Serving Central Oregon since190375
THURSDAY July10,2014
Elks infirst BUSINESS • C6
SPORTS • C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
IN CONGRESS
Aid for locals seeking
Baseball aroundthe WOrld —A BendHigh standout has gone from Central Oregon to Australia to Spain.C1
World Cup —Penalty kicks put Argentina in the final against Germany.C1
jobs
Health tipS —Sevenhabits to adopt to get you fit this summer.D1
By Megan Kehoe The Bulletin
Kathie Quick stood
Meet garageWolverine — Colin Furze, ahigh school dropout and backyard inventor, is trying to re-create the powers of the X-Men.A3
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
outside of a music shop in
Shanghai a week ago, wondering what was taking the teenagers so long. The group of four boys had gone in to look at gui-
WASHINGTON — The
House of Representatives passed a bill Wednesday that would streamline the
tars, but they were taking
la% I
longer than she expected. Slightly concerned, Quick opened the door to the shop and stepped in. She was shocked by
t~e
what she heard and saw.
Grand Canyon — The National Park Service is lining up against what it calls a grave threat to the views.A6
In world news —Diplomatic efforts underway evenas rockets still fall on Israel and Israeli strikes against Hamas continue.A2
And a Web exclusiveKenyan kids travel the world on the power of jump-rope. bemlbunetln.cnm/extrns
process for connecting employers with job seekers and coordinate education and employment programs. The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act passed easily with bipartisan support, 415-6. The bill, which passed the Sen-
'I+4f . -
"Evan's playing a guitar, another of the boys is playing a keyboard, and they're all singing along in Chinese with this large group of Chinese boys," said Quick. "It was so cool
ate in June by a 95-3 vote,
now heads to the desk of President Obama, who is
to open that door and hear
expected to sign it into law within the coming days. The bill seeks to em-
the whole room singing like that. That's one of my
power local job force agencies to tailor their
favorite stories of the trip."
offerings to match local needs. Under the bill,
Quick, a Summit High School math teacher, recently chaperoned a group of four Summit students to China. The group, which consisted of Chinese language
eachstate must produce a unified strategic plan for providing training, employment services and vocational education in a
coordinated way. Every member of the Oregon
students Kevin Panton, 17, Devan Simpkins, 16, William Dalquist, 19, and
delegation voted in favor of the bill.
Evan Young, 17, spent
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Urgentcare clinics draw investors
SeeWorkforce/A5
two weeks touring the
country. The students visited Shanghai, Yangzhou and Xi'an, and got a chance to see such iconic places as The
, 1 L~ l
E~ 4
Priceyjail phonetabs challenged
Great Wall, Tiananmen
Square, and the famed terra-cotta warriors in Xi'an.
Y
But even though the students enjoyed the sites, the cultural land-
marks took a backseat By Julie Creswell New York Times News Service
NORWALK, Conn. — Start in Room 4, just
beyond the reception area: A man is having blood drained from a bruised
finger.
By Lee Romney
to what the students felt really mattered.
"The people were amazing," said Dalquist, a recent Summit High graduate. "The tourist attractions felt kind of fake. But I learned that there are some real-
Over in Room 1, a woman is being treated for
ly great people out in the
eye trouble. Next door, in Room 2, a boy is having
brave enough to go out there
Los Angeles Times
SAN FRANCISCO-
Submittedphotos
William Dnlquist, left, and Kevin Pnnton travel in a rickshaw during their two-week trip to Chine with a group of Summit High School Chinese language students.
Domingo Howard is a "single pops" to a 5-yearold girl he is raising by working part-time jobs.
From left: Summit teacher W KathieQuick, Suzanne, Evan Young, William Dnlquist, Devan Slmpkinsand Kevin Panton stand in front of a
His 24-year-old son, mean-
his throat swabbed.
and find them." The year before last,
pagoda. Suzanne, n Chinese
while, landed in the San Francisco County Jail in January. As "the onlyperson" his son can count on, the
For more than eight hours a day, seven days
Quick spent six months in China as an exchange teach-
studentwho accompanied the group throughout the trip,
two speak on the phone often, Howard said, but the
a week, 52 weeks a year,
er. After returning home to
wns one of Quick's students
costs of staying in touch
an assortment of ailments is on display at the tidy
Bend, she began organizing a school trip, wanting her
when she taught in China.
have soared to as much as
medical clinic on Main Avenue here. But all of the
students to have the same
patients have one thing in common: Noone isbeing treated at a traditional
doctor's office or emergency room. Instead, they have turned to one of the fastest-growing segments of U.S. health care: urgent care, a common category of walk-in clinics with uncommon interest from Wall Street. Once derided as "Doc in a Box"
medicine, urgent care
world. You just have to be
opportunity to experience the culturally and historically rich country. "I really wanted them to see the culture," said Quick. "Learning the language is one thing, but actually seeing what it's like there is
$400 amonth, plunging the 42-year-old warehouse something else. It's the complete opposite of here."
worker into debt.
"It's way out of control,"
"I thought it would be nice
he said. "It's a stress on me
to actually practice my Chinese," said Devan, a junior. "I thought I could probably learn a lot there."
and the rest of my familyto be able to keep up with just normal living and be able to be there for my son at the same time." SeeInmates/A4
See China /A4 ;" Jgn
3,500-year-old Egyptian obeliskgets alaser cleaning
has mushroomed into an estimated $14.5 billion
By David W.Dunlap
business, as investors try
New York Times News Service
to profit from the shifting
NEW YORK — Thutmose
landscape in health care. The office here is part of PhysicianOne Urgent Care. Bankrolled by two
III thoughtbig. His obelisk, however, is being treated at the level of atomic
partides.
Since early May, conservators havebeen cleaningthe obeliskwith hand-held lasers.
Inchbyinch, as if amagicwand werebeingpassed overthe hieroglyphs, the pink granite of Aswan, Egypt, has emerged.
The obelisk was first erected about 3,460 years ago at Heliopolis, on the outskirts of
modern Cairo, to glorify Thutmose III, a pharaoh who has been likenedto Napoleon. The Romans moved it to Alexan-
dria, fromwhere it was trans-
sight. But decades'worth of
ported in 1880 to New York
sooty accumulation so dark-
City, as agift from the khedives enedthe obeliskthat it was who then ruled Egypt. It was easy to overlook — if such a re-erected on Greywacke Knoll thing can be imagined of a 69-foot-high monolith. in Central Park in 1881. It should be an astonishing SeeObelisk/A4
private investment com-
panies, PhysicianOne has grown into an eight-clinic operation, the largest of
TODAY'S WEATHER
its kind in Connecticut,
with plans for even greater expansion. SeeUrgent/A5
tf%
Sunny High 90, Low 54 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 01-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 S oI Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 N'/Movies
B5 C1-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 112, No. 191,
30 pages, 5 sections
Q Iif/e use recycled newsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
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srae e su r i e s as i o ma e i n s "Hamas will pay a heavy price for firing toward Israeli
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JERUSALEM
-
With
rockets raining deep inside
citizens," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. "The
Israel, the nation's military
operation will expand and
pummeled Palestinian targets
continue until the fire toward
our towns stops and quiet Strip and threatened a broad returns." ground offensive, while the Israel began the offensive first diplomatic efforts to end 'Itresday in response to weeks two days of heavy fighting got of rocket launches, and offiunderway. cials said the airstrikes would Egypt, which has mediated continue until the firing stops. before between Israel and the At least 2 0 c i v ilians were Hamas militant group, said it among the at least 75 deaths spoke to all sides about ending reported by the Health Ministhe violence. U.S. Secretary of try in Gaza. There have been State John Kerry was in touch no serious casualties on the with Israel to try to lower ten- Israeli side. Wednesday across the Gaza
a quarterof those forces had been called up, signaling a decision on a ground invasion could still be days away. A ground offensive in Gaza would be a risky gamble for IsraeL It could lead to heavy civilian casualties on the Pales-
tinian side and trigger strong international criticism, as was the case during one that killed
hundreds of Palestinians in 2009. Israeli troops would also
be at much greater risk if they enter Gaza's crowded urban landscape, home to 1.8 million
people, especially for a longterm presence. Israeli security officials say sions. And the United Nations Thousands of Israeli troops they have prepared different chief warned of a"deteriorating massed near the Gaza border, scenarios inside Gaza, rangsituation ... which could quiddy the possibility of a ground in- ing from a quick pinpoint get beyond anyone's control." vasion grew larger — along operation to a full re-occupaAs the Palestinian death toll with the risk of heavier casual- tion of the seaside strip. Israel rose to at least 75, neither side ties on both sides. withdrew from Gaza in 2005. "Despite the fact it will be showed any sign of halting In the first indication that their heaviest fighting since an hard, complicated and costly, cease-fire efforts were uneight-day battle in late 2012. we will have to take over Gaza derway, the office of EgypIsrael said it hit more than temporarily, for a few weeks, tian President Abdel-Fattah 300 targets and Hamas posi- to cut off the strengthening el-Sissi said he held "extensive tions throughout Gaza, includ- of this terror army," Yuval contacts with all active and ing rocket-launchers, weap- Steinitz, Israel's intelligence concernedparties"to end the ons-storage sites and tunnels minister, told Israel Radio. "If fighting. that it said the group uses to you ask my humble opinion, a It said the two sides discarry out attacks. The military significant operation like this cussed the "critical conditions said 74 rockets landed in Isra- is approaching." and the need to stop all milel, including one that reached The government has au- itary action, and to stop the the northern city of Hadera, thorized the army to activate slide" toward more violence. It the deepest rocket strike ever up to 40,000 reservists, and called on Israel to protect Palfrom Gaza. Israeli TV stations said about estinian civilians.
OBAMA DEFENDS TEXAS ITINERARY,POLICY
I ~fr .f '
i,'
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
©
QsQzsQ ez Q ssQ sv
The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.
MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:
17Q 44 29Q 34 Q 37Q 39 Q Q The estimated jackpot is now $4.9 million.
COIOradO marijIIalll — Colorado is smoking pot by the ton, and visitors are, too. Colorado's pot regulators issued what is believed to be the world's first post-legalization market study for the weedon Wednesday. Thestudy relied on sales data from Colorado's first three months of recreational marijuana sales, while previous pot market studies relied on survey responses becausethe drug is illegal. The study estimated that total market demandfor marijuana in Colorado is about130 metric tons ayear. That's about121 metric tons for residents and almost 9 metric tons ayear for visitors. These figures include medical and recreational marijuana. Marijuana has anaverage market rate in Colorado of $220 per ounce,authors concluded.
COhg0 VIOIIhCS —The United States will expand sanctions on groups in the Democratic Republic of Congo, making it easier to target those whoaretrying to disrupt peacekeeping efforts in that country, the Obama administration announced Tuesday. "The United States continues to bedeeply concerned about the situation in the DRC, which hasbeenmarked by activities that threaten the peace, security and stability of the country," read aWhite House statement.
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NSASurveillanCe— A newreport based ondocuments provided by Edward J.Snowdenhasidentified five American Muslims, including the leader of acivil-rights group, as having beensubjected to surveillance by the National Security Agency.Amongthose identified as having been subjected to surveillancewereHooshang Amirahmadi, a Rutgers University professor who isthe president of theAmerican Iranian Council, a public policy group thatworks ondiplomatic issues regarding relations with Iran, andNihadAwad, the executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, orCAIR, aMuslim civil rights organization.
NagiII COrruptiOn — C. RayNagin, the former mayor of NewOrleans, was sentenced to 10years in prison Wednesday onfederal corruption charges, ending acase that began with the rebuilding of the city after Hurricane Katrina. Nagin, a Democrat, was found guilty in February on 20 counts, most relating to kickbacks from contractors looking for city work. Hewasarrested in January 2013, nearly three years after he left office. Thesentence, by Judge HelenBerrigan of U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, was less than the recommended range, around15 to 20 years.
)II~i' i
REDMOND BUREAU
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SIIOwdeIIaSylum — Fugitive national security contractor Edward Snowden has filed the paperwork to extend his refuge in Russiaas the July 31 expiration of his asylum grant approaches, his lawyer told Russian media onWednesday. Snowdenhas indicated in interviews during his yearlong stay in Russia that hewould like to move on elsewhere or evencomehometo the United States if he could beassured of getting a fair trial on the espionagecharges the U.S.Justice Department has filed against him.
highest court to challenge anappellate ruling that gay couples have a constitutional right to marry, the state attorney general's office announced Wednesday. If the U.S.Supremecourt decides to take the case, it will be the first time the top court considers gay marriage since justices last year struck down part of the federal Defenseof Marriage Act. The high court is under no obligation to the takethe case, and it could wait for rulings from one ormore of the five other appellate courts with gay marriage casespending, legal scholars say.
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II'8g COIIfllCt— The ethnic and sectarian tensions that threaten to tear Iraq apart flared Wednesday asthe prime minister accused the Kurdish self-rule region of harboring the Sunni militants who have overrun much of the country, and 50bodies were discovered dumped in a village south of Baghdad. It was not clear who themenwere or why they were killed, but such grisly sceneswere commonduring the darkest days of the Iraq war,and the deaths raised fears of another round of sectarian bloodletting. Many of the victims were bound, blindfolded andshot in the head. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's allegations, made in his weekly televised address, are likely to worsen Baghdad's already thorny relationship with the Kurds, whose fighters have beenbattling the insurgents over the past month.
Utahgay marriage — Utahis goingdirectly to thenation's
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BeIIghaZi attaCkS —Newly revealed testimony from top military commanders involved in theU.S. response to the Benghaziattacks suggests that the perpetrators of a second,dawnattack on a CIA complex probably weredifferent from those who penetrated the U.S. diplomatic mission theevening before andset it ablaze, killing Ambassador Chris Stevensandanother American. Thesecond attack, which killed two security contractors, showedclear military training, retired Gen. Carter Ham told Congress in closed-door testimony releasedlate Wednesday.Theassault probably was thework of a new team of militants, seizing on reports of violence atthediplomatic mission the night before and hitting the Americans while theywere most vulnerable.
— From wire reports
Jacquelyn Martin/The AssociatedPress
President BarackObamaleavesthe podium Wednesday after a newsconference in Dallas about his meeting discussing the border and immigration with TexasGov. Rick Perry. Obama onWednesdayforcefully defended his decision not to visit the Texasborder with Mexico to view a burgeoning humanitarian crisis, saying he's "not interested in photo ops" and challenging Congress to give him newauthority to respond to the situation. "Nothing has taken placedown there that I'm not intimately aware of," Obamasaid during the news conference. His remarks came after a meeting with Perry and local leaders to discuss hisadministration's responseto an influx of tens of thousands of children, mostly from Central America, whohaveentered thestate illegally. Obama, under mounting pressure from members of both parties to view the border situation firsthand,
said he hasbeenwell briefed by his Cabinet aides and called on Congress to quickly approve $3.7 billion in emergency funding to help managethe influx. Perry, a Republican, has loudly criticized Obama's border policies in recent days. In their meeting, Perry asked the president to beef up border patrols, deploy Predator drones andNational Guard troops, and pursue changes to federal law that would allow the minors to be deported more quickly, according to aides on both sides. Obama said there wasnothing Perry asked for that he had aphilosophical objection to and said he had instructed his staff to work with the governor on some of his suggestions. But the president addedthat "if you ask peoplewhat weshould be doing, they give suggestions that are already embodied in legislation I've sent to Congress."
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China hackers pursueU.S.worker data By Michael S. Schmidt, David E. formation, like past drug use. Computer intrusions have Sanger and Nicole Perlroth In response to questions been a majorsource of disNew York Times News Service
about the matter, a senior De-
WASHINGTON — Chinese hackers in Marchbroke into the
partment of Homeland Secu- tries, and the Chinese can rity official confirmed that the point to e v idence, revealed
computer networks of the U.S. governmentagency thathouses the personal information of all federalemployees, according to senior U.S. officials. They appeared to be targeting the files on tens of thousands of employees who have applied for top-secret ~ clea rances. The hackers gained access
attack had occurred but said that, "at this time," neither the
by Edward Snowden, that the
personnel agency nor Home-
went deep into the computer
land Security had "identified One senior U.S. official said that the attack was traced to
systems of Huawei, a major maker of computer network equipment, and ran many programs to intercept the conversations of Chinese leaders and
China, although it was not
the military.
clearifthehackers were partof
U.S. officials say the attack on the Office of Personnel
the government. Its disdosure the Office of Personnel Man- comes as a delegation of senior agement before the federal U.S. officials, led by Secretary authorities detected the threat of State John Kerry, are in Beiand blocked them from the jing for the annual Strategic network, according to the of- and Economic Dialogue, the ficials. It is not yet clear how leading forum for discussion far the hackers penetrated the between the United States and agency's systems, in which ap- China on t h eir c ommercial plicants for security clearanc- relationships and their wary es list their foreign contacts, efforts to work together on ecoprevious jobs and personal in- nomic and defense issues. to some of the databases of
sU s~
r o lo
— The Washington Post
0 00 0 0
0 0 0 0 0
any loss of personally identifiable information."
I
agreement between the coun-
National Security A gency
Management w a s
siRs~tr iiits~~ ~ s
~l
l.
July 11-13 2014
Chemult Mountmn Days is a family-friendly s ummer festival held each July in Chemult, I Oregon. Theevent features a carnival,vendors, food, children's activities, Mrd more! A couple highlights of the festivd are pie eating contest and music and dancing on Friday & Saturday nights. •
•
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•
•
•
•
•
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•
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•
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no t able
because while hackers try to breach U.S. government servers nearly every day, they rarely succeed. One of the last attacks the government acknowledged occurred last year at the Department of Energy. In that case, hackers made off with employee and contractors' personal data.
II
sal knaaal
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CrmMULT MOUXFAIN Dkss
%is eventpartiaayfundedby the Klamath County Transient room tax grant program.
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.; www.facebook.com/chemulti MountainDays www.chemult
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THURSDAY, JULY 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 Thursday, July10, the 191st day of 2014.Thereare 174 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS KS+t0il8 —The Nebraska SupremeCourt could announce as early as todaythat it will hear oral arguments in thecaseover the Keystone XLpipeline's route in early September. IRS —A federal judge will hear from the Internal Revenue Service as towhy theU.S. District Court for the District of Columbia wasnot immediately informed about potentially missing emails.
NAME TO KNOW: COLIN FURZE
DISCOVERY
e — annex oor, Study may yield a check on some s ar mea cawsan a aging disorders A backyard inventor living in England, Colin Furze is a high school
dropout with a penchant for radical contraptions, five Guinness world records and an online audience of half a million.
By Melissa Healy
servable disease is unknown.
Los Angeles Times
Scientists have suspected that the severity of mitochondrial
The arrival of fast and
relatively inexpensive genome sequencing is likely to open whole new avenues for diagnosing and
HISTORY
treating diseases. But in a
States women's soccerteam won the World Cup,beating China 5-4 onpenalty kicks after 120 minutes of scoreless play at the RoseBowl in Pasadena, California. In1509, theologian JohnCalvin, a keyfigure of the Protestant Reformation, wasborn in Noyon, Picardy, France. In1890,Wyoming became the 44th state.
The latest research ze-
that a constitutional amend-
ment was neededto protect traditional marriage. Five yearsago:General Motors completed anunusually quick exit from bankruptcy protection with promises of making money andbuilding cars people would be eager tobuy. Oneyear ago: DzhokharTsarnaev pleadednot guilty in the Boston Marathon bombing in a seven-minute proceeding that marked his first appearancein public since his capture in midApril 2013.
BIRTHDAYS Former boxerJake LaMotta is 93. Actor RonGlass is 69. Actress SueLyon is 68. Folk singer Arlo Guthrie is 67.Banjo player BelaFleck is 56. Actor Adrian Grenier is 38.Actor Chiwetel Ejiofor (Film: "12Years aSlave") is 37.Actress Gwendoline Yeo is37. Singer-actress Jessica Simpsonis34. — From wire reports
that carry mutated DNA. And
they have observed that older people, and people who are new study, scientists show clearly sick with diseases of that it can also reveal how aging such as cancer, heart some age-rel ated diseases disease and diabetes, tend to — from diabetes to neu- have many moresuch mutarodegenerative disorders tions than younger, healthier such as Parkinson's dis- folk. ease and dementia — esBut when nearly all of us tablish a foothold in the seem to carry some mutahuman body, and in doing tions in these special genes, so, point the way to pre- what's the tripping point that venting such diseases. begins the downward spiral
Highlight:In1999, the United
In1919, PresidentWoodrow Wilson personally deliveredthe Treaty of Versailles to theSenate and urged its ratification. (However, the Senaterejected it.) In1929, American papercurrency was reduced insizeas the government beganissuing bills that wereapproximately 25 percent smaller. In1940, during World WarII, the Battle of Britain beganas Nazi forces beganattacking southern England byair. (The Royal Air Forcewasultimately victorious.) In1951, armistice talks aimed at ending the KoreanWarbegan at Kaesong. In1962,ATBT'sTelstar1 communications satellite, capableof relaying television signals and telephone calls, waslaunched by NASAfrom CapeCanaveral. In1973,theBahamasbecame fully independentafter three centuries of British colonial rule. John PaulGetty III, the teenage grandson of theoil tycoon, was abducted inRomebykidnappers who cut off his earwhen his family wasslow to meet their ransomdemands; young Getty was released inDecember 1973 for nearly $3 million. In1985, the Greenpeace protest ship RainbowWarrior was sunk with explosives in Auckland, New Zealand, by French intelligenceagents; one activist was killed. Bowing to pressure from irate customers, the Coca-ColaCo.said it would resume selling old-formula Coke, while continuing to sell New Coke. In1989, Mel Blanc, the"man of a thousand voices," including such cartoon characters as Bugs Bunny,Daffy Duckand Porky Pig, died in LosAngeles atage 81. In1991,Boris Yeltsin took the oath of office asthefirst elected president of theRussian republic. President GeorgeH.W. Bush lifted economic sanctions against South Africa. Tenyears ago: President George W.Bushsaid in his weekly radio addressthat legalizing gaymarriagewould redefine the most fundamental institution of civilization, and
diseases is a function of the percentage of mitochondria
toward illness'? And how do
ros in on mitochrodrial
healthy people get from having a small number of heteroplasmies to having enough genetic material packaged to cause the body to break DNA — the much smaller but more diverse packet of
not in the nucleus of a cell, but in the small cellular
Simon Lee via New YorkTimes News Service
Colin Furze rides his bicycle fitted with a homemade pulse jet engine.
By Loran Grush New York Times News Service
"Are hisclaws potentially hazardous? Yep. They'realso pretty awesome."
As the video begins, a cheerful young man in a rumpled — Caleb Kraft, community editor at Make, shirt and tie lays down the challenge: "Can I make some a DIY technology magazine fully automatic adamantium claws'?" It might seem an odd ques- also recreated the abilities of he was soon hanging upside tion to some — but not to fans the fire-bender Pyro, designing down like a bat from a metal of X-Men comic books and cuffs that shoot flames with strip bolted to the ceiling. films. Soon, with rock guitars two flicks of his wrists. With Furze has critics as well as blaring, he is running around one cuffrigged to a propane fans; some have complained a workshop, equipped with a gas tank in a backpack and the that his creations are too danbackpack and two homemade other serving as a pilot light, he gerous for the average person metal contraptions strapped can ignite a stream of fire up to to attempt. But overall, he said, to his arms. He holds up his 12 feet long. the response from n ovices fists to the camera, and sure For Wolverine's claws, Furze and engineers alike has been enough, six sharp metal claws said,the process was most- positive. "Are his claws potentially shoot from the tops of his ly trial and error, positioning hands: He is Wolverine! the stainless steel blades on hazardous? Yep. They're also This is perhaps one of the his arms to see what made the pretty awesome," said Caleb tamer scenesin a series ofvid- best fit. To make them deploy Kraft, community editor at eos by Colin Furze, a garage and retract, he created a sys- Make, amagazine focused on inventor and d o-it-yourself tem of valves connected to an do-it-yourself technology. "He daredevil in S t amford, En- air tank in a backpack; when doesn't appeartobe out around gland. With more than 500,000 he clenches his fists to press unsuspecting bystanders or subscribers on YouTube, Furze, buttons tucked into his palms, even doing anything particu34, has found an online follow- the valves use p ressurized larly dangerous with them. All ing for his radical — and some- air to push and pull the claws in all, they're possibly less dantimes dangerous — backyard smoothly in and out of their gerous than changing your car inventions, which include the metal casings. tire or mowing your lawn." world's longest motorbike and In his most recent and most For Furze, the whole point is a scooter that shoots fire from gravity-defying X-Men project, to inspire viewers who might its back end. (That one got him Furze set out to make "Mag- not have realized their creative arrested.) neto shoes" — magnetic boots potential. "If you ask somebody, 'Do Despite his penchant for he used to walk on the ceiling such technical feats, Furze is of his workshop. He got old you want to make a magnet'?' no certified engineer. In fact, m icrowave ovens from a scra- they'll probably be like, 'No he did not even finish school; pyard and removed their mag- I'm not really that i nteresthe dropped out at 16 to become netic coils, running a current ed,'" Furze said. "But if you a plumber. through them to make elec- ask someone, 'Do you want to While living with his par- tromagnets strong enough to make some magnetic shoes ents,he said,he experimented hold his body weight. Then he and walk upside down'?' More with metalworking but did not strapped the magnets to a pair people will be like, 'Yeah, that have the resources to test the of old Vans shoes, and voilasounds cool.'" limits of his imagination. "While my dad had a massive shed, I wasn't actually allowed in it, so everything I'd come up with I had to make in my bedroom," Furze said in an
C(Oj~ M IPlAlNILOjN ,' L P'L mtT' ©LII>NI(C
interview. "1 mean, I had a lathe
in there at one point, which was a terrible idea, really." and the array of power tools it
•Q
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ative processes alongthe way. Since then, his inventions have helped him set five Guinness world records, one for the world's fastest mobility scooter (it houses the engine of a 1997 CR125 motocross bike and has a top speed of 82.5 mph).
at least, the latest research
energy from food into cel- offers a glimpse of where lular fuel. Conducting de- humans start that process. tailed mitochondrial DNA Computational mo d e ling scans of 1,095 healthy hu- done elsewhere has already mans from 14 distinct pop- shown that in the length of ulations across the globe, the average human's lifespan, the researchers found that
there's enough time and cel-
at least 1 in 5 healthy hu-
lular turnover to allow spon-
mans carry at l east one
taneous mutations to occur
disease-related mutation
and become widely prevalent
in t h e i r mit o chondrial in cells. But which heteroplasDNA — a condition called mies in mitochondrial DNA
heteroplasmy. And 90 per- are worst, and what factors cent have mitochondrial accelerate those mutations D NA mutation o f sort.
s o m e and their spread, all need to
Yet they were all still healthy.
be explored. Answers to such questions might point to ways to slow
or block those mutations, or their expansion to cells fraction of the estimated throughout the body. And 20,000to 25,000 total genes that, in turn, might nip diseasin thehuman genome. But es in the bud. "Managing the expansion" a fault in any one of those mitochondrial genes of these disease-related muMitochondrial
DNA
contains 37 genes — a tiny
whether inherited or the result of spontaneous mu-
tations in mitochondrial DNA
with cells across the body. Diseases linked to defects
gression," the authors write.
"could be a promising means tation — can wreak havoc of preventing disease proTheir study was published in mitochondrial DNA can Monday in the journal PNAS. cause a wide range of debilitating and deadly conditions, affecting growth, developmentand theprop-
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Those are questions still to be explored. But for now,
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After his father died in 2007, •
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
Democrats'bill wouldforce employers to payfor contraception By Wesley Lowery The Washington Post
W ASHINGTON —
Con-
gressional Democrats vowed Wednesday to bypass the Supreme Court decision in the
Hobby Lobby case, unveiling new legislation that would require all employers to pay for contraception as part of the health-care mandates included in the Affordable Care Act.
The legislation comes a week after the high court ruled that many private com-
panies — including plaintiff Hobby Lobby craft storeswere within their r i ghts to
could cite a religious objection ception mandate included in to providing health plans that t he Affordable Care Act include some kinds of birth even if they claim religious control. objections. That ruling outraged DemThe bill would override ocrats and women's groups, the Religious Freedom Reswho vowed to pass legislation toration Act, forcing most that would require all employ- employers to comply with ers to cover contraception. federalhealth-care require"Women across the coun- ments despite their religious try are outraged,they are de- objections. It would, howevmanding a change," said Sen. er, include an exemption for Patty Murray, D-Wash. "And houses of worship and an today ... we are here to be their accommodation for religious voice." nonprofits. The legislation, being introEfforts to craft the leg-
Continued from A1 Halfway through the planning process, the students found out that Summit High
would not be offering Chinese language classesduring the 2014-15 school year because the district will not have an ex-
change teacher. But that only added to their desire to visit
the country. "They kind of dumped our whole program," Devan said. After more than half a year of planning, the students departed on
t h ei r a d venture
June 19. Duringthetrip, theteenagers got a chance to meet other stu-
dents their age at a local school in Yangzhou. They discovered that Chinese schools are
ing led by Reps. Diana DeGette, D-Colo., Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., and Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y.
"Ninety-nine percent of women — our sisters, daugh-
able Care Act's contraception mandate. "The Protect Wom-
bids in conservative stateswould be willing to vote in fa-
Americans, men and women
one of the most vulnerable
en's Health from Corporate vor of it. Interference Act reinstates the One encouraging sign for ACA's contraceptive coverage the bill's sponsors was that and protects the right of all Sen. Mark Begich, D-Alaska,
ters,friends, colleagues, and alike, to make decisions about Democratic incumbents, was neighbors — will use some their medical care in consulta- openly supportive. "There are so many women form of birth control in their tion with their doctor, not their lifetime, and strong majori- boss." in Alaska who will be affectties of Americans support the Still unclear is whether ed," Begich said. "It's somenotion that women should be D emocrats can muster t h e thing that's woken up the able to make their reproduc- votes to turn this legislation women of Alaska, what's haptive care decisions without into law. pening here in D.C." interference from their emEven with a slight majority But even if Democrats can islation w er e s p earheaded ployer," said Sen. Tom Harkin in the Senate, it is not a cer- keep their caucus in line, they by Murray and Sens. Mark of Iowa, the top Democrat on tainty that all of the Demo- also must convince at least Udall, D-Colo., and Richard the Senate Health Committee cratic senators — especially five Republicans in the Senate Durbin, D-Ill., among others. and the author of the Afford- those facing tight re-election to support the legislation.
duced by Democrats in both the Senate and the House,
seek an exemption from the would require all employcontraception mandate if they ers to abide by the contra-
China
In the House, the effort is be-
lies for a few days. They also with a better understanding of got achance to see several of themselves. "I learned that sometimes their former Chinese language teachers, who taught at Sum- you have to have self confimit High as exchange teachers dence and fend for yourself," in past years. said Devan, who accidentally "It was really cool because lost his video camera and cell when we said goodbye to phone when he left his backthem, we thought we might pack on a train. "Sometimes not ever see them again," said nobody's there to catch you." Dalquist. "It was cool that we The students will continue actually did." their language studies next The tri p w a sn't w i t hout year, though it won't be in a its frustrations, though. The classroom. They'll have to students discovered that the take their C h inese classes phrases they were taught in through an online course. classweren't necessarily pracThe district plans to bring a tical in real-life situations, as Chinese exchange teacher to they weren't buying shoes, Summit for the 2015-16 school renting apartments or throw- year, said the district's coming a party. Public restrooms munication director, Julianne weren't all t hat c lean. The Repman. air in most cities was heavily In the meantime, Quick said polluted. Even just walking that because this trip was so down the street could be an successful, she plans to orga-
much different from American schools — with bigger classes adventure. "Sometimes when you're and long, intensive hours that ran from 9 a.m. to 7p.m. almost walking in a city, something every day of the week. just drips on you, and you nev"I feel like they don't have er know what it is," Dalquist a lot of free will in their lives," said. "You live in constant fear said Kevin, a senior. "They're of the drip." told what to do all the time, But despite those moments, and I feel like a lot of the the cultural experience was younger generation is getting eye-opening for the students, fed up with that." and they have returned home Additionally, the students with a new enthusiasm for got to stay with host fami- the language and culture, and
nize a similar one next year. "I was a little worried at first because when I w ent there
for the first time, it was a big shock," Quick said. "I was worried they (the students) might have that too, so I was
keeping aneye on them the whole time. But they just dove right into the experiencenothing slowed them down." — Reporter; 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com.
Inmates Continued from A1 Howard's story is one that
is echoing across the country, as state lawmakers and
even the Federal Communications Commission move to take on an industry they
say has long charged exorbitant calling rates to a captive audience of prison and jail inmates.
The steep charges are the result of a contracting sys-
tem in which the companies Jay L. Clendenin I Los AngelesTimes pay "commissions" to correc- Phones In L.A. County Men's Central Jail. Earller thls year, the tional institutions — in some
FCC capped the cost of Interstate calls from correctional facill-
cases to pay for inmate pro- tles between 21 and 25 cents per mlnute, and federal regulators grams — while charging fees are explorlng whether to expand those efforts to in-state calls. to cover those costs, accord-
ing to regulators, lawmakers and inmate advocates. Now, San Francisco is tak-
collect in-state regional call,
such as those to a neighboring steps to halt the practice ing county, will drop by 70 — one of the nation's first lo- percent, to $4.05 from $13.35. A 15-minute collect local call cal jurisdictions to do so. At San Francisco Sheriff will now cost $2.75 instead of Ross Mirkarimi's urging, the $4.45 — a 38 percent drop. Board of Supervisors last Earlier this year, the FCC week voted unanimously to capped the cost of interstate amend the county contract with Virginia-based GTL to
calls from correctional facili-
ties between 21 and 25 cents dramatically reduce the cost per minute, and federal reguof calls, which can burden in- lators are exploring whether mates' families. to expand those efforts to in"We just decided to stop state calls. the bleeding of poor people," S o far, m ost s t ate e f Mirkarimi said, noting that fortshave focused on prissuccessful re-entry into soci- ons, not local jails, like San ety often depends on strong Francisco's. family ties. California and at least sevThe cost of a
15-minute en other states ban prisons
from accepting commissions. In a letter to the FCC last year, Anthony Annucci, act-
ing commissioner of the New York Department of Corrections and Community Su-
pervision, said the reduced rates arising from strict rules adopted in 2007 have contributed to "family reunification"
and a dramatic reduction in "illicit cell phone use." Verizon, which isn't in the
corrections business, has weighed in against the practice, telling the FCC: "Forcing inmates' families to fund (inmate services) through their calling rates is not the answer.... Other funding sources should be pursued."
+
Sara Krulwich / New YorkTimes News Service
Bartosz Dajnowskl uses a laser to clean decades of soot off the Egyptian obelisk In Central Park In New York. Presented as a glft to the city In1881, the 69-foot monolith behlnd the Metropolltan Museum of Art is belng restored by the privately-funded Central Park Conservancy.
