Bulletin Daily Paper 07-08-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1

WEDNESDAY july8,2015

FQ(ell 9 rai 88 8 Slllll OUTDOORS/TRAIL UPDATE • D1

bendbulletin.corn

TODAY' S READERBOARD ln OutdeerS —Anold Klamath County timber rail line has been turned into a mountain bike route.D1

a eo ner Foll see more ime or an I r o e

IN SALEM

By Beau Eastes

low the landfill into liquid fuel.

The Bulletin

The county was set to receive

out in'15

Waste to Energy Group, the perpetually cash-strapped California company that has prom-

Plus: National bicycle rOuteS — There arenearly 9,000 miles in the nationwide network. Unsurprisingly, many are in the Northwest.D3

New Horizons —The spacecraft will soon arrive at Pluto after a 9/2-year journey. Expect great photos.A3

ised to convert Knott Landfill

waste into energy, is looking for an extension from Deschutes

County to start its proposed multimillion renewable energy project in Bend. In January 2014, Deschutes County commissioners OK'd a 15-year deal with Waste to

Energy to turn natural gas be-

That deadline is Aug. 3 and Waste to Energy has yet to at least $240,000 a year from break ground on any part of the Waste to Energy or 4 percent project. "They' ve been trying to of the company's gross profits from the project, whichever secure a huge amount of finumber was greater. With the nancing," said Timm Schimke, startup costs estimated to be at Deschutes County's solid waste least $20 million — all of which manager, on Tuesday. "They' re are the responsibility of Waste doing that now." to Energy — the county gave If Waste to Energy can prove the renewable energy company it has all of its financial back18 months to start construction ing before Aug. 3, Schimke before the deal became null and said the county would likely vosb work out an extension to keep

How big issues

played

the project alive.

"We' ll likely stipulate a number of requirements they have to meet," said Schimke, who

has been working with Waste to Energy and its CEO, Randy

By Taylor W. Anderson

Lutz, on the proposed renew-

able energy deal since 2011. "They' ll probably have to show

SALEM — After an exhaustive fivemonth session in

The Bulletin

some legal documents that

Salem that emerged

they have the financing. We' ll

from a scandal in the

probably tie the extension to

governor's office and brought landmark social policies, lawmakers rushed to define how the 2015

meeting certain milestones on a schedule." See Landfill /A5

session should be

remembered by Oregonians and future

OR-7 —Biologists get an upclose look athis second litter. D3

voters.

Republican lawmakers, who all session played a backseat role in the key bills that passed

TWinkieS —Bouncing back from a near-death experience. C6

with only Demo-

cratic votes, said the session was more

EDITOR'5CHOICE

partisan than they' d ever seen.

Vanishing Army bases hit rural emnomies

Democrats said

they were clear from the start of the session that they

would pass bills that bolstered low- and middle-income families and schools, and most heralded the

dg

session as a success. With five months

of work and debate over bills Gov. Kate

By Lydia DePillis

Brown is rapidly stamping into law,

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — The

here's how some of

Iraq war was good for the economy of Jefferson

the major debates this session played

County, New York. Per-

out from start to finish.

r

haps too good. "We had to grow, and grow quickly," said Carl McLaughlin, executive

See Issues /A5

t'

director of the Fort Drum

Regional Liaison Organization, which supports

Sun Country Tours guide Casey Pierce, right, leads a group of rafters, who momentarily get cooled off

Creating islands on coral reefs

as they dip down through an exciting section of the Big Eddy rapids on the upper Deschutes River on

By Eric Niiler

the military base that has been there since the

mid-1980s. "Because the

community wants to keep Fort Drum here, and it wants to show we' re very supportive, it did a lot of things that were over the

top."

As troops poured into the Army base at Fort

Andy Tullis l The Bulletin

The Washington Post

Tuesday afternoon. The Big Eddy rapids are running high and wild despite the drought.

Marine biologist John McManus, who

Drum, the rural area de-

has been studying Pacific coralreefsforthe past 30 years, remem-

veloped at a breakneck

pace. With help from state tax breaks, developers built 3,800 units of brand-

new housing and 600 hotel rooms. Troops depended on the local hospital system, which received $100 million in upgrades. The school system took on

thousands more students. In an area where the last

big industry — paper mills — had disappeared decades ago, the infusion of people and cash was welcome. Now, however, the citizens of Jefferson County

arebracingfora collapse. In the next few weeks, the

Army is expected to announce 40,000 troop cuts to comply with Congressional budget mandates, along with many thousands more pink slips for civilian support staff. At

Fort Drum, estimates suggest that 16,000 of 19,000

could leave the base, as a worst-case outcome. See Bases /A4

A Medicaid experiment: charging patients By Noam N. Levey Tribune Washington Bureau

ELKHART, Ind. — Linda

tribute monthly to a special health account. Joyner chips in $12.33. "It's the first thing I pay after

Joyner, at 64, just got health coverage. Uninsured for years, the former waitress signed up for Medicaid

the rent," she said during a recent

after Indiana expanded its pro-

Charging poor people small premiums or feesforcare— long

gram through the Affordable Care Act. But unlike millions of low-income Americans who've

Sea. "You are traveling along in open ocean waters, then you come upon a place where the waves are

breaking, then everything beyond the reef is flat, like a giant pool " said McManus

favored by conservatives who contend that "skin in the game"

enrolled in the government plan since last year, Joyner is paying for her coverage. Indiana, which has aconservativeRepublican governor and Legislature, is

engages patients in their health — has historically produced Obamacareremains deeply unpopular among Republicans, the

A doctor examines a Medicaid patient enrolled in the Healthy Indi-

pioneering an experiment that re-

idea is attracting new interest.

ana Plan. The state is making low-income patients chip in from $1

r

Mostly sunny High 88, Low 59 Page B6

who is director of the National Center for

mixed results. But at a time when

See Medicaid /A5

Zbigniew Bzdak/chicago Tribune via Tribune News Service

to $27 a month to a health savings account to get coverage.

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

of the Spratly Islands, in the South China

the RV capital of the world.

TODAY'S WEATHER

journey a few years ago to a remote part a chain of low-lying coral and rocky reefs

1

visit to a clinic in this aging manufacturing town often billed as

quires low-income patients to con-

bers a two-day boat

C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State Bf-6 S oI Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 N'/Movies

An Independent

D1 - 6 C1-4 D6

Vol. 113, No. 1ee, 30 pages, 5 sections 0

Coral Reef Research at the University of Miami.

See Reefs /A4

Q i/i/e use recycfed newsprint

IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


A2

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un a ea inc se on I'ee awol' By Andrew Higgins and James Kanter

Vtfsk said that the government of Prime Minister Alexis

it" — Greece's exit from the euro — has surfaced as a seri-

New York Times News Service

Tsipras had until Thursday to ous option, Jean-Claude Junckdeliver a new plan to Greece's er, the president of the EuropeEuropean leaders gave Greece creditors. an Commission, the European "Until now I h av e avoid- Union's executive arm, said at until Sunday toreach an agreement to save its collapsing ed talking about deadlines," a brief news conference late economy from catastrophe Tusk, a former prime minister Tuesday night that his staff had after an emergency summit of Poland, told reporters after drawn up plans for several posmeeting here on 'Itfesday end- a day of fruitless meetings. sible outcomes. BRUSSELS — F r ustrated

ed without the Athens govern-

ment offering a substantive new proposal to resolve its debt crisis.

"The situation is really criti-

cal and unfortunately we can' t

exclude the black scenarios of no agreement," said Donald 'ltfsk, the president of the Eu-

ropean Council, warning that those possibilities included "the bankruptcy of Greece and

"But tonight I have to say it loud and clear — the f inal

"We have a Grexitscenario

prepared in detail," he said. Still, it appears that no one

deadline ends this week." "I have no doubt that this is the most critical moment in

our history." Deadlines have come and

wants to take the blame for a Greek departurefrom the eurozone. That means that all sides

seem ready to keep talking even as the crisis, which bequences, but yet another emer- gan morethan five years ago, gency gathering, this one in- reaches new levels of intensivolving all 28 European Union ty,and even as Greece hurtles leaders in Brussels on Sunday, toward a July 20 deadline to might really be a crunch point. make a payment of 3.5 billion "This could be the last meeting euros, or about $3.8 billion, to about Greece," Prime Minister the European Central Bank. Matteo Renzi of Italy told re- Many analysts say Greece cangone without serious conse-

the insolvency of its banking system" and great pain for the Greek people. Also looming everlarger was theprospectof Greece leaving the European porters on 'Itfesday night. currency union. And for the first time, "Grex-

not miss that payment without

leaving the eurozone.

Dtseuiesrs

THE POPE VISITS ECUADOR

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Faithful take pictures as others throw balloons from balconies asPopeFrancis departs from the San Francisco Church aboard the popemobile, in Quito, Ecuador, onTuesday. Pope Francis pressedhis casefor a neweconomic and environmental world order during his SouthAmerican tour, saying thegoods ofthe Earth are meantfor

everyone andmust not beexploited bythe wealthy few for short-term profit at the expenseof thepoor. Francis' call, delivered on his final full day in Quito, is particularly relevant for Ecuador, aPacific nation that is home to one of theworld's most species-diverse ecosystems but is also anOPECcountry heavily dependent on oil extraction.

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All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconverted to anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520 ,ispublisheddailybyWestern Communications Inc.,777 1 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OIL Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all sraff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsoradilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

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

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday night are:

©©

Q6Q>sQ >6Q 2sQ 4g

The estimated jackpot is now $1 06 million.

COnfederate flag —The South Carolina Senate gaveits final approval Tuesday to removethe Confederate flag from the Capitol grounds, but across the hall in the House,Republicans quietly sought a way to make alast stand to preserve some kind of symbol honoring their Southern ancestors at the Statehouse. TheHousewas scheduled to begin debate today onthe bill to take down the flag and its pole and sendthe banner to the state's Confederate Relic Room.Gov. Nikki Haley andbusiness leaders support the proposal.

Birth COntrOISpending —Out-of-pocket spendingonmost major birth control methods fell sharply in the months after the Affordable CareAct beganrequiring insurance plans to cover contraception at no cost to women, anewstudy has found. Spending on the pill, the most popular form of prescription birth control, dropped byabout half in the first six months of 2013, comparedwith the sameperiod in 2012, before the mandatetook effect. The study, by health economists from the University of Pennsylvania, analyzed health insurance claims from a large private insurer with business in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. S8ll FF8hCISCO SI8gihg — Thecase of a Mexican laborer with a lengthy criminal record whowas charged onTuesday in thefatal shooting of a woman inSanFrancisco has exposed agulf of mistrust and failed communication betweenthefederal authorities and the police in California over immigration enforcement. JuanFrancisco Lopez-Sanchez,56, whopleaded not guilty in Superior Court in San Francisco in the murder of Kathryn Steinle, hadbeendeported from the United States five times. Thecaseimmediately became fodder in the polarized debateover immigration. A SanFrancisco ordinance broadly restricts the police from cooperating with immigration agents. SOIBI' 8CCSSS — The Obamaadministration on Tuesday announced an initiative to help low- and middle-incomeAmericans gain access to solar energy, part of a series of steps that President Barack Obama is taking to tackle climate change,according to administration officials. The administration said it intends to triple the capacity of solar and other renewableenergy systems it installs in federally subsidized housing by 2020, make it easier for homeowners to borrow money for solar improvements andstart a nationwide program to help renters gain access to solar energy, the officials said. TalibalI peaCe talkS —An Afghan government delegation met with Taliban officials in the Pakistani capital for the first time on Tuesday, in asignificant effort to open formal peace negotiations, according to Afghan, Pakistani andWestern officials. The Islamabad meeting, brokered byPakistani officials after months of intense effort by President Ashraf Ghani of Afghanistan to get them morecentrally involved in the peaceprocess, wasthe most promising contact between the two warring sides in years. And it followed aseries of less formal encounters betweenvarious Afghan officials and Taliban representatives in other countries in recent months.

f I' . I

Finance/HumanResources Heidi Wright......................541-383-0324

Midair CclliSich —An F-16fighter jet smashed into a small plane Tuesday over South Carolina, killing two people andraining down plane parts and debris over awide swath of marshes and rice fields. The two people aboard the smaller Cessnawere killed, and the plane was completely destroyed, National Transportation Safety Board spokesman Peter Knudson said. Thepilot of the F-16ejected and "is apparently uninjured," he said. Anews release from ShawAir Force Base in Sumter said the pilot, Maj. Aaron Johnson from the 55th Fighter Squadron, wastaken to Joint Base Charleston's medical clinic for observation.

Ebcla Outbreak —More than a yearafter the Ebola epidemic began tearing through three of the world's most fragile countries, the World Health Organization remains unfit to handle apublic health emergency, an independent panel concluded in ablistering report released onTuesday. Thepanelfaulted the agency for being sluggish, financially unpreparedand overly reliant on "good diplomacy." It pointed to a lack of "independent andcourageous decision making by the director general," Dr. Margaret Chan, in theearly days of the epidemic. The report urged theagency's regional and country representatives to be ready to speakout against recalcitrant governments. U.S. alld Vietnam —President Barack Obamasaid Tuesdaythat the United States andVietnam had moved beyondtheir "difficult history" and would moveahead ontrade and security cooperation that could benefit both countries. Hewarmly welcomed the head of the nation's Communist Party to the White Houseandspoke of a future visit to Vietnam. Obama'smeeting with the Vietnameseofficial, Nguyen PhuTrong, wastimed to mark the 20th anniversary of normalized relations between theonetime war enemies. It came 40years after the fall of Saigon andreflected a deepening of the reconciliation between the United States andVietnam.

Jared Fogleand Subwaysuspend ties after policeraid at his home Find It By Sydney Ember

ing more than 200 pounds by eating Subway sandwiches Subway suspended its rela- and exercising. He first aptionship with its well-known peared in ads for Subway in spokesman, Jared Fogle, on 2000 and founded the Jared Tuesday, hours after investi- Foundation in 2004 to combat gators in Indiana raided his childhood obesity. New York Times News Service

suburban home.

Fogle was not a rrested during the raid on his house in Zio n s ville, I ndiana. Ea r -

lier this y ear, Russell Taylor, a former executive director of Fogle Fogle 's f oundation, was arrested on charges related to child p ornography. Taylor w a s charged in May with seven counts of production and one count of possession of child

pornography. "Subway and Jared Fogle have mutually agreed to suspend their relationship due

ate, with law enforcement in their investigation of unspec-

ified charges and looks forward to its conclusion," Ron Elberger, a lawyer for Fogle, said in a statement. "He has not been detained, arrested "Jared has been cooperat- or charged with any crime or ing, and continues to cooper- offense."

sent a Trrvitter message that

said in part, "We are shocked about the news and believe it is related to a former Jared

Foundationemployee." Fogle had said after Taylor's arrest that his foundation was cutting all ties with

Taylor. Fogle gained fame after los-

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Wednesday, July 8, the 189th day of 2015. Thereare 176 days left in the year.

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS

mos ime or u o's c ose-u

COnfederate flag —South Carolina's House is set to take up a bill on the flag's removal from the Capitol after the state Senate advanced it.

By Kenneth Chang New York Times News Service

NASA's

HISTORY Highlight:In1776, Col. John Nixon gavethe first public reading of the Declaration of Independence, outside the State House (now Independence Hall) in Philadelphia. In1663, King Charles II of England granted aRoyal Charter to Rhode Island. In1853,an expedition led by Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in YedoBay,Japan, on a mission to seekdiplomatic and trade relations with the Japanese. In1889,The Wall Street Journal was first published. In1907,Florenz Ziegfeld staged his first "Follies," on the roof of the NewYork Theater. In1919,President Woodrow Wilson received a tumultuous welcome in New York City after his return from the Versailles Peace Conference in France. In1947, demolition work began in NewYork City to make way for the newpermanent headquarters of the United Nations. In1950, President Harry Truman namedBen. Douglas MacArthur commander-in-chief of United Nations forces in Korea. (Trumanended up sacking MacArthur for insubordination nine months later.) In1965,Canadian Pacific Air Lines Flight 21, aDouglas DC-6B, crashed in British Columbia after the tail separated from the fuselage; all 52 people on board were killed in what authorities said was the result of an apparent bombing. In1975, President Gerald Ford announced he would seek a second term of office. In1989, Carlos Saul Menem was inaugurated as president of Argentina in the country' s first transfer of power from one democratically elected civilian leader to another in six decades. Ten years ago: Group of Eight leaders meeting in Gleneagles, Scotland, unveiled a$50 billion package to help lift Africa from poverty and pledged newjoint efforts against terrorism in response to the deadly London bombings the daybefore. Five years ago: The largest spy swap betweenthe U.S. and Russia since theCold War unfolded as 10people accused of spying in suburban America pleaded guilty to conspiracy and were ordered deported to Russia in exchangefor the release of four prisoners accused of spying for the West. Violent protests erupted in Oakland, California, after a Los Angeles jury convicted a white former transit officer, Johannes Mehserle, of involuntary manslaughter (instead of murder) in the videotaped fatal shooting of an unarmed black man, OscarGrant. One year age:President Barack Obama appealedto Congress for $3.7 billion in emergency spending to deal with the immigration crisis on the nation's southern border, where unaccompanied children were showing up bythe thousands (Republican lawmakers rejected the request).

BIRTHDAYS Singer Steve Lawrence is 80. Actor Jeffrey Tambor is 71. Actress Kim Darby is 68. Children's performer Raffi is 67. Celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck is 66. Actress Anjelica Huston is 64. Actor Kevin Bacon is 57. Actor Robert Knepper is 56. Rock musician Andy Fletcher (Depeche Mode) is 54. Country singer TobyKeith is 54. Rock singer Joan Osborne is 53. Writer-producer RobBurnett is 53. Actor LeeTergesen is50. Actor Billy Crudup is 47.Actor Michael Weatherly is 47.Singer Beck is 45. Actress Kathleen Robertson is 42. Actor Lance Gross is 34. Actor JadenSmith is 17.

New

spacecraft is closing in on Pluto fast. About 4:50 a.m. this Tuesday, New Horizons is ex-

pected to pass less than 7,800 miles above Pluto's surface. Alan Stern, the mission's prin-

Just passingthrough After traveling 3 billion miles, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft will zip past Pluto on Tuesday.

Kerber

cipal investigator, likes to say that if New Horizons were to view Manhattan from a simi-

lar distance, its telescopic lens would be able to pick out the Og APPRNN New Horizons' long-range camera captured Pluto and its largest moon from 8 million miles awayFriday. Recentimages ofCharon show a darkpatch near its north pole.

ponds in Central Park.

Ever since a young astronomer named ClydeTombaugh d iscovered Pluto 8 5

y ears

ago, it has been little more than a dot in the night sky. This first-ever spacecraft vis-

it will bring Pluto into focus, illuminating mysterious dark regions on its surface and possibly erupting ice volcanoes. Weather patterns could swirl in Pluto's thin atmosphere of

nitrogen and methane, with haze and snowfall.

ONESNT New Horizonswasdesigned to be fast and light, which meant it could not carry enough fuel to slow downor orbit Pluto. Thespacecraft will fly through the Pluto system at about10 miles persecond.

O

moon

Stern said he has made only one prediction about Pluto, at a conference in 1993. "I said we would find a Pluto that was

two words: something wonderful," he said. "It's turning out to be completely true. The Pluto system is turning out to be completely amazing." While Pluto was o n ce thought to b e a s i ngular strange body in an otherwise dull, empty expanse of space, it is now the arche-

Pluto

Charon

n

OChsron

PLUTO

SINAll, COlDWOIIUS Pluto is about two-thirds as wide as Earth's moon. It is thought to have arocky core and a coating of frozen methane andnitrogen. AClEARSPOT The Pluto system is tipped onits side, like a target facing thesun. New Horizons will cross the plane ofPluto and its moons nearCharon's orbit.

New Horizons spacecraft

type of what astronomers call

the "third zone" of the solar system. Beyond the rocky p lanets like Earth an d t h e

gas giants like Jupiter, there appear to be millions of icy worlds circling the sun in what is known as the Kuiper belt, named after Gerard Kuiper, an astronomer who had

suggested that some comets originated from the outskirts of the solar system.

FIVE INOO NS W hen th Ne ew Horizons mission wasapproved, Pluto had only oneknown moon, Charon. Foursmaller moons werefound in the past decade: NixandHydra in 2005, Kerberos in 2011and finally Styx in 2012, while New Horizons was inhibernation beyondthe orbit of Uranus.

ADITNfr ECLIPSE

New Horizons wil fly through the shadowsof

Pluto andCharon, watching thesun set and rise and using radio signals sent from Earth to measure andexamine the atmosphere of the dwarf planet andits largest moon.

Sourcesand images: NASA; Johns Hopkins Univemity Applied Physics Laboratory

NewYork TimesNewsService

It has been a long wait to get there — 14 years after the initial proposal and 9'/2 years after New Horizons left Earth in January 2006. Back then, Pluto was still

a full-fledged planet, but the days for t hat designation were numbered. A year earlier, Michael Brown, a profes-

sor of planetary astronomy at the California Institute of

Technology, had discovered something that was farther out than Pluto and appeared to be bigger. Either this world, which he named Eris, after the Greek goddess of chaos

SpaCeCraft Speed bump — NASA's NewHorizons spacecraft is on track to sweeppast Pluto next weekdespite hitting a "speed bump" that temporarily halted science collection. A computer overload prompted thespacecraft to partially shut down on July 4 —just days before the first-ever close flyby of Pluto. Flight controllers managed to regain contact with the spacecraft in just over anhour andcorrect the tense situation, occurring after a relatively quiet journey of 3 billion miles and9~/~years. "We' re on to Pluto!" NASA's director of planetary science, Jim Green, assured journalists Monday. About 2~/~ days of science observations were lost because of the problem. That represents about 30 observations out of 500 planned over the next week. The Associated Press

jects, 20 or 30 miles wide, both

ago when other astronomers

mers call the cold classical

found a second object with a Sedna-like orbit. In addition,

belonging to what astrono-

Kuiper belt. Unlike that of Plu- they suggested that Sedna, the to, the orbits of these objects new object and other bodies are circular and in the plane at the outer edges of the Kuiof the planets, seemingly un- per belt seemed to be nudged disturbed since the formation by the gravity of something of the solar system 4'/z billion big, several times the mass of years ago. "They are proba- Earth, farther out. bly the only things that were That idea is still controverthere at the beginning," said sial, although Brown, for one, Levison of the Southwest Re- is looking. "I think there is a search Institute. What New Horizons will

not discover is what might lie beyond the Kuiper belt; its

the solar system — until 1992, uninterrupted waiting. Partly camera is not designed to scan planet, or Pluto would no lon- when David Jewitt, then at for simplicity, partly for fis- the sky for dark objects. Beger be a planet. the University of Hawaii, and cal economy, the instruments fore Brown discovered Eris, and strife, would also be a

S even months l ater, t h e Jane Luu, then at the UniverInternational A s t r onomical sity of California, Berkeley,

Union officially decided that to be a planet, an object had

to push around everything else around its orbit. Pluto is too small to be a gravitation-

al bully, and the organization invented a new label for Pluto, Eris and their ilk: dwarf

and antenna are bolted to the

main spacecraft body and not discovered a small icy body on a rotating platform. That beyond the orbit of Neptune. means New H orizons canSoon, more icy objects were not take pictures and talk to spotted. Today, more than a Earth at the same time. It will thousand Kuiper belt objects take only a brief pause to send have been discovered, and back a message to tell the sciastronomers estimate there

entists and engineers that it has survived the encounter

might be millions more orbiting out there. The region be- and provide some engineerAs a planet, Pluto had al- yond Neptune is now by far ing details about the day' s ways been an oddity. The in- the most crowded part of our events. ner fourplanets of the solar solar system. Four and a half hours later, system — M ercury, Venus, It is like an attic of mem- the time it takes light to travel Earth and Mars — are rocky orabilia, with clues of how the 3 billion miles from Pluto, spheres. The next four — Ju- dust and gas coalesced into that status message will arpiter, Saturn, Uranus and Nep- planets. "I still think it's one of rive at mission control. "That tune — are giant balls of hy- the most fascinating regions doesn't mean we won't be on drogen and other gases. Then of the solar system that holds the edge of our seats on the there was Pluto. clues to planet formation and 14th," Stern said. "It's just huPluto turned out to be small the early dynamical evolu- man. We' re going to be wait— about 1,465 miles wide, tion of the solar system," said ing for that signal at 9 p.m., smaller than Earth's moon. Its Harold Levison, a planetary and that' ll be our moment of orbit is an ellipse tilted askew scientist at the Southwest Re- suspense." compared with the other plan- search Institute's space studThe first photographs will ets, and it s c omposition is ies department in Boulder, be sent back the next day. Beabout one-third ice, two-thirds Colorado. cause of the sheer volume of rock. data, the slow trickle of com-

super-duper Earth out there,"

he said. "We are pretty convinced that there is something large enough out there that

we can quit worrying about wannabe things like Pluto and

he found Sedna, a smaller

start worrying about the real ninth planet."

object with a much weirder 11,400-year elliptical orbit. At

The age of planetary discovery may not yet be over.

its closest point to the sun, it

is still beyond the Kuiper belt. At its farthest point, it is 31 times as far from the sun as

I •

l5II

Neptune. Sedna remained a singular oddity until a few years

planet.

In 1978, James C h risty

spotted what appeared to be a bulge in the side of Pluto.

A moon asanight light

a Mars-size body into Earth that is thought to have created

the moon.

and Charon.

That turned out to be a moon,

which Christy named Charon. While Pluto was small, Char-

on was surprisingly big, about one-eighth the mass of Pluto. By comparison, Earth's moon

has just one eighty-first the mass of Earth. That pointed to a cataclysmic collision in Pluto's distant

past, similar to the collision of

n o t hing

else like Pluto and Charon in

For people back on Earth, Tuesday will be one of largely

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During the flyby, the seven share NASA's Deep Space instruments on New Horizons Network with other spacewill take detailed measure- craft, it will take a year and a ments of Pluto and its moons. half for all of the information By photographing a surface to be radioed back to Earth. "This is a mission of delayed from multiple vantage points, scientists will be able to con- gratification," said Hal Weavstruct a topographic map. An er, the project scientist. instrument called a spectromeThe long work of analyzing ter will be able to identify some data, digesting the unexpected of the substances on the sur- and putting together a new unface of Pluto and Charon. derstanding of Pluto will take After the closest approach, years. New Horizons wil l p a ss through the shadows of Pluto Kuiper Belt bound

Still, there w a s From wire reports

• The picturescomingbackfrom Pluto arestill a bit fuzzy—but just youwait

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A4 T H E BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

Bases

purpose. Legislators still fear

Continued from A1 Counting spouses and kids, about 40,000 people — a third of the county's popula-

and districts. They' re also skeptical that the reductions will save much money: The last one, in 2005, focused on strategic goals rather than budget cutting and ended up costing $35 billion to implement. "Congress will not go along

base dosures in their states

tion — would vanish, unless

they found other employment nearby. CSIS Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative via The Washington Post

Satellite images show the growing construction of facilities on Fiery Cross Reef in the Sprstly Islands by the Chinese military; scientists are concerned about damage to the environment from construction on the reefs.

"We' re on pins and nee-

dles," McLaughlin said. "To not create a Detroit-like sce- with a BRAC round until they nario, we cannot lose soldiers.

Reefs

Arabian Sea and many other areas. The Philippines and

Continued from A1 Today, seven such coral reefs are being turned into islands, with harbors and landing strips, by the Chinese military. Not only is this work threatening China's relations

Vietnam have erected outposts

with the United States and

several other Pacific nations, but it is also destroying a rich ecological network, according to McManus. "This is devastating," he said. "It's the worst thing that

has happened to coral reefs in our lifetime." U.S. officials estimate that the Chinese military

that beyond military uses the created islands will improve

China's capabilities for "search and rescueat sea,fishing security, d i saster

p r evention

and relief, and meteorological monitoring." While China's construction

has raised tensions in the region, it is also provoking questions about how long these

bases will be able to withstand the severestorms thatare frequent in that part of the Pacific

Ocean. "You can build an island if you do it right," said Robert Dalrymple, a professor of civil engineering at Johns Hopkins University. "But it is not clear

these islands will be permanent unless they can deal with

erosion. They will wash away, just like putting sand on East Coast beaches." Artificial islands have been

built for coastal resorts or airports in shallow waters off Florida, the Caribbean, the

CHINA ' ong Kong

stilts — in the South China

Sea in the past two decades in an effort to support territorial claims. But the Chinese efforts

the Philippines are surrounded by coral reefs that help break up the force of waves traveling across the ocean. But the

300

— many ofthem on wooden

+<

dwarf these projects. At some of the new islands, the Chinese are building concrete breakwaters hundreds of feet long to hold the sand in place. Dalrymple has visited construction projects in China and saysthe country clearly has the engineering expertise to handle huge amounts of dredged material. Other ex-

has built up the shallow trop- perts say that the Chinese are ical seafloor with reclaimed working quickly, rather than sand, steel, wood and concrete carefully, to create the artifibarriers to create 2,000 acres cial islands. "The engineering feats are of new territory. Chinese officials have said incredible in terms of speed," that "rigorous" testing is done said Patrick Cronin, a senior before any construction to pro- analyst at the Center for a tect the reef environment and

0

new bases in the Spratlys don' t have that protection.

Other ocean scientists worry about the effect of dredging and island creation on surrounding marine life. The Spratlys contain major fishing grounds for several Asian nations, and the local marine

So uth China Sea PHILIPPINES

biodiversity has been on the

BIIUSEI

decline for the past two decades, according to a 2013 study by Australian and Chinesescientists. The report, which appeared

~l

ps+ INDONESIA The Washington Post

in the journal Conservation

Biology, found that coral cover had declined to about 20 per• A new dock and gun em- cent (from about 60 percent) within the Spratly archipelaplacements on Gaven Reef. • Expansion on H u ghes go over the preceding 10 to 15 Reef from an outpost on stilts years. "Climate change has afmeasuring less than a tenth of fectedthese reefsfarlessthan New American Security, a an acre to a 380-acre multilevel coastal development, pollution, Washington think tank. Cro- facility and harbor for both ci- overfishing, and destructive nin has been briefed on the vilian and military ships. fishing practices," according to island-building by senior U.S. • Dredging at M i s c hief the report, which warned that officials. "They have not only Reef, which lies within what the declines in the reefs were doubled the land mass ... but the Philippines considers its "unfolding as China's research (also) have created forward economic zone with floating and reef-managementcapacistaging bases of both military naval docking stations. ty are rapidly expanding." and civilian use. Dredging ma• New piers, access channel Greg Mitchell ,aprofessorof chines didn't just build islands, and possible landing strip at marine ecology at the Scripps but also dug deeper shipping Subi Reef. Institution of Oceanography channels." • Desalination pumps and in La Jolla, California, reThe results can been seen a concrete plant on Johnson searchesPacific reef ecosysin unclassified satellite images South Reef. tems. He says the new Chinese While the artificial islands dredging and installation of posted by the Asian Maritime Transparency Initiative at the seem solid in the satellite im- concrete piers are probably Center for Strategic and In- ages, the Pacific Ocean isn' t destroying what's left of the ternational Studies, another always peaceful, says Steve El- local ecology. think tank. Time-lapse images gar, a senior scientist in ocean "If the islands had been left show coral rings in an azure physics and engineering at the alone,they would probably be sea being filled in by white Woods Hole Oceanograph- very diverse," Mitchell said. sand dredged from the near- ic Institute in W oods Hole, "But all of the fishing fleets by seafloor, followed by the Massachusetts. from Asia have been there arrival of construction cranes, He wonders how long they hunting everything from sea workers and then multistory will survive the wind-driven cucumbers and giant clams buildings. waves, some as high as 30 feet, and sharks for fins. My guess Among the projects de- that develop far out at sea and is the biodiversity has been scribed on the CSIS site are: then roll in with no landmass altered already. But now, they • An a irstrip a lmost two to stop them. Such rocky isare burying the ecosystem and miles long on Fiery Cross Reef. lands as Hawaii, Guam and destroying it." • Radar facilities and a helipad on Cuarteron Reef.

We' ll feel every soldier we lose." That feeling is manifest at

is worse," said John Conger, the acting undersecretary of defense for installations and

the nation's 30 largest military installations — all of

environment,at a conference

which are steeling themselves

wave of hollowed-out bases,

for an economic punch in the gut, as the Defense Department works through its biggest drawdown since the af-

Conger thinks, will make his point the hard way. "It's going

termath of the Cold War. And this time, the pain is

the BRAC round." Some installations might even benefit from a BRAC

exacerbated by politicians. W ith

p e r mission f r o m

Congress, the Defense Department has gone through a Base Realignment and Closure process five times since 1988, helping it more efficient-

in late June. The upcoming

to make it dear that this dy-

namic is more painful than

round, like Fort Benning in Georgia, a large base that could pick up extra troops if the Army is allowed to consolidate. But if the budget caps set by sequestration aren't lift-

ed, negative impacts could be of rapid change. Over the past more widespread. That's why few years, while budgeting for even Fort Benning, fearful of troop levels to decline from losing the units it has, is waga wartime high of 570,000 in ing a campaign to avert the 2012 to 450,000 by the end of worst. "Our whole focus is to go fiscal year 2017 — and possibly 420,000 if budget caps ar- and attack sequestration and en't lifted — lawmakers have make it so blindingly obvibeen reluctant to grant the ous that nobody can stand it," military's request for the abili- says Gary Jones, executive ty to close bases. vice president for military afInstead, they will stay in op- fairs at the Columbus, Georeration, costing billions a year gia, Chamber of Commerce. to maintain (and without the To that end, they' re placing possibility of being sold off billboards and encouraging for re-use, which might give people to write their legislathe county a chance to bring tors through a dedicated webly allocate forces after periods

in other business). Ultimate-

ly, less funding remains for personnel attheplaceswhere they' re actually needed. "They may say, we' re going to take 10,000 people from this base, but we can't close

the base," said Tim Ford, chief executive of the Association of D efense C ommunities,

site, GrowBenning.corn. And in what's become standard

practice for military communities fearing cuts, they' ve re-

tained lobbyists — Columbus chose the Spectrum Group, which has picked up a bunch of retired high-ranking military officers recently to take drawdown-related work.

"We are fighting a strategic which advocates for the people who live around military battle," Jones said. "And the bases. eYou keep the base

strategic battle is fought in the

there, but you hollow out the halls of Washington. So we mission. So you have a big need to make sure to make hole in your community." In Fort Drum's case, the base could end up with a skeleton crew to keep the lights on. With a BRAC round, it could be used for some other

sure electedleadership has

all the support they need." For conservative Georgia, that means giving legislators the political cover they need to vote for higher budgets.

F4

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Heightenedimagination for smell may drivefood cravings,weight gain By Melisse Heely

this week at the annual meeting of the Society for Ingestive Close your eyes and imag- Behavior, Yale researchers exine the smell of baking bread, panded on ongoing research of a pungent curry dish, of aimed at understanding when popcorn at the movies or a and how people choose to eat bouquet of freshly cut tea food when they are not — or roses. are no longer — hungry. If these prompts send you In recently published reinto swoons of olfactory de- search, some of the same scilight, there's a good chance entists found that a specific that upon opening your eyes, p attern of activation in t h e an obese person could be star- brain following the first sip ing back at you in the mirror. of a delicious milkshake can, New research has found given certain circumstances, that compared with people of distinguish between people normal weight, obese people who will go on to gain weight conjure up more vivid images and those whose weight will of aromas. The ability to ex- remain stable. periencesensory fantasies so In the latest study, researchrichly, said researchers at Yale ers at Yale's John B. Pierce School of Medicine, may make Laboratory had participants some people more vulnerable complete a series of quesLos Ange(es Times

Medicaid

Twenty-nine states and the District of Columbia haveexpanded their Continued from A1 GOP governors are seek- Medicaid programs through the Affordable CareAct. ing ways to put a conserva• Adopted the Medicaid expansion tive stamp on expanding coverage. Indiana's experiment may provide a glimpse

viduals with a higher body mass index reported an ability

at where the health law is headed in some parts of the

to more vividly imagine odors

tablished that obese individ-

country. "There are a lot of people who are looking really closely at what Indiana is doing," said Matt Salo, exec-

uals experience more food

utive director of the Nation-

cravings than those of normal weight. While the latest re-

al Association of Medicaid Directors.

associated with food, and to

conjure up sensory images of nonfood odors as well. Research had already es-

Arkansas and Iowa, have implemented cost-sharing

methods, it appears to suggest that the ability to create vivid mental images stimulates and

requirements in their Med-

maintains food cravings triggered by the thought, smell and sight of food.

cials in Utah, Arizona, Ohio and elsewhere are review-

icaid expansions. GOP offiing the idea.

If efforts to aid i ndividu-

The Bulletin he expected to

als' weight loss are to be suc-

a report that found Waste to Energy had inflated its claims about potential energy buyers and that the firm the county

hired to conduct an independent review of the project had

several connections to Lutz and his renewable energy company. "I guess there's a chance we

"What we' ve found is that our

can't pull this together in time,"

cause of the project's lucrative potential. Waste to Energy proposes using a recycle conversion process that would

landfill is relatively small and

Schimke said. "But that'd be a shame." Reporter: 541-617-7829,

gas in which developers line

beastes@bendbullet in.corn

Issues

nished the 2015 session came

es with revenue from a gas tax increase can occur until after

with the arid climate we have, it doesn't crank out the kind of

after lawmakers failed to pass Continued from A1 a major transportation funding package that lawmakers, Education business leaders and transA strong, rebounding econ- portation officials say Oregon omy led by Oregon's metro ar- desperately needs. eas brought around $2 billion The narrative that r u l ed more revenue for the 2015-17 much of the session started budget. But the extra money

didn't make for easy politics as lawmakers rushed to pass an education budget early this session. House and Senate Republi-

when Democrats used their

Noam N. Levey, Jon Schleuss /

Sources Kaiser Family Foundation

Los AngelesTimes via TNS

icaid program is ... in need of Several states have since fixing," said Vernita Todd, chief abandoned the cost-sharing Obama adm i n istration, executive of Heart City Health strategy. Others concluded it which must sign off on Center, which operates two was too expensive to adminnew cost-sharing require- clinics in Elkhart serving pa- ister for the poorest patients, ments, was open to more tients who are uninsured or on though many states still charge proposals from Republican Medicaid. Todd, like many offi- small premiums and copays for governors. "We welcome cials who work with Medicaid, low-income adults and children the conversation," she said, has labored to get patients to whose incomes are above the calling Indiana's Medicaid checkups and other preventive federal poverty level. plan "a big deal and a very care. "What we havelearned is Instead of premiums, the important deal." that our Medicaid population is Healthy Indiana Plan requires The stakes in these dis- not really very health-literate," patients to contribute to a cussions are high. Medicaid she said. health savings account used for now provides coverage to For years, states have tried their medical expenses. Monthnearly 1 in 4 Americans at to nudge patients to make bet- ly contributions, based on inan annual cost to taxpayers terchoices.One strategy has come,range from $1to$27. of more than $500 billion. been to make Medicaid look If patients make the contriThe program is growing more like private insurance, butions, medical care is essenrapidly, thanks largely to charging premiums, copays tially free. People can even lowthe 2010 health care law, and penalties for emergency er their contributions by getting which provides federal aid room visits. recommendedpreventive care, to states to expand MedicBut billing poor patients, such as cancer screenings. aid to low-income, work- even in small amounts, often If patients don't contribute, ing-age adults. (Medicaid drives them from the doctor' s they lose dental and vision historically served poor office, studies show. coverage and must pay up children, mothers and the Enrollment in one of Ore- to $8 to see a doctor or fill a disabled.) gon's Medicaid plans plum- prescription. "The Healthy Indiana Plan Though the coverage has meted by nearly half after the provided a vital safety net, state in 2003 began charging ... is aspirational," said Brian Medicaid faces challenges. monthly premiums up to $20 Neale, the governor's health Patients often fare worse and copays up to $5. Many pa- policy director. "We believe than p r ivately i n sured tients later reported skipping that individuals, if offered the Americans. And 21 states treatment. opportunity, will make the haverefusedto expand their Other states, induding Flori- right choices." programs, citing concerns da, Kentucky, New Hampshire As of July 1, more than about Medicaid's effective- and Wisconsin, saw similar 297,000 people had enrolled; ness and cost. declines when they raised pre- about 72percent were making "For us to be honest, we miums in c h i ldren's health the required contributions, achave to say that the Med- programs. cording to the state.

March, The Bulletin published

ticularly patient with Lutz be-

HAWAII

vices Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell said the

cessful, said the study's lead author, Dr. Barkha Patel, re-

inject steam under the landfill up to do something." surface,therefore speeding The county's fast-approachup waste decomposition. The ing August deadline isn't the methane gasproduced from first hurdle Waste to Energy the process would be convert- has hit while trying to line up ed into pipeline-quality gas, the Knott Landfill project. In

have "boots on the ground" in six to eight weeks, could not be methanol or ethanol, dependreached for comment. ing on which market was most "At this point, I' ll personally attractive. M or e t r a ditional start watching this close," said waste-to-energy projects harDeschutes County Commis- vest methane gas and run it sion chairman Tony DeBone. through combustible engines, "Either we' re moving or we turning it into electricity. "We' ve been looking at need to unplug and look at other possibilities." a gas-to-energy project for The county has been par- a long time," Schimke said.

ALASKA

the 2016 elections. "I think we' ll have to see

once peoplerestafterthe session and see if people are interested in bringing it back," Kotek told reporters just after

the finish of the session Monday night.

Z

control of both chambers to Sen. Jeff K r use, R-Roseeffectively create the low-car- burg, said he doubts there will

s

bon fuel standard, a fuel man-

be any appetite for a vote on date that seeks to decrease a bill that raises the gas tax

greenhouse gas emissions 10 during an election year. percent over 10 years through rare alliance with the Oregon biofuel blends and a carbon Social Education Association as they credit market system starting Democrats also passed maboth called for more money this year through 2025. jor social legislation they say for the State School Fund, The program was initial- will help working residents which pays for K-12 education ly approved in 2009 but was who are struggling while in Oregon. slated to expire at the end of businesses are booming, but Democratic budget writ- this year, before the required walked away from the session ers laid out a f r amework changes took effect. Senate without addressing bills that

Z

ass + os 0

e

e

0

cans formed an informal and

early this session that would

Bill 324 was a bill to remove

give schools $7.2 billion from the expiration date and allow the general fund and lottery the program to begin. money. In r apid-fire succession "We are balancing in terms in the first month of sesof priorities, and I think that' s the fundamental thing that we

sion, Democrats passed the

wage in Oregon. Republicans opposed many of the efforts, which they said

were costly mandates that will make Oregon an unpopular

House floor in March, before

12 years. Knopp said the stat-

er bumped thenumber up to lawmakersvoted 31-29 to send $7.373 billion after a rosy eco- the bill to Brown's desk.

ute should be eliminated and filed a bill in the waning days

nomic forecast.

After months of dormancy,

"It's the best education bud- a small group of lawmakers

get the state's ever had even though I still don't think it' s

started meeting to negotiate

a package that involved reenough to actually address pealing the low-carbon fuel the needs we have in edustandard and replacing it with cation," Rep. Peter Buckley, a new program that sought D-Ashland, and the state's co- to curb carbon emissions at head budget writer alongside least as much over the coming Devlin, said in an interview decade. Monday. As momentum grew toward Oregon will also become the a potential deal in the Senate, second state in the country, fol- 19 House Democrats penned lowing Tennessee,to create a a letter to Brown promising to program offering community withhold support from a deal collegefor free.The program if it involved a repeal of the will rely heavily on a require- low-carbon fuel standard. ment that recent high school After one public hearing on graduates apply for federal aid, the deal, Brown and legislawhich is expected to bring a tive leaders called off all talks sharpspike in federalmoney of a transportation package to the state. this session, leaving in place the low-carbon standard and Transportation casting doubt that a package A black m ar k t h a t t a r - to fix roads and bolster bridg-

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6lylein tSe c5piril of/Ae Sesl sr s s r

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sought to raise the minimum

low-carbon fuel s tandard, place to locate a business. want to emphasize," Sen. Rich- which the state says may inRiding support from maard Devlin, D-Tualatin, said in crease the cost of a gallon of jority Democrats, legislators January while unveiling the gas between 4 and 19 cents passed a bill that requires most proposed budget. over 10 years, and two other businesses to offer paid time Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, contentious bills almost entire- off for employees and another became the leading Republi- ly along party lines. that would ensure all workers can voice opposing Devlin's R epublicans called t h e have accessto a state-manframework ashe called for$8 standard a p o o rl y w r i t ten aged retirement account, startbillion for education. Senate law that even some environ- ing July 1, 2017. Republicans proposed paying mentalists question, and they Early this session, lawmakfor anincrease by harvesting refused tooffer support for a ers handed Brown a m ajor more timber on state lands roads funding package unless win by passing a bill that will and ending a t a x-sharing Democrats repealed the new automatically register eligible agreement between the state standard, branding it a "hid- voters. Republicans said resand counties, which Demo- den gas tax" that wouldn't pay idents should take initiative crats said wasn't a realistic for roads. to register, while Democrats "We are about to spend the called registering to v ote proposal. Absent support from Re- money of Oregonians when an unnecessary barrier to publicans, Democrats in both they go to the gas pump. Not voting. chambers passed a $7.255 bil- one dime for a road. Not one Lawmakers also voted to lion budget they conceded was dime for a bridge. And to what double the statute of limitatoo small but was the best they e nd?" McLane said on t h e tions on serious sex crimes, to could do at the time. They lat-

MASS. CONN. R.l. NJ. DEL. MD . D.C.

