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bendbulletin.com MAY 20 fNIL=
TODAY'S READERBOARD
REDMOND
ELECTION ~ ~
Candidates for DA talk of their telling cases
NBA playeffe —Headed to San Antonio, Blazers-Spurs series now has an emphasis on a French connection.C1
Bendremodel— Possi bl e changes coming to theThird Street area.B1
Spider lives —what sociable specimens cantell us about our own personalities.A3
Santa Maria found? Wreckage ofColumbus' flagship may be in water off Haiti.A5
By Shelby R. King The Bulletin
Deschutes County District
Runwaypavingproject
Attorney Patrick F1aherty
and challenger John Hummel have bothbeen trial
„Construction crews are preparing for a $19.6 million runway paving project at RedmondAirport. The plan is to repave theairport's main runway in two phases, starting with a1,500-foot section at the southwest edge this summerand paving the remaining 5,540 feet next summer.
attorneys here and in other
Oregoncounties. Hummel was a defense attorney for
13
12 years and tried cases in
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Deschutes,
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Crook, Washlngton an(l Multnomah
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counties. Flaherty has 25-plusyears asbotha prosecuting and adefense
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Phase2 Summer 2015
ln world news —Anexplosion and fire at aTurkish mine claims at least 200 lives, with another 200 trapped.A2
And a WehexclusiveMillennials are staying put more in jobs, affecting the labor and housing markets. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras
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The Bulletin asked the
-.jr,"»";."-SHARED PAVEMENT The airport will be shut down a portion of the second :-" f.""" during phase of the project while a . PhaSe ] S ummer 2014 Wj~», . shared section of the two runways is paved. Redmond ~'.~."-4~-".4-:;;:.'r- Mayor GeorgeEndicott -
candidates to choose five
m.:-'
cases that each feels paints an accurate picture of some of his accomplish-
"-'"-"PNt '
~
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'
„
„ .
, "
ments as a trial attorney.
See Candidates/A4
The runway hasn't had a major overhaul since 1993, according to city doc-
Democrats pan Walden for useof Benghazi
uments. A 2010 pavement study listed it in "fair to
By Andrew Clevenger
EDITOR'5CHOICE
By David Streiffeld New York Times News Service
Europe's highest court said Tuesday that people
Source: City of Redmond, Oregon Explorer
Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin
• The project is setto start soon, andofficials anticipate both runwayswill be shut down at somepoint during summer2015 By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin
"We still have planning to do, both to determine
Redmond Airport is gearing up for a $20 million runway paving project, like-
the duration of the closure, as well as the impacts to
ly to start in the next month or two.
director Robert Noble said. "We're trying to minimize
the closure time." Closing
had the right to influence
The major construction work should take place over
what the world could learn
two summers. It should
about them through online
significantly improve the surface quality of the main
searches, a ruling that rejected long-established
7,000-foot runway, city offi-
the public," interim airport
an airport to fix runways
isn't unprecedented, he said. Airport officials probably will try to reroute flights
to smaller Central Oregon airports during those days
notions about the free flow of information on the Internet.
cials said. The City Council approved anengineering
A search engine such as Google should allow online users to be "forgot-
Tuesday. Federal funds are expect-
tation options such as buses, Noble said. Redmond Mayor George
ed to cover all but about $1.4
Endicott said the closure
ten" after a certain time by
million of the $19.6 million cost, and Redmond has
probably would last four
applied for a state transpor-
erasing links to Web pages unless there are "partic-
contract for the work
ular reasons" not to, the
tation grant to cover most of
European Court of Justice in Luxembourg said.
the remaining cost.
The decision underlined
the power of search companies to retrieve controversial information while
H u mmel
attorney in Deschutes and Lincoln counties. • ~x r .
European court Ol(s erasure of Web links
Fl a herty
But the paving work probably will mean closing the airport for arriving and departing flights at some point during summer 2015.
or try to find other transpor-
day window next year. The project would be done in two phases, covering the entire length of Runway
poor" condition and said it could end up in "very poor"
The Bulletin
WASHINGTON — The
National Republican Congressional Committee's use
condition by 2016 without
4-22, which handles much of the airport's commer-
major work.
cial and aerial firefighting flights. The first phase would cover 1,500 feet of the runway,
highest level in years. Passenger arrivals and departures from Redmond Airport hit a seven-year high in the first quarter of the year. "Being the main commer-
Americanembassyin Benghazi as a fundraising appeal
cial airport for Central Ore-
Speaking on Monday during aluncheon sponsored
smoothing the pavement
and installing new runway lights and markings. Flights will be able to take off from and land on the airport's second runway while Runway 4-22 is being paved. The closure would come during the second,
Airport activity is at its
of the 2012 attack on the for the 2014 elections has some Democrats criticiz-
ing NRCC chairman Greg Walden, R-Hood River.
gon, we have to have really good, quality runways for
bythe SanAntonio Cham-
berof Commerce, House Speaker John Boehner said
those commercial planes," Endicott said. "We don't want substandard runways." The U.S. Forest Service
he hadnothingto do withthe
decisiontouse Benghazito solicit campaign funds.
larger phase of construction, when the area where the two
also houses some of its aerial firefighting operations at
airport $63,000 to $73,000 in revenue.
runways cross is paved, En-
the Redmond Air Center,
"Listen, I'm involved in this investigation; I'm not
dicott said.
at the airport. The Forest
involved in what goes on in
"We did confirm the run-
The first phase should
Service for several years has lobbied Redmond to spear-
the campaign committee,"
days, which would cost the
way is going to have to be shut down" for a small part of the work, Endicott said.
He added flights won't be affected outside of that four-
start this summer and the second phase next sum-
mer, City Manager Keith Witcosky said, though start dates aren't set.
Boehner said, according to the Washington magazine
head runway and taxiway improvements. — Reporter: 541-617-782O, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com
Politico. "All I know is that
we're trying to get to the truth here."
simultaneously placing sharp limits on their abil-
See Benghazi /A4
ity to do so. It raised the
possibility that a Google search could become as
cheery — and as one-sided — as a Facebook profile or an About.me page.
Warningssoundedonmedical devices' er loopholes
Jonathan Zittrain, a
law and computer science
By John Kuhn
a 34-year-old from Austin,
m ent becomeconnected to
professor at Harvard, said those who were de-
Medill News Service
Texas, got the point: The dan-
the Internet or networks,
termined to shape their online personas could in essence have veto power
Carroll won't forget the first
ger was real. It hit home, too. Carroll has Type 1 diabetes and wears a pump that delivers insulin directly into his body.
they may become lucrative targets for cyber-criminals or hackers trying either to harm the users or make points
tactics," an April report from the cyber division of the FBI
about their technological skills.
"is not as resilient to cyber intrusions compared to the
over what they wanted
people to know. "Some will see this as corrupting," he said. "0thers will see it as purifying. I think it's a bad solution
to a very real problem, which is that everything is now on our permanent records." See Internet/A4
WASHINGTON — Chris time he saw someone hack
into an insulin pump and make it deliver a lethal dose. Although the pump wasn't connected to anyone, Carroll,
As more and more medical
devices and hospital equip-
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 83, Low48 Page B6
"The health care industry
is not technically prepared to combat against cyber-criminals' basic cyber intrusion says. It also says the industry financial and retail sectors,
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Outdoors B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 S oft E1-8 Dear Abby D6 Ob ituaries B5 TV/Movies
D1 - 6 C1-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
vol. 112 No. 134 32 pages, 5 sections
therefore the possibility of
increased cyber intrusions is likely." Experts also are worried
about the potentially deadly consequences of unsecured systems being violated accidentally. SeeDevices/A5
Q
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IIIIIIIIIIIIII 8 8 267 02329
A2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
The
NATION Ee ORLD
Bulletin HOW to reaCh US
Ukrainian tOhSIOllS —An insurgent ambush killed six soldiers Tuesday in eastern Ukraine as Germany moved to jumpstart a possible plan toward peace that includes launching a dialogue on decentralizing the government in Kiev. Ukraine's leadership appeared cool to the plan and U.S. officials view its prospects for success skeptically. But some analysts say Russian President Vladimir Putin is more likely to accept a deal that doesn't come from Washington. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier is in Ukraine to try to broker a quick launch of talks between the central government and pro-Russia separatists. That would be a first step in implementing a "road map" drawn up by the Organization of Security and Cooperation in Europe aimed at settling the crisis.
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Nigerian kidnappingS —U.S.reconnaissanceaircraft flew
over Nigeria in search of the nearly 300 kidnapped schoolgirls Tuesday, a dayafter the Boko Haram militant group released the first evidence that at least some of them are still alive and demanded that jailed fighters be swapped for their freedom. A Nigerian government official said "all options" were open — including negotiations or a possible military operation with foreign help — in the effort to free the girls, who were shown fearful and huddled together dressed in gray Islamic veils as they sang Quranic verses under the guns of their captors in a video released Monday.
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Depo PhotosviaThe Associated Press
Medics place a rescued miner into an ambulance after an explosion and a fire at a coal mineTuesday in the western Turkey city of Soma.
eas
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Si sil.ArL
Drsarirsiie
in ui' s mine a By Desmond Butler and Suzan Fraser
ADMINISTRATION
The Associated Press
SOMA, Turkey — Rescuers
Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
struggled to reach more than 200 miners trapped underground early today after an explosion and a fire at a coal mine in western Turkey killed
DEPARTMENT HEADS
at least 201 workers, authorities said, in one of the worst
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mining disasters in Turkish history. Energy Minister T aner Yildiz said 787 people were inside the coal mine in Soma,
some 155 miles south of Istanbul, at the time of the accident, and 363 of them had been
rescued. At least 80 miners were in-
jured, including four who were in serious condition, Yildiz told reporters in Soma, as he oversaw the r escue opera-
tion involving more than 400 rescuers.
The accident o ccurred when the workers were preparing for a shift change, officials said, which likely raised the casualty toll because there were more miners inside the mine than usual. Yildiz said the deaths were
caused by carbon monoxide poisoning and feared the death toll could end up much
higher than the latest count of helped by rescuers, their faces 201 workers. The rescue effort is "reach-
ing a critical stage," Yildiz said, with more deaths likely
and hard-hats covered in soot.
One wiped away tears on his jacket, another smiled, waved and flashed a "thumbs up"
sign at onlookers. Dozens of ambulances ferrescue operations were hin- ried bodies and the injured dered because the mine had extracted from the mine, and not completely been cleared of rescue workers were massed gas. at the entrance of the mine on Authorities say the disaster a hill side. Family members at followed an explosion and a the scene pleaded for news of fire caused by a power distri- their loved ones. bution unit. One woman threw herself Nurettin Akcul, a mining on the ground, crying after trade union leader, told Haber- hearing about the death of a Turk television that Turkey loved one, Habeft'urk televiwas likely facing its worst sion showed. There were tears mining accident ever. of joy for another who told the "Time is working against station she had just spoken by us. We fear that the numbers telephone to a missing relative. could rise further," Yildiz said. Police set up fences and "We have to finish this (rescue stood guard around Soma operation) by dawn. I have to s tate hospital t o k e e p t h e say that our pain, our trouble crowds away. could increase." Authorities had earlier said Earlier Yildiz said some of that the blast left between 200 the workers were 460 yards to 300 miners underground deep inside the mine. News and made arrangements to reports said the workers could set up a cold storage facility to not use lifts to get out of the hold the corpses of miners remine because the explosion coveredfrom thesite. had caused a power cut. Prime Minister Recep TayyTelevision footage showed ip Erdogan postponed a onepeople cheering and applaud- day visit to Albania scheduled ing as some trapped work- for today and planned to visit ers emerged out of the mine, Soma instead. as time passes. Earlier, the minister said the
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
MEGA MILLIONS
Afghan warvet awardedtop honor By Greg Jaffe andScott Wilson The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — President
Barack Obama awarded the Medal of Honor on Tuesday to former Army Sgt. Kyle White, an Afghanistan war veteran celebrated by Obama as "a soldierwho embodies the courage ofhis generation." T oday ou l " troops are com-
i ng hom e ," Obama said at a White House White
ceremony, held
in the East Room in front of White's parents and
girlfriend, as well as relatives of those who died beside him in battle more than sixyears ago. eBy the end of this year, our
war in Afghanistan will be
f r on t o f
Virginia gay marriage —In sharpexchangespitting the right of states to set marriage rules against equal protection for gay and lesbian couples, a three-judge federal appeals panel in Richmond, Virginia, heard arguments Tuesday on the constitutionality of Virginia's ban on same-sex marriages. The panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit appeared to be divided on the issues in what legal experts consider a crucial case that could propel the marriage question to the SupremeCourt in the coming year. NeW JerSey lane CIOSingS —The chief spokesman for Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey testified Tuesday that he was misled about why lanes leading to the GeorgeWashington Bridge were closed last September, and was "shocked and disoriented" when he learned that the motive appeared to be political vengeance. The spokesman, Michael Drewniak, the most senior administration official to testify before the state legislative committee looking into the matter, said neither the governor nor any of his closest advisers in his office were involved in the lane closings. Syrian COnfliCt —International efforts to end the war in Syria faltered further on Tuesday as the United Nations mediator quit, citing frustrations over the moribund political negotiations, and France's top diplomat said there was evidence the Syrian government used chemical weapons more than a dozen times after it had signed the treaty banning them. The resignation of the U.N. envoy, Lakhdar Brahimi — without a hint of who might succeed himcame just two days before diplomats are to gather in London to discuss the crisis in Syria, with no new or obvious path forward. Airline traokillg —Airlines, governments, pilots and aircraft manufacturers all agreed at a conference onTuesday that a global system for tracking commercial aircraft is badly needed, a United Nations aviation agency said. But the parties sidestepped a key question: whether aircrews should be able to turn off the equipment that makes them visible. The issue gained urgency after Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared in March. Olmert SeniOholhg —Ehud Olmert, the brash former prime minister who was on the brink of a peacedeal with the Palestinians when he was forced from office on corruption charges, on Tuesday became the most prominent former Israeli leader to be sentenced to prison, with a judge giving him six years for taking bribes while likening him to a traitor. The stiff sentence stunned the political and legal establishment in a country where prosecutors' anti-corruption crusades have beencondemned as overzealous and inefficient. — From wire reports
Weekly
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through this," said White, who
White had nowhere to go, so workedtokeep him alive. we'll welcome home this gener- they threw themselves off the "I can talk about the day with ation, the 9/11 generation, that trail and rolled more than 160 ... other people I served with," has proven to be one of Ameri- feet down a steep, rocky diff. White said. "But I could never ca's greatest." A rocket-propelled grenade sit down and talk about it with White was awarded the na- exploded near White's head, my parents. I don't know why, tion's highest military honor knocking him unconscious. but that was always the hardest for action in A fghanistan's He woke to find Marine Sgt. thingto do."
r s,'I
Nuristan province, a remote,
lightly populated region in the country's northeast. The battle
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beforeObamawas electedpresident with a pledge to retool and
Q 37Q 46Q 4sQ 7oQ 74
better resource U.S. strategy in A f~ an. Now 27, White was a high school freshman at the time of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and
oe
T he soldiers in
ClintOO-ROVe tuSSle —An aide to Hillary Clinton and the White House pushed backTuesday against Republican strategist Karl Rove for suggesting that the former secretary of state's health could be an issue if she runs for president in 2016. Rove told Fox News, for which he is a commentator, that Clinton had a "serious health episode" that would be a legitimate issue for her in a potential presidential campaign "whether she likes it or not." The New York Post reported Tuesday that Rove suggested at a private conference near Los Angeles last week that Clinton suffered brain damage. Rove disputed that he was referring to any brain damage.
over,"Obama continued, "and
The numbers drawnTuesday nightare:
The estimated jackpot is now $136 million.
Phillip Bocks lying in the open, ment analyst in Charlotte, N.C. and badly wounded. AnothU.S. troops long ago abandoned er soldier, Spec. Kain SchilNuristan, the site of three of the ling, was bleeding from bullet deadliest battles for American wounds to his shoulder and his soldiers in the long Afghan war. leg. White tied tourniquets onto "I can dose my eyes at any Schilling's wounds and tried to moment and still go back to drag Bocks to safety. 'The rounds were coming in certain experiences that day," W hite said this week i n a and I could feel them go by my roundtable discussion with re- face,justthe pressure from the porters. "I can still feel the tem- bullets," said White, whose face perature of the air, the smell of and hands were peppered with the gunpowder." small bullet fragments. White and 13 other U.S. He carried Bocks a few feet troops with the 173rd Airborne and then, when the fire grew Brigade, accompanied by a too intense, sprinted back to contingent of Afghan soldiers, Schilling, drawing the enemy were moving along a narrow fire with him. Bocks was conridgeline after a meeting with scious, but dying. "The only tribal elders when the Taliban words he ever said to me was I attacked fromthree directions. don't think I'm going to make it and started work as an invest-
TeXaS death rOW inmate —A little more than two hours before he was scheduled to be put to death in Huntsville, Texas, a convicted murderer was granted a stay of execution by a federal appeals court on Tuesday so the courts could review his claim that he is mentally disabled — a disability, his lawyers argued, that Texas agencies had long known. The U.S.Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit in New Orleans granted the request from lawyers for Robert James Campbell, 41, who had beenset to be the first inmate put to death in America since a botched execution in Oklahoma.
originally aspired to enlist in the Marines. His father, Curt,
an Army Special Forces veteran, helped persuade his son to rethink his service branch of
choice. White has since left the Army, graduated from college
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Wednesday, May14, the 134th day of 2014.There are 231 days left in the year.
RESEARCH
Blood pressuresrise around foreclosures
HAPPENINGS SriraCha —The Irwindale, Calif., City Council is scheduled to vote on whether to declare a factory that makes the trendy hot sauce apublic nuisance. CalllleS —The film festival opens in Francewith the already much talked about "Grace of Monaco."
Ol 0 SOClc3 As Jonathan Pruitt, a biologist who studies sociable spiders, puts it: "The
By Dina EIBoghdady
of our physiology," Arcaya said. "It's less about how The stress of living near big the increase in blood a foreclosed home may in- pressure is and more about crease a person's chances of the fact that you can put a developing high blood pres- blood-pressure cuff on a persure, according to research son and see that this is havpublished Monday in Circu- ing an effect on their health."
most maligned of organisms may have something to tell us about who we are."
The Washington Post
HISTORY Highlight:In 1948, by the current-era calendar, the independent state of Israel was proclaimed inTelAviv. In1643,LouisXIV became King of France atagefour upon the death of his father, Louis
lation, the American Heart Association's journal.
While foreclosures are known to drag down the values of neighboring properties, the new research suggests that they can also
XIII.
undermine the health of the
In1796, English physician Edward Jenner inoculated 8-yearold James Phippsagainst smallpox byusingcowpox matter. In1804, the Lewis andClark expedition to explore the Louisiana Territory as well asthe Pacific Northwest left camp near present-day Hartford, lllinois. In1863, Union forces defeated the Confederates in theBattle of Jackson, Mississippi. In1900,the Olympic games opened in Paris, held aspart of the1900 World's Fair. In1913, the Rockefeller Foundation was founded inNew York. In1942, Aaron Copland's "Lincoln Portrait" was first performed by theCincinnati Symphony Orchestra. In1961,Freedom Riders were attacked by violent mobs in Anniston and Birmingham, Alabama. In1964,Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev joined United Arab Republic President Gamel Abdel Nasser in setting off charges, diverting the Nile River from the site of theAswan High Damproject. In1973,the United States
launched Skylab1, its first manned spacestation. (Skylab 1 remained in orbit for six years before burning upduring re-entry in1979.) TheNational Right to Life Committee was incorporated. In1988, 27 people, mostly teens, were killed whentheir church bus collided with a pickup truck going thewrong direction on ahighway near Carrollton, Kentucky. (Truck driver Larry Mahoneyserved 9'/t years in prison for manslaughter.) In1994, the WestBanktown of Jericho saw its first full day of Palestinian self-rule following the withdrawal of Israeli troops, an event celebrated byPalestinians. Ten yearsago: Britain's Daily Mirror newspaper published a front-page apology after photographs supposedly showing British forces abusing Iraqi prisoners turned out to be fakes. TheU.S. SupremeCourt refused to step in andblock gay marriages in Massachusetts. Five years ago:House Speaker Nancy Pelosi accusedthe CIA of misleading herand other lawmakers about the waterboarding of detainees during the Bushadministration, disputing Republican charges that she'd beencomplicit in its use. Chrysler announcedplans to eliminate 789dealerships as part of its restructuring. A pair of spacewalking astronauts installed a newpiano-sized camera in theHubble Space Telescope. Oneyearago:Inanop-ed appearing in TheNewYork Times, Oscar-winning actress Angelina Jolie said she'd undergone a preventive double mastectomy after learning she carried a genethat madeit extremely likely shewould get breastcancer.
BIRTHDAYS Movie producer GeorgeLucas is 70. Movie director Robert Zemeckis is 63. Actor Tim Roth is 53. Actress CateBlanchett is 45. Movie writer-director Sofia Coppola is 43. Facebookfounder Mark Zuckerberg is 30. — From wire reports
Lena Grrostedvia New York Times News Service
settings that reinforce individual traits like shyness and boldness, which may offer insight into how
people develop personalities. were shifted from one set of
beesforage ordefendthe hive. spidersto the next.Moreover, For ants, what they're fed as Of t h e w o r l d' s 4 3 ,000 the spiders in a stable social larvae d etermines w h ethknown varieties of spiders, setting grew ever less like one er they end up as soldiers or an overwhelming majority another over time. workers. For the spiders, perare peevish loners: spinning In other words, far from fos- sonality appears to dictate webs, slinging lassos, lique- tering behavioral conformity, profession. fying prey and attacking tres- a predictable social life accenPruitt and hi s colleagues passers,each spider unto its tuated each spider's quirks have determined that the spiown. and personalstyle,rather as ders in charge of defending But about 25 arachnid spe- the characters in a sitcomthe colony and capturing prey cies have swapped the her- the Goth girl, the huckster, the score high on tests of aggresm it's hair shirt for a m o r e lovable buffoon — rise ever sion, while those caring for sociable a n d co o p erative more to type with every pass- the young are measurably strategy, in which dozens ing laugh-tracked week. more docile. "The longer the spiders or hundreds of spiders pool New York Times News Service
their powers to exploit r e-
sources that would elude a solo player. And believe it or not, ye of
rolled-up newspaper about to dispatch the poor little Char-
lotte dangling from your curtain rod for no better reason than your purported "primal fear," these oddballspider socialites may offer fresh insight into an array of human mysteries: where our personalities come from, why some people can't open their mouths at a
party while others can't keep theirs shut and, why, no matter ourage, we can'tseem to
leave high school behind. "It's very satisfying to me that the most m aligned of
organisms may have something to tell us about who we are," said Jonathan Pruitt, a
biologist at the University of Pittsburgh who studies social spiders.
Animal personalities
part of a much broader um-
brella study that dates back to the 1940s, when researcherssigned up Massachusetts residents with the goal of tracking their habits to de-
neighbors themselves. termine factors that affect The study tracked 1,750 cardiovascular health. Every Massachusetts res i dents few years, clinicians would from 1987 through 2008 and assess the enrollees' health. found that each foreclosure In 1971, researchers began within 100 meters of a per- tracking the children of the son's home affected neigh- original enrollees as well as bors'systolicblood pressure, their spouses, and Arcaya the top number in the read- and fel low researchers from ing. The neighbors may be the University of California at worried that nearby forecloSan Francisco Schoolof Medsures are hurting the value icine, the Federal Reserve of their homes or the safety Bank of Boston and Yale Uniof their communities, and versity based their own rethat anxiety can boost blood search on that cohort, again pressure, the study said. drawing from the results of The increase was not sig- dinical exams. They found nificant enough to present a that each foreclosure within huge health risk to the peo- 100 metersofa person'shome ple affected, but it suggests affected the systolic blood that the housing crisis has pressure by 1.71 millimeters extended beyond the econ- of mercury. As a point of refomy into the public-health erence, each year of age is arena, said Mariana Arcaya, associated with a rise of 0.65 lead author of the study and millimeters of mercury, so a post doctoral research fel- the eff ect of a foreclosure is low at Harvard University's on par with three additional Center for Population and years of aging, Arcaya said. Development Studies. The authors said they
Social Stegodyphus dumicola spiders huddle together on awebafter researchers marked each female with paint to observe the group's interaction. Social spiders, unlike most arachnids, thrive in
By Natalie Angier
The research tracked a
subgroup of people who are
"It demonstrates that a
phenomenon that we think of as being solely in the financial realm is getting reflectedin measured aspects
used the100-meter measure because it is the standard
lengthofablock and encompasses about two properties
on both sides of a house.
were with the same individuals, the stronger their per-
sonalities became, and the more different they became
•
•
•
'
from each other," Pruitt said.
"The aggressive ones became much more aggressive, the •
docile ones more docile." The
r
•
consistency of their behaviors also mounted with time, he said, "to the point where they
seemed almost rigid."
LAWN CHAIR KINDLING
Personality and niche The researchers view the development of strong personalities as the behavioral ver-
sion of so-called niche partitioning, carving out a specialty in a crowded, competitive world. The concept is most famil-
iarly applied to the study of animal foraging practices. For example, when
s t ickleback
fish are feeding in densely populated waters, Laskowski said, "some will specialize on critters in rocks, others on lit-
The new work on social spi- tle plankton." ders is part of the expanding By adopting distinctive forfield of animal personality re- aging tactics, "you don't have search, which seeks to delin- to fight all the time," she said. eate, quantify and understand
" You have your ow n
l i ttle
the many stylistic differences niche." that have been identified in a
For the spiders, behavior-
vast array of species, includ- al partitioning appears to ing monkeys, minks, bighorn serve as the foundation of sheep, dumpling squid, zebra their sociality and hence of finches and spotted hyenas.
their extraordinary success.
Animals have been shown The researchers studied Steto differ, sometimes hugely, on godyphus mimosarum, small traits like shyness, boldness, social spiders that live in colaggressiveness and neopho- onies of 20 to 300 individubia, or fear of the new. Among als, weaving huge communal the big questions in the field webs the size of automobiles are where those differenc- over the trees and bushes of es come from, and why they the Kalahari in southern Afexist. rica. The spider communities Reporting recently in The gain their strength through Proceedings of th e Royal a division of labor, with some Society B, Pruitt an d K ate members specializing in web Laskowski, of the Leibniz In- repair, some in attacking and stitute of Freshwater Ecology subduing prey. and Inland Fisheries in Berlin,
S till others tend t o
the
have determined that character-building in social spiders is a communal affair. While they quickly display the first glimmerings of a basic predisposition — a relative tendency toward shyness or boldness,
young, regurgitating liquefied food right into an offspring's mouth and eventually liquefying their own bodies to
tetchiness or docility — that
spiders thrive.
personality is then powerfully influenced by the other spiders in the group. In laboratory experiments, the researchers showed that
seen the skeletons of birds and
nourish the next generation.
Through team effort and professional expertise, the social "You can capture much larger prey," Pruitt said. "I've rats in some of these colonies." But how to decide who gets
which job? Among social ingroup day after day developed sects like honeybees, caste stronger and more distinctive depends on age; young bees spidersexposed to the same
personalities than those that
work in
:.""4g;,,j,*'.
t h e n u rsery, older
IP
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I
A4 T H E BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
Candidates
he wrote. "(This) case shows
assault and strangulation and
when I need to go to trial to
was sentenced to 25 years in
Continued from A1
fight for justice I will, and I'll
Hummel sent a list of more than a dozen trials in which
win." The other three cases Hummel submitted to The Bulletin
prison. He was acquitted on five related counts, according to court documents.
he had defended people acBray hired prominent Portcused of everything from include a livestock neglect landattorney Stephen Houze sex crimes with mandatory case in which he said police to defend him, the same attorminimum sentencing require- trespassed on a s uspect's ney who defended Bret Biedments to menacing and child property without obtaining scheid in a 2013 Bend hit-andneglect. a search warrant. He filed a run case in which a man was Hummel said he's also motion to suppress evidence killed. proud of his success rate as a based on the police's failure Hummel has stated severdefense attorney. to gain access to his client's al times he believes Flaherty "Immediately upon being property with a valid search was remiss in allowing Biedadmitted to the Oregon bar I warrant and won, he said. scheid to plead to failing to "I was happy to stand up for perform the duties of a driver won my first eight criminal trials," he wrote in a May 1 private property rights and instead of pursuing the origiemail. "I've never heard of the right of privacy," he wrote. nal charge of criminally neganother defense attorney Hummel also offered two ligent homicide, suggesting achieving this." cases in which he received not one reason Flaherty allowed Those eight c ases w ere
guilty verdicts on at least part
tried between 1995 and 1996 in Washington County, where Hummel lived before moving to Bend, he said.
of the accusations, saying they were examples of typi-
Hummel's cases
Flaherty's cases
Hummel offered five cases he said show his versatility and knowledge of the law. The "theme I am trying to convey is that a district at-
the plea deal was because he didn't want to face Houze in
court. Flaherty said he faced
cal cases he defended when
H ouze in B r ay's t r ial a n d
working as a trial attorney.
won, proving he wasn't afraid to take him on again.
F laherty
In 1996, Flaherty p rose-
s u b mitted f i v e cuted a case in which Joseph
Internet Continued from A1 In some ways, the court is trying to erase the last 25
years, when people learned to routinely check out on-
line every potential suitor, partner or friend. Under the court's ruling, information
would still exist onwebsites, court documents and online archives of newspapers, but
people would not necessarily know it was there. In the United States, the
court's ruling
p robably
would clash with the First Amendment. But the deci-
sion heightens a growing uneasiness over the Interdefine people against their will. "More and more Internet users want a little of the
ephemerality and the forgetfulness of predigital days," said Viktor Mayer-Schon-
Snyder broke into a female
berger,professor ofInternet
ty cases to The Bulletin; he
victim's Bend home and re-
governance at the Oxford
won guilty verdicts in all of them. He said they were dif-
peatedly assaulted her. At the trial Snyder was "brazenly sociopathic" in claiming the
Internet Institute.
attorney, a good leader and and he's proud of his courthave an expert understand- room success.
woman had invited him into
drunken pictures to follow
her home and "had consented
them for the next 30 years.
Flaherty's cases date back
to sexual and deviate sexual
ing of the law," he wrote. "I
could have given you many trials that I won, but to me those are boring and don't tell
ficult and complicated cases,
to the 1990s when he was a deputy district attorney un-
intercourse," Flaherty wrote. Snyder was found guilty of
d er District A ttorney M i k e
two counts o f
a story. These cases reveal Dugan. my skills, personality, comOne of his proudest mopassion, intelligence and legal ments as a deputy DA came skills." in 1995 when Jack Crescenzi The first is State v. Grawas convicted of murdering ham, in which Hummel filed his wife. Flaherty said this thebriefand argued the 2005 was a particularly difficult case in front of the Oregon
Court of Appeals. Though the appellate court ruled against him, in 2009 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of the ar-
f i r s t-degree
rape, two counts of first-degree sodomy, firstdegree kidnapping and first-degree burglary. "This remains one of the most disturbing and violent
cases I've prosecuted," Flaherty wrote Tuesday. "The
case because no body was found.
v ictim's testimony wa s
der case and r emains the
painful as i t w a s p owerful, and her testimony was
"This was my first mur-
most challenging case I have gument Hummel used in the prosecuted. I worked this Graham case in an unrelated case for approximately 2.5 Massachusetts case. years," Flaherty wrote in a Hummel said he argued Tuesday email. "There was that "the c onstitution pr o- no physical evidence, no eye-
as
tenced to life in prison for the
issue I analyzed the case law 2010 murder of his wife, Lori "Woody" Blaylock. Blaylock and constitution and k n ew the correct legal result," he admitted to killing his wife wrote. "All attorneys can cite during a fight and dumping U.S. Supreme Court prece- her body in the Santiam river dents. It's the rare attorney
upstream from Detroit Lake.
es is lawful."
sault for failing to protect the child.
Flaherty said that case was particularly difficult because it involved such a helpless baby. "I consider this one of the
most tragic and emotionally challenging cases I've prose-
toddler got out of the house
In 2012, Flaherty received
damage that Daniel went into
while she was sleeping and drowned in a nearby creek.
a guilty verdict on six of
a deep coma from which he
11 counts in a case against
never recovered."
cuted," he wrote. "The defen-
dant confessed to one shaking episode; the medical evidence showed at least 3 sep-
arate episodes in which the defendant shook his baby so hard that it caused a subdural
hematoma. The last episode resulted in so much brain
Thomas Bray, a former Bend Voters get t h ei r c h ance resulted in a hung jury. The a nesthesiologist an d c o l - in the upcoming election to Crook County DA decided lege instructor who raped decide which candidate will not to retry Baller. a woman he met on Match. serve as Deschutes County "Melissa is now a mother, com. Bray was found guilty district attorney. Ballots must recently graduated from col- of two counts of first-degree be received by 8 p.m. Tuesday. lege and is doing very well. rape, two counts of first-de— Reporter: 541-383-0376, I'm proud to have helped her," gree sodomy, fourth-degree sking@bendbulletin.com The case went to t r ial and
fundraise — even after lead-
ing members of his own party Continued from A1 have condemned his actions," Boehner added that the S chwerin s a i d . "Speaker Democrats are probably also Boehner is trying to throw fundraising off Benghazi and Walden under the bus, and it's likely used Hurricane Katrina time for Walden to come out of to fundraise. hiding and take responsibility " I don't k now w h a t t h e for his decisions." fundraising arm is doing. All I Walden could notbe reached know is that it's time to get to for comment on Tuesday. the truth," he said. NRCC spokeswoman AnIn response, the Democratic drea Bozek said the criticism Congressional Campaign Com- was an effort to deflect attenmittee called for Walden to dar- tion from t h e i n vestigation ify his own role in the decision into the administration's reto launch BenghaziWatchdogs. sponse to the 2012 attack in com, which calls on supporters Libya. to contribute to the NRCC.
"The Obama administra-
"House Republicans will tion has not been honest with make sure that no one will get the American people with away from (Benghazi select regards to Benghazi, and if committee chairman, South Nancy Pelosi becomes SpeakCarolina Rep. Trey) Gowdy er, the American people will and the Select Committee," the
never know the t r uth. Our
use the Benghazi tragedy to
After the Benghazi Watch-
dogs site went up this month,
The court also said that a search engine "as a general rule" should place the
right to privacy over the right of the public to find information.
Left undarified was exactly what history remains relevant. Should a business-
answered. Among them is
he said. "I don't think this will
leadto the end of the Internet as dropped only on Google sites in we know it." individual countries, or whethMichael Fertik is chief execer it would be also erased from utive of Reputation.com, which Google.com. Even as Europe helps people improve their has largely erased its internal search results into something physical borders, the ruling they find less objectionable. "For the first time, human could impose digitalborders. Another open question is dignity will get the same treathow much effort a search en- ment online as copyright," Fergine should reasonably spend tik said."It willbe protected uninvestigating complaints. der the law." The only loser, he "I expect the default action said, was Google. "It no longer by search engines will be to gets to profit fromyour misery." take down information," said And perhaps Reputation. Orla Lynskey, a lecturer in com. "This ruling is not neclaw at the London School of essarily favorable for my busiEconomics. ness," he said. A trade group for informaThose who worry that many tion technology companies said people might use the ruling to the court's decision posed a retouch their digital portraits threat to free expression. may find support in the case "This ruling opens the door that began it. to large-scale private censorThe case started in 2009 ship inEurope," said James when Mario Costeja, a Spanish Waterworth, the head of the lawyer, complained that enterBrussels office for the Comput- ing his name in Google led to er and Communications Indus- legal notices dating to 1998 in try Association, which counts an online version of a Spanish Facebook, Microsoft and Goo- newspaper that detailed his gle among its members. "While debtsand the forced saleofhis the ruling likely means to offer property. protections, our concern is it Costeja said the debt iscould also be misused by politi- sues had been resolved many cians or others with something years earlier and were no lontohide." ger relevant. So he asked the That view was echoed by newspaper that had published B ig Brother Watch, a L o n- the information, La Vanguardon-based digital rights group dia, to remove the notices and that was perhaps the first to in- Google to expunge the links. When they refused, Costeja voke the specter of Orwell. "The principle that you have complained to the Spanish a right to be forgotten is a laud- Data Protection Agency that able one, but it was never in- his rights to the protection of tended to be a way for people his personaldata were being whether information would be
man be able to expunge a link to his bankruptcy a decade ago'? Could a wouldbe politician get a drunken-driving arrest removed by calling it a youthful folly? The burden of fulfill- to rewrite history," said Emma ing the court's directives Carr, the organization's acting will fall largely on Google, director. Mayer-Schonberger, the auwhich isby far the dominant search engine in Europe. It thor of "Delete: The Virtue of has more than 90 percent Forgetting in the Digital Age," of the search business in said such concerns were overFrance and Germany. blown. He said the court was Google said in a state- affirming what had been stanment that the ruling was dard Europeanpractice. "disappointing" and that "If you look at how often the company was "very sur- people in Europe have gone to prised" it differed so much a data processor like Google to from a preliminary verdict require it to delete information, last year that was largely in I think it would be in the thouits favor. sands, at best, over 30 years,"
violated.
The Spanish authority ordered Google to remove the links in July 2010, but it did not
impose any order on La Vanguardia. Google challenged the order, and the National High
Court of Spain referred the case to the European court.
Amcrncr. Dishwasher
Because the European
Court of Justice is the highest court in the European
Union,Google cannot appeal Tuesday's decision. The
d e cision l e a ves
H5~g
2400 SW Glacier Place Redmond . 541.923.4732
many other questions un-
TV.APPLIANCE
DCCC chairman Rep. Steve Israel, D-NY., called on Boehner and Walden to take it down.
Prestige Senior Living
"Fundraising off the Benghazi tragedy is despicable and insulting and has no place in the national conversation," he
y
gj
said in a prepared statement.
"Speaker Boehner and Chairman Walden should immediately take down (the website) and stop insulting the memory of the brave Americans who were lost there."
Speaking Sunday on Fox News, Gowdy said he personally would not use Benghazi to solicit campaign contributions. But Democrats had "selective amnesia" when it comes to us-
ing tragedies to fundraise, he said. "They raised money on Sandy Hook; they raised money on Katrina; they raised mon-
website reads. "This is going goal is to hold Democrats in ey on Iraq and Afghanistan," to be a national effort for a na- Congress accountable who Gowdy said. tional investigation." vote against creating the seThe other Republican memIn an email Tuesday, DCCC lect committee on Benghazi bers of the select committee spokesman Josh Schwerin a nd who continue to try t o are Reps. Susan Brooks of called on Walden to justify sweep this controversy under Indiana, Jim Jordan of Ohio, his decision to use the death the rug," she said. Mike Pompeo of Kansas, Marof four Americans, including Bozek noted that Sens. Jeff tha Roby of Alabama, Peter Ambassador Chris Stevens, to Merkley and Ron Wyden, Roskam of Illinois and Lynn raise campaign funds for the both D-Ore., had used the Westmoreland of G eorgia. 2014 midterm elections. war in Afghanistan and sex- House Democrats have not "NRCC Chairman Greg ual assault in the military, re- indicated whether they would Walden needs to explain once spectively, to rally their own agree to participate in the seand for all why he feels that supporters. lect committee. i t is appropriate for him t o
links to certain pages, it
through one of d efendant's
that argues a legal position Her remains were never beforethe Supreme Court de- found. "This was also a 'no body' cides it and after the attorney makes the argument the Su- murder that resulted in a jury preme Courtcomes to agree u nanimously f i nding t h e with him." defendant guilty," Flaherty Hummel said he's proud of wrote. a 2001 case in which he deThere is always a level of fended Prineville resident Me- anxiety when prosecuting lissa Baller, who was charged a murder charge without a with child neglect after her body, Flaherty said.
Benghazi
"If you're always tied to the past, it's difficult to grow, to change," Mayer-Schonberger said. "Do we want to go into aworldwhere we largely undo forgetting?" The court said search engines were not simply dumb pipes, but played an active role as data "controllers," and must be held accountable for the links they provide. Search engines could be compelledto remove said, "even when the publication in itself on those pag-
sock covered hands causing a bleeding injury to one of his fingers." vides a defendant the right to witness and th e d efendant Flaherty also cited a 1996 confront and cross exam his repeatedly denied having case in which Morris Kopp accusers, even when the ac- anything to do with his wife's was convicted of shaking his cuser is a state police lab tech- disappearance." infant son, Daniel Kopp, hard nician who desires to testify That also was the situation enough to cause severe brain in writing without appearing when Flaherty won a guilty damage. Kopp's wife, Sharon in court." verdict in the 2011 trial of Ste- Kopp, was also convicted of "Four years before the U.S. ven Blaylock, who was sen- first- and second-degree asSupreme Court ruled on this
Young people, in particular, do not want their
created for us when she bit
c orroborated by D N A s h e
aboutthemselves erased insome cases.
net's ability to persistently
high-profile Deschutes Coun-
torney has to be a good trial
New York Times News Service file photo
An entrance to Google's European headquarters in Dublin. The highest court in the European Union decided on Tuesday that Google must grant users of its search engine e right to have links
A •
•
A
•
~ Tuesday,May27that3pm
0 Se nior Safety — Home Alone; Learn How to Protect Your Senior Loved Ones Fatalities and injuries can be avoided if you take the right steps in ensuring your loved ones safety.
