Bulletin Daily Paper 05-10-15

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $2

SUNDAY May10,2015

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N'S WEST-SIDEGARDENS: Guidein Travel, C1 HappyMother'sDay e Now's a greattimetotour OREGO

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an 4 WHAT'S NEWTHIS YEAR • COURSE GUIDE • SUMMER CALENDARAND MORE MORE$II %C

A COMING MONDAY

IN COUPONS

THAN g g,+ IN TODAY'SPAPER

bendbulletin.com

Whitewater park nears completion, but opening is still far off

TODAY'S READERBOARD Tea renaiSSanCe —The culture surrounding the beverage — and thebusiness of it — are booming in the U.S.C1

Naming diseases —The

WHO's newguidelines: no animals orplacenames.A3

Drnugdt — Theeconomics of a worst-case scenario. AB

Plus: Water use — what if cities in California demandthat farms cut back?F1

And a Wedexclusive-

GETTING AROUND A SMALL DAM

• w

• t

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Key pieces of the Bend Whitewater Park are 90

percent complete, but it will

Fish moving upstream

still be four months or so

Fish returning to spawnare carried upstream of the Pelton Damand LakeSimtustus by a transport truckand released upstream of the Round Butte Dam.They then can swi~pstream on the Metolius River, on WhychusCreel@>nthe Deschutes River until Big Falls and in LakeBiii. Chinook until they are blocked by theOpal Springs Dam a half-mile into the CrookedRiver.

When it comes to flowers, momsare more popular than sweethearts. bendbnnetin.cnm/extras

until floaters and boaters on the Deschutes River can try it out. Bend Park & Recreation

District Landscape Architect Chelsea Schneider said work on the whitewater

Pello am

VVARM SP.R IND IAN RESERVAT 0

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Simtustus

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Romf" Butte Dam

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early September to take

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and safe passage channels is nearly finished. However, river riders will have to wait until late August or

Reregulating m '

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Hydropower Reform Coalition Submitted photo

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Colorado Avenue dam.

a ras., ' Opni Springs Dnm

THE FISH LADDER PROJECT AT OPAL SPRINGSDAM About the damand the multimillion-dollar project, according to the website OpalSpringsPassage.org: • The Opal Springs Dam diverts the CrookedRiver into pipes, delivering waterto spin a turbine. At normal flows, most of the river is diverted, leaving 50 cubic feet per second of water directly below the dam, where the river is back to full strength. • As part of installing a fish ladder, the diversion wall would be raised 2 to 6feet using inflatable bladders to increase theamount of water in the pool. • The changes would pro-

Manysteelheadand some

EDITOR'5CHOICE

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Creating a dashboard

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Latre , BittY

PA $ 1$ A O SE

f sTATE PARK '

SalmOn WOuld prefer tO SWim

upstream onthe Crooked River.

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bodies

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By Ariana Eunjung Cha

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Prinevill

The Washington Post

SAN DIEGO — From the instant he wakes up

each morning, through his workday and into the night, the essence of Larry Smarr is captured by a series of numbers: a resting heartrateof40 beatsper

minute, abloodpressure of 130/70, a stress level of 2 percent, 191 pounds,

8,000 steps taken, 15 floors climbed, 8 hours of sleep.

Redmoli I I

! Pine Meadow RanchDam Removed in the past year to extend ,' spawning grounds for salmon and steelhead on Whychus Creek.

I

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Stearns Dam, Remtfved'in 2013', $4>.

DESCHUTES,' COUNTY

vide water to fill the fish

I

Exlending spawning range By building a ladder at theOpal Springs Dam, salmon could swim upstream on the Crooked River until the Bowman Dam andextend their spawning grounds into McKayCreek.

self-measured man. For

nearly 15 years, the pro-

Graphic by Pete Smith and David Wray/The Bulletin

While there's an agreement to have a fish ladder installed at Opal Springs Dam, the project needs money,

California, San Diego has been obsessed with what

millions of dollars' worth. If the groups working to make

'Weare currentlyin the lastmonth of the 2014/2015retum year. The good newsis that yi!eare

ters. Some, such as his heartbeat, movement and

By Dylan J. Darling

whether he's sitting, standing or lying down, hemeasures continuously in real time with a wireless gadget

The big effort t o r e store t he Crooked River arm of t h e ocean-going fish runs in Central lake, said Brett Hodgson, district Oregon's major rivers hasputthe fish biologist for the Oregon Defocus on a small diversion dam a partment of Fish and Wildlife in

on his belt. Some, such as

half-mile up the Crooked River

Bend.

his weight, he logs daily. Others, such as his blood

from Lake Billy Chinook. Tucked into the Crooked River canyon, the Opal Springs Hydro-

That piqued the state's interest in seeing a fish ladder installed

gettinga lotmorefish back the bad newsis that, justlike prioryears, the fisha/i want to go upthe Crooked. In the 20134014retumyear 50steelheadadults were releasedinto LakeBilly Chinook. 48 of these fish were radio taggedand 4of those taggedfish were notsubsequently found.... The final reading showed26steel headintheCrookedRiverr iver oramtofthelake.22 werepassedaboveOpal Springs, 8 of whichmadeitupstream of Highway 97.... 16steelhead Irverein the Metoliusarm ofthe lake andsomewere upriver. Of those, f1 hadfirst attempted togo up theCrookedRiver. No steelhead were plantedin the Metoliusanditis not their his-

at the diversion, he said, which

torical habitat.

Smarr compares the way

he treats his body with how people monitor and maintain their cars: "We know

exactly how much gas we have,theengine temperature, how fast we are going. What I'm doing is creating a dashboard for my body."

Whitewater Park last fall.

The $9.7 million project — including a $1.1 million contribution from the Bend Paddle Trail Alliance — is

funded through the $29 million parks bond measure approved by voters in November 2012. Michelle Healy, the district's director of strategic

planning and design, said the project is on budget after jumping sharply during the planning stages. See Park/A5

Pot sellers face a big U.S. tax bill By Jack Healy pouring into Bruce Nassau's five Colorado marijuana shops when his accountant

the ladder happen don't bring in enough money by

testines, he tests only about once every month.

ground on the project recentlynamed the Bend

DENVER — Money was

How arereintroduction effoits working for thefish?

complicated subject he has everexperimented on:his ownbody. Smarr keeps track of more than 150 parame-

and the bacteria in his in-

The Bend Park & Recreation District broke

New York Times News Service

fessor at the University of he describes as the most

4I

C OUNTY~ ' '

Smarr, an astrophysicist

and computer scientist, could be the world's most

ladder as well asadditional water when neededto assist with downstream passage.

Bowman Dam CROOK

their first trip through the area once occupied by the

October, the project could be shelved until 2032. Billy Chinook, particularly steelhead, overwhelmingly swam to

The Bulletin

would give the fish access to more the river through a power-produc- than 100 miles of spawning and ing turbine for the Deschutes Val- rearing habitat upstream. "Passage at Opal Springs is the ley Water District. The structure also prevents salmon and steel- No. 2 fish passage project in the head from swimming upstream. entire state for ODFW," Hodgson Over the past three years, fish said, "so we view it as critically tracked with radio tags by Port- important." electric Project diverts water from

land General Electric through

One fish yi!asin the MiddleOeschutesand one wasin the Oeschutesarm of thelake. As of the end of the20134014season, threeadultsteeihead and threeChinook haveretumed to the Middle Oeschutes/I/VhychusCeeirin a/itetum yeats combined." — Email from YancyLind, with OpalSpringsPassage.org

See Fish /A5

called with the bad news: The 2014taxseason was

approaching, and Nassau could not rely on the galaxy of deductions that other

businesses use to reduce their tax bills. He was going to owe the Internal Revenue

Service a small fortune. "I had to write a check

for $275,000," Nassau said. "Unbelievable." The country's rapidly growing marijuana industry has a tax problem. Even

as morestatesembrace legal marijuana, shops say they are being forced to pay crippling federal income taxes because of a decades-old law aimed at

preventing drug dealers from claiming their smuggling costs and couriers as business expenses on their taxreturns. See Pot /A5

Once, Smarr was most

renowned as the head of the research lab where Marc Andreessen devel-

oped the Web browser in the early 1990s. See Bodies /A4

TODAY'S WEATHER w<I~r

Mostly sunny High 72, Low42

Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts G1-6 Local/State B 1-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies

C6 D1-6 C8

AnIndependent Newspaper

Voi. 113, No. 130,

46 pages, 7 sections

!cled newsprint Q I/I/e use recI

:: IIIIIIIIIII I o

8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0

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A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

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CISCO, Texas — Multiple

tornadoes tore through North Texas on Saturday, leaving one person dead and others unaccounted for in a sparsely populated farming and ranching area as the system slowly weakenedwhileadvancing toward Fort Worth, officials said.

One of the twisters caused "five miles of destruction" as it ravaged homes in a rural area south of the town of Cisco,

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about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, Eastland County Judge

2 OffiCerS Slain —A coroner says two Mississippi police officers have died after being shot in the line of duty. Forrest County Coroner Butch Benedict said onSaturday night that both Hattiesburg officers had died. They'd beentaken to the hospital, and it wasn't immediately clear if they died there or earlier. Hattiesburg Mayor Johnny DuPree told the paper that authorities are searching for a suspect. S'tate butlge't gapS —With the nation's economy at its healthiest since the GreatRecession, a surprising trend is emerging among the states — large budget gaps. Ananalysis of statehouse finances around the country shows that at least 22 states project shortfalls for the coming fiscal year. Thedeficits recall recession-era anxiety about plunging tax revenueanddeep cuts to education, social services and other government-funded programs. Thesheer number of states facing budget gaps prompted Standard & Poor's Ratings Service to call the trend a sort of "early warning."

Eastland County, which was going house to house to assess part of the enhanced zone, was other injuries. Authorities were the damage, but that proved

pelted with 3-inch hail as the

difficult amid the heavy rainfall, he said.

storm rumbled through. Storms also brought heavy

The extent of i njuries or fatalities also wasn't immedi-

rain and quarter-sized hail to

parts of southwest Oklahoma ately clear in the town of Burk- on Saturday afternoon, but meburnett, about 15 miles north of teorologists said there was so Wichita Falls, where a second much rain — and so little suntornado touched down. A po- shine — that the tornado threat lice dispatcher who declined there lessened throughout the to givehername due todepart- day. ment policy said tornado sirens Parts of western Kansas also could be heard in Burkburnett werehitby severeweather ripe just before 6 p.m. for tornadoes. In Kansas City,

Odama VerSuS Warrell —Escalating the fight with his own liberal base, President BarackObamatook on Sen. Elizabeth Warren by suggesting that shewas motivated by politics in her battle against his proposed Pacific trade accord. Obamasaid some ofWarren's warnings about the potential damage of the tradedeal were nothing more than the "hypotheticals" of a lawschool professor and were "absolutely wrong." The president's rebuttal of Warren, D-Mass., who came to national prominence in part through her work with the Obama administration, underscored the schism within the Democratic Party over the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a12-nation trade deal.

Rex Fields said. As the storm moved toward in the eastern part of the state, "The homes that I've seen, Fort Worth later in the evening, a band of rain halted the Sprint there are just maybe one or the National Weather Service Cup race at Kansas Speedway. two walls standing," Fields, had canceled tornado warnBut the threatening skies who also serves as the county's ings in the counties still in its stretched beyond the Plains emergency services coordina- path. states, as twin weather systor, told The Associated Press. The weather service on Sat- tems stretching from the Car"(The tornado has) taken them urday afternoon had elevat- olinas to California produced into pieces and blown them out ed to "moderate" the risk of an unseasonably early tropiinto pastures." tornadoes in the Dallas-Fort cal storm in the Atlantic and a Fields said one person was Worth metropolitan area and late-season snowstorm in the killed and there were likely elsewhere across North Texas. Rocky Mountains.

CampuS COntrOVerSy: ISrael —At dozensof college campuses across the country, student government councils are embracing resolutions calling on their administrations to divest from companies that enable what they see as Israel's mistreatment of Palestinians. And while no university boards or administrators are heeding the students' demands, the effort to pressure Israel appears to begaining traction at campusesacross the country and driving a wedgebetween manyJewish and minority students. The proposals are having mixed success:Sofarthisyear,studentshavepassedthem onseven campuses andrejected them oneight. Ebela iu Lideria —The World Health Organization declared Liberia free of Ebola onSaturday, making it the first of the three hardest-hit West African countries to bring a formal end to theepidemic. According to the WHO, there were morethan 3,000 confirmed Ebola cases in Liberia and a further 7,400 suspected or probable cases, with more than 4,700 deaths estimated to haveoccurred since the outbreak wasdeclared there in March 2014. Amongthe deadwere 189 health care workers. A critical question for Liberians now is whether the country can draw foreign companies back to the country.

Dtseuiese

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Mudarak VerdiCt —An Egyptian court reconfirmed a corruption conviction of former President Hosni Mubarakamid signals from the authorities that he may bereleased soon. Thecourt reissued athreeyear sentence for Mubarak that hadbeenoriginally handed down last May but temporarily set aside when anappeals court ordered a retrial. After the verdict, Egyptian state news reported that prosecutors were calculating whether Mubarak hadserved enough time to warrant his release. Hehas spent more than three years in detention. It remained possible that the authorities might seeksomelegal or other arrangement to keepMubarak out of public view.

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Rev. Roger LaRade, of theEucharistic Catholic ChurchinCanada,blessesagaycoupleasthey lean in to kiss each other in Havana onSaturday. The daughter of CubanPresident Raul Castro sponsoredablessingceremony forgaycouplesonan island where gaymarriage remains illegal. Nearly twodozengaycouplesheldhandsorem-

braced, somecrying, as clergymen from the U.S.and Canada blessed them aspart of official ceremonies leading up to theGlobal Day against Homophobia on May17. Castro's daughter Mariela headsCuba'sCenter for Sex Education, which hasbeenpushing for gayrights in a country with a history of persecuting homosexuals.

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

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North I(oreaclaims to test ballistic missile from submarine The Associated Press PYONGYANG, Nor th Korea — North Korea said

IO L'IiP'

er QQQ

and South Korea," said Yang

Moo-jin, a professor from the Seoul-based University of

Saturday that it successfully North Korean Studies. test-fired a newly developed South Korean o f ficials ballistic missile from a sub- previously had said t h at marine in what would be the North Korea was developing latest display of the country's technologies for launching advancing military c apa- ballistic missiles from unbilities. Hours after the an- derwater, although past tests nouncement, South Korean were believed to have been officials said the North fired conducted on platforms built three anti-ship cruise mis- on land or at sea and not from siles into the sea off its east submarines. coast. Security experts say that Experts in Seoul say the North Korea acquiring the North's military demonstra- ability to l aunch missiles tions and hostile rhetoric are from submarines would be attempts at wresting conces- an alarming development sions from the United States because missiles fired from and South Korea, whose of- submerged vessels are hardficials have recently talked

er to d etect before launch

about the possibility of holding preliminary talks with

than land-based ones. North Korea already has a considthe North to test its commit- erable arsenal of land-based ment to denuclearization. ballistic missiles and is also For the second straight day, believed to be advancing in North Korea said it would fire efforts to miniaturize nuclear without w arning a t S o uth warheads to mount on such Korean naval vessels that it missiles, according to South

claims have been violating its territorial waters off the

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Korean officials. North Korean leader Kim

west coast of the Korean Pen- Jong Un personally directed insula. South Korea's pres- the submarine test launchidential Blue House held an ing and called the missile a emergency national security "world-level strategic weapcouncil meeting to review the on" and an "eye-opening sucthreat and discuss possible cess," said the North's official countermeasures. Korean Central News Agen"By raising tensions, North cy, or KCNA. Korea is trying to ensure that The report did not reveal it will be able to drive whatever future talks with the U.S.

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the timing or location of the

launch.

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, May10, the130th

day of 2015. Thereare235 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Tropical StormAnaThe unseasonably early storm is expected to pass nearthe coasts of the Carolinas

HISTORY Highlight:In1865, Confederate President Jefferson Davis was captured by Union forces in Irwinville, Georgia. In1775, Ethan Allen andhis Green Mountain Boys, along with Col. Benedict Arnold, cap-

RESEARCH

WHOur esmore oints to eaison care in namin i m mune woes rom meases o new iseases Scientists say the study reinforces the importance of vaccines, since there By Rick Gladstone

flu, which many people falsely feared was spread by pigs, and Middle East respiratory syn-

New York Times News Service

No more animal names like swine flu, monkeypox and drome, or MERS, which may mad cow. Avoid place names have originated in the Middle like Spanish flu, Rift Valley East but has spread around the

tured the British-held fortress

fever, West Nile virus, Lyme

at Ticonderoga, NewYork. In1863, during the Civil War, Confederate Lt. Gen.Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson died of pneumonia, a complication resulting from being hit by friendly fire eight days earlier during the Battle of Chancellorsville in Virginia. In1869,a golden spike was driven in Promontory, Utah, marking the completion of the first transcontinental railroad in the United States. In1924, J. Edgar Hooverwas named acting director of the Bureau of Investigation (later known as theFederal Bureau of Investigation, or FBI). In1933,the Nazis staged massive public book burnings in Germany. In1940,during World War II, German forces beganinvading the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium andFrance. In1960, the nuclear-powered submarine USSTriton completed its submerged navigation of the globe. In1975, Sony beganselling its Betamaxhome videocassette recorder in Japan. In1984,the International Court of Justice said the United States should halt anyactions to blockade Nicaragua's ports (the U.S. hadalready said it would not recognize World Court jurisdiction on this issue). In1994, Nelson Mandelatook the oath of office in Pretoria to become South Africa's first black president. In1995, 104 miners were killed in an elevator accident in Orkney, South Africa. Former President GeorgeH.W.Bush's office released his letter of resignation from the National Rifle Association in which Bushexpressed outrage over anNRA fundraising letter's reference to federal agents as "jack-booted thugs." (NRAExecutive Vice President WayneLaPierre apologized aweek later.) Ten years ago: A federal bankruptcy judge approved United Airlines' plan to terminate its employees' pension plans. Cheered by tens of thousands in the former Soviet republic of Georgia, President George W. Bush urged the spreadof democracy across the former communist world and beyond. Five years ago:President Barack Obamaintroduced Supreme Court nomineeElena Kagan, billing her as aunifying force for a fractured court. The EuropeanUnion put up a staggering $1 trillion to contain its spreading government debt

disease and Ebola (a river in The changes could lead to the Democratic Republic of cumbersome new names that Congo). defy easy shorthand or headDo not use people's names line writing. like Chagas, Creutzfeldt-JaIn an inkling of what a

crlsls.

One year ago:First lady Michelle Obama,delivering the weekly presidential radio and Internet address in her husband's place, decried the kidnapping of scores of Nigerian schoolgirls bythe group Boko Haram.

BIRTHDAYS Author BarbaraTaylor Bradford is 82. Rhythm-and-blues singer Henry Fambrough (The Spinners) is 77.Actor David Clennon is 72.Writer-producer-director Jim Abrahams is71. Singer Donovan is 69.Actor Mike Hagerty is 61. Sports anchor Chris Berman is60. Rock singer Bono is 55. Rockmusician DannyCarey(Tool) is 54. Model Linda Evangelista is 50. Rapper Young MC is 48. Actor Dallas Roberts is 45. Actress Leslie Stefanson is 44.Actress Andrea Anders is 40. Racecar driver Helio Castroneves is 40. Actor KenanThompson is 37. Actress Odette Annable is 30. Olympic gold-medal swimmer Missy Franklin is 20. — From wire reports

kob, Alzheimerand Lou Geh-

world.

new name could look like, the

rig. And infectious maladies WHO sought in 2011 to stannamed after groups or occupa- dardize the terminology for the tions — Legionnaires' disease

is evidence they may prevent "immunological amnesia." By Eryn Brown Los Angeles Times

Scientists have known

for decades that having measles suppresses kids' immune systems for sever-

al weeks or months, leaving them ill-equipped to fight off pneumonia, bronchitis, diarrheal diseases and other infections.

virus responsible for the 2009

Now a team of research-

and butcher's wart — hence- swine flu pandemic, calling it forth are out. A(H1NI)pdm09.

ers has suggested that the measles virus may also confer a longer-lasting sort of "immune-amnesia" that makes it harder for people

C oncerned about th e

in-

accuracies and stigmas that names of illnesses can confer upon people, animals, regions and economies, the World Health Organization last week announced "best p r actices"

for naming new human infectious diseases. It called on "scientists, national authori-

"This is the first time that

the WHO has issued recommendations on what to do and what not to do" concerning

"The best practices apply to

WaeSa6on,NJNSlUSI

to stave off other illnesses at his practice in Northridge, California. A new study published

nation, said biologist Mi-

ommendations were devised

chael Mina, lead author of

in the journal Science suggests the measles vaccine not only prevents measles, but mayalso help the bodyward off other

after consultations with other

a paper detailing the research that was published

example, still suffers the after-

effects of a tick-borne disease

health commissioner in Connecticut, said the WHO's new

Science. saw a sort ofshadow effect, "There may be a where deaths from a variety long-lasting impact that of nonmeasles infectious disyou can't undo if your child eases closelytracked measles gets measles," he said. "I incidence. The more meahope this study can im- sles in a population, the more press upon people the dan- deaths from other i llnesses ger measles poses." in the 28-month period that The researchers used followed. what Mina called "an un-

Jersey. The 2009 strain — a mix of a gene from a Eurasian assistantdirector general for pig flu with genes from a huhealth security, said in the an- man flu, bird flu and North nouncement that the recom- American pig flu — raised mendations were necessary unfounded fears that pigs because of the emergence of were transmitting the disease. diseases that can create "un- Egypt, in a misguided move, intended negative impacts by wiped out its entire pig popustigmatizing certain commu- lation. Consumers elsewhere nities or economic sectors." feared eating pork and prices He cited as examples swine plunged.

data from the U.S. and from Denmark. "Really it didn't matter what

ogist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, said she thought it was not clear that

"immunologic amnesia" was an underlying cause. "I do not think the mechanism or mechanisms are understood," she SRld.

To know for certain what w as behind th e effect t h e

group saw, Mina agreed, scientists would need to look at immune cells and observe

age group, what decade or

their behavior. He said he would like to push the work in

what country," said Mina, a

a more traditional direction:

medical student at Emory Uni- back into the laboratory. "The results here are so versity in Atlanta who worked

off other illnesses, gaining new ones that were primed only to combat measlesand neutralize other patho-

ed soldiers in Fort Dix, New

when they studied similar

bodies had trained to fight

c ounter stigmatization a n d

faulty assumptions made by the public and decision-makers when addressing emerging Disease names, the WHO infectious diseases." said, should not include geoSwine flu has been a recurgraphic locations, people's ring problem for decades. In names, species of animal or 1976, a deadly strain thought food, references to culture, to be related to the one that population, industry or occu- caused a 1918 pandemic infect-

The same trend emerged

conventional approach" to search for the long-lasting immune system effects. Previous work in macaque monkeys suggested that monkeys with the disease lost white blood cells their

recommendations would "help

established" and listed some of them as examples to avoid.

infections.

last week in th e j ournal

their bodies essentially forgetting how to recognize

disease names that are already

pation, and "terms that incite undue fear." Dr. Keiji Fukuda, the WHO's

NKt«D„INC.

the importance of vacci-

recognized or reported before came known as Lyme disease, in humans, that have potential although it was subsequently public health impact, and for found nationwide. which there is no disease name Dr. Jewel Mullen, the public

ommendations "do not apply to

&elOst by. hlhrpd Oohme Carp, a ~l

woman in Geneva, said in a telephone interview. The rec-

that first sickened children diseases that have never been and adults in the 1970s. It be-

said in its announcement. It emphasized that the rec-

Eely

for two years or more. Damian Dovarganes /The Associated Press file photo That re- emphasizes A pediatrician holds a dose of the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine

new infections, syndromes and

in common usage," the WHO

Humps,Rubellaaelfg Irus VaccineLive ProQuad® INE FR OZEN: -58'F'r04f

new disease names, Olivia Lawe Davies, a WHO spokes-

ties and the media" to heed the organizations. recommendations. They also were created with Under the WHO's guidance, help from experts leading the a disease name should consist International Classification of of a generic descriptive term Diseases, a system that will based onsymptoms (res pira- still determine the final technitory disease, watery diarrhea), calnames ofnewly discovered who is afflicted (infant, juve- diseases, the WHO statement nile, maternal), seasonality SBld. (summer, winter) and severity The news was welcomed (mild, severe). The name can by officials who had seen the also indude other factual el- damage that a disease's name ements like the environment can cause. (swamp, desert) and the year Old Lyme, Connecticut, for and month detected.

ilngle-DOSe 0.5wLVil

on the study as a postdoctoral

compelling that it

researcher at Princeton University in New Jersey. "They

seeing if we can draw blood

all showed consistent results

w a r rants

from these kids who are getting measles," he said. But, he

... what we're suggesting hap- added, the new study could pens over the long term is that also shake up researchers' gens and leaving them vul- your immune system works approach to understanding innerable to infection. fine, but it has forgotten what fectious disease. "I'm hoping the paper, beTo test if a similar thing it previously learned." may occur in humans, the Some researchers who were yond its results, will introduce group mined h istorical not involved in the work ques- a new way of merging immudata to tease out the rela- tioned whether the reductions nology and population biolotionship between measles in deaths as measlescases gy," he said. incidence and deaths from declinedmay have had more other infectious diseases. to do with improving nutriDOES They turned to d ata tion and smaller family size from England and Wales than with prolonged immune EVERYONE developed nations suppression. (Mina said that MUMBLE? where disease levels are the team did not see the same generally low, allowing a effect with rubella, suggesting Connect Hearing less-muddled view of mea- that was not the case.) sles' effects. Studying meaOthers thought the paper's FORMERLY LEAQELDHEARINGAIDCENTER sles incidence and deaths notion of yearslong suppresfrom infectious disease sion was plausible but said both before and after the they could not comment on introduction of the measles the mathematical models the vaccine in the U.K. in the group used. Diane Griffin, a 1960s, Mina and the team microbiologist and immunolYOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS

1-888-568-9884 •

Atmospheric c02 keeps rising, hits milestone By Seth Borenstein WASHINGTON — Global levels of carbon dioxide, the

Tans said. Pushed by the burning of coal, oil and gas, global carbon dioxide is 18 percent high-

most prevalent heat-trapping gas, have passed a daunting

er than it was in 1980, when NOAA first calculated a world-

The Associated Press

wide average. In 35 years, carsay. bon dioxide levels rose 61 parts The National Oceanic and per million. In p re-human Atmospheric A dmi n i stra- times, it took about 6,000 years tion says in March, the global for carbon dioxide to rise about monthly average for carbon di- 80 parts per million, Tans said. oxide hit 400.83 parts per milMonthly levels fluctuate lion. That is the first month in with the season, peaking in modern records that the entire May and then decreasing as globe broke 400 ppm, reaching plants absorb carbon dioxide. levels that haven't been seen in But they are increasing on a about 2 million years. year-to-year basis. "It's both d i sturbing and Levels are also higher in the daunting," said NOAA chief Northern Hemisphere because greenhouse gas scientist Piet- that's where carbon dioxide is er Tans. "Daunting from the being spewed by power plants standpoint on how hard it is to and vehicles, Tans said. slow this down." The first time levels passed He said it is disturbing be- the 400 ppm milestone was for cause it is happening at a pace just a few weeks in the Arctic

P

milestone, federal scientists

so fast that it seems like an

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in 2012. Last year the monthly

explosion compared to Earth's Northern Hemisphere average slow-moving natural changes. measured in Hawaii exceeded Carbon dioxide isn't just 400 and now the global averhigher, it is increasing at a age has as well, said James recordpace, 100 times faster Butler, head of NOAA's global than natural rises in the past, monitoring division.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

Bodies Continued from A1 Now 66, Smarr is the un-

are ingestible or float in the

oped by data scientists from

bloodstream.

MIT, has created an app that

Privacy concems

likely hero of a global moveSome physicians, academment among ordinary people ics and ethicists critidze the to "quantify" themselves us- utility of tracking as prime eving wearable fitness gadgets, idence of the narcissism of the medical equipment,headcams, technological age — and one traditional lab tests and home-

Ijlj1%4~ ll

DD «

l««« ll

can alert a provider if someP««idlndl llu

t.i

«" "'

MONO

«I

f

that raises serious questions

made contraptions, all with about the accuracy and privathe goal of finding ways to op- cy of the health data collected, timize their bodies and minds

I

l «' l

«« I«l«

the proliferation of devices for

selves and their purpose in life. The explosion in extreme tracking is part of a digital revolution in health care led by the tech visionaries who created Apple, Google, BlackBerry, Microsoft and Sun Microsystems. Using the chips, databases and

broader survei llance by the government, such as what happened with cellphone providers and the National Security Agency. Critics point to the brouhaha

algorithms that powered the

information revolution of the

duding information about the

pastfew decades,these new bil-

duration of a n

~

« »I

1 Dl

IU

l

I

that you — or a loved one or

Cl~

doctor — can access on your phone or desktop. The life sciences unit of Goo-

e pisode and

Earnie Grafton/The Washington Post

lionaires now are attempting to whether it was "passive, light Larry Smerr, a professor of computer science end engineering et the University of California, San rebuild, regenerate and repro- effort" or "active and vigorous" Diego's Jacobs School, tracks his own biometric date — like the charts displayed behind him. — was beingpublicly shared by gram the human body. default.

Hugeamouirts of data

They worry that wearables In the aggregate data be- will be used as "black boxes" ing gathered by millions of for a person's body in legal personal tracking devices are matters. Three years ago, after patterns that may reveal what in the diet, exercise regimen and environment contributes

a San Francisco cyclist struck

to disease. Could physical activity patterns be used to not only track individuals' cardiac health

data from Strava, a GPS-en-

and killed a 71-year-old pedestrian, prosecutors obtained his

abled fitness tracker, to show he had been speeding and blew through several stop signs bebut also to inform decisions forethe accident.M ore recentabout where to place a public ly, a Calgary, Canada, law firm park and improve walkabili- is trying to use Fitbit data as ty? Could trackers find cancer evidence of injuries a client susclusters or contaminated wa- tained in a car crash. terways? Apilotproject in LouMore sophisticated tools in isville, Kentucky, for example, development, such as a sm artuses inhalers with special sen- phone app that analyzes a bisors to pinpoint asthma "hot polar person's voice to predict spots" in the city. amanic episode and injectables "As we have more and more and implants that test the blood, sophisticated wearables that offer greater medical benefit can c o ntinuously m e asure but also pose greater risks.

things ranging from your physical activity to your stress levels to your emotional state, we can

Des Spence, a general practitioner in th e United King-

dom, argues that unnecessary begin tocross-correlate and monitoring is creating incredunderstand how each aspect of ible anxiety among today's our life consciously and uncon- "unhealthily health-obsessed" sciously impacts one another," trackers. Vinod Khosla, a co-founder of Sun and investor in mobile

health startups, said in an interview. The idea that data is a turn-

"As we havemore and more sophisticated

Personal health-monitoring devices

An expanding number of small electronic devices are recording and communicating their users' vital health information.

wearables that can

continuously measure things ranging from your physical activity to your stress levels to your emotional state, we can begin to cross-correlate and understand how each aspect of our life consciously and unconsciously impacts one another."

ON THE MARKET Fitbit

The most popular fitness tracker in the world, the highest-end model tracks location, continuous heart rate, duration and quality of time in bed (i.e. awake or restless), calories burned, steps taken and flights of stairs climbed.

0

— Vinod Khosla, investor in mobile health stertups

"Health and fitness

have become the new social currency, spawning a 'worried well' generation."

"Health and fitness have be-

— Dr. Des Spence,

come thenew socialcurrency, spawning a 'worried well' gen-

in e British medical journal

372

Apple Watch Equipped with a heart-rate sensor andaccelerometer, the watch has an Activity app that graphs things such as minutes standing andcalories burned. Its Workout app provides information about more vigorous physical activities, such as running. A companionappontheIPhonecan share the data with scientific researchers. IN TESTING Propeller Health GPS-enabied inhaler Location sensors track the time andplace of each use of the inhaler. Thedevice — which snaps onto an ordinary inhaler — helps apatient with asthma keep track of medication useand shares the information with a doctor. Propeller Health has launched a project in Louisville, Kentucky, where thousands of patients could help pinpoint "hot spots" of breathing difficulty. Based on the data, thecompany hopesto makerecommendationsto city planners on how to alleviate the issues.

eration," he wrote in an opinion

piece in the April issue of BMJ, sales by 2018, according to an IN DEVELOPMENT the former B r itish M edical estimate by Credit Suisse. Googie X smart contact lens Journal. The research firm GartA hair-thin electronic circuit and a low-power "Getting the data is much ner forecasts that 68.1 milmicrochip melded with a traditional contact lens easier than making it useful," lion wearable devices will be would measure awearer's blood sugar from tear said Deborah Estrin, a pro- shipped this year. A growing fluid on the eyeandsendthe information to a fessor of computer science percentage are being purpatient's mobile phone or other device. and public health at Cornell chased by employers including tendant plethora of apps now University. Bates CollegeandIBM asperks Googie X nanoscaie cancer hunters allow a growing number of Constantly measuring some- for their workers. A survey by Nanoparticles would enter the body through a Americans to track the minuti- one's heart rate may be helpful Nielsen last year indicated that pill, make their way into the bloodstream and ae of their lives as never before. for someone heavily involved 61 percent of those aware of attach to unusual cells, such ascancer. Patients James Norris, in his 30s and in sports or someone at risk of wearable technology for trackwould wear adevice that creates a magnetic field an entrepreneur in Oakland, a heart attack. "But it's unclear ing and monitoring medical to pull the particles to a placewhere they could California, has spent the past howimportant andmeaningful conditions use fitness bands. be counted. 15 years tracking, mapping it is for the everyday person," Ariana Cha and Patterson Clark/The Washington Post Sharing the data and analyzing his "firsts" shesaid. from his first kiss to the first After all, Estrin and other The technology is inherently time he saw fireworks on the experts argue, Homo sapiens social. Many users share their keting manager at Rock hacked it away." Mall in Washington, D.C. have survived for about 130,000 body metrics w it h f r i ends, Health, openly talks online This openness extends to the Laurie Frick, 59, an Austin, years without such technology familyand even co-workers as about how she has had a pain citizen-scientists'willingness to Texas, artist, is turning her because the human body al- readily as they would pictures in her right hip for years and share information for the greatsleep and movement patterns readyhas a number of alarm from their travels to distant has tried several iPhone apps er good. Thirty-four percent of into c olorful v i s ualizations systems built into it. Any moth- countries or their late-night bar to try to find the cause and to health trackers share their data made of laser-cut paper and er who has been woken in the adventures. trackher mood and menstrual or notes with someone else, "When I talk to my par- cycle. wood. wee hours by a crying child according to a Pew Research "I think there is a lot of inAnd Nicholas Felton, 37, knows that a gentle press of the ents, they are paranoid about Center study. a Brooklyn, New York, data back of the wrist to a forehead their health data being stolen, sight you can learn about yourIn March, when Apple anscientist, has been publishing is fast, free and eerily accurate but it doesn't bother me," said self this way," she said in an in- nounced its ResearchKit inian annual report about every in diagnosing a fever. Halle Tecco, the 31-year-old terview. In late April, she tweet- tiative to allow people to share Twitter, Facebook, email and Until about three years ago, co-founder and m anaging ed to the world, "Found out I'm t heir i n formation w it h r e text message he sends. More it was nearly impossible for or- director of Rock Health. The Vitamin D deficient." searchers working on projects than 30,300 people are follow- dinary people to get a readout digital health incubator in San Daniel Gartenberg, orga- in asthma, heart disease, diaing his life on Twitter. about the state of their bodies Francisco is funding a number nizer of the Washington, D.C.- betes, breast cancer and ParMost extreme are "life log- on a regularbasis. of next-generation wearables based meetups for Quantified kinson's through various apps, gers," who wear cameras 24/7, Now dozens of biosensing and monitors, such as a soft- Self, an international group of more than 41,000 people volunjot down every new idea and wearable technologies with ware program that assesses more than 29,000 self-trackers, teered within the first five days. It's undear whether young record their daily activities in names such as the Fitbit Surge, Alzheimer's risk by analyzing has written several apps that exacting detail. Their goal is to Misfit Shine and Jawbone UP eye movements with a cell- helped track his own sleep that adults' open attitude toward create a collection of informa- have exploited the miniaturiza- phone camera and a band be- he has made available to the sharing their data will remain tion that is an extension of their tion of computer components ing tested as a treatment for public. "I had mild insomnia," when the next generation of own memories. and the ubiquity of cellphones post-traumatic stress disorder said the doctoral candidate in more invasive biotrackers beEven P r esident B a r ack to create an industry that is ex- that analyzes skin responses. applied cognition at George comes commonplace. Obama is wearing a new Fitbit pected to reach $50 billion in Mollie McDowell, 26, mar- Mason University, "but have Ginger.io, which was develSurge, which monitors heart rate, sleep and location, on his key to self-discovery is not new. More than 200 years ago, Benjamin Franklin was tracking 13 personal virtues in a daily journal to develop his moral character. The ubiquity of cheap technology and an at-

-

left wrist, as a March photo-

graph revealed. Tech firms are eagerly responding to the human penchant for self-perfectability by inventing more devices that can collect even more data,

which the tech titans foresee as the real gold mine. At the 2015 Consumer Elec-

tronics Show in January, new gizmos on display included a baby bottle that measures nutritional intake, a band that

measures how high you jump and "smart" clothing connect-

ed tosmoke detectors.Google is working on a smart contact lens that ca n c o ntinuously

Partners In Care helped us cope.

measure a person's glucose levels in their tears. The Apple

W atch has a heart-rate sensor and quantifies whenyou move, exercise or stand. The com-

pany also has filed a patent to upgradeitsearbuds tomeasure bloodoxygen and temperature. In the near future, companies hope to augment those trackers with new ones that

will measure from the inside out — using chips that

They were with us the entire time, helping us deal with grief in a healthy way. In fact, they're still here for us, continuing to

care for our family every step of the way. Central Oregon's choice for hospice care. (541) 382-5882

offered. Silicon Valley-based Proteus Digital Health has developed a prototype of an ingestible chipthesize ofa grain ofsand that can be embedded in a pill. When the pill is swallowed, the chip sends a signal that's logged on tocentral servers

in 2011, when some owners of Fitbit exercise sensors noticed that their sexual activity — in-

to that day so that counseling or other intervention can be

Inside the bloodstream

who owns it and how it should

to live longer, healthier livesbe used. There are also worand perhaps to discover some ries about the implications of important truth about them-

thing is "off' — signaling the possibility of depression or a manic episode — based on how much a patient moves around or how many people they talk

p a r t n ersbend.org

Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House I Transitions I Palliative Care

gle X, the search company's secretive research lab, is working on building a nano-size partide that will travel in the bloodstream. The particles would circulate throughout the body

and attach to particular types of cells ,such as cancer cells,or

toenzymes given offby plaque in the arteries before they are about to rupture or cause a heart attack or stroke. If the

particles found questionable cells or enzymes, they would send a signal to a device worn outside the body that would transmit the information to the

patient or to a physician. The innovation is outpacing the scientific and legal framework for testing and regulating such devices. The Food and Drug Administration in

January indicated it would regulate devices that are invasive but take a lighter touch on

wearables. According to the agency's draft guidelines, a wellness product crosses into the territory of a medical device, which requires a rigorous FDA review that is expensive for manufacturers, when its intended use refersto a specific disease

or condition, or it presents an inherent risk to a user's safety. That would essentially leave

hundreds, if not thousands, of "low-risk general wellness" products — a categorythat presumably applies to the current incarnation of Fitbits — free from extra scrutiny under fed-

eral food and drug safety laws. They would still be subject to

monitoring by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, which has the power to recall

products to protect the public against unreasonable risks from injuries or death from consumer products. In 2014,

afterthousands ofusers complained of skin irritations from Fitbit bands, the CPSC worked

with the company on a recall that affected more than 1 mil-

lion devices. How the data that is generated from the devices is protect-

ed and shared is also murky. Federal patient privacy rules under the Health Insurance Portability and A ccountabil-

ity Act don't apply to most of the information the gadgets are tracking. Unless the data is being used by a physician to treat a patient, the companies

that help track a person's information aren't bound by the same confidentiality, notifica-

tion and security requirements as a doctor's office or hospital. That means the data could the-

oretically be made available forsale to marketers, released

under subpoena in legal cases with fewer constraints — and eventually worthbillions to pri-

vate companies who might not make the huge data sets free and open to publicly funded researchers.


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Pot

Software blockstexting while driving

Continued from A1 Congress passed that law in 1982 after a cocaine and meth-

By William E. Gibson

and allows passengers to

amphetamine dealer in Minneapolis who had been jailed on drug charges went to tax court to argue that the money

Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel

continue to text," said Raviv, a professor of electrical

he spent on travel, phone calls,

tracted drivers,a professor at Florida Atlantic University

WASHINGTON

Alarmed by the rising number of crashes caused by dis-

packaging and even a small scale should be considered

has invented a software pro-

tax write-offs. The provision,

still enforced by the IRS, bans all tax credits and deductions from "the illegal trafficking in drugs. Marijuanabusiness owners

gram that can block a driver i

q

O

Benjamin Rasmussen / New York Times News Service

A customer pays for his marijuana purchase at one of Bruce ducting their rent, employee Nsssau's five shops in Denver. Legal marijuana sellers are chafing salaries or utility bills, forc- under large federal tsx bills. ing them to pay taxes on a far larger amount of income than say it prevents them from de-

nonmarijuana bus i n esses ductible business expenses. in Arizona who said that marwith the same earnings and A marijuana business, on the ijuana sellers made up about costs. They also say the taxes, other hand, might pay the same one-fifth of his business. eYou which apply to medical and federal rate on all of its gross find all these weird little stratrecreational sellers alike, are income because it cannot take egies that people use to try to

stunting their hiring, or even these deducti ons. The diff er- parse the definitions." ence can raise the rate on a Oddly, accountants said, one of business. m arijuana business to 70 per- expense that marijuana retailThe issue reveals a growing cent or more of its profits. ers can easily take off their taxchasm between the 23 states, Gillette said she represent- es is the marijuana itself. plus the District of Columbia, ed a dispensary owner who The wording of the tax laws that allow medical or recre- had taken in $1.7 million last and their interpretation since a tional marijuana an d t h e year before expenses and had states began to legalize medfederal bureaucracy, which in- received a tax bill of $866,000. ical marijuana has allowed dudes national forests in Colo- They are negotiating with tax businesses to deduct the exrado where possession is a fed- officials, she said. penses of wholesale marijuaeral crime, federally regulated Colorado and a handful of na or growing the plant, from banks that turn away marijua- other states have changed their the price of the seeds or baby na businesses and the halls of tax laws to let legal marijuana plants to the water and growthe IRS. businesses take deductions on ing lights needed to produce it. While President Barack their state returns. And this Only when retailers go to sell Obama and top federal officials month, Sen. Ron Wyden and those buds, brownies or marihave allowed states to pursue Rep. Earl Blumenauer, both juana-infused drinks do the tax legalization, marijuana advo- Democrats of Oregon, which restrictions kick in. cates say the dissonance be- legalized recreational marijuaDispensary owners who tween increasingly permissive na last year, introduced legis- once feared raids by drug enstate laws and federal prohi- lation that would allow mari- forcement agents say they take bitions is creating a morass of juana businesses that are fol- pride in paying taxes like any complications and uncertainty. lowing their states' legalization other business. They say it The tax rule, an obscure laws to take regular deductions brings them out of the shadows provision referred to as 280E, ontheir federal returns. and distinguishes them from "It's affecting thousands of the black market. Marijuana catchesmany marijuana entrepreneurs by surprise, often in businesses, and it's doubling, advocates trumpet tax-collecthe form of an audit notice from tripling, quadrupling their tax- tion numbers to show that the the IRS. Some marijuana busi- es," Blumenauer said. "It just industry is pouring millions of nesses in Colorado, California cripples them." dollars into state budgets. "It is the last domino that and other marijuana-friendThe current system, he said, ly states have challenged the encouragesmarijuana sellers has to fall for us to be treated IRS in tax court. This year, to file tax returns that do not like any other business in the Allgreens, a marijuana shop follow the law and simply hope country," said Tim Cullen, a co-owner of five marijuana in Colorado, successfully chal- the IRS does not spot them. lenged an IRS policy that imBut Kevin Sabet, president shops in Colorado."We're not posed about $30,000 in penal- of Smart Approaches to Mari- a black-market cocaine dealer. ties for paying its payroll taxes juana, a leading critic of legal- We're totally on board and on in cash — common in an indus- ization, said it made no sense to the level. We'd like to be treated try in which businesses rely on give"tax breaks to companies as such." armed guards and cash-stuffed openly violating federal law But every year, Cullen said, safesbecause they cannot get by selling marijuana gummies he attaches a cover letter to his bank accounts. and lollipops." tax returns explaining what "We're talking about legal Accountants and tax lawkind ofbusiness he runs. businesses,licensed business- yers, who are inundated with In Seattle, John Davisearned es," said Rachel Gillette, the calls from marijuana shops $53,369 in profits last year from executive director of Colorado's these days, say the rules are his medical marijuana dispenchapter of the National Organi- murky and make little sense. sary, the Northwest Patient Rezation for the Reform of Mari- If marijuana retailers dedicate source Center. Because he comjuana Laws and the lawyer who parts of their stores to yoga, plied with all of the tax rules represented Allgreens."There's drug education or selling non- prohibiting deductions, he said, no reason that they should be drug merchandise, can they he ended up owing $46,340 threatening to drive them out

taxed out of existence by the

deduct part of their rent? If em-

Fish

Round Butte dam complex

agreement in fall 2011 with

had been a barrier for fish

Continued from A1 The only fish passage project ahead of Opal Springs are the dams along the Snake River in Hells Canyon.

trying to swim out to sea as they would become lost in the turbulent currents in the lake. Now with the tower in

federaland stateagencies, as well as Trout Unlimited, to add

The state is not alone in ter groups — the Northwest

Steelheaders, Central Oregon Flyfishers, the Native Fish Society, WaterWatch, the Crook-

ed River Watershed Council, the Wild Salmon Center and the W il d

S t eelhead Coali-

tion — have joined together to support a website, www.opal sprignspassage.org, explainingthe situation and asking for donations to help change it. Yancy Lind, conservation

chairman of the Central Oregon Flyfishers and past president of the Northwest Steel-

headers, said he spearheaded the website, the point of which

is to raise visibility about Opal Springs. Like Hodgson he said steelhead have been drawn to the

Crooked River since 2012, when Portland General Electric an d t h e C o n federated

Tribes of Warm Springs started releasing upstream-migrating fish into Billy Chinook's waters. The power company and tribes co-own the Pelton

Round Buttedam complex, which creates Billy Chinook. They began restoration efforts

for salmon and steelhead last decade as part of renewing a federallicense for the pow-

er-producing dam project. The centerpiece of the work is a $100 million submerged tower that helps direct fish migrating downstream. For decades th e

P e lton

a fish ladder at Opal Springs. As planned, the project would cost $7.5 million to $8 place, Portland General Elec- million in all, Hodgson said. tric and the tribes have been The water district has already trapping steelehead and salm- committed $4 million to the on coming in from the Pacific projectand theOregon WaterOcean and up the Deschutes shed Enhancement Board has River, hauling them by truck put up $1 million so there are and releasing them into Billy still millions of dollars left to Chinook. find. "The only thing we need to Once in the lake, the fish have three main options of make this project go forward where to go — the Metolius is money," Hodgson said. River, the Deschutes River and He said there could be more the Crooked River. grants available. Data provided by Portland Lind said he hopes his webGeneral Electric show so far site will also bring in money to the bulk of the fish, mainly support the cause. steelhead, head to the Crooked While m an y r e s toration River. projects, including course "The fish have clearly spo- correction and small dam reken," Lind said. moval, focused on Whychus But there they hit the Opal Creek, a tributary of the DeSprings diversion dam. While schutes, for whatever reason a trap-and-haul effort has the steelhead are drawn to been underway there, Hodg- the Crooked River, said Chris son said only about 50 per- Gannon, executive director for cent of the fish swim into the the Crooked River Watershed traps. Installing a fish ladder Council. "A lot o f p e ople have would give the fish the ability to swim up and over the dam, thought the Crooked is not the he said,and greatly increase place these fish would want to the number of fish making it go," Gannon said. upriver. Although the river can be While the Opal Springs Hy- warmer and have less water droelectric Project, installed in than other options, he said the 1980s, is not due for a new these factors could work in its federal license itself until 2032, favor.Steelhead rel y on cues Lind said he is encouraged to from the river to know when see the water district wanting to migrate and the harsher the to do something about the fish conditions in a river, the stronpassage problem now. The di- ger these cues may be. version produces about 32 milSo far the fish are choosing lion kilowatt hours annually,

power which the district sells to Pacific Power, according to the district website.

The district reached an

from sending or receiving text messages from behind the wheel of a moving vehicle. thing about it. "They are either drunk or The invention by Daniel Raviv was promising enough texting," he said. "It's driving

the front left corner.

to prompt Florida Atlantic

for businesses with drivers

the Crooked River. "There is j ust n o d o u bt

about that," Gannon said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com

PortNexus is using this technology to create products

blindfolded. When you text,

University to patent the pro- it's like closing your eyes for a gram and to spur PortNexus, few seconds.Itcan cause a lot a technology firm in Dania of damage." Beach, Florida, to begin imHis soft ware program, beplementing it. ing developed by PortNexus, "It blocks the driver only is designed to prevent mobile

Park

and for families that take a

pledge to stop texting while driving to ensure safety and avoid liability. A version will be available for sale in about two months.

deter floaters coming from upstream from entering the

nel is located on the left side of

the river, adjacent to McKay

Continued from A1 Park. During the 2012 bond camThe system of pneumatic

whitewater channel. A ddi-

paign, the district estimated the cost of construction at $6.3

bladders that will control the

tional temporary booms will be installed near the portage

size and shape of waves in

area on the left side of the riv-

million, but Healy said the complexities ofbuilding in the river pushed estimates higher. Nearly $1 million of the $9.7 million allocated is being held in reserve in the event of unforeseencosts,butHealy said

the whitewater channel and

er, to keep floaters from going through the safe passage

the elevation of water above Colorado Avenue is also in place, Schneider said, though running on a temporary air compressor. As water is di-

channel before construction is

complete. Althoughthe safe passage and whitewaterchannels are

expected to be almost entirely passers-by should be able to complete by the time the river those funds. Change orders get a good idea of where the floating season is underway, have been kept at less than four drops in the whitewater floaters will have to portage $9,000, she said, with most of channel and the 12 drops of around the construction area, that going toward meeting an the safe passage channel will Schneider said, just as they've Oregon Department of Fish & be, Schneider said. portaged around the dam in Wildlife requirement that the Schneider said each blad- past years. The final stage of district monitor construction der operates independently of construction will involve the noise so as not to disturb Or- the others, so that the system completion of a new pedestriegon spotted frogs living up- should continue to function an bridge across the river, and stream of the dam. even if one bladder is dam- the removal of the temporary A temporary dam was re- aged. The Colorado company construction bridge used to cently removed, allowing wa- that developed the pneumatic move equipment and supplies ter to flow into the two nearly system, Obermeyer Hydro from McKay Parkto midriver. completechannels,Schneider Inc., will remain under conMuch of McKay Park will said, and crews will shift their tract to do annual inspections remain closed through the attention to building the hab- and any needed repairs. summer, Schneider said, "There's a fair amount of though the district intends to itat channel on the Miller's Landing Park side of the riv- expertise and some safety, oc- have a small beach open at er this week. The line of steel cupational hazard issues that McKay Park where floaters sheet piling that has kept the arebest left to them," she said. can re-launch their crafts and bulk of the water in the habiAlso new at the construc- continue downstream. "It's not going to be a hangtat channel over the last few tion site is a bright orange months will be buried with boom floatingin the water up- out destination this year, but rock, she said, forming the stream of Colorado Avenue. hopefully next year we'll be separation between the habSchneider said the boom able to open it up and be more itat area and the whitewater will remain in place through of a park," she said. channel in the middle of the the end of construction and — Reporter: 541-383-0387, river. The safe passage chan- beyond, and is intended to shammers@bendbulletin.com verted into the two channels,

the district has barely touched

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devices from downloading text messages when held by drivers moving faster than a engineering and computer specified speed, say 10 mph. science. "If we save one perWhen fully developed, it son's life, this is worth it, most would allow a mobile netdefinitely." work carrier to distinguish After s eeing d i s tracted the driver from passengers in drivers wavering down the a vehicle by tracking clusters crowded roads of South Flori- of devices moving at the same da, Raviv decided to do some- speed and picking the one in

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

Projection: a big Memorial Day for travel In South Carolina, By Lynn Doan

Trip-takers totaled a record 44 forecasts. Relief at the pumps million in 2005, the Heathrow, and falling unemployment will U.S. travel over the M ay Florida-based motoring club combine to boost holiday trav25 Memorial Day weekend is said last week. About nine el spending, AAA said. "The U.S. economy will poised to reach a 10-year high in 10 people are expected to as Americans with more mon- drive. bounce back and accelerate in ey in their pockets are lured Retail gasoline prices are the second quarter," AAA said. ontothe roads by lower prices below year-earlier levels by "The rebound will be driven by at the pump. more than $1 a gallon, dragged stronger consumer spending. About 37.2 million Ameridown by oil prices that col- This boom in consumer spendcans will travel more than 49 lapsed amid a global glut of ing will be the main driver bemiles from May 21 to May 25, crude. That'll translate into hind the substantial increase a 4.7percent increase from $700 in savings for the typical in Memorial Day travel." last year's holiday and the sec- American household this year, Air travel is forecast to rise ond-highest level in AAA data. based on U.S. government by 2.5 percent from 2014 to 2.6

million passengers. U.S. regular gasoline at the pump averaged $2.659 a gallon on Thursday, $1.006 below a yearago,data compiled by the motoring group show. Prices slid 39 percent in the second

Bloomberg News

GOP candi dates scramble tostandout

half of 2014.

Employers added 223,000 workers to payrolls in April,

By Bill Barrowand MitchWeiss

said was his message to cor-

The Associated Press

porate leaders.

L abor

employment rate fell t o 5 .4 percent, the lowest since May

Rick Santorum, who won Republicans making their t h e Iowa caucuses in 2012 pitch to be the party's 2016 before fizzling out against presidential nominee aimed eventual nominee Mitt Rom-

2008, from 5.5 percent.

to outdo each other Satur-

De p a rtment da t a

showed last week. The un-

GREENVILLE, S .C. -

n e y , w a r ned t hat R epub-

dayinarguingthatPresident licans eager to retake the Barack Obama is a failed W h ite House after Obama's

owmuc cou SOW merica'smos vi ran econom? I'OU

leader. But hitting Obama

two terms in office must stay

with the usual critiques — fromhis2010 health care overhaul to allegations of missteps on foreign policy to the rise in the national

W@

. ~i , "m • Wa lker

' ~

hard for the gaggle of White House aspirants

,

w '

It is a t a n t alizing question facing the future of the American West: What would

zens United. W isconsin S cott W a lker

happen if the Colorado River dried up? The scenario, though unlikely anytime soon, is a stark way to consider the growing effects of climate change and drought on the region. And when researchers at Arizona State looked into it this year,

Gov. t r ied

'

'

,~ ;

by touting his abili-

:

co Rubio took a hard line o n f oreign policy, saying the nation must get tougher with terrorists. Adapting a line from the movie

"Taken," he said: "We will look for you. We will f in d y ou. Andwe will kill you."

-

ty to beat whomever

is nominated by the

and millions of Amer-

icans w h o have holes

forum in South Carolina hosted by the con- Fiorina servative group Citi-

The Washington Post

There are m illions

those boats." .~, I in Flor ,.~ , . i d a S en. M ar-

"

to stand out during a

By Jim Tankersley

"We have to be a

pro- w orker party," he s a i d"We . have to be the party for a rising tide l i f t i ng a ll b oats.

debt during his time in office — also made it

focused on reaching working-class voters.

Jindal

Democratic Party, reminding activists that

TexasSen. TedCruz

he wonthree statewide, elections in four years

Q "®, t r umpeted his unapol~' ~ oge t i c approach on in a state twice carried .~ , Cap i tol Hill, where he by Obama. helped engineer a par"The last time a Re- Sentorum ti al government shut,

they found a story of econom-

ic disaster. The seven states that rely

publican carried the

some of their water supply — from Wyoming down to

'4

fewestjob losseswould come in agriculture.

.

her tactic of going straight at H i l l ary

Bonnie Jo Mount 1 The WashingtonPost

Leobardo Escalante, an agricultural worker, cleans an irrigation channel in April in Imperial County, California. The district relies on water from the Colorado River for crop irrigation.

the lion's share of the water. That's the great tension for

If the ColoradoRiverrunsdry

that d r iv e i n n ovation an d i n A r i z ona need it, and so will deliver h i g her-than-average t h e new Tesla Motors factory

pay for all sorts of workers. outside Reno, Nevada. But continuing that growth, The s now center of Park

t h e past one, when almost no

asserting a legal and historic snow fell on its slopes, forcing right to. ski resorts to draw water to In that sense, the drought

m a k e t heirown.

"It's a major concern," said is not just raising questions about how America can keep Jack Thomas, Park City's soil fertile and food plentiful, mayor and a lifelong skiier. but about the future of jobs, "Our ability to bring water cities and technology. into the community is a con"American c i ties, p a rtic-

Ed I

C i t y , Utah, has secured addi-

perts say, requires additional t ional water supplies to preaccess to the dwindling sup- pare for more winters like ply of water that farmers are

T

Management~ Arts andentertainment~ p Wl e h i g~

s t r a int on growth."

Wt I

I

233 , 4 25 3 28 550 462,462

i

~ ~ I t d ~

Other services Manufacturing Accommodation/foodservices Administrative/wasteservices Realestate and rental Finance and insurance Retailtrade Professional, scientific,technical Government andother Healthcare and social services

Te c h giants such as Goo- F arming declined as a gle and Facebook share of Western state econ97 percent" of the draw relatively litomies throughout the last region's economic Am e I ICBil tl e wa t er to support decades of the 20th century, activity, said Ben Cj /eS j their headquarters then enjoyed a mild uptick Alexander, associ+. «' ' ~ . in the San F r an- during and after the Great Reate director of the ~ cisco Bay area but cession.Today itrepresents a consulting fi r m tl1 e W BSt, Bie us e l arge amounts small fraction of the region's Headwaters Eco- g e f l el g(l'flg to mai n t ain their economy and is expected to nomics. "And they data-storage shrink further. II 9~ cloud can't get the water centers in places Only about 1.4 percent of they need to grow Pe f Cerlt Of such as Or e gon. the economic output in the and expand." Silicon Valley re- Far West,the Rocky Mountge f egiprl'S The tension will lies heavily on the tain West and the Southwest pit some of the naI, Sacramento-San came from agriculture in tion's fastest-grow- BCtiVity. "And Joaquin Delta, one 2012, according to Commerce ing urban econo- pQey Cpp' t of t he nation's most D epartment s t atistics. I n mies against some s trapped wat e r formation services made up ~ of its most troubled < ~ ~~ sources, for resi- 5.5 percent ofthose regions' rural ones, where th e y n e ed dentia l a n d c o m- economies.Private services overall were about 64percent. unemploy m en t p OgfOW BAg m erc i a flows " I d o n' t k n o w and poverty rates In each region, both the in~ d remain high. The that I have a date formation and overall service industries grew faster than s truggle will b e Ben Alexander and time for you complicated by the w hen i t w i l l b e farming from 1997 to 2012. Headwaters West's o f t en-byzThe new, fast-growing ina ntine laws f o r point," said John dustries — and the cities that allocating w a ter. Schulz, associate house them — have learned And it raises questions about v i c e president of sustainabili- to use water more efficiently, whether the region and the t y operations at AT&T, which virtually doubling how much country can afford to use so has offices and network cen- they can do with a drop of wamuch water for agricultural t e r s across the region and is ter, according to calculations purposes. searching for ways to con- by Ellen Hanak, director of "It's a complete mess as far serve water. "We're feeling the Water Policy Center at the nonpartisan Public Policy Inas how to make it work," said the urgency." Timothy James, an economist Fa r m ers feel it, too, but they stitute of California. Her work at the L. William Seidman Re- w a r n that reducing water sup- was based on government search Institute in Phoenix,

p l i e s for farms could devas- data.

In most states, however, tate rural communities, hurt the U . S . economy and risk farmers have made much causing food shortages in an smaller gains in efficiency. Agriculture continues to comi ncreasinglyhungryworld. "We're not doing a lot right mand most of the available their lawns less under r estrictions from the governor, n o w to keep farmers in busi- water not set aside for envistruggling growers of nuts, n ess," said Dan Keppen, ex- ronmental protection or pow— more than 80 produce and other crops have ecutive director of the Family er generation received most of th e atten- F a r m A l l iance, an advocacy percent, on average,in West tion as California's monster group based in Southern Or- ern states. Some of that water grows drought has stretched into its e g on. "Once you start taking fourth year. But other parts of out blocks of production, food high-returning crops, such as the West are baking, too, and prices are going to go up, and California almonds and pistheir industries are thirsty. t h at's going to have a ripple tachios, but not all of it does. Climate models suggest the effect on consumer spending Robert Glennon, a law professor and water expert at the entire region will be facing i n t h iscountry."

who was one of the authors of theColoradoRiverstudy. Along with Angelenos who are showering and watering

475,349 498,5 8D 815,9~ 7 ~r5

817565

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Democratic favorite ~ for 2016. "She is not

~

are conservative. "Have you had anyone up here today say, 'I'm an establishment moderate who stands

e

-' does not have a record Cruz of accomplishment," Fiorina said. In an interview before his turn on stage,

all of whom insist they

for no t h ing?'" he said. "Sohowdoyoutellthe difference? The scriptures tell us, 'You shall

know them by their fruits.'" That means,

. he s a id, asking can'.g~i tr, d i dates, "You say you

Louisiana Gov. Bobby , b e l ieve these princi'Jindal pointed to his ples. When have you work on policy, saying Perry fough t for them?" he's the only potential Former Texas Gov. candidate in the field who R ick Perry let loose a series '

~

,

,

'

. ~

has "spent the last 18 months o f broadsides at Obama and

coming up with detailed his policies, drawing cheers ideas on health care, on for- from the crowd for a witheignpolicy,onenergy." ering critique that covered Once on stage, Jindal i m migration, the Affordable spent considerable time tout- Care Act, the Islamic State ing his credentials as a social militant group and the federconservative, including his a l budget. pushback against criticism His b o ttom line: "We've from some in the business seen gross incompetence. community over "religious We're here to declare that liberty" laws that have be- we're not going to take it come a flashpoint in the na-

a n y more."

tional debate over same-sex F o r mer Florida Gov. Jeb marriage. Bush, Kentucky Sen. Rand

Source:Arizona State University

ularly in the West, are generating well over

.

~~

Rodham Clinton, th e trustworthy, and she

Westernstates— and theU.S. Iongerand harsher droughts Researchers at Arizona State University attempted to calculate the economy — as global tem- i n the decades to come, stok- economic effect in the vast Colorado River Basin if the river dried up for peratures rise and drought i n g i n creased competition a year. Theyestimated 16 million jobs would be lost. While agriculture intensifies in coming years. for the West's most precious claims the lion's share of water taken from the river and its tributaries, This region ofthe country resource. has powered the recovery Te l ecom companies need other industries would lose far more jobs. + 95 g73 fromrecession,leadinginjob w a ter to cool their network Agriculture,forestry, fishing, hunting Mining ~ 130,208 growth and the development centers in New Mexico. SemiUtilities~ 182, 3 15 of cutting-edge industries conductor fabrication plants Construction~ 231, 3 3s

economists and regional ex-

<

ard CEO, continued Rubio

and arts and recreation. The

it's agriculture that still gets

-~

Carly Fiorina, the former Hewlett-Pack-

lose 16 million jobs, many in health care, high technology

sho uld compare his t style with his rivals,

o

a tough state."

Southern California — would

Nonetheless, in the West,

down in 2013. And he told activists that they

state for president was 1984,"hesaid."That's,~ ~

on the Colorado for at least

The Washington Posl

University of Arizona, calculated last year that an acrefoot of water used for farming

"Don't even waste your

Paul, and f o rmer A r k an-

breath trying to bully the s a s Gov. Mike Huckabee governor of Louisiana," Jin- campaigned elsewhere on dal said, repeating what he Saturday.

can yield $1,000 worth of alfalfa or $6,000 of lettuce. The same amount of water could

produce $13 million worth of semiconductors. E conomists s a y

ther e

should be a simple solution to that problem: Industries that could put water to better

Want to raise funds for your nonprofit organizationT We have a great idea:

use would pay farmers for their water r i ghts. "People get super scared about this prospect of water moving from one sector to another,"

Hanak said, but "you don't have tomove much tomake a difference."

The West's often dysfunct ional w ater m a r kets c a n make even small moves dif-

ficult, however. Colorado has long struggled with the outcry in rural communities when

growing suburbs pay farmers to divert their water. In California, coastal cities have

grown rapidly in the past few years, while many farming

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counties across the Central

Valley still struggle with double-digit unemployment. Even r u ra l

c o m munities

that have developed more vibrant economies — particularly from the growing recreation and tourism sector — are worried about water shortages to c ome. M ountain cities are worried that drought could stall their ski industries and maroon their

river rafting guides, said Diana Madson, executive director of the Mountain Pact,

a nonprofit group that works with cities on conservation

and adaptation measures. "In every town right now," she said, "they're thinking about how to i n crease new t ech

opportunities."

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

UPDATE UKRAINE

As monsoons near,Nepalfocuseson sanitation By Gardiner Harris

proving hygiene made here in

New York Times News Service

recent years. "There will be outbreaks of

P AUWATHOK,

y

Nepa l

— After years of intense effort, officials here in rural S indhupalchok district h ad

persuaded almost all of the nearly 61,000 households to each build a toilet. Then the

Brendan Hoffman I New York Times News Service

Watched by trainers from the U.S. Army's 173rd Airborne Brigade, Ukrainian soldiers participate in s wire-cutting exercise in Yavoriv, Ukraine. The 300 American trainers there are working to instill ba-

sic military know-how in soldiers who havealready spent months on the front lines in Eastern Ukraine.

roo s 0 rom ron ines 0

asic rainin interview. "We had no other

New York Times News Service

choice." From the earliest days of the

exercise, one of the most fun- war, the government in Kiev damental in the military hand- had asked for military help book, came off without a hitch.

from the United States. Its re-

A soldier carrying a length of rope and a grappling hook

quest for a sophisticated anti-tank missile went nowhere,

ran to within 20 feet or so of

as Washington feared it would

a coil of concertina wire and justencourage Russia to send stopped. more weapons and men to For a moment, he twirled the

Ukraine. What eventually ar-

rope in his hands like a lasso, rived was basic training. then threw the hook over the The wire-cutting drill was wire, and tugged hard, testing part of that. On a recent spring for explosives. day two weeks into the course, When nothing happened he other similarly low-tech tips signaled two comrades, who were being passed on. ran up and started snipping Bewildered Ukra i nian the wire with cutters. troops were being made to Although this was a typical hoist one another on t h eir training exercise for raw re- backs, firefighter style, and cruits in an elemental soldierly run up a hill, part of an effort skill, there was nothing typi- to improve the dismal mortalical about the scene. Far from ty rate for the wounded. enlistees, these soldiers were

The U.S. instructors barked

regulars in the U krainian national guard, presumably

simple orders — "Hurry up!" and "Keep moving!" — duly

battle-hardened after months on the front lines in eastern Ukraine. And the trainer was a U.S. m i l itary i n s tructor, drilling troops for battle with

rendered into Ukrainian by interpreters.

The training aims to remold the Ukrainian units by

increasing the responsibilities the United States' former Cold of noncommissioned officers, War foe, Russia, and Rus- fixing a Soviet legacy of an ofsian-backed separatists. ficer-heavy infantry. Without "It's been a long time since I sergeants paying attention, baheard a target called an Ivan," sic mistakes were being made, 1st Sgt. David Dzwik, one of the trainers, said in an interview out in the sunny forest,

while observing the Ukrainians run through drills. "Now, I'm hearing it again." The course on cutting wire isone of63 classes ofremedial military instruction being provided by 300 U.S. Army trainers in three consecutive two-month courses.

open a door with a sledgehammer and a crowbar; and how to drag a wounded colleague across a field while holding a rifle at the ready. When the war began a year ago, the Ukrainian army was all but worthless — rife with

cholera and other diseases," environmentinthese devastatsaid Antti Rautavaara, chief of ed areas far worse by carrying water, sanitation and hygiene contaminants into water supfor UNICEF in Nepal. "It is a plies and making direct con-

the world's most unsanitary,

battle we cannot win. We can

tact with fecal bacteria almost

only try to minimize the pain

inevitable.

reason 82 percent of drinking water supplies are contaminat-

earthquake struck, destroying and death." Small outbreaks of diarrhea most houses — and the very Two weeks have passed have been reported across ¹ toilets that could have helped since a magnitude 7.8 earth- palsince the earthquake, and stave off the diseases that can quake devastated large swaths although such outbreaks are run rampant after n atural of this mountainous country, routinehere,they have raised disasters. killing more than 7,900 peo- worries that the quake's afNow, instead of celebrat- ple and injuring more than termath is at least partly to ing a public health triumph, 17,000. Nepal's government blame. But getting residents to residents are holding ser- and charitable organizations consider building more toilets vices for their dead and dig- are racing to beat monsoon amid the devastation has not ging through the rubble to season, which begins in about been easy. find more bodies. And relief sixweeks, to get tents and food More than 80 charities and workersare pouring into the to as many as 800,000 Nepalis government agencies have district, hoping to salvage the whose homes are uninhabit- poured into Nepal since the remarkable progress in im- able. But they say an equally quake to work on its well-doc-

Capt. Nicholas Salimbene, a U.S. trainer, noticed with alarm that t h e U k r ainians

L ines

time, this is a massive opportunity for the sanitation

movement." Before the U NICEF had

e arthquake, i n tended t o

spend $25 million over four yearsaiding the government in its sanitation efforts. Now, the United Nations intends to

dole out $63 million.

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eYou see reports about the little green men," he said, referring to the Russian soldiers •0

ssgsUN6

to the latter months of basic training in the United States. The courses will t r ain 705 Ukrainian soldiers at a cost of

$19 million over six months. The Ukrainian national guard is rotating from the front what

units it can spare for the training. U.S. instructors intend to

way spread the i n struction

1 percent of the equipment was manufactured in the past

more broadly.

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In the first two weeks of training, the Americans found

Needless to say, morale was the Ukrainians' soldierly skills dismal. One armored column lacking, and the group generally in need of instruction.

"I came into it expecting war simplysurrendered to a crowd of drunken local men them not to know much of rather than fight. At that point, the basics," said Sgt. Michael the defense minister estimated Faranda, who i s t eaching

8AMSU IIS Galaxy S'6

- - - . G a l a x y S'6 edge

maneuvers. He was correct.

unit who were actually pre-

Things "every soldier should know," he said, they did not.

pared for combat, out of the 130,000-member army.

on thefirstday ofexercises.

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Some even forgot their helmets S till, F aranda s aid,

the

ernment took to sending new-

Ukrainians' willingness to go

ly recruited national guard soldiers into combat after

into combat was all the more

only two months of training. They fumbled with their rifles,

ration for it.

from treatable wounds.

about the Ukrainian proce-

notable for their lack of prepa-

Shaking his head, Faranda stumbled into traps and died said had he asked one group "Some learn in the classroom, some on the battlefield," Col. Sergei Moskalenko, commander of the group now retraining at this base, said in an

worse," said Rautavaara of UNICEF. "But at the same

L I.S. Cellular V f r i z o n

professi onalism of the force," he said. "We want them to look like soldiers."

Ukrainian units, and in this

Severely pressed, the gov-

ready bad situation gets much

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the safeties off. "It's about the

eton" battalions of officers

that there were at best 6,000 troops from a rapid reaction

ed with fecal bacteria. " The risk is t hat a n a l -

were carrying their rifles with

with just a few men. About

in the early weeks of the civil

Nepalis did not use toilets, one

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corruptionand Russian spies, recommend topperformers to and made up largely of "skel- serve as trainers within other

decade.

with a 2011 government survey finding that 45 percent of

e e new a msun a a x n en s o me.

the trainers said.

Here in western Ukraine, who invaded the Crimean they are far from the fighting, P eninsula last year i n u n and their job is to instill some marked uniforms, "and they basic military know-how in all walk around professionUkrainian soldiers, who the ally, and carry their weapons trainers have discovered are professionally." The Ukraiwoefully unprepared. The nians should, too, Salimbene largely unschooled troops sa1d. are learning such basic skills U.S.officers described the as how to use an encrypted course work as equivalent walkie-talkie; how to b reak

urgent task is to provide clean umented water and sanitation problems. They are coming rains make the poor sanitary to a country that was among

water and toilets before the

. US. Cellular.

By Andrew E. Kramer YAVORIV, Ukraine — The

A7

dure for handling a dud grenade. He was told none existed. "They said, 'We just put it in our pocket, or throw it

away.'"

Thiffpswewant yoffS know: NewRetail Installrnent Con tracts, SharedConnect plan affd S25deviceact, feesrequired. Credit approval required. Reg ulatory Co st Recovery Feeapplies (currefitly S1,82/line/ month); this isnfit ataxor gvrnt requiredcharge. Add,fees,taxes andterrffs applyandvary bysvc. affdeqmt Offersvalid in-store at participating locationsonly, maybefulfiled throughdirect fulfillment afid cannot becombined. Gofftract Payoff Promo: O ffer valid ofi upto6 coffsurffer lines or25businesslines, Mustport in currentnumber to U.S,Cellular andpurchasenewSmartphoneor tablet througha Retail InstallmentGontrast ori aSharedG offfiect Planwith Oe vice Protestiori+, Enrollnfefft in DevicePrstection+ required.Themonthly chargefor Device Protsdiofi+ is S899 for Smartphones.Adeductible per approved clairn applies. Federal Warranty Service Gorporatioff is theProviderof the Device Protection+ ESG benefits, exceptiffGAaffd OK.Submit final bil identifyingEarlyTerminationFee(ETF) charged by carrierwithin 60daysof aciivationdateto www.uscellrflar.corn/cofftractpayoff orvia mail to U.S.Gelrflar Gon tract PayoffPrograrff 5591-61;POHox 752257; ElPaso,TX88575-2257. Grfstorner wil be reimbursed for theETFretlectsd aff final bill rfp to S350/line.Reirffbffrsemefit in forrff of aU.S.Gelrflar PrepaidCardis issuedbyMstaBanke Member FDIC;additional offersarenot sponsoredor endorsedby Meta8afik.mis carddoesnot havecashaccess affdcanbeused at anymerchant localiofi that acceptsMasterGarde Debit Ga rds within theU.S.only. Gardvalid throughexpiration dateshownoff front of card. Nlow 12-14weeksfor processing.Tobe eligible, customermustregister for MyAccount. Refsil InstallmentCofffrasf: Retail InstallmentGofftract(Cofitract) affdrffoffthly paymentsaccordingto thePayment Schedule inthe Contract required. If youarein default or terminateyour r,offtract, werffay requireyouto irffrffediately paythe entire unpaidArffoffnt Rnancedaswell asorir collenioff costs,attorneys' fees and courtcostsrelatedto enforcing your obligafioffs underthe Contract. Trade-In:Requires activation of newline of service with anySmartphone. Requirestrade-in of Smartphoneinfully functional,working conditionwithoutanyliquid darnageor brokencomponents, including,but notlirnitedto, a crackeddisplay or housing. Smartphonemust power onandcannot bepin locked. $50U.S. Gellfflar Promoifoffal G ard: Enrollmentin Device Protection+ required.KansasGffstomefs: Inareasin whichU.S. Cellular receivessupportframtheFederal Universal ServiceFund, all reasonable requestsfor servicernust bernet Unresolvedquestions concerning services availability canbedirected tothe KansasCorporation CommissionXice of Public AffairsandConsumer Protection at1-800-662-0027.Limited-timeoffer. Trademarks and trade narnes arethe property of their respectiveowners. Additional termsapply. Seestoreor uscellular.cornfor details. ©2015U.S.Cellular


AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6

© www.bendbuiletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

WASHINGTON WEEK U.S. HOUSEVOTE • The House on May1 votedto bump spending for water programs, which includes a rollback of environmental protections. The vote also includes an increase of funding for nuclear weapons, the Army Corps of Engineers and other programs within the Department of Energy by $1.2 billion over last year's levels but $633 million below the level requested by President Barack Obama. Oregon's delegation split down party lines for the final vote, with Republican Rep.Greg Walden joining all but seven Republicans voting in favor. Thestate's four House Democrats voting with all but 10 caucus members opposed the proposal, which passed 240-177, in part because it included language that seeks to undermine federal polic iesonoceanmanagement and other environmental protections.

iennium u e

ro OSeS • Bend BudgetCommittee will review proposaloverthis week

Proyosed2015-2017 dudget

By Tyler Leeds

A total of $623 million was proposed for the biennial budget, an increase from the $496.2 million budget from 2013-2015.

The Bulletin

The city of Bend will begin reviewing a proposed $623 million biennial budget this week. The balanced budget is about $125 million larger than the previous biennium's, reflecting the city's recovering economy.The appointed Budget Committee will hold three meetings this week to review the budget in detail,

before passing the document off to the City Council. The increased funding will allow the city to add about 40

positions over the next two years, which will help the city return to pre-Great Recession staffinglevels. "Citywide, with this budget, there's a continued commitment to infrastructure," said

Sharon Wojda, the city's finance director, referencing the $368 million dedicated to infrastructure. "We'll be fin-

ishing up the (Bridge Creek) water project, and there's

quiteafew sewer projects.Because of this, you'll see a big increase in capital spending." Other projects the city will focus on include improving

Cascades East Transit with

$2.7 million, an increase of $400,000 over current funding levels. The budget also recommends $1.53 million be spent to help city staff develop an expansion proposal for the urban growth boundary, the line beyond which the state restricts new development.

