Serving Central Oregon since190375
TUESDAY June10,2014
oominIll
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD NBA playoffs —Acloser look at the year of the flop.C1
OregOn trainS —Oil routes, disclosed, maynot gopublic. B3
TWO BULLS FIRE ids d/ou
Two Bullsfromspace This image, recordedMonday by the MODISsensor
Redmond
on board the Terra satellite,
Smoke
$1 billion project that California hopes will shield it from future droughts.A3
Bend
i oiK CotUNTY Cno
closed eESCHUTES CotUNTY
LANE CotUNTY
By Mark Morical The Bulletin
by-step instructions.B1
Outdoor enthusiasts
le in
Alzheimer's —Healthy seniors tested in bid to block the disease.A4
trails are
Sriot/y
Deschutes County.
Home kegerator — Step-
popular
Two Bulls Fire
shows smokecovering a large portion of
Desaliuatiou —Inside a
rinexiue
5ome
KLAMATH CoiUNTY
hoping to hike or mountain bike west of Bend should be aware that
LAKE CoiUNTY
Source: Earthebaervatory
Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin
VA —57,000 veterans await medical appointments.A2
trails in the popular Phil's Trail network west of Bend are closed due to the Two Bulls Fire. Trails and forest
roads north of Century Drive and farther north to Skyline Forest
And a Wedexclusive
— In Texarkana, divided by a state line and aMedicare card. bendbnlletin.cnm/extrns
are closed, according
00
EDITOR'5CHOICE
A chilling medical experiment By Kate Murphy New Yorh Times News Service
PITTSBURGH — Trau-
ma patients arriving at an emergencyroom here after a gunshot or knife wound may find themselves enrolled in a startling medical experiment.
Surgeons will drain their blood and replace it with
at trailheads to keep
The Bulletin
the public out of harm's way. "The main thing is,
Fire investigators announced Monday that the 7wo Bulls Fire was
get back in there and
information that leads to a
son-Dean said Monday. "The thing that people need to understand is we are looking out for
Correction The Los Angeles Times crossword puzzle grid that published Saturday, June7, on Page F4,was incorrect due to information provided by Tribune MediaServices. The corrected puzzle appears today on Page B6. The Bulletin regrets the error.
then we have to evacuate them in an emer-
gency or we don't know that they're there," Nel-
conviction in the case. Deschutes County Sheriff Larry Blanton told a
crowd of about 150 people at a public meeting Monday night at Bend High School that it is unclear if the fire,
their safety." SeeTrails /A5
which started as two sepwas accidental or not.
the boundaries of conventional surgery — and, some say, medical ethics. SeeTrauma/A4
we don't want folks to
human-caused, and the timber-holding company whose land has been blackened by the blaze is offering a reward for
activity, the patients will be clinically dead. And then the surgeons will try to save their lives.
clinical trial that pushes
Nelson-Dean said
theforestservicehas posted numerous signs
By Dylan J. Darling
arate fires Saturday and burned into one Sunday,
versity of Pittsburgh Medical Center have begun a
Forest spokeswoman. Shevlin Park is also closed, as is Skyliners Road west of Summit High School.
• $2,000 reward offered • 3 schoolsclosed • 50 homesstill evacuated • More wind
freezing salt water. Without heartbeat and brain
Researchers at the Uni-
to Jean Nelson-Dean, a Deschutes National
City using less water
"It's too early to say arson," he said. Cascade Timberlands
has put up a $2,000reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction
By Elon Glucklich
connected to the fire. The fire investigation team is looking to talk with anyone who may have information
The Bulletin
about activity, individuals or vehides seen on Cascade
switched from surface water to well water Sat-
Timberlands forestland
urday, amid concerns
west of Tumalo Reservoir
the 7wo Bulls Fire could threaten the city's water
Water usage in Bend
has dropped about 12 percent since the city
in the days leadingup to the fire. The company owns the
and Oregon Department of
supply. The fire raging in forestland west of Bend had not reached the Bridge Creek watershed as of Monday evening and didn't
Forestry are all part of the
seem to pose an imme-
land where the fires started.
Officials from the Sheriff's Office, the U.S. Forest Service, the Walker Range Fire Protection Association
investigation team. SeeFire /A5
diate threat to the city's drinking water facili-
8.|e
ties in the area, officials
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 75, Low39 Page B6
INDEX At Home D1-6 Crosswords E4 Business C5-6 Dear Abby D6 Calendar B2 Local/State B1-6 Classified E1-6 Obituaries B5 Comics/ Sports C1-4 Puzzles E3-4 TV/Movies D6
Qo Seemorephotos onPage A5and online atbendbulletin. com,whereyoucan also get updates throughout theday
said Monday. But the switch to
groundwater wells and requests by the city for residents to cut back on
water use seemed to be working, Bend Public
r
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Crews extinguish hot spots Monday to secure the fire line on the east flank of the Two Bulls Fire.
Works Director Paul Rheault said. SeeWater /A5
MORE FIRE NEWS
The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper
Wildfire mitigation costsput other projects on hold
Vol. 112, No. 161,
By Andrew Clevenger
al designed to protect fish
allotted for fighting wildfires.
Impact by State," a report it
to improve visitors' experi-
30 pages, 5sections
The Bulletin
habitats.
This means other projects
costs forced the U.S. Forest
vice and the Bureau of Land
Service to put off major projects in Oregon in 2012 and 2013, including sever-
are delayed or canceled when their funding is spent during heavy fire seasons. The Forest Service outlined
ences of public lands, including a $141 000 replacement
cessive wildfire suppression
Under the current funding regime, both the Forest Ser-
Management must borrow from other accounts once they some consequences of this have exhausted their funds approach in "Fire Transfer
released Monday, In Oregon, this meant that repairs to multiple roads and culverts, needed to keep sediment out of fish habitats, were deferred last year. Hundreds of thousands of dollars meant
happen.
Q I/I/e usereryc/ed newsprint
:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
WA SHINGTON — Ex-
of the water system at the Timberline Lodge on the Mt. Hood National Forest, didn't
SeeProjects/A4
A2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
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EgyPtian aSSaultS —A string of sexual assaults on women during celebrations of Egypt's presidential inauguration — including a mass attack on a19-year-old student who wasstripped in Cairo's Tahrir Square — prompted outrage Monday as a video emerged purportedly showing the teenager, bloodied andnaked, surrounded by dozens of men.Sevenmenwere arrested in connection with the assault and police were investigating 27 other complaints of sexual harassment against womenduring Sunday's rallies by tens of thousands of people celebrating Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi's inauguration late into the night, security officials said.
au i II1 S BWBI IIl a oin men By GregJaff e and Josh Hicks The Washington Post
medical staffers and contract with private clinics to see vet-
to handle an aging popuStudent Iealle —Up to 5 million Americans struggling to make their monthly student loan payments could find relief under a program President BarackObamaexpanded Monday, part of an election-year push byDemocrats to paint Republicans as blocking common-sense steps that could help the middle class. Dubbing it a "no-brainer," Obamaalso threw his support behind legislation to let some of those sameborrowers refinance their student loans at lower rates, in a movethe administration said could save 25million borrowers up to $2,000 over the life of their loans.
lation of V i etnam veterans
erans who are unable to get who have flooded the system tionwide audit by the Depart- care through VA medical cen- with severe health problems, ment of Veteran Affairs found ters. Gibson also promised to some of them linked to Agent that 57,000 veterans have been institute new patient satisfac- Orange. waiting more than 90 days for tion surveys and said he had VA has taken steps to adan appointment and that an eliminated the 14-day schedul- dress scheduling problems at additional 64,000 requested ing goal for VA appointments, the Phoenix VA clinic, where medical care but never made it a measure that VA officials allegations of fraud and fake onto VA waiting lists. said was unrealistic and led to waiting lists spurred the in"This data shows the ex- widespread cheating among spector general's investigation tent of the system problems hospital administrators whose into what quickly became a we face," acting VA secretary bonuses were tied to hitting nationwide scandal. In PhoeSloan Gibson said, "prob- the mark. nix, the department removed lems that demand immediate The near-term measures, three senior officials, contactactions." however, are not likely to fix ed all patients on waiting lists Gibson — who took over on deeper problems that plague and deployed mobile medical May 30 afterhis predecessor, an VA h e alth-care system units to speed care. EricShinseki,resigned under that has struggled to accomVA officials said they are pressure — outlined a seriesof modate more than 2 million still trying to figure out how emergency measures Monday new patients over the past much money and how many to ensure that veterans stuck five years. Some of the new doctors and nurses they will on long waiting lists will re- veterans using VA medical need to fix the health-care sysceive care as quickly as pos- centers fought in the Iraq and tem, which has seen its budget sible in the coming days and Afghanistan wars and ap- grow to almost $55 billion. "We're trying to get our weeks. pear to be using VA services The interim VA secretary at rates that are significant- hands around it," said a senior said he would spend $300 mil- ly higher than in previous VA official who was not autholion to increase hours for VA wars. VA also has struggled rized to speak on the record. W ASHINGTON — A
na-
ImmigratiOnruling —Adivided SupremeCourt ruled Monday that children of immigrants who lost their places in theslow-moving immigration system becausethey turned 21 before their parents received their immigrant visa could not begiven special priority. The court's 5-4 decision, some ofthemsaid, upheld apolicy that could separate immigrant families — theopposite of what Congress hadin mind in 2002, when it passedthe law at issue in the case. Thedecision could affect untold numbers of young immigrants across the country. ISrael hunger Strike —Israeli authorities have hospitalized 65 Palestinian prisoners who havebeen participating in anextended hunger strike over Israel's use of administrative detention to keep prisoners in jail indefinitely without charges. Anestimated 300 prisoners are thought to betaking part in the strike. The strike has prompted the Israeli government to push legislation that would allow force feeding, something the Israeli medical association opposes. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reportedly has cited force-feeding at Guantanamo in pressing for the legislation. LaS VegaS ShOOtingS —A husbandandwife who went on a deadly shooting rampage in LasVegas harbored anti-government beliefs and left a swastika and a"Don't tread on me" flag on thebody of one of the two police officers they killed, authorities said Monday. Jerad and AmandaMiller had been kicked off a Nevada ranch where anti-government protesters faced downfederal agents earlier this year becausethey were "very radical," according to the son of rancher Cliven Bundy.Assistant Sheriff Kevin McMahill said the Millers had ideology shared by "militia and white supremacists," including the belief that law enforcement was the "oppressor."
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
DEPARTMENT HEADS
ChriS ChriStie taur —Chris Christie is plunging into what amounts to a cross-country revival tour, looking to recover from a clumsy political scandal and reclaim his place as apromising Republican presidential prospect. In one recent week, it was on-the-ground politics in Tennesseeand NewMexico. This week, after a campaign stop in Pennsylvania, the New Jersey governor returns to the late night comedy circuit with an appearance onNBC's "Tonight Show." Then he'll stop by Mitt Romney's Utah summit, a private event for donors and GOP establishment leaders, and the weekafter that he heads to Washington to court Christian conservatives at anational gathering of the Faith andFreedomCoalition.
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Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnMonday nightare:
QaQa f ®4QsQso Q cr The estimated jackpot is now $3.6 million.
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REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203
WILSONSof Redmond
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Shakil Adil/The Associated Press
Smoke rises Monday above the Jinnah International Airport, in Karachi, Pakistan. Gunmen disguised
INDOW TREAT%
as police guards attacked a terminal with machine gunsand arocket launcher during a five-hour siege that killed at least 29 people, while security forces retaliated and killed all the attackers, officials
said Monday.
The Associated Press
KARACHI, Pakistan — The Pakistani Taliban threatened more violence Monday after
a five-hour assault on the nation's busiest airport killed 29 people — including all 10 attackers — raising a new challenge for a U.S. ally trying to end years of fighting that has daimed thousands of lives. With recently started peace efforts stalled, the cautious
541-3$0-50$4
I 0:L'IlP'
spokesman, Shahidullah Shahid, warned that "such attacks
will continue until there is a permanent cease-fire." The attack began late Sun-
day when 10 gunmen, some disguised a s po l i cemen,
nie8 "'-P'-
=:
-
stormed into a section of the
'
sprawling airport where a terminal for VIP flights and cargo is located. They opened fire with machine guns and rocket launchers, sparking a battle with security forces that lasted until around dawn.
government of Prime Minister Heavy gunfire and multiple Nawaz Sharif may be dragged explosions were heard comcloser to a decision on wheth- ing from the terminal amid er to take on the militants in the fighting. A major fire rose earnest across a country with from the airport, illuminating a long history of ambiguity the night in an orange glow as when it comes to dealing with the silhouettes of jets could be militancy. seen. A further weakening of At least some of the gunmen stability in the nuclear power wore the uniform of the Airwhose tribal regions are al- port Security Force, said an ready a hotbed of foment could official near the terminal. All ripple to neighboring Afghan- the attackers wore vests of existan as international combat plosives, some of which were forces prepare to withdraw detonated when they were shot from that country. at by the police, the official "Everywhere is a t h reat," said, speaking on condition of warned I n t erior Min i ster anonymitybecause he was not Chaudhry Nisar Ali Khan. authorized to talk to the media. "Every area is a target, every The attack started about the building is a potential target." same time that airport securiSuch an attack in Karachi, Pakistan's business center,
G allery - B e n d
7%1 Sw10th • Redmond• (541) 54s4616 www.redmondwindowtreets.com
Pakistani Talibanvows more violence tocome By Rebecca Santana and Adil Jawad
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will likely discourage foreign Airlines engineering wing investment at a time when its were changing shifts, said two economy is struggling. of the PIA employees. The emThe Taliban said the assault ployees asked not to be idention the Jinnah International fiedbecause they were notauAirport in Karachi, Pakistan's thorized to speak to the media. largest city, was in revenge for A cargo building was left the November killing of the completely gutted by the fire militant group's leader in a and the explosions, said RizU.S. drone strike. wan Akhtar, the chief of PaIn a telephone call to The kistan's elite p aramilitary Associated Press, the group's Rangers.
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TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Tuesday, June10, the161st day of 2014. Thereare204 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS BOOk —Hillary Clinton's new book, "Hard Choices," is scheduled to be released.
DiPIOmaCy — U.S. and Iranian officials reconvene in Geneva to revive momentum in the push for anaccord on the Islamic Republic's nuclear program.
HISTORY Highlight:In1964, the Senate
SCIENCE
SCIENCE Q&A
Life in the
esainaion ans: e slow lane uureo e a i orniacoas? Q By C. Claiborne Ray
New York Times News Service
•Why do m edicines •with codeine tend to
cause constipation'?
• Codeine is an opiate, A • a constituent of opium, and like all drugs of
Supporters say a $1 billion project — the largest water desalination plant in the Western Hemisphere — is the state's best hope for a drought-proof water supply.
its kind it has a complex interaction with the human body that tends to slow
voted to limit further debate
on a proposed civil rights bill, shutting off a filibuster by Southern senators. (The Civil Rights Act of1964 went on to win congressional approval and was signed byPresident Lyndon Johnson.) In1692,the first official execution resulting from the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts took place asBridget Bishop was hanged. In1864,the Confederate Congress authorized military service for men betweenthe ages of17 and 70. In1907,11menin five cars set out from the Frenchembassy in Beijing on a race toParis. (Prince Scipione Borgheseof Italy was the first to arrive in the French capital two months later.) In1921, President Warren G. Harding signed into law the Budget and Accounting Act, which created the Bureauof the Budget and theGeneral Accounting Office. In1934, English composer Frederick Delius, 72, died in Grez-sur-Loing, France. In1940, Italy declared war on France andBritain; Canada declared war on Italy. In1942, during World War II, German forces massacred 173 male residents of Lidice (LIH'dyiht-zeh), Czechoslovakia, in retaliation for the killing of Nazi official Reinhard Heydrich. In1944, German forces massacred 642 residents of the French village of Oradour-surGlane. In1967, the Middle East War
ended as Israel andSyria agreed to observe aUnited Nations-mediated cease-fire. In1971, President Richard M. Nixon lifted a two-decades-old trade embargo onChina. In1985,socialite Claus von Bulow was acquitted by ajury in Providence, R.l., at his retrial on charges he'd tried to murder his heiress wife, Martha "Sunny" von Bulow. In1994, the action thriller "Speed," starring Keanu Reeves, Dennis Hopperand Sandra Bullock, was released by Twentieth Century FoxFilm Corp. Ten years ago: Singer-musician RayCharles, known for such hits as "What'd I Say," "Georgia on MyMind" and "I Can't Stop Loving You," died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age73. Five years ago: James von Brunn, an 88-year-old white supremacist, opened fire in the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., killing security guard Stephen T. Johns. (Von Brunn diedat a North Carolina hospital in January 2010 while awaiting trial.) Donald Trump fired Miss California USACarrie Prejean, who'd sparked controversy when she said gaysshouldn't be allowed to marry, citing contract violations. Oneyear ago:Jury selection began in Sanford, Fla., in the trial of neighborhood watch volunteer GeorgeZimmerman, who waschargedwith second-degeeemurder in the fatal shooting of17-year-old Trayvon Martin. (Zimmerman was acquitted.)
BIRTHDAYS Britain's Prince Philip is 93. Former Sen. JohnEdwards, D-N.C., is 61. FormerNewYork Governor-turned-media commentator Eliot Spitzer is 55. Louisiana Gov.BobbyJindal is 43. Olympic gold medal figure skater Tara Lipinski is 32. Model-actress KateUpton is 22. SashaObamais13. — From wire reports
Fromsaltwatertotapwater
How the filters work
A look at how desalination plants convert saltwater to drinkable fresh water. Seawater
Seawater j
Salts ®
down its systems, including the digestive system. In
Membrane
Through a process called reverse osmosis, seawater is forced through Se awater layers of superfine membrane to filter out salt and other dissolved contaminants
fact, one of its medical uses
is treating diarrhea. A 2002 review in t h e
journal Pharmacotherapy described how opiates and drugs that resemble them, called opioids, are thought to cause constipation. One important factor in
R
Fl l l s water
1. Pumping seawater Millions of gallons of seawater a day come in through intake pipes; protective screens minimize sucking in sea life and large debris
Storage
2. Pretreatment Water is filtered for sediments, bacteria and viruses; solid waste is sent to a landfill
Source:BayArea Regional Desalination Project, MCT Graphic: Bay Area News Group
1t.
I II'
3. Desalination Seawater is pumped through concentric filters; more than 99 percent of the salt and minerals is removed
constipation is a reduction
in the speed of peristalsis, the ripples of muscle con-
Brine
4. Wastewater
5. Post-treatment
Water is chlorinated; Brine, the remaining minerals can be water from added to match taste desalination, is more of existing water salty than seawater, so it is mixed with industrial wastewater or other seawater to reduce salinity before it's returned to the sea
6. Storing and deiiyering water
tractions and r elaxations
that move food alongthe digestive tract. Opioid recep-
Fresh water is stored and released into the municipal water system
tors on the smooth muscles
of the gut are believed to slow down both contraction and relaxation. Naxolone,
a drug that specifically counters the effects of opi© 2014 MCT
and high-tech equipment as three massive yellow cranes labor nearby. The crews are building
"We run the risk of building facilities that we don't use," er impurities by blasting the Cooley said. "And that's a water at six times the pressure waste of money." of a fire hose through memLast month, the Santa Bartive director of the Association branes with microscopic holes. bara City Council voted to of California Water Agencies. San Diego County is proba- spend $935,000to hire an engi"But they stuck it out. They got bly better suited than any large neering firm, law firm and lobit done. If it succeeds, it will California community for de- byist to try to restart the city's encourage others to try. And salination. It receives only 10 shuttered plant by 2016. "None of us wants to do it, if it fails, it will have a chilling inches of rain a year, one-third effect." less than Los Angeles, Fresno but I was there 25 years ago, To critics, the plant is a cost- or San Jose. It has very little and it's really ugly when you ly mistake that will use huge g roundwater. And i t h a s a run out of water," said Sanamounts of energy and harm largecustomer base to spread ta Barbara City Councilman fish and other marine life out the cost of the Carlsbad Harwood "Bendy" W h i t e. when it sucks in seawater us- plant, which will provide about "This is one option for stretching the intakes from the aging 7 percent of the total water ing out our supplies." Encina Power Plant next door. needs of the county. Similarly, the C alifornia "This is going to be the pig The high price is worth it American Water Company in that will try for years to find to help San Diego and oth- Monterey County is studying the right shade oflipstick," said er regionsrely less on water three locations to build a desal
what boosters say represents California's best hope for a
Marco Gonzalez,an Encinitas attorney who sued on behalf of
By Paul Rogers San Jose Mercury News
CARLSBAD, Calif. — On sunny afternoons, this stretch
of beach 35 miles north of San Diego offers a classic Southern California backdrop:joggers,palm trees and surfers, flanked by waves rolling in and pelicans soaring overhead. But just across the road, an-
otherscene,unlike any other in the state's history, is playing out:More than 300 con-
struction workers are digging trenches and assembling a vast network of pipes, tanks
before finally breaking ground in December 2012. "They went through seven or eight years of hell to get here," said Tim Quinn, execu-
The process, known as reverse osmosis, removes salt and oth-
from the Colorado River and
oids on these receptors, has been used to treat constipation of unknown origin. It has also been suggested that opioids interfere with the normal supply of water and electrolytes in the lining of the intestines. Another possible factor is
opioid interference with receptors in the anal canal that normally detect
an accumulation of waste and signal the internal anal sphincter valve t o
r e lax
and discharge it.
plant to make up for water lost
the Sacramento-SanJoaquin when state regulators ruled drought-proof water supply: the Surfrider Foundation and River Delta, both of which are the company didn't have valid the largest ocean desalination other environmental groups to overdrawn and increasingly permits for the Carmel River. plant in the Western Hemi- try to stop construction. "This unreliable, said Bob Yamada, In Los Angeles, leaders of the sphere. The $1 billion project project will show that the wa- water resources manager for West Basin Municipal Water will provide 50 million gal- ter is just too expensive." the San Diego County Water District, which serves about lons of drinking water a day For the plant to be a success Authority. 100,000 people, built a pilot "You can't conserve or recy- plant in Redondo Beach and for San Diego County when it and copied in other parts of opens in 2016. the state, Poseidon will have to cle what you don't have," Ya- are studying plans for a $300 Since the 1970s, California deliver high-quality drinking mada said. million desalination plant by " Desal o ff er s u s loc a l 2020. has dipped its toe into ocean water at the price promiseddesalination — talking, plan- and not cause unexpected im- control." ning, debating. But for a vari- pacts to the environment such The authority will pay from ety of reasons — mainly cost as fish die-offs. $2,014 to $2,257 an acre foot "It's a test case," said Ron for the water, depending on and environmental concerns — the state has never taken the Davis, executive director of how much it buys. The agenHWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. plunge. Cal Desal, an industry advo- cy, which provides water to 3.1 716 SW11tb St. (1 block West of Costco) Until now. cacy group. "We like to tease million people in San Diego Redmond . 541.923.4732 541-828-8011 • stmrks.com Fifteen desalination proj- them: Only the entire future of County, signed a 30-year conects are proposed along the desal is riding on this project. tract agreeing to buy at least coast from Los Angeles to San No pressure." 48,000 acre feet ayear. Francisco Bay. Desalination With that guarantee, Potechnology is becoming more Cost counts seidon and its investors were ® I E I ORI A l efficient. And the state is mired Almost every discussion able to sell bonds to finance in its third year of drought. So about desalination begins and the project. The company will critics and backers alike are ends with cost. be guaranteeda rate ofreturn wondering whether this projDesalinated water typical- between 9 and 13 percent, deect in a town better known ly costs about $2,000 an acre pending on operating costs. as the home of Legoland and foot — roughly the amount of Critics say the agency is getIn our effort to provide dental care to children in Deschutes skateboard icon Tony Hawk is water a family of five uses in a ting a raw deal. County who can't afford it, the Kemple Memorial Children's "It's not a public-private ushering in a new era. year. The cost is about double Dental Clinic wishes to thank the following dentists Will California — like Israel, that of water obtained from partnership," Gonzalez said. for their volunteered services in May, 2014. Saudi Arabia and other arid building a new reservoir or "It's corporate welfare." VOLUNTEER DENTISTS TREATING KEMPLE KIDS coastal regions of the world recycling wastewater, accordNobody disputes that the — finally turn to the ocean ing to a 2013 study from the cost of water will go up. AciN THEiR OWN OFFICES. MAY, 2014 to quench its thirst? Or will state Department of W a ter cording to Yamada, the averDr. Scot Burgess Dr. Anne Scott the project finally prove that Resources. age customer's bill, now $71 a Dr. Msrika Stone Dr. David Bitner drinking Pacific seawater is And its price tag is at least month, will rise $5 to $7 to pay Dr. Jetr Timm Dr. Blake Drew too pricey, too environmental- four times the cost of obtaining for desalination. Dr. SteveTimm Dr. Rex Gibson ly harmful and too impractical "new water" from conservaDr. Peter Yonan When the price is too high Dr. David Dunscombe for the Golden State? tion methods — such as paying "Everybody is w atching farmers to install drip irrigaSometimes the high costs Dr. Matt Falkenstein Volunteer Dental Carlsbad to see what's going tion, or providing rebates for can turn off the spigot. Dr. Kelli Fowles Professionals to happen," said Peter MacLag- homeowners to rip out lawns After enduring severewater Dr. Taylor Fowles Lana Austin EPDH gan, vice president of Poseidon or buy water-efficient toilets. shortages during a drought in Dr. Benjamin Grieb Dawn Bailey RDH "We look out and see a vast Water, the Boston firm buildthe late 1980s, Santa BarbaCindy Baumgardner RDH Dr. Brad Hester ing the plant. ocean. It seems obvious," said ra voters agreed to spend $34 Diana Guy RDH "I think it will be a growing Heather Cooley, water direc- million to build a desalination Dr. Dennis Holly Carol Harken DA trend along the coast," he said. tor for the Pacific Institute, a plant. It opened in 1991 and proDr. Mark Jensen "The ocean is the one source nonprofit research organiza- vided water for four months. Laurel Kelso RDH Dr. JeA' Johnson of water that's truly drought- tion in Oakland. "But it's cost W hen the drought ended, the Brandy Ketcher DA Dr. Maureen Porter proof. And it will always be prohibitive for most places in city shut it down. Water from Hailey Rambo EPDH there." California." reservoirs and other sources Dr. Catherine Quas Karen Siewert RDH To supporters, the Carlsbad In Carlsbad, 2 gallons of was significantlycheaper. Dr. Tom Rheuben Desiree Strawn EPDH Desalination Plant is a histor- seawater will be needed to proSimilarly, Australia spent Dr. Brian Rosenzweig Darla Thompson RDH ic engineering marvel. And it duce each gallon of drinking more than $10 billion buildSpecial thankyou to Awbrey Dental for their free is a survivor, having endured water. And to remove the salt, ing six huge seawater desalisix years of government per- the plant will use an enormous nation plants during a severe a f dental care f chiidre mitting, from t h e C a rlsbad amount of energy — about 38 drought from 1997 to 2009. At the Kemple Memorial Children's DentalClinic, ourmission is toimprovethe health City Council to the California megawatts, enough to power Today, Cooley noted, four are and well-beingofchildren in DeschutesCounty byfacilitating critical preventative, Coastal Commission. Sup- 28,500 homes — to force 100 shut down because when rains educationalanddentaltreatment servicesfor childrenwhosefamilies cannot access porters won 14 lawsuits and million gallons of seawater a finally came, the cost of the basic dentalcare.Weadvocate for all childrenneedingtimely, highquality dentalcare. appeals by environmentalists day through a series of filters. water became noncompetitive.
Kemple
Children's en inic
A4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
IN FOCUS: AGING
Trauma
Healthy seniors tested in bid to block Alzheimer's
Continued from A1 By inducing hypothermia and slowing metabolism in dying patients, doctors hope to
By Lauran Neergaard
tal decline in patients with
The Associated Press
mild disease, raising interest i n testing it even earlier. Scie n t ists now think Alz-
WASHINGTON — In one of the most ambitious at -
tempts yet to thwart Alzhei- heimer's begins ravaging the mer's disease, a major study brain at least a decade before got underway Monday to memory problems appear, see if an experimental drug much like heart disease is can protect healthy seniors triggeredby quiet cholesterol whose brains harbor silent build-up. Many believe the signs that they're at risk.
best c h ance of preventing or
Scientists plan to eventu- at least slowing the disease ally scan the brains of thou- requires intervening, somesands of older volunteers in
h o w , when people still ap-
the U.S., Canada and Aus- pearhealthy. tralia to find those with a The $ 140 million study, sticky build-up believed to
fu n d ed by t heNationalInsti-
play a key role in develop- tutesof Health, Lillyandothment of Alzheimer's — the ers, will track if participants' first time so many people memory and amyloid levels without memory problems change over three years. get the chance to learn the
W het h e r th i s p a r t i cu-
buy valuable time in which to mend the victims'wounds. But scientists have never
tried anything like this in humans, and the unconscious patients will notbe able to consent to the procedure. Indeed, the
medicalcenter has been providing free bracelets to be worn by skittish citizens here who do
not want to participate should they somehow wind up in the ER. "This is 'Star Wars' stuff,"
said Dr. Thomas Scalea, a trauma specialist at the University
of Maryland. "If you told people we would be doing this a few years ago, they'd tell you to stop smoking whatever you're smoking, because you've clearly lost your mind."
Pushing boundaries
the 1960s, surgeons in Siberia
doesn't g u arantee s ome-
to improve their chances of
began putting babies in snow banks before heart surgery
one will get sick. But the big amyloid works and how peoquestion: Could intervening ple handle the uncertainty so early make of knowing it's a differ ence for there. Scientists noMr "Amyloid we those who doo "We have to th i n k Alzheimer's kn o w is a huge
survival. Patients are routinely cooled beforesurgicalproceduresthat involve stopping the heart. But so-called therapeutic hypo-
get them at the begins ravagr'ng
ris k f acto~, but
tage when we th e b rain a can save their brains," sa i d lea s t a deCade Dr. ReisaSper- befOre memary ling of Boston's prOQ/emS B righam a n d a p p e a r m uC h
s omeone
patients when the injury has already occurred, and until now
Women's Hospi-
"We need to un-
tors at the University of Pitts-
derstand more about why some brain s are resilien t a nd s ome
burgh Medical Center will be performing the procedure only
are not."
ing trauma" and who have lost
' .
tal and Harvard llke hear Medical School, di sease is who is leading t riggered Qy the huge effort to qu iet cholesterol find out.
build-up.
ca n
h ave a h e a d full o f a m y loid an d n o t d ecline" mentally, Sper l in g s a i d.
B efore a n y are just beginbrain scans, inning to recruit terested 65- to volunteers, and on Monday, 85-year-olds will undergo a Rhode Island man was c ognitive tests to be sure hooked up for an IV infusion their memory is normal. Volat Butler Hospital in Provi-
u n t eers also must be willing
dence, the first treated.
to learn their amyloid levels,
P eter Bristol, 70, of Wake-
a n d r e searchers can t u rn
field, R.I., figured he was at away those whose psychorisk because his mother died logical assessments suggest of Alzheimer's and his broth- they may not cope well with er has it. the news. Sperling expects "I felt I needed to be pro- to screen more than 5,000 active in seeking whatever healthy seniors to find the therapies might be available needed 1,000 participants, for myself in the coming wh o will be monitored for years," said Bristol, who said
a n x i ety or distress. "It is breaking n ew he was prepared when a PET
thermia has never been tried in doctors have never tried to re-
place a patient's blood entirely with cold salt water. In their trial, funded by the
Department of Defense, doc-
on patients who arrive at the ER with"catastrophic penetratso much blood that they have
gone into cardiac arrest. At normal body temperatures, surgeons typically have less than five minutes to restore
blood flow before brain damage occurs. "In these situations, less than one in 10 survive," said Dr. Samuel Tisherman,the lead re-
searcher of the study."We want to give people better odds."
A l zhe i m er's affects 1 i n
Fahrenheit. As the patient en-
After the operation, the team
will use a heart-lung bypass tient. The blood will warm the body gradually, which should ciramvent injuries that can
AsymptomaticAlzheimer's 9 people over age 65, and whether he r eceived about a third of those 85 and monthly infusions of the o l der, according to the Alz-
happen when tissue is suddenly subjected to oxygen after a period of deprivation. If the procedure works, the
experimental medicine, Eli
patient's heart should resume
h e i m er's Association.
Lilly & Co.'s solanezumab, T o d ay' s medi c ations or a dummy drug. only temporarily ease some Solanezumab is designed symptoms, and scientists to help catch amyloid be- d on'tevenknowexactlyhow fore it builds into the brain
t h e d i sease forms. A lead-
leagues plan to try the technique on 10 subjects, then re-
blown Alzheimer's — but it
view the data, consider chang-
t e i n, named tau, speed up the
did appear to help slow men- brain destruction.
Projects
of the federal wildfire budget — would be paid by the FedContinued from A1 eral Emergency Management In 2012, more than $170,000 Agency, much the same way in upgrades to trails were put the agency provides funds to off,and an $84,000 projectto deal with other natural disasdesign a strategy to improve ters, such as hurricanes, tornaforest resilience was canceled. does and earthquakes. "With longerand more seThe plan mirrors legislative vere wildfire seasons, the cur- proposals in Congress to rerent way that the U.S. Forest Service and the Department
structure wildfire suppression
funds, including a Senate bill of Interior budget for wildland by Sens. Jeff Merkley and Ron fire is unsustainable," said Ag- Wyden, both D-Ore., and Mike riculture Secretary Tom VilCrapo, R-Idaho. Oregon Reps. sack in a prepared statement. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, "Until firefighting is treated and Kurt Schrader, D-Canby, like other natural disasters have both introduced similar that can draw on emergency legislation in the House. funding, firefighting expendiUnder the current wildfire tures will continue to disrupt suppression plan, agencies forest restoration and man- project their annual fire costs agement, research, and other by taking the average of the activities that help manage previous 10 years. our forests and reduce future Between 2004 and 2 013,
T isherman an d
both the Department of Inte-
L+
his c ol-
es in their approach, and enroll
ous fuels reduction intended
to mitigate the damage caused by future fires, can be thrown off schedule. In April, the BLM and Forest Service warned that their fire suppression costscould
run as much as $1 billion over budget, although the projected overrun will likely be closer to $470 million. On M onday, P resident Obama spoke via teleconfer-
ence with participants at the meeting of the Western Governors Association in Colora-
do Springs. According to the White House, they discussed the outlook for th e current
fire season, including existing drought conditions. Obama and other admin-
istration officials pledged to continue to use the best-avail-
able science to aid in preparedness and response operand the Forest Service's ations, modernizing wildland Earlier this year, the Obama rior's administration pro p osed wildfire costs exceeded the firefighting resources like changing the way the federal 10-year average seven times. airtankers, and efforts to build government pays for wildfire When those funds run out, resilience to fires by restoring costs. Under the new policy, a gencies are forced to u s e landscapes and forests, accosts incurred fighting the funds all ocated forother pur- cording to the White House's most devastating wildfiresposes. While Congress often account of the meeting. the top 1 percent of the larg- backfills those accounts, work — Reporter: 202-662-7456, est firesconsume 30 percent on other projects like hazardaclevenger®bendbulletirLcom catastrophic wildfire."
*
beating when body temperature reaches 85 to 90 degrees. But regaining consciousness may take several hours or even days.
plaques that are a hallmark in g theory is that amyloid of Alzheimer's. It failed in p l aques kick off the disease earlier studies to treat full- but tangles of a second pro-
the neighborhoods most at risk
Hasan Alam, chief of general for "involuntary enrollment" to say whether he and his col- surgery at the University of in the triaL Still, a taxi driver, leagues had already operated Michigan Medical Center, who grocery clerk and security on apatient. has helped perfect the tech- guard — all African-American Each time they do, they will nique in pigs. men approached at random "It's a little unsettling if you — said they had never heard be stepping into a scientific void. Ethicists say it's reason- think of all the what ifs, but it's of the trial, though they work able to presume most people the same every time you push within a couple of miles of the would want to u ndergo the into new frontiers," he added. hospital. experimental procedure when "You have to look at risk and They also did not object. "I don't have a problem with it, if it the alternative is almost certain balance it againstbenefits." death. Butno one canbe sure of Trauma accounts for more saves lives," said Charles Miller, the outcome. years of life lost than cancer a 52-year-old securityguard. and heart disease combined, Just 14 people have so far 'A grave risk' and it is the leading cause of requested "No EPR" bracelets, "If this works, what they've death in people up to age 44, accordingtothe medical center. done is suspended people when according to the Centers for Nearly a half-dozen trauma they are dead and then brought Disease Control and Preven- hospitals may join the trial and them back to life," said Dr. Ar- tion. Surgeons are eager for begin testing the hypothermia thur Caplan, a medical ethi- new techniques that would procedure on dying patients, cist at New York University. help better the odds in emer- including the University of "There's a grave risk that they gency situations. Black males Maryland Medical Center in won't bring the person back to are disproportionately vic- Baltimore. cognitive life but in a vegetative tims of homicide, especially Scalea, who will head the state." gun violence, and most of the effort there, said he hopes to reBut researchers at a number patients likely to fit the study ceive final regulatory approval of institutions say they have criteria in Pittsburgh are Afri- bythe end of the year. perfectedthetechnique, known can-American males, accordHe recalled a recent stabbing as Emergency Preservation ing to officials at the medical victim who died on his operatand Resuscitation, or EPR, in center. ingtable. "He might have lived if we experimental surgeries on hunIn order to obtain an exdreds of dogs and pigs over the emption to federal informed could havecooled him down," last decade. consent rules, the hospital held Scalea said.
cold saline solution until body temperature falls to 50 degrees
machine with a heat exchanger to return blood to the pa-
T r eatment i n
bolts and that it works," said
research, Tisherman declined
the circulatory system with a
"goingintothesituationwith
t i-Amyloid
to complete the study. Citing the preliminary nature of the
two town hall meetings on the university campus, placed adrecent studies, most without vertisements on buses, and discernible cognitive impair- made sure the news got in ment — after theprocedure, the newspapers catering to minoridogs and pigs remembered old ty readers. tricks and were able to learn Officials posted information newones. about the study on a website, "From a scientific standpoint, a cutecareresearch.org, a n d we now know the nuts and conducted a phone survey in As many as 90 percent of
the animals have survived in
Tisherman and his team will
tersa sort of suspended animation, without vital signs, the surgeons will have perhaps one hour to repair the injuries before brain damage occurs.
m e r ' s o r s i milar dementia,
who has the operation, there
insert a tube called a cannula into the patient's aorta, flushing
scan of his brain showed he ground," said Dr. Laurie harbored enough amyloid to Ryan of the NIH's National "We requalify for the research. Inst i t ute on Aging. "Just because I have it a l l y do have to understand doesn't mean I'm going to get how that affects people." Alzheimer's," he stressed. Mo r e than 35 million peoBut Bristol and his wife are ple worldwide have Alzheiour eyes wide open." including about 5 million in He won't know until the t h e U.S., numbers expected end of the so-called A4 t o r ise rapidly as the baby Study — it stands for An- b oomersage.
another 10. For every patient
will be a control subject for Submerged in a frozen lake comparison. or stowed away in the wheel The experiment officially bewell of a jumbo jet at 38,000 gan in April and the surgeons feet,people can survive for predict they will see about one hours with little or no oxygen qualifyingpatient a month. if their bodies are kept cold. In It may take a couple of years
potentiallytroublingnews. la r d rug works or not, the Having lots of that gunky A l zheimer's study is being protein called beta-amyloid watched closely as a chance t o l e ar n m ore about how
Universityof Pittsburgh Medical Center via New YorkTimes News Service
Emergency room staff at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center simulate an experimental procedure that induces hypothermia in dying patients to buy them more time. The procedure has surgeons drain patients' blood and replace it with freezing salt water, rendering them clinically dead.
