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TODAY'S READERBOARD
•
•
Rescue robots — Oneday they might be able to saveus. But first, they have to know howto open adoor. A3 By Claire Withycombe
an inmate in the county jail, including two supervisors
official said Thursday. Edwin Burl Mays, 31, died of amethamphetanune overdose in the jail Dec. 14. Sheriff's Counsel Darryl Nakahira wrote in an email Thursday that the four are
who were demoted, a sheriff's
named as defendants in a
The Bulletin
Ou the road again —on your summer road trips, you might have noticed the return felt shorter. Scientists are studying thephenomenon.A3
Four Deschutes County
sheriff's employees were disciplined after the death of
$10.7 million lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court by the
Mays family late last month. Video of Mays' final hours, released to The Bulletin in
March, shows sheriff's deputies mocking Mays while he behaved erratically in a hold-
ing cell in the booking area of the jail. The Oregon Department of Justice is investigating Mays' death at the request of
were disciplined, two were su-
Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel.
the names of the deputies, citing Oregon public records law.
Of the four employees who
See Jail /A4
pervisors who were demoted, Nakahira wrote. He said he couldnot share further information about the action, nor
Lovo iocks — Pariscracks down on a tourist traditionbut in a city knownfor romance, an alternative is sought. A6
Porn iu space? —one website thinks it can. Scientists say sex inzero G isworth studying. A4
Aud a Webexclusive-
• Residents of 3 Bend subdivisions were ordered to be readyto evacuate
Ford's Edsel: How ahigh-tech car was undone bytechnology. bendbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Making home health work more attractive By Rebecca Beitsch Stateline.org
WASHINGTON — Peo-
ple working in one of the fastest-growingprofessions in America aren't wellpaid. Many of them don't get health or retirement
benefits. And federalminimum wage and overtime protections still don't apply tothem.
Despite the low wages and odd hours, 2 million
Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin
A helicopter flies over the Shevlin Fire on Thursday west of Bend. The fire burned mainly in Shevlin Park. The cause of the blaze is under investigation.
Americans are home care workers, helpingto dress, feed and bathe the elderly
By Dylan J. Darling
and disabled withintheir homes. They are in high de-
The Bulletin
m and: The U.S. population
Bend's Shevlin Park that was
is aging, and more seniors
dose to homes broughtback Oregon Department of Formemories of the Two Bulls estry will lead the investigaFire from last year for nearby tion with help from the U.S. residents. Forest Service, Bend Fire and Fire crews from around Deschutes County Sheriffs Central Oregon quickly Office. 'Vile have no idea on (the jumped onthe Shevlin Fire, holding it at 8 to 10 acres cause)," Howe said Thursday just hours after it was first afternoon, noting firefighters spotted shortlybefore1:30 needed toput the fire out before worrying about how p.m., said Dave Howe, abattalion chief for the Bend Fire itbegan. Department. The 6,908-acre Two Bulls The fire was expected to Fire started on June 7 last be dedared fully contained year, also west of Bend. over night Thursday, Howe Like many of her neigh-
want to stay in their homes instead of moving to nurs-
ing homes. Some states are trying to
improve home careworkers'wages andbenefits, aiming to attract and retain
more skilled and dedicated workers in a high-turnover lnclustry. See Health /A4
TODAY'S WEATHER ~p
4~ Sunny High 77, Low38 i~ PngeB6
INDEX All Ages D1-6 Dear Abby D5 Business C5-6 Horoscope D5 Calendar In GO! Local/State B1-6 Classified E1-8 Obituaries B5 Comics E3-4 Sports C 1-4 Crosswords E4 Movies D5, GO!
A wildfire Thursday in
said in a news release late in the day. The cause of the fire
is under investigation. The
o
See video behind the fire lines: bendbuuetin.com
bors in subdivisions on
the city's western, wooded fringe, Tracy Pfiffner, 50,
an overlook above Shevlin
Park. "This is a lot doser than the Two Bulls Fire last
year," she said. "(I) came out to the sameplace and this is terrifyingly close." That fire prompted evacuations for
F lre DESCHLITES NATIONAL FOREST
(
Aspen Hall •
Shevlin Park
254 homes on the west side of Bend.
Although no homes were evacuated Thursday, the
Level 1 evacuation zone
>io.
Deschutes County Sheriffs
Office issued pre-evacuation warnings for a trio of subdiMILES
visions near Shevlin ParkThree Pines, Shevlin Com-
o
mons and Park Commons. See Fire/A4
normally been their deepest
The Washington Post
enemy. Obama's top advisers
By Lydia DePillis
shuttled up and down
OWINGS MILLS, Md.The old factory was dark, lit
vol. 113, No. tea, 32 pages, 5 sections
decisive showdown today
Pennsylvania Avenue on Thursday in a bid to shore
with little margin for error,
up Democrats, fearful that
Q I/I/e userecycled newsprint
as his regular allies on Capitol Hill mounted a furious
the fallout from a defeat at the hands of the president's
last-ditch effort to derail a
own party would leave Dem-
D 8 8 26 7 0 2 3 2 9
Shevliu
and her 21-year-old son, Alex Pfiffner, rode their bikes to
ByPaulKnneandMike DeBonis
The Bulletin
: 'IIIII I
on the Shevlin blaze. She
Source: Bend Fire Department
Greg Cross /The Bulletin
Trade debate nears end How the U.S.tries to savebusinesses with Dems still wary before freetrade destroysthem WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama's trade initiatives headed toward a
An Independent Newspaper
found aplace to watch the firefighters Thursday take
The Washington Post
"We'reconvinced Jimmy Hoffa's underneath one of them," Ganz said, of the hulk-
key vote and anxious Repub- ocrats in an internal feud for licans tried to gather support weeks on end.
ing steel apparatuses that only by a few lightbulbs; desks would never spin again. "This were strewn with papers as factory will have a new life, if its erstwhile occupants had but to close it without a new left in a hurry. It felt like a life? Bleh," she sighed. mortuary, but as Suzy Ganz A fewyears ago, these looms walked among the giant texhadbeenbusy churning out the tile looms she regarded them patches that go on the sleeves
for a White House that has
with affection.
See Trade/A5
of Customs and Border Patrol
agents — a steady source of income that helped the 116-year-old Lion Brothers to
ride out the ups and downs of other business. But suddenly, in
late 2013, the agency changed the specs of its contract from "Made in America" to "Made in
America and tradingpartners." Which, in practice, meant "made somewhere else."
See Businesses/A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
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U.S. haCk —Hackers stole personnel data andSocial Security numbers for every federal employee, agovernment worker union said Thursday, asserting that the cyber theft of U.S. employeeinformation was more damaging than theObamaadministration has acknowledged. Sen. Harry Reid, the Democratic leader, said on theSenate floor that the Decemberhack into Office of Personnel Management data was carried out by "the Chinese" without specifying whether he meant the Chinesegovernment or individuals. Reid is one ofeight lawmakers briefed on themost secret intelligence information. U.S. officials have declined to publicly blameChina, which hasdenied involvement.
judge: Enoughevidence to
charge policeinbo s death City of Cleveland and/or the to "review and to determine Cuyahoga County prosecu- whether c h arges w i l l be New York Times News Service tor," Adrine wrote. issued." A judge in Cleveland ruled The shooting of Tamir last This week, a group of activThursday that probable cause Nov. 22 was one of a series ists and community leaders existed to charge two Cleve- of police killings that have asked the court to have the ofland police officers in the prompted widespread calls ficers arrested under an Ohio death of a 12-year-old boy, for reform inthe use of force law that allows "a private citiTamir Rice, but the judge also by officers. The county pros- zen having knowledge of the said he did not have the pow- ecutor, Timothy McGinty, has facts" to start the process by er to order arrests without been handling the case, and filing an affidavit with a court. a complaint being filed by a while Adrine's ruling is not They argued that the widely prosecutor. binding, it puts added pressure seen video of an officer killing In his ruling, Judge Ronald on McGinty. Tamir had given nearly everyAdrine, presiding judge of the McGinty released a state- one "knowledge of the facts." Municipal Court, found prob- ment indicating he would not The Ohio law, in effect in ablecause to charge Officer be rushed into filing a crimi- various forms since 1960, is Timothy Loehmann, who nal complaint. unusual and rarely invoked, "This case, as with all other and lawyers have disagreed fired the fatal shot, with murder, involuntary manslaugh- fatal use of deadly force cas- about what might actually be ter,reckless homicide and der- es involving law enforcement achieved by using it. eliction of duty. He also found officers, will go to the grand The petitioners argued that probable cause to charge jury," he said, adding: "Ulti- the statute allowed ordinary Loehmann's partner, Officer mately, the grand jury decides citizens to bypass the police Frank Garmback, with negli- whether police officers are and prosecutors. Adrine said gent homicide and dereliction charged or not charged." there was a conflict between of duty. In a statement, a Cleveland the law and rules laid down by "This court determines spokesman, Daniel Williams, the Ohio Supreme Court, so he t hat complaints should b e said city prosecutors would could not issue warrants withfiled by the prosecutor of the leave the case to McGinty out a prosecutor's complaint. By Richard Perez-Pena and Mitch Smith
COIOradO theater ShOOter —Months before JamesI-lolmes opened fire in aColorado movie theater, his ex-girlfriend said she urged him talk to his therapist after he mentioned having thoughts about killing people, thoughts that to her "seemedvery philosophical" and not a concrete threat. Gargi Datta also testified Thursday that during their relationship, Holmes showed nointerest in guns, including when they visited an outdoor store that sold weapons. Shedid not know about his meticulous plans for the July 20, 2012, attack or the arsenal he assembled. Datta andHolmeswere graduate students at the University of Colorado whenthey begandating during their first semester in the fall of 2011. Iraq eSCalatian —The Pentagon's top general said Thursday the U.S. military's reach could extend evenfurther into Iraq if the anti-Islamic State campaign gains momentum, and heheld out the possibility of eventually recommending to President BarackObama that U.S. troops take onthe riskier role of calling in airstrikes. Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the White House's announcementWednesday thatupto450moreU.S.troops would be sent to Iraq to invigorate its flagging campaign against the Islamic State is anatural extension of U.S. assistance. Hesaid the support hub the troops will set up will not produce instant results but may serve as amodel to be replicated elsewhere in Iraq, possibly requiring even moreU.S. troops. AmeriCan fighter —The body of an American who died fighting with Kurdish forces against the Islamic State group in Syria was handed over onThursday to his family at a Turkish border crossing, a Kurdish official said. Hundreds of people turned up in theKurdish town of Kobani to bid farewell to Keith Broomfield before his body was handed over to family at the Mursitpinar gate, said Idriss Naasan. Broomfield, from Massachusetts, died on June 3 inbattle in a Syrian village near Kobani, making him likely the first U.S. citizen to die fighting alongside Kurds against the Islamic State group.
Dtseuies rr
MORE FLOODING IN THE SOUTH
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356
Gay marriage OdjeotlenS — Defying the governor, state lawmakers in North Carolina enacted alaw Thursday that allows state court officials to refuse to perform a marriage if they have a"sincerely held religious objection," a measureaimed at curtailing same-sex unions. TheRepublican-controlled Housevoted 69-41 Thursday to override a veto byGov.Pat McCrory, also a Republican, who refused to sign the marriage bill in May.Thestate Senate voted to override McCrory's veto on June 1.The law, which takes effect immediately, allows magistrates, along with assistant and deputy registers of deeds, to refuse to perform a marriage without being punished.
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Cutting fOOd ratianS —The World Food Program, the U.N.'s anti-hunger agency, said Thursday that it was temporarily cutting rations to a half-million refugees in Kenya bynearly a third, an emergency move to conserve dwindling supplies and funds. The affected refugees in the latest cuts, mostly from Somalia andSouth Sudan, live in camps in northern Kenya.Starting Monday, theannouncement said, they would receive 30percent less sustenancethan usual. The agency, which relies on voluntary donations, has beenmaking monthly distributions of 9,300 tons to the refugees in theKenya camps, with each distribution costing about $9.6 million.
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Chlna's purge —President Xi Jinping of China vowedto hunt "tigers" in his drive to rid the ruling Communist Party of corruption, and on Thursday hedefanged the most dangerous tiger yet — Zhou Yongkang, the nation's former chief of domestic security. Zhou was convicted of abuse of power,accepting bribes and revealing state secrets, and wassentenced to life in prison. With the verdict, Xi has taken the Chinesepolitical system into uncharted territory.
JonathanBachman /The Associated Press
Troy Boyd transports sandbags to ahousethat is trying to protect itself from water caused by the flooding of the RedRiver, on Thursday, in Shreveport, Louisiana. Residents of Shreveport are trying to gather what they can salvage from theeffects of the worst flooding of the RedRiver since1945. The flooding is a result of weeks of heavy rainfall
across the South with billions of gallons of water still heading downstream on its way to the Mississippi River. The river peakedMonday at more than 37feet and just a foot below its historic peak, and is expected to remain abovemajor flood stage — 33 feet — through this weekend. — New YorkTimesNews Service
Investigators believeNewYork prison employee wasinonescapeplot By Michael Hill
and Michael Virtanen The Associated Press
tion and spoke on condition of anonymity. M itchell h a s
— From wire reports
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DANNEMORA, N.Y. — In-
charged. Her son Tobey Mitch- stered the force looking for the vestigators believe a female ell told NBC on Wednesday fugitives to 500 officers from TruGreen.com prison employee had agreed that she checked herself into a 450 a day earlier. O2015 Trusreen Li m i t ed Partnership. All rights reserved. to be the getaway driver in last hospital with chest pains Saturweekend's escape by two kill- day. He said she would not have ers but never showed up, a per- helped the inmates escape. k • • k • k • son close to the case told The A longtime neighbor also Associated Press on Thursday. was stunned by the suspicions '< The manhunt, meanwhile, swirling around Mitchell. R s "I just can't believe she'd do dragged into a sixth day with A ll Dann e r Boots i„-.. a renewed burst of activity by something so stupid," neighWOrk Or searchersin the woods close to bor Sharon Currier said. She $pEgIAL setter ArtDER SOrt BEANBOOTCOiuPABY Hunting Boots the prison after bloodhounds said Mitchell is always happy were said to have picked up to help people, but she's "not the convicts' scent. And Gov. somebody who's off the wall." OFF Andrew Cuomo said investigaShe said Mitchell is a fortors are also "talking to several m er town t a x c o llector i n people who may have facilitat- Dickinson, a community near ed the escape." Dannemora. Quick with a SPRIIIGFIILDARMO RY David Sweat, 34, and Rich- laugh and skilled at sewing, XD Essentials ard Matt, 48, used power tools she has worked for five or more M C) A T K K ' to cut through steel and bricks years at the prison, where her and crawled through an under- also husband works, Currier emm or 40 caliber • In Stock ground steam pipe, emerging sard. Federal or Ma~uz~ from a manhole outside the 40Hundreds of police using NOW! ~MagTech foot walls of the maximum-se- dogs and helicopters blocked See Our curity C l inton C o rrectional off a main road and concentratFIRST LITK Facility in Dannemora, about ed their search on a swampy H UIII N 6 Selection 20 miles south of the Canadian area just a couple of miles CLOTHING border, authorities said. from theprison. Schoolswere A II Leath e r And The person close to the in- dosed, and residents received Georgia vestigation sai d a u t horities automated calls warning them OFF PENDLETQN Romeo Lightweight believe Joyce Mitchell — an to lock their doors, close their Shirts and Blankets S ANDALS ON SA L E r'i NOW instructor at the prison tailor windows and leave outside shop, where the two convicts lights on. worked — had befriended the The governor said that inReg men and was supposed to pick vestigators had received tips 569.99 them up Saturday morning, that the convicts were in the but didn't. area, and tracking dogs had The person said that was picked up the scent Thursday II>.Owl%04 4 R@sF~PsiWpgj one reason the manhunt was morning. h%$ focusedso close to the prison. But he added, "Look, they The person was not autho- could either be four miles from L rized to discuss the investiga- the prison or they could be in
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FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Friday, June 12, the 163rd
day of 2015. Thereare202 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS Net neutrality —Rules that treat the Internet like a public utility and prevent companies from blocking or slowing down someonline traffic will go into effect after a federal appeals court refused to delay them.
HISTORY Highlight:In1965, the British government announced that The Beatles would eachbe made an MBE (Member of the Order of the British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace later in the year; the selection sparked criticism, with some MBEs returning their medals in protest. In1776,Virginia's colonial legislature becamethe first to adopt a Bill of Rights. In1920, the Republican national convention, meeting in Chicago, nominatedWarren G. Harding for president on the 10th ballot; Calvin Coolidge was nominated for vice president. In1939, the National Baseball Hall of Fameand Museum was dedicated in Cooperstown, New York. In1942, Anne Frank, aGerman-born Jewish girl living in Amsterdam, received adiary for her13th birthday, less than a month before sheand her family went into hiding from the Nazis. In1963,civil rights leader Medgar Evers, 37,wasshot and killed outside his homein Jackson, Mississippi. (In1994, Byron De LaBeckwith was convicted of murdering Evers and sentenced to life in prison; he died in 2001.) In1964, South African black nationalist Nelson Mandela was sentenced to life in prison along with seven other people, including Walter Sisulu, for committing sabotage against the apartheid regime (all were eventually released, Mandela in1990). In1967, the SupremeCourt, in Loving v. Virginia, struck down state laws prohibiting interracial marriages. In1987, President Ronald Reagan, during a visit to the divided Germancity of Berlin, publicly challenged Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachevto "tear down this wall." In1994, Nicole Brown Simpson and RonaldGoldmanwere slashed to death outside her Los Angeles home.(O.J. Simpson was later acquitted of the killings in a criminal trial, but was eventually held liable in a civil action.) Ten years ago: Vice President Dick Cheney, reacting to a growing chorus of calls to close the U.S. prison at GuantanamoBay,toldFoxNews Channel there were noplans to do so. Five years ago: A French fishing vessel rescued16-year-old Abby Sunderland from her crippled sailboat in the turbulent southern Indian Ocean, ending the California teen's attempt to sail around the world solo. One year ago:During a tightly controlled tour of a converted warehouse at Port Hueneme, California, a government official said the number of migrant children housed at thefacility after they werecaught entering the country illegally could more than triple to 575 bythe following week.
BIRTHDAYS Banker/philanthropist David Rockefeller is100. Former President GeorgeH.W.Bush is 91. Singer Vic Damone is87. Actor-singer Jim Nabors is 85. Jazz musician Chick Coreais 74. Sportscaster Marv Albert is 74. Singer RoyHarper is 74. Rock musician Bun E.Carlos (Cheap Trick) is 64. Actor Timothy Busfield is 58. Singer Meredith Brooks is 57.Actress Paula Marshall is 51.Actress Frances O'Connor is 48. Actor Rick Hoffman is 45. Actor Jason Mewes is41. Blues musician KennyWayne Shepherd is 38. Actor DaveFranco is 30. Actor Luke Youngblood is 29. — From wire reports
CUTTING EDGE
STUDY
escuero oss ow u ure o isas er reie
Wy oeste trip home seem to o y aster?
A look at last week's DARPA Robotics Challenge, where teams designed robots to perform basic (for humans) tasks for a chance at $2 million. By Amina Khan Los Angeles Times
L OS ANGELES — I n a narrow parking lot, Brett Ken-
gsEX
' ihmc
QsPlfA
nedy and Sisir Karumanchi stand around what looks like
OBOTICS
a suitcase. But then four limbs
extend from its sides, bending and dicking into position. Two spread out like legs and two rise up like arms as the robot goes through several poses, looking for all the world like a Transformer doing yoga. This is RoboSimian, a proto-
sessions, seated in a chair.Researchersasked test subjects,
seemed to take a lifetime,
minutes had passed, and mon-
while the (more or less identical) leg that brought you home felt like it flew by. Scientists have noticed this "return trip effect" too, and are beginning to hone their understanding of why we experience it.
itored subjects' heart activity electrocardiograms toassess
i n d i vidual
who were not allowed to have
access to docks, to tell them each time they thought three
whether the autonomic ner-
vous system plays a role in the effect. The team also administered a questionnaire at the
end of the two movies to see if participants perceived that one trip took longer than the other.
In the end, only that last test — the after-the-fact questionnaire — revealed strong evimeasure time as it passes, dence of the return trip effect. "During the initial and reor the way we remember the trips we take after the turn trip, (participants) do not fact, or perhaps a bit of seem to experience thepassing it has to do with the way our bodies experience and
M&L4R RII3IIK Photos by Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times
ABOVE: Team IHMC's robot exits a vehicle successfully during the DARPA Robotic Challenge last week. IHMC came in second among 24 teams. BELOW: Team SNU's robot completes a 360-degree valve shutoff.
both. This week, a team in
time any differently, but when
Japan released a new re- asked afterward, they have a port in the journal PLOS strong feeling that the return
save lives when the next disasr Ilil
f rom
around the U.S. and the globe have sent their best and bright-
est bots to compete in a grueling obstade course — a robot Olympics, if you will. The challenge has been three years in the making.
viewed them i n
You may have noticed it the last time you went on a long journey — by foot, by car or by plane: the outbound portion of your trip
In past years, research-
rescue robots that could help ter hits. T wenty-four t e ams
long, and the participants
Los Angeles Times
ers have suggested that
R O B O T IC S C H A L L E N G E
type rescue robot whose build-
ers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory hope can win the $2 million prize at the DARPA Robotics Challenge. The goal: to foster a new generation of
By Eryn Brown
I,
4., !
'I 'I /
Now, just days before the contest in Pomona, the JPL en-
ONE detailing the latest effort to solve the mystery.
trip felt shorter than the initial
memories alone. "The return trip effect
was not involved in Ozawa's
is nota matter of measur-
In an email, van de Ven told the Los Angeles Times that he
trip did," explained psycholThis group's take? That the ogist Niels van de Ven, of Tilreturn trip effect is created burg University in the Netherby travelers' memories of lands, who has studied the retheir journeys — and those turn trip effect in the past but research.
ing time itself. Rather, it
gineers think they are ready
depends on time judgment thought the new study supportbased on memory," said ed his own finding that the re-
— but they're putting the robot
R yosuke Ozawa o f
the wall are a valve that must
be turned, a high shelf and a low shelf, each holding two power tools. To get into the "room," the
275-pound robot sits back on its haunches and carefully wheels through the doorway on its butt.
JPL, to fit indoors.
er plantneeded to open some
Hong has worked on several different kinds of robots, some inspired by animals, including a snake and an amoeba robot. He even worked with Kennedy several years ago on a predecessor to RoboSimian named
valves to release steam to avert an explosion, but could not get close enough, fast enough, because of the massive amounts
Inside the laboratory, Kyle LEMUR. Edelberg is staring at a computBut for this challenge, Hong er screenshowingarepresenta- has chosen to stick with a hution of RoboSimian and what it manoid form. After all, he says,
of radiation. If robots had been available
to perform these tasks, they could have mitigated the di-
saster, the thinking goes. But the technology doesn't yet exist. DARPA, or the Defense
Advanced Research Projects check on the robot; his senses each do one thing well — climb Agency, is an arm of the Deare limited by RoboSimian's. poles or perhaps squeeze into fense Department that seeks to The robot freezes when it hard-to-reach places. That's develop these kinds of emergreachesfor a triangle-shaped useful in specific circumstanc- ing technologies — and they pull. It's hard for the robot to es during a disaster, but not all do so by putting on these highsee the thin metal, and hard for of them. Here, the robots will risk, high-reward contests. the human to pick it out even if be asked to do a wide variety The robots have to drive a RoboSimian does see it. of human tasks, so a bipedal car to the door, but the hardest This is how operating a res- approach makes sense. part of the ride is getting out cue robot will feel in a disaster of the vehicle without falling, zone, Kennedy says. Robots Facing obstacles Pratt says. He goes through will be sent to perform reconGill Pratt, program man- the motions of some of the naissance or fix malfunction- ager of the DARPA Robotics assigned tasks: He turns a ing hardware in ravaged areas Challenge, grips the handle of valve, mimes drilling through that are too dangerous for hu- a white door under a yellow a window where drywall will mans. So being able to under- warning sign that reads, "Cau- be placedand climbs over the stand and work with the robot tion: high voltage. Do not enter concrete blocks. But before he — and practice with it — is key. this enclosure." completes the course, he gesOutside, RoboSimian reachHe pushes on the door, em- tures at a hole in a wall: a myses for a drill on the lower shelf. bedded in a wall of faux brick tery task that none of the teams The bot pushes against the and corrugated metal, to reveal know about yet. drill to gauge its location, but the real obstacle course, sitting pushes too far: The drill tips in a field in front of the grand- Fall down, get up and falls over. stand at the Fairplex in PomoThe two-day competition Most of the other robots in na. Threemore identicalcours- gives each team two chances to the challenge are humanoides are lined up beside it. earn a high score. On the first they have a head, a torso, two The course is a three-sided day, RoboSimian is one of the arms and two legs. But walk- stage that's open to spectators top performers, as is CHIMP, ing on two legs is a major bal- filling the bleachers above. the other apelike robot in the ancing challenge — a gust of Along the wall, the lanky en- running. The behemoth built wind or a swinging door could gineerfaces a familiar set of by Carnegie Mellon University knock the robots over. objects: a tall black pipe with quickly becomes a fan favorite "The thing that would al- an orange valve that can be on the first day when it does most guarantee our winning turned like a steering wheel what no other fallen robot has the program," Kennedy says, and a staggered pair of shelves done: It picks itself back up and "would be if the Santa Anas that await power tools. Near keeps going, earning roars of kickup." the end of the room, a pile of approval and the only perfect concrete cinder blocks lies in eight-point score. 'Saving theworld' front of the exit to the other On the second day, UCLA's Across town, engineers at side. The robots can choose THOR-RD robot, like many of UCLA are also working on whether to clamber over the the other bipedal robots, takes sees. He can't walk outside and
their entry into the DARPA
the
turn trip effect originates from
Dynamic Brain Network "a violation of expectations." "People are often too optiLaboratory at the Graduate
through its paces. RoboSimian stands in front of a doorway leading to a zigzagging chipboard wall. Along
a nimal-inspired r obots c a n
cinder blocks or wrestle their
challenge. As students pore waythrough debris that willbe over papers and fiddle with strewn next to it when the comelectronics, professor Dennis petition starts. Hong shows off two models of The robots will compete their humanoid robot, THOR- to beat the clock: Finish up to RD, one of which sports shock- eighttasks before an hour runs ing pink hair. out. Four robots will compete "We're trying to literally at a time, each in its own stage save the world and save hu- on the field, so that spectators manity," Hong says. But "we can compare their progress. want to have some fun." The idea for this DARPA Hong, who moved from challenge grew out of the diVirginia Tech l ast y e ar, saster at the Fukushima-Daiibounces around the lab space, chi nuclear power plant in
mincing steps toward its target,
but falls backward partwaybetween the valve and the drill. It's out of the running for the
big prize. After its second performance, RoboSimian also falls
short, ending up in fifth place. CHIMP's high score from the first day helps earn it third
At one point during the crisis,
course, much like the one at
employees at the nuclear pow-
mistic about an initial trip after
ences at Osaka University. To test out what is going on when the trip home seems shorter, Ozawa and colleagues, then at Kyo-
which it (feels) quite long," he said. "When heading back we think, 'It's going to take a long time again,' after which it feels not as bad."
to University, created an
Or perhaps the return trip
experiment in which 20 effect exists simply because healthy men, b e tween people believe it does and re20 and 30 years of age, spond in kind, he speculated. watched varying combinaOzawa said he would like to tions of movies filmed by examine the effect in further an experimenter who held detail — analyzing what hapa camera in front of the pens when a filmed traveler rechest while walking two turns to his original station via different routes. Half of the
a different route, for instance.
group viewed an outbound and return round trip on a single route; the other half,
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
walking videos of two different routes in separate
locations. The videos were all approximately 2 6
m i n utes
Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
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In our effort to provide dental care to children in Deschutes County who can't afford it, the Kemple Memorial Children's Dental Clinic wishes to thank the following dentists for their volunteered services in May, 2015.
VOLUNTEER DENTISTS TREATING KEMPLE KIDS IN THEIR OWN OFFICES. MAY, 2015 Dr. David Bitner Dr. Scot Burgess
Dr. J eff Johnson Dr. Maureen Porter Dr. EliSe BLlrruS Dr. Catherine Quas Dr. Karen Coe Dr. B r ian Rosenzweig Dr. Kelli Fowles Dr. Tom Rheuben Dr. Taylor Fowles D r . Andrew Timm Dr. Benjamin Grieb Dr. Jeff Timm Dr Jay Gronemyer Dr. Ryan Timm Dr. Mark Jensen Dr . Peter Yonan
place and $500,000; second place and $1 million goes to Running Man from Team IHMC Robotics i n F l orida. Team KAIST from South Ko-
where th e U C BC-Universi- Japan, after a massive earth- rea takes the $2 million prize ty of Pennsylvania team has quake and tsunami in 2011. after dispatching all eight tasks
built a smaller version of a
School of Frontier Biosci-
on Saturday with amazing speed.
At the Kemple Memorial Children's DentalClinic, ourmission Is toimprovethe health and well-beingofchildren InDeschutesCounty byfacilitating critical preventative, educationalanddentaltreatment servicesfor childrenwhosefamilies cannot access basic dentalcare.Weadvocate for all childrenneedingtimely, highquality dentalcare.
A4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
Jail
Coughlin and Michelle BurConduct reflecting discredrows, also claims that the su- it upon the sheriff's office or Continued from A1 pervisors "permitted a culture that hinders "county perforA wrongful death lawsuit of unconstitutional treatment mance" is considered reason filed May 26 on behalf of of detainees" in the jail. for disciplinary action. Mays' father, Edwin Mays Jr., "I certainly have a great Deschutes County Counsel names two sergeants, Tedd deal of empathy for their Dave Doyle said Thursday the Morris and Brian Bishop, as families," said Coughlin of county's defense preparation defendants. The lawsuit also the sheriff's employees on for the lawsuit is in a holding names D eschutes C ounty, Thursday. " And I a m s u r e pattern until the state's invesSheriff Larry Blanton and they are very regretful of their tigation is complete. seven deputies. actions." Central Oregon's major The lawsuit asserts Morris According to the collec- crimes team did an initial inand Bishop failed to properly tive bargaining agreement quiry right after Mays' death. supervise deputies the night reached between the county The sheriff's office was the Mays died, resulting in abuse, and the sheriff's employees lead agency as part of the neglect and ultimately, the association, disciplinary ac- team's regular rotation. man's death. Mays' father, rep- tion such as demotion must — Reporter: 541-383-0376, resented by attorneys Jennifer have "just cause." cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com
Health Continued from A1 B ut other
s t ates a r e
concerned about adding costs to their Medicaid programs, and some are in court fighting a 2013 U.S. Department of Labor regulation that would apply minimum wage and overtime rules to home care workers, who have long been exempt. In Washington and Oregon, unions played a role in raising wages for home care workers in t h ose states' Medicaid programs. Montana and North D a-
Fire
Creek canyon, above Aspen The fire caused the closure Hall. According to Bond, the of Shevlin Park and Johnson Continued from A1 fire was burning on both sides Ranch roads, which were reAround 7:15 p.m., Howe of Tumalo Creek, and Howe opened late Thursday. Due to said the warnings for the three added that the fire was not the road closure, Shevlin Park subdivisions were set to be lift- following the creek but rather was basically closed as well ed at midnight. burning up the creek canyon. Thursday afternoon and evePfiffner lives in the Shevlin Less than an hour later, Howe ning. Howe said late Thursday Ridge subdivision, adjacent to said the Shevlin Fire had t he southern portion of t h e where the warning was in ef- stopped growing. By 5:40 p.m. park, home to most of its popfect into the evening. fire crews had a hose line en- ular trails, is open. The northThe fire was first reported circling the fire. ern portion of Shevlin Park, to 911 by a hiker at I:27 p.m. Along with Bend Fire, fire- north of the road, was closed At that time the fighters from the Deschutes until today as firefighters put Related ffre was I/10 of National Forest, the Bureau out hot spots in the burn area. • Morearea an acre, and it of Land Management andthe At its peak the fire drew fires,B1 started near the Oregon Department of For- about 90 firefighters, Howe i ntake fo r t h e estry fought the blaze. Fire said. A large crew was set to Tumalo Irrigation District ca- engines from fire departments keep watch on the fire late nal, according to Deputy Fire in Cloverdale, Sisters, La Pine Thursday. "There is going to Marshal Jeff Bond. The fire and Sunriver also responded be about 40 people on the fire mainly burned on land over- to the fire, ready to help pro- overnight," Howe said Thursseen by the Bend Park & Rec- tect structures. The fire did day night. reation District. An air tanker circled the
not spread to any homes or
other buildings. Shevlin Fire — making rumFrom his vantage point over bling passes over Central Shevlin Park, Glen Ardt, 62, of Oregon Community College Bend, said Thursday that he and other parts of west Bend saw smoke, the helicopter, the — but did not drop any retar- air tanker and an observation dant, Howe said. A helicopter plane. "I mean a lot of activity out scooped water from a pond at Shevlin Sand & Gavel, located there," he said, but he did not near the fire, and dropped it see flames. Ardt lives in the on the blaze. Shevlin Commons subdivision Around 3:15 p.m., Howe de- and was joined in watching the scribed the fire as "spotting" firefighting Thursday after— embers being blown about noon by one of his neighbors and starting new fires — up and her friend visiting from the east side of the Tumalo the San Francisco Bay Area.
The Shevlin Fire b urned
close to land scorched by the 3,350-acre Awbrey Hall Fire
25 years ago this August. Howe, a veteran firefighter with Bend Fire, remembers the Awbrey Hall Fire well. The
fast moving fire destroyed 22 homes. While the location of the
Shevlin Fire reminded him of the Awbrey Hall Fire, the conditions were different. "It was a lot hotter back then and even drier," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
3.4mi ionincrow un ing sought or a porn ilm inspace By Justin Wm. Moyer The Washington Post
About half a century ago, humankind — inspired as much by Cold War geopolitics as the desire to go where no one
has gone before — set its sights on that most distant horizon: space, the final frontier. About 50 years in, that most
distant horizon seems as far away as ever. Sure, we put satellites in orbit and sent men to the moon. But as NASA faces
budget cuts and private corporations jockey for position in what's now called the "space
"Who else can say
man race shouldn't have all its eggs in one basket, or on one
that they were the first
planet. Let's hope we can avoid
porn stars to work in space?This is an amazing opportunity to make history and to
work two dream jobs at once: porn star and astronaut."
dropping the basket until we have spread the load." W hether Lovia an d S i ns
would really be the first to copulate in orbit remains an open
question. NASA and Russia's space agency have denied that astronauts rounded the bases — but, for the record, at least
one married couple has gone
— Performer Eva Lovia to spacetogether, and other astronauts have been accused of flirting. " If a stronauts have h a d
"Jetsons"-ish
you can imagine," proposed space sex, it would have been hope of living extraterrestrial- sexplorer Johnny Sins said in very difficult," Slate conduded ly looks like a 1960s daydream. PornHub's IndieGogo video. in an examination of the topic But today, an enterprising "I've had sex on almost ev- in 2007. Not only does space company has jump-started ery different continent with offer limited privacy and a very what remains of the space race all kinds of different women. busy schedule, but the physDon't get me wrong: I love ics could present a physical in a most unusual fashion. PornHub, which claims to what I do and who I do, but this problem. "Zero gravity can induce be the world's biggest pornog- is a really unique opportunity raphy site, is crowdfunding to break ground in the adult nausea — a less-than-promisfor a sex tape filmed in zero industry." ing sign for would-be lovers," gravity. Sins added, "I'm excited to Christopher Beam wrote. "As"Pornhub is teaming up be part of the PornHub space tronauts also perspire a lot in with top ranking adult studio program for this exact reason: flight, meaning sex without Digital Playground in joining We're going to make porn — in gravity would likely be hot, the ranks of Armstrong and space." wet, and surrounded by small Sins' would-be co-pilot was droplets of sweat. In addition, Gagarin by pioneering a oneof-a-kind mission to defy grav- equally enthused. people normally experience "Who else can say that they lower blood pressure in space, ity, make history, and push the boundaries of i ntergalactic were the first porn stars to which means reduced blood 'Sexploration' by filming the workin space?" Eva Lovia said. flow, which means ... well, you first-ever sextape in space," the "This is an amazing opportuni- know what that means." site's $3.4 million appeal reads. ty to make history and to work That PornHub would hope "In doing so, we will not only two dream jobs at once: porn to become a player in a field be changing the face of the star and astronaut." dominated by state governadult industry, we will also be While Lovia and, ahem, Sins ments and billionaires such chronicl ing how a core com- might make unlikely pioneers, as Elon Musk speaks volumes ponent of human life operates talk of Martian colonies and about the size of the adult inwhile in orbit." extraterrestrial emi g r ation dustry. While PornHub is priNo, it's not a joke. must include an understanding vately held and its valuation is "This is actually 100 percent of what doing the nasty is like hard to estimate, it's said that real," Corey Price, one of Porn- off of planet Earth. If human- 30 percent of all data transmithub's vice presidents, wrote kind must flee Earth because tedby the Internet is porn. "YouPorn, Tube8, and Pornto The Washington Post in an of aresource crisis or asteroid email. impact, sex will be required for hub — they're all vast, vast As fans of f i lms such as the species to survive. (Absent sites that dwarf almost every"Flesh Gordon" (1974) and in vitro fertilization or other thing except the Googles and "Sex Trek" (1990) already sex-free"Int erstellar"-stylesce- Facebooks of the Internet," Exknow, filmmakers have long narios, of course.) tremeTech wrote in 2012. been interested in exploring Even physics superstar PornHub's s e x ploration the erotic possibilities of the Stephen Hawking said sex in crowdfunding campaign, howouter limits. But in proposing space was important — in a ever, had yet to show much to send real people — or, at roundabout way. musde of press time, raising "I believe that the long-term just over $13,000 of its $3.4 milleast, porn stars — into orbit to engage in a biological activ- future of the human race must lion dollar goal. Interested supity researchers might actual- be in space," Hawking said porters of the campaign take i ndustry," t h e
ly need to know more about, PornHub has fused innovation and titillation. "I've had sex pretty much
everywhere and every way
in 2010. "It will b e difficult
note: A $150,000 donation gets
enough to avoid disaster on
you "one of the 2 spacesuits
planet Earth in the next hun-
worn by our sextronauts complete with underwear, plus a
dred years, let alone the next thousand, or million. The hu-
swagbag!"
kota used federal stimulus dollars to help fund increases. And in Maine, Democrats are pushing legislation that would raise
Lynne Sladky/The Associated Press file photo
Home health aide Maria Fernandez, left, helps Bemardo Vega, 88, make the bed as she performs household chores for him andhis wife. to pay workers overtime, he
money to comply with the
said, they may cut workers' hours.
rules, and in both cases it was
Kitzhaber, the overtime rules
who relies on an attendant's
mightforce Oregon to reduce
help 20 hours a week, said those regulations would make
the pay of home care workonly about two-thirds of what ers to $15 an hour from $9 Even states that typically would be needed. an hour, according to Dem- are friendly to unions or that Kelly Buckland of the Naocratic House Speaker offer more benefits to home tional Council on Independent Mark Eves, who is sponsor- care workers are concerned Living, which advocates for ing the measure. about the costs to Medicaid, people with disabilities, also But Ohio has stripped the federal-state health insur- opposes the regulations beh ome care w o r kers o f ance system for the poor. cause of the impact they might union bargaining rights, In Oregon, former Gov. have on workers. Buckland said he's worried and has resisted giving John Kitzhaber, a Democrat, them health benefits, argu- wrote a letter to the Depart- some states may reduce higher ing that they can get health ment of Labor last year asking pay to minimum wage and use care insurance on Afford- for a delay in implementing the savings to cover overtime. able Care Act exchanges. the regulations. Paying work- He's particularly concerned by Meanwhile, the Depart- ers overtime and for travel initial plans in Arkansas that ment of Labor regulation time between clients could would limit home care workthat would extend overcost the state's Medicaid pro- ers to a 40-hour week and only time and minimum wage gram $74 million over two one client per day. Buckland, a quadriplegic protections to home care years, he argued. According to workers has been tied up in court, with some states
(Connecticut,
Illi n ois, hours for some workers, while Iowa, Maryland, Massa- some beneficiaries would have chusetts, Minnesota, New to start getting care from mulMexico and New York) tiple workers. submitting briefs in f aOregon is one of the highvor of the rule but others er-paying states for home (Arizona, Georgia, Kan- care workers, at least within sas, Michigan, Nevada, the Medicaid program, where North Dakota, Tennessee, they earn $13.75 an hour Texas and Wisconsin) in compared with the statewide opposition. median pay of nearly $11. OrThe national median egon's workers also receive hourly wage for home care health insurance that includes workers in 2014 was $9.38. vision and dental coverage, That is more than the fed- and four paid days off, which eral minimum wage, but can be used as sick time, acfew home care workers re- cording to the state union that ceive overtime pay, health pushed for the deal.
it difficult for hi s attendant
to get enough hours, and he would probably have to hire multiple attendants. He said the situation is akin to a busi-
ness that would hire a temp before paying overtime to permanent staff.
Buckland said his organization has long advocated for better attendant pay because it
leads to a higher quality workforce. He just doubts the feder-
al overtime regulations would deliver that.
"If this regulation actually required states to pay existing insurance, sick leave or Heather Conroy, executive home care overtime and actupaid days off. The work- director of the Service Em- ally gave them the money to force is mostly female and ployees International Union pay it, we wouldn't be fighting minority, and many work- in Oregon, which represents this," he said. "We think this ers live near or below the 20,000 home care workers, is actually going to hurt the poverty level, according said turnover has decreased workers." to t h e P a r aprofessional sharply with higher pay and Healthcare Institute, which benefits. studies the home care Dombi said few states are See us for retractable financially prepared for the workforce. awnings, exterior solar While many home care regulation. He said only two screens, shade structures. workers say they enjoy states — New York and CalSun ehen you wantit, t heir w o rk , t h e y o f t e n ifornia — have set aside any shade ehen Jou needit. struggle to make ends meet. Patricia
O' H a r a
of
Queens, New York, who has been a home health aideforfiveyears,isone of them. She began working in the field by taking care of her father, who had Par-
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kinson's disease. After he died, she decided to continue with the work because
~~ ANilNUAE.
it felt meaningful. But she earns only $10 an hour. "Taking care of other people is a good feeling and very therapeutic," she said. "I'm poor now, but I find it
I' ~
very rewarding." O'Hara cares full time
for one client, a prime gig in the world of home care
((
work because she doesn't h ave to l o s e t i m e a n d
money traveling between clients.
Care worker
SINCE 1940
A g nes
"THEBICGESTLITTLESHOW IN THE WORLDN
Maitland, 61, also of New
York City, must juggle multiple clients. The Barbados native said between subway fare, low pay and unpaid hours between clients, she sometimes struggles to buy a bag of rice. She's open to working as many as 60 hours a week but that doesn't usually happen. In addition to low pay and job instability, workers also can be injured on the job, often from lifting clients. But conditions are im-
proving for O'Hara and Maitland: They belong to a local union that's helped negotiate higher pay, and
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even some health benefits. The fight over the stalled
Department ofLabor overtime regulations is indicative of a split over how to
create a stable, high-quality home care workforce.
Unions re p resenting workers favor the regulations. But B il l
D o m bi,
attorney for the National Association for Home Care and Hospice, which represents home care agencies, said his members are c oncerned about
home
care remaining affordable. If state Medicaid programs don't have enough money
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FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Trade
could be a razor-thin mar- and depress wages at home. gin during today's votes, with Vote counts remained fluid on House Speaker John Boehner, each side, but by late Thursday
Continued from A1 Republicans remained fo- R-Ohio, merely saying that he cused on trying to pry loose will match the vote total that votes from rank-and-file con- he has privately promised servativeswho otherwise sup- Obama. "We'll do our part," Boehner port expanded trade but have made a political living offbash- told reporters Thursday. ing the Democratic president. Upward of 200 Republicans During a critical vote Thurs- could support the president, day evening, 34 Republicans and about 20 Democrats have opposedtheirleadership and publiciy pledged their support nearly sabotaged the debate — a total that would just barebefore it even formally start- ly clear the majority needed to ed, but eight Democrats broke send the legislation to Obama's ranks to set the stage for a pair desk for his signature. of votes today that will deterThe centerpiece of the legmine the outcome of Trade Pro- islation would grant the presmotion Authority. ident six years of "fast track" When the gavel fell, giving authority to f reely negotiate Obama and Republicansan trade accords, limiting Conearly win, Rep. Paul Ryan, gress' role in their approval R-Wis., pumped his arm, fist- to a simple up-or-down vote. bumped three Republicans Obama has said he needs this around him and high-fived authority to negotiate the fianother. The chairman of the
nal details of the Trans-Pacific
fits multinational corporations while doinglittle for the middle
the trade authority, but instead
from Richard Trumka, presi-
is a good one," she told reporton a related provision that ers early Thursday. class. would provide financial assisThere will be two votesThe battle has pitted friend tance to workers and commu- one for the trade authority, against friend, nowhere more nities harmed by foreign trade expectedto receive huge GOP so than Pelosi and Rep. Rosa deals. That Trade Adjustment support and some Democratic DeLauro, D-Conn., the fiery Assistance legislation, or TAA, support, and one for worker liberal from New Haven who has historically won wide sup- assistance, which would norhas girded for this fight for two port among Democrats, and its m ally garner huge Democratic years. Italian grandmothers inciusion alongside fast-track support and some Republican who areclosefriends, Pelosi authority has typically helped votes. and DeLauro fought in private persuade skeptical Democrats Despite Obama's efforts, during a leadership meeting to support the overall package. some Democrats opposed to Wednesday night over the tacBut DeLauro and her allies the trade deal pushed to vote tics DeLauro and her union threatened to oppose the pend- against their normal beliefs allies were deploying to defeat ing TAA bill, raising concerns and take down the TAA vote, the legislation, according to about a provision that would because that would then saboseveral senior Democrats. pay for the trade assistance by tage the broader trade agenda. By Thursday's votes, the duo cutting Medicare, as well as "I'm voting against it because held an animated discussion in language keeping public em- it's a way to increase the chancpublic on the House floor. ployees from claimingbenefits. es for TPA," said Rep. Sander Pelosi has kept her plans And the AFL-CIO has led the Levin, D-Mich., the ranking close to the vest throughout outside effort to oppose TAA in Democrat on the Ways and
dent of the AFL-CIO. Late Thursday afternoon,
this process, but those close to her and White House advisers
a tacticalmove to killthe wider
McDonough hurried back to the Capitol for another meeting
say that she does not want to
After a series of modifications made at Pelosi's request,
the focus — from the Capitol corridors to the West Wing-
had narrowed tothe most liberalfaction ofHouseDemocrats. Top Obama
a d m inistra-
tion officials, inciuding White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, Treasury Secretary Jack Lew and Labor Secretary Thomas Perez, were s ummoned to the Capitol by House
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to address skeptical Democrats on Thursday. In an
unusual setup, the presidential team addressedtheDemocrats in a closed-door basement
meeting room, and after they left, Democrats then heard
Ways and Means Committee, Partnership, so the other na- with Pelosi. Ryan served as hisparty's 2012 tions know that Obama can The debate has laid bare the vice-presidential nominee and submit the deal without con- deep divis ion among Demolead critic of Obama's first- gressional tinkering. crats on economic policy, with term agenda. Unions have argued that an- an increasingly vocal coalition Leaders in n either p arty other round of trade deals will of liberal activists saying that expressed confidence in what lead to more offshoring of jobs increased global trade bene-
Businesses That left Lion Brothers reeling. Ganz had to shut down
employees, enabling some to survive where they otherwise may have gone under entirely. And that's probably more cost-effective than trying to
the looms, leaving boxes of intricate leftovers stacked
retrain someone for a job that may not exist.
Continued from A1
in the oldfactory's recesses,
Now, as Congress stands
and lay off dozens of people. ready to pass a measure that But it wasn't the end of the would expedite approval of enterprise: With the help of
a small government agency that advises businesses that
the T r ans-Pacific P a r tnership, a massive trade deal with Pacific Rim countries,
the program's defenders are wondering why more money she was able to open a much isn't going towards helping smaller, high-tech facility in c ompanies adjust to all t h e leased space down the road new disruptive forces that and start looking toward new will result. "Let's say you have a firm markets. For Ganz, the hand with 250 employees, and you up was a welcome relief. "Instead of, 'I'm from the can save those jobs, you don't government and I'm here to have to pay unemployment hurt,' it was 'I'm from (the insurance, or pay for retrainMid-Atlantic Trade A d just- ing and health care," said ment Assistance Center) and Joni Waddell, who runs the I'm here to assist,'" she said. Trade Adjustment Assistance have been caught in the crossdrafts of international trade,
deal.
would eventually support a Republicans unveiled a com- program that they believed in,
see Obama's agenda fall at the hands of Democrats. DeLauro
is leading the charge against trade with an approach that
some Democrats view as any means necessary. The final wrangling among
p romise that r e placed t h e Medicare cut with increased tax revenue and laid out a voting process that suited the
Democratic leader. "The substitute that we have
Democrats is not focused on
value-added product lines, and look for clients that ben-
eiPe ~~-I '
j
"
$4QlI)li)' ljl(il)I)l]l."
:j(( ( jl(g ~ t
i ...
making that vote anticlimactic.
"Their brains may suggest that they should vote against TAA, but their hearts make it very
difficult," said Rep. Steve Israel, D-NY.
but refrains from advertising his services, for getting people's hopes up when there's n ot enough money to go around.
efit from the flexibility and speed of having production located nearby. "It's so small it's a speck, The value of assistance is capped at $75,000, and must really, so it's unknown" how be matched by the recipients much demand exists, Holbert themselves, to make sure said. "We do as much outthey're also invested in their reach as we need to to serve own success — like getting the firms we have the funds to McKinsey to come help out, serve."
®.~ 0 •
Means Committee. Some Pelosi confidants predicted that most Democrats
i
at half the price. Sometimes,
'1 T V t V 0 0 0 V
Eydia DePillis I The Washington Post
Lion Brothers built its new "micro facility" for producing Girl
Scout patches in Owings Mills, Maryland. Lion Brothers hed long designed their merit badges end other patches, end the Scouts agreed to bring ell the production that had taken place in Chine back to the U.S.
firms need help understand- Too little, too late? ing what is happening to Of course, the larger truth them. around trade adjustment as"These folks, once upon a sistance is that it's probably time, they were quite success- too little, too late. ful and competitive. and when The vast majority of Amerthey get hit with imports, they ica'sfactories and jobs were don't know it," said William lost over the last 30 years, Bujalos, who runs the Mid-Atlantic Trade Adjustment As-
as the North American Free Trade Agreement and then
sistance Center. "Their imme- permanent normaltrade rediate reaction is to start using lations with China allowed ing expectations. So instead to bake onto fabric. working capital to r educe industrialists to relocate proof a factory, we called it a miAs for j obs, Lion Broth- their prices. By the time they duction overseas. Thinking "It allows us to do a couple Center in Denver. "It is kind cro facility." ers employs only 10 percent realize that wasn't what they of manufacturing as a secthings at once rather than one of odd timing that just as the In business jargon, that's of the 350 people it had at its should've been doing, three or ond-world strength, the U.S. thing at a time." Trans-Pacific P a r tnership known as "lean manufactur- peak payrolL But now, it's po- four years go by, and they're did little to retrofit factories Trade Adjustment A ssis- might be passed, our program ing": A way to make all pro- sitioned to start expanding introduced to us." to keep some production at tance has long been a bar- has just gotten a pretty gigan- cesses as effi cient as possi- again. Occasionally, the ll Trade home, says Mike Galiazzo, "Will we get back to 350'? Adjustment Assistance Cen- president of th e R egional gaining chip in fights over tic cut, considering we're pret- ble. The new facility delivers free trade agreements, with ty small in the first place." I'm not sure," Ganz said. "But ters across the country enproduct in a fraction of the M anufacturing I n stitute o f labor unions pacified by the time. That inherently means if it was at that level, we'd be counter companies that they Maryland, a coalition of commoney that goes to help re- 'Leanmanufactur1ng' less labor, and Ganz did have producing a lot more goods." know they can't save. But the panies in the state. train people who have lost "They just kind of capitulatAfter losing the Customs to make some painful layoffs Those are only a few of the Pacific N o r thwest's D a vid their jobs to import competi- and Border Patrol contract, — though many of her union- ways in which the program Holbert says that there's usu- ed. They just said 'Oh, we can't tion. The massive fight over Ganz kept the factory open ized employees were close to helps turn around firms. It ally some way to keep them in compete with the Chinese,'" whether to g r ant President for months, hanging on to retirement a n yway. T h o se could be marketing, or better business. Galiazzo sighed. And now, Barack Obama the power her employees in hopes that who stuck with her learned financial management, or fig"Small companies are sur- the number of firms around to "fast track" t r ade deals the agency would change its to do almost entirely differ- uring out how to offer design prisingly flexible, and they to save is approaching zero. through Congress is no ex- mind. Her longtime bankers ent jobs, overseeing machines services as well as simply are experts in their niche, and "There are good programs, ception — liberals say the abandoned her. At times, she rather than operating them. goods for sale. Often, facto- there's almost always a direc- but we're running out of placproposed funding level of wondered whether it was posTake Laura Williams, a 28- ries that have been produc- tion to go in to remain viable," es to go knock on the door $610 million yearly is too low, sible to maintain any domes- year Lion Brothers veteran, ing commodity goods need to he said. He thinks there are and ask them to turn in an while conservatives say it's tic manufacturing at all — no as she lines up a cloth full of find more specialized, higher more firms out there to help, application." an expensive welfare pro- stranger to g l obalization, "9"s in a digital cutting magram that shouldn't exist at Lion Brothers has had a fac- chine and types some instrucall. tory in China since the 1980s tions into the computer termiIt's true, the part of the pro- for more labor-intensive prod- nal right beside it. "You got to tell it what to gram that helps individuals ucts, including university lo— which takes up the vast go-wear and jerseys for major do," said Williams, with satismajority of the money — has sports leagues. faction. "I enjoy it, because it's shown limited success in getBut finally, a partnership a challenge. And it comes out Oll t0fjgy ting people back to work. If c ame through with on e o f perfect. No raggedy edges." foro~ T hat's where t r ad e a d people do manage to replace her longstanding clients: The the jobs they lost, the engage- Girl Scouts of America. Lion j ustment a s sistance c a m e quOtel ments tend to pay less; a 2012 Brothers had long designed in. Ganz was struggling to study commissioned by the their merit badges and elabo- make everything work, and
Have you been keeping up with your home exterior painting, staining and maintenance?
Department of Labor found
that the costs of the program
rate ceremonial patches, and
needed some help to evaluate
the Scouts agreed to bring
far outweighed the benefits. But the tiny slice that goes
all the production that had
the new business model and make sure it was sound. She
to help companies, which
taken place in China back to
also had started doing more
the U.S.That gave Ganz the wherewithal to entirely rein-
research and development
has been funded at between
$10 million and $16 million per year since 2002 — and dropped from $15.8 million
at the new facility, but didn't
vent production: She leased quite have the bandwidth to space in a nondescript office commercialize the new techpark and filled it with high- nologies they were coming to 12.5 million in 2015 — has tech machines that do the up with. Finally, she needed a pretty good track record. stitching, backing, and finish- help figuring out what other According to a Government ing by themselves. In fact, she markets might be accessible A ccountability O ff ice r e - doesn't even call it a factory. beyond athletics and other "We wanted everyone to port from 2012, the program logo wear — perhaps fashion, helped small firms boost sales think of tiny," Ganz said. "We with the shimmering appliand productivity and retain wanted to be accurate in sell- ques they were learning how
THIS WCCKCHD'5 ISSUC II y
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
Spain approves citizenship path for descendants of expelled Jews By Raphael Minder New York Times News Service
intense interest in countries like Argentina, Israel and Tur-
"There will no doubt be a large number of requests, but
M ADRID — S e eking t o key, which have significant redress one of the darkest Sephardic communities. chapters of Spain's history, the The change in the l aw Spanish Parliament on Thurs- should be seen as "an act of day approved a long-awaited historic reparation for a tragic law devised to open the way and serious error," Mario Edufor citizenship for thousands ardo Cohen, president of the of Sephardic Jews whose an- Center for Research and Difcestors were expelled in 1492. fusion of Sephardic Culture, "This law says a lot about based in Buenos Aires, Argenwhat we were in the past, what tina, said recently in Madrid, we Spaniards are today and on the sidelines of a meeting of what we want to be in the fu- representatives of Sephardic ture — an open, diverse and communities from around the
it's too early to say how many and what portion will actually
tolerant Spain," Rafael Catala, the Spanish justice minister,
world. The law is set to come into
residency or
told lawmakers Thursday. The law was first proposed by the Spanish government in 2012. Even before Thursday's final ratification by Congress,
forcein October,and may help
the lower chamber of Parlia-
ment,the measure generated
turn what has until now been
CHEVROLET
meet the citizenship criteria,"
said Rosa Maria Verger Sans, a lawyer in Barcelona who specializes in citizenship requests and has been focusing on Sephardic claims. The Spanish government itselfhas not made any forecast.
GNC
BUICK
Between 2010 and 2013, about
121 Sephardic Jews were granted Spanish nationality, after meeting Spain's existing n a t uralization
~GM Sup p l ier ~price A vailab l e t o nll Credi t i j n i'on M e m b e r s
rules, which is a small proportion of those who applied. The Justice Ministry said
a trickle of successful applica- Thursday that it was already tions into a flood. But just how handling 4,454 applications many Sephardic Jews will be from Sephardic Jews, filed able to get a Spanish passport under the current citizenship is unclear. rules.
ParisandIoverslookto moveon after breakupwith bridge'slocks
Centr al Ore on's Exclusive Buick-GMC Dealer
~16,23r7
By Roslyn Sulcas
$21,987
•I
New York Times News Service
PARIS — After Paris removed hundreds of thousands of locks affixed to the iron
grillwork on the Pont des Arts last week, the romantics on-
line were in mourning. "This is so sad," one wrote,
I
I
amid the thousands of Twitter
posts, Facebook messages and photographs across social me-
. ~23,517
dia that have been posted in
'24,2173
the past week lamenting the dismantling of the grillwork. "That was on m y
b u cket
'I I I
list," another said. Others, picking up on a phrase in a Newsweek article, pronounced, "Better to have loved andlocked than to have
a safety hazard and posed a threat to the integrity of the walkway, which dates to 1801
and was rebuilt in the early 1980s. City officials had been
asking people for months to find other ways to express their love.
It now appears that there is so much emotional weight attached to the locks that the
city is trying to assure the brokenhearted that it will find alternatives to the gesture-
and it is hearing no shortage of suggestions about what could take the locks' place.
Many of the ideas, shared in hundreds of emails to Paris' city hall, as well as in inter-
views along the Seine, stick to the locks theme: placing a large installation along the river, or selling the panels to collectors. The g e n eral s e n t iment
seems to be that if you cannot affix a lock to a railing overlooking the Seine and throw
away the key, how do you express your feelings in Paris? A spokesman for Bruno Julliard, the deputy mayor in charge of culture, was eager to assure love pilgrims that there would be an alternative. "The removal of the love locks
is part of a bigger plan to give people a new way to express their love," he said.
"We are looking at all the suggestions for what we can do with the locks," added the
spokesman, who could not give his name according to city policy. "Probably the mayor will make a statement saying: 'Here are the top 10 ideas. We'll find a solution before the
we love love instead of the
persons." Candace Hilldrup, a psychoanalyst who works in the
tials in trees," she said. "Trees
"No one was hurt, but it could have been dramatic. This is
why we do not want to let tour-
by the Italian author Federico Moccia, in which a character
friend in the love-locked little
square around the statue of Henri IV on the Pont Neuf, said, "Melt down the metal
"It's like people carving ini-
$34,850
•I
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'III
II ~ I I
relationship in time." Hilldrup added that where-
as carving the initials of your beloved in a tree was a
I
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$38,245
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®40,91'4
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$16,995
$17,995
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$19,995
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and constraint in the symbol live longer than we do, and we of the lock, said Franck Rezare projecting into the future. z ak, a P arisian artist w h o This action will make our love exist forever and protect our
•
There was a strange contrast between sentimentality
lives near the Canal St.-Martin, who noted with alarm the
recent appearance of locks there.
•
•
I|
t
$30 995
$28 995
"Most people still think of
love as a kind of contract, with a vocabulary of faithfulness, love." phones and the Internet have betrayal, possession," he said. The tourists strolling the globalized its m odern-day "Now they will probably have P ont des A r t s t h i s w e e k equivalent. "People might feel to melt the symbol of that conpaused to examine the panels that if they come to Paris and tract. It is part of a capitalist covered in street art that have they don't do this, perhaps it's cycle; the locks will become s omething else. It's sort of been temporarily installed playing with fire," she said. on the bridge in place of the The custom is variously at- perfect."
ists do it, not because we don't want them to express their
~30,950
invents the rituaL It is preva-
Marais district, said the plac- and make a giant lock to syming of love locks was "magical bolize everyone's love."
city's decision was not an an-
weight of the locks," he said.
that dates to World War I, or to the 2006 novel "I Want You,"
lent in cities all over the world, but Paris, doubtless because of its image as a city of romance, the Passerelle Leopold-Se- seems to be the most popular. dar-Senghor, a wide pedesAnd the Pont des Arts, said trian bridge leading from the Andrew Hussey, the author of Tuileries gardens toward the "Paris: The Secret History," has "always been about starMusee d'Orsay. There is even a sprinkling crossed lovers." He cited the of locks on the railings of the medieval clerics Heloise and picturesque arched footbridg- Abelard, as well as Jane Birkin and Serge Gainsbourg, the es over the Canal St.-Martin in the less-touristy 10th Ar- British actress and the French r ondissement, although a s singer-songwriter whose 1969 yet none of the surrounding duo "Je T'Aime ... Moi Non mini-industry — lock sellers Plus" caused a sensation. shouting "luvlahs" or engravLovers do not have long to ers at the ready — that is evi- leave their locks on display dent in the heart of the city. here. According to the city, evFor the philosopher and ery lock is destined for removnovelist Pascal Bruckner, the al. A rumor has circulated that desire to d emonstrate love they will be melted down and with a lock and key is a met- sold as scrap metal, but the aphor for our time. "So many city hall spokesman said that chained hearts on this bridge, "for the moment," all suggeswith the risk of a collapse," he tions are being considered. said. "People could have died Those include a three-mile from too much love; we're so hollow glass wall along the in love with love, we are ready banks of the Seine, filled with to kill one another." discarded locks, to which peoHe added in an email lat- ple could add new ones. Or er that he had been thinking irontrees or towers on which more about the locks, and to hang the locks, like those concluded: "That bridge crum- that already exist in Moscow bling under the weight of the and Seoul, South Korea. ("Not locks is a metaphor of mod- very Parisian," said Eric Carlern love, overloaded with high son, an architect in Paris.) "There could be a giant inexpectations. We expect the spouse tobe perfect,perfect stallation on the pedestrianfather, mother, lover, worker, ized lower highway next to the socially valorizing. This also river," suggested Ariela Katz, explains why so many couples a Paris-based architecture divorce for want of accepting professor. Tom Miles, a British tourist the imperfection of the other. We value love so much that taking a selfie with his girl-
thinking."
"We reacted because one of the panels fell down from the
•
tributed to a Serbian love story
links the Ile de la Cite and the Fifth A r r ondissement, and
end of the year.'" He emphasized that the ti-love policy.
I
After removing hundreds of thousands Of "love locks" attached to the Pont des Arts, Paris is trying to assure the brokenhearted that it will find alternatives to the gesture.
never locked at all." (Also, sardonically, "They're worried the bridge will collapse from the grilles. (One artist, Brusk, has weight of failed relationships," covered his panels in melting, Bette Midler wrote on Twitter.) brightly hued locks.) The outcry left Paris a bit They need not go far to find befuddled, especially because hardware still sparkling in the the city had announced last sunlight, including on the tiny year that the ritual had to end. Pont de I'Archeveche, which The weight of the locks was
II ~
Guia Besana/New YorkTimes NewsService
relatively private act, smart-
CHEVROLET
• UICK
svc r I
•
Editorials, B4 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
©
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
BRIEFING Six new wildfires in Central Oregon Firefighters responded to six newwildfires Thursday andmade progress oncontrolling two lightning-caused wildfires acrossCentral Oregon. The two wildfires caused by lightning were on private andBureauof LandManagementlands near Twickenham,about 14 miles southeast of Fossil. Oneof those fires, incident169, wasabout 150 acresand surrounded by a retardant line. Firefighters think thefire has stoppedgrowing, but burning at theinterior of it was still causing smoke, according to a news releaseThursday evening from theCentral Oregon InteragencyDispatch Center. Fire crewsand ahelicopter dropping retardant continued to build a line aroundthe other fire in that area, incident 177, which wasabout 50 acres. Both fires were burning in juniper, grass and brush, thedispatch center said. A25-acre wildfire was burning in steep timber andbrush inthe Deschutes National Forest about 9 mileswest of Sunriver and10 miles south of Mount Bachelor. That fire wascausedby humans, thedispatch center said.
OSU-CASCADES
f ll
IA
By Tyler Leeds
i eis eein u
by the Bend City Council and an independent hearings officer.