Obelisk Continued from A1 That is why A n drzej Da-
jnowski and several colleagues at the Conservation of Sculpttue
and Objects Studio were called in hom Forest Park, Illinois, by the Central Park Conservmcy,
which cares for 55 monuments in thepark On June 30, Dajnowski could
be found more than halfway up the obelisk, cleaning a hieroglyph for the "s" sound in a cartouche reading: "User-Maat-Re, beloved of Amun." A few levels down, Robert Zarycki was
white pinpoint. It did not hum produced the greatest effect, eerily. It cradded. with virtually no impact on the The cleaning is tobe finished stone," said Christopher Nolan, in a week or so. After that, the conservancy's vice presiloose surfaces will be stabilized dent for planning, design and with a consolidating agent that construction. binds stone particles at a molecgn Athens, Greece, the anular level. All the work should cient Caryatid statues of the be finished in the fall, when the Acropolis have recently rescaffolding will come down. turned to public view after a The $500,000 project is paid laser cleaning.) for by the private, nonprofit Laser cleaning exploits the Central Par k C o nservancy, difference in materials' absorpwhich manages the park under tion properties, said Bartosz contract with New York City. Dajnowski, Andrzej's son and In a report to the city's Pub- the vice director of the conserlic Design Commission, which vationcompany. Theblackened reviewed and approved the deposits of soot absorb radia-
passing a laser beam over a obelisk project, the conservanbowl-shaped hieroglyph repre- cy said the goal was "promotsenting a basket and the sound ing its long-term preservation "nb," or Lord. Together with a and enhancing the public's uncartouchebelow, itread: "Lord derstanding and experience." of the two lands, User-Maat-Re, Diana Craig Patch, the head chosen of Re." of the Egyptian art department U ser-Maat-Re i s kno w n at the Met, raised an intriguing today as Ramesses II. He fol- possibility. "I think it unlikely lowed Thutmose III by about that there will be more schol200 years and added his own arshipon the hieroglyphs as a inscriptions to each face of the result of the cleaning, but we obelisk, flanking those of his may know more about how it predecessor. A later pharaoh, was painted possibly," she said. Osorkon I, squeezed in short "Traces mightbe found." tributes to himself. ("CleopatC onservancy offic i a l s ra's Needle" is a misnomer for considered using lasers, mithe obelisk. She had nothing to croabrasives or chemical cleando with it.) ers on the obelisk. Beginning Though th e c o nservators in October 2012, each method wore bulky respirators and was tested on a small patch of greenish goggles, the scene the monument's south face. Exaround the obelisk did not look perts were then convened. "When everybody went up like something out of science fiction. The laser did not pro- in a lift to see, by a great marduce a ruby-red beam, but a gin they said the laser had
tion from the laser much better
than the lighter-colored granite, which tends to reflect it. It
is not unlike wearing dark-colored dothes rather than whites on a sunny day. In nanoseconds, the soot partides are turned into whitehot plasma. As they expand, they expel themselves from
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the granite. Because the la-
ser emerges in infinitesimally short pulses, the stone itself is protected from
o v erheating,
Dajnowski said. Though the beams would be
Colors of Summer ... let the Fun begin!
too dispersed tocause harm
to passers-by, Dajnowski said, tarpaulins are required on the scaffolding as an extra layer of safety. After an intensely technical discussion, Nolan offered a
more pedestrian explanation. "We don't want cats going crazy chasing the lasers," he said.
•
•
• I
•
•
THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Urgent
Workforce
Continued fromA1 But what is happening here is also playing out across the nation, as private equity investment firms, sensing opportunity, invest billions in urgent care and relatedbusinesses. Since
Continued fromA1
The Workforce Innovationand OpportunityAct
In a prepared statement,
Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, said the bill seeks to
Sponsor:Rep.Virginia Foxx, R-N.C. History:Passed Senate in June;passed House Wednesday Central Oregonimpact: Would coordinate regional services and programs between job seekers, employers and local higher education institutions What's next:Headsto the president's desk; Obama is expected to sign into law
replace the current work-
force development system, which constituents have told him is a confusing maze of programs. Walden described the current system as out-
2008, these investors have sunk
$2.3 billion into urgent care dinics. Commercial insurance companies, regional health systems and local hospitals are also looking to buy urgent care
dated, inefficient and not ac-
countable to taxpayers. "This bipartisan legis-
practices or form business relationships withthem.
lation will reform and im-
prove workforce training programs so Oregonians
The business model is sim-
A5
ple: treat many patients as
can obtain the skills they
quickiy aspossible. Urgent care is a low-margin, high-volume proposition. At PhysicianOne here, most people are in and out in about 30 minutes. The
need to go back to work. It eliminates fifteen duplicative programs, reducing administrative costs and unnecessary bureaucracy. Lo-
national average charge runs about $155 per patient visit. Do
cal boards are empowered to tailor services to their
30 or 35 exams a day, and the
region's employment and workforce needs. And the bill promotes skills training
new legislation would help employers c o mmunicate
earlier this month et a PhysicienOne Urgent Cere clinic in Newtown, Connecticut. Private equity
for 21st century jobs, fos-
investment firms, sensing opportunity, have invested billions in urgent care and related businesses,
tering a modern workforce that Oregon businesses rely
such as Central Oregon Community College and OSU-Cascades. "Employers need to get together and say, 'This is something we really need,'"
money starts to addup. Andrew Sullivan / New York Times News Service Urgent care dinics also have Dr. Jeennie Kenkare, left, end Micheiie Flennery treat Roberte Giordeno, who severed e foot tendon, a crucial business advantage over traditional hospital ERs
in that they can cherry-pick pa- one of the fastest-growing segments of the American health industry. tients. Most of these centers do not accept Medicaid and turn
thomas.l oc.gov/home/ bills res.html
their needs to local schools,
on to compete. It's a win for
f a cilities. up around where I practice, Otherstateshaveweighed pro- and almost every day, we have posals on whether urgent care patients transferred to us from facilities should be required to one of them," said Dr. Robert But as urgent care centers accept Medicaid or uninsured O'Connor, the chairman of expand their reach, regulators patients. emergency medicine at the in some states are scrutinizing University of Virginia in Char-
hatsch and his partners chose PineBridge Investments and
"We've focused on how health care is going to be de-
taxpayers, job seekers and employers," Walden said. Trygve Bolken, the human resources manager for Bend Research, said the bill will create a single organization where people looking for jobs, educational organi-
their activities. While some
lottesville and vice president of the American College of Emer-
livered to consumers in the
zations and employers can
new world order and how do
gency Physicians.
consumers want their health
coordinate their efforts. "It's going to strength-
awaytheuninsuredunlessthey pay upfront. Hospital ERs, by contrast, are legally obligated to treat everyone.
Online:Read the bill at
"immediate care"
Eager buyers
states require the dinics to be D espite concerns of possible licensed, most do not. increased regulations, compaIt is unclear whether such ur- nies are lining up to buy urgent gent care centers offer better or care groups. worse care than other providThe insurance giant Humaers. But some family physicians na paid nearly $800 million — who stand to lose business in 2010 to buy Concentra, the to the newcomers — wonder if nation's largest group of urpatients are trading quality for gent care centers, with about convenience. 300 currently. Two years later, "The relationship I have with Dignity Health, a San Franmy patients and the compre- cisco-based health system, hensivenessof care I provide acquired U.S. HealthWorks, to them is important," said Dr. a group that today has 176 Robert Wergin, a family physi- centers. cian in Milford, Nebraska, and Even hospitals are embracthe president-elect of the Amer- ing the trend. Florida Hospital ican Academy of Family Physi- in Orlando, for example, has cians. "While there is a role for opened 24 Centra Care urgent these centers, if I were sick I'd care dinics. "We havea number ofurgent rathersee my regular doctor, and I hope my patients feel that care centers that have opened way."
Pulse Equity Partners, which specializes in health and wellness investments.
care to be delivered," said gressive buyers have been pri- Douglas Lehrman, the foundvate equity firms, according er and chief executive of Pulse to datafrom a research firm, Equity. PitchBook. For now, at least, many patients seem satisfied. At Phy-
sicianOne dinic here, Peter
nail to relieve the pressure and
and skill sets, said Bolken,
has 130 clinics in 10 states. Last fall, when Dr. R. Robert
wrapped up the finger. Andino
who was recently appointed to the Oregon Workforce In-
Andino arrived at on a recent
Thursday evening after smashing his finger in a car door. The doctor quiddy punctured his
"A lot of the improvements in this act are what the gov-
few local candidates meet
the required qualifications
was in and out in 45 minutes. "Dealing with the ER is a hassle," Andino said. "This
cided they needed additional
Gov. John Kitzhaber has
en the connection between
a private equity firm, and Sequoia Capital, a giant in venture capital, acquired a stake in MedExpress Urgent Care, which operated 47 clinics in four states. Today, MedExpress Rohatsch and his partners de-
to develop curricula that will build a pool of local candidates, he said. "Giving employers a voice on gocal) workforce investment boards and on workforce development issues is critical."
already asked state workadult education and really force investment boards to align (those efforts) with streamline their programs what businesses are look- and make the process siming for," he said. plerand easier forjob seekCurrently, Bend Research ers, including r eferring has to recruit around 80 per- them to services such as cent of its hires from outside food stamps for which they Central Oregon because may be eligible, he said.
But some of the most ag-
In 2010, General Atlantic,
and work with local schools
ernor is asking us to do on a state level," Bolken said. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbuIIetin.com
vestment Board. He said the
capital to expand their practice, place is dean, it's quick, and it's Urgent Care of Connecticut, about five minutes away from they received bids from about a my house. What more could dozen private equity firms. Ro- you want'?"
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet • • C l aSSifIedS
•
'
•
National ambitions Already, the race is on to
build large chains with powe rful, national brands — a
McDonald's or a Gap of health care. Wall Street money is driving the growth, but so are other forces. Millions of newly insuredAmericans areseeking
•
•
•
Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, an asso-
•
an adjunct policy analyst at the RAND Corp. "So now we want our health care tobe 24/7."
While convenience is one factor,so is cost.The average
charge to treat acute bronchitis at an urgent care center in 2012 was $122, compared with $814 at an emergency room, according to data on the web-
•
t•
g
I • l
Medicine, a research and consulting firm in Minnesota, puts
thenumber at5,000to6,000. One reason for the discrep-
ancy, Charland explained, is that the industry is dominated by physici an-owned practices with one or two facilities that
nobody tracks. But a bigger issue, he said, is that the industry lacks dear criteria about what
exactlyurgent care means. "Just because a physician's o ffice extended i t s
•
i
4
•
•
I•
•
•
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after1 pm: 59.99.Onlyat Macy's. From Fairfield Square Collection.' Full-king. Shown: Norwood.
after 1 pm: $35-$58R F~u'r Charter Ct'Ub, Martha StewartColle~n , SensorGel and
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2,600 clinics, estimates there are more than 9,000 dinics in
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ductible health plans. Still, just how quickiy urgent care is proliferating is difficult to measure. The Urgent Care Association of America,
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to consumers with h igh-de-
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site of CareFirst Blue Cross
The price of treating a middle-ear infection was $100 versus nearly $500 in an ER. Such cost differences matter not only to commercial insurers but also
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ciate professor in the Department of Health Care Policy at Harvard Medical School and
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Many experts say a cultural shift is also underway.
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' ALL SALE 8[ CLEARANCE APPAREL elect ronics,cosmetics/fragrances,athleticshoesforhim, her & kids,DallasCowboysmerchandise, gift cards, jewelry AND SELECT HOME ITEMS!
~ CANNOT BE USED ON DOORBUSTERS trunkshows,New Era,NikeonField,previouspurchases, special orders,selectedlicenseddepts., special purchases, i OR DEALSOFTHE DAY services,macys.com.Cannot becombinedwith anysavings pass/ coupon,extradiscountorcreditoff er,exceptopening a new Macy' s account.Dollar savings are allocated as discounts offeacheligible item, asshownon receipt. When i YOUR PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE. youreturn anitem,youforfeitthesavingsallocated to thatitem.Thiscouponhasnocashvalueandmaynotbe
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ALL SALE 8[ CLEARANCE APPAREL AND SELECT HOME ITEMS!
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doesn't make it urgent care," Charland said. "To me, urgent care means you can do X-rays, that you can do sutures, maybe you're open one weekend day, plus one or two evenings." Regulators in some states are struggling with that question and others as well. In Illinois, for instance, the authorities restrict the use of the word ur-
gent, so clinics there are called
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OPEN A MACY'S ACCOUNT FOR EXTRA 20% SAVINGS THE FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE REWARDS TO COME. Macy's credit card is available subject to credit approval; new account savings valid the day your account is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, restaurants, gourmet food & wine. The new account savings are limited to a total of $100; application must qualify for immediate approval to receive extra savings; employees not eligible.
A6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
More than rumors drive youths north to the U.S. border
IN FOCUS: GRAND CANYON
ationa ar ervice soun s warnin a out t reat to iconic estern views
By Tracy Wilkinson
for decades: family unifica-
By Julie Cart
Los Angeles Times
tion, hometown violence, in-
Los Angeles Times
escapable poverty and lack — A couple of weeks ago, sis- ofopportunity. ters Karen and Sindy Laucel Guatemala, H o nduras joined the exodus of youths and El S alvador, the sofrom Central America, hop- called Northern Triangle ing to reconnect with their of Central America, are m other, who had left t h is among the poorest and farming village a decade ago most deadly countries in in search of work in the U.S. the hemisphere. Plagued With so many heading by ruthless street gangs north, now seemed the time and a growing presence of to reunite. The teens filled a Mexican drug traffickers, single backpack with three the countries h ave s een days' worth of clothes, and homicideratesgrow by 99 their mother paid a coyote, or percent over the last deguide, to take her daughters cade, with the current rate and a 10-year-old girl from five times that of the United the village to the U.S. border States, according to a new nearly2,000milesaway. study by the British-based HORCONES, Guatemala
G RAND C A N YO N N A TIONAL PARK, Ariz. — At
the rim of the Grand Canyon, busloads of Chinese tourists jostled on a recent day with
20-something b ackpackers
"2 .
and an A mish family w i t h r ambunctious boys i n s u s -
penders and straw hats, all eager for a prime viewing spot. They gazed out on a dizzying sight of receding canyons and sheer rock walls, with the Colorado River cutting
through the canyon floor a mile down.
Generations of park managers have tried to preserve that natural vista, but officials here say a proposed development would alter the view.
Mei Meison / Los Angeles Times
The Colorado River flows through the GrandCanyon, pictured in January. The town ofTusayan,
shops on a distant mesa on the Arizona, has proposed adding commercial development near the canyon that is being fought by the Navajo Indian reservation.
National Park Service.
The developers also plan a gondola ride from those atTusayan development would the canyon floor, where they add 2,200homes and 3 milwould stroll along an elevated lion square feet of commercial riverside walkway to a restau- space to a town two blocks rant at the confluence of the long. Colorado and Little Colorado Park officials say existing rivers. development around the park That project and a second, and the scarcity of water have unrelated development pro- already stressed the park's tractions to whisk tourists to
posed for just south of the can-
ability to handle visitors. The
yon have set off alarms at the new projects would only make National Park Service, which sees them as the most serious
matters worse.
"They are serious threats to the future of the park," said
threat the park has faced in its 95-year history.
park S uperintendent D a ve
The first would alter the
natural beauty of the canyon and encroach on its borders. The second, a major housing and commercial development, jeopardizes the fragile ecology and water supply on the arid South Rim plateau. The
Uberuaga. "When you have that size and scope of potential development that close to the
park, it will impact our visitor experience." The Grand Canyon affords
once-in-a-lifetime views, but it has always been difficult for
of the canyon. We want them
to feel the canyon from the Native American tribes are bottom." It's at the bottom that the changing that. Grand Canyon West, on Hualapai land, oper- conflict lies, as the Navajo conates the Skywalk attraction, tend that they have rights to a popular glass walkway that property above the high-water juts out over the canyon. Since mark of the rivers. 2007, the tribe has offered heliPark officials say the Navacopter tours that land on tribal jo are mistaken. Federal jurispropertynexttotheriver. diction extends a quarter-mile The proposed Grand Can- on either side of the Colorado, yon Escalade gondola would the park says, and no developafford a rare opportunity for ment can occur any closer to tourists to reach the canyon the water. floor, said developer R. Lamar For now, the park is waiting Whitmer, who is working with for the tribe to complete its the Navajo. planning process before proThe park s e rvice offers viding an official response.
s
tube and traveling mostly by bus, they seemed to be among the lucky ones. They avoided the extortion, rape
and grandfather were shot
a bus in central Mexico.
its electricity or water bills to
Karen and Sindy's father
Held for a week in a shelter the federal government. near Mexico City with dozThe Obama administraens of other boys and girls, tion says it h a s d etained they ate pizza and watched more than 50,000 "unaccomtelenovelas until they were panied minors" trying to dispatched back home. cross the border in the first "I cried and cried and half of this year. Many if not cried," said Karen, 15. "Only most appear to have an older when I finally saw all the relative with them, or at least other girls did I calm down." a coyote. Sindy, a year older, has In fact, the smuggling of memorized her m other's people to the U.S. is big busiphone number in North Car- ness. Coyotes, who in Mexiolina, and said she just want- co are often descendants of ed to get to know her. some of the country's most "I know her only by pho- vicious drug cartels, can tos," Sindy said. charge $7,000 or more for a Some Central Americans single migrant. These netfeel encouraged by rumors works may in fact be stimuthat children who cross into lating the current exodus by the U.S. will be allowed to lying about the difficulties of stay. But other fundamental the journey and giving false reasons fueling migration promises about what lies have remained unchanged ahead, experts say.
anyone except seasoned hik- nothing more than "a drive-by ers to reach the canyon floor. wilderness experience," WhitMost of the 5 million annual mer said. "The average person can't ride a mule to the bottom visitors stop at the rim, look out and move on without ever venturing into the canyon.
Action on Armed Violence.
to death in unsolved killings. The family can no longer afford to pay for Sindy's and other crimes so preva- schooling. The town where lent along the route — up un- they live, Horcones, in Jutil the moment an immigra- tiapa state near the border tion agent pulled them from with El Salvador, can't pay
Looking eastward from the
canyon's popular South Rim, visitors could soon see a hive of construction as w orkers build restaurants, hotels and
Crossing the Suchiate River into Mexico on an inner
Ig
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
BRIEFING Firefighters busy with wildfires Firefighters on Wednesday evening had a small wildfire south of Bend under control, as they responded to several fires in the wake ofa thunderstorm Tuesday. But the fire near Pringle Butte, about 9 miles southwest of Sunriver, was human-caused, with the exact cause under investigation, said Jada Altman, the floor supervisor at the Central Oregon Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville. The fire burned six-tenths of an acre. Firefighters also were working on an 8-acre blaze 2 to 3miles southeast of Culver, said Maria Maragni, manager at the dispatch center. That fire had "plenty of resources" fighting it, Maragni said. And a crew was responding by air Wednesday evening to look at a fire spotted near SodaTable, 10 miles east of Paulina. Fire crews werebusy late Tuesdayandearlier Wednesday with three other small wildfires sparked byTuesday's thunderstorm, said Kassidy Kern, spokeswoman for the dispatch center. Firefighters kept two of the fires, which burned about10 miles southeast of La Pine, to about a tenth of anacre each and the other fire, just north of Paulina Lake, to less than an acre. A spotter plane took off around 3 p.m. to search for more fires potentially started by the storm, which was most intense from 5 to 8 p.m. Tuesdayand created 758 lightning strikes.
Surge mayhave caused housefire A house fire on Bend's southeast side Tuesday evening was apparently triggered by a power surgewhen lightning struck a nearby transformer, according to the BendFire Department. The fire, in the 21000
block of Chilliwack Way, was reported at 7:08 p.m. Firefighters arrived to find smoke coming from vents in the roof, and a room andits contents inside on fire. A power companyemployee who came tothe scene to turn off electricity discovered the transformer feeding the house had beenstruck by lightning. Damages wereestimated at $40,000. The American Red Cross is providing two adult residents of the home with recovery information, and information about disaster mental health and disaster health services. — Bulletin staff reports
o unteer: ive en a r ec contro o i ot utte tate ar By Scott Hammers
with Mirror Pond is a problem, you wait until four or five
The Bulletin
A proposal to move Pilot
anytime soon.
years from now — it's gonna be a bigger problem on the butte, a far bigger problem," he said. Jerry Winegar, regional manager for the Oregon
Denny Sullivan, an 88-year-old who has been
Parks and Recreation Department, said the state has
volunteering at Pilot Butte for
on occasion turned over its parks to local controL One example can be found locally, he said — Ochoco Lake State Park near Prineville is run by
Butte State Park under the management ofthe Bend Park & Recreation District is
unlikely to get much traction
more than 20 years, has been promoting the idea as a way to address what he views as
the accelerating deterioration of the butte. Formal and informal trails are destroying vegetation and triggering erosion on the loose slope of the butte, he said, and the narrow road
to the top is unsafe for both
the Crook County Parks & Recreation District under an
t
Sunriver, said the park district is the right body to take
over operation of the butte, as
The state parks department
is in no rush to turn over its facilities to local control,
Winegar added, but would entertain the discussion of what
drivers and those on foot or
bicycles. Sullivan, who lives outside
agreement with the state.
David Jasper/The Bulletin file photo
Denny Sullivan, a longtime volunteer at Pilot Butte, contends Pilot Butte State Park would be better off with Bend Park & Recreation in control of its upkeep.
most visitors to the park are local, and the park district's
focus on providing facilities for physical fitness better
suits how the butte is used today.
should happen to Pilot Butte if
approached by Bend Park & Recreation.
"If they don't do this, you
think the problem we have
SeeButte/B5
BRIEFING Bend bicyclist dies after crash A Bend womandied following a Fourth of July bicycle crash, according to BendPolice. Judy Ramsey-Martinson, 57, died at St. Charles Bendfollowing the crash, spokeswoman Kayle yMendenhall confirmed. Lt. Nick Parker said Ramsey-Martinson was riding her bike when she strucka pedestrian walking along Northwest Wyeth Place on AwbreyButte. Police and emergency responders were dispatched to the crashat 9:46 p.m., Parker said, andRamsey-Martinson was transported to the hospital by ambulance. The pedestrian suffered minor injuries in the crash. Parker said police are continuing to investigate the cause of the crash.
Bend-LaPine boardhas opening
AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT
ur wor coninuesin en • City is spending $500K annually in push for compliance By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin
The city of Bend is halfway through the list of approximately 200 sidewalk curb
ramps it plans to build this summer, in an ongoing effort to comply with the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act. City crews rebuilt curb
ramps on Northwest College Way earlier this week, where a Central Oregon Community College accessible campus routecrosses the street.Bend Street Division Manager
Hardy Hanson said he did not know whether the city or the college built the ramps that
needed to be redone, but the city bears responsibility be-
te
cause its employees inspected
and signed off on the work.
o ttr
"At the time, we thought we
C7
were doing them right, and we weren't," Hanson said. City infrastructure and other public facilities built since the Americans with Disabilities Act took effect
fice, 520 NW Wall St.,
Bend, Oregon, 97701, or via email to andrea. wilson©bend.k12. or.us. The deadline is 4 p.m. Aug. 8. Applicants will be interviewed by current members, who hope to make an appointment before their board retreat Aug. 18. The appointed Zone 4 director will serve through June30 2015 andwill have the option to file for election to serve the remainder of the unexpired term ending June
must meet accessibility requirements. Approximately 5,000 curb ramps in Bend vi-
olated accessibility guidelines as of earlier this year, out of a total of more than 7,000. The
range of problems include incorrect slopes on the ramps and adjoining sidewalks and a lack of visible warnings, such as a yellow plastic strip the city installs on new ramps
to inform visually impaired peoplethey are atthe edge of the street.
Bend is spending $500,000 annually on the work, which it is supposed to finish by early 2015 under a 2004 settlement agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice.
SeeCurbs/B5
The Bend-La Pine School Board is seeking applicants to represent southern Deschutes County as a board member. The board's current southern Deschutes County representative, Mike Jensen, announced during a board meeting Tuesday he would resign at the end of the month. Jensen was appointed by the board in July 2012 after the resignation of Tom Wilson, and he was elected by voters to his current four-year term in May 2013. Before coming to the board, he served on the district's La Pine High School Advisory Committee. Applicants must live within voting precincts 16, 23, 24, 38, 39, 40, or 50, which includes La Pine and Sunriver. Applicants must also be a registered voter and have lived in the zone for at least one year. To apply for the unpaid position, applicants must submit a letter ofinterest and resume to the Bend-La Pine Schools Board of Directors, Attention: Superintendent's Of-
30, 2017. — Bulletin staff reports Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
City of Bend employee Scott Winter, foreground, works with fellow employees to install s new curb
ramp on NWCollege Waynear the Mazama Gymon the Central Oregon Community College campus inBend on Wednesday morning.
Note briefing, B6 News of Reconf, B2
Well shot! 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.cem/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
COCCOffiCialS:EnrOllment diP aSignOteCOnOmiCreCOVery By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Central Oregon Community College continued to see a decline in enrollment this
which began affecting the college after 2012. According to this logic, community college enrollment tends to decline
the college is offering fewer sections than last summer, decreasing expenses by about $95,000, according to Ron Paradis, COCC director of
summer term, according to a
as the economy improves because would-be students
presentation to COCC's board
take jobs instead of class-
Wednesday night. A year ago, the college had
es as more work becomes has led to a $125,000 dip in available. revenue. "We had budgeted for a 15 "This plants a warning percent decline, so this drop is for the fall," Middleton said. "One shoe has dropped. steeper than what the budget anticipated," said COCC Pres- We're hoping the second ident Jim Middleton. doesn't. The preliminary
2,924 students enrolled. This
year, that number is down to 2,395, a decrease of 529 students and just over 18 percent. COCC administrators
attributed the decrease to the continuedeconomic recovery,
To accommodate the larg-
er-than-forecast decrease,
college relations. Despite the savings, the enrollment shift
views on fall enrollment are
challenging both here and at
other community colleges." Dean of Student and Enrollment Services Alicia
Moore noted COCC's enrollment over the past 10 to 15 years has mirrored that of
other Oregon community colleges, though increases and decreases at COCC tend to lag
behind the other schools by one year. "This is on par with what
othercolleges have already experienced," she said. Also during the meeting, the board elected Laura Cras-
ka-Cooper as the next board chairwoman. Craska-Cooper will replace Bruce Abernethy. The board approved a purchase for bed frames, ward-
robes and desks to furnish a dorm that is under construction. The furniture, which
the college is paying $569,730 for, was made by inmates from theOregon Corrections
Enterprises program. The $22 million, 330-bed dorm is scheduled to open fall 2015. — Reporter:541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R Friendly Strangers; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic.
TODAY QUILTS IN THEGARDEN: Selfguided tour of gardens and homes in and around Sisters; quilts will be ondisplay;$15;9 a.m.-3 p.m.; Gallimaufry, 111 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.sistersgardenclub.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli felbendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMf.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
California gypsy-rock band performs; $10; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. CASCADELAVENDER FESTIVAL: Essential oil distilling demonstrations, crafts, lavender refreshments and friendly farm
IJ~ /
com.
,
4
H
TERENCENEAL: Folk-pop; 6 p.m.; Brasada Ranch, 16986 SW Brasada Ranch Road, Powell Butte;
www.brasadalodging.comor 541-526-6865. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Robin Oliveira will present on her book "I Always Loved You"; $5; 7 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SW SixthSt.,Redmond; 541-526-1491.
com, leweyluv©yahoo.comor
541-595-6389. OREGON SUMMER QUILTEXPO: "A Celebration of Fabric Arts" features vendors, exhibits and
learning experiences;$10,free
for children15 and younger; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.
CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP HORSE RACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5 includes parking, women free; 7:15p.m.,gates open at6 p.m .; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www. crookedriverroundup.com or 541-447-4479. "RIFFTRAX LIVE: SHARKNADO": Featuring a new take on the viral movie; $12.50; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. BLACK PUSSY: 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
oregonsummerquiltexpo.comor 866-266-3136. THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Paris Wife" by Paula McLain; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond, reneeb©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1055. THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Elizabeth and Hazel" by David Margolick; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend, reneeb@deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1055. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Robin Oliveira will present on her book"I Always Loved You"; free; 4 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. MUNCH & MUSIC: Featuring nuegrass/pop music by Fruition, with opener Will West and The
FRIDAY OREGON SUMMER QUILTEXPO: "A Celebration of Fabric Arts" features vendors, exhibits and learning experiences; $10, free for children15 and younger; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County
animals; 10-5p.m.;Cascade V
Lavender, 5000 SW Feather Drive, Madras; www.cascadelavendar. com or 541-546-9390.
: . "' 4
+
'Sgk
SATURDAY The Bulletin file photo
The Crooked River Roundup horse races run through Saturday. Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.
oregonsummerquiltexpo.comor
866-266-3136. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade Avenue and Ash Street; sistersfarmersmarket@gmail.com. VFW DINNER:Fishand chips;$6; 3-7 p.m.; VFW Hall,1503 NE Fourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. CRAWFEST2014: More than 25 bands, food, art and more; $20 for weekendpass,camping included, free for children 6 and younger; 4 p.m.; 16065 SW Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; www.j.mp/crawfest. BEND SUMMER FESTIVAL: Live music on three stages, fine artist promenade, conscious living
HORSE RACES:Features the annual equestrian event with gambling; $5 includes parking, women free; 7:15p.m.,gates open at6 p.m .; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; www.
crookedriverroundup.comor 541-447-4479. BEND IMPROVGROUP: The comedy group performs; adult themes; $8 in advance, $10 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave.; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. THE CARAVAN OFGLAM: The Portland gay cabaret show comes to Bend with burlesque, acrobats,
showcase, foodvendors and more;
live singers andmore; $10; 8 p.m., doors openat 6 p.m.; Seven
free; 5-10 p.m.; downtown Bend; www.bendfestivals.com. CROOKED RIVERROUNDUP
Nightclub, 1033 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-760-9412. DIEGO'SUMBRELLA: The
TOUR DESCHUTES: Multidistance social cycling event, with a new 5K noncompetitive event; postride party features live music, food and vendor village; proceeds benefit the St. Charles Cancer Survivorship Program and the Pediatric Foundation; $60, $20 for children15 and younger, $130 for familes (up to four kids) for ride; $25, $10 for children15 and younger, $50 for families (up to four kids) for run; 6 a.m.; High LakesElementary School,2500 NW High Lakes Loop, Bend; www. tourdeschutes.org. PARKING LOTSALE: Benefiting the
www.familyfunrun.eventbrite.com. MADRAS SATURDAYMARKET: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh and B streets; 541-546-6778. MIGRATION ONTHE WING EXHIBIT OPENS: Explore the world of aerial migrations and learn how birds travel thousands of miles; 9 a.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. SISTERSOUTDOOR QUILTSHOW: Showing more than1,300 quilts from around the world; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; downtown Sisters; www. sistersoutdoorquiltshow.org or 541-549-0989. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Mary Tatem will sign her two books "Quilt of Joy" and "Quilt of Faith"; free; 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866.
CENTRAL OREGONSATURDAY MARKET: Featuring local artists and crafters; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lot across from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NW Wall St.; 541-420-9015. COW PASTUREOPEN: 11 holes and a shotgun start, food and more, all proceeds to benefit Deschutes school band's campaign toperform County 4H; $35 per person, at Carnegie Hall in 2015; 8 a.m.-2 registration requested; 10 a.m.; Field across from Maragas Winery, p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 15525 SW U.S. Highway 97, Culver; 541-923-6603. www.rvhs.redmond.k12.or.us or 541-504-3600. NORTHWEST CROSSING FAMILYFUN RUN/WALK: FARMERS MARKET: 10 a.m.-2 Benefiting the Sam Johnson Park p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. renovation; $15, $25 for couples, Washington and NW Crossing $40 for families; 9 a.m.; Dry Canyon drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com Trail, near Pershall Way, Redmond; or 541-312-6473.
1VEWSOF RECORD a.m.June30,inthe700 blockofNW Bond Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 9:07 a.m.June30,inthe20600blockof White DoveLane. Theft — A theft was reported at 3:34 p.m. June 30, in the1100 block of NW Bond Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at 6:57 a.m. July 2, in the19700 block of Poplar Street. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:12 a.m. July 2, in the19700 block of
POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft — Atheft was reported at 6:44
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Volare Lane. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 5:02 p.m. July 2, in the1300 blockof NE Drost Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 5:04 p.m. July 2, in thearea of NW Greenwood Avenueand NWWall Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 5:41 a.m. July 4, in the2100blockof NE Third Street.
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Criminal mischiel — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:34 a.m. July 4, in the 300 block of NE Bend River Mall Avenue. Theft — Atheft was reported at1 p.m. July 4, in the100 block of SE Airpark Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:44 p.m. July 4, in the 500 block of SE Airpark Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 1:51 p.m. July 4, in the 61200 block of
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Larkwood Drive. DUII — Michael Oleachea,43, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:52 p.m. July4, in the areaof NE GreenwoodAvenueand NE12th Street. Burglary — A burglary was reported at10:04 a.m. July 5, in the20600 block of Cherry TreeLane. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 3:09 p.m. July 5, in the 500 block of NE Bellevue Drive.
DUII — Craig EdwardSnyder, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 5:47 p.m. July 5, in the area of NWTrenton Avenue and NWSixth Street. Theft — A theft was reported at1:44 p.m. July6, in the1500 blockof NW Ithaca Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at1:56 p.m. July 6, in the 2100block of NE Third Street.
Continued next page
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THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON GRANTS PASS
AROUND THE STATE
26arrests stemfram
probe into girl's death
COaSt GuardreSCueS 3 —When a14-foot boat capsizedin front of the CoastGuard's TillamookBaystation at Garibaldi on thenorth Oregon coast, guardsmenswung into action, rescuing two children and one adult. Petty Officer 2ndClass Patrick Sandlerwas working on the pier Tuesdayafternoon when heheard screamsfor help andsawagirl swimming toward him. He helped her onto the pier andcalled for reinforcements. Theagency sent out aboat andcrew to helpthe other two people, a mananda boywho were holding on to thebreakwall approximately 200 yards from thestation pier. TheCoast Guardsays all three were taken to anearby hospital. Theywere reported in goodcondition.
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Cover Oregon chief to make$215Ka year —Thenew director of CoverOregonwill earn a basesalary of $215,000 a year. Aaron Patnodewill also beeligible for yearly incentive pay of $32,250 if he meets performancemeasures set bythe Cover Oregonboard. The Oregonian reports that Patnode'swagewill be $30,000 morethan his predecessor's. BoardChair LizBaxter saysthe salary is appropriate and stressed that thesalary range wasset using a consultant's survey of equivalent positions.
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The Associated Press GRANTS PASS — A total
of 26 people have been arrested on weapons, drug and other charges after an investigation that began with the
accidental killing of a 5-yearold girl by a Grants Pass man using a military-style rifle as a crutch to get up from a couch, authorities said. The investigation u ncov-
ered a ring in Southern Oregon that specialized in "straw" purchases of weapons, buys designed to conceal the ultimate recipient, the Grants PassDaily Courierreported. The man convicted in the girl's killing, Jon A. Meyer Jr., 30, was involved in such a pur-
chase, touching off the investigation revealed Wednesday in a statement from the Jackson
County Sheriff's Office. Fivemore people are being sought. The investigation involved federal state and local agencies. The child, Alysa Bobbitt, of
Shady Cove, was visiting at a Grants Pass apartment with her mother in June 2013.
Meyer was below in the living room of his apartment when the gun went off, sending a burst of bullets through the ceiling, hitting the girl and seriously wounding a woman. In a plea bargain with prosecutors, Meyer pleaded guilty in 2013 to manslaughter and other charges and was sentenced to six years in prison.
After Meyer was sentenced, the Daily Courier reported that federal authorities were
investigating the background of the rifle, which fired in an a utomatic mode either b e -
cause of a malfunction or because it had been illegally tampered with. The statement from investi-
gators Wednesday said some of the guns purchased by the ring ended up at crime scenes in California. It said two mur-
der plots were uncovered. During the investigation, authorities seized rifles, hand-
guns and a variety of drugs. Other charges contained in the state and federal indictments include racketeering,
attempted murder, assault and promoting prostitution.
MiSSing KeiZer man faunddead —OregonState Policesay Zachary Kaufman /The Columbian (Vancouver, Washington)
Main Street Marijuana in Vancouver, Washington, opens to the public for the first time Wednesday. Mayor Tim Leavitt cut a green ribbon outside the store, opening the doors to the first recreational
marijuana store in Vancouver.
