Bulletin Daily Paper 05-13-15

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1

WEDNESDAY May13,2015

ace: is in

$ Q? Plus: bighorn hunting GARY LEWIS• D1

OUTDOORS • D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Reduilding Iraq — The country faces evenmore destruction after its battle with the militant Islamic State.A6

ere rou t i sn'tas rastic

Hidden history — The discovery of a medieval mass grave under aParis supermarket offers a rare chance to do archaeology in the city.A6

Tiered water rates — A

Several counties east of the Cascades, including Crook, are in states of emergency. Why not

The Bulletin

Deschutes or Jefferson? We've drawn out how river basins play a role.

The Bend City Council and an appointed citizen

Differences in rock below the surface of the Crooked and Deschutes river systems explain

committee beganporing over the city's proposed $630 million 2015-17 budget Tuesdayevening. Riding on the backs of a recovering economy and increasing property tax revenue, the proposedbudget has grown $134 million over the previous biennium. City Manager Eric King charac-

w hy those who count on the Crooked worry about drought more than those who depend on the ysis of many studies indicates it has many health benefits.A3

And a Wed exclusiveLearning about egg freezingat an elegant hotel with wine and hors d'oeuvres. bendbulletin.com/extrns

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Anesthesia devicecould take place of doctors By Todd C. Frankel The Washington Post

Deschutes.

Volcanoes contriduted tothe area's water riches The igneous geology in the Cascades andwest of the Deschutes River has created a porous basin that allows a vast amount of water to flow underground into the Deschutes River Basin. It eventually flows downhill in the general direction of the river. East of the river, the geology is impermeable and any rainfall tends to quickly become runoff.

Y

- I,"»,

,

thought of the device. He

was blunt: "That's going to replace me." One day, maybe. For now, the Sedasys anesthesiology machine is just getting started, the leading lip of an automation wave that could

transform hospitals just as technology changed automobile factories. But this m achine doesn't seek to

replace only hospital shift workers. It's targeting one

of the best-paid medical specialties, making it all the more intriguing — or alarming, depending on your point of view.

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Afternoon rain High 59, Low34 Pag e B6

INDEX Business C5-6 Horoscope D6 Calendar B2 L ocal/State Bf -6 Classified E1-6 Obituaries B5 Comics E3-4 Outdoors Df-6 Crosswords E4 Sports C1-4 Dear Abby D6 TV/Movies D6 The Bulletin

An IndependentNewspaper

vol. 113, No. 133, 30 pages, 5sections

Q I/I/e use recyc/ed newsprint

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88 267 02329

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Multiple groundwater sources • Well locations that contribute io Bend's drinking water

Elevationprofile revealsBend'sadvantage

have tough choices to make and a tough prioritization

the first in a series of three

scheduled for the week. After the appointed Budget Committee's review finishes

Thursday, the City Council isscheduledtoadoptthe

budget in June. The meeting homed in on the water flowing in and

out of the city, induding the city's engineering and infrastructure planningprogram, which is responsil)le

ae

E Ch

for building the pipes that carry drinking water in and sewage out. SeeBudget/A5

. Bend

4,000

3,000 e

2,000

Man slain in tiny town of Post

ble r c

1,00 Impermeable rock River miles 20 0

cityhad little choice but to cutstaffand services. "Now things are picking backup, and we actually process," King said of the process to develop the proposedbudget. "Before all we had to do was just say no." The night's meeting was

e

180

160

140

120

100

Meanwhile,undertheCrookedRiver ... Rock under the CrookedRiver subbasin is older andnot as permeable asthe rock under the Deschutes River Basin, said Marshall Gannett, research hydrologist with the U.S.Geological Survey in Portland. So, rock in the CrookedRiver subbasin does not soak uprainfall and snowmelt the way the Deschutes basin does, said Gannett, who hasstudied the basins. "The Crookedwould be like pouring water on aflat table, and the liquid would pour off very quickly, and theDeschutes would be like pouring water onto a sponge," hesaid. Over the past two years, little water has poured onto the table, while the spongehas stayed wet, despite back-to-backyears of low snowpack. Theresult: The governor's office has declared drought emergencies in CrookCounty in 2014 andthis year, while Deschutes and Jefferson counties haveavoided such drastic measures.

Where groundwater is the future To meet the projected growing demand for drinking water as Bendexperiences a growth spurt, city water utility leaders expect to drill more wells to tap the underground aquifer while the amount of surface water used remains flat. — Total water ese — Amount from groundwater — Amount from Temalo Creek 60million gallonsper day —.

• At Wickiup,irrigation demandcomesearly "This year was warm and dry so deThe Bulletin mand increases significantly," said Kyle Natural river flows are down Gorman,region manager forthe but irrigation demand has come OraP"IC Or egon Water Resources Departearly, so releases out of Wickiup Oll A5 men tin Bend. Irrigation demand Reservoir are above average for started in early April, he said, as this time of year upstream of Bend on it does in dryyears in Central Oregon. the Deschutes River. SeeWickiup/A5 By Dylan J. Darling

30-

-

By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin

POST — A man died

Monday night in Post at the hands of a relative,according to the Crook County Sheriff's Office. At about 10:30 p.m. Mon-

day, Crook County sheriff's deputies responded to a report of a shooting at a home on SE Terrible Trail,

a dirt road off the Paulina Highway about 25 miles southeast of Prineville. William Brown, 51, was found dead there, accord-

50-

See Anesthesia/A4

TODAY'S WEATHER

Rough outline of the Upper .,~., Oeschutes basin

Redmond

5,000 feet abovesealevel

asked a family friend, an anesthesiologist, what he

during the recession, the

Ilifh~is C~~~~kQgel'S

it r

She was nervous. In a few minutes, a machine — not

research. She had even

of Bend's recent economy as a"roller coaster," noting that

'

one day replace anesthesiologists sat next to a hospital gurney occupied by Nancy Youssef-Ringle. a doctor — would sedate the59-year-old foracolon cancer screening called a colonoscopy. But she had done her

terized the ups and downs

Malrad j

pesct

'CrescentLake ~-.-

p = ... Pelton4jum

togus

Geology is the reason the city of Bendwill likely never run the risk of completely depleting its groundwater. Water seeps into the permeable rock formations in the UpperDeschutes near Crescent Lakeand gravity pulls it downhill through cracks in the rock. Thegroundwater is eventually discharged again into the Deschutes River around lakes Billy Chinook and Simtustus. That's why the Deschutes rarely has severe floods and drinking water can be found about 500 feet beneath Bend,depending onyour location.

TOLEDO, Ohio — The new machine that could

I'evleW By Tyler Leeds

ruling puts them in danger.AS

COffee'S PerkS — An anal-

Bend kicks off its budget

-

-

5 new wells would - de needed dr 202010--2008 '10 '12 '14 '16 '18 '20 Sources:City of Bend, USGS / Bulletin file photo Pete Smith and Dylan J. Darling /The Bulletin

ing to Crook County Sheriff's Sgt. Travis Jurgens. Brown was shot during a

domestic dispute, Jurgens wrote in a news release Tuesday evening. The identity of the shooting suspect was not released."The case is still under investigation

and no charges have been filed," Jurgens wrote. See Slain /A4

Banksget uncertainmessageonlegal pot money By Keri Geiger, Jesse Hamilton and Elizabeth Dexheimer

legalized marijuana. The financial-crimes arm

Bloomberg News

of the Treasury Department is

keep it from organized crime. And it figures banks with strong compliance departments can best help it track

could run afoul of federal drug laws if they accept the cash. That's left the banking industry dazed and confused

the money. At the same time, federal

about what to do even as legal marijuana sellers in 23 states

government has opened

making it easier to deposit the fledgling industry's growing

a new line of business for

revenue, at last count nearly

America's biggest banks, and for once they don't want it.

$3 billion annually and almost bank regulators have reall in cash. The government mained silent on the issue, wants to tax the revenue and raising the specter that banks

NEW YORK — The U.S.

Little wonder: It's cash from

and the District of Columbia are faced with mountains of

cash piling up in warehouses

and basement vaults. "More than 200 million

Americans live in states where there is some form of legal marijuana," said Rep. Earl Blumenauer, an Oregon Democrat, who is pushing a bill on marijuana taxation. See Pot /A4


A2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

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Dnnp-Wntnl' WSIIS —Deep-water drilling is set to resume near the site of the catastrophic BPPLCwell blowout, which killed 11 workers and causedthe nation's largest offshore oil spill five years ago off the coast of Louisiana. A Louisiana-based oil company, LLOG Exploration Offshore LLC,plans to drill into the Macondo reservoir near BP's ill-fated well blowout, according to federal records. LLOG's permit to drill a newwell near BP's site was approvedApril13 by the Bureau of Safety andEnvironmental Enforcement, anagency overseeing offshore oil and gasdrilling operations. The company's exploration plan wasapproved last October after an environmental review by a sister agency, the Bureau ofOceanEnergy Management.

eas ea mra eraimen By Jon Hurdle and Ashley Southall

members. The passenger rail waited for patients, who were agency said it had received rushed intothe emergency New York Times News Service reports of injuries but did not r oom on s tfetchers and i n At least five people were elaborate. wheelchairs. A hospital spokeskilled and dozens more injured That toll was growing as woman said she was not able to when an Amtrak train carfirefighters and rescue workers provide a patient count. rying 243 people derailed on carrying flashlights and ladVideo from the scene showed Tuesday in Philadelphia, shut- ders went from car to car help- several train cars lying on their ting down service in the North- ingpassengers off the train. sides and wreckage strewn east region, the authorities said. Several of the train cars ap- about. The train was headed from pearedtohave fl ipped over.A The front car, believed to be Washington to New York when steel utility pole had crashed the engine, was separated from it derailed around 9:30 p.m., of- onto one of them, and mangled the rest of the train. Firefightficials said during a news con- and twisted track couldbe seen ers had to use hydraulic tools ference'II1esday. near the wreckage. to rescue people trapped inside Forty-nine people, including Injured passengers were tak- the overturned cars. six people in critical condition, en from the scene to local hosGov. Tom Wolf said he was were takento area hospitals. pitals. Maria Cerceo Slade, a in contact with state and local "It is an absolute disastrous spokeswoman for Aria Health, officials and was dosely monimess," Philadelphia's mayor, which has two hospitals in the toring the situation. Michael Nutter, said. "I have area, said it had received 59 Former U.S. Rep. Patrick never seen anything like this in patients at its two locations, in- Murphy, an Iraq war veteran mylife." cluding one minutes from the who served in Congress from The cause of the crash was scene in Frankford. Most of the 2007 to 2011 as a Democrat initially not known. patients sustained minor inju- from Bucks County, PennsylAmtrak identified the train ries and were able to walk, she vania, said he was on the train. as Northeast Regional Train satd. He said on Trrvitter that he was 188 and said it was carrying Outside Temple University helping fellow passengers, add238 passengers and five crew Hospital, doctors and nurses ing, "Pray for those injured."

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As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

MEGA MILLIONS The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:

040003~060~9© The estimated jackpot is now $159 million.

Gay hiood dnnnfS —The Foodand Drug Administration is outlining its plan to endthe nation's lifetime ban on blood donations from gay and bisexual men, a32-year-old policy that many medical groups and gay activists say is no longer justified. TheFDAon Tuesday released proposed guidelines for screening blood donors at increased risk of carrying HIV. Underthe proposal, the current blanket ban on donations from gaymenwould be replaced with a policy barring donations from menwho havehadsexwith another man in the last year. If finalized, the newpolicy would put the U.S. in line with other countries, including Australia, Japanandthe U.K.

NOrth KOrea exeCutian —South Korea'sspyagency saysit has Bikram Rai /The Associated Press

USAID rescue workers inspect the site of collapsed buildings after an earthquake in Kathmandu, Nepal, on Tuesday. A new earthquake spread more fear and misery in Nepal, which is still struggling to recover from a devastating quake nearly three weeks ago that left thousands dead.

Another deadlyquakebits Nepal By Ellen Barry

in Dolakha as "very, very severe." NEW DELHI — The vegThe largest cluster of caEven before T uesday's etable m a r kets, s t r eetside sualties — 34 dead and 101 earthquake, aid workers wordumpling stands and other s eriously injured — w a s ried wealthy nations seemed signs of ordinary life slow- registered in the district of unwilling to fund the relief efly returning to Nepal were Dolakha, where 77 people fort in Nepal, having pledged violently interrupted Tues- died in the April 25 earth- about 15 percent of the initial day when another powerful quake, officials said. appeal for $423 million, said earthquake shook the eastern G ajendra Thakur, w h o Jamie McGoldrick, the resipart of the country less than overseesrelief work for the dent coordinator for the UnitNew York Times News Service

three weeks after a

earthquake, "they went back to the pain again."

d e ad- district, described conditions

information that North Koreaexecuted its defense chief for sleeping during a meeting andtalking back to young leader Kim Jong Un. Lawmaker Shin Kyoung-min says theNational Intelligence Service told a closed-door parliamentary committee today that People's Armed Forces Minister HyonYong Chol was executed in Pyongyang in late April. The intelligence service told lawmakers that Hyonwas killed by an anti-aircraft gun. — From wire reports

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ed Nations in Nepal.

ly earthquake left most of it flattened. Loose hillsides and cracked

buildings gave way and collapsed when a 7.3 magnitude earthquake struck shortly af-

ter noon about 50 miles east of Kathmandu, the capital, near the China border.

Residents and office workers ran screaming into the streets,and people described

plumes of mud and clouds of dust rising up as cracked structures fell. Prakash Ban-

jara, an engineering student, was on an aid mission, deliv-

ering rice to villages in Sindhupalchok District, w hen "the earth started shaking so

Oregon Lottery results

lated its own guidelines in 2013when it investigated environmental advocates who opposedthe Keystone XLpipeline, the FBIacknowledged Tuesday.Thebureau hadreceived information about plots to damage part of the existing Keystone pipeline. As part of the investigation, agents at the FBI's field office in Houston developed sources, who gathered information from environmental advocates. Theagents alsoconducted databasesearchesontheadvocatesandreviewed local law enforcement reports about them. But theagents had not received approval from the head oftheir office and from its chief lawyer.

Yemen fighting —With cargo ships poised to launch a desperately neededaid operation in embattled Yemen, afive-day humanitarian cease-fire beganTuesday night, hours after Saudi-led coalition warplanes struck against Shiite rebels andtheir allies. There were reports of continued ground fighting in someareas, with security officials and witnesses saying fierce combat broke out about ahalf hour after the cease-fire beganwhen rebels tried to storm the southern city of Dhale, firing tank shells, rockets and mortars. But no airstrikes by the Saudi-led coalition battling the rebels were reported. The officials and tribal leaders also accusedthe rebels andtheir allies of reinforcing their positions.

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FBI pipeline inquiry —TheFederal Bureauof Investigation vio-

KSIly'S RnSSin tnikS —TheUnited States and Russia emerged Tuesday from their mostextensive, high-level talks inyearsvowing closer cooperation onUkraineandSyria but unable topoint to any breakthrough or newapproach to bridgethemajor differences separating the powers. Theatmosphere wascordial and the tonewas promising as U.S. Secretary of StateJohnKerry held eight hours of talks with President Vladimir Putin andhis foreign minister in the BlackSearesort of Sochi. Kerry's first trip to Russiasince the Ukraine crisis began coincided with the70th anniversary of the allied defeat of NaziGermany,and both sides hailedthevirtues of U.S.-Russianengagement.

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WISCOnSin Sllnnting —A white Wisconsin police officer won't be charged for fatally shooting an unarmed19-year-old biracial man, a prosecutor said Tuesday, prompting peaceful demonstrations but none of the immediate violence that has hit other U.S. cities in similar cases. DaneCounty District Attorney Ismael Ozannesaid he wouldn't file charges against Madison Officer Matt Kenny in theMarch 6 death of Tony Robinson, saying the officer used lawful deadly force after he was staggered by apunch to the headandfeared for his life. Ozanne, mopping his brow repeatedly but speaking forcefully for some 25 minutes, took pains to outline his own biracial heritage before announcing his decision.

violently." "The mountains before my eyes started tumbling down

"Our community needs this next chapter in our development." Shannon Sullivan Event Services Manager, Tower Theatre

in massive landslides," Banjara said by telephone. By early today, Nepal's National Emergency Operation Center had reported

N k:w e

65 deaths and 1,988 injuries

from Tuesday's earthquake. The death toll from the April 25 quake, with a magnitude of 7.8, had reached 8,159 and was expected to rise. Jasmine Avgerakis, who is stationed in Sindhupalchok with the charity Mercy Corps,

R

A

A •

said she had watched peo-

ple overcome the trauma of the first earthquake and set about cleaning up. "They were just starting to go home and feel comfortable there," she said. With the new

r •

•I'


WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Wednesday, May13, the 133rd day of 2015.There are 232 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS EU immigratiOn — The European Union will unveil its migration agenda —including its plan to hunt down traffickers in the Mediterraneanand destroy their boats.

HISTORY Highlight:In1940, in his first speech as British prime minister, Winston Churchill told Parliament, "I would say to the House, as I said to those who have joined this government: I have nothing to offer but blood, toil, tears andsweat." In1607, English colonists arrived by ship at the site of what became theJamestown settlement in Virginia (the colonists went ashore the next day). In1846, the United States declared that a state of war already existed with Mexico. In1918, the first U.S. airmail stamps, featuring a picture of a Curtiss JN-4 biplane, were issued to the public. (On a few of the stamps, the biplane was inadvertently printed upside-down, making the "Inverted Jenny" collector's items.) In1935, T.E. Lawrencewas critically injured in a motorcycle accident in Dorset, England; he died six days later. In1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed theSt. Lawrence SeawayDevelopment Act. In1958,Vice President Richard Nixon andhis wife, Pat, were spat uponandtheir limousine battered by rocks thrown by anti-U.S. demonstrators in Caracas, Venezuela. In1968, a one-day general strike took place in Francein support of student protesters. In1973,in tennis' first socalled "Battle of the Sexes," Bobby Riggs defeated Margaret Court 6-2, 6-1 in Ramona, California. (Billie JeanKing soundly defeated Riggs at the Houston Astrodome in September.) In1981, PopeJohn Paul II was shot and seriously wounded in St. Peter's Square byTurkish assailant Mehmet Ali Agca. In1985,a confrontation between Philadelphia authorities and the radical group MOVE ended as police dropped a bomb onto the group's row house; 11 people died in the resulting fire, which destroyed 61 homes. In1994, President Bill Clinton nominated federal appeals Judge StephenBreyer to the U.S. SupremeCourt to replace retiring Justice Harry Blackmun. In2000, explosions at a fireworks warehouse in theNetherlands killed 23 peopleand injured nearly1,000 others. (A suspect was found guilty of causing the blasts, but his conviction was overturned.) Tan years ago: The Pentagon proposed the most sweeping changes to its network of military bases in modern history, a plan that would close 33major facilities in 22 states andreconfigure hundreds of others. Five years ago: Three Pakistani men whoauthorities say supplied funds to would-be Times Square bomberFaisal Shahzad werearrested in a series of raids in NewEngland. One year ago:A minefire in Soma, Turkey, killed 301 workers. A Europeancourt, in an important test of the "right to be forgotten," ruled that Google had to amendsomeof its search results at the request of ordinary people whenthey showed links to outdated, irrelevant information.

BIRTHDAYS Actor Buck Taylor is 77.Actor Harvey Keitel is 76. Author Charles Baxter is 68. Singer Stevie Wonder is 65. Actress Leslie Winston ("The Waltons") is 59. Producer-writer Alan Ball is 58. Basketball Hall of Famer Dennis Rodmanis 54. Actor-comedian Stephen Colbert is 51. Singer Darius Rucker (Hootie and the Blowfish) is 49. Actor Iwan Rheon is 30. Actress-writer-director Lena Dunham is29. Actor Robert Pattinson is 29. — From wire reports

MISCONCEPTIONS

er s

eieve i orno,co eeis ace wi Not only will it not stunt your growth, but coffee also actually offers a number of health benefits.

study, published in 2014, used updateddata and included 28 studies and more than 1.1 million participants. Again, the more coffeeyou drank, the less likely you were to have

By Aaron E. Carroll New York Times News Service

When I was a kid, my parents refused to let me drink

diabetes. This included both

coffeebecause they believed

caffeinatedand decaffeinated coffee.

it would "stunt my growth." It turns out, of course, that this

Partof a healthy diet

is a myth. Studies have failed, again and again, to show that coffeeor caffeine consumption are related to reduced

If any other modifiable risk factor had these kind of positive associations across the

bone mass or how tall people

board, the media would be

are. Coffee has long had a repu-

all over it. We'd be pushing it on everyone. Whole inter-

tation as being unhealthy. But

v entions would be built up

in almost every single respect that reputation is backward.

around it. For far too long, though, coffee has been con-

The potential health benefits

sidered a vice, not something

are surprisingly large.

that might be healthy. That might change soon.

When I set out to look at the research on coffee and

health, I thought I'd see it

The newest scientific report for th e U S D A n u t r i tional

being associated with some

guidelines, which I've dis-

good outcomes and some bad ones, mirroring the contra-

cussed before, says that cof-

fee is not only OK — it agrees that it might be good for you.

dictory reports you can often find in the news media. This

This was the first time the di-

didn't turn out to be the case.

etary guideline advisory com-

Last year, a systematic re-

mittee reviewed the effects of coffeeon health.

view and meta-analysis of studies looking at long-term

There's always a danger in going too far in the other direction. I'm not suggesting that we start serving coffee

consumption of coffee and the

riskofcardiovascular disease was published. The researchers found 36 studies involving

to little kids. Caffeine still has

more than 1,270,000 partic-

ipants. The combined data

Thinkstock

might want to avoid for their

sociated with heart failure. Again, moderate consump-

children. Some people don't like the way caffeine can make them jittery. Guidelines also suggest that pregnant

showed that those who con-

sumed a moderate amount of coffee, about three to five cups a day, were at the lowest

risk for problems. Those who consumed five or more cups a day had no higher risk than those who consumed none. Of course, everything I'm saying here concerns coffee — blackcoffee. Iam not talking about the m ostly milk and sugar coffee-based beverages that lots of people consume.

The studies Back to the studies. Years

earlier, a meta-analysis — a study of s t udies, in

w h i ch

data are pooled and analyzed together — was published looking at how coffee consumption might be associated with stroke. Eleven studies were found, including almost

ing coffee consumption by two cups a day was associat-

disease. In patients who already have liver disease, it's

associated with a decreased women not drink more than progression to cirrhosis. In two cups a day. I'm also not suggesting that risk among those who conpatients who a l ready have sumed four servings a day. cent studies confirmed these cirrhosis, it's associated with people start drinking coffee Consumption had to get up findings. Results from me- a lower risk of death and a by the gallon. Too much of to about 10 cups a day before ta-analyses looking at pros- lower risk of developing liver anything can be bad. Finally, any bad associations were tate cancer found that in the cancer. It's associated with although the coffee might be seen. higher-quality studies, coffee improved responses to anti- healthy, that's not necessarily No one is suggesting you consumption was not associ- viral therapy in patients with true of the added sugar and drink more coffee for your ated with negative outcomes. hepatitis C and better out- fat that many people put into health. But drinking modThe same holds true for comes in patients with non- coffee-based beverages. erate amounts of coffee is breast cancer, where associ- alcoholic fatty liver disease. But it's way past time that linked to lower rates of pretty ations were statistically not The authors of the systematic we stopped viewing coffee as much all cardiovascular dis- significant. It's true that the review argue that daily cof- something we all need to cut ease, contrary to what many data on lung cancer shows an fee consumption should be back on. It's a completely reamight have heard about the increased riskfor more cof- encouraged in patients with sonable addition to a healthy dangers of coffee or caffeine. fee consumed, but that's only chronic liver disease. diet, with more potential benEven consumers on the very among people who smoke. The most recent meta-anal- efits seen in research than high end of the spectrum ap- Drinking coffee might be yses on neurological disor- almost any other beverage pear to have minimal, if any, protective in those who don't. ders found that coffee intake we're consuming. It's time we tion was associated with a lower risk, with th e lowest

ed with a lower relative risk

ill effects.

Regardless, the authors of

of liver cancer by more than 40 percent. Two more re-

480,000 participants. As with

But let's not cherry-pick. that study hedge their results There are outcomes outside and warn that they should be

the prior studies, consump-

of heart health that matter.

was associated with

l o wer started treating it as such.

risks of Parkinson's disease, lower cognitive decline and a potential protective effect against Alzheimer's disease (but certainly no harm). A systematic review published in 2005 found that reg-

interpreted with caution be-

cause of the confounding (and fee a day was associated with most likely overwhelming) efa lower risk of disease,com- increased risk of cancer. Cer- fects of smoking. pared with those who drank tainly, individual studies have A study looking at all cannone. Another meta-analysis found that to be the case, and cers suggested that it might ular coffee consumption was published a year later con- these are sometimes high- be associated with reduced associated with a significantfirmed these findings. lighted by the news media. overallcancer incidence and ly reduced risk of developRounding out c oncerns But in the aggregate, most that the more you drank, the ing Type 2 diabetes, with the about the effect o f c o f f ee of these negative outcomes more protectionwas seen. lowest relative risks (about a on your heart, another medisappear. Drinking coffee is associ- third reduction) seen in those ta-analysis examined how A meta-analysis published ated with better laboratory w ho drank at l east six o r drinking coffee might be as- in 2007 found that increas- values in those at risk for liver seven cups a day. The latest tion of two to six cups of cof-

a number of effects parents

Despite coffee's reputation as being unhealthy, studies suggest the drink might bo good for you.

Many believe that coffee might be associated with an

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A

What's goodfor poor kids isn't bad for therichones By Emily Badger

based on data about more than

The Washington Post

5 million families across the

W ASHINGTON —

P

M u c h country, tells u s s omething about rich kids, too.

of the discussion around last week's big new social mobility study focused on the fates of

poor kids. We nowknow, thanks to the work of Harvard economists Raj Chetty and Nathaniel

A boy from wealthy parents (who earn in the 75th percentile nationally) is also much better off growingupinFairfax County than if he grew up somewhere in average America. If he spends his entire childhood

Hendren, that some places in America (Baltimore, Detroit, Chicago and Orlando, Florida) there, Chetty and Hendren esoffer particularly problematic timate, he stands to earn nearly environments for low-income 17 percent more atage 26than children to grow up if we want he would had he grown up in, them to have economic opportu- say, Warren County, Kentucky. nity as adults. Effectively, Fairfax County is We know something about agoodplacetogrow upforboth the structureof those places:

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rich and poor kids. And this

They're highly segregated and is an important, little-noticed unequal. They tend to have takeaway in this big study. "Places that generate better higher crime andworse schools. And they're more likely to have outcomes for kids in low-ina lot of single-parent families. come families do not on averWe also now know that poor age generate worse outcomes children might have better odds for kids in high-income famiif they moved — especially at lies," Chetty says. a young age — to places with This matters because it sugmore economic mobility (Fair- gests that helping poor kids fax County, Virginia; Bergen won't harm rich kids. And one County, New Jersey; Seattle). common obstade to anti-poverThis same research, though, ty programs is fear that it will.

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Wickiup Continued from A1 While farmers and ranch-

ers drawing water from the Deschutes River benefit from a robust aquifer unlike their

c ounterparts pulling f r om the Crooked River, water users relying on both rivers face r estrictions in

t h e f or m o f

Wickiup water Earlier than normal irrigation demand brought by low snowpack and a warm spring has resulted in higher flows than averageout of Wickiup Reservoir upstream of Bend onthe Deschutes River. DESCHUTES RIVER'SAVERAGE DAILY DISCHARGE BELOW THE WICKIUPRESERVOIR — 2015

— 2014

2,000 cubic feet persecond----

By Jonathan Weisman W ASHINGTON —

1,500---

district general manager. For the Deschutes River water users, the district allotted

2.2 acre-feet per acre, he said.

1,000---

1,368 cubic ieet

per second 500----

an acre of land under a foot of

~

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cot ~

co

c-r W

0

Source: Oregon Water Resources Department, Bureau of Reclamation

water. In a normal year, district Pete Smith I The Bulletin

water users are not subject to an allotment.

North Unit supplies about

Last year, the district also

as of 'Itfesday, said Melissa

Webb, a snow hydrologist with acres suppliedby the Deschutes ton said, the first in about a de- the Natural Resources ConRiver and 5,165 acres supplied cade. Allotments come when servation Service in Portland. by the Crooked River. irrigation starts early and dis- Bothwere at record lows. Britton said d i strict offi- tricts turn to stored water, such The low snowpack now cials try to be conservative in as the water in Wickiup Reser- means a low stream-flow foresetting allotments, and more voir, as a supply. cast for the summer. She said water could become available Drawing more water out of the Deschutes River, aided by depending upon late spring Wickiup now probably means groundwater, probably will and summertime weather, but the reservoir will be low at the be about70 percent ofnormal the allotment for Crooked Riv- end of growing season, both this summer upstream of Bend er water users in the district is Britton and Gorman said. Al- whereas the Crooked River upslim. though late spring and sum- stream of Prineville Reservoir "You can't grow much with mertime rains could buoy the is expected to be 8 percent of that," he said. He said some water level at W i ckiup, the normal. "Everything across the state growers relying on the Crook- snowpack is not expected to ed might fallow some fields this help much. is quite a bit lower than normal 850 to 900water users on 53,722

year. In contrast, the allotment for Deschutes River water us-

S e n- singling out Sen. Elizabeth

No. 3 Democrat, have pro-

Asia, a rebuke the president

30 percent increase from the previous year

For the Crooked River water users, the district allotted 1.25

acre-feet peracre.An acre-foot is enough water to submerge

ocratic leader, and Chuck Schumer of New York, the

ate Democrats on Tuesday blocked consideration of giving President Barack Obama thepower to accelerate a broad trade accord with

ers and in March established allotments, said Mike Britton,

Pacific trade accord and the authority he is seeking,

New York Times News Service

allotments. The North Unit I r rigation District draws from both riv-

Senate Democrats oi resi entontra e act

issued similar allotments, Brit-

Two automated snow measuring sites out of 14in the com-

ers in the district probably will bined Deschutes and Crooked be enough for a typical season. River basins had snow at them

helped bring on himself. After more than six years battling Republicans on everything from his signature health care legislation to simply keeping the government open, Obama is at odds with his own party as he seeks a legislative capstone to his presidency. But Tuesday's setback also highlighted a problem that has vexed Obama for most

Warren of M assachusetts for her role in opposing the accord. One Democrat, Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware, joined Republicans to support debating and voting on legislation that would give Obama

posed a compromise to Re-

publicans: First, hold a separate vote on legislation aimed at discouraging so-called currency manipulation by U.S. trading partners, which could be vetoed by the president. Then, wrap the fast-

authority to pursue the most track authority he is seeking sweeping trade accord since with a more encompassing the North A m erican Free bill, including assistance for Trade Agreement more than displaced workers, extension 20 years ago, and the proce- of an African trade accord dural vote fell eight short of and othertrade-enforcement the 60 needed. measures. "Ultimately, it's up to the T hat offer could be t h e president," said Sen. John path forward, given that at Cornyn of Texas, the Sen- least eight Democrats who ate's No. 2 Republican. "Does the president of the United

n ormally

of his tenure in office: his dif-

52-45 vote.

the final word.

the Trans-Pacific Partner-

e m b race t r a d e

deals voted no Tuesday. ficulties with Congress. This States have enough clout The compromise proposed time he is criticizing Dem- with members of his own po- by Reid and Schumer could ocrats whose votes he now litical party'?" help the president because needs. The White House press the currency provisions deThe president "has made secretary, Josh Earnest, tried manded by Democrats are this more personal than he to play down Tuesday's vote strongly opposed by Japan needed to," said Sen. Sher- as a "procedural snafu." and Malaysia, two of the 12 rod Brown, D-Ohio, after the The vote is not necessarily nations trying to complete Obama has said Democrats have been spreading d isinformation

According to Democratic ship, and could be signifileadership aides, Sens. Har- cant enough to stop the larga b out t h e ry Reid of Nevada, the Dem- er accord.

summer stream flow," Webb

said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarifng@bendbulletirt.com

Budget

planned, which, in total, will

$62,500. Rheault also touched on The department's director, sees the city's public works the city's public works laboTom Hickmann, noted the programs, described the ratory, which not only percity's highest-profile, ongoing water utility budget request forms safet y tests forthe wainfrastructure expense is the from his division, which ter utility, but also monitors Bridge Creek pipe replace- provides the city with about the stormwater and sewer ment and w a ter f i l tration 12 million gallons of water systems. The lab, which is work, which has faced a se- a day, mostly coming from budgeted to receive $2.6 milries of legal challenges from creeks in the Cascades. lion over the biennium, tests Central Oregon LandWatch. The utility, which has a to- 50,000 samples a year, which Seven miles of the $70 million tal biennial budget of about breaks down into six to seven project have been installed, $60 million, funded with tests an hour, Rheault said. Today's meeting will feawith 2.5 miles left. about $37 million in service Hickmann said B r idge charges, features numerous t ure presentations on t h e Creek "ends this year," with smaller items to k eep the city's accessibility program, a scheduled completion date system going. Included in systemdevelopment charges, of December. Much of his the budget's purchases for planning, police, fire and the department's work will now the biennium are new well Pilot Butte cemetery. be focused on a m a ssive pumps, an air compressor — Reporter: 541-633-2160, sewer overhaul the city has worth $25,000 and video surtleeds@bendbuifetirt.com Continued from A1

Urban runoff water flows into a pond at the San Joaquin Marsh & Wildlife

Sanctuary in Irvine, California. Don Bartletti I Los Angeles Times

veillance work that will cost

cost about $100 million. Paul Rheault, who over-

SPRING SALE GrET REASY FO'R MEMO'RIAL SAY W™EEKEN S

Californiawater districts scramble to deal with ruling ontiered rates By Matt Stevens

costs ofits various conserva-

Los Angeles Times

tion efforts to the bills of its

LOS ANGELES — During

the last major drought in the early 1990s, Irvine pio-

neered adifferent approach for calculating water bills for customers.

The city's water agency allocated each customer a certain amount of water and

then chargedhigher rates to those who exceeded it. The structure has been a wild suc-

cess: Outdoor water use has dropped almost 50 percent over the last two decades, and

residents are using about 25 percent less water. But conservation alone is

no longer a justification for higher fees, and that has Irvine Ranch and other water

districts across California scrambling. An appeals court l a st month struck down a tiered rate system in one city that

charged more for water than the cost of providing it — a decision that has broad implications across the state. Now,

agencies must prove that the high water rates for heavy users are not meant as punish-

ment but actually reflect the cost of delivering the extra water. A n examination o f h o w California water customers

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said Libby Pischel, a district

spokeswoman. are billed shows a wide va- officials there charged heavy The San Juan Capistrano riety in the way tiered rates waterusers more than $9 for case was brought by homeare applied, with the biggest a unit of water, and the court owners who complained that users often paying many ruled the city failed to base its the city's rates were arbitrary times more than water sav- fees on the actual cost of pro- and unconstitutional. Mike Hensley, an attorney ers. Moreover,some districts viding water to customers, as pass on the costs of certain required under P r oposition for the residents, said, "huge programs only to heavy us- 218. price differences" between ers, adding still more to their Since the lawsuit was filed, tiers should be viewed with bills. San Juan Capistrano over- suspicion. "If you're going to try to Rates in Irvine vary dra- hauled its rate structure. matically based on how much Under the old system, the promote conservation, you w ater customers use:$0.88 for lowest tier was $2.47 per unit, have to show why," he said. every 748 gallons (or "unit") and the highest was $9.05. "You can't just put a bunch of of water in the lowest tier and The new system increases people in a tier and assume up to $12.60 in the highest. ratescharged to low users to they're abusers. You can't just To justify the most expen- $3.41 and cuts the rates for take your budget and reverse sive rates, Irvine tacks on the heavy users to $5.15. engineer."

asra

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It remains unclear, however, how the new rates will

affect conservation now that users pay for more expensive water is significantly cheaper imported water whereas light for heavy users. G aur's consulting f i r m users pay for less expensive groundwater. helped the city craft the new Irvine officials insist their s tructure and said a m a i n methodology passes legal goal was to comply with the muster because they tie their court order. charges back t o s p ecific The new rates, he said, costs. But some w ater-rate "shows the clear nexus beexperts and attorneys say tween operating costs and such widely varying rates are price, which is a legal requiregoing to come under greater ment under the recent court scrutiny. decision." The vast majority of urban Other waterdistricts across water agencies in California the state now must also enuse someform oftiered rates, sure their rates reflect the cost which are seen as a key con- of providing their water. servation tool as communities Such a study is underway work to comply with Gov. Jer- in Marin County, where cusry Brown's order to slash wa- tomers' water pricesvary ter use by 25 percent over the radically. The Marin Municnext year. ipal Water District uses four Longtime rate consultant tiers, and each is a multipliSanjay Gaur said aggressive- er of the lowest rate. Those ly increasing rates — espe- who use the least water pay cially those that charge more $3.74, whereas those who use than $10 per unit — could the most are charged up to raise red flags. He estimat- $22.45. "Our understanding is that ed that at least a third of the state's water suppliers would our current rate structure need to"do a better job ex- meets costs ofservice, and plaining their tiered rates and we're conducting a review to the rationality behind them." ensure that any future rate The California 4th Dis- structures also meet that and trict Court o f A p peal case whatever the new criteria is,"

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TH E BULLETINe WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

TODAY'S READ:PARIS' BURIED HISTORY

mass rave un er a suermar et By Aurelien Breeden

A researcher works at the site of the mass

New York Times News Service

PARIS — Past the racks of

hair accessories on the ground floor of the Monoprix super-

grave under a Monoprix supermarket

market on the corner of the

Rue Reaumur and the Boulevard de Sebastopol in the Sec-

in the Second

ond Arrondissement, there is a

Arrondisse-

door marked staff only. Slip through that passage-

Archaeolo-

ment of Paris.

way and turn left down a spi-

gists believe the discovery is part of the

raling metal staircase into the basement. Past pallets of juice and soda bottles, down anoth-

cemetery of

er flight of stairs, you will find a grim reminder of Paris' history: a mass grave, with row upon row of medieval skele-

a medieval hospital. Denis Gliksman via The New York

Times

tons, 316 in total. Archaeologists believe the

discovery, unearthed in January, is part of the cemetery of of numbered plastic bags, each population," he said. a medieval hospital called the of them full of bones tinted Pierre Vallat, deputy regionHopital de la Trinite that used brown by the passing of cen- al director for the INRAP, said to stand nearby. The long-bur- turies. Nearby, some of the the Hopital de la Trinite was ied mass grave is a reminder remains had been carefully built outside city limits in the that Paris, for all its surface washed with water and tooth- early 13th century and had grandeur, is still replete with brushes and left to dry on met- at different times served as undiscovered archaeological al trays. a shelter for the poor and for treasures, some grand, others Abadie and her team spent pilgrims, a place of religious much more grisly. 2/2 months excavating the re- teaching that put on biblical For archaeologists, though, mains from eight graves cov- plays, an infectious disease grisly can be good. ering more than 1,000 square centerand even a vocational "Each dig is an event, but feet, sometimes up to five peo- school for children. a cemetery is even better, be- ple deep. In the main pit, 175 Vallat and Abadie said the cause you have a real popula- bodies were neatly aligned discovery was the first metion at hand," said Boris Bove, head to toe. Those found in dieval hospital setting to be a historian and professor at the other, smaller, graves were excavated in Paris. Being able the Universite Paris 8 who re- jumbled together — a sign, to study the remains of those cently co-wrote a book on the perhaps, of the rush to bury who lived in the capital, not in French capital in the Middle the dead during a worsening distant provinces, would yield Ages. "Most of the time, you epidemic. precious information on decionly stumble upon buildings." Pathological DNA testing sions made by those in powThe skeletons were excavat- and carbon datingcould take er and how they affected the ed by a team from France's Na- months, so it is too early for population. "The history of this hospitional Institute for Preventive Abadie to know for sure when Archaeology, or INRAP, led by or how the bodies came to be tal really bears witness to the Isabelle Abadie, an anthropol- buried underneath what is whole history of France," Valogist and archaeologist. now the supermarket. "It could lat said. "This is a total histo"There are babies, there be the plague, it could be a ry, not just the history of the are young children, there are famine, it can be many things rich and famous. This isn't teenagers, there are adults,

men, women, elderly people," Abadie said on a recent afternoon at an INRAP warehouse

in La Courneuve, a suburb on the northern outskirts of Paris, where the skeletal remains are

now housed. "This was a mortality crisis,

new construction.

The French businessman Felix Potin opened one of Paris' first modern retail stores

on the corner of Rue Reaumur and Boulevard de Sebastopol

in 1860. After the company was sold in the 1990s, that location became the Monoprix,

which is still adorned with decorated balconies and topped by a large gray dome. Because Paris has been continuously occupied since the Middle Ages, there are few places that can easily be excavated. Archaeological digs are rare and initiated only when

construction workers accidentally stumble upon ruins or remains, or when INRAP comes

on sites before work begins to pre-empt potential damage. "From an archaeological standpoint, Paris is almost like unexploited terrain," Bove

said. In 2013, during construction of a reception hall at police

headquarters on the Ile de la

at this stage — but there are no Versailles." traces oftrauma, so these arMany medieval cemeteries en't deaths linked to an act of had their contents transferred violence or war," she said. into the Paris catacombs in Bove, the h i storian, said the late 18th century, though Pariswas struckbythe plague, some of the remains at this like much of the rest of Europe, burial site might have been

Cite, an INRAP team excavated several layers of history,

during the great epidemic of overlooked when the hospithe late 1340s. "We can't give tal closed during the French

the Left Bank led to the discov-

including the foundations of a 17th century Barnabite church. In 2006, construction of a re-

search facility at the Pierre and Marie Curie University on ery of remnants of a road and ofseveralhousesfromthe Gal-

that much is dear," she added, a n absolute number, but i t Revolution and, in 1812, when gesturing toward stacks of wouldn't have been unlikely it was finally dismantled and lo-Roman era, which ended in crates that contained hundreds that the city lost a third of its the site was covered up by the fifth century.

Defeating IslamicState leaves abill that Iraq is struggling to pay By Aziz Atwan and Zaid Sabah in the price of crude over the Bloomberg News last year has contributed to BAGHDAD — Ahmed the spending gap. al-Jabouri had hoped the The scenes in Dhuluiya worst was over after Iraqi in Salahuddin province are forces drove Islamic State repeated across the shiftfrom his town near Bagh- ing front lines of central and dad. Instead, he returned six northern Iraq. Aid groups say weeks ago tofind bombed about a million Iraqis have homes, looted shops and a been displaced since Islamgrowing list of grievances. ic State seized swaths of the Only a few buildings in country last year after the Dhuluiya survived heavy Iraqi military collapsed. The fighting unscathed, the shop- militant group drew support keeper said after he became from S u nn i c o m munities one of thousands of Iraqis during its lightning advance. to pick up the pieces of their Iraqi government forces lives in areas liberated from and their Shiite militia allies militant control. "The power — some backed by neighbor is out, the school is destroyed, Iran — have regrouped and and our mobile phones don't regained some territory with work," al-Jabouri said. "The the help of U.S.-led airstrikes. government is doing nothing The Pentagon said in April forus." that the area under Islamic The anger building in Sun- State control had shrunk by ni communities is the next nearly a third from its peak. "Abadi faces a dilemma. challenge for Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi's Shiite-dom- He must respond to Sunni inated government as the cost needs in newly liberated arof battling militants bites into eas. At the same he needs to revenues hit by an oil price createa bigger geographical slump. The $430 million it has distance from these areas pledged for reconstruct ion to the front line," said Reiis a fraction of what officials dar Visser, an Iraq historian. s says is needed, raising the "Large numbers of Iraqi risk that sectarian discord hate Islamic State and would will againboil over in pacified be prepared to work with the parts of OPEC's second-big- government if more support is forthcoming." gest producer. The government has "a Another Dhuluiya resident, moral and legal obligation 56-year-oldSheikh Moulod to Iraqis to rebuild their cit- Awad al-Jabouri, said central ies, provide local services and local government offiand secure their areas," Saad cials were nowhere to be seen. al-Hadithi, a go v e rnment The Jabouri dan is a prominent Sunni tribe. spokesman, said. "Neither o f t h e t o w n 's Authorities, however, need to find "billions of dollars for bridges has been fixed yet," the reconstruction work and he said, leaving a fleet of rickto compensate families," he ety boats to connect the town said. "This won't happen in to the main road on the oppoone or two months, it will take

site bank of the Tigris river.

a fewyears." Iraq's fiscal deficit has widened to $25 billion, almost a quarter of its 2015 budget, ac-

sources to rebuild homes that

Hoshyar Zebari. Although we are able to collect about oil exports rose in March to $20,000 to rebuild a house, a three-decade high, a plunge one by one," he said.

i~ita

P& CXCC

werethemostbadlydamaged in the fighting. "Each month,

cording to Finance Minister

Al-Jabouri said locals were pooling their remaining re-

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

BRIEFING

BEND-LA PINESCHOOL DISTRICT

Budget maymeancutting teachers

Man falls 50 feet down river cliffs A man walking near the cliffs at Bill Healy Memorial Bridge took a considerable fall Sunday. At about10 p.m., Bend Fire Department responded to acall of a man who hadfallen 50 feet from a cliff along the Deschutes River at SW ReedMarket Road. A friend who waswith the man called 911. Bend Fire reached the man without using special equipment and took him to St. Charles Bend. Battalion Chief of Administration Dave Howe said Tuesdaythe fire department did not know whether drugs or alcohol contributed to the fall.

By Abby Spegman

schools; it has budgeted $7.255 nally proposed. To get down to billion. 7vvo days later, the that level, Wilkinson suggestWith higher retirement state Supreme Court ruled ed cutting about four teachcosts down the line and uncer- some of the 2013 cuts to the ers, which would raise the tainty surrounding state fundPublic Employees Retirement student-teacher ratio by about ing, Bend-La Pine Schools' System were unconstitutional, one student in kindergarten budget committee has backed a ruling that likely will raise through second grade. Wilkinson's original budget included a conservative budget plan pension costs for state and that might mean cutting teach- local governments. Bend-La cost-of-living increases for ers and larger class sizes. Pine Schools was named as a employees that could also be Last month, Superintendent respondent in the suit filed by trimmed, he said. Union negoRon Wilkinson presented public employee unions. tiations are ongoing. a $154 million budget for At its meeting Ittesday, the Wilkinson also recom2015-16. That assumed the budget committee approved a mended budgeting for a lower Legislature would allocate 2015-16 budget about $3.8 mil- end fund balance. The district $7.5 billion for Oregon's K-12 lion less than what was origihad planned to end the year The Bulletin

with 5 percent of the general fund but that could be lower. With higher PERS payments

Airport to advertise golf course

expected to hit in 2017,

By Beau Eastes

Wilkinson also recommended

The Bulletin

allocating a portion of the

REDMOND — The spotlight is about to shine on

end fund balance to a reserve fund. The budget approved by the panel also includes more revenue from the High Desert Education Service District and the

Juniper Golf Club. Jason Neff, the city of Redmond's budget and financial manager, presented the Redmond City Council

federalgovernmentthrough

on Tuesday with a plan to

the recently renewed Secure

use Redmond Airport to help market the municipal

Rural Schools program. SeeBudget/B5

course.