The Bulletin
The group trying to block OSU-Cascades' west-side exTruth in Site, the organizapansion says it needs $27,000 tion opposing the location, is to keep the fight going and fighting the campus because fund a case before the Oregon it contends added traffic will Court of Appeals. overwhelm the city's west Earlier this week, a state side. In its legal briefs, Truth board ruled the university's in Site argued the university's development should be plans for a 10-acre campus off SW Century Drive are
stopped because the school
lawful, affirming a decision
failed to submit a comprehen-
sive plan for both the 10-acre site and an adjacent property the university is considering whether to purchase. In its Monday ruling, the Land Use Board of Appeals disagreed, siding with the
e i
and a number of other issues. In a message to supporters
accomplishments the delay of additional legislative funding for the school. The message also quoted the organization's lawyer, Jeffrey Kleinman, who noted the university is free to begin developing the campus, just as it has been since the City Council's decision last year.
on Tuesday, Truth in Site wrote it was "not discour-
OSU-Cascades Director of Communications Christine
university on the master plan
aged," counting among its
university is able to begin construction, it has so far
held off to avoid the risk of beginning work that could later be ruled unlawful. "Given that every review
has been in our favor, we have confidence if there is
an appeal we'll stay on the steady path, but we do know if we initiated construction,
there are risks," Coffin said.
Coffin said that although the
SCHOOL'S OUT FORSUMMER
SeeTruth in Site/B5
DESCHUTES COUNTY
Group looks to reduce crime
$
<I~-"<
By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
A diverse group of community leaders
discussed data, the nuances of crime prevention and
more data Thursday afternoon. Ranging from the Redmond police chief to the director
l.a Pine approves $8.2M dndget The La PineCity Council approved an$8.2 million budget this week for the next fiscal year and will add anew position to theadministrative department. City ManagerRick Allen said Thursdaythat the city prioritized road projects in thebudget, much like thecurrent fiscal year. Roadwork will bedone in La Pinenext fiscal year, Allen said,and will be part of Oregon Department of Transportation projects within city limits along U.S. Highway 97. The city budgeted $543,811 for thestreets fund. Theprojects will entail moving water lines and fire hydrants and otheradjustments to accommodate thework. La Pine will also havea new full-time position assisting the city manager and Community Development Department. Allen said thecity has hired Cory Misley for the position, whichbegins July1. Misley has amaster's degreefrom Carnegie Mellon University and interned for Sen.Ron Wyden, D-Ore., hesaid. Allen said his position as city managerwill transition into part time with the city. "I'm going to be working lessand Iwill be coming to LaPineless often," he said. "This is kind of a transition and we'll see how itgoes. It could evenchangethe following years toeven less (timej."
www.bendbulletin.com/Iocal
of the Les Schwab Amphitheater, the
25-person advisory board of Deschutes-
Safe aims to develop crime-prevention strategies for DeJoe Klime i The Bulletin
First-year kindergarten teacher Kate Tibbitts says goodbye to students on the bus at R.E. Jewell Elementary School in Bend. Thursday was the last day of school for students in the Bend-La Pine School District.
schutes County. Its first meeting was Thursday afternoon.
Led by Deschutes County District Attorney John Hum-
Legislature sendspolice bills to Brown By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — A package of bills that seeks to add a layer of citizen accountability over law enforcement passed through the
Legislature on Thursday after months of wrangling. Oregonians will be allowed to openly record interactions with police without fear of arrest; police must create and follow poli-
cies if officers wearbody cameras; and law enforcement will be prohibited from scanning and copying a suspect's phone without a warrant or consent to do so under the bills passed Thursday.
BillS in Salem —House Bill 2571, which was passedThursday, would require the creation of policies surrounding the use of police body cameras. HouseBill 2704 changes state law to allow citizens to record police without fear of arrest. Senate Bill 641, which passed the House onThursday, would prohibit police from copying the contents of a cellphone without consent or asearch warrant. History:Someof the bills were proposed by a bipartisan work group that worked to update lawsaround police surveillance. What's next:Body camera, police recording and cellphone copying bills all head to Gov.Kate Brown for signature or veto.
that currently requires anyone recording audio of a conversation to notify the other person first. The American Civil Liberties Union believed the law
mel, DeschutesSafe is a plan to collect information about
current crime rates and trends, seek pub-
lic insight and make a recommendation on possible strategies to prevent and deter crime. Kathleen Meehan
could have applied to people recording police, putting a chilling eff ecton anyone hoping to record use of force. The bill would make an ex-
Coop, who will serve
ception to the law for citizens
in the collaborative
recording on-duty police, as long as the person was openThe passage of the bills mark cess for several bills pushed by ly recording from a place they the end of a successful push for civil liberties groups to regulate were legally allowed to be, like law enforcement accountability some police surveillance. on a public street or sidewalk or this session, while the session House Bill 2704, if signed by in their home. will likely end with limited suc- Gov. Kate Brown, changes a law See Police bills/B5
as the initiative's coordinator, described
herself as data-driven and interested aspect of DeschutesSafe. She will help the group apply for a grant from the Oregon Community Foundation.
SeeCrime/B5
Trouble atanother Stars could affect theonehere
BLITZ MOUNTAIN BIKE RACE
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
The Oregon Liquor Con-
Allen also said that the
four locations operated in Oregon by the company.
trol Commission has pro-
Christie Scott, spokeswoman with the OLCC,
posed canceling the liquor license of Stars Cabaret 8
said her agency's current proposal would only affect
Steak House in Beaverton,
the license of the Beaverton
city is increasing spending on planningdueto greater development in the area. "We havemoreactivity, and being anew city, we spendmorein the area ofplanning," he
a move that could have implications for the renewal of
location.
the license at the company's
ed with the company faced criminal charges aside from
sald.
Beaverton strip club, who
La Pine isalso planning to save$30,000 it received through its urban renewaldistrict for a future undetermineduse. The moneywill roll over to the next fiscal year.Allen said thecity wants to build upthemoneygenerated for urbanrenewal before investing it.
hired a 13-year-old girl to dance at the club and engage in prostitution with customers during 2012. Last
— Bulletin staff reports
Bend location. The OLCC's proposed action stems from the ar-
rest and conviction of the former manager of the
September,Steven Toth JoeKlineirhe Bulletin
A competitor comes in for a landing off the big air jump on the course of the Blitz mountain bike race Thursday at Tetherow Golf Course in Bend.
The race, which concludes with competitors chugging glasses of craft beer, waswon byBend's Adam Craig, who finished the18-mile course in 55 minutes, 5 seconds. Todd Wells came in second after struggling to finish his beer.
For more from the race, see page C1.
No one directly associatToth, who worked only at
the Beaverton club, though Scott said company president andowner JeffStruhar
receivedmoney from prostitution conducted through the club.
The four liquor licenses held by the four Stars locations are held by different
pleaded guilty to compelling companies registered with prostitution, first-degree sex the OregonSecretary of abuse and second-degree State. However, Struhar is sodomy. He is currently listed as company president serving a 15-year prison for the Bend, Beaverton and sentence. Tigard locations. The Stars here is one of
See Stars /B5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
REGON AROUND THE STATE
rOWn Si nS
mon SO • Supporters of the first-of-its-kind bill say it will reduceunintended pregnancies
COll I'0 Mary Nolan, interim exec- time. utive director of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Oregon,
however, said the benefits of the plan "are so obvious once
By Sheila V Kumar The Associated Press
SALEM — Oregon has enacted a first-of-its-kind insurance law that will allow wom-
en to obtain a year's worth of birth control at a time, ex-
panding coverage that previously needed to be renewed every 30 or 90 days. Gov. Kate Brown signed the
legislation Thursday, saying it "has a simple premise that I whole-heartedly believe in: increase access and decrease barriers." Supporters say the measure will reduce unintended pregnancies and make things easierfor women, especially in rural areas, since they won't need to visit doctors or pick up prescriptions as often.
The plan passed easily and advances a push on the issue
this year. Oregon legislators also are considering a proposal that
Fiery mOtOrCyCle CraSh —A23-year-oldmotorcyclist is in serious condition after hecollided head-on with acar, causing bothvehicles to burst into flames.SeanHendersoncollided on his 2002 Kawasaki motorcycle into 56-year-old CindyStanley's 2014Hyundai onWednesday night. Washington CountySheriff's spokesmanSgt. BobRaysaid deputies suspect themotorcycle's gastank ruptured, causing bothvehicles to ignite. Bystanders rushed toput out Henderson's burning clothing. He was taken to ahospital for nonlife-threatening injuries. Stanley, of Beaverton, wasdriving in the center divider andpassing traffic that was stopped whenHenderson struck her vehicle. Shewasnot injured. Ray says shewascited for improper use of a special turn lane.
It goes into effect Jan. 1.
O regon's moves to
ex-
pand access tocontraception stand in contrast to efforts
you point them out. People elsewhere. had beenaccustomed togoing Some more c onservative tions for women who pass a along with 30 days for so long states have focused on allowself-administered risk-screen- that people hadn't really ques- ing pharmacists to opt out of ing assessment. That pro- tioned it." dispensing contraception if posal also has received wide She said the proposal has they have religious objections. support. drawn interest from lawmak- And a recently passed MisThe Catholic church op- ers in California, New York souri law would have required p oses contraceptive e x - and Washington state. A sim- insurers to issue policies that pansion, saying O regon's ilar measure is pending in don't cover birth control if inmeasures could have "mor- Washington, D.C., reproduc- dividuals or employers said al implications and social tive rights expert Elizabeth contraceptives violate their consequences." Nash said. moral or r eligious beliefs. C ritics of t h e n e w l a w , Insurancecompanies typ- A federal judge, however, meanwhile, say it could in- ically cover a 30- or 90-day struck that down last year as crease healthcare costs for supply of contraception, Nash unconstitutional. employers and insurers. It said. But a y ear's supply Nolan said Oregon has tracould be wasteful to dispense "would reduce the potential ditionally been a champion for a year's worth of pills, for ex- for skipping pills or not hav- women's rights, citing a 1969 ample, since a woman could ing her patch or ring when she move to decriminalize abordecide to stop taking them needs it," the Guttmacher In- tion that came several years or choose toswitch prescrip- stitute researcher said. before Roe v. Wade. "We have a long history," tions, they say. The plan would require "To me it's just a checkbook women to first get a t hree- she said, "of really strong adissue, plain and simple," Rep. month supply to make sure vocates for health care for J ulie Parrish, a W est L i nn there are no adverse reactions. women — and particularly Republican, who opposed the Subsequent pres c riptions around reproductive health measure. could be filled for a year at a care." would allow pharmacists to write birth control prescrip-
Prosecutors won't see eat ena t in Benton Coun tri e-mur er case • Francisco Resendez Miranda's alleged victims included a pregnant woman
gravating circumstance that
Resendez Miranda's apart-
Torres-Renteriawas close to
ment the night before.
nine months pregnant when she was killed.
Resendez Miranda was arrested Aug. 10 and held in
Under Washington state
the Umatilla County Jail un-
The Associated Press
three counts of aggravated law, a murder charge cannot til his Oregon charges were first-degree murder. He could be filed for an unborn child. resolved and extradition paface life in prison without the Resendez Miranda worked perwork had cleared the govly shooting three people in a possibility of parole if con- with Perez-Saucedo at a ernors' offices in both states. Benton County orchard will victed of even one count of Wyckoff Farms property in He later moved to the Bennot face the death penalty. aggravated murder. Patterson. ton County jail in Kennewick, P rosecutor A n d y Mi l l Prosecutors allege ResenPerez-Saucedo, T o r res, where he is being held wither confirmed Tuesday that dez Miranda killed Abigail Torres-Renteria and a fourth out bail. his office will not seek a Torres-Renteria, 23, Victoria person had gone to Umatilla The trial date was pushed death sentence in the case of Torres, 19, and D avid P e- Aug. 8. back a week to Nov. 2 due to a 24-year-old Francisco Resen- rez-Saucedo, 22, last summer. A farmworker discovered conflict with the judge's perdez Miranda, reported The The bodies of the Pasco resi- the three bodies in a field the sonal calendar. East Oregonian. dents were found Aug. 9 in a next morning. Resendez Miranda did not Resendez Miranda h as field 15 miles from Resendez Court documents show the object to the new trial date, been charged i n B e nton Miranda's apartment. killings may have been out of but he said he does not want County Superior Court with The charges include the ag- retaliation for a break-in at it to get pushed back further.
P ENDLETON — A U m atilla man charged with fatal-
Rape trial pOStpOned — Thetrial fora Welshman accused offlying to Eugene tomeeta10-year-old girl who heallegedly raped hasbeen postponed.Twenty-two-year-old Gareth Hall's lawyeraskedWednesday for moretime to preparefor trial. Hall is chargedwith four counts of first-degree rape,two counts of first-degree sodomy,first-degree kidnapping andonline sexualcorruption of achild. Hall allegedly came to Oregon inApril to meet aEugenegirl he metonline. Policesaythe girl sneakedout of herhouseandinto Hall's waiting rental car. Heallegedly drove thegirl to ahotel. After Hall returned toWales, the girl's parents notified policeabouttheallegedevents. A newtrial datefor Hall hasnot yet beenset.
Kitten ShOt inhead, left in traSh — A12-week-oldkitten wil soon undergo surgery to havepart of a bullet or gun pellet removed from her cheek after she wasfound shot in the headandleft in a Portland dumpster. Thekitten, dubbed Lucy, wasfound May28and brought to the OregonHumaneSociety for medical attention. It is unknown howlong shewasleft in the trash. The HumaneSociety and the Animal LegalDefenseFundareoffering a $5,000 reward for any information that leads tothe person or personswho shot Lucy. — From wire reports
NEws OF REcoRD The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhen such a request is received. Anynew information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.
criminal mischief was reported at 6:41 p.m.June7 inthe2500 blockofNE U.S. Highway20. Theft — A theft was reported andan arrest made at3:25 p.m. June 9, inthe 1100 block of SWDivision Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1:22 p.m. June 7, inthe1600 block of NE Lotus Drive.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT
PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
Theft —Atheft was reported at 1:25 p.m. June 2, in the19600 block of MahoganyStreet. Theft —Atheft was reported at 6:36p.m.June7,inthe900block of IIW Bond Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 8:09a.m. June9,In the600 block of NE GreenwoodAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 10:44 a.m. June 9, in the100 block of IIW Minnesota Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at1:12 p.m. June 9, in the1500 blockof NWWall Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 4:33 p.m. June 9, In the 2000 block of NW Lakeslde Place. DUII —Anthony Vincent Brown, 22, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 9:50 p.m. June 9,in the area of NWBondStreet and NW OregonAvenue. Criminal mlschlef — Anact of
Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at11 a.m. June10, in the areaofNW WarehouseWa y.
POLICE LOG
OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Joshua ThomasCarrell, 24, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:23 p.m. June10, on U.S.Highway 97 near mllepost136. DUII —Zachary Dale Zamzow Douglas, 26, wasarrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:53 a.m. June11, In thearea of Second Street and Dekalb Avenue.
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Man gets lifesentencefor killing Ashland jewelry salesman in2013 The Associated Press MEDFORD — A man was sentenced to l if e i n p r i son
Thursday after pleading guilty to the 2013 robbery and slaying of a former jewelry salesman in his home in an Ashland mobile home park, Jackson County District Attorney Beth Heckert said. M erlin E lm o B o un d I I I
had pleaded guilty to felony murder, robbery and burglary in the stabbing of Frank
"it is time for me to climb off this roller coaster
of emotion. I have been sad, scared, lost, mad, helpless and angry, but through all of this, my higher self knows that I need to forgive." — Lynda Kennedy, ex-wife of victim Frank Damlano
prosecutors did not have to prove which one ofthe men
actually killed Damiano, only
judge, saying the man she was married to for 30 years was a good man.
that a participant in the rob-
" He marched to hi s ow n
bery was responsible. She drummer, he gave his heart Bound and his accomplice, added that Damiano was a big to all that came into his world, Othon RobertCampos, had enough man that it would have and he was a man of peace each blamed the other for the taken both Bound and Cam- and now he is gone," she said. killing. Campos also pleaded pos to tie him into a chair. They "It is time for me to climb off guilty and was sentenced in were arrested within weeks of this roller coaster of emotion. February to 25 years in pris- the slaying with some of the I have been sad, scared, lost, on after agreeing to testify jewelry. mad, helpless and angry, but against Bound. Damiano's family was not through all of this, my highHeckert pointed out that un- present, but his ex-wife, Lynda er self knows that I need to derthe felony murder charge, Kennedy, wrote a letter to the forgive."
Bend's best health club offers more for members!!!
Damiano.
'Ban thebox' bill advancesThursday The Associated Press SALEM — The Oregon Senate has approved a bill making it illegal for employers to ask about criminal records on job applications. The bill passed Thursday in a21-8vote. The so-called "ban the box" measure would prohibit questions on job applications, but
an employer could still ask about convictions during a job
convictions would give people a chance to explain their convic-
interview.
tion, their more recent conduct
The bill's proponents say it's andtheir qualifications. extremely difficult for people Critics worry the measure with a criminal record to find
will put businesses at risk of
work because they're automatically excluded at an early stage. Supporters say waiting until an interview to ask about
lawsuits. The measure returns to the House, which must agree to
changes made in the Senate.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
I
more weekly youth and family activities in addition to... 4 pools,pilates,33 yoga classes a week, over 56 cardio/strength group exercise classes a week, 17 cycling classes, cardio, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's Best Professionals.
FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
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IIIIIIIIII
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•
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NW19065 Mt. McLoughlin Ln.
NWX2218 NW Lolo Dr. NWX1699 NW Mt. Washington Dr. NWX1665 NW Mt. Washington Dr. NW62778 Idanha Ct.
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Four Townhomes
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Three bedroom, two-story townhomes $259,900-$279,900
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l Bend Senior Center
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
inson i
POYOU QVEAN W% INILT-IN
sc oosin en early 40 years after he first got into public education, Bend-La Pine Schools Superintendent Ron Wilkinson will retire this month. He's not quite 65 years old, and he and his wife, Gail, have things to do and places to go. He can look at his time as the head of one of the state's 10 largest school districts with pride. Wilkinson took over leadership of the district in 2008. Since then he's had to deal with a major recession and resulting budget cuts that saw the district lose some 20 percent of its funding. That meant layingoffdozens ofteachers,nonteaching staff and administrators, andpersuading one and all to forgo or delay scheduled pay increases. It meant shortening the school year for several years. Teachers will get back their last day next
doubts vanished quickly. He's straightforward and honest and willing to consider criticisms of what he has in mind. In discussing Public Employee Retirement System reforms a couple of yearsago, he acknowledged that the changes, had they gone into effect, would hurt him directly. Still, he believed and said they were the right thing to do. During his tenure, Wilkinson not only successfully led the district through a recession, but he also oversaw the building of five schools, a major improvement in year. student test scores and an equally Wilkinson managed to do all major shift to the use of technology that without strikes, rioting par- in the classroom. ents or a quick exit by those who We don't expect the Wilkinthought they m ight d o b e tter sons, either of them, to simply go elsewhere. home and rock their lives away. For those who've watched his They breedllamas on a ranch east career in Bend, that's no surprise. of Bend, and no one who makes a Wilkinson can sometimes sound herd of live animals part of his life like the ag teacher he once was, can ever fully retire. and while that calm, careful deAt the same time, we do hope meanor may have left some in doubt of his ability to take on what they find time for the community was a 16,000-student district (now and its schools. Such a positive inmore than 17,000 students) those fluence should not just disappear.
OSU renews pledge to work with community on campus IN MY VIEW
By Ed Ray andBecky Johnson long with many residents of Central Oregon, we are very pleased with Monday's decision by the Oregon Land Use Board
will create a university that reflects
A
As leaders of Oregon State University and
of Appeals that affirms the site de-
velopment plan for OSU-Cascades' proposed 10-acre campus. This decision represents a victocant for our current and future stu-
dents. While OSU-Cascades will welcome its first freshman class
K
ids in foster care face difficulties the outside world can
only imagine.
They're too often moved from pillar to post and back again. They can lose contact not only with families, but also with friends, teachers and others as they move. Some are subjected to sexual or physical abuse, while others are neglected. Yet Chegonians have difficulty keeping track of what is happening at the state Deparlment of Human Services, which runs the state's foster care system Information on such things as timely responses to abuse complaintswere reported on the DHS website until sometime in 2011, according to the Oregonian newspaper. Today, that information can be difficult to find. Meanwhile, it's dear that the recent recession and Oregon's resulting financial problems have taken a toll on the agency charged with caring for Oregon kids. By 2011, for example,DHS had only about 68 percent of the employeesit saiditneeded to serve foster children adequately. Thus, federal statistics show, only 70percentof Oregon's foster children
A p
were visitedby DHS once a monthin 2012, the target set in federal law. As for investigations of alleged serious abuse, DHS workers respondedto 73 percent within the required 24 hours during 2012 and 2013. Both the rate of monthly visits and visits because of abuse complaints have fallen in recentyears. No one argues that the work required of DHS employees is easy, and when lackof money keeps the workforce low, the job becomes even more difficult. But effectively hiding, even unintentionally, the fact that such things as reqtured visits aren't being done serves no one. As one former foster child told the Oregonian, without those numbers, it's difficult to spot developing problems before they become major ones. DHS officials say their reporting problems can be blamed, at least in part, on a computer system purchased in 2011. The new system apparently made tracking such information difficult, atbest. Nowthe agencysays itis working to make some numbers available to the public again. It must do so. If it fails inthat effort, Oregon's mostvulnerable kids will suffer.
C BBl' O l '
ut 25 or 30 Central Orego-
nians on a bus in early June and drive them to Eugene,
and here's what happens. Within minutes of their ar rival, most of
JANET
STEVENS
the group is sneezing, red-eyed and sniffling. Or at least that wa s t ru e l ast weekend, when the H igh D esert
and a nice breeze kept the day from
feeling as hot as it might have. program of Special Olympics OreThe more I watch Special Olymgon sent its golf team to the River- pics events, the more impressed I Ridge golf complex outside of Eu- become. gene for a regional competition. This was my daughter Mary's Neither athletes nor coaches, first year as a golfer, and as is alparents nor chaperones were ex- ways the case, we didn't have to pecting to be blitzed by pollen, and worry about the family's lack of any it showed. Tissues were in short golfing equipment. It was provided, supply. and it was altered to fit her short Saturday's event was Special frame. That was true for Mary, and Olympics at its best, in many ways. it was equally true for every athAthletes had trained for weeks to lete who lacked the equipment to get ready, and they came from all participate. over Eastern and Southern Oregon
Moreover, her coaches — volun-
to compete. Athletes and coaches teers all — went out of their way to rekindled friendships with their help her learn basic golf skills. counterparts from around the state, Those coaches, by the way, are
commitment to fulfill
committed to building a
makes it possible for OSU-Cascades to bring students to the region's long-awaited four-year university campus during the 2016-
four year campus that is
community values and provides a legacy of opportunity for local students of all ages, who otherwise would be forced to leave their community to complete their education. Consider Allison Zavala, a 2015
Bend High School graduate, who will enroll this fall as an incoming freshman at OSU-Cascades. Allison plans to study anthropology, and after completing her college degree she hopes to work in the health care field — possibly in forensic anthropology. Allison has shared with us that it
was always her dream to attend college, but like many of her friends, Bend community. she says she did not want to leave Bend to have a university experience and earn a four-year degree. OSU-Cascades' expansion to a four-year university campus close four-year campus will allow Allison at hand. Looking ahead, we renew our a chance to earn her degree while pledge to continue working with remaining close to home. Bend and Central Oregon residents, Working together, we can make as well as with community, busi- this campus a showcase for higher ness andeducation leaders to: education and career opportunities • Fulfill longtime aspirations for for Allison and hundreds of other having a university in Central Ore- Bend and Central Oregon residents. gon by continuing to move this im- And we canensure thatthe campus
well-integrated into the
2017 academic year. As leaders of Oregon State Uni-
versity and OSU-Cascades, we are steadfast in ou r
OSU-Cascades, we are steadfast in our a 30-year community aspiration to bring a fouryear university to Central Oregon. Andwe remain
ry for higher education in Central Oregon and is particularly signifi-
this September, the LUBA ruling
Release information on Oregon's foster care
just build a physical campus. We
c o mmitment to
fulfill a 30-year community aspiration to bring a four-year university to Central Oregon. And we remain
committed to building a four-year campus that is well-integrated into the Bend community.
Last week, we were greatly heartened by the results of a recent survey of Bend-area residents that
demonstrated overwhelming sup- portant initiative forward. port of a four-year university cam• Engage in collaborative planpus that is part of the Bend commu- ning and problem-solving by activenity and within walking distance of ly seeking public input. downtown, housing and other com• Ensure that the new four-year munity amenities for students. university campus will be an eduThesesurvey resultsalso demon- cational, economic and community strate significant interest among difference-maker for Central Orcommunity residents and employ- egon that will add to the region's ers in being able to readily engage quality of life. with and benefit from having a By working together, we will not
will serve as a community asset that
enhancesthe culture,economy and quality of life of Bend and surrounding communities. We hope you will join us in achieving what's best for Bend, Central Oregon and students like Allison
Zavala. — Ed Ray is president of Oregon State University. Becky Johnson is vice president ofOSU-Cascades.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's sIgnature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submIssions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
BCIB
without c o ddling t h em , d e spite pics is free to athletes, no matter limitations that s o metimes look if they're going to Eugene to play All coaches travel to c ompeti-
golf or, as some 7,000 athletes from around the world will do next
tions, as do a host of chaperones month, to Los Angeles for the quaand unified partners — adults, drennial World Games. generally, w i t hout d i s abilities, Among the 7,000 will be t hree who team up to play with disabled athletes from Oregon and the uniathletes. fied partner of one. Bend residents In fact, if it weren't for volunteers,
Special Olympics might well disappear from this state. While Special Olympics Oregon serves children over 8 and adults in 30 programs around the state, it does so with only 25 employees. Everyoneelseis a volunteer,and
Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
m icsin r e o n
pretty wonderful folks. As with all between year-rounders and oneof Special Olympics' thousands of eventers,more than 8,000 Oregovolunteers, they must pass back- nians give time to Special Olympics ground checks, and there must be annually. enough of them to assure that all That no doubt is one reason the athletes get a real shot at improv- organization is able to assure that ing — or developing for the first no athlete is turned away because time — their skills. They're mas- of finances. ters at encouraging their athletes Participating in Special Olyminsurmountable.
Please address your submIssion to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submIssIons are preferred.
Alec Gustafson and his father, Alex,
ment, some athletes played nine holes, while others played 18. Beginners like Mary competed in tests of individual skills, including putting, pitching and chipping, using both a driver and a wood.
Athletes were grouped by sex and by skill level, so that no budding Tiger Woods could completely outshine someone who played his first golf game only this spring. Awards topped off the festivities
in the afternoon, and they're generally as much a pleasure to watch as the competitions themselves.
Special Olympics athletes are as competitive as anyone, but even for those who find losing a terrible disappointment, they're more than
will represent the High Desert pro- willing to c heer th e competition gram as a unified team in bocce, a when medals and ribbons are handball game akin to lawn bowling. In ed out. addition, Bend's Jill Simmons will — Janet Stevensis deputy editor be one of three Oregon coaches to attend.
As for Saturday's golf tourna-
of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-617-7821 istevens@bendbullett.n.com
FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Truth In Site
BITS DEATH NOTICES Shirley Wray Howey, of Bend Aug. 21, 1926 - June 7, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A memorial service will be held at a later date.
Jewel L. La San, of La Pine June 14, 1916 - June 10, 2015
Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private family gathering will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made
Continued from 61 She added the university is
likely to start deciding next week whether to begin building before the appeal process ends, but that the university's focus is currently on students
and graduation events. According to a publicly available fundraising site, Truth i n
"From a quality of life perspective, with traffic, congestion, traffic safety and just
getting from point A to point B, the west
side is where the impact will be." — Bill Gregoricus
S i t e h a s r a ised
$4,325 over the past six months, $1,000 of which came from one couple. Truth in Site spokesman Scott Morgan declined to answer
nized, and I'm sorry if the results are not what they want-
ed, but those are the results wehave." According to its website,
ricus, said he thinks a more
Deathsof note from around
useful survey would focus just on the west side. "From a quality of life perJanie Teater, one of Now for Bend's co-founders, said spective, with traffic, conthe response has been "very, gestion, traffic safety and very positive." just getting from point A to "Our main focus is getting point B, the west side is where people informed and working the impact will be," he said. toward darifying misinfor- "Why not just do a survey of mation," Teater said. "We're the west side and see what trying to drive people to our they think'? If 51 percent said website to show support, and we love it, I'd say fine, don't beyond that, we're trying to care. But we need to hear that build a positive conversation voice." about what th e u n iversity The survey found support brings besides growth, some- for the campus to be equal thing that will happen no from the west and east sides, matter where the university though the survey report goes. We want to take into did not specify the numaccount how the university ber of west-side residents is working on smart growth, interviewed. not random growth." Gregoricus also took issue Morgan called a survey with one ofthe survey quesNow for Bend funded and tions, which asked whether "a is publicizing "egregious," handful of critics" should be though he declined to elab- able to delay OSU-Cascades' orate and said he was not opening, saying opponents of familiar with GS Strategy the campus constitute a much Group, the Idaho-based firm bigger camp than "a handful" that conducted the survey. implies. The survey fielded responsTruth in Site has until June es from 300 individuals, of 29 to file an appeal. Bend City which 59 percent supported Attorney Mary Winters said the west-side location, com- land use cases are expedited
theworld:
pared with 35 percent who
to:
Heart 'n Home Hospice, PO Box 3540, La Pine, OR 97739, 800-HOSPICE,
www.gohospice.com
David Earl Egerton, formerly of La Pine
Sep. 20, 1940- Oct. 17, 2014 Arrangements: Emblom-Brenny Funeral Service, 900 First Street SE Little Falls, MN 56345(320) 632-4393 Services: June 19, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. in Willamette National Cemetery, 11800 SE Mt Scott Blvd, Portland, OR 97086 Contributions may be made: In lieu of flowers, memorials preferred and will be directed to: Unity Family Home Care & Hospice, 815 2nd Street SE, Little Falls, MN 56345. (320)-631-5575
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Ornette Coleman, 85: The
Cascades and Central Oregon Community College.
by the state Court of Appeals
novators in the history of jazz.
and oral arguments are supposed to be heard within 49 a survey conducted last year days of the legal record being by the same firm and fund- received. ed by the campaign of state If OSU-Cascades wins
Died Thursday morning in
Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend,
Manhattan.
which found 61 percent of re- could go to the state Supreme spondents supported a west- Court, though that body has side campus compared with the power to decline an ap33percent opposed. peal, effectively killing the Teater said the survey is case. "statistically valid" adding, — Reporter: 541-633-2160, "The firm is nationally recogtleeds@bendbulletin.com
alto saxophonist and compos-
er who was one of the most powerful and contentious in-
Ron Moody, 91: A British actor best known for his Os-
car-nominated turn as Fagin in the 1968 Charles Dickens adaptation " Oliver!" D i e d
Thursday at a hospital in
Continued from 61 Amid national unrest over
high-profile deaths in police custody, the ACLU teamed up with a group of lawmakers on House Bill 2571, requiring policies that deal with retention
of body camera video footage and when officers could turn cameras on or off. The bill passed the Senate
questions about fundraising or plans for an appeal. Klein- the firm worked on a number man did not return a call for of federal campaigns, includcomment. ing John McCain's 2008 bid Truth in Site now has a ri- for president. The survey has val in Now for Bend, which a5.65percentmar gin oferror launched last week. The at a 95 percent confidence organization's mission is level, meaning the survey's to champion the west-side procedure is expected, based campus, and as of Thursday on the rules of probability, afternoon the group had 330 to elicit a representative renamed individual supporters sponse 95percent of the time. and 56 institutions backing An active opponent of the the cause, including De- west-side location, Bill Gregoschutes Brewery, Bank of the
Police bills
opposed 1t.
Those results are simi larto
at the next level, the case
65
and time needed to blur faces from every passing car on and edit and store video. the road. Police mount the license
Kevin Campbell, execu-
tive director of the Oregon
platereaders on patrol cars Association Chiefs of Police, and can compare the imagsaid cost could prove a valid es from passing cars against concern and that the Legisla- databases containing inforture could always come back mation about certain drivers. and addressissuesthatarise If a passing car is stolen or down the line. the driver has a warrant or is "I think it gives everybody involved in a case, the departa dearer picture of exactly ment can set up the program what happened, provided you to alert the officer when the have a complete recording of car passes. an encounter," Campbell said. The ACLU and legislative privacy group wanted to lim-
unanimously Thursday with no debate and heads to the governor's desk despite some concernsabout arequirement Privacy package that law enforcement blur the Legislators say another bill faces of anyone in the video passed Thursday will protect before releasing it to the pub- Oregonians from overbearing lic or media. surveillance from police by Sen. Floyd P r ozanski, preventing law enforcement D-Eugene, called the body from copying suspects' cellcamera bill an accountability phones without consent or a
it the amount of time police departments could store the
images from the cameras, which also mark geolocation of passing cars and can be mapped showing where cars have been. Police in Portland, which
measure that would help "pro-
warrant.
has morelicenseplatereaders
vide what I would consider the
Senate Bill 641 came out of a privacy work group including Sens. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, and Chip Shields, D-Portland, and Reps. John Huffman,
than other departments, can
actual record of an incident."
The Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association and Oregon Association of Broadcasters said in an April letter
R-The Dalles, and Jennifer
the requirement to make all Williamson, D-Portland. "Think about what's on faces unrecognizable "adverselyaff ects transparency your cellphone. Photos, bank to the public we serve." records, what you purchased Kimberly McCullough, a on Amazon, your emails. The lobbyist with the ACLU of digital books that you have. Oregon, said regardless of The movie you just went to the blurring requirement, last night," Williamson said officers' identities could be Thursday, before the House discovered through reports voted 44-4 to send the bill to and other records from an incident.
Brown. "Just like our homes, law
"As long as we can find out
enforcement should have to
who the officer is in the video, that's the most essential thing
obtain a warrant before they
look at this very personal infor us," McCullough said. formation," she said. M cCullough was c o n - Other privacy bills that cerned about the potential may not pass this session cost law enforcement may targeted cameras police in chargeforaccessto thevideos
Oregon use that scan and
as a result of the technology
store images and information
parkpatrol cars with the cameras onstreetsw ith cameras facing in multiple directions. Campbell an d po l i ce groups want to retain the information for at least a year,
potentially more. Currently there are no laws regulating the devices. Senate Bill 639, which sought to put those policies in place, hasn't left committee and appears
unlikely to be revived this session. The ACLU of Oregon also filed a bill seeking to prohibit law enforcement from obtaining location information without a warrant. Some de-
partments also use technology that acts like a cell tower
and tri cks nearby cellphones to connect to it. That bill also failed to get out of committee.
Crime Continued from 61 The next task is to es-
— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
at a related establishment with an unblemished record.
Continued from B1
The Bend location is due to
Scott said that if the Beaverton location's license is pulled, that action could be
renew its liquor license at the end of September, while the
County as well as w h at
sentatives when it comes time
March 2016.
crime prevention programs exist. "We need to figure out what we're doing now and give an overview of that to say, 'What do you think?'"
to renew liquor licenses at the The Beaverton Stars has other locations. until July 10 to r equest a The OLCC considers all li- hearing concerning the procense cancellations or renew- posed cancellation of its lials on a case-by-case basis, quor license. If no hearing is she said, and the cancellation requested, the license would of a license at a single loca- be canceled at the end of that tion with a history of prob- day, Scott said.
tablish a smaller working group to gather information about crime in Deschutes
to the public, Hummel said.
C ome autumn, D e schutesSafe will host public input meetings, then will make a recommendations. Funding from grants will
company'sTigard and Salem heldagainstcompany repre- locations are due to renew in
lems would not necessarily
affect the renewal of a license
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbuilet in.com
be used for personnel costs,
including a data analyst and facilitator for the public meetings. — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombe@bendbulletin.com
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •
'
•
- ••
Cl a ssi ieds
London. — From wire reports
ChristopherLeebreathed life into nightmarishvilains By Anita Gates New Yorh Times News Service
FEATUREDOBITUARY
Christopher Lee, a towering appeal.
Rank movie studio in London. Lest he tower over his fellow actors,Lee remained seated
throughout his first fihn appearance, as a nightclub cusShakespearean voice and aris- fear in the hearts of moviego- tomer in "Corridor of Mirrors" tocratic presence to a gallery of ers. He played the treacherous (1948). That same year he was v i l l ain allowed to stand, as a spear villains, from a seductive Count light-saber-wielding Dracula to a dreaded wizard in Count Dooku in the "Star carrier, in Laurence Olivier's "The Lord of the Rings," died Wars" installments "Episode II "Hamlet." Sunday in London. He was 93. — Attack of the Clones" (2002) Exactly30 years later,hehad An official for the Royal Bor- and "Episode 3 — Revenge of ough of Kensington and Chel- the Sith" (2005). And he was the sea in London confirmed the dangerously charismatic wizDanny Rastovich death, The Associated Press ard Saruman, set on destroyApril 26, 1926 — June 2, 2015 ing "the world of men," in the reported. Lee was 35 when his break- "Lord of the Rings" and "HobDanny Rastovichpassedaway June through film, Terence Fish- bit" movies. 2, 2015aftera prolonged battle er's British horror movie "The Christopher Frank Carandiwith Parkinson s Disease. Born Curse of Frankenstein," was ni Lee was born in London on April 26, 1926, Danny was the released in 1957. He played the May 27, 1922. seventhchildof George and A nna British movie actor who lent
Even in his 70s and 80s, Lee, his distinguished good looks, as evil incarnate, could strike
become so well-known in the United States that he was asked
to host "Saturday Night Live." He declined to play Dracula in a sketch, but he did appear
as Mr. Death, a cultured gentlemanin a black hooded robe carrying a scythe. In the part, he comes to apologize to a little girl (Laraine Newman) for taking her dog, Tippy.
I
creature. But it was a year later, when he played the title role in
Lee attended Eton and Wel-
lington College, then joined the Fisher's "Dracula," that his cin- Royal Air Force, serving in inematic identity became forever telligence and the Special Forcassociated with Bram Stoker's es during World War II. noble, ravenous vampire, who After the war, a cousin sugin Lee's characterization ex- gested that he try acting and uded a certain lascivious sex introduced him to people at the
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Rastovich, he his survived by his sister, Helen Barrett; daughter, Nancy Poirier; and son, Robert Rastovich; andeight grandchildren. He isprecededin death by his wife of 49 years, Helen, and his older brothers and sisters: Millie Chopp, Marie Barnum, Bob Rastovich, Mike Rastovich, and Martha Blair. Danny lived his entire 89-years of life in the same house on Rastovich Road in Bend. He witnessed the dawn of indoor plumbing, the first telephone service,the birth of radio and television, the dominance of the gasengine and the death of the horse drawn carriage all from the vantage of the small family farm in Central Oregon.
He was probablybestknow as thedriverofschoolbus¹9,with theBend La Pine Schooldistrict for nearly 30years. Students from kindergarten to high school were greetedeach morning with a smile, and with good behavior wouldbe treated to the same in the afternoon, for thosewho got out of line, they were reminded of the merits of good behavior quickly. To his dying day,former students remained dedicated to their "bus driver Danny." Like many of early Central Oregonfamilies, social activities revolved aroundthe Grange Halls.Danny served as Master of the Grange for a number of years, keepingalive the Saturday night dances,and philanthropic duties at Eastern Star Grange until 2009. In addition, Dannyprovidedinsurance services forG range m embers fornearly30 years. Celebration of Life will be held at Pine Forest Grange Hall, 63214 Boyd AcresRd,Bend OR 97701, on Sunday, June 14, 2015. Gathering wil l begin at 11 a.aL with service starting at 12:30 p.m.
Leo Aloysius Garrow Junior February 22, 1927- June 8, 2015 Leo was born in Portland, OR, to Leo A. Garrow, Sr. and Veva Portwood Garrow, the youngest of four children and their only son. He attended St. Stephens grade school and church and was in one of the first classes at Central Catholic Hi gh S chool, where he excelledat football, basketball and was a student body officer. He was conscripted into the Navy in the spring of 1945 when he turned 18, md serveda tour of duty in the South Pacific in the last days of WWII. When he returned home, heentered the new engineering school at the University of Portland, earning a degree in 1950.
In 1949, he married Mary Elaine Feller, and they settled in NE Portland. They began their family in 1951 and had seven children, all of whom attended St. Rose School. Leo and Elaine also raised Elabne'syounger brother, Doug, after her parents' deaths in 1954. After a brief stint at the Bonneville Power Administration, Leo was hired in 1954 at Bingham Pump Co. He stayed there until retiring as chief test engineer. 'Ihe company was then known as Sulzer Bingham. He continued as aconsultant for 10 years, with a total of 44 years ofservice. Leo was aproud supporter of Central Catholic, the University of Portland and was a Trailblazerseason ticket holder for many years.He also followed Oregon State University athletics, Notre Dame and Duck football. He was a fixture at his children's and grandchildrerI's activities, always lending support and encouragement. Many will rem ember cigarsmoke as a signal that Leo was Lnattendance! He was an active volunteer, serving on boards at St. Rose School as Athletic Director, Central Catholic High School, with Elaine as co-presidents of the St. Mary'sAcademy ParentsClub and the University of Portland Alumni Board of Directors. Leo was always willing to help get things done and was a longtime supporter of the Blanchet Houseof Hospitality. He wastruly one of the greatest generation but was as humble and kind asanyone you would ever meet. He was the product of a great family and the Catholic educational system. Leo was atrue example of a great Christian gentleman for whom actions not words were the true measure of a man. He will be missedby many! Leo was predeceased by his sisters, Ruth Millar and Leone Roelandt. He is survived by his wife, Elaine; sister, Marie McCarty; children Dan (Rob), Phil (Diane), Nick (Kerry), Pete (Pam), John (Debbie), Mary Randazzo (Dennis), and Ed (Becki); 19 grandchildren end 10 great-grsndchildren; md many nieces md nephews. 'lhe family suggests remembrsnces tothe Leo A. Garrow Scholarship Fund at Central Catholic High School, 2401 SE Stark Street, Portland, OR 97214.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
i
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i
TODAY
I
TONIGHT
HIGH 77'
Yesterday Normal Record Low
71 41'
96' in 1 9 18 26'in 1916
PRECIPITATION
60/51
5 w
d
Ju l 1
Jul 8
Cannon 59/50
72/44
Tigamo 62/47
High: 97 at Ontario Low: 38'
6
3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrems.
POLLEN COUNT ~y h gr
u L
Wee ds
uf~ L
• W co
dieten 71/
/46 • Mitch II 78/40
76/37
•
• Prineville
• •
79/38
• Eugene
Granitee 72/33
• John Day
• Pa lina
' Re d Brothers Su iVere 77/38 • T S/ 7 • l.a pine Ham ton e Grove Oakridge 78/44
42
Roseburg 82/52
Gra n
62/ Gold ach ~ 78/
Bro ings
8 51
Valee 87/52
•
77/37
ese/51
•
Beaver Marsh
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty 64/55/0.00 63/50/pc 63/49/pc L a Grande 83/44/0.00 77/38/s 75/37/s La Pine Brookings 96/50/Tr 7 2/51/s 68/51/s Me d ford Bums 89/41/0.00 82/39/s 80/40/s Ne wport Eugene 82/45/0.00 78/43/s 79/45/s No r th Bend Klamath Fags 86/38/0.00 85/45/s 83/45/s O n tario Lakeview 82/45/0.00 85/47/s 83/46/s Pe ndleton
82/42
80/43
• Burns Jun tion • 87/44 Rome 88/46 McDermi
• Lakeview 85/47
85/45
Nyssa BB/5 2
Jordan V aey
Frenchglen
Klamath
• Ashl nd • FaRS 85/
untura • Burns J85/43
Riley 82/39 83/38
• Ch ristmas alley Silver 81/39 Lake 79/41 82/39 • Paisley Chiloquin Medfo d '86/45
Yesterday Today Saturday City Astoria Baker City
• Fort Rock Cresce t • ST/35
tario
78/ 4 1
86/44
Yesterday Today Saturday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
city
Yesterday Today Saturday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
84 / 59/0.00 78/40/s 74/40/s 82/39/0.00 78/38/s 75/37/s 92/5 2 /0.00 89/51/s 87/52/s 59/5 0 /0.00 58/45/s 57/45/pc 63 / 46/0.00 60/48/s 62/48/s 97/69/0.00 88/51/s 84/50/s 90/ 5 4/0.00 82/44/s 79/48/s
Portland 79/5 3/0.0073/50/pc 77/51/s Prinevige 86/ 39/0.0079/38/s 75/40/s Redmond 87/ 43/0.0079/37/s 78/38/s Roseburg 88 / 54/0.00 82/52/s 82/51/s Salem 82/48/0.00 77/47/s 79/49/s Sisters 85/39/0.00 81/36/s 78/38/s The Dages 7 3 /61/0.00 80/52/s 82/52/s
•
As of 7 a.m.yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ TOS ~g s
~ gs
~ t es
~ 20 s ~ a g s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~e c s ~7 09
~ ag s ~ gg s ~ 10 0s ~ 1 10s
Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 409 6 3 74% EXTREMES (for the Wickiup 138911 69% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 7 4 6 65 86% 48 contiguous states) Ochoco Reservoir 29180 66vo National high: 110 Prineville 97951 66vo at Death Valley,CA River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. National low: 36 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 313 at Lake Yellowstone,WY Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1700 Precipitation: 4.57" Deschutes R.below Bend 109 atShenandoah,IA Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2010 Little Deschutes near LaPine 72 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 27 Crooked R.above Prineville Ree. 12 Reservoir C rane Prairie
231 52 7
FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Redmond/Madras Sisters Prinevige La Pine/Gilchrist
77/38 eU 7/36
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
WATER REPORT
Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.
'Baker G
•
Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577
Crooked R.below Prineville Res.
75/39 Enterprise • 75/39
JosePh Grande • 78 40 Union
• He PPner u p i Condon 0/41
Camp Sh man Red n
R
72/51
The highertheAccuWealher.rxrm IIYIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low
G rasses T r ee s
79/46
• ermiston lington as/47 Meac am Losti ne
• 78/39
Not available Not available Not available Not available Not available
Source: USDA Forest Service
SQ
Sunshine andpleasant
Oue c Port
9
9
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 94/71/Tr 92/71/pc 91/72/t Akron 91n1/0.00 88/65/t 76/65/t Albany 82/65/Tr 85/67/pc 81/57/pc Albuquerque 90/63/0.00 82/62/pc 84/61/t Anchorage 57/47/0.09 63/49/s 68/54/s Atlanta 86n1/0.91 85/70/t 90/73/pc Atlantic City 87/66/0.00 87/72/pc 87/69/t Austin 92no/0.00 89/71/pc Bsn0/t Baltimore 93/65/0.00 91/73/pc 90/67/t Billings 81/57/0.01 84/53/s 75/52/pc Birmingham 85n1/0.11 85/70/t gon2/pc Bismarck 74/57/0.00 82/58/s 81/54/t Boise 91/59/0.00 85/52/s 83/53/s Boston 88/64/0.00 86/65/pc 78/61/t Bridgeport, CT 87/66/Tr 80/68/pc 83/63/t Buffalo 73/61/0.02 81/60/t 78/61/pc Burlington, VT 80/68/Tr 77/59/r 80/57/pc Caribou, ME 76/57/0.24 76/55/pc 72/51/pc Charleston, SC 89n2/0.00 91/74/t 94/74/pc Charlotte 90/68/0.00 89/71/pc 92/70/pc Chattanooga 89/68/0.00 86/71/t oono/pc Cheyenne 64/56/0.17 69/50/c 74/51/t Chicago 72/63/0.03 69/53/t 71/61/c Cincinnati 92/63/0.00 89/69/t 83/68/t Cleveland 77/65/Tr 87/62/t 72/61/t ColoradoSprings 74/55/0.73 63/50/r 76/53/t Columbia, MO 91n1/0.00 81/69/t 84/70/t Columbia, SC 90n1/0.00 92/73/t 95/73/pc Columbus,GA 88/69/0.00 86/69/t 91/70/pc Columbus,OH 92/67/0.00 89/68/t 80/67/t Concord, NH 88/63/0.00 87/66/pc 82/55/c Corpus Christi 91n5/Tr 91/78/pc 91/78/pc Dallas 93/74/0.00 91/72/pc 87/70/t Dayton 91/68/0.00 88/69/t 82/70/t Denver 76/57/0.00 69/52/t 79/55/t Des Moines 74/65/0.32 72/62/pc 77/69/pc Detroit 73/63/0.02 83/60/t 74/62/pc Duluth 74/48/0.00 75/50/s 74/54/s El Paso 98n3/0.00 98/70/s 99/68/s Fairbanks 55/46/0.05 61/43/pc 69/49/s Fargo 80/57/0.00 82/61/s 82/61/s Flagstaff 73/48/0.01 71/47/pc 72/48/t Grand Rapids 73/58/0.00 72/55/t 75/63/pc Green Bay 66/58/0.25 69/51/sh 73/59/pc Greensboro 89/69/0.00 87/71/pc 91/71/pc Harrisburg 91/67/0.00 92/72/pc 84/65/t Harfford, CT 89/68/0.00 88/70/pc 86/59/t Helena 88/55/0.00 81/48/s 76/47/pc Honolulu 86/73/0.00 85nz/s 87/72/s Houston 94n3/0.01 89/75/t 84/74/t Huntsville 92n2/0.05 86/71/t 89/Tl/pc Indianapolis 90/69/0.00 86/68/t 85/70/t Jackson, MS 91/71/Tr 85/71/t 89/72/t Jacksonville 89/67/0.00 otnO/pc 94nO/pc
45'
Sunny
Amsterdam Athens
S0
'
68/54/pc 86/67/s 59/53/c 106/79/s 99/80/pc 84/65/pc 80/69/s 80/60/1 67/49/pc 90/67/s 59/45/sh 94/66/s 89/68/s 59/41/sh 83/78/t 61/47/c 55/43/pc 79/60/t 70/43/s 91/83/1 80/66/s 83/57/s 64/40/s
75/66/pc 67/59/sh 70/54/pc 72/51/pc 94/81/1
Yesterday Today Ssturday
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litffe Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 55/46/0.66 61/44/pc 68/51/sh 89/73/0.06 72/65/1 79/68/t 75/56/0.14 75/55/1 75/62/pc
95n4/0.00 97ng/pc 99/80/pc 90/65/0.00 87/70/t 76/65/3.02 73/62/pc 94nz/0.00 91n3/t 75/62/0.00 76/63/pc 93/68/0.00 88/73/t 65/57/0.85 70/54/pc otn4/0'.00 90n4/t
San Jose
santa re
64/50/sh 64/55/pc 79/59/pc 74/63/pc 86n1/t 87no/pc 84n6/t 84n6/t sgn2/o.oo 86/71/pc 88/67/t 93/70/0.00 89ft3/pc 88/66/t 90/73/0.00 90n5/pc 92n1/pc 92/73/0.00 88no/t 82/69/t 70/64/2.21 73/62/pc 76/66/t 89/71/0.01 91ft4/pc 94n3/t 102/72/0.00 104n8/s 105n9/s 90/69/1.60 84/66/1 83n2/pc 92/70/0.00 94ns/pc 90/69/t 100/82/0.00 103/80/s 104/81/s 63/56/0.10 67/61/0.30 91/67/0.05 90nT/0.07
89/68/1 79/65/t 80/59/pc 80/57/c 85/67/pc 83/59/t 90ft3/pc 93n3/pc 78/56/s 78/55/pc 92/61/s 94/59/s 92/73/pc 92/70/t 83/59/1 78/58/pc 101/63/s 95/59/s
88n2/t 86n4/t 86/59/pc 85/61/s 92ft6/pc 90n6/t
70/64/pc 72/65/pc 77/57/pc 73/55/pc 82/60/Tr 87/61/pc 83/57/pc 86/56/0.00 78/54/pc 79/54/t 90/69/0.11 91n2/t 94n1/pc 75/53/0.00 70/51/pc 74/52/s 63/58/0.56 75/59/s 75/62/pc 87/58/0.00 75/45/s 74/49/pc
Savannah Seattle Sioux Fags Spokane Springfield, MO oono/o.oo 87/70/1 Tampa 88/73/0.06 91n6/t Tucson 92/72/0.00 99nO/s Tulsa 95ns/o'.oo 91f/3/t Washington, DC 93/71/0.00 94n7/pc Wichita 96/73/0.07 79/68/1 Yakima 96/64/0.00 85/48/s Yuma oon4/o'.oo 102ft6/s 4
82/68/t 75/63/t 88n4/t 77/63/pc 86/71/t 75/62/pc 90n4/t
ssn2/0.55 9Ong/pc 89n9/pc
90/73/0.00 86/60/0.00 86/62/0.00 93/70/0.08 Rapid City 61/55/0.96 Reno 86/58/0.14 Richmond 92/67/0.00 Rochester, NY 78/59/0.00 Sacramento 97/60/Tr St. Louis 93/73/0.00 Salt Lake City 78/66/0.02 San Antonio 92/77/0.00 San Diego 70/64/0.01 San Francisco 71/54/0.00
Providence Raleigh
i
3/54
73/54/0.00 80/63/pc 84/64/0.00 84/70/s Auckland 57/49/0.03 59/53/c rk 1 Baghdad 106/78/0.00 105/78/s s rd %F' ~ ~ ' uffelo Che n Bangkok 99/82/0.00 99/81/1 72/62 , S1/40 69/5 gadefphfe~ Beijing 84/62/0.01 83/65/pc 'ceg C o lmb ens Beirut 79n2/0.00 79/69/s en enasco S e n Leke 7 ~ / 53 9 h 77/57 6 6/59 c < x x Berlin 76/50/0.00 77/57/s ington u Bogota 61/50/0.10 66/48/t Budapest 84/66/0.03 88/64/t ~h~ ss Buenos Ai r es 59/39/0.00 59/46/s • ediu W +Ohtute Cabo San Lucas 93/72/0.00 94/67/s Se/Y • 7/45 ph i u ~ ~e '+ ' +v ' ' ' ~ L' Cairo 86/67/0.00 89/69/s Anchorage A lbuque ue kl e homa Ci t 5 Calgary 82/50/0.00 54/40/1 • 1cs/9 vh t kii> 43 II 0 Sz/62 9 Ssnc Cancun 88n9/0.75 86/77/t Ithe 7 /44 • Osff ~ ~ tuneeu ul pa Dublin 59/46/0.00 62/48/pc sn Edinburgh 70/45/0.00 68/48/pc Geneva 82/55/0.00 78/60/t • rlende Harare 71/42/0.00 73/44/s Orleans • 9 4 Hong Kong 91/83/0.32 90/83/c Honolulu Chihuahua o ~ . t Istanbul 77/64/0.00 79/66/s ssm 99/44 Miemi Jerusalem 73/58/0.00 83/57/s Moiiie 90/Xl 95/73 ' eXXXXWWW W Johannesburg 58/39/0.12 60/40/s 4 W '+ '+ '+ 4 'v 'v 4 4 Lima 76/65/0.00 74/67/pc Lisbon 68/61/0.02 69/57/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 73/50/0.00 78/58/t T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 73/63/0.44 75/52/pc Manila 91/78/0.00 94/81/t 8
82/69/t
91n6/t 100/72/s 84n2/t 90n2/t 80/69/t 84/51/s
103nt/s
I
Mecca Mexico City
116/86/0.00 113/86/c 112/84/s 82/58/0.00 80/58/1 78/59/t Montreal 73/63/0.00 73/56/r 79/55/pc Moscow 68/45/0.00 67/52/pc 77/60/pc Nairobi 73/54/0.00 74/58/pc 75/59/pc Nassau ssno/0'.ot 88/76/pc 87/75/t New Delhi 109/87/0.00 108/87/pc 106/84/pc Osaka 75/68/1.16 84/65/pc 85/68/c Oslo 70/48/0.00 68/52/s 62/50/sh Ottawa 75/57/0.01 70/52/r 78/53/s Paris 82/61/0.02 77/59/1 77/57/s Rio de Janeiro 84/69/0.00 79/69/pc 82/70/s Rome 84/61/0.00 83/65/pc 86/68/pc Santiago 63/34/0.00 60/31/s 55/27/s Sao Paulo 79/63/0.00 67/62/1 78/65/s Sapporo 74/55/0.00 70/59/pc 71/63/sh Seoul 81/64/0.14 83/65/pc 83/64/pc Shanghai 67n4/0'.00 92/75/pc 87/73/c Singapore 84/82/0.12 86n8/t 88/78/sh Stockholm 68/52/0.00 75/54/s 73/52/pc Sydney 62/53/0.09 65/51/pc 65/51/pc Taipei 93/81/0.00 91/81/1 93/81/1 Tel Aviv 81/67/0.00 81/69/s 82/69/s Tokyo 77/70/0.62 77/69/r 78/68/c Toronto 77/55/0.00 73/56/r 77/57/s Vancouver 67/58/0.00 67/50/s 67/52/s Yienna 81/57/0.00 89/65/pc 90/67/c Warsaw 75/52/0.00 81/64/s 84/63/s
PACIFIC FURNITURE DEALEAS
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Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows.
EAST:Sunnyto partly cloudy andlocally breezy todaywith a seasonably warm afternoon. CENTRAL:Mostly
24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.44" in 1950 Month to date (normal) 0.6 0" (0.32") Year to date(normal) 6.02 " (5.34") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 7"
Jun16 Jun24
MONDAY
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TEMPERATURE 84 46'
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Plenty of sunshine
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C3 NBA, C3 Track 8t field, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
WCL BASEBALL
GOLF: OREGON OPEN
Bend evertakes
' orin 'roun ea sto tite
Cowlitz13-12 LONGVIEW— Tyler Davis scored on afielder's choice in the13th inning as Bendtook its record to 5-1 with a1312 West Coast League victory over Cowlitz on Thursday. Bend racked up14 hits and wasaided by six Cowlitz errors. Sam TeagueandCooper Hummell eachhad three hits for the Elks, while Hummell added five RBls and two doubles. Tommy Lanealso had a pair of doubles for Bend. Isaac Benard led the Black Bears (0-3 WCL)
Final
ca e''Q
gon Open
• David LeBeck rallies for Openvictory SUNRIVER — David
LeBeckhad agoalinm ind Jesse Heinly, Bend 68-75-73 — 216 for the final day of the Oregon Open Invitational, after finishing the second round 74-69-74 — 217 two shots back of leader DerRyan Books Ryan Benzel
71-74-73 — 218
Hogan Arey
72-71-75 — 218
Sunrivor on
Tied with second-round
The Bulletin
71-74-68 — 213
Invitational
at Crooowater Club in
Brian Thornton 6 8-72-69 — 209 By Kevin Duke Casey King
IL
David LoBock attempts a putt on the 17th green during the final round of the Oro-
ek Barron. "I hope to make it as bor-
leader and defending champion Derek Barron coming off the 11th green at Crosswater Club on Thursday, LeBeck kept it in the fairway and hit greens over the next five holes, playing
Thursday.
that stretch at 1 under par
Ryan Brennecke / The Bulletin
Loeock won the championohip at 9-undor par 207.
— while Barron suddenly ing a round as possible," LeB- struggled to do the sameeck, from Astoria Golf and and the Oregon pro pulled Country Club in Warrenton, away for an eventual twosaid Wednesdaynight. shot win. He accomplished his goal. SeeOpen/C4
with three hits.
Reliever Kris Jackson earned the win for Bend. Bend returns home today for a three-game series with Victoria.
MOUNTAIN BIKERACING
First pitch is set for 6:35
p.m. — Bulletin staff report
GOLF Bend Ladiesmark 50th tourneyyear The 50th annual Bend Ladies Invitational golf tournament begins today with a practice round at BendCountry Golf and Country Club. The tournament is the longest-running women's event in Central Oregon, and it is one ofthe few stroke-play events for women in thePacific
Adam Craig
celebrates with the crowd after finishing hio boor to win the Blitz
mountain bike race on
Thursday evening at Tothorow Golf Club in Bond.
Northwest.
The tournament begins Saturday with a 9:30 a.m. shotgun. The second and final round gets underway at 9a.m. Sunday, again with a shotgun start. About100 womenare expected to compete in four flights; handicaps range from 0 to32. Competitors from five states are represented and four recent winners
Joe Kline/ The Bulletin
are in the field. Last
year's champion, Awbrey Glen's RosieCook, Eugene's Leilani Norman (2013) and BendG&CC members AmyAnderson (2011) andNettie Morrison (2008) are expected to compete. Spectators are welcome free of charge; proper golf attire is required. A dinner celebrating the tourney's 50th year will be held tonight for tournament participants. Call the pro shop for more information at 541-3823861. — Bulletin staff report
• Bend's Adam Craig wins the Blitz mountain bikeraceon the beer chug
not stop until your glass is empty. Bend's Adam Craig came
By Mark Morical
feet behind Wells Thursday night at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend, but Craig finished his beer first and claimed
the craft brew from 10 Barrel
The Bulletin
Brewing Co., he struggled
Todd Wells could not find
COLLEGE SPORTS OSU names2015 hall of fame class CORVALLIS — The
2005 OregonState baseball team, which featured Madras' Jacoby Ellsbury and became the first Beaver teamto reach the CollegeWorld Series in more than50 years, will be part of the 2015 OSUSports Hall of Fame class. Bob DeCarolis, director of athletics at Oregon State, announced Thursday that the 2005 baseball teamwould be among a class that will beinductedontheOSU campus onOct. 23. The class also includes gymnast Heidi Anderson, football running back Ken Simonton, former baseballcoach Jack Riley, former basketball player andcoachJimmy Anderson, and longtime coach, athletic administrator and faculty member Pat Ingram. — Bulletin staffreport
his beer — and that was a big problem. When he finally did locate
to drink it. That was also a
problem. Because in the Blitz moun-
tain bike race, the clock does
into the finish line about 20
his third victory in the Blitz, formerly known as the Blitz to
the Barrel.
additional photos O© See on The Bulletin's website: bondbnllotin.com/sports
Craig's winning time was 55 minutes, 5 seconds, on the 18-mile course from
Wanoga Sno-park southwest
"That's all your body can
of Bend to Tetherow on the city's southwestern outskirts.
handle after that kind of effort," Craig said. cYouneed
Wells, of Durango, Colorado, finished second in 55:ll, and
Bend's Carl Decker took third a couple seconds before you can imbibe anything, Iet alone in 55:51. beer." SeeBlitz /C4
I ttItl
SOCCER: WOMEN'S WORLD CUP
U.S. prepares to faceformer coach By Anne M. Peterson
in Canada, she was more pragmatic approachingthe
The Associated Press
WINNIPEG, Manitoba — On the eve of the match
against her former
NeXt uP N
this eveningbetween
o. 5 Sweden and the
team, Sweden coach Pia
second-ranked United
Sundhage addressed Hope Solo, Abby Wambach, and the challenge of beating the talent-lad-
States. The stakes got higher for the Swedish women following their 3-3 tie with Nigeria in the group-stage opener. "The reason I'm sitting here is because
en United States in the Women's World Cup.
About the only thing she did not do was break into song. During her five-year
X
h i g hly anticipated showdown
United States v Sweden '
5,
,e!
4
B ALL GAM E T O N I G H T vs.Victoria
Friday,June12, 6:35pm Saturday, June 13, 6:35pm ~i T Her."aNT
ThriVent FinanCial Night
of the U.S. team. They
taughtmehowtodeal with the pressure," tenure with the U.S. Sundhage said Thursday. "You can imagine: national team, Sundhage was known for her vocal W e got one point against Nigestylings: She famously warbled r i a, we're going to play the best "Feelin' Groovy" during a press team in the world.... It's my job conference at the 2011 World to m ake sure we try to do our Cup in Germany. very best." For this year's World Cup See U.S. /C4
Sunday,June14, 1:05pm
5 P' ' t d y TV:Fox
$1 Snow Cones Anne M. Peterson/The Associated Press
Sweden coach Pia Sund-
hago speaks during a news conference at the Women'o World Cup Thursday in
Winnipeg, Manitoba.
TICKET INFO:541-312-9259 0 WWW.BENDELKS.COM
Qh@BendB aseball
C2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
ON THE AIR
COHKBOARD
TODAY Time T V/Radio 8 a.m. Golf 1 0 a.m. Gol f 1 p.m. Golf 4 a.m. (Sat.j Golf
GOLF
Champions Tour,Senior Players LPGA Tour ,LPGA Championship PGA Tour, St. JudeClassic EuropeanTour, LyonessOpen AUTO RACING
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Michigan 400, practice NASCAR,XFINITY, Michigan, practice NASCAR,XFINITY, Michigan, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Michigan 400, qualifying ARCA, Michigan SOCCER UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Kazakhstan vs Turkey UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Croatia vs Italy Women's World Cup,Australia vs. Nigeria Women's World Cup,Switzerland vs. Ecuador Women's World Cup,United States vs. Sweden Women's WorldCup,Japanvs.Cameroon
8:30a.m. 10a.m.
FS1 FS1 FS1
11:30 a.m.
1 p.m. 2:30 p.m.
FS2 FS2
9 a.m. FS2 11:30a.m. ESPN2 2 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. FS1 5 p.m. Fox 7 p.m. FS1
FOOTBALL
Arena, Jacksonville at TampaBay Arena, Arizona at Portland
4 p.m. 7 p.m.