RecreationalpotgivesOregonians an incentive tocrossthe Columbia By Steven Dubois
Washington and Colorado juana was going for $60 and legalized recreational can- 4 grams would set you back VANCOUVER, Wash. nabis for adults over 21. Sales $110. Most people in line said Legal pot means Portlandia began in Colorado on Jan. 1. they paid about $10 a gram is going to get to know "The Washington officials expect on the street. Couv" a little better. "The prices are way too to eventually license more Mayor Tim Leavitt cut a than 300 shops. high. They're going to keep green ribbon outside Main Outside Main Street Mar- the black market i n b u siStreet Marijuana on Wednes- ijuana, appropriately located ness," said Teresa Thorsen, day, opening the doors to the on Main Street, a software 52, of Vancouver. first recreational marijuana company turned its parkMany southwest Washingstore in Vancouver. The city ing lot and a side road into ton residents shop in Oregon a "Weed and Weenie" festi- to avoid sales taxes. They in s outhwest W a shington is just a 10-mile drive from val, with vendors selling hot also head to Oregon to buy d owntown P o r tland. C u l - dogs and drug paraphernalia cheaper liquor, and Thorsen turally, however, it is many while others distributed in- expects they'll eventually miles apart, and Portlanders formation about pot. go to Portland to buy marsay they have little reason to Person after person inter- ijuana. Oregon votersare cross the I-5 bridge to visit viewed Wednesday said they likely to vote on the issue in their suburban neighbors. were withstanding the lines November. "They're going to legalize But Portlanders were rep- and the July sun because r esented among th e h u n - they wanted to be part of an it across the bridge, and it's dreds of people who waited event they likened to the end- going to be cheaper there," in line for the doors to open ing of Prohibition. she said. "And people are go"I'mmore relaxed purchas- ing to do what they do now. on the second day licensed, taxed and regulated marijua- ing this gram than I ever have They're going to bounce over na was available in Washing- been before," said Mark Ed- the bridge." ton state. A handful of stores wards, 42, of Salem, Oregon, Until t ha t t i me , M a yor in the state opened to long who arrived at 3:30 a.m. and, Leavitt and Vancouver busilines and cheers on Tuesday, nearly eight hours later, was nesses hope to capitalize on including one in Seattle, and the first customer to enter the their visitors from the other a few more were expected to store. "And this is a chance to side of the Columbia River. "I'm sure that there will be open by Friday, including a be part of history." second one in Vancouver. The only gripes were about lots of Portlanders that come John Evich, an i n vestor the prices. Because state-reg- up to partake and enjoy, in Bellingham's Top Shelf ulated marijuana produc- and we welcome PortlandCannabis, said business re- tion got off to a slow start, ers coming up to enjoy our mained solid Wednesday af- supply problems sent prices downtown," Leavitt said. ternoon, with five to six cus- at Washington stores much The mayor acknowledged tomers in the shop at a time. higher than what recreation- trying pot in Amsterdam. He said he hoped his supply al users generally spend on Was he going to buy on openwould last through the week. the black market. ing day? "No. I saw what the prices The store openings came At Main Street Marijuana, a 2-gram package of mari- are," he joked. 20 months after voters in
four homes on ahillside above anOregon coast beach. KPTVreports that five fire agencies responded totheTuesday evening fire at Neahkahnie. Firefighters found flamesstretching from the beach upto the homes. The fire appeared to start in some beach driftwood but fire officials didn't know thecause.Strong winds pushed the fire toward the homes. Twosuffered heavy damagewhile theother two sustained just minor damage. Noonewas hurt. — From wire reports
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Being a mom to more than 100 children is m or e t h an
girl was in the third grade and the youngest of five siblings, all of whom Watson took into her home.
most parents would want to
The oldest sibling was 17 at
Grants Pass Daity Courier
Beach wildfire damages 4 homes — Awildfire has damaged
The Associated Press
Grants Pass momhasfostered morethan 100children By Ruth Longoria Kingsland
a 54-year-old Keizermanreported missing onJune 8has beenfound dead in afield near the Marion County community of Talbot. Lt. Gregg Hastings said thebodyfound Wednesdayhas beenidentified as Robert Allen Knupp. Knuppwas reported missing after his vehicle was found unoccupied at theSantiam RestAreaalong Interstate 5 south of Salem. The Oregonstate medical examiner's office plans anautopsy to determine the mannerandcauseof death.
"There's not a whole lot of space for the kids who need
care," he said. To be a foster parent, an applicant must be at least 21
the time and had been raising years old; meet income reCharlene Watson, it's been a his two younger brothers and quirements, so the stipend blessing nearly all of the time. two younger sisters prior to paid for the child's care is not "I am so proud of her. the youths coming to live with the household's only income; Oh man, I'm excited," Wat- Watson, she said. pass a criminal background son said last month as she These are just a small sam- check and safety check on the watched one o f h e r f o ster pling of the about 280 current home; complete a four-week, daughters graduate f r om foster children in Josephine 20-hour training course; and North Valley High School. County, said Bob Hendrick, complete 30 additional hours This made for about a doz- fosterhome recruiterand cer- of training every two years. en graduations Watson, 64, tifier for Oregon Department Applicants also must provide has attended in the 21 years of Human Services in Grants fourlettersofreference. she has been a foster parent. Pass. Single parents may care This particular youth has There is a big need for fos- for up to four children, inbeen in Watson's care for ter homes, he explained, add- cluding their own. A couple is the past 10 years, and is one ing that there are about only allowed to care for up to sevof the "success stories" that 140 certified foster homes in en children, including their makes being a foster parent the county, and the remain- own. Those numbers can be so rewarding, Watson said. der of the children are staying altered slightly in the case of When Watson met her, the with relatives. foster-siblings. imagine. But for foster mom
Perhaps the most import-
ant qualification of a foster parent is being flexible, Wat-
Fewer mosquitoes reported in Bandon The Associated Press
Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:58 p.m. July 6, in the62900 block of N. U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheftwas reportedat4:11 p.m. July 6, in the62900 block of N. U.S. Highway97. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:56 p.m. July 6, in the1400 blockof NW Sixth Street. DUII —Russell CameronBauer,55, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:16 p.m. July 6, inthe areaof Brookswood BoulevardandBuck Canyon Road. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at8:36 a.m.July 7, in the 300block of NEHawthorne Avenue.
Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at9:31 a.m. July 7, in the100 block of NWOregon Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:18 p.m. July 7, inthe1200 block of Bear Creek Road. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:31 p.m. July 7, inthe 61200 block of King Solomon Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:04 p.m. July 7, inthe 63400 block of N. U.S. Highway97. Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen at2:29 p.m. July 7, in the 2400 block of NE Shadow Brook Place. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at10:12a.m. July 8, in the2300 block of NWHigh
Lakes Loop. Theit —Atheft was reported at 7:41 p.m. June 29, in the1100 block of NW Galveston Avenue. Theit —A theft was reported at1:59 p m. July6, in the1200 blockof SE Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at10:44 p.m. July 6, in the1700 block of SE Tempest Drive. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at2:51 p.m.July 7,inthe700blockofNW LavaRoad.
"They're only paying at-
people in Bandon spent a miserable summer swatting mosquitoes and hunkering down indoors, reports suggest there aren't nearly as many of the bugs buzzing
tention to this small portion
of the marsh," he said. The next spraying is expected after the highest tide in the month, July 14. Meanwhile, the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service and Mosquito trap counts are Ducks Unlimited will begin down, The World newspaper work July 15 to add tidal reports, and recently were at channels to drain mosquito about a tenth of the numbers breeding habitat. recorded last year. T he mosquito board i s Also, fewer people show formally known as the Vecup at meetings of the mos- tor Assessment and Control quito board. Those who do Committee. Its c h airman, report fewer mosquitoes on Roger Straus, said constructheir property. tion of bat houses will soon Last year, residents of the be underway, and they will coastal tourist town blamed be providedfree to homes a wetlands restoration proj- still suffering high numbers around town this year.
ect at the Bandon Marsh
of the saltwater marsh mos-
National Wildlife Refuge for quito that plagued the popugiving mosquito larvae large lace last year. areas to grow to adulthood. The swarms of mosquiThis year, some residents toes that occur when large say larvicide hasn't been numbers o f t h e m r e a ch sprayed as widely as it could adulthood are called fly-offs, have been. and Straus said there was One, Don Chance, said one early in July because he's skeptical of any reports some breeding pools were of abated mosquitoes. A missed. A fly-off of mature June 14-15 larvicide appli- mosquitoesalso occurred in cation hit only 140 acres, he mid-May. "There are some mosquisaid, less effective than it would have been to spray all toes out there, but we hav900 acres in the part of the en't experienced masses or marshthathasbeen restored swarms, and it will be two to to develop mudflats and oth- four weeks before they are er features of an intertidal gone," Straus said.
son said.
"It takes somebody who can change plans within an hour, when two or three different
things come up," she said. Watson said she keeps various sizes of clothing on hand, as many of the children arrive with only the clothes on their backs. She also networks with
other local foster parents, so everyone can work together to meet unexpected needs.
Watson, a single mom, raised three girls of her own,
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all of whom are now adults.
She moved to Grants Pass when her daughters were teenagers. Watson also adopted two of the youths she
Lifes a Rreeze At the Coast.
fostered, when they became
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eligible for adoption.
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From previous page
habitat.
BANDON — A year after
r
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BEMD FIRE RUNS Monday 12:05 p.m. —Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 63265Jamison St. 8:24p.m. —Natural vegetation fire, 3222 NWFairway Heights Drive. 25 —Medical aid calls. Tuesday 6:03 a.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 61361 BriannePlace.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
4:04P.m.— Forest, woods or woodland fire, in thearea of ClineFalls Road.
Unauthorizeduse — Avehicle was reported stolen at3:43 p.m.July 8, in the area of N.MainStreet.
7:08p.m.— Building fire, 21229 Chilliwack Way. 20 — Medical aid calls.
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
EDj To
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he federal Highway Trust Fund is rapidly going
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broke, so rapidly that the single largest pot of money
for highways, bridges, light rail and the like could be
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empty by August. If that were to happen, the U.S. Department
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of Transportation says, as many as 700,000 U.S. jobs could
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disappear. The trust fund's problems stem Rep . Peter DeFazio, D-Springfrom a variety of changes in Amer- f i eld, has come up with a doozy of icans' driving habits. According to a solution. He proposes dropping the Washington Post, we're driv- the gas tax and replacing it with a ing smaller, more efficient cars, tax on oil companies — because, and we're driving them less. In Or- as he says, people don't like the oil egon, drivers logged about 6.3 per- companies. Gasoline prices would cent fewer miles in 2012 than theY be unlikely to fall much, he admits. had in 2007,before the recession He'd also double the tax on diehit. Too, the 1993 18.3 cent P«g»- sel fuel, a surefire way to drive up lon tax on gas is worth onlY about the cost of many goods, including 11 cents per gallon in 2014 Pennies food soM m this country. Oregon is particularly vulnerable to the loss of what the state highway fund has merit, DeFazio's D a rt m t f T rt t i f o r v o t ers' rntelhgence sayscouldbe$150mllllonperyem, dlsd~ meanwhile. We're among the most dependent states on federal highRath e r thanDeFazio'sdisingenway dollars, which account for u o us proposal, we'd like something between 35 and 40 percent of state farmore honest,perhaps a mileage road and transit dollars. Moreover, tax applicable to all vehicles. That we consistently get back far more might be a hard sell, but it would from the fund than we put in. fix the problem and do so honestly. Clearly, Congress must find a I t ' s far better than a move to hide way to reload the highway fund, no the current tax from those who ulsimple task in an election year. tima t ely pay it.
Districts should have leeway on test scores
O
regon's high school class of 2012 had th e second worst graduation rate in the country. That is not the kind of education-
al system Oregonians should pay
It won't measure everything. But it's important to get a better measure ofhow Oregon students perform compared to other students. It's not the only thing that is important, but it is important. Now some, induding the Portland School Board, the state's largest district, have asked the state to delayusing testscores based on the Common Core standards to evaluate teachers and schools, The Oregolllan reported. That delaymakes sense to us. Finding the right way to incorporate student test scores into teacher evaluations is complicated. Schoolsshould be about transmitting the best that has been thought and said. They should set high standards for rigor and behavior. Teachers should be rewarded based on performance. Student test scores should be part of evaluating teacher performance. Those are all sound principles, but it does take time to move to aim-
for. Governors and educators across the country began years ago to work on a solution to standardize and toughen state standards. The answer was a set of goals called the Common Core. Oregon was one of the early adopters. Now educators are struggling to adapt tothose new standards. We think they should be allowed some leeway. We agreed with the state's decision in May not to delay implementation of the new tests. The Oregon Education Association, the state teachers union, hadasked for the delay. Inpart, the OEA argued that not enough is known about how well the tests actually measure learning. Of course, that's really the problem with anytest. It won'tbe perfect. inghigh.
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Time to beauti the east side IN MY VIEW
By Sherie Browning he other day I was traveling from NorthWest Crossing
T
were now dead.
to Pettigrew Road. I was en-
W ho i s
r e sponsible fo r t h i s
Let's all take some pride
in our beloved city and not allow the west-side/ east-side divide continue.
joying my ride, noticing the beau- travesty on Reed Market Road'? tiful landscaping, aspens, flowers There was the exception of a few and manicured areas bordering businesses along the road that did We can start with Mt. Washington Drive and Reed landscaping in front of their shops. properly maintaining and Market Road. I especially liked the Kudos to them. beautifying Reed Market Brookswood roundabout, which is I thought to myself: Don't the surrounded by flowers and shrubs. city of Bend, the developers and and Pettigrew roads, wellIt has a beautiful sculpture that the homeowners take any pride in frames the mountains quite nicely. how Reed Market Road looks on traveled roads seen by all. This area appears to have As I continued over Third Street, the east side'? I noticed something was changing. By this time, my enjoyment of been developed without No longer was I seeing beautiful the trip from NorthWest Crossing surroundings, but now I was dodg- had evaporated. As I turned onto any regard to aesthetic ing potholes and would see dead Pettigrew, I came upon an area beauty. subdivisions where developers had where it looked like it was in some started new homes. There was no third-world country. Again, there roadside landscaping in front of were dead subdivisions, but this their subdivisions. There were just time large portions of a fence were We can start with properly maindead weeds and trees with fences missing. What was left standing of taining and beautifying Reed Marin disrepair. this fence looked like it should be ket and Pettigrew roads, well-travWould these developers have taken down, too. eled roads seen by all. This area been allowed to do this over on the I, too, wonder how the owners appears to have been developed west side? Also along Reed Market of these dead subdivisions are al- without any regard to aesthetic Road, the developers were able to lowed to let the fields abound with beauty. cut down mature ponderosas. The 3-foot weeds, which would be a Providing normal, routine mainlack of responsible development real fire hazard to surrounding tenance (potholes filled, at least), continues on this side of town. I ask areas. landscaping that is actually alive myself: Why does the city allow As I turned onto Gardenia head- and thriving, not in th e shadow this to happen? ing toward my home, I asked my- of weeds, requiring developers I continued on R eed M a rket self what can be done about the to landscape the adjoining area onto the new area of the road. All disparity between the west-side/ along the road, build appropriate, I saw in the way of landscaping in e ast-side landscaping that b o r - well-constructed fences is not too this area were twigs planted that ders a large artery in our fair city'? much to ask. looked like they came from the left- Where is the city of Bend in all of Hopefully the new roundabout over garden supply at a local nurs- this'? Why are the developers al- to be constructed on 15th and Reed ery. It was hard to see the shrubs lowed to leave the areas bordering Market will be given the same confrom all the weeds covering a large the roads looking like we live on sideration, with beautiful landscapportion of the new landscaping. the wrong side of the tracks? ing and sculpture as we see on the Let's all take some pride in our west side. We want to be proud of Also, there seems to be no water for this area, as most of the trees b eloved city an d no t a l low t h e Reed Market on the east side, too. and shrubs that had been planted west-side/east-side divide continue. — SIMrie Browning lives in Bend.
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Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Moving climate change talk from hope to mnfidence By Russ Donnelly n late June, I was privileged to represent our Bend Citizens' Climate Lobby chapter (one of over 180 such chapters in the United States and abroad) at the National
t
Citizens' Climate Lobby Conference
(www.citizensclimatelobby.org) in Washington, D.C. The purpose of the conference
is to bring together over 600 CCL volunteersto ask over 500 members ofCongress and their staffs to
consider sponsoring or supporting a revenue-neutral carbon tax and
rebate legislation. The goal of this proposed legislation is to reduce this country's carbon emissions by 52 percent by 2035 (based on 1999 levels). One of the most exhilarating out-
comes of our day on Capitol Hill was that virtually none of the conversations focused on whether on-
going global warming and climate changes and their short- and longterm impacts were real or not. They were about potential solutions.
One of our small group meetings was with U.S. Rep. Greg Walden,
R-Ore., and his staff. It was a constructive and respectful meeting
IN MY VIEW
that acknowledged the threat to our
sources. A recent report by Regional Economic Models, Inc. found that
state and region of average temperature increases, more intensive and longer wildfire seasons, less snowfall and earlier melts, drought and growing season impacts to both farming and ranching, and the degradation of Oregon's shellfish industry caused by ocean acid-
a revenue-neutral carbon tax and rebate will be good for the environ-
ment andthe economy. We discussed British Columbia's
carbon tax and rebate model, which has had tremendous success at reducing emissions after five years; ification. All of these impacts were the promise of the Pacific Coast recently noted in the National Cli- Action Plan on Climate and Energy mate Assessment (http://nca2014. signed by British Columbia, Oregon, globalchange.gov) and the Intergov- Washington and California; and the ernmental Panel on Climate Change follow-up to the 2013 Portland State (www.ipcc.ch). University/Northwest Eco n o mic We discussed the revenue-neutral Research Center "Carbon Tax and aspect of the carbon tax and rebate Shift" study requested by the Orplan, where 100 percent of the rev- egon Legislature (www.pdx.edu/ enue raised by a carbon tax on oil, nerc/carbontax2013.pdf) due this gas and coal applied at the source November. For conservatives and carbon tax (Le., the well head or the mine) will be returned to households. The rev- support, we referenced a recentopinenue will help consumers defray ion issued by Henry Paulson, former increasing energy costs in the short Goldman Sachs CEO and George term, while th e e scalating costs W. Bush Treasury secretary. Paulto extract carbon-based fuels will son points out in a June 22 Op-ed in drive market forces to more rapidThe New York Times, "The Coming ly innovate toward cleaner energy Climate Crash," that "we've seen and
One of the most exhilarating outcomes of our day on Capitol Hill was that virtually none of the conversations
focused on whether ongoing global warming and climate changes and their short- and long-term impacts were real or not. They were about potential solutions. "about more than mitigating climate financial bubble. Let's not ignore the change for future generations." As felt the costs of underestimating the climate bubble."
Buchanan put it ,
We and CCL's other chapters look forward to ongoing conversations
is about economics, trade-offs, local leadership and encouraging
t h i s d i scussion
with our elected officials.
innovation.
B end's Citizens' Climate L o b Most significantly, the local conversation is moving forward in by chapter looks forward to being Central Oregon, too. Recently, the
a catalyst and partner in promot-
City Club of Central Oregon hosted ing this ongoing discussion with a "Net Zero Energy Forum." The the City Club and other business, featured speaker was Mayor Rex Parris, of Lancaster, Calif. His frank
community and environmental or-
ganizations. You can contact us at presentation on creating a "net zero" bend@citizensclimatelobby.org. energy emission city focused on the The conversation is shifting on engagement of the local and region- climate change solutions. As one al business communities. conference attendee said, his feelThe "net zero" approach, as reings have moved from a sense of flected upon by Bill Buchanan, hope to feelings of "confidence." board president of the City Club, is — Russ Donnelly lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTICES
B5
Butte
5 Recreation District, said
Continued from B1 Winegar said Sullivan's concerns about overuse of the park'sroad and trailsare shared by his agency. The state is considering upgrades to the shoulder of the road
cussions about transferring the butte to control of the
there were a number of dispark district before he started 11 years ago, but there's been little talk since then.
Horton said the park district is unlikely to pursue a takeover of the butte be-
Dick Jones,the voice of Disney'sPinocchio
to eliminate "ankle rollers,"
By David Colker
get back to the public school," he said. "I wanted to be a real Feb. 17, 1922- June 28, 2014 boy." LOS ANGELES — Actor Dick Jones appeared in more The voicing of " P inocAt 92 y ears of a ge, and a fter a go o d , l o n g l i f e , than 100 films and television chio," which took place over John L. Smart went home shows in his long career, but about a year and a half, was t o b e w i t h t h e L o r d o n he is best known by far for more enjoyable, in part beJ une 28, 2 0 14. Hi s b o d y a role in which he was not cause he got along well with w ill b e seen on screen. At about 10, adult actor C l if f E d w ards, laid to when he was known as Dick- playing Jiminy Cricket. At r est at ie, Jones was chosen by Walt times Jones' lip movements WilDisney to be the voice of Pin- were filmed in close-up to lamette occhio in the classic 1940 ani- help guide animators workNational mated film. ing on the character. For the Cemetery with At the time, it wasn't musical number "Hi-
with user conflicts ... that's
tion of the trails and roads,
Los Angeles Times
what we've really got up here now, with vehicular (users) and pedestrian (users) with the huge number of people
but has had little direct en-
that want to walk up that
Park on state parks land on
hill," Winegar said.
the eastern edge of the butte.
Continued from B1 the curb ramp improvements City officials have repeat- will make the accessible route edly said they expect to miss through campus smoother.
Aug.10, 1915- July 4, 2014
Military Honors as a 34 year John Smart veteran of WWII, K orean, an d V i etn a m w ars, serving i n b o t h t h e Navy and the Air Force. T he ceremony w i l l t a k e place on July 11, 2014, at noon. There will also be a m emorial service on J u l y 12, at 2:00 p.m., at the First Presbyterian C h u rch in Bend, Oregon. J ohn was b or n F eb . 1 7 , 1922, in North V ancouver, C anada, t o A r t h u r W i l liam and Leah Lansdowne Smart. H e grew u p i n L o s A n geles, during t h e d e p ress ion. A ft e r gr ad u a t i ng from t h e U . S . M e r c h ant M arine A cad e m y , h e j oined the U .S. N avy. H e r eturned fro m W W I I a n d m arried Patr i c i a Fay Gaffney. After the K orean W ar, J oh n a t t e nded S a n Francisco Th eo l o g i c al S eminary. U p o n g r a d u ation, he became a chaplain i n the U S A i r F o r c e a n d w as stationed i n M a i n e , Korea, Illinois, California, Turkey, Nevada, Okinawa, North Dakota, Florida, and G ermany. Up o n r et i r e ment, he moved to Lake Helen, Florida, and had the privilege o f b ei n g th e town's mayor for over ten y ears. An a vi d o r ga n e n t husiast, h e ac q u i re d a W urlitzer theatre pipe or -
E velyn M . I v e r son d i e d July 4, 2014 in B end, OR. She was born to Alfred and E mma Larson A u gust 1 0, 1915 in Moorhead, MN. She moved to Long Beach, CA in January of 1943, where s he worked for t h e A r m y u ntil the close of the w a r . She married Philip Iverson in Los Angeles on A ugust 1 0, 1946. They m o ved t o Central Point, OR in June of 1983. On July 4, 2012, Evelyn moved to Sunriver, OR w ith h e r son ' s fam i l y , where she became a member of the Community Bible Church of Sunriver. E velyn w a s a l o v e r o f people, books, and our Lord J esus Christ. T h er e w a s never a day in her long life t hat a l l t h r e e w e r e n o t paramount in her heart and mind. E velyn I v e r son i s su r vived b y her dau g h t er, P amela Hubbard o f C h i cago, IL; son, Randall Iverson of Sunriver, OR; f our grandchildren; a n d tw o great-grandchildren. A memorial service will be held at 2:00 p.m. July 12 at Community Bible Church of Sunriver.
love of the pipe organ with others and opened his Victorian h o m e f o r s e v e r al o rgan concerts an d b e n efits over the 20 years he lived in Lake Helen. In 2001, he moved to Oregon, living on the coast in Brookings, before moving to Bend rn 2006. He was preceded in death by his two b r others, Wesl ey a n d Rob e r t Sm a r t . Survivors include his three s isters: Pe g g y Mo od y , G wen K e ene, a n d B e t t y Muldoon, all of California; his oldest daughter, Jenny M cGuire o f W e s t L ak e Village, California and her t wo daughters, Dawn an d Joy McGuire of W a shington; his youngest daughter and so n - i n - l aw , Jana S mart G r e e n shield a n d B uddy G r e e nshield a n d t heir tw o dau gh t e r s , J essika an d J o d i G r e e nshield, of Bend. Memorial co n t r i b utions may be made to the Salvation A r m y o r to th e Wounded Warrior Project. Baird Funeral Home is in c harge o f t h e ar r a n g ements. 541-382-0903.
Edward Jay Yoder, of Prineville
David Hurley Sisco, of Bend
Jan. 13, 1937- July1, 2014 Arrangements: Juniper Ridge Funeral Home, 541-362-5606
April 2, 1953 - July 4, 2014
Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. 541-548-3219. Services: No service is planed at this time. Contributionsmay be made
John Lansdowne Smart
to:
American Heart Association 7272 Greenville Ave. Dallas, TX 75231 www.heart.org
Debbie Ann Haman, of Redmond Mar. 14, 1955 - July 5, 2014 Arrangements: Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: No service's will held at
Debbie's request.
Contributionsmay be made to:
Brightside Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond, OR 97756, (541) 923-0882 or a Humane Society of your choice inDebbie Haman's
name. Charles "Mick" G. Kelly, of Bend Nov. 18, 1931 - July 3, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Mick's family will hold a private Military Service at Willamette National Cemetery at a future date and a Memorial Service on Saturday, July 12, 2014, at 2:00 PM at the Molalla Grange Hall, located at 175 Grange Avenue in Molalla. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Evelyn Iverson
gan. He enjoyed sharing his
common for c h ildren
theworld:
Kenny Kingston, 87: A "psychic to the stars" who communicated with the rich, the
famous and the titled and was a regular guest on television shows like "The Merv Griffin Show" an d
" E n tertainment
Tonight" for years and built successful businesses around
and when Walt first heard the ones try- J ones It was the biggest ing to act like kids, he role of his movie casaid no," Jones said in "The reer. He was drafted into Making of Pinocchio," a 2009 the Army in 1944, and after documentary. his discharge he appeared D isney wanted a r e a l in several more films. In the youngster for the part of the 1950s, his career got a boost wooden character who want-
night after a fall at home in But late i n t h e d e cade, the San F e rnando V a lley when landing roles became
community of
N orthridge, tough, he started to get in-
said his son, Rick Jones. The
Fax: 541-322-7254
volved in real estate.
"He didn't want to do comcause of death has not been determined. mercials," Rick Jones said. Jones' preteen voice and
Mike Gabriel, an artist and
director on several recent Disney animated films. " He's j u s t unbelievably lovable and likable in his innocence, in his excitement about everything," Gabriel said of Jones' performance. "You just fall in love with that little guy the minute he starts
talking." But Jones was anything
closed until later in the day
with maintaining the butte's
or adding vehicle-free days facilities. during the busy summer The park district periodiseason. cally hears complaints about "Any timeyou geta park safety at the butte, Horton that's popular, you end up said, particularly the condi-
Don H o rton, e x ecutive director of the Bend Park
Curbs
gagement wit h
t h e s t a te
agency aside from building Pilot Butte Neighborhood — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
pus servi ces for CentralOregon Community College, said
that deadline, and that the Justice Department has not
contacted them about how it will handle the missed dead-
"Kudos to the city," Viola
said at a meeting of the Central Oregon Coalition for Access on Ttresday."We appreciate that at the college, to
line. As of last year, the city had completed improvements make our accessible routes all toallcurbramps neargovern- continuous." ment and medical buildings, Other streets where the according to a city document. city worked on curb ramps so Current priorities include ar- far this season indude Reed eas of employment, training, Market Road, Second Street, socialservices and shopping, Eighth Street, Newport Aveas well as public schools. The nue, Colorado Avenue, Scott city also prioritized assisted Street, Purcell Boulevard, and independent living fa- Simpson Avenue, Powers cilities, Bend's Community Road and Revere Avenue, Center and Senior Center and Hanson said. restaurants. Joe Viola, director of cam-
— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbulletin.com
"So he said, 'The heck with
performance was a spectac- it,' and got himself a regular ular fit for the character, said job." Jones founded a real estate
agency. His last acting roles in the 1960s included episodes of "The Blue Angels" and "Wagon Train." In addition to his son Rick, Jones is survived by his wife of 66 years, Betty; son Jeffrey; d aughters Jennafer Jones and
Weekly
I
Arts &
Entertainment Inside
MAGA? JSIE
••
T he
-
•
•
etm
•
M e lody H u m e;
C om p l e m e n t s
six grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
but naive about Hollywood,
even at that young age. He had already acted in several
films, and he didn't always like what he saw. Richard Percy Jones was
born Feb. 25, 1927, in McKinney, Texas. His father was a newspaperman and his mother was a bit of a stage mother. By the time he was
I
about 5, Jones was perform-
ing at rodeos, billed as the world's youngest trick rider and roper. His bi g s h ow-business break came when movie cowb oy Hoot Gibson saw hi m
perform at a rodeo in Dallas. "Hoot told my mother the famous w ords,
ought to be i n
' That k i d
p i ctures,'"
Jones said in a 1984 Los Angeles Times interview. "She
said, 'Whoopee!' and away we went to Hollywood."
His first movie appearance, uncredited, was in the musical number "Goin' to
79
Heaven on a Mule" in the
1934 Al Jolson film "Wonder Bar," in which he appeared in blackface. He worked almost
PRESEN TEDBY:
steadily, often in Westerns. But he wasn't much enjoy-
ing the acting life. " I didn't l ike going t o school on the set. I wanted to
his professed spiritual abilities. pitch the Cincinnati Reds to the Died June 30 at his home in the NationalLeague championship Studio City neighborhood of in 1961 but was better known Los Angeles. for two revelatory books, "The Tom Veryzer, 61: Infielder Long Season" and "Pennant who played a dozen years in Race," that were the first inside the major leagues and was De- accounts of a baseball team troit's shortstop before Alan written from a player's perTrammell took over in the late spective. Died June28 ata hos1970s. Died this week. pice in Park Ridge, Illinois. Jim Brosnan, 84: Helped — From wire reports
Saturday, August 2nd Doors open at 5:30 pm Show starts at 7:00 pm
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Paid Fair Admission Requireti
TICKETSAVAILABLE AT ALLCENTRAL OREGON NCDONALDS RESTAURANTSEVERYWEDNESDAY FRON 2 PNTIL7 PM • BEGINNING JULY 2 While supplies last, no purchase necessary
It'sAll Part Of TheDeschutes County Fair 5 Rodeo
Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
in early television, with roles
ed to be a real boy, and Jones' on shows such as "The Lone voice e n t ered an i m a tion Ranger." And he played the history. title role in the 1955 "Buffalo Jones, 87, died Monday Bill Jr." series.
Obituary policy
Phone: 541-617-7825
he
started off with adults,
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around
D iddle-Dee-Dee,"
to voice roles in animated movies. "They
he said, and the possibility cause of liability concerns of keeping the vehicle gate and the expense associated
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Deadlines: Death Notices areaccepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the secondday after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
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W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,Inc. ©2014
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NORTHWEST NEWS
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PREMIUM HEARING AIDS at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices
conducted by the Savannah Bob Wilkinson, an enviRiver N a t i onal La b o rato- ronmental safety manager for ry might shed light on what contractor Washington River is causing the illnesses. A Protection Solutions, said the
draft of that report is due by October. Hanford for more than four
decades made plutonium for nuclear weapons, and it now contains the nation's great-
est volume of nuclear waste. Much of the waste is stored in 177 giant underground that doesn't mean workers ar- storage tanks. It is workers at en't getting sick. those tanks who are reporting M Our WOrkerS are nOt eX- smelling chemical vapors and posed to vapors, but they are then falling ill. having symptoms," said Tom This year, 38 workers have Fletcher of the U.S. Depart- sought treatment after reportment of Energy, which man- ing exposure to chemical vaages Hanford. "The question pors. Some of the workers reis: 'Why?'" ported irritation in their eyes, "This isn't something we nose or throat, or a metallic are taking lightly," Fletcher taste in their mouth, Hanford sard. officials said during a media None of the 12,000 air sam- briefing on Wednesday. ples taken this year showed But all 3 8 w o rkers were chemical levels above occupa- checked by d o ctors and tional-exposure limits, Fletch- cleared to return to work, er said. In fact, more than Hanford officials said. 50,000 air samples dating Fletcher demo n strated back to2007 found no chemi- safety precautions taken by cal exposure above the allow- Hanford tank workers, and he able limits, he said. showed reporters machines Hanford officials are hop- that can detect chemicals in ing an investigation being the air.
lack of evidence doesn't mean that workers are not genuine-
ly becoming sick. "There may be something out there we are not aware of," Wilkinson said. "I do not
believe any folks have done false reporting or are psychosomatic. I feel they are reaL" The 177 tanks contain a toxic stew of chemical and radioactive wastes, with no
July Rebate: $200 On all Hearing AidS OVer dp500 Hearing Instruments Include:
two tanks storing the exact same contents. Hanford work-
Free Accessory Kit Free Adjustments and Free 3 Year Warranty
ers are busy transferring the contents of leaking, older single-walled tanks into newer
double-walled tanks. Irritation of the t hroat is
the most commonly reported symptom, Wilkinson said. Hanford covers 586 square miles near Richland, Wash-
ington, about 200 miles south-
1 00 /43 MOney BaCk Guarant e e Full purchase price due attime of sale. Rebate processed 30 days ofter invoicing. Offersvalid through July 3 I, 2014. Offer con'r be combined with ony other
east of Seattle. It was created during the Manhattan Project in World War II to make plutonium for nuclear weapons. That work ended in the 1980s,
-
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trict will supply print copies Upon request. District workers plan to irrigatorS, Who Often turn On irriga- ba at Shavlin Park, talking to park EleCtriCity Will be Shut doWn fOr tion pumps in theearly hours. uSerS and PaSSing Out queStiOnapproximataly1,800 Culvar area naires, from10a.m. to 2p.m. Aug. households early Friday to allow District seeks opinions 2 and Aug. 16. Pacific Power crews to install new on Shevlin Park Bend Park 8 Recreation is also equipment at a substation in the looking for people who live within The BendPark & Recreation area. the district interested in applying In a news release, Pacific Power District wants the community's to be a member of acitizens opinions as it prepares to craft a said the upgrades will allow the advisory committee focused on new management plan for Shevlin Shevlin Park. For more infofmaeleCtriCal SyStem to WOrk mOre Park. efficiently as renewable power tion go to www.bandparksandrec. A questionnaire about the generation is added in theCulver Ofg/Current PfojeCtS/Pafk-Pfojarea. popular park is online at www. ects/Shevlin Park Mgmt Plan/ Survaymonkey. Com/S/3NVJKT9, AffeCted reSidentS Will ba Withor call 541-706-6152. — Bulletin stafflaporfs out power from 2 a.m.until no later according to the district. The dis-
A • m •
•
Continuedfiom Bf
than 4 a.m. Thetiming of the outagewas plannedtoaccommodate
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and the site is now engaged in a $2 billion-a-year cleanup of the resulting wastes.
