since, and perhaps that is one reason Rejani, now 42 and one

of the most successful TV production executives in France,

ened by the success of Shine

France, Rejani decided to take

volved in organizations that promote better relations be-

never bothered to

her experience to northwest Africa, or the Maghreb. Until

tween Europe and Africa, she says she does not push for af-

c o nsider

that being an Arab immigrant could be an obstacle in a country that has had a troubled his-

tory of integrating people from Lauren Fleishman /The New York Times her background. Since Shine France, a subsidiary of Shine Group, a companythat Rejani is the chief operat-

has produced "The Voice" and nMasterChef,n formed in 2009,

ing officer of Shine France, a it has become the biggest production company in France, and subsidiary of Shine Group, a Bouchra Rejani — the COO of Shine France — has decided to take News Corp. company run by her experience to northwest Africa. Elisabeth Murdoch that has produced "MasterChef," "The

Voice" and "Ugly Betty." Rejani had been involved in producing reality shows in France,

was involved in the formation of Shine France in 2009, and it

approached her with the idea

has since become the biggest of starting a new venture. She production company in the said it took him two hours to country, with more than two

persuade herto quit her com-

dozenprograms,including re- fortable job and join a startup ality shows, scripted series and with fewer than 10people. "We didn't want to produce

documentaries.

Five years ago, she was an futility or programs that didn't executive with FremantleMe- make any sense," Rejani said dia France, one of the produc-

in her office, which has an ex-

now, when a network received firmative action on the job. Her the rights for a program in the assistant happens to be AlgeriArab world, it bought the rights an-Tunisian; Rejani remarked, for the nearly two dozen coun- "Hafida? I hired her because tries of the Arab League. For in- she's good." stance, viewers throughout the Still, she realizes that her life Middle East and North Africa see the same "Arab Idol," which

has been exceptional.

"If I were veiled, my expehas the same basic format as its rience may have been different — Imay have encountered American counterpart. tomers, the major networks. "I But in the fall, there will be obstacles," she said. "One of liked the idea of producing feel- a version of "MasterChef" for my teachers once said his best goodprograms that were about Moroccans alone. student was African. I only resurpassing yourself and transIn May, the far right, in alized I was African at the age mitting knowledge." France as well as other coun- of 8." With Lachkar as chief exec- tries, won a stunning victory However, she worries about utive, Shine France began po- in the European parliamenta- the attention that f a r -right sitioning itself to compete with ry elections, worrying many groups are getting in France. "There is a complete political Fremantle and the country's abouttheconsequences forthe other TV production giant, En- country's immigrant popula- failure in France in integrating demol France. tion. Rejani says that concerns its immigrant population," she In 2010, they had a shaky her, although she quickly adds said."One dayorthe other, they

tion companies that had long pansive view of the EiffelTower start with a French version of that her personal experience will have to accept them. But I dominated the French market, and is in walking distance of "MasterChef." That was chiefly has been extremely positive don't think it will happen any when Thierry Lachkar, who the headquarters of her cus- because it started in August, a — working for foreign-owned time soon."

ea ersres on to'sexta ' — The Ex-Mrs.

Dear Abby:I just finished reading

ER have sex! We only do it three

Dear Ex:Thank you for writing. 23), the wife whose husband keeps The saying "men are from Mars, track of how often he and his wife women are from Venus" aptly aphave had sex and his determination plies to the responses I received to havesex 100 times peryear.She from my readers about that letter. was wondering if this is normal. Read on: I can tell her that Dear Abby: Most my former husband guys may keep track thought we should of how often they're DFP,R have sex five times a having sex, although week. He kept a calmore likely it's how

times a week." While the other says,

endar of when we had

breathing and eating as essential to

the letter from "Pressured" (April

Ag gy

sex that also included who initiated it. I explained to him

long since the last

"We have sex ALL THE TIME! We do it three times a week!"

W e must consider the other person and his or her needs, whether they're emotional, sexual or physical. Emotional and physical are not necessarilythe same. — Denise in Michigan

Dear Abby:For most men, sex is just a little less important than

time, or maybe how many times a week. But this guy

our existence. Men are getting fed up with being deprived. I have of-

is an idiot for letting his wife know frequent sex, but that he also had to that he's tracking it, let alone that he

ten considered extramarital sexual

that I was more than willing to have

be an attentive, caringhusband. Our marriage counselor believed he was suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorder, depression and was probably a diagnosable narcissist. Surprise, surprise! He pronounced our marriage counselor to be inept and divorced me. "Pressured" says she has a good

has a goal of 100 times. Hopefully

pursuits, and I feel I'd be justified in doing so. I know I'm not alone.

he's not procreating, just "recreat-

Men have needs, and should have

ing" in bed. Abby, I thought you knew men

a right to share intimate relations with their wives. If not, we should

be given the green light to fulfill our times" — are you kidding? Surely needs elsewhere. you know the saying, "Even bad sex — James in Kentucky is pretty good sex." We guys will Dear Abby: I had to chuckle at take it any way, any how, anytime. "Pressured." I have been married marriage,so I assume that means For us, it's all good, all the time. 20 years and have five children. I she has a caring husband. I would — Dan in Irving, Texas figure my husband and I are intiadvise her to do her best to enthuDear Abby: Unfortunately, my mate anaverage of260times ayear. siastically and creatively meet his husband also likes to keep a run- Needless to say, my husband greets needs. Most men express love and ning tab of our sexual frequency. It me with a smile every day, and our feellovedbyhaving sex. Scorekeep- galls me. marriage is rock solid. ing could be his ineffective attempt I saw a movie years ago in which — Knows the Secret in Utah at communicating his need to feel a couple saw the same therapist and — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com loved. one tells the counselor, "We NEV- or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, AUG. 7, 2014:This yearyou

better. "Fifty great versus 100 'so-so'

Stay anchored.

YOURHOROSCOPE

often rally your energy at home andget By Jacqueline Bigar involved in a cause. As aresult, you will accomplish a lot. At times, those around noteworthy discussion, while others opt to you might feel left out as they encounter the new, efficientyou. Make time for loved avoid the situation. A one-on-one converones and friends. They will continue to sation will point you in the right direction. Tonight: Go for a close encounter. play a pivotal role Stars showthe kind in your life. If you CANCER (June21-July22) of dayyou'Iihave are single, youare ** * * You'll find yourself surrounded ** * * * D ynamic likely to encounter by others. One person specifically is ** * * Positive a n ew person. hot-tempered and capable of causing you ** * Average Rec o gnize that you a problem. How do you want to deal with

** So-so

are changing,and

* Difficult

avoid a commitment for at least a year. If you are attached, your sweetie m ight betaken abackbythe new you.Give him or her time to adjust. CAPRICORNis all business.

ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Someone seems to match your fiery nature, and this will challenge you to move in a newdirection. It is up toyou whether this is war or peace! Responsibilities call, butyou'll want to make extra time for a key person in your life. Tonight: In the whirlwind of the moment.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Others are just as challenging as you are. The problem seems to be that one person wants to be more combative than you can tolerate. Your family will serve as a powerful anchor. Know thatyou can have whatyou want. Tonight: Consider a

weekendgetaway. GEMINI (May 21-June20)

** * * You'll want to get past a problem, butyou might not be able to contain someone's anger. Some of you will attempt a

SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * * You could be angrier than you realize. You havebeen holding back your feelings for so long thatyou might not be totally aware of what is even triggering your anger. Slow down some, and initiate a conversation. Tonight: Hang with a favorite person.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) *** * Your spendingcould goway

this? Many of you will opt to head down a more peaceful path. Tonight: Don't allow someone to trigger you.

over budget if you are not careful. Your instincts are working overtime. Be careful about swallowing anger, as there could be a backfire. You might find that getting a situation resolved can be difficult. Tonight: Play it conservatively.

LEO (July23-Aug. 22)

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)

** * * You'll want to focus on certain de- ** * * * You know whereyouare going, tails that must be completed if you are to thoughafriend could slowyou down. Trust enter this weekend feeling fancy-free and your judgment, and you will come out on content. You can accomplish a lot, quite top. Confusion might surround a phone quickly. Refuse to let a loved one or family call, so try to confirm what is going on. Tomember slow you down. Tonight: Know night: Only where you can listen to music! when to call it a night. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Know when to pull back and let ** * * Your playful manner and deliber- others steal the scene. You might not be ate attitude will attract others' attention. sure of your choices if you opt to head in They might not be exactly sure of what a different direction. Listen to an angry you want, but neither will you. Remain re- friend or relative; this person needs your sponsive to others. If you become irritated help. Tonight: Keepyour plans asecret by someone, sim ply walkaway.Tonight: for now. Start the weekend early. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Reach out to someone at a disLIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) ** * * You might be more upbeat once tance. Thisperson's freshperspective you distance yourself from a difficult always helps level you out, allowing you to see a situation differently. Use your intusituation. You won't want to reveal everything on your mind when checking out an ition to help open up aconversation with a friend. Tonight: Aim for whatyou want. investment involving your home. Refuse to take on a commitment just yet. Tonight: © King Features Syndicate