ESPN2 CSNNW
TRACK ANDFIELD
4:30 p.m. ESPN
College, NCAA OudoorChampionships BASEBALL
MLB, KansasCityat St. Louis MLB, Seattle at Houston
5 p.m. 5 p.m.
MLB
9 p.m.
Spike
Root
BOXING
Premier Boxing Champions
SATURDAY AUTO RACING
AutoRacing,24 HoursofLeMans 5:30 a.m. FS2 NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Michigan 400, practice 6 a.m. FS1 NASCAR,XFINITY, Michigan, qualifying 7 a.m. FS1 NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Michigan 400, practice 9 a.m. FS1 NASCAR,XFINITY Series: Michigan 10:30 a.m. FS1 IndyCar, HondaIndy Toronto, qualifying 2 p.m. N B CSN NASCAR,Truck Series, Gateway, qualifying 2 :30 p.m. FS2 NASCAR,Truck Series, Gateway 5 :30 p.m. FS1 AutoRacing,24 HoursofLeMans 8 p.m. FS2 AutoRacing,24 HoursofLeMans 4 :30 a.m. FS2 SOCCER UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Armenia vs Portugal 8:50a.m. ESPN UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Ireland vs Scotland 9 a.m. FS2 Women's WorldCup,Francevs.Colombia 10 a.m. Fox UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Gibraltar vs Germany 11:30 a.m. FS2 Women's WorldCup,Englandvs.Mexico 1 p.m. Fox Women's World Cup,Brazil vs. Spain 1 p.m. FS1 Women's World Cup,South Koreavs. Costa Rica4 p.m. FS2 FIFA U-20World Cup, quarterfinal, TBA vs. Mali 6 p.m. FS2 7 p.m. Root MLS, FCDallas at Seattle FIFA U-20World Cup, Serbia vs. United States 9:30 p.m. FS1 FIFAU-20Wo rl dCup,TBA vs.Senegal 9:30 p.m. FS2 GOLF
PGA Tour, FedExSt.JudeClassic LPGA Tour ,LPGA Championship PGA Tour, St. JudeClassic Champions Tour,Constellation Senior Players EuropeanTour, LyonessOpen
10a.m. noon noon noon 3:30 a.m.
Golf NBC
CBS Golf Golf
BASEBALL
MLB, Toronto at Boston NCAA World Series, Arkansasvs. Virginia
10:30 a.m. noon 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB, Seattle at Houston
MLB, Arizona atSanFrancisco NCAA World Series, Florida vs. Miami MLB,LosAngelesDodgersatSanDiego
MLB ESP N Roo t Fox ESP N MLB
TRACK ANDFIELD
College, NCAA Outdoor Championships EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, StephenFoster/Fleur de Lis
11:30 a.m. ESPN 5 p.m.
N B CSN
5 p.m.
NBC
6 p.m.
SHO
HOCKEY
NHL, Stanley CupFinal, Chicago at TampaBay BOXING
Deontay Wilder vs. Eric Molina
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL FOrmer COugar drafted dy YankeeS — Alex Robinett, a 2011 graduate of Bend's Mountain View High School, was selected by the NewYorkYankees Wednesday in the 32nd round of the Major League Baseball draft. A right-handed pitcher who recently completed his collegiate career at ArmyWest Point, Robinett was the 963rd player selected overall. As a senior at West Point, Robinett posted a 6-5 record and rankedamong Patriot League leaders with a 2.01 ERA, 92 strikeouts (in 80N innings) and a.194 opponents batting average. The highlights of his season included a1-0 no-hit victory over Longwood and a21-strikeout performance in a shutout win over Air Force.
WRESTLING FOrmer PrOfeSSiOnal RhOdeSdead at 69 — WWEsays Virgil Runnels, a former professional wrestler known by his fans as Dusty Rhodes,hasdied.Hewas69.Thecompanysays Runnels diedThursday,butaspokesman declinedto saywhereorhow he passed away, saying the family had not authorized the release of that information. Runnels, who also went by the nickname "The American Dream," was amember of the WWEHall of Fame, and held the NWAchampionship three times. He becamefamous during the height of wrestling's popularity in the1970s and 1980s, appearing in signature yellow polka dot tights with his sidekick "valet" Sapphire.
FOOTBALL EagleS releaSe two-time PrOBawl guard MathiS —Chlp Kelly dismissed another productive player. Twopeople with direct knowledge of the situation say the Philadelphia Eagles releasedtwotime Pro Bowl guard EvanMathis on Thursday. Both people spoke to The Associated Press oncondition of anonymity because the team hasn't publicly disclosed the transaction. Mathis had missedall voluntary practices this spring because of acontract dispute. Hewas due to earn $5.5 million this year and $6million next year, but now becomes a freeagent. — From staffand wire reports
RODEO
LPGA
BASEBALL
SOCCER
Women'sPGAChampienship Thursd ay Sisters Rodeo WCL Women's World Cup At Wes tchesler CountryClub, WeslCourse Thursday's slackresults AU TimesPDT WESTCOAST LEAGUE Harrison, N. Y. First ge-round AU TimesPDT Purse: $3.6 million Tie-down roping — 1,TysonDurfey, Savannah, GROUP STAGE Yardage:6,670; Par:73(36-37) GROUPA Mo., 8.6seconds,$1,681.73.2, JeremyKempker, SouthDivision First Round lea d ers W L T G F GA Pls Eugene,Mo.,8.7, $1,462.37. 3, ShaneHanchey, JennyShin W L Pct GB 33-33—66 Sulpher,La.,8.8,$1,243.02.4/5, JordanKetscher, BrookeHenderson 5 1 833 Canada 1 0 1 1 0 4 33-34—67 SquawValley,Calif., 9.0, $913.98;JoeHoffman, KarrieWebb 5 1 833 Netherlands 1 1 0 1 1 3 33-35 — 68 Chehal is,Wash.,9.0,$913.98.6/7,BenRobinson, MoriyaJutanugarn 2 4 333 3 China 1 1 0 1 1 3 34-34—68 RedDeer,Alberta, 9.1, $475.27; TyHolly, Mount CharleyHull NewZealand 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 6 000 5 34-34—68 Vernon, 9.1, $475.27.8, DaneKissack, Spearfish, KarineIcher Thursday' sGames East Oivision 35-34—69 S.D., 9.2,$146.24. China1, Netherl a nds 0 W L Pct GB SiminFeng 32-37—69 Steer wrestling — 1,TrevorKnowles, MountVer- JoannaKlaten Canada 0, NewZealand0 Yakima Valley 5 1 833 37-33—70 non, 4.3seconds,$1,732.96. 2/3, BlakeKnowles, ChellaChoi Monday'sGames Kelowna 3 3 400 2 35-35 — 70 Heppner, 4.5, $1,284.78; Matt Reeves,Cross Min Lee Canada vs. Netherlands,4:30 p.m. WallaWalla 3 3 400 2 37-33—70 Plains,Texas,4.5, $1,284.78. 4/6, ClaytonMoore, Hyo JooKim C hina vs. Ne w Z e aland,4:30p.m. Wenatchee 1 2 333 2'/~ 37-33—70 PouceCoupe,British Columbia, 4.6, $557.73; SandraGal 34-36—70 West Division HunterCure,Holliday,Texas, 4.6, $557.73;Luke JaneRah GROUPB 34-36—70 W L Pct GB Branquinho,LosAlamos, Calif., 4.6,$557.73. W L T G F GA Pls Sei Young Kim 37-33—70 Bellingham 4 2 667 Team roping{leaders) —1,Garrett Rogers, Baker JessicaKorda Germany 1 0 1 11 1 4 37-33—70 Victoria 3 3 500 1 City /JakeMinor,Eff ensburg,Wash.,5.5seconds. CristieKerr Norway 1 0 1 5 1 4 36-34—70 Kitsap 2 4 333 2 2, RyanReed/Wittmann, Ariz./Monty Joe Petska, BrittanyLincicome 1 1 0 3 6 3 37-33—70 Cowlitz 0 3 000 2'/z Thailand Turlock,Calif., 5.8. 3,ColtonCampbell, Klamath Lexi Thom Ivory Coas t 0 2 0 2 13 0 pson 35-35—70 Falls/DanieHol l land,Bonanza,6.1.4, KadenRich- CandieKung Thursday' sGames 37-33—70 Thursday' s Games ard, Roosevelt,Utah/CodyDoescher, Roosevelt, Germany1,Norway1 AzaharaMunoz 34-36—70 Victoria 4,Kitsap2 Utah, 6.3. 5, MikeMcG inn, Haines/Bill Justus, JenniferSong Thailand3,Ivory Coast2 35-35—70 WallaWalla4,Wenatchee3 Haines,6.4.6, KoltonSchmidt, Barrhead,Alberta/ StacyLewis Monday'sGames 36-34—70 Kelowna 6, Yakima5 Shane Crossley, Hermiston, 6.6. Thailandvs.Germany,1 p.m. BrittanyLang 33-38—71 Bend13,Cowlitz12(13innings) Barrel racing (leaders) — 1,TaylorJacob,Car- Jing Yan IvoryCoastvs.Norway,1p.m. 33-38—71 Corvallis 5,Bellingham4 mine, Texas,17.71seconds. 2, JadeCrossley, GwladysNocera 34-37—71 Today'sGames Hermiston,17.83.3, KaleyBass, Kissimmee, Fla., PaulaReto GROUP C 36-35—71 Bellingham atKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. 17.86. 4, Kelsie Miller, Riley, 17.89. 5, Rachel InbeePark W L T G F GA Pls 37-34—71 Medfordat Kelowna,6:35p.m. Cameroon 1 0 0 6 0 3 Dice, Livermore,Calif., 17.90. 6, Pamela Capper, ChristinaKim 35-36—71 Cowlitz atKitsap,6:35p.m. Cheney, Wash.,17.97. 7/8, SharonGow,Roseburg, Kris Tamulis Japan 1 0 0 1 0 3 34-37—71 Victoria atBend,6:35p.m. Switzerl a nd 18.06;HannahCarlisle, Bend,18.06. 0 1 0 0 1 0 SophiaPopov 36-35—71 Corvallis atWenatchee,7:05p.m. Ecuador 0 1 0 0 6 0 Sydnee Michaels 34-37—71 T oday's Games Mina Hari g ae 37-34—71 Thursday's liaescore GOLF Switzerlandvs. Ecuador, 2p.m. PaulaCreamer 37-34 — 71 Japan vs.Cameroon, 5p.m. AnnaNordqvist 36-35—71 Local PerrineDelacour 36-35—71 Elks13, Bears12 (10 innings) GROUP D 37-34 — 7 1 Mi JungHur OregonOpenInvit ational W L T G F GA Pls CarolineHedwall 36-35—71 Bend 102 4OB 238 Ogg 1 — 13 14 2 Thursday atCrosswater Club, Sunriver UnitedStates 1 0 0 3 1 3 PernillaLindberg 35-36—71 Cewlitz 104 01B 6BB Ogg g — 12 13 6 Yardage:Tzggg;Par: 72 0 0 1 3 3 1 Kelly Shon 36-35 — 71 Hunter,Newman(5), Albrecht(7), Wiger(8),Boone Nigeria Final Sweden 0 0 1 3 3 1 35-37 — 7 2 KendalDye l (9), Jackson(12) and Hummell. Krueger, Rayburn 67-69-71 —207 DayidLebeck, Astoria 0 1 0 1 3 0 MinjeeLee 39-33—72 (7), Hawki(8), n Clift(9), Wood(12) and Pavletich. W Australia BrianThornton,Meridian 68-72-69 —209 T oday's Games AlisonLee 39-33—72 — Jack son.L— Wood.28— Bend;Hummeff (2), 68-66-76 —210 DerekBarron, Tacoma Australia vs. Ni g eri a ,2 p.m. Thidapa Suwannapura 38-34—72 Lane(2), Da vis; Cowlitz: Benard(2), Archibald.3B71-74-68 —213 CaseyKing,Tokatee UnitedStatesvs. Sweden,5 p.m. GerinaPiler 37-35—72 Cowlitz:LoForte. 70-73-72 —215 RyanMalby,IronHorse HaNaJang 36-36—72 68-75-73 —216 JesseHeinly, Bend GROUPE Mirim Lee 35-37—72 72-74-71 —217 MattEpstein,lnglewood BASKETBALL W L T G F GA Pls 35-37—72 74-69-74—217 Mo Martin RyanBooks,Wenatchee Brazil 1 0 0 2 0 3 36-36—72 Ko Shane Prante, FortSteilacoom 68-74-76 —218 Lydia CostaRica 0 0 1 1 1 1 So YeonRyu 35-37—72 NBA playoffs 71-74-73 —218 RyanBenzel, Sahalee Spain 0 0 1 1 1 1 AlenaSharp 36-36—72 74-72-72 —218 SandyVaughan, GlenAcres N ATIONAL B AS KE TBALL A SS OCI A TI O N S outh Korea 0 1 0 0 2 0 MarinaAlex 36-36—72 72-71-75 —218 HoganArey,TrystingTree AR TimesPDT Saturday' sGames Dori Carter 38-34—72 JakeKoppenberg,Beff ingham 68-73-77 —218 MariajoUribe Brazil vs.Spain,1 p.m. 35-37—72 SeanArey,TrystingTree 74-74-71 —219 FINALS South Koreavs.CostaRica,4p.m. 36-36—72 AustinErnst Erik Dlson,Riverbend 73-73-73 —219 (Besl-ef-7;x-if necessary) MeenaLee 37-35—72 TylerWong,Tualatin 72-71-77 —220 Cleveland2, GoldenState 1 GROUPF Jane Park 38-34—72 KylerGable,Avondale 79-71-70 —220 W L T G F GA Pls JulietaGranada 37-35—72 June 4:GoldenState108, Cleveland100,OT LoganLindholm,Bufalo Hil 74-75-71 —220 J une 6: Cl e vel a nd 95, G ol d en S tat e 93, O T France 1 0 0 1 0 3 36-36—72 LauraDavies CoreyPrugh,Manito 70-74-76 —220 June 9: Cl e vel a nd 96, G ol d en S tat e 91 0 0 1 1 1 1 35-37—72 Colombia SethNickerson,Tumwater Valley 77-72-71 —220 BeckyMorgan J une 11; G o l d en S tat e 103, C lev el a nd 8 2 36-37—73 Mexico 0 0 1 1 1 1 JennySuh Billy Bomar, PrairieFalls 72-76-72 —220 S unday: Cl e vel a nd at G ol d en S ta te, 5 p. m . England 0 1 0 0 1 0 Pat Hurst 38-35—73 BradySharp,Walla Walla 73-75-72 —220 Tuesday,June 16: G olden S tat e at C le ve l a nd,6 p.m. Saturday'sGames CatrionaMathew 39-34—73 ChrisGriffin,Tacoma 74-70-76 —220 x -Friday,June 19; C l e v el a nd at G o lden S ta te, 6 p.m . France vs. Col o m b i a ,11 a.m. 37-36—73 BrentMurray,OswegoLake 71-75-74— 220 AmyYang Englan dvs.Mexico,2p.m. Kaufm an 38-35—73 ChrisVander Velde,Tetherow 75-75-71 —221 Kim Thursday' s Summary HaruNomura 36-37—73 ChuckMilne,Vanco 70-74-77 —221 38-35—73 Ryann O'Toole Justin KadinTe , therow 72-78-71 —221 DEALS Xi YuLin 37-36—73 Warriors103, Cavaliers 82 DavidPhay,Whidbey 72-76-73 —221 S hanshan F en g 36-37—73 75-70-77 —222 George MackJr., BlackBute Stanford 38-35—73 Transactions GOLOEN STATE(183) BrianNosler,Golf inthePearl 77-73-72 —222 Angela Julilnkster 37-36—73 Barnes4-9 4-414, Iguodala8-15 2-2 22,Green 73-74-75 —222 BASEBALL Jeff Gustafson,Broadmoor Lee-Anne Pace 36-37—73 6114717,Curry8-1722 22,KThompson49 00 77-74-71 —222 AmericanLeague JaredLambert, Juniper 37-36—73 9, Lee3-7 3-69, Livingston2-43-4 7, Barbosa1-3 Mi HyangLee 76-70-77 —223 B ALTIMORE O RI OLES — Pl aced RHP Miguel JoshHan son,BrokenTop HeeYoungPark 37-36—73 0-0 2, Bogut0-0 0-00, Speights0-21-21, Holiday Gonzalez 70-77-76 —223 onthe15-day DL,retroactive to Wednesday. LukeBennet,Lake Padden M organ Pre ss el 37-36—73 0-0 0-0 0, McA doo 0-0 0-0 0. To tals 36-77 19-27 73-76-74— 223 RecalledRHPMikeWright fromNorfolk (IL). BenFosnickLakeSpanaway Johnson 32-41—73 103. BOSTONREDSOX— AssignedOFCarlosPegueScott Erdmann,OswegoLake 75-74-74—223 Felicity JenniferRosales 34-39—73 CLEVEL AND(82) 72-77-75 —224 ro outright toPawtucket(IL). SentRHPJustin MasterJay Poletiek,Riverside Christel Boel j o n 37-37—74 James7-22 5-10 20,TThompson6-10 0-0 12, son toPawtucketforarehabassignment. 72-74-78— 224 BenNelson,Linden CarlotaCiganda 38-36—74 Mozgov9-16 10-12 28, Deffav edova 3-14 2-2 10, 75-74-75 —224 CLEVEL ANDINDIANS — Dptioned RHPAustin TylerMatthews,Glendale S arah K e m p 36-38—74 Shumper t2-90-05,Smith2-120-04,Jones0-30-0 Adams 76-72-76 — 224 to Columbus(IL). Recalled RHPC.C.Leefrom Matt CowellrLakePadden D ewi Cl a i r e Sc hre ef e l 38-36—74 0, Perkins 0-2 2-22, Harris0-01-21, Miller 0-00-0 Columbus.SentRHPScott Atchison toAkron(EL) for 74-73-77— 224 Dana Christianson,Linden Anderson 36-38—74 0. Totals29-8820-28 82. arehabassignment. Jason Aichele,MeadowSprings 78-74-72—224 Amy Mika Miyaza to 39-35—74 GoldenState 31 23 22 27 —103 HOUSTONASTROS — Recalled RHP Vincent JoshuaScothorne, Brookdale 70-76-78 —224 0 Baek 38-36—74 Cleveland 24 18 28 12 — 82 VelasquezfromCorpusChristi (Texas). Optioned INF MikeKasch,PascoGolfland 74-76-74— 224 37-37—74 Tan Jonathan Vilar to Fresno(PCL). DavidNuhn,University of Idaho 73-74-77— 224 Kelly Pettersen 39-35—74 KANSAS CITYROYALS— Reinstated CErik Kratz RonnieEspedal, Ocean Shores 79-74-72 —225 Suzann S akura Yo kom ine 39-35—74 WNBA ZachLampert, MeadowLakes 77-73-75 —225 from the15-dayDLanddesignated himfor assignH ee Kyung Se o 36-38—74 WOMEN'S NA T I ON AL B AS K E TB AL L AS S OC I A TI ON JakeO'Neal,RoyalOaks 75-69-81 —225 ment. McPherson 36-38—74 AR TimesPDT M. Gardner, TheCreekat Qualchan75-76-74—225 Kristy LOSANGELESANGELS—Agreed to termswith I. K. Kim 36-38—74 LHPAlexHensononaminor leaguecontract andasDylanCramer,Rivers Edge 74-78-73 —225 Wei-Ling Hsu 38-36—74 EasternConference Tyler Brooks,Pendleton 75-72-78 —225 signedhimto Arizona (Arizona). LizetteSalas 35-39—74 W L PctGB Colin Inglis,EmeraldValley 74-76-75 —225 MINNES OTATWINS—OptionedINFJorgePolanVictoriaElizabeth 36-38—74 Washington 2 0 1 . 000 GregMorris,IronHorse 71-81-74—226 SadenaParks co to Chattanooga (SL). Designated RH PTimStauffer 34-40—74 Clint Ables,WildhorseResort 71-78-77 —226 New York 3 1 .7 5 0 for assi g nme nt. PlacedOFEddieRosario onpaternity M in Seo K w a k 37-37—74 Connecticut '4 2 1 .6 6 7 BobRannow,OceanDunes 72-77-77 —226 leave. NatalieGulbis 36-38—74 DavidFern,Downriver 75-77-74— 226 1 2 .3 3 3 1 '4 NEWYORKYANKEES — Placed LHPAndrew Mill38-36—74 Atlanta P .K. Kongkrap ha n 74-75-78— 227 Chicago 1 2 .3 3 3 1'/z er onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to Wednesday. Traded ScottLeritz,Royal Oaks AyakoUehara 38-36—74 75-73-79 —227 Indiana 0 3 .0 0 0 2 '4 R HP David Carpenter to Washington for INFTonyRenNickBaines,Pumpkin Ridge Lisa Ferrero 35-39—74 76-77-75 —228 WesternConference da. RecalledRH PChris Martin andOFMasonWilliams TomSovay,Redmond Ridge 71-81-76 —228 W L P c t G B fromScranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). SentRHPIvan Nova RobGibbons,Arrowhead Bill Winter,ColumbiaEdgewater 71-78-79 —228 Minnesota 3 0 1 . 000 t o Scranton/Wi lkes-Barre forarehab assignment. Cham pgons 77-74-79 —230 Tulsa 2 1 .6 6 7 1 TAMPABAYRAYS— DptionedLHPEnnyRomero ToddO'Neal,Eugene Constellation Se nior PI ayers Championship 79-73-78 —230 Phoenix 1 1 .5 0 0 1'/z to Durham(IL). RobClark,Wenatchee Thurs day 78-75-77 —230 Seattle 1 2 .3 3 3 2 TEXASRANGERS— DptionedRHPSpencerPatJessWingett,Esmeralda At Belm ent C o untry Club 77-75-80 — 232 Los Angel e s 0 1 .0 0 0 2 ton toRoundRock(PCL). Reinstated OFKyleBlanks ColtonKleis, Inglewood BeIment,Mass. 76-75-81 —232 SanAntonio 0 2 .0 0 0 2'/z from the15-dayDL.SentLHPMartin Perezto Frisco BradHunter,GolfTec Purs e:$2.7milliea 76-77-79 —232 Mike Fields,SuddenValley (TL) forarehabassignment. Yardage: 6,812;Par: 71 (36-36) 71-80-82 —233 Thursday'sGames TORONTOBLUEJAYS— OptionedINFMunenori MarkMance,Olympic Club First Roun d leaders 78-75-83 — 236 Atlanta 72, San A ntoni o 69 Kawasakito Buffalo (IL). Recalled RHPScott Copeland TonyRobydek,ProGolf Discount 34-31—65 BernhardLanger 74-77-88 —239 New York 68, P h oeni x 57 f r om Buffalo. JohnKawasoe, Astoria 34-33 — 67 Connecticut67,Chicago65 National League JackWhealdon, Tacoma 74-76-WD —WD RoccoMediate 32-35—67 LeeJanzen Minnesota 94,Seatle 70 ATLANTA BRAVES— Designated RHPTrevor Ca35-32—67 GuyBoros T oday' s Gam e s hill for assi g nm e nt. Selectedthecontract of LHPDana 35-33—68 Colin Montgom erie PGA AtlantaatWashington, 4 p.m. EvelandfromGwinnett (IL). 37-31—68 G ene S a uer s PhoenixatIndiana,4p.m. CINCINN ATI REDS— Placed SSZackCozart on St. JudeClassic 36-33—69 LorenRoberts the15-day DL.OptionedRHPPedroVillarreal to LouisThursday 35-34—69 Mark Cal c avecchi a ville (IL).RecalledINFsChris DominguezandEugenio At TPCSouthwin 33-36—69 MarcoDawson TENNIS Suarez fromLouisvile. ReleasedRHPJasonMarquis. Memphis,Tenn. 34-35—69 ScottVerplank COLORADOROCKIES — OptionedOF/18 Kyle Purse:$6miuion 33-36—69 Olin Brown e Professional ParkerandRHPChristian Bergman to Albuquerque Yardage:7,239; Par70 (35-35) 36-33—69 Esteban Toledo (PCL).ReinstatedOFCorey Dickerson andRHPLaFirst Roundleaders 35-34—69 TopshelfOpen Russ Cochran TroyHawkinsfromthe15-day DL a-denetesamateIrr 35-35—70 Thursday atDenBosch, Netherlands ScottHoch NEW YORKMETS— PlacedRHPDillonGeeon BrooksKoepka 31-33—64 TomPerniceJr. 35-35—70 Men the bereav ement list andINFRubenTejadaonpaternity 33-31—64 JesperParnevik GregOwen 34-36—70 SecondRound eave.ReinstatedRHPBobbyParnell andINFDilson 33-31—64 Kenny RyanPalmer 36-34—70 NicolasMahut, France,def. Roberto Bautista Agut lH Pe rry errera from the15-dayDL. 33-32—65 Billy Andrade ScottBrown 37-33—70 (3), Spain6-2, , 6-4. PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—Agreedto termswith 34-31—65 Joe Durant StevenAlker 33-37—70 AdrianMannarino (6), France,def. Marco ChiudiRHPJuanGutierrezonaminor leaguecontract. 32-33—65 DavidFrost BrianDavis 33-37—70 neffi,Switzerland,6-3,6-2. WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Placed 18 Ryan 33-32 — 65 RichardSterne 33-37—70 David Goffin (2), Belgium,def. Jurgen Melzer, Zimmerman Kirk Triplett onthe15-day DL,retroactive to Wednes34-32—66 Jeff Hart BenCrane 35-35—70 Austria,7-6(2), 6-2. day. Recal l e dOFMatt denDekker fromSyracuse(IL). 34-32 — 66 Tommy Gainey 36-34—70 flya March enko,Ukraine,def.JoaoSousa(8), Por- TransferredOF Rick Gi b son Nate Mcclouth fromthe15- to the 33-33 — 66 TomGilis 34-37—71 tugal,6-3,7-6(2). GaryHallberg 60-dayDL. Alex Prugh 33-33—66 BrianHenninger 37-34—71 Women BASKETB ALL FabianGomez 34-32—66 KevinSutherland 36-35—71 SecondRound National Basketball Association VaughnTaylor 35-32—67 Jeff Magge 37-34—71 Kiki Bertens,Netherlands,def. AnastasiaPavlyrt DETROIT PISTONS—Traded FsCaronButler and MarkWilson 34-33—67 Mike Reid 35-36—71 uchenkova (6), Russia,6-2,6-2. lwaukeefor FErsanlyasova. LucasGlover 35-32—67 Willie Wood 35-36—71 BelindaBencic(4), Swilzerland,def.AlisonVan ShawneWiliams to Mi FOOTBALL BooWee kley 36-31—67 WoodyAustin 37-34—71 Uytva nck,Belgium,6-3,6-2. National Football League JohnRollins 32-35—67 MarkMouland 37-34—71 JelenaJankovic (2), Serbia,def. AndreaHlavackoCINCINN ATI BENGALS— Signed OTCedric OgSpencer Levin 34-33—67 MikeGoodes 38-34—72 va, Czech Republic,6-1 6-4. Chris Smith 34-33—67 JoeySindelar 37-35—72 Annika Beck,Germany, def. Klara Kouklalova, buehi. DETROILIO T NS—Signed GLakenTomlinsonto StewartCink 35-33—68 MarkBrooks 36-36—72 Czech Republic,6-4, 6-4. afour-yearcontract. KenDuke 32-36 — 68 GrantWaite 36-36—72 NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed LB.D.J. Phil Mickelson 37-31—68 PeterSenior 37-35—72 Lynch andTEsJimmayMundineandLoganStokes. MaxHom a 35-33 — 68 ATP 36-36—72 TomLehman ReleasedQBGarrettGilbert, WRZachD'Orazio andTE AustinCook 34-34—68 RogerChapman 36-36—72 Mercedesgup Tim Wri ght. ZackSucher 33-35—68 Bart Bryant 34-38—72 Thursday atStuttgarl, Germany NEWYORKGI ANTS— ReleasedLBRyanJones. HeathSlocum 34-34 — 68 37-35—72 Jay Don Blake S econd Ro u n d SignedLBTonyJohnson. Matt Every 32-36 — 68 ChienSoonLu 35-37—72 Mischa Zve rev, G e rm an y, def . An dreas Se ppi , Ital y , NEWYORKJETS— ReleasedOTSeanHooey. 33-35—68 Tommy MartinLaird 37-35—72 6-2, 6-4. Armour ffl HOCKEY BrianStuard 34-34—68 TomByrum 37-35—72 BernardTomic (5), Australia,def. Tomm y Haas, National HockeyLeague Will Wilcox 34-34—68 SteveJones 37-35—72 Germany, 7-6 (6), 6-2. NEWYORKISLANDERS— Reachedanaff iliation 35-33—68 Hale Irwin CarlosSainzJr 37-35—72 RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. MarcosBaghdatis, agreementwith Missouri (ECHL)for the next two 36-33—69 Jeff Coston BryceMolder 35-37—72 Cyprus, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (4), 6-2. seasons. 34-35—69 Joe Daley KyleStanley 37-35—72 Marin Cilic (2),Croatia, def.MatthiasBachinger, COLLEG E 34-35—69 StevePate LukeGuthrie 37-36—73 Germany, 7-6(2), 6-3. BIG12CONFERENCE — NamedLanceGottardy 35-34—69 Jeff JasonKokrak 38-35—73 Sluman and MelissaKalz communications assistants, Mitch 35-34—69 Hal Sutton Steven Bowditch 35-38—73 Gerberdigital assistantandBridget O'Connell cham35-34—69 ScottDunlap JohnMerrick 38-35—73 WTA pionshipsassistant. 35-34 — 69 RetiefGoosen 38-35—73 MichaelAllen Notlingham Open NEBR ASKA—Announced SLeRoyAlexander and 33-36 — 69 LukeDonald 37-36—73 JohnInman Thursday at Notlingham, En gl a nd WRJariahTolbert wiltransfer. JerryKelly 35-34—69 BobGilder 36-37—73 S econd Ro u n d NOTRE DAME—AnnouncedDEJhonnyWiliams ChadCampbell 32-37—69 WayneLevi 39-34—73 YaninaWickmayer,Belgium, def.BojanaJovanovs- is transferring. Cameron Tringale 36-33 — 69 37-36—73 BradBryant PENNSTATE— Announcedsophomorebasketball TomHoge 35-34—69 RodSpittle 38-35—73 ki, Serbia,6-0, 6-4. Johanna Konta, Britain, def. MonicaPuig, Puerto GGenoThorpewil notreturn nextseason. CameronPercy 33-36 — 69 PaulGoydos 38-35—73 Rico, 4-6,6-4,7-6(5). PURDUE —Grantedareleaseto junior QBDanny OscarFraustro 33-36 — 69 JohnHuston 36-37—73 Agnieszka Radwanska (1), Poland,def. Christina Etling. Roberto Castro 34-35—69 JerrySmith 38-35—73 UnitedStates, 6-3,6-1. MichaelThompson 33-36 — 69 Jim Carter 36-38—74 McHale, Ana Konjuh,Croatia, def. CaseyDelacqua (6), HarrisEnglish 35-34—69 FredFunk 39-35—74 FISH COUNT Australia, 6-4,6-2. NickWatney 35-34—69 WesShort,Jr. 38-36—74 SachiVi ackery,UnitedStates, def.Zarina Diyas(2), WebbSimpson 35-34—69 BradFaxon 36-38—74 Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack 4-6,7-6 (5), 6-1. Seung-Yul Noh 35-34—69 JohnRiegger 39-35—74 Kazakhstan, chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedCoMattJones 35-34—69 CoreyPavin 38-37—75 lumbia Riverdamslast updatedWednesday. Jim Renn er 34-35—69 BarryLane 40-35—75 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd HOCKEY Zac Blair 34-35 — 69 38-37—75 MarkWiebe Bonneville 4,121 412 1 0 6 35 a-BrysonDechambeau 33-36 — 69 DanForsm 39-36—75 -17 an The Daffes 2,050 19 2 6 NHL playoffs 34-35—69 DuffyWaldorf 37-38—75 TyroneVanAswegen John Day 2,485 22 8 27 6 37-33 — 70 39-37—76 NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE TrevorImmelman LarryMize McNary 1,701 12 6 13 4 35-35—70 Sandy 40-36—76 AU TimesPDT ChezReavie Lyle Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, 37-33 — 70 39-38—77 HarrisonFrazar BobTwa y jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected 33-37—70 JoseCoceres 40-37—77 STANLEY CUPFINAL JasonBohn ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedWednesday. 36-34—70 SteveLowery 41-37—78 Charles Howell ffl (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 35-35—70 JohnCook 40-38—78 Jon Curran TampaBay2, Chicago2 Bonneville 249,433 16,091 5,998 2,829 36-34 — 70 39-39—78 Scott Pinckney MarkMcNulty Satur day;ChicagoatTampaBay,5p.m. T he Daffes 208,986 13,798 660 21 4 34-36 — 70 Skip Kenda 39-39—78 Monday: Tim Wilkinson l TampaBayatChicago,5p.m. J ohn Day 175,241 12,526 817 39 8 38-40—78 x-Wedne Bill Lunde 36-34—70 Jim Rutledge sday:ChicagoatTampaBay,5p.m. McNary 159,370 9,027 903 427
FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NBA FINALS
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL eutandings
American League
All TimesPDT
Indians 6, Mariners 0
AMERICANLEAGUE
NewYork Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Boston Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Chicago Cleveland
Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland
East Division W L 33 26 32 29 31 30 29 30 27 34
Pct GB .559 .525 2 .508 3 .492 4 .443 7
28 31
.596 .559 2 .517 4'/z .483 6'/r .475 7
Central Division W L 34 23 33 26 31 29 28 30 West Division W L
34 27 31 29 30 30 27 33 25 37
Pct GB
Pct GB .557
.517 2'/z .500 3'/2 .450 6r/r .403 9'/z
Thursday'sGames Cleveland 6,Seatle 0 Oakland 7,Texas0 Baltimore 6, Boston5 LA. Angel6, s Tampa Bay2
Today'sGames N.Y. Yankees(Pineda7-2) at Baltimore(U.Jimenez 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Cleyeland(Salazar 6-1)atDetroit(Price 5-2),408p m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Danks3-5) atTampaBay(Undecided),4:10p.m. Toronto(Hutchison5-1) at Boston (J.Kelly 2-4),4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Milone2-1) atTexas (W.Rodriguez3-2), 5:05 p.m. Seattle (FHernan dez9-2) at Houston (Oberholtzer 0-1),5:10p.m. Kansas City(Ventura3-5) atSt.Louis (Jai.Garcia1-3), 5:15 p.m. Oakland(Chavez2-6) at L.A.Angels (Santiago 4-3), 7:05 p.m. Saturday'sGames TorontoatBoston, 10:35a.m. MinnesotaatTexas,1:05 p.m. Cleveland atDetroit,1:08 p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat TampaBay,1;10p.m. Kansas CityatSt. Louis,1:10p.m. Seattle at Houston,1.10 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Baltimore, 4:15p.m. Oaklan datL.A.Angels,7:05p.m. Sunday'sGames Cleyeland atDetroit,10:08a.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxat TampaBay,10:10 a.m. N.Y.YankeesatBaltimore,10:35 a.m. TorontoatBoston,10:35 a.m. Seattle atHouston, 11:10a.m. Kansas CityatSt. Louis,11:15a.m. MinnesotaatTexas,12:05p.m. Oakland atL.A.Angels,12:35 p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division
NewYork Washington Atlanta Miami Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee
W L 32 29 31 29 29 31 25 36 22 39
Central Division W L
39 21 32 26 32 27 27 32 23 38
West Division W L LosAngeles 35 25 SanFrancisco 34 27 SanDiego 31 31 Arizona 27 32 Colorado 27 32
Pct GB .525 .517 r/z .483 2'/r
.410 7 .361 10
Pct GB .650 .552 6 .542 6r/r .458 11'/r .377 16r/r
Pct GB .583 .557 fr/r
.500 5 .458 7'/r .458 7'/r
Thursday'sGames
San Diego 6,Atlanta 4,11 innings Miami 6,Colorado0 N.Y.Mets5, SanFrancisco4 Chicago Cubs6, Cincinnati 3 Milwaukee 6,Washington 5
Today'sGames Cincinnati (Cueto4-4) at ChicagoCubs(Hammel 5-2),1:05p.m. Philadelphia(Correia0-0) at Pittsburgh(Locke3-3), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (A.Wood 4-3) at N.Y. Mets(B.colon 8-4), 4:10 p.m. Colorado (K.Kendrick 2-7) at Miami(Urena0-2),4:10 p.m. Washington (Zimmermann 5-3) at Milwaukee(Fiers 2-6),5:10p.m. Kansas City(Ventura3-5) atSt.Louis(Jai.Garcia1-3), 5:15 p.m. LA. Dodgers (Kershaw5-3) at San Diego(Despaigne 3-4), 7:10 p.m. Arizona(C.Ande rson1-1) at SanFrancisco(Bumgarner 7-2),7:15p.m. Saturday'sGames Philadelphia at Pittsburgh,1:05p.m. AtlantaatN.Y.Mets, 1:10p.m. Coloradoat Miami,1:10p.m. KansasCityatSt. Louis, 1:10p.m. Washingtonat Milwaukee,1:10p.m. Arizona at SanFrancisco, 4:15p.m. CincinnatiatChicagoCubs,4:15 p.m. LA. DodgersatSanDiego,710 pm. Sunday'sGames Atlanta at N.Y.Mets,10:10 a.m. Colorado at Miami,10:10a.m. Philadelphia at Pittsburgh,10:35a.m. Washingtonat Milwaukee,11:10a.m. KansasCityatSt. Louis, 11:15a.m. Arizona at SanFrancisco, 1:05p.m. L.A. Dodgers atSanDiego,1:10 p.m. Cincinnatiat ChicagoCubs, 5:05p.m.
Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE
PITCHING —FHernandez, Seattle, 9-2; Pineda, NewYork,7-2; Keuchel, Houston, 7-2;Gray,Oakland, 7-3; Archer,Tampa Bay, 7-4; Buehrle, Toronto,7-4; Carrasco, Cleveland,7-5. ERA— Gray,Oakland,1.74;Archer,TampaBay, 1.84; Keuchel,Houston,1.90; Pelfrey, Minnesota, 2.28; OdorizziTamp , aBay, 2.47; FHernandez, Seatle, 2.51; Chavez, Oakland, 2.51. STRIKEDUTS —Kluber, Cleveland, 109;Archer, TampaBay,108; Sale, Chicago,93; FHernandez, Seattle,81;Salazar,Cleveland, 81; Gray, Oakland, 79; Carrasco, Cleveland,77. SAVES —Perkins, Minnesota,21; Street, LosAngeles, 17;AMiler, NewYork, 17; Britton, Baltimore, 17; Soria,Detroit,16. NATIONALLEAGUE
PITCHING —Gcole, Pittsburgh, 9-2; Wacha, St. Louis, 8-2;Bcolon,NewYork, 8-4; Shields, SanDiego, 7-0;CMartinez,St. Louis, 7-2; Bumgarner, San Francisco,7-2;deGrom,NewYork, 7-4. ERA —Gcole, Pittsburgh,1.73; SMiler, Atlanta, 1.84; Greinke, LosAngeles,1.92; Burnett, Pittsburgh, 2.11;Scherzer,Washington,2.13; deGrom,NewYork, 2.42; Wacha, St.Louis,2.45. STRIKEDUTS —Kershaw, Los Angeles, 101; Shields,SanDiego, 98;Scherzer, Washington, 97; Hamels, Philadelphia, 91; Liriano, Pittsburgh,87; Gcoler Pittsburgh,86;Arrieta, Chicago,83;TRoss, SanDiego,83. SAVES —Rosenthal, St. Louis, 20; Melancon, Pittsburgh,19;Storen,Washington, 19;Casila, San Francisco,18;Familia, NewYork,17.
CLEVELAND— Giovanny Urshela hit his first major league home run, Shaun Marcum andhis bullpen combined on a two-hitter and Cleveland beat Seattle. A 23-year-old from Colombia who madehisbigleaguedebutTuesday, Urshela grounded anRBI single past shortstop Brad Miller in a four-run third, the first batter after Tom Wilhelmsen relieved J.A. Happ (3-2). Cleveland saved the ball for Urshela, who then hit a solo homer off Vidal Nuno in the sixth. Marcum (3-1) retired his first nine batters and already led 5-0 before hitting Logan Morrison on the back of his right leg leading
Orioles 6, RedSox5
Marlins 6, Rockies 0
BALTIMORE —Adam Jones hit the first of Baltimore's threehomeruns off Wade Miley,andthe Orioles beat Boston for their first sweep of the season.Nolan Reimold and MannyMachadoalsohomeredfor the Orioles, whosqueezedouta pair of one-run victories during the three-gameseries.
MIAMI — Giancarlo Stanton drove in four runs with his 22nd homer and a40-foot single, and Miami broke a three-game losing streak by beating Colorado. David Phelps (3-3), rocked by the Rockies at Coors Field last week, pitched a career-high eight innings, allowing four hits. Chris Rusin (2-1), who beat Phelps last week, gave up11 hits and six runs
Boston
Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Pedroia2b 5 1 1 0 MMchd3b 4 2 2 1 B.Holtrf 4 1 1 0 Reimldlf-rf 3 1 1 1 HRmrzlf 2 2 0 0 A.Jonescf 3 2 2 1 Ortizdh 4 1 1 1 Wietersc 3 0 0 1 Napoli1b 3 0 0 1 DYongrf 4 0 2 1 S andovl3b 4 0 2 2 Loughlf 0 0 0 0 Bogarts ss 4 0 1 1 C.Davis dh 4 1 1 0 Bettscf 4 0 1 0 JHardyss 4 0 1 0 Swihartc 4 0 1 0 Pearce1b 4 0 1 1 DeAzapr 0 0 0 0 Flahrty2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 34 5 8 5 Totals 3 2 6 106 Boston 0 00 301 010 — 6 Baltimore 112 1 0 0 1 0x — 6 E—Sandoval (8). LOB —Boston 5, Baltimore5.
in 5/s innings.
Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi Blckmncf 3 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 5 1 3 0 LeMahi2b 4 0 2 0 Prado3b 5 1 1 0 H wknsp 0 0 0 0 Yelichlf 4 2 2 1 Tlwlzkss 4 0 1 0 Stantonrf 5 1 2 4 C Gnzlzrf 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 3 0 1 0 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 JBaker1b 4 1 1 1 Dickrsnlf 4 0 2 0 Realmtc 3 0 2 0 WRosr1b 3 0 0 0 DSolan2b 4 0 0 0 off the fourth. Paulsnph 1 0 0 0 Phelpsp 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 ISuzukiph 1 0 1 0 28 — Sandoval (6), Betts (12), A.Jones(10), D.Young Hundlyc Seattle Cleveland 2 0 0 0 Cappsp 0 0 0 0 (6). HR —Ortiz (7), M.Machado (10), Reimold (1), A. Rusinp ab r hbi ab r hbi Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 Jones(10). SF—Napoli, Wieters. Morrsn1b 3 0 0 0 Avilesss 2 0 0 0 Descalsph-2b1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSD Totals 3 2 0 5 0 Totals 3 76 136 AJcksncf 4 0 0 0 CSantn1b 4 0 0 0 Boston Cano2b 4 0 1 0 Brantlycf-If 4 1 2 0 C olorado 000 0 0 0 0 00 — 0 Miley L,5-6 4 9 5 5 0 3 Miami Seager3b 3 0 0 0 Raburnlf 4 1 1 0 320 010 00x — 6 22-3 1 1 0 2 2 S.Wright S.Smithrf 3 0 0 0 Bourncf 0 0 0 0 E — C a .G onz a le z(3). DP—Colorado1. LOB—ColTazawa 11 3 0 0 0 0 0 orado 7,Miami10.28—Dickerson(6), Prado(11), Trumodh 3 0 1 0 YGomsdh 4 0 0 0 A ckleylf 3 0 0 0 Mossrf 3 2 2 1 Baltimore Realmuto(8). 38—Yelich (1). HR—Stanton (22), Till manW,4-7 52-3 5 4 4 2 2 Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 Urshela3b 4 2 2 2 J.Baker(3).SB—Hechavarria (2). BrachH,4 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 BMillerss 3 0 0 0 Walters2b 4 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSD Roe H,1 1 1 1 1 0 1 RPerezc 3 0 2 2 Colorado 1 0 0 0 1 RusinL,2-1 Totals 2 9 0 2 0 Totals 3 26 106 Britton S,17-18 1 51-3 11 6 6 2 1 T—2:39.A—22,840 (45,971). Seattle 000 000 000 — 0 Kahnle 12-3 0 0 0 1 3 Cleveland 014 0 1 0 0 0x — 6 Hawki n s 1 2 0 0 0 1 DP — Seattle 2.LOB—Seattle 3,Cleveland5.2BMiami National League Cano(15),Moss(15). HR —Urshela(1). PhelpsW,3-3 8 4 0 0 1 6 IP H R E R BBSD Meis 5, Giants 4 Capps 1 1 0 0 0 2 Seattle HBP—byPhelps(Blackmon). 21-3 6 4 4 2 3 HappL,3-2 T—2:41. A—18,003(37,442). 12-3 2 1 0 0 2 NEW YORK — Michael Cuddyer Wilhelmsen Nuno 3 2 1 1 0 4 singled home the winning run in Brewers 6, Nalionals 5 Rodney 1 0 0 0 1 1 the bottom of the ninth inning, Cleveland MarcumW,3-1 7 2 0 0 0 5 and the NewYork Mets beat San MILWAUKEE — Scooter Gennett McAgister 1 0 0 0 0 1 Allen 1 0 0 0 0 1 Francisco to prevent a three-game drove in the go-ahead run with a HBP —by Marcum (Morrison). WP—Marcum 2. sweep. two-out single in the bottom of PB — Zunino. the eighth, capping Milwaukee's T—2:40. A—15,316(36,856). San Francisco N e w York rally from a four-run deficit for a ab r hbi ab r hbi Aokilf 4 1 2 0 Grndrsrf 4 2 2 1 win over Washington. Gennett's Athletics 7, Rangers 0 Panik2b 4 1 1 0 Lagarscf 5 0 1 0 bouncer trickled just inside the Pagancf 2 0 0 0 Duda1b 2 1 0 1 OAKLAND, Calif.— Scott Kazmir Posey1b 3 0 1 1 Cuddyrlf 5 0 2 2 third-base bagandinto left to Maxwllrf 4 1 0 0 WFlorsss 3 0 0 0 allowed one hit in eight innings drive home ShanePeterson from 4 1 1 2 dArnadc 4 0 2 1 to end a nine-start winless streak Bcrwfrss third. MDuffy3b 3 0 0 0 DHerrr2b 3 0 0 0 and lead OaklandoverTexas. Susacc 4 0 1 0 Campll3b 4 0 0 0 L inccmp 1 0 0 0 Niesep 2 1 1 0 Milwaukee Kazmir (3-4) retired13 of his first Y.Petitp 0 0 0 0 Cecilinph 1 1 1 0 Washington ab r hbi 14 batters around asecond-inning Ariasph 1 0 0 0 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 Spancf 5ab2 r3hbi 1 Lucroyc 5 1 0 0 S trcklnp 0 0 0 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 Rendon2b 3 0 1 0 GParracf 4 2 2 1 walkbyAdam Rosalesanddidn't 0 0 0 0 MyryJrph 1 0 0 0 Y Escor3b 4 0 0 0 Braunrf 3 1 2 1 allow a hit until Elvis Andrus' one- Lopezp Kontosp 0 0 0 0 H arperrf 3 0 1 0 Lind1b 4 1 2 1 out single to center in the fifth. B eltph 1 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 1 Romop 0 0 0 0 Espinosss 4 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 4 6 3 Totals 3 4 5 9 5 CRonsn1b 4 2 2 1 SPetrsnlf 4 1 0 1 Texas Oakland San Franci s co 200 002 000 — 4 MTaylrlf 4 1 1 0 Segurass 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi 000 1 2 0 101 — 6 Roarkp 3 0 0 0 Gennett2b 4 0 1 1 D Shldslf 4 0 0 0 Burnscf 3 1 2 1 N ew york Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. Rivero p 0 0 0 0 Garza p 2 0 1 0 Choorf 4 0 0 0 Semienss 4 0 1 0 E—MDuffy(5), Campbell(8). DP —SanFrancisco Barrettp 0 0 0 0 HGomzph 1 0 0 0 Fielderdh 2 0 0 0 Parrinoss 0 1 0 0 1, New York 2. LO B — S an F ran cisco 5, Ne w Y ork 9. Janssn p 0 0 0 0 Blazek p 0 0 0 0 Blanks1b 3 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 1 2 3 2B — Cuddyer (9), d'Arnaud(3), Niese(1), Ceciliani Dsmndph 1 0 1 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Rosales3b 2 0 0 0 Zobrist2b 5 0 1 1 (2). HR —B.Crawford(9). S—Lincecum.SF—Duda. A ndrusss 3 0 1 0 Vogtdh 2 1 0 0 HPerezph-3b 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSD Totals 35 5 9 2 Totals 3 5 6 106 LMartncf 3 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 3 0 0 0 San Franci s co Corprnc 3 0 0 0 Canha1b 4 1 2 2 W ashington 1 1 0 8 0 0 000 — 5 Lincecum 4 2-3 4 3 2 3 5 Milwaukee Alberto2b 3 0 0 0 Pheglyc 3 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 1x — 6 1130 0 0 0 1 E—Rendon (1), Ar.Ramirez (4), G.Parra (2), SeF uldlf 4 1 3 0 Y.Petit S trickland BS , 1 -1 0 3 1 1 0 0 Totals 2 7 0 1 0 Totals 3 27 117 gura (9). DP —Milwaukee1. LOB —Washington 5, 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee Texas 0 00 000 000 — 0 Lopez 7. 28—Span (13), Lind(14). 38—Braun Kontos 1131 0 0 0 0 (1). HR Oakland 100 000 06x — 7 —C.Robinson(1), G.Parra (4). CS—Rendon 2-3 1 1 1 DP—Texas 2,Oakland1.LOB— Texas2,Oakland RomoL,0-3 (2), Harper(4). New york 9. 2B—Fuld(8). HR—Reddick (9), Canha (8). SBIP H R E R BBSD Niese 7 5 4 2 2 4 Burns(11),Fuld(5). SF—Burns. Washington 1 0 0 0 1 0 Roark IP H R E R BBSD Goeddel 62-3 9 5 5 1 4 FamiliaW,2-0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Rivero Texas 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Strickland pi t ched to 3 b att e rs i n the 7t h . Ch.GonzaleL, z2-1 7 8 1 1 3 4 Barrett L,3-2 2-3 1 1 1 1 1 HBP —by Romo (Granderson), byGoeddel (Posey). Janssen S.Freema n 0 0 1 1 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 PB — Susac. 2-3 2 4 4 2 0 Edwards Milwaukee 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 T—3:03.A—25,143(41,922). Detwiler Garza 6 8 5 2 0 7 Oakland Blazek 1 0 0 0 1 1 KazmirW,3-4 8 1 0 0 2 6 Padres 6, Braves 4 W,2-0 1 0 0 0 1 1 (11 innings) W.Smith Scribner 1 0 0 0 0 0 Fr.Rodriguez S,13-13 1 1 0 0 0 0 S.Freeman pitchedto1 batter inthe 8th. WP — Barrett. Yangervis Solarte hit HBP—byCh.Gonzalez(Lawrie). Balk—Ch.Gonzalez. ATLANTA — T—2:54. A—26,371(41,900). T—2:35. A—14,489(35,067). a two-run single in the 11th inning,
and San Diegobeat Atlanta following a benches-clearing incident and the ejection of manager Bud ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Albert Black. Players left dugouts in the Pujols hit his 537th home run to move ahead of Mickey Mantle into first after Julio Teheranhit Matt 16th place on the all-time list and Kemp with a 90mphfastball. complete the scoring for the Los San Diego Atlanta Angeles Angels in a victory over ab r hbi ab r hbi 5 1 0 0 JPetrsn2b 4 0 2 1 Tampa Bay.Pujols'17th home run Myerscf Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Maybincf 3 1 0 1 of the season, which came in the Venalelf 3 0 0 0 FFrmn1b 5 1 3 2 1 0 0 0 Markksrf 2 0 0 0 ninth inning off Preston Guilmet, Uptonph-If Kemprf 4 1 1 0 Uribe3b 5 0 0 0 was his 1,122nd extra-base hit, ty- Alonso1b 3 0 0 1 KJhnsnlf 3 0 0 0 ing Manny Ramirez for14th place DeNrrsc 3 0 1 1 Cnghmlf 2 0 0 0 4 1 1 1 ASmnsss 5 1 1 0 in that category. The 35-year-old Spngnr2b Mdlrks3b 4 0 0 0 Bthncrtc 5 1 2 0 first baseman has1,685 RBls, one B enoitp 0 0 0 0 Tehernp 2 0 0 0 Maurerp 0 0 0 0 Evelndp 0 0 0 0 short of Ernie Bankswho is 29th Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Massetp 0 0 0 0 on the all-time list. UptnJrph-cf 1 1 0 0 Avilan p 0 0 0 0
Angels 6, Rays2
Colorado
Cubs 6, Reds3 CHICAGO— Miguel Montero and Dexter Fowler each homered, and the Chicago Cubsended banged-up Cincinnati's four-game winning streak. With the rebuilt right-field bleachers in use for the first time this season, the Cubs won for the fourth time in five games. Cincinnati
Chicago
ab r hbi ab r hbi DJssJr2b 4 0 1 0 Fowlercf 4 1 2 1 Votto 1b 4 0 1 0 Rizzo 1b 3 2 1 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 0 0 Bryant3b 4 1 1 1 B ruce rf 4 0 0 0 MMntrc 3 1 2 3 B.Pena c 4 1 1 0 Scastro ss 4 0 0 0 C Dmnglf 4 1 1 1 Coghlnlf 4 0 1 0 S uarezss 3 1 1 0 Lakerf 3000 Amarstss 5 1 2 0 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 C ashnrp 2 0 0 0 Grigip 0 0 0 0 Lornzn p 2 0 1 2 Wada p 1 0 0 0 Los Angeles TampaBay Garcesp 0 0 0 0 Przynsph 0 0 0 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 TWood p 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Boeschph 1 0 00 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 Solarteph-3b 3 1 2 2 Cunniffp 0 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 1 0 1 Kiermrcf 4 0 0 0 Adcockp 0 0 0 0 Baxterph 1 0 0 0 JGomsph 1 0 0 0 Troutcf 5 1 3 2 JButlerdh 4 0 2 0 Cingrnp 0 0 0 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Totals 38 6 7 5 Totals 3 7 4 8 4 Puiols1b 5 1 2 2 Longori3b 4 0 0 0 San Diego 10 0000 030 02 — 6 Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 Denorfiph 1 0 0 0 Calhonrf 5 0 2 0 DeJesslf 4 0 0 0 N egroncf 2 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 100 001 200 00 — 4 Giavtll2b 5 0 3 0 Forsyth2b 3 1 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 E—Amarista(5), Bethancourt(3). DP—SanDiego Joycedh 2 1 0 0 SouzJrrf 3 1 1 2 ARussll2b 4 1 1 0 Cronph-dh 1 0 0 0 Acarerss 3 0 0 0 2, Atlanta 2.LOB —San Diego 8, Atlanta 8. 28—F. Freeman 2(19). HR —FFreeman(11). SB—Kemp (7). Totals 3 3 3 6 3 Totals 3 36 8 5 ENavrrlf 4 1 3 0 Frnkln1b 3 0 1 0 CS — J.Peterson(6). S—Teheran. SF—Maybin. C incinnati 020 1 0 0 0 00 — 3 l annettc 4 0 0 0 Riverac 3 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSD Chicago 301 020 00x — 6 Kubitza3b 3 1 1 1 E—B.Pena (1). LOB —Cincinnati 5, Chicago 9. San Diego Totals 38 6 14 6 Totals 3 1 2 5 2 Votto (12), Rizzo(19), Bryant(9), Coghlan(9). 62-3 7 4 4 4 1 28 — Los Angeles 00 0 001 302 — 6 Cashner 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 38 — Lorenzen(1). HR—C.Dominguez(1), Fowler (7), Tampa Bay 0 2 0 0 0 0 000 — 2 Garces M.Montero (8). E—Souza Jr. (2). DP—TampaBay2. LOB—Los Benoit 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBSD Angeles9, Tampa Bay 3. 28—Trout (12), Rivera(8). Maurer HR—Trout (17), Puiols (17),SouzaJr. (12). SBThayerW,2-0 1 1 0 0 1 0 Cincinnati 5 3 6 Aybar(4).CS—Giavotega(1), J.Butler (2). KimbrelS,15-16 1 0 0 0 0 2 LorenzenL,1-2 4 1-3 5 6 Badenhop 12-3 0 0 0 1 2 IP H R E R BBSD Atlanta 1 2 0 0 1 1 Los Angeles Teheran 7 4 4 3 3 7 Adcock 1 1 0 0 0 1 RichardsW,6-4 7 4 2 2 1 7 Eveland 0 0 0 0 1 0 Cingrani 1-3 0 0 0 0 Chicago J.SmithH,16 1 0 0 0 0 2 MassetH,3 Wada 3 4 3 3 2 4 Street 1 1 0 0 0 0 Avilan 0 0 0 0 1 0 TampaBay Aardsma BS,1-1 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 TWoodW3-2 21 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Colome 51-3 4 1 1 2 4 Grilli 1 0 0 0 0 1 GrimmH,5 B.GomesH,9 2 - 3 2 0 0 0 0 Cunniff L,2-2 2 3 2 2 2 2 J.Russeg H,4 1 0 0 0 0 0 Jepsen L,1-4BS,3-7 1-3 2 3 3 1 1 Teheranpitchedto 3 batters inthe8th. StropH,B 1 0 0 0 0 0 Boxberger 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Eveland pitchedto1 batterinthe 8th. H.RondonS,11-14 1 1 0 0 0 1 Guilmet 2 3 2 2 1 3 Avilanpitchedto1batter in the8th. Wadapitchedto1batter inthe4th. —byTeheran(Kemp). PB—Bethancourt. HBP—byLorenzen(Rizzo). WP—Lorenzen. Cedeno 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 HBP T—3:20. A—10,779(31,042). T—3:42.A—25,759 (49,586). T—2:58. A—35,031(40,929).
Paul Sencya/The Associated Press
Golden State guard Andre Iguodala goes up for a dunk over Cleveland forward James Jones during the first half of Thursday night's game in Cleveland.
in over vs e s arriorS even series By Tom Withers
CAVALIERS2, WARRIORS 2
The Associated Press
CLEVELAND — No pan-
ic, no playing around. Just California cooL
'fl, IiVS
The Golden State War-
riors simply did what they had to do, and now they're Game1: Warriors108, Cavs100 going home in the same Game 2: Cavs95, Warriors 93 shape as when they leftGame 3:Cavs96, Warriors 91 tied in the NBA Finals. Game 4:Warriors103, Cavs 82 Stephen Curry and Andre Sunday atGoldenSt. 5 p.m. Iguodala scored 22 points apiece and the Warriors, June16 atCleveland 6p.m. showing their depth and x-June19 at GoldenSt. 6 p.m. why they were the league's An Times PDT; x-If necessary best team a l l s e ason, squared the finals at 2-2 on missed all eight 3-pointers Thursday night with a 103- and Cleveland's r eserves 82 victory over the Cleve- scored seven points. land Cavaliers. Missing All-Stars Kevin Game 5 is Sunday night at Love and Kyrie Irving, the Oakland's rambunctious Or- Cavs didn't have enough acle Arena, where the teams firepower and their legs were split two overtime games last heavy after playing three week. games in five days against "We've seen it all year, ev- the league's deepest team. ery team we go up against, The Warriors were in a we use our strength in num-
bers," said Iguodala, who made a surprise start."Not only do we have a good first unit but we've got a second unit that is coming at you
must-win situation as none of the 32 teams who have fallen behind 3-1 in the fi-
nals have come back to win an NBA title. Golden State doesn't have to worry about
that, and now it's possible the same type of high-IQ basket- Wamors will get to play two ball. It's hard to keep up with more games on their home Us. court if the series goes the "We're going to try to keep distance. Game 6 is Tuesday it going." night in Cleveland. LeBron James scored 20 Building off a s t r ong points — 21 under his aver- fourth quarter in Game 3 age in the series — with 12 that gave them confidence, rebounds and eight assists, the Warriors showed a sense but Cleveland's megastar, of urgency from the outset who played with a cut on and took it to the Cavs. Igh is head sustained in t h e uodala, who played so well first half, didn't score in the coming off the bench in the fourth quarter and couldn't first three games, started do enough for the under- and made coach Steve Kerr's manned Cavaliers. decision look brilliant. T imofey M ozgov l e d Known for h i s d efense, Cleveland with 2 8 p o i nts Iguodala made four 3-pointand guard Matthew Della- ers, kept James in check vedova, again battling leg and Curry, the league MVP, cramps after a hospital stay made four 3s as well, infor dehydration, had 10. The cluding a deep dagger in the Cavs shot just 2 of 18 from fourth. the field in the fourth quarIguodala made things difter, and got nothing from ficult on James, who went 7 their bench as J.R. Smith of 22 from the field. with the same type of speed,
GOLF ROUNDUP
Palmer, Koepka, Owen tied for early lead at St. Jude Classic The Associated Press in the afternoon to join Koepka and Owen atop pionship: HARRISON, N.Y. — South Korean holesto tie a course record with a 6-under-par MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Ryan Palmer, Brooks the leaderboard at TPC Southwind. Koepka, Jenny Shin shot a bogey-free, 7-under-66 for a 65 in the first round of the Senior Players Koepka and Greg Owen each shot 6-under 64 who won in Phoenix earlier this year, matched one-stroke lead after the opening round at the Championship. Thursday for a three-way tie atop the leader- his low round of 2015 with eight birdies and two KPMG Women's PGA Championship, the secBokjrdy holds 2-stroke lead after opening day board after the opening round of the St. Jude bogeys, while Owen shot his best round this ond major of the season. of Lyoness Open: ATZENBRUGG, AustriaClassic. year with no bogeys and six birdies. Langer ties course record, leads Senior Play- Gregory Bourdy of France carded a bogey-free Palmer, a t hree-time PGA Tour w i nner, Also on Thursday: ers Championship: BELMONT, Mass.— Bern- 7-under 65 to take a two-stroke lead on a warm turned in a bogey-free round with six birdies Shin shoots 66, leads Women's PGA Cham- hard Langer shot four birdies on the final five and sunny opening day of the Lyoness Open.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
Blitz
U.S.
Continued from C1
Continued from C1 Adding to the buildup was a story about Sundhage in The New York
The last part of the course
was a back-and-forth, cydocross-l ikeracealong the grass of the driving range at Tetherow. Wells passed Craig in that section, but Craig stayed close. When he saw Wells go hard up the final hill to the grass finish line, Craig, 34, knew he had a chance on the beer chug. "I knew the chug was in play, because he sprinted up this final hill," said Craig, a 2008 Olympian in mountain biking. "I sat down (on the bike) and I was like, I've got to get a couple breaths, because if I can get my heartbeat just two
Times that caused a stir this week. The interview
was done in April, she said, acknowledging that she can sometimes be provocative. "If I just gave you the same answer it
i,IIf
would be boring," she said. Sundhage was quoted as saying that midfielder Carli Lloyd was a challenge to coach and she suggested
Et" )
she would not start Wam-
bach at this point in the popular veteran's career.
beats below max, I'll be able
She said Solo was one of
to drink faster. That's where I developed my strategy, the last turn. But I'm a terrible chugger. I should probably drink more."
the most challenging players she had coached, "especially when it comes to
the victory. But Wells, 39, said
trouble." On Thursday, she called Solo "a piece of work," but she went on to also call her "the best goalkeeper in
he was just too gassed to drink
the world." She also said
it.
she would start Wambach tonight. "If you look at Abby, she is special," Sundhage said.
After Wells located his beer,
it appeared he might have been simply letting Craig take
"No way. No, no," Wells, a three-time Olympian, said when asked if he was conceding the win to Craig. "I was Joe Kline/The Bulletin having a hard time putting it Katerina Nash hits the big air jump on the course of the Blitz mountain bike race on Thursday at Tetherow Golf Club in Bend. down. And when I first came in I didn't know where to grab
ways, especially her heading. I think she can go another four years."
the beer. I couldn't just drink pavement, and arm wrestling it, no. Because we were racing (after the race). Men's and women's race pretty much flat out for maybe four or five minutes at the end. winners each earned $3,000. And then you have to sprint T he total p r i z e p u rs e o f full gas up that hill. Tough to $20,000 is one of the biggest in drink anything carbonated af- the country among mountain ter that." bike races, according to race The sixth annual pro invi-
"She is special in a lot of
promoter Erik Eastland.
tational mountain bike race The route started at Wanofeatured40 ofthe bestprofes- ga and took cyclists down the sional mountain bikers from
Funner and C.O.D. trails and
the U.S. and Canada, many of the riders from Bend. The race included four cash prizes (primes) of $1,000 each. The primes included winning the
into the Lair jump park near
hole shot, big air, fastest on
18. Riders then raced along the
Tetherow. From there, they
raced to the big-air jump near the golf club's patio and then up the cart path on hole No.
driving-range section and into vada, claimed third in I:10:31. the finish line.