LOCAL BRIEFING Culver area will lose power early Friday
94/78/0.36 87/72/I 87/68/1.05 95/73/pc 85/62/0.00 82/69/I 91/71/0.06 91/74/I 104/85/0.00 107/80/s 81/63/0.00 81/64/s 89/71/0.08 86/68/pc 101/83/Tr 99/86/I 81/64/Tr 79/58/pc 85/64/0.05 79/56/pc 86/71/0.00 85/64/pc 96/75/0.02 86/69/I 79/54/0.00 83/63/I 97/63/0.00 94/66/pc 92/75/Tr 85/70/I 73/60/Tr 75/54/pc 90/60/0.00 88/59/s 87/67/0.00 85/70/s 99/73/0.00 91/71/pc 96/75/0.13 92/75/pc 78/68/0.00 76/69/pc 75/59/0.00 71/58/pc 80/57/0.00 80/57/n 85/58/0.09 88/61/pc 103/75/0.02 92/74/I 80/57/0.00 82/59/s 83/55/0.00 79/67/I 93/67/0.00 88/61/s 84/62/0.00 83/69/t 87/72/3.15 90/76/I 97/72/0.37 94/78/I 93/65/0.00 92/74/I 89/73/0.02 86/72/I 89/67/0.00 88/71/I 100/76/0.00 95/60/n 105/85/0.00 105/83/s
Mecca Mexico City
79/62/I 93/71/s 60/53/r 113/84/s 90/80/sh
59/54/r 67/39/s 92/82/c 87/74/s 87/65/s 55/35/s 69/58/pc 89/69/s 68/57/I 83/53/s 89/78/I
Hi/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 63/51/0.06 64/49/pc 69/53/sh 84/63/0.00 81/69/I 91/72/pc 73/62/0.00 75/56/pc 80/62/s 96/80/Tr 103/82/I 104/83/s 87/68/Tr 85/64/pc 87/68/s 86/59/0.14 84/69/I 9OnO/pc 88/71/1.43 90/73/I 91/75/pc 82/70/0.00 79/66/pc 81/66/pc 87/69/Tr 86/66/pc 89/71/s 76/57/0.00 79/61/pc 79/66/I 85/73/0.14 89/71/pc 91/73/pc 92/75/0.41 88/78/I 89/78/pc 75/56/0.00 73/60/pc 78/65/pc 79/58/0.00 81/65/pc 78/67/I 88/73/0.05 89/66/pc 91/69/pc 90/73/0.25 87/75/I gone/I 88/72/0.12 85/69/pc 83/68/pc 90/71/Tr 86/69/pc 85/66/pc
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gon7/0.05 gomn SOne/s 70/45/0.00 68/50/pc 70/54/c 73/47/0.00 70/50/pc 72/53/I 61/52/0.44 69/49/0.00 93/82/0.10 88/72/0.00 85/65/0.00 52/26/0.00 66/60/Tr 86/59/0.00 73/54/0.00 82/61/0.00 84/79/0.08
Yesterday Today Friday
City
Stay Connected to Life with
Thousandsof air samplesaretested to find causeof sicknessat Hanford ByNicholas K. Geyanios
Hi/Lo/W 93/71/s 82/59/s 80/59/pc 91/67/pc 66/55/sh 86/69/pc 78/69/pc
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TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 95/55 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
Hi/Lo/Pruc. HiRo/W 93 60 96' in 1905 Abilene 98/75/0.00 95/71/pc 64' 47' 29'in 1964 Akron 82/63/0.01 78/56/s Albany 83/67/1 .00 79/57/pc PRECIPITATION Albuquerque 89/66/0.00 92/70/pc 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Anchorage 62/51/Tr 62/56/r Agnnbr 90n4/0.01 82/69/I Record 0.64ein 1933 P P Atlantic City 78/69/0.51 81/69/pc Month to date (normal) 0.02 (0.17 ) R R Ausun 96/67/0.00 94/71/pc Year to date (normal ) 4.54 (5.69 ) Baltimore 88/69/Tr 86/66/I e B arometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29. 9 5 Billings 91/58/0.00 92/63/s Birmingham 88n4/0.05 86/68/I SUN ANDMOON Bismarck 80/51/0.00 81/62/I Today Fri. Bolrm 92/69/0.00 98/67/s Sunrise 5:32 a.m. 5: 3 3 a.m. snsinn 88/73/0.00 85/65/pc Sunset 6:49 p.m. 6: 4 9 p.m. Bridgeport, CT 88n1/Tr 82/67/pc Buffalo 72/63/0.02 75/55/pc Moonrise 7 :04 p.m. 6:00 p.m. Burlington, VT 81/68/1.25 77/55/pc Moonset 3:5 0 a.m. 4:5 3 a.m. Caribou, ME 77/68/0.03 75/50/pc • Nyssa • 90/ Ham ton MOONPHASES Charleston, SC 97n8/0.05 93/75/I • La pine Grove Oakridge Full La s t New Firs t Charlotte 89n6/0.15 84/67/I • Burns Juntura OREGON EXTREMES 97/57 89/55 /56 Chattanooga 87/74/0.09 87/68/I • Fort Rock Riley 94/55 YESTERDAY l Cresce t • 91/54 Cheyenne 87/55/Tr 87/59/I 92/55 Sg/53 Chicago 80/63/0.00 79/62/s High: 101' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 83/64/0.07 82/61/s Jul 12 J ul 16 J u l 26 A u g 3 at Medford Jordan V gey 66/54 Beaver Silver 92/54 Frenchglen 93/61 Cleveland 77/63/0.22 76/57/s Low: 46' 92/61 Marsh Lake 94/57 THE PLANETS ColoradoSprings 89/52/0.00 90/63/I 89/51 at Florence Po 0 91/55 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 84/63/0.00 84/66/pc T he Planets R i se Set • Paisley GN a Columbia, SC 98n4/0.08 91/72/I • 95/62 Mercury 4:15 a.m. 7: 0 9 p.m. Chiloquin Columbus,GA 94/74/0.14 86no/I ach 95 62 Medfo d 8 9 / 5 7 Gold Rome Venus 3:34 a.m. 6 : 4 6 p.m. 0 ' Columbus,OH 84/68/0.04 82/61/pc 65/ M99 97/62 Mars 1:46 p.m. 1 2:42 a.m. Klamath Concord, NH 85/66/0.04 81/53/pc • Ashl nd • FaNS Jupiter 6:24 a.m. 9 : 2 4 p.m. • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi gene/o'.oo 93/77/pc Bro Ings 95/6 89/56 Saturn 3:49 p.m. 1: 5 9 a.m. 67/5 91/57 94/63 Dallas 97nerr'r 98/76/pc Dayton 81/64/Tr 80/59/s 12:27 a.m. 1: 1 9 p.m. Uranus Denver 94/60/0.00 95/63/I Yesterday Today Fridny Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday nes Moines 82/61/0.00 82/66/pc city H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W city Hi/Lo/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W Detroit 78/61/0.00 78/59/pc 65/57/Tr 70/56/pc 74/57/pc Ln Grande 93/63/0.00 90/51/s 90/60/s Portland 83/6 1/0.0087/60/s 90/67/s 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asturin Duluth 73/51/Tr 75/57/pc Baker City 90/57/0.00 90/48/s 90/59/s Ln Pine 89/54/0.00 89/53/n 85/54/s Prineviiie 94/ 6 2/0.0092/55/s 85/59/ n El Paso 96n4/0.05 96/75/pc 5 N(~ 8 ~ 8~ N 5 Brookings 64/56/0.00 67/55/pc 64/53/pc M edlord 101/ 68/0.00 99/66/s 91/66/s Redmond 97/ 57/Tr 93/52/s 91/58/s Fairbanks 76/54/0.00 78/59/pc The highertheAccuWnniberxmmuyIndex number, sums 86/64/0.04 94/55/s 93/61/pc N ewport 63/5 5/0.00 65/53/n 67/54/pc Rnneburg 94 / 64/0.00 93/61/s 90/64/n Fnrgn 76/57/Tr 82/67/pc the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgon.0-2 Lcw, Eugene 90/57/0.00 90/53/s 88/58/pc N o rth Bend 6 4 / 55/0.00 68/56/s 68/57/pc Salem 89/61/0.00 89/57/s 91/62/s Flagstaff 75/53/0.04 75/52/I 35 Moderate; 8-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme. Klamnth Falls 93/64/0.06 89/56/s 82/54/pc O ntario 89/72/Tr 99/65/n 99/72/pc Sisters 90/58/0.00 91/51/s 91/55/n Grand Rapids 75/61/0.00 77/57/pc Lnkeview 91/59/0.00 91/57/s 87/56/pc P endleton 98/ 6 5/0.00 94/59/s 95/67/s The Oalles 9 4 / 70/0.00 94/61/s 98/70/s Green 6ay 73/54/0.10 75/58/pc Greensboro 89/71/0.14 82/67/I Wnnther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shnwers,t-thunderstorms,r-rnin, sf-snnwflurries, sn-snnwi-ice,Tr-trnce,Yesterday data asnl 5 p.m. yesterday Harrisburg 87/65/Tr 83/64/pc G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Harffnrd, CT 89no/0.01 85/61/pc • Hi g~h ~L o~ w Mod erate Helena 95/59/0.00 92/58/s Source: OregonAiiergyAssocintus 541-683-1577 Honolulu 89/75/0.00 sgn5/pc ~ g s ~ f g s ~ 2 08 ~ sgs ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ 608 ~ 708 ~ ags ~ ggs ~t ccs ~ff Os Huusinn ~ fgs ~gs 95n4/0.00 gtn4/I Huntsville 86no/0.77 87/66/pc cnlgn NATIONAL L Indianapolis 81/62/0.00 80/60/s As of 7 n.m.yesterday Snn 72/49 71 Jackson, MS 85/74/0.03 89/71/I • I nlPng T ndnr Sny Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES 7 Jacksonville 94nl/o.oo 92/72/I YESTERDAY (for the
C rane Prairie 404 3 1 73% 56'yo Wickiup 111109 Crescent Lake 7 4 5 66 66% Ochoco Reservoir 26676 60% Prinevige 125464 64% River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 350 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1730 Deschutes R.below Bend 137 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2130 Little Deschutes near LaPine 105 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 65 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 160 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 43 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 10
59'
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OREGON WEATHER ria
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MONDAY
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America Hears HEARING AIDS HelPinfI PeoPle Hear Better
541-21 3-2294
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Monday through Friday 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite ¹10 5 B e nd, Oregon
www.americahears.com
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 S occer, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3
THE BULLETIN•
TH U RSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
GOLF Bend golfer out at Northwest Am PULLMAN, Wash.
— Bend golfer Jesse Heinly's run at the Pacific Northwest Men's Amateur Championship ended Wednesdayin the tournament's round of 16. After cruising to a 2-up win over Aaron Whalen, of Ephrata, Washington, in the round of 32 Wednesday morning, Heinly was edged1 up in his afternoon match. Heinly, a 22-year-old Summit High graduate,
9 w w w.bendbulletin.com/sports
BASEBALL
WORLD CUP COMMENTARY
Around the world inpursuit of a dream Waiting • Bend High gradGroener's careerhastaken him from CentralOregon toAustralia to Spain By Beau Eastes
Austin. He had given professional baseball a whirl following his play-
The Bulletin
Three years out of college, former Bend High baseball standout David Groener was living the good life in
the independent Frontier League,
Texas.
his competitive days on the diamond
Just 27 years old, Groener was a vice president of an oil exploration company,working onthe25th floor of a high-rise building in downtown
were done — or so he thought. "I got a phone call from a friend
ing days at Texas Tech, but after a stint in Australia and a summer in
in Australia," says the 29-year-
old Groener, recounting the 2012
conversation that re-
Graphic
shaped his life. "He'd inside seen me in Bend, • Follow g w o rking with kids, Groener's and said they needed journey Groener a s h ortstop for the up- from being coming season." a Lava Bear That was music to Groener's to a Pirate ears. The former Lava Bear trained toa Red for four months before eventually Raider to a quitting his oil job and heading off Millionaire to Perth, Australia, to join the Wemto a Magpie bley Magpie Baseball Club. toa...,C4 SeeGroener/C4
fell into a two-hole defi-
cit to Christopher Hatch, when the Mukilteo, Washington, golfer won the12th and13th holes at Palouse RidgeGolf Club. Heinly fought back with a birdie on thepar-
for Messi's
magical moment • Argentina reachesfinal on penalty kicks By John Leicester
WEST COAST LEAGUE
The Associated Press
SAO PAULO-
he World Cup can only hope that Lionel Messi is leaving his best for last.
T
414th and then birdied
In the most important World Cup match to date in
the par-517th. But Hatch, a Western Washington University golfer, also birdied No. 17and closed out the match with a par on 18. The tournament's 36-hole championship match is scheduled for Friday.
his epoch-shaping career, football's superstar was neither
super nor a star. The four-time
WOl'lil CIIP
Iggl
world player of the
yearwas a bystander,
— Bulletin staff report
not ade-
CYCLING
cisive protagonist, forlarge chunks of Wednesday's Arge ntina vs. semifinal, Germany hisfirston When:noon football's S u nday biggest TV:ABC stage. The match dragged on
Bachelor park to open Sunday The downhill bike park at Mt. Bachelor ski area will not open until Sunday, Bachelor officials announced Wednesday. The park hadbeen scheduled to openfor the summer season on Friday, but officials decided to delay the opening by two daysto allow more snow to melt off the trails. According to the release, guests on opening day should expect one top-to-bottom route, designed for riders who are more comfortable on more difficult (blue square) terrain. Additional trails will open later this month as the snow continues to melt. Construction of new trail sections will continue during the summer. The park will operate daily through Sept. 1, and operations will continue on Fridays, Saturdays andSundays through Septemeber and into early October if weather and conditions permit. — Bulletin staff reporl
TOUR DE FRANCE
into extra time and then
still finished 0-0 in large part because Messi failed to leave his mark on it as he has done on hundreds of others for Barcelona, his
club, but not for Argentina, his country that needs him
now to step up. Frankly disappointing. In the penalty shootout, Messi
did score the all-important nerve-steadying first goal that his teammates then Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin
Bend's Justin Erlandson beats the throw to Jake Whisler to steal third base during the fourth inning against Klamath Falls in Bend on Wednesday. The Elks won 11-2 and are tied with Corvallis for the West Coast League South Division lead.
• A 7-run first inning givesBenda blowout win and ashareof the South Division lead Jo Carroll,
Two unearned runs in the
third narrowed the gap to 7-2,
over the last 13 games in an
left, celebrates with his teammates after hitting
11-2 rout of the Klamath Falls
a grand slam
Gems on Wednesday night. After opening the season
in the first Innlng.
and Bend earned its 11th win
3-8 to fall into last place of
the West Coast League's South Division, the Elks have won 15 of their last 19 games. And with the Corvallis
Knights' 8-6 loss on Wednesday night, Bend has climbed to the top of the division standings and is tied with
JERSEY LEADERS Yellow:Vincenzo Nibali Green:Peter Sagan Polka dot:Cyril Lemoine White:Sagan (worn by Michal Kiwatkowskii
Silva walked the first five
Corvallis at 18-12 — the second-most wins in the WCL. In the bottom of the first inning at Vince Genna Stadi-
Nextup
f
TODAY Stage 6:A121-mile mostly flat stage along the battlefields of World War I in a nod to the centenary of its start. For mere, C4
Yakima Valley at Bend When:6:35
; r
tonight
um, Klamath Falls' Michael Elks batters before Bend's Brock Carpenter smacked an RBI single to give the Elks a 3-0 lead.
The next batter, Carroll, then lifted a grand slam over
the right field wall to cap a
CHRIS HORNER Horner finished in 61st, among a group of13 riders 4 minutes, 13 seconds behind Boom. The 42-year-old Lampre-Merida rider from Bend dropped oneplace behind Nibali.
after its first shooter, Ron
Vlaar, saw his effort saved. But Messi's contribution to Argentina's win pretty
much started and stopped there. His thousands of fans in the Sao Paulo crowd
Bulletin staff report Jo Carroll blasted a grand slam as part of the Bend Elks' seven-run first inning,
WEDNESDAY Defending champion Chris Froome crashed out before the first section of cobblestones and retired. Dutchman Lars Boom won the 95-mile stage.
to 29th overall, 1:13
built on, heaping intolerable pressure on the Netherlands
monstrous frame for the home team that included seven runs on just three hits.
but a two-run, two-out dou-
ble by Nick Lopez gave the Elks a 9-2 advantage after the fourth.
Bend added a run in the fifth and another in the sixth to all but seal the victory. Carroll finished with two hits and four RBIs, Johnathan Brooks added two hits, while Carpenter, Justin Er-
chanted"Ole, ole, ole, Messi, Messi!" But he didn't really do anything to deserve it. Bottom line: Messi needs to be spectacular in the final
against Germany on Sunday if he is to put his stamp on World Cup history like Diego Maradona. Pub debates about who was/is a better footballer-
Messi, Maradona or Pele — are always entertaining
landson and Billy King each
but ultimately can't be
drove in a run.
answered, because these judgments are very much a personal thing, because
Zack Carter (2-0) scattered five hits over five innings pitched while striking out two. And the committee of Jeff Albrecht, Clay Bauer, Luke Schneider and Rio Gomez limited Klamath Falls to just one hit over the final four
innings and struck out seven. Bend opens up a threegame home series against the Yakima Valley Pippins at 6:35 tonight.
the three of them played in
different eras and because their careers took different
arcs. SeeWorld Cup/C4
Inside • A look at the World Cup history betweenGermany and Argentina,C4
NBA COMMENTARY
Cavaliers deserve tosignLeBronJames By Bob Brookover
rI L
The PhiladelphiaInquirer
t appears time for LeBron
tsecond humbled King, to make the humongous free-agent James, the NBA's recently
obvious that James is going to return somewhere, withhis choices narrowed to the Miami
one city is going to be hurtthe sting would notbe nearly as
Heat, his current team, and the
bad in Miami — and the other
is going to celebrate a freeagent signing as if it were an NBA championship. The added dimension this time is the po-
Cleveland Cavaliers owner DanGilbert famously
decisionofhiscareer.
wrote a vitriol-filled letter after LeBron James signed with Miami claiming the Cavs would win the NBA title before James did.
If you have ESP or ESPN, you probably already know
Cleveland Cavaliers, his former team. Sequels normally are not as good as the original, but for drama and intrigue, Decision II is goingto blowthe first Deci-
about Decision II. It has become
sion out of the water.
Tony Delak/ The Associated Press file
Just like the first storyline,
tential for forgiveness.
SeeLeBron/C4
Inside • To prepare for James' hopeful return, Cavaliers clear salary cap space. Briefs,C2
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY CYCLING
Tour de France, Stage6
Time TV/Radio 5 a.m. (Iive), 9 a.m., noon, 5 p.m., 9 p.m. NBCSN
GOLF
Women's British Open EuropeanTour, Scottish Open PGA Tour, JohnDeereClassic U.S. Senior Open Web.comTour,UtahChampionship EuropeanTour, Scottish Open
6 a.m. E SPN2 6 a.m. Golf noon Golf 1 p.m. E SPN2 3 p.m. Golf 2:30 a.m. Golf
BASEBALL
MLB, Minnesota at Seattle Oakland at SanFrancisco OR ChicagoWhite Sox at Boston L.A. Angels at Texas OR Detroit at Kansas City BOXING Argenis Mendezvs. RancesBarthelemy
7 p.m. 12:30 p.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
Roo t MLB MLB MLB FS1
FRIDAY AUTORACING NASCARSprint Cup, NewHampshire practice 8 :30 a.m. F S 1 NASCARNationwide, NewHampshire practice 10 a.m. FS1 NASCARNationwide, NewHampshire final practic e noon FS1 IndyCar, lowa qualifying 1p.m. N BCSN NASCAR Sprint Cup, NewHampshire qualifying 1 :30 p.m. F S 1 NASCARTruck Series, lovva 5 :30 p.m. F S 1 BASEBALL
MLB, Atlanta at ChicagoCubs MLB, St. Louis at Milwaukee OR L.A. Angels atTexas MLB, Oakland atSeattle
1 p.m.
MLB
5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB Roo t
6 p.m.
E SPN2
BOXING
Friday Night Fights FOOTBALL
Australia, Melbourne vs. Geelong GOLF Golf, Women's British Open EuropeanTour, Scottish Open PGA Tour, JohnDeereClassic Golf, U.S. Senior Open Web.comTour,UtahChampionship SOCCER MLS,D.C.UnitedatSanJose
8 :30 p.m. F S 2
BASEBALL WCL WESTCOAST LEAGUE All TimesPDT
East Division
In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
W
L
Pct GB .629 .556 2 .444 5 .296 9
W
L
Pct GB .600 .600 .555 1'/~
W
L
Yakima Valey Pippins 17 10 W enatchee AppleSox 15 1 2 W alla WallaSweets 1 2 15 Kelowna Falcons 8 19 South Division BendElks 18 12 CorvaffisKnights 18 12 MedfordRogues 15 12 KlamathFalls Gems 8 19 West Division
Bellingham Bell s 20 V ictoria Harbourcats 12 C owlitz BlackBears 1 2 KitsapBlueJackets 9
6 15 15 17
,296 8'/z
Pct GB .769 .444 8'/z .444 8'/~ .346 11
Wednesday'sGames Bend11,KlamathFals 2 Medford8,Corvallis 6 Yakima Valey 12,Victoria 3 Kitsap12,Bellingham3 Today'sGames YakimaValey at Bend, 6:35p.m. Bellingham atKelowna,6:35 p.m. KitsapatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. KlamathFalls atCorvallis, 6:40p.m. WallaWallaatWenatchee,7:05 p.m. MedfordatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Friday's Games Bellingham atKelowna,6:35 p.m. KitsapatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. YakimaValey at Bend, 6:35p.m. KlamathFalls atCorvallis, 6:40p.m. WallaWallaatWenatchee,7:05 p.m. MedfordatVictoria, 7:11p.m.
Elks11, Gems2
DEALS Transactions
/'/ //fII5
"Your teammates send best wishes. And management has decided to hire someone in a mascot oUtfit instead of having a live animal."
KlamathFalls 002 000 000 — 2 0 1 Bend 700 211 00x — 11 0 8 Silva,Hirko(1),Sumpter(5), Strombom(6),Landecker (8) andFriedm an; Carter, Albrecht(6), Bauer(7), Schneider (8), Gomez(9). W—Carter. L—Silva.28 —KlamathFalls: Packard;Bend: Lopez. HR—Carrol.
CYCLING
SOCCER
TENNIS
World Cup
ATP World Tour
All TimesPDT
Hall ot Fame Championshlps Wednesday at TheInternational TenmsHall of Fame, Newperl, R.l. Purse: S539,730(WT250) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles SecondRound SteveJohnson(6), UnitedStates, def.TatsumaIto, Japan, 6-3, 2-0, retired. NicolasMahut(4), France,def. LukeSavile, Australia, 6-4,6-2. SamGroth,Australia, def. MalekJaziri, Tunisia,7-6
Tour de France
6 a.m. E SPN2 6 a.m. Golf noon Golf 1 p.m. E SPN2 3 p.m. GO L F 8 p.m. NBCSN
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF COLLEGESPORTS SenatOrS grill NCAA preSident — Membersofa U.S.Senate committee onWednesdaytook their turns demanding answers from the NCAA, signaling that Capitol Hill has agrowing interest in weighing in on the future of college athletics. In front of a packedhearing room, Sen. JayRockefeller, D-WVa., voiced his anger at the state of college sports, echoing critics vvhohavebemoanedits professionalization — and theperception that the increasing revenue is not being fairly shared with athletes. Among thesix witnesses who testified were Mark Emmert, the NCAA president. Emmert pushed back against the harshest critiques. "College sports, in my opinion, works extremely well for the vast majority of our 460,000 student-athletes," he said.
BASKETBALL Sterling'S wife takeS Stand — After asecond dayof fiery testimony from her husband, Shelly Sterling took the standWednesday in a trial that maydecide if sheacted legally when she seized control of the Sterling Family Trust and sold the LosAngeles Clippers. Soon after, Judge Michael Levanascalled anend to the day' s testimony, and Donald Sterling vvasheard saying to his wife, aGet away from me, you pig!e And then adding, "Shelly, how could you lie?e During
her testimony, Shelly Sterling said shearranged medical exams for Donald Sterling becauseshefeared he vvasdeveloping Alzheimer's disease. "He's beengetting more forgetful. He's slurring his words. He's agitated a lot. Hegets madfor no particular reason," she said of his condition. "He's just not the sameperson that he used to be.e CGVSClear SPaCe fOr LOBron — The Cieveiand Cavaiiers have created salary cap space tomakesure they haveenough to offer LeBron James amaximum contract. A person familiar with the deals says the Cavshaveagreed to trade guard Jarrett Jack, swingman Sergey Karasevandcenter Tyler Zeller in a three-team deal. The moves are designed to openroom under the salary cap sothey can landJames.TheCavshaveagreementswith Brooklynand Boston, the person told TheAssociated Press on Wednesday. Cleveland will receive guard Marcus Thornton from the Netsand send him, Zeller and a future first-round pick to theCeltics. Also, the Cavsare trading Jack and Karasev to theNets. SPurS eXtenSiOn fOr POP —Gregg Popovich has agreed to a multi-year extension with the SanAntonio Spurs. The Spurs made theannouncementonTuesday.Theteam did notannouncetheterms of the deal in atwo-sentence news release. SSIGrp C8p FISSS —The NBAhasset the 2014-15 salary cap at $63.1 million, an all-time high, paving thevvayfor contracts to be signed. Deals canbecomeofficial starting at12:01 a.m. EDTThursday. Players andteams could agree to contracts starting July1, but they couldn't be signed during the moratorium period. Thecap isa 7.5 percent increase from last season's $58.7 million.
TENNIS $3M fOr U.S. Open wihhSF — The 2014 U.S. Openmen's and women's singles champions will earn a record $3 million apiece this year. TheU.S.TennisAssociationalsoannouncedWednesday that the total purse for the tournament will be $38.3 million, an increaseof 11.7 percent from $34.3 million last year. Theprevious winners of the final Grand Slamtournament of the season — Rafael NadalandSerena Williams — earned$2.6 million in 2013. A player vvholoses in the first round of singles will make$35,750, an increase of $3,750.
BASEBALL DOdgerS Partly reSPOnSible in fan deating — ASanFrancisco Giants fan vvhosuffered brain damage in abeating at Dodger Stadium has wonhis negligence suit against the LosAngeles Dodgers, but former owner FrankMcCourt has beenabsolved by the jury. The jury found damages ofabout $18 million but said the Dodgers were responsible for only a quarter of the sum.Therest of the responsibility vvassplit between the two men vvhobeat fan Bryan Stow. — From wire reports
BRDBucharest Open Wednesday atAreneleBNR,Bucharest, Romania Purse:S250,000(Intl.) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Kiki Bertens,Netherlands, def. Irina-Camelia Begu, Romania6-0, , 3-6,6-2. SimonaHalep(1), Romania, def. IndydeVroome, Netherlands,6-0, 6-4. RobertaVinci (2), Italy, def.AlexandraDulgheru, Romania6-2, , 6-3. SecondRound LaraArruabarrena,Spain, def. CaglaBuyukakcay, Turkey,7-5,3-6, 7-6(6). KristinaKucova,Slovakia, def. CristinaDinu, Romania,6-2, 6-3. PolonaHercog(8), Slovenia, def. KatarzynaPiter, Poland,6-2,5-7, 7-6(4). MonicaNiculescu,Romania, def. ElitsaKostova, Bulgaria,7-5, 7-5.
IN THE BLEACHERS
SEMIFINALS Wednesday at Arenberg, France Wednesday'sGame Fifth Stage Argentina0, Netherlands0, Argentinaadvanced 4-2 A94.7-mile flat ride intherain fromypres, on penaltykicks Belgium toArenberg-Porle duHainaut, with THIRDPUICE sevensectfensof cobblestoneroadstotaling Saturday'sGame nearly ninemiles Brazil vs.Netherlands1p.m. 1. LarsBoom,Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 3 CHAMPIONSHIP hours ,18 minutes,35 seconds.2.Jakob Fuglsang, Sunday'sGame Denmark ,Astana,19secondsbehind.3.Vincenzo Ni- Germany vs. Argentina, noon bali, Italy,Astana,sametime. 4. Peter Sagan, Slovakia, Cannond ale,1:01. 5.FabianCancegara, Switzerland, Trek FactoryRacing, sam etime.6. Jens Keukeleire, Belgium, MLS OricaGreenEdge, sametime.7. Michal Kwiatkowski, PoMAJORLEAGUESOCCER land,Omega Pharma-QuickStep, 1:07.8. LieuweWestra, All TimesPDT Netherlands,Astana,1:09.9. MaiteoTrentin, Italy, Omega Pharma -QuickStep,1:21.10. Cyril Lemoine, France,CoFriday's Games fidis, 1:45. UnitedatSanJose,8p.m. 11. AlexanderPorsev, Russia, Katusha,2:02. 12. D.C. Saturday' Games MathewHayman, Australia, OricaGreenEdge,sametime. ColoradoatPhiladelphia, 4p.sm 13. SepVanmarcke, Belgium,Belkin ProCycling, same HoustonatToronto FC,4 p.m. . time.14.JanBakelants, Belgium,OmegaPharma-Quick- Columbus atNewYork,4p.m. Step,sametime. 15. MarkRenshaw, Australia, Om ega oatNewEngland,4:30p.m. Pharma -QuickStep,sametime.16. JurgenVan denBro- Chicag nsasCity atMontreal, 4:30p.m. eck, Belgium, Lotto Belisol, sam etime. 17.Tony Martin, SportingKa Aat Vancouver,7 p.m. Germany,OmegaPharma-QuickStep,sametime.18. Tony ChivasUS R eal Sal t Lake at LosAngeles,7:30 p.m. Gagopin,France, Lotto-Belisol, sametime. 19. Jurgen Sunday'sGames Roelandts,Belgium, Loto-Belisol, 2:08.20.Richie Porte, PortlandatSeatle, 7p.m. Australia,Sky,2:11. Also 22. AndrewTalansky, United Slates, Garmin Sharp, U.cs. Open Cup 2:22.25.RuiCosta, Portugal, Lampre-Merida, 2:28. 26. AlejandroValverde,Spain, Movistar, sam etime.31.Tejay All TimesPDT vanGarderen, UnitedStates,BMCRacing, sametime. 34. Bauke Mogema, Netherlands,BelkinProCycling,2:44. 37. QUARTER FINALS AlbedoContador, Spain, Tinkoff-Saxo, 2:54. 61. ChrisWednesday'sGames topherHorner, United Slates, Lampre-Merida, 4:16. 78. FC Dallas5, CarolinaRailHawks2 FrankSchleck, Luxembourg, Trek Factory Racing, 8:10. ChicagoFire3,Atlanta Silverbacks1 106.AlexHowes,UnitedStates,GarminSharp,13:51.123. SeattleSounders 3,Portland Timbers1, OT PeterStetina,UnitedStates,BMCRacing,15:23. 135.DannyPate,UnitedStates,Sky,15:28.145. BenjaSEMIFINALS min King,UnitedStates,Garmin Sharp,18:03.171. Daniel Tuesday,Aug. 12 Navarro,Spain, Cofidis, 22:40.177.JoaquinRodriguez, PhiladelphiaUnionat FCDallas, 6p.m. Wednesday,Aug.16 Spain,Katusha,same time. 182. Edward King, United States,Cannondale, same time. 186. MatthewBusche, ChicagoFireatSeattle Sounders, 7:30p.m. UnitedStates,TrekFactoryRacing,sametime.Christopher Froome,Britain, Sky,withdrew. NWSL Overall Standings (Afler fiveslages) NATIONAL WOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE 1. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana,20hours,26minutes, All TimesPDT 46 secon ds.2. JakobFuglsang, Denmark,Astana, 2secondsbehind.3.PeterSagan,Slovakia,Cannondal e,: 44.4. Wednesday'sGame MichalKwia tkowski, Poland, Omega Pharma-QuickStep, Chicago1,Portland1,tie :50.5.FabianCancellara, Switzerland,TrekFactoryRacing, Friday'sGame 1:17. 6.JurgenVan denBroeck, Belgium, Lotto Belisol, Boston atHouston,6p.m. 1:45. 7.TonyGagopin, France, Lotto-Belisol, sametime. Saturday'sGames 8. RichiePorte, Australia, Sky,1:54.9.AndrewTalansky, Washington atWesternNewYork,4 p.m. UnitedSlates,GarminSharp,2:05. 10.AlejandroValverde, SeattleFCat Chicago,5p.m. Spain,Movistar,2:11. Sunday'sGame 11. Rom ainBardet, France, AG2RLaMondiale, same FC Kansas City at Portland, 4p.m. time.12.Tejay vanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, sametime.13.RuiCosta, Portugal, Lampre-Merida,same time.14.Geraint Thomas, Britian, Sky,2:16.15. Thibaut BASKETBALL Pinot, France,FDJ.fr, 2:25. 16. TomDumoulin, Netherlands, Giant-Shimano,sametime.17. YuryTrofimov,RusWNBA sia, Katusha , sametime.18. BaukeMogema, Netherlands, NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION Belkin ProCycling,2:27.19.AlbertoContador, Spain, WOMEN'S All TimesPDT Tinkoff-Saxo,2:37. 20.JanBakelants, Belgium, Omega Pharma-Q uickStep,2:39. Wednesday'sGames Also gton72,Chicago65 29. Christopher Horner,UnitedStates,Iampre-Merida, Washin Phoeni x 78, Se attle 58 4:13.43.FrankSchleck, Luxembourg, TrekFactory Racing,912.109.Daniel Navarro,Spain, Cofidis,2606.120. SanAntonio80, NewYork66 Today'sGames PeterStetina, UnitedStates,BMCRacing,2835.146. Benjamin King,United States, GarminSharp,34:00. 157.Alex ConnecticutatIndiana,9a.m. Howes,United States,GarminSharp,37:29.163. Matthew Minnesota at Tulsa, 5p.m. Busche,United States,Trek Factory Racing, 38:55. 167. Friday's Games DannyPate, UnitedStates, Sky, 39:39. 174.Joaquin Ro- Los Angeleat s NewYork, 4:30p.m. driguez, Spain, Katusha,41:18.189.Edward King,United Seattleat SanAntonio, 5p.m. States,Cannondale,54;29. Phoeni xatChicago,5:30p.m.
(7), 7-6(3).
LleytonHewitt (3),Australia, def.AntePavic, Croatia, 6-2,6-2.
JackSock(7),UnitedStates, def.RajeevRam,Unit-
BASEBALL
AmericanLeague BALTIMOREORIOLES — Designated RHP Julio DePaulfor a assignment. AssignedRHPRamon Ramiezoutright to Norfolk(IL). ReinstatedRHPBud Norris fromthe15-dayDL. Agreedto termswith RHP JeanCosmeand SSDerek Petersonon minor league
contracts. BOSTONRED SOX — Optioned RHP Brandon Workman to Pawtucket (IL). DesignatedCA.J. Pierzynski for assignment.RecalledRHPRubby De La RosaandCChristian VazquezfromPawtucket. DETROITIGERS— Agreed to termswith RHPs Artie Lewicki,WhitMayberryandAdamRaveneffe on minor league contracts. SentOFAndyDirksto Lakeland (FSL) forarehabassignment. HOUSTONASTROS — Released RHP Jerome
Williams. LOSANGELESANGELS — Optioned INF Grant Greento Salt Lake(PCL). Recaled RHPCamBedro-
sian from Arkansas(TL). NEW YORKYANKEES— PlacedRHPMasahiro Tanakaonthe15-day DL.Recalled OFZoilo Almonte fromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). SEATTLEMARINERS — Optioned RHP Taijuan Walkerto Tacoma(PCL). Recalled RHPStephenPryor fromTacoma. TORONTOBLUEJAYS— PlacedOFColeGigespie on the15-dayDL,retroactive to Monday. Recaled C Erik KratzfromBuffalo(IL). AssignedOFBrad Glenn outright toBuffalo. National League CHICAGOCUBS— Placed2BDarwinBarneyon paternityleave.Recaled INFArismendyAlcantara and RHPDallasBeeler fromlowa(PCL). Optioned LHPs TsuyoshiWadaandChris Rusin to lowa. CINCINN ATI REDS—OptionedLHPDavid Holmberg toLouisville (IL). LOSANGELESDODGERS—Agreedto termswith OFRogerBernadinaona minorleaguecontract. MILWAUKEE BREWERS— SentRHPJim Henderson toHuntsville (SL)for arehabassignment. NEWYORKMETS— OptionedRHPGonzalezGermen toLasVegas(PCL). ReinstatedRHPDillon Gee from the15-dayDL PHILADEL PHIA PHILLIES— OptionedRHPB.J.