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. t

I

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 1:05, 3:45 • AMOST WANTED MAN (R)11:15a.m.,3:05,6,9:05 • AMERICA(PG-13) 6:45, 9:30 • AND SO ITGOES(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:05, 4:30, 6:55, 9:20 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES (PG-13)3:15 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES 3-D (PG-13)11:20 a.m. • GETONUP(PG-13)11am.,210,630,940 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)12:30,3:30,3:55, 7, 9:45, 10:15 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-D (PG-13)1,7:30 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY IMAX3-D (PG-13)Noon, 3, 6:30, 9:15 • HERCULES (PG-13) 2, 9:50 • HERCULES 3-D (PG-13) 11:35 a.m., 7:15 • HOW TOTRAINYOURDRAGON2(PG) 11:10 a.m., 1:40, 4:05 • THEHUNDRED FOOT JOURNEY (PG)7,10 • INTOTHESTORM(PG-13) 8 • LUCY(R) 11:30a.m., 1:30, 1:50, 4:10, 5, 6:40, 9, 10:20 • MALEFICENT (PG) 11:50 a.m., 2:30, 4:55 • PLANES:FIREfir RESCUE(PG) 1:20, 3:40, 7:10 • PLANES:FIRE &RESCUE3-D(PG)11:05a.m. • THEPURGE:ANARCHY (R) I:IO,3:50 • SEXTAPE(R)7:35,10 • STEP UPALLIN(PG-13) 8 • STEP UPALLIN 3-D (PG-13) 8:30 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES 3-D(PG-13)7:30, IO:10 • TRANSFORMERS:AGEOFEXTINCTION (PG-13) 11:55 a.m.,4:20 • WISH I WAS HERE(R) 9:25 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. r

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13) 6 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST (R) 9 • After7p.m., shows are2t and older only. Younger than 2t may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. t

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on CW, "The Vampire Diaries" —Stefan, Caroline and Matt (Paul Wesley, Candice Accola, Zach Roerig) hatch a desperate plan to save Elena

(Nina Dobrev) asNadia(Olga Fonda) looks back on her long search for her mother. Bonnie and Jeremy (Kat Graham, Steven

McQueen) seekLiv's(Penelope Mitchell) help again. Later, Bonnie learns a secret that threatens all her friends' lives. Caroline and

Tyler (MichaelTrevino) reach a new understanding in"Gone Girl."

9 p.m. on CW, "The Originals" — The entire French Quarter is shaken when Davina (Danielle Campbell) becomes violently ill, prompting Klaus and Marcel (Joseph Morgan, Charles Michael Davis) to find out what's happening. Sophie (Daniella Pineda) divulges some startling new information about The Harvestand presents a drastic plan to save Davina. Hayley (Phoebe Tonkin) reveals to Elijah (Daniel Gillies) that she was involved in Sophie's plan. Claire Holt also stars in "Apres Moi, Le Deluge." 9 p.m. on USA, "Rush" — A lunch appointment between Rush (Tom Ellis) and his stepmother, Corrine (Rachel Nich-

ols), leads to anunexpected outcome in the new episode "We Are Family." Another, more harrowing situation arises when Rush tries to help a bail officer with his injured quarry, while Alex's (Larenz Tate) friendship with Rush takes a toll on his

marriage. Eve(Sarah Habel) redoubles her effort to balance her personal and professional lives. Jake Sandvig, Billy Lush and Jose Pablo Cantillo guest star. 9:01p.m.on 5,8,"W elcome to

Sweden" — Inthenewepisode

"Fitting In/Vanner," Bruce's (Greg Poehler) nearly non-existent command of Swedish continues to pose a problem for their friends, prompting an exasperatedEmma (Josephine Bornebusch) to question whether he's doing everything he can to fit in. Subsequently, Bruce spends some quality time with Emma's prickly mother, Viveka (Lena Olin), hoping to win her over, but his friendship with Hassan (guest star Basim Sabah Albasim) takes a completely unexpected turn. Elsewhere,

Bruce's parents (gueststars Patrick Duffy and llleana Doug-

las) havesomesurprising news for him. o zap2it

EVERGREEN

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

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • LIFE ITSELF(R) 6 • OBVIOUSCHILD(R) 8:30 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)2: 45,3:30,5:30, 6:15, 8:15, 9 • HERCULES (PG-13) 2:15, 4:30 • INTO THESTORM(PG-13) 8 • LUCY(R) 1:30, 3:30, 5:30 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)7 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CHEF (R) 7 • GETON UP(PG-13) 4:30, 7:15 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY (PG-13)4:45,7:30 • LIFE ITSELF (R) 4:30 • LUCY (R)5:30, 7:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • DAWN OFTHE PLANETOF THE APES (PG-13)4,6:50 • GUARDIANSOF THE GALAXY (PG-13)4:15,7 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-D (PG-13)1:30 • HERCULES (PG-l3) 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 • LUCY (R) 3,5:10, 7:20 • PLANES:FIRE& RESCUE(PG) 2:50, 5 7:05 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • GUARDIANSOFTHEGALAXY(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

Beltone

TRIAL of our newest most advanced hearing aids Call Today

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine

'Beltone 541-389-9690


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 •

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Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. Cans for Cats trailer at Jake's Dlner, Hwy 20 E; donate M-F at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or CRAFT, Tumalo. Leave msg. for pick up of large amts, 541-389-8420. www.craftcats.org ENGLISH BULLDOG Puppy, AKC Registered Male, born 5/9/1 4, $2000. 541-416-0375

