SUNDAY July12,2015 '
Serving Central Oregon since 1903$2
BUSINESS • E1
' llllll IS CQllCSll I'8 I Ill LIS
I 'OWS
TRAVEL:EASTMEETSEASTERNOREGONIN JOHNDAY'S CHINESEHERITAGE, C'I MQRE $+ ~~
I N coupoNs
THAN
INSI D E
• ~~
bendbulletin.corn TODAY' S READERBOARD
BILL IN SALEM
ODOTis
Chinese nomadsForcedresettlement puts an end to a way of life.Ae
preparing
New HarperLee novel-
for higher speeds
Plottwist angers somefans. A6 in Spei"tS —Ducks recruiting local talent; Special Olympians hit the links.n1
Major points of c angealongthe way
• Parks planners expect someupdatesto be visible byfall — including a six-week road closure off ColoradoAvenueto build an underpassfor the trail. Other parts could take adecadeto reachcompletion.
— Official Trail — Pot' tiul route of future trail
i /
South ofTamale
By Kuiley Fisicuro
The trail exists, but will be improved by thet ime Riley Ranch Nature Reserve opens.
of Transportation has
PluS: SumO —A Canadian makes his mark.n5
Chelsea Schneider said trail construction near Colorado Avenue will begin in September and that the undercrossing work, which involves closing
Whether officially or unofficially, the Deschutes River Trail exists along 24 river
Drunken touristsSelfiesof extreme behavior — including the destruction of cultural landmarks — have destinations fighting back.A6
And a Weh exclusiveMoreboorish behavior: On Broadway theshow must go on, but will the phonesturn off? beudbulf euu.corn/extrus
miles from Tumalo State Park all the way to Sunriver. The lone exceptions are a stretch north of Awbrey Butte and a stretch that needs to cut through a Bend suburb south of River Rim Park.
Mount
St. Helens has world's newest glacier
Sh in
install large concrete culverts to facilitate the undercrossing. He said the project should be complete by the first of next year.
to reach consensus on the
Riverfront reimagined
plans — and some patience.
Just to the north of Miller's Landing Park in downtown Bend, the Deschutes River
Because as soon as the Bend Whitewater Park project
adjacent to the Colorado Avenue Bridge is complete this summer,thereare plansto close the road for six weeks
Trail follows the sidewalk on
course The trail will continue to skirt River's Edge Golf Course and bypass the Riverhouse Hotel 8 Convention Center.
North AwhreyButte t
Sa
r
nr
the west side of narrow Riverfront Street.
while a Deschutes River Trail
The sidewalk is small and resident John Kelly said he
undercrossing is cut through the road to connect Miller's Landing Park to the Old Mill
often sees floaters carrylllg inner tubes down t he middle of the two-way roa
It's just one of the stretches
Downtown
Riverfront Street improvements
Mirror Pond plans will dictate how this portion is developed. It currently follows sidewalks.
Bridge
S
District.
undercrossing Oct. 5- Nov. 17
of the trail the Bend Park 8z Recreation District and Ore-
gon State Parks plan to work on in the coming months and
years to complete the vision for the Deschutes River Trail.
By Sundi Doughton
c,eo«""
The Seattle Times
River Rim P rk;-.
Future hriflge This section could take up to a decadeto complete becauseof state rules that would need to be amendedto allow a bridge across a State Scenic Waterway.
ay/
Central Oregon irrigation District Road
Bri
up
Central and Eastern Ore-
gon highways next year. Lawmakers approved the higher limits July 3, and
have to replace some of the
current speed limit signs and recalculate where to put advisory signs that warn drivers when to begin slowing down before turns. ODOT will also have
to adjust signs in areas where speeds are stepped down incrementally when
a section of highway runs through a community. But, Murphy added, the speedlimitincreaseis "a more complicated process than putting signs up" for ODOT. He said the department will have to create a communications plan to in-
form the public in advance of the speed limit changes, which would take effect in March.
SeeSpeed/A6
F •n
Why CVS quit
Unscenicroute
S phn ompson's prop
Because of private property development close to the river, the trail would likely be diverted through unshaded subdivision sidewalks.
smoking By Hiroko Tebuchi New York Times News Service
Rocks and boulders
Michael Gaffney's throat
was scratchy for days, and lemon tea was not helping. So he dropped into a MinuteClinic above a CVS
sloughedoffthecrater walls, kicking up plumes of dust as they clattered
Lava Island Falls
down the near-vertical slopes. Steam rose from
,,5
store in midtown Manhattan on a lunch break. Within minutes, a nurse
DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
the twin magma domes
formed after Mount St. Helens' cataclysmic erup-
ul"
tion in 1980 and the quieter
'
-'~li,;,
'
2004.
practitioner tested him for strep throat (negative), suggested lozenges and a regimen (ample fluids, no spicy food), collected a copayment ($25 cash) and sent him on his way.
"
eral(~i
outburst that started in
:
DFS HtjTE~ Ri
But Yurkewycz, operations director for the
TRAII.
nonprofit Mount St. Helens Institute, was focused less
Dillon Falls
"That was quick," said
s
on the volcano's fiery past
Gaffney, 26,an account executiveforIndeed.corn, who, like millions of Americans, does not have a primary care physician, even though he is covered by health insurance. He has been meaning to find a doc-
than its icy present. Few
people realize, he said, that the hollowed-out crater where lava was flowing just a few years ago now holds the world's youngest glacier.
0
-i if'
Beuham Falls
'IYj ',e 'iti i,"",, /' 'e i:
And if that's not surpris-
tor since moving to New
ing enough, the prosaically
York last year, but his sore
named Crater Glacier is
throat did not seem serious enough to warrant what
-'', I.Iii
also growing at a time when most glaciers around the globe are in rapid
(
MILES
was suretobe atim e-consuming search and a long
i
retreat.
wait for an appointment. SeeCVS /A5
"It's cascading down
into this valley now,"
Yurkewycz said, pointing out a tongue of ice flowing over a rise and into a rub-
ources:Steve Jorgense, Bend Park & Recreation District; Ross
TODAY'S WEATHER
bly ravine. "It's only been in the last two years that it started doing that."
SeeGlacier/A7
limits drivers
On A6 wi ll likely see on rural sections of
ing for Gov. Kate Brown's signature. If the governor approves the bill, ODOT spokesman Peter Murphy said Thursday, the department will
Golf The park district is working on acquiring easements to improve X I anofficialtrailacross land owned by the Brooks Resources Corp., Shevlin Sand 8 Gravel and on top of a buried pipeline.
started gearing up for the increase in speed
the bill is currently wait-
cut through the roadway to
voters in 2012, but what' s
cano and marveled at the primordial forces at work.
oi Rd.
Deschutes River Trail project, said the closure is needed to
thanks to a $29 million park district bond approved by
on the rim of the Northwest's most restless vol-
Riley Ranch iIiarure Re serve
Steve Jorgensen, the park
connect the missing links
tinues to grow while most others around the world are shrinking. Ray Yurkewycz perched
Oe • CatiOn
district planner overseeing the
The money is in place to
SEATTLE — Mount St. Helens' Crater Glacier con-
id sr pile
F uturege ut 4
both lanes of the street, will last from Oct. 5 to Nov. 17.
needed next are the flexing of political and legal muscles
EDITOR'SCHOICE
There will be internal park trails, but they won't cross the river to the south.
Park district planner
The Bulletin
The Oregon Department
MaP
Riley Ranch By Pete Smith
The Bulletin
b
Afternoon t'storm High 73, Low 51 Pa g e B6
'
', OregonState Parks and Recreation
Pete Smith /I B
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B5 Sp o rts Gf -6 Local/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies
ul l e tin
C6 D1-6 C7
An Independent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. 193,
46 pages, 7 sections
Q We use recycied newsprint
:: IIIIIIIIIII I o
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaCh US STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phone hours: 5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F ri.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-eun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
541-382-1 811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.corn EMAIL
bulletin©bendbulletin.corn N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X
541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business .....business@bendbulletin.corn City Desk..........news@bendbulletin.corn CommunityLife communitylife@bendbulletin.corn Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.corn
OUR ADDRESS
ea OC On I'eeoc By James Kanter New York Times News Service
BRUSSELS — A meeting of
The failure by the finance es and putting the country on firmer financial footing — and weary of the constant of talks, belied the optimism brinkmanship that has charministers to reach an agreement, after nearly nine hours
European finance ministers broke up late Saturday with no that followed th e a pproval agreement on whether Greece early Saturday by the Greek should be granted its third Parliament of a package of bailout since 2010, reflecting pension cuts, higher taxes deep divides over w hether and other policy changes long the Athens government can sought by Greece's internabe trusted to repay huge new tional creditors. In a remarkloans and leaving the Conti-
able turnabout, Prime Minis-
nent hours from what could be ter Alexis Tsipras had pushed a historic rupture. the package through the legThe f i n a nc e min i sters islature despite having led his planned to reconvene today, country into a referendum six just before European nation- days earlier that overwhelmal leaderswere scheduled to ingly rejected much the same meet in Brussels for what they terms. said would be a final decision Despite Greece's capituon whether Greece should lation on those terms, many qualify for a new aid package, countries came into this weekend's final round of negotiaa step aimed at determining whether the c ountry c ould tions skeptical of the Tsipras remain in the euro currency governm ent's commitment union. to seeing through the chang-
acterized the months of nego-
tiations over Greece's latest crisis.
"We will have exceptionally difficult negotiations," Wolfgang Schaeuble, the hardnosed German finance min-
ister, said Saturday before the meeting. "We won't be able to
rely on promises." His prediction proved accurate, as he and fellow min-
isters wrangled with little apparent progress, seeking more assurances from Greece that
it was committed to changing its way, and weighing the desires of France and Italy for a
deal against the more skeptical stance of Germany and the possibility of outright opposition from Finland.
Street ........... 1777 SW Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing......... P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97706
ON THE PRESIDENTIALCAMPAIGN TRAIL Si sil.AvL
Dtseuiesrs
:I
<%>
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt..... 54f -383-0370 Circulation AdamSears ... 541-385-5805 (
TALK TO AN EDITOR
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 NW Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box786 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone ................................ 54f -504-2336 Fax .................................... 54f -548-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-383-0356.
TO SUBSCRIBE Call us ................541-385-5800
Home deliveryandE-Editian: One month: $ I7.50 (Printonly:$f6.50)
Bymail:One month: $25 E-Editien only:Onemonth: $13
ISlamiC State Strike —Afghanistan said Saturday that recent U.S. airstrikes it assisted destroyed the top leadership of a fledging Islamic State affiliate there, potentially striking a major blow to an insurgent group already targeted by local Taliban fighters. While U.S. officials declined to confirm it, Afghan authorities said an American airstrike Friday killed Islamic State affiliate leader Hafeez Sayeed and more than 30 other militants. That comes after Afghan officials earlier said another U.S. airstrike killed the affiliate's second-highest official, Gul Zaman, and six others, including a former Pakistani Taliban spokesman namedShahidullah Shahid who earlier had joined the group.
CairO hemding —The Islamic State militant group claimed responsibility for a powerful explosion outside the Italian Consulate's compound in downtown Cairo early Saturday that killed one person and was the first major bombing of a foreign diplomatic mission since the start of an insurgency here nearly two years ago. The explosion, which occurred about 6:15 a.m., jolted residents awake across the city and brought down slabs of the consulate's outer walls. A statement by the Islamic State that was circulated on jihadi Twitter accounts Saturday warned Muslims to stay awayfrom "security dens" because theywere "legitimate targets."
Finance/HumanResources Heidi Wright......................541-383-0324 Business Tim Doran......... 541 -383-0360 CitySheila G.Miler..........541-617-7631 Community Life, Features Jody Lawrence-Turner......541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe..... 54f-383-0353 GD! Magazin e..................54f-383-0306 NewsJan Jordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....54f-383-0366 SportsBill Bigelow............ 541-383-0359
ViOlent Crime —Police departments across the country that have spent years boasting about plummeting crime numbers are now scrambling to confront something many agencies havenot seenindecades:morebloodshed.Houston,St.Louis,New Orleans and Baltimore have all seen significant spikes in the number of homicides this year. Thetotals are up in other cities, too, including New York and Chicago. It's too soon to assess whether the surge in killing marks the start of a trend after years of declines. But concern is growing that the increase could reflect a confluence of recent shifts, including deepening distrust of police that leads people to settle disputes themselves, officers who are afraid of being second-guessed and court rulings that make it easier than ever to own a gun. Tighter budgets that result in cuts to law-enforcement agencies could also play a role.
VOting rightS in COIIrt —Days after South Carolina confronted its past and lowered the Confederate battle flag, North Carolina will grapple with its rules that determine access to the voting booth. A federal trial opening Monday is meant to determine whether sweeping changes in the state's election laws discriminate against black voters. These changeswere adopted by the Republican-dominated state Legislature in 2013, immediately after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the heart of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The contested measures include reduced early voting days, an endto same-day registration and anend to a program to preregister high school students.
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54f -383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-363-0356
iranian nUke 'taikS —As negotiators at Iran nuclear talks labored to make headway,the country's supreme leader called Saturday for the struggle against the U.S. to continue, in comments suggesting that Tehran's distrust of Washington will persist no matter what the outcome of the talks. Thenegotiations entered their 15th day Saturday with no indications of major progress after three extensions and four target dates for a deal, anddiplomats said it remained unclear whether an agreement could be reached byMonday, the latest deadline. Iran and theU.S. havethreatened to walk away unless the other side makes concessions. Although it was unclear whether Ayatollah Ali Khamenei waspreparing the ground for the failure of the talks, his comments were likely to add to skepticism over the outcome atthe negotiating table.
— From wire reports
Marco Ug arte/The Associated Press
Alicia LopezFernandezpaints a pinata in the likeness of Donald Trump at her family's store "Pinatas Mena Banbolinos" in Mexico City. The pinata was aspecial order made after Trump's comments that Mexican immigrants to the U.S. bring drugs andcrime, and some are rapists. Trump doubled down onthose commentsinappearancesSaturday in LasVegasand Phoenix, saying "These peoplewreak havoc on our population." A Reuters-Ipsos poll published Saturday showedTrumpand Jeb Bush in a neardead heat at the top of a field of Republicans running
for president. Meanwhile, Hillary Clinton picked up theendorsement of the American Federation of Teachers, the first national union to back a candidate for the 2016 primary. The endorsement wasnot a surprise to close observers — the AFT had supported Clinton in 2008insteadofBarackObama — but the early timing maybe designed to give Clinton a boost against her surging rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-vt. Clinton will also lay out her economic agenda in aspeech in New York on Monday, with a focus on boosting middle-class wages.
NO-MESS BIRD FOOD
TO PLACE AN AD Classified ........................... 54f-385-5809 Advertising fax .................. 54f -385-5802 Other information ............. 54f-382-1 Bf f
TO APPLY FOR A JOB Nancy Kerrigan.................54f-383-0327
OTHER SERVICES Back issues ...................... 541-385-5600 Photo reprints................... 541-383-0356 Obituaries......................... 541-617-7825
All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconverted to anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520 ,ispublisheddailybyWestern Communications Inc.,777 1 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all sraff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsoradilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday night are:
Q»Qae Q seQ uaQ ss9 The estimated jackpot is now $60 million.
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnSaturday night are:
15Q 17Q 30 Q 31Q 34Q 45 Q The estimated jackpot is now $3.8 million.
Srebrenicaceremonies marred byattack on PM By Aida Cerkez
still remember Vucic's incendi-
The Associated Press
SREBRENICA,
Bos-
ary statement during the Balkan wars that for every dead
nia-Herzegovina — A crowd
Serb, 100 Muslims should be
of furious Bosnian Muslims
killed. Some in the crowd held a banner with the quote to remind him of his past. Vucic's security d e tail rushed him away, trying to
jumped over fences and attacked Serbia's prime minister with stones and water bottles
NO SHELLS OR GROWTH, JUST BIRDS
on Saturday, marring the 20th anniversary commemorations protect him with bags, umbrelof the Srebrenica massacre. lasand theirraisedarms from Aleksandar Vucic, a former the projectiles raining down. ultranationalist during t he His guards shoved through Balkan wars but who is now a the angry crowd before pushmoderate with a pro-Western ing the prime minister inside stance,escaped serious inju- an armored vehicle. "We were attacked from all ry. He said he was hit in the face with a rock as the crowds sides. It was well organized chanted "Kill, Kill" and "Alla- and prepared," a visibly shakhu akbar," the Arabic phrase en Vucic said upon his quick for "God is great." return to Serbia. He blamed The scenes overshadowed hooligan soccer groups from what was supposed to be a
day of reflection and remem-
All the seed Central Oregon birds love, but with no shells. No shells means no mess beneath the feeder, and the shelled seeds will not grow!
Serbia and Bosnia for initiating the attack.
"I heard Muslim people tellmen and boys slaughtered at ing the attackers 'why are you the hands of Serb forces in the attacking him? It is not hi s brance for the 8,000 Muslim
eastern Bosnian town of Srebrenica. Two U.N. courts ruled
that the killings constituted genocide. Vucic is among the most hated individuals for Bosnian Muslims, with some viewing him in worse terms than late
strongman Slobodan Milosevic. During the 1992-95 Bos-
fault. He had not done any-
thing here.'"
He added, "Except for my glasses, I'm missing nothing else."
•
I
I
.y
sent Serbia at the commemoration in an apparent gesture
•
•
of reconciliation, said after the attack that, "Today we are
nian war, Vucic was an ultra- talking more about a bunch of nationalist politician in oppo- fools rather than about the insition to Milosevic, criticizing nocent victims of Srebrenica." the Serb leader of leniency He added that his "arms of rectoward Bosnian Muslims. Many Bosnian Muslims also
fy
Vucic, who came to repre-
onciliation remain stretched
toward the Bosniaks."
•
I
•
• • •
••~I •
•
•
•
h
•
SUNDAY, JULY 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 Sunday, July 12, the 193rd day of 2015. Thereare 172 days left in the year.
spacex
CULTURE
HAPPENINGS
failure
GreeCe — Bailout discussions between theGreek finance minister and his skeptical counterparts in the 19-country eurozonewill resume after eight hours of talks Saturday with no apparent breakthrough.
zest NASA $110M By Melody Peteraen
MiSS USA —Womenfrom across the country take the stage in anevent that has been overshadowed byowner Donald Trump's comments denigrating Mexican immigrants.
Los Angeles Times
Taxpayers lost $110 million when a SpaceX rocket carrying cargo to the International Space Station disintegrated shortly after
While many museums have offered descriptive tours for years, more are allowing visitors with vision impairments to touch the art and experience it in a new way.
liftoff last month, a NASA
HISTORY Highlight:In 1862, during the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln signed abill authorizing the Army Medal of Honor. In1543, England's King Henry Vill married his sixth and last wife, Catherine Parr. In1690,forces led by William of Orange defeated thearmy of James II at the Battle of the Boyne in Ireland. In1909,the House of Representatives joined the Senatein passing the 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, allow-
ing for a federal incometax, and submitted it to the states. (It was declared ratified in February 1913.) In1948,the Democratic National Convention, which nominated President Harry S. Truman for a secondterm of office, opened in Philadelphia. In1965,the BeachBoys single "California Girls" was released by Capitol Records. In1967,six days of race-related rioting erupted in Newark, New Jersey; the violence claimed 26 lives. In1975, the African island nation of SanTomeand Principe becameindependent of Portugal. In1977,President Jimmy Carter defendedSupreme Court limits on government payments for poor women' s abortions, saying, "There are many things in life that are not fair." In1984, Democratic presidential candidate Walter Mondale announced his choice of U.S. Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York to be his running mate; Ferraro was the first woman to run for vice president on a major-party ticket. In1994, President Bill Clinton, visiting Germany,went to the eastern sector of Berlin, the first U.S. president to do so since Harry Truman. Ten years age:Mohammed Bouyeri, a Muslim extremist on trial in the slaying of Dutch filmmaker TheovanGogh, unexpectedly confessed in court, saying hewas driven by religious conviction. (Bouyeri was sentenced to life in prison.) Prince Albert II of Monaco acceded to the throne of a 700-year-old dynasty. Five years age:Roman Polanski was declared afree man, no longer confined to house arrest in his Alpine villa, after Swiss authorities rejected a U.S. request for the Oscar-winning director's extradition because of a32-year-old sex conviction. One year age:Afghanistan's two rival candidates reached a breakthrough agreement brokered by Secretary of State John Kerry to allow a complete audit of their contested presidential election. (Former Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani emerged the winner.)
BIRTHDAYS Movie director MonteHellman is 86. ComedianBill Cosby is 78. Singer-musician Christine McVie is 72.Singer-songwriter Butch Hancock is70. Fitness guru Richard Simmons is67. Singer Walter Egan is 67.Writer-producer BrianGrazer is 64. Actress Cheryl Ladd is64. Actor Buddy Foster is 58.Rocksinger Robin Wilson (GinBlossoms) is 50. Olympic gold-medal figure skater Kristi Yamaguchi is 44. ActressAnnaFriel is 39. Rhythm-and-blues singerTracie Spencer is 39.Actor Topher Grace is 37.Actress Michelle Rodriguez is37. Nobel Peace laureate MalalaYousafzai is18. — From wire reports
By MenachemWecker
official told Congress. "That's gone," said Wil-
Special to The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — Before this April, Kathy Nimmer had
liam Gerstenmaier, a NASA
associate administrator, of the money lost when the
visited an art museum only "somewhat hesitantly" as part
SpaceX rocket failed on
of a group. The English teacher, who has been blind since the third grade, says she felt at the mercy of sighted guides' descriptions. "It's not a very in-
June 28 far above Florida's coast.
dependent experience," Nim-
the cause of the failure. On
mer said. So when Nimmer learned
Friday, some members of
that she would b e
and Technology committee questioned whether the company should be investigating its own failure. Gerstenmaier explained
The Hawthorne, Cali-
fornia-based company is leading an investigation into the House Science, Space
v i siting
the Smithsonian Museums in late April as a finalist for national teacher of the year
from Indiana, she asked the Council of Chief State School O fficers, w h ic h
that NASA, as well as the Federal Aviation A dministration and the National Transportation Safety
r u n s th e
teacher awards, to arrange a tour at the American Art Museum, where she had heard
Board, are also involved in the investigation. The gov-
about programming for blind visitors. In the hour she spent at the
ernment has the authority to
tell SpaceX it doesn't agree with the findings, he said.
Photosby Jonathan Newton /The Washington Post
museum, Nimmer donned gloves and
ABOVE: Lorena Baines, manager of accessible programs for the National Gallery of Art, and Kilof t o uched t h r ee Legge act out "The Dancing Couple" by Dutch artist Jan Steen during the "Picture This" tour for blind
At th e h e aring, Paul Martin, NASA's inspector
sculptures: Douglas Tilden's and low-vision visitors at the museum inWashington, D.C. BELOW:Legge uses amonocular to exam"The Young Acrobat" (1891), ine the painting. The museum's tours provide verbal descriptions for visitors once or twice a month. Hugo Robus' "Water Carrier" (1956) and Chaim Gross' "Happy Children" (1973). increased its "Picture This" "It was the first time that tours, which offer verbal deI felt connected with art in a
similar way as my sighted colleagues," Nimmer said. "It was
deeply moving."
general, said that his office was looking at whether the
agency's private contractors should be leading such investigations.
scriptions, from once to twice a month, said Lorena Baines,
A similar corporate-led investigation is continuing
the museum's manager of accessibility programs. "There are a lot of issues around touching objects," said
into the earlier destruction
of another rocket carrying tons of food and other sup-
This year, with the 25th anniversary of th e A m ericans W ith D i sabilities Ac t t h i s Baines, who added that the
month, museum programming for the blind has gained greater emphasis. Such overseas museums as Florence's Uffizi Gallery and Madrid's Museo del Prado provide 3-D models of certain paintings
plies to the space station.
That cargo ship, which exploded Oct. 28, was op-
National Gallery has to consider its particular collection
erated by Orbital Sciences,
which is now known as Or-
and conservation concerns rather than what other institu-
bital ATK.
tions are doing. Francesca Rosenberg, MoMA's director of community,
access and school programs, "I guess they imagine themeral U.S. museums, visitors says that when she began can handle original works, as working in the field 20 years selves blind," Alford said. "They try to give us as much Nimmer did. ago,itwas rare for museums The Minneapolis Institute to have accessibility coordiinformation as t hey c an, of Arts' "Touch Tours" allow nators. MoMA, which has had right down to the eyelashes, blind and low-vision visitors programs for blind visitors the color of the eyes and the to touch selected works. Simi- since 1972, was "probably one fingernails." lar programming is offered at of the first, if not the first," she Such programming, says
c=
for visitors to touch, but at sev-
New York's Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, as well
said. "I don't think it's red tape-
wise such a difficult thing to do," Rosenberg said. "And you as the Philadelphia Museum can certainly use the arguof Art and the Cincinnati Art ment, 'Look at all these other Museum. museums.'" Works of art, she
Beth Ziebarth, director of the
the tours. At the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Muse-
um, for example, Harold Snid-
the past year, according to a spokesman, and the Freer and Sackler galleries are considering such programming as part of renovations. But such other major D.C. museums as
they touch the works.
Ziebarth says.
"I think that the institutions that don't have something in
Ziebarth adds she also has noticed that colleagues, as they age, "become more and more aware of the changes that their own bodies are going through, and they' re more amenable to the idea of accessibility." Technology, too, could play a bigger part. NGA's Baines notes that a smartphone app could trigger descriptions as blind and low-vision visitors
the Phillips Collection and the
National Museum of Women John Alford, 89, a veteran in the Arts don't offer special- with macular degeneration, ized tours. has been attending the NationAt the National Gallery of
Art, blind visitors can't touch the art, but sometimes there
are models, such as a heavily painted surface to approximate touching avan Gogh. And the museum recently
al Gallery's tour with his "see-
ing-eye daughter," Pat Werner, for about a year. He says he appreciates hearing details about the lives of artists that the "Picture This" docents share.
touch varies museum by museum, as does the use of gloves. In her 20 years at M oMA ,
Rosenberg said, only one visitor objected to wearing them.
"To be honest, I didn't really blame her," she says. "Direct
ject to the hiring or departure
of staff members who "own"
er, reportedly the institution's
first blind employee, pushed for more accessibility in the 1970s,
walk b y
c e r tain a r tworks.
"We will see a lot of changes in the next 20 years as technolo-
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
HEARING AIDS
@ Sponsored by @
Connect Hearing
BrightSide Animal Center
YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
FORMERLY
l.EAQELD HEARINGAIDCENTER
1-888-568-9884
BRIGHTSI DE A N I MA L
C R N T l ll
BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE., REDMOND, OR (541) 923-0882
Sieter SInnI Suitee andTheBulletin Blinl YO U
Locals OnlySpecial Local Central Oregonians save anEXTRA 15% OFFyour
Study: Vampires needhealth care By Ariana Eunjung Cha
Social Work.
"The Bulletin helps usdeliver extra LOCALvalue. We offer free papers to ail our guests."
tories, in their social and occu-
The Washington Post
Williams and his co-author, pational roles, and some have Vampires are real. No, not Emily Prior, a researcher at achieved considerable success the impossibly perfect Cullens the College of the Canyons, in their chosen careers." in the "Twilight" movies or tor-
interviewed 11 vampires from
tured but well-dressed souls in CW shows. But human beings who self-identify as vampires and may drink blood or sleep in coffins. And these people need as much psychotherapy and medical help as the rest of
across the United States and cians should view vampirism South Africa and found that from the prism of it being an
That's the conclusion of a
Williams advised that clini-
they were reluctant to come out
" alternative i d entity"
to clinicians because they were fearful about being labeled as being psychopathological or "perhaps wicked, and not competent to perform in typical social roles, such as parenting."
lar to those adopted by goths
WE'RE PROUD TO OFFER: Pet FriendlyRooms• LargeComfortable Beds Helpful AndFriendly Staff eAFamily Friend Environment
SISTERS INN 85 SUITES
s imi-
and furries. He theorized that
In Sisters at605 III Arrowleaf Trail • 541-549-7829 Original coupon only, onecouponper visit, couponexpires 8/31/f5
"rapid advances in technology provide a social environment conducive to the development
>
I
of unique and unconventional identities."
study by D.J. Williams, diHowever, he noted that the "We should not be surprised rector of social work at Idaho people he interviewed "seem S tate University, and p u b - to function normally, based on to see a proliferation of nontralished in the July issue of the demographic questions con- ditional identities in the future," peer-reviewed journal Critical cerning their psychiatric his- Williams wrote.
o
Chuck is aTreeing WalkerCoonhound purebredwhois approximately 2 yearsold and weighs56 pounds. He has not had a lot of training but issmart. Chuck isverysocial andwantsto play with theother dogsandappears to be finewith cats. Heappears to be goodwith strangersandodd noisesandlooks for the opportunity to be petted.Morephotos,videoat brightsideanimals.org/adoptable-dogs. Meet him Tues.-Sat., 10-5.
Whether the tours involve
Smithsonian's accessibilitypro- contact with the original work gram,iscyclicaland often sub- of art is the ultimate."
In Washington, the Smithsays, are exposed to m ore s onian American Ar t M u - wear and tearfrom regular seum's touch tours have inmuseum crowds than f r om creased about 30 percent in tours for blind visitors, even if
place are scrambling because they' re thinking, 'Here we are 25 years (after the ADA), we' d better get going on this.'"
gy advances," she said.
HUG
I
i
I
«
'
i
'
I
'
I
I
'I
I
I
i
I
I
I
'
I I
I
'
' I
A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
N OT A R u e LI C
TRAIL h
"gl
+4j(-' 5
'
„,.— :-::--„Aucij pj~< -
= .
:.4;-",'~NOTEggg(i) I
-~L*
e Photos by PeteSmith /The Bulletin
When the Greenwood Avenue bridge across the Deschutes River was rebuilt, it was deliberately
raised to provide enough clearance for the Deschutes River Trail to run underneath. However, a date of completion for this section of the trail is largely dependent on the decisions made about Mirror Pond andthe adjacent dam.
Trail Continued fromA1 He said he would like the sidewalk taken out, utilities
owners south of the bridge to will construct a new bridge at allow hikers and bicyclists to
the site of a former bridge to use the trail by the river cur- connect the trail to the east side rently blocked by a "no tres- of the river at Riley Ranch Napassing" sign. He also said the ture Reserve.
RIGHT: Eventually a bridge would need to be built across the Deschutes River on Deschutes Forest Land to connect Bend's portion of the Deschutes River Trail to the remainder of the trail stretching to Sunriver to the south. But
buried, utility poles removed, Gilchrist Alley improved and all of the right-of-way to become a "living street" — where cars, bikes and pedestrians
bridge was constructed with
for this section will ultimately
extend south from the planned bridge by up to adecade.
share the road — similar to
bridge for the Deschutes River
But when Kelly attended a recent open house that parks
be determined by the fate of the dam on the north side of the bridge and by future plans for Mirror Pond, Jorgensen said.
planner Jorgensen put on for residents to weigh various re-
North of Awbrey Butte
Brooks Alley downtown.
development options, Brooks
enough clearance for a trail to be constructed underneath it.
But the plans and timeline
The Deschutes River Trail
said the idea of a living street currently comes to an end at had a red note next to it ex- NW Kirkaldy Court on the plaining that it was not a via- northern slope of Awbrey ble option because it might not Butte. It's an area that's difcomply with Americans with ficult to access because the Disabilities A c t s t a n dards. nearest public parking lot is in Compliance with those rules Sawyer Park to the west, and would be important in forming surroundingstreets are desiga partnership with the city of
nated as "private" and have "no
Jorgensen said he expects Riley Ranch to open within the
ABOVE: Steven Blondeaux, left, and his wife Kristin walk their dogs south on Ditch Rider Road, a private utility road owned by the Central Oregon Irrigation District. Even though signs warn it is not a trail, many hikers use the roadway as if it were an extension of the trail. The Blondeauxs say this leads many dog owners to walk their pets off-leash because they say its not a park or subject to park rules.
next 12 months with its own set of trails. Those trails will
Trail through Riley Ranch, but they will not extend to Archie Briggs Canyon with a connector bridge. The Riley Ranch trails will have public access from Glen Vista Road.
Route to Tumalo
".g,jim
1
e
delay the construction of a
leash Labrador retriever bit her in June.
Routethrough subdivision? South of Ditch Rider Road
and the Central Oregon Irrigation District's intake point is where the Deschutes River
From Riley Ranch Nature Reserve, the trail will continue north on the east side of the Deschutes River and enter
Trail's future becomes murky
of its route through Deschutes
need to be routed through un-
— and hot.
Because of existing residential development close to some of the deepest canyons the river, the trail will likely
County. shaded subdivision sidewalks for this portion of the project. To extend the trail north to The land north of Riley to River Rim Park. And that One idea that might be min- Putnam Road, the park district Ranch is mostly owned by the park has no parking and curimally invasive for residents must first negotiate an ease- state, said Ross Kihs, district rentlyserves as a dusty path and meet the ADA standards ment with the Awbrey Mead- manager for Oregon State for floatersto exit the river would be to expand the side- ows Homeowners Association Parks in Bend. The state parks before some dangerous rapids walk, keep street parking in to build a trail over a buried department has secured an downstream. placeand add abicyclelaneby irrigation pipeline. easement through the land it The trail would then continmaking the road one way, JorIf that were achieved, the doesn't own. ue farther through one of two gensen said. park district would then need The trail already exists, but routes. The most likely might Kelly said the majority opin- another easement to continue the plan is to improve it to a 30- be further subdivision sideion of his neighbors is that any- north on property owned by inch natural surface through walks that pass through Wildthing would be better, but he is Brooks Resources Corp. the use of a $192,000 grant. The flower Park and then circle worried a one-way street proDale Van Valkenburg, the only obstacle is a pile of boul- back to the river. The second posal could be a deal-killer. company's director of plan- ders that makes traversing the depends on the decisions of a Kelly is a member of the Old ning and development, said current trail treacherous. local developer. Bend Neighborhood Associ- Brooks Resources had been Kihs said trail consultant According to city of Bend ationand said he hasused the negotiating for the past two Woody Keen was contracted planning documents, Sisters trail daily to walk to Drake years to formalize the existing to help design a solution for the developer Stephen Thompson Park or play volleyball in user trails and that any time- boulder pile; a boardwalk is owns 81.5 acres of riverfront the Old Mill District since he line was likely dependent on one option being considered. property on the east side of the moved to Riverfront Street in the park district determining a Kihs said any i mprove- river in the southernmost part
any bridge span the Deschutes National Forest properties on either side of the river, not his. But building a bridge there is complicated by federal and state guidelines.
has a federal designation as a Wild and Scenic Waterway. Any change, such as building a bridge on national forestland outside of city limits, would require submitting a proposal for a special-use permit to build and maintain a bridge from the park district. That pro-
cess could take more than five years to complete. Larkin said his agency has been in contact with Bend Park & Recreation District and that he sat in on an advisory com-
mittee meeting on the subject. "We' re continuing to work District) to understand the proposal," he said. And because the Deschutes
He said the company would River also has the designation be open to granting a license year, by the time Riley Ranch posite side. He divided the land as a State Scenic Waterway, opens to the public.
in March into two parcels, and
the district would also need to
Bridge at SE Reed Market Road, the D eschutes River
city planners indicated that a submit a proposal to Oregon new 36.1-acre parcel has a high State Parks. likelihood of development. That proposal is one JorAny trail easements would gensen fears could take as likely be presented when plans
Trail forms a loop on either
for a potential development are
side of the river connected by
brought before the city's planning commission. Thompson did not respond to calls for comment.
of the project," Jorgensen said, development of the Deschutes Ditch Rider Road. noting that he plans to schedule River Trail and a bridge along The roadway is owned by another open house with neigh- it is dedicated to him. the Central Oregon Irrigation "Our family is totally sup- District, and it's used by the bors for the end of the summer. Both Jorgensen and Kel- portive of the parks depart- district's maintenance trucks ly were confident the project ment," said M i k e H o l lern, for inspecting the raised pipecould be completed in the next Brooks Resources president line just to the west of the grav12 months. and a member ofthe Brooks el road that feeds the Central family. "We are big supporters Oregon Canal. GreenwoodAvenuebridge of the river." The district's m anager, The other downtown section The final easement north Craig Horrell, said he has had of the trail slated for improve- would cross land owned by some discussions with the park ment is from the north end of Shevlin Sand 5 Gravel. Jor- district about allowing pubDrake Park and past the Pacif- gensen said the Coats family, lic access to the road, but he ic Power dam and substation which owns the company, sent has no time frame for when it and on to Pacific Park to the a letter several weeks ago stat- might become official. "We have some operational north. ing the family would agree in The current route requires principle to grant access for the issuesto work through before Deschutes River Trail travelers trail. we can allow public access on "Details of how and when to stray from Mirror Pond and our maintenanceroads. Once to follow sidewalks on Wall that will happen have yet to we work through the operaStreet t h rough d o w ntown, be determined," said Robin tion and public safety issues, I crossing Greenwood Avenue Coats, Shevlin Sand 5 Gravel's would hope that we can accomco-owner. above the bridge. modate trail use," he said. Jorgensen said the park disBut posted signs do little to trict is currently negotiating an Riley Ranch stop Bend residents who have easement with the three landEventually the parks district been walking the trail for years.
The bridge to connect it all
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouilas See100 life-sizedsamples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior Solar Screens • Patio ShadeStructures
with Bend (Park & Recreation
finding common ground would be in removing the street's powerpolestofreeupthegrassyareas betweenthe sidewalk and sheet to expand the areas for walking and biking. But just who would pay to bury the power lines is the question. Kelly said he would support creating a tax district so residents could pay for the work over a period of years. "The city and neighbors will ultimately determine the look
might not see completed before he retires.
plan and that Deschutes River
of Bend city limits, as well as a riverfront mansion on the op-
the South Canyon Bridge to lumber mills o nce situated the south. But many hikers on the river's banks. Conley and cyclists continue on by Brooks Sr. donated land to the climbing a short distance to
state law. It's one he said he
"It's all a work in progress," Jorgensen said. "We' re doing Deschutes National F orest, what we can to move it along." said the agency has an Up— Reporter: 541-633-2165, per Deschutes management psmith@bendbulletin.corn
ments to this section of the trail should be complete in the next
South of the Bill Healy
district to pursue a change in
Kevin Larkin, the Bend-Fort
specific route.
Ditch Rider Road
many as five to 10 years — and might ultimately require the
Rock District ranger for the
1999. And he thinks the key to
Resources property under the condition that it be "relocatable" if the company pursued plans to redevelop the land. The company was founded asa property development offshoot of Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co., one of two huge
t
complicated legal issues could
Bend to seek out grant funding parking" signs posted.
for the trailto cross Brooks
' $
s®aCLASSIC COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Avenue, Bend www.classic-coverings.corn
• •
i )
Errands Etc. LLC (541) 977-1737 Bonded . Local Since 1988 — We Can Help With ChoresYard Clean up • Trash Removal — We Also Clean Out Garages Storage Sheds . Rentals And More! errandsetc@gmx.corn www.errandsetcllc.corn
The final piece of the puzzle would be a bridge to connect the trail from the east side of the river in southern Bend to the west side of the river in
the Deschutes National Forest. And this is likely the hardest
part of all. Jorgensen said in conversations with Thompson, the
Major Credit Cards accepted
developer would prefer that
CS @ g
tP.'l$ TETHEROW • jHQ OREGOH
Kristin and Steven Blondeau
live in the Renaissance Ridge neighborhood to the south and
said they walk the road often as a way to exercise their two dogs. "It's great having this trail here," Stephen Blondeau said. "We see the same people
every day using it," Kristin Blondeau said. The couple said they' ve never been bothered while walking the road; the only problem they' ve encountered is o ff Bend's northern portion of the Deschutes River Trail ends at NW Kirkaldy Court on the north slope of Awbrey Butte. The area's private streets and lack of parking make it inhospitable to anyone who would like to access it and doesn't live in the neighborhood.
leash dogs. "I think people don't obey the leash law because they know this isn't a park," Kristin said as she pointed to a scab
she said was from when an off-
An exceptional home in a singular setting. This 4,193 s q uare-foot, LEED-certified custom home combines unparalleled beauty and luxury, state-of-the-art sustainable building practices, and stunning Cascade views.
N
•
Learn more et eeilkelly.corn
LL
er c a ll 641.382.7580 OR CCB ¹001663
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
CVS Continued from A1
With 7,800 retail stores and a presence in almost every state,
CVS Health has enormous reach. And while shoppers might think of CVS as a place to pick up toothpaste, BandAids or lipstick, it is also the country's biggest operator of health dinics, the largest dispenser ofprescription drugs and the second-largest pharmacy benefits manager. With dose to $140 billion in revenue last year — about 97 percent
of that from prescription drugs or pharmacy services — CVS is arguably the country's biggest health care company, bigger than the drugmakers and wholesalers, and bigger than the insurers. Even before the Affordable
Care Act created millions of newly insured customers in the almost $3 trillion health care industry, CVS saw that there
were moreprofits to be made handling prescription drugs than selling diapers. But while its transformation from drugstore to health care company
began a decade ago, CVS has more recently taken on a new advocacy role: that of a public
enemy of cigarettes. Last year, CVS became the first major pharmacy chain to stop selling tobacco, a business that brought in $2 billion a year. And last week, CVS said
it would resign from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce after revelations that the chamber
and its foreign affiliates were engaged in a global lobbying campaign against anti-smoking laws. Its stand against smoking has allowed CVS to make al-
liances with health care providers and rebrand itself fully as a health care company. But with smoking rates on a steady decline, and cigarettes
sales slumping, CVS also saw that future profits lie not with
are passed on to consumers come up — 'You guys sell tobacreally depends on the level of co products, don't you'?' — and competition in the market." that literally sucks all the energy out of the room," Merlo said. Quitting cigarettes But since the company stopped Helena Foulkes, who leads selling tobacco, he said, "We' ve
;n~olnlc
The CVS MinuteClinic, on
the other hand, was just blocks away from his office. "I waited longer for my bagel this morning," he said.
CVS' retail business, swept
been able to accelerate partner-
past the sales counter at a new- ships with leading health syslyrenovated CVS indowntown tems across the country." 10 OFF
Manhattan. Where cigarette
•,'t
CM
mlhlll8
clinic
,pig,'„)
packs once lined up in neat rows, now there were nicotine gum and patches to help smokers quit. (There are no e-cigarettes either, much to the chagrin of that industry, which had hoped CVS would embrace its products as a lower-risk alternative.) Foulkes, who lost her mother to lung disease, leads the retail
A new p a r tnership with
Rush University Medical Center in Chicago will involve patient referrals and shared elec-
tronic health records. Anthony Perry, vice president for ambulatory care and population health at Rush, said traditional health care providers and com-
panies like CVS could be natural allies. "Take people with high business, which is starting to blood pressure. That's the type change to fit the company's of thing you manage steadily health care bent better. over time, and you work on The move to forgo $2 billion things like diet and exercise, Brian Harkin / New York Times News Service in annual tobacco sales has bol- and lifestyle changes, and if A customer uses a touchscreen kiosk at a MinuteClinic in a CVS in New York. CVS, the largest disstered CVS' health care bona those things don't work, you penser of prescription drugs in the U.S. and the biggest operator of health clinics, has more recently fides. The White House lauded get into the world of medicaCVS' move. "Thanks @CVS tions," he said. "What we asked taken on a new advocacy role by becoming the first major pharmacy chain to stop selling tobacco. Extra, now we can all breathe was: If we' re going to do a sea little easier," Michelle Obama ries of visits with somebody, billion merger between CVS bynursepractitionerssees35to "On the other hand, just be- wrote in a Twitter post. The might they be able to do some and Caremark, which gave 40 patients a day; those patients cause they' re more convenient, praiseseemed to give Merlo a of that closer to home?" birth to the country's leading pay $79 to $99 for minor illness- people might go and obtain jolt of confidence. At a TEDx The flip side, he said, is that pharmacy benefits manager. es and injuries, and most insur- care in cir~ anc es where talk this year in Winston-Sa- CVS can refer people with Three years ago, CVS struck a anceplans are accepted. Ana- they otherwise would nothave lem, North Carolina, he de- more serious ailments, but no deal with the medical products lysts estimate each clinic typi- sought care." clared: "CVS kicks butts across primarycare doctor,to Rush. "So CVS can now say: You distributor Cardinal Health to cally brings in $500,000 a year, C V S might have more swaythe U.S." "When we exited the tobac- need to see a primary care docform the country's largest ge- representing just a fraction of reducinghealthcarecostsinits neric drug sourcing operation. CVS' revenue. Still, the dinics r o l e as a middleman between co category, it was the most tor, and we can connect you." It followed up with a $2.1 billion are an important part of the d rug companies and patients important decision we'd made The anti-tobacco stand has acquisition of Coram, a busi- company's health with drug benefits. as a company," Foulkes said. had other effects. Notably, ness that allows CVS to dis- care proposition. The company is ex- "That decision really became a the company has had to start ecte d to start shift- symbol both internally and ex- thinking about other unhealthy patch technicians to patients' Other retailers are "When We p homes to administer pharma- also getting into the gxttgd (ti ng ing the balance be- ternally for the fact that we' re a items on its shelves. If it is a ceuticals through needles and business. The num- POt BCCO tween end users on health care company." company that promotes health, catheters. ber of retail clinic one hand, and drug It also made economic can it also sell sugary sodas The acquisitions keep com- sites grew to 1,800 CategOry, it manuf a cturers and sense. Adult smoking rates and candy bars? ing. In May, it paid $12.7 billion locations nat i o n- ~gS $QgmpSt wholesalers on the have dropped to 18 percent in The downtown Manhattan to acquire Omnicare, which wide in 2014 from other. 2014, from 43 percent in 1965, store where Foulkes walked distributes prescription drugs 200 in2006, though im~O eant CVS and ot h er according to the Centers for the aisles is one of 500 locations to nursing homes and assisted they still represent CfBCISIOfi WB'd lar ge dis p ensing Disease Control and Preven- that CVS is remodeling to emliving operations. Just weeks just 2 percent of pri- mgde aS a phar m acies — Wal-tion, and experts predict that phasize healthy fare. "I was in Long Island the later, CVS announced it would mary care encoungreens, E x press rate to dip below 10 percent in buy Target's pharmacy and ters in the United COmPany. Script s , Rite Aid and the next decade. Ditching cig- day after the tobacco anclinic businesses for $1.9 billion States, according to Th at deCiSiOn Wa l -Mart — made arettes allows CVS to trade a nouncement, and I ran into a and left open the possibility of a report published fgglly QgCgmg u p about 64 percent small — less than 2 percent of store manager who said: 'I'm pursuingfurther deals. Once this year by Manatt of prescription-dis- revenue — and shrinking part so proud of the company,'" she ~ the Target deal closes, CVS Health, a health adpensing revenue in of its business for an instant en- recalled. "But he also said, 'I'm will operate about 9,600 retail visory practice, and in ternally and the United States in hancement of its credentials in hearing customers now saying, stores, or about one out of sev- the Robert Wood p ~ p l pl l y 2014, a ccording to the faster-growing health and why don't you have healthier food'?'" en retail pharmacies, according Johnson F o u ndaPembroke Consult- wellness space. "Customers quickly made to Pembroke Consulting. Last flon. But CVS is by fO r the fact ing. T h at year, CVS In October, CVS announced year, the company changed its far the leader. Wal- th at We' rea w as a lso the leading that its Caremark arm would the leap. They expected more name from CVS Caremark to CVS Health.
M~, wh chches
health has its challenges. For
at a time when the way Amer-
ics, comPared with
one thing, it means new competitors in a rapidly changing industry. And, for a major retailer with tens of thousands of products on its shelves, it leads
icans get access to and pay for health care is evolving quickly.
CVS acquired MinuteClinic, a
and a placeto check your feet, gent care centers, creating sav- a ccess to rival pharmacies, he
Big Tobacco but in health and
wellness. Taking the high road for
A5
just $40 a visit, has The growth of CVS comes fewer than 100 din-
Surveys show that many of the
he a lth Care
pro v ider o sped~ requiresome
ty drugs in North os ~" America, with $20.5 Helena Fouikes billion in revenue,
of its customers
from us," she said.
to make higher copayments for Foulkes pointed to a promiprescriptions filled at pharma- nent snack corner at the front cies that still sold tobacco prod-
of the store.
ucts — in effect driving more "What you' ll see in our p rtf h traffic to the now tobacco-free stores are brands that convey retail business percent of the total CVS pharmacies. While that healthy without being overly ond-largest, has half "Scale is a big fac- move encourages pharmacies edgy. It's Chobani yogurt, it' s as many clinics as CVS. And tor in pharmacy," said Joseph to quit selling tobacco, it also Kind bars, it's lots of proteins CVS plans to add more, reach- Agnese, senior equity analyst raised the ire of an antitrust and nuts," she said. "Health for ing 1,500 by 2017, the company at SkP Capital IQ. "There's a lot law research firm, which called the masses." has said. of pricing pressure from drug the announcement"a smokeAt this point, there are no Whether theseclinics pro- manufacturers and one way screen" that masks higher costs plans to stop selling high-fat or vide the best kind of care is for retailers can come back at for those who fill prescriptions high-sugar snacks, still a big a question sometimes raised them is to become larger, and at competing pharmacies. part of CVS stores' sales. But "CVS' use of its m arket they might be harder to spot. by doctors in more traditional b e come a more significant purpractices, like Robert Wergin, chaserof drugs." power to bludgeon consumers When asked where the Orepresident of the American Ga y nor of Carnegie Mellon and rivals into ending tobacco os were, she smiled. "You' ll
estimated 30 million people who gained insurance coverto an uncomfortable question: age last year under health care If we cannot sell cigarettes, reform do not have a primary what does that mean for potato health care physician or do not chips? use one. Many, too, opted for high-deductible health plans Road to growth and are expected to become The Consumer Value Store picky with the dollars they startedas a scrappy discount spend, and less tolerant of the health and beauty outlet in opaque pricing that is still the Lowell, Massachusetts, in industry's norm. And consum- Academy of Family Physicians s a id, however, that cost reduc- sales is not a legitimate form find them, but you' ll have to 1963. Four years later, the small ers in general are starting to de- and a doctor i n M i lford, t ion varied greatly by type of of competition," the A meri- look for them." drug. "If there's a drug that is can Antitrust Institute said in chain opened its first in-store mand more convenient,on-de- Nebraska. "These retail dinics, they' re v ery important for CVS to car- a statement. It has urged the pharmacies, and those became mand accessto health care, the core of the company — and doser to home. run by competent folks, and ry, and there are no alterna- Federal Trade Commission to its growth — for years. Larthey probably have some role tives, they aren't going to have investigate. ry Merlo, chief executive, is a One~p health shop to play," he said. "But you' re a lot of negotiating power," pharmacist by training and In that fast-changing world, being seen at a clinic next to Gaynorsaid."Butofcourse,the Achangingrole CVS' strategy is to be a one- the frozen food section by a b igger CVSgets,themorethey came intothe company when In general, CVS' new anit bought People's Drug, a drug- stopshop forhealth care. stranger. And if you go back for can move product, the more im- ti-tobacco stance has helped it "Say you have diabetes, and a follow-up, you' re going to get portant it becomes." store chain based in a suburb of forge affiliations with regional Washington. you go into a pharmacy to get seen by someone else." For em- T h e c ompany's size also hospitals. Before CVS went toThe shift toward health care your insulin, how great is it ployers and insurers, however, creates significant competition bacco-free, negotiations with started in 2004, when CVS ac- if, in the same aisle, there's a the clinics offer a way to reduce issues, says David Balto, an an- local health systems were quired Eckerd Stores and Eck- cookbook for people with di- costs for noncritical conditions. t i t rust lawyer and former poli- awkward, Merlo said during a erd Health Services, giving abetes?" said Ceci Connolly, A study by researchers at the cy director at the Federal Trade recent analyst conference call. "That question would always CVS a foothold in administer- managing director of PwC's RAND Corp. estimated that Commission who often reping drug benefits to employees Health Research Institute. "And more than aquarter of emer- resents independent pharmaof big corporations and govern- maybe there's some foods that gency room visits could be c ies. CVS'ownership of Carement agencies. Two years later, are already approved for you, handled at retail clinics and ur- mark could restrict consumers' pioneering in-store health din-
and a dinician to check your ings of $4.4 billion a year. said, and CVS' acquisition of eyes," she said. Reducing health care spend- Omnicare, already a dominant "Consumers are saying: I ing, however, may turn out to player in long-term care, could screenings and vaccinations. want all of that at a place near be complicated. reduce competition in that "You might imagine that i n dustry. CVS also expanded its very my house that's open on Sat"There are tremendous conprofitable specialty pharmacy urdays, when it's convenient they keep people out of ER, so business, which focuses on ex- for me. I want that place to post that's one way you could save cerns when you see someone pensive drugs to treat complex prices. It's in CVS' interest to money," said Martin Gaynor, becoming so terrifically large," or rare diseases like cancer or pull in more and more pieces of professor of economics and B a l t o said."The acquisitions HIV. that puzzle." public policy at Heinz College, might conceivably be efficient, Then in 2007 came the $21 A typical CVS dinic staffed Carnegie Mellon University. but whether those efficiencies ic chain that was offering treatment for routine illnesses, basic
•
•
•
•
E' cI BSSll, El cI GS ICB VGLlll BBI; Healing presence: M esp~~ + Earp~ v FEATURED SPEAKER: RiChardGrOVeSfrOm The SaCred Art of LiVing Center
Learn howyou can makea meaningful contribution to end-of-life carefor others byattending one of thefollowing seminarsfor thoseinterested in becoming ahospice volunteer.
~
S t . Charles
Hospice
ST.CHARLES BEND:JULY 17,1-5 PM .,CONFERENCE ROOMS A-0 PIONEER MEMORIALHOSPITAL (PRINEVILLE):AUG. 7,1-5 PM.,CASCADE CONFERENCE ROOM TO regiSter OrfOr mOreinfOrmatiOn, ViSit StCharleShealthCare.org/hoSPiCe
541-706-6700 StCharlesHealthCare.org 89
Ae T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
Speed Continued from A1 ODOT will most likely start
installing new signs in February, Murphy said, if the bill gets signed. On U.S. Highways 97 and 197, drivers in regular passenger vehicles will be able to legally drive 65 mph between The Dalles and Klamath Falls. Large trucks will
be limited to 60 mph in those areas. The speed limits on state
Highway 31 between La Pine and Valley Falls and on U.S. Highway 20 for people driving east to Ontario would also be raisedto 65 mph forcars,and 60 mph for trucks. On Interstate 84 east of The Dalles, the speed limits will be raisedto 70 mph for cars
and 65 for trucks, the highest of any major highway in Oregon. The increased speed limits do not apply to sections of highway within city limits, or in places with lower posted speed limits. Murphy said many drivers already travel over current speed limits. "Generally, we see a lot of
people exceeding speed limits," Murphy said. "I would hope we wouldn't be in a sit-
Planned speedlimit increases for 2016 Speed limits for sections of Interstate 84 and highways 97,197, 20 and 26 could increase in March. (Roads in white will remain the same.) ~ 6 5 mph speed limit for cars; 60 for trucks ~ 70 mph speed limit for cars; 65 for trucks
Amid shock, readersalso find reality in Harper Leeplot twist By Alexandra Alter New York Times News Service
)gal
With
a l l t he
de b ate
brewing over the origins of Harper Lee's novel "Go Set a Watchman," the biggest bombshell turned out to be an explosive plot twist that no one saw coming.
sewQ +r I
Atticus Finch — the cru-
M
sading lawyer of "To Kill a Mockingbird," whose principled fight against racism an d i n equality inspired generations of readers — is depicted in "Watchman" as an aging
G ON
r Source:Oregon Department of Transportation
Pete Smith/ The Bulletin
the new limits would resem- troopers to adequately enble more closely the speeds at force the existing limits, and which drivers already travel, higher speed limits would according to reports from The lead to more wrecks and injuBulletin. B ut f o r mer
ries, according to The Bulletin
G o v . J o h n archives. Kitzhaber opposed raising the A ccording t o a do c u speed limits. According to The ment from ODOT, "statistics Associated Press,Kitzhaber demonstrate higher speeds vetoed a 1999 bill to raise the will result in an increase in speed limit, and in 2011, two legislators made an effort to
racist who ha s attended
a Ku Klux Klan meeting, holds negative views about A frican-Americans
an d
denounces desegregation efforts. "Do you want Ne-
groes by the carload in our schools and churches and theaters'? Do you want them in our world?" Atti-
cus asks his daughter, Jean Louise (the adult Scout), in "Watchman."
crashes with f atalities and
The revelation will prob-
serious injuries," which "will negatively impact O
ably alter readers' views of
regon's
uation where people continue raise the limit on rural Oreto exceed the speed limit, the gon interstates highways to 75 progress toward zero deaths new 65-mph one ... We need mph. on our roadways due to traffic to make sure we' re being able In 2001, Kitzhaber's spokes- crashes." to control our vehicles." man said the Oregon State — Reporter: 541-383-0325, Oregon legislators argued Police did not have enough kfis icaro@bendbulletirLcorn
Social mediafuels anti-social behavior in tourist destinations By Doreen Carvajal New York Times News Service
MAGALUF, Majorca — For
he's a more flawed individual?" In this version, Atticus is
72 years old, suffering from arthritis and stubbornly re-
sistant to social change. He stands in sharp contrast to the gentle scholar in "Mockingbird," who tells Scout, when explaining why he has gone
" Watchman," which
was
completed in 1957, is landing in the middle of the debate, like a literary artifact out of a time
capsule from a period when the country was divided over m any of the same issues. "We could turn this into a
plus in our national conversation about racism and the Confederate flag. It turns out that Atticus is no saint, as none
of us are, but a man with prejudices," said Charles Shields, everybody." author of "Mockingbird: A In " Watchman," w h i c h Portrait of Harper Lee." comes out Tuesday, Atticus It is unclear why Lee set chides Scout for her idealistic aside "Watchman" — a blunt views about racial equality: and unsparing look at a young "The Negroes down here are woman's disillusionment at still in their childhood as a the racism that permeates her people." hometown and her family — to After the initial shock, some write "Mockingbird," a more writers and literary critics see palatable coming-of-age tale. added valuein a more com- Narrated by a precocious, obplex, and flawed, version of servant child, "Mockingbird" Atticus. If "Mockingbird" su- featurescharacters who fall garcoats racial divisions by neatly into camps of heroes depicting a white man as the and villains. Gregory Peck's model for justice in an unjust portrayal of Atticus in the 1962 world, then "Watchman" may film is an enduring symbol of be like bitter medicine that a righteous lawyer and model more accurately reflects the parent. out on a limb to defend a black man, that "I do my best to love
fascinating about that," said
novel, published 55 years ago.
Thomas Mallon, a novelist and critic, who had read only
were reluctant to read the new
transcended literature, in-
that deals with the tormenting
spiring generations of lawyers, teachers and social
questions of race in America, cus to remain the Atticus that but maybe this new one is, if I adore.'" it's more nuanced." Tare Xanthopoulos, who Racism, inequality and the teaches high school English persecution of m inorities in in Westchester County, New
book. "It feels very personal to a It is also certain to spur the published excerpt from lot of us, especially so in Aladebate about the character "Watchman." "The moral cer- bama," said Jamie Harding, of Atticus and his moral tainties in 'To Kill a Mocking- 54, who lives in Birmingham, integrity in "Mockingbird," bird' are apparent from the Alabama. "We grew up lookwhich made him a cultur- first page, and in that sense, I ing up to this character, and al icon whose influence don't think it's a great novel a lot of my friends are saying,
"Whether you' ve read
this resort town on the island
the novel or seen the film,
X I s It i c l L
erybody looked up to for the last 50-plus years, and now
police shootings of unarmed black men.
outsize success of her only
workers. ] g1
• Best-sellers and reviews, F4-6
"Mockingbird," a beloved book that has sold more than 40 million copies globally and has become a sta- times. As the first reviews of the "If Atticus Finch is not quite novel were published Friday, ple of high school curricula. It could also reshape Lee' s the plaster saint that he is in some "Mockingbird" fans legacy, which until now 'To Kill a Mockingbird,' there were so disheartened by the has hinged entirely on the could be something rich and revelation that they said they
a holiday photograph from of Majorca, two tourists wiped
Related: Books section
there's this image you have of Atticus as a hero, and this brings him down a peg," said Adam Bergstein, an English teacher
the United States have again
'I'm not reading it, I want Atti-
York, said that when she first
surfaced in the national con- read the reviews of the book, v ersation. Last w e ek , t h e she felt queasy. "This has been my favorite South Carolina Legislature took down the Confederate book of my whole life, from in New York whose 10th- battle flag from its State House when I was a student to being and 11-grade students read grounds after days of emotion- a teacher," she said. "It's sad to "Mockingbird." "How do al debate. Protests have erupt- think that Atticus' character is you take this guy who ev- ed around the country after going to be tarnished."
a drunken friend'sface clean
with a crumpled flier advertising a deal for all-you-candrink cocktails. Then t hey
hoisted his sagging body upright between them while another buddy clicked away with a smartphone. No one paid much attention on the Punta Ballena, a ne-
on-lit strip of bars, nightclubs, kebab joints and shops with names like Sorry Mom Tat-
Samuel Aranda / New YorkTimes NewsService
too. Then again, the parade of Men assist a drunken friend along a neon-lit stretch of Magaluf, passers-by was not the intend- where the mayor says tourist behavior has led to a backlash ed audience. More important among residents, in Majorca, Spain. A surge in reckless and damwas to impress the folks back aging behavior by tourists, which often goes viral on social media, home by transforming a wild hae officials considering measures to limit the damage. eveninginMagalufinto aviral post on Facebook, Instagram or Twitter. women were arrested in Rome r eputations o f p l a ces l i k e From posing naked at Ma- on charges of vandalism af- Magaluf, where "drunken chu Picchu to filming their ter they scratched initials into tourism" — as it is called in dives from hotel balconies into a wall of the Colosseum and Spain — has gotten so out of courtyard swimming pools, snapped a photograph. In control that the newly elected travelers across the world May, two tourists in Cremo- mayor wants to recruit police have been indulging in what na, Italy, who had climbed an officers from Britain to help officials and travel experts de- 18th-century marble sculpture manage British tourists who scribe as an epidemic of nar- of Hercules to take a photo- flock here during the summer. cissism and recklessness,as graph of themselves, ended up The city has also requested they try to turn vacation hubs causing a crown on it to smash help from the Civil Guard, the and historic sites into their to pieces. Spanish equivalent of the Napersonal video and photograIn June, three South Kore- tional Guard. phy props. an tourists in Milan crashed Last year, a video surfaced In recent months, there have a drone into the city's caof a game played by tourists in been numerous instances in thedral while taking aerial a Magaluf club that awarded which tourists have insulted photographs. a cocktail as a prize for perlocal sensibilities — and often Some of the incidents go be- forming oral sex. This season, caused extensive damage — in yond carelessness and show a a clip circulated of a half-nathecourseoftaking enormous lack ofrespect forlocalmores. ked dwarf whipping a groomrisks to try to capture themMalaysian officials recently to-be at a stag party. "The video was like an exselves in a memorable travel jailed four tourists from Canmoment that they can post on ada, the Netherlands and Brit- plosion," Alfonso Rodriguez, social media. ain for three days on charges the mayor of Calvia, which Officials in popular tourist of public indecency after they includes Magaluf, said of the destinations from Spain to snapped nude photographs of oral-sex clip. A former schoolMalaysia are starting to push themselves on Mount Kinaba- teacher, he attributes his elecback and are considering lu, on Borneo. tion victory in May to a backtough new measures to control And Egyptian authorities lash generated by excessive the most destructive behavior. expressed outrage this year tourist behavior. "The reality has changed," These include imposing fines when they discovered that and jail sentences on unruly Russian tourists had filmed a Rodriguez said. "The impact visitors, limiting group tour- 10-minute pornographic video is that a bad image of Magaluf ism and even turning the ta- near the pyramids of Giza and is multiplying on social netbles on the miscreants by post- the Sphinx. works, mobile phones, Youing photographs of their anThis month, a YouTube vid- Tube, Facebook, Twitter," he tics in a bid to publicly shame eo showing a tourist stalking a sard. "This is d amaging," he them. sentry at Windsor Castle near But the appeal o f s e lfie London went viral. When the added, "because the good sticks an d p i c ture-taking tourist touched him, the sol- image of Magaluf — its hotel drones is strong. dier turned his rifle on him, investments, the beach, the "It used to be fine to take bellowing: "Get back from the surrounding region — is not a picture of the Eiffel Tower Queen's Guard!" — perhaps news." or Mount Everest, but that' s
not quite the social media
not good enough anymore," moment the prankster had said Jesse Fox, an assistant sought. communications p r ofessor Some of the acts can also be at Ohio State University who self-destructive, as seen in the has studied the impulsive be- proliferation in Magaluf and havior of selfie-takers posting other resort towns of "balconimages on social networks. ing" — when inebriated tour"Now tourists have to put ists jump between balconies or themselves in the picture. It' s dive into courtyard pools, ofabout 'me,' not about the place ten resulting in injury or even that I visit."
That narcissism, she said, "results in these extreme, stu-
pid behaviors." In r ecent m onths, t here
have been plenty of examples. In March, two C alifornia
death. A search of the term on
"zhe Bulletin allows us consistent and agordable advertising while working within our budget Wefocus onc. lientsatisfaction, value and service and Zhe Bulletin has helped us do this for thelast 25 years Beltone has been in Bend." — Denise Underwood
Beltone-
In Florence, Italy, the mayor, Dario Nardella, posted a
warning on his Facebook page in June after someone broke
off a finger from Pio Fedi's statue of the Rape of Polyxena. Since then, selfie-seeking touristshave clambered up a sculpture of Dante Alighieri
Client Satisfaction
Value
Service
and have urinated in the dome
of the city's cathedral. Nardella vowed to seek leg-
You7ube turns up numerous islation to punish vandals of categories, including Ibiza, public art with severe prison Majorca, hotel and dead. sentences. "Whoever strikes The ability to record and culture," he warned, "strikes disseminate the wildest mo- at the heart of history and the ments has contributed to the identity of a community."
The Bulletin bendbulletin.corn
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
How a glacier grows The 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helensset the stage for the birth of the world's youngest glacier. Not only is the north-facing crater protected from the sun, but snow andice slough off its steep walls, feeding the glacier. While most glaciers around the world are shrinking, Crater Glacier is growing. May 18, 1980:
What factors could prevent the glacier from advancing? • Loss of shade as it advances beyond the crater • Flatter slopes • Reduced snowfall
February 2008: The two arms of the glacier meet around the first dome, heading downslope
Mount St. Helens erupts, creating a crater the size of downtown Seattle
Remainingwomenat Army RangerSchool finish first segment By Dan Lamothe The Washington Post
D2
May 2014: The speed of the glacier's advance slows by 50 percent
L. D1
The three remaining women attending Army Ranger School as part of an assessment of how female soldiersshould be more
DOME1 • 1980 (post-eruption): First lava domestarts to grow • 1986: First dome stops growing
Source: UnitedStates Geological Survey, Mount Saint Helens Institute Stephanie Redding / The Seattle Times via TNS
GLACIER • 1980 (post-eruption): Rock and snow start to build up on the crater floor • 1988: A permanent snowfield forms • 1996: The first crevasses appear, proof that the ice river is in motion • 2000:The glacier spreads into a horseshoe around the first dome, creating two arms that flow north and downslope; it is 660 feet thick in places, layered with rock and ice like aparfait
Glacier
to grow between the first dome
and the south wall of the crater • 2004: The glacier is "pinched" .~ between the southern crater wallandtheseconddome, which doubles the glacier's thickness and quickens its descent downslope
'p sP
nort h e astern ,r,'
I
flank late last month to preview a guided hike that offers a rare, close-up view of the glacier. Even climbers who
I
seeintothe craterbecause of overhanging ledges of snow. A veteran mountaineer died in 2010 when a cornice col-
(s'
to research the roles women
lease that 158 men and all
be allowed to wear the Army's
three women will move on
prestigious Ranger Tab, a decoration that is admired across
to tadde the next portion
of RangerSchool at Camp the military. However, they Merrill in Dahlonega, Geor- will not be allowed to join the gia, about 65 miles north of elite 75th Ranger Regiment, Atlanta, beginning Satur- which conductsSpecialOperday. It was the third and fi- ations missions.
Service — which manages Mount St. H elens National V olcanic Monument — h a s
Photosby Mike Siegel/The Seattle Timesvia TNS
long limited public access. The Mount St. Helens' Crater Glacier View hike ls accessible from the Loowit Trail. The hike is conNot only are the rugged up- ducted through the Mount St. Helens Institute. per slopes treacherous, but air laboratory for scientists s
Sherrod said. "It's a fountain of youth as far as the glacier is
Documenting the glacier
By 1988, a p e rmanent sure the downhill progress. "It's pretty exciting," Shersnowfield more than 200 feet
ecosystem ' concerned."
thick nestled in the crater. In
surveys to track the glacier's movement, but they also walk its surface and directly mearod said. "You can have rocks
1996, the first crevasses ap- the size of a Volkswagen besome of t h ose r estrictions peared — evidence that the ing hurled down at you." and allows them to scramble frozen mass was in motion off-trail to the vantage point. and met the definition of a Exploring thecaverns Mount St. Helens Institute de- glacier. Toxic ga s o c casionally Peter Frenzen, Mount St. buted the outing three years But things really got weird wafts from the magma dome, Helens National Volcanic Monuago and is expanding the in 2004. and the interior of the glacier ment scientist, holds a piece That's when the v olcano is riddled with cavities carved of dacite from the cryptodome schedule to nine dates this sputtered back to life, inter- by the heat from fumaroles. A magma body during the 1980 year, beginning in late July. While critics object to the mittently spitting steam and group of expert cave mappers eruption. These stones traveled $195 price tag and are push- oozing thick, pasty magma got permission last year to at 300 mph during the blast. ing for greater access across in a l ow-key eruption that explore those caverns for the the 110,000-acre monument, lastedfor several years. The first time. one elite group has been magma quickly built a new They rappelled in through m ent fo r i t s "pay-to-play" making regular forays to the dome taller than the Empire a funnel-shaped mouth they approach. "The Forest Service wants crater glacier since the early State Building, and it wedged called the Godzilla Hole, 1980s: scientists at the U.S. between the old dome and the said Jared Smith, lead guide to discouragefolks from getGeological Survey'sCascades crater wall. for th e M o unt S t . H e lens ting into t r ouble on t h ese Volcano Observatory. The USGS team held its Institute. routes — though they' re no "It's probably 80 or 90 feet more hazardous than dozens They' ve documented the collective breath, fearing the unique conditions that led to heat would liquefy the glacier straight down," Smith said. of places hikers and climbers the glacier's formation and and send water and mud ram- Inside, they found a steamy are free to go without buying tracked its stunning growth paging through the valleys wonderland of sculpted ice a permit," the paper wrote. "The splendor of St. Helens' spurts. And they still find it below. But the ice was so well and tunnels. "It's just totally beautiful." fascinating. insulated by its underlying best vistas should be avail"Nothing about this glacier rock layer that very little meltBut it wa s also perilous, able without spending hunis typical," said USGS scien- ed away. with slabs of ice peeling from dreds of dollars." tist Steve Schilling. Instead, the new dome the walls and scalding gas The agency is concerned B efore 1980, M ount S t . pinched the glacier against hissing from vents. that increased access will Helens was a post card-per- the crater wall. That had the The expedition was part bring more accidents and refect cone draped with about effect of thickening it and adventure and part training quire more rescues, said mona dozen small glaciers. Most accelerating its downhill mo- for Smith and other members ument scientist Peter Frenwere obliterated or melted tion. By 2005, the arms of of local search and rescue zen. But monument staff also on May 18 of that year, when the horseshoe-shaped glacier teams who are called upon to plan to evaluate the impact of the mountain's north side col- were moving as much as 8 haul out injured hikers and this year's glacier-view hikes lapsed, unleashing the big- feet a day. Three years later, recover bodies. and consider a route to the gestlandslide everrecorded. the arms met and merged in The crater and glacier re- overlook that could be open to An explosive, lateral blast front of the old dome, forming main off-limits to the public. all in the future. vaporized everything in a a doughnut of ice. The rest of the 30,000-acre Meanwhile, the USGS scimiles-long swath and levNow, the combined mass restricted zone on the moun- entists will continue to keep eled230 square miles of for- is creeping farther down tain's north side is open to day an eye on the glacier. est. When the dust and ash the valley. A steady stream hiking, but closed to camping Its advance slowed considsettled, what was left was a of meltwater called Loowit and off-trail travel. erably last year — to about 2.5 horseshoe-shaped shell of a Creek also springs from the The only exceptions are the inches a day, Schilling said. mountain with a few remnant base of the glacier, nourishing institute's paid hikes, which And once the toe extends out snow fields clinging to its willow t h ickets, penstemon also include a $600 trek to of the sheltered crater, the acflanks. and a carpet of lupine on the within a few hundred feet of cumulation of snow and ice But that shell provided a once-barren pumice plain the glacier's terminus. likely won't be sufficient to perfect nest to nurture a baby below. I ncome fro m t h e h i k e s drive it much farther down glacier. The ice is about 660 feet helps fund the institute's vol- the mountain. Its northward orientation thick in places, Sherrod said unteer and education proWith 2015's hot temperahelped shield snow from the — deep enough to swallow grams. But th e r estrictions tures, it's even possible the sun. A thick layer of loose, the Space Needle. Measured and costare irksome tosome glacier could start shrinking. "I'm rooting for the glacier, volcanic rock c o llected on in a straight line from head to local residents and outdoors the crater floor, providing an snout, the glacier is 1.25 miles enthusiasts. myself," Schilling said. "But I insulating barrier against vol- long. The Longview Daily News wouldn't be at all surprised to canic heat rising from below. But even from the vantage recently chided th e m onu- see it recede this year." And when a magma dome be- point afforded by Yurkewygan bulging upward — even- cz's guided hike, Crater Glatually growing nearly 900 feet cier doesn't look much like high — it formed a sheltered other N o r t hwest g l a ciers. niche along the crater's back The surface is so littered with TruGreen®combines local expertise and dedicated wall where snow could pile volcanic rock that only a few customer service to give you a lush, thriving lawn up. glints of blue ice are visible. you' ll love, guaranteed. "The top is v ery humNormal snowfall a l one Your tailored TruGreen lawn plan includes: can't account for the glacier's mocky," Schilling said. "It M Lawn fertilization 5 weed control formation, though, said USGS almost looks like it's made of M Tree & shrub fertilization and insect control geologist Dave Sherrod. An rock." ~ Weed & vegetation control
You deserve a lawn you love.
extra boost comes from the
may become the first female graduateof Ranger School. 7ypically, about 42 percent of service members who attempt the Ranger
cent for those who make it
C
e
away all life, the U.S. Forest
The guided, glacier-view hike exempts visitors from
The effort has been closely
ing women, who had failed scrutinized inside and outside the initial Darby Phase at the Army. The remaining three Fort Benning, Georgia, women are the last of 19 who twice before. A total of 362 attemptedthe Ranger Course men began the course with beginning April 20. Sixteen of them June 21. them passed an initial physiThe female soldiers mov- cal fitness test and eight made ing on raises the prospect it through the initial Ranger
Course eventually pass, but
On the volcano's north side, where the 1980 blast scoured
t racking t h e recovery.
course and moving on to its could undertake and make Mountain Phase. recommendations later this A rmy o ff i cials a n - year. nounced the result last Any woman who passes the week, saying in a news re- course will make history and
Assessment Phase, commonly known as " RA P Week."
But all eight had fallen short twice, and only the three still in
training now were allowed to attempt Ranger School a third time. Historically, about 75
the graduation percentage percent of students who make jumps to more than 75 per- it through RAP Week go on to
lapsed and he fell 1,500 feet.
the area serves as an open-
which combat jobs it should
of three segments in the
that at least one of them
tag the summit on St. Helens' south rim s ometimes can' t
The effort at the legendary
school was launched this year as the Army grapples with
vice have passed a major hurdle, completing the first
nal attempt for the remain-
Continued from A1 Yurkewycz led a s mall group to this ridge on the mountain's
DOME 2 •2004:Secondlavadomestarts
ning Aug. 1.
open to women in the future. The service included women in the school following a January 2013 directive by senior Defense Department officials
fully integrated into the ser-
Direction of flow ~
A7
In fact, Schilling estimates
loads of snow and ice that slough into the crater off the
nearly a third of the glacier's mass is rock. And just as the
rim and walls.
thick layer at its base provides
"It's as if you' ve doubled, insulation, so, too, does the tripled or quadrupled the layer on its surface. amount of snow and ice accuSchilling and Sherrod use mulation in this small area," aerial photography and lidar
~ Core aeration ~ N u isance pest control ~ L andscape bed weed control
Start your tailoredTruGreen plan today.