Under the council-approvedplan, passengers departing planes will seestarting as soon as Memo-

-Q4~4P!r

rial Day Weekend — two

OU R SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS

— Bulletin staff report

large wall displays advertising Juniper before they reach the main terminal. At the main terminal, the city

will run video showcasing the golf course. "That's a high-traffic area at the airport," Neff

x ainin ourconnec ion 0 e n a u ra wor

Have a story idea or submission? Contact nsi

The Bulletin Call n reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 Business ...............541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands.......... 541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

told councilors about the

entry of the breezeway in which all departingpassengers must go through to reach the main terminal.

"We figure that space is valued at approximately $1,000 a month and that

250,000 passengers a year will see it."

Figuring out away to promote the city-owned course using the airport has

been a priority of Redmond Mayor George Endicott for several years. SeeRedmond/B2

Submissions • Lettersand opinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-633-2117

Talk to deal with city's growth

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email event information to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthe subject, andincludeacontactname and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0367

re

By Tyler Leeds Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

lation is projected to keep

growing, but the process of acquiring land to fit everybody in isn't particularly straightforward. The city's physical growth is hemmed in by the urban growth boundary, a line beyond which

Plan todetour BrookswoodBoulevard between Pinebrook Boulevard andLodgepole Drivewill be closed Thursday until Sept. 4to construct a roundabout that will connect to the new MurphyRoad extension. Duringthe closure, traffic will be diverted to BakerRoad and U.S.Highway97. BrookswoodPlazawil remain open.

"We want students to know that they are connected to

By Jasmine Rockow The Bulletin

Where does the water pouring from the bathroom faucet

the natural world," said Kirin Stryker, sustainability educator at the Environmental

come from'? Where does toilet

nered with the city of Bend to teach kids where their water

comes from and what they

in southwest Bend. Parent volunteers stood at important

water-related spots around campus, and small groups of

can do to conserve it. The Environmental Center offers the

phy Rd. ension

program for free to public and private middle schools and high schools in Bend.

Slte olfuture

roundabout

and Lucy Veis, stood under a tree in Skyline Park and used laminated precipitation maps

water go after it's flushed, and Center. "They affect their what happens to it once it goes environment, and they are afdown the drain'? fected by it." Cascade Middle School Students in Matt Killebrew's sixth-grade science sixth-graders can answer thesequestions and more, dass learned Monday mornthanks to a new program ing what it takes to move called "Our water system: a clean water into, and dirty journey through Bend." The water out of, their campus Environmental Center part-

Veis, moms to Kelly Cranston

students visited each station to

learn about the school's place in Bend's greater water service landscape. Deanna Cranston and Lisa

to compare (while it rained) the quantity of precipitation in the valley west of the Cas-

cades, to the High Desert east of the Cascades. They talked about how important the

snowpack is to future drinking water supplies. Unable

The Bulletin

The city of Bend's popu-

Parent volunteer Calista Songstad, right, talks to a group of Cascade Middle School sixth-graders Monday about the manhole cover behind them and the sewer system below during a water program offered by the Environmental Center with help from the city of Bend. finds its way to the Deschutes River. Alana Cole, 11, said she's

learned it's important to keep pollutants out of the water system and to conserve water

because of the low snowpack. "There's a huge aquifer un-

the state restricts tradition-

derneath us," she said. "Water

comes from the Cascades and the snowpack. It's where we draw most of our water from."

Calista Songstad, mother of Gunnar Songstad, said she school-issued iPads in their was glad to come help. Gungeneral direction and snapped nar is the oldest of her four a photograph. boys, and it's not often she's

al development, such as new neighborhoods and shopping centers. In 2010, the state rejected Bend's bid to expand its boundary

to see the mountains due to

to accommodate growth

cloud cover, students pointed

through 2028, claiming, in

Several feet away, Stu Sumner, father of student

part, that the city requested too much land. Bend is now

at it again, with a renewed emphasis on proposing

asked to help in his classes.

Abby Sumner, used rocks in a soda bottle to show how lava rocksclean,filter and store snow melt that eventually

"The kids are asking good questions," she said. "They

redevelopment within the

knew what the reclamation fa-

cility was. I was impressed."

existing boundary as a means of needing less land in an expansion. SeeUGB /B3

See Water/B5

Pete Smith/The Bulletin

Paid Advertisement

Railroadcrossingwork onBaker Road

Grocery shoypers, deaware

BNSF will replace the railroad crossing on Baker Road through today. Baker Road will be closed to facilitate the work and to repave the crossing. All traffic in and out of Deschutes River Woods, west of the Baker Road railroad crossing, will be detoured onto Brookswood Boulevard for the duration of the project. Baker Road will be closed at Cinder Butte Road on the west side and Baker Court on the east side of Baker Road. ~ ~ ~ n fIr 8 r BEND

Bend's two Albertsons grocery stores are making a transition to Haggen supermarkets.

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B2

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

Evxxr TODAY SENIOR DAY:Freeadmission for anyone 65 and older; 9 a.m.; HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/senior-day or 541-382-4754. HIGHTEA IN BEND FOR PINCC: Featuring a presentation by Lauren Elliott Mullens, who volunteered with PINCC last summer in Cameroon, Africa, including a silent auction with items from local vendors and live music; 3:30 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance, $30; Chow Restaurant, 1110 NW Newport Ave., Bend; www. bend-hightea.squarespace.com or 830-312-0272. LAURA IVANCIE: Thesoulful alt-folk artist performs, with Tim Snider; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "BACKSTREETBOYS: SHOW 'EM WHATYOU'REMADEOF": A behind-the-scenes look at the popular boy band; 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. THE ENGLISHBEAT:TheEnglish ska reggae band performs, with Nice Privates; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; $37 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. THE MOTHERSHIP: Thealt-rock band from Seattle performs, with Dirty Streets; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

THURSDAY 50TH ANNIVERSARYOFCENTRAL OREGON COMMUNITYCOLLEGE: A celebration of COCC's"Past, Present and Future," the 50th anniversary of the Bend campus, featuring tours,

Redmond

ENm a

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

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

prizes, refreshments, kids activities and a celebration honoring the Coats family; 4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-770. "GUEENS OFTHE ROLEO": Join the Deschutes Historical Museum for the Bend screening of "Queens of the Roleo" as part of Historic Preservation Month; 6 p.m.; $10; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; www.deschuteshistory.org or 541-389-1813.

541-419-5558. ENSEMBLEPARADISO: The Los Angeles-based group with piano, violin, and cello performs, with HDCM founder and violinist Isabelle Senger; 7 p.m.; $35, $10 for students and children; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. CHANDLER P:The local hip-hop artist performs, with Big Price, Kid Cody, Jon-E, Kid Rubix, EYEMC,Ron Hughes and more; 7 p.m.; $2 plus fees,$10forVIP; Domino Room,51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com or 541-388-1106. MO LEVERETT:The Christian folk artist performs; 7 p.m.; free; Grace Reformed Presbyterian Church, 62162 Hamby Road, Bend; www. moleverett.com or 541-948 6212. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "THE IMITATIONGAME":A showing of the film with eight

OUR JOURNEY WITHFOOD: Tammera J. Karr, Ph.D., will speak on nutrition; 6:30 p.m.; A.R. Bowman Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., Prineville; www.bowmanmuseum. org or 541-447-3715. ASHER FULERO BAND: The psychedelic-rock band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. AN EVENINGWITH ELLEN GOODMAN:Featuring the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Ellen Goodman, discussing end-of-life wishes of loved ones; 7 p.m.; free, ticket required; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 just as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "VENUS IN FUR": Part of the Black Box series, a playwright seeks an actress for his adaptation of a classic tale; 7:30 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors and students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "DRIVING MISS DAISY": The play, shot during its Australian tour, featuring Angela Lansbury, James Earl Jones and BoydGaines; 7:30

design and pre-construction work at Evergreen Elementa-

Continued from B1 "(Juniper) is bleeding us $400,000 a year," Endicott said. "I support ... anything thatgetsus more exposure, visitors and rounds played

ry School.The former school is being transformed into Redmond's new City Hall. The $300,000 does not represent an increase in the $9 million project, Neff said, just out there." a shifting of money from next Councilors also p assed year's budget to the 2014-15 a budget amendment for budget as pr e -construction the 2014-15 fiscal year that work is ahead ofschedule. moved $300,000 from the The mayor and City Coungeneral fund to the capital cil started Tuesday's meeting project fund to help finance honoring the winners of Red-

AcademyAward nominations;

Submitted photo

The Freeway Revival, a classic rock and blues band, will play at10 at The Astro Loungeon Friday night. p.m.; $18; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents. com or 844-462-7342.

or 541-419-0111.

TONY G.AND ALEX RIOS:Tony G.,co-founderofBend Comedy, will perform, with Portland-based comedianAlex Rios;8 p.m.;$8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com

"SEUSSICAL": B.E.A.T. Theatre presents a musical based on the words of Dr. Seuss; 7 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students 18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or

FRIDAY

mond's "If I were mayor ..." been at odds for the past year contest. Byranna Marlatt, the over the Redmond Airport's middle school essay winner, updated minimum standards, readher proposal to the coun- though a negotiateddeal is in

7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. "TRUEWEST": A tragicomedy that involves two estranged brothers reconnecting in their mother's home after years of separation; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "VENUS IN FUR": Part of the Black Box series, a playwright seeks an actress for his adaptation of a classic tale; 7:30 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors and students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend;

www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. THE FREEWAY REVIVAL: The

the works, according to Endicott and Butler General Manager Kurt Newton.

classic rock and blues band performs; 10 p.m.; $3; TheAstro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.

SATURDAY "SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T. Theatre presents a musical based on the words of Dr. Seuss; 2 and 7 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for students18 and younger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. DINNER AND DANCE: Featuring a prime rib dinner, live music by Dave and Melody Hill, to benefit theVFW Post;5:30 p.m.;$20, registration requested; VFWHall, 1836 SW Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-526-1371. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Molly Gloss will present her newest novel, "Falling from Horses"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Spnngs Books, 422 SW Sixth Street, Redmond; 541-526-1491. 2015CENTRAL OREGON FILM FESTIVAL (COFF):A family-friendly festival for local filmmakers. We encourage filmmakers of all ages to learn the craft of filmmaking and share their films with the community; 6:30 p.m.;

TerrebonneAssembly of God

church- Main AV room,379 NW Rimrock Way, Terrebonne; www.

centraloregonshowcase.comor 541-806-3268. STEVE POLTZANDGRANTLEE PHILLIPS:The Americana folk artists perform; 7 p.m.; $20 plus fees in advance, $10 for youth; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedysetin PompeiiA.D.79A.D. as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626.

cil's next regularly scheduled meeting is May 26.

The Redmond City Coun-

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletin.com

cil and the public, advocat-

ing for more soup kitchens,a job-shadowing program for

IctmorelhanSIE I fIIIyoml-esehssl.

teens and a new community

center. Notably, during its open session, the council did not

discuss or take any action involving Butler Aircraft, the air port's aviation-service pro-

vider. Butler and the city have ee sj A

NEws OF REcoRD the 400 block of NWSixth Street. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at10:26 a.m. May 9, in the Vehiclecrash — Anaccident was area of U.S. Highway 97andSW reported at 5:18 p.m.May 5, in the The Bulletin will update items in the Highland Avenue. area of NWFifth Street and NW Police Log whensuch arequest DUII —Bobby JoeThompson, 54, Dogwood Avenue. is received. Anynewinformation, was arrested on suspicion of driving Theft — A theft was reported at 7:19 such as the dismissal of charges or under the influence of intoxicants at acquittal, must be verifiable. For more p.m. May 5, in the200 block of SE 12:32 a.m. May10, in the 2700 block Sixth Street. information, call 541-633-2117. of SW TimberAvenue. Theft — A theft was reported at 7:20 p.m. May 5, i n t he 3000 bl ock of SW BEND POLICE Juniper Avenue. BEND FIRE RUMS DEPARTMENT Vehicle crash — Anaccident was Friday reported at 6:59 a.m. May 6, in the DUII — BurkeRossKennedy, 33, was area of SW11th Street andSW 8:28 a.m.— Cooking fire, confined to arrested on suspicion of driving under Highland Avenue. container, 2551 NEHarvey Lane. the influence of intoxicants at 8:38 DUII — Domi n go Manuel Garci a , 55, 12:01 p.m.— Building fire, 19930 p.m. May 8, in thearea of NW12th was arrested onsuspicion of driving Limelight Drive. Street and NWGalveston Avenue. under the influence of intoxicants at 19 — Medical aid calls. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was 12:09 p.m. May 6, in the2000 block of Saturday reported entered at 2:20 p.m. May10, SW 27th Street. in the 62000 block of NE27th Street. 4:02 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:01 18575 Century Drive. 7:10a.m. — Passenger vehicle fire, REDMOND POLICE p.m. May 6, in the2100 block of SW 1275 SEThird St. Deerhound Avenue. DEPARTMENT 2:48p.m. — Unauthorized burning, Burglary — A burglary was reported 19624 Manzanita Lane. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was at 3:56 p.m. May 6, in the1800 block reported stolen at 3:30 p.m. Sept. 2, of NW Jackpine Place. 22 —Medical aid calls. 2012, and anwas arrest made at 2:12 Criminal mischief — Anact of Sunday p.m.May 4,inthe3700 blockofSW criminal mischief was reported andan 12:31 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 34th Street. arrest made at6:58 p.m. May 6, in the 63227 Service Road. Unauthorized use — Avehicle was 2800blockofSW PumiceAvenue. 9:09 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, reported stolen at 8 p.m.Feb. 4,and Theft —A theft was reported at 2:10 143 SWCentury Drive. an arrest was madeat1:10 a.m. May6, a.m. May 7, inthe 200 block of SE 23 — Medical aid calls. in the 600 blockof SW29th Street. Sixth Street. Theft — Atheft was reported andan Theft —A theft was reported at10:15 arrest made at5:34 p.m. May 2, in the REDMOND FIRE a.m. May 7, inthe100 block of SW 3100 block of S. U.S.Highway 97. Sixth Street. RUNS DUII — RogerGenePrusak, 66, was Vehicle crash — Anaccident was arrested on suspicion of driving under reported at 6:16 p.m. May 7, inthe area May4 the influence of intoxicants at12:21 of NE Fifth Street and NENegus Way. 4:58 p.m.— Brush or brush-anda.m. May 4, in thearea of SWCanal grass mixture fire, 1226 SW 28th St. Theft — A theft was reported at 8:23 Boulevar dandSW Salmon Avenue. a.m. May 8, in the600 block of SW 13 — Medical aid calls. Burglary — A burglary was reported Rimrock Way. May5 at10:47 a.m. May 4, in the2900 block Theft — A theft was reported andan of SW 25th Street. 6 — Medical aid calls. arrest made at1:39 p.m. May 8, in the May6 Vehicle crash — An accident was 300 block of NWOakTree Lane. reportedat11:57a.m. May4,inthe 11 — Medical aid calls. Theft — A theft was reported at 2:34 2400 block of S. U.S.Highway97. Thursday p.m. May 8, in the800 block of SW Theft — Atheft was reported andan Evergreen Avenue. 4:21p.m.— Building fire, 604 SE arrest made at2:22 p.m. May 4, in the Theft — A theft was reported at 4:30 Evergreen Ave. 4500blockofSW ElkhornAvenue. p.m.May 8,inthe3000 blockofNW 12 — Medical aid calls. Vehicle crash — An accident was Greenwood Avenue. Friday reported at 3:22 p.m. May 4, in the300 Theft — A theft was reported at 6:40 block of NWOakTree Lane. 4:59 p.m.— Brush or brush-andp.m.May 8,inthe2800 blockofSW grass mixture fire, area ofSW35th Theft — A theft was reported at 6 p.m. Indian Circle. Street. May 4, in the 2200 block of NWCedar Unlawful entry — A vehicle was Avenue. p.m.— Smoke odor reported, reported entered at 5:49a.m. May 9,in 10:48 area of SWQuartz Avenue. Vehicle crash — An accident was the 700 block of NELarch Avenue. reported at12:52 p.m. May 5, in the 12 — Medical aid calls. Criminal mischief — Anact of 2400 block of S. U.S.Highway97. criminal mischief was reported at 8:05 Saturday Criminal mischief — Anact of a.m. May 9, in the300block of SW 10:57 a.m.— Smoke odor reported, criminal mischief was reported at 2:08 35th Street. 7950 NW LonePine Road. p.m. May5,inthe800blockofW. Unauthorizeduse — A vehi c le was 13 — Medical aid calls. Antler Avenue. reported stolen at 9:06a.m. May 9, in Sunday Unauthorized use — Avehicle was the1400 block of NEFourth Street. 9 — Medical aid calls. reported stolen at 3:27 p.m. May 5,in

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

ma essri eswi ro 0 By Anthony Rimel

walking," Hurst said. There are a number of ways

Corvallis Gazette-Times

CORVALLIS — I f

y o u've

that ATRIAS' design princi-

seen films of a robot, walking,

ples could be used, he said: to

most of the time it walks like

create better prosthetic limbs

... well ... a robot.

and to make exoskeletons that could be used for heavy lifting,

Traditional bipedal robots

take steps fairly slowly and deliberately, with "knees" that

or to increase the mobility of

are permanently bent. Such

But it also could be used to create robots that are better able to function in human environments and rough terrain.

people who use wheelchairs.

robots easily could be tripped. Also, the stiff motion requires a lot of energy, which limits how long a bipedal robot can operate.

"The whole (robotics) community is going to move forward very quickly to build

But the researchers behind

a new walking robot designed and built at Oregon State Uni-

things that are better than

versity say their robot is both

more efficient and mobile than any that's come before it, because its design is based on a study of the motion of humans and ground-running birds.

Andy Cripe/The Corvallis Gazette-Times via The Associated Press

Andrew Peekema, 26, prepares the walking robot for a test at

Oregon State University in Corvallis. Researchers behind the new

walking robot designed and built at Oregon State University ssy their robot is both more efficient and mobile than any that's come The robot's steps are boun- before it, because its design is based on a study of the motion of cy. Even standing, it bounces humans snd ground-running birds. from one leg to the other in a constant movement. And the constant motion enables it to Carnegie Mellon University H urst said that the fl u i d walk over different terrains, worked with Monica Dailey, motion of walking animals re-

uphill and even over obstacles. a researcheratthe Royal Vet- tains a lot of energy, but other "This is the first and only erinary College, to study the walking robots can't maintain robot to replicate the physics movement of humans and that kinetic energy. In a news of human and animal locomo- birds, such as ostriches and release on ATRIAS, OSU nottion," said Jonathan Hurst, an guinea fowl. ed that ATRIAS is three times "When we saw something as energy efficient as any othOSU professor of mechanical engineering and director of that is the same across many er bipedal walking robot. the university's Dynamic Ro- sizes of animals we knew that Hurst said ATRIAS, which botics Laboratory. it is something fundamental," was funded by a four-year, $4.7 The robot is called ATRIAS, he said. million grant from DARPA, is short for Assume the Robot is Unlike other walking ro- not a consumer product, but a Sphere, and it is in daily test- bots, ATRIAS does not use it does lay the foundation for ing in preparation for a major cameras to react to obstacles. future robotic development. demonstration at the Defense I nstead, Hurst said, it i s a ATRIAS was designed and Advanced Research Projects "self-stable" system that is de- built over three years at OSU, Agency's robotics competition signed to react and balance to along with two similar robots June 5 and 6. Hurst said researchers at OSU and their partners at the

its terrain as it walks. The ro-

University of Michigan and

use it.

bot's legs act like springs that absorb kinetic energy and re-

that since have been sent to OSU's partner institutions. "This is a scientific tool to

this," he said. He gave the example of a robot sent into a radioactive area after the March 2011 Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear disaster

in Japan. The robot got stuck on some rough terrain. He said a robot that could walk

like ATRIAS would have been able to better respond in an area that would be dangerous

for humans. "Do you send a human firefighter into a burning building, or a robot?" said Hurst. Hurst said ATRIAS still is

being developed and modified incrementally, and the researchers believe that they eventually will get ATRIAS to

the point where it can run, not just walk. Andy Abate, now a doctoral student i n m echanical e n gineering, b e gan working on ATRIAS as an undergraduate. "It's just incredibly cooL It's

why I'm glad I came to Oregon State. It's a research institution, and stuff like this is con-

stantly going on, and you can investigate and demonstrate get involved with it."

AROUND THE STATE NO-CuuteSt Plea —A Roseburg maninvolved in the 2012 killing of his grandfather pleaded nocontest to aggravated murder. The Roseburg News-Review reports that 25-year-old Jonathan Lackey also pleaded nocontest Monday to first-degree arson andpleaded guilty to five counts of attempting to commit murder. Aspart of the deal, Lackey will serve life in prison without possibility of parole, plus an additional 210months. Lackey is accused of shooting at officers who came to question him atCasaLomaMotel about his 71-year-old grandfather Richard Casebeer's death. Casebeer's bodywas found inside his homeafter a housefire that police investigated and ruled a homicide, identifying Lackey as a person of interest. Lackey fired two dozen shots at detectives from his motel room. Noonewaswounded.

Girl found iu Oreguu — Police saidamissing California teenager who met aWashington state manonline has turned up at a McDonald's on the Oregoncoast andreported she'd been abducted. Police said the15-year-old girl from Sanger,California, and the48-year-old man parted Mondaynight when hewalked awayfrom his pickup truck and she walked into theAstoria restaurant to notify authorities. The deputy chief in Astoria, Eric Halverson, saidTuesdaythat the two met through social media. Police aren't releasing other details of the investigation. A police statementTuesdaysaid that Russell Wayne Deviney is from Everett, Washington, and is sought as a"suspected abductor." The girl was placed in protective custody.

Body found iu Gresham — GreshamPolice said aman's body was found lying on astreet Monday night after reports of gunshots in the area.TheOregonian reports that detectives searched thequiet suburban street sceneearly Tuesday, knocking on doors to ask residents if they heardanything. Detectives said theyarewaiting on a search warrant for a house atthe scenethat might have information that would help identify a suspect. Theyhavenot releasedthevictim's name.

Woman will serve time in mental institution —AnOregon City-area womanwhostabbed herhusband after deciding he was possessed bySatanhas been placed under state mental health supervision for 20 years. TheOregonian reports that 62-year-old Helen Vendela Fricke wassentenced Monday. AClackamas County Circuit Judge ruled she will be supervised bythe state Psychiatric Security Review Board. Shepleadedguilty except for insanity April 7 to attempted murder. Court records showthat Fricke has beendiagnosed with bipolar disorder andwas under aphysician's care, but her medications were inadequate, leading to delusions. Prosecutors said Fricke buried a butcher knife in her husband's back inApril 2014. PruteSterS iu POrtland —Protesters in southeast Portland are calling for safety improvements for cyclists and pedestrians after a cyclist was seriously injured by a vehicle. The Oregonian reports that demonstrators took to afour-lane street Monday night, circled the block on bikesand repeatedly traversed crosswalks, prompting angry exchanges betweenmotorists and protesters. — From wire reports

Former so ware entrepreneur isnow Oregon'stop DUIofficer By Everton Bailey Jr. The Oregonian

himself "what if." H e was j ust n amed t h e

WEST LINN — A f ter cir- state's top intoxicated driving ding therestaurants and bars enforcement officer. He made along West Linn's Willamette 65 arrestsof impaired drivers Falls Drive four times, Officer in 2014, one more than all of Jim Abeles spots a young guy the other two dozen officers driving away from a sports pub. in West Linn's patrol division He notes the gray Toyota combined. "It might sound corny, but Yaris is going 33 mph in a 20mph zone and follows the car it's really about making a diffor a mile until he flashes his ferencefor me," he said."Life patrol car's lights and theyboth is just so short, and I really felt pull into a parking lot at Fields like doing something to try Bridge Park. and have a positive impact. I It's dusk on a Friday. The was doing a little bit of that in driver, a 25-year-old man from my white-collar job, but I got so Wilsonville, tells Abeles that he much more of that now, and it's hasn't had anything to drink. so satisfying." He later claims he had one Back at Fields Bridge Park, drink. the driver steps out of the car to The officer — bald with a take field sobriety tests, leaving mustache and botharms cov- a friend inside. The smell of alered in colorful tattoos — is cohol is pungent from at least 6 a long way from his days as a feet away.

other two.

"I think you've had more than one beer to drink, and I

ambitions. "It was the '80s," he said. "I thought I wanted to be rich."

He also wanted to follow in les tells the man, asking him to the footst eps of his grandfacome clean. ther, who worked for most of The passenger in the Toyota his life in the newspaper induslets Abeles know that the driv- try in Chicago, where Abeles er had three tall glasses of beer. gfew up. Abeles and another officer arFor the next 11 years, Abeles rest the driver and bring him to worked as a manager in marthe police department. keting, advertising and classifieds departments at the Chicathink you know it, too," Abe-

Ride-alongimpressions

While an art major at Port-

go Sun-Times, San Francisco Bay Guardian and Willamette

land's Lewis & Clark College Week. in the mid-1980s, Abeles went In 1999, he founded Prel, a on a ride-along with a Port- company that designs software land police officer for a sociol- to manage newspaper and ogy class. From the back seat magazine content. The busiof apatrolcar for eighthours ness grew to about 15 employstraight, he observed how offi- ees, and Abeles felt great satcers responded to calls in north isfaction in creating a product Portland. andbeing his ownboss. Seeing cops interact with But every once in a while, software entrepreneur. Abeles tests how well the people in a different way than Abeles said, he thought back Three years ago, Abeles 25-year-old can follow a pen- what he saw on TV made an to his college ride-along and left his job as CEO of Port- light with his eyes, walk in a impression, Abeles said. He wondered if it was too late to land-based Prel at age 47 to straight line while making sure thought it could be a great way become a cop. pursue a near 30-year dream of his toe and heel touch and bal- for him to help people himself. Then Abeles bid on a ridebecoming a cop. ance on one leg. But by the time he gradu- along with Portland police at Now 50, Abeles said he's

The driver fails the first test

glad he no longer has to ask but appears to do well on the

ated in 1987 with a bachelor's degree in art, he had other

He ended up joining Mike by a police department, maybe Stradley, a Portland gang en- he was too old to start training, forcement officer who is now a West Linn lieutenant, on his

rounds about five years ago. The experience was just as

exhilarating as it was more than two decades ago.

he thought. But he at least had totry. "I got to a certain point in my mid-40s when I thought, this is

my last chance,"hesaid.

Abeles was "the last per-

son who I would have thought wanted to be a cop," his wife sald.

His background was in business, he enjoyed being able to

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create things, and he had never

fired a gun, she recalled. After going on another ridealong with the West Linn Po-

lice Department, Abeles began getting into shape and applying for police jobs. Maybe he wouldn't get hired

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Emarald HEARTH, SPA & PATIO

UGB Continued from B1 Eben Fodor, a Eugene-based community p l anner, t h inks that's a good start. Fodor will

give a talk tonight titled "Reframing the Urban Growth Debate," where he will talk about

Ifyou go What:"Reframing the Urban Growth Debate," a talk by Eben Fodor, aEugene-basedcommunityplanner. When:Registration begins at 6:30 tonight. The talk begins at 7 p.m. Where:Old Stone Church, 157 NWFranklin Ave. RSVP:Toensure available seating, RSVPat www.fodor.eventbrite. com before the event.

some of the advantages that come with keeping a city small and compact. The event is hosted by Central Oregon Land- idea that growth is improving Watch, a nonprofit involved in employment conditions," he the boundary expansion pro- said. "In faster-growing comcessthat advocatesforconser- munities, we tend to have highvation (See "If you go"). er unemployment rates, and "The reasonthe debate needs people make less money per to bereframed isbecausewe've capita than in slower growing been talking about it for the

commullItles.

same way for decades," Fodor

There are upsides to growth, Fodor noted, induding its ability to create a more diverse

said in an interview last week. "In most cities, they encourage

allthe growth they canpossibly get and use every tool to get as muchgrowth aspossible. That's a pretty distant extreme, and I

community. However, Fodor

think there are good reasons to

and what every other town

pursue growth calming." Fodor has identified what he calls the "myths of growth," including the idea that growing providesmore jobs for people

has aswe become more ofthe same-ville."

argues growth can also lead to uniformity, saying, "You see the Wendy's, Pier One Imports

In Bend, the argument has

beenmadethat thecityneedsto grow to lower the cost of hous-

ing and to increase the supply "I'm very sympathetic with of rental properties, which are the need for people to have jobs, currently hard to come by, as but the data doesn't support the the vacancyrate hovers around in the community.

I

"It's a big, complex topic, and it tends to emerge in desirable areas, because housing price is related to demand, which is a

function of the desirability of a community," Fodor said. "If you want cheap housing, you can look to undesirable things and there they will be. But no one

wants to create an undesirable community.

(

'

I

"You have to look at what 1 percent.

Fodor said land availability isn't the key issue with combat-

~P

you can actually control. You cannotsolve the growth pres-

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all us old-fashioned, but we're troubled by the notion that among those setting the rules for marijuana markets in Oregon is a handful of folks who have had serious run-ins with the law over weed. Surely less tarnished "experts" could have been found. The Oregon Liquor Control Commission r ecently appointed more than 30 Oregonians to a trio of committees and subcommittees that will make recommendations about what legal marijuana markets should look like when shops open next year. Many are lawyers, though there are also a county commissioner, policemen and the Clackamas CountySheriffin thegroup. And there are several who have been charged with,and in some cases convicted of, felonies related to the drug. Some have had convictions expunged, and some have seen charges dropped, as was the case in which one member was charged with delivery of a controlled substance to a minor. Tom Towslee, spokesman for the OLCC, told Bulletin reporter Taylor W. Anderson that agency officials have vetted the candidates carefully and are fully aware of the legal problems some of them have had. They're the best people for the job, he said.

We'll grant that they might be experts. Dr. Brent Kenyon, as an example, is the founder of a Medford medical collective that has been one of the biggest prescribers of medical marijuana through the years. He himself has a history of possession and manufacturing of controlled substances,among other things. Clearly he knows his way around weed — and aroundthe laws that have governed the stuff — better than most. But his record would lead almost anyone to suspect that the good doctor decided long ago that the law, at least where marijuana is concerned, doesnotapplyto him. The same can be said for other appointees who've had weed-related legal difficulties through the years. The pot committee appointees are a surprise and a disappointment. Would the OLCC ask bootleggers to help it work out Oregon's rules on alcohol? Why, then, should demonstratedscofflaws be asked to write the rules on marijuana'?

The Bulletin's May19 election endorsements Here are The Bulletin's editorial Director, Zone 5, Charley Miller endorsements for the May 19 elecLa Pine Park & R e creation tion in contested races. District: Ballots must be returned to your Director, Position 4, Gary Gorlocal county clerk's office by 8 p.m. don; Director, Position 5, Tobias on Election Dayto be counted. Wilson Redmond School District: Crook County Director, Position 1, Rhonda EtCrook County Park & Recreation nire; Director, Position 4, Jane Allen; District: Director, Position 5, John Land Director, Position 4 , Kim Sisters School District: Kambak Director, Position 2, Lachlan Deschutes County Leaver; Director, Position 4, Stephen Bend Park & Recreation District: King Director, Position 1, Brady Fuller Black Butte Ranch Service District local option levy: Yes

jeffersonCounty

JeffersonCounty School Board: Director, Position 4, Courtney Central Oregon Community Snead; Director, Position 5, Stanley College: Ray Sullivan

'Facts'on t e campus pan IN MY VIEW

By MIke Walker In response to The Bulletin's plea for the debate to "stick to the facts,"

when the economy rebounded. Two reliable sources indicate the rebound

OSU-Cascades hopes to have a stand- didn't occur until 2013, but OSU-Cashere are a few questions with relative alone campus by 2025 (15years) but is cades' property search began in 2011, "facts" which OSU-Cascades needs not likely to open its first building un- only months after the HEAT report to addtess. How can the pumice mine til fall 2018 at the earliest. In my opin- was finalized. More importantly, did be part ofthecampus?OSU-Cascades ion, OSU-Cascades will not be able to The Bulletin queslionwhya' teboundpresented its proposed p~ of achieveits2025schedulebecauseitde- ing economy" would justify abandonthe two parcels on SW Chandler Av- toured from the well-conceived HEAT ing months of work by the region's enue to a committee consisting of "road map" and its example of seeking leaders andcommunityo only one student, a retired OSU vice the input of the region's leaders and Should our legislators place much president and an OSU department communitybefore selecting a site. faith in OSU-Cascades'plantiing'? head plus a committee chairman who Will the Chandler campus ever be a First, OSU-Cascades disqualified had to abstain from voting because stand-alone four-yearuniversity? the Juniper Ridge site promoted by he represented one of the sellers. The OSU-Cascade daims its "rapid many past city councils. The next failretired vice president questioned the expansion" plan is better, but after ure was the purckm of the five Mill remediation estimate but was assured four years, its April 28, 2014 site plan Point buildings, which was followed by OSU-Cascades the sale would not indudes only one funded academic by the faihre to find any other willproceedifthe costexceeded the fair building. This one funded building ing building seller. Finally, it has paid market value. A detailed peer review has 3,320square feetless dassroom/ $500,000 to date for a pumice mine it and cost estimate showed the cost to lab space than exists today in the can't afford. Howmuch ctedibilitywill be over three times the fair market Cascades Hall building. Meanwhile, OSU-Cascades have with our legislavalue. Whoever did the homework to OSU-Cascades daims it needs to va- tors when it asks for additional fundjustify the nearly $8 million purchase cate the Cascades Hall building to ing for a plangoingnowhere fasP. did apoor job. make its plan work. Its plan sounds Justhowmuchhomeworkdid OSUHow did OSU-Cascades arrive at more like a slow contraction than a Cascade do on alternatives'? OSU-Cascades could have avoidthe condusion the HEAT report is a rapidexpansion. Afundingrequest for slowprocess'? the second building was not placed in ed this entire debate by following the This report is the high-water mark thetieroneofcapitalconstructionproj- example of the HEAT. Instead of inin community planning for Central ects for the 2015-17 legislative budget. duding the elected leaders and the Oregon's higher education advance- Is it reasonable for the plan prepared community, the site selection process ment. Twenty-four of our region's lead- by 24 of our tegion's leaders with 16 was an exdusive process. Meanwhile, ers with 16communityoutteach meet- conimunity outreach meetings to be the public has still only seen a few ings planned for the advancement of "abandoned" for a plan approved by one- or two-sentence condusions from the region's higher education in this only astudent, atetired OSUvicepres- OSU-Cascades disqualifying alterna2010 report. One of the objectives of ident and a OSU department head'? tivesites. the HEAT's workplanwas to complete On March 26, (OSU-Cascades Vice — Mike Walker lives in Bend a "stand-alone four-year university" President Becky) Johnson was quotei and is a civil engineerand a graduate within 20 to 30 years. Meanwhile, as saying the report was abandoned of Oregon State University.

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. Weedlt submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnIsts. WrIters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Hea t care act rema in insurance mar et By Megan McArdle Bloomberg News

Two years in, there's a lot we still

don't know about Obamacare. How many people will it end up insuring? What will the premiums look like?

How much will the program cost? Some of these questions won't be answered satisfactorily for a while, if

ever. Even the most basic data point, on how many people have gained coverage, comes from Gallup polls and is a little murky. The percentage of people saying they don't have health insurance has fallen from about 17 as

enrollment kicked off to about 12 now. The easing of the recession has presumably helped that. Other answers, however, will come into focus in the next year or so. The most important being: What will the

market for individual insurance look like once Obamacare is in full effect? Policies for 2016 will be the first

insurer fees, hopefully preventing the The first is, of course, the cost to the dread problem known as the "death taxpayer: As premiums rise, so will spiral. "However,asRepublicans com- the subsidies we pay. And the second plained that this amounted to a slush is what this might portend for the fund to pay off insurers for keeping structure of the insurance market. premiums low (at taxpayer expense), There's already quite a bitofconcern the administration promised to make that enrollment might be stalling out, sure the risk corridors didn't pay out with people who get huge subsidies more than they took in — and the eagerly snapping up the product (who "Cromnibus" budget resolution in De- doesn't like things that are practically cember wrote that into law. free?) but higher-income consumers, A new report from Standard & who get smaller subsidies or none at Poor's shows just how much differ- all, saying "thanks but no thanks" to ence that could make: SkP expects the relatively pricey high-deductible there will be enough money to pay 10 plans on offer. percent of claims. This suggests that at What will the insurance market least a substantial minority of insurers look like under those conditions? We are expecting to lose a lot of money on can sketch some broad probabilities: the policies they have already written. • If most of an insurers' customers The typical response of insurers who are subsidized, pressure on prices will lose money is to raise premiums in fu- come from the government rather ture years. There's some evidence that than consumers. Folks whose premithis is already happening. ums and cost-sharing are capped as a Oregon's insurers have filed their percentage of their income are going 2016 raterequests, and they're large. to shop on benefits rather than price. More than half of the insurers in the Regulators, of course, will want lower market are requesting double-digit prices and will bring the full force of increases, with one insurer trying to their powers down on insurers to get raise rates by more than 40 percent. them. But this will lead to the sort of Oregon's current moment is just a tortured dynamic that appears so of-

onespriced afterinsurershave a full year of claims data. The prices will increasingly also reflect the disappearance of a safety net: the reinsurance and risk corridor programs that were designed to protect insurers from unexpectedly high daims. As written small sample, of course. But it raises

to stay in the market. We've already seen afew insurersfailor leave,and

groups — and so far, that's what they

they tend to be smaller ones — start-

dle-class program that was sold to the public, that will eventually become

up co-ops or this elderly Wisconsin firm. This makes pretty good sense. For abig health care firm, exchange policies are a tiny portion of revenue, sothecompany can affordtosellthese policies at or below cost to stay on

the good side of Health and Human Services. • Writing exchange policies will be a riskier business. Thanks to the law of largenumbers, bigger insurance

are — rather than the broad mid-

clear to voters. Those voters will look

at the money being transferred from their pockets and into insurance subsidies and ask whether those subsidies couldn't be trimmed abit.

• The subsidy caps could put the

whole market at risk. Most consumers

seem to be interested in exchange policies only if the government picks up most of the cost. Right now, that's not a

pools are more stable and profitable

hugeproblem forconsumers,because insurance pools. If you insure only the subsidies cap premiums at a per1,000 people, an unluckily high num- centage of income. However, starting ber of cancer patients or neo-nates can in 2019, if exchange subsidies exceed break the bank. If you insure millions, 0.54 percent of GDP, the subsidy foryou have a little more cushion.

• The exchanges will require continued infusion of state funds or high fees. Exchanges enjoy considerable economies of scale, which allowyou to amortizehardware and development costs across lots and lots of policies.

mula shifts, so that future increases in

subsidies are pegged to the consumer price index — which means that con-

sumers would have to pay more out of pocket, and the taxpayers' risk would shrink. Overall, this is a potential threat to

Sizeisnoguaranteethatan exchange the future of the insurance market. But can cover its costs, of course. Even as yet, it is only a highly speculative Covered California is far from being threat. We'll know more as the risk-adself-sustaining. But the smaller the in- justment programs begin to expire, ten in the public choice literature: Reg- surance pool, the more subsidies the insurers get more experience in setting into the health reform law, these pro- the concern that premiums are about ulators will care a lot about price and exchanges will require. rates, and states begin to publish more • The exchanges will be more po- data on what insurers plan to charge. grams didn't have to be budget-neu- to rise a lot higher and faster than specific metrics, not a lot about the actral, meaning they could spend more many people were expecting. tualpreferences ofconsumers. litically vulnerable. If exchanges — Megan McArdle is a columnist • Largerinsurers are m ore likely are mostly a transfer to low-income on subsidies than they took in from This is of concern for two reasons. for Bloomberg.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES

B5

• st.

FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Roy Willis Rose, of La Pine Jan. 9, 1935 - May 7, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Per Roy's request, no services will be held.

Beatrice "Betty" Elizabeth Hall

(Lanxon),of Bend Jan. 27, 1924 - May 8, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the Family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Service's will be held at Brush Prairie Cemetery, in Vancouver, WA at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org, The American Cancer Society, PO Box 22718, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 73123-1718.

Morris 'Ole'

Olafson

Fsb. 17, 1933- April 15, 2015 Morris ' Ole' O l afson o f L a Pine, passed away o n April 15, 2015, he was 82. A memorial service w i l l be held Saturday, May 16, 2015, at 11:00 a.m., at High L akes C h r i stian C h u r c h , located at 52620 Day Rd., in La Pine. O le was born i n M i l n o r , North D a k ota, o n F e b r ua ry 17, 1 933, t o J o h n &

Celia (Chetney) Olafson.

In 1941, the family moved t o Portland, Oregon. He w as a gr a d u at e o f t he Class of 1951, at Roosevelt H igh Sch o o l . Sh or t l y t hereafter h e e n l i sted i n t he U S A ir For c e , a n d p roudly served hi s c o u n t ry four y e ars d u r ing t h e Korean War. After his service, h e m a r r ie d S h i r l ey Marie Hobaugh on April4, 1959, in Portland, Oregon. T hey w e r e b l e ssed w i t h two children, a son and a daughter. O le w o r ke d f o r A m e r i c an Steel an d S u p pl y i n Portland. In 1968, the family moved to Eugene where he became sales manager, then general manager of the Eugene plant. After ret iring i n 1 9 91, Ole a n d Shirley moved to La Pine. O le loved t o p l a y g o l f , s ing out loud, work i n h i s w ood s h op , s p en d t i m e with his family, and watch t he O r e gon D u c k s p l a y f ootball! Ol e w a s a l s o a m ember o f Hi g h L ak e s Christian Church, and the La Pine Chapter of Band of Brothers. Survivors i nc l u d e h i s w ife, Shirley o f L a P i n e , OR; son, John Ol afson of Redmond, OR ; d a u g hter,

Margaret (husband, Hugh)

Boyd of Portland, OR; sist er, C a r o l in e S c h l it t o f Sherwood, OR; two grandchildren, M i c h e ll e an d Brittany Ol af s on ; one n iece, D e bbi e S c h l it t o f M olalla, O R ; and one

nephew, Perry (wife, Debb ie) Schlitt o f W e s t L i n n , O R. He i s p r e c eded i n death by his parents. Contributions in honor of O le can b e m a d e t o t h e La Pine Band of Br others, 541-668-1125, l a p i n eband o fbrothers@gmail.com, o r H igh L ak e s Chr i s t i a n Church Missionary Work, 541-536-3333, 52620 Day R d , L a Pin e , OR 97739, www.highlakescc.org Baird M e m o r ia l C h a p el i n La P in e i s h o n ored t o serve Mr. Olafson's family.

Damon Winter/The New York Times file photo

William Zinsser's advice — write clearly, avoid jargon, use active verbs and make the reader think you enjoyed writing — became a

touchstone for generations of students. He died at home in Manhattan on Tuesday at age 92.

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Cascade Middle School sixth-graders Alana Cole, 11, from left, and Kacie Stafford, 12, along with

'On Writing Well' put joy in learning craft By Douglas Martin New York Times News Service

William Zinsser, awriter, edi-

think you enjoyed writing the piece. He conveyed that himself

tor andteacherwhosebook"On with livelyturns of phrase: "There's not much to be said Writing Well" sold more than 1.5 million copies by employing about the period except that his own litemry craftsmanship most writers don't reach it soon to urge darity, simplicity, brevi- enough," he wrote in "On Writty and humanity, diedTuesday ing Well." " Abraham Lincoln a n d at his home in Manhattan. He was92. Winston Churchill rode to gloHis wife of almost 60 years, ry on the back of the strong Caroline Fmser Zinsser, con- dedarative sentence," he wrote firmed the death.

in "Writing to Learn: How to Write and Think Clearly About

Zinsser wrote 19 books, taught at Yale and elsewhere, Any Subject at All" (1988). was dmma editor and movie

It added up to more fun than

critic for The New York Herald some readers might have exTribune and executive editor of pected. "You actually enjoy the Book-of-the-Month Club. reading it, rather than feeling But it was his role as an ar- likeyou're eatingyour spinach," biter of good writing that reso- Ronald Kovach wrote of a Zinsnated widely and deeply. "On ser book in The Writer magaWriting Well," published by zine in 2002. Harper & Row i n 1976, has

William Knowlton Zinsser gone through repeated editions, was born in Manhattan on Oct.

atleastfourofwhich weresub- 7, 1922. He escaped the urgings stantially revised to i n dude of his father to join the family's subjectssuch as new technolo- shellac business but could not gies (the word processor) and escape his mother's counsel new demogmphictrends (more thatbeing cheerful was a Chriswriters from o ther c ultural tian obligation. "It is because of her that I am traditions). It became a book that edi- cursed with optimism," he said tors and teachers encouraged in his autobiography. "On Writing Well" grew out writers to reread annually in the manner ofanother dassic of his teaching at Yale. Writing on the craft of writing, "The it was his wife's idea, he said. Elements of Style," by William They married in October 1955. Strunk and E.B. White.

Mark Singer, a staff writer for

ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around the world:

Peter Gay, 91: Historianwho achieved critical and commercial success from his writings about the Enlightenment and

Sigmund Freud. Died Monday at his home in Manhattan.

Tony Ayala Jr., 52: A boxing star before a 1983 rape conviction that led to the first of two

prison terms. Died Ibesday in San Antonio at a family-owned gym where he was trying to

writerly dos and don'ts; he used

world. They affect their environment, and they are affected by it." Kirin Stryker, sustainability educator at the Environmental Center

Water

Facility, the Outback Water

Continued from B1

ter Reclamation Facility are all under construction, which

lations of authorship, even sub-

school building, Stryker

prevented th e

showed kids the main wa-

ers from taking field trips to those facilities.

ter intake. A large map lay on the ground showing the different water lines leading

"He was a demon about dutter."