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TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A5
Trails
School closures Due to fire evacuation warnings, classes arecanceled today at: • William E. Miller Elementary School •CascadeMiddleSchool • Summit High School
L
I
L
Continued from A1 She added that probably
•• • •
no one would want to ven-
ture into those areas any-
I e
way because of the smoke,
but that smoke alone should not be a factor in determining areas to avoid. A wind-driven fire like Two Bulls, she said, can move quiddy — so quiddy that a relatively smoke-free area is notnecessaril y safe.
Fire Continued from A1 B lanton wa s o n e o f 1 8
"Given the conditions, this
speakers who offered updates on and reaction to the
fire could be very dynamic," Nelson-Dean said. "We certainly hope we can keep it out of that area. It's important that people don't think,
Two Bulls Fire at the Mon-
day evening meeting at Bend High. The crowd included people who live along Skyliners Road and remain under evacuation order. The
'Well, if I smell smoke' ...
no. That's not going to work, because fire can overtake
Sheriff'sOffice order covers
about 50 homes. Susan Mondry, 59, said she's lived i n
areas pretty rapidly." Because it involves pub-
/
./
:
I
I
lic lands, the closure area is different from evacuation
t h e w o oded /
neighborhood near the Skyliners Sno-park for 20 years,
areas, which are mostly on private lands with homes.
The dosure area indudes trails that were planned to
and this is the first time she's
had to evacuate. She said she's been staying in her daughter's spare bedroom in town since Saturday, when the fast-moving fire prompt-
be part of the Blitz 2 the Barrel mountain bike race on
Wednesday evening. The race waspostponed Monday afternoon, and organizers are hoping to reschedule it
ed the call for evacuation. While anxious to r eturn
home, Mondry said she understands why she and her neighbors have to stay away
for a date later this summer. — Reporter: 541-383-0318,
Courtesy Cade Hinderlider
SMOKE AND THE OLD MILL,SATURDAY
mmorical@bendbuiletin.com
from their homes until fire-
fighters have a better handle on the blaze. "We have prettymuch one "
.
.
Water
THE PLUME FROM CLINE BUTTES
way to get out," she said. You are not going to get out .
of there fast." For the first time since the Two Bulls Fire started Sat-
Continued from A1 Whereas city residents typically use 19 to 20 million gallons of water per day in early summer, the figure had
Courtesy Mariah Wilson
urday, firefighters called the wildfire burning just a couple of miles outside Bend partially contained. Burning through a mix of brush and heavy timber west
dropped to about 17.5 mil-
lion gallons per day, Rheault said, as the fite grewto 6,800
acres Monday. "We want to make sure we have enough water for
of town, the fire has burned
about 6,800 acres — more than 10.5 square miles — and
firefighting use," Rheault
said. The city made two fire hydrants on Skyliners Road
was 25 percent contained,
the state team managing fire said late Monday. The fire's
and two others in the north-
west part of Bend available for water trucks to fill up and
proximity to town kept evac-
uation orders up Monday for homes on and around Sky-
taketo crewsbattlingthe fne.
liners Road and evacuation
Schools and Bend Park & Recreation District all start-
The city, Bend-La Pine
warnings for an additional 3 ,000 homes. The fire i s 2 miles west of the outskirts of
ed voluntary conservation on Monday.
t
Bend, a mile from Skyliners
The park district said it
u
Road and about 5 miles from
was continuing to water its
the city's watershed. "We have lots of resources because we are the only big fire (currently) in Oregon," said Tina O'Donnell, spokes-
81 parks across the city, but
starting Monday had cut in half the amount of time watering each field, according to community relations manager Jan Taylor. "We need to keep everything green," Taylor said. But "we'reshootingfor50percent
woman for the Oregon Department of Forestry.
An army of f i refighters worked through hot, dusty conditions Monday, continu-
less watering time." She said the district would keep its
ing their effort to encircle the blaze with a f i r eline. More
than 800 firefighters were assigned to the fire. The fight
co~ '-:«Q
Rheault said the city's conservation efforts would
also included 11 helicopters,
48 engines and 11 bulldozers. So far the firefighting
Q'j$t"
e
Northwest winds of 10 to 18
miles per hour, with gusts up to 25 mph, pushed the fire
be in place at least until
", " - . . ' - 4j .!s,
effort has cost about $2.2 million.
No buildings had been lost and only one firefighter had suffered an injury, a minor cut on the leg, state officials said Monday evening. The big concern for firefighters Monday was wind.
Wednesday and possibly longer, depending on progress fighting the fire.
dll l
— Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbuiletin.com r~
Pare. &rrOA.6 t"O. Courtesy NASA Earth Observatory
aj. B~ dU
TWO BULLS FROM ABOVE
back toward town, but also
• Submit your fire photos to appear in print and online at readerphetes©bendbulletin.cem.
back toward firelines etched by fire crews with bulldozers, chainsaws and hand tools.
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used
Bend Redmond
John Day
— as well as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
-
•
•
Burns Lakeview
•
La Pine
"It will be a test," said Bill
Queen, spokesman for the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center shortly af-
541.382.6447
ter 10 a.m. Monday at a fire
camp along Johnson Road. As of 5 p.m. he said it was a
r~ "
f
Bull lats
test they passed. But more,
possiblystronger, winds are expected for today. "(Today) could be an even bigger test," Queen said. "
.
.
The American Red Cross L a Reserv ir R
she said, but not staffed.
"We know we can have it open (again) in 20 minutes," she said. While people offered to donate bedding, clothes and
P RIVATE LAND
Due to the fire's proxim-
V~I @INIINIU@IL
said the Red Cross can't accept those donations, but can accept money. "We don't really have any
2 tlokete to fly
570 oalhone
816'":~
3 '""' -
g 4 ounoee
staff to sift t h r ough donations," she said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulfetin.com
5PRC ARO DROPRRPO BBNCES
glS>7E<R j (S g;;-;, :,'',';-'.
DQJ ~O Q'~ ""®"'
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
Illl 0, 13IIIIlltlll -;;;:,„....:.:--'
TheBuIIetin
How would you spend itT
dishes for evacuees, Stroup
TheBulletin
•
bendurology.com
•
tor for the group in Bend. The shelter is still fully equipped,
spyrtners fi<. ity to the Bridge Creek waDESCHUTEs tershed, the city of B end ATI o FO R E-S-T remains reliant on groundJ m Source: U.S. Forest Service Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin water, said Bend City Manager Eric King at the Monday "We askthe communityto evening meeting. He said next couple of days, but in the city intends to return to the meantime city residents help us out to conserve wadrawing surface water in the should watch their water use. t e r," he said.
•
•
Lisa Stroup, executive direc-
We still have a lot of work to do, but as of this point I think
•
•
High Desert Middle School on standby Monday, said
UREAU ~0 L AN D MAN NT
Two BullsFire
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate
•
put the emergency shelter at
.
we are continuing to gain ground."
on efforts in place
until conditions improved.
1~
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'
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A6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
TODAY'S READ: BREAKTHROUGH
IN F OCUS: POLITICS
A computer passes the 'Turing Test' in a landmark trial By Terrence McCoy The Washington Post
Can machines think? In 1950, famed London
ome emocrats em race By Carl Hulse and Michael D. Shear WASHINGTON — He is a
"We are proud to declare that Alan 1bring's Test was
passed for the first time on
So when a newproposal to lim-
Saturday," declared Kevin
it power plant emissions was seen as posing a threat to allies
scientist Alan Turing, consid- Warwick, a visiting professor ered oneofthe fathersofarti- at the University of Reading, ficial intelligence, published a which organized the event paper that put forth that very at the Royal Society in Lonquestion. But as quickly he don. "In the field of Artificial asked the question, he called Intelligence there is no more it "absurd." The idea of think- iconic and controversial mileing was too difficult to define. stone than the Turing Test, Instead, he deviseda separate when a computer convinces way to quantify mechanical a sufficient number of interro"thinking." gators into believing that it is "I shall replace the question not a machine but rather is a by another, which is dosely human." related to it and is expressed There is some cause for in relatively unambiguous concern, however. For startwords," he wrote in the study ers, convincing one-third of that some say represented the interrogators that you're a "beginning" of artificial intel- teenager who's speaking in ligence. "The new form of the a second language perhaps problem can be described in skews the test a bit. Was the terms of agame whichwe call computer that smart'? Or was the 'imitation game.'" it a gimmick'? What he meant was: Can a And then there is the concomputer trick a human into cern that such technology can thinking it's actually a fellow be used for cybercrime. "The Test has implications human? That question gave birth to the "Turing Test" 65 for society today," Warwick years ago. said in a university news reThis weekend, for the first lease. "Having a computer time, a computer passed that that can trick a human into test. thinking that someone, or "Passing," however, doesn't even something, is a person mean it did it with flying col- we trust is a wake-up call to ors. For a computer to pass cybercrime.... It is important the test, it must only dupe 30 to understand more fully how percent of the human inter- online, real-time communicarogators who converse with tion of this type can influence the computer for five minutes an individual human in such in a text conversation. In the awaythat they are fooled into test, it's up to the humans to believing something is true ... separate the machines from when in fact it is not." their fellow sentient beings If the optimism of Eugene's throughout their five-minute programmers isany guide, inquisition. we may be headed for a sceThis go-round, a Rus- nario not dissimilar to "Her" sian-made program, which — the 2013 blockbuster that disguised itself as a 13-year- depicted a complex man falloldboy named Eugene Goost- ing in love with his computer. "Going forward we plan man from Odessa, Ukraine, bamboozled33percentofhu- to make Eugene smarter," man questioners. Eugene was Vaselov said, "and continue one of five supercomputers working on improving what who entered the 2014 Turing we refer to as 'conversation Test. logic.'"
standards, and Udall's Republican opponent, Rep. Cory Gardner, voted for a p l an similar to the federal propos-
New York Times News Service
Democrat in a marquee Senate race, pressed by a strong Republican in a state with a challenging political environment.
al while serving in the State
Legislature. 'L-
I I / I
gl
I/f4
II
"In 2010, Democrats and Republicans in the state worked
-
together knowing that any product we produced would m eet Colorado's needs far bet-
ter than any unelected EPAbureaucrat' s plan," Gardner said
of the Obama administration,
Sen. Mark Udall of Colorado acted quickly:He embraced
in a statement.
The fight in Colorado is more likely to be about hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, for natural gas, and Gardner has focused on pressuring Udall
theplan.
"Coloradans have seen firsthand the harmful effects of dimate change, including severedrought,record wildfires and reduced snowpack," Udall
over efforts to impose local
said in a statement shortly after the Environmental Protection
Agency plan was made pub-
Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., who supports the Obama administra-
tion's proposal to limit power plant emissions, speaks earlier this
swing states outside the coal
rule is a good start, and I will
month during a meeting in Greeley, Colo. "Coloradans have seen firsthand the harmful effects of climate change, including severe
belt can capitalize on the emissions rules still seems a difficult
the work we have already drought, record wildfires and reduced snowpack," Udall says. done in Colorado and provides
proposition to some analysts.
states the flexibility they need
of the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report, said the new EPA proposal could be joined
to make it successful." The EPA proposal to reduce carbon pollution from power plants was deemed a political gift from the Obama adminisfor Senate seats inthe coal-producing states of Kentucky and West Virginia, and an anchor around the necks of their Democraticopponents. Elsewhere, the threat of higher electricity
bills and Republican attacks about anotherfederal power grab were supposed to send Democrats scurrymg forcover and distance from the White House.
But Udall's example shows that not all Democrats look at it that way.
In Iowa, Rep. Bruce Braley, the Democratic Senate nominee, has adopted the same
approach as Udall. "Reducing our carbon output is not only necessary for the health of the
planet, it's an opportunity to
tage despite concerted efforts by Democrats there to distance
continue to improve the health
of the Iowa economy — which themselves from the president is and will remain my No. 1 pri- and his plan. Republicans say ority," Braley said. it has also provided a handicap In other states with compet- forDemocratsrunning in eneritive Senate races, like Michi- gy-supplying states, including gan, Democrats say growing Alaska, Colorado, Louisiana ~
in the minds of voters with turmoil in the administration over the Department of Veterans
Affairs and the release of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl from Taliban custody. "How can voters not start to think that this election is a way to protest what he has done?"
Rothenberg said of the president. "To the extent it is about the president, it cannot help
Democrats." At the W hite House, the politics of the carbon rule is
a no-brainer, officials said. In the months leading up to the announcement, Obama's top
political advisers were united in agreement that the environmental proposal would be
a winner for Democrats almost everywhere but in coal country.
White House officials and
a survey in Virginia this week
other Democratic strategists
for an environmental group. In Colorado, which produces both fossil fuels and renewable energy, the political dynamic
say that climate change issues — and Obama's decision to push the pollution debate to
center stage — will have even greater benefits for Democrats states. Colorado has moved in presidential campaigns and ahead with its own emissions future congressional elections. is much different than in coal
I
I
f
,
I
I I
v/
M
Stuart Rothenberg, the editor
public support for action to and Virginia. "Five months prior to the curb climatechange — coupled with pronouncements by most difficult election of their Republican candidates that hu- careers, President Obama is man activityis not contributing turning a blind eye and a deaf to it, or who deny that the world ear to their concerns," the Nais growing warmer — could tional Republican Senatorial helpDemocrats thisyear.They Committee said in a statement. say it will definitely make the "An uphill climb just got even party stronger heading into the more difficult." 2016 presidential election. But Democrats say that pub"Denying the existence of lic polling shows broad accepclimate change is proving to be tance of the need to combat a problem for many Republi- climate change and that some cans right now, and certainly a recent surveys show large long-term albatross for the par- majorities support th e i d ea ty," said Matt Canter, the dep- of emission limits on power uty executive director of the plants. "Democrats will w e lcome Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. "Republican the opportunity to use this to efforts to squeeze political gain talk about the Republicans' deout of this have fallen short." pendenceon oilcom pany interRepublicans scoff at that no- ests and other special interests tion. They say the new propos- that oppose carbon regulation al has given Republican Senate for the sake of their own profits," said Geoff Garin, a Demcontenders in Kentucky and West Virginia a huge advan- ocratic pollster who conducted
tration to Republicans running
III I « r «
The idea that Democrats in
lic last week. "The EPA's draft fight to ensure it complements
w
government restrictions on the process.
Matthew Staver / New York Times NewsService
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
BRIEFING
Deer Ridge inmate is
NO VACANCY
Farmingaccident kills Prinevilleman
pickedup
A Prineville man died in a farming accident Monday after he was struck by several bales of hay, according to a release from the Crook County Sheriff's Office. Gordon EvanStroebel, 77, was loading hay onto his truck at a location on Northwest Peppermint Lane in Prineville on Monday afternoon, when thehay load apparently shifted. Three bales fell from the truckand struck Stroebel. Sheriff's deputies along with Crook County Fire and Rescuewere unable to revive Stroebel, who wasalready dead before authorities arrived.
in Portland By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
The man who es-
caped from Deer Ridge Correctional Institution near Madras last month
Sweeney, center,
ficers arrested Clinton
stands with
Portland
her boyfriend,
Friday evening
current
A foreign-exchange student saved the life of a boy at the Prineville Reservoir State Park on Sunday evening, according to a release from the CrookCounty Sheriff's Office. The Sheriff's Office, along with Crook County Fire and Rescue,were dispatched to aswimming area of the parkat around 6 p.m. Sunday following the report of a near drowning. Upon arrival, paramedics treated a boywhowas later transported to St. Charles Bend byair ambulance for more treatment. The nameandage of the boy havenot been released. Authorities determined the boywas swimming with two friends when hepanicked and started to pull the other two underwater. The boys started yelling for help, at which time Leandre Nicolai, 18, a foreign-exchange student from Belgium, swam to the group. Nicolai was able to find the boy, who hadgone underwater, and pulled him to the nearby docks. The condition of the boy was unknown Monday.
Monday after-
t
picion of disorderly conduct, Sws adngsn resisting arrest and failure to obey a police officer. A spokeswoman with the Oregon Department of Corrections said
officers with the U.S.
noon. They must move out by July 6.
Department of Home-
land Security's Federal Protective Service made
Andy Tullis The Bulletin
the arrest.
Homeland Security officials didn't return calls for comment.
SeeCaught/B2
By Hillary Borrude The Bulletin
Brittney Sweeney has less than a month left to find a new home for her family to rent in Bend, and the pickings are slim. "The hard part about it
now, there is a shortage of houses, but (also)
"The hard part about it now, there is
just the amount of
a shortage of houses, but (also) just the amount of money they're wanting for these houses." — Brittney Sweeney, renter
money they're wanting for these houses," Sweeney said Wednesday. S weeney, 2 6 , lives with her boyfriend, da u ghter and two nephews in
a four-bedroom house near Southeast 27th Street
in Bend. The couple pays $1,200
According to an annual survey of rental owners in Central Oregon communities, rents are up in most areas. The survey looks at apartments, duplexes, triplexes, houses and manufactured homes, but the largest and most consistent sample across communities is for three-bedroom houses.
Trial turns to Wirkkala's mental state
AVERAGERENT FOR THREE-BEDROOM HOUSE
By Tyler Leeds
~
The Bulletin
Rents up inBend
B e nd Redmond/Terrebonne ~ M adras/Culver
~ P r ineville/Powell Butte ~ L a Pine ~ S unriver ~ S i sters
A defense expert testified Monday in the trial of a Bend man accused of murder,
speaking to the man's mental state during the
$1,200
shooting that left his
houseguest dead.
$1,100
Luke Wirkkala, 33, faces one
charge of murder for allegedly shooting 31-year-old
$1,000
a month in rent, but the owner
"At any one time, there's 18 units
of the house plans to sell it and the family must move out by July 6. Sweeney noticed
available for rent (in Bend) That's not enough."
neighborhood for rent at $1,700 to $2,000 a month, but said, "We can't af-
Up. Bend Mayor Jim Clinton has heard a lot of similar con-
cerns from distressed renters, who have been emaili ng
"This isn't Southern California.
Youcan't have a twobedroom apartment at
$2,000 a month.... Our incomes don't match up with that in Central
Oregon." — Kenny LaPoint, Housing Works
$900
David Ry- W i r kkala
$800
der inhis southeast Bend home early Feb. 4,
other houses in the
ford that because our wages haven't gone
housing manager
Reader photos
• We want to see your photos for the next special theme ofWell shot! — "psyched about summer" — to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at bendbulletin.com/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphotos© bendbulletin.com and tell us a bit about where and whenyou took them.
on sus-
rental house in Bend
— Jim Long, city affordable
Well shot!
Orvill Swearingen II in
Joshuwa Allen, and children, Isabella Allen, 6, Owen Hunt, 13, and Jaden Haley, 11, in front of their
Rescue at popular swimminghole
— From staff reports
is back behind bars. Law enforcement of-
Brittney
him to complain about
the high cost and scarcity of rental housing in the city. In April, a survey by the Central Oregon Rental
2 008
2 009
20 1 0
201 1
201 2
201 3
201 4
2013, after the two men
spent the previous day drinking and watching the Super Bowl. The defenseargued inits opening statement that Ryder attempted to force
At the same time, vacancy rates are aslow asthey've been in years. The samesurvey tracks vacancy rates, but numbers for type of unit are only available from 2011forward. The data in the survey represents only a fraction of the rental units available in Bendand surrounding communities but is one of the most consistent measures available for tracking rental information in the area. VACANCY RATES IN BEND, BYTYPE ~ A partments 5%
Wirkkala to perform oral sex on him and
that the shooting was in self-defense. During the opening statement, the prosecution alleged
Hou s es
Wirkkala was not act-
ing in self-defense and "knew what he did,"
citing his use of the word murdertodescribewhat happened before he was charged. Jurors on Monday heard from Ryder's col-
Owners A s sociation of its members
revealed a vacancy rate of just 0.4 per-
cent for rental apartments in Bend and 1.2 percent for houses in
0 20II
2012
2013
2014
Source: Central Oregon Rental Owners Association
leagues, who noted the
the city. SeeRenting/B5
charisma and kindness of the computer engi-
Andy Zeigert/ The Bulletin
neer they worked beside. SeeTrial /B2
MARSHALL HIGHSCHOOL HAPPENED TO ... •
Following up onCentral Oregon's most interesting stories, even if they've beenout of the headlines for a while. Q»To follow the series, visit bendbulletin.com/upclates
successsto: omes or veterans • Former critics praise programtnCentral Oregon
of Veterans Affairs came under criticism for waiting
cent of their income toward
By Hillary Borrud
Coleman, who served in
more than six months to as-
the Navy from 1970 to 1972, received a voucher intended
sign the first 25 vouchers to
the balance. For veterans without income, the vouchers can cover their entire rent
The Bulletin
Jim Coleman, 61, says that
when he received a federal voucher to help cover his rent in 2011, it was a turning point
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Kirstin Ashley, center, joins other smiling seniors as they prepare for their graduation ceremony at Marshall High School in
Bend on Monday.
in his life. "It made a big difference, saved my life and got me off the streets," Coleman said Monday. "It was a good thing."
to help chronically homeless military veterans get into housing and begin to address other needs, such as nutrition and medical care.
veterans in Central Oregon. Groups that raised concerns about the VA's slowness
now say the program works well in Central Oregon. The program has grown since
rent, and the voucher covers
bill. Jeanette Morrison, a VA
social worker in Bend who works with veterans in need
among the first five veterans
allocated for veterans in the
of housing, said Monday that veterans are currently using 64 of the 75 vouchers to help
to receive vouchers in 2011, after the U.S. Department
region. Low-income veterans
pay their rent.
Coleman said he was
2011, with 75 vouchers now
who participate pay 30 per-
SeeVeterans/B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
E VENT TODAY NO EVENTSLISTED.
WEDNESDAY BEND FARMERSMARKET:3-7 p.m.; Brooks Alley, between Northwest Franklin Avenue and Northwest Brooks Street; www. bendfarmersmarket.com. SISTERSHIGH SCHOOL AMERICANACOMMUNITY LUTHIER PROGRAMSHOWCASE:Students will showcase their handmade instruments with live music; 5:30-7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. MainAve.; info©sistersfolkfestival.org or 541-549-4979. OPENMIC: 6:30-9p.m.;HeyJoe Coffee Bar, 19570Amber Meadow Drive, Suite190, Bend; 541-728-0095. SISTERSRODEO:The"Xtreme Bulls" bull-riding event followed by the rodeo dance; $20, free for chilren 12 and younger, $7 for dance only; 6:30 p.m. rodeo, gates open 4:30 p.m., 9
p.m.dance;SistersRodeoGrounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. TAKEN BY CANADIANS: Thealt-folk band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY SISTERSRODEOSLACK
ENDA R PERFORMANCE:Slackperform ance, withbreakfastconcessions; free; 8 a.m., breakfast opens 7 a.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; www.sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Year of Wonders" by Geraldine Brooks; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Courtiss; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY
BRIDAL SHOWER TEAPARTY: Have cake, cookies, lemonade and tea and view an exhibit of bridal gowns from the 1850s' to bend/, reneeb©deschuteslibrary.org now through June 22; 1-5 p.m.; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum, or 541-312-1055. 246 N. Main St., Prineville; www. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read bowmanmuseum.org, bshunk© and discuss "Caleb's Crossing" by co.crook.or.us or 541-447-3715. Geraldin e Brooks;noon;Redmond SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Ave.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ redmond, reneeb©deschuteslibrary. Cascade Avenue andAsh Street; sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com. org or 541-312-1055. "DAMNATION":Showing of the AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Linda Kraemer Dcelletto will present on her award-winning documentary book "Tales, Tall TalesandOutright about dams and the life and health of our rivers, followed by a panel Lies about Bend's Iconic Pilot Butte"; discussion with Q8 Aand araffle; free; 4:30-6 p.m.; Mother's Juice Cafe, $7; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. 1255N.W.GalvestonAve.,Bend; Wall St., Bend; damnationfilm.com www.pilotbuttesummitseekers.org or 541-318-0989. or 541-317-0700. "COMMUNICATINGDOORS" FAR WESTSKIASSOCIATION SILENTAUCTION:Including auction PREVIEW NIGHT:A comedic thriller about a London escort that stumbles for ski travel related packages, aTaste into a murder plot and accidentally of Bend and aski show; free entry; 6:30 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; travels back in time; $10; 7:30 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Greenwood The Riverhouse Convention Center, Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical. Bend; www.fwsa.org, Dmary52© comcast.net or 503-880-7383. org or 541-389-0803. MISS MASSIVESNOWFLAKE: Pop- BEATLESSINGALONG: KPDV rockfrom Portland, with Cousin celebrates its ninth year and the
50th anniversary of the Beatles coming to America; $13 in advance
($11 members),$15at the door for adults, $5 for18and younger; 7-10 p.m., doors open at 6:15 p.m.; The Old Stone, 157 N.W.Franklin
Ave., Bend;www.kpov.comor
541-322-0863. SISTERS RODEO: A PRCArodeo performance with steer wrestling, roping and more; family night; $14, free for children under12; 7 p.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; www.sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. "COMMUNICATINGDOORS": A time traveling comic thriller by Alan Ayckbourn about a woman who stumbles into a murder plot; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "SWEENEY TODD:THE DEMON BARBER OFFLEETSTREET": Stephen Sondheim and Hugh
Wheeler's humorousmusical about a murderous barber and culinary crime, with a champagne and dessert reception; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m., reception at 6:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com, 2ndstreettheater©gmail.com or 541-312-9626. THE ALL-TOGETHERS: The Las
Vegas acoustic groupperforms; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing,
24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. CHANCEMCKINNEY:The Seattle country artist performs; $6 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; www.maverickscountrybar.com or 541-325-1886.
SATURDAY CENTRALOREGON SUMMER MARKET:Featuring a street fair, flea market, farmers market, live music and more; free; 8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; www.streetfair2014.com, bill© streetfair2014.com or 541-385-3364. DOG GONE RUN: Dog friendly 5K and 10K run/walk to benefit BrightSide Animal Center in Redmond, registration required; $30 for runners; 9-11 a.m.; The Weigand Family Dog Park,1500 W. Antler Ave., Redmond; www. brightsideanimals.org/events/dog-
gone-run/, dry.canyon.dgr©gmail. com or 541-815-9998. RHUBARBFESTIVAL: Dutch-oven cooks prepare a variety of rhubarb dishes; with live music, vendors, a baking contest and more; food court proceeds benefit Families and Communities Together; free, $10 for lunch; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; L&S Gardens and Land Clearing, 50808 S. Hunti ngton Road,La Pine;www. Isgardens.com or 541-536-2049.
CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 N.W.Wall St.; 541-420-9015. MOTORCYCLE SHOW: Featuring members of the Goldwing Road Riders Association and Goldwing bikes; free, open to public;10a.m.noon; Pro Caliber Motorsports, 3500 N. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www. procaliberbend.com or 541-647-5151. FLAG RETIREMENTCEREMONY: The Boy Scouts of America and local veterans will retire flags as part of a BSA EagleProject; noon-2 p.m.; Vince GennaStadium, Southeast Fifth Streetand Roosevelt Avenue, Bend; bendelks.com or 541-312-9259. SISTERSRODEO: Featuringa PRCA rodeo performance with roping, riding, steer wrestling and more; $14-$20, infants must have ticket; 1 p.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. SEVERINBROWNE: Thefolk-pop artist performs, reserve aseatfor concert location; $20; 5:30 p.m.; Private Residence, Bend;musicmag@ yahoo.com or 541-390-0797. SISTERSRODEO: Featuringa PRCA rodeo performance with roping, riding, steer wrestling and more; $14-$20, infants must have ticket; 7 p.m.; Sisters Rodeo Grounds,67637 U.S. Highway 20; www.sistersrodeo. com or 541-549-0121.
Veterans
Caught
Continued from B1
movedto different housing assistanceprograms because of
Continued from B1 and his prison clothes were According to a Monday found several blocksaway. report in The Oregonian, the Oregon State Police said officers spotted Swearingen he was spotted less than a sitting against a wall out- week later in the town of Mill side the Pioneer Courthouse City, southeast of Salem, but building with a backpack the trail seemedto go cold and other belongings Fri- afterward. day. The officers reportedly Swearingen had be e n asked for his identification, booked into Deer Ridge on but Swearingen ran and was Feb.4, on a Linn County contackled by the officers about viction of first-degree theft, three blocksaway. two counts of second-degree Swearingen, 31, was ar- burglary and two counts of rested and taken to the Mult- unauthorized use of amotor nomah County Detention vehicle. Center, where he's still being His earliest release date
their mental health needs, and
held, Department of Correc-
two veterans droppedout of the program for reasonsMor-
tions spokeswoman Betty date is likely to be pushed Bernt told The Bulletin on back following his arrest FriMonday. day andpossible new charges Bernt said Swearingen relating to his escape, Bernt is awaiting a transfer to the said. She said there was no Coffee Creek Correctional timelineyet for histransfer or Facilityin Wilsonville. when the newcharges would Swearingen went miss- be addedto his sentence. "Once he goes through ing from Deer Ridge, east of Madras, at 10:30 p.m. May 4 the process, he'll go back after climbing a wire fence through Coffee Creek, and around the prison's perim- there will be a new assesseter. His escape sparked a ment," Bernt said.
Five more veterans have
vouchersand are searching for housing, two veterans are in theprocessof receiving vouchers and caseworkers are in the
processof selecting veterans to receivethe rem ainingvouchers. Thirteen veterans left the
program for positive reasons, such as increases in income that meant theywere no longer
eligiblefor vouchers, Morrison said. One veteran purchased a home. Some veterans also
rison did not know. The VA in Bend maintains a list of veterans interested in vouchers, but Morrison did not know how
Navy veteran Jim Colemanstands in front of his section of a triplex in Bend on Monday. Coleman
longit was.
was among the first to receive ahousing voucher for homeless veterans. He hopes to own a home
Jerry Hollis, executive di-
rector of Central OregonVeteransOutreach, said last week he has notheard of any problems with the voucher pro-
gram sincehe began working for the outreachgroup earlier this year. Hollis said a larger problem is the lack of avail-
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
someday. a Central Oregon caseworker. a homelessveteran needs to Housing Works administers be stabilized in housing, and the veterans vouchers, but
that's the key to that person
VA caseworkers decidewho obtaining employment and receivesthe vouchers. Today, benefits." the VA has three caseworkers Veterans use vouchers for able rental housing in Central in Bend to assist veterans with housing throughout Central Oregon. housing issues. Oregon, including some of "Because of the lack of "Wewere going through the the affordable apartments housing in th i s a r ea, there wintertime, and there were owned by Housing Works, are more vouchers out there a lot of veterans living on the LaPoint said. The vouchers do — regular (U.S. Housing and street," LaPoint said of the sit- not cover security deposits, so Urban Development) vouch- uation in 2010 and 2011,in an LaPoint said heraised money ers as well as VA vouchersinterview last week. One vet- to pay for those, too. LaPoint than there are places to spend eran who was living in a tent said the security deposit asthem," Hollis said last week. was injured when a propane sistance made the program Central Oregon VeteransOut- tank exploded. more successful and is likely reach owns morethan half a LaPoint said th e tu r n ing one reason Central Oregon redozen apartment complexes point was when U.S. Rep. ceivedan additional 50 vouchand single-family homes for Greg Walden, R-Hood Riv- ers,for a total of 75. veteransin Deschutes County, er, put pressure on the VA to The length of time that qualaccording to county property hire a caseworker for Central ified veterans wait to obtain records. Some of the tenants Oregon. Within 15 days, the vouchers varies significantly, use federal vouchers to help agency hired a caseworker, because caseworkers evalupay the rent. and LaPoint said the situation ate how acutely people need Kenny LaPoint, housing improved. housing. "The program is working "Thebenefit of having these director for local housing authority Housing Works, crit- very well," LaPoint said. "In vouchers is really the intense icized the VA several years fact, we've seen quite a few case management," Morrison ago for taking toolong to hire successes come out of it where said."The housing gives them
Trial
symptoms are tu nnel v i - Ryder. sion, a sense of unreality and The prosecution also ques-
Continued from B1
disorientation.
tioned
Ryder worked at G5 Search Marketingin Bend.
The prosecution questioned the thoroughness of the eval-
could have been lying. Best
They also heard from the
uation, noting that Best had
dissociation."
threat offorced sodomy. Best
Best said this set of symptoms is consistent with some-
respondedby saying her opinionwas based onbehaviorand experiences Wirkkala had in the moments before shooting
cution's case to accommodate
the schedule of their expert witness, Suzanne Best, a clin-
ical psychologist with expertise in trauma.
Best was asked by the defense to evaluate Wirkkala's
mental state before, during and immediately after the shooting. Best said based on
her three-hour meeting with Wirkkala and a selection of records from the investigation,
his "physiological, emotional and cognitive symptomswere
one who has perceived a threat, noting some common
summer — toward rent, and the voucher covers the r e -
countywidemanhunt. A ve-
hicle he is accusedof steal-
he saves $120 a month with
one goal in mind: in a year or two, Coleman hopesto buy his own home, through aHousing Works down payment assistance program.
— Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
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The trial is scheduledto — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletirLcom
was Dec. 10, 2017, but that
mainder. "It's kind of rough," Coleman said. Nonetheless,
trance wound. continuetoday.
Ma d r as,
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
said patients do lie, but that
consistent with peritraumatic
spected Ryder's body. The defense interruptedthe prose-
needto be addressed." Coleman pays one-third of his monthly income — a $1,000 monthly military pension payment, plus money he earns as a painter during the
near d owntown
wh e t her W i r k k a 1a
based on her work, Wirkkala not conducted a complete di- did not seemto be lying. "As intelligent as he is, in agnostic examination, which could have discovered more terms of v o cabulary, you about the defendant's mental would have expected him to profile, and that her analysis use more well-chosen words," was based on materials select- Best said. edby the defense. During Monday's testimoBestsaid she wasable to re- ny, the prosecution also interquest more materials if she felt viewed Deputy State Medical they were needed and noted Examiner ChristopherYoung, a complete diagnostic exam focusing on how closeWirkwasn't necessary to address kala's shotgun was to Ryder Wirkkala's mental state sur- when it fired. "It was between zero and 6 rounding the shooting. The prosecution also asked or 7 inches, and on the closer if the threat Wirkkala expe- half of that," Young said. rienced could have been that Youngsaid his analysis was of being held responsiblefor based onhow soot had settled his actions, as opposed to the on Ryder's neck near the en-
medical examiner wh o i n -
a stable place so they can focus on the other issues that
ing after escapingwas found
BPACE IS I.I~ITEOI
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TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
RKGON
eBC e
I 'lS SecISOA IS OVeI"
Train death —Portland police say an autopsy shows an18-yearold man identified asTaishawn Nathaniel Millage drownedafter a train knocked him into the Willamette River. Thepolice said Monday it remains unknown why hewas walking on the bridge about11 p.m. Friday. The bridge is south of the St. Johns Bridge.
• Tsunami trash is becoming less visible, just in time for bikini weather
WOman fOund dead —The Umatilla County sheriff says a woman has beenfound dead near acamp trailer in Northeast Oregon. Sheriff Terry Rowansaysdeputies responded after the dispatch center got a call Monday reporting that a 30-year-old manhadtold a friend he killed his girlfriend. Thebodywas found after a search of the property in Echo, wherethe manhadset up his trailer. The sheriff says deputies later located the boyfriend andtook him in for questioning. Rowansaysthe cause of death was not immediately determined. Thewoman'sname wasnotreleased.
By Chad Garland The Associated Press
SALEM — A change in the
winds could signal an end to a spike in tsunami debris and other marine trash on Oregon and Washington beaches. Federal researchers say this year's soggy spring probably
Much of the debris that has
aided a noticeable uptick in
washed up onOregon's shores,
flotsam along the West Coast, including the northern tip of
including here near Newport, stems from the earthquake that rocked Japan in 2011 and sent a tsunami across the Pacific
California.
Some of the debris stemmed
Ocean.
from the tsunami that hit Japan in March 2011.
Surfrider Foundation /The Associated Press
"This is a significant year2013 seemed to be a quiet year, comparatively," said Charlie Plybon, Oregon field manager for the Surfrider Foundation,
The destruction caused by the tsunami off Japan three years ago has added to an ongoing problem of marine debris. Material a nonprofit that helps with cleanup. washed awayin2011 may continue to wash Winds b l owing s o uth during w i nter, e specially up elsewhere for several years. Oceanic and A t mospheric Administration say the annual transition from wet winter
why some debris kept rolling in through May. "It's a process — it's going to
can be traced back to Japan, however.
take a little time," she said.
Nir Barnea, regional coor-
The Oregonian
The Associated Press
quired ownership to be divided As part of a $3.4 billion setequally among heirs, meaning tlement of a lawsuit filed by ever-lar ger numbers of people Elouise Cobell of Browning, Eastern Oregon expects more owned ever-smaller shares of Mont., the I nterior Departthan 400 tracts of land to come the propertyas generations ment plans to buy back land under its control as part of the passed. from willing sellers and hold "If you get down four gener- it in trust for tribes. Of the tofederal government's efforts to buy back and consolidate Na- ations, you have 40 or 50 peo- tal settlement, $1.9 billion has tive American land holdings ple," said Chuck Sams, a tribal been set aside for the buysplintered by 19th-century acts spokesman. "If one person backs. Of that, $12 million has of Congress. wants to build, they have to get been allotted for the ConfedPENDLETON — The Umat illa t r i bal g o vernment i n
ated" after they were initially allotted to individual tribal members. The legislation re-
permission from the other 49."
The 400 parcels at the Umatilla reservation involve more than 5,000 owners.
erated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. It is one of six tribal nations out of 150
that have signed an agreement
nonprofit SOLVE.