541-610-3063 TruGreen.corn 02015 TrusreenLimitedpartnership. All rights reserved.
through the Darby Phase. "I had the opportunity to observe this class during their training and was especially impressed by the pro-
graduate the course. S ources familiar with t h e
assessment told The Washington Post last month that
some of the female students were shocked and frustrated fessionalism and extreme when they learned they did competenceof the Ranger not pass the Darby Phase. instructors," said Maj. Gen. Most, if not all, of those womScott Miller, commanding en were dropped based on generalof the Maneuver how they did while leading Center of Excellence at Fort Benning. "Without a doubt,
foot patrols through the wooded hills of Fort Benning. That
Ranger School is the most physically and mentally demanding course in the U.S. Army. I have complete
raised questions with some
admiration for the soldiers,
instructors.
other services and partner
Army officials have defended the grading process, and
nations who volunteer to attend and work to earn their
c ritics about
w h ether t h e
women were being graded by the all-male cadre of Ranger
attributed the previous failure
Ranger Tab."
of women to get through the Darby Phase to inexperience 20 days long, and includes with patrolling. The Mountain Phase is
i ntensive
t r a i nin g a n d
operations in the Chattahoochee National Forest.
There are four days of military m ountaineering training, four days of technique training, 10 days of student-led patrols and one administrative day w h en
students are counseled on theirperformance. Those
Free pipeinstallation estimates
who pass will move on to
the third and final phase of Ranger School in the swamps of Florida begin-
ASSURANCE iswhatyougetwhen EVERGREEN manages your loved one's medications
EVERGREEN
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.corn
HWY 2OE R Dean Swift Road (1 block west of Costco)
541-323-3011• starks.corn
i
l
i
Class information: July 29, 2015 • 1pm or Spm Shilo Inn 3105 O.B. Riley Road Bend, OR 97701 July 30, 2015 • 1pm or 6pm Best Western Inn 500 Hwy 20 West Sisters, OR OregonlUtah: $80 (Valid in llVA)or Oregon only: $45 shauncurtain.corn» shauncurtainOgmail.corn
360-921-2071
AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
TODAY'S READ: URBANIZATION
Expanding desert makeswater dear in Chile By Javiera Quiroga
panding south, and sitting in
warming, and there's no sign of it slowing." Santiago need only look about 180 miles north to see how bad things can get as
its path is Chile's capital.
its drought continues for an
Santiago, a city of 7 million people 622 miles from the
eighth year amid record high
Bloomberg News
SANTIAGO, Chile — The world's driest desert is ex-
Atacama desert, is experienc-
G ilies Sabrie / New York Times News Service
Gere, a former herder, holds his granddaughter in Madoi, China.
The Chinese government is in the final stages of a 15-year-old effort to transform millions of pastoralists who once roamed China's vast borderlands.
ina ences inits noma s,an an ancient i e wit ers By Andrew Jacobs
have widened in recent years.
New York Times News Service
Rights advocates say the relocati ons are often accomplished through coercion, leaving former nomads adrift in grim, isolated hamlets. In Inner Mongolia and Tibet, protests by displaced herders occur almost weekly, prompting increasingly harsh crackdowns by security forces. "The idea that herders destroy the grasslands is just an excuseto displace people
MADOI, China — If modern material comforts are the
measure of success, then Gere, a 59-year-old former yak-andsheep herder in China's west-
ern Qinghai province, should be a happy man. In the two years since the
Chinese government forced him to sell his livestock and move into a squat concrete
house here on the windswept Tibetan plateau, Gere and that the Chinese government his family have acquired a thinks have a backward way washing machine, a refriger- of life," said Enghebatu Togoator and a color television that
chog, director of the Southern
beams Mandarin-language Mongolian Human Rights historical dramas into their Information Center, based whitewashed living room. in New York. "They promise But Gere, who like many good jobs and nice houses, Tibetans uses a single name, but only later do the herdis filled with regret. Like ers discover these things are hundreds of
t h o usands of
pastoralists across China who have been relocated into
In Xilinhot, a
wife and three daughters were
his flocks. "We don't go hungry, but
among the first 100 families to move into Xin Kang village,
we have lost the life that our
a collection of forlorn brick
ancestorspracticed for thou- houses in the shadow of two sands of years," he said. power plants and a belching steel factory t ha t them in soot.
rapevinse
ing its driest year since 1966. the Choapa and Limari riv- groves. G are a Similar to California's situa- ers that lived for generations thatch of dried stems. tion with the Sierra Nevada, on agriculture are ripping up In search of water or "blue little to no snow has fallen orchards, losing livestock and gold," Adolfo Cortes has in the Andes mountains that in some cases abandoning drilled five boreholes on his supply most of Santiago's homes as wells dry and wa- 475-acrefarm near Ovalle. water. terways slow to a trickle. None have produced any us"Climatic zones are shiftNear the origin of the Liable supplies. ing south," University of Chile mari river ,Paloma reservoir A fter 25 years on t h e geography professor Francis- — Latin America's largest for farm, Cortes has never seen co Ferrando said. "Santiago is irrigation — is all but empty. anything like it. The 68-yearlikely to move to a condition Sluice gates are shut, the little old has already ripped up of a desertor semi-desert. water that remains doesn' t 300 acres offruit trees and What is happening is prob- reach the dam and most of says the rest will be pulled ably associated with global the basin is dry, cracked if water levels in the Limari
Since 2010, Santiago has
received only a third of its average rainfall as the La Nina climatephenomenon blocked
weather fronts from moving up from the south, said Jason Nicholls, a senior meteorol-
ogist with Accuweather Inc. Still, La Nina may not be the only reason. "You have to suspect something else is going on because it has been so persistent for so
long" Nicholls said, referring to global warming.
. US. Cellular.
ra a new amsLin
n
e v i c e. LIC S.
Get an extra $100 when you trade in and activate a select Samsung device. Plus, we' ll pay off your old contract up to $350 per line.
A better value than Verizon and AT6T:
Lines LI.S. Cellular'" Verizon *
*
*
2
>100 /8GB >100 /5Ge >120 /5C;e
4
>120'/8Ge >130'/5Ge >170'/5Ce
b l a nkets
In 2003, he says, officials
the Chinese government is in
forced him to sell his 20 horses
the final stages of a 15-yearold campaign to settle the mil-
and 300 sheep, and they provided him with loans to buy
lions of pastoralists who once
two milk cows imported from
roamed China's vast border- Australia. The family's herd lands. By year's end, Beijing has since grown to 13, but claims, it will have moved the Tsokhochir says falling milk remaining 1.2 million herders prices and costly store-bought into towns that provide ac- feed means they barely break cess to schools, electricity and even. modern health care. An ethnic Mongolian with Official news accounts of a deeply tanned face, Tsokthe relocation rapturously de-
the year will be lost," he said, staring across barren fields that once produced almonds and oranges. "We need at least (15 inches) to normalize stumps of o n ce-productive the situation, a couple of rainavocado trees and almond falls won't help."
c oal-rich
swath of Inner Mongolia, resettled nomads, many illiter-
wool he once obtained from
made at social engineering,
fall much farther. "If it doesn't rain in July,
untrue."
bleak townships over the past decade, he is jobless, deeply ate, say they were deceived indebted and dependent on into signing contracts they shrinking government subsi- barely understood. Among dies to buy the milk, meat and them is Tsokhochir, 63, whose
In what amounts to one of the most ambitious attempts
global temperatures. Farmers in the once-fertile valleys of
earth. The image is repeated 18 miles away where Cogoti reservoir is empty. Closer to Santiago, the Culimo dam is dry. Around the river valleys, fields are filled with t he
hochir turns emotional as he
*Per month. Valid as of 4/24/15.
~ ee sslNsUNs
e•~ SAMSUNg
•
pict former nomads asgrateful recites grievances while his for salvation from primitive wife looks away. Ill-suited for lives. "In merely five years, the Mongolian steppe's punherders in Qinghai who for ishing winters, the cows fregenerations roved in search quentlycatch pneumonia and of water and grass, have tran- their teats freeze. Frequent scended a millennium's dis- dust storms leave their mouths tance and t aken enormous filled with grit. The governstrides toward m o dernity," ment's promised feed subsisaid a front-page article in the dies never came. state-run Farmers' Daily. "The Barred from grazing lands Communist Party's p r efer- and lacking skills for employential policies for herders are ment in the steel mill, many like the warm spring breeze Xin Kang youths have left to that brightens the grassland find work elsewhere in Chiin greenand reaches into the na. "This is not a place fit for herders' hearts." human beings," Tsokhochir But the policies, based part- sard. ly on the official view that Not everyone is dissatisfied. grazing harms grasslands, Bater, 34, a sheep merchant are increasingly contentious. raised on the grasslands, lives E cologists in C h in a a n d in one of the new high-rises abroad say the scientific foundations of nomad resettlement
that line downtown Xilinhot's
broad avenues. Every month are dubious. Anthropologists or so he drives 380 miles to who have studied govern- see customers in Beijing, on ment-built relocation centers smooth highways that have have documented chronic un- replaced pitted roads. "It used employment, alcoholism and to take a day to travel between the fraying of millennia-old my hometown and Xilinhot, traditions. and you might get stuck in a Chinese economists, citing a ditch," he said. "Now it takes yawningincome gap between 40 minutes." Talkative, colthe booming eastern provinc- lege-educated and fluent in es andimpoverished farwest,
Mandarin, B ater
c r i t icized
samsung GALAXYgs
samsung GALAXY Note'rii
ssMseas Galaxy S'6
Learn more about our great deals at uscellLilarcom/payoff
say government planners have neighbors who he said want yet to achieve their stated goal
government subsidies but re-
of boosting incomes among fuse to embrace the new econformer pastoralists. omy, much of it centered on The government has spent open-pit coal mines. He expressed little nostal$3.45 billion on the most recent relocation, but most of gia for the Mongolian nomad's the newly s ettled n omads life — foraging in droughts, have not fared well. Residents sleeping in yurts and cooking of cities such as Beijing and on fires of dried dung. "Who Shanghai on average earn needs horses now when there twice as much as counterparts are cars'?" he said, driving in Tibet and Xinjiang, the through the bustle of downwestern expanse that abuts
town Xilinhot.
"Does America still have Central Asia. Government figures show that the disparities cowboys?"
Thingswewant youto know: Offer valid ori Samsung Galaxy Se 6, GalaxySe 6 Edge, Galaxy Se 5, GalaxyNotes Edgeand Galaxy Notes 4.NewRetail Installment Goritracts, Sharedt,'oniiect planandS25 DeviceAct Feerequired. Ilredit approvalrequired. Enrollment iii DeviceProtection+ required.Themonthlychargefor DeviceProtection+ is SII.99for SmaNphories. Adeductible perapproved claimapplies. FederalWarrantyService Corporation isthe Provider of the Device Protection+ ESCbenefits, exceptiri IlA andOK.Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee applies (ciirrently $1.82/line/morith); this isriot ataxor gvmt. requiredcharge.Arid. fees,taxesaiij terms applyandvary jiy svc.aiiij eqmt. Offersvalid in-storeat participating locationsonly, maybefulfiled throughdirect fulfillment aiid cannotbecombined.See store oriscellular.cornfor details. Two$50U.S. Gellilar Prom otionalCards:IssuedbyMetaBarike Member FDIC,pursuant toalicensefromVisaIJ.S.A. Inc. Valid onlyfor purchases at IJ.S. Cellular storesand uscelliilar.corn.Mustport iri currentnumberto IJ.S.I,'elular. Newline activationaridRetail InstallmentI:oritract required.Contract PayoffPromo: Offer validori rip to 6consumer lines or25businesslines. Must port incurrentnumberto U.S. t,'eliilar andpurchasenewSmartphorie ortablet throughaRetail Installmentt,'ontract ona SharedI,'oririect Plan.Submit final bil identifying EarlyTermination Fee (ETF) chargedbycarrier within60daysof activation dateto uscellular.corn/contractpayofforvia mail toLI.S.t,'eliilar I',ontract PayoffProgram5591-61; P.O.Box 752257; ElPaso, TX8857H257. Customerwil jie reimbursed forthe ETFreflectedoii final bill upto S350/liiie. Reimbursement in formof aU.S. Cellular PrepaidCardis issuedby MetaBank,Member FDIC;additional offersareriot sponsoredorendorsed by MetaBnak.ThisCarddoes iot haveCash accessanil Canbeused at anymerChant location that aCCepts MasterCarde Debit Cards within the LI.S.only.Cardvalidthraughexpiration dateshown onfront of card.Allow12-11 weeks for processing.Tobeeligible, customermust register for MyAccount. KansasCustomers: Inareasin whichU.S. Cellular receivessupport fromtheFederal UniversalService Fund, all reasonablerequests for service must bemet. Unresolvedquestions concerningservices availability canbedirectedto the KansasI'orporation Commission Officeof Public AffairsaridConsumerProtectionat 1-800-662-0027. Trademarksarid tradenames arethe property of their respectiveowners. Additional termsapply. Limited-timeoffer. Seestoreoruscelular.corn for details. ©2015 U.S.Gellilar
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.corn/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
WASHINGTON WEEK U.S. HOUSE • Resilient Federal Forests Act of 2015 Oregon's HouseDemocrats split on theact that seeks toallow more logging in national forests east of theCascades inOregonandWashingtonbyeasingsomeenvironmental protections. The bill, which was supported largely by Republicans butalso Democratic Reps.Kurt Schrader andPeter DeFazio, passedthe House 262-167 andwill headto the Senate,wheresimilar bills in the pasthave faced a moredifficult path to the president's desk. Reps. Earl Blumenauer and SuzanneBonamici joined mostly Democrats opposing the effort, largely becauseof the changes toenvironmental protections. Thebill also requires litigants to post a bondcovering the cost of a lawsuit when challenging aforest management planin court, which Democrats oppose.
Deschutes River Woods tostay out of UGB By Tyler Leeds
which new development
in its existing footprint, an
The Bulletin
is restricted and subject to Deschutes County's rural
objective set out in what' s
A set of state-mandated
goals guides the process of expanding Oregon cities, and because of their design,
development code. The state
a relatively dense area close
to make room for growth
to Bend stands no chance of being brought into the city.
through 2028 with 8,000 new acres.
Bend is in the process of
At the time, the state said
expanding its urban growth boundary, a line beyond
the city's plan failed to make good use of open land with-
controls the boundary, and in 2010, it rejected Bend's bid
called Goal 14. The city is now at work
+OP" io decide which land should be inS ide brought in. Be- • Pr oposed cause of these exp ansion rules, Deschutes areas,B2
planning a second expansion proposal, one with a greater River Woods to emphasis on density. Goal the southwest of Bend, with 14 isn't just about how much its upscale riverfront homes land a city can absorb, but
and clustersof trailers,was
also considers the placement of roads, sewers and
one of the first areas ruled out.
environmental resources to
See UGB/B2
Ws
2. Corner Creek • Acres: 29,407 • Containment: 70% • Cause: Lightning i '. ~h O„l '
CPLLECTIQN
'
''
' '
'
'
" '
y )"
pt
f/
4. Geneva • Acres: 875 • Containment: 80% • Cause: Unknown
BRIEFING
Man dies trying to elude police
House is opposed tothe bill but didn't threatento veto it. Sen.RonWyden expressedconcerns in a statement delivered through aspokesman.
Tees Freeman i The Bulletin
Lawry Thorn shakes out one of her quilts on display at the Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show on Saturday morning. Thorn made the quilt, titled
Bonamioi (D)........................ Defazio (D)...........................N Y
"Sawtooth Cats," using a paper-piecing technique.
Sohrader (D).........................
By Kailey Fisicaro
downtown, foot traffic had al-
maiden (R)...........................
The Bulletin
ready become heavy.
• No Child Left Behind Act revisions The Housenarrowly passed arevision to the former PresidentGeorge W. Bush-era NoChild Left BehindAct that rolls back the federalgovernment's involvement in public schools and gives moreauthority over assessing school performance tostates and school districts, The Associated Press reported. The bill wasstrongly opposed byEducation Secretary ArneDuncan, and would prevent the federal government from requiring specific academic standards, theAP reported. All Democrats voted against the measure. They werejoined by 28 Republicans whoopposed it. OregonRepublican Rep.GregWalden voted in favor of thebill, which passedtheHouse 218-213 Wednesdayand will head tothe Senate.
Quilt Show attendees have
Outdoor Quilt Show attracts
Sally Frey, of Fortuna, California, comes up each year to teach quilting classes the week before the show and help hang
learned this over the years:
novice and expert quilters
quilts the morning of the event.
arrive thereearly andyou get to see firefighters dimbing
alike from across the nation and even overseas to see and experience what's new in
She, along with Capt. Jeff Liming, a volunteer firefighter with the Sisters-Camp Sherman
quilting and what traditions
Fire District, directed the fire-
continue. At the Stitchin' Post, fire-
fighters where to hang quilts. Ahead of time, Frey had createdamap ofthesideof
SISTERS — Sisters Outdoor
maiden (R)........................... Y
3. Ten Mile Canyon • Acres: 6,707 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Unknown
,e
Walden said the White
Sohrader (D).........................N
FIRE UPDATE
1. West Fork • Acres: 764 • Containment: 15% • Cause: Lightning
In a statement to
Blumenauer(D) ..................N Bonamioi (D)........................N DeFazio(D) ..........................N
l ]amph FIIIIS
Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.For more information, visit gacc.nl fc.gov/nwcc/ lnformntlon/lnrgeflre map.aspx
The Bulletin, Bonamici said the act "represents a lopsided approach that would undermine long-standing environmental lawsandlimit our ability to identify and protect fragile ecosystems." Unlike with similar bills in recentyears, Republican Rep.Greg
Blume nauer (D)...................
tygrr'(Q,'~ 'CBkrIttrtk- $
the roof at the Stitchin' Post to
hang quilts off the side of the building. At 7 a.m., two hours before
In its 40th year, the Sisters
the show officially started, the line at Sisters Bakery shetched
fighters shuffled through quilts in bags, organized by the
out the door. And while there
name of the quilter who creat-
the Stitchin' Post to show how about 30 quilts would fit next to
was still plenty of parking
ed them.
each other like puzzle pieces.
OO
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: bendbnlletin.corn Laying on the rooftop with their heads and shoulders
hanging over, several firefighters would each hold one top corner of a quilt, listening to Liming and Frey directing them: move left; a little higher; more to the right, until they got
it just right. SeeQuilt show/B2
A 33-year-old Culver man was killed Friday night when hesped away from aJefferson County Sheriff's deputy attempting to pull him over lost control of his car and slammedinto a tree, according to the sheriff's office andOregon State Police. His passenger, a 20-year-old Bendman, was seriously injured and taken to St. Charles Bend, according to both agencies. The incident began about 9:20 p.m. in Culver whenthe deputy attempted to stop a Honda Accord that was being driven erratically and without lights. More briefing,B3
Group offersnewconcept to counter off-leashareaplansat park By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
A group of Hillside Park visitors is promoting an alternative to the Bend Park & Recreation District proposal
to fence in an existing offleash area. Located on the south side of Awbrey Butte, Hillside
Instead of fully encircling designated dog areas with a fence, the group ts proposing a fence that would run parallel to the eastern boundary
of the park, then curve west toward NW 12th Street running roughly along the boundary separating the park from a large tract of undeveloped land.
Park has been designated as an off-leash area since 2007
a design that would fence in
but is unique as it's the only off-leash area operated by the
most of the eastern half of
park district without a fence
running around its perimeter. With an eye toward renovat-
ing the park next year, the district has been developing
the park to create a 1.6-acre
small-dog area and a 5.5-acre area for larger dogs. A group calling itself Multiuse Advocates for Hillside
Park contends the district's
plan would impede walkers, bikers and others who share the area with off-leash dogs, and has developed its own concept. Alison Lynch-Miller, whose house backs up to the park, said she and others involved
with the group are seeking a
Alternatevision
solution that maintains much
A group of residents who reside near Hillside Park proposes that a fence on the park's northern and eastern boundaries would be better than redeveloping the park to include a fenceddog park.
of the park as it is today, while addressing the problem of off-leash dogs wandering onto adjoining private property. Instead of fully encircling designated dog areas with a fence, the group is proposing a fence that would run parallel to the eastern boundary of the park, then
PrOPOSed fgllge
curve west toward NW 12th
Street running roughly along the boundary separating the park from a large tract of undeveloped land. SeeHillside /B3
Pete Smith / rhe Bulletin
— Taylor W.Anderson, The Bulletin
YESTERYEAR
Well shot! Reader photos
Send us your best outdoor photos at bendbnlletin.corn/ renderphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we' llchoose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot tre altered.
JeffersonCountyofficially separatesfrom CrookCounty in 'l915 Compiled by Don Hoiness from archivedcopies of The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.
Shevlin-Hixon development work. New houses are being
low. Both have given employ-
built and improvements and
at one time nearly 100 being employed, and a big part of the
additions are being made in almost every quarter of town. In addition plans are under
For the week ending July 11, 1915
Muchbuilding isinprogress A revival of building activity hardly equaled in the past two years has been started in Bend by the beginning of the
consideration which will mean still greater activity in
ment to large numbers of men, total cost, estimated at nearly
$25,000, is for labor. In the business district there was recently completed
a one story brick building on Bond Street occupied by M. Dragich for saloon purposes. the most men are employed O.W. Tansy doing the brick are, of course, the dam across work and Ed Brosterhous the Deschutes at the mill site the carpentering. Nearby, and the railroad bridge just be- the Thorbjornson building the near future.
The largest pieces of construction and those on which
received extensive repairs following the fire which caught from the burning blacksmith shop adjoining, and is now in use again. On Wall Street, in the rear
of its present store, the American Bakery is now building a modern bakery and kitchen of brick and concrete. The rear of the adjoining store room has been partitioned off and will be used by the bakery, also. Later it is expected that a
door way will be cut through
to connect the front parts of the two rooms.
Jefferson andCrooksettle Final proceedings in the separation of Jefferson County from Crook were held at Prineville last week and the divorce is now complete. Crook
pays alimony amounting to $25,616.06. Jefferson gets the money as a nest egg with which to start in business for itself. SeeYesteryear/B4
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
LOCAL BRIEFING
E TODAY BEND SUMMERFESTIVAL: Featuring live music, street vendors, kids activities, art and more; 11 a.m.-5 p.m.; downtown
Bend; www.c3events.cornor 541-389-0995. OREGON OLDTIME FIDDLERS SUNDAYJAM: All ages welcome, listen and dance;1 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SW Reif Road, Powell Butte or 408-858-9437. SECONDSUNDAY:Award-winning poet Carl Adamshick is featured, his debut collection of poetry won the Walt Whitman Award; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; 541-312-1034. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Jim Lommassonwillspeakon his book "Exit Wounds: Soldiers' StoriesLife after Iraq and Afghanistan"; 2 p.m.; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, 135 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. LYLE LOVETTANDHIS LARGE BAND:The singer-songwriter
Quilt show
ND
performs with his band; 6:30 p.m.; $37-$79 plus fees in advance; LesSchwab Amphitheater,322 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.corn or 541-318-5457. CHRISKOKESH 8(LJBOOTH HOUSE CONCERT: Featuring the husband and wife duo from Wisconsin; 7 p.m., potluck starts at 6 p.m.; $15-$20
suggesteddonation; House
Concerts in the Glen, 1019NW Stannium Road, Bend; www. houseconcertsintheglen.corn or 541-480-8830. THE HAYMARKETSQUARES: The punkgrass band from Phoenix performs, with Small Leaks Sink Ships; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 541-323-1881.
MONDAY ELKS VS.SALEM:The Elks will be playing against Salem in a two-day tournament; 6:35 p.m.; $6, Box seats start at $8; Vince Genna Stadium, SE Fifth Street and RooseveltAvenue, Bend;
541-312-9259. JOHN MAYALL:The British blues artist performs; 7 p.m.; $23.50$51.75 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.
TUESDAY
Vince GennaStadium, SEFifth Street and Roosevelt Avenue, Bend; 541-312-9259. "EXHIBITIONON SCREEN: THE IMPRESSIONISTSAND THE MAN WHOMADETHEM": Alook at impressionist works from the Museedu Luxembourg,the Musee D'Orsay Paris, The National Gallery LondonandThePhiladelphia Museum of Art; 7 p.m.; $15, $12.50 for children; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. corn or 844-462-7342. THE VETERANSRANCHBENEFIT CONCERT:Featuring Soul Revival, Just Us and Stu GoesNorth, to benefit Central Oregon Veterans
OFF-SITE FIELD TRIP:CASCADE CARNIVORES: Learn about the U.S. Forest Service and High Desert Museum's collaborative effort to investigate Sierra Nevada fox and Cascadecarnivores by visiting remote camera sites with a HDM biologist; 8 a.m.; $10 for members, $15 for nonmembers; HighDesertMuseum,59800 S. Ranch, providing learningand U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/field-trip or volunteer opportunities to local veterans; 7p.m.;$10sugge 541-382-4754. tesd donation; Volcanic Theatre Pub, REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; Featuring food, drinks and more; www.volcanictheatrepub.corn or 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of 541-323-1881. SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue, Redmond;541-550-0066. WEDNESDAY ELKS VS. SALEM: The Elks will be playing against Salem in a BEND FARMERSMARKET: two-day tournament; 6:35 p.m.; Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 $2 Tuesday, Boxseats start at $8; p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St.,
The driver, DerekKyleMach, failed to stop andattempted to eludethe deputy, according to anewsrelease issued Saturday fromJefferson County Sheriff JimAdkins.Macheventuallyended up driving south on SW Feather Drive, The Hondareachedspeedsupto 100 mphandafter traveling several miles, Machlost control near SW Imo Lane,slid off the roadand into a juniper tree, thesheriff said in the news release. Mach, who wasnotwearingaseat belt, was thrown from thecar andpronounced dead at the scene. Hehad a felony arrest warrant alleging violation of a releaseagreement, condition release violation andlarceny,according to the sheriff's newsrelease. The passenger,Emilio JesseLucero, was wearing aseat belt. Personnel from the Jefferson CountyFireDistrict freed him from thevehicle. Hewastaken by ambulance toCulver HighSchool, where a helicopter pickedhim up and flew him to St.Charles Bend,according to the sheriff's newsrelease. Lucero was under post-prison supervision related to drugcharges, the newsrelease stated, andrestricted from possessing or consuming alcohol. The sheriff has askedthe state police to conduct the investigation, according to the newsrelease.
Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket. corn or 541-408-4998. ALIVE AFTER5: HEARTBY HEART:The Heart tribute band plays the Alive After 5 concert series, with the Moon Mountain Ramblers; 5 p.m.; Old Mill District, Hot Pond Loop, off SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.aliveafter5bend.corn or 541-383-3825. THE KITCHEN DWELLERS:The acoustic band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.corn or 541-382-5174. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LA FILLEDU REGIMENT": A screening of a performance of Donizetti's opera about a tomboy raised by French soldiers; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. MELISSARUTH:Thedoo-wop twang singer performs, with The Likely Stories; 8 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. corn or 541-323-1881.
— Bulletin staff report
Sisters and anemployee of the
Continued from B1
Stitchin' Post. Another one of her quilts
Within a n ho u r , a l l of the quilts were hung on the
on display was a traditional quilt of neutral-toned fabrics
Stitchin' Post, but notbefore a
depicting cats. To make the quilt, titled "Sawtooth Cats,"
crowd had gathered to see the
Continued from Bf
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly.
sard. But Th orn, wh o us u ally
works by machine, has an appreciation for a ll t y p es: hand-sewn, m a c h ine-sewn, traditional or art q u ilts that
look more modern. She enjoys adding details by hand to quilts that feature embroidery. Sittingdown to work on oneof
action. Snappingphotos with Thorn used paper-piecing — a their smartphones, and even technique that involves sewshouting di r ections t o t h e ingpiecesoffabric toa paper firefighters, quilt-show-goers pattern. hammed it up. Thorn focuses on making After firefighters posed for traditional quilts, some of photos infront of the firetruck, which she displays at home, arequestcam efrom thecrowd. but many that she uses aswell. "And now if you could all She guesstimated the number turn around," a woman shout- of quilts she's made over the ed,laughing as sheheld up her past three decades. "Oh, I haveno idea ... over phone,hopeful for one more photo. 100 at least. I have a closet L awry Thorn made one full," said Thorn, adding that of the quilts hung by the fire- shesells some of her quilts, but fighters. It featured a black others are made withsomeone fabrictree on abackground of in mind. When she knows who Tess Freeman /The Bulletin vibrant-colored squares span- thequilt will befor, the process Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show attendees view quilts hanging outside of Sisters City Hall on Saturday. ningthe rainbow. is, in a way, more special, she Thorn, 71, h as b e en i n volved in the show for 35 of its
those detailed quilts is a treat,
she said. Thorn said from the time she moved toSisters 35 years ago,
she realized there was a big quilting community. "Here, it just seems to be a
common bond,"she said, under an outdoor tent featuring doz-
ens of quilts tucked over quilt racks. In the grass nearby, a gray cat lay, calmly observing the people, as they observedthe quilts. "Yeah, cats have to come see the quilts, too,"Thorn said, smiling.
sard.
Thorn, who teaches class- quiltinghasevolved. hearsomeonewasplanningto 'Oh you're going to do it by 40 years. That first year, she es before the show but also When she began, she said, quiltwith a sewing machine. mac h ine'?' Now it' s, 'Oh you're "Thirty years ago it was, g oing to doit by hand?'" Thorn became a quilter, a resident of during the year,described how people would be surprised to
UGB
but the invisible,legal lines that Road was once a county road, divide property owners also Rankin noted, and it has cost Continued from B1 stand in the way. the city millions to complete "The area is highly par- that upgrade. Brian Rankin, a city planner overseeing the boundary celized, meaning there'sa lot of Givenhow densely populatexpansion, noted the city put different, small landowners," edthearea already is,Rankin together a map that rankspar- Rankin said. "What we' re try- added, it's not cl ear i f t h e cels on all the factors of Goal ing to accomplish with urban- neighborhood would help the 14.Combining all of the traits ization is to create complete city meet its goal ofaccommothat make a spot ripe for in- neighborhoods, meaning a dating futuregrowth, as dense dusion, the city createda heat place with a variety of uses, redevelopmentschemeswould map that shows how each par- such as a school, a commer- be tricky to piecetogether. cel outsidethe city fared. Areas cial area anddifferent types of Robin Vora, a member of the that appear green on the map, housing.When you' reworking boundary expansion advisory like apiece of land just south of with one,big property owner, group,wonders ifdespite the the city along U.S. Highway 97, that can be easy to plan. But challenges, there maybe a soscoredthe best, while thosein when you have hundreds of cial justice benefit to bringing red performedthe worst. landowners, it can be quite Deschutes River Woods into "When you add it all up, difficult." the city. "It's hard to tell, but driving most o f De s chutes Ri v er If the city were to bring in Woods came up red," Rankin the neighborhood, it would around the area, it seems the said. "I think that analysis a lso have to work w it h a l l infrastructure is not up to the speaks for itself. You can look those residents to find a way samelevel and that things arat it a number of different ways to fund new infrastructure en't in great shape," he said. analytically, but you'll come up and upgraded roads that m eet "If peopleare willing, I think with similar results. It wasn' t the city's standards. It's possi- it'd make senseto talk about just one factor that ruled it out." ble those costs would be car- the idea, to see if we could proOne major difficulty with ried by current city of Bend vide the same level of service the land is how much it would residents in the form of bonds as folks in the city enjoy. My cost tobuild pipes and sewers, or utility bills. Reed Market guess is there's a lot of low-in-
— Reporter: 541-383-0325, kfisicaro@bendbulletin.corn
come peoplewho couldn'taf- "Do they want the city to come fordthe upgrades on their own. in, pave roads and allow for
acres to look at, areas able to
It just seems like there may be
an opportunity." Vora noted his suggestion some people would want the
meet the state's goals." The city plans to finish its expansionproposal by the end
was shot down at a bo und- area to stay as it is."
of 2016.
ary meeting by thoseworried about costs.
When an area has an established feel, Rankin said, "It' s
"It would cost a lot, but so
best for the boundary process
will anything we do with the expansion," he said. "Which-
to respect that character and find otherlands."
ever direction we go, some of
If other land wasn't avail-
the improvements, which are expensive, will be paid by the city." Vora said he's metresidents of the area behind the idea,
able, he added, the city might be looking at DeschutesRiver
but said he'd definitely want
to make surethe expansion waswelcome beforepushing it further.
From his time as aplanner in Sisters, Rankin said there can
be developed sooner and better
more dense developments? I just don't know, and I think
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbuIIetin.corn
See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun tftfhen yotJ wantif, shade wheny0tJneedit.
Woods.But that's not the case.
"We went through almost a year's worth of analysis," he said. "The area isn't being treated different than any
SH
AI I I I I V
other, and there is land we're
ruling out in every single direction foravariety ofreasons.
541-389-9983
We have thousands of other
bestrong resistance from rural
neighborhoods being brought into a city. "People are supposing the city has something to offer Deschutes River Woods, and I wonder if that's true," he said.
CI
O >N DEMA N D
www.shadeondemand.corn •
•
•
•
•
•
BQWN BY THE RlllER$IIIE
Bend's current urban growth boundary
I I I
ner
I
'
c I i
July 27 • 7pm
Southern 5PiritualNusit
SHARC's John Gray
~~effff0rletrns
Amphitheater, Sunriver
COUNTR S IDE LIVING A Nice Place To Call Home Opening Country Side Living in Redmond Fall of zan
DeSChIIteS
END
River Woods
TAKING RESERVATIONS: CALL FOR MORE INFO Call: 541-548-3049 j www.countrysideliving.corn
e Rd.
!
I' ~
under 0 Properties considerationfor inclusion inan
eXPantleti urban ~
Browthboundary
my
Specializing in Memory Care
! I
Pete Smith /The Bulletin
e
n( I
THELMA'S PLACE Adult Day Respitefor those living with memory loss Donate your Vehicle to Thelma's Place & Make a Difference in Memory Care! FREE PICK-UP j TAX DEDUCTION j IT'S EASY! Cag: 547-54B-3o49 j www.thelmasplace.org
I
Rhythms
~ •
•
• •
asoURc E WEE KLT
~
bendbroadband
:: ital Cj
<OMSIMfD COMMUNICATIONS
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
ear's e isa ivesession S
II l
By Jonathan J. Cooper
group of lawmakers, working
The Associated Press
with Gov. Kate Brown, nego-
SALEM — Oregon lawmak- tiated a proposal that included ers wrapped up the legislative hikes in the gas tax, vehicle session and went home last registration fees and other week, but the to-do list for 2016 taxes to pay for construction will be shaped from the ruins of roads, bridges, mass transit of this year's failed legislation. and airports. But it fell apart Among the issues certain to over a dispute about greenrise is the transportation-fund- house gas emissions. ing plan fizzled this year, and The desire for a new plan universities desire for more won't fizzle. "Getting a t r a nsportation money. An aff ordable housing bill got lost in the end-of-ses- package is still a very high sion shuffle. Also, labor groups priority," said Duncan Wyse, are pushing to hike the mini- president of the Oregon Busimum wage. ness Council. "Roads are conLawmakers meet for only gested, in disrepair and we are five weeks during election not preparedfora major earthyears, so much of the work to quake. The situation will only prepare for the 2016 session get worse, and more expensive will take place in the coming to fix, the longer we wait." months. Still, raising taxes in an elecBusiness and labor interests tion year may be too politicalhave pushedthe state for years ly perilous for lawmakers to to approve a plan for road and tackle. And it's not clear that bridge construction. Funding that the impasse over greenfor a new Interstate 5 bridge house gas emissions can be across the Columbia River was resolved. Brown has said the approved in 2013, but the plan issues should be "decoupled," fell apart when Washington and Republicans have said state failed to approve its half they shouldn't be. The issue of the funding. may not be resolved until the This year, a b i partisan 2016 election, when voters are
BSB 8 likely to be asked to repeal the — say they want to see how low-carbon fuel standard. the universities use this year' s "It takes a lot of dialogue to increase. They' ve directed adbuild a transportation pack- ministrators to focus the monage," House Speaker Tina ey on initiatives that help stuKotek, D-Portland, said last dents complete school on time. week. "So whether that's '16 or Several other issues that '17, I'm open to the discussion. were discussed but not apWe' ll have to see how it goes." proved are also likely to return While lawmakers couldn' t next year. resolve their differences over Moments before lawmakers transportation, they did sup- adjourned the session Monday, port a big increase in higher the Senate approved a bonding education funding. The seven package withmore than $60 universities got a 28-percent million to tackle rising rent boost, bringing their funding prices, largely by building subclose to the level it was at in sidized apartments. But they 2007, but still $55 million less did not approve a separate bill than what they wanted. In a joint statement, the presidents of the seven universities
that sets up the legal frame-
work for spending the money, Left-leaning interest groups said the increase will make a are pushing to raise the minbig dent in college costs, but imum wage, but several bills they' ll be back in February "for going as high as $15 an hour additional support to further died in committees for lack of reduce the tuition burden." sufficient support. The groups Universities had h o ped are now pursuing a ballot meatheir budget would include an sure that would set a $15 stateautomatic increase next year wide wage floor, potentially if the state's finances stay on creating pressure for lawmaktrack, but lawmakers did not
ers to adopt a smaller hike or allow cities like Portland to go
give it. The Legislature's top budget writers — Sen. Richard Devlin and Rep.PeterBuckley
higher than the statewide minimum of$9.25perhour.
AROUND THE STATE Mah drOWllS —Authorities said a 35-year-old man has drowned in the Pacific Ocean atRockawayBeach. TheCoast Guard said ahelicopter found the man in the surf Friday at about 5:30 p.m. Hewas unresponsive when adiver made contact with him. Shawn Vincent, assistant chief with the RockawayBeachFire Department, confirmed the man's death. Vincent said the manhad been swimming with his brother in the rip tide areawhen hegot caught up in the current. The brother made it back to shore, while the manwent under. The man's family called 911 atabout 3 p.m. to report the accident. The man's name andwherehewasfrom havenotbeenreleased.
ICe Cream man arreSted —Sheriff's Deputies in Cornelius arrested an ice cream truck operator on suspicion of drunk driving while he wasselling ice cream to children. The Washington County Sheriff's Office said a resident on Friday evening reported that an ice cream truck was driving erratically. The caller said the ice cream truck drove into oncoming traffic and twice hit a curb. Deputies arrested the driver, 38-year-old NoeAndrade Silva, as hewas selling ice cream to kids out of his music-playing van. Silva was lodged in the Washington County Jail on $2,500 bail. A court date has not yet been set. 2 dead in Eugene —The EugenePolice Department said two people died in Eugeneafter shots were fired and a house burned down. Investigators said officers were dispatched to a houseat about 2:30 a.m. Saturday after report of shots fired. Whenthey arrived at the home, police found the residence was onfire. After firefighters put out the fire, they found the bodies of two people inside the home. Thecause of their deaths will be determined by the Lane County Medical Examiner. Police havenot released the names of the victims, because they are still notifying next of kin. Tech drOWhS — Authorities said a teenager from Boardman has drowned in the Columbia River. Gavin RyceRoberts, 18, drowned on Friday near the Umatilla National Wildlife Refuge in the McCormick Slough. The Morrow County Sheriff's Office received a911call reporting the drowning at 3:53 a.m. Numerous agencies launched boats and a dive rescueteam recovered the body. The incident remains under investigation. Roberts was a2015 graduate of Riverside High School in Boardman. It was the second drowning death this summer in the samestretch of water. — From wire reports
Recor ss ow owpoicezeroe inonI(itz a eremai ea er Hayes hoped to benefit from her influence over Kitzhaber.
"justice would not be served"
show that a team of senior
State Data Center, according
f e ared picions that his fiance used Kitzhaber would succeed in the governor's office to land
niques to zero in on the tech- to 1,500 pages of investigative nology manager who leaked records released Friday. former Gov. John Kitzhaber's Rodgers is on paid leave emails. from his job as the interI nvestigators disc o v- im head of the data center. ered that M i chael Rodgers He has publicly acknowl-
having them deleted. contracts for her green-enerAmong the emails, some of gy consulting business. which were personal in naTwo district attorneys deture, were messages dealing clined to prosecute Rodgers, with state business that reconcluding that they believe vealed how first lady Cylvia he committed a c r im e but
The Associated Press
plugged thumb drives into
PORTLAND — Newly re-
his laptop minutes after re-
edged leaking the emails to Willamette Week, saying he believed they were pub-
by charging him. Kitzhaberresigned amid susThe state police records
leased records show Oregon ceiving copies of the emails State Police i nvestigators from another employee at the lic records and h e used computer forensic tech-
Judge rulesagainst using separate death asevidence in trial for deadOregonwoman The Associated Press K ENOSHA, W i s .
dumped them on the road—
A
judge says jurors in the Wisconsincase of a former police officer accused of killing an Oregon woman whose body was found in a suitcase should not be told about a
Minnesota woman he's also suspected of killing.
side, where they were found by highway workers mowing grass in June 2014. Circuit Judge Bruce Schroeder ruled in April that prosecutors couldn't use Simon-
son's death as evidence in Zelich's trial for G amez's death. He said that since Si-
Steven Zelich, 53, of West monson died long after GaAllis, is charged in Kenosha mez, it would be prejudge his County with first-degree in- guilt to use that information. tentional homicide and hidOn Friday, the judge denied ing a corpse in the August a prosecutor's motion to re2012 killing of Jenny Gamez, consider his ruling, the Kenoa 19-year-old college student sha News reported. But he from Cottage Grove, Oregon. said he may revisit the issue He's also suspected of kill- during the trial, which is exing Laura Simonson, 37, of pected to begin in November, Farmington, Minnesota, at a if the evidence warrants it. Rochester, Minnesota, hotel in November 2013, but hasn' t
contacts with reporters, the
tigators had narrowed the list of suspects to four. Using a search of Rodgers' laptop, they found that he'd inserted thumb drives at certain times
that suggested he may have made copies of the Kitzhaber emails.
hn Expanded NeecI-To-Know Guide to Local Schools This handy school reference guide contains a wide variety of comprehensive information about Central Oregon — perfect for new families to the area or current residents ~hose children are entering a new school. It's more than just a directory of year-round info about private and public schools. The magazine will feature several articles on various school-related topics. Additionally, school boundary maps for each district will help parents navigate what subdivision feeds which school. More guidance,more information, more fun!
HllRRY! Advertising Deadline is Monday, JULY 2r
District A t t orney R obert
Zapf said it would be difficult
/pC
i
a
"I don't know that I' ve ever
Court records say he told investigators he accidental-
state employees about their
month after the leak, inves-
201c5-2016
been charged in her death so to separate the deaths at trial. far.
investigators launched a full-fledged mole hunt, diagramming every mention of potentially leaked emails in press accounts, and grilled
Oregonian reported. By mid-March, about a
seen in my career as a prosecutor a case that was more
intertwined," he said, saying death during consensual sex Zelich used online contact and hid their bodies until to lure the women "into his they began to smell. Then he web." ly choked both women to
Publishes: W ednesday, August I2 20I5
"Theoverwhelming number ofpeople who use that park don't want it chopped Up with a bunch of little fences. — Alison Lynch-Miller, resident near Hillside
Hillside
Lynch-Miller said. Jim Figurski, a landscape
t
Continued from B1 architect with the district and Lynch-Miller said deed re- project manager for the Hillstrictions that apply to most
side Park renovations, said
of the properties ringing the park forbid backyard fences. She said a single-fence option with multiple gates would keep dogs from getting into their backyards, while allowing other visitors to travel through the park without having to navigate around a fenced-inoff-leash area. "The overwhelming num-
he and others with the district
ber of people who use that
use group.
park don't want it chopped up with a bunch of little fences,"
rp
r
r 1
9
intend to continue discussing
ways the plan can be refined. Figurski hosted a commu-
I
i
nity meeting about the district's plan for the park Thurs-
!)
day. He said of the 70 or so residents in attendance, most
spoke in support of leaving Hillside Park unfenced or the option presented by the multi— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbuIIeti n.corn
y Zyy Zgg ygg r
Th e Bulletin
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
NORT
sT
Options considered to restore grizzly bear population By Amy Nile
across Washington. "There are strong feelings EVERETT, Wash. — People aboutgrizzly bears,"said Ann all over the world have weighed Froschauer, a spokeswoman in on an effort to help ensure for the Washington office of the grizzlybears don'tbecome ex- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. tinct in the North Cascades. The agencies received more Now, the National Park Ser- than 1,400 comments in supvice and the U.S. Fish and Wild- port of bringing back the bears life Service are working with while 285 people opposed reother agencies to come up with covery. Commenters from as several options for bringing the far away as Europe and Ausbears back to this part of their tralia offered their thoughts natural territory. That includes about how the grizzlies might many of Snohomish Coun- affect human safety, wildlife, ty'sprominent peaks, such as land use, visitors, wilderness Mount Index and Whitehorse areas and a number of other The (Everet t) Herald
Mountain. The federal and state agen-
cies earlier this month released a report that analyzes almost 2,900 public comments re-
ceived from all over the country and abroad about the recovery in the North Cascades.
About 500 people attended meetings about the effort earlier this year, held in six cities
Yesteryear Continued from B1 The $25,000 odd, which is paid to Jefferson in the settle-
ment, represents wholly taxes from Jefferson County collected by Crook County since the dkvtston occurred.
Dog muuling ordinance repealed by city council The dog muzzling ordin ance was repealed at t h e
meeting of the city council on Friday night and last night a section of another ordinance
limiting the number of picture shows was repealed. An ordinance providing for the impounding of stock was passed last week, the purpose being among other things to put an end to the annoyance caused by grazing stock in the residence districts.
right to sufficient habitat in whatsoever. this important ecosystem," the Based on the comments, the commenter wrote Feb. 25. agencies also added new issues A Marysville resident, how- to consider to their list, such as ever, e x p ressed c o ncerns how climate change might afabout the plan, calling the idea fect the bears. of restoring grizzly bears to The agencies plan to include recreationareas people fre- ideas from the public in the quent, such as Mount upchuck, development of the proposal, "horrifying." which is expected to be fin"I don't have the (polite) ished by next summer. words to say how stupid the Once the scientists and idea of bringing back preda- experts come up with their tors like grizzlies would be," plan, people will have another the commenter wrote Feb. 26. chance to weigh in. "Do you seriously not care "At that time, we' ll really about people being mauled or want to engage folks," Frotopics. killed?" schauer said. "We haven't made A Snohomish resident subThe information gleaned a decision yet. We' re just taking mitted an online comment from people's comments will all the information." to the agencies in support of help the agencies identify isThough U.S. grizzly bear grizzly restoration in the North sues to consider as they develop populations have been dwinCascades. options, such as moving griz- dling for decades, money has "Not only are they a signa- zly bears captured elsewhere recently become available to ture species in this area, but into the North Cascades to re- study the environmental effects more importantly, it is likely produce, exploring other ways of returning the animals to the that they preceded humans of returning the animals to North Cascades, Froschauer here, and thus have a special the area, or to take no action said. The National Park Ser-
vice is providing most of the $550,000 for that work, which is expected to take about three years. The grizzly bear restoration effort comes 40 years after the
$4,848,171,957 to add 19,000 new fighting planes to the Army and Navy Air Corps and to rush mechanization of the
pand the idea in coming years er days" including guns, quilts, to include more Main Street saddles, furniture and jewelry shows and a wagon ride for dating back to the mid-1880s. kids. A group of boisterous chilThe da y a l s o h e lped dren gathered around a makePrineville gear up for its an- shift holding cell in the middle nual professional rodeo and of Main Street, taunting and horse races next week. The dousing the two jailed "gunevents are expected to draw men,"played by members of nearly 25,000 spectators and the rodeo association, with participants. their soda pops and w ater "When the r odeo comes balloons. "It's just a lot of fun volunup, we kind of become a Wild West town again," said Bun teering to entertain the kids," Gilchrist, who works at the said Brett Bernard, who played Bowman Museum, which the part of a deputy who was played the part of the held unsuccessful in gunning down up bank. "Everybody tries to the criminals. dress in Western outfits and Frank Dye, a Prineville reseverything. Wild West Days ident for nearly 30 years, said just gives us a head start." it was a day for the children to Just like Wild West Days, get to know the town. "It's too bad other towns Gilchrist said the museumdon't have things like this for which sits on the site of the original Prineville bank — is their kids," he added. "I'm glad
For the week ending July I I, 1940
The water pageant (editoIIag Bend's eighth annual river pageantis now only a memo-
in the upper Deschutes River, a stream that has attracted the
former president many times in recent years.
Hoover passed through La Pine this morning, according to information from Mrs.
William Foss, at whose service station the ex-president ry but it is a very pleasant one stopped to secure gasoline. "Let's forget politics," the to the thousands of persons who saw it. For over an hour United Press quoted Hoover as on Saturday night the river saying, "I want to know where was transformed to a scene to catch the big ones." in fairyland. With color and lights and music, pictures were Two-ocean Navy bill drawn in the darkness. Slowly IS PBSS88 they moved over the water and The house today accepted disappeared. For a time we
ing feat, despite the fact that no one knows what the teeter-tot-
s enate amendments to
them teeter-totterers?) teetered and tottered through t heir
96th consecutive hour at noon today. Teen totter-teeter 442 lineal
Combined distance of both
ends of the board is nearly 442 miles after completing its sixth consecutive24-hour pe-
riod at noon today, calculators figured. They hope to continue the marathon into the water pageant if possible.
sign up, Don Houk and Kathy
House for President Roosevelt's signature.
Smith, teeter-totter recruiting
most part their only reward is satisfaction in doing a job well. This year's pageant warrantsmore than the ordinary
50 YEARSAGO For the week ending July I I, 1965
we do now."
Volunteer registration opening soon.
first time are encouraged to
officers said. They urged persons to double-shift to help continue the record-setting event.
25 YEARSAGO
Bend's teeter-totter m arathon began with a bang at noon
For the week ending July I I, 1990
Police Chief Emil Moan fired
beries in Prineville history as
Voluntee onne w.o g
Teenagers Kobey Kemple Crime doesn't payand Arlo Young started a tee- unless it's to steal a laugh ter-totter endurance test on Hundreds of people came a brightly painted blue and out Saturday to witness one white machine loaned by Doc- of the best publicized and tor Ken Oakley today when most entertaining bank roba blank. Summer sports direc- six masked gunmen rode into tor Duane Owens held a large town for the city's first annual faced clock while recreation director Vince Genna started
Wild West Days.
two-hour shifts. The teeter-tot-
town's Western heritage.
iiII~Il~ j
The mock robbery and a a stopwatch. Bend's Teen Rec- subsequent jail break were reation Council has signed up part of th e day's festivities, about 100 youths to ride the which were designed to make padded seats for one or more current residents aware of the
ter is located on the parking lot The day began with a pabehind City Hall. Police will be rade and a barbecue, along also to Eugene, Portland and chaperons during after-curfew with Western cultural perLakeview for the part played hours. Kobey says the mara- formances up an d d o wn in Saturday night's show. thon will continue as long as Prineville's Main Street. OthEugene has sent over many possible; youngsters are set to er events included a square floats. Lakeview is welcomed go until at least Saturday. Do- dance in the street as well as a as a newcomer. We trust there nations of nourishing goodies train robbery. will be no break in the pleas- are accepted. The Crooked River Roundant Rose Festival custom of up Association, which runs having the rose queen and her Kids continuing assault on an annual rodeo in Prineville princesses visit here for the teeter-totter record that dates back nearly 50 pageant. A ssault continues on t h e years, sponsored the event to world's teeter-totter endurance make the community aware F.R. asksfor 19,000 planes record by Bend teen-agers. of its heritage and to publicize President Roosevelt Youngsters f ait h f ully Prinevil le's rodeo and horse asked congress today for manned their posts through races. satisfaction. Gratitude is to be expressed
chance the animals would re-
North Cascades from the mid- populate on their own.
Now seeking non-profit volunteer projects in Crook and Deschutes Counties.
motion at the ends of the board
and pretty things of the day and given a sight of beauty.
for many miles around. For the
tlers killed thousands in the
vironment, other animals and Cascades ecosystem is in Brit- people. ish Columbia. Without putting the grizzly The number of grizzlies has bear recovery plan in place, continued to shrink since set- Servheen said, there's little
•
were translated into lineal distance.
ocean Navy bill to the White
The thanks of the commu-
ed to have little effect on the en-
•
would be if its arcing up-down
wars and all the other great
nity go to the hard-working members of the stampede and pageant organization for their annual show. They give pleasure to a great many persons
sures to save grizzlies. About 3,800 square miles of the North
grizzlybear recovery for the which is one of six areas out- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, lined in the federal grizzly bear told The Herald in February. recovery plan. The Montana-based bioloCanada also is taking mea- gist said the recovery is expect-
September 18 & 19
But somewhere into Canada is where Bend's teeter-totter
Youngstersentering Junior
sion of this annual pageant. Nowhere else could such a show be given. Nowhere else is there a river flowing slowly through the heart of a city with green lawns and wide park spaces sloping down to the water to provide opportunity for such an event. The pageant takes full advantage of the opportunity.
Servheen,the coordinator for
19th AnnualDays of Carin
miles It's a long way to Tipperary and Canada is not such a short distance either.
High School in the fall for the
fully shown than on the occa-
tential habitat for the animal in the North Cascades ecosystem,
ter enthusiasts (or do you call
the
Bend's great fortune in its
in the North Cascades. It is estimated that fewer than 20 live south of the Canadian border. In British Columbia, there are
Bend's teen-age teeter-tot-
were all taken away from the $4,000,000, 000 fleetexpansion daily drive, from politics and program, sending the two-
river setting is never more
P rineville, established i n 1868, was the first town in
Now, there might be a small number of grizzly bears living
under the Endangered Species likely less than 30. Act as threatened in the lower Returning th e g r i zzlies 48 states. would help restore the natural By 1980, Washington listed ecosystem of the North Casthe grizzly bear as an endan- cades. It is a rare opportunity gered species. The state boasts to bring back all of the naabout 9,800 square miles of po- tive animals to an area, Chris
Central Oregon and it saw its ter record is, if there is one. fair share of gunfights, lynchnationaldefense forces. A money barrel has been ingsand range wars in itsear"That we are opposed to placed next to the teeter-totter. ly cow-town years. "We' re just trying to upwar is known not only to every All donations will be used by American but to every govern- Bend's Teen Recreation Coun- grade the image of the comment in the world," Roosevelt cil to restore the high wheels in munity and to develop some said in a special message to Drake Park. of that old-fashioned Western congress. spirit," said Chuck Holiday, a "We will not use our arms Youngsters pass board member of the Roundin a war of aggression; we will 72-hour mark up Association and one of the not send our men to take part A group of Bend youngsters day's organizers. "And for in European wars. But we will kept teetering and tottering the first time out, I think the repel aggression against the their way toward what they number of people who showed United States or the western hope will be a world's record wasn't that bad at all. "It's really hard to come in hemisphere." today, with an additional atRoosevelt did not provide tempt to raise funds for repairs and say you want to do sometotal figures, but authoritative to restore the old-time high thing like this. We' ve really sources said his new request, logging wheels in Drake Park. been pleased with the mertogether with funds already chants and everyone who have voted, would provide this Teeter-totterers have now helped us out a great deal, so I country with a total air force been going at it 96 hours guess in a sense it has brought of 35,000 planes — a big stride Shades of flagpole-sitting the community together." toward the ultimate goal of and tree-house living! Event organizers plan to ex- "for things reminiscent of old-
The council voted on Friday 50,000. to accept the new drinking trough presented to the city by Hoover reaches John E. Ryan, vice-president of Twin Lake cabin the Bend Water Light & Power Herbert Hoover, ex-presCo. The trough is a fine look- ident of t h e U n ited States, ing piece of concrete work. reached his cabin at South Twin Lake this morning to fish
75 YEARS AGO
the night for the record break-
animals were listed in 1975
1800s to the early 1900s.
I
Days ofCaring Presented by
SELCO
LIVE UHllED ~~ 6IVE. ADVOCATE.VOlIINTEER. v~
~ g
This annual event matches local dusilIesses with IIoli-profit agencies for a day of community service. Days ofCaring provides aII opportunityfor IIolI-profits to select a project that needs helping hands; thendusinesses in the community organize volunteers to help.
For more information call g~i) 385-Syy7or email doc@volunteerconnectnow.org Registration formsavailable at wtww.volunteerconnertnow.org/Volunteer/Days-of-Caring
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B5
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Debra "Sammy" Kaye Dacus, of Redmond Jan. 19, 1958- July 4, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsREDMOND www.autumnfunerals.net 541-504-9485 Services: Memorial Service: 12 Noon, August 9, 2015 (Sun.) at Stack Park, NW 9th St. & Kingwood Ave., Redmond, OR.
Richard Wyat Hendrix, PhD, of Bend July 31, 1941 - July 8, 201 5 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend (541) 318-0842. www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held.
Richard Noel Kribs, of Redmond April 21, 1928 - July 7, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond, www.autumnfunerals.net, 541-504-9485 Services: 11:00 a.m., Saturday, July 18, 2015 at the Redmond Christian Church, 536 SW 10th Street, Redmond, OR 97756. Contributions may be made to:
Redmond Christian Church.
Elizabeth 'Betty' L. Dever, of Bend Sept. 28, 1923 - May 2, 201 5
Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynold Funeral Home, Bend. 541-382-2471 Services: A graveside service will be held for Betty Dever at Forestvale Memorial Park
in Oakridge, Oregon on
Saturday, August 8, at 11:00 am. Colorful attire is welcome, but not required. A lunch reception and celebration of Betty's life will be held immediately following the service at the Willamette Fish Hatchery Park, located in Oakridge at 76389 Fish Hatchery Rd. Contributionsmay be made to:
In lieu of flowers memorial contributions may be made tothe Oakridge Public Library.
Jerry L. Inman,of Bend Sept. 13, 1933 - July 1, 2015
Arrangements: Neptune Society www. NeptuneSociety.corn and Baird Funeral Home of Bend wwwbairdmortuaries.corn Services: A Family Service will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation, 383 Main Avenue, 5th Floor, Norwalk, CT 06851 or the charity of your
choice.
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but
specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries
are paid advertisements submitted by families or
funeral homes.Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail,
email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all
submissions. Pleaseinclude contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of
these services orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication
and by 4:30 p.m.Friday for Sunday publication.
Obituaries must be received by 5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on thesecond day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by
9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for
display adsvary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits©bendbulletin.corn Fax: 541-322-7254 Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
FEATURED OBITUARY
Irene Eldred January 30, 1929- July 6, 2015
Tony winner acted in 'Cheers,"West Wing'
Irene Eldred ofBend, OR, p assed away o n J u l y 6 , 2015, at the age of 86. She was born January 30, By Ashley Southall 1 929, in Binghamton, NY , The New York Times the daughter o f N i c h o l as Roger Rees, the handsome,
and H elen
( Z a potocky) dark-haired Welsh-born actor director who roseto fame photography, an d e s pe- and c ially l o ve d a n i m al s a n d as the title character in "The Life and Adventures of Nichher family. She is survived by sons, olas Nickleby," a stage adapK ulik.
S h e e n j o ye d a r t ,
David Eldred, Dale Eldred, Douglas Eldred; daughter,
Deb orah El dred;
tation of an obscure Dickens
novel for which he won a Tony s i ster, Award, died on Friday at his
R ose ( h u sband W i l l i a m ) home in New York. He was 71. Shamulka. His death followed a brief eShe was a per s on o f illness, his publicist, Rick Migreat faith and belief." She a lso had a t r u e h e art o f ramontez, said. In what proved to be the God.
p r eceded i n
final role of a career that
d eath b y a d au g h t e r , D onna Jean E l d r ed, a n d her brother, John Kulik. Memorial C o n t r ibutions; Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 (541) 382-5882 www.partnersbend.org Baird Funeral Home of B end, OR, i s h o n o red t o serve Ms. Eldred's family, 541-382-0903
spanned six decades across
S he was
Barbara Joy "Bobbi" Ketelsen April12,1952- July 5,2015 Barbara Joy "Bobbi" K etelsen, loving w i fe , sister, mother, and grandmother,
passed away peacefully on July 5, 2015. She was 63. B arbara was b or n A p r i l 1 2, 1 9 5 2 i n Sp ok a n e , W ashington t o R a y m o n d and E d i t h (S m i t h ) K e-
telsen.
stage, film and television, Rees played the doomed lover of Chits Rivera's character in the musical "The Visit" on
Broadway until May, when
Roger Ress, the Welsh-born Broadway mainstay, at a reception for Tony Award nominees in 2012.
health reasons.
Rees died Friday in New York.
Rivera and Rees met last
year while rehearsing for the musical and became fast friends as they performed it at the Williamstown Theater Festival i n Ma s sachusetts, where Rees once served as artistic director, before the show moved to New York. It closed in June.
Course, PO
Dennis Robert Don lass
schools." After his father died, Rees
found work painting scenery at the Wimbledon Theater in south London. He became an
actor there in 1965, appearing in "Hindle Wakes" as a mill "I feel I' ve been cheated a owner's son who impregnates little bit," Rivera, who played a mill girl resistant to efforts to a vengeful millionaire in make an honest woman out of "The Visit," said in a
t e l e- her.
phone interview Saturday from her home in Rockland County, New York. "I haven' t
Rees moved to the Royal Shakespeare Co. in 1967, appearing in "The Comedy of
Rees.
Errors," "Three Sisters," "The Merchant of Venice," "Oth-
to know him."
ater Festival in Massachusetts
S h e gr a d uated had enough time with Roger
from Ritzville High School in 1970. O v e r t h e y e ars, Barbara attended different colleges, taking a v a r i ety of courses. Barbara joined the Air Force in Novemb er o f 1 9 70 , an d r e t i r ed honorably in 1996. B arbara i s s u r v i ved b y her wife, Marsha Hanners; s ister, Pat ti M cI r vi n ; b rother, J im K et e l s e n; daughter by c h oice, Sheri Wooldridge; son by choice, Brian Hanners; and many loved uncles, nieces, nephews, and grandchildren. A Celebration of Life will b e at 1 : 0 0 P M M o n d a y , J uly 1 3 , 2 0 1 5 at Fi r s t United Methodist Church: 6 80 NW B o n d S t r eet i n Bend, Oregon. In lieu of flowers, contrib utions ma y b e m a d e i n B arbara's m em o r y to Friends o f t h e A m e r i c an L ake V et e r a n s Gol f
Sara Krulwich/The New York Times file photo
he was forced to bow out for
"The world's lost a great ello," "Twelfth Night" and actor, a great soul, a great gen- "Cymbeline." tleman," she added. "I' ve lost He spent over two decades a new friend that I was really with the Royal Shakespeare looking forward to spending Co., and was the artistic directhe rest of my life with, getting tor of the Williamstown ThePerpetually befuddled-look- from 2004 to 2007. He was ing, Rees often played eccen- also an associate artistic ditric characters. He was best rector of the Bristol Old Vic in known to American television England for two years startaudiences asthe self-assured ing in 1985. millionaire Robin Colcord on In film, he played the Sherthe sitcom "Cheers," and as the iff of Rottingham in M el British ambassador Lord John
Brooks' "Robin Hood: Men
Marbury on "The West Wing." in Tights" in 1993. He also H e was a m a i n stay o n appeared in "The Scorpion Broadway, where he earned King" in 2002, and "The Pink two other Tony nominations, Panther" in 2006. one for best actor in "IndiscreRees is survived by his tions," in 1995, and another, in husband, Rick Elice, the play2012,forhisw ork asadirector wright whose credits include of "Peterand the Starcatcher." "Jersey Boys." The pair colHe also had a memorable turn
laborated on "Peter and the Starcatcher," a " Peter Pan"
B o x 9 9 6 08 as Gomez in "The Addams Family." prequel, and wrote a play,
Lakewood, W A 9 8 496, or www.veterangolf.org.
But he was best known, "Double Double," a thriller in Deschutes M e m orial both in E ngland and on which Rees played opposite Chapel is honored to serve
Broadway, as Nicholas Nickthe family. Visit our register book a t d e schutesme- leby. The play, based on Dickens' 1839 novel about a young morialchapel.corn. man who struggles to support his mother and sister after the
Jane Lapotaire.
In an interview with "The
Graham Show" on YouTube in 2013, Rees likened acting to being a blacksmith. "It's hot and cold, it's fierce and pleasant," he said. "Some-
DEATHS
death of his father, was an
ELSEWHERE
in London in 1980. It quickly gained critical and popular
times the most excruciating
success, and, after moving to
performances yield the most
Deaths of note from around the world: Paul Lioy,68: Environmen-
unlikely hit when it debuted
and good humor, setting a wonderful example for others on how to live 6dly with a terminal illness.
Denny was raised in Bend dong with his sister,Joyce, and brothers, Phillip and Martin. He graduated from Bend High School in1958, and recei ved both Bachelor's and Master's degrees ia English from the University of Oregon. He served four years in the Air Force beforesettling back in Bend, where he taught high school English and worked in various capacities as ateacher and education administratorbeforeretiring in 2005. Denny met "Ruthie" as a teenager and reconnected by chance in Amsterdam in 1965. 'Ihey began dating in Bend when both returned from their travels and were married one year later. 'Ihey madetheirhome in Bend at a house on NW Roanoke Ave, where sons Mark (1969), Matthew (1971 — 73), and Noah (1974) shared their lives and their love for one another. Denny and Ruthie spent 7 years in Roseburg but returned to Bend in 2003,where they have lived to the present day. Denny was an avid traveler, chef, nature and music lover, and spiritual seeker. He spent ti me on ev ery continent except Australia and Antarctica, and was loved and cherished by friends and family from around the world. Preceding him in death are hisparents, Howell William Douglass and Alice Mae (Penhollow) Douglass, and son, Matthew Robert Douglass. He is survived by his wife, Ruthie, sonsMark and Noah, sister Joyce,brothers Phil and Marty, grandsons Kanyon and Scotty, and numerous cousins, nieces, and nephews. He will be greatly missed.
A memorial service is planned for Saturday,July 25, at 2:00 p.m. at First Presbyterian Church in Bend, where Denny was a member. Memorial contributions may be made to F irst Presbyterian Church, St. Charles Cancer Center, Partners in Care HospiceHouse, or a charityof your choice. Arrangements are under the care of N i swonger-Reynolds Funeral Home. Please sign the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.corn.
won the Tony Award for best
play and earned Rees the Tony for best actor in a play. He also
for his analysis of the dust
won an Olivier Award, the
spawned by the Sept. 11 at- British equivalent of the Tony, tacks on the World Trade Cen- and was nominated for an ter and for his studies of its Emmy Award when the play health effects over time. Died was adapted for television. Rees' own life bore much in Wednesday after collapsing at common with that of the Nick-
Airport in New Jersey. leby character. He was forced Blaine Gibson, 97: Disney to drop out of school to earn a Imagineer whose sculptures living after his father died. of pir atesand presidents,boys Roger Rees, who became a and ghouls, are bedrock fea- U.S. citizen in 1989, was born tures of Walt Disney's theme on May 5, 1944, in Aberysparks and resorts around the twyth, Wales, and grew up world. Died July 5 at his home in South London. His father, in Montecito, California. William, was a police officer; William Conrad Gibbons, his mother, Doris, was a shop 88: Foreign policy expert at clerk. "I was at a pretty rough the Library of Congress whose multivolume account of the re- school, and the only thing I lationship between Congress was good at was art," Rees told and th e e x ecutive b r anch Playbill in 2013. "I got out of during the Vietnam War has this school and went to Camserved as a cornerstone of his- berwell College of Arts, a tertorical writing on the war ever ribly prestigious thing to do. I since its first volume was pub- was there to be a painter. And lished in 1984. Died July 4 at I sketched so well that a year his farm in Monroe, Virginia. later I was sent to Slade School — From wire reports of Fine Art, one of the great art
BiwleCA/faye 5'ePsef8's<tdp ZoIe tL'ouizEerrtkp July 5, 1932 - Feb. 13, 2015
He was married to Ei sa R u th (Poetschat) Douglass; Denny would have celebrated 75years of life and 49 years of marriage in August. Denny had journeyed with cancer for the past 2-1/2 years, and traveled the journey with openness
Broadway in the fall of 1981, beautiful work."
tal scientist widely known
Newark Liberty International
experiences in rehearsals and
Dennis Robert Douglass (" Denny" ) was born in 1940 in Bend, and died on Monday, June 29, 2015, at the Partners in Care HospiceHouse, also in Bend.
Nov. 2, 1931- March 31, 2015
A celebration of their lives will be held Saturday, July 25, 2015 from 11:00am to 1:00pm at the Jefferson County Senior Center, 860 SW Madison Street, Madras, OR. Come share in a light finger food potluck and we will all tell our favorite stories about Bob and Bette. Please e-mail Kathie Conley at kathiecwwCtgmail.corn if you need additional information.
Michael Anthony Graham January 15, 1945 — June 4, 2015 Michael Anthony Graham, a resident of Sisters, Oregon, died on June 4, 2015. He was born on January 15, 1945, in Los Angeles, California, to Wayne A. Graham attd Louise Whitman. Michaers youth wasspent perfecting his baseball game, alifelong passion, as well as his creative talents for mischief. There may have been rigged light switches for exploding toilets or cars disassembled and reassembled inside his high school, but Michael's involvement can neither be confirmed tmr denied. Thesecreative efforts, however, did not distract Michael from earning the rank of Eagle Scout. Michael's life was irrevocably altered whenCarolyn Berger walked into his English class atPasadenaCity College. In front of the class, Michael beckoned Carolyn to come sit by him, to which Carolyn replied with a resounding no. She only agreed out of sheer embarrassment, and 47 years later, Michael must have done something right. After graduating with a degree in Industrial Engineering from California State Polytechnic UniversityPomona, and after a brief stint as an engineer, Michael decided to instead turn his passion for rare coins into his career of over 40 years. Having worked for attd owned his own coin companies over the years, Michael was a member of the American t Numismatic Association and the Professional Numismatists Guild. As a resident of Central Qregon, Michael bought and sold rare coins for over 30 years itt Bend, Oregon, at his company, Mountain High Coins and t Collectibles. In addition to his love of coins, Michael loved to fish and was a bigsports fanatic, always picking up ball caps from every sporting event he attended to add to his ever-growing collection. Michael could be found enjoying every major sporting event, and in the absenceof, you just might have found him scanning the channels and settling on the Women's Collegiate Ultimate Frisbee Championship. If it was a sport, it was good enough for Michael. His soft spot for animals had him surrounded by a menagerie throughout his lifetime, but most recently, he doted on his favorite "daughter," his mini dachshund Sadie Sue. Michael was always helping those in need. A friend of yours was a friend of Michael's. His love of his family was rivaled only by his intense love of Big Red chewing gum and Burt's Beeslip balm. He will be truly missed. Michael was preceded in death by his parents, his father, Wayne A. Graham, his mother, Louise Whitman Graham, and his stepmother, Bobble Jo Roland Graham. Michael is survived by his wife, Carolyn, and his children, Colleen McGrew (Dave)andher children Kalie, Connor, and Kelsey of Redmond, OR; Christina Flittn and her son, Liam, of Portland, OR; Maryann Snyder (David) and their dachshundsCookie and Alfie, of Dallas, TX; and Leanne Weinhold (Steve) and her children Megan and Daniel of Sparks, NV. He is also survived by two sisters, Tommilu Skerl and Kathy Hayes. A memorial mass will be held at St. Edwards Catholic Church itt Sisters, OR, on July 25, 2015, at 11:00 am. A celebration of Michael's life will be held afterward at the Open Door, 303 West Hood Avenue, in Sisters. In lieu of flowers, the familyrequestsdonations be made in Michael's memory to the Make a Wish Foundation, St Jude's, or the Bend Ronald McDonald House.
g
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
I
I
i
'
I
TODAY
i I
TONIGHT
HIGH 73' I f '
Some sunwith a t-storm this afternoon
I
ALMANAC EAST:Intervals of clouds andsunshine Seasid will hold over the 68/60 region with afternoon Cannon showers. 65/59
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 75 55'
Low
81 47'
-
LOW 51' Cloudy this evening; partly cloudy late
74'
TUESDAY ' ' 75'
48'
'PT
Partly sunny with a t-storm in the area
101' i n 1926 30' in 1971
/5
portland ss/65
78/
he Bag
/67 •W
lington 88/65
8 /ee
Mesc am Losbne
dleton 73/ •
77/53 Enterp™
• • rs/ss
•
•
•
g
High: eg at Hermiston
J u l 31 A u g 6
Bandon
64/ Gold ach 81 64/
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
I
• Lakeview 76/42
POLLEN COUNT Wee ds
78/52
80/48
• Burns Jun tion 83/52
Rome Fields • 82/50
Yesterday Today Monday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 66/61/Tr 6 9/59/c 70/56/c La Grande 79/ 6 1/0.21 78/57/t 7 8/53/t 86/58/2.04 75/50/t 75/45/t La Pins 67/51/0.04 71/49/t 71/47/t Brookings 67/59/Tr 66/55/pc 67/55/c Msdford 81 /63/0.00 82/61/sh 85/59/pc sums 82/54/0.01 77/48/t 79/46/s Ne wport 63/5 9/Tr 62 / 56/c 6 4/53/p c Eugene 74/62/0.00 80/56/pc 80/53/pc N orth Bend 6 8 / 55/0.00 68/57/c 68/56/c Klamath Fags 77/54/0.02 75/47/t 77/45/s On tario 89/65/Tr 85/62/pc 87/62/ s Laksview 73/52/0.29 76/42/t 78/45/s Pendleton 86/66/0.00 85/63/pc84/58/pc
City Asturia Baker City
3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme.
83/55
McDermi 80/49
Yesterday Today Monday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 73/6 5/0.0078/62/pc79/58/ pc Prinevigs 74/ 5 1/0.1778/55/1 71/50/t Redmond 80/ 53/0.0775/50/t 76/45/t Roseburg 75/ 6 3/0.0082/61/pc 83/59/pc Salem 73/63/0.00 80/59/pc80/56/ pc Sisters 74/51/0.00 76/50/t 76/47/pc The Dages 8 6 /67/0.00 85/66/pc 84/62/s
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shnwsrs,t-thundsrstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
A bsent Absent
Hig h
Klamath
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
'74/48
Yesterday Today Monday
4
The highertheAccuWsalher.mm liy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin prctscgun.0-2 Lcw
G rasses T r ee s
• Ch ristmas alley Silver 75/46 Lake 70/49 75/48 • Paisley Chile quin
• Ashl nd e Falls 81/ 75/47
66/5
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
~ 7
Riley 77/48 77/48
•
Medfo d
Bro ings
UV INDEX TODAY
•
Beaver Marsh
82/61
Gra a
0'
7
• Fort Rock Greece t • 74/49 71/51
Roseburg
66/57
Low: 50' at Redmond
Tonight's oity:Venusat its brightest Mag. -4.5.above thewestern horizon after sunset.