Increased development and higher real estate prices are driving the budget growth, Wojda said. City staff estimate that property tax revenue will grow by 5.5 percent annually over the biennium. SeeBudget/B2

$93M public safety

$53M

$368M infrastructure

community andeconomic development

$62M • administration

Source: City of Bend

Carli Krueger/The Bulletin

Earl Blumenauer (D)..........N Suzanne Bonamici (D) ......N Peter Detaz/o (D)................N Kurt Schrader (D)..............N Greg Walden(R)................ Y

U.S. SENATEVOTE • The U.S. Senate on Thursday agreednearly unanimously to give Congress the authority to review a proposed nuclear deal between the United States and Iran. The bill would give Congress 30 days to review the deal that would lift economic sanctions on Iran in exchangefor cutbacks of its nuclear ambitions. Oregon's Democratic Sens. Ron Wyden andJeff Merkley voted in favor of the bill. Assuming the bill passes the Republican-controlled House, the bill would give Congress the authorityto blockthe nuclear deal, Reuters reports.

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Jack Bridges built his chicken and turkey coops to look like townhouses. Bridges' farm was the ninth of 13 stops on Bend's Chicken Coop Tour on Saturday.

Jeff Merkley (D)...... Ron Wyden(D)....... — Taylor W.Anderson, The Bulletin

Grocery shoppers, de aware Bend's two Albertsons grocery stores are closing temporarily and will reopen asHaggen supermarkets.

Aldertsons 1800 NE Third Si. Closes 6 p.m. Tuesday. Tentatively reopens 4 p.m. Thursday.

• Backyard birds' digs range from simple to deluxe atstops onchickencoop tour By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

The chickens stayed put

Saturday, while chicken fans crossed any number of roads to go see coops and henhouses at 13 stops along Bend's Chicken Coop Tour. Rebecca Charlton, owner of

rials, demonstrating how easy and inexpensive it can be to set up a backyard flock.

visitors could wet the soles of their shoes to minimize the risk

azine tour of chicken coops, it's

of transmission. A ll proceeds from the sale of

$10tour guidebooks arebeing donated to the High Desert Museum, which maintains a flock

ofheritage chickens alongside

years, said concerns over the

and reptiles. Charlton said many of the

volved in the process to cancel.

Instead, eachparticipating

bendbulletin.cum/chickencnups

coop was issued atray filled with sanitizing solution, where

Cowgirl Cash and organizer of the tour for the last three local avian flu outbreaknearly convinced her and others in-

additional photos QoSee on The Bulletin's website:

its better known raptors, otters coops on this year's tour were

cobbledtogetherfrom scrap lumber and other found mate-

"This is not the Sunset Magreal Bend families," she said. At Erik Hotvedt's home near

Pilot Butte, he's constructed a chicken coop out of salvaged I pallets and other redaimed = materials tucked in among his +i) vegetable gardens. The bird feed is second hand as well — spent grains from Worthy Brewing and castoff vegetables One of Erik Hotvedt's chickens lies on a nest while attempting he gets from Natural Grocers. to lay eggs inside the coop hebuilt from reclaimed and recycled SeeCoop/B5 materials.

YESTERYEAR

RailroadcrossingworkonBaker Road

e re ve. Av.

Aldertsons 61155 S. U.S. Hwy. 97 Closes 6 p.m. today. Tentatively reopens 4 p.m. Tuesday.

BNSF will replace the railroad crossing on Baker Road between Monday and Wednesday. Baker Road will be closed for three days to facilitate the work and to repave the crossing. All traffic in and out of Deschutes River Woods, west of the Baker Road railroad crossing, will be detoured onto Brookswood Boulevard for the duration of the project. Baker Road will be closed at Cinder Butte Road on the west side and Baker Court on the east side of Baker Road. n fjLds~r..

BEND Buck C yon Rd.

Pete Smith / The Bulletin

To extend the limih of city That plans are being considered for the construction

of a saw mill by the Scanlon-Gipson or Brooks inter-

~b.

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Source: ODOT

Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

For theweek ending May 9, 1915

Bke Rd

end Golf Oun'try C

Compiled by Don Hoiness fromarchiv ed copiesofThe

100 YEARSAGO

Detour in anl out of Deschutes River Wools

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Channeldeepenedfor pageant in 1965

estson the Sisemore proper-

Section ot roal closed Greg Cross/The Bulletin

city limits around the pro-

posed mill site. J.P. Keyes, manager of The Bend Company and local representative of the Brooks interests, when interviewed on the subject before

his departure for Spokane on Monday, said, "Yes, the prospects are that the Scan-

lon-Gipson people will be building in the near future. They will probably build as soon as the necessary arrangements can be made. This matter of extending

ty adjoining the city on the the city limits is one thing south became known early in that our people wish to see the week when a petition was put through before they go circulated asking the council ahead and I trust that the to call a special election for vote will be favorable." the purpose of extending the The object of the proceed-

ing, as frankly stated by Mr. Keyes, is to arrange for the exemption of the mill site from city taxation, all

surrounding property being taken into the city but the

site itself not being included. In speaking of the matter a man familiar with the de-

tails said, "The advantages which accrue to a town by increase in population and

in taxable property through the development of a big industry are so generally recognized that very frequently a site, or a bonus or exemption from taxation or some

similar thing is given by the people on condition that the industry locate."

SeeYesteryear/B5


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

E VENT

ENDA R

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

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

844-462-7342.

TODAY FIFTH ANNUALBREWSKIBEER FESTIVAL:Featuring beer tasting, live music by ElevenEyesandGreg Botsford, and more; noon; $15for a silipint and four beer tokens, $5 for additional tokens; Mt. Bachelor Ski Area, 13000 Century Drive, Bend; www.mtbachelor.com or 800-829-2442. CENTRAL OREGONYOUTH ORCHESTRA: Theyouth orchestra performs; 2 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Bend HighSchool, 230 NE Sixth St., Bend; www. centraloregonyouthorchestra.org. "HOT SPOT IN POMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii 79 A.D. right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 3 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T.Theatre presents a musicalbased on the words of Dr. Seuss; 4 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. RILEY'S RANGE BENDERS: The Americana-roots band performs; 7 p.m.; free; BrokenTopBottle Shop,1740 NWPence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. BEN BALLINGER: The rootsand Americana artist from Austin, Texas, performs, with Micah Peterson; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

MOMDAY E-40: The hip-hop artist performs, with Stevie Stone, Cool Nutz, J-Meast and more; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; $30 plusfees inadvance,$35 at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.j.mp/ e40inBend or 541-388-8111.

TUESDAY "RIFFTRAXLIVE2015:THEROOM": Featuring a riffing on the hilarious "classic" film; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or

WEDMESDAY SENIORDAY:Freeadmission for anyone 65 andolder; 9 a.m.; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend;www. highdesertmuseum.org/senior-day or 541-382-4754. HIGHTEA IN BEND FOR PINCC: Featuring a presentation by Lauren Elliott Mullens, who volunteered with PINCC last summer in Cameroon, Africa, including a silentauction with items from local vendors and live music; 3:30 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance, $30; ChowRestaurant, 1110 NWNewport Ave., Bend; www.

bend-hightea.squarespace.com or

830-312-0272. LAURA IVANCIE:The soulful alt-folk artist performs, with Tim Snider; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School,700 NW BondSt., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "BACKSTREETBOYS:SHOW 'EM WHAT YOU'RE MADEOF": Abehindthe-scenes look at the popular boy band; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. com or844-462-7342. THE ENGLISHBEAT:The English ska reggae bandperforms, with Nice Privates, doors open at 7 p.m.; 8 p.m.; $37 plus fees; TowerTheatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. MOTHERSHIP: Thealt-rockband from Seattle performs, with Dirty Streets; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY SOTHANNIVERSARYOFCENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITYCOLLEGE: A celebration of COCC's"Past, Present and Future," the 50th anniversary of the Bend campus, featuring tours, prizes, refreshments, kids activities and acelebrationhonoring the Coats Family; 4 p.m.; free; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way,Bend;541-383-770. "QUEENS OF THE ROLEO": Join the Deschutes Historical Museum for the Bend screening of "Queens of the Roleo" as part of Historic

"We went through five rounds of layoffs in the recession, which was really, really tough. Wedon't want to be in the position of being too quick to respond (to the upswing in the economy) andhave to do that again. We're

Submitted photo

E-40 performs at 8 p.m. Monday at Midtown Ballroom. Preservation Month; 6 p.m.; $10; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBondSt., Bend; www.deschuteshistory.org or 541-389-1813. OREGON HISTORICRAILROADS PROJECT: A presentation on the historical surveying of Oregon's private, public and interurban railroads by Edward J. Kamholz; 6:30 p.m.; free; A.R. BowmanMemorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., Prineville; www.crookcountyhistorycenter.org/ about/events/or 541-447-3715. ASHER FULERO BAND:The psychedelic-rock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. AN EVENINGWITH ELLEN GOODMAN:Featuring the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Ellen Goodman, discussing end-of-life wishes of loved ones; 7 p.m.; free, ticket required; TowerTheatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "HOT SPOTINPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii 79A.D. right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "VENUS INFUR":Part of the Black

Box series, aplaywrightseeks an actress for his adaptation of a classic tale; 7:30 p.m.; $15, $12for seniors and students; CascadesTheatre,148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend;www. www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "DRIVING MISSDAISY": The play, shot during its Australian tour, featuring Angela Lansbury, James

"VENUS INFUR":Partof the Black Michael Gesme, will conclude its 2014-15 season, with COSAYoung Box series, a playwright seeks an actress for his adaptation of a classic Artist Competition featured soloists; tale; 7:30 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors 7:30 p.m.; free, ticket required; and students; Cascades Theatre, Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St., 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; Bend; www.cosymphony.com or www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-317-3941. 541-389-0803. "VENUS IN FUR":Part of the Black THE FREEWAY REVIVAL: The Box series, a playwright seeks an classic rock and blues band actress for his adaptation of a classic performs; 10 p.m.; $3; TheAstro tale; 7:30 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; and students; Cascades Theatre, www.astroloungebend.comor 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-0116. www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.

SATURDAY

"SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T. Theatre presents a musical based on the words of Dr. Seuss; 2 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students 18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. DINNERANDDANCE:Featuring a prime rib dinner, live music by Dave and Melody Hill, to benefit theVFW Post;5:30 p.m.;$20, registration requested; VFWHall, 1836 SWVeteransWay, Redmond or 541-526-1371. FRIDAY AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Moll y Gloss will present her latest novel, "SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T. Theatre "Falling from Horses"; 6:30 p.m.; presents a musical based on the $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 words of Dr. Seuss; 7 p.m.; $15 SW Sixth Street, Redmond or for adults and seniors, $10for 541-526-1491. students 18 and younger; Summit 2015CENTRAL OREGON FILM High School, 2855 NWClearwater FESTIVAL (COFF):A family-friendly Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or festival for local filmmakers; 6:30 541-419-5558. p.m.; free; Terrebonne Assembly ENSEMBLEPARADISO: The Los of God Church — Main AVroom, Angeles-based group with piano, 379 NW RimrockWay,Terrebonne; violin, and cello performs, with www.centraloregonshowcase.com HDCM founder and violinist Isabelle or 541-806-3268. Senger; 7 p.m.; $35, $10 for students "SEUSSICAL":B.EA.T. Theatre and children; Tower Theatre, 835 NW presents a musical based on the Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. words of Dr. Seuss; 7 p.m.; $15 org or 541-317-0700. for adults and seniors, $10 for "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian students 18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater comedy set in Pompeii 79 A.D. right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. comedy set in Pompeii 79A.D. right com or 541-312-9626. as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; "THE IMITATIONGAME":A $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette showing of the film with eight Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. Academy Award nominations; com or 541-312-9626. 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or SPRING CONCERT: The Central 541-475-3351. OregonSymphony,directed by Earl Jones andBoydGaines; 7:30 p.m.; $18; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. TONY G.AND ALEX RIOS:Tony G.,co-founderofBend Comedy, will perform, with Portland-based comedian Alex Rios;8 p.m.;$8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111.

CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY SPRING CONCERT: The Central OregonSymphony,directed by Michael Gesme, will conclude its 2014-15 season, with COSAYoung Artist Competition featured soloists; 2 p.m.; free, ticket required; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St.,

Bend; www.cosymphony.com or

541-317-3941. "VENUS IN FUR":Part of the Black Box series, a playwright seeks an actress for his adaptation of a classic tale; 2 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors and students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii 79A.D. right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 3 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T. Theatre presents a musical based on the words of Dr. Seuss; 4 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558.

Providence MedicareAdvantage Plan.

sustainable and to make sure we're not acting on a short blip on the radar."

I

— Sharon Wojda, the city's finance director

i

i i

I

Recorddudlet

Continued from B1 Despite the increase, the

city's tax rate of $2.8035 for every $1,000 of assessedvalue is one of the lowest rates in the state. In Redmond, for

example, the rateis $4.41. "We talk about i t a ll t h e

time, but our permanent tax

The city of Bend's latest

proposed biennial budget would set records for expenditures and debt service. H

Budget H

$700 million-

-

-

- -

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

Our overall 5 stars mean you can switch

De b t -

-

-

- -

-

-

-

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rate is so low we don't have

the resources to support all the programs that the City Council wants," Wojda said.

"We have a long wish list with things like more police

300"

$71.1million

ing for streets." To help with streets,the City Council is mulling a 5 cents per gallon gas tax, which could be usedto help

100-

cover

Source: City of Bend

0 2007-09 2011-13 2015-17 2009-11 2013-l5 Pete Smith /The Bulletin

maintenance. will help the city increase the

quality of its services.Nonetheless, she emphasized the city has learned from the re-

cession to be cautious when expanding. uWe w ent t h r ough

five

rounds oflayoffs in the recession, which was really, really tough," she said. "We don't want to be in the position of beingtoo quick to respond (to the upswing in the economy) and have to do that again. We're waiting to see if this

Service is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday through Friday (Pacific time).

-

million in d e ferred street Despite the ch a llenges, Wojda saidincreased staffing

Attend one of our meetings to learn more or to enroll, www.ProvidenceHealthPlan.com/centraloregon.

400"

on the streets and more fund-

es t i m ated $ 8 0

plans anytime without penalties. call 1-855-210-1588 or visit us at

200

the

May 17

Switch now to an overall 5-star t

waiting to see if this increase in activity will be

Budget

A GOD ORANOTHER: The black-metal band from Olympia, Washington performs, with Rutabaga; 8 p.m.; $3; ReedPub Company, 1141 SWCentennial Court, Suite1, Bend; 541-312-2800. TONY G.'S FAREWELL SHOW: Tony G., co-founder of Bend Comedy, will perform, featuring Portland-based comedianAlex Rios;8 p.m .;$8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111.

Redmond Senior Center 325 NW DOgWOOd Ave.

Redmond Thursday,May 14, 10:30 a.m.

Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road Bend Thursday,May 21, 1:30 p.m.

Projected2015-2017

localrevenue

$54M property taxes

$3.BM

PROVIDENCE

G.O. transportation bond (passed in 2011)

Health Plan

$3.9M local operating levy for fire and EMS (passed in 2014)

increase in a ctivity w i ll b e

sustainableand to make sure we're not acting on a short

$2.5M

blip on the radar."

urban renewal areas

The City Council is expected to vote on the budget in June. — Reporter:541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

$14M

transient room tax Source: City of Bend

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

••

TheB u lletin

" 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


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

u e e i n s osoi i wi revenue orecas By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

S ALEM —

and there's only going to be a modest amount of funding out

Wh e n t h e y there for quote-unquote new

passed an education budget initiatives," said Sen. Richard last month that was roundly

Devlin, D-Tualatin. "In fact, I think very little, to be frank."

criticized as inadequate, Oregon lawmakers promised to The last forecast, released in add extra money if economists February, projected the state grew more optimistic about will take in nearly $18.8 billion the state's forthcoming tax during the two-year budget cycollections. cle that begins July 1. That's up nearly 11 percent The next state budget begins to solidify this week when from the current budget. But economists deliver the quar- because employee salaries and terly revenue forecast, telling other costs of government are lawmakers how much money also rising, budget writers still they're expected to be able to feel the squeeze. divvy up. The forecast will In April, Democrats — who also give a strong indication control the House and Senate of whether Oregonians can — approved $7.255 billion in expect to get rebates when state aid for K-12 schools, dethey file their 2015 income tax spite complaints from educareturn. Even before the numbers come out, a wide variety of in-

terest groups are clamoring for a share of the pot. But senior

Speaker Tina Kotek, a Port-

of reach for too many people. "Like never before, Oregon's That leaves very little money public universities and comfor anything else. munity colleges are aligned to Legislative leaders cite a advocate the imperative of imvariety of small demands on proved funding for higher edthe budget that add up, from ucation," the presidents wrote. insufficient prison staffing to a "Beginning to restore funding shortfall in the budget for em- aftera decade ofdisinvestment ployment-related day care. is the right thing to do for stu-

AShland eXCluSiall Zalla —Police told the Ashland City Council this week theymight request an expansion of the downtown exclusion zone in aneffort to rein in rowdy behavior by transients and bar patrons. Anexclusion zone is anareafrom which persistent offenders may be temporarily banned.Thecity passed the exclusion ordinance in 2012 in response towhat police described as out-of-control nuisance crimes by thehomeless population. Thenumber of calls for disorderly conduct in thedowntown areahasdropped from 310 in2012to199 last year. DeputyChiefWarren Hensmansaid police are also trying to address complaints from thosewholive near Will DodgeWay.

land Democrat.

F urther complicating t h e

budgetprocess isthe Supreme Court's decision invalidating

dents and, ultimately, it is the

right thing to do for Oregon's future."

The forecast will also give Public Employees Retirement a much clearer indication System. While the impact whether Oregonians will get won't affect budgets until 2017, tax rebates. Under Oregon's lawmakers may be reluctant "kicker" law, when the Legisla-

MOther kidnapping — APolk Countywomanaccused of kidnapping her mother at gunpoint, binding her to achair with duct tape and stealing her belongings is in custody. MauraOlsson was located Friday after a one-daysearch. Shewasfound nearCoquille. The Polk County Sheriff's Office saidOlsson's mother called for help from their Dallas home Thursday.Thewomantold deputies that herdaughter pointed a shotgun at herandforced her to a nearby trailer. Once inside, the woman saidOlssontied her upandtook hermoney,cellphone andcar. Officers launched asearch for Olsson andshe wasarrested Friday.Olsson was booked onkidnapping, robbery, theft, menacing andfirearms charges.

a large chunk of cuts in the

to add staff whose retirement costs will rise in the long run.

Among the loud voices pushing for more money is Oregon's tion interests that the budget higher education community. would require some school University and community coldistricts to cut teachers or lege administrators say years school days. The funding plan of dedining state funding has induded apromise that schools forced them to lean more on would get 40 percent of any their students through higher

legislators are warning that no matter what the forecast increase above the February's shows, there will be very little projection. "We made this c ommitmoney to spend on new or expanded programs. ment when we passed the K-12 "We are going to be large- budget becauseeducation is ly addressing base needs, our top priority," said House

AROUND THE STATE

tuition.

ture takes in more money than

expected during a two-year budgetcycle,theexcessmoney gets kicked back to taxpayers. The Februaryforecastprojected a kicker worth about $350 million.

The final

d etermination

won't be made until the budget

cycle doses at the end of next month and the state tallies the

In a letter to legislative lead- tax revenue. But this week's ership, the presidents of all sev- forecast will show the number en universities and 17 commu- after the most volatile period of nitycolleges saythe opportuni- the year — the April tax-filing ty for a higher education is out season.

Injured K-9 returnS —TheSalem police dog shot during a standoff with a suspect last month is back on the job. Bacoreturned to work Thursday. Salempolice Lt. SteveBirr said Baco hadonesuture left in his cheek butwas otherwise fine. Bacowasshot in the side of theface by Mark Hawkins, awanted maneventually killed by officers at end of a seven-hour standoff in aWalmart parking lot. Birr said the bullet entered through thetop of Baco's left cheekandexited through the bottom, never penetrating the bone. OregOn driVer CraSh —Authorities said it's surprising no onewas killed in a chain-reaction accident on Interstate 80 ineastern lowathat sent 32 people tohospitals. Thelowa State Patrol said anearlier accident Friday halted traffic on the interstate nearWilliamsburg. At about 3 p.m., a semidriven by aPortland man whodidn't see that traffic had stopped crashedinto the line of cars. It caused chain reaction involving four other vehicles, including a tour bus carrying 26 employeesfrom a Cedar Rapidscommercial real estate company.Thesemi burst into flames upon impactandspread diesel fuel across the interstate, catching other vehicles onfire. — From wire reports

FBIsaysU.K.m an auused ofrape ma y have more victim s The Associated Press EUGENE — A man f r om

Wales accused of traveling to Oregon to rape a 10-year-old girl he met through an online chat program has previously traveled to other states in the United States, and there might

Hall, 22, is jailed in Eugene on threecounts offirst-degree it's working with rape, two counts of first-delocal law enforcegree sodomy and one count of ment agencies first-degree kidnapping after in Oregon and Hall allegedly traveling to the city across the counlast month and taking the girl try to identify otherpossible vic- to a hotel. Hall's public defendThe FBI said in a statement that

be other victims, the Federal tims of Gareth Vincent Hall afBureau of Investigation said.

ter his arrest earlier this week.

Press seeking comment.

said.

Hall and the girl spoke for

The Lane County District two months before meeting in Attorney's office issued an arearly April, Eugene police said. rest warrant for Hall on April Hall allegedlypicked the girl up 30. Less than a week later, Hall in a rental car. The girl sneaked was arrested at an airport in out of the house to go with Hall, Chicago. Authorities said he

worked asa lifeguard before his arrest. However, the county council of the Hall's home

region said in a statement that Hall had been on suspension from hisjob because ofa crim inal investigation by North

who was in Eugene for about was on his way to meet some- Wales Police. The statement four days before returning to oneelse. was provided to The (Eugene) message from The Associated the United Kingdom, police Hall, of Caernarfon, Wales, Register-Guardbythe BBC. er has not returned a phone

Remains of 1950ssoldier ta be buried in ROSebLiig CENIRALOREGOII'SORIGllllALHOMEAlllDLIVINGMAGAZllllE By Laura Gunderson

Brown began basic training in November at Ford P ORTLAND — B e n L e e Ord along the Pacific Ocean Brown was lost in just a week. northeast of Monterey, CalIn 1951, just seven days ifornia, and by Feb. 5, 1951, after the 17-year-old was de- he was on his way to a war ployed, he ended up in one zone. He was listed as a light of the bloodiest battles of the weapons infantryman and Korean War. assigned to Company I, 3rd The Oregonian

Now after 60 years, the Or-

Battalion, 38th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Infantry Division. B rown's r e m ain s c a m e Brown's unit, with a mishome in 1993, when a treaty sion to support the South Kobetween the U n ited States rean troops, was positioned and North K o rea r eturned in a deep valley near the vil208 coffins to the U.S. Yet lage of Hoengsong. As night scientists soon learned there fell on Feb. 11, 1951, four Chi-

egon man has been found.

was more than one servicem ember in

e ach c o ffin, a

nese and two North Korean divisions launched a massive

discovery that led to a pains- surprise attack, encircling the taking and decades-long pro- steep hillsides and blocking cess of isolating remains and the only road out. matching them with the DNA

As South K orean f orces

of surviving family members.

collapsed, military reports

"It has taken some time,"

described a battle in w hich

said Shelia Cooper, a spokes- American and U .N . f o rces woman w it h t h e D e f ense were outnumbered 12 to 1 POW/Missing A c counting that quickly devolved from a Agency in Arlington, Virgin- "rain of mortar fire" to handia. "Technology back then to-hand combat as enemy was very slow. It's faster now, forces swarmed. but it gets complicated when Over the next three days, you have families whose sib- more than 2,000 U.S. and lings and mother and father

have passed away." Today, 7,852 A m e ricans

who fought the three-year war remain unaccounted for, she said. Her agency lists the three dozen soldiers from Oregon whose remains have not

A sneakpeek at the next CentralOregon Living coming 3une 27th... Chefs onTour Learn about the third annual pre-Tour of Homes™event and how it has evolved since 2013. Find out which builders and restaurants will be participating.

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U.N. soldiers were killed. One account put the 38th Infantry

Regiment's losses at 462328 killed in action and 134

who died in captivity. According to newspaper reports at the time, Marines

who recaptured the area a month later erected a crudeCpl. Brown's remains were ly painted sign, "Massacre positively matched last month Valley," after they'd passed with DNA from his brother the mile-long road littered yet beenfound or matched.

and sister, who did not want

with burned and bullet-torn

to comment for this report. He will be buried Friday in Roseburg National Cemetery. Military r e cords s h ow Brown grew up in the small town of Fourmile along the

trucks and hundreds of frozen bodies.

ing 14 105-millmeter howit-

IMa0aga

Oregon Coast south of Bandon. He enlisted in the Army

zers, 901 other crew-served

schsNle

MQj4-'

ly

The battle was controver-

sial not only for its human toll but for equipment lost, includweapons, 137 rocket launch-

in mid-June 1950, likely not ers, 164 machine guns and long after he'd graduated 102 automatic rifles. "It was just a disaster, just from high school. It was also a few weeks before North Ko- a disaster," said Jack Witter, rea invaded South Korea, the a Korean War veteran from move that triggered President Oscodo, Michigan, who was Harry Truman to take action

among the Marines who re-

in hopes of containing the spread of communism.

captured the village and recalled the hand-painted sign.

"'lli(

siifr

For moreinformatioo and to subscridecall

541-382-1811 OEQGN MS N I I IN%SI CRORIINGNOME 8

S MRYBIEIIGY~S M

. The Bulletin


B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Daniel James Earl Bernard Davis, of Crooked Rive Ranch Nov. 24, 1933 - April 29, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please sign our online guest book at www.redmondmemorial.c om 541-548-3219. Services: A memorial service will be held Saturday, May 16, 2015 at 11:00 A.M. at the Ranch Chapel located at Crooked River Ranch,

Oregon.

Georgie Juanita

Turner, of Redmond Mar. 30, 1945 - May 2, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date.

llene England Mathisen Feb.11,1921 - April 22, 2015 Ilene England M a t h isen died peacefully at home in Lake Oswego, Oregon on A pril 22 , 2 0 15. S h e a n d her identical t w i n , I r e n e, were born on February 11, 1921 to George and Kathryn England i n P o r t l and,

Oregon.

I lene m a r r ie d L e o n a r d M artin M a t hisen of H i l l s dale, Oregon on J un e 1 5, 1942. The family moved to Bend, Oregon in 1950. I n 2008 I l en e a n d L e n moved to The Stafford Ret irement C o m m u n it y i n Lake Oswego. P redeceased by her t w i n in 1953 and her husband in M arch 2013, Ilene i s s u r vived by her children, Suzanne (Dick) Piland of Tualatin; David (Gail) Mathisen o f W i l b r a h am, MA; Diana (Tom) Partin of L ake O s w e go ; Mar i l y n

(Greg) Sullivan and Rich-

Wambaugh

Russell Forest Jennings

Frederick Allen Winther

Sep. 2, 1925- Apr. 12, 2015

August 9, 1945 — April 30, 2015

April18,1940- May1,2015

D aniel p a ssed a w a y a t home in the loving arms of h is w if e a n d f a m i l y . H e was born i n A l l i a nce, NE t o E ar l W a m b a ug h a n d Martha (Platt) Wambaugh. When he w as 4, t he f a m -

Russell Forest J e nnings of Red m o nd , O r e g o n , p assed away at h i s h o m e on April 30, 2015. He was 6 9. Russell was b or n A u gust 9, 1945, in Springfield, OR, to Delbert and Katherine

Fred, was born i n S o uth Bend, IN to Johannes Frederick an d I s a bel ' B e tty ' (Kranitz) Winther. He was 75 years old at the time of

He championed opportunity,

education for PuertoRicans

William (Bill) Hall Dillon Jr.

DEATHS

ELSEWHERE

The Washington Post

Marjorie Townsend, an electrical engineer who became the first woman to manage a U.S. spacecraft launch, died April 4 at a hospital in Wash-

ington. She was 85. A spokeswoman for the D.C. Medical E x aminer's O ff ice

said the cause of death has not been determined. In 1959, Townsend was one

of the first female engineers to join NASA. In the next decade, she became the first female

spacecraftproject manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center i n

G r eenbelt,

Maryland. F rom th e

m i d -1960s t o

1975, she managed the agency's small astronomy satellite program, where she was responsible for the design, construction, testing and orbital operations of NASA's first as-

tronomicalspacecrafts. Most notably, she oversaw the development and launch of Uhuru, the w orld's first

X-ray astronomy satellite. The space instrument, launched in

1970 in Kenya, was used to detect, survey and map celestial X-ray sources and gamma ray emissions. According to the American Association for the Advance-

ment of Science, the findings from the Uhuru launch "quadrupled the number of X-ray sources known at the time."

The data collected from Uhuru helped r evolutionize

the field ofhigh-energy astronomy and astrophysics, which e xamines th e

u n i verse i n

terms ofwavelengths and examines high-energy phenomenon such as black holes.

Townsend served as the program manager for NASA's applications explorer missions program before retiring in 1980. For her contributions,

Puerto Rican Coalition.

Medal.

In 1962, a year after the

Marjorie Trees Rhodes was born on March 12, 1930, in Washington. Her father was

an engineer and inventor. She enrolled in college at age 15 and, in 1951, became the first

woman toreceivean engineering degree from George Washington Urnversity.

Her h usband,

C h arles

Townsend, died in 2001. Survi-

vors include four sons, Charles "Chet" Townsend Jr. of Fort Denaud, Florida, John Townsend

of Ellicott City, Maryland, and Lewis Townsend and Richard Townsend, both of Potomac,

Maryland; 11 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.

— From wire reports

John Clarence Arnett Aug. 2, 1927 - May 6, 2015 Long-time Redmond businessman John Arnett went home to heaven

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

Wednesday, May 6, surrounded by his loving family. A long life lived well was verified by the many friends and family who came in the last days to say goodbye to the Patriarch and friend who was always ready to share wisdom and financial assistance to help someone in need.

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020

He and his brothers built and operated nursing homes in Redmond, Bend, Prineville, Burns, and John Day, among other ventures. His early days on the farm led him back to ranching, and he loved raising cattle. Beside flying to a remote hunting or fishing cabin in British Columbia and Alaska, John's favorite pastime was investing in and operating ranches around Central and Eastern Oregon.

Bend, OR 97708

bendbulletin.com

In lieu of f l o w er, contrib utions ca n b e m a d e t o N ew Hope Church o r t h e Cancer Research Institute on his behalf.

By Megan McDonough

she received the agency's Exceptional Service Medal and Outstanding Leadership

In each of his roles, he ap- agency was founded, he the world: pealed to government and was recruited to be business Kenan Evren, 97: Turkish the private sector to create manager for Aspira, a Latino general who led a 1980 coup jobs and training programs youth organization supportthat ended years of violence to reduce high unemploy- ed by private and governbut whose rule unleashed a ment among Puerto Ricans ment grants, thatencourages wave of arrests, torture and on the island and the main- academicadvancement. extrajudicial killings. Died land. In 1976, he pressed for He served on t h e c i vil Saturday at a military hospital recognition of Puerto Ricans rights commission in various in Ankara, Turkey, after being as an official minority group roles for nine years, including place on a respirator. after the rights commission acting director during the Johnny Gimble, 89: Re- conducted the first national administration of President nowned fiddler who gained study of Puerto Rican mi- Richard Nixon. In 1979, he fame for his backup work with grants by a federal agency was named staff director by country stars from Merle Hag- and found that "a dismaying- President Jimmy Carter, a gard to Carrie Underwood. ly high percentage of Puerto post he held until 1981. Died Saturday near his home Ricans are still trapped in He retired as president of in Dripping Springs, near poverty." the National Puerto Rican Austin, Texas. He also accused the news Coalition in 1994.

Find It All Online

picnic.

managed launchof spacecraft

staff director of the U.S. Com- him, along with another mission on Civil Rights; and daughter, Victoria Nunez, as president of the National and two grandchildren.

Deaths ofnote from around

Obituary policy

p lan to p a r t icipate i n t h e

Townsend

Brown. After retirement in 1992, h e and K a t h y m o v e d t o T ucson, A Z f o r 1 0 y e a r s and returned to Redmond, his passing. OR in 2 004 w h ere t h ey In 19 4 7 , currently live. t he fa m Fred was a caring, gentle, ily m oved and kind person who loved ily to Por t - travel, photo g r aphy, moved to l and. H e w alking, h i k i ng , a n d t h e (Monroe) WashingJennings. gr'aduo utdoors; but m ost o f a l l ton He grew ated fr om his family and his cats. making up in Benson He is survived by his wife their SpringHigh Kathy; d a u ghters, J a n ell home on field, S chool i n T hompson o f Red m o n d , Fox Isw here h e 1 958 a n d O R, June (Phil) S m it h o f Russ Jennings gradu Fred Winther volunDaniel l and. In Battleground, WA, April of Wambaugh t h e sum - ated from Springfield High teered for Glendale AZ; sister-in-law mer of S chool i n 1 9 6 3 . S h o r t l y t he D r af t s e r v in g i n t h e Patty Brown, close friends 1940, they moved to Hi lls- thereafter, R u ssell j o i n ed A rmy a s a M il i t a r y P o - L yleth W i n t h e r , M ar l a boro. t he U . S . N a v y ser v i n g l iceman. H e w a s a l s o a Hays of Grain Valley, MO, In November 1942, Dan three tours of duty in VietSergeant in the Oregon Air Jim and Elsie McDonell ... n am. A ft er r etu r n i n g National Guard until 1984. and his four cats. joined the Navy. He served on the aircraft carrier USS h ome, he settled i n J o h n After his m i l i tary s ervice, Fred will be laid to rest at Independence du r i ng Day, OR where he met the h e e n t e re d co l l eg e at S unset Hi l l s M emo r i a l WWII. l ove o f h is l i f e , D i a n n P ortland State and i n t h e P ark in Portland in a p r i In 1947 he began his caMiller. On January 9, 1998 s ummers worked at a f i r e vate family service. Donar eer w i t h Pa c i f i c Te l e - t hey w e r e m a r r i e d a n d l ookout i n I da h o ov e r - t ions m a y b e ma d e t o Clackamas County P e ace phone and Telegraph. In shortly t h ereafter, m o v ed looking the Snake River. 1 948, he m a r r ie d D o n n a to Redmond, OR. He started his police caOfficers' Benevolent FounRyan. Together they had 3 Russell w o r k e d i n t he reer as a Deputy at Washdation, PO B ox 678, c hildren. Da n w a s a d e - health care industry for 16 i ngton C o u n t y Sh e r i f f ' s C lackamas, OR 9 7 015 o r v oted father working w i t h D epartment; then a s h o r t Best Friends Animal Sancyears, seven of them at St. his son in th e Boy Scouts C harles M e d i ca l C e n t er , s tay w i t h Or e g o n S t a t e tuary, 5001 Angel Canyon and taking on t h e l e aderBend as a Certified Nurs- Police. The last 18 years of Road, Kanab, Utah ship of a 4H group with his ing Assistant an d p a t ient h is la w e n f o r cement c a R edmond M emor i a l daughter; plus they shared advocate. reer was at the Clackamas Chapel is honored to serve m any b a c k p acking t r i p s R ussell w a s a H ar l e y County Sheriff's Office. the family. Please sign our t ogether. Donna an d D a n D avidson e n t husiast a n d I n 1 9 6 8 , he mar r i e d online g u e s t b ook at later divorced. enjoyed r i di n g every Lyleth Query and i n 1 9 80 www.redmondmemorial.c In 1981, Dan married Pac hance h e g o t . H e al s o h e was married t o K a t h y om t ricia M c D aniel w h o a l s o e njoyed r e ading, d o i ng h ad t h r e e c h i l d r en . T o - c rossword p u z z l es, g a r ether they had a wonderd ening a n d s h a r in g t h e u l lif e t r a v eling i n t h e i r daily "horriblescope" with R V, fi sh i n g , m ovi e s , the love of his life, Diann. c amping, d a ncing, a n d Russell is survived by his b irding. D a n a n d Pa t t y w ife o f 1 7 y e a r s , D i a n n were avid do8 lovers. They Jennings of Redmond, OR; enjoyed training their dogs five sons; seven daughters, i n obedience, agility a n d a b r other; a si s t e r a n d By Sam Roberts media of denigrating undocgoing to many dog shows. many grandchildren. New York Times News Service umented immigrants. They w e r e l o n g standing Russell was pr eceded in Louis Nunez, a champion Louis Felipe Nunez was m embers o f th e M ou n t death by both parents and of educational and econom- born in East Harlem, New Bachelor Kennel Club. one son. D an r e t i re d fr o m th e Memorial co n t r i b utions ic opportunity for Puerto York, on Oct. 31, 1931. His Ricans for more than three father, Miguel, a Peruvian, p hone company i n 1 9 8 5 . i n Russell's memory m a y He enjoyed reading westbe made t o D o e r nbecher decades, died April 30 at his was a cook and grocery store ern novels while l i stening C hildren's H o s p i t al , c / o home in Rockville, Mary- owner. His mother, the forto his favorite music. Doernbecher F o u n dation, land. He was 83. mer Josephine Parmias, was D an w a s a w a r m an d M ail S t o p 4 5 , P . O . B o x The cause was leukemia, a garment worker from Puerg enerous man w h o w e n t 4000, Por t l a n d , OR his daughter Carolyn Ozcan to Rico. o ut of his way t o h elp hi s 97208-9852. Nunez graduated from c hildren an d P a tty's c h i l A utumn Fu n e r al s of said. Since th e mi d -1960s, Morris High School in the d ren. H e p r o v i ded m o r a l R edmond h a s b e e n e n Bronx and City College with and loving support to Patty trusted wit h t h e a r r a nge- Nunez served on New York when she obtained her dements, (541) 5 0 4 - 9485. City's Board of Higher Edu- a degree in business adminwww.autumnfunerals.net cation; as national executive istration and served in the gree in nursing. He is survived by his wife director of Aspira, a leader- Army in Korea from 1953 to P atty, d a u g h te r D i an a ship development and educa- 1956. He married the former Wambaugh, Doug tional counseling agency; as Cecilia Viguie. She survives

ard (Kathryn) Mathisen of Spokane, WA ; g r a n dchild ren, L a u r a Cam p b e l l , A nne Dec k e r , Ch r i s t i M edlyn, A l a n n a Pa r t i n , K aia W a g n er , W hi t n e y Wambaugh (Cathy), Kelly and L a n d r e e M a t h i s en; M cDaniel O l i p hint , M a r k g reat-grandson Ray l a n McDaniel, Michelle Mathisen; her sister, June McDaniel Conger, grandS melser of H il l s b o r o ; s ons R u be n a n d D a n i e l nieces, Kathry n ( G o r don) Wambaugh, granddaughG ipson of M i l w a u ki e a n d ters Breanne and Brittany Linda Gillette of Portland. O liphint, J a m i e C o n g e r , T here w il l b e a p r i v a t e and two g reat-y andchilfamily gathering in lieu of d ren. A ls o s u r v i v in g a r e a service. R e membrances his si sters A n n i e J a r r ell may be sent to D eschutes ( Percy) an d B e tt y A x t e l l , C hildren's F o undation i n p lus m a n y n i e c e s a n d Bend, or P l anned Parentnephews. Beau, hi s f a i thhood. ful dog, also survives. Y ou may v iew t h e c o m He was preceded in death obituar y at by h i s p a r e nt s a n d hi s plete www.ANewTradition.com. daughter, Debbie. T o h o no r D a n , a Ce l ebration o f L i f e w i l l b e held at the Riverhouse on B end on M a y 3 0 t h f r o m 1:00pm to 4:00pm. Contributions, in hi s July6,1956- April13, 2015 n ame, ma y b e ma d e t o W illiam H a l l D i l l o n J r . Pardners in Care, 2075 NE (Bill) age 58, passed away Wyatt Ct, Bend, OR 97701. o n A p ri l 1 3 , 2 0 15 , a f t er s everal y e ars o f f i g h t i n g cancer. H e i s survived by h is tw o sons, Will iam H a l l D illon I I I Death Notices are freeand and Ry an will be run for oneday, but N eil Di l specific guidelines must be l on, as followed. Local obituaries are w ell as paid advertisements submitted v ery d e ar by families or funeral homes. f riends t o Theymay besubmittedby him in the Bill Dillon Jr. Bend, OR, phone, mail, email or fax. The area. Bulletin reserves the right to B ill h a d an am az i n g edit all submissions. Please a rray o f te c h n i cal s k i l l s include contact information in i ncluding c o m puter e n g i all correspondence. neering a n d m ec h a n ics, For information on any of these but hi s t r u e l i g h t s h i n ed services or about the obituary w hile w oodworking . B i l l a lso loved e x p l orin g n a policy, contact 541-617-7825. t ure wh il e s eeking t h r i l l s a nd m e d i t atio n t h r o u g h s kiing, k a y a k i ng , b i k i n g , Phone: 541-617-7825 S CUBA d i v i n g , b o a t i n g , Email: obits©bendbulletin.com and flying. B i l l l o o ked at the w o rl d w i t h c o n s t ant Fax: 541-322-7254 curiosity and wonder. He will be missed by hi s sisters, n i eces, n e p hews, randdaughter, and riends. A memorial service w i l l be h el d a t New H ope Church in Bend, Sat., May 30, at 10:30 a.m., followed with a p i c n i c a t P i o n eer park. P l e as e R S V P t o

ryan.n.dillon®gmail.com if

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The family would like to thank the staff at St. Charles-Redmond ICU/2M floor for their excellent care and tolerance in allowing the devotion to this special man to be displayed by the many visitors.

9w

John is survived by wife, Shirley; son, Gary; daughters, Sandra Kilander and Karen Eide; sisters, Dorothy Fischer and Shirley McDonald, all Ceneal Oregon residents; and sister, Evelyn Arnett of Portland. He was beloved grandpa to eight grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren, and favorite uncle to many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by wife, Helen; and brothers, Sheldon and Richard. Born Aug. 2, 1927, in Pontiac, Michigan, John spent his early years in Alberta, Canada, moved to Newberg, Oregon, and after high school, there he joined the Navy in 1945. He married Helen (Hazzard) in 1947, and worked in sales on the coast and Willamette Valley until moving to Redmond in 1958 to operate the now Redmond Health Care Center.

He loved to ride motorcycles in to hard to reach fishing streams, or just for the camaraderie of the txip with family, and never turned down a chance to get on his CAT and move some dirt. You could be sure to find John any morning but Sunday drinking coffee and solving the world's problems with his buddies at a local restaurant. Sundays were for church and family and he was passionate about taking leadership roles for decades at the Redmond Free Methodist Church. Married to Helen nearly 58 years before her death, John was blessed to find love a second time, and married Shirley Reinesch of Sisters, in 2005. Together they enjoyed travel and visiting family around the West and realized one of his life goals in 2008, by building the Mountain View Fellowship Church. His relationship with God and resulting character and integrity were important to him and influenced the lives of his children, grandchildren and everyone he touched. These are his lasting legacy. John's life will be celebrated Tuesday, May 12, 2015 at 11:00 a.m., at the Mountain View Fellowship, 1475 SW 35th St., Redmond. Optional graveside service following. Viewing will be at Redmond Memorial Chapel Monday, May 11, from 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the Arnett family. Please sign our Online guestbook at www.redmondmemorial.com


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

OSUresearcherssaydogs

Coop Continued from B1 Adding chickens seemed

sickened after visit to forest

like a natural next step after

establishing the

v egetable

garden, Hotvedt said, a way to

By Nathan Bruttell

keep bugs under control and generate a steady supply of

Corvallis Gazette-Times

nutrient-rich manure. As his

CORVALLIS — The Oregon State University Re-

r

backyard farm has expanded, his neighbors have taken no-

search Forests and College of Veterinary Medicine are investigating instances of dogs getting sick after visiting the Oak Creek access

tice and started building their

own gardens and coops. Hotvedt said opening his

Jr

backyard to the public for the

to the McDonald Research Forest.

tour is his way of showing a wider audience what can be

oped an elaborate vision for

orchards, gardens, beehives line and bright orange flags and chicken coops, none of to scare away hawks or other which he'd ever experimented predatory birds. with before. Jack Bridges said he's colHe cut down 53 juniper lecting two dozen eggs a day, trees, put in a greenhouse and most of which are given away irrigated raisedbeds, and with to family and friends. As his the help of a contractor friend, fruit and vegetables come in

in's mother was helping with an elderly woman who was moving from her house in

Yesteryear

Exposedmud gets

Powell Butte to an assisted

better suit Frieda, and though she died last winter, she's sur-

vived by the birds the Chapins have added, a variety of

living facility. Renters spent breeds with names like Devil, a few months living in the Chirpy and Chicken Nugget. house, but when they moved Chapin said her birds largeout, Chapin's mother found ly take care of themselves. built three "townhouses," as and his meat birds mature, he evidence of chickens on the Chapin said her five kids he call sthem, fora flock of50 expects to have far more food property. After a long search, have started selling eggs to chickens and 15 turkeys. than he can eat and intends Chapin and her h usband neighbors, but she'd keep the The bright red townhouses to find a local meals program found a sickly looking hen chickens just for the entertainare climate controlled and in- that can use his surplus. hiding under a board. ment and companionship they "As my wife can tell you, I cludegravity-fed feeders and The surviving chickenprovide. "They're soothing, it's like waterers fashioned from large overdo everything," he said. named Frieda, after the elderPVC pipe. Behind the townFor Tami Chapin, rais- ly woman — came home with you always have a friend," she houses, the Bridges' chickens ing chickens came to her by them, and was given a spot in sard. and turkeys roam a large out- accident. the family's rabbit hutch. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, door pen strung with fishing About four years ago, ChapThe hutch was modified to shammers@bendbullet in.com

and many other millionaires belong. Church emphasized that

Hitler should be brought to trial on treason charges. The

One of the last of the prelim- offer stipulated before the inary steps to be taken before League of Nations, but Church the milling of the Deschutes

said any attempt to deliver the

timber at Bend begins is being taken at the meeting of

Nazi Fuhrer to Geneva would result in that country being

the county court at Prineville

overrun by the German army.

Stated formally, the busi-

try. A court of all the civilized

ness which is before the court this afternoon is a petition that

nations of the world should trysuch a case andtheUnited

"The proper goal would be this afternoon. The nature of the matter adds to the grow- England," he wrote the Times. ing conviction that a large saw " But th e q uestion o f t r i a l mill is to be built here in the would be too big for Great Britnear future. ain or for any other one coun-

people like flytrap Jaycee Phil Hatch and Dennis Frier, 12, were two real stick-in-the-muds for a while

States should be a member of

such a court."

down his walking stick and

Church said Hitler should be heldas the, "common ene-

knelt in the dirt to better ex-

be the thirsty plant.

Garrett, president of the Na-

For the week ending

tive Plant Society of Oregon,

May 9, 1965

led a group of 45 plant enthusiasts recently to "The Island"

Channel deepening to permit better view of water pageant

Harland Buckingham, local

The public will have a better

pharmacist, believes that Cen-

tral Oregon's high desert is a

view of the water pageant this year.

place of many attractions. He

Water pageant committee

insula at Cove Palisades State

Park on Lake Billy Chinook. But it wasn't the discovery of an Antennaria dimorpha or a Sitanlon hystrix that delight-

to widen and deepen the De-

lope, and just to top off the day they watched an airplane land on the Central Oregon highway directly in front of the one

schutes River channel to per- flowing. mit floats to be moved closer to On the drive to the state

rock that really got the blood

the shore-bound audience. A

park, Garrett said that in the

10 years that he has done the island hike he had yet to spot

After securing several gallons of gasoline from W.A. Rahn of Millican, the flier,

channel 15 feet wide and a foot deepwas made. Hugh McNair, p ageant co-chairman, said the boom on which float-pullers operate

whose name was not ascer-

will be 75 feet from the audi-

are plentiful. To the delight — and apprehension — of the hikers, Garrett was forced to eat his

ence. Floats will be pulled to the shore side of the boom. words. Mr. and Mrs. Buckingham They will tie up at the stage to The island was reached were able to locate the ante- permit performers to act. by a steep, rough trail up a lope and deer after followThe river was lowered Fri- rocky hill that should only be ing directions obtained from day to permit channel dredg- attempted by energetic mounRahn. ing operations. Saturday a tain goats. But once the group bulldozer was brought in to

reached the top, a pristine un-

high desert is covered with luxuriant grass.

shovel out the channel. Hopes grazedgrassland came in to the machine would sink only view. "This kind of ground cover a short distance before hitting Million dollars price I don't think you'll see anyfirm ground were in vain. on Hitler Workers moved the bulldoz- where in Central Oregon," said A $1,000,000 price was of- er to solid ground and brought Dave Bishop, a Terrebonne fered by 50 men and women boards on which the machine rancher who came along on today for the capture of Adolf could ride. Both the bulldozer the hike. "To me this is an abHitler, "alive, unwounded and and the boards began sinking, solutely precious area." "At first, I t h ought, 'well, unhurt." Use of the bulldozer was The group was not identi- abandoned in favor of man- hell, if we could just get some fied, but its spokesman, Sam- power. Boy Scouts from troops cows up here to eat the grass,' uel Hardin Church,president 24 and 59 and a number of Thank God we can't." of the Carnegie Institute, pageant committee members The island, managed by the stipulated that the offer was began digging with shovels on BLM and the Crooked RivgoodforMay only because the Sunday. A channel was start- er Grasslands and the U.S. sponsors had received private ed but the going in the soft Forest Service as a Research information that Hitler con- mud was slow. Natural Area, has gained natemplated a "blitzkrieg" on the Workers sunk up to their tionwide notoriety as one of western front soon, even if it hips on at least two different the few places in the state that cost500,000 German lives. occasions. never have been grazed, said Church made the offer in a letter to the New York Times. Church was not available for comment, but his son R.R.

Church said the offer was made in good faith. He said the names of those making the offer were known only to his father but that many

of them were members of the Duquesne Club, to which E.T. Weir, the steel magnet,

The Bend Fire Department was called in. Water was drafted from the river and mud was

single tree fire likely wouldn't have spread.

miles, damming both rivers and back-flowing 2.8 miles

In the natural state, Halv-

up the Deschutes River. This

y)[1 ~

gCW4 r@~fQra

y g'qg +rrtig~ $37,000 raised!

DESCHUTES

A very special thank you to our friends at Deschutes Brewery for going above and beyond as our top sponsor and event partner!

elt1~1988 rsra

00 e

Sponsors

Nlll+

gee

@ Pacificsour ce HEALTH PLANS

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S MO L I C H

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CONMUNITT CEEOIT UNION

Presenters and Performers Tammy Baney, Juan and Selene Zendejas (Radio La Bronca), Conjunto Alegre, Ache Dide, and Danza de los Angelitos. In-Kind Event Sponsors Casa Bay Photography, Deschtjtes Brewery, Duck Pond Wines, Mission Linen, Southern Wine and Spirits, Trader Joe's. Restaurant SponsorsCulinary Club at Cascade Culinary Institute, Chef Cris of Stars Cabaret, Deschutes Brewery, El Sancho, Esta Bien!, Ginger's Kitchenware, Hola!, Jumbo Tamales, Loco Place, Tranquilo MSA Beer.

a rattlesnake but knows they

Bend.

Buckingham said that the

Butte Dam for a t otal flow d istance of m or e t h a n 6 0

by one-fourth mile rocky pen-

and saw 51 deer and four ante-

tained,took offand headed for

Realistically, he added the

which is actually a two-mile

and Mrs. Buckingham drove members and Boy Scouts are ed the hikers. It was spotting a out over the plateau yesterday working over the weekend rattlesnakecowering under a

man town of Millican.

"You don't see too much of

this in grazed areas," Garrett sard.

erson said.

Stuart Garrett carefully laid

amine a clump of pussy paws. "Oh gee, it's so dry this year of the stream for the purpose my of mankind and brought to I'm not going to be able to of transporting and booming justice accordingly." logs, timber and lumber. bloom," he said, pretending to

50 YEARS AGO

cle of grass with rich soil in the middle.

"The island" of natives

of its course above town be declared navigable, and for a

Airplane takesyas at Millican station

"Almost all of our staff have dogs, and we're ex-

Sunday. The Deschutes was In addition to never having e rson estimated that f i r e s intra-canyon flow later was lowered in Mirror Pond for been grazed, over the years would start about every 40 to carved up by the Deschutes dredging operations. Hatch fires on the island have been 50years. and Crooked rivers. The penwent out to assist with the suppressed. As a r e sult, a The 215 acre "island" was insula is a remnant of this inwork when he sank up to his number ofjuniper trees have formed 1.2 million years ago tra-canyon flow. hips in the mud. Barefoot Den- increased dramatically. when a flow of basaltic lava F ounded in P o r tland i n nis helped unstick Hatch. Several years ago one lone- erupted from vents associated 1961, the Native Plant Society ly juniper was hit by a bolt of with Newberry Volcano, more of Oregon has 11 chapters. It lightning. But state park em- than 50 miles south. At times began as a group interested 25 YEARS AGO ployees rushed to the scene the lava flow reached a depth in enjoying native flora but reFor the week ending and extinguished the fire. of almost 400 feet. cently has become a voice for May 9, 1990 Now, however, natural fires The lava traveled to a point the conservation of plants in will be allowed to burn, Halv1 .2 miles north o f R o u nd Oregon.

the Deschutes River for a mile

For the week ending May 9, 1940

forwarded the information.

with OSU Research Forests if other people's dogs have said T h ursday a f t ernoon become sick after being in that more than one dog be- that area or in other areas came sick after recently around Corvallis, they need drinking from muddy water to take their dogs to their vet. in the area. We need to know where and Officials are advising pet when it started." owners to avoid letting their Copies of the email apdogs drink from any public pearing on social media water source at McDonald were posted Thursday to R esearch Forest until a u several trail entrances to thorities can determine the McDonald Research Forreason why the animals be- ests. Several people walking came ill. dogs in the area immediately "Some dogs have become turned around after reading ill in that area after we as- the postings. sume drinking something Amanda Swartz, 19, took but we don't know what it her dog,Ginger, off of the is, and we're waiting to hear trails i mmediately a fter results from the OSU vet learning about the notice. "It's concerning because I school," said Steve Fitzgerald, the director of OSU Re- bring her here all the time," search Forests. Swartz said. "I bring her The College of Veterinary down here three times a Medicine and members of week, and she loves drinking OSU Research Forest were the water and getting in the looking into an email that mud. I'm going to go somecirculated on social media where else because I don't Wednesday and Thursday want her to get sick."

At the other end of the spec-

75 YEARS AGO

pacity, but a concerned dog owner who works there had

tremely c oncerned a bout this," Fitzgerald said. "I ing sick, but representatives think the important thing is

trum are Jack and Michelle Tess Freeman /The Bulletin Bridges. Upon moving in to Jack Bridges shows off his greenhouse to two people touring chicken coops during the Bend Chicken their home on 5 acres east of Coop Tour on Saturday. The tour featured13 different examples of people who raise chickens in Bend. Bend last winter, Jack devel-

contract leasing that portion

that the email was not sent from them in an official ca-

what led to the dogs becom-

space. "I really want to teach people how to garden, and maybe, bringing people through here will help that," he said.

River rights asked of court

that included a tag from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. ODFW representatives said Thursday

It remains unclear as to

done even in a relatively small

Continued from B1

B5

Ron Halverson, BLM botanist and naturalarea coordinator, who did the hike.

literally blasted out to form a Proving this, Garrett pointchannel using a fire hose and ed to several clumps of "olda high pressure nozzle. growth" bunch grass. In the "Ourbiggestconcern was to beginning of its life, the grass get a current running through looks like a normal clump the channel," McNair said. of threadlike grass. But as it "We have done that. I don't ages, the bunch gradually exthink we will have any prob- pands over the ground and lems with it now." dies in the center leaving a cir-

Special thanks to ourGala Planning Committee Jose Balcazar, Fabian Clark, Michelle Cordova, Andres Garcia, Margie Gregory, Christina Grijalva, Deevy Holcomb, Stacy Lawhead, Tony Levison, Julie Newton and Evelia Sandoval, our50+ volunteers, Boys and Girls Club, and ALL 253 guests!!! Event Donors (New" and Renewing~ Amigos)Bruce Abernethy Family", Alfred Aragon Family', Sonia Bialkowsky Family, John Blakinger Family, Deanna and Richard Brinkman Family", Debbie Cole Family', Jane and Greg Custer Family, Amy Davidson Family, Doug Deering Family, Jacob and Lisa Fain Family*, Mari Galeana Family', Hilary and Stuart Garret Family, Natasha Henderson Family", Don and Tina Littlefield Family", Rudy and Katie Lobos-Smolich Family', Isidra MagaPia Family", Elizabeth Marino Family, Vic Martinez Family", Matt Mohill Family, Emily Oller Family', Tim Plummer Family", Bob and Janice Schock Family', St. Charles Foundation*, Jerry Shultz Family', Gena Zerbin Family", Betsy Warriner Family, Kate Wells Family" Silent Auction DonorsAna Torres, Andrew Vijarro, Angelina Organic Skincare, The Astro Lounge, Atlas Cider Co., Barcelona Foods, Bend Pet Express, Bend Pilates, Brasada Ranch, Candy Stafford, Cosas NW, Crater Lake Spirits, Crux Fermentation Project, COCC Manufacturing Students at the Deer Ridge Correctional Facility, Deschutes Brewery, Dapped Earth, Fleet Feet Sports, Footzone of Bend, Gordon Pennock, Grocery Outlet, George Blackman, Hotel El Ganzo, Tiffany Collingwood and Kathy Jura of Headlines Salon, Heal Grow Thrive Acupuncture, The Hideaway Tavern, High Desert Crossfit, The HighDesertMuseum, Jessica de la 0,Karen Roth,Kendra,West, Latin Dance Academy ofBend, Leapin' Lizards Toy Store, Le Col's Soap Bar, Lowes of Redmond, Christina Grijalva, Mazatlan Redmond, Michelle Cordova, Michele English, Miriam Romero, Muddy Paws Bathhouse, Natural Approach Chiropractic, Newport Market, Oxford Hotel, Pine Tavern Restaurant and Bar, Quiltworks, REI Bend,RicDBMarco, Ronde Reeves, Rob Fincham, Sarah Bella Upcycles, Savory Spice Shop, Schade Steel, Sister s Rodeo Association, Smith Martial Arts and Fitness, Robin Allen of Strands Salon, Studio 404 Photography, Southern Wine and Spirits, Sunny Side Sports, Sun Country Tours, Sunriver SHARC, Top Leaf Mate, Tower Theatre, Tumalo Creek and Kayak, Verda Hinkle, Veronica Castro, The Victorian Cafts, West of the Moon, Wanderlust Tours, Wendy and Bill Birnbaum, Worthy Brewing,

TOGilHEIWi lHRIVi The Latino Family Empowerment Centerwillbe arealitythanksto You' „„ , r <o, ~ g (

pt'(i[

]]30 NWHarrimanSt.

Bend, OR 97701 541.382A366

www.latinocommunityassociation.org

tt,)ljtr~


B6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015

l

i

i

'

I

TODAY

ii

TONIGHT

HIGH T2.

EAST: Mostly sunny and mild today.Turning out partly cloudy tonight. Cloudsand sun Monday.

TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 70 37'

Low

63 35'

88' in 1906 14'in 1916

PRECIPITATION

57/48

Cannon 73/ Tigamo • N/47 Mc innviff

mostly sunnytoday. Turning out mostly Lincoln cloudy tonight; a 58/47 shower. Acouple of Newpo showers Monday. 56/48

72/

High: 88' at Corvallis Low: 27'

May25 Jun2

Tentght'sstttn Brilliant Jupiter and Venus high abovethe western horizon before midnight.

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 65/46/0.00 61/47/c 57/47/sh Baker City 70/35/0.00 73/37/s 66/39/pc Brookings 55/48/0.00 60/48/c 57/44/c Bums 72/34/0.00 71/39/s 68/33/pc Eugene 81/40/0.00 71/47/pc 57/42/sh Klamath Fags 71/30/0.00 72/41/pc 55/30/sh Lakeview 68/28/0.00 74/39/s 63/33/sh

POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ee s Moderate Moderate

Gra n

Wee d s A b sent

tario

3/ 4 6

7 46

74/ City L a Grande L a Pine Me d ford N e wport 5 N orth Bend Ontario P endleton

72/38

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen

69/42

72/42

• Burns Jun tion • 72/42

• Paisley 73/42

Rome 73/43

• Lakeview

72/41

McDermi

74/39

73/41

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W

city

72/ 34/0.00 74/42/s 66/43/pc Portland 83/4 9/0.0073/52/pc 60/49/sh 67/28/0.00 70/42/s 52/30/sh Prinevige 71/ 28/0.0074/42/s 52/30/ sh 84/4 6 /0.00 79/49/pc 65/41/sh Redmond 74/ 27/0.0074/41/s 57/29/sh 7/43 /0.00 56/48/c 54/44/sh Roseburg 85/ 4 7/0.0074/50/pc 62/44/ c 6 1 / 52/0.00 60/49/c 57/45/sh Salem 84/46/0.00 72/48/pc 57/44/sh 80/47/0.00 76/46/s 76/52/pc Sisters 71/28/0.00 74/43/s 58/31/sh 74/ 3 9/0.00 78/51/s 68/44/pc The Dages 8 5 /42/0.00 82/56/s 67/48/c

Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

~ tgs ~gs

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

Acr e feet 490 8 1

eU 3/36

oay

• P a lina 7

Chr i stmas alley

Klamath • Fage

• Ashl nd

Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577

Reservoir C rane Prairie

• Silver Lake 70/42 72/df Chiloquin Medfo d '73742 •

Beaver Marsh

Yesterday Today Monday

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

73/37

• John

Cresce t • 72/42 N/41

Roseburg 74/50

city

The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrm IIY Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protscgon.0-2 Low,

74/42

'Baker C

60/

5

T4/45

• Prineville

«

• • 71/40

Granitee 70/35 '

• Mitch II

n

Bro ings

2 p .m. 4 p .m.

I

73/43

57/

UV INDEX TODAY ~ 7

R

~ gs

~ t g s ~ 2 gs ~ sgs ~ dgs ~ 5gs ~ egs ~ 708 ~ ags ~ 9gs ~tggs ~ttgs

Ca p acity NATIONAL

Celue

Wickiup 168775 Crescent Lake 7 4 9 00 Ochoco Reservoir 31735 Prinevige 112362 7695 River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 320 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1715 Deschutes R.below Bend 85 Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 1960 Little Deschutes near LaPine 96 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 29 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 25 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 275 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 79 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 15

SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday

Ski resort New snow Base 0 3-70 Mt. Bachelor M t. Hood Meadows 0 g-0 0-54 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen I Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 0-0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Source: OnTheSnow.com

i

es/29

89% EXTREMES 84% YESTERDAY(for the 86% 48 contiguous states) , 72vo National high: tgg

, '„"

p

Portland 73/52

es/4

• 1 nipe u T nderBay

tf/so

aismarck ~~i ajfo~ Qgvr

i 4 3/31 d d d d 0 x xx c d d d t x d d S

,:e Toronto < /SS

e

Today Monday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 93/65/0.01 Akron 88/63/0.00 Albany 81/61/0.00 Albuquerque 61/45/Tr Anchorage 58/43/0.13 Atlanta 85/69/0.00 Atlantic City 69/59/0.06 Austin 86/69/Tr Baltimore 81/58/0.01 Billings 44/37/0.12 Birmingham 88/64/0.00 Bismarck 47/37/0.00 Boise 76/45/0.00 Boston 71/46/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 59/52/0.00 Buffalo 89/64/0.03 Burlington, VT 86/63/0.00 Caribou, ME 60/40/0.03 Charleston, SC 83/66/0.02 Charlotte 84/60/Tr Chattanooga 88/62/0.00 Cheyenne 43/41/2.45 Chicago 64/52/0.27 Cincinnati 86/63/Tr Cleveland 88/61/0.00 ColoradoSprings 55/45/0.83 Columbia, MO 71/59/0.12 Columbia, SC 87/66/0.01 Columbus,GA 89/64/0.00 Columbus,OH 87/62/0.01 Concord, NH 81/43/0.00 Corpus Christi 87n7/0.00 Dallas 82/69/0.04 Dayton 86/66/0.01 Denver 51/40/0.46 Des Moines 75/53/0.00 Detroit 83/60/Tr Duluth 52/41/0.00 El Paso 77/62/0.00 Fairbanks 63/46/0.00 Fargo 55/30/0.00 Flagstaff 44/25/0.31 Grand Rapids 69/62/0.41 Green Bay 63/49/0.00 Greensboro 80/62/Tr Harrisburg 78/59/0.00 Harfford, CT 80/52/0.00 Helena 63/34/0.00 Honolulu 82/71/0.02 Houston 87n6/0.00 Huntsville 91/64/Tr Indianapolis 80/66/0.05 Jackson, MS 86/66/Tr Jacksonville 89/62/0.00

Hi/Lo/W 79/58/t 86/66/1 87/64/1 68/44/pc 57/39/pc 88/69/pc 75/65/pc 85/66/1 82/63/pc 52/31/c 90/66/pc 43/31/r 74/51/s 79/64/pc 77/60/pc 82/63/t 79/54/t 65/40/sh 80/69/sh 83/63/pc 88/65/pc 34/24/sn 65/53/1 84/65/1 82/64/t 46/30/sn 80/58/1 87/65/pc 91/67/pc 85/64/1 86/61/pc 85/76/c 75/63/t 85/66/1 43/27/sn 75/49/1 76/62/t 47/36/r 79/54/s 62/39/r 49/37/r 59/28/pc 68/52/t 55/48/1 79/63/pc 84/64/pc 87/63/pc 62/32/s 82/70/pc 86/72/c 88/66/pc 84/66/1 89/67/s 90/68/s

Hi/Lo/W 72/55/s 85/61/1 85/65/sh 73/50/s 57/40/pc 89/69/1 74/66/1 83/65/1 84/63/t 62/39/pc 88/67/pc 47/24/r 75/49/pc 68/53/1 76/60/1 79/58/1 65/57/sh 62/42/pc 86/70/t 87/66/1 90/65/t 43/30/pc 71/48/1 81/56/1 86/58/t 56/35/s 70/48/1 89/67/s 91/67/s 85/59/1 67/47/sh 84/73/t 75/57/t 84/57/1 52/36/pc 63/45/c 82/56/t 44/34/r 85/63/s 63/40/c 46/35/r 66/34/s 76/49/1 68/46/t 86/66/t 83/64/1 85/63/1 65/40/pc 82/69/pc 86/70/t 89/65/1 79/53/1 87/67/t 91/68/s

Amsterdam Athens

65/52/s 77/62/pc 65/54/pc 98/71/s 93/81/1 54/49/r 75/65/pc 61/42/sh 68/50/t 72/46/t 65/54/pc 89/64/s 89/69/s 63/29/1 89/75/s 60/48/pc 59/49/c 73/48/s 75/55/pc 89/78/t 68/55/s 78/55/s 72/50/pc 77/66/pc 82/61/s 66/55/pc 87/57/pc 91/81/t

72/53/s 75/61/s 66/57/s 102/69/s 95/81/t 69/51/pc 77/66/c 70/55/s 69/49/c 70/43/sh 65/57/pc 90/67/s 90/66/s 59/32/s

Mostly cloudy

Yesterday Today Monday

City

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

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 56/46/0.35 58/43/sh 60/42/pc 73/56/Tr 76/46/t 65/42/c 73/60/0.07 72/52/1 79/49/t

75/52/0.00 87/60/0.00 69/51/0.00 79/67/0.96 69/55/0.00 86/67/0.46 69/55/0.00 84/68/1.16 88/71/0.00 51/46/0.23 69/44/0.00

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.P Photos by John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin

A sculpted heron stands guard over awetland in the Oregon Garden near Silverton. Built in 1999 bythe Oregon Association of Nurseries, the property's 20 individual gardens occupy 80acres nurtured by recycled treatment-plant wastewater.

• There are many in Oregon, andnow is agreat time to seethem

ir.

By John Gottberg AndersoneFor The Bulletin

PORTLAND — It's Mother's Day. I hope you gave a dozen roses to your mother — or to the mother of your children. i

If you were in Portland right now, you could

If y ou're in the Salem area, Silverton is home

stroll through the International Rose Test Gar- t o the 80-acre Oregon Garden. In the same vi-

den and get a pretty good idea of the variety of cinity are the Adelman Peony Gardens and roses from which to choose. Established in 1917, Schreiner's Iris Gardens, both of which are at the 4t/2-acre Washington Park garden is the t oldest test garden in the United

h e i r p eaksinMayandearly June.

States, boasting more than 7,000 NPRTHWEg TRAQEL bushesof550varieties.

te

May, Juneand July areprime

AndtheRose TestGardenisn't N e x t w eek: Channellslands ti me for roses, the sweet-smellNational Park ing flower that has led Portland land or the fertile Willamette to become known as the Rose Valley. Not by a longshot. Between the first C i t y . The annual Portland Rose Festival has

the only colorful garden in Port-

peeks of crocuses and daffodils in the spring, been anintegralpart of citylife sinceit was first and the last gasp of bright orange pumpkins held in 1907. This year's festival is scheduled to

i r'.,

in the autumn, the landscape bursts with color. b e g in on May 22, with its signature Grand Flo-

f

Even in the rainy days of winter, various shades ral Parade climaxing the celebration June 6. of evergreen contribute an emerald glow. By that time, Portland will k now w hich The Portland Japanese Garden and the Lan

.r.'

Y

ri

b l o om has been judged its best overall rose of

Su Yuen Chinese garden are cultural icons. 2015.Inrecentyears,yellowhasbeenafavorite The Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden of judges and visiting flower lovers. The Sparin southeast Portland is spectacular in spring. kle and Shine (2014), Monkey Business (2012) Peninsula Park, the Leach Botanical Garden andWalkingonSunshine(2011) rosesallshare Seemingly aflame, a Japanese maple is a spectacular sight in the Crystal Springs Rhododendron and Elk Rock Garden of the Bishop's Close are a similar golden color. Garden near Reed College. While rhodies and azaleas bloom in spring, a variety of other plants add all worth visits. SeeGardens/C4 color to the banks of agood-sized lake.

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

M II ESTON~+ ~

L7

Formsforengogementw,eddinga,nniversary orbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatbendbuiietinconvmiiestones F.onnsand photos must b e submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestones®bendbulletirLcom, 541-633-2117.

MARRIAGES

ANNIVERSARIES

Jerry and Ruth Harris

Harris

lez, of Aliso Viejo, California, and two grandchildren.

Jerry and Ruth H a r ris,

M r. H a r ri s

r e t i red i n

of Redmond, will celebrate 2002. He enjoys walking, their 50th wedding anni- c rossword p u z zles a n d versary in June in Maui, traveling. Hawaii. The couple were married

M rs. Harris r e tired i n

2002. She enjoys walkMay 29, 1965, in Gresham. ing, hiking, reading and They have two children, traveling. Paul of Tampa, Florida, and They have lived in RedKaleen (and Raul) Gonza- mond for nine years.

Erica Brabeck and Alex Fitch

Brabeck — Fitch

is director of internship de-

Erica Brabeck and Alex Fitch, both of Portland, were married Feb.28 at the Lake

Mutual.

velopment at Northwestern

Grove Presbyterian Church in Lake Oswego. The bride is the daughter of Dan and Gigi Brabeck, of

The groom is the son of Ed and Susan Fitch, of Redmond. He is a 2008 graduate of R edmond High School and a 2012 graduate of Linfield College, where

Tualatin. She is a 2008 grad-

he earned a bachelor's de-

I• /

uate of Tualatin High School gree in finance. He works and a 2011 graduate of Pa- in investment operations at cific L utheran U n iversity,

Kit and Naomi (O'Neal) Hall

Northwestern Mutual.

where she earned a bacheThe couple honeymooned lor's degree in English liter- in Cancun, Mexico. They ature and global studies. She

Hall

He is a member of the Shalom

ENGAGEMENTS

ewy

ls

g

L.» g

St. Charles Health System.

will settle in Portland.

Kit and Naomi (O'Neal) Hall, of Bend, will celebrate

Bayit Jewish congregation

their 40th wedding anniversary with a train trip to Glacier National Park. The couple were married May 25, 1975, in Dutch Flat,

Chaplains. He enjoys fly fishing, hiking and white water rafting. Mrs. Hall is a seamstress, baker and counselor. She is a

California, overlooking the gold rush hydraulic mining digs. Naomi hand sewed the groom's embroidered shirt and her wedding dress. They have two children, Elisa (and Von) Trullinger, of Albuquer-

board member of the Shalom

and the Association of Jewish

Bayit Jewish Congregation. She taught school in Alfalfa, worked as a registered nurse for St. Charles Health

System and worked for several sewing stores in Bend.

She enjoys walking her dogs and spending time with her B ar, C alifornia, a n d fi v e grandchildren. grandchildren. The couple have lived in Mr. Hall is a chaplain for Bend for 38 years. que, New Mexico, and Ann

(and Matt) Cavin of Somes e

'+>.;;:: •:'~w t

Lana (Norwood) and Richard Williams Elizabeth Voiles and Josh Deininger

Voiles — Deininger Elizabeth

V o i le s an d

Joshua Deininger, both of Seattle, plan to marry Aug. 20 at Discovery Christian Church in Bend. A reception will follow at Armature in Bend.

The groom is the son of Daniel a n d V a lerie Deininger, of Helena, Montana. He is a 2006 gradu-

ate of Helena High School in Helena, Montana,and a 2010 graduate of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, where he earned a bach-

The bride is the daughter elor's degree in fine arts in of David and Jeanne Voiles, dance performance. He is a of Bend. She is a 2006 grad- professional freelance ballet uate of Summit High School dancer and teacher. and attended Cornish ColThe couple will honeylege of the Arts in Seattle. m oon on a c r u ise in t h e She isa professional free- Mexican Riviera. They will lance ballerina. settle in Seattle.

Williams

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after graduating from high school. He retired in 1988

Richard L. and Lana L.

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after 38 years. He moved

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(Norwood) Williams, of his family to Bend in 1969. Bend, celebrated their 62nd He has traveled throughout anniversary with a celebration dinner March 1 at their

C entral Oregon w it h

the

Dick Williams Band, perdaughter's home in Bend. forming for seniors with T he couple w ere m a r - singing and banjo playing. r ied M a rc h 1 , 1 9 53, i n Mrs. Williams worked for Newton, Iowa. They have many years in the Medicare t wo

chi l d r en ,

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Mar c i e Department for St. Charles

Cutter and L eana Geraghty, both of Bend; three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

Health System, first when

M r. W i l l iams w en t t o work for the U.S. Postal Ser-

tired in 1977.

vice in Powell, Wyoming,

the hospital was located in downtown Bend and later at

its current location. She reThe couple have lived in Bend for 46 years.

Self-awarenessleadsto self-assuredness Find It All Online

By Barton Goldsmith

of talking yourself out of going the day and spend most mornon dates, then you could train ings in front of the computer Knowing who you are is key yourself to say yes, instead of doing just that. If I am on a tight to overcoming life's difficul- saying you'll think about it, deadline because of appointties. Self-awareness is an awe- when someone asks you out. ments with clients, and I know some force when it comes to K nowing how you w i l l that I may need to write again dealing with the world and its r espond is a b i g p art o f in the evening, I may feel some inhabitants. When you know self-awareness, which l eads anxiety all day long, which also what works for you and what to self -assuredness. Knowing keeps me frombeingas present doesn't, and you understand who you are by knowing your as Ishould be forthose people how to make your life count responses (not reactions) to who need me. To combat this, I for something, then you have life's obstacle course simply get up a little earlier and make the power to never be a victim helps you get through difficult sure that I'm done writing beagain — ever. things more gracefully. foreIhave to leave forthe ofAre you a person who can If you don't know what you fice. Sometimes tweaking your overcome your problems, or do want to do with your life at the day to make it work a little betyour problems take over your moment, begin by looking at ter for you can be that simple. life most of the time? Having what you've done before that's Try looking at your own schedthat awareness gives you a m ade you feelgood aboutyour- ule to see how you can make it starting point from which you self, and start creating a list of work better for you. Self-awareness is a process can make the strides necessary things that might make you feel to better deal with the issues of that way again. that can take many years to acSelf-awareness is also about quire, so don't think it's someeveryday life. You can begin by looking at your current ability knowing other people's bound- thing you can attain by reading to cope and then set a goal for aries and limitations. This is one column. There are many howyou would like to be. important because you may fine resources out there that Most of the time when we judge yourself by the behavior can teachyou much more, but feelinsecure, it's because we of others, especially if they can the real knowledge lies within don't know how we will react do something you can't and you.

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in an upcoming situation that is

causing us some anxiety. One

vice versa.

Being aware of when you are at your best can be helpful. list of responses to common Some people are night owls, triggers for your insecurity. For and others are morning larks. I example, if you have a pattern know that I write best early in of the tricks here is to have a

— Dr. Barton Goldsmith, a psychotherapistin Westlake Village,California, is the author of "The Happy Couple: How toMake Happiness a Habit One Little Loving Thing at a Time."