Singer p~ Zin s ser for guiding aspiring writers on the writer has to sell is not the sub- arduous path of finding their ject being written about, but own voice. "He certainly helped who he or she is," Zinsser wrote people avoid the pitfalls of tryin "On Writing Well." "I often ing to sound like something find myself reading with inter- they're not," he said. est about a topic I never thought Christopher Buckley, the would interest me — some sci-

political satirist, said in an in-

entific quest, perhaps. What

terview that he senses Zinsser perched on his shoulder like

holds me is the enthusiasm of the writer for his field." In an autobiography, "Writ-

ing About Your Life: A Journey Into the Past" (2004), Zinsser

said he did not find his writer's voice until he was in his 50s, when he wrote "On Writing

W ell." He had hoped to be per-

a parrot when he sits down to

write. Theparrot always says to look for needless verbiage. "It might not be an exaggeration to say that millions of words have been cut," Buckley said. "Doubtless, Bill would say, 'Ithinkyoumissed a few.'" Zinsser frequently received

ceived as"the urbane essayist or columnist or humorist," he letters from less famous writers,

said, but realized that his most

"It would be a more viscer-

al, aromatic experience if the kids could go to the reclama-

into and out of the school, which also supply surround- tion facility, but we can't go ing homes and businesses. into hard-hat areas," Stryker Kids giggled as she described sald. how the city uses chemicals Instead, the kids will walk like chlorine to kill fecal bac- to Farewell Bend and Rivteria in the water. Then they erbend parks next week snapped another photo, this to learn about stormwater. time of the main water in- Stryker hopes students can take, and headed inside. visit the Bridge Creek and Marshall High S chool sewage wastewater t r eatstudents participated in the ment facilities next year. "This class is important program this year, and all Cascade sixth-graders are because we take water for going through the program granted," Kacie Stafford, 11,

mation plant, and how water

COLLEGE NOTES The following students at Oregon State University were initiated Into the Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi: Sally Spencer, Marshall Allen, Brandlce Durfee, Valerie MccreadyandKelly Regan, all of Bend, Shawn Reece, Heather ByerandGuy George, all of Redmond, and Angella Newstrand, of Prinet/ille.

TEEN FEATS The following students have each won a$1,000 scholarship from Bigfoot Beverages of Bend: Gabrlelle Morales,Madras High

Budget ber Thomas Bahrman said there is a tension between

I make myself available," he wrote. "No hiding."

"Because of my moaning and groaning about what to

providing for students and acknowledging the reality

His advice was straightfor-

write and how to write it, my

that extra money from the

ward: Write dearly. Guard the message with your life. Avoid jargon and big words. Use active verbs. Make the reader

boyfriend gave me a copy of

Legislature might not come through, but that the high-

cause of death was given.

Fax: 541-322-7254

Continued from B1 Budget committee mem-

er PERS costs will. "We're

looking at some cuts that are going to be coming over the next couple of years," he sald. Meanwhile, enrollment

Bend, OR97708

School news: Itemsand announcements of general interest.

Contact: 541-383-0354, news©bendbulletin.com Studentprofiles: Know of a kid with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354, aspegman@bendbulletin. com

water problems now, so he

HunterDoullas

School, Hannah Johns, Redmond High School,Skyler Howe, Summit Hlgh School,Jeff Davies, Burns High School, and Hannah Anderson, Bend High School. To earn his Eagle Scout rank, Colin Burdsall,Troop 18 of Bend, organized a volunteer team Saturdayto clean up the trails and replace markers on the 640-acreStevens Road property nextto the Humane Society of Central Oregon. The property is used regularly by the community and shelter volunteers as a walking and running area for dogs. The EagleScout project also included donations from Miller Lumber.

See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!

See us also for: • Retractable Awnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio Shade Structures

s~a C~ssIC COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com

newsletter.

P.O. Box 6020

Story ideas

SCHOOL NOTES

ly become editor of the camp

Mail:Obituaries

bulletin@bendbulletin.

com

Visit Central Oregon's

do, Florida, who had recent-

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com

Other school notes: College announcements, military graduations or training completions, reunion announcements. Contact: 541-633-2117,

is used by individuals and can help change things for businesses for irrigation and the better when he's older. recreation. — Reporter: 541-383-0354, The Bridge Creek Intake j rockow@bendbulletin.com

knew." "Now, whatever I write about,

Phone: 541-617-7825

OR 97708

ded enthusiastically and said she is now less likely to waste water by dumping out her water glasses and taking long showers. Zach Jepson, er watersheds, conservation, 11, said he likes learning sewer systems and the recla- about how other people solve

instructor, "to pass along what I

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

youth©bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020,Bend,

what grade is best-suited to the curriculum, Stryker said. The program consists of fourlessons and a fi eld trip. Classroom lessons cov-

basic desire was to be a helpful

Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmittedby phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Contact: 541-633-2117,

now. Th e E n v i ronmental saidafterclassMonday. Center wants to determine Harper Justema, 11, nod-

including the night manager at a resort campground in Orlan-

'On Writing Well,'" the woman wrote. "Now I am having a real blast!"

Teen feats:Kids recognized recently for academicachievements or for participation in clubs, choirs or volunteer groups. (Please submit a photo.)

s i x t h-grad-

his book several times.

conscious ones. "Ultimately, the product any

How to submit

Treatment Plant and the Wa-

T oward the back of t h e

"The first lesson he taught his professional experience to immerse readers in the tribu- was what to leave out," he said.

builda career as a trainer. No — From wire reports

"We want students to know that they are connected to the natural

Zinsser went beyond that The New Yorker, took Zinsser's earlier book's admonitions on course at Yale and has reread

Obituary policy DEATHS

their classmates, focus on the main water intake at Cascade Middle School during a water cycle education program Monday morning.

continues to grow: The district expects to add about

store teaching positions. — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbutteti n.com

MPHONY Join us at our Spring Concert to hear th Young Artist Competitt t tt t Winners and the/

350 students by O ctober

Central Oregon Sympho

2015 compared with Octo-

performing works by Bruch,

ber 2014. In September, it

will open a middle and elementary school and implement full-day kindergarten throughout the district.

Some good budget news could come this week. In

approving the $7.255 billion, the Legislature included a trigger that would send 40 percent of new revenue

to schools if the economy shows improvement in the

May economic forecast, set to be released Thursday. The school board still has

to approve the budget, and if more money becomes available, the board can re-

••

Chopin, Haydn, Beach a Humperdinck.

May 16-18, 2015 Saturday7:30pm, Sunday 2t00pm, Monday 7:30pm

Bend High School Auditorium www.cosymphony.com Supported by Charles Sdtwab

g )


TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

B6

W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided byACCUWeather, lnc. ©2015

I

i

i

'

I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 59' I f '

Low

EAST: Cloudsand some sunshinetoday Seasid TEMPERATURE with with an afternoon 55/45 Yesterday Normal Record shower and thunder- Cannon 50 54 90' i n 1924 55/48 37' 35' 17'in 190S storm around.

65/45

2

Yesterday Today Thursday

H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 56/50/0.84 57/44/c 64/48/t La Grande 61/ 45/0.03 60/40/sh 65/46/pc 64/41/0. 13 61/34/sh 64/39/pc La Pine 49/31/0.45 56/34/sh 56/40/t Brookings 58/43/0.00 55/44/sh 58/46/c M e dford 60/3 8 /0.02 66/46/sh 68/48/c Bums 57/39/0.25 60/33/c 61/35/t New por t 52/4 8 /0.52 55/44/sh 56/48/t Eugene 56/47/0.43 63/44/sh67/47/pc NorthBend 55/43/0.11 58/47/sh 60/49/pc Klamath Fags 52/30/0.0457/29/sh 59/35/c Ontario 75/46/Tr 68/43/c 73/49/pc Lakeview 45/36/0.03 57/29/pc58/36/t Pendleton 60/47/0.02 62/42/sh 68/48/pc

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

POLLEN COUNT Wee d s Ab t

64/40

Nyssa Be/ 4 4

Yesterday Today Thursday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 58/4 9/0.3162/49/sh 71/52/t Prinevigs 54/ 4 0/0.1161/35/c 56/39/t Redmond 54/ 37/0.1761/34/sh 60/38/t Roseburg 60 / 42/0.13 68/48/sh 69/50/ pc Salem 55/48/0.45 65/45/sh 70/48/t Sisters 51/37/0.55 61/36/c 60/39/t The Dages 6 3 /49/0.21 64/46/r 74/52/pc

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

Source: OregonAgsrgyAssociates 541-683-1577

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

~ 108 ~

As of 7 a.m.yesterday

gs

~ gs

~ 108

~ 208

Ca p acity NATIONAL

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

Ski resort New snow Base 0-0 Mt. Bachelor 0 M t. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 0-54 Timberline Lodge 2 Aspen I Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 0-0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Source: OnTheSnow.com

~ 303

~ 408

~ 508

~ ags ~ 9 0 8

~ 703

xxxxx

42/49

• ea/49

4 9/47

647 Port

» ~

Billings

Bois

xx

~ 1 0 0 8 ~ 1 1 03 Que c 89/3

i tRee Tffqnder Bay x xx x xae

frsmsgyx

m

p

Amsterdam Athens

'

Sgn5/s

52/40/r 51/34/pc 78/46/t 78/50/s 90/83/c 71/62/s 73/52/s 76/45/s 76/66/pc 71/55/pc 54/45/r 90/53/s

95ng/s

Yesterday Today Thursday

City

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

Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 69/38/0.00 66/42/s 66/42/s 69/41/0.00 72/54/s 72/62/1 52/49/0.09 60/39/s 67/48/c 87/68/0.00 84/61/s 76/53/pc 71/61/0.16 70/47/s 79/61/pc 70/42/0.00 72/54/s 70/55/1 72/58/0.00 76/62/pc 82/67/1 72/57/0.00 70/57/pc 66/55/sh 72/60/0.00 74/52/s 80/66/pc 52/45/Tr 63/40/s 64/51/t 75/61/0.00 80/63/pc 83/69/pc

87n5/D.os 87n7/pc 86nT/pc 54/47/Tr 50/39/s 57/48/c 58/39/0.02 66/52/pc 58/54/r 78/63/0.00 79/54/s 85/64/pc 87ns/0.00 88n1/t 86n3/c 86/68/0.00 69/52/s 72/56/s 87/66/0.00 70/50/s 72/54/s

9Onfrr'r

73/58/s 73/50/0.00 65/60/r 69/39/0.00 72/54/s 92/71/0.00 92//1/t 92/67/0.00 87/62/pc 66/51/0.00 70/51/s 88/66/0.00 71/50/s 91/70/0.00 92/68/s Pittsburgh 73/64/0.14 60/40/pc Portland, ME 82/47/0.08 64/40/pc Providence 85/56/0.22 67/45/pc Raleigh 87/68/0.00 80/53/s Rapid City 68/30/0.00 68/49/c Reno 64/52/0.00 63/41/pc Richmond 92/67/Tr 77/51/s Rochester, NY 69/54/0.17 56/39/pc Sacramento 73/50/0.00 70/51/s St. Louis 70/52/0.00 73/58/s Salt Lake City 78/58/0.00 73/55/s San Antonio 73/68/0.06 75/69/r San Diego 66/61/0.00 67/59/pc San Francisco 62/51/0.00 64/54/pc San Jose 65/46/0.00 65/54/pc Santa re 63/47/0.00 62/40/r Savannah 92/70/0.28 86/64/pc Seattle 60/51/0.02 58/47/sh Sioux Fags 62/35/0.00 72/50/1 Spokane 64/52/0.02 55/41/r Springfield, Mo 69/44/0.00 72/56/s Tampa 95/75/1.34 91 n4/t Tucson 82/62/0.00 89/64/s Tulsa 71/47/0.00 68/60/t Washington, DC gonuo.oo 73/53/s Wichita 69/40/0.00 67/57/1 Yakima 66/54/0.21 63/41/r Yuma 90/67/0.00 90/63/s

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Psoria Philadelphia Phoenix

i

ron t o /35 ~fu

0

9

68/55/s 80/65/1 68/55/1

89n2/t

76/57/pc 69/60/1

73/53/s 88/63/pc 71/52/pc 67/42/s

69/47/s

76/55/s 67/48/pc 56/40/1

74/52/s 66/44/s 65/49/sh 73/64/1

73/51/pc 84/69/t 66/59/c 63/52/sh

62/51/sh 70/39/pc 83/66/pc 69/49/1 62/47/r 72/50/pc 74/64/r 92n3/t 85/57/pc 82/68/t 73/56/s 78/65/1

74/48/pc 83/60/pc

I

Mecca Mexico City

115/80/0.00 108/86/s 76/58/0.11 74/56/1 Montreal 73/46/0.10 62/38/pc Moscow 72/46/0.00 72/49/c Nairobi 79/63/0.04 78/62/pc Nassau 86nT/0'.09 86/74/pc New Delhi 100/80/0.00 100n9/t Osaka 71/64/1.70 76/58/s Oslo 52/46/0.27 57/44/sh Ottawa 70/46/0.13 62/34/pc Paris 70/57/0.00 70/53/pc Rio de Janeiro 82/70/0.02 75/68/pc Rome 77/57/0.00 76/58/pc Santiago 68/43/0.00 74/43/s Sau Paulo 68/57/0.18 68/57/pc Sapporo 63/51/1.01 62/52/sh Seoul 64/51/0.04 70/57/s Shanghai 80/54/0.00 86/71/pc Singapore 90/82/0.11 gongn Stockholm 61/46/0.67 53/41/r Sydney 73/54/0.00 62/51/s Taipei 79/70/0.02 84/76/t Tel Aviv 79/61/0.00 81/63/s Tokyo 70/55/0.50 79/67/s Toronto 61/55/0.00 57/35/pc Vancouver 64/54/0.00 61/48/pc Vienna 75/45/0.00 74/57/sh Warsaw 72/39/0.04 63/44/pc

110/83/s 74/56/1 65/43/s 64/47/c 79/61/pc 86/73/s 103/79/pc 79/66/pc 53/40/pc 66/42/s 64/44/1 76/68/pc 76/63/pc 73/47/s 70/58/pc 58/44/r 74/50/pc 84/70/c 90/80/1 55/37/pc 65/56/s 89/77/t 77/63/pc 80/67/pc 64/42/pc 64/49/pc 69/52/t 62/41/pc

4•

4

~ 508

Calgs

BB% EXTREMES Wickiup 165192 53% YESTERDAY(for the Crescent Lake 7 4 9 00 B5% 4S contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 31178 70vo National high: 99 Prineville 110877 75vo at Death Valley,CA River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. National low: 19 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 322 at Gold Butte, MT Deschutes R.below Wickiup 12BO Precipitation: 7.03" 75 at Corpus Christi, TX Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1SSO Little Deschutes near LaPine 119 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 2S Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 2S Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 275 J4lcflorsgs Crooked R. near Terrebonne 141 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 15 d1

J untura

City Astoria Baker City

The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrmiiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgun.0-2 Low,

Acr e feet 487 5 5

• Burns

42

Yesterday Today Thursday

4

69/45

Ham ton

• La ptne

• Fort Rock Riley 50/33 Cresce t • 57/34 60/35 56/35 Bandon Roseburg • Chr i stmas alley Jordan V gey 59/48 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 68/48 53/38 Marsh Lake 62/40 55/34 57/33 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley 6/ a • 65/37 • Chiloquin Medfo d '58/31 Gold ach ® Rorne 55/ eee/46 67/40 Klamath • Ashl nd • Fags • Lakeview McDermi Bro ings 61/ 57/29 55/ 57/29 64/36

0'

2 p .m. 4 p .m.

58/

Grove Oakridge

UV INDEX TODAY I

Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 65/54/0.36 Akron 67/61/0.02 Albany 84no/0.01 Albuquerque 70/51 /0.05 Anchorage 62/42/Tr Atlanta 84narrr Atlantic City 87/64/0.00 Austin 68/66/0.43 Baltimore 89/63/Tr Billings 63/45/0.01 Birmingham 82n1/0.05 Bismarck 63/31/0.05 Boise 75/48/0.00 Boston 87/48/0.02 Bridgeport, CT 82/62/0.01 Buffalo 60/56/0.49 Burlington, VT 79/54/0.29 Caribou, ME 69/45/0.28 Charleston, SC 90n2/Tr Charlotte 88/66/Tr Chattanooga 84/67/Tr Cheyenne 66/30/0.00 Chicago 56/48/Tr Cincinnati 70/54/0.00 Cleveland 64/58/0.07 ColoradoSprings 69/37/0.00 Columbia, MO 70/46/0.00 Columbia, SC 91/69/0.18 Columbus,GA 85/67/Tr Columbus,OH 67/59/0.18 Concord, NH 84/50/Tr Corpus Christi 83/68/4.62 Dallas 72/58/0.06 Dayton 66/53/0.00 Denver 73/37/0.00 Des Moines 69/43/0.00 Detroit 65/50/Tr Duluth 52/35/0.14 El Paso 77/59/0.26 Fairbanks 64/38/Tr Fargo 57/33/0.04 Flagstaff 63/30/0.00 Grand Rapids 52/48/Tr Green Bay 53/47/0.01 Greensboro 86/66/Tr Harrisburg 85/65/Tr Harfford, CT 89/69/Tr Helena 60/47/0.00 Honolulu 82/70/0.00 Houston 79/69/0.53 Huntsville 83/67/0.00 Indianapolis 64/50/0.00 Jackson, MS 75/68/0.51 Jacksonville 92/67/0.00

Today Thursday

61/44/sh 81/65/s 66/56/r 99/71/pc 93/81/t 82/57/s 74/64/pc 59/42/pc 66/51/c 72/47/t 69/59/s 90/67/pc 82/64/pc 60/34/t

High: 75 at Ontario Low: 33' at Sexton Summit

Ju n 9

Yesterday

63/55/0.00 60/41/pc Boston 72/59/0.00 77/59/s • 67/47 ee/4 47 Lal Auckland 62/57/0.36 65/56/pc Mi ukes w York Baghdad 104/74/0.00 102/75/s eo/3 9/52 Bangkok 95/84/0.02 93/81/1 an Fra dsco eyenue iladelphis Beijing 80/50/0.00 91/60/pc C;g • CI b /54 O'„M SsltLake 1/50 Beirut TTno/0.1 4 76/65/s Omah 5 /40 54 73/55 ' r~ ~ v ' D s u Berlin 80/53/0.35 63/44/pc ington 44/ us lle 73 Las V ss Bogota 68/48/0.03 68/50/t 84/6 4 <yiffaese Cfty Si. u' Budapest 73/39/0.00 78/53/pc sW W Wyayee yd d BuenosAires 68/57/0.00 66/56/s Charfo Los Au fes Cabo San Lucas 90/69/0.00 92/67/pc 4 0/57 Wk'CV. V.V ee V .W C CW Cairo 86/66/0.00 83/63/s Pbueu kk k X X v . X X X v.WW' 7 dd • At Calgary 57/27/0.00 59/37/c • 92/sa d di . Cancun 86n9/0.00 89/74/s 1/ I Dublin 55/46/0.06 54/43/pc Xk Edinburgh 55/47/0.00 56/39/pc ee/42 8 Pa X'eXXX xx'exxxxy Geneva 82/50/0.00 80/55/1 80/41 : Xk k k k k ' • • rlshde Harare 75/53/0.00 77/52/pc %%<<kk worfsahs O/71 9 Hong Kong 85/75/0.02 88/83/pc Honolulu Chihuahua ss/71 o ~ . t Istanbul 72/57/0.00 71/57/s 82/49 83/56 Miami Jerusalem 73/62/0.04 78/52/s M 87~ ae Johannesburg 70/46/0.00 73/50/s s Lima 76/66/0.00 76/65/pc Lisbon 81/59/0.00 84/58/pc today's noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day. Shown are London 64/52/0.01 66/47/pc T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 93/54/0.00 98/65/pc Manila 95/80/0.00 95ng/s

• W co

Source: JimTodd,OMSI

Reservoir C rane Prairie

he Dall

YESTERDAY

Tonight'ssky: Hercules climbs the eastern sky this evening. Lookfor a keystone pattern of dim stars high in theeast by mid-evening.

G rasses T r ee s t ~ Hi h •

9

5

J un 2

vd

/44

Portland

Partly sunny with a passing shower

Mostly cloudy

i

Umatilla 66/43 • ermiston lington 66/41 Meac am Losti ne /43 58/38 Enterprfse dlet, ll •55/ • I / 38

Rufus

38'

TRAVEL WEATHER

5 w

~ 6

Some sunwith a t-storm in the afternoon

Hi/Lo/W 85/63/t 71/53/pc 72/42/s 74/48/pc 58/44/pc 84/66/pc 68/46/s 84/67/1 72/50/s 65/47/pc 85/66/pc 61/43/r 72/48/t 66/49/s 70/51/s 65/47/pc 68/41/s 63/40/s 82/65/pc 80/58/pc 85/64/pc 68/44/s 65/54/c 75/59/pc 68/53/c 70/45/pc 70/63/r 86/62/pc 86/66/pc 72/55/pc 72/35/s 84/75/t 81/67/t 73/59/pc 73/48/s 65/59/r 66/51/c 59/43/r 87/60/s 74/48/pc 63/47/r 58/33/pc 68/50/c 63/48/c 76/57/s 71/49/s 74/43/s 64/46/pc 82/70/s 83/71/t 86/64/pc 73/59/pc 86/67/pc 83/68/pc

RiVer 44 •

SUNDAY

36'

HiRo/W 73/63/r 58/39/s 64/40/c 67/49/r 59/43/s 85/63/s 67/47/s 74/66/r 70/48/s 69/47/1 84/61/pc 68/49/1 67/47/c 64/47/pc 71/50/s 56/38/pc 63/39/c 56/35/c 85/61/pc 82/54/s 81/55/s 62/41/pc 56/40/s 68/46/s 56/40/pc 59/41/1 71/55/s 87/58/s 89/64/pc 64/41/s 65/34/pc 80/75/t 71/64/r 65/45/s 64/44/1 71/54/s 61/41/s 50/39/r 80/61/r 71/46/pc 66/53/r 62/36/s 61/41/s 60/37/pc 80/53/s 67/45/pc 69/42/pc 68/43/1 82/69/pc 80/71/t 81/55/s 66/47/s 85/66/pc 90/68/t

Today Thu. Sunrise 5:42 a.m. 5: 4 1 a.m. Sunset S:22 p.m. 5: 2 3 p.m. Moonrise 3 :09 a.m. 3:43 a.m. Moonset 3:2 0 p.m. 4:3 2 p.m. OREGON EXTREMES New Fi r s t Full Last

6

A thunderstorm in spots in the afternoon

SUN ANDMOON

4 I~

36'

q

Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows.

Hood

Tigamo •

24 hours through 5 p.m.yesterday 0.31 " Record 0.50" in 1915 Month to date (normal) 0.5 5" (0.30") Year to date(normal) 2.31 " (4.43") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . S2"

10 a.m. Noon

36'

u

62/ CENTRAL:More andy 58/44 Mc • 64/46 Joseph 1I46 Gove' • He p pner Grande • clouds than sunshine nt • u pi Condon /40 Cam 60 40 again today with a Union Lincoln 58/ shower and thunSale 57/45 Granite • pray derstorm aroundthis 55/4 /43 a 'Baker C Newpo 56/32 afternoon. 44 55/44 • Mitch ll 51/34 campsh WEST: Mostly cloudy orv lljs eU Yach 59/35 • John again today with a few 55/45 55/45 • Prineville Day /33 tario showers in thearea. 51/35 • P a lina 6 0/ 4 0 43 Cloudy with a shower Floren e • Eugene 'Re d B rothers 5938 Valee 58/48 in spots tonight. Su iVere 59/34

PRECIPITATION

M ay17 May 25

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER ria

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

High

34' A shower early, then a little rain

ALMANAC

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Warmer; a coupleof afternoon showers

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 M LB, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C4 NHL, C2 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

MLB

Ball security is a major concern NEW YORK— Even before TomBradywas penalized, Major League Baseball boosted its prevent defense. As part of a newsecurity plan this season to further safeguard game balls, an MLBrepresentative now watches them get carried by a clubhouse assistant from the umpires' room to the field. Andif the supply of eightdozen or so runs low during a game,an MLB security person is sent to retrieve more. Inthe past, a ballboy or ball girl did those jobs alone. "We can't deflate 'em," Yankeespitcher CC Sabathia said Sunday. "It's precautionary, I guess." MLB said many changes in the pumpedup policy for ball security and storage were discussedbyequipment managers at the winter meetings in December. That was more thana month before Brady and the NewEngland Patriots were accused of deflating footballs in theAFC championship game. As for any copycat in baseball, Boston Red Sox managerJohn Farrell said that it was unlikely. "Baseballs are solid," he said.

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

MAjOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

HORSE RACING

s u s a i n so o , a nic namema enee e By Billy Witz

kees early leads and the other for cementing them. "Whenyou look at those

New York Times News Service

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. The key to the New York Yan-

kees' strong start — leading the American League East at

Ellsbury

21-13 after Tuesday's 4-2 loss

at Tampa Bay — has been their beginning and their end. That is, the head of the batting

order, Jacoby Ellsbury and Brett Gardner, and the tail end of the bullpen, Dellin Betances and Andrew Miller.

One pairing has been responsible for getting the Yan-

tw o s ets of two, they've been a

big help in getting us to where we are," manager Joe Girardi said Monday. "Get a lead and hold them late — that's the whole idea." The twosomes have been such a significant part of the Yankees' success that the

team has filmed commercials

about them and is planning to hold a contest for fans to choose nicknames for them. Betances and Miller, who

typically pitch the eighth and ninth innings, have yet to allow an earned run this

inside • Mariners hits six home runs in win over Padres. MLB,C3 The Associated Press file photo

ters at the top of the order: getting on base and being a distraction once they are there. Ellsbury, with a.415 on-base

season. And they have had plenty of opportunities to pro- percentage, and Gardner, at tect leads thanks to an offense .393 entering Tuesday's game, that is markedly improved were ranked third and 11th from last season, when the in the American League. Ellsbury's 11 steals were tied for Yankees finished 13th in the AL in runs. the league lead, and Gardner Ellsbury and Gardner have was one behind. met two expectations for hitSeeEllsbury/C3

PREP BOYS GOLF' CLASS 5A SPECIAL DISTRICT 2 CHAMPIONSHIPS

background, have a horse in the Preakness Stakes for the first time since Barbaro broke down in 2006.

Barbaro's owners return to Preakness By Mike Jensen The Philadelphia rnquirer

They share your memories. Roy and Gretchen Jackson do — but they

have so many more of their own. The Jacksons remember every minute of Preak-

ness day, 2006. It was their horse, Barbaro, who broke down shortly after leaving the start-

— The Associated Press

ing gate,

NSXt UP

two weeks after Bar-

Preakness Stakes When:Post time3:18 p.m. Saturday TV:11:30a™ Saturday,

baro had

BOXING

inthe Kentuck

Bout breaks PPV records The May 2 fight between MannyPacquiao and Floyd Mayweather Jr. produced morepayper-view purchases than any other fight in history. An estimated 4.4 million viewers paid a record price of $89.95 to $99.95 to watch the fight, generating more than $400 million in domestic revenue, Showtime, HBOandthe fighters' promoters said Tuesday. Mayweather won by unanimous decision. The total nearly doubled the previous record for boxing PPV buys: 2.48 million, for the Mayweather-Oscar De La Hoyabout in 2007. The revenuealso topped the previous record of $152 million, which was generated by Mayweather's bout with Canelo Alvarez two years ago. Cable companies and satellite providers will receive between 30to 40 percent of gross PPV revenue, and asmaller cut (7.5 percent, divided evenly) will go to HBO and Showtime, which co-produced the event. The rest will go to the fighters, to be split 60-40 in Mayweather's favor. With the PPVrevenue alone announced

Gretchen Jackson, with her husband Roy in the

Derby.

NBCSN; 2 P.m.

Jacksons

Saturday, NBC

member where they were, who

they talked to, their jockey walking over, saying, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry," even the police officers who helped Barbaro get out of Pimlico and to surgery the next

day for his catastrophic leg fractures. It was Gretchen Jackson who said that Preakness

day, "You can expect being

beaten. You didn't think

about this. Poor Barbaro. Nobody expects this." Their memories have Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Summit's Cole Chrismsn tees off on the second hole of the Class 5A Special District 2 championships Tuesday afternoon on the Ridge Course at Eagle Crest. Chrisman tied with Mountain View's Mason Krieger for medalist, while the Storm shot a1-under-par 287 to set a

the racetrack's count,

school record and beat runner-up Bend High by 24shots.

when an impeccably bred colt named Divining Rod leaves the Preakness start-

• Summit's ColeChrismanand Mountain View's MasonI(rieger tie over 2 daysfor medalist honors,while the Stormwin with a school-record 1-daytotal of 287 Inside

By Kevin Duke

Summit sophomore Cole

• Cowgirls win district golf meet by 51 strokes over Scappoose. Prep roundup,C4

Chrisman led the way with a

Krieger shot for shot, and

day, shooting a school-record 1-under-par 287 to win the

The Storm placed four golfers in the top five, outpacing crosstown rival Bend High by 22 shots Tuesday after going into the final day up by just

Class 5A Special District 2

two. Summit's 591 two-day

on the front nine," Chrisman

championship Tuesday at Eagle Crest's Ridge Course.

total bested the Lava Bears (615) by 24 shots.

said. "I was making a putt occasionally and two-putting

The Bulletin

REDMOND — While the

individual medalist race could not be decided, the Summit boys left little doubt

who would be crowned the district team champion Tues-

never kept the Jacksons away from Pimlico. By

69 Tuesday, shooting 3 under par on the front nine to match Mountain View's Mason the pair finished the tourney knotted at the top with an

even-par 144 two-day total. "I think I hit every green

ing gate Saturday, he will be the 27th horse the Jacksons have run at Pimlico

since the 2006 Preakness.

everything else." Chrisman and Krieger played the final round together and took notice of each other's birdies on the front nine. "When someone else

It is, however, the first Preakness horse for the

Jacksons since Barbaro. They did not allow the history or the guarantee of

increased media attention to color their decision, they said, to run in the

makes a birdie, that makes you want one too," Krieger said, adding that he had only one missedgreen on thefront nine himself.

Preakness. When Gretchen Jackson

says, "We've moved on from Barbaro," she quickly adds, "It's always there."

SeeGolf /C4

SeeBarbaro/C4

at $418 million, that will

ensure that Mayweather and Pacquiao will each make more than $100 million for about an hour's work.

NHL PLAYOFFS

Ducks' BoLldreaLI fina y gets payoff redemption

— New YodrTimes News Service

By Greg Beacham

cally pointing at him. So Bou-

Correction

The Associated Press

dreau pointed back, and un-

The headline for a story on Bend High girls lacrosse that appeared in Tuesday's Bulletin on page C1misidentified the Lava Bears' opponent in Monday's state playoff match. Bend lost to Liberty High School of Hillsboro. TheBulletin regrets the error.

the Anaheim Ducks stormed

adulterated joy flooded over a face that usually registers only

the ice to celebrate Corey

concern when he is at work.

Boudreau looked up and saw

ment," Boudreau said. "I find when I get excited behind the

ANAHEIM, Calif. — While

Perry's series-clinching overtime goal Thursday, Bruce

"It was a really cool mo-

The coach and his family were celebrating Anaheim's breakthrough, but also the death of Boudreau's old reputation: In his first six Stanley

Cup playoff trips, his teams never got past the second

bench, the team gets too ex-

round. The Ducks are headed

Anaheim coach Bruce Boudreau, left, and goalie

his two sons and his wife, Crystal, hugging and hopping

cited and we lose a little bit of

to the Western Conference

Frederik Andersen celebrate after winning a

in thefrenzied Honda Center

second-round series against Calgary. It is the first time in seven playoff trips Boudreau has

stands. They turned and locked

our focus, so I tried to stay as finals, and Boudreau has a focused as I could. But it was a team in the NHL's final four

advanced past the second round.

eyes with Boudreau, mania-

Chris Carlson /The Associated Press

pretty nice win, so I think I'm

allowed five minutes of joy."

for the first time.

SeeBoudreau/C2

Inside • Lightning hold off Canadiens in Game 6to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second time in11 years, C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY Time 9 a.m. 3 a.m.

TEiiiRS

ATP/WTA, Internazionali d'Italia ATP/WTA, Internazionali d'Italia SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Real Madrid (Spain) vs. Juventus (Italy) MLS, Orlando City at D.C.United

T V /Radie Ten n is Ten n is

11:30 a.m.

5 p.m.

FS1

ES P N2

BASEBALL

1 2:30 p.m. M L B 5 p.m. ESP N 6 p.m. KICE940-AM 7 p.m. Root

MLB,BostonatOakland MLB,N.Y.MetsatChicago Cubs College, OregonSt. vs. Portland MLB, San Diego atSeattle CYCLING Tour of California

2 p.m.

NB CSN

GOLF

U.S. Women's Amateur FourBall EuropeanTour, OpendeEspana

4 p.m. FS1 2:30 a.m. (Thu.) Golf

HOCKEY

NHL playoffs, Washington at N.Y.Rangers

4:30 p.m. NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA playoffs, Washington at Atlanta NBA playoffs, Memphis at GoldenState

5 p.m. 7 :30 p.m.

TNT

TN T

THURSDAY HOCKEY

IIHF World Championship, U.S. vs. Switzerland 6 a.m. NB CSN IIHF World Championship, Canadavs. Belarus 8:30 a.m. NBCSN NHL playoffs, TampaBayat Montreal 4:30 p.m. NBCSN GOLF

EuropeanTour, OpendeEspana Champions Tour, RegionsTradition PGA Tour,Wells Fargo Championship EuropeanTour, OpendeEspana

6 :30 a.m. G olf 9 :30 a.m. G olf noon Golf 2:30 a.m. (Fri.) Golf

TENNIS

ATP/WTA, Internazionali d'Italia

9 a.m. Ten n is 3 a.m. (Fri.) Tennis

ATP/WTA, Internazionali d'Italia BASEBALL

MLB, Minnesota at Detroit College, PennSt. at Purdue MLB, SanFrancisco at Cincinnati College, LSU atSouth Carolina College, Texas A8 M at Mississippi College, Ohio St. at Indiana College, Washington St. at Arizona St. MLB, Boston at Seattle

10 a.m. MLB 2 p.m. Bi g Ten 4 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. SEC 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. Bi g Ten 7 p.m. Pa c -12 7 p.m. Root

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCAR,Truck Series, Charlotte practice NASCAR,Truck Series, Charlotte final practice SOCCER Europa League, Fiorentina (Italy) vs. Sevilla (Spain) CYCLING Tour of California

noon 4 p.m.

FS1

noon

FS2

2 p.m.

FS1

ON DECK Today Baseball :Redmond atBend,4:30 p.m.;Mountain ViewatSummit,4:30p.m.; EstacadaatCrookCounty, 4:30p.m.;Madrasat Molala, 4:30p.m.; Sisters at Junction City, 4:30p.m.;LaPineat Coquile (DH), 2 p.m. Soflbalh Redm ond at Bend, 5 p.m.; MountainView at Summ it, 5p.m.; CrookCountyat Estacada,TBD; Molalla atMadras,4:30 p.m.;Junction CityatSisters, 4:30 p.m.;LaPine at Coquile (DH),2p.m. Trackand field:Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conference championshipat s MountainView,3p.m. Boys tennis:CrookCounty, Madrasat Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships at Madras High Girls tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 2 championshipsat Madras High Boys lacrosse:WestAlbanyatRidgeview,6p.m. Girls lacrosse:OGL Aplayoffs, secondround,Summit at Lakeridge,7p.m.

Friday Baseball:Bendat Redmond, 4:30 p.m.; Summ it at Mountain View,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty atCorbet, 4:30 p.m.;JunctionCityat Sisters, 4:30p.m.;Madras atGladstone,4;30p.m.; LaPineat Glide(DH),

2p.m.;CrookCountyJvatCulver,4p.m.

Soflbalh BendatRedmond,5 p.m.; Summit at Mountain View, 5p.mc Corbett at CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.; SistersatJunction City, 4:30p.mcGladstone at Madras,4:30p.m.;LaPineatGlide(DH),2p.m. Trackandfield: Bend,MountainView,Redmond,Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conferencechampionshipsat Mountain View,3 p.m.; CrookCounty, MadrasatTri-Valley Conferencechampionshipsin Madras,2 p.m.; Culyerat ColumbiaBasin Conferencechampionshipsin Stanfield, 10am. Boys tennis:Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict 1 cham pionships in Sunriver; Redmond,Ridgeviewat MidwesternLeaguechampionshipsatAshlandHigh Girls tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict I championshipsinSunriver, 8 a.m.; Redm ond, Ridgeview at Midwestern League champi onshipsatEugeneSwim andTennisClub; Sisters at Class 4A/3A/2A/tA Special District 3 championshipat s BlackBute Ranch Boyslacrosse:RedmondatRidgeview,7p.m.

Saturday Baseball:Sistersat Burns,3:30 p.m. Softball: Union/Cove at Culver(DH),1t a.m. Track and field: CrookCounty, Madras at Tri-Valley Conferencechampionships in Madras, 1:30 p.m.; Sisters at Sky-EmLeaguechampionships in JunctionCity, tf a.m.; ta Pineat Mountain Valey Conferencechampionships in Glide,TBD;Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencechampionships in StanfieldrTBD;Gilchrist atClass1ASpecial District 2championshipat s MountainView,11am. Boys tennis:Bend,MountainView,Summit atClass5A SpeciaDil strict1championshipsin Sunriver,8a.m. Girls tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict 1 cham pionships in Sunriver; Sisters at Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championshipsatBlack Butte Ranch

BASEBALL

NB CSN

College

5 p.m. ESP N 7:30 p.m. ESPN

Pao-12 All TimesPDT Conference Overall

Listingsarethe mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL

W L T Pct W L T Pct I B 6 0 . 7 50 37 12 0 .755 Southerncal 15 9 0 .625 3416 0 .680 California 1 5 9 0 . 625 31 16 0 .660 ArizonaSt. ) 5 9 0 . 625 30 18 0 .625 OregonSt. ) 4 9 f . 604 32 14 t .691 Oregon ft 1 30 .458 30 22 0 .577 Arizona 1 2t 5 0 .444 28 20 0 .583 Washington 11 16 0 .407 2622 0 .542 WashingtonSt. 9 15 0 .375 2723 0 .540 Utah 7 16 f .3t3 f6 30 1 .351 Stanford 7 17 0 .292 22 28 0 .440

UCLA

Tuesday'sGames

DuCkS take dOWll GOllZGg8 —Oregon took advantage of a wild pitch and anerror to score four runs in the third inning, and Mitch Tolman hit a three-run home run in thefourth as the Ducks beat Gonzaga 9-4 inanonconferencegame Tuesday inEugene.AustinGrebeck had four hits for the Ducks (30-22), and BracWarren (2-0) relieved starter Kohl Hostert during a four-run second for Gonzaga(23-25).

MarinerS RHPIwakuma Shut dOwn —Seattle Mariners starter Hisashi Iwakumawill not pitch for up to two weeks in his recovery from a right latissimus muscle injury after experiencing tightness during a throwing session. Seattle manager Lloyd McClendon said Tuesdaythat Iwakuma would be kept from throwing for10 to 14 daysdependingonhovvheisfeeling.Iwakuma hasbeenonthedisabled list since April 24, retroactive to April 21, with the injury. Hevvas 0-1 with a 6.61ERAin three starts before going onthe DL.

CYCLING SkujinS takeS CalifOrnia lead —LatvianTomSkujjns pedaled to a surprising mountain stagewin by morethan a minute andtook the lead Tuesday inthe Tour of California. The 23-year-old beganstage 3 in 95th position and trailed previous race leaderMark Cavendish of Britain by 42seconds. Hecompleted the hilly105.7-mjje road stage ending in SanJose in 4 hours, 33 minutes and10 seconds. Peter Sagan of Slovakia finished secondfor the third straight day andfinished 1minuteand6 secondsbehind Skujjns,vvho holdsa32-second race lead over Saganwith five stages remaining. Bend's lan Boswell finished in 28th Tuesdayand is 27th overall, 1:13 behindSkujjns.

Formolo WinS4th Giro Stage, Clarke takeS lead —Davlde Formolo carried off a solo attack to perfection to win the fourth stage of the Giro d'Italia on Tuesday,while Simon Clarke took the overall leader's pink jersey from Orica-Greenedgeteammate Michael Matthews. For his first professional victory, Formolo attacked on cl aimb shortly before the finish and clockednearly 4 hours along the undulating 93-mile route from Chiavari to LaSpezia.

NewMexico9, ArizonaSt.6 Stanford6,SanFrancisco 5 UCLA5,CalStateFulerton 4 BYU16,Utah6 Oregon9, Gonzaga4 Washington St.7, Portland3

Today'sGames Gonzag aatOregon,6p.m. OregonSt.vs.Portland, 6:05p.m. Thursday'sGame WashingtonSt.at ArizonaSt., 7 p.m.

SOFTBALL College NCAAtournament All TimesPDT

EugeneRegional (Double elimination; x-if necessary) Tbursday'sGames FresnoSt.vs. NorthDakotaSt., 2p.m. BYUatOregon,5p.m. Friday's Games Game3:Gt Winnervs. G2Winner, 11a.m. Game4:GtLoservs.G2Loser,2p.m. Game5:G3Loservs.G4Winner,5p.m. Saturday'sGames Game 6:G3Winner vs. G5Winner, 10a.m. x-Game 7: 4p.m.

Boudreau Continued from C1 The hockey lifer's spectacular regular-season success will no longer be overshadowed by his teams' postseason failures — and the story could get even sweeter if the Ducks

get past the mighty Chicago Blackhawks. "The instant it happened, it

FOOTBALL

felt really good, and then half an hour later I forgot about

SeahaWkS Sign 2 mOre —The Seattle Seahawks signed linebacker Tyrell Adamsand fullback Brandon Cottom on Monday following rookie minicamp last weekend. To clear roster spots, the Seahawks terminated the veteran contract of offensive linemanC.J. Davis and waived offensive guard Nate Isles. Davis was not on an NFL roster last season, while Isles spent the year onSeattle's practice squad. Cottom was arunning back at Purdue, but at 6-foot-2 and 266 pounds fits the role of a fullback in the NFL.Adams played collegiately at Division II West Georgia and led his team in tackles the past tvvo seasons.

it, and we're starting to think

SOCCER

Transactions In the Bleachers e 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.oocomics.com/inthebleachers

Thursday

Baseball:Bend atSummit,430p m.;CrookCountyat Madras,4:30p.m. Baseball: Bend atSummit,5 p.m. Track andfield: SistersatSky-EmLeaguechampionships inJunctionCity, I t a.m.;LaPineat Mountain ValleyConferencechampionshipsinGlide,1 p.m. Boys tennis:CrookCounty, Madrasat Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships at Madras High Girls tennis: Crook County, Madras at Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 2 championships at Madras High; SistersatClass4A/3A/2A/fA Special District 3championshipsat BlackButte Ranch

BASKETBALL

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

C

"Leonard! It's me, your coach. May I approach the mound? I just want to talk. I don't want trouble."

Tuesday'sSummaries

TENNIS Professional Internazionalid'Italia MondayatRome Men First Round GuillermoGarcia-Lopez,Spain, def. Marin Cilic (9), Croatia6-4,6-3. , Thomaz Belucci, Brazil,def.DiegoSchwarlzman, Argentina,6-4,4-3, retired. FelicianoLopez(ft), Spain, def. NickKyrgios, Australia,6-4, 7-6(4). AlexandrDolgopolov,Ukraine, def. MartinKlizan, Slovakia,6-4, 6-1. ViktorTroickiSerbi , a,def.BernardTomic, Australia, 7-6 (3),6-7(4),7-6(4). DavidGoffin,Belgium,def.AndreaArnaboldi,ltaly, 5-7,6-2, 6-1. RobertoBautista Agut()4), Spain,def. Marcel Granollers,Spain,6-1, 6-3. Jo-WilfriedTsonga(f3), France,def.SamQuerrey, UnitedStates,7-6(6), 6-0. SecondRound StanWawrinka(8), Switzerland, def.JuanMonaco, Argentina,4-6,6-3,6-2. Kevin Anderson(f5), South Africa, def. Philipp Kohlschreiber,Germany, 3-0, retired. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia, def. NicolasAlmagro, Spain,6-1,6-7(5), 6-3. David Ferrer(7), Spain, def. RichardGasquet, France,6-4,7-5. TomasBerdych(6), CzechRepublic, def. Matteo Donati,ltaly,6-2,6-4. Women First Round CarlaSuarezNavarro (10),Spain, def.MonaBarthel, German y,6-4, 2-6,6-3. DariaGavrilova,Russia, def. BelindaBencic, Switzerland,6-7(2), 7-5,6-2. Kristina Mladenovic,France,def. MonicaPuig, PuertoRico,7-5,6-2. AlexandraDulqheru, Rom ania, def. Misaki Doi, Japan,6-7(2),6-3,6-3. ElinaSvrtolina,Ukraine,def. FlaviaPenneta, Italy, 6-4,6-2. Irina-CameliaBegu,Romania, def. UrszulaRadwanska, Poland,4-6, 6-2,6-1. Victoria Azarenka,Belarus,def. LucieHradecka, CzechRepublic, 7-5,2-6, B-f. BojanaJovanovski, Serbia,def. CarolineGarcia, France,7-6(4), 4-6,6-2. Lucie Safarova(t2), CzechRepublic, def. Anna KarolinaSchmiedlova, Slovakia,7-6(6), 6-7 (3),6-4. JelenaJankovic (16), Serbia,def.Cam ila Giorgi, Italy, 7-5,7-5. SecondRound MariaSharapova(3), Russia, def.Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia,6-2,3-f, retired. TimeaBacsinszky, Switzerland, def.SabineLisicki, Germany,6-4,6-3. SerenaWiliams(f), United States, def.Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, Russia, 6-1,6-3.

BASKETBALL NBA playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

(Besl-of-7) Tuesday'sGames Cleveland106, Chicago101, Clevelandleadsseries3-2 Houstonf24, L.A.Clippers103, L.A.Clippersleads series3-2 Today'sGames Washington atAtlanta,5 p.m.,seriestied2-2 MemphisatGoldenState, 7:30 p.m.,seriestied 2-2 Thursday'sGames Cleveland at Chicago,5 p.m. x-Houston at L.A.Clippers,7:30p.m. Friday's Games AtlantaatWashington,4 p.m. GoldenSt.at Memphis, 6:30p.m.