The new finish area at Tetherow included a smallscale beer festival, barbecue,
bike demos and other activities.Hundreds of spectators
country, so I have my pracNash, 37, is a f o u r-time tice, but I gotta say, I enjoy just Olympian (1996 and 2012 in sitting down and drinking mountain biking and 1998 alcohol." and 2002 in nordic skiing) Nash has raced in Bend bewho now lives in Emeryville, fore, but his was her first time
The U.S. won two Olympic golds and went to the World Cup final in Germany during Sundhage's ten-
California.
cans had gone to the final since winning the title in
racing the Blitz. She said she
On Thursday night, she plans to return to the unique riders launched off the mas- took the hole shot at Wanoga event that makes mountain sive big-air jump and then and led the entire race. She biking spectator-friendly. "Mountain biking started made their way back to the fin- finished her beer in plenty ish line. of time, although she spilled in the mountains," Nash said. K aterina Nash, from t h e some of it as she guzzled, as "But we need to bring it to Czech Republic, won the wom- did many other racers. town, to people, and just turn it "It's hard because you're into a show, and this is a great en's race in I:08:23. Megan Chinburg, of Portland, fin- pinning it until the end and example." ished second in 1:09:57, and then you have to chug a beer," — Reporter: 541-383-0318, Teal Stetson Lee, of Reno, ¹ Nash said. "I come from beer mmorical@bendbulletin.com cheered boisterously as the
ure with the team. It was the first time the Ameri1999. She left after the 2012
London Games and returned home to coach her
native Sweden's national team. As aplayer she led Sweden to a t h i r d-place finish in the first Women's World Cup in 1991, and to the team's first European
championship in 1984. She remains
t r emen-
dously popular with the U.S. women who played
Open
The 5-over stretch opened the door for Thornton, who fired a f i nal-round 69 with
Continued from C1
First as a pro
seven birdies to overtake Bar-
What will the w i nner do
ron for second place and take
with his share of the purse'? "You'll have to ask the wife," he said.
home $4,550.
It was LeBeck's first Open
"I did not think Barron would come back to me, but it's easy
since his playing days as an amateur and he made the
B arron held on fo r t h i r d
at 6-under-par 210 and took home $3,200.
to do, especially when you're Lowamateur Bend's Jesse Heinly shot 2 vying for a big championship," Thornton said. "I've been on under on the front nine before both sides of that thing." finishing with 1-over round of Thornton was happy with 73, good enough for a threehis ball striking on the back day total of even-par 216nine, where his three birdies and won the low amateur trocould have easily been four or phy in the process. five. The total was good enough
most of it , t a k ing home a
$7,000 winner's check for his three-day total of 9-under-par 207.
"I wanted to go out, hit some fairways and hit some greens and maybe make acouple of putts and see what happens," LeBeck said after the trophy
"I started hitting it pretty
presentation.
He knew he was in the lead coming down 18, but after a
for sixth place overall, and he
good on the back, but I had two iffy swings that cost me
missed putt for par on 17, he
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
was not certain of the margin. "I hadn't really seen the
Derek Barron reacts after lipping out a crucial birdie putt on the 10th hole during the final round of the Oregon Open Invitational at
scoreboard, so I wasn't sure,"
Crosswater Club in Sunriver on Thursday.
he said. An inconsequential bogey on the last was enough to give ing today," said Thornton, Having to drop some 150 him the win. from Meridian Valley Country yards back to where the ball "I played really solid out Club in Kent, Washington. crossed the hazard, the Ta"It's funny how we say that. coma, Washington, pro manthere and was happy with the way I played," he said. "The Because we know when good aged to get on the green in shot I hit into 18 was pure, I shots come off and they are four, but he would three-putt told my caddie that I didn't quality shots, it's not boring from therefora costly double care where it went, I had hit to hit a shot like that," he said. bogey. it really solid. It went over the "But at the end of the day if it LeBeck's routine par from green a little bit, but at that sounds boring, that would be a just off the fringe put him up point I knew I had a little cush- good thing." by two. ion, so I was OK with that." Bogeys on three of the next Second-place finisher Bri- Tough stretch four holesby Barron, after he an Thornton, champion of the Barron's troubles began on missed the greens on holes 13 Oregon Open in 2012, agreed the 12th tee when he pulled his and 15 and was unable to get it with LeBeck's assessment of tee shot by about 2 yards, and up and down — and his chanchis play. ended up in the hazard to the es for the championship were "He definitely did play bor- left of the fairway. over.
two shots," he said. "Obviously, golf is golf so you don't know, but I had enough firepower today with the seven birdies, I just didn't have the defense.
edged Wenatchee (Washington) Golf and Country Club amateur Ryan Books by one shot for the amateur title.
"It was good, I like this
course a lot and feel com-
fortable here," Heinly said. "I wasn't terribly happy with
"If I could have managed a
my performance, but at least I
couple ofmore par saves that would have been nice."
today and did not totally throw
He trailed the two leaders by five shots after No. 11, so
hung in there on the back nine it away." Other top Central Oregon
he was not considering that he finishers included Tetherow might have a shot at winning professional Chris Van der the tournament. Velde and amateur Justin "I honestly wasn't thinking Kadin (+5, 221), Black Butte about winning this thingRanch pro George Mack Jr. even coming into the last hole and Juniper amateur Jared I wasn't thinking about that," Lambert (+6, 222), Broken he said. Top pro Josh Hanson (+7, 223), "LeBeck was playing so and Meadow Lakes pro Zach good, everything was in play Lampert and River's Edge amand he was never out of posi- ateur Dylan Cramer (+9, 225). tion, but I was happy with the
little charge I made."
— Reporter: 541-617-7868, kduke@bendbulletirt.com.
under her.
"She has a really unique coaching style," said midfielder Tobin Heath. "She really brings the best out in players because she's so positive and encouraging. She really gives you that freedom to express yourself. I think a lot of players learned that under Pia and have taken that into this
new step in our journey." U.S. coach Jill Ellis was an assistant under Sundhage. She was named interim coach after Sundhage stepped down, then again when former coach Tom Sermanni was dismissed in April 2014. Ellis was formally named head coach about a month later. E llis this w eek d e scribed Sundhage as "a sit-down-have-a-beer kind of friend." "Pia's got extraordinary character and I love hanging out with her," Ellis said. "We'll be friends for a long, long time." The feeling is mutuaL "First of all, she (Ellis) is a student of the game," Sundhage said. "She's been around youth soccer for a long time and now she is on top of her soc-
cer life, coaching the best team in the world. Being around her, she's a positive
person, she likes people and she has a great chance to win the World Cup with the U.S. team."
The United States defeated No. 10 Australia 3-1
TRACK AND FIELD
in its opening match, earning three points.
Southern Illinois,Oregonwomenstart fast at NCAAs By Bob Baum The Associated Press
up 10th.
"I like being a dark horse," she said. "A
The Ducks did not win an event but lot of people didn't expect me to do what EUGENE — Southern Illinois had piled up points anyway — nine in the I did today. And I love that. Because I'm a big day at the NCAA track and field 10,000 — to lead the team race with 31. sitting there like, 'Hey, I got this.'" championships Thursday, and host Ore- The Oregonwomen have not won the A few h ours later, Saunders, the gon got off to a good start in the women's NCAA outdoor title since 1985. Arkan- NCAA indoor champion, won on her fiteam race. sas had 22 points, Georgia 21, Southern nal attempt, overtaking Kelsey Card of Freshman Raven Saunders won the Illinois 20 and Kansas State 15. Oregon's Wisconsin with a throw of 60-2 I/2. Card shot put on her final attempt, a few hours men led after Wednesday's first day with threw 58-11 I/4. "This is a great feeling," Saunders after her Southern Illinois teammate ju- 41 points. nior DeAnna EYice won the hammer. Under the new format, except for the said. "Hopefully this will be the path to In other events, Akela Jones of Kan- decathlon, only women competed at me being the first person to win eight sas State won the collegiate title in just the NCAAs on Thursday. The men had straight championships in one event. So the second heptathlon ofhercareer,and their turn on Wednesday and will finish I'm looking forward to it." Demi Payne of Stephen F. Austin out- today. The women's final day of competiPandini, the defending champion in dueled rival Sandi Morris of Arkansas tion is Saturday. the event, led the long jump withher 22-3 in arguably the best women's pole vault Saunders said the motto for the SIU 3/4 effort after three attempts but left for competition in meet history. throwers — coached by veteran John the 200preliminary and passed on her Oregon's do-everything Jenna Pandi- Smith — is "let's go eat." next two attempts when she returned. ni finished second in the long jump and And they helped themselves on She fouled on her sixth and last attempt. qualified for Saturday's finals in the 100 Thursday. Asked how exhausting her day was, meters, 200 and 4x100 relay. Alabama's EYiceseta meet record at234-6 on her the Oregon junior said, "It's more tiring Quanesha Burks won the long jump at last attempt in the day's first final. now. While I was doing it I don't think I 22 feet, 8 inches. She entered the meet with the fourth- realized what was happening. I was kind Molly Seidel of Notre Dame won the best mark of the season but already had of in 'go' mode. Now that it's over I'm re10,000 after defending champion Boise clinched the competition when she un- lieved that I made it through and ready to State faded fast at the finish and wound corked her big throw. go relax and rehab."
Sweden was not so for-
tunate. Nigeria was surprisingly fast and agile, coming back from a 2-0 deficit for a draw. Back in 2007, a draw with Nigeria
Bend'sNodinfinishes 18th in NCAA
decathlon
EUGENE — Bend'sMItch Modin finished18th in the decathlon at
the NCAAOutdoor Track 8 Field Championship sonThursdayat Hayward Field. Modin, a sophomore at theUniversity of Oregon and agraduate of Mountain View HighSchool, finished with a total of 6,666
points in the two-day,10-event discipline. Oregon's Dakotah Keysfinished third with 7,863 points. Another
Oregon entry, Joe Delgado, was 17th with 6,697 points.
Georgia's Maicel Uibo wonthe decathlon with a score of 8,356. Pau Tonnesen of Arizonawas second, with 8,247 points. — Bulletin staff report
in a group-stage match kept Sweden out of the knockoutround.
S undhage called i t a learning experience. Scouting No. 33 Nigeria was difficult because the team does not often travel outside of Africa to play — and the performance shows how other nations are catching up to the top teams. "Usually they say we look very organized; I don't think we were that
organized. Credit to the Nigerians," Su n dhage said. "That is why, being in the women's game for so long, I'm very excited because that I can learn. I can learn from the other opponents. I don't think I did that in '91 or '95. But to-
day we can learn from all the opponents."
C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 18,039.37+38.97 4 DOW ,
S&P 800 2,108. 8 6+3.66 ~
~
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O» Tp look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.cpm/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
TOdap Inflation monitor
2 tpp .
A sharp drop in the cost of gasoline and food pushed down overall U.S. producer prices in April. Economists anticipate that the Labor Department's producer price index, due out today, will show prices rebounded in May. The index measures prices of goods and services before they reach consumers. Over the past year, wholesale prices have dropped 1.3 percent, the most since the government revamped the index in late 2010.
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 18109.77 18001.27 18039.37 DOW Trans. 8456.16 8366.93 8451.67 DOW Util. 567.05 563.08 565.53 NYSE Comp. 11101.13 11055.87 11080.51 NASDAQ 5101.39 5075.05 5082.51 S&P 500 2115.02 2106.80 2108.86 S&P 400 1537.87 1531.04 1537.54 Wilshire 5000 22363.30 22267.24 22310.03 Russell 2000 1270.79 1266.05 1268.92
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Eye on consumers Consumers have found reasons to be cautiousabout the economy and their own financial wellbeing. A weak U.S. economy pulled down consumer sentiment in May to 90.7 from 95.9 a month earlier. The May reading was the lowest since November. Did the trend continue into this month? Find out today, when the University of Michigan releases its latest consumer sentiment index. Consumer Sentiment Index not seasonally adjusted 100
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BOX Close:$18.29%0.50 or 2.8% The online storage provider reported better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter earnings and raised its full-year outlook. $25
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A M 52-week range
$63.80 ~
$104.50
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PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 24 . 93 +1.5 +5.4 +13.6+12.6 CaplncBuA m60.24 +2.0 +2.1 +10.9+10.4 CpwldGrlA m 48.32 +5.2 +2.9 +16.5+12.5 EurPacGrA m 51.21 +8.7 +1.6 +14.4 +9.6 FnlnvA m 53. 8 2 +4.9 +8.8 +19.0+15.3 GrthAmA m 45.62 +6.9 +11.1 +20.7+15.9 Vanguard Selected Value Inv.(VASVX) IncAmerA m 21.75 +1.6 +3.4 +12.4+11.9 InvCoAmA m 37.86 +3.2 +7.3 +18.9+15.1 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m39.99 +7.7 +7.4 +17.4+13.7 oWAMutlnvA m 41.34 +1.4 +6.0 +17.3+15.8 03 Dodge & Cox Income 13.71 +.94 +0.2 +1 .7 + 3.4+4.6 C A 8 CO cc Intlstk 45.90 -.95 +6.9 -1.6 +18.7+11.1 D A A Stock 185.38 +.16 +3.7 + 8 .8 +23.6+16.8 8 A A oFidelity Contra 102. 9 4 +.19+6.1 +12.5 +18.9+16.4 C D C Qo 03 ContraK 102 . 90 +.19+6.1 +12.6 +19.0+16.5 C C C C3 LowPriStk d 53.21 +.15 +5.9 + 9.9 +20.9+16.4 8 C 8 Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 74.71 +.15 +3.4 +10.7 +19.7+16.5 8 8 8 FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 41 .. . + 1 .4 -2.1 +9.7 +9.3 E A A 03 IncomeA m 2 .3 8 . . . + 1 .7 -2.0 +10.2 +9.9 E A A Oakmark Intl I 25.40 +.11 +8.8 -0.4 +19.9+12.1 C A A 0O Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 37 +.98+2.2 +8.8 +16.7+14.1 D E D MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 98 +.97+1.8 +8.0 +15.7+13.1 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 85 +.97+1.8 +8.0 +15.8+13.2 D E E OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m50.93 +.24 +4.6 +9.0 +21.9+14.3 8 B D average of stock holdings SmMidValB m 42.75 +.21 +4.3 +8.2 +21.0+13.4 C C E • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price GrowStk 56.6 6 + .13+9.1 +16.8 +21.3+18.3 A A A HealthSci 81.2 9 +.49+ 19.6 +45.0 +39.7+32.4 8 8 A CATEGORY:MID-CAP VALUE Newlncome 9. 4 8 +.94 0 . 0 +2 . 0 + 2.2 +3.7 8 C D rrORNING STAR Vanguard 500Adml 195.32 +.40 +3.4 +10.7 +19.7+16.5 8 8 A RATINB~ ****rr 500lnv 195.28 +.40 +3.3 +10.6 +19.6+16.3 8 C 8 Cappp 55.71 +.28 +5.6 +16.5 +27.9+18.3 A A A ASSETS $10,486 million Eqlnc 31.71 +.97 +2.3 +6.8 +17.7+16.5 C D A EXPRATIO .41% IntlstkldxAdm 27.97 +.93 +7.9 -1.7 +12.8 NA D D MIH. INIT.INVEST. $3,000 StratgcEq 34.18 +.13 +6.2 +12.4 +25.4+19.5 A A A PERCEN TLOAD N/L TgtRe2020 29.27 +.98 +2.8 +5.2 +11.8+10.3 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2030 30.11 +.97 +3.7 +5.8 +14.2+11.8 A A A TgtRe2035 18.57 +.94 +4.1 +6.1 +15.4+12.6 A A B Return/Rank Tgtet2025 17.97 +.94 +3.3 +5.5 +13.0+11.1 A A B YEAR-TO-DATE +4.6 TotBdAdml 10.72 +.95 -0.3 +2.3 +1.7 +3.5 8 D D 1-YEAR t4.8/D Totlntl 16.72 +.92 +7.8 -1.7 +12.7 +8.2 D D D 3-YEAR +21.5/8 TotStlAdm 53.42 +.12 +4.0 +10.7 +20.2+16.7 8 B A 5-YEAR +16.1/8 TotStldx 53.39 +.12 +4.0 +10.6 +20.0+16.5 8 B A 3and5-yearretaets areannaalized. USGro 32.90 +.96 +7.0 +16.5 +21.7+17.8 A A A
LAST CHG %CHG Paris 4,971.37 +36.46 + . 74 London 6,846.74 +16.47 + . 24 Frankfurt 11,332.78 +67.39 + . 60 Hong Kong26,907.85 +220.21 + . 83 Mexico 44,624.74 +46.46 + . 10 Milan 23,172.34 +80.85 + . 35 Tokyo 20,382.97 +336.61 +1.68 Stockholm 1,604.89 -5.49 -.34 Rank: Fund's letter gradecomparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption Sydney 5,562.60 +76.60 +1AO the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing fee3odeither a sales or Zurich 9,146.30 +43.60 + . 48 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.
P E: 22 .1 Yie l d: 1.5%
Krispy Kreme KKD Close:$19.81 A2.41 or 13.9% The doughnut chain operator reported a boost in first-quarter profit on strong revenue that beat Wall Street expectations. $22
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52-week range $16.41 ~
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Nike
NKE Close:$1 03.88 L0.54 or 0.5% The athletic gear and apparel company will become the official uniform provider of the NBA beginning with the 2017-2018 season. $105
PE: 4 5 .4 Yield: ...
Lululemon Athletica
L UL U
Close:$66.07T-0.70 or -1.0% The yoga gear maker's founder and former leader, Dennis "Chip" Wilson, could sell his remaining 14 percent stake in the company. $70 65
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Citrix Systems
CTXS Close:$70.39%4.42 or 6.7% Activist investor Elliot Management, which owns 7.1 percent of the software company, is urging it to cut costs and sell units. $75
Isis Pharmaceuticals
70
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Close:$68.00 %1.40 or 2.1% The biotechnology company reported positive updated results from an ongoing study of a potential spinal condition treatment. $80
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InterestRates
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.38 percent on Thursday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
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3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
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Wingstop is expected to make its debut as a publicly traded company today. The Dallas-based company, which operates restaurants, is Dividend Footnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declared or paid inlast t2 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, ao regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent known for its chicken wings. dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend Wingstop is the latest restaurant announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distribution date. PE Footnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/Eratio shown. cc — P/Eexceeds99. dd - Loss in last12 months. operator to go public. Shake Shack raised more than $100 million in a January IPO. El Pollo Loco and sandwich maker Potbelly went public last year. Wingstop Krispy Kreme attributed the gains to improved K6697 Kr6m6 ShareS SOared 14 perCent plans to list shares on the Nasdaq Thursday after the doughnut chain . sales trends and margins at its stores. It Global Select Market under the delivered a sweet first-quarter profit. also said that its profitability was helped ticker symbol "WING." The company reported by strong customer response to limited late Wednesday that its CO mpany time offers and smarter use of net income rose 10 SPOt l i ght promotions by the company. The company said it expects percent to $10.7 million. It 4 earned 24 cents per share on an adjusted full-year earnings in the range of BO to basis for the period, above the 22 cents per 85 cents per share. There are more than share that analysts were anticipating. Its 1,000 Krispy Kreme shops in more than 20 revenue increased 9 percent to $132.5 million. countries around the world.
Kriapy Kreme (KKD) T
A M 52-week range
Vol.:4.4m (6.6x avg.) P E: .. . VolJ 6.1m (2.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.99 b Yie l d: 1.2% Mkt. Cap:$19.78b
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl CLOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous) P/E DIV
Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ Avista Corp AVA 30.35 o — Bank ofA merica B AC 14. 8 4 ~ B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .1 4 r $ Columbia Bokg COLB 23.90 — 0 C olumbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 ~ Costco Wholesale CO ST 114.51 ~ 1 C raft Brew Alliance BREW 9.89 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ Hewlett Packard HPQ 31 . 00 ~ Intel Corp I NTC 27.72 ~ KEY 11.55 — 0 Keycorp Kroger Co KR 4 6 .77 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ LA Pacific L PX 1246 ~ MDU Resources MDU 1 9 .88 o — — o Mentor Graphics M E NT 18.25 M icrosoft Corp MSF T 4 0.12 ~ Nike Ioc 8 NKE 73.14 — 0 Nordstrom Inc JWN 64.92 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 ~ PaccarIoc P CAR 55.34 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 2.12 ~ Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Schoitzer Steel SCH N 15.06 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 201.36 ~ Staocorp Focl SFG 59.28 ~ Starbucks Cp SBUX 35.38 — 0 UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 14.70— o US Baocorp USB 38.10 ~ WashingtonFedl WAF D 19.52 — o WellsFargo & Co WF C 4 6.44 — 0 Weyerhaeuser WY 3 0.50 ~
HES
Close:$68.83 L3.19 or 4.9% The oil and gascompany agreed to sell a 50 percent interest in its Bakken assets to for just under $2.67 billion in proceeds. $80 70
55
NorthwestStocks
-0.4
M w Hess
Close:$61.85L3.32 or 5.7/o The menswear retail chain reported better-than-expected first-quarter profit and will run tuxedo rental shops in Macy's stores.
F
CHG. +38.97 +88.20 +3.63 +22.52 +5.82 +3.66 +7.21 +42.79 +1.99
EURO $1.1264 -.0052
Stocks rose after an encouraging report on retail sales suggested Americans are finally feeling confident enough to spend more. The Commerce Department said retail sales climbed 1.2 percent in May, helped by spending on autos, building materials and clothing. Investors have been worried that corporate profits would stall if the U.S. economy and the consumers who drive much of its growth didn't show more resiliency. The May retail report with gains in spending on many kinds of goods, was able to ease those concerns for the moment at least.
"
"
D
r
CRUDEOIL $60.77 -.66
StoryStocks
pow jones industrials
17,200
StocksRecap
Producer price index
$18.98 ...
17,600 "
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r
SILVER
Close: 18,039 37 Change: 38.97 (0.2%) 18,400"
2,000 1,950
""'" "" "
17,680" ""10 DAYS'
2,150
2,050 "
GOLD $1,179.90 -6.20
..... Close: 2,108.86 Change: 3.66 (0.2%)
2,040' " ""'10 DAYS
2,100 "
r
10-YR T-NOTE 2.38% -.10
18,200"
SstP 500
Friday, June 12, 2015
p p -0.3 -0.7 -0.5
r
NASDAQ 5,082. 5 1+5.82
Commodities
FUELS
The price of crude oil settled below $61 per barrel following its first loss in three days. Drops for natural gas and gold snapped three-day winning streaks for each.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
The dollar regained some of its losses against the Japanese yen from the prior day. It also rose against the euro and was close to flat against the British pound.
h58 88
L L L L L L L L
3.28 4.57 2.31 4.91 4.31 1.93 2.99
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 60.77 61.43 -1.07 +1 4.1 -8.1 1.50 1.52 +0.26 1.92 1.95 - 1.28 + 4 . 0 -2.2 2.83 2.89 -2.28 2.14 2.15 -0.39 +49.0
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -0.3 1179.90 1186.10 -0.52 15.95 15.95 + 0.01 + 2 .5 -8.6 1105.20 1115.20 -0.90 2.69 2.77 -2.83 -5.1 742.60 743.00 -0.05 -7.0 CLOSE
PVS.
1.55 1.56 Coffee (Ib) 1.32 1.36 Corn (bu) 3.57 3.57 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.65 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 291.30 296.70 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.24 1.24 Soybeans (bu) 9.40 9.49 Wheat(bu) 5.04 5.14
Foreign Exchange
L L L L L L
%CH. %YTD -0.37 -6.3 -3.26 -20.8 -0.21 -10.2 - 2.10 -1.82 +0.36 -1.00 -1.80
+ 5 .4 -12.0 -11.3 -7.8 -1 4.5 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5519 -.0009 -.06% 1.6793 Canadian Dollar 1.2 281 +.0017 +.14% 1.0867 USD per Euro 1.1264 -.0052 -.46% 1.3529 JapaneseYen 123.40 + . 7 0 + .57% 1 02.04 Mexican Peso 15. 3736 -.0859 -.56% 13.0174 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8239 +.0063 +.16% 3.4592 Norwegian Krone 7 . 8463 +.0815 +1.04% 6.0034 SouthAfrican Rand 12.3299 +.0328 +.27% 10.7572 Swedish Krona 8.2 0 91 -.0502 -.61% 6.6995 Swiss Franc .9342 +.0028 +.30% . 9 000 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.2902 +,0015 +.12% 1.0657 Chinese Yuan 6.2030 -.0047 -.08% 6.2282 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7525 +.0001 +.00% 7.7517 Indian Rupee 63.977 +.206 +.32% 59.280 Singapore Dollar 1.3464 +,0046 +.34% 1.2503 South KoreanWon 1114.09 +2.80 +.25% 1017.71 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.96 + . 0 8 +.26% 30.07
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
CentralOregon fuel iirices
REGULARUNLEADED • Fred Meyer,61535S. U.S. Highway97, Bend,........... $2.83 • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend ........... $2.83 • Ron's Oil,62980 U.S. Highway97, Bend ........... $2.88 • Chevron,61160S. U.S. Highway97,Bend.. $2.95 • RiverwoodsCountry, 19745BakerRoad, Bend ............ $2.99 • Texaco,178SWFourth St., Madras...... $3.05 • Chevron,1210SW U.S. Highway97, Madras......... $3.05 • Chevron,2100 NE U.S.Highway20, Bend ............ $3.09 • Texaco,2409Butler Market Road, Bend............. $3.09 • Chevron,398 NWThird St.,
Prineville........ $3.09 • Shell,801 NWThird
St., Prineville..... $3.09 • 76, 1717 NE Third St.,
Prineville........ $3.09 • Chevron,2005 S. U.S. Highway97, Redmond ....... $3.09 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters...... $3.09 • Texaco,539 NWSixth St., Redmond.....$3.19 • Quick Iey Market, 690 NE Butler Market
Road, Bend ....... $3.29 DIESEL • Fred Meyer,61535 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend............ $2.92 • Denny's Expresswey,999 N. MainSt., Prineville........ $2.99 • RiverwoodsCountry, 19745 BakerRoad, Bend............ $2.99 • Chevron,1095 SEDivision St., Bend.... $3.09 • Texaco,178SWFourth St., Madras...... $3.09 • Chevron,1210SW U.S. Highway97, Madras......... $3.09 • Chevron,2005 S. U.S. Highway97, Redmond ....... $3.09 • Texaco,2409 Butler Market Road, Bend.............$3.15 • Texaco,539 NWSixth St., Redmond.....$3.19
sont ereinso me iaem ire • Rupert Murdoch will appoint son James to chief executive of 21stCentury Fox By Emily Steel and Ravi Somaiya h
Photos by Andy Tullis I The Bulletin
Anthony Carlton, from left, owner Eric Corrales, and his brothers, Alex Corrales and JTCorrales, sit together in Eric Corrales' new parkour studio in Bend, where they all work.
oun en re reneur rin s ar ourin oors
Rupert Murdoch's longheld plan to hand over his media empire to his sons is now being realized. M urdoch expected is to name his son James Murdoch to succeed him as chief executive of 21st Century Fox,
the sprawling entertainment company that includes cable
and broadcast television networks, film studios and satellite companies, multiple
people briefed on the plans said Thursday. He also is expected to
elevate his son Lachlan Murdoch to the role of
By Stephen Hamway
co-executive chairman of
The Bulletin
the company. Lachlan, 43,
Eric Corrales began his
is moving from Australia to
Los Angeles and will work in partnership with James, 42, these people said.
quest to open the first park-
our gym in Central Oregon seven years ago by exploring his own physical limits. "I just wanted to do a back flip," Corrales said. "It wasn't
"This is still (Rupert) Murdoch's company at the end of the day." — Rich Greenfield, media analyst with BTIG Research
The family effectively controls both 21st Century Fox and News Corp., the other
half of the Murdoch media empire, through its ownership of almost 40 percent
of the voting shares in both companies. Rupert Murdoch has more rights in the family trust than his children.
He is not ill, still appears energizedand isexpectedto come into the office regularly, they said. The people who spoke of the plans spoke on the condition of anonymity so as to discuss private company matters.
"This is still Murdoch's
Rupert Murdoch, 84, will
remain at the company as executive chairman. The exact timing for the
even parkour-related. I just
wanted to do a back flip." Today, Corrales can do back flips, front flips and many other moves associated with parkour, a training regime that emphasizes consistent movement to get from point A to point B as quickly as possible. The 21-year-old Corrales taught parkour classes for
Murdoch is expected to continue to provide broad strategic oversight and will retain
three years at Bend's Acro-
ultimate control of the com-
vision Sports Center before
changes is unclear. They are
pany, said the two people.
said to be part of Rupert Mur-
doch's long-term succession plans and are likely to be
company at the end of the
day," said Rich Greenfield, a media analyst with BTIG Research.
As part of the reorganization, Chase Carey will step down from his role as chief
discussed at a board meeting
operating officer at Fox and
next week, two people said. While his sons are stepping
work as an adviser to the
into the spotlight, Rupert
company. Carey, who has worked as the second-highest executive at Fox since 2009
and is widely respected on Wall Street, played an integral role in the succession plans, one person said.
leaving to found Abstract in Motion, the region's first
indoor gym specific to parkour.The gym, located in
Twitter bossset to exit,
Bend at 100 SE Bridgeford
Blvd., is scheduled to open on Saturday, with a kickoff that
includes free barbecue and a 15-minute demonstration of parkour every hour. "Parkour basically is the art of movement," said Ryland Lanagan, co-owner of the Gresham location of Revolution Parkour, which opened its first location in Beaverton in 2008.eYou learn
techniques to move through your environment as quickly as possible." Lanagan said parkour gained popularity in the United States in recent years due to shows like American
• PacificSourceHealth Plans,at 2965 NE Conners Ave., Bend, has been recognized by the American Heart Association as a "Platinum-Level FitFriendly Worksite." • Pure Barre,330 SW Powerhouse Drive, No. 150, Bend, is celebrating its first anniversary with five days of free classes starting Monday. • Sunset Transportation, a third-party logistics and freight payment provider, announced anewbranch at 2863 NWCrossing Drive in Bend. • Slick's ttueCo., 442 E. Hood Ave., Sisters, applied June1tothe Oregon Liquor Control Commission for a full onpremises sales license, which allows the saleand service of distilled spirits, malt beveragesandwine for consumption on the licensed premises. Also allows licenseeswho are preapproved to cater events off of the licensed premises. • Bouquet otBeer, 1364 NW MilwaukeeAve., Bend, applied June 3 tothe OLCC for an off-premises sales license, which allows the sale of malt beverages, wine and cider in factorysealed containers for consumption off the licensed premisesand allows approved licensees to offer sample tasting of malt beverages, wineand cider.
New York Times News Service
i.!,IIiii
originated in France but has
DISPATCHES
IVeS
Llf OC
Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com):
Ninja Warrior, which incorporates challenges similar to parkour. "My main focus is, I want people to have safe training before they take it to the out-
doors," Corrales said. Corrales will enforce that
training by having 10 levels organized by skill, similar to the belt system at a karate
dojo. New students can take a placement test or begin at level one, which emphasizes basics like how to roll properly and safely and how to jump without getting hurt on the landing. Corrales said students don't learn flips until level five.
"I really want my students
a plan Iong inworks By Vindu Goel andMike Isaac
lionactiveusers,facesdeep
New York Times News Service
questions about the future of
SAN FRANCISCO — After Eric Corrales performs a kong vault in his new parkour studio,
the region's indoor gymspecifically for parkour.
replacingmuch of Twitter's top management team last year,
is increasingly about photos and vldeo. "The situation at Twitter
must be much worse than it appears, as replacing the CEO is such a big step," said Brian Blau, an analyst with Gartner.
"My main focus is, I want people to have safe training before
evidenced by the 73 members of the "Central Oregon Park-
chief executive, too.
they takeit to the
he added that it can be tough
to find people to train with,
outdoors."
especially once the weather
— Eric Corrales, owner of gets colder. "Winter sucks for trainAbstract in Motion
to have each skill down before they move on to the next thing," Corrales said.
ing," Corrales said. "Icy, really cold; it's better to come in here. It gives people an
snippets of text in a world that
Dick Costolo told members of
the company's board that he wanted them to replace him as
our" Facebook group, which Corrales manages. However,
its messaging service, which is built around 140-character
On Thursday, they did just that, announcing Costolo will step down July 1 and appointing Jack Dorsey, Twitter's co-founder and former chief, as interim chief executive
"Twitter's problems are clearly not over, and while Jack Dors-
ey knows Twitter well, they really should bring in some nentsuccessor. outside perspective as most of Costolo, a wealthy former theirstrategiesso fararenot entrepreneur who has ledTwit- working out so well."
while they look for aperma-
option that I didn't have six
ter for the last five years, had
years ago." The space is designed to
grown tired of second-guessing by Wall Street, with its
was not seeking a change in
ual and group classes, and the space will also offer open gym time. Corrales said the gym canaccommodate as
simulate the outdoors as
focus on the social network's
much as possible, with basic padding on some of the
company as it searched for a new permanent leader.
many as 35 students at one
but not so much it becomes unrealistic.
sluggish user growth and its repeated failures to make its products more appealing. Instead of beginning an immediate search for a new chief
Students can take individ-
time, provided they take turns on the equipment. He said he sees the gym as a potential beacon for Central Oregon's nascent parkour community. There are
practicioners in the area, as
obstacles to help students,
Dorsey said 7witter's board strategy or direction for the "We do have a great strate-
gy, we do have a great direction, and we do have a great
executive, the board kept him
team behind it," he said in an interview.
that if you roll on this, you're not going to be able to roll on
on, encouraging him to build up his management team and
ecutive in October 2010 in a
concrete," Corrales said.
lay out a strategy for them to
"It's not quite so unrealistic
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.com
follow. Twitter, which has 302 mil-
Costolo became chief exboardroom coup against Evan Williams, Twitter's co-founder and then chief executive.
Correction
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • HomebuyerEducation Class:Learn about services that can help with the process ofpurchasing ahome;9a.m.; $45 per household; Redmond Neighborlmpact Office, 2303 SW First St., Redmond; www.neighborimpact.orgl homebuyer-workshopregistration/ or 541-323-6567. WEDNESDAY • Census Data for Grant Writers:Learn how to make the most of census data when writing grants; 1:30
p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; http:I/bit.ly/1ldRvqy or 541-617-7093. THURSDAY • BusinessStartup: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you; 11a.m.; $29, registration required; Central Oregon Community College Redmond Campus — Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ sbdc or 541-383-7290. • You've Been Hacked
— Privacy andSecurity, ObsolescentValues inthe Digital Age:City Club of Central Oregon forum about digital theft and privacy protection; 11:30 a.m.; $20 members, $35 nonmembers; St. Charles BendCenter for Health & Learning, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; www.cityclubco.org or 541-633-7163. JUNE 22 • Build a Business Website with IordPress, Intermediate:Learn to customize your WordPress
site with themesandhow to best protect your site from spammers, hackers and malware; continues through July1; 6 p.m.; $179; registration required; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • Pitch YourBizwith Passion It Prowess:Join Diane Allen, who hasbeen apitch coach for the BendVenture Conference; 6:30 p.m.; limited seating; BendCreative Space, 19855 Fourth St., Suite 105, Bend; for reservations: tiny. cc/pitchpassionprowess or
541-617-0340.
JUNE 23 • Women andMoney:Are You Ready forChange?:Learn how to organize important papers, complete financial documents, review your investment goals and identify reliable resources; 6 p.m.; Mid OregonCredit Union, 1386 NECushing Drive, Bend; www.midoregon.com or 541-382-1795. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bettdbulletin.com/bizcal
A story headlined "Applicants sought for apartments," which appeared Thursday, June 11, on PageC6,incorrectly stated the dates and times applications will be accepted for The Parks at Eastlake. Applications will be accepted 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. this Monday through Thursday, and 9a.m. to noon June19. The Bulletin regrets the error.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-PILis, D2
Parents & Kids, D3 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages
Animals roaming
BRIEFING
Crook, Deschutes retirement ready Software company SmartAsset hasranked Crookand Deschutes among Oregon's10 best counties in terms oftheir residents' overall readiness for retirement. ReleasedJune1, the SmartAsset report calculates acounty's retirement readinessindex with a formulathat looks at the jurisdiction's median householdwealth, median SocialSecurity earnings, mediancost of living, andwhat percentage of their gross income its residentsspend on their annualstate and local incometax payments. It then indexed these figures onascale of 1 to100, with thehigher numbers beingthe most ready for retirement. Crook County residents had anoverall retirement readiness index of 39.37,which was the highestscore for counties in Oregonand the1,379th highest score forthe United States.Deschutes County's score on the indexwas28.31, which wasthe10th highestscore in Oregonand the 2,804th highestscore in the nation.
Warningsreleased adout HECM ads A recent report from the federalConsumer Financial Protection Bureau warnsthe advertisementsusedbyhome equity conversion mortgage (HECM)lenders that target people 62 orolder may contain inaccurateor incomplete information that could jeopardize a person's retirement security. Also known asreverse mortgages, HECM loans are complicated financial products that allow older homeownersto borrow against the equity of their homes anddelaythe repayment of this loanuntil they die, moveout of, or sell their home.Theloans are the topic ofseveral advertisements thatare typically broadcast on late night television and feature oldercelebrities such asHenryWinkler, Fred Thompsonand Robert Wagner. After reviewing 97 reverse mortgageadvertisements, 43 ofwhich were broadcaston television, theCFPBfound many of themdidnot painta full picture ofwhat a reverse mortgagedoes or what its borrowersare responsible for doing if they takeout oneofthese loans. Forinstance,the bureau found: • Some consumers who sawtheads did not understand areverse mortgage is aloanthat comes with fees,compound interest andmust be paid back inthe future. • Some adsimplied or stated borrowers"cannot lose their homes"even though theycould be foreclosed upon if they fail to paytheir taxes or insurance. • Some consumers had problemsreadingthe fine print used inprint ads andnoneofthem could read the fineprint used on television ads. • Consumers often misunderstood thefederal government's role in the reversemortgage process andthought it was a government-run program when it isnot. • Younger consumers did not realizethey might have problemsgetting more moneyfrom their home's equity if theyoutlived the loan'soriginal balance. —Mac McLean, 7he Bulletin
the office By William Hageman Chicago Tribune
• Daughter connects to mother with Parkinson's disease through old recipe box By KimSeverson ~The New York Times re:t'I
he last full sentence I heard from my mom
/I
'
'
' "
i r
i'
Diesel, an 8-year-old schnoodle, looks at the calendar and snorts. Diesel comes to work
one or two times a week at Kaleidoscope, a company
was around Easter. uYou better call Michael," she said. The only Michael in our
CHICAGO — Take Your Dog To Work Day isn't until June 26.
that assists brand owners
y
through consulting, strategic design and prototyping, in Chicago. On this particular afternoon, she is walking
family is a distant cousin I can't be sure I've even met. But I went with it. Sure, Mom. I'll call him.
the aisles near the work-
That's what it's like these days.
space of her person, Dawn Brigando.
My mother has a kind of
can of Rotel tomatoes. It was
"We come in and she's
d ementia that c omes w i t h advanced Parkinson's. That's
her attempt to give the sauce
on her own," says Briganc' ',
of canned soup a little life.
do, a production artist. "I never worry. She knows
l
lousy in a million ways, but I The page ripples with the especially miss talking to her aftermath of some long-ago about cooking. spill. Bits of dried sauce still My dad recently sent me cling to it. a big box filled with her old In a flash, I'm back at our cookbooks and stacks of oak dinner table, my dad still handwritten recipes on index
in his shirt and tie from work
cards and slips of paper. The recipes are held together with
serving that workhorse of a
thick rubber bands or filed
who she gets treats from, and she's free to go where she wants." Diesel, who has been coming to the office since she was about 4 months
old, is part of the culture at Kaleidoscope, which has an open doggy door policy. Employees are encouraged
dish to five kids. Turns out it was the mess that mattered to me the most.
into a cheerful metal recipe box. They are the sum total of The worn pages of a cookthe cooking life of a woman book have a unique ability to who fed seven people every drill into a place where food day for a long time. memory mixes with love and I wish I could tell you that loss. As our kitchen adventhe collection is a brilliant, turesincreasingly are recordwell-ordered trove of culinary ed in sleek digital files or even instruction. the fleeting history of a recipe That special glazed Bundt search, beat-up cookbooks cake I remember from child- become more valuable, both hood, the one she would al- personally and historically. "We love to see marked-up, ways have under the green plastic dome when I returned dog-eared, grease-splattered home for a visit? The recipe cookbooks," said Paula Johncame from a card attached to son, a curator at the Smitha bottle of Bacardi rum. Next to th e K i n g R anch
to bring their canines to
work, and eight or 10 of them do regularly. There's usually a dog (or dogs) in the office three or four days a week. The idea of pets in the
I'!I
'
'
"
'
: :
.
"
sfjlli i f,';y
boost when Pet Sitters International launched Take
ABOVE: Coconut cream pie from a Savarson family recipe, in Atlanta. BELOW: Recipe Cards from Kim Severson's mother that her fa-
Your Dog To Work Day 17 years ago, and things have snowballed. According to
ther sent her. Sevaraon'a mother haaParkinson's disease. Smudged
the American Pet Products
handwritten notecarda, clipped directions and well-worn cookbooks can reveal a great deal about the intent and life of a cook.
Association, 20 percent
Amber Fouts/The New York Times
sonian Institution's National
office isn't new. But it got a
of U.S. companies now
casserole recipe in an old
Museum of American History in Washington, where
have adopted pet-friendly policies.
PTA cookbook, she made a
Julia Child's kitchen and be-
handwritten notes or physi- much about the intent and life loved books are housed. How cal evidence that a recipe was of the cook. a cookbook is marked, by prepared over and over, tells SeeRecipe box/D3
of this. I do know it's a growing trend," says Steve
note to add chopped green peppers, green chiles and a
"I don't know the origin
Feldman, executive director of the Human-Animal Bond Research Initiative Foundation, a nonprofit
research and education organization based in Washington, D.C., that gathers,
funds and shares research on the positive health im-
pact of animals on people. "Fortune magazine,
- r + »
which is known for its an-
<] ( I+<e e
D
6 ev e v s o gq r
nual list of best places to work, now also puts out a list of the most pet-friendly
A
C~ ; ~
companies," Feldman says. "Having dogs in the office isnice,"saysKaleidoscope CEO Gary Chiappetta. "It calms things down, makes people happy." Lying next to his desk is Olive, his 3-year-old Australian labradoodle.
&&4od —. Cuv
Yci=
Cc ( - g
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ly ™ ~v
OKC. W(u • Re psgoe Q~
~e
u~e C : r.> i
~>r pwfe~ I
"Pets have a wonderful
effect on people," Feldman agrees. "They reduce stress, lower blood pressure, and they increase so-
cial interaction, in and out of the workplace." SeePet friendly/D4
Uni Lietrainin mverscareo o er By Mac McLean
person) do to make you feel
The Bulletin
more at ease?"
Sara Reed told a group of about 20 home care workers
Hoping to address some of the challenges faced by older lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender adults, the
who attended a diversity
training in Salem to pretend they were a gay senior who needed someone to take care
of him and make it possible for him to stay at home.
commission teamed up with the AARP Diversity Advisochapter of Services &Advoca-
cy for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual about having a stranger come & Transgender Elders about into your home?" said Reed, two years ago to develop a who led the training for the
3/2-hour training course that
Oregon Home Care Commission, a state agency that
teaches home care workers a
and disabled residents with state-supported home care workers. "What could (that
few basic details they should consider when working with
this population. "The goal of discussing this topic is to increase people's
might explain why some older LGBT adults might be reluctant to share their sexual identity with anyone but their
closest friends. She also went over a list of LGBT-related terms the Gay,
— Sara Reed, home care trainer Lesbian & Straight Education Network included at the back
ry Council and the Portland
"What would concern you
matches low-income elderly
"The goal of discussing this topic ts to increase people's comfort level with it. The biggest value (of these trainings) ts giving people an opportunity to ask questions they may not feel comfortable asking somewhereelse."
a uts
comfort level with it," said
Reed, who has been leading
During the training, Reed went over a series of histor-
these trainings since the
ical events — such as how
program started in December 2012. "The biggest value (of these trainings) is giving people an opportunity to ask questions they may not feel comfortable asking somewhere else."
the American Psychological Association officially considered homosexuality to be
a mental illness until 1973, when most people who use the state's long-term care were in their 40s — that
of its Safe Space training m anual and played avideo produced by Boulder County Aging Services where a number of LGBT seniors told stories about how they had to hide their sexual identities
and relationships for fear they might lose their jobs or alienate their peers. SeeTraining/D2
D2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
-PLUS
To submit an event for the Activities Calendar, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.
wimmers reve in camara erie, com etitionsatcu in o ane By Erica Curiess The S pohesman-Review
SPOKANE, Wash. — "I am water," said Lorna Henry, 74,
while taking a break from the 5 a.m. practice recently. "That's whoI am." V ictoria
D i c k inson, 6 9 ,
agreed. "Oh that's me too." The women are former teenage swim champs whose careers ended because there was
(Mike) Hamm, who runs a year-round swim school at his Fort Grounds home in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, said the bell curve for masters starts about age 35 and then tapers off at 60. Yet he said many people swim forever, noting one of his favorite swimmers is a 93-yearold woman from Montana,who he'staken to nationals three times.
on Friday mornings after the round swim school at his quiredwomen's college sports. workout. The masters have Fort Grounds home in Coeur Henry was raised in Portland pancakefeeds and Christmas d'Alene, said the bell curve for and Dickinson in Texas. Dick- parties. Many of them swimthe masters starts about age 35 inson coached the University local lakes in the summer, of- and then tapers off at 60. Yet of New Mexico swim team. ten to the Coeur d'Alene Resort he said many people swim forBoth hadn't swum in a meet for Golf Course's floating green ever, noting one of his favorite swimmers is a 93-year-old years, even decades. Yet both wherethey diveforsubmerged were "nagged" into joining the golf balls. To the 58-year-old woman from Montana, who he's taken to nationals three masters' team about a year ago Hamm, masters swim club is and into competition because really more about friendships times. The woman and two rumor had it they were good, and camaraderiethan actual friends in their 80s competed fierce swimmers. swimming. That'sperhaps why recently and did well, Hamm Today both women are so many people are willing to said. among the country's top mas- swim at 5 a.m. and smile about A ttendance on t h i s p a r ters swimmers. North Idaho it. ticular Monday practice was "The team is c ohesive," low, about half of normal even has a strong masters dub, thanks to the Ray & Joan Kroc Hamm said. "You have a vil- though most lanes of the pool Center's competition-size pool lageofpeoplewho loveyou and had three or four swimmers and coach Mike Hamm, who love each other." of various ages, abilities and works to make the swimmers a Masters is somewhat a mis- body types. Hamm said many family, not just a fitness group. nomer. It's aswim fitnessgroup of the swimmers stayed home His efforts were evident as for adults 18 and older and has to rest after the weekend meet swimmers attempted to leave no ability requirements. Any- because they were "really beat thepool to start their post-work- body can compete at nationals up." Yet, as a coach, he said they out mornings. He lured them to or local and regional meets, but should all be in the pool swimthe coffee bar with hot drinks Hamm said many of his swim- ming, stretching, healing. and quick chats about the pre- mers would qualify if it were About an hour into practice, vious weekend meet. required. Less than 20 percent Hamm told the swimmers to "By the way," Hamm called of the team competes. use a kickboard and swim to Dickinson. "You set four new Swimming is considered a side-by-side. "Spend some social time torecords and a zone record." lifelong sport, largely because He then went on chatting water eliminates gravity and gether," he yelled. "Love each with other members gathered strain on joints. It also takes a other." around the fireplace. lifetime to master. Henry swam in the end lane Coffee klatch is common Hamm, who runs a year- by herself, slow and methodino Title IX in the 1950s that re-
Training
in working with older LGBT adults.
Continued from 01 Finally, Reed walked the participants through a series of discussion questions involving scenarios such as a person telling a caregiver it was the anniversaryof his partner's death, a transgender woman
asking a caregiver to go with her to a doctor's appointment, and a caregiver noticing an older woman's "sister" wasn't really her sister at all, but her
cal. Stopping at the end occa-
Tribune News Service Remember how Baby Mozart was supposed to turn your infant into a genius?
sionally to rub her shoulders.
Turns out that listening to
ing that she can't see and can't "I came today to loosen up."
classical music does in fact boost the brain, and at any age. According to a new study from the University of Hel-
She said swimming styles havechanged immensely since
sinki, the dulcet tones of B rahms, B e ethoven a n d
the 1950s when she competed. The strokes are more efficient.
other classical musicians enhance genes involved in motor behavior, learning and memory,and the release of the happy brain chemical dopamine. "Sound is important in evolution to protect us,
"I'm sore today," she said, climbing from the pool and jokhearbut that she can still swim.
As a teenager, nobody swam with goggles or swim caps. She laughed as she remembered her coach sitting the kids on the diving board and dropping castor oil into their eyes to combat the redness and soreness. If a kid happened to have their mouth open, the coach would squirt some of the thick soap-tasting liquid in t heir mouth.
Henry cares for her blind husband and
s ai d m a sters
swimming is her social life. She has few friends outside the pool. Dickinson also enjoys the camaraderie. She believes in water so much that she works as
an aquatic therapist, doing water massages in a 16-foot pool spa in her Coeur d'Alene home.
The water allows the body to become buoyant and the joints to decompress so stretching
and range of motion increase. It also helps people with chronic pain get relief, she said. Dickinson works on several of her teammates, including
Henry. "Being an older swimmer, you have to use common sense
about your body," Dickinson said. "If you over-train, it will set you back."
c umstances, Reed had t o dodge an argument with a
Reed said the first participant was wrong because it used a stereotype, though a positive one, that failed to recognize the diversity of the LGBT pop-
participant who objected to
ulation — some of them are
using the word "assigned" to describe the gender a person
not creative. Forcing people to But through its work with come out makes them feel un- the AARP Diversity Advisory
was born with because "God doesn't make mistakes."
comfortabe, she said.
But even under these cir-
Cheryl Miller, the home
She also corrected someone care commission's executive who thought talking about art
and drama mightmake a gay person feel comfortable about coming out because "gay peopartner. ple are very creative," and an"These trainings have been other person who thought it pretty well received," Reed would be better to have a "disaid, noting her trainings may rect and upfront conversation" have a selection bias because with a someone she thought they are not mandatory and might be gay rather than wait are therefore only attended by for him to come out when people who have an interest he felt comfortable doing so.
director, said 1,157 home care
workers attended these trainings between December 2012 and March 2014. She said her
gender. Nor does it have any plans to do so in the future, she
said, because that might make clients feel uncomfortable and would definitely infringe upon their privacy. Council and SAGE Portland,
the commission has included a space on its home care registry — a website designed to match consumers with home care workers — where peo-
ple can disclose their sexual agency has never conducted a identity and whether they are study to find out how many of LGBT-friendly. its consumers — low-income
seniors and people with disabilities who need help performing certain activities of
daily living — identify as being lesbian, gay, bisexual or trans-
Listening to musiccan lower yourdementia risk
"It seems to work," Miller
said. "It allows people to connect (with a particular type of person) if theyneedto connect."
and music is also sound," ex-
plainslead researcher Irma Jarvela, MD, Ph.D., associate professor of medical molecu-
In the experiment, classical tunes also seemed to modifygenes — in particular a gene known as SNCA — that control the
death of neurons, seen with diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. "By affecting dopamine pathways, music silenced the genes that are risk factors for dementia," (Irma) Jarvela says.
lar genetics at the University of Helsinki. Several of the
anisms behindthose effects.
genes that get dialed up in humans are also known to be responsible for song production in songbirds, a link that highlights the possible role of sound perception and production in survival across species
Researchers, publishing in the journal Scientific Reports, looked at brain scans
of professional musicians before and after they played two hours of classical music, and compared them to scans of musicians who
did a non-musical activity. sical tunes also seemed to Although this experiment modify genes — in particu- looked a t t he co g n itive lar a gene known as SNCA changes in the classical mu— that control the death of sicians themselves, Jarvela neurons, seen with diseases believes that at least some of such as Alzheimer's and Par- the changes — certainly to kinson's. "By affecting do- the SNCA gene — occur in pamine pathways, music si- listeners as well. In the experiment, clas-
lenced the genes that are risk
And as to whether oth-
er genres of music have b rain-boosting powe r , shown music performance Jarvela suspects that jazz, to cause structural and func- with its imagination, improtional changes in the human visation, and creativity, could brain and enhance cognition, alsohave an eff ect on gene but this was the first study to expression. Possibly hip-hop, uncover the molecular mech- too. factorsfordementia,"Jarvela says. Earlier research has
Challengesfacingolder LGB Tadults More than1.5 million LGBTAmericans are 65 or older, according to Services 8 Advocacy for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual 8 Transgender Elders. But while this demographic group is relatively small, its members struggle with a number of challenges older heterosexual adults do not face, including: • Higher poverty rates:A 2009 survey found 24 percent of older lesbians and 15percent of older gay and bisexual men are poor, compared to19 percent of heterosexual womenand13 percent of heterosexual men. • Higher rates of Ilepression:A 2011survey found more than half of older LGBTadults were told they are depressed and 39 percent of them haveseriously thought about suicide. • Higher rates of social isolation:Older LGBTadults are more than twice as likely as heterosexual adults to live by themselves, twice as likely to be single, and three to four times less likely to have children who could care for them. Source:Services & Advocacy for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender Elders
(SAGE)
— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com
ACTIVITIES CALENDAR accepted; Old Mill District, 450 SW enthusiasts are welcome to attend; Powerhouse Drive, Suite 422, Bend; 9:30a.m.; Highland Baptist Church, www.sunrivernaturecenter.org or 3100 Highland Ave., Redmond; PINOCHLEAND BRIDGE AT THE 541-593-4394. 541-639-3217. GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochleand SISTERSART INTHE PARK: bridge; noon;TheGolden AgeClub, PINOCHLEAND BRIDGE AT THE 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochleand food and live entertainment, to bridge; noon;TheGolden AgeClub, benefit a local wish from the Make40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. SATURDAY A-Wish Foundation of Oregon; 10 PRIME TIMETOASTMASTERS: a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson SATURDAY BIRDWALKS: Join Learn to be a more effective Street and Highway 20, Sisters; the Nature Center for gUided communicator and leader; noon; www.centraloregonshows.com or Saturday morning bird walks, Home Federal Bank, 555 NWThird 541-420-0279. bring binoculars; 8:30 a.m.; free, St., Prineville; 541-447-6296. PINOCHLEAND BRIDGE AT THE registration required; Sunriver BEND CHAMBERTOASTMASTERS: Nature Center 8 Observatory, 57245 GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochleand noon;TheGoldenAge Club, Learn to be a more effective River Road, Sunriver; 541-593-4394. bridge; 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. communicator and leader; noon; SISTERSART INTHEPARK: The Environmental Center, 16 NW HANDMADEPAPERFLOWERS Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, Kansas Ave.,Bend;541-383-2581. CLASS:Learn to make flowers food and live entertainment, to Using crepe papers;1 p.m.; $65; The benefit a local wish from the MakeWEEKLY CRUISINAND SHOW A-Wish Foundation of Oregon; 10 Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SE N SHINE:Bring your classic cars Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080. a.m.; Creekside Park,Jeff erson and trucks for a weekly Cruisin and Street and Highway 20, Sisters; Show N Shine; 5:30 p.m.; Jake's www.centraloregonshows.com or TUESDAY Diner, 2210 USHighway 20, Bend; 541-420-0279. 541-647-1769. LA PINETOASTMASTERS: Learn to ARTIST SATURDAYS: A pop-up GEEKS WHO DRINKPUB TRIVIA: be a more effective communicator show with art by more than 40 Trivia hosted by Ryan Traughber; and leader; 8 a.m.; Gordy's Truck local artists; 10 a.m.; The Armature, The Summit Saloon 8 Stop,17045 Whitney Road, La Pine; 7 p.m.; 50 SE Scott St., Suite 2, Bend; Stage, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; 541-815-7180. 541-390-7666. www.facebook.com/GWDBend or PINOCHLEAND BRIDGE AT THE BEND ANDJUNIPER BUTTEDAR 541-419-0111. GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochleand MEETING:Featuring speaker State bridge; noon;TheGoldenAge Club, Regent Cynthia Parnell, lunch at noon, meeting1 p.m.; noon; Juniper 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. THURSDAY Golf Course, 139 SE Sisters Ave., HIGHNOONERS TOASTMASTERS: PINOCHLEAND BRIDGE AT THE Redmond; 541-322-6996. Empowers individuals to become GOLDEN AGECLUB:Pinochleand more effective communicators and bridge; noon;TheGolden AgeClub, leaders; noon;NewHopeChurch, SUMDAY 40 SE Fifth St., Bend; 541-382-7552. 20080 Prinebrook Blvd., Bend; SCRAP METALJEWELRY MAKING 541-936-7566. OLD MILL BIRDWALKS:Join a FOR BEGINNERS:Learnto Use Sunriver Nature Center Naturalist scrap metal in unique jewelry, for Sunday morning bird walk WEDNESDAY suppliei s ncluded;6 p.m.;$60;The along the Deschutes in the Old Mill District, meet at the ticket mill, bring CENTRAL OREGONSPINNERS Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SE binoculars; 7:30 a.m.; free, donations AND WEAVERS GUILD: All fiber Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080
TODAY
In honor of National Flag Week, we will be handing out free American Flags. Flags may be exchanged Monday, June 15 thru Friday, June 19 between 9:00am and 5:00pm. Limited supply, reserve yours today! There will be a ceremonial disposal of the retired flags that are collected.
You'rea grand okf jkg you're a
highflying flag andforever inpeacemay you eave. -George M. Cohan
Prestige Senior Living High Desert 2660 NE Mary Rose Pl Bend, OR 97701
Ph: (541) 312-2003 Managed by
Prestige Senior Living, L.L.C.
www.PrestigeCare.com
FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
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FAMILY CALENDAR
TODAY STORYTIME — PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 10:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-617-7097. TEEN — RANDOM FANDOM: Ages 12-17, celebrate your favorite fandom after hours atyour library, come in costume, registration required; 6:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar or 541-312-1050. TEEN LOCK-IN:Ages 12-17, kick off summer reading at your library's annual teen lock-in: games, food, movies; registration required; 7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-617-7097.
SISTERSRODEO — LESSCHWAB FAMILY NIGHT:Featuring a rodeo performance; 7 p.m.; $14, free for children12 and under; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 Highway 20, Bend; www.sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121.
SATURDAY KIDS ANDCAIRNS, WHYCHUS CANYONPRESERVE:Join the DeschutesLand Trustand Ginny Elliott for a challenging 3- to 4-milehike atW hychus Canyon Preserve for kids; 9 a.m.; Whychus
Canyon Preserve,nearGoodrich Road in Sisters, Sisters; www. jun13kidscairnwcp.eventbrite.com or 541-330-2638. STORYTIME — SATURDAY STORIES:Ages 0-5; 9:30 a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or
541-330-3760. SISTERS RODEO PARADE: Featuring a parade; 9:30 a.m.; Downtown Sisters; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. SISTERS ART INTHEPARK: Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, food and live entertainment, to benefit a local wish from the MakeA-Wish Foundation of Oregon;10 a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson Street and Highway 20, Sisters; www.centraloregonshows.com or 541-420-0279. PET PAWLOOZA:Featuring contests, prizes, pet vendors, nonprofits, adoptable animals,
music, a bouncehouse, abeer garden and more. sponsored by Brightside Animal Center and Bend Pet Express; 10 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www.brightsideanimals.org/events or 541-923-0882.
Jayco
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IN THENATION ~ Full 2 Year Warranty I Iatla t „ ~ ~ = - "-' "- ---- with No StringsAttached NEW 2016JAYCO145RB "BAJA EDITION" Light Weight, Rugged &Easyto Tow
'Don't wakethe baby' offers new look attoddlers' socialskils By John Higgins
that skill develops in small
et toys using see-through
The Seattle Times
children has focused on visu-
plastic tubes that were filled
Children as young as 2
al perspective-taking — for years old u n derstand that example, how babies follow making loud noises wakes a mother's gaze to see what a baby, according to a new she's looking at. study by researchers at the In their latest study, lead University of Washington. author Rebecca Williamson That may not sound like at Georgia State Universia big deal, but appreciating ty and co-authors Rechele how sound volume affects Brooks and Meltzoff at UW someone else is not a trivial believe they are among the social skill. first to explore how that skill Some adults are still work- develops for inferring what ing on it. others can hear — which is J ust think a bout al l t h e more complicated feat betimes you've overheard some- cause we can't follow someone's half of a cellphone con- one's ears like we follow their versation while standing in eyes. It's also a step toward more the checkout line or movie theater and wondered how abstract perspective-taking, they could be so oblivious to such as appreciating that the people around them. someone else might prefer a " Perspective-taking is a different ice cream flavor or lifelong skill that's super im- subscribe to a different politiportant," said Andrew Melt- cal philosophy, Meltzoff said. The "don't wake the baby" zoff, one of the study's co-authors, who co-directs the experiment involved 48 chilUW Institute for Learning & dren, ages 2 and 3. Brain Sciences. The researchers created Previous research on how two noisy toys and two qui-
with bells, beads, feathers or glitter.
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level appropriately, suggesting that they may know what it feels like to be awakened by a noisy brother or sister.
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Recipe box Continued from 01 In N a shville, T ennessee,
e•
three writers joined this year to celebrate the analog beauty of a well-used cookbook page. They asked 18 cooks, some professionals and some nov-
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ices, to select a meaningful
recipe of their own and write about why it m attered. The women and theirrecipes were
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age Museum in New Orleans. The idea came when Jennifer Justus, a food writer, saw
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John Shenk, left, Clair Carter, 7, and Courtenay Rogers fill their plates at "Dirty Pages," a potluck event celebrating the analog
beauty of a well-used cookbook page, in Nashville, Tennessee, in April. The project, which features meaningful recipes selected by
a friend's Facebook post de- 18 cooks, has become an art installation that made the rounds in picting a splattered cookbook Nashville and will have a permanent home at the Southern Food page. Kim McKinney, a home and BeverageMuseum inNew Orleans. cook in Nashville, left a com-
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ment: "I tell my daughters that when I go, they'll know the
Sleeps 6,FordTriton Engine, Hellwig Springsfor a SmoothRide
sissippi. "It connects you to a quotation marks around her good recipes from the dirty moment when they were alive "sugar cookies," and did they pages." and were occupying space really need a cup of lard? Erin Byers Murray, a found- with this same object." She even had practical ader of the project, said, "What's My mom was a cook who vice from friends, like this on crazy is that it's taken social got better a s h e r c h i ldren a recipe for cassoulet: "Realmedia for a lot of us to recog- grew up. Eventually, she ly good if you like beans. A nize what treasures they are." would head up the cookbook real pain in the ass to make, Novelist Alice Randall, 56, is one of the women in the ex-
committee for t h e
h o spital however." The most sacredto me are
auxiliary and even teach a hibit. In February, she and her few classes when she got a daughter, Caroline Randall part-time job at a k i tchen Williams, published "Soul cookware store. Food Love: Healthy Recipes She clipped recipes from Inspired by One Hundred magazines or wrote them Years of Cooking in a Black on whatever happened to be Family." at hand. Instructions for the At the heart of the book, popovers she made with our which covers four genera- Christmas roast beef were tions, is a collection of more scratched out on the back of than 1,000 cookbooks left to a contractbridge score sheet. Williams by her grandmother, S everal were t a ken d o w n a Nashville librarian who on notepads from moving read cookbooks like novels. companies, evidence of how As one might expect from m any times we packed up and a good librarian, she didn't headed for a new city. Somemark her books. But they hold times, a recipe like chicken treasures pressed between the chili or an aunt's carrot cake pages, like Queen Anne's lace would show up in my dad's and grocery lists. neat block script on his work "Every time I come upon stationery. She had odd little one, it is a marker of a shared, similar experience," said Wil-
notes — "3 qts water I qt vin-
the recipes from her Italian family. I picked up a sheet
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potato dough on the counter with my thumb so the little dumpling flipped over and curled like a rat's tail. I finally got to the card that held a recipe for the coconut
cream pie she would bake because I loved it so. It was the first pie I ever attempted.
My mom's handwriting is
a messy version of the formal cursive they taught in north-
ern Wisconsin public schools
egar I cup salt boil and put in the 1940s. I traced the loopy, liams, who recently received on pickles" — and mysteries uneven instructions with my a Master of Fine Arts degree I have yet to solve, like who fingers. And then I made the from the University of Mis- was Shirley, why were there pie for my daughter.
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D4 TH E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
PETS
To submit an event for the Pets Calendar, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10days before
publication. Ongoing listingsmust be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.
r
'•
PETS CALENDAR
TODAY BARKINGLOTSALE: Gently used household items for sale, to benefitanimals in ThreeRivers Humane Society; 9a.m.; Three Rivers Humane Society, 1694 SE McTaggart Road, Madras; www. threerivershs.org or 541-475-6889.