Rosenbergto LehighValley (IL). ReinstatedRHPJeff Manshipfromthe15-day DL.SentCWil Nievesto Clearwater(FSL)for arehabassignment. PITTSBU RGHPIRATES— Placed RHPGerrit Cole on the 15-dayDL,retroactive to Saturday,andOF StarlingMarteon thebereavement list. RecalledRHP BrandonCumpton fromIndianapolis (IL). Agreedto terms withRHPGageHinszonaminor leaguecontract MercedescupResults and assignedhimto theGCLPirates. Wednesday at TCWeissenhof, Stuttgart, BASKETB ALL Germany National Basketball Association Purse: S660,600(WT260) BROOKLYNNETS— NamedFredMangionechief operatingofficer. Surface:Clay-Outdoor SANANTONIOSPURS— Agreed to termswith Singles First Round coachGreggPopovich ona multi-year contractexDanielGimeno-Traver,Spain, def.Peter Gojowczyk, tension. Germany, 7-5,6-3. FOOTBA LL Benjamin Becker,Germany, def. Benoit Paire, National Football League NFL —SuspendedWashington STanard Jackson France,3-6,6-2,6-2. YannMarti, Swilzerland,vs.Henri Laaksonen,Fin- indefinitelyforviolating theleague'ssubstanceabuse land, 7-5,6-4. policy. GuigermoGarcia-Lopez(6), Spain,def. MarcoCeHOCKEY cchinato,ltaly,6-4, 1-6, 7-5. National HockeyLeague LoukSorensen,Ireland, def.Igor Sijsling, NetherCHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Agreedto termswith lands,6-4,6-1. Fs JonathanToews andPatrick Kaneon eight-year Lukas Rosol, CzechRepublic, def. Alexander contractextensions. Zverev, Germany,7-6(7), 7-6(9). MINNES OTAWILD—SignedFCodyAlmond toa SantiagoGiraldo (7), Colombia,def.MateDelic, one-yearcontract. Croatia,6-4,6-2. NASHVILL E PREDATORS — Signed D Mattias Philipp Davydeko, n Russia, def. BlazRola, Slove- Ekholm. nia, 6-4,7-6 (8). NEW JERSEYDEVILS — Re-signed G Cory Schneiderto m aulti-yearcontract. SkiStar SwedishOpen WASHIN GTON CAPITALS — SignedG Edward W ednesday atBastadTennisStadiun, Pasquale to aone-year,two-waycontract. SOCCER Bastad, Sweden Major LeagueSoccer Purse: $660,600(WT250) SPORTINGKANSASCITY— RecalledGJonKemSurface:Clay-Outdoor pin fromloanto OK CEnergyFC(USL-PRO). Singles COLLEGE SecondRound LIU-BRO OKLYN—Announcedthe resignation of Dusan Lajovic, Serbia, def. JerzyJanowicz(4), Powomen'tenni s s coachAsi Philips. land, 6-3,1-1,retired. SAMFOR D—NamedMichele Moultrie assistant JoaoSousa(5),Portugal,def. EliasYmer, Sweden, softball coach. 6-3, 7-5. STEPHENF.AUSTIN— NamedTom HowedefenPablo Cuevas,Uruguay,def. Christian Lindell, Sweden, 4-6r 6-2, 7-6(2). sive ends coach. Renzo Olivo, Argentina, def. Tommy Robredo(2), Spain,7-6(6), 6-3. FISH COUNT ed States, 7-5, 6-2.
Dudi Sela, Israel, def. Adrian Mannarino(8), France,6-3,6-1. John Isner(1),UnitedStates, def.Austin Krajicek, UnitedStates,6-3, 6-3. Ivo Karlovic(2), Croatia, def.SergiyStakhovsky, Ukraine, 7-5, 7-6(3).
WTA NuerabergerGasteinLadies W ednesday atTCWels76,BadGastein, Austria Purse: $260,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound KarolinaPliskova(8), CzechRepublic, def. Ana Bogdan, Romania, 6-2, 7-5. Grace Min,UnitedStates, def.Irina Falconi, United States,6-3,6-3. AndreaPetkovic (4), Germany, def. DinahPfizenmaier,Germany,6-1, 6-3. StefanieVoegele, Switzerland, def. ElinaSvitolina (5), Ukraine, 6-2, 7-5.
Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook, steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 2,560 55 7 2 ,209 1,276 T he Daffes 2,085 5 4 9 1 ,197 6 7 9 John Day 2,300 3 9 6 59 0 277
McNary 3,104 4 8 7 4 4 4 26 5 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelhead at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Tuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 322,106 44,667 27,627 12,171 The Daffes252,405 34,251 11,192 5,538 John Day 218,967 30,494 9,262 3,971 McNary 196,680 26,481 5,544 2,289
U.S. OPEN CUP
Pair of extra-time goals knockout Timbers By Tim Booth
area from 30 yards out and
The Associated Press
Cooper was able to flick it past Portland goalkeeper Donovan
TUKWILA, Wash. — After
giving up a tying goal in the final seconds of regulation to its most heated rival, Seattle's
Ricketts.
"It was obviously disappointing because we thought
Kenny Cooper noticed there we could win it in regulation was no sulking. we had to work extra," Seattle Even if i t m e ant another coach Sigi Schmid said. "But I 30 minutes against Portland, told the guys, 'We have got to with a league match against do it the hard way. We'll do it the Timbers looming this the hard way.' That's just the weekend. way it turned out tonight." "No one ever put their head Seattle held on over the fidown so we kept battling," nal minutes, helped by the Cooper said after scoring on a Timbers playing a man down header in the 110th minute to after Diego Chara was given a help the Sounders advance to red card in the 99th minute for the U.S. Open Cup semifinals his tackle of Seattle's Marco with a 3-1 win over the Tim- Pappa. bers on Wednesdaynight. Portland coach Caleb Porter Cooper's goal came in the was angry about the red card second half of extra time after after theloss. "That's why they won the Darlington Nagbe's goal in the final moments of regulation
game is the red card. At 1-1
forced an additional 30 min- we were the better team, we utes of play. Gonzalo Pineda were the ones creating chancsent a pass into the penalty
es,e porter said. "(Seattle goal-
keeper) Stefan Frei was tremendous. He saved them. That
69th minute to give Seattle a lead that held up until Nagbe's
turned the game, that calL It was one of the worst offici-
goal in the third minute of sec-
ating performances I've ever seen since I've been around the
ond half stoppage time. Nagbe beat Lamar Neagle to a loose ball along the sideline, took areturn pass from Steve
game." Pappa added atT insurance Zakuani and beat Frei to the goal in the 116th minute beating Ricketts from the top of the
farpost.
ed shot. Seattle, which won
cluded the return of Seattle's
Both sides fielded a nearly penalty area with a right-foot- f irst-team squad, which i n three straight U.S. Open Cup DeAndre Yedlin following his titles between 2009-11, advanced to host the Chicago Fire in the semifinals on Aug. 13.
standout performance for the United States at the World Cup.
Yedlin played all of regulation It was the first of two games on his 2lst birthday, but was this week between the heated subbed off for extra time. SeCascadia rivals. The Sounders attle is expected to have U.S. will host the Timbers in MLS captain Clint Dempsey back in play Sunday night. time for Sunday night's match "It's over, it's history, it's
where more than 60,000 are
soccer," Porter said. "We were expected at CentktryLink Field. "He said he felt fine," Schmid ort the wrong ertd of a bad call today, and it was definitely the said of Yedlin. "We felt he is difference in the game." a guy that could play tonight Osvaldo Alonso scored on a and turn it around again for leaping right-footed shot in the Sunday."
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
Familiar opponents This will be the third time Argentina and Germanywill contest a World Cup final, and the third straight World Cupthetwo countries have met. Argentina has just one win against the Germans — the only match contested on South American soil.
TOUR DE FRANCE
roome inis e e oreco e s ones By Jamey Keaten
t hird and
1958 GROUP STAGE
The Associated Press
West Germany 3, Argentina1
A RENBERG, France — A n i n jured wrist was just too much for
and second-place Jakob Fuglsang of Denmark were 19 seconds be-
1986 FINAL Argentina 3, WestGermany 2 1990 FINAL West Germany1, Argentina 0
Netherlands. "This is a special, special day for
memorable and crash-marred stages
me," said Boom, who rides for Belkin
Germany1, Argentina1 (Germany advanced 4-2 on penalty kicks)
2010 QUARTERFINALS
after crashing twice in a rain-, mud-,
Germany 4, Argentina 0
World Cup Continued from C1 Still, at this stage of t he
1986 World Cup, Maradona was pretty much winning the thing single-handed. Captain of Argentina, just like Messi, Maradona scored both goals against Belgium in the semifinal, carrying the team to the final where it beat West Ger-
many, 3-2. Maradona also scored both Argentine goals that eliminat-
ed England in the quarterfinals. The first was the infa-
mous "Hand of God" punched in with his raised fist; the second was a gem after a sublime dribble past five England players. Messi, on the other hand, hasn't scored since the group
stageherein Brazil.Hescored in Argentina's win against Bosnia and Herzegovina in its opening match and made a splash with a fabulous injury-time winner against Iran. He also got Argentina's first two goals in a 3-2 victory against Nigeria. Since then, zilch. Just an assist for Angel Di Maria's winning goal against Switzerland in the first knockout game. It
hind stage winner Lars Boom of the
defendingTour de France champion Chris Froome, in one of the most in recent race history. The Kenyan-born Briton ended his repeat bid Wednesday, dropping out of cycling's biggest event and dropping a bombshell on his competitors
2006 QUARTERFINALS
Pro Cycling. "I was really looking forward to the cobblestones." Overall, Nibali leads Astana team-
mate Fuglsang by 2 seconds. Cannondale rider Peter Sagan of Slovakia was third, 44 seconds back. Contador, breathing hard under a
sweat- and blood-soaked fifth stage for the pack through nerve-wracking
mask of mud at the finish, lost about 2 '/2 minutes to Nibali: He's 2:37 back,
cobblestones along France's border
with Belgium. The 29-year-old Team Sky leader, already nursing pain in his left wrist a day earlier, first scuffed up his right hip, tearing his uniform,
in 19th place. Sky's Porte was eighth overall, 1:54 back, and Valverde was 10th, 2:11 behind.
Crashes all over
then scraped his f ace. Both f alls
Others who went down but kept
cobblestones.
Stage winner Lars Boom of The Netherlands, front, grimaces as he breaks away
going included Americans Andrew Talansky and Tejay van Garderen, Spain's Alejandro Valverde and Ger-
He was the best-known of several big-name riders who crashed on Wednesday. They found out months ago, when the course was
from overall leader Italy's Vincenzo Nibali, rear, during the fifth stage of the Tour de
many's Marcel Kittel, winner of three
France on Wednesday.
of the first four stages. In what was perhaps the day's most visually dramatic crash, Belgium's Jurgen van den Broeck hurtled over his handlebars
happened evenbefore he got to the start of 8 miles over joint-jangling
Bernard Papol/The Associated Press
announced, what they would face race organizersscrapped two ofthe on the roads from Ypres, Belgium to nine scheduled cobblestone patches,
The withdrawal of the pre-race fa-
and reduced the stage by two miles. vorite left the Tour wide open with 16 But that still wasn't enough to stop stages still left. the celebrated Paris-Roubaix one- many riders from tumbling. Overall leader Vincenzo Nibali of "It's devastating for Chris and for Italy wasted little time in speeding day race. On Twitter, Froome wrote that he the team," Sky boss Dave Brailsford ahead, notably after he saw that his was "devastated" to withdraw: "In- said. "We really believed in Chris other big rival for the title this yearjured wrist and tough conditions and his ability to win this race. But two-time champion Alberto Contamade controlling my bike near to it's not to be this year." dor — had trouble on the second run impossible." Froome wished luck to The last time a defending champi- on cobbles. new Sky leader Richie Porte of Aus- on abandoned the Tour was five-time Nibali, too, was one of several tralia and his other teammates for winner Bernard Hinault of France high-profile riders who c rashed, the rest of the race. in 1980, according to French cycling recovered and excelled on the 95Sensing the danger from the rain, statistics provider Velobs.com. mile r oute. Th e I t a l ian f i n i shed
in a bend on a cobblestone patch, and
tumbled into a grassy roadside. Van den Broeck said later he was unhurt, and just got some dirt in his
eyes. In his crash, Valverde said he'd gotten bumped from the side, his gears broke, and he hit the tarmac. Then Movistar teammate Jose Joaquin Ro-
jas gave his bike to Valverde, who rode to the finish on a smaller seat position. "It was really impossible to switch bikes before the finish, because it was
'full gas,' " Valverde said.
Lava Bears,Nillionaires andMagpies, ohmy David Groener's baseball career hastaken him to some exotic locales that claim some unusual team mascots
MILFORD,SASK. •
put Messi on a higher pedestal than Maradona. We can have this conversation again if he
scores the goals that beat Germany in the final. Nigel De Jong can claim much of the credit for keeping Messi out of the action under damp, dark skies in Wednesday's semifinal that felt flat compared to the previous day's fireworks of Germany destroying Brazil 7-1. De Jong glued himself to
TRAVERSE
• BEND
CITY, MICH.
WASHINGTON,PA.
• V ENTURA CALIF.
Messi so closely that when
LUBBOCK, TEXAS •
he shuts his eyes for days to Netherlands midfielder and the feeling of him breathing down his neck. In the first half, Messi did
Race wide open
Arenberg Porte du Hainaut. It's the same big bumps known to racers of
doesn't add up to enough to
come, he'll no doubt still be able to picture the face of the
e x tended his l ead. H e
PERTH, ® AUSTRALIA
AUSTIN, TEX'AS ("Real joh")
VALENCIA, SPAIN •
fire afree-kick hard and flat past the Dutch wall into the
arms of goalkeeper Jasper Cillessen. In the second half,
Messi wasted a free-kick by hoofing it harmlessly long. The Netherlands allowed Messi no time on the ball and
tackled him en masse when he had it. Jordy Clasie took over
• Bend High School Lava Bears • Ventura (Calif.) Community College Pirates
as Messi's handcuffs when De Jong tired and was taken
Groener
off after an hour. After 105
Continued from C1 He has been playing pro-
minutes, data crunchers Opta noted that Messi still hadn't touched the ball once inside
fessionally
o v erseas e v er
Dutch coach Louis Van Gaab Still, the Netherlands' suf-
since. "It's funny," says Groener via Skype from Valencia, Spain, the home of his current team. "I hadn't played in
focation of Messi couldn't
a while, but I did OK and won
the Dutch penalty area. "We didn't see Messi," said
alone explain his failure to
make an impact. Of all the Argentine players who stayed on the pitch for the entire 120
minutes, Messi covered the least ground. He strolled a lot of the time, fiddling with
his captain's arm band, using his shirt to wipe his nose and
watching play happen around, not through, him. Perhaps the hope was that the Netherlands would even-
• Texas TechUniversity Red Raiders • Melville (Sask.) Millionaires of the Western Major Baseball League
• Washington (Pa.) Wild Things of the Frontier League • Traverse City (Mich.) Beach Bums of the Frontier League
• Wembley (Perth, Australia) Magpies of the State League • Valencia (Spain) Astros of Division de Honor
I'm pinching myself that I'm sitting on the Indian Ocean getting paid to play baseball against a big leaguer. But we're a hundred miles south of Perth (Australia) with maybe 50 people watching us play in a cow pasture. Past the outfield, there are kangaroos." — David Groener
pasture. "Past
t he
he continues,
outf i eld," " there a r e
kangaroos." With the Spanish season running through August, Groenerhopes a strong finish on his part will lead to a roster spot during the winter,
cia, where he is hitting .411 four days a week. It's like that the gold glove of the league with a team-high 14 doubles all through Europe where overthere." through the Astros' first 24 you play about two games a Being i n t h e S o u thern games. week." "It's a unique league," Hemisphere, Groener's AusHaving played baseball in tralian league ran from Oc- G roener s ay s a b ou t t h e four different countries on tober 2012 to M arch 2013. Spanish Division de Honor, three different continentsHis play at shortstop got the a nine-team league made up he spent one summer during attention of the Valencia As- mostly of Cuban, Dominican college with the Melville tros, for whom he competed and Venezuelan ballplayers. (Saskatchewan) Mil l i onin spring and summer 2013. Groener and an Astros team- aires of the Western Major After a winter of surfing in mate the only Americans in Baseball League in Canada San Diego, Groener this past the entire nine-team league. — Groener has a stockpile March headed back to Valen- "We're doing baseball about of stories to tell. In Austra-
lia, he played against former Major League pitcher Virgil Vasquez, a big right-hander who spent parts of two seasons with the Detroit Tigers and the Pittsburgh Pirates.
"I'm
p i nching myself
t hat I'm sitting on th e I n -
dian Ocean getting paid to play baseball against a big leaguer," Groener says. "But we're a hundred miles south
of Perth with maybe 50 people watching us play in a cow
possibly somewhere in Latin America. "Last year our coach had a
place lined up in Nicaragua," Groener says. "It was good baseball, but I was more in-
clined to surf and relax. This offseason I'm more focused on trying to play somewhere else. I've got some options, it just depends on having a good season here. It makes
everything easier." — Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulietin.com.
tually forget about him, giving him breathing space to exploit. If so, the tactic didn't work.
In the second period of extra time, Messi did come alive for a brief instant, sprinting with
the ball at his feet and riding tackles to then cut back a
crossforMaxi Rodriguez.But Rodriguez's right-footed volley had neither the power nor
accuracy to trouble Cillessen. M essi's European a n d Spanish trophies with Barce-
lona and his world player of the year awards are enough, already, to make him one of
football's greats. But to be considered a World Cup great, worthy of mention with Mara-
dona and Pele, he also needs a signature moment in a big game in Brazil. He has one last chance to do it.
LeBron
computer-system glitch. to unfathomable lows. The luckiest fly in the world will be In the end, Philadelphia embraced Continued from C1 the one on the wall when Gilbert and Chamberlain as a native son. That To understand just how l oathed James discuss that rant. is not happening to James unless he James became by Clevelanders, reIt is impossible to find an NBA story rejoins the Cavs right now, a possibil-
land without winning a championship.
member that James is an Ohio native
winning seasons, 79 losing ones and five .500 seasons. Cleveland is 0-4 in championship rounds since 1964. During those five barren decades, the
identical to this one. Perhaps the closest example is when Wilt Chamberlain
ity that increased Wednesday when
who grew upin Akron, a 40-minute Clevelanddeared salary-cap room by drive from Cleveland. played with the Warriors. He was a taking part in a three-team deal. Hell hath no fury like an NBA own- Philadelphia kid and the best player in James, however, seems more interer scorned. Cavs owner Dan Gilbert the NBA when he was forced to move ested in titles than cash. With young actedjust like ajilted loverwhen James toSan Francisco because theteam was stars like Andrew Wiggins and Kyrie signed with Miami, posting a rant on sold. He never won a title in San Fran- Irving in Cleveland, he probably has a the team's website that referred to his cisco, but he did return to Philadelphia better shot of winning it all in the near former player as a coward, a traitor still at the top of his game, leading the future with the Cavaliers because the and a narcissist. He also promised that 76ers to their first NBA championship Heat are a collection of aging stars. the Cavs would win the NBA title be- in 1967. As the rest of us watch fromthe sidefore the Heat. And then, amid a dispute with own- line, we should probably be cheering Oops. er Ira Kosloff, he left again one year lat- for Cleveland to win this one. No city The rant was finally removed from er for the bright lights of Los Angeles, with at least three of the four major the team's website Sunday. The Cavs where he eventually won another title sports (baseball, football, basketball said it remained only because of a with the Lakers while the Sixers sank and hockey) has gone as long as Cleve-
Since Cleveland beat the Baltimore Colts in the 1964 NFL championship,
the Browns, baseball's Indians and the Cavaliers have combined for 55
Browns moved to Baltimore, where
they have won two championships as the renamed Ravens, and the city lost
its National Hockey League team, the Barons, after two losing seasons in the late 1970s.
Clevelanders deserve a break. Besides, LeBron's return to Cleveland
would be the better story, even if it would be morbidly fascinating to watch the city's reaction should The
King reject his fellow Ohioans again.
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
BRIEFING Dish aims toblock Time Warnersale Satellite broadcaster Dish Network wants the government to block Comcast Corp.'s proposed purchase of Time Warner Cable. In meetings with Federal Communications Commission officials this week, Dish said a combination of Comcast and Time WarnerCable "presents serious competitive concerns for the broadband andvideo marketplaces andtherefore should bedenied." The details of the
en mansen ence in axcase • Personal development teacherto spendayear anda dayin prison By Rachael Rees
agreed that he made about
ber that he co-founded but
2008. It resulted in a tax loss
panies and transferred ownership of the third to a church
to my friends and family that have endured a lot." In October, a federal grand jury in Wisconsin indicted Plantenberg on three counts
On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman sen-
was sentenced Tuesday in
of willful failure to file income
federal court to a year and one day in prison for failing to
tax returns, a misdemeanor,
file income tax returns for the
ing to evade taxes, a felony. Plantenberg, a founder of
on Sept. 2. "We were certainly surprised by the sentencing," Plantenberg said Wednesday. "Iexpected a sentence ofpro-
Humm Kombucha in Bend,
bation with sizable financial
— Freedom Personal Devel-
penalties. I believe that would have been fair and just." According to the plea agreement, Plantenberg
opment, Freedom Profes-
The Bulletin
Bend resident Eric Planten-
berg, a personal development teacher and public speaker,
and three counts of attempt-
years 2006-08. "I really am clear that I
made a huge mistake," he said pleaded guilty in April to the in a video posted on YouTube. three misdemeanor charges. "I apologized to the judge, to In exchange, the three felony the government and certainly charges were dismissed.
tenced Plantenberg to the
maximum penalty. The judge allowed him to report to pris-
Plantenberg said in Octo-
$1.3 million in unreported income between 2005 and of $367,589, according to the plea agreement. Both the plea hearing and sentencing took place in U.S. District Court in Madison, Wisconsin, where Planten-
berg was an owner of three Madison-based companies sional Services and IKinetic
Solutions — according to the indictment.
meetings were revealed in an FCC filing by Dish. Dish, led byChairman Charlie Ergen, told
never owned two ofthe comin 2000. "I know that all things hap-
pen for good, and my family is very well supported, and I'm a blessed person, and everything is going to be OK," he said. "This entire experience will
make me a smarter, wiser, more humble person." — Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
Fed plans to stop
the FCC that"there do
not appear to beany conditions that would
remedythe harms that would result from the merger." Dish madeits case to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler and commissioners Mignon Clyburn, Ajit Pai, Jessica Rosenworcel and Michael O'Rielly. Among Dish's concerns are the leverage a combined Comcast-Time WarnerCable would have in negotiating distribution deals with content suppliers.
buying bonds in October By BinyaminAppelbaum
— From Mire reports
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve said
Wednesday that it planned to stop adding to its bond holdings in October, in a sign of its confidence that the economy is gaining
PERMITS City of Bend • Triad Homes Inc., 21190 SE Kayla Court, $209,293 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20698 NE Comet Court, $221,884 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20697 NE Comet Court, $324,104 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20740 NE Sierra Drive, $212,548 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 20736 NE Sierra Drive, $212,548 • Timothy C. Phillips, 60956 Bachelor View Road,$236,523 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC,21352 NE Evelyn Place, $245,229 • Long Term Bend Investors LLC,21348 NE Evelyn Place, $252,490 • Craig M. Brown, trustee, 61296 TamMcArthur Loop, $388,046 • FC Fund LLC,620 SE Glencoe Place, $235,053 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 21048 NE High Desert Lane, $176,819 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 21044 NE High Desert Lane, $176,819 • ML Bend USA Limited Partnership, 21052 NE High Desert Lane, $176,819 • Robin M. Lisk, 1946 NW Balitch Court, $355,047
BEST OF THE
BIZ CALENDAR FRIDAY • ConstructionContractor Course:Two-day testprep course that meets the OregonConstruction Contractors Board testeducation requirement. Continues Saturday. Prepayment required; $305, includes Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7290 or ccb@cocc.edu. TUESDAY • Membership 101Driving YourMemdership: New and current members can connect and learn about the benefits available through the chamber. RSVP required; free; 10 a.m.; BendChamber of Commerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org. • Bend Chamberof Commerce Ribbon Cutting:Central Financial Services, 209 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite 200; 4:15-5 p.m. www. bendchamber.com. WEDNESDAY • Bend Chamberof
I,-'
'/
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Matt and Cierra de Gruyter, left, are the husband-and-wife team behind NLB, a new restaurant located in the Century Center in Bend that
specializes in plant-based burgers.
ot our tra ition ast- oo oint "The passionto have some-
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
thing that's absolutely mine,"
Matt de Gruyter staked his business future on the notion that Bend is ready for the next
he said. "My wife's passion is to provide awesome, nutritious food for everyone." The couple researched sites
level in fast-food dining. The restaurant, NLB, for Next Level Burger, that he and his wife, Cierra de Gruyter, cre-
in Austin, Texas; Scottsdale, Arizona; and Newport Beach,
ated inthe Century Center on Southwest Century Drive, of-
locate in Portland. But Cierra
ficially opens at 11 a.m. Satur-
day, he said. Two soft openings arescheduled at5-7p.m. today and Friday. "The catch: It's a 100percent plant-basedburger joint," de Gruyter said Wednesday. "The Next Level Burger is virtually indistinguishable from fastfood burgers. It's 26 grams of deanprotein." De Gruyter, a Denver native
and most recently manager of abrokerage house in Laguna Niguel, California, said the new business is a result ofhis and his wife's passions to create something good for people.
California; before agreeingto de Gruyter grewup in Deschutes County and urged her partner to at least checkthe
traffic for one with lots of foot traffic.
"I thinkit's goingto go really
BEND
well," Stemach said. Matt de Gruyter said the CA
' ca
E
Mt. Washingto r.
Next level Burger Gregcross/The Bulletin
area out, Matt de Gruyter said.
"I'm a mountainbiker and a climber and all those things are easily into the restaurant her pretty close to home," he said. clients envisioned, she said. ''We were struggling to fill The 1,700-square-foot restaurant takes up the last that existing space," Stemach space available at the Century said. The de Gruyters never Center, said Bend architect closed on the property that RachelStemach, who designed went instead to a dental therestaurant.The de Gruyters practice. The Century Center originallyplanned on renovat- location presented a"simpler, ing a former Washington Fed- quicker way to get into the
menu his wife created is free of genetically modified ingredients andbased on organic productssourced mostly from the West or Northwest. In addi-
tion to six varieties ofburgers, the menu includes salads, sandwiches and sides. The name-
sake burger sells for $6.50.
"It's all heart healthy. We're
real proud of our menu," he said. Stemach said the restau-
rant seats 50. She designed a space with "lots of light, lots of space, lots of volume," she
said. Although relatively small forarestaurant,shesaid,"it's a welcoming and warm envi-
strength even as the central
bank gradually withdraws its support. The decision, described
in an account of the Fed's most recent policymaking meeting in June, signals the end of one of the central bank's most aggressive efforts to stimulate the
economy. The Fed, which started reducing its monthly purchases in January, said itplanned to add a final $100 billion to its holdings of Treasuries and mort-
gage-backed securities over the next four months, for a total of $1.5 trillion. But the account underscored that many Fed
offic ialsrem ained guarded in their optimism about the economy. It also suggested that theyhad notyet decided when to take an even more important step in their
retreat: raising short-term interest ratesforthefirst time since December 2008.
Investors generally expect the Fed to start raising interest rates next summer.
The Fed said the decision to end bond purchases in October, rather than
ronment. We were trying to
continuing purchases at a nominal level until the end
eral bankbranch at 560 SW
restaurantbusiness with a
maintain asmuch openness as
of the year, should not be
Columbia St. But that building,
small startingpoint."
we could."
interpreted as evidence that rate increases were likelyto begin sooner.
at 2, 700 square feet,presented a little too much room to turn
Next Level Burger traded
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
a spot withlots of vehicular
Apple landspatent for all-glassiPhone, iPadbuilding process By Salvador Rodriguez
Insider, would allow Apple
2014, but the patent maybe a
Los Angeles Times
to create glass shells that are
due to what's to come from
Apple has been granted a patent for a method to create all-glass shells for electronic devices, such as iPhones and
durable and lightweight. Glass shells wouldbe createdbyfusing together separate glass pieces andthen machiningthem down to the desired shape.
Apple. The Cupertino, California, company is known for its high-caliber product design, butit frequently changes its style. For example, Apple has
iPads. The method described in the
patent, first reportedbyApple
CommerceWomen'sRound Table Series:Social event at the Oregon High Desert Classics horse show; $10 chamber members, 15 nonmembers; 5:30-7:30 p.m. J Bar JYouth Services, 62895 HambyRoad,Bend. More information: www. bendchamber.com THURSDAY • QuickBooksSeminar: Business owners can learn basic functions for accurate accounting; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting
Consumers should not ex-
pect aglass iPhone oriPad in
and Consulting, 61383 S. Highway 97,Suite A, Bend; 541-389-5284 or admin© joyofqui ckbooks.com. • Moving tethe FutureEnvisioningBetter Public Transit for Central Oregon: Public forum to discuss the increasing demandfor public transportation. CascadesHall, Rooms117 and118; 7-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 NWCollegeWay,Bend; 541-548-9523 or scotta@coic. org.
used several different materials
to create the exterior of thepast
JULY22 • ProfessionalEnrichment Series- BendChamberof Commerce:Featuring Dino Vendetti with Seven Peaks Ventures. Registration required; $25 chambermembers,$30 nonmembers;11:30a.m.; Bend Goland f Country Club, 61045 CountryClubDrive; 541-382-7437. • RFP Analysis 8 Proposal Writing Skills:Class offered by theGovernment Contract AssistanceProgram (GCAP)and Central Oregon
few iPhone models. The iPhone 4 and 4s had
shelL Apple has never built an iPhone with an all-glass
glass front andbackpanels with metallic edges. The exte-
exterior. For the next iPhone, expect-
rioroftheiPhone5 and5swas the opposite, builtpredomi-
ed to go on sale this fall, reports have said Apple will use a
nantly out of metal with just a
metal design with an extremely
fewglass panels. The iPhone 5c, meanwhile, has aplastic
durable screenmade out of "sapphire crystal glass."
Community CollegeSmall Business DevelopmentCenter. Preregistration required; free; noon-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-736-1088or www.gcap.org. JULY23 • BusinessAfter Hours: Network andcelebrate the 25th Annual OregonHigh Desert Classic. Registration required; free; 5 p.m.; JBarJ Boys Ranch, 62895 HambyRoad,Bend; 541-389-1409.
JULY25 • fluickBooksSeminar: Business ownerscan learn basic functions for accurate accounting; $97; 9a.m.-1 p.m.; AccurateAccounting and Consulting, 61383 S.U.S. Highway 97,Suite A,Bend; 541-389-5284 or adminO joyofqui ckbooks.com. JULY31 • QuickBooksSeminar: Business ownerscan learn basic functions for accurate accounting; $97; 9a.m.-1 p.m. AccurateAccounting
and Consulting, 61383 S.U.S. Highway 97,Suite A, Bend; 541-389-5284 oradmin© loyofqui ckbooks.com. AUG. 6 • Business Startup Workshop: Two-hour sessioncovers allthe basic stepsneededto opena business. Preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.;COCCChandler Building,1027NWTrentonAve., Bend; 541-383-7290. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Medicine, D3 Nutrition, D5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
MEDICINE
FITNESS
Forminghealthyhabits to get you inshape By Kimberly Garrison Philadelphia Daily News
Everybody knows that in
orderto accomplish something, be it big or small, you must set a goal. It doesn't matter if the goal is to lose 10 pounds, to eat healthier
or to work out consistently. Although we probably all agree that goal-setting is necessary, the real problem is not setting the goal, but sticking with it. Talk
is cheap, and if you really want to achieve your goals this summer, fitness or
otherwise, you really need aplan. To help you get it right this summer, here are my seven habits of highly fit people: 1. Set a goal. Similar to a Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Bend gynecologist and surgeon Dr. Lauren O'Sullivan said it's disappointing that manywomen don't know what services are covered
business metric, you must set quantifiable fitness and
health goals. For example, if your cholesterol is 250, give yourself the goal of getting it down to 200 by your next checkup, as opposed to just
under insurance plans, but said the contracts are so complicated it does not surprise her.
wishing that number would
go down. Take concrete steps, like limiting or elim-
inating your consumption of high-cholesterol foods, like butter, cheese, eggs and meat. If weight loss is also
a goal, commit to a number, let's say 20 pounds, and figure out how many weeks or months it will take you to safely reach your goal. If you stay committed to
your commitments, you can safely lose 20 pounds in 10 weeks. If you want to
improve your muscle tone and strength, give yourself a goal like achieving 10 perfect push-ups in eight weeks, and so on. Otherwise you are just wishing for results as opposed to planning and tracking your success. A wish requires no action on
your part, but a plan does. 2. Write it down. Some wise person once said "Fail-
ing to plan is planning to fail." Write down every sin-
gle thing you would like to accomplish to improve your health, diet and workouts.
You are far more likely to reach your goals if you write them down. SeeFit tips/D4
NUTRITION
causes un eru i iza ion
Health benefits continue
to surfacefor vegandiet By David Templeton
the disease.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
No, vegans are not extraterrestri alsfrom a planetorbiting Vega, although many might consider their dietary habits to be completely
By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
alien. Plant-only eaters
very once in a while, Dr. Lauren O'Sullivan will see a patient who — just as she's about to leave after a routine check-up — asks whether Sullivan tested for a certain sexually transmitted infection. "Patients think that there is just a set group, like they come in and say, 'I want routine labs.' Well, there is no such thing," said O'Sullivan, a gynecologist and surgeon in Bend. Rather, doctors like O'Sullivan decide what tests to run
based on things like age, gender and risk factors.
en, a recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey showed
of the health care system and th en e w services available to
more than half of women
them with no out-of-pocket
don't understand that
costs under the Afford-
'Pa<IS they have to specifable Care Act. don't understand exactly what ically ask for such inSi d e Survey responses has been tested for and what services, as they're • Ma ndated f r o m more than 1,400 hasn't," she said. not part of a routine se r vices, D3 women ages 15 to 44 Although Affordable Care exam. It was one of were inciuded in the Act-compliant health insurseveral areas where the surrep o r t, which covered subance plans must cover testing vey highlighted dramatic laps- jects such as insurance status, for certain STIs among wom- es in women's understanding a ccess to contraceptives, "I would say a lot of women
preventive services like mam-
mograms and pap tests, STI testing and provider counseling on an array of topics. According to the report, 40 percent of women said they had received an STI test with-
The Bulletin
Bythe end of this summer, two new independent pharmacies will have opened in Bend. But if you're among the thousands of Oregonians w ho bought a Moda health insurance policy, you'llhave to continue picking up your prescriptions elsewhere.
Westside Pharmacy, which officially opened in June, and Cascade Custom Pharmacy,
which opens Aug. I, were told by MedImpact, the pharmacy benefits manager for Moda Health and other insurance carriers, they had to wait five and six months, respectively,
before they could get clearance to fill its prescriptions.