Health and Human Ser-

tionnaires that asked them to searchers will need to tease cues, even when they' re not imagine visual and odor cues. out the factors that make cerhungry. The subjects then rated the tain individuals particularly In a study being presented vividness of these cues. Indi- prone to overeating.

Continued from A1 Lutz, who in February told

• • • • • • •

Several states, induding

searchneeds to be fleshed out with brain scanning and other

than others to following food

Landfill

Medicaiedxpansions

of session that would have eliminated the statute of lim-

itations altogether on major sex crimes. The bill appeared as lawmakers were in a final push to leave the building, so it

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.corn/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

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OCri e a r • Bike paths, disgol c f, skate park proposed

a series of crushed rock and

By Scott Hammers

are intended to serve the wid-

architect with the district, said district staff has combined

The Bulletin

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.For more information, visit gncc.ni fc.gov/nnicc/ informntion/lnrgefire mnp.nspx 1. Sugar Loaf • Acres: 4,740 • Containment: 98% • Cause: Lightning

asphalt pathways winding across the property. The paths

concepts developed at earlier public meetings to create the

The Bend Park & Recreation District is hosting a meeting

about 2t/a acres would be developed on both the north and

from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. this evening at Sky View Middle

south ends of the park, with re-

School to share the newest

A playground would be built on the south end of the park, while parking would be on the north side off Egypt Drive. M uch of theparkw ould

for the site. A youth-oriented

remain in near-natural conditions, Figurski said, with

corner.

version of the master plan for Rockridge Park, a nearly 40acre parcel located just south

of Sky View and Lava Ridge Elementary School. Jim Figurski, a landscape

newest plan.

Small grassy areas totaling

strooms adjacent to both areas.

OUR STUDENTS

ProposedRockridge Park master plan • Restroom • Nature play area Wild side play area

er neighborhood, he said, by providing a safe route for kids walking or biking to and from the two nearby schools. Much of the interior of the property would be dedicated to a dirt bike path with bumps and other skill elements, one of two such paths proposed

Local residents will have another chance to weigh in on the latest plans for a proposed park on Bend's northeast side.

2. Corner Creek • Acres: 27166 • Containment: 15% • Cause: Lightning 3. Radar • Acres: 1,037 • Containment: 80% • Cause: Human

an a in S a e

disc golfcourseisplanned for the north end of the property,

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Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Publicsafety officialstalk detox facility

Educational newsandactivities, and local kids andtheir achievements. School notes andsubmissioninfo, B2

en o o erscras course

By Clnire Withycombe

4. Bunker Hill Complex • Acres: 388 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Lightning

The Bulletin

on i ia mar ein

In Deschutes County, the

hospital emergency room and the jail can become

default landing spots for people who are intoxicated or suffering a mental health crisis. Local public safety officialsTuesday discussed the apparent need for a dedicated facility, or sober

5. West Fork • Acres: 150 • Containment: 0% • Cause: Lightning

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Arrest in forgery, theft case A 41-year-old Bend man was arrested Tuesday on suspicion of stealing more than $50,000 from his employer by forging checks to himself, according to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. The sheriff's office began investigating after officials at Jack Robinson 8 Sons Construction reported they believedanemployeehad stolen a largeamount of money, according to a news release. William John Walton III was arrested on 48 counts of first-degree forgery and onecount of first-degree aggravated theft, according to the news release. Hewas being held Tuesdayevening in the Deschutes County jail.

Garage damaged dy lightning fire A lightning strike sparked a fire Monday afternoon that damaged the roof of a garage/ shop north of La Pine, according to the LaPine Rural Fire Protection District. No onewas injured. Firefighters responded to 16175Park Drive around 4:45 p.m. and found fire on the two-story detached building, according to a news release from the fire district. The owners, who were at home,told firefighters they sawa flash, heard thunder and went outside and found lightning had struck a ponderosa pine tree, lighting it on fire. The top half of the tree broke off and pierced the roof of the garage/shop, catching the roof on fire. La Pine firefighters stopped the fire, containing the damageto the building's exterior, according to the news release. Theroof received minor damage. The department does not estimate damage costs, the news release stated. Nore briefing, BS

Deschutes County Sheriff Shane Nelson estimated that a large majority of inmates in the jail either struggle with mental illness or substance abuse

problems. That trend caused the jail to add an area with six

cells dedicated to inmates with mental health and

medical needs last year. Following the death of an inmate from a metham-

phetamineoverdose in December, jail officials are seeking ways to provide more consistent medical

care. Countywide, more law

enforcementofficersare being trained in crisis intervention, which empha-

RyanBrennecke /The Bulletin

Jon Miller, co-founder of the digital marketing firm Marketo, gives a presentation on marketing strategies to students participating in the

sizes techniques to de-escalate potentially criminal

BendPoly course on digital marketing Tuesday morning at the 1001Tech Center.

situations.

By Abby Spegmnn The Bulletin

Students crowded around a conferencetable fullofw a-

ter bottles and laptops and notebooks Tuesday morning, the dresscode ranging from blazers to hoodies. At the

head of the table, Jon Miller, co-founder of the digital marketing firm Marketo, was telling them how to succeed in the business: Be "NICE."

That is: a numerical, intui-

tive, content-creating, execution machine. This was day one of BendPoly, a six-week crash course on digital marketing for students and recent graduates

billed as a "vocational bridge" between higher education and the tech industry. Found-

er Bruce Cleveland said the program set out to augment, notreplace,a collegeorgrad-

uate degree, giving students hands-on experience with digital marketing software. In

the San Francisco area and

the final two weeks, students

have liberal arts backgrounds. These are creative,

will design and run marketing campaigns. "It's a team sport when you build (tech) companies. You need people who can build products but you also need people who can market them and sell them," said Cleveland, who splits time between

The idea of a dedicated facility received support

Bend. Many of the 16 students

from the members of the

articulate, critical thinkers

looking for practical training to enter the tech world, where salaries can start at $70,000 to

ities are operating or have been approved elsewhere in Oregon.

SeeBendPoly /B2

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Redmond Rod 5 GunClub KSTHKTIXMD needs permit before move WANTS TO SODY CONTOURING CLINIC

for the site.

hurdle to clear before it can

"We have everything laid out and all the ranges are platted, and (where the) direction of fire is going to be," Bill Layton, club president, said

move into its new location.

Tuesday. "All that's resolved,

The club hopes to build rifle and pistol ranges at the ranch as well as locations

but until we get the (permit) we can't so much as drive a

The Bulletin

The Redmond Rod & Gun

Club has big plans for Halligan Ranch but has one more

for skeet shooting and trap

shooting. The new site could also have a practice archery range and allow cowboy action shooting, which has targets and props, typically of a Western town.

The changes require permit approval from Deschutes County. A hearings officer has scheduled a public hearing for July 21 to review the permit application and plans

New location of the

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current location north of Redmond Airport. Members have

leased the property from the county, which owns it, for decades. The club began looking for a new home after finding out in 2008 that the county was considering other uses for its land. The lease

enforcement. Similar facil-

$100,000. Nearly all received scholarships to cover BendPoly's $2,500 tuition.

By Ted Shorack

Local Public Safety Coordinating Committee, including representatives from thedefense bar,parole and probation and law

Pete Smith/The Bulletin

was extended by the county several times as the club looked for a new site.

SeeGun club/B5

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B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

E VENT TODAY BEND FARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.corn or 541-408-4998. ALIVE AFTER 5: QUARTERFLASH: The '80s pop-rock band plays the Alive After 5 concert series, with the Soul Benders; 5 p.m.; Old Mill District, HotPond Loop,offSW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.aliveafter5bend. corn or 541-383-3825. MUSIC ONTHE GREEN: Featuring Carrie Cunningham andthe Six Shooters; 6 p.m.; SamJohnson Park, SW15th Street and SWEvergreen Avenue, Redmond; 541-923-5191. THE METROPOLITANOPERA SUMMER ENCORE:"LA TRAVIATA": A showing of the 2012 live

performanceof Verdi's tragic opera; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. MCDOUGALL:ThePortland blues-folk artist performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www. mcmenamins.c orn or541-382-5174. DIRTYBOURBON RIVER SHOW: The folk-blues and jazz band from New Orleans performs; 9

ENDA R p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. ALLISONBENCAR:The Americana artist from Nashville, Tennessee, performs, with Los Colognes; 10 p.m.; TheAstro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.corn or 541-388-0116.

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click ’Add Event" at least 10 daysbefore publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly.Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0351.

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THIRSDAY BROOKSWOOD BICYCLE FEST 8tACTIVEHEALTHY TRANSPORTATIONCELEBRATION: Featuring bike and helmet safety

checks, safetycourse,groupride,

Submitted photo

bike registrations and more, live Death Cab For Cutie will perform in Bend for the fifth time at 6:30 music by Buck 'n the Dig gs from p.m. Thursday at Les Schwab Ampitheater. 5-7 p.m.; 4 p.m.; Brookswood Meadow Plaza, 19570 Amber Les Schwab Amphitheater, 322 SW childrensvisionfoundation or Meadow Drive, Bend; www. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. 541-330-3907. brookswoomeadowplaza.corn or 541-323-3370. bendconcerts.corn. EL SOLDE VERANO SUMMER MUNCHANDMUSIC: CRACKER: TEXTILE ARTLECTURE:Learn how FLAMENCO TOUR: Seattle-based The alt-rock band performs, with avid quilter, Cynthia deVillemarette, Flamenco dancer Savannah Jaime Wyatt; 5:30 p.m.; DrakePark, discovered mid-century textile Fuentes will perform, with Southern 777 NW RiversideBlvd.,Bend;www. designer, Harwood Steiger, Spain's singer, Jose Manuel Pere, c3events.corn or 541-389-0995. whose silk-screened fabrics are and guitarist Bobby deSofia; 8 now col lected by many;7 p.m.; DEATHCABFORCUTIE: The p.m.; $23, $15 for students, $8 for alternative-rock band performs, with $5; Bend Senior Center,1600 SE children, $35 for VIP; 2nd Street Built to Spill; 6:30 p.m.; $37 plus fees; Reed Market Road, Bend; www. Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave.,

BendPoly

tech world, surviving the boom tomers may feel overwhelmed. "Clearly, being loud isn't the and bust and starting Marketo Continued from B1 to create easy-to-buy and use right strategy," Miller said. Danny Kim, 34, is heading marketing software. The comMeanwhile, there's more into his final year at Universi- pany'sfirst product managed sourcesofinformation on custy of Oregon's concurrent J.D./ paid Google search results, tomers — think cellphones that MBA program and is looking helping dients test different report their location, Twitter to build a wide set of skills. ads and determine how much feeds that report whom they Right now, digital marketing is it would cost to get the most know and what they think. his weakest link. dicks. Miller said the goal is to use "I know bits and pieces of It was a good but not great that information not to trick it but I didn't know how it all product, Miller said. "If you people into buying something came together, "he said,adding want to win, you really need but as a way to craft a more he hopes to fill in the gaps be- great." relevant message. Kim, t he tween "search engine optimiThe company continued to J.D./MBA student, asked about zation"" and "power bloggers." develop and grow, as did its marketing tools that are so efJenny Palm, 31, just got her sales; it went public in 2013. ficient they can be intrusive. MBA from UO (students from Now, in a crowded field com- What if a marketer can read the the program make up about peting with the likes of Oracle tea leaves and know a woman a third of Bendpoly's students and IBM, Miller said Marketo is pregnant before her family this summer). She said she has tried to position itself as does2 mostly learned about tradition- software built by marketers for Miller said marketers can' t al marketing in school. marketers. presume to know everything "We don't have practical apOver the 20th century,he about customers, that there is plications for it," she said. "It' s said, marketing has moved a line between relevant and theoretical versus practical." from selling a product to selling creepy. He added another "C" Back in d ass, Miller told a brand, a message, a cause and to his "NICE" formula: "Don' t students he studied physics in a relationship between custom- be creepy." college before going to busi- er and company. From FaceReporter:541-61 7-7837, ness school and entering the book ads to email blasts, cusaspegman®bendbulle it n.corn

Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.corn or 541-312-9626. "RIFFTRAX LIVE:SHARKNADO 2:THE SECOND ONE":Featuring a showing of the film with comedic commentary; 8 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. SAMUEL: Theblues guitarist from Seattle performs; 8 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881. CHRISMORAN AND TRAVIS NELSON:Featuring the Seattle comedians; 8 p.m .;$8 plusfeesin advance, $10at the door; TheSummit Saloon 8 Stage,125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.corn or 541-419-0111.

Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030.

FRIDAY

MILL QUARTERBLOCK PARTY: Featuring music, drinks, food, an arcade and more; 6:30 p.m.; ATLAS Cider-Old Mill Marketplace, 550 SW Industrial Way, Bend; 541-390-8096. ELKS VS. MEDFORD: The BendElks will be playing against Medford in a two-day tournament; 6:35 p.m.; $6, box seats start at $8; Vince Genna Stadium, SEFifth Street and Roosevelt Avenue, Bend; www. bendelks.corn or 541-312-9259..

SISTERSARTISTMARKETPLACE: Featuring art, crafts, food, a beerwine garden, live entertainment and more; 11 a.m.; downtown Sisters, 350 CascadeSt., Sisters;

www.centraloregonshows.cornor 541-420-0279. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locall y madegoodsand more;2 p.m .;

BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 2 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.corn or 541-408-4998. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jane Kirkpatrick will present her novel, "A Light in the Wilderness"; 4:30 p.m.; Paulina SpringsBooks,252W .Hood Ave., Sisters; www.paulinasprings. corn or 541-549-0866. BEND SUMMERFESTIVAL: Featuring live music, street vendors, kids activities, art and more; 5 p.m.; Downtown Bend, BondandWall streets, Bend; www.c3events.corn or 541-389-0995.

SCHOOL NOTES COLLEGE NOTES

to the spring 2015dean's list at Eastern Oregon

James Reid,of Bend, was namedto the spring 2015 dean's list at the University of Arkansas at

Veronica Hemmerich, Haley Rygg and Alexis Temple.

University: Austin Boswell, Amy Freeman,

Little Rock.

Marita Therese Palacio,of Bend, was named to the spring 2015dean's list at Oklahoma State University. Jeanna Wenger,of Bend, recently graduated from The College ofNewJersey. The following students from Bendwere named

MILITARY NOTES Chase L. Antony and Nathan M. Moore, both

of Bend, were named tothe dean's list for the second semester 2014-2015 at theVirginia Military Institute.

How to submit

Story ideas

Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academic achievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Pleasesubmit a photo.)

School news:It emsandannouncements of general interest. Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: news@bendbulletin.corn Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Phone: 541-383-0354 Email: aspegman@bendbulletin.corn

Contact: 541-633-2117, youth@bendbulletin.corn

Mail:P. O.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708 Other schoolnotes:College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117,bulletin©bendbulletin.corn

1VEWSOF RECORD Odem MedoRoad. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was reported at 3:20 p.m. June29, in the The Bulletin will update items in the 700 block of SWFifth Street. Police Log whensuch arequest Theft —A theft was reported and is received. Anynewinformation, arrests were madeat 8 p.m. June29, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more in the 900 block of SW11th Street. information, call 541-633-2117. Burglary —A burglary was reported at8:28 p.m.June29,inthe300 block of NW GreenwoodAvenue. BEND POLICE Vehicle crash —Anaccident was DEPARTMENT reported at12:55 p.m. June30, in the 200 block of SWEvergreen Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:08 Vehicle crash —Anaccident was p.m. June 21, in the300block of SE reported at 6:03 p.m. June30, in the Third Street. areaofS. U.S. Highway97and SW Theft —A theft was reported at 4:17 Odem MedoRoad. p.m.June24,inthe700 blockofSW Criminal mischief —Anact of Columbia Street. criminal mischief was reported at 7:08 Unlawful entry — Avehicle was p.m. June 30, in the1900 block of SW reported entered, items stolen and 33rd Street. arrests made at6:35 a.m. June 26, in Theft —A theft was reported at 8:50 the 2000 block of NE Full Moon Drive. p.m.June30,inthe300blockofNW Burglary —A burglary was reported Oak TreeLane. at8:47 p.m.June26,inthe2000 block DUII —Blaze JamesRay Blevins, 28, of NE Full Moon Drive. was arrested onsuspicion of driving Unlawful entry —Avehicle was under the influence of intoxicants at reported entered at 8:14a.m. June29, 10:54 p.m. June30, in the area ofU.S. in the 400 block of NWFlagline Drive. Highway97 and NW CanalBoulevard. Criminal mischief —Anact of Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan criminal mischief was reported at 6:25 arrest made at7:23 a.m. July 2, in the a.m. July1, in the1300 block of SW 61000 block of Country Club Drive. Obsidian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:08 Theft —A theft was reported at10:23 p.m. July 2, in the 20100block of a.m. July1, in the 300 block of NW Pinebrook Boulevard. Quince Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at10:32 REDMOND POLICE a.m. July1, in the 1200 block of SW Highland Avenue. DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at2:18 p.m. July 1, in the Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:49 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. p.m. Feb. 14, in thearea of NEFourth Vehicle crash —Anaccident was and NE LarchAvenueand anarrest reported at 6:45 p.m. July1, in the was made atnoonJuly 1. area of SWCanal Boulevard andSW Greens Boulevard. Burglary —A burglary and theft were reported at1:51 a.m. June22, in the Criminal mischief —Anact of 500 block of SWFourth Street and an criminal mischief was reported at 8:33 arrest was madeat11:14 p.m. June29. a.m. July 2, in the 1300block of SW DUII —Ryan Allen Pine, 22, was Obsidian Avenue. arrested on suspicion of driving under Theft —A theft was reported at 8:52 the influence of intoxicants at12:31 a.m. July 2, in the 700 block of NE a.m. June 29, in thearea of SEFifth Apache Circle. Street and SE Black Butte Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:55 Vehicle crash — An accident was a.m. July 2, in the 400block of SW reported at 7:55 a.m. June29, in the Black Butte Boulevard. 1600 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Criminal mischief —Anact of Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at criminal mischief was reported at 8:28 12:36 p.m. July 2, in the 800block of a.m.June29,inthe 300blockofSW SE VeteransWay. Second Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1:21 Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was p.m. July 2, in the 200 block of SW reported stolen at10:02 a.m. June29, Rimrock Way. in the 300 block of NWFir Avenue. Vehicle crash —Anaccident was Theft —A theft was reported at10:40 reported at 5:31 p.m. July 2, in the 500 a.m.June29,inthe700 blockofNW block of NW 19th Street. Negus Place. Criminal mischief —Anact of Vehicle crash — Anaccident was criminal mischief was reported at 8:29 reported at1:06 p.m. June29, in the p.m. July 2, in the 1100block of NW area of S. U.S.Highway 97and SW Fir Avenue.

POLICE LOG

Theft —A theft was reported and arrests were madeat 2:59 p.m. July 3, in the 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:28 p.m. July 3, in the 300 block of SW11th Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at3:51 p.m. July4, in the 2900 block of NW DogwoodAvenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:04 p.m. July 4, in the 400 block of NW Sixth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported andan arrest made at8:21 p.m. July 4, in the 2500 block of SW23rd Street. DUII —Carlos Ruelas-Orosco, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:23 a.m. July 5, in thearea of SW 27th Street and SW Obsidian Lane. Theft —A theft was reported at1:35 a.m. July 5, in the in the600 block of NE Butler Market Road. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 7:28 p.m. July 5, in the area of SW33rd Street andSW Volcano Avenue.

BEND FIRE RUNS July1 7:24 a.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 1925 NWMonterey Pines Drive. 2:28p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 2458 NW Crossing Drive. 4:25 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 60776 River BendDrive. 9:42 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 64931 Highland Drive. 23 —Medical aid calls.

REDMOND FIRE

RUNS

June 29 6:13p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, area of NWSeventh Street. 11:48 p.m.— Building fire, 423 NW Sixth St. 15 —Medical aid calls. June 30 5:33p.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 300 NWOakStreetLane. PRINEVILLE POLICE 5 —Medical aid calls. July1 DEPARTMENT 7 —Medical aid calls. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was Thursday reported entered at 4:38 p.m. July 6, in 7:45 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, the area of NEThird Street.

OREGON STATE POLICE Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 6:51 p.m. July 3, in the area of U.S. Highway 97andState Highway 31. DUII —Christopher Lee Thomasson, 38, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:16 p.m. July 3, in the area of State Highway 26near milepost 100. DUII —Justin Allen Chain, 25, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:26 a.m. July 4, in the area ofU.S. Highway 97 and 61st Street. DUII —Corey A. Monette, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:02 a.m. July 5, in the area ofU.S. Highway 20 and NEEighth Street. DUII —Jennifer Craig, 52, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 1:10 a.m. July 5, in the area ofU.S. Highway 97 near milepost137. DUII —Andreas Gregoriou, 37, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:56 a.m. July 6, in the area of NWFederal Street.

1810 SW23rd St. 13 —Medical aid calls. Friday 3:17 p.m. —Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, area ofSW Helmholtz Way. 4:44 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 3110 NE O'Neil Way. 9:39p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, area of NWNorse Drive. 13 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 3:50p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 648 NE ApacheCircle. 9:26p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 3800 SW Airport Way.

10 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 12:26 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, area of NWTetherow Road. 10:31 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 65920 61st St. 11:32 p.m. —Smokeodor reported, 8492 Seventh St. 3 — Medical aid calls.

I

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THIS HfKEKEHlYS ISSUE •

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WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

s ear in u scau oncamera, n i er orn By Kelly House

era, biologists came across

The Oregonian

tiny piles of scat that made it

Oregon celebrity wolf OR-7 and his mate are parenting a second litter of pups, and all

three of the yearlings born last spring have survived through the winter. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife

Service learned those details from a t r ail camera placed

near the Rogue Pack's den in southern Oregon's Rogue Riv-

in the state, a number that

doesn't include any pups born dear OR-7 and his mate are this past spring. It's unlikely any of OR-7's second-time parents. The newest pups have yet to make their three yearlings will leave the on-camera debut. pack this year to start a litter Elizabeth Ma t e rna , a of its own. Typically, young spokeswoman for the fish and wolves don't leave their family wildlife service in Oregon, until they are closer to 2 years called the second litter a good old. sign that OR-7 and his mate If and when the yearlings are healthy. do leave the Rogue Pack, they "It shows there's momentum

many pups are in OR-7 and his mate's new litter, and they may not know for some time.

The pack appears to have left theirden — a common behavior once pups are old enough to travel.

"They have rendezvous sites where they move the pups and the parents go hunt while the

pups stay put," Materna said. Although OR-7's GPS collar

won't have far to roam to find

has died, biologists can still er-Siskiyou National Forest. going with recovery of wolves more of their kind. The Keno track his movements using A time-lapse video pub- in Oregon," Materna said. pair is just miles away near signals from the radio collar lished today shows two of the "We're seeing wolves dispers- the California border. It's un- he is wearing. They hope to yearlings trotting and tussling, ing into new areas of the state known whether the pair is re-collar him or collar another looking healthy and playful. and growing more numerous." denning with a litter. member of the pack later this While retrieving the camThere are 77 known wolves Biologists are not sure how summer.

Junction City imposes Pendleton theater closing some water restrictions By Antonio Sierra

whole city block where Pendleton Cinemas is located. According to the Office of

East Oregonian

By Francesca Fontana

delivering notices of the re-

The (Eugene) Register-Guard

striction. Kaping said the majority of reactions have been

JUNCTION CITY — Like

many o f h i s n e i ghbors, positive. "You' re always going to Junction City resident Tom Endersby found th e n o tice have one or two (negative rehanging from his doorknob actions)," he said. Monday morning, alerting Resident L e Roy Ter rien him that the city had ordered

said that while the restriction

strict their outdoor water use in order to conserve the ca-

t he amount of water it w i l l conserve "won't amount to

homes and businesses to re- isn't particularly burdensome, pacity of municipal wells.

anything." Terrien said he al"With the weather we' ve ready waters his lawn every had now, it's pretty obvious other day. "All I' ve got to do is make that something was going to have to take place," Endersby it the odd days instead of the said. "This is Oregon; when even days," he said. we have weather like this, we Terrien said he believes just need to adjust." the majority of city residents Not long after receiving his a lready use l ess t han t h e notice, Endersby already had amount of water that the readjusted his sprinklers to 20 strictions require. minutes orfewer per area. "Anytime it wants to rain

again would be f ine," he joked. "moderate" water The emergency declared Monday follows a City Council meeting last week to discuss restricting water use because of low river flows that have

caused the groundwater for

"I can't see where they' re

gaining anything because

The r e strictions

i n clude

thinks the restrictions are too harsh. Campbell said she wishes watering was allowed every other day on weekends as well as on weekdays. "I would rather it w asn' t

quite so drastic," she said. Campbell tends her plants and a small garden of blueberries, tomatoes, lettuce and

tering on weekends. Further,

cucumbers, and she said she

residents whose addresses fears that they will not survive are even-numbered can only under the new restrictions. on

eve n -numbered

blockbusters, the Pendleton

Cinema marquee now depicts a short obituary. "That's 1981-2015."

all

fol ks.

Although the curtain is closing on the cinema, Goodwill's purchase of the property ensures the show's not

will Industries of the Colum-

over for the Southwest First

the East Oregonian. Humphrey said he' ll miss the happy faces streaming

an interview request from

out of the theater after a film

ends, but the long drive times it took to oversee his theaters

were taking a toll. After eight years on the After D estiny T h eatres market, Humphrey said the bought Pendleton Cinema Pendleton property was sold in 1994, Humphrey said he Thursday and screened its looked repeatedly into uplast film the same day. grading the theater. Each Humphrey not only sold time, the plans didn't pan out the theater, but also the as economically feasible. Hermiston and The Dalles.

ing the restrictions to ensure

there's enough water available for domestic use and emergencies.

Portland shooting —Police in Portland saidayoung manwas shot multiple times but is expected tosurvive gunfire that also sent a bullet into the backpack of a 66-year-old woman who hadjust alighted from a bus. In astatement, police said their gang enforcement team is investigating theTuesday evening shooting in northeast Portland. Police didn't find a victim at theshooting scene but about15 minutes after the gunfire, ayoung manin his lateteens arrived at a hospital with multiple gunshot wounds. Apolice spokesmansaid thevictim is a known gangassociate and isn't cooperating with the investigation. About an hourafter the shooting, the 66-year-old womancalled 911to say she hadbeenwalking after getting off a transit bus whenshesaw oneman chasinganother,heardgunshotsandthoughtsomeonewas trying to take herbackpack. Officers took alook at the packandfound it had beenhit by a bullet. Police are looking for oneyoung man. TrOOperS Cleared in ShOOting —Authorities said two Oregon State Police troopers weredeemedjustified in the fatal shooting of an assault suspect in Grants Pass.Josephine County District Attorney Ryan Mulkins determinedMondaythat GregorSmyth and Heather West were justified underOregon law intheir use of deadly force against Robert Box onMay29. Smythand West hadbeencalled to Box's housefollowing a report that Boxhadassaulted his wheelchair-bound daughter. Mulkins in anewrelease stated that Boxhad walked close to the officers with a loadedhandgun in his pocket, then pulled it out andpointed it at them.Smyth andWest fired atotal of 11 rounds at Box.Boxwastaken to Asante Three Rivers Medical Center, where he later died. UO StudentS eSCape fire —Three University of Oregon students managed toescape unharmedafter a two-alarm fire broke out in a Eugene home.EugeneSpringfield Fire officials said the fire occurred Monday night in athree-story building. Thefire appeared to be limited to the third floor andattic. Student JaredBrandon said hehadbeen making dinner when apasser-by knocked onthe window andtold him the housewas onfire. Brandon said he grabbed his computer anda roommate's guitar anddarted out of the house.All occupants made it out of the house bythe time crews arrived. Thefire wascontrolled about 20 minutes later. Battalion ChiefJeff Kronser said the students would be displacedfor at least one night. From wire reports

An Expanded Need-To-Know Guideto Local Schools This handy school reference guide contains a wide variety of comprehensive information about Central Oregon — perfect for new families to the area or current residents whose children are entering a new school. It's more than just a directory of year-round info about private and public schools. The magazine will feature several articles on various school-related topics. Additionally, school boundary maps for each district will help parents navigate what subdivision feeds which school.

"They won't last," Campbell

More guidance,more information, more fun!

HURRY! Advertising Deadline is Monday, JULY 2r

restriction and does not see it as an inconvenience. Having lived in Orange County, California, before moving to Oregon in the late 1970s, Southey

W o r k s Dir e ctor said he has experience with

restriction is hard to predict

needs water," he said.

because it depends on how much residents conserve and also on the weather, Kaping sard. If things get worse, the city

Borgaard and his wife garden as a hobby, and use sprin-

emergency that would not allow any outside water use at all. On Monday, public works employees went door-to-door

HOmiCide inVSStlgntlnn —Police in Springfield said they' re looking for a maleacquaintance of a23-year-old womanwho waskilled early Tuesday.Thevictim was identified asSarahAnn Coleman. Police have declined tosayhowshe waskilled. Officers are also looking for her stolen car, awhite 1997DodgeIntrepid. Police said a30-year-old Springfield man is a "person of interest" in the death. Sgt. David Lewis said Tuesdaynight that the two wereacquainted but not in any kind of relationship. Thewoman died inside ahome.Oneof her relatives called police to report the deathand officers respondedshortly before 2a.m.

p •

Gary Kaping recalled a water water shortages. "Water is a restriction about 10 years ago little bit of a problem down that was the result of the loss there," he joked. of a production well, not beJeff Borgaard said he uncause of drought-like weather derstandsthe scarcity ofwaconditions. ter and the reasoning behind The duration of the current the restrictions. "Everybody

couldimpose a "severe" water

said she won't seekanother term as Housemajority leader so she can explore arunfor secretary of state. TheEugeneDemocrat made the announcement in anemail to supporters Tuesday, aday after lawmakers finished the2015 legislative session. Hoyle hasbeenthe No. 2 Democrat in theHousebehind Speaker TinaKotek since 2013. As majority leader, she's responsible for raising moneyandrecruiting Democrats to run for theHouse.Current Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins wasappointed in March to replace Kate Brown, who became governor after John Kitzhaber's resignation. Atkins hassaid shewon' t run for the office.

200-2016

is not surprised by the water

The city said it was impos-

Public

bia's executive director, did not immediately respond to

Street property. The theater's closure was confirmed by owner Bruce Humphrey, who also owns and operates the cinemas in

days, and vice versa for res- sard. idents with odd-numbered Michael Southey said he addresses.

Columbia purchased the property from Humphrey for $600,000. Gordon Comfort, Good-

He and many other residents also already water their lawns only between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m., as the restrictions require, Terrien said. "(During the day), only half of the water gets in the ground," Terrien said. "The

limiting watering of lawns and gardens to evening and e arly morning hours o n weekdays, and no such wa-

water

Umatilla County R ecords, Goodwill Industries of the

Rep. Val HOyle nnt Seeking anOther term — Rep.Val Hoyle

that's what we d o a nyway, most of us," Terrien said.

the city's wells to drop. The city ha s f our w e lls. rest gets sucked up when it' s The wells have the ability to hot." extract a total of up to 1,250 Resident Lin C ampbell, gallons of water per minute, on the other hand, said she

but as of last week's council meeting they were pumping only 950 gallons per minute. By early this week, it was 850 gallons per minute.

PENDLETON — Absent

its usual lineup of summer

AROUND THE STATE

Publishes: Wednesday, August I 2015

( 1$

j

klers and a hose to water their

plants and lawn. Borgaard said he has no problem cutting back on his water usage but worries about the length

of the recent drought. "We'll persevere through it, but it is what it is until the

weather cools off,"he said. lg

)0

1 |

Detox

costs or a location were not

Continued from B1 Deschutes County Health

Nelson described encountering, while on the beat, people

Director Jane Smilie, who led

committing offenses, such as

the discussion along with the sheriff, said the public safety group could work to identify other parties who could provide input on the "sober station" project, developing a concept that would meet the county's needs. Details about

disorderl y conduct ortrespassing, who clearly were under the influence of alcohol or drugs: "You (a police officer) could say, 'Hey, here's another option

discussed.

for you, a sober station.'" Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.corn

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hen the Legislature is not in session, politicians

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and state officials seem to share one common talking point: small business. They talk about the plight and importance of s m all b u siness. They talk about reducing government red tape so small business can thrive. They talk about trade missions to increase Oregon exports. And when they speak, they inevitably come armed with an anecdote about how they just visited Joe's widget factory and how Joe is successful doing some great things. It all sounds like a Hallmark card for small business. But when the Legislature is in session, that seems to have been just talk. The concern for helping businesses grow vanishes. It becomes arace to add taxes, fees and regulation. This session there was the requirement for businesses to add paidsick leave.We happen tohope businesses have paid sick leave. Maybe small businesses will be able to find a way to make the new law work, ormaybe itcould be a reason to close up. The Legislature did not do enough to protect small businesses and their employees. This session there was also the low-carbon fuel standard. It's a tax guaranteed to increase the price of transporting goods in Oregonlet alone getting to work. And that all comes with questionable benefit to the climate.

This session there was the requirement for businesses to add paid sickleave.We happen to hope businesses have paid sick leave. Maybesmall businesses will be able to find a way to make the new law work, or maybe it could be a reason to close up. The Legislature did not do enough to protect small businesses and their employees. As bad as the fuel standard is, what made it worse is that its passage blocked what every Oregonian and every Oregon business could have used: a transportation package to improve the state' s roads. A fter the session, very i m portant state politicians sent out press releases telling Oregonians that they and other very important state politicians proclaim this Legislature a success. And in their vision of sincere do-goodery, perhaps it was. But what it really did for small business is create more fatiguing problems and challenges for them to survive.

Thanks to thosewho helped with fireworks

T

hanks to all, it worked. It can site free of uninvited visitors prior

be a spooky thing, planning a fireworks display during a hot spell and a drought. Yet thanks to the efforts of several businesses and ahost ofgovernment agencies, Saturday night's display came off nearly without a hitch. The Oregon State Parks and Recreation Department, w hich manages Pilot Butte, was among the first on the scene. It hired a crew to remove dry fuels in the days before July 4. Too, Taylor Northwest and its owner, Todd Taylor, soaked the landscape to reduce the potential for fire still further. That wasn't all. The U.S. Forest Service and the state Department of Forestry each had a hand in planning to assure the fireworks went off safely. A private security company was on hand to keep the

to and during the event, and the Bend City Police and Bend Fire Department had major roles in keeping the site and surrounding neighborhoods safe. Still it all could have been for nothing.The weather has been hot for so long — 10 consecutive days with highsof90orabove and overnight lows of 50 or more — with no measurable moisture.The whole event could have been called off, even at the last moment. Saturday night a crew of roughly 40 atop Pilot Butte or nearby put on quite a show. One small blaze, less than 50 feet by 50 feet, was extinguished in less than an hour; other than that, the event went smoothly. Itdid so because so many people helped make sure that it could. We thank them for their effort.

West si e wron By Remington Bruce desirable areasofBend,asisexemplipon completing my junior year fied by the astronomical cost of living of collegiate study in Southern anywhere west of the Deschutes. The California, the I took a nostal- current state of overpopulation directgic drive around the west side. I ob- ly correlates with the lack of accomserved the "Big Tree" at Highland Ele- modation for a campus. Potholes and mentary, where my peers and I would traffic lines fill the roads between Bromeet to embark upon clandestine ken Top and Mirror Pond, and nobody adventures to the monkey bars. I rem- wants to be coming down from Mount inisced at the view of Mirror Pond, Bachelor during the winter season where an aggravated swan once re- anywhere between 2 and 7 p.m. I'd also like to include some personsponded to my 7-year-old curiosity with an unwelcoming pounceand al insights from my experience as a unwavering hiss. Then I saw it — the currently enrolled college student at deeply wooded area across from Cas- a similar-sized university. First off, cade Lakes Brewing Company (home with communities such as Broken to my favorite Yakisoba Bowl)Top, which doesn't even allow resiwhere the new OSU-Cascades cam- dents to have permanent basketball pus has now broken ground. My heart hoops visible in their driveways, I felt shorted, overpowered with confu- have a feeling that leather furniture sion over such happy memories in the stationed in the center of the front face of such an unpromising future for yard will seem rather ghastly by the oldest suburban area in town. comparison. Having trouble sleeping A subcommunity, per se, of inter- through the night'? Perhaps the loud connected students, i n termingled cheering coming from next door as parents and familiar faces at every the neighbor conquers a rooftop kegturn, the west side is one of the most stand will finally convince you to ex-

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M nickel's Worth Pull the flag

The beaver attack

from the South Carolina statehouse

ver attack." Somewhere near the

swers to some questions rather than

just respond solely to more typical Let's not rush to give credit where T he Bulletin presented a m i - multiple-choice items. If the tests are it's not due. Gov. Nikki Hayley of nor news story in a recent paper administeredand scored correctly South Carolina doesn't deserve any that I p redict will c reate an all (a source of some concern), we will praise for being the driving force for time high response from your have much better information about the removal of the Confederate flag readers— "2 Men inj ured in bea- student learning. While the federal government has

grounds. Certainly let's not hail her as the "face of the new South." That flag had been flying there with her knowledge and tacit support throughout her incumbency, and

Lava Island Falls can be seen the endorsed the new standards and ghost of Charles Darwin. It might tests and created some financial inbe interesting to know the price centives for state participation, there for the involvement of Bend Fire is no hidden "conspiracy." HB 2566 Department. has subsequently become law and we never heard her speak out for its Tom Littlehaies will take effect in spring 2016. It' s removal until the political pressure Bend yet another poor public education and publicoutcry over the church policy promulgated by a Legislature slayings became so hot that she had that rarely does its due diligence in to respond to protect her political inconvenient facts such matters. image. Both she and her political Ron Smith ally, Sen. Lindsey Graham, were R obert Perry's "I n M y V i e w " Bend certainly aware of the words used column published July 1 misses by William Thompson to describe the mark in several ways. In his Blame for post office this flag as he originally designed column, Perry criticizes The Bulleit, " ... as a people, we are fighting tin editors for expressing concern to maintain the heaven ordained about the Legislature's proposal Jack Peterson's In My View comsupremacy of the white man over (HB 2566) to make it easy for par- ments of June 30 neglect to mention the inferior or colored race; a white ents to opt out of annual standard- that Congress has created the huge flag would thus be emblematic of ized achievement testing. Here are deficit for the United States Postourcause ..."andthen laterboasted a couple of inconvenient facts over- al Service by requiring enormous that, "this new flag would be hailed looked by Perry. First, the Common pension payments for 75 years into by the civilized world as the white Core curriculum goals (currently the future. Nor does he mention man's flag." limited to language arts and math- that lobbyists for UPS and other While the flag was later rede- ematics)were developed by a con- delivery companies support doing signed into the present red "rebel sortium of state governments and away with the post office. flag," it began and remained a sym- voluntarily adopted by states as a I have been selling on eBay for bol of racist pride to many South- means of establishing similar ex- 16 years and have always shipped erners and, unfortunately, to some pectations for what students across packages via the post office. Two-

Overlookedand

problems

other Americans.

the country should learn. The Com-

day affordable delivery to the East

Second, the Smarter Balanced stan-

Coast for about half the cost of UPS is excellent. I have yet to lose a package or have one arrive damaged. Congress needs to get rid of the pension requirement and keep the

Let's not forget that, and above mon Core goals are not perfect, but all, let's not hasten to exalt those they are a pretty good first effort. politicians, who, by their silence, Anyone who reads them carefuland fearof politicalconsequences, ly will find them quite reasonable. allowed it to wave for too long. Let' s

just celebrate its removal when it' s dardized tests are of the highest gone. qualityever produced. They take Ted Owens a bit longer to administer because Redmond

USPS operating without pension

stress. Barbara "BJ" Thomas

they ask students to write out an-

Bend

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My

View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.corn Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

a c e o r a co e e cam us IN MY VIEW plore that Ambien alternative after

all. Traditionally, college campuses have a way of causing growth around their immediate communities, so why

would we plant this particular campus in the middle of an area with too

Traditionally, college campuses have a way of causing growth around their immediate communities, so why would we plant this particular campus in the middle of an area with too many residents and too little space as is? Sounds like planting a greenhouse in the middle of the Amazon Rainforest.

many residents and too little space as is? Sounds like planting a greenhouse in the middle of the Amazon Rainforest.

"they can ride their bikes." Last time I

checked, Bend wasn't exactly known Finally, I implore you to take ac- for the most dependable and widecount of the subsequent traffic ca- spread transit system, and I will gladtastrophes that follow with even the ly recant my arguments if the Bend most experienced winter drivers. city planner himself is willing to ride Now, imagine 1,000 to 2,000 student

a bike to the campus through the win-

vehides flooding the same roads, but ter. I can tell you from my experience with many individuals who know lit- on amuch more developed campus in tle about driving in such hazardous Southern California that we struggle conditions, not to mention where those immensely with parking, and we have cars will be parked since the current over 4,000spaces. In fact,the Univercity plans will only accommodate less sity President, Jim Doti, recently listed than 20 percent of the student popula- parking as one of the "Top 5 Issues" tion's parking needs. Criticism of this facing Chapman at his annual State of problem has been met with a response

of "students will use public transit" or

the University Address.

If we know collegiate campus-

es have a way of spurring regional growth and zoning boundaries, why don't we place the campus in a location that will benefit more from

the potential growth? Why must the city and OSU-Cascades be so set on packing so much into so little at the

immense displeasure of locals'? I sincerely hope our community doesn' t allow such an important decision to be so geologically misplaced, because OSU-Cascades being stationed on the

west side will more than likely lead to the students finding themselves a day late for parking and a dollar short for housing. Remington Bruce lives in Bend.


WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Rockridge

BITUARIES

Continued from B1 Large portions of the park site would be set aside for

FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Colette Berner

(Tobey),of Bend Sept. 17, 1966 - July 1, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.corn Services: No formal services are scheduled at this time.

Darla Ann Lee (Jahn), of Bend May 2, 1950 - July 2, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.corn Services: A private family memorial will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Harley Preston Bowden, of Madras Oct. 13, 1931 - June 16, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel, 541-548-3219 www.redmondmemoriai.corn Services: A graveside service will be held at 11:00 a.m., Saturday, July 11, 2015, at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, 3545 Canal Blvd., Redmond, OR 97756. A Celebration of Life is to follow at Ronald and Kimberly Bowden's home in Madras, OR. Contributions may be made to:

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the National Kidney Foundation.

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 541-61 7-7825.

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 Email: obils©bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

DEATHS

ELSE% THERE Deathsof note from around the world:

Amanda Peterson, 43: Actressbest known for her role in the 1987 romantic comedy "Can't Buy Me Love." Found dead Sunday atan apartment

complex in Greely, Colorado. She was alone, and an investigation into her death is ongoing. No other information was released. Scot Breithaupt, 57:Pioneer who helped turn BMX b i ke

racing from a backyard backwater into a n

i n t ernational

action sport. Found dead Monday in the desert city of Indio, California, in a tent at a va-

cant lot. He had been dead for an unknown time, and there

Longtime Hollywoodman produced renownedcareer

side" play areas, open areas where kids are encouraged to build their own playgrounds using rocks, sticks and other

18th St., Bend

found objects. The district has a budget of approximately $1.3 million struction of the initial phases for improvements at the park. could begin early next year. Figurski said if p lanning Reporter: 541-3S3-0387, c ontinues smoothly,

c o n-

LOCAL BRIEFING

NEW YORK — One of the last of the classic Hollywood showmen, Jerry W e intraub

Continued from B1

built his show business empire on a Rolodex and chutzpah.