Beachgoers can pitch in any time using cleanup bags available at state park offices, said
Chris Havel, a spokesman for the Oregon Department of Parks and Recreation.
"Any one person can be their own c leanup crew," Havel said.
with the program so far. "This is one tool to begin re-
building the reservation and making it whole again," Sams said. There are far more than 400 fractionated properties in the area, but the tribal govern-
ment's top priority is buying back land owned by people in
have complied with a federal orderand told Oregon firstresponders where they haul vol- move weekly through each atile crude oil and how much county. They also had to disthey move. Whether the pub- close the routes. lic will learn the same inforThough railroads had mation remains tobe seen. balked at submitting the inTwo of the railroad com- formation without confidentipanies that notified the Or- ality agreements in place, the egon State Fire Marshal's companies faced a maximum office about oil train volumes $175,000-a-day fine for failing and routes asked the state to toheed thefederalorder. sign confidentiality agreeThough much of the inments restricting notifica- formation is known today, tionto first responders. railroads have provided it The state didn't sign them haphazardly and voluntariand received the informa- ly to Oregon first respondtion anyway. But the state ers. Firefighters across the wouldn't immediately re- state didn't learn that explolease or even discuss the in- sive crude oil was moving formation railroads disclosed through their communities while it awaited an opinion until after shipments began. from Attorney General Ellen
p.m. June 6, in the20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:37 p.m. June 6, in the19400 blockof Amber MeadowDrive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:07 p.m. June 6, in the2100 block of Northwest Fifth Street. DUII —Robert Lee Hartman, 52, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:21 a.m. June 7, inthe area of Southeast Third Street andSoutheast Roosevelt Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:28 a.m. June 7, inthe 3200 block of Northeast Purcell Boulevard. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:53 a.m. June 7, inthe18900 block of Squirrel Tail Loop. DUII —Annie Irwin, 46, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:47 p.m. June 7, in thearea ofArchie Briggs Road andCasey Place. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:33 a.m. June 8, in thearea of Northwest Lava RoadandNorthwest Minnesota Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 1:32 p.m. June 8, in the800 block of Northwest Brooks Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 1:49 p.m. June 8, in the100 block of Northwest OregonAvenue. Unauthorizeduss —Avehicle was reported stolen at 9:10 p.m.June 4, in the 61300 block of Parrell Road.
The reports would shed
Rosenblum's office. light on the volume of BNSF "We do not have a resolu- Railway Co. trains moving tion on the confidentiality," crude oil through Oregon. said Rich Hoover, spokes- BNSF, which moves crude
other tribes, he said.
man for the State Fire Marshal's office.
The property might be used for housing or community buildings, depending on its zoning, or for farming.
An emergency federal orderinMay required railroads carrying more than 1 million gallons of highly flammable
oil along the Deschutes Riv-
er, hasn't publicly disclosed the volumes of North Dakota crude it moves in the state.
Reports for other companies would be less revelatory.
Find Your Dream Home In
NEws OF REcoRD Criminal mischief —Anact of POLICE LOG criminal mischief was reported at 7:37 a.m. June 5, in thearea of Northeast The Bulletin will update items in the Elk Court and Northeast Lotus Drive. Police Log whensuch arequest Theft —A theft was reported at11:21 is received. Anynewinformation, a.m. June 5, in the2300 block of such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Northwest Lemhi PassDrive. Theft —A theft was reported at information, call 541-633-2117. 12:11 p.m. June 5, in the 200 block of Southeast Soft Tail Loop. BEND POLICE Theft —A theft was reported at 5:07 DEPARTMENT p.m.June5,inthe63400 blockof North U.S. Highway97. Thsll —A theft was reported at 5:12 Theft —A theft was reported at 9:09 p.m. April 22, in the 61300 block of a.m. June 6, in the2300 block of Rock Bluff Lane. Northwest Fifth Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of Theft —A theft was reported at 9:31 criminal mischief was reported at June 6, in the19100 block of 10:47 a.m. April 25, in the1400 block a.m. Chiloquin Drive. of Wall Street. Griminal mischief —Anact of Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at criminal mischief was reported at 11:01 a.m. April 25, in the 63200 block 2:27 p.m. May26, in the1600 block of Northeast Wells Acres Road. of Nels Anderson Road. Theft —A theft was reported at Theft —A theft was reported at 9:45 6:00p.m. June5,inthe600 blockof a.m. May 27, in thearea of Northeast Northeast Third Street. Linnea Drive andNortheast Arnett Theft — A theft was reported at 9:03 Way. a.m. June 6, in the21000 block of Criminal mischief —Anact of Wilderness Way. criminal mischief was reported at Theft —A theft was reported at 9:31 4:14 p.m. May27, in the 600 block of a.m. June 6, in the61100 block of Southeast Wilson Avenue. Larkspur Loop. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:12 Theft —A theft was reported at12:08 a.m. May 30, in the1700 block of p.m. June 6, in the2900 block of Northeast Pheasant Lane. Northeast MareaDrive. Thsll —A theft was reported at 6:26 Criminal mischief —Anact of p.m. May 31, in the1000 block of criminal mischief was reported at Northeast Fifth Street. 12:09 p.m. June 6, in thearea of Burglary —A burglary was reported at10 27 am. June 2, in the1600 block Southwest SimpsonAvenue and Southwest15th Street. of Northeast Third Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of Burglary —A burglary was reported criminal mischief was reported at 2:03 at 9:10 p.m. June 2, in the2600 block p.m. June 6, in the18900 block of of Northeast GenetCourt. Northwest Squirrel Tail Loop. Criminal mischief —Anact of Unlawful entry —Avehicle was criminal mischief was reported reported entered at 4:07 p.m. June6, at11:35 a.m. June 3, in thearea in the1900 block of Northwest First of Southeast Fourth Street and Street. Southeast Railroad Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and an Thsll —Atheft was reported at arrest madeat12:52 p.m. June 6, inthe 1:25 p.m. June 3, in the700 block of 3100 block of North U.S.Highway 97. Southeast Breitenbush Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported and an Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at3:05 p.m. June 6, in the arrest made at3:32 p.m. June 3, inthe 20100 block of Pinebrook Boulevard. 700 block of Northeast Greenwood Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:36
North Dakota oil in a single train — about 35 tank cars — to tell state authorities how many trains they expect to
Three railroadcompanies
Landssplit in1800swill return to Umatilla tribes
The tracts were "fraction-
POliCS IliOg VSStS —TwoMedford police dogs have bulletproof vests thanks to the senior project of North Medford High School student Shyonna Leach.Sheraised$4,000,andthetwovestscost $2,200, so shedonated the remainder to Jackson County Animal Care andControl. Her late father was aMedford police officer who started the canine unit.
Oil routes,disclosed, may not go public
of small boats. Not all of them
Among the debris yet to make landfall from Japan may brought warmer,northwester- dinator for N OAA's marine be two more floating docks ly winds that tend to push de- debris program, said the de- such as those that washed up bris-l aden surface water back struction caused by the tsuna- in 2012 in Newport and Washout to sea. mi off Japan three years ago ington state's Olympic NationIt's a shift that happens ev- has added to an ongoing prob- al Park. ery year between March and lem of marine debris. Material In March of this year, more June, but Amy MacFadyen, washed away in 2011 may con- than 4,500 volunteershelped an oceanographer and mod- tinue to wash up elsewhere for clear a n e s t imated 45,955 eler with the administration, several years, he said. pounds of debris, including 14 said this year it's a little later Last year, construction de- tires, from the entire Oregon and not as sharp as in some bris was common, but he said Coast during one of two annurecent years. She said that is this year there have been a lot al cleanupsorganized by the lows to dry summer highs has
Stranded SalmOn reSCued —Volunteers joined state fisheries biologists in Southern Oregonover the weekend toform a kind of bucket brigade to rescueyoung salmonand steelhead stranded by the drought. The flow of BearCreekthrough downtown Medford is a fifth of average from the lack of rain andearly irrigation withdrawals. That left some juvenile salmon andsteelhead unable to survive in warm stagnant pools, and unable to maketheir way to cooler water upstream. Biologists figure they got afew hundred juvenile fish out.
— From wire reports
during storms, tend to help push debris toward land. But researchers at th e N ational
AROUND THE STATE
Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:55 p.m. June 7, inthe area of Northeast Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported and arrests made at8:02 p.m. June 7,in the area of CombsFlat Road.
JEFFERSON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at 8p.m.June 2, in the 600 block of Northwest Cherry Lane. DUII —Kimberly Renart, 36, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxlcants at 7 p.m. June 3, in the1100 block of Southeast Kemper Way. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:45p.m.June4,inthe7900blockof Southwest Feather Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:44 p.m. June 4, in the1100 block of Northeast Meadowlark Lane. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at 3:06 p.m.June5, in the area of U.S. Highway 26nearmilepost 3. DUII —Diana Valencia, 58, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 12:05 a.m. June 6, in the700 block of Southwest Second Street. DUII —Roland Kalama, 31,was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxlcants at 8:57 a.m. June 6, in thearea of WestU.S. Highway 26 nearCherry Lane.
area of U.S. Highway 97near milepost 13 I. DUII —Douglas Alan Story, 61, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 8:11 p.m. June 6, in thearea of U.S. Highway 97 nearmilepost113. DUII —Acacia Lahree Morford, 19, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 2:35 a.m. June 7, inthe area of Northeast Third and Division streets.
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PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at12:14 a.m. June 7,in the area of Southeast Lynn Boulevard.
p~~ g
Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at10:43 a.m. June 6, in the
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SU-Cascades supporters need to stand up and speak their minds today. They need to prevent a small group of naysayers from damaging — maybe even destroying — the community's dream for higher education. ditional parking adjustments depending on what happens once the campus is operational. Today's hearing will include a presentation of the city's report and recommendation, plus comments from OSU-Cascades. The public can speak at the hearing An organized group of oppo- or submit written comments. The nents, called Truth in Site, has city's senior planner urged people hired a lawyer and vowed to fight to come with written as well as the expansion in its chosen location oral comments because time will at Southwest Century Drive and be capped for speaking based on Chandler Avenue in west Bend. how many people want to address The critics are focused primar- the hearings officer. ily on transportation and parking. Bend has been working toward While they have correctly targeted this moment for decades. The bensubjects that require more work, efits of a four-year university go far they have unfortunately decided beyond the essential core of eduto become the problem rather than cating students and granting bachelor's degrees, enormous as that is. the solution. enhance the comIt's time for the rest of the com- The campus will munity, bringing the right kind of munity to make it clear that Truth economic growth and expanding in Site doesn't represent us, that the vast majority of residents un- the cultural and educational opderstand the overwhelming bene- tions for everyone. fits the campus offers, and that its Soon after the decision to exlocation was chosen for the right pand was made, the community reasons. demonstrated its support by raising Bend city staffers are recom- $4 million. The Legislature has almending the phase one expansion located the money to get it going. This is a critical moment. It's plan be approved, with the city retaining the option to require ad- time to speak up. From 9a.m.to 2 p.m.,a hearings officer will conduct a public hearing for the city on the Oregon State University-Cascadescampus' plan for the first phase of its expansion into a four-year university. The location is the City of Bend Municipal Court Room at 555 N.E. 15th St.
Thank firefighters, and think about fire safe end owes the 700-plus firefighters working on the Two Bulls Fire a hearty "thank you." Crews have been working round the clock in shifts since Wednesday to control the blaze that has threatened homes on the city's west side.
egon State University Extension Service website (extension.oregon state.edu/emergency-resources/ wildfire) offers a variety of suggestions about what should be done. Meanwhile, if we've also become complacentabout our behavior in the outdoors, that should stop. While it's not unheard of to have Fires spread quickly this time of wildfires this early in the year, says year, and trees aren't the only issue. Lisa Clark of the Central Oregon Fire in heavy brush spreads draInteragency Dispatch Center in matically faster than fire in trees. Prineville, one of this magnitude is Care with campfires and such extraordinary. thingsas matches are a no-brainer, The woods and rangeland are but checking with loM agencies dry, about as dry as they normal- to see if campfires are permitted ly are a month from now. In fact, or areas are closed due to high fire Clark says, it would take some- danger also is important. thing like 20 days of rain to really The Two Bulls Fire also shows improve the situation. So much the wisdom of having a two-source summer rain is unheard of in this watersystem here:Though one part part of the world. is shut down by the fire, the other is able to operate satisfactorily. And That's important to keep in mind. No Bend residents have while it's the surface-water source lost homes to wildfire in nearly 20 that is out of commission now, that years, not since the Skeleton Fire may not always be the case. claimed 19 houses in 1996. If people No one wants a summer of have grown complacentas a result, smoke and ash, we suspect. And this fire should serve as a warn- while we cannot prevent all wilding, not only in Bend but across fires, we may be able to prevent the region: Get the defensible space some and lessen the damage otharound your home experts say you ers do. The effort required is well need, and do so quickly. The Or- worth it.
B
Drivers nee ByCandaceBrink it is inevitable that a person, child or magine taking your child and dog pet will be seriously injured or killed
twhen a car comes whizzing by at
to a state park to hike and see the beautiful mountain views of Bend,
in its current state.
Alongside the road that summits Pilot Butte is a path made of dirt and
nearly 40 mph just inches from your loose rock. This path is very slippery. child. This is a daily occurrence at a I have slipped and twisted my ankle state park that hosts almost 882,000 five times during the 10 years I have visitors annually, consisting of hikers been hiking Pilot Butte when going and drivers who summit Pilot Butte. down this path. This issue puts hikThere are, as usual, two sides to ers onthe road because of safety coneach story. Some say hikers are not cerns like slipping, which could end in danger as long as they stay on the much worse than a twisted ankle. I dirt path parallel to the road or use have been walking on the road for the nature trail. However, it is not al- thesereasons and have almost been ways possible for someone walking hit by cars numerous times. My dog up Pilot Butte to use the nature trail has been hit by a moving vehicle beor walk the dirt path. Pilot Butte State cause the driver was mad that I would Park needs to address hiker/car shar- not moveoffthe road.On this occaing of the road because at this point sion I called the nonemergency police
After Bergdahl, a case for uni A
onmentof one of their childrentouch-
mericansdon'thave a com-
mon ancestry. Therefore, we have to work hard to build
es them all. In polarized countries,
DAVID
especially, you have to take care of your own. If you don't, the corrosive
BROOKS
national solidarity. We go in for
more overt displays of patriotism than in most other countries: politi-
effects will be cumulative. It doesn't matter either that the
cians wearing flag lapel pins, everyThe president and vice president, body singing the national anthem the only government officials electbefore games, saying the Pledge of ed directly by th e entire nation, Allegiance at big meetings, revering have a special responsibility to nursacred creedalstatements, such as ture this national solidarity. So, of theGettysburg Address. course, President Barack Obama We need to do this because na- had to take all measures necessary tional solidarity is essential to the to securethe release of Sgt.Bowe health of the country. This feeling Bergdahl. Of course, he had to do of solidarity means that we do pull all he could do to not forsake a U.S.
U.S.government ended up dealing
together and not apart in times of
upon to take the sins of the situation
with terrorists. In the first place, the
Taliban is not a terrorist organization the way al-Qaida is. America has always tried to reach a negoti-
ated arrangement with the Taliban, and this agreement may be a piece of that. In the second place, this is
the dirty world we live in. Sometimes national leaders are called
citizen. It doesn't matter if Bergdahl had deserted his post or not. It doesn't
crisis, including after the attacks on 9/Il. Despite all our polarization, we do accept the election results, even
upon themselves for the good of the country, to deal with the hateful and
matter if he is a confused young compromise with th e l oathsome. man who said insulting and shame- That's their form of sacrifice and ful things about his country and his service. Army. The debt we owe to fellow So Obama made the right call. Americans is not based on individIf he is to be faulted, it would be ilate waves of immigration. ual merit. It is based on citizenship, first for turning the release into an National solidarity is especially and loyalty to the national commu- Oprah-esque photo-op, a political important for the national defense. nity we all share. stunt filled with inaccurate rhetoMen and women serve in the armed Soldiers don't risk their lives only ric and unworthy grandstanding. forcesfor a variety ofreasons,but for those Americans who deserve it; It would next be for his adminisone of them is the awareness that it they do it for the nation as a whole. tration's astonishing tone-deafness is an extraordinary privilege to be It is not dispositive either that the a bout how t hi s swap would b e an American, that it is a debt that deal to release Bergdahl may put received. needs to be repaid with service. others at risk. The five prisoners Most of all, the Obama adminisSoldiers in combat not only pro- released from Guantanamo Bay, tration can be faulted for not at least tect their buddies; they show amaz- Cuba, in a swap for Bergdahl seem trying to use the language of coming devotion to anyone in the uni- like terrible men who could do harm. munal solidarity to explain this deform, without asking about state or But their release may have been im- cision. Apparently, we have become ethnicity. This is the cohesion that minent anyway. And the loss of na- such a hyperindividualized culture makes armies effective. tional fraternity that would result that it is impossible to even develop These commitments, so crucial, if we start abandoning Americans an extendedargument on how indiare based on deep fraternal senti- in the field would be a greater and vidual cases fit into the larger fabric ments that have to be nurtured with more long-lasting harm. ofthecommon good. action. They are based on the notion Israel once traded 1,027 PalestinStill, th e p r esident's instincts that we are members of one nation- ian prisoners to get back one of their were right. His sense of responsial community. We will not abandon own. Another time they traded 1,150 bility for a fellow countryman was each other; we will protect one an- prisoners to get back three of their correct. It's not about one person; other; heroic measures will be taken own. They did it because of a deep it's about the principle of all-for-oneto leave no one behind. Even if it is awareness that national cohesion is and-one-for-all, which is the basis of just a lifeless body that we are re- essential to national survival. They citizenship. trieving, it is important to repatriate did it because Israeli parents share a — David Brooks is a columnist all Americans. common emotional bond; the imprisfor The New York Times. when the other party wins. People in New York do uncomplainingly send tax dollars to help people in New Mexico. We are able to assim-
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are Pi ot Butte wit IN MY VIEW
move over when they see us walk-
ing. Hiking with my nephew was the line but the officer never arrived. I second time I called the police. We hike Pilot Butte nearly every day and were walking down the road because I either have to brave the elements in of the slippery path. A car came up the winter or fear for my life as well very quickly and stopped about a foot as my dogs' lives spring through falL from my nephew's stroller and laid Last summer, to keep cars from
on the horn and would not stop. As I
going off the road, the state placed pulled my phone out to call the police, white posts between the dirt path and he proceeded to move around me and road; consequently this moved hik- continue up the road. Again, the poers even further into traffic. Mothers lice never arrived. who push their children up the butte The nature trail is a great way to either have to push through gravel, avoid cars and still summit the butte. dirt and rock up a very steep incline It is,however, very narrow, and for or walk in the uphill lane because of anyone who has dogs or a stroller, the posts. I have taken my nephew this creates an issue. With many up the butte in a stroller many times people on the path and the obstacles over the last two years and it amazes me how cars won't slow down or
from nature, it is not easy to navigate.
For someone like myself, with two
I ef'S
dogs and on many days a stroller, the trail traffic is frustrating. I hike the
butte for exercise, nature, scenery as well as to combat stress, which is
often negated by the added anxiety when I walk the nature trail. There are ways to avoid the im-
pending tragedy of someone being injured while walking the butte. Paving the path on the main road is a
great way to solve this problem. The road up Pilot Butte is in desperate
need of repaving. When it is repaved, and if the existing dirt path is paved simultaneously, the issue would be
solved. This option would allow cars, hikers, children and pets alike to enjoy the state park as it was intended. — Candace Brinkis an OSUstudent and lives in Bend.
B6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCUWeather, Inc. ©2014
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Hi/Lo/Prsc. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W 82/61/0.42 85/64/pc esnws 77/57/0.00 76/64/c 80/63/I 70/64/0.1 2 80/63/I 74/61/pc 88/58/0.00 88/64/pc 92/60/s 59/48/0.13 56/45/sh 59/44/s 88/70/0.00 87/69/pc 82/67/t 73/65/0.01 76/68/pc 78/68/pc 86no/0.09 92/65/pc 95/71/pc 81/67/0.17 85/66/pc 88/65/I 83/52/0.00 73/49/I 61/44/t 87n2/0.01 83/69/I 82/65/pc
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UV INDEX TODAY
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
82/63/t 86/73/t
85/67/s 90/71/t 85/65/s 82/50/s 103/77/s
4
Senefrr
91/71/t
89/69/s 83/63/s
89/72/t 101/74/s 76/59/c 81/64/I
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65/54/pc 70/59/pc 92/67/t 69/42/c
90/58/s 93/71/t 79/66/I 88/53/s 79/63/c
80/61/s
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73/51/pc 80/56/pc 75/50/s 80/60/pc
89n5/t 88/75/t 105/71/0.00 105/75/s 102/72/s
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111/86/0.00 111/84/s 108/82/pc 78/56/0.17 76/55/I 77/54/I Montreal 81/66/0.00 73/56/sh 77/60/pc Moscow 70/57/0.07 66/54/I 71/50/c Nairobi 77/59/0.03 79/60/c 76/60/c Nassau 86/77/0.31 86n7/t ssnwpc New Delhi 113/88/0.00 115/90/pc 113/89/pc Osaka 86/70/0.02 81/66/pc 77/66/r Oslo 77/52/0.00 77/59/pc 75/52/t Ottawa 82/63/0.00 78/55/pc 76/59/c Paris 79/63/0.15 75/58/pc 78/60/pc Riu de Janeiro 84/73/0.00 74/71/r Tena/c Rome 90/63/0.00 87/65/s 89/65/s Santiago 64/34/0.00 63/44/pc 54/40/r Snu Paulo 72/65/0.00 65/59/r 69/60/pc Snppcrc 74/61/0.13 72/61/c 74/62/sh Seoul 80/63/0.00 82/62/I 82/63/t Shanghai 80/68/0.00 82/68/pc 82/63/pc Singapore 90/82/0.10 89n9/t 89/80/I Stockholm 77/59/0.01 75/53/s 76/54/I Sydney 63/44/0.72 66/49/sh 68/43/pc Taipei 66n7/o'.oe 82/74/t 77nf/r Tel Aviv 81/66/0.00 80/66/s 81/68/s Tokyo 73/66/0.20 77/68/pc 76nO/r Toronto 79/55/0.00 78/59/pc 73/59/r Vancouver 65/57/0.00 66/50/c 68/52/pc Vienna 88/59/0.00 91/67/s 92/67/s Warsaw 84/63/0.00 80/54/pc 78/56/pc
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Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 55/47/0.62 61/42/pc 63/42/s 73/63/0.14 74/56/I 81/62/pc 81/56/0.00 76/61/pc 75/57/r 106/81/0.00 105/82/s 100/81/s 75/55/Tr 80/66/I 80/63/I 74/64/0.00 80/59/pc 86/64/s 74/67/1.44 83/63/I 85/65/s 76/59/0.00 77/61/pc 75/60/pc 79/65/Tr 80/67/I 80/65/I 78/47/0.00 75/52/pc 78/56/c 84/67/2.57 83/67/I 82/64/pc eonz/0.5e 88n6/t 89/76/t 66/50/0.00 67/55/pc 68/53/I 70/59/Tr 78/60/s 81/62/pc
68/63/1.60 80/67/I 72/63/1.87 80/68/I 84/67/0.01 88n3/pc OklahomaCity 79/62/0.24 78/61/pc Omaha 72/62/0.00 80/59/pc Orlando 93/73/0.03 92ff3/t Palm Springs 106/81/0.00 106n5/s Pucrin 81/55/0.00 74/60/r Philadelphia 82/67/0.32 83/69/I Phoenix 110/79/0.00 108/81/s Pittsburgh 68/61/0.00 78/64/c Portland, ME 84/58/0.00 68/56/sh Providence 76/61/0.11 74/62/sh Raleigh 90/69/0.02 93f/1/pc Rapid City 70/41/0.00 80/53/pc Renn 97/59/0.00 91/59/s Richmond 85no/o.oo 90/71/pc Rochester, NY 76/59/Tr 78/62/pc Sacramento 106/63/0.00 97/56/s St. Louis 79/64/0.02 75/62/r Salt Lake City 85/58/0.00 88/58/s Snn Antonio 90/73/1.06 95f/2/pc Ssn Diego 71/65/0.00 74/63/pc Snn Francisco 77/58/0.00 69/55/pc Snn Jose 88/63/0.00 83/57/s santa re 80/49/0.00 85/55/pc Savannah 94nwo.o4 94n3/t Seattle 70/56/0.00 68/51/c Sioux Falls 69/54/0.71 78/58/pc Spokane 79/55/0.00 73/48/pc Springfield, Mo 70/63/0.14 71/57/r
Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC
WATER REPORT
SKI REPORT
Yesterday Today Wednesday
City
Abilene Akron 72/ Albany • W co PRECIPITATION hebaa 7 0 Albuquerque • • 74/43 • 78/ 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" CENTRAL:Clearskies andyn Anchorage 78/55 Mc innvie • 1.07"in 1922 and mild temperaAtlanta Record • He p pner Grande h h • Condon 7/45 75 43 Atlantic City M onth to date (normal) O.o o (0.27 ) tuiesai8expected Union Lincoln h h Austin 62/ Year to date (normal ) 4.03 (5.29 ) right through at least 62/51 Sale Baltimore • pray Graniten Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 2" midweek. 75/5 • 8/50 Billings 'Baker C Newpo 72/39 Birmingham SUN ANDMOON 5/48 63/50 • Mitch 0 74/37 Bismarck 77/42/0.00 79/54/I 70/47/I campseranRed • 74/44 Today Wed. WEST: Cloudyskies at y n OIVHIS uu Boise 89/57/0.00 82/51/s 80/55/s 74/41 • John Sunrise 5:22 a.m. 5: 2 2 a.m. the coast with more 78/50 Boston 72/59/sh 67/57/pc • Prineville oay 6/40 tario Bridgeport, CT 81/67/0.00 Sunset 8:48 p.m. 8: 4 8 p.m. breaks in theclouds in68/64/0.78 75/65/I 71/64/pc 77/43 • P a lina 7 4/ 4 4 8 54 Buffalo 75/56/0.00 76/61/pc 76/64/I Moonrise 6 :14 p.m. 7:20 p.m. land today andtonight. Floren e • Eugene ' Se d Brothers Valen Burlington, VT 82/64/0.00 78/60/I 76/59/pc Moonset 3:3 7 a.m. 4:2 0 a.m. Sun inland, cloudsat Su iVern 75/39 85/52 Caribou, ME 80/56/0.00 71/46/r 77/51/s the coast tomorrow. Nyssa u 74/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 95n5/0.00 92/74/t efnf/I • La pfne 85/53 Grove Oakridge Full Last New First Charlotte 87no/0.11 90/69/I 88/65/I • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 82/45 77/48 /47 Chattanooga 84/64/0.34 85/68/I 82/65/t • Fort Rock Riley 77/38 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 76/38 Cheyenne 68/40/0.00 82/53/pc 75/41/I 76/39 72/39 Chicago 78/55/0.00 71/57/r 72/55/t High: 92' Bandon Roseburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 73/57/Tr 77/66/I 78/62/t J un 12 Jun 19 J u n 27 J u l 5 at Rome Jordan V Hey 66/52 Beaver Silver 78/38 Frenchglen 82/53 Cleveland 72/53/0.00 74/64/c 78/64/I Low: 36' 78/44 Marsh Lake 80/42 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 68/43/Tr 82/55/pc 82/50/t at Baker City Po 0 77/39 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 74/62/0.1 4 70/57/r 80/59/pc T he Planets Ris e Set • Paisley 66/ a Columbia, SC 95n2/0.00 eenzn 91/69/I • 81/46 Mercury 6:25 a.m. 9: 3 6 p.m. • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 90/71/0.18 senon 85/68/I Gold ach • 5 o Medfo d 7 7/ 4 2 Rome Venus 3:40 a.m. 5: 4 2 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 77/58/0.00 78/67/c 82/64/t 76/ 83/46 Mars 2:49 p.m. 2 : 2 0 a.m. • Klamath Concord, NH 85/57/0.00 74/58/sh 67/54/pc • Ashl nd ' Falls Jupiter 7:50 a.m. 1 1 :01 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 93n8/0.00 92/75/pc 92/75/pc Bro lngs 82/4 79/40 Saturn 5:53 p.m. 4: 0 0 a.m. 79/5 78/42 82/47 Dallas 81/65/0.85 84/66/pc 94n5/4 Dayton 76/58/0.00 75/65/r 78/62/t Uranus 2:24 a.m. 3: 1 4 p.m. Denver 69/44/0.00 86/58/pc 83/49/I Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday nes Moines 76/59/0.00 77/60/I 82/62/pc city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Ln/W C i t y Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lu/W Hi/Lu/W City Hi/Lu/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lu/W Detroit 81/57/0.00 78/62/pc 76/63/r 65/54/0.00 64/51/c 64/50/pc Ln Grande 79/46/0.00 75/43/s 77/45/s Portland 74/5 7/0.0073/54/pc 75/53/ s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin Duluth 71/47/0.02 72/50/s 73/55/pc Baker City 79/38/0.00 74/37/s 76/38/s Ln Pine 76/39/0.00 73/39/pc 76/43/s Prineville 77/ 4 3/0.0077/43/pc 76/47/s El Paso 96n4/0.00 97/78/pc 102/75/s 5 NI~ G ~ S~ N 5 Brcckings 82f/1/0.00 79/50/c 65/48/pc Medfcrd 8 7 /54/0.00 83/53/pc 86/52/s Redmond 80 / 43/0.0077/37/pc 78/42/s Fairbanks 69/51/0.21 67/44/pc 61/39/sh The highertheAccuWenuter.txrm IIVIndex number, eums 85/49/0.00 77/38/s 77/42/s Ne wport 61/5 0 /0.00 63/50/c 61/44/pc Roseburg 82 / 61/0.00 82/53/pc 81/49/s Fargo 80/52/0.00 79/58/I 73/49/I the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, Eugene 76/50/0.00 75/49/pc 76/49/s North Bend 63/52/0.00 65/53/c 63/48/pc Salem 77/54/0.00 75/50/pc 75/49/ s Flagstaff 82/49/0.00 83/47/s 78/44/s 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exireme. Klnmnth Falls 85/52/0.00 79/40/s 80/44/s O n tario 90/52/0.00 86/54/s 82/50/s Sisters 77/44/0.00 77/39/pc 77/44/s Grand Rapids 80/57/0.00 75/62/pc 75/58/r Lnkeview 86/54/0.00 78/42/s 79/44/s Pe ndleton 83/ 5 7/0.00 78/48/s 81/50/s The Onlles 7 9 / 60/0.00 78/55/pc 82/56/ s Greenesy 75/49/0.00 73/49/s 76/53/sh Greensboro 85/68/0.22 eono/pc 90/68/I Weether(W):s-sunny, pc-pnrtly cloudy,c-clcudy, sh-shcwers, t-thunderstcrms, r-rnin, sf-sncw flurries, sn-sncw t-ice, Tr-trnce,Yesterdaydata nscf 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 81/67/0.21 84/66/pc 86/66/I G rasses T r ees Wee d s Hsrffcrd, CT 71/63/0.11 78/64/I 72/60/pc ~t th g h • h • hh t Helena 82/48/0.00 74/48/I 69/43/pc Source: OregonAllergyAssccintus 541-683-1577 86/72/0.00 88/74/pc 87/73/pc ~ os ~ f os ~ 2 0 s ~ a o s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~ ecs ~708 ~aos ~gos ~tOOs ~ffcs Honolulu ~ f os ~ o s Houston 87n2/0.50 eontn 94/73/pc Huntsville 83/68/0.32 82/69/t 82/65/pc X t~ W NATIONAL Indianapolis 74/60/0.00 72/62/r 74/60/I As of 7 n.m.yesterday Qunb c i ~ i nipng T n der Sny Jackson, MS 90/70/0.82 83/68/I 85/66/pc Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity EXTREMES h hea/51 2 7 Jacksonville 93no/0.00 92/71/t 88/69/t C rane Prairie 485 2 3 88% YESTERDAY(for the 74'yo 48 contiguousstates) sillingd Wickiup 147546 73/49 Crescent Lake 7 6 4 31 88% National high: 120 orcnto Mn Amsterdam 79/63/0.01 73/56/pc 69/50/pc sni Ochoco Reservoir 32332 73% at Death Valley,CA 7 Athens 86/68/0.00 85/70/pc 89/73/s 7 • 82/sf Mil n knn nit uffnlo Auckland 61/53/1.65 59/52/r 61/51/c Prinevige 139037 94% National low: 26 67 7 Baghdad 113/81/0.00 116/89/s 110/79/pc Rapid City River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t .lsec. at Bryce Canyon,UT nt urwnhrk Bangkok 93/81/0.00 92/80/sh eone/I 8 ' b„ uu 77/SO Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 346 Precipitation: 3 46" Niur eeijing 89/63/0.00 86/65/sh efnf/s • d 78WT h enne dnlphin Deschutes R.below Wickiup 937 at Monticego AR Beirut Teno/o.oo 78/67/s 77/67/s Ih nc t scn nlt Lake C ty 82/5 Oma . I P 8/58 W Berlin 88/67/0.00 96/69/s 85/56/I Deschutes R.below Bend 115 Se/55 Denver T Bogota 68/50/0.01 67/49/c 66/48/c Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2010 Vega 86/ss Kansas ci Budapest 90/59/0.00 95/64/s 93/59/s Little Deschutes near LaPine 132 74/se Buenos Ai r es 64/51/0.00 64/54/pc 64/60/r Albuqu Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 59 W +Ohih Lon An Cnbc Snn Lucns 93/67/0.00 92/71/s 92/72/s ss/84 hnmn Clty : + h: Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 9 8/Sf Cairo 88/70/0.00 92/72/s 94/71/s Phnnn x \ Jbmhor Little nck • AS tn Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 196 Calgary 59/48/0.03 60/41/I 59/41/sh • 108I8 n 0 87/Se Cnncun 86n9/0.21 89/78/t eene/I Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 103 t W I htbhn 7 3 El Pnn Dublin 61/52/0.00 63/50/r 65/50/c Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0 Tns Edinburgh 63/51/0.35 64/52/r 67/52/sh sess Geneva 93/59/0.00 85/57/I 84/57/I J u cx . ;Phb' . ' Orleans < ndu Hsrnre 61 70/44/0.00 73/50/s 67/43/s tl In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday 4 Hong Kong 91/83/0.46 91/83/sh 91/84/pc Honolulu Chihuahua Gki resort New snow Base Istanbul 79/66/0.00 82/67/s 81/67/s 88/74 88/87 Jerusalem 78/60/0.00 77/59/s 77/59/s 0 61- 1 30 Mt. Bachelor Johannesburg 60/42/0.00 62/38/s 58/39/s Limn 71/64/0.00 73/64/pc 73/62/pc Mt. HoodMeadows 0 96-1 1 0 Lisbon 72/59/0.00 72/58/pc 81/65/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 77/59/0.13 71/54/pc 72/56/pc 0 10 0 -100 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Timberline Lodge Cold Front 84/63/0.00 85/62/pc 88/64/pc Manila 86/80/0.33 90/80/I 87/80/I Source: OnTheencw.ccm /51
Partly sunnyand breezy
TRAVEL WEATHER
Hood
today. Clearand mild
37'
Partly sunny, windy and cooler
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.
ria
EAST:Warmwith plenty of sunshine
SATURDAY "'" 71'
65' 37'
40'
Sunny
A moonlit sky
FRIDAY
THU R SDAY "'" 73'
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 77 46'
LOW
Partly sunny andbreezy
I
W EDN E SDAY ' ' 77'
06/07/14
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www.americahears.com
IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 Soccer, C2 Golf, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
GOLF
LOCAL GOLF
Bend's Heinlywins at Royal Oaks
PREP SPORTSCOMMENTARY
Glaze Meadow put to
PORTLAND — Bend
golfer Jesse Heinly shot won the prestigious Royal Oaks Invitational Tournament on Sunday. Heinly, a 22-year-old who recently graduated from Concordia University in Portland, shot a 2-over-par 7273-73 —218 at Royal Oaks Country Club in Portland. That was two shots better than at tie for second place between TyeGabriel, of Lake Oswego,and Nick Baines, of Portland.
Get ready for the next prep season, because there are mbrace the world as it is
— Bulletin staff report
Bend Ladies tee off for 49th time A field of nearly100 golfers will tee it up today in the 49th Bend Ladies Invitational. The two-day, 36-hole stroke-play tournament at Bend Golf andCountry Club — amongonly a few women's strokeplay events in Oregon — attracts a number of the top amateurs from Central Oregonand beyond. Last year, then 63-year-old Leilani Norman, of Eugene,shot13 over par to edgeBend's Rosie Cook by astroke for the championship. Both golfers will be in the field again this year, joining former Bend Ladies champions and Bend residents Amy Anderson (2011)and Nettie Morrison (2008). The tournament also includes ateam component with a four-player best ball. The Ladies Invitational is hosted by Bend G&CC's LadiesGolf Association. Today's first round begins with a 9:30 a.m. shotgun start. Wednesday's final round tees off at 9 a.m. andis expected to conclude at about1:30 p.m. The public is welcome to attend, and admission is free.
• The Northwest's best are converging on BlackButte Ranch for the OregonOpen
now. Soak in what has been — the
In its 58th year, the
Royal Oaks Invitational Tournament is a threeday, 54-hole individual stroke tournament that features many of the top amateur golfers from around the Northwest.
the test
league titles, the state championships — and
By Zack Hall
prepare for change.
The Bulletin
The plate tectonics
QRANT
of Oregonhlghschool
LUCAS
Phil Lagao is as curious as anybody about how his golf course will hold up when many of the Pacific Northwest's club professionals take it on this week.
sports are in motion.
The Oregon Open Invitational
begins today at the Glaze Mead-
And in a few months, a new landscape will be formed. A
ow course at Black Butte Ranch with a field of 188 professionals
new world will await fresh footprints. A new era will begin.
and amateurs. The tournament, a major championship on the annual schedule
Last fall, the executive board of the Oregon School
of the PGA of America's Pacific
Activities Association unanimously approved the final
Northwest Section, represents the highest level of competition that
recommendations of its classification and districting
Glaze Meadow has hosted since thecoursereopened in2012after a $3.75 million renovation. And Lagao, the superintendent at Black
committee. The result will be five Central Oregon high schools moving to different conferences — including two
Butte Ranch since 2007, wants to see his course pushed by the best. "It will be interesting to see
schools that will be changing classifications altogether. SeeChanges/C4
what the low score is over three days of us double-cutting and rolling (to speed up the greens) for a few days, and lowering the greens and firming them up," Lagao says. SeeOregon Open/C4
RIDGEVIEW C R OO K LA P INE 5A COUNT Y 3AS outh Val- CU LVER Intermountain 4A Tri-Valley ley Conference 2A Rolling Conf nce C o nference Plains League CENTRAL CHRISTIAN 1A Mountain
Valley League
— Bulletin staff report
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin file photo
Glaze Meadow Golf Course at Black Butte Ranch will host the
BASEBALL
OregonOpen beginning today.