Pharmacybenefits managers, or PBMs, are third-party companies that large, self-insured employers hire to manage their
prescri ption drugprograms, Erick Scheiderman, said which typically means workwhenpeople learn they can't ing with pharmacies, deciding fill their prescriptions at the which drugs are covered and pharmacy for the first couple paying claims. months, they might just decide MedImpact implemented to stay with their current one a policy roughly a year ago indefinitely. "They may not be 100-perthat requires pharmaciesthat have been inbusiness less than cent happy there, but they one year to undergo on-site thinkit's apainto transfertheir inspections, a costly and medications all over to time-consumingchange M ON EY a new pharmacy," she designed to bring down said."That mightbe a the high rate of fraud, which, deciding factor when you first according to MedImpact, ocopen and you don't take their curs among more than half of insurance and then they say, 'Oh, well, you know, I'm pretty pharmacies open lessthan a year. comfortable where I'm at at Aside from having to pay Safeway.'" ahefty $1,200 inspection fee, Cascade Custom Pharmacy thepharmacies' owners say used to be a compounding not being able to fill Moda pre- pharmacy only — one that scriptions when they open will creates custom medications hurtbusiness. Angela Valerga, for patients — but will expand who owns Cascade Custom to a full-service pharmacyin Pharmacy with her husband, its new location in the Brook-
percent describe themselves
as vegetarian. In contrast, Americans are noted for
their penchant for overconsump-
denominator among all vegans is avoidance of all animal-based foodstuff. What might sound crazy to some, a diet complete-
ly devoid of steaks, eggs, cheese and ice cream, has an ally: science. There are no guarantees, but evidence
continues blooming that a daily diet based on whole
imal-based foods as meat, eggs and dairy along with high sugar intake.
Thinkstoek
Americansare overweight
the chronic health problems
or obese, more than a third
plaguing America — hypertension, high cholesterol, heart disease and Type-2 diabetes. There'sfurther evidence that a plant-based
having diabetes or metabolic syndrome. A poor diet is a risk factor
exam — but it's not.
complications. Family history, low activity and excess body weight also increase a person's chance of getting
serious and life-threatening
diet also can help prevent or
fight cancer, autoimmune diseases and arthritis, among many other common conditions.
SeeVegan/D5
Paid Advertise ent
Get that perfect toned stomach and Fear No Beach this summer.
Exilis
swood Meadow Plaza. Kristen Godfrey, the owner
Tummy Tightening
of Westside Pharmacy, which
opened in a former bankon Century Drive, said it's frustrating to have to turn away
would-be customers. "Ihatewhen people come in and they're all excited that
we're open and then they're like, 'We're Moda,' and I'm
like, 'Ugh, I'm so sorry, but here's the story,'" she said. Moda sold far and away more individual policies than
any carrie rin Oregon in 2014,
Purchase a package of Exilis Stomach Tightening and get your
first two treatments FREE!' ($800 Value)
covering more than 95,000
people and 40 percent of the individual market. The com-
pany wooed enrollees with attractively lowpremiums, but
has applied for a 12.5-percent premium increase in 2015. The
Oregon Insurance Division has notyetapproved theincrease. SeePharmacies/D2
plant foods can PreVent Or re-
verse many of
More than two-thirds of
for 7ype-2 diabetes, which carries with it a number of
SeeACA coverage/D3
ethic and environmental activism, but the common
tion of such an-
in the past two years. Among those, 53 percent assumed it was part of a routine physical
More fraud meanslonger waits and higher fees at newpharmacies By Tara Bannow
represent a mere 2 percent of the population; another 5
The "vegan" term can connote an animal-rights
Es~ T HFT
MD
Our newlarger location is in the Old Mill near
Mckay Parkand theOld Mt. Bachelor Parkand RideLot •
• •
•
-
•
D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
HEALTH EVENTS
FITNESS
MONEY
EVENTS
TODAY DRIVINGAND DEMENTIA: Learn to address safety issues associated with driving, warning signs, strategies to communicate safety concerns and solutions for alternative transportation; free, registration required; 4-5:30 p.m.; Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend; www.alz.org/oregon or 541-382-5882.
TODAY
SUNDAY
FRIDAY
CHILDREN'SVISION SCREENINGS:
LIVING APEACEFULAND JOYFUL LIFE: Learn how to increase inner awareness through proper breathing, positive focus and open heart exercise; $25, registration required; 6-7:30 p.m.; Cafe of Life Chiropractic, 519 NW Colorado Ave., Bend; www. heartofmotivation.webs.com, angelheartofmotivation©gmail. com or 971-217-6576.
Aseven-stepscreening; free;noon3 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-330-3907.
MONDAY FOOTANDNAILCLINIC: Service provided by SundanceFootcare includes inspection of feet, toenails, foot massage, proper foot care education and areferral to a physician if needed; free, donations accepted, reservations suggested; noon-2 p.m.; Bend's Community Center,1036 NEFifth St.; www.
bendscommunitycenter.orgor 541-323-3344.
July 18 UNDERSTANDING THEABCSAND DS OFMEDICARE: Learnabout who is eligible for Medicare, what is covered and not covered and enrollment timelines; free, registration requested; noon-1 p.m.; Partners in Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court,
Bend; lisam©partnersbend.orgor 541-382-5882.
How to submit Events:Email event information to healthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on"Submit an Event" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
PEOPLE • Robin Fuersthas advanced to the level of Senior Professional Licensed Teacher with the International Center for Reiki Training. Fuerst is the owner of Healing Journey Options in Bend.
GOOD FORM RUNNING CLINIC:Learn about running
easier andfocusing on proper mechanics; 5:30-7 p.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com,
angela©foo tzonebend.com or 541-317-3568.
oseinvestin in eat care em race a cautious o timism Jonnelle Marte The Washington Post
SATURDAY COMMUNITYSATURDAY:
Complement aryyogaclasses for new students; 7 a.m., 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; Bikram Yoga, 805 SW Industrial Way, Bend;
www.bikramyogabend.comor
541-389-8599. NAVY SEALPHYSICAL TRAINING:Join a group of retired Navy SEALs in morning calisthenics; free,18 and older, liability waiver form must be signed; 9-10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078. MIKETHE MUGGER:Freeselfdefense workshop for women ages12 to adult, reserve your spot online; free; 6-9 p.m.; Smash Conditioning Studio, 338 SW Sixth St., Redmond; www. smashconditioningstudio.com or 541-923-8563.
July 19 NAVY SEALPHYSICAL TRAINING:Join a group of retired Navy SEALs inmorning calisthenics; free, 18and older, liability waiver form must be signed; 9-10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078.
July 20 FOAM ROLLERCLINIC:Learn basic myofascial release using a foam roller, bring a yogamat; $5, registration required; 9:45 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568.
July 22 BEGINNERSYOGA SERIES: Designed for those who arenew
to yoga;$18for oneclass, $80for five-week session, registration required; 5-6:15 p.m.; Yoga Indigo Bend, 924 NWBrooks St.; www.ambujayoga.com,
autumn©ambujayoga.comor 541-408-2884.
If you could take the pulse of the health care sector, it
would be racing. As the Affordable Care Act
MedImpact's $1,200 fee is reasonable. "To put it in perspective,
Continued from 01 MedImpact spokesperson that's the cost of a drugthat can Gordon Romanas wrote in an be processed in 3 seconds or email that the new policy is less," she said. meant to protect the company's PBMs prefer to wait at least clients. Inspections will include 90 days before green-lighting verifying the stores' invento- pharmacies to make sure the ries and making sure they're business is legitimate, hence storing products properly, have the five- to six-month wait, appropriate signage and have a Hayes said. Hayes' advice to independent pharmacist there at all times. "MedImpact is not focused pharmacies: Plan ahead.Anticon excluding pharmacies, sim- ipate long waits with PBMs and ply verifying the good standing apply longbeforeyou open. of a pharmacy before allowing But that gets complicated it to participate in the network,"
when you consider that phar-
he said. Pharmacy fraud — meaning pharmacies that open, bill PBMs for prescriptions they
macies must first have a license topractice, a lease for their store and other approvals
to practice, said Valerga, who worked for a number of local quiddy — likely costs the chain pharmacies, induding U.S. health care system more Costco, Safeway, Fred Meyer than $50 billion annually, said and Walmart, before opening Susan Hayes, an accredited her own. fraud investigator and princiGodfrey shut down her pripal with Pharmacy Outcomes vate counseling practice in Solutions, an Illinois firm that favor of opening a pharmacy helps health plans eliminate after noticing a dearth of such pharmacy fraud. Hayes bases services locally. After Ray's never filled and then close
10 to 20 years is going to go through a period of fundamentalchange. The way we buy insurance, the way weconsume health care, that's going to be totally different."
(ACA) takes hold in the daily lives of Americans, the law has removed long-standing — Eddie Yoon, fund manager of barriers keeping people from the Fidelity Select Health Care Portfolio buying health i nsurance, changed the ways doctors and hospitals are compensat- nal Budget Office. large parties. ed and — as of this year — reThe law expanded MedicIn patients cured by Sovaldi, quired that most Americans aid eligibility in much of the long-term care costs would diget health insurance or pay a country and prohibited insur- minish dramatically. penalty. ers from denying coverage Drugmakers can typically And it's overhauling the because of pre-existing con- hold on to their pricing advanbusiness of health care — for ditions and established in- tage until their patents run hospitals and insurers, doc- surance subsidies for low-in- out,which generally happens tors and patients. For inves- come families. Millions of about 10 years after a drug tors, that means tracking a newlyinsured Americans are is introduced, making such new roster of winners and making appointments and companies a good long-term losers across the industry. filling prescriptions they put buy for investors who get inThe nearly $3 trillion in- off when they lacked cover- volved early, Acker says. "But dustry, long considered a re- age. Some baby boomers are the challenge is finding those cession-proof holding for in- finding that they need more companies that can be both vestors looking to play it safe, care simply because they're clinically and commercially now also exhibits the kind entering retirement, a period successful," he says. of growth that appeals to in- in their lives where they will S ome l a w makers, c o n vestors looking for a hot new be three times as likely to cerned about high price tags, stock. Health care spending need health care than the rest have debated capping drug in the U.S. accounts for a of the population. Something prices, but Acker says such whopping 18 percent of GDP. like 8,000 baby boomers are regulation is unlikely, adding expected to reach retirement that drug prices may come Future projections age each day over the next 15 down on their own as more "The U.S. health care sys- years, according to AARP. competitors enter the market. "That is the biggest story tem over the next 10 to 20 Getting in before a compayears is going to go through in health care for the next ny is producing the drug and a period of f undamental 20 years," says Charles Size- bringing in revenue can also be change," says Eddie Yoon, more, editor of the Sizemore a gamble, which is why Acker fund manager of the Fidelity Investment Letter. "It means, positions his portfolio so that Select Health Care Portfolio, all else being equal, larg- it can't drop by more than 1 which has $6 billion in assets er demand for health care percent in a single day because and is up 50 percent over the services." of the performance of any one pastyear,accordingto M ornbiotech company. ingstar. "The way we buy Global shifts Some price moves are uninsurance, the way we conThe same is happening predictabl eevenforprofessionsume health care, that's going globally: the World Health als who are dosely watching a to be totally different." Organization estimates that company's development, says That d i sruption s e ems between 2000 and 2050, the Arlinda Lee, senior equity anto bode well for stock per- population of those 60 and alyst at MLV & Co., a boutique formance: Th e S t a ndard older will grow to 2 billion investment bank. For instance, & Poor's 500 health care from 605 million. Their share the share price for Idenix Pharindex is up 9.7 percent this of the overall population will maceuticals, a biotech firm year through June 30, out- double to 22 percent in that developing a drug for hepatitis pacing the overall S&P 500 time. And as emerging mar- C, tripled in June when Merck stock index by 3.6 percent- kets, like India, China and agreed to pay $3.85 billion, or age points. That lead is more Brazil expand their econo- roughly $24 a share, to buy the pronounced over the past 12 mies and improve their in- company, she says. months, when health care frastructures to make health Retail investors might be stocks gained nearly 27.8 per- care more accessible, Yoon better off investing in a mutual cent,compared to 22 percent says companies like Bos- fund or exchange-traded fund forthebroadermarket. ton Scientific and Covidien, that holds a broad basket of As more health care deci- which create testing equip- biotech companies but can still sions are placed in the hands ment and other medical sup- see stronger growth than the of consumers, an entire in- plies, stand to prosper. broader health care market, dustry is popping up to serve Some pharmaceutical gi- she says, adding that it's diffipeople who want to keep bet- ants like Merck, which makes cult to guess which companies ter track of their health from drugs that treat widespread will be acquired. the comfort of their homes.
Pharmacies
And companies that once competed against one another are joiningforces to emerge stronger and more efficient. It's not all good news. Insur-
and chronic illnesses such as diabetes, asthma and heart
disease, could also benefit from rising demand as more people gain insurance and fill prescriptions. But Andy Ackance companies are still try- er, who manages $2 billion ing to grasp how their costs in assets through the Janus might change now that they Global Life Sciences Fund, can no longer cherry-pick which is up 46 percent over their customers. Hospitals are the past year, says the most adjustingto smaller payments interesting names in the drug from government insurance universe are doing well for programs like Medicare. And reasons that have little to do pharmacies, despite the po- with new health care rules: tential for newbusiness, are at They're excelling because a disadvantage when it comes they're creating treatments to negotiating drug prices. that are more efficient and For
r e g ula r i n v e stors come with fewer side effects
watching the upheaval, spotting the companies — or even the types of companies — poised to do well can be nearly impossible. "If you're an average investor, it's very difficult to outguess the market itself," says Joe Heider, a
of treatment, has increased costs for insurance compa-
regional managing principal
nies and launched a nation-
are still a lot of u nknown
treatment has a better track
questions about ultimately who are going to be the win-
record of curing patients. The olderregimens are uncom-
ners and losers."
fortable and less effective,
requiring roughly a year of weekly injections that cause flu-Iike symptoms.
cost of health care.
tied when it comes to accepting Moda policies, although she said she calls MedImpact whenever she has time — anything she can do to speed up the process. "It's so unfortunate because
Despite the mixed picture, investors are piling in, pouring a net $4.8 billion into healthcare sectorfunds and exchange-traded funds so far this year through May, according to Morningstar, a fund research firm. Last year, the funds received $13.9 billion, more than five times the amount from 2012.
available to them before So-
"It's like whack-a-mole," she said. "They pop up and then they go underground and they pop up some other place and they go underground. We're worried about those kind of
pharmacies." Although MedImpact is at
there are so many Moda patients in Bend," she said. "I the forefront of i m plement- don't know that Moda theming such a rigorous inspection selves understands how much
process, Hayes said she thinks their patients are being immore PBMs will soon follow pacted by what MedImpact is suit. Given that a typical fraud domg. investigator can charge $1,000 — Reporter: 541-383-0304, per day, Hayes said she thinks tbannow@bendbulletin.com
by the health care law, such as
newtaxes, fees andrestrictions. For instance, the nation's largest insurance company, Unit-
edHealth Group, saw growth in its Medicaid business and in a service it offers to help cus-
tomerscoordinate care. That is helping the insurer maintain about the same level of earnings despite obstacles such as ratecuts from Medicare,a new
sales tax imposed on health insurers and the introduction of more expensive drugs, says Peter Costa, a health care equity analyst with Wells Fargo Securities. The firm is planning to participate in more state exchanges next year, which could add to its customer base. But there's still a lot of un-
certainty. Insurance companies like Humana, which get more of their business from Medicare plans, are getting hit harder by cuts to Medicare reimbursement rates that were
introduced as part of the ACA. And at the same time, some
insurancecompanies are facing stronger competition for consumers shopping on new public insurance exchanges, says Vishnu Lekraj, a senior analyst for Morningstar. A look at the proposed health insurance rates for 2015 shows that some insurers that entered
the markets with low rates are thinking about increasing prices after gaining market share, while others are planning to lower their rates in an attempt to win over more customers.
Analysts say it's too early to know how insurance companies will fare afterthe first open
enrollment period, given how little they know about their new
track their health.
SlNCE 1980
One goal for some companies: Bringing transparency to health care pricing — just as Expedia or Kayak have done for travel services. In that market, Yoon points to Castlight
Health, which offers software for employers who want to help •3
•
OSPICE
o f Redmond 54 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3 You Have A Choice. Ask For Us By Name.
to make a broad play. "There is merited, given that the new
dosed,Godfrey said the need
h ands are
which consists of companies offering consumer medical devices, telehealth, wearable tech gadgets and even health-related video games, is expected to balloon to $5.8 billion in 2018 from $2.5 billion today, according to IHS Technology, a market research firm. The growth that's ubiquitous in much of the industry right now has helped some players overcome the hurdles created
customers.Some companies may find the rates they charged One consequence of the are not high enough to cover health care overhaul is that all of the claims filed. "As we consumers are getting more in- go into next year there will be volved in their care decisions, more darity," Costa says. creating a new market of servicesand gadgets for people who want to comparison-shop formedicalservicesandbetter TOUCHMARK
for Rehmann Financial, who al debate about who should recommends investors use receive the treatment. But diversified health care funds some investors say that cost
Food Place on Century Drive
own hands. But now, her
outside of the doctor's office, the U.S. home health market,
A new market
which covers three months
government officials and law enforcement agencies place health care fraud-related losses as high as 10 percent or $230 billion annually, and pharmacy represents 25 percent of the
decided to take matters into her
A s more people look t o
track their physical activity and monitor chronic illnesses
than earlier remedies. workers bargain-hunt. InsurOne notable example is ance companies such as UnitSovaldi, the $84,000 hepatitis C drug created by Gilead Sciences. The high price tag,
her estimate on the fact that
for more pharmacies was a constant conversation, so she
edHealth Group are also introducing shopping tools.
"The U.S. health care system over the next
each day for three months.
(Some patients still need the injections, but for a shorter period of time.) While most of the treatments patients had
Acker says. For instance, a
demand forhealth care ser- regimen involving the antivivices. The ranks of the in-
I
t~
~
IBIBEEI IHIH
Your Local Nonprofit Hospice Committed to Qualify of Life For Over 33 Years
Sovaldi, in c ontrast, re-
quires patients to take a pill
The underlying force be- valdi are less expensive, some hind most of the sector's of the newer treatment plans blockbuster performance is were comparablein price, a tremendous growth in the
I I I
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Honoring your wishes for your care Personalized care in your own home Working closely with your personal doctor Access to our nurses 24/7
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ral Ribavirin, interferon and
sured in America are expect- Incivek, a protease inhibitor, ed to balloon by more than costs dose to $80,000, ac12 million people this year, cordingto Express Scripts,a thanks to health care reform, pharmacy benefit manager according to the Congressio- that handles prescriptions for
Serving Bend I Redmond I Sisters I Powell Butte I Crooked River Ranch I Terrebonne I Madras
THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
MEDICINE ACA services Continued from 01 Because of that incorrect
assumption, it's impossible to know how many women
actually received STI testing, said, Alina Salganicoff, vice president and director of
women's health policy for the Kaiser Family Foundation. Often the misunderstand-
ing happens when patients receive pap tests, which test for cervicalcancer, she said. T hat's an i n vasive test i n
which the doctor collects cells from the cervix for testing.
"Unless the doctor tells you they're going to do a test for chlamydia or for gonorrhea or an HPV test, you can't be sure that you're actually getting that t est," Salganicoff
sard. The solution is s imple, O'Sullivan said: Don't assume anything. "Ask the question, be en-
gaged in your own health care," she said. "Even if it's a quote 'routine' visit, ask
'Hey, what are we going to do today?'"
Howmanywomenknow adouttheyreventive services mandatedundertheAffordadle CareAct? A recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey found that many women aren't aware of the new preventive health services available to them under the Affordable Care Act. Despite the coverage mandated for new plans, not all plans cover contraceptives.
Percent of womenaware of provision RequiresallAmericansh veinsuranc by2014or ayafine 74/o
A lthough t h e
l a w tha t
passed outlined a series of specific preventive services
•<'
34/o
H a d an STItest
40%
32%
2'Yo Had 6% coverage, but Don't d id not use k n o w
8% Other coverage/ don't know
1% 10'Yo Did ot ave o Covered by pay nyt ing Medicaid/ other pubiic 22 0
13% Did not have coverage
insurance
Source: Kaiser Family Foundation, 2013 Kaiser Women's Health Survey
coverageforpreventative serdecide which preventive ser- vices, and 34 percent knew it vices insurance plans would
requires insurers to cover the
have to cover specifically for
full cost of breast pump rentals for new mothers.
women. The eight-item list — implemented about a year
after the Affordable Care Act was passed — includes well-woman v i sits, c ontra-
ceptives, preventative screenings like mammograms and pap tests and counseling on issues like STIs and HIV. "It's a huge change and it's really, really important for health care," said Michelle
Such figures weren't sur-
prising for Salganicoff, who regularly works on similar surveys for the Kaiser Fam-
ily Foundation. The survey was performed in the fall and early winter of 2013, just be-
fore open enrollment began to sign up for health insurance in 2014. The idea was to
Although 74 percent of women Kaiser surveyed knew about the Affordable Care Act's insurance mandate, only 60 percent knew it required plans to pay the full cost of an annual preventative visit, coverage that's not mandated for men. Another 57 percent knew about the coverage for preventative services, and 34 percent knew it requires insurers to cover the full cost of breast pump rentals for new mothers.
women
does fully cover birth control, it's likely a big change, as co-pays on birth control
es as well among women who had not previously been insured. She
s ai d w o m en
should not be getting cervical cancer becauseit' s easily de-
tected in annual pap tests. The Affordable Care Act also ensures full coverage for physician counseling on things like HIV, STIs, drug i n t imate
partnerviolence and breastfeeding, but doctors say those subjects might not all fit into a typical 15-minute annual
cuss them every other year or in separate visits from the annual exam.
Overall, Salganicoff said she's optimistic that women's 35% Fully covered by insurance
understanding of the services
covered under their insurance policies will improve, but it will be a slow, steady
change that w il l r e quire public education from many messengers: insurance carriers, doctors and advocacy groups. The issue is not just insur-
plans are moving out of their
ance literacy, it's medical literacy, too: Understanding
grandfather status and be-
which tests a woman needs
ginning to cover services the so that she knows to ask for Affordable Care Act requires, them, Salganicoff said. "We've found that both of Salganicoff said. When a plan's co-pays or deductibles those — general medical literfluctuate a certain amount, acy and insurance literacyit must be considered a new are low among the American plan, she said. public," she said. The Supreme Court put a crimp in the Affordable Care
— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com
Act's contraceptive coverage mandate last week when it ruled that family-owned prito cover employees' contra-
en whose private insurance
hadn't had insurance, so had
might rotate subjects and dis-
vate companies can refuse
get a baseline idea of people's B erlin, a n OB - GY N a n d understanding early on, and co-director of Oregon Health then measure whether that understand what's b eing & Science University's Center changesover time, she said. covered," O'Sullivan said. O'Sullivan, of Bend, said "Even as a physician, I have for Women's Health. "There's it's disappointing that pa- difficulty understanding inno question about it." Although 74 percent of tients don't understand the surance companies and I
was there for her first mammogram. O'Sullivan found a large tumor in her breast. "She is someone who just
exam. Rather, a physician
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration t o
Just last week, she saw a 45-year-old patient who was insured for the first time and
and alcohol u se,
for everyone — such as rou-
tine screenings and counseling — it also directed the
disastrous consequences.
serious cervical cancer cas-
3% Had coverage but did not use
Rec ive pri e re ucti n orfi an iala sist nce
ance before, sometimes with
test
41% Partially covered byinsurance 64/a
seen middle-aged patients who have never had insur-
sort of ignored it," she said. O'Sullivan has seen a few
How the bill for birth control waspaid during the most recent visit among womenwith private insurance
Pai fullcost out f p cket
of 2014, O'Sullivan said she's
Docorr co me ded
Coverage for contraceptives under private insurance
Among womenwho did not havecoverage
-~31%
Ask d to be t ste 1%
Imp essont st s rou ine art f ex m 3%
How the bill for birth controlwas paid during the most recent visit Partially covered Fully by insurance Did not covered have by insurance coverage
Among womenwho reported receiving an STI test, share whosay:
54/
33 0
tive services without any co-
pays, coinsurance or other out-of-pocket costs.
Did not have an STI test
Prohibits in urancecom anies from c arging higherpre iumsthanm n
brought for women was its
requirement that new insurance policies cover preven-
Share of womenwhosaid in the past two years they:
Requiresm stprivatepl nstocovert efullcosto atleast one prevent vevisit or w II womanvis t 6Q% Requiresm stprivatepl nstocovert efullcosto many prevent ive ervicessuchasmammog ams andpaptests 7% Requires m st private pl ns to cover t e full cost of breast pumprentals f r new mothe s
Preventive coverage Perhaps the biggest change the Affordable Care A ct
Many womenincorrectly think STI testing is a routine part of an exam
Act's i nsurance mandate kicked in at the beginning
ceptives if they violate the owners' religious beliefs. While the ruling opens the door for many companies to stop paying for birth control,
Find It All
Online benclbulletin.com
had posed a barrier for some most are likely to continue women in the past, O'Sullicovering the medication, as van said. they already covered it before An i n trauterine device the Affordable Care Act was (IUD), a T-shaped device passed. A 2010 Kaiser Family that's inserted into the uterus Foundation poll found that 85 Plae Well, Retire Well more complicated, she said. coinsurance." "When you sign your conto prevent pregnancy, could percent of large U.S. compaBirth control coverage tract, it's this long thing, it run women up to $1,000, nies already covered birth is really very difficult for Despite th e r e q uirement O'Sullivan said. If they were control for their employees, just the average person to that new i n s urance plans young and healthy and cov- although some of those recover birth control for wom- ered under a policy with a quired out-of-pocket costs. en, Kaiser's survey f o und $5,000 deductible, they likely prehensive support and that more than half of women had to pay the full cost of the Newly insured patients 775 WBonnetWay,Suife120•Bend counseling from trained -0321~www.elevationcapitalstraiegies.com with private insurance still IUD, she said. Additionally, Since the Affordable Care 541-728 providers, plus access to have either partial or no cov- she said women with private breastfeeding supplies, erage for the medication. insurance would not be able That's because plans creat- to go to places like Planned for pregnant and nursing ed beforefederal health care Parenthood or county health women reform was implemented do departments for l o w-cost • Gestational diabetes not have to comply with its care. Bend Park 9 screening for women 24 "Even $40a month for the coverage mandates, they're to 28 weeks pregnant and Recreation consideredgrandfathered out pill, I definitely think it was a those at high risk of developof the requirements. barrier," she said. ing gestational diabetes For the35 percent of womMore and more insurance • Chlamydia screening for younger women and other women at higher risk • Intimate partner violence screening and counseling for all women Public input isneededto helpinform a newpark management • Folic Acid supplements plan designedto balanceparkuseanduser experiencewith for women who may become pregnant conservation ofthe park'snatural resources. • Gonorrhea screening for Questionnaire available now all women at higher risk • Hepatitis B screening for through August 29, 2014 pregnant women at their first et www.bendparksendrec. org/current projects/park-projects/. prenatal visit • Human Papillomavirus If you would like apaper copy mailed to you, call (541)389-7275. (HPV) DNA test every 3 Denture 8: Implant Center years for women with normal cytology results who are 30 or older • Rh incompatibility screening for all pregnant +Changing Smileshas women and follow-up testing changed my life, The District is seeking adiverse group of citizens to represent for women at higher risk the community-at-large and to participate with the District in the Thanks to them I can • Sexually transmitted development of the Shevlin ParkManagement Plan. smile freely again>> infections counseling for sexually active women Qualifications: Experience/knowledge/interest in community • Tobacco use screening Lola Montgomery, planning andability to evaluate diverse viewpoints and make and interventions for all Your host at KSJJ 102.9 recommendations based onwhat is best for the park and the broader women • Urinary tract or other community. Committee membersmust be District residents. infection screening for pregTo Apply: Pleasevisit the BPRDwebsite's Shevlin Park Management nant women Plan pagefor submission guidelines or call (541)389-7275. Deadline • Routine anemia screento apply is August 8,2014. ings for pregnant women • Syphilis screening for Forinformation on theShevlin ParkManagement Plan, all pregnant women or other Call for your free Consulafion, no Referral necessary women at increased risk questi onnaireand committee,
K a i se r su r v eyed basics, but she doesn't blame have to ask my specialist in knew about the Affordable them. Health i n surance is the office when they start Care Act's insurance man- confusing, and i n surance throwing around different date, only 60 percent knew companies only make things terms — deductible, co-pay,
it required plans to pay the full cost of an annual preventive visit, coverage that's not
mandated for men. Another 57 percent knew about the
Preventive services for womenrepuired to de covered under ACA All Affordable Care Act-compliant health insurance policies must cover the following services for women without a copayment or coinsurance, even if they have not met their annual deductible. • Well-woman visits to get recommended services for women younger than 65 • Mammography screenings every1 to 2 years for women older than 40 • Contraception: Food and Drug Administration-approved contraceptive methods, sterilization procedures and patient education and counseling, as prescribed by a health care provider for women with reproductive capacity. This does not apply to plans sponsored by certain exempt religious employers. • Breast Cancer Genetic Test Counseling (BRCA) for women at higher risk for breast cancer • Cervical cancer screening for sexually active women • Breast Cancer Chemoprevention counseling for women at higher risk • HIV screening and counseling for sexually active women • Osteoporosis screening for women older than age 60 depending on risk factors • Breastfeeding com-
Help Determine the Future of
Eind Your Dream Home In Real Estate • • •
Shevlin Park:
TheB u l letin
changing Smiles
CitizenAdvisory Committee
Members Needed
-
-
•
-Source: healthcare.gov
•
-
•
541-388-4444
or visit us af www.changeyoursmile.com
visit www.bendparksandrec.org.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
FjTNEss Walking improvesmoodand eases fatigue in those with Parkinson's disease In yet another endorsement for getting on your feet and walking, researchers said Wednesdaythat people with mild to moderate Parkinson's disease may improve their motor function, mood, fatigue levels and more bytaking regular aerobic walks. "The results of our study suggest that walking may provide asafe and easily accessible way of improving the symptoms of Parkinson's diseaseand improve quality of life," the leadauthor of the study
said. Dr. Ergun Uc ofthe University of lowa andthe Veterans Affairs Medical Center in lowaCity and colleagues published their findings in the journal Neurology. The researchers tracked 49peopleages 50to 80 who had mild to moderate Parkinson's disease. They wore electronic heart and walking-speed monitors, and wereasked to keep adiary of their exercise. Somewalked in groups, others on their own.
following the federal guidelines recommending150 minutes a weekof moderate aerobic activity for people ages18 to 65. More work is needed, in part becausethis study did not include acontrol group, the researchers noted. But it did demonstrate that this group of people can safely take part in aerobic walking.
Their averagewalkingspeedwas2.9 mph. Over six months, improvement came inaerobic fitness, as it would for most people. But the researchers also reported improvements — outside of those from anymedication — in motor function, fatigue levels, mood, aspects of executive function and quality of life. The researchers concluded that people with mild to moderate Parkinson's diseasecould benefit from
Arctic veteran an cancer survivor continues itness re imen at 82
— Mary Maovean, Los Angeles Times
Fit tips Continued from 01 3. Avoid portion distor-
tion. Many people mistakenly think that working out is a license to eat not only whatever they want, but also unlimited quan-
By Martha Ross
tities. Nothing could be
(California) Contra Costa Times
f urther f ro m t h e t r u t h . With or without exercise,
WALNUT C REEK, C ali-
fornia — Eileen Birdsong has facedcancer three times over
if you consume more calories than you burn each day, you will gain weight. If you're aiming for a sixpack, guess what — it
the past two decades, but she
has never let it slow her down. During eight months of radiation treatment for breast cancer in the mid-1990s, the Pleasanton woman w a l ked the 6-mile round trip to her
starts in the kitchen, baby. At the minimum, diet is
doctor's appointments five days a week. Two years ago, back home following surgery from esophageal cancer, she was walking
but you still have to do both. There are no shortcuts, and no a mount of
the intensity of your
training program, and/or to shake up your diet. So, look at your routine and decide which training variables you need to change. gym bag, toiletry items, etc. In short, leave no room for failure or excuses. Buy what
exercise can replace poor
you need, prepare the night before, pack your lunch and 4. Make fitness a pri- leave your gym bag at the o rity. Who ha s t im e t o front door. exercise? With juggling 6. Exercise effectively. Are careerand family,nobody you exercising on a regular has time for fitness, right? basis, say, three to four times Wrong! These days every- a week, but still not getting one is sleep-deprived and the results you want? If so, working 60 or more hours then you must ask yourself: a week. At least, those are How effective is my exercise some of the excuses peo- routine, or what's up with my ple give for not being able diet'? It's not enough to simply to exercise. If you plan to go through the motions. You get fit, you must make fit- want to be sure you are exerness a priority and plan a cising and eating correctly, daily date at the gym, your otherwise you could be getbasement or bedroom for a ting diminishing returns. workout. If you are not getting the nutrition.
Jim Stevens /Bay Area News Group
Eileen Birdsong, whofaced cancer three times over the past two decades, exercises daily with light weights and walks along the pathways near her Pleasanton, California, home. outdoors in c o l d w e ather," II pilot, at a cocktail party in she says. "You could eat like Washington, D.C., in 1967.
a horse because you burned a After the colonel retired, country's Department of De- lot of calories just surviving." t hey married i n 1 970 a nd fense. Birdsong, a native of Her Arctic adventure end- eventually settled in PleasanManitoba, was a dental assis- ed after she met her first hus- ton, California, to be closer to tant, supporting multinational band, U.S. Army Col. William three of his four children. military exercises at a base in Trapp, who had accompanied Eileen Birdsong stayed acChurchill, a town on the shore Wernher von Braun, consid- tive by working as a receptionof Hudson Bay. ered the German father of ist at a Pleasanton law firm At the time, Canada and the rocket science, to the Canadi- and volunteering at the Camp United States feared a Soviet an north to test rockets. Parks Reserve Forces Traininvasion via an Arctic route, Birdsong became a mil- ing Area in Dublin and the itary w i fe. She m aintained
allies trained soldiers and pi- her sense of adventure while lots to fight in extreme weath- finding something to enjoy in er conditions. every place they were posted, In the 1950s, Birdsong says, from Leavenworth, Kansas, to people didn't think about go- Taiwan and Bangkok. ing out to exercise just for the After Trapp died, Birdsong sake ofexercise,butBirdsong met her second husband, U.S. couldn'thelp but get fit. Air Force Col. George "Buzz" "You were always walking Birdsong, a famed World War
Livermore Veterans Administration Hospital. She joined
the law firm. Since her can-
cer surgery two years ago, she reduced walking from six miles to three but is satisfied
with that distance because she
A lso, I'll let you in on another little secret: You're
r esults you want, then it i s likely time to increase either
doneinanhour. These days, she also stretches every morning. Four times a week, she uses eight-pound weights to do a series of lifts to strengthen her upper body and to "get my blood going first thing in the morning."
more likely to get it in if you do it in the morning. The later it gets in the day, the more likely you'll blow Besides, when you prioritize your fitness first, you
the speed, length or the intensity of your training program, and/or to shake up your diet. So, look at your routine and decide which training variables you need to change. 7. Set realistic goals. Don't
are making an investment
expect to lose 50 pounds in
Not only d oes the exer-
in your most significant
maintains a pace that has her
wildlife and birding groups that had her trooping all over the East Bay hills, and played after-work rounds of golf with her husband. Col. Birdsong
cisemake her feelbetter,she knows it's key to maintaining her independence. "I am thankful every day
died in 2004.
she says, "and hopefully, in the process, encourage other seniors to get moving."