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The Bulletin MI LESTONES

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

In ina,a i ema e estwa to in ceanairan uiet By Stuart Leavenworth Tribune News Service

RONGJIANG, C h i na

On the third day of cycling through therice terraces and

rugged hillsides of southeastern Guizhou province, our group of eight needed a recharge. So we unsaddled in front of a store in Guochuan, a town we'd never heard of

before. As we expected, the store w as stocked m a inly

with

snacks and instant noodles. "Any restaurants in town?" we asked the shopkeeper. "No,"

she said. But after some minor bargaining, she agreed to make rice and was soon pick-

ing greens from her garden, while encouraging neighbors

Recently picked greens dry on sticks along a street in Zengchong,

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Guizhou province, China. People in this remote part of China pickle such greens and then use them as a staple food throughout

the year.

to contribute. Within 40 m i nutes, pick-

led fish were on the grill, and steaming plates of stir-fried According to China's Na- end dedicated to caring for salt pork and greens had been tional Library, this Dong the graves of one's elders. laid out. Kids from neighbordrum tower is the oldest of its Over a post-dinner drink, ing houses came out to gawk Photos by Stuart Leavenworth/Tribune News Service kind in China, built more than I started chatting with him, at the laowai — foreigners. It Jason Elder, right, bicycles down a mountain road near Rongjiang in Guizhou province, China. Behind 300 years ago. Back in their relating (in my rudimentary appeared to be the first time him is Bruce Foreman, who leads bicycle tours in Guizhou and other remote parts of southern China. heyday, villagers constructed Chinese) that I was a journalthey'd seen such oddballs besuch drum towers to spot and ist from the United States. Ofdecked in bike gear, eating warn of approaching enemies. ten such a disclosure makes Chinese food while sitting on group arrived by train from well was about 100 meters in The evening ended with a In Zengchong, the drum Chinese people nervous, but tiny stools. Hong Kong; others (including the other direction. sampling of homemade rice tower now serves as a com- his response surprised me. Getting off the beaten track this correspondent) flew into After a sponge bath at the wine. After that, it was a hard munity g a thering p o i nt. He said that th e U n ited is not as easy as it once was in a new airport in Guiyang, the well, I returned to the farmbut short sleep upstairs, with a There is a fire that burns con- States was a good friend of China. Highways, air routes provincial capitaL From there house, where people were rooster alarm clock at roughly tinually at its base, watched China, and that he had read and high-speed trains pen- we were whisked to Rongji- sitting around an open fire, 3 a.m. — the beasts crowing and kept by a rotation of el- several books about how U.S. etrate nearly every c o rner ang, three hours east of Gui- drinking warm beer and forseveralhours afterward. ders. In a nearby square, tod- forces helped his country of the country. Even harder yang, on a new four-lane toll watching Wang Fang prepare Our third night, after andlers scooted around on tri- defeat the Japanese during is finding clean air, verdant road that passed through dinner. A few minutes later, other long day of r i ding, cycles, watched over by shop- World War II. Given the frosty scenery and intact villages. more than 50 tunnels, some while sitting on low stools, we brought a highlight of the keepers and clientele of local state of U.S.-Chinese relations Guizhou, in southern China, more than two miles long. dined on tofu, rice, stir-fried trip — Zengchong, a old Dong noodle joints. these days, his appreciation of "Guizhou is s t il l r e mote, greens, soup and country ba- town on the horseshoe of a offers all three. That night, back at the ho- history impressed me. A long weekend cycling but that is changing fast," said con. We also enjoyed some small river. After checking in tel, I met a young family — a We clinked glasses, smiled through villages of the Miao Bruce Foreman, an Australian stir-fried houttuynia (called to our hotel, we meandered Guizhou government official and toasted our shared bonds. and the Dong people, two of who organized our bike tour. yu xing cao in Chinese), a across an ornate bridge and and his wife and baby. They Privately, I gave thanks to China's 50-plus ethnic groups, "In a fewyears you'll be able to crunchy root vegetable we through alleyways to a spec- were back in their home vil- those serendipitous moments was a reminder that, amid ride for days here on nothing had sampled during our first t acular drum t ower i n t h e lage for the "tomb sweeping" that come when one opts for town's center. China's economic boom, there but paved roads." night in Rongjiang. holiday, an annual long week- the road less traveled. are still rural areas that are Based in Hong Kong, Foreachingly poor, occupied by man runs Bikeaways (www. proud people trying to pre- bikeaways.com), a tour com• Decorative e CIOCks WALLS TABLE serve some of their culture. pany that specializes in twoCrosses Both the Miao and the Dong wheeled adventures. For our WALL a TABLE • Men's Resin are known for their elegant five-day trip, we were supCategories Listed 5 Ceramlc Decor weavings and embroidery, ported by two vans, eight e NIFIOFS WALL a TABLE DOES NOT INCLUDESEASONALDFPARTMENT wALL a TABLE including indigo-dyed tunics high-quality mountain bikes, • Decoratlve Spheres • Birdhouses with elaborate geometric pat- a mechanic, a driver and the 8 Wind Chimes terns, butterflies and o ther wonderful Wang Fang. Fore• Adhesive Vinyl Wall Art motifs. We saw them nearly man arranged for basic hotel • Polyresin 8 Pottery • Lamps 8 lampshades everywhere on this trip. accommodations on every Decor Sale One of our guides, Wang night except for the second • Candles.Flameless LED Candles. FEATURING RNIALS, • Ceramic Decor Sale CANDLEHOLDERS, BOXES a BOWlS Fang, bridged both cultures. one, when we stayed in a Miao Fragrance Warmers 8 Diffusers FFATURING TABLETOP DECOR, PlATES, INCLUDES FLORAL PlANTERS, VASES ssaVING DISHES,PITCHEI% CUss, SALT ITEMS PRICED ss.99 & UP a OTHER POLYRESIN a POTTERY DECOR Her mother is Miao, her father farmhouse. a pEppER AND QTHER cERAMlc DEcoR DOES NOTrrvr2UDE CANDlE FX~, TEAVGHTs, DOESrvOTINCLUDE Dong. Wang said there are The Miao — related to the VOTrvss, VALUEP4CKs ORFRAGRANCEWAX & OILS DECORATIVEDRAWERPuus • Pillows, Rugs & Throws many differences between the Hmong of Vietnam and Laos /

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is where they choose to live. "Dong people like to live near the river," she said. "Miao

people like to live in the mountains." Asked why the Miao build their villages on such remote hilltops, Wang replied, "I think they want to watch for their enemies."

— tend to live in fir-framed houses built on posts, with liv-

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

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L A delicate rose rises above 4t/z acres of beds at Portland's International Rose Test Garden. The oldest test garden in the United States, the Washington Park garden displays more than 7,000 bushes of 550 varieties.

Barb Gonzalez/For The Bulletin

Visitors enter the Portland Japanese Garden in Washington Park. The 5t/z-acre garden,considered the most historically genuine outside of Japan, was commissioned by the city to bridge the East-West gap with a sister city.

through windows, doors and elaborateginkgo-wood lattice screens assure that a visitor's perspective is constantly

changing. From a two-story teahouse

I u

called the Tower of Cosmic

Reflections, a garden panorama takes in 500 tons of imported limestone, meticu-

louslyarranged to resemble small mountains. Waterfalls

it i,

a

A couple stroll across an ornate bridge in Chinatown's Garden of the Awakening Orchid, as Lan Su Yuan is known in English. Designed and built by artisans from Suzhou, China, the garden gives Portland an inner-city oasis of beauty and serenity.

t umble through r ocks a n d stunted pines into Zither Lake,

where zi agzag bridge leadsto a pavilion that frames the full

moon. All of the garden's nine buildings carry the Chinese

-,z-» c

Gardens

visitors is th e

S hakespeare

symbols for health, wealth,

Garden, featuring flowers, longlife, virtue and happiness, Continued from C1 trees and herbs mentioned baked into their roof tiles. You'll find them in the Rose in the plays of circa-1600 Adult admission is $9.50. Test Garden along with such playwright William ShakeFree 45-minute public tours other winners as the fragrant speare. On a memorial wall, are offeredseveral times daiwhite Sugar Moon (2013), the surrounded by roses named ly and frequently end at the creamy-pink Dick Clark (2011) for the Bard's characters, is A two-story teahouse known as the Tower of Cosmic Reflections rises behind Zither Lake in the heart teahouse, where a menu of and th e o r a nge-and-golda plaque with the image of of Lan Su Yuan, Portland's classical Chinese garden. Occupying a city block, the garden features teas and light Chinese foods is Strike It Rich hybrid (2010). Shakespeare and this quote: quiet courtyards and picturesque pavilions. offered.Among many books Other past award w i n ners "Of all flowers, methinks a for sale in the Garden Shop is "Listen to the Fragrance," an also carry unusual names, rose is best." such as Wild Blue Yonder, There's no admi s sion Tono and opened in 1967. to the Flat Garden, which rep- garden, known as Lan Su interpretation of the design Rainbow Sorbet and G i rls' charge to visit the Rose Test Five complementary styles resents the four seasons and Yuan, is located in the heart philosophy behind Chinese Night Out. Garden, although parking of traditional gardens consti- is best-viewed from a central of the city's Chinatown. The gardens. Judges rate the roses based might be hard t o f i nd. It 's tute the Japanese Garden. Vis- pavilion. A century-old cher- Chinese name translates to You can also learn to play upon 11 attributes. As reported worth it, though: The view of itors walk beneath a wisteria ry tree symbolizes spring; "Garden of the Awakening Or- Chinese games such as mah on the garden's website, these s now-covered Mount H o o d arbor and past a five-tiered cooling rocks, summer; a vine chid." Built in 1999 and 2000 jong and go, take part in tradiinclude the attractiveness and rising b eyond P o rtland's pagoda to enter the Stroll- maple, fall; and a pine tree, through a partnership be- tional fitness classes, or attend abundance of its blooms, its d owntown s k y l i ne , w it h ing Pond Garden. A curving winter. tween Portland and Suzhou, lectures and demonstrations proportion of foliage, its fra- scores of roses inthe fore- Moon Bridge crosses a long Adult admission is $9.50. its Chinese sister city, the gar- of Chinese food and medigrance, its hardiness and its ground, is hard to beat. water feature, populated with Guided toursare offered three den is an inner-city oasis of cine, music and calligraphy. resistance to disease. In the adjacent Rose Garden koi fish, to reach the Tea Gar- times daily for no additional beauty and serenity, ringed by Continuing through May 31, the "Impressions of China" Spring arrived early this Store, you might not find Sug- den. At its heart stands a tradi- charge. There's a little gar- tall buildings. W ell-known for i t s c o m - photography exhibition showyear, so sections of the garden ar Moon or Monkey Business, tional tea house, a "chashitsu," den shop that stocks books are already in full bloom. But but you will view a great deal where monthly ceremonies on such topics as "ikebana," pact, intricate urban gardens, cases the work of 13 American most roses won't truly burst of rose-themed merchandise, are performed. The cherry the artof Japanese flower ar- Suzhou sent designers and artists who took part in a culout until next month. They from silk flowers to rose-pat- trees and azalea plants of ranging, and traditional tea artisans to Oregon to build an tural exchange program early will blossom into October. terned tea sets. Proceeds spring give way to flamboyant ceremonies. authentic Ming Dynasty gar- last year. One plot that is already from sales benefit gardens irises in summer and to laceOne art exhibit in the garden that occupies a city block. Continued next page showing its colors is the Roy- and urban youth recreation leaf maples, their leaves glow- den's Pavilion Gallery has just Walkways lead through keyal Rosarian Garden, which programs. ing orange and red, in fall. come to a close, but anotherholelike portals, into q uiet displays the namesake roses Uneven stone walkways "Kizuna: The Rebirth of Ma- courtyards and p a vilions Garden ofthe "prime ministers" ofthe Japanese and a zigzag bridge open into shiko Ceramics" — will run with such poetic names as TOUCHMARK Order of Royal Rosarians, a A short walk uphill is the the Natural Garden, where from June 6 through July 5. "Painted Boat in Misty Rain" SlNCE 1980 civic group that has served as 5t/z-acre Portland Japanese delicate camellias, azaleas The exhibit will highlight the and "Celestial House of Perofficial greeters and goodwill Garden, widely considered to a nd rhododendrons are i n resilience of the historic pot- meating Fragrance." Views ambassadorsfor the city of be the most historically genu- blossom. Many visitors choose tery town of Mashiko, where Portland since 1912. ine outside of Japan. Commis- to linger in this area, which a rtists regrouped after t h e www.AgateBeaehMotel.som Elsewhere, gardeners are sioned by the Portland City feels wilder than others. It devastation of the 2011 earthPrivate,vintage,oceanfront getaway. tending dainty miniature blos- Council to bridge the East- leads into the Sand and Stone quake to rebuild their kilns N wport, O~R soms as small as one-half inch West gap with its sister city of Garden, a dry landscape of and carry on their traditions. 1 0' ' 755-- 7 4 in diameter, and flourishing Sapporo, the garden was built stark gray rocks rising above giants up to 8 inches across. over four years by Japanese carefully raked white pebbles. Chinese Garden •3 A perennial favorite of garden landscape architect Takuma From there, stone stairs climb Portland's classical Chinese

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Visit our retail shoppe at19883 8th St. (Red building at Tumalo Mall, off Hwy 20, turn east at Cook) Next toCIRCLE OF FRIENDS ART GALLERY, TUMALO MALL Open M-W-F 10-4pm S a t . by appointment


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN C 5

~ g. •

Q M~gz

John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin

Elk Rock Garden of the Bishop's Close provides a tranquil spot for a visitor. Overlooking the Willamette River, the13-acre garden

Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin

Rhododendrons in full spring bloom frame a mother and her two children crossing a stream in the Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden. In mid-May, more than 2,500 rhodies and azaleas blossom across the 9t/z-acre grounds.

From previous page

ry and numerous other native

Crystal Springs

and rare plants. Trees include

surrounds the headquarters of the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon.

On the opposite end of the grounds is the only publicly accessible, Frank Lloyd W right-designed house i n

ancient ginkgo and dawn Far too often overlooked is redwood, as well as giant sethe Crystal Springs Rhodo- quoia, maple, birch, cypress, dendron Garden, just across cedar, fir, yew, sassafras and Southeast 28th Avenue from madrone. There is an exquisite Reed College. Mother's Day terrace garden, a large rock falls in the heart of its most garden, lily ponds, a landcolorful season, when more scaped watercourse fed by a than 2,500 rhododendrons natural spring and a formal and azaleas blossom across boxwood-hedged terrace. the 9'/z-acre grounds. Many of

these flowers are rarely seen Visitors pay $4 to walk through the entrance gate and down a ramp or a set of steps to a curving bridge, which crossesawaterfall-fed stream. A good-sized lake is a yearround home to colonies of wa-

terfowl and other birds; nearly 100 species have been seen

here, according to garden literature. Japanese maples, sourwood trees, fothergilla (witch alder) and many other plants add year-round color. If you happen to be in Portland today, you'll find the biggest rhody show of the year taking place at Crystal Springs between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.

horizontal style, with 12-foot,

floor-to-ceiling living room windows that bring the outside environment indoors. Completed in

the American Rhododendron Society oversees a second garden, the Cecil and Molly Smith Garden, near the Marion County village of St. Paul, between Newberg and

features more than 20 indigarden to the Alaskan weep- vidual gardens, presenting ing cypresses of its conifer samples of N o rthwest and display, the Oregon Garden Willamette Valley landscapes,

GO

O REG O N

, Northwest

' Oregon Gardens

Its stone pillars and brickwork, l antern-style street lights and century-old fountain attest to the historical fla-

Northwest plants, with more than 2,000 species. The vari-

ous habitats represented here include a sunny lava-rock garden, a shade-tolerant medici-

nal garden, groves of barberries and woodland lilies and a moist woodland environment.

There's also an e xtensive home-composting demonstration center.

Overlooking the Willamette River in the exclusive southend Dunthorpe neighborhood, the Elk Rock Garden of the

Bishop's Close surrounds the headquarters of the Episcopal Diocese of Oregon. The 13acre estate was built in 1914 by merchant Peter Kerr, who

recruited New York landscape architect John Olmsted to lay out the property.

Kerr then created his personal garden. Today it appears much as it did in 1957, when

Kerr died at age 95 and his d aughters donated it to t h e

church. Around the property are 35 flowering magnolia trees, numerous varieties of witch hazel, wisteria, mulber-

moved it 21 miles to its current site in 2001. It was listed on the Nation-

al Register of Historic Places drought-tolerant plants and three years later.Tours of 45 ornamental shrubbery. One minutes, beginning hourly garden displays pet-safe foli- from noon to 2 p.m., are priced age; another beckons children at $15. to make botanical discover— Reporter: janderson@ ies. In a sprawling oak grove bendbulletin.com stands a white oak determined to be more than 400 years old. Horticulture manager

HUMRNC SOCIGY OF CCNTRRLORCGON/SPCR 6 1170 S.C. 27th St. BEND ~s (541) 38R-3531

.

any month is a good time to visit the Oregon Garden, "but ber," she said. eYou have the

park between 1909 and 1913.

The garden emphasizes native

raze the building, the Frank Lloyd Wright Conservancy

I would definitely come to the garden in August or Septem-

three other small gardens in various parts of Portland. North o f Ki l l ingsworth Avenue, Peninsula Park was designed as a neighborhood

well-known amateur botanist.

por<ia

Area of detail

Admission is free to enter

was

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Chad is a handsome 5 t/sar old shorthairsd cat looking for the psrfsct homs to settls down in. He reallt/ would do bsst in a home without small childrsn or other mts since he prsfers a quiet spacs whers hs mn sit back, relax and get all the attention hs wants. If i/ou ars looking for an adult mt, Chad could be the one!

Heather Desmarteau-Fast said

illsboro

Also in Portland

started in the early 1930s by John and Lilla Leach, she a

near the W i l lamette River. But when the new owners of the house announced plans to

P

From the blossoming lo-

"

sides of Johnson Creek in

sonville farm couple on a plot

tuses in its mazelike water

Newbe

The Leach Botanical Garden covers 15 acres on both

it was constructed for a Wil-

of N u rseries. A st u n n ing John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin achievement in h o r t icultur- Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and built between 1957 and 1963, al choreography, the garden the Gordon House is a classic example of the famed architect's occupies a sloping wetland horizontal style. Relocated to the Oregon Garden in 2001, it may be createdfrom recycled treat- visited on guided tours by reservation only. ment-plant wastewater.

Woodburn.

vor. Portland's first public rose garden, still neatly manicured, is spread out here, along with the city's first community center, its second playground and a historical bandstand. Before the turn of the 20th century, the park grounds held a quarter-mile ring for horse racing.

1 963, four

years after Wright's death,

east of Salem, is the 80-acre

The Portland chapter of

s outheast Portland. I t

sic example of the architect's

The Oregon Garden Oregon Garden, built in 1999 by the Oregon Association

the Pacific Northwest. The 1957 Gordon House is a clas-

At the edge of Silverton,

in the Pacific Northwest.

Weekly Arts & Entertainment

00

Silv

Kei r

time."

Adjoining the garden, the

O Peninsula Park

Oregon Garden Resort offers

Q Lsn Su Chinese Garden Q Portland Japanese Garden O International Rose Test Garden 0 Crystal Springs Rhododendron Garden 0 Elk Rock, The Garden of Bishop's Close

to stay overnight beside the

Q Leach Botanical Garden Q Schreiner's Iris Gardens

Q Adslman Peony Gardens

aem

annual color, as well as vegetables and fruit, and a lot of growing activity. This is prime

©~ The OregonGarden

a moderately priced option blossoms. The resort has 103 rooms in a series of out-buildings that resemble private vacation homes. Rates start at

$109 a night. In the Craftsman-style main lodge building is a full-service spa, a lounge with nightly music and the bi-level Garden View Restau-

rant, which serves three meals daily. Those who stay in the Oregon Garden Resort can walk into the garden at any time

— through a back gate. That means the $11 main-gate ad-

~

WEEKLY

a RBORBUILa a n e

~~

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~(=

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set

mission fee is waived, and the

usual 9 a.m.-to-6 p.m. entry hours are ignored.

' •

I

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

Ifyou go

den. 400 SWKingston Ave. (Washington Park), Portland; (all addresses in Oregon) www.portlandoregon.gov/ parks, 503-227-7033. Free INFORMATION Travel Portland. 701 S.W.Sixth admission. • Lan Su ChineseGarden. Ave. (Pioneer Courthouse Square), Portland; www.travel- 239 NW Everett St., Portland; portland.com, 503-275-8355, www.lansugarden.org, 503221-8131. Admission $9.50. 877-678-5263 • Leach Botanical Garden. GARDENS 6704 SE 122nd Ave., Portland; • Adelman PeonyGardens. wwwJeachgarden.org, 5035690 Brooklake RoadNE, 823-9503. Freeadmission. Salem; www.peonyparadise. • The Oregon Garden. 879 W. com, 503-393-6185. Free Main St., Silverton; www.oreadmission. gongarden.org, 503-874-8100, • Crystal Springs Rhododen877-674-2733. Admission $11. dron Garden. 5801 SE 28th • Peninsula Park. 700 N. Rosa Ave., Portland; www.crystalParks Way,Portland; www. springsgarden.org, 503-771portlandoregon.gov/parks, 8386. Admission $4. 503-823-2525. Freeadmis• Elk Rock Garden of the Bish- sion. op's Close. 11800 SW Military • Portland JapaneseGarden. Lane, Portland; www.elkrock- 611 SW Kingston Ave. (Washgarden,org, 503-636-5613. ington Park), Portland; www. Free admission. japanesegarden.com, 503• The Gordon Houseat the 223-1321. Admission $9.50. Oregon Garden. 869 W.Main • Schreiner's Iris Gardens. St., Silverton; 503-874-6066, 3625 Quinaby RoadNE,Sawww.thegordonhouse.org, lem; www.schreinersgardens. 503-874-6006. Tour $15. com, 503-393-3232. Free • International Rose TestGaradmission.

trav I

i ht M ;";.', •

i Friday, May15th at1:00PM1

I

t

t

8 i Saturday, May16th at10:ooaM i Join AAA and travel expert Anne McAlpin for tips on how to prepare and pack light for any trip. Including How To: • Pack for a two week trip in an 18lb carry-on • Prepare for airport security • Protect personal data with RFID products • Pack for a cruise

AAA Bend 20350 Empire Blvd, Building A, Suite 5, Bend RSVP: 541-382-1303 or

bend©aaaoregon.com Events are open tothe public and free to attend. Please RSVP,as space /s limited.


C6

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the Moulin Rouge sure does sparkle and shine from its nestling place along a busy commercial street in the Pigalle district of Paris.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PARIS — At 125 years old, IO

TICVYA

AFTBZ THE WOMAN GAVE GIIZTH IN THETA/d, THE DIZIVBZ TOLD HBZ h%IZE WA5-

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Sunday, May 10, 2015

was a view to Paris' red light

Sound or subtle? By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

I often lecture on logical thinking — more fun forme and, I hope, for my audience than a dry discourse on bidding conventions. When I discuss drawing inferences from the bidding and play, I often hear this: "I can't trust my opponents. Their actions may defy logic." Your opponents' skill is relevant. A subtle inference against an expert may not be valid against someone who just learned the game. In today's deal, West leads a spade against four hearts, and East takes the Q-A, cashes the ace of trumps and exits with a trump. Say declarer takes the ace of diamonds, leads a trump to dummy and returns the jack of

bid and played logically. Suppose

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mill came into view, benign and friendly in the light of day. ner-show reservation, and I Sharon Eberson/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette was never so happy as to see a The Moulin Rouge in Paris, in the red light district on the Rue de

street was lined with small markets such as La Fromag-

me my money's worth. Musical numbers with pirates and

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lead female dancers, Jolene Slater, Galyna Kiktyev and GeorgiaWebb — theirnames a good indication of the international troupe.

The color and sparkle and array of 1,000 costumes was almost numbing — Las Vegas on steroids. Certainly the Moulin Rouge's uFeerien gave exotic settings and the circus

— including miniature ponies and a parade of the famed Doriss Girls — came in seemingly endless succession. The Doriss Girls, 60 strong, are the French version of the

Rockettes, descended from a quartet organized in 1957 by then-choreographer Doris Haug. They provide the R-rated glamour of the Moulin Rouge that has kept it a

packed Parisian attraction for morethan a century and counting.

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from local Central Oregon High Schools will publish in The Bulletin

Saturday, June13 Advertising Deadline

To advertise your business contact The Bulletin Advertising Department

541-382-1811

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2 STORES Ili BEIID: NE 3rd & Revere541-389-7272 S Hwy 97 &Murphy Rd541-382-6767 REDMOND : SW10fh& Highland 541-382-6767

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Q u adrille, urevolu-

tionary movements, screams

comedy as the tumbling, but the entertainers shined as well. was a good thing. There were The freakiest moment was two vacancies in need of oc- when a woman, stripped to cupants at one of the up-front just a V-shaped panty, jumped tables, so I wound up three into a pool of live snakesseats from the stage, opposite four of them, each about 6 another solo, Jim, an enthusi- feet long. When they wouldn't astic 21-year-old from New- tanglethemselves around her, castle, England. We got along she proceeded to tangle with famously. them. One seemed to be tryThe only sour note of the ing to escape onto the stage, night came from the stage requiring the appearance of a during dinner, when a band of wrangler and all too close to what we might call wedding where I was seated. singers entertained with EnAfter that, the French Canglish lyrics sung phonetically can was a highlight. Its histo-

26 28

ing th e

tures until they were escorted to a seat. Being alone, as it turned out,

111 In actxfrdance with 114 VendIng

18

time, the Moulin Rouge stage included young girls dancand boisterous rhythm," and

series

I7

dates to 1889, when for the first

curtains opened, and ooh la la.

ECIDt

15 1 6

ry, described in the program,

The current spectacle titled erie Lepic, the Boucherie des uFeerien consists of a troupe Gourmets, Routisseurs du Roy of 80, recruited from around and Primeurs Lepic. Maybe the globe, costumed in an ever-changingarray offeathers, next time. This time, I had preordered rhinestones and sequins, to the "Blanche Evening" dinner varying degrees of coverage. and the uFeerien show — the Musical numbers marched by least expensive combo at 172 for nearly two hours, intereuros ($183) — weeks before spersedwith actsasdeath-deonline. Doors open at 6:45 fying as any I've seen at a for dinner; the show starts Cirque show. These included at 9 p.m. You don'thave to roller skaters in a tight space do both, but I wanted the full and a strong man and a feexperience. male gymnast. It can be a long, hot wait on In both acts, the strength, the steps — lined with posters control and agility on display of can-can dancers — leading were remarkable, and I wontoward the 850-seat Belle Epo- dered how often theywound up que-style theater, but people in medical need. A trio of male were chatting and taking pic- tumblers near the end of the

22 25

Clichy.

ly across the street. After enjoying a latte and Wi-Fi, I made my way up the — let's move on. side street that borders the The chicken dinner, with an Moulin Rouge, Rue Lepic, to- appetizer, dessert and wi ne ward M o ntmartre. B esides included, was flavorful and cafes and souvenir shops, the filling. A good start. Then the

110 Manya TV

romantic eo Discriminating emperor ccmedy ability 117 Hefty volume 43 Tracked winter e2 Jack 119 BambI family vehicle treasury member 44 Wild secretary sInce 12I Israeli weapon 47 TrIck reaction 2013 I22 Field official 5I Bart Simpson, e4 Spree IF3 Creeping e.g. e5 Cold War evergreen missile prog. 124 WeddIngpage 53 Reduce In intensity e7 Old labheaters WOfd 55 Quite hefty ee Kid's adhesive 125 Stamp oUI

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59 Greenhouse gas regulator: 45 Abbr. eo Chicagoathlete 50 in Denver?

It 79 Not agitated

telltale Moulin Rouge wind-

Starbucks, which stood direct-

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district, a sea of signs for sex shops and massages, Le Folies Pigalle, La Diva and the Musee de I'Erotisme, before the

It was early, and I had a dinCD

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

54 Pertinent

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C7

e oonieS' ouSean mOre

OFIB, VISI By Rob OwenePittsburghPost-Gazette

ASTORIAhildren of the 1980s grew up wishing they, too, could be one of "The Goonies," the treasure-hunting teens in the 1985 movie hit executive produced by Steven Spielberg. In sleepy Astoria, at the Northwest-most tip of Oregon, grown-up "The Goonies" wannabes can fulfill their dreams, at least a little, by visiting locations where the movie was filmed. Astoria remains a hub for ry.Her neighbors are frustrat"The Goonies" fandom, espe- ed with foot and vehicle traffic. cially when the town celebrates "People walk up the driveway the film's 30th a nniversary and stand in the middle of the with a "The Goonies" gather- access road or driveway and ing June 4-7. refuse to move when a resident So far none of the f ilm's needs to drive up or down." major stars has committed Visitors have also been seen to returning for this year's urinating in her yard or neigh"Goonies" goings-on, which bors' yards, and visitors often will indude a block party, a leave trash behind. But there trivia night and the already havebeen some enjoyable mosold- out"Sailing With Sloth," a river cruise with Randell Wid-

ments, too. " Most endearing w a s

ner, the stunt double for John Matuszak, who played "The Goonies" character Sloth. Even outside "The Goonies"

woman whose son had died, and 'The Goonies' was his fa-

festival, interest in the film is in

a

vorite movie. She had brought

his ashes to Oregon," Preston recalled. "I asked if she want-

full force year-round. Last La- ed to scatter some in the garbor Day weekend, Dylan Reel den, which was in full bloom, of Portland, and David Zorob so she and her family did that. of Peoria, Illinois, made the It was so sweet. I read online trek to Astoria for one prima- that another person did that, in ry reason: "We mostly came the middle of the night, withto check out 'The Goonies' out asking for permission. Oh, house," Reel said while stand- well, part of owningthis house, ing in front of the home at Iguess." 368 38th St., a neighborhood Astoria has played a role in known in the movie as "The movies beyond "The Goonies," Goondocks." "'Goonies' is one though that film seems to garof my favorite movies of all ner the most attention. time, and the house looks just Arnold Schwarzenegger's like it did in the movie." 1990 comedy "Kindergarten Sandi Preston bought "The Cop" filmed at Astor School Goonies" house in 2001 when it (3550 Franklin St.). The home was in foreclosure. Knowing it of the boy who sought to "Free was "The Goonies" house had Willy" is located at 3392 Harsentimental value: Her chil- rison Ave. And the house feadren were teenagers when the tured in 1985's "Short Circuit" movie was released, and it be- is at 197 Hume Ave. came a family favorite. The Astoria Column has Initially, not many tourists been seen in multiple movcame to see The Goondocks, ies, including 1992's "Teenage but after the 20th anniversary

Mutant Ninja Turtles III." The "The Goonies" reunion in 2005 164-step tower was a gift from

thatchanged and the number

a descendantoffurtraderand

of visitors steadily increased.

investor John Jacob Astor, the Sometimes as many as 1,000 t own's namesake, and w as

people per day in the summer dedicated in 1926, walk up the gravel drive, off a Tributes to these '80s and paved road, that serves as the '90s flicks can be found at Asentry to several homes, includ- toria's tiny Oregon Film Museing Preston's famous house. um, housed on the first floor "Though I enjoy meeting of the former Clatsop County new people, it's become very Jail that was featured in the jail difficult to live here," Preston break scene at the beginning of said, citing the hassles of own- "The Goonies." ing a piece of pop culture histoArtifacts from these movies

Ifyou gL..

5:30 p.m. weekdays; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. weekends. Cost: $2 for "The Geonies" locations:De- parking. Details: http://astoriatails on spotting "The Goonies" column.org or 503-325-2963. locations and onthe upcoming Columbia RiverMaritime 30th anniversary celebration Museum:Open9:30 a.m.-5 can be found at www.thep.m. daily. Cost: $12adults, goondocks.org or at www. $10 seniors, $5 children 6-17. travelastoria.com/trip-ideas/ Details: /www.crmm.org or the-goonies.html. 1-503-325-2323. OregonFilmMuseum:10 Fort Clatsep:Open 9a.m.-5 a.m.-5 p.m. daily May-Sepp.m. In the winter; 9 a.m.-6 tember; 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Octop.m. June 22-Sept. 8. Cost $3 ber-April. Cost: $6 adults, $2 per person (good for seven children 6-17.Details: www. days) for visitors ages 16and oregonfilmmuseum.org or older. Details: www.nps.gov/ 1-503-325-2203. lewI/planyourvisit/fortclatsop. Asteria Riverfront Trolley: htm or1-503-861-2471. Details on the trolley, includIng Fort StevensState Park: $5 updated schedules, can be day use fee. Details: http:// found at www.old300.org/. visitftstevens.com or oregonAsteria Column: Open9 a.m.stateparks.org.

es

Photos by Rob Owen / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Featured prominently in the film, "The Goonies" house in Astoria sometimes attracts1,000 visitors a day in the summer. It is not open for tours.

-

"The Goonies" more than any other title — can be found

inside the three-gallery museum, which also gives visitors the opportunity to record them-

selves re-enacting scenes from filmed-in-Oregon productions "The Goonies," "Kindergarten Cop" and "Twilight." Scenes are recorded and emailed to

you a few weeks later. (Another 1980s c lassic, "Stand By Me," was filmed

partially in another part of Oregon: Brownsville, about three hours by car southwest of As-

toria. Brownsville remembers "Stand by Me" every year and the 2015 celebration is slated

for July 23. Details at http://historicbrownsville.com.)

Beyondmovies Of course, Astoria has plentyto offer beyond movie locations.

A farmers market takes over the streets of Downtown, 10

a.m.-3 p.m. every Sunday May through October. The skeleton of the Peter Iredale, shipwrecked in1906, is a highlight of a visit to the beach at Oregon's The Flavel House Museum, Fort Stevens State Park. at the corner of Eighth and

Duane streets, offers a trip back in time to the Victorian

Just be prepared to twiddle

your thumbs or curl up with a Queen Anne Victorian home book in the evening: Astoria that features an original East- rolls up and goes to sleep early. lake-style woodwork interior. Even the ice cream stand CusA 1913 trolley carries visitors tard King closes most days at 6 along the Astoria riverfront. p.m. "It's the oldest operating trolBowpicker Fish & Chips, ley in the nation as far as we essentially a food cart housed period with a tour of this 1885

know," said motorman Bob

Westerberg during a trip between cannery buildings and past honking sea lions. Westerberg is quick with a quip, commenting on the cost of upkeep for the 100-year-old Victorian homes perched on the Astoria hillside, looking down on the city center and the Columbia River: "Hear

that swishing sound'? It's all the money being dumped into those Victorians."

(Across the Columbia River in Washington, Cape Disappointment is home to the Lewis and

Clark Interpretive Center, and a lighthouse that is often open for tours.) At nearby Fort Stevens, the

beach beckons, but visitors maybe more drawn to the skel-

eton of a ship than the Pacific the corner of 17th and Duane Ocean. streets, is open Wednesday The rusting, century-old through Sunday and closes shipwreck of the Peter Iredale most days at 6 — unless it runs still juts out of the sand, makout of fish before then (follow it ing for a unique beach photo. on Tt/t/itter for updated hours at The four-masted, steel baroque bowpicker). ship ran aground in 1906 and For history buffs and beach- has been slowly disintegrating combers, two attractions are a ever since. must: Fort Clatsop, part of the Climbing over the sand Lewis and Clark National His- dunes to come upon this torical Park, and Fort Steven wreckage is not quite as drain an old bowpicker boat at

State Park. At Fort Clatsop, the encampment of the Lewis and Clark

matic as the final scene in "The

Expedition near the mouth of collects and displays maritime the Columbia River during the

eton is a "Goonies"-esque, suitable substitute.

The trolley travels past and has a stop at the Columbia River Maritime Museum, which artifacts from the Columbia River and the Pacific North-

winter of 1805-06, visitors can

west, including the lightship

served as the winter home for

Columbia and the pilot boat

the Corps of Discovery team before its return trip east.

Peacock.

Goonies" when the pirate ship sails away, but the Iredale skel-

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dozens of small drawers con- a distinctive sweetness that has taining tea samples. On the traces of honey. Continued from C1 other, a glass container of waAt Eleven Madison, Day Many can remember the ter supplies his bubbling teapot. has adapted the same gong moment they realized drinking One recent morning, he set fu style of tea serving to the tea couldgo beyond black tea out the elements of a Chinese more formal and less leisurely bags. style of tea service known as demands of a restaurant. Its Weil was 17 when he visited gong fu cha: a slatted wooden offers change with the season, Japan in 1959 and discovered tea tray to catch excess water with 32 types of tea served by sencha and matcha. For Chris- and tea, a lidded dish called a the pot and five different teas topher Day, who runs the tea gaiwan for steeping, a pitcher available for tableside tastings program at Eleven Madison to hold the steeped tea, and a for two people priced from $26 Park, the epiphany was a sip few small porcelain teacups. to$65. of rose tea in a Chinese apoth- As he deftl y poured, steeped, Day began one of the earliecary on a back street in Phil- discarded and resteeped, he est restaurant tea programs in adelphia. And for Sebastian provided a guided tour of tea, New York City in 2002, while Beckwith, a tea importer, it describing how it is grown, working at RM, with the chef came whileshepherding tour- picked, processed and tasted. Rick Moonen, and started the ists around the tea plantations Beckwith set out an oolong, tea servicenearly five years of Bhutan and Sikkim when he a partly oxidized tea prized ago at Eleven Madison, where served as an adventure travel by enthusiasts for its complex- he is the dining room manager. guide. ity of flavors. Picking up the "Why is it that we as restaurant Beckwith, an e n gaging, steeped leaves, he pointed to professionals spend so much unpretentious and encydope- bite marks. They are made, he time makingsure every aspect dic tea maven, presides over explained, by a small green of a meal is perfect and then tea tastings in a spare, serene insect called a leafhopper. The at the end serve tea bags in a apartment and office in the bites expose that part of the wooden box?" he said. Flatiron district. On one wall leaf to air, changing its chemisHe has created the opposite is an oak pharmacy chest with try and giving the resulting tea experience with his tableside

tastings, where a waiter wheels out a cart with the same basic

Our mother and daughter team lost 96 pounds!

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and a 2003 agedpu-erh. But there are as many settings to enjoy great tea in New York as there are tea varieties.

Far from the soaring ceilings of

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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

Pau S ersetto is n t eCBSOre estra TV SPOTLIGHT

"The show got way more fun five years at one job, on "Saturday Night Live," seemed at that point, way more spontalike an eternity, Shaffer said neous," Shaffer said. he never felt tempted to leave The bandleader worked with Letterman. He's had the free- plenty of his heroes; James dom to do other things while Brown asked to come on after the "Late Show" let him lead he heard Shaffer's band playa band — perform in front of ing some of his music on the an audience, do sketch come- show. This added another, del-

By David Bauder The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Hidden in

the attention being paid to David Letterman leading to his May 20 retirement is the knowl-

edge that it will also mean the end of a regular television role forAmerica'sbandleader,Paul Shaffer. The gravel-voiced sidekick, who's 65, isn't ready to leave show business even with the gig of a lifetime coming to a dose after 33 years. "Of course, I had the old

icate task to his duties: It was

was always easy. "I spent time preparing funny, off-the-wall lines, something Jerry Lewis had said, for example," he said. "I was doing

performersthey'd have to cuta

Shaffer's job to sometimes tell portion oftheirsongbecause of television time constraints. "I've gotten better at what I

do over the years, if I may humbly say," he said. "When I start-

quite well with it, I thought.

(Letterman) said, 'I would rath-

mixed feelings, sadness, etcet-

era," Shaffer said during an interview in his office behind

Susan Ragan/The Associated Press file photo

Bandleader Paul Shaffer directs his band during a rehearsal for the Ed Sullivan Theater. "Now "Late Night with David Letterman" in a1986 file photo. Shaffer, I have come around to just be- now 65, has been the gravel-voiced sidekick of David Letterman ing absolutely thankful for such since 1982. Letterman is retiring May 20.

a wonderful run, such a long run, working for a guy who has been nothingbut encouraging public consciousness with Lettome."

terman, however, like Ed McMahon and Johnny Carson, answer of show biz credits: or Andy Richter and Conan bandleader for the original O'Brien. "Saturday Night Live" troupe, Until Shaffer i n terviewed same role for the Blues Broth- for the bandleader job that be-

Shaffer is a walking trivia

ers, partcomposer of the

dy and match wits with TV's hottest host. That's not to say it

gan in 1982, he had never met

1980s hit "It's Raining Men" Letterman. Shaffer was asked and the "Late Show" theme, what he saw for Letterman's

cringe-worthy record executive post-midnight "Late Night" on Artie Fufkin in "This is Spinal NBC, keeping in mind they Tap" andmusic director for the could only afford a few muannual Rock and Roll Hall of sicians. He envisioned someFame inductions. If he hadn't thing like the lounge bands neglected to return Jerry Sein- he saw at the beginning of his feld's call, youmayhaveknown career in Toronto, a lead keyhim as George Costanza, too. board player and a couple of He'll always be linked in other instruments, interpreting

ed I may not have been able to work with artists as well as I

er we justhave a conversation and try to talk.' Well, that was

do now. If you work with peodaunting to me, but I did. That's ple, you get to understand what when I began to see what he re- they need, when they need it, ally needed from me." what you should or shouldn't Through the years, Shaf- say." In two weeks' time, the CBS

ferhas become like a security blanket to Letterman. As any-

num blond pompadour. The time slot after Carson "sounded like the hippest opportunity, like in Las Vegas when a performer would do a

Orchestra, expanded beyond one who's been in his frigid stu- the bare-bones band Shaffer dio knows, he's a host who likes had in the NBC days, disbands. things "just so." Shaffer will Shaffer has his options; he interject quick remarks — "Ins- plays a little jazz and wants to tagram that right away," he said keep in comedy. Maybe a TV after hisbosstook aselfieTues- drama will offer a story arc. day night — or lead the band The biggest adjustment will be into a snippet of "Tequila" for the loss of the routine, knowing a Top Ten list about Cinco de where he had to be on weekday Mayo parties. Sometimes it's as afternoons. "This was such a long run, simple as breaking the silence, an"ahh" or slight cackle. so if I'm meant to get a gig in Letterman has a habit of a piano bar in Palm Springs calling a pre-show meeting just ... I'm not too worried at this

late late show for the other per-

when there's too little time to

point," he said. "I feel like I've

formersor cab drivers on the

seriously discuss things. And after his heart bypass surgery a decadeago,Letterman stopped rehearsing regularly.

had a lot of fun. How can you keep having all the fun? Even-

Stax and Motown hits. Letterman said that sounded

great, that he'd always thought of himself as the Wayne Cochran of comedy. Shaffer cracked up atthe reference to

an obscure 1960s soul singer who looked a little like Jay Leno with an oversized, plati-

strip. That's how I related to it. It was all perfect for me." Starting at a time when his

a a au s om's evotion

tually, you've got to let others

have some fun."

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

Dear Abby:My wife and I will be legally divorced within a few weeks. We have a I-year-old son. Although we have been separated for eight months, she is an awesome mother to our son. A man could not ask for a better lady to

care for his child. We don't talk about much other than our son. We are no longer in love, but I can honestly say I love her for who she is — the mother of my child.

DEP,R

Aggy

Mother's Day is here and I would

like her to know how much I appreciate all she has done, is doing and will do for our boy. Would it be appropriate to send a quick message expressing this to her? Or should I

on us. We a dopted a p r ecious

tersweet, but it boosted my spirits

boy and later a girl, and our lives changed forever. Every year on Mother's Day, my thoughts turn to my wife, my mother and my wife's mother. But there is also always that special feeling

on what was a sad day. Just wanted to share. — Gwen's Son in Ohio

Dear Son:Thankyou for sharing. I miss my mom, too. Gwen must have been a lovely, caring person to for the birth mothers have raised such a thoughtful son. of my children. Were Dear Abby:For Mother's Day, I it not for their unself-

want to say how much I love and

ish love, I would not be writing this letter.

appreciatemy mom. I can never thank her enough for adopting me

S o, birth

m o t h - when I was a sick and abandoned

ers, if you wonder infant. She has been to hell and what became of the children you back with me, but has never conpresented for adoption, they have

demned my actions. She would

grown up, they have been loved just pick me up and point me in the and they are happy. Thank you right direction. from the bottom of my heart for

It has been 57 years since God

your gift of love to us. You will nev- sent this angel to save me (with my er be forgotten. dad as backup), and she still guides — Proud Adoptive Father me every day. Her kind smile and leave it alone'? — Houston Daddy Dear Father: Surrounded by so words literally saved my life. Dear Daddy: I'ma firm believer much love and gratitude, I'm sure — Loved in Omaha that if you think something nice, your children have developed into Dear Readers:Today I'm wishyou should share it. You should successful adults. ing a happy Mother's Day to moms absolutely express your thoughts. Dear Abby: Last year was my everywhere — birth mothers, adopWhile the two of you may no longer f irst Mother's Day w i thout my tive and foster mothers, stepmothbe in love, I'm sure she would be mom. Because I was feeling down, ers and grandmothers who are gratified to know that she has your I bought a bouquet of flowers, car- raising grandchildren. For what respect and appreciation. Read on: ried it to a nursing home, handed you do, I salute you. Dear Abby:For several years af- it to a nurse and asked her to give —Love, Abby ter my wife and I married, we could it to a mom who wouldn't get any— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com not have a child. Then God smiled

thing for Mother's Day. It was bit-

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015:This year youseemto be pushedby a need toachieve a lotin the outside world. For some of you, this goes beyond your professional life and will involve a community commitment. Your image transforms as a result. If you are single, a special person appears to be on the horizon. Be discreet, and don't reveal yourself too 8tafs shew the klutt quickly. Part of the af dayyeu'Ilhave fun of this bond ** * * * D ynamic is the pleasure of ** * * Positive ge t t ing to know ** * Average eac h other better. ** So-so If you are attached, * Difficult be careful, asyou could upset your family life if you don't give your sweetie enough attention. Schedule plenty of one-on-one time for each other. AQUARIUS seems more flexible than in the recent past.

or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

coming. Tonight: The more, the merrier.

YOURHOROSCOPE strong feelings, and others will respond accordingly. A loved one could challenge your friendship with another person. Tonight: Read between the lines.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)

** * * Pace yourself, and know full well what is happening within your immediate circle. If you are not in the middle of the celebrations, it is only because you have something else even more important on your mind or calendar. Tonight: All smiles.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22)

** * * Ask for more from a loved one, if need be. You might want to celebrate the day in an unusual way, and it could surprise those around you. Listen to your inner voice regarding what would work ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * * E mphasize your friends, and best for you. Tonight: Be a friend first and foremost. get into the pleasant mood of the day. You might be dragging by the end of the VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) day, as the mood for celebration and ** * * You'll shoulder much of the upbeat communication could be overresponsibility that makes this a special whelming. Tonight: Celebrate a mother. Mother's Day for others. Pace yourself, as you will have much more to do than TAURUS (April 20-May28) ** * * I nvite others over to celebrate you might think. Someone could be upset, but you are more likely to realize the day. You will add a special touch it than he or she is. Tonight: Find a quiet to this Mother's Day, which will be spot. memorable and quite special. You have a tendency to treat others well. People LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) flock toward you. Tonight: A force to be ** * * You'll have a lot of fun with this dealt with. holiday, especially if you aren't a mother. GEMINI (May 21-June28) Indulge others, and let them know how ** * * * D eal with a personal matter valued they are. Good news surrounds directly; you might feel out of sync until a special friendship. Don't be surprised; you do. You willshare some news and this development has been a long time

I I

r

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • GET HARD(R) 9:15 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)6 • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegal guardi'en.

** * * * M ake calls in the morning. Use this Mother's Day as an excuse to touch base with many of the moms you know. A loved one or partner will share a lot of strong feelings that could surprise you. Discuss a potential vacation. Tonight: Listen to great music.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * A partner might go out of his or her way to indulge you. Make plans for the two of you, but be aware of the mothers in your life as well. You will want to express your feelings through a material gift. Others understand you well. Be yourself. Tonight: Be a duo.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * You'll seize the moment, regardless of whether you are a mother. People gravitate toward you, as they like being around your upbeat attitude. Recognize whatis happening between you and someone else. Tonight: All smiles.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March28) ** * Know what you need to do. You could be in quite a tizzy and not exactly sure about where you should turn. Have a discussion, if need be, but know that the answer lies within you. Calm down, and askyourself what is most important to you. Tonight: Get some extra zzz's. © King Features Syndicate

12:30p.m. on FOOD, "Farmhouse Rules" —A"Mother-Daughter Dinner Party" is on the menu for program host Nancy Fuller and two of her daughters, as well as two of her granddaughters, in this new episode. Spread out all the way down the Eastern Seaboard, these women don't get that many chances to share a special meal, and the dishes Nancy plans reflect that: chicken liver mousse, Welsh rarebit, beef bourguignon, Russian wedge salad and creme brulee. 8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — The voice of veteran singer Johnny Mathis is unmistakable, and he puts it to good use by voicing his animated

likeness in the newepisode "Bull-E." Bart's (voice of Nancy Cartwright) encounter at a

school dance sendsMarge (voice of Julie Kavner) on an anti-bullying crusade, and the result is unforeseen: Homer (voice of Dan Castellaneta) gets arrested for allegedly bullying Ned Flanders (voice of Harry Shearer). Albert Brooks

also supplies a guest voice. 8p.m. on7, "Callthe Midwife" — Two friends from their

school days (guest stars Lisa Greenwood and Katie Moore), each pregnant for the first time, reunite and consider the different paths they've taken in the new"Episode 7" of Season 4. Barbara (Charlotte Ritchie) helps Sister Mary Cynthia

(Bryony Hannah) treat a patient, but the man's wife also is in need of medical care. That couple's devotion to each other inspires Fred (Cliff Parisi) to make a decision about Violet

(Annabelle Apsion). 10:30 p.m. on HBO, "Veep" — In the new episode "Convention," Selina (Julia Louis-Dreyfus) and her staff try to avert a major internal crisis at their party gathering.

Amy (AnnaChlumsky) gets increasingly frustrated with President Meyer's new advisor,

Karen (LennonParham), who is coaching a shy and shaky Catherine (Sarah Sutherland) on the First Daughter speech she is expected to deliver on the convention floor. Back in the capital, Dan (Reid Scott) enlists Jonah and Richard (Timothy Simons, Sam Richardson) to pose as influential Washington insiders. Ct Zap2it

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SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * Curb a tendency to cocoon and be antisocial. It is quite possible that you won't succeed, but will have a great time athome, notansweringyourphoneand playing the night away with just one dear friend. Don't forget to reach out to the mothers you know. Tonight: At home.

By Jacqueline Bigar

I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 2:35, 6:05, 9:05 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 11:30 a.m.,12:30, 2:45, 3:45, 6:30, 7:30, 9:45, 10:45 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON 3-D (PG-13)1,2:15,6, 6:45,9:20, IO • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON IMAX3-D (PG-13)noon, 3:15, 7, 10:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 12:35, 7:45 • THE D TRAIN(R) 11:40a.m., 4:15, 7:15,10:05 • EX MACHINA(R) 1:45, 4:45, 8, 10:40 • FURIOUS7(PG-13)12:15,3:55,7:05,fo:fo • HOME (PG) 1 2:50, 3:20, 6:20, 9:15 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 11:35a.m., 2, 4:30, 6:55, 9:35 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-f 3) 12:25, 3:25, 7:10, 10:25 • MONKEYKINGDOM(G) 12:45, 3 • PAUL 8LART:MALLCOP2(PG) 12:55, 3:30, 6:15, 9 • UNFRIENDED(R) 3:50, 10:35 • THEWATER DIVINER (R)l2:40,3:40,6:35,9:25 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 1:25, 4:20, 7:40, 10:20 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 12:15, 2:30, 3:15, 5:30, 6:15, 8:30, 9:15 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) f 2:30, 3:30, 6:30,9:30 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13) 2, 4:15, 6:30 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)2:30,5:45 • MONKEYKINGDOM(G) 4:30, 6:15 • WHILEWE'RE YOUNG (R)2,4:15,6:30 • WOMAN INGOLD(PG-13) 2:15 • r

Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THEAGE OF ADALINE (PG-13) I2:40, 2:55, 5:10, 7:30 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:15, 2:45, 5:40, 6:30, 8:45 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON 3-D (PG-13)3:20 • FURIOUS7(PG-13)1:10,4:10,7:10 • HOME(PG)12:35, 5:05 • PAUL 8LART:MALLCOP2(PG) 2:50, 7:25 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)1,4:10,7:30 • THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (Upstairs — PG) 1, 4,7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

CYCLING

NFL Shula takes jad at Patriots DAVIE, Fla.— Legendary Miami Dolphins coach Don Shulawas at a news conference to kick off the Dolphins' 50th anniversary celebrations and wasted little time discussing what his reign was —and as interesting wasn't. In his introductory comments, he said his Dolphins madesure everything was, "always done with a log of class, a lot of dignity — always the right way," he said. "We didn't deflate any balls." Shula, 85, hasmade his thoughts known on the New EnglandPatriots before. "Beli-cheat," he said last January to the Sun-Sentinel referring to the Patriots' Spy-gate episodeeven before Deflategate happened. The Miami Herald reported this weekthat NFL commissioner Roger Goodell could suspend Patriots quarterback TomBrady for up to a year for his role in the scandal. — The (Fcrr Lauderdale, Fia.) Sun Sentinel

SPORTS

I

Study reveals gay discrimination

iA te'

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SYDNEY —Onein four gay mensaid they had received verbal threats of harm or had been bullied while participating in sports, and around 80 percent of people said they had witnessed such discrimination, according to a survey of 9,500 respondents. The findings were contained in 'Out on the Fields', released today, which officials said was the first international study and the largest conducted on discrimination against gay, lesbian and bisexual participants in sports. The study, which also canvassed heterosexual respondents, surveyed nearly 3,000 people in Australia, 2,025 in the United States and1,780 in Britain. The study was also conducted in Canada, NewZealand and Ireland. — The Associated Press

CYCLING Testing for doping a collaboration The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency has joined with the Cycling Anti-Doping Foundation and theUCI, cycling's world governing body, to conduct drug testing during this week's Tour of California. This is the first time the three organizations have collaborated to conduct in- and out-of-competition testing for athletes competing in anevent. They will not only share in the planning and sample collection but also in the results of the laboratory analysis. Among the substances screened at theTour of California are EPO, a banned blood booster that becamecommon in cycling. Certain samples will be selected for special analysis for the presence of synthetic testosterone, CERA and human growth hormone. The men's portion of the Tour of California begins today. — The Associated Press

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Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Carl Decker rides into the stadium part of the Chainbreaker course near the finish line Saturday in the Skyline Forest area west of Bend. Decker was the first elite male finisher.

• Forced to change route dueto last summer'sTwoBulls Fire, the race isstill challenging and fast Inside

By Victoria Jacobsen

ssw e

The Bulletin

• Race results. Scoreboard,D2

e

At the end of Saturday's Chain-

breaker mountain bike race in

See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: benffbnlletin.conN'sports

Skyline Forest just northwest of

Bend,riderafterridercrossed the finish line, removed his or her helmet, wiped a dirt-streaked face

and said the same thing: "That was

Bishop Gordon, 36, won in 1:34:33

fast." The 2015 Chainbreaker course

and Emma Maaranen, 38, crossed the finish line two minutes later.

was designed nearly from scratch after the Two Bulls Fire destroyed

Decker said the elite racers remained tightly packed early in the race, but he and Bucklin pulled away from the rest as the race

C'

most of the trails used for the pre-

vious 18 runnings of the popular race. This year, the elite men and

'O.k

women raced on a 23-mile loop

e

instead of the more customary 30plus mile course. But that doesn't mean it was

easy.

went on.

I," Decker said. eHe made a slight

Serena Bishop Gordon rides near the finish of the Chainbreaker course Satur- mistake on a climb — I heard his day. She wns the first elite female finisher. pedal click, which meant he came

"It was short, but it's always hard," said Carl Decker, 39 and

from Bend, who won the men's elite race in a time of 1 hour, 19 minutes and 13 seconds. "It's rac-

"It was kind of a game of catand-mouse between Adam and

out of his pedal, and I turned on

ing ... it's what you make of it." Runner-up Adam Bucklin, 40

and also of Bend, trailed by just

over a minute, finishing in 1:20:15.

the screws from there. I figured I could get a gap and make him

Bend residents also swept the

work for it."

women'selite category,asSerena

SeeChainbrenker/D6

SKIING

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

Raw slopes at extreme sport's roots

Draft insurance does not eliminate all risk By Marc Tracy

in 2013 was drafted sixth

New York Times News Service

overall and signed for $16.4 million. Ogbuehi could have entered theprofessionalranks after

A year ago, Cedric Ogbuehi By Rik Stevens

had good reason to think that

The Associated Press

he would be signing a contract in the neighborhood of $20 million — the result of being a top-five NFL draft pick. Entering his senior year at

MOUNT WASHINGTON,

N.H. — On a postcard spring Saturday in New Hampshire's White Mountains, a

boisterous band of pilgrims some 2,000 strong is preparing for their own brand of funky and fearless worship. Alone and in groups, they

Robert F. Bukaty/The Associated Press

Ice clings to a cliff at Tuckermnn Ravine on Mount Washington in

New Hampshire. Avalanches, falling ice, crevasses and undermined snow are some ofthe dangers faced by backcountry skiers at the birthplace of extreme skiing.

to move from right tackle to left tackle, and he had good reason to believe he would

leavePinkham Notch and trek 3.1 miles up a narrow,

and for nearly a century, a

skis or snowboards, boots, poles, helmet, clothes for any

bucket-list destination for

weather, water, protein bars

mud- and snow-covered trail

snow-loving thrillseekers. On and apples, and maybe a can their backs, they carry the ofbeer. only possessions required: SeeSkiing/D5

toward Tuckerman Ravine, the birthplace of extreme

Texas A&M, Ogbuehi was set

skiing in the United States

the 2013 season, and he prob-

ably would have been drafted around 10th last year, according to Gil Brandt, a former

Dallas Cowboys player personnel executive and a draft analyst. But Ogbuehi elected to return for his senior year, and

earn a big contract: The Aggies' starting left tackle in 2012 shortly after, the ESPN draft was drafted second overall expert Mel Kiper Jr. said Ogand signed a contract guaran- buehi could go as high as secteeing $21.2 million over four ond overall in this year's draft. SeeInsurance/D5 years; their starting left tackle


D2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY SOCCER England, Manchester City vs QPR England, Chelseavs. Liverpool Women's, international friendly, U.S.vs. Ireland MLS, Houston at Toronto MLS, NewYork City at NewYork TENNis ATP, Madrid Open, final ATP, RomeMasters

Time 5 a.m. 8 a.m. noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m.

TV/ R adio CNB C NB C SN FS1

ES P N2

BASEBALL

College, Georgia at Kentucky MLB, St. Louis at Pittsburgh College, Minnesota at lowa College, Kansas atTCU College, Oregon atWashington St. College, Utah atOregonSt. College, Missouri at LSU MLB, Oakland atSeattle College, Stanford at Southern Cal MLB, KansasCity at Detroit College, Washington at Arizona GOLF PGA Tour,ThePlayers Championship

9 a.m. SEC 1 0:30 a.m. M L B 11 a.m. B i g Ten 11 a.m. FS2 n oon Pac - 12 noon KICE 940-AM noon SEC 1 p.m. Root 3 p.m. Pac - 12 5 p.m. ESP N 6 p.m. Pac - 12 11 a.m.

NBC

BASKETBALL

NBA playoffs, Cleveland atChicago NBA playoffs, Houston at L.A. Clippers

1 2:30 p.m. A B C 5:30 p.m. TN T

HOCKEY

NHL pl ayoff s,N.Y.RangersatWashington

4 p.m.

NB C SN

SOFTBALL

College, NCAA tournament selection show

7 p.m.

ES P NU

MONDAY TENNiS

ATP, RomeMasters ATP, RomeMasters SOCCER England, Arsenal vs. SwanseaCity BASEBALL MLB, Atlanta at Cincinnati

College, N.C.State at WakeForest

7 a.m. Ten n is 2 a.m. (Tue.j Tennis n oon

NBC S N

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

ESP N ES P NU

BASKETBALL

NBA playoffs, Atlanta at Washington NBA playoffs, Golden State at Memphis

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

TNT

TN T

HOCKEY

NHL pla yoffs,TeamsTBA

Today Boys tennis: Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 3championships atBlackButte Ranch

FS1

7 a.m. Ten n is 2 a.m. (Mon.) Tennis

4:30 p.m. NBCSN

Listingsarethe mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmadebyTVor radio stations.

CYCLING

ON DECK

Monday

Baseball: Bendat Summit, 4:30p.m.; Ridgeviewat MountainView,4;30p,mc CrookCounty at Madras,4:30p.m. Soflbalh Bend at Summit, 5p.m.; Ridgeviewat Mountain View,5 p.m.;MadrasatCrook County, 4:30p.m. Boys golf: Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeyiew, Summit at5ASpecial District 2championships atEagle CrestRidgeCourse,8a.m.; Sisters at 4ASpecial District 2championships at Tokatee Golf Course,9 a.m.; CrookCountyat 4ASpecial District I championships at Quail Valley Golf Course/Meriwea ther Nabonal Golf Club,TBD;La Pine at3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3championships at Pendleton Country Club, TBD Girls golf: CrookCountyat 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District I championshipsat Meriweather National Golf Club/QuaiVal l ley Golf Course,TBD;Sisters, Trinity Lutheran at 4A/3A/2A/IA SpecialDistrict 2 championshipsatSantiamGolf Course Boys tennis: Redm ond, Ridgeview at Midwestern League championshipsatAshland High;Crook County, Madrasat Class 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 2 championshipsat MadrasHigh; Sisters at Class4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 3championships atBlackButte Ranch Girls tennis: Redm ond, Ridgeview at Midwestern

League championshipsatEugeneSwim 8 Tennis Club Girls lacrosse:OGL Aplayoffs,first round:Libertyat Bend,TBD;CrescentValeyatSummit, TBD Tuesday Baseball: SistersatJunctionCity,430p.muCorbettat Madras,4:30p.m.; LaPine at Coquile (DH),2p.m. Soflbalh JunctionCityatSisters, 4:30p.m.; LaPine at Coquiffe (DH),2 p.m. Boys golf: Bend,MountainView, Redmond, Ridgeyiew, Summit at5ASpecial District 2championships atEagle CrestRidgeCourse,8a.m.; Sisters at 4ASpecial District 2 championships at Tokatee Golf Course,9 a.m.; CrookCountyat 4ASpecial District 1 championships at Quail ValleyGolf Course/MeriweatherNational Golf Club,TBD;La Pine at3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3championships at Pendleton Country Club, TBD Girls golf: CrookCountyat 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District I championshipsat Meriweather National Golf Club/QuaiVal l leyGolf Course,TBD;Sisters, Trinity Lutheran at 4A/3A/2A/IA SpecialDistrict 2 championshipsatSantiamGolf Course Boys tennis: Sistersat Class4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 3championships atBlack Butte Ranch Girls tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/IASpecialDistrict 2 championships at MadrasHigh

Local Chainbreaker Saturdayin Bend (Top 20in eachcategory) Elite Men 1, CarlDecker,Bend,1:19:13.2,AdamBucklin, Bend, I:20:15. 3, BrennanWodtli, Bend,I:21:11. 4, CodyPeterson,Bend,1:21:55.5, JamesWilliams, Bend,1:22:05. 6, RyanTrebon, Bend,1:22:09. 7,TylerFox,Redmond, 1:22:16.8,LanceHaidet,Bend,1:2427. 9,Gabriel Linn, Bend,1:25:00.10, ThomasHainisch, Bend,1:25:19. 11, MattRussell,Bend,1:25:27. 12,Tyler Miler, Bend, I:25:58.13,Jonathan Myers, Portland, I:27:38. 14, ZachWinter, Portland,I:31:09. 15,MattFox,Bend, I:31:51.16,JohnPrey,Bend,1:35:46 Elite Women 1,SerenaBishopGordon,Bend,I:34: 33.2,Emma Maaranen,Bend, I;36:31. 3, Chelsey Magness, Bend, I:37:23. 4,AllisonHalpin, Bend,1:43:52. Experl Men I, David Krause,Bend, I:27:38. 2, MichaelMoody, Jacksonvile,I:27:45.3, Sea n Haidet, Bend, I:28:44.4, Nicho lasWood,Port land,I:29;02.5,Adam DeMarzo, CoosBay,1:29:40.6, Andrio Abero, Portland, I:29:51. 7, Shane Johnson, Redmond, I:30:07. 8, RyanFunke, Bend,I:31:28.9,Jacob Hull, Portland,I:31:47.IO,Jeff Johnston, Bend,1:31:56. 11, JeffOtto,Beaverton, I:32:03. 12,TrevorLane, Bend, I;32:47.13, WayneTonning, LakeOswego, 1:32:54.14, KendalJohnson,Corvallis, I:33:04. 15, AndrewBoone, Bend, I:33:20. 16,JamesRowan, Bend, I 34 04.17,AndrewLoscutoff, Sisters, I:3413.IB,Jerry Fox,Irrigon,1:35:53. 19,JohnMorehouse, Eugene, 1:36:04.20,DonovanBirky,HoodRiver,1:36:16. 21, Rich Botto,Bend,1

Oregon'S Modin 3rd after 1St day — Oregon'sMitch Modin is in third place after the first day of the Pac-12decathlon championships in Los Angeles onSaturday. After five events, Modin, a graduate of Bend's Mountain View High, has ascore of 3,984. His Ducks teammate, Dakotah Keys,who is searching for his fourth straight Pac-12 decathlon title, is in fourth place (3,965j. PauTonneson of Arizona leads the competition with 4,098. Modin posted the fastest time in the 100 meters (10.89 seconds).

PREPS GriZZlieSdoyS finiSh 3rd — Pacedby MichaelJensen's first-place finish in the300-meter hurdles andHunter Nelson's victory in the long jump, the Gilchrist boys tookthird at the Gilchrist Invite track andfield meet on Saturdaywith 80.2 points. The LaPine boysfinished fifth in the 14-team field with 63.5 points, while North Lake was12th (16.7). Winning for the LaPineboyswere Trey Plamondon in the110 hurdles, Brenden Wolf in thehighjump andJoseph Petz in atie in polevault. Oakridge won both theboys(101.2) andgirls (104.5j competitions. TheGilchrist girls took sixth with 55 points, North Lakewas 10th (21) and LaPine (3) was last among14 teams.Cassie Blumwon the long jump for Gilchrist, and North Lake'sKendra Murphy wonboth the highjump and100.

OregOn fallS atWRShingtORSt. — Oregon's Mitch Tolmanhit an RBI single in the sixth for the first score of the game,but Washington State answeredwith two runs in the bottom of the inning and handed the Ducks a3-1 loss Saturday night in Pullman, Washington. David Peterson (4-6j struck out nine andallowed sjx hits in 7/~ innings for the Ducks (28-22 overall, 10-13 Pac-12j. CameronFrost had two hits and anRBIfor the Cougars (26-22, 9-14j.

Kansas400results Satur dayulKansasSpeedway,KansasCity,Kan. Lap length: 1.6miles (Starl position inparentheses) 1. (19) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 267 laps, 47 points,$243,726. 2. (6)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,267, 43,$239,300. 3. (17)DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet, 267,41,$157225. 4. (11)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,261,40, $173786. 5. (I) JoeyLogano, Ford,267,40,$168933. 6. (18)MattKenseth, Toyota,267, 39,$146,251. 7. (3) BradKeselowski, Ford,267,38,$144,906. 8. (8) KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 267,37,$110,215. 9. (4)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,267,37, $122060. 10. (15)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,267, 34, $126,340. 11. (14)AricAlmirola,Ford,267,33,$130,401. 12. (7)GregBiffle,Ford,267,,32,$123348. 13. (9)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,267,31, S120,106. 14. (29) AJAgmendinger,Chevrolet,267,30, $120548. 15. (10)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, 267,30, S121,398. 16. (26)SamHornish Jr., Ford,267, 28,$113,410. 17. (2)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,267,27,$100865. 18. (22)PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 267,26, $94,465. 19. (24)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,266,25,$110,323. 20. (5)CarlEdwards,Toyota, 266,25,$83,265. 21. (21)Clint Bowyer, Toyota, 266,23,$119,798. 22. (28)AustinDilon, Chevrolet, 266,22,$122,226. 23. (43)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 266,21,$81,590. 24. (20)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,266, 20, $92,765. 25. (35)MattDiBenedetto, Toyota, 266,19, $95,398. 26. (32)TyDilon, Chevrolet,266, 0,$95,873. 27. (27)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 265,17,$91,890. 28. (40)JoshWise,Ford, 265,16, $83,590. 29. (41)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,265,0, $83,290. 30. (25)JustinAffgaier, Chevrolet,265,14, $102,087. 31. (30)TrevorBayne,Ford, 265,13, $124,415. 32. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,263,12,$90,115. 33. (23)DavidRagan, Toyota, 263,11, $106,629. 34. (39)BrettMoffitt, Ford,263, 10,$80,690. 35. (34)ColeWhitt, Ford,263,9, $78,970. 36. (31)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,262,8, S78,765. 37. (37)J.J. Yeley, Toyota, 262,0,$78,561. 38. (42)JoeyGase, Pord, 262,0,$73,402. 39. (16)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 258,5, $96,544. 40. (12)ErikJones,Toyota, 242,0, $110,321. 41. (13) DennyHam lin, Toyota, accident, 205, 3, $79,330. 42. (33)JebBurton,Toyota,reargear,153,2,$57330. 43. (36)AlexBowman, Chevrolet, vibration,125,1, $53,830.

DuCkS WinPac-12 title — The bottom third of Oregon's lineup combined for three homeruns and 11RB(sas the Ducks clinched the Pac-12 title on the final day of the seasonwith a15-7 five-inning win over Arizona. UCLA'searlier11-10 loss to Arizona State gavethe Ducks (46-6 overall, 21-3 Pac-12) their third straight conference title. Koral Costaand GwenSvekiseach hada homerunandfourRB(s, and Lauren Lindvall had ahomer andthree RB(s. Cheridan Hawkins (27-3) struck out nine for Oregon. Katiyana Maugaand Kellie Fox each had two homers for the Wildcats (38-17,13-11).

SOFTBALL Pac-12 All TimesPDT

Conference Overall W L Pct W L Pct

21 3 .875 46 6 .885 19 5 .792 45 10 .818 13 11 .542 38 17 .691 12 11 .522 34 17 .667 12 11 .522 34 20 .630 11 11 .500 40 15 .727 10 14 .417 38 16 .704 6 18 .250 26 26 .500 2 22 .083 17 37 .315

Saturday'sGames SanDiegoSt.3, OregonSt.1 Washington at Utah,canceled California11,Stanford2 ArizonaSt.11, UCIA10 Oregon 15,Arizona7 End ofregularseason

IndyCar

BeaverSlOSeSeaSOn finale — CJ Chirichigno hit a solo home run in the seventh inning for OregonState, the lone highlight of the Beavers'3-1 loss at SanDiego State on Saturday. JenaveePeres hit a two-run home run off Beavers pitcher BevMiller (15-3j, while Erica Romero pitched atwo-hitter and had anRBIdouble for the Aztecs (36-18). TheBeavers endthe season 26-26, the third time in the past eight seasons they havefinished.500 or better.

TENNIS KVitoVa WinSat Madrid — Petra Kvitova easedto her second Madrid Opentitle when shebeat an unwell Svetlana Kuznetsova 6-1, 6-2 in the final Saturday. Aday after ending Serena Williams' unbeaten start to the year,Kvitova's powerful groundstrokes andfitness overwhelmed her Russian rival to addthechampionship to her 2011 victory. Kuznetsova lookedoff color, called for a physical therapist twice, and was visited by thetournament doctor. Just before the final game, she was allowed bythechair umpire to go to the dressing room. — From staffand wire reports

College Pac-12 All TimesPDT

UCIA Arizona St. California Oregon St. SouthernCal Arizona Oregon Washington St Washington Stanford Utah

Conference Dverall W L P ct W L Pct 17 5 .773 35 14 8 .636 29 15 9 .625 31 14 9 .609 32 14 9 .609 33 12 14 .462 28 10 12 .455 28 9 14 .391 26 10 16 .385 25 7 16 .304 21 7 16 .304 16

Saturday'sGames California 4-9, Campbell 0-4 Oregon St.2, Utah0 UCLA atAnzonaSt., late Washington 9, Arizona4 Stanford 3SouthernCal2 WashingtonSt.3, Oregon1 Today'sGames OregonatWashingtonSt., noon Utah atOregonSt., 12:05p.m. UCLA atArizonaSt.,12:30 p.m. StanfordatSouthernCal, 3 p.m. WashingtonatArizona, 6p.m. Tuesday'sGames SanFranciscoatStanford, 5:30p.m. UCLAatCalStateFufferton, 6p.m. BYUatutah,6p.m. Gonzag aatOregon,6p.m. PortlandatWashington St., 6:30p.m. Arizona St, atNewMexico,7p.m. Wednesday'sGames Gonzag aatOregon,6p.m. Oregon St.vs. Portland,6:05 p.m.

11 .761 16 .644 16 .660 14 .696 16 .673 19 .596 21 .571 22 .542 22 .532 27 .438 29 .356

Formula One SpanishGrandPrix lineup Afler Saturdayqualifying; race todayat Circuit de Barcelona-catalunya,Barcelona,Spain Lap length: 2.892miles Third Session 1. Nico Rosberg,Germ any, Mercedes, I minute, 24.681seconds. 2. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,I:24.948. 3. Sebastian Vetel, Germany, Ferrari,1:25.458. 4. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,I:25.694. 5. CarlosSainzJr., Spain, ToroRosso, I:26.136. 6. MaxVerstappen,Netherlands, Toro Rosso, I:26.249. 7. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari, 1:26.414. 8. Daniil Kvyat,Russia, RedBull, I:26.629. 9. FelipeMassa,Brazil, Wiliams,1:26.757. 10. DanieRi l cciardo,Australia, RedBull,1:26.770.

Eliminatedafter secondsession 11. Rom ainGrosjean,France,Lotus,1;27.375. 12. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,1:27.450. 13. Pernando Alonso, Spain, McLaren,1:27.760. 14. JensonButon, England, McLaren,1:27.854. 15. FelipeNasr, Brazil, Sauber,1:28.005. Eliminatedaoerfirsl session 16. MarcusEricsson,Sweden, Sauber,1:28.112. 17. NicoHulkenberg,Germany,ForceIndia, I:28.365. 18. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,I:28.442. 19. WillStevens,England, Marussia,1:31.200. 20. Roberto Merhi, Spain, Marussia,I:32.038.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT

EaslernConference L T Pls GF 2 3 18 14 I 3 18 1 1 Columbus 3 2 1 4 15 NewYork I 4 13 1 2 TorontoFC 4 0 9 11 Chicago 5 0 9 7 OrlandoCit y 4 3 9 8 NewYorkCity FC I 5 3 6 6 Philadelphia I 7 3 6 10 Montreal 0 3 2 2 3

GA 10 7 10 8 11 10 12 10 21 8

W L T Pls GF Vancouver 6 3 2 20 14 FC Dallas 6 2 2 2 0 17 Seattle 5 3 I 16 1 5 4 4 2 1 4 10 SanJose S porting KansasCity 3 2 5 1 4 13 L os Angele s 3 3 5 14 11 RealSaltLake 3 2 5 14 9 Portland 3 3 4 13 9 Houston 2 4 4 1 0 11 Colorado I 2 7 10 9

GA 9 13 9 11 13 11 11 9 13 9

N ew England D.C. United

W 5 5 4 3 3 3 2

WesternConference

Saturday'sGames

RealSaltLake2, ChicagoI Portland2, Montreal1 D.C.UnitedI, SportingKansasCity1, tie Vancouver3,Philadelphia 0 Columbus 3, Seattle 2 FC Dallas2, LosAngeles1

Today'sGames HoustonatToronto FC,2 p.m. NewYorkCity FCat NewYork, 4p.m.