The Brooklyn-born son of a Bronx jeweler, Weintraub rose from the mailroom of a talent

agency to become a top concertpromoter before shifting into a decades-long career as a

top Hollywood producer. Along the way, Weintraub worked with the most famous

of stars — Elvis Presley, Frank Sinatra, George Clooney, Brad Pitt — and was a close friend

EMI'

of former President George H.W. Bush. He relished his insider status, just as they sa-

vored the stories that eagerly poured out of him. Weintraub, th e

d y n amic

producer and manager who pushed the career of J ohn

Denver and produced such hits movies as "Nashville," "Karate Kid" an d

EMMYS

" O cean' s

Eleven," died Monday in Santa Barbara, California. He was 77. A publicist for Weintraub

saidhe died ofcardiacarrest. "Jerry was a n

A m e rican

original who earned his success bythe sheer force of his instinct, drive, and largerRichard Shotwell / The Associated Press filephoto than-life personality," said Producer Jerry Weintraub poses in the press room with the award Bush, a longtime friend. "He for outstanding documentary or nonfiction series for "Years of Livhad a passion for life, and ing Dangerously" at the 2014 Creative Arts Emmys in Los Angeles. throughout the ups and downs Weintraub, the dynamic producer andmanager, died Monday of of his prolific career, it was cardiac arrest in Santa Barbara, California. He was77. clear just how much he loved

shammers@bendbulletirLcom

Weintraub failed in one of his most ambitious gambits. His attempt to found his own studio, Weintraub En-

after a lengthy courtship he the eyes of 24 characters in p ersuaded Elvis P s and around the country music manager, Col. Tom Parker, to business. It landed five Oscar let him promote Presley con- nominations, including best

tertainment Group, ended in certs. It was at a time when bankruptcy after only three Presley was beginning to do years. But his long careerlive shows after years of convery much alive at the time centrating on movies. of his passing — was marked Weintraub and partner by savvy innovation (he was Tom Hulett introduced such among the first to stage arena improvements as a modern tours) and old-school class. sound systemfor Presley,an Weintraub had his choice experience that p r opelled lunch spots in Los Angeles, his Weintraub into the top ranks desert home in Palm Springs of promoters. and his favored places to A round th e s a m e t i m e,

Fire causes$72,000

The bull that escapedthe La PineRodeogrounds Friday evening wasfound but woundup being killed by trai a n. During the rodeo,the bull bucked off its rider andjumpedthe fence, according to EdHermann of Rockin' ERBuckin' Bulls, the Rocky Point stock contractor that owned thebull. Hermannandothers attempted to catch thebull, but it escapedthe area. DeschutesCounty Sheriff's deputies at therodeosearched the areabut did not find the bull, according toSgt. DougSullivan. Searchers locatedthe bull Saturday in awooded area nearthe Little DeschutesRiver. Hermann decided to leave the bull there because itwascalm, andhedidn' t want to attempt tocatch it with so many rodeo-goers inthe area. He wanted toavoidinjuries. The bull wasfine Sunday morning whenHermanncheckedon it, but Mondaymorning hefound that the animalhadbeenhit by a train. Hermannsaidthe bull, which was 4 yearsold, wasworth about $7,000. Hermanaddedhewas

Afire in a single-family home east ofRedmondonMondaynight caused about$72,000 in damages, according to theRedmondfire marshal. Firefighters responded toa report of smokenear 66th Street andHomesteadWayataround 8:20 p.m., butcould notfind the source until they receivedthe address, 5335 NW ZamiaAve., according to Fire MarshalTraci Cooper. Crews got insidethe house through agaragedoor andfound the fire burning intheexterior wall and concealedspaceabovethe second story. Bend FireDepartment, Crook County FireandRescueand Deschutes CountySheriff's Office also responded.Thefire was extinguished,and noinjuries were reported, according toCooper, who also said noonewashome during the fire. The departmentestimated about$70,000indamagestothe building and$2,000 loss to its contents. Thecauseof the fire is still under investigation.

Ih llBIMgSs

picture. In his memoir, Weintraub

said he didn't understand the

Mille and PT. Barnum. He titled his 2011 memoir: "When I Stop Talking, You' ll Know I'm Dead." At the time, he joked he

W eintraub saw

"He would be a test case for all my theories on selling and packaging, for everything I had learned since I left home,"

might write another: "Dead, Weintraub said. but Still Talking." After enormous success fol"In the coming days there lowed, Denver bought Weinwill be tributes about our traub a Rolls-Royce as a thankfriend J err y W e i ntraub,"you gift. Weintraub said, "I s aid Clooney, a star of t h e couldn't help thinking that it "Ocean' s" movies. "We' ll wasn't too long ago that neilaugh at his great stories and ther of us had bus fare." applaud his accomplishments. Weintraub produced a dozAnd in the years to come, the en Denver musical specials stories and accomplishments on television — winning an will get better with age, just Emmy for one of them — and as Jerry would have wanted the hit 1977 movie "Oh, God!" it. But not today. Today our It starred George Burns as friend died." God and Denver as the young One of Weintraub's most grocer whom God approaches recent successes was the 2013 to spread his message. Liberace drama "Behind the He also set up successful Candelabra." After the stu- tours for Sinatra and produced dios passed, he took it to HBO, the television special "Sinatra

complicated script, but he was

eager to produce it because "Altman did, and it was Alt-

man who was going to make the movie."

Weintraub went on to produce such notable films as Barry L evinson's "Diner,"

where it won 11 Emmys.

— the Main Event," as well as

ed after just five months amid reports of disagreements with financier Kirk Kerkorian. He later reached a settlement with

as advance man for the agen-

man's MCA, where he worked cy's stars. His career as a promoter took a giant step in 1970 when

"We don't know when we' re

It was approved in 2009 to

county as of 'Ittesday. Resi-

dents can offer testimony in support or opposition to the proposal at the public hearing. For more information, contact the Community Development Department, 541-388-6575. Reporter 541-617-7820 tshorack@bendbulletin.corn

Layton said the club will

Where BuyersAndSellers Meet

tablish his own studio, WEG, but it went belly up in 1990 af-

Cl™assifieds

ter a string of flops including "My Stepmother Is an Alien."

I

"I had, in a sense, promoted myself out of the job I always

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Weintraub continued produc-

ing, putting out such films as "Vegas Vacation" and "Ocean' s Eleven" and its starry sequels. He remade "The Karate Kid"

in 2010, setting the project up in China and starring the young Jaden Smith, Will Smith's son. Weintraub said he

He left numerous projects joint appearances with Denbehind, including the recent- ver. Among other musicians "questioned it 150,000 times" ly debuted HBO series "The Weintraub worked with were before backing it. Brink" with Jack Black, and an Bob Dylan, Neil Diamond and Starting in the 1980s, Weinupcoming bigbudget remake the Beach Boys. traub became known as one of "Tarzan." After hi s f i r s t m a r r iage of the Republican Party's most "If asked my philosophy, (which resulted in a son, Mi- loyal supporters in Hollywood. it would be simply this: Sa- chael), Weintraub married He had been close to Bush vor life, don't press too hard, torch singer Jane Morgan in years before he became presdon't worry too much. Or as 1965. They had three adopt- ident, and in 1991, he hosted a udded partyforthepresthe old-timers say, 'Enjoy,'" he ed children: Julie, Jamie and star-st wrote his book. "But ... I never Jordy. The pair separated but ident at his Malibu home and could live by this philosophy never divorced. played golf with Bush and forand was, in fact, out working, Weintraub's emp h asis mer President Ronald Reagan. hustling, trading, scheming, shifted to movies with 1975's The late AP Entertainment and making a buck as soon as "Nashville," Robert Altman's Writer Bob Thomas contributed I was old enough to leave my acclaimed comedy-drama of biographical material for this parents' house." American life as seen through story. Growing up, Weintraub said his father, a successful gem salesman, taught him "only Long-Term Care and Asset Protection two things are important at

ed a job with Lew Wasser-

up," Layton said.

be used as a private hunting preserve and a place to shoot sporting clays. The club would offer those ac-

finalize the deal to purchase the Halligan Ranch property when and if the

the company. In 1987, he attempted to es-

ries, producing," he wrote in his memoir. "(The films) now were being made for me instead of by me." After the WEG bankruptcy,

the legal documents drawn

going to get on the property," he said "It could be mid-Sepapplication. tember before all the additions Halligan Ranch, which is are finally cleared." about 4 miles south of RedNo objections to the promond, is about 223 acres. posal had been filed with the

D e nver a t

ver as a client.

"Once that is done, then we

are ready to close on the property as quickly as they can get

June 30 to allow the club more time with its land use

"All Night Long," "The Karate Kid," and William Friedkin's a small Greenwich Village controversial, g a y -themed tivities at the site and exfashioned himself in the mold nightclub and wa s o v er- "Cruising." pand to include the other of old Hollywood showmen whelmed by the mountaineer's He became chief of United ranges, according to the like Mike Todd, Cecil B. De- easy manner. He took on Den- Artists in 1985 but was oustapplication. moor his yacht off the French Riviera. A self-made man, he

Bulletin staff reports

county approves the club's permit.

Continued from B1 Deschutes County commissioners recently approved extending the lease of the 66-acre property. The new lease would run until

resley'

relieved noonewasinjured in the situation.

Escaped bull hit by train

Gun club

show business."

build its only Super Bowl team. Died Sunday of natural From wire reports

what the district calls "wild

What:Rockridge Park planning meeting When:5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., today Where:Sky View Middle School library, 63555 NE

The Associated Press

with the franchise and helped

not reported.

Ifyougo ...

By Jake Coyle

were no obvious signs of foul the endoftheweek: how much play. A cause of death had not you owe the bank and how been determinedMonday. much you have in it." Jack Steadman, 86: LongHired to work in the mailtime Chiefs executive who room of the William Morris spentmore than four decades Agency, Weintraub then land-

causes. His place of death was

B5

Discover what youdonot knowabout Medicaid that youneedto know Learn how to payfor long-term care without draining all yourassets Learn aboutyouroptionsfor controlling iongterm carecosts Time: 5:00 to e:30 p.m. Place: Bend Senior Center, 1eoo SE Reed Market Rd., Bend, OR97702 Date: Thursday, Juiy 9, 2015 Cost: No charge, includes complimentary food & beverage Seating is limited so pleasecall to confirm your seat.

j

Presentedby

ElderLawAtt orney

Will Dennis 541-388-3877

R AY M o N D

L E E C A M P B EL L

Ray was born on February 13, 1922, in St. Albans, West Virginia, to Lucy Bailey and Frank Campbell. He is survived by two sisters, Helen of West Virginia and Frances of Florida. He was predeceased by two sisters and four brothers. Ray joined the U.S. Army in 1942 and later transferred to Fort Lewis, Washington, in 1946, where he was honorably discharged. He moved to Tacoma, Washington, where he began his career as an accountant and met Dolores "Dee" Stillman, the love of his life; they were married 64 and a half years until her death in November 2014. Ray worked in accounting in Eugene and Lowell, Oregon, where he had a ranch; he later bought Bend Cabinets and movedto Bend in 1977. He retired in 1985. A graveside service will take place Thursday, July 9, 2015, at 10AM at Deschutes Memorial Gardens, located at 63875 N. Hwy 97 in Bend, Oregon. Ray and Dee have two children, five grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren: son John, his partner Sarah, and their son Alexander and daughters Nina and Eleanor, all of London, England; and daughter Donna and her husband Robert and their son Gregory and daughter Katie; and Gregory's children Paige and Aiden, all of Bend, Oregon. Ray enjoyed jogging, gardening, reading Louis L'Amour books in the sunshine, camping, hiking, hunting, fishing, traveling in the motor home with Deeto visit his family in West Virginia and Florida, and to Arizona during winter. Thanks to Molly and her staff at Mountain House for the loving care he received while living there. Thank youto the St. Charles staff as well as the wonderful nurses at Hospice House for their outstanding care at the end of his life. In lieu of flowers, contributions in his name sent to Partners In Care/Hospice would be greatly appreciated.


0

B6 T H E BULLETIN

W EAT H E R

WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWealter, lnc. ©2015 l

i

i

'

I

TODAY

if

TONIGHT

HIGH 88' i f '

FRIDAY gk>Jg

84'

59'

58'

4

EAST:Partly sunny and hot again today; Seasid an afternoon thunder- 68/55 Yesterday Normal Record storm, locally heavy, in Cannon 88' 79 98' i n 1968 66/55 55' 46' 29' in 1902 parts of the south.

102/61

Rufus

City Abilene Akron Albany Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Atlantic City Austin 92/77/Tr Baltimore 89/70/0.48 Billings 84/54/0.00 Birmingham 92n2/0.00 Bismarck 76/45/0.00 Boise 96/73/0.00 Boston 84/65/0.02 Bridgeport, CT 84n1/0.00 Buffalo 87/69/0.14 Burlington, YT 85/66/Tr Caribou, ME 84/62/0.00 Charleston, SC 89n4/0.13 Charlotte 93/70/0.00 Chattanooga 91 /70/0.00 Cheyenne 65/53/0.06 Chicago 71/57/0.52 Cincinnati 81/72/0.17 Cleveland 85/70/0.85 ColoradoSprings 61/54/0.02 Columbia, MO 69/65/0.52 Columbia, SC 94/73/0.00 Columbus,GA 92/69/0.00 Columbus,OH 84/69/0.55 Concord, NH 85/61/0.23 Corpus Christi 93/80/0.00 Dallas 92/80/0.00 Dayton 83n4/0.46 Denver 75/58/0.01 Des Moines 74/58/0.00 Detroit 79/66/0.17 Duluth 73/52/0.00 El Paso 95n4/ri Fairbanks 74/64/Tr Fargo 74/42/0.00 Flagstaff 76/48/0.25 Grand Rapids 72/60/0.48 Green Bay 72/58/Tr Greensboro 90/69/0.00 Harrisburg 86n2/0.00 Harfford, CT 85/69/0.25 Helena 76/54/0.00 Honolulu 89/76/0.03 Houston 92n9/Tr Huntsville 93n3/0.00 Indianapolis 79/75/4.43 Jackson, MS 93/74/0.03 Jacksonville 93no/1.07

• ermiston

Bandon

at Hermiston Low: 49' at Sunriver

Tonight'9ufqft Last quarter moonat 1:24

0'

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Source: JimTodd,OMSI

5 I~

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The highertheAccuWesther.corn uyIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; M+ Extreme.

POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ees Wee d s ~H ig~h ~Lo~w ~Lo~w

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

82 / 5 7

80/59

82/63

• Burns Jun tion

• Paisley

• 84/59

79/53

Rome

84/60

Klamath

86/

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

Fields•

• Lakeview

75/53

McDermi

80/58

72/52

81/55

Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday Yesterday Today Thursday H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 70/57/0.01 72/57/pc 69/59/pc L a Grande 93 / 57/0.00 92/57/s 90/63/t Portl and 8 7 /59/0.00 92/65/s 92/63/pc 88/53/Tr 8 9/52/s 82/51/t La Pine 88/49/0.08 85/55/pc 80/55/t Prinevige 89/ 55/0.0093/61/s 80/61/t Brooking s 65/53/0.00 64/55/pc 63/55/t Me d ford 97/6 9 /0.00 91/65/t 9 0/62/t Redmond 93/ 55/0.0493/56/s 90/57/t Gums 93/51/Tr 8 6/56/pc 79/51/t Ne w port 64/5 5 /0.00 62/53/pc 61/53/pc Roseburg 94 / 59/0.00 92/61/pc 85/60/t Eugene 92/53/0.00 92/55/s 85/53/pc NorthBend 64/57/0.00 64/55/pc 63/55/pc Salem 88/56/0.00 93/60/s 90/57/p c Klamath Fags 89/55/0.00 75/53/t 76/49/t On t ario 97/63/Tr 9 4/67/t 8 7/66/t Sisters 90/52/0.05 91/56/s 88/58/t takeview 88/54/0.00 72/52/t 75/50/t Pe n dleton 98/ 6 9/0.00 98/66/s 98/71/t The Dages 9 9 /71/0.00 101/72/s 98/71/pc WeatherlW):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, 1r-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. Yesterday City Astoria Baker City

NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 1 08 ~g s

~ gs

Ca p acity NATIONAL 60% EXTREMES Wickiup 94648 47% YESTERDAY(for the Crescent Lake 7 0 8 03 81 Yo 48 contiguous states) 51'Yo National high: 116' Ochoco Reservoir 22782 Prinevige 85714 58% at Death Valley,CA River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. National low: 86 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 267 at Bodie State Park, CA Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1870 preolpftatfun: 7.73" Reservoir C rane Prairie

Chr i stmas alley

83/58

• Ashl nd F a l l s

Source: OregonAllergy Associates 541-683-1577

WATER REPORT

• Silver Lake

• Chile quin ’78/54

,91/66

64/5

2 p.m. 4 p.m.

~ B

7 9/53

Bro ings

Ijv INDEX TODAY

Beaver Marsh

92/61

Po Orf 62/ Gold ach 91 65

p.m.

10 a.m. Noon

Ros eburg

63/55

~ f gs

Deschutes R.below Bend 145 Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 2230 Little Deschutes near LaPine 122 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 4 1 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 216 Crooked R. nearTerrebonne 72 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 11

FIRE INDEX

~ 2 0 s ~ s gs ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ ega ~ 708 ~ e gs Cslgs

Acr e feet 332 7 3

81/so

5 89/42

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T

Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras ~ Ve ry~high ~ Sisters ~M o d~erato ~ Prinevige ~V e ry~high ~ La Pine/Gilchrist High

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91/Ttt,4

Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Cold Front

Source: USDA Forest Service

•'

a

0

Clouds andsun, a t-storm in the afternoon

86/74/t 92/74/pc 85/71/t 77/56/1

Today Thursday Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W Juneau 65/54/sh 67/51/c Kansas City 65/55/r 75/66/1 Lansing 71/71/0.81 73/57/pc 75/56/pc Las Vegas 100/78/Tr 99/76/s 94/72/pc Lexington 80/71/0.70 80/70/t 80/67/1 Lincoln 74/54/0.00 76/56/pc 76/63/1 Litffe Rock 92/76/0.00 gon4/t 91n3/pc Los Angeles 77/64/0.00 74/60/sh 70/58/sh Louisville Tons/o.5s 82/72/t 83/70/t Madison, Wl 71/59/0.49 72/53/pc 78/56/pc Memphis 91/78/0.00 89n5/c 91 n4/t Miami 91/82/0.00 91/79/pc gongn Milwaukee 67/57/0.41 67/57/pc 74/59/pc Minneapolis 72/54/0.00 74/59/pc 81/62/pc Nashville 89/74/0.37 89n1/t gonon New Orleans 92/79/0.00 93/76/1 91/75/s New YorkCity 88/75/0.12 84non 79/68/t Newark, NJ gtns/ri 87/71/t 79/68/1 Norfolk, VA 91/74/0.02 93n5/pc 94nT/pc OklahomaCity 78/71/0.88 78/68/t 89/70/pc Omaha 74/54/0.00 76/57/pc 78/63/c Orlando 90/73/0.03 92/73/t 93n3/t Palm Springs 107/79/0.00 98n2/s 93/67/pc Peoria 76/65/0.36 67/62/1 76/64/pc Philadelphia 91/76/0.00 87/74/t 86/71/t Phoenix 107/85/0.00 1OSng/pc100n7/pc Pittsburgh 85/67/0.29 77/65/1 78/60/1 Portland, ME 76/58/0.04 81/58/sh 73/59/pc Providence 81/66/0.01 87/67/1 74/64/pc Raleigh gtno/o'.oo 93/70/pc 95n3/pc Rapid City 75/53/0. 00 74/57/pc 77/59/pc Reno 89/62/0.14 77/58/1 74/55/1 Richmond 91/71/0.00 92/72/t 95/74/pc Rochester, NY 88/69/0.09 72/57/pc 73/57/sh Sacramento 89/62/0.00 85/59/pc 77/58/pc St. Louis Tsns/o.o5 71/63/r 79/69/1 Salt Lake City 86/66/0.03 83/65/1 88/67/pc San Antonio gtns/ri 92/76/pc 92n6/pc San Diego 72/64/Tr 70/66/ah 72/65/sh San Francisco 74/62/0.00 69/60/pc 69/59/pc San Jose 77/63/0.00 71/59/pc 71/58/pc Santa Fe 77/58/0.44 79/54/1 79/56/1 Savannah gon2/o.ss 91n2/t 92n3/t Seattle 81/57/0.00 89/62/s 89/60/pc Sioux Fags 71/50/0.00 74/54/pc 79/59/pc Spokane 91/66/0.00 94/67/s 97n2/pc Springfield, Mo 76/73/0.31 76/64/r 81/69/1 Tampa gonTrri 90/75/1 92/76/t Tucson 101/76/0.00 ggn5n 95non Tulsa 80/68/0.67 79/70/r 90n6/t Washington, DC 91/75/0.00 88n4/t 92n3/t Wichita 71/65/1.31 77/64/r 85/69/1 Yakima 101/59/0.00 102/65/s 104/70/pc Yuma 106/80/0.00 1Otn4/s 97n1/pc

85/73/t 92/72/pc 88/68/t

84/61/pc 93/73/pc 93/73/pc 79/53/t 86/61/s 91/68/t 85/65/1 84/65/1 71/63/pc 84/69/1 77/67/1 74/59/pc Tt/57/t 76/56/sh 78/59/pc 74/50/sh 77/55/pc 92/74/t 92/74/pc 94/71/pc 99nO/pc 92/72/c 92/70/pc 64/51/1 71/54/pc 69/60/pc 75/61/pc 74/68/t 79/64/t 71/62/c 69/58/r 67/51/1 73/55/1 64/57/r 77/67/1

95/74/pc 97n4/pc 93/71/pc 92/73/s

71/64/1 76/59/1 83/56/ah 79/57/pc 91/76/s 9Ons/pc 87/76/t 93/75/pc 70/67/1 76/62/t 71/53/1 78/57/1

73/55/pc 73/60/pc 74/55/pc 94/72/pc 70/50/sh 76/57/1 74/45/1 75/59/pc 74/52/s

89/70/pc

78/63/pc 75/59/r 80/61/pc 91/70/pc 71/52/pc 85/64/s 71/42/pc 77/56/pc 80/57/pc 95/73/pc

79/68/t 83/66/1 85/64/1 78/61/pc

83/54/pc 87/59/pc 89/77/pc 89/77/pc 92/78/s 93/75/s 92/71/c 92/69/pc 70/65/t 75/64/t 93/73/pc 93/73/s 88/71/t

75/57/0.17 66/54/ah Athens 93n5/0.00 9OnO/s Auckland 54/53/0.37 52/40/pc Baghdad 109/83/0.00 110/83/s Bangkok 95/81 /0.00 96/81/c Beijing 91/66/0.00 94/68/s Beirut 81 /75/0.00 83/75/s Berlin 90/60/0.30 74/56/ah Bogota 64/46/0.03 66/49/1 Budapest 97/66/0.00 97/64/pc BuenosAires 63/37/0.00 63/47/s Cabo San Loess 95/71 /0.00 92/74/pc Cairo 91 n2/0.00 93/74/s Calgary 65/54/0.02 81/60/s Cancun 90/77/0.00 91/77/s Dublin 64/55/0.65 63/46/c Edinburgh 66/57/0.26 60/43/ah Geneva 102no/0.01 77/54/s Harare 70/47/0.00 72/40/pc Hong Kong 90/80/0.05 92/80/c Istanbul 86n2/0.00 87/72/s Jerusalem 81/62/0.00 83/64/s Johannesburg 64/43/0.00 62/42/pc Lima 70/64/0.01 72/65/pc Lisbon 84/63/0.00 83/63/s London 73/59/0.02 70/51/pc Madrid 1 02/72/0.00 103/68/s Manila 88/75/0.47 85/78/r

89/70/t

4 •

4

63/50/sh 92/70/s 50/40/s 111/83/s 93/80/c 94/68/pc

84n4/s 66/53/sh 67/49/t 80/54/pc 63/48/s

89/73/pc 93/72/s 84/60/pc 9OnT/s 64/56/pc 60/49/pc 78/54/s 75/40/s 91/81/c 87/71/s 85/65/s 66/44/s

73/66/pc 85/63/s 71/52/pc 103/70/s 84/78/r

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 76/55/0.00 72/61/0.96

City

i

at Abilene, TX

so

~ f f gs

Today Thursday HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W 84/71/pc 89/69/pc 75/64/c 74/58/r 80/60/ah 76/59/pc 85/65/t 85/62/t 64/54/pc 65/54/pc 92/71/pc 92/72/pc

Amsterdam

pO

High

eg gs ~f ggs

under B,Y

city

75 ' 50'

i

lington 102/64 Mesc am Losdne • W co1 1/69 91/60 Enten rise dlet On88/4 • he Ball • 89 /BO Tigamo 0 96/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Partly andy • 101/72 69/53 Mc innvill • • He p pner L Gra n de• Joseph sunny andhot again /63 Gove nt • upi 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Condon /56 9 57 union Record 0.35" in 1975 today; an afternoon Lincoln 85/ Month to date (normal) 0.0 0" (0.12") thunderstorm, lo66/54 Sale pray Granite • /68 Year to date(normal) 6.11 " (5.84") cally heavy,acrossthe 93/6 a 'Baker C Newpo 83/53 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 91 " south. • 94 /55 62/53 • Mitch II 89/52 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Mostly sunny 92/60 U SUN ANDMOON 91/56 • John eu and hot inland; sea- Tach 91/55 • Prineville Today Thu. 63/63 oay 54 tario sonable at the coast 93/61 • P a line 9 1/ 6 5 5:30 a.m. 5: 3 1 a.m. with morning low 67 Floren e • Eugene 61 ' Re d Brothers 8:50 p.m. 8: 5 0 p.m. Valse 66/52 clouds and fog breakSu IVere 88/59 12:23 a.m. 1 2 :57 a.m. ing for sunshine. 95/68 Nyssa • 6 6 9 • La pine Ham ton 1:22 p.m. 2 : 3 1 p.m. Juntura 94/68 Grove Oakridge S C • Burns OREGON EXTREME 6 4 New Fir s t Full 93/63 69/55 /61 • Fort Rock Riley 86/56 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 86/69 87/57 84/55 High: 100'

J u l 1 5 Ju l 2 3 Ju l 31

~ ~

A thunderstorm in spots in the afternoon

Yesterday Hi/Lo/Prec. 83/69/7.73 86/68/1.07 86no/0.30 80/60/1.62 64/57/0.02 90n1/0.00 84n4/0.00

Portland

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~

TRAVEL WEATHER

Hood RIVer

SUNDAY

77' 52'

~

Var iable clouds with a shower or t-storm

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. um stills

ria

5

TEMPERATURE

Jul 8

51'

OREGON WEATHER

Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.

Low

SATURDAY

79'

4

Clouds andsun, at-storm in the afternoon

Partly cloudy andmild

ALMANAC

High

-

LOW

Mostly sunny

i

THURSDAY

s Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi Nassau

108/88/0.00 110/67/s 73/55/0.14 72/50/t 86/68/0.02 76/59/pc 72/52/0.05 75/60/pc 72/57/0.09 75/53/c 90/77/0.02 90ns/pc New Delhi 91/76/0.08 91/79/1 Osaka Tyno/o.46 81/73/t Oslo 70/55/0.06 57/46/r Ottawa 86/68/0.21 76/53/pc Paris 82/64/0.02 73/55/pc Rio de Janeiro 77/66/0.00 78/69/1 Rome 88/73/0.00 87/721s Santiago 68/34/0.02 62/39/pc Sao Paulo 68/59/0.50 68/58/1 Sapporo 71/61/0.04 68/54/s Seoul 85/66/0.06 84/To/pc Shanghai 74/66/1.50 80n3/t Singapore 88/82/0.01 88/78/1 Stockholm 68/57/0.02 67/54/r Sydney 55/46/0.29 57/45/sh Taipei 97/81/0.00 97/81/t Tel Aviv 84/71/0.00 84/72/s Tokyo 72/68/0.45 78/68/r Toronto 84/66/0.04 72/57/pc Vancouver 72/59/0.00 78/61/pc vienna 97/68/0.00 82/59/1 Warsaw 86/57/0.00 83/57/1

11Ont/s 71/49/1 77/59/s 79/59/t 75/51/c 90/78/s 91/78/t

83/72/r 50/44/ah 78/54/s 75/53/pc 78/67/c 87/70/s 62/41/pc 70/57/pc 73/57/s 87/70/c 83/75/t

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARUT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C ycling, C4 Sports in brief, C2 Soccer, C4 MLB, C3 Golf, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

WCL BASEBALL

O www.bendbulletin.corn/sports

GOLF: PNGA MEN'SAMATEUR

Elks top AppleSox in12 innings

Blazers watch

WENATCHEE,Wash.

— Cadyn Grenier singled home DerekChapman for the game-winning run in the top of the 12th inning, and the Bend Elks blew three leads before extending their winning streak to six games with an 8-7 victory Tuesday night over Wenatchee. Daniel Bies earned his first save of the season after relieving Sam Boone (4-1), who hit a batter with the bases loaded and forced a fielder's choice in the 10th as the AppleSox (11-15) tied the gameat

NBA

As free agency begins at 9 tonight, here is a look at who likely will be with the Portland Trail Blazers next season, how they came to Portland and who is gone. The NBA estimated its salary cap at $67.1 million for the upcoming season, and, according to reportedsalaries,the Blazers could be asm uch as $26 million under the cap when it is announced. THE TEAN(SOFAR) 4

.s

"

Al-Farouq Aminu

sj

r

4 .~w.

7-all..

Louis Wolf gave the Elks (24-5) a 7-5 lead in the 10th on a two-run single. The Elks finish their three-game WestCoast League series with Wenatchee at 7:05 tonight.

Cap:$7,500,000*; will reportedly sign a4-year deal

2014.15 stats (with Dallas):5.6 ppg, 4.6 rpg, 0.8 bpg

Ed Davis Cap:$6,666,667*; will reportedly sign a 3-yeardeal u

2014-15 stats (with LA. lakers):8.3 ppg, 7.6 rpg, 1.2 bpg

t •

.

Gerald Henderson

Bulletin staff report

Cap:$6,000,000; acquired in trade with Charlotte 2014-15 stah (with Charlotte):12.1 ppg, 3.4 rpg, 2.6 apg

COLLEGE ATHLETICS De CaroHstakes post at Michigan Former OregonState athletic director Bob De Carolis is headedback to Michigan, where he will assist interim athletic director Jim Hackett. De Carolis was part of Michigan's athletic department from 1979 to 1998 before heading to Oregon State. He resigned his position as OSU's AD onJune30. Hackett said De Carolis, 62, will work with himself and senior associate ADRob Rademacher on special projects. DeCarolis served as Michigan's softball coach from 1980-84 before going into administration and becoming the senior associate athletic director in charge of facilities. From wire reports

TOUR DE

FRANCE TUESDAY

The Tour finally entered France, swinging over from Seraing in Belgium to Cambrai in northern France. The138.9-mile ride featured seven feared cobblestone sections spread over more than 8 miles. WINNER German rider TonyMartin, a three-time world time trial champion, timed a late attack to perfection and then held off countryman John Degenkolb to clinch a fifth Tour stage win. JERSEYS Yellow:Martin. Having just missed out on the yellow jersey after finishing second in Saturday's opening stage time trial, Martin was not to be denied this time. Starting the stage one second behind overnight leader Chris Froome, Martin finished the day12 seconds ahead of the British rider and 25 seconds clear of American TejayVan Garderen.Green:Andre Greipel.Polka dot:Joaquim Rodriguez.White: Peter Sagan. TODAY Riders will be looking forward to a relatively peaceful stage 5.Today's mostly flat route in northern Francetakes riders over 117.5miles from Arras to Amiens, the capital of the Somme department. See PageC4

Chris Kaman Cap:$5,01 6,000; will be unrestricted free agent in 2016 2014.15 stats:8.6 ppg, 6.5 rpg, 18.9 minutes

Damian Lillard Cap: $4,236,286;agreedto5-year,$120M extension 2014-15 stats:21.0 ppg, 4.6 rpg, 6.2 apg

Meyers Leonard Cap:$3,075,879; rookie deal runs through 2018 2014-15 stah:5.9 ppg, 4.5 rpg, .420 3pfg%

Noah Vonleh Cap:$2,637,720; acquired in trade with Charlotte 2014.15 stats (withCharlotte): 25 gp, 3.3 ppg, 3A rpg

C.J. McCollum Cap:$2,525,160; rookie deal runs through 2018 2014-15 stats:6.8 ppg, 1.5 rpg, 1.0 apg Photos by Kevin Duke / The Bulletin

Mason Plumlee

A part-time Bend resident and caddie at Tetherow Golf Club, Justin Kadin attempts a par putt on the 18th hole during the Pacific Northwest Golf Association's Men's Amateur Championship on Tuesday at Sunriver Resort's Woodlands course. Kadin is tied for ninth with three others at 3 under par.

Cap:$1,41 5,520; acquired in trade with Brooklyn 2014-15 stah (with Brooklyn):45 starts, 6.2 rpg, .573 fg%

Allen Crabbe

• Many golfers fail to complete1strounddueto storms, darkness

Cap:$947,276; will be a restricted free agent in 201 6 2014.15 stats:51 games(9 starts), 3.3 ppg, 1.4 rpg

Bulletin staff report SUNRIVER — Parttime Bend resident Justin Kadin was two shots off the lead after a delayed and

Tim Frazier I

suspendedfirstround of the Pacific Northwest Golf Association Men's Amateur

Cap:$845,069; deal runs through 2017 2014-15 stats:5 games, 4.6 ppg, 1.8 rpg, 3.4 apg

!

Pat Commughton

Championship on'Ibesday.

Cap:$525,093 **; acquired in draft-day tradewith Brooklyn

Kadin, of Bend's Tetherow Golf Club, fired a

2014-15:Played college atNotre Dame

3-under-par 68 — induding six birdies and an eagle-

Daniel Diez

at the Robert Trent Jones

Jr.-designed Woodlands course at Sunriver Resort. A total of 43 players in

a field of 164 top amateurs, induding many collegiate players, were at even par or better when play was suspended at about 8:30 p.m. due to darkness. A

Cap:$525,093 **; acquired in draft-day tradewith Utah

2014.15 stats:Played in Spain for GipuzkoaBasket

Bend amateur Jesse Heinly goes for a flop shotTuesdayover a bunker on the par-5 sixth hole. Heinly made birdie on the hole to help him fire a 1-under-par 70 in the first round.

I

I •

Golf and Country Club's Jeff

• •

e

i •

Charles Kern, Klamath Falls'

Justin Wiles and Lakewood, Washington's Joe Highsmith course when play was called. were all tied with Quayle for Four players were tied for the the lead.

Ward and Sunriver's Justin Huckins were still on the

WHERE DIDTHEYGO?: PFlaMarcus Aldridge:Wil signwith

midafternoon thunderstorm delayed play for almost four hours. lead at 5 under, with Australian Bend's Jesse Heinly shot Anthony Quayle the only one a 1-under 70 and finished who had completed a round.

today on Woodlands, with second-round play beginning on

San Antonio;C RobinLopez:Wil sign with New York; SGWesley Matthews:Will sign with Dallas; G SteveBlake: Tradedto Brooklyn; SF ArranANalo: Will sign with NewYork; SFNicolas Datum:Tradedto Charlotte;PF JoelFreeland, SGAlonm Gee, SFDonell Wright: Unrestricted freeagents * Average annualsalary of reported contract. ** NBA rookie minimum.

the day tied for 23rd. Bend

the Meadows course.

Sources:TheAssociated Press,NBA.corn, Spotrac.corn

Mercer Island, Washington's

First-round play resumes

SOCCER COMMENTARY

TENNIS' WIMBLEDON

Inequities persistdespite

At 33, Serena isbetter than ever

U.S. women' steam'sglory By MicheDeKaufman

as her shot from the center

Miami Herald

circle landed in the net, the third of her three goals during a magical 16 minutes on an unforgettable Sunday

VANCOUVER, British Columbia-

his time, the lasting image of the U.S.

T champions will not be a socWomen's World Cup

cer player in a sports bra. It will be Carli Lloyd, a tough-as-nails 32-year-old from New Jersey, roaring with her arms outstretched

at BC Place. "A beast, an absolute

beast," is how U.S. coach Jill Ellis described Lloyd as the team celebrated the 5-2 final

victory over Japan. "She's a rock star." See USWNT/C4

LONDONt a certain point, Serena Williams started screaming, too. It was

A a howl of competitive rage in

SALLY JENKINS

answer to Victoria Azarenka. All of a sudden. Azarenka's

cries of exertion seemed like nothing more than the call of a whippoorwill. The crowd in Wimbledon's Centre Court on Tuesday began to murmur and then to laugh at the dying warbles from Azarenka, and guttural answers from Williams. Game, set, match.

quarterfinal match between Williams and Azarenka that etched itself on the senses,

the eyes and the ears, with the quality of play. For more than an hour,

Who is going to stop the history-chasing Williams at this Wimbledon'? Ma-

they might as well have gone at each other with broadswords, before Williams rallied from a set down to

ria Sharapova, with those leaf-raking strokes, and her frail mysterious flights of mind and mid-match absenc-

advance, 3-6, 6-2, 6-3.

es? Don't think so. The best chance came and went, in a

said afterward.

"The difference? I don' t know what the difference

was," a depleted Williams SeeSerena/C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKB DARD

TODAY CYCLING Tour de France, Stage5

Time TV / Ratlie 5a.m.,5p.m. NBCSN

BASEBALL

TENNIS

Wimbledon, men's quarterfinals

WCL

5 a.m. ESPN, ESPN2 12:30 p.m.

MLB

MLB, Detroit at Seattle

1 2:30 p.m. 5 p.m.

R o ot ESPN

MLB, St. Louis at ChicagoCubs SOCCER CONCACAFGoldCup,CostaRicavs.Jamaica 5 p.m. CONCACAFGoldCup,ElSalvadorvs.Canada 7:30 p.m.

FS2

FS2

GOLF

EuropeanTour, Scottish Open

5a.m.,5p.m. NBCSN

TENNIS

Wimbledon, women's semifinals MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR,Truck Series, Kentucky, final practice NASCAR,Xfinity Series, Kentucky, practice NASCAR,Xfinit)/Series, Kentucky, final practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Kentucky qualifying NASCAR,Truck Series, Kentucky

5 a.m. 7 a.m. 11 a.m. t p.m. 2 p.m. 4:30 p.m.

ESPN FS1

NB C SN NBC S N FS2

FS1

BASEBALL

MLB, Oakland at N.Y.Yankees MLB, St. Louis at Pittsburgh MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle

10 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB MLB

Root

GOLF

Web.corn Tour, BoiseOpen LPGA Tour, U.S.Women's Open PGA Tour, JohnDeereClassic EuropeanTour, Scottish Open SOCCER CONCACAF Gold Cup, Trinidad andTobagovs. Guatemala CONCACAFGoldCup,Mexicovs.Cuba

1 0:30 a.m. Go l f 11 a.m. FS1 1 p.m. Golf 2:30 a.m. (Fri.) Golf

4 p.m. 6:30 p.m.

FS2 FS1

FOOTBALL

6 p.m. ESP N 2 2:30 a.m. (Fri.) FS2

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOFTBALL 3 CamPS at Summit thiS manth —Thesoftball coaching staff at Summit High in Bendwill offer three separate skills camps focusing on fielding, pitching and hitting over the next three weeks.The fielding camp will meet from 6 to 7:30 p.m. onJuly14 and 21, andthe hitting camp will meet at the sametime on the next three Thursdays. The pitching campwill meet from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. today and onthe next tvvoWednesdays, andattendees must bring their ovvncatcher. The cost is $10 for eachthree-session clinic or $25 to work onall three skills. All sessions will be held at theSummit softball fields. Contact Mike Carpenter at mike.carpenter@bend.k12.or.us for more registration information.

BOXING Klitschko to fight Fury in Octoder —Promoters sayunbeaten British boxer TysonFury will challenge Wladimir Klitschko for his world heavyweight titles in a bout in Germany inOctober. The 39-year-old Klitschko is theWBA, IBFandWBOchampion andthe encounter will be a record 28th heavyweight title bout for him. Fury's promoters said the fight would take place in Duesseldorf on Oct. 24. The 26-year-old Briton is undefeated in 24fights after defending his European title against Christian Hammer in London in March. Heis the mandatory challenger to Ukrainian boxer Klitschko, who hasnot lost a match in 11years. Klitschko last fought in April, defeating Bryant Jennings over 12rounds at Madison Square Garden in NewYork.

SOCCER Again, MiCrOneSia dlOWR Oiit in hiStOriC faShiOn —The Federated States of Micronesia lost the third of its three matchesat the Pacific Games46-0 to Vanuatu on Tuesday. That vvaspreceded by a 38-0 loss to Fiji and a30-0 defeat to Tahiti — 114goals in three matches. JeanKaltak scored I 6goals for Vanuatu which scored at the rate of a goalevery tvvo minutes. The Pacific Games is an under-23 tournament, so the scores will not count asanytype of international record for most goals scored in amatch. That mark still belongs to Australia: Archie Thompson scored 13goals whenthe Socceroos beatAmerican Samoa31-0 in 2001 in an Oceania qualifying match for the 2002World Cup. From staff an wire reports

Serena Continued from C1 But Azarenka knew what it was: Williams blasted the court with 46 winners (to just

12 errors) and 17 blistering, gyrating aces, leaving a memory of chalk exploding like ground-level starbursts. In a season in which Williams has lost just one match and is

pursuing a calendar sweep of the four grand slam events, in a career in which she is going for her 21st major championship, it is a terrifying truth

Kelowna Yakima Valey WallaWalla Wenatchee

and Azarenka. The sounds were expressions of breathless exertion from one corner

of the court to another, pure heat on every shot, and how

In the Bleachers o 2015 steve Moore. Dist. uy Universal Uclick www.gocomics.corn/inthebleachers

W L 24 5 12 13 10 15 5 21

Pct GB .626 .460 10 .400 12

W L 16 6 17 12 14 15 11 15

Pct GB .692 .566 2H .463 5'/z .423 7

W L 20 9 10 16 10 16 10 16

Pct GB .690 .365 6'/z

East Division

West Division

Bellingham Cowlitz Kitsap Victoria

CYCLNIG Tour de France, Stage6

Canada, Ottawa atEdmonton Australia, Richmond vs. Carlton

South Division

Bend Medford Corvallis Klamath Falls

2:30 a.m. (Thu.) Golf

THURSDAY

Transactions

WESTCOASTLEAGUE All TimesPDT

BASEBALL

MLB, N.Y.Mets at SanFrancisco

.192 17'/2

.365 6'/z ,365 Bi/z

Tuesday'sGames Corvallis atMedford, ppd. Kelowna 6,Klamath Falls 5 Victoria 2,Kitsap1 Bellingham1,Cowlitz 0,10 innings WallaWalla4,YakimaValley 3, 11innings Bend6,Wenatchee7,12innings Today'sGames Corvallis atMedford, 6:35p.m. KlamathFalls atKelowna,6:35 p.m. KitsapatVictoria, 6:35p.m. Cowlitz atBellingham,7:05p.m. BendatWenatchee,7:05p.m. YakimaValey at Walla Walla,7:05p.m. Thursday'sGame KitsapatCorvallis, 6:40p.m. Friday's Games WallaWallaatKelowna,6:35 p.m. Wenatchee atCowlitz 635pm MEdfor datBend,6;35p.m. VictoriaatKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. KitsapatCorvallis, 6:40p.m.

"Unfortunately, it's too risky to remove the bat. But, hey. You' re alive!"

Tuesday's linescore

Elks 8, ApqleSox 7, 12 inn. Bend 01B 13B BBB201—B 16 1 Wenafchee BB2 2B1 BBB 2BB—7 9 1 Wilcox,Bush(6), Pyatt (9), Boone(10), Bies(12)and KopasandWolf; Taylor, Sparling (6), Blankenship(12) and Hemstadter.W-Boone, 4-1. L-Blankenship,0-2. Sv-Bies, 1.3B-Kopas(1). 2B-Cavaness(5), Tunnell (10), Davis(15), Hummel (12); Hirabayashi (1), Hiura (6), Hem stadter(2), Amaral (3).