Bed - electric & adjustable medical b ed, The Bulletin reserves HUNTERS in S i lvies used, twin 80" Kor- the right to publish all Hunt Unit. Cabin in foam mattress, never ads from The Bulletin pines, running water needs turning. $500. newspaper onto The and amenities, green 541-382-2935 Bulletin Internet web- yard. 541-589-1130 www.elkridgecabin.com 280 284 286 288 Corner entertainment 6 site. 202 dr. cabinet oak 5x5, Estate Sales Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Want to Buy or Rent scabbard, The Bulletin Leather rifle $200 541-325-7104 SerrrngCentral Oregon sinceSgsg $75. 1232 NW Rimrock Dr., HUGE Mul t i-Family Sale! Fri. only, 8/8, 8am541- 548-3408 Dining Chairs, uphol$Cash paid for 215 4pm. Ethelene'scookie Wanted: Redmond. Fri. 9 -3 , M o v ing/Garage Sale! ** FREE ** vintage costume jewstered, great cond. Marlin 90 vent rib o/u Sat. 9-1, clothing, a F u rniture clo t hing Garage Sale Kjt jars, 25 yrs. accum., elry. Top dollar paid for Coins & Stamps $35/ea. 541-548-4601 12-ga, rare 1937-1958, few antiques, LOTS of h ousehold c a mping Place an ad in The some furn., misc. Cash Gold/Si!ver.I buy by the G ENERATE SOM E Private collector buying e xlnt c o nd., $ 3 9 5. s tuff, 541-419-1585 dec o r a n d MU C H Bulletin for your ga- only, no children. Suntree Estate, Honest Artist EXCITEMENT in your postagestamp albums 8 541-306-0166 Fri.-Sat., 8-4. rage sale and re- Village 1001 SE 15th ¹1 09 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Estate Sale, Auo. 8-g-1P MORE! neighborhood! Plan a collections, world-wide 9-3. 333 po!!arfiide Rd ' 19520 Lone Cow Dr. ceive a Garage Sale Yard/Moving Sale, 61070 Protectyour dog 203 garage sale and don't and U.S. 573-286-4343 SE Ferguson Ct. Fri & Mltcheil OR Hpusehpid (off Brookswood) Kit FREE! from dangerous forget to advertise in (local, cell phone). Holiday Bazaar & barn items, shop tools, pre 8 post Retirement Sat, 8-2. Household/furn/ rattlesnakes classified! KIT INCLUDES: recreational/antiques-vint antique farm equipment.. Sale. A variety, col& Craft Shows with Rattlesnake 242 541-385-5809. • 4 Garage Sale Signs age/home decor/lighting/ Iectibles. Mult!-famlly. ESTATE SALE! Avoidance classes. $2.00 Off Coupon To clothes — upscale stuff! 6 0169 Crater R d . •Use GE Washer/Dryer, King Exercise Equipment 40th yearof Central Call 541-213-4211 Aug 8 g 1p g 4 Jphn Toward Your Yard Sale, Sat gamOregon Sat. Market! Bedroom set, Twin Deere Lawn tractor, BBQ, Thurs.-Fri.-Sat., 8-5 Next Ad S nap Fitness 6 m o . Salmon tackle, $150. 3pm? No earlybirds!! Open Sat., 10am-4pm Bed, Dining Table, tools, furniture, house• 10 Tips For "Garage couples membership. 61750 Gibson Dr. off Downtown Bend, Livinq Room FurniCall for details, hold items & collectibles. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Sale Success!" FRENCHTON PUPS. $150. 541-382-3479 Ward Rd © Modoc (folacross from library. ture. In Eagle Crest 541-548-3408 Great prices, come take a 75% French bulldog, Dopr-to-dpor selling with Largest selection of local debbiemarcum low signs). Twin bunk look. No early sales. 25% Boston terrier. 245 Trolling motor mount, or call beds, dresser, toy chest, artists & crafters. 61795 Ward Rd., Bend fast results! It's the easiest PICK UP YOUR Parents on site. Born Ohotmail.com 503-812-0639 or Golf Equipment $75. Where the Maker GARAGE SALE KIT at X-box game, easy chairs, 6/21! 2 left $1350. Estate Sale Saturday, way in the world tp sell. 503-812-2391 541-548-3408 table, treadmill, other is the Seller!! 1777 SW Chandler Put your deposit down A ugust 9 t h fro m 541-420-9015 CHECK yOUR AD furn, misc household. Ave., Bend, PR 97702 now. 541-279-3588 8am-3pm. Lots pf The Bulletin Classified Outdoor Furniture Call a Pro 290 205 shop equ i pment, 541-3 85-5809 Iiilin Pin AKC pups. The Bulletin Sales Redmond Area Brown 8 Jordan tritools, app l iances, Serving Central Oregon sinceSglg Whether you need a 2 females left! $400. Items for Free angular, smoked, hang glider and misc. SUPER SALE! After 29 Born 4/14/14, potty fence fixed,hedges tempered glass top equipment. 60 8 2 0 yea r s, time to sell! table and 4 sling sale Fri. Aug. 8 2 Retired Contractors 2 Kidney bean shaped training, shots, microtrimmed or a house Bobcat Road, Bend. Antiques, collectibles, Garage Tool Liquidation Sale. loveseat, exc. shape, chipped, In La Pine, back mesh chairs, on the first day it runs hunting, camping, golf, Sat. Aug. 9, 800 to Saturday only! built, you'll find s k i ll you haul. 541-379-3530 602-284-4110 exc. cond., $6000 4:00 collectables, fur- T able s aws, tools, books, houseto make sure it is corsaws, ladders, etc. n and professional help in niture, kids c lothes f new, sell $1800. rect. nSpellcheck hold, Fri.-Sat. 8-3 HOPPer EState Couch, leather, 5-piece Restoration and toys and much Cline Falls Hwy, at good shape. You haul. 60936 Granite Dr., human errors do ocThe Bulletin's "Call a Sale 83rd. Follow signs. more 2021 NE BlueHardware conversaRomaine Village cur. If this happens to Service Professional" 541-379-3530 hf by Farmhouse Aug. 88 9, 9am-4pm. bird Ct. Follow Signs tion set, 4 chairs, 1 your ad, please conEstateSales 286 Directory 208 table crafstman Fri-Sat, Auq. 8-9. tact us ASAP so that Fri.-Sat., 9-4 GARAGE SALE Fri & Annual Yard Bale, 9-4 Sales Northeast Bend style, all metal, 541 -3B5-5B09 corrections and any Pets & Supplies 53784 Bridge Drives S at. 9-3 1 65 1 N E Cute, Smart & No $300. 541-420-8636 Green Pastures adjustments can be La Pine (nexf fo Crestridge Drive Shed. Min-Schnauzer 1 p a y On l y 8/9 Senior Co-pp, made to your ad. WIN model 12, 20 ga., Quail Run GolfCourse) 8am~2pm 2p+ years Schnoodles. Tails The Bulletin recom2633 SW Obsidian Av 541-385-5809 Pool Table with 1a Slate modified, pump, $750. Entire contents of large of good stuff. 1839 NE Huge Garage Sale! Sat. docked, 1st shots, 8 mends extra caution The Bulletin Classified Top. Needs felt. Wood Call/text 541-419-9961 w/glass doors, when home & shoP!Nice mid- pi a bio, wormed. $350-$450. Wlnchester 8/9, 8 t o 5 . 2 1 627 Hutch pur c haslegs, leather pockets, century furniture such as Subdivison off Neff Paloma Dr., F u rn, antique rolltop desk, ing products or serGood homes only! 246 247 5ft x eft. $350 OBO. Heywood-Wakefield, tools, auto, fun stuff. tools, bedding, free 541-322-0609 Rd ppn I Mlssi from out of the Computer desk with Guns, Hunting stuff & m ore. 2615 vices Sporting Goods kitchen items, antiques, area. Sending cash, Need a good home for folding doors by BroyMOVING SALE, bedJohn Deere riding lawn 8ULLETINCLASSIFIEOS SW 21st St.,Sat. 9-4 & Fishing - Ililisc. checks, or credit inmy kitty, moving and hill, cherry finish. 5ft mower, tools, records, room furn. family rm Stonehedge onthe Rim Search the area's most f ormation may b e t ake her w it h m e . Wx 6ft H x 2 f t D. Inc 12g Browning Citari Slumber Jack mummy books, fridge, freezer, furn including a Irg comPrehensive listing of screen TV & surround annual community ga- subjected to fraud. beautiful female calico power strip, bulletin Trap Special, must washer/dryer, china, s leeping bags $ 5 0 rage sale. Aug. 8th 8 For more informa7 yrs old, indoor/out- board, shelving, file see! $2,000. Inquire sound stereo, leather ea. 541-548-8913 9th, 8am-2pm, at 23rd tion about an adver- door. Would make a drawer, room for 2 La-Z Boy loveseat. about others. merchandise to sporting & Kalama Ave. tiser, you may call See ",.x af ' ' good companion ani- monitors, pc, printer. 541-678-4302 Sat., 8-2, 3361 NE 253 O regon State farmhouseestatesales.com goods. Bulletin Classifieds mal. Call Shaondeya $325 OBO. audreyo Stonebrook loop Tools, clothing, gazebo, the appear every day in the Attorney General's TV, Stereo & Video 541-848-5745. swissfamilykeller.com Bend local pays CASH!! yard tractor, smallwares, PEDDLERS MARKET print or on line. C o nsumer MOVING SALE: most toy hauler. Thurs-Fri-Sat, Office for all firearms & POODLEpups, toy. Recliner w/beige/brwn ammo. 5 0 " Sam s ung everything goes. 9-5, 12785 NW Chinook Protection hotline at 541-526-0617 TV, Home raised w/love. hi-lites, e xc., 1-877-877-9392. $65. Plasma, excellent cond www.bendbulletin.com Fri. 9-4, Sat. 9-2, Drive, CRR. H y 20 W t Schnoodlepups also! 541-647-2621 Big Hollywood 8-station $175. 541-977-2505 675 NE Bellevue Dr. YARD SALE antiques Antiques, crafts, 541-475-3889 The Bulletin reloading press with ac¹708. furn., plants, Serring Central gregonsinceSggg S ecretary desk, a n vintage, and more. 255 & collectibles, guns, P oodle, T oy , m a l e tique, curved glass cys, $650. 541-410-3425 art, lamps & many (541) 306-8016 ammo, re l oading, puppy, ready to go, Computers 20th Annual household items. copeddlersmarketo d oor. $ 3 0 0 ob o . CASH!! Honda 90, '74 Cor- (8) Snow white doves, Neighborhood sale gmail.com 541-504-9720 For Guns, Ammo & T HE B U LLETIN r e vette, tools. 8-4 Sat. 8 $ 40 cash f o r a l l . $300. 541-728-1694 Boonesborough 288 Pug-Chihuahua Mix Reloading Supplies. 3340 NW Odem 541-382-2194 282 Sat. Aug. 9, 8-3. Dale Sales Southeast Bend Sun. quires computer ad9-wk-old pups, 1 st 541-408-6900. Ave., Terrebonne. vertisers with multiple Rd. off Deschutes Sales Northwest Bend shots, 3 l e ft. $250 Find exactly what ad schedules or those Mkt. Rd., Bend. 292 Colt SAA 44 s pcl, 7 each. 541-923-7232 Downsizing Sale, Fri. & you are looking for in the 1/2", N.F., 2nd gen selling multiple sysSale in Tumalo! Sales Other Areas 4p year Clearout Sale. Sat., 9-4, 61850 DobQueensland Heelers NIB. Brass. $1550. tems/ software, to disThurs. thru Sat., 8-4 CLASSIFIEDS F r eezers, 8 new. House- bin Rd . Standard 8 Mini, $150 close the name of the obo. 541-389-1392 weathered wooci cre- Oid wares t o ou t d oor baby beds and items, 2-Family Sale! Furniture, & up. 541-280-1537 business or the term ations, bird feeders, g a i ore. F ly & s p i n outdoor grill, propane small frig, garage stor- Adopt a rescue cat or www.rightwayranch.wor Table and 6 chairs "dealer" in their ads. refrg., furn., caPstan, bottles, and more. age cabinets, vanity w/ kitten! Altered, vaccicherry veneer, rerods, r eeis. F l ies, dpress.com Private party advertisBBQ.camPtentw/qn sink & more. Sat., 9-3, movable leaf. $350. nated, ID chip, tested, Camping. Ca- Fundraiser - Bend High ers are defined as air rnattress, gazebo tackie. 15828 Lundy Rd. Sisters. more! CRAFT, 65480 Yorkie pups AKC, 2 tiny 541-815-0395 noe iack. RV sup- Lacrosse those who sell one Garage Sale! frame (no toP), vinp i i es. purniture, decor. 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM girls, 1 boy, potty trainDO YOU HAVE computer. 8/9, 7:30-3, 61104 TOOLS, C o llectibles, Sat/Sun. 3 8 9 -8420ing, shots, health guar., Table and chairs, solid tagecollectibles. SOMETHING TO Dishes. Coats, boots. Sat. auto. $1100. 541-777-7743 Hilmer Creek Dr. Large household, 64695 Wood Ave. www.craftcats.org. SELL Golf. Art. Office desk, 14160 SW Hummingoak, pedestal table, 4 260 10-family sale with furnioff 5th St. in Tumalo FOR $500 OR s uppiies. pile c a b. ture, 210 windsor style chairs. queen bed, kitchen bird Rd., CRR Fri & Border Collie-McNab Misc. Items LESS? Lots more! Fri., Sat. 8 8 home decor, skis, Sat 8AM- 3PM. 284 reg'd puppies, 5 F's I Furniture 8 Appliances Great condition. $350. Non-commercial Sun., 8-3. 716 NE 4th electronics, Wii & more! 541-382-6773 $600ea;3M's I $500 Sales Southwest Bend Buyfng Diamonds advertisers may NOTICE ea. Working parents; 1st ( 2)Dresser , klr awer s /Gofd for Cash place an ad Remember to remove shots, wormed, microHUGE Garage Sale! e ach, 8 3 5 6 8 45 . All Must Go Sale! The Bulletin Saxon's Fine Jewelers with our 8-9-10, 8am-4pm your Garage Sale signs 541-504-9720 chipped, Ready 8/1. recommends extra ' Mostly everything $5 and BOAT, TOOLS, lots of Aug. 541-389-6655 "QUICK CASH Pine Vista Dr. (nails, staples, etc.) 541-408-8944 home or 3 -piece Queen O a k i caution when purunder. Lots of deals! hou s ehold misc. Fri. 20409 SPECIAL" Only quality goods! after your Sale event 714-943-2385 (cell) BUYING 19220Cherokee Rd & Sa t . , 9-5, 3209 NE No children's items. bedroom set, $150. chasing products or • 1 week 3 lines 12 is over! THANKS! Lionel/American Flyer (DRW) 8/8 & 8/9, 9-5. P u r cell Blvd. services from out of I Boxers AKC & V alley 541-610-6698 or From The Bulletin trains, accessories. I the area. Sending I Huge Moving Sale - Ev- and your local utility Bulldogs CKC puppies. Duncan Ross ~ae eke 2 N 541-408-2191. ' cash, checks, o r ' $700-800. 541-325-3376 erything must go! Corner A1 Washers&Dryers Ad must companies. ESTATE SALE i credit i n f ormation of Pettigrew & Azalia, Aug $150 ea. Full warinclude price of BUYING & SE LLING may be subjected to 8/9/10 8am-4pm. Furn, The Bulletin ranty. Free Del. Also 2549 NE IRIS WAY e l e t e i $ 5 0 0 All gold jewelry, silver ~ Sernng Cerrrrac Oregon since Sgsg i FRAUD. For more baby items, scrubs, jewMtn. View Park wanted, used W/D's or less, or multiple and gold coins, bars, information about an I elry, camping & sporting, www.bendbulletin.cpm 541-280-7355 items whosetotal rounds, wedding sets, Take 27th street north to Mtn View Park. advertiser, you may i does not exceed class rings, sterling silFri., Aug. 8 • Sat., Aug. 9, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. I call t h e Ore g on I $500. ver, coin collect, vinCrowd control admittance numbers 8:00 a.m. Friday HUGE ESTATE SALE ' State Atto r ney ' tage watches, dental Sterling Flatware set for 12; Queen Bed; Double 50 years. First Sale Ever! Chihuahua Teacuppupi General's O f fi ce Call Classifieds at gold. Bill Fl e ming, Fri. and Sat. 8-4. pies, 1st shots/dewormed. bed; Twin Blow-up bed; Hide-a bed; Leather reConsumer Protec- • 541-385-5809 541-382-9419. cliner; Sofa; File cabinets; Two rockers; Chests Tons of furniture: credenzas, couches, coffee $250. 541-977-0035 tion h o t line a t I www.bendbulletin.com and nightstands; Bookcases; Small computer tables, dining set, lamps, beds, vintage barC emetery Spa c e l 1-877-877-9392. desk;Lamps; End Tables; Chairs and ottomans; ware, glass and bottles, teacups and saucers, Double depth interBooks; Electric Snowblower; Leather snow Waterford crystal, Christmas and holiday Reels: Hardy Fly, ment grave space Antique sideboard/ I TheBulletin > Fishing SerringCentral Crregon sinceSgtg shoes; Pots and pans and electrical appliances; items, old books and magazines, vases, vinyl buffet:Walnut, Quick spinning& Penn with outer burial conLots of Linens; Men's clothing & shoes; Brass records, Lladro and small character figures, Int'I, all top shelf, $150- tainer built-in. At Desbeautiful detail. Early Balance scales; Food Products; Small Stereo western artwork, designer vintage dresses, 1900's. Exterior has $450. Jim, 541-771-7700 chutes Memorial near 212 set; Pictures and frames; Marlin ¹90 16 gauge boots, hats and suits. Tools, chainsaw, vinPond Mea d ows. Dachshund minis, AKC top drawer 8 3 doors Antiques & shotgun; Remington 30; Stevens 410 shotgun; Howa 1500 223 vartage camping gear, ladders, dog kennel, 2 giNEVER BEEN USED arents, 2F, 4M, long with original key. InSleeping bags; Ducati motorcycle misc. parts; mint nfle, Timney tngCollectibles ant carved eagle and bear totems, antique full $1200. 541-771-4800. air (except blond male) ) side has 2 shelves Older camera and telephoto lens; Small folding er, Truglo scope, size carriage, cat lover items, small appli5-8 Ibs at maturity. $375 and a drawer. Meawheelchair; Baskets; Two vacuums; Smaller sures 71 x21x36 Ex575, Also a FIZ 20 FAST TREES ances, fridge and washer and dryer. Plus Antiques wanted tools M; $450 F. 541-389-2517 sale but nice items!! Handled by ... cellent cond. Pick-up furniture, marbles,early gauge double barrel Grow 6-10 feet yearly! separate fully furnished office. TOO MUCH Deedy's Estate Sales Co. Doberman pups AKC shot gun, $275. $16 - $21, delivered. only.$800 OBO. B/W photography, TO LIST! 16665 Fair Mile Road, Junipine 541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves reg. male/fem., $600 415-279-9893 (Bend) beer cans, jewelry. Interested, call www.fasttrees.com Acres, Sisters, OR www.deeedysestatesales. com ea. 541-771-5438 541-389-1578 541-740-8121 or 509-447-4181