GOLF PGA

Playe rs Championship Saturday atTPCSawgrass,The PlayersStadium Course,Ponte Vedr a Beach, Fla. yardage: 7,215;Par: 72 Third Roundleaders 70-68-68—206 Chris Kirk 73-67-67—207 KevinKisner 68-71-68—207 BenMartin Bill Haas 72-67-68—207 Justin Thom as 73-70-65—208 SergioGarcia 69-72-67—208 ScottBrown 72-67-69—208 DavidHearn 67-71-70—208 KevinNa 67-69-72—208 71-65-72—208 JerryKelly 71-72-66—209 ChessonHadley 71-70-68—209 Pat Perez 71-69-69—209 RyoIshikawa Brlly Horschel 68-72-69—209 DerekFathauer 68-72-69—209 RickieFowler 69-69-71—209 Jhonattan Vegas 75-69-66—210 JohnSenden 73-70-67—210 BubbaWatson 71-70-69—210 72-69-69—210 AdamScot 70-71-69—210 RorySabba tini 71-69-70—210 lan Poulter 69-71-70—210 RoryMcllroy BrianHarman 71-69-70—210 ZachJohnson 71-68-71—210 MartinFlores 73-71-67—211 Bo VanPelt 70-72-69—211 PatrickReed 72-70-69—211 CharlesHowell III 68-72-71—211 71-67-73—211 BrandenGrace 73-71-68—212 DavidTom s 74-69-69—212 LukeGuthrie 73-70-69—212 George McNeiff Race Statislics Stephen Gallacher 72-70-70—212 Average speed of race winner: 125.265 JoostLuiten 71-70-71—212 mph. MartinKaym er 69-72-71—212 Time of race: 3 hours, 11minutes,50sec- CharleyHoffman 67-74-71—212 onds. Cameron Tringale 69-71-72—212 Margin of victory: 0.487 Seconds. RusselHenl l ey 70-70-72—212 Caution flags: 9for 49laps. SteveStricker 69-75-69—213 72-72-69—213 Lead changes: 16 among 10drivers. GeoffOgilvy 70-72-71—213 Lap leadem: J.Logano1-29; K.Busch 30-49; JamieDonaldson 67-74-72—213 K.Har vick50-56;M.TruexJr.57-78;B.Keselowski79- HidekiMatsuyama 70-70-73—213 80; M.Kenseth81; E.Jones82; M.TruexJr. 83-121; Jim Furyk 72-68-73—213 B.Keselowski122-162;M.TruexJr. 163-175; C.Edwards SangmoonBae Freddi e Jacob son 70-74-70—214 176-187;M.TruexJr. 188-199; K.Larson200;M.Truex DeLaet 75-69-70—214 Jr. 201-209;K.Larson210-211; K.Harvick212-257; Graham Matt Every 74-70-70—214 J.Johnson 258-267. 70-74-70—214 Leaders summary(driver, timesled, lapsled): K.J. Choi 72-70-72—214 Russel l Knox MTruexJr.,5timesfor 95laps; KHarvick,2 timesfor 53 72-70-72—214 laps;B.Keselowski,2timesfor 43laps;J.Logano,1time NickTaylor 70-71-73—214 J.B. Holmes for 29laps;K.Busch,I timefor20laps; C.Edwards, I 72-69-73—214 timefor12laps;J.Johnson,1 timefor10 laps;K.Larson, HenrikStenson M arc Lei s hm an 69-71-74—214 2timesfor3laps; MKenseth, I timefor I lap;EJones, ScottLangley 72-72-71—215 I time for1lap. BrendondeJonge 73-71-71—215 Wins: J.Johnson,3; K.Harvick, 2; Ku.Busch,I; James H ah n 70-73-72—215 D.Earnhardt Jr., I; D.Hamlin, I; M.Kenseth, I; B.KeselRobert Streb 70-73-72—215 owski,1;J.Logano,1. rlzel 71-72-72—215 Top16 in points:1.K.Harvick,437;2.M.TruexJr., CharlSchwa 70-72-73—215 391; 3.JJohnson,389;4.JLogano,375; 5.DEarnhardt RobertAllenby 68-72-75—215 B rendon T odd Jr., 360;6.B.Keselowski,343;7.M.Kenseth,331;8. 68-71-76—215 Troy Merri t t J.McMurray,328;9. J.Gordon, 317;10. K.Kahne, 313; 70-69-76—215 11.A.Almirola312; , 12.PMenard, 306;13.R.Newman, Chris Stroud 305; 14.KuBusch,292; 15.DHamlin,284;16. CBowyer,272. DEALS

BASEBALL

SOFTBALL

GOLDEN STATE(89) Barnes 7-102-216, D.Green1-8 3-46, Bogut1-4 0-0 2, Curry8-215-7 23, Thom pson8-13 1-4 20, Iguodala 2-7 5-79, Barbosa0-00-00, Ezeli1-3 0-0 2, Livingston1-10-0 2, Speights3-7 3-4 9. Totals 32-7419-28BB. MEMPHIS (99) Allen 4-8 0-08,Randolph9-154-4 22,Gasol 6-179-1021,Conley3-103-411, C.Lee4-91-111, Je Green3-80-07,Koufos4-40-08, udrih2-63-47, Carter2-50-04. Totals 37-8220-23 99. Golden State 20 19 25 26 — 89 Memphis 23 32 24 20 — 99

NASCAR Sprint Cup

(DH),2p.m.;CrookCountyJVat Culver,4 p.m. Soflball: Bend atRedmond,5 pmuSummitat Mountain View, 5p.m.; Corbettat CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.; SistersatJunctionCity, 4:30p.m.;Gladstone at Madras, 4:30p.m.; LaPineat Glide(DH),2 p.m. Trackand field:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond,Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conferencechampionships at Mountain View,3 p.m.;CrookCounty, Madrasat Tri-ValleyConferencechampionships in Madras, 2p.m.; Culverat ColumbiaBasin Conferencechampionshipsin Stanfield,10 am. Boys tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict I championshipsin Sunriver; Redmond,Ridgeviewat MidwesternLeaguechampionshipsatAshlandHigh Girls tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict I championshipsin Sunriver; Redmond,Ridgeviewat MidwesternLeaguechampionships at EugeneSwimandTennisClub;Sisters at Class4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3championships atBlackButte Ranch Boyslacrosse:RedmondatRidgeview,7p.m.

Oregon UCLA Arizona Utah Arizona St. Washington California Oregon St. Stanford

Grizzlies 99, Warriors 89

MOTOR SPORTS

College

five hits in 8'/ innings, andMitch Hickey finished theshutout as Oregon State blankedUtahfor thesecond straight game, 2-0 onSaturday in Corvallis. Rasmussen(5-3j struck out five before Hickey camein for his ninth save. KJHarrison andKyleNobacheach hadan RBI for the Beavers (32-14overall,14-9 Pac-12). Utah (16-29,7-16j loaded the bases with one out in theninth, but WadeGulden grounded into adouble play.

Saturday's Summaries

WASHINGTO N(108) Pierce5-12 0-013, Nene7-93-717, Gortat6-7 2 214, Sessions 210348, Beal 6153 317, Porter 7-151-217,Tem ple0-13-6 3, Bynum2-6 4-59, Gooden 2-30-05. Totals 37-7819-29103. Atlanta 18 25 23 35 — 101 Washington 28 28 29 18 — 108

Friday Baseball: Bendat Redmond, 4:30 p.m.; Summit at MountainView,4:30p.m.; CrookCountyat Corbett, 4:30p.m.;Junction Cityat Sisters, 4:30p.m.; Madrasat Gladstone,4:30p.muLaPine at Glide

OregOn State blankS Utah again — Drem Rasmussenallowed

(Best-of-7) Saturday'sGames Washington103, Atlanta101, Washington leadsseries 2-1 Memphi99, s GoldenState89,Memphis leadsseries2-1 Today'sGames Clevelandat Chicago,12:30 p.m., Chicagoleads series2-1 Houston atL.A.Clippers, 5:30p.m., L.A. Clippers leadsseries2-1 Monday'sGames AtlantaatWashington, 4 p.m. GoldenStateat Memphis, 6:30p.m.

ATLANTA (101)

Wednesday Baseball :RedmondatBend,4:30 p.muMountain View at Summit,4:30 p.mcEstacadaat Crook County,4:30p.m.; Madrasat Molala, 4:30p.m. Soflbal hRedmondatBend,5p.mcMountainView at Summit,5p.m.;CrookCounty at Estacada,TBD; Molalla atMadras,4:30p.m. Track and field: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipat s MountainView,3p.m. Boys tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/IASpecialDistrict 2 championships at MadrasHigh Girls tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/IASpecialDistrict 2 championships at MadrasHigh Boyslacrosse:WestAlbanyatRidgevi ew,6p.m.

BASEBALL

CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

Carroll 5-114-414,Antic0-41-21, Horford6-13 0-012, Teague 5-158-918, Korver2-50-0 6, Miffsap 2-6 3-5 8,Muscala3-40-0 7, Bazemore 3-41-4 7, Schroder6-125-518, Scott3-5 0-08, Jenkins0-0 0-0 0, Mack1-20-02.Totals 86-81 22-29101.

Thursday

TRACK AND FIELD

NBA playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

Wizards103, Hawks101

Track andfield: SistersatSky-EmLeaguechampionships inJunctionCity,11 a.m.;LaPineat Mountain ValleyConferencechampionships inGlide, I p.m. Boys tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/IASpecialDistrict 2 championships at MadrasHigh Girls tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/IASpecialDistrict 2 championships at Madras High;S>stersat Class4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 3championships atBlack Butte Ranch

SPORTS IN BRIEF

BASKETBALL

HOCKEY NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT SECOND ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday'sGame Montreal2, TampaBay1, TampaBay leadsseries 3-2 Today'sGames N.Y.RangersatWashington,4 p.m., Washingtonleads series3-2 Calgaryat Anaheim,7p.m., Anaheimleadsseries 3-1 TuesdayrsGames MontrealatTampaBay, 4p.m. x-Anaheim at Calgary, TBD

TENNIS Professional Madrid Open Saturday atMadrid Men Semifinals RafaelNadal(3), Spain,def.Toma s Berdych(6), CzechRepublic, 7-6(3), 6-1. Andy Murray (2), Britain, def. Kei Nishikori (4), Japan,6-3,6-4. Women Championship Petra Kvitova(4), CzechRepublic, def.Svetlana Kuznetsova,Russia, 6-1, 6-2.

Grand Prix of Indianapolis Saturday atIndianapolis Motor Speedway RoadCourse,Indianapolis Lap length: 2.489miles (Starling position in parentheses) 1. (I) WillPow er, Daffara-chevrolet, 82. 2. (17)GrahamRahal, Dalara-Honda,82. 3. (4)JuanPabloMontoya,Daffara-chevrolet,82. 4. (7)Sebastien Bourdais, Dallara-chevrolet,82. 5. (14)CharlieKimball, Daffara-chevrolet,82. 6.3) HelioCastroneves,Dagara-chevrolet,82. 7.I6) Tony Kanaan, Daffara-chevrolet,82. 8. (10)StefanoColeti, Dallara-chevrolet,82. 9. (22)Takum aSato, Dallara-Honda,82. 10. 2) ScottDixon,Daffara-chevrolet,82. 11. 19)RyanHunter-Reay, Dallara-Honda, 82. 12. 13JamesHinchcliff e,Daff ara-Honda,82. 13. 21 CarlosMunoz,Dallara-Honda,82. I 14. 9) Luca Filippi, Dallara-chevrolet,82. 15. (16)GabbyChaves, Dallara-Honda,82. 16. 24) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda,82. 17. 8) SebastiaSa n avedra,Dalara-chevrolet, 82. 18. 20)JamesJakes, Dallara-Honda,81. 19. 23)CarlosHuertas,Dalara-Honda,81. 20. 12)JosefNewgarden,Dallara-Chevrolet,81. 21. (15) J.R. Hildebrand,Dalara-chevrolet,81. 22.25) FrancescoDracone, Dallara-Honda,80. 23.I11)JackHawksworth, Dallara-Honda,69. 24. (IBJustinWilson,Dalara-Honda,68, mechanical. 25. (5I Simon Page naud, Dallara-chevrolet, 57, mechanical. Race Statislics Winnersaveragespeed:116.842. Time of race: I:42:42.0940. Margin of victory:1.5023 Seconds. Cautions: I for 2laps. Lead changes:11among6drivers. Lap leaders:Power1-21,Rahal 22-23, Jakes2425,Hinchcliff e26,Power27-39,Rahal40-43,Dixon 44, Hinchcliffe 45-47, Power48-58, Rahal59-61, Kimball62,Power63-82.

Points: Montoya171, Power166, Castroneves 161, Dixon144, Rahal 144, Kanaan 136, Newgarden 129, Hinchcliffe129,Bourdais123,Pagenaud101.

Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— TradedRHPEdwardMujica and cashconsiderationsto theOaklandAthletics in exchange for a player to benamedlater or cashconsiderations.Recalled RHPMatt BarnesfromPawtucket (IL). Optioned INFTravis Shawto Pawtucket. Named Carl Willis pitchingcoach. CLEVEL ANDINDIANS— Purchased the contract of LHPBruceChen fromColumbus(IL). Designated RHPAnthonySwarzakfor assignment. DETROITIGERS— PlacedCAlex Avila on the 15-dayDL.Recalled 0 BryanHoladayfromToledo(IL). NEW YORKYANKEES—PlacedRHPChris Martin on the15-dayDL.Recaled RHPBranden Pinderfrom Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL).

OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Transferred RHPJarrod Parkerto the60-dayDL. National League SANDIEGOPADRES— PlacedINFYonderAlonso on the15-dayDL,retroactiveto May8. Recalled OF Abraham AlmontefromEl Paso(PCL). BASKETBALL

National Basketball Association NBA —FinedLosAngeles Clippers F-CGlen Davis $5,000forviolatingtheleague'santi-flopping rules during aMay8gameagainst Houston. FOOTBALL National Football League ATLANTAFALCONS— SignedCBJalenCollins, WR receiverJustin Hardy,DTGradyJarrett, OTJake RodgersandCBAkeemKing. CINCINN ATI BENGALS— Named Robert Livingston defensivqua e lity control/special team sassistant. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed DL Geneo Grissom. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague DETROIT REDWINGS— SignedCDominic Turgeon toathree-yearentry-level contract. OTTAW A SENATORS—Agreed to terms with G Matt O'Connor onatwo-yearentry-level contract. COLLEGE PROVIE DNCE—NamedJeff Battle men'sassistant basketballcoach.


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL eatandings

AWESOME, THEN SAUCED

All TimesPDT

Washington's PHOENIX — Justin Upton hit a Bryce Harper, go-ahead homerun in the12th inning to lift San Diego. Arizona center, has had forced extra innings when chocolate sauce poured pinch-hitter Danny Dorn doubled in two runs off Craig Kimbrel to tie on him by it in the ninth. teammate

AMERICANLEAGUE

East Division

NewYork

Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Boston Kansas City Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Houston Los Angeles Seattle Texas Oakland

W L 19 12 17 14 16 15 13 15 13 17

Central Division W 19 19 18 11 10

L 11 12 13 16 19

14 13 12 12

17 17 18 20

West Division W L 20 11

Pct GB .613 .548 2 .516 3 .464 4'/2 433 51/2

Pct GB .633

,613 1/2 .581 1'/2

Max Scherzer after Harper hit a tworun walk-off home run in the ninth inning to beat Atlanta on

if/

.407 61/2 .345 81/2

Pct GB .645 .452 6

)

l v

.433 61/2 400 71/2 .375 8'/2

,i

Saturday in

1

Washington. The Nationals won 8-6.

Saturday'sGames Baltimore 6, N.Y.Yankees2 Toronto7, Boston 1 Kansas City6, Detroit 2 Cincinnati10,ChicagoWhite Sox4,1st game ChicagoWhiteSox8, Cincinnati 2, 2ndgame Minnesota 7, Cleveland4 Tampa Bay7,Texas2 Houston 6, L.A.Angels 5 Seattle 7, Oakland2 Today'sGam es Baltimore (B.Norris1-3) at N.Y.Yankees(Pineda4-0),

10:05a.m. Boston (Buchholz1-4) at Toronto (Dickey 1-3), 10:07 a.m. Minnesota(May 2-2) at Cleveland(Salazar 3-1), 10:10a.m. Texas(W.Rodriguez1-1) at Tampa Bay (Beffatti 0-0), 10:10a.m. Cincinnati (Lorenzen1-1) at Chicago White Sox (Danks1-3),11:10 a.m. Houston (Feldman2-3) atL.A.Angels (Richards2-1), 12:35p.m. Oakland(Chavez1-2) at Seattle(F.Hernandez5-0), 1:10 p.m. KansasCity (C.Young2-0) at Detroit (Greene3-2), 5:05 p.m. Monday'sGames TorontoatBaltimore, 4:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat Milwaukee,4:20 p.m. Kansas CityatTexas,5:05p.m. Boston atOakland,7:05p.m.

Padres 6, D'backs 4 (12 inn.j

Nick Wass I The Associated Press

American League

Mariners 7,Athletics2 SEATTLE —Robinson Canohad three hits and anRBI, andSeattle took advantage ofOakland's season-high four errors. Seattle scored five runs onOakland's most errors since Aug.22, 2012. The Cano-Nelson Cruzcombo produced onerun inthe first and a rare double-error by shortstop Semien sent homeanother. Cruz doubled homeCano,andafter Kyle Seager walked, LoganMorrison hit a sharp grounder upthe middle but it caromed off Semien's glove. Semien then threw wildly to home, allowing Cruz toscore.

Twins 7, lndians4

Orioles 6, Yankees2

Brewers12, Cnbs 4

CLEVELAND —Minnesota's Torii Hunter pushed his consecutive

NEW YORK — Chris Davis hit one of Baltimore's three homeruns, and the Orioles snapped afourgame losing streak.

MILWAUKEE — Jason Rogers hit his first career homerun, andGerardo Parra alsohomeredanddrove in four runs to leadMilwaukee.

hit streak to seven at-bats with a

solo homer in the first, a single in the third and an infield hit in the fifth, and Minnesota defeated Cleveland. The streak ended in the sixth when shortstop Jose Ramirez booted his ground ball for an error.

San Diego Arizona ab r bbi ab r hbi M yers1b 6 2 3 0 Inciartrf 6 0 1 0 Spngnr2b 3 0 1 0 Pollockcf 6 0 1 0 Gyorkoph-2b3 1 2 0 Gldsch1b 2 1 1 0 Q cknshp 0 0 0 0 DPerltlf 5 0 2 1 Kemprf 5 0 0 1 Tomas3b 3 0 0 0 Uptonlf 6 1 2 2 Pnngtn3b-ss 2 0 0 0 Solarte3b 6 2 2 1 Owings2b 5 0 0 0 DeNrrsc 6 0 2 1 Pachecc 4 2 1 0 Venalecf 4 0 1 0 EMrshlp 0 0 0 0

Amarstss-2b 5 0 1 1 Ahmedss 3 0 0 0 T.Rossp 2 0 0 0 Hillph-3b 2 1 1 0 Mdlrksph 0 0 0 0 CAndrsp 2 0 1 1 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Trumoph 1 0 0 0 Almontph 1 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Chafinp 0 0 0 0 M aurerp 0 0 0 0 Reedp 0 0 0 0 Barmesph-ss2 0 0 0 Dornph 1 0 1 2 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Gswsch c 1 0 0 0 Totals 4 9 6 146 Totals 4 3 4 9 4 San Diego 100 000 021 B02 — 6 Arizona 000 110 002 ggg — 4 E—Kimbrel (1), Inciarte(1). DP—San Diego 1. LOB —San Diego 12,Arizona8. 28—Myers2 (10), Gyorko(5), Solarte(6), De.Norris(13), Dorn(1). 3B — D.Peralta (1). HR—Upton (8). SB—Spangenberg(3),Upton(7), De.Norris (1),Pollock(6), D.Peralta (1).CS—Goldschmidt (1). SF —Kemp. IP H R E R BBSD San Diego T.Ross 6 5 2 2 2 6 Thayer 1 0 0 0 0 1 BenoitH,7 1 0 0 0 1 1 KimbrelBS,1-10 1 2 2 2 1 2 Maurer 1 1 0 0 1 0 Quackenbush W,1-0 2 1 0 0 0 3 Arizona CAnderson 7 5 1 1 2 2 O.Perez 0 1 1 1 0 0 ZieglerBS,1-1 2-3 2 1 1 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Chafin Reed 1 2 1 1 0 1 DelgadoL,1-2 2 2 - 3 42 2 0 4 EMarshall 13 0 0 0 0 1 O.Perez pitched to1batter in the8th. WP—ChafinRe , ed, Delgado. PB—Pacheco. T—4:17.A—27,340(48,519).

Baltimore Newyork Chicago Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Machd3b 5 1 1 0 Effsurycf 5 1 0 0 Fowlercf 4 1 2 0 Segurass 5 2 2 1 P aredsdh 5 2 3 1 Gardnrlf 5 0 1 0 Bryant3b 4 1 1 3 HGomz2b-3b 5 1 0 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 CYoungrf 3 0 1 0 R izzo1b 4 0 1 0 Braunrf 2 3 1 0 DYongrf 4 0 2 2 Teixeir1b 4 0 0 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Gennettph-2b 1 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 3 1 1 1 Beltrandh 4 0 1 1 D .Rossp 0 0 0 0 Lind1b 4 1 0 0 Pearce2b 3 1 0 0 Pirela2b 4 0 2 0 M Mntrc 2 0 1 0 KDavislf 3 2 3 3 NATIONALLEAGUE Flahrty2b 0 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 1 1 0 Castilloc 1 0 0 0 GParracf 2 2 2 4 Minnesota Cleveland East Division J Hardyss 4 0 0 0 Drewss 4 0 1 0 Solerrf 4 1 1 0 Maldndc 3 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi W L Pct GB DeAzalf 4 1 1 2 JMrphyc 2 0 0 1 Scastross 3 0 1 1 EHerrr3b-rf 4 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 4 2 2 1 Kipnis 2b 5 1 3 0 NewYork 19 11 .633 Lvrnwyc 3 0 0 0 BMccnph 1 0 1 0 M ottep 0 0 0 0 Lohsep 2 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 5 3 3 1 CSantn1b 5 0 0 0 Washington 16 15 .516 3'/2 Totals 35 6 9 6 Totals 3 6 2 8 2 Szczurlf 1 0 0 0 JRogrsph 1 1 1 3 M auer1b 5 1 2 0 Brantlylf 4 0 2 1 Miami 15 16 .484 4'/2 Baltimore B B 13 1 g 1BB — 6 Coghlnlf-1b 4 0 0 0 Jeffrssp 0 0 0 0 Interieague K Suzukc 4 0 1 0 Mossrf 4 0 1 0 Atlanta 14 16 .467 5 NewYork B g gB1g 01B — 2 TWoodp 2 0 0 0 Blazekp 1 0 0 0 Kvargsdh 5 1 2 1 Chsnhll3b 4 0 0 0 E—Flaherty (1), Mac hado m. DP Philadelphia 11 20 .355 BN2 —NewYork 1. E Jcksnp 0 0 0 0 Cottsp 0 0 0 0 EdEscr3b 5 0 3 2 Raburnph 1 0 0 0 CentralDivision LOB —Baltimore 6, NewYork 9. 28—Machado (5), C okep 0 0 0 0 Reds10-2, WhiteSox4-6 ERosarlf 5 0 2 1 Swisherdh 4 1 4 0 D.Young W L Pct GB (3), C.YoungP), Drew(5). 38—Paredes (2). JHerrrph-2b 2 0 0 0 JSchafrcf 4 0 1 0 Bourncf 4 1 2 1 22 8 HR—Paredes(5),C.Davis(7),DeAza(3).SF—J.Murphy. ARussll2b-ss4 1 1 0 St. Louis .733 osRodonearned DSantnss 4 0 0 0 RPerezc 2 0 0 0 Chicago 15 14 .517 6'/2 Oakland IP H R E R BBSO Totals 3 5 4 8 4 Totals 3 3121112 CHICAGO— Carl Seattle DvMrpph 1 1 1 2 Cincinnati 15 15 .500 7 Baltimore Chicago BB3 1BB 000 — 4 hit first major league win asChicaab r hbi ab r hbi Hayesc 1 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 14 16 .467 8 W.chenW,1-1 7 5 1 1 1 7 Milwaukee 0 2 3 1 5 1 ggz— 12 go salvaged adoubleheader split. Crisplf 5 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 3 1 2 1 JRmrzss 2 0 0 0 Milwaukee 10 21 .323 12'/2 Tom.Hunter 1 2 1 0 0 2 E—S.castro (6), A.Russeff(4). DP—Chicago Semienss 4 1 3 0 Ruggincf 1 1 1 0 Waltersph-ss 2 0 0 0 O'Day 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 1. LOB West Division —Chicago 5, Milwaukee4. 2B—Fowler 2 Alexei Ramirez connected in each Totals 41 7 166 Totals 3 9 4 134 W L Pct GB Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 BMillerdh 4 0 0 0 Britton S,6-7 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 (7), Soler (7), K.Davis2 (9). HR—Bryant (1), Se- game for Chicago, including a solo BButlerdh 5 0 1 1 Cano2b 5 2 3 1 Minnesota 1 0 3 B 21 Bgg — 7 NewYork LosAngeles 19 10 .655 gura (2),G.Parra(1), J.Rogers(1). SF—G.Parra, Canha1b 5 1 1 1 N.cruzrf 3 1 2 1 Cleveland g g gB01 3gg — 4 WhitleyL,1-1 drive in the opener.Avisail Garcia SanDiego 17 15 .531 3'/2 Lawrie3b 3 0 0 0 Seager3b 3 0 0 0 52 - 3 6 5 5 2 5 Maldonado. E—E.Rosario (1), J.Ram irez (5). DP—Cleveland D.carpenter 1 1-3 2 1 1 0 2 SanFrancisco 15 16 .484 5 IP H R E R BBSO and Gordon Beckhamwent deep Muncyph-3b1 0 1 0 Morrsn1b 3 0 0 0 2. LOB —Minnesota 9, Cleveland10. 28—Dozier Shreve Arizona 13 16 .448 6 2 1 0 0 0 2 Chicago Pheglyc 4 0 0 0 Zuninoc 5 0 0 0 (10), Mauer (8), Swisher (1), Bourn(5). HR—Dozier HBP —byWhitley (Pearce,A.Jones). Colorado 11 16 .407 7 TWoodL,2-2 4 6 6 4 1 3 in the nightcap. Burnscf 4 0 2 0 Ackleycf-If 4 1 1 0 ( 3), Tor.Hun ter (5), D a v .M u rphy (3). SB — K ipn i s 2 ( 4) . T — 2: 5 5. A — 41,280 ( 49, 6 38). E.Jackson 0 1 3 3 2 0 Sogard2b 4 0 2 0 CTaylrss 4 1 1 0 IP H R E R BBSD First game Saturday'sGames Coke 1 1 2 2 1 0 Totals 3 9 2 102 Totals 3 5 7 103 Minnesota Chicago Washington 8, Atlanta6 Motte 1 2 1 1 1 0 Cincinnati Oakland 000 010 B10 — 2 National League PHughes W,2-4 61-3 10 4 4 0 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati10,ChicagoWhite Sox4,1st game J.Russell 1 1 0 0 0 1 Seattle 210 021 B1x — 7 DuensingH,2 1 - 3 0 0 0 2 0 ChicagoWhiteSox8, Cincinnati 2, 2ndgame D.Ross 1 0 0 0 0 0 B Hmltncf 3 1 1 1 Eatoncf 4 0 1 0 E — L a w ri e (5), Hah n (1), S e m i e n 2 (8), H ap p (1). A.Thompson H,6 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 Byrdlf 5 1 2 3 Mecarrlf 4 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets3, Philadelphia2 Milwaukee LOB —Oakland 12, Seattle 12. 28—S.Smith (6), PerkinsS,11-11 1 6 2 0 0 0 1 Nationals 8, Braves Pittsburgh 7,St. Louis5 LohseW,2-4 5 7 4 4 1 7 Frazier3b 4 1 2 0 Abreu1b 4 1 1 1 N .cruz (4). HR — C anh a ( 5). S B — S em ien 2 ( 6), R ugCleveland Milwaukee12,ChicagoCubs4 Jeffress 1 0 0 0 0 0 Brucerf 5 0 1 1 LaRochdh 2 1 0 0 giano(3),Ackley(1). B.chenL,0-1 4 10 6 6 1 3 WASHINGTON San Diego 6,Arizona4,12 innings — Bryce Harper Blazek 2 1 0 0 0 2 P hillips2b 5 2 1 1 AGarcirf 4 1 1 0 IP H R E R BBSD Rzepczynski 1 2 0 0 0 1 Miami 6,SanFrancisco2 Cotts 1 0 0 0 0 1 B.Penac 3 1 2 0 Gigaspi3b 3 0 1 1 Oakland R.Webb 1 1 1 1 0 0 extended his remarkable homer Cozadss 4 2 1 1 AIRmrzss 4 1 2 2 L.A. Dodgers atColorado,ppd., rain E.Jackson pi t ched to 3 ba tters inthe5th. Hahn L,1-3 51-3 8 6 4 3 4 Today'sGam es Hagadone 1 3 0 0 0 0 streak with a walk-off, two-run Schmkrdh 5 1 3 2 Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 PB — Maldonado. A.castro 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 B.Shaw 1 0 0 0 1 0 shot in the bottom of the ninth. Negron1b 2 1 0 1 Shuckph 1 0 0 0 Atlanta (A.Wood1-2) at Washington(Zimmermann Bassitt T—3:03.A—39,600 (41,900). 11-3 1 1 1 2 0 Atchison 1 0 0 0 0 1 MJhnsn2b 3 0 0 0 2-2),10:35a.m. 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 B.chenpitchedto 3 batters inthe5th. Harper homered for the sixth time Totals 3 6 101310 Totals 32 4 6 4 N.Y.Mets(B.colon 5-1)at Philadelphia(Bilingsley Abad Otero 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—3:02.A—16,199 (36,856). Pirates 7, Cardinals 5 Cincinnati 000 0 0 2 107 — 10 0-1),10:35a.m. in his past three games,one off Chicago 0 00 000 103 — 4 St. Louis (Lyons0-0) at Pittsburgh(Locke2-2), Seattle Happ W, 3 -1 5 4 1 1 2 8 the major league record set by E — G i l a spi e (4), M.Johnson (3). DP—Chicago 10:35a.m. PITTSBURGH — Jordy Mercer, 1 2 0 0 0 2 Rays 7, Rangers 2 2. LOB — C inci n nati 11, Chicago4. 28—Cozart (5), ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 0-1) at Milwaukee(Garza Lowe Shawn Green in 2002. Wilhel m sen 1 0 0 0 0 2 who began the day hitting .186, hit Schumaker (2), Eaton(5),A.Garcia(5). HR —Byrd(6), 2-4),11:10a.m. 1-3 3 1 1 0 0 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Tampa Atlanta a go-ahead two-run double in the Abreu(6),AI.Ramirez(1). SB—B.Hamilton(15), FraCincinnati (Lorenzen1-1) at Chicago White Sox Farquhar Washington F urbush H,4 2 3 0 0 0 0 1 zier (4) 1 Cozart (3). S — B.H am il t on. SF — B.Hamilton, (Danks1-3),11;10 a.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi sixth to lift Pittsburgh. 1 1 0 0 0 0 Bay reliever Andrew Bellatti was Gillaspie. Miami(Latos1-3) atSanFrancisco (Vogelsong 1-2), Beimel M arkksrf 4 0 1 0 Spancf 4 0 1 0 H BP — by Ab ad (S e ag er), by Ba s si t t (N.Cruz). WP the winning pitcher in his major IP H R E R BBSD 1:05 p.m. ASmnsss 5 1 1 0 YEscor3b 5 1 2 1 ahn,Abad,Happ. St. Louis PINsburgh Cincinnati L.A. Dodgers (Greinke5-0) at Colorado(K.Kendrick H league debut. Four Rays relievers F remn1b 4 1 1 0 Werthlf 3 1 1 0 T — 3: 3 6. A — 37,441 (47, 5 74). ab r hbi ab r hbi C ueto W, 3 -3 8 1-3 6 4 4 2 7 1-4),1:10p.m. KJhnsnlf 4 0 0 0 Harperrf 4 2 2 2 finished, and Bellatti was awardJaycf 3 0 0 1 Polancrf 3 0 1 1 Hoover 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 San Diego(Cashner 1-5) at Arizona(Undecided), Caffasp3b 3 2 1 0 Zmrmn1b 4 1 1 3 Kozma3b 1 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 4 1 1 1 Chicago 1:10 p.m. Astros 6,Angels5 ed the victory after pitching 3/s Petersn2b 4 0 0 1 Dsmndss 4 1 1 0 Wong2b 4 1 1 0 Mcctchcf 4 0 1 0 Noesi 12-3 3 0 0 2 3 Monday'sGames Bthncrtc 4 1 2 2 Loatonc 4 1 3 2 innings. H ollidylf 5 0 3 0 Martelf 2 0 0 0 Carroll L,0-1 42 - 3 5 3 2 2 1 PittsburghatPhiladelphia, 4:05p.m. Maybincf 4 1 2 1 MTaylrpr 0 0 0 0 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Chris Carter MAdms1b 4 1 0 0 SRdrgzlf-1b 2 1 1 0 Putnam 1 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 Atlanta at Cincinnati,4:10 p.m. CoMrtnp 0 0 0 0WRamsc 0 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 1 2 1 PAlvrz1b 2 2 1 0 TampaBay Texas Da.Jennings 2-3 3 6 6 3 1 ChicagoWhiteSoxat Milwaukee,4:20 p.m. and Colby Rasmushit two-run Tehernp 2 0 0 0 Espinos2b 4 1 1 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 2 1 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r hbi Petricka 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 N.Y. MetsatChicagoCubs,5:05p.m. C ahillp 0 0 0 0 Fisterp 3 0 1 0 homers and JoseAltuve also hit Molinac 4 1 1 2 Kang3b 4 1 2 0 Choorf 4 0 1 0 Guyercf-If 5 2 2 0 HBP—byCarroll (Frazier), by Putnam(B.Pena). WashingtonatArizona, 6:40p.m. Ciriacoph 1 0 1 2 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 Rynlds3b 2 0 0 0Cerveff ic 3 1 0 0 WP—Noesi, Carroll, Da.Jennings. an early homer for ALWest-leadAndrus ss 5 0 1 0 SouzJr rf 2 2 1 3 Miami atL.A. Dodgers, 7;10p.m. Cunniffp 0 0 0 0 Barrettp 0 0 0 0 MHarrsp 0 0 0 0 Mercerss 3 0 1 3 Fielderdh 5 0 2 0 Longoridh 3 1 2 3 T—3:33. A—0 (40,615). ing Houston, who wonfor just the A vilanp 0 0 0 0 Roarkp 0 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 3 0 1 0 Worleyp 1 1 1 0 Beltre3b 5 0 1 0 Forsyth3b 4 0 0 0 YongJrcf 1 0 0 0 Ugglaph 1 0 1 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 Leaders second time in six games. Blanks1b 4 1 1 0 JButlerlf 3 0 1 0 SecondGame Storenp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0Scahiff p 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Peguerlf 4 1 1 2 Kiermrcf 0 0 0 0 Chicago AMERICAN LEAGUE Totals 36 6 9 6 Totals 3 6 8 148 S oclvchp 0 0 0 0 Hartph 0 0 0 1 LMartncf 4 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi LosAngeles BATTING —AJones, Baltimore,.355;Altuve,Hous- Houslon Atlanta Bgg B1g 23B — 6 Bourjosph-cf1 0 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 Chirinsc 2 0 1 0 Acarerss 4 1 3 1 B Hmltncf 3 1 1 0 Eatoncf 3 1 0 0 ab r bbi ab r hbi ton, .349;Egsbury,New York,.3 47;Reddick,Oakland, Washington B3g B3g BB2 — 8 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Rosal e s2b 3 0 0 0 TBckh2b 4 0 0 0 Byrdlf 1 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 5 1 2 1 .345; Brantley,Cleveland, .344;Fielder,Texas, .342; Mrsnckcf 5 1 2 0 Calhonrf 5 1 2 1 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. J Hrrsnlf 0 0 0 0 Negronlf 0 0 0 0 Abreudh 4 0 1 0 Rivera c 3 1 1 0 A ltuve2b 3 1 1 1 Troutcf 4 2 3 1 Cain,KansasCity,.339; Ncruz,Seattle,.339. E—Cunniff (1). DP—Atlanta 3. LOB —Atlanta5, Totals 34 5 105 Totals 2 9 7 9 6 Totals 36 2 8 2 Totals 3 2 7 10 7 Washington7. 28—Bethancourt (4), Maybin2 (2), Votto1b 4 0 3 2 LaRoch1b 4 1 2 1 RBI — Ncruz,Seattle,26; Hosmer, KansasCity,25; Valuen3b 4 1 1 1 Pujols1b 5 0 0 0 St. Louis ggg B gg 000 — 6 F razier3b 4 0 0 0 AGarcirf 4 2 2 1 BOO 200 Bgg — 2 isdh 3 0 0 0 Freesedh 3 0 0 0 Texas Teixeira,NewYork, 25;Vogt,Oakland,25;Travis, Toron- Gatt Ciriaco(1),Espinosa(5), Fister(1). HR —Harper(11), Pitlsburgh — 7 0 3 B 0 1 3 Bgz — 7 Tampa Bay 3 0 0 B30 B1x Phillips2b 3 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 4 2 3 2 to, 24; KMorales,KansasCity, 23; HR amirez,Boston, CIRsmsrf 3 2 1 2 Aybarss 4 0 1 2 n Lobaton(2). SB—M.Taylor (3). DP —St. Louis 2. TP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB—St. Mesorcdh 4 0 0 0 GBckh3b 3 1 2 3 E—T.Beckham(1). LOB —Texas 11, Tampa Bay Zimmerma(3), Carter1b 4 1 1 2 Giavtll2b 3 1 1 0 22; Reddick,Oakland,22. IP H R E R BBSO Louis 7, Pittsburgh 3. 28 — H oll i d ay (7), Heyw ard 2 6. 28 —Chirinos(6), A.cabrera(5), Rivera(4). HRB oeschrf 4 0 0 0 Sotoc 4010 Congerc 3 0 0 0 C.Perezc 4 0 2 1 DOUBLE — SCano, Seattle, 11;Cespedes, Detroit, (7), Molina(7), Polanco(10), Mccutchen(5), Mercer Brnhrtc 4 0 1 0 Bonifac2b 4 0 1 0 Peguero (4), SouzaJr. (5), Longoria(4), A.cabrera Atlanta 11; DozieMi r, nnesota,10; Beltran, NewYork,9; Infante, Tuckerlf 3 0 0 0 Fthrstn3b 3 0 0 0 Teheran 5 10 6 6 3 6 ( 3), Worl e y (1). HR — N .W alk er (2). CS — P olanc o (2). Cozartss 2 1 1 0 (1). SB —Rosales (1), Guyer (3). CS—J.Butler (1), Cahill Kansa sCity,9;Longoria,TampaBay,g;KMorales,Kan- MGnzlzss 4 0 0 0 Joyceph 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 SF — Jay, Hart. T.Beckham (1). Totals 29 2 6 2 Totals 3 58 148 C owgilllf 4 1 1 0 sas City,9; Pilar, Toronto,9. Cunniff 1 0 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSO Cincinnati 002 0 0 0 ggg — 2 IP H R E R BBSD Avilan HOME RUNS—Ncruz,Seattle,14; HRa mirez,Bos- Totals 32 6 6 6 Totals 3 6 5 105 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 St. Louis Chicago 020 102 30x — 8 Houston 123 000 ggg — 6 Texas ton,10;Teixeira,NewYork,10; Trout, LosAngeles,9. Co.MartinL,1-1 1 3 2 2 0 1 C.MartinezL,3-1 51-3 7 7 7 4 7 DP — Chicago3. LOB—Cincinnati 6, Chicago6. 110 B01 — 5 DetwilerL,0-4 4 5 5 5 3 2 Washington STOLEN BASES—Altuve, Houston,11; Egsbury, LosAngeles 200 ManessBS,1-3 2- 3 1 0 0 0 0 2B — DP—Houston1. LOB—Houston 4, LosAnge- Bass AI.Ramirez (8). HR—A.Garcia (2), AI.Ram irez 2 4 1 1 1 0 Fister NewYork,11; Springer,Houston, 10;Gardner, New 62-3 6 3 3 0 3 Choate 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 —Marisnick (5), Calhoun(4), C.Perez(1). Patton 2 1 1 1 0 2 ThorntonH,7 2), G.Beckham (2). SB—B.Hamilton ((16). CS—A. York, 9; Marisnick,Houston, 9; RDa vis, Detroit, 8; les 7. 28 1 3- 0 0 0 0 0 Socolovich 1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 HR—Altuye(4), Col.Rasmus(6), Carter(5), Trout(9). TampaBay arcia(3),Bonifacio(1). SF—G.Beckham. DeShi elds,Texas,7;Trout,LosAngeles,7. 1-3 2 3 3 1 1 BarrettH,5 M.Harris 1 1 0 0 0 1 32-3 5 2 2 1 2 RoarkBS,1-2 IP H R E R BBSD Marisnick(2). Andriese PITCHING —FHernandez, Seattle, 5-0; McHugh, CS — 2 - 3 1 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh Cincinnati IP H R E R BBSD B.Gomes 1 2 0 0 1 2 Houst on,4-0;Gray,Oakland,4-0;Pineda,New York, StorenW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Worley 5 9 5 5 3 0 MarquisL,3-2 52 - 3 10 5 5 1 0 Geltz 1-3 0 0 0 0 4-0; Betances, NewYork, 4-0; Keuchel, Houston, 4-0; Houslon HBP —byFister (Markakis). ScahiffW,1-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Villarreal 2-3 4 3 3 1 0 W,4-0 6 2 - 3 8 4 4 2 7 BegattiW,1-0 3 1 - 3 1 0 0 1 2 T—3:12. A—39,193(41,341). Simon,Detroit, 4-1;Carrasco, Cleveland, 4-2; Buehrle, K euchel J .Hughes H,B 1 1 0 0 0 1 Badenhop 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 NeshekH,7 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 BoxbergerS,B-B 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Toronto,4-2. WatsonH,6 1 0 0 0 1 0 Chicago ERA—K uch e el, Houston, 1.39;NMartinez, Texas, QuallsS,3-4 1 2 1 1 1 1 Detwilerpitchedto 2batters inthe5th. M elancon S, 6 -7 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 RodonW,1-0 6 4 2 2 4 8 HBP —by Patton (J.Butler), by Bellatti (Chirinos). Marlins 6, Giants 1.47; Gray,Oakland, 1.65; FHernandez, Seatle, 1.73; LosAngeles WP — C.Martinez, M.Harris. PetrickaH,2 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 6 6 6 1 4 WP —Detwiler. PB—Rivera. Odorizzi,TampaBay, 2.21;Chen,Baltimore, 2.52; San- ShoemakerL,2-3 3 T — 2: 3 4. A — 38,06 8 (38, 3 62). DukeH,5 12-3 1 0 0 1 1 J.Alvarez 3 0 0 0 3 4 T—3:18.A—20,943 (31,042). tiago,LosAngeles, 2.57. SAN FRANCISCO — Marcell OzuRobertson 1 0 0 0 0 2 Pestano 1 0 0 0 0 2 STRIKED UTS—Archer, Tampa Bay, 50; Kluber, na homered in athree-run fourth PB — Soto. Balk—Vigarreal. 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland,46;FHernandez, Seattle, 44;Gray,Oakland, Morin Mets 3, Phillies 2 T—2:53. A—27,980(40,615). 1 0 0 0 1 2 Royals 6, Tigers 2 44; Kazm ir, Oakland,40; Buchholz, Boston,40; Pineda, Mattheus inning, and Miami won for the 12th T—2:42. A—40,210(45,957). NewYork,38; Karns,TampaBay,38. time in their past17 games inSan PHILADELPHIA —Juan Lagares DETROIT —Alcides Escobar SAVES —AMiger, NewYork,13; Soria,Detroit,11; History Francisco. homered, and Jonathon Niese Perkins,Minnesota,11; Street,LosAngeles,9; Rodney, Blue Jays homered on the first pitch of the 7, Red Sox1 T HIS DATE IN BASEBALL Seattle, 8;Boxberger,TampaBay,8;Gregerson, Housimproved to 5-0 in his past seven gameandmade asparklingcatch Miami ton,7. San Francisco starts against Philadelphia. TORONTO — Edwi n Encarnacion NATIONAL LEAGUE ab r hbi ab r hbi May1B on Miguel Cabrera's line drive two 1909 —Pitching for WinchesterintheBlueGrass BATTING —DGordon,Miami,.437;AGonzalez, Los hit a three-run homer, Josh DonY elichlf 4 0 0 0 Aokilf 4 0 1 0 innings later to lead KansasCity, Angeles,.373; LeMahieu, Colorado,.360; Goldschmidt, P rado3b 5 0 2 0 Panik2b 5 0 1 1 New York Philadelphia League,FredToney worked17no-hit inningsbefore winning1-0overLexington. Arizona,.355; Hogiday,St.Louis,.354; Galvis, Philadel- aldson had three hits andToronto Stantonrf 4 1 0 0 Pagancf 5 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi which moved ahalf-game over 1934 —Lou Gehrigof theNewYork Yankees phia ,.347;Wong,St.Loui s,.336. Ozunacf 4 2 1 1 Poseyc 4 0 1 0 Grndrsrf 4 0 1 0 Reverelf 4 1 0 0 handed Boston its seventh loss in Detroit for the ALCentral lead. RBI — Stanton, Miami, 29;Goldschmidt, Arizona, R ealmtc 3 1 0 0 Belt1b 3 0 0 0 Lagarscf 5 1 1 2 Galvisss 4 0 1 0 playedfive inningsbefore removinghimself fromthe 27;Harper,Washington,27;AGonzalez,LosAnge- the past eight games. JBaker 2b 2 1 1 1 Maxwll rf 4 1 1 0 D uda1b 5 0 0 0 Ruf1b 4 1 1 0 game becauseof ilness. Bythattime,hehadtwohomKansasCity Detroit les, 25;Upton,SanDiego, 24; Marte, Pittsburgh,21; DSolan2b 2 1 1 2 Bcrwfrss 4 0 2 1 C uddyrlf 4 0 2 0 Francrrf 2 0 0 1 ers, twodoublesandseven RBls against theChicago ab r hbi Boston Toronto ab r hbi Mcarpenter, St. Louis,20;Kemp, SanDiego,20;Votto, Morse1b 4 0 1 0 McGeh3b 4 0 0 0 DnMrp3b 4 0 1 0 Sizemrph-rf 0 0 0 0 WhiteSox. ab r bbi ab r hbi A Escorss 5 2 2 2 Gosecf 5 0 1 0 1944 —Cleveland's MelHarderbecamethe50th Cincinnati20; , Zimmerman, Washington, 20. Hchvrrss 4 0 2 2 Bmgrnp 1 0 0 0 Plawckc 3 0 0 0 CHrndz2b 3 0 1 0 DOUBLE S—Mcarpenter, St. Louis,14;Freeman, Bettscf 5 1 2 0 Travis2b 4 1 1 1 L.cain cf 5 1 2 0 Kinsler 2b 4 0 0 0 Phelpsp 2 0 0 0 HSnchzph 1 0 1 0 D Herrr2b 4 0 1 0 Ruizc 4 0 1 1 player towin200gamesastheIndiansbeattheBoston Hosmer1b 5 0 2 2 Micarr1b 4 0 0 0 Atlanta,13;DeN orris, SanDiego,13; Tulowilzki, Colo- Pedroia2b 4 0 1 1 Dnldsn3b 5 2 3 1 ISuzukiph 1 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Tejadass 3 1 2 0 OHerrrcf 4 0 0 0 RedSox5-4. KMorlsdh 5 1 1 0 VMrtnzdh 4 1 2 0 1967 —Bravesoutfielder HankAaron hit aninrado, 13;AGonzalez,LosAngeles,12;Desmond,Wash- Ortizdh 4 0 1 0 Bautistdh 3 1 1 1 A Ramsp 0 0 0 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Niesep 2 1 1 0 ABlanc3b 3 0 2 0 AGordnlf 2 1 0 0 Cespdslf 4 1 2 0 side-the-park homerun.It wastheonlyoneof his 755 ington,10;Lind, Milwaukee,10; Myers,SanDiego,10; HRmrzlf 4 0 0 0 Encrnc1b 3 1 2 3 Bourph 0 0 0 0 GBlancph 0 0 0 0 Monellph 1 0 0 0 Utleyph 1 0 1 0 Sandoyl3b 3 0 2 0 Smoak1b 0 0 0 0 I nfante2b 5 0 3 1 JMrtnzrf 3 0 1 0 Polanco,Pittsburgh,10. M orrisp 0 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 Harangp 2 0 0 0 homerswhichdid notclearthefence. C.colon 3b 5 0 2 0 Cstllns 3b 3 0 1 2 1970 —HoytWilhelm pitchedhis1,000th major HOMERUNS—Harper, Washington, 11;Frazier, Napoli1b 4 0 1 0 RuMrtnc 4 0 1 1 Romop 0 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Ascheph 1 0 0 0 Cincinnati, 10;Goldschm idt, Arizona,9; AGonzalez, C raigrf 4 0 0 0 Pigarcf 4 0 0 0 JDysonrf 3 1 1 0 JMccnc 4 0 2 0 Casigap 0 0 0 0 Carlylep 0 0 0 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 leaguegame, buttheAtlanta Braveslost 6-5to theSt. Buterac 3 0 0 1 Rominess 3 0 0 0 Los Angeles,9; Pederson, LosAngeles,9; Upton, San Bogartsss 4 0 1 0 Sandrslf 4 0 0 0 MDuffyph 1 1 1 0 F amilip 0 0 0 0 LGarcip 0 0 0 0 LouisCardinals. RDavisph 1 0 0 0 1981 — Charlie Leabecamethefirst French-born Diego, 8; Marte,Pittsburgh, 7;Stanton, Miami,7;Voto, Swihartc 4 0 0 0 Colaellrf 2 1 0 0 Totals 35 6 8 6 Totals 3 6 2 102 Howardph 1 0 0 0 Cincinnati7. , C arrerrf 1 1 1 0 Totals 38 6 136 Totals 3 5 2 9 2 Miami Bgg 3gg 03B — 6 Totals 35 3 9 2 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 pitcher tothrowano-hitter astheMontreal Exposbeat Kansas City 22 1 100 Bgg — 6 STOLEN BASES —Hamilton, Cincinnati, 16; Goinsss 3 0 0 0 San Francisco Bgg B1g BB1 — 2 N ew York O g g0 1 B 200 — 3 the San FranciscoGiants4-0 in thesecond game of Detroit B1 0 B01 Bgg — 2 DGordon, Miami, 12;Polanco,Pittsburgh,9; Aoki, San Totals 36 1 8 1 Totals 3 3 7 9 7 LOB —Miami 8, San Francisco 10.28—Prado(6), Philadelphia BBB BB2 000 — 2 adoublehea der. E—A.Escobar (3), J.Martinez(1).LOB—KansasCity J.Baker(2), D.Solano(1), Hechavarria (7), Panik(6), E—D.Herrera(1), C.Hernandez(2). DP—NewYork 1999 —NomarGarciaparrahit twograndslams Francisco,8; Fowler,Chicago,8; Rizzo,Chicago, 7; Boston 000 010 ggg — 1 10, Detroit8.28 —Hosmer(8),K.Morales(9), Infante(9), Maxwel(3), Upton,SanDiego,7. Toronto 110 301 10x — 7 l H.Sanchez (2). HR —Ozuna (2). CS—B. 1, Philadelphia1. LOB —NewYork9, Philadelphia 8. and atwo-runhomerto becomethefirst ALplayerwith E—J.Kegy 2 (2), Donaldson(6). LOB —Boston J.Dyson(1), Gose(6), VMaitinez(3), Cespedes (11). Crawlord(2). ~ealmuto. PITCHING —Greinke, LosAngeles,5-0; Wacha,St. 28 — Tejada(3), Galvis(2), Ruiz(2).HR —Lagares(1). 10 RBlssince1975, leadingthe Boston RedSox past 38 — Infante (1), Castelanos (2). HR —A.Escobar (1). Louis, 5-0;Harvey,NewYork, 5-1; Bcolon,NewYork, 9, Toronto11.2B—Betts(8), Napoli (3),Carrera(1). IP H R E R BBSO SB — Revere(6). S—Niese. SF—Francoeur. the SeattleMariners12-4. 5-1; Shields, SanDiego,4-0; Haren,Miami,4-1;SMig- HR—Encarnacion (5). SB—Travis (2), Bautista(1), C~.cain(2). S—Butera. SF—Castellanos. Miami IP H R E R BBSO 2001 —JeromyBurnitz went3-for-4 with three IP H R E R BBSO PhelpsW,2-0 6 er, Atlanta,4-1;Gcole, Pittsburgh,4-1. Encarnacion(1).SF—Ru.Martin. 6 1 1 1 3 New York homersandsix RBlsasthe MilwaukeeBrewers beat ERA —Greinke, LosAngeles,1.56; Burnett, PittsIP H R E R BBSD Kansas City A.Ramos H,4 1 1 0 0 1 1 NieseW,3-2 7 5 2 0 1 6 the Cubs11-1. burgh, 1.66;SMiler, Atlanta, 1.66;Niese,NewYork, Boston GuthrieW,2-2 71 - 3 8 2 2 1 3 Morris 2 3 1 1 1 3 C.TorresH,6 13- 1 0 0 0 0 2008 —GregMadduxoftheSanDiegoPadres 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 San Francisco 1.95; Lincecum,SanFrancisco,2.00;Wacha,St.Louis, J.Kelly L,1-2 52- 3 4 6 6 7 3 Hochevar A.Torres 0 0 0 0 2 0 became theninth pitcher in big leaguehistory to win 11-3 4 1 1 1 1 G.Hogand 2.09;Scherzer,Washington, 2.11. Barnes 1 1 0 0 0 0 BumgarnerL,3-2 5 5 3 3 2 10 CarlyleH,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 350 gam es, allowing anunearnedoyersixinnings ina STRIKEDUT S—Shields, SanDiego,55; Kershaw, Layne 1 1 0 0 0 1 Detroit Kontos 1 1 0 0 0 1 FamiliaS,12-12 1 1 0 0 0 1 3-2 victoryoverthe ColoradoRockies. LosAngeles,51;Scherzer,Washington,49; TRoss, San Toronto An.Sanchez L,2-4 6 9 6 5 3 2 Lopez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Philadelphia 2012 —TheOrioles becamethefirst ALteamto 2-3 2 3 3 2 0 HarangL,3-3 Diego,48;Cueto, Cincinnati, 47;Hamels, Philadelphia, HutchisonW,3-0 5 7 1 1 1 6 B.Hardy 1 2 0 0 0 Machi 7 8 3 2 1 2 open agamewith threestraight homeruns, andBal1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Diekman 46; Liriano,Pittsburgh,44. Hendriks 3 1 0 0 0 3 Alburquerque 1 1 0 0 0 0 Romo 13 0 0 0 0 1 timorebeatTexas6-5. RyanFlaherly, J.J. Hardyand SAVES —Familia, NewYork, 12; Rosent hal, St. Osuna 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chamberlain 1 1 0 0 0 2 Casiga 1 0 0 0 1 2 L.Garcia 12-3 1 0 0 2 1 Nick Markakisbeganthebottomof thefirst inning WP — A.Ramos, Kontos. Louis, 11;Grigi, Atlanta, 9; Kimbrel,SanDiego, 9; WP—J.Kelly, Barnes. HBP —byAn.Sanchez(A.Gordon). A.Torres pitchedto2 batters inthe8th. with homersto give Baltimore aleadit wouldnot T—3:24. A—42,285(41,915). Casiga,SanFrancisco,8;Storen,Washington,8. T—3:12. A—42,917(49,282). T—2:40.A—41,456(41,574). T—2:44.A—29,373 (43,651). relinquish.


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE

on sna er oes rom reen eretsto ea aw s By Tim Booth

U.S. Army veteran andformer Texas longsnapper Nate Boyer,

snapper for his final three sea- out there losing friends," Boysons. He was signed by the Se- er said. "That perspective out ahawks immediately after the here has helped me relax and draft concluded last weekend. enjoy it. You don't play tight "Today to be able to say I'm when you're like that. If I am officially an NFL player, as not perfect, but as long as I long as it lasts it's amazing," give maximum effort all of the Boyer said. time, that's something I can Boyer received just as much control." attention as any of Seattle's For his part, Carroll intends eight draft picks on the first on treating Boyer like any othday of rookie camp, even if he er player, and when the time is spent most of it working off on right may call on his military a side field with punter Kyle experience to help make a Loomis, an u n drafted fr ee point in the Seahawks' locker agent out of Portland State. room. "I don't k now N ate w ell He also has a special view and appreciation for football enough yet to know how that framed around his experi- will come to light. But I like

right, talks to reporters after Seattle Seahewks rookie minicamp Friday in Renton, Washington.

e nces in the m i litary as a Green Beret. Boyer did tours

The Associated Press

RENTON, Wash. — Nate

Boyer received the type of reception normally reserved for star quarterbacks and shutdown cornerbacks after finish-

ing his first practice with the Seattle Seahawks. Not bad for an undrafted

free agent long snapper. But no long snapper has a story like Boyer's. "It's hard to grasp for us to understand what he's gone through and what he's endured and the mentality it's

l'

taken to accomplish the things he's accomplished," Seattle coach Pete Carroll said. "And

the guys he's been with, too.

Ted S. Warren I The Associated Press

It's not just Nate. All the guys

he's shared his time with fighting for our country and all. He's an amazing man. We're thrilled to have him. "He snaps the ball pretty sweet, too."

The former member of the

U.S. Army Special Forces faced a wall of cameras and plenty of questions about his military past, his football aspirations, and the opportunity he is getting with the Seahawks

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

no one can match,making Seattle's final roster may be difficult with Clint Gresham firmly entrenched as the long snapper. Gresham re-signed with Seattle in the offseason and has been the Seahawks'

long snapper for the past five seasons. But Boyer said Gresham

was one of the first to reach out after he signed with Sea ttle, an d

we l comed t h e

competition. "I am a huge daydreamer, but I believe I can do it. What

I have learned and what was instilled in the military was how to work toward that and

what you have to sacrifice," ground might be a benefit to Boyer said. "It takes a huge us in some ways," Carroll said. amount of sacrificebecause "When the timing is right and everyone wants to do this. You

to think that anybody's back-

in Afghanistan and Iraq and earned a Bronze Star, gaining after concluding the first day the rank of Staff Sergeant be- we're able to mix it in with our of rookie minicamp Friday. fore leaving the Army. regular routines, I'm going to Boyer, 34, was a walk-on at And then he learned how to try to call on it. I'm not going to Texas after his distinguished be a long snapper. treat Nate any differently than "As much as I love this I treat anybody else." military career, and became the Longhorns' starting long game, it is a game. No one is While Boyer has a story

NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

have to be willing to accept the fact you might fail — that's just

part of it. When you get to a level like this, it's not failing. It

may not work out the way you hope, but it's not failing."

GOLF

I(irk takes lead going to final of Players

Johnson avoids pits, wins in ICansas

The Associated Press The Associated Press

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Kevin Na

K ANSAS CITY, K a n . — Jimmie Johnson stayed

on the track during a late

dropped his club andplaced his hands on his hips as he

caution to take over the

watched his tee shot, cer-

lead, then held off hardcharging Kevin Harvick to

tain that it was going to come up short of the island. Disappointment gave way to an embarrassedsmile when he saw the ball settle

win the rain-delayed NA-

SCAR Sprint Cup race at Kansas Speedway. Johnson w a s

c h a sed

6 feet next to the flag.

across the line by Harvick and Hendrick Motorsports

That one shot summed

teammates Dale Earnhardt

f,g'

Jr. and Jeff Gordon as the clock ticked past midnight local time into today.

Most ofthe leaderswere conserving fuel after pitting with 58 laps to go, and Johnson and Earnhardt decided to press their luck when Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

got into the wall, bringing

.1'

up a warm and wild afternoon Saturday at The Play-

ers Championship. For most players, nothing was ever as bad as it seemed. Or as good. Chris Kirk felt his round

t4;

4

slipping away when he c

missed a short birdie putt and followed that with two

straight bogeys to fall out of

out the final caution with 12 laps left. The Hendrick

the top 10. Three consecutive birdies later, he was on

carsremained on thetrack

his way to a 4-under 68 and a one-shot lead going into

while Harvick went in for

right-side tires and fuel,

the final round.

Johnson built a q u i ck lead on the restart, but Har-

There could be plenty of sweating today in a championship that is up for grabs. "It seems like half the

vick quickly got around

tour has a chance to win

Earnhardt on his fresh tires down the front stretch and set his sights on the lead.

this thing," Rory McIlroy said after a 70 put him four

Harvick appeared to have the faster car, but he

Tiger Woods was part of the other half. He made the wrong kind of history Saturday by makingtwo double bogeys on par 5s for

and Martin Truex Jr. got a

splash of gas.

shots behind.

bobbled at one point on the

back stretch, giving Johnson a little more space. He maintained it the rest of the way to win for the third

Curtis Compton I Atlanta Joumal-Constitution

Washington players mob Paul Pierce on the floor after his game-winning shot as time expired Saturday in Washington during Game 3 of an Eastern Conference semifinal against Atlanta. The Wizards won103-101.

leadingto a 75 that matched

time this season and for the third time at Kansas

Speedway. Truex led a race-high 95 laps, but his pit decision proved costly. W ithout tires, he faded on the final

his worst score at the TPC

The Associated Press play added to the Washington Wizards' offense a day earli-

Washington's Paul Pierce, left, shoots the game-win-

er, and it was drawn up for a

ning basket

WASHINGTON — It was a

glass to give Chicago a 9996 victory over Cleveland on Friday. On Saturday, Washington

restart and finished ninth

guy, Paul Pierce, who's been doing this sort of thing for the

— extending his winless

better part of two decades.

streak to 112 races. Joey Logano stormed to

With three defenders near him, Pierce made a fallaway,

a top-five finish despite two

21-foot jumper that went in

pit-road penalties that had

off the backboard at the buzz-

was missing Wall, its All-Star over Atlenpoint guard, for a second conta's Dennis secutive game because of a Schroder. The broken left hand, but it was Wizsrds lead the Hawks who seemed out of Atlanta 2-1 in sorts most of the evening. their best-ofThe Wizards led by 21 with seven series. less than 10 minutes left.

dropped him back to the leading line.

er to lift the Wizards over the Atlanta Hawks 103-101 on

Alex Brandon/The Associated Press

Matt Kenseth was sixth,

followed by Brad Keselowski, Kurt Busch, Truex and Ryan Newman, who finished in the top 10 with

interim crew chief Todd Parrott calling the shots.

Also on Saturday: Penske gets 1st Grand Prix win at Indy: INDIANAPOLIS — Will Power w on the Grand Pri x o f

Indianapolis for his first IndyCar victory of the season, leading 65 of 82 laps on the road course at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. The Team P enske

star and defending IndyCar series champion held off a surprisingly strong run from Graham Rahal's Honda-powered car. The American finished second,

1.5023 seconds behind the Australian winner.

the first time in his career,

1)Ellrr

Saturday night, despite playing without John Wall and

"We got comfortable," said Bradley Beal, who had 17

Washington. "We thought the game was over."

evaporate. As he left the court after giving the Wizards a 2-1 lead in the Eastern Confer-

Even Hawks coach Mike

Budenholzer put it this way: "You feel like you're not go-

straight to cut Tampa Bay's

lineup of little-used reserves

Yet Budenholzer's small

"I called, 'Game!'" Pierce

made things interesting. Also on Saturday:

Grizzlies 99, Warriors 89:

news conference.

tle young.... He hasn't been

"I'm still soaking it up,"

able to see it over the last 17

Pierce said, "because I don't

MONTREAL Pierre-Alexandre P a r enteau broke a tie with 4.07 left and the Montreal Can-

and Marc Gasol added 21 points and 15 rebounds as

called "Bank!" on the winner. declared. He had more fun at his

The Associated Press

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Zach Randolph scored 22 p oints

gap

years." have too many more of these Memphis beat Golden State to Pierce is 37, and he has a left." take a2-1 lead in their Western tried in vain to disrupt the nerve in his back that acts up Game 4 in the best-of-sev- Conference semifinal. Mike g ame-winner, called it " a from time to time, including en series is Monday night at Conley and Courtney Lee lucky shot," Pierce chuckled. in the first half Saturday. He Washington. both finished with 11 points Then, referring to his lengthy won a championship with the It was the second straight for Memphis, which has won career, Pierce retorted: "Well, Boston Celtics in 2008, and is day a bank shot at the buzz- two straight w i t h C o n ley, I guess Schroder is going to well aware that time is run- er won anNBA playoff game. their point guard, back in the say that, because he's a litning out on his career. Derrick Rose hit a 3 off the lineup. der, one of the Hawks who

Canadiens stay alive adiens beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 2-1 on Saturday night to force a sixth game in the Eastern Conference semifinal series. P.K. Subban slipped the puck to Parenteau for a long shot over goalie Ben Bishop's glove.

ing to be able to close that

ence semifinal series, Pierce was asked on TV whether he

shots for later rounds." Told that D ennis Schro-

NHL PLAYOFFS

points and eight assists for

after letting a 21-point lead

"Usually," Pierce said, "I like to save those type of

Sawgrass.

Montreal has won two series lead to 3-2. Game 6 is

Tuesday night in Florida. " We don't w a n t t h i s thing to end," Parenteau

said. "We worked hard

for each other and we got r ewarded. We w i n t w o

games and hopefully it's not over."


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

D5

Insurance

2 late goals lift Timbers past Impact The Associated Press MONTREAL — Nat Borch-

ers and Diego Valeri scored in the second half to help the Port-

q-„. -gi

land Timbers beat the Montre-

al Impact 2-1 on Saturday. Borchers opened the scoring

~mJ

I- all't ggN

in the 64th minute, and Valeri

gave Portland (3-3-4) a 2-0 lead in the 70th. "I thought their performance

Montreal's Ignacio Piatti takes a shot on Portiand's

Adam Kwarasey, right, as Nat Borchers defends Saturday in Montreal.

Portland atHouston When:5:30p.m. May17TV: None important, especially since this

month we're pretty much on the road." Back from an ACL tear and

making his first start of the season, Valeri curled a shot out

Graham Hughes /The Canadian Press

was really professional," Timbers coach Caleb Porter said.

Nextup

of Bush's reach to put the Tim-

"In the first half, we managed

bers up 2-0. "I'm happy about the goal

the game extremely well, limited their chances and kept the Montreal (0-3-2) in the 71st. game tight. We knew that in Borchers scored on an easy the second half, beingthat they tap-in header after goalkeepwere at home, we would find er Evan Bush made the initial more chances because they saveoffforward Fanendo Adi. wouldbe eager to score." With thegoal,Borchersended Dominic Oduro scored for Portland's goal drought at 281

minutes.

"It felt good. Obviously, we've been frustrated on the offensive side not g etting goals," Portland's Jack Jewsbury said. "To be able to score two goals on the road was very

and the win. We wanted to get

three points and we did it. Now we have another hard game in Houston. We will enjoy this,

rest up and train next week," said Valeri, the team's top goal

fessional athlete (neurological trauma is an example). From one perspective, liberContinued from 01 Ogbuehi was reassured, alized loss-of-value insurance he said, by Texas A&M's is another step toward better offer to buy him loss-of- treatment of college athletes. "We're definitely aware of value insurance, which aims to restore likely fu- it," an official in an NFL front ture earnings that are lost office said, adding that it was frequently a "win-win" when to injury. Asked if the insurance linemen, like Ogbuehi, dehad proved decisive, Og- veloped further by spending buehi, who received a more time at the college level. However, critics say loss-ofbachelor's degree in August, said in October that value insurance is little more it had. Without it, he said, than window dressing. If a he "most likely would have player's draft stock declines because of poor performance gone to the draft." But Ogbuehi tore his — as arguably happened to who moved back to ACL in the Liberty Bowl in Ogbuehi, December, and last week right tackle midseason — a he was selected 21st. Under player is not protected. Also, the NFL's rigid collective the insurance does not acbargaining agreement, count for the fact that staying ege moves players one that will probably reduce in coll his contract to about $8 year further from free agency, million i n gu a ranteed when they can negotiate largmoney over four years, er contracts. according to the website

Over the Cap. Still, Ogbuehi does not

scorer last season.

"It transfers the risk; it does not eliminate it," Jill Wieber Lens, a law professor at Bay-

lor, and her husband, Joshua surance, his agent, Ryan Lens, the Baylor athletic deWilliams, said. Because partment's director of complimost income is taxable but ance, wrote of the insurance the insurance's benefits last year in The Mississippi are not, a player typically Law Journal. No college player is known must fall precipitously in the draft for the policy to to have collected on loss-ofvalue i n s urance. M a r qise take effect. "Although we believe he Lee, a Jacksonville Jaguars would have been drafted wide receiver who played at higher in 2014, he's pleased Southern California, has sued w ith t h e o u t come t h i s the insurance giant Lloyd's year," Williams said. of London over his $5 million Loss-of-value insurance policy. His lawyer declined to has been available to any comment. "If it's highly unlikely to college athlete who could afford it, but colleges have actually collect, then mayrecently begun p aying be once again this becomes for premiums out of their a great benefit people talk stand to collect on his in-

Jtg

I •

j

r

i,

4p~~

s

student assistance funds,

about that really doesn't en-

State reportedly paid for

dent-athlete," Zola said. Athletes' luck with loss-of-

which is allowed under NCAA bylaws. Florida the policy for its Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback, J ameis

Photos by Robert F. Bukaty/The Associated Press

Charlie Carr, of Bristol, New Hampshire, leads his friend, Andy Bell, of Thornton, New Hampshire, up The Sluice, a slope with a 50-degree pitch on Tuckerman Ravine on Mount Washington in New Hampshire on Wednesday. There are no lifts at Tuckerman Ravine; to ski it you have to climb it.

Skiing Continued from 01 Christen Cevoli, a freestyle skiing instructor in Vermont, still had vivid memories of her

firsttrip as she made her second journey to'Ibckerman.

"You get to the top of Left Gully and it felt like you were looking down at the edge of the world," she said, cinching the belt on hot pink ski pants and reaching down to buckle her boots. "I got to the top and I almost started to hyperventilate and I was like, 'If I don't ski down

now, you're going to have to

1

who was the No. 1 overall pick this year. Georgia paid for a policy protecting running back Todd Gurley, who was drafted

loss-of-value policy purchased

10th. After word surfaced

slotted for the late first round,

restrictions; NCAA r u l es

ber, Texas A&M coach Kev-

for him by the university, athletic director Rob M u l lens

said. The policy was worth $3 million, with Ekpre-Olomu

that Texas A&M had paid according to ESPN. Ekpre-Olomu tore his ACL for Ogbuehi's, Oregon paid for policies for sever- in December and was drafted al players, including the in the seventh round. Williams, who also repHeisman winner Marcus Mariota and c o rnerback resents Ekpre-Olomu, deIfo Ekpre-Olomu. clined to comment, citing conTo the extent that loss- fidentiality language in the of-value insurance helps policy. persuade elite athletes to Mullens said it was incumreturn, it is a boon to their bent on universities to eduteams, which get to enjoy cate athletes about the bentheir talents for another efits and downsides of the season. But Ogbuehi's sto- insurance. ry highlights the perils of "There are some people out top athletes who extend there who use this as an optheir college tenure, during portunity to sell a product for which they may be com- a commission, and we want pensated only by a schol- to make sure our student-atharship. In many cases, they letes are fully informed," he cannot enter professional sard. leagues because of age In an i nterview in O cto-

drafts soon after their sea-

C

value insurance could change

soon, however. Ekpre-Olomu, W i n ston, the Oregon cornerback, had a

barring agents and requiring players to declare for I'

hance the welfare of the stu-

in Sumlin explained why he thought it made sense for Ogbuehi to return for anoth-

sons end make a tough de- er year, and for the univercision even more difficult, sity to buy him loss-of-value

ya

ak~~

some observers say. insurance. "The NCAA d o e sn't "You're

helicopter me off this moun-

tain,'" said the 30-year-old

.'l ~

from Brewster, Massachusetts. "Yeah, I was scared. It was to-

tally worth it. I just took a deep

.

i

breath and yelled and just went for it."

working on

ren Zola, a professor and executive director at Bos-

that we have gotten from the NFL scouts — strength lev-

ton College's business

el, things like that — you can move up," Sumlin said, referring to the draft and how rookie contracts were rigidly

school. He cited the dec-

j

coming b ack, t h ese things

make it easier," said War-

Tuckerman is a g l acial ABOVE: Anthony Roman, 26, of Cornwail, New York, pauses on the 3-mile-long trail that leads to cirque — think of a bowlTuckerman Ravineon Mount Washington in New Hampshire on Sunday. Roman, who spent the night carvedout ofthe east side of at a shelter below the ravine, carried a load of more than 60 pounds up the mountain. BELOW: Eric Mount Washington during the Melanson, of Turner, Maine, pauses to take in the view of Tuckerman Ravine last Saturday. The ravine last ice age. It is perfectly posi- attracts a funky and fearless crowd of springtime skiers and snowboarders. tionedto catch and cradle snow

laration deadline and the prohibition of the hiring of agents. Loss-of-value insurance addresses this problem, in theory, by protecting against losses that may re-

that swirls off the mountain's

sult from an extra year out

Sumlin added: "The question would be, what about in-

chow down and watch the fun. Superb runs earn cheers;

of profess ional sports. The insurance is avail-

jury? So now, with the insur-

spectacular, equipment-shedding wipeouts get huge cheers.

able for several other col-

the 'What if?'"

6,288-foot peak, building up an average snowpack of more than 50 feet a year. That usually keeps skiers and riders on its slopes through May. John Apperson of Sche-

\

. 4l85P.

.

S ome are drawn b y

the

freaky weather on Mount Washington, the Northeast's

nectady, New York, made the first descent in April 1914. But

a summit-to-base race, called the American Inferno and pat-

terned after a similar race in Muerren, Switzerland, capti-

home to the fastest wind speed ever recorded (231 mph) and is

ACL and was drafted sixth overall. In January, the five

ber to May. Others relish the risks, in-

in April 1933, according to Jeff Leich, executive director of the New England Ski Museum and author of "Over the Headwall: Nine Decades of Skiing in

cluding avalanches, falling ice and crevasses. Snow rangers

'Ibckerman Ravine."

remind even Tuckerman veterans that no two runs are alike weren't born when Matt made

"They had an element of the his daring dash still speak his spectacular about them that

name in hushed reverence.

"It's the legend of Tucknobody had ever seen before in this country," Leich said of the erman Ravine," said Colin races. Boyd, a 27-year-old from Eliot, 'Ilrckerman put its enduring Maine, who is the 4th-ranked stamp on the extreme skiing snowboarder on the Freeride world during the 1939 Infer- World Tour. "Everybody wants no courtesy of Toni Matt. The

young Austrian finished his final turn before reaching the

steepest part of the slope. With no chance to turn, Mattpointed himself down and scorched the hill, cutting the previous race

record nearly in half to 6 minutes, 29 seconds. Today, skiers

andriders whose grandparents

in the unpredictable bowl. Peosections are steeper — like the ple get hurt here. 53-degree,350-foot stretch of Brian Spurr, a 25-year-old Corbet's Couloir at Wyoming's from Boston, said the warnJackson Hole — Tuckerman ings were on his mind. has the steepest sustained run. Others cherish the effort it

star Nerlens Noel had it

highest peak that was once

vated skiers around the globe

you can't make up, because all those contracts are slotted now."

ance, that takes away a lot of

lege sports, notably basBut not all of that uncerketball. Th e K e ntucky tainty can be eliminated, Zola but reportedly did not try to collect after he tore his

a virtual snow gun from Octo-

delineated, "and that's money

sald. "There is no doubt that fi-

nancially, if you are projected to be a top pick, you can't get enough coverage or protecautonomous conferences tion to make returning to colvoted to allow athletes to lege economically feasible," take out loans with future he said. earnings as collateral in order to pay for loss-of-value insurance — something they were already able to do for disability insurance, I I ' I which protects against the sort of injury that would 716 SW11th St. preclude a future as a pro-

Redmond 541.923.4732

"It's a little nerve-wracking

because so much snow is comtakes to get here. The 3.1-mile ing down around you, that you hike up 1,800 feet just gets to think you're going to cause an the bottom of the ravine. It is avalanche," he said. a story to take home. It's a rite another hour to climb 1,000 Cevoli, the ski i n structor, of passage." feet to the top. Skiers and riders checked her equipment one T here a r e ma n y r ea - snake upward in slow-motion last time before heading up sons Tuckerman stokes the conga lines, using the footsteps Left Gully, abig smile breaking imagination. in front of them like a staircase. outunder sunglasses andblack It's crazy steep: An aver- There is no base lodge unless bandanna. "It's the steepest, rawest I've age of 45 degrees. The web- you count the pile of stones s ite G o ndyline.com r a n k s called Lunch Rocks near the ever skied," she said. "It's the the steepest ski trails in the bottom of the bowl, where most amazing experience of country, and while some short people sprawl in the sunshine, mylife."

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

FaceTime: the atest

Powerful union PacifiCorp is studying the possibility of marrying its power production and transmission capability with the power grid in California.

tech too for se ing rea estate

Sma town fine china

company

S HI N G T O N

ands big cient

M 0 N T A N A

By Richard Scheinin

By Frank S. Abderholden

San Jose Mercury News

News-Sun(Lake County, Jll.)

O REG O N

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — Real estate agent Julie

IDAH0

Ray has come of age in the red-hot housing market.

W> M

ANTIOCH, Ill. — A little part of northern Illinois will now reside in the

+N

White House as Antioch's

But this was a first: Zoom-

Pickard China scored another win in the world of

ing through a $1.7 million house with her iPhone, she

fine china.

used its FaceTime video

The Obama administra-

application to send images of the property — including bathroom tile and a backyardlemon tree— to the prospective buyers in

tion picked the 122-year-old company to produce the

UTA H

tableware for state dinners in the White House.

Last week, the distinctive "Kailua Blue" Obama

Switzerland.

"Theycouldn'tfl y over on a whim to see a house that was going to be gone in three days," said Ray, who got her license five years ago and is accustomed to the bidding wars

State China was used for the first time when President Barack Obama and r

I •

service area

Minister Shinzo Abe and

• PacifiCorp's Rocky Mountain Power service area • CAISO, the power grid for most of California

that routinely break out here. "So I would sched-

ule a call with them, and I would FaceTime them

Michelle Obama hosted a dinnerforJapanese Prime

• PacifiCorp's Pacific Power

r

his wife. The first lady designed the 12-piece set with presi-

dential living quarters designer Michael Smith, the

Source: Pacificorp, CAISO

through the house." Time is of the essence

White House curator, chef Greg Cross/The Bulletin

and other residential staff.

in the Bay Area real estate

In a White House video,

game, and technology is playingan evermore integral role. It's no big deal for agents to hammer out deals with absent sellers who sign off electronically

Michelle Obama said she looked to combine tradi-

• PacifiCorp may join with California agency to helpbalancepower loads

from cruise ships or with

Mainland Chinese buyers who surf the Web for investments. It's the new

r

s

normal, where "seeing" a property means taking an online video tour via an agency's 3-D walkthrough program — or via FaceTime. And, in case you were wondering: Ray's clients

tional with modern. She

recently received her first look at the full set. "It's here. The china is

here," she said in the video. "The colors are just beautiful. It really looks good." She explained that the Kailua Blue detailingreminded her ofthe blue/green waters off the president's home state of Hawaii.

"I was trying to tie in the old with the new, both elegant and timeless," she sald. Andrew Pickard Mor-

— Kristin and Eric Olson,

who moved for two years to Basel, Switzerland,

gan, the fourth-generation CEO of the 50-employee Antioch factory, said the

where Eric had a job in biotech — bought the house

By Joseph Ditzier• The Bulletin

in Redwood City's Mount

Carmel neighborhood for nearly $2.1 million. That

White House curator con-

tacted the company about designing the new china

tility watchdogs and conservationists perked up in April

was close to $400,000

above the listing price.

back in the fall of 2011.