MLS

CYCLING

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

Tour de France

Fourth Stage EasternConference flat ride fromSeraing, Belgium W L T Pts GF GA A13B.B-mile to Cambrai, featuring seven cobbleslene 10 6 5 3 5 23 16 D.C.United sections totaling eight miles Columbus 6 6 6 2 4 2 7 2 6 1. Tony Martin, Germany, Etixx-QuickStep,5hours, 26 OrlandoCity 6 6 6 2 4 23 22 minutes,56seconds. NewEngland 6 6 6 2 4 2 5 2 9 2. JohnDeg enkolb, Germany, Giant-Alpecin, 3 secTorontoFC 7 7 2 2 3 22 23 ondsbehind. NewYork 6 6 5 2 3 2 3 2 2 3. PeterSagan,Slovakia,Tinkoff-Saxo,sametime. NewYorkCity FC 5 6 5 2 0 2 0 2 3 4. Greg VanAvermaet,Belgium,BMCRacing, sametime. TENNIS Philadelphia 5 10 4 1 9 2 2 3 2 5. EdvaldBoassonHagen, Norway, MTN -Qhubeka, Montreal 5 7 3 1 620 25 same time. Professional Chicago 4 9 3 1 5 1 6 2 4 6. Nacer Bouhanni, France,Cofidis, sametime. WesternConference 7. Jacopo Guarnieri, Italy,Katusha, sametime. Wimbledon W L T P tsGF GA B . Tony G allopin, France,Loto-Soudal, sametime. Tuesday atLondon 1 0 7 2 3 2 2 5 1 6 9. ZdenekStybar, Czech R Seattle epublic, Etixx-QuickStep, Men Vancouver 10 7 2 32 23 19 same time. Feurlh Round 9 6 4 3 1 2 2 2 0 10. BryanCoquard, France,Europcar,sametime. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. KevinAnderson Portland Los Angeles 6 6 7 3 1 3 1 2 3 11. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar, sametime. (14), South Africa, 6-7 (6),6-7 (6), 6-1,6-4, 7-5. FC Dallas 6 5 5 2 9 2 4 2 3 12. Mark Cavendish, Britain, Etixx-QuickStep,sametime. Women S porting KansasCity 7 3 6 2 7 2 5 1 7 13. Rigoberto Uran, Colombia, Etixx-QuickStep, Quarterfinals same time. GarbineMuguruza(20), Spain, def. TimeaBac- SanJose 7 6 4 2 5 19 17 sinszky (15), Switzerland, 7-5, 6-3. R eal SaltLake 5 6 6 23 1 6 2 3 14. RobertGesink, Netherlands,Lotto NL-Jumbo, same time. MariaSharapova(4), Russia, def.CoCoVandewe- Houston 5 7 6 2 1 22 24 ghe,UnitedStates,6-3, 6-7(3), 6-2. Colorado 3 6 9 1 6 1 4 1 6 15. VincenzoNibali, Italy,Astana,sametime. 16. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, TrekFactory Racing, Agnieszka Radwanska (13), Poland,def. Madison same time. Keys(21),UnitedStates,7-6(3), 3-6, 6-3. Friday's Game 17. ChrisFroome,Britain, Sky,sametime. Serena Wiliams(1), UnitedStates, def.Victoria HoustonatSanJose, 6p.m. 16. RomainBardet, France,AG2RLa Mondiale, Azarenka (23), Belarus, 3-6,6-2, 6-3. Saturday'sGames sametime. Portlandat Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Today'sshowcourt schedules 19. AlbertoContador, Spain, Tinkoff-Saxo,sametime. NewEnglandat NewYork,4 p.m. 2 0. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha,sametime. Playbeginsat5a.m.PDT FC DallasatOrlandoCity, 4:30 p.m. Also Centre Court —VasekPospisil, Canada, vs. Columbus at Montreal, 5p.m. 22. GerainTh t omas, Britain, Sky,sametime. AndyMurray(3), Britain;NovakDjokovic (1), Serbia, Seattleat Chicago,5:30 p.m. 2 3. Nairo Qui n tana, Co l o mbia, Movistar,sametime. vs. MarinCrlic(9), Croatia. RealSaltLakeat Colorado, 6p.m. 24. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, Ne. 1 Court — GilesSimon(12), France,vs. Sunday'sGames same time. RogerFede rer (2), Switzerland.StanWawrinka (4), TorontoFCat NewYorkCity FC,noon 25. Andrew Talansky,UnitedStates, Cannondale-Garmin, Switzerland, vs.RichardGasque t(21), France. SportingKansasCity atVancouver,6 p.m. same time. 26.Jean-ChristophePeraud,France,AG2RLaMondiale, SOCCER same time. 66. ThibautPinot, France,FDJ,3:23. BASKETBALL 79. TyleFarrar, r UnitedStates, MTN-Qhubeka,3:23. Overall Standings CONCACAF Gold Cup WNBA (After tourstages) All TimesPDT WOMEN'SNATIONAL 1. Tony Martin, Germany,Etixx-QuickStep,12:40:26. BASKETBALLASSOCIATION 2. Chris Froome, Britain, Sky,:12. FIRSTROUND All TimesPDT 3. Tejay VanGarderen,United States, BMCRacing,:25. Group A 4. Tony Gallopin, France,Loto-Soudal,:36. GP W D L GF GA Pts 5. PeterSagan,Slovakia, Tinkoff-Saxo,:39. EasternConference UnitedStates 1 1 0 0 2 1 3 6. Greg VanAvermaet, Belgium, BMCRacing,:40. W L Pct GB Haiti 1 0 1 0 1 1 7. Rigoberto Uran,Colombia, Etixx-QuickStep,:46. cut 7 3 .7 0 0 Panama 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 Connecti 6 4 .6 0 0 1 B. AlbertoContador, Spain,Tinkoff-Saxo,:46. Honduras 1 0 0 1 1 2 0 NewYork t as, Britain, Sky,1:15. Washington 6 4 .6 0 0 1 9. GerainThom Tuesday'sGames Stybar, CzechRepublic, Etixx-QuickStep, Chicago 6 5 54 5 t r A 10. Zdenek Panama1, Haiti1 1:16. Indiana 5 6 .4 5 5 2 '72 UnitedStates2, Honduras1 11. Warren Barguil, France,Giant-Alpecin,1;19. Atlanta 5 7 .4 1 7 3 Friday's Games 12. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, TrekFactory Racing, WesternConference Hondurasvs. Panama,4 p.m. I:Q. W L Pct GB I/nited States vs. Haiti, 6:30p.m. 13. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy,Astana,1:50. Minnesota 6 2 .6 0 0 Monday'sGames Tulsa 9 4 .6 9 2 r/2 14. RobertGesink, Netherlands,Lotto NL-Jumbo, Haiti vs.Honduras,4p.m. 1:51. Phoenix 6 5 .5 4 5 2 r/2 panama vs.UnitedStates,6;30p.m. Seattle 3 9 .2 5 0 6 15. RomanKreuziger, CzechRepublic, Tinkoff-Saxo, 2:03. Los Angeles 2 6 .2 0 0 6 Group B 2 6 .2 0 0 6 16. AlejandroValverde, Spain, Movistar,sametime. GP W D L GF GA Pts SanAntonio 17. Nairo Quintana,Colombia, Movistar,2:06. Canada 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 16. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain Katusha, 2:12. CostaRica 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tuesday'sGames 1 9. J e a n ChristophePeraud,France,AG2RLaMonJamaica 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tulsa65,Atlanta75 diale, 2;19. Today'sGames El Salvador 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 20. Andrew Talansky, UnitedStates,Cannondale-Garmin, Today'sGames Seattleat Indiana,9a.m. 2:51. Costa Ricavs.Jamaica,5p.m. LosAngelesatSanAntonio,5p.m. Also El Salvadorvs.Canada, 7:30p.m. ThursdayrsGame 21. RomaiB nardet, France,AG2RLaMondiale, 3:06. Saturday'sGames NewYor katWashington,6:30a.m. 30. ThibautPinot,France,FDJ,6:30. Jamaica vs.Canada, 3:30p.m. 103.TylerFarrar, UnitedStates, MTN-Qhubeka,16:40, CostaRicavs. El Salvador, 6 p.m. Tuesday,July14 MOTOR SPORTS Jamaica vs. ElSalvador, 3p.m. GOLF Canada vs. CostaRica,5:30 p.m. Group C

NASCAR Sprint Cup

LEADERS GA Pts Wins — 1,JimmieJohnson,4. 2 (tie), KurtBus0 0 0 0 ch, DaleEarnhardt Jr., KevinHarvick, 2. 5 (tie), Kyle 0 0 Busch,DennyHamlin, MattKenseth, MartinTruexJr., 0 0 BradKeselowski, Carl Edwards,JoeyLogano, 1. Points — 1, KevinHarvick, 656.2, Dale Earnhardt Thursday'sGames Jr., 593.3,JimmieJohnson,569.4,JoeyLogano, Trin idadandTobagovs.Guatemala,4p.m. 561. 5,MartinTruexJr., 569.6,JamieMcMurray,526. Mexicovs.Cuba,6:30 p.m. 7, BradKeselowski, 520.6, KurtBusch,506. 9, Mat Sunday'sGames Cuba Guatemala Mexico Trinidad

GP 0 0 0 0

W 0 0 0 0

D 0 0 0 0

L GF 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

TrinidadandTobago vs.Cuba, 3:30p.m. Guatemalavs. Mexico, 6p.m. Wednesday,July 15 Cubavs.Guatemala, 3 p.m. Mexicvos.TrinidadandTobago,5:30p.m.

Kenseth,501.10,Jeff Gordon,500. 11,Kasey Kahne, 496. 12,DennyHamlin, 460.13, PaulMenard, 460. 14, Ryan Newman, 472.15, Glint Bowyer, 465.16, Aric Almirola,441.17,Carl Edwards, 406.16, KyleLarson, 395. 19,GregBiffle, 392.20,Danica Patrick, 366.

from the title before Williams rallied for a 6-2, 2-6, 7-5 vic-

anything, to be able to not just beat Serena but to win Wim-

tory. In the 2013 U.S. Open

bledon," Azarenka said. In May, with Bajin on her

final, Williams had to battle for almost three hours before

much they valued each point. winning, 7-5, 6-7 (6-8), 6-1, in Sometimes the noises were a match that Azarenka said wheezes, sometimes deep or- afterward was like "boiling ganlike exhalations. But Wil- water or something." liams' purely primal screams Azarenka so craves a big early in the second set sig- w in over W i l liams that i n naledthe change in momen- March she evenhired Wiltum. Azarenka hadtaken the first with a series of lacerating

DEALS

IN THE BLEACHERS

liams' ex-hitting partner Sa-

cha Bajin. Williams and Bajin groundstrokes that left Wil- had worked together for eight liams diving or wrong-footed. years, a period covering 10 of Williams was v ulnerable, her grand slam titles, and it that she has never, ever been and she knew it. She was up was partly the egg-crate-abbetter. against one of the few play- dominaled Bajin's drive on the "We just saw today why ers in the world capable of practice court and in the gym Serena is No. 1," Azarenka outhitting her. No one has that helped give Williams said. "I haven't seen her play played her tougher on more such a deep well of fitness. like this, honestly." big occasions than Azarenka, Williams pretended to be Whenever two women fill a a two-time Australian Open unbothered, and even tweetcourt with high-pitched nois- champion who has been close, ed, "don'thave too much fun es, it is remarked on, but in extremely close, to knocking without me congrats Sasha." fact there was something com- Williams off in majors. In the But it was a naked challenge pelling about the soundtrack 2012 U.S. Open final, Azaren- to the world's best player. "I will do anything I can, of the duel between Williams ka was just two points away

BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague BALTIMOREORIOLES— SentRHPJasonGarcia to Bowi(EL) e forarehabassignment. BOSTONRED SOX — Optioned RHP Steven Wright toPawtucket (IL). AssignedRHPZeke Spruil outright toPawtucket. Recalled INFTravis Shawfrom Pawtucket. HOUSTONASTROS— SignedLHPPatrickSandoval to a minor-leaguecontract. KANSASCITYROYALS— RecalledRHPAaron BrooksfromOmaha(PCL). MINNESOTATWINS — Opt ioned LHP Aaron Thompson to Rochester (IL). Selectedthecontract of LHPRyanO'RourkefromRochester. NEWYORKYANKEES—Sent LHPAndrewMiler to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL) forarehabassignment. OAKLANDATHLETICS — Optioned RHP Chris Bassitt toNashville (PCL).Recalled OFJakeSmolinski fromNashvile. SEATTLEMARINERS — ReleasedSS Wilie Bloomquist. TAMPABAYRAYS—PlacedOFSteven SouzaJr. on the15-dayDL ReinstatedOFJohnJaso fromthe 15-dayDL.Designated RHPPreston Guilmet forassignment.Recalled RH PMatt AndriesefromDurham (IL). Agreed to termswith RH PJesusOrtiz onaminor leaguecontract. TEXASRANGERS— Agreed to terms INFAndy Ibanez onaninternational free-agentcontract. TORONT OBLUEJAYS—Agreedto termswith OF ReggiePruitt on aminorleaguecontract. SentRHP AaronSanchezto the GCL Blue Jaysfor a rehabassignment. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Sent OFEnder Inciarte totheAZLDiamondbacksfor arehabassignment. ATLANTABRAVES— Designated RHP NickMasset andLHPDana Evelandfor assignment. Recalled RHPArodysVizcaino fromGwinnett (IL). Selected the contract ofRHPDavid Carpenter fromGwinnet. Signed RHPsMikeSoroka,AnthonyGuardado,Josh Graham,RyanClark, MattWithrow,PatrickWeigel, Taylo rLewis,Stephen Moore,GraysonJones,Evan Phillips, Gilbert Suarez,SeanMcLaughlin, Dalton GeekieandMatt Custred;LHPsA.J. Minter, Ryan Lawlor,ChaseJohnson-Mullins, TrevorBelicek, Jaret HellingerandBenLibuda;CsLucasHerbert, TreyKeegan, Jonathan Morales andCoffin Yelich;3BsAustin Riley ,JacobLanningandRobbyNesovic;OFBradley Keller; 2BKurt HoekstraandCFJustin Ellisonto minor leaguecontracts. CHICAGO DUBS— Recalled RHPDallas Beeler from iowa (PCL). Sent LHPTsuyoshi WadatoTennes-

see(SL)forarehabassignment. CINCINN ATI REDS—RecalledOFYorman RodriguezfromLouisville (IL). COLORADOROCKIES — ClaimedRHP Gonzalez Germen off waivers fromtheChicago Dubsand optionedhimto Albuquerque(PCL). Transferred 1B Justin Morneau tothe 60-dayDL. LOSANGELES DODGERS— Recalled LHP lan ThomasfromOklahoma City (PCL). OptionedLHP Eric Surkamp to Oklahaoma City. MIAMIMARLINS—OptionedOFMarcell Ozunato NewOrleans(PCL). Selectedthecontract of OFJordany Valdespin fromNewOrleans.SentINFMartin Prado to Jupiter (FSL)forarehabassignment. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— PlacedRHPMattGarza on the15-dayDL,retroactive to Friday. Recaled RHP CoreyKnebel fromColoradoSprings(PCL). NEWYORKMETS—ActivatedRHPJenrry Mejia from the restrictedlist andaddedhimto the25-man roster.TransferredRHPBuddy Carlyle onthe 60-day dl. OptionedRH PLoganVerrettto LasVegas(PCL). ST. LOUISCARDINALS—Recalled LHPTyler Lyons from Memphis (PCL). SANFR ANCISCOGIANTS—ActivatedOFHunter Pencefromthe15-day dl. OptionedOFRyan Lolis to Sacrame nto(PCL). BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA —Fi nedDallasownerMarkCuban$25,000 for comm enting abouttheteams' agreements with DeAndreJordanandWes Matthewsduring theleague's freeagentmoratorium. CHICAGOBULLS— Si gned F Bobby Portis. NamedRandyBrownandCharlie Henryassistant coaches.RetainedMike Wilhelm as an assistant coach. GOLDENSTATEWARRIORS — Named Stephen Collinschiefoperatingofficer of GS WArena LLC. PHILADE LPHIA76ERS—Signed CJahlil Okafor. GOLF PGATour — Suspen ded Scott Stallings three monthsforviolatingthePG ATours' anti-doping policy. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague ARIZONA COYOTES—Signed FMikkel Boedker to a one-year contract. BOSTONBRUINS— SignedFJimmy Hayesto athree-yearcontract, F Brett Connolly to aone-year contractandFBrandon DeFazio to a one-year, twowaycontract. CAROLINA HURRICANES—Agreedto termswith FZachBoychukonaone-yearcontract. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Agreedto termswith D Trevorvan Riemsdyk on atwo-year extension, s through the2017-16season. ST. LOUIS BLUES—Signed FVladimir Tarasenko to aneight-yearcontract. COLLEGE ALABAMA — Announced the transfer of men's sophomore basketball GAveryJohnsonJr. fromTexas A&M. BOSTUNU. — NamedAshley Waters softball coach. MICHIGAN —Named BobDeCarolis senioradvisor to interimathletic director. SPRINGHILL— NamedJamesBeestonandBen Fredrickson men'sassistant soccercoaches. VANDE RBILT—Named Shannon Gilroy women's assistantlacrossecoach.

FISH COUNT

World golf ranking 1, RoryMcllroy,NorthernIreland, 12.70.2, Jordan Spieth,UnitedStates, 10.65.3,BubbaWatson,United States,7.34. 4, DustinJohnson,UnitedStates, 6.76. 5, Jim Furyk,UnitedStates, 6.54. 6, HenrikStenson, Sweden,6.49.7, Justin Rose, England, 6.46. 6,Jason Day,Australia, 5.66. 9, RickieFowler, UnitedStates, 5.66. 10,Sergio Garcia, Spain,5.55. 11, Adam Scott, Australia, 5.25.12, JimmyWalker, United States,5.09. 13,J.B. Holmes,UnitedStates, 4.61. 14,Hideki Matsuyama,Japan,4.39. 15,Patrick Reed,UnitedStates,4.12.16, LouisOosthuizen,South Africa,3.92.17,MattKuchar, UnitedStates, 3.92. 16, MartinKaym er,Germany,3.91.

Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updated Monday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsehd Bonneville 1,652 140 5 3 2 315 The Dalles 2,066 26 5 2 6 2 175 John Day 2,369 17 5 23 4 145 McNary 2,211 1 4 5 130 73 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedMonday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsehd Bonneville 337,924 26,641 14,435 7,175 TheDalles 262,543 23,046 4,373 2,140 JohnDay 241,120 16,661 3,615 2,039 McNary 217,436 14,200 2,651 1,246

strafed the net and landed

so oftenresolves a crisis in

right at Azarenka's shoe tops. Azarenka dove for a half-vol-

her favor. But none of it is as

Professional

ley — but framed the ball into

important as that desperate, shouting temperament, th e cry-aloud combativeness, the

side, Azarenka pushed Wil-

the net to give Up the game.

liams to the absolute limit at

The rest was a classic Wil- tendency to feel and play as liams storm surge. Azarenka if she is at a deficit even when seemed to go a l i ttle slack, she is ahead. "She has fury," Tennis while W i l l i ams c o n tinued to lift her game notch after Channel analyst Mary Carillo notch. There was a huge, says. "It's a gift." heavy forehand buried in a If Azarenka cannot beat corner to break Azarenka Williams on her best day, it is in heropening service game hard to imagine that semifinal of the final set. There was opponent Sharapova can do a door-slamming three-ace any better. Williams is 17-2 game to hold for a 5-2 lead. against her, including victo"I just felt like I was never ries in their past 16 meetings. really up," Williams said. "It When Azarenka was asked if was just fighting, fighting, she had a tip for Sharapova, fighting." a recommendation for how to You could choose any one beat Williams when she is in of a number of strengths to this kind of physical and temexplain Williams' staggering peramental form, Azarenka dominance this season. The paused for just a beat. "If I had one," she said, "I strength-fedground strokes that land with the weight of would have used it today." bowling balls. The magnifiSally Jerzfzinsis a columnist

the Madrid Open, going up 6-5 in the third set and had three match points against her — only to lose, 7-6, 3-6, 7-6. That was the back story

when Williams began to howl on Center Court. It was early in the second set, with almost

every game a multiple-deuce affair with f urious rallies. "We were just giving our all out there, literally we gave everything we had," Williams SBld.

The turning point came with Azarenka serving on break point at 2-3. Azarenka

lashed a scathing backhand cross, but Williams anticipated it. She got there in ful-

ly extended stride and rolled a wicked-angled reply that

cent, rope-flexible serve that

with the Washington Post


WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

2 OUTS, 2 WINS

All TimesPDT

Pirates 3, Padres2 PITTSBURGH —GregoryPolanco helped free agrounds crew member trapped underneath a billowing tarp, then hit a go-aheadtriple in the eighth inning to lift Pittsburgh.

AMERICANLEAGUE

NewYork Baltimore Toronto Tampa Bay Boston

Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Cleveland Chicago Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland

East Division W L

44 39 43 41 44 42 43 43 40 45

CentralDivision W L 48 33 45 39 42 41 39 44 37 44

West Division W L

49 37 45 38 41 43 39 45 39 47

Pct GB .530 .512 1'/r .512 1'/t .500 2'/t

.471 5

Pct GB .593 .536 4'/r .506 7 .470 10 .457 11

Pct GB .570 .542 2'/r

.488 7 .464 9 .453 10

Tuesday'sGames Kansas City9,TampaBay5,1stgame Oakland 4, N.Y. Yankees3,10 innings Cleveland 2, Houston0 Boston 4, Miami3 Arizona 4, Texas2 Minnesota 8, Baltimore3 Kansas City7,TampaBay1,2ndgame Toronto2, ChicagoWhite Sox1 L.A. Angels10,Colorado2 Seattle 7,Detroit6,11 innings Wednesday'sGames Baltimore (U.Jimenez7-4) atMinnesota(Milone4-1), 10:10a.m. Detroit(AnSanchez7-7)atSeattle (Happ4-5),1240pm. Oakland (Kazmir 5-5) at N.Y.Yankees(Sabathia3-8), 4:05 p.m. Houston(Straily 00)atCleveland (Bauer7-5), 410pm. Miami(Koehler 7-4)atBoston (Porcelo 4-9), 4:10p.m. Arizona(Hellickson6-5)at Te xas (M.Harrison 0-0), 5:05 p.m. Tampa Bay(Archer9-5) at KansasCity (Guthrie 6-5), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Hutchison8-2) at ChicagoWhite Sox (Danks 4-8), 5:10 p.m. LA. Angel(S s hoemaker4-7) atColorado (Rusin 3-3), 5:40 p.m. Thursday'sGames Oaklan datN.Y.Yankees,10:05a.m. Tampa Bayat KansasCity,11:10a.m. TorontoatChicagoWhite Sox, 11;10 a.m. Houstonat Cleveland,4:10 p.m. Detroit atMinnesota,5:10p.m. LA. AngelsatSeatle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Washington 46 38 .548 NewYork 43 42 .506 3r/t Atlanta 42 42 .500 4 Miami 35 49 .417 11 Philadelphia 29 57 .337 18 Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 54 30 .643 Pittsburgh 49 34 590 41/2 Chicago 46 37 .554 7r/r Cincinnati 38 44 .463 15 Milwaukee 36 50 .419 19 West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 47 38 .553 SanFrancisco 43 42 .506 4 Arizona 41 42 .494 5 SanDiego 39 47 .453 Br/t Colorado 35 48 .422 11

DavidBanks /The Associated Press

Chicago secondbasemanJonathan Herrera, top, forces out St. Louis' Kolten Wongandthrows to first to completea double play Tuesday in Chicago.The Cubs won both ends ofa doubleheader,7-4 and 5-3.

Athlet ics4,Yankees3,10 inn. Royals 9-7,Rays5-1 NEW YORK — Brett Lawrie hit a

KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Alcides

leadoff homer in the 10th inning against All-Star reliever Dellin Betances to lift Oakland. Billy Butler launched atying shot in the sixth, and Tyler Clippard whiffed slugger Mark Teixeira with two on for the final out as theA's improved to 1-6 in extra innings.

Escobar hit a bases-loaded double, AlexGordonmatcheda career high with four RBls and Kansas City swept the day-night doubleheader. On the11th pitch of the at-bat, Escobar yanked afair ball just down the third-base line, emptying the basesand breaking a1-all deadlock. Thevictory in Game 2 cameafter Paulo Orlando hit a ninth-inning grand slam to give KansasCity a win in theopener. It also stuck TampaBaywith its ninth loss in 10games.

National League

Cubs7-5, Cardinals 4-3 CHICAGO — Addison Russell hit a tying single andscored during a three-run rally in the seventh inning, and Chicago completed a day-night doubleheader sweep. The Cubswonthe opener behind a strong start by JakeArrieta, then came back late in the nightcap to beat the NLCentral leaders for just the fourth time in 12games.

Interleague

Diamondbacks 4, Rangers2 ARLINGTON, Texas— Arizona rookie Robbie Ray took a shutout into the eighth inning to outpitch Texas' Yovani Gallardo. Jake Lamb's two-run single with two outs in the top of the fifth put Arizona ahead2-0 andended Gallardo's consecutive scoreless streak

San Diego Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi DeNrrsc 4 1 1 0 GPolncrf 3 0 1 1 Alonso1b 3 1 0 0 NWalkr2b 5 2 1 0 Kemprf 4 0 2 2 Mcctchcf 4 0 2 1 Uptonlf 4 0 0 0 Kang3b 3 0 1 1 at 33/s innings. Gyorko2b 3 0 0 0 Mercerss 4 0 1 0 Kelleyp 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz1b 4 0 1 0 Venaleph 1 0 0 0 GHrndzlf 0 0 0 0 Arizona Texas Benoitp 0 0 0 0 SRdrgzlf-1b 3 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Mdlrks3b 4 0 1 0 Stewartc 2 0 1 0 Pollockcf 5 0 1 1 DShldscf 4 1 1 0 UptnJrcf 4 0 1 0 Lirianop 2 0 0 0 D Perltlf 4 1 1 0 Odor2b 4 0 1 1 Barmesss 4 0 2 0 Ishikawph 1 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 3 1 2 1 Fielderdh 3 0 0 0 T.Rossp 1 0 1 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 Tomasrf 5 0 2 0 Beltre3b 4 0 0 0 Garcesp 0 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Lamb3b 4 0 3 2 Morlnd1b 4 0 1 0 Shieldsph 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 Wcastllc 5 0 2 0 JHmltnlf 4 0 0 0 Mateop 0 0 0 0Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Sltlmchdh 4 0 1 0 Andrusss 3 1 1 0 Solarte2b 2 0 0 0 O wings2b 4 1 0 0 Choorf 2 0 0 1 Totals 3 4 2 8 2 Totals 3 23 9 3 Ahmedss 4 1 1 0 Chirinsc 3 0 0 0 San Diego 0 0 2 g gg 000 — 2 Totals 38 4 13 4 Totals 3 1 2 4 2 PINsburgh 0 0 1 0 1 0 01x — 3 Arizona 000 021 B10 — 4 LOB —San Diego 7, Pittsburgh11. 28—Kemp Texas 000 000 B20 — 2 E — T o m a s (7), C hi r i nos (4). DP—Texas2. LOB(17), McCu tchen(24). 38—G.Polanco(3), Kang(1). S—Shields, Stewart. Arizona13,Texas 4. 28—DeShields (10). 38—D. IP H R E R BBBOPeralta(4). SB—Goldschmidt (16), Tomas(5), Lamb SanDiego (3), Owings (10).SF—Choo. T.Ross 2 2 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBBD Garces 2 3 1 1 1 2 Arizona Mateo 12-3 2 1 1 1 1 RayW,3-4 72-3 4 2 0 1 4 Kelley 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 O.PerezH,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Benoit L,5-4 1 1 1 1 0 2 ZieglerS,13-15 1 0 0 0 0 1 Pittsburgh Texas Liriano 6 4 2 2 1 6 GallardoL,7-7 5 2 - 3 8 3 3 5 4 J.Hughes 1 1 0 0 0 0 S.Freema 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 n WatsonW,2-1 1 2 0 0 0 2 Kela 1 2 0 0 0 2 MelanconS,28-29 1 1 0 0 0 1 Patton 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 HBP —by Benoit (S.Rodriguez), byMateo (Stewart), Detwiler 0 0 0 0 0 0 by Garces (Kang). WP—Garces,Watson. 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Scheppers T—2:55(Delay:1:42). A—21,887(38,362). Sh.Tolleson 1 1 0 0 0 3 Detwilerpitchedto 1batter inthe8th. HBP —byDetwiler (D.Peralta). Braves 4,Brewers3 T—3:03. A—30,955(48,114).

MILWAUKEE— A.J. Pierzynski homered amonghis three hits, and Manny Banuelosearnedhis first major leaguewin to give Atlanta its seventh victory in nine games.

DENVER — All-Stars Albert Pujols and MikeTrout hit two of Los Angeles' four home runs, andMatt Joyce andChris lannetta also went deepastheAngelsjumped on Colorado starter ChadBettis for 10

Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi JPetrsn2b 4 1 1 0 Segurass 5 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Maybincf 4 0 1 1 Lucroyc 3 1 1 1 runs in just 2t/s innings to win their Burnscf 5 0 1 0 Gardnrcf 4 1 1 0 M arkksrf 4 0 1 1 Braunrf 4 0 1 0 Vogtc 4 1 2 1 Headly3b 4 1 0 0 KJhnsn1b 3 1 0 0 CGomzcf 3 0 1 0 fourth straight. First Game Zobristlf 4 0 0 0 ARdrgzdh 4 0 0 0 U ribe3b 4 0 1 0 Lind1b 3 1 2 1 Bt. Louis Chicago F uldlf 0 0 0 0 Pirelapr 0 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 1 3 2 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 0 LosAngeles Colorado ab r hbi ab r hbi Reddckrf 4 0 1 1 Teixeir1b 5 0 0 0 Ciriacoss 4 0 1 0 KDavislf 3 1 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Phamlf 3 0 1 0 Fowlercf 4 1 2 1 BButlerdh 4 1 1 1 BMccnc 3 1 1 1 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 HPerez2b 2 0 0 0 Giavtll2b 5 1 1 1 Blckmncf 4 1 3 0 Wong2b 3 0 1 0 Rizzo1b 3 2 2 2 I.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 GJonesrf 4 0 2 1 Grillip 0 0 0 0 Gennettph-2b2 0 0 0 First Game Calhonrf 5 2 2 0 Le Mah i2b 4 0 3 0 MHarrsp 0 0 0 0 Bryant3b 4 1 1 0 Lawrie3b 4 1 1 1 CYounglf 4 0 1 0 E Perezlf 4 1 1 0 Cravyp 2 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 2 2 3 Tlwtzkss 4 0 TampaBay KansasCity 1 1 G richkph 1 0 0 0 Solerrf 4 1 0 1 Sogard2b 4 0 1 0 Gregrsss 4 0 1 1 Banulsp 1 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Pulols1b 5 1 1 3 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 Denorfilf 4 0 2 3 S emienss 4 1 1 0 Drew2b 3 0 0 0 Vizcain p 0 0 0 0 SPetrsn ph 1 0 1 1 Aybarss 4 0 0 0 CGnzlzrf 4 0 0 0 Sizemrdh 5 0 0 0 AEscorss 4 1 2 0 Soclvchp 0 0 0 0 SCastross 5 0 0 0 Totals 36 4 8 4 Totals 3 5 3 6 3 J Gomsph 1 0 1 0 Blazekp 0 0 0 0 Freese3b 3 1 2 0 WRosr1b 4 0 1 0 JButlerlf 4 1 1 0 AGordnlf 4 1 3 2 JhPerltss 3 1 0 0 MMntrc 4 0 1 0 — 4 Oakland 1B1 001 000 1 Fltynwp 0 0 0 0 GParraph 1 0 0 0 J oyce lf 3 1 1 1 Hundlyc 4 0 0 0 Longori3b 5 1 1 2 KMorlsdh 4 1 2 2 Heywrd rf 4 1 2 0 Arrieta p 3 1 2 0 — 3 New York 2BB 100 000 g Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 D nRrtsph-If 1 0 1 0 Stubbslf 3 1 1 1 Rynlds3b 4 1 1 2 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 E—Semien (27). DP—Oakland 3, NewYork2. Loney1b 5 1 2 1 Hosmer1b 5 1 1 0 ASmnsss 1 0 0 0 l annettc 3 2 1 2 Bettisp 0 0 0 0 4 1 2 0 Bourioscf 4 1 2 1 Coghlnph 1 0 0 0 LOB —Oakland 3, NewYork 7. HR—B.Butler (7), F orsyth2b 3 1 1 0 Riosrf Totals 34 4 104 Totals 3 3 3 8 3 Heaneyp 3 0 0 0 Flandep 2 0 0 0 DeJessrf 4 0 2 0 Infante2b 4 1 2 1 S crggs1b 4 0 1 1 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Lawrie(8).SB—Sogard(6). Atlanta gtg 11B 100 — 4 Elmoress 2 0 0 1 Orlandcf 5 2 2 4 Salasp 0 0 0 0 BBarnsph 1 0 0 0 Tcruzc 4 0 1 0 Baxterph 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSD Milwaukee 1 B B ggg 110 — 3 Acarerph-ss 1 0 0 0 Cuthert3b 4 0 1 0 Lyonsp 2 0 0 0 NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 Oakland DP — Atlanta 1, Milwaukee 1. LOB—Atlanta 6, Morinp 0 0 0 0 Fridrchp 0 0 0 0 1000 H atleyp 0 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 Gray 7 6 3 3 3 5 Kiermrcf 4 1 1 0 Buterac 3 1 0 0 Milwaukee7.2B—J.Gomes(6), Braun(16), C.Gomez Totals 3 6 101110Paulsnph Rivera c 2 0 0 0 Totals 35 2 9 2 Tuesday'sGames Mcrpntph-2b1 0 0 0 JHerrr2b 4 1 2 0 Fe Rodriguez 0 0 0 0 0 1 Jaso ( 16), S.Peterson (3). 38 — M ay bi n (1). HR — P ier ph 1 0 1 0 Los Angeles 362 000 ggg — 10 ChicagoDubs7, St.Louis 4,1st game Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 3 6 7 127 Pomeranz W,3-3 2 0 0 0 0 0 C asalic 0 0 0 0 zynski(6),Lucroy(2), Lind(15). CS—J.Peterson(9), Colorado 001 0 0 1 ggg — 2 Cincinnati5, Washington0 Bt. Louis Bgg B gg 2B2 — 4 Segura(2).S—Banuelos. ClippardS,16-18 1 0 0 0 2 1 DP — LosAngeles1, Colorado1.LOB—LosAngePittsburgh3,SanDiego2 Totals 36 5 9 4 Totals 3 7 9 159 Chicago BB2 BB1 04x — 7 NewYork IP H R E R BBSO les 3,Colorado7. 2B—Calhoun (14), W.Rosario (9). Boston 4, Miami3 Bay B 1 0 3 0 0 BB1 — 6 E—Socolovich (1). DP—Chicago 2. LOB —St. Atlanta Eovaldi 5136 2 2 1 4 Tampa HR — T r out (22), Puiols(26),Joyce(5), lannetta(4), Arizona 4, Texas2 City B3 0 1 00 1B4 — 9 Louis 4,Chicago14. 28—Bourios (7), Fowler(13). BanuelosW,1-0 5 1-3 5 1 ShreveBS,1-1 2 - 3 1 1 1 0 1 Kansas 1 3 1 Chicag oCubs5,St.Louis3,2ndgame Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. HR — Reynolds (6), Rizzo (16). SB—Fowler (12). VizcainoH,1 Warren 1 0 0 0 0 2 23- 0 0 0 0 0 Stubbs(3). S—Heaney.IP H R E R BBSD Atlanta 4,Milwaukee3 E—Longoria (5), A.Escobar(9), Hosmer(2). S—J.Herrera. Ju.Wilson 1 0 0 0 0 1 FoltynewiczH,1 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 LosAngeles Tampa Bay 3. LOB—Tampa Bay 8, Kansas LA. Angel10, s Colorado2 IP H R E R BBBD D.CarpenterH,1 1-3 BetancesL,5-2 1 2-3 1 1 1 0 3 DP — 0 0 0 0 1 HeaneyW,2-0 7 1 -3 8 2 2 0 5 Philadelphi7, a L.A.Dodgers2 Loney (6), DeJesus(8), A.Escobar Bt. Louis Capuano 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 City 9. 28 — Aardsma H,3 1 1 1 1 0 2 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 SanFrancisco3, N.Y.Mets 0 52-3 7 3 3 5 3 (14). 3B —Kiermaier (9). HR —Longoria (9), Loney LyonsL,2-1 Fe.Rodriguez pitched to1 batterin the8th. Grilli S,24-26 1 0 0 0 0 3 Salas Morin 1 1 0 0 1 2 Today'sGames (3), A.Gordon(11), Orlando(2). SB—Rios (5). Hatley 1-3 0 0 0 2 1 Milwaukee WP—Gray, Fe.Rodriguez. Atlanta(Teh eran64) at Milwaukee(Fiers47),11:10a m. T—3:16. A—32,337(49,638). SF — Elmore. M.Harris 1 0 0 0 0 2 CravyL,0-2 6 8 3 3 1 3 Colorado 2 1-3 8 10 10 1 2 N.Y.Mets(deGrom8-6) at SanFrancisco(Peavy0-3), IP H R E R BBSD Choate 0 3 3 3 0 0 W.Smith 1 1 1 1 1 0 BettisL,4-4 52-3 2 0 0 1 3 12:45p.m. TampaBay Socolovich 1 2 1 0 1 1 Blazek 2 1 0 0 0 1 Flande 3 Friedrich 1 1 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati(Lorenzen3-3) at Washington (G.Gonzalez Twins 8, Orioles M.Moore 4 13 9 4 4 2 1 Chicago Gravypitchedto1 batter inthe7th. HBP —byBettis (Trout). 12-3 0 0 0 0 0 ArrietaW,9-5 6-4), 4:05 p.m. Geltz 62 - 3 7 2 2 2 4 T—2:55.A—33,388 (41,900). T—2:30. A—26,232(50,398). SanDiego(Cashner3-9) at Pittsburgh(Morton6-2), 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 J.RusselH,7 Cedeno l 1 3- 0 0 0 0 1 MINNEAPOLIS —Top prospect 2 -3 1 0 0 0 0 4:05 p.m. Jepsen StropH,12 1 0 0 0 0 1 Giants 3, Nets 0 Miami(Koehler 7-4)atBoston (Porcelo 4-9), 4:10p.m. Miguel Sanodemonstrated his Teaford 1 1 0 0 0 0 Ne.Ramirez 1-3 2 2 2 0 1 Red Sox4, Marlins3 Arizona(Hellickson6-5)at Te xas (M.Harrison 0-0), power in hitting his first major BoxbergerL,4-5 1-3 3 4 4 1 0 Motte 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 5:05 p.m. Kansas Ci t y Choate pi t ched to 3 ba tt e rs i n the 8t h . SAN FRANCISCO — Matt Cain homerthenshowed some BOSTON — Xander Bogaerts St. Louis(Wacha10-3) at ChicagoDubs(Hammel league C.Young 6 5 4 4 1 5 WP — Lyons. pitched six innings of two-hit ball drove in three runs with a bas5-4), 5;05 p.m. patience at the plate by drawing a K.Herrera 1 1 0 0 0 2 T—3:10. A—34,368(40,929). L.A. Angel(Sh s oemaker 4-7) atColorado (Rusin 3-3), .DavisH,11 1 2 0 0 0 1 for his first win in nearly ayear bases-loaded walk for Minnesota. W es-loaded single in theseventh in5:40 p.m. G.HollandW3-0 1 1 1 1 2 2 SecondGame as San Francisco ended its sevKnown for a potent bat, Sano had Philadelphia(Morgan1-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw C.Young pitchedto1 batter inthe 7th. ning to lift Boston, which matched Bt. Louis Chicago en-game losing streak. 5-6), 7;10 p.m. HBP—by M.Moore (Butera, A.Gordon). WP —G. ab r hbi ab r hbi two hits and hashit safely in each a season high with its third conThursday'sGames Holland. Phamlf 3 0 0 0 Fowlercf 4 0 0 1 of his first six gamessince being secutive win. St. Louisat Pittsburgh,4:05 p.m. T—3:10.A—22,386 (37,903). Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 2 0 0 1 New York San Francisco Cincinnatiat Miami,4:10p.m. promoted from Double-A. Villanvp 0 0 0 0 Bryant3b 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi AtlantaatColorado,5:40 p.m. SecondGame T cruzph 1 0 1 1 Solerrf 4 1 1 0 Grndrsrf 3 0 1 0 GBlanclf 4 1 3 0 Miami Boston Philadelphiaat L.A.Dodgers, 7:10p.m. TampaBay KansasCity Teladass 2 0 0 0 Panik2b 4 2 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt2b-3b4 1 1 0 Denorfilf 2 0 0 0 Baltimore Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi DnMrp3b 4 0 0 0 MDuff y3 b 4 0 1 0 D Gordn2b 4 0 0 0 Bettscf 4 1 0 0 JhPerltss 5 0 1 0 Coghlnph-If 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Jasodh 3 1 2 1 AEscorss 4 2 2 3 W Flors2b 3 0 0 0 Pencerf 4 0 1 2 Yelichcf 4 0 3 2 B.Holt2b 4 0 1 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 2 1 SCastross 3 1 1 1 MMchd3b 3 1 1 0 Dozier2b 3 0 0 1 History Sizemrlf 3 0 0 0 AGordnlf 5 0 4 4 Duda1b 4 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 0 1 Hchvrrss 4 0 1 0 Bogartsss 4 0 2 3 M olinac 3 0 0 0 Tegrdnc 2 0 1 1 Paredsdh 4 0 0 0 Mauer1b 4 3 2 0 THIS DATE IN HISTORY JButlerph-If 1 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 1 0 M yryJrlf 4 0 1 0 Belt1b 3 0 1 0 Rynlds3b-1b 4 0 1 1 MMntrph-c 0 1 0 0 M orse lf-1b 3 0 0 0 Ortizdh 2 0 0 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 2 1 Plouffe3b 3 2 1 1 Longori3b 4 0 1 0 Hosmer1b 5 0 0 0 N iwnhscf 3 0 0 0 Pagancf 4 0 0 0 S crggs1b 3 0 0 0 Beelerp 2 0 1 0 Bourdh 4 0 0 0 HRmrzlf 4 0 0 0 C.Davirfs 4 0 0 0 Sano dh 3 1 2 3 July 8 Loney1b 2 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 0 1 0 P lawckc 3 0 2 0 Susacc 4 0 1 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 JBaker1b 1 0 0 0 DeAzalf 0 0 0 0 Wietersc 3 0 0 0 ERosarrf 4 0 1 2 197B —JimRayHart of SanFrancisco hit for Parmel1b 3 0 1 0 EdEscrlf 4 0 1 0 Forsyth2b 4 0 1 0 Orlandrf 3 0 0 0 B.colonp 2 0 0 0 M.cainp 2 0 0 0 Grichklf 1 1 1 0 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 ISuzukilf 3 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 0 0 the cycleandbecamethefirst NLplayerin 59years Pearceph 1 0 0 0 SRonsnlf 0 0 0 0 Acarerss 4 0 0 0 Infante2b 4 1 1 0 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 Ariasph 1 0 1 0 Bourioscf 4 0 1 0 TWoodp 0 0 0 0 Realmtc 4 1 1 0 Victornrf 4 1 1 0 to drive insixrunsin oneinningasthe Giants beat S niderlf 3 1 1 0 Hickscf 3 0 1 0 Guyer rf 3 0 0 0 Cuthert 3b 4 1 1 0 Cooney p 2 0 0 0 JHerrr ph-2b 2 1 1 0 Lagarsph 1 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Gillespirf 4 2 2 1 TShaw1b 4 1 3 0 Atlanta,13-0. A Torrsp 0 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 4 0 1 0 JDysoncf 2 3 1 0 Kozma2b 2 0 1 0 ARussll2b 3 1 1 1 Roias3b 1 0 0 0 Hanignc 2 1 1 1 Schoopph 1 0 0 0 KSuzukc 4 1 3 0 1994 —ShortstopJohnValentin madethe10th JHardy O sichp 0 0 0 0 Dietrchph 1 0 0 0 C asalic 3 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 ss 4 1 1 2 DaSntn ss 4 1 0 0 unassistedtriple play in baseball history. Theplay Flahrly2b 3 0 1 0 Casillap 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 5 1 Totals 3 5 7 117 M ottep 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 3 24 8 4 cameinthesixthinning, andhethenledoffthebottom Totals 33 3 7 3 Totals 3 2 8 11 7 Tampa Bay B01 ggg Bgg — 1 Totals 3 6 3 9 3 Totals 2 95 6 5 Totals 29 0 4 0 Totals 3 3 3 103 Miami 001 000 200 — 3 of theinning withahomer to leadBostonto a4-3 vicYork g g gg gg 000 — B Boston City gg g B14 B2x — 7 010 000 30x — 4 B altimore 000 0 2 0 B10 — 3 Kansas Bt. Louis Bgg B B2 gg1 — 3 New tory over theSeattle Mariners. Ban Francisco gg2 gtg ggx — 3 E—J.Baker(2), Re)as(1). DP—Miami 2. LOBE—Loney(1). DP—KansasCity 1. LOB—Tampa Chicago Minnesota 3 0 1 4 0 0 ggx— 8 Bgg B1g 31x — 6 E—B.colon (2), Dan.Murphy(7). DP—NewYork Miami 6,Boston7.28—Yelich (9), Hechavarria (13), E—Siegrist (1). LOB —St. Louis 9, Chicago6. DP — Baltimore 2, Minnesota 1. LOB —Baltimore Bay 7,KansasCity 9. 28—Jaso (1), Forsythe(16), 2, San Franci s co 2. LO B — N e w Y ork 6, Sa n F r anc i s co A.Escobar(15), A. G or don (1 3). HR — J as o (1 ). S B 28 — So l e r (14), S.castro (8), Beel e r (1). SF — R iz z o, R eal muto(11), Gilespie(4), Bogaerts (19). S—Roias. 5, Minnesota6. 2B—A.Jones2 (15), Parmelee(5), American League 8. 28 —Mayberry Jr. (6), Plawecki 2(8). 3B—Grand(2),J.Dyson (10). IP H R E R BBBD Plouffe(21), Hicks(3). HR —J.Hardy (5), Sano(1). Loney S.castro. (1).SF—B.crawford. IP H R E R BBBD Miami SB — Hicks (7).SF—Dozier. IP H R E R BBBD erson IP H R E R BBBO Haren 6 6 1 1 1 5 IP H R E R BBSD TampaBay Bt. Louis Mariners 7, Tigers 6, 11inn. Andriese 4 2-3 4 1 1 3 5 Cooney CishekL,2-6H,3 1-3 1 3 0 1 1 Baltimore 5 1-3 3 1 1 1 3 NewYork 10 3 2 0 4 DunnH,14 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 ManessL,3-1BS,2-5 1 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 GausmanL,1-1 3 2-3 7 8 7 1 4 Teaford 3 2 1 1 B.colonL,9-7 6 1 0 0 0 0 3 CappsBS,2-2 1 - 3 SEATTLE —Robinson Canolined Brach 1 0 0 1 1 21-3 3 0 0 2 2 B.Gomes L,1-4 2 - 3 2 4 4 1 0 Siegrist 23 0 0 0 0 1 C.Torres A.Torres 1 0 0 0 1 1 21-3 5 2 2 0 2 Villanueva B.Morris 1 0 0 0 0 1 Matusz 1 0 0 0 0 1 Colome 1 1 1 1 1 0 an RBI single into the right-field Ban Francisco Boston Britton 1 1 0 0 1 0 KansasCity Chicago corner with one out in the 11th M .cain W,1-1 6 2 0 0 2 7 Miley 62-3 7 3 3 2 9 Volquez 5 5 1 1 3 5 5 4 2 2 2 6 Minnesota Beefer H,6 1 1 0 0 0 0 Tazawa W,1-3 1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 W,2-0 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 J.RusselBS, inning to lift Seattle. Canohit a GibsonW,7-6 6 6 2 2 1 7 Finnegan l 2-2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Kontos S trickland H,7 2 3 1 0 0 1 2 uehara S,20-22 1 0 0 0 0 2 12-3 0 0 0 0 2 Grimm 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Duensing 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hochevar 2-1 pitch from Detroit left-hander H,1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 PB — Realmuto. 1 0 0 0 0 0 T.Wood Graham 1 1 1 1 1 1 Madson W,5-3 1 1 0 0 1 1 Osich C asilla S,21-25 1 0 0 0 1 0 T — 2: 4 4. A — 36,863 (37 , 6 73). lan Krol that one-hopped off the O' Rourke HBP — b y B.G om es (O rland o). 1 0 0 0 0 1 H.RondonH,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:10.A—28,119 (37,903). pitchedto1 batter in the7th. MotteS,5-5 1 3 1 1 0 0 T—2:47.A—42,164 (41,915). wall. It was the first walk-off hit for Brach HBP— by Gausman (Plouff e).WP— Gausman 2. Beeferpitchedto2 batters inthe6th. Leaders CanosinceAug.28,2009,withthe PB —Wieters. HBP—byCooney(Rizzo). WP—Grimm2. Phillies 7, Dodgers2 indians 2,Astros0 T—2:48. A—25,091(39,021). T—3:02. A—35,703(40,929). AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Yankees. BATTING —Micabrera, Detroit, .350; Fielder, LOS ANGELES — ChadBillingsley Texas, CLEVELAND — Corey Kl u ber .344; Ki p ni s , Cl e vel a nd,.336; Jlglesias,Detroit, Detroit Seattle BlueJays 2,W hiteSox1 Reds 5, Nationals0 won for the first time in over two .319;Pedroia,Boston, .306;LCain, KansasCity, .305; ab r hbi ab r hbi pitched five-hit ball into the sevBoston, .304. Kinsler2b 5 0 1 0 AJcksncf 4 2 1 4 years to lead Philadelphia. Billing- Bogaerts, enth inning andwonfor the first CHICAGO — Felix Doubront WASHINGTON —JohnnyCueto PITCHING —Keuchel, Houston,11-3; FHernanC espdslf 5 1 1 1 Gutirrzlf 6 1 2 1 sley earned his first victory since dez, Seattl e,10-5;Carrasco,Cleveland,10-7; Gray, time since May 28 to lead Cl e veVMrtnzdh 5 0 2 0 Cano2b 6 1 2 2 pitched into the seventh inning in pitched a two-hitter with 11 strikeOakla nd,9-3;McHugh,Houston,9-4;Richards,Los April 10, 2013. Rominepr-dh 0 0 0 0 N.cruz rf 4 0 2 0 land. Kluber (4-9) went 0-4 with his first start of the season, and outs, and JoeyVotto homered Angeles,9-5; Archer,Tampa Bay, 9-5; Buehrle,ToJMrtnzrf 4 1 1 0 Seager3b 5 0 1 0 two no-decisions in his previous ronto, 9-5. ead and drove in three runs to lead Avilac 4 2 1 2 Trumodh 4 0 2 0 JoshDonaldson homered to l Philadelphia LosAngeles ERA —Keuchel, Houston,2.14; Archer, Tamp a Cstllns3b 5 1 1 2 Ackleypr-dh 0 0 0 0 Toronto. six starts. But the defending AL ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati. Bay, 2.18;Gray,Oakland,2.20;Santiago,LosAngeKrauss1b 4 1 1 1 Morrsn1b 4 1 0 0 CHrndz2b 4 0 1 0 Pedrsncf 3 0 0 0 Cy Young winner allowed only one les, 2.40;Price, Detroit, 2.54; Kazmir, Oakland, 2.56; RDavisph 1 0 0 0 Zuninoc 5 1 1 0 Reverecf 4 1 2 2 HKndrc2b 3 0 0 0 Toronto Chicago Cincinnati Washington Gallardo,Texas,2.67. runner to reach third base. JMarte1b 0 0 0 0 CTaylrss 3 1 2 0 Franco3b 4 1 1 0 JuTrnr3b 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi STRIKEOUT S—Kluber, Cleveland, 148, Sale, Gosecf 4 0 1 0 S.Smith ph 1 0 1 0 R eyesss 4 1 1 0 Eatoncf 4 0 1 0 Ruf1b 4 1 1 0 AGnzlz1b 4 1 1 0 Phillips2b 4 2 1 0 MTaylrcf 4 0 0 0 Chicago,147; Archer, TampaBay, 141; Carrasco, Francrlf 5 2 2 3 Grandlc 3 1 2 2 Jlglesisss 3 0 0 0 BMigerpr-ss 1 0 1 0 Dnldsn3b 3 1 1 1 Abreu1b 4 0 1 0 Houston Cleveland Votto1b 5 2 3 3 Espinos3b 4 0 0 0 and, 115; Keuchel, Houston, 110; Salazar, G alvis ss 5 0 1 1 Puig rf 4 0 1 0 Clevel Totals 40 6 9 6 Totals 4 3 7 157 Bautistrf 4 0 0 1 Mecarrlf 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Frazier3b 3 0 0 1 Harper rf 3 0 1 0 and,108;Price, Detroit, 107. D Brwn rf 4 1 1 1 Ethier lf 3 0 1 0 Clevel Detroit 03B 2BB 01B 00 — 6 Altu ve2b 4 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 3 0 0 0 Brucerf 4 0 2 1 WRamsc 4 0 0 0 Encrncdh 4 0 2 0 AvGarcrf 4 0 0 0 SAVES —Perkins, Minnesota,27; Street, Los Ruppc 4 0 1 0 JRognsss 4 0 0 0 Angeles,23; Seattle GBB 01B ggg 01 — 7 Tuckerrf 4 0 2 0 Lindorss 4 0 0 0 RuMrtnc 3 0 0 0 LaRochdh 4 0 0 0 B.Penac 4 0 1 0 CRonsn1b 3 0 0 0 Britton, Baltimore,23;uehara,Boston, Blngslyp 3 1 0 0 BAndrsp 1 0 0 0 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. Correass 4 0 0 0 Brantlydh 4 2 3 1 Colaell1b 3 0 1 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 2 0 Suarezss 4 0 1 0 uggla2b 3 0 0 0 20; Boxberger,TampaBay, 20; Soria, Detroit, 18; LGarcip 0 0 0 0 KHrndzph 1 0 0 0 E—B.Miler (9). DP—Detroit 2, Seattle 1. LOBG attisdh 4 0 2 0 DvMrplf 3 0 2 1 Smoak1b 0 0 0 0 GBckh3b 3 1 1 0 Schmkrlf 3 0 0 0 Dsmndss 3 0 1 0 Gregerson, Ho uston,18; DavRobertson,Chicago,18. Ascheph 1 0 0 0 Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 Detroit 4,Seattle10. 2B—VMartinez(10), JMartinez Valencilf 3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 2 0 0 0 CIRsmscf 4 00 0 YGomsc 4 0 1 0 Bourgslf 0 0 0 0 dnDkkrlf 3 0 0 0 NATIONAL LEAGUE Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Callaspph 1 0 0 0 C ongerc 3 0 1 0 Mossrf 4 0 0 0 (16), Gose (12), N.cruz(12), C.Taylor (2). HR —Ces- Carrerlf 0 0 0 0 Shuckph 1 0 0 0 BATTING —Goldschmidt, Arizona,.351; Harper, Cuetop 4 0 0 0 Scherzrp 1 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Thomsp 0 0 0 0 pedes(12),Avila(3), Castelanos(6), Krauss(2), A. Pillarcf 3 0 0 0 CSnchz2b 3 0 1 1 MGnzlz3b 4 00 0 CSantn1b 3 0 2 0 BHmltncf 4 1 1 0 Jordanp 1 0 0 0 Washington,.343;DGordon, Miami, .335;Tulowitzki, Totals 3 8 7 107 Totals 3 1 2 6 2 Jackson (4), G utierrez (1),Cano(6). SB—Romine(6). Travis2b 3 0 0 0 Gillaspiph 1 0 0 0 Singltn1b 3 0 0 0 Urshela3b 3 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Colorado,.320;Aoki, SanFrancisco, .317;YEscobar, P hiladelphia 1B3 gg2 100 — 7 CS — Kinsler (4).S—A.Jackson. T otals 3 0 2 5 2 Totals 3 31 7 1 P resley lf 2 0 1 0 Bourn cf 3 0 0 0 Washington,.315; GParra, Milwaukee,.309. S olisp 0 0 0 0 Los Angeles ggg gg2 000 — 2 IP H R E R BBBO Toronto Totals 32 0 6 0 Totals 3 1 2 8 2 PITCHING —Gcole, Pitsburgh,12-3; Wacha, St. 100 100 ggg — 2 Totals 35 5 9 5 Totals 3 0 0 2 0 E—Bigingsley (1), JurTurner(6). DP—PhiladelDetroit Houston ggg ggg Bgg — 0 Chicago 010 000 ggg — 1 Cincinnati 2 B 1B2g ggg — 6 phia 2. LOB Louis, 10-3;CMartinez,St. Louis, 9-3; Arrieta,Chi—Philadelphia 8, LosAngeles 6. 2B— 2 K.Ryan 22-3 6 5 5 1 2 1 0 0 B01 Bgx E—Reyes (8), AI.Ramirez (10). DP —Toronto 1, Cleveland Washington Bgg Bgg ggg — B Francoeur(10). HR—Francoeur (6), Grandal (14). cago, 9-5;Scherzer,Washington,9-7;Bcolon,New A.Wilson 21-3 4 1 1 1 1 Chicag DP — Houston 1, Cleveland1. LOB —Houston 7, E—Votto (5), Frazier(10), uggla(2), Espinosa(3). SB — o 2.LOB— Toronto 2,Chicago 8.28— G. York, 9-7; Heston,SanFrancisco, 8-5; Bum garner, Revere(20), D.Brown (2). Alburquerque 2 0 0 0 0 3 Beckham(7). HR Cincinnati1, Washington1. LOB—Cincinnati 6, —Donaldson(21). SB—Reyes(11), Cleveland7. 28—Dav.Murphy (10). HR—Brantley DP — IP H R E R BBSO SanFrancisco,8-5; deGrom,NewYork,8-6. B.Hardy 1 1 0 0 0 1 AI.Ra (5) ERA —Greinke, LosAngeles, 1.48; Burnett, Pittsmirez(10). S—G.Beckham. Washington4. 28—Votto (14), B.Hamilton (4). 38Philadelphia B.Rondon 1 1 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBBD Bruce(3), Desm IP H R E R BBBD ond (1). HR —Votto (15). SB—B. BigingsleyW,1-2 6 6 2 2 1 3 burgh,1.99;SMiger,Atlanta, 2.07;Scherzer,Washing11-3 3 1 1 1 1 Toronto Krol L,1-2 Houston Hamilton(42).SF—Frazier. ton, 2.12; Gcole, Pittsburgh,2.28;deGrom, NewYork, L.Garcia 1 0 0 0 0 1 Seattle L,0-1 61-3 6 2 2 2 5 DoubrontW1-0 6 2-3 6 1 1 1 6 Velasquez IP H R E R BBBD Giles St. Louis,2.53. 1 0 0 0 0 2 2.30; Lynn, TWalker 6 6 5 5 1 3 SchullzH,2 Sipp 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati 1 0 0 0 0 2 BTRIKEOUT B—Kershaw, Los Angeles, 147; Papelbon 1 0 0 0 0 1 LoweH,10 1 0 0 0 0 3 LoupH,B 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 R.Hernandez 1 2 0 0 0 1 CuetoW6-5 9 2 0 0 1 11 LosAngeles Scherzer,Washington, 143; Shields,SanDiego, 126; RodneyBS,4-20 1 1 1 1 0 1 OsunaS,4-5 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cleveland Washington B.AndersonL,5-5 5 6 4 3 2 5 Hamels,Philadelphia,119;Liriano, Pittsburgh,119; KluberW,4-9 6 2 - 3 5 0 0 2 7 ScherzerL,9-7 4 Ca.Smith 2 1 0 0 0 5 Chicago 2-3 7 5 5 0 4 Nicasio 2 4 3 3 1 1 Arrieta,Chicago,114;Bumgarner,SanFrancisco,114. FurbushW,1-1 1 1 0 0 1 3 QuintanaL,4-8 8 4 2 2 0 8 McAllisterH,5 1 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 Jordan 3 1-3 2 0 0 1 3 Thomas 2 0 0 0 1 2 SAVES —Melancon, Pittsburgh, 28; Storen, B.Rondon pitchedto 1batterin the10th. Petricka 1 1 0 0 1 0 B.Shaw S,2-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Solis 1 0 0 0 0 0 HBP —byPapelbon(Ethier), by Bilingsley(H.Kend- Washington, 25;Rosenthal, St.Louis, 24;Grili, AtlanHBP —byTWalker (J.lglesias). PB— YGomes.Balk— Kluber. HBP —byDoubront (Flowers).WP—Osuna. HBP —byScherzer (Philips). rick), byGiles(Pederson). ta, 24;Familia,NewYork, 23;Kimbrel, SanDiego,21; T—3:44.A—21,782(47,574). T—2:33. A—17,028(40,615). T—3:03.A—10,821(36,856). T—2:30. A—31,898(41,341). T—2:45.A—46,614 (56,000). Casilla,SanFrancisco, 21.