Birdsong began her 6-mile w alks after she retired from
that I am able to be active,"
off your exercise routine.
five weeks or expect to look like an elite athlete after only four weeks of training. Losing one to two pounds a week is not just acceptable, but a of your success. Get orga- rather lofty goal. Two pounds nized, prepare your meals, is the equivalent of 7,000 calobuy your gear, sneakers, ries, and that's no joke. asset — you. 5. F o llow t he Boy Scouts. "Be Prepared." Preparation is 90 percent
Focus on
Weekly Arts Sc Entertainment In
otenou exercise eieve to e via e reason or o esit e i emic By Deborah Netburn
researchers found that from
Los Ange(es Times
1988 to 2010, the percentage
of adults who reported doing study suggests that under-ex- no exercise in their free time ercising, rather than over- grew dramatically from 19 eating, may be at the heart of percent to 52 percent in womAmerica's obesity epidemic. en, and from 11 percent to 43 Researchers from Stanford percent in men. "We suspected there was a University School of Medicine report a strong correlation be- trend in that direction, but not tween the rise in obesity and that magnitude," said Ladaa striking drop in the amount baum. "People can get exerof time Americans spend exer- cise in other ways, but most cising when not at work over people don't walk or bike to the last 22 years. work, and most people are not Their analysis uncovered no in jobs that require physical evidencethat Americans have activity." increased their daily calorie At the same time, the recount in the same time period. searchers found that the prev"We wouldn't say that calo- alence of obesity increased ries don't count, but the main from 25percentto 35 percent takeaway is that we have to in women, and from 20 perlook very carefully at phys- cent to 35 percent in men. In ical activity. The problem is that time period the propornot all in the intake of calo- tion of normal weight men ries," said Dr. Uri Ladabaum, a and women dropped, while professorof gastroenterology the proportion of overweight at Stanford Medical School. men and women remained the Ladabaum is also the lead au- same. thor of the study that will be But here comes the surprispublished in the August issue ing part: The researchers did of the American Journal of not find any evidence thatpeoMedicine. ple were ingesting more calThe study relies on data ories on a daily basis in 2010 collected b y t h e N a t i onal than they were in 1988. LOS ANGELES — A new
to increase either the speed, length or
and exercise is 20 percent,
Canadian Arctic w ith t h eir
so from September to May, the
then itis likely time
80 percent of the equation
as soon as she could, if only to
the end of the block and back. "It's not how much you do or how far you walk, doing some form of exercise is better than doing nothing," says Birdsong, 82. "My doctors told me I survivedbecause Ihad taken such good care of myself all my life through exercise and diet." Birdsong's can-do spirit revealed itself when she was a young woman in the 1950s, living and working in the
If you are not getting the results you want,
that one caused the other.
"The study looks at trends
icine in an editorial.
She notes that single mothers in particular may have does not prove any cause and difficulty figuring out how effect between these," he said. to work exercise into their aland certain associations, but
He also wants to make clear that the fact that the average
rewards for your efforts. It's a
lifestyle, and what you put in is what you'll get out.
M]LGiLZBK •
optimal at the population level
between the ages of 18 to 39.
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ready hectic lives. She also been most prevalent in women
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wonders if this may explain caloric intake did not change why the rise in obesity has
substantially does not mean that caloric intake has been
t h e t a n gibles,
like preparing healthy meals, getting stronger, increasing stamina, getting more muscle and losing body fat. Looking good and feeling great are the
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or at the level of individuals.
"We simply did not detect a substantial increase over time," he said.
Even with all those caveats, however, this study could still be used to inform policy on managing America's obesity epidemic. "Even though it is very difficult to prove directly that public health interventions promoting physical activity will make a difference, I think they will," he said. "This study should serve as a reinforce-
Understanding tIte ABCs ct Ds of Medicare Friday, July 18; noon to 1:00 pm Presented by: Emily Carrick, MBA Licensed HealthInsurance Agent and Sales Executive,
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ment of the message that we need to think of a multi-component solution where diet is a
big part of it, and physical activity is a big part as well." However, there is a big difference between telling people that they should be exercising "The one caveat here is that and actually getting them to Health and Nutrition Examination Survey from 1988 to the amount of calorie intake do it. "The finger wagging Pu2010, which Ladabaum and was based on self-report, so his team used to look for it is possible people were not ritan in me wants sedentary trends in obesity, abdominal recalling correctly what they folks to get off the couch and obesity, physical activity and ate, or not reporting correctly," exercise, but my public health caloric intake in the last two Ladabaum said. background cautions me to decades. Ladabaum notes that the go beyond the data tables and The most startling finding study can tell us only that a look at the lives of Americans in the study is the drop in the major drop in time spent ex- today," writes Pamela Powers amount of exercise Ameri- ercisingoccurred atthe same Hannely, managing editor of cans do in our free time. The time as a rise in obesity, not the American Journal of Med-
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
MTVta esnew at wit 'Fin in arter' TV SPOTLIGHT
"I think I'm coming at this
"I like this show themati-
as old-school as you can," said By Steven Zeitchik
Minsky, who has written on
cally for so many reasons," Daniels said. "As teens and ad-
Los Angeles Times
shows such as "Sex and the
olescents, you see the world as
City" and also serves as the "Carter" show runner. "I don't
a series of firsts. This is a great look at that through a different
ATLANTA — The actress
Anna Jacoby-Heron looks at
have a dystopian society; I
her costar and on-screen twin K athryn Prescott, wh o r e -
turns her intense gaze. "Next time you see me I'll
be a diff erent person," Jacoby-Heron says as the two stand in the parking lot of a suburban high school in oppressive July heat. eYou already are," Prescott
lens. It's what happens when
don't have a sister vampire werewolf thing. Not that that's
you're already dealing with all of that and then your world
easy. But this show has the advantage of thinking everyday teenagers are werewolves and shapeshifters in their own right." This retro push (with some slick 21st century production values, natch) comes courtesy of Susanne Daniels, the drama guru formerly of Life-
turns upside down."
She added, "I hope it's a new chapter for MTV." There's a reason why MTV
has generally found its teen drama via shows such as "The Hills." Scripted is more
replies with a heartfelt seriousness as the TV cameras roll. Courtesy MTV i The Associated Press The scene, from the new Anna Jacoby-Heron stars as Taylor in the new family drama "Find- time and the CW. Since being TV series "Finding Carter," ing Carter" on MTV. hired as MTV's president of has the feel of any number of programming 18 months ago, up-market dramas you might Daniels has sought to raise the "Finding Carter" has a high level of scripted programming find on a broadcast or pay-ca- hourlongs series contain a ble channel. witch, werewolf or other genre conceptand some heightened at the reality-heavy network. The network behind it, flourish, MTV is betting that moments. This is, after all, In part she's trying to replicate though, is anything but ex- the next big thing can come the millennial-oriented MTV. past CW/ WB successes such pected. It's MTV, place of a via the old big thing: tradi- But as created by Emily Sil- as "Gilmore Girls" and "Dawhundred reality shows and tional family drama. "Finding ver ("Bones") and executive son's Creek," smart fictional the outsized personalities to Carter" tells a story about the produced by the TV veteran stories in which the challenges match. In fact, when the net- titular teenage girl (Prescott, and former journalist Ter- are universal and the teenagwork premiered "Carter" on best k n ow n f r o m B r i t i sh ri Minsky, it fundamentally ersareatleastassharp asthe Tuesday, it will have been only provocateur favorite "Skins") asks the questions drama adults. its fourth hourlong drama in who's reunited with her biohas been posing for decades: One of her first bets — and the last decade and its first logical family after learning Why do we lovethe people arguably her biggest — is family drama in at least two the single mom who raised we do, what obligations do "Carter," a concept she bought her — and whom she adores our blood ties create and from Silver and then hired decades. Nor is it the kind of scripted — kidnapped her as a toddler. how much can or should our Minsky to shepherd when series you might imagine. At We're a long way from the Jer- identities be shaped by our the former was tied up with "Bones" commitments. a time when most teen-aimed sey Shore. environment?
ri e-to- e'staxin rien s i
expensive than reality, and it doesn't lend itself to the kind of crank-'em-out series and
spinoffs in the same way (see under: Snooki and JWoww, now seemingly in their 112th
season). But at a moment when so
many cable networks are cleaning up with critics, scripted does offer the possibility of increased acclaim, not to mention viewers. "I think this is exactly the kind of show that can
bring in young people who don't currently watch MTV," Daniels said.
And, she added, it might just steal one back from those adult shows teens watch. "It
really lends itself to co-viewing. Parents and children. I mean, thoseare the best dra-
mas, right'?"
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and /MAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
DeerAbby:My best friend is get- fiance because you're having trou- we should snuggle up and sleep toting married and asked me to be her ble looking him in the eye. gether even when we're sick. I think maid of honor. She has also asked
Your best friend sounds like a
it'scommon courtesy to keep a re-
me to buy an expensive dress,host piece of work, and if it costs you a lavish shower I'm afraid I can't the friendship, you won't have lost afford and plan a destination bach- much. This girl lacks both judgment elorette party. The cost will be and character, and you'll be betexorbitant. ter off to distance yourself. Both of On top ofthis,she has asked me you should mingle with people with to be her "cover" when she lies to whom you have more in common. her fiance about where she is. She DearAbby: I don't know where to has admitted to me that she has start so I will just plunge in: I have cheated on him, and five kids by five difI think she's doing it ferent men. I am not a again. terrible person. I have DEAR I know it's not my a job, take care of my ABBY place to question her babies and am workor tell her what to do, ing toward a degree. but this has made me But sometimes I feel hesitant to commit financially to her like the ultimate loser. I get judged
spectable distance from loved ones and to clean up after yourself when you have a "bug" that is communicable. I need to stay as healthy as possible to keep up with the needs of our child, the housework and my job while my husband is sick. Your thoughts?
wedding. Should I talk to her about
all the time. I'm so ashamed of the
functional.
this? I don't want to lose my best
choices I have made in life. Will it ever be better?
His tissues, meds and a pitcher of water should be by the bed. There
friend, but I also don't want to put
my money on the line for someone who isn't being honest.
— 5Kids,5Dadsin Oregon
— Married to a Mart-Child Who Needs aMommy
Dear Married to a Man-Child: Your husband may think I'm heartless,
but I agree with you. While he may "need" you emotionally, his rational self should accept that with a child
in the house and the demands of your job, you need to stay well and
should be a wastebasket for his
Dear 5-5: You will see an improvement as soon as you stop beatDear Dragging YourHeels:Do not ing yourself up over the choices you question your friend or tell her what have made. No one can change the to do, but DO convey to her that you past. All we can do is learn from — Dragging My Heels in New York
can't function as her maid of honor
because you can't afford the cost. And the next time she asks you to cover for her, tell her you no longer want to be a party to deceiving her
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, JULY10, 2014:Thisyearyou might naturally over-indulge and dote on others. When you reverse gears, which will happen at times, you could receive a snub or anger. Look at the monsters you could be creating. Use exercise and mediation to curb a tendency to over-worry. Worry only wears you down. If you are single, others are drawn to you. Make sure your sweetie of choice is emotionally available. Your caring style could attract people very different from you. Consider the type of relationship you want. Tame
tissues. He should wash his hands before touching anything, and you should use hand sanitizer liberally. You should sleep elsewhere. The "cuddling" can wait until he's no our mistakes and make a conscious longer contagious. decision not to repeat them. And as P .S. And d o n't f o rget t o to those who judge you, they should sympathize. judge not, lest they, too, be judged. — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com Dear Abby: My husband thinks or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
be sure justyet. Listen to another person's thoughts, but stay noncommittal if need be. You speakyour mind as much asyou can. Tonight: Your words seem to turn a situation much more in your favor.
GEMINI(May 21-June20)
Starsshowtheklnd which could be a of dayyou'llhave factoraftermid-Ju* * * * p ' . ". ' ' Iy,ifattached.You
** * * You are full of information, and others seem to recognize that fact. Many of your callers seek out your thoughts as well as what you know. Let your ingenuity break through any problem that appears. Use care with spending. Tonight: Go with the moment.
*** Average
CANCER (June21-July22)
possessiveness,
** So-so * Difficult
as a coupleopt
to split from your daily life as often
as you canto go
off together alone. These occasions add to the power and strength of the relationship. Passion flares during these periods, adding to your bond. Try instigating an old-fashioned date night more often. Respectyour differences, especially around your domestic life. The solution might be neither of yours, but one that addresses your issues. CAPRICORN needs security just as you do, but they approach this seeming necessity differently. Stop and learn from each other.
** * * You are still in a very fortunate phase where the unexpected seems to fall in your favor. Be willing to express your true needs. A family member could be cantankerous. You see asituation involving funds as awkward. Tonight: Clear out
errands. LEO (July23-Aug. 22) *** * Your more playful sideemerges
when dealing with a difficult child or loved one. A friend means well and asks valid questions, even if you feel uncomfortable. Another person's generous nature could make you feel rather uncomfortable. Tonight: Help lightenup another person's ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * You easily could toss an associate mood. into a tizzy, as he or shedoes not understand what you are doing. This person will approach you directly in his or her time. A family member means well. You are far more optimistic because of the support you get from your immediate circle. Tonight: Think weekend plans.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You could be questioning the value of a certain relationship in your life. Is this a phase or long term? Youcannot
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Your sensitivities often take you to strange places, which might be difficult to discuss. You have alot to consider involving your finances. Takecharge of a problem and handle it. Your imagination helps you zero in on what you want. Tonight: Happily heading home.
attacked. You feel cared about in a domestic situation and/or with family. Try to meetyour expectations rather than those of others. Curb a tendency to overindulge. Tonight: At home.
I
•
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You could be surprised by another person's energy as exhibited in a meeting. Be smart, and don't try to control anyone. Just let everyone else be.Your intuition is right-on about a partner or joint financial matter. Tonight: Getting into the moment.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * You could sense a situation is building that you would prefer not to deal with. You might need to make anappointment with a doctor or dentist. The unexpected
revolves aroundfamily and/or home.
Maintain a sense of humor. Tonight: Pace yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) *** * Friends nearly alwayssurround you. Today a friend could dominate a situation more than you might like. Let this person see the interaction as you do by sharing more openly. Use your energy to accomplish whatyou must. Tonight: Be impulsive!
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * You might not be in a position where you can be frivolous. You often strive to make acertain impression. Do not take down months of hard work with a moment of silliness or craziness. Maintain
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22)
a perspective. Creatively postponesome
** * * You will defend yourself vigorously if attacked or perceive thatyou were
fun. Tonight: Follow your pals. © King Features Syndicate
Bp.m. on2,9,"BlackBox" — Believing he's already dead, a patient submits to tests in the new episode "I Shall Be Released." Several doctors fail to diagnose a young woman's apparent meningitis correctly. Catherine (Kelly Reilly) comes forth with surprising honesty after Will (David Ajala) accuses her of keeping information from him. Esme (Siobhan Williams) learns more than expected by taking a job at Will's restaurant. Rachel Brosnahan ("The Blacklist") guest stars. 8 p.m. on 5, 8, "Hollywood Game Night" — With Martha Stewart and Curtis Stone among the celebrity players, the episode title"What's Cooking on Game Night" is justified. Scott Wolf (currently appearing on "The Night Shift"), Mena Suvari and Margaret Cho also play the games. So does Matthew Morrison, who inevitably has some funexchanges with hostJane Lynch, the SueSylvester to his "Mr. Schue" on "Glee."
8 p.m. on(CW), "TheVampire Diaries" — Silas (Paul Wesley) tells Damon and Elena (lan
Somerhalder, NinaDobrev) about his new goal and asks for their help in return for accomplishing a major task, but they're skeptical. After telling
Stefan (Wesley)about hernext move, Tessa(Janina Gavankar) realizes Silas has outsmarted her. Katherine (Dobrev) offers Caroline (Candice Accola) a deal foraspot in the dormroomin "Handle With Care." Kat Graham also stars. 8:31 p.m. on 6, "The Millers"Family divorces lead Carol (Margo Martindale) to decide on a reorganization of the clan's cemetery land in "Plot Twists." The toughest aspect may well fall to Nathan (Will Arnett), who has to communicate with his ex-wife (guest star Eliza Coupe, "Happy Endings") in order to meet Carol's wishes.Beau Bridges,Jayma Maysand J.B.Sm oove also star. 9 p.m. on 2, 9, "Rookie Blue" — Chris' (Travis Milne) strange behavior worries Dov (Gregory Smith) in the new episode "Going Under." The timing is far from optimal, since the officers are working an undercover assignment to locate illegal handguns. Rattled to learn that Duncan (Matthew Owen Murray) — aka "Selfie" — is questioning her professionalism, Andy (Missy Peregrym) assists Sam (Ben
Bass) in amissing-person case. o zap2it
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SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21) ** * Don't take an unnecessary risk with funds. You could be reading more into a venture than really is there. You could be quite angry at someone's intervention or nosiness. Establish stronger boundaries with this person and perhaps others. Tonight: Pay bills first.
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 1,3:45, 7, 9:45 • AMERICA(PG-13) 11:10a.m.,1:45, 4:30, 7:05, 9:40 • CHEF(R)11a.m., 1:40, 4:20 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES (PG-l3)10 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES 3-D (PG-13)10 • DELIVER US FROMEVIL(R) I2:40,3:30,7:15, IO: IO • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 11:30 a.m., 1:55, 4:20, 6:45, 9:10 • EDGE OF TOMORROW(PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 1:50 • THE FAULT INOURSTARS(PG-13) 10:45 a.m., 1:35, 4:35 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)10:55a.m.,1:30, 4:05, 6:40 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 23-0 (PG)9:15 • JERSEYBOYS(R) 10:50a.m., 2:05, 6, 9 • MALEFICENT (PG) 11:25 a.m., 2, 4:50, 7:25 • RIFFTRAXLIVE: SHARKNADO(no MPAArating) 8 • RISEOF THE PLANET OFTHE APES/DAWN OF THE PLANET OFTHEAPES DOUBLEFEATURE(PG-13) 7 • TAMMY(R)12:50,2:15,3:20,5,6:05,7:30,9:05,IO • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)10:45 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:40, 6:15, 9, 10:05 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION 3-D (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2:55, 7:45 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION IMAX3-0 (PG13) 11 a.m.,2:45,6:30, 10:15 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
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SATURDAY I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • 22JUMPSTREET(R) 2,4:30,7,9:30 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 2:45, 4:45, 6:45, 8:45 • TAMMY(R)1:45,4:I5,6:45,9:l5 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)2:15, 5:30, 8:45 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • BELLE(PG) 4:45 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 5, 7:15 • JERSEYBOYS(R) 7 • TAMMY(R) 5:15, 7:30 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)6:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • 22 JUMP STREET (R) 2:40, 5:05, 7:30 • DELIVER US FROMEVIL (R) 4:10, 6:50 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 2:50, 5, 7:10 • TAMMY (R)2:20, 4:40, 7 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (PG-13)6:30 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION 3-D (PG-13) 3:15 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • EARTH TOECHO(PG) 6:30 • TRANSFORMERS:AGE OF EXTINCTION (UpstairsPG-13) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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Pets 8 Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
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Lost & Found
Horse manure will load, Dachshund AKC blk/tan Deschutes Mkt Rd., pups, $425.541-508-4558 Bend. 541-318-8707 go to bendweenies.com
Min Pin AKC pups. Beautiful, potty training, shots, chipped. Born 4/14/14 $500.
Wood roll-around tool Found Mountain Bike, Twin E rgo-motion Savage model 93, 22 chest, 6 deep drawers. off Century Drive on 500 automatic bed $150. 541-706-1051 Knoll, July 4. Call to mag rifle, w /1 50 with memory foam rounds of a mmo, Woodworking s h op identify, 541-383-2161 208 602-284-41'I 0 mattress, like new, Donate deposit bottles/ $175. 541-548-3408 equipment: Shop- FOUND: young Puggle, used for a short Pets & Supplies cans to local all vol., Newfoundland puppies, only smith with upgraded vicinity of S E 2 7th. German Shepherd, 3 t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . Tasco special 6-18 x non-profit rescue, for AKC, black w/white, table saw; Band saw; Call to iden t i fy y rs old, n am e i s 541-383-7603 42R r ifle s c o pe 202 8 mo. old pups, good- feral cat spay/neuter. checked, shots, Lathe; Jointer; Disk, 541-382-1178 Louie. Needs a loving vet w/rings, $75. watchdogs, h o u se Cans for Cats trailer ready 7/25. $1500. Want to Buy or Rent Sander and working Lost "Baby", small gray dogs, ou t s tanding at Jake's Dlner, Hwy home. $300 adoption 541-255-9538 Upright Freezer Frigid- 541-548-3408 tools; Shopsmith 12" part-Siamese cat, defee. Must be only dog looks, safe with chil20 E & Bend Petco CASHfor wood in home! Neutered, Nonprofit cat r escue aire, 3 yrs, exc. cond. Win. mdl 74 2 2 r ifle planer with s t and, clawed, vic. Revere & dren. $150 ea. near Applebee's, dodressers and wood auto,1949, nice cond. Sears 12" wood lathe Neff. 541-382-6013 pot t y seeks volunteer board $100 541-526-0687 nate M-F a t S mith v accinated dinettes. 541-420-5640 541-447-13237 with Copy Crafter and director members. Washer & dryer LG top $195. 541-604-0842 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or trained, knows basic of working tools. Tormek & micro Must support no-kill load, 3 yrs old, $350 Wanted: $Cash paid for Adopt a rescue cat or CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. commands, 253 Super grinder 2000 chipped. Comes with philosophy. E x perikitten! Altered, vaccipair; LG microwave, vintage costume jewmsg. for pick up large with many a t tach- REMEMBER: If you in fundraising 8 built in, above range, TV, Stereo & Video elry. Top dollar paid for nated, ID chip, tested, amts, 541-389-8420. bed, blanket, toys, ence ments and i nstruc- have lost an animal, collars, leash, medi- recruiting volunteers a $75. 541-388-4038 Gold/Silver.l buy by the more! CRAFT, 65480 www.craftcats.org Porter Cable don't forget to check SONY 55" rear projec- tions. cation and bowl. Call plus! 541-280-3172. Estate, Honest Artist 78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM 212 tion TV, screen prot. 4"x8" belt/disc bench The Humane Society 541-598-4472. Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Sat/Sun. 389 8420, Persian kittens puresander. Central MaAntiques & $75. 503-639-3355 Bend www.craftcats.org. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! bred available. Call chinery 4"x6" belt/disc Lab Pups AKC,black & 541-382-3537 203 541-359-7564 Collectibles 255 bench sander; Sears Door-to-door selling with yellow, Master Hunter Redmond Holiday Bazaar 8~/~"slide compound performance pedi- Pomeranian-Shih-tzu 541-923-0882 Computers fast results! It's the easiest sired, Antique Clawfoot tub, & Craft Shows miter saw. AMT 4600 ree, OFA cert hips & el1-yr (b.7-10-13) $250 Madras Aussie, mini/toy, $200 way in the world to sell. ows, 541-771-2330 Male not neutered 541-475-6889 Dell printer 2350d, b&w scroll saw; B ench female, 1st shots, $360 541-410-4596 www.kinnamanretrievera.com blossomhut@gmail.com grinder Router table 40th year of Central laser, 2-sided. $60 Prineville cash. 541-678-7599 The Bulletin Classified Oregon Sat. Market! 541-589-1124 with Sears r o uter; The Bulletin reserves 541-526-0687 541-447-7178 Labradors (chocolates), Open Sat., 10am-4pm 541 485-5809 Makita router; Ryobi the right to publish all Aussies, Mini AKC, or Craft Cats POODLE pups, toy. no papers, ready 7/22. Downtown Bend, Samsung co m puter t able w i t h Se a r s blues, black tri, m/f, ads from The Bulletin 541-389-8420. older pup to adopt. across from library. $300. 541-977-6844 all-in-one desktop, 1 router; Makita router; parents on site newspaper onto The ENGLISH BULLDOG Schnoodle pups also. Largest selection of local 541-788-7799 Bulletin Internet web- yr old, Windows 8 and Ryobi tri m r o uter; 541-475-3889 Puppy, AKC registered, Miniature S c hnauzer artists & crafters. Windows XP $500. Router bits; B ench site. male, 1st shots 8 microWherethe Naker pups, Black, 3 female, Queensfand Heelers Boxers AKC & Valley 541-526-0687 vise; various clamps. chipped. $2000. is the Seller!! 1 male, $700. Family Bulldogs CKC puppies. & Mini, $150 The Bulletin T HE B ULLETIN r e - 541-549-9383 541 -416-0375 541-420-9015 raised. 541-410-7701 Standard Servin««Cen««elOre««o««since «9IB $700-800. 541-325-3376 & up. 541-280-1537 quires computer ad265 www.rightwayranch.wor 241 vertisers with multiple Building Materials dpress.com Bicycles & ad schedules or those Weimaraner pups, parselling multiple sysAccessories Bend Habitat ents exc. disposition tems/ software, to disRESTORE and on site. Ranch close the name of the Kent 26", Shiman0 gear Building Supply Resale 325 raised and parents business or the term with helmets. $100. Quality at LOW Hay, Grain & Feed "dealer" in their ads. hunt, 3 males, 1 female, 541-526-0687 PRICES $350. Please leave Private party advertis740 NE 1st New Diamondback Re1st Quality mixed grass msg. 541-562-5970. ers are defined as 541-312-6709 sponse XE hybrid, lots of those who sell one hay, no rain, barn stored, Open to the public. extras incl Giro helmet, computer. $250/ton. 280 284 286 292 $275 obo. 541-306-0166 Sisters Habitat ReStore Call 541-549-3831 Estate Sales Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Other Areas 257 Building Supply Resale Patterson Ranch, Sisters 245 Quality items. Musical Instruments Excellent 1st cutting orPEDDLERS MARKET YARD SALE 9am-4pm Golf Equipment LOW PRICES! chard grass mix, small GARAGE SALE Sat., July 12, 8 -3 S ATURDAY O N L Y Multi-family yard sale 150 N. Fir. Brand new Randy Jackbales, $245/ton. and fund-raiser. (PRINEVILLE) Yorkie AKC Puppies, Tumalo Feed Co., 61361 Sally Ln. Rus541-549-1621 son American Tribute Ltd Madras, Oregon Saturday, July 12, Fri. 8 Sat., 8-3, (3 to 5 I b s w h en Hwy 20 West tic wood futon frame, Open to the public. Ed acoustic/electric gui541-420-9736 8am to 3pm 7/11 & 7/12. grown). 1st s h ots, Antiques, crafts, sport rack, retired litar complete w/package, 1291 NE WILSHIRE dew claw removed 1985 Cub Electric 267 vintage, and more. b rary books, e t c . 62601 Hawkview Rd. 341 $250. 541-306-0166 Corner of Steins Pila nd tail docked. 2 (541 ) 306-8016 541-999-2298 Golf Cart Fuel & Wood Horses & Equipment lar 8 Wilshire (just female, 4 males. $600 copeddlersmarketO Piano Kimball console, Newer batteries, 288 North & East of the to $800. Call anytime good tires, in good gmail.com good condition, $750 AffYear Dependable 286 541-728-6626. Sales Southeast Bend Hospital) Dog ramp, firm. 541-317-9063 condition, and runs Firewood: Seasoned; Sales Northeast Bend Coleman 8 person 282 Just bought a new boat? Lodgepole, split, del, well. $700. tent, Misc. catering, 61197 Cottonwood Dr./ Sales Northwest Bend Sell our old one in the B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 541-447-7906 "cabin" decor, Prints Ferguson, close to the class!I!eds! Ask about our or 2 for $365. Call for ** FREE ** (NWTF & DU), furn. Bridges at Shadow Glen Super Seller rates! 3-MOM BABY SALE! multi-cord discounts! antique glassware, Slightly used y o u th VARIETY! Antique 541-385-5809 High-end clothing, gear, Garage Sale Kit 541-420-3484. 2001 Silverado "beach" decor, men's clubs, includes bag, buffet, sect. sofa, yard Place an ad in The bottles, pump, toys, 3-horse trailer 5th Yorkies, small females, $50. 619-988-2517 (like new) clothing, equip, kitchen, etc. Bulletin for your gamuch more! Sat. 11-3, Pine & juniper Split wheel, 29'x8', deluxe cute, playful, shots & Wurlitzer Organ like Fri-Sat, 7/11-12, 9-3. collectables, wall art, rage sale and re776 NW Saginaw showman/semi living docks, parents on site. 246 new condition, reNo earlybirds, please! kitchen stuff, ( like ceive a Garage Sale 541-536-3108 or quarters, lots of exmote speaker for PROMPT DELIVERY new) linens, crystal, $550. Guns, Hunting A Lot of everything, Kit FREE! text to 541-915-5754. tras. Beautiful condihome or church. 542-389-9663 etc. LOTS OF STUFF GARAGE/MOVING/ & Fishing even the house! tion. $21,900. OBO $450. 541-617-8610 KIT INCLUDES: BUSINESS SALE 210 Retirement Sale. Very 541-420-3277 • 4 Garage Sale Signs 60401 Tall Pine, Wood269 1873 Springfield Trap large clean work table • $2.00 Off Coupon To side Ranch, Fri-Sat-Sun, Furniture 8 Appliances 258 Door, original, $1250. on wheels w/ electrical Use Toward Your Gardening Supplies 9am. Display cases, Travel/Tickets 541-383-7603 hookups, greatfor Golf Galore! Gloves, 2 end tables, $50 and & Equipment Ad tools, bikes, pipes, bongs. clubs, shop or quilting, fabric •Next balls, ie: ProV1 $35, or best offer. 6.5x54 Mannlicher car- Dave Matthews Band 10 Tips For "Garage CC accepted. galore - quilting, uphol- Sale 54'I -548-4170 $25 in box & more! Sat. Success!" bine, w/dies, brass, 4 tickets, $600 each stery, etc., sewing ma7/12, 9-3, 52242 ParkBarkTurfSoil.com REDUCED! $1750. 541-504-9146 8/26/1 4 6:00 p.m. HUGE Sale of supplies chine, sewing items, way Dr., La Pine A1 Washers&Dryers 541-389-7145 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, for scrapbooking, stampBend local pays CASH!! rugs, outdoor furn., PICK UP YOUR $150 ea. Full warPROMPT DELIVERY 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good for all firearms & tools, bedding, cloth- GARAGE SALE KIT at ing, etc. Suntree Village ranty. Free Del. Also 260 cond. Logan Coach Inc. 542-389-9663 Clubhouse,1001 SE 15th ammo. 541-526-0617 ing, household, toys & 1777 SW Chandler wanted, used W/D's $4200 obo. 305-794-0190 Misc. Items more! 63985 Tyler Rd., Ave., Bend, OR 97702 July 11-12, 9am-4pm. July 10-13th, 10am-4pm. 541-280-7355 CASH!! Thurs, Fri., Sat., 7-4. Oak bdrm set, exlnt Older 4-horse lead For Guns, Ammo & Aussie gas BBQ pit, For newspaper Sat. 7/12 8-2, 60102 cond; men's camo huntThe Bulletin horse walker, $175 Reloading Supplies. delivery, call the Serving Central Or«q«nsince «903 C ouch, leather, l i ke cast iron burners $75 Ridgeview Dr. West, ing clothes; tools; fishing obo. 541-410-4596 541-408-6900. Circulation Dept. at EXTREME Garage new, $350; Tall enrods; lots of VHS & DVD obo 541-706-1051 W oodside Ra n c h, Sale. % Donated to 541-385-5800 Shetland pony colt, he'll tertainment c e n ter,ISSC M22 long rifle, 10 fridge, furn. and more! old movies; horse tack; To place an ad, call Tour De Chutes. 8 steal your heart. $250 Great Quality Sale! m isc. 6400 NW Narcissa $100; long c o ffee shot, also box 525 LR Buying Diamonds table; $50 hollow points, $350, 541-385-5809 541-788-1649 am (Fr!.-Sun.) NW Sat.7/12 8 a.m.-? 2420 /Gofd for Cash Ct, CRR. NO earlybirds! 290 541-480-1337 or email C rossing, Lem h i Saxon's Fine Jewelers www.purr-majik.com NE Desert Willow Ct. 541-279-3218 classified@bendbulletin.com P ass I Will i am Baby gear, maternity, Sales Redmond Area 541-389-6655 Dryers (3), all good 345 Clark. See craigslist. sporting gear, houseworking cond, $30 Kimber Solo 9mm, The Bulletin BUYING Follow bright signs. Livestock & Equipment hold decor, speakers & Garage Sale Fri-Sat, 8-? Illloving Sale Sat. 8-4, each. 541-410-4596 Serving Central Or«««on since 8««« black 8 s t a inless, Lionel/American Flyer Vintage English military 12507 S W J u n i per more! rose crimson trace trains, accessories. trunk, antique purses, Pine Ln.,offShumway G ENERATE SOM E FFA project Feeder Pigs, 541-408-2191. chest freezer, wicker Powell Butte. Guns, EXCITEMENT in your grips, 3 extras clips, 9 O $135each. INSTANT GREEN Fri 8c Sat 8-3; 65111 Huge Church Sale, Sat. l ike n e w $9 0 0 . Call Alice, 541-475-9254 desk, linens, pictures, skeet thrower, clay pi85th Place, near Hwy 97 8-4, corner of Cooley & ruqs, glassware, books, geons, fishing gear, neighborhood! Plan a 541-420-7100 BUYING & SE LLING McPheeters Turf Lawn Fertilizer & Tumalo Rd.; Furniture, Hunter's Circle. Queen LOTS of misc. 3749 SW 14x16 canvas wall tent, garage sale and don't All gold jewelry, silver 383 forget to advertise in handicap supplies and gold coins, bars, bed, tools, lots more; Tommy Armour Ln. Leather rifle scabbard, wood stove for tent, Produce & Food (walker, shower chairs, classified! proceeds benefit children. rounds, wedding sets, crib, high-chair, arm- 541-385-5809. $75. etc.), tools, afghans, 542-389-9663 class rings, sterling siloire, artwork, HP print541-548-3408 cooler, desks, and more Moving/Garage Sale! THOMAS ORCHARDS ver, coin collect, vinMulti-Family Garage Sale, July GE Upright freezer, ers, lots of misc. 10-11-12-13 9am-5pm Kimberly, Oregon New Just Right 9mm tage watches, dental Fri 7/11 only, 8-2. 63576 270 22 cu ft, $375. 14482 Pony Trail, Fl e ming, U ick or Read icked carbw/3 Glock mags, ex- gold. Bill Brahma Ct. S. Children's Crooked River Ranch. 541-948-9191 MOVING SALE, Lost & Found 541-382-9419. Dark Sweet Chernes tras, $650. 541-306-0166 Sat 7/12, only, 8-noon. clothing, toys, books, furn, Everything must go! Maytag washer & dryer Rainer cherries 715 NW Yosemite Dr. sporting goods, tools. Llving rm furn, 2 bedNew Wright 8 McGill fly Swamp cooler, heavy Found 7/6, cash on east NOTICE real HD, $1200 both. rod, 4-weight, fast tip, Apricots Tools. furniture, camping room sets, kitchen items, Remember to remove duty, like new, 3ft. x side of Bend. Call to 541-279-3218 Semi-Cling Peaches & sports equip, misc. Multi-Family Sale Fri-Sat, outdoor furn, 2 TVs, case, $75. 541-848-1921 3 ft., p o rtable o r identify. 541-389-0924 your Garage Sale signs BRING CONTAINERS 8-3 at 2 homes on Dove tools, fire pit, other misc. Refrigerator GE side by (nails, staples, etc.) $3 7 5 .FOUND kayak paddle Blackhawk .357 s tationary. 284 All great stuff! for U-PICK/!! Lane & Chilliwack off NE side, water in door. Ruger after your Sale event 4-5/8" barrel, SS, with 541-382-6773 July 2nd at Sparks Open 7 days week, $100. 541-526-0687 Sales Southwest Bend 27th. Collectibles, golf, is over! THANKS! leather holster, $600. Lake. Call to identify lots more - see craigslist! MOVING SALEFri., Wanted- paying cash 541-977-7040 From The Bulletin 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! Maytag w/ 541-389-7472. MOVING SALE, Fri., Sat., Sun., 9-5. Tools, and your local utility Refrigerator for Hi-fi audio & stu541-934-2870 icemaker, very clean. 8-2, Sat. 8-11. 60848 Multi-family Street Sale Honda generator, Ruger Mini 14 r a nch dio equip. Mclntosh, FOUND keys Old Mill Visit us on Facebook for companies. $450; 541-815-4811 Cultus Drive. Down- Sat. 7/12 8:30-3, on chain saw, Weed rifle stainless .223 w/ J BL, Marantz, D yD istrict Shops b e - updates and look for sizing, misc. house- Livengood Wy. North Eater, furn., collectThe Bulletin Small roll-top desk, 2 - 30 rd mags. Like naco, Heathkit, San- tween Saxon's and for us on Wed. at Bend S«««iny CentralOr«««onsince «««8 hold i tems, f u rn., of Cooley Rd., go N. ible dolls, 12817 SW $75 or best offer. new condition $495 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Spice Shop. Call to ID Farmers Market and crafts, garage stuff! on Ranch Village Dr. Upper Ridge Rd. CRR www.bendbulletin.com 541-548-4170 541-678-5646 Call 541-261-1808 541-610-2558 Sat. at NW Crossing.