Elks fall 7-3 to Rogues
oregon open
MEDFORD — Med-
ford starter Brandon Erickson scattered four hits over seven innings as the Roguesopened a three-game series with a 7-3 win over the Bend Elks. Erickson (1-0) struck out six and allowed the Elks' lone run, a sacrifice grounder from Nick Osunathat scored ZachClose in the fourth inning to make the score 2-1. The Roguesscored three runs in the eighth to make it 7-1 before the Elks scored two in the ninth. Elks starter Patrick McGuff (0-1) allowed three runs on four hits while striking out eight in six innings. Johnathan Brooks and Jo Carrol each hadtwo hits. Curtis Wildung hit a two-run single in the ninth. — Bulletin staff report
NHL FINALS Kings take 3-0 lead for the Cup JonathanQuickstops 32 shots for the shutout as Los Angeles takes a commanding lead in the Stanley Cupfinals, C3
4A Special District1
4A Special District 1
Wade finedfor flopping, a growing part of thegame The Associated Press
MIAMI — The flop is hav-
ing an impact on the NBA playoffs, and it is being caught much more than it was in the
2A Tri-River Conference
SPURS 1,HEAT1
NBA FINALS
By Tim Reynolds
4A Sky-Em League
And there is an ironic twist — Ginobili is often considered
a master flopper, but he was not warned about it even once this season.
"He took a swipe and he hit me," Wade said Monday, be-
gP;," Rg
Game1: SanAntonio110, Miami 95 Game 2: Miami98,SanAntonio96 T oday at Miami 6 p. m . T hu. a tMiami 6 p. m . June15 at San Antonio 5 p.m. x -June17 at Miami 6 p. m . x-June 20 atSanAntonio 6p.m.
regular season. Miami guard Dwyane Wade fore the fine was announced. "It was a late callby the ref, but became the latest recipient of a postseason flopping fine he called it."
x-if necessary
Monday when the NBA or-
the regular season until their
deredhimto giveup $5,000 after a review showed that
during Game 2 of the finals he exaggerated a foul that was charged to San Antonio's Manu Ginobili.
The league saw it a little
differently. It was the fifth flopping violation of the playoffs, which works out to one in every 17.2 games. The NBA said 35 flops were caught in the regular
season, or one in every35.1 games. Players are not fined in second flop of theyear; in the playoffs, every flop is a fine. "Flopping," Miami guard Shane Battier once said, "is a silent killer." SeeNBA finals/C4
1A Big Sky
League
Where:Black Butte Ranch, Glaze Meadow What:54-hole stroke play TodnynndWednesday: Tee times start at 7:30 a.m. and run through 2:40 p.m. Thursday:Thefield will be cut to 70 players for the final round Admission:Free For more informationand live scoring:www.pnwpga.com
MOUNTAIN BIKERACING
8 itz 2 the Barre to be reschedueddueto fire By Mark Morical
warning Monday,meaning
The Bulletin
residents there should be
The spectator-friendly Blitz 2 the Barrel mountain
bike race, originally scheduled for Wednesday, has been postponed, another sporting event falling victim to the raging Two Bulls Fire west of Bend. Fire evacuation routes
coincide with much of the race course, and Tetherow Golf Club, through which bikers race, was heightened from a Level 1 to a Level 2 pre-evacuation
prepared to leave at a moment's notice. "We finally had to make a call, and every call I had, it was getting bleaker and bleaker," said Blitz organizer Erik Eastland, who announced the postpone-
ment Mondayafternoon. "It was just not going to be the right thing to do." Eastland said the race would be rescheduled for sometime this summer. SeeBlitz /C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY BASEBALL
MLB, L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Seattle
Time TV/Radio 4 p.m. MLB 7 p.m. Roo t 6 p.m.
Kelowna Wenatchee WallaWalla Yakima Valey
BASEBALL
9:30 a.m. MLB 4 p.m. E S PN 7 p.m. Roo t
HOCKEY
NHL finals, Los Angeles at N.Y.Rangers SOCCER MLS, FCDallas at Portland
All TimesPDT
ABC
WEDNESDAY MLB, Minnesota at Toronto MLB, Boston at Baltimore MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Seattle
MLS
IN THE BLEACHERS
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT
West Coast League
BASKETBALL
NBA finals, SanAntonio at Miami
BASEBALL
5 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m.
E SPN2
Bend Medford Corvaffis Klamath Falls Kitsap Cowlitz Bellingham Victoria
Easl Division W L 2 I 2 I I
2 2 2
South Division W L 2 2 2 2 I 2 I 3 West Division W L 4 2 2 I
0 I 2 2
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www Oocomics com/inthebleachers
N ewEngland
P ct. .66 7 .5 0 0 I/2 .3 3 3 I .3 3 3
P c t .GB .5 0 0 .5 0 0 .3 3 3 i/2 .3 3 3 1
i lIJIJNf 0
P c t .GB
1 . 000 .66 7 I'/t .5 0 0 2 .5 0 02 1/2
Monday'sGames
Listings are themostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF COLLEGESPORTS
Medford7,Bend3 Klamath Fals 5, Beffingham4 Kitsap14Wenatchee4
top football and basketball players a cut of the billions of dollars flowing into college athletics began inearnest with former UCLAbasketball star EdO'Bannontaking the stand in federal court to describe how he spent long hours working on his game and asfew as possible on his grades. Thelead plaintiff in a landmark antitrust suit against the NCAAsaid his goal at UCLAwasn't to get a degree, but to get two years of college experience before being drafted into the NBA. Also on the stand Mondaywas aStanford economics and antitrust expert, who testified the NCAA acts as a cartel by fixing the price of scholarships for athletes andnot allowing them to makeany more money by prohibiting them from selling their names, images or likenesses (NILS) either as individuals or groups. Roger Noll said every expert opinion he's seenover the last 30 years agreesthe NCAAviolates antitrust laws by paying nothing for the rights and imposing rules that would punish athletes for trying to profit from their NILs.
Virginia11,Maryland2,Virginia advances Mississippi10,La.-Lafayete4, Mississippi advances
CollegeWorldSeries At Omaha,Neb. (DoubleElimination, x-if necessary) Saturday'sGames UC Irvine (40-23)vs.Texas(43-19), noon Louisville (50-15) vs.Vanderbilt (46-19),5 p.m. Sunday'sGames TexasTech(45-19) vs.TCU(47-16), noon Virginia(49-14)vs.Mississippi (46-19), 5p.m.
HOCKEY NHL Playoffs
Olympic star VanDykensevers spinal cord in crash-
FOOTBALL What CurSe? Sherman On Madden COVer —Richard Sherman does not believe in video gamecurses. TheSeattle Seahawks' All-Pro cornerback will have his imageplastered on the front of the next version of EASports' popular "Madden" football game. It's an honor that's allegedly beenfraught with peril for some past recipients who have either hadsubpar seasons or suffered injuries the year they were on thecover. "I don't think about anything like that. It's just something that's been fabricated, I think," Shermansaid Monday.
BASKETBALL Donald Sterling dacksout of agreement with iliBADonald Sterling's attorney said Monday his client would not be dropping his billion-dollar lawsuit against the NBA,complicating some of the final details in the sale of the LosAngeles Clippers. Last week Maxwell Blecher said Sterling hadagreed to adeal with the NBAin which he would sign off on the $2 billion sale to former Microsoft CEO SteveBallmer andagree to drop his suit against the NBA.The league, in turn, would agreenot to sueSterling and would drop the charges against him. Sterling's legal team interpreted that to mean the leaguewas rescinding its lifetime ban and $2.5 million fine. Tothe NBA, however, the only charge theywere dropping against Sterling was the "charge to terminate ownership." TheNBAcancelled that June 3 hearing after Sterling's wife Shelly agreed to sell the team to Ballmer. But that's not the main reasonSterling reversed course, according to Blecher, whosaid NBAcommissioner Adam Silver's adamancy in aSunday press news conferencewas the primary culprit for Sterling's change of heart. Blecher called Silver's handling of the situation, "just plain nasty." Before Game 2 of the NBAFinals, Silver fielded numerous Sterling questions, calling the deal "almost there" in terms of putting this situation behind them.el have absolute confidence it will be resolved because aspart of the sale agreement with Shelly Sterling, she agreed to indemnify the Leagueagainst a lawsuit by her husband.So inessence,Donald issuing himselfandheknows that," Silver said.aWhile I understand he is frustrated, I think it's over. I think it's just a matter of time now,andthen we will move on to better topics and back to theFinals."
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT FINALS (Best-of-7;x-if necessary) Los Angeles3, N.Y.Rangers0 GameI:LosAngeles3,NYRangers2,OT Game2:LosAngeles5, NYRangers4, 20T Game 3:LosAngeles3, NYRangers0 Wednesday: LosAngeles atNYRangers,5p.m. x-Fri day:N.Y.RangersatLosAngeles,5p.m. x- June16:LosAngelesat NYRangers,5 p.m. x-June18:N.Y.Rangers at LosAngeles,5 p.m.
TENNIS Professional WTA AEGON Classic Monday At EdgbastonPriory Club, Birmingham, England Purse: $71B,BBD (Premier) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles First Round Belinda Bencic,Switzerland,def. DonnaVekic, Croatia,6-4, 6-4. VirginieRaz zano, France, def. KarolinaPliskova, Czech Republic, 7-6 (I), 6-3. Yanina Wickmayer, Belgium,def. BojanaJovanovski(10), Serbia6-4, , 6-4. VarvaraLepchenko,United States,def. AlisonVan Uytva nck,Belgium,6-4,6-0. Francesca Schiavone,Italy, def.ZhengJie, China, 6-3, 6-4. KimikoDate-Krumm,Japan, def. PaulaOrmaechea, Argentina,6-3, 6-1. LaurenDavis, UnitedStates, def. Tam ira Paszek, Austria,6-3,3-6, 6-2. CocoVandeweghe, United States,def. ZarinaDiyas, Kaza khstan,6-4, 7-5. Mona Barthel, Germa ny, def. Ajla Tomljanovic, Croatia,6-1, 6-4. Alison Riske(15), UnitedStates,def. Lyudmyla Kichenok, Ukraine,7-6 (3),6-3. VictoriaDuval,UnitedStates, def. CarolineGarcia (13), France,6-2,6-4. MadisonKeys(II), United States, def. Teliana Pereira,Brazil, 6-3,6-3. Nadiia Kichenok,Ukraine, def.SharonFichman, Canada, 6-7(6), 7-6(2), 6-3. Shahar Peer, Israel, def. Kristina Mladenovic, France,4-6,6-2,6-2. Zhang Shuai(9), China,def. Eleni Daniilidou, Greece,7-5,6-4. CamilaGiorgi, Italy, def.KatyDunne, Britain, 4-6, 6-2,6-1.
agreed to become the next coach of the NewYork Knicks and will be introduced at anewsconference this morning, a person familiar with the situation told TheAssociated Press. The Knicks did not confirm the hiring, other than saying they wereplanning a "major announcement.n The 39-year-old Fisher just completed his18th season, finishing his career with the OklahomaCity Thunder. He played under Knicks President Phil Jackson with the LosAngeles Lakers, and helped that franchise win five NBAtitles. Fisher would have beenan unrestricted free agent this summer, though it was widely known that this season would behis last as a player.
HORSE RACING ChrOme CO-OWnerCodurn apOIOgiZeS —After a weekend of calling fellow horse owners "cowards" and "cheaters" for running fresh entrants in the Belmont Stakes, California Chromeco-owner Steve Coburn said Mondaythat he needed to apologize "to the world," including the connections of winner Tonalist. Appearing on Good Morning America with his wife, Carolyn, Coburn told host Robin Roberts thatnl'm very ashamed of myself." California Chrome was trying to becomethe12th Triple Crown winner in Saturday's Belmont, but he finished tied for fourth. Tonalist, a horse whoskipped theKentucky DerbyandPreaknessStakesbecausehespikedafever before the Derby, won aclose race over Commissioner, another horse who didn't run in the first two legs of the Triple Crown.Tonalist was the ninth straight Belmont winner not to haverun in the Preakness. Immediately after the Belmont, Coburn called itecoward's way out" to run fresh horses in the third leg of the Triple Crown. Heeven used the word "cheaters" in later interviews. Hedidn't back off on his commentsSunday.ButMondaymorning hesoundedcontriteand appeared close to tears, saying "I sincerely apologize" andel'm going to do better." — From wire reports
Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
ATPWorldTourGerry WeberOpen Monday At GerryWeberStadion, Halle, Germany Purse: S1.1million (WT250) Surlace: Grass-Outdoor Singles First Round PhilippKohlschreiber,Germany,def. AndreasSep-
BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT FINALS
pi, Italy, 6-3 i 6-4.
PeterGojowczyk, Germany,def. Michal Przysiezny, Poland,7-5,6-4. Pierre-Hugues Hebert, France,def. JerzyJanowicz
(8), Poland, 7-6(5), 6-2. Dustin Brown,Germany, def. AndreyKuznetsov, Russia,6-3,6-4. Joao Sousa,Portugal, def. Jan-LennardStruff, Germany,6-4,6-2. ATPWorldTourAEGONChampionships Monday AtThe Queen'sClub,London Purse: $1.1million (WT250) Suriace:Grass-Outdoor Singles First Round James Ward,Britain,def.BlazRola,Slovenia, 7-5,6-4. Bernard Tomic, Australia, def. TimSmyczek,United States,6-4, 3-6,7-5. JamesDuckworth, Australia, def. DudiSela, Israel, 0-6, 7-6(5),6-4. Paul-Henri Mathieu,France,def. Aljaz Bedene, Slovenia7-6 , (2), 6-4. DanielEvans,Britain, def.JurgenMelzer, Austria, 6-3,6-7(5),7-6(2). SamQuerrey,United States, def.JeremyChardy (14), France, 6-7(4), 7-6(4), 7-6(5). DenisKudla,UnitedStates, def. MichaelRussell, UnitedStates,4-6,6-3, 6-1. Nicolas Mahut(13), France,def. Marsel ffhan, Turkey,6-3,6-4. LleytonHewitt, Australia, def.DanielGimeno-Traver, Spain,6-3,6-3. AdrianMannarino, France,def.Daniel Cox,Britain, 7-5,6-2.
Kenny deSchepper, France, def. Somdev Dewarman,India,6-4,7-5. Sergiy Stakhovsky,Ukraine, def. Daniel Brands, Germany,7-5,6-2. FelicianoLopez(10), Spain, leadsDusan Lajovic, Serbia,6-3,susp.
MOTOR SPORTS NAinCAR Sprint Cup Wins Leaders
Two: JoeyLogano,Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jimmie Johnson ,KevinHarvick.One:JeffGordon,CarlEdwards,BradKeselowski, DennyHamlin, KyleBusch, KurtBusch.
Points Leaders
I,Jeff Gordon,498; 2, MattKenseth, 482; 3, Dale EarnhardtJr., 476;4, JimmieJohnson, 475; 5, Brad Kesel owski,448;6,KyleBusch,443;7,CarlEdwards, 441;8, Denny Hamlin,420;9,Joey Logano,418; 10, Kyle Larson,417. 11, RyanNewman, 411; 12, Kevin Harvick, 403; 13, BrianVickers,392;14, GregBiffle,385;15, Austin Dillon, 385;16,Clint Bowyer, 383; 17, Paul Menard, 380;18,TonyStewart, 368;19,AricAlmirola, 366;20, AJ Allmendinger,360. 21, KaseyKahne, 351;22, MarcosAmbrose, 351; 23, JamieMcMurray, 351;24, Martin TruexJr., 324; 25, Casey Mears, 322; 26, RickyStenhouseJr., 290; 27, KurtBusch,283;28,Danica Patrick, 246; 29,Justin Allgaier,241;30, MichaelAnnett, 212. 31, ColeWhitt, 195;32, DavidGililand, 191;33, DavidRagan, 184;34, Reed Sorenson, 175;35, Alex Bowman,169; 36,JoshWise,158; 37, RyanTruex, 108; 38,TravisKvapil, 97;39, MichaelMcDowell, 63; 40, ParkerKligerman,54.
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
San Antonio1, Miami1 Game1; SanAntonio110, Miami95 Game2:Miami98,SanAntonio96 Today:SanAntonioat Miami, 6p.m. Thursday:SanAntonioatMiami, 6p.m. x-June15:MiamiatSanAntonio, 5p.m. x-June17:SanAntonioatMiami, 6p.m. x-June20:MiamiatSanAntonio, 6p.m.
BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Selected thecontract of RHPJoshStinsonfrom Norfolk (IL). OptionedRHP BradBrachtoNorfolk. TransferredLHPJohanSantana to the60-dayDL. MINNES OTATWINS— Agreed to termswith SS NickGordon. NEWYORKYANKEES— SentRHPShawnKelley to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL) forarehabassignment. OAKLANDATHLETICS— AssignedOFKentMatthes outrightto Midland(TL). SEATTLEMARINERS — Transferred LHP James Paxtonto the60-dayDL. TORONT OBLUEJAYS— Agreedto termswith RHPLuisAyalaonaminor leaguecontract. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Reinstated RHP J.J. Putzfrom the15-day DL.Recaled RHPWill Harris from Reno (PCL). PlacedINFEric Chavezonthe15day DLDesignatedRHPTrevor Cahil forassignment. CHICAGOCUBS — SentOF Ryan Sweeneyto KaneCounty(MWL) for arehabassignment. COLOR ADOROCKIES—Selected thecontract of
RHPChristian BergmanfromColoradoSprings(PCL). RecalledRHPChad Betis fromColoradoSprings. PlacedOFMichael Cuddyer andRH P Eddie Butler on the15-dayDL,retroactiveto June6and June7, WNBA respectively.DesignatedRHPWilton Lopezfor assignment. WOMEN'SNATIONAL LOS ANGELESDODGERS — SentRHP Chad BASKETBALLASSOCIATION Billingsley toRanchoCucamonga (Cal) for a rehab AR TimesPDT assignment. PHILADEL PHIAPHILLIES— AssignedLHPCesar EasternConference outright toLehighValey (IL). Agreedtoterms W L P c t G B Jimenez with 28NateSpears ona minor leaguecontract. Atlanta 5 3 .6 2 5 ST. LOUIS CARDINALS—Sent18 MattAdamsto Chicago 5 3 .6 2 5 Memphis(PCL)and LHPTyler Lyonsto Springfield Indiana 4 4 .5 0 0 I (TL) forrehabassignments. Washington 4 4 .5 0 0 I WASHINGTONNATIONALS — SentOFJeffKoNewYork 3 5 .3 7 5 2 to Potomac(Carolina) for arehabassignment. Connecticut 3 6 .3 3 3 2 '/t bernus BASKETB ALL WesternConference National Basketball Association W L PctGB NBA —FinedMiami GDwyaneWade$5,000for Minnesota 8 I .88 9 Phoenix 5 2 .7 1 4 2 violatingtheleague's anti-flopping rules duringSunday' sgame. SanAntonio 4 5 .4 4 4 4 FOOTBA LL LosAngeles 3 4 .4 2 9 4 National Football League Seattle 3 6 .3 3 3 5 A RIZONA CA R DI N AL S — R e-signedCJohnEstes. Tulsa I 5 .16 7 5 ' /t Released GChristian Johnson. CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedOLAlexParsons Today'sGames and K-P JakeRogers. NewYorkatTulsa, 9:30a.m. J ACKSONVI LL EJAGUARS — SignedG Brandon PhoenixatWashington, 4p.m. Linder to afour-year contract andWRBrandonWimSeattle atChicago,5p.m. berly.Relea sedOTDeMarcusLove. Wednesday'sGame NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— SignedTEKyleAufSeattle atIndiana,4p.m. fray. Rel e a sed WRDerrickJohnson. Thursday'sGame PhoenixatConnecticut, 4p.m. PRTSBURGHSTEELERS— SignedWRMartavis Friday's Games Bryantto afour-yearcontract. Chicagoat Washington, 4 p.m. HOCKEY Connecticutat NewYork, 4:30p.m. National HockeyLeague Minnesota atAtlanta 4:30p.m. TAMPABAYLIGHTNING— Re-signedFOndrej SeattleatSanAntonio, 5p.m. Palat toathree-yearcontract. Los Angeleat sTulsa,5 p.m. COLLEGE Saturday'sGame ARIZONA STATE—Announced theresignation of LosAngelesatSanAntonio,5p.m. baseb al lcoachTim Esmay. Sunday'sGames IOWA STATE—Promoted Charlie Henryto men's NewYorkatConnecticut,10 a.m. assistantbasketballcoach. PhoenixatMinnesota,10 a.m. MICHIGAN STATE— Announcedmen'sbasketball AtlantaatWashington, I p.m. GEronHarris istransferring fromWest Virginia. SeattleatTulsa,1:30 p.m.
SOCCER World Cup All Times PDT GROUPSTAGE
Thursday'sGame
Brazil vs.Croatia,1 p.m.
Friday's Games Mexic ovs.Cameroon,9a.m. Spainvs.Netherlands, noon Chilevs.Australia, 3 p.m. Saturday'sGames Colombi avs.Greece,9a.m. Uruguay vs.CostaRica,noon Englandvs. Italy, 3 p.m. IvoryCoastvs.Japan,6 p.m.
FISH COUNT Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 3,437 4 7 5 17 4 48 The Daffes 3,063 28 3 61 13 John Day 1,898 2 2 9 30 7 McNary 1,547 2 1 0 23 5 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 236,882 29,041 6,767 1,739 T he Daffes 174,571 22,462 1,207 2 76
John Day 147,577 19,753 3,372 1,178 M cNary 121,948 15,853 984 36 5
WORLD CUP
Was it a goal?Newtechnology should enddebate By Stephen Wade
Derek Fisher agrees to coach Knicks —DerekFisherhas
DEALS
College
SWIMMING Six-time Olympic gold medalist swimmer AmyVan Dyken severed her spinal cord in anall-terrain vehicle accident over the weekend, and she told emergency workers shecould not movehertoes or feel anything touching her legs. The41-year-old swimmer, who goes by her married nameAmy VanDyken Rouen,was injured Friday. She was airlifted to a hospital and had surgery to stabilize her spine. A letter from the VanDykenand Rouenfamilies said she severed her spinal cord at the T11vertebrae andthat the broken vertebrae came within millimeters of rupturing her aorta. A report by the ShowLow Police Department said theATVthat Rouenwas driving hit a curb in a restaurant parking lot and sent her over adrop-off of between 5 and 7 feet.
D.C.Unitedat Montreal,4:30 p.m. FC DallasatPortland, 7p.m. Break forWorldCup
NCAATournament All TimesPDT
Super Regionals Monday'sGames TCU6, Pepperdine5,TCUadyances
7 5 2 23 21 1 8 Sporting KansasCity 6 5 4 2 2 2 1 14 D.C.United 6 4 4 2 2 18 14 Toronto 6 4 I 19 1 5 1 3 NewYork 4 5 6 1 8 22 22 Columbus 4 5 6 1 8 18 18 Houston 5 9 2 17 1 6 2 9 P hiladelphia 3 7 6 15 22 2 7 Chicago 2 4 8 1 4 22 25 Montreal 2 6 4 1 0 11 22 WeslernConference W L T Pls GF GA Seattle 10 3 2 3 2 32 23 RealSaltLake 6 2 7 2 5 25 21 Colorado 6 5 4 2 2 21 18 FC Dallas 6 7 3 2 1 26 26 Vancouver 5 2 6 2 1 25 20 Portland 4 4 7 19 26 25 LosAngeles 4 3 5 1 7 16 11 SanJose 4 5 4 1 6 15 14 2 7 5 11 1 4 2 6 ChivasUSA
Wednesday'sGames
Today'sGames KitsapatWenatchee,11:05a.m. BendatMedford,6:35p.m. KelownaatWalla Walla,7:05p.m. KlamathFalls atBellingham,7:05p.m. Cowlitz at Victoria, 7:11p.m. Wednesday'sGames BendatMedford,6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Corvallis, 6:40p.m. KlamathFals atBelingham,7:50p.m. KitsapatWenatchee,7:05 p.m KelownaatWalla Walla,7:05p.m. Cowlitz at Victoria, 7:11p.m.
O'Bannon takeS the Stand in laWSuit — Thebattle to give
EaslernConference W L T Pls GF GA
The Associated Press
RIO DE JANEIRO — Was it
a goal, or was it not? The question should not need to be debated in the next
five weeks in Brazil, where goal-line technology will be used for the first time in a
World Cup. Fourteen cameras — seven trained on each goalmouth-
havebeen setup in all 12 World Cup stadiums. The cameras will record 500 images per second, and a computer will digest the frames. Within a second of a ball crossing the line, the referee's special watch will vibrate and flash "GOAL."
Holzmuller said the Goal-
U.S. teamarrives in Brazil SAO PAULO — The4,080-mile overnight flight to Sao Paulowas easy for the U.S.World Cupteam. A4-mile bus ride from its base hotel through the city's perpetually congested streets to theAmericans'training campwasanother matter. nWe haven't had anye problem, other than thetraffic. But other than that, not too bad, goalkeeper TimHoward said Mondayafter the Americans arrived in Brazil exactly oneweek before their World Cup opener against Ghana. TheU.S.Iandedfrom Miami andreached its hotel about 2 hours, 20 minutes later. Foursoldiers in fatigues andabout two dozen police in riot gear stood outside the hotel, which is adjacent to a park on atree-lined street. What on mapsappears to bea short ride to theSaoPaulo Futebol Clube's luxurious Barra Funda training complex took 45 minutes in late-afternoon traffic as a subway strike in its fifth day tightened bottlenecks. At adowntown station, riot police usedtear gasagainst striking workers. — The Associated Press
End of the debate? It should
be. The designer of the system Cup changed that when a shot program that helped implesays 2,400 tests have been run by England's Frank Lampard ment the technology. "The in Brazil, without a mistake. in the second round against same applies for normal TV "This is the future," said Dirk Germany was clearly over the cameras."
Control system had proved reliable, even if several of its seven cameras were blocked
by players. Broichhausen suggested the system could not be hacked, and FIFA has repeat-
edly said it is just another aid to help the referee. "This system is not able to
be manipulated because the system is offline," Broichhausen said. "Offlirte means no internet connection. There is
no possibility to manipulate or disturb anything." The system has tested perfectly so far. That does not mean it is perfectly accurate.
Like most engineering projects, this one has a margin of error. It o ff icially measures
correctly within a plus-minus margin of 1.5 centimeters, or approximately half an inch, but Broichhausen, who heads the line, yet was disallowed. That H olzmuller said t h e h u - Broichnausen suggested that German company GoalCon- goal would have tied the score man eye can record only 16 the real margin could be about trol, whose system will be used at 2-2. Instead, Germany won "frames" per second, no match 0.5 centimeters gess than a at the tournament and was 4-1. And that helped end the for a high-speed camera. quarter of an inch) "All of these 2,400 goal indemonstrated Monday at Rio's indecision. Different types of goal-line "Most of the time the referee technology have already been cidents were correctly r ecMaracana Stadium. It is also a type of technology doesn't have the best vantage used in club soccer, including ognized by t h e s y stem," that FIFA, soccer's governing point for his decision — goal the Hawk-Eye system in En- Holzmuller said. "So yes, we body, repeatedly balked at in or no goal," said Johannes glmtd's Premier League this can trust the system. We are the past. But the 2010 World Holzmuller, who heads a FIFA past season. sure it works 100 percent."
TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL catandings
National League
LONNIE BASEBALL?
All TimesPDT
Pirates 6, Cobs2
AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division
W L 39 26 32 30 31 31 28 35 24 41
Toronto Baltimore NewYork Boston Tampa Bay
Central Division Detroit
Cleyeland Chicago Kansas City Minnesota Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston
W 33 33 32 31 29
L 27 31 33 32 33
West Division W L 39 25 35 28 34 29 31 33 29 36
PITTSBURGH — Andrew McCutchen homeredand drove in three runs to lead Pittsburgh over Chicago. McCutchendroveatwo-
Pct GB .600 .516 5'/t .500 6'/t
.444 10 .369 15
run shot to right field in the third
inning and added anRBI double in
Pct GB .550 .516 2
the fifth.
.492 3'/t .492 3'/t
Chicago
Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Bontfac2b 4 0 0 0 JHrrsn2b 4 0 0 0 L akecf 4 0 0 0 Sniderrf 3 2 2 0
.468 5
Pct GB .609 .556 3'/t 540 41/2
.484 8 .446 f0'lz
Monday'sGames
Seattle 3,TampaBay0 Baltimore 4, Boston0 Toronto5, Minnesota4 Cleveland17,Texas7 Chicago WhiteSox6, Detroit 5 N.Y.Yankeesat KansasCity, ppd.,rain Houston 4, Arizona3 LA. Angels4, Oakland1
Today'sGames Houston(Peacock2-4) atArizona(Arroyo54),1240pm. Boston(Workma n 0-0) at Baltimore(Tilman5-2), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota(Correia2-7)atToronto(Happ5-2),4:07 prmr St. Louis (Wainwright8-3) at Tamp a Bay (Odorizzi 2-6),4:10p.m. Miami(Koehler5-5) atTexas(Lewis4-4), 5:05p.m. Cleveland(Kluber6-3)at Kansas City (Vargas5-2), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander6-5) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh. Danks4-5), 5:10p.m. Oakland(Pomeranz5-3) at LA. Angels(H.Santiago 0-6), 7:05 p.m. N.Y.Yank ees (Nuno1-2) at Seatle (Iwakuma 4-2), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday'sGames MinnesotaatToronto, 9:37a.m. ClevelandatKansasCity,11:10a.m. Bostonat Baltimore,4:05 p.m. St. LouisatTampa Bay,4;10 p.m. Miami atTexas,5:05 p.m. ArizonaatHouston,5:10p.m. Detroit atChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. Oakland atLA. Angels, 7:05p.m. N.Y.YankeesatSeattle, 7:10p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE
Atlanta Washington Miami NewYork Philadelphia
East Division W L 33 29 33 29 33 30 28 35 25 36
Central Division
L 26 31 33 33 36 West Division W L SanFrancisco 42 22 Los Angeles 34 31 Colorado 29 34 SanDiego 28 35 Arizona 28 38
Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago
W 38 33 30 29 25
Pct GB .532 .532 .524 r/t
444 51/2 .410 7r/t
Pct GB .594 .516 5 .476 7r/t
.468 8
.410 ffr/t
Pct GB .656
,523 Br/t ,460 12r/t .444 13r/t
.424 15
Monday'sGames
Pittsburgh6, ChicagoCubs2 L.A. Dodgers 6, Cincinnati 2 Atlanta3, Colorado1 Houston 4, Arizona3 Washi ngton9,SanFrancisco2
Today'sGames Houston (Peacock2-4) atArizona(Arroyo5-4),12:40 p.m. ChicagoCubs(TWood 5-5) at Pittsburgh(Liriano 1-6),4:05p.m. San Diego(Kennedy 5-6) at Philadelphia(A.Burnet 3-5),4:05p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 3-3)at Cincinnati(Leake3-5), 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Estrada5-2) atN.Y.Mets(Matsuzaka2-0), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright8-3) at Tamp a Bay (Odorizzi 2-6),4;10p.m. Miami(Koehler5-5) atTexas(Lewis4-4), 5:05p.m. Atlanta(Minor2-4) at Colorado(Nicasio 5-4), 5:40 p.m. Washington(Fister 4-1)atSanFrancisco(Bumgarner 8-3), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Chicago Cubsat Pitsburgh, 4:05p.m. SanDiegoatPhiladelphia, 4:05p.m. LA. Dodgers atCincinnati,410 p m. MilwaukeeatN.Y. Mets, 4:10p.m. St. LouisatTampa Bay,410 pm. Miami atTexas,5:05 p.m. Arizona at Houston, 5:10p.m. AtlantaatColorado,5:40 p.m. Washington atSanFrancisco,7:15 p.m.
History THIS DATE IN BASEBALL
June 1B 1921 — Babe Ruth of theNewYorkYankeesbecame baseball's careerhomerunleader byhitting his 120th off Cleveland'Ji sm Bagbyin thethird inning. The Indians tookthegame8-6. 1972 — HankAaron's grandslam pushedthe AtlantaBravesto a 15-3 rout overthePhiladelphia Phillies. ItwasAaron's 649th homerun, moving him aheadof Wilie Maysintosecondplaceonthe career homerunlist. Itwasalsohis14thgrandslam, tying Gil Hodges'NLrecord. 1981 —PeteRose's single in thefirst inningoff NolanRyangavehim 3,630hits, tying StanMusial's NL record. 2008— ThematchupbetweenGregMadduxand Dodgersrookie ClaytonKershawwasthe largest gap in careerwins betweentwo starters sinceAug. 25, 1965,whenSan Francisco'sWarrenSpahn(361wins) faced theMets' Darrell Sutherland(one). Maddux,who was denied his 351st victory, outpitchedtherookie. Maddux, 42,waswinning 18gamesin his secondful season in themajors whenKershaw,20, wasborn in 1988.
LM Otero/The Associated Press
Cleveland's Lonnie Chisenhall hits a three-run homer in the eighth inning against Texas on Monday, part of a nine-RBI game. The Indians won 17-7.
American League
Orioles 4, RedSox0
Nationais 9, Giants 2 SAN FRANCISCO — lan Desmond had a career-high five RBls and Stephen Strasburg won his third straight decision for Washington. Denard Spanadded atriple and two doubles to help the Nationals win for the eighth time in10 games. Desmond hadthreehits and Jayson Werth drove in two runs.
Washington San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi Rizzo1b 4 1 1 0 AMcctcf 4 1 2 3 Spancf 5 2 3 0 Blancocf 4 0 1 0 Scastross 4 1 3 2 I.Davis1b 3 1 1 1 F rndsn3b 5 0 1 0 Pencerf 3 0 1 0 Valuen3b 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz3b 4 2 2 0 W erthrf 4 1 2 2 Arias1b 1 0 1 1 Schrhltrf 4 0 1 0 SMartelf 4 0 3 2 M cLothrf 1 0 0 0 Poseyc 3 0 1 0 Coghlnlf 4 0 1 0 Mercerss 4 0 0 0 LaRoch1b 3 2 1 0 Adrianz3b 1 0 1 0 J oBakrc 4 0 1 0 CStwrtc 4 0 0 0 Zmrmnlf 4 2 0 0Sandovl3b 3 0 0 0 EJcksnp 2 0 0 0 Mortonp 2 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 2 2 1 HSnchzc 1 0 0 0 Rugginph 1 0 0 0 Tabataph 1 0 0 0 Dsmndss 5 0 3 5 Morse1b 2 0 0 0 Viganvp 0 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 E spinos2b 4 0 0 0 Petitp 0000 Gsnchzph 1 0 0 0 Strasrgp 3 0 0 0 Paganph 1 0 0 0 JHughs p 0 0 0 0 D obbsph 1 0 0 0 Colvinlf 4 1 1 0 Totals 3 5 2 8 2 Totals 3 46 10 6 Barrettp 0 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 1 1 Chicago Ogg 061 001 — 2 Detwilrp 0 0 0 0 B.Hicks2b 3 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 012 0 1 6 0 2x — 6 Vglsngp 2 0 0 0 E—Valbuena (5). LOB—Chicago 6, Pittsburgh Kontosp 0 0 0 0 7. 28 — S.castro (18), Schierholtz(8), Coghlan(2), J.Perezrf 1 1 1 0 Snider (1),A.Mccutchen(18),PAlvarez(6), S.Marte2 Totals 39 9 12 8 Totals 33 2 8 2 11). HR —S.Castro (8), A.Mccutchen(8), I.Davis(5). W ashington 1 1 2 0 0 0 500 — 9 B—S.Marte (15). CS—S.Marte(5). San Francisco 010 000 610 — 2 IP H R E R BBSO E—Morse(1). LOB—Washington 7, SanFranChicago cisco 5.28—Span2 (19), Werth (12), LaRoche (9), E.JacksonL,4-6 6 7 4 4 2 8 W.Ramos (5), Desmond (8), Posey(5), Colvin(9). Villanueva 2 3 2 2 1 2 3B — Span(4), Desmond(2). Pittsburgh IP H R E R BBSO MortonW,3-7 7 6 1 1 0 7 Washington MelanconH,12 1 0 0 0 0 1 StrasburgW,6-4 6 4 1 1 0 7 J.Hughes 1 2 1 1 0 0 Barrett 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—2:33.A—24,075 (38,362). Detwiler 2 4 1 1 0 0 San Francisco VogelsongL,4-3 6 9 6 6 2 6 Dodgers 6, Reds2 Kontos 1 3 3 3 1 0 Petit 2 0 0 0 1 1 CINCINNATI —Scott Van Slyke Vogelsong pitchedto 2batters inthe7th. HBP — by B ar ret t (Morse). drove in a career-high four runs T—3:01. A—41,597(41,915).