~ Tuesday, June 24th at 3 pm
OT ips Tor Dealing with Caregiver Stress; Learn How to Take Time for Yourself While Helping Seniors
The emotional and physical demands involved with caregiving can strain even the most capable person. Learn tips that have helped others deal with caregiver stress.
~ T uesday July 29th at 3 pm
0 Le t's Talk; Easing the Family Dialogue The ideal time to talk with your loved one about futurepossibilities is before they show signs of needing extra help. Even if you ve postponed talking and your loved one is now showing signs, the discussion doesn't have to be uncomfortable and somber. Tuesday, August 26th at 3 pm
4 Co mpensate for Short-Term Memory Loss
Learn practical tips that can be put into everyday action. We'll discuss resources for reai-life dilemmas and information you can depend on to make the most of for your family and your particular situation.
— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Devices
Michael Carome, the director of health research at Public Citizen, a consumer rights
Continued fromA1 As people become more advocacy group in Washingdependent on medical devic- ton, said that although the es that share information, the risk of private medical-inchance increases that their formation leaks was hard codes could be scrambled, to quantify, "It is a concern causing malfunctions. and it should be on the radar "I think the thing we really screen of public health offihave to worry about the most," cials and those who are resaid Frank Painter, a health sponsible for security." care technology c onsultant Particularly with the implefor Technology Management mentation of the A ffordable Solutions, a computer consult- Care Act, which encourages ing company, "is an unsecure physicians to adopt electronic system being able to be violat- health record-keeping fortheir ed by accident." patients, greater security proThe technology magazine visions are needed, Carome Wired reportedin Aprilthat an sald. information security official The FBI r eport cites refrom Essentia Health found
search from the SANS Insti-
that cyber intruders can ma- tute, a private company that nipulate drug infusion pumps specializes in Internet securi— which deliver antibiotics ty training. SANS concluded and chemotherapy directly that some systems and devicinto patients — defibrillators, es were compromised for exX-rays and even temperature tended periods, and that comsettings on medical refrigera- panies, when notified of the tors that store drugs and blood. vulnerabilities, did not repair The security official, Scott them. "The time to act is yesterErven, had access to a chain of health care facilities in the day,"thereportsays. Midwest over two years for the
study, Wired reported. Erven
Dick Cheney had the wireless function on his heart defibrillator disabled, fearing it made him more vulnerable to a ter-
rorist attack. But most people don't face the same level of personal risk. "I hold no delusions of grandeur that I'm important
enough for people to go after, but I do knowthat some people try these types of things just for the hell of it," Carroll said.
Typically, problems with medical devices are identified by or reported to the FDA. But
the exponential rate of device innovation calls into question the FDA's capacity to monitor
TODAY'S READ:DISCOVERY
Shipwreck Off Haitian coast may be Columbus'Santa Maria By Jacqueline Charles The Miami Herald
MIAMI — A top underwater explorer says he is certain that he has found the Holy
Grail of shipwrecks — Christopher Columbus' long-lost Santa Maria flagship used in his initial voyage to the New World.
medical devices. "There are so many differ-
Barry Clifford said he discovered the ship's remains
ent kinds of inventions and de-
vices doing so many different
near the coast of Cap-Haitien in northern Haiti, where the
things, the FDA really can't
Spanish explorer reported
legislate down to the line and code of security forevery situ-
in his journal that it had run
general standards were suffi-
aground on Christmas morning in 1492. Years earlier, Clifford photographed what he now believes to have been a 15th century wrought-iron
ation," said Painter, the health
care technology consultant. Painter also said the FDA's cient and that the responsibili-
lombard or cannon that has
ty for ensuring device security
since disappeared.
lay with the manufacturers:
"There are only seven lombards that have been found
C arroll i s f a m i liar w i t h "Good designers can build manufacturers' i n d i fference good, safe, secure designs in
to security concerns. After he the first place, pretty simply. saw the insulin pump hacking So if they did that, it would preMoreover, as hospitals move demonstration, he contacted clude somebody from doing patient records to network da- his own pump provider. something bad." "Both of the people I talked tabases, the financial incentive In an email, the FDA refor hackers is huge. The FBI to had no idea this was pos- ferred to an online statement report notes that even par- sible, and had no answer re- noting that it allows devices to tial electronic health records garding plans to fix the issue," be marketed "when the probare selling for $50 each on the he said. "They tried the whole, able benefits to patients outblack market, compared with 'Well, even if it's possible, no weigh the probable risks." $1 for Social Security cards one would do it.' " Like Painter, the FDA mainand credit card numbers. So far Carroll's pump man- tains that u ltimately "manElectronic health r ecords ufacturer has been right. The ufacturers are responsibl e contain comprehensive patient Food and Drug Administra- for remaining vigilant about information and allow all the tion's website says the agency identifying risks and hazards patient's health care provid- isn't aware of any patient inju- associated with their medical ers to share that information. ries or deaths related to hack- devices, including risks relatThese recordsare attractive ing intrusions. ed to cybersecurity, and are targets to h ackers because Still, at least some users responsible for putting approthey can be used to sell drug think the risks are real. As ear- priate mitigations in place to prescriptions. ly as 2007, then-Vice ~sident address patient safety." couldn't be reached for comment for this article.
in the Western world," Clifford told the Miami Herald on Tuesday. "We found the
eighth, exactly the distance where Columbus said he lost the Santa Maria."
The Santa Maria ship drifted into a reef and had to be
Brandon Clifford via The Associated Press
A diver measures a cannon adjacent to a ballast pile in a 2003 photo off the north coast of Haiti. Explorer Barry Clifford says the site could be the wreckage of Columbus' flagship, the Santa Maria. He says evidence that the wreck is the Santa Maria
abandoned. Columbus or- includes ballast stones that appear to have come from Spain or dered sailors to build a fort Portugal and what looked like e 15th century cannon that was at nearby in Haiti before sailing the site during an initial inspection but has since disappeared. the remaining two ships — La Nina and La Pinta — back to
Spain to report his findings.
northern coast.
"There is a lot of water, a lot needs to be verified, has its of history around Haiti, and share of skeptics, including there have been many, many another underwater explor- shipwrecks along the coast er who also believed he had of Haiti," said Daniel KosT he claim,
w h ic h s t i l l
ki-Karell, whose 1991 mission
discovered the remains of
the Santa Maria while snor- to confirm his hunch was keling in 1987 off Haiti's thwarted by political turmoil.
But should the scientific
evidence of the wreckage pan out this time, the discovery would solve a more
than 500-year-old riddle that has plagued historians and marine archaeologists and has been the subject of many failed explorations.
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A6 T H E BULLETIN + WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
IN FOCUS: JOB TRENDS
Forecast:
cimbing demandfor drone ski s
Military researchers deem climate change a rising threat "Tribes are killing each otharound the world will create more demand for U.S. troops, er over water today," Kerry WASHINGTON — even asflooding and extreme said. "Think of what happens accelerating rate of c limate found that dimate change-in- regions like eastern India, Ban- weather events at home could if you have massive dislocachange poses a severe risk to duced drought in the Middle gladesh and the Mekong Delta damage naval ports and mili- tion, or the drying up of the national security and acts as East and Africa is leading to in Vietnam at risk and could tary bases. waters of the Nile, of the major a catalyst for global political conflicts over food and water lead to a new wave of refugees. In an interview, Secretaryof rivers in China and India. The conflict, a report published and escalating longstanding In addition, the report pre- State John Kerry signaled that intelligence community takes Tuesday by a leading govern- regional and ethnic tensions dicted that an i n crease in the report's findings would in- it seriously, and it's translated ment-funded militaryresearch into violent dashes. The report catastrophic weather events fluence U.S. foreign policy. into action." By Coral Davenport
organization concluded.
New York Times News Service
also found that rising sea levels
are putting people and food T h e yses Military Advisory Board supplies in vulnerable coastal The Center for Naval Anal-
By Dominic Basulto The Washington Post
Next year around this time,
we may be talking about an explosion of interest by em-
ployers for r ecent college grads who know how to operate drones. That's right — the
same way that we currently hear about the IT skills gap in hot areas such as mobile
and the cloud and big data — we may be hearing about the need for IT workers with
skills and experience related to drone technology. One key factor is the re-
lentless growth of new businessopportunities fordrones. It is almost a certainty that
W
the ability to build, pilot and monitor these drones is going to be hugely important once commercial drones get the go-ahead from the FAA. Sure, there are the high-profile business cases — such as the Am-
U
w
azon retail delivery drones or
the Domino's pizza delivery drones — but there are also ev-
m
eryday-use cases that extend
from filmmaking and aerial photography to fields such as real estate, farming and pipeline maintenance. Journalists want to work with them. As do meteorologists. And, yes, the
Pentagon is definitely interested in the future of drones, too. A ccording to a
2 0 13 r e-
port from the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International, FAA approval
of commercial drones could lead to the creation of 70,000 U.S. jobs within the next three
years, and 100,000 U.S. jobs by the year 2025. Many of these early jobs, most likely, will be involved in integrating commercial drones into commercial airspace. At any time,
there are thousands of commercial aircraft airborne in U.S. airspace, and it's possible
that there will be just as many drones within a
Sometimes, two people just click. You have the same priorities.
f e w s h ort
years. Some predict drones to become an $80 billion business opportunity by 2025. Already, we're starting to see the first testing of commer-
You believe your work can truly change lives. You like to wear nametags.... We're excited to welcome Sterling Bank because
cial drones at FAA test sites
in places such as New York,
of everything we have in common — and because of everything
North Dakota, Alaska, Neva-
da, Texas and Virginia. The goal of these new FAA sites is to test drones in a variety of
we can do together in the new comrnunities we now serve.
climates, environments and
use cases. The drones in New York, for example, are meant
So come in, have a chatovera cup ofcoff ee, and let' s discoverthe awesome ways we can click with you.
to test ways to integrate com-
mercial drones into congested Northeastern air space. And the drones in North Dakota
are going to be used to test approaches related to farming management and agriculture research. To keep up with this projected demand for drone skills, there is now a growing number of official programs and academic opportunities f or
drone operators. Once companies start hiring, they're probably going to pass on recent engineering grads with a theoretical knowledge of
machine propulsion or navigation systems, in favor of candidates with hands-on ex-
perience who know how to get a drone airborne from a dead startand maneuver itaround for photos. When A m azon
starts hiring drone operators, for example, it probably won't want to build a drone-training
program from scratch. (Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos
owns The Washington Post.) Which might explain why we're starting to see some
very innovative types of academicprograms forthe drone technology experts of tomorrow. It's the basic law of supply and demand at work. The Unmanned Vehicle University in
Phoenix, for example, can set you up with a variety of career options — piloting a drone, becomingan aerialdronephotographeror starting a career as a UAV systems engineer. The Embry-Riddle Aeronau-
•
• •
•
e
s e
•
•
tical University offers a bach-
elor's degree in Unmanned Aircraft Systems Science. The University of N orth D akota
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offers afour-year program for future Unmanned Aerial Vehicles pilots, while Kansas
State offers an undergraduate degreeinUnmanned Aircraft Studies.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
BRIEFING Sisters-area volunteer sought The Deschutes County Bicycle and Pedestrian Advisory Committee seeks a volunteer to fill a Sisters-area position on the panel. Candidates with a background or interest in cycling or pedestrian issues are encouraged to apply. The committee holds monthly meetings in Bend from noon to 1:30 p.m. on the first Thursday of each month. Voting members are asked to serve a three-year term. Applications will be available until the position is filled and should be submitted by 5 p.m. June 2. Deschutes County commissioners hope to select the new member in June. For more information, contact Peter Russell at peter.russell© deschutes.org.
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
BEND
Contract approved for newmiddleschool
Planto revitalize citycenter identified
By Tyler Leeds
approved contract includes
The Bulletin
funds for a 14,624-squarefoot wing meant to hold 200
The Bend-La Pine School Board on Tuesday night approved a nearly $28 million contract for the construction of a middle school. The board awarded the contract to Kirby Nagelhout Construction, which beat out
students that the district ear-
lier considered not building to save on costs. Construction will be funded by a $96 million bond passed by voters last May, and the school is expected to open in fall 2015.
will be on a site adjacent to Miller Elementary and
"The bids were very competitive and very good, which was good news for the district," said Chief Opera-
Summit High School. The
tions and Financial Officer
a bid from Skanska USAby $200,000. The 800-seat school
Board member Peggy
Nagelhout Construction to build an elementary school.
Kinkade noted, "The bid far
That school, which will hold
Brad Henry.
exceeded our expectations as 600 students, will be located far as being low." between Reed Market and Kinkade said that any
Brosterhous roads east of Third Street.
decision to put off building the optional wing probably
During a budget meeting
would have ended up cost-
before the board meeting, the
ing the district more, given the bid the district received
board and budget committee
By Hillary Borrud
discussed the consequences
The Bulletin
for the entire 800-student
of changing the district's pay-to-play fees for student
a possible plan to revitalize
building. In April, the board also
athletics.
See School /B5
approved a contract for Kirby
a series of public meetings over the past seven months. The latest proposal calls
for an undercrossing for
as ea at ars a
Hawthorne Avenue to better connectthe area to downtown
on the west side of the parkway, plus bike lanes and wide sidewalks along Second and Fourth streets. The plan would also reduce Third Street to three lanes between Green-
wood Avenue and Franklin Avenue and widen sidewalks and add planters to that section.
City employees and a team of people from the community are working on the plan and will meet May 21 to discuss
A 43-acre controlled burn planned for today off Skyliners Road west of Bend could send up smoke today near town. Smoke from the fire may be visible from
their next steps, such as study-
ing in greater detail howthe plan would work. Nick Arnis, director of the
city of Bend Growth Management Department, said people expressed a variety of views duringpublic meetings. "You'd get some people saying 'We really want this really active area, and we want to be able to walk and bike,'" Arnis
Pilot Butte, Horse
Butte, Sunriver and portions of U.S. Highway 97, as well as in Bend, according to the U.S. Forest Service. The fire is planned for woods about 7 miles from Bend and near the homes along Skyliners Road. The goal of the prescribed fire is to reduce overgrown vegetation, according to the agency.
said. "And then we'd get other
people who would say, 'I don't want that.'" See Revitalize/B5
Plan forcenteroftown
— Bulletin staff reports
Andy Tullis i The Bulletin
Bend Police Department officers and members of the BendFire Department respond to agas leak and subsequent student evacuation at Marshall High School in Bend onTuesday afternoon. A crew at work on theschool's sprinkler system damaged agas line, according to Bend-La PineSchools communication manager Julianne Repman andthe BendFire Department. Repmanconfirmed that no one wasfeeling ill at the school. Students were released from school at 2:30 p.m., a few minutes following the evacuation. Marshall, an alternative school on Bend's east side, serves just under 200 students. — Bulletin staffreport
ELECTION CALENDAR Are you holding anevent to educate voters in the lead-up to the Mayelection? Submit the information toelections© bentibulletin.cem.We will not publish information about political fundraisers.
Thursday CANDIDATEMEET AND MINGLEAT PINTS ANDPOLITICS: Meet local candidates for representative in Congress, state representative, Deschutes County Commission and Circuit Court judge. Join Oregon League of Conservation Voters and fellow
community membersfor an opportunity to hear from candidates before the May 20 primary election and get to know them one-on-one at this casual candidate meet and mingle; free; 7-9 p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop 8 Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541-728-0703.
Correction In a brief headlined "Baby shower for Redmond kittens," which published Sunday,May 11, on PageC1,the date for a kitten baby shower at BrightSide Animal Center was incorrect. The event already took place. The Bulletin regrets the error.
the geographic center of the city from the Bend Parkway to Northeast Fourth Street, after
Controlleddurn today off Skylines
Nore briefing, BS News of Recorrl, B2
Bend officials have identified
Bend has identified a possible plan to revitalize the geographic center of the city from the BendParkway to Northeast Fourth Street. The latest proposal calls for an undercrossing for Hawthorne Avenue to better connect the area to downtown on thewest side of the parkway, plus bike lanesand widesidewalksalongSecondand Fourth streets. ~ 2 - lanestreet ~ ~ 4 - 5-lane street •
A busystudent byday;a musician bynight
3 - lanestreet
In tersection improvement Potential boundary
By Monicia Warner The Bulletin
For Olivia Holman, a junior at
Bend High School, combining 10 years of classical piano training, three years of choir and a few poetic lyricshasbecome the norm. It may even land her
OUR SCHOOLS, OUR STUDENTS Educational newsand activities, and local kids and their achievements. • School Notes and submission info,B2 See Olivia Holman performing a song shewrote at bendbulletin.ceml Helman
O
Olney Ave. Portland Ave. C'0 1
o
some TV time. "Music is a good stress re-
U
GreenwoodAve.
liever," she said. "I love writing songs because it gives me a
I
"'ndsrPass I-lawthsrne Ave.
chance to be creative and pour
out what I'm feeling. I love performing because I love to share
Pranklin Ave.
stories with people." Holman, 17, was home-
schooled most of her life and transferred to Bend High during Joe Kline/The Bulletin her freshman year. Now, instead Bend High junior Olivia Holmen performs at the Crazy Mama Craft of spending her day at home Faire outside the Bend Factory Stores on Saturday.
Colorado Ave. lndustrial Ave.
ROundabOut
with her cat and a history book,
she spends it immersed in International Baccalaureate classes,
debateand speech teams, choir and creating her own music.
"You have to do what you have to do," Olivia said.
"(School) is my day job and mu-
Warm Springsschool
sic is kind of my night job and that ' s how I look at it."
See Musician /B2
Source: City of Bend
Andy Zeigert The Bulletin
REDMOND
A makeover for ci s website receives 1.64M grant
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
The yet-to-open Warm Springs K-8 Academy has received $1.64 million from a federal program that targets low-income, low-achieving schools for three-year turnarounds. This is the third wave of the U.S. Department of Edu-
cation School Improvement Grants, which have brought $55.4 million to Oregon schools. In Central Oregon, the
program has given awards to Marshall High School in Bend and Jefferson County Middle
School and Madras High School. SeeGrant/B5
by Leslie Pugmire Hole
said 11tesday.
The Bulletin
The newwebsite has many familiar aspects to anyone
It's beentwoyears coming, but a redesigned website has
who used the city's former site:
been launched by PhatO the cityof Redmond On B6 withagoalofamore user-friendlyproduct for both staff and citizens.
links to pages highlighting "business,""government,""our
''We reorganized the entire
site with all of our customers in mind," Communications Manager Heather Cassaro
community" and "residents,"
as well asrecentnews releases and ameetingcalendar.
m ore graphic elements such as video, photo slideshows and interactive maps. Atime-lapse
video canbe launched from the homepage thathighlights concerts in the parks, Dry Canyon bike path, the historic
shopping district, ice rink, downtown parades and the
gatewayleadingintotown streamlined, however, with with the distinctive 'Thoughts fewer links launching directly of Flight" sculpture. from the home page, as well as SeeWebsite/B6 The site's look is more
B2
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R
TODAY
THURSDAY
AUTHORPRESENTATION:Frank and Charlotte Mecklenburg will speak about living in the West Bank of Israel for two years, includinga Q&A session;6:30-7:30 p.m., potluckat6 p.m.;Ranch Chapel, 5060 S.W. Clubhouse Road, Crooked River Ranch; 541-923-8081. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LA CENERENTOLA"ENCORE: Starring Joyce DiDonato in the Cinderella title role, with Juan Diego Glorez as her Prince Charming; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: David Moskowitz presents a talk and slideshow based on his book "Wolves in the Land of Salmon"; $5; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. REDRAYFRAZIER: Thesoul-rock singer-songwriter performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
MEGA MOTORHOME ANDRV SUPER SALE:Free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. HELPING HANDSGALA: Featuring a dinner, an auction and entertainment; $45; 6-9 p.m.; Awbrey Glen Golf Club, 2500 N.W. Awbrey Glen Drive, Bend; dfr© theparalegalbeagle.com or www. theparalegalbeagle.com/events. SPEECHANDDEBATENIGHT: Hosted by the MVHS competitive Speechand Debateteam, open to the public; 6:30 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend;541-383-6360. CALICO THEBAND:The California country band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Courtesy Anne Marie Fox
Matthew McConaugheystarsas Ron Woodroof, a Texas cowboy who was diagnosed HIV-posltive in the1980s, in the drama "Dallas Buyers Club," which will be shown at Jefferson County Library in Madras on Friday.
redmondoregongardenclub.org.
MEGA MOTORHOME ANDRV mcmenamins.com. SUPER SALE:Free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; "ARRIVAL":COTAmovie night Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo presents the freeride mountain Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, bike film; $5 per person; 9 p.m.; Redmond; 541-548-2711. McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., FUNFRIDAYS:Featuring a petting Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. zoo, hay rides and other kids events; secondbasefilms.com/arrival. $5;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; mcmenamins.com. 541-548-1432,duggan©ddranch. net or www.ddranch.net. JESSE COOK: The Canadian jazz FRIDAY guitarist performs; $36-$56, plus EXECUTIVELEADERSHIP MBA fees; 8p.m.,doorsopenat7p.m.; INFORMATIONSESSION: Meet REDMONDGARDENCLUB PLANT Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall representatives from the College SALE:The nonprofit club will St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. have a variety of plants, fruits and of Business and learn about towertheatre.org. admission requirements, how to vegetables to sell, with garden BIG STICKYMESS:The California apply, tuition, financial assistance tools, books and garden decor; funk band performs; $5 at the door; 9 proceeds benefit school horticulture andscholarships andacademic p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. programs; free admission; 8 a.m.-6 advising. The course takes about Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 two years to complete and is p.m.; Private residence, 3688 S.W. or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. 34th Street; 541-923-3825 or www. designed for professionals currently
in leadership roles, orforthose with goals to lead in the future. Registration not necessary. To learn more call 541-737-5510 or
email osumba©oregonstate.edu; free; noon-1 p.m.; OSU-Cascades Graduate & Research Center,650 S.W. Columbia St., Building 7000, Bend. "DALLASBUYERSCLUB": A screening of the 2013 film about a man working around the system to help AIDS patients (R); free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541475-3351 or www.jcld.org. BEND IMPROVGROUP:The
comedy groupperforms; adult themes; $8 in advance, $10 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave.; 541-312-
Musician
find inspiration playing around thing's solidified." with a production program on Olivia still has another year Continued from B1 her computer or at the piano to figure out her post-high Olivia's piano teacher, Peter bench. schoolplans, but wants tofocus "Whenever I find the melo- on music andpossibly record a Brownlee, coached her through the Oregon Music Teachers dy, I flnd the words at the same demo. "For me, I don't really know Association piano syllabus, a time," she said. "I'll find some grueling course of piano study beats and shape it to what I'm what I want to do or where I that required her to learn 30 writing about or I'll sit at the fit in yet," Olivia said. "Music, to 40 da s sical pieces over piano and play until something that's mypassion. But we'll see 10 years. He said he always comes." what happens; Istill have to pay likes his students to do their But she's not afraid totesther the bills." best, but Olivia's best is "quite extmordlllary. "Olivia has a talent rather
limits.
"If I don't like the melody or the piano, I just trash it and say like Barry Manilow," Brown- 'I could probably write somelee said. "She has taken dassi- thing better,'" she said. "I probcal music and fused it with her ably have about 100songs that I own creative style. Once in a
haven't finished."
while, you'll hear a harmony Olivia is a regular performer very reminiscent of Debussy or at Volcanic Theatre Pub on 14th Bach."
Olivia said she never really thought about music until her "awkward" transition into high
school. "I never took music too seri-
ously;it was always just a thing that was there for me," she said. "In high school it almost became anecessity form e because I didn't really fit in anywhere and I was looking for a place where I really felt secure." Bend High choir teacher Luke MacSween has taught Olivia since she transferred to the
school and said her music and her voice have grown in that time.
"She's really musically in-
tuitive. It's obvious she's spent a lot of time listening to the greats," MacSween said. "Her
songwriting is really eclectic and modern and she can easily make a career out of it if she wants."
Andria Lindsey, Olivia's
Street and other small venues
around Bend. She's been using the gigs as practice for a private audition in two weeks with pro-
ducers from"The Voice." "They Facebook-messaged me," Olivia said. "It just said, 'We heard your music on YouTube and you have a strong voice, here's our information,
pleasecall us.'" For her audition, she has
been practicing four p op songs for at least two hours a night "just to make sure every-
Olivia Holman,17 Bend High junior Favorite bands:Noah and the Whale, Foreign Talks Favorite classical compositien:"Clair de Lune" by Claude Debussy Favorite classical cemposer:Debussy and Frederic Chopin
IB math teacher, said Olivia's
9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS: JUMP:Local storytellers perform, with special guests; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 503-8605733 or www.solospeak.com. COLD RIVERCITY: Funkandsoul; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331. CODY BEEBE: The Seattle country artist performs; $6 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com.
SATURDAY
bendparksandrec.org.
POLE PEDALPADDLE: Participants will race through multiple sports from Mt. Bachelor to Bend; the Les Schwab Amphitheater, which marks the end of the race, will host a festival with music and vendor booths; free for spectators; 8 a.m.; LesSchwab Amphitheater,344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-388-0002 or www.mbsef.org. REDMONDGARDENCLUB PLANT SALE:The nonprofit club will have a variety of plants, fruits and vegetables to sell, with garden tools, books and garden decor; proceeds benefit school horticulture programs; free admission; 8 a.m.-3 p.m.; Private residence, 3688 S.W. 34th Street; 541-923-3825 or www. redmondoregongardenclub.org. SUMMER STREETFAIR:Featuring vendors, kids' attractions, entertainment, food and more; free;
SCHOOL NOTES REUNIONS
How to submit
Story ideas
Matthew Fiacco,a senior at Bend High, is a member of Troop 21 and earned the rank of Eagle Scout on Jan. 20. For his Eagle service project, Fiacco contributed 129 service hours creating an educational campaign on Hantavirus. He isthe son of Laura and Paul Fiacco, of Bend.
LLAMA FESTIVALAND SHOW: Hosted by the Central Oregon Llama Association, view llamas
on display, purchasellamas, see competitions for obstacle courses and more at the Blackand Blue Festival; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-548-4158, lamabatty©aol.com or www. centraloregonllamas.net. MEGA MOTORHOME AND RV SUPER SALE:Free; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. CENTRAL OREGON GREAT STRIDES:A walk-a-thon for cystic fibrosis; donations accepted; 10 a.m., check-in 9 a.m.; Sam Johnson Park, Southwest15th St. and Southwest Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-480-6703 or www. greatstridescentraloregon.org.
NEWS OF
Jacob Brown, a sophomore at Summit High School, is a member of Troop 21 and earned the rank Bend Senior High School class of of Eagle Scout on Feb. 4. For his 1974 will hold a reunion Aug. 8-9, Eagle service project, "Seven 2014; No Host Bar, 61276 S. U.S. Benches," Brown contributed Highway 97, Bend, 5 to 11 p.m. 195 volunteer hours planning, Aug. 8; Bend Senior High School developing and building seven tour,10a.m. Aug.9; Bend Golf wood benches outsidetheJewish and Country Club, 61045 Country Community of Central Oregon. He Club Drive, Bend,5to11 p.m. is the son of Henri and Debra Aug. 9; visit www.lavabears. Brown, of Bend. — Reporter: 541-633-2117, reunionmanager.com to BenjaminJohnson isa mwarner@bendbulletirt.com register or contact Kathy member of Team 60and Timm at 541-480-4345 or earned the rank of Eagle jktimmland©aol.com. Scout on Feb. 24. For his Fiacco Eagle service Project, COLLEGE Johnson contributed100 hours improving the gazebo NOTES Teen feats:Kids recogand signs at Pilot Butte nized recently for academic Cemetery. He is the son of M adsleins Rods, ofBend, Bruce and Diane Johnson, achievements or for partichas been recognized for of Bend. ipation in clubs, choirs or academic achievement at Jltn John Siemens,a senior volunteer groups. (Please an Honors Day convocation Siemens at Bend High School is at St. Olaf's College in submit a photo.) a member of Boy Scout Northfield, Minn. Contact: 541-383-0358, Venture Crew 66 and has Melissa Monette, of Bend, earned the rank of Eagle youth©bendbulletin.com has been initiated into Phi Scout. For his Eagle service Mail:P.D. Box6020, Bend, Kappa Phi at Kansas State project, he refurbished University in Manhattan, OR 97708 donated tents and provided Kan. camp stoves for Central Other schoolnotes: ColJphn Alyssa Bennett, of Bend, Oregon Veterans Outreach. lege announcements, milihas been initiated into Phi He is the son of Andy and tary graduations or training Kappa Phi at San Jose State Sandy Siemens, of Bend. completions, reunion University. Jim Siemens,a junior announcements. Jeffrey Porter,of Culver, at Bend High School, is has graduated with a a member of Boy Scout Contact: 541-383-0358, bachelor's degree in Venture Crew 66 and has bulletin©bendbulletin.com business administration earned the rank of Eagle from Simpson University in Scout. For his Eagle service Redding, Calif. Porter was project, he was aveteran also named to the Dean's List for guardian and educated local youth spring 2014. School briefs:Items and on World War II veterans. He is the son of Andy and Sandy Siemens, announcements of general of Bend. interest. TEEN FEATS
Contact: 541-633-2161, news©bendbulletin.com Student profiles:Know of a kid with a compelling story? Contact: 541-383-0354, mkehoe@bendbulletin.com
8 a.m.-4 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-3853364 or www.streetfair2014.com. CIVILWAR REENACTMENT AND LIVING HISTORYCAMPS: A full re-enactment by the Northwest Civil War Council, with camps presenting living conditions of early 1863 and more; $8, $5 seniors and students, free for ages younger than 6; 9 a.m.-6 p.m.; House on Metolius, Forest Road 980, Camp Sherman; 866-904-6165 or www. nwcwc.org. LEARN TOFISH: Use loaner rods, reels and tackle to learn to fish, juvenile angling license required for ages14-17, ages17 and younger; free; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 389-7275 or www.
MILITARY NOTES Air Force AirmanWyatt Willis has graduated from basic military training at Joint Base SanAntonioLackland. He is a 2013 graduate of Redmond Proficiency Academy. He is the son of Tabatha and Jerry Willis, of Pilot Butte.
RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must beverifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMEMT Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:52 p.m. May7 intheareaof Big Eddy Circle and Notch RapidCourt. DUII —JamesArthur Gurski, 51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:03 a.m. May 9, in thearea of Southwest Bond Street andSouthwest Reed Market Road. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:10p.m. May9, in the 60200 AddieTriplett Loop. Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest madeat1:23 a.m. May10, in the 2500 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at 7:12 a.m. May10, in the area ofSuttle Lake Court and Metolius Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 7:33 a.m. May10, in the 3300 block of Northeast Mendenhall Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:59a.m. May11, in the 600 block of Southeast GlenedenPlace. DUII —Marlene GayeConger,51, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 7:24 p.m. May11, in the area ofNortheast Butler Market RoadandNortheast Weeping Willow Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:23 p.m. May12, in the1500 block of Northeast SecondStreet. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:27 p.m. May12, in the1100 block of Southeast Third Street.
Continued next page
uniqueness and personality show through her music and songwriting. "You can tell that, when she
A Gift for er-
sings, she's very comfortable with the type ofmusic she represents," Lindsey said. "She's really confident in who she is. (Everyone)loves to be around her because she'ssopositive." In a sense, Olivia has taken
MOTHER'SDAYSP CI%t,
er a
some cuesfrom herolder sister,
Sara, whois also a dassical pianist and has two commercial recordings to her credit and another to be released in July.
r anc
"I grew up going to all of her
t o sme
watching her and I was like, 'That could never be me,' and writing my own music." Olivia said she's trying to create more of an indie pop
sound similar to Lorde, Lana Del Rey and Regina Spektor. She has about 12 songs in her
repertoire, with six she would put on an album. Her favoriteis one she recently penned called "Winter Arms."
"It feels like home when Ilisten to it," she said. 'When I'm
having a bad day, it makes me feel a little better." Her writingprocess isdifferent each time; sometimes she'll
to to r0 IQ 0
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
aeree s eac ers're ues o ea ommon ore ess The Associated Press
and training in teaching to the those results are available, she tests, said Hanna Vaandering, sard. ers union in Oregon wants the president of the Oregon EduSaxton said it's important state to put off new statewide cation Association, a potent for Oregon to give students, testsscheduled for next year political force w it h 4 0 ,000 schools, parents and policybecause a majority of students members. makers accurate information are expected to fail. But state Some students will become about how students measure schools chief Rob Saxton has ill, cry, feel frustrated and feel up against rigorous national refused. their self-worth badly under- standards in reading, writing, The new statewide tests are mined if forced to take state math and analysis beginning part of a n a tional standard tests they aren't equipped to next spring, so that Oregon won't lag behind other states called the Common Core, pass, she said. PORTLAND — The teach-
"Is there any rational reason
and the state Department of Education estimates that 35
in adopting the standards.
whyyou would give an assessStates that have switched percent to 40 percent of Ore- ment that 65 percent of our to Common Core tests saw gon students will pass the first students would fail?" she said. marked improvements in the Teachers and students are second and third years, he year, The Oregonian reported. Teachers in some districts taking samples of the test, sald. have not had enough time and the state should wait until Since 2001, federal educa-
in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Criminal mischief —Anact of Theft —Atheft was reported and criminal mischief was reported at an arrest made at10:33 a.m. May 5, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak 1:31 a.m. May11, in the2500 block of Northeast Twin KnogsDrive. Tree Lane. Burglary —A burglary was Burglary —A burglary was reported at 5:03 p.m. May11, in the700 block of reported at10:45 a.m. May 5, in the 200 block of Southeast Sixth Street. Southwest Industrial Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:59 Theft —A theft was reported at 4:16 p.m. May 5, in the 1200 block of p.m. May10, in the1400 block of Northwest Canal Boulevard. Northwest CollegeWay. DUII —Rodney Everet Ringgenberg, Theft —Atheft was reported at 47, was arrested on suspicion 5:49 p.m. May 9, inthe1500 block of of driving under the influence of Northeast FrankMcCleanCourt. intoxicants at 7:29 p.m. May 5, in the Theft —Atheft was reported at12:38 1700 block of Southwest Parkway p.m. May12, in the61500 block of Drive in Powell Butte. Brosterhous Road. Unauthorized use —A vehicle was Theft —Atheft was reported at reported stolen at 9:44 a.m. May 4:54 p.m. May11, in the100 block of 6, in the 2100 block of Southwest Southeast Third Street. Obsidian Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:55 Theft —Atheft was reported at p.m. May11, in the63100 block of 9:48a.m.May6,in the 400 blockof Eastview Drive. Northwest Larch Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and REDMOMD POLICE an arrest made at12:48 p.m. May 6, in the 700 block of Northwest Fifth DEPARTMENT Street in Warm Springs. Criminal mischief —An act of Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:38 criminal mischief was reported at p.m. May 6, in the 1300 block of 12:54 a.m. May 5, in the 200 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Northwest Dogwood Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported and Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at 5:45 p.m. May 6, an arrest made at 5:15 a.m. May 5, in the 700 block of Northwest Fifth
From previous page
Street in Madras. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at10:15 p.m. May 6, in the 300 block of Northwest Oak Tree Lane. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at 6:57 a.m. May 7, in the 2700 block of Southwest Glacier Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:31 a.m. May 7, in the1300 blockof Southwest Canal Boulevard. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 10:23a.m.May 7,inthe2600 block of Southwest Cascade Mountain Lane. Theft —A theft was reported and an arrest made at11:09 a.m. May 7, in the1700 block of South U.S. Highway 97 in La Pine. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:34 p.m. May 7, in the 700 block of Northwest Fifth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:40 p.m. May 7, in the 1300 block of Southwest Obsidian Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at8:22 p.m.Ma y7,in the 400 block of Southwest 27th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 10:19 a.m. May 8, in the 600 block of Northwest10th Street. Vehicle crash —An accident was reported at5:40 p.m. May8, in the
tion law has required all states
to give standardized reading
AROUND THE STATE Fallen Cllmbar —Rescuers releasedthe nameofa climber from New Jersey whofell about1,000 feet from thetop of Oregon's tallest peak. The HoodRiver County Sheriff's Office says57-year-old Robert Cormier of JerseyCity, NewJersey, diedTuesday.Sheriff's Office spokesman Pete Hughessaid Cormier ascendedMount Hood's south sidewith two others, one ofwhomsuffered aleg cramp. Cormiercontinuedalone and appeared toreachthe summit before hefell nearEliot Glacier atthe volcanic peak50 mileseast of Portland. Ahelicopter photographed him, but crews saw nosigns of life. Hughessays rescuerswill wait until next week to recoverCormier's body.
and math tests in grades three
through eight and in one high school grade every year. All50 states have complied.
Some states have already changed to Common Corealigned tests, and the rest plan to do so in 2015.
No state has made a serious effort to discontinue or
suspend annual reading and math testing, as Vaandering says Oregon should. If Oregon refused to comply, it would jeopardize at least $140 million in f ederal education
Albany killing —Albany police saya 36-year-old Albanywomanhas been shot todeath in herapartment andthey're appealing tothe public for information abouther. Policesaid they got acall about 2a.m. Tuesday from the woman's8-year-old child saying that shewasbleeding. The Albany Democrat-Herald reports that whenofficers arrived, they found Angela EstherStephensondeadof agunshot wound. Capt.Eric Carter says the child wasawakened byanoise andcalled police. Cartersays there's no indication of suicide,andofficers arehoping acquaintances and neighbors canhelpthemdetermine whether shewas kiled bya stranger or someoneshe knew. Winery fire —Damagefrom atwo-alarm fire at the Scott Paul Winery in Carlton, which is located inYamhill County, isestimated atmorethan $300,000. KPTV reports the Sunday night fire damagedthe fermentation room but did notreachwine barrels at the opposite endofthe building. — From wire reports
funding.
area of Southwest 33rd Street and Southwest Reservoir Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at 9:28a.m.May 9,in the200 blockof Southwest Rimrock Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 12:07p.m.May9,in the 2200 block of Southwest Canal Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at1:05 p.m. May 9, in the area of Southwest 27th Place and Southwest Quartz Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 3:56 p.m. May 9, in the 8100 block of11th Street. DUII —Brandon Taylor Danley, 23, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:02 a.m. May10, in the 400 block of Southwest Glacier Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:26 p.m. May10, in the 600 block of Southwest11th Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 2:19 p.m. May 10, in the 1300 block of Southwest17th Street. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 4:17 p.m. May10, in the 300 block of Southwest 27th Street in Terrebonne. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 5:29 p.m. May10, in the1700 block of Southwest Odem MedoWay. Criminal mischief —An act of
criminal mischief was reported at 6:58 p.m. May10, in the 1800 block of Southwest Veterans Way. Burglary —A burglary was reported at10:41 p.m. May10, in the1100 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Unauthorized use —A vehicle was reported stolen at 2:04 a.m. May11, in the 800 block of Northeast Larch Avenue. Criminal mischief —An act of criminal mischief was reported at 11:01 a.m. May11, in the 400 block of Northwest Sixth Street. Unlawful entry —A vehicle was reported entered at12:57 p.m. May 11, in the 2200 block of Southwest 19th Street. Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at 8:41 p.m. May11, in the area of U.S. Highway 97 and Southwest Evergreen Avenue.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT DUU —Nicholas Rodin, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 3:09 a.m. May12, in thearea of Northeast Mariposa Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at6:18a.m. May 12, in the area ofNortheast Mariposa Avenue.
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RUNS May5 8 —Medical aid calls. May6 6:45p.m.—Building fire, 1250 S.W. 28th St. 9:39p.m.— Unauthorized burning, 21170 Arid Ave. 4 — Medical aid calls. Mayl 9 — Medical aid calls. Thursday 12 —Medical aid calls. Friday 11:15 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 3838 N.W.SpruceAve. 5 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 1:52 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 7000 S.W.Quarry Ave. 9 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 4:33p.m.—Authorized controlled burning, 6100South U.S.Highway 97. 7 —Medical aid calls.
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REDMOND NAGAZINE DISCQVER EVERYTHING THISCHARMINQTQWlllHASTOOFFERFROM ITS HERITAGE TOTHEARTS,THERE'8SOMETHING FOREVERVONEIN REllMOlllD
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SISTERS MAGAZINE WELCOME TQTHECENTRALOREQON TOWN OFSISTERS SISTERS MAGAZINEHONORSTHEUllllQUENESSOFTHISMOllNTAI TOW N Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businesses that make uP the baCkbOne Of thiS Small mOuntain tOWn. In the COming year, eaCh editiOn Will highlight SiSterS' eVentS WhiCh draW thOuSandS to the area.