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E2 THURSDAY, JULY 10, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Hom e s with Acreage Manu f actured/ Commercial/Investment • H o mes for Sale Properties for Sale Mobile Homes S TUNNING Widg i 1716 Te r re t Rd, Creek sign ature $354,000. 3 b d rm., Excellent Commercial FACTORY SPEC/AL L ocation! O n 11 t h home! 3 bdrm, 3 bath, 2611 sq.ft. home on 5 New Home, 3 bdrm, 3281 sq. ft., Master acres, 3-bay shop. $46,500 finished Street between Highon your site. land 8 Gl a cier in with fireplace a nd High Lakes Realty & M a nage- J and M Homes Redmond. Perfect for gym, vaulted ceilings, Property 541-548-5511 s mall b usiness o r maple inlaid f l oor, ment 541-536-0117 626 continue to lease with magnificent rock wall fireplace, s p acious People Look for Information current tenant. Cute Loans & Mortgages About Products and boutique-style build- light kitchen, central island eating bar Services EveryDaythrough BANK TURNED YOU ing would be great for seating for 6., Tile DOWN? Private party C4 zone b usiness The Bulletin ClessiBeds roof, pavered drivewill loan on real es- professional, hair sa- way, triple garage Custom built contemtate equity. Credit, no lon, barber s hop, /storage. Dec k s porary raised ranch problem, good equity flowers, coffee shop. w is all you need. Call Separate garage or overlooking 11th Tee, for sale by owner. and lake, and private Oregon Land Mort- storage building. With fenced pavered deck. 2706 sq . f t. 3-4 a little TLC this propbdrms, 2 tia b a ths, gage 541-388-4200. 660 $ 797,500. Pami r erty and location can spacious kitchen and LOCAL MONEYrWebuy work for you! Properties, Inc., Mara dining room, wet bar, liilotorcycles & Accessories secured trust deeds & $125,000 Stein, Broker granite and h eated 541-420-3400. note,some hard money ¹201404633 stone, new c arpet, loans. Call Pat Kellev Dennis Clark, Principal p rivate study, o a k 541-382-3099 ext.13. 746 Broker, 541-771-8730 cabinets, newer heat Century 21 Northwest Bend Homes pump, fir e places, Gold Country Realty Pozzi wood windows. Place a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES Exceptional NW on 4.6 h ighly s eforonly$f 5.00 perweek. Kcmi9nlh Starting at 3 lines New Listing, .88 acre location, skyline cluded, heavily FXSTD Harley commercially zoned views and privacy. w ooded acres b e *UNDER s500in total merchandise OVER '500 in total merchandise Davidson 2001,twin p roperty w it h t w o Custom craftsman t ween Bend & T u cam 88, fuel injected, 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 s tick-built home s Tour Home borders malo, 3-car garage, Vance & Hines short rented at $575 and 14 days................................................ $16.00 Quail Park by Awbrey irrig.system and wa- shot 7 days.................................................. $24.00 exhaust, Stage I $850. You also get an Golf. Interior upter feature. $589,900 *tlllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 with Vance & Hines additional tax lot in the grades, Courtesy to 541-410-2098 or Srfuel management 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special deal. This location is Realtors. $575,000. siewert©bendbroadsystem, custom parts, 631 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) off of the Madras Hwy 2772 NW Rainbow band.com extra seat. in Prineville, and there Condo/Townhomes Ridge Dr $1 0,500OBO. have been some new Twin Lakes Ranch 5 541-848-0040 Call Today for Rent b usinesses i n th e Acre Family Home541-516-8684 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: area. Asking 3 bdrm, 3 b ath with Desirable modern 3 bd/ $ 210,000. Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. 2042 sq living space. Harley Davidson 2003 2.5 ba townhome near owned property.Age n t • Redmond Homes Built in 2005. Mani- Annwersary Road King, BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) NWX, w/d. No smok- Heather Hockett, Broured front 8 b a ck Stage 1 pearl white exing. Pets neg. $1795 ker, Bank owned, 3 bdrm, clawns, REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well 54 1 420-9151 flower beds. cellent condition, lots of mo . 971-227-3471. 2.5 bath, 2080 sq.ft., Automated C entury 2 1 Gol d sprinkler c hrome & as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin extr a s . home built in 2006 Country Realty. a m azing $13,999. 541-279-0846 632 bendbulletimcom and located on 1 flat system, reserves the right to reject any ad at Powell Bu t t e/CasApt./Multiplex General Own a Piece of History acre, new carpet and cade Mountain views, any time. is located at: - Fort Rock Tavern & vinyl. Extended front and tons of room for 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. CHECK YOUR AD Grill. Recently remod- and rear decks. MLS play - f o rts, t rails, eled. 4 p oker ma- 201404793. Bend, Oregon 97702 seasonal creek, play chines and lottery, full $194,900. Call Pam s a ndbox, Lester, Principal Bro- structure, bar, pool table and basketball court! Don't ker, Century 21 Gold PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction much more. 4 full RV forget the m assive Harley D a vidson hookups fo r RV. Country Realty, Inc. 40x50 s h op/garage 2006 FXDLI Dyna is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 541-504-1338 to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these with 12' doors to store Low Rider, Mustang on the first day it runs $200,000. newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party to make sure it is cor- MLS201306884 all the toys. 2 outdoor seat with backrest, Cascade View Estates, Duke Warner Realty Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. battery, windrect. "Spellcheck" and Redmond - 4 bdrm, 3 fire-pits with b r ick, new 541-382-8262 human errors do ocrock & shale de- shield, forward conbath home with 2046 river signs. Custom paint trols, lots of chrome, cur. If this happens to 476 476 466 sq ft of living. Amaz740 your ad, please conheat pump and Screamin' Eagle exing Northeast view inside; Employment Employment Independent Positions 11,360 miles. tact us ASAP so that Condo/Townhomes just a bove V a lley certified wood stove haust, Opportunities Opportunities Well maintained! corrections and any on gorgeous for Sale View Park. perched Sales rock hearth. $6,650 in La Pine adjustments can be MLS¹201404003, HOTEL/RESORT Medical Assistant made to your ad. $399,000. (928) 581-9190 Earn over Eagle Crest lakefront $254,900. The Riverhouse Back Office Medical MLS¹201403598. 541 -385-5609 Scott McLean, townhome 2 bdrm, 2 is seeking: $1,000 Assistant. Experience The Bulletin Classified bath 1410 sq. ft., sgl Scott McLean, Principal Broker • Experienced Houserequired. W e ar e Pnnctpal Broker a week! 541-408-6908 level. Great room floor keeper -Qualified can- looking for an enerSenior Apartment541-408-6908 Realty Executives p lan, Lakefront & didate will have at least getic, dependable and Independent Living Realty Executives Welcome to YOUR S mith Roc k v i e w. 476 one year of previous ALL-INCLUSIVE self motivated person NEIGHBORHOOD $219,500 MLS¹ Single Level Charmer in housekeeping exper. to join our team part with 3 meals daily Employment 763 PUBLICATIONS. 201401507 Lynn NW R e dmond • Houseman -must be time with possible full We are establishing Month-to-month lease, Opportunities Johns, Principal Bro- $ 315,000. 4 bed - Recreational Homes able to lift 50 Ibs & time option. We offer check it out! Harley Davidson have a friendly and a branch in ker, 5 4 1 -408-2944, rooms, plus o ffice/ & Property a superior salary with Call 541-318-0450 2011 Classic Limden, 2.5 baths, 2410 Central Oregon. Wes Johns, Broker positive attitude. Up to Fridays off. Computer Caregivers Needed Loaded! 9500 sq ft. Brand new con- Cabin hidden in woods ited, $10/hr. We are looking for 541 408-2945 Where can you find a skills and electronic miles, custom paint at Luxury struction, fen c ing, responsible and Central Oregon on trout stream, 637 records exp. "Broken Glass" by Senior Home helping hand? Must be willing to work medical front lan dscaping, acres, 75 mi. from individuals to Resort Realty beneficial. Dermatol- ambitious Nicholas Del Drago, Leisure Club Inc.has custom tile. flexible hours/days. sell subscriptions to From contractors to Bend,$695k. a plus. Outnew condition, shift positions availPre-employment drug ogyexp. MLS¹201310781 The Bulletin at 746 541-480-7215 yard care, it's all here standing patient care, heated handgrips, able. Work includes testing required. Call Jim Hinton, established sales team player and atHomes for Sale caring for the elderly auto cruise control. in The Bulletin's Apply in person at: 541-420-6229. locations. 771 in p remium s tyle $32k in bike, 3075 N Hwy 97, Bend t ention to d e tail a "Call A Service Central Oregon Realty homes. Starting pay is m ust. Position i n 8356 SW Pumice Ct. Lots only $20,000or best or apply online at Group, LLC Control what you earn Professional" Directory Ready to move in. 3 $175 per shift; exceloffer. 541-318-6049 www.riverhouse.com volves a variety of duby working a lent working condities in a fast paced Bdrm, 2 bath home Single Level $90,000 • 56119-56135 designated local tions. located in the heart of Updated work e n v ironment. 662 Solar Dr. Need to get an on Large - SW •1.24 acres territory and essentially Pleaseca// Fax your resume and CRR on 1 acre. Large Redmond.Lot on channel Houses for Rent Offer ing 3 ad in ASAP? build your own 541-550-6612 or garage/shop. Located cover letter to Jodi at the De s chutes bedroom, 2 bath, for of business! NW Bend email seniorleisure You can place it 541-323-2174 or on a cul-de-sac which $178,500! River Charming •Community park and c~lutt@ ahao.ca provides privacy. MLS email Jodi©centralonline at: ranch home on .32 boat ramp (1 block) for moreinformafion/ oregondermatology.co To learn more about Desirable modern 3 bd/ ¹201404446. acre lot, 1424 sq ft, www.bendbulletin.com m. NO phone calls 2.5 ba townhome near $132,000. this new questions. than 4 miles to HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low greenhouse, s h ed, •Less NWX, w/d. No smok employment Juniper Realty, Sunriver Resort Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1& please. new electrical, wood ing. Pets neg. $1795 541-385-5809 opportunity 541-504-5393 Bill Kammerer, Broker 2 Vance 8 Hines pipes, floors thr o ughout, mo . 971-227-3471. MOTEL- Housekeeping please call us at 541-410-1200 $13,500. 541-306-0166 wood stove, DRIVERS MACHINISTS DESIRED Staff, Full-time. Expen- 458-206-0905 Great home in very de- newer Windermere newer windows. Laura Parker Hannifin/ ence helpful but not sirable location at the Central Oregon or email us at HDFat Bo 1996 Hilton, Broker, GRI, Local moving Custom Cylinders CNC necessary. Apply in per- paperman09@ttotmail.com - 9 &Ra@s base of Pilot Butte. 3 ABR, Real Estate 541-306-1800 company seeks son at front desk, Sug& Lathe Operators bedroom 1 bath 1050 op©ggg John L. Scott Class A and Class Must have 5-7 years ex- arloaf Mountain Motel Your Nelghborhood [Pp sq ft. Extensive cusBeautiful building lot just Real Estate, Bend perience. Will read blue- 62980 N. Hwy 97, Bend. B CDL Drivers. tom tile work includ- www.johnlscottbend.com steps from Meadow Publications prints and perform comMust be able to ing granite tile kitchen Lakes Golf Course in Receptionist plex set ups to very close work hard, pass Sales Help Wanted: and bath countertops Prineville. $90,000 - Front Desk tolerances. 2nd shift. Ex541-480-3937 U/A and backnergetic kios k and backsplash, cus- Looking for your next Completely cellent compensation & Busy Dermatology Of- E tom t i l e flo o ring sales person needed ground check. emp/oyee? benefit package, 401K, fice is looking for a Rebuilt/Customized throughout most of 773 No experience immediately for the Place a Bulletin help & Pension Plan. 29289 p art ti m e fron t 2012/2013 Award home, large pantry wanted ad today and 732 necessary. Airport Rd . E u gene desk/scheduling pro- Bend-Redmond Acreages Winner back deck, fenced reach over 60,000 area. Secured loca97402; E-mail: fessional to work 2 Commercial/lnvestment yard. Extensive parkShowroom Condition readers each week. Lcourtne @ arker.com days per week. Meditions, high commis5.77 acres, elevated, Many Extras Call Bill, Properties for Sale ing w it h d e tached Your classified ad Parker is an equal S W Q u ai l R o a d, cal Reception a nd sions paid weekly! Low Miles. 541-383-3362 will also appear on opportunity employer/ EMR experience re- For more informa- 51540 Huntington Rd., 2-car g a rage/shop, Crooked River Ranch $15,000 for more info. attached 1 car gaVEVRAA Federal Conbendbulletin.com acre $90,000. Pamir quired. P l ease fax t ion, p lease c a l l La Pine car w ash rage 8 carport, RV 541-548-4807 tractor - "Minority/Female/ your resume to Jodi at which currently reProperties, Inc., Mara Howard at business opportunity. parking. $ 2 18,500. Disability/Veteran" ceives over 541-323-2174 or 541-279-0982. You Stein, Broker AD¹1512 ¹20'!310366 1.5 million page 541-420-3400. email Jodi Ocentral- c an a l s o em a i l TEAM Birtola Garmyn Executive Jodi Clark, Principal views every month oregondermatology.co tcolesOyourneighMasonry Director High Desert Realty Broker, 541-771-8731 at no extra cost. 5.17 acres. 65694 Old m. NO phonecalls borhoodpublications. 541-312-9449 for Laborers Century 21 Bulletin Classifieds Bend/Redmond Hwy, please. www. BendOregon com for more inforGold Country Realty Slsters Chamber Needed! Get Results! L~ Mtn view, power, waRealEstate.com mation. of Commerce Call 385-5809 or ter, septic approved. HD Sportster, 2001 exc Must have • I I Modern Architecture + cond, 1 owner, maint'd, place your ad on-line $174,000 O.B.O. Call valid ODL. Quaint Farmhouse new t i r es , cu s t om at Please send cover Brad 5 41-419-1725, The Bulletin Wage DOE. ServingCentral Oregon since f903 Rastra block c o n- bendbulletin.com letter, resume and or Deb 541-480-3956. chrome, leather saddle s e e king struction, passive so32,400 mi, $4200. Apply between Desperately salary requirement to debra©bendbroad bags, Rhonda O. I am an old The Bulletin Circulation department is looking Tom, 541-382-6501 4 b e droom, 3 'obattttaiateracount .com band.com 8 a.m. -2 p.m., friend who has found it for a District Representative to join our Single lar, bath, 2954 sq ft. Ra755 by July 25, 2014. Honda Goldwing 1985 Mon. - Fri., at extremely necessary Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week diant floors and reand imperative on my position. Overall focus is the representation, cycled timbers keep Sunriver/La Pine Homes Land in Madras - Prime O60,000 miles. Has 63026 Lower and ready to b uilt, minor body damage Fullj ob is available art that I speak with sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspa- t his h o m e eco Meadow Dr., 2.44 acres located in but runs well $1500 at description at er. Please, please per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, friendly. Sits on nearly 16206 Hawks Lair. 4 t/a bath, 3304 an area of nice homes O BO. sistersco ntre, Suite ¹200, call Werner (951) special events and news dealer outlets. Daily 19 acres of Cascade bdrm, 2 Ca l l J o h n sq. ft . 2 gar age. and conveniently near 541-306-7615 COllll obs 929-4535 or email me Bend. ~ responsibilities include driving a company ve- view pastoral farmtown. Lot is easy to wernsocalIgmail.com $319,900. High Lakes hicle to service a defined district, ensuring land. $899 , 000. Realty & Pr o perty develop with water newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, MLS¹201404611 and power nearby. Management managing newspaper counts for the district, Call Terry Skjersaa, 541-536-0117 Owner terms may be building relationships with our current news 54'I -383-1426 available. $ 6 4 ,950 dealer locations and growing those locations Duke Warner Realty 56090 Snowgoose Rd, ¹201303181 with new outlets. Position requires total owner541-382-8262 new 3/2, 3-car gaJodi Clark, Principal ship of and accountability of all single copy eleHonda Rebel 250, 1986, rage, approx /a acre, Broker, 541-771-8731 gets ments within that district. Work schedule will be RV Parking! Large Lot! $279,000. 60 mpg, excellent Call54 I3855809topromote your service• Advertise for 28delsstartinget' lfII plustredatpackageir naavailablee er wrbrtat K i m at Century 21 Thursday through Monday withTuesday and commuter, 7213 miles, 3 bedroom, 2 bath 541-954-3069 Gold Country Realty W ednesday off . Requires good communication home, Northeast side $1100. 541-788-6276 skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift of town. MLS pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to 201405258; Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care 45 multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong IjOII $185,000. Call Don YOUR /to WILL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 service/team orientation, sales and problem Chapin, Broker, NOTICE: Oregon Land- Aeration/Dethatching solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: EXPOSURES FOR ONLYa50! 541-350-6777. 1-time or Weekly Services scape Contractors Law IIIItSIIII NOTICE: Oregon state 0 r C I ~ Ad i ~ N~ k n A oe N r e P a I A circulationObendbulletin.com Redmond Re/Max Land law requires anyone (ORS 671) requires all Ask about FREEadded 8 Homes Real Estate. Peek o July 7, 2014 svcs w/seasonal contract! businesses that adwho con t racts for Applications are available at the front desk. vertise t o p e r form Bonded & Insured. construction work to Drop off your resume in person at BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS be licensed with the Landscape Construc- COLLINS Lawn Maint. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Ca/i 541-480-9714 Search the area's most Construction Contrac- tion which includes: Serving Central Oregon since f903 No phone inquiries please. p lanting, deck s , comprehensive listing of tors Board (CCB). An Pre-employment drug testing required. fences, arbors, 541-385-5809 classified advertising... active license EOE/Drug Free Workplace means the contractor water-features, and in- Allen Reinsch Yard real estate to automotive, Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. merchandise to sporting is bonded & insured. stallation, repair of ir- llllaintenance & llllowing Verify the contractor's rigation systems to be (& many other things!) goods. Bulletin Classifieds General l icensed w it h th e Call 541-536-1294 or CCB l i c ense at appear every day in the The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturLandscape Contrac541-615-5313 www.hirealicensedprint or on line. DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes day night shift and other shifts as needed. We tors Board. This 4-digit contractor.com Call 541-385-5809 currently have openings all nights of the week. or call 503-378-4621. number is to be inEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin recom- cluded in all adver- Maverick Landscaping children, custody, support, property and bills start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and weedeating,yd mends checking with tisements which indi- Mowing, The Bulletin cate the business has end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All podetail, chain saw work, aIV/llg CNls8Icl&gah rlllCP 19ts the CCB prior to consitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. tracting with anyone. a bond, insurance and bobcat excv., etc! LCB division. No court appearances. Divorced workers c ompensa¹8671 541-923-4324 Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Spacious and affordSome other t rades minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts also req u ire addi- tion for their employable living! 2 b e din 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of tional licenses and ees. For your protecroom, 2.6 bath, 1416 tion call 503-378-5909 Painting/Wall Covering loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackcertifications. sq ft home has gas or use our website: ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup fireplace, vaulted paralegalalternatives.com legalalt©msn.com www.lcbistate.or.us to and other tasks. For qualifying employees we ceilings, slate in the ALL AMERICAN check license status offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Debris Removal guest bathroom and PAINTING before contracting with Interior and Exterior short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid tiled cou n tertops. the business. Persons vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Master bedroom has Family-owned doing lan d scape prior to employment. private access to the maintenance do not Residential & Commercial JUNK BE GONE outside an d l a r ge 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts r equire an LC B l i I Haul Away FREE Please submit a completed application attenDrivers-START WITH OUR TRAINING OR 5-year warranties bathroom with plenty cense. For Salvage. Also tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Summer Special! of closet space. Great Cleanups 8 Cleanouts at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanCall 541-337-6149 floor plan includes a Mel, 541-389-8107 CCB ¹193960 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be CONTINUE YOUR SOLID CAREER.You have double attached gaobtained upon request by contacting Kevin rage. Large patio over Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). the garage is w e ll options! Company Drivers, Lease Purchase No phone calls please. Only completed appliHandyman PAINTING shaded in the afterZor/ed QnaPiep WESTERN CO. Richard Hayman, cations will be considered for this position. No noon for entertaining. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reZavvg Cttr e r',a, I DO THAT! a semi-retired paint$119,900 or Owner Operators Needed 877-789-8518 quired prior to employment. EOE. Home/Rental repairs Full Service ing contractor of 45 ¹201404958 Small jobs to remodels Landscape Management years. S mall Jobs Dennis Clark, Principal Honest, guaranteed 541-390-1466 Welcome. Interior & Broker, 541-771-8730 The Bulletin www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com serving central oregon sincefslo work. CCB¹151573 Experienced Exterior. c c b¹5184. Century 21 Dennis 541-317-9768 Commercial & Residential 541-388-6910 Gold Country Realty
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUL 10, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wii'sbprtz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Thursday,July10,2014
Into the unknown By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency With apologies to Dilbert, here's another office memo from a real-life project manager: "What I need is a list of specific u nknown p r o b lems we mi g h t encounter." In today's deal, East took the king of spades and led a trump. South won and, oblivious t o a n y p r o blems known or unknown, drew trumps and led a heart. West signaled with the nine from his doubleton, and East let dummy's king win. South nextruffed a spade and led a heart to the queen, but East won and led a diamond. Since dummy had only one trump left, South couldn't set up and cash the long hearts. Down he went.
ACROSS 1 Presenter of "The Borgias," in brief 4 Burning 10Arizona's Canyon Dam 14Owner of Moviefone 15Jackie who played Uncle Fester 16Italian beach resort 17The "American Moses" 19Hot spot in "Hanseland Gretel" 20 Four stars, say 21 Critical elements 22 "Attendance is mandatory" 23 Brewed refresher 26TV great who said "I live to laugh, and I laugh to live"
rebids two spades and you try three clubs. Partner then r ebids t hree spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's bidding is not encouraging. He has suggested a s even-card s ui t w i t h mi n i m u m values. With a sound hand and a solid suit, he could have jumped to four spades over your three clubs. Bid four spades, but don't be surprised if he doesn't make it. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4963
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FIRST TRUMP South had a problem but didn't know it. To use the hearts, he must preserve dummy entries,hence he should lead a heart at Trick Three. When East plays low, South returns a trump to his hand to lead a second heart. If East wins and leads a t hird trump, South wins in dummy. He ruffs a heart, takes the ace of diamonds, ruffs a diamond and takes the good hearts to fulfill the contract.
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By Steve Blais (c)2014 Tribune ContentAgency, LLC
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07I10114
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 10 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860
880
Motorcycles & Accessories
Victory TC 2 0 0 2, 40K mi., runs great, s tage 1 kit, n e w tires, rear brakes 8 more. Health forces s ale. $4,00 0 . 541-771-0665
Motor h omes
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
880
881
881
882
882
882
882
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Laredo 30'2009
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning seldom used; just add water and it's ready to go! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne.
Komfort Trailblazer 2003 23-ft, with slide, $6995. Call 541-647-2314 !II
i
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8%L
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
'! 8
Bcla • ••I
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5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, Sell for $3500. OR For Hire
You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic 2013 R-Vision 23RBS package, A/C,table Trail-Lite Sportby Mo8 chairs, satellite, naco -Expedition pkg, Bend: 541-330-2495 Bend: 541-330-2495 Arctic pkg., power Redmond: Sport Value pkg, conveRedmond: awning, in excellent 541-548-5254 nience pkg, elec. awning, 541-546-5254 condition! More pix Call for quote spare tire, LED TV/ent. at bendbulletin.com Ask for Theo, 865 system, outside shower, Call The Bulletin At 541-260-4293 Call Dick, $25,500 $23,995. elec. tongue jack, black ATVs 541-385-5809 541-419-3301 541-480-1687. WILDERNESS 26' 541-383-3503 flush sys, beautiful inte541-548-5174 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 2000, heat, A/C, rior, huge galley, great shower,queen bed, storage, 1/2-ton towable, At: www.bendbulletin.com TURN THE PAGE nice condition alfoys, queen bed. For More Ads TOW EQUIPMENT $6775. new, asking $21,900 Looking for your Brake Buddy, $500; Like The Bulletin 541-548-0675 Gordon, 541482-5797 next employee? Guardian rock Place a Bulletin help shield, $200; wanted ad today and Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' Roadmaster 5000 Just too many 885 bed, with ramps. $800 Bigfoot 29 2003, sleeps reach over 60,000 tow bar, $450; collectibles? readers each week. Holiday Rambler MONTANA 3585 2008, Canopies & Campers obo. 541-549-4834 or 5, walk-around queen OR $900 for ALL. bed, 57K mi, 7.3L power Alumascape 28' exc. cond., 3 slides, 541-566-0066 Your classified ad stroke t urbo d i esel Call 541-548-1422 2003,1-owner. Sell them in will also appear on king bed, Irg LR, w/Banks power pak incl Self-contained, 870 Arctic insulation, all bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classifieds auges, torque lock 8 Arctic Fox 29' 2003, 13' slide, 80W solar which currently reoptions $35,000 obo. Boats & Accessories ake brakes. Power evcovered storage, slidepanel, walkaround 541-420-3250 ceives over 1.5 milerything, auto levelinq out, exc. cond inside & queen + sofa/bed, 541-385-5809 lion page views evjacks, air ride w/90psi outside 201 6 tags, loads of storage ery month at no compressor, 3.6kw prothroughout. Excellent $14,500. 541-678-1449 extra cost. Bulletin Eagle Cap 850, 2005 p ane gen set. V e r y cond., licensed 2015. or 541-410-8849 with slideout, AC, micro, Classifieds Get Reclean, no pets, no smkrs, Ready to make memories! Must see! $13,700. s I frig heater, queen bed, sults! Call 365-5609 araged. N o sl i des. Top-selling Winnebago 541-389-9214 CHECKYOUR AD wet bath, exlnt cond, or place your ad 36,500. 541-548-3985 31J, original owners, non12' Aluminum boat $16,900. 541-388-3477 smokers, garaged, only on-line at leave message. with trailer, 3hp motor, 18,800 miles, auto-levelbendbulletin.com ing jacks, (2) slides, upOPEN ROAD 36' good cond, $1200.. Price Reduced! 2005 - $25,500 503-307-6570 graded queen bed, bunk Komfort LEAR CANOPY 2003 P a c ific beds, micro, (3) TVs, King bed, hide-a-bed Call a Pro blue, fits Ford F-350 Ridge 27 ' Like sleeps 10! Lots of storsofa, 3 slides, glass on the first day it runs s hort b o x , $500. NEW deluxe NW deWhether you need a shower, 10 gal. waage, maintained, very 541-410-4354. to make sure it is cors ign, 1 5 ' Su p e r cleanl Only $67,995! Exfence fixed, hedges ter heater, 10 cu.ft. rect. "Spellcheck" and Kit Companion 1994, 12' aluminum fishpriv . b drm, tended warranty and/or fi- Slide, fridge, central vac, Dodge trimmed or a house human errors do ocpower jack, electric good cond. 26' with ing boat, t r ailer, nancing avail to qualified atellite dish, 2 7 " cur. If this happens to one slide, Reduced! to s Brougham 1978, SNUG TOP awning, solar panel, built, you'll find motor, fish finder, TV/stereo syst., front buyers! 541-388-7179 your ad, please con- $4000. 541-389-5786 Pickup canopy for 15', 1-ton, clean, 6-volt, led lights, alaccessories, $1200. front power leveling professional help in tact us ASAP so that F250 short bed, 541-369-7234 ways stored inside. 69,000 miles. I~ Sf 5 jacks and s cissor The Bulletin's "Call a corrections and any white in color, A MU S T see! Look at: $4500. stabilizer jacks, 16' adjustments can be es • like new, « Service Professional" $23,500 obo! Call Bendhomes.com awning. Like new! In La Pine, 12' McGregor boat and made to your ad. $675. Pam 541-768-6767 541-419-0566 call 541-602-8652 Directory for Complete Listings of 541-385-5809 trailer, $400. 541-416-9686 or Bill 541-460-7930 541-385-5809 541-593-6243 The Bulletin Classified Area Real Estate for Sale Winnebago Adven16.2' 1967 Barron Maturer 2005 35~/~', gas, rine, i/o, top cover, less than 20,000 miles, $4,500 obo excellent condition, 2 541-419-5731 slide-outs, work horse 16' Cobra Triple sit on Fieefwood Discovery chassis, Banks power top Kayak w/ all ac- 40' 2003, diesel, w/all brake system, sleeps cessories, $950 OBO. options - 3 slide outs, 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. 541-546-3761 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Call 5 4 1-306-6711or etc., 32,000 miles. Ads published in the email a i kistu Obend"Boats" classification Wintered in h eated cable.com shop. $62,000 O.B.O. include: Speed, fish541-447-8664 ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-365-5609 Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideFLEETWOOD PACE ARROW, 1999 outs, Leather inteUpdated interior, 36', 2 rior, Power s eat, 875 windows, shdes, 42,600 miles, V10 locks, Watercraft as, 5000 watt generator, Aluminum wheels. 17" hydraulic levelers, auto Flat Screen, steps, back-up camera, Surround s o u nd, washer/dryer, central vac, camera, Queen bed, ice m aker, l o aded, Foam mattress, Awexcellent condition. ning, Generator, In$27,500 541-620-2135 verter, Auto Jacks, (See Craiqs/ist Air leveling, Moon 16' Old Town Canoe, ¹4470374489) roof, no smoking or spruce, cedar & canvas, p ets. L i k e ne w , Lake model, 1 owner, $74,900 very good cond, w/extras. 541-460-6900 $1000. 541-388-3386
a --e
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In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds
The Bulletin
Full Colar Photos
For an addifional
1994 Yamaha Wave Raider exc. cond, low miles, $2250. 541-460-3937
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 Find exactly what 5 speed trans., 39K, you are looking for in the NEYI/ TIRES, 2 slides, Dnan 5.5w gen., ABS CLASSIFIEDS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
(2) '05 Yamaha Waverunners lo hrs, 1 has 256 hrs, other has 239 hrs. Garaged when not in use. The pair $6250 obo
541-546-2554
541-549-4634 / 586-0068
Jayco Greyhawk 26SS 2005 Ocean Kayak 11' model 6K miles, 1 slide, Malibu2, w/seat back sleeps full bath in rests $325 rear, no4, bdrm, outside 541-389-9919 shower & BBQ, back-up camera, aw880 ning, solar panel, Motorhomes brand new tires, new engine battery, protec1997 Bounder 34' tive sealants in/out, w/slide. $17,900. lots more! Exc. cond, Excellent condition, $38,000 541415-2737 must see! Ford 460 w/Banks, new tires, dual A/C, rear camera, triple axle, Onan gen, 63k miles. 541-306-9697
w~
i
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•
2007 Winnebago 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 Prineviiie.
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. $49,500. 541-420-4303
Winnebago Sightseer 27' 2002. workhorse as motor, Class A, 5'' slide living rm/dinette, new tires. spare tire carrier, HD trailer hitch, water heater, micro/oven, generator, furn/AC, outside shower, carbon dioxide 8 smoke detector, fiberglas ext., elect. step, cruise control, CB radio, 60k miles, awning, TV antenna w booster, flat screen 23" TV. AM/FM/CD stereo. $2 7 ,500.
RV CONSIGNlllENTS 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
TIFFINALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles /Dffered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more Allegro 32' 2007, like information go to new, only 12,600 miles. mne ~ Chev 6.1L with Allison 60 alle rob s.com ~ transmission, dual exor email haust. Loaded! Auto-levtrainwater157O eling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, or ca mail.com 858-527-8627 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driver door Check out the w/power window, cruise, classifieds online exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking www.bendbufletirLcom Updated daily $67,500. 503-781-8812
GOLDEN RETRIEVERPUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving ("Specialprivateparty ratesapply fo puppies looking for a caring home. merchandise and automotive categories.) Please call right away. $500.
Add Color to your ad For an addifional '2 per day
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Th!s truck Modern amenities andall the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, you will need. Room to grow in and a tough V8 englne will gst your own little paradise! Call now. the job done on the ranch!
GOLDEN RETRIEVERPUPPIES, We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for a caring home. ease call right away. $500.
QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenitiesandall the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your oiitQ little paradisei Call now
FORD F150 XL2005. This truck can haul It all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
GOLDEN RETRIEVERPUPPIES, Ws are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away.$500.
~QUAINTCABIN ON 10 ACRES! I Modernamenities andall the quiet ,'you will need. Room to grow in ,'your ownlittle paradise! Call now.,'
II I
FORD F150XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!
I
a, I ')
~
Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004 with living
room slide, 48k miles, in good cond. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.
Add a Border For an addifional '1.50 per day
$27,900
Call Dick at 541-408-2387 881
Providence 2005 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. $95,000 541-460-2019
0<
'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks*
Travel Trailers Dutchman Denali 32' 2011travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $28,500 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, Or. 206-715-7120
•
•
Keystone Laredo 31' RV 20 06 with 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 a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$1 8,600 541-4947-4605 Komfort 2007 271TS, solar panel, full awning, LR slider, inverters, TVs, walk-around qn bed, A/C, table & chairs, power jack, lots more. 1 owner, $22,500. 541-447-7235 or 541-550-8673 Komfort Ridgecrest 23', 2008, 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
Ifalic and Bald headlines For an addifional .50C up to $2.00 per ad
AttentionGetting Graphics For an addifional '3 per week '10 for 4 weeks
2IIIIS. This truck GOLDENRETRIEVERPllPPIES, OllAINT CABIN ON 1II ACRES! FORD F15D XL We are three adorable, loving Modernamenitiesandallthequiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, puppieslookingforacaringhome. you will need. Room lo grow In and a tough V8 engine will get please call right away. $500. you r own little paradise! Call now.the job done on the ranch!
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GOLDEN RETRIEVERPUPPIES, QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Th!s truck We are three adorable, loving Modern amenities andall the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4, puppies looking for a caring home. you will need. Room to grow In and a tough V8 engine will get your own little paradise! Call now. the job done on the ranch! Please call right away. $500.
The Bulletin To p l a c e
y o u r a d , v is i t w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m o r 5 4 1 - 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
Hours:
24-Hour MeSSageLine:
Monday - Friday 7:30am - 5:00pm
541483-2371 Place,cancel,or extend an adafterhours. 1777S.W.ChandlerAve. Bend,Oregon97702
Telephone Hours: Monday - Friday 7:30am - 5:00pm Sa!ruday10:00am -12:30pm