Mariners 3, Rays0
indians17, Rangers 7
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Robin-
ARLINGTON, Texas— Lonnie Chisenhall had three homersand nine RBls in a five-hit game to lead Cleveland. Chisenhall becamethe fourth major league player since RBls became a statistic in1920 to with two homers, and LosAngeles have at least five hits, nine RBls pulled away from Cincinnati for a lnterleague and three homers in agame. rare comfortable win in their pitching-dominated series. Cleveland Texas Astros 4, Diamondbacks3
son Cano drove in two runs with a BALTIMORE — Bud Norris bases-loaded double andSeattle pitched eight innings of threeblankedTampa Bayforthesecond hit ball and AdamJones hit one straight game. FiveSeattle pitchof Baltimore's three homeruns combined on a five-hitter. The against Boston. Nick Markakis and ers Mariners extended scoreless Ryan Flaherty also connected for streak to 19 inningstheir and won for the Orioles. Boston has lost six the eighth time in nine games. of seven after a season-high seven-game winning streak. Seattle TampaBay
ab r hbi ab r hbi Los Angeles Cincinnati Bourncf 5 1 1 0 DRrtsncf-If 5 1 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi PHOENIX — Jose Altuve had three ab r hbi ab r hbi Acarerss 6 3 3 0 Andrusss 4110 Blmqstfb 4 1 2 0 DJnngscf 4 0 0 0 Boston Baltimore Figgins2b 4 0 0 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 B rantlylf 3 5 3 1 Choolf 4 0 0 1 hits, including an RBIdouble, S moak1b 0 0 0 0 Kiermrrf 3 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi HRmrzss 4 0 1 0 Frazier3b-1b 3 0 0 0 Jarred Cosart pitched six solid Raburnlf 0 0 0 0 LMartncf 1 0 0 0 Holtlf 3 0 1 0 Markksrf 4 1 2 2 J.Jonescf 4 1 3 0 Longori3b 3 0 0 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 Ph i l l i p s2 b 4 0 2 0 Kipnis2b 5 3 3 4 ABeltre3b 5 1 2 1 Cano2b 3 0 1 2 Loney1b 2 0 1 0 Bogarts3b 4 0 0 0 Machd3b 4 0 0 0 D Gordnph 1 0 1 0 Brucerf 2 0 0 0 innings for Houston. The23-yearC hsnhll3b 5 3 5 9 Riosrf 4021 Romerlf 4 0 0 1 Zobrist2b 3 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 4 0 0 0 A.Jonesdh 4 1 3 1 Jansen p 0 0 0 0 Ludwcklf 4 1 2 1 5 0 0 1 DMrph1b 4 0 0 0 old right-hander struck out eight, Enchvzlf 0 0 0 0 DeJessdh 2 0 1 0 CSantn1b D.Ortizdh 4 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 4 0 1 0 Puig rf 4 1 1 0 B.Pena c 4 1 1 0 5 1 1 0 Choicedh 4 1 1 1 Zuninoc 4 0 0 0 Sandsph-dh 2 0 0 0 DvMrprf N apoli1b 4 0 0 0 N.cruzlf 3 0 0 0 matching his career high set in his Kemplf 3 2 1 0 Cozartss 4 0 1 0 Gtambtdh 5 0 0 0 Chirinsc 4 1 2 1 Navarf 2 0 1 0 Hardyss 3 0 0 0 S eager3b 4 0 0 0 Joycelf 4 0 1 0 Kottarsc 4 1 2 2 Sardins2b 3 2 1 0 V nSlykcf 3 3 3 4 Lulz1b 1 0 0 0 previous start. Gigespirf 4 0 0 0 YEscorss 4 0 1 0 GSizmrcf 3 0 0 0 Loughcf 3 0 0 0 JuTrnr3b 5 0 2 1 Ondrskp 0 0 0 0 B uckdh 4 1 1 0 JMolinc 3 0 0 0 Totals 43 171817Totals 38 7 116 JHerrrss 2 0 0 0 CJosphc 3 0 0 0 Cleveland 361 3 6 1 04g — 17 Romak1b 3 0 0 0 Heiseyph 0 0 0 0 BMillerss 3 0 0 0 Forsythph 1 0 0 0 Houslon Arizona D.Rossc 3 0 1 0 Flahrly2b 3 2 2 1 Fdrwczc 3 0 1 1 SMrshllp 0 0 0 0 Texas 1B3 2gg 01B — 7 Totals 34 3 7 3 Totals 3 1 0 5 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Totals 29 0 3 0 Totals 3 1 4 8 4 E — A.cab rera (10), Chi s enh a l (9). DP — C lev eHarenp 3 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 603 ggg ggg — 3 Seatge Fowlercf 5 2 3 0 Gregrsss 4 1 1 0 Boston 000 000 GOO — 0 Howegp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 l and 2 , T e x a s1 . L O B — C l e v e l a n d 3 , T e x a s 6 . 2 8 — A . TampaBay GOO GOO ggg — 0 Altuve2b 5 1 3 1 GParrarf 3 2 1 0 Baltimore 100 0 2 0 10x — 4 Cingrnp 1 0 0 0 DP—Seattle 1.LOB —Seattle 5, TampaBay 10. Cabrera(14), Chisenhall (16), DavMurphy(14), Roiasph-ss 1 0 0 0 RSantg3b Singltn1b 5 1 1 0 Gldsch1b 2 0 1 1 DP — Boston 1. LOB—Boston 5, Baltimore4. 3010 Cano (13), Kiermaier (4), Loney(15). SB—J. D.Robertson(1), Andrus(16). 38—Rios (8). HR Jcastroc 3 0 1 1 MMntrc 4 0 2 1 2B — Nava (3), D.Ross(5). HR—Markakis (6), A. 28 — Totals 3 4 6 106 Totals 3 1 2 7 1 Brantley (10), Chi s enhal l 3 (7), Kottaras (3), Choi c e Jones(7),Loney(2). MDmn3b 3 0 2 1 Prado3b 4 0 0 0 Jones(10),Flaherty(2). CS —Holt (1). Los Angeles 01 B 28B 000 — 6 (6), Chrri n os (4). SB — K ipni s (7), Sa r d i n as (1). SF IP H R E R BBSO rssmnlf 4 0 1 0 Hill2b 4000 IP H R E R BBSO C incinnati 01B 1 g g 000 — 2 G Kottaras. Seatge illimsp 0 0 0 0 DPerltlf 4 0 0 0 Boston IP H R E R BBSO E—Cingrani (1). DP—Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati W 4 2-3 4 0 0 5 5 E.Ramirez MGnzl z lf 0 0 0 0 Inciartcf 4 PeavyL,1-4 7 8 4 4 1 7 1. LOB —Los Angeles 9, Cincinnati 7. 28—Kemp Presleyrf-If-rl3 0 0 0 Cllmntrp 2 00 10 0 2 3- 0 0 0 0 1 Cleveland Badenhop 1 0 0 0 0 1 BeimelW,1-1 31-3 6 6 5 2 1 (15), Federowic(3). House z HR —Van Slyke2 (6), Ludwick Villarss 4 0 0 0 C.Rossph 0 0 0 00 2 -3 0 0 0 0 1 LeoneH,5 Baltimore AtchisonW,3-0 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 (5). CS — D .G ordo n (5). SF —Federowicz. F arquhar H,5 2 1 0 0 1 2 osartp 3 0 0 0 Harrisp 0 0 0 0 B.NorrisW5-5 8 3 0 0 3 6 IP H R E R BBSO C 2 3 0 0 0 3 S ippp-rf-p 0 0 0 0 Putzp 0000 0 0 0 0 0 Axford Tom.Hunter 1 0 0 0 0 0 RodneyS,18-20 1 Los Angel e s Carrasco 1 1 1 1 0 1 TampaBay T—2:21. A—19,729(45,971). HarenW,6-4 51 - 3 5 2 2 2 2 Frnswrp 0 0 0 0 Owingsph 1 0 0 0 Outman 1 0 0 0 0 1 Price L,4-6 8 7 3 3 1 10 1000 HowellH,12 12 - 3 1 0 0 1 0 Carterph 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Texas C.Ramos 1 1 0 0 2 0 Quagsp 0 0 0 0 L,1-3 2 6 8 8 3 1 League 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 N.Martinez Boxberger Totals 36 4 11 3 Totals 32 3 6 2 Jansen 1 0 0 0 0 2 S.Baker 5 119 9 0 7 Blue Jays 5, Twins 4 WP — E.Ramirez,Farquhar. Houslon 220 000 ggg — 4 Scheppers 1 0 0 0 0 2 Cincinnati T—3:11.A—10,400 (31,042). 000 102 ggg — 3 CingraniL,2-7 4 2-3 7 6 6 3 5 Arizona Ross Jr. 1 1 0 0 0 1 E — F ow l e r (2), Hi l l (3). DP—Houston1, Arizona TORONTO — Edwin Encarnacion Ondrusek 21-3 2 0 0 1 4 S.Bakerpitchedto4 batters inthe8th. 1. LOB — H o us t o n 8, Ari zona6. 28—Fowler (9), AlWP — House. S.Marshall 1 0 0 0 1 0 hit a three-run homer in the first (20),J.castro(9), Goldschmidt (24), Inciarte(2). T — 3: 2 0. A — 29,362 ( 48, 1 14). Hoover 1 1 0 0 2 1 tuve White Sox 6, Tigers 5 S B — A lt u ve (2 4). SF — M .Dominguez. inning and Kevin Pillar singled WP — Haren2, Cingrani. IP H R E R BBSO home the winning run in the ninth CHICAGO T — 3: 2 6.A — 31,91 5(42,319). — Jose Abreu hit a Houston Angels 4, Athletics1 to lift Toronto. The first two batCosartW,5-5 6 5 3 3 2 8 two-run homer in a three-run 12-3 0 0 0 1 3 Braves 3, Rockies1 SippH,4 ters of the game,DannySantana ANAHEIM, Calif.— Mike Trout fifth and Chicago snappeda Williams 0 0 0 0 1 0 and Brian Dozier, homered for the three-game losing streak. Gordon drove in a run with a double that FarnsworthH,5 1- 3 0 0 0 0 1 DENVER — Gavin Floyd pitched QuagsS,8-9 1 1 0 0 0 1 Twins, but Encarnacion's 20th Beckham addedthree hits. Miguel originally was ruled a homer, effectively into the seventh inning Arizona of the season soon putToronto Garrett Richards pitched seven CollmenterL,4-3 7 7 4 3 1 5 Cabrera, Victor Martinez and for his first win since returning ahead. Jose Reyesadded a solo Harris 1 2 0 0 0 1 Eugenio Suarez homered for the strong innings for Los Angeles. last month from reconstructive Putz 1 2 0 0 0 0 shot for the BlueJays. Los Angele s manager Mi ke Sci os Tigers, who havedropped seven pitchedto1batter in the8th. surgery on his right elbow, leading Williams HBP —byCollmenter (J.Castro). cia was ejected in the fifth for arof nine. Atlanta over Colorado. Minaesota Toronto T—3:12. A—18,805(48,633). guing after a call was overturned ab r hbi ab r hbi DSantncf 5 1 2 1 Reyesss 5 1 3 1 Detroit Chicago Atlanta Colorado on replay: Trout's towering drive Dozier2b 3 1 1 1 Mecarrlf 4 1 1 0 ab r h bi ab r hbi Leaders ab r hbi ab r hbi to right field was touched by a fan M auer 1b 4 0 0 0 Pigarlf 1 0 1 1 K insler2b 5 0 0 0 Eatoncf 5 1 2 1 Heywrdrf 4 0 1 0 Blckmnrf 3 0 0 0 ThroughMonday'sGames W lnghlf 4 0 1 0 Bautistrf 3 1 1 0 D.Kellyrl 4 0 0 0 GBckh2b 5 1 3 1 at the top of the 18-foot wall. Buptoncf 4 1 1 0 Stubbscf 4 0 0 0 A rciarf 2 0 0 0 Linddh 4 0 0 0 TrHntrph 1 0 0 0 Gigaspi3b 4 1 2 2 FFrmn1b 4 1 0 0 Mornea1b 4 0 0 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE KMorlsdh 3 0 1 0 Encrnc1b 3 1 2 3 Micarrdh 4 2 2 1 JAreu1b 4 1 2 2 J.uptonlf 3 1 1 0 Tlwtzkss 4 0 0 0 Oakland Los Angel e s BATTING —Rios, Texas, .335; VMartinez, Detroit, A.Hickspr-dh 0 0 0 0 JFrncs3b 3 0 0 0 VMrtnz1b 4 1 2 2 A.Dunndh 3 0 1 0 Gattisc 4 0 1 1 Dickrsnlf 3 1 1 1 .332; Cano,Seatle, .330; Micabrera,Detroit, .329; ab r hbi ab r hbi Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 StTllsn2b 1 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 4 0 2 0 AIRmrzss 4 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 4 0 3 2 McKnrc 4 0 1 0 Crispcf 4 0 0 0 Calhonrf 5 0 2 0 Altuye,Houston,.320; Beltre,Texas,.316; Markakis, Nunezpr-3b 0 1 0 0 Lawrie2b-3b 4 0 2 0 Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 Viciedorf 3 0 0 0 LaStell2b 3 0 0 0 Culersn3b 2 0 0 0 J asodh 3 0 0 0 Troutcf 3 0 1 2 Baltimore,.312. K Suzukc 4 1 3 1 Tholec 1 0 0 0 AJcksncf 3 1 1 0 Sierrapr-rf 0 0 0 0 Smmnsp 0 0 0 0 Le Mah i2b 2 0 0 0 RBI — Ncruz,Baltimore,55; Encarnacion,Toronto, 4 0 0 0 Puiols1b 4 0 1 0 EEscorss 4 0 1 1 DNavrrph-c 1 0 0 0 A vilac 4 0 2 1 DeAzalf 4 1 1 0 Dnldsn3b Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Rosarioph 1 0 0 0 M ossrf 4 0 0 0 JHmltnlf 4 0 1 0 53; Moss,Oakland, 53; Micabrera,Detroit, 52;DonKralzpr 0 1 0 0 RDavispr 0 0 0 0 Flowrsc 3 1 0 0 ASmnsss 4 0 0 0 Brgmnp 2 0 1 0 Cespdslf 4 1 2 0 Freese3b 3 1 0 0 aldson ,Oakland,50;JAbreu,Chicago,49;Trout,Los G osecf 3 0 0 0 Suarezss 4 1 1 1 Floydp 3 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Lowriess 3 0 0 0 JMcDnl3b 0 0 0 0 Angeles,45. Totals 3 3 4 9 4 Totals 3 35 105 Totals 3 7 5 105 Totals 3 5 6 116 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 RWhelrph 0 0 0 0 Vogtc 3 0 2 1 HKndrc2b 3 1 0 0 HOMERUNS—Ncruz, Baltimore, 21; EncarnaM innesota 2 0 0 0 0 0 602 — 4 Detroit GOO 112 gg1 — 6 R.Pena2b 1 0 0 0 Barnesph 1 0 1 0 Cagasp1b 3 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 0 2 0 cion, Toronto,20;JAbreu,Chicago,18; Donaldson, Toronto SOO 010 601 — 5 Chicago 101 631 ggx — 6 Ottavin p 0 0 0 0 Sogard2b 3 0 0 0 Ibanezdh 4 0 2 1 Oakl and,17;Moss,Oakland,16; Bautista, Toronto,15; E—V.Martinez (3), Porcello(1), J.Martinez(1). One outwhenwinning runscored. FMorlsp 0 0 0 0 Congerc 3 2 2 1 VMartinez,Detroit,15; Pulols,LosAngeles,15. —Detroit 6, Chicago8. 28—V. Totals 3 1 1 4 1 Totals DP — Minnesota1, Toronto 3.LOB—Minnesota6, DP —Detroit 2. LOB Totals 3 4 3 7 3 Totals 3 0 1 4 1 ERA —Tanaka, NewYork, 2.02; Buehrle,Toronto, 3 34 11 4 Toronto8. 28—KrSuzuki (12), E.Escobar(19), Bau- Martinez(15), J.Martinez(6), A.Jackson(14), Avila Oakland Atlanta Ogg 2gg 010 — 8 B16 ggg Ogg — 1 2.04;Kazmir,Oakland,2.20;Darvish,Texas,2.36; tista (11). 38 —Willingham(1). HR —D.Santana (2), (10), G.Beckham 2 (10), J.Abreu(14), A.Dunn(10). Los Angeles gg 1 116 01x— 4 Colorado Ogg Ogg 100 — 1 Seattle,2.39. Eaton (2). HR—Mi.cabrera (12), V.Martinez Dozier(13),Reyes(4), Encarnacion (20). SB—Reyes 38 — E—Floyd (1), Tulowitzki (3). DP—Colorado 1. FHernandez, E—Donaldson 3 (12). DP—Oakland 1. LOBNATIONALLEAGUE (15),Suarez(2), J.Abreu(18). 2(14).CS—Gose(2). L OB — Atlant a 9, Co l o rado 7. 2B — B ar ne s (9). HR and 4, LosAngeles10. 2B—Cespedes (17), BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado, .354; Lucroy, IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO Oakl Dickerson(8). SB—B.upton (10).S—Blackmon. C alhoun (9), Trout (13). CS — Iba ne z (1). SF — T r out. Milwau k e e , . 3 3 5; Puig,LosAngeles,.333;MaAdams, Minnesota Detroit IP H R E R BBSO St. Louis, .325;Pagan,SanFrancisco, .321; Utley, IP H R E R BBSO Nolasco 52-3 7 4 4 2 6 PorcegoL,8-4 5 9 6 5 1 4 Oakland Atlanta Philadelphia,.314;AMccutchen,Pittsburgh,.309. Thielbar 11-3 0 0 0 1 0 Knebel 1 1 0 0 0 1 J.chavez 62 - 3 3 1 1 3 4 RBI — Stanton, Miami,53;Goldschmidt, Arizona, L,5-4 6 8 3 2 1 5 FloydW,1-2 GuerrierL,0-1 1 1 - 3 1 1 1 2 3 Krol 1 1 0 0 2 0 Cook 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 47; Desm 13 1 0 0 1 0 AvilanH,4 ond,Washington, 42; Morse,SanFrancisco, Fien 0 2 0 0 0 0 E.Reed 1 0 0 0 0 2 Abad H,4 1 0 0 0 0 1 42; Tulowitzki, Colorado,42; Howard, Philadelphia, 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 SrSimmons Toronto Chicago KimbrelS,17-20 1 0 0 0 1 2 41;Blackmon,Colorado,40;Puiq,LosAngeles,40. 1 1-3 2 1 0 0 1 Dickey 51-3 5 2 2 2 3 NoesiW,2-4 52 - 3 7 4 4 1 5 Ji.Johnson Colorado Los Angel e s HOMERUNS—Stanton, Mtami, 17; Tulowitzki, McGowan H,5 1 2 -3 1 0 0 0 0 S.DownsH,6 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 RichardsW6-2 7 5 2 2 2 4 Colorado,17;Jupton,Atlanta, 14;Desmond, Wash4 1 1 0 4 BergmanL,0-1 6 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 LoupH,12 1 0 0 0 1 1 PetrickaH,6 1 0 0 0 1 3 ington,13;Frazier,Cincinnati, 13;Morse,SanFranJ.Smith H,B 1 0 0 0 0 2 Brothers Janssen W,1-0 BS,2-13 1 3 2 2 0 1 PutnamH,B 2 3- 0 0 0 0 2 Frieri S,11-13 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 cisco,13;Re 0 0 0 0 3 Ottavino ynolds, Milwaukee,13. Fien pitched to 2 batters inthe9th. BelisarioS,6-9 1 2 1 1 0 1 HBP 1 0 0 0 1 1 —byJ.chavez(Conger,H.Kendrick), byRichards F.Morales ERA—Teheran, Atlanta,1.89; Hudson,SanFranHBP—by Dickey(Arcia). Porcego pitchedto1batter in the6th. WP —Floyd. Jaso). cisco, 1.97; Cueto,Cincinnati, 1.97; Cashner,San T—2:53. A—19,428(49,282). T—2:55.A—28,817 (50,480). —2:55.A—36,838(45,483). Diego,2.13;Wainwright, St.Louis,231. T—3:13.A—18,803 (40,615).
NHL FINALS
Kings have uic and Rangers' Cup hopesnearly dead By Allan Kreda New York Times News Service
NEW YORK — The Garden
Frank Franklin tt I The Associated Press
was ready. The capacity crowd was loud and prepared for the New York Rangers' first home game in the finals in 20 years. But the experienced Los Angeles Kings, who had never won a playoff game at Madison SquareGarden, spoiledthe party. Once more the Kings' top players guided them to a victory, a 3-0 win that put them up
Los AngelesgoalieJonathan
three games to none over the
Quickloses his mask as defenseman Alec Martinez helps defend.Quick stopped 32 shots in the 3-0 win over the New
Rangers.
York Rangers on Monday.
first Cup two years ago, each set up defenseman Jake Muzz- had strong games, with Carin for another score early in the ter collecting a team-high four second. Center Mike Richards shots on goal. "We're a team playing with made it 3-0 late in the second, and goaltender Jonathan Quick confidence," Richards said. turned away all 32 shots the Kopitar, who led the Kings Rangerssent his way,leaving in scoring in the regular seathe Kings on the verge of com- son, had his team-leading 21st pleting a sweep. assist. 'We are a very good team Gaborik, who leads all scorwhen we get ahead," said ers this postseason with 13 Kings captain Dustin Brown, goals, was making his flrst apwho centers the line with Ga- pearance on Garden ice since borik and Kopitar. "We grind the Rangers traded him to Coaway and gradually take over tumbus in April 2013. The Blue games." Jackets dealt him to the Kings ers forward, and Anze Kopitar
The veteran Jeff C a r ter Carter and Richards, who scored with 0.8 seconds left in were key pieces when the
the flrst period, and then Mar- Kings beat the Devils in six ian Gaborik, the former Rang- games to claim the franchise's
shots, but it felt as if they dominated play much of the night. eWe played a solid game, no more than that," Kings coach
KINGS2,RAMGERS D
Darryl Sutter said.
Gaborik had his ups and downs while with the Rangers. 7wo seasons of 40-plus
• goals and a 22-goal campaign Game1: Kings 3, Rangers 2, OT Game 2: Kings 5, Rangers 4, 20T in which he was hampered by injury culminated in a difficult Game 3: Kin s 3, Ran ers final season under John Tor- Wed. a t New York 5 p.m. torella and a less-than-ideal de- x-Fri.~ at LosAngeles 5p.m. I parture for Gaborik. York 5 p.m. But in his three months as a x-June16 at New King, Gaborik has flourished. Now he is a victory from hoist-
x-if necessary
ing the Cup on his former home His line buzzed Henrik ice. day after the Kings' morning "I have great memories of my skate. "But it's all about busiLundqvist and the Rangers' net all night. The Kings had only 15 time here," Gaborik said Mon- ness now." this season, in March.
C4 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
U.S. OPEN
NBA finals
Changes
Continued from C1
"We feel we're right there." A nother 4 A s c hool w i l l
Continued from C1
Well, unless it works. W ade drew t h e f o u l
be changing classifications
The most notable leap is
as well — i n
t h e o p posite
being made by Ridgeview, direction. which after competing in After competing in the 4A C lass 4A i n i t s f i r s t t w o Sky-Em League since Oreyears of existence joins Bend gon expanded to six classifischools Mountain V i e w, cations in fall 2006, La Pine Summit andBend High, and will drop to 3A and become crosstown rival R edmond a member of the new South
against Ginobili with 4:09 left in the second quarter
on Sunday night. Ginobili, who took a big swipe at the ball about 35 feet from
the basket, wound up going to the bench with his
High in the 5A Intermountain Conference.
third foul of the half. Wade went to the foul line and
"I think it's going to be great having Ridgeview in there," says longtime Moun-
made the two resulting free throws, as Miami was al-
ready in the bonus.
Valley Conference this com-
ing falL "Overall, I think the community's excited, the school's
excited to be going down and
tain View a t hletic d irector playing what we think are in Dave Hood. "They obviously communities that look a lot
The Heat wound up win-
ning by two points. "I saw Manu coming out of the corner of my eye to
can compete withanybody in the IMC. There's no doubt
like La Pine," says Rusty Zysett, La Pine High's athletic director. " When w e d r o ve
try to steal it so my only
about that." While the IMC will no lon-
thing was to make sure
ger be a "hybrid" league-
into Cottage Grove (a Sky-Em League opponent), that didn't
that he didn't steal it," Wade
which included 4A schools
look a whole lot like La Pine.
Ridgeview and Crook County, the only two members of
said. "He swiped and he wound up hitting me and The Heat-Spurs matchup
Ravens, according to Rid-
It looked like a university compared to us. We drive into Glide (a member of the South Valley Conference located east of Roseburg), that looks
is tied 1-1, and Game 3 is in Miami tonight.
geview athletic director and
a lot like La Pine. We're excit-
football coach Andy Codding. "It's going to be just like it was this year," Codding says. "Football was the only sport where we didn't play a full league schedule against
ed to be playing some of those schools again."
all IMC teams. We've done
ceptable cost for being able to compete against programs of comparable size. And with
the ref called a foul. We move on."
4A Special District 1 — much will remain the same for the
Some of the flops in the playoffs have been almost circuslike acting jobs, including a pair by Indiana guard Lance Stephenson — the official leaguewide leader in flopping this sea-
this. It's going to be nice to
son with two violations in
the regular season and two more in the postseason. He has had to pay $20,000 for those flops, or basically about 2percent of his season's salary. For Wade, who has made nearly $19 million in salary
not have the 'hybrid' word atJay LaPrete/The Associated Press
Jordan Spieth says he can win the U.S. Open, which begins Thursday. The 20-yeer-old held the lead in the final round of the Masters before bogeying two straight holes.
mere pocket change. And situations like that w ere pointed out last year by David Stern, the now-retired NBA commissioner, who said the small fine "isn't
enough. You're not going to cause somebody to stop it for $5,000 when the aver-
age player's salary is $5.5 million." Stern added then that
anyone who thought the fine would stop the flop is allowing "hope to prevail over reason." So it would be no surprise if tougher flopping penalties are at least discussed by the NBA's competition
com m i t tee
when that group meets this summer. Heat coach Erik Spoels-
tra said he is not surprised that the rate of flopping goes up in the playoffs, saying Monday that the reason fortheincrease couldbeas simple as "more people in the league office watching each possession." Besides Stephenson and
Wade, theother postseason flop fines have been assessed to Indiana's Roy
Hibbert and the Spurs' Tiago Splitter. All of those flops were cited in the con-
ference-f inalround orlater. A media relations official from the Pacers tweeted
shortly after the Wade-Ginobili play Sunday that the Heat guard deserved a flopping fineand even made what seemed like a lighthearted plea to the league: "C'mon NBA, do it f or Lance."
Blitz
By Joe Juiiano The Philadelphia rnquirer
PINEHURST, N.C. — He is still almost seven weeks short of his 21st birthday and
yet Jordan Spieth has spent the 2014 season as a familiar
name on the list of contenders before any PGATour event he enters.
When 156 players tee it up Thursday for the 114th U.S. Open at Pinehurst Resort and
Country Club, Spieth will be on that list yet again — and maybe even a little higher up after having a chance to win the Masters and the Players Championship in the last two
Ducks' Nclver qualiTies asalternate University of Oregon golfer Brandon Mciver wasadded to the U.S. Open fieldonSunday.Thesophomore,whoaweekago missed by just one stroke anautomatic bid to play at the Open, was the first alternate coming from the sectional qualifying at Emerald Valley Golf Course in Creswell. "The feeling of disappointment last weekandjoy of knowing I have the opportunity to compete at theOpen. I'm still in awe," Mclver told Gooucks. com. Both Mciver and his college coachCasey Martin thought that he would have a good chance of qualifying for one of the four open spots, so the sophomoreandassistant coach Van Williams flew out to North Carolina. "We thought this was a possibility aii week so hewasout there practicing and preparing himself," Martin said. Hewill also have plenty of support with Williams — who is a North Carolina native —out there by his side aswell as his best friend from high school, Jake Hedge, who will serve as his caddie. — Bulletin staff report
months. To hear Spieth tell it, he has reached one objective for this
year by contending in majors. strokelead after seven holes. Spieth competed in his first He would like to take the next But bogeys on the eighth and major — the U.S. Open at the step this week. ninthholes — against apair of Olympic Club in San Francis"I believe that I can win birdies by Watson — put him co — two years ago when he this golf tournament," he said in a two-shot hole from which got in as a last-minute alterMonday. "I feel comfortable he did not recover. nate. He finished as low amaon this golf course. I think it Then at the Players, Spi- teur, tying for 21st place while fits my game. When I step on eth played bogey-free golf for playing "the best golf I'd ever the first tee, that's what I'm three rounds and entered the played in my life." He shot 77 trying to do. If I get into con- final round tied with Martin and 76 last year at Merion and tention, I'm definitely going to Kaymer. But he closed with a missed the cut. draw off any experience I've 74 and tied for fourth. He is excited to be playing "I've contended now," Spi- this week. His family will be had; now I do have a little experience. That's only going to eth said. "I think now if I can present. He loves the setup help me. get into that position, the goal at Pinehurst No. 2, which is "And I feel like I willbe able isn't just to feel the feelings d ifferent from what it w a s to close this one out, if I get an and try to get the comfort during the Opens in 1999 and opportunity." level, but it's to really try and 2005 in that it has no rough Closing out has been an put into place what Augusta but sportsacres ofwaste area issue for Spieth. He was tied as well as the Players have and wrre grass. "I've never played anything with Bubba Watson for the taught me. But out here, it's lead going into the final 18 at going to be more difficult to be like it," Spieth said. "I think it's the Masters and held a two- patient." goingto be a fair test."
The Blitz 2 the Barrel, in its fifth year, starts at
Wanoga Sno-park and takes some of the coun-
Oregon Open
t ry's top
ers on a mostly downhill course along singletrack
Continued from C1 "I am intrigued to see where everything shakes
and into Tetherow. Large
out," he adds.
crowds gather at Tetherow to watch bikers fly off man-made jumps. Riders race from Tetherow along Skyline Ranch and Skyliners roads and Galveston Avenue to the
Glaze Meadow did host the 2012 Oregon Mid-Am-
m o untain b i k -
a teur C h ampionship
two
months after reopening, but Lagao and his crew were limited in what they could
finish at 10 Barrel Brew-
do on such a recently overhauled golf course.
ing Co. That course largely overlaps designated fire
He will have no such limitations this time.
evacuation routes.
"The police basically said, 'No, you're not going to run that event, not on that road,'" Eastland said.
Part of the race course
"This will be a good test," says Lagao, a former Oregon chapter president of the Golf Course Superintendents Ass ociation of
"We will push the
course to see what speeds (on the greens) we can get to and how firm we can get things." Phil Lageo, course superintendent at Black Butte Ranch
in both team and individual
that are currently closed, as the Deschutes Nation-
gion. "The Mid-Am was OK, but we didn't push it for the
al Forest has closed trails
M id-Am, and w e w i l l f o r this. We will push the course
played at the highest levels of pro golf, including former PGA Tour pros and past Oregon Open champions Jeff Coston of Semiahmoo Golf 8: Country Club in Wash-
"We are officially rescheduling," Eastland said.
better test of the golf course." The field for the 54-hole
ington and Pat Fitzsimons
before cyclocross season
Oregon Open — now in its 109th year, including 30 of
former head pro at Prineville
starts — later this summer.
It's still going to be great, just on another day." — Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com
termountain is left with five s chools. And w it h a n o d d
Junction City. Pleasant Hill
adjustment."
TVC member Madras. Class 2A Culver, a Tri-River Confer-
... is kind of like going to Cotnumber of conference mem- tage Grove. It's all very simibers, scheduling becomes lar. We lost the Central Oremore difficult. gon connection by not being "It's one thing if you have a in the same league as Sisters, small league of four or a small but they were not in the Skyleague of six, and then you Em League that long." have your league games and And that is not the end of you've got this huge group of the changes involving Central nonleague games at the start Oregon schools. of the year," Hood says. "Well, At th e 4 A l e v el, C r ook we've got byes all the way C ounty will j ump t o t h e through the schedule clear to Tri-Valley Conference in the the end. So we'll have to deal fall, joining another Central with that.... It just takes some Oregon school in current The upside, however, is
that all five members of the ence school in 2013-14, joins I MC ar e w i t hi n 2 0 m i l e s the Rolling Plains League. of each other, give or take. And at 1A, Redmond's CenThen again, Hood notes, a tral Christian will leave the
small league (the IMC will Big SkyLeague fortheMounbe the second-smallest in 5A) tain Valley League, where it translates to more matchups will join current Central Oreagainst the same (few) league gon MVL members Gilchrist rivals — and more holes to fill and Bend's Trinity Lutheran. on the nonleague schedule. Gone are the much-maStill, the addition of Ridligned special districts and geview to the IMC, Hood says, the hybrid leagues. Just ahead "is critical."
is the new world, where a new
"Redmond has really been era in Oregon prep sports is such a great community ath- about to begin. letically," the Mountain View
director says. "We have these great rivalries. Since I played at Bend High (in the 1970s), the real Central Oregon rivalry was Bend-Redmond. Now, to have Ridgeview and Redmond and the three Bend
the last 33 in Central Oregon
— is composed of94 club professionals and 94 ama-
try Club's Brandon Kearney, who has been among the better players in the Northwest Section in recent years.
The stakes are significant, p articularly for t h e p r ofessionals in the field: The
low professional will earn $6,500.
— Reporter: 541-383-030'7 glucas®bendbulletin.com.
schools, I just think it's really important and it w il l r eally
improve the quality of competition here.
"They're a powerhouse in a number of sports," Hood says of Ridgeview. "It'll improve the quality very quickly of our league. We really look forward to that."
In moving up from 4A, Ridgeview (754 average daily school year) will join Redmond High (718) as two of the smallest schools in 5A. "Aside from that," Codding says, "we feel good about where we're at. And we're excited to not be relegated to
Now0 ering
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the kids' table anymore when
it comes time for season-end (state) awards and stuff.
Plenty is on the line for Black Butte Ranch, too.
The management ofthe s prawling r esort a b out 8 miles northwest of Sisters
•
•
tournaments, and it thinks To that end, Black B utte Ranch wants to see how the
w i t h region's top professionals react to the new design and its conditions.
Alaska and parts of Idaho and Montana. Some of the entrants have
to see what speeds (on the greens) we can get to and how firm we can get things. "This will be for sure a
"I've got to try to get it in
not have to adapt much to a different travel schedule. "Going to Glide is kind of like going to Elmira," Zysett observes. "Going to Harrisburg is kind of like going to
to the Sky-Em — La Pine will
competitions. The players the 7,007-yard Glaze Meadrepresent all of the PGA's ow has the layout to do it.
among the most respected W ashington, along s uperintendents in th e r e -
the fire.
out, is t hat w i thout Crook County consistently competing with the rest of the IMC
W i l l amette V a l l ey
schools making up the South Valley Conference — similar
teurs playing in foursomes of has been open about a detwo pros and two amateurs sire to host more high-profile
Pacific Northwest Section, A m e rica a nd which includes Oregon and
also runs through trails
and forest roads north of Century Drive because of
mostly
enrollment, based on OSAA calculations for the 2012-13
Continued from C1
3A level, but he calls it an ac-
tached to our league. But it's going to be the same in terms of league play." The issue, as Hood points
(the Cowboys from Prineville join the 4A Tri-Valley Conference in the fall), the In-
this season, the $5,000 was
Zysett concedes that t h e
Hawks might b e l o gging more miles on the road at the
"We are proud of what we
•
•
have there and we want to show off what we created," says Jeff Fought, Black Butte
Ranch's director of golf, who is also competing in the tournament. "We set the g olf
course right and I think we of Salem Golf Club (and the can test the best golfers in the Pacific Northwest."
Golf & Country Club). Also Spectators are welcome in the field are 31 Central and admission is free. Oregon golfers, a list that in- — Reporter:541-617-7868, zhall@ cludes Bend Golf and Counbendbulletin.com.
•
•
Widgi Creek, G OL F C L U B
18707 SW Century r . , e n www,wid i.com (541) 382-4449
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
BEST OFTHE
EXECUTIVE FILE
Merc na s iotec
BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Membership 101, Driving YourMembership: New and current Bend Chamber of Commerce members can connect and learn about benefits available through the chamber. RSVPsrequired; free; 10 a.m.; Bend Chamber of Commerce, 777 NWWall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221 or shelley©bendchamber.org. • Women's Roundtable Series — Doingthe Juggling Act:Join apanel ofwomen astheytakean in-depth look at winning at the game ofwork andthe business of life. Register online; $25 chamber members, $30 community members; noon; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • Ribbon Cutting: Free; 4:30 p.m.; Wild Ride Brewing Co., 332S.W. Fifth St., Redmond; 541-610-2520. • Young Professionals Network: Networking at the newly renovated hotel with CascadeLakes Brewery, NakedWinery and Hot BoxFoodCart. Register online; $7 Bend chamber members, $15 community members; 5 p.m.; Marriott TownePlace Suites, 755 S.W.13th Place, Bend;541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. • How to Select the Right Franchise: Is franchise ownership right for you? Learn to choose a franchise, arrange financing and other details; free; pre-registration is required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • Illustrator, Create a CustomDesignedWater Bottle: UseAdobe llustrator to create personalized vector artwork for acustom, laser-engravedHydroFlask water bottle while learning thefundamentals of the software. Registration required; $125;6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. THURSDAY • State of the Community Address: Discuss how community stakeholders are managing tax dollars and preparing for the future. Bring questions or send them inadvance to jamie©bendchamber. org. Registration 7 a.m. $25 BendChamberof Commerce members; $35 nonmembers; 7:45-9:15 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or www.bendchamber.org. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbugetin.com/bizcal
DEEDS Deschutes County • Tetherow Glen58 LLCto Michael D.and Jenifer J. Mudd, Tetherow,Phase2, Lot 41, $287,375 • Hayden HomesLLCto Christopher andHolly Bonner, Gleneden2, Lot47, $239,840 • Stanford N. Bettis and Patricia A.Tyburczy-Bettis to Richard W.and Jacquelyn King, HaroldsAddition, Township15, Range13, Section16, $171,200 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to Patricia A. Schouviller, Parkland, Lot 72,$205,500 • Thomas B.andTina E. Jefferson to David E.and Nancy E.Cook, EagleCrest 2, Phase1, Lot 21,$307,490 • John and Sally Adelusto Ella B.andRomir Chatterjee, Forest Hills, Phase1, Lot56, $415,000 • Stephen K. Greenholzto Brice G.andDebraMurri, trustees of theMurri Family Trust, Township16, Range 11, Section 35,$400,000 • Nickolas E. Smith and Jessica M. Lorentz-Smith to Lorenzo A.GonzalezRamirezand AlmaL Aguiar, SouthVillage, Lot1, $197,000 • Steven V. and Carolyn B. Stanfill to DEC Morton Holdings LLC,ReedMarket Industrial Area, Lot1, Block 2, $725,000 • Kyle S. and Jessica Taylor to Philip G.and Marsha K. Gonzales,Township 17, Range13,Section 33, $383,600 • Stonegate Investment LLC, whichacquired title as StonegateDevelopment
What:Y Knot Branded What it does:Designs and sells Western-inspired women's shoes Number ofemployees: Two, co-owners Kelly Beall and WendyWeems Pictured:Weemsand Beall at DesperadoBoutique in Bend Where:Sisters
+
ou it
Phone:541-420-7774
Ou the Web:wwwYknot branded.com
By Andrew Pollack New Yorft Times News Service Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
est -en too
oes, an
i
By Valerie Smith •The Bulletin
Central Oregon sisters Kelly Beall and Wendy Weems saw a void in women's fashion footwear for shoes that brought together the big city and the Old West. So the duo, who manage their Ranch andHome, both located in business from their homes in Sis- Bend. Ten other retail locations ters and Tumalo, started Y Knot Branded and plan to launch their
first shoe collection, Alpha Mare, next month. Weems is the sole in-
across the U.S. and three in Cana-
da will also sell the shoes. Y Knot Branded sells shoes wholesale, not directly to consum-
ers. However, it does offer online The company specializes in shopping through two retailers, shoes that are a cross between tra- via YKnotBranded.com. ditional Western styles and highBeall, who thought of the initial end heels. Beall and Weems say idea for the products, designed vestor, and Beall the lead designer.
inspired Q •• What you to name the first collection Alpha Mare? • Wendy • Weems: I have no idea. Kelly comes up with all of the names. She's the creative one, andan Alpha Mare in the horse world is the horse that decides it's time to take them to water, when they move from one place to the next. The... Alpha Mare in the horse world is the leader."