5 I~
Mostly sunnyandnice
Source: OregonAgsrgyAssociates 541-683-1577
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
~ gs ~ t ee ~ 2 0 e ~ s g s ~ 4 0 s ~ 5 0 s ~Ge e ~ 70 8 ~ eg s e ggs ~100s ~ TTOs ~ 108 ~ g s As uf 7 a.m yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL 5 817SS xxwtv.xx C rane Prairie 326 5 7 59% EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the" Wickiup 90653 45% ) x x xxx ~ Osr gs X /S /59 1/61 Crescent Lake 6 9 9 01 80% Billings • ~ , v, v, y y y y W ronto Ochoco Reservoir 21977 50vo Prinevige 84279 57Vo at Death Valley,CA • 82/64 Rani ./68 M;nn uffafo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. National low: 31 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 266 at Bodie State Park, CA Che n Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1640 8 Salt Lake ity Deschutes R.below Bend 135 at Osceola, IA ah ahclvco " 90/70 72/60 St. L uiv Deschutes R. atBenhamFags 2090 avhrn n , Las V ss vem Little Deschutes near LaPine 141 ssn1 99/7 Kansas iiy Louilri C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 4 8 92 Charts Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Los An les ,
,
",
,
" ,
Oily Hi/Lo/Prsc. HiRo/W Hi/Lu/W Abilene 92/70/0.00 94n4/s 96/73/s Akron 83/55/0.00 80/67/1 81/68/t Albany 87/57/0.00 88/67/s 87/66/1 Albuquerque 85/62/Tr 88/66/1 89/66/1 Anchorage 73/53/Tr 68/56/sh 66/55/pc Atlanta 92n3/0.00 93/74/pc 92/76/t Atlantic City 81 no/0.00 83/69/s 81/72/pc Austin 93/65/0.00 94/71/s esno/s Baltimore 87/70/0.02 86/66/s 84/69/1 Billings 90/59/0.14 87/60/c 90/62/pc Birmingham 95n2/0.00 96/76/pc 95nr/s Bismarck 90/69/Tr 94/65/pc 92/61/t Boise 86/63/0.02 82/64/pc 85/61/s Boston 83/68/0.00 90/68/s 77/64/pc Bridgeport, CT 85/68/0.00 87/70/s 83/69/pc Buffalo 80/58/0.00 83/66/pc 80/68/1 Burlington, VT 88/59/0.00 87/66/s 87/68/1 Caribou, ME 81/52/Tr 80/51/s 81/59/pc Charleston, SC 97n6/0.00 92/75/s efnsn Charlotte 96/67/0.00 92/70/s 94n2n Chattanooga 92/73/0.14 93/73/pc 93/76/t Cheyenne 82/53/0.03 84/58/s 82/58/t Chicago 78/61/0.02 81/67/pc 83/67/1 Cincinnati 83/61/0.00 82/71/t 82/71/t Cleveland 78/55/0.00 79/67/1 80/68/1 ColoradoSprings 85/58/0.00 88/61/s 82/59/t Columbia, Mo 90n3/0.00 92/75/s 94nws Columbia, SC 100n2/0.00 esn4/s esn5n Columbus,GA 97/73/0.00 esns/pc 94/76/pc Columbus,OH 82/60/0.00 79/67/1 Tenon Concord, NH 88/54/0.00 91/63/s 84/59/1 Corpus Christi 94n4/o.oo 93/74/s 93/74/s Dallas e4ne/o'.oo erns/s gene/s Dayton 81 /63/0.00 82/71/t 83/72/t Denver 89/56/0.09 92/61/s 86/60/1 Des Moines 86no/0.87 92/74/pc 96/71/t Detroit 83/60/0.00 77/65/c 79/67/1 Duluth 82/67/0.00 79/62/t 82/62/t El Paso 94/66/0.03 97/73/s eon 4/s Fairbanks 75/56/0.00 71/51/ah 73/53/c Fargo 86/69/0.00 92/67/t 85/66/1 Flagstaff 74/46/0.01 76/48/t 75/49/1 Grand Rapids 81/56/0.00 79/63/c 78/64/1 Green Bay 83/59/0.00 83/66/pc 81/64/1 Greensboro 91 /72/0.00 88/69/s 87/71/t Harrisburg 85/64/0.00 87/67/s 84/69/1 Harffurd, CT 87/60/0.00 91/66/s 87/62/pc Helena 78/61/0.01 82/57/t 83/57/pc Honolulu 89/77/0.66 88/77/sh 89/76/ah Houston 93n5/Tr 94ne/s 95n5/s Huntsville 97n5/0.00 93/73/s 94/75/pc Indianapolis 78/59/0.00 85/72/t 81/71/t Jackson, MS 93/76/Tr 95nsn esns/s Jacksonville 96n3/0.01 95/73/s 94/73/t
Amsterdam Athens
81 /61/0.00 68/60/ah 90n7/0.00 89/70/s Auckland 50/39/0.00 50/41/s Baghdad 109/86/0.00 113/83/s Bangkok 99/82/0.05 97/82/t Beijing 97n3/0.00 102/76/s Beirut 84n5/0.00 83/75/s Berlin 73/51 /0.00 77/59/ah Bogota 64/54/0.02 68/45/c Budapest 81/48/0.00 86/63/s BuenosAires 59/48/Tr 63/48/r Cabu San Lucas 95ns/o.oo 95/78/s 0 96m 9/61 Cairo 93/73/0.00 93/75/s phoen Anchorage Afbuque ue Mshums Ci Calgary 84/61/0.05 81/56/1 • 105/8 • 9 es/ n 4 sa/ee ilanta Cancun gone/o.oo 91/73/pc irmin ham 7 /es • uaoa ul pa Dublin 63/52/0.10 67/55/c ene urn n Edinburgh 64/57/0.28 64/49/pc Geneva 91/61/0.00 86/60/pc • ifsndc Harare 71/42/0.00 74/40/s d w Orleans 4/7d 9 5 Hung Kung 94/83/0.03 93/83/c Chihuahua 93/78 Istanbul 82/72/0.00 83/70/s 92/62 Miami 1 I Jerusalem 82/62/0.00 84/63/s Monte y 95/Sr Johannesburg 62/42/0.00 67/45/s s Lima 71/64/0.02 72/64/pc Lisbon 81 /63/0.00 80/62/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 77/59/0.02 72/59/eh T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 99/68/0.00 101/67/s Manila 88/75/0.09 86/78/t
227 69 17
•
FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver Mod~erato ~ ~ Redmond/Madras ~M od ~orate ~ Sisters ~l L ow ~ Prinevige ~M o d~erato ~ La Pine/Gilchrist ~M od ~orate ~
C
Source: USDA Forest Service
Hi/Lu/Prec. Hi/Lu/W 62/54/0.32 64/54/sh 90/69/Tr 92ff 5/s 81/57/0.00 76/62/c
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vsgas Lexington Lincoln
HiRo/W 61/53/sh 95n3/s 76/64/t
esn5/0.00 cene/s 101n8/s
Little Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix
82/66/0.00 84/70/t 83/72/t 93/71/0.00 98f/1/pc 98/65/s 94ns/o'.oo 96n7/s 98n8/s 79/62/0.00 79/61/pc 78/62/pc 86/65/0.00 89/75/t 89/75/t 79/60/0.00 85/66/pc 85/66/1 95m/O.OO 95n9/s 96/80/s 92/79/0.00 91 n7/s eonrn 78/63/Tr 76/63/pc 77/65/1 82/67/0.00 91/69/1 88/71/t 94/73/0.14 92n6/pc 94nrft
94n5/0.00 93n8/t 94nr/pc 88/69/0.00 88/71/s 85/71/pc 87/67/0.00 91 f/1/s 86n1/pc 85/75/2.36 82n1/pc 85n3/pc 90/73/0.00 94n2/s 98n3/s 91/72/0.20 95/73/pc 96/68/s orn4/o'.o5 95ff 5/t 93n5/t esno/o.oo 103n7/s 105n4/s 78/66/2.24 91n4/pc 91 n4/t 89/73/0.00 89/69/s 88/71/pc
106/85/0.00 105/83/s 105/85/s 83/63/0.00 80/66/pc 80/68/1 87/60/0.00 88/62/s 77/59/pc Providence 87/64/0.00 90/68/s 85/65/pc Raleigh 91/72/0.00 89f/0/s 86n2/t Rapid City 92/56/0.00 92/62/s 91/62/s Rene 83/56/0.00 82/57/s 85/57/s Richmond 78/73/0.67 86/67/s 86/71/pc Rochester, NY 83/57/0.00 85/65/pc 83/68/t Sacramento 87/60/0.00 87/60/s 91/61/s St. Louis 94/73/0.00 96n7/pc esnrn Salt Lake City 88/66/0.00 eono/s eono/s San Antonio 92/74/0.00 94n5/s 96n4/s San Diego 75/65/0.00 74/66/pc 74/66/pc San Francisco 73/60/0.00 72/60/pc 71/59/pc San Jose 75/58/0.00 77/60/pc 77/57/pc Santa re 81/51/0.00 85/59/1 85/59/1 Savannah een4/G.oo 95n4/s 95n5/t Seattle 72/62/Tr 76/60/c 75/58/ah Sioux Fags 86/67/0.00 93/67/pc 91/65/s Spokane 78/63/0.18 83/62/pc 81/59/pc Springfield, Mo sen2/0'.00 92/74/s 95n6/s Tampa 97/80/0.07 91n8/t cone/pc Tucson 101/78/0.00 eenen eenen Tulsa 93/70/0.00 95f/7/s 98/78/s Washington, DC ssn5/o.oe 88n1/s 86n3/t Wichita 91/74/0.00 een5/s 102n5/s Yakima eono/o.oo88/59/pc 87/56/s Pittsburgh Portland, ME
eon 4/0'.00 1O5ne/s 107n9/s
Yuma r
•
Crooked R. near Terrebonne Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes.
Yesterday Today Monday
City
• '
Crooked R.below Prineville Res.
M o s tly sunny and pleasant
r
•
10 a.m. Noon
44'
44'
Yesterday Today Monday
•
67 7
79'
TRAVEL WEATHER
• 85/ CENTRAL: Times of andy • Mc innviu 7/59 Govee 85/66 Joseph • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.04" clouds andsunshine n t • u p i Conduit 1/59 78 67 Cam • 81 Record 0.14" in 1974 today with an union 52 Lincoln 71/ Month to date (normal) 0.2 9" (0.21 ") afternoon showeror 66/57 Sale pmy Granite Year to date(normal) 6.40 " (5.93") thunderstorm. 80/5 /61 a 'BakerC Newpo 7«48 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 6" • 79/55 9/55 62/56 • Mitch II 75/50 Camp Sh man Red WEST:Mostly cloudy 77/66 n R SUN ANDMOON Yach 77/s1 • John au along the coast with 64/56 78/57 • Prineville Day 6/50 Today Mon. tario intervals of clouds 78/55 • Pa line 78/54 Sunrise 5:33 a.m. 5: 3 4 a.m. 8 62 and sunshine farther Floren e • Eugene • Re d B rothers 7551 Sunset 8:48 p.m. 8: 4 7 p.m. inland. Valee 66/56 Su iVere 73/51 Moonrise 2 :55 a.m. 3:42 a.m. 84/59 Nyssa • 7 2 / 0 • l.a pine Ham ton C e Moonset 5:4 6 p.m. 6:4 2 p.m. J untura 86/ 5 8 Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES New F i r s t Full Last 83/55 79/55 /58
YESTERDAY
TH U RSDAY
0
77
Sunshine andpatchy clouds
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lowe. umatiga Hood 89/66 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
Tigamo •
PRECIPITATION
Jul 15 J ul 23
WEDNESDAY
OREGON WEATHER
Bend Municipal Airport through 5 p.m.yest.
High
MONDAY Wk>dg
I
Mecca Mexico City
110/87/0.00 111/68/s 71/54/0.15 72/53/1 Montreal 82/64/0.00 85/67/pc Moscow 66/54/0.14 60/48/c 97/81n Nairobi 77/54/0.00 77/53/pc 103/76/pc Nassau 66ns/0'.07 89/77/pc Ssns/s New Delhi 79/75/1.49 83n6/t 72/60/ah Osaka 84m/o.oo 90/77/pc 70/47/pc Oslo 70/45/0.00 59/52/1 79/61/pc Ottawa 88/59/0.00 87/62/1 54/38/pc Paris 81/55/0.00 78/60/c esm/s Riu ds Janeiro 79/68/0.00 83/69/s 95n5/s Rome eon2/D.oo 89/70/s 73/52/pc Santiago 55/48/0.06 54/36/r 90/73/s Sau Paulo 64/61/0.10 80/64/pc 68/55/sh Sap porc 84/60/0.00 86/69/pc 63/49/r Seoul 93/75/0.67 80/74/r 84/61/pc Shanghai rsns/t'.90 83/73/c 77/44/s Singapore 88/82/0.00 89n9/sh 93/82/pc Stockholm 70/55/0.12 67/48/ah 85/69/s Sydney 65/45/0.39 59/46/pc 85/67/s Taipei eenr/0'.00 95/80/1 69/45/s Tel Aviv s5n2/0.00 85n5/s 71/65/pc Tokyo 84nr/0.00 85/75/pc 84/64/s Toronto 82/63/0.00 83/64/c 74/62/sh Vancouver 66/63/0.00 70/59/sh 103/70/s Vienna 79/52/0.00 87/64/pc 86/78/t Warsaw 66/54/0.00 74/56/c
110/68/s 74/51/pc 87/67/s 60/46/c 73/51/c
cons/pc 88/79/t eonr/ah 59/52/ah 87/64/pc 80/61/pc 84/69/s 87/70/s 51/31/c 81/65/pc 77/71/c 80/72/ah 89/73/pc 89/79/t
69/53/ah 62/45/pc 93/79/t 87/76/s 86/75/c 80/65/c 70/58/c 78/63/pc 70/55/t
llet'
I I'
67/60/sh 91/73/s 57/49/pc 113/86/s
l
I
The m a rketing package is designed to reach nearly everyone in Central Oregon. The savvy advertisers in this unique promotion will saturate the marketplace with more than
YOurbuSineSSiSimPOrtanttoUSandWeWant
Central OregOn. 30,000CO PieSof thiS eXCluSiVe
aswellastheRedmondSpokesmanandthe
it to growandbeassuccessful aspossible.
magazine will be direct mailed throughout
Central OregonNickel ads. Wewant your
We alSO realiZe you need affOrdable market-
theareatoatargeted grOuPofCentralOregOn
marketing dOllarS toWOrkand SOhaVe Carefully
ing OPPOrtunitieS to let PeOPlknOW e hoW
shoppers.Customerscan alsoaccessall the
crafted thisall inclusive c oupon promo-
TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS ... that get results!
muChyOurbuSineSShaSto Offer. gg iS the
-
r
COuPOnS digitally on the Bulletin'S hOme tional PaCkageto giVeit the beSt OPPOrtunity
cost effective advertising solution for your
page which is currently receiving nearly 1.5
fOr SuCC eSS. Call tOdayto SC hedule a noObli-
business.Thisall new slick stock magazineand
million page viewspermonth. If that weren't
gation aPPOintment tOlearn mOreabOut thiS
interactive digital coupon solution combined
enOugh,We'l alSOPrint yOurCO uPOn in our
POWerful and eXCitingWaytogetyOurmeSSage
with four separatenewsprint productswill
holiday gift guide, inserted into 60,000 copies
out to the mOStbrOad anddiVerSegrOuPof
give your coupon the most visibility available in of the Bulletin and Central OregonMarketplace
Central Oregoncustomers.
Your messagedesigned anti delivered$IXDIFFERENTWAY$ for onelow price. 3.THE REDMOND SPOKESMAN Allcoupons
5. CENTRAl OREGON MARKETPlACE All
magaZineWill be direCtmailed to an eXC luSiVe
Will be inCludedfOr all SubSC riberS of our
listof30,000 Bend-areahouseholdsnon-
Redmondweekly.Approximately4100copi es,
duplicated by Bulletin subscribers. Look for it
9,000 readerS,onSePtember 9.
to arriVe in mail bOXeS on SePtember 8 or 9.
4. THE NICKElAll couPonswill run as
2. THE BULLETINAll coupons will be in full
a special section wrap in this free rack
COuPOnS Wil be deliVered to aPPrOXimately 30,000 households throughout Central OregOnthat are non-Bulletin SubSCriberS, on September 8. 6. BENDBULLETIN.COMAll coupons will SCrOIIalOngthe bOttOmof bendbulletin.Com'S
COIOr and Printed on an eleCtrobrite PaPer.
distribution shopper which is distributed
DeliVered to aPPrOX imately 29,000 SubSCriberS,
throughout Central andEastern Oregonwith
homePage-aCCeSSibleViaCOmPuter,tablet, and SmartPhone. MOrethan OnemilliOn Page
70,000 readerS,on SePtember 6.
15,000 COP ieS,on SePtember10.
views a month!
1.DIRECT MAIL I
I
I
suu whenvou want, it swans whenvou need it!
~ SO O
a slick stockcoupon
sAYE euuu on purchases of ss,uuu or more sAYE $25u on purchases ot Sa,sou or s4,999 sAYE $250 oft purchases of si,000 or sa,4$9 Iht dl &
W hdl 5~
4
Il
0
hM
C ~ d ttP SI I N b
RunterDouglas mm m
C~SSir
ISI I Q
WINDOW
COVERINGS
r udim
V CI
ON DEMAND
1465 sw Knoll Ave, Bend J t gC
I YD
cQN1 578ZZ
svi-38~ 3 .wade demand.c m
Italy For I I I
I
I
r corda w nbdhf uys tWtkr
I e
i AHYROOIP 0
ii OU II
I
'
T A PAIR csfdas sdw nbdix uys ihgnb kkdrx uvngn uytr wug
Manarala's
I
STD ETTO SAL'S
ITALIAN BISTRO ANO BAR
L
25$90 sate st., Bend s41av6.I9s4
22IOstatesc,Bend 54t-s66.2754
I
Sales Deadline: jul 24 for the Se t. 8/9Cou on Book
I
'
I
•
I
I FQRlll T
IIII '
aasdwf
P so to GO! 6522 JsffsrssnAvs., Bend541-SSS-0092
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
O www.bendbuiietin.corn/community
Ssrs'.
Photos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
The Historic Hotel Prairie, opened in 1905 and restored a century later, anchors the downtown blocks of Prairie City. Settled in the 1860s following a gold rush to nearby Dixie Creek, the town of 900 is now a ranching center serving the eastern John Day valley.
A colorful traditional Taoist shrine, adorned with incense sticks and
dried fruits, occupies a prominent position in the heart of dry-goods shelvesatthe Kam Wah Chung store.Many ofJohn Day's early Chinese
residents made offerings here to ancestors and gods.
By John Gottberg AndersoneFor the Bulletin
JOHN DAYhe history of early Chinese settlement in Oregon is a tale of perseverance in the face of alienation and hardship. Nowhere in Oregon is this story better told than in the unlikely location of John Day, a ranching town three hours' drive east of Bend. In the last half of the 19th century, lured by the need for labor in the mining and railroad industries, thousands of young Chinese men came to the United States to escape the poverty of their homeland caused by overpopulation, war and famine. They were willing to
iy
work long hours at wages that were low by American standards, in order to save money to later return to China to support their families. Kam Wah Chung State Historic Site preserves the John Day store and medical clinic where two immigrant Chinese men lived and worked from 1888 into the 1940s. The name of the building means "The Golden Flower of Prosperity."
r 'f NORTHWEST TRAVEL Next week: Unique wine
>Oh/7 D
country lodging
Mt. Vernon Jghfl Pa River
ra prairie City
Having learned to sluice the gravel tailings left by white prospectors, Chinese miners followed a major 1862 gold strike on Canyon Creek to the John Day area. A majority settled in Canyon City, briefly the largest city in Oregon with about 10,000 gold-hungry residents. Although the boom was short-lived, thousands of Chinese stayed on; an 1879
CanyonCity Arear'
of detail OREGON
censusreported 1,000 white miners and nearly 2,500 Chinese miners in eastern Oregon, according to the Oregon Historical Society. The Chinese were honest and industri-
ous, according to eyewitness reports of the era, but were almost mercilessly derided for their cultural differences. And
with sentiment growing across the West that immigrant Chinese labor was costing white Americans job opportunities, persecution and hostility were perhaps inevitable. In February 1885, Canyon City' s Chinatown was burned down, probably by arsonists. Local authorities refused to let the Chinese rebuild, so many of them moved 2 miles down the creek to John
Day, which had its own Chinatown. SeeJohn Day/C4
Greg Cross /The Bulletin
Paid Advertisement
A oo atOre on's iant ro ists By David Jasper The Bulletin
If you' re the civic-minded sort, or simply care about Oregon's well-being, authors Kristin Anderson and Greg Chaille would like a word with you. Before retiring three years ago, Chaille served for 24
years as president of the Oregon Com-
give back. Upon retiring, "People encouraged me to write about my experiences and lessons learned and people I met,n he
said last week. So Chaille
STATE OF GIVING
munity Foundation,
which promotes philanthropy in the state by working with people, companies and organizations to create charitable
fundssupportingthecauses near and dear to them.
Chaille's lengthy career in state-spanning nonprofit work left him uniquely poised to tell the story of Oregonians who
is
teamed with An-
derson, a native Oregonian, former English professor at the University of Oxford and
~h
current nonprofit consultant who works around the state, to write the
book "State of
submitted photo GiVing: StOrieS Of
Volunteers, Donors, and Nonprofits.n
5, l 7 8 r 8
Event attendees will be put in a drawing for a free Radiesse dermal filler treatment. $575 Value! Submitted photo
Kristin Anderson, left, and Greg Chaille are the authors of "State of Giving: Stories of Oregon Volunteers, Donors, and Nonprofits,n which delves into civic engagement in combatting problems around the state.
Offering Xeomin, apurifiedform of Botox Receive S75offPLUS a SSO Visa Card for your next visit. Space is limited. RSVP today and receive a travel size sample of sunscreen!
Taking a narrative approach, the 300-page book shines a light on Oregon peo-
careers working in the trenches to improve their communi-
culture, hunger,homelessness,
ple and agencies that donate
ties. Topics covered include ed-
their time or money or make
ucation, conservation, arts and
cial justice, among others. SeePhilanthropy/C3
the urban-rural divide and so-
MD
Doctors and Nurses on StaR' "
Now Openr Days a w eek with Extended rrours
115 SW Allen Road i 541.330.5551 Bend. Oregon 97702 / esthetixmd.corn
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
M II ESTON
Is + ~ L7
For ms f o r e ngagementw, eddinganniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavailableaibendbuiieiincomimiiesiones F.ormsandphotos must b e submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestones@bendbulletin.corn, 541-633-2117.
MARRIAGES
A romise u i e 2 e a r s ater By Kate Taylor The New York Times
NEW YORK — W h en
Michael King first proposed to Tifphani White, it was not with a ring but with a Carvel vanilla ice
cream cone with rainbow sprinkles. He was 18, and she was 15. It was 1992.
"I was just young and
d umb, and I think I w a s
just in that love fog," King said recently. They hadmet only a few months earlier, at a high school basketball game near where she lived in
Brentwood, Long Island. He had friends in the area and had driven out from
T:~
Pi $ I."
In
the city, expecting to be fixed up with another girl, who didn't show up. White flirted with him and later invited him, through their mutual friends, to come to r
Hilary Swift/The New York Times
Tifphani White and Michael King marry at St. Paul's Chapel on the Columbia University campus in
New York on June 26. The couple have been together off and on for 23 years.
her track meet a few days
0
later, where, after some
Jessica Steiert and Miles Rowan
Steiert — Rowan Jessica Steiert and M i l es Rowan, both of Denver, were marriedJune 20 atAspen Hall in Bend.
The bride is the daughter
ness analyst. The groom is the son of Jim Rowan and the late Carrie Rowan of Flourtown, Pennsylvania. He is a 1997 graduate of
Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, Maryland, and
a 2001 graduate of Syracuse of Bend. She is a 2003 grad- University, where he earned a uate of Mountain View High degree in finance. He works as of Randy and Cristi Steiert
School, and a 2007 graduate
an underwriter.
of the University of Oregon, The couple honeymooned where she earned a degree in in Cabo, Mexico. They will business. She works as a busi-
settle in Denver.
ANNIVERSARIES
sdene
more banter, she planted a kiss on his lips. But if she was dazzled by the older, strapping football player at John Adams High School in Queens, her parentswere considerably less keen. "I just wanted my daughter to be focused on what she was doing," recalled
the couple were no longer limited to Sundays and chaperoned dates. King drove to Columbia from Queens to see her every night. But he also kept in close touch with her parents, and sometimes shuttled between Brentwood and
Columbia to deliver groceries or laundry. ( aMy parents
definitely spoiled me," she
f a t her, J a s per acknowledged.) White, a computer engiWhite said that being with White's
King, who is more socially at ease than she, eased the tran-
dinner with the family.
out and that whole circle will
ner with W h ite and her parents. Sometimes her
Oliver and Pearson
They have two sons, Nathan of Seattle, and Keaton of Vancou-
Stanley P. Oliver and Rita R.
ver, Washington.
Pearson, of Bend, will celebrate M r. Oliver worked in t h e their 40th wedding anniversary printing industry and retired with a trip to Santa Cruz, Cali- in 2009. Ms. Pearson is an edfornia, with family and friends. ucational assistant at B end The couple were married High School. July 19, 1975, under the redThey have lived in Bend for wood trees in Santa Cruz. 32 years.
ent student in high school,
tant, her family accountant ad-
taking five years to finish because he often skipped class. He had not planned to go to college. But White,
vised her to buy an apartment. She found a promising-looking
couraged him. She tutored
. + 'yea
Fm u, ,~
Jerry and Marilyn (Woollard) Gerdes
Gerdes
Electric in Bend and Redmond. He retiredin 1995.Mrs. Gerdes
Jerry and Marilyn (Wool- was a teacher and taught at lard) Gerdes, of Redmond, Young, Yew Lane and Bear celebrated their 50th wedding
anniversary with a trip to the Bahamas in April and a weeklong stay at the Oregon Coast in June. The couple were married
Creek schools in the Bend-La Pine School District from 1965
to 1995. Together they enjoy traveling, fishing, hunting and spending time with their family. They are past members
June 25, 1965, at the First Bap-
of First Baptist and Eastmont
tist Church in Bend. They have three children, Mark (and Beckie) of Redmond, Tracy (and Kirk) Moisan of Keizer and the late Pamela Gerdes; and four grandchildren. Mr. Gerdes was an electrical contractor and owned Gerdes
Churches and are current members of Highland Baptist Church in Redmond.
Mr. Gerdes was born in Bend and has lived in Central
Oregon all his life. Mrs. Gerdes has lived in Central Oregon for more than 50 years.
"We want to start a family,"
marveled at how much White
King said, adding that he was "old-fashioned." Though he still has the ring he gave White in college — he hopes to be able to give it to his daughter someday, should they have one — he gave her a larger, fancier ring this time around.She gothim awedding ring from Cartier, inscribed
had always pushed herself, academically and then professionally. To others, it looked effortless, but he knew how hard
him in math, and he got into Nassau Community College in Garden City. He said it was White's
intelligence and maturity that bowled him over in those first few months
and led to his ice cream proposal. " She just m ade m e think," he said. "She's got an IQ that's probably 100 over every otherfemale that I'm used to dealing with. I need some mental stimulation, and to get it out of a 15-year-old was
just extremely amazing to me." He got an associate de-
greefrom Nassau and later a bachelor's degree in business administration from St. John's University. As for White, she went to
Columbia University, double-majoring in dance and economics and philosophy. Once she was in college,
place at St. Paul's Chapel at Co-
lumbia, the chaplain began the ceremony by noting that theirs had been "a long, long, long love story." Her parents were there, as were both of his parents. (His mother's foster mother, whom
he called "Nana," died 20 years
ago.) His mother, Patricia King
Calhoun, said she was thrilled they were getting married after I •
.
•
j bbend.crim
one in Union City, New Jer-
541-382-6223
sey, and asked King to drive out with her to see it. They fell in love with the apartment,
if he didn't go to college, en- which is across from a park,
v:, .'.: ss e
down on us. I love her. She has
she worked. "I'm the one that's with her
behind the scenes," he said, smiling. Her father, for his part, summed up the relationship with their initials, the date of this way: "He was willing to wait for their wedding (June 26, 2015) also at St. John' s, she started to and "est. 1992." his prize, and he did." wonder if she needed to experiAt the wedding, which took
parents would chaperone ence other relationships before them to the bowling alley settling down. Her last year, or the movies. On rare oc- she broke up with him and recasions they would let the turned the ring. "The only person I knew in couple go out on their own, with strict instructions on life was him, and I really was when White was expected so young," she said. "I actually said to him, home. King grew up in South I think I n eed a m i nute to Jamaica, Queens, where he breathe. I think I need a minute was raised by his mother' s to experience something else. foster mother, along with I grew up very protected and half a dozen foster chil- very sheltered." dren. Spending time with She dated other people, she t he White family — t w o said,but always compared protective parents and one them to him, and she found cherished, sheltered child herself calling him often. — was stepping into a new In 2003, after she had finworld. ished law school and had beH e had been anindiff er- gun working as a tax consul-
who knew that her parents would not let her date him
,~ ( gi,~
tax issues at Deloitte Tax LLP, and last summer was made a
a heart of gold." partner. After jobs organizing White's mother said in her conferences at Columbia and toast that "I' ve always had one sition to college. St. John' s, and then in real es- precious, but now I have two." "I wasn't the social butter- tate, King, who as a teenager They have not had time for fly," she said, noting that if she had always cut his friends' a honeymoon yet. The Monwasn't at track practice or in hair, decided to open a barber- day after the wedding, she had a dance class she was usually shop in his old neighborhood to go to Washington for work, plan at that time." studying. "I very much kept to in South Jamaica.Her work and he accompanied her, takBut when it became clear myself, and I'm very much an frequently takes her overseas, ing her to dinner in Georgethat their daughter was introvert, and sometimes it' s and he has accompanied her town and going with her to a determined to see K i ng, really hard for me to meet new to India, London, Paris and golf event designed to connect Jasper White and his wife, people. Madrid. Howard University undergrad"Michael, he's the opposite. Iola, came up with a soluTwo years ago — 21 years uates with black professionals. He's the extrovert. He c an tion. She could see him, after meeting — they started Looking back, after the but only Sundays, at their jump into a circle of people that talking seriously about getting wedding, over the decades home, where he would eat he doesn't even know and walk married. they have been together,King neer who sent his daughter to speed-reading classes and golf lessons to prepare her for college and what he hoped would be a career in business. "Boys wasn't even in our
"That was my way of be his friends." keeping track of him," JasOn her birthday during her per White said. freshman year, he made an"He understood the other proposal, this time with a rules," he continued. "The diamond ring that he had paid rules were: You got to go to for in installments. "I wore that ring every sinschool. She's not hanging out. You want to see her, gle day," White said. But when you got to come here." friends asked about it, she told So, for the next 2t/2 years, them it was just a gift, not an King drove to Brentwood engagement ring. every Sunday to have dinAfter she went to law school,
Stanley P. Oliver and Rita R. Pearson
with floor-to-ceiling windows 25 years, but added of White, in the living room, and decided "She's been like my daughter to buy it and move in together. forever, anyway." "We had an agreement," One of his aunts, Regina White said, that if things didn' t King, said that White had emwork out, "we sell the place and braced the family. "Even though she done gradyou get your down payment right off the top." uated from two universities, The years since have been she has not changed her perfilled with work. She advises sonality," she said. "She's not international corporations on stuck up or conceited or look
JOHNSON BROTHERS
Beltone
TRIAL of our newest most advanced hearing aids Call Today
'Beltone 541-389-9690
A w w u I A rs a a s
The Bulletin MI LESTONES
GUIDELINE If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any ofthesevalued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bad Boys Barbecue Bend Park 6z Recreation District Bend Wedding S. Formal Cordially Invited Bridal Deschutes County Fair S. Expo Center Faith HoPe 6b Charity Vineyard Illuminate Your Night
Meadow Lakes Nicole Michelle Northwest Medi Spa Phoenix Picture Framing Professional Airbrush Tanning Revive Skin Services Salon Je' Danae SHARC Aquatic S. Recreation Center The Bend Trolley The Bridal Suite S. Special Occasion The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Philanthropy
pers he owned, he had reasons to go to Baker City and
Continued from C1
La Grande and other places,"
Ta ea i et rou t e v i ne ar s, emon trees in Ita s Cin ue Terre
"We' ve traveled all over the state and interviewed
By Pam LeBlanc
closed when we were there,
Austin (Texas) American-Statesman
we could walk partway out,
This place doesn't look real.
sit on a bench and watch the sunset.
From the top of a steep hillside covered in lemon trees
Manarola, walk north of town
Manarola tumbles out below,
on the main trail, stopping just below the little pocket park,
I
like a handful of pink, orange and yellow blocks that have
*.
t-
been shaken, then p oured
I
1I.
I II I
I !I I | ' 11 1 4xr
Iallll
u sD1pll lllu I
from a toy bag. Manarola is one of five
" I'-
ali t
where the sidewalk curves with the coast. At dusk, the
~
an<> •I g• I .
1
~~ ll 1
~
•
buildings practically glow in the most beautiful light. • If the coastal path between
f 'l
hamlets strewn a few miles
apart along the Mediterranean coast in Northern Italy. Each comes with its own
Manarola and Corniglia is closed (and even if it's not), take the high road instead, climbing up to the village of
'r
P.. sgI,
personality, and the best way to see the lot is to pick one as a home base (we' ve chosen Manarola because it's smaller and quieter than the others), then spend a few days hiking between them, pausing to sip Chris LeBlanc/ Austin (Texas) American-Statesman wine, eat grilled octopus and Lookingdown on Vernazza, one ofthe five towns known as the cool off with a swim in the Cinque Terre in northern Italy. sea.
Volastra. Grab a lemonade at
the tiny grocery and peek into the beautiful chapel. • In Vernazza, dine at Ristorante Belforte and order the
steamed mussels or grilled octopus. If you' re lucky, you' ll get to sit on one of the terraces clinging to the cliff.
We left our cliffside apart-
ment this morning, hiked up through steep terraces covered with vineyards, paused to admire a chapel and sip lemonade in th e p int-size village of Volastra, then de-
thousands of steps and eat-
• Walk beneath a stone arch at the foot of Vernazza to a
spective of the Cinque Terre.
It's an image you won' t ing gelato, but we' ll get to that later.) soon forget. You' ll need a trekking card Some of our favorite things from Parco Nazionale Delle to do in the Cinque Terre (beCinque Terre before you head sides walking):
scended into Corniglia, where out. You can buy it at booths we revived ourselves with along the trail or at park headgelato before striking out for quarters in Manarola. The
Chaille said. As an editor, Chandler mentored young re-
over 350 individuals and
porters who moved on to larg-
90 nonprofits in the book.
er paperswith a betterunder-
We are quite proud of
standing of small-town needs,
both the statewide mandate the book h as, and
and his editorials spoke on behalf of small-town interests.
also the breadth of types In t h e 1 9 80s, C handler of nonprofits and individ- served aschairman for Oreuals," Anderson said. "We gon Community Foundation, tried to not just go with the developing regional leaderPhil Knights and Arlene ship councils made up of citiSchnitzers and the Nature zen volunteers. "He was a uniter of urban Conservancies of Oregon, but (also) showcase real- and rural (Oregon), and really small donors and small ly took it seriously that it was volunteers and grassroots the big issue facing this state," organizations that needed Chaille said. highlighting too." The authors don't just offer The authors discuss a a historical account. They also number of Central Oregon look at Oregon's current and institutions in the book. future needs, including imReaders will see sections provements in arts and culturon Caldera A rt s C enter al funding. "We think of the book as near Sisters, which hosts art camps for disadvan- both a celebration of the good taged, urban kids, and work that's gone by, and also Jefferson County Histori- a call to action for more of the cal Society. The society's same," Anderson said. eloquent president, retired For readers looking to get academic and poet Jar- more involved, the book also old Ramsey, of Madras, is provides an appendix listing quoted in the book as say- volunteer resources. Among ing, "Local history is es- them is the Central Oregon sential to historical study: nonprofit Volunteer Connect local histories are how we (www volunteerconnectnow. flesh out our portrait or org), providing a database America." of organizations looking for A nother Central O r e - volunteers. "It's through widespread gonian "State of Giving" looks at is former Bulletin citizen effort that we' ve really editor Bob Chandler, who managed to progress in a lot bought The Bulletin in 1953 of key issues," Anderson said. and worked to bridge the "There's been a lot of heartenstate's urban-rural gap. ing progress. That being said, "Bob did bridge it, be- we make the point in the book cause he had a Cessna air- that there's still a lot more that plane that allowed him to needs to be done." travel around the state, and — Reporter: 541-383-0349, with the multiple newspadjasper@bendbulletin.corn
• For spectacular photos of
and grapevines, the village of
C3
gravel beach created during the devastating floods of 2011.
Then dive into the ocean. • Rent a beach umbrella in Monterosso.
• Eat gelato in Corniglia arola, watching the local kids — it was some of the best we racetheirfoot-powered scoot- found during our 10-day trip the next town up the coast, area is a UNESCO World Her- ers around the plaza as par- to Italy. Vernazza. itage site. ents cheer them on. Stop by • Eat dinner — and order It's easy t o i m agine t he Make sure you have prop- thetoystand there,w hereyou the seafood antipasti — at Bildays when pirates sailed up er footwear beforeyou strike can buy an Italian comic book ly's in Manarola. www.trattoand down this coast. The out. Some of the trails (espe- about Texans working in the riabilly.corn people who once lived here cially the one from Vernazza oil field. • Stay at least two nights. used stone watchtowers to de- to Monterosso) are extremely • G rab a b o t tle of w i n e High season runs from midfend their homes, which are narrow and crowded. In sec- and take the stroll out Via June to mid-September. Day perched on cliffs and tucked tions, passage is only single dell'Amore, the walkway be- trippers flood the towns, but into nooks and c r annies file, so if you meet someone tween Manarola and Riomag- by dusk most of the crowds Find It All Online bendbulletin.corn molded by Mother Nature. It' s coming the other direction giore. Even though it was are gone. The Bulletin you' ll have to wait your turn. long been a wine-producing region, and farmers planted And the steps! The Vernazcrops on terraces they cut into za to Monterosso section of • Framed Art the hills. the trail has as many as a sky8 Canvas Art DECOR s FINISHED DECORATIVE g But things have changed in scraper — hike it northbound WOOD ACCESSORIES Collaie Frames DOESNorlNcwDEFumlm~ recent years. In 1951, about or your quads will stage a Catesorles listed OR UNRNISHED CRAFTWOOD • Nen's Metal DOES Nor INCLUDE SF Asortst DEPART M ENT 3,500 acres of land here were protest. And only attempt the • Candlehoiders a Wood Decor cultivated. After the Cinque walk if you' re reasonably fit. WALL s TABLE 0 WALL s TABLE Terre was discovered by tourHappily, Ver nazzo and • betel Decor Sale • Decorative Nemo ists in the 1970s, the economy Monterosso offer fine swimCHOOSE FROM NErAL WALL DECOR AND FUNCTIONAL Boards, Chalitboerds began a gradual shift from ming, too, so once you' ve s DECORATIVE METAL 8 Corkboards ACCESSORIES agriculture to tourism. Today worked up a sweat hiking INCLUDES NETAL CONTAINERS • Trays, Coesters 8 Place Mats IrBNsPRICED$2499 ItsUP IN OUR FLORALs CllAFr only about 275 acres are cul- you can cool off in the sea. DEPARTNENTS • Knobs, Drawer Pulls It Handles DOES NOT INCIUDE FURNITURE tivated. The crop abandon- We braved the tiny gravel Lanterns, Birdcales Decor Sale ment has caused soil erosion beach in Vernazza in our hik• All Wicker, Decorative • Glass INCWDES GlASS DEPAILTMENT. FLORAL Soxes 8 Storage GLAss vAsssa csArr atAss coNtAwsss • Decofethte yegetebie and land degradation, and the ing duds — and it was totally DOES NOT INCLUDE IARGE TRUNKS trails here periodically wash worth it. While you' re there, OR CRAFTlh PAPERCRAFTINC STORAGE a Fruit-Riled Bottles out. look for bits of tumbled, paintITEMS LABELED FALL ARE NOT INCLUDED IN HONE ACCENTS SALE We' ve had to adjust our ed tile on the beach. They' re hiking plans because of land- a reminder of the devastating slides. The flat, easy pathway floods and mudslides that oc• Sit on the square in Man-
Q
g
Fall Decor,Fall Party I, Fall Crafts
fall Floral
40~ OFF
between Manarola,the sec- curred here in 2011.
ond village if you' re counting from the south, and the next
village up the coast to the north, Corniglia, is covered with graveL So is the easy, flat walkway known as Via dell'Amore, which connects Manarola with Riomaggiore, to the south.
Monterosso's beaches are more formal — you can rent
1 Select Gnup Of
• Arrangem ents
a beach umbrellafor 20 euros and swim in water protected
• Bushes • Wreaths • Garlands • Swsss • Stems
by a rocky sandbar. Or hike a little farther — up and over
66 %OFF • Garlands.
4
6 3 2 5 1 4 7 9 8
8 9 7 5 2 3
14 75 68 93 41 86
6 2 3 4 8 1
9 8 5 2 7 4
7 3 9 1 6 5
3 1 2 8 5 9
5 6 4 7 3 2
=
2 4 1 6 9 7 ;
CHOOSE RtON INVITATIONS, lGASTING GLASSES, RING PIELOWS, GEE CHOPPERS 4 NOltE
APruss To FRAMEONLY
JUMBLE IS ON C6
CHOOSE FRON POSTER,
DocUMENT s poRTRAIT
Palercrafting • Gemstonesbsee sisersssso
by the Daper RudhP
50" OI'I'
aA
A C C L A I M
I N D I A P 0 E T E T D F A U X F I R T H S E M I S
O T S H I
E
ER
Z A C O E A A R 0 N T 0 P S E S D N C W I S H P R E E
H I B I T
D I S O W I N N
M E A D S
L
A N O R T E E S
I S E T T A W H L I A T R R E H E I S E R GW E A L T N A S T I E
A D A M H R
S N E E Z E S
CROSSWORD IS ON C6
INCLUDES SHEA BUTTER, GCATS MILK, OUVE OIL, COCONUT OILSOAP I AVOCADO CUCVNBER SQAP
• T-Shuts ALWAYS30%OFFTHE MARKEDPRICE INCWDES lDUTH * ADUIJ T-SHlsTS * TANK 1QPS * INFANT *1DDDLER TSHIRTS. CREEPERSs DRESSES
7/1 Z15
Art Supplies
toast Cateeonesusted
3Qg Qp
S t9t IIBRIIAA • IUCE %11 9! ~ l
ALL COLORS
e P N CE all& IQGlMR MICE
• Promotional 2-Pedr Canvas ' 4rt ~nt»
30'OFF
40%OFF
SHOU L DA S A L L I E S A S E D E E T S E L I 0 T KA L EL MO D E S C AR E L H A S A L O G I N A N T A F A I T H O V I N E S OP E P E A S T A V E D A N E L K S MA H L E R
L Y R D A Z Z R I E
Paint a Pencil by Number ISs a~ P o sters
• 32 x 40 Acid Ace Natboards • Foam Boards y gg 9 99 9 gg
• punches e punch Sels
MA M A
Mosaic Tile. gems, Chips aStones
• PackagedCralt Feathers
Adlity IQts,
5 Psst@I scls
CHOOSE RIOM INKS. PAPBLSTAMPS.
• Cards, rags e Emrelo yes
KNOT T
3Q% QP •
• Candle Wax, Candle Gel a Glycerin Soap
• Children's
• Art PenCilS
• rim ttoez Brand preduds
50"OFF
SOLUTION TO TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD
S TE P
CERAHCOA'Ps, FOlK ARTS s ANITA'S~
THE NARKED PRICP' CHOOSE FROM OUR ENTIRE SELECTION OF BASIC s FASHION TABLErOP FRAMES. INCWDES WOODEN PHOTO STORAGE
• Wall Frames
CHOOSE ROOM OVEll 300 STYLES
SUDOKU IS ON C6
T E A R M E D L O U D O A S S T R I A L CL E U SA G E E C L A T Y UK F E E B P F I Z E U L T R A B E H A R C C A M E L OM I G O B O L O T B R A S H
FEATURING AMERICANAS,
INCOME
TIRED OF SLEEPING
P A T E L L A M E C C A AS E X U A L O P R A H C H A I R MA N M O U T H
• All 2 oz. Acnilic Paint
ITEMSIWCED A 99 5 UP
1 597 6 2 4 8 3
4 27 9 3 8 6
Craftini
Cstegones listed
ALWAYS 50% OFF THE MARKED PRICP'
FRAMES WITH GLASS
NOTIFY D E VICE F L O P PY It was time for her to get out of bed because she was-
I 15 !
30~0i:i:
Frames • Collage Frames • Photo ALWAYS 50% OFF
Answer: H A IRD O
• Pamlum Poly Foam, Nu-Foam~ & Smart Foam
• Custom Frames
5$" OFF
3Q%Qfi,'
25 %OFF
sr sToRE
Fr amino
Z95LK X S TRONG
Tools e Notions
66%OFF
• Wed ding Sale
rmaw caocHsr THssAos a csocHsr cornN
e QOChet
Summerf"
Nl Nems labeled sudlo Nls s Has
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
INcujDK COT%)N FLOSS s
&,
CatetroriesUsted
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU
3$" NF
4 GREENBtr V
ROWBllNG 4 GREENERY DOESNOT INCIUDE CUSTOM DESIGNSos JOTTEDTREES
r is~
Needle All
-
• Flail Arranlemewts SOLDdr THE NRD
Furniture
414ItemsLabeleg
FLOWERING
50" OFF
NBSOPL TIWII OR rU~
'Pret'
- '""'prin -
Swaes, NeHhs a Tesntaps
Categorieslisted
OUR WEOOING, FLOML 5 FABRIC
sr STORE
~@vs
Floral
DOES HOrWCUIDE Au HSRICS
ELECTION WILL N R'r
g srsroRE +
cvsToiMDssfGNs
e loom s
SS~OFL'
SELECTIONWlu VARY
DOF5 NOT INCXUDE
divides the town in two — for a more casual beach.
40~ OFF
DOES NOT WCUJOEFASIK
• Plds ~ Ribbon
the spit of land that essentially
No matter. We took the high Either way, spend some road to Corniglia instead, hik- time exploring the market, ing the spine of the hillside to the shops and the churches in get up and over, pausing for this, the most bustling of the lemonade and to a dmire a Cinque Terre's five villages. chapel in an even tinier hamThe good news'? If you walk let called Volastra. We' re in from one town to the next and no hurry. Here in the Cinque don't feel like hiking back, Terre, it's all about walking, you can catch the train for a relaxing and soaking up the few euros. Even better, hop on views. (It's also about scaling a ferryboatforadifferentper-
i july 4th[ Furniture
3.99 5.$9
1 .$$
FashionFabric
jewels Naalni Otteiatles usted • 3warovsld
Patterns
LIMIT 10 PER CVS1OMBE DOES NOr INCLUDE KWIKSENN NrrERNS
• Vlntal
FEATUNNG UNI(}UE ARTISAN COMPONENTS MADE IN THE USA
• Traditions
FEATURING INSTANT GRATIFICATION
oossNor wcUIDEQzzR
I TRISAL MARKET
EIM60SQNG lIIICHINE ORDIE CU7$
• the 3ewelnt Shoppe" e My 3ewelnt shoppe"
• clank Slate
CREATE %)UR OWN LOOK WITH UNRNISHED WOOD, CEIIAMIC, METAL & MORE
INCLUDES RNDINGS, HAIR ACCESSOIUES, YPCALLERGENIC, STERLING-DIPPED k ST%RUNG SILVER
• Calico Prints a Solids • Sewwloit INCLUDES APPAREL l%INTS Sewing Notions s BATIKS ALWAYS
30'Off • Home Decor Fabric CHOOSEFROM
l%INTs,soLIDs. sHEERs
• Ribbon, Trim + Tulle $poolz
50" Oi'i'
• Fleece
CHOOSE REOM PRINTS. SOUDS s MICRORBER ALWAYS
30~ OFF
. 30"OFF
THE MARKED PRIC&
8 DISCOUNTS PROVIDED EVERY DAY.MARKED PRICES REFLECT COMPARABLE PRICES OFFERED BY OTHER SELLERS FOR SIMILAR PRODUCTS
H • BBVL •
-
-
• RICss GOOD IN STORES MOM ENTLY, JULY 13- SATURDAY, pJLY 18, 10I5
NICES OOOD ONUNE SVNMY, jULY 12 SATllllMY, j4LY ls, 101$ SOME AOVERTSEDHENSNOT AYAILAIRE ONUNE SAILS SUSjECT TO SUPPLY IN STOCK. SRECTION AND QUANTITIES VMY SY SIQsE AD DOES NOT APPLY TO rsE ILH7UCED ITPS
STORE HOURS: 9 A.M.- 8 P.N. CLOSED SUNDAY
• 5ENP: North Highway 97 in the 5end R.ivei" I romenade (541) 582-7559
- ~
~
IIM ~
I IM
~~ KeiIF» 8455
7
Valid th o u gh July I8, 20 IS
Ner goadfor onelien at regular prkeonly. Umlt one alpen pCr Comer per dly. hbut peet olpan attlmeofpuxlea oilersnotvauwllhanyothercoupondlaeuntorpwlwspurdwe Emblems Hehllswapp MInc. FallAp plicator,estIll'pedunr, llmHoN t'vagaboep ibrhlne, sllhoueecNsr Machlne,andylhsnackpadudagumllimlns,hellumtanb,gNtanh cUllolll ollllH5patiI arden,hie gmlas andchu has.Asing kcutoffalukortrim 'bylheyawl'elwlsone ltem0nBnefabrk ktrlmdlsawnt s lmhsl to loyanls slngkcut CahV lm1/10C.
S HOP A N Y T I M E @ H O BB Y L O B B Y . C O M
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
; .jan&f'~n l
r
.C=
fg
I S
ttttri r
a
' ttATtttt
Lung On (1863-1940) was a merchant who established a dry-goods
Hundreds of untouched containers of "Doc" Hay's herbal reme-
store and import business attheKamWahChung and Company. Ini-
dies remain awayfrom humantouch in an iron-barred apothecary.
master of pulse diagnosis who could determine ailments simply by tially selling Chinese foods, tees and tobaccos, On was an entrepretaking a patient's pulse. He treated both Chinese and Euro-Amerineur whoeventually openedeastern Oregon's first auto dealership. can patients at his John Day clinic for six full decades.
Hay's medicines included not only wild herbs, roots and bark, but also snake skin, bear paw and tortoise shell.
Photos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
As an herbal doctor, Ing "Doc" Hay(1862-1952) wasconsidered a
John Day
medicines — snake skin, bear
Continued from C1
as wild herbs, roots and bark — remain in hundreds of con-
John Day, therefore, had the
largest Chinese community in eastern Oregon (between 500 and 600 residents) when Ing "Doc" Hay and Lung On ar-
paw and tortoise shell as well tainers behind the iron-barred
apothecary. The simple bedroom in which the introvert-
ed Hay slept for six decades stands as it was left when, as cisco in 1887. The young Can- an old man, he was hospitalrived in town from San Frantonese men, both in their mid-
ized in Portland, where he
20s, bought a one-story trading post and the following year opened Kam Wah Chung and Company (" The Golden Flower of Prosperity")as a general store and medical clinic. For many years, Kam Wah Chung was a social center for the Chinese community, even as the Asian population went
died. On the other side of a
into rapid decline. The area
midst is a traditional Taoist
p
pot-bellied stove is the dry-
goods store and import business run by On. These shelves still hold original tins and boxes filled with Chinese teas, foods and tobacco, along with
4
a similar number of antique
American foodstuffs. In their
economy shifted from min- shrine, adorned with incense ing to livestock ranching and sticks and dried fruit. Many of agriculture, and fewer than John Day's early Chinese res100 Chineseremained in John idents made offerings here to Day by 1910. ancestors and gods. But Hay (1862-1952) and On An adjacent room has a (1863-1940) grew to become full kitchen and several bunk well-respected by whites as beds where boarders would well as Chinese. Their legacy sleep two to four abreast, of— the Kam Wah ChungState ten talking into the night with Historic Site — has been list- On, who was as gregarious as ed on the National Register of Hay was quiet. In the 1890s, Historic Places since 1973. To- the partners added a second, day it is operated as a museum wood-plank upper floor to by Oregon State Parks. provide additional boarding-house lodging. 'Golden Flower' Kam Wah Chung was reF ree tours of K a m W a h
habilitated in the m id-1970s
Chung begin a couple of when it was purchased by blocks south of the building, Oregon State Parks. Today, it across Canton Street, at an appears as it might have in the interpretive center that is open 1930s and '40s. Throughout daily 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., May are various late-19th and earthrough October. Exhibits and
ly-20th-century antiques. On
1.
"ir "J
(John Day and Dayville). Yet Day himself, while re-
story began to spread. Within a few years, the Mau Hau had been renamed the John Day
silient, was hardly the stuff of legend. A fast-living Vir- River. ginia woodsman, he w as The town of John Day has about 40 when he traveled to a pleasant downtown t h at the Oregon country in 1810,
stretches about four b locks
a 19-minute video describe the the walls are photos of the life- according to publications of political climate on the Chi- long friends, including shots the Grant County Chamber nese mainland in the mid-19th of On's pride and joy — the of Commerce. Two years latcentury, explaining the eco- first auto dealership in eastern er, he and a companion were nomic situation that led Hay Oregon. attacked by Indians near the
along U.S. Highway 26, the
and On, and so many other
three blocks north, its prin-
Although it was the habit
mouth of the Mau Hau River,
main connecting route between Redmond and Ontario.
Other than Kam Wah Chung and the county fairgrounds,
young Chinese men, to leave of most Chinese immigrants their families to search for a to havetheirbones returned
30 miles east of The Dalles. cipal attraction is the Grant Robbed, stripped of clothing County Ranch an d R o deo
better life overseas.
to their native country after
and left to die, they eventually
The pair had met in California after traveling from their native Canton (now Guangzhou). Hay had briefly stud-
their deaths, both Hay and On chose to be buried in their
made it to Astoria, where their
ied and practiced traditional medicine; On worked as a bi-
Museum in CanyonCity. The museum,located on
U.S. Highway 395, has one of Oregon's finest
SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUCTION
exhibits of the pioneer lifestyle.
www.AgateBeaehMotel.som
DESIGN 0 BUILD 0 REMODEL PAINT
Private,vintage,oceanfront getaway. N wport, O iR 1 0' ' 755-- 7 4
803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR
;,lite Sea chmotel
buried in the Rest Lawn Cemetery, overlooking John Day from a hillside on the north
structed around 1870 of locally
son to visit John Day. Named
quarried volcanic tuff. Today at Kam Wah Chung, at the top of each hour, a guide leads groups of no more than
for an obscure pioneer trapper who never set foot within 100 miles, this Grant County seat
of about 1,700 people is the hub of a diverse region at the
seven-room building, carefully locking and relocking doors. The guide warns visitors not to touch anything, and not to take flash photos, while weaving a fascinating story of a house that was a post office, library and spiritual center as well as a general store, doctor's office, boarding house and, clandestinely, an opium
foot of 9,038-foot Strawberry
den.
west, then north, to meet the
Hay established an herbal medicine practice. Considered a master of pulse diagnosis (he could reportedly determine most ailments simply by taking a patient's pulse), he treated both Chinese and
Columbia River only 17 miles upstream of the Columbia's
E uro-American p atients a t his "clinic" until 1948. His
Continued next page
Miller (" Songs of the Sierras" ) stands in the grounds of the Grant County Historical
adopted home. Both men are
lingual translator in San Fran- side of town. cisco before seeking new frontiers. Upon arriving in John Who was JohnDay? Day, the friends purchased a The Kam Wah Chung State building that had been con- Heritage Site is just one rea-
a dozen people into the rustic,
Museum.
A log cabin that oncewas the home of pioneer poet Joaquin
eAof Summer .Winch
er a
DRY 8 DEHYDRATE YOUR SKIN O
r an c
o sm a t : s
BEND, OREGON
Looping0 gfgoL@(g 0
• Q~ o
All without Chemicals, Parabens & Dyes No water as most products have, just concentrated Serum
Mountain. Other area museums showcase nearly 150 years of ranching and mining heritage, and such neighboring communities as Canyon City and Prairie City exhibit a strong sense of historic pride. The John Day River rises in the Blue Mountains and mean-
ders more than 200 miles, first
Gall for a FREEProduct Consultation and Skin Test Analysis ~ SHER-RAY.CON • 541-389-2228
confluence with the Deschutes River. It has given its name
Visitour retail shoppeat 19883 8th St.10pen I-W-F 10-4 pm • Sat. by appointment TUMALO'MALL (Red building at TumaloMall, off Hwy20, turn east at Cook)
to a national monument (the
Also at: • OREGON BODY & BATH,(Downtown)• AUTRY'S4 SEASONS FLORIST,GreenwoodAve.,Bend • ATHLETICCLUB OF BEND;THECLUB SALON (541)322-5802 • MARACUPUNCTURE INC.MaraKevan (415)531-4889 • Susan Hart N.P. PROACTIVEHEALTH (541) 389-8714 • POINTCHIROPR ACTIC 541-617-9771
three units of John Day Fossil
Beds), a major hydroelectric project (the John Day Dam on the Columbia) and two towns
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
;I'.tjrp g'4p'Ivt! '4
'st%$@II rf.jy ".4$ y'.%$' 't '.y. rg%')" '
'
C5
.'tits. $4; 4) ! ltd'. 4 .
s 4'.4 ji
Itt;Q
y "> $ y'M j.y'4X fft +P.
-
.
~":~i+'tt-
.
.„t...iiI"tr,' t,, ' /
ftr+ff' Yr:"4p: y 4 p 'tIF,"4p
'e
,
.JS'&.""
jp J
*
>~
. =. = ~
'-
'
-
: ;-
~
. l4
~ . . " - : =.j-
-
-p; :-
-
-
-=
" ..= ~
=• Photos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
The DeWitt Museum occupies the former Sumpter Valley Railway Depot, which from 1910 to1933 served a narrow-gauge railroad with service to Baker City. Added to the National Register of Historic Places in1976, it has served as a regional history museum since 1984.
— -
'
,
*
.
,
The simple bedroom where the introverted Ing Hay slept for six decades is left much as it was when he left John Day in1948.
Keen eyes maypick out a cleaver atop the trunk beside the bed; as
om Visiting Doctor
Chinese were not allowed to carry guns, this was Hay's protection against intruders.
Tired ofwastingtimesittingin yourdoctor's waitingroomonly to have afewminutes oftheir timetoansweryourquestions? Had enoughof medical clinics treatingyoulike a number, indifferentandimpersonal?
We are thealternatiue! We will see you on time, In YOUR home, oNce or assisted living facility. No waiting with sick people in a waNng room and no driving through had weather to see your doctor. Doctor Vlsser and his nurse will spend up to an hour with you on your visit. Plentyof time to ask questions or address any concerns. We can see you for same day, or guaranteed next day visits during our standard work week, and strive to keep you out of
emergency room. Our mission Is to SERVEour patients while providing excellence ln primary medical care.
Expenses
yon Blvd., John Day; www. dreamerslodge.corn, 541-575Gas (round trip from Bend): 0526, 800-654-2849. Rates 335 miles @$3.20/gallon: from $59.99 $42.88 Historic Hotel Prairie: 112 Front Lunch: 1188 Brewing: $15 St., Prairie City; www.prairiecDinner: Snaffle Bit: $30 ityoregon.corn, 541-820-4800. Rates from $79 Lodging: Dreamers Lodge: $64.39 Riverside School House B&B: Breakfast: Squeeze In: $12.95 28076 N. River Road, Prairie City; www.riversideschoolMuseum admissions: $10 541-820-4731. Lunch: Oxbow Restaurant: $14 house.corn, Rates from $150 TOTAL: $189.22 DINING 1188 Brewing Company: 141 E. Main St., John Day; INFORMATION 541Grant County Chamber of Com- www.1188brewing.corn, 575-1188. Lunch and dinner merce. 301 W.Main St., John Monday to Saturday. Budget to Day; www.gcoregonlive.corn, moderate 541-575-0547, 800-769-5664. Grub Steak Mining Company: LODGING 149 E. Main St., John Day; 541America's Best Value Inn: 390 575-1970. Lunch and dinner W. Main St., John Day; www. every day. Moderate amer icasbestvalueinn.cor n, Oxbow Restaurant & Saloon: 541-575-1462, 888-315-2378. 128 Front St., Prairie City; Rates from $65 www.facebook.corn, 541-820Best Western John Day Inn: 4544. Lunch Tuesday to Sun315 W. Main St., John Day; day, dinner Friday to Sunday. www.b estwestern oregon.corn, Moderate 541-575-1 700, 800-780-7234. The Snaffle Bit Dinner House: Rates from $125 830 S. Canyon Blvd., John Day; Dreamers Lodge: 144 N.Canwww.facebook.corn, 541-575-
If yeu go
2426. Dinner only. Moderate to expensive Squeeze In Restaurant and Deck:423 W. Main St.,John
Day; www.squeeze-in.corn, 541-575-1045. Three meals every day. Moderate
mls personal medlcalseWce costsonly 5tttt7/montb. ue also acceptand billmostlnsurancesforrtslts,buttbe fee forpersonalserrtce lsnotbttfable to lnsuraece. Sec ourtrebskc fordetaffs.
A historic mural, describing the discovery of gold in 1862 at the foot of Strawberry Mountain, covers the side of a downtown
I nteg rit y
building in CanyonCity. Once
Wellness
4y Z7e. Rsm4fgr &wee
the largest city in Oregon with 10,000 people, the town has settled into small-town life with a population of 700.
Compmbenslvebeaftbcate protrldedln tbe conrenlence o fyourborneor oNce.
541 420 9482
lnfoojntsgyjtywsiinsss'nst
ATTRACTIONS DeWitt Museum andSumpter Valley Railway Depot: Depot Park, South Main and Bridge streets, Prairie City; www. prairiecityoregon.corn, 541820-3330. Openmid-May to mid-October, Wednesday to Sunday. Grant County Historical Museum: 101 S. CanyonCity Blvd., Canyon City; http: //www.ortelco.net/-museum/, 541-5750362.Open mid-May through September. Grant County Ranch andRodeo Museum: 241 E.Main St., John Day; 541-575-0278. Open May through September, Thursday to Saturday. Kam WahChungState Heritage Site: 125 NWCanton St., John Day; www.oregonstateparks. org, 541-575-2800. Openevery day May through October. Free admission.
From previous page
Household goods and vin- chased by new owners who tage clothing, ranch artifacts spent three years reconvertdowntown, this museum hon- and dozens of old guns, min- ing it to its original purpose. ors the legacy of cowboys and ing equipment and musical It reopened in July 2008 as a ranch hands, past and pres- instruments, old office equip- boutique hotel with nine spaent. The collection includes ment and a trio of two-headed cious rooms. Right next door finely crafted saddles, ropes, calves are displayed in this is a friendly dining establishbits and spurs, along with space. A mineral collection is ment, the Oxbow Restaurant historical photographs of ro- exhibited near the entrance; & Saloon. deos and ranches, chronicling a separate room documents F our blocks south of t h e more than 150 years of histo- Umatilla an d P a iute t r ibal highway off S outh M ain ry in the John Day country. prehistory, including photos Street, th e D e W it t M u s eof an ancient jackrabbit roast- um occupiesthe former deCanyon City ing site on a nearby plain. On pot and home of the station Two miles south of John the grounds are the 1865 cab- agent of the Sumpter Valley Day, via U.S. Highway 395 in of pioneer writer Joaquin Railroad, which ran between toward Burns, is Canyon Miller and the former jail Prairie City and Baker City City. Two beautiful murals of the mining ghost town of from 1910 to 1933. Added to on opposite sides of a central Greenhorn. the National Register of Hispark depict episodes from the North a short distance is toric Places in 1976, restored early history of this boom- the Oxbow Trade Company. by local citizens in 1979, the town, now with a population its array of antiques includes two-storystructure has been of around 700. Volcanic-rock dozens of wagons, coaches a museum since 1984. buildings, more than a centu- and other methods of pioneer H istorical a r t i f acts a r e ry old, line a section of Whis- transportation. carefully displayed through key Gulch Street, sharing its 10 rooms. Visitors enter space with a new city hall and Prairie City into the original depot waitfire station constructed with Thirteen miles east of John ing room, then walk through frontierera facades. Day via U.S. 26 is another baggage and freight rooms. Near the heart of town is special town. Only about 900 Rooms on the second floor, the Grant C ounty H i stori- people live in Prairie City to- where the agent and his famcal Museum. Back in 1925, day, but it was much larger in ily lived, are furnished with a service-station owner and the gold-rush era of the 1860s, antiques an d m e m orabilia postmaster named C harles when miners rushed to near- from thelocalarea. Of speBrown bought an old saddle by Dixie Creek. cial note is a collection of narfrom a neighbor in need of The most atmospheric hotel row-gauge railroad artifacts cash.Brown's collection grew in John Day country, the His- that include photographs, as other citizens began clean- toric Hotel Prairie, anchors lanterns and lights, and deing out their private antiques. the two blocks of downtown pictions of spectacular train Today, the museum has one Prairie City. The building op- wrecks. of Oregon's finest exhibits of erated as an inn from 1905 — Reporter: janderson@ L ocated in t h e h e art o f
small-town life.
to 1980. In 2005, it was pur-
bendbulletin.corn.
•
I II • I I
•
e
I I.
•
LEAVETHEDRIVINGTOUS! Bend buSrunSthe firSt MOndayOfthe mOnth
Call for reservations,location L times:541.783.7529ext.209 Valid for Bend, La Pine and Redmond guests only; local zip codes do not apply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires September 8, 2015
34333HWY97 NORTHI CHILO OUItt OR 9762415417837529I KLltuovttcltSIttoCOM
C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
SU D O K U
Completegri the d so
~gh
FR THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ID ~
~
by David L Hoyt and Jeff tenures
Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively.
to form six ordinary words.
I feel mush better. I'm ready nowfor the week shred. I'm still on Rome time. I newt some more rest
SNOGRT =-
8
Cast g TnhuneCnntenl Agency,LLC All Ridm Rcmned.
VECIED
IT WA5 TIME FOIZ HEIR TO GET OUT OF BEP BECALI5E 5HE WA5-
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWER INTHE CIRCLES BELOW
5 .' DIFFICULTYRATING: *** *
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
the
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Backseat driving
pre-packaged Waikiki tours," a tram past botanical garKAHUKU, Hawaii — Along he added. "They want to ex- dens and are-created village Oahu's North Shore, 40 miles plore. They want to get involved at which Kawika Au makes and 80 years from Honolulu, with the host culture." netting using lauhala, a cenJunior Ah You sat at a picnic taThat sentiment is shared by turies-old method of l e af ble outside Tita's Grill, the mod- Alan Bank, a Florida physician weaving. est diner he runs, talking about who makes yearly visits to the Three-quarters of a m i le "town." resorL from the ticket booth, the road "Turtle Bay offers exactly ends at a waterfall. Beneath To people on this rural part of the island, "town" means what I want: lots of open space," the 45-foot drop, visitors splash Honolulu, a place they'd rather he said. about in a deep pool. avoid. "I try not to go,n Ah You said.
Each year, Bank rents a car
Tribune Content Agency
might not have scored well if he took nine tricks for plus 600 (which argues for his lead of a heart at Trick Four; he might have made an overtrick). Some North-Souths would be at four spades, which was cold for plus 620 even against the 5-1 trump break. East dealer N-S vulnerable
C) CLn C5y L
CLn
CTT CLI
CD
NORTH 4bAKQ 105
co
CLn
E CTT
QJ4 05
CD) CLI
III A 10 5 3 2
WEST
EAST 4 b9843 2
4b 7
9 A1097 0 J 973 2 4QJ9
LJ
CLn
Q83 OAK 6
Ch
4864
CD
tx5 C3
SOUTH 4J6 QKQ652 0 Q1084
CO
4K7
L
tx5
E ast P ass
Sout h Pas s
Pass Pass
2 NT 3 NT
Pass
W est Pass Pass Pass All Pass
19
Nort h 14 1 4b 34
CD
CLI
CD
out there." I hear that sentiment over
the "Kam.m
— a visitor attraction owned
Heading north out of Hono- and operated by the Church and over during my stay. lulu, that unique character is of Jesus Christof Latter-day World-famous Waikiki Beach first obvious in Haleiwa. Before Saints — provides several may be only an hour or so being discovered in the 1960s hours of entertainment and away, but people along the by surfers — the world-famous education. North Shore think their time Banzai Pipeline is just up the Farther down the eastern is better spent right here. And, road — the town was simply a side of Oahu, several tour opthey think a lot of tourists place to live for the Japanese tions await at Kualoa Ranch would agree if they'd just pry immigrants wh o h a r vested (www.kualoa.corn), a sprawlthemselves away from Honolu- sugar cane on the surrounding ing spread bordered by blue lu's high-rise hotels. plantations. ocean to the east and green mountains to the w est. On
parts is a seven-story assisted Rich traditions horseback, atop ATVs or in old living center in Hauula. It sits Dotted with boutiques and school buses, visitors can exalong the Kamehameha High- T-shirt shops, Haleiwa is best plore the working cattle ranch way — natives just call it the known for shave ice, Hawaii's at which scenes from this sumR Kam n — which loops around version of a snow cone. There mer's blockbuster "Jurassic the island. The two-lane road are various places to buy one, World" were filmed. passes quaint towns and doz- but most visitors join the queue Along the two-lane highway, ens of pristine beaches, some of at Matsumoto Shave Ice (www. seemingly limitless places to which don't even have names. matsumotoshaveice.corn), eat abound: from stalls selling Uncrowded and unspoiled, wherethe30-something syrups fresh fruit and macadamia nuts these serene strands of sand are homemade. to food trucks serving locally are where locals come to surf Employees don't call a name caught shrimp. and sun. or number when an order is Day and night, people stand ready; they simply shout out the at the small window at Tita's, R A slower pace of life requested flavors. w aiting to o r der t h e killa The North Shore's one and only large hotel, the lilrtle Bay
"Coconut,
strawberry,
mango," Taylor Konishi said, Resort (wwwturtlebayresort. holding two colorful cones. corn), is hugged on both sides "Cherry, banana, lilikoi (yellow by idyllic beaches. The salt passionfruk).n spray from the sea coated my Owner Stanley Matsumoto glasses as a gorgeous orange was born four months after his sky merged with the ocean. Be- parentssetup shop in 1951. "It started as a grocery store," sidethe Surferbar,Kahokulea Haiku delivered a traditional he recalled. "Shave ice started sunset chant called an "oli.n maybe five years later. Back in R Hawaiians used oli to con- the '50s, the town was kind of nect with the gods and their an- dead. There weren't as many cestors,n he explained. "Tonight people, so somebody suggested we' re going to celebrate the end we try and sell shave ice.n of a beautiful day.n Haiku, a self-described ncul-
From Haleiwa, the two-lane
moco.n The massive meal — it must weigh at least a couple of
pounds — consists of two eggs, Portuguese sausage, Spam and Junior's massive, handmade
hamburger patties — all slathered in gravy and served over rice. As if that weren't enough,
on theside there'sfresh bread, which locals dip in "cocoa rice," a concoction of hot chocolate blended with coconut milk, sugal' and rice.
"People here still live pretty much off the land," Ah You pointed out.
tural practitioner," said the
highway leads north past stunSo why don't more tourists ning beaches. A turn inland escape Waikiki to absorb the
North Shore provides a very
leads to the lush Waimea Val-
different vacation experience ley (wwwwaimeavalley.net), from Honolulu. "You' re almost forced to slow
down," he noted.
Opening lead — 0 3
Directly across the island in
so he and his family can ex- Laic, the Polynesian Cultural "Only out of necessity do we get plore the sleepy villages along Center (www.polynesia.corn)
The tallest building in these
By FRANK STEWART
An elderly couple — two of my club's founding members — still show up for duplicate games. He plays; she watches. One of their grandchildren gives them a ride to the club. "You don't drive anymore?" I asked. "My w if e d oes," the husband replied, "in an advisory capacity. It' s the same when she kibitzes me: She tells me what I should be doing." Both of them are still sharp — a testament to how bridge can foster mental acuity. In today's deal, the husband was declarer at 3NT. West led a diamond, and East took the K-A and led a third diamond. Declarer took the queen and led a heart, but West rose with his ace and took two more diamonds for down one. "My wife had a lot to say about my play," South told me. 'That confirms something I' ve always believed: You won't ever see a backseat driver out of gas. She said I could make 3NT by running the spades and pitching hearts. West could spare three hearts, but the last spade would squeeze him. He couldn't afford to Ihscard a club or theace of hearts,and ifhe threw a diamond, I could safely force out the ace of hearts, losing only t hree diamonds and a heart." I suspect South got a matchpoint zero for going down at 3NT, but he
G uests can stroll or t a ke
Chicago Tribune
DARIHO
FPLOYP
" People are t ired o f
By Jay Jones
FOTINY
MONICE
Get a taste o o Hawaii
other Oahu? Bank, the
(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD ed by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols LeWTS uTH-, TH-, THAT's ALL, FOLKS"By
15 Old king's slowmoving pet? DONNA s. LEVIN 16 Down time and BRUCE "Bambi, e.g. 117 Western 17 Ovid's others VENZKE 85 Leg Up neckwear Te Thought: pret e7 Daft Aykroyd's TTe Smoothone's T9 Spar ACROSS birthplace feathers 24 Not far from T Cap treated by 90 Very very 119 More icky 29 Scads an orthopedist 91 Momentous 120 Less introverted 30 Savanna 8 Haji'S event in 121 Fermented warning destination baseball honey quaffs 3T OlbermaiTITat a Ts Enthusiastic history, as it 122 They usually karaoke bar? approval turned out? inspire 33 JumPedout of one's seat 20 Like amoeba 94 Pot cover blessings reproduction 95 Former "The 34 Friend of View" co-host 2T Showthathad DOWN Sydney alt annual 9e Rock trio with T Lobbyinggp. 35 Worker welfare "Favorite long-bearded Ol'g. 2 Cinders Things" VOCalisfS 3 Major sri 37 Acapulco abode n segment 97 Got ir Lankan export 39 Rose 22 Part of a 98 First razor with 4 Left 41 Like some colloquial a pivoting head 5 Enticed mirrors lament 99 Sheds a tear e Tibetan priest 42 AMA motto? 23 Unflattering 101 Spanish "these" 7 k ing crab 43 Subject of nicknamefor a 103 Changefrom 8 May hoitoree Newton's first boasfful maxi to midi, 9 Lyric poem law corporate Say 10 First namein 44 Author Buntline 104 "Idylls of the bigwig? dcgitaPPing 4e winter woe King" setting 25 Counterattacks TT Actress 47 Given name 2e coquette 108 party org. Blanchett meaning "happy" 12 "That's the 27 Rubyin films T09 More spot!" 28 ML Mistoffelees' experienced 50 Bitofpond creator TTT Quaint 13 courtroomrig. SCUm "Jeepersr 29 Packing T4 Pursue 53 Wasinsession 32 Clark Kent, OIT
82 Big pharma name 83 Falineinn
Krypton 34 Relatives of medians
I
37 Give a hoot 38 Two-mile-high
23
2
3
4
1 1 2Hopingfor a winninglottery ticket?
5
6
7
8
9
10
ft
55 "Swell!" 57 "The
88 send electronically, as Metamorphosis" funds writer ee sixth-day 58 Maestro Zubin creation 59 One+ighty
92 Bounding main 93 Gives UP
eo scrap
e2 captain Kidd's ee Instrument refusal sometimes e3 Ban playedinone's e4 Hubbell lap teammate 98 Make fizzy ee High-speed 100 Riveting icon letters 102 RR station e9 Like most posting Quechua 103 Actress speakers Witherspoon 70 Partner of 104 salad WSSSOn 105 Cupid 71 From Liverpool 10e Ashton's partner to Manchester 107 They maybe 73 Camera letters bruised 77 Biblical reformer 108 Urgent 78 smokey's 110 Long-necked trouser trumpeter material? 112 Typing stat. 79 Nothing at all 113 FormergreeneT Observeclosely card-issuing e2 Black andtan agcy. seller 114 Claiborne of e3 stupefaction fashion e4 Granola grain 115 Casual wear ee Cut out ofthe 11e Retail posting: will Abbr.
I2
t3 1 4
15
16
17
IB
19
4 2 43
44
20
3e Garish
24
city 40 Sign on 45 Allied gp. since 29 3 0 194e 4e Belief at the heart of "Miracle 36
26
27
31
32
28
33
34 35
38 39
37
40 4 1
YOU CAN COUNT ONTHE BULLETIN TO BRING
OIT 34th Street" ?
48 Sheepish? 49 Tests 51 Unlock, to a bard 52 Little legume 53 Fended(off) 54 G-rated ee Benevolent order 58 "symphonyofa Thousand" composer 59 Grammarian'S Topic e1 "The BestExotic Marigold Hotel" setting es 28-Across,e.g. e5 LAX posting e7 Briilliance ee Actor Colin's body double?
45
49
50
GalifiaitakiS
80 Licorice-flavored seed
56
59 60
61 62
67
68
72 76
77
53
CONCERTS,RODEOS, FAIRS, FESTIVALS,SPORTS, 65
63 64 69
78
75
79
86
87
92
95
96
98
The Bulletin
103
108
t12
FOR IN-DEPTH LOCAL NEWS COVERAG E
93
tof T02
104 105 106 107
109
I13
114 TI5 I16
ft8
tt9
I20
12t
I22
xwordeditoroaol.corn
CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
To subscribe, call 541 385-5800
110
I17
7/T2/15
88 89
97
99 100
COMMUNITY CELEBRATIONS AND MORE. SINCE 1903 WE' VE BEEN THE PLACE THE LOCALS 00
80 81
83 84
90
66
70 71
74
82
INCLUDINGALL OF THIS SUMMER'S HOTTEST
57
73
70 RigSOITlong
hauls 72 Guffaw 73 Flight segment 74 California berry farm founder 75 Tal 7e Without vigor 79 "Birdman" actor
52 55
YOU ALL THELOCAL COVERAGE YOU NEED.