Rockets124, Clippers103 LA. CLIPPERS (103) Barnes1-8 2-2 5, Griffin 12-2t 6-9 30,Jordan

3-3 7-1613, Paul9-16 0-0 22, Redick3-12 2-2 9,

Crawford 2-t0005, Davis O-f0 00, Rivers3-1f t-2 8, Hawes5-70-011,D.Jones0-00-00, Hudson0-1 0-00, Turkogl0-1 u 0-00. Totals38-91 18-31103. HOUSTON (124) Ariza 8-12 2-2 22, Smith 4-7 0-29, Howard 7-t4 6-)420, Terry4-100-0 ff, Harden9-207-826, Prigioni 01 000,Brewer5856 t5, TJones582212, Capel a4-40-28,Johnson0-00-00,PapanikolaouO-f 1-2 I, Dorsey 0-00-00. Totals46-8523-38124. L.A. Clippers 2 22 6 28 27 — 103 Houston 27 36 27 34 — 124

Cavaliers106, Bulls101 CHICAGO (101) Dunleavy5-8 7-7 19,Gibson4-12 2-2 10, Noah 4-6 2-210, Butler9-188-8 29, Rose7-242-3 t6, Sneff 0-10-00, Mirotic2-75-6 fg, Hinricht-40-03, Brooks 2-60-04. Totals 34-8626-28101. CLEVEL AND(106) James14-249-1238, Thompson5-72-412, Mozgov 07 1-21, Shump ert 610 0013, Irving 9-164 525, Smith5110012,Jones00000, Dellavedova1-f 22 5, Perkin0-3000. s Totals40-7918-25106. 24 20 27 30 — 101 Chicago Cleveland 25 29 26 26 — 106

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

EasternConference W L T Pls GF BA N ew England 5 2 3 18 1 4 1 0 D.C. United NewYork

5 4

1 3 1 8 ff 7 1 4 16 14 9 10 13 10

Columbus 4 3 2 1 4 15 TorontoFC 3 5 0 9 12 Chicago 3 5 0 9 7 OrlandoCit y 2 4 3 9 8 NewYorkCity FC I 6 3 6 7 Philadelphia 1 7 3 6 10 Montreal 0 3 2 2 3 WesternConference W L T Pts GF Vancouver 6 3 2 20 14 FCDallas 6 2 2 20 17 Seattle 5 3 1 16 15 SanJose 4 4 2 1 4 10 S porting KansasCity 3 2 5 1 4 13 L os Angele s 3 3 5 14 11 RealSaltLake 3 2 5 14 9 Portland 3 3 4 13 9 Houston 3 4 4 1 3 13 Colorado 1 2 7 10 9

12 12 21 8

GA 9 13 9 11 13 11 11 9 14 9

BASEBAL L AmencanLeague BALTIMOR EORIOLES—PlacedINFRyanFlaherty on the 15-dayDL.Recalled INFReyNavarro from Norfolk(IL). HOUSTONASTROS— OptionedRHPAsherWojciechowski to Fresno (PCL). ReinstatedRHPLuke Gregorson fromthefamily medicalemergencylist. KANSASCITY ROYALS— OptionedRHPYohan Pino toOm aha (PCL). Recalled RHPAaron Brooks fromOm aha. LOSANGELESANGELS— Selectedthe contract of INFMarcKraussfromSalt Lake(PCL). Designated RHPRyanMattheusfor assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS— Placed OF Shane Robinson onthefamily emergencylist. RecalledOFAaron HicksfromRochester (IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS — Released OF AlexHassan. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Optioned RHP EvanMarshall toReno(PCL). CINCINN ATI REDS— Released RHPKevin Gregg for assignme nt. LOSANGELES DODGERS— Optioned OFChris HeiseytoOklahoma City (PCL). Recalled RHPMike BolsingerfromOklahomaCity. MIAMI MARL INS— Assigned INFReid Brignac outright toNewOrleans(PCL). PHILADE LPHIA PHILLIES— Optioned 3BCody Ascheto LehighValley(IL). BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKEE BUCKS— NamedSukiHobsonsenior strength andrehabilitation specialist. NEWORLEANSPELICANS— FiredcoachMonty Williams. FOOTBA LL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS— SignedLBShaqRiddick and WR J.J. Nelson tofour-yearcontracts. ATLANTA FALCONS— SignedRBTevinColeman. BUFFALOBILLS— SignedTENickO'Learyand WRDezminLewis. CHICAGO BEARS— ClaimedTEChris Pantale off waiversfromthe NewYorkJets. CINCINNATI BENGALS—SignedSDerronSmith. CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedDLXavierCooperandFBMalcolm Johnson. DENVERBRONCOS— ClaimedTEMarcelJensen (Jacksonvile)andWRSolomon Patton (Tampa Bay) off waivers.SignedG Andre Davis andWR David Porter. DETROI TLIONS— SignedWRLanceMooretoa one-yearcontractandRBDesmond Martin. Released RB Ras heedWilliams. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS — Signed LB Dante FowlerJr.toafour-yearcontract. KANSASCITY CHIEFS— SignedFBManasseh Garner; OLCharlesSweeton; LS AndrewEast; TE JamesO'Shaughnessy; Cs MitchMorseandGarrett Frye; DLRakeemNunez-Rochesand David Irving; CBs De'Va nteBausbyandJustinCox;WRsKennyCook, Tello LuckettandDa'Ron Brown; andLBsRamikWilson, D.J.Alexander,SageHaroldandJustin March. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Signed LB Dekoda Watson. NEW ORLEANSSAINTS— SignedLBStephone AnthonyandCBPJ.Williams tofour-yearcontracts. OAKLAND RAIDERS—SignedWRAustin Hill, T AnthonyMorris andWRAndreDebose. PRTSBU RGHSTEELERS— SignedCBSenquez Golsonto afour-yearcontract. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS— Terminated the contract of G C.J.Davis. WaivedGNateIsles.SignedLBTyrell AdamsandFBBrandonCottom. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— SignedLB Kwon Alexander,WR s Kenny Bell andKaelin ClayandRB Joey losefa.ClaimedS D.J. Swearinger off waivers fromHoustonandLBKhaseemGreenefromChicago. WASHINGTON REDSKINS— SignedOLBrandon Scherff. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague EDMONTONOILERS— SignedCEetuLaurikainen to a two-year,entry-level contract. SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer MLS —SuspendedMontrealcoachFrankKlopas onegameandfinedhimanundisclosedamountfor Violatingtheleague'spolicy onentering thefield/leaving the bench areain the90th minuteof aMay9match againstPortland. COLUMBU S CREW— Mutually agreedto part wayswithDHernanGrana. NEWYORKCITYFC— PlacedDAndresMendoza on waivers. COLLEGE ANGELO STATE— Named James Reid interim athletic director. ASSUMP TION— Announcedthe retirement of softballcoachRalphDeLucia. GEORGIA STATE— Announcedmen' sbasketballF Willie Claytonistransferring fromCharlotte. GEOR GIATECH—Announced men'sbasketball G AdamSmith is transferringfromVirginia Tech. INDIANA — Suspended men's basketball F Devin Davisfromaffteamactivities. MICHIGAN STATE—Granted thereleaseof senior WR AndreSimsJr. fromhis scholarship, so hecan completehisfinal yearof eligibility elsewhere. TEXAS-PANAMERICAN — Named Vi nicius Baiganassistant volleyball coach. UALR — Named SteveWiedower women'sassistant basketballcoach.

Today'sGame OrlandoCityatD.C.United, 5 p.m.

Friday's Games Chicagoat NewYorkCity FC,4p.m. New YorkatFCDalas,6p.m.

HOCKEY NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT

SECOND ROUND

(Best-of-7) Tuesday'sGame

Tampa Bay4, Montreal f, Tamp aBaywinsseries 4-2

Today'sGame

Washington atN.Y. Rangers, 4:30p.m., seriestied3-3

lightningoustCanadiansinGame6 assist, TAMPA, Fla.— Nikita Kucherov had two goals and an and TampaBayadvanced to the Eastern Conference finals with a 4-1 victory over Montreal on Tuesdaynight. Steven Stamkos scored his third goal of the playoffs for the Lightning, who closed out the second-round series in sjx games after Montreal fought off elimination in Games 4and 5. Ondrej Palat also had agoal and assist for TampaBay,and Ben Bishop stopped18 shots to outperform Carey Price, who finished with 24 saves. TheLightning will face the winner of tonight's New York Rangers-Washington Capitals game. —TheAssociated Press

FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 2,539 34 3 19 0 -2 The Daffes 3,215 381 1 JohnDay -2 McNary 3,t29 292 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedTuesday. Cbnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 183,987 5,784 4,434 2,338 TheDaff es t59,628 4,818 334 t64 John Day 129,959 3,712 495 317 McNary 119,425 2,799 66 4 415

his Caps won only two playoff rounds in fouryears. He was unemployed for just 48 hours after Washington

fired him for a slow start in November 2011, and he swift-

ly fixed the underachieving Ducks, who nearly rallied into a playoff spot that spring. Anaheim has been one of the NHL's dominant teams ever

since, winning three division titles and finishing in the over-

all top three each season. But Boudreau had the same

about Chicago," Boudreau said. "I was really glad that coaches (.664).

Blues made only one confer-

I don't have to answer that

ence final despite reaching sev- to Los Angeles in 2014.

But he had minimal post-

agonizing playoff fate, losing a Game 7 to Detroit in 2013 and

question anytime soon. In that season success and a handful respect, it's always good. Get- of high-profile flops on his ting to the final four is a new resume before everything experience for me, so it's going changed this spring while the

en consecutive postseasons, and his Colorado Avalanche

Now on a new frontier, Bou-

to be interesting to see how ev-

the conference finals in his first

teams. I think we've lost for

Ducks steamrolled the Pacif-

erything goes." ic Division bracket with eight Boudreau almost won too wins in nine games. "There's an awful lot of great much during the regular season in Washington and Ana-

coaches in this world that ha-

BarCelOna adVanCeS toChamPiOnSLeague final — Bar-

heim, because it made his

ven't gotten to the semifinals

celona advanced to theChampions Leaguefinal for the first time since 2011,getting a pair of Neymar goals andcruising to a 3-2 loss at Bayern Munich onTuesdaynight for a 5-3 aggregate victory in their semifinal matchup. Seeking its fifth Europeantitle, Barcelona will play defending champion RealMadrid or Juventus in Berlin on June 6.Real tries to overturn a 2-1deficit in today's semifinal.

postseason d i sappointments

of the Stanley Cup, or haven't

— From staffand wire reports

DEALS

IN THE BLEACHERS

even more cutting. He has

done a lot of things, but they're still great coaches," Boudreau Presidents' Trophy in his eight said. NHL seasons, leaving BouIndeed, an example is bedreau with the highest points hind the other bench. percentage among all active Joel Quenneville's St. Louis won seven division titles and a

dreau is not forgetting how he never got out of the second got here. "I think we've had good round. The Blackhawks made season and won his first Cup reasons," Boudreau said. "But I one year later, in 2010 — Quen- trynot to let it trickle in, (or) say, neville's 13th NHL season and 'Hey, it's your fault that you're 12th postseason. not making it to th e fourth The Capitals promoted him round or the third round,' befrom their minor-league team cause when you start thinking in 2007, and the 51-year-old like that, then you doubt your NHL coaching rookie immedi- abilities. I don't want to do that. ately revitalized the franchise, I think it's the coach's job to not winning four straight South- only sound confident, but to east Division titles and the look confident, especially (to) 2010 Wesidents' Trophy. Yet your players."


WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL IT'S OUTTA HERE, ALL THEWAY

eatandings All TimesPDT

NewYork Tampa Bay Toronto Boston Baltimore Kansas City Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland Houston Los Angeles Seattle

Texas Oakland

Dodgers11, Marlins1

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB 21 13 .618 18 16 .529 3 17 17 .500 4 15 18 14 17

CentralDivision W L 21 20 18 13 11

12 13 15 17 20

West Division

W L 20 13 16 17 15 17 14 19 13 22

455 51/2 .452 5'/t

I

Pct GB .636 .606 1 .545 3 .433 6'/t .355 9

5INro»

14

Pct GB

P Alvrz1b 4 1 1 0 Francrrf 4 0 0 0 Scahigp 0 0 0 0 CHrndz3b 3 0 1 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 OHerrrcf 4 0 2 0 K angss 4 0 0 0 Ruizc 4010 JHrrsn3b 3 2 1 3 OSullvnp 1 0 0 0 Cervegic 3 1 2 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Burnettp 2 0 0 0 ABlancph 1 1 1 0 SRdrgz1b 1 0 0 0 LGarcip 0 0 0 0 G ilesp 0 0 0 0 Sizemrph 1 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Totals 33 7 8 7 Totals 3 4 2 8 2 P ittsburgh 000 3 0 0 400 — 7 Philadelphia 00 0 002 600 — 2 E—J.Harrison (6), Polanco(3). DP—Pittsburgh 1, Philadelphia1. LOB —Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia

Detroit, and Angel Nesbitt earned his first career win.

Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi DGordn2b 4 0 0 0 Pedrsncf 6 0 1 0 Prado3b 4 0 1 0 Roginsss 6 2 2 0 Stantonrf 2 1 2 1 HKndrc2b 5 2 4 1 JBakerlf 0 0 0 0 AGnzlz1b 3 2 1 1 Ozunacf 4 0 0 0 Santosp 0 0 0 0 Yelichlf 2 0 0 0 Uribeph 1 0 0 0 Massetp 0 0 0 0Nicasiop 0 0 0 0 Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Howellp 0 0 0 0 JSolanoph 1 0 0 0 Guerrr3b 5 2 3 2 Morse1b 4 0 0 0 Grandlc 4 2 2 2 R ealmtc 4 0 1 0 Ethierrf 5 1 5 3 Hchvrrss 2 0 1 0 VnSlyklf-1b 4 0 3 2 DSolanss 0 0 0 0 Bolsngrp 3 0 0 0 Harenp 1 0 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Handp 0 0 0 0 KHrndzph-If 2 0 0 0 ISuzukilf-rf 1 0 0 0 Totals 2 9 1 5 1 Totals 4 4112111 Miami 1BB OBB 000 — 1 Los Angeles 06 1 145 ggx— 11 DP —LosAngeles1.LOB— Miami6,LosAngeles 12. 28 —A.Gonzalez(15), Guerrero(4),VanSlyke(6). HR —Stanton (8), H.Ke ndrick (4), Ethier(5). CSYelich(1). S—Haren. SF—VanSlyke.

throw over; they pay attention

first, the Orioles would not

t o pitch a gainst th e

Chris Carison/The Associated Press

Miami's Giancarlo Stanton celebrates with Christian Yelich after his home run left Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, only the fifth time in the history of the park a homer has left the stadium.

Boston(Miley1-4) atOakland(Gray4-0),12:35 p.m. St. Louis(lackey2-1)atCleveland(Kiuber0-5)r3:10p.m.

Toronto(Aa.Sanchez 3-2) at Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 3-2),4;05p.m. Minnesota (Nolasco 2-1) at Detroit (Lobstein3-2), 4:08 p.m. N.Y.Yankees (Warren2-1) atTampa Bay(Karns2-1), 4:10 p.m. KansasCity (Ven tura 2-2) atTexas(Gagardo 2-5), 5:05 p.m. Chicago WhiteSox(Quintana 1-3) atMilwaukee(Nelson 1-3),5:10p.m. SanFrancisco(THudson1-3) at Houston(Oberholtzer 0-0),5;10p.m. Colorado (Lyles 2-3)at LA. Angels(Santiago 2-2), 7:05 p.m. San Diego(Shields 4-0) at Seattle (TWalker 1-3), 7:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames St. LouisatCleveland,9;10a.m. Minnesota at Detroit,10:08a.m. KansasCityatTexas,11:05a.m. N.Y.YankeesatTampaBay,4:10 p.m. TorontoatHouston, 5:10 p.m. Bostonat Seattle, 7:10p.m.

PHILADELPHIA — A.J. Burnett

Miami

Tuesday'sGames

Today'sGames

Cardinals 8, indians 3

Giants 8,Astros1

CLEVELAND — Matt Holliday had

HOUSTON —Chri sHeston's first career complete gamewas a two-hitter, and hestruck out10 as San Francisco won for the third time in four games.

four RBls, including a three-run homer, to lead St. Louis.

Pirates 7, Phillies 2

gave up two runs to win in his LOS ANGELES — Andre Ethier return to Philadelphia and lead went 5-for-5 with a homerand Pittsburgh to its fourth straight three RBls, and LosAngeles won win. The 38-year-old right-hander its fifth straight, easily overcoming led the majors with18 losses for a mammoth first-inning home run the Phillies last year andsigned a by Giancarlo Stanton that left the one-year deal with the Pirates in stadium. Howie Kendrick hadfour the offseason. hits and also went deep asthe Dodgers roughed upDanHaren Pittsburgh Philadelphia ab r hbi in his return to Los Angeles. Stan- P olancrf 5ab1 r1hbi 2 Reverelf 4 1 1 1 ton's homer wasthe fifth to ever NWalkr2b 5 0 1 0 Galvisss 4 0 1 0 Mcctchcf 4 1 2 2 Utley2b 4 0 1 1 leave Dodger Stadium. Martelf 2 1 0 0 Howard1b 4 0 0 0

.606 .485 4 .469 4'/t .424 6 .371 8

St. Louis8,Cleveland3 Toronto10,Baltimore2 Detroit 2,Minnesota1,10 innings Tampa Bay4, N.Y.Yankees2 Kansas City7,Texas6, 10innings Chicago WhiteSox4, Milwaukee2 SanFrancisco8, Houston1 Oakland 9, Boston2 L.A. Angel5, s Colorado 2 Seattle11,SanDiego4

National League

Tigers 2, Twins1 (10 inn.) DETROIT —lan Kinsler's RBI single in the bottom of the10th lifted

6. 28 — Cervelli 2 (6), Revere(7), C.Hernandez (2), A.Blanco(3). HR—Mccutchen(3), J.Harrison(3). SB — J.Harrison (1). CS—Ruiz(1). S—Burnett. IP H R E R BBSO Pittsburgh BurnettW,2-1 7

6 Scahig 1 1 Caminero 1 1 Philadelphia O'SullivanL,0-2 5 5 E R BBSO DeFratus 1 0 L.Garcia 1 2 6 0 4 Giles 1 0 5 1 1 Papelbon 1 1 0 0 2 HBP —byO'Sullivan (Marte). 0 0 1 T—2:49. A—20,393(43,651).

2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

5 1 1

3 3 1 2 Cleveland IP H R 0 0 0 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami Minnesota Detroit 4 4 2 1 Wong2b 5 0 0 0 Kipnis2b 4 1 3 1 HarenL,4-2 41-3 11 6 ab r hbi ab r hbi 0 0 0 1 Ban Francisco H o uston Mcrpnt3b 5 2 2 1 CSantn1b 5 0 2 0 2-3 6 5 Hand D ozier2b 5 0 1 0 Gosecf 4 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 ab r h bi ab r hbi Hogidvlf 5 1 2 4 Brantlycf 4 1 2 1 Masset 2 2 0 TrHntrrf 3 0 0 1 Kinsler2b 5 0 2 1 J hPerltss 5 1 2 1 Mossrf 3 0 0 0 Aokidh 3 0 0 0 Mrsnckcf 4 0 1 0 Morris 1 2 0 Mauer1b 4 0 1 0 Micarr1b 3 0 0 0 MAdms1b 5 0 1 0 Raburnph-rf 2 0 1 1 Ariasph-dh 1 0 0 0 Altuve2b 4 0 0 0 Los Angeles Plouff e3b 3 0 0 0 VMrtnzdh 4 0 0 0 Molinac 4 1 2 0 Swisherdh 3 0 0 0 Panik2b 4 1 1 0 Valuen3b 3 0 0 0 BolsingerW,1-0 5 2-3 5 1 1 2 3 KSuzukc 4 0 1 0 JMrtnzrf 4 1 1 1 T.cruzph-c 1 0 0 0 DvMrplf 4 0 0 0 Pagancf 5 1 3 0 Gattisdh 3 0 0 0 P.Rodriguez 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cnbs 6, Mets1 KVargsdh 4 0 2 0 Cespdslf 4 0 2 0 Heywrdrf 4 1 0 0 Chsnhll3b 4 0 0 0 Poseyc 4 1 0 0 CIRsmsrf 3 0 0 0 Santos 1 0 0 0 1 0 Rynldsdh 4 1 3 2 RPerezc 4 0 0 0 Belt1b 5 1 1 0 Carter1b 3 0 0 0 EdEscrlf 4 0 0 0 Cstgns3b 3 0 1 0 Nicasio 1 0 0 0 1 1 CHICAGO Hickscf 4 0 1 0 Romine3b 0 0 0 0 —Jake Arrieta had a Bourioscf 4 1 1 0 JRmrzss 3 1 1 0 Maxwllrf 5 2 2 1 Jcastroc 3 1 1 1 Howell 1 0 0 0 0 0 DSantnss 4 1 1 0 RDavisph 1 0 0 0 Totals 42 8 13 8 Totals 3 6 3 9 3 Bcrwfrss 4 2 1 1 MGnzlzss 3 0 0 0 season-high10 strikeouts, Kris Hand pi t ched to 6 ba tt e rs i n the 6t h . HPerez3b 0 0 0 0 S t. Louis 020 0 1 0 140 — 8 MDuff y3b 4 0 3 5 Grssmnlf 3 0 0 0 HBP—byHaren(A.Gonzalez).WP—Haren. Bryant homered for the second JMccnc 4 0 0 0 C leveland 000 0 0 0 300 — 3 GBlanclf 3 0 0 0 T—3:03.A—49,628 (56,000). Jlglesisss 3 0 1 0 E—CSantana(2), JoRamirez(6). LOB—St. Louis Totals 38 8 11 7 Totals 2 9 1 2 1 straight day andChicago spoiled NATIONALLEAGUE Totals 3 5 1 7 1 Totals 3 52 9 2 8, Cleveland10. 2B—M.carpenter (15), Jh.Peralta Ban Francisco 630 660 BBB — 8 Noah Syndergaard's anticipated — 1 East Division Minnesota BBB BBB B16 0 (9), Kipnis2(7), Brantley(9), Raburn(9). HR —HolliHouston 610 600 BBB — 1 Diamondbacks14, Na t i on al s 6 W L Pct GB day (3).SB—M.Adams(1). E—Valbuena (2), Ma.G onzalez(3). DP—Houston Detroit BBB 1BB BBB 1 — 2 debut with NewYork. NewYork 20 13 .606 IP H R E R BBSO 1. LOB —SanFrancisco8, Houston1.28—B.crawford One outwhenwinning runscored. PHOENIX — Mark Trumbo homWashington 18 16 ,529 2'/i Bt. Louis DP — M inne s ot a 1, Detroi t 1. LOB — M in ne sot a 6, (5), M.Duffy(4).HR —J.castro(3). CS—Aoki (3). New york Chicago Atlanta 15 18 .455 5 LynnW,2-3 6 4 0 0 4 9 —K.Suzuki (3), K.vargas(2), Gose(7), ered twice to drive in four runs, IP H R E R BBBD Detroit 8. 28 ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami 15 19 .441 5r/t Belisle 1-3 2 2 2 0 1 SanFrancisco Kinsler (8),Cespe des(12), Casteganos(6). 3B—D. and Arizona snappedWashingGrndrsrf 2 0 0 0 Fowlercf 4 1 0 0 Philadelphia 11 23 .324 9'/t Choate 0 1 1 1 0 0 HestonW,3-3 9 2 1 1 0 10 Santana(2). HR—J.Martinez (7). SB—Dozier (3). DnMrp3b 4 0 2 0 Bryant3b 4 13 1 CentralDivision ton's five-game winning streak. SiegristH,6 1 1 0 0 0 1 Houston CS — Hicks(1). S—Gose.SF—TorHunter. uddyrlf 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 2 0 1 0 W L Pct GB Socolovich 12-3 1 0 0 0 3 McHughL,4-1 4 2-3 7 7 IP H R E R BBSD Bryce Harper hit his seventh home C 3 2 3 D uda1b 4 1 1 0 MMntrc 4 0 1 1 St. Louis 23 9 .719 Cleveland 11-3 2 1 1 2 3 Minnesota K.chapm an F loresss 3 0 1 0 Solerrf 5 1 2 0 Chicago 17 15 .531 6 CarrascoL,4-3 6 2-3 10 4 4 0 7 W.Harri run in the last six gamesfor the Gibson 7 5 1 1 0 6 s 1 1 0 0 0 Niwnhscf 3 0 0 0 Scastross 5 2 2 1 Pittsburgh 17 16 .515 6'/2 Rzepczynski 0 1 0 0 0 0 Sipp Boyer 2 2 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Nationals, a two-run shot. Plawckc 2 0 0 1 Coghlnlf 2 1 1 2 2-3 0 2 0 1 1 Cincinnati 16 17 .485 7r/t B.Shaw Pressl y L,1-1 1 3 2 1 1 0 0 Deduno 1 0 0 0 0 1 Syndrgp 2 0 0 0 Szczurph-If 1 0 0 0 1-3 1 1 1 0 1 HBP Milwaukee 12 22 .353 12 Hagadone Detroit — b y M cH ugh (B .craw f o rd). WP — H es ton. ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Arrietap 4 0 0 0 Washington Arizona 1-3 1 1 1 0 0 T—2;39.A—20,468 (41,574). West Division Atchison 72-3 6 1 1 1 6 Simon Glmrtnp 0 0 0 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi W L Pct GB R.Webb 1 0 0 0 0 1 C hamberl a in 1 3 0 0 0 0 1 Monellph 1 0 0 0 ARussll2b 4 0 1 1 Spancf 3 0 2 1 Inciartcf 3 1 1 3 LosAngeles 22 10 .688 Rzepczynskipitchedto 1 batter in the7th. Choate Soria 1 0 0 0 0 2 TMooreph 1 0 0 1 Trumorf 5 2 2 4 Roblesp 0 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 17 16 .515 5'/t pitchedto1batter in the7th. American League N esbitt W,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Teiada2b 3 0 1 0 WP — Lynn. YEscor3b 5 0 1 0 Gldsch1b 3 2 0 0 SanDiego 17 17 .500 6 HBP —byGibson(J.lglesias). Totals 2 8 1 5 1 Totals 3 56 116 W erthlf 5 1 1 0 DPerltlf 5 1 3 0 Arizona 15 17 .469 7 T—3:31. A—12,615(36,856). T—2:56. A—26,177(41,574). 000 0 0 0 610 — 1 Colorado 11 18 379 91/2 H arperrf 3 2 2 2 Hill3b 5 2 3 2 N ew york Royals 7, Rangers 6(10 inn.) 000 004 11x — 6 Zmrmnfb 4 0 2 0Owings2b 5 3 3 0 Chicago White Sox 4, Brewers 2 DP — Chicago 2. LOB—New York 3, Chicago Tuesday'sGames Blue Jays10, Orioles 2 WRamsc 4 1 1 0 Gswschc 4 1 1 2 ARLINGTON, Texas— AlexGor12. 28—Rizzo (8), S.castro 2 (3), A.Russell (7). St. Louis8,Cleveland3 Dsmndss 3 0 0 0 Ahmedss 3 1 2 1 3B — Bryant(1). HR —Bryant (3), Coghlan(4). SFPittsburgh 7, Philadelphia2 MILWAUKEE — Chris Salestruck don homered onthefirst pitch of Gracep 0 0 0 0 RDLRsp 3 1 1 1 BALTIMORE — Edwi n EncarnaCincinnati 4,Atlanta3 B arrettp 0 0 0 0 Chafinp 0 0 0 0 Plawecki. out11 as Chicago ended a sevthe 10th inning to lift Kansas Ci t y. IP H R E R BBSO cion homered twice anddrove Chicago Cubs6, N.Y.Mets1 CRonsnp 0 0 0 0 Delgadp 0 0 0 0 New York en-game road losing skid. Chicago WhiteSox4, Milwaukee2 MTaylrph 1 0 0 0 in three runs for Toronto. It was KansasCity Texas SyndergaardL,0-1 51-3 6 3 3 4 6 SanFrancisco8, Houston1 210 2-3 1 1 1 3 2 ab r h bi ab r hbi his19th career two-homer game Espinos2b-ss3 A.Torres Arizona14,Washington6 Strasrgp 0 0 0 0 Chicago Milwaukee A Escorss 4 1 2 0 Choorl 5 1 3 1 Gilmartin 1 2 1 1 0 1 L.A. Angel5, s Colorado 2 S olisp 1 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi and second this season — both Mostks 3b 5 1 2 1 Smlnsk pr-If 0 1 0 0 Robles 1 2 1 1 0 0 L.A. Dodgers11, Miami1 Uggla2b 2 0 1 1 Eatoncf 5 0 1 0 Segurass 4 1 1 0 against Baltimore. L.caincf 5 1 1 1 Andrusss 3 1 2 0 Seattle11,SanDiego4 Totals 3 5 6 125 Totals 3 6 141613 Chicago Mecarrlf 5 0 0 0 KDavislf 4 0 0 0 Today'sGam es 3 1 1 2 10 A breu1b 4 1 1 1 Braunrf 4 0 0 1 Hosmer1b 3 2 2 2 Fielder1b 4 0 1 2 W ashington 0 9 1 1 9 2 002 — 6 ArrietaW,4-3 8 KMorlsdh 5 1 1 1 Beltre3b 5 0 2 1 l 1 2 0 0 0 2 Washington (G.Gonzalez 3-2) at Arizona(Hellickson AGarcirf 5 0 2 0 CGomzcf 4 0 1 0 Toronto Baltimore Arizona 261 624 Ogx — 14 J.Russel WP—Synde rg aa rd. AGordnlf 5 1 3 1 Blanksdh 4 1 3 1 1-3),12:40p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi Gillaspi3b 3 0 0 0 JRogrs1b 3 0 0 0 E—Strasburg (2). DP—Arizona3. LOB —WashS.Perezc 5 0 1 0 LMartnpr-dh 0 0 0 0 Carrerlf 4 0 0 0 Machd3b 4 1 3 0 St. Louis(Lack ey2-1)atCleveland(Kluber0-5),3;10p.m. GBckh3b 0 0 0 0 EHerrr3b 3 1 1 1 ington 6,Arizona5. 28—Span (8), Harper(7), Zim- T—2:55. A—31,542(40,929). Infante2b 4 0 0 1 Corprnph-dh 1 0 0 0 Dnldsn3b 5 2 2 3 Paredsdh 4 0 1 2 Pittsburgh (Liriano1-2) at Philadelphia(Hamels 2-3), AIRmrzss 3 1 1 1 Maldndc 3 0 0 0 merman (10), Uggla (3), Hil (4), Owings(5). 38JDysonrf 5 0 0 0 Peguerlf-rf 5 0 0 0 4:05 p.m. Bautistdh 4 1 1 0 A.Jonescf 3 0 0 0 Flowrsc 4 1 2 1 HGomz2b 3 0 0 0 Owings(2). HR —Harper (12), Inciarte(1), Trumbo Leaders F ield2b 5 0 2 0 Encrnc1b 4 3 2 3 DYongrf 4 0 0 0 Atlanta(Stults1-3) atCincinnati (RIglesias00,410 pm. M Jhnsn2b 2 0 1 1 Fiersp 2 0 0 0 2 (6). S —Strasburg, R.DeLaRosa. SF—Inciarte 2, Chirinsc 3 0 0 1 Miami(Cosart 1-3)atL.A.Dodgers(Frias3-0),4:50 p.m. Roertsnp 0 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 RuMrtnc 4 0 2 0 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 Gosewisch. N.Y.Mets(Harvey5-1) at ChicagoCubs(Hammel Salep 3 0 0 0 Blazekp 0 0 0 0 DShldscf 2 2 1 0 Colaegrf 5 0 2 1 Pearce2b 3 0 0 0 AMERICANLEAGUE IP H R E R BBSO 3-1),5:05p.m. Totals 4 1 7 127 Totals 3 7 6 146 Bonifacph-2b1 1 1 0 GParraph 0 0 0 0 Pillarcf 5 1 1 0 JHardyss 3 1 1 0 Washington BATTING —AJones, Baltimore, .347; Brantley, — 7 ChicagoWhiteSox(Quintana1-3) atMilwaukee(NelKansas City 610 603 101 1 C ottsp 0 0 0 0 Clevel a nd, .347; Ellsbury, NewYork, .346; Reddick, G oinsss 5 1 3 0 Sniderlf 3 0 0 0 StrasburgL,2-4 3 1-3 8 8 7 1 3 son1-3),5:10p.m. Texas 10 1 6 1 1 101 B — 6 Kinlzlr p 0 0 0 0 StTRsn2b 2 0 0 0 Josephc 3 0 0 0 Solis 2 4 4 4 2 1 Oakland,.346; Ncruz,Seatle, .344;Vogt, Oakland, E — A .E sc obar (5), Andrus (9). DP — K ans as C it y SanFrancisco(THudson1-3) at Houston(Oberholtzer Totals 3 5 4 9 4 Totals 3 02 3 2 Smoakph 1 0 0 0 Grace 2-3 3 2 2 0 1 .337; Fielder,Texas, .333. 0-0),5:10p.m. 2, Texas1. LOB —Kansas City 8, Texas7. 2B—L. Travispr-2b 1 2 0 0 RBI — Vogt, Oakland,30; Ncruz, Sea ttle, 27;HosChicago 0 00 020 611 — 4 Barrett 1 0 0 0 0 0 Colorado (Lyles 2-3)at LA. Angels(Santiago 2-2), M ilwaukee 1 0 0 0 1 0 600 — 2 Cain (7),K.Morales(11), A.Gordon2 (9), Blanks(3). Totals 40 10137 Totals 3 1 2 5 2 C.Robi n son 1 1 0 0 0 1 mer, KansasCity, 27;Teixeira, NewYork, 27; KMoA.Escobar(1). HR —Moustakas(4), Hosmer (6), Toronto 7:05 p.m. E—Gilaspie (5), Maldonado(2), E.Herrera(3). 38 — rales, KansasCity, 25;Reddick, Oakland,25; Travis, BBB 161 449 — 16 Arizona San Diego(Shields 4-0) at SeattleFLW alker 1-3), LOB —Chicago9, Milwaukee2. 28—AI.Ramirez(9 A.Gordon (4), Choo(4). SB—Peguero (2), DeShields Baltimore BB 2 B BB DBB — 2 R.De LaRosaW4-2 7 8 4 4 2 4 Toronto,25. 7:10 p.m. Flowers(4). 38—Segura (2). HR—E.Herrera 4. 2(9). CS —DeShields (1). S—Andrus. SF—Infante, E—Goins (5), J.Hardy (1), C.Davis (1), Machado Chafin DOUBLES —Cespedes, Detroit,12; Cano,Seattle, 12-3 4 2 2 1 0 SB — M.Johnson (3), C.Gome z (3). CS—C.Gomez Fielder,Chirinos. Thursday'sGames (8). DP —Toronto 2, Baltimore1. LOB—Toronto 7, Delgado 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 11; KMorales,KansasCity,11; Dozier,Minnesota,10; St. LouisatCleveland,9:10a.m. (2). SF —AI.Ramirez. IP H R E R BBBD Baltimore3. 2B—Bautista(7), Machado2(7). HR Pillar, Toronto,10;11tiedat9. WP—Grace . PittsburghatPhiladelphia,10:05a.m. IP H R E R BBBD KansasCity HOMERUNS—Ncruz, Seattle,14; Teixeira,New Donaldson (8), Encarnacion2(7). T—2:59.A—19,053 (48,519). N.Y.MetsatChicagoCubs,11;20a.m. Chicago Volquez 5 6 4 4 3 3 York, 11;HR amirez, Boston, 10; Trout, LosAngeles, IP H R E R BBSO San Francisco atCincinnati,4:10 p.m. SaleW3-1 8 3 2 2 1 11 MadsonBS,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Toronto 9; Vogt,Oakland, 9; CDavis, Baltimore, 8; Donaldson, Coloradoat LA. Dodgers, 7:10p.m. RobertsonS,6-7 1 0 0 0 0 2 HocheyarBS,1-1 1 4 1 1 0 0 BuehrleW,5-2 6 Toronto,8;ARodriguez, NewYork, 8. 4 2 2 1 4 Reds 4, Braves 3 WashingtonatSan Diego,7:10p.m. Milwaukee W.Davis 1 1 0 0 0 STOLEN BASES—Altuve, Houston,11; Egsbury, Osuna 1 0 0 0 0 1 61-3 5 2 2 1 7 G.HollandW,1-0 2 Fiers 2 1 1 0 2 Loup NewYork,11;Gardner,NewYork,10; Springer,Hous1 1 0 0 0 0 CINCINNATI —Devin Mesoraco 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Texas W.Smith ton, 10; DeShi elds,Texas,9; Marisnick, Houston,9; Tepera 1 0 0 0 0 0 Interleague BlazekL,3-1 1 1 1 1 2 0 N.Martinez 61-3 6 4 3 1 4 Baltimore doubled homethe winning run RDavis,Detroit,8. Cotts 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Claudio 0 1 1 1 0 0 TillmanL,2-5 ERA —Keuchel, Houston, 1.39; Gray,Oakland, 62 - 3 9 5 5 1 4 with one out in the ninth inning, Kinlzler 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Bass 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Tom.Hunter 1.65; FHernanez, d Seatle, 1.85; NMartinez,Texas, 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 Mariners11, Padres 4 WP — Blazek. and Cincinnti snapped a threeSh.Tolleson 1 2 0 0 0 1 .88; O dorizzi,TampaBay,2.09;Lewis,Texas,2. 40; McFarland 1-3 2 4 0 0 1 T—2:45. A—26,935(41,900). Feliz 1 2 1 1 1 0 Brach game losing streak. UJimenez, Baltimore, 2.41. 12-3 0 0 0 1 4 SEATTLE —Nelson Cruz hit his PimentelL,0-1 1 1 1 1 0 0 HBP—byTilman (Carrera, Ru.Martin). WP STRIKEOUT S—Archer, Tampa Bay, 58; Pineda, —McFarClaudiopitchedto1batter in the7th. NewYork,54; FHernandez, Seattle,50; Salazar,Clevemajor league-leading 15th home Angels 5, Rockies 2 land. PB —Joseph. Atlanta Cincinnati Volquezpitchedto1batter in the6th. l a nd, 48; Kl u ber, Cleveland, 46;Gray,Oakland, 44; T—2:37. A—17,319(45,971). ab r hbi ab r hbi HBP —byN.Martinez (A.Escobar). run, Mike Zunino connected twice, ANAHEIM, Calif.— Albert Pujols KazmirOa , kland,43;Buchholz,Boston,43. Markksrf 4 0 2 1 BHmltncf 3 0 1 0 T — 3: 3 4. A — 23,6 59 (48, 1 14). SAVES —AMiller, NewYork,13; Perkins,Minneand Seattle hit a six homers in a A Smnsss 5 1 1 0 Byrdlf 2001 Athletics 9, RedSox2 the tiebreaking run on sota, 11;Soria,Detroit, 11;Street, LosAngeles, 11; Fremn1b 3 1 1 0 Votto1b 2 1 0 0 game for the first time since 2004. scored Rodney, Se atle, 9; Boxberger, Tampa Bay, 9; Britton, KJhnsnlf 3 0 2 1 Frazier3b 3 1 1 2 Johnny Giavotella's single in the Rays 4, Yankees2 Baltimore,7; Gregerson,Houston,7. — Josh Reddick OAKLAND, Calif. JGomsph-If 0 0 0 0 Phillips2b 3 0 0 0 San Diego Seattle eighth to sendColorado to its10th NATIONAL LEAGUE Cagasp3b 4 0 0 1 Schmkrph-2b1 0 0 0 had four hits with a homerand ab r hbi ab r hbi ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Evan BATTING —DGordon, Miami, .425; AGonzastraight loss. P rzyns c 5 0 0 0 Bruce rf 4 0 1 0 Almontcf 2 2 1 0 S.Smithlf 3 0 2 0 l e z, Los Angel e s, .373; Hol liday,St. Louis, .346; Longoria hit a tiebreaking sacrifice threeRBlsasOaklandsnappeda Petersn 2b 3 1 2 0 Negron ss 4 0 1 0 DeNrrsc 4 1 1 1 Rugginpr-cf 1 1 1 1 LeMahieu,Colorado,.340; Mcarpenter,St. Louis, six-game losing streak. YongJrcf 2 0 0 0 B.Pena c 4 1 3 0 Colorado Los Angel e s fly during a two-run eighth inning Kemprf 5 0 0 1 BMigerdh 3 1 2 0 .336; YEscobar, Washington, .336; Pagan,SanFranMaybicf n 1 0 0 0 Lornznpr 0 1 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Uptonlf 5 0 0 0Weeksph-dh 1 0 0 0 cisco, .333; Freem an, Atlanta, .333; Goldschmidt, as TampaBay rallied late. Fltynwp 3 0 0 0 DeSclfnp 2 0 0 0 Blckmncf 3 0 0 0 Calhonrf 4 0 3 0 S olarte1b 4 0 1 2 Cano2b 4 1 1 1 Boslon Oakland Arizona,.333; Al o nso,SanDiego,.333. Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 T lwtzkss 3 0 0 1 Troutcf 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi R BI — H ar per, W a shington, 31;AGonzalez,LosAnGyorko2b 4 0 1 0 Blmqst2b 1 0 0 0 New York TampaBay CGnzlzrf 4 0 0 0 Puiolsdh 4 1 1 0 Gosselnph 1 0 1 0 Cozartph 1 0 0 0 geles,30;Stanton,Miami,30;Goldschmidtr Arizona, B ettscf 4 0 0 0 Crisplf 4 1 0 0 Mdlrks3b 3 0 1 0 N.Cruzrf 4 2 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Arenad3b 3 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 0 0 JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Pedroi a 2b 3 1 2 0 Semienss 5 2 3 1 Spngnrdh 2 0 0 0 Seager3b 5 1 1 3 Zimmerm an, Washington, 25;Marte, Pittsburgh, Ellsurycf 4 1 2 0 Kiermrcf 3 1 0 0 Mornea 1b 4 1 2 0 Aybarss 3 2 2 0 Grigip 0 0 0 0Achpmp 0 0 0 0 27; B.Holt2b 1 0 0 0 Reddckrf 5 2 4 3 Barmesss 4 1 1 0 Morrsn1b 3 2 1 1 24; Upton,SanDiego,24. Gardnrlf 3 1 2 0 SouzJrrf 4 1 2 0 WRosrdh 4 0 0 0 Giavtll2b 4 2 2 1 Mesorc ph 1 0 1 1 Ortizdh 4 0 0 0 BButlerdh 5 0 0 0 Ackley cf-If 3 0 1 0 DOUBLE S —Mcarpenter, St. Louis,15; AGonzaD ickrsn lf 3 0 2 1 Joyce lf 4 0 1 3 ARdrozdh 3 0 0 0 Longori3b 3 1 1 1 Totals 34 3 9 3 Totals 3 0 4 8 4 H Rmrzlf 3 0 0 0 Vogtc 3212 Zuninoc 4 2 3 3 lez, LosAngeles,15; Freeman,Atlanta,14; DeN orris, BMcCnc 4 0 1 1 Loney1b 3 0 0 0 Hundlyc 3 1 1 0 Cowgillpr-If 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 002 1BB 000 — 3 Napoli1b 3 0 1 1 Muncy1b 3 1 0 0 CTaylrss 4 1 1 0 Diego,13;Tulowilzki, Colorado,13;7tied at10. Beltranrf 4 0 1 1 Forsyth2b 3 1 1 0 LeMahi2b 2 0 0 0 C.Perezc 4 0 1 1 Cincinnati 2B B DBB 101 — 4 San Sandovl3b 3 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 4 1 2 0 Totals 3 3 4 6 4 Totals 3 6111511 HOME RUNS — Ha r per , Wa shingt o n,12; Frazi er, Headly3b 4 0 1 0 DeJessdh 3 0 2 2 Krauss1b 3 0 0 0 One outwhenwinning runscored. V ictornrf 3 1 1 0 Fuldcf 3000 San Diego D B B DBB 301 — 4 Cincinnati, 11;Goldschmidt, Arizona,9; AGonzalez, Drew2b 4 0 0 0 Acarerss 3 0 0 0 Cron ph-1b 1 0 0 0 E — F ol t ynewi c z (1). DP — A tla nt a 1. LOB — A tlan t a Seattle 461 062 31x — 11 Totals 29 2 5 2 Totals 3 4 5 10 5 G Jones1b 3 0 1 0 Guyerlf 3 0 0 0 Navarf 0 0 0 0 Sogard2b 4 0 2 3 LosAngeles,9;Pederson,Los Angeles,9;Marte, 12, Cincinnati 7. 28 —Markakis (5), K.Johnson(3), Pittsburgh,8;Stanton, Miami,8; Upton,SanDiego,8. E—C.Taylor (1). DP—Seattle1. LOB —SanDiego C olorado Bogartsss 3 0 0 0 001 1 0 0 600 — 2 T eixeir1b 1 0 0 0 Riverac 3 0 0 0 Peterson (1), Gossel i n (3), B.Pena (4), Mesoraco Swihartc 3 0 0 1 11, Seattle 7. 28 —De.Norris (14), B.Miger 2(6). LosAngeles 000 STOLEN BASES —Hamilton, Cincinnati, 17; Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 200 63x— 5 HR — Ruggiano(1), N.Cruz(15),Seager(4), Morrison LOB Totals 3 0 2 4 2 Totals 3 69 129 (1). HR —Frazier (11). SB—Peterson (3). CS—B. DGordon,Miami,12; Polanco,Pittsburgh,10;Aoki, —Colorado4, LosAngeles 7. 2B—Morneau(7), Totals 33 2 8 2 Totals 2 8 4 6 3 Hami l t on (2), Bruce (1). S — Y ou ng Jr., B.H am i l t on. (6), Zunin2 o(5). CS—Ackley(1). S—Ackley. BBB BB1 1BB — 2 San Francisco,9;Fowler,Chicago,8; Rizzo,Chicago, 200 6 0 0 BBB — 2 Boston Dickerson(5), Calhoun2 (6)r Aybar(3), Joyce(5). New York SF — Cagaspo, Byrd. IP H R E R BBSO SB — Oakland 313 1BB 01x — 9 7 UptonSanDiego7 Puiols (1). CS—LeMahieu (3). S—Blackrnon. Tampa Bay 6 0 0 6 0 0 22x— 4 E — S em i e n (11). LOB — B os t o n 1, Oakl a nd 7. IP H R E R BBSO ERA —Greinke, LosAngeles,1.52; Burnett, PittsSan Diego LOB — N e w Y ork 6, T am pa B ay 4. S B — Sou z a Jr . (5). SF — Tulowitzki. 28 — Victorino (2), Sogard(5). 3B—Semien (1). Atlanta KennedyL,2-2 4 2-3 8 5 5 3 5 Ellsbury (5), Gardner(3). SF—Lonooria. burgh,1.60;SMiler,Atlanta,1.60; Niese,NewYork, IP H R E R BBSO CS — 62-3 6 3 2 4 7 11-3 4 2 2 0 1 Colorado Semien(6), Reddick (6), Vogt(9). Foltynewicz Kelley 1.95; Scherzer,Washington, 1.99; Lincecum,San IP H R E R BBBD HR — 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Franc Garces 2 3 4 4 1 1 KKendrick IP H R E R BBSD Avilan isco,2.00;Wacha,St.Louis,2.09. 7 7 2 2 0 5 New York JiJohnson 1 0 0 0 0 1 Seattle E ovaldi L,3-1 71 3 6 4 4 2 6 Boston BTRIKEDUT — BKe rshaw, Los Angeles, 56; BetancourtL,0-1 2-3 3 3 3 1 2 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 Scherzer,Washington,55; Shields,SanDiego,55; PaxtonW,1-2 6 3 0 0 5 5 Roberts 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Betances 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 MastersonL,2-2 21-3 6 6 6 1 1 Grigi L,0-2 52-3 6 3 3 3 4 Cincinnati Farquhar 1-3 1 3 1 2 0 Los Angeles TampaBay S.Wright Lynn,St. Louis,51;Fiers,Milwaukee,49; Arrieta, ChiDeSclafani 6 7 3 3 3 5 cago,48;TRoss,SanDiego, 48. Wilhelmsen 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 C.WilsonW2-2 8 5 2 2 1 6 Archer 7 7 2 2 1 8 Oakland Furbush 1 0 0 0 0 0 StreetS,11-13 1 0 0 0 0 2 Jepsen W,1-2 1 0 0 0 1 1 PomeranzW,2-3 7 4 2 2 0 3 Hoover 1 1 0 0 1 1 SAVES —Familia, NewYork, 13; Rosen thal, St. Lowe 1 1 1 1 2 1 HBP —byK.Kendrick (Trout), byC.Wilson (Arenado). BoxbergerS,9-9 1 1 0 0 0 0 Fe.Rodriguez 1 0 0 0 0 1 Ju.Diaz 1 1 0 0 1 0 Louis, 11;Grilli, Atlanta, 9;Kimbrel, SanDiego,9; HBP —byKennedy(S.Smith). PB—C.Perez. WP—Eoval di,Betances2. Otero 1 0 0 0 0 1 A.chapman W2-2 1 0 0 0 1 0 Storen, Washington, 9; Melancon, Pittsburgh, 8; T—2:33.A—10,417 (31,042). T—3:17.A—16,148 (47,574). T—2:44. A—28,150(45,957). T—2:32. A—24,605(35,067). T—2:46.A—23,780 (42,319). Casilla,SanFrancisco, 8.