Oakland

NewYork

Atlanta

Angels 10, Rockies2


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE

Safety first for Froome astime trialist Martin wins stage, takesyellow By Jerome Pugmire

late attack."

The Associated Press

ing stayed safe on the treacherous cobblestones, Chris

Relieved after c r uising through the final paved section, Froome did not chase as the German rider peeled away

Froome cared l i t tl e

a b out

some 2 miles from the line to

conceding the race leader' s yellow jersey to Tony Mar-

clinch a fifth Tour stage win

CAMBRAI, France — Hav-

"Changing the bike, with the wrong position, I was just berto Contador by 36 seconds; thinking to finish," Martin Nibali by 1:38 and Colombian said. "Suddenly, 5 kilometers rider Nairo Quintana, the 2013 (from) the finish, I just decided runner-up, by 1:56. to give it a chance." lead over his rivals. He leads two-time Tour champion Al-

The 30-year-old Martin, a three-time world t ime t r i al

He leads Froome by 12 sec-

onds and American rider Terowly missing it on stage 1. champion who finished sec- jay Van Garderen — shaping tin on Tuesday's fourth stage "While Tony's a g r e at ond to Rohan Dennis in stage up as a dangerous outsiderof an action-packed Tour de 1's time trial, fell into the arms by 25 seconds. France. time trialist, he's not going to Nibali, who built last year' s After crashing out of last be there in the mountains," of his teammates after the year's race early, following Froome said. "I'm happy to stage. Countryman John De- win on the back of a brilliant three crashes in two days, see the jersey go to him rather genkolb finished second and performance on the slippery Froome had good reason to than any of the big overall ri- Slovak Peter Sagan was third. cobbles, failed repeatedly to vals. This is the perfect situa"All the pressure of the last crack Froome's resistance. be nervous given that this "I don't have any regrets," days has come off," said Marstagefeatured seven sections tion for us." of cobbles. But the nightmare Peter Dejong /The Associated Press F erocious sidewinds i n tin, who was 1 second behind Nibali said. "Froome is very scenario never materialized, Germany's Tony Martin celebrates as he crosses the finish line stage 3, a huge crash on stage Froome before the stage."I strong." While Martin changed his and the British rider repelled ahead of the sprinting pack to win the fourth stage of the Tour de 4 that took down 20 riders and was really on the limit. I got the attacks of defending Tour France on Tuesday in Cambrai, France. Martin, who is not s threat put five out of the race, and round the last corner and I bike, Contador rode the last champion Vincenzo Nibali to win the overall race, earned the yellow jersey. Tuesday's cobbles have pre- was surprised I could make it." 15.5 miles with th e broken After the final cobblestone rim of his wheel rubbing the as the valiant Italian failed to sented riders with a dangerous claw back time on him. cocktail of hazards. Froome section, he got a flat tire and brakes. "I hung in there," the Span"I wasn't trying to show how day; it was about staying out 2013 Tour champion. "Con- has come through them un- swapped bikes with teammate strong I was on the cobbles to-

and take the yellow after nar-

o f trouble," said Froome, the

g r a t ulations to Tony for hi s scathed and with a healthy

ens

0

LI WI

By Schuyler Dixon

g/Ig

FRISCO, Texas — Clint

United States forward Glint

Dempsey didn't view a wild

Dempsey,

sellout crowd as a pro-Texas

left, takes control of the ball in front of Honduras' Afredo Mejia during the

The Associated Press

bunch celebrating two goals by what amounts to a hometown kid. The E ast

T e xa s n a t ive

thinks American soccer supportersare a lot more fervent than that now.

Dempsey scored twice on

second

headers not far from where

half of a CONCACAF Gold

he trained as a youth, and the United States opened defense of its CONCACAF Gold Cup

Cup match Tuesday

title with a 2-1 victory over

Honduras on Tuesday night.

in Frisco,

"I think the crowd was be-

Texas. Dempsey

hind the whole team," said the 32-year-old, who is up to 43 record. "I remember when I first started with the national

scored both American goals in a 2-1 victory.

team and there'd be more fans

LM Otero/The

international goals, 14 behind

1

Landon Donovan's American

J4

Peter Dawson and his staff

The Associated Press

is to find the right company for Watson — although the final crossing of the Swilcan Bridge could very well be on a Sunday. Watson was 8 hole at St. Andrews, and the feet away from winning the company he kept that Friday Open just six years ago at afternoon in 2005 could not Turnberry. He made the cut have been better. last year at Royal Liverpool. Donald played with Tom Such matters r equire This was one time Luke Donald did not mind taking 45 minutes to play a 357-yard hole. He was on the 18th

Watson and Jack Nicklaus,

reer with his 164th and final sponsorship deals with the

moments for women's sports, affirmation that Title IX leg-

islation and America's efforts for gender equity do pay huge dividends. A record-breaking TV audience of 25.4 million tuned in to Fox for the match, mak-

ing it the most-watched soccer game in U.S. history. It topped all 2015 NBA Finals games, and it was the highest-rated Sunday prime-time show this

season. Viewership peaked at 30.9 million toward the end of

the game. The previous soccer record had been 18.2 million viewers for th e U .S. men' s

pearances. At 27 years, 341 days, he is the fourth-youngest

for winning last summer. The lyst Jeff Van Gundy with his men's teams that lost in the wife and two daughters. USA won t h e i n augural first round of the World Cup Van Gundy has become a Women's World Cup in 1991, earned $8 million. huge supporter of women' s players faxed results to their While America celebrates soccer. families because there was so its female athletes, most of the He said in an interview with little media coverage. Roughly world still ignores theirs. publication For the Win: "The a dozen fans awaited the team When it comes to profes- example they set for me havat the airport when it arrived sional opportunities and sal- ing been in the NBA for a long from China. aries, the disparity between time, they just have a different The field depth and level of men and women is staggering. perspective because they' ve play is far better than it was in Argentine star L ionel Mes- never had it easy.... They' re the 1990s. France is a fantastic si makes $27 million a year just really excited about the team, but it had the misfortune with Barcelona and another opportunities and how they go of losing in the quarterfinal to $40 million in endorsements. about it is impressive. top-ranked Germany on the fi- The top Major League Soccer "The utter lack o f s ense nal shot of a penalty shootout. players can make big money of entitlement was actually England had its coming-out — Kaka makes $6.6 million startling for me ... the most party, finishing in third place a year, Michael Bradley and difficult diva of women's socwith a stunning win over Ger- Jozy Altidore $6 million, and cer would be the easiest NBA many. Colombia, Netherlands Clint Dempsey $4.9 million. player ever." and Australia proved they beWomen who play in the He urged sports fans to suplonged and figure to be stron- National W o men's S o ccer port the NWSL. "Go to the games," Van ger by the 2019 World Cup in League earn between $6,000 France. and $30,000, with most in the Gundy said. "It doesn't matAnd U.S. coach Ellis was $15,000 range. Every play- ter if you have daughters or criticized by fans and media er on theU.S. team except sons. You want to see great for her tactics and lineups ear- Abby Wambach plays in the athletes competing, setting ly in the tournament, just like league, and their salaries are the right example. Going is the male coaches in men's sports. subsidized by U.S. Soccer. best thing anybody can do beThat is progress. Still, they are paid only a frac- cause they' ve gotta find a way But let's not get so lost in the tion of what men make. The to make (the league) stick and ant and Tom Hanks. Consider that when Team

vancements in the women' s

game since 1999. There were watch parties

large and small across the United States, and among

Let's not forget that FIFA forced the women to play their

World Cup on artificial turf, something they would never ask the men to do for fear

of injury. The U.S. women' s tions were President Obama, team was awarded $2 milTiger Woods, Justin Timber- lion for winning Sunday. The lake, Andre Agassi, Kobe Bry- German men got $35 million those tweeting c ongratula-

NWSL is the third attempt to

U S GA

tally different atmosphere. It

make 100 international ap-

saves in the first few m i n-

was a treat to play with him

and experiencethe admiration everyone had for Jack and what he had done for the

game. "The last few holes, every window was filled with people watching a legend." Ian Baker-Finch knows

the feeling. He is not sure why his name was chosen to play the King bid farewell at the home of golf in 1995.

World Cup match against Portugal last summer. Those women in baggy shorts and knee socks are healthier role models than Kim K a r dashian, M i l ey Cyrus, or rail-thin fashion models. celebration that we ignore the It is encouraging to see ad- inequities that still exist.

Paul Lawrie. Th e

Royal Bank of Scotland, and Donald thought he might get the pairing. "They came to me and ...

with Arnold Palmer when

Continued from C1 They are all rock starsfor the time being — just like the 1999 championship team. Both games were watershed

For his final U.S. Open at

appearance in a major. Pebble Beach, Nicklaus was Donald and Nicklaus had joined by David Gossett and

"Great atmosphere and a

zan had a couple of tough

very special moment for Michael Bradley," U.S. coach Jurgen Klinsmann said. 69th minute for Honduras, a the second round of last year' s were at our best. I think we Bradley replaced Dempsey, semifinalist in the past three World Cup. The Americans, turned the ball over quite eas- who lost the captaincy going Gold Cups, and the Catrachos 29-1-2 all time in Gold Cup ily too many times and may- into the Gold Cup after getcame close to tying the score. group play, meet Haiti on Fri- be put ourselves under some ting suspended by MLS and "It wasn't our best perfor- day and Panama on Monday. undo pressure." the U.S.Soccer Federation for mance, but we' re happy to Haiti tied Panama 1-1 in the Bradley, a son of former U.S. a confrontation with a referee get three points from our first doubleheader opener. coach Bob Bradley, became in a U.S. Open Cup match for game," Dempsey said. U.S. goalkeeper Brad Gu- the 16th American male to Seattle.

USWNT

thought, and Dawson was

giving him an unobstructed not tipping his hand. view for the farewell of golf's Yes, it can be a distraction. greatest champion. Not only That is usually outweighed was it the final round for by the privilege of witnessNicklaus at St. Andrews, he ing how much one player can closed his incomparable ca- endear himself to so many.

distraction — and it was in certain parts — it was a to-

crowds, I think the team defi-

United States ed fromcrossesfrom Michael vs. Haiti utes on a muggy night before Bradley, wearing the captain' s 22,357 at the home of Major arm band in his 100th interna- When:5:30 p.m. League Soccer's FC Dallas. "They came out and put us tional appearance. The goals FridayTV:FS1 boosted the Americans to 13-0 under a bit of pressure and we in Gold Cup openers. It was the first competitive had to find a way to weathCarlos Discua scored his match for the U.S. since los- er that storm, which we did," first international goal in the ing to Belgium in extra time in Guzan said. "I don't think we

By Doug Ferguson

96), Cobi Jones (27-239) and Marcelo Balboa (27-320).

Press

Next up

tbe ride forWatson's farewell at St.Andrews'?

American after Donovan (26-

Associated

So to be able nowadays to play in front of pro-American

and 64th minutes were creat-

Wbo will be alofor ng

typically puts the defending champion with the U.S. Amateur champion (Gossett) and British Open champion not warned me, but asked (Lawrie). The defending U.S. if I would be interested in Open champion was Payne playing with Jack in his last Stewart, who died in a plane Open," Donald said. "I didn' t crash the previous October. take me long to think about Nicklaus was given that it. Even though it can be a honor.

for the other team sometimes.

nitely feeds off that energy." Dempsey's goals in the 25th

iard said.

GOLF

SOCCER: CONCACAF GOLD CUP

••0

Matteo Trentin.

Baker-Finch w o n

fey? He won the PGA Champ ionship, th e m a jor t h a t

kept Palmer from the career Grand Slam, and he won it at Oakmont of all places.

"Nobody could pick up on Mahaffey," Fay said. T urns out t here was a

club member at Oakmont named Jack Mahaffey who was on the USGA executive

ing to slide. And so while it was an honor that the R&A

committee and was close friend with Palmer. Fay said the third player in Palmer's group was chosen because of

chose him and Peter Baker

his surname.

dale, but his game was start-

of England to play alongside Augusta National, meanPalmer, there was no short- while, marches to its own age of nerves. beat. "I was in a funk and I was

Nicklaus did not announce

trying to figure it out," Bak- that 2005 was going to be his er-Finch recalled Tuesday. final Masters, which might "And I remember thinking

explain wh y

t h e s i x-time

how hard it was going to be champion finished his final to figure it out playing before round on the ninth hole. "I' ve had my time at Au50,000 people who were with Arnie." gusta. I don't need a lot of But what a memory. And what an artifact.

fanfare for that," Nicklaus said before the tournament.

Palmer gave Baker-Finch He played with Jay Haas and the golf ball he used over the Shingo Katayama. final two holes that year, and Palmer's final M asters then signed it for him. in 2004 was documented "I have the last one he

from the time he arrived.

played his last hole with at

He played the first two

St. Andrews," Baker-Finch said.

rounds with U.S. Mid-Amateur champion Nathan Smith, who is from Western Pennsylvania. And with Bob Estes.

Few images in golf are as indelible as Palmer and Nicklaus posing one last time as they cross the Swilcan Bridge.

cer since 1999. The first two

will follow Van Gundy's ad-

failed. Some NWSL players are

vice. But I seriously doubt that

and final Open next week at St. Andrews. Watson is a

h o s t f a m i lies' players will go back to being homes — including U.S. World the little-celebrated, grossly

on five courses, four of them

Cup starters Meghan Klingen- underpaid women they were berg and Morgan Brian. They before the World Cup began. play for the Houston Dash and Progress? Abs o lutely. live at the home of NBA ana- Equality? Hardly.

John Mahaffey. Mediate, like Palmer, grew up in Western Pennsylvania. But Mahaf-

The

work this time." I would love to think fans

will happen. Most of the U.S.

with Rocco M ediate and

Open in 1991 at Royal Birk-

professionalize women's soc-

boarded a t

More curious was Palm-

er's swan song at Oakmont for his final U.S. Open. He played his final two rounds

Next up is Tom Watson,

who is playing in his 41st five-time champion, the only player to win the claret jug

"Everybody loves Arnold Palmer, and he knows everyone," Estes said. He would

hit his second shot and walk over to the gallery ropes almost every time. The people would get so caught up and enamored with Arnold they would forget Nathan and I

in Scotland, though not at St. were still playing." Andrews. He is beloved in the old country.

The task for R&A chief

Was it worth it? Said Estes: "I'd volunteer

to do it again."


C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 S&P 500 2,081 . 34+12.58

17,776.91 4 DOW , +93.33 ~ .

TOdap Eye on Alcoa

2,100 "

Financial analysts anticipate that Alcoa returned to a profit in its second fiscal quarter. The metalscompany, due to report its latest financial results today, has benefited this year from higher aluminum prices. Alcoa alsohas been moving to close, sell or curtail some of its mining and smelting operations in several countries as it transforms itself into a supplier for the auto and aerospace industries.

AA

$11.06

"

2,160 "

10

18,200

Close: 2,081.34 Change: 12.58 (0.6%)

17,820"

2,080 "

GOLD $1,152.40 -20.50

M

18,400"

"

Close: 17,776.91

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Change: 93.33 (0.5%)

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18,000"

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17,600 . 2,040

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F

StocksRecap

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M

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 17793.45 17465.68 17776.91 +93.33 DOW Trans. 8191.84 8012.80 8179.02 +100.49 DOW Util. 579.49 563.33 576.72 +1 3.89 NYSE Comp. 10841.49 10631.52 10829.32 +46.64 NASDAQ 5002.00 4902.21 4997.46 +5.52 S&P 500 2083.74 2044.02 2081.34 +1 2.58 S&P 400 1508.24 1481.95 1507.35 +6.51 Wilshire 5000 2201 5.96 21596.77 21994.39 +124.40 Russell 2000 1248.96 1225.98 1248.05 +1.09

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD t0.53% L -0.26% -1 0.51% t1.24% t2.47% L -6.69% -0.09% t0.43% t0.11% L +5.52% t0.61% L L L +1.09% t0.43% +3.78% t0.57% +1.50% t0.09% +3.60%

2Q '14 2Q '15

North westStocks

based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $0.12 Div. yield: 1.1%

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DOW

Price-earnings ratio: 22

EURO M $ 1 .0979 -.0068

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SILVER $14.9 5 -.78

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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

Close:$0.96 T-0.04 or -3.9% The bank's shares fell as Greek voters rejected European creditors' bailout terms and the nation's finance minister resigned. $2.0

AGN Close:$307.00%0.30 or 0.1% The pharmaceutical company is buying medical device maker Oculeve for $125 million in cash and future milestone payments. $320

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A M J J A M J J L T +15. 3 +2 4 .7 2 6 8 2 0 0 . 72f ColumbiaBnkg COLB 23.90 ~ 33.4 4 3 1. 8 3 -.52 -1.6 T 52-week range 52-week range Average rates for a 30-year, ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ 64. 9 2 60.76 +.48 +0.8 T L L + 3 6.4 +42.9 137 30 0.60 $8.88 ~ $3.69 $2D1.91 ~ $3 17 .72 fixed rate mortgage hit 4.08 CostcoWholesale COST 115.88 ~ 1 56 .85140.50 +4.62 +3.4 L L L -0.9 +2 2.3 3746 27 1 .60f Vole27.1m (1.7x avg.) P E: . . Volc1.7m (0.8x avg.) P E: .. . percent last week, the highest 7 1 92 Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 9.89 o — 17.8 9 10. 1 0 -.35 -3.3 T T T -24.3 -11.0 Mkt. Cap:$3.37 b Yield:.. Mkt. Cap:$120.48 b Y ield : ... level so far this year. The average -3.9 - 10.9 738 2 0 0 . 44 FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 35.29 31.0 4 +. 1 5 +0 .5 L L L rate is up from a 52-week low of Catabasis Pharma. CA TB Versartis VSAR Hewlett Packard HPQ 2 9 .52 ~ 4 1.1 0 30.80 +.23+0.8 L T L -23.2 -8.2 18007 12 0.70f 3.59 percent. 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Lattice Semi LSCC 5.76 ~ 8.50 6.06 +. 0 4 + 0.7 T T L -12.0 - 29.2 99 1 d d reports its latest weekly data on $14 $20 LA Pacific L PX 1246 ~ 18 64 1687 + 0 7 +0 4 L T T +1 9 +10 7 13 4 2 d d home loan applications. 13 18 MDU Resources MDU 1 8 .93 o — 34. 1 9 1 9 .63 + .49 +2.6 L T L -16.5 - 41.2 944 1 4 0 . 73 T +18. 6 +1 9 .3 8 0 5 2 2 0. 2 2 Mortgage applications survey Mentor Graphics MEN T 18.25 t -r 27. 3 8 25 . 99 -.10 -0.4 T T 12 seasonally adjusted percent change T L Microsoft Corp MSFT 4 0 .12 ~ 50.05 4 4. 3 0 -.09 -0.2 T -4.6 +9 . 1 35878 18 1 . 2 4 est. A M J A M J J 3 million barrels Nike Inc 8 NKE 75.90 — 0 11 0 .73111.29 +1.45 +1.3 L L L +15. 7 +4 1 .4 3 537 30 1 . 1 2 2.4 52-week range 52-week range -1.8 +10.7 2175 2 1 1 . 48 NordstromInc J WN 64.92 ~ 83.16 77. 9 6 + 2.68 +3.6 L L L $11. 51 ~ $16.96 $14.13 ~ $29.93 - 1.9 16 6 2 1 1 . 86 Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 ~ 52.5 7 44. 1 8 +. 8 8 +2.0 L L L -11.5 28 20 68 27 49 V ol.: 51.4k (4.8x avg.) PE: . . VolJ 504.0k (2.1x evg.) P E: . . . 0 Paccar Inc P CAR 55.34 ~ 71.15 64.4 1 +. 2 3 +0 .4 T L L -5.3 -1.8 1768 16 0.96f Mkt. Cap:$195.23m Yield : .. Mkt.Cap:$544.64 m Yie ld: ... Planar Systms P LNR 2.45 ~ 9.17 4.24 -.08 -1.9 T L T -49.3 +72.8 8 4 12 Horsehead Holding ziNC Allot Communications AL LT -3.3 - 4.7 87 1 3 3 1 . 76 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.26 41.3 6 +. 3 5 t0 . 9 L L L Close: $9.48 V-0.06 or -0.6% Close:$5.68 %-0.32 or -5.3% Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 261. 4 8 19 5.83 + . 34 +0.2 T T T -18.7 - 23.3 2146 1 6 0 . 12 The zinc and nickel-based products The Internet protocol services comSchnitzerSteel S CHN 1 5.06 ~ 28.44 19. 3 0 -.45 -2.3 T L L -14.5 -24.6 665 d d 0 . 75 company reported a slide in zinc pany reported disappointing prelimiSherwin Wms SHW 201.47 ~ 294. 3 5 28 3.63 +3.67 + 1.3 L L L +7.8 +36 . 1 68 9 3 1 2. 6 8 metal production in June, partly benary second-quarter financial results, citing lower bookings. 5/22 5/29 6 /5 6 / 1 2 6/19 6/26 StancorpFncl S FG 59.28 ~ 79.07 76. 6 1 +. 6 1 +0.8 L L L + 9.7 +19 . 2 18 3 1 5 1 . 30f cause of equipment issues. $20 $10 Week ending StarbucksCp SBUX 35.38 — 0 54.75 54 .38 + . 0 7 + 0.1 L L L +32.5 +38 .9 9 2 95 3 2 0. 6 4 15 8 Source: Facteet UmpquaHoldi ngs UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 8.9 2 17.72 -.21 -1.2 T T T +4.2 +2.3 18 4 0 2 1 0. 6 0 10 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 3. 4 7 -.13 -0.3 T T L -3.3 + 2 . 3 8 512 1 4 1 .02f L T + 3.9 +6.0 766 14 0. 5 2 Washington Fedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.2 5 23.02 - .33 -1.4 T Oil monitor A M J J A M J J WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 ~ 5 8.2 6 56.25 -.19 -0.3 T T +2.6 + 9 .2 15558 14 1.50f 52-week range 52-week range The Energy Department reports Weyerhaeuser WY 3 1.06 a — 37.0 4 32. 06 + . 3 3 +1.0 L L L -10.7 -1.0 2851 26 1 . 16 $8.33~ $2 1.D2 $5.47~ $ 13.58 its latest tally of U.S. crude oil DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 9 -Amount declaredcr paid in last t 2 months. f - Current Vol.:2.1m (3.4x avg.) P E: .. VolJ 204.1k (1.5x avg.) P E: . . . stockpiles today. annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$537.13 m Yield : .. Mkt. Cap:$175.8 m Yield: ... The nation's crude oil supplies dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m —Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash rose two weeks ago by 0.5 SOURCE: Sungard AP value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months. percent to 465.4 million barrels. That translates to a gain of about InterestRates NET 1YR 2.4 million barrels. An increase in TREASURIES TEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO the nation's crude oil inventories typically brings down the price of Carnival Corp. says it could 3-month T-bill . 0 1 .01 ... .01 although as relations thaw oil. 6 -month T-bill . 0 7 .0 7 .05 become the first American cruise between the two countries visitors 52-wk T-bill .22 .23 -0.01 T T L .10 company to visit Cuba since the have fewer hurdles to overcome. 1960 trade embargo when it Americans can't just vacation in 2 -year T-note . 5 9 .59 ... T T L .50 The yield on the begins offering trips to from Miami Cuba but must go there as part of 10-year Trea5-year T-note 1.52 1.56 -0.04 T T L 1.73 to Cuba in May, pending approval an approved cultural or sury fell to 2.26 10-year T-note 2.26 2.29 -0.03 T T L 2.61 from the Cuban government. humanitarian trip, unless they have family on the island. percent on 30-year T-bond 3.04 3.08 -0.04 T T L 3.44 The weeklong trips will be through its new brand, Carnival, which is the world's largest cruise Source: Facteet

' ";"." Carnival considers Cuba

SU HS

Fathom, which focuses on trips where passengerssail c o m pany, is expecting high demand for the voyages to a destination in order to do volunteer work. and has priced them accordingly. Prices start at $2,990 Cuba is still closed for general tourism for Americans, per person plus taxes and port fees.

Carnival (CCL) T 52-WEEK RANGE

$33

uesday 's close: $50.20 Price-earnings ratio: 28

$51

(B a sed on past 12-month results)

&md Focus AP

MarhetSummary Most Active VOL (ggs) LAST CHG

NAME

BkofAm Petrobras Vale SA Micron T Apple Inc FrptMcM Intel ChesEng SouFun

16.69 -.25 8.29 + .09 5.62 +.01 18.20 -.12 125.69 -.31 17.25 -.59 29.90 -.14 11.46 +1.04 6.90 -.23 2.09 -.38

1062262 510612 505042 460538 459400 443418 429597 418452 399538 395416

AMD

Gainers NAME

LAST 28.62 2.68 HmFdB LA 27.37 PostRck rs 2.54 DS Hlthcre 2.92 VillB&T rs 22.37 PlugPowr h 2.54 LegacyRes 9.02 Connectu n 11.60 TICmSys 3.70

Depomed ProDvrsty

CHG +7.98 +.66 +6.65 +.34 +.39 +2.87 +.31 +.94 +1.14 +.36

%CHG + 38.7 + 3 2.7 + 3 2.1 + 1 5.5 + 1 5.4 + 14.7 + 1 3.9 + 1 1.6 + 10.9 + 1 0.8

Losers NAME

EmmisC pf WowoLtd n Baozun n NQ Mobile Galectin un

LAST 3.30 6.17 7.43 3.78 5.79

CHG %CHG -1.60 -32.7 -1.96 -24.1 -2.13 -22.3 -.92 -19.6 -1.28 -18.1

Foreign Markets NAME

LAST Paris 4,604.64 London 6,432.21 Frankfurt 10,676.78 Hong Kong24,975.31 Mexico 45,01 7.75 Milan 20,958.48 Tokyo 20,376.59 Stockholm 1,516.12 Sydney 5,563.96 Zurich 8,764.11

Div. yield: 2.0%

Selected MutualFunds

3-yr* 17.8

5-yr*

Fidelity Blue Chip Growth has FAMILY been a top performer during the six-year tenure of its manager; American Funds Morningstar recently reaffirmed its bronze-medal analyst rating.

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 24 . 74 +.10+1.1 +4.5 +12.6+12.7 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.75 +.16 +0.3 -0.4 +9.0 +9.7 8 8 A CpwldGrlA m 46.55 -.07 +2.3 -0.5 +14.1+11.3 C 8 C EurPacGrA m 49.61 -.29 +5.3 -1.8 +12.0 +8.4 8 8 C FnlnvA m 52. 8 8 +.22+3.4 +6.0 +17.5+15.3 C C C GrthAmA m 44.78 +.13 +4.9 +7.4 +19.2+15.9 D 8 D Fidelity Blue Chip Growth (FBGRX) IncAmerA m 21.25 +.07 0.0 +1.1 +10.9+11.5 D C A InvCoAmA m 37.01 +.21 +1.3 +4.1 +17.2+14.9 D C D VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m38.10 -.01 +5.0 +4.0 +15.4+13.0 A 8 8 oWAMutlnvA m40.58 +.26 0.0 +3.9 +15.7+15.9 C C A 53 Dodge &Cox Income 13.64 +.01 +0.4 +1 .6 + 3.1 +4.4 D A 8 Do Dc IntlStk 42.69 -.34 +1.4 -6.7 +15.0 +9.6 D A A Stock 180.23 +.37 +1.2 + 3 .6 +20.9+17.1 C A A oFidelity Contra 102. 7 0 +.30+5.8 +10.3 +17.6+16.7 C C C 53 ContraK 102 . 67 +.30+5.9 +10.4 +17.8+16.9 8 C C C3 LowPriStk d 52.22 -.02 +3.9 + 5 .8 +18.3+16.7 8 C B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.38 +.45 + 2.2 + 7 .4 +17.8+16.8 8 8 8 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.35 +.01-0.7 -5.6 +7.9 +8.5 E A A 53 IncomeA m 2. 32 . .. -0.5 - 5.2 +8.3 +9.1 E A A Oakmark Intl I 24.33 .. . + 4 . 2 -4.4 +16.9+11.2 DO Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 08 +.08+0.9 +5.8 +14.9+14.2 C E D MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 75 +.08+0.5 +5.0 +13.9+13.2 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 62 +.08+0.6 +5.0 +14.0+13.3 D E E OsFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m49.49 +.19 +1.8 +4.6 +19.9+14.5 8 A D average of stock holdings SmMidValB m41.57 +.17 +1.4 +3.8 +18.9+13.6 C B E • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.1 8 + .13 -1.0 0. 0+ 14.6+13.8 E D D GrowStk 56.0 0 + .18+7.8 +13.2 +19.7+18.9 A A A CATEGORY: LARGE GROWTH HealthSci 61.9 8 +.07+20.6+42.6 +36.2+33.7 A 8 A Newlncome 9. 5 0 +.02+0.4 + 2.1 + 2.0 +3.5 C C D BIORNINGSTAR RATING~ ***** Vanguard 500Adml 192.09+1.16 +2.1 +7.4 +17.8+16.8 8 8 A 500lnv 192.09+1.16 +2.1 +7.3 +17.7+16.7 8 8 8 ASSETS $14,615 million CapOp 54.84 +.21 +4.0 +12.0 +25.4+19.0 8 A A EXPRA TIO .89% Eqlnc 31.00 +.22 +0.6 +3.5 +15.6+16.6 C D A BIIH.INIT.INVES T. $2,500 IntlStkldxAdm 26.45 -.18 +3.1 -7.3 +9.3 NA D D PERCEN TLOAD N/L StratgcEq 33.75 +.26 +4.9 +8.6 +22.8+20.4 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 28.91 +.04 +1.6 +2.7 +10.2+10.2 A A A TgtRe2035 18.22 +.02 +2.1 +2.6 +13.2+12.5 8 8 8 Return/Rank Tgtet2025 16.83 +.03 +1.8 +2.8 +11.2+11.0 A 8 8 YEAR-TO-DATE +6.2 TotBdAdml 10.76 +.02 +0.3 +2.7 +1.7 +3.3 A D D 1-YEAR t12.6/A Totlntl 15.81 -.11 +3.0 -7.4 +9.3 +6.6 D D D 3-YEAR +21.9/A TotStlAdm 52.50 +.29 +2.7 +7.3 +18.1+17.1 8 8 A 5-YEAR +19.6/A TotStldx 52.48 +.29 +2.6 +7.2 +17.9+17.0 8 8 A 3and5-yearretants areannaattzed. USGro 32.01 +.16 +7.0 +13.5 +20.6+18.6 A A A

CHG %CHG -1 06.90 -2.27 -1 03.47 -1.58 -213.85 -1.96 -260.97 -1.03 +223.74 + . 50 -642.24 -2.97 +364.36 +1.82 -10.82 -.71 Rank:Fund'sletter grade comparedwith others in +1 00.67 +1.84 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in -98.67 -1.11 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent.

BONDS

Commodities

FUELS

The price of crude oil fell as low as $50.58 during trading its lowest level since April, before paring much of its losses. It was the fourth straight drop for oil.