A
Merck will buy the biotech-
nologycompany IdenixPharmaceuticals for $3.85 billion in an effort to bolster its arsenal of potential drugs in the competitive arena of hepatitis C
treatments, the companies announced Monday. Merck will pay $24.50 in cashforeach shareofIdenix, an eye-popping 3.4 times the Idenix closing price of $7.23 a share on Friday. New drugs are transforming the treatment of hepatitis
C, replacing injections with pills, as well as increasing the cure rates, reducing side
effects and cutting the duration of treatment to as little as
eight to 12 weeks from as long as ayear. But the new pills for hepatitis C must be used in combi-
Doesthe • company plan to expand into other products anytime soon? • Theonly • one(sj we're really thinking of, anditcould be as far as a yearout, it could be handbags and clutches and maybe, cuffs.
Q•
nations of two, three or more drugs. Companies are scrambling to procure the components of such regimens. Gilead Sciences is the leader in the hepatitis C race. Its new
pill, Sovaldi, recorded sales of
Y Knot Branded is, "Where New York and the Old West collide."
and worked in the Western fash-
Those in the Alpha Mare collection feature hand-tooled leather similar to designs found on W estern saddles.Some shoes are adorned with silver nail heads;
Weems, an artist and sculptor, put in the money to make the business
some have conchos; and others
Have you al• ready started working on the next collection? and if we didn't do it, someone else • We have. would." • You know, As far as testing the market to that date's jumpsee if the shoes would be successful, ing around on us. theythrewthatideaout thewindow. There's just so much "No, w e w e n t b a c kwards," going on with the Weems said. "We didn't test the new company. market, but we had an unveiling back inJanuary with women con-
Merck is in late-stage clinical trials of a combination of two hepatitis C drugs, which could get to market in two years. But that combination
nected to the fashion industry. "I would think we invited about
in as little as four weeks, Dr. Roger Perlmutter, who heads
20 fromourlocalarea,and the response was overwhelming. As far as market research, it was small and local; we felt like it was enough
research and development for
to goahead and take a chance on it." — Reporter:541-383-0325,
worldwide have hepatitis C, which can destroy the liver over time.
sport Western buckles. They have names like Tequila Sunset, acelosia orange-colored
shoe, CowDiva and Cowboy's Sweetheart.
The sisters' love of horses and ranching inspired the designs, Weems said. "The trends for women in West-
ern lifestyles are usually frilly skirtsand dresses,"Weems said.
"They always have to wear cowboy boots. A cross between boots and flip-flops or heels has never been explored before." The sisters started the business in January 2013, formally branding their company in January 2014. The shoes will be showcased at Desperado Boutique in the Old Mill D istrict an d H ig h D esert
ion industry for close to 20 years. happen. "The other ideas that she's had
were amazing, but this one is just unique, and I couldn't quit thinking about her drawings," said Weems. "My husband couldn't quit thinking about her drawings,
$2.3 billion in the first three months of this year, shattering
the pharmaceutical industry's record for sales of any drug in its first full quarter on the
market but also raising concerns about affordability.
Q•
is aimed at only certain
subtypes of the hepatitis C virus and requires 12 to 18 weeks of treatment. Adding
a drug from Idenix to those two drugs could allow for a once-a-day pill that could treat all subtypes of the virus
Merck, said. At least 3 million Ameri-
cans and 150 million people
vsmith@bendbulletirt.com
Credit scoresmayinfluence drivers' premiums By Patricia Sabatini Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
In case you needed another reason to pay your bills on time, a new study by Wallet-
Hub has found that credit scores have a surprisingly big influence on what you pay for car insurance. The study found that insurance premiums among five of the largest auto insurers nationwideaveraged 65percent higher for a driver with no credit history versus someone with excellent credit. Because many factors go into pricing premiums, the percentagedifference won't hold true for all consumers,
the study noted. Nevertheless,creditscores
will have a significant im-
LLC, to StonewaterDevelopment Inc., Township18, Range12, Section 20, $1,016,803 • Larry C. andBarbaraJ. Nichols to William A.andTori A. Hannah, Fourth Addition to StageStop Meadows, Lot 44,$159,500 • John C. and Julie M. Copleyto Andrew J.Sabatierand Nicole E. Phelan, AubreyHeights, Lots1 and 2, Block5, $459,900 • Eric R. Storjohann to Jeffrey A. and JaneM.Hiatt, Westside Pines, Phase2, Lot 7,$278,760 • Amara N. Anderson, nowknow as Amara N.Spittler, and Robert W. Spittler to ChadGrovesand Brittany N. Powell, EastVilla, Lot 1, Block1, $243,500
"Hopefully (this) will lead people to givea little more TLC to their credit scores and manage loans and credit cards more responsibly." — John Kiernan, with WalletHub
pact on what you pay, said John Kiernan, senior analyst
resulting in a 116 percent
Conversely, people with good credit might want to check first with companies that give credit data greater
weight. The results also help to
explain why insurance quotes can vary widelybetween companies, Kiernan said. WalletHub also looked at
difference in premiums, while State Farm relied on those
were about using credit scores
data the least with a fluctuation of 45 percent. In the mid-
to help set rates. Among 10 top insurers nationwide, Progressive received the most points
scores and manage loans and
dle were Farmers Insurance, Geico and Progressive. Kiernan said consumers could use the results to help
creditcards more responsi-
them shop for a better rate.
with WalletHub, a Wash-
ington-based social media site focusing on personal finance topics. "Hopefully that will lead people to give a little more TLC to their credit
bly," he said. The study found that among insurers, Allstate relied on credit data the most,
• Megan M. Curtis to Todd LeBlanc, Leeanne Acres, Lot4, $290,000 • Corinne Broderick, whotook title as Corrine Broderick, to Nita Roberts, Southwest Pines,Lot 8, $282,000 •SusanFeldertoJamesM.and Amanda L Dayton, NorthWest Crossing, Phase1, Lot54, $475,000 • Tetherow Glen58 LLCto Bright Oak HomesLLC,Tetherow, Phase 2, Lot 67,$216,000 • Structure DevelopmentNWLLC to Roger A.and Karen L Pollard, NorthWest Crossing, Phase17, Lot 790, $590,000 • Dennis E. and Annette G. Brown
"If your credit standing isn't great, you might want to gravitate to a company that relies
on credit scoresless,"hesaid.
to Seth N.Durkin, Deschutes River Woods,Lot54, Block BB, $170,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Paula Minetti-Maboll andMark Maboll, Village atColdSprings, Phase4, Lot 107, $255,098 • Blake andVictoria Petersen to Kelley D.Kersch, Oakview, Phase 3, Lot12, $203,000 • Michael G.andKathryn A. Carroll to ZacharyStockwell and Codi Kramer,Sterling Pointe, Phase 2,Lot35, $267,500 • Brentley S. Fosterto Andrew D. andWendy A. Lyons, Awbrey Village, Phase5, Lot156, $437,000 • Dylan M. Owensto Robert
how transparent insurers
for transparency, while Liberty Mutual was rated the worst.
While manypeopleknow that motorists' driving record and type of car they have influence rates, many are sur-
prised to learn about the use of credi tscores,hesaid.
TomlinsonandElineJ.Kaufman, TamarackParkEast,Phase2, Lots 26and 27,Block1, $190,000 • Pete B. Morristo Caroline Ramoz, DesertWoods 2,Lot15, Block11, $165,000 • Marjorie A. Renick, trustee of the Marjorie A.Renick Revocable Living Trust, to ConstanceR. Norman, NottinghamSquare, Lot 13, Block 3,$200,000 • Dave Hasenoehrl Homes LLC to Clayton T.and Kathryn O. Higuchi, Shevlin Ridge,Phase3, Lot 34, $579,000 • Bruce L. and Gloria J. Durbin to SuppagreepornandChristy M. Dejanakul, BellaSera, Lot15, $179,900
• Suppagreeporn Dejanakuland Chnsty Delanakul, whoacquired title as Christina Dejanakul, to Robert W.andAmara M. Spittler, First Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot4, Block11, $292,500 • Donald P.KaneandShelley R. Selkirk, whoacquired title as Shelley R.Kane,to Annemarie Thomas, GoldenButte, Phase2, Lot 41, $235,500 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Dianna L. Harrisand John M.Wren, Rivers Edge Vilage, Phase14, Lot 6, $399,950 • Federal National Mortgage Association to MarkandJanet Borgers, NottinghamSquare, Lots9and10, Block3, $158000
BRIEFING Growth today, redoundsoon? The U.S. economy will expand at a robust 3.5 percent annual rate in the second quarter and continue at asolid pace the rest of the year, according to a survey of business economists released Monday. The National Association for Business Economics revised its forecast from March, when it projected the economy would grow at a 2.8 percent annual rate in the second quarter. The group also boosted its outlook for the second half of the year. It now projects 3.1 percent growth in the third quarter, up from 2.9 percent. Still, worse-than-expected first-quarter economic numbers led the business economists organization to downgrade its projection for overall growth this year. The economy nowis expected to expand ata 2.5 percent rate for the entire year, down from a 2.8 percent estimate in March. Economists have beenexpecting a rebound in the Marchthrough-June period.
Tyson gobblesup Hillshire Brands Tyson Foods Inc. has won a bidding war to gobble up Hillshire Brands, the makerof Jimmy Deansausages and Ball Park hot dogs. Tyson had beenvying with rival poultry producer Pilgrim's Pride to acquire Hillshire, which wrapped up its bidding process Sunday.Tyson's final offer ended up at $63 per share, about two weeksafter Pilgrim's Pride made an initial bid of $45 per share. Pilgrim's Pride, owned by Brazilian meat giant JBS,saidMonday it was bowing out of the competition. Still, the deal is not sealed yet. It is contingent on Hillshire not going through with its offer to acquire Pinnacle Foods Inc., which makes Birds Eyefrozen vegetables andWishBone salad dressings. Tyson, like Pilgrim's Pride, has beenlooking to boost its presence in brand-name, prepared foods like Jimmy Dean breakfast sandwiches. Those types of products are more profitable than fresh meat, such as chicken breasts, where there isn't as much wiggle room to padprices.
GM lawsuits will be one case A panel of federal judges handedGeneral Motors a modest but meaningful victory Monday, consolidating the pretrial phase of more than 80 lawsuits against the company into asingle proceeding in Manhattan, the venuesought by the automaker. It came asthe embattled company prepared to face investors today in what is expected to be a tenseannual shareholders meeting, the company's first since it began recalling millions of defective small cars in February. The cases, most seeking class-action status, have beenfiled around the country on behalf of owners of Chevrolet Cobalts, Saturn lons and other cars that GM recalled this yearfor a dangerously defective ignition switch. Owners are seeking compensation for lost valueof the vehicles andother economic damages. — From wire reports
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D5 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/athome
HOME
-'r
Do it: Build yourself a home kegerator Editor's note: Check back every other week for do-ityourself projects.
>P/+
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or a conversion kit from a store like TheBrewShop in Bend (www.thebrewshopbend. com, 1203 N.E. Third St., 541-
323-2318), and then buy akeg filled with your favorite beer. A Here's a great do-it-yourself home-sized kegerator usually project for a beer lover: Makea holds a sixth-barrel or a Cornekegerator for your house. lius keg, which equals 40 pints What's a kegerator, you may of beer, so chill some glasses, ask? It's what you get when and get the party started. Jeff Hawes, owner of The youcombinea"keg"witha "refrigerator" — it's an appliBrew Shop along with Tom ance that can dispense fresh, Gilles and GlenSamuel, told us inexpensive draft beer from that this is a DIYproject that's your own chilled tap at home. simpleandeasy."Thetoughest Most people with kegerators part is drilling the hole through keep them in thegarage, althe refrigerator. As long asyou though you canbuild one into a have the right size bit, you can home bar aswell. do it, and we'll explain it all to All you have to do is buya you when you pick up akegerused refrigerator or a chest ator kit," Hawes said. freezer, purchase thesupplies See Kegerator /D5 By Alison Highborger For The Bulletin
•n
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•
•
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You can build your own kegerator to dispense fresh, inexpensive draft beer at home.
gpkp pgpgpgtpr
Buy a used, working refrigerator. Buy a kegerator kit from a local beer supply company. Drill a hole for the tap with a 7/8" hole sawbit.
•
•
•
Install the CO,gas tank and regulator andhookit up to your keg.
•
Set the pressure, pour a beer and enjoy.
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Greg Cross/The Bulletin
FOOD
By Sophie WilkinseThe Bulletin •
•
hris and Madelle Friess' garden may
see more traffic than most other gardens in town. Located on Riverside
Drive across from Drake Park, the garden is in the heart of picturesque Old Bend. The Friesses moved into their
bungalownearly 22yearsago,in 1993.Aftera remodel and a full-story addition in 1996, they
began work on a lush shade garden. From the driveway to the porch to the sidewalk, every outdoor space has been covered with various hues of green, different textures and bursts
of col or.Chrisand Madellehavecamouflaged the ground of every garden bed with vibrant shades of grasses orflowers. The space features
hundreds of flowers and shrubs, a vegetable garden and a water •
•
See additional photos 0 on The Bulletin's website: designedtobe bendbulletin.com/atitometoor
•
PA . • +t-'
the Cascades to open. In the
For The Bulletin
meantime, Waterston recently took a 10-mile hike in the
Fresh air+ exercise =
hunger! As you head out this sum-
mer for long hikes, river paddles and bike rides, a good supply of smart and delicious snacks will fuel your body and help you feel comfortable and happy. We asked some local outdoorsy people what they like to take into the backcountry
shrubs." He says that his love of gardening wasn't family-inspired, but instead came from personal enjoyment. "You just walk out here, and you're
writer and outdoor adventurer Ellen Waterston, who's most
amazed.... If I see something that amazes me or
recent work is "Via Lactea," a
looks different, I'll buy it."
verse novel about a journey on the Camino de Santiago, told
Chris said, "I
r-+'~ - ~~
By Alison Highberger
on a day trip, and did some research to get a list of suggestions for you, in case you're getting bored with your usual granola bars, apples and jerky. Gifted Central Oregon poet,
and a fountain.
kr
Time ortrai c ow
envisioned an English garden, intense color, not pastels. But I moved towards liking flowering
"He's done such a good job of trying to have color through the flowers and through the leaves, the stems, so that there's something going all year
us she's eager for the trails in
nearby Badlands. "I once heard a hiker say that one feels part of some-
thing bigger when hiking in the mountains. So true," she sald. Waterston told us her favor-
ite hiking snack is a "gorp" (good old raisins and peanuts) made with banana chips, walnuts, raisins, dried cranberries and sunflower seeds.
She likes to hydrate with water mixed with a little fruit
juice and an Emergen-C packet mixed in. Another essential for Waterston is food for the soul.
"Most importantly, a poem to memorize while walking," she told us (see "Poem ideas," Page D2). See Snacks/D2
long," said Madelle.
This is the third yard Chris has worked on. When the Friesses started on the garden, there
was only an arborvitae, abirch, a spruce and a crabapple tree on the property. When asked if the garden was created for privacy, Madelle laughed, saying, "There's no privacy
TODAY'5 RECIPES Snacksforyourbackpack:No-BakeChocolateQuinoaEnergy Bites,02;Zucchini-Oat Bread,D3
on Riverside.... We love all of the activities going
on." Initially they created a garden on the slope in front of the house, but they kept having trouble with it. Eventually, with lots of dirt, they made a level spot and put a flower bed in front. Almost ev-
Vegetarian recipes from a redone classic: Mung Beansand RicewithSpicyTomatoes,Edamame andSesame Puree,Tangerine Pudding Cakeswith Raspberry Coulis (pictured), D3
erything is aperennial and grown organically. See Friess /D4 Editor's note: The At Home section features a garden profile each month during the gardening
season. To suggest agarden toprofile, email athome@bendbulletin.com.
RecipeFinder:Another take on delicious butter cake,03
D2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
FOOD Snacks
Next week: Using your freezer
Something to drink on yourhike
What to pack in your pack — 7$ideas
Continued from D1
Snackideas
Water Water mixed with fruit juice and Emergen-C (EllenWaterston) Coconut water Iced tea: Makeyour own green tea, herbal tea, black tea Lemonade Iced tea mixed with lemonade Iced coffee Vitamin water Gatorade
Sherrie Pierce goes birding two or three times a week with friends or with the East Cascades Audubon Society
(www.ecbcbirds.org), where she is board secretary and past president. She often takes
along a loaf of homemade zucchini-oat quick bread to share (see recipe). "I like using this recipe because I have apple trees for the applesauce, grow the zucchini and freeze it, dry my daughter'sgrapes fortheraisinsand have chickens that supply the eggs," Pierce said. Eric Denzler, outdoor pro-
I
spends a lot of time outdoors
ant to keep the energylevel up, rather than waiting to eat and
crashing. If you wait to stop for lunch, the blood sugar levels are jumping up and down," Denzler said.
Stur+ food andno sharing with critters
Denzler said think " stur-
dy" when you're packing your foodforaday in thebackcountry: firm cheese sticks, jerky, granola bars, h ard-boiled eggs. Avoid soft cheeses that may melt or spoiL "Don't bring things that will crush or crumble easily. They'll be powder by the time you're eating them. A nice scone will turn to crumbles,"
Denzler said. He said that it's not a good idea to share crumbs with
critters, even though you may think you're being environmentally friendly. Teach children, especially, to refrain from feeding animals and birds. "Let's not feed the birds and
rodents your lunch. Let's keep the cute critters wild. Crumbs attract them, but what eats the
squirrelsand other rodents? Rattlesnakes will come into
the campsites if we have lots of birds and rodents, like squirrels. The best advice is leave no trace on the trail," Denzler said.
GU Sports Gel:Vanilla Bean or Chocolate Outrage flavors Clif Shot EnergyGel: Mocha or Double ExpressoTurbo Clif Shot Bloks: Mountain Berry or Cran-Raspberry Clif Energy Bar: White Chocolate MacadamiaNut or Crunch Peanut Butter
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulleti
1. Peanut butter crackers 2. Individually wrapped prunes 3. Homemadegorp (good old raisins and peanuts) 4. Fresh vegetables: snappeas, carrot, celeryand jicama sticks, zucchini coins 5. Beef jerky 6. Tanka bars (natural buffalo and cranberries) 7. Peanut M8M's 8. Fruit leather 9. Luna bars, especially lemon zest and peanut butter flavors 10. Hard-boiled eggs 11. Apples 12. Salami 13. Pickled asparagus 14. Rice Krispie treats 15. String cheesesticks (1 oz.) 16. Roasted almonds 17. Tangerine (peeledand ina zipper-lock plastic bag) 18. Bananabread or muffin 19. Popcorn 20. Licorice 21. Turkey jerky 22. Celery sticks with Laughing Cow cheese, hummusor peanut butter 23. Dill pickle 24. Sardines 25. Lollipops 26. Pumpkin bread 27. Peanut butter and jelly sandwich 28. Peanut butter and Nutella sandwich
29. Peanut butter with banana, honey and wheatgerm sandwich 30. Dried apricots 31. Sunflower seeds 32. Orange (peeledand in a zipper-lock plastic bag) 33. Honey Stinger HoneyWaffle
Source:Dave King, REI Store Manager, 380 Powerhouse Dri ve,Bend,OR, 385-0594
54. Bagel spreadwith Biscoff cookie spread 55. Hummus in single-serving packet 56. Chocolate chip cookies 57. Tootsie rolls 58. Go-Pakof Nutter Butter bites (3.5 oz. cup), or Mini-Oreos (3.5 oz. cup) 59. Dates 60. Dried figs 61. Dried apples 62. Mild cheddar cheesesnack stick 63. Prepackaged trail mix 64. Dried bananachips 65. Chocolate-covered espresso beans 66. Egg salad sandwich (with an ice pack) 67. Snickers bars 68. Ritzcrackersandwiches made with cheeseor peanut butter 69. Single-serve squeezepackets of almond butter, peanut
(1 oz.) 34. Smokedsalmonand crackers 35. PROBAR(whole food bar) 36. Mini Babybel semisoft cheese in waxcovering 37. Jelly beans 38.No-BakeChocolateQuinoa Bites (see recipe, PageD2) 39. Graham crackers spread with Nutella and marshmallowfluff 40. Dried cherries 41. Chile-dusted dried mango from Trader Joe's 42. Peanut butter cups in minisize 43. Mixture of cereals in zipper bag: Cheerios, shredded wheat, oat squares 44. Tuna in pouchwith small packets of mayo 45. Pickled okra 46. Hard cheese 47. Baby carrots 48. Chocolate-covered nuts or dried fruit 49. Cucumber 50. Sesamesticks 51. Fig Newtons 52. Zucchini-Oat Bread (see recipe, PageD3) 53. Marshmallows
No-Bake Chocolate Quinoa Energy Bites Makes 24 bites. I predict you will make these on-the-go energy bites again and again. Kids love them, so besure to keep aseparate stash just for yourself. — CamiitaI/. Saulsbury, author of 5500Best QuinoaRecipes," Robert RoseInc., 2012 1t/4C raw cashews '/4 C quinoa flakes 1 C unsweetened flaked
t/2tsp fine sea salt t/a C agave nectar, brown rice
syrup or liquid honey
coconut
2 tsp vanilla extract
t/a C unsweetened cocoa powder
(not Dutch processed), or unsweetened carob powder Line a 9-inch square metal baking panwith foil. Lining a panwith foil is easy. Begin by turning the panupside down. Tear off a piece of foil longer than the pan, then mold the foil over the pan. Removethe foil and set it aside. Flip the panover and gently fit the shapedfoil into the pan, allowing the foil to hang over the sides (the overhang ends will work as "handles" when the contents of the panare removed.) In a food processor, combine cashews, quinoa flakes and coconut; pulse until finely chopped. Add cocoa powder, salt, agave nectar and vanilla; pulse until mixture forms a dough. Using your hands, a spatula or a large piece of waxed paper, press dough into prepared pan. Refrigerate for 1 hour or until firm. Using foil liner, lift dough from panand invert onto a cutting board. Peel off foil and cut into 24 bars. Storage tips: Store bars in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. Or wrap them in plastic wrap, then foil, completely enclosing them, andfreezefor up to 6 months. Let thaw at roomtemperature for 1 hour before serving.
butter, Nutella
70. Pistachio nuts 71. Dried blueberries 72. Pumpkin seeds 73. Pop-Tarts 74. Oatmeal cookies 75. Bagel spread with peanut butter and sprinkled with raisins 76. Salty snack mix: minipretzels, crackers, nuts, seeds, corn chips
— "500Best QuinoaRecipes,"by Camiiia I/.Saulsburjr, Robert Rose Inc.,2012
on empty, your body starts would pack for lunch at the of- to break down amino acids to take, think about what you
fice, and then add 25 percent Audubon Society, Bend Park and Recreation District, www.livestrong.com,
author's research and interviews.
Goodnutrition and flavor
tossfruitpeels,sunflower seed shells, pistachio shells and hardboiled eggshells on the glound.
"People think they're natural
and they'll break down, but in
writes Kathleen M. Zelman, a
The best fuel for prolonged registered dietician on www. exercise is a combination of WebMD.com. carbohydrates, protein and Take some snacks that fat, eaten often and in small you really enjoy, along with a amounts. healthy combination of foods. "When your 'gas tank' is Continued on next page
the time to skimp on food, Denzler said.
wonderfulplaces for a reason.
from your muscle mass and
more. You're burning a lot of converts them to glucose for calories on a long day outside," energy. Instead of burning fat, Denzler said. you're in danger of breaking down valuable muscle tissue,"
Sources: REI-Bend, East Cascades
Pack it out Denzler often sees people
— www.poets.org
Best-selling snackandlierformance foodat REI-Bend
(www.bendparksandrec.org)
lake, take out your food and have a drink, too. It's import-
To find a good poemto memorize, check out www. poets.org, the website of the Academy ofAmerican Poets. Youmayalsoenjoy the anthology, "Committed to Memory:100 Best Poems to Memorize," edited by John Hollander, 1996 "By choosing and memorizing a poemthatyou love, you connect yourself to this long tradition of passing along stories and customs through the power of poetic language."
iM
gram coordinator for the Bend Park & R e creation District
and advises park and rec program participants about the best foods to take along for comfort and safety. "We encourage people to bring things to snack on during the whole day. Have food in a Ziploc bag in your shorts, so it's easy to munch. When you stop at a pretty
Poemideas
our high desert environment, We want to keep them as natu"It's not a good idea to think that can take years, if not de- ral as we can," Denzler said. cades. Bring snacks in Ziploc about losing weight on a day bags, and haul out trash in Take enough outside. Lose weight in town! the bags. We're going to these A long day in nature is not To determinehow much food
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T o sub s c r i b e , c a l l
541-385-5800
TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F OO D
Beloved butter cake: Here's another take By Julie Rothman
RECIPE FINDER
The Baltimore Sun
Bernie Moran from Baltimore was in search of the recipe for the butter cake that was
sold at Brown's bakery in the late 1950s. The bakery, locat-
ed on Belnord Avenue in East Baltimore, has been closed for many years, like many other small bakeries. Nonetheless, it seems many people still long for some of the special baked
goods that were sold at these neighborhood spots.
Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Balti-
D3
ve e ariancassic,re one By Joe Yonan
and restaurantchefs,400,000 suddenly
Madison has continued to write inter-
The Washington Post
seems like a conservative estimate of the
esting, beloved books since, including last year's "Vegetable Literacy," but this
When Deborah Madison wrote "Veg- book's impact. etarian Cooking for Everyone," who I wasn't vegetarian when I started
year shedecided to return to her mag-
eared, sauce-splattered editions on the
the vegetarian cookbooks that came
num opus and update it. "The New Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone" (Ten Speed Press, 2014) is an even fresher, honed version of her formidable vision, including an easier-toread design, 200 more recipes (bringing the total to more than 1,600),
shelves oflibraries and home cooks
beforehers seem fusty by comparison.
and a new introduction.
knew that the title would end up be-
cooking from the book, shortly after its
ing so close to prophetic? The book 1997 publication. But I was certainly inhas morethan 400,000 copies in print, terested in vegetables. Madison opened which isn't literally everyone, of course. up a universe of possibilities for cookBut when I think of all the photocopied ing them, and a streamlined, elegant, and e-mailedrecipes I've seen,the dog- modern sensibility that made many of
more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.
Ruanne Lori from Parkville
sent in a recipe for abutter cake cooled, both recipes produce that she said appeared in this a sweet, slightly dense cake column more than 30 years with pools of luscious butter ago. She alsousedtolive in East running through. Hopefully, Baltimore and remembers buy- this one will be close to the ing delicious butter cake from cake Moran remembers. a bakery not far from Belnord Avenue. This recipe did not come from Brown's bakery but
Request
was developed by Baltimore pastry chef Gerhard Kadolph. Lori said his recipe makes a cake very similar to the butter cake she remembers buying at her neighborhood bakery. Not long ago, I ran a recipe for someone else looking for a gooey, German-style butter cake from a different East
Mich., is looking for the recipe for what she calls Crisco Breath O'Spring Cake. She said she has been helping a friend copy recipes from a collection of old clippings and recipe cards so they will be easier to read. They came
Baltimore bakery. That cake, like this one, had sweet raised
book from 1942, but it w as
Mary Beth York from Niles,
acrossthe recipe for this cake
stuck in the back of a cook-
damaged, and they are unable dough as the base, which was to make out the entire recipe. topped with a butter-and-sug- She believes the recipe was ar toppingbefore beingbaked. originally printed on the laThe two recipes have subtle bel of an old Crisco can. She differences most nota- is hoping someone else might bly pan size, which affects have saved the label and can the density. Once baked and fill in the missing pieces.
Anne Farrar /The Washington Post
Mung Beans and Rice with Spicy Tomatoes hits all the right notes: hearty (from the classic combination of rice and beans), flavorful
(from a layering of spices, chilies, herbs and aromatics), quick (with fast-cooking mungbeans) and easy (all in one pot).
Mung Beans and Rice withSpicy Tomatoes Butter Cake Makes16 servings. 2 pkgs active dry yeast
BUTTER TOPPING:
t/sC lukewarm water t/sC Iukewarm milk '/s C sugar t/sC soft shortening 1 tsp salt
1 C sugar /2 C brown sugar 1 stick (8 TBS) unsalted butter,
room temperature
2 eggs All-purpose flour (4t/s to 5 C)
1 TBS milk powder 1 tsp vanilla Pinch of salt
1 sm egg Soften yeast in warm water for 5 minutes. Meanwhile, mix milk, sugar, shortening and salt. Stir in dissolved yeast mixture, then eggs. Mix flour in with a spoon, then useyour hands until you haveadded enough flour to makethedougheasyto handle. Turn dough out onto a lightly floured surface and kneaduntil smooth, about 10 mInutes. Oil top of dough and place in an oiled, covered bowl. Place in a warm, draft-free place to rise until it doubles in size, about1t/2 to 2 hours. Punch down, cover and let rise again. After the second rising, round up and let rest15 minutes so dough is easy to handle. Spread dough evenly into a12-by-15-inch sheet panand preheat oven to 375degrees. For the butter topping, cream sugars, butter, milk powder, vanilla and salt. Mix in egg. Spreadbutter topping evenly over dough. Let dough rise until light, about 15 to 30 minutes. Bake for 25 to 30 minutes. The cake should be golden brown but stIII somewhat wobbly whendone.
From previous page "I like peanut M&Ms. You
and carry two ofthem. You hear about search and rescue
get the chocolate, protein and operations where someone energy. I like bagels with hard spends a night in the woods. cheese — that holds up well on a They say, 'I just sat there nibhot day. I like a quesadilla. I put bling a granola bar.' If anyhard cheese and bacon sprin- thing, it's good psychological kles on a tortilla, roll it up and
support," Denzler said.
put it in a Ziploc, and then I can Enjoy the glorious Central bite it off as I go," Denzler said. Oregon summer, and be sure
Emergency supplies It's always a good idea to put some extra, emergency food in the bottom of your daypack or backpack. Add a small bottle of water, too.
"Even if it's just a power bar or a granola bar, stick it in a different part of your pack,
to take plenty of snacks and
beverages with you when you head outside. A long, hot day can turn into a trudge some-
times, and an abundant supply of favorite snacks and bever-
ages will revive flagging energy and spirits. — Reporter: ahighberger@mac. com
Zucchini&at Bread Makes16 slIces. Bend's Sherrie Pierce's favorite "survival food" for a day of bird watching is this homemadequick bread. "I make aloaf, cut it in slices, and then share it with others at a break." — Sheme Pierce,EastCascadesAudubon Society past-presidentand current board secretary (wiririrMtecbcbirdsorg)
Nonstick cooking spray 1t/a C sugar 2t/4 tsp ground cinnamon 2t/2 C all-purpose flour 1 C rolled oats
1 tsp baking powder s/stsp salt t/a tsp baking soda
3 eggs 1 C applesauce t/4 C butter, melted 1 tsp vanilla 2 C shredded, unpeeled zucchini
1 C chopped walnuts or pecans s/4 C raisins
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly coat a 9-by-5-by-3 inch loaf pan with cooking spray; set aside. Combine1 tablespoon of the sugar and '/4 teaspoon of the cinnamon; set aside. CombIneflour, oats, baking powder, salt, baking soda and remaining cinnamon; set aside. In a large mixing bowl beat eggs with electric mixer on medium speed for 2 minutes or until foamy. Add remaining sugar, the applesauce, butter and vanilla. Gradually add the flour mixture, beating on lowspeedjust until combined. Stir in zucchini, nuts, and raisins. Spoon into prepared pan. Sprinkle with sugar-cinnamon mixture. Bake for1 hour, 20 minutes, or until a wooden pick inserted near the center comes out clean. Cool in pan on a wire rack for 10 minutes. Remove from pan. Cool completely on rack. Wrap and store several hours before slicing. — Adapted from BetterHomesand GardensiNagazine,Mrwwtbhgcom
Makes 4 to 6servings. /4 C whole green mung beans 1 C long-grain white rice /4 C chopped cilantro, plus
extra for garnish 3 cloves garlic
1 TBS peeled andchopped fresh ginger 1 tsp garam masala /2 tsp ground turmeric
/4 tsp groundcayenne pepper 3 TBS ghee or coconut oil, divided
1 med onion, finely chopped s/4 tsp cumin seeds, divided 1'/4 tsp dill seeds, divided 1t/stsp fine sea salt
1 or 2 jalapeno peppers (to taste), seeded and finely chopped 2 med tomatoes,cored and cut into wedges t/sC whole-milk or low-fat
yogurt (optional)
In separate bowls, cover the beansand rice with water. Use a mortar and pestle or a food processor to pound or puree the cilantro, garlic, ginger, garam masala, turmeric and cayenne. Heat 2 tablespoons of the ghee in a12-cup saucepanover medium heat. Add the onIon,t/2teaspoon of the cumin seedand1 teaspoon of the dill seed. Cook until the onion starts to take on color, 5 to 7 minutes, then stir in the cilantro mixture and cook for 3 minutes. Drain the beans and add them to the saucepan along with 4 cups of water and the salt. Bring to a boil, then lower the heat and cook, covered, for15 minutes, keeping the liquid barely bubbling. Drain the rice, add It to the pot and cook, covered, for 18 more mInutes or until both the rice and beansare tender and the water has beenabsorbed. Remove from the heatand let stand for10 minutes. Heat the remaining 1 tablespoon of ghee In asmall skillet over medium heat. Add the remainingt/4 teaspoon of cumin andt/4 teaspoon of dill along with the jalapenos. Cookuntil the seeds start to brown, just for a few mInutes, then raise the heat to medium-high, add the tomatoes and cook until they begin to soften, 1 to 2 minutes. Serve the rice and beans warm, garnished with the tomatoes, yogurt (if using) and asprinkling of chopped cilantro.
Tangerine Pudding Cakes with Raspberry Couiis Makes 6 to 8servings. Deborah Madison's take on the brilliant pudding cake — in which the top puffs like a souffle and the bottom puddles into a cream —uses tangerine juice instead of the classic lemon. FOR THE CAKES: 3 TBS unsalted butter, at room
Softly whipped cream, for serving
temperature, plus morefor the ramekins 3 Ig eggs, separated
FOR THE COULIS: /s C water
/s tsp fine sea salt /2 C plus 2 TBS organic sugar 2 tsp finely grated tangerine zest, plus / C fresh tangerine
juice (from 2 to 4tangerines) 1 C whole milk or light cream 3 TBS flour
3 TBS organic sugar, plus more to taste
3 C frozen organic, unsweetened raspberries 3 TBS orange muscat wine or other sweet wine (optional) 1 tsp fresh tangerine juice, plus more to taste
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Lightly butter eight 4-ounce or six larger ramekIns or custard cups and seat them in aroasting or baking panlarge enough to hold them all with a bit of space around eachone. Boil a kettle of water for the bain-marie (water bath). Combine theeggwhites Deh Lindsey i For The Washington Post and salt in the grease-free bowl of a standmixer fitted with the balloon whisk attachment. Beat onmedium speeduntil foamy; increasethe speed andgraduallyadd 2 tablespoons of the sugar,beating to form thick, glossy peaks.Scrapeinto a large bowl. Rinse out the mixing bowl, wipe it dry and return it to the mixer. Switch — Adaptedfrom '7heNew Vegetari an Cooking forEveryone" to the paddle attachment. Beat the 3 tablespoons of butter with the remaining /2 cup of sugar and the tangerine zest until light and fluffy. Add the egg yolks one at a time, beating to Incorporate before eachaddition. Edamame and Sesame Puree Gradually pour in the milk and juice, then sift in the flour, beating on low Makes 6 servings (about1/2 cups). speed until combined. (A few lumpsare OK.) VivId green, fluffy and light, thIs dIp seemssuited to spring but can Pour the batter over the whites and fold them together. Distribute evenbe madeanytime thanks to the ready availability of frozen edamame. ly among the ramekins or custard cups. Placethe pan onthe middle oven Serve on crackers. rack (pulled out halfway), thenpour enough of the just-boiled water to come halfway up the sides of the ramekins or cups (to create the bain-marie). 1t/ C shelled fresh or frozen 1 tsp Meyer lemonjuice, plus Bake for about 30 minutes, until the tops have risen andare golden; they edamame (green soybeans) more to taste should spring backwhen lightly pressed with afinger. Sea salt /2tsp black sesame seeds, Meanwhile, makethe coulis: Combine the water and sugar in a medIum 1 sm clove garlic, minced toasted (see note) saucepan over medium-high heat. Bring to a boil and give it a stir, then 1 /2 tsp toasted sesame oil, 1 scallion, thinly sliced on the reduce the heat to medium or medium-low so the mixture is gently bubdivided diagonal, for garnish bling; cook until the sugar hasdissolved. Stir in the raspberries; cook for 1 minute, then turn off the heat and Bring a few cups of water to a boil in a mediumsaucepan over me- let the fruit stand in the syrup for 5 minutes. Force the mixture through a dIum-high heat. Add the edamameand afew pinches of salt; reduce fine-mesh strainer placed over abowl; discard the solids. Stir in the wine, the heat to medium or medium-low so the water is gently bubbling. if using, and the juice. Coverand refrigerate until well-chilled. Cook until the edamameare tender, about 4 minutes, then drain, reRemove the pudding cakesfrom the water bath. Serve slightly warm or serving at least1 cup of the cooking water. at room temperature. Drizzle sauceover eachpudding cake; top eachone Transfer the edamame to a food processor along with the garlic, t/t with a small cloud of whipped cream. teaspoon of salt and1 teaspoon of the oil. Pulse, adding the reserved — Adaptedfrom '7heNew Vegetari an CookingforEveryone" cooking water as needed to makethe mixture smooth and creamyabout t/t cup or more. Stir in the teaspoon of lemon juice, and taste; add lemon juice andsalt as needed. Scrape the pureeinto ashallow bowl and run aknIfe back and forth over the top to smooth it. Drizzle the remainingt/2 teaspoon of oil over the top, then sprinkle with the sesameseeds and scallion. Serve at room temperature. Note:Heat the sesame seeds in a dry skillet over medium heat, shaking the panfrequently, until fragrant, 4 to 8 minutes. Watch carefully; they burn easily.
Fore. Dad.