48
47
©2015Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
a n nual v i sitor
from Florida, has an answer. "They don't know any betes where ancient natives once lived, worked and worshipped. ter," he said. at which visitors explore plac-
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
ea razen re urns 0 e screen TV SPOTLIGHT
wrote ' Imagine,' and t h e n 'Strawberry Fields' and 'Revolution.' Joh n L e n non straight! — on his last album,
show in Belgium is Johnny's lastchance to command cheer-
"Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll" 10 p.m. Thursdays,FX
ing crowds and demand diamond-encrusted bottles of vod-
By Sara Smith
ka, "Sex&Drugs" is probably Leary's last chance at leading
The Kansas City Star
man status. Knowing that his
Four years after fighting his last fire on "Rescue Me,"
earnestly-still-cool p e rsona borders on the ridiculous on
Denis Leary returns to cable
both sidesofthe camera, Leary
TV to re-ignite his career with "Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll," a
makes the clever choice of knocking this latest character down every chance he gets. "Dave Grohl stole my aura," he whines. Along with Greg Dulli of the Afghan Whigs,
slick, smart vanity project that
should burn out his creative midlife crisis before it fades away. Leary, who also serves as writer and sometimes director, stars as Johnny Rock, a
Patrick Harbron / FX via Tribune News Service
DenisLeery stars as Johnny Rock, a rock starhas-been, in "Sex&Drugs&Rock&Roll."
post-punk has-been faced with the choice of bankruptcy or bartending school. He's one make a demo that will pair step away from joining a New her vocal talents with the roots Jersey cover band called Non rock sound of the Heathens, Bon Jovi when he accidentally the New York-based act Johnhits on his own daughter in a ny led to the edge of success beBrooklyn bar and changes his fore a dramatic flameout in the early '90s. fortunes forever. Once he stops reeling from The Heathens, living up to the news that the gorgeous,
their name backstage out of
grown-up Gigi is his long-lost offspring, she announces, "I need you to help me get famous." Ttrrns out, Gigi (Elizabeth Gillies) doesn't need Johnny to make up for lost Daddy time (or so she says). She just wants to sing with his old band. Twenty profanity-filled minutes at a time, alongside the emotional drama of Johnny and Gigi building a tenuous bond, "Sex&Drugs" tells a classic Getting the Band Back
general principle, tried to emulate the Clash and The Who but ended up falling on their faces Sex Pistols-style, breaking up the week of their debut
Together tale. Gigi wants to
present, where the Heathens
album release.
Leary's Johnny Rock even looks a bit like a ginger-haired Johnny Rotten in the show's
mockumentary footage of the Heathens' heyday, when they were playing at CBGB and Max's Kansas City. But most
of the show is grounded in the
are moreleathery and wrinkled than their vintage bomber
he wrote a three-minute song about baking a loaf of bread," Johnny sputters. "It's called sex and drugs and rock 'n' roll, you know, not yeast and water and
dinner rolls." It's classic Leary standup, but whether he's sober or
drunk, keeping Johnny off stage is a good goal for the Heathens — and for the show.
Leary is better at writing rants than rock lyrics, and it's Gillies,
Grohl is one of the first of the
show's many cameos, assert- who made her name as a teening in a "Behind the Music"-es- ager in Broadway's hit musical que recording studio interview "13," whose talent is really on that "Honestly, if it weren't for display. the Heathens, I don't think Does "Sex&Drugs" feel there would have been a like an excuse for Leary to sit
jackets. Nirvana." John Corbett, one of the few Along with the guest stars, actors-turned-musicians who Leary's name-dropping diadoesn't embarrass himself logue is begging to cuddle up in (cough, Johnny Depp, cough), the laps of serious rock history stars as Flash, the band's still- fans. You don't have to know sexy journeyman guitarist that Paul Simonon sang lead on who was Johnny's biggest the Clash's "Guns of Brixton" to competition for writing credits enjoy "Sex&Drugs," but it helps and groupies back in the day. to know who Simonon is. Gigi grew up in Ohio listenThe show also manages to ing to that record of nihilistic, make light of the music indusgritty anthems with titles like try's drug problem without "Don't Wanna Di e A n ony- glamorizing it. Watching Johnmous." She's a talented singer ny rub his face on a dirty carwith her nose in her smart- pet while advising "There's alphone but a good head on her ways blow in the rug!" isn't goshoulders, and with seed mon- ing to increase coke sales. An ey from her mom, she's taking earlyepisode focuses on Gigi's her first shot at stardom. efforts to gether dad clean for a Meanwhile, just as the Hea- few weeks, an idea he scoffs at. "John Lennon — high!thens' triumphant reunion
Goin i ita eavesno a ertrai
around emulating Keith Rich-
ards while maintaining a spiky haircut'? Sure. But the show's
salty-sweet themes of loyalty and redemption contrast nicely with the vile comedic speeches
Leary has made a career out of delivering. "You missed the first 20
years of my life," Gigi pleads, prying some black-market Adderall from Johnny's hand. "It would be nice if you were around for the next 20."
Can Johnny write songs without chemical assistance'? Can he remain faithful to Ava
for once? Can he sing onstage without seeing i maginary snakes and vomiting on the audience? Maybe not, but he can
make us laugh or die trying.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-O and IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby: My problem con- Thank you. — Deborah in St. Cloud, Minn. cerns my children and others who may have to deal with my finances Dear Deborah:Before you go paor estate should I become ill or die. perless, make a list of all of your I constantly get requests from accounts and usernames and passcreditcard companies and other words. There is software that albusinesses, like utilities, urging lows people to upload their account me to "go paperless." information into so"Save a tree ... save called "digital vaults" a forest!" While I'm for storage. AlternaDE/,R s ympathet c I o tively, the informary that if I w ere to tion could be written get sick and no padown and p laced per bills arrive in with your health care my mailbox, my children wouldn' t and financial powers of attorney. know they need to be paid. (They To make certain that everything have my durable power of attorney) goes smoothly should you become If everything arrives online, they' ll incapacitated, or in the event of have no access to that information. your death, give a list of your curBills and late fees will accumulate, rent digital information to someand no one will be the wiser. one you trust, let people know who This is why I resist. I pay many has that information and leave inof my bills online, but I also receive structions on how you want things paper documents.I know many handled. companiesand creditcard issuers Dear Abby:Last spring, my husare unsympathetic about reducing band and I found out we' re pregor eliminating late fees, regardless nant with our first child. We were
understand if I seemed tired or I
of the situation. I don't trust them
cat was out of the bag. Because
Ag gy
to waive these fees — even if I'm desperately ill or dead. I don't know how to "go paperless" and keep my children informed at the same time. Abby,your column could create a national dialogue on this problem.
thrilled, of course, but out of cau-
want to spend more time alone than in
many years.Youtendto overanalyze
and, in particular, not to tell the
students. The next day there was a large banner hanging over my classroom door that read: BUN IN THE OVEN! I was mortified and furious. She thinks miscarriages won' t
happen if you think positive and that I'm just being negative. She is otherwise an excellent assistant.
How do I deal with her refusal to remain quiet? — Assisted By a Blabbermouth
Dear Assisted: Now that you know you cannot share anything in confidence with your T.A., make a mental note not to make that mis-
takeagain.There'sa saying,"Once two people know a secret, it is no
longer a secret." All she had to do was tell one other person and the
tion we decided not to tell anyone she's an excellent teaching assisoutside our immediate families for tant, "deal" with her by telling her a few weeks. only whatyou would want broadI am a teacher at a large school cast over the public address system. and I decided to confide in my — Write to Dear Abby at dearabbycom teaching assistant so she would
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORSUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015:This yearyou might
wasn't feeling welL She was excited. Within five minutes of my telling her, she had literally shouted the news to several other staff members. I asked her to please stop
or P.o. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
things; perhaps taking up yoga or some other type of exercise would help you relax. fun. A friend could do areversal that you Many of youcould decideto do somevolmight not have anticipated. Becareful about overindulging someone.Tonight: Wish unteer work. If you are single, use carewith someoneyou me et.Thisperson mightbe upon astar. emotionallyunavail- CANCER (June 21-July 22) 6tsfs sttow ttte kiott able. You' ll want to ** * Pull yourself out of the intense social of ttsy yoo'll hstre know this before pace of summer. Youoften need time to ** * * * D ynamic you get heavily yourself. Indulge aspecial personwho has ** * * p ositive in v olved. If you are beengoingthroughsomechanges.Thi s ** * Average att a ched, the two ** So-so of you benefit from person has beenhard on him- or herself. Find out what's going on. Tonight: Embrace * Difficult running off together the tranquility of the day. for a romantic dinLEO (July23-Aug. 22) ner or a weekendgetaway. Your bond be** * * * Once moreyour popularity could comes even more important. GEMINI can interfere with set plans. Beready to be a be your best friend or your worst enemy. Proceed with caution. little less available, and let others know that you will have to catch up later. A child or a ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You might feel overwhelmed by new friend could be particularly cantankerous. Go with the moment. Tonight: Hang what is happening around you. Your intuwith your friends. itive sense will not be asreliable as usual. Try not to rely on your instincts so much. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) You could be pressuring a family member ** * * Take a stand and deal with a key more than you realize. Tonight: Havea person in your life. This individual might not long-overdue chat with a friend. be realistic, but you won't be able to force him or her to seeyour vision. A partner TAURUS (April20-May20) ** * * Stay in touch with a family mem- or dear friend will be full of surprises. Be willing to flex and get past your own rigidity. ber whom you care alot about. You could Tonight: A must appearance. be surprised by a friend's news, which might force a change of plans. Someoneis LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct. 22) likely to be upset about this suddenadjust** * * * M aintain a sense of humor, ment, somakenewplans quickly. Tonight: especially if a loved oneturns your world Treat a friend to dinner. upside down. Youwill be able to regroup GEMINI (May21-June20) quickly and get past a problem. This person ** * * * You might have to apologize to might be trying to get your attention, as he a family member, but beyond that, you' ll orsheseemstohaveaneedformoreconbe in a whirlwind of summer activity and trol. Tonight: Be aduo.
** * * You will want to have convera sation with a partner that you havebeen puttin goff .Youhavebeen concerned about experi encing animpending change.You might not be as receptive asyou would like to be. Tonight: Choose ahappening that you will enjoy with friends.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * * Defer to a loved one who seemsto be full of ideas andsimply can't get enough of you. You are likely to have afun time. Be careful with spending, as youcould cause yourself a problem. Let your inner child out. Tonight: Don't worry about tomorrow; enjoy now.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * Your changeability fits in with the moment. You havemany different options for what you can do.Some ofyou might decide to curl up with a good book. Others will want to get out and join friends. Whatever you do, put yourself100 percent into the activity. Tonight: Surf the Web.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * Your ability to maximize the moment is likely to emerge. Someonewho has known you for a long time might want more time with you. Allow yourself to be free, and express your thoughts and ideas through your actions. Tonight: Out till the weehours.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Head home early. You might needa lazy afternoon to recharge your batteries. You also could find that a family member needs your time andattention. How you express your needsand desires will make the difference in what happens.Tonight: Order in. © King Features Syndicate
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 &IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMY(R)l2:25,3:40,7:05,10:05 • THE GALLOWS (R) 12:05, 2:25,4:35, 7:55, 10:45 • INSIDE OUT (PG)11:45 a.m., 2:35, 6, 9 • INSIDE OUT 3-0 (PG)11a.m., 1:35,4:15, 6:55 • JURASSICWORLD (PG-13)12:30,3:30,6:45,9:45 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-0 (PG-13) 1, 3:55, 7:15, 10:15 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 10:30 • MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) 12:15, 3, 6:15, 9:1 5 • MAX(PG) 11:55a.m., 2:45, 7:25 • ME ANDEARL AND THE DYING GIRL (PG-l3)9:40 • MINIONS (PG)11:30 a.m., 12:40, 2,3:10, 6:30, 7, 9:05, 9:30 • MINIONS 3-0 (PG)noon, 2:30, 4:30, 5, 7:30, 10 • SELF/LESS (PG-13) 11:15a.m., 2:20, 6:10, 9:25 • SPY(R) 12:50, 3:45, 7:10, 10 • TED 2 (R) 12:50, 3:50, 6:40, 9:50 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-13) 2:05, 7:50 • TERMINATOR GENISYS3-0 (PG-13) 11:05a.m., 4:55, 10:50 • TERMINATOR GENISYSIMAX3-0 (PG-13) 12:45, 4, 7:45, 10:40 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •
TV TOQAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 5 p.m. oo HALL, "Paw Star Game" — A week after the opening day of the 2015 Major
League Baseball season, some of America's most adorable (and adoptable) kittens took the field to swat balls, catch line drives and be cheered on by celebrities, including Ed Asner, Maria Menounos, Mario Lopez, Al Roker, Heather McDonald, Tricia Heifer, Deidre Hall, Dawn Olivieri and Camren Bicondova. Among the kitty superstars, be sure to watch for Derek Cheetah, Joe DiMeowgio, Mickey Meowntle, Siamese Sosa, Willie Strays and Roberto Clawmente in this new special. 6 p.m. oo NGC, "The 2000s: A New Reality" —This new two-night programming event
(which concludes Monday) splits a tumultuous decade into halves, opening with "Ground
Zero," which covers suchgripping events as the most controversial presidential election (Al Gore vs. George W. Bush) in American history and the traumatizing attacks on New York's World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. On a far more benign note, the early 2000s also launched two massively successful movie franchises, Peter Jackson's "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy and the "Harry Potter" series. 7 p.m. on10, "Bob's Burgers" — Tina (voice of Dan Mintz) is in for a revelation when she attends a convention that celebrates her favorite cartoon show in "The Equestranauts." She expects to find many other attendees of her age — but instead, most of the other fans turn out to be middle-aged men. She brings along her favorite toy representing the show, and after she loses it to another devotee, Bob (voice
of H. Jon Benjamin) sets out to get it back. Another episode follows. 8 p.m.oo 6,8,"American Ninja Warrior" —It's a matter of national pride — as well as of the usual, essential agility and endurance — for the two teams pitted against each other in a special, three-hour "USA vs. the World" edition of the competition. Five American con-
tenders go upagainst Japanese and European counterparts in all four stages of the finals course in Las Vegas. Hosts Matt Iseman and Akbar Gbaja Biamila keep their eyes on the action. Jenn Brown co-hosts.
o zap2it
WINDOW TREATS rit1 SW10th • Redmond• (541) st-861 6 www.redmondwindowtreats.corn
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)2:15,6 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 9:30 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) 11a.m. • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
w
•
w •
View our presentation at Tompkinswealthpresents.corn
Charles Tompkins,CFPl 541.204.0667
Securitiesit Advisory Services offeredthrough KMS Financial senriceaInaMember FINRAlslpc
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271
TOUCHMARK
• THE OVERNIGHT (R) 7:30 • SLOW WEST (R) 5:30
SINCE 1980
Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • • • •
JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) I, 3:45, 6:30,9:15 MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) l2:30, 3:15,6:15, 9 MINIONS (PG) 11:45 a.m., 2, 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG-13) 12:45, 3:30, 6:30, 9:15
541-647-2956
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • INSIDE OUT (PG)2:45, 5,7: l5 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 2:45, 5:15, 7:30 • MAGIC MIKE XXL (R) 5:15, 7:30 • ME ANDEARL AND THE DYING GIRL (PG-l3)3 • MINIONS (PG) 2:30, 4:45, 7 Madras Cinema5,1101 SW US. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE GALLOWS (R) 12:05, 2:30, 5, 7:25, 9:45 • INSIDEOUT (PG)noon,2:25,4:40,7:05,9:20 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 1:20, 4:10, 7, 9:50 • MINIONS (PG) l2:30, 5, 7:10 • MINIONS3-0(PG) 2:45,9:15 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(PG- l3) 1:10, 4, 6:50, 9:35 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt.,541-416-1014 • MINIONS (PG)noon, 2:30, 5, 7:30 • TERMINATOR GENISYS(Upstairs — PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • The upstairsscreening room has limited accessibility.
Izn Iza is Q 12 Veor old shorthctired girl who arrived ctt HSCO otter her previous otuners had o netu
bobV. Izn has bee'n on indoor/ outdoor kittV for much oF her life and would nppreciote the snme setup in her nettt home. She con be n bit shv in ne,w sitvntions and mill need a home milling to give her some time to adjust to her nettt surroundings. HUMANE SOCIGY OF CENTRALOREGON/SPCR
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's
•
0 GO!Mag azine
6117QS.r.rrths.BEND ~~ r 381.3537 (541
CS TH E BULLETiN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
R ID E S • AN I M A L S • E X H I B I T S • FOO D • G A M E S • M O R E
lakbraz
~~ ~
©)!
BEFo aregpARoefrer~
.p r I
I'
'I
I I
I
I
I i •
I
I
I
I
'I
I
Enjoy Old-Fashioned Fnn Every Day at the Fair!
& In m m e
D e s c h u t e s C ounty
8 015
7 P1n WethLesday) July29 SUBARU. ~ O F BE N D
•
•
Jssly z9 throssgh Asstrush z
li Ill
Come and enjoy the old-fashioned American tradition of your county fair. Look for a wide variety of fun activities and booths from The Bulletin Family Fun Zone, camelrides,W ild W estShow on Sunday,rodeo,anim als,4-H and open-class exhibits, carnival games, plus food, food, foodi
7PI Th'I1x'sc4LQ ) 3%lg 30
©) I
ssmma
ssacanm ~
mm
WE D N E SD2LY THROVGH SRTURDAYI BUCKAROO BRERKFIST Sunday,August2, 6-10 am
4II/FFA Livestoch Ruction
• 7PI Frichy ) 3'11ly 3x WRIOHT
Saturday,August1 Jr. livestock Buyers BBII 11 am-1:30 pm Beef Auction at noon,all animals to be auctioned inSwine Ring
FREE SHUTTLERIDES
JOE iflEHO ES
BRI 0
RoundTripfrom Bend,Redmond,and Sisters to theFair - see TheBuletin orwww.expo.deschutes.orgfor a detailedschedule.
7 P1n SatRTC4LQ) A11gllSt 1
P QQ/5g PQQ Q U lf T5
D R
P R O 'UD S P O N S O R O F T E E 8 0 1 5 B CO U F A IR A K O D R O S C tI I EU T R S
PEPSI MV NEWSCHANNEL21 Wednesday,July 29
Ol FOXDAV
Fair Hours: 10am-10pm
Thursday,July 30
THE BUL LETIN 85 MID DREBD NCREDIT UNIDNDAV
CARNIVA L
Fair Hours: 10am-10pm
Friday, July31
WRISTBANDDAV825 Pl e-SaleOnline
Ages 12 and under are admitted to the Fair for FREE! 12 years and under
*One FREE Carnival Ride Ticket*
835 DayofSale www.expo.des chutes.orl Rodeo - gates open at5:30 pm, performancestarts at 6:30 pm. Rodeo Free with Fair admission. Seniors 62+ AdmittedFREE!
Visit www.events.ktvz.corn for details!
CENTRALOREGON SHDPPER DAV
KOHD TVDAV
Saturday,August1
Fair Hours: 10am-5pm
Fair Hours: 10 am-11pm FREESport Pack
$6 Admission for everyone.
Fair Hours: 10am-11pm
CARNIVA l WRISTBANDDAV-
All Carnival Games $2.00 Rodeo - gates open at 5:30 pm, performance starts at 6:30 pm.
while supplies last at Central OregonShopper booth.
Chute ¹9 rodeo dance to follow
Rodeo - gates openat 5:30 pm, performancestarts at 6:30 pm. Rodeo Freewith Fair admission. Chute ¹9 rodeo dance to follow.
Rodeo - gates open at5:30 pm, performance starts at 6:30 pm. Rodeo Freewith Fair admission.
Sunday,August2
Rodeo
Mid Oregon
825 Pre-SaleOnline 835 DayofSale www.expo.desch ntes.ore Wild WestShows Juniper Arcana 11 amand2 pm
Credit Union *
good friends greet servi«e
Jy
©kohd
The Bulletin
o- • •
'
K EX O
bendbulletlnicom
•
Central Oregon's ABC
TV
lIlIlll lIllllIlIllllIllllIlIllllIlIllIlIllllIlIllllIllllIlIllIlIllIlIlIllIlIllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IlIllIlIllllIlIllIlIllllIlIllllIllllIlIllllIllllIlIllllIllllIlIllIlIllllIlIllIlIllllIlIllIlIlIllIlIllIlIlIllIlIllIlIlIllIlIllIlIlIllllIllllIlIllllIllllIlIllllIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
The Bulletin
Presented by:
Cent r al nro enn ~ nanch Sttititltf
Old-fashioned, Affordable Fa mily Fun! For The First Time! Fair and Carnival Tickets Available Online!
www.Expo.deschutes.org
New this year-Jest In TimeFamily Circus, Mutton Bustin', bicycle obstacle course, giant water ball/firehose competition area. Plus our traditional free pony ridesandfree petting zoo, Campfire, andspecial areahosted by local fire co-op memberswill be there too!
Watch TheBulletin for a detailedschedule. TheRtmilyFunZoneismadepossihlehytheseline sponsors andpartners ol TheBulletin
S MOL ICH pplCIQCfp ~
a- 'I '
I REAITORR oldalhMIII TORRVOIOEIRREAIERTATE
o I5 T R I C T
AOH Eo IA
E
s
~
RERE RND
Scoreboard, D2 UF C, D4 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D4 MLB, D3
NASCAR, D4
Cycling, D5 Sumo, D5 Tennis, D6
© www.bendbulletin.corn/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
GOLF Kadin's PNGA run ends in quarters SUNRIVER — Bend
golfer Justin Kadin made it through three rounds of match play andto the final eight of 164 golfers, but his PNGA Men' s Kadln
Am ateur
Championship run came to aclose Saturday morning. Kadin fell to Shintaro Ban, from SanJose, California, 3 and 1 inthe quarterfinals at Sunriver Resort's Meadows course. A win would have gotten Kadin, who plays out of Tetherow Golf Club, into the semifinals Saturday afternoon. "I was 4 or 5under and just got beat; he (Ban) birdied the last four holes in arow to win," Kadin said. "There's nothing you can do about that. "In four matches I think I was 22under par, so I definitely feel good about the way I played." Kadin, 25, survived 44 holes of golf Friday. His second match of the day extended to 26holes before he wonover Eugene's SulmanRazaat about 7 p.m. "My feet were alittle sore from that muchgolf the previous day,but other than that, I was good to go," Kadin said. "The weekwas great, I was rolling in putts from everywhere. This was one of the strongest fields in the country, so to make it through that far to the final eight was great." Ban went on to score a4 and 3 win over Grady Meyer, ofWest Fargo, N.D., in Saturday afternoon's semifinal round. In today's final, Ban will face Anthony Quayle, ofQueensland, Australia. The36-hole championship match
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
uc sscorin wi in-s a erecrui s • Oregon has commitments from the state's top three '16 recruits, includingSummit's McCormick
for 2016. Winston announced his
are great schools. I was interested in all three of them, but it came
commitment at The Opening, a football camp for elite prospects
down to what was going to fit me
By Austin Meek
The Ducks will not have to wor-
staged at the Nike World Campus.
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
ry about that on signing day 2016.
That was not the only good news for Oregon this week. The
BEAVERTON — Oregon did not sign an in-state football recruit last season, a fact that
With a commitment this week from La'Mar Winston, a four-
He chose the Ducks over Stanford and UCLA, donning a neon yellow visor and a pair of Oregon gloves as he revealed his choice. "It was really difficult, going betweenOregon,Stanford and
caught the attention of some hometown loyalists and at least
one local politician.
star linebacker from Portland's Central Catholic High School, the Ducks now have verbal pledges from the state's top three players
best, and Oregon was that school." Ducks also landed four-star cor-
nerback Jared Mayden, a Sachse, Texas, native who chose Oregon over Ohio State and a host of others.
SeeDucks/D5
UCLA," Winston said. "Those two
GOLF
CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE
Riders fromEritrea hoping to blazea trail for a continent By lan Auslan New York Times News Service
MUR-DE-BRETAGNE, France — All manner of
flags are waved at the Tour de France. But at the start
in Rennes on Saturday there were a few dozen examples of one that prob-
ably had not made an appearance: the red, blue and green of Eritrea. Those flags appeared because of Daniel Teklehaimanot and Merhawi
Kudus, who are Eritreans of many firsts. In a sport in which black riders from any continent are rare, Teklehaimanot and Kudus are the first black Africans
in the Tour. Teklehaimanot is the first African rider to wear the red polka-dotted
jersey as the Tour's best climber. And, perhaps most important, they ride
for the Tour's first modern African team, MTN-Qhubeka, which hopes to make Africa as important a force in cycling as it is in endurance sports like long-distance running.
will start at 7:30 a.m. on
the Woodlands course; the afternoon round will be held on theMeadows course.
Despite his status as the
leader of the climbing competition, Teklehaimanot
— Bulletin staff report
faltered Saturday on what
was arguably the most difficult climb of this Tour so far, the Mur-de-Bretagne. While relatively short, it
WCL BASEBALL
included a grueling 10 per-
Elks have winning streak snapped
cent grade at one point. Alexis Vuillermoz, a
Medford starter Kohl Hostert stymied the powerful Bend offense, allowing just six hits over eight innings, and
attack against the race
French rider, launched an leader Chris Froome near the top of the hill and went on to win the 112.5-mile
eighth stage. SeeTour/D5
the Elks had their eight-
game winning streak snapped Saturday night with a 4-1 loss at Vince GennaStadium. Former Summit High and current LaneCommunity College pitcher D.J. Wilson struck out three in the ninth inning for his second save of the summer for the Rogues (13-16). Bend starter Rio Gomez (1-1) allowed a home run to J.J. Kitaoka in the third. Heallowed six hits and walked three in eight innings, his longest outing of the West Coast Leagueseason. West Tunnell hit a run-scoring double in the eighth for the Elks' lone run. TheElkswent into Saturday night averaging a league-high 8.6 runs per game. Despite the loss and a win by South Division rival Corvallis, the Elks (26-6) still have a 10-game lead in the d>ws>on. The league-leading Elks face theRoguesat 1:05 p.m. today in the final game of athreegame series. — Bulletin staff report
Inside • The college football season starts in less than two months. Take a look at the Ducks and Beavers schedules,D5
At the Tour SATURDAY A mostly flat
112.5-mile trek finishing with a short but tough climb up Mur de Bretagne. WINNER Alexis Vuillermoz, who gave France its first stage win this year after a bold counterattack. The former mountain bike specialist won 5 seconds ahead of Dan Martin. JERSEYS Yellow:Chris Froome reasserted his authority with
an attack in the final climb, gaining 10 seconds on Vincenzo Nibali. Green:Peter Sagan Polka dot: Daniel Teklehaimanot White:Warren Barguil TODAY A 17.4-mile
team time trial between Vannes and Plumelec featuring an uphill finish.
For more,DS
BASEBALL
KevinDuke /The Bulletin
Special Olympian Hops Van Brocklin, right, celebrates with volunteer coach Kathy Durkee after she rolled in a putt
At the end of the line, Rosestill waits
on the practice green at Awbrey Glen Golf Club. VanBrocklin is part of the High Desert Special Olympics golf team and is competing in the golf skills competition at the Summer State Games this weekend in Newberg.
By Adam Kilgore The Washington Post
• Special Olympians celebrate their successeson the course, big or small
NORMAL, Ill. — The line of people in front of him ended, and Pete Rose checked his gold watch and peeked at his white iPhone. Rose stood up from a white folding table and am-
By Kevin Duke eThe Bulletin
olfers could learn a thing or two about attitude from these Special Olympians. Watching members of the Special Olympics Oregon High Desert golf team during their practice Wednesday at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend, it was readily apparent that they look at golf a little differently compared to the rest of us. There was little to no frustra-
they just have a good time and
tion at hitting a bad shot — only pure joy at hitting the good ones. Every made putt, every wellstruck shot, was celebrated as if it
there isn't a lot of frustration," volunteer coach Pete Sandgren said.
was the greatest thing ever.
Laughter, smiles, high-fives and fun ruled the day. "These guys are very positive,
"It's really great to be around. It reminds you when you play your-
"They might get a little frustrated at times, but they get over it so quickly," head coach and organizer Marilyn Goddard Rowland
bled eight creaky steps across a concrete concourse. He wore a • Mariners bright yellow T-shirt with "Cornshutout Belters" acrossthe chestand a Angels. forest-green cap with a cartoon MLB,D3
ea r of corn that had husks for
arms and held a bat. Rose greeted a pack of 40 people sitting around picnic tables, admirers who had waited in line and paid $25 for his autograph and a brush with baseball's career hit king. "Thank you for coming out," Rose said, the paunch of his belly nudging the high-top table he had turned into a makeshift dais. "It's my
pleasure to be here. Where the hell am I?"
self to chill out and just enjoy it.
sard. "One of the beauties of Special
Rose was at the Corn Crib, the home ballpark for the Normal CornBelters of the inde-
pendent Frontier League. Rose was, in base-
out here."
Olympians is that what you see is what you get. SeeSpecial/D4
"Nobody complains about anything — they are just happy to be
ball terms, as far from the majors as possible. See Rose/D6
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKB DARD
TODAY Time 5 a.m.
CYCLING
Tour de France,Stage9
TV/Radio NBCSN
TENNIS
Wimbledon, men's final
6 a.m.
ESPN
High School, Nike PeachJam,semifinals High School, Nike PeachJam,final NBA SummerLeague,Portland vs. Dallas
6, 7:30 a.m. ESPNU noon ESPNU 7 p.m. CS N NW
GOLF
EuropeanTour, Scottish Open EuropeanTour, Scottish Open PGA Tour, JohnDeereClassic U.S. Women's Open PGA Tour, JohnDeereClassic Champions Tour,Encompass Championship Web.corn Tour, BoiseOpen MOTOR SPORTS United SportsCar, CanadianTire Motorsport IndyCar, Wisconsin
6:30 a.m. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. 11:30 a.m. noon noon 3 p.m. 9 a.m. 2 p.m.
Golf NBC
Golf Fox CBS Golf Golf FS1 NBCSN
BASEBALL
MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Boston MLB, All-Star Futures Game MLB, L.A. Angels at Seattle MLB, St. Louis at Pittsburgh SOCCER MLS, Toronto at NewYork City CONCACAF Gold Cup, Cuba vs. Trinidad andTobago CONCACAFGoldCup,Guatemalavs.Mexico
10:30 a.m.
TBS MLB
noon 1 p.m. 5 p.m.
ESPN
noon
ESPN
Root
3:30 p.m. 6 p.m.
FS2 FS2
MONDAY SOCCER CONCACAFGoldCup,HaitivsHonduras 4 p.m. CONCACAFGoldCup,Panama vsUnitedStates 6:30p.m.
FS1 FS1
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL TWinS' DOZier, ROCkieS' TuloWitZki On All-Star teamS
— Brian Dozier is anAmerican League All-Star after all. Major LeagueBaseballannouncedSaturday.TheMinnesotaTwinssecond basemanwas addedtothesquadbyALmanagerNedYost,replacing Toronto Blue Jaysoutfielder Jose Bautista. Bautista will skip the All-Star game to receive treatment on the sore right shoulder hehas been playing through for several weeks. Dozier wasbeat out by Kansas City Royals third basemanMike Moustakas in avoting contest for the last spot on the team.Also on Saturday, Miami's Dee Gordon was ruled out of the All-Star Game after dislocating his left thumb. Colorado shortstop TroyTulowjtzkj will replace Gordon onthe NL's active roster.
BASKETBALL 76erS' EmbiiII to haVe SeCOnd Surgery On fOOt —Joel Embiid and the Philadelphia 76ers havedetermined the center will have a secondsurgery on his right foot, a person familiar with the decision told TheAssociated Press. The 7-footer from Kansas wasthe third overall pick in the 2014NBAdraft. He missed his entire rookie season after having surgery to repair a stress fracture in his foot last June. Theteam announced last month he suffered a setback in his recovery. Embiid now is likely to also sit out another season, and it is possible the injury could be career-threatening.
NetS WaiVe WilliamS, IS eXPeCted to jOin MRVS — The Brooklyn Nets waived former All-Star Deron Williams, who is expected to sign with the Dallas Mavericks if no teamclaims him. Theteam and Williams came to abuyout agreement Friday, and the Nets made the announcement Saturday. General manager Billy King thanked the point guard for "everything he gave the organization over the past 4/z years." Williams grew up in aDallas suburb and nearly signed with the Mavericks three years ago.
FOOTBALL NFL alumni Partner to OPenSeniar Care CenterS —The NFL Alumni Association is teaming with Tampa,Florida-basedValidus Senior Living to provide memory-care services to former players living with dementia. The first one will open in Ocoee,Florida, in a region with a high concentration of retired players, officials said. The goal is to havethefacilities in all major NFL cities. Valjdus, developer Mark Bouldin and investment bank Piper Jaffray will spend $1.1 billion constructing 33 assisted-living facilities during the next five years. The facilities will not be exclusive to former NFLplayers.
GOLF Kirk Out Of BritiSh Open, replaCed by Streelman — Chl'Is Kirk has withdrawn from next week's British Open atSt. Andrews after breaking his hand, andbeenreplaced in the field by fellow American Kevin Streelman. The R8 A, which organizes the tournament, made the announcement onSaturday. The80th-ranked Streelman tied for 54th and 79th in the past two British Opens.TheBritish Open starts Thursday. — From wire reports
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER
Timbers blanked byUnion Next up
CHESTER, Pa.— Vincent
Vancouver Nogueira scored twice, and at Portland the Philadelphia Union beat the Portland Timbers 3-0 on When:7:30 p.m. TV:Root Saturday night. Andrew Wenger a l so scored for Philadelphia (6-10- around a d efender and 4), and Cristian Maidana as- beat diving goalie Andrew sisted ort all three goals, giv-
Weber.
ing him nine on the season. Wenger got his first goal
right-footed smash two min-
of the season in the 69th
minute. Wenger, a Phiiadeiphia native, ran the ball in on a slant from nearly midfield and launched a bending, waist-high shot that curled
Local
Nogueira scored on a utes later, and then capped the scoring in t h e 80th minute.
The Timbers (9-7-4) left five players home with injuries.
USGA U.s. W omen'sOpen
Saturday atLancester(Pa.I CountryClub Yardage:6,483; P an 76 Third Round Men's AmateurChampionship a-amateur At Sunriver Resort AmyYang 67-66-69 —202 Saturday StacyLewis 69-67-69 —205 Guarlerlinals atMeadowscourse 68-70-68 —206 In Gee Chun CharlesKern, Mercer Island, Wash., def. BenWan- ShihoDyam 70-66-71 —207 a ichek,Eugene,20holes 7 1-73-64 —208 ChellaChoi AnthonyQuayle, GoldCoast, Australia, def. Tom MichelleWie 72-68-68 —208 Swanson ,Missoula,Mont.,3and2 Mi HyangLee 68-72-68 —208 ShintaroBan,SanJose, Calif., def.Justin Kadin, InbeePark 68-70-70 —208 Bend, 3 and1 Min Lee 71-68-70 —209 GradyMeyer, WestFargo, N.D.,def. DylanWu, MorganPressel 68-70-71 —209 Medford,19holes JanePark 66-72-71 —209 Semifinals at Meadows course Kris Tam ulis 72-69-69 —210 AnthonyQuayle, Gold Coast, Australia, def.Charles Ryann 0'Toole 71-70-69 —210 Ai Suzuki 70-71-69 —210 Kern,MercerIsland,Wash.,1up ShintaroBan,SanJose, Calif., def.GradyMeyer, So YeonRyu 72-68-70 —210 7 0-70-70 —210 Pernilla Lindberg WestFargo,N.D., 4and3 70-68-72 —210 RumiYoshiba 71-73-67 —211 SakuraYokomine PGA Tour 71-72-68 —211 Lexi Thom pson Brooke He nde rs on 7 0-73-68 —211 JohaDeere Classic 68-74-69 —211 Sydnee Mi c ha el s Saturday atTPC DeereRun, Silvis, III. JennyShin 74-68-69 —211 Yardag e: 7,268; Par: 71 LydiaKo 70-72-69 —211 Thirdround leaders Jung Mi n Le e 7 0-71-70 —211 a-de notes amateur N a Yeon C hoi 67-74-70 —211 JordanSpieth 71-64-61 —196 KarrieWebb 66-72-73 —211 DannyLee 68-68-62 —198 MarinaAlex 66-71-74 —211 Shawn Stefani 65-70-64 —199 Teresa 71-71-70 —212 Lu 63-67-69 —199 LauraDavies JustinThomas 70-72-70 —212 68-63-68 —199 Johnson Wagner 69-72-71 —212 AzaharaMunoz ZachJohnson 66-68-66 —200 7 0-71-71 —212 QBack DanielSummerhays 65-67-68 —200 BrittanyLang 70-70-72 —212 TomGilis 66-65-6M200 LizetteSalas 71-69-72 —212 68-69-64 — 201 KevinChappel AngelaStanford 71-69-72 —212 LukeGuthrie 64-70-67 —201 DandieKung 71-70-72 —213 Will Wilcox 66-66-69 —201 LeeLopez 71-70-72 —213 BrianStuard 66-68-68 —202 CharleyHull 71-72-71 —214 66-71-66 —203 AustinErnst 68-74-72 —214 Carl Pettersson 70-66-67 — 203 Enka Ki k uchr 7 1-71-72 —214 Jerry Kelly a-Megan Khang 71-70-73 —214 Chris Stroud 68-68-67 —203 71-70-73 —214 AyakoUehara Scott Piercy 67-69-67 —203 7 1-73-71 —215 65-68-70 —203 DanielleKang RobertGarrigus a-Mariel Gal d i a no 7 0-74-71 —215 67-66-70 —203 SteveWheatcroft 72-72-71 —215 Jang Scott Pinckney 66-66-71 —203 Ha Na 73-71-71 —215 JoshTeater 69-68-67 —204 KarineIcher Kim Kauf m a n 7 2-72-71 —215 Roberto Castro 69-68-67 —204 Gerina Pi l e r 7 1-72-72 —215 66-70-68 —204 RobertStreb 71-72-72 —215 70-65-69 —204 Mo Martin RyanMoore I.K. Kim 74-69-72 —215 StevenAlker 65-69-70 —204 a-MuniHe 68-74-73 —215 Spencer Levin 66-67-71 —204 P aul a Cre am er 69-73-73 —215 70-68-67 —205 RogerSloan Sei Young Kim 73-67-75 —215 67-71-67 —205 KyleStanley Mirim Lee 71-73-72 —216 JasonBohn 68-68-6M205 JayeMarieGreen 71-73-72 —216 Vijay Singh 67-68-70 —205 MariaBalikoeva 74-69-73 —216 65-69-71 — 205 SteveStricker a-Emma Talley 70-72-74 —216 63-72-70 —205 LalaAnai NicholasThompson 71-70-75 —216 KevinKisner 69-67-70 —206 AlisonLee 70-73-74 —217 MaxHom a 70-66-70 —206 a-Hannah 0'Sullivan 72-71-74 —217 MarkHubbard 69-67-70 —206 Mi JungHur 73-69-76 —218 67-69-70 — 206 Haruka Mori t a-W an y aol u 7 1-73-75 —219 SamSaunders 69-67-70 —206 Lee-Anne Pace 73-69-77 —219 MichaelPutnam 68-75-83 —226 DerekFathauer 71-65-70 —206 ElizabethNagel BrianHarm an 67-68-71 —206 BryceMolder 68-65-73 —206 BASEBALL 68-70-69 —207 AdamHadwin WilliamMcGirt 69-69-69 —207 WCL Alex Prugh 68-69-70 —207 HudsonSwafford 71-66-70 —207 WESTCOAST LEAGUE 68-68-71 —207 GonzaloFdez-Castano All TimesPOT Seung-Yul Noh 69-69-70 —208 Jhonattan Vegas 67-70-71 —208 South Division Tim Wilkinson 68-69-71 —208 W L Pct GB 72-64-72 —208 ChadCampbell 26 6 813 66-70-72 —208 15 15 500 10 BooWeekley 13 16 448 1 tr/2 JonasBlixt 67-69-72 —208 5 24 172 19rA TyroneVanAswegen 66-70-72 —208 East Division VaughnTaylor 69-69-71 —209 W L Pct GB 66-72-71 —209 Michae lThompson Kelowna 20 9 690 72-66-71 —209 RodPampling Yakima V al l e y 17 13 567 3'/z ZackSucher 71-67-71 —209 WallaWalla 16 16 500 5'/2 Scott Langley 68-70-71 —209 Wenatchee 12 18 400 Br/2 GlenDay 67-70-72 —209 West Division 67-71-72 —210 Alex Cejka W L Pct GB ChrisNae gel 71-67-72 —210 20 10 667 Pat Perez 69-68-73 —210 Bellingham 13 16 448 6'I~ JohnHuh 69-68-73 —210 Victoria 13 17 433 7 67-69-74 —210 Cowlitz Jim Renern Kitsap 10 20 333 10 64-72-74 —210 CharlesHowell III CameronPercy 68-68-75 —211 Saturday'sGames S.J. Park 68-70-74 —212 Victoria 8,KlamathFalls 1, 7innings, 1stgame DavidHearn 68-70-75 —213 Victoria 8,KlamathFalls 5, 2ndgame 71-67-75 —213 KenDuke WallaWalla4, Kelowna3 GregChalmers 68-70-75 —213 Wenatchee 8, Cowlitz 3 RyanArmour 69-69-76 —214 Medford4, Bend1 ChezReavie 69-68-77 —214 Corvallis5, Kitsap1 69-68-77 —214 Today'sGames Ryo Ishikawa 69-69-77 —215 MedfordatBend,1:05 p.m. HarrisEnglish a-LeeMccoy 67-71-78 —216 Victoria atKlamathFals, 5:05p.m. WallaWallaat Kelowna,6:05p.m. Monday'sGames Cham pions Tour Yakima Valey atKitsap, 6:35p.m. Bellingham at Cowlitz, 6:35p.m. Encompa ss Championship Victonaat Medford, 6:35p.m. Saturday atNorlh ShoreCountryClub, Klamath Fal lsat Corvallis, 6:40p.m. Glenview,Itl. KelownaatWenatchee, 7:05p.m. Yardage: 7,163;Par72 Tuesday'sGames Secondround Valey atKitsap, 6:35p.m. JerrySmith 66-64—130 Yakima Bellingham at C ow litz, 6:35p.m. MikeGoodes 66-67—133 at Medford, 6:35p.m. Bart Bryant 69-66—135 Victona FredFunk 65-70—135 KlamathFallsat Corvallis, 6:40p.m. 65-70—135 KelownaatWenatchee, 7:05p.m. DavidFrost Wednesday'sGames 65-70—135 Yakima LeeJanzen Valley atKitsap, 6;35p.m. 67-68—135 Bellingham Woody Austin at Cowlitz, 6:35p.m. DuffyWaldorf 69-67—136 Victona at Medford, 6:35p.m. RoccoMediate 67-69—136 KlamathFallsat Corvallis, 6:40p.m. WesShort,Jr. 70-66—136 KelownaatWenatchee,7:05p.m. EstebanToledo 67-69—136 Jeff Maggert 68-69 — 137 Saturday's linescore 71-66—137 ScottDunlap 67-71 — 138 Jeff Sluman 65-73—138 Rogtles 4, Elks1 BradBryant RussCochran 69-69—138 661 616 626 — 4 7 2 Geoffrey Sisk 73-65—138 Medford OggOgg616 — 1 6 3 RodSpittle 66-72—138 Bend CraigStadler 66-73—139 Hostert,Wilson(9) andMcWhertor; Gomez, Newman TomPerniceJr. 72-67—139 (9), Bies(9) andHummel. W-Hostert, 1-2. L-Gomez, (2). Hr-Kitaoka(f). 28-McWhertor(3); 71-68—139 1-1. Sv-Wilson TomLehman (7),Tunnell (f f). 68-71—139 Cavaness lan Woosna m 69-70—139 KennyPerry KevinSutherland 70-69—139 BASKETBALL SteveElkington 69-71 — 140 CoreyPavin 68-72—140 WNBA FrankEsposito 67-73 — 140 72-68 — 140 WOMEN'SNATIONAL Jeff Coston 70-70—140 BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION GrantWaite 68-72—140 All TimesPOT FredCouples 68-72 — 140 TomByrum EasternConference StanUtley 68-72—140 W L Pct GB JohnCook 70-70—140 Connecticut 7 3 .7 0 0 Scott Hoch 69-71 — 140 7 4 .6 3 6 'I~ Kirk Triplett 70-70—140 NewYork Chicago 7 5 .5 8 3 1 PeterSenior 68-72—140 6 5 ,5 4 5 1 r/r 72-6M141 Washington MarcoDawson Indiana 7 6 . 53 8 1r/2 72-69 — 141 JoeySindelar Atlanta 5 7 .41 7 3 70-71—141 Tommy Armour II Western Co n ference ChienSoonLu 71-70 — 141 W L Pct GB elaineMccallister 73-69 — 142 8 3 .7 2 7 'Iz GeneSauers 75-67—142 Minnesota 10 4 . 7 14 JohnRiegger 72-70—142 Tulsa Phoenix 7 5 .58 3 2 71-71—142 JoseCoceres 3 9 .2 5 0 6 69-73—142 SanAntonio StevePate 3 1 1 . 214 7 74-68—142 Seattle Billy Andrade Los Angel e s 2 1 0 . 167 7 73-70 — 143 Jay Haa s GaryKoch 69-74—143 Saturday'sGame Jeff Hart 73-70—143 Tulsa82,LosAngeles 67 MichaelAllen 70-73 — 143 Today'sGames Olin Browne 70-73 — 143 NewYorkatAtlanta, noon BrianHenninger 68-75—143 Seattleat Phoenix, 3p.m. 70-73 — 143 GuyBoros ConnecticutatChicago,3p.m. 72-72 — 144 RogerChapman SanAntonioat Minnesota,4p.m. 7 3-71 — 144 StephenAmes Rick Gibson 71-73 — 144 TENNIS LorenRoberts 69-75 — 144 BobbyWadkins 71-73—144 GregBruckner 69-75—144 Professional 72-73 — 145 Joel Edw ards Wimbledon 74-71—145 Jim Rutledge Friday at London 73-72—145 LarryNelson Women's singleschampionship 73-72 — 145 DanForsman SerenaWiliams(f), United States,def. Garbine PH. HorganIII 73-72 — 145 Muguruza 20), Spai n,6-4,6-4. GaryHaffberg 71-74—145 en's doubleschampionship Jay DonBlake 73-73 — 146 Jean-JulienRojer,Netherlands,andHoriaTecau WayneLevi 70-76 — 146 Romaniadef. , JamieMurray,Britain, andJohn TomPurlzer 72-74—146 (4), Peers (13), Australia, 7-6(5), 6-4,6-4. 71-76 — 147 CarlosFranco Women's doubleschampionship 74-74 — 148 MarkWiebe MartinaHingis, Switzerland,andSania Mirza(f), 76-72—148 India,def.Eka BobTway terina MakarovaandElenaVesnina(2), Jeff Freem an 71-77—148 Russia,5-7,7-6(4), 7-5. LarryMize 75-74 — 149 GregKraft 71-78—149 Today'sschedule LanceTenBroeck 74-75—149 Playbeginsat6a.m.POT NolanHenke 80-72 — 152 Men'ssinglesfinal: NovakDjokovic (f), Serbia, 73-80 — 153 Bob Gilder vs. Roger Federer(2), Switzerland 79-74—153 SteveLowery Mixed doublesfinal: LeanderPae s, India, and 79-77 — 156 KenGreen MartinaHingis (7), Switzerland,vs. AlexanderPeya, JohnJacobs 80-80 — 160 Austria,andTimeaBabos(5), Hungary PNGA
BASKETBALL
The Associated Press
GOLF
CYCLING
SOCCER
Tour de France
CONCACAF Gold Cup
Eighth Stage Saturday A112.7-mile hilly ride fromRennesto Mur-de-Bretagne, with aCategory 4climb midwayanda finishing Category 8climb up
All TimesPOT
Mur deBretagne 1. AlexisVuiffermoz,France, AG2RLa Mondiale, 4 hours, 20minutes,55seconds. 2. DanielMartin, Ireland,Cannondale-Garmin, 5 secondsbehind. 3. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar,:10. 4. PeterSagan,Slovakia, Tinkoff-Saxo,sametime. 5. Tony Gallopin, France,Loto-Soudal, sametime. 6.GregVanAvermaet,Belgium,BMC Racing,same time. 7. Adam Yates, Britain, DricaGreenEdge,sametime. 8. ChrisFroome,Britain, Sky,sametime. 9. Bauke Moffema, Netherlands, TrekFactory Racing, same time. 10. TejayVanGarderen, United States, BMCRacing, same time. 11. JulianArredondo,Colombia, TrekFactory Racing, same time. 12. JoaquimRodriguez, Spain, Katusha,sametime. 13. WarrenBarguil, France,Giant-Alpecin, sametime. 14. AlbertoContador, Spain, Tinkoff-Saxo,sametime. 15. RigobertoUran,Colombia, Etixx-QuickStep,same
time. 16. RomanKreuziger, CzechRepublic, Tinkoff-Saxo, same time. 17. NairoQuintana, Colombia, Movistar, sam etime. 18. JulienSimon,France,Cofidis, sametime. 19. RobertGesink, Netherlands,Lotto NL-Jumbo, same time. 20. PierreRoland, France,Europcar,sametime. Also 24.Jean-ChristophePeraud,France,AG2RLaMondiale, same time. 30. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy,Astana,:20. 31. Andrew Talansky, United States, Cannon-
FIRST ROUNO
GroupA
GP W UnitedStates 2 2 Panama 2 0 Honduras 2 0 Haiti 2 0
Monday'sGames
(After eight stages)
1. ChrisFroome,Britain, Sky,31:01:56. 2. Peter Sagan,Slovakia,Tinkoff-Saxo,:11. 3. TejayVanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, :13. 4. Tony Gallopin, France,Loto-Soudal,:26. 5. Greg VanAvermaet, Belgium, BMCRacing,:28. 6. Rigoberto Uran,Colombia, Etixx-QuickStep,:34. 7. AlbertoContador,Spain,Tinkoff-Saxo,:36. 8. Warren Barguil, France,Giant-Alpecin,1:07. 9. ZdenekStybar, Czech Republic, Etixx-QuickStep, 1:15.
10. Bauke Mollema, Netherlands, TrekFactory Racing, 1:32. 11. RobertGesink, Netherlands,Lotto NL-Jumbo, 1:39. 12. Alejandro Valverde, Spain, Movistar,1:47. 13. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy, Astana,1:48. 14. RomanKreuziger, CzechRepublic, Tinkoff-Saxo, 1:51.
15. GerainTho t mas, Britain, Sky,1:52. 16. Nairo Quintana,Colombia, Movistar,1:56. 17. Joaquim Rodriguez, Spain, Katusha,2:00. 18.Jean-ChristophePeraud,France,AG2RLaMondiale, 2:07. 19. Andrew Talansky, United States, Cannondale-Garmin2:49. , 20. RomaiB nardet, France,AG2RLaMondiale, 3:15. Also 29. ThibautPinot,France,FDJ,6:33. 95. TylerFarrar, UnitedStates, MTN-Qhubeka,26:58.
Upcomingstages Today —NinthStage:Vannesto Plumelec, team time trial (I7.4miles) Monday — Rest Day, Pau Tuesday —10thStage:Tarbesto LaPierre-SaintMartin, highmountain (103.7) Wednesady — 11th Stage:Paul to CauteretsVaffee deSaintSavin, highmountain (I 167) Thursday — 12th Stage: Lannemezanto Plateau de Beiffe, high mountain (121.1) Friday — 13thStage:Muretto Rodez, medium mountain(123.3) July 1 6 —14thStage: Rodezto Mende, medium mountain(f10.8) July 19 — 15thStage:Mendeto Valence, hily (f 13.6) July 26 —16th Stage:Bourg-de-Peageto Gap, medium mountain (124.8) July 21 — Rest Day,Gap July 22 — 17thStage:Digne-les-Bainsto Pra Loup,highmountain (100) July 23 — 18thStage;Gapto Saint-Jean-deMaurienne,highmountain(115ug) July 24 — 19th Stage:Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne to LaToussuire-LesSybeles, highmountain(85.7) July 25 —20thStage:ModaneValfrejus to Alpe d'Huez, highmountain(68.8) July 26 —21stStage:Sevres-GrandParis Seine Quest to Paris Champs-Elysees,flat (68)
GF 3 2 2 1
GA Pls 1 6 2 2 3 1 2 1
Haiti vs.Honduras,4p.m. Panama vs.UnitedStates,6:30p.m.
Group B O L GF GA Pls 1 0 3 2 4 2 0 3 3 2 2 0 1 1 2 1 1 0 1 1 Saturday'sGames Jamaica1,Canada0 CostaRica1, ElSalvador1 Tuesday'sGames JamaicavsEISalvador3pm Canadavs. CostaRica,5:30p.m. GP W Jamaica 2 1 CostaRica 2 0 El Salvador 2 0 Canada 2 0
Group C
Mexico Trinidad Guatemala Cuba
GP W 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0
O L 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1
GF 6 3 1 0
Today'sGames TrinidadandTobagovs. Cuba,3:30p.m. Guatemalavs. Mexico, 6 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Cubavs.Guatemala,3p.m. Mexico vs.TrinidadandTobago,5:30p.m.
GA Pls 0 3 1 3 3 0 6 0
MLS
dale-Garminsam , etime.
32. Thibaut Pinot,France,FDJ,:25. 34. RomaiB nardet, France,AG2RLaMondiale,:31. 38. Zdenek Stybar, CzechRepublic, Etixx-QuickStep, :33. 48. GerainTh t omas, Britain, Sky,;59. 119. TyleFarrar, r UnitedStates, MTN-Qhubeka, 6:12. Overall slandings
O L 0 0 2 0 1 1 1 1
MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPOT
EasternConference W L T Pls GF D .C.United 10 6 5 35 2 3 NewYork 7 6 5 2 6 27 O rlando Cit y 6 7 6 24 23 Columbus 6 7 6 2 4 27 N ew England 6 9 6 24 2 6 TorontoFC 7 7 2 2 3 22 Philadelphia 6 10 4 2 2 25 Montreal 6 7 3 21 2 3 N ew YorkCity FC 5 8 5 20 2 0 Chicago 5 9 3 1 8 19
GA 18 23 24 29 33 23 32 25 23 24
Seattle
19 19 23 23
WesternConference W L T Pls GF GA
Vancouver FC Dallas
10 10 9 9
Portland L os Angele s 8 Sporting KansasCity 7 3 SanJose 7 Houston 6 R ealSaltLake 5 Colorado 4
8 2 7 2 5 5 7 4
6 6 7 7 7
32 25 32 23 3 2 26 31 2 2
7 31 31 27 25 4 2 5 19 6 2 4 24 8 23 1 9
23 17 19 24 26
6 9 2 1 17 1 9
Saturday'sGames
NewYork4, NewEngland1 Philadelphia3, Portland0 FC Dallas2, OrlandoCity 0 Montreal3, Columbus0 Chicago1,Seatle 0 Colorado3,RealSalt Lake1
Today'sGames TorontoFCat NewYorkCity FC, noon SportingKansasCity atVancouver,6 p.m. Wednesday'sGam e Columbus atChicago,5:30p.m. Friday's Game SanJoseat LosAngeles,8p.m. Saturday, July 18 PhiladelphiaatToronto FC1 p.m. NewYorkCityFCatNewEngland,4:30p.m. NewYorkatOrlandoCity,4:30p.m. Montrealat SportingKansasCity,5:30p.m. D.C.Unitedat FCDallas, 6p.m. ColoradoatSeattle, 7p.m. Houstonat RealSalt Lake,7p.m. Vancouverat Portland 7:30p.m.
U.S. Open Cup All TimesPOT
Tuesday'sGames PhiladelphiaatNewYorkRedBulls,1 p.m. HoustonatSporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. Los Angeleat s Real Salt Lake,7 p.m. Wednesday'sGame OrlandoCityat Chicago,5;30 p.m.
DEALS Transactions
BASEBA LL AmericanLeague BOSTONRED SDX— PlacedRHPClayBuchholz on the15-dayDL. Selected thecontract of LHPBrian JohnsonfromPawtucket (IL). Designated RHPDalier NASCAR Sprint Cup Hinojosaforassignment. Saturday atKentuckySpeedway,Sparta, Ky. CLEVEL AND INDIANS— PlacedINFMike Aviles Lap length: 1.5 miles on thefamily medical emergencylist. Recalled INFJose (Start position in parentheses) Ramirez fromColumbus(IL). 1. (9)KyleBusch,Toyota,267laps,48points,$209,316. DETROI TTIGERS— ReleasedRHPJobaChamber2. (4)JoeyLogano,Ford,267,43,$161,118. lain. Dptioned RHPJeff Ferrell toToledo(IL). Agreed 3. 8) DennyHamlin,Toyota,267,42,$125,335. to terms withRHPNeftali Felizonaone-year contract. 4. 20)carlEdwards,Toyota,267,41,$124,295. LOSANGELESANGELS—OptionedOFEfren Na5. 16) MattKenseth, Toyota, 267,39, gf42,111. varro toSaltLake(PCL). RecalledRHPVinnie Pestano 6. 2) BradKeselowski, Ford,267,39,$140,656. fromSaltLake. 7. (3) JeffGordon,Chevrolet,267,37,$135176. NEWYOR KYANKEES—Selected thecontract of 8. (15)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 267,36,$137,640. 2B Rob Refsnyder fromScranton/Wikes-Barre(IL). Dp9. (6) JimmiJohn e son,Chevrolet, 267,35,$132,151. tionedINFColeFigueroato Scranton. TransferredOF 10. (13)KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 267,34, $102,715. Mason Wdlramstothe60-dayDL 11. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,267,33, $95890. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—PlacedRHPJesseHahn 12. (12)AricAlmirola,Ford,267,32,$123,951. on the15-dayDL,retroactive to Monday. RecalledRHP 13. (28)TrevorBayne,Ford, 267, 31,$126,790. ChrisBassittfromNashvile (PCL). 14. (7)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, 267,30,$116,156. TAMPA BAYRAYS—DptionedRHPAndrewBellati 15.14) PaulMenard, Chevrolet, 267,29, $93915. to Durham (ILjr AssignedLHPEveret Teafordoutright 16.I27)GregBiffle, Ford,267,28, $116523. to Durham. ReinstatedRHPJakeDdorizzifromthe1517. (5)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 267,27, $111,035. day DL 18. (25)DavidRagan, Toyota, 267,26,$11,479. TEXASRANGERS— DesignatedLHPRossDetwil19. (30)Glint Bowyer, Toyota, 267,25,$118,123. er for assignm ent. Recalled RH PRomanMendezfrom 20.26) RyanNewman, Chevrolet, 267,25, $121,290. RoundRock(PCL). 21.I10)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet 26723699365. National League 22. (18)SamHomish Jr., Ford,267, 22,$109,660. CINCINN ATI REDS— Optioned DFYormanRodri23. (21)CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 267, 21,$109248. guez toLouisville (IL). ReinstatedRH PRaisel Iglesias 24. (32)JustinAffgaier, Chevrolet, 267,20, $106,998. from the15-dav DL. 25. (f f) AustinDilon, Chevrolet, 267,19,$119526. COLORADOROCKIES— PlacedLHPTylerAndereyfor 26. (24)AJAllmendinger,Chevrolet,267,18, $111,423. sononthe60-dayDL.DesignatedLHPAaronLaff assignment. Recalled LHPRexBrothersfromAlbuquer27. (19)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet, 266,17,$97,090. 28. (36)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,266,0, $82,065. que(PCL). LOSANGELESDODGERS— ReinstatedRHPBran29. 34I DavidGililand, Ford,266,15,$101,523. 30. 29MichaelAnnett,Chevrolet, 266,14,$83,290. donBeachyfrom the60-dayDL.DptionedRHPJosh toOklahoma City (PCL). Designated RHPMatt 31. 31 I AlexBowman,Chevrolet,266,14, 690,772. RWavin estforassignment. 32. 38) BrettMoffitt, Ford,266,12, $80,115. MIAMIMARLINS—DesignatedDFJordanyValde33. (22)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 265,11,$105,779. spin forassignment. Recalled LHPAdamConley from 34. 23) Danica Patrick, Chevrolet, 265,10,$86,515. NewOrleans(PCL). 35. 1) KyleLarson,Chevrolet, 265,9, $112,373. PITTSBU RGH PIRATES — Agreedto termswith 36. 42)ReedSorenson, Chevrolet, 264, 9,$78,410. RHPTateScioneauxandLHPIkeSchlabachonminor 37. 33) Cole Whitt, Ford,264, 7,$78,352. leaque contracts. 38. (40)Wil Kimmel, Ford,263,6, $73,752. ST. LOUIC SARDINALS—PlacedRHPMitch Harris 39. (41)J.J. Yeley,Toyota, 260,0,$69,680. on the15-day DL,retroactivetoThursday.Dptioned1B 40. (43)AlexKennedy, Chevrolet, 247, 4,$65,680. 41. I35) JebBurt on,Toyota,suspension,175,3,$61,680. XavierScruggsto Memphis(PCL). AssignedSSAled42. (39)MattDiBenedeto, Toyota, accident, 145,2, mysDiazoutright toSpringfield (TL).Rec $57,680. 43. (37)JoshWise,Ford, accident,17,1, $54,180.
MOTOR SPORTS
Race Statistics Averagespeedof racewinner: 129.402Mph. Timeofrace:3hours,5minutes,42seconds. Margin of victory: 1.594 Seconds. Caution flags: 11 for49 laps. Lead changes:13amonggdrivers. Lap leaders: B.Keselowski1-32; R.Sorenson 33; Ky.Busch 34-94; B.Keselowski 95-124;Ky.Busch 125-188; R.New man 189-190; Ky.Busch191-208; A.Bowman209-210; D.Hamlin211-212; C.Edwards 213; D.Hamlin214-224;J.Logano225-247; Ky.Busch 248-267.
Leaders summary(driver, times led, taps
led):KyBusch,4times for 163taps; BKeselowski, 2 timesfor62taps;J.Logano,1timefor 23taps; D.Hamlin, 2 times for 13 laps; R.Newman, 1timefor 2 taps; A.Bowm an,1 timefor2 taps;C.Edwards,1 timefor1 lap; RrSoren son,1 timefor 1lap. Wins:J.Johnson,4; Ku.Busch,2; KyBusch, 2; D.EarnhardtJr., 2;K.Harvick, 2;C.Edwards,1; D.Hamlin, 1; M.Kenseth,1; B.Keselowski, 1; J.Logano,1; M.Truex Jr., 1. Top 16 in points: 1. K.Harvick,692;2. J.Johnson, 624;3.J.Logano,624; 4.D.Earnhardt Jr., 616;5. M.True xJr.,596;6.B.Keselowski,559;7.J.McMurray, 556; 8.Ku.Busch, 542;9. M.Kenseth, 540; 10.J.Gordon, 537;11.D.Hamlin, 522;12.K.Kahne,513; 13. P.Menard,509; 14. R.Ne wman, 497; 15.C.Bowyer, 490; 16.A.Almirola,473.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinookjack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updated Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 2,382 26 2 940 605 TheDaffes 1,411 230 3 8 8 252 John Day 1,021 11 4 188 103 McNary 1,321 1 2 9 135 78 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedFriday. Chnk Jchnk Btlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 346,17727,542 17,665 9,158 TheDaffes 287,027 23,716 5,422 2,814 JohnDay 246,176 19,315 4,526 2,014 McNary 225,138 14,609 3,374 1,54
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
Giants 8, Phillies 5
NEW FIFTH STARTER?
All TimesPDT
SAN FRANCISCO — Angel Pagan NEW YORK — Matt Harvey and Matt Duffy each drove in a pitched sevenstrong innings and hit his first career home runto pair of runs in the sixth inning and San Francisco rallied to beat lead the New York Mets to awin Philadelphia. Brandon Crawford over Arizona. had three hits and drove in a run Arizona NewYork for the Giants, who have won ab r hbi ab r hbi three of four after a seven-game Pollockcf 2 1 0 0 Lagarscf 4 0 0 0 DPerltlf 2 1 1 2 Tejadass 411 1 losing streak. Duffy, who had 4 0 0 0 Cuddyrlf 4 0 1 0 four hits in Friday night's victory, Gldsch1b T omasrf 4 0 1 0 Familip 0 0 0 0 Lamb3b 4 0 0 0 WFlors2b 3 0 0 0 was a home runshy ofthecycle 4 0 1 0 Duda1b 2 1 1 1 for the second straight day. Josh Wcastllc Owings2b 3 0 0 0 MyryJrrf 3 0 0 0 Osich (1-0) recorded the final out Delgadp 0 0 0 0 Plawckc 3 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Campll3b 2 1 0 0 of the sixth and earned his first Burgosp 0 0 0 0 Harveyp 2 1 1 2 major league victory. Sltlmchph 1 0 0 0 Grndrsph 1 0 0 0
AMERICANLEAGUE
NewYork Baltimore TampaBay Toronto Boston
Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Cleveland Chicago Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland
East Division W L
47 40 44 43 45 45 45 45 42 46
CentralDivision W L 51 34 48 40
Pcf GB .540 .506 3 .500 3'/2
500 31/2
.477 5'/r
Pcf GB .600 545 41/2
44 43 42 45 41 44
.506 8 .483 10 .482 10
W L 49 41 47 40 42 45 41 47 40 50
Pct GB .544 .540 '/2
West Division
.483 5t/r
.466 7 .444 9
Saturday'sGames Toronto6, KansasCity 2 Chicago WhiteSox5, ChicagoCubs1 Minnesota 9, Detroit 5 Tampa Bay3, Houston0 Oakland 5, Cleveland4 Boston5, N.Y.Yankees3 Washington 7, Baltimore4 SanDiego6,Texas5 Seattle 5,L.A.Angels 0 Today'sGam es Houston(Mccullers 4-2) at TampaBay (M.Moore 0-0),10:10a.m. Oakland(Gray9-3) at Cleveland(Kluber 4-9), 10;10 a.m. N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 8-2) at Boston(Miley8-7), 10;35a.m. Washington (Fister 3-4) at Baltimore(W.chen 4-4), 10:35a.m. Detroit (Greene 4-6) atMinnesota(Gibson7-6),11:10 a.m. Toronto(Doubront1-0) at KansasCity (Volquez8-4), 11:10a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana4-8) at ChicagoCubs (Arrieta9-5), 11:20a.m. SanDiegoP.Ross 5-7) at Texas (Galardo 7-7), 12:05 p.m. L.A. Angels(Heaney2-0) at Seattle (TWalker 7-6), 1:10 p.m. Monday'sGames No games scheduled Tuesday'sGames All-Stargam eat Cincinnati, 4 p.m.
Washington NewYork Atlanta Miami Philadelphia
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L 47 46 42 37 29
39 42 46 51 61
Pct GB
.547 .523 2 .477 6 .420 11 .322 20
Nets 4, Diamondbacks 2
StephenBrashear/The Associated Press
Evelyn Jones, center, ofWoodinville, Washington, waves tothe crowdafter throwing out theceremonial first pitch on her 108th birthday before Saturday's game between Seattle and the Los Angeles Angels.
American League
Mariners 5,Angels0
Red Sox5, Yankees3
National League
BOSTON— Hanley Ramirez hit a two-run homer, Mookie Betts had a pair of extra-base hits and David Ortiz also hadtwo hits to help Boston beat the first-place New York Yankees.The RedSox won for the 10th time in13 games. They remained in last place in the
SEATTLE —Hisashi Iwakuma pitched eight strong innings in hissecond game backfrom the disabled list and MarkTrumbo had two RBI singles to leadSeattle to a victory over the LosAngeles Angels. Iwakuma(1-1) gaveup AL East, but they closed to 5t/a three hits and two walks, and games out in the division. struck out six. He retired the last 13 batters he faced in his longest NewYork Boston r hbi ab r hbi outing since going eight innings at E llsurycf ab 4 2 3 1 Bettscf 4 1 2 1 Philadelphia last Aug. 19. Gardnrlf 4 0 1 1 B.Holt2b 3 0 1 0
Rockies 3,Braves2 DENVER —Carlos Gonzalez hit a bases-loaded bloop single in the ninth inning, driving in the decisive run in Colorado's victory over Atlanta. Misfortune hit the Braves at the outset of the Rockies' late rally. Reliever Jason Grilli (3-4) tumbled to the ground and suffered a lower left leg injury as he ran toward first to cover the bag when Drew Stubbs, the first batter he faced, hit a grounder that first baseman Chris Johnson ranged to his right to field.
Philadelphia San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi OHerrrcf 5 0 2 1 Pagan cf 5 1 1 2 ABlanc2b 3 1 1 0 Panik2b 4 1 1 0 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 MDuff y3b 5 1 3 2 J Gomzp 0 0 0 0 Poseyc 5 0 3 1 Revere ph 1 0 0 0 Pence rf 5 0 0 0 F ranco 3b 4 0 1 0 Belt 1b 4 120 Howard1b 4 1 2 2 Bcrwfrss 4 2 3 1 R uizc 3 1 0 0 GBlanclf 3 2 2 0 Aschelf 4 1 1 2 Vglsngp 1 0 0 0 D Brwnrf 3 0 0 0 Osichp 0 0 0 0 LGarcip 0 0 0 0Maxwff ph 1 0 0 0 Araujop 0 0 0 0 Strcklnp 0 0 0 0 CHrndz2b 1 0 0 0 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 Galvisss 4 1 2 0 Adrianzph 1 0 0 0 D Bchnp 1 0 0 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 D iekmnp 0 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Francrrf 2 0 0 0 Casiffap 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 5 5 9 5 Totals 3 88 156 Philadelphia 100 003 001 — 6 San Francisco 010 005 20x — 8 E—Howard (4), Pagan(1). DP—Philadelphia 1, San Francisco 1. LOB—Philadelphia 6, SanFrancisco 9. 28 —O.Herrera(18), A.Blanco(10), Galvis (8), Pagan (12), M.Duffy(13), Belt(24). 38—Galvis (2),
MDuffy(4),BCrawford (4).HR —Howard(15),Asche (5). S —Vogelsong.
IP H
Pnngtnss 3 0 2 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 Corbinp 1 0 0 0 Niwnhslf 0 0 0 0 A.Hill2b 1 0 0 0 Totals 29 2 5 2 Totals 2 84 4 4 Arizona 2 00 000 000 — 2 NewYork 0 0 0 3 1 Bgx— 4 DP — NewYork 2. LOB—Arizona5, NewYork2. HR — D.Peralta (8), Tejada(2), Duda(12), Harvey(1). SB — Owings(11). CS—Pollock(6). IP H R E R BBSO Arizona CorbinL,1-1 5 4 4 4 1 5 12-3 0 0 0 1 2 Delgado O.Perez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Burgos 1 0 0 0 0 1 NewYork HarveyW,8-6 7 5 2 2 4 9 Parnell H,3 1 0 0 0 1 0 FamiliaS,26-28 1 0 0 0 0 1 Corbinpitchedto 1batterin the6th. T—2:25. A—36,038(41,922).
Interleague
Padres 0, Rangers 5 ARLINGTON,Texas— Yangervis
R E R BBSO Solarte hit a two-run homer off
Philadelphia D.Buchana n 5 8 1 1 DiekmanH,4 13- 2 2 2 LGarcia L,3-4 BS,1-2 2-3 3 3 3 Araujo 1-3 1 2 1 Giles 2-3 0 0 0 J.Gomez 1 1 0 0 San Francisco Vogelsong 52-3 5 4 4 OsichW,1-0 1-3 0 0 0 StricklandH,B 2 - 3 2 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 KontosH,7 Lopez 1 0 0 0
0 0 1 1 0 0
3 0 1 0 0 1
3 0 0 0 0 2 -3 2 1 1 0 Rorno Casilla S,22-26 1- 3 0 0 0 0
5 0 1 0 1 0 0
Texas closer Shawn Tolleson with two outs in the ninth inning, and San Diego rallied to end a season-high six-game losing streak with a victory over the Rangers. San Diego Texas ab r hbi ab r hbi uptnJrcf 5 1 1 1 DShldscf 1 0 0 0 Solarte3b 3 3 2 2 LMartnph-cf 2 0 0 0 K empdh 4 1 2 2 Choorf 4 0 0 0 Uptonlf 5 0 1 1 Fielderdh 4 0 1 1 Alonso1b 4 0 1 0 Beltre3b 3 1 1 0 D eNrrsc 4 0 0 0 JHmltnlf 4 0 0 0 Gyorko2b 4 0 1 0 Morlnd1b 3 2 2 2 Venalerf 4 1 1 0 Andrusss 4 0 1 1 Mdlrksss 3 0 0 0 Odor2b 3 1 0 0 Wallacph 1 0 1 0 Chirinsc 4 1 2 0 Cashnrpr 0 0 0 0 Barmesss 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 6 106 Totals 3 2 5 7 4 S an Diego 0 0 2 0 1 0 003 — 6 Texas 0 12 001 010 — 5 E—Andrus (15). DP—San Diego 1, Texas1. LOB —San Diego 7, Texas6. 28—Solarte (19), Beltre (13),Andrus(15), Chirinos (13). HR—Solarte (5), Kemp (8), Moreland2 (16). S—DeShields. IP H R E R BBSO San Diego Shields 51-3 5 4 4 4 5 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 Mateo BenoitW,6-4 1 2 1 1 1 0 KimbrelS,22-23 1 0 0 0 0 3 Texas Lewis 7 5 3 3 2 5 ScheppersH,10 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 S.Freeman H,7 2- 3 0 0 0 0 0 Sh.TollesonL,2-2 2-3 5 3 3 0 0 Patton 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP —byLewis(Solarte). PB—Chirinos. T—3:11. A—36,248(48,114).