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED•

E2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50

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A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

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Horses & Equipment

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2001 Silverado 3-horse trailer 5th wheel, 29'x8', deluxe showman/semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

(3) Gentle Fox Trotters, well trained, mountain experienced, $6500/ea. 541-523-0933 elkhornfoxtrotters.com

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 260

263

Misc. Items

Tools

267

How to avoid scam Table saw, Craftsman, and fraud attempts g ood c ond. $ 7 5 . VBe aware of international fraud. Deal locally whenever possible. Y Watch for buyers who offer more than your asking price and who ask to have money wired or handed back to them. Fake cashier checks and money orders are common. PNever give out personal financial information. PTrust your instincts and be wary of someone using an escrow service or agent to pick up your merchandise.

Fuel & Wood

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, Check out the The Bulletin classifieds online recommends paywvvw.bendbuffetin.com ment for Firewood Updated daily only upon delivery and inspection. 265 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Building Materials 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should Bend Habitat include name, RESTORE phone, price and Building Supply Resale kind of wood Quality at LOW purchased. PRICES • Firewood ads 740 NE 1st MUST include 541-312-6709 species & cost per Open to the public. cord to better serve our customers. Sisters Habitat ReStore Building Supply Resale Quality items. The Bulletin servInycenrral oregonance rae 541-504-9720

Shilo bumper pull 3269 trailer w/tack room, Gardening Supplies horse like new, more extras, & Equipment $5900. 541-923-9758