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on't buy the idea that because the U.S. Forest Servicehas losta couple ofcourtcasesabout some fees
~8%~ qgboDEljNe
it charges, other fees will go up. Those making the claim argue that the court losses leave the agency no other choice. Congress is already working on another choice. Fees are abone of contention for some national forest users. The land, they argue, belongs to all of us, and if some forest visitors are not using developed facilities, they shouldnot be charged to be there. There are problems with t h at argument. Most forest users, even those who head to the wilderness, end up using something the Forest Service must maintain. Trailheads often are marked withsigns and maps, as are trail intersections. Maintenance of even those facilities must be done. That costs money. The law that has led to such confusion over where fees can be charged is the Federal Land Recreation Enhancement Act. It gives the Forest Service the power to chargefees— under certain conditions. Unfortunately, within the bill there are conflicting definitions of where the fees may be charged, according to Andrew Malcolm in the office of U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River. The act expires at the end of next year,Malcolm says,and the House of Representatives' Natural Resources Committee is already
working on changes it hopes to make in getting the measure reauthorized. Among those changes will b e l anguage clarifying just where the Forest Service may
charge day-use fees.
Vote yes on the Bend fire levy t
Current discussions center on what's available at a given forest site. To charge fees, bathrooms would be required, as would any three of the following four: trash collection, permanent interpretive materials, picnic tables and the routine presence of law enforcement personnel. The list is not cast in stone, at this point. If forests are to be able to handle the visitors they receive, and if the Forest Service is to be able to build new recreation sites and maintain old ones, the money must come from somewhere. Given the size of the federal debt, the nation's tax dollars are an unlikely source. Visitor fees, then, will have to pick up the slack. Congressional changes, which we believe both houses should approve without fuss, will allow the Forest Service to continue to charge small entrance fees under some circumstances. Doing so helps the agency recover maintenance costs and, as a side benefit, hold other fees down.
By Ted.C. Lyster IN MY VIEW came to Bend in early 1965 (almost 50 years ago), when the ten the difference between life and population was about 12,500 and
The most highly skilled surgeon
its. At that time, Bend was a lumber town located at the crossroads of
in the world, operating in the finest
equipped hospital, is of little help if the patient doesn't survive to get to him. So what's the answer? Money, of course; it takes money to hire
the state. St. Charles Hospital was on the hill near the center of town and the city had one fire hall (downtown), and only one two-wheel drive ambulance.
wanted to have a voice in their own destiny.
For almost 240 years, Americans have fought,
bled and died to protect the right of citizens to and train the backup crews so that they are available to cover when the vote and control their own
A lot has changed since then.
Today, the area population is about on-duty personnel are called out. 100,000 with many of the "newcomers" retirees. St. Charles Hospital
The solution is simple, and it's
easy. All that needs to be done is pass the upcoming five-year bond
is now a giant "state-of-the-art" medical center located northeast of
future through the power of the secret ballot. Please don't waste their sacrifice.
measure: 9-97 for those in RFD2
and 9-98 for Bend voters, it's relahas five fully equipped rescue am- tively painless. The levies, respec- ally counts. bulances in firehouse substations tively, will cost 20 cents per $1,000 Please vote YES on ballot mealocated strategically throughout the valuation per year for five years. sure 9-97/9-98. That's $50 per year for owners of a coverage area. Let me add one more thing. Our It sounds great, the Cinderella $250,000 home, but that will effec- great nation was founded by peostory of a logging community that tively be reduced to about $15 per ple who wanted to have a voice in has evolved into a modern, upscale, year due to the expiration of the their own destiny. For almost 240 city that's home to a world-class Bend Library and Deschutes Coun- years, Americans have fought, bled medical facility. ty jail levies. That's a small price to and died to protect the right of citSo what's the problem'? We have pay if it saves the life of a loved one. izens to vote and control their own the hospital and each fire substaMy home is outside the city, and I future through the power of the setion has its fire engines and an know that if a member of my family cret ballot. Please don't waste their ambulance. issick orinjured and needs an am- sacrifice. The problem is that, for the first bulance, I want them to get help as The ballots for this election have time in its history, the Bend Fire soon as absolutely possible and I'm already been mailed and by this Department and the Deschutes sure you feel the same way about time you should have received Rural Fire Protection District No. your family. Those first few minutes them. It's up to you to make an in2 cannot, within the constraints of are golden and could well mean the formed decision, mark your choictheir current budget, afford to hire difference between life and death. es, sign the envelope, add a stamp and train enough qualified personThe Bend Fire Department and and mail them. It's a small effort to nel to consistently meet satisfactory the Deschutes County Rural Fire repay a huge debt to those who have response times, and on ambulance Protection District need your help earned you this right. Please vote! calls minutes are very precious, of- so that they can help you when it re— Ted C. Lyster lives in Bend. Pilot Butte and the fire department
Bulletin endorsements elow are The Bulletin's endorsements for the May 20 primary election. The editorial board interviews candidates only in contested races. Ballots must be returned to county clerks' offices by 8 p.m. on Election Day. To read the endorsements, please go to www.bendbulletin.com/endorsements.
• Republican nomination: Dennis Richardson House District 59 • Republican nomination: John Huffman
FEDERAL Senate • Democratic nomination: Jeff Merkley • Republican nomination: Jason Conger House District2 • Democratic nomination: Aelea Christofferson • Republicannomination: Greg Walden STATE Governor • Democratic nomination: John Kitzhaber
CROOKCOUNTY
B
death.
most folks lived inside the city lim-
Our great nation was founded by peoplewho
DESCHUTES COUNTY • Circuit court judge: RandyMiller • County commissioner, seat1: Tony DeBone • District attorney: Patrick Flaherty • Bend fire levy, Measures 9-97 and 9-98: Yes • County commissioner, position 2: Seth Crawford • Making commissioner officers nonpartisan, Measure 7-62: Yes
JEFFERSON COUNTY • County commissioner, position 1: Tom Brown • County commissioner, position 2: Mike Ahern • Lake Chinook Fire andRescueDistrict bond: Yes
Letters policy
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In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
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 My View
P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Spear has superior experience NI Nickel's Worth By James Bailey IN MY VIEW homas "T.J." Spear's overwhelming courtroom expe- lives, and just as we all would prefer rience which includes seven an experienced surgeon to one who years as a pro tem circuit court has never operated before, having judge make him not just the better an experienced judge presiding candidate for Deschutes County over what could be a life-changing Circuit Court judge but the only event is vastly preferable to a judge truly qualified candidate. who will learn on the job. Both Thomas Spear and Randy Candidates for elected posiMiller have military experience. tions round up endorsements from Both men have families, and both friends and co-workers, but two unhave friends and colleagues who solici ted endorsements ofSpearcarlike them. However, when you com- ry particular weight. First, the Depare their backgrounds in terms schutes County attorneys favored of qualifications to be judge, only Spear 69-31 percent over Miller in Spearhas the necessary experience. the Oregon State Bar poll. Such an We all know how important exoverwhelming preference by profesperience is in all aspects of life, but sionals who are in court all the time in certain fields it is the most im- is compelling. When the people who portant characteristic. Parties to le- practice law for a living and who ungal proceedings and their attorneys derstand the legalprocess best favor know it is crucial that the judge pre- one candidate over another by more siding over the dispute knows how than 2-1, it is clear that Spear is the c ourtrooms operate and k n o w s right man for the job. how to maintain control in t h at The second unsolicited endorsecourtroom. ment is perhaps even more signifSpear has been an attorney for icant: Spear was appointed to the 19 years; Miller for nine. Spear Deschutes County Circuit Court in has had over 200 jury trials; Miller 2007, then reappointed twice more. has had one. Spear has served as a Each time his appointment required judge for over seven years; Miller the agreement of the Oregon Sunever. The disparity in their experi- preme Court and th e Deschutes ence is profound. County presiding judge. When the A courtroom dispute is often a state's highest court and our own life-altering moment in the parties' county court have both recognized
T
the high caliber of Spear's work as a judge and when Spear's experience and performance have impressed those most capable of evaluating his qualifications for judge, unquestionably Spear is the right man for the job. I also want to mention briefly
the peculiarity of The Bulletin's endorsement in this race. The Bulletin endorsed Miller for two reasons: he
has civil litigation experience, and he is "enthusiastic." Spear also has civil litigation experience, so that
distinction is meaningless, particularly in light of Spear's considerable overall litigation experience. As for "enthusiasm," no litigator I know would want an "enthusiastic" judge presiding over his or her trial rather than a judge whose experience and personality projected confidence and calm as does Spear's.
I have been an attorney for almost 30 years, and I have never been motivated to write a letter en-
dorsing any candidate for office. However, when the disparity in ex-
perience is as great as it is in this election, I felt it important to write
in support of Thomas Spear. I urge you to vote in the best interest of
the Deschutes County. I urge you to vote for Thomas Spear for circuit
court judge. — James Bailey lives in Bend.
Vote for Flaherty Patrick Flaherty is criticized for
site just by "clicking" on tabs. We all talk about debt, but to really understand that the United States has $129
letting go of ineffective prosecutors, trillion of unfunded liabilities, which but John Hummel's charges about is equivalent to $1.1 million per those firings are double talk in my taxpayer, is really mind-boggling. opinion. The lawsuits and investiga- And the $17.5 trillion debt equals to tions were found to be without merit. $55,200 per citizen and/or $151,600 The people who brought the suits are for each taxpayer. And our own state responsible for the costs to Deschutes debt is a whopping $37-plus billion or County, not Flaherty. $9,600 per citizen. The complaint "39% not prosecutAs a citizen of the United States ed" is a false complaint. Those cases and Oregon, Icould not conceive are adjudicated at arraignment or be- how our family would ever be able fore trial, actually avoidingexpensive to finance the United States and Oretrials. gon debts without selling our "souls." Hummel's charges are designed to For all of you who stay within a manconfuse the facts, but the job descrip- aged budget to pay your automobile, tion makes it clear. Patrick Flaherty groceries, housing, taxes, utilities, is the man for the job. He is a prosecu- among many other expenses, KUtor with 25 years' experience and the DOS to you! However, the financial district attorney's office is running direction our country is going the efficiently. wrong way and corrective action is John Hummel has no prosecutori- required. al experience — zero experience as That being said, it is important a DA. John Hummel is just not qual- and our God-given right to vote for ified. Those are my opinions. candidates and measures. However, Cary Robles we all should have a thorough unBend derstanding of candidates' positions and tax consequences for measures
Debt clock is ticking
It would be very interesting for all citizens to take the time to investigate the debt clock at www.usdebtclock.
org. It just boggles your mind as to how much information is within that
presented to us for a vote. The other ingredients are truth and trust. So
questions you must ask yourself who can we trust and who is telling the truth!
Wayne Holland Bend
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
course will be held at Deschutes Fair 8 Expo Center June13. Held Continued f/om Bt in conjunction with ATVSafety Week, the hands-on training will demonstrate proper operation All-ages ATVsafety of your machine, protective gear course offered and how to minimize risk. AcA free all-terrain vehicle safety cording to ATVSafety Institute,
92 percent of all ATV-related fatalities are caused by unsafe behaviors such as youth riding on adult vehicles. To learn more, sign up or take a free e-course, go to www. atvsafety.org.
Revitalize
ing affordable housing, ac-
LOCAL BRIEFING
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES
B5
— Bulletin staff reports
Jeanne Marie Gough, of Bend
Oct. 6, 1926 - Mar. 21, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net
Continued from 61 The City Council is inter-
ested in helping the area to develop into a more vibrant
Services: A private service was held.
business a n d r e s i dential district, where it would be
easier and more pleasant for
Terry Joe Taylor, of
people to walk and ride their
Redmond Oct. 28, 1963 - May 7, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: An Urn Committal service with military honors will take place Thursday, May 15, 2014 at 10:30 AM at Willamette National Cemetery, located at 11800 SE Mt. Scott Boulevard in Portland, OR. A Memorial Service will be held Saturday, May 17, 2014 at 3:00 PM at VFW Post 4108, located at 1836 SW Veterans Way in
Redmond, Oregon. Beverly Thomas, of Bend
Jan. 25, 1935 - May 11, 2014
Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com, 541-382-2471 Services: Celebration of Life: Saturday, May 17, 2014, 11:00 a.m. at Niswonger-Reynolds Chapel. Visitation is Friday, May 16, from 3:00 to 7:00 p.m., at Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths ofnote from around theworld: Malik Bendjelloul, 36: The
acclaimed Swedish film director behind the Oscar-winning
music documentary"Searching for Sugar Man." The fihn, which detailed the life and ca-
reer of American singer Sixto Rodriguez, won the Oscar for best documentary in 2013. Died
in Stockholm late Tuesday. William Worthy, 92: A correspondent for the Baltimore Af-
bikes. The transformation would take years because city p l anners an d Swiss artist H.R. Giger poses with two of his works at the art museum in Chur, Switzerland, in 2007. Giger, whose work often showed scenesof humans and machines fused into hellish hybrids, died Monday at age 74 from injuries suffered in a fall.
Macabreartist H.R.Giger designedthe creature in sci-fi horrorclassic'Alien' By Frank Jordans
a ppeared on t h e
BERLIN —
S w i s s a r tis t
H.R.Giger,whodesignedthe creature in Ridley Scott's scifi horror classic "Alien," died at age 74 from injuries suffered in a fall, his museum said Tuesday. Sandra Mivelaz, adminis-
or whether to adopt them sooner as separate amendments to city code. The state
c o ver o f
1 9 7 3 album by the rock band
Emerson, Lake and Palmer. Along with his design for Debbie Harry's solo album, "Koo Koo" (1981), it was featured in a 1991Rolling Stone magazine list of the top 100
f
machines fused into ,$ hellish hybrids, influenced a generation of Giger movie directors and inspired an enduring
'60s. Died May 4 at a senior liv-
father insisted he learn a trade. His mother,
C"f-cf 8 " . O i ' PI78 ttr BI'6
s tains st and o u t less o n his clothes.
Chur, he trained as CygZy" While his work an industrial dewas commercially signer because his — H.R. Giger, in a successful, critics 1979interviewwith d e rided it as mor-
Starlog magazine bid kitsch. His designs were exhibited more frequently
Melli, to whom he showed a lifelong in "Alien" t h eme devotion, encouraged her b a rs, short-lived Giger muson's passion for art, despite seums and at tattoo convenhis unconventional obsession tions than in established art with death and sex that found
little appreciation in 1960s rural Switzerland. The host of one of his early exhibitions
g a l l eries.
In 1 9 98, Giger acquired t h e C h ateau St. Germain in G r u y eres and established the
was reportedly forced to wipe H.R. Giger Museum. the spit of disgusted neighGig er was pleased that his dy was assassinated in Dallas bors off the gallery windows idea of machines with human and who became a high-rank- every morning. skin became a popular motif ing Secret Service official A collection of h i s e ar - in b o d y a r t . "The greatest compliment during Johnson's administra- ly work, "Ein Fressen fuer "A Feast is when people get tattooed tion. Died on Saturday at his den Psychiater" home in Hoover, Ala. for the Psychiatrist" — used w i t h m y w o rk , whether it's Samuel Halperin, 83: Helped mainly ink and oil, but Giger d o n e w el l o r n o t," h e t o ld shape laws dramatically ex- soon discovered the airbrush Seconds magazine in 1994. panding access to public ed- and pioneered his own free- "To wear something like that ucation during the 1960s and hand technique. your whole life is the largest remained involved in national Giger also created sculp- complimentsomeonecanpay education policy for more than tures, preferably using metal, to you as an artist." four decades. Died May 6 at his Styrofoam and plastic. D etails on sur vi v o r s Giger's vision of a human and funeral plans were not home in Washington, D.C. President Lyndon B. Johnson when President John F. Kenne-
-
— From wire reports
skull encased in a machine
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries RO. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708
s t a te
refers to this type of development as low-intensity or low-density because there
imately 206 acres, from Revere Avenue to the north to the train tracks near Burnside Avenue to the south and
are fewer businesses or homes packed into each unit
of land. "What wehave to balance
when Third Street was the
commercial d evelopment, said Arnis, the Growth Man-
Education Foundation and district.
The discussion centered
agement Department director. "We have people who are vested out there, who are
in a certain zone type and if we are wanting to change that zone type, it's a really
big question for folks. So we
housing units such as two- to
four-story apartments and
want to move slowly." — Reporter: 541-617-7829,
condominiums there, includ-
hborrud@bendbullettn.com
Kinkade noted that many
Board member Mike Jensen said he supports allowing
high school students fail to report needing free or reduced lunch. She suggested that loweringthe fee may encourage
is capped at $300 for high school athletics. Students who are identified as needing free or reduced lunch are eligible for scholarships through the
all students to participate, but
that he is concerned how a reduction or elimination of
more participation as more low-income students would
fees may affect other school
"In abstract, say we reduce
board has the ability to al-
operations. be able to afford it without reNo action was taken to ceiving a scholarship. change athletic fees or any Budget committee member other aspects of the 2014-15 Tom Bahrman said he want- school year budget. It was ed more information on how approved by the budget comstudents would react to fee mittee, which serves as an changes. advisory group. The school
it, it may have an impact or ter the budget and has final ticipation of students unable not," he said. "Cost should not say on implementation. Final to aff ord the fee and embar- be a barrier at all; that's my board approval of the budget rassed by the prospect of be- philosophy. But is changing is expected in June. ing identified as eligible for a cost the answer and by how — Reporter: 541-633-2160, scholarship. much? Let's find out." tleeds@bendbulletin.com on how to encourage the par-
Grant
by visiting different schools that use these learning mod-
els," DeSouza said. "In order Continued from B1 The award coincides to do all of this, there must be with the opening of the a lot of professional developWarm Springs K-8 Acad- ment, and we're going to start emy this coming fall. The by building that foundation." school, funded jointly by The school will begin by the Confederated Tribes of emphasizing blended learnWarm Springs and a bond ing, a strategy in which stuapproved by J e fferson d ents complete tasks w i t h County voters, will replace the help of technology, often Warm Springs Elemen- working on their own or in tary, which did not host smallgroups.Th ebiggerchalmiddle school s t udents. lenge for the school entails deDespite being on the reser- velopingrubricsfor self-masvation, the school is a part tery, an approach in which of the Jefferson County students progress by demonSchool District. strating certain skills outlined The school's planning by teachers. "The goal is to have stuprincipal, Glenna DeSouza, said the money will be dents really understand what used to train teachers in the adoption of a curriculum
that will emphasize new instruction
they need to know to make it to the next level," DeSouza said. "It takes a lot of work to
develop the rubrics we will be using." Tied up with personal mastery is project-based instruction, in which students learn
lessons by completing projects integrated across differ-
ent classes. Aside from professional development, funds will be used to foster connections between the tribe's history and students. "We're connecting with the
Museum at Warm Springs to provide cultural arts pro-
grams after school and even during school for certain classes," DeSouza said.
"We're also looking at bringing language instruction into the school, and starting that with kindergarten students." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
tec h n iques,
aimed at allowing students to master skills while working i n d ependently and on large projects. "We've developed the model over the past year
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com l e t rn
A Li e Celehvation Blaine M. Knop 01.26.1924 — 03.10.2014
Miriam C. (Burke) Knop 11.1e.1924 — 10.09.2011
A Life Celebration for Blaine and Mim will be held 1:00PMon Friday, May 16, 2014
617-7825.
drive-throughs. Th e
to fix. The state found Bend
a v a i lable.
T e
prohibit the future development ofbusinesses such as
area has developed over the years along Third Street,"
$100. A family's total cost
that was attributed
p lanned, it would l i mit o r
is that's how the commercial
Continued from B1 Currently, middle school students pay $40 per activity; high school students pay
for s p e cial effects. Fre-
If the city applies state guidelines for bike- and pedestrian-friendly u s age to the area as currently
Fourth Street. The area was z oned fo r i n d ustrial a n d
School
chanical" tattoos. MP' P B l rtilitgS to him on screen. "lVly Paintings Sgfam ~O The image of a seem to make the brooding, mystestrongest impresr ious a r t is t w a s sion on people who Stl'OitgBSP nurtur e d by Giger are, well, who are fmpfBSSjpii w orking only a t crazy," Giger said night, keeping his in a 1979 interview O~ P~OP ~ curtains p e rmawith Starlog mag- W170 Bl'6, nently drawn and dress i n g main azine. " If they like yygll yyQp ' my work they are ly in black — a " " Y creative ... or they habit he acquired are crazy." they like my w hil e working as a Born Hans Rue- ®pf.p fhfay prfa draftsman because di Giger on Feb. 5, it made Indian ink 1940, in the eastern Swiss town of
use other forms of transportation in the area.
from Bend Parkway east to
ing to a computer model, the plan would allow Sec-
qu e ntly frustrated by t he Ho l l ywood producti o n process, Giger eventually d i sowned much of the work
fashion for "biome-
the numbers of people who walk, ride their bikes and
rejected a previous Bend growth plan and identified a list of problems for the city
Lewis said that accord-
a l b um covers of all time.
,', ~
toric downtown, workplaces to the north and the Old Mill District to the south, as well as setting targets for
did not plan for enough infill main U.S. Highway 97, beand redevelopment, and city fore the parkway was built. employees believe a redevelOne goal of the project is opment plan in the city cen- to make it possible for propter is one way to address the erty owners in the area to state's concerns. develop at l east 500 new
trator of the H.R. Giger muGig er went on to work as a seum in Gruyeres, in western set designer for Hollywood, S witzerland, told The Associ- c o n t ributing t o "Species," ated Press that Giger died in a "Poltergeist II," "Dune" and hospital on Monday. most famously "Alien," ' = - : " : for which he received a Giger's works, of' +' "; 1979 Academy Award ten showing macabre scenes of humans and
Other goals include improving connections to the his-
Technical Advisory Committee and project team meeting When:2 to 4:30 p.m. May 21 Where:Mt. Bachelor Room, City Hall, 710 N.W. Wall St., Bend
o t h ers
update to the city's expansion plan that is under way,
"Br'ain Salad Surgery," a
The Associated Press
cording to a city document.
involved are talking about ond and Fourth streets to ideas for new guidelines that accommodate future traffic would apply to future rede- increases as the area revelopment in the area. develops. They will still be Transportation engineer slower-speed, more local Robin Lewis said city offi- streets, Lewis said. "But recials have not yet decided ally ... they will better serve whether to incorporate the the land uses right abutting proposed zoning and trans- them." portation changes into the The area covers approx-
Arno Balzarini/ Keystone /The Associated Press file photo
ro-American newspaper who made news — and inspired a folk song — by challenging U.S. policies to report from China and Cuba in the 1950s and ing facility in Brewster, Mass. Lorenzo Zambrano, 70: Built Cemex SAB into the biggest cement producer in the Americas with a two-decade, $29 billion buying spree and then saw the Mexicancompany flirtwith default. Died of natural causes in Madrid Monday. Lem Johns, 88: A Secret Service agent who guarded Vice
Ifyougo:
at Living Savior Lutheran Church in Tualatin. Pleasevisit the full life story at wtNtNyoungsfuneralhome.org In lieu of flowers the family suggests contributions to the Alzheimer's Foundation of America of The Alzheimer's Association.
~)
r++
Lillirtn (Btrnny) Line March7, 1921 — April 30, 2014 Lilt (B y) a p d y peacefully on April 30, 2014, after a brief illness, She wasborn in Hancock, Michigan on March 7, 1921, to Mary and Arthur Kelly, and grewup in the Upper Peninsula of M i chigan, After g r aduating from Houghton H igh Sc hool, she attended secretarial college in BufFalo, NY, During WWII she worked for Lt, Frank Pace, taking depositionsregarding plane crashes, In 1943, she married Waiter Line in Detroit, Michigan, They havetwo daughters,Linda Cohen of Bend, O R, and Laura Line, of Gaittesville, FL, one granddaughter, Keiii, and two greatgranddaughters, Liiii and Kazli, of Tustin, CA, Hezhusband, Wally, as well assiblings, Florence, Katherine, and John Kelly ali preceded her in death, Bunny was always busy, with hez family, her garden, as anexecutive secretary for Ford Motors, and with her many friends and neighbors, She and Wally spent their working years living outside of Detroit, and then moved to Torch Lake, MI, to retire, They were "stmwbizds" for many years, alternating their time between Michigan and Florida. In Gainesville, Bunny loved playing golf, mahjong, and attending the United Church of Gainesville, She spenthez last few yearsenjoying life in Bend, at Touchmazk, We aii miss her spirit and her love, The family held a private celebration of her life,
B6
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided by ACCM Weather, Inc. ©2014
o
I
r
'
I
TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
"'" LGW 48' ~
HIGH 83' Mostly sunnyandwarmer
I f' I
ALMANAC EAST:Mostlysunny TEMPERATURE and very warmtoday Yesterday Normal Record Mostly clear tonight. 75 64 90' i n 1924 Partly sunny and still 37' 36' 19'in 1955 warm tomorrow.
PRECIPITATION
38'
Breezy andnot as warm with clouds andsun
Seasid 77/52
Cannon
Clouds and sunwith a shower; breezy
cify
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 63/50/0.02 72/44/s 81/50/s 86/63/0.83 72/55/I 67/42/r 74/61/Tr 76/59/c 79/63/pc 55/38/Tr 64/47/s 75/53/s 64/38/0.00 67/44/s 66/46/s 86/67/0.00 86/63/I 73/52/r 66/62/0.02 62/56/r 67/63/pc 68/56/4.10 71/43/pc 79/47/s 86/65/0.00 73/62/c 82/64/pc 63/36/0.01 64/43/pc 69/47/I
•
Firs t
•
Bandon
7:48 p.m. 4:08 a.m.
• Silver Lake 82/45 83/46 Gra 73/ Chiloquin 56 MedfO d ' 84/46 Gold ach
The highertheAccuWenurer.rxrmuyIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgon.0-2 Lcw, 35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme.
POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ee s Moderate Moderate
Bro ings
Wee d s A b sent
91/5
Yesterday Today Thursday
city
•
Beaver Marsh
Ch ristmas alley
• Burns Jun tion • 80/48
Rome • Lakeview
Fields •
81/47
Mcoermi
78/44
78/49
Yesterday Today Thursday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 80/48/0.00 84/50/pc 69/52/pc L n Grande 73 / 34/0.00 79/40/s 83/47/pc 72/31/0.00 78/37/s 83/44/pc Ln Pine 76/26/0.00 82/48/s 81/42/pc 84/51/Tr 7 3/51/pc 66/50/pc M edfnrd 91/4 9/0.00 95/59/s 91/54/pc 72/28/0.00 79/44/s 84/46/pc N e wport 7 3/48 /0.00 79/50/pc 66/46/pc 80/42/0.00 88/53/pc81/45/pc NorthBend 75/46/0.00 78/53/pc 66/49/pc 77/38/0.00 84/46/s 83/42/pc O ntario 76/37/0.00 81/48/s 87/53/pc 75/30/0.00 78/44/s 82/44/pc Pendleton 78/44/0.00 82/52/s 85/53/pc
City Portland Prineville Redmond Roseburg Salem Sisters The Onlles
Yesterday Today Thursday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Lo/W 85/5 1/0.0089/58/pc87/53/ pc 75/ 3 4/0.0085/51/s 81/43/pc
Duluth El Paso Fairbanks
Baker City Brnnkings 78/ 32/0.0085/47/s 86/43/pc Bums 89 / 49/0.00 92/57/s 86/51/pc Eugene 84/46/0.00 88/54/pc84/48/ pc Klnmnfh Falls 73/30/0.00 85/47/s 85/43/pc Lnkeview 8 5 / 41/0.00 91/50/s 90/54/pc Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clnudy, sh-shnwers,t-thunderstnrms,r-rnin, sf-snnwflurries, sn-snnwi-ice,Tr-frnce,Yesterday data nsnf 5 p.m. yesterday
Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Green sny Greensboro Harrisburg Hsrffnrd, CT Helena Honolulu Houston
NATIONAL WEATHER
Source: OregonAllergyAssocintes 541-683-1577
~ fgs ~os ~ o s WATER REPORT NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 536 6 0 97% YESTERDAY 89'yo 48 contiguous Wickiup 178955 states) Crescent Lake 7 5 8 21 87% National high: 99 Ochoco Reservoir 35041 79% at Santa Ana,CA Prinevige 149209 t 00% National low 10 River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. at Laramie, WY
86/66/0.00
Cleveland 88/67/0.63 ColoradoSprings 49/30/Tr Columbia, Mo 57/50/0.24 Columbia, SC 91/69/0.00 Columbus,GA 87/68/0.00 Columbus,OH 88/70/0.03 Concord, NH 55/48/Tr Corpus Christi 77/67/1.38 Dallas 71/55/0.08 Dayton 86/69/0.00 Denver 52/31/0.00 Oes Moines 61/48/Tr Detroit 88/64/0.65
76/48
• Paisley
84/46
Cincinnati
Jordan V Hey
Frenchglen 80/46
• Ashl nd Falls
73/51
2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asturin
~ B~ N 5
92/57
Klamath
5: 5 2 a.m. 4 : 5 5 p.m.
UV INDEX TODAY
Ro seburg
78/53
~ fo s ~2 06 ~3 0s ~d os ~5 0s ~e os ~7 06 ~a os ~gos ~toos ~ffos
Huntsville Indianapolis
cnlgn
Jackson, MS Jacksonville
O
54/37/0.60 70/49/0.00 63/43/Tr 53/40/0.09 55/33/0.00 76/69/0.06 60/48/Tr 90/64/0.00 85/61/0.00 71/55/0.00 67/32/0.00 81/71/0.13 75/65/3.45 87/68/0.00 79/68/1.12 87/71/0.00 84/66/0.00
57/46/0.00 82/61/0.00 6 /56 • 78/54 • n Mn kon o Auckland 64/52/0.45 Baghdad 95/73/0.00 nl Bangkok 97/84/0.02 P nndnlpbln Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 297 Precipitation: 3.18" • C ' ngu Cuiu eeijing 86/58/0.00 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 709 at Houston, TX Beirut 73/63/0.00 n n ciscn S a lt Lake ify hingtun mn • Onn 67/51 d d d X Berlin 60/48/0.20 Deschutes R.below Bend 89 90/58 d~ Lnn V nn Bogota 66/48/0.03 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1690 Kansas City 66/72 Budapest 61/45/0.19 Little Deschutes near LaPine 62/43 280 d d d d BuenosAires 70/54/Tr Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 58 * Chnriu Lnn An len 91/64/0.00 Cnbn Snn Lucns oddd Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 216 69/ Cairo 82/63/0.00 Phnnn x \ Anchurng Albuque ue Lit t leRckfto Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 173 Calgary 63/37/0.02 • 92nf 67/4 n 0 64/47 Cnncun 86n5/0.00 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 51 • onnn Juneau El Pnn Dublin 61/43/0.04 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 0 Sa47 1/62 Edinburgh 62/36/0.04 ha/41 Geneva 54/43/0.16 ;,'ob ', d ncIO Hsrnre 78/52/0.00 In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday Orlunnn Hong Kong 88/79/0.03 Honolulu Chihuahua ~~~W/57 Ski resort New snow Base Istanbul 73/61/0.00 72/46 Jerusalem 66/54/0.06 0 96- 1 52 Mt. Bachelor Johannesburg 69/44/0.00 M t. Hood Meadows 0 112-1 3 1 Limn 75/64/0.00 0 85- 1 56 Timberline Lodge Lisbon 79/55/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 London 61/48/0.31 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid 0-0 Cold Front Park City Mountain, UT 0 75/52/0.00 Manila 97/82/0.00 Source: OnTheSnuw.cum
Q
SKI REPORT
O U R C O M n iUNllv
68/50/r
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Puorin Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
Rapid City Renn Richmond Rochester, NY
Sacramento SI. Louis Salt Lake City Snn Antonio Ssn Diego Snn Francisco Snn Jose Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa W ashingt on,OC
79/57/s
70/45/pc 54/32/pc 71/35/s
54/31/pc 63/33/s 60/43/r 58/39/c 88/65/pc 74/63/c
50/38/sh 55/36/I 74/56/I 84/59/pc 72/58/c 76/62/pc 72/46/pc 74/50/I
85nz/pc ssn5/pc 74/51/pc 79/57/I 62/46/r 76/48/I 85/70/pc
76/56/s 67/48/r 56/44/c 69/47/s 84/61/I
57/42/sh 82/59/s 61/52/sh 92/72/s 97/82/c 78/55/pc 74/62/s 56/40/pc 65/48/I 60/45/r 73/57/pc 91/64/s 89/70/s 68/42/pc 88/72/pc 60/45/c 59/50/pc 58/38/sh 76/47/s 87/78/pc 73/59/pc 71/56/s 68/45/s 76/62/pc 83/61/s 64/46/s 79/54/s 94/78/I
57/43/s 75/55/s 63/48/pc
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Litiie Rock Lus Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
58/28/pc 60/34/pc 78/54/s 85/57/pc 67/56/c 72/58/pc 64/59/c 69/61/pc 69/60/I 70/49/I 74/59/c 79/61/c 56/46/sh 73/56/pc 86/69/s 82/66/I 86/65/pc 75/56/r 80/63/I 68/49/r 57/36/pc 58/40/I 58/43/r 54/42/I 72/52/r 62/42/r 68/53/I 62/41/r 58/39/pc 66/41/pc 60/45/r 61/41/pc 88/68/s 81/60/I 86/66/I 75/52/r 72/58/I 65/43/r 68/53/c 75/58/pc 75/55/pc 82/53/s 69/47/pc 81/54/s 66/51/r 61/40/r 60/38/pc 66/42/pc 66/42/pc 62/36/sh 64/47/r 56/41/r 52/30/c 50/30/c 71/52/s 67/37/s
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W 61/49/0.01 62/41/r 63/48/Tr 62/43/pc 80/65/0.41 62/44/r 81/62/0.00 86n2/s 85/67/Tr 74/56/I 64/43/0.00 66/37/pc 64/63/1.20 62/46/r 94/65/0.00 99/66/s 88/71/0.00 72/53/I 57/52/0.37 61/41/c 83/70/0.15 66/47/r ssne/o.o5 87n6/I 66/59/0.94 52/43/r 53/46/0.00 59/38/c
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln
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Montreal
Moscow Nairobi Nassau
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PREMIUM HEARING AIDS
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Celebrate with Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices - Lowest Ever on: Freedom Silver
$949;.;,
Courtesy city of Redmond
A screen shot of the city of R6dmond'6 newly overhauled w6bsit8.
Website
wWeWant aCCeSS
the city slightly less than a year ago, also has made public
Continued from B1
to Redmond city
access to information a priority in his administration.
One new interactive feature
allows users to sign up for e-alerts from the city, everything from meeting notices to event details, requests for pro-
posals or job openings. "I'd say we're launching at
government to be as easy and painless as possible — and useful." — K6ith WitO36ky,
Redmondcit ymanager
is part of our continuing effort
to create a platform for informing and interacting with residentsand partners,"Wi tcosky said in a news release. "We
want access to Redmond city
said. The team working on the site pushed it to go live sooner
government to be as easy and The Web team learned from
previous mistakes, she said. spending too much time on vi- On the former site, the city ruses attacking the old site, she home pagebecame a dumping sald. ground for all new informaThe new site has much tion, creating a "garage salestronger firewall protections, out-front" effect. Cassaro said, which should The budget for the website help shield it from malicious Was $100,000, aCCOrdingto Cas-
viruses such as the one that
saro,and is expected to come
created false search engine links that directed people looking for "city of Redmond Oregon" to websites selling Viagra and other discount
in dose to that figure. While a Web COnSultant Was used, City staff also spent considerable
that method to send EIut blasts
o ooo oo
Beige(pfctxnred) & Brown lnstruments eligible for a $699 rebate/uet
All Hearing Aids Include FREE: Hearing Test, 3 Year Repair Warranty, 1 Year Loss & Damage Coverage, Start-Up Accessories and ln-Oflice Adjustments Rebate processed30 days after invoicing. Offers valid through May 37,2074 or while supplies last.
painless as possible — anduse-
-
•
•
•
fLtl. It'S the beginning, nOt the
end, as we keep pushing our use of the technology continu-
•
•
um in all areas of our work."
•
Designing a website for government userather than unique challenges, Cassaro said. While a business site might emphasize sales, a municipal site must serve many uses, from sharing informa-
C assaro showed off
the
"I'll give you an example," in case of an emergency," Cas- new page at the Redmond Cassaro said. "Previously, the SRT'0 Sald. City Council meeting Tuesday information about utility bills Increasing its use of social night, prompting Councilor was under 'Finance', but now media and other technology Camden King to comment, "It it's under 'Residents', plus we to communicate with its citilooks 400 billion times better, put a big button for it on the zens is a major Redmond City it seems much more intuitive." home page. I mean, who would Council goal. City Manager — Reporter: 541-548-2186, think to look under 'Finance"?" Keith Witcosky, who joined Ipugmireibendbulletin.com
w
4
• A •
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corporate comes with its own
time on the project, assessing tion with a wide audience to what each department need- community promotion and pharmaceuticals. ed and wanted and how they providing electronic services According to city officials, could engage the public. such as forms and bill paying. "We're really excited about The site was also designed there were twEI main goals in redesigning the website: cre- the e-alerts because the way with more controls for city ating efficiencies and more it's set up you can sign up for staff so it can consistently be functionality for city staff and only the things you are inter- updated with new information an interface that outside users ested in, but we can also use and images, she said. would find more intuitive.
$949 REBATEI S1898 due at time of purchaseBuy OnelGet One Rebate eligible on Grey Instruments Only
"The new Redmond website
about 80 p ercent," Cassaro than expectedbecause itwas
•
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•
•
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C ycling, C2 Sports in brief, C2 MLB, C3 NHL Playoffs, C2 Horse racing, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
COLLEGE
PREP BOYS GOLF
FOOTBALL
NBA PLAYOFFS San Antonio's
Ducks backup QB to transfer
Tony Parker, left, guards
Oregon's backup quarterback position remains unsettled entering summer workouts, but coach Mark Helfrich knows one candidate who will not be backing up Marcus Mariota in
Portland's Nicolas Batum during
) ttr
Monday's
xr
Game 4 of the
Western Conference semifinals. Parker
has been
2014.
somewhat a mentor to Batum, a fellow member of the French
Jake Rodrigues, a 6-foot-3, 217-pound sophomore, told CSNNW.com hehas decided to transfer out of the program after meeting with Helfrich on Monday. "Football wasn't working out here and that is why I amleaving," Rodrigues said. "I am notleaving because of how people treated me, or how much it rains here. I amleaving simply based onthis football decision." Rodrigues will haveto sitoutayear per NCAA transfer rules if he goes to another FBSprogram, where hewould then have two years of eligibility remaining. Ifhe transfers to anFCSprogram, he would beable to play immediately with three years of eligibility.
national team. Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press
's win an 0 ome or azerS • Putting Batum on fellow Frenchman Parker helpedPortland win in Game4
— The (Eugene) Register-Guard
NHL The Associated Press
NHL headmeets with Seattle group
SAN ANTONIO — Tony
Parker has long been Nicolas Batum's friend and
SEATTLE —NHL
commissioner Gary Bettman made avisit to Seattle to meet with local elected leaders to get an update on the status of a possible newarena. NHL spokesman Frank Brown said the meeting was solely to get an update onthe status of a newarena being proposed by investor Chris Hansen. Legislation approved by city and county officials call for an NBAteam to be placed in Seattle first before an NHLteam unless the memorandum of understanding on the project is rewritten. In an interview last month, Hansensaidhis group does not haveinterest in being majority owners of an NHL team. Seattle has beena rumored landing spot for an NHLexpansion franchise after the nearmove of the PhoenixCoyotes last summer. Bettman said earlier in theNHL playoffs that Seattle needs to get its arena situation settled before the leaguewill consider a franchise there. — The Associated Press
COLLEGE SPORTS Northwestern AD: players needvote ROSEMONT, III. -
Northwestern athletic director Jim Phillips says college athletes need more than justa voice when it comesto issues that affect them. They need avote. Phillips says that "has to happen" as theNCAA tackles a list of issues concerning athletes. He insists, however, that unionization is not the wayto go. Phillips says unionization "goes against all that is what webelieve is right in the landscapeof college athletics." — The Associated Press
NBA PLAYOFFS hunder Clippers
105 104
izar s Pacers
02 79
SPURS 3, TRAIL BLAZERS1
@P.' Rg
mentor, both on the French national team and in their
NBA careers. So it was understandable
Game1: Spurs116, Blazers 92 Game 2: Spurs114, Blazers 97 Game 4 of the Western Con- Game 3: Spurs118, Blazers103 ferencesemifinal playoffse- Game 4: Blazers 103, Spurs 92 ries between the Spurs and Today at SanAntonio 6:30p.m. the Portland Trail Blazers x-Fri at Portland TBA that San Antonio's veteran SanAntonio TBA point guard cracked a smile x-Mon at when asked if he had a part x-if necessary in his pal's success. "I'm happy for him. He's doing great," Parker said. victory Monday night at "He's doing everything he the Moda Center. Portland can to help his team out avoided elimination and there. You have to give him narrowed its deficit in the after Batum's dominance in
h
credit." Batum had 14 points, 14
series to 3-1, sending it back to San Antonio for Game 5
rebounds and eight assists
tonight. See Blazers /C4
in the Trail Blazers' 103-92 Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Bend High's Ryan DeCastilhos chips onto the seventh green during the Class 5A Special District1 championship Tuesday afternoon at Juniper Golf Club in Redmond. The Lava Bear junior birdies the 17th and18th holes to win the individual district title.