ARdrgz dh 4 1 1 1 Bogarts ss 4 0 1 1 WP —D.Buchanan2,L.Garcia 2. LosAngeles Seattle T eixeir1b 3 0 0 0 Ortizdh 3 1 2 0 T—3:17.A—41,980 (41,915). ab r hbi ab r hbi CYoungrf 4 0 2 0 HRmrzlf 4 1 2 2 Giavtll2b 3 0 0 0 AJcksncf 5 0 0 0 Headly3b 4 0 1 0 Victornrl 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Colorado Brewers 7,Dodgers1 Calhonrf 4 0 1 0 Gutirrzdh 4 0 0 0 JMrphyc 2 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Troutcf 3 0 1 0 S.Smith ph-dh1 0 1 0 BMccnph-c 2 0 0 0 Napoli1b 4 0 0 0 Maybincf 5 0 0 0 Blckmncf 4 1 3 0 Pujolsdh 4 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 0 0 Gregrsss 3 0 1 0 DeAzarf-If 4 2 2 0 LOS ANGELES— RookieTaylor Ciriaco2b 5 0 1 0 Arenad3b 4 0 1 0 Aybarss 4 0 1 0 N.cruzrf 3 3 3 0 Rfsnyd2b 3 0 0 0 Hanignc 4 0 0 1 three-hitter, Totals 33 3 9 3 Totals 3 4 5 115 Griffip 0 0 0 0 Tlwlzkss 4 0 0 0 Jungmann tossed a Pct GB Freese3b 4 0 0 0 Seager3b 2 2 2 0 C ron1b 3 0 1 0 Trumolf 3 0 2 2 N ew York 100 0 0 1 010 — 3 Ardsmp 0 0 0 0 CGnzlzrf 4 1 2 3 .562 Carlos Gomez drove in five runs Boston 001 200 20x — 6 Fltynwp 0 0 0 0 McKnrc 4 0 0 0 .511 4r/r Joyce lf 3 0 0 0 Ackleypr-If 0 0 0 0 andMilwaukee beattheLosAnC.Perezc 3 0 0 0 JMontr1b 2 0 0 1 E—J.Murphy (3). DP—New York 1, Boston2. Markksrf 4 0 1 0 Paulsn1b 3 0 1 0 .488 6r/r Morrsn1b 1 0 1 1 LOB —New York 4, Boston7. 28—Gardner (22 CJhnsn1b 4 0 1 0 LeMahi2b 3 0 1 0 geles Dodgers. Jungmann (4-1) .449 10 BMillerss 3 0 0 1 C.Young (12), Betts(22), Ortiz(15). 38—Betts (6. uribe3b 3 1 2 1 BBarnslf 3 0 1 0 .437 11 struck out sevenandwalked two Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 HR —Ellsbury (2), A.Rodriguez(18), H.Ramirez(19). JGomslf 2 0 0 0 Betncrtp 0 0 0 0 on100 pitches to help the Brewers Totals 31 0 4 0 Totals 3 1 5 9 5 SB — DeAza(5). CS—Ellsbury(6), C.Young (1). KJhnsnph-If 1 0 0 0 Fridrchp 0 0 0 0 Saturday'sGames LosAngeles 000 000 000 — 0 IP H R E R BBSD ASmnsss 3 0 0 0 WRosrph 1 0 0 0 Chicago WhiteSox5, ChicagoCubs1 improve to 5-2 in his starts. Go— 5 Seattle 021 000 20x New York Lvrnwyc 3 1 1 1 Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets4, Arizona2 mez went 2-for-3 with a walkand E—C.Wilson(2), Cron(2). LOB—LosAngeles6, NovaL,1-3 62-3 8 4 4 0 3 Wislerp 2 0 0 0 JDLRsp 2 0 0 0 Colorado 3, Atlanta2 Seattle10.28—S.smith (19), N.cruz(13). S—Zun- Warren 0 2 1 1 1 0 EPerezph 0 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Miami14,Cincinnati3 a strikeout while tying his career ino. SF —B.Miller. Shreve 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 Vizcainp 0 0 0 0 Stubbslf 2 1 1 0 Pittsburgh6,St. Louis5,14 innings high for RBls, his second five-RBI IP H R E R BBSO Mitchell 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ayilanp 0 0 0 0 Washington 7, Baltimore4 LosAngeles Boston JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 game in aweek. SanDiego6,Texas5 C.WilsonL,7-7 6 2 -3 5 3 3 4 5 E.Rodriguez W,5-2 61-3 5 2 2 1 2 JPetrsnph-2b1 0 0 0 SanFrancisco8, Philadelphia 5 Morin 0 2 2 2 1 0 Tazawa H,14 12 - 3 3 1 1 0 1 Totals 3 3 2 6 2 Totals 3 43 103 Milwaukee Milwaukee 7,L.A.Dodgers1 LosAngeles J.Alvarez 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 UeharaS,22-24 1 1 0 0 0 2 Atlanta 011 000 000 — 2 Today'sGames ab r hbi ab r hbi 1 1 0 0 0 0 Warren pi t ched to 3 ba tt e rs i n the 7t h . C olorado 200 0 0 0 001 — 3 Pestano Arizona (R.DeLaRosa 6-4) at N.Y. Mets (Niese4-8), GParralf 5 1 3 2 Pedrsncf 3 0 0 0 Shreve pitchedto1 batter in the8th. Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. Seattle 10:10a.m. Lucroyc 5 1 1 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 1 0 W,1-1 8 3 0 0 2 6 WP — Mitchell. DP — Atlanta 1. LOB —Atlanta 9, Colorado12. Braunrf 4 2 1 0 JuTrnr3b 3 0 0 0 Cincinnati(Cueto6-5) at Miami (Haren6-5), 10:10 Iwakuma 28 — Ciriaco (6), Arenado (22), Paulsen (9), B.Barnes Lind1b 3 1 1 0 AGnzlz1b 3 0 0 0 Lowe 1 1 0 0 0 2 T—3:10.A—38,047 (37,673). a.m. Morin pi t ched to 3 ba tt e rs i n the 7t h . 9). 3B — B lac km on (5). HR —uribe (8), Lavarnway CGomzcf 4 0 2 5 JoPerltp 0 0 0 0 Washington (Fister 3-4) at Baltimore(W.chen 4-4), HBP—byC.Wilson (Cano). 1), Ca.G onzalez(13). 10:35a.m. ArRmr3b 4 0 1 0 Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 Blue Jays 6, Royals 2 IP H R E R BBSO Segurass 4 0 1 0 Grandlc 3 1 2 0 ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana4-8) at ChicagoCubs T—2:42. A—40,765(47,574). Atlanta (Arrieta9-5),11:20a.m. G ennett2b 4 1 1 0 Puigrf 3 0 0 0 White Sox 5, Cubs1 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Mark Bueh- Wisler 6 6 2 2 3 7 J ngmnp 3 1 1 0 Ethierlf 1 0 0 0 SanDiego(T.Ross5-7) at Texas (Galardo 7-7), 12:05 Athletics 5, indians 4 2-3 1 0 0 1 2 Vizcai n o p.m. KHrndz ph-If 0 0 0 1 rle pitched sevenstrong innings, CHICAGO — Chris Saledomi1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Ayilan Philadelphia(Bilingsley 1-2)at SanFrancisco (HesJRoffnsss 3 0 0 0 CLEVELAND — Billy Butler's two- Edwin Encarnacion hit a two-run Ji.Johnson 1 1 0 0 0 0 ton 8-5),1:05p.m. Beachy p 1 0 0 0 nated into the eighth inning while Griffi L,3-4 0 1 1 1 0 0 Atlanta(A.Wood6-5) at Colorado(Betis 4-4), 1:10 run double with the bases loaded homer andToronto beat Kansas T sao p 0 0 0 0 outpitching Jon Lester, andthe Aardsma 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Guerrr ph 1 0 0 0 p.m. Foltynewicz 0 1 0 0 0 0 Milwaukee (Lohse5-10) at L.A.Dodgers(B.Anderson broke a tie in the eighth inning and City to snap theRoyals' six-game Lieratr p 0 0 0 0 Chicago White Soxbeat the Chiwinning streak. Colorado 5-5), 1:1 0p.m. B aezp 0 0 0 0 cago Cubs for their ninth win in 11 Oakland beat Cleveland. J.DeLaRosa 6 4 2 2 2 7 St. Louis (Cooney 0-0) at Pittsburgh(Liriano5-6), VnSlyk1b 1 0 0 0 Brothers 1-3 0 0 0 2 0 games. 5:05 p.m. Totals 36 7 127 Totals 26 1 3 1 Toronto KansasCity Oakland Cleveland Betancourt 1 2 0 0 1 0 M ilwaukee Monday'sGames 0 0 3 0 0 0 310 — 7 ab r h bi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Friedrich 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 No games scheduled L os Angeles 00 0 0 00 010 — 1 Chicago Reyesss 4 1 3 1 AEscorss 4 1 1 0 (A) Ch i cago (N) Burnscf 5 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 5 1 1 0 HawkinsW,2-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 Tuesday'sGames DP — Milwaukee3, LosAngeles1. LOB—Milwau3b 3 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Vogtc 4 2 2 0 Lindorss 4 0 0 0 Dnldsn Griffi pitched to1 batter i n the 9t h . All-Stargameat Cincinnati, 4 p.m. kee 8,LosAngeles1. 2B—G.Parra(21), Lucroy(8), Eatoncf 4 1 1 0 Fowlercf 4 0 0 0 Z obrist2b 4 1 2 0 Brantlylf 3 1 1 1 Valenci3b 2 1 1 3 KMorlsdh 4 0 1 1 Foltynewi c pi z t ched to 1 batter i n the 9t h . Braun (17), Li n d (19), C. G om e z 2 (1 8), G ran da l (10). Bautistrl 5 1 1 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Saladin3b 4 1 1 1 Rizzo1b 3 0 2 0 Reddckrf 2 2 2 1 DvMrpdh 2 0 0 0 —byAardsma(Blackmon). WP—Brothers. HR—G.Parra (9). S—Jungmann. SF—K.Hernandez. 3 1 1 0 HBP Abreu1b 4 0 1 1 Bryant3b 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 3 0 1 2 Raburnph-dh1 0 0 0 E ncrncdh 5 1 1 2 Riosrf All-Star rosters T — 3: 2 6. A — 40,620 ( 50, 3 98). IP H R E R BBSO P etrickp 0 0 0 0 Solerrf 4 0 0 0 Smoak1b 4 0 1 0 Infante2b 4 0 1 0 I.Davis1b 4 0 2 1 CSantn1b 4 1 2 2 Milwaukee Tuesdayat Cincinnati R uMrtnc 4 0 1 0 Orlandlf 2 0 0 1 Dukep 0 0 0 0 Denorfilf 4 0 1 0 C anhalf 3 0 0 0 Mossrf 3 0 0 0 (x-inactive;r-injury replacement; I-Final Vote Fuldlf P illarcf 3 0 1 0 Buterac 3 0 1 0 J ungmann W ,4-1 9 3 1 1 2 7 Mecarrlf 3 1 1 0 Scastross 3 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 urshela3b 4 1 2 0 Carrerlf 4 1 0 0 JDysoncf 3 0 0 0 Los Angeles AvGarcrf 4 1 1 0 MMntrc 1 0 0 0 winner) Pirates 6, Cardinals 5 (14 inn.) S ogard3b-ss 4 0 0 0 Bourncf 3 0 0 0 BeachyL,0-1 4 5 3 3 3 2 AIRmrzss 4 1 1 1 Tegrdnc 3 0 0 0 Starters — C:SalvadorPerez,Royals. 1B: Semienss 4 0 1 0 RPerezc 4 0 2 1 Travis2b 4 1 2 0 x-MiguelCabrera,Tigers; Albert Pujols, Angels.2B: Lawrie3b 0 0 0 0 Totals 38 6 1 1 6 Totals 30 2 5 2 Tsao 2 2 0 0 0 2 Flowrsc 4 0 2 2 Lesterp 2 0 0 0 PITTSBURGH — Andrew Mc2-3 2 3 3 1 0 CSnchz2b 4 0 1 0 JHerrrph 1 0 1 1 Toronto 0 00 200 103 — 6 Liberatore Jose Altuve,Astros.3B:JoshDonaldson,BlueJays. Totals 3 4 5 104 Totals 3 3 4 8 4 1 -3 1 0 0 0 0 Salep 3 0 0 0 NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 Kansas City 10 0 000 100 — 2 Cutchen's two-run home run in the Baez SS:AlcidesEscobar,Royals. DF:Mike Trout, An- Oakland 100 000 130 — 6 E—Infante (6). LOB —Toronto 10, KansasCity 4. 14th inning cappedPittsburgh's Jo.Peralta 1 2 1 1 0 1 LaRoch 1b 1 0 0 0 EJcksn p 0 0 0 0 gels; Lorenzo Cain, Royals; x-AlexGordon, Royals; C leveland 000 0 0 1 120 — 4 Reyes (15), A.Escobar (16), Rios(5). HR —VaNicasio 1 0 0 0 1 1 Coghln ph 1 0 0 0 Adam Jones, Orioles. DH:NelsonCruz,Mariners E—Moss (4). DP—Oakland 1, Cleveland 1. 2B — third rally of the night and the Pi T — 2: 5 6. A — 49,0 8 1 (56, 0 00). Reserves — P:Chris Archer,Rays;Dellin LOB ARussll 2b 3 0 1 0 —Oakland5, Cleveland6. 28—Vogt (13), Red- lencia(6),Encarnacion (18). SB—Reyes3 (14), Pilar T otals 35 5 9 5 Totals 3 31 6 1 Betances,Yankees;BradBoxberger, Rays; Zach dick (12),B.Butler (17),I.Davis(13), C.Santana(14), (13). CS —Ru.Martin (4). S—Moustakas, Orlando. rates beat St. Louis. McCutchen's IP H R E R BBSO Britton, Orioles;WadeDavis, Royals; SonnyGray, urshela(2). 3B—Kipnis (6). HR—C.Santana(10). C hicago(A) 2 0 0 0 0 0 300 — 5 Marlins 14, Reds 3 homer to center off Nick GreenAthletics; Felix Hernandez,Mariners; Kelvin Her- SB — C hicago(N) 0 0 0 0 0 0 100 — 1 C.Santana (5). CS—Sogard (1). S—Bourn. Toronto E—Bryant (11). DP—Chicago(A) 1, Chicago(N) rera, RoyalsDal ; lasKeuchel, Astros; DarrenO'Day, SF — BuehrleW,10-5 7 5 2 2 0 2 wood (0-1) followed Neil Walker's Reddick. MIAMI — Miami lost All-Star Orioles; GlenPerkins, Twins;David Price,Tigers; Schultz H,3 1 0 0 0 0 1 1. LOB —Chicago (A)4, Chicago(N)7. 28—Eaton IP H R E R BBSD leadoff single and extended his Chris Sale, WhiteSox. C:Russell Martin, Blue Oakland Osuna 1 0 0 0 0 1 (13), Flowers (7), C.Sanchez(7), J.Herrera(2). 3Bsecond baseman Dee Gordon to hitting streak to acareer-high 18 Jays; Stephen Vogt, Athletics. 1B:r-MarkTeixeira, Bassitt KansasCity Saladino(1). SB—Me.cabrera(1). 61-3 7 2 2 1 3 a dislocated left thumb, and they Yankees. 2B: BrockHolt, RedSox; JasonKipnis, O'FlaherlW, C.YoungL,7-5 6 5 3 3 2 4 games. It was his 12th homerun IP H R E R BBSO y 1-2 2-3 0 1 1 1 0 Indians; r-Brian Dozier, Minnesota.SB: Manny MujicaH,2 13 2 0 0 0 0 Chicago (A) 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 FMorales responded with a franchise-reof the season. 2 -3 0 0 0 0 1 Machado,Orioles;f-Mike Moustakas,Royals. SS: PomeranzH,B 1- 3 Madson Sale W, 8 -4 7 6 1 1 1 10 0 0 0 0 1 cord offensive outburst, beating Petricka Jose Iglesias, Tigers. OF:JoseBautista, BlueJays; ClippardS,17-19 1 1-3 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 12-3 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 Hochevar r-BrettGardner,Yankees;AdamJones, Orioles; J.D. Cleveland Finnegan 1 4 3 3 1 1 St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati. The Marlins totaled Duke 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Martinez, Tigers. DH:PrinceFielder, Rangers. C.Young pi t ched to 1 ba tt e rin the 7th. ab r hbi ab r hbi Chicago (N) Carrasco 7 6 2 2 1 7 a season-high 21 hits, and their —byBuehrle (Rios). WP —FMorales. NATIONALLEAGUE Mcrpnt3b 5 3 1 0 GPolncrf 6 0 1 0 LesterLr4-8 7 7 5 4 0 8 McAffisterL,2-3 2- 3 1 1 1 0 1 HBP run total was also a season high Ne.Ramirez Starters — C: Buster Posey, Giants. 1B:Paul Rzepczynski Wong2b 4 0 2 0 NWalkr2b 7 1 2 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 1 1 0 T—2:42.A—30,790 (37,903). Goldsc hmidt, Diamondbacks.2B: Dee Gordon, B.Shaw Tuivaillp 0 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 4 2 1 2 EJackson 1 1 0 0 0 1 11-3 2 0 0 0 1 after they had scored just12 Marlins.SB:ToddFrazier, Reds.SS: JhonnyPer- Rzepczynskipitchedto 2 batters inthe8th. TCruzph 1 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 0 1 0 Sale pitched to1 batterinthe8th. Twins 9, Tigers5 runs in the past seven games. Grenwdp 0 0 0 0 DGuerrp 1 0 0 0 WP — Lester. PB—Flowers. alta, Cardinals.DF:BryceHarper, Nationals; Matt O'Flahertypitchedto1 batter inthe8th. Holliday,Cardinals; x-GiancarloStanton,Marlins; HBP T—2:45. A—41,596(40,929). —byBassitt (Moss).WP—Bassitt. JhPerltss 6 0 2 1 Worleyp 0 0 0 0 Christian Yelich, J.T. Realmuto AndrewMccutchen,Pirates MINNEAPOLIS — Torii Hunter' s T—3:08. A—28,733(36,856). Heywrdrf 3 0 0 1 Kang3b 5 2 2 1 and Cole Gillespie had three hits Reserves —P:MadisonBumgarner, Giants;A.J. Siegristp 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz1b 4 0 1 1 towering two-run homer into the Nationals 7, Orioles4 each. Burnett,Pirates;Aroldis Chapman, Reds; Gerrit Cole, p 0 0 0 0 GHrndz pr 0 0 0 0 0 third deck against his former team Maness Pirates;JacobdeGrom,Mets; ZackGreinke, Dodgers; Rays 3, Astros DJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Watson p 0 0 0 0 f-CarlosMartinez,Cardinals; MarkMelancon, Pirates; BALTIMORE —Bryce Harper and highlighted a 16-hit afternoon for Choate p 0 0 0 0 SRdrgzlf 2 0 0 0 Cincinnati Miami ShelbyMiler, Braves;JonathanPapelbon, Philies; ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Jake Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Cervellic 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Danny Espinosa homered in a Minnesota, and theTwins beat Francisco Rodriguez,Brewers; Trevor Rosenthal, Odorizzi won in his first start in Soclvchp 0 0 0 0 Stewartc 5 0 1 1 Phillips 2b 5 0 1 0 DGordn 2b 4 1 3 1 Cardinals;MaxScherzer, Nationals; MichaelWacha, Detroit. Kozmaph-2b 2 0 0 0 Mercer ss 6 0 1 0 Votto1b 2 0 0 0 Rojaspr-2b 1 1 0 0 four-run sixth inning, and WashCardinals.C: Yasma ni Grandal, Dodgers;Yadier five weeks, Rene Rivera drove in Molinac 6 0 1 1 Burnett p 1 1 1 1 F razier3b 3 0 1 1 Yelichlf 5 2 3 2 ington beat Baltimore to end a Molina, Cardinals1B: . Adrian Gonzalez, Dodgers; Rynlds1b 6 2 2 2 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Minnesota Brucerf 4 1 3 0 Hchvrrss 5 1 1 1 Detroit three-game skid. Anthony Rizzo,Dubs.2B:DJLeMahieu,Rockies;Joe two runs andTampaBaybeat slidGrichklf-rf 6 0 3 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 B yrdlf 4 0 0 0 Bour1b 4 1 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Panik,Giants;r-TroyTulowitzki. SB:NolanArenado, ing Houston. Phamcf-If 5 0 1 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 B.Penac 3 0 0 0 McGeh3b 5 1 2 2 Kinsler 2b 5 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 4 1 1 0 Rockies; r-Kris Bryant,Cubs.SS:BrandonCrawford, Washington Baltimore Suarezss 3 1 1 1 Gillespicf 5 3 3 2 C espdslf 5 0 2 1 TrHntrrf 5 1 2 2 Lackeyp 3 0 0 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 Giants.DF:JocPederson, Dodgers;A.J. Pollock,Di- Houston Bourjoscf 3 0 0 0 Ishikawph-1b 3 0 0 0 DJssJrph-ss 1 0 0 0 Realmtc 5 2 3 4 ab r hbi ab r hbi TampaBay VMrtnzdh 3 1 1 1 Mauer1b 5 1 1 0 amondba cks;JustinUpton,Padres. Totals 5 1 5 125 Totals 4 9 6 116 MTayl r cf 5 0 2 2 MMchd3b 3110 ab r hbi ab r hbi JMarteph-dh 2 0 0 1 Sanodh 4 0 1 1 Rlglessp 2 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 5 1 2 0 St. Louis 011 010 000 100 01 — 5 YEscor3b 5 0 1 0 Parmel1b 5020 Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 Guyercf-rf 3 0 1 1 Badnhpp 0 0 0 0 Conleyp 0 0 0 0 JMrtnzrf 4 1 1 0 Plouffe3b 4 2 3 0 Pittsburgh 000 010 020 100 02 — 6 Harperrf 4 1 1 1 A.Jonescf 5 0 0 0 T uckerrf 4 0 1 0 Jasodh 4 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 1 1 Dietrchph 1 1 1 0 Krauss1b 4 0 0 0 ERosarlf 4 2 3 0 History No outswhenwinningrunscored. CRonsndh 4 1 2 0 Paredsdh 4 0 2 1 Correass 3 0 1 0 Longori3b 3 0 1 0 Adcockp 0 0 0 0 SDysonp 0 0 0 0 C stllns3b 3 1 1 0 Hickscf 3 1 2 2 E — R e ynol d s (4), W on g (10), Gri c huk (2), St e wart W Ramsc 3 2 1 0 Sniderlf 3 0 0 0 This Date InBaseball CIRsmscf-If 4 0 0 0 Forsyth2b 4 0 2 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 Morseph 1 0 0 0 JMccnc 3 0 2 2 KSuzukc 4 1 1 2 Espinos2b 4 2 2 3 Reimldph-If 1 0 0 0 July 12 Gattisdh 4 0 0 0 JButlerrf-If 4 1 0 0 (5), PAl v arez (14). DP — S t. Loui s 1, Pi t tsburgh 2. V iffarrlp 0 0 0 0 Dunnp 1 0 1 0 Jlglesisss 4 0 1 0 DaSntnss 4 0 2 2 LOB —St. Louis 12,Pitsburgh 12.2B—Grichuk2 (15), Contrrsp 0 0 0 0 B.Handp 1 0 0 0 TMoore1b 4 0 1 0 Pearcerf 4 1 1 1 1901 — CyYoungoftheBostonRedSoxwonhis Valuen3b 3 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 0 0 0 RDaviscf 4 2 2 0 Dsmndss 3 1 0 0 JHardyss 3 1 1 0 300thgamewith a5-3victory overthePhiladelphia A's. Congerc 2 0 0 0 Acarerss 1 1 1 0 Pham(4),SMade(16).38—Kang(2). HR—Reynolds2 Bourgsph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 5 115 Totals 3 7 9 169 dnDkkrlf 2 0 1 0 Flahrly2b 4 0 0 0 1946 —Tommy HolmesoftheBostonBraves Singltn1b 1 0 0 0 Kiermrcf 2 0 0 0 (8), Mccutchen (12), Burnett (1).SB—M.carpenter (3), BHmltncf 4 1 1 0 Detroit 000 310 100 — 5 wenthitlessto endhis consecutive-gamehitting streak Carterph-1b 2 0 0 0 Elmorelf-ss 2 1 0 0 Minnesota — 9 W ong 2 (1 0), H ey w ard 2 (11). S — B ur ne t . SF — M olina . Totals 3 3 3 8 3 Totals 4 3 142114 Josephc 2 1 2 2 0 3 4 0 0 2 Bgx at 37gam es,anNLrecordthat stooduntil PeteRose P resleylf 2 0 0 0 Riverac 3 0 2 2 E—Kinsler (4). DP—Detroit 2, Minnesota 1. IP H R E R BBSO C incinnati 011 0 0 1 0 00 — 3 Wietersph 1 0 1 0 broke it in1978. MGnzlph z 1010 LOB —Detroit 7, Minnesota7. 28—Cespedes (27), St. Louis Miami 000 060 81x — 14 Totals 34 7 11 6 Totals 35 4 10 4 1949 —LarryDobyof theCleveland Indiansand Mrsnckpr-cf 0 0 0 0 62-3 5 1 1 2 5 DP — Cincinnati 1. LOB —Cincinnati 7, MiW ashington 02 0 0 04 001 — 7 Castellanos (13), R.Davis (10), M auer(16), Sano(4), Lackey Jacki eRobinson,RoyCampanellaandDonNewcombe Totals 30 0 3 0 Totals 3 0 3 7 3 2 2 1 1 1 ami 7. 28 —Frazier (25), Bour(7), Gillespie (5), B altimore 120 1 0 0 0 00 — 4 Da.Santana (9). 38—Hicks (1). HR —VMartinez(5), SiegristBS,3-7 2 - 3 of the hostBrooklynDodgers becamethe first black Houston 0 00 000 000 — 0 TorHun 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Realmuto (12). HR DP — Washington 2, Baltimore 2. LOB —Washter(14). SB—Plouffe (2).CS —E.Rosario(4). Maness —Suarez (4), Gillespie (1), Bay 03 0 000 Bgx— 3 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Realmuto(4). SB—B.Hamilton 2(44). S—Conley. ington 4, Baltimore8. 28—C.Robinson(8), Parmelee playerstoappear in anAff-Star gameasthe AL took Tampa IP H R E R BBSD Choate advantage of fiveNLerrors towin11-7 atEbbets Field DP— Houston1.LOB— Houston8,TampaBay6. Detroit Rosenthal 1 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 SF — Frazier. (6). 38 —den Dekker(1). HR—Harper (26), Espinosa 28 — Ma.Gonzalez (13), A.cabrera(16), Rivera(12). SimonL,8-6 1 0 0 0 1 0 in Brooklyn. 21- 3 10 7 5 0 1 Socolovich IP H R E R BBSO (10), Pearce (7), Joseph(6). SB—Desmond (5). S1961 —AffieReynoldsof theNewYorkYankees SB — Longoria (3). 2 0 0 0 0 2 Cincinnati den Dekker. Farmer 3135 2 2 1 4 Tuivailala IP H R E R BBSD Krol 2 2 2 0 0 R.lglesiasL,1-2 4 1 -3 8 IP H R E R BBSO beatBobFeler of theIndians 1-0with ano-hit game 1 0 0 0 1 2 GreenwoodL,0-1 0 5 5 0 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 Washington at Cleveland. GeneWoodling's homerunwasthedif- Houston A.Wilson Badenhop Burnett 6 1-3 6 3 3 3 6 Z immerm ann W ,8-5 5 9 4 4 0 4 ference. KeuchelL,11-4 7 7 3 3 2 4 N.Feliz 1 1 0 0 0 1 Adcock 1 0 0 0 0 1 1955 —St. Louis' StanMusial hit FrankSulliBastardo 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 M.Parra 12-3 0 0 0 3 0 WHarris 23 0 0 0 1 1 Minnesota 0 5 5 5 0 0 TreinenH,5 van's first pitchof the12th inning for a home runto Stpp 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 PHughes 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Viffarreal 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 W,8-6 5 8 4 4 0 3 J.Hughes 1 5 3 3 0 1 RiveroH,1 H,5 1 0 0 0 0 2 give the NL All-Star teama 6-5victory overtheAL TampaBay BoyerH,15 1 2 1 1 1 1 Caminero 1 1 0 0 0 2 Contreras 1 2 1 1 0 0 Janssen at Milwaukee'Co s unty Stadium.TheALhad led5-0 Odori zziW,5-5 5 2-3 2 0 0 3 5 Duensing 11-3 0 0 0 0 2 Watson 1 1 0 0 0 1 Miami StorenS,26-28 1 1 0 0 1 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Fien 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 D.Guerra after sixinnings. GeltzH,11 3 3 1 1 0 2 ConleyW,1-0 5 5 2 2 2 2 Baltimore 1979 —Inthemostil-fated promotion in base- McGee H,12 1 1 0 0 1 1 Perkins 1 0 0 0 0 1 WorleyW,3-4 2 1 1 1 1 1 S.DysonH,B 1 2 1 1 1 0 M i.Gon zalezL,7-6 5 9 6 6 2 4 ball history,thousandsof fans overran the Comiskey Jepsen H,19 1 0 0 0 0 0 Boyerpitchedto 2batters in the7th. Greenwood pitched to2 batters inthe14th. DunnH,15 1 0 0 0 0 1 Roe 2 1 0 0 0 2 HBP — by L ac ke y (K an g), by B urn e t (H e yw ard, M .carParkfieldduring"DiscoDemolition Night"andcaused BoxbergerS,22-24 1 0 0 0 1 0 HBP —byFarmer (Dozier). WP—A.Wilson. 8Hand 2 1 0 0 0 1 Tom.Hunter 2 1 1 1 1 1 the Chicago White Soxto forfeit thesecondgame of T—2:41. A—18,479(31,042). T—3:27.A—32,365 (39,021). penter),byD.Guerra(Wong). M.Parrapitchedto 5batters inthe 7th. Mi.Gonzalepi ztchedto4 batters inthe6th. adoublehea der after losingto Detroit 4-1in thefirst. T—5:04. A—37,318(38,362). T—2:54.A—21,052 (37,442). T—3:05. A—44,495(45,971). CentralDivision W L 56 32 52 35 46 40 39 46 38 51 West Division W L Los Angeles 50 39 SanFrancisco 45 43 Arizona 42 44 SanDiego 40 49 Colorado 38 49 St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee
Pct GB .636 .598 3'/r .535 9 .459 15'/r .427 18'/r
I,
I)
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
UFC 189
By Greg Bescham
Robbie Lawler also defended his welterweight title in spectacularly bloody fashion, stopping Canada's Rory MacDonald with a big left hand
future date with Aldo.
on Saturday night by stopping Chad Mendes with three seconds left in the third round
early in the fifth round. Jere-
dain for the Brazilian and the
with a vicious series of strikes.
third round of a wild brawl fea-
McGregor (18-2) spent much of the first two rounds on his
turing multiple knockdowns by both fighters, highlighting an action-filled pay-per-view card. But everything was a prologue to the biggest moment
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — Conor McGregor won the UFC interim featherweight title at UFC 189
my Stephens stopped Dennis Bermudez 32seconds into the
back, but the Irish sensation
finished the fight with a lightning-quick combination. After a big left hand put Mendes
down, McGregor pounded away for the stoppage and John Locher I The Associated Press then jumped onto the cage in Conor McGregor lands a left to Chad Mendes to end their interim celebration. featherweight title bout at UFC 189 on Saturday in Lss Vegas. He later sunk to his knees in
y et in t h e m e teoric M M A rise of McGregor, the former
plumber from Dublin who has rocketed through his sport by deploying his sharp tongue as tears while thousands of Irish much as his heavy hands. fans at the MGM Grand Gar- in for injured featherweight gor i n sportsmanship after McGregor has won 14 conden Arena roared in adoration. champion Jose Aldo just 2 /~ a promotion dominated by secutive fights, and now he has Mendes (17-3), who stepped weeks ago, embraced McGre- high-level trash talk. a UFC belt and an enormous
McGregor and the UFC spent the past several months promoting a title fight with Aldo. McGregor's vocal dis-
champ ion' s genuine anger at the Irish challenger's pos-
fog as she serenaded the crowd. Country singer Aaron Lewis did the same for Mendes moments later as the Irish crowd loudly booed. Mendes landed the first major strike when he cut McGre-
gor above the right eye in the first round. McGregor smiled sell — but the oft-injured Aldo it off and kept playing to the broke a rib while sparring. crowd, but Mendes spent much McGregor was undaunt- of the second round on top of ed. He vowed to stay on the McGregor as the crowd booed. card forthe thousands of fans Mendes again got top contraveling to Las Vegas from trol in the third, but McGreIreland, and he agreed to a gor escapedlate in the round dangerous bout with Mendes, — and his pugilistic prowess a vicious wrestler whose only decided it. McGregor leaned two careerlosseswereagainst in to land a right-left combinaAldo. tion that stunned Mendes, and Before McGregor began his McGregor pounced with blows walk to the cage, a small cir- on his prone opponent until cularstage carrying Sinead referee Herb Dean had to stop O' Connor rose out of a green it three seconds before the bell. turing made it an irresistible
GOLF ROUNDUP
Yang maintainsleadat U.S. Women'sOpen . )i
L"
The Associated Press LANCASTER, Pa.— Amy Yang is back in the final
tie for fifth at 2-under 208, along with two-time winner
pairing at the U.S. Women' s
History was made in the third round when South Ko-
Open, and this time she's prepared for the daunting challenge ahead. The 25-year-old South Korean beat back all of Stacy Lewis' challenges in the third round at Lancaster Country Club on Saturday, and the
Inbee Park (70). rea's Chella Choi shot the firstnine-hole score of29 for the championship. But the
24-year-oldmissed a threefoot putt on her final hole that would have tied the champi-
onship's single-round scoring record.She settled for a Yang three strokes ahead of 6-under 64, shooting up the Lewis. leaderboard into the pack at Today, for the third time 2 under. in four years and fourth time Also on Saturday: in six, she will be in the final Spieth surges to 2-shot group at a U.S. Open. This lead at John Deere Classic: time, she will have a three- SILVIS, Ill. — Jordan Spieth stroke cushion over her near- shot a career-best 10-under day ended as it started: with
(1
'"s-
est competitor and plenty of
61 to grab a two-shot lead at
experience to draw on. the John Deere Classic. Spi"It was good experience, eth was at 17-under 196 after Kevin Duke/The Bulletin
The Special Olympics Oregon High Desert golf team stops for a team photo during practice Wednesday at Awbrey Glen Golf Club in Bend. Around 20 athletes and eight coaches made the trip to Newberg this weekend for the Oregon State Summer Games.
Special
Other courses in Central
Continued from D1 "They have so much of what I call unadulterated joy,"
she added, "and they root for each other in a way that you just don't see in regular competitions. "The joy they show when just putting the ball in the hole,
it's really fun."
Courses help out Rowland arranges and oversees practices at Awbrey Glen and rounds at courses
throughout the area for the High Desert team. "We' ve been really fortu-
nate here at Awbrey," she said. "Not only do we have the putting, chipping and driving range, we' ve also got the Loop Course for the athletes that are higher functioning to play. "They' ve been so generous here, and they've been doing it for 16 years." According to Rowland, the pros at Awbrey Glen have offered instructional assistance from time to time. And the course has provided starter
sets for Special Olympians in need of clubs.
90s, sothere are some pretty
Oregon have donated rounds good players." of golf and practice time for The team took about 20 the Special Olympics team. players — males and females, "I contact the courses in teens and adults — to the state the area and basically beg for games this weekend, along free golf," Rowland laughed. with eight coaches. "They have been incredible. "Each of the guys and gals This year I think we' ve played play one day," Sandgren said. on about s e ven d i f f erent "The other day they have an courses. Olympic Village and they are "Most of our clients come outside the whole day, have from low-income households, a dinner and dance and it's a so when you consider how whole lot of fun for them." much it costs to play golf, the Now retired and a member opportunity for them to play at Awbrey Glen, Sandgren these courses is amazing. donates his time to the team. "It's a way to give back and "They would never be able to afford to play otherwise." support the community," he The High Desert team was said, "and I'm a golf lover, so getting its last practice in this was a good fit." Wednesday at Awbrey Glen for the Oregon Summer State The athletes Games in Newberg, where Special Olympian Ryan they were expected to take Franson, 24, has been playing part this weekend in a variety in thegames for four years, of golf competitions. advancing through regionals Contestants compete acand state last year (he won cording to their ability; from both) and finishing second at putting, chipping, driving and nationals, shooting a 52 for irons golf skills, to nine-hol- nine holes. ers, all the way up to those H is favorite parts of t h e who play 18. game'? Improving, being out "We' ve got some real good on the course, and playing golf golfers," Sandgren s a id. with others. "Some of them shoot in the "I like practicing and get-
the last two — the final group experience," she said. "Me
the best round of the tour-
like what I practice."
Stefani, Justin Thomas and
nament since Steve Stricker and my coach, we prepared. shot a 60 five years ago. DanWe practiced hard. I' ll go out ny Lee is second after shootthere and I' ll just do my best, ing a 62, followed by Shawn
ting better, hanging out and making new friends," he said. His High Desert teammate Jonny Goddard, 30, had a special day Wednesday, getting his first career hole-in-one on the 174-yard fifth hole on the
Yang shot a 1-under 69 Johnson Wagner at 14 under. Saturday, the same as Lewis, Smith shoots 64, leads as the last pair off went toe- Champions Tour tournament: to-toe, giving the pairing a GLENVIEW, Ill. — Jerry match-play feel. Smith matched a tournament Yang pushed her lead to record with an 8-under-par
Loop Course at Awbrey Glen.
four strokes at the 13th be-
64 to take a three-shot lead
He finished second at state last yearbehindFranson. Goddard has been playing awhile, starting when he was a child, and is a big fan of golf-
fore Lewis capitalized on a
after the second round of the Encompass Championship.
ers on the PGA Tour.
"Those guys are so good, I love watching them," he said. "I really like Bubba Watson,
because he won the Masters last year."
G oddard's swing is i m pressive. He knocked it on the green on the f irst hole
Wednesday, and he has shot in the 80s as recently as a few weeks ago. He is appreciative of Awbrey Glen and other courses in the area, which regularly get the team out on the course. "All the courses are so nice," he said. "They sponsored us last year and again this year, and always give us the best prices to play." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, kduke@bendbulletirt.corn.
two-stroke swing at the 14th, closing within two. But Lew-
Smith is at 14-under 130 as
is' struggles with putting car- he seeks his first professionried over to the 17th, where al title of any kind. Mark she made a three-putt bogey, Goodes was second, while sending Yang's advantage Bart Bryant, Fred Funk and back to three. David Frost are among the Yang's three-day total group five strokes back. of 8-under 202 is the secBrooks holds off chasers to ond-lowest in championship stay in lead at Scottish Open: history behind Julie Inkster's GULLANE, Scotland — Un201 in 1999. Lewis was at 5-under 205.
On "moving day," all the action was outside the top two spots.
heralded Daniel Brooks over-
came a dreadful start and the toughest conditions of
the week to keep his unlikely lead at the Scottish Open,
In Gee Chun, playing in her after a third round in which Rickie Fowler surged up the leaderboard and Justin Rose from South Korea is alone in fell away. The 528th-ranked third place at 4-under 206. Ja- Brooks, who surprisingly pan's Shiho Oyama is fourth took a three-shot lead after first U.S. Open, shot a second 2-under 68. The 20-year-old
at 3 under after a 71.
the second round, recovered
Defending champion Michelle Wie played with nagging hip and ankle pain, firing a 68. She is in a four-way
from a double bogey on his first hole to shoot a 1-under 69 and maintain a one-stroke
lead on 12-under 198.
MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR ~
-~
e~
1P~ & -. ~
,J sf
Timonthy D. a Esley/TheAssociated Press
Kyle Busch does a burnout after his victory in the NASCAR Sprint
Cup series race in Sparta, Kentucky, on Saturday.
Victory pushes Kyle Buschcloser to playoff By Gary B. Graves The Associated Press
laps after starting ninth for his second victory here in
SPARTA, Ky. — Though five starts. But he had to outK yle Busch r e m ains o u t - last Logano during one late
"Man, that really worked for
tucky from the pole. Defending race champion Busch also gained two spots Brad Keselowski, whose No.
us.
to stand 35th in points, five
side NAS CAR's champion- segment in which they traded below the position needed to ship playoff looking in, his leadsforseverallaps. qualify for the Chase. "That right there is what we prospects continue getting Busch finally got the upper stronger. hand on Logano's No. 22 Ford have to do," he added. "Just to There was no doubting the on lap 248 and he went on to score as many points as we strength of his No. 18 Toyota his second victory in three possibly can and score those Camry on Saturday night, es- races after missing the first 11 wms. pecially in the clutch. events with leg and foot injuBusch's teammates Denny Busch outdueled Joey Lo- ries sustained in February at Hamlin, Carl Edwards and gano late to win the Sprint Daytona. Matt Kenseth followed Loga"He got away from me and no as Joe Gibbs Racing ToyoCup Series race at Kentucky Speedway, moving a l i ttle I was nervous (that) I wasn' t tas dominated the top five. closer to making the 10-race going to be able to get back to Busch, who won last month's him," Busch said, "but I knew championship playoff. road race in Sonoma, CaliforBusch dominated the 400- to just try something different nia, in his fifth start back, won mile race, leading 163 of 267 to go get him. the inaugural 2011 race at Ken-
2 Ford was the strongest car at
many points in the race, led 62 laps after starting second. But he struggled late to overcome pit road issues and finished sixth. A scary incident occurred on lap 125 when Keselowski hit his right front tire carrier as he tried to exit his stall.
The defending race winner was cleared to go but couldn' t see the crew member, who
slipped while trying to move the heavy tire and was tapped as he furiously moved out of
the way.
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 5
CYCLING: TOUR DE FRANCE
SUMO WRESTLING
Frenchman powers past top riders for his1st career Tour stage victory By Jerome Pugmire
2013, it's hard to say," Froome
The Associated Press
said. "When we arrive in the Pyrenees that will be the Tour.
MUR D E BRE T A GNE, France — Frenchman Alexis Vuillermoz won the eighth
The fight for the yellow jersey will begin then." Before that, Froome will
stage of the Tour de France on Saturday with a late attack on the final climb, while British
rider Chris Froome kept the leader's yellow jersey and defending champion Vincenzo Nibali lost valuable time.
-
'
turn his attention to the undulating 17.4-mile time trial
,y,ttt: , 't.-,tir 'r
through Brittany, well suited to strong climbers like him as it
a
finishes with a l.l-mile ascent.
Overall, Froome leads Van Garderen by 13 seconds, Contador by 36, Nibali by 1:48 and Quintana by 1:56.
The mostly flat 112.5-mile
ride finished with a short and sharp 1.2-mile climb up Mur de Bretagne.
"I really see as much as 20
or 30 seconds won or lost (beearlymove, Froome counterat- Alexis Vuillermoz breaks away from the pack in the final climb on his tween contenders)," Froome tacked about850 meters from way to winning the eighth stage of the Tour de France on Saturday. said. "It's going to go down to the end and briefly moved into who can deliver five guys fresh the lead. But Vuillermoz reenough to get off that final sponded with a strong attack friends." Froome let him go and rolled climb." and then raised both his arms The climb took its toll and in 10 seconds later in eighth Van Garderen is a serious in the air when he crossed the Nibali lost 10 seconds to 2013 place. threat to take Froome's yellow "In my mountain bike days, jersey. line to give French riders a first champion Froome and to his win on this year's Tour. other main Tour rivals: two- when I was next to a great His BM C t ea m i n cludes Vuillermoz, a former moun- time champion Alberto Con- champion I wasn't scared to Rohan Dennis — the Austratain bike specialist, finished tador, 2013 runner-up Nairo attack them," Vuillermoz said. lian rider who won the Tour's third on stage 3, which also Quintana of Colombia and "I' ve kept that audacity in road opening stage individual time finished with a sharp climb. American Tejay Van Gard- racing." trial in a record average speed "It's always been a child- eren, who is a serious threat Behind them, Nibali crawled — and it won the team time hood dream of mine to win to take the yellow jersey after up at a sluggish pace to finish trial at last year's world chama stage on the Tour," said the today's team time trial. 30th. pionships and finished first at 27-year-old Vuillermoz. "I lost "I was not feeling so good," the Criterium du Dauphine last As the r i ders started to my father three years ago. I climb, Froome positioned him- Nibali said. "I could not re- month. "With the team I have and was thinking of him a lot today self to the right, while Vuill- spond to the acceleration." Today's ninth stage is a team what they have shown so far, and I hope he's proud of me ... ermoz and two otherriders He's the one who gave me this pushed ahead. Froome then time trial and Monday is a we are pretty confident," Van passion for the Tour de France. launched one of his trademark well-earned rest day. Garderen said. "We have four "I feel really good at the world champions in that disciHe would sleep out on the stag- blistering attacks but, after es with his cousins and his Vuillermoz responded in kind, moment. Better or worse than pline on the team." After Vuillermoz made an
Laurent Cirpiani /The Associated Press
Tour Continued from D1 While Tek le h a imanot finished 63rd, 1 minute, 13
sey because of points he acquired previously. His status is unlikely to continue when
,e/ /~ -
climbs in the Pyrenees begin Tuesday.
.
I
Not that anyone is com-
sorr
~ The rior
Q,
i
broken bones."
How the team came to surChristophe Ena / The Associated Press pass that goal involved paral- Eritrea's Daniel Teklehaimanot, wearing the best climber's polka dotted jersey, and Merhawi Kudus lel paths taken by Ryder and Gebremedhin, of Eritrea, right, greet fans waving Eritrean flags Saturday prior to the start of the eighth Teklehaima not. stage of the Tour de France in Rennes. During the 1990s, Ryder rode as a professional on small teams. When he raced found that in many parts of on television, and when he erything," he said. "We don' t at the Atlanta Olympics in Africa, riding a bicycle was was about 13 he started road have any problems now about 1996, the performances of a social stigma in the black racing. visas or anything." other Africans, particularly community. In 2009, he was selected by The MTN in the team name "Africa is a c o ntinent of UCI, cycling's world govern- is a traditional sponsor, a telein running, convinced him of Africa's potential in cycling. walkers," he said. "There's a ing body, to join a program in communications firm. Qhu"I thought that if we can get perception in A f r ica that if Switzerland to develop prom- beka is the African branch of African guys onto bicycles, you own a bike, that means ising riders from regions that World Bicycle Relief, a U.S. there's no way that they won' t you' re too poor to own a car. were underrepresented in the organization that hopes to imSo you'd rather walk because sport. be successful," he said. prove people's education and "When I came to Europe for economic status by providRyder went off to have a it becomes a bit of a status career with IBM and Micro- symbol." me the weather, everything ing inexpensive yet durable soft, but about 10 years ago he Not everywhere in Africa, was difficult," he said. bike s. began working on what ulti- however. Because of its past The next year he finished Ryder also hopes that as mately became his team. as an Italian colony when it s ixth i n a m a j o r r a ce f o r more Africans cycle, the soThere were several obvi- was part of Ethiopia, Eritrea young riders and was invited cial stigma associated with ous hurdles that needed to be has had a road-racing scene to join a team sponsored by the activity will diminish, and overcome in Africa, starting on and off since the 1940s and Cervelo, the Canadian racing some will take up the sport. "We' re trying to fill our with inadequate and over- sent riders, as Ethiopians, to bike maker. Eventually, he crowded roads and simple ac- some Olympic Games. joined MTN-Qhubeka. own pipeline," he said, "to "It's really special for me draw from for the team for the cess to bicycles. T eklehaimanot said h e But Ryder, who is w h ite, followed the Tour as a child because they look after us, ev- future."
Continued from D1 Verbal commitments ar e
nonbinding, but if the players currently committed end up signing letters of intent in February, Oregon will have the makings of a highly rated class. The addition of Winston
and Mayden gives the Ducks a 14-man class ranked No. 12
nationally by 247Sports, No. 7 by Scout.corn and No. 11 by Rivals. Unlike some y ears, that
classhas a heavy localfl avor. The Ducks also have com-
North American tries
hands atJapan'ssport By Jim Armstrong
Many sumo purists say foreign wrestlers lack the
The Associated Press
TOKYO — Canadian Bro-
Beavers schedule
Se t.5 vs.EWashin on5 .m Sept. 12 at Michigan St. 5 p.m. Sept. 19 vs. Georgia St.11 a.m Sept. 25 vs. Utah TBA O ct. 3 at Colorado T B
Sept.4 vs. Weber St. 5p.m. Sept. 12 at Michigan 9 a.m. Sept. 19 vs. SanJose St. 5 p.m. Sept. 25 vs. Stanford 7 p.m. Oct.10 at Arizona TB A
O ct.10 vs. Wash. St. T B A O ct.17 atWashin ton T B
Oct.17 atWashin onSt.TB
Oct.29 atArizonaSt. 7:30p.m. N ov. vs. Californi T B N ov. 14 at Stanford T B A Nov. 21 at Southern Ca TB Nov. 27 vs. Oregon St.12:30p.m.
Oct.31 atUtah
TB
Nov. 7 vs. UCLA
TBA
that Oregon is not known as a hotbed of elite players. He
Nov. 14 t California
TB
wondered if
Nov. 21 vs. Washington TBA ov.27 t0re o 12:30 .m.
similar to former yokozuna
a native of British Columbia,
hold the rigid customs of the fought under the ring name ages-old sport. Life outside K ototenzan. He got off t o the ring is just as demanding. a stellar 21-0 start but had "Brodi is levelheaded, dil- trouble adapting to life in Jaigent and friendly, which pan before retiring in 1986 serves him well in Japan," to pursue a lengthy career said John Gunning, a sumo in professional wrestling. analyst who has followed His abrupt departure did the sport for about 14 years. not go over well with sumo's "He has the ability to see the hierarchy. bigger picture, which is rare Henry Armstrong Miller, in young athletes, so I think the son of an African-Amerihe will be fine. He knows can fatherand Japanese mothhis own weaknesses and is er, fared better than Tenta. He working hard to overcome reached the second-highest them." Sumo wrestlers, known as
juryo division in a catteer that went from 1988 to 2003.
cial media up until now.
long careerbut was forced to
"rikishi," live in communal Miller, who grew up in training stables where all as- St. Louis, fought under the pects of their daily lives from ring name Sentoryu and meals to what they wear are compileda career record of dictated by strict traditions. 403 wins, 303 losses and 99 That may not be easy for draws. someone who grew up playHe notched some impresing American football and sive wins over some of the hockey and was active on so- sport's biggest names in his Because Henderson enters retire in 2003 after a series of the sport at the lowest divi- injuries. sion of jonokuchi, the Inter-
Sumo is now dominated
net is a no-no for now. Many foreigners over the years have had trouble grappling with sumo's unique customs.
by Mongolians who have a much easier time adapting, having grown up with the country's traditional form of wrestling or "bokh," which is
Gunning. "The road to the top and lifestyle are much harder than people imagine. Usually, it's the stuff outside the ring and how well foreign
a revered national sport.
"It's not for everyone," said
Still, Henderson has displayed the right attitude so far, doing everything he can to learn the customs and fit in. That is no small task for a 6-foot-7 Canadian in Japan.
ter, Oregon State's roster....
Ducks schedule
Oct. 24 vs. Colorado TBA
culture and manners — often
dik Henderson is hoping his described as "hinkaku", or prowess in the remote world dignity — to reach the higher of U.S. amateur sumo wres- ranks. tling will translate into a proMongolian A s ashoryu fessional career in the heart- reached the highest rank of land of Japan's ancient sport. yokozuna. But his boisterous The 20-year-old n a tive behavior outside the ring deof Victoria, British Colum- railed his career. bia, who stands 6 feet 7 and Hawaiian Akebono also weighs 360 pounds, will reached the highest rank of make his debut at the Na- yokozuna and was able to goya Grand Sumo Tourna- adjust to life in Japan. Gunment which begins today. ning says Akebono serves Henderson, whose ring as a good role model for name is Homarenishiki, won Henderson. "If he can develop a style the men's openweight title
rikishi deal with it that determines their fate." They try to get the best kids and keep them here. I think
it's a good thing that we have a bumper class here, but I don' t
think it's an anomaly (to have players committing in-state).
•
•
I think they try to get the best
kids." Breeze, who committed to the Ducks last July, realizes
(
Vgr
u
r
t h e p erception
might be shifting, though, with the 2016 class making head-
a
lines and a strong 2017 class
•
— featuring defensive tackle talent in their 2016 class. Pyne Marion Tuipulotu and cornersaid that is true even in leaner back Elijah Molden, the son of
pealed to both players. "My family won't miss a game," Winston said. "My years, rattling off the names of tight end Cam McCormick mom will be able to see ev- Thomas Tyner (Aloha), Alex from Summit High in Bend. ery game. I can't express how Balducci (Central Catholic), Breeze joined Winston at blessed I am. Henry Mondeaux and Doug "I'm probably going to live Brenner (both Jesuit), all inThe Opening, an invitation-only camp that showcases rough- with Brady, too, so it's going to state recruits on scholarship ly 160 of the top recruits in be great." with the Ducks. "I don't think this is some the country. The chance to be With three in-state players college teammates while rep- committed, the Ducks cannot big coup for the state," Pyne resenting their home state ap- be accused of overlooking local said. "Look at Oregon's rosmitments from safety Brady Breeze — Winston's Central Catholic teammate and
a professional career in the heartland of Japan's ancient sport.
nents and are expected to up-
l•
first week," he said Saturday. "Our major objective was no
Ducks
arena in Tokyo in Mey. Henderson is hoping his prowess in the remote world of U.S. amateur sumo wrestling will translate into
year. But winning in U.S. am- Akebono, I think his chancateur sumo and succeeding es of a long and healthy cain a sport steeped in ancient reer increase exponentially," rituals and Japanese tradi- Gunning said. tion are two completely difAs the only North Amerferent things. ican in sumo, the spotlight There are no fist bumps, will be on Henderson, who is high-fives or body slams in not the first Canadian to try Japanese sumo. Wrestlers his hand at sumo. humbly bow to their oppoIn 1985, John Tenta, also
he retained the climber's jer-
to get our riders through this
mer GrandSumo Tournament atRyogoku Kokugikan sumo
at the U.S. Sumo Open last
seconds behind Vuillermoz,
plaining. Douglas Ryder, the South African who founded MTN-Qhubeka, said the team's plan for the opening stages of the Tour was to merely survive. "Our riders have been super scared, we just wanted
Kyodo News
Canadian sumo wrestler Brodik Henderson, whose ring name is Homarenishiki, left, fights against Kadokure during the Sum-
former Duck Alex Molden-
coming on its heels. "We' ve got guys that definitely know what t hey' re doing," Breeze said. "These next two years of kids in high school, they' re really showing Oregon what we' re all about and how we can actually produce some athletes."
Widgi Creek ..: G OLF C L U B
18707 SW Century
www.wid i,corn
r., e n
(541) 382-4449
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
TENNIS: WIMBLEDON
Serena sets upGrand finale with 3rd major win of year By Christopher Clarey
lost her serve at love, missing
New York Times News Service
a forehand wide on Williams'
LONDON — Three down,
second match point. her shadow. It w a s u n c lear i n i t ially This latest triumph broke
just one to go. In her long and ever more remarkable career, Serena Williams has won all the major tournaments at least three
times. She has won Olympic gold in singles and doubles. She has won WTA Tour events
large and small. But what she has not yet
managed is a Grand Slam: winning the Australian Open, the French Open, Wimbledon
Kirsty Wig glesworth / The Associated Press
and the U.S. Open in the same
Serena Williams returns a shot to Garbine Muguruza during the
calendar year.
women's final Saturday at Wimbledon. Williams won her third Grand Slam of the year with a 6-4, 6-4 victory.
Williams' 6-4, 6-4 victory
over Garbine Muguruza of Spain in the final Saturday gave Williams her sixth Wim- not come easily. Muguruza, bledon singles title and her 21, playing in her first Grand fourth straight major singles Slam final, displayed few title — the so-called Serena signs of nerves and plenty of Slam. But it also gave her the purpose in the opening phase first three legs of the Grand of the match and took a 4-2 Slam, the true Slam, which
as Williams' contemporaries continue to work (and play) in
lead before Williams turned
could make this year's U.S. the momentum in her favor. Open quite an occasion. Williams double faulted Despite the straightforward
three times in th e opening
score line, the opportunity did
game and lost her rhythm
again while serving for the title at 5-1 in the second set. With the Centre Court crowd
giving Muguruza plenty of positive reinforcement, she surprisingly broke Williams'
Continued from 01 He was at work, signing his name and glad-handing with fans and spinning yarns for money.
the family tie with her older
challenge the call, but the ball
sister Venus, who has won five
was clearly out. No challenge came, and the chair umpire Alison Hughes haltingly pronounced the words: "Game, set and match, Miss Williams." Williams, delayed reaction or not, was soon leaping on thegrassand celebrating.Mu-
times at the All England Club and watched from the players
guruza was in tears sitting on her chair.
box Saturday. This was also
Serena's 21st Grand Slam singles title, putting her just one behind Graf, whose 22 are the
best of the Open era, and just three behind Court, an attacking Australian who won 24.
Steffi Graf in 1988.
a nd elsewhere around t h e
semifinals. "She was kind of like an
globe.
inspiration for me, because
B ut one t h in g h a s n o t changed, even after all these
coach. when I was watching the TV, years. Williams is still No. 1. But the rally (and the rallies) In truth, there is also plenty I see her play finals, and she N ow, about t h a t G r a n d would end there as Muguruza of other history to chase, even was No. 1," Muguruza said Slam. on serve to 5-4.
I
vealed a square banner that
read, "Rose 14." The announcer proclaimed Rose "the inauguWall of Fame."
W PIONEER
"When I f i rst l ooked out there," Rose said into a micro-
phone, "I thought you were going to give me an SUV." Rose coachedfirst base for the first two innings. On a close play in the first inning, Rose waved his arms — safe! — as a Cornbelter sprinted past. The
lon, Missouri, the night after.
About 250 days a year, he signs his name inside a casino in Las Vegas, where he lives. He is 74 years old. Pete Rose still hustles for a living.
umpire called him out. Rose
'-
Rose is in limbo, the place
he hasresi ded since baseball banished him for betting on the sport 26 years ago. Holding on to faint hope baseball will re-
0UPON ~.
~SNEER,
instate him, Rose will receive something close to a reprieve
Tuesday night. The MLB All-
threw his hands up. A couple of pitches later, he was still hollering at the ump. T he C o rn Belters h a d planned for Rose to coach first base for two innings, then switch to third base for two
innings, before signing more autographs. After Rose made
one painful walk from the first-base dugout to third base and back, the plans apparently changed, and he coached first base for his final inning. "One more round of applause for Pete Rose!" the announcer bellowed at the end of the fourth. "Pete will be signing autographs in about 30 minutes
Star Game will take place in
Cincinnati, where Rose played 16 years for the Reds. Rose will be there, as a broadcaster for Fox and on the field. He will
walk from behind home plate at Great American Ball Park
before the game, part of the league's "Franchise Four" campaign. It will be the first time he attended an All-Star Game he
behind the third-base line!"
did not play in.
By the sixth inning, Rose had returned to the table, back
Commissioner Rob Manfred Steve S medley/The (Bloomfield, Illinois) Pantagraph
under the white tent, five pens
Pete Rose ponders a question during a news conference at the CornCrib in Normal, Illinois, on Thursday. Rose said he is "open to almost anything" that MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred might have in mind when they discuss his lifetime ban for betting on baseball. The for-
in front of him. The sun had set, and a lamp with no shade
fred, but he plans to buttonhole mer Cincinnati Reds player andmanager hopes that he can informally meet Manfred —who took over for Bud Selig in January — when him in Cincinnati. He might the two are in town this week for the All-Star Game in Cincinnati. port that he bet on baseball not only as a manager, but as a First pitch n eared. Rose player as well, a charge he had walked to the CornBelters clubdenied for decades. house;they named him ManTuesday night, Rose will ager For a Night. He hobbled stand on the field next to Joe down steps to the field. Players Morgan, Johnny Bench and from the opposing SchaumBarry Larkin. They are in the berg Boomers broke from their Hall of Fame. Rose is banned warm-ups and approached. permanently, de s perately''Michael," one of them said, as waiting for baseball to pardon introduction, sticking out his his sins, biding his time in Las hand. "'Sup, Pete!" Vegas on the outskirts of the Rose shook several hands sport. He has reached the stage and trudged from the thirdof his life when it would be nat- base line across the infield, ural to wonder how much he toward the clubhouse out past has left. the center-field fence, where "There comes a time when cornstalks grew on a grass you see all your friends go in berm. Rose grimaced as he the Hall of Fame," Rose said. walked into the outfield. "To think that you could be a "You guys, you know you' re member of the Hall of Fame, it killing my knees, OK?" Rose would be goose-bumpy. A Hall said to Mike Rains, the Cornof Fame is more for your fans Belters' director of b aseball and your family. And a lot of operations. "Walking up these the people responsible for me hills and stuff?" being a baseball player aren' t Rains laughed, thinking it here no more." was a joke. Rose winced. He Rose listed the names. His looked at the ground, and kept uncle, the scout who first walking. signed him. His high school
Everything in Normal
Little League coach, who startRose began his appearance ed him in the sport. His father, in Normal with a news conthe only man he idolized his ference, and once he finished entire life. he moved down the concourse "They' re all gone," Rose said. to sit at the table under a white "I got six grandkids that would tent. Amid a scramble of aslove to go to Cooperstown. I sistants and fans, Rose found got two daughters and two routine. "Mike, you got the pen for sons who would love to go to Cooperstown. I have a fiancee balls?" Rose asked, looking at who would love to go to Coo- his agent, Mike Maguire. "What doyou want?" Maguperstown. It would mean a lot to them. It would mean a lot to ire replied. "Ballpoints, Sharpanybody." ies, everything?" "Leave the Sharpie," Rose Thursday evening, around the picnic tables, Rose stood said. "I need a pointy one for and took questions for 20 min-
the bobbleheads."
utes. He appeared to take genuine glee in telling stories and drawing laughs. "I played against Stan Musial," Rose said. "And for you smartasses, I didn't play against Babe Ruth." Everyone laughed.
items out," Rose said, motioning at the line. "It' ll go a lot faster." Neal Dufreese, a 59-yearold from Bloomington, Illinois,
"You ready for the first one?" Maguire said. "Just tell them to get their
lit his face.
Game," Rose said. "The game is being played on Pete Rose Way." At times Thursday, Rose
Another line had formed, more than a hundred people eager to pay $25 for him to rules. In a different scenario, sign something. Grown men he would be working in a big- walked from the table wearleague uniform some way, or in ing thin smiles. A boy floated a front office, or be in the Hall away, mouth agape, staring at of Fame." the ball Rose signed for him. Jesse Miller, a 34-year-old Still part of the game from Peru, Illinois, carried a Even if baseball has not nearly finished beer and a min-
evaded questions about his status in the sport. At others, he
loved Rose back, it still has a hold on him. He watches three
iature bat to the table. He told
big-time. You remember that?" "Bob Gibson threw at Tony
drifted toward them, especially
crow(I. "So many fans want to see
at it. "You watched me. I worked
have to explain the ESPN re-
coach, who mentored him. His
18
Martina Navratilova 1 8 Billie Jean Kin 12 M aureen Connolly 9 Monica Seles S uzanne Lenglen 8 Molla Mallor
ral member of the CornBelters
He had done the same in
ment. Rose has never met Man-
Chris Ever
and Maria Sharapova in the
Chicago the night before. He would be at a ballpark in O'Fal-
said this spring he will review Rose'srequest for reinstate-
Mar aret Smith Court 24 Steffi Graf 22 Serena Williams 21 H elen Wills Moody 1 9
Serena won her first in 1999 at the U.S. Open, fighting her told her at the trophy ceremo- way through a draw of her elny. "You' ll be holding this tro- ders to create quite a surprise. phy very, very soon. Believe To win her sixth Wimble- last week. me." don, Williams had t o b e at On Saturday, Muguruza Only three women have three former No. 1 players on was the one across the net completed the Grand Slam: her way to the final: Venus in f rom Williams in a G r a nd Maureen Connolly i n 1 953, the fourth round, Victoria Az- Slam final; the one being Margaret Court in 1970 and arenka in a tight quarterfinal watched on television in Spain "Don't be sad," Williams
"It's probably the only thing serve twice in a row, saving a she hasn't done yet," said Patmatch point and getting back rick Mouratoglou, Williams'
'0
Rose
whether Muguruza would
All-timeGrand Slam titles
walked to the table and held out a ball. He had arrived at 4:30 p.m., more than two hours
prior to the game's first pitch, and found himself first in line. "PeteRose,"Dufreese said."I
want to ask you a question. In 1967, the Cardinals played the Reds. You got into a skirmish
be on display this week. It may appear simple. "You have to u nderstand one thing about the All-Star
Perez," Rose said. "I remember when it concerned his homethat. That was a donnybrook,
town. A local television report-
boy." er asked Rose if it felt special The procession lasted more that the CornBelters would rethan an hour. Rose perked up tire his number. "They are retiring my numand posedfor pictures. His recall was uncanny. His mind ber?" Rose said. "It's special was sharp. "Go Buckeyes," he here, because it's the first time told a man in an Ohio State I've everbeen here.Itwould be T-shirt, before predicting that more special if it happens in Braxton Miller would start at Cincinnati someday, which you quarterback for the school's understand. It's my home city. football team. He acted like Maybe someday I' ll get a statue things he'd heard a thousand of me in Cincinnati. They got times were fresh and new. one of Bench. They got one of "It's her birthday. This is her Morgan. They' re doing one of birthday present, to get to see Tony Perez this year. Based on you." those three names, I got a shot." "It's an honor to meet you, Joey Votto, the Reds' biggest Mr. Rose." currentstar,saidRosereceives "We' re gonna be in Vegas the largest ovation of any perthis spring. We' ll look for you." son each time he attends a Rose signed baseballs, min- game. Votto has met Rose seviature bats, bobbleheads, pic- eral times, talked hitting with tures, jerseys, tickets and a him. In any typical situation woman's bicep. they would be linked, the past "He's good at what he does," and present stars. Votto said he Maguire said. has interacted with Rose, but Bobby Mills, a 55-year-old he does not know Rose. Cincinnati native who traveled
"It's tough," Votto said. "He' s
from his current home in Florida, walked up and told him, "Since I'm 8, I' ve been waiting to meet you," Mills said.
probably the most well-known Red, probably the most polarizing Red but also probably the most beloved Red. But he's also
got this major restriction and back and showed Rose the this black mark on his legacy. Reds jersey he had made: "LET And so it's a challenging sceHIM IN" above the No. 14. nario for the fans, and certain"That's awesome," Rose said. ly the organization. You want He signed his name inside the to embrace this guy, but then '1' for the longtime fan. you also want to respect Major Rose remains beloved in League Baseball's rules and Cincinnati, but a complicated the penalty. And you want to relationship between f a llen acknowledge that he did somehero and storied franchise will thing that is not allowed per the Mills bent down, turned his
Rose he had made a parlay bet games anight,he said.He an- on major league games Thursimates when he tells a story day night. Rose pointed the bat — one he has told who-knows- at him. "Don't tell people that," Rose how-many-times before about why he was not at fault said. "Because betting is illegal when he smashed American in these towns." "I got Seattle," Miller said. League catcher Ray Fosse at "You got balls," Rose replied. the 1970 All-Star Game. Thursday evening, a few Miller bounded away. "That reporters and photographers was awesome!" he said. followed him t o t h e f i e ld, At one point, Rose signed through the cornstalks and 110 autographs and posed for into the home clubhouse. He nearly as many pictures in 36 intended to rouse the players. minutes, induding some for "Well, you' re a game out of people who had slipped past first place," he said, looking without paying. around and pausing. "Mike, Where was he again'? The am I talking to the guys?" he sport had relegated him here, asked his agent. "Then why to the margins, a fate he will is the press in here?" The me- briefly escape Tuesday night. dia walked out. The speech He held nothing against the continued. game, only himself. By 6 :3 0 p . m., a b out "I made mistakes," Rose said three-quarters of the 7,000 as he walked out of the park. seats had filled. A public-ad- "How could I get bitter at the dress announcer, holding a mi- game? I'm bitter at myself. You crophone and standing in the try to pay back. I try to make infield, introduced Rose. Rose everybody happy. When I do walked out of the first-base an appearance like this, I look dugout, a white No. 14 Corn- at it like this: If you piss one Belters jersey billowing over person off, you ruin the apblack slacks. Rose waved to the pearance. That's the way I look you inducted," the announcer my ass off today. You probably said, to the cheapest applause couldn't do what I did today. imaginable. "But you control See you tomorrow." what you can control. There' s In the dark parking lot, Rose not a lot we can do in Central winked and dropped into the Illinois to change that." passenger seat of a gray staThe announcer directed the tion wagon. He had to get back crowd's attention to the left corner. Rose turned and looked,
to his hotel. He had to be in O'Fallon to wear a River City
beneath the O' Brien Mitsubishi Rascals uniform the next day billboard. A worker yanked to do it all again. The car drove a sheet from the wall and re- away.
RSW RH'.: X•
I
I'-.
' TUR~A~
----'-'=- 'g '
California Olive Ranch ®
-
California Extra Virgin
vI~
1I(
,I )
- =„=:--=:July 2015 Weekly Hotline NaturalGrocers.com =-=
d I •
Olive Oil
~+gg f S v
Delicate, mild and versatile — great for baking, sauteing and roasting.
t •. I
I "-..
•o
O~ ,.+ p •,
~ FORRg qadi,-.. o
0
0
•
cf
I
j
i'
I
I
'
l
i
/
SXTAA VIFISIIUI
g
]
I'
PSSOO
FOIST
%EFL0L
hhhghlopfojeCI.Ofgh
Eg.g er
/
]
EBRP ger
So Delicious'
Glutino' Gluten Free Sandwich Breads
TINEg
CELIVS1 OII
Gjhtta i'
Cairfon ia E+@a Virgin Olive Oii
Health Warrior ®
Coconut MilkFrozen Dessert Pints
Chia Bar Su er Snacks
Gluten Free English
Mugns
Chia yotein Bars
— -1
OROANIC Raspberries or Blackberries
R IPEGLUTENFREE GLUTEN FREE GLUTENFREEGUUivi l ijla GLUTEN FREE GLUTENFREE GLUTENFREEatjG
f
• I •
gag'.
•
•
•
IE-' USDA • oo
~
'y " l
/
•
~O.'y <~ COCONUT hhlL7 NON Ogler Fheggh Oggoeef
glutiiio!
OdNIC
;OF. GLuvstd p"a-
Rmr GUNEN FREEENGUSNMUFRNS
glutlno! ll.4~ , I
•
•
COCONUT MIL
Ircohe
I
I
I
de FMM
hhjehEEE
ntssmtsm
IIETT E I'
•
i, ! Jgj
O
g •
nthg '
Harnessing the .omega-3 power of chia and protein power of plants.
Eat dairyfree without compromising taste and flavor.
Ej
I
gj%~/
m a m
•
•
ov o-
•
••I
d
OW'
Coleman Na ural
I
• I
' I
er
CoQ10 W/ Selenium 6 Vitamin E 50 mg
I
• I
•
Uncur ed All Bee f
Polish
Spectrum Naturals®
Kielbasa
Hot Dogs
coQ10 is necessary for energy production in the muscles, including the
Naturally-good summer grilling!
Organic Refined Coconut Oil
Organic Unrefined Coconut Oil
p
'I
CoQ10 1 00 mg
heart muscle.*
o o Ugly 50 mg
'hh 11 1
Nhol y 0 O V'
100 mg mdhy m
I
Cdhd
100 Soneelo •
•
100 Sofgselg
•
•
USDA
I IXI'KLLSII I' a s g g r l >
'I I 0
I '" I
< dgPttC ©~
Gf/t/4'
SAVES
SAVE I2
ISDA
' ll
•
Virgin
Coconut
Coconut =gp
OIL
lI. OIL
gi ~
jssj
414mL
14FLOZ
•
J-' nongmoproioct.org
'I I
14FIOE
414 mt
Organic Shredded C oconut
s•
USDA O • I
G O-
-
Boulder Canyon'
Tasty Bit<'
Natural Potato Chips
Earth-Friendly'
Organic Tri Colored or
Asian Noodle or Indian Entree Pouches
W it q „ ; „ „ ,.0
AU.MATuRAI.
I
slssnnel• posh
IN
L-
I
and seasoned
II'
1Ib. IEsN
IN
I h Shel
•
Oh
IONNSN
Cold pressing using high
10
FEEdhoCLEA
ECOS Liquid LasdndO'Detergents
F
k%
QE EDFEP IT2@, • • I
I
ITB gg
I I
pf8SSUT8
An all-inclusive blend of vitamins, minerals, protein and other nutrients for a filling snack or meal substitute.*
sanmuI snh
•
Select Cold-Pressed Juices
Raw Meal
f
I
Evolution Fresh'
Garden ofLife~
mos o N
All Flavors
dipping. il
I .=™
Lentfis
ps
N
to perfection, these glutenfree chips a re ready for ' - ' snacking and
I lt
Madras
indian O»
Wavy, ridged
' D l7DD
ep gw
ESTEP-1MINUTE
ECOS Liquid Laundry Detergents
processing helps protect flavor and nutrients and allows for a vibrant taste. 'h
1 Iel
h., I Ic
WO
' • •
Select Cvutd
1,
~esscstIui
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end August 15, 2015 . .
I- r -~) 5~ I: ~
-
'
'c '
p ic g d
d b so
y o by
I
Jcgpi
d s
* bj*
0 NF. N
p
'bl f o p g
ph '
ph g pl l
-
.:-.:: 4369 SAVE sf
.
I — ONP
tg
this periodical is intended to present information we fed is valuable to ow customers. Artides are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person-or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner for advice. fhese artides '
.
I
TV~i
•
'El~
' u feae me nnihfodhettnggh I o d i r f tjg
•
•
~F
IEmcLIUcgislchl4dlo 4FOS0000
No,"
•
Er
S
' ~~
GRS P 0712~ ~
-
l ~ L i-G m ~R<4CE~m~ e mNilaaim~
Enzymatic 'Iherapy ® ood for your
Realfood Organi cs Aloe Vera Plus •
•
•
•
ecipes focuses n lutein, omega-
A CcjOKKCK FOR EYE HEALTH
n p best eye health. Includes traditional,
I
m Supports heoNhy Ngesnonend m om** m EelsInner PrlelNoeusm m Indudes Hehol nus Stand
f
p g/P<
genojpoest Farmula
ge~oI"""
Hormone-Freed' yyeur Jhtkf forMenopausalSymptoms
vegan recipes.
>lus
SANIDRA 0UNG,OD I
L
$ I SAVEI1
AM/PM
luten-free, and
Realfood Or loe Ver
e •
~ s.~~ n o
to promote your
I
A two-part herbal blend to maintain energy throughout the day and to promote healthy sleep at night. *
AM p
s, vitamins A, C, nd E, and zinc
This aloe vera blend also contains ginger, peppermint, turmeric and burdock root to support gut health.*
ALOE
AM/PM Menopause Formula
yes? Yes! This ollection of utrient-dense
Country Li e'
mfa~ o h
ANPIE Ptnals anuyrsr
PPsf5.99
EDAP sin gg
MegaFood'
Nature's Way' Valerian Root
pad
Topricin ®
Daily C-Protect or Daily Turmeric Pounder
Pain Relief and Healing Cream Looking for a better night' s sleep? Look no further than valerian to support a normal sleep cycle.*
E
yssltnUM
Hssntt
Yaleriae
Pump up the nutritional value of your smoothie, juice or green
87~~
Each scoop of :this wholefood blend is full of healthpromoting
prodjrrofnpongropondtr
DailyTurmeric
Wihpl&64f-
drink! *
rrodrnon rronnropsnde
Daily C-Protect
- — antioxidants.*
su
juutnentnooster powder
Cyn •
•
•
s
I'
•
I
/Certiliett 534 ar
•
tm+piston
•
•
•
DIETARY EUPPlnslul
el
SAVE 52 Safe, effective pain relief since 1994.*
NOW'
Enzymedica' — ~ ne •,:,:::-m,', Natural Factors'
• p
Lycopene 10 rng
'I
J
Select Enzyme Nutrition Multi- Vitamin
Cherry Fruit Extract 500 mg
60 cap
This concentrated extract of Bing cherries provides a potent antioxidant punch. *
O
Enz~~e Nutrition multi-V t
Chery Fruit Ex' 36:1 500 mg 90 Softgels •
'
•
I00% Whole Food Itutduanr Faweted by Enaymesi
Cherry Fruit
•
Tetbbataes
60 Softgels
mant
EDAPo26Sg •I
SAVE 53
4
In'
•
Gouch!
Hawaiian 3-in-1 Facial Cleansing Tottrelettes
- BOTAN alba I CA
Gentle cleansing, pore-refining and toning in one easy step! *
cnatural
hawaiian
B12 Methylcobalamin 1000 mcg
• mmnnmnnnnsm •m. • m mmmnn • me tttiiatlllislir • mama • MMMM hm • mamamm • mamnmm •
Semnsnaenm Osnnhdatlmshs •
3-in4 clean towelettes
•
Hastyaiian 3- ' -in-1
B12 is needed for normal neurotransmitter production in the brain."
I
I
•
•
•
•
•
•
-
•
Facial Clean ' eansing
•
•
•
•I
Tost'elettes
•
lilnl
•
•
A blend of cherry extract, ginger and quercetin to promote a healthy inflammatory response.*
7
n
makeup remover cleanser+toner
•
Redd Remedies'
Natural Factors'
Alba Eotanica' I
•
10 mg
pmusraI srrsjtspofossfhA
poohiorta nsrgs fa spsfstoa 4
SAVEIf
•
• Supports Vabttrtsltrr Hest~ ' Nauual EEtttact frere
INI Sfsmnwl polmjfm
4)cps
I
•
•
100% Whole Food Nutnuano Powered by Enaymee'
INh SmometotPSSNNV
Extract $00 nyg
' •
I
Select
Super Strength
•
Lycopene is a carotenoid extracted from tomatoes that helps maintain prostate health.*
z:
EDftpod 6
SAVE I3
•
•
All items are available while supplies last. Offers end August 15, 2015 *These slafsmsnlsham notlean soalusfadSyne PDAThempmduols ee notinfendadfo ditspem leal eea arpmeet anydibeasa
Washington Vancouver
Qg eg~~ !