Bt. Louis

I,

Ellsbury

Buck Showalter said over the

Continued from C1 And even though they are

looking for one." This is the type of lineup

both left-handed hitters, Ell-

the Yankees envisioned when

sbury, who was batting .341 overall entering Tuesday's game, and Gardner, who was batting .308, have hit about as well against left-handed pitchers as against right-handers. "They really have two leadoff guys," Baltimore manager

they signed Ellsbury, a Madrasnativeand former Oregon

weekend. "Most people are

the Yankees dealing with injuries, Gardner ended up hitting leadoff and Ellsbury third for most of 2014. Jeter finished the year bat-

ting .256, his lowest mark for a season in which he played State star, to a seven-year, $153 at least 119 games. He also million contract in December stole 10 bases — a number that 2013. But there was reluctance Gardner and Ellsbury have allast season to move Derek ready reached. "I know when I get on (base), Jeterout ofhiscustomary second spot in the order, and with

pitchers slide-step a lot; they

Yan-

to me," Ellsbury said before throw to second base if Gard- kees on Tuesday, echoed that Monday's game. "If it gets ner tried to steal because they sentiment. "Anytime there's speed back them out of their rhythm, may- did not want to risk Ellsbury's be it allows them to miss over stealing home. to back, it puts pressure on the "Those are the little as- team as a whole," Archer said. the plate a little more. It doesn't necessaril y mean you'regoing pects," Ellsbury said. "When "Trying to keep them off balto hit it, but the more times you you have speed, when you dis- ance, not only at the plate but get a pitch to hit, the more suc- rupt the defense, all those little on the bases, too, is huge for cessful anybody's going to be." things play big in a 162-game us. Most teams are trying to The 31-year-old Ellsbury season." do that, but they're not able to said he noticed that when he Tampa Bay pitcher Chris because those guys are plus, and Gardner were at third and Archer, who was scheduled plus."


C4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

PREP ROUNDUP

Barbaro

ow irs ominate istrictmeet PREP SCOREBOARD

Bulletin staff report BANKS — Crook County

dominated the team score of

Softball Standings cial District 1 girls golf chamConference pionships, as the Cowgirls Team Intermountain Conference Overall

Class4A

the Class 4A/3A/2A/IA Spe-

Ridgeview Bend M ountaiVine w sec o nd-place Summit Redmond

finished with a t wo-day total of 758 to finish 51 strokes

14-0 7-4 5-7 3-10 2-10

Corbetl Madras

20-1 12-9 9-13 8-13 4-1

Tri-Valley Conterence

0002010 — 3 8 2 104 330 x — 11 14 3

Boys golf

Class 5A Special Dislrict 2 championships At EagleCrest, RidgeCourse Par 72 Class5A Team score s— Summit304-287— 591,Bend IntermountainConference 306-309 —615, Hermiston 319-325—644, Pendleton innings) 326-319 —645, Eagle Point 331-326—657, Mountain ified for n ext w e ek's state Ridgeview (57(1 0)0 01 — 18 13 1 View 329-330 —659, Churchill 325-336-661, Marist championship tournament. Mountai nView 002 11 — 4 8 2 338-330 —668, Ridgeview 361-358—719, Redmond 379-392 —771, Ashland 49404—807, TheDalles The Cowgirls' Michaela Class 4A 421-408 —829, Crater 446-413—859,HoodRiver ValMcGrew finished tied for secTri-Valley Conference ley 518-508-1026. Co-medalists — Mason Krieger, Mountain View, ond with a two-day total of (10 innings) 1 0 0 002 101 6 — 11 17 3 74-70—144;Cole Chrisman,Summit,75-69—144. 186, shooting a 92 in the final Madras — 5 8 2 Crook County 000 211 001 0 Summit(591) —Cole Chrisman75-69—144, round at Quail Valley Golf JackLoberg76-72—148,BenWasserman79-71—150, Max Higlin75-75— 150,CooperDonahue78-82— 160. Course on the second day. Baseball Bend (615) — RyanDeCastilhos 73-77—150, Maddie Kasberger finished JackKlar78-74—152, MaxMcGee75-78—153, Rhett Standings Pederson80-80—160, Jamison Dover/Matt Klar 83one stroke behind McGrew IntermountainConference 83 — 166. in fourth place, Cora White Team Conference Overall Mountain View (659) — MasonKrieger 74Summi t 10-3 18-3 7 0 — 144, Seth Chilcutt 84 -85—169, Cole Rupert posted tied for fifth shooting Bend 8-3 15-6 88-85 —173, JoeNavarra 84-90—174, Payton Cole a 189, Macy Goehring fin- Redmond 6-6 10-u 87-90—177. 5-9 Ridgevi e w 8-16 ished seventh with a 198 and Ridgeview (719) —LukeBuerger 83-81—164, Vie w 2 - 10 5-15 Johnny Spinelli 82-89 —171, Jacob Kinzer/Derrick Abby Papke finished eighth M ountain Brown96-93—189, Zach Nelson100-95—195, Ryan with a two day total of 200 for Class 5A Winslow100-110 —210. IntermountainConference RedmondI771) — AndrewDavis 85-93—178, the Cowgirls. (5 innings) Mitch Jeffords98-97—195, JordanChristiansen103Also on Tuesday: Ridgeview 42 5 56 — 22 15 0 95 — 198, Bailey Fisher 93-107—200, JustimDoan 117-122 —239. Mountain View 000 00 —02 2

ahead o f Scappoose. The top threeteams and the top five individuals qual-

Postponements The following baseball and softball gameswere postponed due toweather: Bend at Summit baseball and softball, Sisters at Junction City baseball, Junction City at Sisters

softball, La Pine atCoquille baseball and softball. The Sisters-Junction City contests have beenreschedUled for today, ashavethe La Pine-Coquille games. Bend will visit Summit on

Thursday. four hits, and

R idgeview

scored at least two runs in

thejockey. Of course, the whole thing turned into a sad saga two

Continued from C1 "It's not going to change w eeks later. Talking to a r unning a h o r s e i n t h e Pimlico official for a press Preakness. We've had hors- statement last week, Gretches run at Pimlico on Preak-

ness day. We never forget it but you don't let it change your life." Divining Rod could have run in the Kentucky Derby. Derby Fever is a time-tested term, familiar to even the

en Jackson said of Barbaro's hospitalization, "It was in-

crediblystressful because you second-guessed yourself every morning when you got up or when you saw him. One day, he was great, and two weeks later, you were considering putting

most well-credentialed of thoroughbred horse owners. him down. It was a real rollIf your horse qualifies for er-coaster ride. It was very the Derby, you almost can- stressful, being in constant not help but dream of the

contact with press and peo-

possibilities. The Jacksons ple you didn't know and beare no strangers to those ing asked to deal with facts d reams, but they di d n o t

have to wonder about what it is like to be in the winner's circle at Churchill Downs

on the first Saturday in May. That partly explains why Divining Rod, also bred by the Jacksons, skipped the Derby but will be at Pimlico for the 140th Preakness

and deal with emotions all the time. It was hard." " What sticks out is m y

mind is the huge support we had from everywhere, the track, the police, the public,"

Roy Jackson said Monday on the phone with his wife. "It still goes on. We still get the occasional letter or note.

each frame of a five-inning Intermountain C o nference

Stakes. Of course, their memories

There was such a commu-

victory a t M o u ntain V i ew. G arret A l b recht h a d t w o triples, and Garrett Dewolf a dded two hits t o t h e R a vens' 15-hit attack. Trevor Wilson allowed two hits and

of Barbaro and the Preakness are entirely different, sport. Barbaro's breakdown and monthslong stay at the

nity that sprung up supporting Barbaro that a birthday party was held in the year after he died. A woman showed up with a tattoo of

New Bolton Center and sub-

Barbaro on her back.

was backed by three double Girls golf plays en route to the comSample takes district title: plete-game victory for RidAUMSVILLE Victoria PENDLETON — L a P i ne's 4A/3A/2A/IA state champi- geview (5-9 IMC, 8-16 overSample of T r i n it y L u t her- I siah Dolan shot a s e c- onships by placing fourth in all). The loss was the third an shot a 12-over-par 86 on ond-round 78 to finish with a singles in the Special District straight for the Cougars (2-10, the second day of the Class second-place 158 at the Class 3 tournament, which conclud- 5-15). 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District 3A/2A/IA Special District 3 ed Tuesday at Sam Johnson Madras 11, Corbett 3: MA2 championships at Santiam championships at Pendleton Park. Three wins Monday, in- DRAS — Madras' Alec McGolf club to win the district Country Club, earning him a cluding a 6-4, 6-1 first-round Donald struck out three and title by two strokes. Sample, spot at the state tournament upset over No. 3 seed Tyler allowed two earned runs in a senior, will compete in her next week at Quail Valley West of St. Mary's, put Rein- a complete-game Tri-Valley

sequent euthanization the following January due to

"His name got us into the government to see who we

laminitis are all part of that

felt were i m portant p eo-

history. When Divining Rod qualified for this year's Kentucky Derby by winning the Lexington Stakes on April look at the whole thing with some degreeof logic since

ple that could help the anti-slaughter bills go through and federalization of drug testing," Gretchen Jackson sard. As for Divining Rod, the Jacksons obviously watched him closely since he won his

they had another horse in

November debut at Laurel

that 2006 Derby, a horse named Showing Up, who,

Park, not far from Pimlico. "I always have a high opinion of o u r h o rses," Gretchen Jackson said. "He

fourth s t ate

c h ampionship Golf Course in Banks.

next Monday and 'Ibesday at Eagle Crest Resort in Redmond. Sample's teammate

Mariah Murphy shot a 113 on Tuesday and finished with a two-day total of 229. Emily

Christen of Sisters shot a 94 on Tuesday and a 197 over two days to finish in eighth place in the 40-player field.

Boysgolf Outlaws finish at districts: BLUE R I V E R

Sis t e rs

wrapped up the Class 4A Special District 2

t o u r n a-

ment at Tokatee Golf Club, as Devin Robillard carded a

two-day 214 for the Outlaws. There were no state qualifiers for Sisters, which also saw Kade Owen finish with a two-

day 229. Crook County just short: HILLSBORO Mayson T ibbs r ecorded a se c ond-round 79 and placed sev-

enth overall with a two-day 164 at the Class 4A Special District 1 championships at

Meriwether National Golf Club. The top three teams and top five individuals qualified for next week's state tournament. The Cowboys finished with a score of 743 to take fifth as a team.

Hawk qualifies for state:

ert i n

T u esday's semifinal Conference win. McDonald

round. There, he fell to North also had three hits and an Boys lacrosse Bend's Ignacio Aguilar, 7-6 RBI, and Austin RauschenSummit 18, Sisters 6: (7-5), 6-3. In the third-place burg had three hits, including A.J. Weichman scored a match, Reinert lost a 7-5, 4-6, two doubles, and three runs school-recordeight goals as 7-6 (7-5) decision to Pratheev scored for Madras (4-7 TVC, the Storm won in the semi- Weerkakoon of St. M a ry's. 7-12 overall). finals of the High Desert North Bend placed first and playoffs to earn a matchup St. Mary's was second. Sis- Softball against Bend on Thursday for ters finished fifth among 10 Ridgeview 18, Mountain the league title. Weichman teams. The state tournament View 4: REDMOND — Fern also dished out two assists for is set for May 21-22 at Oregon Spencer had a two-run home Summit (13-3), Stu Bledsoe State University in Corvallis. run and a grand slam in the had four goals, and Nick Rassecond inning to help the mussen scored twice and had Girls tennis Ravens to an Intermountain four assists. For Sisters (9-6), Cowgiris in contention: MA- Conference v i ctory. S p enJosiah Jones and Mark Fish DRAS — The Crook County cer's home runs were part of each had two goals. tandems of Grace Harper/Ka- a 10-run second inning for Bend 16, Hermiston 3: The dence Kee and Laura Fraser/ Ridgeview (14-0 IMC, 20-1 Lava Bears easily handled Gwyneth Ptomey each won overall), and Paige Davis also the Bulldogs in the first of their first two matches to ad- belted a home run. Jamie Witwo High D esert semifinal vance to the quarterfinals of throw led Mountain View (5games contested at Sum- the Class 4A/3A/2A/IA Spe- 7, 9-13) with two hits, includmit High. Cohl Johnston cial District 2 championships ing a two-run double. and Cade Hinderlider both at Madras High. Madras had Madras 11, Crook County 5: scored five goals. and Eli four sets of doubles teams ad- PRINEVILLE — The White Pite scored four goals and as- vance to the second round but Buffaloes exploded for six sisted on three more. Nikos fall short, including Sophie runs in the 10th inning for a Skoufos improved to 13-0 in Gemelas and JenniYoung, Tri-Valley Conference vicgoal with the Lava Bears (8-0 who lost 7-5, 6-3. The top four tory. Shelby Mauritson had HDL, 14-0 overall) and was doubles teams and top four three hits, including a home replaced by Oliver Reese at singles players advance to run and a double, and four halftime. next week's state champion- RBIs for Madras (4-7 TVC, ship tournament. 9-14 overall). Keely Brown Boys tennis had four hits, and Chloe MarOutlaws' Reinert qualifies Baseball tin struck out five in a comfor state: REDMOND — UnRidgeview 22, Mountain plete-game win. Crook Counseeded Sisters senior Colin View 0: Collin Runge hit a ty (9-4, 14-8) tied the game in Reinert qualified for the Class three-run homer among his the bottom of the ninth.

Golf Continued from C1 The duo knew they were within a shot or two of each other on the entire back nine, and the individual title may

have come down to a par from Chrisman and a bogey from Krieger on the 17th hole. From an uphill lie, Chrisman pulled his second shot l eft an d w a s l e f t w i t h a

11, the Jacksons were able to

as it happens, had won the

Lexington Stakes that year. "It probably colored the

was a nice horse, he was

said Monday, remembering

certainly bred to be a nice horse. You certainly have

how Barbaro won the Der-

anticipation based on breed-

by after five weeks of layoff while Showing Up finished

ing alone. You hoped he had more talent than he was able to display in earlier races, because of his gate position

decision," Gretchen Jackson

sixth, the official chart not-

ing Showing Up "was just off the winner briefly when and his immaturity. In the entering the stretch and flattened out in the drive."

Lexington he showed maturity even thought he had the

So Divining Rod will be

same gate position, number

fresh for

t h e P r e akness, one."

a capable contender, not an afterthought, although Derby w i n ner

"He's just progressed," Roy Jackson said. "Gretch-

A m e r ican en used the word boisterous.

Pharoah and top Derby finishers Firing Line and Dortmund will earn more attention at the betting windows.

The Jacksons realize they will get plenty of attention themselves because of Barbaro. "You never forget it, and

He gives you sort of a 'Here I am' look. He looks like he's full of himself." Trained by Arnaud Delacour out of the Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton,

Maryland, the same place Barbaro was based in Michael Matz's barn, Divining

you're so grateful, but it has Rod was on the front in the not been a stumbling block Sam F. Davis Stakes and for us," Gretchen Jackson Tampa Bay Derby and fadsaid of owning Barbaro. ed to third in both of those "Maybe I'll be poetic — it's early Derby preps. In the been a steppingstone rather

Lexington, his owners noted

than a stumbling block. We that Divining Rod was able learned from it.... It's easier to keep a stalking position as time passes to remember before moving on to win. the good." That is the maturity they The Jacksons have their were noting. personal memories of the Not succumbing to Derday Barbaro won the Ken- by fever does not mean the tucky Derby by more than owners still don't dream big. "We always dream," Roy six lengths. They can remember their grandson that Jackson said. "Are y o u kid d i ng?" week, always on the elevator at the hotel in Louisville, Gretchen Jackson added. evading his parents. Anoth- "We don't put money on it er grandchild, a 4-year-old, but we dream." "We had a foal born yesbeing lost in the postrace celebration, only to turn up terday and we dream about in the arms of Edgar Prado, that," Roy Jackson said.

Rockets blowout Clips to avoid elimination

from a back bunker, couldn't

stop it on the green, and his chip left him with a testy downhill 6-footer for the

The Associated Press

bogey. He calmly drained it for the bogey save and they the lead. "I knew the putt was

and part of the history of the

NBA ROUNDUP

short-sided flop shot to get it up and down for par. He played it perfectly, landing the flop mere inches onto the green — and the ball stopped inches from the cup. Krieger had a downhill lie

would head to the 18th tied for

He was so loved."

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Mountain View's Mason Krieger putts on the first green while competing in the Class 5A Special District 2 championships Tuesday on the Ridge Course at Eagle Crest in Redmond. Krieger tied for medalist.

pretty big, but I wasn't aware

it was that big," Krieger said. "I would have been shaking a er to crack the top eight, with enough to impress Storm and little more if I knew how big first-day leader Ryan DeCas- Lava Bear coaches, Andy that putt was." tilhos leading the Bears while Heinly and Rusty Clemons. "That was t h e s t rongest Krieger an d C h r isman tying for fourth at 150 and were named c o-champions Jack Klar and Max M cGee performance from this team for the tournament, after both finishing seventh and eighth, that I've seen," Heinly said. "We had four guys that played just missed birdie putts on 18 respectively, at 152 and 153. that would have provided the After a 73 on Monday to really good golf, it was fun to separation. lead the tournament, DeCas- watch." "You have to tip your cap B en Wasserman ha d a tilhos' bid for medalist came career best 71, Jack Loberg undone on one hole, the par- to them," Clemons said. "For came in at even-par 72, while 4 ninth, where one ball out of a high school team to shoot 1 Max Higlin's 75 rounded out bounds and another lost in a under is very impressive." the team scoring to lead the tree led to a quintuple-bogey Wasserman bettered his Storm to the title. Loberg fin- nine. He played the other 17 first round by eight shots in ished third alone at 148, while holes even par. shooting his career best. "He struggled yesterday, "I had a solid round, but Wasserman and Higlin tied for fourth at 150. had one bad hole," he said. but to come out today and as K rieger was t h e o n l y The Storm's record-break- the number five player shoot non-Lava Bear or Storm play- ing round was more than a 71, that was special," Hein-

ly said. "They all have that ability. I've said from day one that we have the horses this

year to win the whole thing. They're proving that we do." The two squads will meet again at the Class 5A state

championships next Monday and Tuesday at Emerald Val-

ley Golf Club in Creswell. Other state q u alifying t eams were H ermiston, in third a t 6 4 4 , f o u rth-place Pendleton at 645 and fifth-

place Eagle Point at 657, edging out Mountain View for the

final spot at the state tournament by two shots. — Reporter: 541-617-7868, kduke®bendbulletin.com

-

coach Kevin McHale cleared

James the bench. Harden had 26 points, 11 Trevor Ariza a dded 22 rebounds and 1 0 a s sists, points for Houston and Corey Dwight Howard added 20 Brewer had 15. points and 15 r ebounds, M cHale toyed with t h e and the H ouston Rockets starting lineup after losses bounced back from two lop- by 25 and 33 points, inserting sided losses to avoid elim- Josh Smith in place of Terination with a 124-103 vic- rence Jones. Smith finished tory over the Los Angeles with nine points and seven Clippers on Tuesday night rebounds, while Jones proin the Western Conference vided a spark off the bench semifinals. with 12 points. Houston used a 36-point Also onTuesday: second quarter to take a comCavaliers 106, Bulls 101: manding lead and withstood C LEVELAND — L e B r on a third-quarter surge by Los James scored 38 points, Angeles to lead by 14 enter- Kyrie Irving added 25 and ing the fourth. Cleveland took a 3-2 lead in Blake Griffin had 30 points its testy Eastern Conference and 16 rebounds, and Chris semifinal against Chicago. Paul added 22 points and 10 James added 12 rebounds, assists for the Clippers. six assists and had zero turnHarden made a 3-pointer overs in 41 minutes.. Jimmy with about two minutes to Butler scored 29 and Mike play to make it 121-100 and Dunleavy had 19 for Chicago. HOUSTON


C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

S&P 500+

N ASDAQ ~ 1 7 36 4,976.19

Todap A blip or a trend?

2 100

An unseasonably cold winter hurt U.S. retail sales for much of this year. Sales increased in March for the first time in four months. Economists point to the yearlong hiring surge and lower gasoline prices as reasons why sales should continue to climb this year. Did the trend continue in April? Find out today, when the Commerce Department reports its latest retail sales figures. Retail sales

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

18,000"

.

1,960

StocksRecap

0.2

-0.5

Vol. (in mil.) 3,078 1,658 Pvs. Volume 2,889 1,678 Advanced 1405 1184 Declined 1705 1547 New Highs 35 58 New Lows 72 58

SILVER

+

$16.51

'

"

N

D I J '14: '15

F

M

A

"

17,600 "

.

17,200"

.

Source: FactSet

Tech bellwether Financial analysts anticipate that Cisco Systems' earnings improved in the third quarter from a year earlier. The major supplier of computer networking gear reports its latest financial results today. While it has long been the dominant company in its market, Cisco has recently faced a challenge from rivals selling systems using new software.

CSCO $35 $23.02

$29.23

30 25

'15

20

Operating EPS

I

I

3Q '14 3 Q '15

Price-earnings ratio: 18 based on past 12-month results

Dividend: $0.84 Div yield: 2.9%

Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ Avista Corp A VA 30.35 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ B arrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 . 11 ty ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.59— o ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ Costco Wholesale CO ST 113.51 ~ 1 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 10.07 o — FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ HewlettP ackard H PQ 31. 00 ~ Intel Corp I NTC 25.74 ~ Keycorp KEY 11.55 — 0 Kroger Co K R 4 5 .97 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MDU 20 . 01 o — Mentor Graphics ME N T 18.25 t -t Microsoft Corp MSFT 39.27 ~ Nike Ioc B NKE 72.37 ~ Nordstrom Ioc JWN 60.51 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 ~ PaccarIoc PCAR 55.34 ~ Planar Systms PLNR 2.12 ~ ty Plum Creek PCL 38.70 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ S choitzer Steel SCH N 15.06 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 195.85 — o StaocorpFocl SFG 57.87 — 0 Starbucks Cp SBUX 34.64 ~ Umpqua Holdi ngs UMPQ 14.70 ~ US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~

Source: FactSet WashingtonFedl

WellsFargo & Co Weyerhaeuser

Better quarter? J.C. Penney reports its first-quarter financial results today. The department store chain has been struggling to return to a profit after a string of quarterly losses. The company has taken steps to slash costs by closing stores. Last month, it projected that its sales at stores open at least a year would be up in the first quarter.

"

"" j "

Price-earnings ratio:13 47

(B a sed on past 12-month results)

*annualized

AmdFocus

Gainers NAME

LAST PainThera 2.62 PhoenxCos 21.61 PhnxC32 20.48 Cartesian 3.94 ImpacMtg 22.36 OceanRig 9.22 PallCorp 118.62 AOL 50.52 FMSA n 9.10 SciClone If 9.53

CHG %CHG +.68 + 3 5.1 +4.35 + 2 5.2 +3.82 + 2 2.9 +.73

+ 2 2 .7

+4.05 + 2 2.1 +1.52 + 19.7

8.19.31 + 1 9 .4 +7.93 + 1 8.6

+1.14 + 14.3 +1.14 + 13.6

Losers NAME ITT Ed

L AST C H G %CHG -1.75 -43.5 2.27 NorandaAI 2.08 -.92 -30.7 -15.59 -29.9 NewLink 36.55 BarrettB 35.01 -14.54 -29.3 -3.59 -25.7 CambrC un 10.40

Foreign Markets NAME

LAST Paris 4,974.65 London 6,933.80 Frankfurt 11,472.41 Hong Kong27,407.18 Mexico 44,950.49 Milan 23,104.87 Tokyo 19,624.84 Stockholm 1,600.10 Sydney 5,673.10 Zurich 9,044.98

Oppenheimer Developing Markets is the largest actively managed emerging-markets mutual fund with $40 billion in assetsunder management, according to Morningstar.

SelectedMutualFunds

50

F $26.16~

M

F

52-week range $12 0.35

Mkt. Cap:$12.65 b

M

FAMILY

Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar.

A

M

52-week range

$76.53~

Vol.:7.6m (13.3x avg.)

$ 56.20

PE : 60.1 Yield: ...

GPS Close:$38.36 V-1.61 or -3.8% The retailer behind Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic reported a drop in first-quarter revenue because of a strong U.S. dollar. $44 40

A

M

Gap

42

M

M A 52-week range

Vol.:14.1m (10.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $6.55 b

100 F

RAx

55

835.46~

$46.85

PE: 34.3 Vol.:12.2m (3.1x avg.) Yie l d: 1.0% Mkt. Cap:$16.1 b

Pain Therapeutics

PTIE Close:$2.62L0.68 or 35.1% The drug developer reported positive results from a study focusing on an abuse-resistant version of the painkiller Remoxy. $3.0

PE: 1 3.4 Yiel d : 2. 4%

Threshold Pharma.

T HLD

Close:$4.00L0.24 or 6.4% The drug developer's potential cancer drug evofosfamide, in joint development with Merck KGaA, received FDA fast track status.

$5

2.5 2.0

F

M

A

M

F

52-week range

M

A

M

52-week range

$1.61~

$6.22

$2.58~

$ 5.41

Vol.:21.1m (45.5x avg.) P E:... Mkt. Cap:$119.88m Yield: 28.6%

Vol.:8 .6m (11.5x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt.Cap:$285.34 m Yie ld: ...

New LinkG enetics NL N K

Depomed DEPO Close:$20.43 V-3.98 or -16.3% The drugmaker reported a first-quarter loss and the earnings and revenue results fell short of Wall Street expectations. $30

Close:$36.55 V-15.59 or -29.9% The biotechnology company will continue a pancreatic cancer drug study, while Wall Street had hoped for an early completion. $60

25

50 40

20 M A 52-week range

$17.32~ Vol.:5.7m (8.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.04 b

M

F

M A 52-week range

$58 .73 $5.85~ P E: 11.0 Vol.:10.1m (5.6x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.22 b

M $ 26. 16

PE: 1 0.3 Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

SU HIS

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3-month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 1 .01 . 0 8 .08

52-wk T-bill

.22

.23

2-year T-note . 6 0 .6 2 5-year T-note 1.56 1.60 10-year T-note 2.25 2.28 30-year T-bond 3.02 3.04

BONDS

... ...

V L

L W

-0.02 V -0.04 L -0.03 L -0.02 L

L L L L

W .40 L 1.66 L 2.66 L 3.50

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Commodities

FUELS

The price of natural gas rose for the second time in three days and reached its highest price in nearly eight weeks. Crude oil and gold both rose for the second time in three days.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

Foreign Exchange The dollar fell against other currencies, including the euro and British pound. It dropped below the 120

Japanese yen level, where it's bounced around since March.

h5Q HS

METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

.02 .04 .09

L -0.01 V

5-yr*

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 85 -.85+2.0 +8.4 +13.2+11.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 61.88 -.18 +3.4 +5.3 +10.6 +9.9 A A A CpWldGrlA m 48.49 -.20 +5.6 +5.7 +15.1+11.0 C 8 C EurPacGrA m 51.35 -.19 +9.0 +4.8 +12.4 +8.5 8 8 C FnlnvA m 53. 5 8 - .15 +4.4 +12.0 +17.8+13.8 8 C C GrthAmA m 45.15 -.BB+5.8 +14.3 +19.2+14.1 C A C OppenheimerDeveloping MarketsA(ODMAX) IncAmerA m 21.95 -.87 +2.5 +6.1 +12.2+11.2 C 8 A InvCoAmA m 37.86 -.10 +3.2 +10.7 +18.1+13.5 C 8 C VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m39.10 -.13 +7.8 +10.5 +15.9+12.4 A 8 A oWAMutlnvA m41.37 -.10 +1.5 +9.0 +16.7+14.3 C C A 53 Dodge &Cox Income 13.78 +.81 +0.7 + 2 .7 + 3.5 +4.8 C A 8 Co cc IntlStk 45.24 -.23 +7.4 + 1.8+16.4 +9.8 C A A Stock 181.96 -.25 +1.8 + 9 .6 +21.3+14.8 8 A A oFidelity Contra 101. 4 1 - . 34 +4.5 +15.0 +17.1+14.8 C C 8 53 ContraK 101 . 37 -.34+4.5 +15.1 +17.2+15.0 C C 8 C3 LowPriStk d 52.60 -.20 +4.7 +11.1 +18.2+14.7 8 C A Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 74.20 -.21 +2.7 +12.9 +18.2+14.7 8 8 A FraakTemp-Frankli o IncomeC m 2.45 ... +2.7 +0.3 +9.5 +8.8 E A A 03 IncomeA m 2. 4 2 - .81+3.0 + 0 .8 +10.0 +9.2 E A A Oakmark Intl I 25.36 -.10 +8.7 + 1 .4 +17.3+10.9 C A A 0O Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 17 -.86+1.2 +10.8 +14.7+12.5 C E D MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 17 . 82 -.85+0.9 +10.0 +13.7+11.5 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 69 -.85+0.9 +10.0 +13.9+11.7 D E E OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValA m50.85 -.11 +2.8 +10.1 +18.6+12.1 8 C D average of stock holdings SmMidValB m42.83 -.10 +2.5 + 9.2 +17.7+11.2 C D E • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.8 4 - . 88 +1.1 + 5 .4 +15.5+11.8 E D D GrowStk 55.8 2 - . 89 +7.4 +19.7 +19.1+16.4 A A A CATEGORY: Diversified Emerging Mkts HealthSci 78.2 0 +.81+15.0 +44.9 +36.8+30.0 8 A A Newlncome 9. 5 6 . .. +0 .6 + 3 .1 + 2.5 +4.0 8 C C BIORNINGSTAR BATING~ ****w Vanguard 500Adml 193.99 55 +2.7 +12.9 +18.2+14.7 8 8 A 500lnv 193.97 55 +2.6 +12.8 +18.1+14.6 8 8 8 ASSETS $10,267 million CapOp 55.19 33 +4.6 +19.8 +25.6+16.1 A A A EXPRATIO 1.29% Eqlnc 31.69 10 +2.2 +9.2 +16.7+15.1 C C A MIB.INIT.INVES T. $1,000 IntlStkldxAdm 28.36 85 +9.4 +1.9 +10.9 NA C D PERCEN TLOAD 5.75 StratgcEq 33.90 14 +5.3 +14.4 +22.4+17.4 A A A HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.32 85 +3.0 +7.2 +10.8 +9.4 A A A TgtRe2035 18.57 83 +4.1 +8.5 +13.9+11.2 A A B Return/Rank Tgtet2025 17.89 83 +3.4 +7.7 +11.9+10.0 A 8 8 YEAR-TO-DATE +2.3 TotBdAdml 10.80 +0.3 +3.2 +2.1 +3.8 8 D D 1-YEAR -4.0/E Totlntl 16.96 82 +9.4 +1.8 +10.9 +7.2 C D D 3-YEAR +5.4/8 TotStlAdm 52.91 14 +3.0 +12.7 +18.3+14.8 8 8 A 5-YEAR +5.5/A TotStldx 52.89 14 +3.0 +12.6 +18.2+14.7 8 8 A 3and5-yearretsttts aressnsaazed. USGro 31.63 87 +5.8 +18.6 +19.8+15.8 A A A

CHG %CHG -53.22 -1.06 -96.05 -1.37 -200.94 -1.72 -311.02 -1.12 -229.48 -.51 -216.99 -.93 +3.93 + . 02 -16.94 -1.05 Rank: Fund's letter gradecomparedwith others in +45.50 + . 81 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in -72.35 -.79 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent.

Rackspace Hosting

Close: $45.967-7.17 or -13.5% The cloudcomputing company met first-quarter profit expectations, but its revenue results fell short of forecasts. $60

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.85 2.87 -0.02 L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.42 4.41 +0.01 L Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.20 +0.08 L PRIME FED Barclays US Dtv t dend. $0 92 High Yield 5.97 5.96 +0.01 L RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.03 3.91 +0.12 L Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.93 1.91 +0.02 L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.17 3.08 +0.09 L 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

3 -yr* ota l return 1-yr 4. %%d Dtv yteid. 2 4%

EURO +.0066 1.1220+

+1.50 '

110

The quarter's revenue missed market forecasts of $3.76 billion. Gap also said that its revenue from its stores open at least a year, a key indicator of performance, fell The yield on the 4 percent for the quarter. This figure fell 12 10-year Treasury percent for April, versus a 9 percent increase fellto 2.25 last year. This includes a 15 percent drop at percent, but only Gap andBanana Republic and 6 percent after climbing as decline at Old Navy. high as 2.36 Gap will report its full first-quarter percent earlier in results next week. the day.

Tuesday's close:$38.36 T

AP

Most Active

+2 0 .2 4 1 0 1 9 0 .22f

+1.9 +22. 8 27243 20 1 . 2 4 +6.5 +41 . 4 2 2 41 2 9 1 . 1 2 - 3.1 +27.4 1032 2 1 1 . 48 - 11.3 + 5. 0 1 3 1 2 1 1 . 8 6 -2.8 +9 . 7 1 0 44 1 6 0 .88a - 49.9 +91.4 4 6 5 1 2 -1.8 + 0 . 3 1 1 81 3 3 1. 7 6 -13.7 -18.0 1248 16 0 . 12 -23.4 - 31.5 313 d d 0 . 75 8-9. 8 +4 4 .8 7 3 3 3 2 2. 6 8 +4.8 +22. 6 14 5 14 1. 3 0f +21. 2 +4 2 .6 5 677 29 0 . 6 4 + 1. 1 + 9 .2 779 20 0.60 -2.3 +10.9 6691 14 0 . 98 -0.8 + 5 . 9 5 9 9 1 4 0 .52f 8.1.2 +16 .0 11523 14 1 .50f -11.0 + 9 . 7 3 0 60 2 6 1. 1 6

:::"" Gapreports sales struggle

52-wEEK RANGE

NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG S&P500ETF 1019928 209.98 -.63 BkofAm 584855 16.43 -.06 CSVLgCrde 460373 3.82 +.20 Apple Inc s 454904 125.87 -.46 AT&T Inc 407987 33.66 +.17 SPOR Fncl 391036 24.58 -.09 iShEMkts 359995 42.32 -.14 8 iPVixST 346680 21.05 -.07 Vale SA 339395 7.37 -.29 Cisco 313354 29.23 +.02

+9.5

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last I2 months. I - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, so regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

GAP (GPS)

Marhetsummary

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PLL Close:$118.62 %19.31 or 19.4% The water and air filter maker is in an auction that could set its value at $10 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal. $120

F

Gap shares fell 4 percent Tuesday after the retailer reported weaker sales trends, due to the strong U.S. dollar and uneven performance among its brands. The company, which owns the Gap, O ld Navyand Banana Republic brands, said late Monday that its first-quarter revenue fell 3 percent to $3.66 billion. It estimates the translation of foreign sales into U.S. dollars pushed this figure down by about $90 million.

AP

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$35

+

AOL AOL Close: $50.52L7.93 or 18.6% 'A."." jM. 16 1800" N" "D " F M A M The Internet company is being bought by telecommunications company Verizon Communications Inc. HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. %CHG. WK MO QTR YTD in a cash deal for $4.4 billion DOW 18119.18 17924.80 18068.23 -36.94 -0.20% L L L +1 .38% $60 -5.36% DOW Trans. 8743.29 8632.80 8649.87 -104.72 -1.20% V 50 DOW Util. 579.56 573.43 578.05 -2.26 -0.39% V -6.48% NYSE Comp. 11136.72 11058.98 11113.17 -27.57 -0.25% L L +2.53% 40 NASDAQ 4995.50 4931.60 4976.19 -1 7.38 -0.35% +5.07% S&P 500 2105.06 2085.57 2099.12 -6.21 -0.29% L L +1.95% F M A M -3.24 -0.21% S&P 400 1518.07 1500.78 1514.74 +4.29% 52-week range Wilshire 5000 22226.72 22012.79 22168.99 -55.82 -0.25% +2.30% $33.20 $50.75 -2.70 -0.22% Russell 2000 1236.14 1218.37 1233.13 L +2 .36% Vol.:30.7m (21.9x avg.) PE 33.4 : Mkt. Cap:$3.96 b Yield:... "

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

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Stocks fell for a second day on Tuesday as investors sold across industries. Investors are beginning to worry about a global sell-off of government bonds. That could send borrowing costs higher, a potential drag on corporate earnings. Heavy selling of U.S. Treasury bonds briefly pushed the yield on the benchmark 10-year note to its highest level since November. Yields rise when prices fall. In commodity markets, the price of oil climbed above $60 a barrel for just a third time this year. That helped push up stocks of energy-related companies. Eight of the 10 sectors of the Standard and Poor's 500 index fell, led by raw materials companies.

"

NorthwestStocks -1

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Close: 18,068.23 Change: -36.94 (-0 2%) 18,400"

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10 YR TNOTE 2.25% «240

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Wednesday, May13, 2015

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CLOSE PVS. 60.75 59.25 1.64 1.65 2.00 1.95 2.90 2.80 2.04 1.99

CLOSE PVS. 1192.60 1183.20 16.51 16.30 1133.00 1127.30 2.95 2.92 785.15 780.45 CLOSE 1.51 1.35

Coffee (Ib) Corn (hu) 3.57 Cotton (Ih) 0.65 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 234.00 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.17 Soybeans (hu) 9.67 Wheat(hu) 4.79

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PVS. %CH. %YTD -8.6 1.50 +0.81 1.33 +0.86 -1 9.3 3.58 -0.35 -10.1 0.65 - 0.57 + 7 . 9 237.60 -1.52 -29.3 1.18 -0.30 -16.2 9.83 -1.63 -5.1 4.76 +0.63 -18.7 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5676 +.0087 +.55% 1.6866 Canadian Dollar 1.1 9 98 -.0099 -.83% 1.0891 USD per Euro 1.1220 +.0066 +.59% 1.3755 -.20 -.17% 102.17 JapaneseYen 119.89 Mexican Peso 15. 3 564 +.0085 +.06% 12.9699 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8578 -.0045 -.12% 3.4549 Norwegian Krone 7 . 4921 -.0671 -.90% 5.9223 South African Rand 12.0488 -.0279 -.23% 10.3654 Swedish Krona 8.3 2 2 9 + .0230 +.28% 6.5710 Swiss Franc .9286 -.0051 -.55% . 8 881 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2513 -.0139 -1.11% 1.0680 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2076 -.0027 -.04% 6.2378 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7519 .0006 -.01% 7.7517 Indian Rupee 64.224 +.283 +.44% 60.075 Singapore Dollar 1.3344 -.0025 -.19% 1.2504 South KoreanWon 1093.15 -3.69 -.34% 1024.60 -.05 -.16% 3 0.25 Taiwan Dollar 30.75


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

BRIEFING Verizon, Sprint agree to pay WASHINGTON — Verizon Communications Inc. and Sprint Corp. have agreed topay a combined $158million, including at least $120 millionin consumer refunds, to settle federal and state investigations into allegations mobile customers were improperly billed for premium text messages. The so-called cramming of unauthorized charges onto customers' bills involved one-time fees of 99 cents to $4.99 for third-party text-messaging services and monthly subscriptions to those messagesthat cost $9.99 to $14a month, federal regulators said Tuesday. Customers complained that they never authorized thecharges, according to theFederal Communications Commission. The FCC said Verizon kept at least 30 percent of the feescharged by the third-party services. Sprint receivedabout35 percent of suchfees paid by its customers, the FCC said. The agencywas joined by theFederal Trade Commission, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureauandthe attorneys general of all

i eo e 0

e r izon'S YouTube to HBO — on mobile

The nation's biggest wireless operator sees its digital

"You've got maiL" AOL might be known for its dot-com rise and fall and for current Web content such

future in a company that still

as The Huffington Post, but

ginning to grapple with this rapidly evolving market. By layering AOL's technology atop its 109 million wireless connections and growing

By David Gelles New York Times News Service

offers dial-up Internet service. Verizon is looking to gain However backward that the company's powerful but might seem, Verizon Commu-

little-known mobile video and

nications' $4.4 billion all-cash deal for AOL, announced

advertising technology. That

Tuesday, illustrates how the

phone and Internet offerings more appealing to consumers

communications industry has changed — even if the underlying rationale has not — from the days when the Internet pioneer told users

could make Verizon's own — and to advertisers.

The motive is clear. Consumers are increasingly watching videos — from

phones, tablets and laptops. And big media companies

millennials," said Kathryn W insted, aprofessoratPace University's Lubin School

ing Tuesday's deal a rounding error.

and advertisers are only be-

of Business in New York.

tail, and it is clearly not going to wag the whole dog," ana-

cable television business, Verizon is betting that it can

"They may sell ads, they may sell subscription content, but they need to figure out this market."

The price Verizon is paying is a fraction of the $165 bil-

make billions of dollars by selling ads against streaming

lion that AOL spent on Time Warner in 2000, an ill-fated merger struck at the peak of

video.

the dot-com boom. Verizon

"They know that mobile is

where it's at if you want to get

a ncairsa n

now has a market value of

more than $200 billion, mak-

in e mon

— From wire reports

BANKRUPTCIES Chapter 7 Filed May 4 • George S. Mendoza,5780 SW Impala Lane,Redmond Filed May 5 • Benjamin E and Celeste M. Payne, 1684 SWKnoll Ave. No.1, Bend Filed May 6 • Christina M. DeLong, 2420 SWWickiup Court, Redmond • Timothy A. Park, 2420 SWWickiup Court, Redmond • Kaylen Matus, 1464 NW Galveston Ave., Bend Filed May 7 • Michael S. Gray,1265 NW StanniumRoad,Bend Filed May 8 • John M. Kahlie Jr.,1621 NW Newport Ave. Unit 4, Bend Chapter13 Filed May 7 • Tracy A. Wilson, 19911 Ashwood Drive, Bend Filed May11 • Christopher S. and Michele E Williams, 854 E. Coyote Springs Road, Sisters

lysts with MoffettNathanson wrote in a note. "Verizon is

still, first and foremost, a wireless phone company." The AOL that Verizon is

buying is a shadow of its former self, managing a small collection of media and technology properties. It was spun off from Time Warner in 2009.

10 Barrel expands into Coors country By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

Bend-based 10 Barrel

Brewing Co. has expanded into Colorado. The company is selling its Apocalypse IPA and Joe IPA along with seasonal varieties in Denver

and Boulder, brewery partnerGarrettWales said Tuesday. He said 10 Barrel beers are sold for both on-premise con-

50 states and the District

of Columbia in negotiating the settlements. "Sprint and Verizon had flawed billing systems that allowed merchants to addunauthorized chargesto wireless customer bills," said Richard Cordray, the bureau's director. "Consumers borethe brunt of those charges and ended uppaying millions of dollars while the companies reaped profits," he said. The companiesare the latest wireless carriers to agree tomajor settlements of federal and state cramming allegations. AT&T Inc. agreedin October to pay$105 million, including $80 million in refunds. Two months later, T-Mobile US Inc. agreed topay $90 million, including $67.5 million in refunds. Verizon agreed topay $90 million — at least $70 million in refunds, $16 million to state governments and a$4 million federal fine. Sprint will pay $68 million, including at least $50 millionin refunds, $12 million to the statesand a $6 million federal fine.