SATURDAY BARKINGLOTSALE: Gently used household items for sale, to benefitanimals in ThreeRivers Humane Society; 9a.m.; Three Rivers Humane Society, 1694 SE McTaggart Road, Madras; www. threerivershs.org or 541-475-6889. DOG GONERUN:The Dog Gone Run 5K fun run/walk for people and leashed pets begins and ends at Riverbend Park; register online or at FootZone and FleetFeet in Bend, and BrightSide Animal Center Thrift Store in Redmond;
9 a.m.; $35advance; $40 dayof; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St., Bend; www.runsignup.com/ race/OR/Bend/dogonerun or 541-923-0882. Maria Yetka via The Associated Press
Susan Horecki shows Snickers, right, and his sister Logan after passing her Denver Pet Partners therapy dog evaluation during a visit with patients and staff at Rose Medical Center in Denver. Snickers is part of a study to find out why golden retrievers' lifespans have gotten so short and why cancer has gotten so prevalent among them.
PET PAWLOOZA:PetPawlooza festival; contests, prizes, petrelated vendors, nonprofit groups, Ask-A-Vet info booth, adoptable
animals, live music, bouncehouse
tu
aims to uncover reason r a ues o enretrievers
By Sue Manning
to make life easier for their dogs, especially because the LOS ANGELES — If a gold- most helpful data about canen retriever gives birth, gets cer, obesity, diabetes and othstung by a bee or sprayed by er chronic conditions won't a skunk, veterinarians want emerge for six or seven years, to know. researchers say. Scientists are studying the Early exams showed 33 popular breed to find out why percent of the dogs, which their lifespans have gotten are 1 to 5 years old, had skin shorter over the years and disease or ear infections; 17 why cancer is so prevalent. percent had gastrointestinal The Colorado-based Morris illnesses; and ll percent had Animal Foundation recently urinary disease. got the first lifetime study of The dogs get medication to 3,000 purebred golden retriev- treat the conditions, but vets ers up and running after sign- can't treat them differently ing up the first dogs in 2012. because it would skew the reThe nonprofit says the review sults, Lappin said. of health conditions and enviMarla Yetka of Denver says ronmental factors facing gold- her nearly 2-year-old golden ens across the U.S. can help retriever, Snickers, joined the other breeds and even people, study and has been suffering because humans carry 95 per- from skin problems. Yetka cent of the same DNA. uses oatmeal shampoo on her "Canine cancer has become pet, but she's looking forward a dog owner's greatest fear," to talking with other particisaid Dr. David Haworth, pres- pants about their remedies. "I have too many friends ident and CEO of the foundation, which invested $25 mil- who have lost goldens," she The Associated Press
lion in the study. "You don't
see dogs running loose that
'"k
, I,III!.
erything, from a move across Susan Horecki via The Associated Press country or across town, a From left to right, Marla Yetka, Judy Harris, Nicole Berens, Linda c hange in c l imate or t i m e Berger with Snickers the Denver Pet Partners therapy dog during
setts, in the study. When he
Pet owners keep tabs on ev-
graduated from veterinary school in 1972, golden retrievers lived 16 or 17 years. Today, it's nine or 10 years. Golden retrievers die of bone cancer, lymphoma and a cancerof the blood vessels
The v et s
c o l lect b l ood,
Continued from D1 At Kaleidoscope, the rules are unwritten. Actually, there
really aren't any. "People are very respectful (of co-workers) and want to keep this up," Chiappetta
says. "Only one time did we have somebody's dog that was a distraction. You tell them, 'If
the dog needs that much attention ...'" At some businesses, ani-
mals aren't so much invited as they are interlopers. At Sharprint, a Chicago apparel printing and embroidery company, a young orange cat wandered into the building through an open door one night in November 2013. An
employee coming to work the nextmorning found hersound asleep on a pile of T-shirts.
June is Adopta Shelter Catmonth and the HumaneSociety of Central Oregon is celebrating with $5 feline adoptions for cats 4 monthsandolder. Chad is ahandsome andcharming, 5-year-old brown tabby looking for a family. This laid-back guyis sure to makeyou smile. All adoptions include spay orneuter, free health exam, microchip ID,vaccination, collar, ID tag, license, foodandmore. Meet Chadat the HumaneSociety of Central Oregon,61170SE27th St., Bend. Formoreinformation, visit www.hsco.org or call 541-382-3537.
Submitted photo
real time is really a unique opportunity." The interactive portion
a Chicago hospital soon will will be set up at the hospital be able to play with puppies as soon as coding issues can and kittens at a n a n imal be worked out, Ruohonen shelter without leaving their and Aiken said. Until then, rooms. t he interactive portion i s Wright-Way Rescue ani- available online to the pubmal shelter set up a camera lic, Aiken said. system in a playroom at its Anyone can watch the annew adoption center in sub- imals live on Wright-Way's urban Morton Grove so chil- site. Above the feed, a link ladren can engage with pets beled, "Come play with us!" virtually from their hospital
leads to a site with an inter-
illnesses. "Everyone involved will feel the burden it will take to be able to say, 'I am playing a role in stopping cancer in these animals I love,'" Ha-
died. The dogs come from every state; about half are male and half are female; and half
able to watch the animals
are fixed and half are not.
their rooms' television mon-
Each visitor has two min-
Those who brought dogs into the study, including both veterinarians, hope goldens get a shot at the longer life they used to enjoy. "I'm glad I found the study and feel in some small way, I might make a difference," Ye-
itors, according to Susan Ruohonen, the hospital's di-
utes to engage the devices
most i m m ediately," R u o-
and the animals at the same
tka said.
be able to experience that in
lives."
She was dubbed Molly at first, with an alternative, the Snuggle Delivery. calling her Margaret SchroFor $150, HSBC volunteers eder,afterthe characterfrom will bring puppies, kittens, "Boardwalk Empire," and she dogs or cats to youroffice for became the company's house an hour of playtime. Employcat. Or a member of the staff, ees get a treat, homeless anidepending on your outlook. mals get needed socialization, "She caught a mouse once, the shelters raise money and so she at least earned her get the word out about their keep," says Zach Corn, Shar- mission — and when things print's head of sales. click, there are adoptions. He says Margaret — or Goldberg got the idea from Schroeder, she doesn't have a a Texas group that brought preference— spends most of kittens to a workplace. "I said her time lounging. w e could totally do this. . . . "She's a stress reliever," We had no idea it would be so Corn says. successful." Of course, having dogs or In the f i rst tw o m o nths, cats as daily visitors to the there were four adoption office isn't practical for all events and another dozen are companies. on the schedule. Eight puppies Adam Goldberg, digital found homes in those first four marketing specialist for the events. In addition, the group Humane Society of Broward raised more than $2,700. "The fee is only $150. People County in Florida, came up but employees soon started
ALL BREEDDOGSHOW: Agility, obedience, rally and conformation trials; 8 a.m.; free for spectators; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.mbkc.org or 541-318-6355.
beds, said Lisa Aiken, direc- active feature that controls a tor of development at the no- camera in the room and actikill shelter vatesone ofthree devices,a Since the beginning of the machine that shoots peanut year, children at Lurie Chil- butter-flavored bubbles, a dren's Hospital, in d o w n- tail that wags or a long rope town Chicago, have been hanging in the middle of the
waste, and hair and nail samples annually to test if the dogs get sick, hoping to uncover a common thread or early warning sign among worth said. dogs that develop cancer or So far, seven goldens have more than any other breed in otherdiseases.Doctors also died of conditions such as the country. check for changes in tempera- cancer and g astrointestinal Lappin plans to get his fam- ture, blood pressure, energy, problems, and one was hit by ilies together in a few months diet, sleeping patterns or oth- a car, Haworth said. Another to see if they have found ways er factors that could explain dropped out when its owner
Pet friendly
june 28
a visit. Three-thousand purebred golden retrievers have signed up for the $25 million lifetime study by the Colorado-based Morris Animal Foundation. The first dogs were signed up in 2012, but all 3,000 weren't part of it until March, so the study just officially started.
thorn in its foot, eats a spider
or devours a bunch of bologna if it tears into the groceries.
ALL BREEDDOGSHOW: Agility, obedience, rally and conformation trials; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; free for spectators; hosted by the Mt. Bachelor Kennel Club; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www. mbkc.org or 541-318-6355.
CHICAGO — Children at
the vaccines we have today are very good, so our concerns are warranted."
different food or behavioral changes. Most keep journals so they don't constantly call the vets when their dog gets a
June 27
CharmingChad
Chicago Tribune
their breeding?"
enough yet to improve or prolong the retrievers' lives, but key factors could lie anywhere, said Dr. Michael Lappin, who has 19 patients from Buzzards Bay, Massachu-
ALL BREEDDOGSHOW: Agility, obedience, rally and conformation trials; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.; free for spectators; hosted by the Mt. Bachelor Kennel Club; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www. mbkc.org or 541-318-6355.
ADOPT ME
By Meredith Rodriguez
much anymore, we don't see a lot of infectious diseases, and
zone, new children at home,
June 26
Kids at hospital will beable to 'play' with shelterpets
said. "Is it what we are feeding them, their environments,
The vets haven't learned
and beer garden; sponsored by Brightside Animal Center and Bend Pet Express; 10 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www.brightsideanimals.org/ events or 541-923-0882
rectorof children'sservices.
"It really was amazing how popular it became al-
"We kind of feel like we're rescuing both the children
Don't forget the...
before tax time, the people
B.IG D>AD~D>, Y
who jumped on itwere accounting firms," Goldberg says. "They were very excited because they were very stressed out."
Father's Da)y 'Satle!
"It's a good trend," Feldman
00'0 off
says. "It makes us happier, healthier and makes us more ,g~o'ck
To Work Day is June 26. Pet Sitters International, w hich created the event, invites busi-
nesses to download its free Action Pack planning guide on its website: www.takeyourdog. com.
in the room after clicking a button to queue on the site.
honen said. "It's sort of a day time," Aiken said. "They in the life of puppies and to both have challenges in their
are donating above and beyond, and in addition are donating items off our wish list," Goldberg says. The program got offthe ground about three months ago. "When we first did it, right
satisfied with our jobs." The 17th Take Your Dog
room that spins. The hospi-
play throughout the day via tal will have a separate link a stream that can be seen on once it is up and running.
O<ur Famous Hanging Baskets, Annuals, Perennials, Trees Bc Shrubs! (with this coupon) Expires 6/25/15
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FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT
'Powerpuff 'reboothasnew voices TV SPOTLIGHT
•
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replacements well. Apparently, we'll never actually see them Cartoon Network didn't both- onscreen. Actors who do televiBy Soraya Nadia McDonald er to reach out to them about sion voice work tend to remain The Washington Post reprising their roles in the ani- relatively anonymous. The women who originally mated series. But we've entered a new played Blossom, Bubbles and Seriescreator Craig Mc- landscape where even voice Buttercup all tweeted their re- Cracken, who will also not be a work has a social component actions Tuesday as Cartoon part of the 2016 reboot, tweeted that didn't exist whenthe series N etwork revealed the n ew a picture of the original three originally began airing in 1998. voices for its "Powerpuff Girls" voices, suggesting that he stood It would appear that Cartoon reboot, which will premiere in in solidarity withthem. Network went with actresses
•
It's interesting that Cartoon
2016.
Cartoon Network
A reboot of the Cartoon Network show, "Powerpuff Girls" will not feature the original voice actors or the creator, Craig McCracken.
Catherine Cavadini (Blossom), Tara Strong (Bubbles) and Elizabeth Daily (Buttercup) expressed sadness even as theywished their younger
closer in age to that of their tar-
Network is choosing to promote its animated show by so heavily foregrounding the actresses who play the new Powerpuff Girls, considering that
on or Disney show. Sorry nostalgic millennials, but this iteration just isn't for
you. So, will the situation with the "Powerpuff Girls" turn into a
fiasco like the much-poo-pooed "Jem" reboot? There was so much initial excitement over the new "Jem" movie — until the trailer was released. It was met with disappointment and
get audience. Amanda Leigh- rage. Would-be early adoptton, Natalie Palamides and
ers were dubious about the
Kristen Li look like three girls fact that "Jem" creator Christy who could just as easily be cast Marx was not involved in the in a new live-action Nickelode- live-action project.
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES
8 p.m. on 29, "Shark Tank" — Sooner or later, just about
This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday.
everyonedealswith a clogged
It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13areincluded, along with R-ratedfilms that may have entertainment or educational value for older children with parental guidance.
sink... and aWashingtonman aims to be their savior with the product he pitches in this episode. He maintains it will prevent such situations. A Florida family man stakes his clan's future on a service to provide real grass for pets, and aRhodeIsland resident introduces his system for controlling a bed's temperature. Bar-
"JURASSIC WORLD" Rating: PG-13 for intense se-
quences of science-fiction violence and peril. What it's about: A popular theme Park has its murderous new attraction bust out and start eating the guests. Again. The kid attractor factor: Dinosaurs running amok, faced by that Guardian of the Galaxy Chris Pratt.
Violence: Graphic, gruesome and dist u rbing death-by-dinosaurs. Language Scattered blts pf profanity. Sex Fljrtatjpn a kjss pr twp Dr s Np Parents' advisory: More violent than the "Jurassic park" movies, ujte vjpient fpr a kjds fjim t k th t ser i ousl' OK for
I
What it's about: A CIA office 7 wor k er is sent to Europe, into "the "e field," to foil the sale of a nuclear bomb. The kid attractor factor: Melissa McCarthy, in action and out of her depth. Good lessons/badlessons: It's not "Well-behaved women often Submitted photo make history," it's "Well-behaved "Jurassic World," starring Chris Pratt, has scenes featuring women SELDOM make history." disturbing deaths by dinosaurs. The PG-13 rating should be taken Violence: Deaths, gun play, seriously. knife-fights.
Goodlessons/bad lessons:
"SPY"
"Life is the acceptance that you are never actually in control." "A promise tomorrow is a lot less than trying today."
Ra t i ng: R for language through9 9: . ou t , violence, and some sexual con ' tent inclu'ding brief graphic ty-mouthed in the third act. nudity. Sex: Nudity, comical groping.
Drugs: Alcohol.
and profane for the very young,
Parents' advisory: Too violent
OK for 15-and-up.
bara Corcoran gets to checkon a
Cincinnati sandwich business she invested in. 9p.m. on TLC, "Love, Lustor Run" — Style expert Stacy London returns for a newseason of guiding a slate of diverse women with over-the-top looks through fashion make-unders to teach them that less is usually more. Among the womenfeatured during the course of this new
seasonareLisa, acancer sur-
au terwon'tre a mot er
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby: I am a single woman know how to get out of this situation who borrowed $80,000 to send my because it is taking atoll on me. daughter to college with the underShe hassomewhat compensated standing that she would take over me for gas, but I have two jobs and the payments once she was profes- family obligations thatlimitmytime sionally established. She is now so off, and I just can't continue this taxi "into" her new lifestyle that she is re- service. We work side-by-side at my fusing to have contact day job. I care about with her "poor" birth her and our friendmother. She refuses ship, but can no lonDFP,R to take responsibility ger continue allowing for repaying the loan, her hardship to be which is in my name, my hardship. Abby, and says "tough luck" please advise how to to my stupidity. break the news to her.
Ag gy
This means I will have to contin-
— Not a Taxi Service
ue working until I drop dead. Abby, Dear Not: Explain it to your I am 60. Is there any help for me? co-worker just as you have ex-
There arefour couples who get to-
gether for dinner once or twice a week. We all decide on a theme beforehand and bring a dish, potluck-style. My problem is that one of the couples will announce during dinner, "Those potatoes are our left-
oversfrom three days ago,"or,"W e had this for dinner last night." Is it just me, or is that gross? I al-
ways prepare something fresh for these dinners, as does everyone else. They are not struggling for money, and time isn't the issue. Should I say something? I tend to ignore what they bring, but I think they will notice eventually. Is this something I should keep my mouth shut about? Or is it bad manners to feed some-
Has this happened to other baby
plained it to me — that it has become
boomers?
more time-consuming and stressful oneelseyour leftovers? — Potluck in Oregon thanyoucanhandle,givenyour oth-
— Poor Birth mother in Georgia
Dear Poor: Sadly, yes it has. And er obligations. Rather than cut her Dear Potluck: Bad manners'? No. no, there isn't help for you. Because off cold turkey, give her some notice Lacking in tact? Yes. Keep in mind the agreement with your daughter — say a week — to arrange for other that some dishes taste better the was verbal and wasn't put in writ-
transportation. Do not apologize or
next day, after the flavors have had
ing,you don't have a legalmeans to forceher to assume the loan payments. Dear Abby: I have a difficult situation at work. A co-worker lost her driver's license two years ago, and I began providing her transportation. In the beginning it was occasion-
feel guilty about doing so. You have been more generous and supportive thanmanypeoplewould have. P.S. You didn't mention why she lost her driving privileges, but if it's still possible for her to reapply for a d river's license, you should s~ i t . Dear Abby: My husband and I are part of a tight-knit social group.
time to meld. If the other couples in the group feel as you do, the "offending" couple should be informed. However, if you are the only person who's turned off, then keep your
al, but now it's almost daily. I don't
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015: This yearyoubecome more in touch with the real you. You will spend a lot of time reflecting, but sooner or later you will have come to terms with certain issues in your life. You might want to do some volunteer work just to get out of yourself more often. If you are single, check out anyone you meet this year with
care. Someone Stars show the klod very desirable of day yoo'g have easily could be ** * * * D ynamic different from how ** * * Positive he or she seems. ** * Average Tim e is your ally. If ** So-so you are attached, as a couple, you * Difficult will benefit from a vacation away together. You can strengthen your bond in this setting. TAURUSmakes an excellent healer for you.
ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * You might sense a haze rising around a difficult issue that you would prefer to let go of. You can walk away from it for now, but in several months the problem will re-emerge. Deal with a money matter, but curb a tendency to go overboard. Tonight: Your treat.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * * Y our mood brightens as the day grows older. Even if a certain goal or desire does not land in your lap today, you will be one step closer to reaching it. A roommate or family member will play a significant role in what happens. Tonight: Music, friends and Friday combine.
GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * After the high energy of the past few days, you could be taken aback by how muchthings haveslowed down. Play
mouth shut and continue to "pass"
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 800-326-3264. • THE AGE OF ADALINE (PG-13) 11:20 a.m. • ALOHA (PGl3) 12:40, 3:45, 6:55, 9:50 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13l 11:10a.m., 2:35, 6:25, 9:50 • ENTOURAGE (Rl 1:05,3:55, 7:40, 10:25 • FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)2:05,3:05, 6:15, 9:40 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) 11:05, 2:05, 4:30, 7:10, 10:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:05,6,7,9,10 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) 11a.m., 2, 3, 5, 6:30, 7:55, 9:30, 10:45 • JURASSICWORLD IMAX 3-D(PG-13)noon,3:30,7:30, IO:30 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD (Rl10:55 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 12:35, 3:40, 7:20, 10:20 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13l 1, 4:15, 7:35, 1 0:35 • SPY (R) 11:45 a.m., 12:15, 2:45, 3:20, 6:45, 7:15, 9:45, IO:15 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) 11:35 a.m., 3:15, 8:40, 10:05 •
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend,541-330-8562 • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) 6 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) 9 • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA (Rl 3:30 • THE SEARCH FORFREEDOM(NR) 8:30 • WHILE WE'RYOUNG E (R) 6:15
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov. 21)
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
it low-key with others. You are best on a one-on-one level with a loved one. Use care with someone you meet today! Tonight: Make your vanishing act special.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * * D on't lose focus with your main objectives. You'll want to clear out as much as you can in order to enter the weekend with a smile. Your sense of direction plays a significant role in what occurs. A meeting could set the tone for the weekend. Tonight: Where the crowds are.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * * * A partner seemsto preoccupy your thoughts. You will want to take care of errands and some other matters that could be preventing you from being with this person. A loved one might be holding back, but don't force this person's hand. Tonight: A force to be dealt with.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * You might want to rethink a decision that could put you in a difficult situation if you are not careful. Detach. A partner might be sitting on his or her feelings, or perhaps he or she is not even aware of them yet. Relax. This, too, will pass. Tonight: Say "yes" to an offer.
** * * You could be the recipient of a lot of attention. You might not be sure how to handle a difficult associate. Tap into your imagination, and everything will work out just fine. Reach out to a friend who seems a bit closed-off. Tonight: Follow someone else's lead.
puts Frank(TomSelleck) in a tough spot in "Power of the Press." A cop's dealings with a civilian are exposed to the public, leaving the commissioner with much to answer for. An informant who's denied witness protection poses a challenge for Dannyand Baez (Donnie Wahlberg, Marisa Ramirez). When a friend's daughter claims she wasassaulted at college, Erin (Bridget Moynahan) investigates. 0 Zep2it
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedp Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777
jbbend.com ~
541-38 2 -6223
JoHNsoN B RoTHERs A P P L I A N C E 9
TOUCHMARK SINCE 1980
• JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 12:45, 1, 3:30, 3:45, 6:15, 6:30, 9: I5, 9:30 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13l 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • SPY (R) 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * You will be happy to finally compiete your to-do list. Your head might be in the clouds, and you could be thinking of doing more interesting things. Try to ground yourself. You could be accident-prone or speak too quickly. Tonight: Know when to call it a night.
GAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * Tap into your creativity to get your desk cleared. Don't be too proud to ask for help if you need it. If you are single, you could meet someone from out of the blue who will mean a lot to you. If you are attached, stoke the fires of romance. Tonight: Get into the moment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * Anchor in at home. Work if you must,butbesuretospend some downtime just for you. You could have an unexpected visit or a party at your home very soon. Go along with the spontaneity. Tonight: Hang out at a favorite haunt close to home.
PISCES (Feb.19-March 20)
** * * Return calls. You have a lot to do, ** * * Defer to a partner, as this person andyou'l lneed some feedback.A boss needs experience with seeing that his or or older friend could be very demanding. her way is not the only way. You could feel Be diplomatic. What do you have to lose? Listen to your inner voice with someone pushed to the max if you are not careful. Learn the word "no," and use it. Take the who tends to be over the top. Tonight: lead with a project if you must. Tonight: TGIF! Join friends. Confusion reigns. © King Features Syndicate
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22)
10 p.m. on 6, "Blue Bloods" — The controversy over police officers wearing body cameras
r
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onwhat theybring. — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
vivor and single mom; Sarah, a community advocate who feels uncomfortable in her own skin; Tracy, a nurse who still bears the emotional scars of childhood bullying; and Ebonie, aformer tomboy turned stylist.
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • ALOHA (PG-13) 5:15 • FAR FROM THE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)5 • JURASSICWORLD (PG-13)4:45,7:30,7:45 • MAD MAX: URY F ROAD (Rl7:30 • SPY (R) 4:45, 7:15 Madras Cinema5,1101 SWU.S. Highway97, Madras, 541 -475-3505 • ENTOURAGE (Rl 12:10, 2:35, 5, 7:25, 9:50 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) I:05, 3: I5, 5:25, 7:35, 9:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 1:20, 7 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) 4:10, 9:50 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13l noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20, 9:55 • SPY(R) I:45, 4:25, 7:10, 9:45 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:30 • PITCH PERFECT2 (Lipstairs — PG-13l 1:10, 4:10, 7:15, 9:45 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GD! Magazine
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ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809
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247
260
267
Pets & Supplies
Pets 8 Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Furniture 8 Appliances
Exercise Equipment
Sporting Goods - Misc.
Misc. Items
Fuel & Wood
0
Adopt a great cat or Mini Aussie, F , T r i , Yellow Lab, AKC RegM ust sell: s old R V . two! Altered, vacci- beautiful, active, istered, 3M.; $700/ea, R eese 5t h w h e el WHEN BUYING nated, ID chip, tested, smart! AKC reg., al- 4F; $750/ea, all yelKAYAKS (2) hitch, 20k p o unds, FIREWOOD... more! CRAFT, 65480 most 2 yrs. old. $300 low. Parent g r eat Necky Manitou-14, used once, $800 obo. To avoid fraud, 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 541-325-1268 hunters. Avail. to go $600. P e r ception Slide out jack, SOLD. The Bulletin 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 July 4th. 541-934-2423 Prodigy II 14.5 tan15' 50 amp electric recommends paystretch dem, $700. Werner www.craftcats.org Flexisteel slumber Pre-Cor c ord, SOLD. T i r e ment for Firewood POODLE or POMAPOO trainer. Improve your 202 Cypress pa d d le shocks, SOLD. Towsofa, queen. exc. Deposit c a n s/bottles puppies, toy. Stud also Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, upon delivery cond., $350. Other felxibility targeting key $225. 54'I-382-6664 i ng m i rrors, u s e d only 541-475-3889 Want to Buy or Rent 1F, adorable, UDT needed for local all and inspection. muscle groups. Exonce, SOLD. King-pin large furniture avail. shots, health guar., pics volunteer, non-profit • A cord is 128 cu. ft. con d ition. including Large desks, cellent s tabilizer, SOL D . 4' x 4' x 8' Wanted: $Cash paid for 248 cat rescue. Donate at Queensland Heelers $500/up. 541-777-7743 541-548-7154 patio swing set, etc. $400. 541-593-2053 vintage costume jewelry. Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 Standard 8 Mini, $150 • Receipts should Health & Queen bed S e a ly Top dollar paid for E, Bend; Petco in & up. 541-280-1537 243 include name, 210 Reduce Your Past Tax Beauty Items Posture-Pedic ExcepGold/Silver.I buy by the Redmond; S m ithwww.rightwayranch.wor Furniture & Appliances phone, price and Ski Equipment Bill by as much as 75 tional Plush with bed Estate, Honest Artist Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, dpress.com kind of wood Got Knee Pain? Back Percent. Stop Levies, Elizabeth,541-633-7006 frame, SOLD, ex c . Bend; CRAFT in Tupurchased. Snowboard/Ski Factory. Pain? Shoulder Pain? Liens and Wage Gar5000 series Maytag cond., cas h o n l y. malo. Can pick up Ig. nishments. Call The • Firewood ads 205 This equipment prodryer, like new, 4000 Get a pain-relieving Buyers will need to amounts. 389-8420. MUST include pro d uction brace -little or NO cost Tax DR Now to see if series Maytag dryer, move items. Morn- duces Items for Free www.craftcats.org species 8 cost per Qualify will hold 2 queen size ings only ( T erreb- quality snowboards. to you. Medicare Pa- you cord to better serve f Everything you need tients Call Health Hot- 1-800-791-2099. quilts. $850. Brand onne) 541-504-0056. Free loveseat, blue flo- For Sale: Weimaraner our customers. to get started minus line new, still under warNow! 1- (PNDC) ral fabric exc. cond. puppies, parents on site, exc. disposition, ranty, Whirlpool conG ENERATE SOM E grinder. $20,000. Call 800-285-4609 541-318-8503 Sell y ou r s t ructured The Bulletin h unting l ines a n d Standard Poodles, 5 burner glass EXCITEMENT in your 720-260-8254 (PNDC) Serrrng Central Oregon sincefgtg black grand vection settlement or annuity 208 great family d ogs, Beautiful top stove with warmneighborhood! Plan a 245 payments for CASH 253 rand raised & estab- champion bred pups. ing station. Has Aquo- garage sale and don't Pets & Supplies NOW. You don't have All Year Dependable 13 weeks, fabulous list technology. $700. forget to advertise in Golf Equipment l ished breeder. 4 coats, TV, Stereo & Video heathy a nd to wait for your future Firewood: dry males O $ 350 ea. classified! 1 909 $ 2 .5 0 go l d payments any longer! Lodgepole, split, del, 541-562-5970. Please happy. Will bring great piece, $400. 2 viles of 541-385-5809. 3 gas golf carts: 2006 DIRECTV Starting at The Bulletin recomCall 1-800-914-0942 joy to y our home. gold nuggets, a little 1 /$195; 2/$3 6 5 . leave message. Y amaha, $20 0 0 . $19.99/mo. FREE Inmends extra caution $2000. 541-601-3049 Multi-cord discounts! Hy un d a i, s tallation. FREE 3 (PNDC) when purc h asover a gram ea. $45. Modern platform queen O lder German Shepherds cash, check, Visa, MC bed w/attached night$1000. 1996 months o f HBO ing products or ser- www.sherman-ranch.us ea. Sterling silver, 24 541-420-3484, Bend Have an item to vices from out of the diamond earrings, still stands and mattress, Easy-Go, $2000. S HOWTIME CIN Quality. 541-281-6829 area. Sending cash, in box, $200. 2 (set) l ike n e w . $60 0 Good carts - can de- EMAX, STARZ. FREE C.O. mixed wood, sell quick? liver within reason. HD/DVR U p grade! checks, or credit incubic zirconia sterling 541-619-7100 semi-dry, split, delivIf it's under 541-576-2477 2015 NFL S u nday f ormation may be silver e n g agement ered in Bend. 2 for I TO CANCEL subjected to fraud. rings, sizes 7 and 8, NEED Ticket Included (Se- g500 you can place it in $270. Cash, check, YOUR AD? FIND IT! rc lect Packages) New For more informa$50 e a . Mic h ael Visa/MC accepted. The Bulletin Wheaten Terrier Pup- 541-589-3092 The Bulletin BUY IT! tion about an adverC ustomers Onl y . 541-312-8746 Classifieds has an pies AKC Soft-Coated SELL IT! CALL 1-800-410-2572 tiser, you may call Irish Wolfhound Pups! $1200. Classifieds for: "After Hours"Line H y p o-allerPonderosa pine firethe O regon State The Bulletin Classifieds (PNDC) 60" corner oak entment. Very rare, regal, anCall 541-383-2371 wood, split, $160 genic, shedless. LovAttorney General's ' 1 0 3 lines, 7 days c enter w/ 2 7 " T V . 24 hrs. to cancel breed. 2 stun- i ng f a mily pe t s . cord. 541-419-1871 ALL CLUBS R IGHT D ish Network - G e t Office C o n sumer cient 541-719-1292. $175. 541-325-7104 ning AKC females, your ad! LE S S ! '16 - 3 lines, 14 days H AND F R FL E X , M ORE f o r Protection hotline at 269 gwks, ready to go. ExG RAPHITE. 201 5 Starting $19.99/month (Private Party ads only) 1-877-877-9392. Oak dresser, lowboy, 5' cellent lineage, tem- W olf-Husky pups $500, Contemporary (for 12 months.) PLUS Gardening Supplies tea k m int T / M spe e d 9 drawer, $95. blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., Bundle & SAVE (Fast peraments, sweet and 3 8 yrs exp. Wolfsong d e s k se t . $17 5 . wide, & Equipment The Bulletin 541-388-1737 S E C URITY Serving Centrel rrregon sincetgtg loving. $1500. Call or Kennels 541-977-7019 5 4 1-619-7100 $440. Call a way Internet f o r $15 SOCIAL ISABILITY BEN text 541-337-4328. Driver, x2hot, 12-15, more/month.) CALL D FITS. U nable t o BarkTurfSoil.com Find It in a djustable-h.c p l u s Now 1-800-308-1563 E work? Denied ben(PNDC) tool, $140. Callaway The Bulletln Classifleds! efits? We Can Help! Titanium five wood, 541-385-5809 255 WIN or Pay Nothing! PROMPT DELIVERY $100. Mizuno J PX 541-389-9663 Contact Bill Gordon 8 Computers wedges 54-60, $80 Associates at ea. All c lubs obo. 1-800-879-3312 to T HE B ULLETIN r e 951-454-256'I For newspaper quires computer ad- start your application delivery call the today! (PNDC) CHECK YOUR AD vertisers with multiple Circulation Dept. at 280 282 286 290 ad schedules or those 541-385-5800 Estate Sales Sales Northwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Redmond Area selling multiple sysFind exactly what To place an ad, call tems/ software, to dis- you are looking for in the PATIO TABLE 541-385-5809 Fri.-Sat., 9-3. house- MOVING SALE June Estate Sale - Fri., 9-4, 54" Tropitone table close the name of the or email NW P rairie hold, garden, patio CLASSIFIEDS 12th-14th, 9-4. 3408 Sat., 10-4. G arage 3219 business or the term claeeified@bendbulletin.com 4 chairs, tilt (Awbrey opens at 8:30am Fri. Place furniture, c a mping, SW Xero Ct. Tools, "dealer" in their ads. awning, $350. on the first day it runs 97 7 0 1, fishing, parlor stove antiques, collectibles, The Bulletin Offers The Bulletin 20995 Country View Village) 541-382-6664 to make sure it is cor- Private party advertis- Free Serrrng Central Oregon sincefgtg Jun e Lane, Bend. Butler S aturday, (cast iron) Antiques & furniture, Pfaff sewing Private PartyAds rect. nSpellcheckn and ers are defined as Mkt to Purcell, north 13th, 7 a m-Noon, collectibles, wardrobe machine, clo t hes, • 3 lines 3 days human errors do oc- those who sell one • Private Party Only to Old Deschutes Rd., 480-220-1599, chest, cedar chest, loads of crafts 8 supcur. If this happens to computer. rayramos2@cox.net The Bulletin then 1 mile north to safe, tools, cement plies, • Total of items adverk n i ckknacks, your ad, please con260 Country View Lane. Sale items: home m ixer, e lect. j a c k electronics, C h rist- recommends extra tised must equal $200 tact us ASAP so that + Peat Mixes deco, ch r istmas I ceuso ne pu Collectables, furniture, hammer, compressor, mas, and much more. or Less Misc. Items corrections and any + Juniper Ties deco, framed picchasing products or • including dining room generator, laser level, FOR DETAILS or to adjustments can be + Paver Discounts set with six c hairs, tures, 2- M a rriott l adders an d m o r e Multi-family Sale F r i. services from out of I PLACE AN AD, 100% Alpaca poncho made to your ad. + Sand + Gravel Sat. Sun., 9-4. misc. the area. Sending I8 corner cabinet, sofa Hotel queen bed 62749 Eagle Road. purple wit h s c a rf, Call 541-385-5809 541-385-5809 + Bark (like household„ furniture, cash, checks, or • and loveseat, bdrm comforters Fax 541-385-5802 $200. 541-419-1822 Garage Sale Fri., 12th The Bulletin Classified Ingtantlendscaping com I Jack 3944 SW Timber Ave. i credit i n f ormation set, lamps, g l ass, new), Sat., 13th. 2021 NE may be subjected to 4-drawer office filing PowerWantedpaying cash jewelry, holiday decor. LaLanne's 246 Bluebird Ct, off Shep292 Por t able i FRAUD. For more cabinet, beige $40 for Hi-fi audio & stuGarage includes fish- Juicer, ard Rd. Follow Signs. Sales Other Areas Guns, Hunting obo. 541-388-0865 player, porinformation about an 8 270 dio equip Mclntosh ing, table saw, work- DVD 8-4. Dryer some Furtable printer with advertiser, you may I & Fishing JBL, Marantz, D y buddy, drill p r ess, Lost & Found Buying Diamonds niture, retro console 16405 Heath Dr., La I c all t h e Oregoni naco, Heathkit, Sangrinder, belt sander, leather case, slide iGold for Cash stereo, Vinyl Records, projector in T u mi State Attor ney ' Pine, Sat. & Sun. 8 7.65 Sportorized Arsui, Carver, NAD, etc. generator, tools gaFOUND: set of keys on Saxon's Fine Jewelers Call 541-261-1 808 Collectibles, Kids a.m. Furniture, bike, i General's O f f i ce lore. Great yard art case, electric car entine Germ a n McGrath rd. 6/8. Call 541-389-6655 Clothing and m uch meat slicer, sausage Consumer Protec- • g Mauser, model 1891, and misc. 1995 Ford buffer, books, large to ID. 541-388-4687 more. Come Check it maker, golf c l ubs, tion h o t line at I rifle made in Berlin. 261 BUYING 450 pickup, low mile- cooler, kids Styker out! Lionel/American Flyer multiple air tools, new i 1-877-877-9392. $400. 503-936-1778 age. C ash o nl y ! Balance bike, elecMedical Equipment tronic picture frame, Garage Sale, Sat. only ATV trailer 9yg'x6' trains, accessories. No early sales. Bend local dealer pays home cooling fans > TheBulletin 8 541-408-2191. 9-2, 20840 Cassin Dr. HOSPITAL BED w ith REMEMBER: If you Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 CASH!!for firearms & Estate Sale, Fri. 8 Sat., in box. All items like Something for every- Estate Sale. Fri/Sat, have lost an animal, BUYING 8c SE LLING hand-held electronic ammo. 541-526-0617 new. one, set of Jeep Windon't forget to check 8-4, 3668 SW 3 0 th June 12th & 13th, All gold jewelry, silver control, overhead tra212 ter tires 235/70R16. The Humane Society St., Redmond. Cash CASH!! BAM. 17234 Kent and gold coins, bars, peze, works well! only! Don't miss! Antiques & For Guns, Ammo & $400 cash only Bend rounds, wedding sets, ESTATE SALE - 60+ Tools, clothes, anRd, Sisters (off CloReloading Supplies. 541-815-4219 541-382-3537 class rings, sterling silverdale). Vintage yrs. a c c umulation. tiques and furniture. Collectibles 541-408-6900. Redmond ver, coin collect, vinESTATE SALE Everything from vin- HUGE MULTI-FAMILY glassware 8 collect263 541-923-0882 tage watches, dental Home full o f q u ality tage bikes & skis to Garage Sale - 62910 ables, old books, The Bulletin reserves gold. Bill Fl e ming, Madras items 2 queen beds 4 old tools & yard art. Eagle Rd. Fri.-Sat., household goods Tools the right to publish all 541-382-9419. 541-475-6889 furniture, quality plus dressers, newer sofa, Dressers, furniture 8 9-5 & Sun., 9-2. ads from The Bulletin Prineville sz wm's clothing & loveseat, 2 sw i v el so much more. Lots to newspaper onto The DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 5250 WattGenerac gas 541-447-7178 DO YOU HAVE chairs, lift r e cliner, dig through. 20033 Multi-Famil Sale: more (541)548-7680 Bulletin Internet web10 Americans or 158 powered electric genor Craft Cats Teak china cabinet, Glen Vista, off O.B. Sat. 6/13, 8 a.m.- 3 SOMETHING TO site. million U.S. A d ults erator, Honda motor, 541-389-8420. SELL Teak Mid - Century Riley. Fri.-Sat., 8-4. p.m. on Canal View r ead content f r om fix even with top of Modern dining set, Find exactly what The Bulletin FOR $500 OR off NE 18th; n ewspaper m e d i a pickup bed, $ 3 50. Serring Central Oregon sincetgtg a Tin y Drive LESS? wooden kitchen di- Moving t o Furniture, Home De- you are looking for in the each week? Discover 541-419-2971 nette, corner cabinet, House... 22 years of cor, 30 cu. ft. frig, Non-commercial the Power of the PaCLASSIFIEDS 240 265 advertisers may office items, F ran- life must go! No rea- Books, Board cific Northwest NewsCrafts & Hobbies ciscan Desert Rose, sonable offered re- Games, Puzzles, place an ad Building Materials paper Advertising. For fused. 63314 Lavawith our Russell Wright dish Dishes & many more GARAGE SALE F ri.a free brochure call Fr i -Sun, 541-633-7723 Sat. 9-3. 52464 River COMPLETE POT"QUICK CASH set, other Mid-Cen- crest St . La Pine Habitat 916-288-6011 or 9am-2pm Pine Road, La Pine TERY SET UP InSPECIAL" tury items, KitchenAid, email RESTORE (off Burgess) cludes Skutt kiln, two Kuerig, Noritake & 1 week3lines 12 Building Supply Resale ceceliaocnpa.com Multi-homes Fri., June 284 wheels, clays, glazes, or Homer Laughlin dish Quality at 12, 9-4. Cascade Vil(PNDC) small library shelves, sets, lots of kitchen- Sales Southwest Bend lage Home Park,off HUGE ~sweeke 2N LOW PRICES MULT I 308 scales, heat e rs, Homedics Shiatsu back Ad must ware, glassware 8 52684 Hwy 97 Cooley, take Ranch FAMILY YAR D tables, booth and too & shoulder massage dishes, ladies cloth- 7th Annual Pinebrook Village Dr., to Liven- SALE include price of Farm Equipment 541-536-3234 Sat u rday to list. $2,500 or ~ cushion w/heat & reen ls tem oi geon ing, books, artwork, Neighborhood Sale, good Way. Open to the public . 6/13 8:0 0 -4:00, much & Machinery best offer. Contact mote control, like new. lots of decor, garden SW Bend near New or less, or multiple Sunday 6/14 Hope Church, SaturSat. Only 9-3, 9020 S. Rodney at items whose total $85. 541-389-0919 Prineville Habitat tools, 4 patio sets, lots 8:00-12:00 1 7 153 541-728-0604 Hwy 97, Redmond. Milky Way Bend of misc! FRI. & SAT. day 8am-4pm. does not exceed How to avoid scam BuildingReStore Ranch/Multi F a mily 97707 Supply Resale 9-4 Numbers Fri. 8 Huge supreme s ale, $500. (Sunriver Two Viking s e wing and fraud attempts 1427 NW Murphy Ct. Sale. Furn i ture, a.m. O.B. Riley to area) 2 P o ntoon many new items. 8-3 /quilting m a c hines Call Classifieds at mor e . v'Beaware of interna541-447-6934 Archie B r iggs to Sat. & S un. 6 0140 s addles 8 E l e ctric with extras. Very good Farm/shop e q u ip- Boats, 2 mo 541-385-5809 tional fraud. Deal loOpen to the public. 20215 Star Ridge Ct. t o rs, condition. $700 each www.bendbulletin.com C inder B utte R d . ment, tools, tires, to Trolling cally whenever posFuton, Bow Flex, 1953 Ford Golden Juwww.atticestatesanDRW. Call 54 1 - 706-0448 much too list. sible. 266 double solid maple dappraisals.com bilee, one yard bucket, eves or weekends. H Watch for buyers Heating & Stoves 72" box drag, $4600 541-350-6822 STONEBROOK bed frame, 5 sets of 286 Glock 19 9mm, Ruger COMMUNITY golf clubs, washer P 95 9 mm , L C 9 S who offer more than obo. 541-914-1951 241 Sales Northeast Bend asking price and NOTICE TO GARAGE SALE! and dryer, skis and 9 mm, R E M 19 1 1 your Bicycles & who ask to have CASE 530 diesel tracFind It in ADVERTISER Off Butler Market Rd., snowboards, f ish45ACP, Bond Arms money wired or tor with backhoe atAccessories Since September 29, Sat., June13, 8 to 4 ing gear, tons of Derringer 45/ 4 10, The Bulletin Classifieds! Community Garage handed back to them. 1991, advertising for tachment, $4500. clothes and shoes, S ale I 11 8 8 N E Colt SP1 223, Ruger 541-385-5809 288 Fake cashier checks 541-389-7669. used woodstoves has 27th. Sn o w berry 10 pairs brand new mini 14223, REM 721 and money orders been limited to modshoes, Village 55 plus se- Sales Southeast Bend athletic 300 H 8 H, National 325 are common. Griffin Farm els which have been nior park. This is a TONS OF NFL AND Ord 30 cal carbine, v'Never give out perHay, Grain & Feed certified by the OrCOLLEGE LOGO Estate Sale one day sale only S at. 9-3, 20396 R a e Charles Daly OU 12 sonal financial inforRd. Clothing, fishing CLOTHING: Seaegon Department of given by Farmhouse Saturday June 13th ga., Taurus 357 2". mation. Environmental Qual- Wheat Straw for Sale. Estate Sa/es gear, bike, golf clubs, hawks, 49ers, ASU, 9am to4pm. Please H & H Firearms & Tack RANS Wave recumAlso, weaner pigs. grTrust your instincts ity (DEQ) and the fedFriday - Saturday, 9-4, obey our 1 5MPH etc. Don't Miss! baby items, lots of 541-382-9352 bent. 60" WB, older and be wary of eral E n v ironmental 541-546-6171 books, board 4660 SW Jericho Ln, s peed l imit a n d 290 model some wear on Ruger Single 6 .22 re- someone using an Protection A g e ncy Culver. Off 97, take games, l uggage, please no parking on frame. W e l l m ain- volver w/ mag cylinSales Redmond Area escrow service or and much m u ch (EPA) as having met Looking for your Jericho Ln. the grass. tained. New: chain der. 1 9 6 9 mo d e l, agent to pick up your smoke emission stanmore! next employee? E ntire contents o f r ings, t i res, s e a t pre-hammer m o d., Big Garage Sale, Fri. & 541-771-7757 merchandise. dards. A cer t ified Place a Bulletin home and 2 shops, cushion. Cateye Velo with George Sat., 9-5. 4820 NE 5th oodstove may b e help wanted ad ** FREE ** Bulletin widentified this sale consists of 7 computer/odometer. Lawrence c u s tom The St. Furniture, houseby its certifiSerrng Central Oretnn sinceteet today and Pickers & Hoarders sale! $350 541-504-5224 60+ years of accu- Garage Sale Kit western style holster. hold, and more. cation label, which is reach over New condition. $725 Infrared Sauna, 220-V permanently attached mulation, farm Place an ad in The GREAT SALE: House- Antiques, tools, weed 60,000 readers hook-up, no building, to the stove. The Buleaters, c h a insaws, 503-936-1778 implements, 500 gal. Bulletin for your gahold, lots of m isc., bench vises, anvil, each week. $3000 value, asking letin will not knowfuel tank and stand, rage sale and reWANTED: Collector collectibles, c l e an, loggers' Your classified ad cli m bing $1000. 541-536-7790 ingly accept advertismetal lathe, air com- ceive aGarage Sale reasonable. Rain (in- spurs, axes, 2-man seeks high quality fishwill also for the sale of pressor, wel d er, Kit FREE! ing items & upscale fly Men's navy dress/ca- ing side) or shine. 2186 saws, d r a g saw appear on uncertified tractor parts & tools, sual jacket, s z.44, N W Jackpine C t ., rods. 541-678-5753, or KIT INCLUDES: blades, b l a cksmith bendbulletin.com woodstoves. Prowler camp trailer, • 4 Garage $30. 541-389-1821 503-351-2746 Sale Signs Redmond. Turn west forge hearth, buggy ROCKY M O U NTS which currently antiques an d s o • $2.00 Off Coupon To telescoping R4 bike @ 19th and Ivy in seat, 1yg hp, Interna- rack. Carries single, Winchester M70 Alasreceives over much more. See pix Use Toward Your Redhawk. Fri. 8 - 3, tional Harvester hit & 1.5 million page kan 375 H8 H Mag. w/ tandem or recumbent and descriptions at Next Ad Sat. 9-1. miss motor w / belt bikes up to 78" WB. 2.5-8 Leupold scope, views every • 10 Tips For "Garage www.farmhouseesHuge Sale! Desert Ter- pulley; Much more. Pivoting, push-button new in box. $3,100. month at no Sale Success!" tatesales.com race Mobile Estates. See craigslist for pics. axle; easy load/un- 541-416-9686 extra cost. 30+ families. Appli- Fri. 8 Sat., 6/12-13, load. Fits Thule and Bulletin Sat & Sun, 13th & 14th, 8-4. 55782 Swan Rd 247 ances, tools, generaPICK UP YOUR Yakima crossbars. Ciassifieds 9-4, B lack F o rest GARAGE BowTech, Elite, Hoj/t, Matthews, PSE (off S. Century Dr. in SALE KIT at tor, yard equipment, Sporting Goods Used twice. $250. Get Results! cuckoo clocks, com1777 SW Chandler antiques, household, OWW2) 541-504-5224. - Misc. Call 541-385-5809 plete bedroom suite, Ave., 541-593-7188 • High Quality Bows 8 Accessories Bend, OR 97702 kitchen, clothes. lamps, 2 piece oak or place your ad • Bow Tuning and Service Fri.-Sun. 6 / 1 2-6/14Two houses down to 242 bookcase, M. Jacobs The Bulletin Diving equip., 2 large on-line at 9-3. 5063 S Hwy. 97 • 30 Yard Indoor Range furniture, oak dining Serving Central Oregon since 1903 one! Furniture, Exercise Equipment tanks, 1 small tank, 1 bendbulletin.com • Lessons for Beginners and Adults table w/ 6 ch a irs, Huge Sale - Fri., Sat. & h ousehold ite m s , Viking dry suit - large, • Archery Leagues crystal, w h i msical,FIND IT! Sun. 8-3. 1424 tools, generator, etc. Pre-core EFX 5.17 el1 regulator, 1 B C , Need help fixing stuff? and high end decoraTeakwood Ct., RedSat June 13th only, liptical fitness cross gloves, 2 knives, 2 SUY IT! Call A Service Professional tor items, other misc. mond. Every- Bam-5pm. No early trainer. Excellent con- snorkels w/ masks, all 1611 South 1st Street, Redmond SELL IT! find the help you need. 2 560 S W Yar r o thing must go! Priced sales! 5 0 83 1 Doe d ition. $ 59 9 ob o . for $250. 541-316-1784 www.bendbulletin.com Creek Dr., Redmond. The Bulletin Classifieds to sell! 360-921-4408 541-416-9686 Loop, La Pine.
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUN 12, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD l lfjll $hprtz
DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Friday, June 12,2015
Second mile
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
Another sign standing sentinel beside a church in my town: "There are notraffic jams for those who are willing to go the second mile." Today's declarer went the f irst mile. At 3NT, he won the first spade with the king, cashed the ace of diamonds and led the queen. He intended to overtake with dummy's king and run the diamonds with a normal 3-2 break. But when West discarded a heart on th e second d iamond, South w a s s u nk . H e overtook and cashed the jack of diamonds but won only eight tricks in all. "We s hould have been at s i x diamonds," South shrugged, "and five diamonds would have been safer than 3NT."
The next player passes. What do you say? ANSWER: You would like to bid two diamonds to sign off at a safe spot, and maybe your bidding style would let you do so. But most pairs would treat a two-diamond response a s conventional — pe r h aps a "transfer." To show a weak hand with long diamonds, they might j ump directly to three diamonds or use some other sequence to sign off. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4j85
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DIAMOND ENTRY
WEST
EAST 4373
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Good declarers go the second mile: They lookfor second chances.After South wins the first spade, he should lead the A-K and a third club. When the suit breaks 3-3 (of if East had, say, J-9), South sets up the ten as a winner while dummy still ha s a diamond entry. If the clubs didn't produce an extra trick, South could hope for a friendly diamond position.
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DAILY QUESTION
East Pass
Opening lead — 4o Q
Youhold: 4385 9 6 0 K J 9 8 7 4 4 10 6 5 3. Your partner opens 1NT.
(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis OIOG MIO.
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By Don Gagliardo anII C.C. Burnikel O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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06/12/15
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
881
908
932
935
975
975
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Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Sport Utility Vehicles
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Mercedes Benz E Subaru Legacy Ford Escape2014, Chevy Malibu 2012, 2.0L 1-4 cyl (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Class 2005, LL Bean 2006, 1000 (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Vin ¹299392 (exp. 6/17/15) is in exc. cond., w/ exc. cond. Total inte- VIN ¹A46674. $24,888. Legal Notices Vin ¹688743 Stock ¹44256A Vin ¹203053 good paint & newer rior refurbish, engine (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 Stock ¹82316 Stock ¹82770 $15,979 or $189/mo., interior. Full IFR. Auto OH, new floor pan, LEGAL NOTICE $2500 down, 84 mo., $11,979 or $155/mo., $16,977 or $199/mo., pilot, yaw d amper, plus lots more! SunBEND URBAN 4 .49% APR o n a p - $ 2500 down 7 2 m o $2600 down 64 mo at RENEWAL AGENCY engine monitor. r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n ap 4 .49% APR o n a p 6485TT, 1815SMOH, $9500. 541-504-5224 and title i ncluded in proved credit. License proved credit. License NOTICE OF PUBLIC 692STOH. Hangered HEARING ON payment, plus dealer in- and title i ncluded in and title i ncluded in 933 in Bend. $32,000 or 541-548-1448 CAPITAL stalled options. payment, plus dealer in- payment, plus dealer i/~ share. $16,000 for Pickups smolichmotors.com stalled options. IMPROVEMENT Looking for your installed options. SUBAR Ll Call Bob Carroll PROGRAIIII 541-815-6319 next employee? uuuuuuouuuuu.oou GMC Yukon SLT2007 541-550-7382 SUBA R IJ. S UBA Rll Place a Bulletin help uuuuuuouuuu uou 4x4 leather, loaded. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. arcarroll9©gmail.com A public meeting of wanted ad today and 877-266-3821 ¹ 325813 $24,995 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. t he Board of t h e reach over 60,000 HANGAR FOR SALE. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 AAA Ore. Auto Source 877-266-3821 Bend Urban R eSafari 1998 motorreaders each week. 30x40 end unit T Dlr ¹0354 corner of West Empire DID YOU KNOW 144 Dlr¹0354 newal Agency, City home 30', low mileYour classified ad hanger in Prineville. & Hwy 97, Bend. Dlr million U.S. A d ults of Bend, Deschutes age, 300 HP Magwill also appear on Dry walled, insulated, 0225 541-598-3750 Chevy 1992 F4 ton read a N e wspaper County, State of Ornum Cat motor with bendbulletin.com and painted. $23,500. 350 V8, auto., 2WD. www.aaaoregonautoprint copy each week? egon will be held on turbo, always inside, which currently reTom, 541.788.5546 source.com. clean inside. Good Discover the Power of June 17, 2015 at white leather inteceives over 1.5 miltires, radio and GPS. PRINT N e wspaper 7 00 pm a t C i t y rior, like new, has lion page views ev$2899/OBO Advertising in Alaska, Council Chambers, m any extr a s . ery month at no 541-419-5060 Idaho, Montana, Or- Mustang Conv. 2011, Subaru Outback XT City Hall, 710 NW $50,000. S e r ious extra cost. Bulletin egon and Washing- 6 speed auto, pony Wall Street, Bend. callers only. Classifieds Get Re2006, t on with j us t o n e pkg 15 0 0 0 mi The purpose of this CAL LW 541-548-8415 sults! Call 385-5809 (exp. 6/17/15) p hone call. Fo r a $20,000. meeting will be to or place your ad TODAYW VIN ¹313068 Save money. Learn Hyundai Veracruz FREE adv e rtising 541-330-2342 hold a public hearon-line at Chevy Pickup 1978, Stock ¹44631A to fly or build hours 2008, 63.8L V-6 cyl network brochure call ing to hear and rebendbulletin.com long bed, 4x4, frame $11,999 or $149/rn., Winnebago with your own airVIN ¹061266 $16,997. 916-288-6011 or ceivecomments on Have an item to restoration. 500 $2600 down, 72 mo., c raft. 1968 A e r o up Journey (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 email the Urban Renewal Cadillac eng i ne, 4 .49% APR o n a p sell quick? 882 2001 36' 2nd owner, Commander, 4 seat, ceceliaocnpa.com proved credit. License A gency's 5 Y e a r fresh R4 transmisS M O L I C H 150 HP, low time, 300 Cummins Turbo If it's under Fifth Wheels (PNDC) Capital I m p roveand title included in sion w/overdrive, low diesel, Allison 5 spd, full panel. $21,000 V Q LV Q Pro g r am payment, plus dealer ment mi., no rust, custom '500 you can place it in Ford Fusion SE 2012, obo. Contact Paul at 80k miles. D r iver 541-749-2156 CHECK YOUR AD (CIP). Copies of the installed options. interior and carpet, 12,500+ miles, like s ide s l ide, g a s 541-447-5184. smolichvolvo.com The Bulletin CIP are available for n ew wheels a n d new, $14,500 obo. SIJBARIJ. stove, oven, 2 flat review at City Hall, tires, You must see Classifieds for: 541-598-7718 or screen TVs, refer, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 710 NW Wall Street, it! $25,000 invested. 541-261-1445 generator, inverter, during normal busi877-266-3821 $12,000 OBO. '10 - 3 lines, 7 days King Dome, tow bar. ness hours. Dlr ¹0354 541-536-3889 or Non-smoker, no '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 541-420-6215. on the first day it runs LEGAL NOTICE pets, no c hildren. to make sure it is cor(Private Party ads only) CIRCUIT COURT OF C lean, an d w e l l uSpellcheck u and rect. Jeep Grand CheroSuperhawk N7745G OREGON FOR DESmaintained, $47,500 human errors do ockee Overland 2012, CHUTES COUNTY. Owners' Group LLC 541-390-1472. 4x4 V-6, all options, cur. If this happens to Cessna 172/1 80 hp, CHRISTIANA TRUST, Ford Fusion SEL2012, Vehicle? Dodge Ram 1500 running boards, front your ad, please confull IFR, new avionics, A D I V ISION O F (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Call The Bulletin 2 004, quad c a b , guard, nav., air and tact us ASAP so that u GTN 750, touchWILMINGTON SAVVin ¹117015 Toyota Corolla2013, Say ugoodbuy and place an ad corrections and any 4x4, black, 1 owner, heated leather, cusscreen center stack, INGS FUND SOCIStock ¹44382A today! (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) 90K m i . , $ 9 7 00. tom wheels and new adjustments can be exceptionally clean. to that unused ETY, FSB, NOT IN Vin ¹053527 $15,979 or $199/mo., Ask about our 541-350-8678 made to your ad. tires, only 41K miles, Healthy engine ITS INDIVIDUAL CAitem by placing it in $ 2400 down 8 4 m o . 'Whee/ Deal"! Stock ¹83072 541-385-5809 reserve fund. $31,995 PACITY B U T AS 4 49'/ A P R o n a p for private party $15,979 or $199 rn., Hangared at KBDN. 541-408-7908 The Bulletin Classifieds The Bulletin Classified TRUSTEE OF ARLP proved credit. License advertisers $2000 down, 84 mo., One share and title i ncluded in 4 .49% APR o n a p - TRUST 3, Plaintiff, v. FOUR WINDS 2003 5th available,$13,000. payment, plus dealer inproved credit. License ROBERT E. PRICE; 5 41-385-580 9 wheel 26L, A/C, CD, Call 541-815-2144 stalled options. and title included in BANK OF WHITMAN; micro, awning slide payment plus dealer in HANIA PRICE; WILSUBAR Ll o ut, m u c h mo r e stalled options. 925 uuuuuuouuuuu.oou LIAM PRICE; $9000. 541-876-5073. Dodge Ram 1500 2009 AMERICAN EX2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Call The Bulletin At Utility Trailers SUBAR Ll 4 dr., crew cab Jeep Willys, metal 877-266-3821 PRESS CENTURION 541 -385-5809 top, big tires, ps, new Dlr ¹0354 SMART PARK Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 VIN ¹711891. $28,998. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. BANK; PROPERTIES, L LC sets of straps, exc. (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 paint, tow bar, new 877-266-3821 At: www.bendbulletin.com AND SMART PARK gauges, etcH. $5500. c ond., capable o f Dlr ¹0354 Winnebago Outlook 541-233-7272 PROPERTIES 11, LLC; p ulling a f u l l s i ze 2007 Class "Cu31', P orsche Cayman S STAHANCYK, KENT, pickup truck. If inter2 008, L i k e new , clean, non- smoking Keystone Everest 5th JOHNSON & HOOK; ested we will send exc. cond. Must See! 14,500 miles, Wheel, 2004 STEELE A S S OCIpictures. $1000 obo. Lots of extra's, a very Model 323P - 3 slides, $35,000. ATES ARCHITECTS; 951-961-4590 360-510-3153 (Bend) good buy.$47,900 541-548-1448 GEO Metro 1991 rear island-kitchen, THE RE S I DENCE For more info call smolichmotors.com 5 spd manual trans., 3 fireplace, 2 TV's, 929 CLUB O PR O NG541-447-9268 cyl., 40+ mpg, 151k CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner Automotive Wanted Toyota MR2 Spyder HORN COA; ARROLexus RX 3500 2012, miles. Runs good,. w/surround sound, A/C, Winnebago Superchief 2 001 5 spd , ex c . W OOD SUMM I T 3.5L V-6 cyl $1500 or best offer custom bed, ceiling fan, DONATE YOUR CAR, H OME OWN E RS 1990 27' clean, 454 W/D cond., pre-sale inVIN ¹126992.$29,997. 541-419-5060, Ron ready, many extras. TRUCK OR BOAT TO C hevy, runs v e ry New spection by Napa meASSOCIATION; (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 awning & tires. ood. g oo d t i r es, Exc. cond. chanic with r eport. UNITED STATES OF Tow vehicle HERITAGE FOR THE Scion TCcoupe 2007, 8500. 541-279-9458. SMOLICH T rue s p orts c a r ! AMERICA, I N T E RBLIND. Free 3 Day also avail.$17,900 obo. fphoto for illustraeon onl (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) N AL REV E N U E $7900. 541-728-0445 Morepics. 541-923-6408 V acation, Tax D e - Ford F-150 2007, v) V Q L V Q Vin ¹198120 SERVICE; SKYductible, Free Towing, Winnebago Via 541-749-2156 Super crewcab, 74K mi. Stock ¹44193B LINER SUMMIT AT All Paperwork Taken 2011 25R, 12,500 smolichvolvo.com VIN ¹C52685. $21,998. Laredo 31' 2006, $10,379 or $149/mo., BROKEN TOP Care O f . CAL L miles, M e r cedes (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 $2800 down, 60 mo., 5th wheel, fully S/C HOMEOWNERS' 1-800-401-4106 188hp turbo diesel. H onda Accord S E 4 .49% APR o n ap one slide-out. ASSOCIATION; (PNDC) New $13 6 ,000, 2006, 99K mi., clear proved credit. License STATE OF OREGON, Awning. Like new, Got an older car, boat Yours $85 , 000, title, non-smoker, well and title included in D EPARTMENT O F 541-389-1188 hardly used. m aintained. $ 6 9 95 payment, plus dealer in- Volvo XC60T6 2014, or RV? Do the huREVENUE; AND Must sell $20,000 obo Call Sinclair at stalled options. mane thing. Donate it 3.2L 1-6 cyl PERSONS OR PARor refinance. Call 480-266-7395 (Bend) to the Humane Soci881 VIN ¹556445 $38,997. TIES UNK N OWN Toyota FJ Cruiser SUBA R IJ. 541-548-1448 541-410-5649 ety. Call 1(exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 CLAIMING 2012, 64K miles. all ANY Travel Trailers smolichmotors.com 800-205-0599 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, hwy, original owner, SMOLICH (PNDC) 877-266-3821 never been off road O R I NTEREST IN V Q LV Q Dlr ¹0354 RV THE PRO P ERTY or accidents, tow 931 541-749-2156 CONSIGNIIIIENTS pkg, brand new tires, DESCRIBED IN THE Automotive Parts, smolichvolvo.com WANTED COMPLAINT very clean. $26,000. We Do the Work, ervice & Accessories Lexus ES350 2010, Call or text Jeff at HEREIN, Defendants. You Keep the Cash! Excellent Condition 541-729-4552 NO. 1 5 C V0056FC. u Looklng for your On-site credit Extra clean 2005 ForSnug Top white canopy 32,000 miles, $21,000 Ford F-150 2007, P LAINTIFF'S S U Mnext employee? 214-549-3627 approval team, (in est River (Salem) 25' for short bed pickup. Super Crewcab MONS BY PUBLICA940 Place a Bulletin help travel trailer. Sleeps 6. web site presence. L ike n e w , $3 0 0 . VIN ¹C09983 $24,888. Bend) TION. TO:HANIA Subaru GT Legacy wanted ad today and We Take Trade-Ins! Vans Hard to find rear acHeavy duty l adder (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 PRICE, WIL L IAM 2008, Lexus RX 350 2012 reach over 60,000 cess storage. Walk rack for pickup, 6' P RICE, an d P E R (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Black, 47K miles. readers each week. BIG COUNTRY RV around queen size tool/parts boxes on Vin ¹212960 SONS OR PARTIES VIN:125152. $32,995 Your classified ad bed. A/C. 1 slide out. Bend: 541-330-2495 each s i de, $ 2 7 5. UNKNOWN CLAIMStock ¹83174 AAA Auto Source will also appear on Redmond: 541-416-9686 Microwave, refrigeraING AN Y R I GHT, Corner of West Empire $14,972 or $179/mo., bendbulletin.com 541-548-5254 tor/freezer. Awning. TITLE, LIEN, OR IN$2500 down 64 mo. 932 & Hwy97 which currently reLevel jacks. N orth 4 .49% APR o n a p TEREST IN THE 541-598-3750 541-548-1448 ceives over 1.5 milAntique & proved credit. License West package. Must PROPERTY DE885 (photo forillustration only) aaaoregonautosource. lion page views smolichmotors.com and title included in see! $8,975. S CRIBED IN T H E Classic Autos Dodge Grand com. DLR¹ 0225 Canopies & Campers every month at payment, plus dealer in541-410-2707 COMPLAINT FORD F600 1962 14' Caravan2007, stalled options. no extra cost. Bulle'I HEREIN: IN THE Lincoln LS Sport 2005, metal flatbed, good auto, 133K mi. Canopy for Toyota p/up tin Classifieds NAME OF THE V8, Moon-roof, White, wood truck $ 2 000 VIN ¹192261 $6,888. S UBA R loou l Get Results! Call short bed 60 uwx63 uL uuuuuuouuuu Sat., July 11 STATE OF OREGON: 541-389-2459 (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 Excellent condition., 385-5809 or place $200 928-581-9190 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Roseburg Graffiti You are hereby re$5,900. 503-781-0360 your ad on-line at 877-266-3821 Weekend quired to appear and or 541-593-0130 bendbulletin.com Dlr ¹0354 defend against t he i Call to Consign allegations contained 541-689-6824 Fun Finder 2008 21' petersencollectorcars.com in the Complaint filed sleeps 6, walk- around I The Bulletin recoml a gainst you in t h e queen, extras, must 541-548-1448 mends extra caution I above entitled prosee. $10,500 obo. Just too many NissanFrontier smolichmotors.com when p u r chasing i ceeding within thirty 541-233-9424 Northlander 1993 Crew Cab 2013, collectibles? i products or services (30) days from the 17' camper, Polar 4.0L V-6 cyl Mercedes Benz CL Need to get an from out of the area. date of service of this Subaru Impreza2013, 990, good shape, 2001, VIN ¹727615 $24,997. i S ending c ash , Summons upon you. Sell them in ad in ASAP? (exp. 6/17/15) new fridge, A/C, (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) ):= ~4 checks, or credit ing If you fail to appear ,e~ Vin ¹027174 The Bulletin Classifieds queen bed, bathYou can place it Vin ¹016584 formation may be I and defend this matSMOLICH Stock ¹83205 room, indoor/outStock ¹83285 online at: ter within thirty (30) sublect toFRAUD. V Q L V Q or $249/mo., i For door shower, lots of or $169/mo., $20,358 more informadays from the date of 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com $8,979 $2600 down, 84 mo., 541-749-2156 $1800 down, 48 mo., Heartland Pr o wler storage, custompublication specified 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n ap - i tion about an advereized to fit newer smolichvolvo.com 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', herein along with the proved credit. License tiser, you may call proved credit. License 541-385-5809 like new, 2 slides-liv- pickups,$4500 obo. I the Oregon State required filing fee, and title included in and title i ncluded in 935 541-419-9859. i ng area & la r ge payment, plus dealer Attorney General's g CHRISTIANA TRUST, payment, plus dealer in975 closet. Large enough Sport Utility Vehicles Office C o nsumer I A D I V ISION O F installed options. stalled options. to live in, but easy to Automobiles i Protection hotline at WILMINGTON SAVtow! 15' power awSUBAR Ll S UBA RU 1-877-877-9392. INGS FUND SOCIu uuuuuuouuuuu.oou uuuuuuouuuuu.oou ning, power hitch & ETY, FSB, NOT IN 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. stabilizers, full s ize CHEI/ELLE u 0 ITS INDIVIDUAL CA877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Serving Central Oregon since 1993 queen bed , l a r ge MALIBU 1971 PACITY B U T AS Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 shower, porcelain sink TRUSTEE OF ARLP 57K original miles, & toilet. $2 6 ,500. TRUST 3 will apply to 350 c.i., auto, 541-999-2571 BMW X3 35i 2010 the Court for the relief stock, all original, Exc cond., 65K BMM/328i XDrive demanded i n the Hi-Fi stereo miles w/100K mile 2011, Complaint The first Keystone Spring$15,000 transferable war3.0L 1-6 cyl date of publication is dale 2010 , 2 1 ' , 908 ranty. Very clean; VIN ¹N81801 $23,995. May 22, 2015. NOsleeps 6, DVD & CD 541-279-1072 loaded cold Aircraft, Parts (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 TICE T O DE F ENplayer, 60 g a llon weather pkg, preDANTS: READ SMOLICH freshwater, 7 cu.ft. & Service mium pkg & techT HESE PAP E RS fridge. Leveling hitch V Q LV Q nology pkg. Keyless CAREFULLY! You & j acks, a wning, access, sunroof, 541-749-2156 must "appear" in this spare tire, lots of navigation, satellite smolichvolvo.com case or the other side storage. New cond., radio extra snow will win automatically. only 3,000 m iles. tires. (Car top carTo "appear" you must Priced below Blue rier not included.) file with the court a leBook, $10,500. Call Mustang $22,500. gal paper called a Rick for more info. Hard top 1985, 1/3interestin 541-915-9170 "motion" or "answer." 541-633-7017 6-cylinder, auto trans, Columbia 400, The "motion" or uanpower brakes, power Financing available. swer" must be given steering, garaged, Buick LeSabre 2005 Add a PhOtO to yOur Bulletin ClaSSified ad fOr juSt to the court clerk or RV $125,000 well maintained, Custom. Very clean, (located O Bend) administrator w i t hin CONSIGNMENTS 815 per week. engine runs strong. inside & out, only has 541-288-3333 thirty days along with WANTED 74K mi., great condi96k miles. If you drive the required filing fee. We Do The Work ... tion.$12,500. it, you'll fall in love!! It must be in proper You Keep The Cash! Must see! 32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in On-site credit Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 form and have proof 541-598-7940 t own. $ 5799, o b o dr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, cash/credit/debit card. o f service o n t h e approval team, leather, a/c, like new Trade-in considered. plaintiff's attorney or, web site presence. F ord p ickup 1 9 5 1 tires. reg. to 10/16. if the plaintiff does not We Take Trade-Ins! or Text Ron O c ustom, o a k b o x . Runs great, very good Call have a n at t orney, 541-419-5060 All adS aPPear iTI bOth Print aT)d Online. AM/FM cassette, new 1/5 share in v ery c ond., $4800 . BIG COUNTRY RV proof of service on the '67 brakes, 289 V-8, 541-385-4790 nice 150 HP Cessna plaintiff. IF YOU Bend: 541-330-2495 Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before 150; 1973 C e s sna Mustang engine in this. HAVE ANY Q UESRedmond: 541-548-5254 your ad appears in print and online. 150 with L ycoming Edelbrock intake and TIONS, YOU TURN THE PAGE 0-320 150 hp engine carb CFM. 10,461 mi. CHECK YOUR AD S HOULD SEE A N For More Ads on the first day of pubc onversion, 400 0 on engine. $12,500. A TTORNEY IMMEThe Bulletin hours. TT airframe. 541-610-2406. lication. If a n e rror DIATELY. If you need may occur in your ad, Approx. 400 hours on help in finding an at0-timed 0-320. HanDodge Durango SXT p lease contact u s torney, you may call and we will be happy gared in nice (electric 2 014 V6-auto, t o w the O regon S t ate door) city-owned hanto fix it as soon as we Bar's Lawyer Referral pkg. only 5000k mi. www.bendbulletin.com can. Deadlines are: Springdale 2006 26' gar at the Bend Air¹345840 $ 31,495 S ervice a t (503) bunkhouse, exc. port. One of very few 684-3763 or toll-free AAA Ore. Auto Source Weekdays 12:00 noon To PlaCeyOur PhOtOad, ViSit USOnline at ha s Mercedes 380SL 1982 for next day, S at. cond, 12' p o p-out, C-150's t h a t corner of West Emin Oregon at (800) stored in RV garage. never been a trainer. Roadster, black on www.bendbulletin.com or call with questions, 452-7636. The object pire 8 Hwy97, Bend. 11:00 a.m. for SunWell cared for. Many $4500 wi ll consider black, soft 8 hard top, Dlr 0225 day; Sat. 12:00 for of the said action and extras. $12,000 obo. trades for whatever. exc.cond., always ga541-598-3750 Monday. the relief sought to be 5 41-588-0068, c e l l , Call J i m Fr a zee, raged. 155K miles, www.aaaoregonauto541-385-5809 o btained therein i s 541-549-4834 home 541-410-6007 source.com. The Bulletin Classified fully set forth in said $11,500. 541-549-6407
Monaco Monarch 31 ' 2006, F ord V 10 , miles, 28,900 auto-level, 2 slides, queen b ed 8 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, convection microwave, 2 TVs, tow package. PRICE REDUCTION! $59,000.
Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. $17,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-780-4487
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Show your stuff, sell your stuff. Visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "PLACE AN AD" and follow the easy steps.
BSSl lt
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
S
E6 FRIDAY JUNE 12 , 2015 •THE BU LLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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171228CD02601 LOT 5 AND THE EAST HALF (E'I/2) OF L O T 4 IN BLOCK 2 7 OF WIESTORIA, CITY OF BEND, D ESCHUTES COUNTY, O REGON. Commonly known as: 641 NE SEWARD A VE, BEND, O R 97701 The undersigned hereby certi-
fies that based upon business r e cords there are no known written assignments of the trust deed by the trustee or by the beneficiary and no appointments of a successor t rustee have been made, except as recorded in the records of the county or counties in which the above
complaint, an d is briefly stated as follows: Foreclosure of a Deed of Trust/Mortgage. Grantors: Robert E. Price. Property address:120 NW Phils Loop, B e nd, OR 97701. P u b lication: The Bend B ulletin. DATED this 21 day of April, 2015. C r aig Peterson, OSB ¹ 120365, Emai l : cpeterson@robinsontait.com, Robinson Tait, P.S., Attorneys for Plaintiff, Tel: (206) 676-9640, Fax: (206) 676-9659. LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF BEND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM
A public meeting of the City Council of the City of Bend, Deschutes County, State of Oregon will be held on June 17, 2015 at 7:00 pm at City Council Chambers, City Hall, 710 NW Wal l S t reet, Bend. The purpose of this meeting will be to hold a public hearing to hear and receive comments on the City's 5 Year Capital I m p rovem ent Prog r am
(CIP). Copies of the CIP are available for review at City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, during normal business hours.
LEGAL NOTICE CITY OF BEND NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON STATE SHARED REVENUES
A public meeting of the City Council of the City of Bend, Deschutes County, State of Oregon will be held on June 17, 2015 at 7:00 pm at City Council Chambers, City Hall, 710 NW Wal l S t reet, Bend. The purpose of this meeting will be to hold a public hearing to hear and receive proposed uses of state shared revenue funds for the 2015-16 fiscal y ear. This is t h e second of two publ ic h e arings r e quired for the City to be eligible to r eceive state shared revenues in the upcoming year. The f irst h earing f o r "possible uses" of state shared reve nues wa s h e l d before the Budget Committee on May 6, 2015.
LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON I N AND FOR T H E COUNTY OF D ESCHUTES. F e d eral
of the date o f
f i rst publication specified herein along with the required filing fee. The date of first publication of the summons is May 22, 2015. If you are in the active military service of the United States, or believe that you may be entitled to protection of the SCRA, please contact our office. If you do not contact us, we will report to the court that we do not believe that you are protected under the SCRA. If you h ave questions, you should 1000
Legal Notices
see an attorney imERLAND, LLC, / s /. mediately. If you need Mary Hannon, help in finding an at- M ary H a nnon ¹ torney, you may con- 131074 tact the Oregon State [mhannon© logs.com] Bar's Lawyer Referral , 7632 SW Durham S ervice o nline a t R oad, S uite 3 5 0 , www.oregonstatebar. Tigard, OR 9 7 224, org or by calling (503) (360)260-2253; Fax 684-3763 ( in t h e (360)260-2285. Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free else- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! where in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. At- Door-to-door selling with torneys for Plaintiff, fast results! It's the easiest SHAPIRO 8 S UTHway in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O TICE OF SALE T.S. No.: OR-15-663761-NH Reference is made to that certain deed
made by, CHRIST OPHER T H I L L AND LARA M GRAY, HUSBAND
A ND WIF E a s Grantor to FIDELITY NAT I O NAL TITLE INS CO, as trustee, in favor of Wells Fargo Bank, NA, as Beneficiary, dated 5/30/2012 recorded 6/11/2012
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FORM LB-1
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
Tele hone: 541 3550555
Email: Tom.Andsrson deschutes.o
FINANCIALSUMMARY - RESOURCES
Araual Amount 2013-14
TOTALOFALLFUNDS
Be innin Fund Balance/NetWorkin Ca ital Fees, Licenses Permits Fines AssessmentsSothersvccha ss Fedsral State and All Other Grants Gilts Allocations and Donations Revenue from Bondsand Other Debt Interfund Transfers/ Intemal Service Reimbursements Allcther Resourcesgxre tpro e Tsxes Current Year Pro e Taxes Estimsted to bs Recsived Total Rssoumes
4315045 195 321 4 045 375
Adoptsd Budget This Year 2014-15 3 790 750 172 500 4 090 414
100 000 304 407 7 905 552 15 045,500
5 272 552 15,540,525
Next Year 2015-15 4 021 455 151 500 4 252 027 100 000 250 073 5 753950 1T505 020
100 000
223 000
FINANCIALSUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS By OBJECT CLASSIFICATION
Personnel Services Materlsls snd Servicss Ca ital Ouga Debt Service
Interfund Trsnsfers Contln endes S eclal pa ments una ro ristad Endin Bslancs and Reserve for Futu/u endituras Total Re uirements
12305 715
15055525 I 430 000
17 405 020
100 000
100000
100 000
4450 054
100
10 040,500
15 040 520
1y 50S 020
FINANclAL BUMMART - REI2UIREMENTBBY ORGANIZATIONALUNIT OR PROGRAEI Nams of Organizational Unit or Program FTEforthstunitor ro rsm General Fund 15 573 014 15 155 525 Ca itsl Reserve Fund I 375 705 1 451 000 Totsl Re ulrements 15 045 MO 15 549 525 TotalFTE
"motion" or "answer." The "motion" or van-
swer" must be given to the court clerk or administrator w i t hin 30 days along with the required filing fee. It must be i n p roper form and have proof o f service o n t h e plaintiff's attorney or, if the plaintiff does not have a n at t orney, proof of service on the plaintiff. The object of t he complaint is t o foreclose a deed of t rust dated May 1 , 2002 and recorded as Instrument No. 2002-25755 given by Sandra S. George, an unmarried woman on property commonly known as 2631 NE Wintergreen D r ive, Bend, OR 97701 and legally described as: L ot S e v e n (7), MOUNTAIN V IEW PARK, PHASE I, Deschutes County, Oregon. The complaint seeks to f o reclose and terminate all interest of U n known Heirs of Sandra S. George and all other interests in the property. The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days
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FORM LB-1
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meeting of the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners will be held on June 22, 2015 at10:00 a.m. inme Wgliam D. Bames Room of me Deschutes Services Center located at 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this meeang ls to discuss the budgetfor the fiscal year beginning July I, 2015 as approved by the Deschutea County Budget Commitlee. A summery of the budget is presentsd below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtained at the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners' Omce at1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon, between the hoursof 5:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, or ongne atwww.deschutes.org/linanos/page/oounty-budget-informetion. This budget ls ran annualbudgetperi od.This budgetwas prepared ona basisofaccoungng mat isme same as used in the preceding year.
15 004 057 I 503 042 1y 595 020
FINANCIAL SUSESARY - RESOURCES TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Aclual Alrioorit 2013-14 Be innin FundBalance/NetWorkin Ca ' Tg 441 945 24430 023 Fees Licenses, Pennits Fines Assessments 5 OtherSvc Cha es 37 g35 T04 Federal. Smm and Ag Omer Grants Gifls Agocstions and Donations 5 7/3 002 Revsnue from Bonds and Other Debt Interfund Transfem / Intemal Servlce Reimbursements 50 055 333 Ag Other Resources Exce Pro erly Taxes 10 013 005 25 TTI 300 Current Year Pro e Taxes Estlmated to be Recelved asagas,aas Toiel Reeources
Femonnel Services Materlals and Services
Ca ilalouga
PROPERlY TAX LEVIES or mpom 2013-14
Permanent Rate Le r s t s limit 1.5500 er I 000 Locsl0 tion Lsv Ls For General Obli agon Bonds
31.4000
STA E NT OF INDEBTEDNESS Estimated Debt Outstanding onJul 1.
LONG TERM DEBT
Gsnsral Obli agon Bonds OtherBonds Other Borrowln3 Total
FORM LB-1
a or
o un mpose
Next Year 2015-10
1.4000
303.54y.ssa
105 315 493 34 551 023 15 020 955 9 550 435 25 023 570 57 344 030
Debt Service Interl'und Transfers Conan encies S ecislPa ments Una ro riatsd Endln Balance and Reserve for Future Ex enditures Total Re uirsments
41.05 705 232 4.00 292 072 3.00 243 054 1.70 130 054 1.00 20 140 901
Veterans' Services General Fund FTE
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
FINANCIALSUMMARY - RESOURCES TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Actual Amount 2013-14 Be innin Fund Balance/NetWorkin Ca itsl 5 030 170 Fees,Licenses,Permits,Fines,Assessments & Other SvcCha es 507 525 Federsl State and Ag Other Grants Gifts Agocatlons and 2 731 553 Revenue from Bonds and Other Debt Interfund Transfers/Intemsl Service Rsimbursements 100 000 All Other Resources Except Properly Taxes 550 340 Current Year Pro e Taxes Estimatsd to be Received 15,005 109 Total Resoumes 22,555Sgg
General Fund Ca itsl Reserve Fund Total Re uirements Totsl FTE
27 131 102 525 707 27 555 399
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
Actual Amount 2013-14
innin Fund Balance/Net Work' C i t al Fees,Licenses,Permgs, Fines,Assessments 5 OlherSvc Cha es Federal SlateandASOtherGrants Gihs Allocationsand Donations Revenue from Bonds and Other Debt Interfund Transfers / Intemal Service Reimbursements I Other Resources Except P rty Taxes Current Year Pro T a xes Estimated to be Received Total Resources
Personnel Services Materials and Services Ca ital Outla Debt Service Interfund Transfers Contin nrfes 'al Pa nts
533 413 71 314 5 355
50 000 19 450 304 735 1,079,2T1
Adopted Budget This Year2014-15 5 707 277 565 000 2 005 595 100 000
400 500 17 292 244 25 235 110
25 357 070 547 149 25 235119
Approved Budget NextYssr2015-15 5 245 352 531272 2 371 300
100 000 500 705 10 055 313 2SAST,942
25 357 942
23+07,042
27 754 024 733 115 23 ST942
Adopted Budget This Year 2014-1 5 545 700
Approved Budget Next Yeer 2015-15 555 100
35 200
55 200
75 100 15 270 403 355 1 132135
50 100 15 170 433 513 1,144 333
157 450 410 705 200
75 100 52 320
50 100 55 727
432 000 1 132 135
450 200 I 144 333
50 000
Law Libra Fund
Coun Clerk Records Fund Ea Lsarnln Nub fonnerl Children 5FamigesCommisslon Fund
Couh Faciwes Fund Deschutes Cou Communication m
450 500 1 144 333 2.00
PROPERTY TAX LEVIES Raar or Amount Irnposed Rats or Amount Imposed Rats cr Amount Imposed 2013-14 Thls Year 2014-15 Next year 2015-10 0.0224 .0224 0.0224
STATEMENTOFINDEBTEDNESS Estimated Debt Outstanding onJul 1.
syy 007 4.50 354 030
4 121 995 33.00 I 524 715 7.95 55 534 0.52 5 145 351 42.05 355 513 4.50 353 779
3.00 253 509 1.70
293 574 1.30
42.05
3.00
23 130 215 137 157 123 133 733 350
25 129 055
0 001 720 022 5.00 271 550 141 004 200 355 05 943 10 171 135 3 255 003
533 434 4.00 555 034 515 000 200 000 00 000 10 220 000 3 050 922
550 274 4.00 50 500 530 000 230 200 10 313 000 2 103 999
3441055 530 041 535 010 315 231 20 143 3 053 500 0.33 004 190 0.10
3 014 355 042 300 553 200 500 500 27 054 4 350 040
3 291 000 3 705043 035 100 555 000 30 595 4 710 002
503 500
000 500
soy 319 0.0e
559 322
324 370
153 700 142 000 750 500
05 000
197 254
50 500
55 500
421 550 4.00 594 220 0.50 454 000 2 230 052
424 007 4.00 535 100 0.50 445 504 I 397 505 2.00
509 953 5.00 012 500 0.50 442 001 935 543 2.00 7 339 529 41.30
F u nd
Sherlffs Ofgce Fund Communlcagons S m Reserve Fund Public HeaabFund HealS Slart Prenatal Fund FTE Fubgc Neslth Reserve Fund OHP Menlal Nesah Servlces Fund Behavloral Health Fund cute Care Servlces Fund ONP-Alcohol/Dru Services Fund Code Abatement Fund Commun' Develo mentDe arlmentFund
3 955 155 gy 250 5 005 705 30.00
FTE
CDDJ roundwster Parlnershl Fund Newbe Nel hborhood Fund Commun Develo ment Reserve CDD Bugdln Pro ram Reserve CDD Bugdln Im nwement Reserve
147 532 432 005
GIS Dedlcated Fund
415 050 3.05 23 950 025 52.75 504 503 1.00 342 243 120 720 042 051 I 350 515 12 325 I 501 500 I 210 741 035 201
Road Fund FTE
Nstural Resounms Pmtecgon Fund FTE
Federal Forest Tltle gl Fund Surve r Fund Public Land Comer Preservagon Fund Road Buildin 5 E ul ment Fund Road ImmvementReserve Fund Coun ide Tmns orlagon SDC Im rovement Fee Fund VehlmeMalntenance 5 Re lacement Fund Do Control FTE Adult Pamls S Probatlon Fund FTE Local Im rovement Dlstrhl Fund Jail Pro ect Fund
1.02 5 553 13y 33.55 155 010 11 702 357 701 100 350 324 524 343 125 333
North Coun Services Bulldin Fund Cam us Im rovement Fund Sistem Nesnh Cgnlc LID 2007 Fund Debt Service LID 2000 Fund Debt Servlce
7 211 yey 47.50 00 707 305 150 0.50 40 375 545 220.50 002700 10 Tsy 003 71.00 244 010 0.00 337 747 15 440 312 27 410 515 171.40 I 515005 2 534 507 05 300 0 230 219 33.50 155 255 433 103 535 470 I 000 307 113 2.25 27 707 307 52.75
ygc 025 1.00 353 112 100 503 043 935 I 250 035 12 405 2 015 202 1 150 045 501 023
100 075 320 050 43 353 011 225.50 505 120
10 204 722 50.40 340 153 5 322 205 25 045 737 175.70 I 421 722 2 050 140 03 300 7 213 533 35.00 71 355 321 500 I 320531 345 401 50 000 303 015 2.00 27 733 500 52.50 2 050 557 1.00 253 575 337 952 592 354 I 554 703
2 345000 1 455 025 550 533
5 333 543 33.55 150 000 4 441 000 543 000 451 000 571 000
5 071 710
100 143 I 477 053 255 250 000 205 250 400 335 077 545 531
175 225 I 470 221 254 104 302 000 250 334 572 045 303 021 543 432
I 074 530 2 550 000 409 500
I 140 523 2 735200 503 003
5 eey 107
5 300 223
21.50 3 130 305 520 030 4 200 320 553 510 410 000 2 054 545 10.00 I 245 735 1.00 3 324005 23.30 1 233 017 0.75 570 722 3.00 I 339 350 0.50
22.50 2 444 742 770 015 2 130 001 357 553 455 440
35.55
552 000 220 500
sg gss
CDD Buildin Full Fagh5 Credit Serles 04 Fund Debt Servme Full Faith 5 Credit 2003/Refundin 2012 Fund Debt Service Full Faith 5 Credit 2005 Fund Debt Servlce Full Faith 5 credit 2003 Fund Debt service Full Faith 3 Credit 200SA Fund Debt Service HHS/BJCC Full Faith 5 Credil Ref Series 05 Fund Debt Service Full Faith5 Credg 2010-STF Fund Debt Servlce Jail Pro ect Fund Debt Servlce Public Safe 1993/2002/2012 General Obg abon Fund Debt Service PERS Debt Service 2002/2004 Fund Fal rounds Debt Senrice Fund RV Park Fund Sogd Waste Fund FTE Landgg Closure Fund Landgg Postclosure Fund Sogd Waste Ca ital Pro eot Fund Sogd WsstsE ulmentReserve Fund Falr5 Ex 0 Center Ca itslRsserve Fund lr 3, Ex o Center Fund Ea~ FTE Deschutes Countv Falr Fund FTE Pr~oe and Fscgigss Fund FTE
General Su .PJ.ort Servlces-Admlnlstratlve Servlces Fund FTE Gensral Su ort Servlces-Board of County Commlssloners Fund .F2r FTE General Suooort Services-Flnance Fund FTE General Su ort Services-Flnance Reserve Fund General Support Servlcss-Legal Counsel Fund FTE
General Suocort Servlcss-Fersonnsl Fund FTE
103 000 I 452 T20 255 449 054 132 250 410 533 207 311 023 430 015 I 500 050 I 017 035
2 332 903 415 111 0 454 405 21.50 2175375 510 305 345 445
351 sy2 510 413 I 55T 352
0.00 I 142 070 1.00 3 312 740 23.00 I 253443 0.40 505 335 3.00 I 017 039 7.29 073 535 0.00 I 133 570 5.05 2 gyg 005
Is.yg
FTE
General Su ort Servlces-Informatlon Technolo Rsserve Fund insurance Fund
Totsl Re ulrements Total FTE
530 552 541T 110 3.25 30 105 092 1.00
205 433 503 •33.10
550 020
I 027 300 5.00 I 247 001 5.30 2 734 055 10.30 330 023 5 903 305 3.25 31 004 710 1.20 300 547 $02 040.00
2 303 542 10.00 I 499 754 1.00 3 514 003 25.20 I 459 014
0.75 515 447
3.00 2 030 403 0.30 I 523 000 I 131,203 0.00 I251 523 5.00 2 554 147
15.00 335 715 5 250 104 3.25 33 035 000 1.10 300 541 101 302.30
2.00
STATEMENT OF CHANGES INACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING Tmr collecgons are anbci ated to inmaase a rordmatel 5 000.
Permanent Rate Le rate limit $0.0224 r 31 000 Local 0 tion For Cmneral Obl agon Bonds
10 015 500 303,541,101
131 005 100 413 450 923
5.00 7 171 533 45.20 03 343 735 002 0.50 33 000 040 210.50 402 345 10 210 502 75.05 300 945 0.00 355 757 15 274 210 22 254 253 102.25 I 044 230
Commun Juslhe-Juvenge Fund
FTE Hsalth Benegts Fund FTE
553533
0 sss 35y 303,547,5$2
3 esa
Pro s Msna ementO emgonsFund Foreclosed Land Sales Fund Vicdms' Assistance Pro ram Fund
Gene/a~lSu orl Servlces-Informsgon Techn~olo Fund 534 005 1,019,2T1
FINANCIALSUMMARY - REQUIREMENTS BY ORGANIEATIONAL UNITOR PROGRAM Nameof Organizagonal unit or Program F TE for that unit or r a m General Fund ?23 355 590 535 3.00 2.00 Reserve Fund 355 915 432 300 Totsl Re uimments 1 070 271 1 132 135 Telal FTE 3.00 2.00
LONG TERM DEBT
ideo Lous Fund ransbrnt Room Tax Fund-1% FTE
FTE
100 000
RNANCIAL SUEIMARY -REQUIRE EIENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIRCATION 152 914 103 551 300755 399 501
una ri s ted Endi Balance and Reserve for Future n d iture Total Re uimments
General Obl' a50n Bonds Other Bonds Other Borrowin s Total
Non-De arlmenlal GeneralFund EconomicDevelo ment Fund Court Technolo Reserve Fund Assessment 5 Taxation Reserve Fund Grant Pro' cts Fund Jusiice Courl Fund
Generalcoun Pro ts Fund Geneml Ca ital Reserve Fund Coun SchoolFund S emal Trans orlabon Fund Ta G m ain Fund Transient Room Tax Fund
A public meeling of the Countywide Law Enforcement District (District 1) will be held on June 22, 2015 at10 00 a m. in the William D. Bames Room of the Deschutes Services Center located et 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Couniywide Law Enforcement District(District I) Budget Commigee. A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspectad or obtained at gre Deschutes County Board of Commissioners' Ogice at 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon, between the hours of 5:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday thmugh Friday, or online at .deschutes.org/gnance/page/couniy-budgetdnformation This budget is for an annual budget period. This budgetwas prepared on a basis of s ccounfin that is the same ss used in Ihe recedin a r . Tele hone: 541 3554505 Contact: Tom Anderson Email; TomAndemon deschules.o
59 703 402 205A33,503
03 300 101 10 097 325 25 054 001
FINANCIAL SUISISART - REQUIREIEENTS By ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT ORPROGRAM Name of Organizational Unit or Program FTE formatunltor m ram 3550 750 3 793 770 ssessor General Fund 31.00 31.00 I 203531 I 530 210 Cmru/Elecfions Geneml Fund T.05 7.03 FTE 59 304 70 Tyy Boardofpro e Tsx e a l GeneralFund 0.52 0.52 5 352 574 5 335 3yy DistrictAitom GeneralFund
Industrlal Lands Proceeds Humane Sode of Redmond Fund Park A uismon3 Develo ment Fund Park Develo ment Fees Fund FERS Reserve Fund Pro ct Develo ment 5 Debt Reserve Fund
Esgmated Debt Authorized, But Not Incurrsd on Jul 1
Approved Budget Nexl Year 2015-10 57 510 773 27 277 551 05 937 509
FINANCIAL SUMISARY - REQUIREMENTS By OSJECT CLASSIFICATION 101 070 024 34 031 071 02 355 372 70 349 120 11 727 409 20 044 535 11 035 792 10 073 453 21 320 015 20 395 440 45 932 700
Grant Pro cts Geneml Fund
or nioe rripose This Year 2014-15 1.4000
Adopted Budget This Year 2014-15 35 723 341 24 170 303 03 701 520
50 530 733 9007 330 27 327 000 305,541,101
Pro e Mana ementndminisuationtGeneralFund
STATEEIENT OFCHANGES IN ACTIVITIES and SOURCES OFFINANCING
Emag: Tom.Anderson deschules.or
Tele hone: 541 353-0555
Tax GeneralFund
S OCIATION, I N C .; P ARTIES IN P O S SESSION, D e f enSTATEIEENT OFCHANGES IN ACTMTIES and SOURCES OF FINANCINQ dants. No. Due to addiTional expandsd jsil operagng costs, the tax levy rate for FY 2015 will be increased by3.07 to $1.02. Assessed vslusgon on taxable 15CV0232FC. CIVIL ro e isangci atedtoincreaseb 5%fortheFY2015 ro e taxcahmmgons. SUMMONS. TO THE DEFENDANTS: PROPERlY TAX LEVIES or oun mpose or o u mpos or u m U nknown Heirs o f 2013-14 Thls Yesr 2014-15 Next year 2015-15 Sandra S. G eorge. Permanent Rate L rat e limit 1.2500 er 51 000 30.9500 30.0500 $1.0200 NOTICE TO DEFENLocalo fionLe DANT: READ THESE Le For Genersl Obli ation Bonds P APERS CARE FULLY! A lawsuit has STATEIEENT OF INDEBTEDNESS LONG TERM DEBT Estimated Debt Outstsnding Estimsted DebtAuthorized, But been started against on Ju 1. Not Incurred on Jul I you in the above-en- Geneml Obli ation Bonds titled Court by FedOther Bonds eral National Mort- Other Borrowin s age Ass o ciation Total "Fannie Maeu), Plaintiff. Plaintiff's claim is stated in the written FORM LB-1 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING Amended Complaint, public meegng cf the Deschutes County E/dension and 4-H Service District will be held on June 22, 2015 at 10:00 a.m, in ths William D. Bsrnes a copy of which is on Room of the Deschutes Services Center located at 1300 NWWall Street, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this rneegng is to discuss the budget for file at the Deschutes e fiscal yaar beginning July I, 2015 as approved by the Deschutes County Exlension and 4-H Service District Budget Committee. A summary of County Courthouse. e budgst is presented below. A copy of the budget msy be inspected or obtained at the Deschuias County Bosrd of Commissioners' Olflce at You must "appear" in 1300 NW Wall Slreet, Send, Oregon, between the hours of 0:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Fridsy, or onlins at this case or the other www.deschutes.orgriinance/page/county-budget-information This budget is for an annual budgst period. This budget was prepared on a basis of side will win automati- accounfin that is the same as umd in the recedin r. Tel hone: 541 355-5555 Email. Tom.Anderson deschules.o cally. To "appear" you Contact Tom Andemon must file with the court FINANCIAL SUMMARY -RESOURCES
a legal paper called a
1000
Assessed valuation on taxable property is anricipated to increase by5.5% for the FY2015 property tax cslculations.
National M o r tgage FINANCIAL BUEIMARY - REOUIREIEENTS By OBJECT CLASSIFICATION Association ( vFannie Pemonnel Services v Mae ), Plaintiff, vs. Materials and Services 20 597 253 25 135 119 ROBERT CHARLES Cs italouga G EORGE, INDI - Debt Senrice VIDUALLY AND AS Interfund Trsnsfem 100 000 100 000 Congn encies CONSTRUCTIVE S ecial pa ents TRUSTEE OF THE ro riated Endin Balance and Reserve for Future enditure 5550515 E STATE OF S A N - una Tolal Re uirements 2T,B55,099 25,235,119 DRA S. G E ORGE; UNKNOWN H E IRS FINANCIAL SUIEIEART REQUIREMEN TS BY ORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM OF S A NDRA S. Name of Orgsnizational unit or Program .'Fri i G EORGE; M O U Nuinln: FTEforthatunitor ro ram T AIN V IE W P A R K HOMEOW N ERS AS-
Approved Budget
described real property i s si t u ated. Further, no action has been instituted to recover the debt, or any part thereof, now remaining secured by the trust deed, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.752(7).
Legal Notices
ContacL' TomAndemon
A public meeting of the Rural Law Enforcement District(District 2) willbe held on June 22, 2015 at10:00a.m.in the William D. Barnes Room of the Deschutes Services Center located at 1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal ysar bsginning July I, 2015 as approved by the Rural LawEnforcement District (District 2) Budget Commigee. A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budgst msy be inspected or obtained at the Deschules County Board of Commissioners'Oflice st1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon, between the hours of 5:00 s.m. snd 5;00 p.m., Monday through Friday, or online atwww.deschutes.org/lrnanm//page/county-budgetinformation. This budget is for an annualbudget period. This budgetwas prepamd ona basis of sccounting thst is the same as ussd in the
rscedin ear. Contact: Tom Anderson
, in official records of DE S CHUTES County, Oregon in book/reel/volume No. a n d/or as fee/file/instrument/ microfilm / r e ception number 2012-022555 covering the following described real property situated in said County, and State, to-wit: APN: 100795
Estimated Debt Authorized, But Notlncurredon Jul I
STATEMENT OF CHANGES INACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING Assessed valuatlon on taxable properly ls antlclpated to increase by 533 for Fy 2010 properly tsx calcuhrgons. Pari oflhe Personnel Servlces increase ls due to FERS rste increases and a 1.5% or 2.0% COLA to mostCouniy employees, and a 4II Incrsass in heaah benefits costs. The total County FTE net Increase ls 17.3 FTEas s result of expandlng cllent populagon end incmased demands for servme. Wah the expanslon of the jail and the need for an sddlgonal Petrol Deputy, the Shsrgfs Ofgce plans to add 5 new FTE In Fy 2010. Neagh Servmes has requested a net Increase of 3.1 new postlons to meet the demands of thelr cgentsle and Community Oevelopment has been augrorized to increase thelr staffby 2 FTE to meet the Increase In bulldlng actlvlty. Other addmonal staffing requests include 2.0 FTE for the Assessofs oNce, 2.0 FTE for Parole 5 Probatlon, 1.5 FTE for Pro e and Fscgiges 1.0 for the Vlctlm's Asslstance Pro ram and 1.0 In Pemonnel. PROPERTY TAX LEVIES 2013-14
Permsnent Rate Lev r a te gmk $1.2733 er I 000 Localo tlonLev Lev For General Obll atlon Bonds LONG TERM DEBT
Gensral Obli atlon Bonds Other Bonds Other Borrowln 4 Total
1.2T53 $,30$ 300
STATEISENT OF INDEBTEDNESS Esgmated Debt Outstandlng onJu 1. 5 130 000 305 T20 040 3343 435 STI 194 435
This Vear 2014-15 1.2753
or n m Next Year 2015-15 31.2733
2,5TS,ITS
2.531 053
Esgmated Oebt Authorlzed, But Not Incurred on Ju I
ES FRIDAY JUNE 12 , 2015 窶「THE BU LLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED窶「 541-385-5809
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CEL NO. 1 OF Gillette Ave., Irvine, PARTITION PLAT CA 92614 ( 8 44) People Look for Information Just bought a new boat? Call The Bulletin At Sell your old one in the 706-4'l82 SALE INNO. 1990-17 FILED About Products and 541-385-5809 Ask about our APRIL 2, 1990, IN FORMATION CAN Services Every Daythrough classifieds! Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Super Seller rates! THE DESCHUTES BE OBTAINED ON The Bulletin Clnssifieds 541-385-5809 At: www.bendbulletin.com COUNTY CLERKS LINE AT www.inOFFICE, AND BEsourcelogic.com ING A P O RTION FOR AUTOMATED OF LOT FOUR (4) SALES INFORMAA ltE P U B L I C IN BLOCK ONE (1) T ION PLE A S E OF VIEW ACRES, CALL: In S o urce MCテェICES DESCHUTES Logic at 702-659-7766. OrCOUNTY, ORIiVLPC&RTAIII~ del' EGON. Commonly No. OR'I 5-000015-1, known as: 2471 SW 23RD ST., R E DPub Dates An important premise Upon which the principle of MOND, OR 97756 06/1 2/2015, democracy is based is thatinformation about APN: 06/1 9/2015, 161649/1 5'I 320DBO 06/26/2015, government activities must be accessible in order 0900 Both the Ben07/02/2015. for the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. e ficiary an d th e Trustee have Public notices provide this sort of accessibility fo PUBLIC NOTICE elected to sell the Notice of Regular Board citizens who want fo know more about government said real property to of Trustees Meeting satisfy the obligaGCflvlfle5. tions secured by The F o u r Ri v ers said Trust Deed and Reod your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin Vector Control Disnotice has been retrict will hold a regular classifieds or go fo vt/ININ.bendbulletin.comand corded pursuant to Board Meeting on 22 Section 86.735(3) of click on "C/ass/%edAds". June 2015, 7:00 p.m., Oregon R e v ised at 56478 Solar Drive, Statutes. The deOr go to WWW.PubliCnotiCeoregon.Com Bend, O R 97 7 0 7. fault for which the Topics of discussion foreclosure is made The Bulletin are general business. is the Grantor's fails ure to pay: THE IN1000 1000 1000 1000 S TALLMENT O F P RINCIPAL A N D Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices INTEREST WHICH BECAME DUE ON September 11, 2007 FORM L8-1 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING AND ALL SUBSEpubgc meedng of the Sunriver Library County Service District will be held on June 22, 2015 at 10 00 s m. in the William D. Bames Room of the QUENT INSTALLDeschutss Services Center localed at 1300 Nw Wall Strrmt, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this meefing is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year M ENTS, A L O NG beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Sunriver Library County Service Dishict Budget Commigee A summary of the budget is presented WITH LATE below. A copy of the budget may be inspedad or obtained at the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners' Office st 1300 NWWall Street, Bend, Oregon, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Fridsy, or online atwww.deschutes.org/finance/page/county-budgetCHARGES, PLUS informaiion. This budget is for an annual budget psriod. This budget was prepamd on a basis of accounfing that is the same as used in the FORECLOSURE receding year. COSTS AND LEContact Tom Anderson Tele hons: 5af 3888585 Email: Tom Jtndemon deschutes.o GAL FEES,IN ADDITION TO ALL OF FINANCIALSUMMARY - RESOURCES THE TERMS AND TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Adual Amount Adopted Budget Approved Budget CONDITIONS AS 2013-14 This Year201S-15 Next Year2015-18 PER THE DEED OF Be innin Fund Balance/Net Worki ital 13 112 7 000 8 500 TRUST, PROMISFees,Licenses,Permgs,Fines,Assessments& OtherSvc Cha es Federal State snd All Olher Grards Gifls Allocafions and Donafions SORY NOTE AND Revenue from Bonds and Olher Debt A LL RELA T E D Interfund Transfers/ Intemal Service Reimbumements L OAN DOCU A ll Other Resources Pro Tax e s 3 201 2 000 8800 MENTS. M o nthly Current Year Pro Taxes Estimalad to be Received 85470 93 975 85 030 Payment $ 2 15.82 Total Resources 101 783 102 925 100130 Monthly Late Charge $40.00 By FINANCIAL SUMIBARY - REI2UIREMENTS BY OLIECT CIASSIFICATION this reason of said Personnel Services default the BenefiMaterials and Services 5 000 ciary has declared Ca itsl Oulla all obligations seDebt Servioe 94 535 84 875 95 130 cured by said Trust interfund Trsnsfers Deed immediately Conhn encies due and payable, S 'al Ps ments said sums being the Una r riated Endin Balance and Reserve for Future nditura 7 248 8 000 following, to-wit: The Total Re uimmsrds 101 783 102 gyg 100 130 sum of $79,685.64 together with interFINANCIAL SUMISARY -REI2UIREMENTS BYORGANIZATIONAL UNIT OR PROGRAM est thereon at the Name of Organizational Unit or Program rate of 3 . 25000% FTEf or that unit or ra m General Fund 101783 102 075 100 130 per annum from AuTotal u lmmenla 101 283 10 gyg gust 11, 2007 until 100130 Tolal FTE paid; plus all accrued late charges STATEMENT OF CHANGES INACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING t hereon; an d a l l FY 2018 will be the final year of payment on gtis debt and the fund will be inachvated effsctive June 30, 2015. Trusteels fees, foreclosure costs and any s u m s ad PROPERTY TAXLEVIES vanced by the BenRsts or Amount imposed Rste or Amount Imposed Rale or Amount imposed 2013.14 Thls Year2013-te Next Year2014-15 eficiary pursuant to P ermansntRatsLe ra t e limitg . er 10 0 0 the terms of said Local 0 tion Trust Deed. Le For Genersl Obl' ation Bonds 80,828 gggyd 80,079 Wherefore, notice is hereby given that, STATEMENT OFINDEBTEDNEBS the und e rsigned LONG TERMDEBT Estimated Debt Outstanding Estimatsd Debt Authorized, But Trustee will on OconJu 1. NotlncurredonJu 1 General Obl' stion Bonds 90 000 tober 13, 2015 at Other Bonds the hour of 11:00 Other Borrowins A M, Standard o f Total 800,000 Time, a s e s t ablished by S ection 187.110, O r egon CITY OF BEND Revised Statues, at the Bond Street enNOTICE OF SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARING trance steps to the Deschutes County A public hearing on proposed supplemental budgets for the City of Bend, Deschutes County, Courthouse, 1 164 State of Oregon, for the 2013-2015 biennial budget period beginning July 1, 2013 will be held in NW Bond St., Bend, OR 97701 County of the Council Chambers at City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, Bend. Deschutes, sell at public auction to the The hearing will take place on the 17th day of June, 2015 at 7:00 pm. The purpose of the highest bidder for hearing is to discuss the supplemental budgets with interested persons. In addition to the cash the interest in the said described budget adjustment listed below, supplemental budgets will also be considered in the Police real property which Grant Fund, Economic Improvement District Fund, Cemetery Fund, Water Fund, and the the Grantor had or Community Development Block Grant Fund, however a public heading is not required for those had power to conadjustments as expenditures will be adjusted(10o/I over the 2013-2015 biennium. Copies of vey at the time of the supplemental budget are available for review at City Hall, 710 NW Wall Street, during t he execution by him of the said Trust normal business hours. Deed, together with any interest which SUMMARY OF PROPOSED BUDGET CHANGES the Grantor or his AMOUNTS SHOWN ARE REVISED TOTALS INTHOSE FUNDS BE/NG MOD/F/ED successors in interest acquired after t he execution o f Cemete Penyianent Malntenance Fund said Trust Deed, to Amount Resource Amount Requirement satisfy the foregoInvestment Income $56,600 l n terfund Transfers $56,100 ing obli g ations thereby secured and Revised TotalFund Resources ~sssr,too Revised TotalFund Requrementl~ sssr,rco the costs and expenses of sale, including a r easonComments: able charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that To authorize additional investment income and increase interfund transfers to transfer any person named investment income earnings to the Cemetery Fund to pay for operation and maintenance costs in Section 86.753 of at the Pilot Butte Cemetery. Oregon R e v ised S tatutes has t h e FORM L8-1 NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING r ight to have t he f oreclosure pr o A public meefing of gte Deschulas County 9 1-1 Couniy Service Disbict will be held on June 22, 2015 at 10 00 a m. in the William D. BamesRoom ceeding dismissed of the Deschutes Services Center located at 1300 NW Wall Sbaet, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this meefing is to discuss the budget for the fiscal yesr beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the DeschulesCouniy 0 1-1 CouniySenrice Distrtct Budget Committee. A summaryofthe budget and the Trust Deed is presented below. A copy of the budget may be tnspected or obtained at gm Deschutes Couniy Board of Commissioners' Ogce at 1300 NW Wsll reinstated by payStreet, Bend, Oregon, between the houm of 8:00 a.m. snd 5:00 p.m.. Monday thmugh Friday or online atwww.deachulss.org/rrnance/page/countyment to the Benefibudget-informagon. This budget is for sn annual budget period. This budget was pmpamd ona basis of accoungng thst is the same as used in the ciary of the entire preceding year. amount then due Email; Tom Jtnderson deschutes.o Colltscb Torrl Alldelson Tele hone: 541 3800585 (other than s u ch FINANCIAL SUMMARV -RESOURCES portion of said prinAdoptsd Budget Approved Budget TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS Actual Amount cipal as would not 2013-14 This Yesr 2014-15 Next Year 2015-18 then be due had no 13 580000 14 854 000 Be innin Fundsalancs/NetWorhin Ca Ital 12710038 default o c curred), Fees Llosnsss, pennils Fines Assessmentsd ONer Svc Cha es 402 800 380788 807 Sst t ogether with t h e 918 803 008 000 1 175 080 Federal StatsandA/togtererams Gi/ls AllocsgonsandDonagons costs, Trustee's or Revenue from Bonds and Other Debt attorney's fees and 200 000 interfund Transfers / intemal Smvice Reimbumements 7 800 000 222 800 213 000 curing any o t her All Ogrer Resources Exca t Pm Tmms 283 S52 8 040 000 8258 758 8 482 015 default complained Current Year Pro Tmms Estimated to be Received 21 021 3 Total Resoumes of in the Notice of Default by tenderEMENTB Bv OBJECr CLISSIFICATIDN FINANCIAL SUMISARV REtgUIR ing t h e per f or4 420 333 5083 538 8 338 511 Pemonnel Ssrvioss mance required un1 008 805 2 078 888 2 338 788 Materials andServices der the obligation or 1 453 000 88 408 355 000 Cs ilal Outla Trust Deed, at any Debt Servics time prior to f ive 200 000 interfund Transfem 7 800 000 days before the date 3 305 987 S 883 253 Confin ncies last set for sale. In S ecisl Pa ents 8020000 construing this noUna ro rialad Endin Balance and Reserve for Future endilu 14 080 220 10108000 21 821&3 Total Re uiremsnts 28 373.858 tice, the masculine gender includes the FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RE12UIREMENTSBY ORSINIZATIONAL UNITOR PROGRAM f eminine and t h e Namsof Organizagonal unit or Program neuter, the singular FTEforgtatungor ro ram includes plural, the 14 005 530 General Fund 18 223 490 11 417 403 word "Grantor" in57.50 cludes any succes10 20S 000 10 274 000 E ui ment Reserve Fund 10 150 388 sor in interest to the Grantor as well as 28 23888 21 821 403 Total Re ulmments 62ug 52.80 any other persons Totsl FTE owing an obligation, STATEMENT OFCHANGEB IN ACTIVmES and SOURCES OF FINANCING the performance of Assessed valusfion on taxable property is anficipated to increase by 555 for the FY 2018property trur calculsgons. The District is undergoing a which is secured by number of changes that aftbct the FY 2016 budget thet will improve the delivsry of services to County msidents and rimt msponders for years to said Trust Deed, the oome. Ashategi c plan has besndeveloped for 0-1-1opsrsuonsaswellasconsolidadon ofgte 0-1-1comunicagons syslems used by var ious words "Trustee" and agendes in the County intoa single systsm to be operated by ihe Counbr 0-1-1 Center. As a result of the adopgon of the strstegic plan, stafling "Beneficiary" in in the 0-1-1 Center increased 8.0 osiTions in FY 2015, and the FY 2018 bud t inctudes anolher 5.0 new osiTions. cludes their respecPROPERlY TAX LEVIES tive successors in or u mpo o r o u m po a or o u m i nterest, i f any . NextYear2015-16 2013-1s Thls Year201S-15 1818 Dated: 06/04/2015 rate limit .1018 r 1 000 1818 1818 Permanent Rste .2000 .2000 .2000 Locai on la First American Title L F or General Obli arion Bonds I nsurance C o m pany By: LAURIE P. STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS ESTRADA AuthoEsrimated Debt Authorized, But LONG TERMDEBT EsrrmatedDebt Oulslanding rized Signatory First onJu 1. Not incuned on Jul 1 American Title InGeneral Obl' egon Bonds Other Bonds surance Company Other Bonowin s c/o Special Default Total Services, Inc. 17100
FORM LB-1
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A public meegng of the Sunriver Service Districtwill be held on June 22, 2015 st 10:00 a.m. in the William D. Barnes Room of the Deschutes Senrices Center located at1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon. The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscsl year beginning July 1, 2015 as spproved by the Sunriver Service District Budget Committee. A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspectad or obtained at the Deschutes County Board of Commissioners' Office at1300 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, or online atwww.deschutes.org/finance/page/county-budget-information. This budget is for an annual budget period. This budget was prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as used in the preceding year. Contact: Tom Anderson Tele hone: 541 3884585 Email: Tom Anderson deschutes.o FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
Be innin FundBalance/NetWorkin Ca ilal
Fees,Licenses,Permtts,Fines,Assessments8 OtherSvcCha es Federal, State and All Other Grants, Gigs, Allocsgons and Revenuefrom Bonds and Ogmr Debt interfund Transfers/ intemal Service Reimbumements All Other Resources Except Pmperty Taxes Current Year Pm e Taxes Esfimated to be Received Tolal Resources
Actual Amount 2013-14 2 598 792 245 250 4 845
Adopted Budget This Year2014-15 2 833 485 220 400
250 000 128 301 4 032 073 7,289,281
270 000 89 000 4 087 500 2,500,385
Approved Budget NextYear2015-18 3284014 212 081
291800 t 14 000 4 080 445
T,082,140
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - REI2UIREMENTS BY OBJECT CLASSIFICATION 3 085 035 3 345 153 825 818 709 915 121888 13 900 100 250 000 270 000 2 028 115
Pemonnel Services Matsrials snd Services Ca ital Outla Debt Service interfund Transfers Congn encies S ecial Pa ents
una ro riated Endin Balance and Reserve for Future e n diture Total Re uimmenar
3 357 824 715 580 581588
291800 2 154 581
1 135202 7,500,385
3 178 522 7,250,281
880 087 T,082,140
FINANCIAL SUINMARY - REt2UIREMENTS BY ORGANIIATIONAL UN/TOR PROGRAM
Nameof Organizagonal Unit or Pmgram FTEforthatunitor ro ram General Fund
8 310 144 28.00 040 117 T 250 281 28.50
FTE
Reserve Fund Total u i remenla Tolal FTE
8 351 283 28.00 1 149122 y 500 385 28.00
8 519 445 28.00 1 442 895 7 982 140 26.00
STATEMENTOF CHANGEB INACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING Capital expenditures anticipated for FY 2018 include ambulance upgrades, replacement of two police vehicles, training facility improvements and e ui mentre lacements. PROPERlY TAX LEVIES sor mou mpose 2013-14
Permanent Rate Le ratelimit53.4500 er 1000 Local0 gon Le Le For General Obli srion Bonds
3.3100
STATEMENT OF INDEBTEDNESS Estimated Debt Outstanding on Ju 1.
LONG TERM DEBT
or mou mpose Thls Year201t-ts
or oun mp Nexl Yser 2015-18
$3.3100
53.3100
Estimated DebtAuthonzed, But Notincurredon Ju 1
General Obli agon Bonds Olher Bonds Other Bonowin s Total
FORMUR-f
NOTICEOF BUDGET HEARING
Apublicmsetngofihe BendUrban RenewalAgencywil beheld onJune17th, 2015at 7I pm st CiiyHall intheCoundl Chambers, 710NWWell Street Bend,Oregon. The purposeofthis meehngis to discussgw budgetfor Ihebienriisl budgetpsnudbsg/nningJuly1, 2015ssapproved bythe BsndUrbanRenewalAgencyBudget Commiltse. A summayofthebudget is presentedbelou Acopy of ihe budgetmsyheinspected oroblainsd at CityHall,710 NWWallStreet, Bend,Oregon,betweenthe hourscf8am and5pmoronlineatwwwbendoregon gov. Thisbudgetisforsn annual X biennialbudgetperiod. This budgetwssprsparsd onabmis ofaccounsng ststis JL thesameas dilferent thanusedStepscedlngtnutr. Ifdilfwsnt, ihe majcrchangessndtheiretfsd on thebudgetare: N/A
Tel hone: 541 80M158 Emall;dkni M hend on ov FININCIAL SUMMARY. RESOURCES Adual Amount 2011-2013
TOTAL OFALL RINOS
Bsginni Fund Balancs/Netytbrung Ca1st Federal, SateandAll ChrvGrants Rsvsnuefien BondsandOlhw Debt intsrfundTransfsrs All QherResourcmBcept Divis'smofTa/r 5 Spsdal Levy Revsnus fmmDiwioncf Ttu Reumue fiom al
ApprovsdBudget Next Biennium2015.2017 1347,500 3505 450
Adoptsd Bl/dgei This Biennium 2013-2015
34tt 820
8,753,500 50,000
6,T28,853
Totill Ressulcss
82,000 46900
2,270200
2dn1,100
tgAso,sgg
8,107,450
RNANCULSUMM ARY. REQUIRENENTS BTOBJECT CLASSIFICATION
PwscnnslSentces MaterialssndServices Debt Sen//cs intsrfundTransfers
895368 18851 3,977,887
213150 2,900,000 5 322,850
1374104 5,728,653
1880,1M 10,S50,S00
25780 141,360 1 300,000 1,858800 94,400 2,800
All 0/her allflh//es wld t/hestsnls
Uns rialef End' Fund Balance Tolal uimmwds
2,874,510 8,107,450
FINANI2AL SUMMARTJIEQUIREMENTS AND FULL-TIME EIIUIVALENT EMPLOTEES BT ORSANITATIONAL UNITOR PROGRA/8*
' alUnitorP rsn RE forlhstunitor m Bend Urban Renewal e General Fund
Nsmeofc
'
S98479 0.00 2,581 145 0.00 237,114 0.00 2879,870 0.00
BendUrbanRenewal Oountram Debt Service Fund
Bend UrbanRenewal e Mu BendUrbanRenassl J u rii R i e Debt Semce Fund
454200 0.00
401,400
0.00
0.00 825,600
1,078050 0.00 3,243,200
534,800 0.00
0.00
Sso 742
Bsnd Urban Renewal D ownturm Conshuciion Fund
0.00
Bend Urban Renewal M
Cms s i O / sucffrm Fund
Bend Urban Renewal J u k
R i e Comhucton Fund
0.00 73,303 0.00
2,993,500 0.00 3,842,500 0.00
0.00 8728653
0.00 10 S50S00
0.00 1,300,000 0.00 0.00
Non.ge rhnmtsl Non-Pro / 0.00 107 450 0.08
TotalFIE
STATE8/ENT OF CHANGES IN ACTMTIES and 80URCES OF FINANCING'
BendUrbanRsnewal AgencyGeneal Fund: pmpcssdbudgetcydeindudes fundingfor 8.3SII of gte0/tt/s mmEconomic Dsvelopmsnt Dirsdorposilion. Reservts withiniheGeneral Fundareset sside forfulumdevsisplle/It pmiscta
MurphyCrosslngUrbsnRsnswslArwc Duringgte 201315biennial budgetcyde, theBendUrbanRenewalAgencyissued83milisn oflongtermdebtthatwlll bs repaidwiNMurphyCrossing Urban Renewal AreattsrJnuement properiytaxavenues. Debtprocsedswll bs usedto lnance apmjectto conslrud sroundaboul, stcrmwstsrfacilities, iliuminstlon,and shipingatIheinlsrsecgonofMurphy 8Panell. unipsr Ridge UrbanRenswal Area: Duringgte 201315bienriial budgtdcyde, theBend UrbanRenewal Agencylinslized a longtermpennansnt finandngagreementwith Bankof theCascadesto relinanceihe 88milion line ofcredil heldbyBankof Amwica Therelunded debtwas vsdablemts dsht sst tomalure duringsscsl yesr201314; ihe longterm pstmsnentfimncing is a10year, 1.5tt fsrsdrale loanwilh a mahsily dsteof December1, 2023. STATEMENT OFINDEBTEDNESS Esglnaisd DeblOllisialvlng Ju 1,2015
LONGTERMDEBT
EstimatedDebtAulhomsd, But NotlncunedonJW 1 2015 80
Genual Obli 'm Bonds
Tolal * ifmorespaceis neededto cunpbts anysschonofgtis fimn, inset lines(nmsl onOis sheetoradd shsels. Youmaydelete unusedlines.
FORM LB-1
NOTICE OF BUDGET HEARING
A publicmeesng of the Black Suite Ranch Service Districtwill be held on June 22,2015 at10:00 a.m. in the William D. Sames Room of the Deschutes Services Center located at 1300 NW Wall Street, Send, Oregon. Ths purpose of this meeting is to discuss the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 2015 as approved by the Black Butte Ranch Service District Budget Committee. A summary of the budget is presented below. A copy of the budget may be inspected or obtsinsd at ths Dsschutss County Sosrd of Commissioners' Offlce at 1300 NW Wall Street, Send, Oregon, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, or online at www.deschutes.orgmnancs/pags/county-budaet-information. This budget is for an annuai budget period. This budget was prepared on a basis of accounting that is the same as used in the preceding year. Contact: Tom Anderson
Emall: Tom.Anderson deschutss.or
Tele hone: 54t 388-8565
TOTAL OF ALL FUNDS
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - RESOURCES Actual Amount
Ss inning Fund Salance/Net Workln Capital Fess, Licenses, Permits, F/nes, Assessments & Other Svc Char es Federal, State and All Other Grants, Gtns, Allocstions and Donations Revenue from Bonds and Other Debt interfund Transfers / intemal Service Reimbursements All Other Resources Except Properly Taxes Current Year Pro e Taxes Estimated to be Received Total Resources
Adopted Budget
2013-14 815 378 28 139
This Year 2014-15 804 328 14 400
32 140
28 000 804 384 1,73e,110
878 428 1 TSS,OSS
Approved Budget Next Year 2015-18 932 059
ts soo
24 500 916 693
1,ssy,ess
FINANCIAL SUMN/ARY - RE00/R EMENTS SY OBJECT 0 LASS/F/CAT/ON 642 393 727 975 196 479 214 500 37 851 51000
Personnel Services Matenals and Services Ca itsl Outls tfsbt Service interfund Transfers Contin encies S ecialpa ments Una ro riated Endin Balance and Reserve for Future Ex endltures Total Re ulrements
873 360 1,780,083
730 158
219,500 55 000
S4 000
305 584
851835 1,738,110
577 432 1,887,882
FINANCIAL SUMMARY - Rgdtt/IREMENTS BY ORGANIZATIONAL UN/T OR PROGRAM Name of Organizational Unit or Program FTEforrnatunitor ro ram General Fund 1 750083 1 858 700 FTE 7.38 7.38 Total Rs ulrements 1750,083 1sss yoo Total FTE 7.38 7.38
1 887652 7.38 1,887,682 7.38
STATEMENT OF CHANGES /NACTIVITIES and SOURCES OF FINANCING There are no changes in activiTies anticipated for FY 2016. Voters passed the renewal of the five year local option levy in May 2015. PROPERTY TAX LEVIES Rate or Amount Imposed Rats or Amount imposed 2013-14 This Yesr2014-15 Permansnt Rate Ls ra t e limit 51.0490 er 1 000 1.0499 1.0499 Local0 tionLev 0.5500 80.5500 Lev For General Obii ation Bonds
Rate or Amount imposed Next Year 2015-18 $1.0490 0.5500
STATEMENT OF /NDESTEDNESS
LONG TERM DEBT
General Obli stion Bonds Other Bonds Other Borrowin s Total
Estimated Debt Outstanding on Jul 1.
Estirnated DebtAuthorized, Sut Notincurredon Jul 1
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Everyone'sfavorite dinosaur parkcomes roaring back to life in 'JurassicWorld,' PAGE26
ll
PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ONTAC T
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
in ez
US
REPORTERS Kim Himstreet, 541-383-0350 khimstreet@bendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasper@bendbulletin.com Brian McElhiney, 541-817-7814 bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.com Sophie Wilkins, 541-383-0351 swilkinsObendbulletin.com
EVENTS • 10
PLANNING AHEAD • 18
• The 75th-annual Sisters Rodeo
• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting
ARTS • 11 • CTC presents Sondheim's "A Funny ThingHappened on theWa ytothe Forum"
DESIGNER Tim Gallivan, 541-383-0331
tgallivanObendbulletin.com
MUSIC • 3
SUBMIT AN EVENT
• X's John Doe comesto McMenamins • Genders kick off summer series at Crow's Feet • Supersuckers retum to Bend • David Brighton glams up the Tower in his Bowie tribute • British reggae from SteelPulse • "The Cemetery Club" rises again at 2nd • Party on the Patio starts tonight Street Theater • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life U.S. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
ADVERTISING
GOING OUT • 8
541 -382-1811
Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. e
Submitted cover photo; design by Tim Gallivan/The Bulletin
• A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more
DRINKS • 14
MUSIC REVIEWS • 9
CALENDAR • 16
• Muse, Faith No More and more
RESTAURANTS • 20 • Review: Bend Burger Co.'s new location • More news from the local dining scene
OUT OF TOWN • 23 • Comic genius Eddie Izzard does Portland • A guide to out of town events
MOVIES • 26
• "Jurassic World" open in Central Oregon • "Kingsman: The Secret Service" and five others are out on Blu-ray andDVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon
• Craft Kitchen and Brewery opens in Bend • A week full of Central Oregon events
et tn
I
I
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'
"
"
"
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~
~ ~.~- AT THE BANK BFTHECABCAIIEB CENTER
1 PM TNUNSII Y, JUl
T l l . a t'n"eatn'anMtsst'n'n'nnnntnnn
WIN FREE MARTINA MCBRInEVIP TICKETS ANn PASSES Enter to WIN FREE VIP Tickets, VIP Parking and TICKETS to the Fair!
4—'
Visit www.bendbulletin.comNIPtickets and enter to win! No Purchase required. By entering you will automatically be added to The Bulletin's Daily Headline and Sneek Peeke-mail list. You can opt out of the list at any time. Winners will be drawn on July1, 2015. All winners will be notified by e-mail only. Winners will have 24 hours to respond to their winning email notice or a new winner will be drawn. No purchase neccessary. E-mail list will not be sold. Ten winners will receive VIP tickets, Fair Entry and VIP parking. orty winners will receiv IP tickets. Tickets have no cash value Winners are randoml I t d f
Fair Tickets andSeasonPassesavailadle online at deschntesconntIItair.strangertickets.com Z u l p 8 8 t h t h r o u ~ h , A u ~ u s t R n cN. C e l e b r a t i n g S S V e a r s O f J a xn P a c k e ck F u n !
ll
TheBulted
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
musie
• The longtime punk rockerand solo artist will perform Thursdayat McMenamins By Brian McElhiney
cording to Doe, the band's bassist and
The Bulletin
co-frontman, "Breathless" was never
here's a reason why Paul Shaffer rehearsed, and it threw the show's proand his band would always ac- ducers for a loop. "In between the rehearsal and the company the musical guests on David Letterman's show, starting in the show, Exene (Cervenka, co-frontwom'80s. According to John Doe, it's all X's an) said, 'I'm not too comfortable, not
T fault.
the cameramen were completely freaking out. We were like, it's 1983 ... who
cares? After that, all the musical artists have to play with Paul Shaffer's band. We messed them up." X, along with Doe and his many side projects, wound up as frequent guests
too confident with this song,'" Doe said
on Letterman's shows over the years.
The Southern California punk group recently from his home near Oakland, X, part of the first wave of the genre in California. "And rather than saying,
Doe performed on the show for the last
the late '70s, first played on "Late Night
'Oh, let's work on it; it'll be fine, you're
with David Letterman" on NBC in 1983. so great' — rather than just reassuring The band performed two songs — "Hot her, I said, 'OK, let's just do a different song.' So we did, and it was a totally difHouse" and "Breathless" (this was back when bands performed two ferent amount of time — they had the numbers on the show). But acshow timed out a certain way, and
Ifyou go What: JohnDoe,withJesseDayton When:7 p.m. Thursday Where:McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend Cast:Free Contact:www.mcmenamins.com
time in June last year in support of his best-of compilation, 2014's "The Best of John Doe: This Far." He'll be at McMenamins Old St. Francis School with
Dayton's touring band will support Doe, alongside what he calls his "secret weapon," singer Cindy Wasserman.
country rocker Jesse Dayton on Thursday night to kick off the final, West
ebrationof Doe's solo career,he's not
Coast leg of touring behind that record.
Continued Page 5
While the show and tour are in celafraid of a little X.
John Doe will perform at McMenamins in Bend on Thursday at 7 p.m. Submitted photo
•$
music
PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE
7
• After someunusually easy gigs,Genders is preparedfor the hard work of touring
pr g'
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
7
gCar' g
aq
t<
By Ben Salmon For The Bulletin
or lots of bands, a first full
F
tour of t h e U n ited States
involves long van rides to small venues in unfamiliar towns, playing to meager audiences, occasionally dealing with shady promoters, and sleeping in cheap motels,on floors,orw orse.
So Genders' first national tour was a really good one, relatively speaking: The Portland-based quartet was invited by Idaho indie rock giants Built to Spill to warm up its crowds at a slew of
shows across the country in late 2013.