— Adaptedfrom '7heNew Vegetari an Cooking forEveryone" N gg H N
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
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Next week: More watering advice for Central Oregon
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Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Peonies, a Japanese maple andwild ginger at the front of the Friess home in Bend.
A sculpture next to the sidewalk in the Friess garden in Bend.
Friess Continued from 01 "I send my green stuff to the landfill; they compost it and I buy it back from them," Chris said with a laugh. The front garden features yellow rhododendron, a rare oak tree named heptacodi-
um, bleeding hearts of pink and purple varieties, an abundance of peonies — including Vesuvian tree peonies with red leaves — peppery scented viburnum, lilies, lamiastrum
and Siberian Bugloss with two-toned leaves imitating the
u
Hostas, bleeding hearts, a Japanese maple and aclimbing hydrangea in front of the Friess home.
dozens ofhostas, lenten roses
whose muted colors closely resemble C h ristmas
r o ses
in an "earth bag." They've also let the bird feeders go empty due to house sparrows eating the veggies. The vegetable gar-
and more. The undergrowth is full of an interesting flowering plant called Siberian squill. Long leaves, resembling a long grass, carpet the garden floor and in the A birdbath surrounded by Welsh poppies, clover and a variety of other flowers. spring bloom with little blue
star-shaped flowers everywhere. The beds closest to
to find the right rock to create
the house suffer more shade than sun, and they have to be planted accordingly. Primrose, varieties of ginger, oxalis or three-leaf clover, violets,
a water feature for the birds. They moved their herbs to the
coleusand something resem-
bling a vanilla plant seem to do well in the low light. An interesting Welsh poppy resembles its California cousin, except it bears yellow petals.
side of the vegetable garden to begin construction of the fountain.
The boulder's concave surface creates a pool in which
the birds play and features a hole through the middle where th e
r e cycled w ater
That's a lot of w o rk," says
bubbles up and spills over the edges. It ran all winter and never froze. A large rubifolia bush provides a thick underbrush in which the birds play.
Madelle.
An additional birdbath sits
"You actually have to burn
the stem and seal it after you cut them or else they just wilt.
The birds andthe bees
just off the front porch under
the shade of a Japanese maThe Friesses are a c tive ple tree. birdersand wanted to create Madelle tends to the vegwelcome spaces to observe etable garden and loves the them in their yard. The cou- reward she gets from it. "We
ple searched for a year with local company Ripple Effect
love the cycle of nature, especially the vegetables starting
stickers called berberis or bar berries and, of course, the Or-
egon state flower — Oregon grape. A jonagold apple tree sits next to the house and pro-
duces anywhere from five to pellon cloth to protect the let- 20 apples a year. "They make tuce, among other things. the best a pplesauce," said Madelle's tr an s p lanted Madelle. herb garden contains tarraA robin built a nest last gon, parsley, sage, rosemary, year in one of the trees right thyme and chives, her partic- outside Chris' office, but it ular favorite. A large lovage hasn't been inhabited this plant sits beside her vegeta- year. A path around the right ble garden, with stalks that sideofthehouse incorporates resemble those of the celery a unique set of bricks taken plant. The bigger leaves are from the floor of the origipeppery to the taste. Madelle nal one-car garage that was chops them and freezes them re-done. The bricks bear the for winter soups and stews. name of A.P. Green, a brick Drier gardens between making plant in Mexico, Mo. the garage and house boast beautiful l u pin, I c elandic Trial and error poppies, anemonies, columAll of the beautiful success Bleeding hearts in the Friess garden. bine, daphne moonshine and in the garden has not come carol mackie; two varieties without a few losses. "Chris of daphne less fragrant than and I grew up in Salem, and from seed, and then eating rots, onions, covered toma- their valley cousins, flax, so he's always trying to grow the things that we've grown." toes, zucchini, cucumbers, white epimedium, alliums things here that typically The s t rategically p l aced leeks and broccoli. Although for thebees, Shasta daises, grow there," said Madelle. He's e xperimented w i t h south-facing vegetable gar- she is w a i t in g f o r b e t t er clematis, a ginkgo tree, a paden has lettuce, kale, beets, weather to plant green beans, per bark maple, red Alex ros- varietiesofJapanese maples, cabbage, green onions, car- Madelle has potatoes started es, a lime-colored plant with including Fall Moon and Liden has required a cover of
on's Mane maples, wild roses,
A Free Public Service
ginkgos, dogwoods, beeches, birches and magnolias. "You think they're doing fine, and then all of a sudden they die, and it's really sad," said Madelle.The dogwood tree took five years in the ground before it had one blossom. "Our kids say, 'How many $50 sticks do you have this spring, Dad?'" A beautiful birch tree sits
on the corner of their property. Concerns of the bark bee-
tle disease demand special attention, especially with a closeneighbor'stree already suffering from the disease. Chris takes time to water it in the winter, even though they
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
put the garden to bed sometime in the late fall. Chris appears to be entranced by trees, shrubs and ferns. "I'm always trying to get him to plant more flowers, because I
like cut flowers in the house.
I
1
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0 QKg©ZH55service to be automatically emailed of notices that match your needs. t
... And from now until October I can have bouquets in the
house," said Madelle. Chris, a local doctor, is close to r e tirement. When
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asked what he'll do w i th more spare time, he chuckled and said, "They're going to go on without me, and I'm going to garden without them." "We love to garden; we're
always curious what's going to grow," says Madelle. "When you're a gardener, hope springs eternal." — Reporter: 541-383-0651, swilkins@bendbulletin.com
TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 5
Kegerator Continued from 01 There are two different kits at The BrewShop. Oneis for the home brewer or kombucha maker (fermented, carbonated tea made with yeast andbacteria) that comes with a keg ($270). The other is a kit that allows you to dispensebeer from a commercial keg ($240). Hawessai dtheywould helpyou assemble most of the items before you leavethestore, so your DIY part at home iseasier. Belowyou'll find an abbreviated look at the steps you'll need to complete if you're going to tackle this DIY project. The Brew Shop is happy toanswer questions and talkyou through the process. Theshop also serves beer andfood in the Platypus Pub, which is below the store.
Time: About one hour Difficulty: Easy
will be about $300 to $350.
andsecurethem withaccompanying hardware.
Supplies: Used refrigerator or chest freezer. Measure carefully to make sure your kegwill fit inside. (About $50 online)
Step 3: Connect the beer end ges hoses. Connect the beer hose to the shank and the tap, which goes intothekeg.Connectgashose to the regulator and tap, clamping both ends.
Drill
/8 inch hole sawbit ($9) Crescent wrench Kegerator kit ($240 for one that uses a commercial keg, and $270 for a homebrew kit that includes a keg).The kit includes a tap, shank, faucet, handle, gas and beer hoses, full carbon dioxide tank andregulator. (Individuals can also look into ordering the parts separately.) If using a chest freezer, you'll need athermostat (to regulate temperature), plus a single-to-triple faucet ($86 to $220)
Step 4: Put the keg in the kegeretor end tap it. Put the keg inside. Tapthe keg by rotating the tap clockwise and pushing down onthe tap handle to lock it in place and secure it to the keg. Learn about proper CO,pressure for pouring (10 to14 pounds onthe regulator gauge). Pour abeer and enjoy! Step 5: Plan to clean the kegerotor. Read up or askabout how to keep the beerhoseand faucet clean by flushing them with cleanser occasionally.
Step1: Drill a hole in the front center of the refrlgerator. Unplug the refrigerator and drill a hole in the front door. Once the hole is drilled, remove any dust and debris.
DIY projects are about saving moneyandfeelinggoodabout accomplishing a task. Doing-it-yourself doesn't get more fun that this, eh? Cheers!
Step 2: Install the shank Cost: Assuming you own adrill and end faucet. Put in the shankand faucet, a crescent wrench, the total cost
— Reporter. ahighberger@mao.oom
ASK MARTHA
Ste sto e ect rie c ic en Aied Chicken
- MARTHA STEWART
Makes 4 servings.
might think of them as
secrets for the best tfact"my" these excellent tips for f ried chicken, but
1'/ tsp freshly ground black
3 TBS plus1 tsp coarse salt, dlvlded 1 whole fryer chicken (3'/~ to 4
pepper, divided 1 /2 C all-purpose flour
2 TBS coarse yellow cornmeal Safflower or canola oil, for frying
Ibs), cut into10 pieces
in
2 C buttermilk 2 tsp dry mustard
crispy, golden, moist, tasty, incredibly delicious fried chicken were shared with me one night in Amarillo,
Flakysea salt,such as Maldon,
1 tsp cayenne pepper, divided
for serving (optional)
In a large bowl, stir together 10 cups ice water and 2 tablespoons coarse salt. Add chicken, submerging all pieces. Cover; let soakovernight Texas. It was a tradition in in refrigerator. Amarillo on Tuesday nights In another bowl, whisk together buttermilk, 1 tablespoon coarse salt, that local cooks would gath- mustard and /~teaspooneachcayenneand blackpepper.Transferchicker together to prepare their en to marinade, submerging all pieces. Cover; refrigerate at least 4 hours personal-favorite recipes and up to overnight. for one another, not just Let chicken stand at room temperature1 hour. In ashallow dish, whisk their respective bosses. One together flour, cornmeal, remaining 1 teaspoon each coarse salt and week everyonemight make blackpepper,and remaining /~teaspooncayenne. Texas barbecue; the next, Heata heavypotfilledhalfway with oil overmediumheat until adeep-frytherfried fish; the next, chili. I mometer reads350F.Removechickenfrommannade,afewpiecesatatime (do was fortunate to be invit- notshake offexcess); dredgeinflour mixture.Transfertoa baking sheet. ed to fried-chicken night, Fry chicken in batches until golden brown and a thermometer inserted and it was in the kitchen into thickest part (avoiding bone)reads160 F, 6to 7 minutes for small piecof one of the cattle barons es, 9 to10 minutes for large.Adjust heat to maintain atemperature between that I was made privy to the 340 and 350 F during cooking. Transfer to awire rack set on arimmed bakfried-chi cken secrets. ing sheet; seasonwith sea salt. Serve warm or at room temperature.
Steps Nothing here is hard
n
to do — you just need to
e r ewasi
plan ahead to brine and marinate the chicken (the
two secrets to this recipe's success).
Soak — twice
• For a couple in the Netherlands, inspiration came in a church
Brining th e c h i cken o vernight (soaking it i n salted water) seasons it all the way to the bone and helps keep it moist. Next, marinate it in b uttermilk
Matthew Williams / New York Times News Service
with salt, pepper, cayenne Let this crisp, flavorful fried chicken be the star of the show. and dry mustard. The marinade tenderizes the chick-
en — and gives it a kick.
Dredge Adding a l i ttle cornmeal to the flour mixture means more crunch and
flavor. When you transfer the chicken from the mar-
jljI
l4
slippery. Fry the chicken until it's golden brown, cookingpieces of similar size together. Be-
tweenbatches,remove crumbs from the oil with a skimmer.
inade, don't let too much drip off. The moisture will
Drain
help the flour mixture bind to the chicken.
wire rack to drain and to keep
Fry
I I mel i
on the floor to catch spatters, board milk or juice container which would make the floor
Safety first: Put a towel
Set the fried chicken on a
to dispose of it. — Questions of generalinterest can be emailed to mslletters® marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.
BarhTurfSoil.com
the crust crisp (it can get soggy on paper towels). Let the oil cool completely in the pan, and then pour it into a card-
I
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PROMPT DELIVERY
541-389-9663
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Andreas Meichsner / New York Times News Service
A white interior of the former nave is punctuated by a red staircase to the master suite on the second floor in the church converted into a home by Ronald Olthof and his partner, Sofie Suiker, in Haarlo, Netherlands.
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By Nick Amies New Yorh Times News Service
When Ronald Olthof and
his partner, Sofie Suiker, decided to buy a h ome, their first instinct was to find an
old building they could renovate. An abandoned industrial
space, maybe. They never dreamed they would end up in a church. But
that was before a higher power intervened. "We originally w anted to buy an old factory," said Olthof, 39, an architect with
the firm Leijh, Kappelhoff, Seckel, van den Dobbelsteen, in Hengelo, a city in the east- The master bedroom is painted black to aid sleeping and to distinern part of the Netherlands.
• a
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guish it from the adjoining bath area.
And they almost did, he added, "But that deal fell through."
Then they happened to see came up with was a simple a vacant church, in Haarlo, a one: strip (in other words, resmall town nearby. And they duce the building to its essenhad a good feeling about it, he tial elements); isolate (emphasaid. Particularly after they size the most interesting of met some of the neighbors. those elements by surround"We discoveredthat one came ing them with lots of space); from Sofie's home city of Am- and furnish (sparingly). "It was a conscious choice sterdam," he said. "And another came from my hometown of not to fill the entire 1,100-cubic-meter space" — nearly Borne." It wasn't until they went
39,000 cubic feet — "with as
home to deliberate, though, many rooms as possible, but to that they got the definitive minimize the demands in orsign that it was meant to be: der to retain the spaciousness a letter telling them that the of the building," Olthof said. house they were renting was "We wanted to change as little about to be demolished. as possible." Suiker, 37, was convinced. Still, there was plenty of "How many more signs from work involved. Several Dumpabove do we need?" she asked sters worth of rubble had to Olthof. be removed, along with three After a certain amount of ceilings, a wooden floor, some back and forth, the couple wall paneling and a poorly bought the 1928 chapel, which constructed annex added in had been used by the Dutch the 1960s. The r e novation Reformed Church, in March of was finally completed in June 2011 for 130,000 euros (about 2012, at a cost of about 250,000 $177,000) and set about con- euros. verting it into a home. The transformation is an Since Olthof is an architect arresting mix of the heavenand Suiker is a stylist and the ly and the ungodly. Visitors head window dresser for the are confronted with a mutfashion label Gant, they did ed gray mural of angels and the planning and designing a white stucco interior that themselves. The concept they glows with light from restored
stained-glass windows — but
also with a blood-red stairway leading to the master suite on the second floor. The stair is housed in a modern structure
cladin recycled church flooring that also holds storage and some kitchen functions. (The couple call it their Stairway to Have Fun.) Where the altar once was is
now the home office — a comment, perhaps, on the role of
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work in modern life? On the other side of the nave, near
,~l
the entrance, will be a nursery
(they are expecting twins in August). And the monastery garden has been turned into
PLUS,4 More
the couple's outdoor seating area, where a flock of what
Burgers
they call their "lost sheep"-
little wooden ones — graze on the lawn. " We have a
resents that." He added: "We honor the
holiness, but bring something innocent and mischievous to its modern form."
J
FREE!
m o tto t h at
sums up the essence of the house for us: cherish your inner child, remain pure, playing, exploring and a little bit naughty," Olthof said. "I think the design of our home rep-
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT •
TV TODAY
ria o cen u an
•
TV SPOTLIGHT ByFrszier Moore The Associated Press
NEW YORK — O.J. TV was
"At the beginning we knew it was a big story," says Ford, "but I don't think any of us anticipated how the public would
ry's shocking verdict was pronounced. Identical courtroom video was carried by ABC,
be so invested in it."
broadcast networks, and by
a national pastime.
CBS, Fox, NBC and The WB
The case, with all its constit-
The O.J. Simpson Show double homicide — comman-
deered the media, especially television, along with a spellbound audience for nearly 16 months.
It began as little more than a juicy crime story: the ex-wife of a celebrity and a male acThe Associated Press file photo quaintance slain outside her A white Ford Bronco, driven by Al Cowlings and carrying O.J. home on June 12, 1994. Simpson, is trailed by LosAngeles police cars on June17, 1994, as Then things took a shock- it travels on s freeway in Los Angeles. ing turn: Simpson, initially seen as the grieving former husband, became the accused. for CNN's trial coverage. "Ev- transcended sports and even But O.J. TV erupted in full erybody was watching it, live, race, a guy who had achieved force late in the afternoon of wondering if O.J. was going single-name status," says Jack June 17, with Simpson (charged to blow his brains out. That's Ford, now CBS News legal anwith the m urder o f
N i cole when the hook was set for ev-
Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman) the focus of a slowspeed police chase in his white Ford Bronco, apparently considering suicide en route. More than 90 million Americans watched, thunderstruck,
as TV helicopters tracked this mot o r cade
along the freeways of Los Angeles, then, after some 90 minutes, witnessed Simpson
surrenderin the driveway of his Brentwood home. "You didn't dare turn away,"
says Greta Van Susteren, now a Fox News Channel host,
who became a legal analyst
cable channels CNBC, CNN, Court TV, E! Entertainment, ESPN and Headline News, with 91 percent of all TVs in
uent parts, became second-nature to viewers: Nicole's front
— with its centerpiece a former football great on trial for
beyond-bizarre
e n some
erything that followed." What followed was labeled
alyst, who covered the trial for NBC News. O.J. T V ke p t v ie w e rs
walkway on Bundy Drive and O.J.'s towering hedge on Rock- use tuned to this bombshelL ingham Avenue. Ron GoldO.J. TV came to an end with man's father's upturned mus- the audience deeply divided tache. O.J. houseguest Kato on his guilt. But there was uniKaelin's flowing locks. Judge ty on something else: Viewers Lance Ito on the bench peck- wanted more and since then, ing at his laptop. Robert Kar- have joined the media in hopedashian (the father of future fully framing each new trial TV personalities Kim, Khloe (Timothy McVeigh, Scott Peand Kourtney) as O.J. lawyer tersen, Casey Anthony, Oscar and hanger-on. And so many Pistorius) as the Trial of the more, including O.J., of course: Century. somber, stone-faced, always Yet none has been. As tawleading-manhandsome. dry, tragic melodrama, nothThe jury was unseen, out ing has come close to O.J. TV, of camera range, but it, like the first and only of its kind. "It was a freak event in telethe rest of Simpsonalia, was scrutini zed, analyzed and ar- vision," says Van Susteren. gued about. And not just by Other news stories have the scores of on-air commen- seized society and rattled the tators. The Simpson case was culture. News will never lose Topic A among the watching its capacity to startle, grip and hordes, and television wel- horrify its audience en masse.
hooked with jury selection TV perfectly poised to give that fall, through the trial's it the full treatment, serving start in January 1995, then as its primary dispatcher and through months of proceed- comed their opinions. Thus enabler. Endowed with cam- ings, carried gavel-to-gavel was O.J. TV a forerunner of today's interactive media. eras in the courtroom, this by numerous networks and was the first big TV trial. It recapped daily on numerous Geraldo Rivera's nightly was lurid, star-driven and ra- shows. CNBC tal k s h ow, a l l-concially charged, with elements It swamped the airwaves, sumed with the Simpson case, of glitz, sex and domestic vio- from network evening news- invited viewer call-ins. E! solence all wrapped in mystery casts (where the Simpson licited viewers' faxes, one of and supercharged with who- case was the most heavily which, shown on camera, adwill-win suspense. covered story of 1995) to mag- vised prosecutor Marcia Clark And it had th e perfect azine shows, talk shows and to "take a pill and chill, or O.J. headliner. CNN, whose ratings increased will walk." "Here was a man who had eight-fold. Then on Oct. 3, 1995, the juthe Trial of the Century, with
u orti ou ave earin oss
But such seismic TV stories as 9/11 and Katrina didn't unfold in a courtroom.
With a bland, cramped LA courtroom its main stage, O.J. TV boasted characters, theat-
rics and novelty ensuring its reign as the Trial for the Ages. To expect it to be equaled by a future trial is to imagine that,
someday, four young Liverpool lads could spark another round of Beatlemania.
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
sonal computer. understand. —Audiologist in Pennsylvania rector of the Hearing Loss AssoBy joining HLAA, "Mortified" ciation of America, may I suggest can receive Hearing Loss Magazine Dear Abby:My 91-year-old moththat "Mortified at the Dinner Table" and get the latest information about er is hard ofhearing. I take her out to (March 2), who wrote about her in- hearing loss and how to live well dinner once a week. laws' poor hearing even with hear- withit. I don't worry about what people Dear Abby: As the executive di-
ing aids, connect with one of our
— Anna Gilmore Hall
200-plus local HLAA
Dear Ms. H all: matter what she wants to talk about. Thank you for your I'm just glad she's able to get out and
c hapters a t
www .
hearingloss.org? These member-led groups offer emotion
DEP,R
ABBY
al support, camara-
around us are thinking. It doesn't
letter and the infor-
converse with others. The conver-
mation you generously provtded. Any reader with hearing loss should check out
sations at tables near us are sometimes so obnoxious that I'm GLAD my mother can't hear them.
derie, communication strategies and techniques for living the HLAA website for a more dewith hearing loss, both for people tailed description of the services it who have hearing loss as well as provides. Read on: their families and friends. Most Dear Abby:As a practicing audiolchapters also share information ogist, I recommend the following to about assistive listening devices my patients to help make communithat link via a telecoil found in most cation easier. modern hearing aids that could (1) Test hearing annually so heargreatly enhance her in-laws' hear- ing aids can be reprogrammed to ing around the dinner table. current hearinglevels if necessary. "Mortified" might also want to (2) Follow up with the audiologist accompany her in-laws to a hear- for regular hearing aidmaintenance ing aid evaluation visit at an audi- andcare. ologist's office to learn more about (3) In restaurants, ask to be seattheir particular hearing difficulties. ed away from high noise level areas; There is more to correcting hearing preferential seating may help. loss thanbuyinghearingaids. Some (4) Reserve confidential discususersbenefit from assistive listening sions for another time and locadevices or from listening training tion, which would make them easthat can be done at home with aper- ier for people with hearing loss to
People are normally very courteous about helping me with her, and many have told me they wished their parents were still alive and able to have dinner with them.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUES-
one's resistance.You could become cold and distant later in the day, as you get further away from the positive vibes of the morning. Eventually, this coldness could rub off on others. Think before copping an attitude. Tonight: All smiles.
— Judy in Arizona
Dear Abby:Your advice to "Mortified" was certainly not taking into account the other diners' feelings that this writer was so admirably
describing! Everyone around that tablepaid for — and deserves — to
have a pleasant dining experience too. This includes not being subjected to others' cellphone conver-
sations, unruly children or excessively loud conversations regardless of their content. — Marianne in Washington — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BELLE(PG)12:15, 3:05, 6:20, 9:10 • BLENDED(PG-13) 1:40, 4:40, 7:30, 10:15 • CHEF(R)I2:25,3:15,6:30,9:20 • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13)Noon,3,6,9 • EDGE OF TOMORROWIMAX3-D (PG-13) 1,4,7, 10 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:55, 2:45, 3:55, 6:05, 6:50, 9:05, 9:45 • GODZILLA(PG-13) 1:45, 4:45, 7:55 • MALEFICENT (PG) 12:05, 1:15,4:15, 5:05, 7:15, 9:40, IO:15 • MALEFICENT3-0 (PG)2:35, 7:45 • MILLIONDOLLAR ARM (PG)12:30,3:25,6:45,9:50 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 1:20, 4:20, 7:20, 10: IO • NEIGHBORS (R) 1:30, 4:30, 7:40, 10:05 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)12:45,3:30,6:25,9:25 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-13)11:50a.m., 2:50, 6:I5, 9:15 • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTUREPAST3-D (PG-13)12:40, 3:40, 6:35, 9:35 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
8p.m. on 58, "America's Got Talent" —It's another "Audition" episode as judges Howie Mandel, Heidi Klum, Mel B and Howard Stern survey another group of varied talents hoping to make their way to the stage of New York's Radio City Music Hall. 8 p.m. on 6, "NCIS" —The results of a drone attack give
Gibbs (MarkHarmon)and his
team the evidence they need to go after a terrorist in "Double Back." Most of the agents are up to the task, but McGee (Sean Murray) remains clearly rattled by the attack itself. Wendy Makkena ("Sister Act") guest stars. Michael Weatherly, Pauley Perrette, David McCallum, Brian Dietzen, Rocky Carroll and Emily Wickersham also star. 8 p.m. on FAM, "Pretty Little Liars" —The Season 5 opener finds the Liars dealing with the aftermath of Alison's (Sasha Pieterse) revelations and Ezra's
(lan Harding) shooting andcom-
ing to the realization that "A" is closer than ever. As Aria (Lucy Hale) stands watch over Ezra at the hospital, the Liars set a trap to flush out"A" that snares an unlikely party in "EscApe From New York." 9 p.m. on USA, "Royal Pains" — The sixth season opens with "Smoke and Mirrors," which finds Hank (Mark Feuerstein) returning to the Hamptons after traveling the world for nine months to find HankMed has moved on without him. Not comfortable in the new arrangement, he must find a way to fit in. 10:01 p.m. on 58, "The Night Shift" —If the basic theme of the new episode"Hog Wild" seems amusing at first, hog-hunting turns out to be anything but funny for the participants who end up needing medical help.One losesa hand to one of the intended targets, while another suffers an arrow through the chest. At the hospital, a young patient vexes Topher
(Ken Leung),andDrew(Brendan Fehr) tries to keep Jordan (Jill Flint) from finding out about an injury he's sustained. 10:01 p.m. on 6, "Person of Interest" —Carter's murder continues to leave the team stunned in "The Devil's Share."
Though wounded,Reese(Jim Caviezel) is determined to find Officer Patrick Simmons (guest star Robert John Burke), while Shaw (Sarah Shahi) initiates her own pursuit. © Zap2it
mplements 1fee,s '3nksri e ~a 70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com
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YOURHOROSCOPE
DAY, JUNE10, 2014:Thisyear you enter a period where you are more upbeat and more extroverted. Others enjoy your companyand often seekyou out.Ifyou are single, your personality and charisma draw manypeople toward you.You could find that you have quite a choice of potential sweeties. If you are attached, the two
of you enjoyeach
Stars showthe kind other's company ""'yy'"""'" . ** * * * D ynamic morethanever. ++++ pos~tlve * ** "" " ' * Difficult
Plan onspending
more time together
to enhanceyour bond. SCORPIO tests your limits, butyou can handle
it.
ARIES (Msrch21-April19) ** * * Work with a partner as a team. Though at times you might feel bogged down, the benefits of this teamwork will allow you to indulge in unpredictability. In this case, it even could add to your strengths. Don't let someone's comments get to you. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * You might believe that you don't have any other choice, as you defer
tosomeoneelse'sideas.Youcouldbe right, but your ideas and feedback count more than you realize. Make sure to return all your calls today. Good news will be heading your way. Tonight: As you like it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You'll have your hands full with what you must getdone.Youseem to be all smiles when facing a critical associate or a difficult challenge. Your confidence will carry you through a rough spot. Be
By Jacqueline Bigar
willing to share more of yourself. Tonight: Know when to call it a night.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * * Your optimism will carry you far and help you accept what might be nothingmore thangood luck.You know not to question a situation. You are likely to find that a loved one can be incredibly challenging. This, too, shall pass. Don't worry. Tonight: Go with the flow.
** * Much goes on behind the scenes that you might choose not to share with anyone. You could become a little withdrawn despite a friend's effort to draw you outand encourage you to viewa situation in a new light. A loved one might be critical. Tonight: Not to be found.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
** * You might want to anchor in and have a long-overdue conversation. You could be more tired than you realize. A friendship will play a significant role in your plans. Your sixth sense will help you with a domestic matter. Tonight: Stay centered.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * Your words have a lot of power. Keepconversations mo ving.Peopleyou deal with daily seem to be communicating awkwardly right now. You could feel out of sorts until you hook up with friends. A meeting will prove to be important. Tonight: Catch up on emails.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * Someone you look up to could be seeing you in a far more positive light than how you see yourself. A conversation with this person will give you a better perspective. Detach from the more difficult aspects of your life. Take another look in a day or so. Tonight: Keep your budget.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * *
Your smile will melt away some-
** * * * Z ero in on priorities in a meeting.You haveatendency to become too vested in the outcome of a situation. Recognize that you can't control others, and they might resent you for trying. You can control only yourself. Tonight: Respond to
a loved one'srequest. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fsb.18) ** * * You might be wondering what would be best to do with a difficult work-related situation. You need to recognize your limits when dealing with others. Know whento letevents happen.You
could besurprised bysomeone's reaction. Tonight: Work late.
PISCES (Fed.19-March20) ** * * Reach out to someone at a distance. News thatyou have mixed feelings aboutcould headyourway.Remain upbeat in how you deal with the people involved, and hold back your initial reaction. Tonight: Get tickets to a concert, or listen to some great music. © King Features Syndicate
• ONLY LOVERS LEFTALIVE (R) 8 • THEUNKNOWN KNOWN (PG-13)5:30 ON SALE Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(PG-13) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • MALEFICENT(PG) 4:30, 6:45, 9 • AMILLION WAYS TO DIEIN THEW EST (R)4:30,7,9:30 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-I3)4,6:45,9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BELLE(PG) 6:15 • CHEF (R)6:30 • MALEFICENT(PG) 6 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST (R) 6:30
E310 6512001
We er Genesis Si co
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TV.APPLIANCE
Plass Well, Retire Well
Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13)4:45,7:20 • THE FAULTIN OURSTARS (PG-I3) 4:10, 7 • MALEFICENT (PG) 4:50, 7:10 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 4:15, 6:50 • X-MEN:DAYS OF FUTURE PAST (PG-l3)3:50,6:40 Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014
• EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13)6:30 • X-MEN: DAYS OFFUTUREPAST(Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbuiletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
. Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
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. .Classified telephone hours:
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24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
T he
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
B u g I e t I n:
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Pets & Supplies
Antiques & Collectibles
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Misc. Items
Heating & Stoves
Lost & Found
Horses 8 Equipmen
Employment Opportunities
I
541-389-1578
German Wirehaired Pointer Puppies 10 The Bulletin reserves weeks old. American the right to publish all Kennel Club Litter ads from The Bulletin Certificate SR821323. newspaper onto The One male $500, and 3 Bulletin Internet webfemales $600 each. site. Contact Gerri
The Bulletin
541-413-0959.
SereinttCentral Dreitnnsince SIB
Elizabeth,541-633-7006
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, REMEMBER:If you 1991, advertising for have lost an animal, used woodstoves has don't forget to check On a classified ad been limited to modThe Humane Society go to els which have been Bend www.bendbulletin.com certified by the Or541-382-3537 to view additional egon Department of Redmond photos of the item. Environmental Qual541-923-0882 ity (DEQ) and the fed2Lf Madras eral E n v ironmental 541-475-6889 Tools Protection A g e ncy Prineville (EPA) as having met 541-447-7178 Muro screw gun, coil smoke emission stanor Craft Cats type, w it h 1 2 , 000 dards. A cer t ified 541-389-8420. screws, $650. w oodstove may b e 54'I -480-1353 286 identified by its certifiPower Washer (com- cation label, which is Sales Northeast Bend mercial) new in crate, permanently attached Honda 13 hp - 4000 to the stove. The Bul** FREE ** psi, 4 gpm. Retails letin will not know$1849, Sell $ 1 349. ingly accept advertis- Garage Sale Kit ing for the sale of Steve 541-771-7007. Place an ad in The uncertified Bulletin for your gawoodstoves. rage sale and re267 ceive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! Fuel & Wood
MorePixatBendbjlletin,com
DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12
BANKING
~SELCO
REDUCED! Community 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, SELCO Credit Union 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good is lookingfor a cond. Logan Coach Inc. Business Loan Officer $4500 obo. 305-794-0190 in the Bend area to oversee thedevelopment and maintenance of SELCO's Get your Business Loan portfolio business by promoting and working closely with other BusinessLoan Officers, e ROW I N G supportstaffand management. with an ad in Qualified applicants must The Bulletin's have strong analytical "Call A Service skills, firm understanding of business financial Professional" analysis, a Bachelor's Directory degree in Business or a related field or equivaGood selection of AQHA lent experience, a miniHorses, yearling to 5-yr mum of two years of exolds, well bred, exlnt con- erience in commercial formation. 541-548-3086 ending o r ano t her closely related a r ea 358 within a financial instituFarmers Column tion, five years of experience in credit analysis Swalley Irrigation Water, and loan underwriting, 5t/2acres. Going price and must be bondable. is $2000/acre; QUICK SALE PRICE, To learn more about the $800/acre. 541-383-0702 position and apply, visit www.selee.er ~
Lab Pups AKC, black & 215 208 yellow, Master Hunter oi' sired, performance pedi- • C oins & Stamps Pets & Supplies ~n e eks 2 N ree, OFA cert hips & elAd must ows, 541-771-2330 Private collector buying include price of The Bulletin recom- www.kinnamanretrievers.com postagestamp albums & le se ei $50D mends extra caution Min PinAKC fem. pups. collections, world-wide n~ or less, or multiple when purc h as- potty training, shots, and U.S. 573-286-4343 items whosetotal ing products or serhealthy/adorable $600 (local, cell phone). does not exceed vices from out of the ea. 602-284-4110, $500. 241 area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in- POODLE,toys & minis, Bicycles & Call Classifieds at formation may be also rescued older pup 541-385-5809 Accessories subjected to fraud. to adopt. 541-475-3889 www.bendbulletin.com KIT INCLUDES: For more informaQueensland Heelers Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) • 4 Garage Sale Signs tion about an adverTotal Shop Sheet WHEN BUYING Standard & Mini, $150 54cm and 58cm, car- Ruger Mini-14, 3x9 Ni• $2.00 Off Coupon To tiser, you may call Equipment FIREWOOD... bon fiber, Shimano kon, 6 mags, 500+ rds & 4'Metal 8 up. 541-280-1537 Use Toward Your the O r egon State air shear; 8'x16ga www.rightwayranch.wor 105, SP D p e dals, Next Ad case, $1000 obo. Ruger Hand Brake; Pinspotter; To avoid fraud, Attorney General's $400 each. Miyata • 10 Tips For "Garage dpress.com P345, 5 mags, 500+ rds, Office C o n sumer Pittsburgh 20ga w/Acme The Bulletin Sale Success!" Triathalon bike, $750 obo. 541-516-8695 recommends payProtection hotline at SHIH-TZU Mix PUPS kids Rolls', Manual Cleat$125. 541-410-7034 1-877-877-9392. bender 24nx20ga; Spot ment for Firewood Avail 6-15-14 Male Welder w/24" arms; Blip only upon delivery Top Pin Archery PICK UP YOUR $350 Female $500 242 e dia; The Bulletin roll (manual) 3'x2 and inspection. Pro Shop GARAGE SALE KIT at 541-589-1124 tareinct Central Oregonsince tatta Box & Pan Brake 48" x16 Exercise Equipment • A cord is 128 cu. ft. WeNow Have 1777 SW Chandler blossomhut©gmail.com 4' x 4' x 8' ga; Easy Edger (Bench Bowlech! Ave., Bend, OR 97702 A dog sitter in NE Bend. Siamese kittens, raised type)... will sell complete • Receipts should Archery Lessons for Nautilus NS 200 Loving home w/no cages, in home. Gorgeous! or by the piece. include name, The Bulletin all ages. like new! Pulley sm. dogs only. $25 day. Only $25. 541-977-7019 Call 541-771-1958 Sererng CentralOreannsince fani phone, price and 1611 South 1st St., Linda, 541-576-4574 system with extra kind of wood Redmond, weights,$600! purchased. Adopt a rescue cat or Three 7 mo. old pups, 541-316-1784 Call a Pro Will deliver! • Firewood ads kitten! Altered, vacci- lots of snow white 541-388-2809 Whether you need a hi g hlights, MUST include nated, ID chip, tested, w/black Wanted: Collector seeks fence fixed, hedges more! CRAFT, 65480 great family dogs, species & cost per 476 high quality fishing items 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM parents on site. $150 cord to better serve trimmed or a house & upscale bamboo fly BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Employment Sat/Sun. 389 8420, ea. 541-447-1323 our customers. built, you'll find Search the area's most rods. Call 541-678-5753, www.craftcats.org. Opportunities Yorkie-mix puppies, or 503-351-2746 listing of professional help in Aussie, Mini AKC, blue really cute! 2 © $225. comprehensive classified advertising... 255 The Bulletin's "Call a reerI, black tri, m/f par541-977-0035 CAUTION: real estate to automotive, e nts o n si t e . C a l l Computers Service Professional" Aff year Dependable merchandise to sporting Ads published in Yorkie pups AKC, 2 tiny 308 541-788-7799 /598-5314 "Employment OpDirectory baby doll girls, potty train- goods. Bulletin Classifieds Firewood: Seasoned; Farm Equipment Border Collie pups, ing, shots, health guar., appear every day in the T HE B U LLETIN r e porfunff/es" include Lodgepole, split, del, 541-385-5809 quires computer ad& Machinery employee and inde$300 to best offer. print or on line. $1100. 541-777-7743 B end, 1 f o r $ 1 95 vertisers with multiple memphis@cbbmail.com pendent positions. Call 541-385-5809 or 2 for $365. Call for Wildland Fi r efighting schedules or those Fuel tank, 300-gal die- Ads for p o sitions 210 www.bendbulletin.com ad multi-cord discounts! Boxers AKC & Valley equip., new & used, selling multiple syssel w/stand, filter, hose, that require a fee or Bulldogs CKC puppies. Furniture & Appliances tems/ software, to dis- hose, nozzles, wyes, 541-420-3484. $750. 541-480-1353 upfront investment The Bulletin $700-800. 541-325-3376 ServingCsnnal Oregonsince faas close the name of the reducers, bladder bags. 269 must be stated. With 316 Steve 541-771-7007. business or the term A1 Washers8 Dryers any independentjob Gardening Supplies Irrigation Equipment "dealer" in their ads. Pilates XP297 w/riser, $150 ea. Full waropportunity, please 265 & Equipment ranty. Free Del. Also Malibu chair, fluidity bar, Private party advertisi nvestigate tho r Building Materials ers are defined as Swalley Irrigation Water, oughly. Use extra wanted, used W/D's like new, 541-408-0846 5t/2acres. Going price 541-280-7355 those who sell one caution when apFor newspaper 245 2 Vinyl windows, trapcomputer. is $2000/acre; plying for jobs ondelivery, call the ezoid, 7'x6'6", 30' , QUICK SALE PRICE, CAVALIER King Charles G ENERATE line and never proSOM E • G olf Equipment Circulation Dept. at 260 b oth for $300 . $800/acre. 541-383-0702 vide personal inforSpaniels AKC, all shots, EXCITEMENT in your 541-385-5800 541-480-1353 Champion lines, Misc. Items CHECK YOURAD mation to any source 325 neighborhood! Plan a To place an ad, call GORGEOUS!! Newyou may not have Bend Habitat 541-385-5809 borns (taking deposits)- garage sale and don't Hay, Grain & Feed Buyfng Diamonds researched and forget to advertise in RESTORE or email 7 mo, all coiors. $1800. iGofd for Cash classifiedObendbulletin.com deemed to be repuBuilding Supply Resale classified! 541-848-7605 1st Qualilty mixed grass Saxon's Fine Jewelers Use extreme 541-385-5809. Quality at LOW rain, barn stored, table. 541-389-6655 The Bulletin hay, no$250/ton. Chihuahua beautiful c aution when r e PRICES teretnttCentral Circktnnstncnftk0 s ponding to A N Y puppies, 541-280-6262 / on the first day it runs 740 NE 1st Call 541-549-3831 BUYING 541-233-8110; $150 & up Twin E rgo-motion employment 541-312-6709 to make sure it is cor- Lionel/American Flyer Patterson Ranch, Sisters online n 270 ad from out-of-state. 500 automatic bed rect. Spellcheck" and Open to the public. Chihuahua purebred, trains, accessories. with memory foam ALFALFA HAY We suggest you call Lost & Found human errors do oc54'I -408-2191. healthy playful puppies, the State of Oregon mattress, like new, Excellent quality, Where can you find a cur. If this happens to $100 ea. 541-382-6905 only used for a short 3x4 bales, $165/bale Consumer Hotline BUYING & SE L LING Found black cat with your ad, please conhelping hand? 541-548-3086 at 1-503-378-4320 Dachshund AKC mini pups t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . collar, near Tumalo tact us ASAP so that All gold jewelry, silver www.bendweenies.com 541-383-7603 For Equal Opportuand gold coins, bars, From contractors to Road and 85th St., corrections and any All colors• 541-508-4558 nity Laws contact rounds, wedding sets, yard care, it's all here 541-389-8782 adjustments can be Looking for your class rings, sterling silOregon Bureau of made to your ad. next employee? in The Bulletin's Washer 8 Dryer, WhirlFound engraved wedLabor & I n dustry, USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI ver, coin collect, vin541-385-5809 Place a Bulletin pool, excellent cond. ding ring at City Park "Call A Service tage watches, dental Civil Rights Division, help wanted ad $125/ea. 541-510-6624 The Bulletin Classified gold. Bill Door-to-door selling with Fl e ming, Professional" Directory in John Day, OR. ID 971-673- 0764. today and to claim, 541-382-9419. fast results! It's the easiest Just bought a new boat? 246 reach over The Bulletin Sell your old one in the Sisters Habitat ReStore 541-233-8961 way in the world to sell. Guns, Hunting 60,000 readers classifieds! Ask about our Building Supply Resale Found keys,for house & 541-385-5809 each week. & Fishing Super Seller rates! Quality items. The Bulletin Classified car? Corner of NE 10th & Your classified ad 541-385-5809 LOW PRICES! Greenwood. Call to iden541-385-5809 16 Mallard Decoys with will also Good classified adstell 150 N. Fir. tify, 541-382-6482 PATIO SET lines & weights in decoy appear on the essential facts in an 541-549-1621 Glass table with 6 Donate deposit bottles/ The Bulletin bag, with 2 camo cloths, FOUND:male brown & bendbuuetin.com interesting Manner. Write Open to the public. cans to local all vol., recommends extra ' $1 f0 all. 206-714-9970 chairs and cushions, white terrier mix, corwhich currently from the readers view -not non-profit rescue, for l caution when purumbrella & stand, ner of Ice and Wimp receives over the seller's. Convert the $200. feral cat spay/neuter. chasing products or • Bend local pays CASH!! Way, 541-548-7137 1.5 million page facts into benefits. Show Cans for Cats trailer services from out of I for all firearms & at Grocery Outlet, 694 ~ the area. Sending ~ ammo. 541-526-0617 Call 951-454-2561 views every the reader howthe item will Found seating pad on (in Redmond) SE 3rd & Bend Petco • cash, c hecks, o r • month at no help them insomeway. Green Lakes Trail 6/1. near Applebee's, do- l credit i n f ormation Call to ID, 360-689-7810 extra cost. This Need to get an nate M-F a t S m ith may be subjected to Bulletin advertising tip Swamp cooler, heavy Found, tame Golden Solid Marble Siqn, 1515 NE 2nd; or l FRAUD. For more ad in ASAP? brought toyouby Classifieds duty, like new, 3ft. x Columns Pheasant in field next CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. information about an g You can place it Get Results! 3 ft., p o rtable o r Bargain-priced to 4211 Condor Drive msg. for pick up large advertiser, you may l The Bulletin stationary. $375. ServingCentral Oregonsince tatn online at: columns that were (near Eagle C rest Call 541-385-5809 amt, 5 4 1-389-8420. e call the O r e gon e or place your ad 541-382-6773 donated to Equine condos). Been feedwww.craftcats.org ' State Atto r ney ' www.bendbuuetin.com Add your web address on-line at Outreach. Perfect for ing for two w eeks. English Springer Spaniel l General's O f fi ce Wanted- paying cash to your ad and reada custom home or bendbuuetin.com (509) 531-0385. 541-385-5809 puppies. AKC, field Consumer Protec- • for Hi-fi audio & stuers on The Bulletin's deck. Still in crates, champion blood lines, tion h o t line at I dio equip. Mclntosh, Lost: Turqouise and sil- People Look for Information web site, www.bend1200 Ibs each. liver & white, avail. 7/1. i 1-877-877-9392. JBL, Marantz, D yver ring, Sunday 6/1 bulletin.com, will be CASH!! $980 each; About Products and at concert at Mt. View able to click through $800/ea. Beaver Creek For Guns, Ammo & naco, Heathkit, San$4900 forall 5. > TheBulletin > Services Every Day through Kennels. 541-523-7951 Reloading Supplies. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-480-6130 H igh. Please c a l l automatically to your Serving Centrsl Oregon since 1903 arrn njamq.cco 541-408-6900. Call 541-261-1808 541-389-1510 The Bulletin Classineds website.