• Bend High's DeCastilhos hits back-to-back birdies on final two holes topull aheadfor district championship Bulletin staff report REDMOND — Rusty Clemons has seen
ies on the back nine — including back-to-back bir di e s on the 17th and 18th holes — to fire
PREP BOYS TENNIS
Raven tandemtakestitle Bulletin staff report ONTARIO — In just its
Ridgeview after falling 6-4, 7-5 in the third-place
plenty of golf over the years. Around his a 3-under 69 and secure medalist honors by team, Clemons constantly mentions himself at Juniper Golf Club. inelde "I really wasn't super nervous," Denames of former players, kids who have etched themselves forever in his • At long last, Castilhos said. "I felt pretty comfortmemory. La Pine wins a b le. I just stuck to my routine." And what Clemons saw on Tuesday a league The Bend High junior put his third afternoon, the 13th-year Bend High soft bal l shot w i thin a foot and a half of the pin boys golf coach will always remember g a me, C4 ont h e 17th hole to set up a tap-in birdthe name Ryan DeCastilhos. ie. But it was his third shot on the par-5 • prep "You've got to play your best when 18th that stood out to Clemons. scoreboard' your best is needed," Clemons said. From 85 yards out, DeCastilhos dec4 "And he played his best today." livered a strike that bounced into and A day after carding a 1-over-par 73 and then out of the cup, which led to a birdie and
second year, Ridgeview will send five representatives to
match, and Brett Blundell rebounded from a semifinal
the Class 4A/3A/2A/IA boys
loss to post a 7-6, 6-0 victory
tennis state championships.
to place third in the singles
The Ravens' tandem of Caleb Maxwell and Gabe
bracket.
tied for first at the Class 5A Special District 1 championships, DeCastilhos used three bird-
don Huff placed fourth
Miami pitcher
Jose Fernandez was put on the disabled list Monday and could be the latest victim in a recent
epidemic of elbow injuries requiring Tommy John
surgery. Wilfredo Lee/The Associated Press
cl in c hed the individual district title.
SeeBoys golf/C4
Payne won the district's doubles title with a 6-4,
Also in singles play, Crook County's Pedro De Souza logged a 6-3, 6-1 semifinal
6-7, 6-4 victory over Crook
win to earn a spot in the
County'sGarrettHarper
championship, where he fell
and Leonhard Pusl in the final on Tuesday afternoon. Chase Bennett and Bran-
7-5, 6-4. The Class 4A/3A/2A/1A
in the doubles bracket for
state championships at Oregon State begin next Thursday and end on Saturday.
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
An epidemicgripsbaseball, with pitcherspaying the price • Tommy John surgery becomesalarmingly common, with Marlinsstar latest victim By Tyler Kepner
of the baseball season: Matt Harvey and Jose Fernandez,
just starting their major league careers, sidelined suddenly by a serious elbow injury. "It's becoming a pretty common story," Harvey said in the visitors' clubhouse at
must-see ace right-handers
Yankee Stadium in New York
New York Times News Service
They are twin poles, for the moment, of a grim trend that has become the story
on Tuesday, "but it's something you definitely don't want to hear about when the
best pitchers in the game are going down for a year." Harvey of the New York Mets started the All-Star
Game for the National League last July, but by August he was finished until 2015.
SeeTommy John/C3
C2
TH E BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Radie 1 0 a.m. ML B 12:30 p.m. Root 4 p.m. E S PN
BASEBALL
MLB, L.A. Angels at Philadelphia MLB, TampaBayat Seattle MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat N.Y.Mets BASKETBALL
NBA Playoffs, Brooklyn at Miami NBA Playoffs, Portland at SanAntonio
4 p.m. TNT 6:30 p.m. T NT
GOLF
EuropeanTour, OpendeEspana HOCKEY NHL Playoffs, Montreal at Boston NHL Playoffs, Anaheim at LosAngeles SOCCER UEFAEuropa League,final, Sevilla vs. Benfica
2:30 a.m. Golf 4 p.m. NBCSN 6:30 p.m. NBCSN 11:30 a.m. FS1
THURSDAY GOLF
EuropeanTour, OpendeEspana Champions Tour, RegionsTradition PGA Tour, HPByron NelsonChampionship EuropeanTour, OpendeEspana
6:30 a.m. Golf 9:30 a.m. Golf noon Golf 2:30 a.m. Golf
HOCKEY
2014 IIHFWorld Championship, Latvia vs. USA 6:30 a.m. NBCSN BASEBALL
MLB, San Diego atCincinnati
9 :30 a.m. F S 1 4 p.m. MLB 4:30 p.m. ESPNU
MLB, N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets
College, South Carolina atVanderbilt CYCLING
Tour of California, Stage 5
2 p.m. NBCSN
BASKETBALL
NBA Playoffs, Indiana atWashington NBA Playoffs, OklahomaCity at L.A. Clippers BOXING Boxing, Antonio Orozco vs. Martin Honorio
5 p.m. E S PN 7:30 p.m. ESPN 7 p.m.
FS1
Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not reSpOnSible far late ChangeS made by TrvZOr radiO StatiOnS.
SPORTS IN BRIEF DaviS' grand Slam leadS BeaverS — DylanDavis's sev-
enth-inning grand slam broke a2-2 tie as Oregon State defeated Portland 8-4 on Tuesday inKejzer. It was Davis' first career grand slam and his sixth homer of the season, andhis five RBls upped his season total to a career-high 62, TheBeavers built a 2-0 lead through sjx innings before the Pilots scored twice in the top of the seventh. In the Beavers' half of the inning, Pilots pitcher Austin Kelly hit Trever Morrison and Jeff Hendrjx, and reliever BrandonSnyder's first pitch hit Michael Conforto to load the basesbefore Davis' slam. It was the 12th straight win for OregonState (39-8). ChaSO'S tWO homers ChaSeS PaCifiC —Shaun Chasehit two home runs, including a grand slam, to leadOregon to a14-8 win over Pacifi conTuesdayinEugene.Chaselaunchedhissecondgrandslam in the last10 days, after Mitchell Tolmanwas intentionally walked to load the bases, with two outs in the bottom of the fourth inning to push the Ducks' lead to 9-2. Thejunior added his10th homer of the season in the eighth, a solo shot that gavethe Ducks (37-16) a12-8 lead. Chasewent 2 for 5 with five RBls, and Tyler Baumgartner and JoshGraham each hadtwo hits.
SOCCER TimherS' Chara Out two weekS —Portland Timbersmidfielder Diego Chara isexpected to miss two weeks because ofa fractured bone in his left hand. Charawas injured during Sunday's1-1 tie with the LosAngeles Galaxy. Aprocedure to stabilize the fractured third metacarpal bonewas performed Monday. Chara, in his fourth season with the Timbers, has started each of Portland's10 games thisseason.TheTimbersalsoannouncedTuesdaythattheteam has acquired forward FanendoAdi on loan from Danish first-division team FCCopenhagen. The23-year-old Nigerian had three goals in nine matches for Copenhagenduring the 2013-14 Danish Super Ligaen season.
Viewing up172 perCent OnEPL'Sfinal day — NBCsays 4.9 million viewers tuned in to watch U.S.English-language coverage Sunday of the10 matches onthe final day of the English Premier League season. Thetotal was up172 percent from the previous high of 1.8 million for coverage onthe last day of the 2011-12 season on ESPN2and nine Foxnetworks. NBCsaid Tuesday the figures include anyone whowatched at least 6 minutes. In data releasedTuesday, NBC said 31.5 million viewers sawPremier League coverage onits networks this season, up from13.3 million last year, whenU.S. rights were shared byFoxand ESPN.
BASKETBALL PiStOnShire Stan Van Gundy to run, COaChteam — The Detroit Pistons havereached anagreement with former Miami Heat andOrlando MagiccoachStanVanGundytobecome coachand head of basketball operations. Theagreement could beannounced soon— perhapsbytheendoftheweek.VanGundy,54,hasa.641 winning percentage in two-plus seasons with the Heat(2003-05j and five with the Magic (2007-12). Yahoo! Sports is reporting a possible five-year, $35-mjlljon contract is being negotiated. The person with firsthand knowledge of the Pistons' plans addedthat a general manager would be hired to report directly to VanGundy. — Staffand wire reports
Sam Stosur,Australia, def. SabineLisicki (15), Germany, 6-3, 6-3. AndreaPetkovic, Germany, def. Rom ina Oprandi, Switzerland6-3 6-0. FlaviaPenneta(12),ltaly,def. YvonneMeusburger, Austria,6-2, 6-3.
IN THE BLEACHERS
Today
Baseball: Bend at Mountain View,4:30 p.m.; Crook CountyatSummit,4:30 p.m.;RidgeviewatRedmond, 4:30 p,mcMadras at Molala, 5 p.m.; Delphianat Culver,4:30p.m. Softball:MountainViewatBend(DH),3 p.m.; Redmond at Ridgeview (DH), 3 p.m.;Summit at CrookCounty DH), 3p.m.;Molagaat Madras,5 p.m.;Delphianat ulver,4:30p.m.
DEALS Transactions
Boys lacrosse: HighDesertConference playofs, MountainViewat Bend, 6 p.m.;Sistersat Summit,
BASEBALL
6:30p.m. Girls lacrosse:OGLA state playoffs, second round, CentralOregonlacrosseatSunset, 7:15p.m.
AmericanLeague CHICAGOWHITESOX — AssignedRHPMaikel Cletooutright toCharlotte (IL). KANSAS CITYROYALS—Placed INFOmar Infante onthe15-dayDL,retroactive to May7.Selectedthe contractof INFPedro Ciriaco fromOmaha(PCL). LOSANGELESANGELS— AssignedLHPBuddy Boshersoutright toSalt Lake(PCL). OptionedRHP Cory Rasmus to Salt Lake.Recaled RHPMatt ShoemakerfromSalt Lake. NEWYORKYANKEES— PlacedRHPShawnKelley on the15-dayDL,retroactiveto May7. Recaled OF
Thursday
Track and field: Sisters, LaPineat Sky-EmLeague championshipat sElmira,11a.m. Equestrran:Oregon High School Eque strian Tea ms statechampionshipsatDeschutesCountyFair &Expo Center,Redmond,8a.m.
CI
Friday Baseball:MountainViewat Bend, 4:30p.m.; Summit at CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.;Sistersat la Pine,4:30 p.m.;Redmondat Ridgeview,4:30p.m.; North Marion at Madras,4;30p.m.;Culverat Perrydale,4;30 p.m. Softball: Bendat Mountain View,4:30 p.m.; LaPine at Sisters,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty atSummit, 4:30 p.m.;MadrasatNorth Marion, 5 p.m.; Culver at Perrydale,4:30p.m. Boystennis:Bend,MountainView,Redmond,Summit at Class 5ASpecial District1 championshipsat Hermiston,TBD Girls tennis:Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Summit at Class 5ASpecial District1 championships in Sunriver,TBD Trackandfield: Class5ASpecial District1 champ-i onships at Summit, 2 p.m.; Greater Oregon League championships in BakerCity, 3 p,mc Tri-Valley Conference championships inAurora, TBD;Tri-River ConferencechampionshipsinWaldport, 2p.m. Boys lacrosse: HighDesert Conference playoffsat Sisters,TBD. Equestrian:OregonHigh School Eque strian Tea ms statecham pionshipsatDeschutesCountyFair 8 Expo Center,Redmond,8a.m. Saturday Baseball: SistersatRidgeview,noon Boystennis:Bend,MountainView,Redmond,Summit at Class 5ASpecial District1 championshipsat Hermiston,TBD Girls tennis:Bend,MountainView,Redmond, Summit atClass5ASpecial District1 championships in Sunriver,TBD Trackandfield: Class5ASpecial District1 championships at Summit,10a.m.; Sisters, LaPineat Sky-Em Leaguechampionships at Elmira,11a.m.; Greater Oregon Leaguechampionships in BakerCity, noon; GilchristatClass1ASpecial District 2championships in Rogue River,11a.m.; Tri-RiverConferencechampionshipsinWaldport,11;30a.m. Equestrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams statechampionshipsatDeschutesCountyFair &Expo Center,Redmond,6a.m.
Sunday Equestrian:OregonHigh School Equestrian Tea ms statecham pionshipsatDeschutesCountyFair &Expo Center,Redmond,8a.m.
BASEBALL
BASEBALL College Pec-12Slandings All TimesPDT Oregon State Washington Oregon ArizonaState USC WashingtonState Stanford UCLA California Arizona Ulat
Conlerence Overall 20-4 19-5 14-10 14-10 14-14 12-12 10-13 10-14 9-15 10-16 4-20
39-8 37-11 37-16 27-21 26-23 22-25 23-22 23-26 21-25 31-29 16-30
Tuesday'sGames Washington 6, Seattle 0 SanJoseState10, Stanford6 Oregon State6, Portland 4 Oregon14,Pacific 6 Utah 5,BYU4 ArizonaState9,UNLV5 Gonzag a5,WashingtonState4 UC Irvine10,UCLA2 Friday's Games Washingtonat OregonState, 4p.m. Arizonaat California, 4p.m. Utah at ArizonaState, 6:30p.m. WashingtonStateat Stanford, 7p.m. OregonatUCLA,7p.m. Saturday'sGames WashingtonStateat Stanford, 1p.m. Washingtonat OregonState, 4p.m. Arizonaat California, 4p.m. Utah atArizonaState, 6:30p.m. OregonatUCLA,7p.m. Sunday'sGames WashingtonStateat Stanford, noon OregonatUCLA,noon Utah at ArizonaState,12:30 p.m. Washingtonat OregonState, 3p.m. Arizona at California,3 p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT CONFERENCESEMIFINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Tuesday'sGames Washington102,Indiana79,Indianaleadsseries3-2 Oklahoma City105, L.A.Clippers104,Oklahoma City leadsseries3-2 Today'sGames BrooklynatMiami, 4p.m., Miamileadsseries3-1 PortlandatSanAntonio,6:30 p.m.,SanAntonio leads series3-1 Thursday'sGames Indiana atWashington, 5 p.m. Oklahoma City at L.A.Clippers, 7:30p.m. Friday's Games x-MiamiatBrooklyn,5 p.m. x-SanAntonioatPortland, 6:30or7:30 p.m. SundaytsGames x-Brooklynat Miami,TBA x-WashingtonatIndiana, TBA x-L.A. Clippers at OklahomaCity, TBA Monday'sGame x-PortlandatSanAntonio, TBA
lO
A O
3
ET
"I was measuring his vertical leap. Then he decided toshow off."
Tuesday'sSummaries
Thunder105, Clippers104
SOFTBALL College
NCAATournament L.A. CLIPPERS (104) All Times PDT Barnes5-8 2-2 16,Griffin 10-204-5 24,Jordan 0-1 0-00,Paul6-164-517, Redick6-121-1 16, DaRegionals vis2-40-04, D.coffison 0-21-21, Crawford7-222-3 19,Dudley0-00-00,Granger2-32-2 7,Hoff ins0-0 (Double elimination, x-if necessary) EugeneRegional 0-0 0.Totals 38-8816-20 104. Friday's Games OKLAHOM ACITY (105) W isconsi n (34-18) vs.Albany(N.Y) (33-11), 2p.m. Durant6-2212-1227,Ibaka4-80-06, Perkins1-4 0-02, Westbrook11-2314-1636,Sefolosha 4-50-0 UtahValley(18-40)atOregon(49-7-1), 5 p.m. Saturday'sGames 8,N.collison0-12-22,Jackson2-53-48,Adams 4-51-29, Butler1-30-03, Fisherg-1 0-00,Jones Game 3: UtahValley-Oregonwinnervs.Wisconsin-Al0-00-00. Totals 33-7732-36106. bany(N.Y.)winner,11a.m. 4: UtahValley-Oregon loservs. Wisconsin-AlLA. Clippers 34 2 4 28 18 — 104 Game OklahomaCit y 2 6 2 7 28 26 — 106 bany(N.Y.)loser,2 p.m. Game5:Game3 loservs. Game4winner, 5p.m.
Zoilo Almonte fromScranton)Wtlkes-Barre(IL). TORONTOBLUEJAYS— OptionedINFJonathan Diaz to Buffalo(IL). RecalledOFKevin Pilar from Buffalo. National League
MILWAU KEE BREWERS — Placed 3B Aramis Ramirez onthe15-dayDL.OptionedOFCalebGindl to Nashville(PCL).Recalled UTElianHerrerafromNashville. Reinstated OFRyanBraunfrom the15-day DL. NEWYORKMETS— RecalledRHPJacobdeGrom from Las Vegas(PCL). PlacedRH PGonzalezGermen on the15-dayDL,retroactive to May6. PHILADEL PHIAPHILLIES— AssignedINFJayson Nix outrightto LehighValley (IL). ST.LOUISCARDINALS— PlacedLHPTylerLyons on the 15-dayDL.OptionedRHPEric Fornataroto Memphis (PCL).RecalledLHPSam FreemanandRH JorgeRondonfromMemphis. SANDIEGOPADRES— SentRHPCaseyKellyto San Antonio(TL)forarehabassignment. ActivatedOFCarlosQuentin fromthe15-dayDL.Recalled RHPKevin QuackenbushfromEl Paso (PCL). SANFRANCISCOGIANTS — OptionedOFJuan Perez to Fresno(PCL). ReinstatedLHPDavid Huff from the15-day DL. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA —Promoted Amy Brooks to executive vice president,teammarketing andbusiness operations and EmilioCollins toexecutive vice president, global marketing partnershtps. CLEVEL AND CAVALIERS — Promoted interim generalmanager David Griffin to general manager. PHOENIX SUNS—Entered intoasingle-affiliation relationshiwi p th Bakersfield (NBADL). FOOTBALL
National Football League BUFFALOBILLS — Released OLJamaalJohnson-Webb. SignedDBs Deon Broomfield andKenny Ladler, LBsDarrin KitchensandJames Gaines, DT Damien Jacobs,CBDariusRobinsonand DEBryan Johnson.Agreedtotermswith DBDerekBrim andDT ColbyWay. CHICAGO BEARS — Agreed to terms with T Sundey'sGames CharlesLenoJr., RBKa'DeemCarey,DTEgoFerguson Wizards102, Pacers 79 Game 6:Game3winnervs. Game5winner,1 p.m. and PPatrick O'Donnell onfour-yearcontracts. x-Game 7: 4p.m. CLEVELAND BROWNS — SignedDBJoeHadento WASHING TON(102) afive-yearcontractextension. Ariza 4-9 2-2 10,Nene2-6 0-0 4, Gortat 13-15 DALLASCOWBOYS — SignedDTChrisWhaley, 5-731, Wal11-20 l 2-2 27,Beal7-172-318, Gooden TENNIS RBBenMalena,QBDustinVaughanandCBDashaun 0-4 0-0 0,Webster 0-42-2 2, Harrington 1-22-34, Phillips. Miller 1-10-02, Booker0-1 0-00, Porter Jr 1-10-0 Professional JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— ClaimedLBAllen 2, Temple1-1 0-02, Seraphin0-10-00. Totals41BradfordoffwaiversfromtheNewYorkGiants. Inlernazionali BNL d'Italia 82 15-19 102. K ANSAS CI N CHIEFS— SignedGZachFulton. Tuesday INDIANA (yg) MINNES OTA VIKINGS — Released LBsSimoni Al Foro Ilalico George5-15 2-3 15,West 7-142-3 17, Hibbert Lawrence andTerrell Manning, RBBradleyRandle and 2-7 0-04,G.Hill 1-81-2 3, Stephenson4-6 0-09, Rome GJoshSamuda.SignedGConorBoff eli;OTsPierce Purse: Men,$4.77minion(Masters1000); Mahinmi1-20-02,Turner1-30-02, Scola2-51-15, B urton, Matt HallandAntonio Richardson;WRsKain Women,S3.63million (Premier) Watson 2-42-57,Copeland3-53-69,Allen1-20-0 Colter,DonteFosterandErik Lora;DEsRakim Cox, Surface: Clay-Outdoor 2, Butler0-0 2-22, Sloan1-4 0-02. Totals 30-77 TylerScottandJakeSnyder; DTIsame Faciane;CZac Singles 13-2279. Kerin; TE A.C. Leonard; QBTravis Partridge; andDomMen Washington 26 20 31 26 — 102 iniqueWiliams. First Round Indiana 19 19 14 27 — 7B NEW YORKGIANTS— WaivedDBChazPowell. Marin Cilic,Croatia,def. Santiago Giraldo, Colom- Signed LBDanFox,SCharlesBarnettandDEsEmbia, 6-4,2-0,retired. manuel DiekeandJordanStanton. HOCKEY Andrey Golubev,Kazakhstan,def.FernandoVerSAN FRAN CISCO 49ERS — Signed LBAaron dasco,Spain,6-4,7-5. LynchandDTKalebRamseytofour-yearcontracts. KevinAnderson,SouthAfrica, def.VasekPospisil, NHL Playoffs TAMPABAY BUCCANEERS— Signed LBSteven Canada, 7-5,7-6(4). ichael Smith. NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE ErnestsGulbis, Latvia,vs.AlejandroFalla, Colom- Jenkins.WaivedRBMHOCKEY All TimesPDT bia, 6-1,retired. National HockeyLeague TommyHaas (15), Germany, def. AndreasSeppi, WASHING TON CAPITALS — Extended their afSECOND ROUND Italy, 6-1,4-6,6-3. filiation agreem ent with Hershey(AHL)through the (Besl-of-7; x-if necessary) Dmitry Tursunov,Russia, def. Roberto Bautista 2014-15season. SignedFGarrett Mitchell to aoneAgut, Spai n , 6-0, 7-6 (4). Tuesday'sGames Igor Sijsling,Netherlands,def. MarcoCecchinato, yearcontract. SOCCER N.Y.Rangers2, Pittsburgh1, N.Y.Rangers wins se- Italy, 7-6 (4), 7-5. Major LeagueSoccer ries 4-3 SecondRound CHIVAS US A — R ele asedFAdolfo Bautista. Chicago2,Minnesota1,Chicagowins series4-2 NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def. RadekStepanek, MONTREAL IMPACT— LoanedM BlakeSmithto Today'sGames Czech Re publ i c ,6-3,7-5. Eleven(NASL). Montrealat Boston,4 p.m.,series tied3-3 StanislasWawrinka(3), Switzerland, def.PereRiba, Indy PORTLANDTIMBERS— AcquiredFFanendoAdi Anahei m atLosAngeles,6:30p.m.,Anaheim leads Spain, 6-0,6-3. on loan FCCopenhagen (Denmark). Waived F series3-2 Philipp Kohlschreiber,Germany, def. Tommy Ro- Fredericfrom Piquionne. Friday's Game bredo (16), Spa i n , 6-2, 6-4. COLLEGE x-LosAngelesatAnaheim,6 p.m. Milos Raonic(6),Canada,def.SimoneBolelli, Italy, CINCINN ATI — Announced men's basketball F 6-3, 7-6(5). Jermai n e L aw renc e w i l transfer. David Ferrer(5), Spain,def. Mikhail Kukushkin, SOCCER GEOR GIA — Announced WRUriah LeMaywil Kazakhstan, 6-1,6-2. transfer. Women GEOR GIATECH—AnnouncedFRobert Carter Jr. MLS First Round will transfer. CamilaGiorgi, Italy,def. DominikaCibulkova(9), MAJORLEAGUESOCCER ILLINOIS— Suspended F Darius Paul for the Slovakia,6-4,7-6 (2). All TimesPDT basketball season. GarbineMuguruza, Spain, def. Nastassja Burnet, 2014-15 KANSASSTATE— GrantedQB/WRDanielsSams Italy, 6-1,6-3. EasternConference a condi t i o nalreleasefromhis scholarship. BelindaBencic, Switzerland,def. Anastasia PavlyW L T P tsGF GA LSU —Granted releasesto men's basketball Gs chenkoya, Russia, 6-3,3-6, 6-3. S porting KansasCity 5 2 2 1 7 14 6 nthon yHickeyandMalilMorganandFShaneHamChristina McHale, United States, def. Sorana A NewEngland 5 3 2 17 14 10 mink. D.C. 4 3 2 1 4 13 11 Cirstea,Romania, 6-3,4-6, 6-1. MISSOUR I — Named Brad Loosmen'sassistant Sara Errani(10), Italy, def. ChanelleScheepers, basketballcoach. Houston 4 5 2 1 4 15 19 SouthAfrica,7-5, 6-3. NewYork 3 3 5 14 18 17 RUTGER S—DismissedQBPhilip Nelsonfromthe MonicaPuig,PuertoRico, def. Daniela Hantucho- football Columbus 3 4 3 12 10 11 team. va, Slovakia6-0, , 4-6, 6-0. TorontoFC 3 4 0 9 7 9 T CU — NamedEdwinaBrownwomen'sassistant CarlaSuarezNavarro(13), Spain,def. MonaBarth- basketball coach Chicago 1 2 6 9 17 18 andrecruiting coordinator, Hann a Philadelphia 1 5 5 6 10 14 el, Germany,6-2,6-2. women'sassociateheadbasketballcoachand EkaterinaMakarova,Russia, def. RobertaVinci, Howard Montreal 5 3 6 7 17 defensi v e coordi n ator and C ry stal Rob i n son w om en' s Italy, 6-2,7-6(6). WesternConference assistantbasketballcoach. SecondRound W L T P tsGF GA PetraCetkovska,CzechRepublic, def. Angelique Seattle 7 3 1 22 22 19 Kerber (7), Germany,4-6, 6-3,6-4. RealSaltLake 5 0 5 2 0 21 12 ZhangShuai, China,def. PetraKvitova(5), Czech FC Dallas 5 5 1 1 6 20 19 FISH COUNT Vancouver 4 2 4 1 6 16 12 Republic,7-6(6), 5-7,6-3. Upstream daily movement of adult chinookjack Li Na (2),China,def. Casey Dellacqua, Australia, Colorado 4 3 3 15 11 12 6-1, 6-4.PaulaOrmaechea, Argentina, def. Kurumi chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected SanJose 2 3 4 10 10 11 C olumbi a Ri v er damslast updated on Monday. Nara, Japan, 6-4,6-3. Los Angeles 2 2 3 9 8 6 Cbnk Jcbnk Stlhd Wsllhd VarvaraLepchenko, United States, def. PengShuai, ChivasUSA 2 5 3 9 12 19 Bonneville 5,092 1,529 40 2 Portland 1 3 6 9 13 16 China,6-1, 6-0. T he Dal l es 3,420 1,009 11 2 ZhangShuai, China,def. LaurenDavis, United John Day 3,156 86 1 21 0 States, 6-4, 6-0. Wednesday'sGame 6 2 6 12 3 Francesca Schiavone,Italy, def.EugenieBouchard McNary 3 760 PhiladelphiaatSporting KansasCity,5:30 p Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, (17), Cana da,6-4,6-2. Saturday'sGames j a ck chi n ook, steel h ead an d w i l d st e el h ead at se l e ct e d Petra Cetkovska,CzechRepublic, def. Tsvetana NewYorkatToronto FC,1:30 p.m. Pironkova,Bulgaria, 1-6,6-1, 6-4. ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSunday. NewEnglandat Philadelphia, 4p.m. Cbnk Jcbnk Stlbd Wsllhd VenusWiliams, UnitedStates, def. AnnikaBeck, Montrealat D.C.United, 4p.m. Bonneville 163,324 13,769 4,363 1,231 Germany, 6-3,6-1. LosAngelesatHouston,5:30p.m. T he Dal l es 113,460 8,156 53 2 16 5 SloaneStephens,United States,def. BojanaJovaChiva sUSAatFCDallas,5:30p.m. John Day 93,266 6,449 2,659 1,106 novski,Serbia,3-6,6-3, 6-3. ColoradoatReal Salt Lake, 6:30p.m. 6 0 7 331 Casey Deff acqua,Australia,def.MagdalenaRyba- McNary 71,381 3,309 SanJoseatSeattleFC7p.m. rikova,Slovakia,4-6, 6-1,6-4. Columbus at Portland, 7:30p.m.
CYCLING ROUNDUP
Wiggins movescloser to California crown
NHL PLAYOFFS
Rangers, Blackhawksadvance The Associated Press
ON DECK
DANVILLE, Calif. — Rohan Dennis of Australia was
hell on wheels. He set off on a blistering
With five days left, it seems Tuesday in a stage race that like a foregone conclusion could lose its drama. for the Team Sky leader. The man who won the 2012 Tour
But Dennis and the rest
a lso were not
r e ady t o
Also on Tuesday: Bouhanni wins 4th Giro stage; Matthews keeps lead: BARI, Italy — F r ench r i der Nacer Bouhanni won the
concede.
team-high seventh g oal cord with his fifth straight of the postseason for the Game 7 vict ory,making 35 Penguins. saves to lift the New York Also on Tuesday: Rangers to a 2-1 win over Blackhawks 2, Wild1: ST. the Pittsburgh Penguins on PAUL, Minn. — Chicago's Tuesday night and earn a Patrick Kane scored on a spot in the Eastern Confer- backhand 9 minutes, 42 sec-
de France and Olympic time sprint in the final 200 meters trial gold medal at the London 'Itfesday during a lung-burst- Games looks too fit to catch. "I don't know if the Tour de ing climb up Mount Diablo to win Stage 3 of the Amgen Tour France and Olympic champiof California. on is going to crack," Dennis The final burst from the said. "He is a level above all of Australian riding for Team Us. Garmin-Sharp shaved 20 secKiel Reijnen of U nitedonds off Bradley Wiggins' Heathcare Pro Cycling put
ence finals.
onds into overtime to clinch
overall lead after three tough
Brian Boyle and Brad Richards scored for New
their second-round Western Conference series. Kris Ver-
York, who r allied from a
steeg scored at j.:58 of the
stages in the tour that ends planet." Sunday in Thousand Oaks. The rest of th e 125-rider Wiggins, 34, finished ninth field knows the score. Wigon a day it appears he secured gins proved himself over a his first Tour of California title. one-two punch Monday and
Dennis showed he was the mile route from Giovinazzo man of the day by sprinting to Bari — the shortest stage past Wiggins and all other of the three-week race. It was comers to win the 108.5-mile the sixth win this year and the queen stage in 4 hours, 56 the 26th career victory for
PITTSBURGH — Henrik L undqvist set an NHL r e -
year history.
Bulletin wire reports
Jussi Jokinen scored his
3-1series deficitforthefirst first and Corey Crawford time in the franchise's 88- stopped 34 shots.
it this way: "He's on another
"It's biking racing, it's never over," Reijnen said. "A mechanical in the wrong spot, a flat or a crash. It's easy to say on paper, but for most of us if we didn't believe we had a
shot of winning we wouldn't be here." At least for a few seconds,
minutes, 2 seconds.
slippery fourth stage of the Giro d'Italia in a sprint as the race. Australian rider Michael Matthews retained the overall
leader's pink jersey. Bouhamzi didn't have many established sprint rivals to contend with
at the end and clocked nearly 2 1/2 hours over the flat, 70-
BouhannL
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings
American League
All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB Baltimore 20 17 .541 Toronto 20 20 .500 1'/r Boston 19 19 .500 H/r NewYork 19 19 .500 H/z TampaBay 17 23 .425 4'/r Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 23 12 .657 Kansas City 19 19 .500 5'/2 Minnesota 18 19 .486 6 Chicago 19 22 .463 7 Cleveland 18 21 .462 7 West Division W L Pct GB Oakland 25 15 .625 LosAngeles 20 18 .526 4 Seattle 20 19 .513 4'/r Texas 20 20 .500 5 Houston 13 27 .325 12
Tuesday'sGames
Detroit 4,Baltimore1 LA. Angel4, s Philadelphia 3 N.Y.Mets12,N.Y.Yankees7 Toronto5, Cleveland4 Minnesota 8, Boston 6
Kansas City5, Colorado1 Houston 8, Texas0 Oakland11,ChicagoWhite Sox0 Tampa Bay2,Seattle1 Today'sGames Detroit (Verlander4-2)at Baltimore(Gausman0-0), 9:35a.m. L.A. Angels(Richards3-0) at Philadelphia(Burnett 2-2),1:05p.m. Colorado (Chacin 0-1)at Kansas City (Vargas3-1), 11:10a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Rienzo3-0) at Oakland(Milone 1-3),12:35p.m. TampaBay(Odorizzi 1-3) at Seattle (Maurer1-1), 12;40p.m. Cleveland(Kluber 3-3) at Toronto(McGowan 2-1), 4:07 p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Tanaka5-0)atN.Y.Mets(Montero0-0), 4:10 p.m. Boston(Doubront1-3) at Minnesota(Correia 1-4), 5:10 p.m. Texas(Tepesch 0-0) at Houston (Feldman2-1), 5:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames Bostonat Minnesota,10:10a.m. Cleveland atToronto,4:07 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat N.Y. Mets, 4;10p.m. Baltimore atKansasCity,510 p m. Tampa Bayat L.A.Angels, 7:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L Atlanta 22 16 Washington 20 19 Miami 20 20 NewYork 19 19 Philadelphia 17 20
Milwaukee St. Louis Cincinnati Pittsburgh Chicago
SanFrancisco Colorado Los Angeles SanDiego Arizona
Central Division W L
Pct GB
.579 .513 2'/z .500 3 .500 3 .459 4'lz
Pct GB
25 14 20 20 17 20 16 22 13 25
.641
W 25 23 22 19 16
Pct GB .625 561 2'/r
West Division
L 15 18 19 21 26
500 5'/2
.459 7 .421 8'lz
,342 tn/r
537 3'lz ,475 6 .381 10
Tuesday'sGames
L.A. Angel4, s Philadelphia 3 N.Y.Mets12, N.Y.Yankees7 SanDiego2, Cincinnati 1 Kansas City5, Colorado1 Milwaukee 5,Pittsburgh2 St. Loui4, s ChicagoCubs3, 12innings Arizona3,Washington 1 LA. Dodgers 7, Miami1 Atlanta 5, SanFrancisco0
Today'sGames
LA. Angels(Richards3-0) at Philadelphia(Burnett 2-2), 10;05a.m. Colorado(Chacin 0-1)at Kansas City(Vargas3-1), 11:10a.m.
Washington (Fister 0-1)at Arizona(Mccarthy 1-6), 12:40p.m. Atlanta(Teheran 2-2) at SanFrancisco (Bumgarner 4-3),12:45p.m. N.Y.Yankees(Tanaka5-0) atN.Y.Mets (Montero 0-0), 4:10 p.m. San Diego (Kennedy 2-4) at Cincinnati (Cueto3-2), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Liriano 0-3)at Milwaukee(W.Peralta4-2), 5;10 p.m. Chicago Cubs(Hammel4-1) atSt.Louis (Wacha2-3), 5:15 p.m. Miami(DeSclafani0-0) atL.A.Dodgers(Maholm1-3), 7:10 p.m. Thursday'sGames SanDiegoatCincinnati, 9:35a.m. PittsburghatMilwaukee,10:10a.m. Chicago CubsatSt. Louis,10:45 a.m. N.Y.YankeesatN.Y. Mets, 4:10p.m. Miami atSanFrancisco,7:15p.m.
Rays 2, Mariners1 SEATTLE —David Price struck out12 in his second complete gamethi sseasonandTampa Bay rallied in the ninth inning against Seattle closer FernandoRodney. David DeJesus led off the ninth with a tying homer, andRodney gaveupago-ahead RBIsingleto Matt Joyce five batters later. RobinsonCano hadadouble,single and an RBIfor Seattle.
Twins 8, RedSox6 MINNEAPOLIS— Chris Parmelee hit a game-ending homer in the ninth and Minnesota overcame David Ortiz's big night. Ortiz went 4 for 5 with two homers andfour RBls. Kurt Suzuki singled with two outs Parmelee lined an0-1 pitch into the right-field seats for his first two RBls of the season.
National League
Cardinals 4, Cubs 3(12 innings) ST. LOUIS —Pinch-hitter Greg Garcia was hit by apitch with the basesloadedand oneoutinthe 12th, sending St. Louis to the win. Trailing 3-2 going into the ninth, Chicago rallied to tie it on Emilio Bonifacio's RBI two-out single.
Chicago Bt. Louis Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Bonifaccf 6 0 2 1 Mcrpnt3b 5 0 0 1 Pedroia2b 5 1 1 0 Dozier2b 5 1 1 2 Valuen3b 6 1 3 2 JhPerltss 5 1 3 1 Victornrf 5 2 3 1 Mauer1b 5 0 2 1 Rizzo1b 3 0 0 0 Hollidylf 5 1 0 0 D.Ortizdh 5 2 4 4 Plouffe3b 4 1 2 0 6 0 0 0 Craig rf-1b 5 0 1 0 N apoli1b 4 0 0 0 Kubellf 3 0 0 0 Scastross TampaBay Seattle Schrhltrf 3 0 1 0 YMolinc 5 0 1 0 GSizmrlf 2 0 1 0 Colaegph 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Russel lp 0 0 0 0 MAdms1b 4 0 2 1 JGomsph-If 0 0 0 1 KSuzukc 5 1 3 1 TWoodph 1 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 Parmelrf 4 2 3 2 Myersrf 4 0 0 0 J.Jonescf Schlittrp 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Bogartsss 4 0 1 0 Nunezdh 4 1 1 2 DeJessdh 4 1 2 1 Romerrf Grimmp 0 0 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 Mdlrks3b 4 0 0 0 EEscorss 4 1 1 0 Longori3b 4 0 0 0 Cano2b Castigo c 5 0 2 0 Descalsph 1 0 0 0 BrdlyJrcf 4 1 1 0 DSantncf 2 1 0 0 Zobrist 2b 4 0 0 0 Hart dh LakeIf 5 1 1 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 6 116 Totals 3 7 8 138 Loney1b 4 0 1 0 Smoak1b Barney2b 4 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Boston 100 101 3gg — 6 SRdrgzpr-1b 0 1 0 0 Seager3b Arrietap 2 1 000 1 M innesota g g g 8 1 0 gg2 — 8 Viganvp 0 0 10 00 GGarciph DJnngscf 4 0 1 0 Ackleylf Bourjoscf 5 1 2 0 Two outswhenwinning runscored. Joyceg 4 0 3 1 Zuninoc 2b 4 0 0 0 DP — Boston 1, Minnesota1. LOB —Boston 7, Wrght p 0 00 00000M.EII>s YEscorss 3 0 1 0 BMillerss Wnwrgp 1 0 0 0 Minnesota8. 28—Dozier (3), Plouffe(15). 38—Vic- Oltph JMolinc 2 0 0 0 NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 Jayph 100 torino (1),Bogaerts (1). HR—D.Ortiz 2(9), Parmelee Coghlnrf 2 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 Hanign ph-c 2 0 0 0 0000 (1). T otals 3 5 2 8 2 Totals 3 21 6 1 (1), Nunez JButlerrf 2000 IP H R E R BBBD Tampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 0 802 — 2 Totals 43 3 103 Totals 42 4 9 4 Boston Seattle 100 000 ggg — 1 Chicago 002 ggg 081 Ogg —3 4 13 9 6 6 2 1 LOB— TampaBay7,Seattle4.28— DeJesus(8), Peavy 001 002 ggg001 — 4 12-3 2 0 0 2 2 Bt.Louis Capuano J.Jones (4), Cano(8), Ackley(5), Zunino(6). HR Breslow 1 0 0 0 1 2 One outwhenwinning runscored. DeJesus(4). E—S.castro (6). DP—Chicago 1, St. Louis 3. 1 0 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBBD Tazawa —Chicago10, St. Louis 13.28- Valbuena (7), A,MigerL,1-1 2 - 3 2 2 2 0 2 LOB TampaBay —BourCraig(7), Bourjos(4). HR —Valbuena(2). SB Minnesota PriceW,4-3 9 6 1 1 0 12 —Rizzo(2),Olt(1). Nolasco 6 6 3 3 1 6 jos (3).CS Seattle I P H R ER BBBD 2-3 3 3 3 0 1 Iwakuma 8 4 0 0 0 5 TonkinH,3 Chicago ng 0 1 0 0 1 0 RodneyL,1-2BS,2-13 2-3 4 2 2 1 1 Duensi 4 4 1 1 5 5 0 0 0 1 0 Arrieta Farquhar 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 GuerrierBS,1-1 0 1 1-3 2 2 1 1 0 Thielbar 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Viganueva WP — Price. W Wright BS, 1 -1 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Burton 1 0 0 0 0 2 T—2:48. A—13,446(47,476). 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 PerkinsW,1-0 1 1 0 0 0 2 N.Ramirez Russell 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Duensingpitchedto 2 batters inthe7th. Schlitter 2 0 0 0 0 1 Blue Jays 5, lndians 4 Guerrierpitchedto1batter inthe7th. G rimm L,1-2 1-3 1 1 1 2 0 Breslowpitchedto1batter inthe8th. Bt. Louis W P — C ap uan o. TORONTO —R.A.Dickeywon Wainwright 6 7 2 2 1 4 T—3:25.A—23,949(39,021). S iegrist H,10 11 - 3 00 0 2 2 for the third time in four starts C .Marti n ez H,9 23 0 0 0 0 0 and Juan Francisco homered in Athletics11, White Sox0 RosenthalBS,1-11 1 2 1 1 1 1 Toronto's win. BlueJays left fielder S.Freem an 1 0 0 0 1 2 Neshek 1 0 0 0 0 1 OAKLAND, Calif.— Brandon Melky Cabrera threw out Carlos Maness W,1-2 1 1 0 0 1 0 Moss homered twice andDrew Santana at the plate to endthe HBP —byGrimm(G.Garcia). T—4:39. A—43,627(45,399). eighth, preserving a one-run lead. Pomeranz andthree relievers Cleveland Toronto ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourncf 4 0 2 1 Reyesss 4 1 1 0 Swisher1b 4 0 1 2 Mecarrlf 2 1 0 1 Brantlylf 4 0 0 0 Bautistrf 4 1 1 0 C Santn3b 4 0 1 0 Linddh 3 1 1 2 Acarerss 4 1 1 0 DNavrrph-dh 1 0 0 0 DvMrprf 4 1 1 0 Encrnc1b 4 0 0 0 YGomsc 3 1 1 0 JFrncs3b 3 1 2 2 Chsnhlldh 3 0 0 1 StTllsnpr-2b 0 0 0 0 Aviles2b 4 1 1 0 Lawrie2b-3b 3 0 1 0 T holec 2 0 0 0 P igarcf 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 4 8 4 Totals 2 95 6 5 C leveland 001 0 0 0 300 — 4 Toronto 000 118 ggx — 5 E—Lawrie (1). LOB—Cleveland 7, Toronto5. 2B — Lind (5), J.Francisco (3). 38 —Reyes (1). HR—J.Francisco (6). SB—St.Togeson (1). SFSwisher,Me.cabrera.