Pickard China had previously designed tableware

when PacifiCorp announced it's studying a union with

"It's obviously a lot of

money to plop down for a place you've never set

for Air Force One, the Blair

the agency that controls the California power grid, a

House in Washington, D.C.,

foot in," said Eric Olson. "But we had a lot of con-

partnership that could move power more cheaply and efficiently

Camp David, the United Nations, State Department,

fidence in Julie. We knew the neighborhood" — he

across the West.

12 state mansions, including Illinois, and embassies

and Kristin had lived there

with their two daughters before moving overseas"and the FaceTime images assured us that we were going to get comparative value for what we were paying." Kristin Olson recalled

the details: "I'd say to Julie, 'Wait! Back up! Can I see that tile on the kitchen

counter'? Better angle!' A lot of houses have virtual tours, but with a virtual

touryou're kind of a passive viewer. With this, it really was like we were with her.

The only thing we couldn't do was smell the house." See FaceTime/E6

around the world. The

company's other major The California Independent System Operator, a nonprofit corporation with

aboard appointedbythe governor, on a dailybasis controls the wholesale elec-

tricity market for 80 percent of California and a slice of Nevada. It has authority to

balance power supplies and demandsacross26,000miles of transmission lines. It can

move surplus power where it's generated across the grid it controls to meet peak de-

mand elsewhere. PacifiCorp, the parent company of Pacific Power, provides power across six

states, its 16,300-plus miles of

a big deal," said Bob Jenks,

consumer and environmental

transmission lines spread like

executive director of the non-

advocacygroup. Some states maybalk at handing control of their power grids to an organization currently based in Sacramento. On the other hand, California maybe re-

a fishing net over Wyoming, Idaho, Utah,Oregon,Wash-

profit watchdog Citizens' Utility Board of Oregon. "It would ington and Northern Califorbe a very significant change nia. Bringingthe two together in how resources inthe West means potentially lower costs are allocated and used." forconsumers forelectrical Marrying PacifiCorp to California's power grid has power, whether generated fromfossi lfuelsorrenewable potential downsides. It would

in 2009 for outgoing first lady Laura Bush.

"I think we'll have to be able to demonstrate that this

"We went through a lot of different tests," Pickard

and solar. A merger could put more renewablepower on the grid and drive down the cost to generate thatpower, according to PacifiCorp and

tem that regulates utilities, a layer represented by a

bearsan interesthereforour

Morgan said when asked

customers," said PacifiCorp

about creating the new

mammoth bureaucracy with

spokesman Bob Gravely."We certainlybelieve there's a

White House china. The companyuses com-

potential for that. At the end

puters to create digital art

advocates for renewable

said Fred Hewitt, senior poli-

of the day we'll have to make

energy. "If it happens, it will be

cy analyst for the Northwest Energy Coalition, a business,

that case."

renderings before the final product is made. See White House/E2

thousands of employees and a multimillion-dollar budget,

claw machines. Harris said

machines that operate in a variety of different formats.

cards. Down the road, Harris

By Stephen Hamway

their hands for the money they were spending," Harris

Some are free to play, with

sard. At its core, Real Prize Ar-

pays for shipping, while others are pay-to-play with free shipping. But the thrust of Real Prize Arcade's business model comes from membership costs, which range from $10 per month for 10 plays per week, to $50 per month for unlimited plays. The prizes in the membership machines aren't the stuffed animals or dolls you might remember from arcade

applications themselves, allowing people to spend real money on virtual tools or new levels. That setup isn't enough for Dan Harris, owner and founder of Bend-based Real Prize Arcade. "I wanted to offer some-

thing that gave people the opportunity to get a real, physical item put back into

cade has a straightforward concept. Players can use

the application to remotely operatean arcade-style me-

chanical claw game. If the user picks up a prize, the item is removed and shipped anywhere in the world from Harris' Bend warehouse. The public cannot play yet. Harris is raising money

the White House, the first

add another layer to the sys-

through a crowdfunding campaign. But he currently has six

build the incentives into the

This is the second time

Pickard has made china for

sources such as wind, water

• The Real Prize Arcade allows users to control gamesover the Internet Many smartphone games

chains and royalty in England and Saudi Arabia.

power grid to outsiders.

luctant to yield control over its

See Power/E5

e n usiness rin srea rizes oa The Bulletin

contracts have included the Hilton and Sheraton Hotel

cheaper prizes where the user

wor

that the machines will include electronics, jewelry and gift said they might offer everything from Apple Watches to vacations. "At some point, we want to

be able to give away a car," Harris said. For the moment, howev-

er, the problem is funding. Harris has a little more than

a week left in a 45-day Kickstarter campaign, through which he hopes to raise $10,000. As of Friday afternoon, Real Prize Arcade had

raised $186. See App /E5

:Cesi p .

rrses

Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin

With Bondo, his 6-year-old pug at his side, Daniel Harris displays the Real Prize Arcade app on his phone. Harris is seeking funding on Kickstarter for his arcade, which allows users to operate real

games over the Internet and win prizes.


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

BUSINESS TUESDAY Open ComputerLab:Freetime to practice yourcomputer skills or get your questions answered.Bring your own device oruseoneof our laptops; 1:30 p.m.;RedmondPublic Library, 827 SWDeschutesAve., Redmond; 541-6 I7-7089. SCORE freebusinesscounseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minut eone-on-oneconferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org.

WEDNESDAY Pints withOurPillars: TammyBaney: Learn moreaboutTammy Baneyand what things shehasaccomplished both insideandoutside herroleas DeschutesCounty Commissioner; 5 p.m.; $15for members;$20nonmembers; DeschutesBrewery &Public

END

House,1044 NW Bond St., Bend;www. business.bendchamber.org/events or 541-382-3221.

May 19 Business Startup:Doyouhavea great ideathat youthink could bea successful business,butjust don't know howto get started?Coverthe basics in this two-hour classanddecide if running abusiness isfor you; 6 p.m.; $29, registration required;Madras COCCCampus,1170 EAshwood Road, Madras;www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. Open ComputerLab:Freetime to practice yourcomputerskills or get your questionsanswered. Bringyour own device oruseoneof our laptops; 1:30 p.m.; RedmondPublic Library, 827 SWDeschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-617-7089. SCORE free businesscounseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minut eone-on-oneconferences with local entrepreneurs; check inat the library desk onthe secondfloor; 5:30-7 p.m.;Downtown BendPublic

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0323.

Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org.

to successfully plan, buildandmanage your business; 6p.m.; $89,registration required; COCC Chandler Lab,1027 NW Trenton Ave.,Bend;www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. Networking withConnectW"Branding on a Budget": Elicia Putnam, of PrestoBox,will speakabout branding; 5 p.m.;$25-$40 register early for guest price, includesdinner; St. Charles Bend,2500 NENeff Road,Bend; www.connectw.org or541-678-8988.

May 20 Family BusinessBreakfastMultiple GenerationsWorking Together:Join us for breakfast as we learn howto better collaboratebetween generations tohelp ensureasmooth business succession planforyour family business; 7:30a.m.; $40, registration required; DoubleTreebyHilton, 300 NW Franklin Ave.,Bend;www.secure. touchnet.net/or 541-737-6017. GrowingYourBusiness with QuickBooks:Getyour QuickBooks installation optimizedfor your business. Three classescoverthe fundamentals ofbusinessaccountingandQuickBooks operation, plusdaytimeadvising sessions; 6 p.m.;$199,registration requi ed; r Redmond COCC CampusTechnolog yEducationCenter,2324NE College Loop,Redmond;541-383-7290. How to Developa BusinessPlan: Atwo-eveningworkshopfor peoplein the preliminary stages ofdeveloping a business. Discoverthe tools you need

CampusTechnologyEducationCenter, great idea that you think could be a 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; successful business, but just don't www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. know how to get started? Cover the basics in this two-hour class May 29 and decide if running a business is for you; 11 a.m.; $29, registration Contractors CCB Test Prep course: Chandler Lab,1027 Take this two-day live class to prepare required; COCC for the state-mandated test to become NWTrenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc. edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. a licensed contractor in Oregon; 8:30 a.m.; $299-$359 with required manual, What's Hot in Franchising!:Explore $359, registration required; Redmond the possibility of owning your own COCC Campus —Technology franchise. In this highly interactive Education Center, 2324 SE College two-hour workshop, find out about Loop, Redmond;www.cocc.edu/ccb or the top trends, the best industries and 541-383-7290. 'What's Hot' in franchising for 2015; 6 p.m.; $29, registration required; June2 COCCChandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. Open Computer Lab:Freetime to practice your computer skills or get June 4 your questions answered. Bring your own device or useoneof our laptops; Nonprofits Open Lab:Search for 1:30 p.m.; RedmondPublic Library, grants using Foundation Directory 827 SWDeschutesAve., Redmond; Online with assistance from staff, 541-617-7089. use one of our laptops or bring your own;1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, June 3 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; Business Startup:Do you have a 54 I-617-7089.

May 26 Open ComputerLab:Freetime to practiceyour computer skills or get your questions answered.Bring your own device oruseoneof our laptops; 1:30 p.m.; RedmondPublic Library, 827 SWDeschutesAve., Redmond; 541-617-7089.

May 28 Launch YourBusiness: Learn about starting or being in theearly stages of running a business; 6 p.m.; $199 registration required; COCC Redmond

DEEDS Deschutes County • Ben C. andChristyn N. Wagenblast to David and NadineKenney, Fairhaven, Phase 3, Lot 7,$222,000 • Nancy A. Becker to Gary M. Estenson, DeschutesRiverW oods, Lot 8, Block TT,$195,000 • Jessica L. Beachand DeanB. Bagley to James E.andColleen S. Stenger, Mountain Village East II, Lot 4, Block 5, $249,000 • Ronald R. Ratcliffe to Tanankarn Thanittithanand, Preecha Tingakrau and NaruemonStephen,Township15, Range12, Section10, $249,500 • Richard Humphreyto Erik R. Moberly and Kara K.McGinn, Valhalla Heights, Phase 2, Lot 2, Block 5, $362,000 •Thomas A.and ElizabethE. McDannoldto Eilene C.Flory, Lazy River, Lots 35-36, Block1, $265,735 • Katherine A. Mercer to Heather Price, Crosswinds, Lot 25, $202,000 • Jason A. Mendell to Aaron andErika Harvey, Deschutes RiverWoods, Lot 4, Block KK, $320,000 • Lands Bend Corp., successor by reason of conversion from Lands Bend LLC, toDavid L.Kerrigan, trustee of the Harry andRosalynn Crowell LegacyTrust FBOKyle Gladding, South Deerfield Park, Lot 40, $279,900 • Creative RealEstate Solutions LLC to Corinne S. Broderick, Lakeside Place, Lot 6, $380,000 • Northwest Trustee Services Inc. to Federal National Mortgage Association, also known asFannie Mae, Fall River Estate First Addition, Lot 20, Block 2, $372,575 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Robert J. and Susana M.Polykronis, Badger Forest, Phase 2, Lot15, $263,000 • Karen Lillebo to Stacey Harris, Happy Acres, Lot1, Block1, $399,000 • Richard R. andSheryl Abbott to Kevin L. and Linda C.Spencer, trustees of the Spencer Living Trust, North Brinson Business Park, Phase3, Lot 62, $261,360 • Jesse P. Figueroato Kenneth 0. and Julie R. Potter, Monticello Estates, Phase 1, Lot17, $269,000 • Loren and Kristina Burling to David R. and Azlan S.Salciccioli, Eastbrook Estates, Phase 3,Lot 55, $229,000 • Structure Development NW LLC to H. Doryne Brummond, trustee of the H. Doyrne BrummondFamily Trust, NorthWest Crossing, Phases20-22, Lot 855, $495,000 • Marilyn A. Thomas, trustee of the Marilyn Thomas Living Trust, to Residential Assistance Program, Canyon Park, Lot 36, Block 2, $260,000 • Curtis Hewitson, also known as Curtis T. Hewitson, andRosanne Hewitson, also known asRosanneG. Hewitson, to PaulandMarci Henry, RiverRim PU.D., Phase1, Lot157, $425,000 • Christopher M. and AmandaW. McCartyto Joseph A.and Kelley L. Hull, River CanyonEstates No. 3, Lot 208, $329,999 • Jeremy S. Hayter to John and Michele Beneville, EagleCrest II, Phase1, Lot 8, $385,000 • The heirs of Mark H. Pfenning to Lawrence E.,Jeanne K.and Debra A. Nunes, Township16, Range11, Section15, $447,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association, also known asFannie Mae, to Karie andBenOdell, Township 17, Range12, Section 26, $395,000 • Krista L. Cooper to Daniel Wright, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 29, Block

GG, $207,000 • Renwick B. andNancy A. Jeffrey to Adam T.andNatalie M. Wallen, Copper Canyon, Phase 2,Lot 26, $289,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Gregory L. Peterson andJensine H. Lirette, Stonehedge West,Phase1,Lot26, $195,406 • Karoma Properties LLC to Jeffry A. Hocker, Ni-Lah-Sha, Phases2-3, Lot 114, $239,900 •Kevinand DawnToombstoBrian Jacobson, RedHawk, Unit5, Lot37, $185,000 • Gregory S. Longnecker, Mami Phillips-Longnecker andJohn L. Starkey to GlenandCarol Matsui, Heritage Place, Lot 5, $334,000 • Neil and Elyse McDaniel to Arne I. and Laurel A. Cherkoss, Gardenside P.U.D., Phase 2,Lot 85, $385,000 • Bruce D. andLee A. Hoisington to Brent W. andChristine K. Lansing, Township18, Range12, Section13, $425,000 • Northwest Trustee Services Inc. to Bank of America, AwbreyPark, Phase 2, Lot 54, $510,000 • Northwest Trustee Services Inc. to US Bank Trust,KiwaMeadows,Lot26, Block 2, $152,833 •DunlapFine HomesInc.and C and LHintonLLC to Kevinand Dawn Toombs, Vista Meadows, Phase 3,Lot 69, $333,700 • Cynthia L. and Steven E. Smith to Todd S. andSusan M. Smith, Holliday Park, Lot 6, Block 2, $180,000 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC to Pacwest II LLC,AngusAcres, Phase 3, Lot 83, $170,075.57 • Pacwest II LLC to Douglas H. Lutz Jr., Angus Acres, Phase 3,Lot 83, $289,947 • David C. andDouglas Clemens to Sisters Airport Property LLC, Township15, Range10, Section 4, $889,690 •AnneM. and RobertB.Jamiesonto Kristian and Kelly Jamieson, Awbrey Vill age,Phase3,Lot82,$475,000 • Charles A. and Melissa A. Novotny to Linda S.Chaney,trustee of the LindaL.Chaney RevocableTrust,Pine Meadow, Phase 2,Lot 42, $690,000 • Lyle E. andCheryl F. Lutton to John E. and Donna C.Moss, Rim atAspen Lakes, Lot15, $595,000 • Samuel E. Blackwell Jr. and Linda L. Blackwell to Ruben G.and Geri A. Servi, trustees of the Servi Living Trust, Ski HouseCondominium, Lot 53, $215,000 • Phillip E. Schroeder to Michael and AlayneFardella, Elkai Woods Townhomes, Phase 3,Lot 57, $375,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Thomas Kucharski, Gleneden II, Lot12, $239,990 • Kaylin S. Tornayto CaseyC.and Jason A. Bjorklund, ShadyPines, Lot 5, $220,000 • Dale G. andTrudiA. Hoketo Linda L. Anthony, Deschutes RiverWoods, Lot 56, Block XX, $334,900 • Hayden HomesLLCto Javier S. and LorenaA. Luna, ColdSprings South, Lot 4, $279,831 • Nationstar Mortgage LLCand ChampionMortgageCompanyto Kevin Holland, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit 9, Part 2, Lot 52, Block 41,$250,000 • James F.Ross to Patrick T. andApril D. Coiteux, Sunridge, Phase 2,Lot12, $540,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Ashley Grucza, Village Pointe, Phases4-7, Lot 186, $176,990

• US Bank N.A.Trustee to Dunlap Fine Homes Inc., TamarackParkEast, Phase 2, Lot1, Block4, $192,000 • David A. and TamaraL. Henderson toJames F.Ross,BridgesatShadow Glen, Phase1, Lot 84, $410,000 • David C. andDouglas Clemens, Sisters Airport Property LLC,Barclay Meadows, Township15, Range10, Section 4, $889,690 • U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, which acquired the title as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, to Brent A. Bracelin, Northwest Townsite Second Addition, Lots1-2, Block43, $311,322 • Miller Pumice Plant LLC to St. Charles Health System Inc., NorthWest Crossing District1, Lot17, $1,568,160 • Nicholas J. and Alison A. Martin to Josiah S. andKristin L. Thelen, Centennial Glen, Lot 27,$198,900 • Shirley A. Richmire, trustee of the Shirley A. Richmire Trust, to KarenR. Harger andCylde J. Harger Jr., Rocky Point, Phases1-2, Lot 2, $490,000 • Stephen C.Vantress, also known as Stephen CharlesVantress, to CaseyS. Vantress, Indian FordMeadows, Lot1, Block 3, $279,000 • Stephen W.and Erin A. Cruthirds to Samantha L. andJared A.Young, Goodrich Subdivision, Lots 2 and4, Block 2, $210,000 • James S. Drew, trustee of the James S. Drew Revocable Living Trust, to Nicholas E.Loftus and Anne M. Sanguinetti, River TerraceAddition to Bend, Lot1, Block 7,$445,000 • Scott R. and SusanJ. Asla to James G. and Monte P.Cohen, Tanglewood, Phase 4, Lot 3, $385,000 • Jeffrey and Melissa Scott to Timothy J. and Camille S.Connelly, Mountain River Estates, Lot15, $523,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association, also known asFannie Mae, to Christopher J. andDaniel W. Davis, Courtyard Acres, Lot 2, $264,900 • Jeremy L. and SarahGriffith, who acquired title as SarahDinescu, to Mark S. andKelly Dean, 27th Street Crossing, Lot 5, $291,000 • Craig J. and Beverly A. Larison, to Richard E.andSusanA. Jenkins, Ridge at EagleCrest 41, Lot 52, $225,000 • Janet R. Molebash, trustee of the Janet R. Molebash Survivor's Trust, to Mary A. and Karl A. Paulson, Aspen Rim, Lot12, $420,000 • Affordable Homes of Oregon Inc. to Shaun S. and Michelle E. Nichols, Red Bar Estates, Phase 2, Lot 68, $164,000 • Hayden Homes Inc. to Shandra L. Harris, Sierra Vista, Phase 2, Lot 44, $197,990

• Kenneth C. and Lora G. Fenter to Jeff D. and Diane Brewbaker, Ridgewater II P.U.D., Lot16, $377,500 • Hayden Homes LLC to Carmen and Gerda H. Tillenburg, Sierra Vista, Phase 2, Lot 47, $197,890 • Flowering Crabapple LLC to Jay Sparks, North Mountain View Estates, Lot 35, $349,000 • JS Contracting Inc. to Dustin R. and Mayra Acheson, Parkway Village, Phases 1-3, Lot 59, $209,200 • Shannon Mitchell to Christopher A. and Sara E.Carrion, Township16, Range 12, Section14, $210,000 • Michael J. Carter Jr. and Shauna K. Carter to Colinda J. Wolfe, Timber Estates, Lot 10, $174,500 • Rodney W. and Clair H. Clarke to Justin and Kelly Johnson, Miller Heights, Phase 2, Lot 47, $534,000 • VRE Crescent LLC to Benjamin Bazer, Tetherow, Phase 6, Lot 301, $270,000 •Thomas E.and Betty J.Mayto Christopher D. and Jennifer E. Winans, Partition Plat 2005-77, Parcel 1, $189,000 • John W. and Lisa D. Cooper, alsoknown asLisaD.Jimenez,to Anthony and Emily Coito, Plateau Estates, Lot2,Block 2,$253,000 • Marian H. West, trustee of the Robert G. and Marian H.West Family Trust, to Ronald M. Rudy Jr. and Karen Rudy, Woodside Ranch, Phase 1, Lot17, Block4, $515,000 • Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Trustee to Glenn Browning, Westside Meadows 2, Lot 6, $302,000 • Hayden Homes LLC to Jesse D. Fox, Village Pointe, Phases4-7, Lot189, $183,990 • Daniel S. and Mona J. Glode to Ann P. Bridgeford, Fourth Sister Condominium, Unit 3B, $195,000 • Alex W. and Mary T. Hart to Tim Fief, Vandevert Ranch, Phase 2, Lot 19, $165,000 • Nancy S. Illingworth to Mary E. and Patrick D. Moore, Crescent Creek No. 2, Lot 87, $234,000 • Jeanne Young to Triple Knot Associates LLC, Golf Homesat Tetherow, Lot11, $750,941 • Triple Knot Associates LLC to Vickie V. and John W.Partridge, trustees of the Partridge Joint Revocable Trust, Golf Homes atTetherow, Lot11, $819,750 • Jaret Y. Ogasawara to Brian J. and Brittany L. Hughes, Pheasant Run, Phase1, Lot 42, $335,000 • Richard W. and Vickie I. Braxling to Michael J. Carter Jr. and ShaunaK. Carter, Salmon Run, Lot 5, $204,900 • Sarah A. Oberle to Curt Loch, First Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot10, Block12, $349,000

• Valerie J. Grindstaff to Kelly S. Gobler, Diamond BarRanch,Phase 2, Lot 59, $166,000 • Lands Bend Corp., an Oregon corporation successor by reason of conversion by Lands Bend LLC,to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada, Phase 1, Lot 49, $272,700 • Franklin Brothers LLC to Jesse P. Figueroa, Miranda, Phase1, Lot49, $272,700 • Matthew M. and AmandaS. Gillette to Angela K. andGavin C. MacFarland, Sun Meadow No.2,Lot 55, $257,900 • Jack D. Menedezand Ruth E. Burleson to Kelly A. and Thomas P. Allen, Cottages at NorthWest Crossing, Lot 22, $365,000 • Gordon R. and Rosella J. Lehto to Patrick D. and Patricia J. Schmitt, Bentwood Estates, Lot12, Block 2, $412,200 • Brandon R. Cook-Bostickto Jeremy H. Boucher andCatherine A. Rojo, Sierra Vista, Phase1, Lot 33, $229,500 • Patricia I. Freauff, who acquired title as Patricica I. Freauff, and Mark A. Freauff to Donald W.and Pamela J. Miller, StonehedgeWest, Phase 2, Lots 32 and 40, $229,900 • William R. Robertson to Manfred and Brigitte M. Walder, trustees of the Walder Revocable Living Trust, Shevlin Meadows,Phases1-2,Lot 13, Phase 1, $415,500 • Chanin and Sangwan Osathanon to Mark A. and Patricia I. Freauff, Fairhaven, Phase11, Lot 5, $257,500 • Oscar M.and Frances R. Michaelto Elkibou Properties LLC, Partition Plat 1993-52, Parcel 2, $200,000 •DunlapFineHomes Inc.and C and L Hinton LLC to Gordon R. andRosella J.Lehto,Vista Meadows,Phase3, Lot 70, $326,000 • Marilyn F. Ulrich to Andrea J. Wilson, Northpointe, Phase1, Lot 31, $218,400 • David Grigsbyto Mike Larson, Township18, Range12, Section 3, $186,000 • Crystal River Construction Inc. toLindaS.and MichaelNoonan, Deschutes River Woods, Lot11, Block J, $389,900 • Cynthia A. Carlton to Jason B. and Nikki K. Alkire, Parks at Broken Top, Phase 3, Lot 95, $799,500 • Suncreek Ranch LLC to Jamie Carder, Fairway Point Village 2, Lot 12, Block10, $420,000 Jefferson County • Anthony D.andNorma M. Radich toCindyL.andMickeyG.Gonzales, CrookedRiver RanchNo.10, Lot246, $207,000 • Virgil and YvonneHarperto Philip and PenelopeKnight, Township13, Range13,

Section 34,$2,250,000 • Kyle P.Padburyto Nationstar Mortgage LLC,doing businessasChampion MortgageCompany,Township 13,Range 12, Section 35,$217,527 • Susan J. Gatesto William P. Butler, CrookedRiver Ranch,Phase2, Lot12, Block 46,$179,000 • Bank of theWest, Successor byMerger to Pacific One Bank, to Washington Federal, Palmain,Lots1-3, Block12, $275,000 • George andLindaNemeth to Wiliam A. and Ellen M.Deyoung,Township13, Range12,Section 26,$361,900 • Jeffrey G. Bart, personalrepresentative for the estate ofBurton E.Grabhorn, to 9L FarmsLLC,Township 9, Range13, Section 26,Parcels1-2, $1,075,000 • Donald J. and Jacquelyn L Vandecoevering, toGregoryand Cindy Anderson,Township13, Range12, Section 26,$175,000 • Christopher S.Leachto Stacie N. Ittershagen,Partition Plat1995-04, Parcel 2, $285,000 • Gary L. andKathleenR.Watkins to Lee A.Sporleder,trustee ofthe LeeA. SporlederFamilyTrust, CrookedRiver RanchNo. 12,Lot30, $240,000 Crook County • Patricia L. Katzberg, who acquired title as Patricia L. Katzberg to Glenn E. Meusec, Township16, Range16, Section 2, $162,000 • Keith A. and Victoria L. Rivera, trustees of the Keith A. Revocable Trust, to Craig A. and Kelly L. Keudell, trustees of the Keudell Living Trust, Brasada Ranch 6, Lot 564, $200,000 • Robert L. and Theresa L. Dunn, trustees of the DunnFam>ly Community Property Trust to Joshua E. Fishburne, Partition Plat 2010-02, Parcel 3, $460,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Mary J. Purkerson, Ochoco Pointe P.U.D., Phase 2, Lot135, $249,950 • Clint Bentz, trustee of the Matthew G. Decker Trust II, to Cindy G. Severance, Township14, Range15, Section 15, $215,000 • Kevin Parks to Daniel J. Byrd, Township14, Range15, Section 35, $196,000 •CindySeveranceto Kaley M.Hook, Township 13, Range15, $475,000 • Lory L. Stulken to Robert L. Brown, Longhorn Ridge, Phase1, Lot54, $354,179 • National Residence Nominee Services lnc. to Johnny D. and Tamara D. Snyder, Partition Plat 1990-18, Parcel 2, $262,000 • Forrest H. and Marilyn F. Smith to Douglas and Nancy Snyder, Red Cloud Ranch, Lot 7, Block 6, $340,000

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White House

the dog bowls made for Millie,

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spaniel, and Obama's dog Bo, a Portuguese waterdog.

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Broken Top resident Member, OSU-CascadesNeighborhood Livability Task Force

President George H. B ush's "It's just some of the fun

cost of $362,000. "The china servicesare paid

things we do," Pickard Morgan said with alaugh. for through an endowment, Longtime Pickard employnot with taxpayer money," ees, such as Renee Fettinger Pickard Morgan said. "This of Antioch, also take pride in china belongs to the people making the W h ite Ho use's and will remain at the White china. House. Part of Fettinger's job is to "We're obviously extremely smooth the edge of a plate honoredto make this set." with a small razor and then Insidethe company's small with asanding pad. retail shop, there is a trophy

case of sorts displaying the new Obamachina as well as many different designs they havecreated over the years. There are also examples of

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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QUEsrtoN: I am traveling internationally soon. What steps should I take to besure my credit and debit cards work?

Answer: Start by calling your bank, credit union or card provider and informing them of the dates and locations of your travels. For your protection most financial institutions block international transactions. By calling and giving them a heads up, they can lift that block and allow you to use your card internationally. You may want Kathleen to consider requesting that the international block be lifted an extra day or two on either end of your arrival and departure dates in caseyour travel plans change. Ask your bank or credit union if there are any additional steps you need to take to ensure your card functions correctly. You may also want to inquire as to which ATM networks they subscribe to. Depending on your bank or credit cards networks, you may beable to accesscash at a lower fee at certain ATMs. If your debit or credit cards do not currently have an EMV chip in them, ask your bank and/or credit card company if they can sendyou cards with a chip. Some overseas ATMs will not support chip-less cards. All credit and debit cards are required to havechips by October, 2015. If you are traveling during this transition time, be sure you check with your card provider to ensure that you receive anewcard. Depending on the countries you're planning on visiting you may want to consider bringing extra currency with you in case ATMs are not easily accessible. To find out more about Washington Federal, please visit our website at washingtonfederal.com or contact our Bend Bluff Drive office at 541-330-1894 or our Purcell offtce at 541-385-0485.Washington Federal is an Equal Housing Lender and Member FDIC.

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QUEsrtoN: I don'tunderstand how 'asset protection' works?

ANswER: Everything you own is an asset, whether it is real property like your home, personal property like your autos, a business, or money and investments. Your total net worth is based on how much these items are worth collectively minus any loans like a mortgage or car loan. The purpose of the liability portion of your home, auto, umbrella, or business insurance is to protect your assets by providing enough coverage to pay any judgements that could be levied against you in a court of law. Judgements could result from many sources including an automobile accident, a personal injury claim, or negligent behavior like a dog bite. If you are sued and a court finds you liable for financial damages your insurance company will step in and pay that judgement up to your policy limits so you don't have to use your assets to satisfy the judgement, thus protecting your assets. If you don't have enough liability insurance you are personally responsible for paying the balance to the injured party out of your own pocket, depleting your assets and your net worth. Ideally your liability protection should at least equal your net worth. If you are a higher net worth individual, an umbrella is recommended to adequately protect your assets.

Assistant Vice President, Smal l Business Banking puicer

Pho ne: 541-312-7122 er e 'E mail: kate.baileV©wafd.com Washington Federal NMLSR ¹410394

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ANswER: "I WISH I WOULD HAVE KNOWN THIS SOONER!" This is what I am often told when reviewing credit reports and giving clients advice and options regarding the information in the reports. Once you know your path to improving the report information and scores, you can move down that path to recovery... raising your scores as high as possible, as quickly as possible! No two credit reports look alike, unless all your accounts have been opened jointly, so the path to improvement is different for every person. Maybe this path is short and straight, maybe long and winding, or somewhere in between. Having someone point you in the right direction is invaluable! If you are using cash for purchases you aren't going to prove yourself to the credit bureaus and usually won't be able to obtain the credit you desire. If you aren't dealing with negative credit report information you probably won't be able to obtain the credit you desire, either. And, just a few points can keep you from being able to obtain the best rates. 'Floundering' in the credit world is unnecessary and very frustrating. Having a path and reaching your goal(s) is empowering! It is still only $49 for detailed analysis and consultation regarding your path to recovery.

Question: We have two small children and I know my husband and Ishould have life insurance, butwhen I go online Isee there are different kinds like term, whole life, universal r life, variable universal life, etc. I just want to make sure my children are protected. How do Iknow what is the besttype for us? ANswER:There are two basic categories of Patrick life insurance: term and permanent. Term O'Keefe life insurance is very simple. You pay a premium in order to p urchase a death benefit, generally this is the only benefit. Term policies can be guaranteed for 10, 15, 20 or even up to 30 years. This means the premium will not change during that entire time. Rates are based on age and health status and since the insurance company has a greater risk the longer they are guaranteeing the policy, the rate goes up a bit the longer the term. For example, a healthy 30 year old male can get a $250,000 ten year term policy for as little as $12/month and a 30 year term policy for $25/month. Permanent insurance is generally more expense, has additional benefits such as cash value that is separate from the death benefit, and is often used as a financial planning tool. I strongly recommend talking to a financial advisor before purchasing any sort of permanent insurance. For most people in your situation term insurance is the most appropriate as it is inexpensive and allows you to have much more coveragefor the money.

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QUzsrtoN: I'm getting ready to sell my property. Inthis seller's market I plan on listing it for more than has been recommended knowingthata buyer can make an offer. Is this a good idea? I really want top dollar! ANSWKR: Studies showanoverpriced listing generally sells for lessthan if it had beenpriced at market value. In addition, an overpriced listing takeslonger to sell, exacerbating the negative impact overpricing hasona seller. Properties receive the most attention, and most salesactivity, when they first hit the market. The best performing real estate brokers pay close attention to "new" listings as they enter the Multiple Listing Service ("MLS"). Additionally, other websites, such asrealtor.com, post new listings as soon asthey come onthemarket. In a seller's market, buyersalsocombnewlistings assoon asthey come on themarket. They know that well-priced homesarelikely to receive an offer, and sometimes multiple offers, quickly. On the other hand,buyers understandthat if a home appearsto beoverpriced, it will sit on the market until theseller lowers theasking price ortakesalow off er. Real estate professionals recognize it can be difficult to price a homein an escalating market. Homes that closed amonth ago wereactually put under contract 30 to 90 days before that. So,while thosesalesprovide a guide to pricing your home, the final decision needs to take into account morerecent market trends, the seasonality of the market and a "sense" of what the bulk of the buyers in your general price rangeare looking for. Realtors active in yourmarket aremost likely to understand how toprice a home togenerateboth the most activity and, ultimately, thehighest price. ln conclusion, my recommendation for obtaining top dollar is to know the market; askforandlistentoadvicebasedonresearch;andpriceyourpropertyaccordingly.

Holly Polis, Vice President and Principal Broker The Pennbrook Company opennbrook.com pENNggppK Mo ~MPANIf hpolls 541 419 8710

Question: I am ninishlng mytaxes, what ls the difference between aregular IRA and a ROTH IRA? / Answer: A regular IRA is money put away before taxation and grows tax deferred until you pull it out after age 59-1/2. All the money you contributed and the growth of the account comes out as taxable income. There is no long-term gains nor any write-offs for potential loss. If you pull the money out prior to 59-1/2 Barbara the government hits you with a 10% early withdrawal penalty in addition to the taxes you will owe. There are other exceptions to avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty which can be found in the IRS publication 590B concerning early distributions. The government requires you to begin pulling your money out as required minimum distributions (RMD) by age 70-1/2. You can wait till the April after you turn 70-1/2 to pull your RMD but that does mean 2 RMD's in 1 year (more taxes to pay). A Roth IRA is money you invest after taxes arepaid on the money. However all the money and the potential growth comes out tax free. The good news is you can keep it growing since there is no RMD at 70-1/2. You must keep the money in for 5 years in order to pull the principal you put in. The gain or interest on the money has to stay in a Roth account until 59-1/2. For both regular and Roth IRAs the maximum you can put away for 2014 and 2015 is $5500 (if you at least earned that much) under age 50. Over age 50 the IRS allows you to put an additional $1000 in as a "catch up" provision to equal $6500. There are earning limits which does limit your contribution if you (or your spouse) also have another qualified plan such as a 401K or 403B. We do carry those schedules but as with dealing with taxes you need to speak to a qualified tax preparer or CPA.

CFPG

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Q: Is it "mortgage insurance" that pays off my loan if I dle? Or is it the insurance that keeps someone from claiming rights to my property? A: A c t u ally i t i s n't either one. "Loan Cancellation Insurance" pays off the loan if you pass away before the loan is paid off. "Title Insurance" ensures you have clear title to your property and protects you from prior Judy claims. McClurg "Mortgage Insurance" enables you to get a home loan with less than 20% equity. Lenders figure if they had to foreclose on a home, they could discount the price 20% and sell it right away to pay off the outstanding loan balance.For example, ifyou purchase a home for$200,000, you would needa down payment of $40,000 (20%). But rather than refuse to give you a loan unless you have 20% down payment, the lender insures the portion you didn't put down of the 20%. The lender gets to make a loan while lowering their risk, and you purchase a home without saving for many years in order to accumulate 20% of the purchase price. Everyone wins! Credit on approval. Terms subject to change without notice. Not a commitment to lend. www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org

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Question: I am thinking of selling my home on my own. Is thisa good idea? Answer:The main reason sellers decide to "go it alone" is that they don't want to pay a commission of 5%-6% a to a realtor. In the end for most FSBO sellers this is not the case because many end up eventually hiring a real estate agent. I have a friend who told me recently he tried for 3 months to sell Sue Marx his own home.It was a frustrating experience and finally he hired a real estate professional who sold his home for $7,000 more than what he was asking! Homes listed by a realtor almost always sell for more money. 2013NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers reports the average FSBO home sold for $174,900 while a realtor represented home sold for $215,000. Your home gets more exposure to a larger pool of potential buyers as most realtors have access to a larger network than the FSBO; for example, other agents, clients or other real estate agencies. There are many types of "turbulence" that can occur during the process of home selling and home buying. Many times during the process the FSBO seller can be in a position of liability if the proper paperwork and disclosures that are required to close the sale are not in place. A realtor brings expertise, which few FSBO sellers have, to a complex transaction. A realtor knows the process and is ready to negotiate with the long list of people you will need to deal with in selling a home: the buyer, the buyer's agent, the mortgage company or bank, the home inspector, the appraiser, the title company, not to mention all the phone calls and showing appointments a FSBO will deal with on weekends or evenings. That is why in 2014 88% of home sellers used a real estate professional according th a t ional Association of Realtors.

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Answer a local Financial Question. Reach 70,000 local readers with your Financial Answer. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OR EMAIL K AREN S T O W E

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Power

balance market, using 5-min-

Continued from E1

forecasts to smooth out the

Coal power Amy Hojnowski, senior campaign representative for the Sierra Club Beyond Coal Campaign, said the union, if accomplished, could allow PacifiCorp to bring into California greater amounts of elec-

Continued from E1 "What it comes down to is

respective girds. If they agree to further link ifornia's, public utility commissions in six states would need to sign off, along with FERC. In addition, the Cali-

fornia Legislature would need to amend its laws to open the

generating plants are fueled by coal, which provides about 60 percent of its electrical power. "California, right now, is really set on an irreversible course of trying to rid itself of all coal-fired power," Hojnowski said. "The ISO (California Independent System Operator) is really pitching this as an opportunity for an

board to representatives from the other states.

increased use of renewables.

system operator governing "Part of what's driving this,

is in the West you have 38 spe-

cial control areas where energy supply and demand are managed and balanced, and

PacifiCorp, the parent company of Pacific Power, may join with a

not much coordination across

California agency to moveelectricity more efficiently over trans-

those boundaries," Gravely

mission lines, like these near Mt. Hood, across the West.

you turned power plants on

Potentially, it's a great opportunity to be more efficient with renewable energy, to rely more on renewables and less on fossil fuels." Gravely said the surplus supply of solar-generated electricity that California some-

more solar, when things are going up and down in a less

times generates could be used to reduce the amount of pow-

the process would unfold in

er generatedby PacifiCorp's coal- and natural-gas-fired plants. The California Independent System Operator is one of nine

similar, regional organizations in the U.S. and the only

U.S. Department of Energy

said. "That worked OK when and let them run. "Now, with more wind and

predictable way, it makes more

sense to have joint control." He said the study may be c omplete this year, with

a

working agreement in place by 2017. Others are skeptical two years. "It's going to take a while to get there, but the general

idea of it is pretty clear," said Hewitt of the Northwest En-

ergy Coalition. "There's very little chance of it being in place in 2017."

one in the West. It owns no

He said the coalition, like

redundancy in building gen- help the states involved meet eration plants and transmis- goals laid out in the proposed sion lines. Clean Power Plan put forth "What this results in is a last year by the U.S. Environmuch more efficient use of mental P r otection A g ency the existing system," he said. to reduce by 30 percent the "It helps you u nderstand carbon emissions from powwhat you need to build if you er plants burning fossil fuwant to get the most out of els, primarily coal. The plan renewables." lists emission targets for each H ewitt agreed. In t h e- state to reach by 2025, but alory, adding PacifiCorp to lows them to work together to the California grid adds not meet those goals. only fossil-fuel generating The EPA is scheduled to plants, but renewable power, release final rules later this as well. Electricity generated year. States have another by wind and water in the Pacific Northwest could end up

in California during times of peak demand, and solar pow-

power plants or transmission the Sierra Club, has not yet er could flow from California lines but controls the flow of taken a position on Pacifi- when it has a surplus. "With a system like this ..., power across the utility com- Corp joining forces with the pany lines within its jurisdic- California Independent Sys- you have things operating tion. Its purpose, according to tem Operator. However, Carl in real time," Zichella said. the organization's website and

Zichella, an expert in power

"You're able to dispatch the

the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, is to allow equal access to power and, by creating a market for power, lower costs and diversify pow-

grids and energy transmis-

er sources.

he wrote in the NRDC blog,

least-cost (power) to meet the need, which is good for renewable energy. In almost every case, it's dispatched first." Finally, PacifiCorp joining the California Independent System Operator could

"One way to think of it is

sion for the National Resourc-

es Defense Council, called the idea a "bold step." "This is a very big deal," "Switchboard," in April.

year t o

10,000 views or more, Harris said Real Prize Arcade

funding via Kickstarter. Wal-

Lauren Wallace, an attorney at the Portland firm T onkon Torp L L P w h o specializes i n t e c hnolo-

launch with or

gy and startups, said that 71 percent of Kickstarter campaigns don'tmeet their funding goals within the designated time frame.

term, he plans to offer some

laceadded that even compahas only gotten around 450 nies whose products aren't views. received well gain valuable "If your own social me- experience and exposure that dia reach isn't that big, then can help them try again. "The great thing about you're relying on exposure to propagate that," Harris Kickstarter is it basically gives sard. you a mailing list of enthusiLack of exposure is a asts," Wallace said. c ommon p r oblem w i t h For his part, Harris said Kickstarter projects. Real Prize A r c ade w o uld

Successful efforts typical-

ly build up a significant network through outreach and public relations before the Kickstarter campaign launches. " There's n othing

facilities an d

t he groundwork fo r

10.8

4.5

69 .6

10.0

4.1

54. 1 0 25.05 122 .67 88.42 63. 0 9 72.45 42.2 5 21.39 10 3 .83 310.86 6 9.47 11 2 .7 9 238. 2 4

4.83 2.00 84 .7 5.65 3.95 4.51 25 .4 1.27 55 .5 16 . 36 3.70 5.90 12. 4 2

9.8 8 .7 74 6 .8 6 .7 6.6 6.4 6 .3 5 .6 5 .6 5.6 5.5 5.5

-0.8

9.2 -5.0 6.0 0.5 -10.8 12.8 10A 10.7 9.3 4.7 -1.3 2.7

that makes a multistate plan

viable." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com +/- 101,930.4 Square Feetii +I- 2.34Acres • Sewer and Water on Property • SharedAccess to Business 97 (3rd Street) • LocatedAcross from South Les Schwab store and immediately South of Suba Guru • First Commercial Property on right side of road entering Bend from South • New roadscreate remarkable exposure

CoNSTRVCTION

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GMCR W FM

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TICKER

13.5 Borderfree Inc 0.0 Quality Distribution 0.0 Fate Therapeutics 17.3 CHC Group Ltd 60.0 Ryerson Holding 21.1 Calithera Bioscience 30.4 PMFG Inc 34.2 Olympic Steel -14.4 Proteon Therapeutics 2.8 Cyan Inc 96.3 HillInternational 24.8 NeoPhotonics Corp 28.5 Layne Chrlstensen 106.6 Blueprint Medicines 16.5 Nautilus Inc

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Keurig Green Mountn Whole Foods Westlake Chemical Monster Beverage Sprint Corp Mvidia Corporation

Globalmarkets

FRIDAY C L OS E

INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

BRDR

13. 97

7.55

1176

1 07 . 0

7.7

QLTY

15. 7 3

5.77

579

55.0

16.0

FATE

7.22

2.43

50.7

38.3

HELI

1.71

0.54

46.2

37. 9

RYI

7.80

2.32

42.3

27.5

13. 8 7

4.05

41.2

-22.4

PMFG

6.41

1.79

38.7

41.8

ZEUS

18. 2 4

4.54

33.1

55.1

CALA

PRTO

16. 9 9

4.19

32.7

9.8

CYNI

4.75

1.10

30.1

13.1

HIL

5.05

1.14

29.2

33.2

NPTN

7.07

1.58

28.8

19.6

LAYN

8.69

1.88

276

65.5

BPMC

23. 6 0

5.07

2 7.4

25. 1

NLS

21.82

4.52

26.1

28.4

3.3 -78.1 0.0

-14.75

-12.7

-12.9

42.5 9

-5.59

-11.6

-17.4

7.6 Phoenix Cos 1 1.9 Global Power Equip

PNX

G L PW

17.85

-15.45

-46.4

-54.1

7.66

-4.48

-36.9

-40.2 -27.8

s&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

LAST 2116.10 11709.73 7046.82 27577.34 5090.39 19379.19

FRI. CHG +28.10 +301.76 +159.87 +287.37 +123.17 +87.20

FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD +1.35% L L +2.78% 2 65% L >19.42% +2.32% +7.32% %16.83% +1 05% +2.48% L t19. 1 4% +0.45% +11.05%

SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA

Aires M erval 12205.09 +80.47 +0.66% X X 0.0 Buenos Mexico CityBolsa 45 1 25.95 +357.15 +0.80% L L 11.7 -21.3

Sao Paolo Bovespa Toronto S&P/TSX

0.0 /AFRICA 28.3 EUROPE

-17.0 Amsterdam 12.3 Brussels Madrid -41.8 Zurich 0.0 Milan 88.0 Johannesburg Stockholm

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

10 1.49

— Reporter: 541-617-7818 sitamway@bendbulletinjcom

but

"It's part of the plumbing

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

5.54

fun for everybody."

the answer," Zichella said.

S o ffered through Ktte Financial

76.5 6

some money, too, that makes it

tates that, but it's not by itself

wealthManagement 8!Ivlcrs,lraMemberajtRAISjpo

5 6.7 7

people win stuff and make

t h o se

SUN FoREsT

15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

Magna lntl MGA Qorvo Inc QRVO N orwegian Cruise Ln NCLH A ctivision Blizzard AT V I Mallinckrodt plc MNK Estee Lauder EL cognizant Techsol C TSH Royal Carlbn R CL Holly Frontier Corp HFC UBS Group AG U BS Incyte Corp INCY CF Industries CF Visa Inc V Alnylam Pharmaceutic ALNY IntercontinentalExch I C E

"People like to win stuff,"

Harris said. "If I could have

emissions. "This kind of market facili-

Securities & Advisory Services

$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO

hundreds of machines.

states to create a larger plan to reduce carbon dioxide

CharlesTomitkins, CFP

FRIDAY C LOS E

several warehouses filled with

t r a n smission

Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers T ICKER

electronics, with the goal of building it into a facility with

lines in six states could lay

541 -204-0667 TOM P K I N

be out of reach in the near

s u b mit i n d i vidual

Minutemarkets

Get A F RE E Retirement Kit

w i t hout the

additional funding. While car keys and vacations might

plans, or longer if they band together. Linking generation

as an air traffic control sys-

tem," Gravely said. "Airlines Clean Power Plan own the airplanes but there's For one, he said Thursday, a unified system that dictates the proposed arrangement where those airplanes take off would create incentives to and land and when." build more windmills and solar farms; it also reduces In April, PacifiCorp and the California Independent System Operator announced they would study the feasibility of the two coming together. SinceNovember, thetwo have cooperated in an energy im-

campaign with their PR mech-

exposure," Harris said. "We anisms in place, they aren't haven't really had any yet." going to succeed." Unlike some Kickstarter Still, all is not lost for comprojects, which can receive panies who fail t o obtain

PacifiCorp's system to C al-

tricity from coal-fired power plants. Ten of the utility's 74

COMPANY

preparation in a Kickstarter campaign," Wallace said. "If (companies) don't begin the

ute and 15-minute spot market flow of electricity across their

-55.6

+42. 27% L + 4.5 9% 571 49.33+227.94 + 0 .40% a a a +14.2 8 % 1 5 1 70.02 +81.20 +0.54% V V L +3.6 7 %

490.79 +1 2.01 3652.87 +67.61 1158.43 +24.63 9093.33 +21 9.78 23312.43 +470.51 53790.57 +552.40 1616.46 +28.81

2 51% L I 89% +2.17% j +2.48% +2.06% +1.04% +1.81%

4

+15.62% L

t11.19% t11.1 2%

+1.22% t22.62%

+8.08% T

+1 0.37%

ASIA

-0.26% T Seoul Composite 2085.52 5.48 Singapore Straits Times 3452.01 +1 9.23 + 0.56% T -14.6 Sydney All Ordinaries 563 5.40 -9.40 -0.17% V 263.9 Taipei Taiex -0.12% V 9692.00 -12.11 0.0 Shanghai Composite 4205.92 +93.71 + 2.28% -48.1

-7.30

-9.4

-6.7

-8.5 varonis Systems Inc vRNS

19.87

-9.31

-31.9

1 2 8 .47

-12.66

-9.0

-7.1

19.07

-7.84

-29.1

32.0

4.77

-0.45

-8.6

-4.0

120.1 Impac Mtge Hldgs IMH 0.0 Westlake Chem PtrsLP WLKP 24.9 Fluidigm Corp FLDM -37.9 Skullcandy Inc SKUL -28.3 Town Sports Intl Hdg CLUB -47.0 Molycorp Inc MCP -23.3 BioScrip Inc BIOS

20.30

-8.12

-28.6

-28.0

26.95

-10.76

-28.5

-36.2

8.27

-2.64

-24.2

-25.3

18.6

4.76

-1.43

-23.1

-30.5

-13.3

"I amoptimistic we will soon have a good outcome."

0.70

-0.20

-22.2

32.1

-87.1

3.63

-1.03

-22.1

-32.8

-34.1

—Alexis Tsipras, Greece's prime minister, on his expectation that the countrywill soon reach an agreement with its international creditors, averting a potential default

70.41

N VDA

20. 8 3

-1.93

-8.5

-8.5

Cenovus Energy

CVE

17.44

-1.54

-8.1

-1.0

ONEOK

OKE

44.75

-3.91

-8.0

-7.3

Chesapk Engy Pioneer Natural

CHK

15.28

-1.26

-76

3.0

P XD

159 . 0 6

-12.50

-Z3

-7.8

E5

+8.87% +2.58% +4 58% 4 13% 30 03%

14.4

Quotable

Note: Stocksclassified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Rangesare $100 milion to $1billion (small); $1 billion to $8billion (mid); greater than $8bilion Ilarge).

InsiderQ&A

Continental

contrarian

Marc Halperin Senior pofffolio manager, Federated Investors

Europe's problemsare far from over. Economicgrowth across the continent remaIns anemIc,wIth unemployment topping 10 percent in France and Italy and 20percent in S pain. Greece's government Is still struggling to pay back lenders, stoking concerns that Greece could dropthe euro and prompt other countries to follow Its lead. All the negative newsis part of what attracts Marc Hal perin, senior portfolio managerat Federated Investors, who says he likes to take a contrarian approach. His investment fund, the Federated International Leaders,has staked a majority of its $2 billion in European stocks, includingbig French and Italian banks.

Investors have been burned In recent

years by bettlng that Europe was finally turning around. What's changed? We've got around 75 percent of our fund in Europe, becausethat's where we're fIndlngthe most value rlght now. We like stocks when there's blood in the streets and maximum pessimism, and that's what you haveIn Europe. We believe that Mario Draghl's stimulus program will work. It's $1.2trillion, and we think irs golng to stimulate growthInthe economy and take the currency lower. A lower currency will certainly help exporters, especially Germany, where exportsare about half of their gross domestic product. A weakereuro is starting to help already.

they the most exposed If there's trouble? We're not talking about junky companies. We've never owned any of the problematic French Dr British banks.For us, irs CredIt Sulsse,BNP Parlbas, Banco Santander, HSBC. Whydo we like them? They're trading at hugediscounts to book value. They still pay prettygood dividends. Not only are they some Df the best financial institutions Dnthe continent, but they're some of the best globally.At the moment, their non- performing loansare abnormally hIgh. Once the economy InEurope improves, those loans willstart to recover.

What are your concerns? Europeanbanks make up a large share What worries you? of your fund. What's the appeal? Aren't Well, thereare geopolitical concerns

certainly. In Ukraine, for instance, that situationhas not been resolved. Vladimir Putln, Russla'spresldent, will continue to roil thingsthere. He clearly still wants to bite off pieces of Ukraine. I think that's still golng tobe drag on Europe. Greece will also continueto be a drag.

And what If Grmce drops the euro? We thinkthere's a good chance there will be some sortDf compromise. Greece is the least of Dur worries, actually. Europe has been preparing for this contingency now for the last four years. It wouldn't be anywherenear the catastrophe for the European Unionthat it would have been in 2011. Interviewed by Matthew Craft. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Indexclosing and weekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, May8, 2015

I8,I9I.« + +

NASDaa ~ 5,003.55

1 84

S&P 500

+

2,116.10

+7.81

R UssELL 2000 ~ + 6 . 82 I,234.93 ~

WILSHIRE 5000 ~ 22,319.28 ~


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

UNDAY D

R

a a c ssix- in er unc By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News

"Small" smacks of skinny cheeseburgers and tiny bubble-shaped cars for two. "Climb on into the Gupmo-

~ac ik4

bask in the neon. But I fully understand this

push and slash by automakers to

REVIEW get smaller. With fue l economy standards rising dramatically, though, the gas-gulping V-8s I admire must be ousted from engine compartments Jaguar viaTribune News Service

The 2015 Jaguar XF 3.0 Sport has a look that is a bit dated, but the car still flashes some well-proportloned lines.

Continued from E1 Redfin has rolled out its own 3D Walkthrough online tours

of all its Bay Area properties, using high-resolution interactive technology: "It's just like in the video games: Look down, look up, turn around and just go round and round the whole house. It's really cool," said Bita Salamat, an agent in the East Bay. "You can actually stand"

— virtually — "in front of the cabinets of the kitchen area, tilt it upwards and see what the

ceiling looks like." Last month, a couple in Shanghai looking for an investment used the online feature to tour aproperty in San Leandro: "It was under $500,000, three

bedrooms,two baths, townhouse style," Salamat recalled,

"perfect for investors because

security code. I was told that the code would be in the ownthe vehicle. I found it and tried repeatedly to activate

checked at AutoZone P 0014 and P 0024. T h e

the radio w i t hout success.

run it 50 miles prior to the

a replacement from a l ocal

oil change. A local garage and In-

electronics shop. I still have the original radio in my garage and whenever I see it, it grinds my gears. Is there

The shop also tried using the mechanics said it was due code in the owner's manual to dirty oil. They reset the as well as going online to see code,but it came back on if another code was available. in five miles. I had a syn- No luck. thetic oil change, and a A local BMW dealer was mechanic told me to run also unsuccessful. I f i nalSeaFoam through itand ly gave up and purchased

to have two modules replaced for $2,600. They also stated that this may

not fix the problem as

2015 JaguarXF 3.0Sport

it's close to the San Mateo

side the master bedroom, the

Bridge — easy for commut- buyer decided it was worth her ing to Silicon Valley. And they time to squeeze in the Wedneswanted the house so bad that day showing. "That was two days ago," they were willing to do whatever to get it." Wentworth said. "She made an They made a cash offer, but offer and we've accepted it." It's only in the last few years alas, their efforts didn't pay off in the end, because "we had an- that agencies have moved beother cash offer for more mon- yond static online images of ey," Salamatnoted. properties to more sophistiAbby Wentworth, also a catedfeatures.Some agencies R edfin agent, used the 3D now use drone photography Walkthrough to help turn a for aerial and distance shots, deal last week on a $425,000 especially for homes on hills condo in Oakland's Pill Hill andhillsides, said Billy McNair, neighborhood. It s t e nants an areabroker associate with nixed showings on a Mon- Coldwell Banker whose backday and a Tuesday, but OK'd a ground is in marketing and Wednesday showing — when tech startups. "Guys are coming in with the the prospective buyer had to leave town. To break the dead- harness stabilizers and video lock, Wentworth suggested cinematography (to create virthat the buyer take a virtual tual tours) that give a true reptour, and she did. Especially resentation of what the propertaken with a reading nook out- ty is about," he said.

With that said, there are

then bring it in? What is

looked. After t h ree unsuc-

your advice?

cessful attempts at entering the code, BMW radios lock

a couple of things you could grade in performance and try that may have been over-

A agnostic codes f ound? • Are the P0014 and • P 0024 the only d i -

ALLDATA s hows t h ese two codes refer to a problem with the EVT — electronic valve timing — on

II W

until the ignition and radio have been left on for one hour. Also, some BMW radi-

os require pushing the right arrow key a fter entering

A dditional D T C s

h ave p i npointed

the code before the unit will c o u l d function.

the

Finally, did you purchase the vehicle new or used? Is sor (P0035), cam position that the original radio for the sensor (P0340), exhaust car? If not, your only hope valve timing control sen- would be to identify the propsor (P1078), exhaust valve er code for the replacement magnet retarder, the ex- radiothrough BMW. crankshaft position sen-

haust valve timing control

pulley assembly or t he timing chain and gears.

a 2005 Dodge Q •• IGhave rand C a ravan w i t h

If P0014/P0024 are the

148,000 miles on it. Recent-

only codes, sludge or de-

ly the dash and headlights

bris accumulating on the

started to f l i cker i n termittently. The battery is new and

camshaft's pickup might be the problem — thus the suggestions of adding SeaFoam and a couple of short interval oil and filter changes are the simplest and least expensive first steps. I'd hesitate to replace expensive modules

I'm suspecting an alternator problem. Any thoughts'?

A cables clean and tight? Does • Is the new battery rated • for this vehicle? Are the

the battery light indicate low

voltage when the flickering occurs'? A scan tool may idenw ithout s p ecific D T C s tify a charging problem, but I'd suspect something like the confirming a problem. high/low beam switch on the

When I went to turn on the radio, I saw a message

Amid frenzied bidding in a constricted market — Ray

the information to the dient over the phone, he decided

it 50 times, checking each bathroom. I have dients who walk

recalls48 offers on a house in

which offer he wanted to accept, we emailed it to him, he signed it on DocuSign" — an electronic signaturetechnology — "and we sold his house."

lighting system ground.

ciate with Coldwell Banker in Menlo Park. "I sold a house last

through a house turning on every light and turning on every faucet.They are diff erentends of thebuyer-client spectrum." About a year ago, broker The seller was Wayne Ha- associate Arthur Sharif, who thaway, a retired tech engineer sells luxury properties for Soand entrepreneur now living in theby's International Realty Texas, who bought the modest in Silicon Valley, walked into Bahl Patio Home in the early his own FaceTime deal: "What '70s for $38,000 and sold it for I had was a family from Ire$1.3 million. land and basically all they Long-distance deal-making did was send a friend over can be "a little nerve-wracking. with an iPhone. And the guy There'sa lot of pressure," said walks through the house with Ray, who works for Coldwell the iPhone, showing them the

year with multiple offers from

Banker and showed the Olsons

Redwood City a few weeks ago — high-tech touring and display features are becoming a necessity, especially for highend deals. Everything is handled upfront by agents and buyers, who can read disclosure documents online and move

toward making noncontingent offers. "I've done it with an iPad.

I've done it with a laptop," said Elaine White, a broker asso-

house, and the people never

half a dozen or so houses via came to visit it. And the house Ticking off anecdotes, she FaceTime lastyear. was just short of $4 million "It takes a certain type of continued, "I sold a house in in Los Altos Hills, and they Sunnyvalelastyearw here my buyer to do it," she said, ac- bought it, never having set foot client was in Russia on a cruise knowledging the risks of buy- on the property. "Technology is ruling the ship. There were seven offers ing sight-unseen, "to really let on hisproperty.We presented go of the need to walk through day." my hotel room in Alaska."

lr,

bUlh

out any additional attempts

both banks of cylinders.

Agel,ess

sso on

4%$ ~

vehicle before entering the security code.

— Brandis an automotive troubleshooterand former race car driver. Email questions to paulbrandistartribune.com. Include a daytime phone number.

pp ~

the unit to be installed in the

out the fix? Can I run the car until it starts to de-

POlE PRSSI. l %DI I

yee

on your bench with a 12-volt battery, but it may require

engine. The battery was dying so I went to my local shop and had it replaced.

4ht4PojrIIL+

t r~8 ~

A • compelling challenge. You could try powering it up

tilt steering column or a poor

l • t g

ggbe

BROUGHT TOYOU BY THE BULLETIN

promised with existing sludge in the motor. The car runs fine. Mileage and performance are fine. My question is what's the harm in running it with-

some way that you can find to get this thing to work? • Like you I'd find this a

a 2002 BMW Q •• IZ3have with the 2.5-liter

Central Oregon Golf Preview

ATTRACT IONS!

er's manual that came with

ber, my engine light went on and I had the codes

the system could becom-

thoughit got a tad coarse above the car's interiors maintained 4,000. a sense of European elegance, measure. In fact, below 70 mph, the V-6 and that is still true today, Whoopee. Base price:$57,175 builds a powerful case for it- when things are decidedly Take slinky, powerful Jagself, making the V-8 sometimes better. As tested:$58,100 uar, for i n stance, a storied seem as excessive as an expenBut the black interior in the Wpe:Five-passenger, rearbrand that found its snarl again sive girlfriend who drinks too Jag Ihad was more chic than wheel-drive, midsize luxury in improbablypowerful V-8s. much. classic, with elements seemsedan Although the English autoB ut above 70 , t h e V - 6 ingly inspired by some trendy, Engine: Supercharged, maker will keep some highstrained some to generate that techno-pop bar in London. direct-injected 3-liter V-6 end V-8 powered sedans, its smooth rush of power available The graceful black dashwith 340 horsepower and mainstay engines at this point in the 5-liter V-8. board, wrapped in rich-look332 pound-feet of torque will be turbo fours and superOne compensation was fuel ing, pliable plastic, dropped Mileage:18mpg city, charged V-6s. economy: The V-6 rings up 18 down onto silver trim at mid28 mpg highway To make matters worse, the miles per gallon in town and 28 dash. In typical Jag fashion, 2015 Jag XF 3.0 Sport I had reon the highway, compared with silver chain-trim "doors" over cently arrived in white, the offi15/23 in the V-8. the dimate-control vents rolled cialcolor ofsurrender. aged to blow out rolling over In addition, the V-6 sedan is open when the car was started, The midsize sedan's lengthy the nasty railroad tracks be- 150 pounds or so lighter, giving snapping shut when the engine name denotes a supercharged hind The Daily Planet. itsharperhandling responses. got turned off. 3-liter V-6, a motor nearly 40 My bad, Jag — or whatever The XF turned into tight corMeanwhile, the rotary shiftpercent smaller than the V-8 in it is coolly detached people say. ners nicely — though with a bit er on the XF's broad silver and the last XF I had. (Thanks for not making me of lean — and kept its compo- piano-blackconsole also rose But, as I discovered during change it.) sure even when the driver had from a recessed position when the week I drove the XF, small But the big news with the not. the car was started. engines can muster pretty big still-stylish XF is the lusty little Moreover, the Jag stepped As you might expect in a bluster if you throw enough motor beneath its hood. over bumps and potholes with Jag, the sleek black seats had money andtechnology atthem. the high-end grace you expect supportive bolsters, sectioned While a bit dated — and the Stout motor from a sedan that costs nearly centers and stitching on the car willbe freshened for 2016 Over the last decade, Jaguar $60,000. edges. — the XF still flashes some has gotten really good with Although hardly soft like They were matched stylewell-proportioned lines. supercharged engines, bolt- Jaguar sedans from the '60s wise by a headliner and windGreat squinting, scowling ing together motors that seem and'70s, the athletic XF offered shield pillars in black suede. dual-projector he a dlampshard-edged and responsive generous wheel travel that Oddly, given the car's slinky reside alongside a squarish even down low where blowers soaked up lots of imperfections. profile, legroom and headroom blacked-out grille. typically sap power. Like virtually all m odern in back were surprisingly amA long, slightly raised hood The diminutive 3-liter V-6, for cars, the steering on the Jag ple, though Jag had to position complemented smooth, round- example, feltbigger throughout was so filtered and thick it was the seat kind of low to get it. ed sides cut by a sharp line its broad power range than its difficult to tell what kind of surThe 3.0 Sport could be an inabove the rocker panel. numbers suggested. face the front wheels were sail- terestingcarforJaguar. It's priced about $25,000 less One curve really defined With340horsepower, the en- ing across — smooth concrete, the XF, I thought — its slinky, gine is hardly a lightweight. But greasy asphalt, my bad neigh- than the rip-snorting V-8-powgraceful top. it must lug about 4,100 pounds bors' lawn'? ered Jaguar XFR, but it offers Likewise, the car wore slen- and still managed to pack a But it was responsive and more than adequate perforder, fairly distinctive taillamps punch. The stout little motor well-weighted — light around mance for most buyers. in back that kind of matched bolted away from stops, accel- town, getting heavier as speeds Since leases rule in the luxuthe headlamps. erating to 60 in 5.2 seconds, increased. And best of all, it ry segment, the 3.0 might give Mine also brought a bit of about a second slower than felt pretty good in corners and Jag a chance to make some attitude to the boulevard with Jag's nastiest V-8XFR model. curves. attractive deals on the car and gray-spoked 20-inch wheels Tied to a refined eight-speed pump up sales. carrying pretty substantial 25 a utomatic, th e e n gine f e lt Insidestory As I have claimed for de5/35 tires, one of which I man- strong all the way to 6,000 rpm, Even in Jag's darkest hours, cades, small can bebig.

FaceTime

saying that I needed to enter a

Star Tribune(Minneapolis)

finiti dealer said I needed

where they've lived since the inder engines will turn American wheels now, sipping fuel by the teaspoon and generally returning excitement in the same

By Paul Brand

Q

That doesn't exactly sound like a sizzling night at the drive-in, where 400-cubic-inch musde and old-school steel still

Eisenhower era. Six-, four- and eventhree-cyl-

before buyingparts • I have a 2010 Infiniti • EX35. Last Decem-

bile, babe, but watch those plastic seats."

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

COMMENTARY

JOHN COSTA I

Testing the First Amendment e First Amendment to the Constitution is tested time

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and again and in many ways, but never so often or so predictably as in times of war or because of na-

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tional security concerns. You would think that the Found-

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ers' prescription would suffice, but it doesn't.

In case you don't recall, this is what they came up with in the Bill of Rights: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peace-

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ably to assemble, and to petition

the governmentfora redress of grievances."

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Clear and conclusive as that

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sounds, its implications have been argued endlessly over the life of the republic. It wasn't until the beginning of

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the 20th century that the Supreme

Court began to give it the meaning that it has today, protecting

Damon Winter/The New YorkTimee

individuals' broader freedom in

Homes with swimming pools abut the desert of Palm Springs, California. The state's history as a frontier of prosperity and glamour faces an uncertain

speech that is critical of governments,public causes and other individuals. Before that, what you said could get you in trouble, if not in jail.

future as the fourth year of severe water shortages has prompted Gov.Jerry Brown to mandate a 25percent reduction in nonagricultural water use.

Before the niceties were worked

out, there were sedition laws, pornography laws, and if those didn't produce the intended direct sup-

pression, there were laws against use of the mails for speech that went against the grain. Times now are much better, though not perfect, for the First Amendment. But it continues to be tested, and

in new ways. The latest has a familiar and, un-

fortunately, predictive ring to it. A group in Texas held a cartoon By Timothy Egan«New York Times News Service

contest that featured critical im-

ages of the prophet Muhammad, which is anathema to Muslims. Two gunmen, suspected of ties

to ISIS, arrived and opened fire, wounding one security officer before being shot dead by another guard. It had shades of the attack on the

French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, though not nearly the murderous impact on innocent victims.

ANGELS CAMP, Calif.n a normal year, no one in California looks twice at a neighbor's lawn, that mane of bluegrass thriving in a sunblasted desert. Or casts a scornful gaze at a fresh-planted almond grove, saplings that now stand accused of future water crimes. Or wonders why your car is conspicuously clean, or whether a fish deserves to live when a cherry tree will die.

You could likely guess that I am an absolutist on the First Amendment. To the center of my soul, I believe that Charlie Hebdo and the Texas conferees have a right to satirize whatever they want, a right that I

defend. And it seems hard to argue that

you can terrorize the world in the name of Islam, chopping heads off for the cameras, and then ex-

pect that you are immune from criticism, including the kind of satire that is the meat and potatoes

of Charlie Hebdo and the Texas conference. But as zealots, they do expect that.

And they would, if they could and as they have done in their own land, rewrite the First Amendment. There, there are laws establish-

ing a state religion, and dangerous exercise of any other; certainly little free speech, and assembly restricted to marching slogans of the state. The great majority of Muslims,

Of course, there is nothing normal about the fourth year of

the great drought: According to climate scientists, it might be the worst arid spell in 1,200 years. For all the fields that will go fallow, all the forests that will catch fire, all the wells that will come

up dry, the lasting impact of this drought for the ages will be remembered, in the most exported term of California startups,

as a disrupter. "We areembarked upon an experiment thatno onehasever tried," Gov. Jerry Brown said in early April in ordering the first mandatory statewide water rationing for cities. Surprising, perhaps even disappointing to those with schadenfreude for the nearly 39 million people living in year-round sunshine, California will survive. It's not going to blow away. The economy, now on a robust rebound, is not going to collapse. There won't be a Tom Joad load of SUVs headed north. Rains,

and snow to the high Sierra, will eventually return. But California, from this drought onward, will be a state transformed. The Dust Bowl of the 1930s was human-caused,

after the grasslands of the Great Plains were ripped up and the land thrown to the wind. It never fully recovered. The California

drought of today is mostly nature's hand, diminishing an Eden createdby man. The Golden State might recover, but it won't be the same place.

Looking to the future, there is also the grim prospect that this dry spell is only the start of a"megadrought," made worse by climate change. California has about one year of water supply left in its reservoirs. What if the endless days without rainbecome

IRA, nor the great majority of Ital-

endless years? In the cities of a changed California, brown is the new green. A residential lawn anywhere south of, say, Sacramento, is already considered an indulgence. "If the only person walking on your lawn is the person mowing it," said Felicia Marcus, chair-

ians fond of the mafia.

woman of the State Water Resources Control Board, then maybe

The question for those of us who value the First Amendment is easy

it should be taken out. The state wants people to convert lawns to drought-tolerant landscaping or fake grass. Artificial lakes filled with Sierra snowmelt willbecome bakedmud valleys, surrounded byuglybathtub rings. Some rivers will dry completely — at least until a normal rain year. A few days ago, there was abare trickle from the Napa, near the town of St. Helena, flowing through some of the most valuable vineyards

I believe, do not agree with this

brand of suppression or control. But neither were most Irishmen and -women in agreement with the

to state but painfully difficult to

answer. Are there limits we should impose on ourselves?

In fact, newspapers that have standards of publication do it every day, which I know doesn't answer

the question of whether to publish the images of Charlie Hebdo or the cartoonists in Texas.

I wholly support their right to their choice, but for me the answer is a resounding, "It would depend." — John Costa is publisher of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337 jcosta@bendbulletin.com

I

on the planet. The state's massive plumbing system, one of the

e

biggest in the world, needs adequate snow to serve farmers in the Central Valley and techies in Silicon Valley. This year, California set a record low for Sierra snowpack in April — 5 percent of nor-

mal — after the driest winter since records have been kept. To Californians stunnedby their bare mountains, there was no more absurd moment in public life recently than when Sen.

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James Inhofe, R-Okla., chairman of the Environment and Public Max Whittaker/The New YorkTimee Works Committee, held up a snowball in February as evidence of A rig drills a water well on the edge of a new almond orchard in Hanford, California. America's hydraulic bounty in the age of climate change. California's challenge with the drought is economic and political. The state might SeeDrought/F5 have plenty of water, but it doesn't have enoughfor every possible use.


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road. less clear. Just how does one go about collecting a studded tire tax? On the sales of such tires, whether to Bend residents or not? Like it or not, studded tires continue to have a valid role to play in safety, even for those of us who live in Bend. They do help people stop better on ice. As for the tourism tax, remember, tourism is also a job creator Of course, all Bend residents for Bend. If Bend looks for ways to might like much of what the trans- target tourists with more taxes, at portation forum participants said some point it will mean fewer tourthey want. But when fewer than 3 ists and fewer jobs. percent of us commute by bike, and The tourism tax is also going to about 3 percent of us walk to work, miss and hit Bend residents. Collectthe city must decide where its limit- ing a sales tax onprepared food and ed funds should be spent. beverages, as anews release accomIn fact, money is sure to be an panying the forum report suggests, issue no matter what path the city would hit tourists. takes. Two financing suggestions But as most restaurant owners from forum participants were just in these parts will tell you, if they plain terrible. had to live on revenues from tourA studdedtire taxhas a feel-good ists alone, they'd no longer be in ring to it, to be sure. And, some days business. of the year a tax on tourism — beDreaming is good, and Bend yond the transient room tax the city 2030 should continue doing just now collects — also sounds fine. that. Turning dreams into reality, as In reality, however, the picture is the city must do, is something else. The results were predictably high-minded. Those who attended, all 175 of them, want better sidewalks, more trails and bike routes, better transit ... all the usual stuff. There's nothing wrong with any ofthat. We would caution city officials and others to not put too much credence in results from a tiny sliver of self-selected folks, though.

M 1Vickel's Worth Help with cougars

through ODFW.

city limits.

There are many groups in this The solar array would be surarea whoprovide time and money rounded by 8-feet-tall chain-link for improving our habitat, which fences topped with strands of we have so poorly mismanaged, so barbed wire. The solar panels that all wildlife can thrive. would be 12 feet high and placed as Join up. densely as possible without blockJim Persing ing the sun from other panels. No

A number of lettershave been written that are critical of the Ore-

gon Department of Fish and Wildlife and the way it handles cougars. It is the job of ODFW to man-

age all wildlife in Oregon, but the voters of Oregon have taken away

Redmond

their main management tool, hunters, from cougar management. The voters decided that hunters

trees or wildlife would exist inside

Barney Prine's is not closed

the solar development area. Each of these two projects alone would be the largest solar power-generating plants in Oregon.

ing to the owner of Barney Prine's,

ting to this rural area east of Bend.

should not be allowed to use dogs to hunt them, which leaves them basiAs a resident of Prineville, I wish There aresolar developments in cally uncontrolled. to inform you of an error in report- the Arizona and California deserts By having intruded into the ani- ing that Barney Prine's Steakhouse and in Washington; however, none mals' habitat for the last 200 years was closed. It is not. It has moved is located near populated areas. and forcing the native species to to a bigger and better location on Although solar power producadapt to our taking over their prime Fourth and Deer streets. tion is desirable and efforts to make habitat of valleys, riparian areas It has some fabulous food and it available are commendable, placand land that produced their food, should be considered a d efinite ing them on acreages that are too water and cover, we have forced competitor to Pioneer Club! small to shield surrounding properthem to live in marginal areas. Please do the honor of apologiz- ties would bring an industrial setWe can never have a "balanced"

The Bulletin's May19 election endorsements La Pine Park & R ecreation Here are The Bulletin's editorial endorsements for the May 19 elec- District: tion in contested races. Director, Position 4, Gary GorBallots must be returned to your don; Director, Position 5, Tobias local county derk's office by 8 p.m. Wilson on Election Day to be counted. Redmond School District:

nature of animals anymore unless as he has put a lot of time, money we move out of the prime habitat, and skill into his place, and he demolish our cities and leave. We should be proud. have let cougars and wolves interDeborah Core fere with this by not allowing manPrineville agement of them. We need to let the dedicated ex-

I strongly urge our County Planning Division and our county commissioners to carefully study the implications of such projects and suggest that these power production facilities be sited on larger blocks of land with substantial perts at ODFW do what they know buffering for surrounding farms, is best for our wildlife. ranches and homes. If there are others who think Two solar p o wer-generating There will be formal hearings for they know better, then they should facilities have been proposed for these two projects, which will be do something with actions and the east edge of Bend on Neff and announced in The Bulletin. Please money. I would like to know how Erickson roads. These two proj- consider contributing your thoughts many of the people who write these ects would total 167 acres and are on the potential change this will letters buy a Habitat Conservation planned for an area near working have on the east side of Bend. Stamp from ODFW or donate to farms, residential homes and Big Cathy Jensen the Nongame Wildlife Fund, also Sky Park, only a mile from Bend's Bend

Solar plans will change rural area

Crook County

Director, Position I, Rhonda EtCrook County Park & Recreation nire; Director, Position4, Jane Allen; District: Director, Position 5, John Land Director, Position 4 , Kim Sisters School District: Kambak Director, Position 2, Lachlan Deschutes County Leaver, Director, Position 4, Stephen Bend Park & Recreation District: King Director, Position I, Brady Fuller Black Butte Ranch Service Dis- Jefferson County trict local option levy:Yes JeffersonCounty School Board: Central Oregon Community Director, Position 4, Courtney College: Snead; Director, Position 5, Stanley Director, Zone 5, Charley Miller Ray Sullivan

Doyou noww at t E

very reflectiveperson sooner

or later faces certain questions: What is the purpose of my life?

How do I find a moral compass so

DAVID

BROOKS I can tell right from wrong? What should I do day by day to feel fulfillment and deep joy? As late as50yearsago,Americans There wasa coherent moral ecology could consult lofty authority figures you could either go along with or rebto help them answer these questions. el against. Some of these authority figures All of that went away over the past were public theologians. Reinhold generation or two. It is hard to think Niebuhr was on the cover of Time of any theologian with the same pubmagazine.Rabbi Abraham Joshua lic influence that Niebuhr and HesHeschel wrote about everything from chel had. Intellectuals are given less wonder to sin to civil rights. Harry authority and are more specialized. Emerson Fosdick wrote a book called They write more for one another and "On Being a Real Person" on how to are less likely to volley moral systems live with integrity. onto the public stage. Other authority figures were These days we live in a culture

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

that is more diverse, decentralized, interactive and democratized. The

Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In My View

P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

e p u rposeo your i eis?

many shows where people argue about fiscal policy but not so many on how to find a vocation or how to measure the worth of your life. In

the right questions to ask, the right

son, experience or book or sermon

vocabulary to use, the right place to swers at alL As I travel on a book tour, I find

that decisively helped you get there? Ifyou have answers to these questions, go the website for my book, "The Road to Character," click on

disagreement indirectly, under the pretense that we're talking about politics, which is why arguments about things such as tax policy come to resemble holy wars.

there is an amazing hunger to shift

F irst Steps and send in y our r e -

the conversation. People are ready to talk a little less about how to do

sponse. We'll share as many as we can on the site's blog called The Con-

economists, evolutionary biologists

itive environment, are, if anything,

and big data analysts. These scholars have a lot of knowledge to bring, but they're not in the business of offering wisdom on the ultimate questions.

hungrier to find ideals that will give

two reporting on what I've learned about how people find purpose these days. I hope this exercise will be useful in giving people an occasion to sit down and spell out the organizing

meaning to their activities. It's true of

frame of their lives. I know these es-

need to feel that life is in service to

to find more of it.