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

NET 1YR TEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.86 2.92 -0.06 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.44 4.47 -0.03 T T 12. 9 Barclays USAggregate 2.36 2.44 -0.08 T T PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 6.60 6.50 +0.10 L L D i v idend: $1.00 RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.14 4.26 -0.12 T T Source: FactSet TEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.89 1.93 -0.04 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.31 3.38 -0.07 T 1 YR AGO3.25 .13

Total return 1-y r CCL 3 6.5%

*annualized

AP

Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or redemption fee.Source: Mcrningstar.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the euro, British pound and Canadian dollar. It was virtually unchanged against the Japanese yen.

hfdf 88

METALS

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

L L L L L L L

3.25 4 57 . 2 33 . 4.93 4 28 . 1 99 . 3.01

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -1.8 52.33 52.53 -0.38 + 0 .4 1.63 1.64 - 1.28 1.71 1.71 +0.14 -7.3 -6.0 2.72 2.76 -1.45 1.95 1.92 +1.34 +35.8

CLOSE PVS. 1152.40 1172.90 14.95 15.73 1041.10 1065.90 2.45 2.54 651.40 675.15

%CH. %YTD -1.75 -2.7 -4.93 -4.0 -2.33 -13.9 -3.62 -13.7 -3.52 -18.4

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.8 1.51 1.51 +0.38 Coffee (Ib) 1.23 1.23 -0.32 -26.2 Corn (bu) 4.16 4.18 - 0.66 + 4 . 7 Cotton (Ib) 0.66 0.66 - 1.35 + 8 . 7 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 281.20 283.70 -0.88 -15.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.24 1.18 +4.96 -11.6 Soybeans (bu) 10.02 10.34 -3.07 -1.7 -1.7 Wheat(bu) 5.80 5.89 -1.53 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5447 -.0158 -1.02% 1.7131 Canadian Dollar 1.2 725 +.0069 +.54% 1.0675 USD per Euro 1.0979 -.0068 -.62% 1.3607 -.00 -.00% 101.86 JapaneseYen 122.45 Mexican Peso 15. 7 920 +.0551 +.35% 13.0082 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.7932 +.0214 +.56% 3.4274 Norwegian Krone 8 . 1977 +.1189 +1.45% 6.1565 South African Rand 12.4681 +.0645 +.52% 10.7903 Swedish Krona 8.5 2 4 9 + .0596 +.70% 6.8287 Swiss Franc .9466 +.0037 +.39% . 8 932 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.3440 +.0102 +.76% 1.0670 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2081 -,0032 -.05% 6,2040 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7551 +,0020 + 03% 7.7502 Indian Rupee 63.515 +.259 +.41% 59,950 Singapore Dollar 1.3560 +.0072 + 53% 1.2463 South KoreanWon 1136.65 +11.06 +.97% 1011.60 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.09 + . 1 6 +.51% 29,96


© www.bendbulletin.corn/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

BRIEFING

omeowners insurance

Showtime starts streamingservice It's showtime for Showtime's stand-alone streaming service. The premiumcable network's digital-only service went liveTuesday morning across ahandful of distribution partners — Apple, Roku,Huluand PlayStation Vue. The newservice, priced at $10.99 amonth, allows broadbandInternet users on-demand access to thepremium cable channel's roster of programming without a TV subscription. It costs a fewdollars less than the$14.99 broadbandusersturn over for HBO'sstreaming service called HBO Now. Showtime's service, unlike HBO'sincludes , live-streaming options for its EastandWest coast feeds. The over-the-top option from Showtime comes asmediacompanies arescrambling to chase youngerconsumers and others wholive in the more than 10 million U.S. homesthat payfor only broadbandInternet access with nocable package. To drum upsubscriber interests, all four distribution partners areoffering a 30-day freetrial.

CVS cuts ties with Chamber Pharmacy giantCVS Health announcedTuesday that it would endits membership in theU.S. Chamber ofCommerce because ofthegroup's stance ontobacco deregulation. CVS, which became the first major drugstore to remove cigarettes and other tobacco products from its stores last year, said it was "surprised" by reports that theChamber had lobbied foreign governments to easerestrictions on tobaccosales. The NewYork Times reported last weekthat the Chamber,the nation's largest trade group, was attacking foreign restrictions onsmoking in public places, banson menthol andslim cigarettes, and prohibitions on tobaccoads. The Chamber, ina statement, calledCVS's departure "unfortunate" and said reports about its tobacco positions were part of a "concerted misinformation campaign." From wire reports

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter7 Filed June 29 • Annette R. Rodriguez, 1435 NEThird St., Redmond Filed June 30 • Kevin C. Miller, 61611 Summer ShadeDrive, Bend • Janis C. Helser, 1449 NE Purcell Blvd. Apt. B48, Bend • Brian H. andSheryl K. Mobley, 61091 Borden Drive, Bend • Seth D. andCauria J. Sophy, P.O.Box2205, Terrebonne • Michael P. and Gallic B. Neihart, 2982 NEPinnacle Place, Bend Filed July 1 • Sara A. Ortega Alcala, 2600 NE ForumDrive No. 1, Bend • Richard L. Burkhart, P.O. Box 6743, Bend Filed July5 • Deborah L Treadway, 5488SW GemLane, Culver Chapter 11 Filed July 6 • Nolan Town Center LLC, 250 NW Franklin Ave.No. 204, Bend Chapter 13 Filed July 6 • Darlene P.Burrows, 20791 Northstar Way, Bend

owin en • Study finds goodprotection from fire, low crime keepinsurance costs down

'g +

/+

ll

Matt York / The Associated Press file photo

After the culinary comebacks of Twinkies, shown above, Wonder bread and a host of other Hostess Brands goodies were relaunched by new owners after disappearing in 2012 when the company went out of business. Now the company might be worth billions.

Twinkies make comeback; now baker rolling in dough'? By Drew Harwell

value the company at around $2.5 billion.

The Washington Post

In 2012, Hostess, the iconic American bakery giant behind Ding Dongs, Ho Ho's and Twinkies, was bankrupt,

los, the 69-year-old turn-

ceived "a number of calls" to buy the company, and fielded a proposal from bankers over a potential Hostess stock-mar-

around artist, swatted back

In an interview, Metropou-

rumors, saying "it was too with plans to slash more than early to consider a sale or IPO 18,000 jobs and close its doors at this time." The ubiquitous, for good amid a crippling na- legendary brand on which tionwide strike. they had pledged millions in Then, in 2013, a snack-cake repairs, he said, still had plensavior appeared. The Misty of room to climb. "We feel souri-based sweets-maker that we' re just two years into was bought for $410 million this wonderM turnaround of by a partnership between this company, and that there' s private-equity giant Apollo a lot of potential growth to GlobalManagement and C. consider." Dean Metropoulos, a billionIts sales have yet to recover aire turnaround artist known to the nearly $1 billion a year as "Mr. Shelf Space" for his it reached before the bankrevival of brands such as Vlaruptcy. But by following a sic, Hungry-Man and Chef turnaroundplaybook refined Boyardee. by Metropoulos — slashing Now, the iconic dessert jobs and costs, investing in titan is resurgent, selling its automation, spending wildly golden, cream-filled Twinkies on marketing campaigns across the world under the name Hostess Brands and

that dubbed Twinkies' return

turning down $2 billion offers from a pack of hopeful buyers. OnTuesday morning, the company reached its latest peak when Reuters, citing anonymous sources, suggested Hostess would head

the History of Ever" — the

to Wall Street with an initial

Metropoulos said over the past few weeks he had re-

"The Sweetest Comeback in

public offering that would

company has arisen from the ashes to regain a place in American pantries — and

ensureanother hyper-profitable flip for its deep-pocketed rescue team.

By Stephen Hamway

for affordable homeowners

The Bulletin

insurance.

Home prices might be on the upswing in Bend again, but at least homeowners in-

Tye Farnsworth, financial representative for the All-

surance premiums in the city

1900 NE Division St., said Central Oregon's relative

state Insurance Co. office at

fall below the state average, according to a recent study. ValuePenguin.corn, a personal finance website, published a study that ranked Bend 18th lowest for home-

owners insurance out of 57 Oregon cities and towns. Ac-

lack of natural disasters such as earthquakes, tornadoes or hurricanes helps keep premiums low. While the region does have to deal with hail and fire damage, he said homes in the Willamette Val-

cording to the research, Bend

ley have to deal with much

had a baseline homeowners insurance cost of $885 per year, nearly 4 percent less than the state average of $920 per year. Bend also had lower

higher rates of rot because of

the damper climate. "Bend just doesn't have those problems," Farnsworth

premiums than three other

said. Fire can be an issue, but

ket debut. He would not offer

cities in Central Oregon-

Bend's higher concentration

details on how much they could raise in an IPO. Apollo spokesperson Charles Zehren declined to comment. Metropoulos' mega-deals

Sisters, Prineville and Madras — included in the study.

of fire hydrants and stations gives the city an advantage

Brian Quinn, one of the founders of ValuePenguin

over smaller communities in

and the author of the study,

have tended to focus on

wrote that the study used a hypothetical home and buyer to establish a baseline cost. The home is on a 2,000-square-foot-property,

website shows three manned fire stations within the city

troubled but well-known household names that he can

buy for cheap, reinvigorate for a few years, then sell with a newly hyped turnaround story, to a long-term operator or highest bidder. But the billionaire would set no timeline for when he

expected to flip the company, saying only that corporate leaders would "continue to

focus this coming year on expanding the business," and adding, "It's hard to call when we will consider something." In two years, Metropoulos

said, the leaders have invested more than $150 million in "improvements and efficien-

the region. The city of Bend's limits, as well as two others outside of town.

constructed in 2000, with

a reconstruction cost of $200,000, while the baseline homebuyer was a single, 41 year-old male who doesn' t smoke or own any pets.

The study took the average of costs from four national

like we do here." Quinn addedthat Bend

insurance companies — Pro-

erty crime that can plague larger cities. According to

gressive, Liberty Mutual,

the study, Portland has the

State Farm and Farmers Insurance — to come up with the overall metric.

highest insurance premiums in the state, at $1,162 per year, which Quinn said was due to higher instances of property crime.

"Oregon has some of the

cheapest home insurance rates in the country, and the

In 2013, Bend saw 2,267

variation in the state, largely,

of millions on marketing to

wrote in an email. Insurance companies look

Spotify had bestweek ever in U.S.

have the clusters of homes also doesn't have the prop-

cies" at the firm's bakery plants, and spent hundreds remind hungry buyers the snack cakes were ready to buy and unwrap.

"In Bend, we have so many more manned fire stations," said Charles Earp, owner of People's Insurance, in Bend. "With Sisters, you just don' t

wasn't too drastic," Quinn

at a mix of factors to deter-

mine homeowner insurance costs, including risk of fire

reportedproperty crimes, slightly more than 28 per 1,000 people, according to FBI statistics. By comparison, Portland saw more than

or natural disaster, property

48 property crimes per 1,000 residents. "All things being equal,

crime rates and the claims

larger/denserareas tend to

history of particular ZIP

have higher rates," Quinn

codes. For these reasons, local insurance agents said Bend was ideally positioned

wrote. Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulleti n.corn

By Joshua Brustein

it hadn't reached for even a

Bloom berg News

single day since December

biggest question is how many people it gets to sign up for pre-

Cost ofhomeownersinsurancein Oregon

2013. More attention for stream-

mium subscriptions, and that isn't dear from this data.

Valuepengui n.cornconductedastudyofhomeownersinsurancein57 Oregon cities and rankedthemaccordingly. The meanannual homeowners insurance premium was$920 based onprices for a 2,000-squarefoot single-family house. State meanprice

It's been a week since Apple M usic launched, and one of

Apple thinks its biggest market will be people who don't have any streaming with the most to lose just not the business making the had its best week ever in the news. And while Spotify took music subscriptions, so it isn' t U.S. Apple store, measured a hit in early June, when Apple necessarily positioning itself by how it ranked among the announcedplans atWWDC as a Spotify killer. A week is most-downloaded apps. Spoti- to stream music, it quiddy re- not enough time to see how fy spent five consecutive days covered. Of course, downloads this will play out, especially aren't the only measure of as the ninth-most-popular given that all of Apple's users iPhone app in the U.S., a spot success for the company. The are still using a free trial. thebeneficiariessofarseems to be Spotify. The company

ing musichasgenerally been good for Spotify, even if it is

BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR FRIDAY

• ContractorsCCBTest Prep Course:Two-day class to preparefor the state-mandatedtest, which is not included, to become a licensed construction contractor in Oregon;8:30 a.m.; $359; registration required; COCC Redmond Campus —Technology Education Center,2324 NE College Loop,Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ccb or 541-383-7290. SATURDAY • HomebuyerEducation Workshop: Understand the buying process,accesssafe mortgage loansand prepare for the responsibilities of homeownership; 9 a.m.; $45 perhousehold; Bend Neighborlmpact Office, 20310Empire Ave., SuiteA100,Bend; www.neighborimpact. org/homebuyerworkshop-registration/ or 541-323-6567. TUESDAY • Pints withOurPillars: Patrick Kruse, founderand

owner of Ruffwear, aBend company offering awide range of performancedog gear, will share hisstory and secrets to success.;5 p.m. $15, members;$20, nonmembers; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NWBondSt., Bend; https://bendchamber. chambermaster.corn/ eventregistration/ register/900 or 541-382-3221. • BusinessStarttfp:Cover the basics anddecide if running a business isfor you; 11 a.m.;$29; COCC Crook CountyOpen Campus, 510SELynn Blvd., Prineville; www.cocc.edul sbdc or 541-383-7290. JULY 16 • Growth Trends in Central Oregon:Discussion of the region's growth through 2040; 11:30a.m.; $35; register by5 p.m. July13; lunch included; St. CharlesCenterfor Health andLearning, 2500 NENeff Road,Bend; www.cityclubco.org/or 541-633-7163.

JULY 22 • BusinessStartupin Spanish/EmpezandoStf Propria Negocio: /,Quieres iniciar tu propio negocio? Acude aesta clase. 1Te has preguntado eicorno iniciar tu propio negocio, cuales serian los requisitos, permisos, prestamos economicosy corno obtenerlos?6p.m.; $29; COCCChandler Lab, 1027 NW TrentonAve., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 54 I-383-7290 JULY 23 • LunchandLearnMonthly MarketOverviews: noon; MorganStanley, 705 SW Bonnett W ay,No.1200, Bend, or 541-617-6013.

JULY 29 • ExpandingYourMarket to Federal, State & Local Governmentwith GovernmentContract Assistance Program: Free workshop to introduce business owners to the basic tools for selling to the government; 10a.m.;COCCChandler Lab,1027NW

Trenton Avenue,Bend;www. gcap.org or 541-736-1088. JULY 30 • ExpandingYourMarket to Federal, State & Local Governmentwith GovernmentContract AssistanceProgram:Free workshop to introduce business owners tothe basic tools for sellingto the government; 10a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College Redmond Campus — Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond;www.gcap org or 541-736-1088. AUG. 4 • Buying or Selling a Business:A practical guide for entrepreneurs interested in investing in, buying or selling a business;6 p.m.; $69; Central Oregon Community College,2600 NW Coll egeWay,Bendor 541-383-7270.

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

1. Gresham 2. Lake Oswego 3. Keizer 4. Tigard 5. Medford 7. Coos Bay 9. Corvallis 11. Salem 18. Bend 25. Eugene 32. The Dalles 36. Prineville 38. Madras 39. John Day 41. Klamath Falls 45. Ontario 46. Sisters 47. Pendleton 48. Burns 57. Portland $0

11 831

SSIS

$899 $91I

$922 $931

$II32 $840 895I

$gsO $972 l$979 $200 $40 0

$ 6 0 0 $8 0 0 $1,000 $1,200

t' REGON

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-%a ~ Source: Valuepenguin.corn

Pete Smith i The Bulletin


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing report, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.corn/outdoors

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6 I

d

BRIEFING Mountain bike race series Mt. Bachelor will

host a mountain bike cross-country race series and agravity race series during July and August. The cross-country race series starts July 15, with additional races set for July 29 and Aug. 12. Racesstart at 6 p.m., and eachrace will take place ona different course on the cross-country singletrack near the baseof Bachelor. The mountain will also host a gravity race series on three Fridays: July 24, Aug. 7,and Aug. 21. Each racewill start at 6 p.m. and takeplace on a different course within the downhill bike

park at Bachelor. All races — open to riders 13 andolder with intermediate or higher ability — include after-parties and award ceremonies. Cost for both the cross-country and gravity races is $15per race if preregistered on www.mtbachelor.corn or $20 per race onthe day of the race. Cost for an entire series (three races) is $40. For more information, visit www.mtbachelor. corn.

l w + a

Bulletin staff report r '

TRAIL UPDATE

~~c~n

With ChrisSaba Tumalo Falls and its viewpoint are now closed to all public access until further notice. Too manypeoplewere trying to accessthe falls by going through the construction zone, creating a dangerous situation. Anyonefound hiking or biking through the construction zoneor at the viewpoint maybe cited. TumaloCreekTrail out of Skyliner Sno-park is now closed. Road 370from Todd Lake to theBrokenTop Trailhead will beopenby the weekend.Almost all trails are nowsnow-free. Climbers Trail onSouth Sister doeshavepatchy snow at around8,000 feet. Due to thedry winter and increasingly dry spring andsummer, alot of backcountry creeks that would normally be flowing this time ofyear are dry or drying up.Hikers who usually rely on these creeksfor awater source should packadequate waterandnot rely on intermittent streams. All trails are in adry and dusty condition. Clearing of downed trees continues.Green Lakes andSodaCreek trails are nowclearedof blowdown. Trails that were clearedcould see new blowdownafter storms. Due to high to extreme fire danger, public use restrictions for campfires go into effect midnight Friday. Campfires, warming fires and cooking firesincluding charcoal fires, portable propanecampfires, biomass orparticle wood-burning stoves and wood pellet grills or smokers — areprohibited in all wildernesses in the Deschutes, Ochoco and Willamette national forests and BLMlands. SeeTrails /D5

A mountain biker rides through the'

area known asSwede's Cut on the OC&E WoodS Line State Trafl,

a formeroggin l g railroad line between Klamath Falls and Bly. Lee Juillerat (Klamath Fallea) Herald and News

• Former railroad line that hauled timber between Klamath Fallsand Blyis now ascenic bike route

When Weyerhauser Co. discontinued the rail service, the company enough to allow tractor-trailer rigs railbanked the right-of-way to the

Transportation promised to replace it with a higher structure, one tall to pass underneath. It's estimated

a new bridge will cost upward of By Lee Juillerat trail slices through a canyon carved $800,000. Still, nearly 30 years later, (Klamath Fags) Herald and News decades ago by crews that built the it's an unfulfilled promise. DAIRYOregon, California & Eastern, a The Highway 140 crossing is alastoral fields and, whoops, a logging railroad between Klamath ways an anxious time, but the rest slithery bull snake, almost as Falls and Bly. of the ride is pure pleasure. long as the trail was wide. And the always nerve-racking We rode our mountain bikes from Brilliantly colored thistles, crossing of Highway 140 at the Olene past Dairy, about 10 miles, beand skittery marmots, salamanders place where the former railroad fore doubling back, on the unpaved, and ground squirrels that played overpass was removed. It's a semi- often uneven surface of the former impromptu games of chicken and blind crossing near a bend in the rail line that was used to transport narrowly avoided being flattened highway with cars zipping past at logs from the Bly, Sprague River under our mountain bike tires. 55 to 65 miles an hour. and Sycan Marsh forests to mills in The always welcome shade in When the old bridge was demol- Klamath Falls from the early 1990s Swede'sCut,wherethe OC&E bike ished, the Oregon Department of until 1990.

Oregon State Parks and Recreation

Department for development of the OC&E Woods Line State Trail, the state's longest linear state park.

The combined trail from OC&E Klamath Falls to Bly and the Woods Line from Beatty t o t h e Sycan

M arsh covers more than 100 miles. While the 7-plus mile paved section from Washburn Way to Olene is

heavily used, traffic — bikers, equestrians, walkers and wintertime cross

country skiers — on the other sections of the other 93-plus miles of unpaved former rail line is limited. SeeOC& E Trail /D4

Getting a teenagerhooked ontrout at Timothy Lake w

hen Joe Warren said he'd found trout in a Mt. Hood channel

the evening before and more than a few were working the surface, I tied on a No. 12 Ant Misbehavin' to

fornia, where there are but

GARY

LEWIS

foam-bodied pattern and it looks like what a carpenter ant looks like after the first

slap, maybe not dead, but punch-drunk. We were at Timothy Lake,

10 miles off Highway 26, south of Mt. Hood. Those woods were logged a long time ago and maybe there aren't as many ants in the timber as there would be if there

Joe Warren were in Warren' s boat, with anchors in the bow and stern to hold them in

place. were fresh clear cuts, but ants

our Mt. Hood fish camp. I'd

Warren had arrived the day before and scouted the old river channel in the North Arm. The water was low and clear and, with polarized

reserved three spaces at a campgroundand mentioned

glasses to cut the glare, I could see the darker, deeper

the trip to friends. We filled the campsites and then some with adults and teens. My mother and father were in a drift boat with my

water. Narrow in places, the

13-year-old nephew, Michael, who through no fault of his own lives in Southern Cali-

othy Meadow before the dam was built. SeeLewis /D5

FISHING lu re a couple. would definitely be on the It's a

few trout. James Flaherty and

menu. It was the first evening of

goal

channel widened out into sunken pools and a person could geta sense ofthe creek

that used to run here in Tim-

Gary Lewis/For TheBulletin

Joe Warren, of Carson, Washington, battles a rainbow at Timothy Lake. The best trout fishing in the hot weather will be in the high

lakes, very early and late in the day.


D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

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Submit your best work at Q bendbulletin.cern/readerphotes. Your entries will appear online, and we'l choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors. Submission requirements:Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution fat least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

SPARKS LAKE SUNSET Larry Weinberg took this photo at Sparks Lake using a Canon G7X. The sky was putting on a show just before sunset while couples headed to secluded camping spots around the lake.

ta is iscove

iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN

By Brett French

something on public land and

can determine about them and

Billings (Mont.) Gazette

million to 160 million years Wyoming. And those discovago to the late Jurassic ageeries have typically revealed It took five years for Jay Gun- the time of dinosaurs. Back only one kind of starfish, not derson to find a scientist will- then, this area of M ontana several. "So this is way outside the ing to investigate the fossilized was an inland sea. The Swift starfish — also called sea stars formation represents the last normal," Guensburg said. "So — that he discovered in crum- "major regression of the Sun- we' re pretty excited about this bling rock along the base of the dance Sea," Gunderson wrote occurrence." What's more, th e P r y or Pryor Mountains in Montana. in a paper about his discovery.

brings it to our attention; we

the history of the rocks and

It was worth the wait. "What you found is an ex-

"I'm just surprised it hadn' t

together make starfish fossils

fessor emeritus at the Univer-

the weather, some have been

a rare find, especially whole ones.

sity of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He noted that the only

etched and damaged.

Fateful hike

similar fauna of a similar age Gunderson, who works as to that found in the Pryors is in a geologist for the Montana Switzerland, "and that's it." "One of th e i n t eresting Bureau of Mines and Geology in Billings, Montana, said things about it is it looks like he likes to get out of the office it will have some parallel with occasionally to e x plore the Switzerland," Blake said, posrock exposures strewn about sibly the same massive extinc-

In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.corn

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of starfish all on one surface in a smallarea — 22 examples," Guensburg said. "It's interest-

ing because they are the oldest examples of starfish that aren't too different from modern

Ana XnC

ones." In all, the crew collected so

tion that affected all life in that

many fossils that they had to

In 2010, he was hiking with his 9-year-old son, Robert, when they chanced upon two

time period.

be shipped to Blake for study in four separate boxes — one of which was late to arrive and

washed over the starfish all at causedtheresearchersa bitof inches across — embedded in once, entombing them in time, anxiety. "This is a great example of the surface of a 150-foot layer Guensburg said. Other starof chalky marine sandstone fish fossils have been found how the system can work to known as the Swift formation. in only a handful of locations benefit the public," Liggett said The formation dates back 150 in North America, including in his email. "Someone finds small starfish — only about 6

EVERGREEN

"What's interesting is that it's four to six different kinds

south-central Montana.

In Montana, a large ancient flood or i nflux o f sediment

perhaps publish his findings in a scientific journal; and evget the clearance needed to eryone enjoys the benefits of excavate; Dan, as the expert, public fossils and the informawill spend time studying the tion about the past that they new fossils and see what we provide."

starfish fossils were mixed in

been seen before," Gunderson with fossilized clams and oystraordinary occurrence," Tom said. "I kept it secret for years. ters, their traditional prey. Guensburg, interim dean of I know that starfish are pretty Quickexcavation the Physical Science Divirare fossils." sion at Rock Valley College After taking photographs Finally arriving at the site in Rockford, Illinois, wrote to of the fossil find, Gunderson last month, Blake, Guensburg, Gunderson after investigating s ent the pictures out to t r y Liggett and a crew of volunthe site last month. "It could to encourage someone with teers were able to use masonry be the most diverse starfish knowledge about starfish to saws to cut the surrounding fauna known from the Juras- investigate further. No one rock and remove the starfish sic, a time when modern star- responded. fossils over the course of six "We went out again and fish orders make their earliest days working 12 to 14 hours a known appearances. This is found moreand more," Gun- day. "I was elated because they good stuff." derson said. "Finally I sent the Fossilized starfish are rare, photos to the BLM." are so rare, and here they are," especially whole ones, said Blake said of finally arriving Guensburg, who has long re- Expert connection at the site. "For those of us dosearched ancient sea stars. The Bureau of Land Maning this kind of thing, it's fun Often, only bits and pieces are agement is responsible for the to see them in the field." "I was sort o f o v e rfound. That's because when land where the fossils were they die, starfish are eaten by discovered. It was BLM's Greg whelmed," Guensburg said. scavengers or quickly disin- Liggett, a paleontologist for "When you work all of your tegrate as the dual action of the Montana-Dakotas office, life and find only one or two sand and surf grinds them who encouraged an investiga- of them and suddenly they are down. tion of the site. all over the place." It's also because of their "I am not a starfish expert, Whole portions of the rocks body composition. The ex- so I contacted Dan (Blake) had to be removed because tryternal shell of the animals is to see if he was interested in ing to chisel out just the fossil made of thousands of sponge- coming out from Illinois to would be impossible given the like plates held together by take a look, and that resulted crumbly nature of the stone. soft tissue. in his trip," Liggett wrote in an Blake said it would be more "Modern ones are a handful email. likely that the fossils would of sand in a matter of days," Blake is recognized as one be embedded in a cementlike Guensburg said. of the world's experts on fos- material to keep them intact. All of these factors taken silized starfish. He is now pro- Because they were exposed to

other site in the world with

connect with a leading expert on the subject and help them

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CLV a OF BE


WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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PhotosbyDan Pelle 1The (Spokane, Wash.) Spokesman-Review

Nick Deshais crosses the Tommy Thompson Trestle near Anacortes, Washington, during his U.S. Bicycle Route 10 ride across Washington State to Sandpoint, Idaho. Washington state's U.S. Bicycle Route 10 accounts for 416 miles in the nationwide network of bike routes, which has nearly 9,000 miles of official routes.

a iona i erou esareseein areviva By Nicholas Deshais

quire much. No bike lane,

work being complete, the state

The S pohesman-Review

signs or even a substantial

transportation

SPOKANE, Wash. — In a forest of blackened spires, the

shoulder is needed, though all of these things are very desirrecent victims of the largest able. The only realrulesforan wildfire in Washington's his- official bike route are it must tory, I climbed toward Loup connect two or more states, Loup Pass on two wheels, or a state and an international breathing heavily and drip- border or to another official ping sweat. route. A cardboard box on the Of course, nothing is that side of the road stopped me. It simple. Every j u risdiction was illustrated with a bicycle along USBR 10 — 18cities and ascending the steep incline towns, seven counties and a of Loup Loup, flames licking handful of transportation disits tires. "Cold Water," the box tricts — had to approve the read, describing its contents. route. When the work of con"Hot Hot." vincing policymakers and colIn the days previous, I had lecting signatures was done, ridden from the cool air of state Transportation SecrePuget Sound into the Skagit tary Lynn Peterson had to enValley. I ascended through the dorse and sign the application blustery woods of Mt. Bak- for the route to the American er-Snoqualmie National For- Association of State Highway est to the cold alpine reaches Transportation Officials, the of the North Cascades, only to same organization that apblaze down through the warm proves new highways with a winds of Methow Valley. similar process. "We were engaged from the Already, drivers had affably waved and honked at me. beginning," said Barb ChamMotorcyclists had given me berlain, executive director of the low-key salutation usually Washington Bikes, a statewide reserved for their own kind. advocacy group. "Our role has Strangers approached me on been the actual on-the-ground the street to inquire about my

identification of the potential

journey. But free water on one of

routes and actual routes. That means all along the way, we' ve done local advocacy, working with bike groups if there is

the hardest climbs of my trip? That was a first.

I had seen so much of the state, and been shocked at

one. You need volunteers to do this."

the hospitality along the way, One of those volunteers is yet I'd only ridden 175 miles John Pope. He "spearheaded" of my trek along U.S. Bicycle the effort for the route, rode Route 10. Many more were be- the whole thing and chronitween me and my destination of Sandpoint, Idaho. These

miles are a small percentage of those in the national bike highway network. Washington state's U.S. Bicycle Route 10 accounts for 416 miles in the nationwide

network of bike routes, which has nearly 9,000 miles of official routes, including Idaho's recent addition of 66 miles across the Panhandle. State planners and cycling advocates worked for nearly four years to have the first official Western bike route appear

cled his tour for Washington

Bikes. His blog posts inspired my trip. I spoke to Pope early in my trip, and he gave me some pointers: watch out for the steep, no-shoulder s w i tch-

backs west of Wauconda; enjoy Ione's red bridge; have fun.

Bicycle infrastructure

7

Reeves said. Snow, with Adventure Cy-

cling, echoed Reeves. "A lot of communities want

a

bicycle tourism in their towns. Bicyclists tend to ride on rural roads, and because of that it

brings a new type of tourism

I

these communities don't nor-

mally see," she said. "Cyclists spend moremoney than motorized tourists. That's be-

/

causethey spend more time in the state, they spend more on lodging and food, and they do that in rural communities. Es-

sentially, they have a greater Nick Deshais reaches the end of his journey in Sandpoint, Idaho.

impact on these smaller, rural towns."

For me on my ride, this was bike routes, and better street ment, another $4 is spent on d efinitely true. A t r i p t h a t striping. trips and traveL would've taken a day in a car take time, but you have to start Reeves said the state was A recent study — done by took 10 days on a bike. Every to somewhere." identifying p l aces w h ere Tacoma-based Earth Eco- 40 to 60 miles, usually after a For Washington state, that shoulders could be widened, nomics and called "Economic day of climbing, I pulled into somewhere is identifying af- and perhaps using a different Analysis of Outdoor Recre- some small town I had prefordable improvements. method to resurfaceroads ation in Washington State"viously just driven through, Paula Reeves, a planner in than chip-seal, which can quantified Reeves' claim, stat- or neverbeen to before.After the state transportation decrowd the shoulder with a jag- ing that bicycle riding in gen- gorging myself on an inordipartment's engineering pol- ged, rough surface. eralgenerated more than $3.1 nate amount of food, I found icy and innovation division, billion in annual spending. a campsite or hotel, cash in said the state was looking for The economicargument R eeves said s ome r u r al hand. "quick wins" in an era when That's the way i t s h ould For Reeves, though, it's less c ommunities initially h a d funding for transportation in- about the pavement improve- concerns about designating be, said Washington Bike's frastructure is limited. ments than what bicycle trav- a route, with worries that it Chamberlain. That includes adding bike eling and tourism can offer would bring r equirements "It's not like a race across facilities a t in t ernational rural communities. about shoulder width and bike America. You don't have to do border crossings, as part of In a chapter titled "A Bicy- lane installation. this as fast as possible," she Washington and British Co- cling Haven" in the recently Similar c oncerns w ere said. "Bicycling is the most eflumbia's initiative to reduce published book "Planning the shared by officials in Okla- ficient transportation known greenhouse gas emissions Pacific Northwest," Reeves homa, who blocked the effort to humankind, but you just at their border crossings. It wrote that for every dollar by volunteers to designate have to take it a little bit at a includes adding signage to spent on bike gear and equip- a route. Despite the ground time." her group's ambition. "That' s definitely a major goal. It' ll

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But not everyone can call

DISC OVERTHEVERYBESTCENTRALOREGONIIASTOOFFER,: :

Pope and get his rundown. That's why there's a need for official routes.

Saara Snow, travel ini-

Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also Offeredto DeSChuteS County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.

t iative coordinator with t h e Missoula-based A d v enture

for that.

i

Yet the routes, Snow said, are so much more. "Being a U.S. Bicycle Route ways was hatched in 1978, the Pacific Northwest was not helps to show motorists that the cycling mecca it is today. these roads are being used by In fact, the first two official a bicyclist, and that brings a routes were designated on the new kind of awareness for the other side of the country in roads and their use," she said. When the idea of a nation-

wide network of bike high-

1982. One stretched from Vir-

"While we don't require facil-

ginia to North Carolina, and the other connected Illinois, Kentucky and Virginia. No other routes appeared

ities on every road that is designated a U.S. Bicycle Route, we do hope that when those roads are being maintained,

until 2011, when the dormant U.S. Bicycle Route system

or there's construction, they' ll

miles of bike routes to the system every year. With the

where there was thankfully al-

, •

s

TO,DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON '; -;-"j: ., '"-~<+ ~, IS 'ACOMPREHENSIVE GUIDE:. 4' to places, e v ents a n d a c t ivities t a king .", place throughout Central Oregon d uring the year =,

I told Snow there were more USBR 10 that had no shoulder, where I had to ride in the lane

e'

112 WAYS

Adventure Cycling Associa- than a few stretches along tion. Since then, the groups have added more than 1,500

l

I

add a shoulder or special pathwas revived by the American way because bicyclists are usAssociation of State Highway ing these roads." Transportation Officials and

concern about that, but I think

they' re realizing the benefits to their own economies,"

in Washington, and now they say the route will only do more Cycling Association, said at to burnish the state's standing their simplest the routes are as the most bike-friendly state way-finding tools for bike in the union. travelers. They inform riders to go this way and watch out

Reviving an idea

de p a r tment

wouldn't sign off on the effort. Those worries, in Washington anyway, were easily alleviated. "There was some initial

most no traffic. She said that' s

simply the state of American Idaho and Utah, the USBR bike highways. For now. "That's just a reality for cynetwork has 8,992 miles in 18 states and Washington, D.C. clists on American roads," she As I found on my tour, an said, noting that increasing official bike route doesn't re- bike facilities along the road is recent addition of routes in

The Bulletin www.denddulletin.corn •


D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

UrDOORS BIRDING OLD MILL BIRDWALKS:Join a Sunriver Nature Center Naturalist in Bend's Old Mill district every Sunday morning through Aug. 30; chance to see bird species like Wilson's Warblers, Dippers, Killdeer, Flicker W oodpeckers, and m ore;meetat the Ticket Mill across from Strictly Organic at 7:30 a.m., and bring binoculars; free event, open to all ages; www.sunrivernaturecenter.

org.

CYCLING OCHOCO GRAVELROUBAIX:Gravel bike race, featuring supported 120- and 45-mile gravel loops and a10-mile road ride in the Ochoco National Forest on Aug. 29; race proceeds will help place aTCF certified athletic trainer in Crook County High School; finish-line party will be open and free to the public and feature bicycle demos, live music, and a beer garden; races

E AD

will start and finish at the Crooked River Park in Prineville; register for the race at ochocogravelroubaix.

corn. VOLCANICBIKE& BREW FESTIVAL:At Mt. Bachelor on Aug. 21-23; a weekend of biking and festivities at Mt. Bachelor, featuring the third stop of the Oregon Enduro Series on Sunday, Aug. 23; the weekend will be a combination of competitive races, biking clinics, demos, activities, music, and beer.

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifeibendbulletin.corn,541-383-0318.

541-306-4509, deschutestu@ hotmail.corn; www.deschutes.tu.org. BENDCASTINGCLUB:A group of fly anglers from aroundCentral Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.;clubmeetson the fourth Wednesday ofeach month; location TBA; 541-306-4509 or

bendcastingclub©gmail.corn. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www.

sunriveranglers.org.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;

www.cobe.us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greet and discuss what the chapter is up to; meets on the first W ednesday ofeachm onth at6 p.m .; 50 SW Bond Street, Bend, Suite 4;

THECENTRALOREGON FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;m eets on the third Wednesday of each month; Bend Senior Center; www. coflyfishers.org. INTERNATIONALFEDERATION OF FLYFISHERSFAIR:The International Federation of Fly Fishers 50th Anniversary Fair is scheduled for the Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center in Bend, Aug. 13-15, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day; the show is open to the public; vendors

will display the latest products; tying and casting demonstrations; youth camp; visit www.fedflyfishers.org or call 406-222-9369.

HIKING FULL MOON HIKE: Join a Sunriver Nature Center Naturalist for a guided full moon hike along LakeAspen, the Deschutes, and through a meadow; listen and look for nocturnal creatures; registration required; 8-9 p.m.onAug.29,Sept.28,Oct.27;

$6 for adults, $4for kids; kirstinrea© gmail.corn or 541-593-4394. DESCHUTESLANDTRUSTWALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds, and take in spring wildf lowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING BOWHUNTER EDUCATIONCLASS:

ODFW-approved bowhunter education field day classes will be offered on Aug.11 at the Bill Scholtes Klamath Sportsman's Park (past Keno); participants of the field day classes must complete a home study or online course prior to attendance at this class; cost is $10 per student; to register, go to or.outdoorcentral.us/or/

license; for moreinformation and

times, call instructor Mike Hagen at 541-884-3781. THE BENDCHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; m eetsthesecondWednesday of each month; King Buffet, Bend; ohabend.webs.corn. THE OCHOCOCHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMOND CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

SHOOTING COSSAKIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided;

parent or guardianmust sign in for each child; fee for each child is $10; 10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www. pinemountai nposse.corn. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns; 10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.

hrp-sass.corn.

'Dis erse cam in 'o ersaternativeto u cam roun s By Brett French

Campers use a dispersed campsite in

Keep the menu simple or pre- remote and provide a greatpare fanciermeals ahead of er chancefor stress-relieving time and freeze them. The fro- activities like stargazing, bird the Helena zen meals will help keep your watching or cooking up a National Forcold items colder longer. batch of s'mores. est In MonAlways remember to bring S o don't feel bad i f t h e tana. When the sunscreen and mosqui- campground is full and you campgrounds to repellent. A well-stocked forgot to make reservations. are full,camp- first-aid kit may also come in You are not alone. According ers have an handy. to the Outdoor Industry Asoption known Repair kits for unexpected sociation's survey, "Although as dispersed tears, or a roll of duct tape, can almost half of campers make camping. This help solve a number of prob- the decision to go camping Is camping lems. A small toolbox can also at least a month in advance, where there proveusefulifthere'sagearor many campers donot make are no picnic vehicle failure. campsite reservations until tables, fire Also, make sure to bring a the day of the camp. Thirrings, potable variety of warm clothes, be- ty-five percent say they made water or cause even in midsummer a walk-in reservation on their

Billings (Montana) Gazette

BILLINGS, Mont. — Few

things are more disheartening to the camping summer tourist than pulling into a campground and finding all of the sites full. It's especially deflating when you' ve been on the road for hours and just want to pitch your tent and relax. It's no wonder there are few

places to camp with more than 42 million people camping in

/ I

the United States every year,

according to a 2012 Outdoor Industry Association survey. Sixty-seven percent of those

campers are using public campgrounds. Fortunately, many public and private campsites can now

toilets. Brett French The Billings Gazette

be reserved online — avoid-

ing such disappointment. But what about those times when you' ve forgotten to reserve a site, weren't sure where you

bag.

cover the ashes to extinguish

In addition to Forest Ser-

t he summer, when the f i r e

close to an improved facility,

Try to pitch it out of sight of

danger is high, there are restrictions on campfires. A GPS is another good source of location information, since the palm-sized gadgets can help you locate your position in the woods as well as on a forest map. Combining

like a campground, trailhead or picnic area.

other folks. After all, you' re away from the crowd, so why not heighten that feeling of seclusion' ? Car camping allows you to

not on private property, where camping would incur a trespassing fine. Newer GPS software, in addition to apps that can be downloaded to your

mobile phone, even show land ownership, making it so much easier to figure out where it' s

OK to unroll your sleeping

last trip."

night. Hats, gloves and a rain jacket are other essentials for your comfort.

Not alone

and hide the fire from future would end up, or simply decid- viceland,dispersed camping campers. Always make sure to ed to go camping on the spur is also allowed on Bureau of carry a bucket for hauling waof the moment? Land Management property. ter to douse the fire. If this happens near state or BLM sells maps at its district Speaking of water, don' t federal lands, campers have offices. BLM lands are colored drink from mountain streams an option known as dispersed yellow and sometimes pink on without using a purifying wacamping. This is camping m aps, ForestServicelandsare ter filter, water purification where there are no picnic ta- green andstatelands are blue. tablets or after bringing the bles, fire rings, potable water water to a boil. Drinking unor toilets. This is camping the Some rules filtered water creates a risk old-fashioned way — roughEven if you are going to be of contracting giardia, a nasa "rough it"camper, there are ty stomach bug. Better yet, ing it. For those u n initiated t o still rules and etiquette to fol- try to bring enough drinking the ins and outs of dispersed low. First and foremost is to and cooking water with you camping, here are some tips not camp within 100 feet of a in a large, clean plastic water for pitching a tent away from lake or stream in national for- container. an improved campsite. ests. That increases to 200 feet Whether o r n o t yo u ' re on BLM lands. On forest land, camping in bear country, it' s Know where to go do not drive more than 150 always a good idea to store One of the best tools to help feet off of designated roads to your coolers and other foods campersfind a dispersed site reduce damage to the forest. inside your vehicle. The preis a good map. These can be Secondly, pack out what caution keeps critters away purchased from the local For- you pack in — that includes and your food safe. In bear est Serviceoffices or ordered all garbage. Try to leave the country, it's mandatory to folonline. Local officials are also site looking as undisturbed as low such food storage rules. the best source for informa- possible. tion on where you can pitch a On federal lands, campers Things to pack tent and what, if any, restric- are allowed to stay for 14 days. Tents offer the easiest way It's often illegal to camp to camp at a dispersed site. tions there may be. Often in

the two helps ensure you are

the mountains can get cool at

To go tothe bathroom you

will have to dig what's often called a "cat hole." Dig the hole at least 6 inches deep and take fat, cushy pads to place keep it 100 feet away from any under your sleeping bag. The lake or stream. Pack out your pads also insulate the sleeptoilet paper. There's nothing er from the cold ground. This worse than finding someone' s may be one place you don' t discarded toilet paper litter- want to skimp. ing the woods. Cover up the A bucket and shovel will cat hole and try to make the come in handy for digging ground look like it had before cat holes and dousing fires, you dug the hole. respectively. Likewise, campfires can be There are foldable camp tabuilt within a dug-up patch of bles that provide a place to eat. ground, saving the topsoil to Pack them with some folding

chairs to create a remote dining site. Lanterns and flashlights are key to getting around in

Whether it's a scheduled stop or last-minute effort to

find a place to plant your pillow, dispersed camping can

the dark. Always make sure

provide a more remote ex-

to check your fuel or batteries and to carry extras. Gas grills and stoves make cooking easier and faster.

perience for those traveling into the woods and prairies. With no or few neighbors, the

campsites can feel much more

% %ILSONSofRedmond 541-54$-2066

Secant

NN 'TRESS

G allery-Be n d 541-330-50$4

J

Com p l e m e n t s

H o m e I n t er i or s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o r n

R015 Desehutes County Fair Talent Showcase Wednesday, July 29, Noon-3p.m. on the Eberhard's Dairy/Mosaic Medical Food Court Stage Singers, Musicians, Dancers, Bands, Magicians, Jugglers 8 Acts of all kinds!

4 acts will each win a $150 prize & perform again on Saturday 2 OPTIONS FOR ENTER ING : 1.Contact by email 4 Include • Brief Bio (IncludeAge, category &type of act) • An audio or video file that captures talent • The link to a currently posted You-Tube video

2. Mall a CD and cover letter to Deschutes Co. Admin Contact Jim Erickson at

OC&E Trail Continued from D1 That could change if plans

the 400-foot-long, 50-foot-high

mountain hikes and another

Merritt Creek Trestle.

for road bikes. The maps also include information on places

Mountain bikers wanting to know more about the OC&E Woods Line and other Klam-

for food and water, picnic ar-

eas and camping. ath Basin routes, including Along with t h e O C &E the still-developing Spence Woods Line, Ridgeview, SpenMountain Trail, dazzling-view ce Mountain and Moore Park plentiful Klamath Ridgeview routes, the map's mountain Trail and the spaghetti-like bike routes include the High Klamath Falls to Bly in a very network in Moore Park, can Lakes Trail between Lake of long day, and other times ped- do so through Ride Klamath the Woods and Fish Lake, the aled or, during snowy win- Ride. Brown Mountain Trail, and ters, skied most sections of Maps available through the Collier Park to Kimball Park "gravel grinder." the OC&E. Favorites include Discover Klamath — either the Switchbacks-Devil's Gar- at its 205 Riverside Drive ofThe road bike map inden area to the community of fice or the website at www. cludes Hamaker Out and Sprague River, Beatty along rideklamathride. corn — offer Back, OCHRE Trail Out and the bubbly Sprague River to- basic details and, helpfully, el- Back, Triple Loop Running ward Bly and, on the Woods evation profiles. Y Ranch, Lake of the Woods Line, Horse Glade toward the Each tear-off map includes Loop, Westside Loop, Airport Sycan Marsh,atleastas faras seven routes, with one map for Loop and Crater Lake Loop. by Oregon State Parks, with

support from the Rails-toTrails group, to pave the trail from Olene to the Highway 140 crossing materialize. I' ve biked the distance from

AII audition materials must be submitted by Saturday, July 18'"! Notification will be completed by Sunday, July 19th. • Up to 24 acts will be chosen to compete on Wednesday, July 29th • All acts must be residents of Deschutes County (an act from a neighboring county that does not participate in the State Fair is eligible). • A panel of three judges will evaluate each act! • Four acts will be chosen for the $150 prizes and the right to perform again in a 10 to 12 minute performance on Saturday, August 2nd. • Three acts MAY qualify for the State Fair Talent Show — 1 children (1-9) — 1 youth (10-17) — 1 adult (18+) • A sound system will be provided with a sound tech and a CD player. • CD accom animents must have the lead vocal tracks corn letel removed! Instrumental and harmon ~tracks are oka . • Bands will be expected to provide their own amps, keyboards, drums, etc. and to set-up and remove their equipment. • All performances must be suitable for the family atmosphere at the stage. • Performers under 16 get a pass and one for a parent/guardian. Performers 16 and over get a pass for themselves. • For more information, call 541-548-2711 or email entertainment4dcfOgmail.corn -

.


WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Michael Kaufman, of El Cajon, California, shows off a rainbow trout

FISHING REPORT ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: The water remains dirty and low, but there is still enough water to launch a small boat. Sampling indicated many trout available in the reservoir, but fishing effort remains low. BEND PINENURSERY: Limit is two fish per day, 8-inch minimum length. BIKINI POND:Trout fishing has slowed down do to warm summer water temperatures, the pond will be stocked again in November. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR: Opportunities for 16- 24-inch rainbow trout continue to be good. Anglers using flies in the old river

FLY-TYING CORNER

channels arehaving success. Trout

daily catch limit may include one rainbow trout over 16 inches and one non-fin-clipped (unmarked) rainbow trout. NOTE:Anglers who harvest one rainbow trout over 16 inches that is non-fin-clipped have met both of these special regulations. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMANDAM:Fishing for trout and whitefish has been good. Fish that are being released should not be removed from the water. DAVIS LAKE:Restricted to flyfishing only with barbless hooks. DESCHUTESRIVER,MOUTH TO THE PELTONREGULATING DAM: Trout anglers can find summer in full swing on the Deschutes. Warm air and lots of bug hatches in the mornings and evenings. Dry fly-fishing is good right now. The best trout fishing is from Warm Springs to Maupin. Steelhead have not started entering the lower Deschutes yet. Anglers should watch The Dalles Dam counts and expect fishing to pick up in midJuly. Anglers who catch a tagged hatchery steelhead with an orange

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

The Heart Attack Machine, tied by Quintin McCoy.

When I think of horseflies, I think of riding out of Cove,Oregon, to drop into the Upper Minamdrainage in August. We made 8 miles in the saddle the first day, off-loaded the packanimals and headed to the river with our fly rods. For the next few days we were bitten regularly by the big flies that followed the horses. If I go back, I' ll pack afew horsefly imitations along. And more bug spray. This pattern is called TheHeart Attack Machine and it's a good choice anywhere thereare horse trails close to the water. Tie this one on aNo.10-14 dry fly hook.Forthe body, use black foam ribbed with bronzeArizona Peacockdubbing. For the wings, use tan or gray raffia. For legs, use black elk hair. Wrap black sparkle dubbing to form the headand finish with eyes made from red mono, or ultra chenille. Gary Lewis, For TheBulletin

day.

EAST LAKE:Anglers report good fishing for rainbow trout and kokanee. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. anchor tagareencouragedto FALL RIVER:River will be stocked report catch information to ODFW at 541-296-4628. Anglers catching this week with rainbow trout. Restricted to fly-fishing only with a tagged wild fish should release it barbless hooks. immediately without recording any information. HOOD RIVER:Steelhead fishing on LAKE BILLYCHINOOK TO BENHAM the Hood will be slow through the summer and early fall. Anglers can FALLS:Anglers report good fishing. Fishing restricted to artificial flies expect a few fish in November and December. and lures. Best opportunities are below Steelhead Falls where springs LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing for provide coolerwater. 11- to 13-inch kokanee is excellent. BENHAMFALLSUPSTREAMTO Fish are beginning to concentrate in the upper end of the Metolius WICKIUP RESERVOIR: Anglers report good fishing upstream of Arm. Anglers are reminded there are Bend. Five trout per day, which may small numbers of spring Chinook include two non-fin-clipped rainbow and summer steelhead in Lake Billy trout. Scheduled to be stocked with Chinook as part of the reintroduction rainbow trout this week. effort. Please release these fish unharmed. WICKIUPRESERVOIR TO CRANE PRARIE:Two trout per day, 8-inch LAURANCE LAKE: Laurance Lake minimum length. Fishing is slow due reservoir has been recently stocked to warm water. and should provide excellent opportunities. CRANE PRAIRIERESERVOIR UPSTREAM TOLITTLE LAVALAKE: LAVA LAKE(BIG): Fishing for 12- to Anglers report fair fishing for brook 18-inch rainbow trout continues trout. Catch-and-release only for to be excellent. Anglers fishing the rainbow trout. Five brook trout per early morning hours when the water

MysteryWinchesterarrives at firearmsmuseumfor

is cooler are having most success. LOST LAKE:Lost Lake has recently been stocked and should be great fishing at one of Oregon's most scenic lakes. METOLIUS RIVER:Special fishing regulations apply to the Metolius River. All tributaries except Abbot, Lake, and Spring Creeks are closed to fishing. Opportunities for challenging catch-and-release

fly-fishing for native redband trout and bull trout in a pristine

mountain streamareexcellent. NORTH TWIN LAKE: No recent reports. There is good bank access around entire lake. OCHOCO CREEKUPSTREAM TO OCHOCO DAM: Angling is restricted to artificial flies and lures only; two trout per day with an 8-inch minimum length. OCHOCO RESERVOIR: The water level is low but the boat ramp is still usable.

ODELL CREEK:Catch-and-release for trout. ODELL LAKE: Kokaneefishing has been good and lake trout opportunities are fair. Most fish are in the deeper cooler water. Closed to fishing for bull trout and any incidental caught bull trout must be released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lake are closed to fishing. PAULINA LAKE:No recent reports. Unmarked rainbow trout must be released. PINE HOLLOWRESERVOIR:The reservoir has been stocked and good fishing has been reported. Many of the trout have copepods, which are tiny parasites on their bodies and gills, according to reports. These are not harmful to humansand the lesionscan be removed, but the meat should be thoroughly cooked. PRINEVILLERESERVOIR:The water level is low but the Jasper Point, State Park and Powderhouse Cove boat ramps are still usable. Crappie and smallmouth bass opportunities are excellent. PRINEVILLEYOUTHFISHING POND:No recent reports. ROCKCREEKRESERVOIR: Anglers should be prepared that low-water conditions due to irrigation withdrawals will limit success in Rock Creek reservoir. SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to juvenile anglers17-years-old and younger. SOUTH TWIN LAKE:No recent reports. There is good bank access around entire lake. SUTTLE LAKE:Norecent reports. TAYLORLAKE(WASCO COUNTY):Trout fishing will slow down during the summer months, but anglers can find lots of bluegill and largemouth bass. THREE CREEK LAKE: Anglers report fair fishing for brook trout. WALTONLAKE:Anglers will have the most success fishing early in the morning when the

he caught at Timothy Lake south of Mount Hood. The 13-year-old

learned how to tie knots, bait hooks, catch fish and cook it in foil with butter and salt and

pepperand lemon juice. Gary Lewis For The Bulletin

Lewis Continued from 01 We couldn't get too close to the channel because there were skittish spotted shadows in the water — some with dark

We caught a few in the morning. As the day warmed, the fish moved up toward the creek mouths, where, for a couple of hours, they were easy pickings for kids armed with spinning rods.

spots, some with light speckIn between trout, the kids les on dark green backs. Rain- chased snakes, caught crawbows. Brook trout. dads and experimented with Any forest reservoir is different baits and lures. "Learn the improved clinch bound to have stumps and Timothy has no shortage. knot," I'd told Michael four One stump stuck up above weeks before, when he printed the waterand gave me a place out the plane ticket. "If you do to bump my pontoon boat that, I' ll take you fishing." against, stand up and cast I wanted him to own it. Tie without getting too close to the

channeL I looked over at my nephew and his spinning rod was doubled over with his very first

his own knots. Bait his own h ook. Catch hi s ow n f i s h. Cook it in foil with butter and

salt and pepper and lemon juice.

rainbow. My line lay stretched out

And he did.

We put him back on the airbefore me on the still water. plane, a copy of Curtis Creek Nine feet off the end of it, on Manifesto in his hands, a sima light tippet, my little soldier, ple instructional treatise on the No. 12 foam ant, tempted a fly-fishing, illustrated comic 14-inch brook trout. It sipped

and swirled and my line went straight. When the trees threw long

book style. I read it when I was 13.

Maybe the boy will be a fly-fisherman when he comes back next summer. Since he' s

temperatures arecooler. As a

shadows on the reservoir, the fish left the channel and

reminder, the bag limit includes only one trout over 20 inches per

spread out to feed. I'd landed two rainbows and two brook

get hooked on something. It might as well be fishing.

trout and let them go, but the

Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and

day.

WICKIUP RESERVOIR:No recent reports, but opportunities for 16- to 20-inch kokanee and large brown trout are good. Special regulations apply for this body of water.

13, it is a good time for him to

best fish of the day were the

ones 13-year-old Michael caught, his first trout ever. He ate them for breakfast.

After the meal, the group headed out for more fishing.

author of "John Nosier Going Ballistic," "Fishing Mount Hood Country," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Gary at www. GaryLewisOutdoors.corrL

Switch now to an overall 5-star t

Providence MedicareAdvantage Plan.

I

identification, conservation

i

i i

Winchester rifle has arrived at

page. The post asked, "Can you find the man-made object in this image'?" That one question sparked a

the Cody Firearms Museum in

media sensation.

plans anytime without penalties.

clement weather in Nevada's Snake Mountains. The Winchester Model 1873

has had calls from CNN and

Attend one of our meetings to learn more or to enroll,

even talked to people from Europe who have heard the story

call 1-855-210-1588 or visit us at

lever-action rifle received in-

about the unusual rifle. "Peo-

ternational attention after it

ple like a mystery." Park officials recently de-

www.ProvidenceHealthPlan.corn/centraloregon.

By Brett French Billings (Mont.) Gazette

A mysterious 132-year-old Wyoming for a little TLC after

being exposed to years of in-

was found leaning against a juniper tree last November by an archaeologist working in Nevada's Great Basin National Park, four hours northeast of Las Vegas. "One thing we all assumed was that someone here had a

"It has crossed all demographics," Hlebinsky said. She

livered the rifle to the Buffalo

center also holds the manufacturing records for Winchester firearms.

very bad day,e park archaeolo-

After years with little progist Eva Jensen, who found the tection from sun, rain, wind rifle, told the Associated Press at the time. "One of the staff

I

Our overall 5 stars mean you can switch

Service is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday through Friday (Pacific time).

Bill Center of the West's Cody Firearms Museum for conservation and identification. The

a nd snow, the r i fl e had

Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road Bend Wednesday,July 15, 2 p.m.

Redmond Senior Center 325 NW Dogwood Ave. Redmond Wednesday,July 22, 10:30 a.m.

a

cracked wooden stock that said, 'Why do you set your gun had weathered to gray and down and forget where you put the barrel had rusted to a it? That just doesn't happen.'" deep brown. The natural colWell, that's not entirely true.

"There are people I know

ors helped the rifle blend into

its surroundings in a remote rocky outcrop, keeping the risaid Ashley Hlebinsky, cura- fle camouflaged for years.

who've lost their f i rearms," tor of the Cody Firearms Museum. "So it's not unheard of."

The "Forgotten Winchester,"

Known as "The Gun that

Won the West," Hlebinsky

PROVIDENCE

called the Winchester Model

1873 possibly "the most iconic ral online after park employ- western firearm of all time," ees posted a photograph of the which probably adds to the alrifleon the park's Facebook lure of the mystery. as some have called it, went vi-

Trails Continued from 01 Campfires will be permitted in designated areaswithin select campgrounds only. For information on campgrounds that have designated campfire areas, call 541-383-4000. There will be a24-hour bike race out of WanogaSno-park

Saturday andSunday. Morethan 200 racers are expected, so please use courtesy whensharing the bike trails. Leash regulations on wilderness trails go into effect July 15 through Sept. 15. Leashregulations will be enforced along trails systems on South Sister, Moraine Lake, GreenLake, Broken Topand Todd Lake.

D5

Health Plan " Medicare evaluates plans based on a 5-star rating system. Star ratings are calculated each year and may change from one year to the next. Providence Health Plan is an HMO and HMO-POS plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in Providence Health Plan depends on contract renewal. A sales person will be present with information and applications. For accommodation of persons with special needs at sales meetings, call 1-855-210-1588 (TTY:711). H9047 2015PHP129 ACCEPTED


D6

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Fres, unn voices oru comin eection TV SPOTLIGHT

upon," Albanese said. "You

about it, if they really want to do it," Albanese said. "Because

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — A presiden-

tial campaign is beginning without late-night television

hosts who helped us laugh through past ones, both a cul-

for the debut. Ted Cruz, Ber-

history. Jon Stewart exits next month, along with a research

team that allowed him to bust politicians and journalists for hypocrisy. Stephen Colbert, Seth Meyers, Larry Wilmore and Kate McKinnon are the most likely

comicstarstoemerge forDecision 2016.

"As much as it's sad to see Jon leaveand have Letterman and Leno gone, it's not like the

new dass coming in will be doing plate spinners," said Rory Albanese, executive producer

of "The Nightly Show" with Wilmore on Comedy Central. A recent sign of the new

landscape came when Jimmy Fallon invited Jeb Bush on NBC's "Tonight Show" to slow-

jam the news, the comic slipping in titillating jokes about the presidential family name. Fallon seemed o vereager during the ensuing interview, the conversation rarely stray-

DNA of "The Daily Show." But as a South African not steeped

nieSanders and Carly Fiorina have appearedforinterviews. Meyers is trying to do more comic pieces responding to the day's news, said Mike Shoe-

tural loss and an opportunity

for new voices. David Letterman is gone, taking his unmatched ability to have serious conversations with public figures and not skimp on humor. Jay Leno's rat-a-tat pace of one-liners is

would say, 'I can't wait to hear

if it's not coming from their gut what Jon Stewart is going to ... it can feel kind of empty." say about this, or what LetterMeyers has emphasized pol- man is going to say.'" itics on "Late Night" since Vice Stewart's replacement, TrevPresident Joe Biden showed up or Noah, is expected to keep the

By David Bauder

in American politics, the perspective is sure tobe different. Tina Fey, with her dead-on

Sarah Palin impersonation, maker, "Late Night" executive was the comic star of the 2008 producer. presidential campaign. "SatMeyers a d mired L e t ter- urday Night Live" has another man's ability to make an in- winner with McKinnon, whose The Associated Press file photo Larry Wilmore, host of "The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore," is terview feel unscripted. His portrayal of a cravenly amamong the newvoices weighing in on the presidential campaign appearance with Cruz showed bitious Hillary Clinton holds on late-night television. the host's ability to stand toe- great promise for the next year. to-toe with a political guest Wilmore has increased his for a substantive conversation topical content following the ing beyond biography points ed, either." with some laugh lines. When January debut of "The Nightly like how the Republican met That leaves a path for Let- the Texas Republican talked Show." His ongoing "unblackhis Mexico-born wife. terman's replacement. Col- about his Senate filibuster on ening" segment showcases an Similarly, President Barack bert, who will compete in the Obama's health care law, Mey- unburdened president as his O bama was asked to p a r - same time slot with Fallon ers shot back, "How'd it go?" term winds down. Wilmore is ticipate in a signature comic and Kimmel starting in Sep- and earneda briefglare from encouraging candidates to join routine on "Jimmy Kimmel tember, hasn't talked much Cruz. him for interviews over soul Live!" this spring, reading about the new show other than Research is the key to mak- food, as he did with Rhode Ismean tweets posted about him saying he won't be playing a ing sure these interviews go land's Lincoln Chafee. "We were very conscious online. character like he did on Com- well, Meyers said. "You have to know their po- of not doing 'The Daily Show' Fallon and Kimmel host the edy Central. His adeptness at two most popular programs on topical material was evident sitions," he said. "The one thing after 'The Daily Show,'" said late-night TV now. While their on "The Colbert Report," and I' ve found when you' re talking Albanese, who worked with broadly comic shows don't ig- his interest obvious in how he to a political guest, be they Re- Stewart before joining Wilmnore public affairs, that's not in couldn't resist the comic fodder publican or Democrat, if you ore. "But with Jon leaving and either host's wheelhouse. of Donald Trump's campaign don't cut them off, they' ll talk the political landscape heat"I don't think there's a partic- announcement last month. the whole time." ing up, for us it makes much ular comfort factor there," said Colbert released a video on Stewart's take on a day' s more logi calsense forusto be Bill Carter, author of books on the "Late Show" website that events will be missed more covering this stuff. The thing late-night television induding nailed the surreal randomness than his interviews. "What you we' ll bring to it is that Larry's "The Late Shift." "But in fairof Trump's speech. got from both of these guys perspective is different. He' s "So much of this is about was a very specific and unique looking at the world through a ness to Fallon, there wasn't for Letterman when he got start- whether the host is passionate point of view you could rely different prism."

HIV- ositive woman i es status

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

Dear Abby:I moved away from years ago. He also mentioned that ring, which I accepted. He's great my hometown 18 years ago. At the if these men's wives had contract- with the girls and he makes me time, a friend of mine had found ed HIV from their husbands and happy. out she was HIV-positive. Thank-

become pregnant, that their dis-

fully, healthwise she's doing well. To look at her you would never

ease would very likely have been the controlling behavior will only discovered. get worse down the road. I think

know.

We have reconnected, but I have she had several relationships in the past

You need to talk

DEAR

Agcy

and didn't reveal that

to your friend and explain that this is both a health issue

and one of morality. If she's continuing to have unprotected

My father, however, says that it's because Roy was laid off from

work and is having a hard time finding a job. I'm sure once he' s working he' ll be less focused on me. Who's right, me or my father? Mom Of Twoin Rhode Island Dear Mom Of Two:When a couple has been together for only six months, they are usually still in

she was HIV-posi tive or use pro- sex with her partners, there is still tection. She says she "loves" these some potential risk that she could men, their families and their chil- pass along the virus. So if she truly what is referred to as the "hondren. It makes me sick that she' s loves anyone but herself, she will eymoon phase." Has Roy been killing them. get with the program and be hon- jobless since you met him'? If the Someone calledher doctor and est about her health status. layoff is recent, then his change he talked to her about it, but she Dear Abby:I'm a single mother in behavior may be related to his lied and said that she had told them. of two wonderful daughters. I have frustration at not being able to find These men haveno idea! What can a fantastic boyfriend, "Roy," who I another job. be done so she quits spreading this met when I was pregnant with my However, your father not only disease? second.We have been together for has a point, he also has more ex— She's Killing Them in Indiana Dear S.K.T.: I ran y o ur l e tter

by an old and trusted friend, Dr. Mervyn Silverman, former direc-

tor of health in San Francisco. He asked me to reassure you that if your friend has been under treat-

ment for HIV, her chances of passing it on are far less than they were

six months and I love him very

perience than you do. Pay atten-

much. Unfortunately, he has become mildly controlling and critical. Roy has no children of his own, and he doesn'tseem to reali ze what goes into working, raising children and running a household. Recently, he gave me a promise

tion to what he's telling you. If Roy becomes increasingly controlling and critical, you' ll know your father was right, and you should return that promise ring. So take

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015:This yearyou feel a strong drive to head in a certain direction in order to achieve your goals. With all the energy you naturally stir up, you probably will take on a community commitment. If you are single, you are likely to meetsomeone ina mostunexpected way. You will note a case of the butterflies when you are 8tars showthe king around this Person. If you areattached, of tfsy yoo 0hstfo ** * * * D ynamic the two of you will ** * * p ositive benefit from taking ** * Average on a new hobby or ** Bo-so project together. You tend to isolate * Difficult yourselves, even when in groups, because you like sharing so much time with each other. ARIESoften intimidates

or exhausts you! ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * You might feel pressured at home or at work. You will be eyeing a potential change. If you feel uncomfortable, look within for a response. You also might decide to say less but connect more often with a family member who seems to need you. Tonight: Go with the unexpected.

** * * You might need to relax some and not worry so m uch aboutsomeone else's reaction. You could be tired and worn out by a situation that you cannot

Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.corn or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium61& IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • INSIDEOUT(PG)l2:20, l2:40,3,3:50,6:l5,9:20 • INSIDE OUT 3-D (PG)11:40 a.m., 2:10, 4:40, 7:10, 9:50 • JURASSICWORLD (PG-13)12:30,3:35,6:40,7:20,9:40, 10:25 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-0 (PG-13) 11a.m., 3:15, 7:40, 10:40 • MET SUMMER ENCORE:LATRAVIATA (No MPAA rating) 7 • LOVE 8 MERCY (PG-13) 11:10 a.m., 6:35 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 1f:15 am., 225,1045 • MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) 11:f 5 a.m., f 2:15, 2, 3:20, 4:45, 7:30,8, IO:30, fo:45 • MAX(PG) 11:20a.m., 2:20, 6:25, 9:35 • ME AND EARL ANDTHEDYINGGIRL (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 6:45, 10:05 • PADDINGTON (PG) 10 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 2:40, 10:20 • SPY(R) 12:20,3:10, 7:05, 10:10 • TED 2 (R) 11:25a.m., 11:55 a.m., 2:15, 3:05, 5, 6:50, 7:50, 9:45, 10:35 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-13)noon,9:30 • TERMINATOR GENISYS3-0(PG-13)3:30,6:30 • TERMINATOR GENISYSIMAX3-0 (PG-13) 1 f:30 a.m., 230,7, IO • TURBO (PG) 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

change. Stay on top of your priorities. Honor a friend's request. A meeting could be very important. Tonight: Friends equal fun.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You might want to try a different way of handling a pressured situation. You will need to keep communication open,butyou also could bebecoming less willing to find a solution. Ask yourself what would work best. Be willing to walk away, if need be. Tonight: Up late.

** * Get into a project, and you might be able to avoid a problem with an associate who is on the warpath. Honor a change of directi on,and know what you need and want. Be more direct, and make fewer assertions about the other party. Tonight:

Squeeze insomeexercise. SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * You could be deciding to venture out in a new direction. Others like to share their ideas with you because you take and integrate them well. One-on-

one relating hasmanysurprises, as you

will discover. Maintain your sense of humor. Tonight: Allow your imagination to decide.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)

** * * Some of you might not be aware of how much you are suppressing anger. It would be best to detach for now. Communication needs to be authentic to make the difference you want. Cut through confusion with what you know is true. Tonight: Do something totally different.

** * Deal with a property matter that is likely to surprise you in some way. Others share an interest in what you are doing. Try to avoid stirring the pot. A friend might not be as supportive as you would like him or her to be. Understand what is going on. Tonight: Head home early.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) *** * Have one-and-oneconversa-

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)

even if events prove to be full of surprises or someonedoes the unexpected.Refuse to allow yourself to be irritated by everything that happens. Tonight: Defer, defer, defer.

** * * * A sk rather than sit on a question too long. You might wonder what would be the best way to handle a problem that arises from out of the blue. You can discuss it forever, but you will need to take action to resolve the problem. Do not overthink. Tonight: Catch up on news.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * You' ll move into a new realm of thinking. How you handle a personal matter could change as a result. You will be more willing to express what others view as being a very wild idea. Allow your imagination to flow. Avoid taking any financial risks. Tonight: Make it your treat. © King Features Syndicate

8 p.m. on10, "MasterChef" — As the title of the new episode "Gordon's Greatest Hits"

suggests ,someofChefGordon Ramsay's signature dishes give the remaining contestants their challenges. First, they taste his Beef Wellington, then have to replicate it ... and if that seems tough, wait until the next round. In that, they have to prepare his scallops with puree of English peas, bacon and quail eggs, finished with shaved truff les. That's very likely not something they make all the time.

8 p.m. oo(CW), "Arrow"-

"The Carrie Diaries" alum Austin Butler becomes acast regular in "Draw Back Your Bow," playing a disc jockey who both angers and intrigues Thea (Willa Holland). Oliver (Stephen Amell) is plagued by a serial killer (guest star Amy Gumenick) who wants to capture Arrow's attention, no matter what — nor whose life — it takes. 8:30 p.m. on 2, 9, "TheGoldbergs" —Adam's (Sean Giam-

brone) decision topursuefencing alarms Murray (Jeff Garlin) in "As You Wish." The situation gets worse when Adam reveals why he wanted to take up the sporthis inspiration being the movie "The Princess Bride." Beverly

(Wendi McLendon-Covey)decides to play matchmaker for educators linked to Barry and Erica (Troy Gentile, Hayley Orrantia). 9 p.m. on SYFY, Movie: "Predestination" —A temporal

agent (EthanHawke)embarks on a final time-traveling assignment to prevent an elusive criminal from launching an attack that kills thousands of people in this head-spinning 2014 Australian sci-fi film adapted by writer-director siblings Peter and Michael Spierig from a short story by Robert A. Heinlein. Noah Taylor

(" Game of Thrones") also stars

in the film, which drew generally positive reviews overall, but it was young leading lady Sarah Snook in a complicated "intersex" role that dominated most of the acclaim. 11 p.m. on TBS, "Conan"HostConan O' Brien makes no bones about what it is that motivated him to take his late-nite show to San Diego for four consecutive nights while Comic-Con is in progress. (The answer: lots of chicks in Wonder Woman costumes). All kidding aside, it seems like a natural opportunity for the talk-show host with the keenest appreciation of the surreal and absurd. o zap2it

TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980

r

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • ALOHA (PG-13) 6 • HOT PURSUIT (PG-13) 9 • TOMORROWLAND (PG)2:30 • Younger than 21 may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

tions. A friend who seems to be on the warpath might surprise you by forcing TAURUS (April 20-May20) you to take another look at your relation** * * Don't push so hard to have your ship. Tap into your imagination and try to way. You know what you are doing, but see a situation differently. A loved one is those around you might be hesitant. Be likely to shock you. Tonight: Among the careful not to displaceyour anger.You ci'owds. might be taken aback by everything that LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) is happening around you.Slow down the ** * Defer to others in order to get a pace. Tonight: Listen to your inner voice. different perspective. Remain confident,

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)

your time and please don't rush!

I

TV TOOAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

541-647-2956

• J

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE OVERNIGHT (R) 8:30 • SLOW WEST (R) 6:30 • SUNSHINE SUPERMAN (PG) 4:15 I

I

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • INSIDE OUT (PG)2, 4:30, 7 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 3:45, 6:30, 9:f 5 • MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) 3:15, 6:15, 9, 9:30 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-13) 3:30, 6:30, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • INSIDE OUT (PG)3:45, 5:30 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 4:45, 7:I5 • LOVE 8 MERCY (PG-13) 7:30 • MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) 5:45, 8 • ME ANDEARL AND THE DYING GIRL (PG-13)5:45,8 if~ i

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • INSIDEOUT (PG)noon,2:25,4:40,7:05,9:20 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) f:20, 4:10, 7, 9:50 • MAX(PG) 12:05, 2:30, 5, 7:25, 9:45 • TED2(R)noon,1:20,4:10,7,9:50 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-l3) 1:10, 6:50 • TERMINATOR GENISYS3-0 (PG-l3) 4, 9:35 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt.,541-416-1014 • INSIDE OUT (Upstairs — PG) 6:30 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-13) 6:15 • The upstairsscreening room has limited accessibility.

O

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

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g )


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.corn THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 •

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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate a!t onl

kfl

Call for package rates

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Packages starting at $140for28da s

Call for prices

Prices starting at $17.08 erda

Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months

:'hours:

contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

: Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

. .Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 On the web at:www.bendbulletin.corn

Place, cancel or extend an ad

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261

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306

Pets & Supplies

Pets 8 Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Golf Equipment

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Medical Equipment

Fuel & Wood

Farm Equipment & Machinery

Maremma Guard Dog CHECK YOUR AD The Bulletin recompups, purebred, great mends extra caution dogs, $350 e a ch, when purc h as- 541-546-6171. ing products or services from out of the Mini Aussie, Red Meric male. 3t/2 yrs. Happy area. Sending cash, sl u mber little guy, been out- Flexisteel the first day it runs checks, or credit insofa, q ueen. exc. on s ide a l l h i s li f e . to make sure it is corf ormation may b e cond., $350. O ther Throws great puppies! large furniture avail. rect. nSpellcheckn and subjected to fraud. $300 541-325-1268 human errors do ocFor more i nformaincluding Large desks, tion about an adver- Mini Whoodle pups, patio swing set, etc. cur. If this happens to your ad, please contiser, you may call non-shed, great fam- Buyers will need to tact us ASAP so that the O regon State i ly p e t s , $80 0 . move items. Mornand any Attorney General' s 509-305-9085 ings only ( T erreb- corrections adjustments can be Office C o n sumer Pomeranian p u p s, onne) 541-504-0056. made to your ad. Protection hotline at pure bred, sables, For sale, white kitchen 541 -385-5609 1-877-877-9392. tri-colored markings, appliances: Kenmore The Bulletin Classified dewormed, g r e at refrigerator, 18cu. ft., The Bulletin dispositions, ready 30' wide, $ 1 7 5.Mach driver. 9.5 deg. 7/24. Taking deep. Frigidaire ele c tric Adjustable, draw face. C all a f te r 4p m range, 5 bu r ners, $40. 541-788-4229 1 G i ant S c hnoodle 541-383-8195 smooth top, $ 1 75. 246 black female puppy POODLE pups,toy or Frigidaire dishwasher, avail. $800, several Guns, Hunting mini, Pomapoos 8 $175. Sharp carousel M ini P artie S c h - Chipoo. 541-475-3889 microwave, $50. All & Fishing noodle babies avail. items in great work7/1 0/1 5, $600-$800. Queensland Heelers ing cond., have all Bend local dealer pays Standard & Mini, $150 509-305-9085 books. 541-480-4793 CASH!!for firearms & & up. 541-280-1537 www.rig htwayranch.wor G ENERATE SOM E ammo. 541-526-0617 AKC Golden Retreiver dpress.corn EXCITEMENT in your female puppies, soft, Sheep-A-Doodle pups, neighborhood! Plan a Find exactly what Apricot, avail. now. ready to go, lovely garage sale and don' t you are looking for in the $1000. 509-305-9085 non-shed, forget to advertise in coats, CLASSIFIEDS entle di s position. classified! 541-385-5809. 1200. 509-305-9085 CASH!! For Guns, Ammo & Shih-Tzu 8 wks only 2 Hide-a-bed couch, exReloading Supplies. left, $ 4 0 0 eac h tra pillows, exc. cond. 541-408-6900. 541-390-9868. $1 50. 541-548-5399

Med-Lift beige electric All Year Dependable lift chair, used f or Firewood: dry CASE 530 diesel tracabout a year, $750. Lodgepole split del tor with backhoe at541-923-8050 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . tachment, $4500. Multi-cord discounts! 541-389-7669. print e Tossing t h e 262 cash, check, Visa, MC Wedding B o uquet" 541-420-3484, Bend Horse & t/2Gould irrigabrown glass w ood Commercial/Office tion p ump, $ 2 0 0. frame, image s ize Equipment & Fixtures 203 269 541-420-2116 24nx20", frame meaHoliday Bazaar Gardening Supplies nx311/2". sures 35 325 & Craft Shows $250 OBO. & Equipment 541-593-7438 (Please Hay, Grain & Feed Central Oregon no calls after 5 PM) BarkTurfSoil.corn Saturday Market A+ Premium Central 253 We will be closed on Ore. Orchard Grass/Hay TV, Stereo & Video Sat., July 4th, come Free commercial wire PROMPT DELIVERY mix. 25 bales per ton, watch the Pet Parade, 542-389-9663 $1 95/ton. Quantity racks, you haul. Call Powered s u bwoofer, then we will be OPEN Discount, 541-977-3181 541-419-6321 120 watts, like new, SUNDAY July 5th. The $40. 541-788-4229 CO Orchard grass largest selection of lo263 For newspaper weed free, 70 lb. cal artists and crafters, delivery, call the Tools Need help fixing stuff? bales, $225/ton. No East of the Cascades. Circulation Dept. at Call A Service Professional delivery. Call (541) 420-9015 or 541-385-5800 find the help you need. DeWalt contractors mi541-317-8744 visit us on Facebook place an ad, call t re sa w , Mod e l To541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.corn DW730, comes w/ link First cutting orchard or email 255 attachment & l e g s. clanntfted@beodbolletio.corn g rass m ix , sm a l l USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! OBO. $300 bales, $165/ton, slight Computers 541-604-1964 Door-to-door selling with The Bulletin ream. 541-420-9736 SecantsCentral Orettnn since etre Madras, Oregon T HE B U LLETIN r e fast results! It's the easiest quires computer adway in the world to sell. New Sunmojoe Lawn Wheat Straw for Sale. vertisers with multiple mower electric $100 Also, weaner pigs. ad schedules or those The Bulletin Classified obo. 541-516-8957 541-546-6171 selling multiple sys541-385-5809 tems/ software, to disTree branch c utter, close the name of the t elescoping, 14f t . , Looking for your business or the term MIXER mortar, con$40. 541-788-4229 next employee? "dealer" in their ads. crete, etc. 12 cu. ft., Place a Bulletin Private party advertis- towable, w / 1 3HP 270 help wanted ad ers are defined as Honda gas, hydrauLost & Found today and those who sell one lic dump, used once, reach over computer. l ike n ew . IM E R FOUND Dachshund mix FIND IT! ION'NIIS I&Ill Henchman 4HSM-4, 60,000 readers near Deschutes River BUY /7' 257 new $5000, s e l l each week. Woods, June 30. Call $ELL IT! Musical Instruments $3950. Your classified ad to describe. The Bulletin Classifieds DO YOU HAVE 503-781-8812 will also 541-408-0658 SOMETHING TO 260 286 appear on PA System: needed for SELL Found - Power tool car- bendbuuetin.corn Bulletin Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Sponsors 265 sweet Portia, hit by a The FOR $500 OR Peavey XR700 7 rying case, SW Redrecommends extra ' which currently channel powered car & now missing LESS? Building Materials mond. Call to identify. receives over Eagle Crest E s t ateH uge church s a le part of her jaw 8 i caution when purNon-commercial mixer, Cerwin Vega 541-923-6535. 1.5 million page Sale, 7/11 8 7/12. Call benefits low income tongue. Further sur- chasing products or • mains, Bull Frog advertisers may La Pine Habitat 951-454-2561 for ap- children, Sat. July 11, gery is needed to re- services from out of I views every FOUND Swiss watch place an ad monitors. Ready to RESTORE 8-3, 1st Presbyterian move her damaged ~ the area. Sending ~ pointment. month at no 7/6 at J.C/s Bar & use. $250.00 with our Building Supply Resale ' cash, checks, o r ' 230 NE 9th, eye. Recovery will Grill downtown Bend. extra cost. 541-905-2746 "QUICK CASH Estate Sale, All Must Church Quality at Lower level. take a while, but she i credit i n f ormation Call t o des c ribe. Bulletin SPECIAL" LOW PRICES Go! Fri. & Sat., 7-2, may be subjected to 541-610-7694 C!assifieds 1 week 3 lines 12 21011 Lim e stoneMulti-Family Sale, Sat. l oves life & w e a t i FRAUD. For more 52684 Hwy 97 CRAFT rescue will do oi' Get Results! Upright piano. 541-536-3234 Ave., between Bend & July 11, 8-4 Lost gray cat, Hazel, Call all we can for her. information about an I 541-385-5809 Redmond. All reason- F urniture, ~aa aka ate Melville-Clark WurlOpen to the public . decor , Donations n e eded! advertiser, you may c West Awbrey Butte, Ad must itzer. Nice sound or place your ad able offers accepted. bikes/toys, c l othes, PO Box 6441, Bend f call t h e disappeared July 3/4, Ore g on f include price of on-line at Cash only! and touch. Paid 266 Atto r ney ' sports and yard items, 97708 o r no collar. Please help. Pa y Pal,' State s~in le item nt esne $1100. Need to sell. bendbuuetin.corn 8 more! 20628 Blanca www.craftcats.org. Heating & Stoves 541-408-4733 O' Brien i General's O f f i ce July 10th 8 11th, 7-4. or less, or multiple $650 OBO. Ct./Summit area. Also need jars of baby Consumer Protec- • 2467 NE Denton Ln., 541-41 9-361 5 items whosetotal 541-480-6358 NOTICE TO food meats, Royal tion h o t line a t i Prineville. Camping, 383 does not exceed 288 Canin babycat dry ADVERTISER i 1-877-877-9392. fishing & hunting gear, $500. Produce & Food 260 Since September 29, food 8 good quality h ousehold ite m s , Sales Southeast Bend canned pate food for > Serving TheCenrrarBulletin > Call Classifieds at 1991, advertising for REMEMBER: If you Misc.Items tools, canning, dark Oregon sincetee used woodstoves has have lost an animal, THOMAS ORCHARDS room & cameras. 1st Annual B ronze- her & o t hers with 541-385-5809 Kimberly, Oregon don't forget to check 1 hp electric pump w/10 been limited to modwood Neighborhood short-term eating diffiwww.bendbulletin.corn 262 212 The Humane Society U-Pick allon pressure tank, els which have been Garage Sale: 9-3 on culties. 541 598 5488 certified by the O rBend 150. 541-693-4480 Sales Northwest Bend Saturday, 7/1 1. Antiques 8 Dark Sweet cherries egon Department of 541-382-3537 New Rossi.357 lever Browse through mulfrom bin $1.85/lb. Collectibles action rifle, $ 4 95. BuyPng Diamonds Environmental QualRedmond 5 family garage sale, tiple garage sales in Semi-Cling /Gold for Cash 541-306-0166 541-923-0882 ity (DEQ) and the fedFriday & S a turday, the same neighborPeaches 70n/lb. The Bulletin reserves Saxon's Fine Jewelers eral E n v ironmental Madras 8-5. 63811 O.B. Riley hood! Also for sale is Apricots $1.00/lb. the right to publish all Ruger Single 6 .22 re541-389-6655 Protection A g e ncy 541-475-6889 Rd., Bend a big collection of pigs call for availability ads from The Bulletin volver w/ mag cylin(EPA) as having met Prineville & Puffkins! BronzeBUYING newspaper onto The 1 96 9 m o del, Lionel/American Flyer Cowgirl Ca$h smoke emission stan541-447-7'I 78 BRING CONTAINERS! wood is off 15th St Standard Poodle pup- Bulletin Internet web- der. pre-hammer m o d ., trains, accessories. I buy Western & dards. A cer t ified or Craft Cats Open 7 days a week, b etween Wilson & pies, 2 apricot males, site. with George Vintage. Boots, leather, Reed Market. woodstove 541-389-8420. 541-408-2191. may be top AKC b reeding, 8 a.m.to 6 p.m .only Lawrence cu s t om jewelry. 924 Brooks, identified by its certifiA thletic, calm a n d 541-934-2870. western style holster. BUYING & SE LLING cation label, which is T hurs. July 2nd, my 541-678-5162. Buying 2 family sale 61267 very sweet. Love hu- The Bulletin All gold jewelry, silver permanently attached Cannondale Trail 5 M/eare at the Bend Wed.- Fri. 11-6 & by apt. New condition. $725 mans and other dogs. Benham Rd. Saturand gold coins, bars, to the stove. The Bul- bike was taken from Farmer'sMarket 215 503-936-1778 Ron at day only, 9-3. Be- Call 286 rounds, wedding sets, letin will not k now- Campsite 8 in Cinder on Wednesdays and or Coins & Stamps tween Rae and Chase 541-480-3378, class rings, sterling sil- ingly accept advertis- Hill Cam p ground Fridays. Visit us on Sales Northeast Bend off Parrell. Lots of ron.guiley©gmail.corn SAKO 270 Short ver, coin collect, vin- ing for the sale of north of Eastlake Re- Facebook for updates! Private collector buying items. Mag Stainless, Betage watches, dental Wolf-Husky pups $500, sort. Bike is like new, Community Wide Yard uncertified stamp albums 8 retta stock, original gold. Bill Fl e ming, wood pure white and wolf postage blue with white letterSale! Bear Creek Vil- Community YardSale: stoves. collections, world-wide 541-382-9419. box, unopened gray. 541-977-7019 ing Inertia seat bag lage Apts is having a Fri. & Sat. 8-3, Suntree and U.S. 573-286-4343 factory scope and bike computer. Dishes - 8 place set of yard sale, Sat, July 11 Village, 1001 SE 15th, (local, cell phone). Yorkie AKC pups 2M, 267 mounts. Used one R eward of fe r e d. Sango Nova Brown, from 8:30 to 4. 155 lots of great stuff, 2F, adorable, UDT hunt, very accurate. Fuel & Wood P lease return n o 240 $75. 541-408-0846 NE Craven Rd something for everyone! shots, health guar., pics Talley rings availquestions asked. Can $500/up. 541-777-7743 Crafts & Hobbies able. $750. For sale: 1974 Ford be anonymous. Rex, Fencing inflators, clip541-280-5574. pickup F250, 4 w d, WHEN BUYING ** FREE ** 210 541-504-4624 pers, lamb h alters, COMPLETE POT360 v8, manual trans, FIREWOOD... sleezies and head Furniture & Appliances TERY SET UP - InGarage Sale Kit new motor, $6,000. stand, scr a pbook Place an ad in The WANTED: Collector cludes Skutt kiln, two 1989 Ford p i c kup To avoid fraud, s upplies, books 8 C alifornia k i n g b e d wheels, clays, glazes, seeks high quality fishThe Bulletin Bulletin for your gaF150, 4wd, 302 v8, 421 m isc. 1413 S E M i - E than A l le n wi t h small library shelves, ing items & upscale fly recommends payrage sale and reauto trans., power Schools & Training nam Ave. Thurs. & mattress & box scales, ment for Firewood ceive a Garage Sale hea t e rs, rods. 541-678-5753, or steering, $2, 5 00. only upon delivery Fri. 10-5. springs, matching 11- tables, booth and too 503-351-2746 Kit FREE! Commercial H o bart IITR Truck School drawer dresser w/ Irg much to list. $2,500 or and inspection. m eat saw, 1 HP , • A REDMOND CAMPUS KIT INCLUDES: Foxborough neighbor- m atching mirr o r . best offer. C ontact 249 cord is 128 cu. ft. 1725 RPM. $1,000. 4' x 4' x 8' Our Grads GetJobs! • 4 Garage Sale Signs hood garage sale. $600. 541-241-4373 Rodney at Art, Jewelry All OBO. Call Brent 1-888-438-2235 • $2.00 Of Coupon To Sat. 8 to 4. Broster- Redmond • Receipts should 541-728-0604 541-447-5504 & Furs Use Toward Your WWW.IITR.EDU hous N. of Murphy. include name, Next Ad Enter at Foxborough Infrared Sauna, 220-V 308 245 phone, price and • 10 Tips For "Garage Desperately Seeking hook-up, no building, 454 Ln./ Songbird Ln. kind of wood Farm Equipment Golf Equipment Sale Success!" Missing 1940s dia- $3000 value, asking purchased. Looking for Employment & Machinery m ond ring sold a t $500. 541-536-7790 • Firewood ads 290 3 gas golf carts: 2006 Bend Pawn approx. MUST include PICK UP YOUR Sales Redmond Area Y amaha, $200 0 . Sept.13-17, 2014 has Wanted- paying cash 2 rows of bailing wire, Specials in cleaning species & cost per GARAGE SALE KIT at houses office RV's Very Good condition 3 Older Hyun d ai, central diamond and 2 for Hi-fi audio & stu$50 each. cord to better serve and any general 1777 SW Chandler Great sale in Cascade c ushion Couch, 2 $1000. 1996 little side stones, one dio equip. Mclntosh, 541-420-2116 our customers. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 cleaning. Call Three View Estates, 3750 matching pillows, mfd Easy-Go, $2000. i s m i s sing. C a l l JBL, Marantz, D yMaria's:541-977-1833 Xero Avenue. Fri. by La-Z Boy, $175 or Good carts - can de- 541-213-1221 please naco, Heathkit, San.C. c omplete h a y The Bulletin SW Bulletin A bailer, & Sat . 7 to 4, b est o ff er . Cal l liver within reason. keep trying! Will pay sui, Carver, NAD, etc. The $600. Juarezm990O gmail. serving cenrrat oregon since tees SereintrCendaf Oreiton since elec 541-548-4301 541-317-0826 541-576-2477 reasonable price Call 541-261-1808 541-420-2116 corn

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Signed and numbered (7/575) Jane Wooster Scott limited edition

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E2 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.corn

t ••

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Place aphoto in your private party ad for only $15.00par week.

*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

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

icall for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices in ad

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Are you interested in learning the entry level basics of being a pressman?