Boston
combined on afour-hitter as Oakland won its sixth straight. Chicago
Oakland
BALTIMORE — Miguel Cabrera hit a three-run homer off Tommy Hunter with two outs in the ninth and Detroit, down to its last strike, rallied to win. Victor Martinez then hit a shot to right that landed beyond the scoreboard in right field. Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 Markksrf 4 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 3 1 1 0 Machd3b 4 0 1 0 Micarrdh 3 1 2 3 A.Jonescf 4 1 2 1 VMrtnz1b 4 1 2 1 C.Davis1b 4 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 4 0 0 0 N.cruzlf 3 0 1 0 W orthss 0 0 0 0 Loughlf 0 0 0 0 AJcksncf 3 0 0 0 Hardyss 4 0 0 0 Cstllns3b 3 0 0 0 Pearcedh 4 0 1 0 Avilac 2 0 1 0 Schoop2b 3 0 1 0 RDavispr 0 1 0 0 CJosphc 2 0 1 0 Holadyc 0 0 0 0 AnRmnss 2 0 0 0 D.Kellyph-lf 1 0 0 0 T otals 2 9 4 6 4 Totals 3 21 7 1 Detroit 000 000 804 — 4 B altimore 100 0 0 0 ggg — 1 DP — Detroit 1, Baltimore 3. LOB—Detroit 1, Detroit
Astros 8, Rangers 0 HOUSTON —Houston' sDallas Keuchel pitched aseven-hitter for his first major leagueshutout. Keuchel struck out sevenwithout awalk. Hegave upjust one extra-base hit, a double byAdrian Beltre in the first, and threw his secondcareercompletegame.L.J. Hoes andCarlos Corporaneach homered anddrove in three runs.
BenoitW,1-0 StreetS,12-12 1
IP H
7 1
Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi JHrrsnrf 4 0 2 0 CGomzcf 1 1 0 0 JHughsp 0 0 0 0 EHerrrlf-rf 2 0 2 0 Deckerph 1 0 0 0 Gennett2b 5 0 2 0 N Walkr2b 4 1 1 1 Braunrf 2 0 0 0 AMcctcf 4 0 0 0 KDavisg 2 1 2 0 P Alvrz3b 3 1 0 0 Lucroyc 4 1 2 2 Tabatalf 4 0 3 0 MrRynl3b 3 0 0 1 I.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Overay1b 4 0 0 0 GSnchzph-1b1 0 1 1 Segurass 4 1 2 1 Mercerss 3 0 2 0 LSchfrlf-cf 3 1 1 0 CStwrtc 3 0 0 0 Estradp 1 0 0 0 Colep 2 0 0 0 RWeksph 1 0 1 1 J uWlsnp 0 0 0 0 Kintzlrp 0 0 0 0 Sniderph-rf 2 0 0 0 Bianchiph 1 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 2 9 2 Totals 3 35 125 Pittsburgh 1 g g g gg 010 — 2 Milwaukee 0 8 2 0 8 1 2 0x — 5 Pittsburgh
R
7 1 0 0 0 0
Diamonddacks 3, Nationals1 PHOENIX —Bronson Arroyo scattered sevenhits in his16th career complete gameandalso singled twice.
5
2
PHILADELPHIA —Luis Jimenez hit a tiebreaking two-run double in the sixth to lead LosAngeles. Los Angeles Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Cowgigrf 4 1 2 0 Reverecf 4 1 1 0 Troutcf 5 0 1 0 Rollinsss 4 0 0 0 P ujols1b 5 1 0 0 utley2b 3 1 1 1
HKndrc2b 3 1 0 0 Howard1b 3 0 1 1 l annettc 4 1 1 0 Byrdrf 4000 G reenlf 3 0 1 1 DBrwnlf 3 1 1 0 L Jimnz3b 4 0 1 2 Ruizc 200 1 JMcDnlss 4 0 1 0 Asche3b 3 0 0 0
I
York Mets roughed upfill-in starter Vjdal Nuno to get atwo-game sweep in the Bronx. David Wright had three hits and two RBls, and Daisuke Matsuzakapitched32/3 innings in relief of a wild Zack Wheeler as theMets earnedtheir sixth straight win against their crosstown rivals.
Dodgers 7, Marlins1 LOS ANGELES — JoshBeckett
earned his first victory since September 2012, giving up an unearned run andfour hits over
Miami
Los Angeles
New York(N) N e w York (A) ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi Yelichlf 4 0 0 0 DGordn2b 4 1 1 0 H chvrrss 4 0 0 0 Puigrf 3 1 2 1 E Yongdh 3 3 0 0 Gardnrlf 5 1 2 1 D nMrp2b 3 2 1 4 Jeterss 3 1 0 0 Stantonrf 4 0 2 0 HRmrzss 4 1 1 2 DWrght3b 5 2 3 2 Ellsurycf 2 1 0 0 McGeh3b 4 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 1 1 1 S ltlmchc 4 0 0 0 Kempcf 4 1 2 1 CYounglf 5 0 0 0 Teixeirdh 5 1 1 1 G Jones1b 3 1 1 0 Crwfrdlf 4 1 2 0 Grndrsrf 3 2 2 3 Mccnnc 4 1 3 3 Lagarscf 4 1 1 1 ASorinrf 5 0 1 1 Ozunacf 3 0 1 1 JuTrnr3b 3 0 1 1 Duda1b 4 0 2 1 Solarte3b 4 2 2 1 D ietrch2b 3 0 1 0 Buterac 4 0 1 1 dArnad c 5 0 0 0 KJhnsn 1b 2 0 0 0 JaTrnrp 0 0 0 0 Beckettp 2 0 1 0 Tejada ss 4 2 1 1 BRorts 2b 3 0 0 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 RJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 Figginsph 0 1 0 0 Totals 3 6 121012 Totals 33 7 9 7 N ew York (N)401 240001 — 12 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Leaguep 0 0 0 0 NewYork(A)300110011 7 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Ethierph 1 0 0 0 E—Solarte(3). DP—NewYork(N)3. LOB—NewYork JWrghtp 0 0 0 0 York (A) 9. 28—D.Wright (10), Lagares Totals 30 1 5 1 Totals 3 3 7 127 (N) 6, New Miami Ogg Ogg 100 — 1 (9), Duda (4). HR —Dan.Murphy(3), Granderson(5), Mccann(5), Solarte(3). SF—Dan.Murphy, Lagares. Los Angeles ggg ggg 11x — 7 IP H R E R BBSD E—Stanton (3), Dietrich (7). DP—Miami 2. LOB— Miami7,LosAngeles5.2B— G.Jones(8), D.Gordon(8), Puig(7), H.R amirez(15), Ad.Gonzalez (10), C.crawford(5). SB—Stanton (4), Figgins(2). S—Ja.Turner. SF—Ozuna,Ju.Turner. IP H
New York(N) ZWheeler
41-3 7 5 5 6 MatsuzakaW,1-0 3 2-3 1 1 1 2 Familia 1 1 1 1 2
R E R BBSO New York(A)
Miami Ja.TurnerL,0-1 5 1 - 3 8 5 4 Da.Jennings 2-3 1 0 0 A.Ramos 1 1 1 1 Cishek 1 2 1 1 Los Angeles BeckettW,1-1 6 1-3 4 1 0 2-3 0 0 0 E R BBSD C.Perez League 1 0 0 0 J.Wright 1 1 0 0 1 1 6 —byA.Ramos(Figgins). PB—Butera. 0 1 0 HBP 0 0 2 T—3:02.A—50,349 (56,000).
Cincinnati Leake 8 2 1 1 1 A.chapman L,0-1 1 1 1 1 1 HBP —byLeake(Headley,Gyorko). T—2:31. A—23,269(42,319).
Angels 4, Phillies 3
Shomkrp 1 0 0 0 CI.Leep 2 0 0 0 Kohnp 0 0 0 0 CHrndzph 1 0 0 0 ENavrrph 1 0 0 0 MAdmsp 0 0 0 0 Salasp 0 0 0 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 J.Smithp 0 0 0 0 Cronph 1 0 0 0 F rierip 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 4 7 3 Totals 2 93 4 3 Los Angeles 00 0 004 ggg — 4 P hiladelphia 0 0 0 2 0 0 100 — 3 E—H.Kendrick (3), Asche3 (6). DP—LosAngeles 2.LOB— LosAngeles8,Philadelphia4.28— Cowgig (4), L.Jimene z(1).38—utley(3), D.Brown(1).SBGreen(1). S —Shoemaker. SF—Green, Ruiz. IP H R E R BBBD Los Angeles Shoemaker W,1-1 5 3 2 2 1 3 E—I.Davis (1), Segura(5). DP—Milwaukee 1. KohnH,3 1 0 0 0 1 0 LOB —Pittsburgh 8, Milwaukee11. 28—J.Harrison SalasH,3 1 1 1 1 0 0 3), (6), 1 0 0 0 0 1 ) G.Sanchez ) Mercer(6), Gennett (7), K.Davis J.SmithH,5 9), Segura (5). HR—NWalker (8). SB—PAlvarez(4), Frieri S,5-7 1 0 0 0 1 1 C.Gome z(7), L.Schafer(1). CS—Tabata(1), E.Herrera Philadelphia (1). S —C.Stewart, Estrada. SF—Mar.Reynolds. CI.LeeL,3-4 7 6 4 0 1 7 IP H R E R BBSO Mi.Adams 1 1 0 0 0 0 PiNsburgh Diekman 1 0 0 0 1 0 Cole L,3-3 52-3 7 3 3 3 6 HBP —byKohn(Utley). Ju.Wilson 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:49. A—41,959(43,651). J.Hughes 2 5 2 2 1 0 Milwaukee 7 EstradaW,3-1 6 6 1 1 2 8 Mets12, Yankees KintzlerH,2 1 1 0 0 0 0 W.Smith 1 2 1 0 0 1 NEW YORK — Curtis Granderson FrRodriguezS,16-17 1 0 0 0 0 1 and Daniel Murphy eachhit a HBP—byCole(C.Gomez). T—3:14.A—24,176 (41,900). three-run homer, andthe New
walking three.
CINCINNATI — San Diego'sChase Headley homered in the ninth off Aroldis Chapman, the first hit the hard-throwing lefty allowed since his return from being hit in the head by aline drive in spring training.
San Diego Cashner
MILWAUKEE — Jonathan Lucroy hit a bases-loaded,two-run single, and Milwaukeewithstood theearly exits of star ouffieldersCarlos Gomez and RyanBraun. Gomezscored the second run onLucroy's single in the third after getting hit by achangeup. Braun's departureafter thesixth was planned ashereturns frominjury.
6'/5 innings, striking out six and
Padres 2, Reds1
ab r hbi ab r hbi S emien3b-ss4 0 0 0 Jasodh 5 2 3 0 GBckh2b 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 1 2 0 JAreudh 4 0 1 0 Puntoph-ss 1 0 0 0 Viciedolf 4 0 0 0 Cespdslf 4 2 2 1 AIRmrzss 2 0 0 0 Barton1b 1 1 1 0 Nietoc 0 0 0 0 Moss1b-If 5 2 3 5 Konerk1b 2 0 0 0 DNorrsc 4 1 1 1 Sierrarf 3 0 0 0 Reddckrf 5 2 2 2 Flowrsc 2 0 1 0 Callasp3b 3 0 1 0 San Diego Cincinnati Gigaspi3b 1 0 1 0 Gentrycf 4 0 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi LeGarccf 3 0 1 0 Sogard2b 4 0 0 0 Venal e cf-rf 4 0 0 0 BHmltncf 41 1 0 Totals 2 9 0 4 0 Totals 4 0111710 ggg ggg ggg — 0 Ecarerss 4 0 0 0 B.Penac 4 0 0 0 Chicago 100 143 82x — 11 S.Smithrl-lf 4 1 2 0 Phigips2b 4 0 3 1 Oakland Quentinlf 3 0 0 0 Votto1b 2 0 1 0 E—Sierra(1). DP—Chicago1, Oakland2. LOBMaybincf 0 0 0 0 Frazier3b 4 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSD Chicago4, Oakland8. 28—Jaso (4), Lowrie (14), Headly3b 3 1 1 1 Ludwcklf 3 0 0 0 Cespedes(10), Moss(6), D.Norris(6).HR—Moss2 Gyorko2b 1 0 0 1 Berndnlf 0 0 0 0 Cleveland k MastersonL,2-2 51-3 6 5 5 3 4 (8), Reddic(2). IP H R E R BBSD Alonso1b 3 0 0 0 Heiseyrf 4 0 0 0 Outman 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Riverac 3 0 0 0 Cozartss 4 0 1 0 Axford 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago 5 11 6 6 1 2 Cashnrp 2 0 0 0 Leakep 3 0 0 0 Rzepczynski 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 Carroll L,1-3 1 3 3 3 1 0 Grandlph 1 0 0 0 AChpmp 0 0 0 0 C.Lee 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 FFrancisco Belisario 1 1 0 0 1 1 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrph 1 0 0 0 Toronto 1 2 2 2 0 0 S treetp 0 0 0 0 DickeyW,4-3 6 4 4 2 2 6 Lindstrom Totals 28 2 3 2 Totals 3 3 1 7 1 Loup H5 1 1 0 0 0 0 Oakland g g g 1 g g 081 — 2 PomeranzW,3-1 5 3 0 0 2 8 B an Diego Cecil H,9 1 2 0 0 0 2 1gg g g g ggg — 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 Cincinnati Janssen S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 Otero E — R iv era (3). LOB —San Diego 4, Cincinnati 8. Abad 1 1 0 0 0 1 Dickeypitchedto4 batters inthe7th. S.Smith (12), Philips (10),Frazier(11). 38—B. Savery 1 0 0 0 0 0 28 — HBP—byDickey(Chisenhag), PB—Thole. Hamilton (3). HR —Headley (4). CS—Gyorko (1). WP — Carroll. PB—Nieto. T—2:29. A—13,673(49,282). SF — Gyorko. T—2:50.A—13,826 (35,067).
Tigers 4, Orioles1
Interleague
Brewers 5, Pirates 2
1 0 0 0
2 1 1 2
3 0 0 0
6 0 1 1
Braves 5, Giants 0 SAN FRANCISCO — Mike Minor pitched three-hit ball into the seventh and EvanGattis drove in a run with his first career triple.
2 4 1
NunoL,1-1 31-3 4 7 5 4 1 Aceves 12-3 4 4 4 1 2 Daley 3 0 0 0 1 3 Claiborne 1 2 1 1 0 1 HBP—by Nuno (E.Young). WP — ZWheeler. PB—d'Arnaud. T—3:58.A—8,958(49,642).
Royals 5, Rockies1 KANSAS CITY, Mo.— James Shields cooled down hot-hitting Colorado over sevensharp innings, and LorenzoCain and Salvador Perezboth homered for Kansas City. Theonly run Shields allowed came on anRBIsingle by Justin Morneau in the fourth inning.
San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi H eywrdrf 5 1 1 0 Pagancf 2 0 0 0 Colorado KansasCity ab r hbi ab r hbi J.uptonlf 4 0 1 0 Blancocf 1 0 1 0 B lckmncf 4 0 0 0 Aokirf 4010 Texas Houston F Frmn1b 4 2 2 2 Pencerf 4 0 2 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi G attisc 3 0 1 1 Poseyc 4 0 0 0 Dickrsndh 4 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Choolf 3 0 1 0 Altuye2b 5 2 2 0 Washington Arizona C Jhnsn3b 4 1 1 0 Petitp 0 0 0 0 Tlwtzkss 3 1 1 0 BButlerdh 2 0 0 0 Leaders Andrusss 4 0 1 0 Springrrf 2 0 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi B uptoncf 4 0 1 1 Morself 4 0 0 0 CGnzlzlf 4 0 1 0 S.Perezc 4 1 2 1 AMERICANLEAGUE ABeltre 3b 4 0 1 0 Fowler cf 4 0 1 1 Spancf 4 0 0 0 GParrarf 4 0 0 0 Smmnsss 4 0 1 1 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 Arenad3b 4 0 2 0 AGordnlf 2 0 0 0 BATTING —Solarte, NewYork, .336; VMartinez, Fielder1b 4 0 2 0 MDmn3b 5 0 0 0 Rendon3b 4 0 1 0 Prado3b 4 1 1 0 Minorp 3 0 0 0 HSnchz1b-c 4 0 1 0 Mornea1b 3 0 1 1 Valenci3b 3 1 1 0 Detroit,.336;Mecabrera,Toronto,.329; Choo,Texas, Riosrf 3 0 1 0 Guzmn1b 3 1 1 0 Wedhrf 4 0 1 0 Gldsch1b 4 1 2 2 Thomsp 0 0 0 0 B.Hicks2b-1b2 0 0 0 Barnesrf 3 0 0 0 Ciriacopr-2b 0 1 0 0 .328;AIRamirez,Chicago,.327;Loney,TampaBay, Choicecf 3 0 0 0 Carterdh 4 2 3 0 WRamsc 4 1 1 0 Monterc 4 0 1 1 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 4 0 0 0 Pachecc 3 0 0 0 Giavtll2b 4 1 1 0 .317;KSuzuki, Minnesota,.314. LeMahi2b 3 0 00 Mostks3b 0 0 0 0 L Martndh 3 0 0 0 Hoeslf 4 2 2 3 D smndss 4 0 1 1 Hill2b 4010 JSchafrph 1 0 0 0 Vglsngp 1 0 0 0 RBI—JAbreu,Chicago,38; Micabrera,Detroit, Chirinsc 3 0 1 0 Corprnc 4 1 1 3 Espinos2b 4 0 0 0 C.Rosslf 3 0 0 0 Halep 0 0 0 0 Ariasph 1 0 0 0 Lcaincf 2 1 1 2 33; Moss,Oakland, 33; Brantley,Cleveland,30; ColaO dor2b 3 0 0 0 Villarss 4 0 0 0 T Moore1b 2 0 1 0 Inciartlf 0 0 0 0 P strnck2b 3 1 1 0 Huffp 0000 AEscorss 4 0 2 2 bello, Minnesota, 30; Ncruz,Baltimore, 30. Totals 30 0 7 0 Totals 3 5 8 118 Frndsn If 3 0 1 0 Pollock cf 3 0 1 0 R.Pena2b 1 0 0 0 Adrianzph-2b1 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 5 1 Totals 2 9 5 8 5 HOME RUNS —JAbreu, Chicago, 14;Bautista, ggg ggg ggg — 0 Texas Strasrgp 1 0 0 0 Owingsss 3 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 9 5 Totals 3 2 0 5 0 C olorado 000 1 0 0 ggg — 1 Toronto,10; Ncruz,Baltimore,10; Pujols, LosAnHouston 830 140 ggx — 8 McLothph 1 0 1 0 Arroyop 3 1 2 0 Atlanta ggg 183 100 — 5 Kansas Cit y 0 1 0 2 1 0 81x— 6 E—Springer(6). DP—Houston 4. LOB—Texas4, Storenp 0 0 0 0 DP — Colorado2, KansasCity1. LOB —Colorado eles, 10;Dozier,Minnesota,9; VMartinez, Detroit, 9; Baltimore7. 28—N.cruz (7). HR —Mi.cabrera (6), San Francisco ggg ggg 000 — g LOB — Atlanta 5, San Fra nci s co 8. 28 — B lanc o (1), rtiz, Boston,9; ColRasmus,Toronto, 9. V.Martinez(9), A.Jones(5). SB—R.Davis (13). CSHouston8. 28—ABeltre(7),Altuve(13),Guzman (3), Totals 3 1 1 7 1 Totals 3 23 8 3 4, KansasCity 7. 2B—A.Escobar (10). HR—S.Perez NATIONALLEAGUE Mi.cabrera(1), VMartinez(2). S—C.Joseph. Carter(9).38—Altuve(2). HR —Hoes (2), Corporan Washington 8 1 8 ggg ggg — 1 Pence 2 (10), H.Sanchez(4). 38—Gattis (1). (4), L.cain(1).SB—A.Gordon(1). BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado,.394;Blackmon, IP H R E R BBSD (4) Arizona ggg 128 ggx — 3 IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSD Colorado,.342;Utley,Philadelphia,.338;SSmith, San Detroit IP H R E R BBSO E—Desmond (9), Prado (8). DP—Arizona 2. Atlanta Colorado Diego,.336;Morneau,Colorado,.329. Smyly 6 5 1 1 2 7 Texas LOB —Washington 5, Arizona5. 28—Goldschmidt 2 MinorW,1-2 62- 3 3 0 0 2 6 MoralesL,3-3 5 8 4 4 4 0 RBI — Stanton, Miami, 42; Tulowitzki, Colorado, J.Miller W,1-0 2 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 Kahnle 1 0 0 0 0 M.HarrisonL,1-1 1 2-3 4 3 3 3 (16). 38 —Desmond (1). S—Strasburg. Thomas 2 0 0 0 1 0 33;Morneau,Colorado,30;Puig,LosAngeles,30; NathanS,9-11 1 1 0 0 0 0 Germano 31-3 6 5 5 2 1 IP H R E R BBBD Varvaro 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Masset 1 0 1 1 2 0 Black mon,Colorado,29;AdGonzalez,LosAngeles, Baltimore Sh.Tolleson 2 1 0 0 0 3 Washington Hale 1 1 0 0 1 0 KansasCity 28; Arenado, Colorado,26; Goldschmidt, Arizona,26. U.Jimenez 7 3 0 0 2 7 Ogando 1 0 0 0 0 1 StrasburgL,3-3 7 8 3 3 0 6 San Francisco ShieldsW5-3 7 5 1 1 0 8 HOMERUNS—Stanton, Miami, 11;Tulowilzki, O'DayH,4 1 0 0 0 0 2 Houston Storen 1 0 0 0 0 1 VogelsongL,1-2 6 7 4 4 1 8 W.DavisH,7 1 0 0 0 0 2 Colorado,11;Belt,SanFrancisco, 9; Blackmon, Col- Tom.HunterL,1-1 2-3 3 4 4 1 0 KeuchelW,4-2 9 7 0 0 0 7 Arizona Huff 2 2 1 1 0 2 Crow 1 0 0 0 1 2 orado, 9;CGomez,Milwaukee,9;AdGonzalez,Los Guilmet 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 HBP —byKeuchel(Choo). ArroyoW,4-2 9 7 1 1 1 7 Petit 1 0 0 0 0 2 WP—Masset. Angeles,9;Jupton, Atlanta,9. T—2:57. A—29,950(45,971). T—2:45.A—14,028 (42,060). T—2:21. A—19,025(48,633). T—2:51.A—41,506 (41,915). T—2:50. A—15,914(37,903).
Tommy John Continued from C1 Fernandez of the Miami Marlins
was the major league leader in strike-
Here are some of the victims: Patrick Corbin, Jarrod Parker, A.J. Griffin, Kris Medlen, Brandon Beachy, Matt Moore, Josh Johnson, Ivan Nova, Bobby Parnell, Luke Hoche-
outs when the team placed him on var, Bruce Rondon, Cory Gearrin. the disabled list Monday night. Fer- That is a full staff worth of major nandez seems likely to have ulnar league pitchers. collateral ligament r econstruction The volume of injured pitchers surgery, more commonly known as seems staggering. The year with the Tommy John surgery, the same oper- most documented Tommy John suration Harvey had last October. geries was 2012, when there were 69 The procedure, in which a torn between the majors and the minors. ulnar collateral ligament is replaced By mid-May of that season, only by a tendon from another part of 26 operati ons had been performed. the body, is both the scourge and the There is no telling what the final toll savior of pitchers' careers. First per- will be for 2014, of course, but there is formed by Dr. Frank Jobe on John, reason to fear it. then with the Los Angeles Dodgers, Yankees manager Joe Girardi, a in 1974, the procedure has been per- former catcher,cited the increased formed on an alarming number of specialization by amateur athletes arms already this season. as a reason for the trend. He said he According to research by Jon made sure his 12-year-old son, DanRoegele, a writer for the Hardball te, stops playing baseball every Oct. Times and Beyond the Box Score, 33 1 and takes time to participate in footpitchers in the majors or the minors
ball and basketball.
had undergone Tommy John surgery since Harvey's operation. The typical
ball year-round to satisfy scouts and
recovery time is at least 12 months.
collegerecruiters hungry for hard
Many young pitchers play base-
Atlanta
throwers. Doctors regularly cite this
starters. Soon, it seems, Fernandez
as a cause for the spike in Tommy John surgeries among amateurs. Fastball speeds beyond 80 to 85 mph are considered more than a developing ligament can handle.
will be part of a group Nova never knew was so big.
"I don't really care what coaches want to see and what scouts want to
"In the past, it was scarier, but right
now, it's like routine, because everybody's getting it," Nova said. "It's really unbelievable. Even here, there's guys I didn't know had the surgery,
see," Girardi said. "I need to do what alkd they told me. So that's a good I think is best for my soru keep him thing, because everybody says,'You healthy, keep him doing what he come back stronger.'" loves." Not all pitchers recover so easily. The Yankees lost Nova to a torn 7ypically, about 1 in 5 never makes it UCL last month during a game back to full strength, and some, like against the Tampa Bay Rays. Nova Beachy, Medlen, Johnson and Parksaid he did not expect to be so se- er, end up having the operation a secverely injured, and in the clubhouse ond time. Tuesday he wore a bulky brace Brian Wilson, the Los A ngeles on his right arm, which he cannot Dodgers reliever, grew up in New straighten. Hampshire, where the severe weathNova said he was discouraged er limited his pitching opportunities to hear about Fernandez, a pitch- but did not keep him from having er he admires, he said, for his "easy two Tommy John surgeries. Wilson cheese" — baseball lingo for a seem- said the modern ethos was to give in ingly effortless fastball. According to to pain, not grind through it. Modthe website Fangraphs, which tracks ern technology can detect problems
to the way it was played before, but now peopleare getting Tommy John with the slightest tear," Wilson said
last week. "I have to believe that people would be pitching through the slightest tear three decades ago. Now you don't pitch with pain. It's very precautious."
Harvey played in youth tournaments growing up in Connecticut, but he said he could not determine
what caused his injury. He tried to avoid surgery and still sounds surprised that he needed it. Even on the
operating table, Harvey said, he never felt discomfort in his elbow, only in his forearm.
"Guys are getting bigger and stronger, and ligaments just aren't able to withstand the pressure of throwing a
baseball," Harvey said. "It's obviously an unnatural movement and motion to actually throw something at
95 or 100miles an hour. That involves a lot of stress. Thankfully they have Tommy Johntomake you come back and analyzes baseball statistics, Fer- unknown to previous generations of and make you stronger, hopefully. I nandez's fastball averages 95.1 mph, pitchers. feel better about the way that my arm "I guess I can't compare the game feels right now." ranking sixth among major league
C4
TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
Blazers Continued from C1 No NBA team has ever rallied from a 3-0 deficit to
win a playoff series. B lazers c o ach T e r r y S totts, well a w ar e t h a t
he had to do something, switched things up heading intoGame 4 and gave the 25-year-old Batum the task of stopping his countryman, who turns 32 on Saturday. The combination seemed
to work: Parker scored 14 points in Game 4 after averaging 26 points and more than eight assists in the first three games of the series.
"I just did my job," Batum said. "My job was to slow him down. He's had
a great series so far. He's a great champion. So I just tried to do my job and slow him down." Parker, who had just one assist and three turnovers,
was the top scorer for the Spurs, who as a whole scored far fewer than the
116 points they averaged in the first three games.
"You have to give a lot of
credit to Portland," Parker
said. "They played great, they came out of the gates. Batum was great, he gave them a big boost. He got on the boards and was everywhere." Monday night's victory over the Spurs was the Blazers' first in a second
Haw s et irst ea uewinintwo ears Bulletin staff report LA PINE — It took nine innings, but La Pine got its first
but Gladstone scored twice in the bottom of the inning en
highlight a three-run second inning.
route to the Tri-Valley Conference victory. Jasmyn Reese
6-6 in the bottom of the ninth, La Pine freshman Bailey Mc-
a Shelby M auritson t r iple.
Fullhart fell in the champion-
Chloe Martin and Reese com- ships to North Bend's Keaton Girt came off the bench and bined to limit the one-loss and Baker in the Special District belted a line drive to left field, league-leading Gladiators to 3 district singles champibringing in Maddie Fisher just two hits. onships and the tandem of from second and sending the Central Linn 8, Culver 0: Devon Calvin and Evan RickHawks to a 7-6 victory over HALSEY — The Bulldogs ards placed fourth in the douSisters. managed just two base run- bles bracket to give Sisters Keara Parrish pitched eight ners and zero hits against the three qualifiers for the Class innings for La Pine (1-13 Sky- Cobras in a Class 2A/1A Spe- 4A/3A/2A/1A state t ournaEm, 7-17 overall) and helped cial District 3 contest. Josie ment next week. The threeherself out with a double and Harrison pitched 3 2/3 inning day championships at Oregon a triple. Brenna Carpenter of no-hit ball for Culver (4-7, State begin next Thursday. came on in relief in the ninth 4-16) after coming in to pitch to secure the win. Micae- in the third. GIRLS TENNIS la Miller was 3 for 4 with an Harris takes district title: RBI.
BASEBALL
The Outlaws (1-13, 1-21) Sisters 12, La Pine 3: SISwere led by Shayla Curtis, TERS — A 10-run first alwho was 3 for 5 with an RBI. lowed the Outlaws to seize Zoey Nason had two hits and control early and cruise to a three RBIs, and Kylie Steiner Sky-Em League victory. JarIn other Tuesday action: SOFTBALL
Gladstone 3, Madras 1: GLADSTONE — The White Buffaloes evened the score at 1-1 with a run in the fourth,
round since beating Utah
6-2, 6-0 but rebounded in the third-place match with a 7-5,
don Weems went 2 for 2 with three RBIs for Sisters (14-0,
BOYS GOLF
La Pine qualifies golfer to state: BLUE RIVER — After
the win made the Blazers, the fact remains that they
are one loss from elimination. Batum tried to spur
championships a t T o k atee Golf Club, L a P i ne's Isiah D olan finished with a t w o day total of 171 to take fifth
County rebounded and took the team title by 12 shots, finishing with a two-day toonships at Eagle Crest on tal of 792. Maddie KasbergMonday. The Hawks finished er led Crook County with a fourth with a 786, followed 192. Tianna Brown claimed
overall and clinch a spot at the Class 4A state champi-
second with an 804, and Raelyn Lambert was third with
won with a 703, while Junc- County qualified for the state t ion C i ty's J o hnny H u n t s tournament at Trysting Tree
Harris put away the Ravens'
Laura Fraser and Gwyneth
a 181 overall. Cottage Grove a 188. Ridgeview and Crook claimed medalist h onors with a 158.
1CS 1sll CIlOU
Ravens claim d i strict Trinity L u theran's Victoria crown: REDMOND — James Sample and Sisters' Codie Seeley's two-day total of 158 Lagao will also move on to was good enough for third state after shooting a 183 and place and helped Ridgeview a 191, respectively.
c o n f ident,"
Blazers guard Wesley Matthews said. "Someone has to make history at some
Bend (601) —RyanDeCastilhos 73-69—142, Max McGee 77-76— 153,Jack Klar79-74— 153, Chapi m Pedersen 80-73— 153,Sam Nielsen 8279 — 16t Mountain View (691) — Mason Krieger8082 — 162, BryceAnderson84-86—170, SethChilcutt 91-87—178,StephenSmallenberg91-88—179, Taylor Smith92-8M181. Redmond (749) — BrenonThornton8286 — 168, Trent Meyer 91-94—185, JasonSumerlin 106-97 —203, SonnySmith 100-107—207, Jordan christiansen119-93 —21z
NBA PLAYOFFS
Thunder win on late FTs
Special to The Washington Post
Oxbow, who had finished six lengths behind Normandy
The Associated Press
The filly who could win the Preakness will not be in
Invasion in the Derby, won at Pimlico.
By Andrew Beyer
Baltimore on Saturday.
Untapable captured the Kentucky Oaks in sensational fashion, a performance significantly faster than California Chrome's Kentucky Derby victory the next day. But trainer Steve Asmussen
semifinals.
her interests to run back in
Westbrook was fouled by Chris Paul while shooting a
two weeks," the trainer said. Asmussen, who won the
3-pointer with the Thunder
Preakness with Rachel Alex-
trailing by two. After his
andra under similar circum-
free throws, Paul drove to
stance in 2009, presumably knows what is best for his
3:23 for the Thunder. B lake Griffin h a d 2 4
points and 17 rebounds, Jamal Cr awford s c ored 19 points and Paul had 17
points and 14 assists for the Clippers. Also on Tuesday: Wizards 102, Pacers 79: INDIANAPOLIS — Marcin Gortat had 31 points
and 16 rebounds, John Wall scored 27 points and Washington rode a 39-re-
bound advantage to a rout o f Indiana that cu t t h e Pacers' lead in the Eastern
Conference semifinals to 3-2. David West scored 17 points for Indiana. Wash-
ington used a 15-6 run to take a 45-38 halftime lead, extended the margin to 24
after three and to as much as 30 in the fourth.
LaPine (785) —IsiahDolan82-89—171,Zack Smith 87-103 —190, SamWieber 90-101—191, Micah Jenkins 06-117 —233, Scout Labhart 127119 — 246.
Sisters (877) — NolanFerwalt 94-87—181, steenJohnson06-107—223, Devin Robilard 0905 — 234, KadeOwen125-04 —239.
Softball Class 4A Sky-EmLeague (9 innings)
Sisters La Pine
011 220 000 — 6 13 6 300 030 001 — 7 12 9
Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference Madras 0001000 — 1 2 2 Gladstone 1 0 0 200 x— 3 2 1
Class 2AttA Special District 3 Culver 0000000 — 0 0 2 Central Linn 4 3 0 010 x — 8 7 0
Baseball Class 4A Sky-EmLeague
La Pine Sisters
030 000 0
—33 3 (10)01 010 x — 12 9 1
Boys lacrosse Redmond Ridgeview
Monday'sresult aonconference 11 10
David J. Phillip/The Associated Press
against challenging males in the Preakness. "It is not in
of his 27 points in the final
77 —158.
Rosie Napravnik rides Untapable to victory during the Kentucky Oaks on May 2. Untapable could have run the Preakness, but her trainer decided not to run her again on just two weeks' rest.
onds to beat the Los Angeles Clippers 105-104 on Tuesdaynight to go up 3-2 in the Western Conference
Kevin Durant scored 10
Class 4A Sky-EmLeagueChampionships
At TokateeGolf Club, BlueRiver Par 72 Two-daytotals Teamscores— CottageGrove703,SweetHome 708, JunctionCiiy 772,LaPine785,Sisters877. Medalist —JohnnyHunts, Swe et Hom e, 81-
75 — 153.
time. Might as well be us."
the hoop, but Reggie Jackson stole the ball from him, and time expired.
Class4A/3A/2A/1A Special Dislrict 5 Championships At TokateeGolf Club Par 72 Two-daytotals Team scores— CrookCounty792,Ridgeview 804, TrinityLutheran927,Cotage Grove944. Medalist —TiannaBrown, Ridgeview,8992 — 1st Crook County (792) —MaddieKasberger 10488 — 192, Caitlin Dalton92-104—196, Sierra Smith 107-95 —202,MichaelaMcGrew106-109—215. Ridgeview (804) —TiannaBrown89-92—181, RaelynLambert 96-92—188, Kayla Heath109-108217, Megan Lau 108-0 0—218. Trinity Lutheran (927) —victoria Sample 86-91—183, Mariah Murphy126-113—239, Katie Murphy133-116—249, SavannahRose Walker 133123 — 256. Sislers (inc) —CodieLagao94-97—191, Emily Christen120-104 —224. Class 5A Special Dislrict1 Championships Juniper GolfCourse,Redmond Par 72 Two-daytotals Team scores— Summit599,Bend601,Eagle Point 657,Mountain View691,Redmond749. Medalist — Ryan DeCastilhos, Bend, 7369 — 14z Summit (599) — MaxHiglin 76-72—148, Declan Watts15-15—150, Jack Loberg 75-76—151, Ryan Blackwell 75-77 —152, Cole Chrisman78-
first-round series' deciding game.
overcame a s e v en-point deficit in the final 50 sec-
Girls golf
Boys golf
2003 but ultimately lost the
onds remaining, and the Oklahoma City Thunder
Golf Course in Corvallis next week, which begins Monday.
PREP SCOREBOARD
round against Dallas in
free throws with 6.4 sec-
for Ridgeview, which took
district singles championship for the Crook County junior.
ping the first three. Portland rebounded in the first
38 points and made three
at Tokatee Golf Club, Crook
of competition to finish with
to seven games after drop-
O KLAH OM A C I TY Russell Westbrook scored
cial District 5 championships
4 A/3A/2A/1A Special D i s trict 5 title, the third straight
T he Blazers were t h e last team to take a series
are
the Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Spe-
players en route to the Class with an 87 on the second day
his teammate along by asking, "Why not us?"
"We
d i strict:
BLUE RIVER — A f ter fi n-
medalist honors with a 181
en o w ee s'
on vacation. So w e j u st
GIRLS GOLF
Cowgirls wi n
carding an 89 on the second ishing one shot behind Ridday of the Sky-Em League geview after the first day of
"We had nothing to lose,"
Batum said. "We had no pressure. If we lose, we're went out there and played our game the way we're used to playing." No matter how hopeful
medalist honors with a 149.
O NTARIO — E l s a H a r r i s by Sisters with 877. Nolan defeated t w o Ri d g e view Ferwalt paced the Outlaws
20-2), Ryan Funk went 2 for 3 Caitlin Carr 6-2, 6-0 in the with a double and three RBIs, semifinals before dispatchand Joey Morgan doubled ing Ridgeview's Riley Hanks and drove in two run. For La 6-4, 6-3 in the finaL Crook Pine (1-13, 2-22), Tristan Cox C ounty's doubles team o f smacked a two-run double to
State.
HORSE RACING
in the 2000 conference semifinals.
win th e G reater Oregon League championships at Eagle Crest's Ridge Course.
6-3 winover a Vale tandem. T he Ravens fi nished w i t h BOYS TENNIS had a bunt single for Madras Outlaws send three to state: The state championships be- a team score of 665. Bran(6-7, 10-13) and scored on MEDFORD — Sisters' Paul gin on Thursday at Oregon don Ellwanger of Baker won
softball league win in two years onTuesday. With the score knotted up
had two hits.