The shift has meant there is less

some good. The task now is to come up with fo-

nity of conversation as a way to get

fact, we now hash out our moral

look or even if there are ultimate an-

things and to talk a little more about why ultimately they are doing them. Intellectual prestige has drifted This is true among the young as from theologians, poets and philos- much as the older. In fact, young peoophers and toward neuroscientists, ple, raised in today's hypercompet-

versation, and I'll write a column or

people in all social classes. Everyone says will help others who are looking is born with moral imagination — a for meaning and want to know how

moral conversation in the public square. I doubt people behave worse rums where these sorts of conversaJohn Dewey advocated prag- old days when gray-haired sages had than before, but we are less articulate tions can happen in a more modern, matism. Jean-Paul Sartre and his all the answers about the ultimate about the inner life. There are few- personal and interactive way. American popularizers champi- issues of life are over. But new ways er places in public where people are I thought I'd do my part by asking oned existentialism. Hannah Arendt of having conversations about the talking about the things that matter readers to send me their answers to wrote big books on evil and the life core questions haven't yet come into most. the following questions: Do you think of the mind. being. As a result, many feel lost or over- you have found the purpose to your Public discussion was awash in Public debate is now undermor- whelmed. They feel a hunger to live life, professional or otherwise? If so, philosophies about how to live well. alized and overpoliticized. We have meaningfully, but they don't know how did you find it? Was there a perpart of th e secular priesthood of intellectuals.

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.

Mostly the idea is to use a commusomewhere: to revive old vocabularies, modernize old moral traditions, come up with new schools and labels

so that people have more concrete building blocks and handholds as they try to figure out what life is all about. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New Yorh Times.


SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

w

i Ou

a w , Civiiza ianS a

hy did Rome and Byzan-

had gone missing in a mysterious es a controversial agreement with

tium fall apart after cen-

turiesof success? What

causes civilizations to collapse, from

a dysfunctional fourth-century-B.C. Athens to contemporary bankrupt

VICTOR

DAVIS HANSON

computer crash. Lerner has not been

charged. Under the current system, the very wealthy have the pull and capital to navigate around the 3.7-mil-

Iran that will not meet the Constitutional test of ratification by two-thirds of the Senate, then it will not be called

a treaty and instead be imposed by

Greece'?

lion-word IRS tax code. Billionaire

presidential executive order. Prosecutors have never been more

The answer is usually not enemies tions. If an average citizen tried to at the gates, but the pathologies in- amend his taxes for such huge sums side them. and from that long ago, he would What ruins societies is well- probably be under indictment. known:too much consumption and News reports of undocumented not enough production, a debased donations from foreign governcurrency and endemic corruption. ments caught the foundation underAmericans currently deal with all reporting its income. The well-conthose symptoms. But two more fun- nected Clinton clan apparently had damental causes fordecline areeven assumed that their political status more frightening: an unwillingness ensured them immunity. to pay taxes and the end of the rule In the current political landscape, oflaw. ideology also offers cover for tax Al Sharpton is again prominent- noncompliance. Two of th e most ly in the news, blaming various liberal talking heads at the MSNBC groups for the Baltimore unrest. cable news network, Toure Neblett But Sharpton currently owes the and Melissa Harris-Perry, known U.S. government more than $3 for their advocacy of higher tax rates million in back taxes, according to on the affluent, turn out to be both reports. His excuses have ranged quite well off and quite unwilling to from insufficient funds to pay them pay their fair share of taxes. Reports to sloppy record-keeping and mys- indicate that Neblett and Harris-Perteriousfires. ry bothowe more than $50,000 in Sharpton, a frequent White House delinquent taxes. Who will police the tax police? guest, apparently assumes that his community-organizing p r o vides Former IRS official Lois Lerner him political exemption from federal and her subordinates were found tax law. He seems to be right, at least to have targeted conservative nonas long as the current administra- profitgroups for excessive federal tion is in power. scrutiny. While testifying before The Clinton Foundation is expect- Congress, Lerner invoked her Fifth ed to refile its tax returns for 2010, Amendment right against self-in2011 and 2012 after failing to sepa- crimination, and investigators later rate government grants from dona- found that two years of her emails

George Soros, a proponent of big government and higher taxes, reportedly could face a tax bill of approximately $7 billion after years of deferrals.

ideologicallydriven. Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) opposes administration policies on Cuba and Iran — and then suddenly faces federal indictments on chargescovering aperiod from 2006

Nonparticipation in the tax system and noncompliance are recipes

to2013.

In the tragic Freddie Gray case, for social and cultural disaster — as Baltimore State's Attorney M ariwe see with the current climbing tax lyn Mosby all but assured an angry rates, huge deficits and unsustainable crowd that she had provided them national debt. indictments for murder and manOur laws are becoming as politi- slaughter and thereby expected calm cized as our taxsystem. in the streets in return. She indicted Whatever one thinks of illegal im- six Baltimore policemen on charges migration, it's undeniable that under that are likely to be reduced or disthe Obama administration, federal proved in court, but those charges immigration law enforcement is now servedthe short-term purpose of depredicated on politics. The law as it fusing unchecked rioting and looting. was written suddenly has ceased to Warping the law was thought to be exist — at least for particular groups more effective in easing tensions than at particular times and places. enforcing it. In the last six years, the enforceIncreasingly in the United States, ment of federal laws has depended the degree to which a law is enforced — or whether a person is indictedon their apparent political utility. If elements of the controversial Afford- depends on political considerations. able Care Act were deemed political- But when citizens do not pay income ly risky, then their implementation taxes, or choose not to pay taxes that was ignored until after an election. If they owe and expect impunity, a comthe Environmental Protection Agen- plex society unwinds. cy could not see its agenda passed And when the law becomes negothroughCongress asfederallaw,then tiable, civilization utterly collapses. it implemented its green policies by — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist fiat.

If the Obamaadministration reach-

and historian at the HooverInstitution, Stanford University.

THOMAS

FRIEDMAN

Praise for a green Germany BERLINweek at the American Acad-

emy in Berlin leaves me with o contradictory feelings: One is that Germany today deserves a Nobel Peace Prize, and the other is that Germany tomorrow will have to over-

come its deeply ingramed post-World War II pacifism and become a more serious, activist global power. And I

say both as a compliment. On the first point, what the Germans have done in converting almost

30percent of their electric grid to solar and windenergy from near zero in about 15years has been a greatcontri-

butionto the stabilityof ourplanet and its climate. The centerpiece of the German"Energiewende," or energytransformation, was an extremelygenerous "feed-in tariff" that made it a no-brainer for Germans to install solar power

(or wind) at home and receive a predictable high price for the energy generated off their own rooftops. There is no denying that the early days of the feed-in tariff were expensive. The subsidies cost billions of euros, paid for through a surcharge on everyone's electric bill. But the goal

S tro es on't a ect ust t e e e r

was not simply to buy more renewable energy: It was to create demand that would drive down the cost of solar and wind to make them mainstream,

affordable options. And, in that, the energiewende has been an undiluted success. With price drops ofmore than 80percentforsolar and 55 percentforwind, zero-carbon energy is now competitive with fossil fuels here. "In my view the greatest success

By Maureen Dowd New Yorh Times News Service

EDGEWATER, Md.-

he thing that's easy to miss about Tara is how

T In a big Irish family of gabby, argumentative people, my niece is a lovely, willowy brunette competitive she is.

of the German energy transition was

with an easy laugh and a quiet manner. Her parents had a love match onthe tennis courts

giving a boost to the Chinese solar panel industry," said Ralf Fuecks,

at Catholic University, when mybrother Martin was coach of the men's team and his future wife, Jone,

the president of the Heinrich-Boell-

Stiftung, the German Green Party's political foundation. "We created the

was coach of the women's team. They are not the overindulging side of the family. Tara never smoked or did drugs, and two glasses of wine on a weekendis abacchanal. Tara constantly challenges herself. She played on

mass market, and that led to the in-

creasedproductivity and dramatic decrease in cost." And all this in a country whose northern tip is the same

latitude as the southern tip of Alaska! This is a world-saving achievement. And, happily, as the price fell, the subsidies for new installations also dropped. The Germans who installed solar ended up making money, which is why the program remains popular, except in coal-producing regions.

her mom's tennis team at Catholic, helping it earn a

Division III national ranking, and, at 25, joined the California National Guard, winning the top women's fitness award.

Tara had already done several triathlons, but approaching her 40th birthday two years ago, she began training two hours a day to compete in a Half Ironman, cheered on by her husband, Chris O'Kieffe, who runs a successful Kona Ice franchise in their

So if that's the story on renewable

Chesapeake Bay town. After 16 years teaching kids with disabilities, Tara — mother to a pretty 9-yearold, Kasey — now helps Chris with the business. Last spring, she also decided to start playing tennis again. She was nervous that, because of her tennis family, her friends wouldhavehighexpectations.

power, how about national power? Two generations after World War II,

Germany's reticence to project any power outside its borders is deeply ingrained in the political psyche here. That is a good thing, given Germany's past. But it is not sustainable. There is

Her shoulders tensed up through her entire first

match, but she was elated when she won. By the

an impressive weight to Germany to-

day — derived from the quality of its governing institution, its rule of law

time she drove home and got in the shower, howev-

er, she had a throbbing pain in the back of her head above her neck.

and the sheer power of its economy

built on midsize businesses — that is unique in Europe.

She took some Advil and got into bed. She looked

at her phone, but the letters were moving. She tried to watch TV with Chris, but it was "like looking through a really thin layer of water, rippling and sparkling." She assumedthatshe was having her fi rstmigraine, a letdown after being so amped up. The headache was still there in the morning, and the morning after that. Her husband teased her about being "a big baby" and held up his fingers to the right ofher face to testhervision. "I can't seeyour hand at all," she toldhim. "We need to go to the emergency room," Chris

When you talk to German officials

about Greece, their main complaint is not about Greek fiscal policy, which is better lately, but about the rot and corrology who works at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

with quickly, but they get little neurology training. The brain is the Rolls-Royce of the system. Would

When I met Tara at the airport for her flight to you run your Rolls-Royce into the local gas station? If you have problems with the brain, ask for a neulost 15pounds, andher sparkwas gone. rologist. If you live in a big city, find an academic At 78, Caplan is gruffly angelic, like a Frank medical center that has a specialization in stmke. "I'm afraid to go to the emergency room," he addCapra character. He showed Tara picture cards to SBld. test her memory and speech, checked her visual ed. "I think it's dangerous." Shehadsometests."The doctorcame in and said, abilities and looked at her brain and vascular imagCaplan dryly admitted that it's a contradiction: Vilell, it turns out you had a stmke,'" she recalled. "I es. They had been misinterpreted by the Maryland You have to worry about getting to the ER fast and don't know if the doctor's words or Chris' expres- doctors, who thought that Tara's vertebral artery then worry about the quality of treatment once sion scared me more." had closed when it had just narrowed, meaning it you're there. The next months were the worst of her life. "I could open and heal. He assured Tara that her stroke was not caused didn't go through a day without crying," she said. Some youngerpeople have strokes from recre- bynervesoraweaknessinher arteriesand saidthat She wasafraidto exerciseoreventurn herhead. ational drugs. But others — even children and teen- there was only a 1 percent chance of renumnce for "At some point," she said, "I got really angry agers — have strokes after dissections, a tear in the this kind of stroke after the first month. He told her about, why the hell do I do everything right and wall of an arterythat unleashes a dot. he was goingto playtennis and advised her to do the "It can happen with a sudden everyday move- same. then almost die? From playing tennis? The thought "Unfortunately, doctors andpatientsputtoomany of not being able to do anything more than what I'd ment that stretches the artery," said Caplan, who already done was so sad to me." seesdissectionson aregularbasis."The arteriesare restrictions on themselves," he said later. "They're Tara was part of a disturbing health trend, ac- more elastic with younger people." told, 'Don't lift your baby,' 'Don't have intercourse.' cordingto a Washington Postpiece that ran amonth He has treated a doctor who lurched when he Because movementbrought this on, they think they after she had the stroke. After years of dedining in thought his kid was falling from a tree, a basket- cannot have any movement. That overprotectivethe elderly, the paper reported, strokes are rising ball coachwho was runningup anddown thecourt ness canbeworse thanthe dissection itself." among younger adults. lookingback and forth and a pregnant womanwho When Tara got home, she ran a mile and a half, Because they are accustomed to being healthy, swerved her head to check traffic before crossing crying all the way. "It was like I realized I don't have to throw me younger stroke victims often deny or ignore the the street. Dissections can be caused by sneezing, symptoms, leading them to miss treatment in the coughing, vomiting, having sex or even leaning away and try to develop this newperson," she said. critical hours and days afterward. And, because back to get your hair washed at a salon. And someOn April 2, the first anniversary of her stroke, they look young and healthy, doctors often don't times the only symptom is a headache or neck ache. she ventured back onto the court for a cardio tennis consider stmke as a cause. Caplanisnot sureif strokes areincreasingamong class. She was terrified, and her friends were jittery, Tara lost 30 percent of her peripheral vision. Doc- youngerpeople or if doctors are just gettingbetter at pickingup balls for her. "I was nervous for a few hours afterwards," she tors told her to cutback on physical activity. realizing "it's not just old folks." "So I was going to walk gingerly and turn my He said stroke experts have had a hard time get- said."I would lookin the mirror and smile and make head slowly and do what I needed to do to see Kasey ting the message across to ER personnel that if a sure I wasn't drooling." As we drove in herneighborhood one recentafgrow up, and that was my battle," she said. "I was stroke is suspected, a vascular image must be taken livinglike I was made of glass." as well as abrainimage, because it shows up first in ternoon, she marveled at how wonderful it was to I urged her to get another opinion, and she the vessels that supply and drain the brain. see the spring. "I missed the last one," she said. "You have to be pushy," he explained to me later. booked an appointment with a national stroke ex— Maureen Dowd is a columnist pert, Dr. LouisCaplan, a Harvard professor of neu- "There are a lot of organs ER people have to deal for The New York Times. Boston, I walked past her. In four months, she had

ruption in Greece's governing institutions. The Greeks"couldn't implement the structural reforms they needed, if

theywantedto," one German financial official said to me. Athens' institutions are a mess. With the United States less inter-

ested in Europe, Britain fading away both from the European Union and

the last vestiges of its being a global military power, France and Italy economically hobbled and most NATO members shrinking their defense budgets, I don't see how Germany avoids exercising more leadership. Its economic sanctions are already the most important counter to Russian aggression in Ukraine. And in the Med-

iterranean Sea, where Europe faces a rising tide of refugees (and where Russia and China just announced that their navies will hold a joint exercise in mid-May), Germany will have to catalyze some kind of EU naval response. The relative weight of German power vis-a-vis the rest of Europe just keeps

growing, but don't say that out loud here. A German foreign policy official put their dilemma this way: "We have

to get used to assuming more leadership and be aware of how reluctant others are to have Germany lead — so we have to do it throughthe EU."

Here's my prediction: Germany will be Europe's first green, solar-powered superpower.Can those attributes coexist in one country, you ask? They're going to have to. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the week that ended Sunday, May3. HARDCOVER FICTION 1."Gathering Prey" by John Sandford (Putnam, $28.95) 2. "Memory Man" by David Baldacci (Grand Central, $28) 3. "The Girl on the Train" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 4. "The Liar" by Nora Roberts (Putnam, $27.95) 5. "The BoneTree" by Greg lles (Morrow, $27.99) 6. "Death Wears aBeauty Mask" by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon 8 Schuster, $26) 7. "God Help the Child" by Toni Morrison (Knopf, $24.95) 8. "Lords of the Sith" by PaulS.Kemp (DelRey/Lucas,

$28)

9. "The Stranger" by Harlan Coben (Dutton, $27.95) 10. "Every Fifteen Minutes" by Lisa Scottoline (St. Martin's, $27.99) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "Hope" by AmandaBerry and Gina DeJesus, with Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan (Viking, $28.95) 2. "Legends 8 Lies" by Bill O'Reilly and David Fisher (Holt, $32) 3. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed, $16.99) 4. "The Road to Character" by David Brooks (Random,

$28)

ansoninean, er a s,a oo "Galactic Hot Dogs1: Cosmoe's Wiener Getaway"

can increase print sales rather than erode them. Scholastic's multiplatform game and book

by Rachel Maguire (Aladdin, 304 pages, $13.99)

series, "39 Clues," which started in 2008, has more than 17

By Alexandra Alter

million copies in print. "With these properties, we've proven that kids will engage on a screen with a book for a long time," said Jess Brallier, the president of the

New York Times News Service

Max Brallier didn't have

very realistic career goals as a child. "I wanted to be a Jedi," he said. That didn't work out. But

Family Education Network,

which operates the sites. "We realized we had an intellectual property launchpad." Funbrain and Poptropica together draw around 4.7 mil-

Brallier, a baby-faced 31-yearold, has found a more pragmatic way to channel his "Star Wars" fanaticism. The result

is "Galactic Hot Dogs," his new book about a boy who

lion monthly visitors, accord-

ing to the Internet analytics company comScore, though

battles giant mutant worms

and zombie space pirates with his sidekicks: a robot, a rebellious princess and a lumbering alien. The story, which Brallier describedas "a goofier 'Star Wars,'" is undeniably silly. His publisher is treating the project very seriously, though. Aladdin, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Children's Pub-

lishing, bought "Galactic Hot Dogs" in a seven-figure, threebook deaL The company is printing 500,000 copies and began promoting the book more than a year ago, through an elaborate, million-dollar

print and online marketing campaign. Simon & Schuster has sol-

id reasons to be bullish about

$28)

2004 and now has more than 150 million copies in print globally. "Dork D i aries," a middle-grade series by Rachel Renee Russell, experienced improved sales through a story-based interactive game on

— Tribune NewsService

found that interactive games

by Max Brallier, illustrated

5. "And the GoodNews Is" by Dana Perino (Hachette/ Twelve, $26) 6. "The Whole 30" by Melissa Hartwig and Dallas Hartwig (HMH, $30) 7. "The Hungry Girl Diet Cookbook" by Lisa Lillien (St. Martin's Griffin, $27.99) 8. "Brain Maker" by David Perlmutter (Little, Brown, 9. "Dead Wake" by Erik Larson (Crown, $28) 10. "Missoula" by Jon Krakauer (Doubleday, $28.95)

o res

" Galactic Ho t

D o g s." T h e

book has already taken off on Funbrain.com, a popular gaming website for children that has been an incubator for some of the biggest blockbusters in children's book publishing. Jeff Kinney's "Diary of a Wimpy Kid" series began as a free book on Funbrain in

Funbrain's sister site, Poptropica, and now has more than 20

million copies in print. The comic strip "Big Nate," by Lincoln Peirce, became the basis for a popular game on

the company that operates the

sites said they have around 8 million visitors a m o nth when factoring in traffic from

school computers and a rising

Misha Friedman /The New York Times

Max Brallier, who writes illustrated children books, including "Galactic Hot Dogs," sits at his home in New York. The book has already taken off on Funbrain, a popular gaming website for kids that has served as an incubator for some of the biggest blockbusters in children's book publishing.

mobile audience. In the past, Funbrain has

helped publishers promote their own series. With "Ga-

lactic Hot Dogs," the company wants to replicate the process and keep the intellectual property. Two years ago, Funbrain

Poptropica and later became ic-strip-style illustrations. who are migrating to digital "We've s een thi s m o d - and mobile reading. Sixa print best-seller. Other popular middle-gradeseries,in- el work before," said Mara ty-seven percent of children cluding StephanPastis'"Tim- A n astas, vice president and ages 2 to 13 read e-books, acmy Failure" and Brandon p ublisher of the children's im- cordingto a report released Mull's best-selling fantasy p r i nts Simon Pulse and Alad- in January by Digital Book series "Beyondin Books. "The World and PlayCollective, up .== ders," are find. g r o undwork is from 54percentin 2012. ' < ing audiences already laid." To the uninitiated, Funbrain on Poptropica There is no and Poptropica might look —,,— | I,' ' and Funbrain -~ g u a r antee t hat like a publisher's worst night': that are carryI @ you n g readers, mare. On Poptropica, children ' / I /lf" ing over into or the i r parents,can create cartoon avatars booksales. will be a s enand play games on computers " Ga l a c t i c thusiastic about or phones — the sort of sticky, H ot Dog s " a print b ook addictive online activity that seems to be on a s they are a parents and teachers worry a similar trajecf ree onl i n e is chipping away at reading ' prod u ct . Si- time. tory. More than 6 million chilmon & SchusBut authors and publishers dren have read ter, which has have discovered that the sites t he book o n p lowed m i l - often steer children toward Funbrain since l ions into a c - books. (Poptropica was creatthe fall of 2013, q uiring a n d ed by an author, Kinney, who when Brallier posted chap- m arketing " Galactic H o t started the site in 2007 and is ters. More than 1 million have Dogs," is making a risky bet still its creative director.) Most played a story-based "Ga- t hat a healthy slice of the major children's publishers lactic Hot Dogs" game that b o ok's online audience will market books heavily on the went live on Poptropica two s e e k it in bookstores. sites, through straightformonthsago. Likemanybooks In t h e last few years, mul- ward advertisements, book

asked Max Brallier, Jess Brallier's son and a freelance writ-

erforthecompany since 2009, to write an original series for the site.

-

-

-

-

.

The younger Brallier, who has published 19 children's

'

~

'

. '

.

books and humor and trivia ti-

'

"

'

-

'

-

.

tles, quickly came up with the plot for "Galactic Hot Dogs." Daniel Lazar, a literary agent

'

.

-

'

'

thathavethrivedonthesite,it

appeals to 8- to 12-year-olds who appreciate its hammy underdog hero, Cosmoe, and its slapsticky humor and com-

at Writers House, sent out a

proposal for a book in October 2013. It was an easy sell.

He had an offer from Simon & Schuster the next day and quickly closed the seven-figure deaL "Everyone already knew Funbrain, b ecause t h ey've

spent a lot of money marketing their books on Funbrain," Lazar said.

Even though more than 6 million readers have already seen "Galactic Hot

D o gs,"

Max Brallier seems anxious about its arrival in print. He

ti p l atform books with online excerpts on Funbrain or inter-

gaming components have active games featuring their b ecomecrucialtoolsforchil- brands and c h aracters on dren's book publishers seek- Poptropica. ing to reach young readers Some publishers h ave

dreads public speaking and is about to go on his first book

awards ceremony, some church members apparently

ing us as friends, but are in no way advising our church

expressed concerns that "The

on spiritual matters."

Jindal set to release book on 'The Daniel Plan' namedChristian Book of the Year history By Ron Charles

The Washington Post

The Associated Press

Earth's loss is heaven's gain. Bestselling pastor R i ck

NEW Y OR K — Republican Louisiana Gov.

Warren won t h e C h ristian Book of the Year award Tues-

Bobby Jindal, who might be running for president, says he has a publication coming in October, but it's definitely not a campaign book.

day night for his weight-loss book, "The Daniel Plan: 40 Days to a H e a lthier L i fe," written with doctors Daniel Amen and Mark Hyman. T he Book o f t h e Y e a r

belief that Jesus is the only way to heaven or that the Bi-

with additional prizes in various categories, at the Evan-

Editions announced Tues-

in Nashville, Tennessee.

Bestselling pastor Rick Warren's weight-loss book "The Daniel

day that Jindal has a deal

Warren, the founder of the Saddleback megachurch

Plan" won the Christian Book of the Year award Tuesday. The book emphasizes weight loss through faith and fellowship.

ble is the 100% completely infallible and perfect Word of Nick Ut/The Associated Press

Plan" after noticing that he

cessed foods and eating a diet titles must "include explicit

and many of his congregants had grown too fat. While preaching one Sunday, he asked if anyone would like to join him in a biblically based

that emphasizes fruits and

Christian content, an overtly

vegetables. But the "special sauce," he says, is faith and friends. Warren is no newcomer to the bestseller list, of course.

Christian message, and/or a distinctively Christian world

effort to exercise, eat better

and lose weight. More than 12,000 people immediately

His 2002 devotional b ook

view."

Nominated books must also be in harmony with the E CPA's statement of f a i t h,

signed up.

"The Purpose Driven Life" has sold tens of millions of

which includes belief in the Trinity, the infallibility of the

Legions more have since joined the cause through his

copies around the world. The Chr i s t ia n Book

ment notes that the book offers "dramatic tales that

interactive w ebsite, w h i ch

demonstrate the courage,

out music CD, a DV D t h at demonstrates his "compre-

Awards are the oldest prizes in the religious publishing industry. To be eligible,

Bible, the Virgin Birth, the Atonement, the Resurrection and the eternal damnation of

I n a r e ference to t h e next presidential election,

Threshold's

a n nounce-

faith, and vision that we need in 2016." Jindal said that he will decide whether torun af-

ter the state legislative session ends in June. "I hope to get people to read it ('American Will') regardless if I run," Jindal said.

Those people, he added, include the candidates already in the race.

A previous Jindal book, "Leadership and Crisis," came out in 2010.

Da ig

in Lake Forest, California,

In the book, Jindal re-

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SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Investigating WWII internment camps in Washington by the world's most powerful men and how those decisions affected the lives of ordinary Americans whose only crime was to be of Japanese descent. By John Reinan

Within 10 weeks of the attack

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

on Pearl Harbor, all Japanese "How could this have hap- living on the West Coast and penedhere?" in the Pacific Northwest were That's the question Richard ordered out. The given reason: Reeves askedhimself every They were a threatto securiiy, time he drove by a faded sign in potential saboteurs whose loythe desolate high alty would lie with desert between Japan rather than Los Angeles and America. Families San F r a ncisco. were rounded up I t m a rked t h e site of the Manz anar War R e -

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'j 1 ha s tilybuiltprison 'I camps in some of ,,, the b leakest cor-

were locked up during World War

ners of the nation. A mon g t h o se sent to the camps were future actors George Takei and Noriyuki "Pat"

II.

M orita, as w e ll

t ration

cam p s

where more than 1 20,000 Ja p a nese-Americans

.

~

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As a group,these first-and as Norm Mineta,a m ember of second-generat ion Americans Congress and a cabinet secrewere fiercelypatriotic and com- tary under two presidents. mitted to the "American way."

A s t h e United States wrestles

They were successful farmers, once again with never-ending businesspeople, students and questions of assimilation and community leaders. But in time immigration, Reeves reminds of war, their racial connection u s t hat our nation has always

to an enemy trumped their b een formed by "the almost rights as citizens. blind faith of each wave of im"Infamy: The Shocking Sto- migrants — induding the ones ry of the Japanese-American weputbehindbarbedwire." Internment During World War

"We are a nationmade by

with meticulous care — doc-

t h ey were not like us until they

II" tells their tale with energy, immigrants," he writes, "forcompassion and moral out- eignerswho were needed for rage. Reeves, aveteranjournal- their labor and skills and faith ist, answers his own question — butwereoftenhatedbecause umentingthe decisions made wereus."

Drought

cee rationo t e ri "The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough (Simon & Schuster,336 pages, $30)

devoted parents and Wilbur's

rot ers

e d i tor at Simon& Schuster, who wielded the stick. But in

relentless self-education, the Bob Bender, who confides in bicycle shop where they first a reader's note in "The Wright revealed their

m e chanical B r o thers" that h e c o uldn't Cullough discovered that the

boy was famous, notorious, in his own right: Oliver Crook Haugh, a neighborhood bully at the time and later executed for murdering his mother, fa-

two.

and a senior curator at the

ggl ]P

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dismisses recent

"Among the people I turned daims by Conup were the Wright brothers, necticut officials and it just astonished me that that a resident of

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sitesoftheirearly experiments and Io o kmg through thou-

part to playin their story," says

the Haugh entry. Crouch gives McCullough "full credit for O ne o f th e being the first to identify Wil"Five years bur's assailant in a Wright w orld's m o s t popular and honored histori- ago, I knew only the same ba- biography." ans, McCullough has written sic things most people did, that McCullough tries to connect about presidents, Paris, bridg- they were bicycle mechanics his books to the present and es and natural disasters. But f r o m Ohio and that they in- sees in the Wrights an exemhe sees common themes and ventedtheairplane,"hesays. plary case of persistence. They approaches in his work. His His r esearch enabled him endured numerous failures, first book, "The Great Flood," t o beat the experts and crack humiliations and near-fatal was about the 1889 Johnstown a l o ngtime mystery about the mishaps, induding a crash Flood in Pennsylvania and W r ights, involving a hockey that badly injured Orville and was successful enough that s tick that changed young Wil- a ferocious mosquito attack he feared he would be labeled bur's life. that McCullough says would "Bad News" McCullough. Wh e n Wilbur Wright was have sent him home "permaSo starting with "The Great a teenager, he was smashed nently, in absolute horror." "There's an old novelist adBridge," published in 1972, he in the face by a hockey stick picked narratives defined by while playing on a frozen age, 'Keep your hero in trouwhat is achieved and not lost. l a ke, knocking out several ble,' and these fellows are in

tave Whitehead,

the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, a Boston resident visit-

ing New York to promote "The Wright Brothers," which came

out last week. "Just reading about them, I realized how much more in-

teresting they were, how much more compelling than I had any idea. And I thought, 'No, this is thebook.'" T he 8 1-year-old M c Cullough was interviewed recently in a private study at the Yale Club in Manhattan, a favorite setting for the Yale

alumnus. He sees "The Wright Brothers," already optioned

%VIATP I 'I T

TH) Q g/LJfl I

Path Between the Seas" about the Panama Canal. Paris is part of the Wrights'

to understand," he says. "Be- i t

a lso made him an intense of 35,000.' And there I am do-

causethey're expertson agiv- readerand brought him clos- ing some rewriting of some en era or a given group of peo- er to Orville, whom he joined chapters of these guys and I story because they at first re- ple or an idea. I don't want to f i rst to run a printing press, thought, 'Whoa, here I am, ceivedmore supportfrom the beanexpert.Expertshaveall t hen a b icycle shop, then working on this book and I'm French than from the Ameri- the answers; I have questions." as collaborators on flying zooming along at 35,000 feet, cans. McCullough also traces At first, he knew little more m a c hines. all with other people who don't their childhood in Ohio, their about the Wrights than did his Un t i l recently, no one knewthink a thing of it."

tion, which Carlsbad, north of

alfalfa and other thirsty crops

San Diego, is pursuing with a huge plant under construction. Australia went down this road

during its epic drought in the 2000s. But the plants proved to be so prohibitively expensive to run that four of them

4"sdt. '

farmers — who produce about

were mothballed. Billions were

spent without producing a drop of clean water. What California still has,

er-funded dams, canals and

in great supply, is ingenuity. Three years ago, Mitt Romney compared the state to bank-

rupt Greece. It was laughed at and written offby conservative pundits. California now has a budget surplus and led the nation in job growth last yearfar outpacing Texas. The droughtmightindeedbe a long overdue bill for creating

It's a sad sight — a warming puddle, where the Stanislaus recharge badly depleted underRiver once ran through it. At ground aquifers. Farmers have full capacity, with normal rain- let more than 400,000 acres fall, New Melones should have go fallow and took a $2 billion enough water for nearly 2 mil- hit last year. They might add lion households for a year. 600,000 acres to that total this Even worse is the Lake Mc- year. Almonds, after all, are a Clure reservoir, impounding healthy food source. the spectral remains of the The new morality tale beMerced River as it flows out of comes further muddled when

an oasis civilization. But there-

in lies a solution. The Golden State is an invention, with lives to match. If the drought contin-

you consider that San Fran-

10 percent of capacity. In a nor- cisco, praised for its penurious Monica Almeida/The New York Times mal spring, the reservoir holds water ways, gets its life-sup- The fountain has been turned off and the pool drained in front of City Hall in Compton, California. The m ore than600,000 acre-feetof porting liquid from the Hetch persistent water shortage is illustrating parallel worlds in whichwealthy communities guzzle water as water. As April came to a close, Hetchy dam, in Y osemite. poorer neighbors conserve by necessity. it was at 104,000 acre-feetMany people, dating from the

p owerless the street — at a flow rate that

farmers. Swimming pools in lookedbigger thanthat coming greater Los Angeles were filled from the anemic Merced Rivwith liquid that could have kept er.Itwas pouring onto a grass orchards alive in the Owens median strip, and then spilling Valley, to the north. over, in a development called It was hubris, born in the

the Estates at Blackstone.

words of the city's chief water Or consider that wealthy engineer, William Mulholland, communities — say, Portola when he opened the gates of Valley, woodsy home to many the Los Angeles Aqueduct in an environmentally conscious 1913 with an immortal procla- tech multimillionaire — use mation: "There it is. Take it."

far more water per capita than

But now, just about every- do the poor of Compton, in the one in California knows that Los Angeles area. When cost it requires a gallon of water to is no object, there is very little grow an almond, or that agri- incentive to cut back. cultureaccounts for80 percent But there is n o g etting of the water used by humans around the fact that agriculhere. Meanwhile, the cities ture, for all its water needs, still have become leaders in con- produces barely 2 percent of servation. It takes 106 gallons

ues, California will be forced to rely even more on what has long sustained it — imagination. Not a bad thing to have too much of.

sainted John Muir, believe that

the way. (The measurement is flooding that mountain valley 1 acre filled to a depth of a foot, was one of the bigger crimes or 325,851 gallons.) That's the against nature in California surface disruption in a state history. that might soon be unrecognizAnd not every city is sparable in places. tan with its water. On any givThe morality tale behind en day you can find, as I did California's verdant prosperity in a new housing development will most certainly change. In in the foothills east of Sacrathe old narrative, the evil city mento, water running down took water f rom

his own 1989 book and missed

by Tom Hanks for a planned miniseries, as the last of anunHe also insists on starting t e e th. Theinjurysenthiminto trouble all the time," he says. official "trilogy of accomplish- with a subject he knows little a d epression so severe that he "I was flying to California ment," following his landmark about. abandoned plans to attend or somewhere and they came "The Great Bridge" about the "And that's something my college and rarely left home on the loudspeaker and said, Brooklyn Bridge and "The academic friends find hard o ver the next few years. But 'We havereached our altitude

as habitat for birds and wildlife. As it drains away, it can

with almost no snowmelt on

National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., said he had looked through the diaries while working on

their state, Gus-

20 percent full. It could be com- pumping systems. But that pletely drained by summer's water, in some cases, ends up

Yosemite National Park. It's at

Tom Crouch, a Wright biographer praised by McCullough

they were even in France, let alone that it had an important

hills east of the Central Valley, half of the nation's fruits, nuts where Mark Twain made a andvegetables — ascrony-caplegend of a jumping frog. The italist water gluttons might not state's fourth-largest reservoir, be entirely fair. Yes, the water holding water for farmers, and is subsidized,through taxpay-

end.

ther and brother.

states. And by exporting that

overseas, the state is essentialYou can see the result of end- ly shippingits precious water to lessweeks of cloudless skies China. in New Melones Lake, here in Still, casting C alifornia

for fish downstream, is barely

reading through the diaries of the Wrights' father, Mc-

genius and the 1903 flight at t ell which brother was which The Associated Press Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, (Short answer: Orville wore NEW YORK — David Mc- which later ala mus tache, Cullough's latest work of his- lowed them to Wilbur didn't). tory followed a spontaneous claim h o nors McCullough edas thefirst sucucated himself path,from abook aboutmany Americans in Paris in the 20th csssiui pilct s drruugh reading century to the biography of (McCullough and travel, visitBy Hiiiei ltaiie

Continued from F1

Calaveras County in the foot-

F5

the state'sgross product and

government subsidy, cost is the biggestobstacle.Farmers certainly aren't going to pay the billions now footed by federal taxpayers. And then: Where is the "new" water going to come from? Underground, wells are probing ever deeper, sucking aquifers dry, the land sinking rus is quick to note that the na. Is abundant water the next at a dramatic rate. Overhead, crop uses enough water to sup- must-have possession of the 1 the sky is unreliable. port 75 percent of the state's percent? Desalination, making seaAgriculture will not give up water potable, is another oppopulation. In o ther w ords, there would be no water short- its perch atop the power pyraage in San Diego or Los Ange- mid without a fight. Water that les if nut growers shut off the goes from the mountains to the sea is a waste, farmers say. The pumps. "Imagine if somebody ever drought is "a man-made" disassaid, 'Let's have a vote on how ter, as Carly Fiorina, the former exe c utive to use California's water,'" said Hewlett-Packard Daniel Beard, a former Bureau who is seeking the Republiof Recreation c ommission- can presidential nomination, er anda critic offederaldam claims. She blames environbuilding. "That's the last thing mentalists for blocking major bigagriculturalinterests would dam projects.

• E555!5

In addition, one fear of makchairwoman, said, or neighbor ing water an open-market snitching on neighbor, until the commodity is that rich and pourban majority resists and de- litically powerful communities mands a change in allocation. would get all the clean water What will come, then, from they needed, while poor public this disrupting drought is like- districts would be left out. A ly to be a shift of power. The class system around breathurban "almond shaming" cho- able air has developed in Chiter Resources Control Board

want." for disruption. The land that

has been left fallow now in the

livelihoods at the altar of their

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Works in ALL weather conditions, even in standing water for quick winter repairs.

Central Valley is still less than

5 percent of all the irrigation acreage in California. Anoth-

of water to produce an ounce employs about 3 percent of its of beef — which is more than workers. the average San Francisco Bay Fair or not, it seems inconArea resident uses in a day. gruous that farmers in the San Mayor Eric Garcetti of Los Joaquin Valley are still plantAngeles wants to reduce the ing almond trees — they've amount of water the city pur- nearlydoubled the crop since chases by 50 percent in the 2005 — while people in the citnext decade, cutting back ies kill their lawns and dash in water districts have more than through aggressive use of and out of low-flow showers. enoughmoney to buy farm wawastewater and conservation. The idea t hat C a lifornia ter in a freewheeling exchange. It's outlandish, urban critics could have it all — a pool in ev- Indeed,they've been making note, for big farm units to be ery suburban backyard, new numerous purchases for years growing alfalfa — which con- crops in a drought, wild salm- — though limited by complex sumes about20 percent ofthe on in rivers now starved of ox- water contracts and infrastrucstate's irrigation water — or ygen — is fading fast. There is ture that makes it difficult to raising cattle, in a place with only so much more "pop per pipe large amounts from one a third of the rainfall of other drop," as Marcus, the State Wa- place to the other.

by mail withthe

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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015

'Womeno Wi':T eevoutiono "Women of Will: Following the Feminine in Shakespeare's Plays" by Tina Packer(Alfred A. Knopf, $27.95)

in his female portraiture:

By Michiko Kakutani

pedestal."

a es eare'swomen war-making machinery, to the endless cycles of violence and revenge. And women such as Lady Macbethand Volumnia (Coriolanus' heartless mother), who renounce their empathy and tenderness to play the power games of men, end up wreaking devastation around

• In early plays such as "The Taming of the Shrew," she argues, women tend to be over-

bearing harridans or idealized and compliant "virgins-on-the • In plays including "Romeo

New Yoris Times News Service

On the cusp of the 400th

and Juliet"and "Much Ado anniversary of Shakespeare's About Nothing," a quantum death, his work seems more leap occurs, and Shakespeare radically modern than ever. depicts women not as adversar-

Not only does it anticipate a contemporary view of the

world as an irrational place subject to flux and the contingencies of time, but it also

them.

There was a g a thering darkness in S hakespeare's plays with "King Lear," "Co-

ies but as "full human beings" and equal partners in love. • In middle plays such as

riolanus" and "Timon of Athens" — and Packer writes that

"something was happening" to the playwright: syphilis, possibly, or maybe depression, or just growing disillusion with

"As You Like It," "Julius Cae-

sar" and "Twelfth Night," she

prefiguresa postmodern art says, women step out and tell the truth, regardless of the genres, while mixing high and consequences. • In "Macbeth" and "Corilow tropes and breaking the fourth wall. olanus," t h ey At the same renounce their

that would reinvent traditional

time,

S h a ke-

r ema r k a b l e new emotional

and psychological depth to literature, indud-

ing

s p i rited,

outspoken her-

oines such as Beatrice ("Much A do

softer,

I

s peare w a s introducing characters of

A bou t

Nothing") and Rosalind ("As You Like It"), who would almost seem more at home in our world today than in Eliza-

bethan England, where women were not even allowed to act onstage. In her fascinating but not

always convincing new book, "Women of Will," Tina Packer — the founding artistic direc-

tor of Shakespeare & Company in Lenox, Massachusetts — provides a detailed look at

Shakespeare's heroines, arguing that they form a progression over the years that traces

his spiritual growth and evolving vision of the world. Packer identifies five stages

of W il l

the follies and tragedies of the

world. As she tells it, he decided at that point (the dates are a little fuzzy) to leave London

more

and return to Stratford, re-

turn to his wife and daughters;

fe min'ine gifts

and "promote the m a sculine i nstitutions o f

Francesca Faridany in "Macbeth" at the Vivian Beaumont Theater in New York in 2013. A new book by Tina Packer takes readers chronologically through William Shakespeare's plays and takes a look at the evolution of female characters, from the "virgins-on-the-pedestal" of his earlier works to the aggressive, more masculine women in "Macbeth" and "Coriolanus."

war and aggressive superiority in government" with g rievous

"Oh! You Pretty Things"

By Janet Maslin

nounces that he's easy to deal D-list actress who is one of with is like a normal person this book's many endearing who says the check's in the secondary figures. But Jess is mail. an instant sucker for Eva CarlWhataneducation Jessgets! ton, the gorgeous star who's

New York Times News Service

And what a lot Mahin must

358 pages, $26.95)

Tempest," were different in construction and theme. They

were plays in which daughters (Perdita, Miranda) redeem the fathers, plays in which there was a prospectofredemption and healing.

"groundbreaking — both in

is never less than compelling. ines. That someone, Packer deWhen it comes to drawing clares,was the so-called Dark romances "The connections between Shake- Lady of the Sonnets, whom she L Tempest" and speare's life and art, however, identifies as the musician and "The W i nter's Packer indulges in a lot ofhigh- poet Aemilia Bassano. Tale," daugh- ly speculative reasoning, exThis argument on Packer's ters and artists trapolating freely and at times part drastically oversimplifies (embodying the "feminine" glibly from the paltry handful the ambiguities of the sonnets traits of empathy and creativiof known facts to make some- — which depict a love triangle ty) offer the promise of rebirth times questionable or simplis- riddled with doubts and conand renewal, the possibility of tic assertions. Most notably, flicting emotions — and the transcendence. she contends that the trans- continuing debates over the Packer brings insights she formation in Shakespeare's identity of the Dark Lady, who has gained during four decades understanding o f wo m en has also been identified, variof directing Shakespeare. Her (from stereotyping them, to ously, as the aristocratic Mary experience in the theater gives "groping his way toward some Fitton, a brothel owner named her book a hands-on dimen- kind of understanding, to un- Lucy Morgan and Aline Florio, sion, and although many of her derstanding them completely" the adulterous wife of a transarguments about the radical and "giving them full agen- lator, among others. Packer complexity of Shakespeare's cy") came from falling in love glosses oversuch debates;it with "someone who possessed better suits her theory that women are hardly new made many times before by qualities unimaginable to him Shakespeare became a chamscholars such as Harold Bloom previously," a woman who pion of women's rights, if his — her knowledgeable tracing became a model of sorts for true love were a feminist like of connections amongtheplays his "quick-witted, outspoken, Aemilia. " Romeo and J uliet" w a s andparallels among characters sexually adventurous" heroconsequences. • In the late

A tale of being a personalassistant to the wealthy, capriciousand cruel by Shanna Mahin (Dut ton,

and the plays he wrote there, "The Winter's Tale" and "The

Sara Krulwich/The New York Times file photo

world literature and in Shake-

speare's canon," Packer writes, Shakespeare "didn't abanbecause Shakespeare gave don the psychological development of his characters," Packer

the two characters, male and

female, "absolute equality" in

their relationship. Not in world-

writes; "he made the canvas and the time frame so large

ly terms (as a woman in Elizabethan England, Juliet has

that he and the audience got an overview of how it could turn

"no independence in the social

out if certain mysteries were

structure of her family or in society at large"), but "in inner, psychic terms." Shakespeare came tobelieve, Packer argues,

allowed to take place — if the artist drew a wider picture so

that eventually the children,

with their openness, love, courthat men and women can ex- age and vulnerability, could perience the sort of "sexual/ halt the darkness of greed, in-

spiritual merging" experienced adequacy, jealousy and desire by Romeoand Juliet,Benedick for dominance." This vision, Packer conand Beatrice, and Antony and Cleopatra, only "if there is ab- cludes in her fascinating but lumpy book, completed the arc solute parity between them." In Packer's opinion, Shake- of Shakespeare's maturation speare also came to regard as an artist and, at the same women as providing an alter- time, signified a triumph of native to institutionalized pow- the feminine and imaginative er — to government and the spirit.

A MAGAZINE DEDICATED TO DEFINING THE FUTURE OF CENTRAL OREGON

s u d denly her newboss — and,

have been through to have ac- after a brief period of standPretty Things" falls into the go- cumulated so many wickedly offishness, her confidante and fers'-revenge genre, to which accurate observations! Tyler's cuddly friend. This is much "The Devil Wears Prada" and coffee needs sound trivial, but tougher than working for 7br"The Nanny Diaries" also be- they're a tipoff to where this ler, whose manipulative skills long. But the difference lies in whole boss-slave relationship d o n't amount to much. Female location, and in this case loca- is going to go. His picture-per- celebrity bosses can hit their tion is everything. Mahin's de- fect kitchen has female flunkies but novel is set in Hollywood, a w ildly e x with a whole difwhich she uses less to denote pensive coffee ~qgg fs f / Pl I r arent arsenal or a geographical location than machine. Tyler g j K s > f j~ I put- d owns from a state of mind. It's that cliched but ever-trendy place with two how to use it, male c ountert~~ parts u se,. castes: the rich, beautiful, fa- so he refuses ro f fll I I "Oh! You Pretmous types and the yes-people believe that Jess .' who do their bidding. does. I n s tead ty Things" is at ': s; ="' Mahin worked as a person- Mr. Easy sends . its best in detail" "... ing w h a t goes al assistant herself. But that's her to Starbucks . . ' -t< ~ , ' not why her book works. What and gets ever on between Eva matters is her gimlet eye for angrier if there's a nd Jess a n d ' =' '= " ... a c k nowledging the culture in which her hero- a drop or milk Shanna Mahin's"Oh! You

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tha t i t ' s a l most

- like a love afmight be comfair. Jess gets monplace, but itdoesn't seem girl-crushes on women who old here. radiate beauty and power, and "Every detail is equally im- she's never been this close to over the maximum acceptable size-2 body type) and old portant in Tyler's world," his a stellar presence before. At (pushing 30), the place won't manager warns Jess. Unlike, first, it hardly bothers her that let her work its profitable day say, fashion magazine editors Eva is more demanding about shift. or New York parents with nan- food, shopping and last-minute And even though she's a nies, Hollywood hotshots can errands than Tyler knew how terrific cook, interviewing for actually have enough free time to be. That part goes with the a scullery job at a hip restau- tothinkthatway. Whichmight territory. It's in the final part rant, she claims, "feels like be fine if t hey remembered o f the book that Mahin breaks going on a casting call for a what they had asked for and somenewgroundintherealm commercial." She swears that weren't changing their minds of Celebrity Wrangling 101. these kitchen job applications allthetime.Itdoesn'ttake Jess T h e b asic lesson, so easily require head shots. A lot of this long to tire of Tyler's whims forgotten: Glamorous people book's appeal lies in its hones- or the daily business of driv- have the power to behave caty: Why would Jess want to live ing from store to store, taking priciously, without guilt or rein a place so unwelcoming? Be- snapshots of clothes and an- sponsibility.Andtheywill. cause like much of TV-watch- tiqueshemaywanttobuy. Mahin's enjoyable debut is "Oh! You Pretty T h ings" a b i t r eminiscent of Jennifer ing, magazine-reading America, she's obsessed with celebri- might seem outlandish, but it Weiner's"GoodinBed,"witha ty culture and can't help want- never loses touch with reality. s m a rt, embarrassed but tough ing to be near it. Even at their funniest, Mah e r oine who works her way She gets her first case of hin's observations are painful- out of a corner. Too bad its aured carpet fever when a friend ly true. That's even more the thorial string-pulling is so flarecommends her for his for- case with Jess' next job, which grant. Mahin throws in a Mr. mer job: personal assistant puts her to work for a major Right for Jess, concocts a conto an Oscar-, Grammy- and actress: a much greater chal- v e n iently illicit affair that forcEmmy-winning c o mposer.lenge, since women are both es the story's denouement and Jess lives in an uncool, inex- her closest friends and her a l soattimesuses Jess'mother pensive part of Santa Monica. biggest weakness. Jess' awful too neatly. But as the first book Her handsome new "dream relationship with her mother is by a high school dropout who boss," Tyler Montaigne, lives treated jokily here, but it's the had to pay her dues as an asin a monument to decorating kind of thing that could have s i stant, perhaps in the kinds of perfection somewhere in San- ruined her life at an early age hair-raising jobs she describes, it's quite a breakout. Mahin ta Monica Canyon. And he is (and very nearly did). very, very nice — when they Ever since, she's relied heav- m i ght not have mattered much first meet, that is. According ily on her female pals, such in those days, but she matters virtually unemployable. As the book begins, Jessison herlast legs as a barista in Venice. Because she is large (a size 8, way

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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin

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MUST be only call/text 541-467-2674 Call A Service Professional or less, or multiple egoodbuyn Say find the help you need. to make sure it is corchild. 541-408-4079 items whose total RANS Wave recum- rect. DSpellcheck" and Yorkies 2 males 8 wks, www.bendbulletin.com to that unused does not exceed The Bulletin recombent. 60" WB, older 1st shots, $600. Can human errors do ocPollshers • Saws poodle, Silver $500. item by placing it in mends extra caution Miniature model some wear on deliver. 541-792-0375 cur. If this happens to NEED TO CANCEL when purc has- purebred, AKC, 1 1/2 frame. W e l l mainyour ad, please conThe Bulletin Classifieds YOUR AD? y rs o l d , ken n el Repair & Supplies Call Classifieds at ing products or sertained. New: c hain tact us ASAP so that The Bulletin trained, neutered M, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! 541-385-5809 vices from out of the r ings, t i res, s e a t corrections and any Classifieds has an www.bendbulletin.com all shots, $450. He o area. Sending cash, cushion. Cateye Velo 5 4 t 385-5809 adjustments can be "After Hours" Line needs to go to a home Door-to-door selling with checks, or credit in7 computer/odometer. made to your ad. Call 541-383-2371 with no kids. Call for fast results! It's the easiest TURN THE PAGE f ormation may b e $350 541-504-5224 541 -385-5809 CASH!! 24 hrs. to cancel LOP tags for Deer & Elk pics. 541-598-5032. subjected to fraud. way in the world to sell. For More Ads For Guns, Ammo 8 Huntinq; access in ConThe Bulletin Classified your ad! For more informaThe Bulletin Reloading Supplies. don, OR. 541-384-5381 Golf club sale, 3 sets tion about an adverThe Bulletin Classified 541-408-6900. custom irons, drivers tiser, you may call 541 485-5809 Two V i king s e wing Need to get an hybrids and putters. C ombine Bo w w i t h the O r egon State P eople giving p e ts /quilting m a c hines away are advised to $300 per set, case, practice and Attorney General's ad in ASAP? with extras. Very good 210 541-788-3743 hunting arrows, like Office C o nsumer be selective about the condition. $700 each You can place it Furniture & Appliances new owners. For the new, $240. Protection hotline at Call 54 1 - 706-0448 ROCKY M O U NTS online at: 541-233-6520 1-877-877-9392. protection of the anieves or weekends. telescoping R4 bike PATIO TABLE mal, a personal visit to 19.5 cubic ft. Kenmore 54" www.bendbulletin.com rack. Carries single, Tropitone table the home is recom- chest freezer, energy The Bulletin Just too many tandem or recumbent Take care of Servfng Central Oregon sincetgffs 4 chairs, tilt mended. efficient, 3 sl i d ing bikes up to 78" WB. collectibles? 541 -385-5809 for easy storawning, $350. your investments Pivoting, push-button The Bulletin baskets Adopt a great cat or a ge. $ 2 5 0 ob o . 541-382-6664 Serving Central Oregon since tgtg Street legal magslift with the help from axle; easy load/unSell them in two! A ltered, vacci541-389-0340 PRICE REDUCED! load. Fits Thule and kit, split windshield, nated, ID chip, tested, The Bulletin's The Bulletin Classifieds Nosler MDL 48 Patriot l eather seats b a l l Pedestal double bed, 6 Yakima crossbars. more! CRAFT, 65480 30-06 rifle NIB never "Call A Service drawers and headUsed twice. $250. cleaner, ice c hest. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, fired. $1195. $3000 obo. board. Mattress and 541-504-5224. 541-385-5809 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 Professional" Directory 541-408-4522 541-389-1966 box spring included. www.craftcats.org $500 54 1 -777-9366 Madras Deposit c a n s/bottlesPIT BULL p u rebred (2) 90-inch Couches needed for local all Cane bamboo with P uppy, 7 wk s o l d, volunteer, non-profit needs a good. home silk upholstery, cat rescue. Donate at $500 each, obo. Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 to someone who has the time and energy to E, Bend, Petco in her. Has 1st R edmond; Smi t h raise Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, shots and vet visit, in health. cannot Side Table - Solid Bend; CRAFT in Tu- good cherry wood, Built by malo. Can pick up Ig. keep her due to my $275. Dovetail; Mahogany Media amounts. 389-8420. disability. 541-350-3871. 19 nDx52 nWx29 nH, Armoire, 2 drawers, 2 www.craftcats.org shelves,SOLD $325. 541-815-0395 619-8844785 (Bend) Solid Rosewood Furniture. Dining Room 5000 series Maytag set: Table, leaves, 8 dryer, like new, 4000 chairs, sil v erware series Maytag dryer, cabinet, $2500. Secwill hold 2 queen size retary/ desk, $1200. quilts. $850. Brand B eautiful, hea v y . new, still under war- Other items a v ail. ranty, Whirlpool con- e-photos. vection 5 burner glass 541-382-9126 280 286 top stove with warmEstate Sales Sales Northeast Bend ing station. Has Aquo- The Bulletin list technology. $700. ESTATE SALE - Sat. & 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d recommends extra ' NOW HIRING MULTI-SKILLED TECHNICIAN — REFERENCE CODE 12101 Sun. May 9th-10th, ** FREE ** piece, $400. 2 viles of i caution when pur9-5. 2045 NW Lake- Garage Sale Klt products or, gold nuggets, a little chasing FIND THE MOST SIGNIFICANT WORK OF YOUR CAREER AT TRANSCANADA side Pl., Bend. over a gram ea. $45. services from out of I Place an ad in The area. Sending Il Bulletin for your gaea. Sterling silver, 24 the At TransCanada we dream big, think bjg and do big things. For more than 60 Find It in diamond earrings, still cash, checks, or ' rage sale and reyears, we've been supplying reliable and efficient energy to millions of North i n formation in box, $200. 2 (set) i credit The Bulletin Classifieds! ceive a Garage Sale may be subjected to cubic zirconia sterling Americans with our pipelines, gas storage and power generation facilities. Kit FREE! 541-385-5809 i FRAUD. For more silver e n gagement information about an c KIT INCLUDES: rings, sizes 7 and 8, Reporting to the Borders West Region South Area Manager, the employee 282 • 4 Garage Sale Signs $50 e a . Mi c hael advertiser, you may i filling this position has (1) 8 high level of competency in the operations and l call t h e Ore g onl Sales Northwest Bend • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-589-3092 ' State Atto r ney ' Use Toward Your maintenance of electronic and/or electrical Company equipment; and (2) 8 Quality Ladder-Back i General's O f f ice M oving s ale, e c h o Next Ad an intermediate level of competency in mechanical skills. The incumbent • 10 Tips For "Garage Consumer Protec• Antique White Dining friendly electric lawn Chairs. Stone-Nichols. t ion h o t line at I mower, 4 st u dded Sale Success!" applies ejectronldejectrlcal, instrumentation and controls skills and aptitude $650 435-770-8079 i 1-877-877-9392. tires, small kitchen to repair, install, troubleshoot, and perform other planned maintenance a ppliances, mu c h PICK UP YOUR I TheBulletin I and corrective tasks on assigned electronic, pneumatic and/or mechanical misc. Free stuff, May GARAGE SALE KIT at Servfng Central Oregon since tgDS 9 8E 10, 9-4. 63703 1777 SW Chandler control systems, devices, and equipment. Operates and maintains natural NW Hunter Circle Ave., Bend, OR 97702 gas compressor station, pipeline, and equipment in a manner to meet 212 Sat. 8 Sun., 10-4, NW Bulletin Antiques 8 operational needs in compliance with company and regulatory requirements. 6th between Portland The serving central oregon since1925 Collectibles & Roanoke. HouseDESK TransCanada is an equal opportunity employer. For more information and to hold, gardening, etc. 30 nx54 Multi Family Yard Sale. Antiques Wanted: apply to this position, please visit our website at jobs.transcanada.com. Leather Top Fri., Sat.8 Sun. 8am Tools, furniture, marbles, Have an item to - Spm. 62875 Santa $250. 541-382-6664 coin-op machines, beer Everything you do at TransCanada contributes toeverything we do across sell quick? Cruz Ave. cans, pre-'40s B/W photography. 541-389-1578 North Arnerica. Make more of your career. Help us build long-lasting If it's under Full size box springs 292 and mattress set $125 energy solutions that rnatter. '500 you can place it in Sales Other Areas C hina cabinet, o a k; obo. 541-419-4343 trunk; 2 chairs, oak, The Bulletin Moving Sale. Furniture, G ENERATE SOM E upholstery no arms; Classifieds for: h ousehold ite m s , EXCITEMENT in your Redwood burl table tools, clocks, bedding neighborhood! Plan a 4xt/z'x35/~', round end '10 - 3 lines, 7 days TransCanada and more. May 8th garage sale and don't table; decorative maand 9th, 9-4. 53557 forget to advertise in hogany b o o kcase. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Way, Wild classified! Must See! (Private Party ads only) Kokanee River, La Pine. 541-385-5809. 541-388-3532 vr

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place 8photo in your private party sd for only $15.00 perweek.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Special

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 246

253

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

TV, Stereo & Video

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Misc. Items

Heating & Stoves

Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

DIRECTV Starting at DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Sell your s t ructured NOTICE TO Found: 1 pair of men'3 $19.99/mo. FREE In- 10 Americans or 158 settlement or annuity ADVERTISER wire frame glasses on s tallation. FREE 3 million U.S. A dults payments for CASH Since September 29, 5/2 on the rock point Sat. 8 Sun. months of HBO r ead content f r om NOW. You don't have 1991, advertising for at Paulina Lake. Call 8-5 Only! S HOWTIME CIN - n ewspaper m e d ia to wait for your future used woodstoves has 541-408-1096 to pick May 9th & 10th EMAX, STARZ. FREE each week? Discover payments any longer! been limited to mod- up. HD/DVR U p grade! the Power of the Pa- Call 1-800-914-0942 els which have been FOUND bag of jewelry 10th Annual 2015 NF L S u nday cific Northwest News- (PNDC) certified by the Or- on NW 0th St., RedTrout Bum Ticket Included (Se- paper Advertising. For egon Department of Contact t he FLY SWAP lect Packages) New a free brochure call SOCIAL S E C URITY Environmental Qual- mond. Redmond Police Deor D ISABILITY Big Bargains on C ustomers Onl y . 916-288-6011 B E N - ity (DEQ) and the fed- partment. CALL 1-000-410-2572 email E n v ironmental E FITS. Unable t o eral New & Used, Refer(PNDC) cecelia@cnpa.com work? Denied ben- Protection A g e ncy 541-693-6911. plus great ence Case (PNDC) efits? We Can Help! (EPA) as having met in-store savings ¹15-108939 D ish Network - G e t WIN or Pay Nothing! smoke emission stanM ORE fo r LE S S ! H ELP PREV E NT Fly & Field cer t ifiedFound chainsaw along Contact Bill Gordon & dards. A Starting $19.99/month FORECLOSURE & Highway. Call (541) Outfitters at w oodstove may b e (for 12 months.) PLUS Save Your Home! Get Associates to identified by its certifi- 389-0198 to i nquire 35 SWCentury, Bundle & SAVE (Fast FREE Relief! Learn 1-800-079-3312 label, which is about its return. Will Internet f o r $15 about your legal op- start your application cation Bend permanently attached n eed caller t o I D more/month.) CA LL tion to possibly lower today! (PNDC) 547 -318-167 6 to the stove. The Bul- make, model, day lost Now 1-800-308-1563 your rate and modify letin will not know- and highway. The Bulletin Offers (PNDC) your mortgage. ingly accept advertisFree Private Party Ads 000-971-3596 WANTED: Collector ing for the sale of FOUND: Hearing Aid at Projector for DVDs (PNDC) • 3 lines - 3 days seeks high quality fish- Wall Wagner Mall, week of uncertified and games. $ 4 0. • Private Party Only ing items & upscale fly April 13. woodstoves. 541-388-1533 How to avoid scam • Total of items adverrods. 541-678-5753, or 541-389-5226 and fraud attempts tised must equal $200 503-351-2746 267 or Less Found: Mtn bike, NW YBe aware of interna255 Fuel & Wood FOR DETAILS or to B end. Contact b y Winchester model 12, tional fraud. Deal loPLACE AN AD, email only, jlcorso@ 3" mag. Factory vent Computers cally whenever posbendcable.com with Call 541-305-5$09 rib, d e luxe w o o d. sible. WHEN BUYING Fax 541-385-5802 full description. Final $600. 541 -548-3408 T HE BULLETIN r e - Y Watch for buyers FIREWOOD... date to claim S/1 0/1 5. quires computer adwho offer more than vertisers with multiple your asking price and Wanted- paying cash 247 To avoid fraud, The Bulletin ad schedules or those who ask to have for Hi-fi audio 8 stuThe Bulletin Sporting Goods To Subscribe call selling multiple sysdio equip. Mclntosh, recommends paymoney wired or - Misc. 541-385-5000 or go to tems/ software, to disment for Firewood handed back to them. JBL, Marantz, Dyclose the name of the Fake cashier checks naco, Heathkit, San- only upon delivery www.bendbulletin.com Backpack, N o rthface business or the term sui, Carver, NAD, etc. and inspection. and money orders Irg cap. Iike new. "dealer" in their ads. Call 541-261-1SOS • A cord is 128 cu. ft. are common. $130. 541-388-1533. 4' x 4' x S' Private party advertis- av'Nevergive out perers are defined as REMEMBER: If you • Receipts should sonal financial inforKodiak canvas 10'x10' those who sell one have lost an animal, include name, mation. tent, brand new, used computer. don't forget to check phone, price and VTrust your instincts 2x, never wet, very The Humane Society kind of wood and be wary of clean, stored inside in 258 1usu vevr Bend purchased. someone using an dry, c oo l c l i mate. 541-382-3537 Travel/Tickets • Firewood ads escrow service or obo. $400 Redmond MUST include 541-408-1676 agent to pick up your Winegard Carryout auto 541-923-0882 Sheryl Crowtickets (4) portable satellite anspecies & cost per merchandise. Madras reserved seating July tenna with a t tach- cord to better serve Call The Bulletin At 541-475-6889 $ 5 0 0 obo 6, Bend Amphitheater. The Bulletin ment our customers. 541-385-5809 Serv~ng Central Oregon since ssea 5 41-588-0068 ce l l Prineville Cash only price firm Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 541-447-7178 $300. 503-500-5249 Infrared Sauna, 220-V 541-549-4034 home The Bulletin Sarvlne CentralOraeen sincefate or Craft Cats At: www.bendbulletin.com hook-up, no building, People Lookfor Information 541-389-8420. $3000 value, asking Wooden cart w/ bicycle REI leather frame back About Products and $1000. 541-536-7790 size tires $100 obo. AltYear Dependable pack, gd cond., $50. Services EveryDaythrough 541-213-1172 Firewood: Seasoned; New Suede Jacket 541 -388-1533 The Bvlletin Classmeds Lodgepole, split, del, mens Italian XL, US 261 B end 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 m-I $50. 541-306-6539 248 250 or 2 cords for $365. Medical Equipment Health & Misc. Items Multi-cord discounts! Look at: 541-420-3484. Beauty Items Bendhomes.com 300+ S t racks, cas- for Complete Listings of 269 Got Knee Pain? Back settes 8 vinyl records. Area Real Estate for Sale Gardening Supplies Pain? Shoulder Pain? $100. 541-536-2786 Get a pain-relieving 4 B r idgestone t i resNY Yankees pinball & Equipment 315 brace -little or NO cost 225/65/r17 Low miles. wooden non-electric, Irrigation Equipment to you. Medicare Pa- $150. 541-385-9646 $40. 541-388-1533 Tempur-pedic twin tients Call Health Hotelectric bed & remote. BarkTurfSoil.com FOR SALE line Now! 1- Baseball glove Rawl- Ping pong table, and Top mattress has a Tumalo Irrigation good cond, $50. water-proof mattress PROMPT DELIVERY 800-285-4609 ings RSG1B 1 31/9" net, 541-388-1533 Water (PNDC) $40. 541-300-1533 cover. $500. Hoyer 541-309-9663 $4,500 per acre Classic Lift with sling. Rainbow play structure Call 541-419-4440 Buying Dtamonds 251 - super sized castle, Will lift up to 400 lbs. /Gotd for Cash 4 wheel Hot Tubs & Spas new, needs $125. For newspaper The Bulletin's Saxon's Fine Jewelers $4000 New batterdelivery, call the some care, you haul, Scooter. "Call A Service 541-309-6655 ies purchased April Marquis 2005 S ilver $800. 541-815-2505. Circulation Dept. at 2 015, charger i n Professional" Directory Anniv. Hot Tub, gray 541-305-5000 BUYING SOLD! and black, 6-8 person Lionel/American Flyer Reduce Your Past Tax cluded. is all about meeting To place an ad, call 541-317-11SS Bill by as much as 75 seating, new circuit 541-385-5809 trains, accessories. your needs. Percent. Stop Levies, board. Delivery avail541-408-2191. or email Liens and Wage Garolasaified@bendbulletin.oom Call on one of the able, $2000. 265 BUYING a S E LLING nishments. Call The 541 -815-2505 professionals today! Building Materials The Bulletin All gold jewelry, silver Tax DR Now to see if Serving Central Oregon sincesaea and gold coins, bars, you Qualify 253 325 Bend Habitat rounds, wedding sets, 1-800-791-2099. RESTORE TV, Stereo & Video Prompt Delivery Hay, Grain & Feed class rings, sterling sil- (PNDC) Building Supply Resale Rock, Sand & Gravel ver, coin collect, vin13e Sony Trinitron TV 541-312-6709 Wheat Straw for Sale. tage watches, dental R oller b l ades, u p Multiple Colors, Sizes $30. DVD/TV for RV, gold. Bill Fl e ming, graded wheels $60. 224 NE Thurston Ave. Instant Landscaping Co. Also, weaner pigs. 541-382-9419. 541-388-1533 Open to the public. 541-389-9663 541-546-6171 $40. 541-388-1533

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classitieds Get Results! Call 541-385-580$ or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809 341

Horses & Equrpment

Deluxe showman 3-horse trailer Silverado 2001 29'xS' 5th wheel with semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277

RESORT Black Butte Ranch

Career Extravaganza!

Join our Team - WE ARE HIRING NOW!!! WHEN: Tuesday,May12th, 5-7pm & Sunday, May 17th, 3-Spm WHERE: The Black Butte Ranch Community Center-next to the Administration building WHAT: IMMEDIATE OPENINGS: food 8 beverage, housekeeping, golf, recreation, welcome center, maintenance Directions-Hwy 20 West (S mi. West of Sisters) Left at Black Butte Ranch entrance-then follow event signs! We look forward to meeting you! Visit our website at www.BlackButteRanch.com and click on the "Career" Link to submit an application today or contact Human Resources at (541) 595-1523 for more information. INe offer 8 Drug-free work place / EOE

Career Opportunity! Ad Services Admin The Bulletin is seeking an individual to play a vital role on the Ad Services team. The Ad Services Admin position is 32 hours per week and is eligible for benefits. An Ad Services Admin works closely with others on the Ad Services team to coordinate and track ads though our roduction system; at times, taking corrections rom customers via phone, faxing ads to customers, and ensuring all corrections have been made prior to printing. In addition, this position will include training for a path to page composing responsibilities. The ideal candidate will be computer literate, have outstanding customer service skills, above average grammar skills, the ability to multi-task and a desire to work at a successful company.

To apply, submit a resume by Wednesday May 13th, with qualifications, skills, experience and a past employment history to The Bulletin, attention: Debby Winikka/ dwinikkaiawescompapers.com OR PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708-6020. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer.

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Home Delivery Advisor

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Livestock & Equipment position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive Ready to work, regis- superior service. Must be able to create and tered yearling Angus perform strategic plans to meet department bulls. Gentle, good objectives such as increasing market share dispositions, popular, and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a proven b l o odlines. self-starter who can work both in the office Raised in long-estab- and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary lished herd. $1000 8 up. 54 1 - 480-0096, with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills Madras are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to: 345

The Bulletin

421

Schools & Training IITR Twck School

REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads GetJobs!

1<ss<30-2235

WWW.IITR.EDU

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmullerobendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletinis 8 drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drugscreen required.


THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Employment Opportunities

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Employment Opportunities

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

B E A K S S H Y E R S A H A R A O X L I P T I M M A R A O P E N E R S Perfect Pizza Company Sales Hood River County Caregivers Communications is looking for a franNational Outside B E T S Y A N O O K O F T H E N O R T H seeks Sea s onal Officer (Dispatcheri w anted t o j o i n chisee/area d e v elSales Broker ree Farm O H V oper for Eastern OrS C A M A M O K S I T I N S M A I A oul' caring Are you a Senior in T CITY OF PRINEVILLE H igh S chool a n d Trail Specialist to egon. Best pizza in CNPA Ad v e rtising m emory c a r e R E D L I N E S C E C E B A T E D POLICE wondering what's next work 1000hrs from Oregon. Perfectpizza- Services is seeking a c ommunity. A l l DEPARTMENT f or you a f ter y o u June through Octocompany.com. Call for self-motivated & re- E A R T O O N E S H E A R T B A L E R S ber. Starting wage shifts a v ailable. information, sourceful individual to g raduate? The O r is $20.23/hr. P r eA R A N A G P O L A D A N O 503-855-4893 Accepting Applications Must be reliable. egon Army National join our team as an f or F u ll-time a n d Also needed part Guard i s se e king ferred applicant will I ndependent S a l es S E I Z E D O R M A N C O N Q U E S T have edu c ation Part-time 9-1-1 PCO. t ime c hef. F o r young motivated men Broker for a National PROPERTY P E T E C O S T U S A I R Job consists of radio and women like you to and/or experience in Preprint Advertising Y A L E U inf o r ma- join our ranks! Join- tree farm manageMANAGEMENT dispatching for more Program. Our comA P G A R S T U T I 0 R T E ment and r e creSTAFF or any police-fire-ambulance. tion, ing the G uard will pany is i n S a craACCOUNTANT Position is computer questions, open many doors for ational trail maintemento, CA but proC O W L A R R O W M I N D E D A P E X oi' oriented with related please spective candidates you with benefits such nance call recreational f a ciliCompass CommerA H A C P A A A A A D A G E paper record keeping. 541-385-4717 as college tuition ascan live in other arcial, Central A pplicants must b e sistance, the Mont- ties m anagement. eas. Candidates need P H Y L A B A H T M U N I C R E E P Must be knowledgeOregon's p r emier able to multi-task begomery Gl Bill, and b ackground in N a commercial real esB L O N D E tween phones and excellent on the job able of building and tional New s paper 0 I S E P O L L U T I O N radio's. This position training. Plus, it's one m aintaining O H V t ate company, is Sales, with strength in V O W E L M T M D R E D E E will work al l s h ifts, of the best part-time recreational t r a ils l ooking to ad d a Prepnnt Advertising. and oper a ting team player to our H A M I T E I C E P I E C E O F W O R K holidays and weekjobs you can have mini-excavators as commercial p r opends. A p p lications while pursing your caResponsibilities: Now Hiring O B O T E I S O N F R A C A S E S well as towing and erty m a nagement and m or e d e t ails reer goals. Customer backing u p of team. Responsible available on-line at Applicants must be 17 •Identify new b u s iM O N T B H O P A L I P O D S P O T for A P / AR , re Service www.cityofprineville.c years old prior to ob- equipment trailers. ness o p portunities; E U R O T R A N S M I T T E R A L E V E mus t sponding to c lient om (Be sure to com- Representatives taining a contractual A pplicants u nderstand cli e n t and vendor inquiries • Starting Wage: plete the "POLICE" obligation. E l igibility complete HRC apneeds 8 present rel- S N O W C A T T E A S E R S C E R E S on accounts; application from web $13.50 — $14.25 r estrictions app l y . plication. Obtain job evant solutions. packet and return to monthly financial reD E N U D E O L O R D H Y M N S • Comprehensive • Responsible for ensite.) Faxed applicaContact your l ocal ports and reconciliaBenefits Packet tions will not be acNational Guard repre- HRC Administration, tire sales p rocess: 801 State St., Hood tions for managecepted. Con t a ct sentative and secure identify sales opporPUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 River, OR. 97031 by ment review. Assists Communications DiApply online tunities & carr y your future now. 4:00 p.m. May 13, with general ledger www.consumer rector Tobie R e ySSG Oxford through to meet rev476 2015. Hood River processing includnolds at cellular.com/About/ 541-617-1342 enue goals. Employment ing account recon541-447-8324 for Careers •Create pr oposals, oregonarmyguard.com County is an EOE. Medical ciliations and postOpportunities more information on present to client & Feature Writer - Reing journal entries; the position. Disbursement Agent manage overall ivantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital The Central Housekee ers Wanted Strong fin a ncial projects. CLOSING DATE: C onstruction Ris k porter. 2011 & 2015 Immediate Positions TELEFUNDRAISING Oregonian newspaanalysis skills, AA in April 28, 2015. Management firm loAvailable. per in Prineville is Accounting, BA cated in Sunriver is seeking a reporter Part-time, Job Qualifications: Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in inc l udes preferred; 5+yrs acTele-funding for Add your web address seeking highly motiEnterprise, OR some weekends and counting exp; Exp in to focus on features. • Meals On Wheels to your ad and read• Minimum 3 y e a r s vated individual to as- Some news coverholidays. Must be a Quickbooks, R e al ers on The Bulletin's sist with construction print and/or media Med Surg RN Full-Time team player, have at- Estate Accounting as well. JourSeniors, students web site, www.bendsales experience. Nafunds disbursements. age tention to detail and s oftware; Str o ng tional sales experiand all others welbulletin.com, will be Position is Full-Time. nalism experience is ~Variable Shifts - Shift differential applies to have own transporta- communication photogable to click through ence a MUST. come. No exp. Individual should have mandatory; nights and weekends. tion. raphy and paginaskills; attention to •Successful n ew automatically to your a minimum of t wo necessary, will •CPR Certification required Call 541-593-2024 for detail and high level tion experience a website. business d e v elopyear experience in train. .ACLS required within 8 months. application process. of org a nizational plus. Full time with construction adminisment track record & ~TNCC, PALS Certification preferred. PART TIME full benefits. Salary skills; exc e l lent established portfolio tration or commercial based on e xperi•Prior OB 8 ER Experience. Preferred. Mon-Thur. S UB A R U . customer s e r vice of potential clients. lending. Construction •Excellent Benefits Package. 4:30-8:30 p.m. nce. Drug f r e e Medical skills. Works with • Dynamic, f l e x ible, Auto - Sales terminology and ac- e Mercy O u t patient Property Manage$9.50/hour. workplace. Send rehard-working & highly counting experience Sales professional to Equal Opportunity Employer and c o ver Imaging, in Rosement team memorganized with excel- Call 541-382-8672 needed. Must be pro- sume Visit our website at wchcd.org or contact Join Central burg, has an openletter to bers C o m petitive lent c o mmunication Oregon's l a rgest ficient in Microsoft Ex- Tahern © madrasLinda Childers @ 541-428-5313 ing for a f u ll-time w ages DOE, i n skills. new ca r de a ler cel. Excellent com- p ioneer.com. N o MRI Tech. Our MRI cludes ben e fits. • Bachelor's Degree Subaru of B e nd. munication, w r i ting calls please. technologists work P lease email r e preferred from an ac- Garage Sales and o r g anizational Offering 401k, profit closely with i ntersume and cover letskills required. Comcredited university. sharing, m e dical preting 8 referring General ter to centraloregon petitive salary DOE & plan, split shifts and Get your Garage Sales p hysicians, o t h e r jobs©bbsihq.com benefit pkg. Firm is Send resume to paid vacation. Expedepartment staff and business Wolf Rosenberg: an EOE. e-mail to: Garage Sales rience or will train. patients to d eliver Administrative Assistant ali.schaal ©tetra wolf©cnpa.com 90 day $2000 guarhigh quality MRI ex- RANCH HELP Engineering Find them tech.com a ntee. Dress f o r aminations. Our staff Sisters-area employer Non-Exempt, e ROW I N G success. P l e ase represent excellent seeks full-time sum- Sales Person wanted Non-Represented in apply at 2080 NE FIND YOUR FUTURE i nterpersonal a n d mer ranch hand who for growing manufacMonthly Salary: with an ad in The Bulletin Hwy 20, Bend. See HOME INTHE BULLETIN patient care skills. is comfortable around tured home dealer$3,454 - $4,246 The Bulletin's ship. Call Bob or Devon. We perform all MRI horses and can proClassifieds Yourfutureisjust apageaway. 541-548-5511 exams, i n c luding vide b a si c la b o r. "Call A Service Whetheryou'relookingfora hator special need patient Please call Dale at 541-385-5809 Performs highly responsible administrative Professional" aplacetohangil, TheBulletin 541-549-0859 for info. groups, p r oviding support, secretarial duties and land developFind exactly what Directory images of high qualment review assistance to the Engineering Classifiedisyourbestsource. The Bulletin is your you are looking for in the ity for a permanent Department. Everydaythousandsolbuyersand Resident Care CLASSIFIEDS record and accurate Employment Coordinator Field Service sellersof goodsandservicesdo interpretation. This is JOB UALIFICATIONS RE UIREMENTS: caution when pur(Benrfi Tech a busy outpatient fabusiness inthesepages.They Mandato Re uirernent: Marketplace SALES-Progressive I chasing products or I Compensation: DOE cility. We prefer our know youcan't beatTheBulletin • services from out of • High school diploma, or GED equivalent, Sporting Goods Co. RCC position. LPN KEITH® is looking techs to come with supplemented by an Associate's degree or Classified Sectionforselection based in La Pine is f the area. Sending or multiple years' Call for an experienced experience on Sitechnical certificate in secretarial sciences and looking for a self moti- c ash, checks, o r andconvenience- everyitemis e xperience as a Field Service Tech. emens 3T system. four years o f p r ogressively responsible vated individual to fill f credit i n f ormation med aid in an asjust a ph on e ca l a w a y. If you have welding, T his position i n 541-385-5809 a in-house sales posi- ~ may be subjected to ~ verifiable work experience in secretarial and sisted l i ving or electronics and hyvolves weekend call administrative assistant duties; or any equivaTheClassifiedSectionis easy tion. Travel to trade FRAUD. draulics experience rotation at M e rcy memory care. Proshows is r e quired. For more informa- I lent combination of verifiable work experience to advertise. to ussEveryitemis categorized vides direct superviand enjoy traveling Medical Center utiMust hav e s a l es tion about an adver- • and training which demonstrates the knowlsion of care giving andeverycategoryisindexedon lizing GE 1.5T sysplease apply at: edge, skills, and ability to perform the above e xperience, en j o y/ tiser, you may call within the commukeithwalking t em and w e w i l l the section'sfront page. described duties. www.bendbulletin.com people and be a quick the Oregon State nity. Ensures resifloor.com cross train for GE. Whetheryouarelookingfora home Don't miss this rare dents are t reated learner. Some Indus- f Attorney General's R egistered A R RT HOW TO APPLY C o n sumer t try experience and or Office with respect, dignity or need aservice,yourfutureis in opportunity to j o in (MR) and OBMI liRequest application packet from r ecognizing i n d i- College also required. Protection hotline at I the KEITH® Team cense is required. the pages olTheBulletin Classfied. DeAnne Wakefield, City of Redmond Salary and benefits I 1-877-877-9392. vidual needs and Serviny Central Oregonsince 19N a nd r e ceive t h e Apply directly via our i ncluded. Plea s e Human Resources Department, encouraging indemany bene f its website www.mercy> The Bulletin The Bulletin email resume to 5 O C c t l a N /t 5 i ~ I9 0 3 via email onlypendence. Fosters a 5 ringcntrala~ n* i nc 1903 offered. rose.org/jobs.php, h ome-like a t m o - bmyers0057Oaol.com deanne.wakefield Oci.redmond.or.us. requisition number sphere throughout 1 500009557. F o r General Wildland the com m unity. Accounting Complete application packets must be subadditional informaFirefighters Must have experimitted by 5pm, Thursday, May 21, 2015. tion, contact Mercy To fight forest fires must Medical Center Huence with managbe 18yrs old & Drug ing staff, scheduling, man Resources at free! Apply 9am-3pm 541-877-2475. experienced in care Mon-Thurs. Bring two giving. Good written Central Oregon Community College has forms of ID fill out and verbal commuopenings li s te d bel o w . Go to Federal 1-9 form. nication skills. Must https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply No ID MEDICAL Accounts Payable Specialist = No Application Supervisor — Downtown be flexible and able online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, The North L a ke to work all shifts. 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; Bend Library H ealth District i s Responsible for maintaining vendor accounts, Benefits after (541)383 7218. For hearing/speech impaired, including posting vendor invoices, researching looking for a 90days. For more Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. Do you like to work in a lively and resolving vendor and pricing discrepaninformation, or any Clinical COCC is an AA/EO employer. questions, p lease cies, maintaining accurate payee data, and environment filled with Director/Provider PatRick Corp. maintaining strong v endor r elationships. call 541-385-4717 ever-changing opportunities? These to manage and Residence Life Coordinator R equires experience o r e d ucation i n 1199 NE Hemlock, operate a primary Live-in staff position responsible for engaging career positionsoffer a great chance Redmond accounting and proficiency with Excel, data care facility in a ruresidential living environment. Provide direct 541-923-0703 EOE entry and 10-key. Must have the ability to learn to thrive in meaningful ways with ral setting. Call a Pro supervision to community advisors. Bachelors new software and work well independently and stafF and to make a difference in the +1-yr re s i dence li fe exp. req. Whether you need a in teams. Please reply with lives of children, teens, andi adults. $34,000-$37,000/yr plus housing. Closes qualifications to fence fixed, hedges May 11. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Prior supervisory skills are required. nlhd@ymail.com or trimmed or a house customer service, with over 450 stores and Two full-time positions are available. North Lake Health Part time Latino College Prep Bend Park@ built, you'll find 7,000 employees in the western United States. District, P.O. Box Deadline:z:oo on May zl. Recreation Program Coordinator We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, 844, Christmas professional help in Serve as primary coordinator for students preretirement and cash bonus. Please go to Is Accepting Valley, OR 97641 The Bulletin's "Call a paring for post-secondary education. Estabw ww.lesschwab.com to apply.No phone calls http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ Applications For: within 30 days. lish goals and objectives of the program. Service Professional" please. employment for more details, -Fleet Tech (Seasonal) $19.32 - $23.00/hr. 30hr/wk. 11months per Directory year. Closes May 17. -Child Care application, and supplemental Office Position Les Schwab is proud to be an -Lifeguard 541-385-5809 equal opportunity employer. General Office Posiquestionnaire. Or call (5~) 3tz-toz5 Assistant Professor of HIT -Swim Instructor tion i n Sun r iver. for assistance.EOE Provide classroom and lab instruction in the -TR Specialist Seeking an enthusiHealth Information Technology Program. Pro- -Night Custodian astic, energetic pervide student advising and assistance. AssociFor complete job son with e x cellent ate Degree + 1-yr exp. in HIT profession. telephone, computer announcements $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. or to apply go to skills 8 Microsoft ofo s S C I I U T E S P U BL I C bendparksandrec.org fice with basic knowlPart-Time Instructor Positions L I B RA R Y edge of QuickBooks. Equal Opportunity NEW-Veterinary and Librarian Qualified i n d ividual Employer Looking for talented individuals to t each m ust enjoy a f a s t Planer I Moulder Technician part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our paced work environGood classified ads tell employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Gilchrist, Oregon ment with significant the essential facts in an Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 multi-tasking in a fun, interesting Manner. Wri t e class credit), with additional perks. e n v ironment. Interfor Corporation is a growth-oriented lumber company with opfrom the readers view - not team Offering a c ompetierations in Canada and the United States. The Company has anthe seller's. Convert the tive salary and bennual production capacity of 3.1 billion board feet and offers one of General facts into benefits. Show efit package including the most diverse lines of lumber products to customers around the the reader howthe itemwill 4 01K. Su b mit r e world. For more information about Interfor, visit our website at Ab teawAIHM help them in someway. sume to Tetra Tech www.interfor.com. This PO Box 3585, Sunri* sdvenisin9 tip v er, OR 9 7707 o r Interfor is currently recruiting for a Planer/Moulder Technician for / * Great Supplemental Income!! iVantage Top 100 Critical Access brought toyou by email: our Gilchrist mill based in beautiful Central Oregon. The successali.schaal©tetra IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I ful candidate will be responsible for the set-up of a new Hospital 2011 & 2015 The Bulletin tech.com Ser 'ng Cmtat O~ns i nce r9N I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI WEINIG/WACO H-5000 high speed planer/moulder. • currently have openings all nights of the week.• WALLOWA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts We are looking for candidates with the following skills and Circulation start between 8:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and experience: The Bulletin Circulation department is lookLOCATED IN ENTERPRISE,OR / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpofor a District Representative to join our • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• ing MED SURG RN FULL TIME Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour - Practice positive safety awareness I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI Single week position. Overall focus is the repre- Able to lift 50 pounds g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg per - Must be at least 18 years of age • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• sentation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack loca- Mechanical aptitude and experience Variable Shifts — Shift differential applies / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacktions, hotels, special events and news dealer - Knowledge and experience in troubleshooting of ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a to nights and weekends / other tasks. planers/moulders company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced CPR Certification Required IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl We offer our employees: supplied, managing newspaper counts for I including life insurance, short-term & long-term and ACLS Required within 6 mos. the district, building relationships with our curdisability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. - Competitive compensation package including 401k match rent news dealer locations and growing those TNCC, PALS Certification Preferred and benefits locations with new outlets. Position requires ~ Please submit a completed application - Internal advancement opportunities and professional develtotal ownership of and accountability of all Prior OB 8 ER Experience Preferred attention Kevin Eldred. opment single copy elements within that district. Work Applications are available at The Bulletin - Job stability and a positive team environment schedule will be Thursda throu h Monda ExcellentBenefit Package front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or 8AM to 4:30PM with Tuesda and Wednesan electronic application may be obtained d a off. Requires good communication skills, a To express interest in this opportunity, please apply online at ~ Equal Opportunity Employer upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 www.interfor.com/careers. email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to We appreciate the interest of all applicants, however, only those multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong selected for an interview will be contacted. Visit Dur website at ~ wchcd.or or contact I No pho ne calls please. service/team orientation, sales and problem All applicants offered a position must successfully complete a solving skills. Must be insurable to drive compre-employment drug test. Linda Childerse ~541 426-5313 * No resumes will be accepted * pany vehicle. Send resume to: mewing@bendbulletin.com Interfor is an Equal Opportunity Employer Drug test is required prior to employment. Applications are available at the front desk. EOE. building a capable, committed, diverse 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 workforce. No phone inquiries please. 9-1-1 Public

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Serving Central Oregonsince 1903

Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE/Drug Free Workplace

All qualified applicants will receive conside ration for employment without regard to race, /NT E P F Q R ' color, religion, sex, national origin, protected veteran status, or disability.


G4 SUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

747

Employment Opportunities

Business Opportunities

870

Southwest Bend Homes Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

[Pp op ~Q DID YOU KNOW that Sunrise Village - 2575 not only does newssq. ft. home for sale paper media reach a by orig. owners, 3 Wildland Fire HUGE Audience, they bdrm/3 bath, 3 -car Fightersalso reach an ENarage, great room, Cooper Contracting GAGED AUDIENCE. 6 89,000. To m o r is now hiring entry Discover the Power of Sandy, 541-385-7932 level fire f ighters. 732 Newspaper Advertis(No exp. needed). 750 ing in six states - AK, Commercial/Investment Must be least 18 yrs ID, MT, OR 8 WA. For Redmond Homes Properties for Sale of age. Starting pay a free rate brochure $10.10/hr., plu s call 916-288-6011 or $4.02/hr. hazardous Looking for your next email HIGH PROFILE pay on the first 40 employee? cecelia©cnpa.com LOCATION IN h rs. C a l l Se a n (PNDC) Place a Bulletin help DOWNTOWN 541-948-7010 to wanted ad today and REDMOND schedule and interreach over 60,000 view or fo r m o re Need to get an ad readers each week. info. Your classified ad in ASAP? will also appear on bendbulletin.com Check out the which currently reFax it to 541-322-7253 classifieds online ceives over www.bendbnfletin.com The Bulletin Classifieds This commercial 1.5 million page building offers exUpdated daily views every month cellent exposure at no extra cost. WILDLAND along desirable NW Bulletin Classifieds FIREFIGHTERS 6th Street. Get Results! GFP Ente r prises Currently housing Call 385-5809 or Inc./ASP Fire - curThe Redmond place your ad on-line rently seeking qualified Spokesman newsat applicants for CRWB, paper offices, the bendbulletin.com ENGB, FFT 1 /ICT5 2,748 sq. ft. space is AND FFT2. No experiperfect for owner/ Look at: ence necessary: Entry user. Two private level and a dvanced offices and generBendhomes.com training provided. $14 ous open spaces. for Complete Listings of 627 to $32/hour DOE. Three parking Area Real Estate for Sale For more information Vacation Rentals places in back+ please reply to: street parking. 771 & Exchanges hr@gfpenterprises.com $259,000. Lots or call 541-967-8425. Deluxe furnished condo Call Graham Dent Apply on line at: 7th Mtn Resort, avail 541-383-2444 www.gfpemergency.com June-Sept.nightly, Excellent Lots Drug Free workplaceFor Custom Homes weekly, 5 star, many COMPASS,~ „.„, EOE - Veterans enIn NW and SE Bend a menities. 541 8 15 naetaatiag eeer Saaaeaa couraged to apply. Call for Information 7707, kar e nmichHarcourts The ellen Ohotmail.com Looking for your next Garner Group 632 employee? 541 -383-4360 Place a Bulletin help AptiMultiplex General House (structure only) TheearnerGroup.com wanted ad today and for sale in historic disreach over 60,000 CHECK YOUR AD trict, $1. 1 Bdrm, 1 readers each week. bath. House must be Your classified ad r emoved from l o t . will also appear on 775 Buyer responsible for bendbulletin.com all moving costs. 536 Manufactured/ which currently NW Colorado Ave. Do receives over 1.5 Illlobile Homes on the first day it runs not disturb t enant. million page views to make sure it is corksmccord Olive.com every month at List YourHome rect. nSpellcheckn and no extra cost. JandMHomes.com human errors do ocNew Homes Bulletin Classifieds We Have Buyers cur. If this happens to Nearing Completion Get Results! Get Top Dollar your ad, please conin NorthWest Call 385-5809 Financing Available. tact us ASAP so that Crossing or place 541-548-5511 corrections and any Call for Information your ad on-line at adjustments can be Harcourts The bendbulletin.com made to your ad. Garner Group 541-385-5809 541-383-4360 486 TheBulletin Classified TheGarnerGroup.com Independent Positions Where can you find a

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helping hand? Sales Help From contractors to Wanted: En e ryard care, it's all here getic kiosk sales in The Bulletin's person ne e ded immediately for the "Call A Service Central O r e gon Professional" Directory area. Secured locations, high com634 missions paid weekly! For more AptlMultiplex NE Bend information, please Only a few left! c all H oward a t Two 8 Three Bdrms 541-279-0962. You with Washer/Dryer can a ls o e m a il and Patio or Deck. tcoles@yourneigh- (One Bdrms also avail.) borhoodpublicafyfountain GlenApts tions.com for more 541.383.931 3 information. Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

WIM(t)(89

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

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00 528

Loans & Mortgages

636

Apt./Multiplex NW Bend

WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392. BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

LOCALMONEY:We buy secured trust deeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. 573

Business Opportunities WARNING The Bulletin recommends that you

i nvestigate eve r y phase of investment opportunities, espec ially t h os e fr o m out-of-state or offered by a person doing business out of a local motel or hotel. Investment o ff e rings must be r e gistered with the Oregon Department of Finance. We suggest you consult your attorney or call CON S UMER HOTLINE, 1-503-378-4320,

8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri.

Beautiful studio on Drake Park, incl utili

ties/WiFi, open Sat./Sun. $925. 408-322-0904 648

Houses for Rent General PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

Two Twin Yamaha TW200 st o ck w ith fatty tires 2006 with 1155 miles, 2007 with 1069 miles. $3775 for one or $7250 for two obo. 5 4 1 -588-0068 cell, 541-549-4834 hm

Motorhomes

tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 41-385-5809

2006 Smokercraft Sunchaser820 model pontoon boat 75HP Mercury and electric trolling motor, full canvas and many extras. Stored inside $19,900 541-350-5425

ALLEGRO 27' 2002 Fleetwood D i scovery 58k mi., 1 slide, vaca- 40' 2003, diesel, w/all tion use only, Mich- options - 3 slide outs, elin all weather tires satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, w/5000 mi., no acci- etc., 34,000 m iles. dents, non-smokers, Wintered in h e ated Workhorse e n g i ne shop. $78,995 obo. 261-A, Allison Trans., 541-447-8664

The Bulletin 880 Motorhomes

backup cam e r a, heated mirrors, new refrig. unit., exc. conditioned, well cared for. $3 4 ,000. obo! 541-549-8737 Iv. msg.

The Bulletin

Call 54!-385-5809to promoteyour service• Advertise for 28 days starting at 'l40 piis speaol rteckagaisnoi ewiloble onour weissxe)

Building/Contracting Landscapin~ard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon LandyOOB tt n • • I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, law requires anyone scape Contractors Law tons of extras, low hrs. who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all Full wakeboard tower, construction work to businesses that adlight bars, Polk audio be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form speakers throughout, Construction ContracLandscape ConstrucNOTICE: completely wired for tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: All real estate adveramps/subwoofers, unactive license l anting, deck s , tised here in is sub850 derwater lights, fish means the contractor ences, arbors, ject to th e Federal finder, 2 batteries cusSnowmobiles is bonded & insured. water-features, and inF air Housing A c t , tom black paint job. Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irwhich makes it illegal Residential & $12,500 541-815-2523 CCB l i c ense at 2* Free Weehs rigation systems to be to advertise any prefwww.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the Commercialservices of Yard erence, limitation or Landscape Contrac1968 Cuddy 21 foot, contractor.com for over 25 years discrimination based tors Board. This 4-digit new outdrive rebuilt or call 503-378-4621. Maintenance with Eco-friendly on race, color, reliThe Bulletin recomnumber is to be inmotor, many e xtra ion, sex, handicap, mends checking with cluded in all adveroptions. parts. Excellent conSeryice inclldes: amilial status or na- 4-place enclosed Inter- d ition. tisements which indi$5,75 0 . the CCB prior to con• Mowing 541-699-7524 tional origin, or inten- state snowmobile trailer 541-480-1616 tracting with anyone. cate the business has • Edging tion to make any such w/ RockyMountain pkg, Some other trades a bond,insurance and also req u ire addi- • Weed Control workers compensa- Painting/Wall Covering preferences, l i mita- $8500. 541-379-3530 tional licenses and tion for their employtions or discrimination. • Fertilizer bought a new boat? certifications. ees. For your protecWe will not knowingly Just • Irrigation Sell your old one in the tion call 503-378-5909 accept any advertis- classifieds! Ask about our • Blowing Handyman or use our website: ing for real estate Super Seller rates! www.lcbistate.or.us to which is in violation of We also offer 541-385-5809 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, check license status this law. All persons htllwervtce before contracting with great shape, call for I DO THAT! are hereby informed 860 the business. Persons • Interior and Exterior landscaping that all dwellings ad- Motorcycles & Accessories info. $8500. In Bend doing land scape 661-644-0384. vertised are available including • Family-Owned maintenance do not on an equal opportupatios, fire pits, • Residential irt require an LCB nity basis. The BulleCommercial water features. cense. tin Classified 'Wfrerr siysisI up for a full • 40 years experience Open Floor plan with seasoe ofsrairrfgrranre. • Senior Discounts Handyman/Remodeling master on one side for LCB «ci153 • 5-year Warranties Resldenffal/Commerclal privacy. 3 bdrm, 2 • I I H arley Road K i n g 19' Pioneer ski boat, 541 n7$2nS'356 ttlgk about our bath, all with walk-in Stlall Jobs to newport avelandscaping.com 1983, vm tandem closets. Oversized ga- Classic 2003, 100th Ewire Roow Remodels SPRIIVG SPECIAL ! trailer, V8. Fun & rage and sunroom. Anniversary Edition, GarageOrgatgfzatiotg Call 541 420 7846 fast! $5350 obo. $89,000/ MLS 16,360 mi. $12,499 Home rtrspeclion Repairs Bruce 541-647-7078 Creg204918 541-815-0936. 201200073 Quality, Honest Work Cascade Realty, Magna 750cc Dennis Haniford, Princ. Honda Have an item to • 0 ttennfs 541-317.9768 motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 casttt 51573Bottr/er/rrnsured Broker SBNlsecnrrsxl0REGQN miles, $3250. sell quick? 1-541-536-1731 siege 20ss 541-548-3379 If it's under Landscaping/Yard Care Reglitentlal a commeggtal The Bulletin Planning a Move? '500you can place it in Sprinkler Choose a Realtor To Subscribe call Ilct!tlxtion/Repair The Bulletin With Experience. 541-385-5800 or go to Baek Flow Testing Call for Information www.bendbulletin.com Classifieds for:

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G6 sUNDAY, MAY 10, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.


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Caldera Springs


4 • Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

Index

ResultsfromTheBuletin's golfsurvey

GROWTH STILL PRIZED •5 COURSE GUIDE • 9-16 • After weathering the Great • We review everyCentral Oregon Recession,areacourses now try to course in this pullout section andtell grow the gameback you how youcanplay them— even the exclusiveones. CHANGES FOR 2015 • 6 • Bend Golf and Country Club begins JUNIOR GOLF • 17 • Central Oregon Junior Golf its most dramaticchangesinceit Association bouncing backwith a expanded to 18holes in 1973 large group of 6- to 8-year-olds. AREA TOURNAMENTS • 18 • Elite junior events highlight a packed Central Oregontournament schedule /r — r 0:.

BANKING ON BOARDS • 8 • Tetherow Golf ClubandAspen LakesGolf Courseget creative with the latest trend in golf — GolfBoard

CALENDAR • 19-22 • Looking for an event to playthis summer?We list themall right here Cover photo of the t8th hole at Brasada Ranch / Submitted by Brasada Ranch

Voted "FAVORITE GOLF COURSE" in Central Oregon

The Bulletin's 2015Central Oregongolf survety showsthat out of the 200 respondents, a vast majority show adesire to get better an see overwhelmingly positive results when they takeconcrete steps to play better In addition, nearly 70 percent of respondents think less time-consuming rounds arehe best way toattract more golfers. Q. What steps haveyou taken this past ear to improve your game? Receiv d golf-IInprove entstr tegies from a ewspaiwer,boo , magaine, vid orweb iteand riedtoi pleme tthem Bought eweq ipment Tookle sons Attende atlea t one clnic Q. Doyou consider yourself anavidgolfer? i

Yes

Went to a golf curse secificall to practic but didnotpla None

Q. Howmuch doyouestimateyouspend on golf each year, including course green 8 ePS e ec fees and/or memberships, golf cart rentals your scores? and/or golf lessons? Less than $500 to $999 $500 More than ~ ~ $10,000 $5,001 to $10,000

Yes No

Q. Do youthink $1,000to you are well $2,499 informed about how to begin lessons or where to attend a golf clinic? $2,500 to $5,000

Q. Doyou plan to spendmore or less on golf this year thanyou did in 2014? Less

Yes

Q. Doyou plan to practice more on your game this season?

Yes

More Roughly thesame

Purchase a River's Edge Golf Pass for just $59 and receive up to 40/o off regular green fees! Golf Pass also indudes participation in River's Edge Club events, as well as pro shop and golf lesson discounts.

Q. What would get you to playmore golf? Less ex ensive I alread playa much s I can Roundstookle s time t play

Annual unlimited play memberships starting at $1550

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Iflwas etter Less ch Ilengin andm re fun Source: The Bulletin's 20ts Central Oregon golf survey

Q. What is the most promising way toget nongolfers or casual players more interested in the ame? Morea cessibl six-an nine-hole rouds GolfBo rds(po ergolf art, skateb ardhybid) Speedg If(aro nd that actors score a dtime) Larger ups FootGo (agolfsoccer ybrid) Greg Cross/The Bulletin


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 5

A errecession, rowt sti By Zack Hall

ing the new-age golfer while

Special to The Bulletin

maintaining the rich traditions

game," says Erik Nielsen, head golf pro at Bend Golf and CounCentral Oregon spent the of the game," says Louis Ben- try Club. 'Tm still optimistic better part of the 1990s and nett, the head pro at Tetherow about golf: It is such a pure 2000s opening golf courses in Bend. "It's not an easy task game that builds so many valulike they were Starbucks. This w hatsoever. But that i s t h e able skills and relationships." region has 30 golf courses, 21 battle that we, along with the As the 2015 season tees of which were built after 1988, PGA of America, USGA, R&A off, Central Oregon golfers part of a national building (Great Britain's Royal & An- should be getting used to boom in golf. cient) and all of golf's govern- spotting signs that facilities Of course, the Great Reces- ing bodies, have to fight every have embraced grow-thesion ended all that, both here day." game initiatives. and nationally. That too fits a national patFootGolf? Courses as diSince, some of the sharpest tern in which golf's governing verse as Awbrey Glen Golf golf professionals in the local bodies have fought to reverse Club in Bend, The Greens at industry have been perpetu- slumping participation. Redmond and even Pronghorn ally pondering ways to attract How effective has that fight Club have made room for the more golfers. In real terms, been? Well, the results have golf-soccer hybrid. thatmeans most courses have been mixed, with most facilGolfBoards? Aspen Lakes been trying to find ways to of- ities reporting improvement Golf Course in Sisters and fer quicker rounds, alternative over the leanest years but still Bend's Tetherow are two of forms of golf, and less-intimi- well below the highest times. the pioneers that have already "We're still not back to the adopted a fleet of the golf dating ways to learn the game. "Chris van der Velde (man- days of 10 years ago, but I'm cart-skateboard hybrids made aging partner at Tetherow pleased that the golf industry by a Bend company. And more Golf Club) and I talk every day has been working so diligent- courses will most certainly about the challenge of satisfy- ly to generate interest in the follow.

r i ze i n o

Also, courses everywhere doubts that the industry will have beefed up more tradition- return to the high-flying days al efforts to attract golfers, such before the recession anytime as beginning golf clinics aimed soon. at junior golfers and ladies. For one, golf faces an impa"I am still very optimistic

tient culture in which would-be

about the future of our great game," says Zach Lampert, the head golf pro at Meadow Lakes Golf Course in Prineville. "Golf

golfers are often unwilling to

courses are working hard to

grow thegame by coming up with fun initiatives to create new golfers, and I believe that we will continue to do t h is

and reap the rewards of our efforts." Still, Lampert and o thers

spend the ample time it takes

to become proficient at such a challenging game, Bennett says. "We are becoming so acclimated with the get-it-now mentality that I'm genuinely afraid that new players will not be willing to put forth the time and effort it takes to even

acknowledge that golf faces serious challenges with a changing culture. "These things go in cycles, and right now golf is not as

be an average player," Bennett says. "Golfprofessionals and golfcourses are trying to be inventive and creative, and I think those efforts have helped us maintain the level at which

we currently sit. But in the long country as it was 10 years ago," run are they sustainable? I Lampert says. guess only time will tell." Like L a m p ert, Be n nett Continued next page popular with the youth in our

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6 • Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

Changes at area's oldest courseamong many in region By Zack Hall Special to The Bulletin

Crews work on

Bend Golf and Country Club embodies the very defi-

removing a group

nition of "venerable."

of trees

The private facility in south-

along the

east Bend this year is cele-

fairway of the first

brating its 90th season of golf, making it by far the oldest golf

holeas part of an improvement project at

course in Central Oregon. But that does not mean that Bend

Golf and Country Club can't change. Bend G8CC is in the processof adopting a new master plan, hiring Portland-based

Bend Golf

and Country Club.

architect Dan Hixson to de-

Ryan BrenneckeI The Bulletin

vise a way to spruce up the classically designed country club. Hixson, wh o d e signed highly regarded Wine Valley Golf Course in Walla Walla, Washington, among other notable golf courses, has devised master plans for some of the Northwest's most historic golf courses, including Portland Golf Club. "Instead of saying you need an overhaul or a renovation,

using those big words that usually carry big price tags, (Hixson) basically says this is what you are going to work

since it expanded to 18 holes in 1973.

N i elsen, That project helped open Bend G&CC's longtime head up the ponderosa pine-lined professional. "He has a goal courseto make it s characterfor everything." istically tight fairways more The details of the master forgiving. The second, sevplan have yet to be finalized, enth and 18th holes show the but already work has begun. most difference, Nielsen says. Earlier this spring the golf "(The master plan) gives us course removed some 200 a road map for what we need toward," says Erik

trees, which Nielsen has characterized as th e m ost d r amatic change at Bend G8cCC

From previous page Tetherow has been aggressive in its player-development strategies, and it seems to dream up ambitious ways to interest new golfers each year.

Bend Golf and Country Club expects more changessome modest, such as changes

Sunriver Meadows In April, Sunriver Resort c ompleted the w ork o f r e -

Sunriver's Crosswater Club as well as its Woodlands and Meadows courses. The total

to mowing patterns, and some building all 18 of the Meadows cost to replace all 54 greens more dramatic, like changing Course greens. Now when is more than $1.2 million, acthe bunkering — in the com- Meadows opens for the season cording to Sunriver. ing years. on Memorial Day weekend, Meadows was renovated The reaction so far? golfers will have the pleasure by John Fought in 1999, but "It's been fairly positive," of putting on a smooth, hardy slowly, Poa annua, an annual Nielsen says. "People have strain of bentgrass, called T-l. bluegrass, began to creep onto been pretty excited about it. The May 22 opening will the putting surface, which to create a better golf course," Our members have been in- also mark the completion of is inevitable in t h e P acific Nielsen says. "The trees were credibly patient, understand- an ambitious five-year pro- Northwest. ing and helpful." a big part of that." gram to replace every green at Continued next page

ship by simply focusing on game — and to Awbrey Glen. making its members better The result? "Excitement is up and we are golfers. Awbrey Glen's professional staff immersed itself in seeing growth at a faster pace," clinics and coaching programs, says Tim Fraley, Awbrey Glen's hosted f r equent e q uipment head golf professional and diAwbrey Glen Golf Club in demo days, and offered tips on rector of player development. Bend has also been aggressive the first tee and rounds of golf "As PGA professionals, it is in player development. with its pros. It also structured important that we get out there Last season, the private club the dinics to be more social. with the people to play, teach completely overhauled the way The idea is that better players and cultivate fun. As seen from it interacted with its member- will be more connected to the our last-year numbers on retail

sales and member satisfaction lots of golf courses to fill, after surveys, our new player devel- all. And it still has a long way opment approach is working." togo. "Golf courses are still overThat alone is reason for optimism, and facilities will con- built in many areas, induding tinue to try to make golf more Central Oregon," says Bend enjoyable for those who choose Golf and Country Club's Nielto play the game. sen. "I'm anxious for the day In the end, golf is not going when our efforts in generating anywhere. But it could use golferscreate the demand to more players. make each golf course more Central Oregon does have profitable."


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 7

ult will always be a difficult course for better

From previous page Not only will the T-1 bent-

grass give Meadows pristine greens throughout the resort,

players to make birdies ... but we're trying to make it easier for the average golfer to make pars andbogeys, which keeps the game fun.n

the surfaces should drain more efficiently and recover from — Louis Bennett, Tetherow's head golf professional cold weather more quickly, extending the golf season in both spring and fall. overtheyearsfrom Bend archi- says Chris van der Velde, man"The nice thing for us is that tect David McLay Kidd's origi- agingpartner at Tetherow. we've done all of this during nal design. "It will always be a difficult challenging (economic) times," That work continued over course for betterplayers to Josh Willis, Sunriver Resort's the past year, including a sig- make birdies — we don't want director of golf, said earlier nificant change to Tetherow's to change that — but we're trythis year. "We're hoping that signature par-3 17th hole to ing to make it easier for the avthe light is bright for us in the createa farsafertee shot.Tethe- erage golfer to make pars and near future in terms of growing row vastly expanded the green, bogeys, which keeps the game golf and growing golf rounds which is set at the bottom of an fun," says Louis Bennett, Tethein Central Oregon. And we're old pumice quarry, to about 50 row's head golf professional. ready to roll." yards from front to back. Tetherow also worked on the Black Butte Ranch Tetherow Golf Club green of the par-3 seventh hole. The sprawling resort just The links-style gem in Bend There the course reduced the northwest of Sisters has taken has a reputation for being di- size of a dramatic hump in the on two projects this spring at abolical.The fescue-carpeted back-right portion of the green, its Big Meadow course. First, it fairways and greens, the un- flattened out the back of the resurfaced the putting green on predictable bounces off hilly green and added an upper tier the 185-yard, par-3 13th hole. lies, and bunkers that can feel to add two more pin positions. Also, Phil Lagao, the superlike a scene from"Return of the In addition, Tetherow added intendent at Black Butte Ranch, Jedi"can indeed frustrate some three new tees and replaced and his staff have spent the golfers. severalwaste areas to replace month of April improving all 65 Tetherow has softened a bit heavily trafficked native areas, of Big Meadow's bunkers.

The crew has packed down the sand and soil of each bunker, and the drainage on some bunkers has been repaired. Then the crews freshened each hazard with new sand. As a final touch, the crew deaned up

Lakes plansto renovate several

of the tee boxes throughout the course as the season progresses, Lampert says. Pronghorn Club near Bend has added FootGolf on its driving range. FootGolfa golf-soccer hybrid in which "golfers" kick a soccer ball to

the turf edges of everybunker. The bunker project is nearly complete, and Lagao says the giant holes, but strokes are 13th green should be back to counted as they would be in 100 percent by Memorial Day golf — will be open to the pubweekend. lic, and there will be no charge formembers and resortguests Other changesofnote on Wednesdays and Saturday • Quail Run Golf Course in nights, saysJerrelGrow,ProngLa Pine reworked its 10th hole, horn's head professional. • The O ld B ack N i ne a t reshaping the left-front bunker and expanding the left side of Mountain High in Bend has the green. In addition, it re- added a small fleet of power m oved sometrees,cleaned out carts and new walking carts, the fronting pond and installed says club manager Mark a new fountain. In addition, Reisinger. • Aspen Lakes Golf Course Quail Run purchased a fleet of 55 electric power carts. will expand its fleet of Golf• Meadow Lakes Golf Course Boards, a skateboard-golf cart will receive a new fleet of golf hybrid made by a Bend-based carts arriving about July 1, company,to morethan adozen. "which we are really looking The Sisters course and Tetheforwardto," says Zach Lampert, row are the only two Central head pro at Prineville's munici- Oregon facilities with a fleet of pal course. In addition, Meadow GolfBoards.

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8 • Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

Local coursesget innovative with GolfBoards By Zack Hall Special to The Bulletin

Golf will have to get inventive to attract new players to the game. At least, that is the

consensus in the golf industry. Spurred by slumping participation in recent years, golf

courses across the country have been searching for fresh

ideas — from FootGolf (a golf-soccer hybrid) to expanded hole sizes — in an effort to draw new players. This year, though, Central Oregon may become known as the birthplace of a sport that

could be as promising as any in luring new golfers: speedgolf played on GolfBoards. Saywhat? Start with the premise of

speedgolf, a niche game (with some Bend roots) that combines running and golf with the aim to shoot the lowest

score possible in the shortest possible time. Then take a GolfBoard, a golf cart-skate-

board hybrid, made by a Bendbased company, that allows golfers to zip around ..

the course. Finally, take two imagina-

ing to make it a really cool

tive area golf clubs — Teth-

de, the managing partner of

erow Golf Club in Bend and Aspen Lakes Golf Course in

Tetherow, who often welcomes

event," says Chris van der Vel-

70s that loved to ride them last outside-the-box golf ideas. Both Aspen Lakes and Teth- year. It's kind of fun.... It's a erow plan to host speedgolf- really unique product. "If you can introduce a prodGolfBoards — to replace the boarding events during the running aspect of speed- golf season. Details had yet to uct that makes it more fun for golf with a joy ride on those be finalized for either course kids and you can play faster, GolfBoards. by deadline for this publica- it should increase your golf Add it all together and you tion, but Tetherow plans to participation." Jeff Dowell, the president of have a sport — call it speed- host a weekly league on Tuesgolfboarding — that is unique day evenings and open the GolfBoard Inc. who grew up to the region. And one that par-3 course to the sport one in Bend, is hesitant to attribute particularly makes sense here Monday each month. Aspen all of Tetherow's growth to his in Central Oregon. Lakes wants to set aside time company's product. "It is a n i n n ovative ap- in the evening or early mornStill, there has been enough proach," says Rob Malone, ings for speedgolfboarding positive reaction in the past director of golf at Aspen and is also considering a more two years to believe that GolfBoards will increasingly be Lakes. "It is also keep- formal event. a fixture at golf courses here ing with the (active) culSisters, two of the pioneers that have already adopted

ture of Central Oregon, with all th e mountain

"I think we're pretty --I bl k i ng, hiking, running, darn confident that — paddleboarding a n d this is not a fad." kayaking." The sport effectively tees off later this month when Tetherow hosts boarding tournament. On May 29, Tetherow

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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo

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— Jeff Dowell, president of Bend-based GolfBoard, Inc.

and elsewhere. "I think we're pretty darn confident that this is not a fad," says Dowell. "This is a real

thing and it has staying power. People want it."

Seeing Aspen Lakes and Tetherow take the GolfBoards

a step further by integrating Both courses see promise GolfBoards into a n a c t ual in the GolfBoards. For one, game can only help, he adds. In fact, he considers such will open its driving unlike golf carts, which generrange (which converts ally are restricted to fairways on-course innovations "critto a par-3 course) for and cart paths and are not ical" to the future health of a d emonstration allowed near the putting sur- GolfBoards. "I personally think it's going e vent. Then o n face,the boards allow golfers May 30, a maxi- to move directly to their ball to be wildly successful," Dowmum of 96 golfers and take players to the edge of ell says. "We'll see. If I knew that I could play 18 holes in will tee off in the the green. GolfBoard Open, The idea must be intriguing. an hour and 25 minutes in the an 18-hole event GolfBoardshave been among eveningIw ouldplay oneday a with spots open to the most raved-about products week. I'd do it in a heartbeat." the past two years at the PGA The golf industry has spethe public. Champion surf- Merchandise Show in Orlan- cifically targeted three things that will improve the longer Laird Hamilton, do, Florida. "It retains the general in- term health of the game: The a c o ntributor t o the design of Golf- tegrity of the game, while sport must better appeal to a Boards, is expected starting to eliminate the time younger audience, it needs to to be on hand. And constraints that stop a lot of become a more family-centric the event should people from playing regular- game, and it has to take less time to play. have many of ly," Malone says. Van der Velde says that last The GolfBoard, van der Velthe trappings of a b ig-time year, rounds ticked up some de says, is one of the few inno20 percent after Tetherow in vations that can affect all three tournament. The w in- August received its fleet of 30 needs. "You have to have creative n er wil l g e t GolfBoards, becoming the first golf club in the country to ideas to make (golf) fly," van his or her own have a fleet. der Velde says. "And I think GolfBoard. "We are go"Bend is such an active com- this one of the fun ones." the first-ever speedgolf-

Paul Hodge rides a GolfBoard while playing at Tetherow Golf Club last summer.

munity and our membership is so young and active," van der Velde says. "I think we had four or five guys in their


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10• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015 The unique red cinder bunkers at AspenLakes are asrecognizable as perhaps anyfeature on any course in the region. The Sisters course is lined with ponderosa pinesand is achallenge for golfers of every skill level. The course has aquality set of par 5s, and its 222-yard, par-315th hole is amongthe toughest pars in the region. Number ofholes:18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:16900Aspen Lakes Dr., Sisters Tee times:541-549-4653 Course stats:Par 72, 7,302 yards Green fees:Through June 9, $65 Fri.Sun., $60 Mon.-Thur.; June10-Oct. 7, $75 daily; after Oct. 7, $45

Website www.aspenlakes.com Tee Rating Slope Black M 75.4 141 Blue M 73.6 139 White M

Gold M White W

Gold W Red W

71.9 69.7 77.7 75.1 72.6

132 125 145 140 131

Big Meadow:Thecourse is now 43 years old, but thanks to a relatively recent renovation, golfers will still find a well-bunkered, straightforward layout that is welcoming to players of all abilities. In addition, the views of the surrounding mountains on the back ninecanmakefor a breathtaking finish. Glaze Meadow:The35-year-old golf course is maturing into a must-play track in Central Oregon after a John Fought redesign three years ago.GlazeMeadow's new design utilizes classical elements, including grass-faced bunkers andturtleback greens that hearken back to the goldenera of golf design.

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Power cart:$17 Director of golf:Rob Malone Director of player develpment:Howie Pruitt Course designer:Bill Overdorf (original nine, 1997; second nine, 1998) Extras:Putting green, driving range, pro shop, practice bunker, clubhouse, restaurant

i

Numberofholes:36— GlazeMeadow (18) and BigMeadow(18) Status: Openseasonally Location:Eight miles northwest of Sisters on U.S.Highway20 Tee times:BigMeadow, 541-595-1545; Glaze Meadow,541-595-1270 Coursestats:BigMeadow, par72,7,002 yards; GlazeMeadow,par 72, 7,007yards Greenfees:Through May21,and October, $47; May23-June19, $67; June 21-Sept. 30, $77 Power cart:Single $22, $32 to share Director of golf:Jeff Fought

Head golf professionals:Terry Anderson, Big Meadow;TomBaker, Glaze Meadow Coursedesigners:Big Meadow: Robert Muir Graves (1972); GlazeMeadow: Gene "Bunny" Mason (1980), John Fought redesign (2012) Extras:Twodriving ranges, putting greens, chipping and bunker practice areas at both courses Website:www.blackbutteranch.com BIG MEADOW

Tee Black M

Rating Slope 73.3

130

Blue M White M

70.7 69

Red M

66

White W

130 125

118

74.4 Red W 71.2 GLAZE MEADOW Black M 72.7 Blue M 70.5 White M 6 8.3 Red M 65.5

139 131

GoldM

6 3.4

10 9

White W

73.5 70.2 67.6

136 126 118

Red W GoldW

133 128

12 0 113

The scenic regulation course overlooks theCrookedRiver Gorge,and it remains popular for golfers of all skill levels despite its relatively short length. Thesignature 260-yard, par-4 fifth hole caneasily be managedwith two short irons, or more adventurous golfers will take theshortcut over the gorge andplay the hole as a225-yard par 3. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:5195 Club House Road, Crooked River Ranch Tee times:541-923-6343 Course stats:Par 71, 5,818yards Green fees:Through Sept. 30, $49 Friday through Sunday,$42 weekdays;

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October, $41 weekends, $37weekdays; November through February, $31 daily Power cart:$15 Head golf professional:PatHuffer Coursedesigners:Original nine: Wiliam McPherson (1978);secondnine: Jim Ramey (1994) Extras:Driving range, pro shop, chipping and bunker practice area, two

practice putting greens Website:www.crookedriverranch.com Tee Rating Slope Bk Blue M

Blue M White M Blue W White W

Red W

67.1 66.4 65 66.4 70.1 67.9

117 113 109 113 122 116

The municipal golf course in Madras utilizes a flat, straightforward design that will not intimidate golfers of any skill level. It does havesomespectacular mountain views, and it is a good place for beginning golfers to play a regulation-length course. Number ofholes: Nine Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:565 NWAdler St., Madras Tee times:541-475-6368 Course stats:Par 36, 3,231 yards Green fees:$12for nine holes and $19 for18, weekdays; $14for nine and$22

for 18, weekends Power cart:$20 (can be shared) Head golf professional:None Extras:Putting green, driving range (at separate site), clubhouse Email:desertpeaksgolf©gmail.com Website: www.desertpeaksgolf.com

Tee Black M White M

Red M White W

Red W

Rating Slope 69 68.2 64.4 74.4 69.6

112 110 103 123 115


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 11 Resort Course:Theoldest of the three courses atEagleCrest is for the most part a position golf course, with tight fairways andsmall greens. Thenarrow 481-yard, par-5 secondholerequires precise shots to thebottom of asmall, juniper-lined canyon,and it takes asharp right turn toward thegreen about 350 yards from thetee box.

Ridge Course:Thecourse is loosely lined with junipers and hasplenty of rough to work with, offering freedom to play a driver. In other words, aggressiveness can berewarded. On aclear day, players are greeted at the teebox of the downhill, 190-yard 12th hole by unobstructed views of Mount Jefferson and Mount Hood.

Challenge Course:Similar in appearance and feel to the Ridge, theChallenge is not necessarily for beginners despite its short length. The18-hole, 4,160-yard, par-63 track has anequal number of par 3sandpar 4s. But with holes such asthe398-yard, par-4 fourth, the ChallengeCourse is no pitch-and-putt course.

Number ofholes:54 — Ridge Course (18), Resort Course (18), Challenge Course (18) Status:Twocourses open year-round, weather permitting; Resort Course open seasonally Location:1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond Tee times:541-923-4653 Coursestats:Challenge Course, par 63, 4,160 yards; Resort Course, par 72, 6,704 yards; RidgeCourse, par 72, 6,974 yards Greenfees:ChallengeCourseThrough May 22and Oct. 13-Nov. 9, $35 daily; May 23-Oct. 12, $44 daily; after Nov. 10, $25daily. Resort and Ridge courses —Through May 22and Oct. 13-Nov. 9, $55 daily; May23-0ct. 11, $74 daily; after Nov.10, $35 daily (Ridge only).

Power cart:$17 RIDGE COURSE Director of golf:Ron Buerger Tee Rating Slope Director of instruction:TamBronkey Gold M 73.4 137 Course designers:Resort: Gene"BunBlack M 71.7 129 ny" Mason (1986); Ridge: JohnThronBlue M 6 9.6 12 6 son (1992); Challenge:JohnThronson White M 67 123 (1999) Extras:Real-grass 18-hole putting Red M 63.6 115 course, two driving ranges, several Blue W 74.9 136 practice greens, clubhouse, restaurant, White W 72.2 131 golf academy Red W 67.6 123 Website:www.eagle-crest.com RESORTCOURSE

CHALLENGECOURSE

Tee Black

Tee

Blue M White M

Red M Blue W White W

Red W

Rating Slope 71.6 69.7 66.8 64.9 75.6 71.7 69.4

132 127 122 117 139 132 128

Blue M White M

Red M Purple W White W

Red W

Rating Slope 61.5

112

60

106

57.7

101

61.8

115

61.1 57.7

114 98

The Greens atRedmondhasmadesignificant improvements to its conditioning since new ownership took over in 2014. Atrue executive course with14 par 3s andfour par 4s, the short layout is well-designed and enough to test most golfers. It is ideal for those with three hours or less to spend ongolf. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location: 2575SW GreensBlvd., Redmond Tee times:541-923-0694 Course stats:Par 58, 3,554 yards

Green fees:$32 daily Power cart:$20 (Can beshared) Head golf professional:None Course designer:Robert Muir Graves (1996) Extras:Indoor driving facility, putting green and practice bunker, pro shop,

snack bar, banquet/meeting facilities Website:www.greensatredmondgolf. com Tee Blue M Blue W

Juniper is cast across the high desert terrain, winding through juniper trees andlavarock. Hard andfast conditions make the course a challenge toeventhe most skilled golfers, and its speedy bentgrass greensare its hallmark. If the prevailing wind is up, the 478-yard, par-417th hole is arguably the toughest par in Central Oregon.

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Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:1938 SWElkhorn St., Redmond Tee times:541-548-3121 Course stats:Par 72, 7,186yards Greenfees:Through May24andSept. 9-Oct. 31, $50 daily; May 25-Sept. 8, $60 weekdays, $66 weekends/holi-

days; Nov. 1-Dec. 2, $40 daily; after Dec. 2, $20 Power cart:$15 Head golf professional: Bruce Wattenburger Course designer:John Harbottle III (2005) Extras:Driving range, putting green, practice pitching green, restaurant, banquet facility

Website www.playjuniper.com Tee Rating Slope Black M

Green M White M

Red M White W

GoldW Red W

74 71.1 68.3 63.5 74.2 70.7 67.8

130 126 123 113 135 128 122


12• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

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The front nine of Central Oregon's northernmost course utilizes a straightforward layout in which aggressiveness is rewarded throughout. The backnine, designed four years after the front nine, is awholly different position course. The two nines make up a moderately challenging layout with a serenesetting at the bottom of a steeply walled high desert canyon. Golfers sometimes feel like they havethe track to themselves, particularly on weekdays. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location: 6823 Highway8,Warm Springs Tee times:541-553-4971 Stats:Par 72, 6,352 yards Green fees:Through Oct. 15,

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$40 unlimited play Power cart:$30 (can be shared) Head golf professional: Joe Rauschenburg Course designers:Original nine: William Bell (1972); second nine:Gene "Bunny" Mason (1976) Extras:Putting green, driving range,

snackbar Website:www.kahneeta.com Tee Rating Slope Blue M White M

70.4 67.9

122 117

Red M

65

106

White W

73.7 67.9

127 117

Red W

The southeast Bendcourse is primarily a position golf course that cuts through ponderosa pines with doglegs present to some degree onevery hole except the four par 3s. Thecourse's best-known hole is the141-yard, par-316th, a short hole with a massive green that just happens to besurrounded by water.

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Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:60205 Sunset View Drive, Bend Tee times:541-385-1818 Course stats:Par 72, 7,003 yards Green fees:Through June11, $54 daily; June 14-Oct. 4, Mon.-Thur., $63; Fri.-Sun., $74;Oct. 5-Nov. 7,$42 daily;

after Nov. 8, $36 daily Power cart:$10-$14 Director of golf:Brian Whitcomb Director of instruction:Bob Garza Course designer:Brian Whitcomb (1996) Extras:Putting green, driving range and short-game area, restaurant, pro shop, learning facility Website:www.losttracks.com

Tee One M Two M Three M Four M Two W Three W Four W

Rating Slope 72.7 70.1

136 126

6 8.6

12 6

65.2 75.3 74.1 70.3

120 145 144 132

The course, which doubles asPrineville's wastewater treatment facility, is everything a municipal course should be. It is relatively affordable, easily accessible, andwell-maintained. Water comes into play on every hole in the form of either the Crooked River or the course's 10man-madelakes, which helps the course provide aworthy challenge to golfers of all abilities. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location: 300SW Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville Tee times:541-447-7113 Course stats:Par 72, 6,783 yards Green fees:Through Sept. 30, $34, Mon.-Thur.; $39, Fri.-Sun. Oct. 1-0ct.

31, $30 daily. After Nov. 1,$25 daily Power cart:$15 Head golf professional:Zach Lampert Course designer:Bill Robinson (1993) Extras:Putting green, driving range, restaurant, pro shop Website: www.meadowlakesgc.com

Tee Black M

Green M Blue M White M

Red M Blue W White W

Red W

Rating Slope 72.1 70.5 68 64.6 62.8 73.9 70.4 67.9

125 123 118 111 105 135 127 121

A regulation-length, nine-hole golf course, the OldBack Ninehas madereal improvements in its conditioning in recent years. An easily walkable layout, the course twists through ponderosa pinesandthe Mountain High neighborhood in southeast Bend. Thecourse is an appealing option for golfers looking to avoid formality. Number ofholes: Nine Status: Openseasonally Location: 60650ChinaHatRoad,Bend Tee times:541-382-1111 Course stats:Par 36, 2,882 yards

Green fees:Through May21, $22 for nine holes, Mon.-Tues.; $26, Wed.-Sun. May 22-Sept. 7, $26, Mon.-Tues.; $30, Wed.-Sun. After Sept. 8, $22 daily. Power carts:$10

Head golf professional:None Course designer:JanWard (1987) Extras:Putting green, clubhouse, snackbar Website:www.oldbacknine.com


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 13 Heavily woodedwith ponderosa pines, Quail Run, just north of La Pine, is considered by many Central Oregonians to bea hidden gem.Thecourse is generally well-conditioned andevery bit as fun and challenging to play as its more-heralded counterparts in the region. It is a consistent course throughout, with the 451-yard, dogleg-right18th hole making for a test at the finish. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openseasonally Location: 16725 Northridge Drive, La Pine Tee times:541-536-1303 or 800-895-GOLF Course stats:Par 72, 6,897 yards Green fees:Through May14 and after

Oct. 1, $42 daily; May15-Sept. 30, $55 daily Power cart:$13 Director of golf:ToddSickles Course designer:Jim Ramey(original nine, 1991; second nine, 2006) Extras:Driving range, putting and chipping area, practice bunkers, snack bar, pro shop

Website:www.golfquailrun.com Tee Rating Slope Blue M 73.4 137 White M

70.7

133

Gold M

69.6

13 1

White W

76.3 75.3 71.4

146 143 130

Gold W Red W

Nestled ontheeast side of Awbrey Butte, River's Edgecan bea hard placeto find flat ground. That makesit a particular challenge for golfers not accustomed toplaying hillside lies. But River's Edgealso offers somedramatic views of Bend, andnoplace is that more apparent than on the tee box of No.16, a216-yard par-3 with panoramic views of Pilot Butte andthe surrounding city. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:400 Pro ShopDrive, Bend Tee times:541-389-2828 Course stats:Par72, 6,683 yards Green fees:Through May21and Sept.

8-Nov.1, $47 daily; May 22-Sept. 7, $59 daily; after Nov. 12,$39 daily Power cart:$17 Head golf professional:Troy Eckberg Course designer:Robert Muir Graves (1988, original nine; 1992, second nine) Extras:Driving range, putting green, chipping area, pro shop, restaurant

Website:www.riverhouse.com Rating Slope Tee Blue M 72.2 139 Gold M 71.1 134 White M White W Red W

69.6 75.2 71.4

130 145 135

With a full-size driving rangeand nine holes, none of which measures longer than 104yards, Smith Rock should betreated as a true practice facility. That makesthe pitch-and-putt course a placefor experienced golfers to work on their game or beginning golfers to learn the sport in a pressure-free environment. Number ofholes: Nine-hole par-3 course Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:1401 NEMaple Ave., Redmond

Tee times:None Information:541-923-3426 Course stats:Par 27,699 yards Green fees:$10 for nine holes, $16 for18

Head golf professional:None Course designer:Jim Ramey (2002) Extras:Full-size driving range, chipping and putting green, pro shop Website: www.smithtrockgolfcourse.com

Meadows:Whenit opens for the season, Meadows will feature18 newly resurfaced bentgrass greens. The course meanders through wetlands andsomeforest, but unlike at the resort's Woodlands course, the trees rarely come into play. As a result, the golf course is playable for golfers of most skill levels. But Meadowscan be atest evenfor highly skilled players. Woorgands:TheWoodlands spent four seasons replacing its greens one by onewith a hardy strain of bentgrass, completing the project in 2014.Woodlands requires more accuracy than Meadows. Thetrees frame andshapethe golf course, giving the track subtle doglegs rather than hard turns left or right. Woodlands is playable for most but challenging to all. Thur. and $109 Fri.-Sun. for all others; July 3-Sept.13: $79 Mon.-Thur. and (18) $99 Fri.-Sun. for Deschutes County residents; $99 Mon.-Thur. and$119 Status: Openseasonally.Meadows Fri.-Sun. for all others (Prices include opens May 22 cart) Location:In Sunriver, 15 miles south Director of golf:Josh Willis of Bend, west of U.S. Highway 97 Course designers:Meadows course, Tee times:541-593-4402 Course stats:Meadows, par 71, 7,012 John Fought redesign (opened1968; yards; Woodlands, par 72, 6,933 yards redesigned1999); Woodlands course, Robert Trent JonesJr. (1981) Green fees:Through May21 and after Sept. 28: $49 daily for Deschutes Extras:Driving range, practice facilities include chipping greenwith bunker, County residents, $59 for all others; putting green, andnine-hole putting May 22-July 2 andSept. 14-27: $79 course with bunkers (at Meadows) Mon.-Thur. and $89 Fri.-Sun. for Deschutes County residents; $99 Mon.Website:www.sunriver-resort.com Numberofholes:36 — Meadows course (18) andWoodlands course

MEADOWS

Tee Black M Blue M Tournament M White M Red M White W

Red W

Rating Slope 73.5 71.7 69.7 68.7 65.3 75.4 70.7

140 138 134 131 124 140 135

WOODLANDS

Tee Black M Blue M Tournament M Red M White W

Red W

Rating Slope 73.8 72.1 70.9 71 75.1 71

143 139 137 136 145 136


14• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

if ~ W I I J

The tiered greens ofWidgi Creekmakefor some ofthe most challenging putting surfaces in Central Oregon. Position off the tee on the heavily woodedcourse is far more important than length to obtain a good score. The216-yard, par-311th hole is tough in every way that canmakea par 3 a challenge, including a 200-yard forced carry over water and amultiple-tiered green.

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Number ofholes:18 Status: Openseasonally Location:18707 Century Drive, Bend Tuu times:541-382-4449 Course stats:Par 72, 6,905 yards Green fees:Through June 3andSept. 21-Oct. 18, $49 daily; June 4-Sept. 20, $79 daily; Oct. 19 through closing, $29 daily

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Power cart:$16 Head golf professional:Matt Phillips Course designer:Robert Muir Graves (1991, original nine; 1992, second nine) Extras:Driving range, short-game practice facility, putting green, restaurant, pro shop Websitu:www.widgi.com

Teu Black M Blue M White M

GoldM Green M White W

Gold W Green W

Rating Slope 72.7 70.5 67.3 63.7 60.1 72.6 68.7 61.9

139 134 123 119 109 140 128 114

Pronghorn's Nicklaus Course, namedafter its legendary designer, Jack Nicklaus, is considered amongthe elite public-access facilities in the nation by most national golf publications. It is one of the best-conditioned courses in Central Oregonand one of the region's most challenging. Thelayout offers a stark contrast between the lush green of the course andthe scraggly high desert that surrounds it. Number ofholus: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend Information:541-693-5300 How to play:Available to members and their guests, with limited play for general public Course stats:Par 72, 7,379 yards

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Wubsite: www.pronghorn.aubergeresorts.com Teu Rating Slope Tips M 75.2 151 Black M 73.8 147 Rust M

Gold M Rust W Silver W

Gold W

71.3 68.9 77 75.2 74.7

143 135 151 151 145

Recognized bymanynational publications as amongthe elite public-access facilities in the country, Tetherow was designed by renowned architect and Bendresident David McLay Kidd. Atest of golf throughout, Tetherow has astriking design using hard and fast fescue grassesthat provide a style of golf more like aScottish links course than atypical American layout.

I

Number ofholus: 18 Status: Openseasonally Location: 61240SkylineRanchRoad, Bend Teu times:541-388-2582 How to play:Available to members and their guests, with limited play for the general public Course stats:Par 72, 7,298 yards Green fees:Through May: $125daily; June-September: $175daily; October:

I

Green fees:Through Mayand in October: $145 daily; June1-Sept. 30: $210 daily (Prices include cart, range balls, forecaddie basefee) Head golf professional:Jerrel Grow Course designer:Jack Nicklaus (2004) Extras:Driving range, short-game area, putting green, indoor training facility, forecaddie services, snack bar and three restaurants

$105 daily (All prices include cart, range balls, forecaddie) GolfBoardrental:$20 Head golf professional:Louis Bennett Course designer:David McLay Kidd (2008) Extras:Driving range (with short-game course), two putting greens, indoor golf academy, clubhouse, two restaurants and snack bar Websitu:www.tetherow.com

Tuu Rating Slope 141 Kidd (Pro) M 74.9 Black M

Tan M Sage M Red M Tan W Sage W Red W

73.4 70.9 69.6

138 132 127

66

116

77.4 75.3 70.9

153 147 133

Nestled just west of AwbreyButte in west Bend,thewooded Awbrey Glenhas madegradual improvements to the course in recent years. Also, AwbreyGlenhas alearning center and afive-hole par-3 course. That has helped theclub embrace agame-improvement model in which thePGAstaff is focused on improving the play of its membership.

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Number ofholus: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location: 2500 NW AwbreyGlen Drive, Bend Information:541-385-6011 How fo play:Guestsmayplaywhen accompanied by amember. Awbrey Glen also offers a reciprocal rate for members of other area private clubs. Memberships available.

Course stats:Par 72, 6,957 yards Head golf professional:Tim Fraley Assistant headgolf professional: Tommy Berg Course designer: Gene "Bunny" Mason (1993) Extras:Pro shop, dual-ended driving range, learning center, additional fivehole par-3 golf course, restaurant, fitness center, pool Wubsitu:www.awbreyglen.com

Teu Green M GoldM White M

Yellow M Red M GoldW White W

Yellow W Red W

Rating Slope 72.9 71.1 69.1 66.7 65.7 77.4 75.2 72.1 70.8

138 137 129 123 122 141 136 131 127


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 15 The oldest golf course in Central Oregonembarked on athinning program in the offseason as part of its new master plan, which was created byDanHixson, a well-regarded Northwest architect. The classically designed course is still defined by ponderosa pines andits Poaannua greens. Bend G8CCfeatures tight fairways that put a premium on shot-making skills. Number ofholes:18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:61045 Country Club Drive, Bend Information:541-382-3261 Course stats:Par 72, 7,058 yards How to play:Guestsmayplaywhen accompanied by amember. Memberships available

Head golf professional:Erik Nielsen Course designers:Original nine: H. Chandler Egan,William Hanley (1925); second nine: BobBaldock (1973) Extras:Practice facilities include two chipping and putting greens, driving range, three greenside bunkers, 275yard practice hole, and a75-yard approach area. Fitness center, pool, restaurant, meeting/banquet facilities and tennis courts

Website:www.bendgolfclub.com Tee Black M

Blue M White M

GoldM Blue W White W

GoldW

Rating Slope 73.6 71.2 68.6 66.1 77.5 73.9 71.4

138 135 127 120 148 142 129

Co-designed byPeterJacobsen, the Portland native whowent on to play on the PGAand Champions pro tours, the desert course has areputation for being among the region's most enjoyable layouts. Massive fairways keeplesser-skilled golfers in play and challenging green complexeswill test highly skilled players. And every golfer should enjoy the panoramic views. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:16986 SWBrasada Ranch Road, Powell Butte Information:541-504-3200 How to play:Golf course open to Brasada club membersandtheir guests, with limited tee timesavailable for resortguests

Course stats:Par 72, 7,295 yards Director of golf:Zach Swoffer Head golf professional:Daniel Wendt Course designers:Peter Jacobsen and Jim Hardy (2006) Extras:Two-tiered driving range, and practice area that includes putting, chipping and bunker. Clubhouse, fitness facility, pool Website:www.brasada.com

Tee Jacobsen M Black M GoldM Silver M Red M GoldW Silver W Red W

Rating Slope 74.2 71.1

145 140

6 8.4

13 0

65.4 62.5 74.6 70.9 66.4

118 113 138 131 125

When it opened in1993, the TomWeiskopf/Jay Morrish design on Bend's west side helped usher in an era of high-end private golf in Central Oregon. Aclassic test of golf, BrokenTop is awell-manicured, parkland-style golf course that offers spectacular views of the Cascades. Its signature par-411th hole is memorable for the deeppumice pit guarding the green. Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openseasonally Location:62000 Broken TopDrive, Bend Information:Golf shop, 541-3830868; membership, 541-383-8200 How to play:Guests can play if accompanied or sponsored by amember. Golf course memberships areavailable

Course stats:Par 72, 7,161yards Head golf professional:Jim Cubillas Course designers:TomWeiskopf and Jay Morrish (1993) Extras:Driving range, putting course, two short-game practice facilities, clubhouse, pool, fitness facility Website:www.brokentop.com

Tee Black M Green M Silver M Gold M Green W Silver W Gold W

Rating Slope 73.7 71 68.2 70.4 77.1 73.4 70.4

142 134 123 130 153 143 130

Designed by Jim Ramey,Crosswater Club's now-retired director of agronomy, and BobCupp,Crosswater's architect, Caldera Links is considered bysomepublications to be amongthe best par-3 layouts in the country. Like Crosswater, Caldera Links utilizes the surrounding meadows to define the course. Number ofholes: Nine-hole par-3 course, with additional regulation-length par-3, par-4 andpar-5 holes Status: Openseasonally Location:Eastof entrance to Crosswater Club onSouth Century Drive in Sunriver

Information:541-593-4402 How to play:Nine-hole course available to Sunriver Resort guests, Caldera Springs homeowners andCrosswater Club members andtheir guests Course stats:Par 27,hole distances range from 60 to185 yards

Head golf professional:Josh Willis Course designers:Robert E. Cuppand Jim Ramey (2007) Extras:Putting green, retail outlet Website:www.calderasprings.com


16• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015 The best-known golf course in Central Oregon, Crosswater has anunmatched setting. Forced carries over the Deschutes and Little Deschutes rivers add hazard to Crosswater's lengthy setup. Agolfer's ability to hit precise approach shots into Crosswater's greens will be the difference between asolid score and arough day. With18 new bentgrass greens installed in 2012, the course has some ofthe best putting surfaces around.

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yM

Number nfholes: 18 Status: Openseasonally Location:17600CanoeCampDrive, Sunriver Information:541-593-4402 Hnw tn play:Available to members, guests of members andSunriver Resortguests only

Course stats:Par 72, 7,683 yards Director nf golf:Josh Willis Course designnr:Robert E. Cupp (1995) Extras:Driving range, putting and chipping greens, clubhouse with restaurant, snack bar, pro shop, locker facilities, pool Wnbsite:www.crosswater.com

Ten Rating Slope Gold M 76.6 146 Silver M 74.7 143 Championshi pM 73.7 140 Blue M 72.7 139 White M

69.8 64.3 73.4 75.7 72

Red M Gold W White W Red W

Red Front W 70. 9

Number nfholes: Nine Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location: 7120 OchocoHighway, Prineville Pro shop:541-447-7266 Hnw tn play:Guests mayplay whenaccompaniedbyamember. Memberships available

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Off-peak rates Through June 9:$39daily before7a.m.; Mon.Thurc $45 from 7-7:50 a.m.Weekends: $50 from7-7:50a.m.;$45daily from2-5 p.m.; $30 dailyafter 5p.m.Nineholes: $35from 8 a.m.-5p.m.,$25before8a.m. andager 5p.m. June 10-OcL 7: $45before 7 a.m., $60 from 7-7:50 a.m.,$65from1-2:50 p.m., $49after 3p.m.,$40after5p.m. Nineholes: $40from 8a.m.-5p.m.,$29before8a.m.andafter 5p.m. ANerOcL 7:$35 before 7:30 a.m.Nine holes:$20before7:30a.m., $25after. Families: $45,includingcart, forafamilyof four after 5p.m. BLACKBUTTERANCH BIG MEADOW AND GLAZE MEADOW

Through May 22:$42after 1 p.m.Nine holes(after2p.m.): $27daily. May 234unI19:$52dailybefore7:30 a.m. andager2 p.m. Nineholes: $37,after 3

p.m.;$27after5p.m. June 20-Sept. 30:$67daily before7:30 a.m.andafter 1p.m., $52after 3 p.m.(begins at 2 p.m.inSeptember). Nineholes: $37after3 p.m.;$27after5p.m. Families:$60for family of fourwith two juniors age17or younger. CROOKED RIVERRANCH

ThroughSeptember:Mon.-Thur.. $31 after 2 p.m.Weekends: $37after 3 p.m. Nine

holes ; Mon.-Thorc $23.50 before 2 p.m., $17.50 after.Week ends: $24 before 3 p.m., $22.50after. October: Mon.-Thurc$28after1p.m.Week-

ends;$32after 2 p.m.Nineholes: Mon,-Thurc $21.50before1 p.m., $16.50after. Weekends:

$23.50before2p.m., $17.50after. EAGLECRESTRESORT(REDMOND) ThroughIgay22 andOcL13-Nov. 9: ResortCourse,$29alter 2 p.m.; RidgeCourse, $35 after2p.m.;ChallengeCourse, $19aiter 2 p.m. Nineholes: Resort Course,$35before 2 p.m.,$29after; RidgeCourse, $35daily.

Head golf professional:None Course stats:Men's tees: par 32, front nine; par 33, back nine; 4,959 yards total. Women's tees: par 33, front; par 35, back; 4,531 yards total Course designers:Bob Hogan, Eddie Hogan, TedLongworth, Larry Lamberger (1950) Extras:Driving range, putting green,

practice bunker, bar andrestaurant Websitn:www.facebook.com/pages/ Prineville-Country-Club Ten Rating Slope W hite/Yellow M 64.1 11 6 Red/Blue M 62 101 White/Yellow W 68.7

121

Red/Blue W 6 4. 9

112

Pronghorn's FazioCourse — namedafter its famed designer, Tom Fazio — is amongthe most visually impressive golf courses anywhere andhas beenlisted among thecountry's best golf courses in somenational publications. The green complex on Fazio's187-yard, par-3 eighth hole makes it auniqueand spectacular golf hole. Number nfholes:18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend Information:541-693-5300 Hnw tn play:Guestsmayplaywhen accompanied by amember. Memberships available

ASPENLAKESGOLF COURSE(SISTERS)

135

The second-oldest golf course in Central Oregon, the nine-hole facility is a decidedly unpretentious private golf club. The throwback design weavesthrough the foothills east of Prineville, offering the uninitiated a surprising test of golf. The greens are considered by many to beamong theslickest in the region.

I

I

131 114 146 151 134

May 23-OcL 12:Resort Course,$57 from11 a.m.-2:59p.m., $39afler 3 p.m.; Ridge

Course,$49afler3p.m.;ChallengeCourse,$29 alter 3p.m.Nineholes: Resort Course, $49before 11 a.m., $39after; RidgeCourse, $49daily. THE GREEN SATREDMOND

Summer:$24after 3p.m.Nineholes:$22 daily. JUNIPER GOLFCOURSE(REDMOND) ThroughMay 24 andSept.9-Oct.31:

$40 afternoon.Nineholes:$31before noon, $26 after.

May 25Sept.8: Mon.-Thur.$45 from noon-4p.m.and$40(cart included)after4p.m. Weeken ds: $55fromnoon-4 p.m.;$50(cartincluded)after4p.m.Nine holes: Mon.-Thur: $36 fromnoon-4p.m.,$26after4p.m.Weekends; $40 from noon-4p.m., $26after 4p.m. Nov. 1-Dec.2:$30afternoon.Nineholes: $26 beforenoon,$21after. LOSTTRACKSGOLFCLUB(BEND) Through June 11:$39aiter noon.Nine holes;$35daily.

Course stats:Par 72, 7,447 yards Head golf professional:Jerrel Grow Course designer:Tom Fazio (2007) Extras:Driving range, short-game area, putting green, indoor training facility, forecaddie services, snack bar and three restaurants Wnbsite: www.pronghorn.aubergeresorts.com

June12-Oct 4:$49 daily from noon-3 p.mc $40daily after3 p.m.Nineholes: Mon.Thur.:$39daily. Weekends:$40daily. Oct. 5-Nov. 7: $35daily after 3p.m.Nine holes;$30daily. MEADOW LAKESGOLF COURSE (PRINEVILLE ) Through Sept. 30:$25after 1p.m., $25 with cart)after3 p.m.Nine holes: Mon,-Thurc 18 before 1p.m., $15 after. Weekends: $22 before1p.m.,$15after. Oct. 1-Oct.31:$20daily after1 p.m.Nine holes;$17before1 pm.,$14after. OLD BACKNINEAT MOUNTAIN HIGH Through May21:$22for nineholesafter noon. Igay 22-Sept. 7:$22for nineholesafter noon,Mon.-Tues.$25after noon,Wed.-Son. PRONGHORNCLUB,NINLAUS COURSE

(BEND) ThroughIgay 31 and Oct.1-Oct.31: $105 daily (inclodescart, range balls and forecaddie fee)after2;30p.m.

Ten Tips M Black M

Rating Slope 74.8 72.5 70 67.6 63.7 76.4 73.3 68.6

Rust M

GoldM Silver M Rust W GoldW Silver W

June-September:$125 daily (includes cart, range balls andforecaddie fee)afler 2:30

p.m.

QUAILRUN GOLFCOURSE(LA PINE) Through May 14 andafterOct.1:$25

after 1p.m.Nineholes: $25daily.

May 15-Sept.30: $35after 2p.m. Nine

holes:$35daily. RIVER'S EDGEGOLFCOURSE(BEND) ThroughMay21 andSept. 0-Nov. 1:

$30afterl p.m.Nineholes:$31 daily. May 22-Sept. 97Mon.-Thur.:$39after 3p.m.Weekends;$49after3 p.m.Nineholes: Mon.-hT orc$40daily.Weekends:$46 daily. SUNRIVERRESORT,MEADOWS AND WOODLANDSCOURSES

May22-July 2and Sept 14-27:Mon.Thur.:$69(Deschutes County) or $79(public) fromnoon-2p.m.,$59from2p.m.-5 p.m., $49 after 5p.m.Weekends:$79(Deschotes County) or $89(poblic) fromnoon-2 p.m.,$69from2 p.m.-5 p.m.,$49after 5 p.m. (pricesinclude cart).

141 136 131 124 114 148 141 130

July 3-Sept 13:Mon.-Thurc$69 (DeschutesCounty) or $79(public) fromnoon-2 p.m., $59from2p.m.-5 p.m.,$49after 5p.m. Weekends:$89 (DeschotesCounty) or $99

(poblic) fromnoon-2 p.m.,$79from2 p.m.-

5p m.,$49after 5pm.(prices includecart). TETHEROWGOLFCLUB (BEND) Through May:$110after1:40 p.m.(prices include cartandforecaddie fee). June 1-SepL 30:$110for Central Dregon residents,$145for general public after 1:40 p.m.(prices includecartandforecaddie

fee).

After Oct. 1:$80for Central Oregonresidents,$90for generalpublic after1:40 p.m. (pricesincludecart andforecaddie fee). WIDGI CREEK GOLFCLUB (BEND) Through June 3andSept. 21-Oct. 18: $40 from1-3;59p.m., $25after 4 p.m. Nine holes:$40daily.

June4-Sept.20:$49from 1-2:59p.m.,

$40 from3-4:59p.m., $25after 5 p.m. Nine

holes;$50before 1p.m.,$40after.


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 17

C036A optimistic about junior golf in the region By Zack Hall

tournaments.

COJGA

Special to The Bulletin

If the Central Oregon Junior

Wasserman i s

Weh: www.cojga.com Phone: 541-604-8386 Email:cojgagolf@gmail.com

Golf Association is any indication, golf could once again find itself on the upswing — at least,

here in Central Oregon. COJGA is set to tee off its 22nd season this year. In many

ways the organization — which offers a weekly series of golf tournamentsforboys and girls 17 or younger (or graduating high school seniors who are 18) that is played at courses

following a trend of sliding participation in golf at all age levels across the country. Still, Brian Wasserman, a longtime COJ-

GA board member who took over as the tournament director last season after former di-

throughout the region — will

rectorWoodie Thomas retired, be the same well-oiled machine sees that trend beginning to it has been for years. After all,

reverse.

standouts A n drew V i j a rro, need not be able break par to o p t i mistic currently a developmental tour join COJGA. The organiza-

for a reason. A relatively large professional, and Jesse Heinly, tion is open to any golfer, age 9 group of 6- to 8-year-olds par- who advanced to the round of through 17, with at least a basic ticipated in COJGA last year, 32 at last year's U.S. Amateur understanding of the game. and he expects many of those Championship. Vijarro and Starting in J une, COJGA kids to come back for more. Heinly, both now in their 20s, will host seven Monday tour"I think there is a lot of room were part of one of the most naments at golf courses around for optimism because I think lauded groups of COJGA play- the region. The season wraps you are seeing a lot more in- ers in the organization's history. up with the COJGA Cup on volvement from the younger But with a little luck, Was- Aug. 16, at Eagle Crest Resort kids," says Wasserman. "I think serman feels another promis- in Redmond. To join, junior golfers must COJGA is in a bit of a unique ing group could be on the way. situation (because of ample golf For instance, last season Red- pay a $75 membership fee, and resources available in Central mond's Isaac Buerger, then a additional family members can Oregon), but I don't think there 12-year-old, shot an impressive join for an additional $30. Each 70in a tournament tournament carries an entry fee is any reason for us to not be 2-under-par optimistic." at Meadow Lakes Golf Course of $20 per golfer.

"We stabilized last year and I Wasserman says C OJGA in Prineville. "There is a whole handful of think(this year) we willbe simi- has had no issues filling each lar, or even be a bit up, from last tournament with a field of more kids his age, a year younger or year," says Wasserman, who than 120 golfers, even with a a year older, who are capable of has two teenage sons who par- smaller membership. doing that," Wasserman says. ticipate in the program, anothCOJGA is not an instruction- "You're starting to see (an uper son who played in COJGA al program. But through com- tick in talent) at the high school before graduating from high petitive play it has helped de- level and we are definitely seeago. But enrollment dwindled school, and a teenage daughter velop some of the region's most ing it in COJGA." in recent years, to about 250, who helps him organize the notable golfers, including Bend Of course, a young golfer there is a reason COJGA has grown to become the largest and most enduring junior golf program in the region. In other ways, COJGA is undergoing a rebirth. COJGA had grown to more than 300 golfers just afewyears

Central Oregon's Premier Ezcecutive Golf Course.

COJGA offers an introducto-

ry program for players ages 6 to 8, for whom the membership

feeis$15 and the per-eventfee is $8. Golfers wh o

h av e n ever

played in COJGA must attend a new-member qualifier, which will be held in late May at Aw-

brey Glen Golf Club in Bend.

Lie angle, ball speed, trajectory.

o n irm e

LocateBin tbe Heart of Central Oregon!

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18• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

Junior tournaments could spur interest in golf By Zack Hall Special to The Bulletin

The Bulletin file photo

Ah, to be young. Central Oregon and its 30 golfcourses always figure to be busy with golf tournaments during the summer months.