The experience was amazing, but also gave Genders a false sense of life on tour, says guitarist Stephen Leisy. "You're getting paid every night. You're playing for a bunch of people. There's tons of food in the greenroom," he saysin atelephone interview. "It was a total
/ //
I
fantasy." That was driven home a few months l ater,
w h e n G e nders
toured again and returned to towns they'd played with Built to Spill to try to capitalize on what-
ever renown they'd generated. The tour was fun, Leisy says, but Genders kick off the Summer ConcertSeriesTuesday atCrow's Feet Commons in Bend. the band battled van problems and the shows weren't as well-at-
tended as hoped.
"We'd have ideas and they'd be
"It's hard to get people out to
a little crazy at first, and he would
shows in cities you've played once," he says. Genders has never played Bend, but that will change Tuesday when the band makes the
not want to explore them," Leisy
drive over the mountains to rock
the plaza outside Crow's Feet Commons (see "If you go"). Leisy will be joined onstage by singer/ guitarist Maggie Morris, drummer Katherine Paul and bassist Matt Hall, who is playing his final shows with band. Leisy, Morris and Hall started
says. "We just sort of realized that whenever we had those weird
ideas, that's when we were having the most fun." In late 2013, Genders released
its debut album, "Get Lost," which isn't particularly weird, but it does
Ifyou go What:Genders, with BDYBAG When:6 p.m. Tuesday Cost:Free Where:Crow's FeetCommons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend Contact:www.crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-728-0066
fit snugly into the canon of Pacific Northwest indie rock, setting Morris' melancholy melodies against a mosaic of electric guitar is working on a follow-up. Afcrunch and serrated psychedelia. ter the band got home from that
Submitted phot
group (though, as noted, he will play in Bend). Eventually, everyone took some time away from Genders to relax and recharge,
Leisy says. "I think we'd been kind of burn-
second, smaller and more chal-
thing about the arc of success or
whatever you want to call it, behitting a spot where it was hard to cause we had that (Built to Spill) make everybodyhappy.Itseemed tour and we played a show with a little stressful," he says. "Some- Alt-J (in Portland) and we played times really all you need, espe- some shows with The Helio Seing ourselves out and ... we were
cially with creative stuff, is just to relax a little bit. It's a lot easier to
create that way." I t w orked. B ack
from t h e
break, the band brought in Toby Genders in 2012 after the dissolu- abashed pop hooks but also en- lenging tour, its members got day Tanabe to play bass and has betion of their previous band, Youth, shrouded with an overcast vibe; it jobs and had a tough time sched- gun working on songs to fill out which crumbled under singer/gui- is obvious why Built to Spill took a uling band activities. Hall took a a sophomore full-length. The tarist Elec Morin's airtight artistic liking to this band. teaching gig outside Portland and guys from Portland's The Helio vision. A year and a half later, Genders eventually decided to leave the Sequenceare going to help 'em Its 12 songs are packed with un-
finish it. And Genders generally feels more ready to ride out the ups and downs of being a band, Leisy says. "We definitely learned some-
quence, and then it started to fiz-
zle and that's kind of around the time we got tired," he says. "So we definitely learned that, as a
band, you release something, cool things happen, and then you really haveto knuckle down and get to work again." — Reporter: bsalmon@ bendbulletin.com
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
OU
Y
1eve
musie
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 5
O~ e
FITMESS*1440 I
II *541-305-6757*
ou know you're doing something right in your David
•
a
•
I
I I I ' •
I •
•
I
Bowie tribute act when the
man himself appears alongside you
SEND,DRESDN
in a television commercial — and no
one watching it can tell who's who (see bendbulletin.com/music to see for yourself). Since 1994, David Brighton (he's even got the name for it) has staged
•
his Bowie tribute, Space Oddity,
JUNE 19-21, 2015
in venues across the country and world. He's got the look, from the alien-weird-cool of "Ziggy Stardust" to the slick "Let's Dance" disco era, and his shows cover it all. As if Bow-
H
Photo submitted
Space Oddity: David Brighton's Tribute to David Bowie will be at the Tower Theatre Saturday night. likes of When We Were Fab and the
original cast of "Beatlemania."
From Page 3 In fact, you can fully expect him
in the past decade or so.
McMenamins. "I love the X,N Doe said. "I think I
started doing that (playing X songs), oh, maybe 15-plus years ago. I saw a couple of solo people — maybe Paul Westerberg, I don't know who else — and they did a lot of solo material, and then they did some band stuff. (I thought), ohyeah, that's such a great song, and I know all the words to that one."
He doesn't do much X, only three or four songs, considering the band does still tour. In fact, almost im-
mediately after his solo tour wraps June 28 in Ventura, California, Doe will join the rest of X — Cervenka,
guitarist Billy Zoom and drummer D.J. Bonebrake — for a run of shows across the country.
To many, Doe is probably still best known for his punk rock with X. But as Doe points out, he's released
m ore solo recordsthan X records at this point. Starting with his solo debut, 1990's "Meet John Doe," he's re-
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"A lot of the songs exist in their
own small world," Doe said. "A lot of The album's 21 tracks span his en- basic(elements) like water, light, sun." tire career, and include some songs Along with his busy touring and Doe said he feels deserved a second recording schedule, Doe is also chance, including the spaced-out working on a book set for publica"Sueltame"and "Catch Me." tion in 2016 that will chronicle the "It was hard, hard to pick out of early Calforniapunk rock scene some 90-some songs,what are the through the eyes of its key players, ones that are not just the best, but including essays from Henry Rollones that maybe didn't get as much ins, Cervenka, Jane Wiedlin of the notice as I thought they should have Go-Gos and Doe himself. or could have, and how to balance Looking back on the scene, X's D it out, Doe said. "Luckily, I had the music seems to stand out — melodformat of two LPs to help decide se- ic, with Doe and Cervanka's off-kilquencing and things like that." ter harmonies, influenced in equal Some different songs have been measure by '60s and roots rock and making appearances in Doe's live the Ramones. But before hardcore sets due to the compilation, such as took over in the '80s, Doe said, the "Never Enough" and "Forever For punk scene in L.A. was far more exYou." He's also been road-testing perimental, leading to bands such as some new material for a new album the Weirdos, the Avengers and X. "A lot of the other bands — a lot he estimates will be released next of the other musicians — had nevyear. Doe has always defied catego- er played, so they thought, 'Cool, rization musically, from the m e- punk rock means you can just do lodic punk of X, to his excursions anything; count me in,'" Doe said. Hence, Doe's best-of compilation.
into roots rock and what's become known as "alternative country" to-
day, to the rockabilly sound of his leased eight albums under his name most recent record, 2011's "Keepalong with collaborations with the
day; $23, $33, $53reserved seating, plus fees(tickets can be purchased
at website below); Tower Theatre, Tower Theatre on Saturday night. 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towSpace Oddity: David Brighton's ertheatre.org.
Tribute to David Bowie;8 p.m. Satur-
from his first band's back catalog at
A,ILG - WUZTKDI)IRQQ
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He'll bring Bowie to life at the
a killer George Harrison with the
to pull out a handful of old favorites
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ie's implied endorsement in the Vit-
tel Mineral Water ads isn't enough, Brighton has appeared on bills with Devo, Kenny Loggins and Elton John, to name just a few. Allthis lookalike hype wouldmean nothing if Brighton didn't have the pipes to match, but he does, in spades. And he's helped along by a stellar backing band that nails the gritty glam rockers,tenderballads andeven the thumping Queen collaboration "Under Pressure" with equal aplomb. As an aside, Brighton also does
I
MUSIC FESTIVAL
ere He describes his new music as
Sadies and Jill Sobule, most of those "more sparse"and "elemental."
CONCERT SERIES HEALTHQ
FAMlLLI
"Which I totally support. That's one
of the main things about rock 'n' roll: It represents freedom; you can
IllvlPHITH EITEII
do whatever you want." — Reporter: 541-617-7814, bmcelhiney@bendbulletin.com
BendConcerts.com
musie
PAGE 6 + GO! MAGAZINE I
I
I
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
I
June19 —The Thermnls(indie rock) at The Bite of Bend,www. biteofbend.com. June19 —Mike G endLeft Brain(hip-hop),Domino Room, Bend, www.mindgone.net. June19 —Sam Outlaw(classic country),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.
com.
June 20 —CommonKings (reggae-rock) at The Bite of Bend,www.biteofbend.com. June 19-21 —Rusted Root, The Motet and ALO at 4Peaks Music Festival (jams), Tumalo, www.4peaksmusic.com. June 21 —BrokenDownGuitars, Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. June 23 —ShadyElders(indie rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub. com. June 24 —Polecat (bluegrass) at Pickin' & Paddlin',Tumalo Creek Kayak & Canoe, Bend, www.tumalocreek.com. June 24 —The Red Paintings (art rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.
r '»
com.
June 24 —Eric Taylor (Southern singer-songwriter),Bend house concert, call or text Jim Holmes at (541) 306-8784 or email Susan Holmes at sue©denicefranke. com for more information. June 25 —Willie Nelson and Alison Krauss &Union Station (country),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www. bendconcerts.com. June 25 —This Frontier Needs Heroes (Americana),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. June 26 —Motopony(electro-
pop),Domino Room,Bend,
www.redlightpro.com. June 27 —Steve Earle & The Dukes (roots-rock), Century Center, Bend, www. subaruofbendout sidegames.com. June 27 —Central Oregon Metalfest (horns up),Third Street Pub, Bend, 541-306-3017. June 27 —KoolStuff Katie (garage-pop),The Astro Lounge, Bend, www.astroloungebend.
com.
June 28 —Jessica Hernandez & The Deltas (rock),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. June 28 —Tubaluba (N'ewlins funk),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www. bendconcerts.com.
Steel Pulse brings
Hounds, a trio (Nicholas DelDrago, Dan Larsson and Dan Fogerty) whose sound draws from
reggae toMidtown
the past few decades of blues,
For years,a steady trickle of
rock 'n' roll, R&B and soul. They'll
reggae bands — both good and bad — have toured through Central Oregon. But rarely does a band the size and stature of Steel Pulse stop and baptize our little burg in reggae's gentle bounce. Toots & the Maytals,maybe? Ziggy Marley,perhaps? Snoop Lion'? (Just kidding.) Point is, Steel Pulse's show Thursday at the Midtown Ball-
be a perfect fit for tonight's shin-
dig, which is also a celebration of local radio station 98.3 FM The Twins' 25th anniversary. Here's the rest of the Party on
I
—:4
flOW:
'I
room is a big deal for local lovers of reggae. For four decades, the Pulse has been pumping out is-
I
June 19 — Mango Stew June 26 — Naked Gypsies July 3 — Bomberos
I
July 10 — Five Pint Mary
July 17 — Jones Road July 24 — Soul Benders
To dig in for yourself, visit www. steelpulse.com. section of Birmingham, England, Steel Pulse, with Neil Mangicaro that gave the band's 1978 classic & The Current, DJ Raider and The "Handsworth Revolution" album Colonel;9 p.m. Thursday, doors its name. open 8 p.m.; $27 plusfees in adland vibes rooted not in Jamaica, but in Handsworth, the diverse
Since, Steel Pulse has put out a
vance (ticket outlets listed at the
dozen or so studio albums, won link below), $30 atthe door; Midone Grammy award, played all town Ballroom, 51 NW Greenover the world and generally es- wood Ave., Bend; www.randomtablished itself as one of Britain's presents.com. — Ben Salmon, For The Bulletin finest reggae bands. Make no
m i stake, however:
This is not a cheap knock-off of Jamaica's signature sound. From
half a world away, Steel Pulse has always mined the gritty style and politically minded themes of tra-
the Patio schedule, as it stands
Country Catering
kicks offpatio parties One o f
th e b est —
and
best-smelling! — indicators that
ditional Jamaican roots-reggae. summer has arrived in Central
Oregon is the sound of live music and thearoma of fine barbecue wafting through the air around Southeast Ninth Street and Wil-
son Avenue on Friday nights. Yes, folks, it is time for Country Catering's Party on the Patio to
come to life again and make that decidedly non-westside intersection one of the most popular gath-
July 31 — Jackie Barrett Aug. 7 — Cinder Blue Aug. 14 — Mango Stew Aug. 21 — 2nd Hand Soldiers Aug 28 — Familiar Souls Sept. 4 — Patrimony
Sept. 11 — Jones Road Sept. 18 — Friends of Lenny Sept. 25 — Precious Byrd Visit the website below and
ering spots in Bend. Foryears now, click "Party on the Patio" (under Party on the Patio has been an "The Deli") to find links to all the oasis of fun times in a quasi-indus- bands. trial section of ourtown's east side, Party on the Patio with The offering all-you-can-eat barbecue Rock Hounds; 4: 30-8tonight;free; (for $11.95) and free live music ev- Country Catering, 900 SE Wilson ery Friday night all summer long. Ave., Bend; www.bendcatering. This year's series kicks off com or 541-383-5014. tonight with Bend's The Rock
— Ben Salmon, For The Bulletin
musie
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 7
music news
I
IINPHITH EITER DOBBbleBrOtherS —LesSchwab Amphitheater's 2015 season got off to a strong start in late May,and it continues Tuesday with classic-rock hit-makers the Doobie Brothers. For decades, theDoobieshavebeenaregularpresenceonpopular and classic rock radio, thanks to enduring hits like "Listen to the Music," "China Grove," "Black Water" and "Takin' It to the Streets." And, of course, their biggest hit with Michael McDonald on leadvocals, 1979's "What A Fool Believes," is one of humankind's great cultural accomplishments, right up there with Wagner's Ring Cycle, Michelangelo's work on theceiling of the Sistine Chapel, Newton's"Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica" and CoolRanchDoritos. The Doobies play the Schwab (344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend) at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. Gatesopenat5 p.m.and PatSimmons Jr.opens.Tickets are $38 (general) and $79 (reserved), plus fees, available at The Ticket Mill (541-318-5457) in Bend oronline at www.bendconcerts.com.
PrOmOter SpOtlight — Let's take asecond to shout out John Davis, local musician and longtime local mover-and-shaker on the Bendmusic scenewho is "killing it," as the kids (lamentably) say, on theshow-promotion front through his company RedLight Productions. The guyco-promoted Thursday night's Orgone show, later this month he's got a couple of good indie-rock shows (Motopony at the Domino RoomJune 26, Kool Stuff Katie at the Astro June27) coming to town, and he's the manbehind AndrewW.K.'s July1 concert at the Domino Room. He's busy this weekend, too, with Bendregulars The Quick & EasyBoys ($7, 10 p.m.) tonight and rising L.A. synthrock band TheEiffels (free, 10 p.m.) Saturday night, both at the Astro (939 NWBond St., Bend). The Eiffels sound like a moodier, slightly more unkempt Phoenix; check themout at www. theeiffels.com. And keep up with all of Red Light's activities at www.redlightpro.com.
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THIS
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— Ben Salmon, ForTheBulletin
WIXAVAIL NOWA AW DOOR
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Supersuckersplay
band explored in the mid-'90s. He al" Marty Chandler and drummer last appeared in Bend on the tour for "Captain" Chris Von Streicher joinVolcanic Theatre Pub his 2013 solo album "The Value of ing Spaghetti and fellow co-foundSelf-proclaimed "greatest rock 'n' Nothing." ing guitarist Dan "Thunder" Bolton, roll band in the world" the SuperBut there's nothing country are on the road this summer. They suckers (though you'd never guess about last year's "Get the Hell," the kicked things off in Long Beach, it by their name) have had a rough band's first studio set in six years. California, on June 7, and will be at run of things since their 2008 album This is classic 'Suckers, full of slea- the Volcanic Theatre Pub in Bend "Get it Together." zy riffs and sleazier lyrics (even the on Wednesday. Local cowpunkers With the departures of longtime Depeche Mode cover, "Never Let Harley Bourbon are slated to open. manager Chris Neal and founding Me Down Again," rocks) that call Supersuckers, with Harley Bourguitarist Montrose Heathman short- to mind the 1999 album "The Evil bon; 9p.m. Wednesday, doors open ly after the album's release, the band Powers of Rock 'N' Roll" or the 1992 8p.m.; $15in advance at www bendwent on hiatus. Lead vocalist and bassist Eddie
debut "The Smoke of Hell." It's prob-
deeper into the country sounds his
attle band, with new guitarist "Met-
ticket.com, $20 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatre-
ably no coincidence that "hell" apSpaghetti released a solo album, pears in both album titles. 2011's "Sundowner," which delved Originally from Tucson, the Se- pub.com.
— Brian McElttiney
KMAR ITHIWEIROAL MIW IAELFRAHTI BEHHARPERW ILG OO EATHGABFORGO TIEWILLIE
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PAGE 8 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at Q<bendbulletin.comlevents. CELEBRATINGPETESEEGERAND THE POWER OFSONG: Comefor an informal celebration of the life and music of Pete Seeger, including performance, singalongs and stories; 1:30 p.m.; Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; 541-385-3908. BOBBY LINDSTROM AND EDSHARLET: Rockand blues; 4 p.m.;10 Barrel Brew Pub, 1135 NWGalveston St., Bend; 541-678-5228. THE RUGS:Rock; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703.
FRIDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; 12 p.m.; FatTuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. THE ROCKHOUNDS:Classicrock;4:30 p.m.; Country Catering Co., 900 SE Wilson Ave., Bend; 541-383-5014. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Portland bluegrass and folk trio performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. MARK RANSOM:Folk-pop;6:30 p.m.; Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend; 541-385-3333. PATTHOMAS:Country; 7 p.m.; Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. RENO ANDCINDY HOLLER:Pop;7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com or 541-548-4220. COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 7 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 845 NW Delaware Ave., Bend; 541-647-2198. DAVE ANDMELODY HILL:7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendblacksmith.com or 541-318-0588. HIGHWAY 97: Rock 'n' roll; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; www.facebook.com/ TheHWY97Band or 562-810-1818. HOBBSTHEBAND: Blues-rock; 8 p.m.; $5; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-4979. THE RIVERPIGS:Americana and rock 'n' roll; 8:30 p.m.; Kelly D's Sports Bar 8 Grill, 1012 SE Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-306-0797. THE SUBSTITUTES:Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. DJ LYFE:Electronica; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949.
SATURDAY MARK RANSOM:Folk-pop; 6 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 845 NW Delaware Ave., Bend; 541-647-2198. COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 6:30 p.m.; Bend Brewing Company,1019 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-383-1599.
Submitted photo
Scratchdog Stringband, a bluegrass-folk band from Portland, plays two gigs in the area this week: Friday at 6 p.m. at Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards in Terrebonne and Saturday at 7 p.m. at Broken Top Bottle Shop in Bend. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Americana and bluegrass trio from Portland performs; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. PATTHOMAS:Country;7 p.m.;Tumalo Feed Co., 64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-382-2202. BURNIN'MOONLIGHT: Bluegrass, blues and swing; 7 p.m.; The Life Line Taphouse, 249 NWSixth St., Redmond; 541-306-0797. GREGG DONNELLY: 7 p.m .;portello winecafe, 2754 NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www.portellowinecafe.com or 541-385-1777. RENO ANDCINDY HOLLER: Pop;7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com or 541-548-4220. HIGHWAY 97: Rock 'n' roll; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; www.facebook.com/ TheHWY97Band or 562-810-1818. BOYLESQUE SHOW: Featuring a performance of the show "Cocked and Loaded"; 8 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
HOBBSTHEBAND: Blues-rock; 8 p.m.; $5; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-4979. THE SUBSTITUTES:Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. LIKE AROCKET:The American roots band performs; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. THE EIFFELS:The indie band from Los Angeles performs;10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. THE ROCKYHORROR PICTURE SHOW: The cult-classic musical is presented; 11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-410-0975.
SUNDAY COYOTEWILLOW:Chamber-folk; 10 a.m.; Chow Bend, 1110 NWNewport Ave., Bend; 541-728-0256. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAY JAM:All ages welcome, listen and dance;1 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell Butte; 408-858-9437.
JOHN CRAIGIE HOUSE CONCERT: The indie-folk singer-songwriter performs, with Bill Valenti, 7 p.m. concert, 6 p.m. potluck/social; $15$20; House Concerts in the Glen,1019 NW Stannium Road, Bend; www. houseconcertsintheglen.com/rsvp.html or 541-480-8830. DJ SORSKI:House; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949.
MOMDAY THE STUPIDDAIKINI: The California indie-punk band performs; 9:30 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; 12 p.m.; FatTuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. GENDERS!:The Portland rock and roll band performs, with BDY BAG; 6p.m.; Crow'sFeetCommons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066. MICHELLEVANHANDEL:Jazz; 6 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. COYOTEWILLOW:Chamber-folk; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. GRACEASKEW:The Voice finalist and country-blues singer performs; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
WEDNESDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rock and blues;
12 p.m.; FatTuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. AMERICAN SONGBOOK: Jazz; 6 p.m.; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-604-6055. JP HARRIS8tTHETOUGH CHOICES: The country band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins or 541-382-5174. SUPERSUCKERS:The rock 'n' roll band from Seattle performs, with Harley Bourbon; 9 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rock and blues; 12 p.m.; FatTuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. CINDERBLUE:Americana and rock 'n' roll; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. JUST US:Rock; 7 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. RHYTHM DRAGONS:The rockabilly band from Arizona performs, with Big Evil; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. FUNK THIS!:Featuring an evening of Nu:Disco, with DJ RrlTime and Mark 8 Matt; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. DJ HARLOW:9 p.m .;TheAstro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. STEEL PULSE:The reggae-roots band from the United Kingdom performs, with Neil Mangicaro 8 the Current, DJ Raider and The Colonel; 9 p.m., doorsopen at8 p.m .;$27 plus fees in advance, $30 at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-388-8111. • SUBMITANEVENTby visiting bendbulletin.com/ events ahd clicking "+ Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 54t-3830351 or email communitylife@bendbulletin.oom.
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
musie reviews Spotlight: Muse
Tamia
key modulations, gauzy slow Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; jams and hypermainstream bal- www.ticketswest.com.
"LOVE LIFE" on
lads — maintains the tradition. — Ben Ratliff,
Tamia's new album is "Sandwich
New York Times
Def Jam Recordings The
att e ntion-getter
and a Soda."For its first 30 sec-
— Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times
Faith No More
onds — a lot of real estate on a "SOL INVICTUS" Major Lazer "PEACE IS THE MISSION" track that's only three minutes, Reclamation Recordings /Ipe15 seconds long — she whispers Mad Decent cac Recordings over the intertwining patterns A fter e n during t h e du l l F aith No More first hit t h e of two electric basses, played by est tracks on Major Lazer's charts with "Epic" at the dawn of real fingers with real hesitations
new album, "Peace Is the Mis-
gences from Rush, Queensryche
and stickiness; one has the tone sion," it's sometimes tough to ofanundergreasedhinge. r emember that t h ere w a s a They sound close-up time when its f oundand untreated, puncer, superstar producer tuated by short chord Diplo, was awesome. stabs from an organ, As a rising tastemakwhich seems far away er in the early '00s with and softened by reverb. deep crates and great The song makes you taste, the artist born think about distances. Wesley Pentz made his Tamia has one of the name on the East Coast
and 30 Seconds to Mars. At their
finest voices in the last
when his Hollertronix
(Warner Bros. Records)
best,concept albums surprise.
Put on your headphones and
Mastodon's "Leviathan" master-
20 years of R&B. (She's 40 now, and was diag-
strap them onto your ears with a belt. Don't text, talk, Snapchat, Vine or Tindr for the next 53 minutes. Submit to a swirl of clumsy
fully retold "Moby Dick." Norwegian black metal band Emperor's
nosed w it h
brutal "Prometheus: The Discipline of Fire and Demise" was set
been public and instruc-
parties soundtracked a buzzing New York musical revival. Through mixtapes such as "Never Scared" and "T5
Hans PeterI Submitted Photo
Britsh art rock band Muse's new concept album, "Drones," is aptly named.
Muse "DRONES"
metaphors and a been-there-do- amid the birth of fire. ne-that narrative and become one Pretentious? Perhaps, but the with "Drones," the cerer eal crime here i s bral new concept album blandness and predictby the British art rock ability. "Drones" is a band Muse. simple story that reads The contemporary like a failed short story rock equivalent of an idea from Sci-Fi 101. Andrew Lloyd Webber The worst part of "Drones" is how flat it production, "Drones" pits man against the sounds in the hands of Machine, exploring mind con- veteran producer Robert "Mutt" trol through heavy-handed lyrics Lange. Muse are musician's muabout militarism, "men in cloaks," sicians, rightfully lauded for their a "CIA babe" and rebellion. As skills and creatively labyrinthic such, it addresses ideas better ex- structures. plored in classic works like AldGiven the right fuel, "Drones" ous Huxley's "Brave New World," might have charged right up. UnGeorge Orwell's "1984" and Mike fortunately, Muse's efforts can Judge's "Idiocracy." barely get off the ground and Metal concept albums are a wouldn't survive a war against a dime a dozen. Early templates fly swatter. such as Yes' "Tales From Topo-
graphic Oceans" begat later indul-
— Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times
m u l t iple
sclerosis in 2003; she's tive about it.) She can inflate her light mezzo-soprano to belting
album in 18 years, has landed atop Billboard's Top 200 with
a bloody, pulpy bullet. Their avant-garde mix of hard raprock and prog — combined with singer Mike Patton's booming, operatic voice and incendiary lyrics — doesn't feel right in the same list with, say, the sound track to "Pitch Perfect 2." Yet here's "Sol Invictus": pulsating,
dramatic, ferocious, and eerily aggressive. Same as it ever was. What makes "Sol Invictus"
the DJ proved his cu-
so, um, epic? Where Patton has had a career's worth of personal projects — e.g., Tomahawk, Fantomas, Peeping Tom, John Zorn
ratorial know-how as
sessions — this album sounds like
New York was rolling
a band work, with big melodies,
Soul Sessions, Vol. 2,"
level and hide the effort involved. But here, with the microphone at close
the MTV '80s. So it's crazy that "Sol Invictus," the band's first
to the S t rokes, DFA raginglypreciserhythms, andfreRecords, post - d is- netic complexity. Faith No More co and o l d L i quid 2015 don't eschew manic theatri-
range, she underper-
Liquid jams with equal glee. cality ("From the Dead"), nor do The third studio album from they shun pop (the contagiously going on — layers of keyboards Major Lazer, Diplo's project in- paranoid "Separation Anxiety") and vocals, buried loops of cries spired byJamaican dancehall or slick riffing ("Matador"). But
forms. And that's mildly interesting, but there's so much else and shouts, the couplet "If you
music, features a few hot tracks
wanna ride these curves/ hop in your Chevy Nova."
and a few so tepid that we need out, and Patton joins in with a will reminders about what made on hard-core numbers such as
Seduction is b eing enacted
D iplo interesting in
there's noise and skronk through-
t h e f i r st the jack-hammering eSuperhero."
Odd-rock's most gorgeous voice since Bowie sounds as though it's the charts,it's become an area but most seem so transparent- found a comfortable home among for radical imagination, by sing- ly designed for cheesy poolside old friends. ers like Tinashe, SZA and Dawn summer anthem consumption ON TOUR: September 12here, but so is conservatism. As place. The best steer furthest R&B has grown less popular on away from commercial pop,
Richard. But reinvention isn't ex-
that they're hard to take seri-
Mad Decent Block Party; Cuth-
citing unless there's something ously as creative endeavors. bert A mphitheater, Eugene; existing to reinvent. A record like They're more like aural content. www.ticketswest.com. this — with grown-up passions — A.D. Amorosi, ON TOUR: September 12"Mad Decent Block Party"; and accountable moods, stirring The Philadelphia Inquirer
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V INYI -D V D - R U D I O E Q U I P M E N T N EW R E L E R S E S , SPE C IB I O R D E R S , C ON C E R T T I C K E T S Downtown Bend For Over 19 Years St Counting t • •
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PAGE 10 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
events
1
'euu
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin file photo
Andy Easterly wrestles a steer at the 2012 Sisters Rodeo. In its 75th year, the rodeo has several performances this weekend.
• And hold on tight; it's time for the SistersRodeoto celebrate its 75th year By David Jasper
On Sunday, the B uckaroo Breakfast will be served from 7-11
last minute — local people — to know what the weather's going to be like before they buy tickets. deo will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday's That's kind of a mistake," she said, rodeo will feature a fly-over by two laughing. vintage planes, a P-51 Mustang It is a mistake this year. The and a Skyraider. downtown Sisters ticket office Therearesome 550 competitors closed Thursday. An y t i c k ets in this year's rodeo and Xtreme that remain go on sale at the gate Bulls competition. two hours before each rodeo The stands also see high atten- performance. "I keep getting emails from peodance, with visitors coming from points as far away as Europe and ple saying, 'I can't get through the Asia, Malone said. (ticket hotline),' and I'm kind of "It's really not unusual to have saying, 'Well, you should've tried in around 10 foreign families," she April,'" Malone said Wednesday. sard. The odds of sidling up and getTickets have been selling "gang- ting a ticket at the gate on Saturbusters," she said. Event organiz- day are "very,very slim,"she said. ers in Central Oregon often say "Last year we sold so many standpeople around here wait to the last ing-room tickets and people still minute to purchase tickets, and ended up being turned away. We Malone is one of those who lament just couldn't pack any more in."
a.m., with the cowboy church ser-
that fact.
rodeo action takes place tonight
The Bulletin
through Sunday; tonight's rodeo on't ask Sisters Rodeo's gets underway at 7 p.m. (see "If Bonnie Malone, the rodeo you go"). board's secretary and meEach rodeo performance bedia relations wrangler, to tell you gins with a team bronc riding
D
which disciplines tend to be crowd favorites. She may tell you, "That's not
competition.
really nice, David." (Helps if your name is David.) But then she'll helpfully toss in that barrel racing really gets the crowd revved up and involved. The bulls are popular too, she adds. Team ropers as well. Yes, the Biggest Little Show in the World is back this weekend, with barrel racing, bronc riding, bull riding, team roping and more. The Sisters Rodeo kicked off
oratethe rodeo's 75th year. On Saturday morning, grand marshal R.L. Garrigus will be joined at the parade by some 33 former Sisters Rodeo queens, including 1944 queen Georgia Gallagher, whose father was one of the rodeo's founders. The parade will be fol-
earlier this week, but the main
vice at 9, after which the final ro-
Malone saidthere are several special events in store to commem-
lowed by the rodeo, at 1 and 7 p.m.
"A lot of people do wait to the
— Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
Ifyou go What:Sisters Rodeo When: Today — 7 p.m. rodeo Saturday — 9:30 a.m. parade;1 and7p.m. rodeo Sunday— Buckaroo breakfast 7-11a.m.; cowboy church service 9 a.m.; rodeo 1 p.m. Where:Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S.Highway 20 Cost:General admission $14, kids12 andyounger admitted free today; $14-$20 Saturday; $12-$17Sunday; box seats $32 if available Contact:www.sistersrodeo.com or 541-5490121
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 1
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
arts
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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Susan Benson, playing Ida, left, and RachelDeegan, playing Lucille, rehearse ascene for "TheCemetery Club" at 2ndStreet Theater last week. The comedyopens tonight at the Bendplayhouse.
• 2nd Street Theaterbrings backits production of 'The Cemetery Club' By David Jasper
sweet-tempered Ida and Rachel
The Bulletin
t's been six years since 2nd
Deegan as the life of the party, Lucille. The trio is completed by
Street Theater's previous pro-
Gloria Anderson, as the critical,
duction of " The Cemetery Club," a humor- and pathos-filled
faultfinding Doris (there's one in every crowd).
t
comedy about three Jewish wid-
ows, as well as life, death and the veryhuman need to move
If you didn't see it last time,
a fur coat, boasting of the great price she paid for it and showing signs of losing her resolve for their Set in Forest Hills, Queens, in monthly graveside visits. the fall, the action is divided beDoris is running late despite it tween Ida's apartment and the being a big day in her post-Abe cemetery, to which they go month- life. ly to visit their deceased husbands. A comical debate as to when The three widows have formed a close bond, but their little club is
yet the title of the play or its sub- also a constant reminder of death ject matter ring bells, it was also and what it's taken from them. forward. adapted into a 1993 film of the The play opens on the fourth Reprising their roles in the Ivan same name, which starred Ellen anniversary of Doris' husband Menchell play are Susan Benson Burstyn, Olympia Dukakis and Abe's death. Lucille shows up to Ida's apartment in a bargain of (who also directs, again) as the Diane Ladd.
their husbands died turns into a
bit of a "Who's on First" type of exchange. Doris: "Murray. Ida's Murray. He died a year before your Harry." Lucille: "Murray died the year before Harry?" Continued next page
Ifyou go What:"TheCemeteryClub" When:Opens 7:30tonight with6:30p.m.champagne reception; additional shows 7:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday, through June27 Where:2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend Cost:$19 adults, $16 students and seniors Contact:541-312-9626
arts
PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
unn
in '
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
enin in
en
By David Jasper The Bulletin
mong the many useful things one learns in "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum" is just how well "tunics" rhymes with"eunuchs."
A
«r
And that's just in the opening
)l
number of Cascades Theatrical Co.'s final show of the 2014-15 season. The fast-paced,farcical
Stephen Sondheim musical opens with a dessert reception tonight at CTC's Cascades Theatre (see "If
yougo"). With a book by Larry Gelbart and Burt Shevelove, the Tony
Award-winning show takes inspiration from the comic works of an actual ancient Roman playwright, Plautus.
Set during the Nero administration, Pseudolus (played by Russ Seaton) is a resourceful, crafty-asa-fox slave who endeavors to gain his freedom, as one does.
To that end, Pseudolus encourages his love-struck master, Hero, to be a trendsetter and set him free
if and when he helps Hero win the hand of the beautiful virgin next
door, Philia (Stephanie Crespo). The prospect of gaining his freedom makes Pseudolus downright Joe Kline/The Bulletin giddy — at the idea of voting so Castmembers rehearse ascenefrom "A Funny Thing Happened on theWa ytothe Forum" lastweekatCascades Theatre in Bend. The farcical Sondconscientiously he may even do it heim musical opens tonight and runs through June 27. twice, writing poetry, holding his head high — though the thought of no longer having a roof and three coming in September from Stage incredible." day-Saturday, 2 p.m. Sunday, A four-piece live band will promeals provided for him briefly Right Productions and the Tower through June 27 giveshimpause. TheatreFoundation,an upcoming vide the music, under the direction What:"A FunnyThing Happened Philia, though, has already Where:CascadesTheatre, 148 NW production of "Peter Pan" from of Ben Larson. on the Way to theForum" Thoroughly Modern Productions "I just hope everybody gets a been sold t o M i l e s G l oriosus Greenwood Ave., Bend When:Opens7:30 tonight with (Evan Smith), and hijinks ensue and OperaBend's recent staging of chance to see it because I think it Cost:$20, $16 seniors, $13 stu6:30 p.m. dessert reception; — through blackmail, pick-pock"Into the Woods." is the foundation of Broadway. It's additional shows 7:30 p.m. Thurs- dents "(It's) exciting, because I think a very early Sondheim, but yet eted books of potions, digs at the Contact:541-389-0803 Greeks, mistaken identity, and theater begets theater, but that you can see where he was coming
Ifyou go
other twists and turns.
"It's ultimately a love story and Though over 50 years old, "A De Grosse said t h a t s h e's Funny Thing Happened on the a class struggle, so all those issues thrilled with her cast, especialWay to the Forum" is a timeless still resonate, they just happen to ly given the proliferation of area show, said director Deb De Grosse. resonate in a musical," she said. musicals, induding n "Avenue Q,"
From previous page Doris: " Yeah. Abe died tw o years before Murray." Eh, it works better said aloud
quickly by talented actors. Doris is so devoted to the lov-
ing memory of her husband that she gripes about the landscaping around his grave site, and is considering actually holding a seance so she can communicate with him in the great beyond.
"You're married until death do you part," Lucille reminds her, adding, "The only thing I'd want to ask Murray is if maybe there's a bank account somewhere he for-
but it's an odd choice tone-wise. Sam (Ken McClintock), seen
got to tell me about, you know'?"
of widows in the vicinity of Forest
Doris dials up her tsk-tsking personality even more when
Hills. Though his wife is buried
they're at the cemetery and along
from the point of view of Doris, is
a womanizing shark preying on lonely hearts of the growing roster there, Doris believes he goes to the
sometimes spreads things a little thin," De Grosse said. "I thank
from even in that time, and I just think ... it is timeless. It is for all
my lucky stars for the 18 talented times andplaces," De Grosse said. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, people we have on stage, because they're incredible. They're just djasper®bendbulletin.com
putting the past behind her and nock as Mildred, an interloper and quelling her loneliness. When he another obstacle to Sam and Ida's attempts to ask her out, Ida has to relationship. And while a new relakick her meddling friends out in tionship may form, old ones come order for it to happen. apart in perhaps unexpected ways. Their h e s itating, s t a rt-stop Overall, "The Cemetery Club" courtship is sweet to see happen, is a touching work that explores but it takes its toll on the Cemetery themes — grief, regret and loneliClub, whose other members don't ness — that don't often turn up in necessarily let the relationship comedies.
cemetery to pick up women. comes Sam the butcher — I've no But, for Ida, Sam's interestinher idea if calling him Sam the butch- is a good thing, and gets her think- take its natural course. er is a nod to "The Brady Bunch," ing about moving on with her life, The play also stars Vicki Pen-
— Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
arts
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13
ART E XH I B I T S ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring the works of 30 local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19, Sunriver; www.artistsgallerysunriver. com or 541-593-4382. THE ART OFALFRED DOLEZAL: Featuring oil paintings by the Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; 541-526-1185 or www.alfreddolezal.com. ATELIER 6000:"The A6 Collection," featuring contemporary prints and handmade books by various artists; through June 28; 389 SWScalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito; 1024 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www. canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. CIRCLE OFFRIENDS ART & ACADEMY: Featuring works by Debbie Parrish, Valerie Y. Smith and Lois Wilson; through June; 19889 8th St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. FRANKLINCROSSING:"OSU Cascades BFA Student Art," featuring art by graduating seniors from OSUCascades; through June 25550 NWFranklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. GHIGLIERI GALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: Featuring photography by Stacie Muller and Michael Wheeler; 961 NW Brooks St., Bend; info© highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HOOD AVENUEART:Featuringworks by Winnie Givot and Mitch and Michelle; through June 22; 357 W. HoodAve., Sisters; www.hoodavenueart.com or 541-719-1800. HOP N BEAN PIZZERIA: Featuring landscapeartby Larry Goodman; 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series with unique pieces; 1006 NWBond St., Bend;www.johnpauldesigns.com or 541-318-5645. KAREN BANDY DESIGN JEWELER: Featuring custom jewelry and paintings
Submitted photo
"The Unknown Trail," an oil painting by Janice Druian, will be on display in the lower level of the Betty Gray Gallery at the Sunriver Lodge through June 26. by Karen Bandy; through Aug. 31; 25 NW Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. LA MAGIEBAKERY& CAFE: Featuring landscape watercolors and pastels by Patricia W. Porter; 945 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. LUMIN ARTSTUDIOS: Featuring resident artists Alisha Vernon, McKenzie Mendel, Lisa Sipe and Natalie Mason; by appointment; 19855 Fourth St., Suite 103, Tumalo; www.luminartstudio.com. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: "Four Seasons," featuring work by Angela Mia De La Vegaand Romona Youngquist; through June 30; 869 NWWall St., Bend; www.mockingbird-gallery.com or 541-388-2107. THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring mixed media by Mary Medrano; through June24;10 NW MinnesotaAve.,Bend; 541-382-9398.
PATAGONIA@BEND: Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. PEAPOD GLASSGALLERY: Featuring oil paintings and sculptures by Lori Salisbury; 164 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-312-2828. QUILTWORKS:Featuring quilts by Grace Grinnell and The Notable Women Quilt Initiative; through July1; 926 NE Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. RED CHAIRGALLERY:Featuring art by Linda Swindle, Jacqueline Newbold and Joanie Callen; through June 29; 103 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Imagine That!," featuring the Third Annual Juried Art Exhibition; through July10; "Running with Horses," featuring work by Valerie T. Smith; through July in the silent reading room; 827 SWDeschutes Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1050. REDMOND SENIORCENTER: Featuring watercolor paintings by Caroline MacPherson; through June
20; 325 NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond; 541-548-6325. ROTUNDAGALLERY: "The 2015 Bachelor of Fine Arts Exhibition," featuring work by 2015 graduates; through June15; Robert L. Barber Library, Central Oregon Community College; 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7564. SAGEBRUSHERSARTSOCIETY: Featuring works by "Wednesday Painters"; through June 26; 117SW Roosevelt Ave., Bend; 541-617-0900. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:Featuring works by Kathleen Keliher; through June 27834 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0251. SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC LIBRARY: Featuring paintings of Sandra Neary and fabric arts by Karen Padrick; through June 27; 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVERRESORT LODGE BETTY
GRAY GALLERY: Featuring varied works by Janice Druian, Margot Thompson, Janet Webster; through June 26 in the upper gallery; Featuring art by Monica Setziol-Phillips and Gary Vincent; through June 27;17600 Center Drive, Sunriver; 541-382-9398. TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: "Peace Book," featuring work by Donn Curry; through June 30; 835 NWBond St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. townshendstea.com. TUMALO ARTCO.: Featuring works by Susan L. Higdon; through June 30; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO AND GALLERY:Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture and more; 222 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www.vistabonitaglass.
com. WERNER HOME STUDIO& GALLERY: Featuring painting, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541815-9800 for directions.
PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
rinks
Submitted photo
t/2 barrel brewing system. Craft Kitchen and Brewery opens Saturday in Bend. Brewer Michael McMahon plans to produce nine standard flagship beers and three rotating seasonals using a 3 A barrel-aged program is also underway at Craft, with a porter sitting in bourbon barrels and an IPA in pinot noir barrels.
• The only place to get Craft Kitchenand Brewery's sudsisat its Bendpub By Jasmine Rockow
the pub's patio, overlooking the
For The Bulletin
Deschutes River. "It's a pub-driv-
brid German maibock named
Systems, an essential part of the craft in Craft's beer.
Courtney Stevens points out that
"It gives me the flexibility to
nonalcoholic drinks will have Craft's homespun touch as well,
produce morebeer at the peak of
like Southern sweet tea and fresh
freshness,"McMahon said over squeezed limeade finished with ocal pride is about to collide en brewery, for the community ... old daughter. Courtney Stevens the phone Tuesday. "I'm able to lime sorbet. Eventually McMahon with European brewing tra- what you get here, you're not go- especially looks forward to Mc- produce beer more often in small plans to brew a nonalcoholic ginditions and the American ing to get at another brewpub." Mahon's "deceptively smooth" batches, so it's always fresh on ger beer, too. South's culinary heritage at Craft Smokestack Stout, which will be tap and it's always fresh to the after Elly, the Stevens' 17-month-
L
Kitchen and Brewery in Bend. Central Oregon's newest brew-
ery and pub opens Saturday near
The drinks
The Craft bar will have 20 taps,
onnitro. Craft's summer seasonal beers
with nine flagship beers and three will feature hops from Mecca seasonals brewed by Michael Grade Estate Malt in Madras and McMahon. The remaining taps Tumalo Hops Company. McMaco-own Craft, along with chef Jon will feature hard to find Europe- hon expects a seasonal saison an-style beers. Calvin. to be on tap in a month or so, fol"The general goal we have is Craft standards include kolsch, lowed by a seasonal pale ale. to create beer just for this pubAmerican-style lager, single hop He uses a s m all, 3t/2-barrel we're not trying to sell in Boise or India Pale Ale, red ale, beech- brewing system that was fabriPortland," Calvin said Tuesday on wood smoked porter, and a hy- cated by Bend's WeCan Brewing the Old Mill at 803 SW Industrial Way. Courtney and Mark Stevens
customer."
Thefood
Craft brews will come in a S taying t r u e t o h is K a n 20-ounce imperial pint. Guest sas City, Missouri roots, Calbeers will be served in a regular, vin will be serving wood-fired 16-ounce pint.
Non-beer drinkers can look forward to Craft cocktails made
with house-infused vodkas and homemade bitters and simple syrups. A new mom familiar with the days when she couldn't drink,
smoked meats like brisket and
turkey with homemade barbecue-style sides, alongside other Southern-inspired sandwiches
like Muffalettas, Po' Boys, and Cubanos. Continued next page
drinks
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
From previous page Not trying to reinvent the wheel or offer a new twist on Southern
classics, Calvin would rather fo-
Alliance or Bend Search and Rescue, for example. "We want to give back to the community, from little kids to old-
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5
to let parents relax and enjoy their
meal while kids do what they want to do. On Wednesdays hap-
on the kids menu. The genesis of Craft Kitchto do ... aim toward the communi- en and Brewery began with the now-closed Old Mill Brew Werks, Tapas, small plates meant for ty more than anything." sharing, will be another compoCalvin described the service as which was located where Craft is nent of Craft's menu, and the pub a hybrid of counter and full table today. McMahon was the original will have a "taps and tapas hour" service. Customers order their master brewer for Brew Werks on weekdays from 2:30 p.m. to food at the counter, take a number and Courtney and Mark Stevens 5:30p.m. and find a seat. From there, the were co-owners along with the service is all table-side. No busing brewery's original owners. The brewpub "When they left, we took the your own tables or going back to Community is an important the bar for refills. opportunity to do our own thing," "The idea is, you come in here, Courtney Stevens said. "We element of the Craft ethos, evident in both the brew pub's de- order your meal, sit down and wanted our own brewery with sign and culture of charitable h ave your food in t h e t ime it Michael (MCMahon) and the opfundraising. would take just to sit down or get portunity was there ... we can do June's kids menu proceeds water," Calvin said. what we want to do. This is our will benefit Healthy Beginnings, The tables were hand built with inspiration in life. We love food, a nonprofit working to provide salvaged wood transported from drinks and beer and an empowhealth and development services McMahon's hometown on Wash- ering c o mmunity o r i entation. to young Central Oregon kids, ington's Whidbey Island. A side Our business plan is not to get big and Craft will host a promotion- room just for kids has a farm-to- and distribute, but to stay small al night for the organization June table theme, complete with a play and provide a true quality craft 27. Every month a percent of sales garden stand and cash register, a product. — Reporter: jrocftottr@ will be donated to a different local small kitchenette and stand alone organization like the Bend Trail grill, toy veggies and chalkboards bendbulletin.com cus on "making what these dishes
are with the best local ingredients," he said.
what's happening?
py hour will extend to discounts
er people," Courtney Stevens said.
"That encompasses what we want
TODAY
BEER,KOMBUCHA AND WINE TASTING: Sample kombucha from Humm, beer from Worthy Brewing Co., and wines from the TakenWine Co.; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Avenue Market,1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; 541-382-3940. BARREL AGEDBEERTASTING: Featuring 8 handcrafted, barrelaged brews; 6 p.m.; $45.00; Deschutes Brewery - Mountain Room, 901 SW Simpson Ave., Bend; 541-385-8606. SATURDAY WINETASTING: Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. MONDAY WOMEN TASTINGWINE: Owners and winemakers Dena Drews and Ernie Pink, of Amalie Robert Estate
in Dallas, Oregon, will present wines, complemented by Chef Time Garling'3 small plates; 4 p.m.; $45, registration requested; Jackalope Grill, 750 Lava Road, Bend; www. womentastingwine.com or 541-420-1213. WEDNESDAY
BEER TASTING: Sample beer from Backwoods Brewing; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; 541-382-3940. THURSDAY FERMENTATIONCELEBRATION: Featuring beer tastings from Bend breweries, live music and more; 4 p.m.; $20 for drink tickets and glass; Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. • 3UBMITAN EVENT by visiting bendbulletin. com/events and clicking ea Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 541-333-0351 or email communitylife@bendbulletin.com.
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541-388-1188 ~ www.celoveloyscom
PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE
FRIDAY SISTERS FARMERSMARKET:Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locally made goods and more; 2 p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The Portland bluegrass and folk trio performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jonathan Stewart will speak on his book"Walking Away from the Land: Change at the Crest of a Continent"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. SISTERSRODEO — LES SCHWAB FAMILY NIGHT: Featuring a rodeo performance; 7 p.m.; $14, free for children 12and under; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. (Page
10) "A FUNNYTHING HAPPENEDONTHE WAY TOTHE FORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slowwitted courtesan named Philia; 7:30 p.m., opening reception at 6:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-3890803. (Page 12) "THE KID WITH A BIKE": A showing of the grand prize winner of the 2011CannesFilm Festival; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE ESt., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. "THE CEMETERY CLUB": A play about three Jewish widows meet once a month for tea before going to visit their husband's graves; 7:30 p.m., opening reception at 6:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors and students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-3129626. (Page11) AUTHORPRESENTATION:Jennifer Hillman-Magnuson will be reading excerpts from her travel memoir "Peanut Butter and Naan: Stories of an American Mom in the Far East"; 8:30 p.m.; Barnes and Noble, Forum Shopping Center, 2690 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. centraloregonwritersguild.com or 541-548-4138. TANGO ALPHATANGO: The Portland rock 'n' roll band performs, with Bravey Don; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THE BULLETIN• FR
TRACORUM:The southern swamppop band performs; 9 p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. THE QUICK 8EASYBOYS:The Portland rock'n'roll band performs; 10 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
SATURDAY PORCHES ONTHE HIGH DESERT: Featuring a "Show and Shine" car show, by the High Desert Region Porsche Club; 8 a.m.-1 p.m.; free; Deschutes Historical Museum,129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; 425-269-5470. EXHIBIT OPENING:GLOW:Experience the world of bioluminescence, explore how some plants and animals appear to glow in the dark; 9 a.m.; free, with the price of admission; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. MADRAS SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring food, drinks, live music and more; 9 a.m.; Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. SISTERS RODEO PARADE: Featuring a parade; 9:30 a.m.; Downtown Sisters; www.sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121.
(Page10) SISTERSART INTHEPARK:Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, food and live entertainment, to benefit a local wish from the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon;10a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson Street and Highway 20, Sisters;
www.centraloregonshows.com or
541-420-0279. ARTIST SATURDAYS: A pop-up show with art by more than 40 local artists; 10 a.m.; The Armature, 50 SEScott St., Suite 2, Bend; 541-390-7666. CENTRAL OREGONSATURDAY MARKET: Featuring crafts, music, food and more; 10 a.m.; Across from the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. 75TH ANNUALSISTERSRODEO: Featuring a rodeo performance; 1 and 7 p.m.; $14-$20; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. (Page
10) AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Michelle Lee, author of "Living Luxe Gluten Free" will speak; 1 p.m.; Newport Avenue Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; www. newportavemarket.com or 541-382-3940. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jonathan Stewart will speak on his book"Walking Away from the Land: Change at the Crest
of a Continent"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodSt., Sisters; 541-549-0866. SCRATCHDOG STRINGBAND:The
I•
Americanaandbluegrasstrio from Portland performs; 7 p.m.; free; Broken Top Bottl eShop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. "A FUNNYTHINGHAPPENEDONTHE WAYTO THEFORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slowwitted courtesan named Philia; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. (Page 12) "THE CEMETERYCLUB": A play about three Jewish widows meet once a month for tea before going to visit their
FRIDAY-SUNDAY 75th AnnualSisters Rotleo: Don't miss all the action!
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husband's graves;7:30 p.m.;$19, $16 for seniors and students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-3129626. (Page11) BOYLESQUESHOW: Featuring a performance of the show "Cocked and Loaded"; 8 p.m.;$12 plusfeesinadvance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. SPACE ODDITY: DAVID BRIGHTON'S TRIBUTE TO DAVID BOWIE:Featuring the retro rock David Bowie impersonator; 8 p.m.; $23-$53 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. (Page
FRIDAY-THURSDAY Author Presentatlons:Plenty of chances to be inspired by writers!
SATURDAY-SUNDAY Slsters Art In thePark: Bring the family for some arts and crafts.
SATURDAY Glow Exhibit Opening:Learn about bioluminescence in this new exhibit.
5)
SUNDAY
LIKE AROCKET:TheAmerican roots band performs; 9 p.m.; free; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. THE EIFFELS:The indie band from Los Angeles performs; 10 p.m.; free; TheAstro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www. astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. THE ROCKYHORROR PICTURE SHOW: The cult-classic musical is presented; 11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-410-0975.
Cocktail Cabaret:A theatrical singing show in one of Bend's cocktail lounges
SUMDAY BUCKAROOBREAKFAST—SISTERS RODEO:Featuring a breakfast; 7 a.m.; $10, $5 for kids ages 4-12, free for children 3 and younger; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. (Page
10) ART START:Draw, paint, create collage masterpieces with your kids; 9:30 a.m.;
$45; Art Station, 313 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-617-1317. SISTERSARTINTHE PARK:Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, food and live entertainment, to benefit a local wish from the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Oregon; 10 a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson Street and Highway 20, Sisters; www. centraloregonshows.com or 541-420-0279. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAY JAM:All ages welcome, listen and dance; 1 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif Road,PowellButte;408-858-9437. 75TH ANNUALSISTERSRODEO:The
final rodeoperformance;1 p.m.; $12-
$17; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www.sistesrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. (Page 10) CELEBRATINGPETESEEGERAND
THE POWER OFSONG: Come foran informal celebration of the life and music of Pete Seeger, including performance, singalongs and stories;1:30 p.m.; free; Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; 541-385-3908. "A FUNNYTHING HAPPENEDONTHE WAY TOTHEFORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slowwitted courtesan named Philia; 2 p.m.;
$20, $16 for seniors, $13for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. (Page 12) "THE CEMETERY CLUB": A play about three Jewish widows meet once amonth for tea before going to visit their husband's graves; 3 p.m.; $19, $16for seniors and
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7
DAY, JUNE 12, 2015
INSIDE OUT":Featuring an early screening of the movie, behind-the-scenes footage, interviews and more; 7 p.m.; $25; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. com or844-462-7342.
(Page 29) "BEND BACKWARDS"COCKTAIL CABARET: A nightlife theatrical singing show;8 p.m.;$16 plusfeesinadvance, $10 at door for standing room/seat; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook. com/farmtoshaker or 541-760-4961. GRACEASKEW:The Voice finalist and country-blues singer performs; 8 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
breweries, live music and more; 4 p.m. $20 for drink tickets and glass; Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: ScottCook and Aimee Wade will present a talk and slideshow based on their newest book,"PDXccentric:An Odyssey of Portland Oddities"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; www.paulinasprings.com or 541-526-1491.
JOHN DOE: The rock-folk artist performs, with Jesse Dayton; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com or 541-382-5174. (Page 3) "A FUNNYTHING HAPPENEDONTHE WAY TOTHEFORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slowWEDNESDAY witted courtesan named Philia; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 50TH ANNIVERSARYTOUR FOR Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood HORSELESSAND CARRIAGE CLUB OF Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or AMERICA:A car show with Portland 541-389-0803. (Page 12) Regional Horseless Carriage Club; "THE CEMETERYCLUB": Aplay about 11:30 a.m.; $5; Faith, Hope andCharity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, three Jewish widows meet once a Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. month for tea before going to visit their husband's graves; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 BEND FARMERS MARKET:Featuring for seniors and students; 2nd Street food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; Alley, NW Brooks St., Bend; www. bendfarmersmarket.com or 541-408-4998. www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-3129626. (Page11) BIKERODEO — LOVE YOUR BRAIN: RHYTHM DRAGONS:The rockabilly Featuring a bike obstacle course, helmet band from Arizona performs, with Big demo andchecks,bike mechanical assessments andmore;5:30p.m.;free; Evil; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. High Lakes Elementary School, 2500 NW High Lakes Loop, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. centerfoundation.org or 541-408-7269. FUNKTHIS!:Featuring an evening of 2015 DRUM CORPSINTERNATIONAL Nu:Disco, with DJ RrlTime and Mark TOUR PREMIERE:Featuring six of Drum 8 Matt; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Corps International's top marching Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; music ensembles;5:30 p.m.;$15;Regal www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or Old MillStadium16and IMAX,680 541-706-9949. students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE and Rainbows Pride Week film; 6 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SWSeventh SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond; STEEL PULSE:The reggae-roots band Lafayette Ave., Bend;www.2ndstreettheater. $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury fathomevents. com or844-462-7342. com or 541-312-9626. (Page11) Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com 541-550-0066. from the United Kingdom performs, with (Page 29) or 541-323-1881. (Page 29) Neil Mangicaro & the Current, DJ Raider BELLAACAPPELLAHARMONYCHORUS JOHN CRAIGIEHOUSECONCERT:The JP HARRIS& THE TOUGH CHOICES: andTheColonel;9p.m.,doorsopenat "BEND BACKWARDS"COCKTAIL GUEST NIGHT:A guest night to welcome indie-folk singer-songwriter performs, The country band performs; 7 p.m.; free; 8 p.m.; $27 plusfees inadvance,$30 women and girls who love to sing; 6 p.m.; with Bill Valenti, 7 p.m. concert; 6 p.m. CABARET: A nightlife theatrical singing McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW potluck/social; $15-$20; House Concerts show; 8-10 p.m.; $16 plus fees in advance, free; Bend Senior Center, 1600 NEReed NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins or Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket. Market Road, Bend; 541-306-7493. in the Glen, 1019 NWStannium Road, $10at the door; Dogwood Cocktail 541-382-5174. com or 541-388-8111. (Page 6) Bend; www.houseconcertsintheglen.com/ Cabin, 147 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; GENDERS!:The Portland rock and roll SUPERSUCKERS: The rock 'n' roll band "COMES WITHBAGGAGE" AND rsvp.html or 541-480-8830. www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or band performs, with BDYBAG; 6p.m.; from Seattle performs, with Harley "THE BLACK CANYONTRAIL" — A 541-760-4961. free; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW YOUNG ARTISTSSCHOLARSHIP Bourbon; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; BACKPACKING DOUBLEFEATURE: Brooks St., Bend; 541-728-0066. (Page 4) CONCERT: A showcase of scholarship THE STUPIDDAIKINI: The California $15 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door; Featuring two short movies, to benefit the students in a program of vocalists and indie-punk band performs; 9:30 p.m.; $5; THE DOOBIE BROTHERS: The classicVolcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury rock band performs, with Pat Simmons Jr.; Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com Central Oregon Trail Alliance; 9 p.m.; $5; instrumentalists; 7 p.m.; free; Holy Trinity Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 Catholic Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road, Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. 6:30p.m.,gatesopen at5 p.m .;$38 plus or 541-323-1881. (Page 7) NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. Sunriver; 541-593-1084. fees, $79for reservedseating; LesSchwab com or 541-382-5174. (Page 29) Amphitheater, 520 SW Powerhouse Drive, TUESDAY THURSDAY Suite 626 , Bend; www.bendconcert s . com • SUBMITANEVENTbyvisiting bendbulletin com/ MONDAY events and clicking "+ Add Event." Ongoing listings or 541-312-8510. (Page 7) REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: FERMENTATIONCELEBRATION: must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 541-383"GUN HILLROAD":The LGBTQStars "INSIDER ACCESS TO DISNEYQPIXAR'S Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Featuring beer tastings from Bend 0351 or email communitylifeC!bendbulletin.com.
PAGE 18 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
planning ahea
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Sean Galvin, right, chops up tomatoes as chef Nick Ragazzo empties a blender while making a dish in the Top Chef finals at last year's Bite of Bend. This year's event takes place June19-21.
JUME 19-25 JUNE 19-21 — 4 PEAKSMUSIC FESTIVAL:4 Peaks is celebrating 8 years of welcoming national and regional touring bands to Central Oregon with camping, workshops, a kid's area, room to dance, and great local vendors; 9 am. June 19-20; 10 a.m. June 21; $135 plusfees, $150at the gate, includes camping; Rockin'A Ranch, 19449 Tumalo Reservoir Road, Bend; www.4peaksmusic.com or 541-382-8064. JUNE 19-21, 25 — "AFUNNYTHING HAPPENEDONTHEWAYTOTHE FORUM":A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slow-witted courtesan named Philia; 7:30 p.m. June 19-20, 25; 2 p.m. June 21; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or
541-389-0803.
541-215-0357. JUNE19 — SISTERSFARMERS JUNE 19-21, 25 — "THECEMETERY CLUB":A play about three Jewish MARKET:Featuring fresh vegetables, widows meet once a month for tea before fruits, locally made goods and more; 2 going to visit their husband's graves; p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between 7:30 p.m. June19-20, 25; 3 p.m. June 21; Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. $19, $16 for seniors and students; 2nd JUNE19 — BENDFARMERS Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., MARKET:Featuring food, drinks and Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or more; 2 p.m.; Mountain View High 541-312-9626. School, 2755 NE27th St., Bend; JUNE19-21— BITEOF BEND: Celebrate www.bendfarmersmarket.com or the local flavor of Central Oregon during 541-408-4998. the region's largest food festival, with live JUNE 19 — NEWBERRYNATIONAL music, kids activities and more; 6 p.m. VOLCANICMONUMENT 25TH June19; 11 a.m. June 20-21; Downtown ANNIVERSARYKICK-OFF Bend, NW BondandWall Streets, Bend; CELEBRATION: An evening of www.biteofbend.com or 541-323-0964. celebration commemorating the 25th Anniversary of Newberry National JUNE 20-21 — FARMCARNIVAL Volcanic Monument; 6:30 p.m.; Sunriver & SOLSTICEPARTY: Featuringa Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation farmer's market, carnival games,farm Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; tours, Father's Day competition and discoveryourforest.org/events-2/or more; 10 am.; Smudgie GooseFarm, 541-383-5530. 19221 NE O'Neil Hwy, Redmond; www.smudgiegoosefarm.com or JUNE 19 —AUTHORPRESENTATION:
Scott Cook and AimeeWadewill present a talk and slideshow based on their newestbook,"PDXccentric:An Odyssey of Portland Oddities"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina SpringsBooks,252 W .Hood St., Sisters; www.paulinasprings.com or 541-549-0866. JUNE19 — SAMOUTLAW:The country singer from Los Angeles performs; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE 20 — YARD SALE: Sale to benefit the Bend Genealogical Society; 8 am.; Williamson Hall (behind Jake's Diner), 2200 NEU.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-317-9553. JUNE 20 — MADRASSATURDAY MARKET:Featuring food, drinks, live music and more; 9 am.; Sahalee Park, 241 SESeventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778.
JUNE 20 — 52NDANNUALAIRFLOW CLUB OFAMERICAN MEET:Featuring a car show and more; 9 am.; Cascade Mall Shopping Center, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-389-7329. JUNE 20 — NWXSATURDAY FARMER'S MARKET:Featuring local organic artisans in produce, meats, baked goods, skincare and more; 10 am.; NorthWest Crossing, NW Crossing Drive, Bend; www.nwxfarmersmarket.com/or 541-350-4217. JUNE20—CENTRALOREGON SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring crafts, music, food and more; 10 am.; Across from the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. JUNE 20 — NACHO ORDINARY ART EVENT:Join OSU-Cascades MFA students and local Bend artists for a collaborative and participatory art event; 3 p.m.;TheW orkhouse atOld Ironworks, 50 SEScott St., Bend; 516-652-5817.