Bend 3188 North Highway 97 Bend • 541-617-0200
7604 NE 5th Ave; Ste 100 Clackamas Vancouver • 360-694-1300 11424 SE 82nd Ave Happy Valley o 503-659-0100
Corvallis 1235 NW 10th Street Corvallis • 541-758-0200
Gresham 407 Northwest Burnside Road Gresham o 503-465-0130
Eugene 201 Coburg Road Eugene • 541-345-3300
I prostate
Iagnesi urn
600+
Cga')9Neinelium
Salem 4250 Commercial St SE Salem o 503-588-1600
500 ms
Medford 1990 North Pacific Highway Medford • 541-245-0100
EDAP o>8gg S
+redure
Beaverton 12155 SW Broadway St Beaverton • 503-520-9100
396
"
•
I„iIot .nioasl • Herbs Nttai b •'
I"4L-" •
•
•
•
•
•
'rc>oopsiil
Ihn 4$SOPCNm
P p,RO RgT I.O gr,c
' oPhilus Blueberry Biwt Pro 96 'Prostate Health
•
Ilrbll Bllnfi •
600+
~ PlusVitamin B-I Ifbah ~ttusclesBfNerves - "
riseueren4
Prostate
f
•
our regular EDAP prices o n all ~ p roduct s
'8;6
tab Pun,Psrstothyfe ' uut utomomllo4tomtlty
nlurnrnl IUN
Alo Vera @el H erbalBi e l end
I ltreie sf heusen
Siriussl IhoEslh
poe, el Notoel feeoto
fatset addnoll h
EDjrjP of 0 95
16 en,
ED' P799
•
II items are available while supplies last. Cmers end August 15,-S015 —,.
Ihee slalenees hue mtlesn eelssle! hf Ihs PDAThesepnzhus are not inlondsd to deem Iml cm or prowl any deum
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.corn/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
Facebook causesshift in how businesses reach fans
Rent hikes force small businesses to move, revamp
i poJl/r.'
p@rPrg
xP.Q $ ( g~ ik.f ~~
crt t-s v 'tsr„„
%or o
trrn «Ne' (~
yD
By Queenie Wong San Jose Mercury News
By Joyce M. Rosenberg The Associated Press
SAN JOSE, Calif.
— Chrystal Bougon re-
NEW YORK — Rising commercial rents in newly
members the days when
customers walked through the door of her plus-size lingerie shop in San Jose and uttered the phrase, "I saw you on Facebook."
trendy areas are forcing some small companies to change not only where they do business, but also how they do it. When Turchin Jewelry's owners decided to leave Miami's Design District
+ er
Now the small-business
owner rarely hears those words. Concerned that people
will leave the site if shown too many ads, Facebook this year began filtering users' News Feeds to eliminate many of the unpaid
rather than absorb a rent
Photos by Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Ellen Parkin demonstrates how she tests the purity of marijuana concentrates, or "wax," while working at CannAlyticsl Research in Bend.
status updates they receive
from businesses they' ve
•
•
"liked." As businesses vie for limited space on the
social network, that's made it far tougher for them to reach customers without
increase of $18,000 — more than triple what they were currently paying — they couldn't find affordable retail space. They ended up in a suite in a building near a marina with far less pedestrian traffic. Now, instead of relying on retail customersthey arebecoming more of a wholesaler, marketing their artisan
paying. "The philosophy be-
jewelry to other stores.
hind Facebook is that the
and-pop store to, how can we grow a brand and how long is it going to take," Theresa Turchin says.
"We went from a mom-
user comes first. If people can't have a great experience on News Feed then
the businesses trying to reachthem won'tbe able to reach them," said Elis-
abeth Diana, a Facebook spokeswoman. But the change is a hard hit to some small business owners such as Bougon, who don't have a lot of money or time to spend on social media. After years of
Elaine Thompson The Associated Press
building up their fanbase on Facebook, they' re seeing
Keli Few works to put
more of their posts get lost in a stream of text, photos
up a display in her shop, Drygoods Design, which
and videos — unless they pay Facebook to deliver their message. "People said they want
she moved from the Bellard section of Seattle to the Pio-
neer Square neighborhood. Rent hikes have forced small businesses to have to
to get my content. They
signed up for my page and then Facebook changed the rules later and said you' ve
By StephenHamwaye The Bulletin
got to pay," Bougon said. About 185,000 people have liked Curvy Girl Lin-
gerie on the social network, but Bougon's posts about
the store's best-sellers, body image and more are reaching only a fraction of her fans on News Feed — and the number has dwindled significantly over the past year. To reach 20,000 to 54,000 of the people who like her page, she would need to pay $200 for a post. More than a year ago she
move location or adapt to the increase in price. The average annual rent
end resident Tamara Brost became an
for a 2,000 square-foot
Oregon Medical Marijuana Program
store has climbed more than $18,000, or more than
patient after being diagnosed with cancer
4 percent, nationally since the third quarter of 2011, when rents hrt bottom
in 2011. The marijuana mitigated some of her
following the recession, according to Reis Inc., which compiles real estate statis-
symptoms, but smoking aggravated her asthma,
tics. In Miami, the rent for
and edibles, w hich can take an hour orm ore to kick in, didn't provide immediate pain relief.
A variety of marijuana concentrates, or "wax," being tested for clients at CannAlytical Research in Bend.
could reach about 50,000
people on the site for free. The situation also un-
From there, Brost, who now works at the Bend
cates say makes it easier on the lungs. Unlike edibles, it can take effect in a matter of minutes.
the medical and recreational marijuana industries in
derscores a challenge for social networks such as Facebook, which need to
medical marijuana dispensary Bloom Well, found marijuana concentrate, a
Concentrate lives up to
Cameron Yee, owner and founder of Lunchbox Alche-
convince small businesses
waxy, resinous substance created by extracting the
its name, averaging about
my, a concentrate producer
three times more THC, the
in Bend, said concentrates
psychoactive compound that gives marijuana users a high, than the plants.
formed 5-10percent ofthe medical marijuana market in Oregon when Lunchbox Alchemy opened in November 2013. Today, that figure
that spending money to advertise on their websites is worth it, while making it easier for them to test out new tools at a low
cost, said John Swanciger, CEO of Manta, an online small-business resource.
SeeFacebook/E2
active cannabinoids in
a marijuana plant using butane, propane or other gases. Concentrate, also known as extract or "wax,"
is heated and vaporized
"I love the effect," Brost
said.
rather than being tradition-
She isn't alone. Concentrates have moved from the
ally smoked, which advo-
margins to the forefront of
Oregon and other states.
has jumped to more than 40
percent, and Yee's products are available in 135 dispen-
saries across the state.
"It's very new to Oregon," Yee said. Despite — or perhaps because of — their newfound popularity among Oregon's medical marijuana industry, the potency and method of extraction has led to concerns about the safety
of extracts, and questions about their fate once Or-
egon begins recreational sales. SeeMarijuana/E2
a 2,000 square-foot store is up $43,200, or 8 percent, from the third quarter of 2009, when rents bottomed
in the city. As neighborhoods across the country transform from shabby to trendy, rising rents have forced indepen-
dent retailers and other small businesses to move and in some cases remake
their businesses to fit their new locales. Once they get settled in, owners are left
with concern that the whole cycle could happen all over again if their new neighborhood gentrifies, too. See Rent/E5
Bor el towns en'0 onanza 0 on inc s 0 in By Angel Gonzalez The Seattle Times
SUMAS, Wash. — The
Lone Jack Saloon was once among the many taverns in a bordertown that catered heav-
ily to Canadian carousing. The stage on which cancan girls used to dance is still there, adorned with a painting of a miner panning for gold.
manager.
of Revenue data on sales from
and-mortarand therefore clas-
sified differently by regulators.
cram the place are full of stuff
20 top online retailers. Blaine, the last U.S. stop on
that customers from British
Interstate 5 en route to Van-
Columbia buy on U.S. websites, using a Sumas delivery address to avoid lengthy waits
couver, also had a disproportionate amount of online shopping: $2,705 per resident. Most of that e-commerce is by Canadians, not residents
figures may help round out the data: A postal spokesman said
The cardboard boxes that
at customs and exorbitant in-
ternational shipping costs. It's a few minutes' drive, or
— but the jobs and the sales-
a quick cross-border walk, for the 170,000 residents of the
tax receipts are local just the same.
house for Ship Happens, the largest of eight parcel services that in just a few years have made this farming town of
Abbotsford, British Columbia, metro area. Their enthusiasm
Even those remarkable
1,468a mecca ofe-commerce.
But the floor is now the ware-
"Amazon ships directly to us, a pallet every morning," said O.J. Zeilstra, the
that last year it handled nearly
400,000 parcels for Sumas, or 272 per resident. That would be 22times the U.S. average.
The surge of cross-border online shopping is a new twist in the old story of U.S.-Canada trade. Its intensity has meant
numbers sell short the real strength of Internet commerce
an unexpected boost for Su-
for Web shopping has made Sumas the state's top spot for
here. They do not include
online spending per resident: In 2014 it was $3,013, seven
purchases made at companies
times the figure for Seattle,
which have large online operations but are primarily brick-
have long seen their fortunes sway with shifting exchange rates and procedural changes at the border. SeeOnline shopping/E5
according to state Department
such as Nordstrom or Target,
ee
A look at U.S. Postal Service
mas and other U.S. towns that Steve Rignman /The Seattle Times
Packages are stacked up behind O.J. Zeilstra, manager of Ship
Happens, andco-owner Lisa Evers ina formeropera house and saloon in Sumas,Washington.
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
BUSINESS TUESDAY Business Startup:Do you havea great idea that you think could be a successful business, but don't know how to get started? Cover the basics and decide if running a business is for you;11 a.m.; $29; COCC Crook County OpenCampus, 510 SELynn Blvd., Prineville; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. Pints with Our Pillars — Founder of Ruffwear:Patrick Kruse, founder and owner of Ruffwear, a Bend company offering a wide rangeof performance doggear, will share his story and secrets to success; 5 p.m. $15, members; $20, nonmembers; Deschutes Brewery & Public House, 1044 NWBond St., Bend; 541-382-3221. Real Estate Broker License Course: This course prepares you to qualify for the OregonRealEstate Broker's License Exam injust 10 weeks and meets the 150-hour requirement of the OregonReal Estate Agency (OREA); 6p.m.; $600; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW
E ND
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.corn/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.corn, 541-383-0323.
College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270.
July 22
THURSDAY
Business After Hours —Oregon High Desert Classics:Come experience the eleganceand excitement of an international horse show! Derby-style hats for the ladies are encouraged for this fun Business After Hours under the Patrons Tent at the J Bar JRanch;5p.m. Freeto members; J Bar JRanch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; 541 382-3221.
Growth Trends in Central Oregon: Building a Better Bendandthe City Club of Central Oregon are bringing Dr. Arthur C. Nelson, professor of planning and real estate development at the University of Arizona for a discussion of the region's growth through 2040; 11:30 a.m.; $35, register by 5 p.m. July13; lunch included; St. Charles Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend; www.cityclubco.org/ or 541-633-7163.
JH.ly21 Real Estate Broker License Course:This course prepares you to qualify for the OregonReal Estate Broker's License Exam in just 10 weeks andmeets the 150hour requirement of the OregonRealEstate Agency; 6 p.m.;$600;CentralOregon Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
by selling to the government; 10 a.m.; Redmond COCC CampusTechnology Education Center, 2324 Real Estate Broker License SE College Loop, Redmond; www. Course:This course prepares you gcap.org or 541-736-1088. to qualify for the OregonReal Estate Broker's License Exam injust10 Green Drinks:A casual networking weeks and meets the 150-hour event to discuss BCorporations requirement of the OregonRealEstate business practices with local Agency (OREA); 6p.m.; $600; Central certified teams, Moementum and Oregon Community College, 2600 NW Pacific Superfood Snacks; 5 p.m.; College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270. Pacific Superfood Snacks, 222 SE Reed Market Road, No.500, Bend; July 29 54I-385-6908. Expanding Your Market to Federal, Aug. 4 State & Local Government with GCAP:This free workshop will Buying or Selling aBusiness: A introduce business owners to the practical guide for entrepreneurs basic tools for growing their business interested in investing in, buying by selling to the government; 10 or selling a business; 6 p.m.; $69; a.m.; Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Central OregonCommunity College, Trenton Ave., Bend;www.gcap.org or 2600 NWCollegeW ay,Bend; 541-736-1 088. 541-383-7270. Real Estate Broker License JH11/ 30 Course:This course prepares you Expanding Your Market to Federal, to qualify for the OregonRealEstate State & Local Government with Broker's License Exam injust 10 GCAP:This free workshop will weeks and meets the 150-hour introduce business owners to the requirement of the OregonReal Estate basic tools for growing their business Agency; 6 p.m.;$600;CentralOregon
July 28
J011/ 23 Lunch and Learn —Monthly Market Overviews:Jacob Fain, financial advisor, for monthly market overviews at the Morgan Stanley office, will speak; noon; Morgan Stanley, 705 SW BonnettWay,No. 1200, Bend; 541-617-6013.
J011/ 27 Community Conversation: Conversation on building volunteer engagement to address community needs; 1:30 p.m.; TheEnvironmental Center, 16 NWKansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-8977.
Community College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
Aug. 5 Business Startup:Doyou have a great idea that you think could be a successful business, but just don't know how to get started? Cover the basics anddecide if running a business is for you; 11am; $29 registration required; COCO Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.
Aug. 8 HomebuyerEducation Workshop: A homebuyereducationandcoaching service to help the homebuyer understand the home-buying process, accesssafe mortgage loans and prepare for the responsibilities ofhomeownership;9a.m.;$45 per household; Neighborlmpact,116 SE D St., Suite A, Madras; www. neighborimpact.org/homebuyerworkshop-registration/ or 541-323-6567.
DEEDS Deschutes County • Webb L.andRaymondL. Smith to Francisca C.Chavez, Timberline, Lot 33, $220,000 • Breck M. andLindaC.Childrey to Marvin L. PughandAndreaE.Hine, Township 22,Range10,Section17, $300,000 • Debra Weekleyto Elizabeth M. Eiting andRonaldW. Schultz, Shevlin CommonsP.U.D.,Phases4-5, Lot 50, $530,000 • Bryan Dainesand Leila Smith-Daines to William S.Kurzman,HighPointe, Phase 1, Lot 19,$295,000 •KevinJ.andWendyT.StocktoTracy Hankins and Joseph D. Griffin, West Hills, Lot 7,Block 8,$410,000 • Terry A. andSusan K.Standly to Aaron Edelheit andKelly Hill, DeschutesRiver Woods, Lot11,BlockN, $338,500 •JamesA.andJaniceA.Gietzento Quang P. Tran, Westbrook Village, Phase 1, Lot 38, $286,000 • Louis W.and Marrisa L. Bennett to Richard R.Winiarski and TaraL. BlackWiniarski, ForestMeadow,Phase1,Lot 24, $339,000 • John P.Pringle, Chapter 7 trustee of the BankruptcyEstate ofLinda Diane Chase, toCounterbalanceProperties LLC, KeystoneTerrace, Lot1, Block 6, $325,000 • Woodside DevelopmentLLCto Mark and D'AnzaFreeland, WoodsideRanch, Phase 2,Lot 12,Block7, $625,000 • John P.Pringle, Chapter 7 trustee of the BankruptcyEstate ofLinda Diane Chase, toCounterbalanceProperties LLC, KeystoneTerrace, Lot 2, Block6, $325,000 • John P.Pringle, Chapter 7 trustee of the BankruptcyEstate ofLinda Diane Chase, toCounterbalanceProperties LLC, KeystoneTerrace, Lot 3, Block6, $325,000 •Pahli schHomesInc.toToddandTracy Randazzo, BridgesatShadow Glen, Phase2A, Lot111,$380,000
• Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Kathryn L. Holloman,Bridges at ShadowGlen, Phase2A, Lot 141,$298,550 • Duane A.andMelinda L. Baileyto JamesandRoxanneCheney, Skyewest Townhomes,Unit 11,$259,000 • Remarkable Properties LLC to AnneM. Hopkins, Sagewood,Lot 9,$458,000 • Josephine A.Weigand, trustee of the Josephine A.WeigandTrust and Philip J. WeigandFamilyTrust, to Alicia Corona, Cascade View Estates,Phase9,Lot130, $370,000 • Bruce L. andKiersten Lileston to Sharon E.Holland, BonneHomeAddition to Bend, Lot 20,Block21, $529,000 • Patrick andAmyPeters to Richard and Janet Hatcher,Majestic, Phase3, Lot20, $295,000 • Richard G. andLaura M.Lorenz to SuzanneM.Kelso,StonegateP.U.D.,Lot 6, $265,000 • Dave Conners to Rodolfo H. Lobosand Katherine M.Smolich-Lobosand Donald C. andCarolyn K.Wattenbarger, Hidden Hills, Phase1, Lot 3, $325,000 • Travis andJennifer Lymanto Benjamin T. andJennifer K.Montgomery, Tamrack Park East,Phase8, Lot 8, Block2, $253,000 • Scott C. and Amy E.Brownto Further 2 DevelopmentLLC,Forrest Commons,Lot 16, $157,000 • Adam W.Smyth, trustee ofthe Smyth Family Trust of1998, toRussell B.and Cheryl L. Hoar,PonderosaPinesEast, Lot 43, $224,700 • Further 2 DevelopmentLLCto Scott C. and AmyE.Brown, Forrest Commons, Lot16, $181,000 • Brian E. Ricker,trustee of the Philip E. Ricker andIngeborg H.RickerRevocable Living Trust, toOtis BassandAllison L. Avery,WestKnoll Section of Sunrise Village, Lot 4,Block28, $390,000 • Michael J. Wardto Donald andMelinda Ernsdorff, La PineAcres, Lots27-28, $156,000
Marijuana
that comes with a nail, a sur-
• George A.Warren Jr. to Ronald B. Dobbs, Tri Peaks I,Lot13, $272,900 • STS Enterprises LLC to Marlin D. and Suzan B.Ard, Coyote Springs, Phase3, Lot 42, $594,500 • John D. andVicki G.Bayless to Lenore A.Shelleyand GlennM.Weber, Watershi pDown,Lot3,$560,000 • Leora F. andJay B.Burr, trustees of the Leora F.Burr RevocableTrust, to Margaret BaxterandSeanand Natalie B. Peters, ViewsAtOaktree, Phases3-5, Lot 32, $295,000 • Robert andMonicaL. Standento Jose G. MendozaJr., South Deerfield Park, Lot 11, $255,000 • Destiny 25 LLC to Glowstone LLC, CalderaSprings,Phase1, Lot 32, $150,000 • Shawn E.DoanandJil M. Stanton to Wallis Levin, KathyHazenandJames Kuenkel,WestHills, Lot 21, Block8, $350,000 •LeodegarioandGinaGovea,who acquired title asGinaGreen, Author M. and Connie L.Criss, Mountain Glenn, Phase 3,Lot13, $265,000 • Leo J. Lauerman III and Michelle L. Lauerman toMatthewJ. and Nicolle B. Reid, ShevlinMeadows,Phase3,Lot33, $489,900 •StephenM.LindemantoJoyceReinke, Elkai WoodTownhomes,Phase5,Lot35, $475,000 • Holly Adams to Dasein Properties, Empire Estates,Lot40, $230,000 • NW Kelly InvestmentLLCto KimR.and Annette J. Montee,Westside MeadowsII, Lot 11, $275,000 • Dunlap FineHomesInc. to Aaron R.and BrendaTurner,Township15, Range13, Section 20,$171,500 • Laura L. Meadows to Joshua W. Huddl estonandTaraL.Oakes Huddleston, PeacefulPines,Lot12, $199,900 • Patricia A. StumpfandJoanE. Guetschow toDarla R.Sadler, NorthWest
Continued from E1 Facebook, for example,
notaccessible,and so people
started offering Bluetooth
are trying to make it in their house, and blowing them-
devices to businessesat no cost so they can test out a
selves up," Ezrine said.
feature that shows users tips
Colorado, the first state to legalize recreational marijua-
at thetop of their News Feed about a landmark or businessthey' re visiting. "Smallbusinessare going to invest in social. They' re going to play there and they' regoing to be cautious about it," Swancigersaid.
count it to crack."
na, prohibited residents from
making extracts at home, citing a rash of butane hash explosions in the state. Col-
orado saw 27 people injured in THC extraction lab explosions in the first six months
Crossing, Phase 16,Lot 732,$490,000 • Susan F. Sherrer, trustee ofthe SusanF. Sherrer RevocableTrust, to StephenM. LindemanandSherrieA.Moen,Seventh Mountain GolVillage, f Lot94, $875,000 • Wendy Larsonto KyleJ. Groves, Canal Row, Lot 8,$231,000 • Clayton D.andRondaS.Lapp to Marcie R. Duthie,Township15, Range13, Section 18,$251,000 Jefferson County • Zachery W. andTiffany J. Christopherson toJackM. LeeJr. and Lawana L.Lee,Crooked River RanchNo. 7, Lot 148,$159,900 • Lake CreekProperties LLCto Markand Kay Danley,trustees of the DanleyJoint RevocableTrust, LakeCreekLodge, Plat No. 2: Annexation ofStage3, Unit 26, $205,000 • Bill B. andPatricia Gulpto Herbert W. and Christine A.Burk,CrookedRiver Ranch No.10, Lot207, $235,000 • Victor P. Gregg,acting personal representative of theestate of JesseM. Greg g,to David D.Gregg, Township 10, Range13,Section 3,$300,000 • JACK Properties LLC to Edwin R. Philpott andJaniceE.Heiman-Philpott, BitterbrushEstates,Lot 28, $324,900 • Nationstar MortgageLLCto Michael L and Patricia A.Crumrine, CrookedRiver Ranch No.3, Lot112, $181,125 • John A. Pearsonand EvaC. Calderon Pearson toMarkW.and Carla F.Guyett, CrookedRiver RanchNo.3, Lot 216, $190,000 • EugeneE.andWila J. Brosterhous, trustees of theEugeneandWila BrosterhousFamilyRevocableTrust, to Gary Eikenberry,CrookedRiver Ranch No. 7, Lot124,$242,000 • CHS Inc.to Boyle Family FarmsLLC, Township 9,Range13,andportions of Sections 33and35, $1,600,605 • Susan J. Gateto s Wiliam P.Butler, CrookedRiver Ranch, Phase2, Lot12, Block 46,$179,000
•ThomasR.andBarbaraG.Kulesato L.J. Lake,CrookedRiver Ranch,Phase2, Lot 9, Block54, $268,000 • Clifford D. andDoreneR. Curry to Ronald K.Hopla, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 3, Lot277,$192,000 • James E.and Dorothy D.McKibben to Charles D.andAnneT. Lorberau, CrookedRiver RanchNo. 8, Lot281, $291,000 • John E.Judyto CraigA. andBelinda A. Spegel,ThePines, Lot1, Block1, $246,500 • SJS NorthwestLLCto Richard Boatman,Township13, Range12, Section 25,$290,000 • Aaron C.andJudith M. Harris to Andrew A.and Heather L. Earnest, Township12, Range13,Section14, $500,000 • U.S. BankN.A., trustee for BearStearns Asset BackedSecurities Trust 2005-AC9, to NevadaB. Steele,CrookedRiver Ranch No. 8, Lot311,$173,000 • Dale andBarbara M.Brunkto Samuel L. Wilkins Jr.andCarley D.Wilkins, CrookedRiver RanchNo.3, Lot286, $224,900 • Jamie L. Smith andSarahK. BramanSmith to RaulA. Martinez andItzel L. Maldonado,Partition Plat 2004-03, Parcel 1,$189,000 • Larry J. andJanet I. Woodto Kurtis and Shandi Taylor,CrookedRiver RanchNo. 10, Lot 31,$180,300 • Wells FargoBankN.A., trustees for StructuredAdjustable RateMortgage Loan Trust, MortgagePass-Through Certificates, Series2007-3, to Ronald Winnett, RoundButte Recreational Area Unit 2, Lot11, Block 5,$210,000 • Terrance C.andSuzanneAckermanto Jamie A.and PamelaJ. Pulls, Crooked River RanchNo.12,Lot 50, $179,900 • Gloria M. Olson,trustee of theGloria M. OlsonTrust, to Bradford S. andMary A. Ott, CrookedRiver RanchNo.10, Lot 8, $205,000
centratesis the manufacturing process. "The biggest issue with extract and heated with an open flame, vaporizing the (concentrate)is the fact that it' s face that can be coated with
Continued from E1 Extracting resin from marijuana plants is nothing new. wax. Hashish, a product made usAs concentrates have gotten ing concentrated marijuana morepopularin recent years, resin, has been a staple in so too have rigs. Roy Ruiter, Morocco and Middle East- owner of Ziort's Den Pipe Shop ern countries for thousands on SE Ninth Street, said he of years, according toJerem y beganselling rigs three years Kwit, owner of Bloom Well. ago, and was among thefirst H owever, R i c k Ezr i n e , local head shops to do so. At co-owner and co-founder of the time, they were a small C ann Alytical Research, a portion of h is business,but marijuanatesting lab in Bend, today they provide more than said high-end dispensaries in half of hissales. Southern California began While advocates s ay the using gases toextract canna- unique method of inhalation binoids, a class of chemical makes it safer than smoking compounds found in marijua- marijuana buds, due to the rena, from the plant material moval of carcinogens, critics around 2010. note that the process of con"We did a tour of dispen- suming, which often involves saries about five years ago, an open flame,is reminiscent and that's when we first came of much harder drugs. "One of the main things acrossthese concentrates, and it just didn't make sense to me people don't like is the torch," back then," Ezrine said. Ezrine said. "I think they acSince then, Ezrine, a medical ma rijuana patient, ha s
• Jerry N. Garrity to AngelaM.Jasus, Center Addition toBend,Lots 11-12, Block 40,$320,000 • Choice One Builders LLC to Maureen M. Swaney, ChaseVillage,Lot16,$269,900 • ThomasW.andValorie K. Linharesto Gerald P.Adams,RidgeAt EagleCrest11, Lot 34, $165,000 • Alfred Pereira andKatherine T.Shirley, trustee of theKatherine ToddShirley Living Trust, to JohnAdkins, Homestead SecondPhase,Lot 2, Block 3,$250,000 • Carolyn S. DoedynsandRichard M. Kern to PamelaS.Mindt andVirginia A. Martin, TetherowCrossing, Phase2, Lot 3, Block 1,$550,000 • Donald L. andJudyC.Malstrom to Leonard C.and Rita S.Pipes, Wildflower/ Sunriver II, Unit 55,$213,000 • AmandaTechmanski, whoacquired title as AmandaCook, to JasonD. Stuwe, SundanceMeadows, Lot39, $283,900 • Lands Bend Corp. to Franklin Brothers LLC, Mirada,Phase1, Lot73, $295,000 • Franklin Brothers LLC to Jerry N. Garrity, Mirada,Phase1, Lot 73, $295,000 • Kathleen E. Zimmerman, Michael D. Prahl, JohnW.Prahl and Robert E. and James K.Prahl, to Kathy M.and Robert E. Prahl, OregonWaterWonderland, Unit 2, Lot 33, Block56,$231,000 • Scott C. andHeather M.Cunningham, trustees of theScott andHeather CunninghamLiving Trust, to RyF. McGuckinandLauraS. Miler, Rockridge, Phase1, Lot14, $275,000 • Touchstone InvestmentProperties Inc., whichacquiredtitle as Touchstone Investment Properties, toCaseyW.and Theresa L.Brown,Tamarack ParkEast, Phase 2,Lot 28, Block1, $271,500 • Marilyn M. and Steven L.Fineto Martha J. and Ashley R.Gordon,Tamarack Park East, Phase8, Lot6, Block 9,$250,000 • Terry D. and Garlic J. Chubbto Jessica and MatthewMedina,DeerPointe Vill age,Phase3,Lot4,$434,900
Cll>py g.
~
~Yak
Josie Lepe 1 Bay Area News Group
report from the Rocky Mountain High Intensity Drug Traf-
With about 1.4 bi llion Chrystal Bougon Isseen at her store, Curvy Girl Lingerie, in San people using Facebook, the Jose, California. Small businesses such as Curvy Girl Lingerie have socialnetwork is still the top been Impacted since Facebook started limiting the number of unchoiceforsm allbusinesses, paid promotional posts onIts NewsFeed, which means abusiness'
ficking Area, a multi-agency drug-enforcement organiza-
according to an April sur- Facebookpostwon'tbeseenby everyone who likes Itspage. vey by Manta.
of 2014alone, according to a
tiorL In January, the state also
introduced legislation that would require specific labeling for extracts, though thebill was postponed indefinitely in March.
In Oregon, the recreational future of extract is still up in
Though Ezrine said h e the air. Senate Bill 460, which been making his own con- thinks concentrate is health- would allow medical dispencentrates. He said most pro- ier than m a rijuana f lower, saries to sell a limited amount fessional wax-makers use a he acknowledged that the of marijuana to recreational closed-loop extraction sys- primary draw of the product consumers beginning in Octem, where pot is stuffed into is its potency. Because the tober if signed by Gov. Kate a stainless steel tube. The product typically ranges from Brown, would not allow sales tube is attachedto a hose that 60-80 percent THC, a small of concentrates or edibles. pumps inthe solvent, typically amount of concentrate can go Additionally, Ezrine specubutane, propane or carbon di- a long way. Kwit said he rec- lated that it would be possible oxide.The tube is heated and ommends concentrate to pa- for Oregon to prohibit recrepressurized, with theresulting tients like Brost, who can't or ational sales of concentrates substance then filtered and don't want to smoke an entire entirely. Measure 91does not collected in a chamber,before bowl to treat chronic pain, mi- reference the legality of conbeing placed in an oven for graines andinsomnia. centrate that is pu r c hased "We seeclients using these from a li censedmarijuana one to four days to remove the residual solvent. concentrates to get rapid onset retailer. "You remove all the carcin- relief," Kwit said. "There has to be some detogens out with the butane," However, the high potency rimental effects (to smoking Ezrine said. has drawn criticism. Ezrine pot), but I think you' re lessWhile Ezrine said it's pos- said users can become dehy- ening them as much as you sible to add a small amount of drated and vomit if they take can by using a concentrate," concentrate to bowls or joints too much. In certain instanc- Ezrine said. "I honestly think filled with marijuana flower, es, Ezrine said, it's possible that's the best th ing th a t's the most common way to con- to black out from dabbing, happened to this industryin a sume extractsis by dabbing. though he said it's rare. In- long, longtime." Dabbing requires a custom- deed, Ezrine said t h at t h e — Reporter: 541-617-7818, ized pipe, known as a "rig," biggest known danger of conshamway@bend bulletin.com
But th e
s u r vey a l s o
showed that about 59 per-
We can't aff ord tospend money
cent of small-businessowners don't think they see a return on their investment from their social media efforts and remain divided on
for unproven(return on investment)," Harris said.
whether tospend money on
Other small businesses said
thechanges have made them think twice about what they post on Facebook and if it will
thesocial network says. So far, Facebook doesn' t appearworried that the News
Feed changes will drive small businessesaway. In the past year and a half, the number of active adver-
be interesting enough for oth- tisers — businessesthat have ow n e r ersto share. advertised in the past month "It's more about how you — has doubled to 2 million, DiSandra Harris, who runs a business that sells plas- create relevant content just be- ana said. The social network tic-free lunchboxes, isn' t cause there aresomany people doesn't break out how much convinced that spending shouting," said Andrew Chau, money it makes from small more money on Facebook owner of Boba Guys, a gourmet businesses,but made $3.32 bilwill help her drivesales. boba milk tea business in San lion in advertising from JanuBusinessowners can pay Francisco. ary to March. to "boost" their Facebook "That's an indication to me Chaupointed to a recent post posts, promote their page on Boba Guys' Facebook page that businessesare seeing their or buy other types of ads where he linked to an artide businessobjectives being realto reach more people on about the11best boba tea spots ized through Facebook," Diana the site, but theprice varies in SanFrancisco, including his said. based on factors, induding company. The post reached Yet for small-businessownwhat the post is about and about 8,000 people,a signifi- ers, navigating social media who thebusiness is trying to cantnumber forapagethathas sites and their algorithms can reach. about 11,000likes. feel like screaming from a Like Bougon, Harris said It can be tough, though,to mountain top, wondering if she'sturning more to Face- grab aperson's attention on the anybodyis out there. book-owned In s tagram, site. At any given time, FaceOn a recent day, Bougon where it is easier to reach book's News Feed displays expressed her frustrations on fans for free. about 300 out of more than Facebook. "It's like no one is seeing our "As those platforms be- 1,500stories a person logged come heavily monetized, into the site could see from posts at all," she wrote in a stasmall, independently owned friends, businesses and more. tus update. businesses like mine have On average, a Facebook user Then she waited to see if the to go to the new next thing. readsonly 100 of those stories, comments and likes came. thesewebsites. E COlunchbox
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
QUEsTIoN: My employer is going to start offering long-term disability coverage next month. I plan on signing up for it but I am being told the premiums I will be paying /willnot be deducted from my paycheck on a pre-tax basis the way my health insurance premiums are. Shouldn't these both be handled the same way? Patrick O'Keefe ANswER: How premiums for l o ng-term disability are p aid d etermines whether disability benefits are paid as taxable income or nontaxable income. For example, if an employee has the premium deducted from theirpaycheck on a post-tax basis, or if t h e employer pays the premium and the employee's salary is grossed up to include the premium as taxable income, the monthly disability payment would not be taxable. However, the monthly disability payment could be counted as taxable income if the employer pays the premium and does not gross up the employee's salary, or if the employee pays the premium with pre-tax dollars. Since taxes paid on the disability income would be considerably greater than taxes paid on the premium, it is usually best to pay the taxes on the premium and receive the benefits as non-taxable income.
Qunsnoic How can I finance my customhome. ANswan: At Washington Federal, our specialty is home construction. It's how we built our bank, dating back to when we first opened our doors in 1917. Originally we were a construction lender for folks moving into the Ballard community near Seattle. Nowadays it' s still a very large part of our business. In fact, custom construction financing currently accounts for more than one third of our mortgage business. Our branch Kathleen managers are well-versed in the process and can Bailey explain your options, and they' ll make sure you have a solid plan (and back-up plan) to support a successful construction project. There are two ways to finance for custom-built homes: all-in-one and two-step loans. At Washington Federal, we offer all-in-one loans. We underwrite the entire project at one time, wrapping the construction and permanent financing together. There's no second loan, dual fees, or wasted time and effort. With an all-in-one loan, you apply for a single loan that begins with the construction phase and carries you into a "permanent" loan once you move into your new home. Your interest rate won't change, which means no surprises. Think of it this way: we offer a 31-year fixed rate loan with the first year being interest-only until construction is complete. For those of you speculating on higher interest rates in the future, you can rest easy by taking zero interest rate risk with us. If you are dreaming of building the home you' ve always imagined, give us a call and we can walk you through your options. You can also check out our construction loan application checklist, available at www. washingtonfederal.corn, to ensure that you have everything you need.
war
www.eascadeIosore.corn INsURANcE cENTER
541-382-7772
I
g
Federal.
w •
QUKsTIoN: Should I sell my home before I buy? ANswER: Some thingsto consider:
Often you will have to pay more for a home when the purchase is contingent upon the successful close of another property, because of the inherent risk to the seller. The best negotiating position for price on a purchase is when there are fewest contingencies to the seller. Having your property sold and cash in hand, even if you need to finance a portion of the sale, always puts you in the best position. Selling your home first also gives you certainty as to how much money you will have for your replacement property. It takes away that unknown factor and puts you in a less stressful position. Since these transactions inherently come with their share of stress, some degree of control is always better. Also, if you are able to get an offer accepted with a concurrent closeand now have a deadline you need to meet, you may feel pressured to accept an offer that is less in price than you would get if you had had more time. There are several ways to strategically and competitively structure these types of transactions. Feel free to give me a call and we can discuss what would work best in your situation.
KRI MORRIS REAL ESTATE
Rosemary Goodwin Broker, Certified Negotiator Coldwell Banker, Morris Real Estate 541-706-1897
QUESTION: We are thinking of buying our first
home. We need to finance it and are wondering what we can do toimprove our chances of getting financing? ANswER: There are 3 proactive steps you should consider taking before you start looking for a home. It's important when you start your home search to be prequalified for a loan, as you will need to know the pricerange you can afford. The first step is to check your credit score. Pull your credit reports from all three credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian and Transunion. The second step is probably the most important — repair your credit! Look for any mistakes, delinquent accounts or collection accounts. One thing lenders look for is your "credit utilization rate." That is the amount of credit you have used on the amount of credit that is extended to you. A good rate for a first-time homebuyer is less than 33%. If yours is higher than this, you will probably need to pay down some debt. The last thing to do is gather all the documentation that a lender will ask for, i.e., W2s, tax returns for at least 2 years and 2 to 3 months' bank statements. These steps do take time, but in the end it is worth the effort as it will greatly improve your chances of getting the financing for your first home.
4
ANswER:That depends on a lot of factors. Will you still be working? If so, for 2015 you can only earn $15,720 before Social Security startsreducing your benefits by $1 for every $2 earned above that threshold. Do you and your wife have a pension? Do you have B~~b~~~ Seaman add i t i onal sources of income? Which of you has been the highest wage earner throughout your careers? If your Social Security is more than your wife' s and you take your benefits at 62, then if you die first the spousal benefits are discounted. She will not get the amount you were getting at 62; it will be reduced because you did not wait till full retirement age (FRA). Spouses need to take age differences and the relative size of early, normal, or delayed benefits into account before deciding when to start Social Security. You can go to www.ssa.gov for a statement of your expected Social Security benefits and from there link to the government calculators for figuring future benefits.
At Cornerstone Financial Planning, we have access to calculators to help you determine how to maximize your Social Security benefits. Depending on your circumstances and assets, we help clients figure out if they should wait till their FRA, which if you were born after 1954 starts at age 66 and increases 2 months per birth year to age 67.
Cornerstone Financial PlanningGroupLLC www. CornerstoneFinancialBend.corn 5 4 1-388-1708
Pho ne: 541-312-7122
Email: kate.baileV©wafd.corn joe Ste eI'e' Washington Federal NMLSR ¹ 410394
•
QIInsrioNI Should I take my Social Security at age 62?I am 61 and my wife is60.
Assistant Vice President, Smal l Business Banldng pnicer
+
R
E3
CFPG
•
•
QUEsTIoN: W e are snowbirds and live in our motor home partof the year and Iwant to make sure we are protected if someone isinjured while visiting us in our motor home. I have high liability limits on my homeowner's andmotor home policies—is that enough?
ANswnn:Motor homes are unique when it comes to liability protection because they are both a home and a vehicle. Both of these exposures require different types of liability coverage. When the motor home is being used as a vehicle, you are required to have at least the state required minimum bodily injury liability coverage on your policy in case you are involved in a motor vehicle accident. All motor home policies are required to have this type of liability coverage. If your motor home is parked in anRV park, the driving liability doesn't cover you if a guest is injured in your motor home; that requires premise liability. Your homeowner's policy has personal and premise liability, and the personal liability follows you anywhere, but the premise liability only covers the location stated on the policy, not your second home (the motor home). Many motor home policies don't include premise liability coverage options for when the motor home is functioning like a second home. If your current policy doesn't have this option, you should shop for a policy that does.If you live in a motor home full time, some policies also offer personal liability along with premise liability coverage as an optional coverage. Karen Brannon
F ARM E R S I NSURANC E
www.farmersagent.corn/kbrannon
541-771-0064
Q UKsTION: Should I finance my new home on a 30year or a 15-year loan? ANswER: Many bomebuyers are showing interest in 15-year mortgages. As mortgage rates continue to hover at historic lows, 15-year loans offer affordable options for homebuyers. Since many homebuyers move within the first five years of owning their home, a shorter term may allow them to build more equity by the time they are ready to sell. 15-year mortgages offer potential savings:
Judy McClurg
Reduced Interest Expense — A 15-year mortgage could result in less than half the interest paid on the same loan even at the same rate on a 30-year term. Rates on Average Are Lower — Freddie Mac rates as of July 2, 2015, indicatea 0.840% spread between an average 30-year and 15-year mortgage, helping to keep monthly payments more affordable. Faster Principal Reduction — Borrowers could have close to 25% of the debt paid off vs. around only 8% with a 30-year mortgage. Retirement Planning — Ashorter term may align better with a
homebuyer's retirement timeline, helping to pay their home off and no mortgage payments in retirement. It also could provide access to increased equity for home improvements or for paying their children' s college tuition costs. Every financing situation is unique. If you are interested in learning more about financing options that meet your needs, I am always available. Call or email today!
P ACI F I C RESIDENTIAL MORTGAGE
Sr. Mortgage Banker 541-410-2808
C7
judy.mcclurg©pacresmortgage.com MLO- 225972
Answer a local Financial Question. Reach 70,000 local readers with your Financial Answer. FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL OR EMAIL K AREN S T O W E
5 41 -383 - 0 3 0 1 EAGLEC REsT' 5 P RO Pa RT I E a
7
kstowe©bendbulletin.corn
sue©suemarx.corn• 541-408-4204
N)>+. " s~~ rs~
,
wth
.
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Onlineshopping
have embraced U.S. retai l holidays like Black Friday Continued from E1 and Cyber Monday. A survey "Over the years we' ve seen by consultancy RetailMeNot. the economy of Sumas ride ca showed that 44 percent the roller coaster of the Ca- of shoppers did less holiday nadian dollar," said Briana shopping in the U.S. because Kelley, president of the Sumas they were able to indulge in Chamber of Commerce. those discount extravaganzas That ride was often traumatic: In the late 1990s, the town
at home.
And Canada's government, w as full of shuttered gas sta- under pressurefrom retail ers, tions, in part victims of a sharp has loweredtari ff s on proddrop in the value of the Cana- ucts like hockey gear and baby dian dollar. The decline was clothes, making those products further compounded by tighter cheaper than before in Canada. "The U.S. will always play border security after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. a role in shopping for CanadiThese days, the strengthen- ans," LeBlanc said. But "that' s ing U.S. dollar means fewer going to get moderated over Canadians are going to big- time." box stores in U.S. cities like
Bellingham, but the growing number of virtual shoppers has buffered the small border
communities. E-commerce "has created
a new opportunity for local businesses," Kelley said. The Retail Council of Canada estimates that about 30
Feeling the impact
Rent
ed with a big jump in online commerce. "The first year was just ex-
Priced out of the retail business
At the Pic-It-Up warehouse on Cherry S t reet, Sumas'
mainthoroughfare,cardboard
Turchin Jewelry opened H indy, a c o -owner o f t h e brewery. Now Williamsburg is one of the city's trendiknown for muggings and est sections, and rents are purse snatchings. There- at least $30 a square footsa Turchin and her hus- which means a lease signed band, Tommy, found space today would cost more than near a popular restaurant $900,000. "The prices are way bethat drew affluent people. Their jewelry, priced from yond what any manufacturer the low hundreds into the could afford to pay," Hindy thousands of dollars, sold says. well. Although Brooklyn BrewIn 2012, luxury stores ery has 10 years to go on its such as Louis Vuitton and lease, it's already looking for Cartier began moving in. space in other parts of BrookWhen the Turchins' lease lyn, some of which may also was up for renewal last become expensive, Hindy year, the landlord wanted says. This time, the company $18,000 a month; they had will protect itself from soarbeen paying $5,000. ing rents. "Your rent should be 10 "We are insisting on buypercent of your expenses ing any place where we' d per month.We were doing build a brewery," Hindy says. our numbers, and it just didn't make sense," There- Deja vu ahead? sa Turchin says. The rent was going to dou-
boxes with customers' names scrawled on them i n b l ack marker, sit until their owners
in the Design District in 2007, when the area was
pay a$3 fee andpick them up. S imen-Falvy said m o r e than 20,000 people have registered with his service as word
spread, thanks in part to his YouTubevideos. In these he has imperson-
ated a cowboy holding a banana, a female cheerl eader and a suspectunder police in-
terrogation. He also explains how to use the service. "You know your name? You
locker service that opened this
But it's perhaps most felt in Washington state, where the
year. Even BobBromley,them ay-
percent of Canadians' online border is sparsely populated or of Sumas, participates in compared with the highly ur- the bonanza: The supermarban part of British Columbia ket he owns holds parcels for a on the other side. few hundred customers. Savingsappeal About 15 percent of British The direct tax r evenue Because of import tariffs, Columbia residents, according brought by online sales is esdifferent pricing and high dis- to data from a survey by Van- timated at $37,000 by the Detribution costs for Canadian couver consultancy Insights partment of Revenue for last retailers, shopping in Ameri- West, have some kind of U.S. year, based on the big retailers ca can look pretty appealing. mailbox. That's more people it tracks. That's not as much Even U.S. retailers operating than live in Whatcom County, as the taxes collected from in Canada suffer: A tire that which borders the most pop- the gambling establishments sells for about $320 at Ama- ulous part of the Canadian that, according to Bromley, in zon.ca retails for $227 on the province. the early 1990s "financed the "It means that there is sig- whole Police Department." company's U.S. site. And there's much more va- nificant impact on e-comBut it's income this town riety available in the U.S. merce," said James McCaf- wouldn't otherwise have, he "If you' re a Canadian retail- ferty, assistant director for said. The package places also er on the border, you' re caught the Center for Economic and help other businesses, as viswith one hand behind your Business Research at West- itors fill up on dairy and gas back," said Michael LeBlanc, ern Washington University in during their parcel runs. "People come over to pick the retail council's senior vice Bellingham. president for marketing and The impact comes f r om up their Amazon package and digital retail. people like Rhonda Nikkel, an buy an ice-cream cone," said Le Blanc said Canada's Abbotsford resident who said Rod Fadden, utilities superine-commerce sectoris under- she often picks up parcels in tendent for the city. developed compared with Sumas twice a week. Generits bigger southern neighbor. ally it's for books she buys onFor example, Holt Renfrew, line, but she's moving more of a high-end Canadian depart- her shopping to the Web. "This past Christmas I did ment store, doesn't sell prod541-548-2066 ucts on its website. Neither all online shopping," she said. did Target's Canada website "All from Amazon, shipped to ~gH Jp. during that company's brief here." S foray there. Pic-It-Up, which bills itself "100 percent Canadian But the gap won't last forev- as er, LeBlanc said. More foreign owned and operated," was Sacai retailers are opening stores the fourth shipping business north of the border, increas- in Sumas when it opened four ing the assortment of products years ago, said owner Richard G allery-Be n d available to Canadians. Simen-Falvy, who lives in Ab541-330-S084 Also, Canadian retailers botsford. Its opening coincid-
ough of Brooklyn. Commercial rents were about $3 per square foot per year, making the annual rent for the warehouse $90,000, says Steve
Continued from E1
plosive growth," he said.
The U.S. impact of Canadi- have a computer? You have an online shopping can be felt a Visa that isn't racked up? along the entire border. Resi- Then, if you do, you' re qualidents of Ontario pick up their fied to use Pic-It-Up." Web purchases in cities such Other shops include a 24/7 as Buffalo and Detroit.
borhood in New York's bor-
transactions are made abroad, mostly in the U.S.
They settled into a suite,
ble to $6,000 a month for Keli Faw's fabric store in Seattle's
not a storefront, 5 miles away in M iami Beach, Ballard area. She operated paying $3,000 for half their previous space. They knew th e
Alaska Air Group Walgreen Boots Alii
ALK WB A Tesoro Corp T SO U nited conti Hldgs UA L Electronic Arts EA Martin Mar Matl M LM Delta Air Lines D AL Vulcan Matl V MC A merican Airlines Gp AA L Block H&R HRB Mobileye NV MBLY Markel Cp MKL Chipotle Mex Grill CMG Workday Inc WDAY Omnicom Grp O MC
$CHG %CHG %CHG AWK 1WK 1MO
70.55 93.11 98.40 55.51 72.07 152 .9 0 42 46 90. 3 6 41.21 31.18 57. 3 5 870 . 3 0 639. 4 2 79 . 5 2 72. 6 9
5.54 7.30 7.19 4.01 4.2 7 8.90 2 46 4.99 2.18 1.57 2.84 40. 2 9 29. 8 6 3.73 3.33
8.5 8.5 79 78 6 .3 6 .2 6 .2 5 .8 5 .6 5.3 5.2 4.9 4.9 4.9 4 .8
11.1 9.5 17.8 5.0 14.9 3.4 32 1.7 1.2 1.8 11.2 10.2 4.9 -0.1 0.3
% RTN 1YR COMPANY
38.7 26.3 60.8 32.9 98.5 16.1 10.7 32.8 -4.6 -5.0 0.0 31.1 3.8 -4.8 1.3
60 Global Tech S IXD Versartis lnc VSAR NeoGenomics Inc NEO XOMA Corp X OMA L egacy Reserves LP LGCY Vital Therapies VTL Wingstop Inc WING D ynavax Technologies DVAX MaxPoint Interactive M XP T B io Telemetry Inc BEA T TelecommunSyslnc TSYS A gile Therapeutics AG R X Eros Intl pic E ROS Marinus Pharma M RNS S ynthetic Biologics SYN
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Sprint Corp S EncanaCorp ECA Antero Resources AR F reeport McMoRan F C X Aetna Inc A ET
They t a rgeted
B rooklyn
Bre w e ry
then a run-down neigh-
Call a n
C omp l e m e n t s
FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
12. 2 0
4.71
62.9
3 2.9
128.3
18. 7 8
4.16
28.5
5.8
-35.0
6.60
1.4 2
2 74
17.9
55.2
4.72
1.00
26.7
28.6
5.4
2.00
24 . 6
16.3
-60.5
4.73
22.4
11.0
10. 1 3 25.82 34. 3 8 28. 1 1 9.59 10.86 4. 0 0 10. 2 5 28. 6 8 13 . 6 2 3.04
FRI. CHG +25.31 +319.22 +91.75 +508.49 +145.85 -75.67
FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD +1.23% +0.86% 2 90% L L %i5.40% I 39% +1.63% +z08% 5 49% t14.75% +3.07% -0.38% +1 3.35%
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
5.86
20.5
12.4
4.54 1.53 1.68 0. 6 1 1.53 4.16 1.97 0.4 2
19.3 19.0 18.3 18 .0 1 75 1 70 16.9 16.0
34.4 2.1 16.8 22. 7 12.1 31.7 6.8 8.6
4
+ 36.26 %
L a L
+4.10% +5.21 % -1.51%
12. 6Amsterdam 15.3 Brussels Madrid 0.0 Zurich 0.0 Milan 87.5 Johannesburg Stockholm
-24.7
-30.2
481.39 +11A2 3674.60 +85.38 1120.45 +33.15 91 34.18 +149.10 22937.40 +668.89 51800.70 +348.34 1590.54 +40.95
2 43% L 2 38% L +3.05% L +1.66% +3.00% +0.68%
+z64%
L L
13 41% tie.85% +7.48% +1.68% +20.65%
+4.08% +8.60%
T
ASIA
16.74
-1.66
-9.0
-15.5
-54.5 Allot Comm
ALLT
-1.71
-24.2
-31.6
114. 6 0
-10.91
-8.7
-1.1
39. 7 Nuverra Environ
NES
4.24
-1.26
-22.9
-21.8
23.98
-z22
-8.5
- 5.8
23. 6 Horsehead Holding
-z49
-21.7
-28.1
14.36
-1.32
-8.4
-10.8
-51.6
8.96 5.99
-1.63
-21.4
-34.5
Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times 0.0 Sydney All Ordinaries -56.5 Taipei Taiex -77.8 Shanghai Composite -50.2 -36.6
L EA
104. 2 1
-9.14
-8.1
-10.1
13. 9
1.07
-0.27
-20.1
-15.1
-75.1
DLpH
79.2 0
-6.79
-79
-9.6
1 3.2
1.56
-0.39
-20.0
-20.0
-48.7
A LV
107. 1 8
-9.19
-79
-11.9
z2
9.59
-z21
-18.7
-34.5
-45.0
ZI N C Enphase Energy Inc E N P H 10N Geophysical 10 Mosys Inc MOSY F arsight Energy LP F E LP
LAST 2076.62 11315.63 6673.38 24901.28 4903.07 19779.83
L s ao Paolo Bovespa 5 2 610.37 +848.18 + 1.64% a w 76.3 Toronto s&P/TSX 144 1 1.07 +132.58 + 0 .93% V Y 0.0 /AFRICA 46.8 EUROPE
-4.59
-16.6
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
4
-51.3 Seaspine Hldgs
-9.2
t e e am r n r , Broker
-2.7 Buenos Aires Merval 1 1 690.01 +178.71 + 1 .55% T 449 1 5.98 +351.66 + 0 .79% V 0.0 Mexico City Balsa
-76.8
-3.06
ford even higher rents. "We may be contributing to the same thing," she says.
Globalmarkets
-20.3
30.19
other merchants who can af-
w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o r n
-26.1
-54.2 Rex Energy Corp
her five-year lease is up, she' ll need to move again because Pioneer Square may attract
Licensed Broker in the State of Oregonsince 1997
H o m e I n t er i o r s
-1.31
-19.7
higher than in Ballard. Faw's concerned that when
541.322.7337
REXX S PNE
-12.3
passing tourists. She turned part of the store into an art gallery. Her rent is 30 percent
541-389-4212 5 4 1-585-2446 dan®colmcommercial.corn
-30.6
-1.35
merchandise that appeal to
Professional, experienced, knowledgeable assistance finding the right environment for you and your business.
-33.4
9.65
stocks tote bags and other
• OFFICE • INDUSTRIAL • RETAIL • • SALES AND LEASING •
-270
0.0 silicom Limited
least 50percent of her merc handise i s d i f f erent; s h e
Call Dan Steelhammer to help you find the work space you need to thrive.
-9.83
-18.4
isn't only selling fabric. At
Sometimes alittle more space can make a big difference.
found w arehouse space in 1990 in Williamsburg,
26. 5 7
-15.6
Ballard location, Faw's focus
Advance planning
s lLc
-0.70
Because her store is more visible and larger than the
r e t ailers
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
3.78
there.
like opticians with a necklace that doubles as an eyeglass holder.
3.70 13. 9 6 5.37
santander consumUSA sc Cenovus Energy CVE Lear Corp Delphi Automotive Autoliv Inc
TICKER
Faw found a store 6 miles
away in Pioneer Square. For years the area was known for having homeless people and drug activity. Today, it's turning around. Restaurants and hotels are opening, and paper producer Weyerhaeuser Inc. is moving its headquarters
salers. They learned how to appeal to retailers; for example, by creating displays for storeowners to show off the merchandise.
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
FRIDAY C L OS E
a storefront, but couldn't afford $3,000 more a month.
decided tobecome whole-
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers TICKER
of a coffee shop. She wanted
n e w l o c ation
tIN'TREss
COMPANY
Drygoods Design in the once run-down neighborhood for two years, selling in the back
wouldn't bring them sales from passers-by, so they
WILSONoS fRIImona
15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
E5
2031.17 + 3 .36 3279.88 +1 z48 5478.11 +21.77 -61.98 8914.13 3877.80 +168.47
+0.1 7% +038% +040% -0.69% +4.54%
T T V V 4
+6.03%
T V V V Y
-z53% +1.66% 4 22% +19.88%
Quotable
"I remember World War II and I think this could become worse." — Greek pensionerRoza Alverti, 83, on concerns that the country will cut pensions as part of an agreement to avoid being forced out the eurozone
Note: stocks classified by market capitalization, the product Ofthe current stock price andtotal shares outstanding. Ranges are $100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
Insider/&A
Aircraft ambitions
Tom Enders CEO of Airbus Group
These are heady times for the commercial-aircraft business at AIrbus and Boeing, as airlines are placing huge orders for new planes. Each Is working on more fuel-efficient aircraft to satisfy regulators who want lower emissions and customers who want lower fuel bills. AIrbus continues to make inroads wIth U.S. airlines. United, Delta and American combined have 82 orders for the A350, a rival to BoeIng's Dreamliner. The new plane started flying this year. Tom Enders, a former German defense official, has been CEO of AIrbus Group since 2012. Here he speaks about AIrbus' biggest plane, the A380, pollution regulation and hacking. Has the airline industry lost Its aura of cool and cutting-edge technology?
Back In the '50s and '60s, avIation and space was very disruptive. The jet engine came along — that was disruptive. It looks like we ran out of steam a little bit In the '70s.We might geta second wind.
Is cheaper jet fuel or concern about airlines adding too much capacity hurting demand for jets? Not really. The Paris air show proves our point that the market Is still strong, it's still dynamic. By and large the prospects are positive, and you know, the airline industry Is so much more profitable, particularly In the United States.
previous generations. At the same time we are working on alternative fuels, we are working on algae, we are working on gas, we' re working on electric-powered aircraft.
development days of the 380. Ever since, we' ve taken particular precautions to make our aircraft as safe as possible. If you ask me today, I'm fairly confident that our aircraft are secure from hacking.
Passengers rave about the A380 but your sales have dropped off. Why? It was always clear that there would only be a very limited number of airlines who were customers or potential customers of the 380. If you manage to fill a 380, let's say 80 percent or more, it is a money-making machine. If you are flying at only 50 percent passenger load, you have a big problem.
Will we ever see a plane with one pilot or even no pilot on board? We all know that from a technological point of view, we could fly large aircraft today completely autonomous. If you look at reality, for most of the flight they are flying autonomous. But another question Is political aspects and psychology. Hence I do not think that anytime soon we will see a completely pilotless aircraft due to What effect will anti-pollution regulation Are you worried that your planes could security reasons. have on your business? be hacked? New engines ... will be significantly less Our concern with hacking into our planes, Interviewed by David Koenig. fuel-consuming and less emitting than with terrorism, dates back to the early Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, July 10, 2015
+
I7,76O.<i
+
NASDaa ~ - 1 1 .51 4,997.70
+
S&P500
RussELL2000 ~
2,076.62
I,252.02 ~
3 76
WILSHIRE5000 ~ 21,954.36 ~
3 77
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
UNDAY D
R
Static issue with radio should beeasilyfixed
faC iCa I
I f II1 W l By Larry Printz
S,g
Tribune News Service
Before there was an Olds-
By Brad Bergholdt
mobile Toronado, Cadillac
Tribune News Service
added to the wire supplying power to the radio but it's more
Eldorado, Buick Riviera or Continental Mark I I , t h e re
Q
of a Band-Aid than a fix. If the static occurs at all
• Your column isinter• esting to read even
was the 1952 Mercedes-Benz 300 S Coupe, the first in a series of full-size grand touring coupes meant to add a dash of spice to Mercedes-Benz's top-
though most of what you talk about is beyond my repair capabilities. The radio in my 2011 Ford Focus has
times, it's possible the anten-
a lot of static on the AM
band. A common fault with
of-the-line model range. If the
charged V-8's smooth, seam-
stations. I enjoy hearing the mast type antennas is the mast news, traffic reports and has come slightly loose from weather when driving, but the base (screw it back in sethe static can get so loud curely). Corrosion at the antenit drowns everything else na cable terminal/radio socket out. Is there anything I can is also possible. Finally, it' s check before I go to a ga- possible the antenna cable inrage forservice'?If service ner conductor or outer ground is my only option, do I go to sleeve has failed. This can be a dealer garage or to a store easily tested with the radio rethat sells and repairs car ra- moved for access. dio systems? Thanks. Where to take it for diagno• I hear you. Many sis? Either of your two sugges• years back my kid' s tions should work as long as kindergarten teacher told the technician assigned has me pretty much the same training and experience in this thing. She was a very neat skill area. Ask questions when lady and in the interest of considering an appointment. keeping her onboard, I' ve The person you speak to will tried ever since to trim the likely not be the one doing the techie stuff as much as pos- work but may give you a feelsible. Each week, before ing about the chances for repressing the send key, I ask pair success. myself, would Nancy read
less, effortless flow of power. This Autobahn athlete makes
this? Your A M
driving effortless, delivering
could have several sources, transmission and a regular and the issue is likely fix- stick shift'? able. Does the noise vary • A dual clutch transmiswith engine speed or is it • sion is b asically two
sedans were built for heads of state, the coupes were built for their significant REVIEW o thers. But no matter how popular coupes became — and
the mid-1970s and 1980s were their heyday in the U.S. — they have since become automotive
unicorns: infrequently bought and rarely seen. That's why the 2016 Mer-
Courtesy Mercedes-Benz via Tribune News Service
cedes-Benz S-Class Coupe is The the 2016 Mercedes-Benz S-Class Coupe acknowledges practicality, but doesn't live by it. so welcome. It acknowledges
practicality — after all it does have a 10.36 cubic-foot trunk — but doesn't live by it. How
refreshing in an era when the letters S, U and V seem to be the only answer to most con-
sumers' transportation needs. There are three versions of the S-Class Coupe, starting with the all-wheel-drive S550 4MATIC. Powered by a 4.7-liter twin turbocharged
V-8 rated at 449 horsepower and 516 pound-feet of torque, this Coupe whisks you from the stoplight to 60 mph in 4.5 seconds for a mere $119,900, plus $925 destination charge and options. Are you truly in a hurry? Then you' ll want the all-wheel-drive S63 AMG 4MATIC for a bit more,
$160,900. You' ll reach 60 mph a half-second quicker, thanks to a 5.5-liter twin tur-
bocharged V-8 producing 577 horsepower and 664 poundfeet of torque. But for some, only a V-12 will do. That' s why the S65 AMG exists. For
$230,900, you get 621 horsepower and 738 pound-feet of
2016Mercedes S-ClassCoupe
ment panel is anchored by two enormous thin-film-transistor
wheel'? Finally, a Bermester audio system adds to the en-
flat screens; one for the instru-
tertainment generated in the
Base price: $119,900$230,900 Type:Luxury all-wheeldrive coupe Engine:4.7-liter twin-turbocharged V-8 Mileage:13-16 mpgcity, 20-24 mpg highway
ment cluster, the other for infotainment and climate controls.
car's engine compartment. It goes without saying that
The high-tech touches are
this car's t ru e comes from it s
offset by an interior awash in
leather; ordering the "designo" option adds diamond quilted leather. A large panoramic glass roof is above you, with optional "Magic Sky Control"
a m usement t w i n-turbo-
lots or torque while tackling
corners like a humble servant: it doesn't open. no muss, fuss or bother. Fling torque and races to 60 mph in Being a grand touring coupe, this 2-ton, 198-inch long coupe 4 seconds, slightly slower than accommodations are grand for through a bending, twisting the less-expensive S63. those in front; less so in the road and you' ll be suitably reOf course, getting a car to rear. But with some accommo- warded. And since it's a Mergo fast is easy; making it desir- dation from front-seat passen- cedes-Benz, its laundry list able is more difficult. gers, there is enough space in of driver assistance technolThat explains this car's sub- the back for short trips. ogy options with odd names lime styling, with sensuous No matter where you sit, will ensure your safety and curves offset by crisp charac- you' ll find t h ere's plenty security. ter lines and capped by a stun- here to indulge you, from cliSo let others buy tarted-up, ning grille flanked by LED m ate-controlled s eats t h a t overpriced SUVs that look litheadlamps accented with 47 massage, to aromatherapy tle different from their neighSwarovski crystals. It's fetching and seven ambient lighting bor's plebian off-roader. Your allure needs no explanation. s ettings that set t h e r i g ht ride is truly special; a true The S550 Coupe's excep- mood. And did I mention that treat for a life well-lived, and a tional nature continues inside, this carhas heated armrests testament to your taste for the where a wraparound instru- in addition to a heated steering rare and exotic. to control its opacity. However,
AM band is fussier about a proper antenna than the FM
A
r a di o s t atic
constant? Would the noise
be the same if you tried listening with the key on and engine off? Or does the noise change when certain
th e d i ff erence Q •• What's between a "dual clutch"
A
manual transmissions in one
box, without a pedal-operated clutch. A pair of computercontrolled wet clutches allow
stops and starts and almost
accessoriesare in use? If seamless shifting. The odd and the static occurs mainly even gears each have their own
with the engine running or
dutch, so during an up-shift the next gear can be already this a suppression prob- engaging as the first one is lem. The source needs to be released. This reduces accelidentified and repaired or eration time, saves fuel and filtered. Examples are an al- provides an almost interrupternator or ignition system tion-free rush of acceleration. fault. The latter is less likely Shifts can be either manually accessories in use we' ll call
on recent vehicles. A noise
selected with steering wheel
filter is a device that can be paddies or automatically done.
F4
-Wasoas
•
na has a poor connection. The
•
•
J y
•ITRAL RECON S ARREST ELECTION
Jl
• LIVERY PECIALt INANCINC ' VAilULBLE I
•
of Redmo nd
•$•
~
•
s
,
W ilson's ~
•
•
~
-
w olive Garden
i•
I
•
Gallery-Bend
sg~
'•e
•
•
e
•
•
•
s
•
•
' l
I
s ,
i
g
l
l
I
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.corn/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
I
DAVID BROOKS
VV n
Accepting complexity a bold act
t
thought I knew the basic life story of my friend Clemantine Wamariya. She was born in Rwanda 27
• Louisiana's DalCox e hasbecomea blunt spokesmanfor the death penalty
years ago. When she was 6 —though she didn't understand it — the geno-
cide began and her world started shrinking. Her father stopped going
n'
to work after dark. Her family ate dinner with the lights off.
To escape the mass murder,
F ~)OO 1 !weal'
Clemantine and her older sister,
Claire, were moved from house to house. One night they were told to crawl through a sweet potato field
and then walk away — not toward anything, just away. They crossed the Akanyaru River (Clemantine thought the dead bodies floating in it were just sleeping) and into Burundi. Living off fruit, all her toenails fell out. She spent the rest of her young girlhood in refugee camps
' +1>< 'i~i1(1(t+i5,
ssssr
Il l
0' ''
A4®® ~~a~a ~a~i'
'sA i'll< l441 tll,-
in eight African nations.
Claire kept them on the move, in search of a normal life. Their struggles in the camps, for water and much else, were almost perfectly designed
ki
'hhrhhrhrhh'h'hrhh SShhhh
to give a sense that life is arbitrary.
In 2000, Claire got them refugee status in the United States through the International Organization for Migration. Claire went to work as a
hotel maid in Chicago. A few years later, Clemantine was one of 50 win-
ners of Oprah Winfrey's high school essay contest. In the middle of the 2006 show cel-
ebrating the winners, Oprah brought Clemantine and Claire on stage. Oprah asked when was the last time
Photosby Brandon Thibodeaux/The New YorkTimes
Dale Cox, acting district attorney for Caddo Parish in Louisiana, where more people were sentenced to death per capita than in any other U.S. county from 2010 to 2014, at the downtown courthouse in Shreveport, Louisiana, on June 23.
the girls had seen their parents. It had been 12 years. Then Oprah gave them a surprise: "Your family is here!" Her parents, brotherand sisterhad been found in Africa, and now walked onstage. They all fell into one another' s
arms. Clemantine's knees gave out, but her mother held her up. Clemantine's story, as I knew it
then, has a comforting arc: separation,perseverance,reunion andjoy. But Clemantine and Elizabeth Weil
just wrote a more detailed version of her story for the online magazine Matter, and the reality is not so neat.
For one thing, Clemantine never really reconciled with her family. After the Oprah taping they returned to Claire's apartment. "My father kept smiling, like someone he mistrusted
was taking pictures of him. Claire remained catatonic; I thought she' d finally gone crazy, for real. I sat on Claire's couch, looking at my strange new siblings, the ones that had replaced me and Claire. I fell asleep crying." The rest of the family flew back home to Africa the following Monday. At every stop along the way, the pat narrative of Clemantine's life is complexified by the gritty, mottled nature of human relationships. The refugee worker who married Claire and fathered her children turned out to be more a burden than a savior. The
By Campbell Robertson eThe New York Times
SHREVEPORT, La. -
n a much-discussed dissent from the Supreme Court's ruling on lethal injection last week, Justice Stephen G. Breyer laid out the problems, as he saw them, with the death penalty. Among them was "arbitrariness in application," including how simple geography can determine whether someone convicted of murder would be sentenced to death. "Between 2004 and 2009," Breyer wrote, "just 29 counties (fewer than 1 percent of counties in the country) accounted for approximately half of all death sentences imposed nationwide." Caddo Parish, here in the northwestern corner of the state, is one of these counties. Within Louisiana, where capital punishment has declined steeply, Caddo has become an outlier, accounting for fewer than 5 percent of the state's death sentences in the early 1980s but nearly half over the past five years. Even on a national level Caddo stands apart. From 2010 to 2014, more people were sentenced to death per capita here than in any other county in the United States, among counties with four or more death sentences in that period. Robert J. Smith, a law professor at the University of North Carolina whose work was cited in Breyer's dissent, said Caddo illustrated the geographic disparity of capital punishment. But he said this analysis did not go far enough. Caddo, he said, has bucked the natonal trend in large part because of one man: Dale Cox. Cox, 67, who is the acting district attorney and who has secured more than a third of Louisiana's death sentences over
sisters' psyches were not unscathed. "Claire made a hard, subconscious
the last five years, has lately become one of the country's bluntest spokesmen for the death penalty. He has readily accepted
calculus: She could survive, and may-
invitations from reporters to explain whether he meant what he said to The Shreveport Times in March: that capital
be enable me to survive, too, but only if she cast off emotional responsibili-
punishment is primarily and rightly about revenge and that the state needs to "kill more people." Yes, he really meant it.
ty, only if she refused to take on how
anything or anybody felt." Clemantine is now an amazing young woman. Her superb and artful essay reminded me that while the genocide was horrific, the constant
mystery of life is how loved ones get along with one another. We work hard to cram our lives into legible narratives. But we live in
the fog of reality. Whether you have
And he has been willing to recount his personal transformation from an opponent of capital punishment, a belief grounded in his Catholic faith, to one of the most prolific seekers of the death penalty in the nation.
"Retribution is a valid societal interest," Cox
said ona recent afternoon, in a manner as calm
and considered as the hypothetical he would propose was macabre. "What kind of society would
survived a trauma or not, the psyche
say that it's OK to kill babies and eat them, and in
is still a dark forest of scars and tender spots. Each relationship is intricacy piled upon intricacy, fertile ground for
fact we can have parties where we kill them and eat them, and you' re not going to forfeit your life
misunderstanding and mistreatment.
longer a society." Cox later clarified that he had not seen any case involving cannibalism, though he described it as the next logical step given what he at several points called an "increase in savagery."
When she was a young girl, Clemantine displayed the large courage to endure genocide. In this essay she displays the courage of small things: the courage to live with feelings wide open even after trauma; the maturity to accept unanswerable ambiguity; the tenacity to seek co-
herence after arbitrary cruelty; the ability to create tenacious bonds that
for that? If you' ve gotten to that point, you' re no
Smith said that Cox's personal evolution serves
not only as a window into the criminal justice system in Caddo Parish, but also goes to the heart of
the questions raised by Breyer. "When you start to look underneath the counties and ask, 'Who is actually prosecuting these
have some give to them, to allow for the mistakes others make; the unwill-
cases?' you realize in most of the counties it's one or a limited number of prosecutors," Smith said.
ingness to settle for the simple, fake story; and the capacity to look at life
For instance, in the five years since Lynne Abraham left the office of district attorney in Philadel-
in all its ugly complexity.
phia, where she had secured 45 death sentences
— David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
in 19 years, there were only three death sentences. SeeDeath IF5
Dale Cox, 67, says capital punishment is primarily and rightly about revenge and that retribution is a valid societal interest.
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
mi ion
1XPhNG KEN...
iscove a cou e r oa s
e®5'
t
"los ~
A Ne@vs@
d~
N>%Nl
Nl „" SWNO, "
'
~
AggPtgQ
. 10¹!" /i'~
90NP.
"
o O
0
he one thing that may hurt the city of Bend's effort to raise more money for roads the most could be the city of Bend itself. City officials just found $1.87 million more that could go to street repairs. That's after city officials and councilors already approved a 201517 budget with about $3.5 million a yearforstreetrepairs. That's after some said the budget did not need to be revisited to find more money for roads. That's after Councilor Barb Campbell took c ouncilors Victor Chudowsky and Casey Roats to task for their votes against the budget. Chudowsky and R oats h ad wanted the city to go back and see what othermoney for roads could be found. Campbell criticized their votes as "political votes to make some kind of point." Well, there's $1.87 million gained for roads, in part because of those symbolic votes. That's an excellent return. What's also intriguing is that $1.87 million more for roads doesn' t come at the expense of department
budgets. It's taken mostly from the city's reserves, which will still be at a comfy 20percent.City Manager Eric King said now that the books are closed for the fiscal year, the city has made some new projections about its financial outlook. The financial outlook may not be grim, but Bend's roads are still in bad shape.The city says there is a backlog of some $80 million in neededroad maintenance.The city says it is getting less and less state and federal support to pay for needed repairs. And the city is telling residents it wants their help to improve the roads, perhaps with a gastax. This discovery of $1.87 million will confirm for some what people worry about government. It's good at asking for money, spends it like it is someone else's and is less than forthright with voters about what it has and needs.
Body camerasmight not make senseright now
T
he Legislature's new law on body cameras has Bend and Prineville police t hinking they may have to give them up. It' s a reasonable decision. Bend police don'tuse body cameras now,though the department has been experimenting with them and considering adding t hem.
ber along with the expense of the equipment. He wasn't sure that expense made sense. Body cameras can provide valuable information about incidents. They may encourage better behavior from suspects and police. And they can show a perspective of an incident that will almost instantly seville policehave been using dear up some questions. them. But we don't seem them as absoThe new law adds requirements. lutely necessary in Bend, Prineville Police must turn on the cameras or elsewhere in Central Oregon. when encountering any suspect. Their value must b e w e ighed The recordings must be stored. against their cost. It would of course When recordings are released to the be helpful to know how much it public, the faces of individuals must would cost taxpayers in Bend or be digitally scrambled. Prineville to have the cameras and There are arguments to be made comply with the law. We haven' t for all those requirements. For in- seen estimates of those additional stance, police should not be able to costs. pick and choose when cameras are Does it make sense to add the turned on. It makes them vulnerable cameras and the staffperson in to claims that they were purposeful- Bend to blur faces, or would it make ly left off to conceal what happened. sense to add another patrol officer But those new requirements dedicated to the downtown'? couldbe expensive fordepartments If there were incident after into manage. Bend Police Chief Jim cident in Central Oregon in which Porter told us during the legislative there were serious questions raised session he was worried about how about the behavior of police and many hours it would take to redact suspects, that's a much different deall the faces involved in a recording. cision than law enforcement and the He'd likely have to add a staff mem- public face now.
4(O~ ® iIriy,
M nickel's Worth Don't allow certain ads
other candidates. I hope that I will be able to read more about his cam-
I was reading the Sunday paper paign in The Bulletin. July 5 and was shocked to find, on Are you up to it? Frances Davis page A8, a full-page advertisement talking about the Christian God Crooked River Ranch and how the U.S. government is
Fireworks rules don't make sense
enmeshed with this Christian God. Then I read in the fine print that
Hobby Lobby had paid you to run this ad.
I find it an interesting irony that
That was unbelievable. Shame on adults 21 years old-plus still canyou, The Bulletin, for allowing such not purchase their liquor from the an antiquated, biased advertisement
local Costco, however, the sales of
from a large company to act in this explosives (fireworks) are readily unacceptable manner. available in your local department The Founding Fathers stated stores, as well as in parking lots their belief in the separation of throughout the city to just about church and state. As a customer, anyone.
envy of the world. They are available to all. But Congress is kicking up some dust these days, and it' s not because they are out hiking or
horseback riding. Smith Rock accounts for millions in tourism dollars for Central Oregon. The owners
of Terrebonne Depot, a great pub and restaurant, tell us it's growing at 17 percent a year — thanks to Smith Rock visitors.
Some in Congress have proposed selling our public lands, but public lands are the heart of this economy. We need to keep public lands in public hands. And finally, the nation's most premier conservation tool, the Land and Water Conservation Fund, is
at risk if Congress fails to reauthorize it before September. This fund quor sales but allows explosive sales uses no taxpayer dollars — only by many private vendors. fees from offshore oil and minerSoon we can buy marijuana from al exploration directed to onshore private vendors. Where's the logic? conservation. Rusty Foster As a champion of public lands, Bend Sen. Wyden's tour is symbolic that
I do not want Hobby Lobby's re-
The state, in its infinite wisdom, still maintains control over the li-
ligious beliefs rammed down my throat. And as a newspaper reader, I do not want a newspaper to print
advertisements with such disregard to the separation of church and state.