Ptomey fell in the semifinals
and owner Ron Winchell decided almost immediately
filly. But his reluctance to run a top horse in the Preakness after a two-week rest is
The belief that horses need lengthy rest between
races has become part of thesport's orthodoxy. It is a radical change from the
every wise-guy handicapper's pick to win the Preakness. The colt had made a
with t h e
difficult for the horses. K entucky Derby w i n ners regularly come back to deliver smashing performances i n
Bal t i m ore:
a l m ost-universal up at Pimlico.
horses will "bounce" — i.e.,
always take a shot at the Tri-
long term," Porter said. The ple Crown, the Preakness is decision was subject to even one of the few races in which more second-guessing when top horses will run with two
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Mountain View's Mason Krieger taps in his putt on the eighth hole during the Class 5A Special District1 championship Tuesday afternoon at Juniper Golf Club in Redmond.
Boysgolf
Loberg rounded out the top
Normandy Invasion, Porter said, "Our goal is to have
Continued from C1
By way of first- and second-place team finishes, Sum-
a fresh horse" for races at
shot," Clemons said.
Saratoga in August. But after passing up a golden chance
of their golfers to the two-day 69 gave him a two-day total Class 5A state championships of 142 to claim a five-stroke in Banks next week, which victory over runner-up Matt begins on Monday. Hedges of A s hland, last "It's a great confidence year's district champ. The builder (heading into state)," L ava Bears entered the f i DeCastilhos said. "We definal round eight strokes back nitely feel really good as a
When he opted to skip the P reakness last y ear w i t h
to win a Triple Crown race,
Normandy Invasion developed afoot abscessthatpre-
run an inferior race — if they vented him from running at run back too quickly from a Saratoga; he was out of acpeak effort. Five-time Preak- tion for the remainder of his ness-winning trainer Bob 3-year-old year. Baffert believes that the DerP erhaps skipping t h e by's now-common fields of Preakness will work to the 20 horses put so much stress long-term advantage of Unon runners that they need tapable and the Derby run-
bold premature move into the teeth ofa fastpacebefore weakening to finish fourth in the Derby. Brown and owner Rick Porter hemmed more time to recover than and hawed about the Preak- the Preakness allows. ness before deciding not to Because the trainer of a run. "Coming back in two Derby winner w il l a l most weeks would be a mistake
Pimlico contradict the belief that this short layoff is too
Funny Cide (2003) won by past. In the 1950s and 1960s, nearly 10 lengths, Smarty good horses often raced with Jones (2004) won by 11 '/2, a week's rest (or less). Now Big Brown (2008) by 5 ~/2. In 3-year-olds get their final 2012 I'll Have Another and prep racethree,four or five Bodemeister finished 1-2 in weeks before the Derby, and the Derby, then ran much so the 14-day layoff before faster in the Preakness and the Preakness looks like a finished 1-2 again. None of daunting challenge. them bounced. When Derby Why do modern-day thor- winners have flopped in Baloughbreds need such gen- timore — such as Orb in 2013 tle handling'? The change and Super Saver in 2010in training philosophy may the explanation may be that have occurred because hors- they benefited from perfect es are less robust than their trips at Churchill Downs and forebears. It may have to do did not get such an easy set-
part of a trend in the sport. use of Lasix, as the diuretic Only three of the Derby's 19 causeshorses to lose signifstarters will be in the field. icant weight and they need The colts who finished 2-3- time torecover from a race. 4-5-6 will not challenge Cali- Many leading trainers are fornia Chrome. believers in th e Ragozin Asmussen's decision is Sheets and the Thoro-Graph as disappointing as the one speed figures, both of which made last year by Chad espouse the philosophy that Brown, trainer of Normandy Invasion, who was almost
weeks' rest. The results at
ners who are absent from Baltimore. But patience and
prudence are not necessarily rewarded in racing, as the example of Normandy Invasion demonstrated. Sometimes the wisest strategy is to strike while the iron is hot.
"It was that perfect of a
five with a 151. mit and Bend will send all five
DeCastilhos' second-round
of Summit. But a 292 on the second — the l owest team total for Bend since at least
team, and I know at least two
2007, according to Clemons-
guys can go lower for sure. It helps build my confidence and gives us a good vibe as to
helped the Bears finish with
what it feels like to play that
a 601 for the tourney, and just well." two strokes shy of the Storm Mason Krieger posted a for the district crown. two-day total of 162 to pace Summit's Max Higlin card- Mountain View, which was ed a 72 on Tuesday to finish with a 148 and a third-place f inish, Declan W a tt s w a s fourth with a 150, and Jack
fourth as a team with a 691.
Redmond, which rounded out the team standings, was led by Brenon Thornton's 168.
C5 THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
16,715 ~4~4
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O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugotin.com/business. Also sooarecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S&P 500
N ASDAQ ~ 1 3 69
+
4,130.17
Todap
GOLD ~ $1 29460
10 YR T NOTE 2.61%
+.80
1,897.45
58$P 500
Wednesday, May14, 2014
On the rise?
1,860
Economists are anticipating that the producer price index increased for the second month in a row in April. The index measures price changes before they reach the consumer. It edged up in March, led by gains for food, clothing, jewelry and chemicals. Overall inflation remains relatively tame. Producer prices increased 1.4 percent during the past 12 months. The Labor Department reports April's producer price index today.
"
0.3
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16,400"
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StocksRecap
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HIGH LOW CLOSE 16735.51 16695.92 16715.44 DOW Trans. 791 8.92 7867.72 7903.51 DOW Util. 537.85 533.72 535.85 NYSE Comp. 10725.09 10698.25 10702.86 NASDAQ 4155.13 4128.01 4130.17 S&P 500 1902.17 1896.06 1897.45 S&P 400 1378.10 1367.68 1368.10 Wilshire 5000 20154.17 20071.00 20079.53 Russell 2000 1134.45 1121.03 1121.16
DOW
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CHG. %CHG. WK +1 9.97 t0.12% + 36.06 t 0 .46% L +1.36 t 0 .25% V -064 -001% L -1 3.69 -0.33% L +0.80 +0.04% -6.48 -0.47% L -18.27 -0.09% -1 2.49 -1.10% L
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MO QTR YTD +0.84% +6.80% W +9.23% L L +2.91% L V -1.11% +2.66% L L +1.90% +1.90% L V -3.65%
Wall Street anticipates that the retailer, which also operates Bloomingdale's stores, will report Dividend Footnotes: a -Extradividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c -Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declared cr paid inlast12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, nc regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent improved earnings and revenue dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend for its fiscal first quarter. Winter announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date. PE Footnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. storms chilled Macy's sales in the November-January quarter. Investors will have their eye on the company's latest sales figures to assess whether more consumers portfolio. Elizabeth Arden has been struggling with shopped at the chain as the winter Elizabeth Arden reported an unexpected fiscal third-quarter loss of 89 cents per share after the sluggish sales for some time, a slump that was faded. market closed Monday, and investors fled. Shares of compounded by the difficult holiday shopping season. thebeautyproducts company Its sales continued to sag into the early spring $57.84 plummeted 23percent Tuesday. The company reported its loss widened to $60 $47.23 The companyhas hired Goldman $26.4 million for the quarter ended Sachs to help it explore its strategic March 31, from $1.3 million a year 50 alternatives.Goldman Sachs will help earlier. On an adjusted basis, it lost 84 the company look at ways to boost cents per share. Analysts polled by '14 shareholder value, speed up growth FactSet were anticipating it to 40 and maximize the value of its brand break-even. Operating I I EPS * 1 0- YR* YTD 5 - YR
: '::" Elizabeth Arden plunges
Price-earnings ratio:
EliZabeth Arden (RDEN) T
ue s day's close: $27.50
Price-earnings ratio: 172
15
based on trailing 12 month results
$24
Dividend: $1.00 Div. yield: 1.7%
AP
Source: FactSet
49
(Based on trailing 12 month results)
T o t al returns through May 13
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RAx
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RDEN
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+1.11 '
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1.3699
1.9 7.9
Source: FactSet
SelectedMutualpunds
Encana
ECA
Close:$22.98 L0.42 or 1.9% Higher gas prices and rising volumes pushed the Canadian energy company past Wall Street expectations during the first quarter. $24 22 20
F
M A 52-week range
$26.18~
Vol.:14.8m (5.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.24b
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L 0 NAME TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV -0.1 L L +33. 3 +4 9 .0 67 8 1 2 1. 0 0 Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ 98.06 97 . 8 2 -.07 -0.1 L N D j: J F M A Avicta Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 32.94 3 1. 9 4 -.29 -0.9 V L L +13.3 +16 .2 4 0 2 1 6 1. 2 7 '13 I '14 W W -3.5 +16.1 57277 20 0 .04 B ank of America BAC 12 .13 ~ 18.03 15 . 0 3 -.04 -0.3 L Source: FactSet BarrettBusiness B BS I 4 5 .07 o — 1 02 . 20 46 .64 -1.64 -3.4 L V V -49.7 - 17.5 5 6 21 0. 7 2 Boeing Co BA 9 4 .10 ~ 144. 5 7 13 3.45 + . 85 +0.6 L L L -2.2 +43.3 3116 23 2 . 92 Cascade Baacorp C A C B4 .31 ~ 6.95 4.83 ... . .. L L T -7.6 -17.9 32 5 Deere's demand question -.38 -1.5 L W W -8.6 +21.4 2 9 0 1 9 0.48a Columbia Bokg C O L B 21.26 ~ 30. 36 25.12 Farm equipment maker Deere has Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 89. 9 6 85.75 +.34 +0.4 L L L +8 . 9 +45.6 93 28 1.12 projected that sales of its Costco Wholesale CO ST 107.38 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 6.29 -.22 -0.2 L L L -2.3 + 7 . 1 1 212 2 6 1.42f agriculture and turf gear will ty Craft Brow Alliance BREW 7.40 18.70 11 .62 - .49 -4.0 W W W -29.2 +6 0.2 5 8 61 moderate this year. FLIR Systems F LIR 23.58 ~ 37.42 3 4. 1 4 -.37 -1.1 W V +13.4 t 40. 4 43 3 2 4 0. 4 0 The company, due to report HewlettPacKard H P Q 20 . 25 — o 33.90 33 .28 + . 4 6 +1.4 L L L + 18.9 +55 .1 7 2 49 1 2 0 . 64f fiscal second-quarter earnings, HomoFederal Bocp ID HOME 11.54 ~ 1 6.03 15. 3 6 + . 1 0 +0.7 L L V +3.1 +21 .9 46 dd 0.2 4 also has predicted that sales of Intel Corp I NTC 21.89 ~ 27.24 26.4 5 +. 0 8 +0 .3 L V L +1.9 +11. 3 20057 14 0 . 9 0 construction and forestry gear will Koycorp K EY 10.24 ~ 14.70 1 3. 8 1 -.05 -0.4 L L V + 2.9 +36 . 7 7 7 86 1 3 0 . 26f rise about 10 percent in 2014 as Krogor Co KR 3 2 .77 — o 46.80 46 .59 + . 07 + 0.2 L L L +17.9 +37 .2 2 7 36 1 6 0. 6 6 L L +51. 9 +6 9 .7 1 274 5 6 the economy recovers and more Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 8.34 -.13 -1.5 L houses are built in the U.S. Will LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 20.35 15.8 6 +. 1 7 +1 .1 L L V -14.3 -19.9 2427 24 w +12. 0 + 3 3.1 5 3 5 2 3 0 . 7 1 MDU Resources MDU 24 . 09 ~ 36.05 3 4. 2 3 -.26 -0.8 w w that demand be apparent in EN T 1 7.75 ty 24.31 20 .73 -.41 -1.9 L L V -13.9 +17.4 5 4 6 1 6 0 . 20f Deere's latest financial snapshot? MentorGraphics M M icrosoft Corp MSF T 3 0.84 ~ 41.66 40. 4 2 +. 7 3 +1.8 L L W +8.0 +25 . 4 26695 15 1 . 1 2 Nike Ioc 8 N KE 59.11 ~ 80.26 7 4.5 9 -.04 -0.1 L L L - 5.2 +16.6 2217 2 5 0 . 96 Nordstrom Inc J WN 54.90 ~ 64.19 6 2. 6 2 -.14 -0.2 L L L +1.3 +8.1 17 2 1 1 7 1. 3 2 V V +2.3 +2.5 Nwst Not Gas NWN 39.96 ~ 45.89 4 3. 8 0 - .43 -1.0 V 91 20 1 . 84 PaccarIoc PCAR 51.13 ~ 68.81 6 3. 3 9 -.43 -0.7 L W V +7.1 +24 . 5 1 2 77 1 9 0 . 88f Planar Systmc P LNR 1 55 ~ 2 93 2 29 -.01 -03 L L L -98 +2 9 0 17 dd Plum Crook P CL 40.57 ~ 54.62 4 3. 5 5 -.46 -1.0 V L L -6.4 - 12.3 647 3 8 1 . 76 Proc Cactpartc PCP 207.15 ~ 274. 9 6 25 3.64 -2.07 -0.8 V L L - 5.8 +21.8 8 5 8 2 1 0 . 1 2 Safoway Ioc SWY 19.92 ~ 36.03 3 4. 3 7 -.01 . . . L L L +17.9 +6 0 .7 2 755 3 0. 8 0b V V - 15.0 + 7 . 6 2 7 7 d d 0 . 7 5 Schoitzor Stool SCH N 2 3.12 ty 33.32 27.76 -.03 -0.1 L Sherwin Wms SHW 163.63 ~ 208. 6 3 28 0.26 -1.58 -0.8 L L L +9.1 +8.5 458 27 2. 2 0 Staocorp Focl S FG 43.01 ~ 69.51 6 1. 9 3 -.53 -0.8 L L V -6.5 +44.1 1 4 9 1 2 1 . 10f StarbocksCp SBUX 62.31 ~ 82.50 71. 1 6 +. 0 1 ... L L V -9.2 +14.3 2833 2 9 1 . 04 L +76.6 + 1 48.8 2264dd Triqaiot Semi TQNT 5.90 — O 15.07 14 .73 -.30 -2.0 L L Umpqoa Holdings UM P Q 12.51 ~ 1 9.65 1 6. 3 4 -.22 -1.3 L W W -14.6 +36.3 1360 20 0.60a US Baocorp U SB 33.30 ~ 43.66 40.5 3 +. 0 8 +0 .2 L V V + 0.3 +23. 5 5 5 34 1 3 0. 9 2 Spring sales pickup? Washington Fodl WA F D 16.87 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.02 -.32 -1.5 W W W - 9.7 +26.6 2 7 7 1 4 0 . 4 0 Macy's reports its latest quarterly WellsForgo & Co WF C 3 7.83 — o 50.49 49 .81 + . 0 5 +0.1 L L L +9.7 +34. 1 9 5 50 1 2 1 . 40f financial results today. Woyorhaoasor W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 3 0. 2 8 -.05 -0.2 W L L -4.1 -0.6 2654 26 0 . 88
1 Q' 1 4
"" ' ~ $1 01.70
.
M
F
$54.20
$16.48~
M A 52-week range
M $ 23.93
PE: 49.0 Vol.:9.4m (1.7x avg.) P E: .. . Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$17.03b Yie l d: 1.2%
Nabors Industries
4c
1 Q '13
.
Close:$29.88L2.35 or 8.5% The cloudcomputing company rebounded from a rough year with a very strong first-quarter performance and outlook. $40
NorthwestStocks
0.1
.
Rackspace Hosting
est.
0.2
"
•
The stock market made the slightest of gains in choppy trading Tuesday. Major indexes flipped between gains and losses, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index briefly crossed above 1,900 for the first time. Economic reports gave the market little direction. The government said retail sales slowed to a crawl in April as consumers scaled back purchases of furniture and electronics. Among companies making moves, Allergan rose after Valeant Pharmaceuticals said it would raise its offer for the maker of Botox. Six of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 index ended higher, led by energy and industrial companies.
1,800
1,760 "
"
StoryStocks
......... Close: 16,715.44 Change: 19.97 (0.1%)
"
NYSE NASD
0.4
"
"
16,800"
Vol. (in mil.) 2,849 1,883 Pvs. Volume 2,950 1,834 Advanced 1 383 8 9 8 Declined 1720 1749 New Highs 147 59 New Lows 20 38
05
"
16,320" ""' 10 DAYS "
"
1,880 "
Producer price index seasonally adjusted percent change
1654o "
Change: 0.60 (flat)
1,840 "
"
$1 9.50 W
Dow jones industrials
........ Close: 1,897.45
1,840' " ""'10 DAYS
1,920 "
'
NBR Close:$25.76%-0.01 or flat Bernstein Research downgraded the oilfield services company, believing that optimism for the sector has peaked as risks increase. $30
J.C. Penney
JCP Close:$9.09 V-0.09 or -1.0% Shortly before it posts quarterly earnings numbers, Sterne Agee is cautiously optimistic that the retailer will top expectations. $10
25 20 F
M
A
M
F
52-week range $14.50~
M
A
M
52-week range $28 .20
$4.90 ~
$19.63
Vol.:5.6m (1.0x avg.) PE: 50 . 5 Vol.:22.4m (1.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$7.48 b Yiel d : 0.6% Mkt. Cap: $2.77 b
DirecTV
DTV Close:$86.08 V-1.08 or -1.2% Some industry analysts say that not only is it likely that ATBT will buy the satellite TV company, but that it's also a great idea. $90
P E: . . . Yield: ...
Keurig Green Mtn.
GM CR
Close:$119.07 L8.36 or 7.6% Coca-Cola raised its stake in the beverage dispenser company to 16 percent, seeking to get its familiar brands into more homes. $140 120
80
F
M
A
M
100 60
F
52-week range $82.08~
$8 9.46
Vol.:16.2m (3.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$43.9 b
M
A
M
52-week range $56.87~
$ 124 .42
PE: 1 6 .7 Vol.:11.5m (3.4x avg.) PE: 3 5 .3 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$19.38b Yie l d: 0.8%
Halozyme Thera.
HALO Close:$8.04%0.52 or 6.9% The drug developer said it's closer to reinitiating the study of a pancreatic cancer treatment that was halted by regulators. $20 15
Elizabeth Arden RDEN Close:$27.50V-8.13 or -22.8% The cosmetics maker reported a surprising quarterly loss and said it was exploring alternatives to create shareholder value. $40 35 30
10
F
M A 52-week range
$5.88~
M $18 .18
Vol.:11.7m (4.9x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1 b
P E: . . Yield:..
F
M A 52-week range
M
$23.45~
$4 9.47
Vol.:4.0m (11.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$816.26 m
PE: 2 7 .2 Yield : ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU
HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury fellto 2.61 percent Tuesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill . 0 2 .0 2 6-month T-bill . 0 4 .04 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 2-year T-note . 3 8 .4 0 5-year T-note 1.61 1.66 10-year T-note 2.61 2.66 30-year T-bond 3A5 3.50
BONDS
... ...
v
w
.0 3
W V ~
W W
.07 . 10
L T T V
L .25 L .82 V 1.92 W 3.13
~
-0.02 V -0.05 V -0.05 L -0.05 L
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 3.23 3.27 -0.04 L
Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.56 4.56 .. . w Barclays USAggregate 2.31 2.28 +0.03 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.00 5.02 -0.02 w RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.24 4.21 +0.03 L YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.86 1.88 -0.02 W 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 2.98 2.96 +0.02 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
W W 2 .80
w w 4.0 8 w L L w
w W L w
1.87 5.03 3.8 9 1.10 2.7 1
AP
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 BalA m 24.9 2 + .83 +2.6 +12.6 +12.0+14.9 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.31 -.84 +4.6 +9.6 +9.4+12.8 8 A 8 CpWldGrlA m 46.91 +3.9 +15.8 +10.6+15.0 8 8 D EurPacGrA m 49.71 +.83 +1.3 +12.8 +6.5+12.6 8 C C SiriusXM 674306 3.27 + .07 FnlnvA m 52. 1 5 +.82+1.6 +16.8 +13.0+17.6 D C C S&P500ETF 616667 189.96 +.18 GrthAmA m 43.52 +.81 +1.2 +18.6 +13.9+17.2 C 8 D BkofAm 572772 15.03 -.04 Prudential Iavostmoo NotorRocA m IncAmerA m 21.47 +.82 +4.8 +12.4 +11.1+15.5 A A A Cisco 572290 22.86 -.33 InvCoAmA m 38.22 +.81 +4.5 +20.4 +14.3+17.0 A 8 D iShR2K 546683 111.43 -1.10 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.84 +.81 +0.7 +14.3 +10.9+16.3 C 8 C PlugPowr h 532829 4.09 + . 19 WAMutlnvA m40.68 +.84 +3.6 +18.9 +15.1+18.4 8 A 8 IShEMkts 522968 42.48 +.16 Facebook 475151 59.83 Dodge & Cox Income 1 3.87 +.83 +3.7 + 3.3 +4.6 +6.9 A 8 B AT&T Inc 338369 36.20 -.37 IntlStk 45.41 -.85 +5.5 +20.4 +9.4+16.3 A A A IShJapan 291122 11.30 +.15 Stock 172.83 -.81 +2.6 +23.3 +16.0+20.1 A A A Fidelity Contra 94.68 - . 8 8 -0.5 +16.8 +13.9+18.5 D 8 B Gainers ContraK 94.6 5 - . 87 -0.5 +16.9 +14.1+18.7 D 8 B NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 50.17 . . . + 1.4 +17.8 +13.9+20.8 C A C Fidoli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 67.42 +.84 +3.4 +18.5 +14.8+19.0 B 8 B IntrCloud n 5.06 +1.96 + 63.2 InterCld wt 3.02 +.93 + 4 4.5 «C FraakTomp-Franklio Income C m 2. 55 .. . + 6 .0 + 11.8 +9.3+14.9 A A A KingtoneW 4.65 +1.24 + 3 6.4 63 IncomeA m 2. 5 3+.81 +6.7 +12.5 +9.9+15.5 A A A 2Un 13.35 +2.58 + 2 4.0 Oakmark Intl I 26.74 +.87 +1.6 +14.7 +11.5+18.8 A A A GoldResrc 4.28 +.76 + 2 1.6 0O Oppoohoimor RISDivA m 19 . 93 . . . +1 .2 + 14.3 +11.6+15.5 E D E ZhoneTech 2.70 +.45 + 2 0.0 RISDivB m 17 . 81 . . . +0 .9 + 13.3 +10.6+14.4 E E E Morningstar OwnershipZone™ Sysorex n 4.75 +.70 + 1 7.3 RISDivC m 17.70 . . . + 1.0 +13.4 +10.7+14.6 E E E ManhBrCa 2.25 +.33 + 1 7 .1 OsFund target represents weighted SmMidyalAm 45.64 -.89 +3.1 +21.3 +9.7+17.9 B E E ACareSrco 2.87 +.41 + 1 6.7 average of stock holdings SmMidyalBm 38.41 -.88 +2.8 +20.3 +8.8+16.9 C E E PlanetPay 2.53 +.36 + 1 6.4 • Represents 75% of Iund's stock holdings T Rowo Price Eqtylnc 33.61 -.82 +3.0 +16.1 +13.6+18.2 D C B Losers CATEGORY Natural Resources GrowStk 51.30 -.87 -2.4 +19.9 +14.9+19.8 B A A NAME L AST C H G %CHG MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 60.42 -.12 +4.5 +29.8 +24.6+28.7 A A A RATING™ PGNAX -42.79 -39.3 Vanguard 500Adml 175.37 +.11 +3.4 +18.6 +14.8+19.0 8 A 8 DXP Ent 66.13 ElizArden 27.50 -8.13 -22.8 ASSETS ***crcr 500lnv 175.35 +.12 +3.4 +18.4 +14.7+18.9 8 8 8 -.44 -17.9 MagellPet 2.02 500Sgnl 144.86 +.89 +3.4 +18.6 +14.8+19.0 8 A 8 EXP RATIO 1.17% TechComm 4.88 -1.06 -17.8 CapOp 47.83 -.11 +3.6 +20.1 +15.5+19.8 8 A A MANAGER Neil Brown -1.10 -17.4 FoelTech 5.24 Eqlnc 30.79 +.83 +4.2 +17.0 +15.8+19.8 C A A SINCE 2006-07-31 IntlStkldxAdm 28.66 +.84 +3.1 +10.4 +5.2 NA C D RETURNS 3-MO $1,668 million Foreign Markets StratgcEq 31.32 -.89 +4.4 +24.9 +16.5+23.9 A A A YTD +8.9 TgtRe2020 27.93 +.83 +3.0 +10.3 +8.8+13.2 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +9.5 Tgtet2025 16.22 +.81 +3.0 +11.4 +9.3+14.1 A A B Paris 4,505.02 +11.37 + . 25 3-YR ANNL +18.7 TotBdAdml 10.79 +.83 +3.2 +0.8 +3.4 +4.7 C D E London 6,873.08 +21.33 + . 31 5-YR-ANNL -0.5 Totlntl 17.13 +.82 +3.0 +10.3 +5.1+12.0 D D D Frankfurt 9,754.43 + 51.97 + . 54 TotStlAdm 47.79 -.84 +2.8 +18.7 +14.6+19.6 8 8 A Hong Kong22,352.38 + 90.77 + . 41 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 47.77 -.83 +2.8 +18.6 +14.4+19.5 8 8 A Mexico 42,236.83 +1 50.66 +.36 Noble Energy Inc 3.95 Milan 21,255.99 -237.68 -1.11 USGro 28.93 +.82 +0.8 +19.8 +14.2+18.5 8 8 8 Schlomberger NV 3.8 Tokyo 14,425.44 +275.92 +1.95 Welltn 39.23 +.87 +4.1 +12.7 +11.3+14.3 A A A 3.79 Stockholm 1,373.62 + 8.84 + . 65 Halliburton Co Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 3.27 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,475.40 +46.40 + . 85 Concho ResourcesInc Zurich 8,543.58 -1.54 -.02 Dril-Quip Inc 3.1 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
Prudential Jennison Natural FAMILY Resources has 86 percent of its Marhetsummary American Funds stock holdings in the energy Most Active sector and isn't as diversified as it NAME VOL (80c) LAST CHG once was, cautions Morningstar.
Commodities The price of oil rose Tuesday as traders looked ahead to the Energy Department's latest tally of U.S. crude oil supplies. Natural gas fell. Gold, copper and silver also declined.
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose versus several currencies, including the euro and British pound. But the ICE U.S. Dollar Index, which compares the dollar against a basket of major currencies, fell.
55Q QD
FUELS
CLOSE PVS. 101.70 100.59 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.13 2.14 Heating Oil (gal) 2.94 2.92 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.36 4.43 UnleadedGas(gal) 2.93 2.91
%CH. %YTD + 1.10 + 3 . 3 +0.09 +11.7 +0.87 -4.3 - 1.71 + 3 .0 + 0.54 + 5 . 2
CLOSE PVS. 1294.60 1295.60 19.50 19.50 1456.00 1441.90 3.15 3.17 817.45 808.90
%CH. %YTD - 0.08 + 7 . 7 + 0.02 + 0 .9 + 0.98 + 6 .2 -0.54 -8.5 +1.06 +1 4.0
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.37 1.38 - 0.47 + 1 . 9 Coffee (Ib) 1.84 1.86 -1.32 +65.9 Corn (bo) 5.03 4.97 +1.16 +1 9.3 Cotton (Ib) 0.91 0.91 - 0.41 + 7 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 338.00 337.50 +0.15 -6.1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.62 1.61 +0.31 +1 8.5 Soybeans (bu) 15.02 14.84 +1.25 +1 4.5 Wheat(bu) 7.00 7.06 -0.78 +1 5.7 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6823 -.0043 -.26% 1.5292 Canadian Dollar 1.0 9 14 +.0023 +.21% 1.0108 USD per Euro 1.3699 -.0056 -.41% 1.2970 JapaneseYen 102.29 + . 1 2 + .12% 1 01.93 Mexican Peso 12. 9130 -.0569 -.44% 12.1375 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4580 +.0031 +.09% 3.6153 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9273 +.0050 +.08% 5.8010 South African Rand 10.3169 -.0485 -.47% 9.1621 Swedish Krona 6.5 5 22 -.0188 -.29% 6.6121 Swiss Franc .8904 +.0023 +.26% . 9 583 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0686 +.0006 +.06% 1.0047 Chinese Yuan 6.2290 -.0088 -.14% 6.1515 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7517 -.0000 -.00% 7.7618 Indian Rupee 59.525 -.550 -.92% 54.846 Singapore Dollar 1.2523 +.001 9 $..15% 1.2415 South KoreanWon 1022.60 -2.00 -.20% 1113.50 -.01 -.03% 2 9.92 Taiwan Dollar 30.24
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
BRIEFING BrasadaRanchto sell newhomelots Brasada Ranch has received approval and started site work on 42 new single-family home lots, the final phase of its original master plan, according to a news release issued Tuesday. The lots, called Hat Rock Homesites, will be some of the largest at the destination resort in Powell Butte and sit several hundred feet higher in elevation than the entrance to the resort. The location, at the base of the Powell Buttes, will provide views of the Cascades, the news release states. The first16 lots are expected to range from 0.67 acre to 1.13 acres and be available for sale midsummer. Prices have not been finalized. Crook County approved the master plan for Brasada Ranch in 2004, according to county documents. At build-out, the resort expects to have 750 single-family home lots total, according to the news release, and 359 have been sold. Bythe end of the year, Brasada Ranch expects 20 new homes to be completed, bringing the total to 71 homes, along with 88 individually owned cabins. In 2010, Jeld-Wen sold Brasada Ranch, Eagle Crest (near Redmond) and the Running Y Ranch near Klamath Falls to a joint venture that included the Northview Hotel Group.
POWELL BUTTE
OS 0 iCeSieonau ion OC By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
The building housing the Powell Butte Post Office goes
on the auction block Saturday,
The building that houses the Powell Butte Post Office will be on the auction block Saturday in Portland.
OntheWed For more information about Realty Marketing/Northwest's spring auction, visit www.rmnw-auctions.com.
but the U.S. Postal Service says
don't worry, the post office will remainopen forbusinesseven Bidding for this and several if the building comes under other properties — induding new ownership. the Nu-Vu Motel, in Biggs Realty Marketing/Northwest Junction, and a 1-acre home lot is offering the 713-square-foot
in Sun Forest Estates about 10
building and accompanying 1.24 acres with no minimum bid required, according to its 2014 Spring Auction Catalog. "It's one of the most popular
miles southeast of La Pine-
properties we've offered in 28
office building comes the opportunityto renegotiate the post office lease, now $725 a month, Rosenthal said. The wedge-shaped acreage at state Highway 126 and Bozarth Road is zoned forcommercial development. The post office may move this year to reduced hours, likely six hours daily, Monday
years ofbeinginbusiness," said the firm's president, John Rosenthal. "Thirty-five people have inquired about theproperty and we expect some com-
petitive bidding." Jeld-Wen Inc., the owner, paid $169,000 for the property in 2006, according to Crook Countyrecords online.
starts at noon Saturday at the Sheraton Hotel at the Portland International Airport. With ownership of the post
through Friday, said Ernie Swanson, Postal Service corporate communication special-
- Ilil I iiIiiir.
Courtesy Realty Marketing/ Northwest
ist in Seattle. First, the Postal
Service plans to survey Powell Butte customers and hold a public meeting in the summer to discuss the survey and outline its plans. Foot traffic is down at the post office, one
state 84 meets U.S. Highway 97 that opened in 2000, he said. at the Columbia River. Sammi Tsubotabuilt the
"I was kind of surprised to
see it was on the auction," Lafever said.
reason the Postal Service may
18-unit motel, now property of
reduce its hours, he said.
Bishop Services Inc., in 1962 to
Reservepricesforthe four
capitalize on traffic crossing the Sam Hill Memorial Bridge, which opened the same year, saidRichard Lafever,aBishop employeewho managed the
Biggs Junction properties together add up to $597,500, although the properties are available separately. The Nu-
motelforseveralyears.Tsub-
at $275,000, accordingto the auction catalog.
"If everything moves forward, we're probably looking at changing the hours around October of this year," Swanson sald. Also available for auction the
same dayis the ¹Vu Motel, one of fourpropertiesforsale
ota sold the hotel to Bishop around 1998; the motel lies ad-
at Biggs Junction, where Inter-
jacent to the Pilot Travel Center
Vu Motel minimum bid is set — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
recor winter or cance ations Oregon ECONOMY
showing strong job
growth The Associated Press PORTLAND — After a battering in the Great
Recession and a slow recovery, Oregon's job market is showing springtime Vlgol". The state Employment
Department said Tuesday Oregon added about
— Bulletin staff report
15,000 jobs in March and
April, the largest twomonth increase since Patrick Semansky i The Associated Press file photo
BANKRUPTCIES
The U.S. airline industry set a dubious record for canceled flights during the first three months of 2014. Weather wes the biggest culprit. The worst winter before this was 2001.
2005.
The Employment Department says that, compared national trends, Or-
Chapter7 Filed May 7 • Cody R. Richardson, P.O. Box 3239 No. 309, La Pine • Kevin S. and Mariah L. White, 25190 Alfalfa Market Road, Bend Filed May 8 • Elizabeth E. Majorowicz, 3127 S.W. Reindeer Ave., Redmond Filed May 9 • Cherie L. Smith, 1650 N.W. Ivy Ave., Redmond • Raquel and Carlow Guzman Mcfadden, P.O. Box 1745, Sisters • Amanda A. Brinduse, 1619 N.W. Newport Ave. No. 3, Bend • Brian K. and Katherine L. Delamarter, 536 N.W. 28th St., Redmond • Robert E. and Cynthia L. Scudder, 2056 S.W. 32nd Court, Redmond • Karen A. Taylor, 60311 Addie Triplett Loop, Bend • Carrie S. WilsonRobertson, 60986 Snowbrush Drive, Bend Filed May10 • Michael J. Jefferson, 4301 S.E Jerry Drive, Prineville Filed May11 • William J. Fitzpatrick, III, 20080 Doanna WayNo. 3, Bend Filed May12 • Shelby L. Varcoe, P.O. Box 2461, La Pine • Doreena DeeCole, 21578 Park Way, Unit 3, Bend Chapter 13 Filed May 6 • Carl J. Ylvisaker, 2987 S.W. 41st St., Redmond Filed May 9 • Collin T. and Regina L.Olmsted,8625 N.E. Seventh St., Terrebonne Filed May12 • Danny R. Kuettle,150 S.W.17th St. No. 3, Bend • Aaron D. Myhra, 2347 N.W. Hazelwood Ave., Redmond
egon lost a larger share of jobs during the recession
• Officials: U.S. airlines canceled4.6 percentof flights in first quarter
merged American Airlines and US Airways, canceling
The Associated Press
per passenger or $4.1 million for a typical plane holding
1.9 percent. Southwest Airlines and United Airlines
regain them.
150 fliers.
both canceled 1.1 percent and
Oregon is now adding jobs at a faster annual
NEW YORK — It's official: This winter was the worst for fliers in the 20 years that the
governmenthas been collecting data. During the first three
the nation. But airlines are also quicker to cancel flights these
days, sometimes a day in
Making things worse for
Delta Air Lines 0.2 percent.
advance of a storm. The shift
travelers, airlines have been
in strategy came in response to newgovernment regula-
cutting unprofitable flights and packing more passengers into planes. When flights get canceled there isn't anywhere to put the stranded passengers; some end up waiting days to secure a seat on another flight. In March, JetBlue had the
Some of the highest flight cancellation numbers came from smaller regional airlines that are operated by other companies on behalf
months of this year, U.S. air-
tions, improvements to over-
linescanceled 4.6percent of their flights, the Department
all operations and because canceling quickly reduces expenses.
of Transportation announced Tuesday. The worst winter before this was 2001, when
4.4 percent of flights were scrapped. Mother Nature is mostly to
In May 2010, a new DOT
rule took effect prohibiting airlines from keeping passengerson thetarmac for three hours or more. So,
blame, with a relentless wave
airlines now choose to cancel
of snow and ice storms par-
blocks of flights to avoid potential fines of up to $27,500
alyzing airline traffic across
must be over 21; 5:30-9 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery Mountain Room, 901 S.W. Simpson Ave., Bend; 503-548-4432. • Computer Essentials for the Workplace: Learn to feel comfortable with the different kinds of technology you will encounter and the basic software packages; registration required; $69; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • Executive Leadership MBA InformationSession: Meet College of Business representatives and learn about admission requirements, tuition, financial assistance and more. Designed for professionals in leadership roles now or in the future, the course takesabout two years to complete. To register contact osumba@ oregonstate.edu. For information, call 541-7375510; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; room 126, OSU-Cascades
pressJet, which flies regional planes for American, Delta and United, scrapped 5.1
percent of its March flights. American Eagle canceled
highest cancellation rate
4.1 percent of its flights and
among the bigger airlines: 2 percent of flights. That was closely followed by the
SkyWest — another subcontractor — nixed 2.3 percent of its scheduled flights.
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Commercial Lending: What Can goSideways and Howto Protect Yourself:Presented by the Risk Management Association East Cascades Chapter; $30 for members, $35 nonmembers; to register or learn more visit www.eventbrite.com/e/ commericial-lendingwhat-can-go-sideways-anhow-to-protect-yourselftickets-10442524873; 7:15-9:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-7437. THURSDAY • Bio on theHigh Desert: Oregon Biosciencehosts a panel discussion on the growing entrepreneurial bioscience community; registration required by May14; for more information, visit www. oregonbio.org and follow the link under events or call 503-548-4432; $50 for members; $80 for nonmembers; $25 for full-time students,
of the major airlines. Ex-
Graduate & Research Center, 650 S.W.Columbia St., Bend. FRIDAY • Build YourBusiness Website with WordPress: Use WordPress to create a custom website that looksprofessional, is easy to update and ranks higher in search engines; registration required; $149; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. • Executive Leadership MBA InformationSession: (See above.) Noon-1 p.m.; room 126 OSU-Cascades Graduate & Research Center, 650 S.W.Columbia St., Bend. SATURDAY • Entrepreneur's Boot Camp:Learn the fundamental sneeded to start a business, from startup logistics to branding; registration required; $129; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.
Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • SEO BasicsWorkshop: Hands-on workshop will feature digital marketing experts covering searchengine optimization basicsfor local business owners; bring your laptop; registration required; session one, 9-11a.m.; session two, noon-2 p.m.; cost: $99for Bend Chamber of Commerce andRely Localmembers, or $125 for nonmembers; 406Bend, 210S.W. Wilson Ave., No. 213, Bend; 541-550-7246, diana@406bend.com or www.406bend.com. MONDAY • Know Jobsand Resumes:Learn to update your resume to get the job you want; registration suggested; free; 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wail St.; 541-617-7080. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
and was slower at first to The department says rate than the nation as a
whole, 2.6 percent versus 1.7 percent. Despite that, Oregon's
unemployment rate remains at 6.9 percent, because baby boomers are retiring and shrinking the workforce. The percentage of Oregonians employed or looking for work is at its lowest level since compa-
rable statistics began to be compiled, in 1976.
Still a homefor Fannie,
Freddieundernewpolicy By Annie Lowrey
the role of the now-profitable
New York Times News Service
mortgage institutions, which
WASHINGTON — The
were fully taken over by the federal government during
federal overseer of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on Tuesday announced a shift in
policies intended to maintain the mortgage finance giants' role in parts of the housing market, spurmore home lending and aid distressed homeowners.
"Our overriding objective is to ensure that there is broad liquidity in the housing finance market and to do so in a way that is safe and sound," Melvin Watt, the new head of
the Federal Housing Finance Agency, said in a speech at the Brookings Institution in
Washington. But Watt's announcement
raises bigger questions about
the financial crisis to avoid
their bankruptcies. Watt's changes would perpetuate the presence of the
two government-sponsored enterprises in mortgage finance, rather than shrinking it.
Watt laid out several specific measures. For example,
ratherthan reducing current limits on the size of the loans they guarantee, as previously proposed by the former overseer, Fannie and Freddie would keep the current, rel-
atively loose, limits in place. The two enterprises back about two-thirds of all new
mortgages.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMEYI' W Fishing Report, D2 Outdoors Calendar, D4
THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
WATER REPORT For water conditions at local lakes and rivers, seeB6
BRIEFING Fishing event held for youth The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will be holding a free youth fishing event at Pine Nursery Pond from 9a.m. to1 p.m. Saturday. The event will be open to anglers17 and younger. Loaner rods, reels and tackle will be available, andODFW staff and volunteers will be on hand to help participants learn how to bait a hook, cast and land their catch. The pond will be stocked with rainbow trout prior to the event. Kids ages 13and under do not need afishing license, but those ages 14 to17 will need ajuvenile angling license. All state fishing regulations appiy The Bend PineNursery Community Park is located in northeast Bend near Ponderosa Elementary School. For more information, visit www.dfw.state. or.us.