The Bulletin has an immediate opening for a full-time pressroom Roll Tender. This entry-level position is responsible for the loading of newsprint rolls and the operation of the reel stands on the press. The work schedule will consist of 4 days at 10 hours per day, from 3:30 PM to approximately 2:00 AM, on a rotation schedule that will allow for every other weekend being 3 days off. Starting rate is $10.00 per hour DOE. The right person for the job must be able to move and lift 50 lbs. or more on a continuing basis. The position also requires reaching, standing, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. Learning and using proper safety practices will be a primary responsibility.

PLEASENOTE: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.

Applications are also available at the front desk at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave., Bend, OR. Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p portunities " include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline

Cabinetry

SAWYER in a l o ng running custom cabinet shop in Bend. Top pay for the right person. Send resume to cabinets©qwestoffice.net

Home Delivery Advisor

476

Part Time 20 — 25 Hour

a week. Accepting resumes I High Desert Commons 2201 SW Canal Blvd Redmond, OR 10am to 2pm, Mon.-Fri.

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.corn

Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, anelson@bendbulletin.corn

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and The Bulletin perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share caution when purpenetration. Ideal candidate will be a chasing products or I and who can work both in the office services from out of a self-starter and in their assigned territory with minimal l the area. Sending supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary c ash, checks, o r company vehicle provided. Strong l credit i n formation with customer service skills and management skills l may be subjected to are necessary. Computer experience is FRAUD. You must pass a drug screening For more informa- I required. be able to be insured by company to drive tion about an adver- • and vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we l tiser, you may call b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o the Oregon State advancement within company is available to l Attorney General's right person. If you enjoy dealing with Office C o n sumer s the from diverse backgrounds and you are Protection hotline at l people energetic, have great organizational skills and I 1-877-877-9392. interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to: Employment Opportunities

Maintenancel Janitoriall Landsca perl Painting, Plumb› ing, Electrical Exp. Necessary.

IMMEDIATE OPENING for E X P ERIENCED

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Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulletin’s web site, www.bendbulletin.corn, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

Immediate need for Wildland Firefighters to fight forest fires. Must be 18 years old and Drug Free! Apply 9am-3pm Mon-Thurs. Bring two forms of ID fill out Federal l-9 form. No ID = No Application

PatRick Corp.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

®

Redmond

541-923-0703 EOE P ATR I c K

S UBA R U .

Auto - Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's largest new ca r de a l er 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 $2000 guara ntee. Dress f o r success. P l ease apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.

Purchasing Agent KEITH Mfg. Co. currently has an opening for a Purchasing Agent. Responsibilities include coordinating the purchasing of goods. Qualifications: at least 3 years recent purchasing experience. Excellent communication skills and strong problem- solving instincts. Proficient in Microsoft Office with heavy emphasis in Excel. Positive attitude and personally suited to work in a team oriented environment. Strong organizational skill a must. Lean manufacturing knowledge a plus. Benefits: Health, Dental, Vision, Life Ins., Disability Ins., paid vacation and holidays. Please apply at: keithwalkingfloor.corn/keith/aboutlcareers

PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT

In this position you will support outside sales representatives and managers with account and territory management

The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts. Job begins on or about Sept. 1

TolOIIBII1

• Excellent verbal, written and communication skills • Accurate typing, filing, multi-tasking, and organizational skills • Google Docs and Excel skills a plus. • Ability to develop and maintain good customer service and relationships • Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, deadline oriented office environment • Valid driver's license and transportation for occasional driving

If you have a positive, "Can Do" attitude, strong service/team orientation, problem solving skills, are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual with multi-tasking abilities, WE WANT To TALK To YOU!

Please send your resume and cover letter to: nkerrigan@wescompapers.corn This position is full-time, sam to 5pm Mon-Fri. Pre-employment drug testing is required Western Communications, inc. and its affiliated companies, is proud fo be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace.

'a •

• . •. . • •

• Proven interpersonal skills • Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must • Working knowledge of traditional high school sports • Proven computer and proofreading skills • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlineoriented environment • Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen

If you are a sports minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT To TALK To YOU!

Ro o ms for Rent

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 634

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

Only a few left! Two & Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer and Patio or Deck. (One Bdrms also avail.) Mountain Glen Apts 541.383.9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: sportsassistantObendbulletin.corn •

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* No resumes will be accepted

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.

Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

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The Bulletin

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servrnscentral oregon ance 1903

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L +**** * * * * * * * * * * A y •

C all 54 /-385-580 9 to r o m ot e o u r service L a ndscaping/Yard Care

Houses for Rent General

NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o p e r form Construction Contrac- Landscape Constructors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's stallation, repair of irCOB l i c ense at rigation systems to be www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e contractor.corn Landscape Contracor call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin recom- number is to be inmends checking with cluded in all adverthe CCB prior to con- tisements which inditracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades a bond, insurance and also req u ire addi- workers c ompensational licenses and tion for their employcert ifications. ees. For your protection call 503-378-5909 Handyman or use our website: www.lcb.state. or.us to check license status I Do THAT! before contracting with Home/Rental repairs the business. Persons Small jobs to remodels doing lan d scape Honest, guaranteed maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. LandscapingNard Care

PUBLISHER' S NOTICE All real estate adver-

a

If you have a positive "Can Do" attitude, enjoy working with numbers, solving problems and helping others WE WANT To TALK To YOU!

Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud lo be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace

Room for rent in house in Eagle Crest, Redmond. Elderly lady preferred. Rent: $400.

• Roommate Wanted

I

No pho ne calls please. *

Please send your resume and cover letter to: nkerrigan©wescompapers.corn

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• Excellent verbal, written and communication skills • Accurate typing, filing, multi-tasking, and organizational skills • Microsoft Office and basic accounting skills a plus. • Ability to develop and maintain good customer service and relationships. • Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, deadline oriented office environment. • Pre-employment drug testing is required

'

Building/Contracting •

Totavalil, •

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front desk(1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.corn).

. 0 0

CHECK YOUR AD

In this position you will support the Accounting and Human Resources Departments

* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I

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AP/HR ASSISTANT Administration

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attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin

General

I II Please submit a completed application . I

AptiMultiplex General •

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The BILIIlt:tm

Retail Advertising

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

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No agencies or telephone calls please.

ADVERTISING SALES ASSISTANT

alrris rrrlrraclttohslro! las

.

In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

tin Classified

'

Awbrey Butte beautiful furnished house, two rooms avail. WiFi. Cell ¹ 408-694-7045

TolDUTBII7,

1199 NE Hemlock,

FIND YOURFUTURE HOME IN THE BULLETIN

Call 541-280-0892.

The Bu8etm

541-385-5809

NOTICE

All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal e state which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulle-

I

The Bulletin

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller©bendbulletin.corn No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employmenl drug screen required.

Homes for Sale

deposit. 541-419-1917

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Bul leting

Vm ©nljtl

C ountry living - N E Redmond. Neat and clean 2 bed, 2 bath manuf. home. Carport. Storage building. No pets, no smoking. Taking applications. $650/mo. + security

BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party I * Great Supplemental Income!! * I will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I problem, good equity day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI is all you need. Call currently have openings all nights of the week. Oregon Land Mort- I Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and gage 541-388-4200. I end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m .AllpoLook at: • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI Bendhomes.corn for Complete Listings of I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Area Real Estate for Sale I are loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackLOCAL NfoNEyrWe buy ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and secured trust deeds & I other tasks. note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsI 541-382-3099 ext.13. I including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time.

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FIREFIGHTERS NEEDED NOW!

1-877-877-9392.

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Education Eastern Oregon Uni- Management versity is hiring a di- ServiceMaster seeks a rector for its Bend Of- fleet/equipment/ fice. The primary roles building manager. is to advocate the Must be mechanically People Lookfor Information higher education inclined. This Iob is About Products and needs of the resithree to six days a Services EveryDaythrough dents of Deschutes week depending on The Bulletin Clsssiffeds County and surthe needs of the aprounding area; to pro- plicant. Help us revide overall program spond to Central Ormanagement for pro- egon disasters by at 1-503-378-4320 gram offerings in this keeping our fleet and For Equal Opporturegion. For more inequipment in top nity Laws contact formation please go Oregon Bureau of notch order. to: https:lleou.peoWe are a drug free Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, pleadmin.corn/ work place. Call 971-673- 0764. 541-388-5000

The Bulletin

those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,

For more information or to submit a resume, please contact:

MX

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Your future isjust apage away.Whetheryou're looking for a hat oraplaceto hangit, The BulletinClassified is your bestsource. Every daythousandsof buyersandsellers ofgoods Rmzras servicesdobusinessin 5 l3z@zcm and these pages.Theyknow you can'tbeatTheBulletin ClassifiedSectionfor selectionandconvenience - every item is just aphone call away. 528 The ClassifiedSectionis Loans & Mortgages easy touse.Everyitem is categorizedandevery WARNING caitegoiy is indexed on the The Bulletin recomsection's frontpage. mends you use caution when you proWhetheryouare lookingfor vide personal information to compa- a homeor needaservice, nies offering loans or your future is inthepagesof The BulletinClassified. credit, especially

Roll Tender

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

Employment Opportunities

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.corn which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

For More Information Call Issa Lozada de Vega - (407) 551-5664 issa.l ozadadevega@searshomepro.corn EDE

3: 00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines

658

Houses for Rent Redmond

Employment Opportunities

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Home Services

• • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

• Competitive Pay • Comprehensive Benefits Package • Paid Vacations • Van, Tools, Fuel & Parts Provided

Friday. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

•... . . . .

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Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 • pm Fri • Tuesday. • • • • • • • • • • • • .NoonMon. Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

.

tising in this newspa- Zcpe dQua/reI L’a~< C’~ r,. per is subject to the F air H ousing A c t Full Service which makes it illegal Landscape to a d vertise "any Management preference limitation or disc r imination Fire Protection based on race, color, religion, sex, handi- and Fuels Reduction •Tall Grass cap, familial status, •Low Limbs marital status or na•Brush and Debris tional origin, or an intention to make any Protect your home with such pre f erence, defensible space limitation or discrimination." Familial staLandscape tus includes children under the age of 18 Maintenance living with parents or Full or Partial Service legal cus t odians, •Mowing ~Edging pregnant women, and •Pruning .Weeding people securing cus- Sprinkler Adjustments tody of children under 18. This newspaper Fertilizer included with will not knowingly acmonthly program cept any advertising for real estate which is Clean-Ups in violation of the law. Its not to late to have a O ur r e aders a r e Beautiful Landscape hereby informed that all dwellings adverWeed Free Bark tised in this newspa& Flower Beds per are available on an equal opportunity Lawn Restoration basis. To complain of d iscrimination cal l Experienced HUD t o l l-free a t Commercial 1-800-877-0246. The tt Residential toll free t e lephone Free Estimates number for the hearSenior Discounts 541-390-1466 ing i m p aired is 1-800-927-9275. Same Day Response

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Maintenance

•Sprinkler Repair •Summer Clean up •Fuels Reduction/ Brush Mowing ~Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bark, Rock, Etc.

~Landsca in •Landscape Construction ~Water Feature Installation/M aint. •Pave rs •Renovations •Irrigation Installation •Synthetic Turf Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

Painting/Wall Covering

KC WHITE PAINTING LLC Interior and Exterior Family-owned Residential tt Commercial 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-vear warranties SPRING SPECIAL! Call 541-420-7846 CCB ¹204918


THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, JUL 8, 2015

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TH E BULLETINoWEDNESDAY, JUL 8, 2015

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wlii'shortz

DAILY BR I DG E C LU B wednesday, July8,2015

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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

My friend the English professor wonders how s om e p eople g et admitted to college. He told me about a studentwho, on a language exam, defined "medieval" as "only partly bad." North's 2NT was a conventional forcing spade raise. At four spades, dummy and East played low on the first heart, and South took the king and drew trumps. He cashed the top clubs, ruffed dummy's last club and led a diamond. South hoped to play the seven from dummy, passing the lead to East, who would be end-played. But West put up the nine, and South was sunk. He finessed with the queen and lost two diamonds and two hearts. PLAN

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: D OP E L O I R E H A R D R OE S E N T E R O M O O T O RS G L O V E S E T S S E A M I L E D A N CE R 0 U N D A N D R0 U N D A R A C H N E S I G N R O D E O P A S A C R O E N E C I RC L E S OA R R O S S M O T L I S T S W A H L M O D N P I E R E V O L V I N G D O O R M O I R A T A K E S I N O N T V R O M A S A S T O O O Z E S P O D E N O O R D RY S A S S O C A R O D xwordeditorteaol.corn 07/08/15 5

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07/08/1 5


THE BULLETINQ WEDNESDAY, JULY 8 2015 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

750

Redmond Homes

EAGLE CREST. Gated. 3 bdrms.,2.5 baths, 1850 sq. ft., Great Room, den/office, gas fireplace, air, 2-car garage, mountain view. $365,000. Possible owner carry with large down. possible lease/option. 541-280-4599,

Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.corn which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

Ito t orcycles & AccessoriesBoats & Accessories

Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds 5 41-385-580 9 Honda Magna 750cc motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 miles, $3250. 541-548-3379

gi

10 PRINEVILLE Acres RMV = $15,700 $6,700 FIRM 805-286-1383 775

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

List Your Home JandMHomes.corn We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-546-5511

: I.

®

00 850

Snowmobiles

4-place enclosed Interstate snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $7500. 541-379-3530

881

881

882

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

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I

2008 Beaver C ontessa 40' four slide diesel pusher. Loaded, great condition. Warranty. Pictures/info at www.fourstarbend.corn 541-647-1236

i 2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser 820 model pontoon boat, 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $1 9,900 541-350-5425

'

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbrrlfetin.corn Updated daily

Moto Guzzi B r eva 1 100 2 0 07 , onl y 20' Seaswirl cuddy V6 11,600 miles. $5,950. f uel i njected. I o w hours, exc. c o nd., 206-679-4745 $8750. 541-369-7270

Cabin in the woods on trout stream, private, off the grid, 80 mi. from Bend. 638 ac. $849K. For d r o ne video li n k , call 773

880

19' Pioneer ski boat, 1963, vm tandem trailer, V6.Fun & fast! $5350 obo. 541-815-0936. H arley Road K i ng Classic 2003, 100th Anniversary Edition, FUN & FISH! 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 Bruce 541-647-7078

763

Acreages

880

Harley Davidson 2002 S oftail, l i k e ne w . 4,436 miles, $10,500. 541-316-8797

Recreational Homes 8 Property

541-480-7215.

880

870

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-365-5609

~

-

Freight!incr 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6

Safari 1998 motor-

home 30', low mileage, 300 HP Magnum Cat motor with turbo, always inside, white leather interior, like new, has m any extr a s . $50,000. S e r ious callers only. 541-548-8415

speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077

Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Ask about our ALLEGRO 27' 2002 classifieds! Super Seller rates! 58k mi., 1 slide, vaca541-385-5809 tion use only, Michelin all weather tires w/5000 mi., no accidents, non-smokers, Workhorse e n g i ne 261-A, Allison Trans., backup camera, new refrig. unit, h eated Monaco 38PDQ mirrors, exc. cond., well cared for. Sacri- Di lomat 2005 fice! $32,000. obo! Four slides, 541-549-6737 Iv. msg. loaded, 17,100

miles, original owner, just serviced Ready to go! $82,500. 541-480-8154

S outhwind F o r d Fleetwood motorhome, 19 9 4, 32', asoline, 82K miles, ood con d ition, $8,500 obo. 503-807-5490

Forest River Wild2 0 02, $1 0,590. 2 Slides, walk around queen size bed, a/c, microwave, fri d ge/ freezer, awning and m uch more! H a s been garaged. must see to appreciate. Please call, 541-312-8367 wood 26ft.

2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D river s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat screen TVs, refer, generator, inverter, King Dome, tow bar. N on-smoker, n o pets, no c h ildren. C lean, an d w e l l maintained, $47,500 541-390-1472.

Keysfone Springdale 2010, 21 ' , sleeps 6, DVD & CD player, 60 g a llon freshwater, 7 cu.ft. fridge. Leveling hitch & j acks, a wning, spare tire, lots of storage. New cond., only 3,000 m iles. Priced below Blue Book, $9,900. Call Rick for more info.

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.corn

BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 885

5th wheel hitch durable Canopies & Campers B 8 W Companion Lance Squire 4000, made in the USA 1996, 9' 6" extended $450 541-279-9013 cab, bathroom w/ toiCHECK YOURAD let, queen bed, outside shower. $5,700. Call 541-382-4572

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. Ifthishappensto your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any ad!ustments can be made to your ad.

Northlander 1993 17' camper, Polar 990, good shape, new fridge, A/C, queen bed, bathroom, indoor/outdoor shower, lots of 541 -385-5809 storage, customTheBulletin Classified ized to fit newer pickups,$4500 obo. Curt fifth wheel hitch, 541-419-9659. 2 24, b ought n e w September/14 w/ brackets & hardware, BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS $450. 520-331-9747 Search the area's most Husky 16K EZ Roller comprehensive listing of 5th wheel hitch; and classified advertising... 5th wheel tailgate fits real estate to automotive, '03 dodge or newer, merchandise to sporting $450 for both. goods. Bulletin Classifieds 541-923-2595 appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.corn

Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 541-633-7017 transmission, dual exYamaha TW200 haust. Loaded! Auto-levTwo Twin stock with eling system, 5kw gen, RV fatty tires power mirrors w/defrost, CONSIGNMENTS 2007 with 1155 miles, 2 slide-outs with aw- Renegade V i l lagio 2007 with 1069 miles. nings, rear c a mera, Find It in WANTED 2015, loaded trai!er hitch, driver door 25QRS We Do The Work ... $3400 Each The Bulletin Classifleds! Class B+, 2900 miles. w/power window, cruise, You Keep The Cash! 541-568-0068 cell, ervin Central Ore on since 190 V-6 Turbo 541-385-5809 On-site credit 541-549-4834 hm exhaust brake, central Mercedes D iesel, t 6 + M P G . vac, satellite sys. Reapproval team, Bayliner 185 2006 870 open bow. 2nd owner duced price: $64,950. $40,000 under MSRP web site presence. at $92,900. B end. Boats & Accessories — low engine hrs. 503-781-8812 We Take Trade-Ins! 541-961-1508, — fuel injected V6 R .e, 541-639-6442. . 1 N 12' Valco alum. on — Radio & Tower. ,I BIG COUNTRY RV B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , trailer 9.9 J ohnson Great family boat Bend: 541-330-2495 one slide, low mile0/B, plus amenities, Redmond: Priced to sell. age, very clean, lots RV exc. shape. $1250. 541-548-5254 $11,590. of storage, $26,500. CONSIGNMENTS Winnebago Minnie 541-549-8126 541-546-0345. 541-639-9411 WANTED 2005 26' Class C, 16' 1976 Checkmate ski We Do The Work ... FIND IT! 29k miles, queen Creek Comp a ny You Keep The Cash! boat, 90HP Mercury bed, slide dinette, BUY ITl I N 'll'RIIS'IIHN I ODC1220 2 man inOn-site credit motor, restored; new A/C, generator, awSELL ITr Keystone Everest 5th flatable pontoon boat, approval team, seats, new c a rpet ning, Class 5 hitch, The Bulletin Classifieds Wheel 2004, web site presence. floor, new prop, with s eldom used, w as Coronado 27' motornew Michelins, exc. Model 323P - 3 slides, We Take Trade-Ins! trailer. Have receipts. $ 2000, selling f o r home 1992, e x c. shape. Stored inrear island-kitchen, $1000 firm. cond. interior, minor $2500. 541-536-1395 doors, no smoke. fireplace, 2 TV's, 541-981-0230 decal cracking exteBIG COUNTRY RV 17' Old Town Path $39,000. CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner rior. Strong running Bend: 541-330-2495 541-312-8402 w/surround sound, A/C, Finder Canoe NEW Creek Company gasoline e n g ine. Redmond: custom bed, ceiling fan, $300, used twice. ODC1624 3 man in- Just had t une-up. 541-548-5254 W/D ready, many extras. Located in Sunriver. flatable pontoon boat. 35,000 miles. Call RVision C r o ssover New awning & tires. I 503-319-1864 N ever used, w a s 5 41-815-3827 f o r 2013, 19ft, exc. Well Exc. cond. Tow vehicle 16' Bayliner 175 Capri, $ 3000, selling f o r more details and • s~~ equipped, $ 1 1,500. also avail.$1 7,900 obo. firm. pictures $6,995. like new, 135hp I/O, $2000 541-604-5367 More pics. 541-923-6408 low time, Bimini top, 541-981-0230 many extras, KaraFind exactly what Winnebago Outlook 875 van trailer with swing you are looking for in the 2007 Class "C" 31', neck, current registraWatercraft Monaco Monarch 31 ' clean, non- smoking CLASSIFIEDS tions. $8000. 2006, F ord V 10, exc. cond. Must See! 541-350-2336 Ads published in "Wa 28,900 miles, Lots of extra's, a very tercraft" include: Kay auto-level, 2 slides, Laredo 31'2006, good buy.$47,900 ks, rafts and motor Fleetwood D i scovery queen Unique R-Pod 2013 ed & For more info call 5th wheel, fully S/C zed personal 40' 2003, diesel, w/all hide-a-bedbsofa, trailer-tent combo, 4k 541-447-9266 one slide-out. atercrafts. Fo f ully l oaded, e x options - 3 slide outs, gen, convection mi'boats" please se Awning. Like new tended service consatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, crowave, 2 TVs, tow Winnebago Superchief hardly used. lass 870. etc., 34,000 m iles. package. 1990 27' clean, 454 tract and bike rack. Must sell $20,000 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, 541-365-5609 Wintered in h eated PRICE REDUCTION! $17,000. C hevy, runs v e r y or refinance. Call great shape, call for or shop. $78,995 obo. ood. g oo d t i r es, 541-595-3972 $59,000. 541-410-5649 info. $60500. In Bend 503-760-4467 541-447-8664 541-815-6319 6500. 541-279-9458. 661-644-0364.

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In Print CInd Online With The Bulletjn'5 CICISSjfiedS. A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e ! I

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GOLDENRETRIEVER PUPPIES,we Q UAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it aii! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for 8 caring home. Please you wijlneed. Roomto grow inyour a tough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.

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Aircraft, Parts & Service

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Financing available.

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E6 WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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Aircraft, Parts & Service

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

4

8 1/5 share in v ery Superhawk N7745G CORVETTE 1979, nice 150 HP Cessna Owners' Group LLC glass top, 31k miles, 150; 1973 C e s sna Cessna 172/180 hp, all original, silver 8 150 with Lycoming full IFR, new avionics, maroon. $12,500. 0-320 150 hp engine GTN 750, touch541-388-9802 c onversion, 400 0 screen center stack, hours. TT a irframe. exceptionally clean. Approx. 400 hours on Healthy engine 0-timed 0-320. Hanreserve fund. gared in nice (electric Hangared at KBDN. Oneshare door) city-owned hanavailable,$10,000 gar at the Bend AirCall 541-815-2144 port. One of very few C -150's tha t h a s Mustang never been a trainer. 925 Hard top 1985, $4500 wi ll consider 6-cylinder, auto trans, Utility Trailers trades for whatever. power brakes, power Call J i m Fr a zee, steering, garaged, 541-410-6007 Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 well maintained, sets of straps, exc. engine runs strong. c ond., capable of 74K mi., great condip ulling a f u l l s i z e tion.$12,500. pickup truck. If interMust see! ested we will send 541-598-7940 pictures. $1000 obo. 951-961-4590

1974 Bellanca

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$40,000.

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Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

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navigation, satellite radio extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170

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Antique 8 Classic Autos

The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville.

CHEVELLE MALIBU 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000

Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500. Tom, 541.788.5546

541-279-1072

150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at

BMW X3 35i 2010 Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless

17" MOMO Mag wheels fits Dodge D akota VW SunBug 1 974 Need help fixing stuff? $150. 541-693-4480 exc. cond. Total inte- Call A ServiceProfessional rior refurbish, engine find the help you need. Four tires, 235-65-17, OH, new floor pan, www.bendbulletin.corn good rubber, $100. plus lots more! Sun541-693-4480 r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. $9500. 541-504-5224

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Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat,

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F J40 Toyota Lande ruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-389-7113, Michelle

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Pickups X3 Sl 2007, Chevy Che y enne BNyi/ Low Miles - 68,500, 1 996, 2 50 0 ex AWD, leather Intetended cab, 4WD, rior, sunroof, blueps, pb, a/c, cruise, voice comrecent u p grades. tooth, mand system, and E xcellent tru c k , too much more to list $4850 OBO - Cash! here. $15, 9 00. 541-876-5570 Please call Dan at

Jeep Willys,'46, metal Buick LeSabre 2005 I lllini C ooper S Toyota MR2 S pyder Mustang GT 2007, top, big tires, ps, new Custom. Very clean, Convertible 2013: 2 001 5 spd , ex c . 27,000 miles, dark paint, tow bar, new inside & out, only has Like new convertible cond., pre-sale i ngrey e x t erior/light auges, etcH. reduced 96k miles. If you drive w/ only 18,600 miles. spection by Napa megrey interior, heated 4,000. 541-233-7272 it, you' ll fall in love!! All options incl. Chili chanic with r eport. garage, non-smok32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in Red paint w/ black T rue s p orts c a r ! ing, retired, Roush town. $ 4250 o bo stripes, 17" wheels, $7900. 541-728-0445 lowering kit, Roush Trade c o n sidered.film protection, cuscold air inductions, Cash/credit/debit tom f r ont d n v ing lovered side w i nFind It in card. Call or Text Ron lights, black leather dows, after market The Bulletin Classiffeds! ltd 4 © 541-419-5060 seats. $2 2,500 exhaust, sequential 541 -385-5809 541-420-1659 or idar ear l ights, d u al Jeep Wrangler RubiThe Bulletin's homonteith vtt aol.corn power seats. con 2 0 04, $18,500 "Call A Service Toyota Prius 2009 $19,995. Mileage: 065 , 1 54 Professional" Directory loaded, excellent con541-383-5043 Automatic, Cr u i se dition, 76800 mi, unis all about meeting Control, Tow Bar, Air der blue book $10,500 your needs. Conditioning, Power 541-420-9522 P orsche Cayman S Door Locks, Alarm Call on one of the 2 008, L i k e new , VW Jetta Sport Wagon and much more. Call 14,500 miles, TDI 2011, $18,492. professionals today! Gary: 541-280-0558. $35,000. Auto, silver, 45K mi., exc., 541-280-2229 Mustang Conv. 2011, 360-510-3153 (Bend) Subaru Outback 2005 6 speed auto, pony LL Bean Edition, moon, pkg. 1 5 , 00 0 mi. Toyota Avalon 2003, leather. ¹354625 for your $20,000. 150K m i . , si n g le Looking Dlr 0225 $ 1 2 ,495 next employee? 541-330-2342 owner, great cond., Place AAA Ore. Auto Source a Bu! Ietin help new tires and battery, wanted ad today corner west Empire 8 and Cadillac CTS 2010, maintenance records, Hwy 97, Bend. reach over 60,000 V 6 I n jection, 6 leather seats, moon54'I -598-3750 each week. Speed A u tomatic. Tick, Tock roof, full set of snow readers www.aaaoregonautoYour classified ad Luxury series. Extetires on rims, $7000. source.corn. will also appear on Tick, Tock... rior Black Raven, 541-548-6181 bendbulletin.corn Interior: Light Tita...don't let time get which currently renium/ E b o ny ceives over 1.5 milaway. Hire a What are you 2 2,555 m i les. 4 lion page views door. Excellent conprofessional out looking for? every month at dition all a r ound. of The Bulletin's no extra cost. BulleYou' ll find it in Has Arizona plates. tin Classifieds This is car is a great "Call A Service Toyota FJ Cruiser The Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call mix of luxury, com2012, 64K miles. all Professional" 385-5809 or place f ort, s t y le , an d hwy, original owner, your ad on-line at Directory today! workmanship. never been off road 541-385-5809 bendbulletin.corn $24,000.00 or accidents, tow Call 541-408-3051 pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. FIND IT! Call or text Jeff at A RE P U R L I C 541-729-4552 975

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The Bulletin Classifieds

An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order

541-815-6611

CALL]I

TODAY 5

Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or 541-420-6215.

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Automobiles

for the electorate fo make well-informal decisions.

CORVETTE COUPE 2003 - 50th Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, Anniversary auto, F WD, b l a ck color, A/C, 1 15,971 6 spdEdition manual transmiles, clean title and carfax. Call or t e xt mission, always garaged, never driven 541-834-8469 in winter, only 21k

Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front miles,$24,000 guard, nav., air and Buick Century 2 004 541-815-0365 heated leather, cus- exc. mech. cond, retom wheels and new built trani, new tires + Mercury Sable L S 4 studs on wheels tires, only 41K miles, 1 60k m i 32M P G 1996, $1800 OBO. $31,995 Runs, looks great. y 541-408-7908 $2950 541-408-4144

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Bend, Oregon 97702. Sheriff's Off i ce, d ant/s. Case N o .: 1 4CV0384FC. N O LEGAL NOTICE Conditions of S ale: US Bank National As- 63333 W. Highway 1 4CV0412FC. N O - TICE OF SALE UNPotential bidders must sociation, as trustee 20, Bend, Oregon, TICE OF SALE UN- DER WRIT OF EXarrive 15 minutes prior for Adjustable Rate sell, at public oral DER WRIT OF EXECUTION - REAL to the auction to allow M ortgage ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is Trus t auction to the highPROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the sell the p ersonal the Deschutes County 2005-7, A d j ustable est bidder, for cash Sheriff's Office to re- Rate hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty property described Mortgage or cashier's check, view bidder's funds. Backed Pass Through the real p roperty Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on below to enforce a Only U.S. currency Certificates, S e r ies commonly known as Sheriff's Office will, on Tuesday, August 4, lien imposed on said and/or cashier' s 2005, Plaintiff/s, v. 652 N W Po w ell T uesday, July 2 8 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in property under the checks made payable Roxanne D. C o ok; Butte Loop, Bend, 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Oregon S e lf-Storto Deschutes County John S. Green; Mort- O regon 977 0 1 . the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty age Facilities Act. Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 The u n dersigned Sheriff's Office will be gage Electronic Reg- Conditions of Sale: 's O ff ice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, will sell a t p u blic accepted. P ayment istration Sy s tems, Potential b i d ders Sheriff must be made in full must arrive 15 minW. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, sell, at public DER WRIT OF EXauction on the The Inc.; CitiBank, N.A., immediately upon the successor in interest u tes prior to t h e Oregon, sell, at public oral auction to t he ECUTION - REAL undersi ned w i ll close of the sale. For to CitiBank, FSB, a auction to allow the o ral auction to t h e h ighest bidder, f o r PROPERTY. Notice is sell at ublic aucmore information on h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier' s hereby given that the An entity may proFederal Sav i n gs Deschutes County tion on the 24th this s al e g o to: Bank; and Occupants Sheriff's Office to cash o r ca s hier' s check, the real propDeschutes C o u nty test this determinad a of Jul 2 0 1 5 http: //oregonsheriffbi d der's check, the real prop- erty commonly known Sheriff's Office will, on tion in accordance of the premises, De- review at 10:Ooam on the Advertise your car! with OAR ssale.org/ erty commonly known as 19209 Choctaw Tuesday, August 4, premises her e fendant/s. Case No.: funds. Only U . S. Add A Picture! 1 37-047-0710 n o currency an d / or as 20956 Vista BoRoad, Bend, Oregon 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Reach thousands of readers! 12CV0788. NOTICE said property has later than July 15, Call 541 -385-5809 cashier's c h e cks nita Drive, Bend, Or- 97702-7957. Condithe main lobby of the b een stored a n d OF SAL E U N DER Prot e sts The Bulletin Classifieds which are located at egon 97701. Condi- tions of Sale: PotenDeschutes C o u nty 2015. WRIT OF E X ECU- made payable to Find It in TION - REAL PROP- Deschutes County tions of Sale: tial bidders must arSheriff 's O ff ice,63333 must be submitted NORTH E M PIRE The Bulletin Classifieds! ERTY. N o tice Potential bidders must rive 15 minutes prior W. Highway 20, Bend, to City of Bend Puris Sheriff's Office will LEGAL NOTICE S TORAGE C E N541-385-5809 arrive 15 minutes prior to the auction to allow Oregon, sell, at public c hasing 710 N W hereby given that the be accepted. PayN ationstar M o r t - T ER 6 3 04 8 N E Wall Street, Bend, to the auction to allow the Deschutes County o ral auction to t h e Deschutes C o u nty ment must be made Lower Meadow Dr. gage LLC, its sucOregon, 97701. For the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to reh ighest bidder, f o r B end Ore o n Sheriff's Office will, on in full immediately cessors in interest copies of the deterupon the close of Sheriff's Office to re- view bidder's funds. cash o r ca s hier' s T hursday, July 3 0 , and/or ass i gns, C ount o f De s LEGAL NOTICE mination or a d dithe sale. For more view bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency check, the real propPlaintiff/s, v. Ronald c hutes State o f U.S. Bank N.A., in its 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Only U.S. currency and/or cashier' s erty commonly known tional i n f ormation W. S m ic z aka Orecron the capacity as trustee for the main lobby of the information on this contact and/or cashier' s checks made payable as 2055 NW K ing- please following: R onald Walt e r the Registered Hold- Deschutes C o u nty sale go to: http: //orchecks made payable to Deschutes County wood Avenue, Red- Heather Herauf at 's Office,63333 egonsheriffssales.or Smicz; Camille J. Keyshia 8 John ers of Home Equity Sheriff to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will be mond, Oregon 97756. 541-385-6677. Martin Unit ¹1223 Smicz aka Camile Asset Trust 2005-5, W. Highway 20, Bend, g/ Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment Conditions of S ale: Jolene Smicz; First Brian Bell Home Equity Oregon, sell, at public LEGAL NOTICE accepted. P ayment must be made in full Potential bidders must Date of Public NoUnit ¹636 Horizon Home Loan Pass-Through Certifi- o ral auction to t h e Wells Fargo Bank, tice: July 8, 2015 must be made in full immediately upon the arrive 15 minutes prior Corporation; StoneCourtney Cornis cates, Series 2005-5, highest bidder, f or N .A., Plaintiff/s, v . to the auction to allow Unit ¹551 ca s hier' s Frank R. Davila; and immediately upon the close of the sale. For hedge on the Rim Plaintiff/s, v. Christian cash o r the Deschutes County LEGAL NOTICE A ssociation, I n c . ; Courntey Cornis K . S c huster a k a check, the real prop- Laurie M. Davila, De- close of the sale. For more information on more information on this s al e go to: Sheriff's Office to re- James B. Nutter & Unit ¹654. erty commonly known O ccupants of t h e Christian Case No.: this s al e g o to: http: //oregonsheriffview bidder's funds. Company, its sucItems to be auction Heinz-Schuster; Paula as 1580 NW Newell fendant/s. premises; and the 13CV0274. NOTICE http: //oregonsheriffssale.org/ Only U.S. currency cessors in interest Avenue, Terrebonne, Real Property loare but not limited Schuster-Crozier; SALE U N DER ssale.org/ and/or cashier' s and/or ass i gns, cated at 1305 to- tools, furniture, Marcia I. O'Neal aka Oregon 97760. Con- OF WRIT OF E X ECUHave an item to checks made payable Plaintiff/s, v. Elton J. electronics, Southwest Rimrock Marcia Irene ditions of Sale: PoTION - REAL PROPLEGAL NOTICE to Deschutes County Wilson aka E lton c hildren's toys , Schuster; Oregon De- tential bidders must ERTY. N o tice Way, Redmond, Orsell quick? is Wells Fargo Bank, Sheriff's Office will be Jean Wilson; Ruth s porting gear, 8 egon 97756, Defenpartment of Revenue; arrive 15 minutes prior hereby given that the NA, Plaintiff/s, v. Lisa If it's under accepted. P ayment M. Wilson aka Ruth to the auction to allow dant/s. Case No.: misc. h o u sehold Oregon Board of ChiDeschutes C o u nty K . Bourne and a l l must be made in full M arie Wils o n ; 14CV0646FC. NOgoods. Purchases ropractic Examiners; the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office will, on other Persons or Par- '500 you can place it in immediately upon the U nited States o f T ICE O F SAL E must be paid for at Persons or P a rties Sheriff's Office to re- Thursday, August 6, ties unknown claimThe Bulletin close of the sale. For America; U.S. Bank, t he time o f p u r UNDER WRIT OF unknown clai ming any view bidder's funds. 2015 at 10:00 AM, in ing any right, title, lien, more information on National A ssociaOnly U.S. currency the main lobby of the or interest in the Real EXECUTION chase in cash only. Classifieds for: right, title, lien, or inthis s al e go to: tion, successor in All purchased items cashier' s REAL PROPERTY. terest in the property and/or C o u nty Property c ommonly http: //oregonsheriffi nterest b y pu r Notice i s h e r eby sold are as is where described in the com- checks made payable Deschutes Sheriff's Office, 63333 k nown a s 192 0 9 '10 -3 lines, 7 days ssale.org/ is and must be rec hase f ro m th e given that the Desplaint herein, Defen- to Deschutes County W. Highway 20, Bend, Choctaw, Bend, OR '1 6 - 3 lines, 14 days Sheriff's Office will be c hutes Coun t y moved at the time of dant/s. Case N o .: FDIC, receiver of Oregon, sell, at public 97702, Defendant/s. (Private Party ads only) sale. Sale subject to LEGAL NOTICE Park National Bank; Sheriff's Office will, 13CV0094. NOTICE accepted. P ayment o ral auction to t h e Case No.: City of Bend cancellation in the OF SALE U N DER must be made in full h ighest bidder, f or State of O regon; on Thursday, July event of settlement Sole Source O ccupants of t h e 23, 2015 at 10:00 WRIT O F E X ECU- immediately upon the cash o r 1000 1000 ca s hier' s A M, in t h e m a i n between owner and TION - REAL PROP- close of the sale. For check, the real Public Notice premises; and the Legal Notices Legal Notices propo bligated par t y . Real Property lolobby of the DesERTY. N o tice is more information on erty commonly known g o to: a s 2801 N E S y c hutes Coun t y Dated this 8th and hereby given that the this s al e D ate o f Pub l ic cated a t 1232 Notice: July 8, 2015 Northwest Rimrock Sheriff's Off i c e, 15th day of J uly, Deschutes C o unty http: //oregonsheriffsLEGAL NOTICE camore Court, Bend, sales.org/ Drive, R e dmond, 63333 W. Highway 2015. Sheriff's Office will, on Sub Bids Requested Oregon 97701. ConAnticipated Award Oregon 97756, De20, Bend, Oregon, Thursday, August 6, OSU Cascades Academic Building ditions of Sale: PoDate: July 15, 2015 LEGAL NOTICE 2015 at 10:00 AM, in LEGAL NOTICE fendant/s. Case No.: sell, at public oral 1500 SW Chandler Ave. tential bidders must 14CV0785FC. NOauction to the highOcwen Loan Servic- the main lobby of the Wells Fargo Bank, Bend Oregon 97702 arrive 15 minutes prior D escription: E c o T ICE O F SA L E est bidder, for cash C o u nty N.A. a s T r u stee to the auction to allow Bid Date:July 20, 2015 4:00 p.m. ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Deschutes nomic development UNDER WRIT OF or cashier's check, Michael E. B urdick; Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 F /B/0 Holders of Deschutes County Scopes Bidding:Concrete, Rebar, Structural services, including EXECUTION the real p roperty Nancy C Burdick; and W. Highway 20, Bend, Structured A s s et the Sheriff's Office to re- Steel but not limited to: REAL PROPERTY. commonly known as persons or parties un- Oregon, sell, at public Mortgage I n v est- view bidder's funds. Bid Date: July 23, 2015 2:00 p.m. m arketing, bu s i Notice is h e reby 1305 Sou t hwest known claiming any o ral auction to t h e m ents II Inc. , Only U.S. currency Scopes Bidding: MEP, Fire Protection, Elevaness r e cruitment, given that the DesRimrock Way, right, title, lien or in- h ighest bidder, f o r S tructured A s s e t and/or cashier' s tors, Lab Construction, Finishes, Roofing, ExRedmond, Oregon cash o r ca s hier' s Mortgage I n vestbusiness retention, c hutes Cou n t y terest in the property checks made payable terior Skin, Site Electrical, Landscaping, all and business exSheriff's Office will, 97756. Conditions described in the com- check, the real prop- m ents II Trus t to Deschutes County other trades less grading/ utilities. on Tuesday, Auof Sale: P o tential plaint herein, Defen- erty commonly known 2 007-AR4, Mo r t pansion services. Sheriff's Office will be NON MANDATORY OUTREACH EVENT g ust 4 , 2 0 1 5 a t bidders must arrive d ant/s. Case N o . : as 61100 Rustic Lane, age Pass-Through Tuesday, July 14 from 10:00 to Noon accepted. P ayment 15 minutes prior to 12CV0214. NOTICE Bend, Oregon 97702. ertificates, Series Prospective C o n1 0:00 AM, i n t h e must be made in full Hilton Garden Inn Conference Room tractor: E c onomic main lobby of the the auction to allow OF SALE U N DER Conditions of S ale: 2007-AR4, 425 SW Bluff D rive Bend OR 97702 immediately upon the D evelopment f o r Deschutes County the Desc h utes WRIT OF E X ECU- Potential bidders must Plaintiff/s, v. close of the sale. For Contact Receiving Bids:Jeff Butler Central Oregon, Inc. S heriff's Offi c e, County Sheriff's OfTION - REAL PROP- arrive 15 minutes prior Gonzalo Morales; more information on jeff.butler@fortisconstruction.corn f ice to revi e w ERTY. N o tice is to the auction to allow O ccupants of t he 63333 W. Highway this s al e g o to: Pyg F ORT I S Amount: 20, Bend, Oregon, bidder's funds. Only hereby given that the the Deschutes County property, http: //oregonsheriffsU.S. currency Deschutes C o unty Sheriff's Office to re- Defendant/s. Case $ 201,500.00 per sell, at public oral C ONSTR U C T I O N IN C . sales.org/ year for 2 years auction to the highand/or ca s h ier' s Sheriff's Office will, on view bidder's funds. No.: 13 C V 0242. 1705 SW Taylor Street, Suite 200 checks made payT hursday, July 3 0 , Only U.S. currency NOTICE OF SALE LEGAL NOTICE est bidder, for cash Portland OR 97205 The City intends to or cashier's check, able to Deschutes 2015 at 10:00 AM, in and/or cashier' s UNDER WRIT OF Wells Fargo B ank, Phone: 503-459-4477 c ontract for e c othe real p roperty County Sheriff's Ofthe main lobby of the checks made payable EXECUTION N .A., Plaintiff/s, v . Fax: 503-459-4478 nomic development commonly known as f ice will b e a c Deschutes C o u nty to Deschutes County REAL PROPERTY. B rian L. Gran t ; OR CCB¹155766 services including 1232 Nor t hwest cepted. P a yment Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 Sheriff's Office will be Notice is h e reby Stephanie D. Grant; Bid documents are available for review at the m arketing, bu s i R imrock Dri v e , must be made in full W. Highway 20, Bend, accepted. Payment given that the DesC apital On e B a n k Fortis office and at local plan centers ness r e cruitment, Redmond, Oregon i mmediately u p on Oregon, sell, at public must be made in full c hutes Cou n t y (USA), N.A.; and PerOr by emailing Chelle Pape retention, and ex97756. C onditions t he close o f t h e o ral auction to t h e immediately upon the Sheriff's Office will, sons or Parties unchelle.pape O fortisconstruction.corn sale. For more inhighest bidder, f or close of the sale. For on Thursday, Auknown claiming any We are an equal opportunity employer and repansion services. In of Sale: P otential addition t o the bidders must arrive f ormation on t h is cash o r ca s hier' s more information on g ust 13, 2 015 a t right, title, lien, or insub bids from minority, women, disadabove m e ntioned 15 minutes prior to sale go to: www.orcheck, the real prop- this s al e g o to: 1 0:00 AM, i n t h e terest in the property quest vantaged, and emerging small business enr equirements t h e the auction to allow egonsheriff s.corn/sa erty commonly known http: //oregonsheriffmain lobby of the described in the com- terprises. entity must possess the Desc h utes les.htm as 61122 Geary Dr., ssale.org/ Deschutes County plaint herein, DefenLEGAL NOTICE Bank o f Am e rica, N .A., Plaintiff/s, v . Cristina Godoy; Francisco Godoy; and Persons or P arties unknown claimingany right, title, lien, or interest in the property described in the complaint herein, Defend ant/s. Case N o .: 1 3CV1092FC. N O TICE OF SALE UN-

key relationships at the local, regional, state, national, and international levels to best provide the needed r etention, expansion, and recruitment services desired by the City of Bend. Economic D evelopment f o r Central Oregon, Inc. (EDCO) is the sole contractor who can p rovide th e s e r vices required.

County Sheriff's Off ice to rev i e w bidder's funds. Only U.S. currency and/or ca s h ier' s checks made payable to Deschutes County Sheriff's Off ice will b e ac cepted. P a yment must be made in full immediately upon t he close o f t h e sale. For more inf ormation on t h is sale go to: http: //oregonsheriffssales.or g/

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS H EREBY GI V E N that t h e un d e rsigned intends to


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