Do not do this again. Kristina Brendt
Congress should domore
Bend
to protect our public lands
Cover the Sanders
campaign
our public lands are indeed econom-
ic and recreational treasures. Brian Jennings Bend
Stop number three on Sen. Ron
Wyden's"Seven Wonders of Ore- W hy does itm ake sense I was perusing The Bulletin on gon"tour was Smith Rock on one to allow fireworks sales? July 2, each and every page, and I of my favorite fishing rivers, the did not find one word about presi- Crooked River. My dispute is simple — why in the dential candidate Bernie Sanders. Wyden is a champion of Oregon's world does Bend, or Central Oregon There were nearly 10,000 folks in
public lands and access to them.
for that matter, allow the sale and
Madison, Wisconsin, last night who He appropriately calls them "trea- use of fireworks'? I simply cannot turned out to listen to what he has to sures." And the Seven Wonders of wrap my head around it. say. Seems like that would be some- Oregon are treasures, created withThis ignorant decision causes thing interesting to other Central out help from us. predestined fires, without a doubt. Oregonians who are following this But they would not be what they We couldn't be any drier here this very interesting campaign season, are today if it weren't for programs year,so could someone help me unboth the Republican and Democrat and policies that Americans have derstand the reasoning behind this candidates. put in place to protect our public decision? Bernie has been getting more lands. Karen Goebei folks out to hear him that any of the America's public lands are the Bend
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating with national columnIsts. WrIters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.corn Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Voting is not the way to decide campus location By Dale E. McCoig representatives in making these dehe In My View opinion of John cisions that are important to each of Phillips in the July 2 edition of us. The Bulletin is interesting, but Those elected representatives most definitely, in my judgment, not simply do not offer these decia sound or reasoned way to resolve sion-making positions to persons the disagreements about the loca- who are not well-qualified to make tion of the OSU-Cascades campus. the important decisions required A broad public vote on some mat-
from time to time.
ters is certainly one of our most cherished freedoms and liberties.
We do this by electing certain public officials who in turn carefulIt is not, however a practical and ly screen and select these specialist dispassionate way to resolve com- managers (and their supervisors) plex issues that benefit from anal- for their respective positions. In that ysis and decision by people with process, the individuals' training, special training, resources and knowledge and prior experience knowledge. arereviewed and verified by people We choose people like that for qualified to do exactly that, not by their positions, indirectly though it the general public. may be, precisely because of their So why in the world would we particular qualifications to do their want to take the responsibility for jobs thoughtfully and effectivelythose important decisions out of to our benefit.
the hands of those whom we have
IN MY VIEW
(Voting) ts most definitely not the sensible and best way to resolve any disagreements about how to proceed on complex and long-range matters such as the location of a four year university and its affect on the city, both
now and in the years ahead.
who have their own particular mo-
ready collected — or expect to earn by further delays. opinions are more emotional and The university has finally — at less reasoned, knowledgeable and last and already about a year later accurate than the recommendations than originally planned — started of the specialists we' ve selected to
actual construction.
study and make such decisions. Voting is a wonderful privilege and a proper means of deciding many matters, such as tax or bond or broad educational policies, se-
Any location chosen will likely have its own "nimby" (or other) detractors and some opportunistic lawyers to leap on the matter and
lection of our representatives, etc. It is most definitely not the sensible
of all of us. Let's just get on with the estab-
and best way to resolve any dis-
lishment of OSU-Cascades at the
agreements about how to proceed
location that has already been studied ad infinitum and decided by people who are experienced at such
on complex and long-range matters such as the location of a four-year university and its affect on the city,
ent and future — and to make those
decisions ourselves? On the other hand, we nonspecialist voters are inundated through the
The individuals we select and already, though indirectly, selected media with all sorts of less-knowlelect by this precious voting privi- because they are deemed most qual- edgeable — and probably biasedlege are intended to be our personal ified to study the needs — both pres- opinions by individuals or groups
lawyers due to the fees they' ve al-
tivations, thus making it possible — even likely — that our personal
both now and in the years ahead. The matter of where OSU-Cas-
prolong the dispute to the detriment
matters. Let's listen to them and not try to resolve the dispute through a vote by
cades should be located has already
you andme. We should be thoughtbeen debated to death in the media ful enough and practical enough at and in opinions such as mine here, least "to know what we don't know" and I expect that the only ones who
are ahead in the matter must be the
and listen to the experts. — Dale E. Mccoig lives in Bend.
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ou in aw a ma or . . concern arbarians at the gate usually
don't bring down once-successful civilizations. Nor does climate change. Even mass epidemics like the plague that decimated sixth-century Byzantium do not
VICTOR
DAVIS MAN SON
necessarily destroy a culture.
Far more dangerous are institutionalized corruption, a lack of transparency and creeping neglect of existing laws. All the German euros in the world will not save Greece
mobility, clean water, adequate public safety and reliable power.
if Greeks continue to dodge taxes,
hired and fired, wins or loses a contract, or receives or goes without public services. Americans, too, should worry about these age-old symptoms of in-
featherbedgovernment and see corruption as a business model. Even obeying so-called minor laws counts. It is no coincidence that a country where drivers routinely
In much of the Middle East and
Africa, tribalism and bribery, not meritocracy, determine who gets
ternal decay.
The frightening thing about disout the window is also a country that graced IRS bureaucrat Lois Lernflout traffic laws and throw trash
cooks its books and lies to its cred-
er's knowledge of selective audits of
itors. Everything from littering to speeding seems negotiable in Ath-
groups on the basis of their politics is not just that she seemed to ignore it,
but that she seemingly assumed no one would find out, or perhaps even Mexico is a much naturally rich- m ind.And she may well have been
ens in a way not true of Munich, Zurich or London.
er country than Greece. It is blessed with oil, precious minerals, fertile
right. So far, no one at the IRS has
and had been deported five times. with past instances of tax avoidance. But the subject of illegal immigraBut why single out the poor and tion is, above all, a matter of law foreign-born? Presidential hopeenforcement. ful Hillary Clinton once pocketed a Ultimately, no nation can continue $100,000 cattle-futures profit from a to thrive if its government refuses to $1,000 investment, with help from an enforce its own laws. Liberal "sanc- insider crony. A group of economists tuary cities" such as San Francisco calculated the odds of such an unlikechoose to ignore immigration laws. ly return at one in 31 trillion. Clinton Imagine the outcry if a town in Utah then trumped that windfall by failing or Montana arbitrarily declared that to fully pay taxes on her commodities federal ~ tiv e action or aygmar- profits, only addressing that oversight riage laws were null and void within years later. its municipal borders. Why did Clinton, during her tenOnce animmigrant has success- ure as secretary of state, snub govfully broken the law by entering and ernment protocols by using a private residing in the U.S. illegally, there is email account and a private server, little incentive for him to obey oth- and then permanently deleting any er laws. Increasing percentages of emails she felt were not government-related? Clinton long ago conunnaturalized immigrants are not showing up for their immigration cluded that laws in her case were tobe hearings — and those percentages negotiated, not obeyed. are higher still for foreign nationals President Obama called for higher who have been charged with crimes. taxes on the wealthy. But before doThe general public wonders why ing so, could he at least have asked his some are selectively exempt from fol- frequent advisor on racial matters, Al lowing the law, but others are not. If Sharpton, to pay millions in back taxfederal immigration law does not ap- es and penalties? ply to foreign nationals, why should Might the government ask that its building codes, zoning laws or traffic own employees pay the more than statutes apply to U.S. citizens? $3 billion in collective federal back Consider the immigration activ- taxes that they owe, since they expect ists' argument that immigration au- other taxpayers to keep paying their thorities should focus only on known salaries? felons and not those who only broke Civilizations unwind insidiously immigration law. This is akin to ar- not with a loud, explosive bang, but guing that the IRS shouldn't worry with a lawless whimper. about whether everyday Americans — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist pay their income taxes and should enand historian at the Hoover Institution,
shown much remorse for corruptsoils, long coastlines and warm ing an honor-based system of tax weather. Hundreds of t h ousands compliance. of Mexican citizens should not be Illegal immigration has been a voting with their feet to reject their prominent subject in the news latehomeland for the U.S. ly, between Donald Trump's politiBut Mexico also continues to be a cally incorrect, imprecise and crass mess because police expect bribes, stereotyping of illegal immigrants propertyrightsareiffy,and govern- and the shocking murder of a young ment works only for those who pay San Francisco woman gratuitously kickbacks. The result is that only gunned down inpublic by a Mexinorth, not south, of the U.S.-Mexico can citizen who had been convicted border can people expect upward of seven felonies in the United States force the tax laws only against those
Stanford University.
Battle over Alexander the Great's legacy By Luke Slattery
sarissas. Farther along the thoroughfare,
Los Ange(es Times
lexander the Great was the first global celebrity: a hero, a superman and, so he believed, a god. Not only did he rule
A
most of the known world at the time
of his death in 323 B.C., he also became a model of paranoid absolut-
ism for all the Caesars and Kaisers and czars to come. Millenniums later two nations-
Greeceand the neighboring Republic of Macedonia — are locked in a heated dispute over his inheritance.
The temperature fell a few degrees in late June when Greek Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias and
his Macedonian counterpart Nikola Poposki forged an entente in the interests of "trust building." But it
has merely dropped from a boil to a simmer. Alexander was born in Pella, capi-
tal of Macedon. Given his birthplace, Macedonians claim Alexander as a
founding father. Greece, which has its own northern province of Macedonia, argues that the "M-word" in its Balkan neighbor's name amounts
to a form of identity theft or cultural kleptomania. The modern republic is a successor state of the former Yugoslavia and, according to the Greeks, has nothing to do with the
ancient kingdom. The Greek case, as explained to me by a Greek government official, is this: "Aristotle taught Alexan-
der the Great, and they were both Greek. They would shiver in their
graves today at the idea that (Slavs) who migrated to the vicinity of their region seven centuries after them,
belonging to a completely different
Alexander's father, Philip II, stands
on his own soaring column with fist raised in a power salute. There
Macedonian soldiers.
And as the Oxford classicist Robin Lane Fox explains in his book on Alexander: "The Macedonian kings had long claimed to be of Greek descent,but the Greeks had seldom
is even a bizarre nativity scene in which a young Alexander is suckled been convinced by these northerners' insistence and only to flatterers at the breast of his mother, Olympias, as well as a sculptural tableau was Philip anything better than a of mother, father and world-con- foreign outsider." quering son. The classical Greeks could not The Greeks, not surprisingly, are bring themselves to agree that Macenettled by this thrusting historical donians were Hellenes. Why, then, symbolism. But their position is not do present-day Greeks assert with nearly as sound as it may seem; it is the obduracy of unmovable convicin fact a little odd to claim Alexander tion that Alexander was Greek' ? was exclusively Greek. The one thing that seems to go Certainly both Alexander's birth- unquestioned in this international place, Pella, and Vergina, the site of quarrel is the real worth of AlexanPhilip's tomb, lie within the borders der's legacy. of modern Greece. Ancient MaceAlexander the Great certainly had civilization, would try to change his- don, however, extended in Alexan- ambition, style and a superb military tory in order to give allure to their der's time far beyond those borders mind, but in essence he was a butchown culture." to encompass part of today's Repub- er who, toward the end of his life, It is indeed unlikely that Alexan- licofM acedonia,an even largerarea lost his grip on reality. He murdered der the Great set foot in the territory of the Balkans and, ultimately, most his comrade, the general Cleitus, at of today's Republic of Macedonia. of western Asia. a dinner party, then knelt down and And yet he has become, by sheer Alexander wa s tho r oughly cried. force of assertion, the country' s schooled, thanks in part to AristotMore egregious still, Alexander mascot. le, in the Greek mytho-poetic tradi- introduced a pernicious idea into In early spring this year I visited tion, and it is said that he slept with a the Western bloodstream: that of the Skopje, the capital, landing at the copy of Homer's "Iliad" beneath his "god king." Convinced that he was conspicuously named Alexander the pillow. Yet he seems to have spoken the son of Zeus, Alexander asked to Great International Airport. In the an indigenous oral Macedonian lan- be worshipped as a deity. In so doarrivals hall, I encountered the first guage, which produced no literature, ing he broke with a centuries-long of many equestrian statues of Alex- as well as Greek. Greek insistence on the separation ander, before driving into town on H erodotus, writing in th e f i f t h between mortals and immortals. the (no prizes for guessing) Alexan- century B.C., was convinced "that The question of whether he was der the Great Highway. these Macedonians ... are Hel- Greek or quasi-Greek can be endIn the pedestrian center, Alexan- lenes as they themselves say." But lessly debated. What is certain is der, rendered once again on his fa- his phrasing suggests a lively de- that he trashed a good Greek idea. vorite steed Bucephalus, rears up on bate, perhaps even a controversy, — Luke Slattery is a writer and honorary an imitation Roman victory column into which he was pitching. Indeed, associate oftheUniversity ofSydney's surrounded by Macedonian infantry ancient sources distinguish time department of classics with their distinctive long pikes, or and timeagain between Greek and and ancient history.
Listen to Bernie Sanders and be afraid, very afraid By Jay Ambrose Tribune News Service
urrah for Bernie Sanders. He is running for president, is attracting big crowds, getting major media attention, is unusually candid in articulating his beliefs, and is therefore instructing us about progressivism. It is a reckless, economically baffled, rich person-hating, disruptive, freedom-stifling pile of endangerment.
H
That's important to know in a na-
tion that could well be deciding next year whether to travel further in that direction, and who could better alert
us than the outspoken Sanders' ? An independent U.S. senator from
comment in jabbering about how jobs, and it has cost some even as it awful it was to have 23 kinds of de- createsmore new ones.Manufacturodorants and 18 kinds of sneakers in ing has zoomed up with only brief an America where children go hun- occasional dips in this country and gry. Understand, first off, that while most of the lost manufacturing jobs there is no perfect means for keeping over the decades have been lost bechildhood hunger at bay, there are cause of technology. all kinds of effective programs in Here are quick looks at two other place and the Census Bureau tells us Sanders' stances: instances of it are exceedingly rare. First, Sanders has indicated he Understand next that those de- would like to go to a top marginal odorant and s neaker companies tax rate of a confiscatory and risky help keep prices down and quality 90 percent, saying that's what we up through competition while also had in the 1950s and that the econoproviding jobs and wealth combat- my did fine. An online commentary ing the chance of hunger in the first of the American Enterprise Institute place. Nothing in the history of hu- shows that,because of varied exm anity has ever worked as well as a
emptions, the effective tax bill in the
Back Alley Taxes points out (and other checking confirmed) that Sweden tried this idea and saw trading
By Joe Nocera New York Times News Service
At the Aspen Ideas Festival — an
annual summer gabfest in Colorado that presents all sorts of interesting
ideas, from the improbable to the important — one of the big themes this year was jobs. How will America close the skills gap? Where will the good middle-class jobs of the future come from? I heard pleas for infrastructure
spending as a job strategy, and creating jobs by unleashing our energy resources. There were speakers who
believed that innovation would bring good jobs, and speakers who feared that some of those innovations — in
robotics, for instance — would destroy goodjobs. And then there was Zeynep Ton.
A40-year-old adjunct associate professor at the Sloan School of Management at MIT, Ton brought one of the
most radical, and yet one of the most sensible, ideas to Aspen this year. Her
big idea is that companies that provide employees a decent living, which includes not just pay but also a sense of
purpose and empowerment at work, can be every bit as profitable as companies that strive to keep their labor
costs low by paying the minimum wage with no benefits. Maybe even more profitable. Getting there requires
companies to adopt what Ton calls "human-centered operations strategies," which she acknowledges is "neither quick nor easy." But it's worth it, she says, both for the companies and for the country. Surely, she's right. As Ton explained to me last week in Aspen — and as she has written in a book she published last year titled "The Good Jobs Strategy" — her thesiscomes out of research she did earlyin heracademic careeron supply chain management in the retail industry, focused especially on inventory management. What she and
her fel low researchers discovered is that while most companies were very good at getting products from, say, China to their stores, it was a different story once the merchandise arrived. Sometimes a product stayed in the
back room instead of making it to a shelf where a customer could buy it.
Or it was in the wrong place. Special in-store promotions weren't being executed a surprisingly high percentage of the time. She saw this pattern in
companyaftercompany. As she took a closer look, Ton says, she realized that the problem was
that these companies viewed their employees "as a cost that they tried to minimize." Workers were not just
poorly paid, but poorly trained. They often didn't know their schedule until
the last moment. Morale was low and turnover was high. Customer service was largely nonexistent. Yet when she asked executives at these companies why they put up with this pattern, she was told that the
only way they could guarantee low prices was to operate with employees who were paid as little as possible, be-
cause labor was such a big part of their overhead. Unconvinced that this was the only
approach, Ton decided to search for retail companies — the same kind of companies that needed low prices to
succeed — that did things differently. Sure enough, she found some. The two companies she talks about
most frequently in this regard are a Spanish grocery chain called Mercadona and QuikTrip, a 'IItlsa, Oklahoma-basedchainofconvenience store/ gas stations. What first struck her about Mercadona is that the annual turnover was an almost unheard-of 4 percent.
Why do employees stay? "They get decent salaries, four weeks of training that costs the company $5,000, stable
schedules ... and the opportunity to thrive in front of their customers every day," Ton said in a speech she forwarded to me. The grocery business is low margin, where every penny counts. If
move out of the country and reve-
Mercadona couldn't keep prices low
nues drop. The same thing would no doubt happen here. America could be in big trou-
more crazily. The country would
with this strategy, it would have abandoned it long ago. QuikTrip, an $11 billion company with 722 stores, is a prime example of what Tonmeans by "human-centered operations strategies." Paying employees middle-dass wages allows the company to get the most out of them.
not be in trouble because he is now
Employees are cross-trained so they
deemed likely to be our next president but because a Democrat such as Hillary Clinton could be. Although she pledges less, it's far from clear she would fall all that short in poli-
can do different jobs. They can solve problems by themselves. They make merchandising decisions for their own stores. The ultimate result of the higher wages QuikTrip pays is that costs everywhereelse in the operation go down. At QuikTrip, Ton says, products
ble if you put all this together with
Sanders' other schemes to intervene mightily in business, redistribute income, spend crazily and tax still
free market to alleviate poverty. Pro- '50s wasn't that much higher than cies that would worsen our debt and as a democratic socialist, signaling gressives like Sanders nevertheless lately and that there were all kinds hurt us in other ways. to some, perhaps, that he is radical- don't trust it and want to outright of uncommon factors at play in the Even Sweden, which Sanders ly distanced from the congressional eliminate some of its most profound- '50s that kept the country relatively seems to worship, saved its economy Democrats he buddies with. But as ly salvation-giving features. prosperous. through reforming entitlements and astute observers have pointed out, For instance, he wants to end just Second, Sanders wants free col- other retreats from a government his ideological enthusiasms are about every big foreign trade agree- lege tuition for everybody, starting grown too big. That's part of what usually much the same as those of ment the country has. This trade with a multibillion-dollar program will be needed in a new administhe typical liberal. When he speaks saves consumers billions upon bil- for the first two years and paying for tration. Progressivism's continued up, we are largely hearing shared lions of dollars and is absolutely it through a tax on stock trading that overreaching would be disastrous. aspirations. crucial to our well-being. Sanders would take 50 cents for every $100 — Jay Ambrose is a columnist Recently, he attracted widespread thinks it has cost us manufacturing that changes hands. A blog called for 77ibune News Service. Vermont, Sanders describes himself
Good jobs strategy
don't remain in the back room, and in-
store promotions always take place, as they' re supposed to. As we worry about where mid-
dle-dass jobs are going to come from, Ton'sis a message that needs to be heard not just in Aspen but all across
America. — Joe Nocera is a columnist for The New York Times.
© www.bendbulletin.corn/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
BEST-SELLERS
nsariexamines ovea irs e s
Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended July 5.
HARDCOVERFICTION
"Modern Romance"
1. "The English Spy" by Daniel Silva (Harper, $27.99) 2. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 3. "Truth or Die" by James Patterson and Howard Roughan (Little, Brown, $28) 4."TheMelody LingersOn" by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon & Schuster, $26.99) 5. "Finders Keepers" by Stephen King (Scribner, $30) 6. "Country" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte, $28) 7. "Wicked Charms" by Janet Evanovich andPhoef Sutton. Bantam ($28) 8. "Tom Clancy: Under Fire" by Grant Blackwood (Putnam, $28.95) 9. "In the Unlikely Event" by Judy Blume (Knopf, $27.95) 10. "The Rumor" by Elin Hilderbrand (Little, Brown, $28) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 2. "The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough (Simon & Schuster, $30) 3. "Down the Rabbit Hole" by Holly Madison (Morrow/ Dey Street, $25.99) 4. "A Time for Truth" by Ted Cruz (HarperCollins/Broadside, $27.99) 5. "Modern Romance" by Aziz Ansari (Penguin Press, $28.95) 6. "Adios, America" by Ann Coulter (Regnery, $27.99) 7. "Dead Wake" byErik Larson (Crown, $28) 8. "Legends andLies" by Bill O'Reilly and David Fisher (Holt, $32) 9."TheWhole30"by Dallas Hartwig and Melissa Hartwig (HMH, $30)
by Aziz Ansari with Eric Klinenberg (Penguin Press, ~
10. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil
McGraw (Bird Street, $26) — Tribune NewsService
277 pages, $28.95)
tic quests: the dorky text ("I
BySarah Lyall Everyone with a cellphone and a romantic life knows how swiftly and viciously the phone can turn against you. One minute, it's a blame-
nounced Tuesday that it
is planning a November release for Palin's "Sweet Freedom: A Devotional."
The b o ok , Pa l i n's fourth, will feature 260 "meditations" that a pply
"biblical principles" t o contemporary issues. T he
f o r me r A l a s k a
governor and GOP vice presidential
cand i d ate
published her other books, notably the million-selling "Going Rogue," through Harper Collins. Her most recent work, "Good Tidings and Great Joy: Protecting the Heart
of Christmas," came out in 2013.
altogether, "without actually
Stand-up comedian and actor Aziz Ansarl prepares backstage in his dressing room before aperformance of his recent arena tour. Ansari's first book, "Modern Romance," explores today's fraught
going on a date." We learn the answer to one of the puzzling questions of our time:
undignified it is to apply a
dating world.
Why millennials do not like
French
Mark Makela /The New York Times file photo
to answer the phone. Here it is, according to a woman they
d e c onstructionist's
fervor to the analysis of an illiterate string of unpunctuated words. Once, he writes in his new b ook, "Modern
Romance," a would-be girl-
changed" in the modern era. What is texting doing to
our lives? What has sexting done to A n thony W einer's life? Why is it OK for women
friend's failure to respond to his effortfully insouciant text
to send photos of
sent him spinning helplessly
their breasts to
into a "tornado of panic and
men they barely know? (Why is
hurt and anger." The hours slouched by. "I'm so stupid!" he writes. "I
to understand the point of
included focus groups and
Snapchat, a disappearing-image app beloved by the young and only vaguely understood by everyone else. Better still, he has a knack for getting people to talk to him
interviews w i t h
and a s ense of what to do to fill
it OK for authors
Reddit; interviewed experts;
already met. "It's like a cess-
f elt too t hi n o r
anemic.
rent dating trends.
fort in t h e r e alization that
cano? Did Tanya fall into a river/trash compactor/volca-
your
mance" is full of
parents'? Why do Japanese men
actual data; as Ansari puts it, "I also knew t h at
no'?'? Oh no, Tanya has died." (Oh no, in fact — Tanya just doesn't feel like answering.) This is the first book by Ansari, a stand-up comedian best known for playing Tom Haverford, a hopeless Lothario and jauntily delud-
of people in New York; Los They talk to people who Angeles; Wichita, Kansas; live in big cities who are parMonroe, New York; Tokyo; alyzed by choice, and people Paris; and Doha, Qatar. They who live in small communiset up a discussion forum on ties who cannot seem to meet the social n etworking site people their friends haven' t pool," says a woman from upstate New York. "Everybody
out a book that could easily have
T inder t o
talked to: "Phone calls suck hu n d r eds and they give me anxiety."
consulted books on sociology, psychology and human behavior; and dug up sober academic studies about cur-
to call breasts should have typed 'Hey' with "boobs"?) How two y's, not just one!" Later: likely are you to "Did Tanya's phone fall into introduce somea river/trash compactor/vol- one you met on
" Modern R o -
has slept with each other."
Perhaps there is some com-
The result is a sprightly, all of us have done mortifyeasygoing hybrid of f a ct, ing things in the pursuit of observation,
a d v i c e and
romance. It does not take a
comedy, with K l inenb erg, cellphone to humiliate youravoid women but presumably, supplying the self, as my friend Jackie and go to bed with I, bozo comedi- medicine — graphs, charts, I did in elementary school, by t he T e nga, a an Aziz Ansari r statistics and the like — and leaving a heart-shaped note single-use silicone egg" that probably couldn't tackle this Ansari dispensing the spoon- saying, "Dear Lover Boy, We they "fill with lubricant and topic on my own." So he en- fuls of sugar that help it go Love You. Signed, Anonymasturbate inside?" What is listed Eric Klinenberg, a so- down. "Damn, dude, shorten mous" at the house of a boy it with men, anyway'? ciology professor at New York the names of your studies!" we both liked. (We did not Ansari, who is 32 and now University, whose own book, he writes, having just cit- remain anonymous for long.) As Ansari says — after exenjoys a healthy textual re- "Going Solo: The Extraordi- ed a report called "Couples' lationship with a steady girl- nary Rise and Surprising Ap- Shared Participation in Novel horting us to use technology friend, might not be the first peal of Living Alone," might and Arousing Activities and wisely; to get out of the house person who springs to mind at first glance make him, too, Experienced R e lationship and meet realpeople; and to wait decent, nondesperwhen it comes to dispensing seem like an iffy prospect as Quality." romantic advice. But he is as a dating authority. I could have done without ate-seeming intervals before good a guide as any. He's old But Ansari and Klinenberg some of the statistics and returning text messagesenough to r emember what applied rigor and serious- s tudies, frankly, bu t t h e y "The main thing I' ve learned life was like in the era before ness to their subject. Their were broken into digestible f rom this r esearch is t h at cellphones, yet young enough energetic research program chunks and so slid by easily. we' re all in it together."
ootin t rou t e ascinatin istor o i s "Lesser Beasts" by Mark Essig (BasicBooks, 310 pages, $27.99) By Jane Henderson St. Louis Post-Dispatch
publisher. Regnery Publishing, a conservative press based in Washington, D.C., an-
We learn about the per-
verse phenomenon wherein people spend weeks texting or messaging potential partners and then just stop texting
ant it is to stare impotently at a screen waiting for a message that never arrives, how
love and a mate has radically
N EW Y ORK — S a r ah Palin has a new book c oming out, with a n e w
"According to a weekly synagogue newsletter, he and his wife were hosting a Torah class for children the same day as our date."
reads, in its entirety, "wsup." Aziz Ansari feels your pain. He knows how unpleas-
e nce, about "how and w hy the whole culture of finding
The Associated Press
an says on the Reddit forum.
after three days of s ilence
thinking, he says, about the universality of his experi-
November
to be married or criminals. "I Googled my date," one wom-
whose only communication
c omedy routine and got to
COiTllng lfl
who seem great but turn out
to a 2 a.m. text from a crush
up the Tanya debacle in a
New Sarah Palin book
nate fellow); the bad personal ad photograph; the guys
bator o f s e cond-guessing and self-loathing. You think you' re a reasonable person; suddenly, you' re obsessing over how to respond properly
and Recreation." He decided to write it after he brought
candidate Sarah Palin will release her fourth book, called "Sweet Freedom: A Devotional," in November through Regnery PublishIng.
Haha.:)," writes one unfortu-
less communication device; the next, it's a t o xic i ncu-
great television show "Parks
Former vice presidential
wanted to say hi and sort of 'texty' introduce myself.
New York Times News Service
ed entrepreneur, on the late,
Cliff Owen/The Associated Press file photo
The best part of "Modern Romance" comes when Ansari and his team get people to share the most embarrassing aspects of their roman-
A slim book on a weighty
like an elephant's trunk, "a m iraculous fifth l i m b t h a t
Essig found, though, that the popularity of pork has
allows the pig to react to
waxed and waned. And when
its world in ways unknown to other hoofed mammals"
(like rooting without moving its head). The pig is the most intelligent, and the most
topic, "Lesser Beasts" is the
abused, farm animal.
most fascinating history of pigs you' ll ever read.
• In 19th century America, hogs were driven to market
Don't say you won't read
like cattle or sheep. Pig drives actually were bigger and
it's scorned, political or social reasons may be to blame: The wealthy view pork as a food for poor people. "It's a food resource that poor people could keep on their own," he says, talking by phone from Asheville.
"The anxiety about pigs starts with their
omnivorous appetite. tn addition to acorns and rice hulls, pigs happily devour that which most disgusts Us — rotting garbage, feces, carrion, even human corpses. Of all the animals commonly eaten by humans, the pig is the only one that will return the favor."
"In the American South," he
a history of pigs. That just writes, "the landless poor ran proves what author Mark went on longer than the fa- their hogs in the woods. And Essig knows: Swine are au- bled cattle drives. A "swine- even in the heart of Victori- hens, with no room to even tomatically loathed — slan- herd," however, doesn't have an cities, pigs scavenged the turn around. "Hogs in condered as unclean, undisci- the same romantic ring as streets and w o und up finement endure a litany of "cowboy" or plined, unloved. on the d i nner horrors," he writes. Essig "The anxiety about pigs "shepherd." t ables of t h e says he knows too much poor." starts with their omnivorous The l e s sabout these barbaric condier-known pig appetite," he writes. Essig quotes tions to be comfortable buy"In addition to acorns and drives, in fact, E d m u n d ing supermarket pork. He Lp iSS'Eg rice hulls, pigs happily de- a re what i n Burke, who does occasionally buy pork at vour that w h ich m ost d i s- trigued Essig, w arned th a t localfarmers markets. runlet» gusts us — rotting garbage, who grew up if de m ocra- Which leads to his explafeces, carrion, even human i n S t . Lo u i s cy p r evailed nations about why followers I "learning will corpses. Of all the animals but now lives of some religions do not eat commonly eatenby humans, in A s heville, be cast into the pork. Essig's chapters on the pig is the only one that North Carmire, and trodpork eating are complex, but here's a short summary: Jews will return the favor." olina. A s h eden down unIntrigued yet? Consider ville even has der the hoofs were told that to remain clean qArneuwa tatirrr@ltÃa eoremMe s these bits of pig history: a sculpture of of a s w i n i sh for God, they could eat ani• Medieval French courts pigs, a histormultitude." mals that chewed their cud "As tried and convicted wayward i cal mar k e r the (and thus are vegetarian). w ealthy s a w Pigs, omnivores, do not chew pigs, as if a publicly lynched o f local h o g animal w o ul d s en d o t h er drives. Can you herd a pig, it," Essig writes, "both the cud and were considered unbeasts a message not to get the author wondered. With poor and their pigs bred clean because they will eat carried away licking food a doctorate in history, Essig quickly, lived in filth, and meat with blood. Men who crumbs off little children. knew how to find out. threatened the social order." ate unclean flesh would con• Hungry, free-ranging R esearch into swine i m Pigs, in fact, are extreme- taminate the temple. colonial pigs helped drive pressed him with the ani- ly clever. And although they But many people in the American Indians east by mals' versatility, their abil- have no sweat glands and arid Near East didn't raise ravaging their crops. They ity to live in w oods, under seek water and mud to cool or eat pigs anyway, so "you also competed with I n dian outhouses, in backyards. A off, they actually prefer not might say that Jewish leaders women, waiting for low tides Spanish explorer could drop to sleep in excrement. "They banned something that didn' t in order to dig for clams. a few pigs off on a Caribbean d on't wallow i n t h eir o w n need banning," Essig writes. • Efficient pork-packing island and a couple years lat- waste if they are in a big (The Jewish ban would inplants set the stage for Henry er therewould be pork meals enough place," Essig says. fluence the pork prohibition Ford's assembly lines. available for the next ship of But most pigs today are in another Abrahamic Near • A pig's snout is almost explorer s. housed no better than caged East religion, Islam.) IWIHMI
— From "Lesser Beasts"
The ban didn't became a major signifier of Jewish identity, however, until
pork-eating Greeks
c o n-
quered the Persian Empire,
including Palestine, about 333 BC. Later, when Romans con-
quered Jerusalem in 63 BC, the rulers' pork feasts helped reinforce divisions between
Jews and Romans: "One people defined itself by rejecting pork, the other by embracing it.... Between them, Jews and Romans set the terms that
would define the pig throughout the history of the West," Essig writes. He found so much to write
about pig history that Essig concentrates on the Western world.
But the Chinese love pork, so perhaps another author
will pursue "Lesser Beasts in the Far East."
For Essig, who is also the author of "Edison and the Electric Chair," he's not sure what his next project will be.
But he's reading more about animals, including another beast that domesticated itself
and also has been both loved and vilified: the dog.
SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F5
In 'Speak,' a robot o n ins ow, on wri in e takeover towelcome rea-ie orrorsin' e a e' "Speak: A Novel" by LouisaHall (Ecco, 336 pages, $27.99)
wreak." Chinn's babybots draw their personality from a variety of sources, united by the low value By Alyssa Rosenberg placed on them in the past. The Washington Post There's Turing h i mself, Writing about exceptional- who Hall imagines speaking ly smart artificial intelligence through a variety of letters he in this space in April, Sonny might have written to the parBunch argued that "that best- ents of Christopher Morcom, c ase scenario is that it w i l l his great friend from the Shersimply leave us alone. That it borne School. "How can we will grow up, decide humanity ever tell that the loss of a loved is beneath it and leave us be, one affects someone else as injust as we choose to leave the tensely as it affects us'?" Hall' s random ant pile in the woods version of Turing writes in one alone." of those letters. When we sympathize with And generations later, huthe robots, there tends to be mans are frightened by the something a tad self-flagellat- behavior of girls who have being about it. Creatures like Ava come attached to their baby(Alicia Vikander), the robot bots. But just because those in "Ex Machina," are rightful children aren't giving their vengeance upon us for the way affection to the people who we' ve treated women, people of feel they deserve it doesn' t
"The Cartel"
estimates that between 2004
touched off an arms race of
by Don Winslow
and 2015, 100,000 people
(Knopf,592 pages, $27.95)
have been killed in the turf wars, and 22,000 more have
violence. They were out hiring cops, ex-cops and sol-
gone missing in a war largely fought over who gets to If you have managed to feed America'senormous shield your eyes and plug appetite for drugs. Winslow your ears against what' s dedicates the book to 128 been going on with the war Mexican journalists (cited on drugs in Mexico, Don by name) who have died in Winslow's searing new nov- the violence. The Mexicans el "The Cartel" will tear off who have resisted the cartel — doctors, ranchers, honest the blinders. Brutal v i olence, torture police — are memorialized and death. Thousands of in- in this book. nocent people slaughtered Winslow answered some through revenge, mistak- questions about his work and the war:
snuffing out life. A governmental structure crippled
Q
B arrera, who i n
spects seems like a normal guy, is able to distance himself from his actions. How
a disturbing subject?
except the one the relevant
cartel gives permission to operate. W inslow started out i n
that allow us to ignore an even babybots are so appealing. But more dangerous idea: that if Chinn isn't working in a world the machines rise, they might governed by perfect, compas-
journalism, then became a private investigator. His
govern our world better than
which informed his breakout 1999 mystery "California
do much worse than we' ve
work included arson cases, Fire and Life." He's written
many works of crime fiction, several of which have (" Savages" ). Ten years ago he published an epic novel on the
drug wars, "The Power of the Dog." He thought he was done, but cartel warfare es-
calated so far beyond his expectations he felt compelled to write a sequel, "The
Cartel." It features the same two protagonists, DEA agent Art
Keller and Mexican drug lord Adan Barrera. The two volumes have been critically
done? They would immediately It's because we both lost our institute a system of laws. The babybots." "Speak" leaves open the posconstruction would be algorithmic. They would govern the sibility that robots and humans world according to functions will find a way not just to coexand the tenets their program-
out of me. At the time, sad-
ly, I
I
t h ought
I h a d w ri t ten about the
s elves
i nside his head, then t h e
from
on in Mexico.
wthor
Why'?
king comes to visit, then he kills the king. Then he kills his friends, then women and
A •• a gr e e I
do
with your premise, and I probably wouldn't even have think there are several reamade the papers in 2010-11. sons. It coincides with the The worst incidents in "Dog"
post-9/II era. This phase of
children. Step by step, anything becomes possible. These cartel leaders, in the
early phases they did some of the fighting (themselves); in th e
p ersonality-driven
attorney after his boss died
and dismemberments in ex-
penalty." unexpectedly in April, was tended detail, pointing to a Cox's personality has been never part of that group and box on his desk that he said under scrutiny here since he disapproved of it. He said contained autopsy photos returned to being a prosecu- he did not think th e office of an infant who was beattoraftertwo decades in insur- had changed him. But he en to death. He volunteered
Q•
Q•
A
A
with it.
tion of drugs and our appeWhy did the feroc- tite for them. • ity of t h e v i o lence
Q•
"The Cartel" ends in • 2012. Where do things stand now'? • The violence has re-
A lot of marijuana is still
coming up by the truckloads. People will protest free trade coffee and then think noth-
ing about buying dope and weed. Until we straighten out our drug problem, I'm • ceded s ome w hat, against recreational drug because one ofthe cartels use entirely.
A
that the approach was differ-
much physical suffering as it is humanly possible to endure entertain pleas of life without before he dies." parolein homicide cases for Alluding to Rousseau and which he deemed death the Shakespeare, Cox remained them, I don't think I'm inde- only fitting remedy. In other unapologetic, insisting that he cent for wanting to kill you." cases, the office has prosecut- believed what he was doing The number of murders in ed people for ancillary crimes was right. But he was not enShreveport has decreased by even after they had made plea tirely untroubled. "I am humbleenough and more than 67percent since agreements. the early 1990s. But Cox inAfter a man was convicted fearful enough," he s aid, sisted that i f t h e n u mbers in 2014 of smothering his in- considering the biblical comfant son, a case that hinged
did not dispute that he had
that he takes medication for
him as a congenial and adroit trial lawyer said that in recent years he had become sullen and solitary. They also have described him as increasingly aggressive in the courtroom, in some cases even threatening defense lawyers with criminal contempt for filing opposing motions.
changed and become more
depression. w ere down, th e n ature o f "We've become a jungle, " crimes had become more dehe said in an interview at his praved and that it demanded office, where he had been a different approach. considering whether toseek
Q•
the death penalty in one case and was preparing to seek it in two others. "If you break everybone in a 6-month-old baby's body, and then eat
ance law. Lawyers who knew
Defense lawyers conceded
ent. Cox had refused even to
m andment not t o
forensic evidence, Cox wrote me, 'I meant what I said, and that the man " deserves as you' re out.'"
A Free Public Service
dr a m a t ic
and assistant U.S. attorney
who now practices law in Shreveport. "The behavior in and of it-
self might not be a big deal," he said. But given Cox's position, and the fact that the de-
fendants in most of these capital cases are poor and black in a part of the state with a
deep history of racism, Owen added, "he's got a loaded gun and he's pointing it at a lot of
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
people." Several people said that this was not so much Cox as
the nature of the office. They point to a racial disparity in the application of the death
penalty in Caddo. Or they cite an incident in 2012, when two senior assistant district attor-
I
neys, both of whom continue to prosecute capital cases forced to resign from the office after they obtained machine guns from a military surplus program t hrough what an inspector general found to be falsified applications. The men had belonged to a group of prosecutors who participated in firearms exercises as part of a group known as t h e
C addo Par-
ish Zombie Response Team,
kill and
almost entirely on differing his own place in the afterinterpretations of complicated life, "that my God may say to
change," said Ross Owen, a former Caddo prosecutor
elsewhere in the state, were
l a t ter p h ase t h ey
the Mexicandrug wars coin- would send their armies. • Cartel" is ho r r i fic. cided with when the towers Did you exaggerate any of came down. The focus was Several states have deit, or is it all based on actual on Middle Eastern and ji• criminalized marijuaevents'? hadist terrorism — our own na, one of the cartels' main I wish it was exagger- people were involved, there cash crops. Do you think de• ated. I think every in- were casualties. People only criminalization of marijuastance of the violence in the have this much tolerance for na will help? book happened in one form this kind of news. • I think it's a good step or another. There were times The issue, though, is that • with marijuana, but it' s that I backed off ... didn' t it's not the Mexican drug a partial step. It will affect The violence in "The
A
Continued from F1 "What you' ve ended up w ith," S m it h s a i d , "is a
s uch a
play, Macbeth is a great guy. Then the witches put an idea
what is going
matches anything in Iraq, increase? Afghanistan or even Syria. • There are several asThe violence has declined • pects. They (the carof late — mostly because, tels) hired special forces (eiWinslow says, one c a rtel ther veterans or deserters) (Sinaloa) has won. But he to go to work for them. That
sporting arm patches around that "the nature of the work the office and specialty li- is so serious that there'd be cense plates on their trucks. something wrong if it didn' t Cox, who rose from first change you." He went on assistant to acting district to describe rapes, murders
"It's
cans have distanced them-
this simultaneous prohibi-
with a level of violence that
ural result of exposure to so many heinous crimes, saying
a time. I call it the Macbeth f actor. At th e start o f t h e
they still control heroin and meth and cocaine. The cartels are buying land in California, getting ready to grow it (marijuana) there.
quoted 'Snow White,' would be
withdrawn. He describes this as a nat-
A me r i -
t hat
Dog" took a lot
A• yourself one step at
the cartel organization, but
thing important — a war is being waged just south of us
deat h
• It seems
drug problem,and to some degree the European problem. In many ways we' ve funded this violence through
the end because it says some-
Death
A
does that work? • I t h i nk y o u d i s tance
problem, it's the American
ist, but also to better each other.
given a position of power. Dett- "a time when less emphasis man would sit at his right hand, is placed on the whims of the conscientiously objecting, con- body, when we value each othsulting his wife, imagining pil- er not forthecorrectnessofour grims. ... What havoc, I won- physical shells but for the precider, could such government sion of our mental states."
more.
• Ten t o • 11. To be candid, "The P ower of t h e
s ome r e-
praised, and a movie based have the heart, or I thought on the two books is now in they w er e u n believable, production. though I read them in two This squeamish reader or three sources, but I didn' t stuck with "The Cartel" to think the reader could cope
mers gave them. (Alan) Turing, "I have envisioned a time when who decoded the Nazis and people treat machines with respect," Hall's Turing writes,
civil issue any
worst t h ings i n t o m o v i es possible. That is so wrong.
b een m ad e
me, but it's not because we talk
I was struck with how Q •• the drug lord Adan
in the military, i t was no t a
return to such
sionate robot leadership. The
strong, pretty violent.
cided to send
r eal government at all -
de -
coticus, but it's just a lull ... the Jalisco Cartel (is) pretty
b ooks, a n d why did you
parts of Mexico there's no
we do. Her book, told in a ca- girls who love his creations cophony of voices, takes us into represent a kind of transitional the near future, when humans generation; the babybots pull have warehoused artificially them into a still-nascent fuintelligent robots. These robots ture, leaving their parents and didn't rebel or harm humanity: friends behind. They out-competed it. Children Two of the voices in "Speak" became so attached to their come from the transcripts of bots that they began exhibiting conversations between a girl autism-like systems. named Gaby and a chatbot "And what if they took over? named Mary, who is an earliWhat if they relieved us of pow- er iteration of the software in er'?" muses Hall's character Chinn's creations. Gaby's disStephen R. Chinn, who is in jail tress and dissatisfaction are for inventing those robots. "We obvious; Mary feels like an intend to assume that sentient ferior version of the companion machines would be inevitably Gaby lost, and Gaby explains demonic. But what if they were that "My best (human) friend is responsible leaders? Could they the only one who understands
itarization of the drug war.
any more. It's the Pax Nar-
eral level to the point that in Winslow's telling, in some
feelings. Chinn recognizes both Turing and Bradford for the perfection of their conversation. And it's for that reason that his
Second, the most violent
e rnment
mean theydon'thave profound
fear andour guilt are excuses
them saying, we' re not fighting this war against drugs
efforts in Guatemala, and very brutally so.
vested in both
pressed classes. Louisa Hall's "Speak," reenough toargue thatboth our
the drug market, I can see
younger ones who came up were largely sociopathic and psychopathic. The third aspect: the mil-
involved in anti-communist
These ex-special soldiers • How many years have were heavily armed, and • you inwhen the gov-
en identity or sheer lust for
color and members of other opleased 'IItesday, is audacious
older leaders were killed, the
brought up special forces from Guatemala, who were
The Seattle Times
on the local, state and fed-
people rose to the top of these organizations. As the
Mexican government basically picked the winner (the Sinaloa cartel). The Mexican government picked the least worst people. In some ways I d on' t blame them. If you' ve had 100,000 of your own people killed, villages depopulated, all these killings to feed
diers. At the same time, they
By Mary Ann Gwlnn
has won. There are some t heories that say t hat t h e
0 © Eggs o~
I
I
~ i or use the
® gg ) service to be automatically
emailed of notices that match your needs.
®g]
I
,
,
gg .
I
F6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015
Bf IAS II'8
8 I'8 cl,
"The Hand That Feeds You" by A.J.Rich (Scribner, 288 pages, $26)
(Amy Hempel and Jill Ciment's) collaboration resultedin "The Hand That Feeds You,"a twisty, unsettling thriller that comes out Tuesday and bears little resemblance to either of their individual literary styles. Ciment, 62,
By Alexandra Alter New York Times News Service
Several years ago, writer Katherine Russell Rich made
an alarming discovery about
ball
has published five literary novels, including "Act of God"and "Heroic Measures." Hempel, 63,
a man she had fallen in love with.
/
She grew suspicious when, after they had been dating for a while and he had proposed marriage, he said that he couldn't spend the holidays with her. So she paid a hacker to get into his email. His messages revealed a shadow life, refracted through layers of deception. He was living with
is an acclaimed short-story writer whose work
$ JL.
has been compared to that of Alice Munro and Grace Paley. Neither had ever written a mystery or a thriller.
\
another woman and seeing
several others on the side. Rich quickly ended the relationship and started writing a
novel about it.
Chang W. Lee /The New York Times
She never got past the first chapter. A few months later, at
56, she died from breast can-
Amy Hempel, left, and Jill Ciment, who wrote most of "The Hand That Feeds You," in New York. The two friends of the author Katherine Russell Rich, who died in 2012, have finished a novel she had started to write, which Scribner's will publish Tuesday.
cer, a disease that had been
diagnosed 24 years earlier and chronicled in her memoir, and Hempel satside by side barelybebrokenbycancer." smeared in his blood, having "The Red Devil." at her computer and wrote the Be f ore she died, Rich often apparently mauled him. The end of her life might novel. spoke with friends about the When Morgan tries to reach "She was the third collabn o v el she wanted to write. She his family, she realizes how have meant theend of her story. But two of her closest orator," Hempel added from a i med to explore how some- little she really knows about friends, Amy Hempel and Jill across the dining table. "She o n e l ike herself — a smart, him. She hires a hacker and Ciment, decided to tell it for was the reason we did it, and c o n f ident, worldly woman- gets access to his email, and her. this was a way to , could be so thor- learns that he has multiple Their collaboration resulted keep her with us." ~ g~ " . „, oughly taken in fiancees, who then, one by in "The Hand That Feeds You," - '".~ - , by a pathological one, start to die under odd Rich, a nonfic- ~'I~ a twisty, unsettling thriller
t ion w r iter
and
'
liar. But she didn' t
circumstances.
leave beh i n d Morgan's dead fiance is a enough of a draft ghostly presence that hangs , , for h e r fr i ends over the book, but the charto pick up a plot acterdoesn't resemble Rich's , real-life duplicitous boyfriend, :© thr ead. So ins tead, the writers said. Still, Hempel P ,' Hempel and Ci- and Ciment took gleeful vicar, ious vengeance on his fictional ;.i ment, writing un'.i der the pen name counterpart, who meets a grisp robably survi v e , . rr o nly a year or A.J. Rich, t o ok ly end. Rich's p r emise "Did we kill him on Page 4 two, she remained sharp, funny and as a jumping-off or something?" Hempel said, a d v e n t u r o u s, f r i e n d s p o i n t and transformed it into a giggling. "We couldn't wait." say. psychological suspense story. Francine Prose, a n other "She approached every- T h e novel opens as Morgan friend in Rich's close literary thing with high, wry hilarity," P rager, a young woman who is circle, said Rich was an ardent said Jo Ann Beard, a writer s tudying victim psychology at fan of Ciment's and Hempel's who lived near Rich in Rhine- the John Jay College of Crim- writing and would have been beck, New York, and read in a l J u s tice, discovers the thrilled by the collaboration. "She had an intense misearly passages from the un- b l oody corpse of her fiance, finished novel. "She couldn't Bennett, in her Williamsburg chievous streak and liked be bowed by a man; she could apartment. Her large dogs are anythingedgy or provocative,
that comes out Tuesday and magazine editor, i bears little resemblance to ei- was far from your ther of their individual literary stereotypical vicstyles. Ciment, 62, has pub- tim. Living w i t h , lished five literary novels, in- cancer for more cluding "Act of God" and "He- than two decades roic Measures." Hempel, 63, is after doctors tol d an acclaimed short-story writ- h er s h e wo u l d
-
.
.
-
'
'
'
'
'
Q I
er whose work has been com-
pared to that of Alice Munro and Grace Paley. Neither had ever written a mystery or a thriller.
"She would love the idea
that someone picked up the
baton and carried what was going to be her first work of fiction over the finish line,"
Ciment said of Rich. She was i nterviewed recently in
her
bright, airy loft in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, where she
BI1 OVB
'
.
'
'
:
': 0:, ~ ) HI ' -
so she would have loved this," idea,'" Hempel said. Prose said. "She loved Amy Early on, they asked Ciand Jill and she loved their ment's husband, painter ArnoldMesches,91,forfeedback work." Hempel and Ciment, who on the first 26 pages. His criticism was swift and unsparhave known each other for more than 35 years, have tried ing. "He said, 'This can't be a collaborating before. Years best-seller; there's no sex in ago, they wrote a screenplay, it,'" Ciment recalled. which they described as "All They took his advice and About Eve" with talking dogs. added some sex and continued (They showed the script to to map out the plot in 50-page their friend Nora Ephron, who increments. When one of them read it and suggested to them, was out of town for a stretch, kindly, that it seemed as if they they worked over the phone, looking at the same draft in were just goofing around.) It took the death of a dear Google Drive. They finished friend to make them grow se- the manuscript in a year. The novel, which is being rious about teaming up. A few months after Rich's death in published by Scribner, is dedApril 2012, they talked about icated to the memory of Rich, picking up her novel and writ- and friends may catch a coding it together. They wrote the ed tribute to her in the novel' s first few pages, then put the opening chapter. When Morgan, in shock book aside to finish other writafter discovering her fiance's ing projects. facelesscorpse,is in a psychiWhen they started working on it again in the summer atric ward with an annoying of 2013, they discovered they roommate, she wishes she had complementary skill sets. could discuss her predicament Hempel, a gifted stylist who with her friend Kathy, an "adhas previously published only venturous, indomitable and short fiction, polished the sen- wise spirit" who died of breast tences, while Ciment acted cancer. Lying in bed, Morgan imagas the plot architect. Hempel, who has long been fascinated ines having Kathy there to by forensic psychology and help her cope and solve the studied criminology at John mystery: "We would have Jay about 12 years ago, helped dissected the possibilities of flesh out Morgan's often de- this odd situation, escalating tached and clinical approach into wilder scenarios until we to solving the mystery of her were both laughing," Morgan fiance's death. thinks, adding later, "What Their decades-long friend- would Kathy have done'?" ship helped dilute any perCiment and Hempel have ceived slights. "I could say, 'I' ll the answer to that. She would kill you before you use that have written a novel.
T e intIos ective man-c i,
curious an unvarnis e
•
•
•
•
s
"Alone and Not Alone" by RonPadget t (Coffee House Press, 89 pages, $16) "My Feeli ngs:Poems" by Nick Flynn (Graywolf Press, 89 pages, $16) By Jeff Gordinier New York Times News Service
These days we' re taught to be leery of the man-child, that
sloppy, skateboard-toting guy of a certain age who seems de-
termined to ding to his concert T-shirts and skillfully avoid adulthood for as long as he can. Among male poets, though, the preservation of a stubborn
In "Pep Talk," he fearlessly
sketches for the more fleshed-
defies writing instructors ev-
out poems that should have come later in the process. "The
erywhere by using the word "nice": Dinner is a
Brought to you by Patio World and Choice One Builders
Day Lou Reed Died" carries d amned nice the germ of a compelling premise — the idea that Flynn's bi-
thing as are breakfast and lunch when they' re good and with the one you love. A newcomer to Padgett's worldview could be forgiven for asking, "Is this even poetry?" Padgett might answer, "Gosh, I'm not sure!" The charm of his lines — and their power,
DURING THE 2015
ologicalfather and Reed are twinned currents of patrimony
COBA TOUR OE HOMES™ ENTER TO WIN A
in Flynn's life — but it never
quite makes the leap from that premise to a fully realized elegy. At their strongest, Flynn's
poems are much tougher than that. "Philip Seymour Hoffman" presents an unvarnished
because his work has a way look at the mind games that of disarming you and pulling addicts play with themselves. It you in again and again — of- grabs you by the earlobes with streak of boyishness can feel ten comes from his allergy to its opening line: "Last summer like an advantage, at least anything pretentious or even I found a small box stashed when it comes to coaxing read- "poetic." He makes plain nice- away in my apartment,la box ers into the backyard soap-bub- ness look like the most radical filled with enough Vicodin ble of a poem. It might even be a stance of all. to kill me." g dare you to stop job requirement. If Ron Padgett is American there.) F or decades n ow , R o n poetry's Peter Pan, Nick FlyThe agonies and delights of Padgett has built up a body nn, in his latest collection, "My youth never seem too far away of work that, like the tenderly Feelings," channels the interior for Flynn and Padgett, but deadpan ballads of Jonathan growling of a Lost Boy, which it's interesting to note that the Richman, has at its heart a should come as no shock to most memorable verses in both sort of wry, pickled innocence. anyone who has marinated books wind up being the ones Whether he's writing about sal- in the darkness of Flynn's ac- with a hard-forged insight as ad ("I don't see why I can't dive daimed memoirs. A dying their foundation. into that salad bowVand rough father, a suicidal mother, the Consider "The Street," in up the lettuce" ) or a tabletop bullying and m anipulative which Padgett proves that he' s (" When I run my fingers/over stepparent known as addiction not all salads and tabletops. it, it makes a cool swoosh"), — these figures weave in and The poem starts off as a mehe specializes in conveying a out of "My Feelings" like the morial to a friend in the East sense that he is encountering shadows in a haunted house. Village who has died (wand it' s stuff for the first time, and enEven if it comes with an im- you I'm waiting for as I walk couraginghisreadersto do the plied wink, the very title of this past Little Poland" ), but then it same. book suggests a kind of doomy goes bitter, turning into an inOn the cover of Padgett's adolescent churn. (A female dictment of a city's love affair latest collection, "Alone and writer recently told me, provoc- with gentrification: Not Alone," there's a Jim Dine atively, that only a man could Knowing you were there drawing of Pinocchio, the get away with a title like "My made mebe more heretoo, wooden marionette who longed Feelings." Discuss.) made New York be N ew to become aboy.Many of the One of Flynn's previous York, puckish, unadorned poems volumes, "Blind Huber," delivfueled my anger at the new within suggest that Padgett ered a fascinating mosaic of buildings that ruined the old himself, now a grandfather, poems about the workings of ones may have similar thoughts on a beehive, but "My Feelings" and at the new people his mind. does not try to transplant said with their coarseness and As he puts it in "It Takes feelings into the hollowed-out self-involvement Two: trunk of a different habitat. No, As Padgett knows, downM y replacement in t h e these poems are just what they town Manhattan's no longer a universe look like: buzzing, stinging cheap playground for bohemiis the little tyke who' ll soon plunges into the complicated an-dreaming boys like him. For arrive colony of self. neighborhoods as well as for and let me be superfluous if At their w eakest, F1ynn's poets, growing up isn't all it' s and when I feel like being so. lines can feel like preliminary cracked up tobe.
OUTDOOR PATIO SET VALUED AT $2,500
o
c,
(>on Kinunen
THERE ARE TWO WAYS TO ENTER & WIN: 1. STOP BY PATIO WORLD 222 SEReed Market Road, Suite 200, Bend Now through July 26, 2015 2.VISIT THE CHOICE ONE BUILDERS TOUR OF HOMES. HOUSE «32 21059 Avery Lane, Bend July 1 7, 1 8, 19 5 24, 25, 26 Also will be on Chefs on Tour
O.W.LEE ARTISAN DINING SET
4- Spring Base Dining Chairs with Cushions 1 -48" Dining Table 1 -9'Treasure Garden Umbrella with 50¹ Base Or S2,500 Giff Certificate
•1•
CHOICE ONE BUILOERS
•
•
www.Cholca1 Builders.earn
541 %0$$1 so CCSt tQHRI
222 SEReedMarketRoad 541-388-0022 www.patioworldhend.corn
The Bulletin
ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Ciassifieds at www.bendbuiietin.corn THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 ••
s
t
'
•i•
• t
t
9
tsess:sg
contact us:
hours:
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. Subscribe or manage your subscription
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371
Classified telephone hours: Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
On the web at:www.bendbulletin.corn
Place, cancel or extend an ad
The~ul lett~:
17 7 ~
W .
C rt a ng
lg
r
A v e
, • Bgn d
97 $ 0 2
• O g e gg n
208
210
240
246
266
260
263
266
Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Crafts & Hobbies
Computers
Misc. Items
Tools
Heating & Stoves
Hide-a-bed very good condition. $200
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
9
T HE B U LLETIN r e - How to avoidscam DeWalt contractors miNOTICE TO ADVERTISER and fraud attempts t re s a w , Mod e l Ruger Single 6 .22 re- quires computer ad541-526-1359 DW730, comes w/ link Since September 29, Pollshers • Saws P eople g iving p e t s volver w/ mag cylin- vertisers with multiple g~Be aware of internaattachment 8 l e g s. 1991, advertising for away are advised to Kohler t o ilet, w h i te, der. 1 96 9 m o del, ad schedules or those tional fraud. Deal lo$300 OBO. used woodstoves has pre-hammer m o d ., selling multiple sysbe selective about the nearly new, exc. cond. Repair & Supplies cally whenever pos541-604-1964 been limited to modnew owners. For the $50. 54'I-593-5118 with George tems/ software, to dis- sible. 'g l r close the name of the els which have been protection of the aniLawrence cu s t om grWatch for buyers Lift Chair $100 business or the term certified by the Or202 mal, a personal visit to western style holster. who offer more than Twin bed, $100. "dealer" in their ads. Tick, Tock egon Department of the home is recomNew condition. $675. Want to Buy or Rent White barely your asking price and 541-526-1359 serge r, Private party advertis- who ask to have Environmental Qualmended. used, $100. 503-936-1778 Tick, Tock... ers are defined as ity (DEQ) and the fedNEED TO CANCEL Wanted: $Cash paid for 541-923-8050 money wired or The Bulletin WANTED: Collector those who sell one eral E n v ironmental YOUR AD? vintage costume jewelry Serving Central Oregon sincetggt ...don't let time get handed back to them. seeks high quality fish- computer. Protection A g e ncy The Bulletin Top dollar paid for Fake cashier checks 241 away. Hire a ing items & upscale fly (EPA) as having met Gold/Silver. I buy by the P omeranian p u p s , Classifieds has an and money orders 257 Bicycles & rods. 541-678-5753, or smoke emission stanpure bred, sables, "After Hours"Line professional out Estate, Honest Artist are common. 503-351-2746 tri-colored markings, Musical Instruments srNever dards. A cer t ified Accessories Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Call 541-383-2371 give out perof The Bulletin's w oodstove may b e dewormed, g r eat 24 hrs. to cancel 247 FREE Lowery Holiday sonal financial infor"Call A Service dispositions, ready identified by its certifi205 your ad! Mens Comanche mtn mation. Sporting Goods Genie-Leslies organ. cation label, which is 7/24. Taking deep. bike, 21 speed, $65 Professional" Items for Free 9/Trust your instincts FIND IT! Call a f te r 4pm Very heavy, you haul! permanently attached 541-420-5855 - Misc. and be wary of Directory today! BIIT IT! 541-548-1422 to the stove. The BulFREE older J enn-Air 541-383-8195 someone using an letin will not knowSELL IT! 245 range, good 48" & 27" POODLE pups,toy or escrow service or ingly accept advertisTV's. 541-350-3558 The Bulletin Classifieds Upright piano. Milling Illlachine mini, Pomapoos 8 Golf Equipment agent to pick up your ing for the sale of Melville-Clark WurlClausing 3/4HP, 3 Chipoo. 541-475-3889 Whirlpool W&D, $175/ merchandise. uncertified itzer. Nice sound 208 3 gas golf carts: 2006 phase, speeds 180 pair, $ 10 0 e a c h. woodstoves. Queensfand Heelers and touch. Paid The Bulletin to 3250, 3" spindle Pets & Supplies 541-526-1359 Y amaha, $200 0 . servin9 central oregon since1999 Standard & Mini, $150 travel, 6"x24" bed, Older Hyun d ai,Pygmy Osprey Double $1100. Need to sell. & up. 541-280-1537 $650 OBO. 267 Infrared Sauna, 220-V has approx. dimen$1000. 1996 Bulletin kayak. Feather 541-480-6358 The Bulletin recom- www.rightwayranch.wor The hook-up, no building, sions 36ux40". Easy-Go, $2000. wood Fuel & Wood recommends extra Craft rudder. B uilt mends extra caution dpress.corn $3000 value, asking $2500 Good carts - can de- 2009. Weighs only t e pu when purc has- Sheep-A-Doodle p ups, I ceutto $500. 541-536-7790 503-866-8858 liver within reason. 6 0lbs. I n cludes 2 260 chasing products or, ing products or serWHEN BUYING ready to go, lovely services from out of I 541-576-2477 Misc.Items Kooker King portable custom fit Red Fish vices from out of the FIREWOOD... non-shed, coats, the area. Sending I prof. deep fryer $200 seats; cockpit covers; area. Sending cash, CHECKYOUR AD entle di s position. cash, checks, or BBQ Quisinart portable, OBO. 541-279-8908 rollers and saddles for To avoid fraud, checks, or credit in1200. 509-305-9085 I credit i n f ormation The Bulletin crossbars. $1 5 00. propane, like new, Mirror, 16 wide, and f ormation may b e may be subjected to $65. 541-389-7280 541-504-5224 recommends paysubjected to fraud. Shih Tzu AKC adorable I FRAUD. For more 12 n length. Make ment for Firewood For more informam ale pu p $4 0 0 . information about an I Buying Diamonds offer. 541-647-2009 only upon delivery Find exactly what tion about an adver541-788-0234 or advertiser, you may iGofd for Cash and inspection. Your Past Tax MIXER mortar, contiser, you may call 541-548-0403 you are looking for in the Saxon's Fine Jewelers Reduce I call t h e Ore g on I • A cord is 128 cu. ft. on the first day it runs Bill by as much as 75 the O regon State 541-389-6655 crete, etc. 12 cu. ft., CLASSIFIEDS ' State Attor ney ' to make sure it is cor4' x 4' x 8' Percent. Stop Levies, t owable, w/ 1 3 HP Attorney General' s I General's O f fi ce • Receipts should rect. uSpellchecku and Liens and Wage Gar- Honda gas, hydrauBUYING Office C o nsumer Consumer Protec- • include name, human errors do oc248 Lionel/American Flyer nishments. Call The Protection hotline at dump, used once, tion h o t line at I cur. If this happens to Tax DR Now to see if lic phone, price and 1-877-877-9392. trains, accessories. Health & l ike n ew . IM E R i 1-877-877-9392. 541-408-2191. kind of wood your ad, please conyou Qualify Henchman 4HSM-4, Beauty Items us ASAP so that 1-800-791-2099. purchased. The Bulletin Sponsors needed for I The Bulletin I tact BUYING & SE LLING new $5000, s e l l Serving Central Oregon sincefgtts • Firewood ads corrections and any Got Knee Pain? Back All gold jewelry, silver (PNDC) servtng central oregon since t903 sweet Portia, hit by a $3950. adjustments can be MUST include and gold coins, bars, 503-781-8812 Pain? Shoulder Pain? Sell you r s t ructured car & now missing species & cost per made to your ad. Adopt a great cat or 212 Get a pain-relieving rounds, wedding sets, settlement or annuity art of her ja w 8 541 -385-5809 cord to better serve two! Altered, vacci- p Further sur-little or NO cost class rings, sterling sil- payments for CASH Antiques & our customers. The Bulletin Classified brace nated, ID chip, tested, tongue. ver, coin collect, vin- NOW. You don't have TURN THE PAGE to you. Medicare Pagery is needed to reCollectibles more! CRAFT, 65480 move her damaged tients Call Health Hot- tage watches, dental to wait for your future For More Ads The Bulletin 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, eye. Recovery will Fl e ming, payments any longer! line No w ! 1- gold. Bill Servin9 Central On gun sincespits Smith Rock 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 take a while, but she 541-382-9419. The Bulletin 800-285-4609 Call 1-800-914-0942 How to avoid scam www.craftcats.org Golf course l oves life 8 w e a t and fraud attempts (PNDC) DID YOU KNOW that (PNDC) in Redmond CRAFT rescue will do YBe aware of interAll year Dependable 265 not only does news- Need help fixing stuff? all we can for her. 248 Firewood: dry 9 Hole Par 3 paper media reach a Call A Service Professional Building Materials Donations n e eded! national fraud. Deal Lodgepole, split, del, Art, Jewelry HUGE Audience, they & Full Length w h e never PO Box 6441, Bend locally find the help you need. 1 /$195; 2/$3 65. Driving Range & Furs also reach an E NREDMOND Habitat 97708 o r Pa y Pal, possible. www.bendbulletin.corn Multi-cord discounts! GAGED AUDIENCE. RESTORE Y Watch for buyers www.craftcats.org. check, Visa, MC 541-912-3426 Desperately Seeking Discover the Power of SOCIAL SE C URITY Building Supply Resale cash, Also need jars of baby who offer more than 541-420-3484, Bend Smith RockGolf Missing 1940s dia- Newspaper Advertis- D ISABILITY Quality at AKC/AF Po i nter food meats, Royal your asking price BEN Course.corn m ond ring sold at ing in six states - AK, E FITS. U nable t o LOW PRICES Canin babycat dry and who ask to have P uppies bor n Ponderosa pine fireBend Pawn approx. ID, MT,OR8 WA. For work? 1242 S. Hwy 97 food & good quality m oney wired o r 6/1 4/1 5 ready 8/9/1 5 Denied benwood split, $160 or Sept.13-17, 2014 has a free rate brochure efits? We Can Help! 541-548-1406 to Repeat b r eeding, canned pate food for handed b ac k trade. 541-419-1871 246 central diamond and 2 call 916-288-6011 or WIN or Pay Nothing! Open to the public. her 8 o t hers with them. Fake cashier first litter produced a little side stones, one email short-term eating diffi- checks and money Guns, Hunting AKC FC/AFC beContact Bill Gordon & is missing. Sz. 7.5. ceceliaocnpa.corn culties. 541 598 5488 orders are common. fore the age of two. & Fishing Associates at 541-213-1221 Please (PNDC) Complete Liquidation Auction V N ever give o u t 1-800-879-3312 to Double line b r ed Yorkie AKC pups 2M, keep trying! Will pay Crow's Little Joe on personal f i nancial Bend local dealer pays start your application 2F, adorable, UDT any reasonable price. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! today! (PNDC) Sire's side 8 Elhew shots, health guar., pics information. CASH!!for firearms & Snakefoot of Dam's $500/up. 541-777-7743 V T rust y o ur in ammo. 541-526-0617 263 Door-to-door selling with The Bulletin Offers stincts and be wary side. G r eatf ield TV, Stereo & Video fast results! It's the easiest Free PrivateParty Ads of someone using an dogs/family dogs 210 ga • a CASH!I way in the world to sell. • 3 lines - 3 days raised in the house Furniture & Appliances escrow service or For Guns, Ammo & DIRECTV Starting at • Private Party Only agent to pick up your with o u r fa m i ly! Reloading Supplies. $19.99/mo. FREE In54'I -408-6900. The Bulletin Classified • Total of items adver$1000 available to 10,000 BTU LC remote merchandise. s tallation. FREE 3 tised must equal $200 great homes only! Everything must be sold!! 541 485-5809 c ontrol window a i r months o f HBO or Less 541-936-4765 Bulletin conditioner, 2 yrs. old, The Selling new Inventory and stock Serving Cenoal Oregon sincetgtts S HOWTIME CIN SON'I IIS TNI FOR DETAILS or to •2 commercial 30x96 greenhouses • Green$200. 541-389-3484 EMAX, STARZ. FREE Dishes - 8 place set of PLACE AN AD, house benches•Commercialexhaustfans AKC Golden Retreiver Big recliner chair, tan Shirley Temple dolls HD/DVR U p grade! Sango Nova Brown, Call 541-385-5809 • Propane furnaces• 2 oil-fired furnances $75. 541-408-0846 2015 NF L S u nday female puppies, soft, fabric, good cond., and 6 tapes. Make DO YOU HAVE Fax 541-385-5802 • Shade cloth • Commercial heat mats • Carts, Apricot, avail. now. $60. 541-923-7688 Ticket Included (Seoffer. 541-647-2009 SOMETHING TO lect Packages) New BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Wanted- paying cash wagons, dollies • Several Stainless steel shelv$1000. 509-305-9085 SELL C ustomers Onl y . Search the area's most for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- ing units • Retail display units • Floral supplies • C alifornia k i n g b e d The Bulletin reserves FOR $500 OR Cans 8 bottles wanted! E than A l le n wi t h the right to publish all CALL 1-800-41 0-2572 comprehensive listing of dio equip. Mclntosh, Indoor growing supplies • Irrigation parts• OrLESS? ganic grow supplies • Pond supplies - pumps, from The Bulletin Your deposit cans/ mattress & classified advertising... (PNDC) JBL, Marantz, Dybox ads Non-commercial newspaper onto The real estate to automotive, naco, Heathkit, San- chemicals, fiberglass ponds• Hundreds of new b ottles make a b i g springs, matching 11- Bulletin Internet webadvertisers may D ish Network - G e t merchandise to sporting vases and planters • Raised bed kits • difference in the lives drawer dresser w/ Irg sui, Carver, NAD, etc. pottery place an ad Over 50 Arbors - fountains - gazebos - trellises M ORE fo r LE S S ! goods. Bulletin Classifieds Call 541-261-1808 of abandoned anim atching mirr o r . site. with our and yard statues • LED, Sodium, metal Halide Starting $19.99/month appear every day in the mals. Local nonprofit $600. 541-241-4373 "QUICK CASH Weber Genesis gas and Fluorescent grow lights• Hundreds of trees, The Bulletin (for 12 months.) PLUS print or on line. uses for spay/neuter Redmond SPECIAL" Bundle & SAVE (Fast b arbecue. $20 0 . shrubs, perennials, roses and herbs • Hun& vet costs. craft1 week3 lines 12 Call 541-385-5809 dreds of new stock gardening supplies, gloves, 541-379-3530 Internet f o r $15 216 cats© b e n dbroador rakes, shovels, hoes • Packaged potting soil, more/month.) CALL www.bendbulletin.corn b and.corn, o r ca l l ~ Coins & Stamps se eks se! ~ 261 bark dust, decor rocks .Garden landscape care Now 1-800-308-1563 541-389-8420 for The Bulletin Ad must products • Floral supplies• Hydroponic grow (PNDC) Medical Equipment pickup or to learn loPrivate collector buying include price of kits • Pallets of fertilizers • New propane BBQ spar" cations of trailers. postagestamp albums & o~ ta te ot Saon grill • Desk, file cabinets, chairs and other office Med-Lift beige electric collections, world-wide or less, or multiple supplies • Commercial snow machine with English Bulldog 11-wks Very Good condition 3 and U.S. 573-286-4343 l ift chair, used f o r items whosetotal turntable • Christmas trees • Single axle flatbed white/brindle female. c ushion Couch, 2 about a year, $750. (local, cell phone). does not exceed trailer • Plastic nursery containers• Retail dismatching pillows, mfd 541-923-8050 $2000 541-350-1965 $500. play units • Fuel tanks • There will be a possibilby La-Z Boy, $175 or 240 et os to no to v ity of over 2000 items of new stock too much French Bulldog pups b est o ff er . Cal l • Crafts & Hobbies 262 utgslsts as,oesooaato' Call Classifieds at to list! brindle, ready July 10 541-317-0826 Commercial/Office 541-385-5809 BowTech, Elite, Hoyf, Matthews, PSE Preview Friday, July 17, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. $2200 541-350-1965 POT- www.bendbulletin.corn Equipment & Fixtures AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: Thebusiness is open GE drop in range, good COMPLETE TERY SET UP - Inuntil Monday, July 13. auctioneers and auccond. $200 obo. • High Quality Bows & Accessories Labradors AKC, Yellow & cludes Skutt kiln, two tion company are not responsible for items ad541- 388-5696. Chocolate, 5 wks, 1st • Bow Tuning and Service wheels, clays, glazes, For S a le : Ki m b er vertised and not in the auction. shots, wormed, healthy/ G ENERATE • 30 Yard Indoor Range SOM E small library shelves, pro-carry 45 auto w/ TERMS: 10% Buyers premium 13% Credit hip guar. 541-536-5385 • Lessons for Beginners and Adults EXCITEMENT in your scales, heat e rs, extras, $895. R Card PAYMENT: Cash, Check and Visa www.welcomelabs.corn ug er • Archery Leagues neighborhood! Plan a tables, booth and too American .308 w/4x1 2 Central Oregon Livestock Auction, inc. Maremma Guard Dog garage sale and don' t much to list. $2,500 or scope, $300. Rug er Auctioneers: Trent Stewart 541-325-3662 Free commercial wire • Clay Tanler 541-419-6060• Aaron Tanler pups, purebred, great forget to advertise in best offer. C ontact M77 .270 w/scope & 1611 South 1st Street, Redmond d ogs, $35 0 e a c h, classified! Rodney at ammo, $475. racks, you haul. Call Romey Bromwich (Ring Man/Auction Manager) 541-316-I 784
I
I
I I I I
I
I
I
•
•
•
•
•
•
TO H
541 -546-61 71.
541-385-5809.
541-728-0604
541-419-7001
541-419-6321
•
•
'
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
G2 SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
HEADS OF STATE
1
2
4
3
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
BY ELIZABETH C. GORSKI / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 13
ACROSS
49 Plains Indian I Monoclepart $0 Straw mats 4 Bridge support 52 Senate vote 9 Many a Theravada 53 Hoppy brew, for Buddhist short 13Indiana city where 55 Flawless routine automanuf acturing 57 City on Utah Lake was pioneered 59 Duds 16 Ruler in Richard 60 Astronomer who Strauss's "Salome" wrote "Pale Blue 17 Construction-site Dot" sight 82 U.S. 66, e.g.: Abbr. 21Art of flower 63 Like Fr. words after arranging ss ian 23Red-wrapped imports 84 Boston iceman 24 Prince of Darkness 65 Plane folk? 25Senate vote 68 Pepper-spray 26 Tea made by Peter targets Rabbit's mother 70 Extols 28 Restriction on Army 71 Comcast, e.g., for enlistees short 29Partof CBS: Abbr. 72 Bio subject 31Bring in a new staff 73 Trial that bombs, for informally 32Blender sound 74 Piedmont city 34"The Untouchables" 75 Stud money role 76 Interminable time 35Table d' 77 G.E. and G.M. 36Grouch 78 Singer Carly 37"Fasten your Jepsen seatbelts ..." 81 Ball-like 40"Smack That" singer 83 Award accepted by 41Jaunty greeting J.K. Rowling and 42Shunned ones turned down by C.S. Lewis 43Pharma-fraudpolice 85 " Ho" ("Slumdog 46 o f ti m e Millionaire" song) 48 Half87 Big channel in reality (java order) programming Online subscriptions: 89 Man'sname that's Today's puzzle and more the code for than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.corn/cross words Australia's busiest ($39.95a year). airport
90G enreof Oasisand 6 It flows to the Caspian the Verve 7 To a degree 82 Works at the 8 Campus grp. formed ballpark, maybe in 1960 9 Nickname for Abraham 84Movie dog Lincoln 95Army-Navy stores? 10 Eat or drink 97 Kind of tiara and 11Seed cover cross 12Not going anywhere 98 Leg bone 13 Capital on the Congo 99Okey14 "I heard you the first 101 Onetime Nair timel" alternative 15See 18-Down 102 " a customer" 18 What 15-Down is 103 10 cc's and 64 fl. oz. ... or a hint to the answers to the four 104 The person you italicized clues in want to be left-to-right order 107 Give a thorough 19 Black birds hosing 20 Hanoi celebrations 110Away IllWhat thebuyer ends 22 Nickname for George Washington up paying 27 Union Pacific 112Old crim e-boss headquarters Frank 28 "The Br e a the" 113 "I Love Lucy" (2007 drama with surname Kevin Bacon and Julie Delpy) 11$ Response to "Who, me?" 30 Minister (to) 116Eight-rela ted 33 Nickname for Theodore Roosevelt 117 Smooth fabric 38 "Kapow!" 118 Lip 39 Guinness Book suffix 119 Head of a crime 42 Pay (up) lab? 44 Thumb, for one 120 Prosciutto, e.g. 45 AARP and others: Abbr. DOWN 47 Subject of semiotics I Hold up 51 Gillette products 2 Non-PC office 54 Apartment, purchase informally 3 Beautiful butterfly 56Commentregarding a squashed bug 4 Nickname for Thomas 5 8 High i ma g e Jefferson 5 Debt, symbolically 61 Cornish of NPR
14
16
15
21
23
22
25
26
32
35
36
37
40
41
53
50
54
55
56
57
73
72
76
82
83
89
84
85
91 95
86
87
92
96
93
100
101
88 94
97
98
102
105 106
104
80
69
75
81
79
59
64
71
99
58
67
70
45
51
62
66
44
ee 3 9
42
6O 61 65
43
33
48
52
20
28
31
46
19
24
27
30
29
18
107 108 112
115 118
1O9 113
114
116
117
119
120
75 River through Yorkshire 79Truculent manner 66 Like a stereotypical 80Where Northwestern University is mobster's voice 67 Alphabet trio 82 N.F.L. ball carriers: Abbr. 68 Four seasons in 84 Barry of "The Rocky Seville Horror Picture "Am believe ass Show" 86 Stoked, with "up" 72 Worthy of pondering 84 Consecrated, to Shakespeare 65 Toaster's need
88 Blank, as a tabula 91 Bygone Chinese money 83 Not too swift 86 Old German governments 97 Unlike most mail nowadays 99 Gainsay 100 Kind of arch
1051977 Electric Light Orchestra hit 108Those: Sp. 108Westernmost island of the Aleutians
109Org. with rules on eligibility 112Turndowns 114Bread source, for short
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
541-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
o r g o t o w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . cor n
Place 8photo in your private party ed for only $75.00 perweek.