O< www.bendbulletin.com/outdoors
Surviving a wet spring bear hunt etting ready for a hunt
against the tree, it scrapes its
tall timber and the rain began
upper and lower teeth up and to fall about mid-morning. down into the cambiNeil was soaked from um. A sticky, spongy H U N TING going too deep in the m ass accumulates and creek. search north of the Coquille the bear scrapes its teeth with In my survival pack, I River, where the bears focus its tongue. The bear rips off had an emergency kit that a 14-year-old named Bekka Nute on spring grasses and forbs. more bark and scrapes more "South of the river there are cambium. If made for me alot ofbears, but they are hard- he completes after reading er to find because they're in the a circuit the Outdoor 15-year reprodwhere theypeel around the section in this GARY the trees," Freitag explained. tree, the tree newspaper. LEWIS Because I was headed to dies. Bears Inside were Port Orford, he suggested I use that learn to four watercalls to try to bring a bear out peel as cubs proof matchinto the open. pass it on to their young. es. Around us the forest was On the Pacific Coast, by On the first evening, with drenched with the kind of rain the fourth week of spring, a my cousin Neil, who just carthatgrows PortOrford cedar bear can smell sap running in ried binoculars, we looked at trees and carpets the banks the trees. With its claws, the a clearcut where he had seen with moss. n the Oregon Coast, I chanced to talk to Todd Freitag, an outfitter from Bandon. He recommended we
bear hooks in and tears off bark. Pressing its mouth wide
bears in the past. On the sec-
ond day, we hunted up in the
Dad taught me to build a
fire when I was 4 years old.
wood, I thought about the two
great discoveries that changed history: fire and air conditioning. I struck a match into my
fire starter and coaxed the timid flame. Last week I found a story
in Bear Hunting magazine about a hunt that took place 180 years ago. The writer was Friedrich Gerstacker, of Arkansas. A black bear had
killed his friend Erskine and broken his arm: See Bear hunting /D3
vacation hot spots By Zach urness The Statesman Journal
GRANTS PASS — One
of the famous landmarks in Grants Pass is a large
sign hovering over the city's downtown proclaiming, in big white letters: "It's the Climate."
For the five years that I lived there, the sign was a source of much amusement because it's not a motto exactly, but a
"Now what it is about this
place'? I can't quite put my finger on it." "Oh yes! It's the climate! Thank you gigantic sign!" But while the silliness of
promoting something as fleeting as the weather is obvious — is it still the cli-
mate when it's raining outside? — the sign does raise one important point: Southern Oregon's weather is, in fact, spectac-
ular, especially this time of year.
J
The sunshine arrives
earlier, lasts longer and burns hotter than in the
!
TRAIL UPDATE
damp Willamette Valley.
Allergies are less of a problem, mosquitoes are limit-
I/
With ChrisSabo
SeeTrails /D4
In their day, a fire was the first
thing they built each morning. Coffee, breakfast, the morning paper, all came after the fire was made. As I struggled to find dry
Oregon
declaration that assumes everyone driving through Grants Pass is wondering,
*n
With warming temperatures and longer days, the snow line is going to move up relatively quickly with near 24/7 melting. Snow lines are generally between 4,800 and6,000 feet with patchy to sectional snow below those elevations. Blowdown levels are moderate to average. Some of the lower elevation trails, including Deschutes River trails, Peterson Ridgeand Phil's Trail are being cleared by volunteers. Wilderness trail access is limited and snow-free up to 4,600 feet, mostly running along the crest. Crews havestarted maintenance onJefferson LakeTrail, but only 2.4mileshasbeen cleared. Thetrail is not recommended for horse travel. Trails in the Metolius area are in good shape. Black Butte Trail has been cleared, with patchy snow at the top. There hasbeenno maintenance atNewberry Caldera (1-2 feet of snow) or in the Crescent Ranger district. For winter trails, the only functioning sno-park is Dutchman, though it is beginning to show bare spots in some areas. There isstill 6 feet of snow onDutchman Flat. CascadeLakes Highway is still closed to snowmobile andski traffic, and users should ride out to alternate access trails on posted signs. There aregood conditions onTumalo Mountain and into other backcountry areasabove Dutchman. Snow issoft in some areasandhikers are advised that if they go postholing, they will lose the trails completely. South Sister area above 4,800 feet is almost100 percent snow along the crest, close to10 feet. TheSwampy Lakes Trail is well on its way to melting out. Around Elk Lake,there's currently 70 percent snow coverage onthe ground.
After dad, grandpa taught me and so did my other grandpa.
Southern
ed, and the lack of humid-
ity means even 90-degree days are comfortable.
S+
The outdoor recreation
calendar lasts from May into October, and with wild
rivers, rugged mountains and great fishing, it makes a wonderful place for family vacations. ' c>I A •
-w s' -
Southern Oregon's
•
-
-~c~-
weather ts, in RyanBrennecke l The Bulletin
The Lower Whoops Trail west of Bend includes a number of small jumps and bermed corners.
MOUNTAIN BIKE TRAIL GUIDE
fact, spectactular, especially this time of year. And so, with summer
getaways being planned in countless family households, I present my top five family vacations in South-
ern Oregon: These are vacation spots that most
anyone can enjoy — from children to grandparents — and include lots of easy
places to play and spend the night.
Bolan Lakecampground Nestled deep in the
• Whoops singletrack is a free-ride favorite in Central Oregon
Siskiyou Mountains, on the border of Oregon and California southeast
a doctor, he texted me this cryptic message: "threebroken ribs." Mark is fully recovered and
Editor's note:Mountain Bike Trail Guide, by Bulletin sports and outdoors writer Mark Morical, features various trails in Central
Oregonand beyond. The trail guide appears in Outdoors on alternating Wednesdays through the riding season.
plans to ride with me some this summer, but the incident
ast summer I took my wife's uncle, Mark, bike ride west of Bend. We
had already ridden several miles when we arrived at the top of the Lower Whoops TraiL Just before we started down the singletrack trail with freeride flavor, I told Mark — an
extremely fit Eugene resident
serves as a reminder to not attempt anything out of your comfort zone when riding a trail like Lower Whoops.
MARK
on a classic mountain
MORICAL
s
The course he replied. He toughed it out for many
more miles and we eventually made it back to the car. But days later, after he had visited
west of Bend, Lower Whoops is about 2 miles long and includes some high tabletop jumps, a number of smaller jumps andseveralbermed corners. Upper Whoops,
of Cave Junction, sits a
about I/2 miles long, is a tam-
er, downhill cross-country
of the best rentable fire lookouts in the state-
trail.
the areaalso features a
Last week, on a partly cloudy and windy day, I start-
campground of 15 sites surrounding trout-stocked
Whoops Trail
Bolan Lake and three ex-
The plan was to ride up Ben's
cellent nearby trails.
network, the downhill-only Whoops Trail has long been a favorite among area mountain bikers. Located about 5 miles
Trail to Lower Whoops, then descend Phil's Trail back to
the trailhead. SeeWhoops/D3
UPPer
thrilling riding, I heard a cacophonous grunt some dis-
Whoops
tance behind me that seemed
Phil's Trailhead
sprawled in the pine needles on the ground and in obvious pain. I asked him what happened.
I
Ke n t's.:
r'.G.B.
phirs
( I
)
r
Ilooooo 1
g i] Trail junction = Single track — Forest roads
;Storm
gii
y e
make sure to stop at Wild
-i
C.O.D.
Cave Junction for a good
map and directions. Best time to visit: June to September Information: Wild Riv-
D SCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
ers Ranger district, (541)
I
"I tried to get some air on a
smaller jump, like you said,"
sure to make reservations
Rivers Ranger district in
' MILES 0
Lake to fish for trout. If you want to rent Bolan
way ahead oftim eon Recreation.Gov. The area also is somewhat confusing, so
•
.o Helicopter Pad
I
hauling an inflatable kayak a half-mile to Tanner Mountain Lookout, make
1
Fo est I/O
RI • 5+
to Tanner Lakes and Tanner Mountain — both in My favorite activity was
>VI 4.
~
National Forest.
a few hundred feet. Mark was
X+e aa+
• ei t
to echo through the Deschutes Suspecting something had gone wrong, I stopped and hiked up through the woods
lower Whoops ~.'"-',
Down the road from Bo-
lan Campground are easy, kid-friendly trails leading the Red Buttes Wilderness.
much smaller jumps. He took that to heart. After maybe a minute or so of fast,
Best known for Bolan Mountain Lookout— one
ed out from Phil's Trailhead.
A Central Oregon favorite, the mountain bike trail features a series of jumps andbankedturns.
to get a little bit of air on the
mountain top views.
Tucked into the Phil's Trail
in his mid-50s — that I prefer
to simply roll over the big tabletop jumps and maybe try
little-known destination of alpine lakes, trails and
AndyZeigert i The Bulletin
592-4000. SeeVacation /D5
D2 THE BULLETIN• WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
FISHING REPORT Here is the weekly fishing report for selected areas in andaround Central Oregon, provided by fisheries biologists for the OregonDepartment of Fish and Wildlife. This report was last updated onTuesday.
trout. Fishing should pick upas warmer weather continues. FALL RIVER: The river is scheduled to be stocked withrainbowtrout this week. Depending onweather condit ions,somegood mid-day hatches havebeenreported. Restricted to fly fishing only with barbless hooks. Open all year upstream ofthe falls. LAKE BILLY CHINOOK:Anglers are still reporting easy limits of kokanee throughout the entire reservoir. Bull trout fishing hasbeenfair with anglers mostly catching undersized fish. Anglers are remindedthere are
PAULINALAKE:Catch-and-release
onnon-adipose fin-clippedrainbow
FLY-TYING CORNER
trout. Check oncurrent accessibility as winter conditions maystill exist. PINEHOLLOW RESERVOIR:The reservoir is warming upandhas been stocked, so fishing should begreat. ANTELOPE FLATRESERVOIR: PRINEVILLERESERVOIR:Fishing has Fishing has beenfair due to the turbid been slow. water. Using scent or lots of flash will help the fish find your offering. The PRINEVILLE YOUTH FISHING POND: majority of the fish rangefrom12- to Fishing should begood for troutand 14-inches long. the bass should bemore activeas the BEND PINE NURSERYPOND:The water warms. pond is scheduled to bestocked this ROCKCREEKRESERVOIR:The week with rainbow trout. Current smallnumbers ofspring chinook reservoir has beenstocked andshould regulations allow for a limit of two and summer steelhead inLakeBily be a great place to gothis spring and fish per day,8-inch minimum length. Chinookas part of the reintroduction catch some rainbow trout. Fishing should befair for the next few effort. Please releasethese fish SHEVLINYOUTH FISHING POND: weeks. unharmed. Stocked with rainbow trout the week BIG LAVA LAKE: Fishing has been METOLIUSRIVER:Fishing has been of May 5. Fishing should begood for good with reports of decent size fair with reports of decent nymphing. the next few weeks.Two trout per rainbow trout being caught. On warmer afternoons andevenings, day, 8-inch minimum length. Fishing CLEARLAKE:Clear Lakehas been small hatches arebeing reported. restricted to juvenile anglers17-yearsstocked andshould be agreat place to NORTHTWIN: The lakeis scheduled old and younger. catch recentlystocked legals, trophies, to be stocked with rainbow trout SOUTH TWINLAKE:The lake is and hold overs. this week. Fishing hasbeenfair with scheduled to bestocked with rainbow CRANEPRAIRIERESERVOIR:Fishing moderate pressure onthe weekends. trout this week. has beengoodfor rainbow andbrook OCHOCO RESERVOIR: Trout anglers trout. Closed from onehour after SUTTLELAKE:Fishing has beenfair are reporting slow fishing. Recent sunset until one hour before sunrise. for kokaneeandshould improve with sampling indicates the crappieand warmer weather. CROOKED RIVER BELOW BOWMAN bass are staging in theshallow coves. DAM:Keepaneyeonthe gaugeto see ODELLLAKE:Fishing has beengood WICKIUPRESERVOIR:Fishing has if the flow is beingadjusted. Thefishing with decentsize kokaneebeing caught. been good with reports of decentsize is usually poor until the flow hashada kokanee beingcaught. Twenty-five Twenty-five kokaneeperday (nosize few days to stabilize. Please be mindful limits) in addition to other trout species kokanee (nosize limits) in addition to to not trample anyredds. catch limit. Trout daily catch limit may other trout species catch limit. Closed CULTUSLAKE:Thelake is scheduled include only onelaketrout, 30 inch from one hourafter sunset until one to be stocked this week with rainbow minimum length. hour before sunrise.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
CDC Possie Bugger, courtesy The Patient Angler It came to fame on the McKenzie River, abeadhead nymph reminiscent of aHare's Earwhile employing a bead for flash andweight, a dark headlike acaddis larva, mylar for sparkle and acollar to simulate legs or wings. This Possie Buggeruses CDCinstead of partridge. And it's tied with Aussie possum.Awesome. On a river, fish it on thewet fly swing or dead-drift like a nymph. In still water, usethis one aspart of a tandem rig with a PrinceNymph or aCallibaetis Nymph. Tie the CDCPossie Bugger on aNo.12 nymph hook. Slide abrass bead upagainst the eye. Forthe tail, use possum hair andfour strands of Krystal Flash. Wrapthe bodywith Australian possum dubbing and rib with opposing turns of copper wire andKrystal Flash. Tie in acollar of cul de canard (CDC)then finish with a tight, black dubbedHaretron head. — Gary Lewis, for TheBulletin
cenic ese rives on a o- re on By Pete Zimowsky The IdahoStatesman
J ORDAN
V A L LEY
desert is to get out of the car and soak up the sights, smells
and mahogany. As you drive, you'll see
Rnd sounds.
mountains in
Ghostly figures appeared in the Stop and walk up a canyon, sagebrush onthe desertplateau or sit beside a creek in a meadalong the road to Jordan Cra- ow. If there's a small reservoir ters in Southeast Oregon. or pothole, sit down and wait One second the pale brown for something to happen. and white pronghorns were It will. Blackbirds will start staring at the truck. The next contesting you for territory. A they were dashing across the hawk may ride the thermals gray-green landscape and aboveyou. Shorebirds will defimaking abeeline for aridge. nitely squawk at you. The high desert is a magiAnd t hose p ronghorns? cal place during spring, and a They mayjust comebackto see chance to spot wildlife such as what you're all about, especialpronghorns, mule deer, coyotes ly if you are downwind of them, and hawks, and to listen to a and the inquisitive animals symphony of meadowlarks, can't figure you out. sandhill cranes and blackbirds. Besides sitting and listening, The landscape is bloom- take along a wildflower guide ing with green grasses and book. You'll want to photointricate colors provided by graph flowers and know what wildflowers. you're looking at. Spring is definitely the time to take a scenic drive out in the
Owyhee Byway
high desert of Southwest Idaho The 100-mile Owyhee Upand Southeast Oregon. lands National Back Country This remote country doesn't Byway is one of the most scehave much traffic aside from nic desert drives in Southwest occasional rockhounds, AT- Idaho. Vers and ranchers towing stock It is known locally as Mud trailers.
Flat Road, and it's the primary
Most of the roads are good access to the central Owyhee in dry weather, aside from be- County canyonlands. You'll pass by r i mrock ing bumpy and dusty, and they takeyou to a lot of wild country plateaus, through canyons between 90 minutes and sever- abundant with sagebrush and al hours from Boise. bunch grass, and climb to eleThe key to a trip to the high vations with stands of juniper
t h e d i stance,
such as the Jarbidge, Steens and Owyhee ranges.
*te
Notes: A round trip on the
re
byway from Boise takes a full day — dawn to dusk. There are no services for
100 miles between Grand View at the start of the byway
Pete Zimowaky /The Idaho Statesman via The Associated Press
The road to Jordan Craters in Southeast Oregon is scenic at every curve and hill.
and Jordan Valley at the end. The road can be traveled in a passenger car in good The unique thing about the weather, but it gets slick and area is that in the middle of the muddy when wet. dry, rocky landscape are two
The bridge over the creek is
Environmental Concern, according to the BLM. All motor-
dosed to vehicles or ATVs.
ized vehides and bicydes are Getting there: Take the G etting t h ere: S t ar t a t historic ranches at a BLM rec- limited to existing roads and rough 15-mile dirt road off OrGrand View, south of Boise. reation site. parking areas. egon 201 between Adrian, OreFrom Idaho 78, just east of It is also the take out for rivGetting there: Head south gon, and the Idaho border. Grand View, take off on Mud er trips on the Owyhee River on U.S. 95 from the Marsing Information: o r e gonstateFlat Road. It travels about 92 from Rome downstream. You area. At about 8 miles, take the parks.org. Search for Succor miles in Idaho and 12 miles in won't see many boaters this McBride Creek Road to Rock- Creek State Park. Oregon to Jordan Valley. From time of the year because of low ville, then a mile north to Leslie Jordan Valley, you can take water. Gulch Road and then 15 miles Antelope Reservoir U.S. 95 back to Marsing and The canyon is an oasis of west. The reservoir is l ocated the Treasure Valley. green in the desert with campInformation: blm.gov/Vale. southwest of Jordan Valley and Information: i d . blm.gov/ ing available. doesn't get much use. It's a good side trip from Succor Creek State Park bruneau; id.blm.gov/owyhee; However, it's well-known to id.blm.gov/recreation. Jordan Craters, and you might This natural areais in a deep, local bird watchers when its see bighorn sheep, deer, chu- rocky canyon south of Adrian, waters attract migrating birds Jordan Craters kars and other wildlife. Oregon. It is frequented by rock in spring. It's a short distance The craters are northwest of Notes: There is one source hounds and wildlife watchers. from pavement and an easily Jordan Valley and look like a for drinking water at the recThe road follows a cut in the accessible place to get away blackshadow on the vastgreen reation site with a f i ve-unit canyon and soon your vehicle from it all. andbrown landscape of South- campground and restroom. seems miniature among the You may see antelope and east Oregon. Getting there: Use the same rock walls. surely a variety birds in the As you draw closer while directions to Jordan Craters, Note: There are 15 primitive, spmlg. driving on the Jordan Craters but take the turnoff to Birch walk-in camping spots and N otes: The B L M c a m p road from U.S. 95, you'll start Creek. Follow the BLM signs some day-useareas atthe state ground has four camping sites to make out a huge geological for 28 miles off U.S. 95. park along Succor Creek. for tents or RVs (no hookups). feature called Coffee Pot CraInformation: b l m .gov/or/ No drinking water is avail- There is a restroom. Boat anter. It looks far off, but keep
districts/vale.
able, but there is a vault toilet.
glers fish the reservoir for trout
going. The road will eventually get you there.
You can hike along the Leslie Gulch canyon rims above the campIt's the only feature in the T his p a stel-colored c a nground, or just drive up the craters thatis accessiblebymo- yon in the Owyhee Breaks off road and see steep, canyon tor vehicle. Owyhee Reservoir is breath- walls. The Succor Creek Bridge It covers about two-thirds of taking, with spires, walls and in Succor Creek State Natural a squaremile and is described pinnades. Nature has carved Area is open to pedestrians. as a"well-preserved,steep-sid- the rock structures inthe volcaed crater" by the U.S. Bureau of
Getting there: Take U.S. 95 about 12 miles south of Jordan
Valley, Oregon, and turn on the clearly marked Antelope Reservoir Road. It's a mile to
the campground.
nic ash and soils of the remote
Land Management. canyon. As you explore Jordan CraThe geology and photograters on foot, you'll see splatter phy will be your main focus, cones and a vast lava field. but don't forget the wildflowers Notes: There aren't any fa- and wildlife, such as bighorn cilities there for camping. You sheep and chukars. You'll find a campground can camp in dispersed areas nearby. with a restroom near Owyhee Getting there: Drive south
when there's enough water.
•
•
•
•
•
T
6
Reservoir. There's plenty of
on U.S. 95 from Marsing. Look off-trail hikes in slot canyons forthe road to Jordan Craters. and also on the ridgelines of the It's about 8miles before you get Owyhee Breaks. to Jordan Valley. Follow BLM Notes: Camping and fires are Jordan Craters access signs 25 miles to the recreation site.
limited to the 12-unit Slocum
Birch Creek
is a vault toilet. Outhouses are
•
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Creek campground. No drinking water is available, but there
also located alongthe road. in the Owyhee River Canyon, Overnight hikers must camp northwest of Jordan Valley. outside of the Area of Critical This is a remote scenic area
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WE CAN HELP.
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call 888-877-4894 or visit Pete Zimowaky/The Idaho Stateama via The Associated Press
A person is framed by a beautiful rock formation at Leslie Gulch in Southeast Oregon.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
Who is'dumb enough'to try
this hunting technique? ,,v
ByRich Landers The Spokesman-Review
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An old technique of hiding behind a gobbler decoy to stalk wild turkeys is being revived — much to the dismay of
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hunter safety educators.
A decoy company's video hyping the "scoot 8 shoot" technique — or "fanning" as some call it — is getting a lot of play on the Internet. The Mojo O utdoors vid-
eo clips show hunters rising from behind a gobbler decoy's
Michael Pearce/The Wichita Eagle via The Associated Press
Jason Brown, left, shoots video of Theresa Vail, Miss Kansas, through a decoy's feathers in Chase County, Kan.
fanned tail and shooting run-
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
ning toms, sometimes as close do it myself? Heck no." — Jimmy Parman of Newas 10 feet or less. Ethical hunters strive to be man Lake, voted Washingundetectedso a steady, clean ton's hunter safety educator of shot can be made at a standing the year in 2013, said he hasn't gobbler's head from a distance directly addressed fanning optimum for shot placement. tactics. In several cases, the hunters
" It never occurred to m e
rise from the decoy, spooking thatanyone would be dumb the incoming gobblers at close enough to do this," he said. "I'll range and then taking run- be talking about this with my ning shots, with poor results. students from now on." The link for the Mojo OutDefending the tactic as OK doors scoot & s hoot decoy in a "safety zone" of private video was sent to five people, land doesn't hold water, Parexperts in the field of turkey man sald: "Every landowner will tell hunting and hunter safety. Following is a summary of their you he's dealt with trespassers reactions. and poachers." — Steve Hall , e x e cutive — Dave Murphy, veteran director of the International Spokane turkey hunter and Hunter Education Associa- former P r i mos p r o -staffer, tion, said a hunter in the field said, "This is new to turkey must look at shooting from hunting and I really don't the offensive perspective — be think those who made up the sure of your target — as well safety recommendations ever as the defensive. saw this coming. "Our stance has always "I don't like the idea at all!" been don't wear anything re- said Murphy, who's promoted sembling animals that are be- safe use of gobbler decoys and ing hunted, especially on pub- calls. "I have not and will not lic land." encourage anyone to do it. "Put your back to a tree and Missouri was a leading state in compiling data on causes put your decoy out in front of for turkey hunting accidents, you. In that way you can hopesaid Hall, who's been analyz- fully see anyone sneaking in ing hunter accident stats for on your decoy and the tree more than three decades. protects your back." "The safe practices we teach — Leonard W o l f , loc a l are usually borne from empiri- sportsman who hunts mostcal data," Hall said. "In the case ly on private land, is less of turkey fanning, I must say judgmental. "As a seasoned and experiwe haven't collected any, yet. "Do I have evidence against enced turkey hunter who regit? No. Would I promote it or ularly takes out novice hunters
and spends over 20 days annually in search of long beards, mostly for others as an unpaid
guide, I would compare these Mojo products to automobiles and drivers," he said. "A
souped-up sports car in the hands of a skilled driver on an appropriate course could be safe while it would be dangerous on public streets or in the hands of an amateur, he said.
"I would never suggest (scoot &shoot) be used by nov-
Mark Morical makes his way down Lower Whoops Trail last week.
Whoops
proving the Whoops Trail for the past 16 years. The area Continued from D1 near Whoops was logged in Per the Central Oregon the 1930s and '40s, accordTrail Alliance's (COTA's) ing to longtime COTA mem-
and much of Phil's Trail is restricted to downhill. I like
the effect of the new rules since they were implement-
ed in early April. Now I can ride from the crowded Phil's
"I can see where these de-
coys might appeal to an inexperienced hunter, and if that were to occur and these decoys
ter masses of oncoming mountain bikers — even on weekends.
the manufacturer, nor would I
riders when I'm
placeany blame on them." — Tom Hughes, National Wild Turkey Federation assistant vice president and wildlife biologist who's helped prepare the organization's safety materials, condemns fanning.
ing Ben's Trail. Still, on my
"I consider it an extreme
data, Hughes said the NWTF
had a "strong belief that the traditional method of sitting in place and calling a turkey, moving as needed to new locations, is safer and more successful than s n eaking methods."
Whoops Trail
Trailhead and not encoun-
were used incorrectly under the wrong conditions, I see no evidence of guilt on the part of
form of stalking turkeys, and we've already affirmed that stalking turkeys is unsafe and a bad idea." After years of studying
ber Kent Howes. To help re-
restricted to uphill riding
public land!" he said.
But, man, I sure get passed frequently by other a scend-
ride last week I managed to
make decent time climbing to Lower Whoops. From the bottom of the trail, I start-
ed up a doubletrack road to reach the top. The dimb r equired about 2 0
The entire 14-mile loop took about 2t/~ hours. I'll be back to cruise the
Whoops again this seasonbut Mark might require some planted trees grow, the U.S. persuading. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, Forest Service built furrows — grooves in the ground that mmorical@bendbulletirLcom collect rain and snow. The Whoops Trail (named for the up-and-down "whoopde-do" nature of the furrows) Directi ons:TheW hoops was built in the late '80s and Trail can be reached bybike early '90s along these furrows, via the Phil's Trail Network which were transformed into west of Bend. Bikers can small jumps along the traiL also drive west on SkyAbout eight years ago, liners Road from Bendto Bend's Lev Stryker, owner Road 300, where Lower of Cog Wild Bicycle Tours in Whoops ends. AdoubleBend, took over as the trail track road, just to the north steward for Lower Whoops, of Junction 24, can be adding bermed corners and ridden up to Junction 29, even more tabletop jumps. the top of Lower Whoops The evolution o f the and the bottom of Upper Whoops Trail is part of COWhoops. (Lower Whoops TA's dedication to adding is downhill only, but Upper more free-ride opportunities Whoops can beriddenboth in Central Oregon. The Lair ways.) free-ride park, west of Bend, length: UpperW hoops is is also an example of that new
new directional trail syst em, Ben's Trail i s n o w
ice hunters and NEVER on
yon and back to the trailhead.
min-
utes. Many bikers will park along dirt Forest Road 300 off Skyliners Road and then bike continual laps up the access road and down Lower Whoops. After climbing up the
about1t/~ miles long and
focus.
Lower Whoops is about 2 miles long. Rating:Technically advanced, aerobically easy. Trail Features:Fastsingletrack with a variety of free-ride features, including small jumps, large tabletop jumps and bankedturns.
While Upper Whoops does not include the free-ride features of L ower W hoops, it
does have a fast, downhill flavor and its fair share of Whoops, cruising through whoop-de-dos from the origithe bermed corners and nal furrows. catching a min u scule After descending Lowamount of air on the small- er Whoops, I pedaled down er jumps, Mark's broken Phil's Trail through the canr ibs constantly on m y r oad, I
sta r t e d d o w n
mllld.
The bigger jumps are a little too intimidating for
Bear hunting
as the flame from the Fire-
Starters packet licked into the Continued from D1 wood chips, I began to stack " It grew dark. No o ne twigs log cabin-style. I've carried a variety of fire came. I roared and shouted likemad; no one heard me." starters. A favorite is Leon Gerstacker tried to light Pantenburg's wal l e t-sized a fire, but he couldn't get a
waxed cloth fire starter. I've
sparkstarted and realized he might die before morning.
also used the Original Fire Box, which measures 4 inch-
" I tore away part o f t h e
es, and the High Energy Quick-Fire, which comes in a cardboard box, too big for the backpacker. A spring bear hunt is one of the lowest percentage opa little powder into my rifle, portunities offered in Oreand placing the muzzle on the gon's Big Game Regulations. rag, I fired, when it began to I think we hunt bear in the burn immediately. Blowing it spring to walk the trails and up to a flame, I piled on dry see the trilliums, buttercups leaves, twigs and succeeded and the arrowleaf balsamin making a good fire..." root. But spring weather can These days most of us do turn cold and wet in a hurry. not hunt with flintlock rifles Bring matches, a lighter and like Erskine and Gerstacker tinder. A fire can save a life or
back of my hunting shirt, the fore part being saturated with blood, sprinkled some powder on it, rubbed it well in, all with my right hand, shook
did, and even then that method of starting a f ire was a
ers, and my friend Brian Davis's expedient. Davis seals
me, so I braked to roll over the tabletops rather than
Exit stage left. Next time I'll dress like a tree and imitate
launching through the air. F inally reaching t h e bottom, I was worn outnot in an aerobic way, but my body just felt beaten up from speeding down all the jumps, bumps and
the sound of a hemlock with sap running in the bark. — Gary Lewis is the host of "Frontier Unlimited" and author of "John Nosler — Going Ballistic," "A Bear Hunter's Guide to the Universe," "Hunting Oregon" and other titles. Contact Lewis at www.GaryLewisOutdoors.com.
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minute, at 15 minutes, at 52 minutes, 54 minutes and later in the call. It takes at least an
pitchy wood chips with wax hour to call a bear. in a cardboard tube. As soon Forty minutes in we heard
Fish from home! Lswn rolls into the Deschutes River. Single level remodeled 3 bedroom plus office home, .ST acre lot, birds and wildlife galore! Very special setting.
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$499,000 - MLS¹20 I 30543 I
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turns.
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Gary Lewis/ For The Bulletin
A warming fire catches hold in Fi
a spring shower.
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MORRIS REAL ESTATE
at least an attitude.
On the last morning, we dangerous resort. Gerstack- found another clearcut. Wind er's account was penned 180 swirled in the canyon, so we years ago, but we were cold, perched up top and put the wet, tired and wanted a fire FoxPro caller in play with too. blacktail deer distress sounds. I've had bears show up at one The flame leapt into t he tinder, Grate Chef's FireStart-
a woof. It smelled or spotted us, barked and spun around.
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Neil Lewis, left, and Paul Garratt look for bear in a canyon in the Siskiyous.
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
UrDOORS ROCKMONKEYSTUESDAYS OR THURSDAYS: Beginner rock climbing class for kids ages 7 to12; $75 to $95 per month, includes gym membership; through June; 4 to5:15 p.m.; BendRockGym;541-388-6764; info@bendrockgym.com. YOUTH ROCKCLIMBING MONDAYS AND WEDNESDAYS: Designed for intermediate to advanced climbers looking to honetheir skills; $95 to $110 per month, includes gym membership; through June; 4 to5:30 p.m.; BendRockGym;541-388-6764;
info©bendr ockgym.com.
SUMMER MOUNTAINBIKING PROGRAM:The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation will hold the sessions for two weekseachin June, July, and August; call 541-388-0002, email mbsef@mbsef.org, or visit
www.mbsef.org.
FISHING CENTRALOREGONBASS CLUB:New members welcome;7-9 p.m.; meets on the first Tuesday ofeachmonth; Abby's Pizza, Redmond;www.cobc. us. DESCHUTESCHAPTEROFTROUT UNLIMITED:For members to meet and greetand discuss what the chapter is up to; 6p.m.; meets on the first Monday ofeach month; Oregon Natural Desert Association offices, Bend;541-306-4509, communications©deschutestu.org, www.deschutestu.org. BENDCASTINGCLUB:Agroup of fly anglers from aroundCentral Oregon who are trying to improve their casting technique; 6-8 p.m.;club meetson the fourth Wednesday ofeach month; location TBA;541-306-4509 or bendcastingclub©gmail.com. THE SUNRIVER ANGLERSCLUB: 7 p.m.; meets onthe third Thursday of
E1VD
each month; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center; www. sunriveranglers.org. THE CENTRALOREGONFLYFISHERS CLUB:7 p.m.; meets on the third W ednesday ofeachmonth;Bend Senior Center; www.coflyfishers.org.
HHGMG DESCHUTESLANDTRUSTWALKS + HIKES:Ledby skilled volunteer naturalists, these outings explore new hiking trails, observe migrating songbirds and take inspring wildflowers; all walks and hikesare free; registration available at www. deschuteslandtrust.org/events.
HORSEBACK RIDIMG SPRINGTUNEUPCLINIC: Saturday, May17, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m, Terrebonne TRUhorsemanship trainer Clint Surplus is offering a one-day clinic at Pilato Ranch, 70955 Holmes Road, Sisters; $140 for participants; free for spectators; registration deadline is May12; call 541-961-5727
or emailkathyebarnes©gmail.com.
Email events at least 10 days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0351.
SKY WATCH
Weekend observatory fun A remote campus of theUniversity of Oregon, PineMountain Observatory (PMO) is located just 34 miles southeast of Bend.A research facility, PMO isalso heavily involved in public outreach andscience education throughout Oregonand beyond. Each year from Memorial DayWeekendto the last week inSeptember, the public is invited to tour the facilities on Fridayand Saturday evenings. Programs beginabout a half-hour before sunset, including an interactive lecture followed bypersonal "eyeball" viewing through large aperture telescopes. A donation of $5 perperson is requested. Dress warmly, as it can becold at 6,300 feet in elevation. Comfortable walking shoesare a must and, very important, only red light is allowed from small flashlights held under adult supervision for the protection of attendee's night vision. Redcellophane is provided at no charge. Children's lighted shoes, flash photography, andother light-producing activities are strictly banned. Petsare not allowed in the lecture tent andmaynot accompany
attendees in viewing areasafter dark. Knowledgeable volunteers will be on hand to answer questions andenhanceyour understanding andappreciation of the entire Universe. On Sundays through Thursdays, large groupsareaccommodated bytwo-week advanced appointment. A fee of$100 is required, covering up to 20people. Add $5 per person for groups with more than 20people. A no-fee, first-come-first-served dry campground is available just across the road. Oversized vehicles, including school buses, are accommodated. Bottled water and gifts are available at thecampus shop. For information, including classroom visitations and volunteer opportunities, call 541-3828331 or visit pmo.uorgeon.edu, wherethere is also a gallery of astrophotographs takenat PMO. Foradditional volunteer information go to http://www.meetup.com/astronomy-116/. Driving Instructions: TakeU.S. Highway 20 east. In approximately 26 miles, arrive at Millican (closed general store onthe right). Just
File photo I The Bulletin
Bend resident Erik Holcomb looks through the eyepiece of the 24-inch aperture telescope at Pine Mountain
Observatory. The observatory will open to the public Friday and Saturday nights from May 23 through September.
past the old store, turn right at the greenPMO sign onto the gravel road. Follow the road south (no turnoffs) 8 miles to PMO'sparking lot. If arriving at night, use parking lights to avoid light pollution. — Kent Fairfieldisa volunteer with PineMountain Observatory and alifelong amateur astronomer. He can be raachedatkent farrfreldrgtgmail com. Other PMO volunteers also contributed to thisarticle.
HNVTING LEARNTHEARTOFTRACKING ANIMALS:Guidedwalks and workshops with a certified professional tracker to learnhow to identify and interpret tracks, signs and scat of the animals in Central Oregon; 8 a.m. to noon; two or more walks per month; $35; 541-633-7045; dave©wildernesstracking.com, wildernesstracking.com. THE BENDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.;meetsthesecondWe dnesday ofeach month;King Buff et,Bend;
ohabend.webs.com. THE OCHOCOCHAPTER OF THE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION: 7 p.m.; meets the first Tuesdayof each month; Prineville Fire Hall; 541-447-5029.
THE REDMONDCHAPTEROFTHE OREGON HUNTERSASSOCIATION:7 p.m.; meets the third Tuesday ofeach month; RedmondVFWHall.
MISCELIdQVEOUS YOUTH ANDFAMILY OUTDOOR DAY:Saturday, May31,from 8:30 a.m.to 4 p.m .atCyrusRanch,68395 Cloverdale Road,Sisters; activities
includearchery,sporting clays, camping essentials, wilderness survival, and more; $10perperson; registration deadline is May23; call 541-480-7323 or visit www.ohabend.
webs.com.
PADDLING KAYAKROLLSESSIONS:
Noninstructed sessions at indoor pool; 4:05-6 p.m.; runs through the end of May; $12for in-district residents, $16 otherwise; Juniper Swim & Fitness Center, Bend; register at bendparksandrec.org or call 541-389-7665.
SHOOTIUG COSSAKIDS:Coaches are onhand to assist children; rifles, ammo, ear and eye protection are provided; parent or guardian must sign in for each child; fee for each childis $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.
PINEMOUNTAIN POSSE: Cowboy action shooting club;secondSunday of each month; Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association range, milepost 24, U.S. Highway 20, east of Bend; 541-318-8199, www.
pinemount ainposse.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.
SNOW SPORTS ALPINESKIING YOUTH CAMP: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education
Boise Foot i sa oomwit wi owersins rin By Pete Zimowsky The Idaho Statesman
,A
BOISE, Idaho — The Boise Front is a wildflower dassroom
in the spring. Wildflowers start blooming in late March and early April in the lower foothills at about
3,000 feet in elevation, and continue to bloom throughout sum-
h
j.pw
I
mer, all the way up to Bogus
Ann DeBolt. She said the Idaho Native Plant Garden and Lewis and
the location, different types
which is the Idaho state flower,
Mores Mountain
of milkvetch, fleabane, sulfur buckwheatand monkey fl ower Clark Native Plant Garden (in wet sites). feature b i scuitroot, a r r owLate summer: Hoary aster, leaf balsamroot,serviceber- buckwheat and blazing star. ry, mock-orange or syringa,
Basin and Mores Mountain at around 7,000 feet.
Wildflower afi c ionados and photographers canfollow wildflowers up in elevation as
the seasons progress, the temperatures warm and the snow
Idaho Botanical Garden to see wildflowers youwill find in the native plants and flowers. lower Boise Foothills and when "If folks are interested in you're likelyto see them. learning about a few wildSpring: Phlox, lupine,biscuitflowers, the Idaho Botanical root, serviceberry, milkvetch, Garden has easy access. It has bitterbrush, death camas, arseveralgardens that feature rowleaf balsamroot and yellow flowers and shrubs native to bells. the Boise Front," said botanist Summer: Depending on
elderberry, yellowbells, buckAs flower seekers go up in wheat, woodland star, globe- elevation, one of the best places "Spring is a beautiful timeto mallow and even a few sego for wildflowers is around Mobe in the Foothills," said David lilies. res Mountain and Bogus Basin. Gordon, coordinator of Ridge Although there is a lot more Spring: Dwarf onion, turkey to Rivers. "Green grass and Gordon wrote this month Ridge No. 82 in the Polecat variety in the Boise Foothills, peas and currants. wildflowers abound." about his trail picks for the best Reserve, Watchman No. 3 in Debolt likes the garden beSummer: Kittentails, scarlet Foothills trails, which are w ildflower watching i n t h e Rocky Canyon and Chickadee cause it offers a snippet of what gilia, several different pensterecommended for spotting Ada County's newsletter, the Ridge No. 36A in the Lower peoplewill find in thefoothills, mons, Indian paintbrush and a wildflowers, are even named "Current." Hulls Gulch Reserve. and the plants are labeled. lot more. It's definitely the best aftersome species.How about Other trails Gordon suggestIf hiking on foothills trails time. the Wild Phlox Trail No. 112 in ed include: Central Ridge No. isn't your thing, there's always Lower foothills Late summer: Cinquefoil, asHere's alook at what types of ter, lupine and buckwheat. Seaman Gulch? 22 in Military Reserve, Doe a quick and easy stroll in the recedes.
Foundation is holding an alpine skiing camp for youth at Mt. Bachelor, June 13-20; for more information, call 541388-0002, email mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org. NORDICSKIING YOUTH CAMPS: The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding a Memorial Day weekend nordic camp for youth, May 24-26, and aFire and Ice nordic camp for youth, June13-18; call 541388-0002, email mbsef©mbsef.org, or visit www.mbsef.org. FREERIDESKIAND SNOWBOARD YOUTH CAMP:The Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is holding a camp for youth, June 13-21; call 541-388-0002, email
mbsef©mbsef.org, orvisit www. mbsef.org.
Trails Continued from D1 Leash regulations are in effect on Deschutes River trails. Northwest Forest Pass requirements are also in place. Construction is ongoing in Skyliner areaand thetrailhead is still inaccessible. Parking is still provided just beyond the trailhead. Tumalo Falls is in good condition with snow line at 5,600 feet. LavaButte Trail has reopened. Deschutes County is still planning to openCascade Lakes Highway in time for Memorial Day weekend, aslong as plowing operations go as planned.
Pete Zimoweky r The Idaho Statesman via The Associated Press
Ann DeBolt, a botanist at the Idaho Botanical Garden, checks out a healthy arrowleaf balsamroot at the garden in Boise, Idaho.