Gabriella Then watches her winning birdie putt on a playoff hole of the Rolex Tournament of Champions in 2011 held at Crosswater Golf Club in Sunriver. Then won the event, the last time the Tournament of

That will be the case again this

year, of course. And among theprimary beneficiaries of this year's schedule will be local junior golfers, who will not have to travel at all this summer for a chance to com-

Champions was held

pete against some of the best young golf talent anywhere.

in Central Oregon. She went on to win the U.S. Girls Junior championship in 2013 and is currently

The 85th Bob Norquist Junior

Amateur Championship will be held June 23-26 in Redmond at Eagle Crest Resort's Ridge Course. The same week, Crosswater Club in Sunriver will host

a sophomore playing at the University of Southern California.

the American Junior Golf Asso-

k4 %ALIo' M w

4 6 U

\ Slkl ~

ciation's Rolex Tournament of Champions, which will boast a national field filled with future

NCAA Division I golfers and likely a few future players on the PGA and LPGA tours.

Also, the Rocky Mountain Junior Golf Tour, a fledgling tour for college hopefuls that is Golf Association Men's Amaplayed in six states and Canada, teur Championship — a tourwill visit Eagle Crest in August. nament once won by a teenage These come in addition to fix- Tiger Woods — will be staged in tures on the junior golf calendar July at Sunriver's Meadows and like the weekly Central Oregon Woodlands courses. The Men's Junior Golf Association tourna- Amateur is the most high-proments, the Oregon Golf Associ- file event on Central Oregon's ation's Central Oregon Junior 2015 golf calendar. in July, and the AJGA Sunriver But otherwise, this year Junior Open in August. marks a rare opportunity for I n other words, not a b a d Central Oregon junior golfers. summer to be a young golfer in After all, it is not often that the these parts. state's most prestigious junior "There is going to be a lot of tournament tees off in Central really high-caliber junior golf Oregon. that takes place in Central OrThe Oregon Junior Amateur, egon this summer because of open to golfers age 17 or youngthose two marquee events and er, will be held in Central Oresome other events," says Ron gon for the first time since 2003 Buerger, the director of golf at and just the third time since the Eagle Crest Resort and the fa- tournament was first played in ther of one of Central Oregon's 1927 at Columbia Edgewater most promising young golfers, Country Club in Portland. 13-year-old Isaac Buerger. "The To compete against the best more opportunity for the kids to

in the state, golfers who live in

play and for them to experience Central Oregon usually must the different formats, that is just spend their summers traveling greatforthegame and greatfor back and forth to the Portland the kids." area or elsewhere in the WillaThe 114th Pacific Northwest

mette Valley.

"That's not feasible financial-

Crosswater in 2011.

ly for most families," says Brian Such talent can pique interest, Wasserman, COJGA's tourna- Willis says. ment director, whose two teen-

"Anytime the AJGA d rops

age sons will likely play in the Oregon Junior. "The ability to

into a town and kids see and

not have to spend thousands of

dollars to compete against other good players, that's definitely a positive thing." Even if a junior is not yet at

the level to play in the invite-only Rolex Tournament of Cham-

pions or does not qualify for the Oregon Junior, there still can be a benefit, says Josh Willis, the director of golf at Sunriver

hear about it, it absolutely is ex-

tremely valuable for the growth of golf," Willis says. "If you're reading the paper and you see on the front cover and you see this kid down in Sunriver shooting 5 under par through 18 holes, it's going to make you interested in golf. It's cool." Buerger agrees, which is why he plans to continue to offer

up Eagle Crest to host junior

Resort. The Rolex Tournament of

events.

LPGA Tour star Morgan Pressel

that it is at Eagle Crest or that

mie Lovemark won the Rolex. And future college standouts

ask a few questions about what

Such tournaments can only Champions, which typically be good for the game. "It can b r in g a w areness," invites a local player or two to compete, will be making its Buerger says. "There are gothird appearance at Crosswa- cal) kids who will see it on the ter in 11 years. In 2004, future schedule, and it will register and futurePGA Tour player Ja- it is at Sunriver. Maybe they'll kind of road it takes to get from Gabriella Then (Southern Cal- where I am today to get the abilifornia) and Shun Yat Hak ity to play in and belong in those (Georgia Tech) won the event at type of events."

Tournament Iliglllights A look at some of the top golf tournaments planned for Central Oregon in 2015: June11-13: Oregon Open Invitational at Crosswater Club June22-26: 85th Oregon Junior Amateur Championship at Eagle Crest Resort's Ridge Course June 23-26: AJGA Rolex Tournament of Champions at Crosswater Club July 7-12:114th PNGA

Men's Amateur Championship at Sunriver's Meadows andWoodlands courses July 20-21:Central Oregon Junior Championship at Meadow Lakes andJuniper golf courses Aug. 8-9: Oregon Masters (Rocky Mountain Junior Golf Tour) at EagleCrest Resort Aug. 31-Sept. 3: AJGA Sunriver Junior Open and Junior AllStars at Sunriver's Meadows course Sept. 14-16:PNGA Women's Senior Team at Sunriver's Meadows and Woodlands courses Sept. 16-18:PNGA Men's Senior Team at Sunriver's Meadows and Woodlands courses Sept. 19-24:Pacific Amateur Golf Classic at various Central Oregon courses Sept. 19-20:88th

OGA Men'sTeam Championshi patBend Golf and Country Club


May10, 2015• Teeto Green• Central Oregon Golf • 19

GOLF CALENDAR

CLIMICS 5 CLASSES May 11-13:Adult coedgolf lessonsat Lost Tracks Golf Club inBendoffered bythe Bend Park& Recreation District.Sessionsare5:30p.m.to 7 p.m.andare taught byPGAprofessional BobGarza. Eachsession includeson-courseinstruction anda maximum student/leacher ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment wil be provided for thosestudentswithout their own.Cost is $59 for residentsof the BendPark& Recreation District, $71 for others.Toregister, call 541-389-7275orvisit www.bend arks p andrec.org. May 11-13:GetGolf Readyat BlackButte Ranch is intended to bring adults into thegameof golf inafast, fun and affordableway. Cost is $105andincludesthree consecutive 90-minutelessonsthat beginat2p.m.each day.Formore informationorto register: 541-595-1545. May16-26:Women-only lessonsatLost TracksGolf Club inBendofferedbytheBend Park& RecreationDistrict. Sessions are5:30p.m. to 7p.m. andaretaught by PGAprofessional BobGarza. Eachsessionincludesoncourseinstructionandamaximumstudent/teacherratio of 8-to-1.Equipment wil beprovidedfor thosestudents withouttheir own.Cost is $55for residentsoftheBend Park &RecreationDistrict, $74for others. Toregister, call 541-389-7275 orvisitwww.bendparksandrec.org. May 18-26:GetGolf Readyat BlackButte Ranch is intended to bring adults into thegameof golf inafast, fun and affordableway. Cost is $105andincludesthree consecutive 90-minutelessonsthat beginat2p.m.each day.Formore informationorto register: 541-595-1545. May 19-22:BetterGolf in FourDays is aninstructional clinic offered byCentral OregonCommunity College at JuniperGolf Coursein Redmond. Classis taught by Juniperdirectorof instruction StuartAllisonandbegins atnooneachday. Cost is $89.For moreinformation or toregister:www.cocc.edu/continuinged,call 541-3837270oremailpro@stuarlalfisongoff.com. May 26-29:Better Golf in FourDays is aninstruc-

tional clinic offered byCentral OregonCommunity College at JuniperGolf Coursein Redmond. Classis taught by Juniperdirectorof instruction StuartAllisonandbegins atnooneachday. Cost is $89.For moreinformation or toregister:www.cocc.edu/continuinged,call 541-3837270 oremail pro©stuartallisongolf.com. June2-6:BetterGolf inFourDaysis aninstructional clinic offered byCentral OregonCommunity Colege at JuniperGolfCoursein Redmond. Class is taughtby Juniperdirectorof instructionStuartAllisonandbegins at noon eachday.Cost is $89.Formoreinformationor to register:www.cocc.edu/continuinged,call 541-383-7270 or emaiproff l hstuartaflfsongolf.com. June 2-23:Newto Golf is a clinic for beginners offeredbyCentral OregonCommunity Colegeat River's EdgeGolf ClubinBend. Classesbeginat3:30p.m.and 5:30 p.m. everyTuesdayandaretaught byPGAgolf professionalMikePalen.Cost is $99.For moreinformation or to register:www.cocc.edu/continuinged orcall 541383-7270. June 3-24: Golf shortgameclinic isofferedbyCentral Oregon Community Collegeat River'sEdgeGolf Club in Bend. Classesfocussolelyontheshort game. Classes begin at5:30p.m,everyWednesdayandaretaughtby PGAgolfprofessional MikePalen.Cost is $99.Formore informatioor nto register: www.cocc.edu/continuingedor call 541-383-7270. June 3-24:Clinic for intermediategolfers is offered by CentralOregon Community Collegeat River's Edge Golf ClubinBend. Classesarefor golfers withsomegolf experienceandare designedto takegolfers to thenext level .Classesbeginat3: 30p.m.everyWednesdayand are taughtbyPG Agolf professional MikePalen.Cost is $99. Formoreinformation orto register: www.cocc.edu/ continuinged or call 541-383-7270. June 6:Swing into Spring golf clinic at Mead ow LakesGolf Coursein Prinevigeis designedto teach beginninggolfersfundamentals andseasonedgolfers to sharpentheir golf skils. TaughtbyPG AproVic Martin, class isscheduledfor 9a.m.to10:30 a.m.andcosts$5. Clubsavailableforthosewhoneedthem.Formoreinformation ortoregister: 541-447-7113.

June 6-16:Adult coedgolf lessonsat LostTracks Golf Club inBendoffered bythe Bend Park 8 Recreation District.Sessionsare6 p.m. to 7:30p.m.and are taught byPGAprofessional BobGarza. Each session includeson-courseinstruction anda maximum studentffeacher ratio of 8-to-1. Equipment wil be provided for thosestudentswithout their own.Cost is $59 for residentsof the BendPark & Recreation District, $74 for others.Toregister, call 541-389-7275orvisit www.ben dparksandrec.org. June 9-16:Start Smart Golf is aparen-tchild participantprogramfor beginningchildrenages5 to 7at HarmonParkin Bend offeredbythe Bend Park&RecreationDistrict. Four-dayclinic runsfrom5:30to 8:20 p.m.onTuesdaysandThursdays.Equipmentwillbe providedforthosestudentswithouttheir own.Costis $34 for participantsin theBend Park 8 Recreation District, $41 for others.Toregister, call 541-389-7275orvisit www.ben dparksandrec.org. Tuesdays andThursdaysfromJune 21-Bept 3: StartingNewat Golf, orSNAGGolf, atBlackBute Ranch introduces kids to thegame of golf with funequipment and basicskils. OfferedTuesdays from 3-4:30 p.m. and Thursdays from4-5:30 p.m,atBlackBute Ranch's newLake sideActivity Center. Opento children age7 or older.Costis$15.Formore information orto register: 541-595-1545. June22-24:Women-only lessonsatLostTracks Golf ClubinBendofferedbytheBendPark&Recreation District.Sessionsare8p.m.to 7:30p.m. andaretaught by PGA professional BobGarza. Eachsessionincludes on-courseinstruction anda maximumstudentffeacher ratio of8-to-1. Equipmentwil beprovidedfor thosestudentswithouttheir own.Cost is $59for residentsof the BendPark&Recreation District, $71for others.Toregister, cal541-389-7275 l orvisitwwwbendparksandrecorg. TuesdaysfromJune 26-Augr 20: BlackButte RanchJunior PuttingChalenge.Junior golfersmeetat 3:30 p.m.attheGlazeMeadowpractice green.Cost is$5 and incldues anicecreamsandwich.Formoreinformation: 541-595-1500 or www.blackbuteranch.com. June 30-Aug.18: Junior Golf PerformanceAcad-

emy isopento childrenofagabilities ages12to 13at TetherowGolf Clubin Bendand is offeredbytheBend Park &RecreationDistrict. ClinicsruneachTuesdayfrom 1to2:30p.m.,andpart icipantscanchoosebetweentwo four-week sessionsor theentireeight-weeksession. Participants wil betaught lessonsonall phasesof golf and will receivaeplayerscardmembershipthat allowfor$5 olf at localcourses.Cost for theeight-weeksession is 199 forresidentsoftheBendPark&RecreationDistrict, $239for others.Four-weeksessionscost$129for residents,$155for others. Toregister, call 541-389-7275or visit www.en bdparksandrec.org. June 30-Aug.18: Junior Golf PerformanceAcademy isopento childrenof all abilitiesages9 to11 at TetherowGolf Clubin Bendand is offeredbytheBend Park &RecreationDistrict. ClinicsruneachTuesdayfrom 3to 4:30p.m.,andparticipants canchoosebetweentwo four-week sessionsor theentire eight-weeksession. Participants wil betaught lessonsonall phasesof golf and will receiva eplayerscardmembershipthat allowfor$5 olf at localcourses.Cost for theeight-weeksession is 199forresidentsoftheBendPark8 RecreationDistrict, $239for others.Four-weeksessionscost$129for residents,$155forothers. Toregister, call 541-389-7275or visit www .bendparksandrec.org. July1-Aug.19:Junior Golf PerformanceAcademy is open to children ofall abilities ages14to17at TetherowGolfClubin Bendandis offeredbytheBend Park& Recreation District. ClinicsruneachWednesdayfrom1to 2:30 p.m.,andparticipants canchoosebetweentwofourweek sessionsortheentire eight-weeksession. Participantswil betaught lessonsonagphasesofgolf andwill receiveaplayerscardme mbershipthatagowfor$5golfat localcourses.Costfor theeight-weeksessionis$199for residentsoftheBendPark&RecreationDistrict, $239for others.Four-weeksessionscost $129for residents,$155 for others.Toregister, call 541-389-7275orvisit www . bendparks andrec.org. July1-Aug.19:Junior Golf PerformanceAcademy is opento childrenof all abilitiesages8 to 8 atTetherow GolCl f ubin Bendandis offeredbytheBend Park& RecreationDistrict. ClinicsruneachWednesdayfrom3to

4:30 p.m.,andparticipants canchoosebetweentwofourweek sessionsortheentire eight-weeksession. Participantswil betaught lessonsonall phasesofgolf andwill receiveaplayerscardme mbershipthatagowfor$5golfat localcourses.Costfor theeight-weeksessionis$199for residents oftheBendPark&RecreationDistrict, $239for others.Four-weeksessionscost $129for residents,$155 for others.Toregister, call 541-389-7275orvisit www. bendparksa ndrec.org. July 6-9: NikeGolf Cam pat Eagle Crest Resort in Redmond.Camperswil learneveryfacet of thegame. The overnightcampincludes golf instruction, course play,meals, housingandeveningactivities.Theextended daycampoptionfrom9 a.m.-9 p.m.includeseverything exceptbreakfastandlodging. Thedaycamprunsfrom9 a.m.-5p.m.andincludes all golf instruction, lunch,and courseplay.Agcampoptions arefor junior golfersofag ability levelsage , s13 to18. Costis $1,195for overnight campers ,$975forextendeddaycamps,and$695for day cam pers. Formore information orto register: visit www.ussp ortscamps.com. July13-16:Youth golf lessonsforbeginnerswhoare childrenages8to12 atLostTracksGolf Clubin Bend offeredbytheBendPark&RecreationDistrict. Three-day clinic runs from4 to 6p.m. Classesare taught byPGA rofessionalBobGarza and his staffandaredesigned or beginners.Clinicsincludelessonsonetiquette,rules, utting, chipping,pitching, mid-ironsandfull swings. quipmentwil be providedfor thosestudentswithout their own.Costis $79for residentsof theBendPark8 RecreationDistrict, $95for others.Toregister, call 541389-7275orvisit www.bendparksandrec.org. July 20-22:Adult coedgolf lessonsat Lost Tracks Golf Club inBendofferedbytheBendPark&Recreation District.Sessionsare8p.m.to 7:30p.m. andaretaught by PGAprofessional BobGarza. Eachsessionincludes on-courseinstruction anda maximumstudent/leacher ratio of8-to-1. Equipmentwil beprovidedfor thosestudentswithouttherr own.Cost is $59for residentsof the BendPark&Recreation District, $74for others.Toregister, cal541-389-7275 l orvisit www.bendparksandrec.org.

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2015 SLIMMER RATEs • Annual passes beginning at $875 for a single and $1095 for husband/wife

yA~H Golf Course

• 6-monthpasses beginat$675 for a single and $825 for husband/wife

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• 10-play punch cards for $250 • Senior rate: $25 Monday-Friday all season long • Late day rate: $25 with cart after 3pm in May, after 4pm in June-August, for 18 hgles or until dusk

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NEW GOLF CARTS CO PIINQ lkkQp

300 SW M e adow L akes Dr. Prineville 54 r -447-71 I a

IN JULY!!6

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20• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf• May10, 2015

GOLF CALENDAR From previous page Aug. 2-6:NikeGolf Campat EagleCrest Resort in Redmond.Campers wil learneveryfacetof thegame. The overnightcampincludes golf instruction, course play,meals, housingandeveningactivities. Theextended daycampoptionfrom9 a.m.-9 p.m,includeseverything exceptbreakfastandlodging.Thedaycamprunsfrom9 a.m.-5p.m,andincludesall golfinstruction, lunch,and courseplay.Agcampoptions arefor junior golfersofall ability levelsages10 , to 18.Cost is $1195for overnight campers ,$975forextendeddaycamps,and$695forday campers.Formoreinformation orto register: visit www. ussportsc amps.com.

Wednesd aysat5or5:30p.m. throughSeptember.Costfor theleagueis$32andplayersmusthaveanOGAhandicap

(totatcostwithhandicapservicesis $m). Thepublic rs welcome. Formoreinformationortoregister: callMeadow Lakesat541-447-7113or visit www.meadowlakesgc.com. MeadowLakesSeniorLeague:Forgolfersage 60andolder,theleagueplaysonTuesdaysatMeadow Lakes Golf CourseinPrinevige. Cost fortheleagueis$17 and players must havean OGAhandicap (tota(cost with handicap services is $50).Thepublic is welcome.For moreinformationorto register:call MeadowLakesat541447-7113 or visit www.meadowlakesgc.com. MeadowLakesCouplesGolfandGrubLeague: Couple stournamentsheldeachSundayatMeadowLakes GolfCourseinPrinevile. Tournamentsbeginat3p.m.and include buffetdinnerafter golf. Costfor each event is $55 per couple withoutanannual pass, $35for coupleswith annual passes. Formore information orto regrster: call Aspen LakesMen:TheMen' sClubatAspenLakes Meadow La sat 541-447-7113or visit www.meadowGolf Coursein Sistersplayson Wednesdaysat 8 a.m. lakesgc.coke .m through thegolf season. Newmembersarewelcome. For QuailRunWomen:Quail RunGolf Coursewomen's moretnformation,call AspenLakesat541-549-4653. 18-hol e gol f leagueplaysat Ba.m. duringthegolf season. Bend Park and Recreation Distrid Adult nterested golfersarewelcome. Formoreinformation,cal League:Four-playerteamsplaya nine-hole scramble IPenny Scotat541-598-7477. on Monday nights beginning tnJuneat LostTracksGolf Rrver' sEdgeMen:TheMen' sClubatRiveVsEdge Club inBend. Cost is$699perteamfor theseason,which Golf Course in Bend playsweekly tournaments onTuesincludes greenfeesforfour playersandweeklyprizesfor Mem bers of the men's club andotherinterested longdrive,KPsandlongputts. Deadlineto registerisJune day. iver'sEdgeGolf Clubmen with anestablished USGA 3or untilfull. Toregister, call541-389-7275orvisit www. R handi c ap are invited to participate. Formoreinformation bendparks andrec.org. Black ButteRanchMen:Bl ackButleRanchMen's or to register,callRiver'sEdgeat541-389-2828. Rtver' sEdgeWomen:TheWomen'sClubatRiver's Golf Club acceptsmengolfersofall levelsforWednesday tournam entseachweek. For moreinformationorto regis- EdgeGolfCourseinBendplayseachWednesdayduring t h e gol f sea son. Membersarewelcomeand should sign ter calltheBigMeadowgolf shopat541-5951500orvisit up by thepreceding Saturdayfor thetournaments. For www.blackbteuranch.com. m ore i n format BlackButteRanchWomen: Black Butte Ranch 389-2828. ion,orto register, call River'sEdgeat 541Women'G solf Clubacceptswomen golfers of aglevels Bunriver ResortMen:Men'sclubatSunriverResort for Tue sdaytournamentseachweek.Formoreinformation lay sWednesdaytournamentsattheMeadowsorWoodor to register,call theBigMeadowgolf shopat541-595- p lands courses with shotgunstarts at9 a.m. Cost is $55 1500 orvisit www.blackbutteranch.com. annualmembership. Formoreinformation, visit www. CentralOregonSenior Golf Organization:The for . CentralOregonSenior Golf OrganizationmeetsonaMon- srmensgolf.com Bnnriver ResorlWomen: Women'sclubatSunriver dayeachmonthat golf coursesacrosstheregion.Series R esort p l a y s We dnesdaytournamentsattheMeadowsor is open toanymanage50or olderwithaGHINhandicap ands courseswith shotgunstarts approximately 9 index. Costis $165fortheseasonplus$5per event. Swr- Woodl a.m. There are both nine-hole and18-holegroups.For son began March30. Formoreinformation: TedCarlin at more informa tion onnine-holegroup:Vicki Doerfler at 541-604-4tyJ4or vptcarlin@yahoo.com. yahoo.comor call 541-598-8467;18-hole Central Oregon Golf Tour. Acompetitive series vickilynn49@ ShennvBraemerat sbraemer4©gmail.comorcall held atgolfcoursesthroughoutCentralOregon.Grossand group: 541-593-4423. net comp etitions opento amateur golfers of agabilities. Widgi CreekMenandWomen: Widgi Creek Prizepoolawardedweekly andmembership notrequired. Men' sCfubandWomen'sGolf Association atWidqiCreek For moreinformation orto register: 541-633-7652,541G olf Clubin Bendareweekly golf leaguesthatplayeach 350-7605,orwwwcentraloregongofftourcom. more information, call theWidgi Creek Deserl PeaksLadies:TimesvaryeachWednesday. Wednesday.at5For 41-382-4449. For moreinformation, callDesert Peaksat5 41-475-6368. clubhouse Widgi Cr e ek ThnrsdayLeague:LeaguemeetsevDeserl PeaksMen'sClubs:Separateclubsteeof eveningfor nine-holeteammatch play.Cost eachThursdayat10a.m.oreachWednesdayat6p.m. ery Thursday perteamandcanincludeasmanyas10players. Formoreinformation, callDesert Peaksat541-475-6368. is $100 or moreinformation, call theWidgi Creekclubhouseat EveryWom an's Golf Association: TheCentral F 541-382-4449. OregonChapter of theEvery Woman'sGolf Association meetsmultipletimeseachweek—including weeknight leagues and Saturdayplay — during thegolf season. Eventsareopentoanyoneinterestedin joiningtheEWGA. For moreinformation orto join theEWGA: Delores Mc- 8cEVENTS Cannat dmccann@bendbroadband.comor www.ewgaco. com. May 19:CouplesHit 8 Giggleat BlackButteRanch JuniperLadies:Juniper Ladies Golf Clubmee ts event attheBig Meadowcoursedesigned weeklyonWednesdaymorning. All womenplayerswel- is a nine-hole for non-com petitiveplayerswhowant toplayasacouple. come. Formoreinformation,visit www.playjunipercom. Each ev en t b eg ins at3 p.m.Opentoagskil levels. Cost is JuniperMen:JuniperMen'sClubmeetsweekly on coupleandincludesdinner andaglassof wine or Thursdaymornings. Formoreinformation, visit www. $99 per pint ofbeerafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: playjunipercom . or golfgroups©blackbuteranch.com. Ladresof the Greens:TheLadiesof IheGreens 877-468-1660 May 11:CentralOregonSenior Golf Organization play nine-holetournamentsat TheGreensat Redmond atCrookedRiverRanch.8:30a.m.shotgun.The golf courseweekly onTuesdaysthrough October. New event membersarewelcome. Formore information,call Nancy format isindiyidualgrossand net, aswell asteambest ball. Cash prizesawardedat eachevent. Tournament seat 541-923-8213. to anyone50 or olderwith aGHINy. Cost Ladies of theLakes:Ladiesof theLakesgolf club ries is open fortheseasonplus a$5 per-event fee. Formore at Meadow LakesGolf Courseis aweekly women'sgolf is $165 i n formati o n, contactTed Carlin at 541-604-4054 or vptleaguethat playson Thursdays at 9 a.m.Season runs oo.com. through September.Agwomenplayerswith aGHINhand- carlin@yah May16:RonaldMcDonald House Charities Central icapwelcome.Formoreinformation: callthegolf shopat OregonOpen is a four-personscrambletournament at 541-447-7113or visitwww.meadowlakesgc.com. B lack ButteRanch's Big Meadowand Glaze Meadow Lost Tracks Ladies:TheLadiesLeagueatLost TracksGolf Clubin Bendplays weekly onTuesdays. Ag courses.Tournament begins with 9 a.m.at bothcourswomengolfersarewelcome. For more information: call es. Fielddividedinto competitive orfundivisions. Cost LostTracksat541-385-1818,email lostlracksladiesgolO is $135perplayeror$500per teamandincludesgreen bendbroadan bd.comor visit www.lositracks.com. fees,cartandlunch.Sponsorship opportunities available. Lost Tracks Men: Men's club at LostTracksGolf Aff proceeds benefit Ronald McDonald HouseCharitiesof Club holdsweekl yeventsonMondays,Wednesdaysand CentralOregon.Formoreinformation orto register: 541318-4950 or wwwcentraloregonopen.org. FridaysthroughOctober.Formore information: call Lost Tracks at541-385-1818,email losttracksmc©hotmail. May16:Chippin'In forBendAreaHabitattournament com orvisit www.losttracks.com. at Brasada RanchGolf Clubin PowegButte. Four-person MeadowLakes Men:Men's Golf Assoc iation at scramblebegins with a10 a.m.shotgun. Costis $175 Meadow LakesGolf Coursein Prinevile playsweekly on per golfer.Priceincludes, golf, cart, rangebals, awards

PUBLIC LEAGUES

TOURMAMENTS

luncheon and teeprize. Proceeds benefit theBend Area Habitatfor Humanrty. Formoreinformation or toregister: 541-385-5387,rcooper@bendhabilat.org or visit www . bendhabitat.org/even ts/golf. May 16-17:31stedition oftheJuniperChapmanat JuniperGolfCourseinRedmond.Opento anytwomale golferswith a maximumhandicapdifferential of eight strokesbetween partners. Cost is $240per teamfor the two-day, 36-holetournamentwith grossandnet divisions and includes apractice round.Toregister, call IheJuniper proshopat 541-548-3121or downloadentry format www.playjunipercom . May 18:ImagineNoMalaria Golf Tourna ment at AwbreyGlenGolf Clubin Bend. Four-person scramble beginswitha1p.m.shotgun.Cost is$100pergolfer,and includesgolf, cart,drivingrangebals, boxlunch, with prizesfortopfinishersand long-drive andclosest-to-pin competitions.Proceeds beneftt First UnitedMethodist Church'seffortsto combat malaria.Formoreinformation or toregister:541-213-2333orpkbend@bendbroadband. com. May 18:Hospitality Cupat BlackButteRanchs' Big Meadowcourse. Eachteamin four-personscramble tournam ent mustconsist of fouremployeesfrom the sameCentralOregonrestaurant,hotel orotherhospitality business. Tournament begins with a9a.m. shotgun.Cost is$150perteam andincludescart, barbecuelunch, prizes and awa rds. Formoreinformation orto register; email bbain©blackbutteranch.com, call 541-595-1292or visit www.blackbu teranch.com/golf/golf-events. May 21:Central OregonGolf Tourindividual stroke playtournam entat theNicklausCourseat Pronghornnear Bend.TheCentral OregonGolfTour is acompetitive golf seriesheldat golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Grossandnet competitions opentoaffamateur golfers of ag abilities.Prizepoolawardedweekly, andmembership not required.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-6337652,541-350-7605,orwwwcentraloregongolftourcom. May 21:LostBallClassicgolf tournament andsilent auctionatLostTracksGolf Club.11 a.m.shotgunstart,5 .m. after-parlyandauction. Costfor foursome is $380. rice includes foodandbeverages, 18holesof golf with cart, entrytoIheafter party, andmore. Proceedssupport theDeschutesCountySearch8 RescueFoundation.For moreinformationorto register; 541-241-4403orgeorge. nutweg©d eschutessarorg. May 24:CouplesHit &Giggleat BlackButteRanch is a nine-holeyent attheBigMeadowcoursedesigned for non-com petitiveplayerswhowant toplayasacouple. Each event begins at3 p.m.Opentoagskil levels. Cost is $99 per coupleandincludesdinner andaglassof wine or pint ofbeerafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 877-468-1660orgolfgroups©blackbuteranch.com. May 26-27:OregonChapter of the PGApro-am tourname nt. Formatfor first roundis netrotationfollowed by twonetbestbals. Thistwo-dayevent is heldatBend GolfandCountry ClubandBrasadaCanyonsGolf Clubin PowegButte. Cost foramateursis $200per golfer. Contact: 800-574-0503 orwww.pnwpga.com. May 29-30:GolfBoardOpenat TetherowGolf Club in Bend.Com petitors wil play speedgolf with aGolfBoard,combining thelowest time andlowest scoreto determinethewinner. Tournament opens with a Friday eventanddemonstrationonTetherowspar-3 course.The full 18-hole event wil teeoffonSaturday.Winner wins a GolfBoardandchampion surfer Laird Hamiltonwil beon hand.CostisTBDand includesgolf, appetizers, drinks and anawardsdinner. Formoretnformaton: wwwtetherow.com. May29-May31:Dufers8Doll sChapmanTournamentat Desert Peaks Golf ClubinMadras. Cost is $120 per coupleandincludesFriday practice round,twodays of tournam entgolf, KPandlong-drivecompetitions, team bestballonSaturdayandaCalcutta onSunday.Optional nine-holekickercompetitionduringFridaypractice round is $5. Formoreinformationor to register, call theclubhouseat541-475-6368or visitwww.deserlpeaksgolf.com to download aregistrationform. May30:Four-personlocal qualifier fortheWorldGolf ScrambleatAspen LakesGolf Course. Uptofour teams will advancetothe World Golf Scramble inLasVegasAug. 13-15.Localqualifier wilbeginat2p.m.Cost is $500per teamand$125per golfer,which includesgreenfees,golf cart and asmall gift bag.Spots canbereservedbycalling 541-549-4653. May 39:Central Oreg on VeteransOutreachbenefit four-person teamscramble at Rivers EdgeGolf Course in Bend. 9 a.m.shotgunstart. $360perteam($90 per person)includesgolf with cart, range,barbecue, prizes, andraffle.Sponsorships available. Entry formcan be downlode ad at www.covo-us.org orpickedupat the River'sEdgeproshop. For more information call Bobat 541-788-1653.

May 30:WildlandFirefighter Foundtiaon Bene fit Golf Tourna ment atTheGreensat Redmond. Four-player scramblbe eginswith9a.m.shotgun.Costis$60per golfer andincludes18holesof qolfr cartand barbecue. Proceedsbenefit theWildland Firefighter Foundation, which helpsfamiliesofkiled orinjuredfirefighters. Deadline to enter isMay25.For moreinformationorto register: 541504-7350,cbuhrig©fs.fed.usorwwwwffoundation.org. May 39:The16thannual Golf ForeKidsat Meadow Lakes Golf Coursein Prineviffeis sponsored bythe KiwanisClubof Prineviffe,Four-person teamscramble beginswith9a.m,shotgun,Cost is $75per playerand includes rangeballs, cart,lunch,treprize,flightedgross and netpayoutsand additional prizesandgames. The field is limited to thefirst 25teams,andthe deadline to register isMay23. Formore information orto register: www.prinevilekiwanis.orgor contact MeadowLakesat 541-447-71 13or zach©meadowlakesgc.com. May 31:Seventhannual UnitedWayGolf Classic at SunriverResorl's Crosswater Club.Scramblebeginswith a1p.m.shotgunstart. Costis$195per playeror$780per foursome andincludes golf, cart, lunchandawardsbarbecue.Sponsorshipsalsoavailable. Proceedsbenefit the UnitedWayofDeschutesCounty. Formoreinformationor to register,contact theUnited Way of DeschutesCounty at 541-389-6507,katiOleschutesunitedway.org, orwww. deschutesunitedw ay.org/golf-classic. May 31:Pro-Junior23at AwbreyGlenGolf Clubin Bend is a fundraiser golf tournam ent for theCentral OregonJuniorGolf Association. Four-person,23-hole golf tournamen be tginswilh a2p.m.shotgunstart. Teamswill

playsham bleandscrambleand playAwbreyGlen's regulationcourseandfive-hole loopcourse.Eachteamwill consistofthreejunior golfersbetweentheagesof10 and 16andonegolf professtonaf. Spaceis limited to10teams. Costis$100perteamandincludesgolf, lunch,drinksand prizes.Formoreinformation or to register,call Awbrey Glenheadprofessional TimFraley at 541-388-8526or emailhimattim@ awbreyglen.com. June 4:Central Oregon Golf Tourindividual stroke play tourna ment at Crosswater Clubat Sunriver ResorL TheCentral OregonGolf Tour is acompetitivegolf series held atgolfcoursesthroughoutCentralOregon.Grossand netcompetitions opentoall amateurgolfers ofagabilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly,andmembershipnot required. For moreinformation orto register: 541-633-7652,541350-7605,orwwwcentraloregongolftourcom. June 6: Fourth annual Schwabe,Williamson&Wyatt CharityGolfClassicatAspenLakesGolf CourseinSisters. Fundraiserfortheeducationalprogramsof theHighDesert Museum. Scramble format. Costis $200per person. Shotgunstart at1 p.m.Formoreinformation, visit www. highdeserlmsueum.orgorcall 541-382-4754,ext. 365. June 6-7:LadiesMarmot at PrinevigeGolf Clubis atwo-person teamevent stretchedover twodaysand 36 holes.Formore information orto register,call Prineviffe GC at 541%7-6658 or www.sites.goog le.com/site/ prinevigegolfclub. June 7: SwingsForeStringsattheWoodlandscourse at SunriverResort is afundraising tournament to benefit SunriverMusicFestival andmusic education programs in southDeschutesCounty. Thescrambletournament will beginwitha1p.m.shotgun.Cost is $125perplayer and includes cart, drivingrangeand putting greenchalenges, par-3competitions, teeprizesand awards. A reception afferplayis alsoincluded.Formoreinformation, call the SunnverChamber of Commerceat 541-593-9310, email info@sunrivercha mber.com,or visit www.sunriverchamber.com. June 8: OregonGolfAssociationTour partnerseries tournam entatthe Resort Courseat Eagle Crest Resort in Redmond.Teetimesbegin at11 a.m.OGATour eventsare opentoanygolferwithaUSGAhandicapandincludeopen andseniordivisions.Costforthis event is $158per team for OGA membersand$198for nonmembers. Deadlineto enter isJune1. Formoreinformation orto register,visit www.oga.org orcall theOGAat503-981-4653. June 8:CentralOregonSenior Golf Organization eventat Desert PeaksGolf Coursein Madras. 7:30a.m. shotgun. Theformatis individual grossandnet,aswell as teambest bal. Cashprizesawardedateacheyent.Tournamentseriesis opento anyone50 or olderwithaGHINy. Cost is$165fortheseasonplus a$5per-event fee.For moreinformation,contactTedCarlin at 541-604-4054 or

vptcarlin@y ahoo.com. June 9: OregonGolfAssociationTourpartnerseries tournam entat theRidgeCourseat EagleCrest Resort in Redmond. Teetimesbeginat8:30a.m.OGATourevents are open to anygolfer wtthaUSGAhandicapandinclude openandseniordivisions. Cost forthis eventis $158 per team forOG Amembersand$198for nonmembers. Deadline toenter isJune1. Formoreinformationorto register, visit wwwg.oa.orgor call theOGAat 503-981-4653.

June 9-11:OregonOpenInvitational at BlackButte Ranch'sGlazeMeadowcourseisanannualPacific NorthwestPG Aevent thatfeatures52teamsof two professional golfersandtwoamateur golfers competingin36holesof teamcompetition andina54-holeindividual stroke-play tournam ent.Afterthesecondround, field is cutto low70 players.Com petition handicapof 18(afthoughplayers

mayhavehigherhandicaps). Formore information on the tournam ent orsponsorship opportunities, visit www. pnwpga.com or call thePacific Northw est PG Aat 360456-Q96.

Jnne11:LadiesNine&Wineat BlackButteRanchis anine-holeeventatIheBig Meadowcoursemeant toprovide non a -intimidating andfunenvironmentfor womento learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open to all skill levelsCost . is $40and includesoneglassof wineandacheesetrayor lighthord'oeuvresto enjoyafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister:541-595-1500or www.blackbu teranch.com. Jnne12: FreeGolf DayatMeadowLakesGolf Course. Any golferwhoplaysatMeadowLakeswil havehis or her greenfeeswaived, asspace permits. Teetimes are recomm ended. Formoreinformation ortoregister,call the Meadow Lakesproshopat541-447-7113. June 12-14:The50th BendLadies' Invitational at BendGolf andCountry Clubis a36-hole individual amateurstroke-playtournament. Practice roundis June 12, followedbytournament play onJune13 and 14. Nonmem ber entry feeis $190and includes36holes of strokeplay,practiceround,breakfastandlunch for two days.Awardswil begivenfor theoverall bestgrossand netscores, withgrossand netpayoutsforfourflights. Ag female playersage18andover withan activeUSGAhandicaparewelcome.Formoreinformationor toregister, call Vicki Tayloat r 541-550-7960,orBend Golf andCountry Club541-382-2878.Entry formsalso available onlineat www.ben dgolfclub.com(ctick the"Tournaments"tab).

June13: The1mhannual RCScrambleis afour person scram bletournament at Crooked River Ranch. Tournamentbegins with an8a.m. shotgun.Cost is $75per personbeforeJune1 and $100 per personafter. Price includesgreenfees, cart, dinnerandprizes. Sponsorships also availableProc . eeds to benefit Redmond Christian Church'syouthministries. Formoreinformationor to get aregistrationform:visit www.redmondchristian.org or cal 541-548-2974. June14:BendFCTimbersSoccer Golf Tournament at TelherowGolf Club in Bend is a four-personscramble. Tourna ment begins witha1 p.m,shotgun, Cost is $600perfoursomeandincludesgreen fees, cart, dinner andawa rds. Playersfromthe PortlandTimbersarealso expec tedtobeonhand.Event,contestandholesponsorshipsavailable.Proceeds benefit theBend FCnmbers financial aid fundandfield development fund. Formore informatioor nto register: visitwww.bendfctimbers.comor emaiatdarby@ l bendfctimbers.com. June14:CouplesHit& GiggleatBlackButteRanch is a nine-hole event attheBig Meadowcoursedesigned for non-com petitive playerswhowant toplayasacouple. Each event begins at3 p.m.Opentoaffskil levels. Costis $99 percoupleand includesdinnerandaglassof wineor pint ofbeerafterplay.Formoreinformationortoregister: 877-468-1660orgolfgroups@blackbutteranch.com. June 14:TheRexUnderwood MemorialGolf TournamentatQuail RunGolf Clubin LaPine. Four-person scramblebeginswith an8a.m. shotgun. Proceeds benefit theGilchrist Booster ClubandGilchrist HighSchool studentactivities,sportsandclubs. Quail Runmembers ay $25, affothers$55andprice includesgreenfees, - ve contestsandprizes.Deadline to unch, KP andlong-dri register isMay31. Formore information: LizAlexander at 541-977-2950,LynneUnderwood-Murrayat541-3904221 or atlynnectrave l@aol.com, or Gilchrist Highat 541-433-2295. June 14:Kah-Nee-TaJunior at Kah-Nee-TaResort nearWarmSprings is anOregon Golf Association junior tourname nt. Formoreinformation: 866-981-4653or www.oga.org/junior-golf. June 15:CentralOregonJunior Golf Association tournamen attBlackButteRanchs' GlazeMeadowcourse. TeetimesTBD.For moreinformation, call COJGAtournamentdirectorBrianWassermanat 541-604-8386, email cojgagolf@ gmail.com,orvisit www.cojga.com. June 16:OregonGolf Association Tourindividual seriestournam entat theBig MeadowcourseatBlackButte Ranch.Teetimesbeginat8:30a.m. OG ATour eventsare opentoanygolferwithaUSGAhandicapandincludeopen and seniodirvisions. Costforthis event is $79forOGA members and $99 for nonmembers. Deadlineto enter is June 8. Formoreinformationorto register, visit www.oga. org orcalltheOGAat 503 981-4653

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May10, 2015 Tee • to Green• Central OregonGolf • 21

GOLF CALENDAR From previous page June 16:OregonGolf AssociationTourindividual seriestournament at theGlazeMeadowcourseat Black ButteRan ch.Tee times begin at 8;30a.m.OG A Tour eventsareopentoanygolfer withaUSGAhandicapand includeopenandsenior divisions. Costforthis event is $79forOGAmembersand$99fornonmembers.Deadline toenteris June9.For more information orto register, visitwww .oga.org or call theOGAat 503-981-4653. June 16:Golfersfor Scholarsgolf tourname nt at EagleCrestResort Coursein Redmond. Four-person scramblebeginswith 8:30a.m. shotgun. Costis $75 er person and includescart, rangebals andbarbecue unch.Proceedsto benefit theRedmond High School ScholarshipProgram.To register orfor moreinformation: 541-788-2274,bruce@ dunlapfinehomes.com or beal©johnlscott.com. June18:CentralOregonGolf Tour individual strokelay touma ment at GlazeMeadowat BlackButte Ranch. eCentralOregonGolf Tour is acompetitivegolf series held atgolfcoursesthroughoutCentralOregon.Grossand net comp etitions opentoall amateurgolfers ofall abilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly,andmembershipnot required. For moreinformation orto register: 541-633-7652,541350-7605orwww .golfersforscholars.org. June 18:Couplesgolf outingat AspenLakesGolf CourseinSisters.Nine-holescramblebeginsat4;30p.m. Cost is$90percoupleandincludesathree-coursedinner at AspenLakes' Brand33 restaurantaftertheround.For more informationorto register: 541-549-4653orvisit www.asp enlakes.com. June18-19:The2015OregonSeniorGamesGolf Tournam ent atBrasadaRanchin PoweffButteand Broken Top Clubin Bend. Stroke-playtournament is for golfers age50and olderand isplayedover 36holes.Playbegins with 9a.m.shotgun bothdays. Field wil begroupedby age,genderandhandicap inbothnetandgrosscompetitions.Grossscoreswil determineeligibilityforthe NationalSeniorGam es.Costis$210andincludescartandrange balls. Formoreinformation orto register:visit oregon. fusesport.com /registration/166 oremail oregonseniorgames@visitbend.cm o. June 29: The21st annual ThreeSisters Op enWom-

en's GolTourn f ament at Eagle Crest's Resort Coursein Redmond.Theteamscramblebegins with an8:30a.m. shotgun startand isfor womengolfersofaffabilities. Proceedswil bene fit QuotaInternational of Central Oregon and theBendWomen's Scholarship Fund.Cost is $100 er playerandincludesgolf, cart, continental breakfast, unch, h,teegiff andpr pizes. Spaceis limitedandentries wil

be accep tedonafirst-comebasis. Formoreinformation or to register:Ga yle Najera, 541-408-0940 or gnajeraO bendbroad band.com, orvisit www.quotaofcentraloregon. org. June 20:Sixth annual Father's HouseGolf Tournament atAspenLakesGolf Course in Sisters. Scram ble tournam entbeginswitha1 p.m.shotgun. Cost is$80and includes rangeballs, cart, prizes,andhamburgersandhot dogsafterthetournament. Deadlineto register is June13. For moreinformation orto register: 541-389-7500,541-

382-5607 oremail ray©rbwassoc.com. June 20:TheFather-Son Classic is an 18-hole bestballtournament at BlackBute Ranch's BigMeadow course.Father-sonteamsmayconsistof fathersandsons, randfathersandgrandsons, stepfathers andstepsons, Iher sandsons-in-law,andunclesandnephews.Shotgun startat 9a.m.Cost is $225per teamand includes coffee barbreakfast, tournament roundof golf andawards luncheon.Special rateson practice roundsand lodging available.Formore information orto register: visit www. blackbutteranch.com /father-son. June20-21:Central OregonScrambleis athree-person scram bleatJuniper Golf CourseinRedmond.Shotun startat8:30a.m.eachday. Cost is $300per team. or moreinformation, call 541-548-3121ordownloadan entryformatwww.playjuniper.com. June 22:CentralOregon JuniorGolf Association tournam ent at MeadowLakes Golf Course in Prinevile. TeetimesTBD.For more information, call CO JGAtournamentdirectorBrianWassermanat541-604-8386, email cojgagolOgmail.com, orvisitwww.cojga.com. June 22-26:85thOregon Junior Ama teur Chamionship attheRidgeCourseat Eagle Crest Resort in - yay edmond. Boysandgirlswil play18holesof match-pl qualifyingfollowedbyroundsofsingle-eliminationmatch play .EntrantsmusthaveaUSGAHandicapIndexandhave

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a2015Ore gonJuniorGolf membership,forgolfersage8 to17. The field ofeachdivisionis limited. Formoreinformation:866-981-4653orwww.oga.org/junior-golf. June 23:Central OregonJunior Golf Association's looper tournam ent at Awbrey GlenGolf Club'sLoop CourseinBend. Event isfor 6- to8-year-olds.Golf begins at 4 p.m.Costis $15to register forthreeevents, plusan $8 per-eyent fee.Formoreinformation, call COJGAtournamentdirectorBrianWassermanat541-604-8386,email cojgagolQgmail.com, orvisit www.cojga.com. June23-26:RolexTournamentofChampionsat Crosswa ter ClubinSunriver. AmericanJunior Golf Associationtournam entfeaturestopboysandgirlsfromaround Ihe countryandbeyondto playin72holesofstroke play with a54-holecut. Formoreinformation, call theAJGAat 770-868-4200 orvisit www.ajga.org. June26:TheCentralOregonBuildersAssociationis hostingtwogolftournaments inoneday at River's Edge Golf Course mBend. Four-personshambleteesoffwith an 8a.m.shotgunstart. Costis$125 per personor$450 per team to play inonetournament. Feemcludeslunch, tee and rafflepizes.Proceedsto benefit COBA. For more informatioor nto register, call AndyHighat541-389-1058 or emaihil matandyh@coba.org. June26: LadiesNine8 Wineat BlackButteRanchis anine-holeeventatIheBigMeadowcoursemeant toprovide a non-intimidating andfunenvironment for womento learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open to all skill levelsCost . is $40and includesoneglassof wineandacheesetrayor light hord'oeuvresto enloyafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or www.blackbu teranch.com. June 26:OutlawOpen Golf Toun rament at Aspen LakesGolf Coursein Sisters. Scramble format for foursomes starls at1p.m.Tournament is afundraiserforaff SistersSchoolDistrict co-curricularactivities andis open to thepublic. Costis$100,andincludesgreenfees,cart, rangeballs andlight dinner.Formore information, visit shshaffoffm ae.orgoremail crambrose17©gmail.com. June 26:BendChamberofCommerce2015Member InvitationalGolf Tournament atAwbreyGlenGolf Clubin Bend.Tournament separated into twoflights: a serious grossandnet twobest balls tournament andascramble

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with mulligansandstrings. Shotgun start at 9:30a.m. followedbydinnerandawardsstarting about 4:30 p.m. Cost is$150per personand includescart, rangebals, dinnerandcontests. Toregister orfor moreinformation, visitwww bendchamberorgor bonnie@bendchamberorg. June 26:Fifth annualCentral OregonAdult 8 Teen ChallengeGolf Tournament at Widgi CreekGolf Club. Four-personscramble tournament begins with a9 a.m. shotgun start. Costis$125per personandincludesgreen fees, cart,andawards barbecue. Prorxlds benefit the CentralOregon Chapter of Teen Challenge,a12-monlh residentiaaddi l ctionprogramfor men. Formoreinformation orto register: call 541-678-5272oremail eric.jones© teen chaff engepnw.com. June26-28:The62ndMen'sMirrorPondAmateur InvitationalCe , ntral Oergon'slongest-running golf tournament,atBendGolfand Country Clubattractstopamateur malegolfersfromOregonand beyondfor36holesof individualstroke-playcompetitionovertwodays.Apractice round isscheduledfor June26,followedbytournament playSaturdayandSunday. Nonmember entryfeeis $230 and includes practice round,teeprize,hostedtournament dinner,36-holestroke-playevent and additional contests andprizes.All maleplayerswith anactiveUSGAhandicap arewelcome . Fieldlimitedto140players. Playerscanregister inoneof Ihreedivisions: open(age18 and older), senior(age50andolder)andsuper senior (age65and older). To register, call theBendG&CCgolf shopat 541382-2878 or email bendgolfshop @bendgolfclub.com. Entry formsalsoavailable onlineat www.bendgolfclub. com(clickthe"Tournaments" tab). June 27: World Golf Scram ble Qualifier atMeadow LakesGolf Course.Four-personscramblebegins with 8 a.m. shotgun. Grossand net divisions available. Costis $500perteam,andincludesgolf, cart,anda small tee prize.Topteamswil advancetotheWorld Golf Scramble Champiosn hip in LasVegas. Formore informationorto register:541-447-7113orvisit www .worldgolfscramble. com. June 28: CouplesHit8 GiggleatBlackButteRanch is a nine-holeyent attheBigMeadowcoursedesigned for non-com petitive playerswhowant toplayasacouple. Each event begins at3 p.m.Opentoaffskiff levels. Cost is

$99 percoupleand includesdinnerandaglassof wineor pint ofbeerafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 877-468-1660orgolfgroups@blackbutteranch.com. June 29:CentralOregon Junior Golf Association tournament at BrokenTop Club inBend. TeetimesTBD. Formoreinformation, call COJGAtournamentdirector Brian Was sermanat 541-604-8386,email cojgagolOgmail. com,orvisit www.cojga.com. July 4-6:Central OregonAmateur is anindivdual stroke-playtournament at Juniper Golf Coursein Redmond.Open,senior, men'sand ladiesdivisions available. Cost is$100per player. Formoreinformation, call 541548-3121 ordownloadanentry format www.playjuniper. com. July 6-7:OregonChapter of thePGApro-amtournament.Thistwo-dayevent is heldat Aspen LakesGolf CourseinSistersandattheNicklausCourseat Pronghorn ClubnearBend. Cost is $200per amateur.Contact: 800574-0503 orwww.pnwpga.com. July 7: CentralOregonJuniorGolf Association'slooper tournam entat AwbreyGlenGolfClub's LoopCoursein Bend.Event is for6-to 8-year-olds.Golfbegins at4p.m. Cost is$15to registerfor threeevents, plusan$8 pereyentfee.Formoreinformation,call COJGAtournament directorBrianWassermanat541-604-8386,email cojgagolOgmail.com, orvisit www.cojga.com. July 7-12:PNGAMen'sAmateur atSunriverResort's Woodl andsandMeadowscourses.Tournamentbegins with 36holesofstrokeplayfolowedbysingle-elimination matchplay.All golfersmustcarry a4.4 handicapindex or better.Costis $225andfield is limitedto168 golfers. Deadlineto enter is June16.Formore information or to register,visit www .thepnga.orgor call thePNGAat 800643-6410. July 9: LadiesNine8 WineatBlackButteRanchisa nine-holeeyent atIhe BigMeadowcoursemeant to provideanon-intimidatingandfunenvironmentfor womento learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open to all skill levelsCost . is $40and includesoneglassof wineandacheesetrayor light hord'oeuvresto enloyafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or www.blackbuteranch.com .

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18 holes of golf plus a selection

x8

from the all-day menu at Robert's Pub.

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$$9

Valid Sunday noon through Thursday through May 31. Not valid 5/24. Carts not included. Not valid for groups.

All summer, enjoy the game

of golf as a family.

GOLF FOR $6Q

Available for tee times after 4pm. Walking rate; Valid for two adults, two juniors.

G©LF

Get into the game in a fast,

fun 5 affordable way.

READY 5 LESSONS FOR S105

May 11, 12, 13 ( 2-3:30pm May 18, 19, 20 j 2-3:30pm

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22• Tee to Green• Central Oregon Golf • May10, 2015

GOLF CALENDAR From previous page July19:15th annual GolfForeKidsTournamentatEale CrestResorl's RidgeCourseinRedmondtobenefit the oys &Girls ClubsofRedmond/TerrebonneandKiwanis Club ofRedmond. Four-personscramblebeginsat Ba.m. Entryfeeis$125perpersonor$500perteamandincludes continentalbreakfast, barbecuelunch,prizesfor thefirstandsecond-pl aceteams,men'sandwomen' slong-drive contestandclosest-to-the-pin conteston everyhole. Awardceremonyandsilent auctionto followtournament. Sponsorshipsareavailable. Formoreinformation: 541504-9060,bmcclennen@bgcrt.org orvisit www.bgcrt.org July 11:KidsClubof JeffersonCounty four-person golf scram bleatDesert PeaksGolf Clubin Madras.Tournamentbegins with 8a.m.shotgun.Cost is$125pergolferandincludes golfcart, greenfeesandlunch.Longdrive, closestto thepin, puttingcontest andrafle prizeswil be included. Agproceedsgoto the KidsClubof Jefferson County.Formore information orto reqister:contact Joe McHaneyat541-647-3710oremail kidsclub©509j.net. July 11-12:60thannual PrinevigeInyitational ProAm atPrineyille Golf Club.The36-hole individual and teamcompetition begins at7:30a.m, eachday. Fieldincludes24professionalsand96 amateurs. Fridaypractice roundandevening horseracefor professionalsalsoavailable.Admission is freeandspectatorsarewelcome. For more information:541-447-6658or www.sites.google. com/site/prinevigeoglfclub. July12:TheAudreyDitmoreMemorial Golf Tournament isan18-holefour-personscramble at DesertPeaks Golf ClubinMadras. Cost is $100per teamand includes reenfees,KPand long drives, aswell asa barbecue Iunch.Formoreinformation or toregister, call Desert Peaksat 541-475-6368,visit www .deserlpeaksgolf.com, or emaides l ertpeaksgolOgmail.com. July 13:CentralOregonSenior Golf Organization eventatJohnDayGolf Course.Ba.m,shotgun,Theformat is individualgrossandnet,aswellasteambestball. Cash prizesawardedat eachevent. Tournament series is open to anyone 50or olderwithaGHINA Cost is $165for the seasonplusa$5per-eventfee. Formoreinformation, contactTedCarlin at541-604-4054orvptcarlinqbyahoo.com. July13:Central OregonJuniorGolf Associationtournament atAspenLakesGolf Course inSisters.Teetimes TBD.Formoreinformation, callCOJGAtournament director Brian Wassermanat 541-604-8386,email cojgagolf@ gmail.com, orvisit www.coiga.com. July 16:Couples golf outingat AspenLakesGolf CourseinSisters.Nine-holescramblebeginsat4:30p.m. Cost is$90percoupleandincludesathree-coursedinner at Aspenlakes' Brand33 restaurantaftertheround.For more informationorto register: 541-549-4653orvisit www.asp enlakes.com. July 29: CentralOreqonJuniorGolfAssociationtournamentatTokateeGolf Clubin BlueRiver.TeetimesTBD. Formoreinformation, call COJGAtournamentdirector Brian Was sermanat 541-604-8386,email cojgagolfqbgmail. com,orvisit www.cojga.com. July 20-21:Central OregonJunior atJuniperGolf Coursein Redmondand MeadowLakes Golf Coursein Prinevigeisa major championship onthe OregonGolf Association junior golf schedule. Formore information: 866-981-4653 orwww.oga.org/junIor-golf. July 21:Central Oregon Junior Golf Association's looper tournam ent at Awbrey GlenGolf Club'sLoop CourseinBend. Event isfor 6- to8-year-olds.Golf begins at 4 p.m.Cost is $15to register forthreeevents, plusan $8 per-eyent fee.Formoremformation,call COJGAtournamentdirectorBrianWassermanat541-604-8386,email cojgagoliqbgm ail.com,orvisit www.coiga.com. Jufy 23: LadiesNine& Wineat BlackButteRanch is anine-holeeyen tat theBigMeadowcoursemeant toprovide a non-intimidating andfunenvironment for womento learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open to agskil levels.Costis $40and includesoneglassof wineandacheesetrayor lighthord'oeuvresto enloyafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or www.blackbtu eranch.com. July24:The34thannual St. CharlesRedmondVolunteersGolfTournamentattheResort CourseatEagle Crest Resort inRedmond. Thistournament is a four-person Texasscramblewith awards for men,ladiesand mixed doubles.Prizesfor men'sandwomen's long-drive competition.Shotgunat 8:30a.m.Entry feeis$100per player and includes continental breakfast, golf, cart,rangeballs, prizesand cateredlunch. Proceedsto benefit thenewRedmondSt.Charles Women'sCenter.Formoreinformation: visit www .stcharleshealthcare.orgorcall JuneOverbergat 541-504-8860,JeanneKosanovic at 541-526-1580or DianeAndersonat541-923-0157. July 28: TheMuseumat WarmSpringspresents The BoomerClassic Benefit GolfTournament, a four-person teamscrambleat Kah-Nee-TaResort. Tournament begins with 9:30a.m.shotgun. Costis $75per personand includeslunch,contestsandprizes.Proceedsbenefit communityeduca tional program s of The MuseumAt Warm

Springs.Formoreinformation orto register: call 541322-5753,email dstaconaqbmuseumatwarmsprings.org, or visitwww.museumatwarmsprings.org. July 27:Central OregonJunior GolfAssociationtournamenfatAwbreyGlenGolf ClubinBend.TeetimesTBD. Formoreinformation, call COJGAtournamentdirector Brian Wass ermanat 541-604-8386,email cojgagolfqbgmail. com,orvisit www.cojga.com. Aug. 1:OregonGolf AssociationTourpartnerseries tournam entat JuniperGolf CourseinRedmond. Teetimes beginat1:30p.m.OGATour eventsareopentoanygolfer with aUSG A handicap and include openand senior divisions.Costforthis eventis $158perteamfor OGA members and$198for nonmembers. Deadlineto enter is July 25. Formoreinformationor toregister,visit www.oga. org orcalltheOGAat 503-981-4653. Aug. 2:OregonGolf AssociationTour partnerseries tournament at AspenLakesGolf Course in Sisters.Tee times beginat8:30a.m. OGAToureventsareopentoany olferwithaUSGAhandicapandincludeopenandsenior ivisions.Costforthis event is $158per teamfor OGA members and$198for nonmembers. Deadlineto enter is July 26.Formoreinformationor toregister,visit www.oga. org orcalltheOGAat 503-981-4653. Aug. 3: Central OregonJuniorGolf Associationtournament atRiver's EdgeGolf ClubinBend. TeetimesTBD. Formoreinformation, callCOJGAtournamentdirector Brian Was sermanat 541-604-8386,email cojgagolfqbgmail. com,orvisit www.cojga.com. Aug. 3: CentralOregonSeniorGolf Organizationevent at ValleyGolf ClubinBurns. 9am. shotgun.Theformatis individual grossandnet, aswell asteambest bal. Cash rizesawardedat eachevent. Tournament series is open o anyone 50or olderwithaGHIN4. Cost is $165for the season plusa$5per-eventfee. Formoreinformation,contactTedCarlin at541-604-4054orvptcarlinrNyahoo.com. Aug. 6:CentralOregon Golf Tourindividual stroke lay tournam ent at AspenLakesGolf Course in Sisters. eCentralOregonGolf Tour is acompetitivegolf series held atgolfcoursesthroughoutCentralOregon.Grossand net comp etitions opentoagamateurgolfersofagabilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly,andmembershipnot required. For moreinformation orto register: 541-633-7652,541350-7605,orwwwcentraloregongolltourcom. Aug. 7: First Story's10thannual CharityGolf TournamentafTetherow GolfClubinBend. Four-personscramble beginswith 9a.m.shotgun.Cost is $2,000per foursome and includes golf, forecaddie, openingnight luau,breakfast, lunch,drinks, teeprizes, on-coursecontests and ost-tournam ent barbecue.Field is limitedto 33teams. roceeds benefit First Story'shousinggrant program.For moreinformationorto register: www.firststory.orgoremail info@firststory.org. Aug. 7-8: TheGhost TreeInvitational attheNicklaus Courseat PronghornClub nearBend is a four-person scrambletournament that is opento thepublic. Double-shotguntournament begins at 7:45a.m.and 1:30 .m, Costis$2,400for astandardteam,which includes oursome andfour tickets to Dinner onthe RangeSaturday night;$3,400for a corporateteam,which includes foursomeand10ticketstoDinnerontheRange. Proceeds benefittheAssistanceLeague of Bend andRonald McDonaldHouseCharities. Formoreinformation orto sign up, visitww w.ghostreeinvitational.com. Aug. 8:Prinevile SoroptimistGolfTourna ment at Meadow LakesGolf Course.Cagowayscramble format. 7 a.m.check-in and8a.m. start. Costis $240per team and includesgreenfees, continental breakfast, lunch, and prizes.Proceedsbenefit InternationalSoroptimists of Prinevige,whichwil fundlocal youthscholarships. For moreinformationorto reqister, callMeadowLakesat541447-7113oremaiboydj l 42©gmail.com. Aug. 8-9:JuniperMan-Gal is a36-holetournament for two-personcoed teams at Juniper Golf Course in Redmond.Chapmanformat. Cost is $240per team.For moreinformation orto register: 541-548-3121or www. playjunipercom . Aug. 8-9:OregonMasters at Ea gle Crest Resort in RedmondisaRockyMountainJunior Golf Tourevent.The 36-holestroke-playtournament is forboysand girls with divisionsforgolfersage10to19.Costis $160forRMJGT members, $185for nonmembers. Formoreinformationor to register: www.rockvmountainjuniorgolftour.com. Aug. 9: LadiesNine&Wineat BlackButteRanchisa nine-holeeyent atIhe BigMeadowcoursemeant to provide a non-intimidating andfunenvironment for womento learnandpractice. Eachevent begins at 3:30p.m.Open to agskil levels.Costis $40and includesoneglassof wineandacheesetrayor light hord'oeuvresto enloy after play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or www.blackbutteranch.com . Aug. 13: LadiesNine&Wineat BlackButteRanchis anine-holeeyen tat theBigMeadowcoursemeant toprovideanon-intimidatingandfunenvironmentfor womento learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open to agskill levels.Costis $40andincludesoneglassof wineandacheesetrayor lighthord'oeuvresto enloyafter

play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or www.blackbu teranch.com. Aug. 14:CentralOregon Police Chaplaincybenefit golf tournam entat theRidgeCourseat EagleCrest Resort mRedm ond.Scrambletournament beginswith an8a.m. shotgun start. Costis$125 per golfer andincludesrange balls,cateredlunch,aswel assnacks andrefreshments. For moreinformation or to register:Andreaat 541-3904970 orwww.copchaplain.com. Aug.18:TheHumaneSocietyoftheOchocosgolf tournam ent, dinnerandauction at MeadowLakesGolf CourseinPrinevige.Proceedsbenefit theHSO.For more information:541-447-7178or heatherdodaniel@yahoo.

barbecue awardsluncheon,plus prizesandgiffs. Spaceis limited to first 60couples.Formoreinformation orto register:contactKendalDaiger at541-595-1536orkdaiger© blackbutteran ch.com, orvisit www.blackbuteranch.com/ grapes-golf. Sept. 11:12thannualGopher BrokeScramble at BendGolf andCountry Clubis hosted bytheBend Park and Recre ation District. Thisfour-personscramble tournamentbegins witha 12;30p.m,shotgun, Cost is $600 per team and includesgolf, cait, andfoodandbeverages

at mostholes. Proceedsfromthegolf tournament support recreationscholarships forlocal childrenandfamiles to articipateinBend Park& RecreationDistrict programs. com. or more information orto register: SueBoettnerat541Aug.15-18:Cowboy-Cowbegecouplestournament 706-6231orsueb@bendparksandrec.org; KimJohnson at PrinevigG eolf Club.Couplescompetition is played ina at 541-706-6127or kim@bendparksandrec.org; visit scotch-balformat l .Tournament includesaFridaypractice www.benpdarksandrec.org/info/foundation. roundandevening nine-hole funandfeast. FormoreinBepL 12-13:JuniperBest Ball isa36-holetournaformation:541-4k-6658or wwwsites.google.com/site/ mentfortwo-personmen'steamsat JuniperGolf Course prinevigegolfclub, in Redm ond.Cost is $250perteam.Formoreinformation Aug. 16:CentralOreqonJunior Golf Association or toregister:541-548-3121,or downloadanentry format COJGA Cupat EagleCrest Resorl's RidgeCourseinRed- wwwplayjunipercom . mond.TeetimesTBD.For moreinformation, call CO JGA Sept. 13-15:Ace-in-the-HoleGolf & PokerTourtournam ent directorBrianWasserman at 541-604-8386, namentat BrasadaCanyons Golf Clubin PowegBulte. Two-person bestball withgrossandnet competitions. emaicoj l gagolOgmail.com,orvisitwww.cojga.com. Aug. 17:CentralOregonSenior Golf Organzat i ion Cost is$329and includesthreeroundsof golf, entryinto eventat TheGreensat Redmond.8:30a.m. shotgun.The okertournament anda tee prize.For moreinformation: 1-504-3200orvisitwww.brasada.com. format isindividualgrossandnet, aswell asteambest ball. Cash prizesawardedateachevent. Tournamentseries Bepl.14-15:TheSeniorKah-Nee-TaFall Invitational is open toanyone50orolderwith aGHINA Cost is$165 at Kah-Ne e-TaResort ontheWarmSpringsIndianReserfor theseasonplusa$5per-event fee. Formoreinforma- vationispresentedbytheOregonChapterofthePGA.For tion, contactTedCarlin at 541-604-4054orvptcarlin© moreinformationor toregister, call541-553-4971orvisit www.orpga.com yahoo.com . Aug. 20:Couples golf outingat Aspentakes Golf Sept. 14:Central OregonSeniorGolf Organization CourseinSisters.Nine-holescramblebeginsat4:30p.m. event atAspenLakesGolf Coursein Sisters. 9:30a.m. shotgun. Theformatis individual grossand net, aswell Cost is$90percoupleandincludesathree-coursedinner at AspenLakes'Brand33 restaurantafterthe round.For as team best bal. Cashprizesawardedateacheyent.Tourmore informa tion orto register: 541-549-4653orvisit nament seriesis opentoanyone50 or older with aGHIN www.asp enlakes.com. A Costis$165for theseasonplusa$5per-eventfee.For Aug. 21:25thannualRedmondChamberGolfTour- moreinformation, contactTedCarlin at 541-604-4054 or ahoo.com. nament atJuniperGolf Coursein Redmond. Four-person vptcarlin@y scramble wil beginwith8a.m.shotgun.Cost is$100 per Bepl. 14-16:PNGAWomen's Senior Teamat Sunpersonandincludescateredbreakfast, drinks, snacksand rive rResort sMeadowsandWoodlandscourses.Tour' cateredbarbecue lunch. Formoreinformation, call 541- nament is 54holesoftwo-personteamcompetition (four 923-5191 oremail karen@visitredmondoregon.com. ball, Chap man andfour bal) for golfersage50or older Aug. 27: LadiesNine&Wineat BlackButteRanchis by Sept.14.All golfersmustcarry a40.4handicapindex anine-holeeyetatIhe n BigMeadowcoursemeant topro- or better.Costis $430per teamand fieldis limitedto 60 vide a non-intimidating andfunenvironment for womento teams.Deadline toenter is Aug. 24.Formoreinformation learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open or to reqister,visit www.thepnga.orgorcall thePNGAat to agskil levels.Costis $40and includesoneglassof 800-643-6410. wineandacheesetrayor light hord'oeuvresto enloy after Bepl. 16-18:PNGAMen'sSenior Teamat Sunriver l'sMeadowsandWoodlandscourses.Tournamentis play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or Resor www.blackbuteranch.com . 54 holeof s two-personteamcompetition (fourbal, ChapAug. 28:Birdiesfor BabiesClubTeamChallengeat manandfour ball) forgolfersage50 or olderbySept. 14. BrokenTopClubinBend. Agproceedsfromtheevent go All golfersmustcarry a26.4handicapindexor better.Cost directly toMountainStar Nurseryto benefit localchildren is $430perteamandfieldis limitedto60teams.Deadline at risk ofabuse. Formoreinformation orto register: 541- to enter isAug.26.Formore information orto register, 322-6820,b4bgolfqbgmail.com orvisit www .mountainvisit wwwthepngaorg or call thePNGAat 800-643-6410. starfamily.org. Sept. 17:Couplesgolf outing atAspen LakesGolf Aug.3tgr CentralOregon Senior Golf Organzat i ion CourseinSisters.Nine-holescramblebeginsat4:30p.m. eventatMeadowLakesGolf CourseinPrinevile. 9a.m. Cost is$90percoupleandincludesathree-coursedinner shotgun. Theformat is individual grossandnet,aswellas at AspenLakes' Brand33 restaurantaftertheround.For teambest bal. Cashprizesawardedateacheyent. Tourna- more informa tion orto register: 541-549-4653orvisit enlakes.com. mentseriesis opento anyone50 or olderwithaGHIN77. www.asp Cost is$165fortheseasonplus a$5per-event fee.For Bepl. 18:CentralOregonRegional Council'sannual moreinformation, contactTedCarlin at 541-604-4054 or golf tournam ent atTheGreensat Redmond. Four-person scramble tournament teesat3 p.m. costs$60per person vptcarlinriyahoo.com . Aug. 31-Bept. 3: SunriverJuniorOpenandJunior and includes abarbecuedinnerafter theround.Formore All-StarsatSunnyer Resort's Meadowscourse.American information ortoregister: email contactusricaioregon.org JuniorGolfAssociationtournamentfeatures topboysand or call lauraat503-531-9668or503-635-0742. girls ages12 to18fromaroundthecountryandbeyondto Sepl. 19-20:The88thOGAMen' sTeam Champiplay in54holesof strokeplay. Formore information, call onship atBendGolf andCountry Club. Tournament is the AJG Aat 770-868-4200or visitwww.ajga.org. an OregonGolf Association 36-holegrossstroke-play Bepl. 19:Central OregonGolf Tour individual stroke event.OG Amember clubsnominatefour amateur golfers theclub. Teamscoresarecalculatedusing playtournam entat BigMeadowatBlackBute Ranch.The to represent CentralOregonGolf Tour is acompetitive golf seriesheld the bestthreeindividual scoreson theteameach day. at golfcoursesthroughout Central Oregon. Grossandnet For moreinformation, visit www.oga.orgorcall theOGA competitionsopento all amateurgolfers of agabilties. at 866-981-4653. Prizepoolawardedweekly,andmembershipnot required. Bepl. 19-24:The19thannual Lithia Pacific Amateur For moreinformation orto register: 541-633-7652,541- Golf Classicisopento anyamateur golfer whopossess 350-7605,orwwwcentraloregongolltourcom. an establishedUSG A Handicap. Thethree-day, net, Bepl.10:LadiesNine&WineatBlackButteRanchis stroke-playtournament is staged at seven areacourses, anine-holeeyentatIheBigMeadowcoursemeant topro- culminatinginachampionship roundat Sunriver Resort's videanon-intimidatingandfunenvironmentfor womento Crosswa ter Club. Entry feeis $530. Register onlineat camgol f.com orbvcalling888-425-3976. learnandpractice. Each event begins at 3:30p.m.Open www.pa to agskil levels.Costis $40and includesoneglassof Bepl. 28:CouplesHit 8 GiggleatBlackButteRanch wineandacheesetrayor light hord'oeuvresto enloy after is a nine-holevent attheBig Meadowcoursedesigned petitive playerswhowant toplayasacouple. play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 541-595-1500or for non-com www.blackbu teranch.com. Each event begins at3 p.m.Opentoagskil levels. Cost is Bepl. 19-12:Grapes& Golf tourname nt at Black $99 per coupleandincludesdinner andaglassof wine or ButteRanchis acouplestournament. Two-daytournament int ofbeerafter play.Formoreinformationortoregister: 77-468-1660 or golfgroups@blackbuteranch.com. features tworoundsofgolf, abest ball onFndayat Glaze Bepl. 24:CentralOregonGolfTour individual strokeMeadowand StablefordonSaturdayat BigMeadow. Cost is$750percoupleandincludeswine,cheeseandhors I'I" lay tournam ent atTetherowGolf ClubinBend.TheCend'oeuvresreception, onepractice roundwith cart, two ral Oregon Golf Tour is acompetitive golf seriesheldat tournam entroundswith cart, rangebals eachday,Friday golf coursesthroughout Central Oregon. Gross and net and Saturday breakfast, four-coursewine pairing dinner, competitionsopento all amateurgolfers of agabilities.

Prizepoolawardedweekly,andmembershipnot required. For moreinformation orto register: 541-633-7652,541350-7605,orwwwcentraloregongolftourcom. Bepl. 26-27: DeerWidowsInvitationalatJuniperGolf CourseinRedmondis abest-ball tournament for women only. Tourna ment begins with 10a.m.shotgun. Costis $250team. Formoreinformationorto register,callJuniper at 541-548-3121, or visit www.playjunipercom. Bepl. 28-Oct. 1: TheFallTour is apro-amtournamentforteamsandindividuals. Thisfour-dayeventisheld at EagleCrestResort's RidgeCourse inRedmond, Broken TopClubinBendand Black ButteRanchs' GlazeMeadow and BigMeadowcourses.Formoreinformation call Rich Haaland at503-702-1389. Oct. 24:Brewer'sChapmanat BrokenTopClubin Bend.Chapman event incorporatestwoof Central Oregon' spastimes:golfandbeer.Noonshotgunbothdays and adinneronthe Friday night before thetournament. Costis$450pertwo-person team,whichincludespractice roundandtwocompetitive rounds, four mealsand localy craftedbeers. Formoreinformation orto register: contact Jim Cubigas at541-383-8215or jimc@brokentop.com. Oet. 3-4:2015OG ATour ChampionshipattheNicklaus andFazio coursesat PronghornClub near Bend. Tournam ent is byinvitationonly based on pointsaccrued at OGA Tour events, which areopen toanygolferwith a USGA handicap and includeopenand senior divisions. For moreinformation orto register, visit www.oga.orgor call theOGAat 503-981-4653. Oet. 8<:BattleoftheButte Individual Championship atBlackButteRanch'sBigMeadow andGlazeMeadow courses.36-holetournament is welcometo amateursof all skill levelsto compete in bothgrossand net stroke lay inopen,senior and womendivisions. Official USGA andicap is required.Cost is$170perplayerandincludes Fridaypracticeround,barbecuelunch, pnzesandawards. Field is limitedto first120 golfersandcompetitors must reqisterbvSept.24. Formoreinformation orto register: cail 541-595-1292,email golfgroupsqbblackbuteranch. com or visit www.blackbuteranch.com/battle-butte. Oct.6:Central OregonSenior Golf Organizationevent at JuniperGolf Course in Redmond. 9:30a.m. shotgun. The formatis individualgrossandnet, aswell asteam bestball. Cashprizesawardedat eachevent.Tournament series isopentoanyone50or olderwith aGHINACost is $165 fortheseasonplus a$5 per-event fee. Formore information,contactTedCarlin at 541-604-4054or vptcarlinrNyah oo.com. Oct. 9:Chip in ForeKids charity golf tournam ent at Bend Golf andCountry Club.18-holescramble tournamentbenefits Deschutes Children'sFoundation. For moreinformationorto reqister: visit www.deschuteschildrensfounda tion.org, call 541-388-3101or email amyqb deschuteschildrensfoun dation.org. Oet. 9-10:AwbreyGlenFal Classicis a 36-hole stroke-playtourna ment at Awbrey Glen Golf ClubinBend for seniomen. r Play begins atnoon onFriday;8:30a.m. on Saturday. Tournament is opento anygolfer with an officialUSG Ahandicapof 36.4 orless. Senior (50and over)andsupersenior divisions(65andover) areavailable.Costis $225per playerandincludes tworoundsof golf, cart,rangeandpar-3courseaccess, barbecuedinner and lunch.Lodgingavailableat Mount Bachelor Vilage. Field limitedto 72golfers. Formoreinformation or to register:wwwawbreyglen.com,541-388-8526 ortime awbreyglen.cm o. Oet. 22:Central OregonGolf Tour individual strokeplay tournam ent at BrasadaRanch in Powell Butte.The CentralOregonGolfTour is acompetitive golfseriesheld at golfcoursesthroughout Central Oregon.Grossandnet competitionsopento all amateurgolfers of agabilities. Prizepoolawardedweekly,andmembershipnot required. For more information orto register: 541-633-7652,541350-7605,orwww.centraloregongolftourcom. Oct. 24:Seasoncloser at JuniperGolf Coursein Redmond. Four-personscramblediyided intotwo-couple teams. Shotgunstart at11a.m.Costis $140per team.For moreinforma tion orto register: 541-548-3121ordownloadentryformat www.playiunipercom. Oct. 31:PumpkinBashPar3ChallengeatMeadow LakesGolfCoursein Prinevige.Individual stroke-play tournam ent,butag18holesareplayedaspar3s.Playbeginswith10a.m.shotgun.Costis $25per golfer plus$25 per-person greenfee.For moreinformationor to register, call theMeadowLakesproshopat541-447-7113. Nov. 14:TheTurkeyShootOpenatMeadow Lakes Golf Coursein Prinevigeis a best-ball tournament for two-person teams.Eventteesoffwith an11a.m. shotgun. Cost is$40plus $25 per-persongreenfee. Formoreinformationortoregister, call theMeadowLakespro shop at 541-447-7113. Dec. 12:ChristmasGoose Golf Tourna ment at Meadow LakesGolf Coursein Prinevige. Chapmanis for two-person teamsandtees offwith an11a.m, shotgun. Cost is$30plus$15per-persongreenfee.Toregisteror for moreinformation, calltheMeadowLakesgolf shopat 541-447-7113.


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