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09 Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Siiver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
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Antiques wanted: tools, furniture, marbles,early B/W photography, beer cans, jewelry.
Want to Buy or Rent
Q r i ag d I er
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SELCO Community Credit Unionisan Equal Opportunity Employer. Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809 Banking
) first communit We are excited to announce an available position for a Financial Services Representative in Bend, Oregon.
Salary Range: $10.00 - $19.00 For more details
please apply online: www.myfirstccu.org EOE
Customer Service Rep at Bird Gard in Sisters. Sales, customer service, computer and phone skills required. Export sales exp. helpful. Competitive wages, excellent benefits. Apply in person at 270 E. Sun Ranch Dr., Sisters.
DRIVERS Class A and Class B CDL Drivers needed. Must be able to work hard, pass IJ/A and background check. No experience necessary.
Call Bill, 541-383-3362
for more info. Garage Sales
Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
E2 TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER'500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
!call for commercial line ad rates)
*ltlfust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
Bsnl &RaRs op©ggg [Pp
860
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880
Motorcycles & Accessories
Watercraft
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
'z7Po o Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by River's Edge, 1800+ sf, Nicholas Del Drago, 2 bdrm, 2t/s bath overnew condition, looking ponds& waterheated handgrips, fall. $350,000. Adjoining auto cruise control. buildable lot available. $32k in bike, By owner, 541-410-061 9 only $20,000or best offer. 541-318-6049 745 740
Condo/Townhomes for Sale
ds published in "Wa Tioga 24' Class C tercraft" include: Kay Motorhome aks, rafts and motor Bought new in 2000, Ized personal currently under 20K watercrafts. Fo miles, excellent "boats" please se shape, new tires, Class 870. Fleetwood Discovery professionaly winter40' 2003, diesel, w/all 41-365-5809 ized every year, cutoptions - 3 slide outs, off switch to battery, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, plus new RV batteretc., 32,000 m iles. ies. Oven, hot water Wintered in h eated heater & air condiPenobscot 17 canoe, Olto- shop. $84,900 O.B.O. tioning have never nar/Royalex laminate, exc 541-447-8664 been used! cond $875. 541-480-1248 $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. 880 Stored in Terrebonne. Motorhomes 541-548-5174
The Bulletin
Homes for Sale
NOTICE
HDFat Bo 1996
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any prefCompletely erence, limitation or Rebuilt/Customized discrimination based 2012/2013 Award on race, color, reliWinner ion, sex, handicap, Showroom Condition Many Extras amilial status or national origin, or intenLow Miles. tion to make any such $15,000 preferences, l i mita541-548-4807 tions or discrimination. We will not knowingly Honda Goldwing 1985 accept any advertis- Interstate Motorcycle. ing for real estate Has about 6 5 ,000 which is in violation of original miles. Runs this law. All persons reat still looks good. are hereby informed 1 500. C a l l J o h n that all dwellings ad- 541-306-7615. vertised are available on an equal opportu- Piaggio/Vespa 3-wheel nity basis. The Bulle- MP3 scooter 2009 with only 400 miles. tin Classified Not a scratch! Like 746 brand new! $5900. 520-360-9300, owner Northwest Bend Homes
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Brand new on market! is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Custom craftsman 3 bd, 2.5 ba, extensive interior to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based oo the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party upgrades, granite slab in gourmet kitchen, hickory Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. flooring. Off Mt. Washington Dr., borders Quail Triumph Daytona 476 476 476 Park, adjacent to Aw2004, 15K m i l es, brey Glen golf commuEmployment Employment Employment perfect bike, needs nity. Fabulous Cascade Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Vin skyline view, private fully nothing. ¹201536. fenced backyard. 2004 MENTAL HEALTH $4995 Tour of Homes!Open READY MIX DreamCar 1-4 Sat. & Sun. 2772 Mental Wellness DRIVERS — WE Auto Sales NW Rainbow Ridge Dr. Centers, Inc. caution when purWILL TRAIN! 1801Division, Bend $575,000. By owner, chasing products or I is in an evaluation stage DreamcarsBend.com 541-848-0040 of opening a compreservices from out of a 541-678-0240 hensive outpatient / l the area. Sending 605 750 Dlr 3665 community-based c ash, checks, o r Roommate Wanted Redmond Homes m ental health/ s u bl credit i n f ormation stance abuse treatment l may be subjected to Seeking roommate, $250/ FRAUD. program in Bend, Or+ t/s power. Have wd- Looking for your next egon. We are seeking For more informa- I mo. emp/oyee? Iq storage shed, tion about an adver- • stove, an Executive Director to $75 chk reqd. Place a Bulletin help oversee the daily opl tiser, you may call Brian,backgrnd 541-633-0613 wanted ad today and you like to the Oregon State erations of the facility. Wouldwith reach over 60,000 a team of l Attorney General's They must hold an ac- work readers each week. high quality profes630 Victory TC 2 0 0 2, Office C o n sumer I tive masters-level Your classified ad sionals? We are acRooms for Rent 40K mi., runs great, cense in the State of Protection hotline at I will also appear on cepting resumes' for s tage 1 kit, n e w O regon such a s a polite professional I 1-877-877-9392. bendbulletin.com tires, rear brakes 8 Furn. room i n q u iet LCSW or LPC, a nd drivers to deliver our which currently rehome no drugs, alcomore. Health forces have clinical supervi- product to p rivate LThe Bulletin ceives over hol, smoking. $450 s ale. $4,50 0 . sion/ executive experi1.5 million page arties and c o n 1st/1st. 541-408-0846 541-771-0665 ence. We prefer some- p views every month struction p rojects. o ne wh o h o ld s a Transportation at no extra cost. have two years 632 certification in addiction Must 865 Chip Truck Drivers Bulletin Classifieds class B CDL truck counseling along with Hiring 3 drivers loApt JMultiplex General Get Results! ATVs driving experience the LCSW/ LPC, but it cal and regional line Call 385-5809 or an acceptable is not mandatory. The with haul - for our growCHECKYOUR AD Aluminum ramps by DMV record. We are place your ad on-line position will be salary, ready to train those ing Madras division. 5-star, 1500-Ib load cap., at DOE. In addition MWC CDL with doubles $100. 541-548-0749 bendbulletin.com have high interoffers a f u l l b e nefit who endorsement and a in learning how A rcticCat AT V 7 0 0 package. Furthermore, est good driving record drive/operate a 773 2008 t w o-rider vethe person hired will re- to req. We hope you ready mix truck prohicle, EFI LE. L ow ceive growth incentives will consider joining Acreages on the first day it runs y o u are hours, high p e rforin addition to their sal- viding the Chambers Maa s uitable/qualified to make sure it is cormance. Nice wheels, ary. If you are interdras team cel5.17 acres. 65694 Old rect. "Spellcheck" and Suc winch, extra equip., ested please email re- candidate. ebrating our 50th Bend/Redmond Hwy, cessful candidates human errors do oc$5000. Moving causes sume to Year in 2014! mtn view, power, wacur. If this happens to maintain a qualsale. 541-447-3342. e ettin ill@mwcid.com will Call 541-546-6489 or ter, septic approved. ity, professional seryour ad, please conax to 08-528-2945 or 541-419-1125. $174,000 O.B.O. Call 870 tact us ASAP so that vice oriented attifor questions call Brad 5 41-419-1725, Boats & Accessories corrections and any 208-542-1026 and ask to tude while working in or Deb 541-480-3956. adjustments can be a fast, safe, efficient Transportation speak with Eric. debraObendbroadteam manner. Ben- Part time CDL driver made to your ad. band.com 541-385-5809 efits include medical, needed, 1-2 days a Have an item to dental, 401k, paid week. Local haul, Flat- The Bulletin Classified 775 sell quick? vacation/holidays. bed experience helpful, Manufacturedi EOE/AAP. Please 634 no tarping. If it's under fax r e s um e to 541-546-6489 or Mobile Homes Apt./Multiplex NE Bend '500you can place it in 12' Aluminum boat 541-749-2024 or 541-419-1125. email to: 2 006 S u pe r G o o d with trailer, 3hp motor, The Bulletin Call for Specials! good cond, $1200.. hrmanagerO TRUCK DRIVER Cents 1 296 sq. ft. Limited numbers avail. Classifieds for: 503-307-8570 WANTED hookercreek.net. m fd. home, 2 f u l l 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Must have doubles baths, 3 bdrms, walk W/D hookups, patios '10 - 3 lines, 7 days endorsement. in closets, all applior decks. Local run. ances, incl u ding '16 -3 lines, 14 days MOVNTAIN GLEN, Truck is parked in i freezer. Very clean, 541-383-931 3 12' aluminum fish(Private Party ads only) Madras. 541-475-4221 must be moved Professionally ing boat, t r ailer, $36,000 541-382-6650 managed by Norris & motor, fish finder, PRODUCTION Looking for your next Stevens, Inc. accessories, $1200. FACTORY SPECIAL employee? Leading manufacLarry's RV in New Home, 3 bdrm, 541-389-7234 turer of Fishing and Place a Bulletin help 648 Redmond is hiring for $46,500 finished Hunting waders is wanted ad today and the full time energetic on your site. Houses for seekinga reach over 60,000 J andM Homes Sales Person. 15' tri-hull fiberglas Rent General readers each week. Production 541-548-5511 fishing boat, 1971 Your classified ad Superyisor Must have experience. walk-thru, fish finder, PUBLISHER'S will also appear on for immediate hire. Salary is commission full top cover, 45 hp NOTICE bendbulletin.com MUST have signifiEvinrude, tr a i ler, based. All real estate adverwhich currently :s. cant experience in spare tire, access., Benefits included. tising in this newspareceives over 1.5 Production and have good cond. $1200 Email resume to: per is subject to the million page views supervisory s k i lls. obo. 541-408-3811 F air H o using A c t resumeOlarfysfv.com every month at Hourly rate with benwhich makes it illegal no extra cost. efits. to a d vertise "any Mail resumeto: Bulletin Classifieds preference, limitation SMI-Production Get Results! SALES MANAGER or disc r imination PO Box 1410 Leading manufacCall 385-5809 based on race, color, La Pine, OR 97739 or place turer of Fishing and 850 religion, sex, handiHunting waders is your ad on-line at cap, familial status, Snowmobiles seeking a bendbulletin.com 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, marital status or naSales Manager Tick, Tock tional origin, or an in- Arctic Cat 580 1994, inboard motor, great for immediate hire. cond, well maintained, tention to make any EXT, in good MUST have signifiTick, Tock... $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 such pre f erence, condition, $1000. cant experience in Rmijjcej limitation or discrimi- Located in La Pine. ...don't let time get Sporting Goods, sales ® l3zdlzcm Say "goodbuy" nation." Familial staCall 541-408-6149. & management fields. away. Hire a tus includes children Location open, but to that unused professional out 860 must be able to travel under the age of 18 item by placing it in when needed. Salary living with parents or Motorcycles & Accessories of The Bulletin's with benefit package. legal cus t odians, The Bulletin Classifieds "Call A Service Mail resume to: pregnant women, and SMI - PO Box 1410 Professional" people securing cusLa Pine, OR 97739 tody of children under 541-385-580 9 Directory today! 528 18. This newspaper Loans & Mortgages will not knowingly acAds published in the cept any advertising "Boats" classification General WARNING for real estate which is The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturinclude: Speed, fishThe Bulletin recomFXSTD Harley in violation of the law. day night shift and other shifts as needed. We ing, drift, canoe, mends you use cauDavidson 2001, twin O ur r e aders a r e currently have openings all nights of the week. house and sail boats. tion when you procam 88, fuel injected, hereby informed that Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts For all other types of vide personal Vance & Hines short all dwellings adverstart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and watercraft, please go information to compa- tised in this newspa- shot exhaust, Stage I end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoto Class 875. with Vance & Hines nies offering loans or per are available on sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. 541-365-5809 fuel management credit, especially an equal opportunity system, custom parts, Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a those asking for adbasis. To complain of minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts extra seat. serv>n renfral ore on since 1903 vance loan fees or d iscrimination ca l l are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of $10,500OBO. companies from out of HUD t o l l-free at loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackCall Today state. If you have 1-800-677-0246. The ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup 541-516-8684 concerns or questoll f ree t e lephone and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, tions, we suggest you number for the hearconsult your attorney ing i m p aired is short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid or call CONSUMER 1-800-927-9275. vacation and sick time. Drug test is required HOTLINE, prior to employment. Chaparral 2130SS 1-877-877-9392. One bdrm home in CulClean, well m ainPlease submit a completed application atten- BANK TURNED YOU ver, all appl. $500 mo. tained 21 ' f a mily No smokers/pets. More tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available DOWN? Private party info 541-546 2221 or Harley Davidson 2005 ski/wakeboard at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanwill loan on real esopen-bow runabout FLHRCI Road King 541- 948-1890 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be tate equity. Credit, no Classic,less than 5,000 with new Barewest obtained upon request by contacting Kevin one-owner miles. Lots of tower/Bimini. Great problem, good equity Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Take care of is all you need. Call extra chrome, just like sound system, new No phone calls please. Only completed appliOregon Land Mortnew, never laid down, dual battery system. your investments cations will be considered for this position. No garage stored. Paid over Stored under cover, gage 541-388-4200. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is rewith the help from $20K; disability forces fresh water use only, quired prior to employment. EOE. LOCAL MONEyrWe buy sale for$1 1,500. 2 nd o wner. J u s t The Bulletin's secured trust deeds & 541-546-8810 or b ought a lar g e r "Call A Service The Bulletin cell, 206-790-7352 note,some hard money Chaparral! $16,000. servinscentral oregon since 19IB loans. Call Pat Kellev before 7pm. 541-419-9510 541-382-3099 ext.13. Professional" Directory Seriousinquiries only.
r.=.-"-,.— ..a . 0 0 I
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I
FLEETWOOD PACE ARROW, 1999
2007 Wtnnebago
Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268
Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineville.
p ~
~ ii
Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smokert 3 shdes, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4" ceiling. Clean!$74,500. 541-233-6520
Allegro 28' Class A 2008 Ford V10 gas, 50K miles, 2 slides, satellite, 2 TVs, Onan gen, rear & side cameras, hydraulic levelers, 300w solar panel with inverter. Original owner. $55,500. 541-420-4303
I
J
•
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $23,995. 541-383-3503
Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax d i e sel, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach Sales & Service, Bend 541-914-8438 DLR ¹3447
•
®
Updated interior, 36', 2 shdes, 42,600 miles, V10 gas, 5000 watt generator, hydraulic levelers, auto steps, back-up camera, washer/dryer, central vac, ice m aker, l o aded, excellent condition. Find exactly what $27,500 541-620-2135 you are looking for in the (SeeCraigslist ¹4470374489) CLASSIFIEDS
C
l l
I
TOW EQUIPMENT Brake Buddy, $500; Guardian rock shield, $200; Roadmaster 5000 tow bar, $450; OR $900for ALL. Call 541-548-1422
Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
Winnebago Adventurer 2005 35t/a', gas,
less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with a l l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-8711or email a i kistu@bendcable.com
a• KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
$25,000.
541-548-0318
(photo above ls of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)
Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP
Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here( For more information go to mne ~ alle ~ robus.com or email trainwater157© mail.com or cal 858-527-8627
Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L i k e ne w , $74,9OO 541-480-6900
Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004
For Sale with living r oom slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV. $3tr000 Call Dick at 541-408-2387 881
Travel Trailers
Fleetwood Wilderness NW
Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425
Forest River Salem T222006, Queen bed, solar panel, sway bar, bath with shower, awning,$8,900. 541-617-5775
00
The Bulletin
i l'l l l y our next e m p l oye e is eeading Yhe Bulletin The Bulletin delivers your "HELPWANTED"ad to 70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising.
Get 7 consecutive days F OR O N L Y S 2 1 . 4 3 A D A Y ! ~ And get $33 in ad upgrades for FREE! BASED ONA 2" AD SPACE
Classifjeds 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9 The Bulletin offers both print adanddaily online accessfor our emPIOymentneedShere at COCC. ThiSreaCheSa large audience at agreat price. Data provesemployment seekers look to TheBulletin for available opportunities. In 2013 recruitment stats showed 51% of the online applications had identified The Bulletin as their source of advertisement notification." Chrjsta Gunnell, Human ResourcesCentral OregonCommunity College t
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, JUN 10, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Tuesday ,June10,2014
LOIJie'S 1OSing Win
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"It's hopeless," Unlucky L o uie groaned. "I find two missing honors located where I can win finesses, and I still go down." At 6NT, Louie won the first spade in dummy and led the queen of clubs. East played low. Louie continued with a club to his jack, but when he took the ace, West discarded. "You can't h av e e v erything," Louie sighed. East won the fourth club and exited with a spade. Louie had four clubs, three spades, two diamonds and two hearts, but since he lacked the entries to get to dummy to finesse with his jack of hearts and get back for the ace, he went down.
and he bids two clubs. What do you
say?
ANSWER: Slam is possible even if your partner has minimum highcard values. His hand could be K 6 5, 2, A Q 9 6 2, A I 1 0 6. Bid three diamonds if i n y our parmership a jump-preference in opener'sminor suit is forcing. If that bid would be invitational, bid two spades — the "fourth suit" — and show y o ur diamond fit next. South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH 45 A104 III
DAILY QUESTION You hold: 4i A 10 4 9
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WRONG ORDER Louie tried his f i nesses in the wrong order. He should lead a heart to his jack at T rick T wo. I f t h at f inesse lost, Louie could wi n t h e spade return, take the king of hearts, go to the king of diamonds, pitch a diamond on the ace of hearts and lead the queen of clubs, succeeding if East held K-x or K-x-x. When the heart finesse wins, Louie leadsthe ace and a low club to assure 12 tricks.
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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
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By Jerry Edelstein (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
68
06/10/14
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, JUNE 10 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 881
881
882
908
932
933
935
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Keystone Cougar 31' readers each week. Your classified ad 2 004 2 sl i des, 2 will also appear on bdrms, sleeps 7 with bendbulletin.com r ear bunks, tub & which currently reshower combo, elect. ceives over 1.5 miltongue jack, s o lar lion page views evpkg. all the bells & ery month at no whistles, and lots of extra cost. Bulletin storage, immaculate Classifieds Get Rec ond., always g a raged. Great for fam- sults! Call 365-5809 or place your ad ily v a c ations or on-line at part-time home. bendbulletin.com $16,400 obo 541-480-9876
KeystoneLaredo 31' 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E as y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 Rl/
541-447-4805
Komfort Ridgecrest 23', 2006, queen bed, sleeps 6, micro & AC, full awning, living room slider, yule tables, outside shower, 4 closets, fiberglass frame, as new, $11,500. La Pine call 541-914-3360
Lance 2013 Model 2385 24' w/large slide, 4-Season, fully loaded & used only 4 times. Has extra Trident surface protection coat, stinger w/sway bars, electric tongue jack, 6-volt batteries, queen walk-around bed, large front kitchen w/pantry, complete entertainment system w/exterior spkrs, power awning. Like new, $29,995. 541-480-4148
Like NEW! Trail-Lite 2011 Crossover 21-ft. A/C, awning, AM/I-M CD, custom queen bed, custom drawer pullouts. Dry axle wgt 2,566; dry unloaded wgt 2,847. EquaFlex suspension, exterior shower, indoor tub/ shower combo, stabilizer jacks, 2 batteries, plus MORE!$12,995. Call 541-280-9516 for info, or to see - in Bend.
2013 R-Vision 23RBS Trail-LiteSportby Monaco• Expedition pkg• Sport Value pkg• Conyenience pkg• Elec. awning • Spare tire• LED TV/ent. system ~ Outside shower • Elec tongue jack• Black flush sys • Beautiful interior• Huge galley• Great storaqe• t/s -Ton towable • Alloys• Queen bed Likenew, asking $22,900 Gordon, 541482-5797
Orbit21' 2007, used only 6 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $13,900 OBO. 541 -382-9441
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Ford F-350 4x4,
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Automobiles
Chevrolet Impala SS 2008
Porsche 911 Turbo
Recreation by Design Ford Bronco ll 2013 Monte Carlo, 1976 Cessna 150M Plymouth B a r racuda 2006 XLT 4-door 4x4, 198936-ft. Top living room, 2 Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 1966, original car! 300 Crew Cab 5i3L V6, auto., 52k Automatic, power bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 hrs since out of frame hp, 360 V8, centermiles, 24 MPG Hwy major, Horton Stol Kit. steering, stereo A/Cs, entertainment lines, 541-593-2597 6.0L Turbo diesel, full vin¹123364 center, fireplace, W/D, Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS power, a u t omatic, upgrade, set-up to $13,977 WHEN ONLY THE garden tub/shower, in & additional radio (4 fre6-disc CD, cruise, fog tow, runs good. BEST WILL DO! great condition. $36,000 quencies can be monilights, running boards, $1700. ROBBERSON i tored at once). Tranobo. Call Peter, tow pkg, bedliner, grill 541-633-6662 LI NcoLN ~ rsesee sponder w/mode C, JPI 307-221-2422, guard, folding rear Fuel Flow Monitor, digi( in La Pine ) seat. Tan cloth inte541 -31 2-3986 tal density, temp & amp WILL DELIVER rior, metallic tan exteDLR ¹0205 monitor. Nice paint & upFord Escape XLT rior. 91,400 miles. w/memory foam 2010 TURN THE PAGE holstery Price reduced to seat bottoms. Oil filter & Buick Skylark 1972 The Bulletin $20,500 For More Ads block htr. 1 owner past 17K orig. miles. Please To Subscribe call 882 541-350-6925 14 yrs; always hangared, see hemmings.com for The Bulletin 541-385-5800 or go to Fifth Wheels no damage history. details. $18,900. www.bendbulletin.com N9475U.$26,000. 541-323-1698 Need help fixing stuff? RV 541-480-4375 Call A Service Professional CONSIGNMENTS 933 Moon roof, roof rack, find the help you need. WANTED l eather, pdl, p w . Pickups 3000 sq. ft. Hanwww.bendbulletin.com We Do the Work, vin¹C15393 gar Bend Airport You Keep the Cash! west side. 60' wide $16,997 On-site credit by 50' deep with 55' 5th Wheel Transapproval team, ROBBERSON wide by 16' high Corvette 1979 web site presence. port, 1990 bi-fold door, 14'x14' L82- 4speed. Low miles, EFI 460, I nternational Fla t We Take Trade-Ins! door rear side. Up65,000 miles 4-spd auto, 10-ply Free Advertising. Bed Pickup 1963, 1 541-312-3986 graded with painted Garaged since new. ton dually, 4 s pd. tires, low miles, alBIG COUNTRY RV dlr ¹0205 floor, windows, sky I've owned it 25 most new condition, Bend: 541-330-2495 2005 Diesel 4x4 trans., great MPG, lights, 240V/50 amp years. Never damcould be exc. wood Redmond: Chev Crewcab duSell for $3500. outlets. aged or abused. 541-546-5254 ally, Allison tranny, hauler, runs great, OR For Hire $195,000. new brakes, $1950. tow pkg., brake con$12,900. Call for quote (520) 360-9300, 541-419-5460. troller, cloth split Dave, 541-350-4077 Ask for Theo, 885 Owner front bench seat, 541-260-4293 re Canopies & Campers only 66k miles. 935 Ford Fusion Sport Very good condition, HANGAR FOR SALE. Ford Explorer 4x4 2001 Original owner, Sport Utility Vehicles 2-dr 30x40 end unit T Sport, V6, heater/AC $34,000 hanger in Prineville. works great, tags qood or best offer. Dry walled, insulated, 3/16, leather, good tires, Volvo S60T5 2013 541-408-7826 and painted. $23,500. everything works. $4600 Tom, 541.786.5546 obo. 541-615-9939 Arctic Fox 29' 2003, Eagle Cap 850, 2005 201 1 - 2. 5L 4 cyl., Hangar for sale at covered storage, slide- with slideout, AC, micro, Redmond Airport - not GMC Envoy SLE FWD, auto., 64k out, exc. cond inside & frig, heater, queen bed, miles, Bordeaux Rea T Hangar -$39,000. outside 2016 tags, wet bath, exlnt cond, 541-420-0626 serve vin¹324193 $14,500. 541-676-1449 $16,900. 541-388-3477 AWD, less than 11k $20,997 leave message. or 541-410-8649 mi., auto, 6 spd. Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 ROBBERSON LEAR CANOPY 2003 vin ¹202364 CHECK YOURAD with camper s hell, LINCOLII~ I s s ss e blue, fits Ford F-350 $30,977 good cond., $1500 NWIIPX 2005 4.2L 6 cyl., s hort b ox , $5 0 0 . OBO. 541-447-5504. 541 -312-3986 541-410-4354. 4WD, auto., 141k ROBBERSON DLR ¹0205 miles, 20 MPG Look at: u vcoa» ~ ~rs e m e Save money. Learn Hwy, Vin¹303927 SNUG TOP Bendhomes.com to fly or build hours BARGAIN CORRAL! 541-312-3986 Pickup canopy for on the first day it runs for Complete Listings of Ford Mustang 1996 with your own air$8,977 DLR ¹0205 F250 short bed, BASE to make sure it is corc raft. 1966 A e r o Area Real Estate for Sale white in color, rect. "Spellcheck" and ROBBERSON i Commander, 4 seat, like new, human errors do oc150 HP, low time, Chevy Silverado 1996, sssme $675. ~ ~ cur. If this happens to 2WD, 454, all pw opfull panel. $23,000 541<16-9686 tions, 82K orig. mi., your ad, please con541.312.3986 obo. Contact Paul at tact us ASAP so that stored winters, all serDLR¹0205 541-447-5184. vicing co m pleted, corrections and any adjustments can be $4400 cash only. La 3.8L V6, , automatic, o T-Hangar for rent Pine, 541-508-0042. BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K 53k miles, 30 MPG made to your ad. at Bend airport. Need to get an ad 541-385-5809 00 I miles, premium packHwy, vin¹169261 Call 541-362-8998 age, heated lumbar .998 The Bulletin Classified in ASAP? supported seats, pan916 ROBBERSON oramic moo n roof, msms Trucks & Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe- Fax It to 541-322-7253 ~ ~ non headlights, tan & Heavy Equipment 541-312-3986 black leather interior, The Bulletin Classifieds dlr ¹0205 Chevy s/4 ton 1962, built n ew front & re a r 908 350 with 450 HP and brakes I 76K miles, $1000 tires. $3000 one owner, all records, Aircraft, Parts Fleetwood Prowler The Bulletin's NissanMurano SL obo. 541-633-8951 very clean, $16,900. 32' - 2001 & Service "Call A Service 2011 541-388-4360 2 slides, ducted Professional" Directory What are you heat 8 air, great Peterbilt 359 p o table is all about meeting condition, snowbird water t ruck, 1 9 90, looking for? your needs. ready, Many up3200 gal. tank, 5hp grade options, fiYou'll find it in pump, 4-3" h oses, Call on one of the nancing available! camlocks, $ 2 5,000. The Bulletin Classifieds professionals today! $14,500 obo. 541-620-3724 black w/ leather seat 1/3interestin trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 BMW X3 2006, Call Dick, 925 miles. vin¹362484 541-385-5809 Columbia 400, 3.0 si., 71,800 mi., 541-480-1687. Utility Trailers 26.977 Financing available. Premium, cold weather, sports pkg. $150,000 ROBBERSON Call The Bulletin At All maintenance up (located © Bend) u seoLr~ ~lsa s e a 541-385-5809 to date w/ records. 541-286-3333 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Lots of extras - new Ford Thunderbird 541-312-3986 brakes, new tires, dlr ¹0205 2004 At: www.bendbulletin.com new battery, winter Convertible mats, running Dodge Ram 2500 with hard & soft top, 940 boards, hitch-Must silver with black 2008 Diesel, Big Tex see! $19,000 obo. Vans interior, exc. towing vehicle, utility frailer 5'x6', 541-460-6815 all original, 2WD 55000 drop ramp. Perfect very low mileage, 1/3 interest in wellfor hauling your miles. New batterin premium condition. equipped IFR Beech Bo- motorcycle,jet skis, ies, rear air bags, nanza A36, new 10-550/ $19,900. Holiday Rambler quads, etc! Roll-n-lock bed 702-249-2567 prop, located KBDN. Alumascape 28' cover, spray-in $1,200 $65,000. 541-419-9510 (car is in Bend) 2003,1-owner. 541-379-3530 liner. 5th wheel www.N4972M.com Self-contained, hitch available, too. 13' slide, 80W solar Chrysler Town 8 $19,000. Country LXI 1997, Porsche 911 panel, walkaround Featherlite a l uminum Chevrolet Trailblazer 541-604-1285 beautiful inside & Carrera 993 cou e queen+ sofa/bed, car hauler, 20'x8' with 2008 4x4 out, one owner, nonloads of storage 7000¹ axles, electric Automatic, 6-cylinder, throughout. Excellent smoker,. Ioaded with brakes, winch, chrome tilt wheel, power win- options! 197,892 mi. cond., licensed 2015. wheels, spare tire, 4 Dodge Ram 3500 dows, power brakes, Must see!$15,700. Service rec o rds extra tires, removable SLTQuad Cab air conditioning, key- available. $4 , 9 50. 541-389-9214 1/5th interest in 1973 fenders, and rare air less entry, 69K miles. Cessna 150 LLC dam. V er y cl e an, Call Mike, (541) 615Excellent condition; 150hp conversion, low $3900. 541-389-7329 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 1996, 73k miles, Want to impress the tires have 90% tread. time on air frame and Tiptronic auto. $1 1,995. relatives? Remodel engine, hangared in 932 transmission. Silver, 975 Call 541-598-5111 Bend. Excellent perblue leather interior, your home with the Antique & Automobiles formance & afford2006 6.7L 6 cyl. diemoon/sunroof, new help of a professional Classic Autos able flying! $6,000. sel, automatic, 61k quality tires and from The Bulletin's Buick LeSabre, 1995, 541-410-6007 miles, VIN¹191705 battery, car and seat "Call A Service with 102K miles, autocovers, many extras. $30,977 matic, air, power winProfessional" Directory Recently fully serdows, doors 8 seats. ROBBERSON ~ viced, garaged, Excellent cond, well looks and runs like Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, maintained, all records new. Excellent conAWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, available. Must see to 541-312-3986 dition $29,700 clean title, 12/15 tags, appreaate! $3000 or best DLR¹0205 Chevy C-20 Pickup 541-322-9647 172 Cessna Share $5995. 541-610-6150 offer. 541-475-0537 1969, was a special IFR equipped, new order, has all the ex- Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 Garmin 750 tras, Kit Companion 1994, avionics, and is all original Power Stroke diesel, touchscreen, center See to believe! good cond. 26' with turbocharged, 5-spd, stack, 160hp. $16,000 or best offer one slide, $4500 obo. good runner & work Exceptionally clean 541-923-6049 541-369-5768 truck. $4500 obo. & economical! Call 541-389-5353 $13,500. Laredo 30' 2009 or 541-647-6176 Hangared in KBDN
2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg., 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quakty t ires, and battery, Bose p remium sou n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras.
Garaged, p e rfect condition, $59,700. 541-322-9647
FIND ITr St!T IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds
PMIo,58!
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Saturn 2001 station wgn, dark blue, gray leather interior, V6, auto, exlnt mileage, great all-around vehicle or tow car! $2950. 541-768-4844 Advertise your car! Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers!
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Claesiffede
Subaru Outback 2012 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, leather heated seats, AWD, power moon r oof, a n d mor e ! 25,600 miles. Below KB I $27, 5 0 0 541-344-5325 annie2657Oyahoo.com
Toyota Prius 2006 65K miles. Gets 42-46 mpg around Bend. Good condition. Has had all routine maintenance. $10 , 250 541-480-8912
bth©bendbroadband. com Find It in
The Bulletin Claseifiedsl 541-385-5809
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,
power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond.
A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
VW Jetta GL 1988, 185K,
5spd, AC, sunroof $1500/ ofr. 541-382-6258 Iv msg Vyy Jetta GLI2012
Bluetooth, pl, pw, manual trans. Vin¹106574 $18,977 ROBBERSON y LIIICOLN ~
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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205 WHEN YOU SEE THIS
MorePixatBendbjjlletin.com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
T IME F OsR A BIGrGrER
Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mdl P 27RL 31', 15' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $26,500.Call Bill, 541-460-7930
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
541-548-5254
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily 0+I
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$28,000
541-419-3301
• ii& MONTANA 3585 2006,
exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250
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Wind River 201127ORLDS (Four Seasons) 28' by Outdoor RV in LaGrande, OR. 2 Slides in living room, separate bdrm, power jack,elect awning, solar panel, flat screen, surround sound, micro, air cond, day/night shades, ext speakers,ext shower. Like new!$24,000. 541-548-2109
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overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
TRAILER?
Call 541-728-0773
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1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
Chevy 1953 one-ton V-8 w/auto trans, new tires, good cond., Ford F150 LIGHTNING $2500 obo. 1993, 500 miles on re541-516-6222 built engine. Clean interior & new tires. $7000, OBO. 541-647-8723
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179
Ford F-250 1985 Diesel 2WD. 110,000 original miles. ATS Turbo, Gear Vendor Splitter Box overdrive, camper shell, tool box, trailer brakes. Excellent condition, $5500. Call Gary 208-720-3255
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