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800

Youth saddle, $100. Leather chinks, $75. 541-548-3408 383

To place an ad, call

Produce & Food

or email

Grass fattened natural beef, cut and wrapped at $3.50/lb. 541-480-8185

541-385-5809

classified@bendbulletimccm

The Bulletin

THOMAS ORCHARDS Kimberly,Oregon U-PICK Freestone Canning Peaches - Sunbright & by Sat. 8/9, Loring El542-389-9663 bertas. Nectarines, Santa Rosa plums, Catalina plums. 270 READY-PICKED Lost & Found Dark sweet cherries, LOW PRICES! peaches, nectarines, 150 N. Fir. FOUND: sunglasses in The Bulletin Call for avail. 541-549-1621 serving centrar oresonsincers03 Drake Park on Aug. 1, plums. All YearDependable Gravenstein apples Open to the public. 541-550-6498 Firewood: Seasoned; New 5-gallon propane Fruitstand Lodgepole, split, del, Found visor on 7/30, 266 tank, full of propane, SPECIALS! B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Shevlin Park, Call to Heating & Stoves $25. 541-330-1944 or 2 for $365. Call for identify, 520-260-7123 semi cling peaches multi-cord discounts! local. $12/by the box. New dark brown 2-pc NOTICE TO 541-420-3484. sofa slip cover by SureADVERTISER BRING CONTAINERS Lost: 7/31, near 14th & Fit, 74' - 96 " $35. Since September 29, for U-PICK!!! Galveston, black cat 541-382-0673 1991, advertising for Call The Bulletin At Open 7 days week, w/ white paws, fe541 -385-5809 used woodstoves has a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! m ale, 2 y r s ol d , 8 Toro gas lawn mower been limited to mod- Place Your Ad Or E-Mail named twilight. Call Visit us on Facebook for with bag, $35. els which have been At: www.bendbulletin.com 541-213-3312 updates and look for 541-382-0673 certified by the Orfor us on Wed. at Bend egon Department of Farmers Market and Wanted- paying cash Environmental Qual- Plne & Juniper Spilt Sat. at NW Crossing. for Hi-fi audio & stu- ity (DEQ) and the fed541-934-2870 REMEMBER:If you dio equip. Mclntosh, eral E n v ironmental PROMPT DELIVERY have lost an animal, J BL, Marantz, D yA g e ncy 542-389-9663 don't forget to check naco, Heathkit, San- Protection as having met The Humane Society sui, Carver, NAD, etc. (EPA) s s smoke emission stanBend Call 541-261-1 808 dards. A cer t ified 269 541-382-3537 WHEN YOU SEE THIS w oodstove may b e Redmond identified by its certifi- Gardening Supplie 541-923-0882 & E q uipment cation label, which is • Madras attached 541-475-6889 MorePixB atendbijlletiji.com permanently to the stove. The Bul- BarkTurfSoil.com Prineville On a classified ad letin will not know541-447-7178 go to ingly accept advertisor Craft Cats 421 www.bendbulletin.com PROMPT DELIVERY ing for the sale of 541-389-8420. 542-389-9663 Schools & Training to view additional uncertified photos of the item. woodstoves. 275 HTR Truck School Auction Sales REDMOND CAlviPUS Our Grads GetJobs! TACK & SADDLE 1-888-438-2235 AUCTION WWW.HTR.EDU Sat. Aug. 16, 7:00 p.m. Preview 5:30 p.m. 470 Liquidating 60 Saddles Domestic & Call5f I 385580f topromoteyour service• Advertise for28deyt startingat'lfl pta sssl frckotrt natsiirbir eer ertstrt including a large assortment of antique In-Home Positions and vintage saddles + an entire store's worth Experienced Caregiver Aggregate Domestic Services L a ndscaping/Yard Care of new inventory at needed in Sisters for republic auction, r e- lief 1-2 days per week. Vic Russell Const. Inc. Home is Where the Dirt Is CARLSENG DESIGNS gardless of loss or 541-598-4527 9 yrs experience in Aggregate 8 Paving Landscape Design, cost. Top brand and housekeeping. Refs & Res. & Comm. Consultation & Garcustom made 476 rates to fit your needs. CB¹31 500966MDI dening. 541-610-6961 Saddles, Bri d les, Employment Call Julie 541-410-0648 541-536-3478 Blankets, too much to Tanya Carlsen or 541-410-1 136 Opportunities list. Everything used Allen Reinsch Yard on or around a horse. Baths & Kitchens Handyman Maintenance& Mowing C ash, Cards, N O CAUTION: (& many other things!) CHECKS. 10% BP. Reid Construction Ads published in I DO THAT! Call 541-536-1294 or Elks Lodge No. 1371 Bathroom & Kitchen "Employment OpHome/Rental repairs 541-815-5313 63120 Boyd Acres Rd. remodel specialists! portunities" include Bend, OR 97701 Daniel, 541-788-4676 Small jobs to remodels Maverick Landscaping employee and indeHonest, guaranteed CCB¹200863 (503) 489-9103 pendent positions. work. CCB¹151573 M owing, weedeating,yd Mike Murphy, Just bought a new boat? Dennis 541-317-9768 Ads for p o sitions detail, chain saw work, Auctioneer Sell your old one in the that require a fee or bobcat excv., etc! LCB classifieds! Ask about our Landscaping/Yard Care ¹8671 541-923-4324 upfront investment Super Seller rates! must be stated. With 541-385-5809 any independentjob NOTICE: Oregon Land- YARD MAKEOVERS opportunity, please Better, cheaper, scape Contractors Law Building/Contracting i nvestigate tho r Bigfoot Yards (ORS 671) requires all oughly. Use extra 541-633-9895 that adNOTICE: Oregon state businesses caution when apto pe r form law requires anyone vertise plying for jobs onConstrucwho con t racts for Landscape Masonry line and never protion which includes: construction work to vide personal inforl anting, deck s , Ellingson Masonry be licensed with the mation to any source ences, arbors, Custom stone work, 306 Construction Contrac- water-features, you may not have in- lic. bonded, insured. tors Board (CCB). An stallation, repairand Farm Equipment researched and of iractive license CCB¹ 157238 deemed to be repu& Machinery systems to be means the contractor rigation 541-480-9512 table. Use extreme icensed w it h th e is bonded & insured. lLandscape ContracStock water tank galv., c aution when r e Verify the contractor's tors Board. This 4-digit Painting/Wall Covering 37 0 gal. Rocket brand s ponding to A N Y CCB l i c ense at number is to be in$65. 541-382-3089 online employment www.hirealicensedcluded in all adverad from out-of-state. ALL AIIIIERICAN contractor.com 325 We suggest you call PAINTING or call 503-378-4621. tisements which indithe business has Interior and Exterior Hay, Grain & Feed the State of Oregon The Bulletin recom- cate bond, insurance and Family-owned Consumer Hotline mends checking with a workers compensaResidential & Commercial 1st Quality mixed grass at 1-503-378-4320 the CCB prior to con40 yrs exp. • Sr. Discounts tion for their employhay, no rain, barn stored, For Equal Opportutracting with anyone. ees. For your protec5-year warranties $250/ton. nity Laws contact Some other t rades tion call 503-378-5909 Summer Special! Call 541-549-3831 Oregon Bureau of also req u ire addiCall 541-337-6149 use our website: Patterson Ranch, Sisters Labor 8 I n dustry, tional licenses and or CCB ¹1 93960 www.lcbistate.or.us to Civil Rights Division, certifications. check license status TURN THE PAGE 971-673- 0764. before contracting with WESTERN PAINTING R&TCustom Const. For More Ads Fine and Finish Carthe business. Persons CO. Richard Hayman, The Bulletin The Bulletin land scape a semi-retired paintpentry. CCB ¹17991 4 doing ing contractor of 45 541-385-5809 maintenance do not Ron 8 Tammy Berg, 541-647-8701 r equire an LC B l i - years. S m all Jobs O rchard g rass m i x Welcome. Interior & cense. $235/ton, 7 2 lb. your web address Exterior. c c b¹51 84. 2-twine bales, deliv- Add Debris Removal to your ad and readAeration/Dethatching 541-388-6910 ery avail. Call Lee, ers on The Builetin's 1-time or Weekly Services 541-410-4495 JUNK BE GONE web site, www.bendAsk about FREEadded People Look for Information Q I Haul Away FREE svcs w/seasonal contract! bulletin.com, will be About Products and For Salvage. Also Bonded & Insured. chard grass mix, small able to click through Services EverY Day through Cleanups & Cleanouts COLLINS Lawn Maint. bales $225/ton. Madras, automatically to your Ca/l 541-480-9714 The Bulletin Clasaifierfs OR, 541-420-9736 website. Mel, 541-389-8107 INSTANT GREEN McPheeters Turf Lawn Fertilizer •

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Aquatics Coach

Loans & Mortgages

Employment Opportunities

LOCAL MONEY:Webuy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.18.

HOTEURESORT

The Riverhouse The Madras is seekinga Aquatic Center House Person seeks qualified Aquatics Coach for adult & youth swim, and head coach Qualified candidate will Get your for water polo teams. 1-3 be able to lift 50 Ibs, business yrs previous swimming work flexible shifts and and/or water polo coach- have a friendly and ing preferred. Year- positive attitude. Expe- e ROW I N G round position; main- rience preferred but not tains/coordinates coach- required. $10.75/hr. ing duties with all facets with an ad in of aquatic sports proThe Bulletin's gram including organizApply in person at: "Call A Service ing & planning practices 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend & game strategies, trainor apply online at Professional" ing, health education www.riverhouse.com Directory and recruiting of athletes. Could be 22 positions.) PRIVATE MONEY for ontact MAC Executive Log Truck Director Joe McHaney: short term 1st mortDrivers jmchaneyO gage loans. Strong (Long & Short) macaquatic.com security 541-480-1670 or 1195 SE Kemper Way, for logging comMadras, OR 97741. For pany in Florence, more information, visit OR. Experience www.macaquatic.com BxiMlh preferred. CDL

©

541-385-5809 648

325

and current medical card. Great pay and benefits. Year-round, longterm employment. Call 541-997-8212

S UBA R U .

Auto Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r de a ler Subaru of B e nd. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success. P l ease apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.

. 0 0 630

Rooms for Rent

ROOFERS WANTED

Room for rent in Redmond, $450, incl utilities. No smokinq. Mature, responsible,& stable. Call

Call River Roofing, 541-383-3569

~

S U BA R L L

Jim, 541-419-4513

Houses for Rent General PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any preference, limitation or disc r imination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any

such

pre f erence,

limitation or discrimination." Familial status includes children

under the age of 18 living with parents or legal cus t odians, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination ca l l HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-877-0246. The toll f ree t e lephone

number for the hearing i m p aired is 1-800-927-9275.