"It's the tip of the tip of the

sumption in Colorado and

in outlets such as grocery stores. "The plan is that once

we get a presence in the Denver market, to go through the whole state,"

Wales said. Denver is about 15 miles from Golden, Colorado, the home of

Coors Brewing Co. Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Chris Noyes, an engine mechanic andhydraulic technician at Lancair, works on aLancair Legacy airplane Tuesday at the company location on Timber Avenue in Redmond.

• Kit-airplane maker decidesto stay put, pays$1.7 milion for the property it is on now

In addition to the IPAs,

seasonal beers Cucumber Crush, DUB and Swill are also available in limited

quantities, said brewery partner Chris Cox. He said 10 Barrel brands are

By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

High-performance kit-aircraft maker Lancair will be

staying put in Redmond. A company created by Lancair's owner, Robert Wolsten-

holme, of Colmar, Pennsylvania, bought the building the company call shome, 250 SE Timber Ave., in the business parkadjacentto the Redmond Airport, said Randy Akacich, Lancair general manager. The $1.7 million sale was expected to close Tuesday, he said.

The purchase ends Lancair's search for a permanent

home, a search that included sites outside of Oregon, Akacich said Monday. He declined to identify specific locations. "We were concerned about the economy, and so we want-

ed to keep our options open," he said. "We feel more confident and, as a result, felt it

was time to buy the building and establish roots." The company, founded

Lancair's aircraft designs

Central Oregon's aviation

evolved from its first model, a two-seater powered by a

sector, said Brian Fratzke,

principal broker of Fratzke 100-horsepower piston engine, Commercial Real Estate,

ated with Anheuser-Busch InBev, which bought the

to the Evolution, a 750-horse-

which represented KkW

Bend beer-maker in a deal

power turboprop that sells for about $1.2 million. Meanwhile, company founder Lance Neibauer in 2003 sold the firm to Joseph

Legacy. Lancair employs 46 people and plans on adding about four more within three

that closed in December.

Bartels, a New Orleanslaw-

yer, who sold majority inter-

said the company sold more Evolution airplane kits in the

est in Lancair to the Wolsten-

first quarter than in any other

first quarter in company history. The company has sold

for Central Oregon. "We are thrilled to hear Lancair has

holme family in 2010. The Timber Avenue property will be owned by a new company, K&W Legacy LP,

decided to purchase the build-

which will lease it to Lancair,

flyforbusinessorpersonal

in 1983 in Gardena, California, moved in 1991 to

Redmond. The company occupied a building on nearby SE Airport Way until about six years ago, when it moved to its current home, a

38,400-square-foot building, Akacich said. "We are excited," said Jon Stark, Redmond manager for Economic Development

ing they occupy. They are pio- Akacich said. The previous neers of the aviation industry owner, a real estate holding in Redmond and, importantly, company controlled by Sabal Central Oregon." Financial Group, of Newport The firm was among the Beach, California, acquired first to design a kit aircraft the property in June 2012, acmade of composite materials, cording to Deschutes County to be built by the buyer, often records. with assistance from the Lancair's purchase of the company or other experts. building is a good sign for

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • Device Workshop:Learn about cellular devices; 6:30 p.m.; U.S.Cellular, 1380 SWCanal Blvd., Suite101, Redmondor 541-548-8830. TUESDAY • BusinessStartup:Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running abusiness isforyou;6 p.m.; $29; registration required; Central Oregon Community College Madras Campus, 1170E Ashwood Road,Madras; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. • SCOREfree business counseling:Business counselors conduct free 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor;

5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. WEDNESDAY • Family Business Breakfast — Multiple GenerationsWorking Together:Learn to better collaborate between generations to help ensure a smooth business succession plan for your family business. 7:30 a.m.; $40; registration required; DoubleTree byHilton Hotel Bend, 300 NWFranklin Ave. http:I/bit.ly/1 Qr89qk or 541-737-6017. • GrowingYourBusiness with tluickBooks: Three classescover the fundamentals of business accounting and QuickBooks operation, plus daytime advising sessions; 6 p.m.; $199; registration required;

Central OregonCommunity College RedmondCampus — Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmondor 541-383-7290. • Howto Developa Business Plan: Atwoevening workshop for people in the preliminary stages of developing a business. Discover the tools you needto successfully plan, build and manageyour business; 6 p.m.; $89; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edul sbdc or 541-383-7290. • Networkingwith ConnectW —Branding on a Budget: 5 p.m.;$25-$40, includes dinner; St. Charles Bend, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend; www.connectw.org or 541-678-8988. MAY21

• Board Fair:Visit with more than 25 nonprofit organizations; discover opportunities to serve on a nonprofit board and find a meaningful wayto get involved; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Community Center, 1036 NE Fifth St., Bend; http:I/bit.lylf IzL1n1 or 541-385-8977. MAY26 • SCOREfree business counseling:Business counselors conduct free 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal

months, Akacich said. He

about 70 aircraft in the past six years. Pilots, whether they reasons,are more comfort-

able today making that purchase, he said. "I would say across the

board," Akacich said, "people that we are talking to seem to be more confident about their

future." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

available around the state through distributors affili-

Terms of the sale were not disclosed. Discriminating beer drinkers and established craft brewers make the Colorado market similar

to Oregon's and just as competitive, Cox said. Colorado is the fourth state in which 10 Barrel

is sold, joining Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Wales said the company has no plans for a brewpub of its own in Colora-

do. In addition to its pub in Bend, the company has others in Boise, Idaho, and

in Portland, where the pub opened in March. — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

Price of beef onthe rise as 2012drought takestoll By Rick Montgomery The Kansas City Star

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — If

Backyard cooks can blame, in part, the Midwest drought of 2012. Its aftershocks are

beef is on the menu, firing up apt to keep beef prices at the grill this year will cost you record levels throughout this more than ever. grilling season, say ranchers And not just a bit more.

and economists.

The average price of a sirloin Chicken and pork? Those steak is up almost 20 percent prices have barely budged. from a year ago. An 8-ounce Bacon on average has gotten filet mignon costs $15 or more cheaper. at some Kansas City area Yet here near the heart of stores,forexample, or you beef country, the high prices can get six shipped online to that cattle are fetching have your door for $180. just begun to flatten in recent Two pounds of extra-lean weeks, said Jim Hertzog of ground beef can set you back Mo-Kan Livestock Market, $12, a couple of dollars more a sale barn in Bates County, than last spring. Missouri.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Reader photo, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4 Fishing Report, D5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors

Experience history and nature on Oregon coast trail

WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6

BRIEFING ODFW tohost free fishing event The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will host a free youth fishing event at Bend's Pine Nursery Pond this Saturday from ga.m. to1 p.m. ODFW staff and volunteers will be on hand to help young anglers learn how to bait a hook, cast a rod and land a fish. Tackle and loaner rods and reels will be available, and

By Terry Richard The Oregonian

ASTORIA — The Fort

Clatsop area of Lewis and Clark National and State

Historical Parks covers 1.74 square miles, not large by national park standards

but a crucial forested area in the watery, urbanized and logged northwest corner of Oregon. The park's main recre-

there will be fish in the

pond for kids to catch, according to ODFW. The event is open to those17 years old and younger. No fishing license is required for youngsters age13 and younger. Youth ages 14 to 17 will need to have a juvenile fishing license. Licenses should be purchased prior to the event as they will not be available at the event itself. The Bend Pine Nursery Community Park is located in northeast Bend, near Ponderosa Elementary School off Purcell Boulevard. For more information, call the ODFW Bend office at 541388-6363. — Bulletin staff report

TRAIL UPDATE With ChrisSabo

ation components are the Fort to Sea Trail, which

covers 6.5 miles between Fort Clatsop inland and

Sunset Beach on the Oregon coast, and the Netul Picnic Area canoe launch

on the Lewis and Clark River.

'

• Anglers are finding success for brook trout at Elk Lake, which is not knownfor its fishing opportunities ELK LAKEhe watersports

MARK

Terry Richards/The Oregonian

The Fort to Sea Trail at Fort Clatsop in the Lewis and Clark National Historical Park hosts a variety of views

MORICAL

enthusiasts

Summer trails are in good condition, with some muddy areas

start arriving here this time of year for an

near the 5,800- to

endless array of activities: sailing, windsurfing,

6,000-foot level where snow is melting. Hikers should avoid using trails that are pushing the snowline. When encountering snow-covered trails, hike over the snow rather than hike off the designated trails to avoid damaging vegetation and creating new trails. Black Butte and Metolius River trails are in good condition. Any new dusting of snow this week should melt by the weekend. Paulina Lake Shore Trail is snow-free and accessible. The road to Paulina Peak remains closed. Hikers traveling up the Paulina Peak Trail will encounter substantial snow and blown-down trees. The Crater Rim Trail is not accessible due to snow and blown-down trees. The Lucky Lake Trail is now clear of blown-down trees and is accessible. Crews are constructing rock walls around the Suttle Lake Trail so please use caution. There are some unstable trail edges, so watch for workers below the trails. The project is expected to continue through early June. Crews will begin work on a restoration project along the Metolius River Trail next week. That project will continue for two weeks. The road into Tumalo Falls remains closed during pipeline construction. Access to the falls is open via the Tumalo Creekand South Fork trails or Mrazek and Farewell trails. Parking is available at the Skyliner Trailhead. SeeTrails /D2

, K Ai;m:ni; ~;

anyone can enjoy. Another five miles of trail wander through the

swimming, kayaking, paddleboarding,

forest and along the river near Fort Clatsop, which

beachcombing.

is a re-creation of a fort built and used by the Lewis and Clark expedition

But fishing? Not really.

to spend the winter of 1805-06. The Fort to Sea Trail

Elk Lake is not known as a destination trout fishery like many of its neighboring Cascade lakes in Central Oregon.

winds past forests, coastal bogs, farms and an active military training center and crosses a miniversion

Mark Morical/The Bulletin

I have been to the lake dozens of times over the last 14 years, and not once have I seen someone wetting a line.

An Elk Lake brook trout. Fishing is the least common activity on Elk Lake, which is known for a variety of watersports.

of Portland's Fremont

Bridge before reaching Sunset Beach State Recreation Site, the crossing of

Local fishing guide John Garrison called me last week and made me guess where two of his clients

U.S. 101 via an underpass.

With one end on federal

had just limited out with five beautiful brook trout apiece. I reeled off names of lakes until there were

land and the other on state, and with other land holders in between, the trail is a

no other options.

metaphor for what makes "Uh, Elk Lake'?" I asked.

"Elk Lake," he responded whimsically. I expressed my disbelief in no uncertain terms, but we

made plans to fish Elk Lake the next week.

Garrison, owner of Garri-

Contro e unta Those of us who plan to hunt big game east of the Cascades this fall have a deadline. By Friday, we have to decide

LEWIS

of our children. That, in addi-

tion to the hundreds of dollars we've already spenton licenses. At least that's how it works

Pacific Northwest, with

the lead federal managing component (National Park Service) and four state sites in each Oregon and Washington. SeeFort to Sea/D2

i cation ea ine ooms the subject his life's work is Bryan Martin, a 43-year-old outfitter, who grew up in Ore-

gon and now makes his home in Kamloops, British Columdollars are spent on scientific

game management. Last year,almost 18,000Oregon residents did the same thing,

HUNTING spouse's appli- in hopes of drawing one of 85 cations and $8 m ore per application foreach

unique, at least here in the

One person who has made

GARY

how to invest our preference

points, if we have any, in the big-game drawings. Eight dollars for deer, $8 for elk, $8 for antelope, $8 each for our

the Lewis and Clark park

son's Guide Service in SunF r a nk Cariglia, had fished bragged about all the fish he river, has guided anglers on E l k Lake last fall and told caught. I took him to show the Cascade lakes for Garrison about his me where, and it worked out some 30 years, and he FISH I NG su c cess fishing for quite nice. How long is this said his boats have nevbrook trout. going to last? I don't know. "I'd never even been on the er touched the waters of Elk But it's a very beautiful brook Lake until this spring. lake," Garrison said. "Frank trout fishery." One of his assistant guides, came late last season and See Elk Lake/D2

resident sheep tags. Bighorns live in difficult places, and there is not enough surplus for everyone. Permits are hard to get, and

the demand is so high a person might apply for a lifetime

bia. Martin owns Canadian and Asian Mountain Outfit-

hard-to-reach places. "Start young," Martin said. "You're going to have to make an income higher than the normal guy. Sheep hunts require money and time. Going sheep hunting is like going to the Ferrari dealership. If

But I'm OK with making a donation, because I know these

money."

today.

ag

hunters in pursuit of critters in

at our house. I always apply for a sheep and never draw a tag. But peotag, which is more like a dona- ple get lucky. tion than a dim hope I'll draw. A person who wants to be a sheep hunter should start

f

ters and specializes in guiding

u

you want to own a brandnew Ferrari, you're going to have to earn a great deal of SeeDeadline/D5

Gary Lewis / For The Bulletin

Bighorns in Hells Canyon. Because of the dearth of bighorns, obtaining a tag to hunt for them is done through a lottery.


D2

TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

Fort to Sea Continued from D1 The Fort to Sea Trail is a

lovely hike one way but a bit of a grind for most hikers both

I II' ' I •

I ' I

ways. Setting up a

s h uttle

Submit your best work at Q bentlbulletin.cem/reatlerphetes. Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Also contribute to our other categories, including good photos of the great Central Oregonoutdoors.

helps. Or you can take a taxi from Astoria to Fort Clatsop for about $20. The local bus service (ridethebus.org) runs close to the trail at Sunset

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

Beach but is a 40-minute walk

from Fort Clatsop. Fort Clatsop has a non-

resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

m otorized boat l a unch o n the Lewis and Clark River,

according to the Lower Columbia Estuary Partnership

(estuarypartnership.org). Paddlers can head up river or down river past Fort Clatsop,

restoration sites and toward Youngs Bay. It's a generally protected paddle with a great

deal of history associated with it. It's also great for birding, but plan according to the tides.

Trails Continued from D1 %tQ

r

The wilderness permit system goes into effect Memorial Day weekend. Wilderness permits are free and available at wilderness trailheads. The permits help during search and rescue operation and are used for tracking usage trends. For current trail conditions and general information, visit www. fs.usda.gov/deschutes

Find It All Online

ss s

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bendbujletin.com

n

.J

VAST VIEWS IN TERREBONNE With the Deschutes River below and mountain views in the distance, Larry Cole enjoys the scenery from Lower Bridge Road.

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p i e m e n t s h o m e . c o m

Elk Lake

"That's not a normal an-

gling report for Elk Lake," he said. "It's not a highly productive lake. But because of

Continued from D1 The Oregon D epartment of Fish and Wildlife stocks Elk Lake with 50,000 trout

fisheries (in Central Oregon) are showing some pretty large fish. The lakes stayed productive longer (during the winter) and there was not a

s

prise me if Elk Lake benefitn

.

II •

st

ed, too.

Aside from the fishing at Elk Lake, the views are about as good as they get in the Central Oregon Cascades.

The 250-acre lake, located

South Sister towers over the north end of the lake, and the south side of Mount Bachelor

I met Garrison at the Elk

Lake Resort launch this past Friday, as the wind whipped

looms to the northeast.

l a k e.

Mark Morical/The Bulletin

Fishing guide John Garrison fishes Elk Lake on Friday.

at the resort for $10. Boats at Elk Lake can also launch at

Little Fawn Campground or Point Campground for free.

lot of die-off. It wouldn't sur-

32 miles southwest of Bend, has a depth of 25 to 65 feet.

Boat launching is available

the mild winter, a lot of the

fingerlings — 30,000 brooks, 20,000 cutthroat — each year in late June or early July, according to Erik Moberly, an ODFW fish biologist based in Bend. The lake also supports naturally reproducing kokanee, but the main catch is the brook trout.

up whitecaps on th e

"So it really wasn't worth

her time," he said. Garrison motored his 22I told Moberly about our foot pontoon to the south end

All sorts o f

w a t ersports

die-hardscome here to enjoy those views. Maybe the anglers should,

s u c cess at Elk Lake. He was too. surprised — but not t h at

s u rprised.

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical®bendbulletin.com

of the lake near the Beach

II •

Wi dgl ~ eel <. G OLF C L U B

18707 SW Century r . , e n www,wid i,com (541) 382-4449

A Free Public Service

d ay-use area, where t he depth was about 20 feet, and we cast out lines with worms and marshmallows attached.

The morning started slow, as the wind out of the north continued to hammer us and

made it difficult to see the bites.

I picked up one rod, gave it a slow reel and felt some weight on the end of the line.

Sure enough, I ended up reeling in a nice 14-inch brook trout.

"You can say you caught a brook trout on Elk Lake," Garrison said with a laugh. "Surprise, surprise, surprise." Brook trout do not fight

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

l ike rainbow trout — t h ey

don't come flying out of the water when hooked — but they sure are a good-looking fish, and good eating, too. We nettedfour more brook trout, and I limited out, prom-

I

ising a nice Mother's Day barbecue for the family. The brook trout we landed

ranged from 14 to 18 inches. The last fish of the day, which we caught and released near the resort, was a d arker, well-spotted 18-incher.

Moberly said he does not receive too many reports from Elk Lake. ODFW placed a creel counter at the lake

last year, but Moberly said she could not find anybody fishing.

I

ci ©Kggh o~

I

iIItttt or use the

® gg ) service to be automatically

emailed of notices that match your needs.

®g]

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 3

W at's new t is ear at rater La e Nationa Par By LeeJuillerat • (Klamath Falls) Herald and News

CRATER LAKEajor road and parking lot improvements, a possible Sister City agreement with China, the Crater Lake Lodge's 100th anniversary, the National Park Service's 2016 Centennial, expanded vehicle-free days and creation of a possible Crater Lake symphony are among many projects at a busy Crater Lake National Park slated for this season. "We're expecting record numbers of visitors this year," predicts park superintendent Craig Ackerman, who believes visitation for 2015, which peaks in July and August, will exceed the 530,000 figurereached lastyear. Crater Lake, the remnants of an ancient volcano in Southern Oregon, is the deepest lake in the United States and Oregon's only national park. Its scenic location and blue waters make Crater Lake a popular tourist attraction. Photos by Alisha Roemeling I The Statesman Journal via The Associated Press

North Entrance Road and West Rim Road both open to

traffic Friday, the same day Crater Lake Lodge opens.

boat has

Wizard Island is seen in Crater Lake in this scenic view from the lodge area at Crater Lake National Park. The 2015 season is expected to i n f l atable rescue break visitation records.

rafts and a secondary motor. For the first time, a park

w a ter fixtures with low-flow selected locations, including Cleetwood Cove area, travel- toilets and valves and no lon- Cleetwood Cove and Mount Rim Drive are vehicle-free ing between the rim and lake, ger automatically replaces Scott. and open to bicyclists, walk- to help prevent people from t o w els and sheets, and water "It's becoming really popers and runners. walking the trail with dogs, is served at food service out- ular really fast," Ackerman ensure trail walkers have l ets only by request. Visitors said of designated days when Road and parking lot adequate water and handle an d employees will again Rim Drive is closed to motorconstruction medical issues. be asked to take shorter ized vehicles from the North Ray Moore, Crater Lake's showers. Entrance junction east to chief of maintenance, said the Crater Lake Lodge Cleetwood Cove and around first phase ofa three-year $18 Several to-be announced ~tSter CttyPrOleCt the rim to Munson Valley. million project will create de- activities are planned in celThr e e delegates represent- "The more you manage an lays for motorists along por- ebration of the Crater Lake i n g the Chinese province of event, the more people will tions of Rim Drive between Lodge's 100th anniversary. Fujian spent three days at come. We're looking at the the North Entrance junction The 72-room lodge opens CraterLakethisyearduring potential for thousands of and Cleetwood Cove. for this season Friday. Mike a t our of Southern Oregon. people," he said, noting biThe project will begin in Keller, Crater Lake's man- A c k e r man said the Chinese cycling, running or hiking June. This year's focus will agerforXanterra, the park's government might send a around portions or the entire be reconstructing Rim Drive concessionaire, said com- l a rger delegation to the park 33-mile long Rim Drive is a from the North Junction to memorative products, such i n l a te June with the goal of non-polluting, positive activiCleetwood Cove, and com- as plates and menu covers, signing a Sister City agree- ty that also serves as an ecopletely reconstructing the will be offered along with a m ent between Crater Lake nomic boost to the park and Rim Village parking area be- special p r ogram and Mount Wuyi neighboring communities. tween the outdoor restrooms t entatively set f o r World He r i tage Cyatey /-Bke, and C ultural Site. 2016 NPS Centennial and Crater Lake Lodge. At no Aug. 25. time will the entire parking Keller said some tQe yeynnantS He sai d M o unt With th e N a t ional P ark area be closed, but parking is Mazama V i l lage Wuyi receives nine Service anticipating its 100th f t million visitors a anniversary in 2016, proexpected to be limited. operations, includWork o n r e c onstructing ing t h e c a bins, Vp /Canp In year, comp a red grams at Crater Lake and and enlarging the Cleetwood stores and camp- SOUt/Iey n with a b out 500,000other NPS units are gearing Cove parking area, site of ground, will open O ~ at Crater Lake, but up. Crater Lake will receive ranger will be assigned to the

Until then, some sections of

the only trail that goes to the

this month.

the deepeSt lake, is planned for 2016. The Ofthe project will add 53 parking ImPaCtS o ngoing drought /ake . in t/I e sites. n l e a eS While the lack Cleetwood Cove trail, tour boats

of winter snow — Bnd OyegpnS

noted the Chinese

$53,000 for extr a seasonal

rang"s o ' pro grams common in

Lake's chief of interpretation,

theU.S. "There's a

said a selected seasonal employee will help develop and

par k does not haverangers.

lot

Marsha McCabe, Crater

the park received pn /y n a t / pna / about 200 inches of its usual 524 inches

of b e nefit to their oversee Centennial events, The Cleetwood Cove Trail parks," he said of such as night sky programs. isn't expected to open unwhy the Chinese til mid-June, when conces- of snow — allows support the Sister sion-operated tour b o a ts the early opening City program. "I will begin daily operations. of roads and facilities, it has saw plenty we can learn from M oore said the t r ail w i t h - otherimpacts. them," said Ackerman, who "It's going to be a bad year," visited Mount Wuyi and said in the caldera rim "always needs a lot of work" because Ackerman s ai d o f wa t e r its s h uttle system "would be of damage caused by rock- concerns. the envy of any park in the Csssls aoss falls, especially in low snowAckerman said the park U . S." Ssstlsl Slsllss fall years. has drilled a test well capaCra ter Lake is planning to ~ Srssssles1 a ra The two-hour boat tours, ble of producing 200 gallons translate park brochures to ae aaanlnra which include talks by a park a minute with "water so clear Mandarin to accommodate ranger, will be offered eight it doesn't need to be treated." C h i nese visitors.

Ongoingscience — water quality, newts, bull trout and p(ants

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gallons a minute. The well Vehicle-freedays Wizard Island. is not being used because of Ve h i cle-free days, which In previous years, two of ongoing water rights issues proved successful beyond the concessionaire's three with the state. expectations last year, are b oats were used w it h t h e To conserve water, the park planned to be offered yearly available for stopovers at

third kept at the Cleetwood

has spent $185,000 in recent fixtures at the lodge, hotel,

c a n t change, this year's vehi-

learned holding a boat at the campgrounds and all park dock is not required. In case

of emergencies,each tour

Gradesieal

w eeds, were limited to t h e

c l e-free days will include waresidences. ter stations, support vehicles, Xanterrahas replaced all paramedics and rangers at

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Crater Lake Suite

source protection.

artist-in-residence programs

In recent years, some of the lake research has focused on the spread of crayfish, which now inhabit 80 percent of the shoreline and threaten

for several years. The program allows emerging and

the native Crater Lake newt,

ers — to live and create art

volving threatened bull trout.

Festival, through a National

established artists — paint-

ers, writers, graphic designers, photographers and oth-

Populations in park streams Endowment of Arts grant, to had declined to an estimated work with a composer to de150 fish, but have increased velop a Crater Lake Suite. and are now regarded as Under tentative plans, the stable. Britt's 90-member orchestra Herring said a cooperative w ill debut the work at t h e project with other agencies is park, probably in 2016. After resulting in bull trout moving the inaugural performance, outside the park and eventu- tentative plans call for smallally, he hopes, to the Wood er groups of the orchestra to River.

perform the suite and other

Jen Beck, the park's botanist, said a concern is the

music near Rim Village and other lake viewpoints.

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Bend Central Christian Central OregonChristian Home Educators Crookgountry Culver Gilchrist laPine Madras Marshall Mountain View North Lake Oregon National Guard Youth Challenge Redmond. RedmondProficiency Academy Sisters. Summit Trinity Lutheran

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"and we don't know what we at the park for multiweek can do about that." penods. While a primary focus is Ackerman said the p ark the lake, biologist Dave Her- is working with the Jackring is involved in projects in- sonville-based Britt Music

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the park. "This is one of those takes-forever problems," she said.

research continues, making Crater Lake "one of the

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Congratulate all Central Oregon Graduating Seniors with a full color ad fromVoui' dusinessl

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Multiple pages listing all 2015 Graduates

from local Central Oregon High Schools will publish in The Bulletin

Saturday, June13

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2 STORES Iit BEitD: NE 3rd & Revere541-389-7272 S Hwy 97 &Murphy Rd541-382-6767 REDMOND : SW10th& Highland 541-382-6767

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D4

TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

UrDOORS

E 1VD

To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" 10days beforepublication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylifeibendbulletin.com,541-383-0318.

www.cobc.us. sunriveranglers.org. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT THE CENTRAL OREGON UNLIMITED:For members to meet FLYFISHERSCLUB:7 p.m.;meets and greetand discuss what the on the third Wednesday of each chapter is up to; meets on the first month; Bend Senior Center; www. W ednesday ofeachm onth at6 p.m .; coflyfishers.org. 50SW Bond St., Bend, Suite4; 541- DETROITLAKE FISHING DERBY: 306-4509, deschutestu©hotmail. May15-17 at Detroit Lake; 6 a.m. to com; www.deschutes.tu.org. 4 p.m. each day; $15for adults, $8 BEND CASTING CLUB:Agroup for children; adult grand prize is a of fly anglers from around Central Smokercraft boat and trailer; girls Oregon who are trying to improve and boys grand prizes are bicycles; their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.; club registration will buy three full days of meets on the fourth Wednesday of fishing fun with an awards ceremony each month; location TBA; 541-306on the last day; 503-931-1885; 4509 or bendcastingclub©gmail. DLRABA©hotmail.com; www. com. detroitlakeoregon.org. THE SUNRIVERANGLERSCLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third Thursday of HIKING eachmonth; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www. FULL MOONHIKE:Joina Sunriver

CYCLING CENTRAL OREGON 500+BICYCLE RIDE:June 3-7; five days of classic Central Oregon road rides; 100-mile and100-kilometer ride options each day; rides include Mt. Bachelor loop, Crooked River Canyon, East Lake, Smith Rock

and McKenziePass; oneday is $75 and all five days is $325; a benefit for the MBSEF cycling program; to register, visit www.mbsef.org and search under the "events" tab.

FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASSCLUB: New members welcome; 7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday of each month; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;

Nature Center Naturalist for a guided full moon hike along Lake Aspen, the Deschutes and through a meadow; listen and look for nocturnal creatures; registration required; 8-9 p.m. on June 2, July 2, Aug. 29, Sept. 28, Oct. 27; $6 for adults, $4 for kids; kirstinrea© gmail.com or 541-593-4394. DESCHUTESLANDTRUST WALKS + HIKES:Led by skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take in spring wildflowers; all walks and hikes are free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.

HUNTING THE BEND CHAPTER OF THE

OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthe second W ednesday ofeach month;King Buffet, Bend;ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCO CHAPTER OFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesday of each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029. THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday of each month; Redmond VFWHall.

SHOOTING COSSAKIDS:Coaches are on hand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each child is

$10;10 a.m.; third Saturday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, Bend; Don Thomas, 541-389-8284. PINE MOUNTAINPOSSE:Cowboy action shootingclub;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www. pinemountai nposse.com. HORSE RIDGEPISTOLEROS: Cowboy action shooting with pistols, rifles and shotguns;10 a.m.; first and third Sunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-408-7027 or www.

hrp-sass.com.

La e ean i ersearnrewar sin1 -mietre to te e in ByRich Landers

to enjoy a sandwich or ice cream before catching the

The (Spokane, Wash) Spokesman Review

population of about two dozen people, but the numbers

ebb and flow significantly depending on the season, the However, many v i s itors, holiday and the arrival and including the Spokane Moun- departure of the Lady of the taineers, have learned to take Lake. advantage of the free campThe morning after camping at the National Park Ser- ing out at Stehekin, savvy visvice sites and relish the un- itors will be at the bike rental common luxuries Stehekin station at 8 a.m. so they can offers. They bring cash for pedal 2 miles to the Stehekin the kayak and bike rentals Pastry Co. Yum. Then they Lady of the Lake for the 55-

STEHEKIN, Wash. — Ste-

mile ferry back to Chelan.

hekin is a Northwest classic backcountry destination at

the end of Lake Chelan, accessible by boat and floatplane and, most deliciously, by foot. Hikers who tough out an

'd

18-mile trail can celebrate the

effort in a quaint wilderness inholding as they mix with

a nd four q u arters fo r t h e five-minute shower.

ride farther to visit the old

people who got there without

so much as a bead of sweat.

Another option is to pay

ic orchard. Not to be missed

schoolhouse and the histor-

is a stop to walk up and get hekin on the dead-end road drenched in the refreshing to High Bridge Campground mist at Rainbow Falls. to rub elbows with Pacific The bakery cooks said that Crest Trail h i k ers. A mong on a busy day they might go the options from High Bridge through eight dozen fresh

But visitors who arrive the

$7 for the shuttle from Ste-

hard way have a heightened appreciation of the amenities: a National Park Service museum, shower, rental bikes

to explore 13 miles of roads and waterfalls and a bakery that serves the best fresh, hot

cinnamon rolls ever baked by the dozen in the heart of the wilderness.

Rich Landers/The (spokane, wash.) spokesman Review

The Chelan L akeshore

The Lady of the Lake II ferries hikers to the Prince Creek trailhead for the Lake Chelan Lakeshore Trail near Stehekln, Washington.

Trail is available to hikers or

is a 20-mile trek to gawk at 20 waterfalls in H o rseshoe Basin. Stehekin overnighters can find a site and pitch a tent,

make a reservation for a restaurant dinner if t h ey're

snowshoersmost of the year, tired of camping food, visit but it's especially attractive the park museum and join an for early-season backpack- ground. The ferry comes in an d t h e s mall population Lake Chelan NRA. interpretive tour led by a park ing. The route along the fa- l anding-craft style, dropping that's scattered on 417 acres Some hikers arrive in Ste- ranger. mous north-central Wash- a g angplank from the nose of p r ivate land within the hekin with just enough time Stehekin has a year-round ington lake is brightened by of t h e boat so passengers wildflowers before m any c a n disembark onto the steep ski areasare closed for the rockyshore. season. Prince Creek bar was levMany hikers revel in the e l edbyheavyspringflooding unusual twist t h a t t h e y i n May 1948, eliminating use must board a f erof a forest guard ry or hire a float s tation a n d Bo y plane to reach the Tl le C flelBil Scout c amp. trariheads From the Prince L gkeSfI pre Lakeshore Trail T ygl/ Creek d r a inage, They raiSe familieS, fOCuS Ontheir CareerS and Still manage to find time 1247 usually is the the t r ai l h e a ds to make a differenCe intheir COmmunitieS. Theyare the first wil d erness aV ailable n orthwest up t h e trail to open on the gp fI jgef.S Di lak e . H i kers tend WOmen OfCentral OregOn. U MagaZine iS a bright, W enatchee Nation- g p W r , p to be grouped af-

cinnamon rolls i n

a d dition

to all the other scones, rolls, muffins and breakfast egg combos they sell. "We always have some cinnamon rolls frozen and ready just in case someone comes in late," the woman behind the counter said. "If they come this

far and have their heart set on a cinnamon roll, we don't want to disappoint them."

U MAGAZINE CBITRALOREGON'S WOMEFS AND FAMILY MAGAZINE

"

al Forest and North

ep

ter mass departure

Cascades National mO St Of the Park. The route is y eg f QUt j$'S m ostly w i t hi n e i -

ther the Lake Chelan-Sawtooth WildernessortheLake Chelan N a tional Recreation Area. It runs along the north side of the 55-mile-long lake

from t h e ferry, but the r a nks spread out quickly. eSpeCially It's common to Bf t i B C tlVe f01 se e deer and black epf/ySe>SpfI bears along Lake C helan dur i n g P 71~ spring. It's not unThe rOute c ommo n to see g f p /Tg (fl e a rattl e snake or to pluck off a few

from Prince Creek,

ticks.

which is 37 miles 1IOrthCentral "up lake" from the rl/ll/gS fI frfgfD1I

Power h ouse hikersgo all the way to Stehekin in a day.

town of Chelan, to Stehekin, which is

Most hikers do the

nestled at the very br i g h t e n ed by w est e n o the I/I/l((g(OWet'S lake in the shadow of north Cascades ~ peaks. Stehekin is Sk l Bl'eBS Bre inside the national CIDSed fpy park boundary. D The Lakeshore Trail c r osses a

tre k in two days to enjoy the undulating route as it leads u p and down from th e lak e , a l o n g bluffs a nd through forest.

intelligent and inspiring magazinewith a focus On family, health, and SPirit WhiCh featureS tOPiCS OfintereSt to tOday'S WOmenand their familieS. From SubjeCtSSUChaS

health, style and professional success to PerSOnal gOalSand relatiOnShiPS,

U Magazine offers its readers content to eduCate, emPOWerand inSPire.

Each edition highlights women, their families and the positive impact they haVe On Central OregOnand their communities.

WHEN TO LOOK POR IT:

Saturday, June6

H ikers find v a -

riety as the trail n umber o f s m a l l weaves t h r ough seasonal streams and 1 1 g h ost f orests and n ewer significant creeks, some of g r owth in areas burned by

which can be tricky to cross

t h e Rex Creek Fire of 2001 and the Flick Creek Fire of

in spring flows. Later in the summer, back- 2006. The trail winds through packers can tramp uphill a n d around a few pockets of from the lake into Lake Chel- private property, but mostly an basin, past alpine lakes to it's wild. the Methow Valley and the Des i gnated camping areas Washington Pass/Rainy Pass are: • Meadow Creek camping area on state Route 20. While those high r o utes

j.gght>J' 'j

The Bulletin 541-$82-1811 WWW.bendbulletin.COm

a r e a , 7 m i l e s f ro m P r i nce

are snowbound and not via- Creek, is steep with primitive ble for another month or so, sites scratched out along a the Lakeshore Trail

s t ay s fl o o d-scoured ravine and the

below the spring snowpack r i dgeabove. • Moore Point, ll m i l e s with a total elevation gain of 500 feet.

from Prince Creek, an estab-

Between May I and Oct. l i shed camp with more con15, the Lady of the Lake ferry venient lake access. Hunt's makes "flag" stops at Prince

B l u f f i s a M o o r e P oint-ar-

Creek trailhead, giving hik- e a destination with a lake ers more options. overlook. • Flick Creek Campground Before May I — and depending on the early-season is 4 miles uplake from Moore l ake levels — the only boat

access to the trail is by way of

P o int. • Stehekin, 2.8 miles far-

ther uplake at the trail terFrom the Field's Point m i nus, offers camping and Landing, it's a 20-mile boat m ore. ride to Prince Creek CampTh ev i llage serves visitors Stehekin.

• forynr

tIIIriters t 4 Reade Ae: A quitting Iltusbatio

II

INSPIRED BY IRAQFRi%L VQBIBI


WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

At these weddings, forget the rice and bringsneakers By Lauren Lipton New Yorh Times

At 7 a.m. one day last Au-

gust, Paul Donnelly, Laura

Sportsclub Association, a a s c o ntrolling. Experts say trade group, 18- t hrough i t 's important to be clear that 34-year-olds represent 28 per- athletic events are optional, to cent of health club members.

t a k e the pressure off guests

A slightly higher percentage who do not wish to participate 5-kilometer race. Later, they of these young adults claims and also those who can't. "You have to t hink: Can attended an awards ceremo- no particular religious affilny and drank Gatorade. Then iation, according to Pew Re- Grandmadodownwarddog?" they showered, changed into search Center. said Kellee Khalil, the founder dressy attire and went on to Some couples see athletic and chief executive of the wedthe day's main event: the wed- endeavors as a way to forge ding-planningsiteLover.ly. "Optional" or not, the presding of Donnelly and Oliver. quick bonds among guests, Paul Donnelly, 32, and Lau- guaranteeing a cohesive wed- sure to be a good sport at such ra Donnelly, 28, who are from ding reception later. Physical activities is high, said Erin Oliver and 40 others ran a

E vanston, Illinois, met in a

activity can b e

running club. The couple organized the "Wedding Day 5K" — complete with race numbers, logo T-shirts, swag bags and official time rankings — just for guests at their

break between boozier gath- gallantly took part in the Veerings and can appeal to active itch spin class despite an inpeople who might otherwise juredknee. "It doesn't matter what the have to skip a workout. (Eric Stevenson, 34, the winner of b r ide is telling you," she said. the Donnellys' 5K, logged 17 "Nothing is ever optional. If more miles that day, part of y ou have the honor of standhismarathontraining.)Agood ing up with someone on the

celebration weekend in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

"My thinking was, a lot of

a w e l come D e B r ita,26,abridesmaidwho

sweat can also relieve stress, m o st importantdayofherlife,

often the bride's and groom's. y o u'd better suck it up and do are runners as well," said Paul anything she wants you to do." Donnelly, a software engi- Calming the nerves When it's DeBrita's turn to neer and marathoner. "HavChris and Deborah Veitch's marry, she said jokingly, her ing something that everyone prerehearsaldinner workout friend should beware. "I have no plans on punishcould take part in the morning in 2013 was just the thing to

the people who were there

of, I thought it was a fun idea."

burn off the impending Italian

m e nt yet, but that's not to say it

meal and the bride's nervous won't happen," she said. "You Athletics part of activities energy. She wore a"Sweating made me do spin class with At some point between the for the Wedding" tank top as a torn ACL, so I'm going to rehearsal dinner and the mornthe couple took their families make you wear a puke-green ing-after brunch, and even on and their attendants to Full b r idesmaid'sdress." the day of the ceremony, wed- Psycle in Costa Mesa, CaliforMa n dy Fabel, 29, and Brian ding guests today might find nia, where the two had spin F a b el, 32, chose not to invite themselves running, hiking or class together four or five days a crowd to their August 2014 performing burpees as more aweek. wedding, which spanned 45 "I had been really couples add athletic events to hours and included a 14-mile bike ride, their festivities. freaking out," said a 25-mile mountain In Amagansett, New York, D eborah V e itch, S Om e last summer, a couple sched- 28. "This was just COUpleS hike and a six-hour uled a $2,000 morning ses- bringing some nor- see a t h lett c clim b up a granite sion at Barry's Bootcamp for malcy, like: 'Hey, it's peak in the Shoshothemselves and tw o d o zen OK. It's just another en d e aVOrS ne Nat i o nal Forest guests, then exchanged vows day.'" m Wyoming — and aS a VVay tO a few hours later. In Memphis, Other brides and fOy~e then the entire thing g ~ UtCQ Tennessee, the Cardio Barre grooms seek i nin reverse. studio hosted a bride and her ner peace through bO ndS amOng B ria n Fabel , guests at a wedding-day class group yoga, creat- gU eStS, the director of the last fall and ha s a s i milar ing a small industry Chamber of Combooking this month. of traveling instruc- g ayaAteetAg m e rce i n L a nder, And Tough Mudder, a tors who specialize a COheSiVe Wyomi n g, and mucky 10-mile run through 20 in one-off classes at Vveddt Ag Mandy Fabel, the punishing obstacles that takes hotels, homes and associate d i r ector t. place in various locations, has resorts. of philanthropy at been the site of a wedding-day Yoga for Wed- later. the Wyoming Comgroup run and at least one cer- dings, a consortium munity Foundation, emony since its 2010 inception. of teachers in Los considered asking One dauntingobstacle is called Angeles, New York and other guests to join them for varielectroshock therapy, a collec- cities, fields requests for about ous parts of the journey but tion of dangling live wires just 50 wedding-weekend sessions decided the logistics were too before the finish line. from April through Novem- complicated. "It is horrible," said Heath- ber. Balance Within You i n Sti l l , their officiant, a climber Suddaby, 39, of Simsbury, Torrington, Connecticut, of- e r buddy, accompanied them Connecticut. "I'm not going to fers a mobile Wedding Day the entire way, and two more lie." Bliss package that can be cus- friends with cameras met Nevertheless, she and her tomized to includeyoga, guid- them after a shorter but still husband, Aaron, 31, both mil- ed mediation and reiki, a Japa- strenuous trek. "I hadn't done anything that itary veterans, exchanged nese method of relaxation. vows just before covering their extreme before, personally," faces and bobbing and weav- DOn't fOrget about traditiOn said Kyle Duba, 30, a video ing their way through a 2013 Although wedding guests producer and outdoorsman Tough Mudder in V ermont. tend to go along with forgo- who documented the Fabels' Accompanying them during ing alcohol or other rituals ceremony. "But hiking up into the race were two stalwart friends, who served as the best man and the officiant.

that might be central to

a

FISHING REPORT ANTELOPEFLATRESERVOIR: The reservoir will be stocked this week with 2,500 legal-sized trout. The water is very dirty, and fishing has been slow.

FLY-TYING CORNER

BEND PINENURSERY: Limit is two fish per day, 8-inch minimum length. Scheduled to be stocked this week. CRANE PRAIRIE RESERVOIR: Anglers reportgood troutfishing and fair fishing for kokanee. Anglers may harvest only one

non fin-clipped (unmarked) rainbow trout or one rainbow trout over16 inches. CROOKED RIVERBELOW BOWMAN DAM:Fishing for trout and whitefish has been good. Anglers are reminded that trout over 20 inches are considered steelhead and must

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Probasco's Flashback Stonefly Nymph, tied by Quintin

McCoy.

be releasedunharmed.

In May, the big golden stonesand salmonfly nymphs start moving toward shore. Theycrawl up onthe rocks, then shed their nymphal shucks anddry their wings. The migration signals a feeding binge, andbig rainbows go onthe alert. The best wayto put a stonefly nymph to work is to pair it with a small No. 14-16 mayfly nymph. Tie onthe big bug, then fish the smaller one ona dr'opper'. This Iridescent FlashbackStonefly Nymph, developed by Ronn Lucas Sr., is a goodchoice this time of year. Usebigger versions in the Deschutes River andsmaller sizes when exploring streams up on Mount Hood. Tie the FlashbackStonefly Nymph with brown thread on aNo. 4-8 Daiichi 2340 hook. For thetail, use brown goose biots. For ribbing, tie in brown Swannundazeand build the body with brown iridescent dubbing. Wind the ribbing forward and tie off. Then tie down stripped hackle antennae and black beadeyes. Tie in a Flashback wingcaseandtie in a brown hackle, tip-first. Build the thorax with brown dubbing, then wrap thehackleandtie down the wingcase.

EAST LAKE:Anglers report good fishing for trout. FALL RIVER:Downstream of the falls is closed to fishing. Fishing upstream of the falls is open all year. Restricted to flyfishing only with barbless hooks. HAYSTACK RESERVOIR: No recent reports. Warm-water fish should be active with the warm weather. HOSMER LAKE:Hosmer Lake is scheduled to be stocked with rainbow trout. Anglers report good fishing with large trout being caught. The southern

— Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin

Highwayisopenupto Elk Lake. Lake might be frozen during colder weather. LAKE BILLYCHINOOK:Fishing has been good lately, especially for kokanee. Opportunities for bull trout are expected to be good this year. Anglers are reminded there are small numbers of spring chinook andsummer steelhead in Lake Billy Chinook as part of the reintroduction effort. Please release these fish unharmed.

Continued from D1 Martin, who has guided hunters from all over North

America, says anyone can hunt sheep if he starts now.

siastic, prepared hunter who

A p erson s erious about starts out to be a sheep hunter drawing a sheep hunt should while still in high school. "If apply at home and in other you're young and smart and states. When making a 15- apply in all the western states year plan, a hunter should and provinces, you will draw a apply in Wyoming, Colorado, tag for sure in your 40s," MarUtah, Montana and Nevada, to

tin said.

accumulate points. A lot of us missed that train, At today's rates, the average but there is hope. cost for an out-of-state appliThe odds are decent an Orcation is $200. Apply in five egonian could draw a sheep states for 15 years, and the tab hunt at some point. Special could run upward of $15,000 raffles can raise a person's before the first hunt! chances. The process is daunting, but Each year, there is a sheep there are services that help a tag in Oregon's Big Game Rafperson navigate the maze of fle and another tag in the aucstate regulations. tion. A ticket in the raffle costs M artin r e commends t h e $11.50.

"You're going to have to Huntin' Fool magazine for its application service and the gamble $1,000 to $2,000 each way it breaks down opportu- year if you want a reasonable nities in each state and prov- chance," Martin said. ince. Other services Martin This year, Oregon's auction respects include Epic Out- sheep hunt sold for $160,000. doors and Hunter Application Think of it like a donation to service. fund hunter access and wildPlan on being at a high level life habitat. of fitness all the time. We call Hunters 40 and older should it sheep shape. "You can't date get into the application proa supermodel unless you go to cess like a younger person but the gym," Martin says. play the odds for off-the-radar And a hunter who draws opportunities.

SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: Shevlin Pond is scheduled to be stocked this week with rainbow trout. Open to fishing all year. Limit is two trout per day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing restricted to juvenile anglers17 years old and

ODELL LAKE:Anglers report good catches of kokanee. Closed to fishing for bull trout, and any incidental caught bull trout must be released unharmed. All tributaries to Odell Lake are closed to fishing.

younger. SOUTH TWIN LAKE:Anglers report fair fishing for rainbow trout. Scheduled to be stocked this week.

PRINEVILLE RESERVOIR:Fishing for trout has been slow. The warmwater fish should be active with the warm weather.

LAVA LAKE (BIG): Angers report good fishing for rainbow trout with large fish begin caught.

WICKIUP RESERVOIR:Anglers report good fishing with large kokanee being caught. Early morning seems to be the best time to catch fish.

PRINEVILLE YOUTHFISHING POND: Troutfishing has been

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

••

TheBulletin

t he m o untainstoclimb apeak

fO 4iP

er

( ) f

gh ".' a tag might have to drop other plans. "Even if it m eans you have to cancel your son's wedding, you're going sheep hunting." The odds favor an enthu-

good.

OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Fishing has been fair for trout that average14 to 16 inches. The warm-water fish should be active with the warm weather.

portion of CascadeLakes

couple's religious or ethnic i s something I would do on my background, they might not o w n time,anyway." It was probably inevitable be so compliant about a forced T h e Fabels have advice for that couples would want to workout. anyone planning a similar invite their wedding guests to There's some sacredness to c h a llenge at t h eir w edding join them in the sports they traditional customs, said Bren ceremony: Go for it. "We often share our wedding love. While previous gen- Underwood, the founder of erations found community Must Bring Buns, an etiquette story by saying, 'We know it through church or temple, mil- and lifestyle blog. was selfish, but we had exactly lennials might be more apt to But fitness and dietary t h e wedding day we wanted,'" view their fellow gymgoers as choices sometimes seem like Mandy Fabel said. "Rarely will their tribe. passing whims, and couples anyone argue with something According to the Interna- who push their health habits you describe as your perfect tional Health, Racquet and on guests can come across weddingday."

Deadline

QQQ

When you are getting up in age, don't put in for the best units that are the hardest to

draw. Instead, apply for hunts in tougher terrain. People might come to hunt-

ing (or to money) later in life, and their chances ofgoing for a sheep hunt are still slim un-

less they raise their cards in an auction and put up the big dollars. A would-be sheep hunter

'1s

1

should commit to a workout routine and rifle range time

at least once a month. A lot of people draw their once-ina-lifetime tags and blow their opportunity by not being in shape. The results come back in the third week in June, and

some hunts start as early as

I

August. If you have to lose 40

pounds in eight weeks, it's going to hurt.

t•

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s

I

s

t

$

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Remember, if you want to

date a supermodel... Oregon's controlled hunt application deadline is this Friday. Somebody is going to draw a bighorn sheep tag this year. Maybe it will be you. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited TV" and authorof"JohnNosfer— Going Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon"and other titles.Contact Gary at www. GaryLewisoutdoors.com.

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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

o i ureou

o u r o i sa ' enius'

TV SPOTLIGHT

meeting room.

we'relearning more than ever

"We've been able to under-

ing you the chance to find out if your best friend is more Ein-

about dogs." stand individual dogs. We now Have they found a differhave the tool to help you fig- ence among the breeds as to ure out what kind of dog it is intelligence? Dr. Hare says not that you have in your house. Is yet. "Everything I'm interested your dog one that really relies in, it has to be an idea that's heavily on its working mem- testable, and whatever idea ory? Is it one that's amazing it is, it has to be potentially at reading your gestures? Is it falsifiable, otherwise it's not a dog that has a really strong science. So when people have empathic bond with you? Is ideas about differentbreeds your dog one that is capable being different, you can't ask of inference?Is your dog one them, 'Can you show me the that's so smart that it's cun- empirical paper where that

stein than Goofy. Their week-

ning? Part of the reason that

endlong"BarkFest"premieres Friday with "Is Your Dog a

it sometimes disobeys you, it knows exactly what you've

dog?' They'll be annoyed with you.

asked, it just knows when it doesn't have to listen to you,"

science has just wakened up

he says.

to dogs. It's just the last 10

"Is Your Dog a Genius?" 10 p.m. Friday,Nat Geo WILD

By Luaine Lee Tribune News Service

PASADENA, Calif. — At-

tention dog lovers: Ever wonder whether your dog is a furry genius or a wily loafer who really ought to know better? Well, Nat Geo WILD is offer-

Genius?" featuring Dr. Brian

Hare, who heads the Canine Dognition Center at Duke University.

Courtesy National Geographic Channels via Tribune News Service

Dr. Brian Hare will help famililies learn how smart their dog is

on "Is Your Dog aGenius?" premiering Friday. It is part of the

"Anybody can learn about "BarkFest" weekend special on Nat Geo WILD. Hare is assisted by their dog playing the best Finley, the dog. games that we've designed at Duke, and other colleagues at Yale and Harvard, to find out series of games that you can your dog's mind. "Is your dog an amazing about how your dog thinks rel- play with your companion to ativeto otherdogs, "saysHare. find out whether he's top dog communicator or one who's It's not a question of wheth- at problem-solving or can read really empathic? Is your dog er Fido is smart or not, he in- your mood like a clairvoyant. one that has amazing inferensists. "That's assumed — the Families can access these ex- tial skills or is your dog really q uestion is w hat i s i t t h a t ercises by going to www.dog- cunning? If your dog is cunmakes your dog a genius? So nition.com. ning and not empathic, that "Go online, sign up and doesn't mean he's not intellijust like people where you have people who are good at become a citizen scientist," gent, but it helps you undermath or English or history, says Hare. "It's a lot of fun. stand who's sleeping in your dogs are the same way. They Studying the psychology of bed better." have different types of intelli- your dog using these games Hare studies all kinds of angence. And some of them rely — fromthebestresearch — is imals. But his purpose, he says on some of these intelligences as easy as hiding food under is, "trying to understand humore than others. But there's cups and manipulating a few mans by understanding what no right answer. The question things, like where you point it is to NOT be human. It ends is, what describes your dog?" and where you look, and you up that dogs have played a big The center has devised a can find out what's going on in part of that story," he says in a

trait has been observed in that "But what I can tell you is

years where you've seen an explosion of activity where scientists are now really paying attention to dogs. At Duke, I don't have dogs in cages or anything. People bring their pet dogs in. And just like when you do developmental psychology and people bring their children in, we do the same thing. You bring your fourlegged child in and we play games, and we see how they think, just like anybody would

While not all canines are

the same, the games reveal in which areas your pet excels. "We give you instructions. You play the games and as you go, you type in what your dog is doing, and it's very easy. After you finish, everything that you put in is analyzed, and your dog is compared to every other dog in our database. A report is generated automatically, and now you have a report that compares your dog to every other dog." Hare says they've discovered they can conduct brain scans on dogs because the

do with a kid.

"One of the things we hav-

en't been able to do at universities is that we can't collect

scan requires the subject to

enough data to look at breed

be very still, and dogs have

differences. There are hun-

been trained not to move. "I don't do that on the show, but

dreds of breeds. It's just intractable. That's where citizen sci-

we do cover it in the show, and ence comes in. We can finally it's one of the exciting things is look at breed differences."

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY ' inners Howto ost'DearA

• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. I

Dear Abby: We have enjoyed three other couples for many

your name and mailing address, one, and it made for an interesting plus check or money order for and fun evening. The recipes are $14 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby-

years. Besides an i nternational

traditional, easy to read, simple to

theme, we occasionally have other theme dinners. The host cou-

prepare and delicious.

an international dinner club with

p le chooses the country and i s

written to tell me they've hosted

As I mentioned to a reader from Little Rock who inquired about

responsible for the t he booklet, o n e main course. Anhostess described other couple brings decorating her place DFP,R an associated encards with a ppliABBY tree, the third couple qued hearts and tiny brings dessert, and flowers. She creatthe fourth couple ed a centerpiece by provides the wine. We rotate re- making a "bouquet" of envelopes sponsibilities so we host once ev-

ery four months. We have become closefriends over man y

addressed to Dear Abby.

Another woman copied ques-

tions from past columns, printm e m orable m e als ed them out and made them into

Cookbooklet Set,P.O. Box 447, Mount M o r ris, I L 6 1 054-0447. My mother used many of these

recipes for dinner parties, and so have I. I particularly recommend the Pecan Pie recipe — which has

been printed in this column because it has taken prizes at county fairs.

It was given to Mama by the chef at the now-demolished Phoenix Hotel in Lexington, Kentucky,

and people rave about it. Dear Abby: Folks always tell me that gals like to be wooed, but when I holler "woo" at them, they

together, sharing

p r egnancy a party game, instructing her give me dirty looks. What's up a nnouncements, c h i l d r ear - guests to supply the answers. She with that'? ing, graduations, weddings and said that after a few glasses of — Abby Fan From Twitter anniversaries. wine, some of the answers they Dear Fan:Decades ago, "gals" I think a "Dear Abby" dinner came up with were hilarious but would have been flattered. But would be fun to host, and I'd love not suitable for printing in a fami- since the w o men's movement, to plana meal around your cook- ly newspaper. many females would regard your books. Would you please advise My cookbooklet set contains attempt to be friendly as a form how this avid reader might get more than 100 tasty recipes rang- of sexual harassment rather than copies? ing from soups to salads, appetiz- a compliment. Instead of "hol— Chef Mikein Canada ers, main courses and desserts. lering," try saying hello and you Dear Chef Mike: I know a Dear The recipes can also be used for might get better results. Abby dinner party would be en- holiday celebrations and other — Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com joyable, because readers have special occasions. To order, send or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESDAY, MAY13, 2015:This yearyou will emphasize your immediate circle of friends and your long-term goals. You will have a drive to learn more, experience other cultures and break pastyour present mental barriers. If you are single, you are likely to meet quite a few people who might be of interest to you. Come fall, the possibilities of meeting The One

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

re-establish a boundary. You have alot to do, and there is little time for other matters. Tonight: Could go till the wee hours.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

delayed anylonger.Youcould beexhausted by a personal matter that seems to be dominant and perhapstakesup too much of your time. Allow your creativity to emerge, and head in a newdirection. Tonight: Make the most of the moment.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * You might be mulling over a situation that you have not yet come to a con-

** * * * A llow your imagination to soar clusion about. Encourageadiscussion, increase. If youare when faced with unavoidable obstacles. even though a side of you will want to Btars showthe ging attached, the two You will find a solution. A conversation of tlay you'll have of you might Purwith someone you look up to will make a close down the conversation. Ask your** * * * 0 y namic chase a new house big difference in your perspective. Make self, Why is there resistance? Get down to ** * * p osltlve or remodel your the root cause. Tonight: At home. calls and plans to take off for a few days. ** * Average pre s ent one. It will Tonight: Listen to the music. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) become important ** So-so ** * * Speak your mind, and underLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) to you as a couple * Difficult ** * * * You could be taken aback by a stand what is happening with a close to have sufficient associate. This person might be upset, personal situation andanapparent lack privacy. ARIES of options. You will remain mellow yet butcan'tseem to discusswhy.You havea understands you a little too well for your direct. Speakyour mind to someone you comfort. talent for communicating, and it will help lookuptowho often givesyousound ad- him or her to open up. Let your creativity ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * You'll want to take some time to vice. Be more forthright with this person. flourish. Tonight: Head home first. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. process your feelings. Try not to act too AOUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) quickly; otherwise, you could experience VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * Dealing with funds could be diffi** * * One-on-one relating will take you a problem. Share some of your thoughts cult, as aclose associate seemsto close down a new path. You could be confused with a trusted friend whose feedback down no matter what you do. Understand might be significant. Tonight: Nap, then by someonewho seems to pullback thatyoucando only so much.Takeyour decide. suddenly. Know that this person will calm cue from afamily member or roommate, down in time. Enlightening news will open TAURUS (April 20-May20) and give this person some space. Tonight: ** * * * Z ero in on a friend who might the door to a potential change. Tonight: In Join a friend for munchies. the whirlwind of the moment. be a creative type. Conversations could be PISCES (Fed.19-March20) trying, as he or she might have difficulty LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * * You dominate the present scene being clear. Remain gracious, and try ask- ** * * You could be tired and withing a clarifying question or two. A meeting drawn. How you handle a partner or more than you realize. An issue with a is likely to take up much of your time. associate who feels a stronger need to be changing situation could cause an unexTonight: Let the party go on. in control will be more important than you pected problem. Nevertheless, you'll dethink. You can't put off a discussion any cidetocontinueasyouhavebeen.Speak GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * Someone will make it very clear longer. You might be surprised by what is your mind so that those involved can going on. Tonight: Be social. continue down a specific path. Tonight: that he or she wants what he or she wants. Stay centered and direct, especial- SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) Hang out. ly ifyou are involved. Youmight need to ** * Dive into a project that can't be © King Features Syndicate

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 2:35, 6:05, 9:05 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 11:30 a.m.,12:30, 2:45, 3:45, 6:30, 7:05, 9:45, 10:45 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON 3-D(PG-13)1,2:15,6, 9:20 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON IMAX3-D (PG-13)noon, 3:15, 7, 10:15 • BACKSTREETBOYS: SHOW 'EMW HAT YOU'RE MADE OF(no MPAArating) 7 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-l3) 12:35, 7:45 • THE D TRAIN (R) 11:40 a.m., 4:15, 7:15,10:05 • EX MACHINA (R) 1:45, 4:45, 8, 10:40 • FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 I2:15, 3:55, 7:05, 10:10 • HOME (PG)12:50, 3:20, 6:20, 9:15 • HOT PURSUIT (PG-13) 11:35a.m., 2, 4:30, 6:55, 9:35 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 12:25, 3:25, 7:10, 10:25 • MONKEY KINGDOM (G)12:45,3,6:45,9:40 • PAUL BLART: MALLCOP2(PG) 12:55, 3:30, 6:15, 9 • UNFRIENDED (R) 3:50, 10:35 • THE WATER DIVINER (R) 12:40, 3:40, 6:35, 9:25 • WOMAN IN GOLD (PG-13) I:25, 4:20, 10:20 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. i

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • GET HARD (R) 9:15 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)6 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) 2:30 • Younger than21 mayattend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. f

7 p.m. on CNBC, "Consumed: The Real Restaurant Busi-

ness" —Many people who enjoy cooking (or simply

eating) dream of opening their own restaurant one day, but the reality often shatters the daydream. This new eight-episode series takes viewers behind the scenes of five eateries fighting to survive in the intense New York food scene. In the premiere, a trend-setting chain called The Meatball Shop looks to expand, as does Harlem comfort food hotspot Melba's. Elsewhere, the family-run Ann 8 Tony's struggles to fill seats in a changing Little Italy. 8 p.m.on 2,9,"The Middle" — Sue's (Eden Sher) biggest day as a student is fraught with unforeseen hurdles — making her fear it will be memorable for all the wrong reasons — in the new episode "The Graduate," the finale of the show's sixth season. Frankie and Mike (Patricia Heaton, Neil Flynn)

are torn over the prospect of letting Brick (Atticus Shaffer) skip a grade and go right on to high school. Axl (Charlie McDermott) is worried by his girlfriend's social-media posts. 8 p.m. on10, "American Idol" —It all comes down to this: The competitive per-

formances havebeengiven,

and there's roughly two more hours to sweat out until this season-ending episode justifies its title, "Winner Announced." The finale always is a big affair stuffed with "name" musical guests, and scheduled are Pitbull, New Kids on the Block, past judge Steven Tyler — and, of course, current judges Harry Connick Jr Jennifer Lopez and Keith Urban. Host Ryan Seacrest identifies the winner. 8 p.m. on FAM, "Young 8 Hungry" —In the new episode "Young 8 Sandwich," Gabi (Emily Osment) believes that her friend Sofia's (Aimee Carrero) romantic dry spell is because she's just too picky, so she signs Sofia up for an online dating site. Sure enough, Sofia soon finds what looks to be the perfect guy, but Emily discovers the guy is hiding a huge secret. Elsewhere, Josh (Jonathan Sadowski) vows to put himself through "dating detox," and Yolanda (Kym Whitley) finds out that her new boyfriend used to be really close to Elliot (Rex Lee). © Zap2it

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • ADULT BEGINNERS (R) 3:30 • OF HORSES ANDMEN(no MPAArating) 8 • WILD TALES (R) 5:30 I

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Up to $1000 Mastercard® . Prepaid Card Rebate by mail with the

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)4:30,5:15,7:30, 8:15 • FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 5:30, 8:30 • HOT PURSUIT (PG-13) 4:30, 6:30, 8:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13) 6:15 • AVENGERS: AGEOFljLTRON (PG-13) 6 • MONKEY KINGDOM (G) 6:15 • WHILE WE'REYOUNG (R)6:30

jbbend.com 541-382-6223

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Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505

• THE AGEOF ADALINE(PG-13)2:55,5:l0,7:30 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)2:45,5:40,6:30 • AVENGERS:AGE OFIjLTRON 3-D(PG-13)3:20 • FURIOUS7 (PG-13)4:10, 7:10 • HOME (PG) 5:05 • PAUL BLART: MALLCOP2(PG) 2:50, 7:25 •

slrrcs

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G allery-Be n d 541-330-5084

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)6:15 • THE SECOND BEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (Upstairs — PG)6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION

DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL PAINT

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

803 Sw Industrial way, Bend, OR


ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 210

Furniture & Appliances 0 n

246

Gun s , Hunting & Fishing

267

Fuel & Wood

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AflYear Dependable 540+ rnds .308 PMC Firewood: Seasoned; Lodgepole, split, del, FMJ-BT & 80+ rnds Winchester FMJ. Ex- B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 tra brass and MTM/ or 2 cords for $365. Plano ammo boxes Multi-cord discounts! (two .308, one .40/.45, 541-420-3484. and one . 38/.357). 421 269 $ 360 c a s h ob o . Schools & Training Gardening Supplies 541-977-3173 & Equipment Bend local pays CASHII IITR Truck School for firearms & ammo. REDMOND CAMPUS 541-526-0617 Our Grads Get Jobs! BarkTurfSoil.com 1-888-438-2235 Bolt action 7.65mm ArWWW.HTR.EDU gentine Mauser, made PROMPT DELIVERY in Lowe, Berlin, model 542-389-9663 1 890 $ 225. W W 1 476 model of U S 1 9 17 Employment enfield 30.06 serial For newspaper Opportunities 24030, not in original delivery, call the condition. $600 obo. 2 Circulation Dept. at Add your web address original mili t a ry 541-385-5800 to your ad and readthreaded barrels, 1 in To place an ad, call ers on The Buiietin's canvas case marked 541-385-5809 web site, www.bendM8, other wrapped in or email bulletin.com, will be paper and cosmoline, ctaeeified@bendbuttetin.com able to click through m arked M9 , bo t h automatically to your brand new. $150 ea. The Bulletin website. 541-213-1757

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Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

EMPLOYMENT Feature Writer - Reporter. The Central HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS Oregonian newspaAuto -Sales Are you a Senior in per in Prineville is Sales professional to H igh S chool a n d seeking a reporter Join Central King bedroom set Now Hiring wondering what's next to focus on features. Oregon's l a r gest 202 6 pace solid cherry; Customer f or you a fter y o u Some news covernew ca r de a ler headboard footWant to Buy or Rent g raduate? The O r - age as well. JourSubaru of B e nd. Service board, side rails, 27" egon Army National nalism experience is Offering 401k, profit Representatives TV armoire, bed side Wanted: $Cash paid for Guard i s se e king mandatory; photogsharing, me d ical • Starting Wage: chest w/drawers, Grandmas old/newer jewyoung motivated men raphy and paginaking mattress/box plan, split shifts and $13. 50 — $14.25 elry. Top $ paid for gold/ and women like you to tion experience a paid vacation. Expe• Comprehensive springs, top quality silver. I buy by the esjoin our ranks! Join- plus. Full time with Lexington brand rience or will train. Benefits Packet tate/load. Honest Artist ing the Guard will full benefits. Salary 90 day $2000 guarREDUCED $1600 Elizabeth, 541-633-7006. open many doors for based on e xperiobo. Call or text a ntee. Dress f o r Apply online WANTEDwood dressyou with benefits such e nce. Drug f r e e 435-770-8079 success. P l e ase www.consumer ers; dead washers & as college tuition as- workplace. Send reSunriver apply at 2060 NE cellular.com/About/ sistance, the Mont- sume and c o ver dryers. 541-420-5640 Hwy 20, Bend. See Careers gomery Gl Bill, and letter to Bob or Devon. 206 excellent on the job Tahern I madrasDisbursement Agent Pets & Supplies training. Plus, it's one p ioneer.com. N o C onstruction Ris k of the best part-time calls please. Caregivers Management firm loAdopt a great cat or jobs you can have cated in Sunriver is Wildjand two! A ltered, vacciw anted t o j o i n while pursing your caseeking highly motinated, ID chip, tested, Firefighters reer goals. our caring individual to as- Applicants must be 17 To fight forest fires must PATIO TABLE more! CRAFT, 65480 m emory c a r e vated sist with construction years old prior to ob78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 54" Tropitone table be 18yrs old & Drug c ommunity. A l l funds disbursements. taining a contractual free! Apply 9am-3pm 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 4 chairs, tilt shifts a v ailable. Position is Full-Time. obligation. Eligibility Mon-Thurs. Bring two www.craftcats.org awning, $350. Individual should have r estrictions Must be reliable. ap p l y. forms of ID fill out Deposit c a n s/bottles 541-382-6684 CASH!! 270 a minimum of t wo Federal 1-9 form. Contact your l o cal Also needed part needed for local all For Guns, Ammo & year experience in Lost & Found Get your National Guard repre- No ID = No Application volunteer, non-profit Range 30" Magic Chef Reloading Supplies. t ime c hef. F o r construction adminisand secure 541-408-6900. business cat rescue. Donate at black glass top, s/c, more inf o r ma- tration or commercial sentative future now. Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 $100. 541-504-1549 C ombine Bo w w i t h Found chainsaw along lending. Construction yourSSG tion, or a ny Highway. Call (541) Oxford E , Bend, Petco i n terminology and accase, practice and 389-0198 to i nquire questions, 541-617-1342 R edmond; Smi t h 212 hunting arrows, like about its return. Will a ROW I N G counting experience oregonarmyguard.com please call Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Antiques & needed. Must be pronew, $240. need caller t o PatRick Corp. ID 541-385-4717 Bend; CRAFT in Tuwith an ad in ficient in Microsoft Ex541-233-6520 1199 NE Hemlock, Collectibles make, model, day lost malo. Can pick up Ig. cel. Excellent comThe Bulletin's Get your Redmond Just bought a new boat? and highway. amounts. 389-8420. munication, w r i ting 541-923-0703 EOE Antiques Wanted: People Lookfor Information Sell your old one in the FOUND: Hearing Aid at "Call A Service www.craftcats.org and o r g anizational business Tools, furniture, marbles, classifieds! Ask about our Wagner Mall, week of About Products and Housekee ers Wanted Professional" skills required. ComGiant pe t ad o ptioncoin-op machines, beer Super Seller rates! Services Every Day through Immediate Positions April 13. petitive salary DOE 8 event a t P e t smartcans, pre-'40s B/W phoDirectory 541-385-5809 Available. 541-389-5226 The Bulletin Classineds benefit pkg. Firm is May 15-17! Various tography. 541-389-1578 Part-time, inc l udes LOP tags for Deer & Elk an EOE. e-mail to: rescues/shelters will F OUND: Husky M ix some weekends and ali.schaal©tetra f eature dozens o f China cabinet, o a k; Huntinq; access in Con- dog, has tag, phone holidays. Must be a tech.com dogs, puppies, cats, trunk; 2 chairs, oak, don, OR. 541-384-5381 number on tag disteam player, have atWith an ad in kittens, 3 days, 10 to upholstery no arms; M arlin M odel 1 8 9 4 connected, found in tention to detail and Ad Services Admin Where can you find a 4. Low adoption fees, Redwood burl table Cowboy limited, lever Macy's parking lot, The Bulletin's have own transportaThe Bulletin is seeking an individual to play a free items from Pets- 4xt/a'x3t/a', round end action, 44 cal. Walnut call helping hand? to ID. tion. vital role on the Ad Services team. The Ad Sermart. Come m e et table; decorative ma- checkered stock, 20" 541-280-3001 From contractors to vices Admin position is 32 hours per week and hogany b o o kcase. hex barrel, excellent "Call A Service Call 541-593-2024 for your next best friend! is eligible for benefits. An Ad Services Admin applicationprocess. Must See! condition, yard care, it's all here $650 . Golden Retriever pup- 541-388-3532 Call a Pro works closely with others on the Ad Services Professtonat" 541-420-5184 in The Bulletin's Office Position pies, 4 boys left, 9 team to coordinate and track ads though our Whether you need a General Office Posiweeks old, ready for roduction system; at times, taking corrections "Call A Service PRICE REDUCED! Directory tion i n Sun r iver. fence fixed, hedges their forever home. rom customers via phone, faxing ads to cus- Professional" Directory Nosier MDL 48 Patriot Seeking an enthusi$650/ each. tomers, and ensuring all corrections have been 30-06 rifle NIB never trimmed or a house astic, energetic per541-447-8970 made prior to printing. In addition, this position fired. $1195. built, you'll find son wit h e x cellent will include training for a path to page composCredit Services 541-408-4522 Queensland Heelers telephone, computer professional help in ing responsibilities. The ideal candidate will be Northwest Farm Credit Services is seeking a Standard & Mini, $150 skills & Microsoft ofOak frame 28" x31", WANTED: Collector computer literate, have outstanding customer Relationship Managerto work their Salem or The Bulletin's "Call a 8 up. 541-280-1537 fice with basic knowlscroll work. $40obo seeks high quality fishservice skills, above average grammar skills, Redmond, OR office. The final location will be www.rightwayranch.wor 541-4'I 9-6408 Service Professional" ing items & upscale fly edge of QuickBooks. the ability to multi-task and a desire to work at a determined based on businessneeds. This dpress.com Qualified i n dividual rods. 541-678-5753, or Directory successful company. position assists in achieving the objective of The Bulletin reserves 503-351-2746 m ust enjoy a f a s t Scottie puppies ready the right to publish all providing high quality, profitable and construc541-385-5809 To apply, submit a resume by Wednesday paced work environnow, mom and dad on tive credit and related services to customers. Winchester model 12, from The Bulletin May 13th, with qualifications, skills, experience ment with significant site, AKC p a pers, ads This position requires a bachelor's degree in 3" mag. Factory vent Found: Mtn bike, NW newspaper onto The and a past employment history to The Bulletin, multi-tasking in a fun, shots. 541-771-0717 business, accounting, finance, or Ag-related rib, d eluxe w o od. B end. Contact b y Bulletin Internet webattention: Debby Winikka/ dwinikka©wescomteam e n v ironment. field. Successful candidate must have strong $600. 541-548-3408 email only, jlcorso© site. papers.com OR PO Box 6020, Bend, OR Offering a competicommunication, marketing, analytical and bendcable.com with 97708-6020. Pre-employment drug screening is tive salary and ben256 computer skills, and leadership ability. Three full description. Final required prior to hiring. The Bulletin is an equal The Bulletin efit package including tenfnoCentral creoon efncefota to five years of experience in credit, banking or Travel/Tickets date to claim 8/10/1 5. opportunity employer. 4 01K. S u b mit r e financial services preferred. An Ag b acksume to Tetra Tech ground is also desirable. Apply online at Sheryl Crow tickets (4) PO Box 3585, Sunnwww.northwesffcs.com/careers Silver to y p o odle, reserved seating July Serving Central Oregon since f903 v er, OR 9 7707 o r EEO/AA Employer - Minorities/Women/Indibeautiful p u rebred. 6, Bend Amphitheater. email: viduals with Disabilities/Veterans AKC, 1.5 years old, Cash only price firm ali.schaal©tetra neutered M, kennel $300. 503-580-5249 Accounting tech.com NOrthM!feSt trained, al l sh o t s, fkee Ce • OIT • • eVIC • • LOST POS S UM! 260 Perfect Pizza Company $350. 541-598-5032 Vintage wash bowl & • Early May, NE Bend. Misc.ltems is looking for a franSt. Bernard puppies, 6 pitcher set, large, $85 If you see her, please chisee/area d e v elobo 541-419-6408 wks., $500 ea. Call or don't hurt her. She is Accounting 300+ 8 t r acks, cas- loving and harmless. oper for Eastern Ortext 541-233-9837. egon. Best pizza in settes & vinyl records. 541-280-8972 215 $100. 541-536-2786 Oregon. Perfectpizza-.-;-. - 1 Accountant i Coins & Stamps company.com. Call for Buying Dfamonds information, Private collector buying Responsibilities include preparing checks, /Gold for Cash 503-855-4893 postagestamp albums & Saxon's Fine Jewelers REMEIIIIBER:If you maintaining check r e gisters, r econciling collections, world-wide have lost an animal, account balances with vendors, processing RANCH HELP 541-389-6655 Accounts Payable Specialist don't forget to check Sisters-area employer payroll, p e rforming b an k r e c onciliation, Tiny Malti-Poos, born and U.S. 573-286-4343 BUYING (local, cell phone). The Humane Society maintaining loan a mortization schedules, seeks full-time sum3/17. Taking deposit Responsible for maintaining vendor accounts, Lionel/American Flyer Bend mer ranch hand who updating S Corp distribution and partnership call/text 541-467-2674 including posting vendor invoices, researching 240 trains, accessories. 541-382-3537 draw reports, coordinating property tax is comfortable around and resolving vendor and pricing discrepan541-408-2'I 91. Yorkies 2 males 8 wks, Crafts & Hobbies Redmond horses and can prostatements and preparing/distributing 1099s. cies, maintaining accurate payee data, and 1st shots, $600. Can 541-923-0882 Other duties include assisting with fixed asset l a b or. 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Classifieds - super sized castle, Les Schwabis proud to be an $4000 new, needs Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent equal opportunityemployer. 541-385-5809 some care, you haul, customer service, with over 450 stores and (2) 90-inch Couches 7,000 employees in the western United States. 306 RANS Wave recum- $800. 541-815-2505. Cane bamboo with We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, silk upholstery, bent. 60" WB, older Wanted- paying cash Farm Equipment retirement and cash bonus. Please go to model some wear on for Hi-fi audio & stu$500 each,obo. & Machinery www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls. frame. W e l l main- dio equip. Mclntosh, tained. New: chain JBL, Marantz, D y- 60" Landpride weed Les Schwabis proud to be an r ings, t i r es , se a t naco, Heathkit, San- cutter, 3ptto, u sed equal opportunityemployer. cushion. Cateye Velo sui, Carver, NAD, etc. once. $1100. CRR, 7 computer/odometer. Call 541-261-1808 503-936-1778 $350 541-504-5224 Mahogany Media 316 Armoire,2 drawers, 2 282 284 266 shelves,SOLD Irrigation Equipment 619-884-4785(Bend) Sales Northwest Bend Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend totaa |elp FOR SALE 5000 series Maytag Tumalo Irrigation C AMPING G EAR Moving Garage Sale omen & men ' s (60964 C r eekstone ** FREE ** dryer, like new, 4000 Water Winegard Carryout auto iVantage Top 100 Critical Access W c lothes, 1374 N W Loop) May 16th-17th Garage Sale Kit series Maytag dryer, ROCKY M O U NTS portable satellite an$4,500 per acre Baltimore, Corner of 8AM. Everything must Place an ad in The will hold 2 queen size telescoping R4 bike tenna w it h a t t ach- Call 541-419-4440 Hospital 2011 & 2015 14th 8-2, Sat. go! 541-419-2917 quilts. $850. Brand rack. Carries single, ment $ 5 0 0 obo Bulletin for your ga325 new, still under war- tandem or recumbent 5 41-588-0068 cel l rage sale and reWALLOWA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL MOVING SALE Fri Sat Neighborhood Sale ranty, Whirlpool con- bikes up to 78" WB. 541-549-4834 home Hay, Grain & Feed 7-4. furniture, pool ceive a Garage Sale Sat. 8-2 62741 Mt. vection 5 burner glass Pivoting, push-button LOCATED IN ENTERPRISE,OR J efferson Pl. i n 3 table, custard glass, Kit FREE! 261 top stove with warm- axle; easy load/unWheat Straw for Sale. Pines sub.off Shevlin Garfield C h ristmas, ing station. Has Aquo- load. Fits Thule and Medical Equipment KIT INCLUDES: Also, weaner pigs. MED SURG RN FULL TIME Park Rd. Le a t her Bud steins, p lenty • 4 Garage list technology. $700. Yakima crossbars. Sale Signs 541-546-6171 c ouch, L aZ B o y more. 18964 Choctaw • $2.00 Off Coupon To 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d Used twice. $250. chair, several bikes, 341 Use Toward Your piece, $400. 2 viles of 541-504-5224. s tationary a s w e l l , Ad Variable Shifts — Shift differential applies gold nuggets, a little Horses & Equipmen USE THECLASSjFIEDS! •Next mens back country 10 Tips For "Garage over a gram ea. $45. 242 skis 8 boots, backSale Success!" to nights and weekends ea. Sterling silver, 24 Exercise Equipment packs, nice womens Door-io-door sel l i ng wi t h diamond earrings, still clothing 8 s carves, CPR Certification Required in box, $200. 2 (set) Pilates bench, $ 3 00 Tempur-pedic twin • ., I S , kitchen items, CDs, fast results! It's the easiest PICK UP YOUR cubic zirconia sterling n ew, $ 7 5 OBO . electric bed & remote. ACLS Required within 6 mos. many designer items, way in the world io sell. GARAGE SALE KIT at silver e n g agement 951-454-2561. Top mattress has a lamps, lots of lots of 1777 SW Chandler rings, sizes 7 and 8, water-proof mattress TNCC, PALS Certification Preferred books, current & Id + Ave., Bend, OR 97702 $50 e a . Mi c hael cover. $500. Hoyer Deluxe showman 246 children's books, golf The BulletinClassified 541-589-3092 3-horse trailer SilPrior OB & ER Experience Preferred Classic Lift with sling. clubs, and art items The Bulletin Golf Equipment 541-385-5809 servingceneal oregon sincet903 Will lift up to 400 lbs. verado 2001 29'x8' ExcellentBenefit Package 5th wheel with semi SUMMIT R O B OTICS $125. 4 wheel Golf club sale, 3 sets Scooter. New batter286 living quarters, lots of RUMMAGE SALE Sat 266 custom irons, drivers ies purchased April Equal Opportunity Employer extras. Beautiful con5/16 8 am to 1 pm at Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend hybrids and putters. Summit High School 015, charger i n - dition. $21,900. OBO .".: Mct $300 p er set, 2 541-420-3277 Commons. cluded. SOLD! BIG GARAGE SALE Garage Sale. Furniture, 541-788-3743 visitour weosite at w~ tecd.or or contact 541-317-1188 Sat and Sun, 9am- home goods, c raft 345 264 DESK 3pm. 3344 NE Palmer items, exercise 30"x54" 265 Linda childers 5 41 426-5313 ao ~ Livestock & Equipment Sales Southwest Bend Dr. Houseware, con- e quipment, G r a nd Leather Top • Building Materials struction tools includ- Targhee Dr. B end, $250. 541-382-6664 Ready to work, regis5/16 Jumble Sale ing saw, clothes and Sat. 16th, 9-2. La Pine Habitat tered yearling Angus 19679 Hollygrape St purses, jewelry, fur292 G ENERATE SOM E RESTORE bulls. Gentle, good 9am -1pm niture, camping EXCITEMENT in your Street legal mags- lift Building Supply Resale dispositions, popular, Lots of what you want equipment, seasonal Sales Other Areas neighborhood! Plan a kit, split windshield, Quality at and need! decorations, TV proven b l o odlines. garage sale and don't leather seats, b a ll LOW PRICES Raised in long-estabSale benefits women's DVD player, luggage, Fri. 8 Sat. 5/15-16 from forget to advertise in cleaner, ice c h est. 52684 Hwy 97 lished herd. $1800 & service organization s crapbooking s u p - 8-5. 1 6 68 3 B i t terclassified! $3000 obo. 541-536-3234 up. 54 1 - 480-8096, Soroptlmlst Internaplies, dog clothes and brush, Sisters. A lot of 541-385-5809. 541-389-1966 Open to the public . Madras tional of Bend pet supplies. good stuff!

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Boats & Accessories

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590.

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CONSIGNMENTS Resident Care Wildland Fire WANTED Coordinator FightersWe Do The Work ... (Bend) Cooper Contracting You Keep The Cash! Compensation: DOE is now hiring entry On-site credit Keystone Everest 5th RCC position. LPN level fire f ighters. approval team, Wheel, 2004 528 850 or multiple years' F35 Bonanza. Aircraft 908 (No exp. needed). web site presence. Model 323P - 3 slides, e xperience as a 541-548-0345. Loans & Mortgages Snowmobiles is in exc. cond., w/ Must be least 18 yrs We Take Trade-Ins! rear island-kitchen, Aircraft, Parts med aid in an asgood paint & newer of age. Starting pay fireplace, 2 TV's, 875 & Service sisted l i ving or WARNING interior. Full IFR. Auto CD/DVRNCR/Tuner $ 10.10/hr., plu s BIG COUNTRY RV memory care. ProThe Bulletin recomWatercraft pilot, yaw d amper, w/surround sound, A/C, $4.02/hr. hazardous Bend: 541-330-2495 vides direct supervimends you use cauengine monitor. Redmond: custom bed, ceiling fan, pay on the first 40 sion of care giving tion when you pro6485TT, 1815SMOH, ds published in eWa 541-548-5254 W/D ready, many extras. h rs. C a l l Se a n within the commuvide personal 692STOH. Hangered tercraft" include: Kay New awning & tires. 541-948-7010 to nity. Ensures resiinformation to compain Bend. $32,000 or aks, rafts and motor Excellent condition. 4-place enclosed Interdents are t reated schedule and internies offering loans or $16,000 for Yeshare. personal $19,750. More pics view or f o r m o re state snowmobile trailer Ized with respect, dignity credit, especially Call Bob Carroll watercrafts. Fo available. 541-923-6408 r ecognizing i n d i - info. 541-550-7382 those asking for ad- w/ RockyMountain pkg, "boats" please se 1/3interest in vidual needs and vance loan fees or $8500. 541-379-3530 arcarroll9@gmail.com Class 870. Laredo 31'2006, Columbia 400, encouraging indecompanies from out of 860 541-385-5809 5th wheel, fully S/C Financing available. HANGAR FOR SALE. pendence. Fosters a state. If you have one slide-out. 486 Monaco Monarch 31' 30x40 end unit T h ome-like a t mo$125,000 concerns or ques- Motorcycles & Accessories Awning. Like new, hanger in Prineville. 2006, F ord V 10, (located I Bend) sphere throughout Independent Positions tions, we suggest you Serving Central Oregon since1903 28,900 miles, hardly used. 541-288-3333 Dry walled, insulated, the com m unity. consult your attorney and painted. $23,500. 880 auto-level, 2 slides, Must sell $20,000 Must have experior call CONSUMER Tom, 541.788.5546 Sales Help or take over payence with managqueen b ed & HOTLINE, Motorhomes ing staff, scheduling, Wanted: En e rhide-a-bed sofa, 4k ments. Call Take care of 1-877-877-9392. experienced in care getic kiosk sales 541-410-5649 3 Cu.ft. fridge for RV. gen, convection miyour investments giving. Good written person ne e ded Find exactly what Norcold, 110 V o l t, crowave, 2 TVs, tow Harley Road K i ng with the help from and verbal commuimmediately for the you are looking for in the Classic 2003, 100th propane or 12 Volt. package. nication skills. Must Central Or e g on The Bulletin's Anniversary Edition, $250. 541-549-1736 PRICE REDUCTION! CLASSIFIEDS be flexible and able area. Secured lo$59,000. 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 or 541-647-0081 "Call A Service to work all shifts. 541-815-6319 cations, high com- BANK TURNED YOU Bruce 541-647-7078 Save money. Learn Benefits after Professional" Directory to fly or build hours missions paid DOWN? Private party 90days. For more Honda Magna 750cc with your own airweekly! For more will loan on real esmotorcycle. 1 2 ,000 information, or any P %~ag~ii c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o information, please tate equity. Credit, no Montana 34 ft. 2003, questions, p lease miles, $3250 . Safari 1998 motorCommander, 4 seat, c all H o ward a t problem, good equity 541-548-3379 w /2 s l ides. N e w call 541-385-4717 home 30', low mile150 HP, low time, 541-279-0982. You is all you need. Call tires, brakes a nd age, 300 HP Magfull panel. $21,000 can a ls o e m a il Oregon Land MortAlfa See Ya 2006 36' num Cat motor with awning - Very clean obo. Contact Paul at gage 541-388-4200. tcoles©yourneighExcellent condition 1 and under cover. turbo, always inside, 541-447-5184. Sales Person wanted borhoodpublicaowner, 350 Cat diesel, $16,900 obo. LOCAL MONEY:We buy leather inte1/5 share tn v ery for growing manufac- tions.com for more 52,000 miles, 4-dr frig, white 541-536-5638 or secured trustdeeds & rior, like new, has nice 150 HP Cessna tured home dealer- information. icemaker, gas stove, m any note,some hard money a s . 541-410-9299 150; 1973 C e s sna The Bulletin is your ship. Call oven, wa s her/dryer, $55,000. Sextr loans. Call Pat Kellev Kawasaki KLX125 150 with L ycoming 541-548-5511 e rious non-smoker, 3 slides, 541-382-3099 ext.t 8. Employment 2003, good condicallers only. 0-320 150 hp engine RV generator, inv e rtor, tion.$800 obo. 541-548-8415 conversion, 400 0 CONSIGNMENTS Marketplace leather interior, satellite, 541-593-8748 hours. TT airframe. 7'4n WANTED Medical ceiling. C l ean! Approx. 400 hours on Kj(IIKClk We Do the Work, Call $72,000. 541-233-6520 0-timed 0-320. HanYou Keep the Cash! iVantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital gared in nice (electric On-site credit 2011 & 2015 Just too many door) city-owned han- 5 41 -385 - 5 8 0 9 approval team, gar at the Bend Aircollectibles? web site presence. Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in to advertise. port. One of very few We Take Trade-Ins! Enterprise, OR C-150's t h a t has Ready to make memories! Sell them in Two Twin Yamaha never been a trainer. www.bendbulletin.com Top-selling Winnebago BIG COUNTRY RV Med Surg RN Full-Time TW200 sto c k w i th The Bulletin Classifieds 31J, original owners, non- Bend: $4500 wi ll consider 634 541-330-2495 fatty tires 2006 with smokers, garaged, only trades for whatever. Redmond: .Variable Shifts - Shift differential applies to AptJMultiplex NE Bend 1155 miles, 2007 with 18,800 miles, auto-levelCall J i m Fr a zee, 541-548-5254 nights and weekends. gerving Central Oregon since tgttg 1069 miles. $3775 for 541-385-5809 ing jacks, (2) slides, up541-410-6007 •CPR Certification required Onlya few left! one or $7250 for two graded queen bed, bunk eACLS required within 6 months. Two & Three Bdrms obo. 5 4 1-588-0068 beds, micro, (3) TVs, .TNCC, PALS Certification preferred. with Washer/Dryer sleeps 10! Lots of storcell, 541-549-4834 hm •Prior OB & ER Experience. Preferred. i ~ • and Patio or Deck. age, maintained, very •Excellent Benefits Package. (One Bdrms also avail.) clean!Only $67,995! ExMountain Glen Apts tended warranty and/or fi) a g f I Equal Opportunity Employer nancing avail to qualified 541.383.9313 Wanderer by Thor 1998 Visit our website at wchcd.org or contact Professionally buyers! 541-388-7179 ALLEGRO 27' 2002 Gooseneck $ 5 0 00 Linda Childers O 541-426-5313 managed by 58k mi., 1 slide, vaca541-419-3535 Norris & Stevens, Inc. Yamaha V-Star 250cc tion use only, MichTick, Tock Check out the elin all weather tires 2011, 3278 mi., exc. Home Delivery Advisor classifieds online cond. $4700 OBO. w/5000 mi., no acciTick, Tock... • a f The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking I RMI dents, non-smokers, Dan 541-550-0171. www.bendbtrlletfn.com a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Workhorse e n gine ...don't let time get Updated daily ~o ©@9 position and consists of managing an adult 870 261-A, Allison Trans., away. Hire a Thank you St. Jude & carrier force to ensure our customers receive 885 Boats & Accessories backup cam e r a, Sacred H e art of superior service. Must be able to create and professional out heated mirrors, new Canopies & Campers Jesus. j.d. perform strategic plans to meet department 12' Sears aluminum refrig. unit., exc. conof The Bulletin's objectives such as increasing market share boat. Min-kota elec- ditioned, well cared "Call A Service BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a t ric motor w / v e s t for. $3 4 ,000. obo! Canopyfor short self-starter who can work both in the office Professional" cushions. New trailer, 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. Searchthearea's most box, lined interior, and in their assigned territory with minimal used. $575. green, good locking comprehensive listing of Directory today! supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary Commercial/Investment never Redmond. system. excellent classifiedadvertising... with company vehicle provided. Strong 541-548-7137 shape. $995. I customer service skills and management skills • Properties for Sale real estate to automotive, 541-389-7234. 16' 1976 Checkmate ski are necessary. Computer experience is s~yy I merchandisetosporting required. You must pass a drug screening boat, 90HP Mercury HIGH PROFILE Looklng for some- goods. Bulletin Classifieds motor, restored; new and be able to be insured by company to drive Need to get an LOCATION IN one who knew my seats, new c a rpetAllegro 32' 2007, like vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we mom (then) Ruby K, appeareverydayin the DOWNTOWN ad in ASAP? floor, new prop, with new, only 12,600 miles. Winnebago Outlook b elieve i n p r o moting f ro m w i thin, s o pnnt or on jine. fall of 1967 m RedREDMOND You can place it trailer. Have receipts. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 advancement within company is available to mond. I think she 2007 Class "Cn 31', Call 541-385-5809 $2500. 541-536-1395 transmission, dual exthe right person. If you enjoy dealing with online at: worked at Peden's. www.bendbujjetjn.com clean, non- smoking haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- exc. people from diverse backgrounds and you are She was fun and cond. Must See! www.bendbulletin.com eling system, 5kw gen, Lots of extra's, a very energetic, have great organizational skills and sassy. Very important. power mirrors w/defrost, interpersonal communication skills, please Contact Cheri good buy.$47,900 541-385-5809 2 slide-outs with awgenringCentral Oregonsince f9ig send your resume to: 303-204-0332 nings, rear c a mera, For more info call The Bulletin This commercial 541-447-9268 trailer hitch, driver door c/o Kurt Muller building offers ex17.5' Seaswirl 2002 w/power window, cruise, Winnebago Superchief PO Box 6020 cellent exposure exhaust brake, central 1990 27' clean, 454 I I I Wakeboard Boat Bend, OR 97708-6020 J J along desirable NW satellite sys. Asking C hevy, runs v e r y I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, vac, or e-mail resume to: 6th Street. ood. g oo d t i r es, tons of extras, low hrs. $67,500. 503-781-8812 kmullerObendbulletin.com Currently housing Full wakeboard tower, B ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , 8500. 541-279-9458. No phone calls, please. The Redmond Call 54l3855809 tgpromote yoursenice ' Advertise for 28dafgstarting ar'!4) Ists eet'et>I sge atsgttatteeeenoertregs'tiei light bars, Polk audio The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE one slide, low mileSpokesman news881 speakers throughout, Pre-employment drug screen required. age, very clean, lots paper offices, the completely wired for Travel Trailers of storage, $28,500. 2,748 sq. ft. space is amps/subwoofers, un541-639-9411 perfect for owner/ derwater lights, fish Building/Contracting Landscaping/Ysrd Care Landscaping/Yard Care Circulation user. Two private finder, 2 batteries cusThe Bulletin Circulation department is lookoffices and genertom black paint job. NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landing for a District Representative to join our ous open spaces. $1 2,500541-815-2523 law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour Three parking who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all per week position. Overall focus is the repreplaces in back+ 1968 Cuddy 21 foot, construction work to businesses that adsentation, sales and presentation of The Bullestreet parking. Heartland Pro w ler be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form new outdrive rebuilt tin newspaper. These apply to news rack loca$259,000. 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', Construction ContracLandscape Construcmotor, many e x tra Fleetwood D i scovery 2* Free Weeks tions, hotels, special events and news dealer Call Graham Dent tion which includes: parts. Excellent con- 40' 2003, diesel, w/all like new, 2 slides-liv- tors Board (CCB). An outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a of Yard 541-383-2444 license l anting, deck s , d ition. $5,75 0 . options - 3 slide outs, i ng area 8 la r g e active company vehicle to service a defined district, Maintenance ences, arbors, Large enough means the contractor 541-480-1616 ensuring newspaper locations are serviced satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, closet. water-features, and inlive in, but easy to is bonded & insured. C OMPASS,~ „ „ , and supplied, managing newspaper counts for etc., 34,000 m iles. to Navlgerlllgvaaraaeeeaa 15' power aw- Verify the contractor's Service includes: stallation, repair of irthe district, building relationships with our curWintered in h eated tow! CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be power hitch & • Mowing rent news dealer locations and growing those shop. $78,995 obo. ning, licensed w i t h the stabilizers, full s i ze www.hirealicensed• Edging locations with new outlets. Position requires 541-447-8664 Landscape Contracqueen bed, l a r ge contractor.com total ownership of and accountability of all • Weed Control Open Houses tors Board. This 4-digit shower, porcelain sink or call 503-378-4621. single copy elements within that district. Work • Fertilizer The Bulletin recomnumber is to be in& toilet. $2 6 ,500. schedule will be Thursda throu h Monda Sat. 16th, 11-2. Large 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, • Irrigation mends checking with cluded in all adver541-999-2571 8AM to 4:30PM with Tuesda and Wedneshome i n To r engo great shape, call for the CCB prior to con• Blowing tisements which indida off. Requires good communication skills, a ~ Glenns on canal, fam- info. $8500. In Bend tracting with anyone. cate the business has strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 RV ily room + formal din- 661-644-0384. Some other t rades a bond, insurance and We also offer pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to CONSIGNIIIIENTS ing and living room, also req u ire addiworkers compensafull-service multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong WANTED mtn. views, walkable Freightliner 1994 tional licenses and tion for their employservice/team orientation, sales and problem We Do The Work ... landscaping to Pine Nursery Park. certifications. ees. For your protecCustom solving skills. Must be insurable to drive comYou Keep The Cash! Karen Whiteid, including tion call 503-378-5909 Motorhome On-site credit pany vehicle. 541-977-2953 Handyman or use our website: Will haul small SUV patios, fire pits, approval team, Send resume to: mewingIbendbulletin.com www.lcb.state.or.us to or toys, and pull a water features. Applications are available at the front desk. web site presence. I DO THAT! check license status 19' Pioneer ski boat, trailer! Powered by • H omes for Sale We Take Trade-Ins! 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 Home/Rental repairs contracting with 1983, vm tandem 8.3 Cummins with 6 *When signing up for before No phone inquiries please. the business. Persons Small jobs to remodels trailer, V8. Fun & speed Allison auto a f ull s eason o f doing BIG COUNTRY RV land scape By owner Woodside Honest, guaranteed fast! $5350 obo. trans, 2nd owner. maintenance. Ranch, 2+ acres, 3 Bend: 541-330-2495 maintenance do not work. CCB¹151573 541-815-0936. Very nice! $53,000. Serving Central Oregon since 1903 i/g bedroom, 2 bath, Redmond: r equire an LC B l i Dennis 541-317-9768 541-350-4077 541-548-5254 Irg. Iiving rm with firecense. Pre-employment drug testing required. LCB ¹9153 FUN & FISH! place, dining rm, famEOE/Drug Free Workplace Landscapincyyard Care 541 782 8356 CPR Property ily rm with fireplace, newportave Maintenance Irg. kitchen, laundry e re Landscaping jandscaping/com General rm, 2-car attached ga& Painting r age + 2 - ca r d e a CCB¹204254 tached garage, + carZnrre~Qan/I/ep Need to get an • Spring clean ups p ort. $525, 0 00 84raVsrdCr rv /gtt. • Aeration/de-thatching ad in ASAP? 541-389-6256 Springdale 2006 26' 2006 Smokercraft * Full Service • Lawn repairs G rand Manor b y bunkhouse, Sunchaser 820 exc. You can place it / * Great Supplemental Income!! House (structure only) • Weekly maintenance Landscape Thor 1996, 35' very cond, 12' p o p-out, model pontoon boat, sale in historic disonline at: • Bark mulch IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I for good condition, 454 Management 75HP Mercury and stored in RV garage. trict, $1. 1 Bdrm, 1 www.bendbulletin.com Call 978-413-2487 I day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI gas engine, 50,050 Well cared for. Many electric trolling moHouse must be • currently have openings all nights of the week.• bath. miles, 2 pop outs, extras. $13,500 obo. Spring Clean Up Aerate / Thatching r emoved from l o t . tor, full canvas and new tires, $18,999. / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts 5 41-588-0068, c e l l , •Leaves 541-385-5809 many extras. Weekly Service Buyer responsible for start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Call 541-350-9916 541-549-4834 home Stored inside •Cones Bend, Redmond, and all moving costs. 536 / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo• Needles $19,900 Eagle Crest. Colorado Ave. Do 882 • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• NW 541-350-5425 •Debris Hauling COLLINS Lawn Maint. disturb t enant. I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI not Fifth Wheels Ca/I 541-480-9714 g minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg ksmccord © live.com Weed FreeBark Ads published in the MOOERS MOWERS • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• Cougar 27' 2011, half & Flower Beds "Boats" classification Serving Central Residential/Commercial / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackton towable, queen, Oregon Since 2003 Manufactured/ include: Speed, fishservices for 25+ yrs. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and solar, great c ond., Lawn Renovation Residental/Commercial ing, drift, canoe, Mobile Homes Eco-friendly options. / other tasks. extras. Sisters Aeration - Dethatching house and sail boats. Jayco I l llelbourne many 541-699-7524 Sprinkler Overseed For all other types of 2010 29D Class C, 3 541-270-2962 List Your Home IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl Activation/Repair Hedge Trimming, Yard Compost watercraft, please go slide o uts, 1 2 ,500FOUR WINDS 2003 5th JandMHomes.com I including life insurance, short-term & long-term Back Flow Testing Makeovers, Best and Top Dressing to Class 875. We Have Buyers miles on Ford 450 wheel 26L, A/C, CD, disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Cheapest. Call 541-385-5809 • chassis, Immaculate micro, awning slide Get Top Dollar Maintenance Bigfoot 541-633-9895 Landscape cond., loaded, f u ll o ut, m u c h mor e Financing Available. eThatch & Aerate ~ Please submit a completed application body paint, c herry $9000. 541-876-5073. Maintenance 541-548-5511 • Spring Clean up Serv ng Central O~egon srnce 1903 Painting/Wall Covering attention Kevin Eldred. cabinets, s t a inless Full or Partial Service eWeekly Mowing Applications are available at The Bulletin appliances, very • Mowing eEdging & Edging Crest Butte Apartments front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or KC WHITE home-like in t erior. •Pruning eWeeding •Bi-Monthly & Monthly 1695 Purcell Blvd., Bend, Oregon PAINTING LLC an electronic application may be obtained AutoSeek dish, two Water Management Maintenance Now accepting applications for the 2-4 yr. Interior and Exterior upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via TVs, Nav., CD/DVD, •Bark, Rock, Etc. Family-owned waiting list for federally funded housing. When email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). back up an d s i de Fertilizer included Residential 8 Commercial available, 1 and 2 bedroom units with rent cameras, 500 0 l b. with monthly program teneaoe in ~ 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts I No pho ne calls please. based on income for those who qualify. Freightliner custom •Landscape trailer hitch. $74,500. 5-vear warranties Amenities include three on-site laundry facili5th wheel puller, 541-312-8974 Weekly,monthly Construction SPRING SPECIAL! * No resumes will be accepted * ties, a basketball court and a nice playground. sleeper cab, rebuilt eWater Feature Call 541-420-7846 Close to major medical facilities and shopping. engine with 20k miles, or one time service. Installation/Maint. CCB ¹204918 Please contact the Site Manager for more inDrug test is required prior to employment. PINNACLE 1990 6.5 generator, 120 cu. • Pavers Managing formation. EOE. 30' motorhome, ft. storage boxes - one All About Painting •Renovations Central Oregon Phone rn 541-389-9107 8' long. Gets 10.9 clean. Rear Exterior, interior, • Irrigations Installation Email: crestbutteOviridianmgt.com Landscapes walk-around bed. mpg. All in good deck seal, light maint. •Synthetic Turf The Bulletin TTY: 1(800)735-2900 Since 2006 No smokers, no shape. See to appreFree Estimates. Servrng Central oregon since teea mildew, no leaks. ciate (in Terrebonne CCB ¹148373 Senior Discounts "This institute is an equal Senior Discounts $8500. 541-420-6729 area). $24,000 some Bonded & Insured opportunity provider."e • e eotalas 541-306-7268 541-390-1466 trades considered. 541-815-4458 10% Off exterior or 503-949-4229 Same Day Response LCB¹8759 interior job booked.