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015 JUNE 20 — "CARAVAN OFGLAM": The troupe from Portland performs; 8 p.m.;
$12 plusfees in advance, $15atthe door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. JUNE 20 —THEROCKYHORROR PICTURESHOW:The cult-classic musical is presented;11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; bendticket.strangertickets.com/ Browse¹search=Lonely%20Fish%20 Productions or 541-410-0975. JUNE 21 —FATHER'SDAY:Freeday at the museum for all fathers; 9 am.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.U.S.Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/ fathers-day or 541-382-4754. JUNE 21— BROKEN DOWN GUITARS: The rock group performs, as part of the 2015 Bend Memorial Clinic FreeSummer Sunday Concert Series; 1 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts. com or 541-312-8510. JUNE 21 — AUTHORPRESENTATION: Craig Johnson will speak on his book "Dry Bones"; 4 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodSt., Sisters; 541-549-0866. JUNE 21 — AUTHORPRESENTATION: Craig Johnson will speak on his book "Dry Bones"; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SW SixthSt.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. JUNE 23 — REDMONDFARMERS MARKET:Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066. JUNE 24 —BENDFARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St.,
Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.comor 541-408-4998. JUNE 24 — PICKIN' & PADDLIN'. Featuring music by the Polecat, with Coyote Willow and TheGold Rust; 4 p.m.; Tumalo CreekKayak & Canoe,805 SW Industrial Way, Suite 6, Bend; www. tumalocreek.com or 541-317-9407. JUNE 24— MUSIC ON THE GREEN: Featuring Out of the Blue, a local 5 piece R & Bdance cover band; 6 p.m.; Sam Johnson Park, SW15th Street and SW Evergreen Avenue,Redmond; 541-923-5191. JUNE 24— FULL DRAW FILM TOUR: A film tour of bow hunting and outdoor films; 7 p.m.; $14, $10 for children ages 4012; The TowerTheatre,835 NW Wall St, Bend; www.towertheatre.org/ tickets-and-events/full-draw-film-tour or 541-317-0700. JUNE 24 —THEREDPAINTINGS: The art-rock band from London performs; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE 25 —WATERSTONDESERT WRITINGAWARD CEREMONY:
planning ahead
Talks 5 classes
6 p.m. Tuesday; St Charles Medical Center-Conference Room A, 2500 NE For a full list, visit bendbulletin.com/ Neff Road, Bend; www.cooath.org or events. 503 951-9623. WRITING GROUPFORNEWMOMS: ESCAPE YOURORDINARY WITH A writing group for new moms to MOSLEYWOTTA: Learn how to help record memories during this escape the ordinary, to get out special time; 10 a.m. Sunday; $15 for of expectations and standards to two sessions; Sarah Cyr's House, reach a deeper state of creativity; 1804 NW Element Place, Bend; www. 6 p.m. Tuesday; Downtown Bend sarahcyr.com or 541-480-7732. Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or HANDMADEPAPERFLOWERS 541-312-1034. CLASS:Learn to make flowers using crepe papers;1 p.m.Sunday;$65; LUNCH ANDLEARN-GETTING THE The Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 JUMP ONSUMMER ALLERGIES SE Scott St., Bend; www.mkt.com/ THE NATURALWAY: Learn about the-workhouse/or 347-564-9080. how to get a jump on summer allergies the natural way, by Beth COMMUNICATINGFORLIFE: Join Bryn Hazell for this life changing Skaug, Purely Essentials Bend; eight-week workshop series; 6 p.m. 12 p.m. Wednesday; Bend Senior Center, 1600 SEReedMarket Road, Tuesday; $80 suggested donation; Center for Compassionate Living, Bend; www.bendseniorcenter.org or 339 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-548-1133. 541-728-0878. CENSUSDATAFORGRANT HUMAN TRAFFICKINGAWARENESS WRITERS:Learn about the benefits of TRAINING:Learn about human using census data in grant proposals trafficking and what each of us can withCensus Data Dissemination do to putastop to this terrible crime; Specialist Linda Clark;1:30 p.m. Featuring an award presentation and readings by winning author Rebecca Lawton and three finalists; 6 p.m. registration requested; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 541-382-4754. JUNE25 — WILLIENELSON& FAMILY AND ALISONKRAUSS & UNION STATION:The legendary country singer performs, with the bluegrass-Americana singer and band, featuring Jerry Douglas; 6:30 p.m.; $59- $109 plus fees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 322 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts. com. JUNE 25 — "UNREAL, AMOUNTAIN BIKE FILM":A film about some of the best mountain bikers on the planet; 6:30
and9p.m.;$12plusfeesinadvance, $15 at the door, $7 for16 and under; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org/tickets-andevents/unreal-a-mountain-bike-film or 541-317-0700. JUNE 25 —THIS FRONTIERNEEDS HEROES: Thealternative folk band from Brooklyn performs, with Paula Boggs Band; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
JUNE 26- JULY 2 JUNE 26-27 — "AFUNNYTHING HAPPENED ONTHEWAYTOTHE FORUM":A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave, who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slow-witted courtesan named Philia; 7:30 p.m.;
$20, $16for seniors, $13for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
JUNE 26-27 — "THECEMETERY CLUB":A play about three Jewish widows meet once a month for tea before going to visit their husband's graves; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for seniors and students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. JUNE 27-28 — REDMOND STREET FESTIVAL:Featuring a variety of arts, crafts, antiques, food and live entertainment, a kid zone, abeer garden and more; 10 am.; Downtown Redmond, Sixth Street, Redmond; www.centraloregonshows.com or 540-420-0279. JUNE 26 — SISTERSFARMERS MARKET: Featuring fresh vegetables, fruits, locally made goods and more; 2 p.m.; Barclay Park, Hood Street, between Ash and Elm, Sisters; 541-719-8030. JUNE 26 —BENDFARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 2 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE 27th St., Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket com or 541-408-4998. JUNE26 — VAVA VOOM BURLESQUE VIXENS:The burlesque troupe performs; 9 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JUNE 27 — MADRASSATURDAY MARKET: Featuring food, drinks,
live musicandmore; 9am.; Sahalee Park, 241 SE Seventh St., Madras; 541-546-6778. JUNE 27 — NWXSATURDAY FARMER'S MARKET: Featuring local organic artisans in produce, meats, baked goods, skincare and more;10 am.; NorthWest Crossing, NWCrossing Drive,
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19 Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. JUNE 27 —THEROCKYHORROR PICTURESHOW:The cult-classic musical is presented;11:30 p.m.; $10, $15 for V.I.P.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; bendticket.strangertickets.com/ Browse¹search=Lonely%20Fish%20 Productions or 541-410-0975. JUNE 28 — TUBALUBA: The blues funk band from Seattle performs, as part of the 2015 BendMemorial Clinic Free Summer SundayConcert Series; 1 p.m.; Les SchwabAmphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. bendconcerts.com or541-312-8510. JUNE 28 —AUTHORPRESENTATION: Michelle Lee local author of "Living Luxe Gluten Free" will speak; 2 p.m.; Barnes 8 Noble, The Forum, 2690 NE Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242. JUNE 28 — THE ABBASHOW: The ABBA tribute band performs, featuring musical performances, a live backing band, replica costumes and more; 7 p.m.; $59, $30 for children12 and under; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org/tickets-and-events/theabba-show or 541-317-0700. Bend; www.nwxfarmersmarket.com/or 541-350-4217. JUNE 28 —JESSICAHERNANDEZ& THEDELTAS:Therock & rollbandfrom JUNE 27 —CENTRALOREGON Detroit performs; 7 p.m.; $12 plus fees SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring crafts, in advance; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main Ave., music, food and more; 10am.; Across from the Downtown Bend Public Library, Sisters; 541-549-4979. 601 NW Wall St., Bend; 541-420-9015. JUNE 30 — REDMONDFARMERS MARKET:Featuring food, drinks and JUNE 27 —CRUXAPALOOZA:The third anniversary celebration with live music by more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Second Son, Three D,PhilFriendly Trio, Avenue,Redmond;541-550-0066. 2nd Hand Soldiers and more, with food and drinks; 11:30 am.; Crux Fermentation JUNE 30 — GREGG ALLMAN BAND: The rock'n' roll singer performs with his Project, 50 SWDivision St., Bend; 541-385-3333. band, as part of the 2015 PeakSummer Nights concert series; 5:30 p.m.; $43, JUNE 27 — STEVEEARLEAND THE $88 for a dinner ticket; Athletic Club of DUKES:The roots musician performs Bend, 61615 Athletic Club Drive, Bend; with his band, with Mastersons and Robert Earl Keen; 5 p.m.; $40 plus fees in www.newportavemarket.com/concerts or 541-385-3062. advance; Century Center, 70 SWCentury JUNE 30 — HIGHDESERT Drive, Bend; www.bendticket.com or COMMUNITY RADIO —LIVEANDIN 541-617-3215. LIVING COLOR:Featuring performances JUNE 27 — LASTSATURDAY:Featuring by Five Pint Mary, Dennis McGregor local art and culture with art openings, and the Spoilers, MOsley WOtta, Triage live music, food carts, workshops and Improv, the Around the Bend, Comic more.; 6 p.m.; TheOld Ironworks, 50 SE Celeste Franklin and more, to benefit Scott St., Bend; 347-564-9080. 88.9fmKPOV;7 p.m.;$20 plusfees in JUNE 27 —AUTHORPRESENTATION: advance, $18 for members, $25 at the Edie Jones will read from and sign her door; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., book"Raising Kids with Love, Honor, and Bend; www.towertheatre.org/ticketsRespect: RecipesforSuccess";6:30p.m.; and-events/high-desert-community$5;PaulinaSpringsBooks,252W Hood radio-live-and-in-living-color or St., Sisters; www.paulinasprings.com or 541-317-0700. 541-549-0866. JUNE 30 — KPOV'8 10TH JUNE 27 — SOUND STORM: A Nightof ANNIVERSARY PARTY: Featuring Five Rhythm In Motion: The Bend-based tap Pint Mary, MOsley WOtta, the Dennis dancecompany performs;7:30p.m.; McGregor Band, Triage andthe Around $20 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW the Bend Players and more; Tower Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org/ Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. tickets-and-events/sound-storm-a-night- towertheatre.org. of-rhythm-in-motion or 541-317-0700. JULY1 — BENDFARMERSMARKET: JUNE 27— TROPICAL ISLAND NIGHTS: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 with CoLOsO,Chris Carpenter and p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., Hokulea OhanaHula Dancers; 10 p.m.; Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.com or 541-408-4998. $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door;
Wednesday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-617-7093. AN EVENINGWITH TEMPLE GRANDIN:Hear the renowned autism self-advocate speak; free; 6 p.m. Wednesday; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SWHighlandAve.,Redmond; 888-288-4761. PRIVACYANDSECURITY, OBSOLESCENTVALUES INTHE DIGITAL AGE: This forum will discuss digital theft, your exposure to it and howyour privacy can be better protected; 11:30 a.m. Thursday; $20 members, $35 non-members; St. Charles Bend Center for Health 8 Learning, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend; www.cityclubco.org or 541-633-7163. SCRAP METALJEWELRY MAKING FOR BEGINNERS: Learnto usescrap metal in unique jewelry, supplies included; 6 p.m. Thursday; $60; The Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; www.mkt.com/theworkhouse or 347-564-9080.
PAGE 20 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
The Ponderosa burger with fries and a chocolate milkshake at Bend Burger Co.'s Third Street location in Bend.
BendBurgerCo.
â&#x20AC;˘ Bend BurgerCo.'snew restaurant elevatesthe quality of service, food By John Gottberg Anderson
service and cleanliness left a great are professional in their attention
For The Bulletin
deal to be desired. I couldn't imagine that a renovation of the former
to maintenanceand customer ser-
the Bend Burger Co. was open- El Pollo Gordo site would result in
easily deteriorate into fast-food mode; instead, it retains an up-
t
was dubiouswhenIlearnedthat ing a second outlet on Bend's
any quantum improvement.
north side, opposite Wagner Mall. I was wrong. In multiple visThe original downtown Bend its to the new Bend Burger Co., I shop, after all, had failed to impress have found it to be everything the me on two separate review visits flagship location was not. Burgers five years apart. I didn't dislike the are better than ever, but perhaps burgers there, but the standard of more importantly, the employees
vice. The 60-seat restaurant could scale, contemporary feel. Indeed, a sign at the entrance to the restaurantemphasizes: "Caution! This is not fast food!" And it's not.
Continued next page
i.ocntion:1939NEThird St., Bend; also at 718 NWFranklin Ave., Bend Hours:11a.m. to 8 p.m. Sundayto Thursday, 11a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday Cuisine:American Price range:Soupsand salads $3.99 to $9.95, burgers andother sandwiches $4.99 to $11.95, side dishes $1.99 to $5.50 Credit cards:Discover, MasterCard, Visa
Kids' menu:Onrequest; a grilled cheesesandwichisjust$4.99 Vegetarian menu:Best choice is the Westside GardenBurger Alcoholic beverages:Beerand wine Outdoorseating: No Reservations:No Contact:www.bendburger.com, 541-382-1914 (Third Street), 541306-6166 (Franklin Avenue)
Scorecard Overall:AFood:B+.Good burgers and buns; kitchen must be careful not to overcook condiments Service:A. Professional in both customer service andmaintaining a clean restaurant.
Atmosphere:A-. Comfortable renovation is enhanced by acontinuously running slide show. Value:A-. These aren't the cheapest burgers in town, but they are good value for whatyou get.
COLDW ELLBANKER
This Week's Open H ou ses
ORRIS EAL STAT E OPEN I RIDAY 12-4
OVEN SATI IRDAY 12-3
OVEN SATI IRDAY 12-3
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KIRK SANDBURG, BROKER, 541-556-1804
ROSEMARY GOODWIN, BROKER, 541-706-1897
KIMMY SUE LICKTEIG, BROKER, 503-593-1183
3017 sq.ft., 4 bedroom, 4 bath in Widgi Creek. Bonus room with wet bar. Views of 2 lakes 8 7th green. 5688,000• MLS 201503137 DIRECTIONS; Century Drive towards Mt. Ba<helor, left on 7th Mountain Drive, left on Golf Village Loop. 60767 Golf Village Loop.
5<eni< Heights! Main level master, 4 bedroom plus an office, 2.5 bath, 3500 sq.ft., triple garage. Views, close to River Trail, 5689,000• MLS 201504202 DIRECTIONS: Mt. Washington Drive, south on 5<eni< Heights. 285 NW 5<enic Heights Drive.
Brand new 2039 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, elevated views. Great room, island kitchen, offi<e 8 bonus room. 5539,900• MLS 201410958 DIRECTIONS:Shevlin Park Road to NW Crossing Drive. 2458 NW Crossing Drive,
OPEN SATLTRDAY 12-3
OPEN SATL! RDAY 12-3
OPEN SATLIRDAY 12-4
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JOHN GALLAWAY, BROKER, 541-480-5802
KARIN JOHNSON, BROKER, 541-639-6140
KIRK SANDBURG, BROKER, 541-556-1804
Copperstone at Awbrey Glen. Great room plan, wow kitchen, ni<e master
Nottingham Square 1456 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2 bath on a <orner lot. Built-ins,
suite, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath plus office. 5387,395• MLS 201505341 DIRECTIONS;Shevlin Park Road to NW Mt. Washington Drive, Follow signs.
gas firepla<e, private refinished deck. 5249,900• MLS 201505396 DIRECTIONS; SE15th Street to Friar Tuck Lane to Robin Hood Lane to
2669 NW Havre Court,
Canterbury Court. 20778 Canterbury Court,
4 bedroom, 3,5 bath, 2852 sq.ft. home, 2 masters, covered deck, vaulted ceilings, 3.<ar garage, .46 a<re. 5595,000• MLS 201502640 DIRECTIONS;Reed Market Road to south on SEFargo Lane, right on Perrigan Drive, right on Ascha Rose Ct. 61547 Ascha Rose Court.
OPEN DAILY 12-4
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DON KELLEHER, BROKER, 541-480-1911
ERICA PATCHEN, BROKER, 541-480-4825
DARRIN KELLEHER,BROKER , THEKELLEHERGROUP,541-788-0029
BRAND NEW2084 sq.ft. Franklin Brothers built home. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, natural light, great room. $321,990• MLS 201501796 DIRECTIONS; East on Butler Market, right on Daniel Road, left on Evelyn Place. 21336 Evelyn Place.
Brand new 2039 sq,ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, elevated views. Great room,
Soaring Cas<adeviews, 6052 sq.ft., 5 bedroom, 4 bath, gourmet kit<hen, theater room, wine cellar & fitness room. 51,425,000• MLS 201502497 DIRECTIONS: NW Mt. Washington Drive to Perspe<tive Drive, left on Remarkable Drive. 1703 NW Remarkable Drive.
COLDW~ BANgRR L3
island kitchen, office & bonus room. 5539,900• 201410958 DIRECTIONS;Shevlin Park Road to NW Crossing Drive, 2458 NW Crossing Drive.
www.bendproperty.com 541-382-4123 • 486 SW Bluff Dr., Old Mill District, Bend, OR 97702
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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
outo town * Portland; TF June 28 —Metropolitan Youth Symphony 8 Portland School OfRock, * COMCERTS Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF June 28 —TheTing Tings, Star Theater, June12 —Screeching Weasel and Portland; www.startheaterportland.com. MxPx,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, * June 29 —The ABBAShow, Craterian Portland; CT Theater at the Collier Center for the June 12 —ToddRundgren, Wonder Performing Arts, Medford; www. Ballroom, Portland; TF* craterian.org. June 14 —GordonLightfoot, Cuthbert June 30 —RobThomas, Arlene Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* June 16 —Ingrid Michaelson, July1 —Robin Trower,Aladdin Theater, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; * Portland; TF www.etix.com. July1 —Tuxedo,Wonder Ballroom, June 16 —Steven Wilson, Aladdin * Portland; TF * Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF July 2 —Big BadVoodoo Daddy, Britt June 17 —Purity Ring, McMenamins Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; July 2 —The Green, Wonder Ballroom, www.etix.com. * Portland; TF June17 —Steel Pulse, Roseland * July2 —Tyler The Creator, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT * June 18 —Scott Bradlee 8 Postmodern Theater, Portland; CT Jukebox,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, July 5 —Ben Folds, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org Portland; www.etix.com. July 5 —Big Business, Dante's, June 19 —Joey BadaSS, Wonder * Portland; www.danteslive.com. Ballroom, Portland; TF July 5 —Boz Scaggs, Britt Pavilion, June 20 —Brit Floyd, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July 7 —Pouya, Roseland Theater, June 20 —The Doobie Brothers, * Portland; CT McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. July 7 —Sheryl Crow, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. June 20 —EdSheeran, Moda Center, Portland; TM* July 8 —Death Cab for Cutie, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; June 20 —Houndmouth, Wonder SOLD OUT;www.etix.com. Ballroom, Portland; TF* July 8 —Elvis Costello and The June 21 —Chicago, Oregon Zoo, * Imposters,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Portland; TF Hall, Portland; P5* June 21 — DeathGrips,Roseland * July 8 —Kate Power & Steve Einhorn, Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;CT Main Street, Portland; P5* June 21 — Smash Mouth/Toad July 8 —The Minus 5, Main Street, the Wet Sprocket,Britt Pavilion, Portland; P5* Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. July 9 —Rising Appalachia, Britt June 23 —Chicago, Britt Pavilion, Performance Garden, Jacksonville; Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org. www.brittfest.org June 23 — Mono, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF July10-11 —The Decemberists, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; JULY June 24 —The Assad Brothers, * 10 SOLD OUT; www.etix.com. Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5 July11 — Indigo Girls, Oregon Zoo, June 24 —Bootsy's Rubber Band, * Portland; TF McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. July11 —Purusa and lan Moore, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF June 26 —Willie Nelson and Alison Krauss,McMenamins Edgefield, July13 —Lyle Lovett, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. Troutdale ;SOLD OUT;TF* July14 —AmosLee 8 David Gray, June 27 —American Music Program's Pacific Crest Jazz Orchestra:This McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; 17-piece big band will perform Ellington's SOLD OUT;www.etix.com. "Tatooed Bride" with guest saxophonist July14 —John MayaN,The Shedd Devin Phillips in a fundraiser for the Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or American Music Program. Alberta 541-434-7000. Abbey, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com. July14 —The Decembrists/Calexico, June 27 —The B-52s, Oregon Zoo, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www. * Portland; TF brittfest.org. June 27 —Elle King,Wonder Ballroom, Continued next page
The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
is acome ic' orce' • The comedian will perform in Portland later thismonth By Kim Himstreet The Bulletin
ritish comedian, actor and self-described "ac-
B
tion transvestite" Eddie Izzard will perform
two of the final U.S. shows of his "Force Majeure" world tour at Portland's Keller Auditorium on June 27 and 28.
One of the most acdaimed comedians of his generation, Izzard's unique, tangential, absurd and surreal comic narratives are praised for their creativi-
ty and wit, earning him a New York Drama Desk Award and two Emmys, amongst his many honors. Izzard was the first solo stand-up comedian to
perform at the Hollywood Bowl, has sold-out three consecutive nights at Radio City Music Hall and toured arenas throughout the U.S., including a sold-
out show at Madison Square Garden. Izzard got his comedy start street performing and then moved on to comedy clubs, appearing at London's famous Comedy Store in 1987 before running his own club in London where he started to attract notice for his improvisatory skills. His first one-man comedy show premiered in London's West End in 1993. Izzard's film and television credits include both comedic and dramatic roles, with appearances in "Valkyrie" opposite Tom Cruise, Steven Soderbergh's "Ocean's Thirteen" and "Ocean's Twelve," "Powers" on Playstation, NBC's "Hannibal" and "The Riches" on the FX Network,
which he alsoproduced. "Force Majeure" is Izzard's most extensive comedy tour to date, taking him to 25 countries on
five continents since 2013. The show has played throughout Europe, Africa, Russia, the U.K., Canada, the U.S., India, Nepal, the Far East and Aus-
tralia — with Izzard planning to learn Spanish and Russian in order to perform shows in those countries in their native languages.
Eddie Izzardperforms "Force Majeure" at Portland's Keller Auditorium on June 27 and 28.The June 27 show isalready sold out
(except for VIP packages), and tickets for
Amanda Searle / Submitted Photo
the June 28show startat $56.50. For more
Comedian Eddie Izzard will perform June 27 and 28 at the Keller Auditorium.
information and tickets, go to www.portland5.com. Reporter: 541-383-0350, khimstreet@bendbulletin.com
out of town
PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE
From previous page •
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July15 —Joey Porter's Tribute to Stevie Wonder,Main Street, Portland; P5* July15 —John MayaN,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* July16-19 —Northwest String Summit, Horning's Hideout, North Plains; www. stringsummit.com. July16 —NEEDTOBREATHE,Switchfoot, Drew Holcomb & The Neighbors and Colony House, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July17— Graham Nash,McDonald * Theater, Eugene; TW July17 —Harry Connick,Jr., Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* July17 —Quadraphonic: Spatial Frontiers,Britt Performance Garden, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July18 —BADBADNOTGO OD, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. July18 —Graham Nash,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* July21— Jane'sAddiction,McM enamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; www.etix.com. July21— John MeNencamp, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* July 21 —Rush,Moda Center, Portland; www.ticketmaster.com. July 22-23 —Built to Spill, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* July 22 —Rickie Lee Jones,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* July 22 —The Shanghai Woolies, Main Street, Portland; P5* July 23 —Morrissey, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; www.etix.com. July 23 —Sugar Ray/Better Than Ezra /Uncle Nracker /Eve 6,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July 23 —Third EyeBlind/Dashboard Confessional,Cuthbert Amphitheater, Eugene; TW* July 23 —Unknown Mortal Orchestra, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF July 24 —Bruce Hornsby 8 The Noisemakers,Oregon Zoo, Portland; TF* July 24-26 —Northwest World Reggae Festival,Scio; www.nwwrf.com. July 24 —Easton Corbin, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July24— SayAnything,Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* July 25 —Barenaked Ladies, McMenamins Edgefield, Troutdale; SOLD OUT; www.etix.com. July 25 —Jamie XX, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* July 25 —JohnButler llio/Ethan Tncker, Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July 25 —Sweet HarmonySoul, Oregon * Zoo, Portland; TF July 25 —Taj Mahal, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* July 26 —Charlie XCX andBleachers, McMenamins Edgefield, www.etix.com.
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www.ticketswest.com or 800-992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticketfly.com or 877-435-9849
CT:CascadeTickets, www.cascadeticekts.com or 800-514-3849 P5:Portland'5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5.com or 800273-1530 July 26 —G. Love 8 Special Sauce/Big Head Todd 8 The Monsters,Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org July 26 —John Butler Trio, Oregon Zoo, Portland; TF* July 28 —Esperanza Spalding, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. July 29 —Ratatat, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* July 31 —EmmylouHarris and Rodney CroweN,Oregon Zoo, Portland; TF* July 31-Aug. 2 —OregonJamboree Music Festival,Sweet Home; www. oregonjamboree.com.
Auditorium, Portand; www.portlandopera. org or 503-241-1802 or 866-739-6737. Through June 21 —Portland Piano International SummerFestival: A series of recitals, lectures films and master classes honoring the centennial of legendary Russian pianist Sviatoslav Richter and the legacy of the Russian piano tradition, featuring guest artists Stanislav loudenitch and Alexander Shtarkman; Various locations, Portland; www.portlandpiano.
org.
Through June 28 —Music by the Sea: Astoria Music Festival: The festival hosts more than 26 classical, opera and chamber
music performances eachyear featuring world-class stars and ensembles rarely seen outside of the United States' largest cities; Various locations, Astoria; www. astoriamusicfestival.org. June 22-26 —Chamber Music Northwest 45th SummerFestival, Chamber Music Northwest, Portland; www.cmnw.org. June 25 —"Flutes, Flautists 8 Flourishes":Featuring Band Directors from 34 states and five foreign countries; Presented by The American Band College of Sam Houston State University; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.
org.
LECTURESSK
June 25-July 12 —OregonBach Festival, Various venues,Eugene;www. oregonbachfestival.com. June 18 —Bill Burr, Arlene Schnitzer July 8 —Fred Sherry & Friends:A Concert Hall, Portland; P5* dynamic contemporary program led by Chamber Music Northwest favorite Fred June 24 —Katharine Hayhoe: Renowned climate scientist, and political conservative, Sherry; Jimmy Mak's, Portland; www. cmnw.org. Hayhoe was recently cited as one of Time Magazine's "100 Most Influential People" July15 —"The French Connection": and as one of Foreign Policy's "Leading A remarkable evening of French music, Global Thinkers" in 2014; Arlene Schnitzer including Messiaen's transformative and * Concert Hall, Portland; P5 spiritually evocative "Quartet for the End of Time," concert performers include June 27-28 —Eddie Izzard, Keller many of the young up-and-coming artists Auditorium, Portland; P5* from Chamber Music Northwest's Protege July10 —Marc Maron, Aladdin Theater, Project; Alberta Rose Theatre, Portland; Portland; TF* www.cmnw.org. July18 —Jim Gaffigan:Jim Gaffigan July17, 19, 23, 25, 30 —"The Elixir of is a Grammy nominated comedian, New Love":Gaetano Donizetti's most warmYork Times best selling author, top touring hearted creation, notable for its charming performer and multi-platinum selling father characters, its melodic grace, and the of five; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, poignant tenor aria "Una furtive lagrima;" Portland; P5* Newmark Theatre, Portland; www. July 20 —Jim Gaffigan: Grammy portlandopera.org or 503-241-1802 or nominated comedian, NewYork Times 866-739-6737. bestselling author, top touring performer July 22 —Club BodyVox:BodyVox and and multi-platinum selling father of five; Chamber Music Northwest team up again Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; this year for two concerts in one night www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. featuring classics, a world premiere, and July 25 —UhhYeah Dude: Acomedy more; BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; podcast hosted by Seth Romatelli and www.cmnw.org. Jonathan Larroquette; Aladdin Theater, July 29 —3 Leg Torso, Main Street, Portland; TF* Portland; P5* July 28 —Anthony Bourdain, Arlene July 31-Aug.15 —Britt Classical Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* Festival:Eight concerts featuring the Britt
COMEDY
Orchestra andvarious guest performers,
SYMPHOMY 8c OPERA Through June 14 —"The Rake's Progress":Stravinsky's musical inspiration comes from Mozart, with his opera blending raucous comedy with lifeand-death drama a la DonGiovanni; Keller
including Hugh Russel, Celena Shafer, Javier Abreu, The Dover Quartet, San Francisco Girls Chorus, Aoife O'Donovan, Jeremy Kittel, Sixth Floor Trio, Morgan James,James Ehnesand Ma son Bates, plus two children's concerts; Britt Pavilion, Jacksonville; www.brittfest.org.
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
THEATER 5 DANCE
July 8, 15 —Unit Souzou: Portland's newest professional taiko company, Unit Souzou
Through June14 —"The Lion": One man, six guitars, and a true story of love, loss, family loyalty, and the redemptive power of music; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through June 21 —"The Liar": An adaptation by David Ives; Artist Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. Through June 21 —"Three Days of Rain":This Pulitzer Prizenominated play will star beloved actors from the Portland-filmed NBC television series "Grimm": Silas Weir Mitchell (Monroe) and Sasha Roiz (Captain Renard); Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Oct. 31 —Oregon Shakespeare Festival:The following productions are part of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival: "Fingersmith" (through July 9), "Long Day's Journey into Night" (through Oct. 31), "Much Ado about Nothing" (through Nov. 1), "Guys and Dolls" (through Nov.
forefront of a growing artistic movement within the world-wide taiko community; Main Street, Portland; P5* July 8-Aug. 2 —"Twelfth Night": William Shakespeare's sparkling, romantic comedy of love, longing,
1), "Pericles" (through Nov.1), "SecretLove in Peach Blossom Land" (through Oct. 31), "Antony and Cleopatra" (through Oct. 9), "Head Over Heels" (through Oct. 10), "The Count of Monte Cristo" (through Oct. 11), "The Happiest Song Plays Last" (July 7-Nov.1) and "Sweat" (July 29-Oct. 31); Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. June19, 21 —"The Day the Earth Stood Still":Presented by Fred Crafts' Radio Redux; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.radioreduxusa.com or 541-682-5000. June19-21, 26-28 —"How To SucceedlnBusiness Without Really Trying":This musical boasts a hilarious book by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock and Willie Gilbert and an exhilarating score by Frank Loesser that includes such priceless songs as "I Believe in You," "A Secretary Is Not A Toy," "Brotherhood of Man" and "The Company Way"; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. June23-28— "Potted Potter — The Unauthorized Harry Experience — A Parody":Daniel Clarkson and Jefferson Turner take on the ultimate challenge of condensing all seven Harry Potter books (and a real life game of Quidditch) into seventy hilarious minutes; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5*
(pronounced "sohzoh") is at the
gender confusion andmarriage;
Portland Shakespeare Project; Artists Repertory Theatre, Portland; www.portlandshakes.org or 503-313-3048. July 10 —"Dancing with the Stars:Live!": ABC's hit show "Dancing with the Stars" is
going back onthe road giving fans the opportunity to see their favorite stars dance live in their hometowns; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* July 22 —Cluh BodyVox:BodyVox and Chamber Music Northwest team up again this year for two concerts in one night featuring classics, a world premiere, and more; BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www.cmnw.org. July 29-Aug. 16 —"Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical": A cultural phenomenon in musical theatre history, "Hair" celebrates the rock music and culture of the '60s and '70s and follows a group of young Americans in their effort to foster peace and love during the Vietnam War; Presented by Enlightened Theatrics; Salem's Historic Grand Theatre, Salem; www.enlightenedtheatrics. org. July 31 —"Whoopee!":A thoroughly goofy story of rivalry, car (and horse) chases, threatened violence, and true love; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000.
EXHIBITS Through June 30 —Fire On The Water:Dragon Boat Art Show: A Group Art Show inspired by the theme of Dragon Boating; Antoinette Hatfield Hall, Portland; p5*
Through Aug. 10 —World Forestry Center:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Forestial, Salvage, Inhabit" (through Aug.10); World Forestry Center, Portland; www.worldforestry.org. Through Aug. 15 —"State of Oregon Craft":Showcasing the diversity of Oregon's craft artists and traditions;
Museum ofContemporary Craft, Portland; www. museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Sept. 7 —Oregon
Museum of ScienceandIndustry:
out of town The following exhibits are currently on display: "Ripley's Believe it or Not" (Through Sept. 7); Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through Sept. 20 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum ofArt: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Gifts from the Judith and Jan Zach Estate" (through June 15), "Elegance & Nobility: Modern & Contemporary Korean Literati Taste" (through June 30), "Ten Symbols of Longevity and Late Joseon Korean Culture" (through June 30), "Vistas of a World Beyond: Traditional Gardens in Chinese Material Culture" (through July 26), "Amanda Marie and X-0: The Many Places WeAre" (through Aug. 9), "Rick Bartow: Things You Know But Cannot Explain" (through Aug. 9), "Gustavo Germano: Ausencias" (through Aug. 16), "The Word Became Flesh: Images of Christ in Orthodox Devotional Objects" (through Aug. 30), "Japanese Impressions from the Vault: The Rare, the Beautiful, and the Bizarre" (through Sept. 6) and "Brett Weston in Oregon" (through Sept. 20); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu. Through Oct. 18 —Portland Art Museum:The following exhibits are currently on display:
"Classically Modern: The Portraiture of Vera Prasilova Scott" (through June 21), "APEX: Betty LaDuke" (through July 19), "Subject/Object: Modernist Photography from the Bluff Collection" (through July 26), "David Hockney: A Rake's Progress" (through Aug. 2) and "Handand Wheel:Contemporary Japanese Clay" (through Oct.18); Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811.
MISCELLANY June 13 —"Tipper: An Ambient Journey": Beloved presents the second ever showing of leading transformational artists, Alexand Allyson Grey, and leading visual manipulator, Johnathan Singer's, ambient performance, "Tipper"; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. June14-28 —Portland Jewish FilmFestival:The Portland Jewish Film Festival explores themes of spirituality and Jewish identity throughout all parts of the world, especially how American Jews perceive themselves in a larger social context; Northwest Film Center, Portland; www.nwfilm.org. June 19-21 —Oregon Garden Brewfest,The Oregon Garden,
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 25 Silverton; www.oregongarden.org. June 20 —"Full Draw" Film Tour: "Full Draw" breaks the boundaries of hunting films and will truly inspire all who share the passion and pursuit of bow hunting and outdoor films; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org. June 20 — unReal,a M ountain Bike Film:Rise into the unReal and
explore the imagination of some of the best mountain bikers on the planet, creating a world where snow is fair game, 1000-pound mammals are riding partners, and anything is possible; Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* July10-12 —Oregon Country Fair, Veneta, Oregon; www. oregoncountryfair.org or TW* July17- Aug. 27 —Top Down: Rooftop Cinema: Top Down is the Northwest Film Center's annual outdoor film series held atop the panoramic parking rooftop of the Hotel deLuxe, this unique outdoor
event also includesperformances from local bands, cocktails, beers, and BBQ from Gracie's Restaurant; Hotel deLuxe, Portland; www. nwfilm.org. July 31-Aug. 2 —Hello Kitty's Supercute Friendship Festival, Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland; www.ticketmaster.com.
I O Q A Ch
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PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
movies t„:;. + ~ g4Q+"4 4;: f
Submitted photo
Bryce Dallas Howard, from left, Chris Pratt, Nick Robinson and Ty Simpkins star in "Jurassic World."
• 'Jurassic World' puts a modern spin onthings while remaining true to thespirit of the original hey never learn. The megalomaniacal billionaire wants to play God and create life. The brilliant scientist is suscep-
itary-industrial complex is interested only in creating the ultimate fighting machine. And nobody ever listens to the bearded, macho rogue in the J.
tible to greed and blind ambition.
Peterman leather vest — the guy
The wisecracking geek at the computer keeps saying, "Something's not right," and "Wait a minute," but is ineffectual. The rigid, numbers-crunching
who keeps warning them they're making a BIG mistake by messing
T
administrator in charge doesn't
care about the human element in the profit equation. The representative of the mil-
RICHARD
ROEPER
"Jurassic World" 124 minutes PG-13, for intense sequences of science-fiction violence andperil
learns to love in a time of crisis to the obligatory profit-driven villain
tination for more than 20,000 visi-
who refuses to shut things down even as the body count piles up. (Remember the mayor in "Jaws"? It's just a little fish problem! Let's keep the beaches open.) This is "Jaws" meets "Godzilla" meets, well, the "Jurassic Park"
The children can ride docile Triceratops. You can roam the lush
movies, and I love the way "Ju-
tors every day. grounds in a rotating gyro device that allows you to almost become
one with a pack of Stegosauruses. There's an enormous aquatic attraction featuring a huge Mosasaurus that nibbles on a whole
rassic World" pays tribute to the shark like it's a cheese goldfish groundbreaking original. (A small snack. Everywhere you look in the example: A Jurassic World staffer aviary, there's a flying Pteranodon. with the natural order of things. ie is dedicated to the thundering has just scored a vintage "Jurassic Andyet we're told the people are "Jurassic World" is pure, dumb, action sequences, with the re- Park" T-shirt on eBay for $150. The bored. As the no-nonsense execuwall-to-wall fun. When they hand maining time devoted to the usual ones in mint condition go for $300.) tive named Claire (Bryce Dallas you your 3-D glasses, you can Spielbergian sci-fi thriller tropes, Set on the same island near Howard) puts it, for today's generacheck your brain at the door and from the siblings who bond be- Costa Rica that was home to Ju- tion, a living, breathing dinosaur is pick it up on your way out. cause Mom and Dad might be rassicPark, Jurassic World is a no more excitingthan an elephant. About 80 percent of the mov- splitting up to an icy adult who monstrous, sprawling tourist desContinued next page
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
ana res -ace
movies
irector tame t is east> a group of journalists investigates tional and romantic while also bea man who claims to own a func- ing scary and intense and dark," tioning time machine. In the orig- he said. "A movie doesn't have to inal script, the contraption did not be just one thing."
By Brooks Barnes New York Times News Service
LOS ANGELES — In "Jurassic World," scientists create a living
theme park attraction called Indominus rex by splicing the DNA of two very different dinosaurs. They are ecstatic. Behold! The glorious
work. But Trevorrow at the last
future, a ticket-selling machine.
But there are naysayers. Madness! This Franken-beast monster may draw crowds, but it is not nat-
ural. You cannot be two things at once. The director and a w r iter of
"Jurassic World," Colin Trevorrow, and the film's heavily involvedexecutive producer, Steven
Spielberg, are most definitely in
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27
Submitted photo
Director Colin Trevorrow, left, talks with Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howsrd on the set of "Jurassic World."
the first camp — if not with Indominus, then at least with their
"Jurassic World" could either et sales could reach $100 million. science-fiction thriller. "Jurassic World," even with a production benefit greatly from Spielberg's But reinvigoration is the true budget of $150 million, is in many steadying hand or end up a lum- goal, and w hether "Jurassic ways an experiment: Can a green- bering mishmash of vintage and World" will be received by audihorn art-house director (Trev- modern. "I remember that first ences (and critics) in a way that orrow, 38) meld his filmmaking two-hour meeting with Steven, confidently propels the series ideas with those of a cultural gi- when I had to stop being a fan and forward is still an unknown. "It's ant (Spielberg, 68) to successfully think about work," Trevorrow re- not a secret: The earlier movies dust off — but not overhaul — a called in an interview. "I was like: had diminishing returns for the 'Look, if "Jurassic Park 4" fails, audience," said Trevorrow, sitting 1990s-era movie series? Trevorrow is hardly the first you continueon being a legend. in the Santa Monica, California, unseasoned filmmaker to be giv- I'm finished.'" offices of Frank Marshall, one of en the keys to a major franchise. Trevorrow's only previous ex- Spielberg's longtime collaborators Others include Marc Webb ("The perience as a feature film director and a "Jurassic World" producer. Amazing Spider-Man"), Joseph came in 2012 from "Safety Not "If we were going to make anothKosinski ("Tron: Legacy") and Guaranteed,"a well-reviewed co- er one of these dinosaur movies, Josh Trank (the coming "Fantastic medicdrama. Budget: $750,000. it had to be something that could Four"). But it is relatively rare for "Jurassic World" will almost rebuild our love for the franchise." the originator of a movie series to certainly be a success when it arSpielberg, who has made apoint remain so involved in a rejuvena- rives on June 12, at least from a over the years to mentor budding tion effort. Spielberg did not visit financial perspective. Surveys that directors (J.J. Abrams most promthe "Jurassic World" sets, but he track audience interest indicate inently), said in an email that he approved the script, watched foot- that its distributor, Universal Pic- was impressed by Trevorrow's age daily and emailed and texted tures, has whipped up significant confidence, especially with "Safesuggestions. excitement; opening weekend tick- ty Not Guaranteed." In that film, thatisfunny and warm and emo-
From previous page What to do, what to do. How
about creating a whole new, super-scary species of dinosaur, containing DNA strands of doz-
ens of creatures? What could possibly go right? Fresh off his "Guardians of the Galaxy" triumph, a chiseled Chris Pratt plays Owen, a former
Navy man who's now something of a Veloci raptor whisperer. No kidding — using just a little clicker device,a stern voice and the promise of treats in the form of mice, Owen has a special bond with the Raptors, most notably
the one he calls Blue, who communicates with Owen almost as if
bone-crunching violence, numerThe moment Owen hears about ous scenes of dinosaurs munching the 50-foot "Indominus Rex," and on humans and blood spraying how ol' Rexy ate its only sibling hereand there.There's one fairly when it was but a lad, he tells sick and wickedly funny scene in Claire and everyone else they've which a character is plucked from made a big, big, big mistake. the ground by a Pteranodon and Think anyone listens? then dropped in mid-air, only to Meanwhile, sulking teenager land in the clutches of ANOTHZach (Nick Robinson) and his an- ER Pteranodon, Cirque du Soleilnoyingly precocious little brother, style, and that's not the end of her Gray (Ty Simpkins), have escaped dilemma. from Aunt Claire's assistant and Director Colin Trevorrow and areseparatedfrom the pack,soto the team of screenwriters have they're in a Pixar movie.
speak, at just the wrong moment. Indominus Rex is on the loose and
some fun turning summer thrill-
he's hunting for sport!
er cliches sideways, producing some major laughs as we catch
"Jurassic World" earns every inch of its PG-13 rating for some
our breath from the action. How-
ard is wonderful as Claire, who
That may be Trevorrow's con-
minute opted for a more magical, fidence talking, or maybe his lack hopeful finale. Universal execu- of Hollywood-weary cynicism. As tives were also bowled over by the studios seek to attract ticket buylittle film, in particular by Trevor- ers overseas, event movies are berow's attention to detail and char- coming stripped of their nuance. acter development. But the studio Witty banter? Hard to translate. was persuaded he could make Nix that, too, and just have a suthe leap in large part because he perhero destroy another city. would be steered by Spielberg and But Trevorrow misses more Marshall. artisanal movies from his 1980s Trevorrow was hired in March childhood, like "Romancing the 2013 without his having seen the Stone" and "Indiana Jones and the script. He disliked what he read. Temple of Doom," both of which "I didn't understand what it was added a genderwar element to about," he said. So, along with his the action. "We haven't seen that writing partner, Derek Connol- in a long time," he said. "Those ly, Trevorrow cranked out a new kinds of male-female dynamics draft built around three bedrock are things that are universal. Men ideasfrom Spielberg: The park and women don'tunderstand each was open; the raptors could be other, and I don't find that in any trained; and a synthetic dinosaur way to be a trope." had been created. Among other Trevorrow's time with Spielberg Spielbergian parameters, there is not finished. In March, one of had to be children involved. Spielberg'scompanies, DreamSpielberg was pleased with the Works Studios, announced that new script — so pleased, in fact, it would make "Intelligent Life," that he hit the brakes. "The studio an original science-fiction thriller was happy, but until Steven says, co-written by Trevorrow. He in'Yeah, go shoot this movie,' noth- tends to direct it, but he has also ing is happening," Trevorrow said. signed on to direct a low-budget "He said, 'Let's take another year, film called "Book of Henry" that is because if we do it right this could unaffiliated with Spielberg. Trevorbe really special.' " row has said he will not return to Along with big action moments direct a fifth"Jurassic Park" movie. "This opportunity has been provided by marauding dinosaurs — sniff, chomp, sniff, chomp amazing, but I also want to make — Trevorrow wanted "Jurassic original films," he said. "My body World" to have elements of roman- of work at the moment is two tiny tic adventure and screwball com- shoes and a giant head balancedy. "I wanted to make something ing on the shoes. I need a body of
goes from uptight bureaucrat to bad-ass action hero, and Vincent
work!"
post-production. That said, the special effects
D'Onofrio has fun hamming it up as Hoskins, the military strategist
are indeed pretty special. Rare is the occasion when it doesn't feel
who actually thinks it would be
as if humans and dinosaurs are
a good idea for the U.S. military to use trained Velociraptors as weapons. I'm a big Chris Pratt fan, but
sharing the same space. (It does happen once or twice.) It's great to hear the classic John Williams theme in a movie
he's so focused on playing the
theater again. How can your heart
action hero with a smirk on his
not soar when the music swells
face and a hankering for the and the camera swoops over Jugirl who can't resist his charms, rassic World before all the chaos Owen ends up being kind of a ensues? You happily strap on the stiff. Also, it's hard not to look a seat belt and let the silly greatness little goofy when you're pretend- of it all wash over you. ing to be squaring off against a After all, it's almost summer. — Richard Roeper is a film critic bunch of Raptors who of course won't really be in the scene until for The Chicago Surt-Times.
movies
PAGE 28 + GO! MAGAZINE
e insi Editor's note:"Inside Out" opens June 19,with early screenings Thursday. A special advance screening that includes exclusive behind-the-scenes footage from Pixar Animation Studios will screen Tuesday.
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
on ixar's atest,'nsi e V.'
t
By Steven Rea The Philadelphia rnquirer
t
n "Inside Out," which debuted at the Cannes Film Festival
in May to rapturous crowds and kudos, the emotions of an 11-year-old girl are brought to life Pixar-style.
Joy (the voice of Amy Poehler) is a sparkling, google-eyed pixie. Sadness ("The Office's" Phyllis Smith) is a roly-poly blob of blue, sporting big round glasses and a look of helpless woe. Anger (the ranting, raging Lewis Black) is
//
I
squat and red and blows flames
out of his head. Disgust (Mindy Kaling), green from head to toe, sneers contemptuously at every-
one and everything. And Fear (Bill Hader) wears a nerdy bow tie, rubbing his purply hands together with worry, ready to slink into a crevice at the first sign of trouble.
They operate inside the head of Riley (Kaitlyn Dias), working the controls and being sorely tested
when her parents (Kyle MacLachlan, Diane Lane) decide to pick up Joy and Sadness navigate through Imagination Land in "Inside Out."
Disney Pixar I Submitted photo
and move from Minnesota to San
Francisco. "We had s ome o ther e mo-
with you, Ennui?' " Rivera re-
tions in there early on," says Pete members. "And he went, 'Eh.'" Docter, who codirected and cowIf Ennui and Schadenfreude rote "Inside Out," and who, not
didn't make the final cut in the
altogether coincidentally, moved movie, there's still plenty going from Minnesota to the Bay Area
on inside Riley's head that is, well,
(with a stop at Cal Arts in greater not the stuff of typical pipsqueak L.A.) when he landed a job at Pix- fare. There are references to abar. His daughter also happened to stract thought, the subconscious, be 11 when the idea for the movie even nonobjective fragmentation, popped into his brain. whatever that is. The other emotions that nearly Docter is ready to concede that crowded into Riley's head? Pride a few of his own emotions (Selfwas one. Schadenfreude was an- doubt, Dread) bubbled up from other (he had a German accent). time to time during the five years "And Ennui," says Jonas Rivera, he and Rivera andtheirteam were who produced "Inside Out" with readying "Inside Out," budgeted Docter and has worked with his at a reported $150 million to $200 Pixarcolleague on a number of million. (Computer animation is computer-generated 'toons. You a famously painstaking, snailmay have heard of a couple of paced process.) But there was the them: "Up" (Academy Award hope, at least, that children would for best animated feature) and get it. "Monsters, Inc." (four Oscar nomMaybe the parents would, too. "I always had confidence that inations, $562.8 million in global receipts). kids would be attracted to the "The line was something like, same things we were in terms of 'Hey, we'll call you guys if any- the funand the comedy and the thing comes up — is that all right characters and the world they in-
habit," says Docter. "Where we
there 21 years (starting out as a
did have doubts was in terms of
production assistant on "Toy Sto-
John Lasseter, the creative chief at Pixar and Disney.
"Just like when we were doing complexity. Because we have 'core ry") — but the two men have dememories,"personality islands'cidedly, well, animated attributes. 'Up,' we had some ideas," Rivera all these rules and concepts to try Docter is ridiculously tall, with a says. "And one of those ideas was to lay down for people." long, narrow face interrupted by a this one, 'Inside Out,' so we hope So a year and a half ago, pair of thick rectangular glasses. to continue that cycle, to get anPixar test-screened a w o rk-in- Rivera commonly speaks through other one going soon." Docter is ready, too. progress "Inside Out" to a key a big smile. His ears are elfish, "It's interesting," he says, "as demographic. jauntily protruding from a base"We brought in a lot of kids," ball cap. this wraps up and people seem to "We've got lots of stuff going be enjoying certain things about says Rivera. "Our kids, neighbors' kids, kids on the soccer on at Pixar right now," Docter it, there's a tendency for me to says. "In fact, this is going to be a want to look for more of that in team, and we did a little Q&A afterward.... And we were re- pretty banner year for us because some way. I'm not saying a sequel, ally pleased, because these kids we have two films coming out. but just the idea that the elements, spoke back to us, very accurate- 'The Good Dinosaur' comes out the ingredients of finding somely, all of the concepts.... Without in November.Everybody'smadly thing that rings true and taps into us asking leading questions, they scrambling to finish that one. the emotions — that's tempting to "And then we've got a bunch try again. would say, 'Well, there are five "On the other hand, I'm also emotions,' and they would name more stuff: 'Finding Dory,' the them and say what their jobs sequel to 'Finding Nemo,' that really attracted to doing somewere." comes out next summer. And thing really new, so we'll see what "It's been rewarding to see the then there's stuff stacked up for happens." kids really grasp it," adds Docter. years." But don't hold your breath. "In another five years, probMaybe it comes from working Docter and Rivera have been at Pixar — Docter has been there kicking around ideas, too, al- ably," Docter says. "Sometimes since 1989 (he was the third ani- though they haven't had a chance I feel, well, it would be nice if we mator hired), Rivera has been to pitch them to the boss yetcould go a little faster."
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
movies
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29
Submitted photo
Robert Downey Jr. stars as Tony Stark in "Avengers: Age of Ultron."
O N LO C A L S CREEN S
"Inside Out" —Growing up can be abumpy road, and it's no exception for Riley, who is uprooted from her Midwest life when her father starts a newjob in SanFrancisco. Like all of us, Riley is guided by heremotions — Joy (Amy Poehler), Fear (Bill Hader), Anger (Lewis Black), Disgust (Mindy Kaling) and Sadness (Phyllis Smith). The emotions live in Headquarters, the control center inside Riley's mind, where they help advise her through everyday life. As Riley and her emotions struggle to adjust to a new life in SanFrancisco, turmoil ensues in Headquarters. Although Joy, Riley's main and most important emotion, tries to keep things positive, the emotions conflict on how best to navigate a newcity, house and school. This film opens June19, with early screenings Thursday. Runtime is 94 minutes.
STILL SHOWING
"The Age of Adsline" — Hollywood long ago ceded "love that stands thetest of time" to the realm of science fiction andfantasy, so "The Age of Adaline" falls neatly into a genrethat includes "TheTime Traveler's Wife," "About Time," and even"Somewhere in Time." But building this film around all the willowy, worldweary grace that Blake"Gossip Girl" Lively Reviews byRichard Roeper or RogerMoore, can muster paysoff. As atwenty-something who stopped aging 80yearsago,Lively unless otherwise noted. suggests several lifetimes of experience in a love story that rangesfrom wistful to hopeful, HEADS UP a romancewhosefemale half understands its consequences. Rating: Threeanda half stars. "ComeswithBaggage/The BlackCanyon 110 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore Trail" —Two movie shorts about biking "Aloha" —Bradley Cooper is terrific as and backpacking to benefit the Central a defense contractor working in Hawaii, Oregon Trail Alliance. 9 p.m.Thursdayat (PG) reconnecting with an ex(Rachel McAdams) McMenamins in Bend.Over 21only. Cost is — Synopsis from the film's website and charmed by afighter pilot (Emma Stone). $5 (cash only). (No MPAArating) Cameron Crowehasdirected a great-looking — Synopsis from McMenamins "Insider Accessto DisneyPixar's Inside movie with just enough bright spots to get Out" —A special advance screening of the "Drum CorpsInternational 2015Tour us past the cloudy moments. Rating: Three highly anticipated movie "Inside Out" that Premiere" —See six of Drum Corps includes exclusive behind-the-scenes footage stars. 105 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper International's top marching music "Avengers:Ageof Ultron" — Captain from Pixar Animation Studios, the Lavashort, ensembles compete in their season-opening and exclusive live Q&A. This movie screens America, Iron Man,Thor andthe rest are debut — live. This movie screens locally back in a giant superhero adventure that's locally at RegalOld Mill Stadium16 & IMAX at the Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAXat sometimes daffy, occasionally baffling, at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Cost is $25. Runtime is 5:30 p.m. Wednesday; Cost is $15. Runtime surprisingly touching andevenromantic 150 minutes. (PG) is 120 minutes. (No MPAArating). with one kinetic thrill after another. It earns a — Synopsis f r om F an dango . com — Synopsis from the film's website place of high ranking in the Marvel Universe. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 142 minutes. "Gun Hill Road" — After three years in (PG-13) — Roeper prison, Enrique (Esai Morales) returns home WHAT'S NEW "Clouds of Sils Maria" — Anexpertly to the Bronx to find the world heknew has "JurassicWorld" —Pure, dumb, wall-tochanged. His wife, Angela (JudyReyes), filmed insider's look at the film business, struggles to hide anemotional affair, and his wall fun, "Jurassic World" earns every inch the trappings of fameandthe unstoppable, teenage son, Michael (HarmonySantana), sometimes bone-chilling march of time. It's of its PG-13rating for somebone-crunching explores a sexual transformation well beyond violence, numerous scenes of dinosaurs rare when afilm has three robust, deeply Enrique's grasp andunderstanding. This drawn female characters — andJuliette munching on humans and blood spraying Binoche, ChloeGrace Moretzand Kristen movie screens at 6p.m. Monday atthe here and there. Strap onthe seatbelt and let Volcanic Theatre Pub inBend. Presented the silly greatness of it all wash overyou.This Stewart deliver memorable, nuanced performances. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. by LGBTStarsand Rainbows.Costis$5. film is available locally in 3-D andIMAX3-D. 124 minutes.(R) — Roeper Runtime is 86 minutes. (No MPAA rating). Rating: Threeand a half stars. 124 minutes. — Synopsis from the film's website (PG-13) —Roeper Continued next page
Here's what's showing onCentral Oregon movie screens.Forshowtimes,see listings on Page31.
(4 X B ALL GAM E T O N I G H T ve.Victoria
Friday,June12, S:35pm Saturday, June 13, 6:35pm ~i
""'"'." Thriwent Financial Night
Sunday,June14, 1:05pm $1 Snow Cones TICKET INFO:541-312-9259 0 WWW.BENDELKS.COM
QhOBendBa seball
movies
PAGE 30 e GO! MAGAZINE
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Twentieth Century Fox/ Submitted photo
Carey Mulligan stars as Bathsheba and Tom Sturridge as Sergeant Troy in "Far From the Madding Crowd."
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"Entourage" — TheTV show abouta movie star (Adrian Grenier), his agent (Jeremy Piven) and his hangers-on wasalready spinning its wheels whenits HBOrun ended in 2011. This big-screen updatefeels more like a rerun than a fully formed, standalone movie. Rating: Twostars. 105 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Far From the MaddingCrowd"— Thomas Hardy's romantic Victorian novel of class, labor and the fickle finger of love, "FarFrom the Madding Crowd," earns astately yet earthy and full-blooded film treatment from the Danish director ThomasVinterberg. The film makes afine showcasefor CareyMulligan ("The GreatGatsby"), Mathias Schoenaerts ("Rust8 Bone"),MichaelSheenandJuno Temple. And if it isn't as decorous anddeft as the JaneAusten romances of an earlier literary (and cinematic) age, the longing is still there in a story that feels more lived-in, brutish and realistic. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 119 minutes.(PG-13) — Moore "Home" —Alittle Jim Parsons goes a long way, and hegrates on your nerves voicing an alien on the run with a smart seventh-grader (Rihanna). Kids will probably enjoy the colors and the music, but anyoneover10 will see the plot twists a mile away.Rating: Twostars. 96 minutes.(PG) —Roeper "Insidious:Chapter 3" —It starts with a simple request. OK, it's a horror movie. So maybe not so simple. "I want to talkto somebody who's not aroundany more." Of course, warning youngQuinn (Stefanie Scott) that trying to talk with her mother isn't a great idea, doesn't work. Mom died of breast cancer. Quinn is finishing high school, wantsto beanactressandneeds her mother's advice, becausethere are some things electrician dad (Dermot Mulroney) just doesn't understand. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 97 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore "Iris" —Shewas never agreat beauty, a model or magazineeditor, never married anybodyfamous. Butsomehow, IrisApfel was anointed aNewYork "fashion icon."
That Apfel achieved this status, with her vast collection of couture accessories earning a Metropolitan Museum ofArt showfollowed by newspaper profiles andmagazine covers, well into her '80s, is what makesher rise astonishing, andworthy of "Iris," one of the last documentaries of the late Albert Maysles. Maysles could havemadethis another "Grey Gardens," seeing Apfel as just a sad,shallow and well-heeled hoarder. ButApfel never comes off as eccentric, just singular. Rating: Three stars. 80 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore "Mad MarcFuryRoad" —TomHardy and Charlize Theron makeoneof the best action duos ever in astunningly effective post-apocalyptic fable, a chilling andyet exhilarating daytime nightmare that also contains a surprising amount of depth and character development. Rating: Four stars. 120 minutes. (R) —Roeper "Pitch Perfect 2" —Thesequel to 2012's surprise hit about a cappella singers hasa few wickedly funny one-liners and occasional moments of zany inspiration, but the musical numbers are often curiously dull, and there are far too manyscenes that serveas time-killing filler and/or journeys into headscratching, "What wasTHAT?"territory. Rating: Twostars. 115 minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper "Poltergeist" —Well, the little girl gets it. Kennedi ClementsplaysMaddy Bowen,the child trapped betweenthe realworld and the afterlife in the new version of "Poltergeist," and gives us wild-eyed terror we canhang onto and a blood-curdling scream that will haunt your nightmares. Therest of the players? Theysort of shrug it off. Sam Rockwell, as the father of the missing child, lands his laughs. But he,Rosemarie DeWitt, Jane Adams(as aparanormal academic) and others under-react to the stunning evidence of a supernatural menace in away one can only describe as blase.Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 93 minutes.(PG-13) — Moore "San Andreas" —In "San Andreas," you will believe the ground is rippling under Los Angeles, the cracking collapse of the Hoover
Dam and that a tidal wave issubmerging San Francisco. But what sells this formulaic corker of apocalypse porn is the cast. Sure, we know where it's going, from the moment the ground starts shaking until itfinally stops, several "swarms" later. But "SanAndreas" is a well-executed reminder of why wedon't need to fret over the zombieapocalypse when there are plenty of real calamities Mother Earth can throw at us. Andthat Hollywood's best craftsfolk at Digital Domain, Houseof Moves and other effects houses aregetting even better at recreating those worst case scenarios we love somuch — inour movies, at least. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars.114 minutes.(PG-13) — Moore "The SearchforFreedom" —Thestory of a cultural revolution fueled bythe humandesire to live in the momentand dowhat makes you feel the most alive. Wediscover how an electrifying new world cameabout through pure energy and imagination andthe infinite possibilities of self-expression available to anyone willing to drop in. This documentary, written and directed byJon Long is avisceral, visual experience told through theeyes some of the brightest pioneers, legends, visionaries and champions of surfing, snowboarding, skiing, skateboarding, mountain biking and more. This film was not screened inadvance for critics. 72 minutes. (No MPAArating) — Synopsis from fiim's yirebsite "Spy" —A deskbound CIAagent (Melissa McCarthy) is sent on anundercover mission in a foul-mouthed, often hilariously disgusting, slightly paddedcomedythat soars on the bountiful comedic talents of McCarthy, Rose Byrne andJason Statham. Rating: Three stars. 120 minutes.(PG) — Roeper "Welcome toMe" — Kristen Wiig gives perhaps the most impressive performance I've seen this year as a deeply troubled California womanwho uses lottery winnings to get her own bizarre talk show.There's never a momentwhen we're not worried about her, but that's becausewe've cometo care so muchabout her. Rating: Three anda half stars. 87 minutes. (R) —Roeper
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2015
MOVI E
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31
T I M E S • For the meekfoJune12
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• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times a/e subject to change after press time. I
Submitted photo
Colin Firth stars in "Kingsman: The Secret Service."
NEW O N D V D 8a BLU-RAY The following movies were released the week ofJune9.
"Kingsman: The Secret Service"In a very violent and very silly movie, Colin Firth gives a disciplined, serious performance as aspy from a supersecret British agency. "Kingsman," a relentless, hardcore spoof of the old-school James Bondmo vies, is the craziest movie I've seen in a long time. NoDVDor Blu-ray extras are listed for this film. Rating: Three and a half stars. 129 minutes. (R) — Roeper "The DUFF" — Asocially awkward high school senior (the eminently likable MaeWhitman) ditches her besties after learning she's their "Designated Ugly FatFriend." This well-intentioned andsometimes quite sharp movie falls just short due to a few way-off-the-mark scenesandtoo much heavy-handed preaching. No DVD or Blu-ray extras are listed for this film. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 104 minutes (PG-13).— Roeper "Serena" — After a string of fine performances, BradleyCooper is utterly unbelievable as aruthless, Depression-era timber baron who looks like hejust stepped off a GQ photo shoot. And ashis bonkers new bride, Jennifer Lawrence is monumentally bad. Despite all the ingredients for a prestige film, what we have here isan epicclunker. No DVD or Blu-ray extras are listed for this film. Rating: Onestar. 109 minutes (R) —Roeper
Also available:
"The Squeeze," "Healing" and "Project Almanac."
Next Week:
"The Lazarus Effect," "Run All Night," and "Unfinished Business."
• Accessibility devices are available for somemovies at Regal Old Mill Stadium 76/d IMAX
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 11:20a.m. Mon: 11:20 a.m., 3, 6:30, 9:30 Tue: 11:20 a.m., 3 Wed-Thu: 11:20 a.m., 3, 9:30 • ALOHA (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:40, 3:45, 6:55, 9:50 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 11:10a.m., 2:35, 6:25, 9:50 Thu: 11:10a.m., 2:35, 9:50 • DCI 0 215TOUR PREMIERE (No MPAA rating) Wed: 5:30 • ENTOURAGE (R) Fri-Thu: 1:05, 3:55, 7:40, 10:25 • FAR FROM THEMADDING CROWD (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 12:05, 3:05, 6:15, 9:40 Thu: 12:05, 3:05 • INSIDE OUT (PG-13) Thu: 7, 9:45 • INSIDE OUT3-D (PG-13) Thu: 7:30, 8, 10:10 • INSIDERACCESS TO DISNEY PIXAR'S INSIDEOUT(No MPAArating) Tue: 7 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:05a.m., 2:05, 4:30, 7:10, 10:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:05, 6, 7, 9,10 Sun-Wed: 11:30a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:05, Columbia Pictures / Submitted photo 6,7,9,9:55 Thu: 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:05, 6:15, 7, Emma Stone, from left, Bradley Cooper and Rachel McAdams star in "Aloha." 9:55, 10:15 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 11a.m., 2, 3, 5, 6:30, 7:55, 9:30, Fri-Sat: 3:30 Fri: 4:45, 7:30, 7:45 10:45 Sun: 2:30 Sat-Sun: 2:15, 4:45, 7:30, 7:45 Mon-Wed: 11a.m., 2, 5, 7:55, 10:45 Mon-Thu: 5:30 Mon-Thu:6 Thu: 11 a.m., 2, 5, 6:40, 10:45 • IRIS (PG-13) • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) • JURASSIC WORLD IMAX3-D (PG-13) Mon-Thu: 3:30 Fri: 7:30 Fri-Thu: noon, 3:30, 7:30, 10:30 • THE SEARCH FORFREEDOM(NR) Sat-Sun: 5, 7:30 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri-Sat: 8:30 Mon-Thu: 6:30 Fri-Thu: 10:55 Sun: 7:30 • SPY (R) • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) • WHILE WE'RYOUNG E (R) Fri: 4:45, 7:15 Fri-Wed: 12:35, 3:40, 7:20, 10:20 Fri-Sat: 6:15 Sat-Sun: 2:15, 4:45, 7:15 Thu: 12:35, 3:40, 7:20 Sun: 5:15 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-l3) Mon-Thu: 8:15 i I • i Fri-Thu: 1, 4:15, 7:35, 10:35 I I I • SPY (R) Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway Fri-Wed: 11:45a.m., 12:15, 2:45, 3:20, Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 6:45, 7:15, 9:45, I0:15 Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • ENTOURAGE(R) Thu: 11:45 a.m., 12:15, 2:45, 3:20, 6:45, • INSIDE OUT (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:10, 2:35, 5, 7:25, 9:50 7:15, 9:45, 10:30 Thu:7 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) • TOMORROWLAND (PG) • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 1:05, 3:15, 5:25, 7:35, 9:40 Fri-Thu: 11:35a.m., 3:15, 6:40, 10:05 Fri-Sun: 12:45, 1, 3:30, 3:45, 6:15, 6:30, • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) i 9:15, 9:30 I Fri-Thu: 1:20, 7 Mon-Thu: 1:30, 3:30, 4:15, 6:15, 7,9 McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) NW Bond St., Bend,541-330-8562 Fri-Thu: 4:10, 9:50 Fri, Mon-Wed: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) Sat-Sun: 11, 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Fri-Thu: noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20, 9:55 Fri-Thu:6 Thu: 1:30, 4 • SPY(R) • COMES WITHBAGGAGE/THE BLACK • SPY(R) Fri-Thu: 1:45, 4:25, 7:10, 9:45 CANYON TRAIL (No MPAArating) Fri, Mon-Thu: 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Thu: 9 Sat-Sun:11:15, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • HOME (PGI3) Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt., Prineville, Sat-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2:30 541-4I6-10 I4 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Wed: 2:30 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) Sisters, 541-549-8800 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 9 Fri-Sat: 1, 4, 7,9:30 • ALOHA (PG-13) • Younger than 27 may attend all Sun:1,4,7 Fri: 5:15 screeningsifaccompanied by a legal Mon-Thu: 6:15 Sat-Sun: 3, 5:15 guardian. • PITCH PERFECT 2(Upstairs — PG-13) Mon-Thu: 6:45 • Fri-Sat, 1:10, 4:10, 7:15, 9:45 • i • FAR FROMTHE MADDING CROWD I Sun:1:10, 4:10, 7:15 (PG-13) Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Mon-Thu: 6:30 Fri:5 Bend, 541-241-2271 Sat-Sun: 2:30 • The upstairs screening room has limited • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) • CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA (R) accessibility •
Call Becky Vaughan 641-316-6626 www.horizonps.com 1723Lyge Street Bend OR97762
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PAGE 32 • GOI MAGAZINE
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