632 Sales Sales professional to Apt./lilultiplex General Look at: Join Central Bendhomes.com Oregon's l a r gest CHECK YOUR AD for Complete Listings of new ca r d e a ler Area Real Estate for Sale Subaru of B e n d. CDL Truck Driver Offering 401k, profit Needed. sharing, m e d ical Our wood chip and Houses for Rent plan, split shifts and lumber drivers averpaid vacation. ExpeMadras age 54K annually. on the first day it runs rience or will train. Off weekends,paid to make sure it is cor90 day $1500 guarvacation, health inrect. "Spellcheck" and A 3 bdrm, 2 bath house a ntee. Dress f o r Flats in Madras. s urance. For 3 5 human errors do oc- on the success. P l e ase cur. $1000 month. If this happens to years we have serapply at 2060 NE 541-475-3519 viced Eastern Oryour ad, please conHwy 20, Bend. See egon, Central Ortact us ASAP so that Good classified adstell Bob or Devon. egon, Sou t hern corrections and any the essential facts in an O regon an d th e adjustments can be interesting Manner. Write Boise Valley a nd made to your ad. The Bulletin from the readers view - not 541 -385-5809 you can live in any the seller's. Convert the of these locations. The Bulletin Classified caution when purfacts into benefits. Show We run late model chasing products or I the reader how the item will ApartmentP etes an d K e n from out of a Senior help them insomeway. worths all 550 cats l services Independent Living the area. Sending ALL-INCLUSIVE This with 13 speeds, our c ash, checks, o r trailers are C urtin l credit i n f ormation with 3 meals daily advertising tip vans (no tarps to l may be subjected to Month-to-month lease, brought toyou by deal with) 4 0'-23' check it out! FRAUD. The Bulletin Call 541-318-0450 doubles year around servingrenlral o~n race 190r For more informa- I work. We our looktion about an adver- • ing for long term l tiser, you may call drivers, our average The Bulletin the Oregon State serving central oregonsince rsle employee has l Attorney General's w orked for us f o r Office C o n sumer l The Bulletin Circulation department is looking over 8 years. So if Protection hotline at l for a District Representative to join our Single you are looking for a I 1-877-877-9392. Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week home, give us a call position. Overall focus is the representation, 541.523.9202 sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaLThe Bulletin per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily TRUCK DRIVER Need to get an responsibilities include driving a company veWANTED hicle to service a defined district, ensuring ad in ASAP? Must have doubles newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, endorsement. You can place it managing newspaper counts for the district, Local run. online at: building relationships with our current news Truck is parked in dealer locations and growing those locations www.bendbulletin.com Madras. 541-475-4221 with new outlets. Position requires total ownership of and accountability of all single copy ele541-385-5809 Looking for your next ments within that district. Work schedule will be employee? Thursdaythrough Monday with Tuesday and Place a Bulletin help W ednesday off .Requires good communication Construction Mgmt firm wanted ad today and skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift in Sunriver seeking reach over 60,000 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to highly motivated indireaders each week. multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong vidual(s) for full-time Your classified ad service/team orientation, sales and problem will also appear on solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: CONSTRUCTION bendbulletin.com circulation©bendbulletin.com DISBURSEMENT which currently AGENT receives over 1.5 Applications are available at the front desk. million page views Drop off your resume in person at Requires 2-yr. experievery month at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; ence in construction no extra cost. No phone inquiries please. administration or Bulletin Classifieds Pre-employment drug testing required. commercial lending. Get Results! EOE/Drug Free Workplace WORD/ Excel Call 385-5809 Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. profiency. EOE. Fax or place resume 541-593-3604 your ad on-line at System Administrator or e-mail to bendbulletin.com roberta.moody@ Are youa geek who can also communicate eff ectively with non-technical executives and emtetratech.com. ployees? Would you like to work hard, play hard in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of EDUCATION RmIIIBI the state? Then we'd like to talk to you. Siuslaw School ® Uz@tlzm District Job Openings We are abusy media company seeking an expeFlorence, OR rienced systems administrator who is also a www.siuslaw.k12.or.us forward thinker, creative problem solver, excellent communicator, and self-motivated profes• Kindergarten sional. We have 8 locations throughout Oregon Teacher, 1.0 FTE and California. • (2) Title I Teachers, Elementary, 1.0 FTE 526 Job Res onsibilities: • Special Education Loans & Mortgages • Evaluation, selection and deployment of new Teacher, 1.0 FTE technology and tools • School Counselor, WARNING • Provide expertise regarding system installations, Middle School, 1.0 The Bulletin recomconfigurations and ongoing maintenance FTE mends you use cau- • Install, configure and administer stable Linux en• Classified and tion when you provironments Certified Substitutes vide personal virtual server environments Please see our website information to compa- •• Maintain Monitor and maintain enterprise network security for moreinformation. nies offering loans or • Work with team to optimize system performance credit, especially across applications, network and databases those asking for ad- • Help team troubleshoot and repair both hardHotel/Resort vance loan fees or ware and software OPENING companies from out of • Occasional travel to remote locations state. If you have • Participate in on-call rotation SOON!! concerns or quesHampton Inn & tions, we suggest you Essential Ex ertise Needed: Suites at the Old consult your attorney • *nix systems administration - Ubuntu, Solaris, Mill District. or call CONSUMER OpenBSD, FreeBSD Come join the team! HOTLINE, • ZFS/Solaris file servers 1-877-877-9392. Part-time House• Virtualization and Cloud experience - VMWare, keeping starting at XenServer BANK TURNED YOU • Server $10.25/hour. Support - Windows Server DOWN? Private party 2003/2008/2012, Flexible schedule. Active Directory, Group Policy will loan on real es- • Network administration - Switches, routers and Contact Matt Blacktate equity. Credit, no burn at matt.blackISPs problem, good equity burn@hilton.com is all you need. Call • Firewalls/VPN - pfSense, OpenVPN. or 808-430-1836. Oregon Land Mort- • Domain registrations, SSL certificate management, DNS gage 541-388-4200. • Google Apps for Business

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General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The Bulletin serving cemral oregons/nce rsw

Preferred Ex erience: • Background in the media industry • Apache and Nginx • PC and Apple hardware and software support

experience

•M ySQL, Rubyon Rails,PHP, PERL, VisualStudlo

• Confluence • Telecommunications — Avaya Definity and Asterisk • Adobe Creative Suites

We are Central Oregon's most comprehensive news and information resource. This full-time position is located at corporate headquarters in the beautiful resort town of Bend, OR. Do you love the outdoors? We have activities right outside your doorstep (literally) that include world-class mountain-biking, rock climbing, skiing, fly-fishing, rock-climbing, golfing, hunting and mountain hiking trails. We have music and seasonal events year-round. This is the place everyonecomes to vacation. You couldn't ask for a better lifestyle! If you've got what it takes, email a cover letter and resume toresume@wescom a ers.com

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since f903

EOE/Drug Free Workplace



E4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUG 7, 2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

rsday,August7,2014 DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thn

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Bashful bidding By FRAIaIK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "If my p artner were one of the Seven Dwarfs," a club player told me, "he'd be Bashful. He's been underbidding on every deal. I told him I wasfed up, and he got mad and put me in 6NT in this deal." I looked at the North-South cards. It seemed that South needed one of the Evil Queen's magic potions to take 12 tricks. "I took the king of spades," my friend said, "and saw that I had to win a t least t w o f i n e sses p lu s g e t favorable splits. I led the eight of d iamonds t o d u m m y' s a c e a n d returned a diamond to my j ack. I cashed the king and got to dummy with the seven to return a heart to my jack."

your left, opens one spade. Your p artner doubles, and you bid t w o diamonds. The opening bidder rebids two spades, and two passes follow. What do you say? ANSWER: Don't sell out cheaply when your p a rtner ha s o p ening values or more and probably has good support for one of the minor suits. B i d t h r e e c l u bs . I f the opponents let you play there, you may make it, but your primary goal is to push them to three spades. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

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TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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Redmond Homes

THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 7 2014 E5 870

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Boats & Accessories

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Bank owned, 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, 2080 sq.ft., == home built in 2 0 06 I and located on 1 flat J acre, new carpet and vinyl. Extended front 29 2003, sleeps Winnebago A dvenPrice Reduced! Eagle Cap 850, 2005 and rear decks. MLS Fleetwood Prowler 18.5' Sea Ray 2000 Bigfoot with slideout, AC, micro, walk-around queen turer 2005 35~/~', gas, Komfort P a c ific 732 201404793. $187,900 32' - 2001 860 4.3L Mercruiser, low 5, bed, 57K mi, 7.3L power less than 20,000 miles, Ridge 27 ' Like frig, heater, queen bed, P a m L e ster,Motorcycles & Accessories 2 slides, ducted Commercia!/Investment Call hrs, 190 hp Bowstroke t urbo d i esel wet bath, exlnt cond, deluxe NW dePrincipal Bro k e r, heat 8 air, great rider w/depth finder, w/Banks power pak incl excellent condition, 2 NEW Properties for Sale $16,900. 541-388-3477 Su p e r C entury 2 1 Gol d slide-outs, work horse s ign, 1 5 ' condition, snowbird radio/ CD player, rod auges, torque lock & leave message. Slide, private bdrm, Country Realty, Inc. ready, Many upholders, full canvas, ake brakes. Power ev- chassis, Banks power power jack, electric 1352 NE 2nd St., Bend. 541-504-1338 brake system, sleeps grade options, fiEZ Loader trailer, Beautiful commercial erything, auto levelinq Find It in awning, solar panel, nancing available! exclnt cond, $9500. jacks, air ride w/90psi 5, with al l o p tions, 6-volt, led lights, alo ffice b u ilding i n Single Level Charmer in The Bulletin Class!Beds! $14,500 obo. $62,000 / negotiable. NW R e dmond 707-484-3518 compressor, 3.6kw proBend. $579,000 High stored inside. 541-385-5809 p ane gen set. V e r y Call 5 4 1-306-8711or ways be d (Bend) Lakes Realty & Prop- $ 31 5,000. 4 A MU S T see ! Call Dick, clean, no pets, no smkrs, email a i kistu@benderty Man a gement rooms, plus o ffice/ FXSTD Harley $23,500 obo! Call 541-480-1687. No sl i des. cable.com 541-536-0117 den, 2.5 baths, 2410 1997 Reinell 18.5 ft. ski araged. Pam 541-788-6767 Davidson 2001, twin sq ft. Brand new con- cam 88, fuel injected, 0 boat, in/out Volvo en- 29,500. 541-548-3985 or Bill 541-480-7930 738 struction, fe n cing, Vance & Hines short i ne, e x c . co n d . 0 0 FLEETWOOD front lan d scaping, shot exhaust, Stage I Multiplexes for Sale 8000. 541-389-6256 Wilderness 2000 custom tile. •, — I,+ RV with Vance & Hines 28' 1 slide, good MLS¹201 31 0781 $285,000• Duplex CONSIGNMENTS fuel management Have an item to cond with awning. •2 Bdrm, 2.5 bath, spa Call Jim Hinton, system, custom parts, WANTED 541-420-6229. sell quick? and A/C, shower, cious units extra seat. We Do The Work ... Winnebago Aspect queen bed, nice • 100% occupied and Central Oregon Realty $10,500OBO. If it's under You Keep The Cash! 2009- 32', 3 slidecondition $8775 Group, LLC p rofessionally m a n Call Today On-site credit Dodge '500 you can place it in outs, Leather inte541-548-0875 908 aged 541-516-8684 approval team, Brougham 1978, rior, Power s e at, •Large yard, multi- level Looking for yournext The Bulletin web site presence. Aircraft, Parts 15', 1-ton, clean, locks, win d ows, living emp/oyee? We Take Trade-Ins! & Service Davidson 2003 Classifieds for: Aluminum wheels. 69,000 miles. Christin Hunter, Broker Place a Bulletin help Harley Free Advertising. Anniversary Road King, 17" Flat Screen, 541-306-0479 $4500. wanted ad today and Stage 1, pearl white, exBIG COUNTRY RV Surround s o u nd, Bend: '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Windermere reach over 60,000 In La Pine, 541-330-2495 cellent condition, lots of camera, Queen bed, Central Oregon readers each week. chrome & Redmond: extr a s. '16 -3 lines, 14 days call 541-280-3146 Foam mattress, AwReal Estate Your classified ad 541-548-5254 $13,999. 541-279-0846 (Private Party ads only) ning, Generator, Inwill also appear on Need help fixing stuff? verter, Auto Jacks, bendbulletin.com Holiday Rambler REDUCED! Call A ServiceProfessional Air leveling, Moon Looking for your Alumascape 28' which currently reroof, no smoking or 1/3 interest in find the help you need. next employee? 2003, 1-owner. ceives over p ets. L ik e n e w , Place a Bulletin help Self-contained, www.bendbulletin.com Columbia 400, 1.5 million page 13' slide, 80W solar $74,900 wanted ad today and views every month Financing available. 541-480-6900 745 reach over 60,000 panel, walkaround at no extra cost. Fleetwood D i scovery $150,000 queen+ sofa/bed, readers each week. Bulletin Classifieds Homes for Sale Harley D a vidson 19' Pioneer ski boat, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all (located @ Bend) loads of storage Your classified ad Get Results! 2006 FXDLI Dyna 541-288-3333 options - 3 slide outs, 1983, vm tandem throughout. Excellent will also appear on Call 385-5809 or 13240 SW Horny HolLow Rider, Mustang satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, trailer, V8. Fun & cond., licensed 2015. bendbulletin.com seat with backrest, low Trail, Terrebonne place your ad on-line etc., 32,000 m iles. fast! $5800 obo. Must see!$13,700. which currently reat - Nice acreage with new battery, wind54'I -815-0936. Wintered in h eated 541489-9214 ceives over 1.5 milbendbulletin.com shield, forward con5-stall 36x48 horse shop. $82,000 O.B.O. lion page views evbarn and plenty of trols, lots of chrome, Ads published in the 541-447-8664 ery month at no Screamin' Eagle ex"Boats" classification riding area. Separate Winnebago C 22' extra cost. Bulletin runs & foaling stall, Garage Sales haust, 11,360 miles. include: Speed, fish2002 - $30,500 Classifieds Get ReWell maintained! 1/3 interest in wellrubber matted floors 8 ing, drift, canoe, • Big engine, heavy sults! Call 385-5809 equipped IFR Beech Boaisle w/cross t i es, Garage Sales $8,150 in La Pine house and sail boats. duty, many extras, or place your ad nanza A36, new 10-550/ large tack room, up- Garage Sales (928) 581-9190 For all other types of 21,000 miles, like on-line at prop, located KBDN. stairs loft & hay storwatercraft, please go new. Please call for bendbulletin.com Kit Companion '94 26' $65,000. 541-419-9510 age, plenty of storage to Class 875. • FLEETWOOD Find them details with one slide, new www. N4972M.com for toys in the 24x36 541-385-5809 • PACE ARROW, 1999 541-260-3251 stove/fridge, comes in metal pole barn/shop Updated interior, 36', 2 Just too many with gen. reduced to w/concrete flo o rs. shdes, 42,600 miles, V10 The Bulletin Servin Central are on since 1903 collectibles? $4000. 541-389-5788 $149,950. as, 5000 watt generator, Where can you find a Classifieds MLS¹201403194 hydraulic levelers, auto helping hand? Sell them in Karin Powers, Broker, steps, back-up camera, Laredo 30' 2009 541-385-5809 541-410-0234 Harley Davidson washer/dryer, central vac, From contractors to The Bulletin Classifieds Century 21 Gold 2011 Classic Limice m aker, l o aded, yard care, it's all here 1/5th interest in 1973 763 Country Realty excellent condition. ited, Loaded! 9500 'igt „ ~ in The Bulletin's Cessna 150 LLC 541-385-5809 miles, custom paint $27,500 541-620-2135 Recreational Homes 9560 SW Geneva View 150hp conversion, low "Call A Service "Broken Glass" by (SeeCraiqsiist & Property Rd, Terrebonne. Nice, Chaparral 2130SS time on air frame and ¹4470374489) 882 Nicholas Del Drago, Professional" Directory level 1-acre building Clean, well m ainengine, hangared in new condition, Fifth Wheels lot w/many trees is Cabin hidden in woods heated handgrips, tained 21 ' f a mily overall length is 35' Bend. ExcellentperWinnebago Sightseer perfect for b uilding on trout stream, 637 ski/wakeboard formance 8 affordhas 2 slides, Arctic auto cruise control. 27' 2002. workhorse acres, 75 mi. from your dream home or open-bow runabout package, A/C,table able flying! $6,000. $32k in bike, ia tlcc ' gas motor, Class A, Bend, $695k. «I • • v vacation home. Come with new Barewest & chairs, satellite, 541-410-6007 lg only $18,000or best 8' slide living rm/di541-480-7215 Arctic pkg., power enjoy all that Crooked tower/Bimini. Great offer. 541-318-6049 nette, new tires. spare River Ranch has to sound system, new awning, in excellent 771 HOLIDAY RAMBLER tire carrier, HD trailer condition! More pix offer - Golf, tennis, dual battery system. VACATIONER 2003 hitch, water heater, Lots at bendbulletin.com swimming, hik i ng, Stored under cover, 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, micro/oven, genera5th Wheel Transfishing, disc golf, and fresh water use only, workhorse, Allison 1000 tor, furn/AC, outside $'25,500 port, 1990 all the wild l ife. Cascade Mt. view prop2 nd o wner. J u s t 5 speed trans., 39K, shower, carbon diox541-419-3301 erty Ready to Build. Low miles, EFI 460, $34,950 MLS b ought a lar g er NEW TIRES, 2 slides, ide & smoke detector, 4-spd auto, 10-ply Large corner lot in SW ¹201400593 Chaparral! $14,000. Onan 5.5w gen., ABS fiberglas ext., elect. 1974 Bellanca tires, low miles, alRedmond ready for Karin Powers, Broker, 541-419-9510 brakes, steel cage cock1730A step, cruise control, HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low most new condition, your dream home. 541-410-0234 pit, washer/dryer, fire- CB radio, 60k miles, Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & Great neighborhood, Sell for $3500. Century 21 Gold lace, mw/conv. oven, awning, TV antenna w 875 2180 TT, 440 SMO, schools and views. All 2 Vance & Hines pipes, OR For Hire Country Realty ree standing dinette, booster, flat screen $12,500. 541-306-0166 180 mph, excellent utilities. MLS Watercraft Call for quote was $121,060 new; now, 23" TV. AM/FM/CD I Great home in very decondition, always ¹201403757. Ask for Theo, $35,900. 541-536-1008 stereo. $2 7 ,500. MONTANA 3585 2008, sirable location at the hangared, 1 owner $42,950. 541-260-4293 HDFatBo 1996 541-548-2554 exc. cond., 3 slides, base of Pilot Butte. 3 Ainslie Reynolds, for 35 years. $60K. king bed, Irg LR, bedroom 1 bath 1050 Principal Broker Advertise your car! Arctic insulation, all sq ft. Extensive cusReMax Key In Madras, Add A Picture! options $35,000 obo. tom tile work includProperties. Reach thousands of readers! call 541-475-6302 541-420-3250 ing granite tile kitchen 541-410-1054 Cell Call 541-385-5809 16' Old Town Canoe, and bath countertops 541-728-0033 Offi ce The Bulletin Class!fieds Provtdence 2005 and backsplash, cusspruce, cedar & canvas, Take care of Completely Lake model, 1 owner, Fully loaded, 35,000 tom t i l e flo o ring SW Quail Rd. Crooked Rebuilt/Customized verv your investments River Ranch. miles, 350 Cat, Very Winnebago good cond, w/extras. throughout most of 2012/2013 Award clean, non-smoker, $1000. 