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E4

TH E BULLETIN4 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shorfz

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B wedn~day, May13,2015

Millard's self-signal By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "The man signaled to himself," Cy the Cynicfumed. Today's East was Millard Pringle, who gets confused by defensive " rules." C y w a s d e c l arer a n d blanched when he saw dummy. A doubleton K-Q i s hi s nemesis. It reminds him of marriage, an institution he distrusts. "I may aswell concede down one," Cy groaned. When West led a spade, Millard p aused. He k n e w a b it a b o u t defensive signals, so he played the nine, signaling to himself.

32 Jack or jenny 64 Showed some puppy love? 33 First National briefly, with "the" Leaguer with 66Warning to the 500 homers SSubj.for a answers to the citizenship 34 Conductor's three starred applicant place clues regarding 8 Largo, for one 38The "A" of BART the word hidden 13Monotonous in 17-, 34- and 41Tram'8 cargo leaming 43-Across 42 Dunham of 14Country music'8 "Girls" 68 Cheap smoke Young Band 43 Grammy category 69 Poop out 1SCoiner of won five times by the term Eminem 70 Camera setting "doublethink" 17Gillette razor 48 Org. featured in 71 Some British "Outbreak" brand jackets 19Country that's 49 Carrier units, 72 " Good !" south of South briefly Sudan 73 Aspiring atty.'8 50Alley-ooppass, exam 20Citynear the maybe only remaining 54 U.S. counterpart wonder of the to Britain's GCHQ ancient world DOWN 21 Bryn C o l lege 55 Cable co. 1 Tiny amounts acquired by AT&T 23 Captain's post in 1999 2 Reposition, as 24 Hot time on the 56 J.F.K. posting: tires Riviera Abbr. 3"Gaveit my all" 25 Mo. with Patriot 57 Miler Sebastian Day 58 French 101 verb 4 *Tough test, ACROSS

What is your opening call? ANSWER: Many experts would consider this hand a m a ndatory opening bid with its fair defensive values, but a case exists for passing. The hand has no major-suit length or high spot cards, the long diamonds are ragged and the spade honors aren't carrying their weight. I would pass, but I would open a 12-point h andsuchas KQ 1 0 6 5 , 5 3 2 , K 8 , A5 2. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 49KQ

9532

DAILY QUESTION

0 K 87 42 4A52 WEST 4 1J86 3 2

EAST 4A94

9 Q7

9 J109 O QJ 9 5

() 103 4 K97 4

27 Frozen Wasser 29 Dweller along the 60 Calls off Mekong 62 Roval bride of 30 Marsh plants 1981

S P I C E

CA R OD I CON 0 U G AT D C RO O R AN I A ME N TO U G E SP P L SN I C H AN D E GG S

OA6 4Q63 W est Pass Pass

Nort h 20 49

East Pass All Pass

You hold: 48 K Q 9 5 3 2 O peni n g l ead — 493 0 K 8 7 4 2 4 A 5 2 . You are the dealer with both sides vulnerable. (C) 2015TribuneContentAgency,LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

F E A R P A K W A I S B E D E HM E D I C I S R A R OU G H N U N IT S A N GS T N A H H O N C R I ON O OS O U G H T H K E R A T V A L E OM E N

I W V I I N E T H A L E L M E E R O S U OZ N O

M A L E M O D E L

slangily rol l (sushi item) 6 Batter's nightmare 7 Bart's toon sister 8 *Fodor'8 guide buyer 9Tiny bit of work 10Soundof an air kiss 11Cruz with a 2008 Oscar 12Cato the Elder'5 language 16 Boxer Jake a.k.a. Raging Bull 18 Head-scratcher 22 Underhanded sort 5

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

4J108 SOUTH 4I 1075 Q AK 8 6 4

S outh 19 29

2

3

4

5

6

7

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1 Chicago paper,

HIGH TRUMP The Cynic was stuck. If he took the A-K of trumps and lost a spade, East could cash his high trump and a second spade, and Cy would also lose two clubs. Best defense would also prevailif Cy conceded a spade or started the diamonds at Trick Two. Cy succeeds if Millard wins the first spade. On a club shift, Cy can play low from his hand, take the ace and continue with the top numps, A-K of d i amonds, diamond ruff, spade to dummy, diamond ruff. He ruffs a spade and throws a club on the good diamond, losing a club, a spade and a trump.

1

No. 0408

A C X Y E D S L A V E

S E M I S

FA UG R E ON R T

T H R E E

13

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21 25

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38

15

45

46

47

50

51

56

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52

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65

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68 71

67

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PUZZLE BY ZNOUQIN BURNIKEL

26 "Exit full screen" key 28Oneof a geog. 15, once 31 Year of the (most of 2015) 35 Joins for a ride 36 Steroid 19905-early 0005, in baseball) 37 Poor box contents 38 Stephanopoulos's employer

39 Republican stronghold 40 Mollusk on la carte 44 'Mobhit victim 45Givesin 46 Happy hour spot 47Old nutritional fig. 51 Wax-winged flier of myth 52 "Moonlight 53 Darjeeling server

56Seanof the "Lord of the Rings" movies 59Toasterwaffle brand 61 First queen of Carthage

63 Stressed type: Abbr. 65A, in Aachen 67 "Get it?"

Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.

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SAFE HAVENS

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investigator's item 14 Advil alternative 15 Pair on a lake 16 Place to slog through 17 ''Wait, there'8 more ..." 20 Hullabaloo 21 Barry White

genre 22 Dossier cover? 23"Boy, am I

dumb!"

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THAT SCRANiBLEO WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

85 Unscramble these four Jumbles, 006 letter tO eaCh Square, to form four ordinary words.

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0 Lauahil98ock Lioen8ng Inc., 064 by Universal Uclick, 2015

Yeateda 4

"I told you to u8e my insect spray."

65 'Wait, there'8 more ..." 68 D.C. dealers 69 Hawaiian coffee district 70 Putacapon 71 Eye woe 72 Kiddie-lit dog 73 Stops bleeding

Now arrange the circled letters

to form the surprise answea as

HERMAN~

49 Irritated state 50 ''Wait, there's more ..." 53 Brainy Simpson 54 Not within walking distance 55 One needing a lift 58 " Girl": 2014 Affleck film 61 Battery terminal

sign

69015 THbune Content Agency, LL0 All Righls Reeenred.

0 0 0

25 Touch the groUrirj 27 ''Wait, there'8 more ..." 33 Airline with the MileagePlus frequent flier Pl'Og. 34 Ole Miss rival 35 Customs collection 38 Golf lesson subject 40 Charmin layer 42 Black & Decker rival 43 Dapper 46 Gave up for

J0mbl08 PERCH

L E M U R C AM E R A

BO T A NY

! Answer: After discovering fraud at the aerospace com-

Pany, they would need to — LAUNCH A PROBE

DOWN

1 Apple Store array 2 Job opening 3 Prefix with

goddess

4 Go to extremes 5 Complete collection 6 Con : b r iskly, on scores 7 lolani Palace site 8 Estracell sponge brand 9 Phishing fig. 10 Does a slow burn 11 Surfing convenience 12 Opera showstopper 13 Gets in the pool, maybe 18 Milo of the movies 19 She adopted

44 Stone monument 56 Featureofsome 45 UFO fliers, paneling purportedly 57 In a l aid-back 47 Career officer manner 48 Forensic 59 Words of dismay investigator's 60 St r a ightened up molecule 62 Wedding rental 51 Convertible, in 63 C o m bat group slang 64 LAPD ranks 52 Adviser who was 6 6 Puts one's initials

a regular 'Oprah"

on

guest 55 Enervates

67 Pampering, for short

ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

L A Z Y A B Y 0 B 0 E B L U Tigger G O O S E B U M 24 Top of a scepter, I B A R perhaps 26 Part of MoMA O F F T O S T 27 Perturbs C L U I N G O 28 O.K. Corral T A D S R O U gunfighter B E R R 29 Toy (with), as an E K G T E E N A D I idea 30 Sitter'8 challenge F O R B E S 31 Quiz answer B L A C K A R T 32 Maori carvings R E C A S T 36 Unshakable A T T N B L U 37 Cut and run 39 "Don't make me S H O D O G R laugh!" H E R O Y E N 41 K i ppur xwordeditor@aol.com 2

3

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S S T 0 P S P R A H D E I E N O S S L O E S E S T A

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M E W A V E K E S A E N T W A T S A N C O M O S F E N A F A R A G E L Y T E R S E I S T A T E S G A G A O R G Y 05/13/15

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By Gafl Grabowskf and Sruce Venzke O2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

62

05/13/15



E6 WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

1000

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1000

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

grantor as well as any other persons owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Deed of Trust, the words "trustee" and 'beneficiary" include their respective successors in i nterest, i f any . Dated: 4/8 / 2015 C LEAR RE C O N CORP 621 SW Morrison Street, Suite 425 Portland, OR

1 164 NW B O N D S T., B E ND, O R 97701, sell at public auction to the high-

LEGAL NOTICE 129653 / Ocwen Loan Servic- 1513070001500 ing, LLC, Plaintiff/s, v. Commonly known Jeffrey D. Evans; Patti as: 48 2 1 NW G . E v ans; 2 0 4 78 J ACKSPINE A V Karch Drive T rust; ENUE REDMOND, Unknown Trustees of O REGON 9 7 7 5 6 the 20478 Karch Drive The current benefiA public meeting of Trust; Mortgage Elec- ciary is: Wells Fargo the Budget Commit- tronic R e g istration Bank, N.A. Both the tee of the Rural Law Systems, Inc.; Indy- beneficiary and the Enforcement District mac Bank, F .S.B.; trustee have elected ( District 2 ) , De s - American Family Mu- to sell the chutes County, State tual; Citibank, N.A.; above-described of Oregon, to discuss Rampart MMW, Inc.; real property to satthe budget for the fis- and Persons or Par- isfy the obligations cal year July 1, 2015, ties unknown claim- secured b y th e to June 30, 2016, will ing any right, title, lien, Deed of Trust and be held at the Des- o r interest i n t h e notice has been rechutes Ser v ices property described in corded pursuant to Center, 1300 NW Wall the complaint herein, ORS 86.752(3). The Street, Bend, Oregon. D efendant/s. C a s e default for which the The meeting will take No.: 1 3 C V1093FC. foreclosure is made p lace on May 2 8 , N OTICE OF S A L E is the grantor's fail2015, beginning at U NDER WRIT O F ure to pay when 11:45 a.m. The pur- EXECUTION - REAL due, the following pose of the meeting is PROPERTY. Notice is sums: D e linquent to receive the budget hereby given that the Payments: D ates: message and to re- Deschutes C o u nty 05/01/1 4 thru ceive comment from Sheriff's Office will, on 02/01/15; No.: 10; the public on the bud- T uesday, June 1 6 , Amount: $1,591.92; get. This is a public 2015 at 10:00 AM, in Total: $ 1 5,91 9.20. meeting where delib- the main lobby of the Dates: 03/01/15 thru eration of the Budget Deschutes C o u nty 0 4/01/15; No.: 2 ; Committee will take Sheriff's Office, 63333 Amount: $1,569.39; place. Any person W. Highway 20, Bend, Total: $3 , 1 38.78. may appear at t he Oregon, sell, at public Late Cha r ges: meeting and discuss o ral auction to t h e $1 86.45. B e n eficiary Ad v ances: the proposed proh ighest bidder, f o r ca s hier's $0.00. Foreclosure grams with the Bud- cash o r g et Committee. A check, the real prop- Fees and Expenses: copy of the budget erty commonly known $ 0.00. Total R e document may bein- as 20478 Karch Drive, quired to Reinstate: spected or obtained Bend, Oregon 97702. $1 9,244.43. TOTAL on or after May 18, Conditions of S a le: REQUIRED TO 2 015, at t h e D e s - Potential bidders must PAYOFF: chutes County Board arrive 15 minutes prior $88,382.32. By reaof C o mmissioners' to the auction to allow son of the default, Office, 1300 NW Wall the Deschutes County the beneficiary has Street, Bend, Oregon, Sheriff's Office to re- declared all obliga97701, between the view bidder's funds. tions secured by the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 Only U.S. currency Deed of Trust imp.m. Monday through and/or cashier's mediately due and Friday. F o r f urther checks made payable payable, including: information, c ontact to Deschutes County the principal sum of Loni Burk, Sheriff's Office will be $80,258.60 toFinancial/Budget accepted. P ayment gether with interest Analyst, at must be made in full thereon at the rate (541 )388-6536. immediately upon the of 5.375% per anclose of the sale. For num, from 4/1/2014 LEGAL NOTICE more information on until paid, plus all NOTICE OF this s al e g o to: accrued late SUNRIVER LIBRARY www.oregonsheriffs.c c harges, and a l l COUNTY SERVICE om/sales.htm trustee's fees, foreDISTRICT closure costs, and BUDGET COMMITTEE LEGAL NOTICE any s u m s adMEETING PNC Bank, National vanced by the benAssociation, eficiary pursuant to A public meeting of Plaintiff/s, v. Estate of terms and conthe Budget Commit- Norman T. Welch; the the of the Deed tee of the Sunriver Li- Unknown Heirs and ditions Trust Whereof, brary County Service Assigns of Norman T. of District, D e s chutes Welch; the Unknown n otice hereby i s that the unCounty, State of Or- Devisees of Norman given trustee, egon, to discuss the T. Welch; Washing- dersigned LEAR RE C O N budget for the fiscal ton Mutual Bank, FA C whose adyear July 1, 2015, to nka JPMorgan Chase CORP., ress is 621 SW June 30, 2016, will be Bank; and all Parties d Str e et, held at the Deschutes claiming any interest Morrison Suite 425, Portland, Services Center, 1300 in the Real Property OR 97205, will on NW W a l l Str e et, commonly known as /25/2015, at t h e Bend, Oregon. The 848 NE P rovidence 8 of 11:00 AM, m eeting wil l t a k e D rive, B end, O R hour time, as p lace on May 2 6 , 97701, Defendant/s. standard established by ORS 2015, beginning at Case No.: 1 87.110, AT T H E 9:00 a.m. The pur- 1 4CV0191FC. N O - B OND STR E ET pose of the meeting is TICE OF SALE UN- ENTRANCE STEPS to receive the budget DER WRIT OF EXO T H E DES message and to re- ECUTION - REAL T ceive comment from PROPERTY. Notice is CHUTES COUNTY the public on the bud- hereby given that the COURTHOUSE, 1 164 N W B O N D get. This is a public Deschutes C o u nty T., B E ND, O R meeting where delib- Sheriff's Office will, on S 97701, at public eration of the Budget Thursday, June 11, auction sell to the highCommittee will take 2015 at 10:00 AM, in est bidder place. Any person the main lobby of the the interestforincash the may appear at t he Deschutes C o unty meeting and discuss Sheriff's Office, 63333 above-described property which the proposed pro- W. Highway 20, Bend, real grantor had or grams with the Bud- Oregon, sell, at public the had power to conget C ommittee. A o ral auction to t he vey at the time it copy of the budget h ighest bidder, f o r executed the Deed document may bein- cash o r ca s hier's Trust, together spected or obtained check, the real prop- of an y i n terest on or after May 18, erty commonly known with the grantor or 2 015, at t h e D e s - as 848 N E P r o vi- which successors in chutes County Board dence Drive, Bend, his a c q uired of C o mmissioners' Oregon 97701. Con- interest after the execution Office, 1300 NW Wall ditions of Sale: Poof the Deed of Trust, Street, Bend, Oregon, tential bidders must to satisfy the fore97701, between the arrive 15 minutes prior o b ligations hours of 8 a.m. and 5 to the auction to allow going secured and p.m. Monday through the Deschutes County thereby costs and exFriday. F o r f urther Sheriff's Office to re- the of sale, ininformation, contact view bidder's funds. penses a r easonLoni Burk, Only U.S. currency cluding able charge by the Financial/Budget and/or cashier's trustee. Notice is Analyst, at checks made payable further given that (541 )388-6536. to Deschutes County any person named Sheriff's Office will be in ORS 86.778 has LEGAL NOTICE accepted. Payment the right to have the NOTICE OF must be made in full f oreclosure SUNRIVER SERVICE pro immediately upon the ceeding dismissed DISTRICT close of the sale. For a nd the Deed of BUDGET COMMITTEE more information on Trust reinstated by MEETING this s al e g o to: payment to the benA public meeting of www.oregonsheriffs.c eficiary of the entire the Budget Commit- om/sales.htm a mount then d ue tee of the Sunriver (other than the porLEGAL NOTICE Service District, Des- River Forest Acres tion of principal that chutes County, State Road District w i ll would not then be of Oregon, to discuss have it s a n n ual due had no default the budget for the fis- meetingon May occurred), together 30 cal year July 1, 2015, w ith t h e cos t s , the Sun River Lito June 30, 2016, will at trustee's and brary from 1:30-3:30 be held at the Des- p.m. All River Forattorneys' fees, and chutes Ser v ices curing any o t her property owners Center, 1300 NW Wall est default complained are invited. Anne Street, Bend, Oregon. of in the Notice of The meeting will take Ness 503-848-6467. Default by tenderp lace on May 2 6 , LEGAL NOTICE ing t h e pe r for2015, beginning at T RUSTEE'S N O mance required un9:00 a.m. The pur- TICE OF SALE TS d er the Deed of pose of the meeting is No.: 02 4 2 70-OR Trust at any time not to receive the budget Loan No.: later than five days message and to re- ***** * 7852 R e f e r- before the date last ceive comment from ence is made to that set for sale. Withthe public on the bud- certain trust deed o ut l i miting t h e get. This is a public (the "Deed of Trust") trustee's disclaimer meeting where delib- executed by JAMES of r e presentations eration of the Budget L. OMTA AND GAIL or warranties, OrCommittee will take M O MTA, H U S - egon law requires place. Any person BAND AND WIFE, the trustee to state may appear at t he as Grantor, to Flin this notice that meeting and discuss DELITY NATIONAL some r e s idential the proposed proTITLE INS CO, as property sold at a grams with the Bud- Trustee, in favor of trustee's sale may g et Committee. A W ELLS FAR G O have been used in copy of the budget B ANK, N.A., a s manufacturing document may bein- Beneficiary, dated methamphetamines, spected or obtained 8/31/2005, rethe chemical comon or after May 18, corded 9/1 9/2005, ponents of w h ich 2 015, at t h e D e s - as Instrument No. a re known to b e chutes County Board 2 005-62725 in t h e toxic. P r ospective of C o mmissioners' Official Records of purchasers of resiOffice, 1300 NW Wall Deschutes County, dential pro p erty Street, Bend, Oregon, Oregon, which covshould be aware of 97701, between the ers the following dethis potential danhours of 8 a.m. and 5 scribed real propger before deciding p.m. Monday through e rty s i tuated i n to place a bid for Friday. F o r f urther Deschutes County, this property at the information, c ontact O regon: LOT 3 , t rustee's sale. I n Loni Burk, BLOCK 1, construing this noFinancial/Budget H OWELL'S H I L L tice, the masculine Analyst, at TOP ACRES, REgender includes the (541 )388-6536. C ORDED J A N U f eminine and t h e ARY 11, 1971, IN neuter, the singular Look at: B OOK A , P A G E includes plural, the Bendhomes.com word "grantor" in451, DESCHUTES for Complete Listings of COUNTY, ORcludes any succesArea Real Estate for Sale EGON. APN: sor in interest to the LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF RURAL LAW ENFORCEMENT DISTRICT (DISTRICT 2) BUDGET COMMITTEE MEETING

97205 858-750-7600.

LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O TICE OF SALE TS No.: 01 6 1 29-OR No.: * ** * * *

9085 R e ference is made to that certain trust deed (the "Deed of Trust") executed by P ATRICK W H I LL AN U N MARRIED MAN, as Grantor, to A MERITITLE, a s Trustee, in favor of COMMONW EALTH U NITED MOR T GAGE A DIVISION OF NATI O NAL CITY BANK OF INDIANA, as Beneficiary, dated 1/7/2005, recorded 1 /14/2005, as I n strument No. 2005-02194, in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, which covers the following described real prope rty s i tuated i n Deschutes County, Oregon: LOT SEVE NTEEN (17) I N BLOCK (5) WEST HILLS 5TH A DDITION, RECORDED M AY 2, 1 970, I N CABINET A, PAGE 395, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. APN: 101735 / 171230CC04100 Commonly known as: 20 8 8 NW VICKSBURG AVE BEND, O R EGON 97701The c urrent beneficiary is: GSR MORTGAGE LOAN TRUST 2005-AR3, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2005-AR3, U .S. B AN K N A TIONAL ASSOCIAAS TION, T RUSTEE, Bo t h the beneficiary and the t rustee h ave elected to sell the above-described real property to satisfy the obligations secured b y the Deed of Trust and notice has been recorded pursuant to ORS 86.752(3). The default for which the foreclosure is made is the grantor's failure to pay when due, the following sums: D elinquent Payments: Dates: 01/01/11 thru 0 2/01/1 1; No.: 2 . Amount: $1,618.72; Total: $3 , 237.44. Dates: 03/01/1 1 thru 02/01/1 2; No.: 12; Amount: $1,585.18; Total: $ 1 9,022.16. Dates: 03/01/12 thru 0 8/01/1 2; No.: 6 ; Amount: $1,633.83; Total: $9 , 802.98. Dates: 09/01/12 thru 0 2/01/1 3; No.: 6 ; Amount: $1,635.75; Total: $9 , 81 4.50. Dates: 03/01/1 3 thru 02/01/1 4; No.: 12; Amount: $1,604.41; Total: $ 1 9,252.92. Dates: 03/01/14 thru 02/01/1 5; No.: 12; Amount: $1,574.72; Total: $ 1 8,896.64. Dates: 03/01/1 5 thru 0 3/01/1 5; No.: 1 ; Amount: $1,574.73; $1,574.73. Late Charges: $254.84. Beneficiary Advances: $1 0,443.48. Foreclosure Fees and Exp e nses: $ 0.00. Total R e quired to Reinstate: $92,299.69. TOTAL REQUIRED TO PAYOFF: $ 319,144.19. B y reason of the default, th e b e neficiary has declared all obligations secured by the Deed of Trust i mmediately due and payable, including: the p rincipal sum o f $259,094.39 together with interest thereon at the rate of 3.25 % per anfrom num, 12/1/2010 until paid, plus all accrued late c harges, and a l l trustee's fees, foreclosure costs, and

a ny s um s

ad -

vanced by the beneficiary pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Deed of Trust Whereof, n otice hereby i s given that the undersigned trustee, C LEAR RE C O N CORP., whose add ress is 621 S W Morrison S t r eet, Suite 425, Portland, OR 97205, will on 8 /13/2015, at t h e hour of 11:00 AM, standard time, as established by ORS 1 87.110, AT T H E B OND STR E ET ENTRANCE STEPS T O T H E DES CHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE,

Oregon, sell, at public 63333 W. Highway O regon, sell, a t LEGAL NOTICE oral auction to t he 20, Bend, Oregon, W ilmington Tru s t public oral auction h ighest bidder, f o r sell, at public oral Company, as Trustee to the highest bidcash o r ca s hier's auction to the highfor Merrill Lynch Mort- d er, for c ash o r est bidder for cash check, the real prop- est bidder, for cash gage Investors Trust, cashier's check, the the interest in the erty commonly known or cashier's check, Mortgage Loan real property comabove-described as 1 7 044 W h ittier the real p r operty Asset-Backed Certifi- m only known a s real property which Drive, Bend, Oregon commonly known as cates, Series 53091 Loop Drive, the grantor had or 97707. Conditions of 2239 Nor t hwest 2006-HE5, Plaintiff/s, La Pine, O regon had power to conSale: Potential bid- J ackpine Co u r t, v . Derek C . L e e ; 97739. Conditions vey at the time it ders must arrive 15 Redmond, Oregon Mortgage Electronic of Sale: P o tential executed the Deed minutes prior to the 97756. Conditions Registration Systems, bidders must arrive of Trust, together auction to allow the of Sale: P o tential Inc.; American Mort15 minutes prior to with any i n terest Deschutes C o u nty bidders must arrive gage Express Finan- the auction to allow which the grantor or Sheriff's Office to re15 minutes prior to Desc h utes cial dba M illennium the his successors in view bidder's funds. the auction to allow Funding Group; Rob- County Sheriff's Ofinterest a c q uired Only U.S. currency the Desc h utes ert Ezell S pringleaf f ice to revi e w after the execution and/or cashier's County Sheriff's OfFinancial S e rvices, bidder's funds. Only of the Deed of Trust, checks made payable f ice to revi e w currency Inc. fk a A m erican U.S. to satisfy the foreto Deschutes County bidder's funds. Only ca s h ier's General Finance Ser- and/or going o b ligations Sheriff's Office will be U.S. currency checks made payv ices, I n c. ; S e l co thereby secured and accepted. Payment and/or ca s hier's Community C r e dit able to Deschutes the costs and exmust be made in full checks made payUnion; Occupants of County Sheriff's Ofpenses of sale, inimmediately upon the able to Deschutes the premises, Defen- f ice will b e a c cluding a r easonclose of the sale. For County Sheriff's OfP a yment d ant/s. Cas e N o . : cepted. able charge by the more information on f ice will b e a c 1 4CV0720FC. N O - must be made in full t rustee. Notice i s this s al e go to: cepted. P a yment TICE OF SALE UN- i mmediately u p on further given that www.oregonsheriffs.c must be made in full t he close o f t h e DER WRIT OF EXany person named om/sales.htm immediately u p on ECUTION - REAL sale. For more inin ORS 86.778 has t he close o f t h e PROPERTY. Notice is f ormation on t h is LEGAL NOTICE the right to have the sale. For more inhereby given that the sale go to: www.orWells Fargo B ank, f oreclosure pr o f ormation on t h is s.com/sa Deschutes C o unty egonsheriff N.A. as Trustee for ceeding dismissed sale go to: www.orSheriff's Office will, on les.htm WAMU Mor t gage and the Deed of egonsheriff s.com/sa Thursday, June 11, Pass Through Certifi- les.htm PUBLIC NOTICE Trust reinstated by 2015 at 10:00 AM, in cates Series Notice of Budget payment to the benthe main lobby of the LEGAL NOTICE 2 006-PR3 Trus t , Committee Meeting eficiary of the entire Deschutes C o u nty Wells Fargo Bank, Plaintiff/s, v. Kevin M. Redmond Fire & amount then due Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 P riest; Brenda A . N.A., its successors Rescue (other than the porW. Highway 20, Bend, in interest and/or Priest; Occupants of tion of principal that Oregon, sell, at public assigns, Plaintiff/s, the premises, DefenA public meeting of would not then be o ral auction to t h e d ant/s. Case N o . : v. Unknown Heirs of the Budget Commitdue had no default h ighest bidder, f o r John C. Lehto aka 1 4CV0813FC. N O occurred), together cash o r ca s hier's tee of the Redmond TICE OF SALE UN- John Corey Lehto; w ith t h e cos t s , check, the real prop- Fire & Rescue, DesD eborah Leh t o; DER WRIT OF EXchutes County, State trustee's and erty commonly known Calvin Lehto; NikECUTION REAL attorneys' fees, and as 21237 S t arlight of Oregon, to discuss kita Lehto; CitiBank, PROPERTY. Notice is curing any o t her Drive, Bend, Oregon the budget for the fishereby given that the N.A., successor by default complained 97702. Conditions of cal year July 1 2015 merger to CitiBank Deschutes C o u nty of in the Notice of Sale: Potential bid- to June 30, 2016, will Federal S a v ings Sheriff's Office will, on Default by tenderders must arrive 15 be held at the RedBank; State of OrThursday, June 18, mond Main Fire Staing t h e per f orminutes prior to the egon; Mid Oregon 2015 at 10:00 AM, in tion located at 3 41 mance required unauction to allow the FCU; Occupants of the main lobby of the N.W. Dogwood Ave., d er the Deed o f Deschutes C o u nty the premises, and Deschutes C o u nty Trust at any time not Sheriff's Office to re- Redmond Oregon on the Real Property Sheriff ' s Off i ce, 63333 later than five days view bidder's funds. May 21, 2015 at 9:30 27 6 3 W. Highway 20, Bend, l ocated a t before the date last Only U.S. currency a.m. The committee N ortheast Hop e Oregon, sell, at public set for sale. Withand/or cashier's will reconvene if necD rive, Bend, O r o ral auction to t h e o ut l i miting t h e checks made payable essary on May 28, egon 97701, Defenhighest bidder, f or trustee's disclaimer to Deschutes County 201 5 at 9:30 a .m. dant/s. Case No.: cash o r ca s hier's of r epresentations Sheriff's Office will be The purpose of the 14CV0778FC. NOcheck, the real propmeeting is to receive or warranties, Oraccepted. P ayment T ICE O F SAL E erty commonly known egon law requires must be made in full the budget message UNDER WRIT OF as 1113 NW 2 2nd the trustee to state immediately upon the and to receive comPlace, Redmond, Or- EXECUTION in this notice that close of the sale. For ment from the public REAL PROPERTY. egon 97756. Condisome r e s idential more information on o n the budget. A Notice is h e reby tions of Sale: Potenproperty sold at a this s al e g o to: copy of the budget t ial b i dders m u st given that the Destrustee's sale may www.oregonsheriffs.c document may beinc hutes Coun t y arrive 15 minutes prior spected or obtained have been used in om/sales.htm Sheriff's Office will, to the auction to allow on or after Wednesmanufacturing on Tuesday, June 9, LEGAL NOTICE the Deschutes County day, May 13, 2015 at methamphetamines, 2015 at 10:00 AM, Sheriff's Office to reW ilmington T r u st the Redmond Main the chemical comin the main lobby of Company, Succesview bidder's funds. Fire Station located at ponents of w hich the Desc h utes sor Trustee to CitOnly U.S. currency 341 N.W. Dogwood a re known to b e County Sheriff's Ofi Bank, N .A., a s and/or cashier's Ave., Redmond Ortoxic. P rospective checks made payable fice, 6 3 33 3 W. Trustee f/b/o Holdegon, between the purchasers of resiHighway 20, Bend, ers of S t ructured hours of 10:00 a.m. dential pro p erty to Deschutes County O regon, sell, a t Sheriff's Office will be Asset Mortgage Inand 2:00 p.m. Addishould be aware of public oral auction vestments II I n c., tional information may accepted. P ayment this potential danto the highest bidmust be made in full Bear Stearns Alt-A also be located on the ger before deciding Trust 2006-8, Mortimmediately upon the d er, for c ash o r D istrict webs i t e: to place a bid for cashier's check, the close of the sale. For gage Pass-Through www.redmondfireanthis property at the real property comCertificates, Series more information on drescue.org. t rustee's sale. I n 2006-8, Plaintiff/s, v. this s al e g o to: m only known a s construing this no2 763 N E Hop e Brihana Wa l k er; This is a public meetwww.oregonsheriffs.c tice, the masculine D rive, Bend, O r om/sales.htm Matthew Walker aka ing where deliberaender includes the egon 97701. CondiMatthew S. Walker; tion of t h e B udget e minine and t h e LEGAL NOTICE tions of Sale: P oM ortgage Ele c Committee will take neuter, the singular Wells Fargo Bank, tential bidders must tronic Registration place. A n y p erson includes plural, the NA, its successors arrive 15 m inutes Systems, Inc.; Semay appear at t he word "grantor" inin interest and/or prior to the auction curitynational Mortmeeting and discuss cludes any succesassigns, Plaintiff/s, to allow the Desgage C o mpany; the proposed prosor in interest to the v. Russell Harrison c hutes Coun t y Portfolio Recovery grams with the Budgrantor as well as aka Russell George S heriff's Office t o A ssociates, L L C ; get Committee. any other persons H arrison; Daw n review bid d er's Advantage Assets II owing an obligation, Nicole Leroy-Harrifunds. Only U . S. Inc.; Capital One Publish: The Bulletin the performance of son; an d O c c u- currency an d / or Bank; Occupants of May 13, 2015 which is secured by pants of the precashier's c h e cks the property, Defenthe Deed of Trust, mises, Defendant/s. made payable to dant/s. Case No.: the words "trustee" Case No.: Deschutes County Have an itemto 13CV0418. NOand 'beneficiary" in12CV1345. NOSheriff's Office will T ICE O F SAL E clude their respecsell quick'? T ICE O F SAL E be accepted. PayUNDER WRIT OF tive successors in UNDER WRIT OF ment must be made EXECUTION If it's under i nterest, i f any . EXECUTION in full immediately REAL PROPERTY. Dated: 3 / 30/2015 REAL PROPERTY. upon the close of ' 5 00 you CanPlaCe it in Notice i s h e r eby C LEAR RE C O N Notice is h e reby the sale. For more given that the DesCORP 621 SW MorThe Bulletin given that the Desinformation on this c hutes Coun t y rison Street, Suite c hutes Cou n t y sale go to: www.orSheriff's Office will, Classifieds for: 425 P o rtland, OR Sheriff's Office will, egonsheriff s.com/sa on Tuesday, June 9, 97205 on Thursday, June les.htm 2015 at 10:00 AM, 858-750-7600. 11, 2015 at 10:00 '10- 3 lines, 7 days in the main lobby of A M, in t h e m a in TURN THE PAGE LEGAL NOTICE the Desc h utes ' 1 6- 3 lines, 14days U.S. Bank National lobby of the DesCounty Sheriff's OfFor More Ads c hutes Cou n t y Association, fice, 6 3 33 3 W. (Private Party ads only) The Bulletin Off i c e, Plaintiff/s, v. Michael S heriff's Highway 20, Bend, C. Frost and Deanna L. Frost; et al, DefenNOTICE OFSUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARING d ant/s. Case N o . : 1 4CV0294FC. N O TICE OF SALE UNThe High Desert Education Service District Board of Directors will be holding a public hearing to DER WRIT OF EXconsider a supplemental budget for the 2014-15 fiscal year. The meeting will be held May 19, ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is 2015,at6:30 p.m.,inthe districtoffice at 145 SESalmon Ave.,Redmond, Oregon 97756. The hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Board of Directors will receive comments regarding the additional services to be provided to Sheriff's Office will, on local school districts and recognize unexpected grant monies and contract increases to be spent Tuesday, June 30, on specified educational activities and building acquisition and improvement costs. The 2015 at 10:00 AM, in additional budget items to be considered are listed below: the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office, 63333 Adopted Revised W. Highway 20, Bend, Ch • ed i Budget ~ Oregon, sell, at public GeneraIFund o ral auction to t h e Expenditure h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's Instruction 3,282,859 3,282,859 check, the real prop5,661,925 SupportServices 5,640,925 21,000 erty commonly known 21 000 4 342 813 Transfers 4 363,813 as Lot 8 NW McClelTotal 13,287,597 0 13,287,597 lan Lane, Bend, Oregon 97702. Conditions of Sale: Special RevenueFund Potential bidders must Resource arrive 15 minutes prior Local Sources 8,494,787 250,000 8,744,787 to the auction to allow 6,924,119 State Sources 6,486,119 438,000 the Deschutes County Federal Sources 3,080,679 3,080,679 Sheriff's Office to reTransfers 1,644,069 1,644,069 view bidder's funds. 2 350,582 Only U.S. currency Fund Balance 2,350 582 and/or cashier's Total 22,056,236 688,000 22,744,236 checks made payable to Deschutes County Expenditure Sheriff's Office will be 8,784,224 Instruction 8,346,224 438,000 accepted. P ayment Support Services 10,943,943 181,000 11,124,943 must be made in full immediately upon the 80,000 Enterprise & Community 80,000 close of the sale. For Transfers 2,159,008 69,000 2,228,008 more information on Contingency 527,061 527 061 this s al e g o to: Total 22,056,236 6&8,000 22,744,236 www.oregonsheriffs.c om/sales.htm Facility Maintenance Fund LEGAL NOTICE Expenditure U.S. Bank National 479,240 SupportServices 479,240 Association, Debt Service 214,000 214,000 Plaintiff/s, v. Jaseon W Hamilton and Amie Transfers 96,000 96,000 M . Hamilton; et a l , Contingency 100 000 96 000 4,000 D efendant/s. C a s e 0 793,240 Total 793,240 No.: 13CV0746. NOTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EX-

ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff's Office will, on T uesday, June 1 6 , 2015 at 10:00 AM, in the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 W. Highway 20, Bend,

BuildingConstruction Fund Resource Debt Financing Transfers Total Expenditure Building Acquisition & Construction Total

0

1,275,000 225 000 1,5 0 0,000

1,275,000 225,000 1 500,000

0

1500000 1,5 0 0,000

1 500 000 1,500,000


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