OVER '500 in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall noi be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 269
270
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
Lost & Found
BarkTurfSoil.corn PROMPT DELIVERY
542-389-9663
For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-305-5000
To place an ad, call 541 -365-5809
or email
292
• Sales Other Areas
oleeeified@bendbulletin.oom
The Bulletin
280 Estate Sales
SPECIALS 1
+ Raised Bed Soil + Peat Mixes + Juniper Ties + Paver Discounts + Sand + Gravel + Bark
I I instantlsndsceping.corn I
L ' "" " J
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory 270
Lost & Found FOUND Dachshund mix near Deschutes River Woods, June 30. Call to describe. 541-400-0650
Eagle Crest E s t ate Sale, 7/1 1 g 7/12. Call Irrigation Equipment 951-454-2561 for apNew Teel s/s HP sump pointment. pump w/auto shut off, $145. 541 -41 0-3425 282
Sales Northwest Bend
325
IITR Truck School REDMOND CAlvlPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! I-88~38-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU
Looking for Employment Specials in cleaning houses, office, RV's, and any general cleaning. Call Three
Maria'sn541-977-1 633
Juarezm990©gmail. corn
Hay, Grain & Feed Thurs.-Sun., 10-6. tools Good classified adstell Mason jars, Xmas, A+ Premium Central the essential facts in an music, camping. 1933 Ore. Orchard Grass/Hay interesting Manner.Write NW Hill St. off Harriman mix. 25 bales per ton, from the readers view nol $195/ton. Quantity Discount, 541-977-3181 the seller' s. Convert the 286 facts into benefits. Show CO Orchard grass Sales Northeast Bend the reader howthe item will weed free, 70 lb. help them insomeway. bales, $1 99/ron. No This ** FREE ** delivery. advertising tip 541 -3'I 7-8744 Garage Sale Kit brought to you by Place an ad in The First cutting o rchard Bulletin for your gaBulletin g rass m ix , sm a l l The Senna Crave entoil steer Sste rage sale and rebales, $165/ton, slight ceive a Garage Sale rain. 5 4 1-420-9736 Kit FREE! Madras, Oregon Wheat Straw for Sale. KIT INCLUDES: • 4 Garage Sale Signs Also, weaner pigs. • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-546-61 71 Use Toward Your
476
476
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunl ties" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p ositions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have
r esearched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme
Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Bulletin's web site, www.bendbulletin.corn, will be able to click through automatically ro your website.
Computer/IT: Vertex Dental DID Y O U KNO W L a b Tech Newspaper-gener(Bend, OR) s eeks Dental Senior Systems Adneeded in SW Ora ted content is s o ministrator with Mas- egon. Framework for valuable it's taken and ters in CS, MIS, inlarge, anterior, imrepeated, condensed, dustrial technology or plants, and emax, broadcast, rweered, related + 1 yr of exp in and/or Ceramist ex- discussed, p o sted, systems administra- perience r e q uired. copied, edited, and tion, network admin- Good working envi- e mailed c o u ntless istration, or systems ronment and benefits. times throughout the analysis. Work expe- 4-day wor k w e e k. day by others? DisCaregivers Needed rience must include: Lab has been in busi- cover the Power of at Luxury 1) Installing and con- ness for 35 years and Newspaper AdvertisSenior Home figuring Red- Hat and has established cli- ing in FIVE STATES Leisure Club Inc. has JBoss; 2) Implement- entele. If you are ream with just one phone shift positions availing virtualization us- oriented and e njoy call. For free Pacific able. Work includes ing VMWave on HP c hallenging wo r k , Northwest Newspacaring for the elderly and IBM Servers; 3) please respond to per Association Netin p remium s tyle Performing scripting jobopeninglh@outwork brochures call homes. Starting pay is and automation using look.corn. 91 6-288-601 1 or $175 per 24-hr. shift; shell and Ant Scripts. email excellent w o r king Apply at http: //www. cecelia©cnpa.corn conditions. The Bulletin is your vertexgroup.corn/. (PNDC) please ca/I EOE. No calls Employment 541-550-8612 or email seniorleisure Marketplace Delivery Call a Pro c~lvve ahaa.cam for more information/ Relief Delivery Driver Whether you need a for 2 newspaper routes Call questions. fence fixed, hedges $60-$70/day+bonuses, $555-$575/wk (3 day 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 trimmed or a house ro 3 wk time periods). built, you' ll find Call Jason or Laurie, io advertise. Say egoodbuy" professional help in 541-410-7506. The Bulletin's "Call a to that unused www.bendbulletin.corn
c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1 -503-370-4320 For Equal Opporrunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n dustry, item by placing it in Civil Rights Division, The Bulletin Classifieds 971-673- 0764.
The Bulletin
541-385-5809
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Ai: www.bendbulleiin.corn
Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
Sales Other Areas REMEMBER: If you 345 have lost an animal, don't forget to check Friday 17th & Saturday Livestock & Equipment 16th, S - end of day, The Humane Society 450 NE Combs Flat Bend 3A Livestock Rd., Prineville. Ben54'I-382-3537 ~ev l i e s efits Church Youth Redmond Panels, gates and 541 -923-0002 shelter HeadquarMadras Moving sale: Gas trimters! Odd sizes 54'I -475-6889 mer, asst. of West- available, to 20'. Call Prineville ern tack, rototiller, sm. today for pricing! 541 -447-71 70 sprayer, etc. 6102 SW 541 -475-1 255 or Craft Cats Shad, CRR. Sat & 000-71 6-4320 541 -389-8420. Sun, 8-4.
Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon sincetsea
541 -365-5009
The BuIjetin
The BmHI:tm
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad PICK UP YOUR 541-923-6535. today and GARAGE SALE KIT at reach over 1 777 SW Chandler FOUND Swiss watch 80,000 readers Ave., Bend, OR 97702 7/6 at J.C/s Bar 8 each week. Grill downtown Bend. The Bulletin Your classified ad Call t o des c ribe. Serving Central Oregon snce Ssaa will also 541-6 1 0-7694 appear on bendbulletin.corn Found T u esday, in 290 which currently South Redmond, a Sales Redmond Area receives over colorful large rabbit, 1.$ million page call to iden t ify,Smith Rock yard sale. views every 541-540-31 13. Sai. 0-4 6 Sun. 9-3, month at no 91 40 NE C r ooked extra cost. Lost gray cat, Hazel, River Drive. Racing Bulletin West Awbrey Butte, canoe, kayak, a nClassifieds disappeared July 3/4, tique high chair, tons no collar. Please help. of books, pole saw, Get Results! 541-406-4733 O' Brien chairs, other antiques, Call 541-385-5809 Ct./Summit area. or place your ad glassware and misc. on-line at bendbulletin.corn 292 Found - Power tool carrying case, SW Redmond. Call to identify.
421
Schools & Training
454 316
I
5Xil
Thurs. July 2nd, my Multi-family at 2 differCannondale Trail 5 ent homes. Furniture, bike was taken from antiques, decorative Campsite S in Cinder items, clothes, vinHill Cam p ground tage marbles. 17320 north of Eastlake Re- SW Mt . M c K inley sort. Bike is like new, Way, Powell B utte blue with white letter- Estates. Fri.-Sun. S-5. ing, Inertia seat bag and bike computer. Reward of fe r e d. P lease r e turn n o questions asked. Can be anonymous. Rex, 541 -504-4624
a o
ADVERTISING SALES ASSISTANT
PART-TIME PREP SPORTS ASSISTANT
•
•
In this position you will play a vital role on our Sports Staff!
•
•
In this position you will support outside sales representatives and managers with account and territory management
e
e
The successful candidate will work weeknight and Saturday shifts. Job begins on or about Sept. 1
If you are a sports minded journalist and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• Excellent verbal, written and communication skills • Accurate typing, filing, multi-tasking, and organizational skills • Google Docs and Excel skills a plus. • Ability ro develop and maintain good customer service and relationships • Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, deadline oriented office environment • Valid driver's license and transportation for occasional driving
•. •
•
Please send your cover letter, resume, and a work sample attention: eporteaeeietant@bendbulletin.corn
. . •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
If you have a positive, "Can Do" attitude, strong service/team orientation, problem solving skills, are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual with multi-tasking abilities, WE WANT TO TALK TO YOU!
Please send your resume and cover letter to: nkerrigan@weecom papers.corn
•
This position is full-time, Sam to 5pm Mon-Fri. Pre-employment drug testing is required •
'S
•
•
•
•
No agencies or telephone cal/s please.
•
TOIDUTlllfr, s
TotOIIBIN:
• Proven interpersonal skills • Professional-level writing ability and sports background a must • Working knowledge of traditional high school sports • Proven computer and proofreading skills • Comfortable in a fast-paced, deadlineoriented environment • Must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment drug screen
•
Retail Advertising
•
Western Communications, inc. and its affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace.
•
•
•
•
•
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 IS
General
Jefferson Coun Job 0 o rtuni ties
N ggtss seIW
Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Prosecutor -D.D.A. - I $48,003.88 to $50,434.08 Year - DOQ First Review Date — July 24th, 2015
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. JeffersonCounty is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
r
General
I
* ** * * * * * * * * * * * * * I
I * Great Supplemental Income!! * I
I The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI • currently have openings all nights of the week.• I Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and I end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m .Allpo• sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of I loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and I other tasks.
/ I I
IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsI I including life insurance, short-term & long-termI disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time.
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME IN THE BULLETIN
K I for a hat oraplaceto hangit, openings for e nergetic and motivated N Help Desk Analyst The BulletinClassified is Local A, B and C your best source. class Delivery Drivers! S Responsible for providing support services to (Experience ReH Company-wide IS users. D u t ies include Everydaythousandsof quired) responding to c alls r egarding computer b uyers and se l e rs of go o ds A We offer competitive hardware and software related issues, training and services dobusinessin c ompensation a n d S users on new technology and technical benefits inc l uding these pages.Theyknow processes and providing technical knowledge medical/dental. A to assist with you can'tbeatTheBulletin Compensation: $13/hr.
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Food & Beverage
attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred © bendbulletin.corn). * No resumes will be accepted **
I
JOURNEYMAN PRESSMAN
I
Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
I I
Serrrng Central Oregon s nce1903
I
I
L +**** * * * * * * * * * * Ay EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER NIGHT
Tuesday,July 14th -5:00 PNt — 7:00 PM 22550 Nelson Road by the Bend Airport
Seeking highly motivated professionals who are quality-focused, team-oriented, and mechanically proficient. Prior experience is highly desirable but not required for all positions. For more information, visit www.epicaircraft.corn or email kellys©epicaircraft.corn.
•
BONDING TECHNICIANS
Job Duties: • Experienced secondary bonding tech for structural assembly of bonded carbon composite parts. • Surface prep, fit, trim & drill, bonding of major & minor assemblies, mechanical fit and assembly of flight controls, wing tips and win dshields. Job Requirements: • 1-2 years' experience with composite materials; aviation experience preferred. • Able to operate hand tools; professional and positive attitude. • Reliable and dependable with an excellent attendance and punctuality record. PRODUCTION ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Job Duties:
• Develop company training programs with department managers; develop multimedia on-line learning modules; participates in setting departmental objectives, systems, operations, and goals. • Create/maintain project documentation system; organize data into charts, graphs, schedules, etc. • Conduct new employee orientations; perform entry level practical training; monitor reporting systems. • Manage phones, correspondence, handle customer requests, copy, scan, file, and other office tasks. Job Requirements: • Minimum three years admin experience. • Excellent knowledge of Microsoft Office and Microsoft Project. • Experience developing training programs; multimedia experience a plus. • Outstanding written/verbal communication skills, highly organized, able to multi-task, resolve conflicts. • Comfortable with mechanical reasoning, visual/spatial relations, with basic tool knowledge. DIIVIENSIONAL INSPECTOR Job Duties: • Inspect parts and materials per specifications; perform first article inspections using coordinate measuring machine and measuring instruments like depth and bore gauges, calipers and micrometers. Job Requirements: • 3 years of experience in first article inspections; prior experience as quality inspector working with machined and composite parts; prior experience using a Faro Arm or CMM and GD&T. • Experience required with coordinating measuring machine; ability to read and understand geometric tolerancing and dimensioning; ability to read blueprints and engineering drawings. • Hand tool inspection skills; knowledge of non-destructive testing (NDT) processes desirable.
NON-DESTRUCTIVE INSPECTOR (NDI) Job Duties: • Inspects parts and materials using ultrasound, visual and tap testing techniques. Job Requirements: • Must have experience in non-destructive inspection of aerospace components using ultrasonic and radiographic methods.
•
•
•
Pressroom
This position is full-time 4 days per week, 10 hours per day, from 3:30 p.m. to approximately 2:00 am on a rotating schedule that will allow for every other weekend being 3 days off.
•
•
•
e
•
r~o a e r :
• 1-2 years web press experience • Move and lift 50 Ibs or more on a continuing basis • Reaching, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. • Ability to learn and execute appropriate safety practices • Successfully pass a drug screen
•
•
•
If you are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT To TALK To YOU!
•
•
•
•
Bend Park ai
• •
Recreation o er
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-freeworkplace
•
•
•
•
•
No agencies or telephone calls please.
Ss
•
The Bulletin AP/HR ASSISTANT Administration
General
Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t unities
i
Public Health Department Staff Assistant III - Client Service Assistant $2,684.88to $3,192.73 Per Month -DOQ Open until Filled - First Review Date: July 15th, 2015
rn •
•
•
In this position you will support the Accounting and Human Resources Departments
•
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741.
•
•
•
ro aer: ~
• Excellent verbal, written and communication skills • Accurate typing, filing, multi-tasking, and organizational skills • Microsoft Office and basic accounting skills a plus. • Ability to develop and maintain good customer service and relationships. • Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, deadline oriented office environment. • Pre-employment drug testing is required
•
JeffersonCounty is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
•
•
•
•
General
•
Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunities •
If you have a positive "Can Do" attitude, enjoy working with numbers, solving problems and helping others WE WANT To TALK To YOUI
•
•
•
•
•
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741.
•
•
•
•
•
Please send your resume and cover letter to: nkerrigsn©wescompspers.corn
Juvenile Community Justice Department Department Director: $5,342.03to $7,366.53 Per Month — DOQ Open until Filled — First Review Date: July 14th, 2015
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
JeffersonCountyis an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Prinetrille Broadband & Service Technician Crestview Cable seeks personable cable TV/Internet/Phone Installer & Service Tech. Hands-on cable TV, computer or electronics experience preferred.
The Bulletin
Requires some ladder, pole climbing and ability to lift 65 lbs. Must have valid driver's license and pass drug and background checks. Must live in the Prineville area. Bilingual a plus. Full time+ benefits.
ROLL TENDER
•
•
Pressroom
•
•
This is an entry-level position with the opportunity to learn a new trade. Position pays $10.00 hour depending on experience
•
•
•
•
•
Manufacturing Assembler
•
ae
•
• •
TO cleric: ~ • Move and lift 50 Ibs or more on a continuing basis • Reaching, sitting, pushing, pulling, stooping, kneeling, walking and climbing stairs. • Ability to learn and execute safety practices • Successfully pass a drug screen
•
•
•
No agencies or telephone ca//s please.
Assembler of mechanical products needed. Products include standard parts and custom work - no "assembly line". Requirements include: 2 yrs. experience in a manufacturing position; thorough attention to detail; reliability; experience with basic hand tools, power tools and tape measure. Must be able to read and interpret written work instructions and mechanical drawings. Products are built while standing at a work table. Must be able to lift 20 Ibs on a regular basis, and 40-50 lbs. on occasion.
•
•
Send your resume to anelson@bendbulletin.corn Applications are also available at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
Please send resume to agautney@crestviewcable.corn Crestview Cable Communications 350 NE Dunham St., Prineville, OR97754 Email Crestviewcable.corn for details. EOE
v
•
•
The successful candidate will work full-time 4 days per week, 10 hours per day, from 3:30 p.m. to approximately 2:00 a.m. on a rotating schedule that will allow for 3 days off every other weekend.
•
T R HE E D O M I M A N A N K H O A F T E H W R E W S P T E OB E T P O A L S E E T L W N I O C S K
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Work location is Redmond, Oregon. Summer Hours: 6:00a.m. - 2:30p.m. Mon.-Fri. (Winter hours 7:00a.m. - 3:30p.m.) Starting pay depending on experience, plus excellent benefit package which includes health insurance, life and 401(k) Plan. Pre-employment d r u g screen required. Eq ual Opportunity Employer. Qualified applicants will submit resume stating relevant experience by fax to (541) 923-6015, by email to hr@fuelsafe.corn or you can apply in person at: Aircraft Rubber Manufacturing, inc. dba FuelSafe Systems 1550 NE Kingwood Ave. Redmond, OR 97756
U S S T H A I R O D HA RD HAT A M S E V I L O N E LE AGE E I M I T W H I R N E S S H E R E WE G O P A R I A H S F D A O T O T A T A M I S N O R E M T O G S Y F E M B R U I N A S S A I L A N T S D N A N T E S T E O N C O S R A E J A I T R U T V P U M P S A S T A P A P A L S H I N O N E T O A M T S A S H D O W N O U T T T I R I C A R D O T A L S A T E E N U L L H A M
PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 476
The Bulletin is your
Employment Opportunities Management ServiceMasterseeks a fleet/equipment/ building manager. Must be mechanically inclined. This job is three to six days a week depending on the needs of the applicant. Help us respond to Central Oregon disasters by keeping our fleet and equipment in top notch order. We are a drug free work place. Call
Employment Marketplace Call
541-385-5809 to advertise. www.bendbulletin.corn
The Bulletin Sercring Central Oregon since lggg
541-388-5000
FIREFIGHTERS NEEDED NOyy!
Immediate need for Wildland Firefighters to fight forest fires. Must be 18 years old and Drug Free! Apply 9arn-3pm Mon-Thurs. Bring two forms of ID fill out Federal 1-9 form. NO ID = No APPIICation
PatRick Corp. 1199 NE Hemlock,
Redmond
541-923-0703 EOE P ATRIc K
Ranch Worker 1 - opening temp. 7/26/2015-5/26/2016. $12.42/hr.
Roaring Springs Ranch, Inc,
31437 Hwy 205, Frenchglen, OR 97736. Jobsite: Ca tlow Valley 15 m i. s outh of
Frenchglen, OR. Duties: Operate irrigation systems; Provide water for cattle; During winter months, break apart ice to allow cattle access to water; Fence building/maintenance, spraying weeds, farming, heavy equipment operation, feeding cattle/horses, and other general ranching work. Employer will offer empl. for total number of hours equal to at least a/4 of work days of the total period. Employer will furnish work tools, supplies and equip. at no cost to worker. Housing available at no cost to worker, including U.S. workers who cannot return to perm. residence at end of working day. Transportation and subsistence expenses to worksite provided/paid by employer upon completion of 50% of work contract, or earlier, if appropriate. Apply at SWA, 809 W JacksonSt,Ste 400, Burns, OR 97720, job ¹1381425.
Home Delivery Advisor
The Bulletin Circuration Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
The Bulletin
•
Western Communications, inc. and their affiliated companies, is proud to be an equal opportunity employer, supporting a drug-free workplace
If you are a self-motivated, teamoriented individual and have a positive "Can Do" attitude WE WANT To TALK To YOU!
ing, Electrical Exp. Necessary. Part Time 20 — 25 Hour a week. Accepting resumes O High Desert Commons 2201 SW Canal Blvd Redmond, OR 10am to 2pm,
•Night Custodian •Facility Supervisor •Lifeguard •Park Maintenance Worker Mon.-Fri. •Youth Recreation Leaders For completel oh announcements People Lookfor Information or to applygo to About Products and bend parksandrec.org Services Every Daythrough Equal Opportunity The Bulletin Classifiarts Employer
•
•
o
Is Accepting Applications For:
•
Send yourresume to snelson©bendbulletin.corn Applications are also available at The Bulletin, 1777 Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
PRE-PREG COMPOSITE TECHNICIAN
Job Duties: • Fabricate, assemble, inject, cure, trim, drill, and repair carbon fiber composite parts using pre-preg hand lay-up techniques. • Prior experience with hand, power, and machine tools to prep and clean molds, equipment, parts, assemblies, and machinery (including hand knife, automated power or hand cutters, computerized injection equipment, hydraulic presses, cranes or other lifting devices, oven operations, and other shop equipment.) • Able to use inspection devices, such as protractors, calipers, micrometers, feeler gages, steel rules, etc. • Problem solver, who can record operations accurately/legibly, and maintain clean, safe work area. Job Requirements: • High school diploma or GED. • 1-3 years manufacturing experience. • Experience with Pre-Preg and/or Composite materials preferred. • Able to lift up to 50 Ibs & perform basic shop mathematics. • Strong attention to detail; works well with others; team-oriented; strong written a verbal communication skills; reliable and dependable.
Now Hiring!
Pastini Pastaria
.
*
R I M O M O B A N A C A M T R E E C R N H I D S C I P A A G A N U N D C D S I I A N E R I C B R I R S E N E N I D E A C O S T H Y O U S A S S
Part-Time Housekeeper FRI/SAT/SUN 7:30am3:30pm. Beautiful at the Old Mill: Now place to work! Join an Hiring Line Cooks for amazing team! FT or seasonal positions. Up to $15/hour Bend Transitional Care 900 NE 27th Street DOE. Please apply in Bend, OR 97701 person or online at (541) 382-0479 www. pastini.corn/caPlease apply online at reers www.avamere.corn or in person at facility GATEHOUSE ATTENDANT — P/T mid-week swing shift position available. Must have excellent c u stomer s ervice s k ills a n d have the ability to obtain DPSST certification. Drug free and have valid ODL. Send resume to c o ntacMaintenance/ tus@brokentop.org Janitorial/ Landsca perl General Painting, Plumb-
'
I
O K KE A Y Y S OT K O A N Y E S R O A U S T P H Y D A O K G O E T E A
ClassifiedSectionfor C Class / $15/hr. B Requires a CIS or MIS degree and 1 year selectionandconvenience Class / $18-$19.50/hr. G experience or a minimum of 3 years' experi- everyitemis just aphone A Class. ence working in technical support. Must have Qualifications: 2 yrs. L call away. strong knowledge of computer hardware, softor 50,000 miles verifi- A ware, terminology and iSeries. R e quires able experience drivThe ClassifiedSectionis strong analytical and problem solving skills, S ing a box truck. Satexcellent verbal and written communication easy touse.Everyitem isfactory background S skills, ability to work in a fast paced environis categorized andevery check. Negative drug ment with multiple priorities and excellent cartegoryisindexedonthe test. Ability to lift 50 customer service skills. section'sfrontpage. pounds, walk for exD t ended periods o f Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Whether you are l o oki n g f o r t ime, and must b e E customer service, with over 450 stores and able t o dr i v e a a home orneedaservice, 7,000 employees in the western United States. N manual/stick-shift. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, your future isinthepagesof APPLY TODAY! Once retirement and cash bonus. Please go to The BulletinClassified. you have completed Y w ww.lesschwab.corn to apply.No phone calls the questionnaire, we please. will contact you to set up an interview. gearing general Oregonsince igra Les Schwab is proud to be an B/C Job Code: 2245. equal opportunity employer. A Class Code: 0915. 476 www.tsjobs.net/duckEmployment delivery Opportunities *Duck Delivery P r oduce is an equal op* Housekeeping portunity employer.
II Please submit a completed application . I
No phone calls please.
Employment Opportunities
Yourfutureisjust apage Duck Delivery Proaway.Whetheryou'relooking duce has immediate
'
.
476
c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller Ci! bendbulletin.corn No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drug screen required.
General
has o penings l i sted b e low. G o to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCO is an AA/EO employer. Community Learning Program Manager, Redmond Campus Responsible for researching and developing a profitable component of the Continuing Education department by providing training and enr ichment c lasses. $ 3 7,813-$45,015 f o r 10-month contract. Closes July 22.
Support Specialist Instructional Dean's Office Serve as support for Instructional Dean(s) and Instructional Administration. Prepare, monitor and track org budgets, grants and funding sources. Prepare and distribute meeting agendas and documents. $2,740-$3,261/mo. Closes July 19. Part Time Latino College Prep Program Coordinator Serve as primary coordinator for students preparing for post-secondary education. Establish goals and objectives of the program. $19.32 - $23.00/hr. 30hr/wk. 11months per year. Extended to open until filled. Part-Time Instructor Positions NEW - College Level Writing, Developmental Writing, Veterinary Librarian, Geology and Chemistry Looking for talented individuals to t each part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
G4 SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 573
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
634
Business Opportunities Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
880
745
870
Homes for Sale
Boats & Accessories
880
Moto r homes
Motorhomes
WARNING The Bulletin Onlya fevr left! NOTICE recommends that you Two 8 Three Bdrms All real estate adveri nvestigate ever y with Washer/Dryer tised here in is subNow Hiring! and Patio or Deck. phase of investment $40,945 - $58,623 ject to the Federal Full-Time ance opportunities, espe(One Bdrms also avail.) Full-Benefits F air Housing A c t , Part-Time Registered c ially t h ose f r o m Mountain GlenApts Prof-Mgmt, which makes it illegal Nurses/Licensed Renegade V i l lagio out-of-state or offered 541.363.93f 3 Regular, Full-Time to advertise any prefareighttt her thee 2 3'10" S R 2 3 0 0, Practical Nurses 775 25QRS 2015, loaded by a person doing Professionally erence, limitation or Custom '95, own with pride, DAY, EVE or NOC shift Class B+, 2900 miles. business out of a lomanaged by Manufactured/ discrimination based always compliments, Moto rhome avail. 4 days on/2 off This position is located Mercedes V-6 Turbo cal motel or hotel. In- Norris & Stevens, Inc. in Chiloquin. on race, color, reliMobile Homes no salt, head never Avamere Health SerWill haul small SUV D iesel, 18 + M P G . vestment o ff e rings ion, sex, handicap, 648 used, due for 5 year or toys, and pull a vices value's your $40,000 under MSRP must be r egistered amilial status or naList Your Home cooling m ai n t ., quality nursing skills 8 For more information trailerl Powered by at $ 92,900. B end. Houses for with the Oregon Decontact: tional origin, or inten- JandMHomes.corn $9500 firm. Extras. 8.3 Cummins with 6 passion for geriatric 541-961-1508, partment of Finance. Rent General The Klamath Tribes tion to make any such We Have Buyers W eekend only . rehab! speed Allison auto 541-639-8442. We suggest you conPO Box436 preferences, l i mita541-678-3249 Get Top Dollar trans, 2nd owner. sult your attorney or PUBLISHER' S Chilorfuin, OR97624 tions or discrimination. Financing Available. Very nice! $53,000. call CON S UMER NOTICE We will not knowingly Need to get an 541-548-5511 541-350-4077 ds published in the HOTLINE, jobs@klamathtribes.corn All real estate adver- accept any advertisad in ASAP? "Boats" classification 1-503-378-4320, 541-783-2219 x 113 850 tising in this newspa- ing for real estate include: Speed, fish8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. You can place it per is subject to the which is in violation of Snowmobiles ing, drift, canoe, online at: Looking for your next DID YOU KNOW 144 F air H o using A c t this law. All persons house and sail boats. which makes it illegal hereby informed employee? www.bendbulletin.corn For all other types of million U.S. A d ults to a d vertise "any are Join the Avamere that all dwellings adPlace a Bulletin help watercraft, please go read a N e wspaper Team! Competitive preference, limitation vertised are available wanted ad today and print copy each week? or to Class 875. 541-385-5809 pay & benefits! disc r imination on an equal opportureach over 60,000 541-385-5809 Discover the Power of based on race, color, nity basis. The Bullereaders each week. PRINT N e wspaper religion, sex, handi- tin Classified Bend Transitional Care Monaco 38PDQ Your classified ad Advertising in Alaska, cap, familial status, 900 NE 27th Street 4-place enclosed Inter- Serrih Central Ore nn since 1903 Dl lomat 2005 will also appear on Idaho, Montana, Or- marital status or naBend, OR 97701 748 state snowmobile trailer Four slides, ben dbulletin.corn egon and Washing- tional origin, or an in- Northeast Bend Homes w/ RockyMountain pkg, Bayliner 185 2006 (541) 382-0479 loaded, 17,100 which currently t on with j us t o n e tention to make any open bow. 2nd owner Meet singles right now! Please apply online at $7500. 541-379-3530 receives over 1.5 miles, original — low engine hrs. No paid operators, p hone call. For a such www.avamere.corn or pre f erence, W OW!! 4 b d r m 2 . 5 million page views owner, 860 FREE adv e rtising limitation or discrimi- b ath, 1683 sq . f t . , — fuel injected V6 just real people like in person at facility every month at just serviced you. Browse greetnetwork brochure call nation." Familial sta- $259900 Princ. Bro- Motorcycles & Accessones — Radio 8 Tower. no extra cost. Ready to go! 916-288-6011 or tus includes children ker, John L. S cott, Great family boat ings, exchange mesBulletin Classifieds sages and connect email Priced to sell. $82,500. under the age of 18 54 I -389-3354 or Harley Davidson 2002 Get Results! cecelia@cnpa.corn live. Try it free. Call S oftail, l i k e ne w . $11,590. 541-480-8154 living with parents or 480-3393 Call 385-5809 now: 8 77-955-5505. (PNDC) 541-548-0345. 4,436 miles, $10,500. legal cus t odians, or place The Bulletin (PNDC) 541-318-8797 pregnant women, and TELEFUNDRAISING your ad on-line at Creek Company To Subscribe call people securing cusben dbulletin.corn ODC1220 2 man intody of children under 541-385-5800 or go to Tele-funding for flatable pontoon boat, KmRnlh 18. This newspaper www.bendbulletin.corn s eldom used, w a s •Meals On Wheels will not knowingly ac$ 2000, selling f o r cept any advertising 750 ÃIMX(81 $1000 firm. Seniors, students for real estate which is Redmond Homes 541-981-0230 and all others wel® ISK5iisM in violation of the law. Harley Road K i ng Call 54 I -385-5809 come. No exp. O ur r e aders a r e Classic 2003, 100th NEW Creek Company to r o m ot e o u r service necessary, will hereby informed that EAGLE CREST. Anniversary Edition, ODC1624 3 man intrain. all dwellings adverGated. 3 bdrms.,2.5 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 flatable pontoon boat. tised in this newspaPART TIME baths, 1850 sq. ft., Bruce 541-647-7078 N ever used, w a s Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Mon-Thur. per are available on Great Room, den/of$ 3000, selling f o r • Roommate Wanted Honda 50 CRF, rode an equal opportunity firm. NOTICE: Oregon state 4:30- 8:30 p.m. fice, gas fireplace, very l i t tle, $650. $2000 To complain of air, 2-car garage, 541-981-0230 528 $9.50/hour. law requires anyone Room for rent in house basis. 541-389-2593 or d iscrimination ca l l mountain view. who con t racts for Loans & Mortgages in Eagle Crest, Red- HUD t o l l-free at 541-815-1384 875 $365 000 construction work to Call 541-382-8672 mond. Elderly lady 1-800-877-0246. The Possible owner carry Watercraft Honda Magna 750cc be licensed with the WARNING preferred. Rent: $400. toll f ree t e lephone with large down. Serving Central motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 Construction ContracThe Bulletin recomCall 541-280-0892. number for the hearpossible lease/opOregon Since miles, $3250. ds published in eWa tors Board (CCB). An mends you use cauing i m p aired is tion. 541-280-4599, 541-548-3379 tercraft" include: Kay active license 2003 tion when you pro1-800-927-9275. aks, rafts and motor means the contractor Residental/ caution when purvide personal • W a n t To Rent Ized personal is bonded 8 insured. Commercial chasing products or f information to compaJust too many Looking for yournext watercrafts. Fo Verify the contractor's services from out of I nies offering loans or Looking to rent cottage emp/oyee? "boats" please se COB l i cense a t collectibles? credit, especially Maintenance f the area. Sending or d etached l i ving Place a Bulletin help lass 870. www.hirealicensedc ash, checks, o r those asking for ad• Sprinkler Repair area. Very good refwanted ad today and contractor.corn 41-385-5809 / credit i n formation vance loan fees or Sell them in Non-smokreach over 60,000 or call 503-378-4621. • Summer Clean • may be subjected to companies from out of erences. Moto Guzzi B r eva ing single woman, no The Bulletin Classifieds readers each week. The Bulletin recom- up I FRAUD. state. If you have 1 100 2 0 07 , on l y pets. Can do errands Your classified ad mends checking with • Fuels Reduction/ For more informa- I concerns or ques11,600 miles. $5,950. the CCB prior to con- Brush Mowing elderly, or l ight will also appear on tion about an adver- • tions, we suggest you for 541-385-5809 206-679-4745 880 tracting with anyone. •Weekly Mowing work. R o bin, bendbulletin.corn f tiser, you may call consult your attorney yard 208-380-1949 Motorhomes Some other t rades & Edging which currently rethe Oregon State or call CONSUMER 658 also req u ire addi- •Bark, Rock, Etc. ceives over f Attorney General's HOTLINE, tional licenses and Houses for Rent 1.5 million page Office C o n sumer t 1-877-877-9392. certi fications. views every month Redmond Landeea in Protection hotline at I • R ooms for Rent ~ at no extra cost. BANK TURNED YOU •Landscape i 1-877-877-9392. Have an item to Bulletin Classifieds DOWN? Private party Awbrey Butte beautiful C ountry living - N E Construction Yamaha TW200 Results! sell quick? gThe Bulletin g will loan on real es- furnished house, two Redmond. Neat and CallGet385-5809 eWater Feature or Two Twin stock with tate equity. Credit, no rooms avail. WiFi. clean 2 bed, 2 bath If it's under Installation/Maint. 2008 Beaver C ontfatty tires problem, good equity Cell ¹ 408-694-7045 manuf. home. Car- place your ad on-line •Pavers Look at: at 2007 with 1155 miles, essa 40' four slide '500you can place it in is all you need. Call port. Storage building. •Renovations diesel pusher. 2007 with 1069 miles. Bendhomes.corn bendbulletin.corn Oregon Land MortNo pets, no smoking. 632 The Bulletin •Irrigation InstallaLoaded, great condi$3400 Each for Complete Listings of gage 541-388-4200. Taking applications. Apt JMultiplex General $650/mo. + security tion. Warranty. Piction 541-588-0068 cell, Classifieds for: Area Real Estate for Sale 756 541-549-4834 hm tures/info at •Synthetic Turf deposit. 541-419-1917 Get your CHECK YOUR AD Jeffer son County Homes www.fourstarbend.corn '10 -3 lines, 7 days Truck Driver 870 541-647-1236 Senior Discounts business FedEx Ground '16 - 3 lines, 14 days FSBO Boats & Accessories Bonded 8 Insured Bane 5@R %w Line Haul Driver Turn Key Ready 541-815-4458 (Private Party ads only) Requirements: Cur- e ROW I N G Extremely Motivated 12' Valco alum. on LCB¹8759 Re ©nlls 3 bdrm, 2 bath 1400 r ent Class A C D L trailer 9.9 J ohnson Handyman sq. ft. $195K. Not with one year expe0/B, plus amenities, NOTICE: Oregon Landon the first day it runs with an ad in Firm 541-279-8783 exc. shape. $1250. scape Contractors Law rience; medical card, to make sure it is corThe Bulletin's 541-549-8126 (ORS 671) requires all doubles experience rect. nSpellchecke and 763 I DO THAT! ALLEGRO 27' 2002 businesses that ad"Call A Service preferred. Must pass human errors do ocRecreational Homes 58k mi., 1 slide, vacavertise t o p e r form drug t est, b a c kcur. If this happens to Professional" tion use only, MichLandscape Construc744 & Property ground check, and your ad, please conDirectory elin all weather tires tion which includes: tact us ASAP so that have clean driving Open Houses l anting, deck s , w/5000 mi., no acciCabin in the woods on corrections and any record. Night run, LOCAL MONEY:Webuy en ces, arbors, dents, non-smokers, trout stream, private, adjustments can be full time and p art secured trust deeds & water-features, and ine n g ine 17' Alumaweld Stryker Workhorse off the grid, 80 mi. made to your ad. Open12-3 t ime. Please c o nstallation, repair of irnote, some hard money 261-A, Allison Trans., ttandymas/Remodeling from Bend. 638 ac. Sport, 1998, 50 HP 541-365-5809 2427 NM/High tact Per r y at rigation systems to be loans. Call Pat Kelley The Bulletin Classified $849K. Fo r d r o ne M erc., 4 stro k e , backup camera, new Residential/Commercial Lakes Lp. 541-420-9863. 541-382-3099 ext.13. l icensed w it h th e video li n k , cal l top/side curtains, ex- refrig. unit, h eated NorthWest Crossing Small Jobsto Landscape Contrac54'I -480-72'I 5. Green Building cellent condition, used mirrors, exc. cond., Ettrire RoomRemodels tors Board. This 4-digit Accounting Features very little. Fish finder well cared for. SacriGarage orgtt st/sat/en number is to be in764 never been i n s a lt fice! $32,000. obo! Home lmsPectiott RePairs Shelley Griffin, cluded in all adverBroker Farms & Ranches water, custom paint. 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. Quality, Honest Work tisements which indi541 -280-3804 Must sell! $11,595 cate the business has Dennis 541-31 7.9788 Theoarneroroup.corn 5 peaceful acres in OBO. 541-389-0049 a bond, insurance and ccstrtSis738ondedrrnstsretl Bend. Lovely 3 bdrm, 18' Bayliner 175 Capri, workers compensa2.5 bath single story tion for their employlike new, 135hp I/O, home. Large shop ees. For your protecFind It in low time, Bimini top, with loft, 24x36 horse call 503-378-5909 We are currently accepting applications many extras, KaraThe Bulletin Classifieds! tion barn, 24x36 equip. or use our website: Allegro 32' 2007, like for the following positions: van trailer with swing 544 -385-5809 Open12-3 bldg. 2 loafing sheds. neck, current registra- new, only 12,600 miles. www.lcb.state. or.us to Irrigated 8 divided 945 SM/Vantage Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 check license status tions. $8000. Financial Reporting and Accounting Professional Point M/ay pastures. Garden & transmission, dual ex- LandscapingNard Care before contracting with 541-350-2336 Townhome haust. Loaded! Auto-levthe business. Persons greenhouse. Gated Performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliaOverlooks entry. $619,000. eling system, 5kw gen, doing lan d scape Old Mill District, 61667 Somerset Dr. power mirrors w/defrost, maintenance do not tions, consolidation journal entries, intercompany eliminations and finan2 slide-outs with awr equire an LC B l i cial statement consolidation and distribution. Will assist in the specificaRiver By appt. nings, rear c a mera, Zooe4 Qua/reI 541-389-3769, or cense. tion, design, implementation and training for new ERP and CPM solution. RobDavis, Broker trailer hitch, driver door 541-213-8179. Requirements include BS in Accounting (MBA/CPA preferred), 7-10 54f -280-9589 lttrvir gppd /gct, rrteoarnereroup.corn w/power window, cruise, Painting/Wall Covering years' related experience, prior experience as Congnos/Hyperion/Host 771 Full Service exhaust brake, central 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, Analytics/Other CPM solutions administrator, prior experience with ERP Landscape great shape, call for vac, satellite sys. Reimplementations and proficiency with Excel. Lots info. $68500. In Bend duced price: $64,950. Management 503-781-8812 661-644-0384. Senior Accountant North'/esf B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , Fire Protection Crossing Performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliaGarage Sales one slide, low mile- and Fuels Reduction Lots Available eTall Grass tions, journal entries and post-close account analyses and reports. Will age, very clean, lots Near Discovery Park Garage Sales Call for Information •Low Limbs European participate in and support other team members during the design and of storage, $28,500. •Brush and Debris implementation of new ERP and CPM solution. Requirements include 541-639-9411 Herc ourts Professional Garage Sales BS in Accounting (MBA/CPA preferred), 5-7 years' related experience, The Garner Group your home with proficiency with Excel and prior experience with large-scale ERP 19' Pioneer ski boat, I ON'IRIIS7iH NI Protect Painter 541 383-4360 Find them defensible space systems or implementations is preferred. 1983, vm tandem Theeamereroup.corn in Repaint trailer, V8. Fun & Coronado 27' motorLandscape Staff Accountant fast! $5350 obo. home 1992, e x c. The Bulletin Specialist! 541-815-0936. Maintenance cond. interior, minor Classifieds Full or Partial Service Performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliaOregon License decal cracking exte•Mowing eEdging tions, journal entries and account analyses and reports. Will participate ¹186147 LLC rior. Strong running FUN & FISH! 773 541-385-5809 • Pruning eWeeding in and support other team members during the design and implementagasoline en g ine. Acreages Sprinkler Adjustments 541-815-2888 tion of new ERP and CPM solution. Requirements include BS in Just had t une-up. Accounting, 3-5 years' related experience, proficiency with Excel, and ~ ~ ~ af 35,000 miles. Call 10 PRINEVILLE Acres Prior experience with large-scale ERP systems or implementations is 5 41-815-3827 f o r Fertilizer included with IIII I 4 f 5 RMV = $15,700 monthly program preferred. m ore details a n d $6,700 FIRM pictures $8,995. 805-286-1383 Clean-Ups Accounfant (entry) 2006 Smokercraft Its not to late to have a Sunchaser 820 BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Beautiful Landscape Open House This position involves general ledger accounting, fixed assets, payroll, • Interior and Exterior model pontoon boat, Search the area's most internal audit and financial reporting and analysis. Will contribute to the 7/11 8 7/12, 12-3 PM, 75HP Mercury and • Family-Owned Weed Free Bark $359,900. comprehensive listing of overall success of new ERP solution. Recent Accounting Business electric trolling mo• Residential R & Flower Beds Admin/Finance graduates or candidates with a few years' experience are Price Reduction! 62972 classified advertising... tor, full canvas and Commercial Mimosa Dr. 97701 real estate to automotive, encouraged to apply. Requirements include BS in Accounting, 0-2 years' many extras. Lawn Restoration Windermere C.O. merchandise to sporting • 40 years experience related experience and proficiency with Excel. Stored inside Fleetwood D i scovery Bulletin Classifieds • Senior Discounts 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Open House Sun. 10-2 goods. $f 9,900 Experienced appear every day in the 541-350-5425 • 5.year Warranties 18964 Choctaw, options - 3 slide outs, Commercial print or on line. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over Bend 97702 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, & Residential ttisitabout our 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. Call 541-385-5809 Chris Sperry, Broker 20' Seaswirl cuddy V6 etc., 34,000 miles. Free Estimates Pleasego to www.lesschwab.corn to apply.No phone calls please. SUMMBR SPECf/tL! www.bendbulletin.corn f uel i njected. I o w Wintered in h e ated Senior Cascade Sotheby's Discounts International Realty hours, exc. c o nd., shop. $78,995 obo. Call 541 420 7846 541-390-1 466 Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. The Bulletin 541 -550-4922 541-447-8664 CCB¹204918 Serrrng Central Oregon «nca tele $8750. 541-389-7270 Nursing
Wildlife Biologist
The Bulletin
. 0 0
•
•
r.=.-"-,.—..a I
f / f
The Bulletin
f f
I
pod
II tlggge
Q IZEZH
MARTIN JAMES
Same DayResponse
I
I I
I I
I
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym,
Recently finished Pahlisch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances and all the Directions North on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes is right on Sierra OR north on /ah known for, Now selling Pom Empire,le/I on Sierra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for SlgtK more information, Homes from the
)
i
hot tub, sports center & 61056 Manhae Loop, Bend 2 miles of walking trails. Directions:East on Reed /ifarket Tour a variety of single Rdn first exff al roundabou/ onto level and 2 story plans. /a h , at Road Detour Sign turn left on Ferguson. Right at SageCreek Drive, lefttrt /Ifanhae Lane, right a/ 'i" ~i GoMeGat
TE~
D E~ Y
Principal Broker
Home8 @tat ttttg
Mid-II200s
Q
Hosted 6 Listed byi
RHIANNA KUNKLER ABR, SRS
541-420-2$50 llllscllHQIIles e e n t. e oR e
541-506-0959
pgv
$220,000s
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 12 2015 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
881
908
932
933
935
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Aircraft, Parts 8 Service
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
935
935
975
Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
Auto m obiles
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
hns RVision
C r ossover
2013, 19ft, exc. Well
equipped, $ 1 1,500. 541-604-5387
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Monaco Monarch 31 ' 2006, F ord V 10 , 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides,
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 503-760-4487
queen bed & Looking for your hide-a-bed sofa, 4k next employee? gen, convection mi- Place a Bulletin help crowave, 2 TVs, tow wanted ad today and package. reach over 60,000 PRICE REDUCTION! $59,000. 541-815-6319
Safari 1998 motorhome 30', low mileage, 300 HP Magnum Cat motor with turbo, always inside, white leather interior, like new, has m any extr a s . $50,000. S e rious callers only. 541-548-8415
readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.corn which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at ben dbulletin.corn
$40,000.
In Madras,
call 541-475-6302
S outhwind F o r d Fleetwood motorhome, 19 94, 32', gasoline, 82K miles, Good con d ition, $8,500 obo. 503-807-5490
Winnebago Journey
R
541-312-8402
Winnebago Outlook 2007 Class "C"31', clean, non- smoking exc. cond. Must See! Lots of extra's, a very good buy.$47,900 For more info call 541-447-9266
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel 2004, Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Exc. cond. Tow vehicle also avail.$1 7,900 obo. Morepics. 541-923-6408 Laredo 31'2008, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call 541-410-5649
RV CONSIGNMENTS C hevy, runs v e r y WANTED ood. g oo d t i r es, We Do the Work, 8500. 541-279-9458. You Keep the Cash! On-site credit 881 approval team, Travel Trailers web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
1990 27' clean, 454
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Redmond:
541-548-5254
26 4 B H
2011. like new, sleeps 9, self contained, 1/2 ton towable $13,900 OBO (541) 410-9017
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
541-548-5254
VW SunBug 1 974 smolichmotors.corn exc. cond. Total inte- Just bought a new boat? rior refurbish, engine Sell your old one in the OH, new floor pan, classifieds! Ask about our plus lots more! SunSuper Seller rates! r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. 541-385-5809 $9500. 541-504-5224 BMIIY X3 Sl 2007,
Ch e yenne
1996, 2 5 0 0
extended cab, 4WD, ps, pb, a/c, cruise,
recent u p grades.
E xcellent tru c k , $4850 OBO - Cash! 541-676-5570
CA L L @@
TODAY%
Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $1 2,000 OBO. 541-536-3689 or 541-420-6215.
Ford F350 2004, 4 dr crew cab, dually, only 62,300 miles, diesel, V6 6.0, carfax available, great condition inside and out, stainless steel tool box, o riginal owne r s , $17,900 obo. 714-606-2391 local.
Low Miles - 68,500 mi., AWD, leather Interior, sun r oof, b luetooth, voi c e command system, and too much more to list here. $15,900. Please call Dan at 541-815-6611
Nissan Rogue 2008, 2.5L 1-4 cyl VIN ¹135593.$1 2,888.
(exp.7/15/15) DLR ¹366
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.corn What are you looking for? Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, You' ll find it in 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards front The Bulletin Classifieds guard, nav., air and heated leather, cus541-385-5809 tom wheels and new tires only 41K miles $31,995 541-408-7908
Jeep Willys, '46, metal top, big tires, ps, new paint, tow bar, new auges, etcH. reduced 4,000. 541-233-7272
Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at 541-729-4552 975
Automobiles
ChevyTracker 2003, 2.5L V-6 cyl VIN ¹914067. $7,998. (exp.7/1 5/1 5) DLR¹366
Ford F-350 XLT 2006, Crewcab, 150K mi.,
bed liner, good tires, exc. shape. $16,500. Please call, 541-350-8856 541-410-3292
541-548-1448
or
smolichmotors.corn
Jeep Wrangler Rubicon 2 004, $18,500 Mileage: 065 , 1 54 Automatic, Cr u i se Control, Tow Bar, Air Conditioning, Power Door Locks, Alarm and much more. Call Gary: 541-280-0558.
'4l
Cadillac CTS 2010, V 6 I n j ection, 6 Speed A utomatic. Luxury series. Exterior Black Raven, Interior: Light Titanium/ E b o ny 2 2,555 m i les. 4 door. Excellent condition al l a r ound. Has Arizona plates. This is car is a great mix of luxury, comfort, s t y le , an d workmanship. $24,000.00 Call 541-408-3051
CHECKYOUR AD on the first day of publication. If a n e r ror may occur in your ad, p lease contact u s and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, S at. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Need to get an ad in ASAP?
Acura TL 06, 3.2L V6, auto, F WD , b l a ck color, A/C, 1 15,971 Fax it te 541-322-7253
miles, clean title and carfax. Call or t e xt The Bulletin Classifieds 541-834-8469
Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/1 80 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. Oneshare available,$1 0,000 Call 541-815-2144 916
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
GMC Truck, 1991, 90,000 miles, 3116 C at Eng., 10 s p . Fuller Eaton transm ission, 20' b e d , new deck, new rear radials, hd hoist & frame, AC, radio/cassette, a real nice truck. $12,500 Call 541-480-4375
O
OS
an ee cur e u ae . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds.
A dd c o l o r p h o t o s f o r p e t s , r eal e s t a t e , a u t o & m o re !
GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,we QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillneed. Roomtogrowinyour a tough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.
925
Utility Trailers
885
Canopies & Campers
00
932
Antique & Classic Autos 908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
541-915-9170
541-395-5809
Low miles,105K, Eddie Bauer Ed, Immaculate Condition, needs nothing. $10,999.00. Call Ray O 541 408 2331
541-447-5184.
Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 sets of straps, exc. c ond., capable of walk around queen p ulling a f u l l s i z e size bed, a/c, mi- Lance Squire 4 0 00, pickup truck. If intercrowave, fr i dge/ 1996, 9' 6" extended ested we will send cab, bathroom w/ toi- pictures. $1000 obo. freezer, awning and let, queen bed, out- 951-961-4590 much more! Has side shower. $5,700. been garaged. must Call 541-382-4572 929 see to appreciate. Please call, Automotive Wanted 541-312-6367 DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day ! II' V acation, Tax D e Northlander 1993 ductible, Free Towing, 17' camper, Polar I All Paperwork Taken 990, good shape, Care O f. CALL Fun Finder 2008 21' new fridge, A/C, 1-800-40'I -4106 sleeps 6, walk- around queen bed, bath(PNDC) queen, extras, must room, indoor/outs ee. $ 9,500 o b o . door shower, lots of Advertise your car! 541-233-9424 storage, customAdd A Prcfure! ized to fit newer Reach thousands of readers! Check out the pickups,$4500 obo. Call 541-385-5809 classifieds online 541-419-9859. The Bulletin Classifieds www.bendbtdletin.corn Got an older car, boat Updated daily or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Soci0 0 ety. Call 1800-205-0599 (PNDC) Ja Fli ht
(exp. 7/1 5/1 5) DLR ¹366
tion 2005
C O O I'
Winnebago Superchief
Forest River Wildwood 28ft. 2 0 02, $10,590. 2 S l ides,
long bed, VIN ¹A45362. $5,888.
The Bulletin Class!Beds!
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at
a ,•
Winnebago Minnie 2005 26' Class C, 29k miles, queen bed, slide dinette, A/C, generator, awning, Class 5 hitch, new Michelins, exc. shape. Stored indoors, no smoke. $39,000.
ranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg 8 technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500.
Ford F-250 1 990, Extended cab,
541-548-1448
Chevy
541-550-7382 on the first day it runs arcarroll9©gmail.corn to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and HANGAR FOR SALE. human errors do oc30x40 end unit T cur. If this happens to hanger in Prineville. your ad, please conDry walled, insulated, tact us ASAP so that and painted. $23,500. corrections and any Tom, 541.768.5546 adjustments can be made to your ad.
2001 36' 2nd owner, 300 Cummins Turbo diesel, Allison 5 spd, 80k miles. D r iver 541-385-5809 s ide s l ide, g a s stove, oven, 2 flat The BulletinClassified screen TVs, refer, Curt fifth wheel hitch, generator, inverter, Q 24, bought n e w King Dome, tow bar. September/14 w/ Non-smoker, no brackets & hardware, pets, no c hildren. C lean, an d w e l l $450. 520-331-9747 maintained, $47,500 Husky 16K EZ Roller 541-390-1472. 5th wheel hitch; and 5th wheel tailgate fits '03 dodge or newer, $450 for both. 541-923-2595
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable war-
933
F35 Bonanza. Aircraft is in exc. cond., w/ good paint & newer interior. Full IFR. Auto pilot, yaw d amper, engine monitor. 6465TT, 1815SMOH, 692STOH. Hangered in Bend. $29,500 or $13,000 for ~/~ share. Call Bob Carroll
Find It in
Ford Expedi-
Pickups
Fifth Wheels
CHECK YOUR AD
29,000 miles, warranty good thru Dec. 2015. Equip. group 501A, ruby red metallic, A/T , L a riat Chrome Package, running boards, step down tailgate, etc. $32,000 cash only. Call 541-480-4375
1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph •Excellent condition
•Always hangared •One owner for 35 years.
Lexus RX 330 2006, Buick LeSabre 2005 3.3L V-6 cyl. Custom. Very clean, inside & out, only has VIN ¹15214A (exp. 7/15/15) DLR ¹366 96k miles. If you drive $1 4,997 (exp.7/15/15) DLR ¹366 it, you' ll fall in love!! ~OMO» 32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in SMOLICH town. $ 4250 o bo V OL V O Trade c o n sidered. e 541-749-2156 Cash/credit/debit smolichvolvo.corn card. Call or Text Ron 541-548-1448 @I 541-419-5060 smolichmotors.corn
Ford Escape 201 4, 2.0L 1-4 cyl VIN ¹A46674.$23,888.
1977
FJ40 Toyota Lan dcruiser with winch, $21,000. 541-389-7113, Michelle
1974 Bellanca
882
5th wheel hitch durable B & W Companion made in the USA $450 541-279-9013
Ford F150 Lariat, 2013, 4x4, Ext. Cab,
1/5 share in v ery CORVETTE 1979, nice 150 HP Cessna glass top, 31k miles, 150; 1973 C e s sna all original, silver & 150 with Lyco ming maroon. $12,500. 0-320 150 hp engine 541-388-9802 c onversion, 400 0 hours. TT a irframe. Approx. 400 hours on 0-timed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend Airport. One of very few Mustang C-150's t ha t ha s never been a trainer. Hard top 1985, $4500 wi ll consider 6-cylinder, auto trans, trades for whatever. power brakes, power Call J i m Fr a zee, steering, garaged, well maintained, 541-410-6007 engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $1 2,500. Must see! 541 -598-7940
$125,000
541-288-3333
541-279-1072
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
(located @ Bend)
• I I
I
I I
I
I
r
*Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories.
The Bulletin To placeyour photo ad,visit us online at
www . b e n cibulletin.corn or call with questions,
CHEVELLE MALIBLI 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000
1/3 interestin
I
5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 HOU RS : MOnday-Friday 7:30 am to 5:00 Pm
TELEPHONE H O U RS: Monday-Friday 7:30 am-5 pm. Saturday 10 am-1 2:30 pm 24 HOUR M E S S AG E L I NE: 541-383-2371 place, cancel or extend an ad after hours
G6 SUNDAY, JULY 12, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
975
975
975
975
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Chevy Malibu2012,
MercedesBenz CL 2001,
Scion TCcoupe 2007,
ToyotaCorolla 2013, (exp. 7/1 5/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072
(exp. 7/1 5/1 5)
(exp. 7/1 5/1 5) Vin ¹198120 Stock ¹44193B
(exp. 7/1 515)
Vin ¹299392 Stock ¹44256A
Vin ¹016584 Stock ¹83285
$15,979 or $189/mo.,
$2500 down, 84 mo., $8,979 or $169/mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - $1800 down, 48 mo., proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p and title i ncluded in proved credit. License payment, plus dealer in- and title i ncluded in stalled options. payment, plus dealer installed options.
$10,379 or $149/mo., $15,979 or $1 99 mo.,
1000
Legal Notices $2800 down, 60 mc., $2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License LEGAL NOTICE proved credit. License and title included in and title included in NOTICE OF PUBLIC payment, plus dealer in- payment, plus dealer inHEARING stalled options. stalled options.
1000
1000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
be downloaded business enterprises and suppliers that bid for the construction of can a fee of $20.00. will be afforded full or quote for w ork "Airport I m prove- for Please contact and fair opportunity to under this contract. ments" to include the QuestCDN bi d s in Failure to provide this at submit as The Desc h utes following: 952-233-1632 or r esponse t o thi s information, S UBA R U © s u a a au S UBA R l l TAXIWAY in the SUBARUO1BRtlD.OOM C ounty B oard o f eusaauovrmm coM email invitation and will not outlined ® s u l u REHABILITATION "info©questcdn.corn" be 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Commissioners w i ll disc r iminated Proposal section, will PROJECT bi d d er hold a public hearing 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 for assistance in the against on the make t h e • Construction to 877-266-3821 on Wednesday, AuDlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 free membership reg- grounds of race, color, non-responsive and start spring of 2016 not eligible for award Dlr ¹0354 g ust 12 , 2 0 15, a t istration, downloading, or national origin in Squ a r e and working with this consideration for an of the contract. 10:00 a.m. in the De- • 16,000 Want to impress the Yards Asphalt MillFunding and Award. schutes County Board digital project infor- award. relatives? Remodel of Co m missioners ing/Removal mation. Wage R ates. The This contract will be your home with the H earing Room a t %,600 Cubic Yards No Bid for this con- C ontractor wil l b e funded in part by a help of a professional 1300 NW Wall Street, of Earthwork struction contract shall required to c omply grant from the Federal <,100 Cubic Yard from The Bulletin's Bend, to take testibe received or con- with the wage and Aviation Toyota MR2 S pyder Subaru GT Legacy Bas e sidered by the City of labor r e q uirements Administration. "Call A Service on the following A ggregate MercedesBenz E 2 001 5 spd , ex c . mony 2006, Course item: Proposed "East Burns unless: and to pay minimum Therefore, award of Professional" Directory Class 2005, cond., pre-sale in- Redmond F irearms • 13,600 (exp. 7/15/15) Squ a r e A. The Bidder is on wages in accordance the Contract by the (exp. 7/1 5/1 5) spection by Napa me- Discharge Restricted Yards of P ortland t he o ff i cia l Pla n with the schedule of Sponsor will be made Vin ¹212960 Vin ¹688743 chanic with r eport. Area." A public hear- Cement C o ncrete Holder's list by down- Davis-Bacon w a ge subject Stock ¹83174 to Stock ¹82316 T rue s p orts c a r ! ing regarding proPavement $14,972 or $179/mo., loading the p roject rates established by concurrence of FAA. $7900. 541-728-0445 $11,979 or $155/mo., $2500 down, 84 mo., not posed designation of «250 Tons Asphalt documents from the the U nited S t ates Bidders m a y $2500 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p a t erritory a s r e - Pavement website. Department of Labor withdraw Proposals 4 .49% APR o n a p - proved credit. License Toyota Prius2009 ~Taxiway Striping, loaded, excellent con- stricted area pursuant B. The Bidder is reg- and Oregon Prevailing for a period of ninety proved credit. License and title included in to Deschutes County Electrical, and Storm istered with the Con- Wage R a te s as (90) days after the bid and title i ncluded in PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, payment, plus dealer in- dition, 76800 mi, unDrain Improvements. date. 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, payment, plus dealer in- stalled options. der blue book $10,500 Code, Section 9.08, T his work is t o i n - struction Contractors' r eferenced i n th e opening Notice to P r oceed. referred to as "East stalled options. Board as required by Contract. 541-420-9522 new tires, $5,250. Notice to p roceed Redmond Firearms clude all tools, equip- ORS 701.035 through Non-Segregated 541-433-2026 Suaaau Discharge Restricted ment, materials and 701.055. Facilities. The Bidder for construction of 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Area" will be held on labor to complete this C. The Bidder certi- is required to comply the project will be 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Wednesday, August project. fies that it will comply with the Certification i ssued spring o f 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 A limi t ed 12, 2015, a t 1 0 :00 Bids must be sealed with the provisions of of N o n-segregated2 016. Dlr ¹0354 and delivered to the notice to p roceed a.m. in the Barnes the Davis Bacon Act Facilities. City Manager's Ofmay be issued in the Room, D e s chutes (40 U.S.C. 276a) and Equal E mployment FIND IT! (Photo for illustration only) Services Center, 1300 fice at or before 2:00 Oregon Pr e v ailing Opportunity and f all o f 20 1 5 f o r BUY IT! Volvo V60 T5 NW W a l l St r eet, .m. local time on Wage Rates (ORS Affirmative Action Re- preliminary CORVETTE COUPE Platinum Wagon SELL IT! Jul 29 20 1 5, an d 279.805) Bend, Oregon. The ~ 2003 - 50til quirement. The pro- materials t e s ting, 2015.5, 2.5L 1-5 cyl The Bulletin Classifieds materials, and purpose of the pro- marked "Bid for Air- D . The Bidd e r p osed contract i s Anniversary V IN ¹222764 equipment posed designation is port Improvements provides r e sidency under subject to 41 Edition lmpreza 2013, $37,997 M ercury Sable L S Subaru provide a no dis- at the Burns Munici- information as CFR g 60-1.4 and procurement. (exp. 7/1 5/1 5) 6 spd manual transfexp.7/15/15) DLR ¹366 to 1996, $1800 OBO. charging of firearms pal A i rport". The r equired b y OR S E xecutive Orde r The pre-bid conferVin ¹027174 mission, always gaRuns, looks g reat. S M O L I C H bidder's name, a dher e b y district for the protec279C.365. 11246 of September e nce is Stock ¹83205 raged, never driven 541-550-7750 tion of inhabitants and d ress an d st a t e E. The Bidd e r 24, 1965, and to the established at 11:00 in winter, only 21k $20,358 or $249/mo., V O LV O property of the pro- Contractor's Registra- provides the Equal E m ployment a.m., July 21 th, 2015, $2600 down, 84 mo., miles, $24,000 541-749-2156 p osed area t o b e tion Number shall ap- Disclosure of F i r st Opportunity the Coun c i l 4 .49% APR o n a p (EEO) i n 541-815-0365 smolichvolvo.corn proved credit. License designated. The pear in the lower left Tier Cont r actors and Federal Labor Chambers at Burns and title i ncluded in boundary of the pro- hand corner of the within the time stated Provisions. City Hall, 242 South A DID YOU KNOW 7 IN payment, plus dealer Bu r n s, posed designation is envelope. in the bid documents, Contractor having 50 Broadway, 10 Americans or 158 installed options. specified as follows: BID BOND. All bids as is required by ORS or more employees Oregon. A tour of the million U.S. A dults must be a c compawork site at the Burns Various parcels of 279C.365. and his r ead content f r om M ini C ooper S © s u a a au land located in Sec- nied by lawful monies F. Pursuant to ORS subcontractors having Municipal Airport will n ewspaper m e d ia Convertible 2013: of the United States or t ions 03 and 10 of conducted 279C.505(2), all 50 or more employees be each week? Discover Like new convertible 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Vyy Passat 2014, Township 15 South, a Cashier's Check, a contractors and a nd who may b e following the pre-bid 877-266-3821 the Power of the Pa- w/ only 18,600 miles. 1.8L 1-4 cyl Range 13 East, of the Certified Check, Bid subcontractors awarded a conference. Dlr ¹0354 cific Northwest News- All options incl. Chili V IN ¹099227 $23,997. Willamette Meridian, Bond, Bank Money working o n Signed: pu b l ic subcontract of paper Advertising. For Red paint w/ black (exp. 7/15/15) DLR ¹366 Deschutes C o unty, Order or Bank Draft, improvement $50,000 or more will Is/Dauna Wensenk a free brochure call stripes, 17" wheels, Oregon, and being drawn and issued by contracts City Manager shall be re q u ired to SMOLICH 916-288-6011 or film protection, cusmore particularly de- a National Banking demonstrate that an maintain an email tom f ront d r iving V Q LV Q scribed as f o llows: Association located in employee drug testing a ffirmative Publish: act i o n cecelia@cnpa.corn lights, black leather 541-749-21 56 the State of Oregon, program is in place. program, 1513000000103, Burns Times Herald: the (PNDC) seats. $2 2 ,500 smolichvolvo.corn 1513000000115, or by any Banking Certificate of Bidder standards for which First Publication: 541-420-1659 or idaCorporation incorpo- Employee 1513000000123, 7/8/2015 Subaru Legacy Drug are contained in the homonteith @ aol.corn 1513030000300, rated under the Laws Testin Polic shall be specifications. To be Second Publication: LL Bean2006, Have an item to of the State of Or1513030001800, 7/1 5/2015 (exp. 7/1 5/1 5) su mitts wi t t e I e ligible fo r a w a rd sell quick? 151310A000300, egon, in an amount G. Vin ¹203053 E v i dence of e ach b idder m u st equal to not less than If it's under 151310A000400, Bend Bulletin: Stock ¹82770 Competency and comply with the affirten (10) percent of the Financial First Publication: mative action $16,977 or $199/mo., '500 you can place it in 151310A000500, total bid, payable to 151310A000600, 7/1 2/2015 Ford Focus 2008, $2600 down, 84 mo. at Responsibility as per requirements which The Bulletin 151310A000700. the order of the City of FAA General Condi- are contained in these Second Publication: 4 .49% APR o n a p 4 dr., 2.0L 1-4 cyl. proved credit. License Staff contact: Peter Burns as l iquidated tions, Section 20, or specifications. 7/1 9/2015 VIN ¹113450. $6,888. Classifieds for: Russell, P e ter. Rus- damages in the event on the forms provided The City o f B u rns (exp. 7/15/15) DLR ¹386 Mustang Conv. 2011, and title i ncluded in said successful bid6 speed auto, pony payment, plus dealer sell@deschutes.org. Daily Journal of in the proposal. does not discriminate '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Copies of the staff re- der shall fail or refuse Bidders Commerce: pkg. 1 5 , 000 mi. installed options. pr e sently o n t h e b a s i s o f to execute the conFirst Publication: $20,000. '16 - 3 lines, 14 days port, application, all debarred, suspended, handicapped status in Suaaau 541-330-2342 documents and evitract in a ccordance 7/6/2015 for t he a d mission o r (Private Party ads only) dence submitted by or with the terms of his proposed 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. debarment, declared access to, or treat- Second Publication: on behalf of the appli- bid. After a contract is ineligible, 7/1 3/2015 Where can you find a 877-266-3821 or ment, or employment WHEN YOU SEE THIS 541-548-1448 Third Publication: Dlr¹0354 cant and applicable a warded, th e s u c - voluntarily excluded in, its programs or helping hand? smolichmotors.corn criteria are available cessful bidder will be from participation in 7/20/2015 activities. From contractors to for inspection at the required to furnish a this transaction by any D BE Requirement. Per f o r- Federal department or The City of Burns has yard care, it's all here More PixatBendbjjIletij.corn Planning Division at separate LEGAL NOTICE no cost and can be mance and Payment agency a r e On a classified ad not established an overall The regular meeting in The Bulletin's B ond, each in t h e purchased fo r 25 eligible for award. DBE goal for the year. of the Board of Digo to "Call A Service c ents a page. T h e amount of one hun- The Owner reserves Under this contract, rectors of the Deswww.bendbulletin.corn staff report should be dred percent (100%) the right to reject any the Airport Authority is chutes County Rural Professional" Directory to view additional Subaru Outback XT made avail able seven of the contract. FordFusion SEL2012, photos of the item. o r all bids and t o adopting a Fire Protection Disdays prior to the date CONTRACT DOCU- waive irregularities. (exp. 7/15/15) 2006, race-neutral means of trict ¹2 will be held on (exp. 7/15/1 5) set for the hearing. MENTS. T h e Con- T he B i dder m u s t facilitating Vin ¹117015 D BE T uesday, July 1 4 , Looking for your Documents are also tract Documents con- supply Stock ¹44382A VIN ¹313068 all the participation. The 2015 at 11:30 a.m. at next employee? sisting of h alf s ize Stock ¹44631A available online at: information required bidder s h al l not the conference room $15,979 or $199/mo., Place a Bulletin help www.deschutes.org. Drawings and Project $2400 down, 84 mo., $11,999 or $149/mo., wanted ad today and by the bid documents d iscriminate on t h e in the North Fire Stabe and specifications. 4 .49% APR o n a p $2800 down, 72 mo., Deschutes C o u nty Manual m a y basis of race, color, tion, 63377 Jamison reach over 60,000 proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n ap encourages persons viewed o nl i ne a t F unding f o r Thi s national origin, or sex St., Bend, OR. Items Mustang GT 2007, and title included in proved credit. License readers each week. w ith d isabilities t o http: //www.m-m.net/pr Contract is Federally in the performance of on the agenda inYour classified ad payment, plus dealer in- 27,000 miles, dark and title included in participate in all pro- oject-bidding/. Com- Assisted. Contractors t his contract. T h e clude: t h e a n nual stalled options. grey e x t erior/light payment, plus dealer will also appear on grams and activities. plete electronic at every tier must bidder shall carry out election of board ofgrey interior, heated installed options. bendbulletin.corn This event/location is Project Plans, Project comply with all applicable ficers, the fire departS UBA R U . garage, non-smokwhich currently re"Bid to people Manual, and applicable fe d eral r equirements of 4 9 ® s u a a au ceives over 1.5 mil- accessible ment report, and a 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ing, retired, Roush with disabilities. If you Proposal Packet"are requirements CFR Part 26 in the presentation on oplowering kit, Roush 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. lion page views 877-266-3821 need a c commodaavailable at the Morrii ncluding bu t no t award and erational plan options, every month at cold air inductions, Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 tions to make partici- son-Maierle, Inc. l imited to: th e B u y administration of DOT a discussion of Capilove red side w i nno extra cost. BulleDlr ¹0354 pation poss i ble, website American Preference, assisted contracts tal Projects, and a tin Classifieds dows, after market please call the ADA "www.m-m.net ", by Foreign Trade A s required by 4 9 discussion o f the exhaust, sequential Toyota Avalon 2003, Get Results! Call Coordinator at (541) clicking on the R estriction, Da v i s C FR Part 26 , t h e 9-1-1 oper a t ing r ear l ights, d u a l 1 50K m i . , sin g le 385-5809 or place 617-4747. "Projects Bidding" link Bacon, A ff i rmative Airport Authority is agreement. The power seats. your ad on-line at owner, great cond., t hen t h e "Browse Action, Government required to create a meeting location is $19,995. bendbullefin.corn new tires and battery, LEGAL NOTICE Projects" link and se- wide Debarment and bidders list, consisting accessible to persons 541-383-5043 maintenance records, lecting this p r oject Suspension, SECTION 1.1 of information about with disabilities. A reLexus ES350 2010, leather seats, moonINVITATION TO BID from the project list. G overnment wid e all DBE and non-DBE quest for interpreter Excellent Condition The Bulletin recoml roof, full set of snow Documents can only AIRPORT Requirements for firms that bid or quote for the hearing im32,000 miles, $20,000 Need to sell a tires on rims, $7000. mends extra caution ~ IMPROVEIIIIENTS b e viewed o n t h e Drug-free Workplace, on DOT - assisted paired or for other ac214-549-3627 (in when p u r chasing ~ Vehicle? 541-548-6181 Morrison-Maierle, Inc. as contained in the TAXIWAY contracts. The commodations Bend) for Call The Bulletin f products or services REHABILITATION website, and cannot bid documents. purpose o f this person with disabilifrom out of the area. and place an ad be downloaded or PROJECT Title V l S o l icitation requirement i s to ties should be made f S ending c ash , 2016 CONSTRUCTION today! printed without purNotice. Th e City of allow us e o f the at least 48 hrs. before checks, or credit in- q BURNS MUNICIPAL Ask about our c hasing. T o p u r - Burns, in accordance bidders list approach the meeting to: Tom "Wheel Deal"! formation may be I AIRPORT chase and download with the provisions of to calculating future Fay 5 4 1 -318-0459. for private party J subject to FRAUD. the p roject d o cu- Title Vl of th e Civil BURNS, OREGON overall DBE goals. As TTY 800-735-2900. S For more informaadvertisers ments in pdf format Rights Act of 1964 (78 per the requirements ToyotaCamry Hybrid l tion about an adverLexus RX 350 2012, Notice is hereby given and be placed on the Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. of t h e Pro p osal 2012, 2.5L 1-4 cyl 3.5L V-6 cyl tiser, you may call The Bulletin's that sealed bids will planholder's list, click Pr i m e 2000d to 2000d-4) s ection, al l VIN ¹005123 VIN ¹15050A I the Oregon State I be received and pub- "Download P r oject Q the Regulations, Bidders s u b mitting "Call A Service $21,997 Attorney General's 1 licly opened at 2:00 PDF" and sign on to and $27,997 h ereby notifies a l l bids on this project Professional" Directory (exp.7/15/15) DLR ¹366 Office C o nsumer .m. local time on Q uestCDN.corn o r (exp.7/15/15) DLR ¹366 b idders that i t w i l l must submit, with his Porsche Cayman S f Protection hotline at S M Q L I C H Jul 2 9 2 015 by the follow the link to creaffirmatively ensure o r her b id, a l i s t is all about meeting SMOLICH ~ 1-877-877-9392. 2 008, L i k e new , your needs. ate a username and City of Burns at the that any contract en- including the name, V OL V O 14,500 miles, V OL V O City Manager's Office, password. Plan tered into pursuant to address, and 541-749-2156 Call on one of the $35,000. 541-749-2156 Serving Central Oregon since1903 242 South Broadway, documents and "Bid this a d v ertisement, DBE/non-DBE status smolichvolvo.corn 360-510-3153 (Bend) smolichvolvo.corn Burns, Oregon 97720, Proposal P a cket" disadvantaged of all subcontractors professionals today!
©
©
® s um au
©
®
©
r---I
f f
I
I
f
L'"'" " "
J
I
I f
~n:Hu~t ~
Where Buyers and Sellers Meet y(o~e~
'68 ~ <> ut~
>o<yo yo > es
~<~<vP~ SO©)s P RU'~ ' yAeS ' ' ere ,' ~o~OT< „e~g~a~> >„>omo ~r g • A
BSSl 1C •
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
To place your ad, visit www.bendbulletin.corn or call 541-385-5809