541-388-3386 Sightseer 30' with the help from home, large pantry Elevated 5.77 acre view Winner lot. $90,000. 3 slides, side-by-side 2004 with living back deck, fenced The Bulletin's Showroom Condition ds published in "WaMara Stein, refrigerator with ice room slide, 48k yard. Extensive parkMany Extras tercraft" include: Kay- maker, Washer/Dryer, miles, in good cond. Arctic Fox 24.5' 2005, OPEN ROAD 36' "Call A Service ing with d e tached Principal Broker, 2005 $25,500 Low Miles. aks, rafts and motorFlat screen TV's, In Has newer Michelin axles are turned, stored in 2-car g a rage/shop, 541-420-3400 Pamir Ized bed, hide-a-bed Professional" Directory personal Properties, Inc. $15,000 motion satellite. tires, awning, blinds, garage, 1 slide, all new King attached 1 car gasofa, 3 slides, glass watercrafts. For tires, 1 owner. $11,900. 541-548-4807 $95,000 carpet, new coach rage & carport, RV 773 shower, 10 gal. wa"boats" please see 541-633-0520 or 541-480-2019 battery and HD TV. parking. $ 2 18,000. 3300 sq.ft. Hangar 541-389-2087 ter heater, 10 cu.ft. Class 870. Acreages ¹201310366 $27,900 Prineville Airport fridge, central vac, 541-385-5809 Jodi Clark, Principal RV Call Dick at 60'wide by 55' s atellite dish, 2 7 " $450,000 • River CONSIGNMENTS Broker, 541-771-8731 541-408-2387 TV/stereo syst., front deep with 16' Frontage Century 21 WANTED Serving Central Oregon since 1903 front power leveling bi-fold door. ~Amazing view of Des We Do The Work ... Gold Country Realty jacks and s cissor Upgrades include, chutes River 881 You Keep The Cash! 880 stabilizer jacks, 16' T-6 lighting, Modern Architecture + •Gated subdivision HD FXSBI 2006 new On-site credit Travel Trailers awning. Like new! Motorhomes Quaint Farmhouse ~21 Acre private loca skylights, windows, cond., low miles, approval team, Arctic Fox 29' 2003, 541-419-0566 14' side RV door, R astra block c o n - tion 12' slide, elect/gas Stage I download, exweb site presence. struction, passive soBea Leach, Broker Dutchman Denali infra-red heating, tras, bags. $8900. We Take Trade-Ins! fridge, gas stove, 541-788-2274 32' 2011 travel lar, 4 b e droom, 3 541-447-0887 and bathroom, Free Advertising. microwave, air conRV bath, 2954 sq ft. RaWindermere trailer. 2 slides Evditioning, full bath. BIG COUNTRY RV $155,000, Call Bill CONSIGNMENTS diant floors and reCentral Oregon erything goes, all Bend: 541-330-2495 Less than 5000 541-460-7930 WANTED cycled timbers keep Real Estate kitchen ware, linens Redmond: miles use, exc. conWe Do the Work, this h o m e eco etc. Hitch, sway 541-548-5254 dition & clean, inacres. 65694 Old Hangarfor sale at You Keep the Cash! friendly. Sits on nearly 5.17 bars, water & sewer cludes RV cover. 2007 Winnebago Hwy. Redmond Airport - not On-site credit 19 acres of Cascade Bend/Redmond hoses. List price $14,500 Mtn view, power, waOutlook Class "C" a T Hangar -$38,000. approval team, view pastoral farm- ter, septic approved. HD Sportster, 2001 exc 31', solar panel, Cat. $34,500 - asking 541-678-1449 541-420-0626 web site presence. land. $899 , 000. $174,000 O.B.O. Call cond, 1 owner, maint'd, $28,500 Loaded. heater, excellent We Take Trade-Ins! MLS¹201404611 new t i r es , cu s tom Must see to apprecicondition, more exBrad 5 41-419-1725, chrome, leather saddle CHECK YOUR AD Free Advertising. Call Terry Skjersaa, ate. Redmond, Or. tras. Asking $58K. or Deb 541-480-3956. bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. BIG COUNTRY RV 541-383-1426 206-715-7120 debra©bendbroad Tom, 541-382-6501 Ph. 541-447-9268 Bend: 541-330-2495 Duke Warner Realty Can be viewed at band.com Redmond: 541-382-8262 TIFFINALLEGRO Western Recreation 541-548-5254 C ascade Mt . Vi e w BUS 2010 - FULLY (top of hill) NOTICE Property - Ready to LOADED 40QXP Save money. Learn in Prineviiie. All real estate adver- Build. 9.90 Acres off Powerglide Chassis / to fly or build hours on the first day it runs 885 425HP Cummings tised here in is sub- Gribbing Rd. Ready to make sure it is corwith your own airCanopies & Campers Engine / Allison 6 c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o ject to th e F ederal for a home, horses rect. "Spellcheck" and Spd Automatic Trans Fair Housing A c t, and toys. Backs to human errors do ocCommander, 4 seat, (ai =~ HONDA SCOOTER Heartland P r owler 1995 Lance Camper, / Less than 40K miles which makes it illegal c ounty land, t h e n 80cc If this happens to 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self 150 HP, low time, "Elite", 9k mi., exc. 2012, 29PRKS, 33', cur. /Offered at $199K. to advertise any pref- BLM. Avion w a ter, cond., $975. (541) your ad, please confull panel. $23,000 like new, 2 slides-livToo many options to contained very lightly obo. Contact Paul at erence, limitation or power at property and 593-9710 or 350-8711 i ng area 8 la r g e tact us ASAP so that list here! For more used, exc. cond., TV, 541-447-5184. discrimination based approved for s t ancorrections and any closet, 15' power awinformation go to Allegro31 ff., 2006 VCR, micro, oven, on race, color, reli- dard septic. Beautiful adjustments can be The Bulletin mne ning, power hitch & onginal owner, 2 fridge, 3 burner stove, T-Hangar for rent ~ gion, sex, handicap, land and outstanding made to your ad. To Subscribe call lle rob s.com s tabilizers, 1 8 g a l . a~ slides, Ford V-10, q ueen o ve r ca b , familial status or na- views. 541-385-5809 MLS 541-385-5800 or go to at Bend airport. water heater, full size or email 28,000 miles, satellite tional origin, or inten- ¹201401000. The Bulletin Classified $8000. 541-389-6256 Call 541-382-8998. trainwater157O queen bed , l a r ge TVs, queen bed, www.bendbulletin.com tion to make any such $199,900. mail.com shower, porcelain sink sleeps 6, lots of storpreferences, l i mitaAinslie Reynolds, or ca I858-527-8627 8 toilet. $2 6 ,900 865 age, stored under tions or discrimination. Principal Broker QOI 541-999-2571 cover, A/C, electric YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE To 2,000,000 ATVs We will not knowingly ReMax Key awning, 5.5 KW genEXPOSURESFOR ONLY$25e accept any advertisProperties. Tioga 24' Class C erator, auto leveling, WIR@I ing for r eal e state 541-410-1054 Cell 0 I C I ~ Ad i ~ N~ k nA ~ N ~ P bi I A Motorhome no smokers, no pets, a" which is in violation of 541-728-0033 Offi ce Bought new in 2000, Week of August 4, 2014 $52,900. this law. All persons Land in Madras - Prime currently under 20K e 541.390.9932 g are hereby informed $ miles, excellent ready to b uilt, that all dwellings ad- and I shape, new tires, 2.44 acres located in vertised are available Serving Central Oregon since 1903 professionally winterJayco Jay Feather on an equal opportu- an area of nice homes Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' ized every year, cutLG7 25Z 2005 541-385-5809 and conveniently near bed, with ramps. $700 nity basis. The Bulleoff switch to battery, LR slide, central air, town. Lot is easy to obo. 541-549-4834 or tin Classified plus new RV battermicro, AM/FM/CD stedevelop with w ater 541-588-0068 ies. Oven, hot water reo, TV antenna with Spacious and afford- and power nearby. heater & air condiAllegro 32' 2007, like booster, queen walk a ble living! 2 b e d- Owner terms may be 870 DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes only 12,600 miles. tioning seldom used; around bed, s l eeps room, 2.6 bath, 1416 available. $ 6 4 ,950 Boats & Accessories new, just add water and it's Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 4-6, outside grill, ensq ft home has gas ¹201303181 children, custody, support, property and bills ready to go! transmission, dual extertainment center and fireplace, vau l ted Jodi Clark, Principal haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- $22,000 obo. Serious shower, awning, power ceilings, slate in the Broker, 541-771-8731 inquiries, please. diViSiOn. NO C o ur t a P PearanCeS. DiVOrCed eling system, 5kw gen, hitch, new g a s/elec guest bathroom and Century 21 power mirrors w/defrost, Stored in Terrebonne. water heater. All new tiled cou n tertops. Gold Country Realty in 1 - 5 we e k s po s sible. 5 0 3-772-5295. 2 slide-outs with aw541-548-5174 tires, includes spare. Master bedroom has nings, rear c amera, Clean, Great Shape. WWW.ParalegalalternativeS.COm legalalt@mSn.com private access to the trai(er hitch, driyer door $11,200 541-389-8154 12' Aluminum boat outside and l a rge Tick, Tock w/power window, cruise, bathroom with plenty with trailer, 3hp motor, exhaust brake, central I of closet space. Great Tick, Tock... good cond, $1200.. vac, satellite sys. Asking floor plan includes a 503-307-8570 ...don't let time get $87,500. 503-781-8812 Drivers-START WITH OU R T RAINING OR double attached gaaway. Hire a rage. Large patio over Ready to makememories! CONTINUE YOUR SOLID CAREER. You have the garage is w ell professional out Top-selling Winnebago shaded in the after31 J, original owners, non- Keystone Laredo 31' of The Bulletin's options! Company Drivers, Lease Purchase noon for entertaining. smokers, garaged, only 20 06 with 1 2' "Call A Service $119,900 18,800 miles, auto-level- RV Sleeps 6, Or OWner OPeratOrS Needed. 877-789-8518 ¹201404958 ing jacks, (2) slides, up- slide-out. Professional" 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 walk-around Dennis Clark, Principal graded queen bed, bunk queen Directory today! bed w/storage underWWW.CentraltruCkdrivingjobS.Com Wakeboard Boat Beaver Marquis, beds, micro, (3) TVs, Broker, 541-771-8730 neath. Tub & shower. I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, 1993 sleeps 10! Lots of storCentury 21 775 tons of extras, low hrs. 2 swivel rockers. TV. 40-ft, Brunswick age, maintained, very Gold Country Realty Full wakeboard tower, cond. Gas stove & J IM PALMER TRUCKING IS HIRING. N O Manufactured/ floor plan. Many clean!Only $67,995! Ex- Air light bars, Polk audio 748 tended warranty and/or fi- refrigerator/freezer. extras, well mainMobile Homes Microwave. Awning. speakers throughout, EXPERIENCE? EARN WHILE YOU LEARN. nancing avail to qualified tained, fire supNortheast Bend Homes completely wired for Outside sho w er. buyers! 541488-7179 pression behind NewDream Special amps/subwoofers, unSlide through storCOMPANY SPONSORED CDL TRAINING.Earn 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2005 3 bdrm, 2 bath refrig, Stow Master FIND IT! derwater lights, fish a ge, E a s y Li f t . home has oak floors, new $50,900 finished 5000 tow bar, finder, 2 batteries cus$29,000 new; $41,500+ 1st Year Full Benefits. 1-888-619-0374 SUY IT! carpet & is fenced. 3-year on your site. tom black paint job. $23,995. Asking $18,600 SELL IT! tenant. $224,900. Hohday J and M Homes 541-383-3503 541-4947-4805 $12,500 541415-2523 Realty, 541-385-5069 541-548-5511 The Bulletin Classifieds

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