Weekly Arts & Entertainment Inslde M~ m
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TheBulletin
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Plae Well, Retire Well
2 locations lnBend
Kayakfisherman savesdiverin CoosBay By George Artsitas
spot to be a real-life hero. jumper out, Hyde pedaled friends without help." The Worrd News A few weeks ago, Hyde over to Wesson to show him If you want t o see what Rarely do great stories fall and his fishing buddy Justin what was about to happen. happened for yourself, just into your lap. Chris Hyde's Wesson were in the trestles in Wesson quickly m o ved, type in "Kayak Fishing Rescue" on YouTube. The video has landed onto mine twice. North Bend for some evening ready to provide help. A month ago we did a pro- fishing. Hyde headed toward W esson told t h e k i d t o has a familiar landmark (Mcfile on Hyde and his burgeon- the southern end of the north jump onto the bow of the Cullough Bridge) in the backing group devoted to kayak t restle and n o t iced a k i d kayak and pedaled him back ground of the thumbnaiL angling called Coos Kayak wearing nothing but shorts, to the two girls he was with, The video, with no means Fishing. Hyde had started a standing on the bridge and with the jumper thanking the of advertising other than Facebook page for the group, preparing to dive into the wa- two fishermen the whole way Hyde and a provocative title, carried some solid stories to ter. Hyde was shocked to see back. has more than 2,600 views. share, but most importantly, two girls with their phones Hyde thinks being in the Tallying up YouTube hits he was the kind of commu- waiting to record what ap- area averted what could've are nice and all, but the connity member who should be peared to be a stupid stunt. been a tragedy that day. tent of the video is what mat"I don't think he accounted "He probably w ould've ters most to Hyde. highlighted in the Outdoors section. Hyde wasn't just a for how fast the tide was mov- drowned and hi s f r iends "This could have been a lot guy doing a hobby he loved, ing and the water temp was would be watching helpless- worse," Hyde said. "I'm glad he was a guy who was try- in the low 50s," Hyde said. ly," Hyde said. "The strength we were there to assist. An ing to proliferate his hobby "Couple that with approxi- of the current and the water attempt to impress two girls around the community,and mately a 6-foot exchange in temperature fatigued him so nearly cost this kid his life. that's something we endorse tide. He was lucky to make it much that he wasn't going Luckily, we were there to see here at The World. across the channel to the cen- to be able to get back to his this thing unfold. Since the article was pub- tertrestles. " lished, Hyde says the group After the initial plunge, the has added 50 percent more jumper climbed up another members and adds that peo- trestle and leaped a second ple have approached him as time to get back to where the "that guy from the paper." girls were. Stud1es show that using Testosteroae products may He's even picked up a bigHyde could see he was sign16cantly increase your rlsh of a heart attack strohe, time sponsor. Eagle Claw freezing and was afraid that blood clots and death. Ff You or a loved one has suffered any now supplies them with their the he wouldn't make it back of these injuries call 1-800-THE-EAGI E now about mahing a clalm for subshntlal monetary compensatlon. No fees or line of trokar hooks. in his condition. costsuntilvour case 1s settled or won. We practice law only "He would have been able So while he was being ln Arlaona, but associate with lawyers throughout the U.S. s howered w i t h t h e o v e r - to tread water for five minGOLDBERG L.OSBORN E whelming fame that goes utes before his body gave out < t t me.~a 1 - 8 0 0 -T H E - E A G L B along with a newspaper pro- on him," Hyde said. (1-800-843-3245) '• www. 1 aootheeagle.com file, Hyde found himself in a With the tide pushing the
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Vacation Continued from D1
Illinois River canyon
D5
and drinks at the lodge. Since nights at the lodge are pricy, consider camping or staying at Union Creek Resort (where
Deep green s wimming
you can access both Crater and Diamond lakes).
holes, sand beaches and wild-
Best time to visit: Mid-June
flowers you can't find any- to September where else in the world popuI nfo: C r ater L a k e Na late this wild and remote can- tional Park (541) 594-3000); yon between Grants Pass and D iamond L ake Reso r t Cave Junction. (541) 793-3333) Explore this scenic recre-
ation area beginning from Selma along the Illinois River Road. This semi-terrifying road winds into the spectacular, bright-orange and burnedover canyon. Trails, beaches
and campsites line the road. My favorite campsite and swimming hole is Store Gulch — though there are plenty others — while the swinging bridge at McCaleb Ranch is also nice. The best hike or
Applegate Valley In a landscape of iconic rivers, the Applegate has traditionally played third-fiddle to the Rogue and Illinois. That being said, for a vacation that features local wine,
summer music and lots of hiking, biking, boating and fishing options, the Applegate Valley is tough to beat. Let's start with Applegate
Reservoir — a warmer and backpack route is the Illinois less crowded version of Detroit River Trail, which features a Reservoir. It's great for fishing, singular collection of wild- boating, mountain biking and flowers and plants, including hiking. Nice campsites nearby the carnivorous cobra lily include Cantrall Buckley and above the river's deep gorge. Jackson, both along the rivBest time to visit: Spring er. Applegate Lodge is a nice and early summer place to spend the night (if not Info: Wild Rivers Ranger in a tent or camper). district, (541) 592-4000 A total of 19 wineries populate Highway 238 through the Crater Lake/Diamond Lake Applegate Valley — between These iconic Southern Cas- Grants Pass and Ruch — and cade lakes attract a combined 1.5 million visitors each year,
the vast majority during summer. And for good reason. Oddly enough, Diamond Lake is the more popular of the two — especially among Oregonians — due mainly to the ability to catch rainbow trout the size of SUVs. Diamond
Zach Urness/Statesman Journal via The Associated Press
Applegate reservoir, shownnear Rush, features fishing and water recreation during the summer, and also is surrounded by amountain biking trail snd is near access into trails leading into the Red Buttes Wilderness. The outdoor recreation calendar in Southeast Oregon lasts from May into October and with wild rivers, rugged mountains and great fishing, it makes a wonderful place for family vacations.
for nighttime entertainment,
head to the historic (and touristy) town of Jacksonville. More wild recreation op- water for trout, steelhead and tions can be found nearby in chinook salmon. the Red Buttes Wilderness Enjoy dinner at Galice Realong the Pacific Crest Trail
sort, sitting on a n
and the Middle Fork Applegate Trail.
deck over the river where music often plays. Take an evening stroll on Rainie Falls Trail to a spot where salmon jump in late August and
Best time to visit: May to
o u tdoor
Lake Resort is the hub — they September rent boats, sell equipment and Info: Star Ranger district, offer lodging — but the area (541) 899-3800 September. also has campsites. Mount For civilized lodging on Thielsen and Bailey surround Rogue River the river, try the Double Tree the lake and adventure-seekYou could pick anywhere Ranch, Galice Resort, Morers can follow trails up both. along this 217-mile stream and rison's Lodge or Riverhouse Crater Lake, of course, is not go wrong, but for our top Camp Lodge. For camping, home to the state's only nation- vacation pick of Southern Ore- my favorite spots are Indian al park. My favorite activity is gon, I'm referring to the Rogue Mary and Almeda, but there taking the boat tour to Wizard River's recreation section near are many others. Island, hiking the cinder cone Merlin and Galice. Numerous outfitters in the island's summit and celebratSpend hot summer days Rogue Valley offer guided ing with a quick swim in the floating through fun, splash- trips and boat rentals. United States' deepest lake. and-giggle Class I and II rapBest time to visit: June to Two of the best hikes are ids between Hellgate Canyon September Mount Scott a n d G a r field and Grave Creek Boat landPeak. Celebrate with dinner ing. Put your fishing line in the
Info: Smullin Visitor Center
(541-479-3735)
Zach Urness / Statesman Journal via The Associated Press
Galice Resort, shown here alongside the Rogue River's recreation section near Grants Pass, is a
popular spot for rafters after a longday onthe river and has live music many nights.
Stand up paddleboarding proves to not be just a fadin Oregon
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By Zach Urness The Statesman Journal
SALEM, — In ever-greater numbers, Oregonians are learning to walk on water.
Or at least stand up on it. Whether it's the ocean or es-
tuaries, alpine lakes or whitewater streams, the number of people floating Oregon waterways on stand up paddleboards has skyrocketed the past two years.
Dismissed at one point as a short-lived fad, SUP, as it's commonly known, is among Zach Collier/The Statesman Journal via The Associated Press the fastest-growing outdoor Tim Thornton paddles his stand up psddlebosrd on the Hood River. activities in the nation. More people tried SUP for the first time in 2012 than any other outdoor activity, and the popularity has continued to
wouldn't be able to. The sharks
or a trend," Higgins said. "But saleshave reall y increased.
can't get you as easily — that's something I really like — and This year we got a ton in stock and still sold out the inflatable grow, according to the annual you're a bit warmer." "It really caught on with SUPs." Outdoor Participation Report from the Outdoor Foundation. the younger fitness crowd, But the popularity has beThe two-legged trend has and that's where it picked up come anissue forthe Oregon become an undeniable force a lot of traction," said Michael Marine Board, which deterin Oregon, showing up every- Bowersox, who teaches a SUP mined SUPs to be an official where from Scappoose Bay to yoga class at Next Adventure. vessel. That means users Waldo Lake to the Deschutes, "But more recently, it has also must wear a life jacket, have a Willamette and Rogue rivers. become popular with people sound producing device (whis"We started noticing it ages 45 to 65 who can't tolerate tle) and get an invasive species about four years ago," said sitting for long periods of time. permit for boats 10 feet or lonAshley Massey, public infor- You can still be in touch with ger inland. mation officer at the Oregon the water but your body is unThe problem is that many Marine Board. "But recently it der a lot less stress on a SUP." people don't wear life jackets, has been like 'bam,' and all of Another driver of the pop- Massey said, which can be a a sudden we're literally seeing ularity has been the improve- big issue on rivers like the Cothem everywhere. ment, and affordability, of the lumbia and Willamette that "The problem is that people boards. Fiberglass boards seem flat but have dangerous are getting on the water with- have beenjoined by a fl eetof currents below the surface. out education or understand- boards made with cheaper Three people have died on a ing the danger." materials. Perhaps the biggest SUP since 2009, all of them on The modern incarnation innovation was the introduc- rivers — the Columbia, Wilof SUP arrived in the main- tion of inflatable SUPs, which lamette and Chetco — and all land United States via Hawaii pack down small and light after falling in without a life about 2004, focused at first on and can be used on lakes and jacket. surfers in California using the rivers. Even with the risk, both re"I remember thinking they tail and outfitters have found addition of a paddle to catch waves. The trend quickly could be really fun to use success with SUP. spread up the West Coast. in rivers, but the fiberglass T im Thornton, owner o f "It reminds me of when boards weren't the best for White Salmon, Wash. outfitsnowboarding first came out — at first it was this new thing,
then all of a sudden half the people on the mountain have
them," said Patrick Higgins, a kayak school instructor at Next Adventure in Portland.
Higgins said his favorite activity on a SUP is surfing ocean waves.
"There's a lot of advantage paddling out (into the ocean)," he said. "You're higher up and can catchwaves you normally
whitewater," said Zach Collier,
Colorit Hot
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ter River Drifters, found that
owner of Northwest Rafting bringing SUP on rafting trips Company and general manag- on the Deschutes River added er of ECHO River Trips, who a fun element. "We brought a few boards first started experimenting with SUP in 2010. "When in- on overnight trips and found flatable boards came out they that it was actually one of the were a big improvement. highlights," Thornton said. At Next Adventure, keeping "You have younger dads who inflatable boats in stock has don't necessarily want to sit been a challenge. in an inflatable kayak but still "When I started here two want a challenge and really years ago, the joke was that like SUP. It's fun for the entire our boss thought it was a fad family."
Entertain your Friends
Patio World 222 SE Reed Market Road - Bend 541-388-0022 PatioWorldBend.com
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TH E BULLETIN0 WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
Leaving L.A.helpsEricMabius land new role TV SPOTLIGHT
He'd scored nicely early on when he costarred in two independent films that were
By Luaine Lee McClatchy-Tribune News Service
roundly praised at the Sundance Film Festival, "Wel-
PASADENA, Calif. — Eric
Mabius is one actor who claims you CAN go home again. In fact, he and his wife did just that. After his popular series, "Ugly Betty," was canceled, Mabius admits he was heartbroken.
come to the Dollhouse" and "I Shot Andy Warhol." He trekked to L.A. with his
girlfriend with no intention of staying. "We were visiting her mother in Santa Monica and I remember the coldest winter
and 7, says, "I just focused on my boys. And I brushed myself off and picked myself up. And the big key to the evolution of feeling content is getting rid of everything. We sold everything in California and moved back to
we'd had in New York in 20 years. My car was snowed in
Massachusetts."
Mabius kept trying. He eventually landed a slew of guest
on the street for two weeks
because I couldn't get it out. I just stayed. I thought, 'Oh, I can do this. Maybe I can.'"
Scores of pilots followed. Most were not picked up, but
Contrary to popular belief, is starring in the Hallmark Channel's spritely original series, "Signed, Sealed, Delivered," in which he plays the chief of postal detectives in the Dead Letter Office.
The team's mission is to
s pots, costarred in " Th e L
Hallmark Channel via The Mcclatchy Tribune News Service
Word," "The O.C.," "Ugly Betty" and made the series, "Out-
Eric Mabius stars as a "detective" based in the Dead Letter Office on "Signed, Sealed, Delivered" on Hallmark Channel.
He'd already debilitated his ego when he helped with the
casts," in South A f r ica for British television. cleared almost tw o a cres," "For the longest time when he says proudly, "milled the people asked me what I did-
birth of his f irst child. "It's
wood at a friend's mill, had
especially when I first moved
one thing to be married to
the wood mill build a 36-foot
to L.A. — for quite a while I
woodshed, got nine cords up someone by blood and to help before the fall came and took years later. A missing missive bring them into the world ... if raw earth, and tilled 25 traccan make all the difference. you haven't done it, it sounds torbuckets of horse manure As it turns out, a canceled trite. But when that happens from the horse farm. And my show can too. you live for someone else, ful- wife and I grew anything we "I didn't want (to live) the ly and completely — having wanted to. That was the first Catch 22," says Mabius over someone else who's absolute- season. I'm good with my lunch at a hotel restaurant ly dependent upon you for the hands and love getting dirty, return errant mail to its intended recipients, sometimes
8 p.m.on 2 9,"The Middle"
— Sue (EdenSher) enters Ehlert Motors' "Hands on a Hard Body" contest, hoping to win a car by keeping her hands on it the longest. Mike's (Neil Flynn) brother, Rusty (Norm Macdonald), joins him on a road trip to Chicago for Brick's (Atticus Shaffer) spelling bee. Frankie (Patricia Heaton) tries to help Axl (Charlie McDermott) find a missing desk in the new episode"Heck on a Hard Body."
said, 'Let's just not go back.' I
The father of two sons, 5
that didn't destroy his career. In fact, it vitalized it. Mabius
TV TODAY
someone, but to be related to
But everything up to now has led to "Signed, Sealed, Delivered," he says, a show he sees as a positive rendering in an often-negative landscape. Mabius, 43, is a perfection-
would say that I was a janitorjustto see their responses. Because EVERYONE s a id
they were an actor. Everyone ist about his work and impaexists in such a state of 'want' here. Most of them aren't sure
tient with those who aren't.
"It's a constant work-in-progress the way you imagine a this state of want," he says. scene," he says. "I was raised in western "When you go to act, it's here. "I have to work to pay first time ever in your life. It's and that's what we do with Massachusetts and I like to perfect in your mind's eye for this big house. My kids brought all the most wonder- the boys every day. Nothing think my head is screwed on and you always spend time don't need a big house. They ful things in my life." makes me happier." straight, and I appreciate the trying to get to that. That's just need to be with their dad When he and his wife, a But it wasn't always that outdoors and things that are the job. But it's frustrating and their mom, that's part of ceramicist, pulled up stakes way. While a struggling ac- real. Fortunately I had that because it's never done. It's turning your focus outward and moved east, they bought tor, he waited tables and lived foundation when I came out the thesis and antithesis. And as opposed to inward — and a small farm situated be- with a roommate in a $700 (to L.A.) Christmas of 1995 what goes out is this third it's not about your ego." ap ar t m ent. with the bags on my back." 'other' thing." hind a larger horse ranch. "I two-bedroom what they want, but they're in
Hostin success u inner arties
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times aresubject tochangeafter press time. l
Dear Abby: I love cooking for my wife and friends. There are few things I find more pleasing than to put out a nice spread of food and watch people enjoy. I'm always on the lookout for more cookbooks, and you hold the key to my DEP,R I w a s r e ading ABBY t hrough your a r chives and have seen many peopleasking about your cookbooklets. I'd love to get them.
Can you print the ordering information again, so I can be sure I'm
Your idea of throwing a "Dear Abby Dinner Party" is a good one, and I have been told the recipes provide a fun, traditional eating
order, send your name and maila n d ing address, plus check or money order for $14 (U.S. funds) to: Dear O ne reader d e - Abby — Cookbooklet Set,P.O.Box scribed cr e ating 447, Mount Morris,IL 61054-0447. place cards for her Shipping and handling are includguests dec o r ated ed in the price. w ith h earts a n d You will find tips on entertainflowers. The centerpiece was a ing at the beginning of the first "bouquet" of envelopes addressed booklet. Anyone who hasn't ento me. tertained before should be sure to e asy-to-read delicious.
Another reader said she cop-
ied questions from my column, right place? Thanks! printed them out and, as a party — NIan In the Kitchen in game, asked her guests to supply North Little Rock the answers. (She said that after a Dear Man in the Kitchen: I'm few glasses of wine, some of the reglad to oblige. I have been a com- sponses were hilarious, but couldn't p ulsive cookbook c ollector f o r be printed in a family newspaper) many years, so I can relate. (I'm My cookbooklet set contains sure you will be pleased when you more than 100 tasty recipes, rangsee that my cookbooklets, while ing from soups to salads, appetizwide-ranging in content, take up ers, main courses and desserts, little space on your bookshelf.) that can be used when families
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORWEDNESability to harness various perspectives will determine your success. You become more open, as well as wise, in your interpersonal relationships. If you are single,
you could meetmanyinteresting people, though most of them might not be what you desire for a long-term bond. The process of choosing the right person could be exciting. If you Stars showthe kind are attached, the of dayyou'llhave two of you cIickas ** * * * D ynamic you used to Don't ** * * Positive hesitate to devel** * v erage opanewhobby together — it can * Difficult only add to your relationship. Do not try to make your sweetie agree with you; instead, respectyour differences. SCORPIO often challenges you.
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Optimism flows among your peers with the exception of one person. You might feel as if others are testy, especially when the issue is money! You have a lot to share, but a boss or respected associate might not listen to your ideas. Tonight: Juggle different concerns.
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * You might need to go along with someone else's ideas and leadership, even if just for today. If you stop and think about it, both of you have the same bottom-line issue; you simply have very different approaches. Feelings run high at the moment. Tonight: Be a little wild.
she hosted parties, as have I. To
adventure. All of them are simple,
sending the right amount to the
DAY, MAY14,2014:Thisyearyour
get together to celebrate holidays and otherspecial occasions. My mother used many of them when
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
You'll need to call upon your self-discipline to complete what you must. Tonight: Get as much done aspossible.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * * You seem tohaveananswer when others are flustered. Friends could be asdemanding asa loved one usually is. If you don't know how to juggle, you are doing a masterful act. A partner could become quite determined. Listen to this person's news. Tonight: Let the fun begin.
LEO (Jufy23-Aug.22)
read them.
By following these suggestions, even the most nervous, first-time host can be confident. I know you
will enjoy the recipes as much as we have and serve them with prtde. Thought For the Day: It's not what you put on the table, but who
you put in the chairs that makes a successful dinner party. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
a problem. Be open to possibilities that you normally would not come up with on your own. You'll see how differently others think and how there are no answers written in stone. Tonight: All smiles. The world is your oyster.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * You might be keeping certain personal matters to yourself and refusing to share them. Some of you could be de-
pressed. Arisk aroundmoneywill be unusually tempting, but how are you going to handle it if it should backfire? Tonight: Do something specifically for you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
** * Pressure builds where you least anticipated it would. Someone close to you, like a roommate or a partner, could be singing the blues. A problem might surround your home or an investment. Your priorities are likely to change as a result. Tonight: Happily mosey on home.
** * * Emphasize what you want and expect from certain friends in your life. Be more upbeat in howyou approach a friendship, even if the person is difficult or remote at times. For that matter, understand thatyou have similar moods at times. Tonight: Where the gang is.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
** * * Choose your words with care. You might not be ready for a fast change that a statement could trigger. Tap into your creativity as well as your communication skills. A loved one might be quite smitten when it comes to you. Tonight: Hang out with friends.
** * * You might want to take a stand and handle a personal matter far differently from how you have in the past. You'll have your hands full with work and your personal life. A relationship likely will add high-voltage energy to your life. Tonight: Burn the midnight oil.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) ** * You might feel as if you have much to learn before you can feel competent in a certain area of your life. Your domestic situation might be transforming in front of
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
your eyes.Newscomesin from adistance
** * Pace yourself, and follow through on whatyou must do. If you start overthinking your words and actions, you could stall out and create a problem.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) *** * You will see awayof bypassing
that might put you in a more amorous mood. Tonight: Use caution with funds.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * * K eep seeking a different vision or a new understanding of what might be workable. A friendship is in the process of developing into a much deeper bond. Indulge a female pal who makes your life easier. Tonight: Where there is great music. © King Features Syndicate
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 12:45, 3, 4, 6:15, 7:15, 9:35 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 23-0 (PG-13) 1:15, 4:30, 7:45 • THEAMAZINGSPIDER-MAN2 IMAX3-0 (PG-13)Noon, 3:25, 6:40, 9:50 • BEARS(G)1:45, 3:55 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 9:05 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-l3) 12:10, 3:40, 6:55, 10 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 1:35, 4:45, 8 • 0RAFT DAY(PG-13) 1:40, 4:25, 7:55 • FADINGGIGOLO(R) 12:35, 2:55, 7:40, 10:05 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 1:25, 4:15, 7:20, 9:55 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)12:55, 4:10,7:30 • LEGENDSOF OZ:DOROTHY'8 RETURN (PG)2:10,4:40, 9:25 • LEGENDSOF OZ:DOROTHY'8 RETURN 3-D (PG)11:50 a.m., 7:05 • THEMETROPOLITAN OPERA: LA CENERENTOLA (no MPAA rating) 6:30 p.m. • MOMS' NIGHTOUT(PG) 1,3:30, 6:45, 9: I5 • NEIGHBORS (R) 12:30, 3:15, 6:30, 9:30, 10 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)12:20,3:45,8:25,9:10 • RI02 (G) 12:05,2:45,6, 9 • Accessibilitydevicesareavailable for some movies. r
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE (R) 6 • MUPPETSMOST WANTED (PG)3 • THAT AWKWARD MOMENT(R) 9 • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legalguardian. t
I
8 p.m. on 5 8, "Revolution" — Monroe and Neville (David Lyons, Giancarlo Esposito) forge an uneasy alliance based on their mutual determination to take down the Patriots. Rachel's (Elizabeth Mitchell) search for Aaron (Zak Orth) brings her face to face with the nanotech. Miles, Charlie and Gene's (Billy Burke, Tracy Spiridakos, Stephen Collins) attempt to steal the Patriots' mustard gas supply goes awry in the new episode "Memorial Day." Steven Culp also stars. 8 p.m. on 10, "American Idol" — This new episode is brought to you by the number 3 and the number 500. It's the 500th installment of the long-running singing competition, and it's where the three singers still standing compete for the chancetomove on to next week's final showdown. Ryan Seacrest hosts. 9:31p.m. on 29, "Mixology" — As Liv (Kate Simses) helps
Tom (Blake Lee)persuade Maya (Ginger Gonzaga)to leave with him after last call, sheand Tom can'thelp but wonder if they should be together. Bruce (Andrew Santi-
no) realizes that Jessica (Alexis Carra) is probably going home with Dominic (Adan Canto), so he starts looking around for someone else N and learns a lesson in the process N in the new episode "Last Call." 10 p.m. on 2 9, "Nashville" — With Will Lexington's (Chris Carmack) album climbing the charts, Rayna (Connie Britton) goes to work with Teddy (Eric
Close) on planning a freeconcert at LP Field to publicize her Highway 65 debut. Gunnar, Zoey and Avery (Sam Palladio, Chaley Rose, Jonathan Jack-
son) rock out at a charity benefit. Avery's attempt to serenade Juliette (Hayden Panettiere) with a song he wrote doesn't go as planned in the season finale, "On the Other Hand." cr zap2it
'
NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
TOUCHMARK rlrrcr 1980
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • The "Spaghetti Westem" will screen at 630 tonight (doois open at 6 p.m) andincludes anall-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THEAMAZINGSPIDER-MAN 2(PG-13)3:30,6:30 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 4, 6: I5 • NEIGHBORS (R) 4:45, 7:15 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)4:30,7
•3
•
Visit Central Oregon's Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • THEAMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-13) 6 • BEARS (G)5 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 5 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 6:45 • NEIGHBORS(R) 7 • THEOTHER WOMAN (PG-13)6:30 r$• r
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 2(PG-13) 8:40 • THE AMAZING SPIDER-MAN 23-D (PG-13) 5 • BRICK MANSIONS (PG-13) 7:20 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG)4:20, 6:50 • NEIGHBORS (R) 4:50, 7:10 • RI02 (G)5:05 •
See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • THEAMAZING SPIDER-MAN2 (Upstairs — PG-13) 6:15 • HEAVEN ISFORREAL(PG) 6:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
HunterDouglas
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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Tools
Heating & Stoves
Hawaii time share 2 wks/ Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, CHECK YOUR AD year, private party. Free, The Bulletin recom- 2 girls, potty training, UTD mends extra caution ou pay $175 transfer shots, hea(th guar., $450 when purc has- & up. 541-777-7743 ee. 541-388-8944 ing products or ser210 vices from out of the Get your area. Sending cash, Furniture & Appliances on the first day it runs checks, or credit inbusiness to make sure it isn corf ormation may be n A1 Washers8 Dryers rect. Spellcheck and subjected to fraud. $150 ea. Full warhuman errors do ocFor more i nformaranty. Free Del. Also cur. If this happens to tion about an adverwanted, used W/D's your ad, please contiser, you may call 541-280-7355 tact us ASAP so that the O regon State corrections and any With an ad in Attorney General's G ENERATE SOM E adjustments can be Office C o n sumer made to your ad. The Bulletin's EXCITEMENT in your Protection hotline at neighborhood! Plan a 541-385-5809 1-877-877-9392. garage sale and don't The Bulletin Classified "Call A Service forget to advertise in ServingCentral Oregon sincetgtg classified! Professional" Mens' McGregor set 541-385-5809. complete $150; LaAdopt a rescued cat or L-shaped mission oak dies McGregor set Directory kitten! Fixed, shots, ID d esk, e x lnt c o n d, with Mizuno drivers, chip, tested, more! $100. Taylor Burner 65480 78th, Tumalo, $800. 541-408-1154 bubble, $50; other Sat/Sun 1-5 389-8420 mixed irons, $10; Sleep Number www.craftcats.org ladies shoes, size 6, King $10, hats and ball Boxers AKC 8 V alley bed & box, bought sets. 541-923-3298 Bulldogs CKC puppies. in October, 2010 for $700-800. 541-325-3376 $2'I 99; excellent condition, 246 Cavalier King Charles new foam pad, $1500 Male, 8mos Guns, Hunting asking $750. AKC 541-639-7541, 286 & Fishing Call 541-678-5436 Sales Northeast Bend Donate deposit bottles/ (in Bend) Bend local pays CASH!! cans to local all vol., for all firearms & The BIG One! non-profit rescue, for ammo. 541-526-0617 Garage Sale, Fri-Sat, 8-4 feral cat spay/neuter. The Bulletin Household, furniture, lots Cans for Cats trailer recommends extra CASHI! of books, gifts, Cabbage Grocery Outlet, 694 I cevrro I e po For Guns, Ammo & Patch & Barbie dolls, girls' at SE 3rd; or donate M-F chasing products or I Reloading Supplies. 7-12 yrs clothing, games, at Smith Sign, 1515 services from out of I 541-408-6900. toys, too much to list! 20535 Sunderland Way. NE 2nd; or at CRAFT, the area. Sending lI Tumalo. Lv. msg. for cash, checks, or p ick up o f la r g ei credit i n f ormation Yard Sale, Sat 5/17, 8-5, 2338 NE Buckamounts, 389-8420. may be subjected to wheat Ct. Some anwww.craftcats.org i FRAUD. For more DO YOU HAVE tiques & collectibles, information about an t SOMETHING TO furniture, lots of misc. advertiser, you may SELL I c all t h e Oregoni FOR $500 OR 288 State Attor ney ' LESS? Sales Southeast Bend i General's O f f i ce Non-commercial Consumer Protec- • advertisers may Downsizing - it has to go! Doxie-Poos: Dachshund tion h o t line at i place an ad Housewares, tools, safe, dad, AKC poodle mom, i 1-877-877-9392. with our misc. Clean - no junkl 10 wks, healthy, $350. "QUICK CASH Fri 5/16, 9-4, Sat 5/17 9-3, 541-447-4490, leave msg l TheBulletin l SPECIAL" Sernng cenvei oregon s ncerges 61000 Brosterhous ¹8 1 week 3 lines 12 Lab/Jack Russell pupor' Estate Sale - Furniture, 212 p ies. 7 w k s . $ 5 0 eweeke ete ~ antiques, tools, house(541)323-1787 or Antiques & Ad must wares, in excessive include price of amounts! 7-3 Fri & Sat., (541)419-6485 Collectibles 61149 Hilmer Creek Dr. Lion Head-mixBunnies, in le item oi Ssoo e~ or less, or multiple Antique Furniture: free to approved homes 290 3 chests of drawers; items whosetotal only. 541-548-0747 secretary desk; dropleaf does not exceed Sales Redmond Area table, kItchen cabinet. $500. Call 541-408-1154 Celebrating Pistol Call Classifieds at Cowgirl's Boutique Antiques wanted: tools, 541-385-5809 2nd Anniversary! furniture, marbles,early www.bendbulletin.com Join us at ourFlea B/W photography, Market with 14 vendors, toys, decoys, jewelry. PIT BULL MIX - Ready food by Tacos Tijuana, for 541-389-1578 adoption, eDino" is 2 May 17, 9-4, 5624 SW Kimber Solo, C-D-P rs old, ' pgentle,'yloving. The Bulletin reserves (L-G) 9mm p istol Reif Rd., Powell Butte. enced property would the right to publish all with 3 clips, $975. be best. Loves dog park, ads from The Bulletin 541-420-7100 GARAGE SALE! plays well with others, 9-5 Fri-Sat-Sun newspaper onto The housetrained, crate 17325 NW 0'neil Hwy Bulletin Internet web- Taurus M85 38 special No earlybirds, please. trained & doing well with site. revolver, 5 shot, 2" basic commands; he's a wonderful companion! bbl, excellent condiThe Bulle6n Call a Pro 253-509-2488; Facebook, ServingCennel Oregon sincetgta tion, 10 rounds fired oDino Cowardly Lion" or o nly, no m arks o r Whether you need a 240 AdoptdinoOyahoo.com wear on gun anyfence fixed, hedges Crafts & Hobbies where. Original box, Poodles, black toys, trimmed or a house packaging and manu1 male, 1 female, to als. $320, built, you'll find good homes. 1st shots; AGATE HUNTERS 541 912 8388. professional help in ready to go! $200 each. Pelishers • Saws Cali 541-279-1970 or • • s • Wanted: Collector seeks The Bulletin's "Call a 541-279-1779. high quality fishing items Repair & Supplies Service Professional" & upscale bamboo fly s POODLE, toys & minis, Directory rods. Call 541-678-5753, also rescued older pup or 503-351-2746 541 -385-5809 to adopt. 541-475-3889 241 253 Bicycles & Moving Sale! Fri-Sat, Pug 8 Boston Terrier TV, Stereo & Video 5/1 6-1 7, 8am-4pm, 836 adorable pups, 1st shots, Accessories SW 12th. Ranch sup- vet check, microchipped, plies, tack/ropes, house- will be small dogs, $295. Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) 541-233-3566 or hold items, furniture, 54cm and 58cm, car541-213-1530 clothes, office furn/supbon fiber, Shimano MusicNoice Studio plies, and law books! 105, SP D p e dals, Includes: Queensland Heelers $400 each. Miyata • Pro Tools 8 software Moving Sale - Sat, 5/17 Standard 8 Mini, $150 kids Triathalon bike, • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 & up. 541-280-1537 only, 8-4, 3073 SW VolB1 mic cano Cir. Lots of house- www.rightwayranch.wor $125. 541-410-7034 •• Behringer Sony headphones hold 8 craft items. dpress.com 242 • Samson USB studio mic w/stand; Exercise Equipment • Training books THE GREENS • Corrugated foam AT REDMOND Nautilus NS 200 padding Huge Annual like new! Pulley Package price new, Neighborhood Sale $1200+system with extra Yew Ave/Exit 124, weights, $600! Offered at $550. follow signs Whoodle pup, only 1 (A/i reasonable offers Fri 5/1 6 8 Sat 5/1 7, sweet female left!8t/g Will deliver! considered) 9am to 3pm wks, 1st shots, wormed, 541-388-2809 Call 541-639-3222 $1150. 541-410-1581
r e - Picnic Table, locally NOTICE TO quires computer ad- custom made from logs ADVERTISER vertisers with multiple $750. 818-922-9074 Since September 29, ad schedules or those 1991, advertising for selling multiple sys- Swamp cooler, heavy used woodstoves has tems/ software, to dis- duty like new 3ft. x been limited to modTotal Shop - Sheet close the name of the 3 ft., p o rtable o r els which have been Metal Equipment business or the term s tationary. certified by the Or$3 7 5 . 4' air shear; 5'x16ga "dealer" in their ads. 541-382-6773 egon Department of Hand Brake; Pinspotter; Private party advertisEnvironmental QualPittsburgh 20ga w/Acme ers are defined as Wanted- paying cash Rolls', Manual Cleatity (DEQ) and the fedthose who sell one for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- bender 24nx20ga; Spot eral E n v ironmental computer. Protection A g e ncy dio equip. Mclntosh, Welder w/24" arms; Slip (EPA) as having met JBL, Marantz, Dy- roll (manual) 3'x2e dia; 257 smoke emission stannaco, Heathkit, San- Box 8 Pan Brake 48" x16 Musical Instruments A cer t ified sui, Carver, NAD, etc. ga; Easy Edger (Bench dards. Call 541-261-1808 type)... will sell complete w oodstove may b e identified by its certifior by the piece. cation label, which is Call 541-771-1958 261 permanently attached Medical Equipment Wildland Fi r efighting to the stove. The Bulequip., new & used, letin will not knowhose, nozzles, wyes, ingly accept advertisWheelchair 2006 Gibson Stanreducers, bladder bags. ing for the sale of dard Le s P a u le Steve 541-771-7007. Pronto uncertified Electric Guitar, one (by Invacare®l woodstoves. 266 owner, dual bridge powered Building Materials and dual controls, wheelchair, 267 great con d ition. in good condition, La Pine Habitat Fantastic so u n d. Fuel & Wood $450. Blue tone c o lor. RESTORE 541-633-7824 Building Supply Resale Aii YearDependable Comes with original Quality at case. $1200 firm, Firewood: Seasoned; LOW PRICES cash only, no trades. Lodgepole 1 for $195 263 541-322-9619 52684 Hwy 97 or 2 for $365. Cedar, 541-536-3234 Tools split, del. Bend: 1 for Open to the public . $175 or 2 for $325. 60 gal. air compressor DRUM SET 541-420-3484. New complete set of 6.5hp, little used, Garage Sales Pearl drums, $625. 541-385-9350 plus Zildjian Garage Sales 269 cymbals 8 cases. Contractor job box, 5' x Gardening Supplies 2' x 2', $325. Garage Sales Call 541-306-4869 & Equipment for details. 541-480-1353 Find them Power Washer (comin BarkTurfSoJl.com DRUM SET: mercial) new in crate, The Bulletin REMO Master Honda 13 hp - 4000 PROMPT DELIVERY Touch drum set, psi, 4 gpm. Retails Classifieds 541-389-9663 drums only no $1849, Sell $ 1 349. hardware, 22" bass Steve 541-771-7007. 541-385-5809 drum, 8", 10", 12", n
T HE B U LLETIN
sRowlNG
Th p~ ~
I
I
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13", 16" and 18 toms, 14n snare
i
drum, $800/obo. Excellent condition. 541-410-4983
I
Make Your
Yamaha console piano, walnut, exc cond & sound $3000. 541-408-1154 260
t;assiie 8 , to your ad 5 in print and online.
Misc.ltems $1.00 Porch Sale Sat. 5/17, 10-noon!
K lite ~ e a f 950 SE 3rd St., Bend between Wilson 8 Reed Mkt.
2012 Sim p licity Gusto Hepa canister va c uumwith attachments, extra filter and bags, exc. cond. Retail $1500, Asking $600 obo. 971-221-8278 (cell)
3 00-gallon fuel t a nk w/stand, filter 8 hose, $1200. 541-480-1353
•
•
couch, and matching recliner, $200.
Bose stereo system i
series 321, $400. i Oak Entertainment center, $350.
I
Can oe, $300.
I
CUSTOM ACOUSTICGUITAR Plays and sounds beautifully. Includes hard-Shell CaSe and aCOuStiC Pr8amP. SOlid toP, SideS and baCk. MuSt 586 to believe!
To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on "Place an ad nand follow these easy steps: 1. Choose a category, choose a classification, and then select your ad package. 2. Write your ad and upload your digital photo.
Buying Diamonds /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers
3. Create your account with any major credit card.
541-389-6655
To place your ad, visitwww.bendbulletln.com
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. BUYING &
SE LLING
All gold jewelry, silver and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, class rings, sterling silver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-382-9419.
or call 5 41-385- 5 8 0 9
BSSl 1C S www.benJIbulletin.com
All ads appear in both print and online. Pleaqse allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print or online.
E4
TH E BULLETINoWEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 2014
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wii'sbprtz
Better late than early By ~
ACROSS 37 Question asked by a customs 1 Furtive attentionofficer or a kid getter on Christmas ... 5 Handles roughly with a hint to this puzzle's shaded 9 Like some scents
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Tribune Content Agency
"How'd you become such a procrastinator?" I asked Cy t he Cynic, who will probably show up late for his own funeral. "I'm not that bad," Cy protested. "I'm only an amateur crastinator. Maybe one day I'll turn pro." C y was today's East,and against four hearts, West led two high spades. Dummy ruffed with the jack, and insteadof overruffing withthequeen, Cy procrastinated. He threw a rhamoild.
the next player responds one spade, and the opening bidder bids 1NT. What do you say? ANSWER: Double. You show a good hand with length in the unbid suits plus heart length (and perhaps strength) to explain your failure to act earlier, Since your partner has yet to act, your double is for takeout, though he may pass for penalty if he has strength in spades. West dealer Both sides vulnerable
20 Will Smith biopic
ride, and West took the ace and led a third high spade. This time dummy r uffed with th e n i ne, and C y discarded again. South then led the eight of trumps, and the Cynic covered. South's king won, but Cy's seven and six were Ingh. Down one. South is safe if C y o verruffs dummy on either heart lead (and if Cy discards a club at Trick Two, South can succeed at d ouble dummy). It's seldom right to overruff with a trump trick you rate to win in any case.Instead,be a procrastinator and wait. Let the standing of your middle trumps improve.
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65 Ingredients in old-fashioneds 66 "Little piggies"
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: E T C H Z O L B A I 0 E D A B L A B R 0 U C0 N C 0 R D O O H P U E B L D P U A K A T U R N P E R T R E T AS P I C I IVIOB I L A J A W E S B U F F A L O B A L T E R B 0 F I E L D A L T A R T S RO xwordeditor(Naol.com 7
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05/14/I 4
THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY MAY 14 2014 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTOR YSPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511
880
870
775
Boa t s & Accessories
®
:OQ 850
Snowmobiles Arctic Cat 580 1994,
EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
1971 Fishing boat, full top cover, 35 H P Ev i nrude motor, trailer a nd spare tire, accessories, good condition. $1100 obo.
Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
15' fiberglas Sportsman, 75HP motor, trailer, good condition, $950. 541-389-1086
$23,995.
541-383-3503
$17,000
541-548-4807
16' 1996 Lowe alum. f ishing boat, 2 0 h p Evinrude outbrd & remote control Minnkota t rolling motor, f i sh finder, bow f i shing chair, Bimini top, trailer w/spare tires, anchor, DLR ¹3447 fenders, life jackets, lights, exc. cond. & reat for local lakes, 2,995. 541-390-9932 18.5' 2003 Bluewater Breeze Open Bow, 4.3L V6, 190 HP, great mileage on the water with plenty of power Dodge for skiing or wakeboarding. Pi o neer Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, deck amp with Kicker s peakers, seats 7 . 69,000 miles. Great boat. $8,950. $4500. Mark at 541-977-2780 In La Pine,
Winnebago Aspect 2009 - 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s e at, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900
WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003
Winnebago C h ieftain 30' 1992, $6500/neg. Paul, 8 1 8-231-2201 before 9 p.m.
Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004
m . •,- .a
2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (fop of hill) in Prineviiie.
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008
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with living r oom slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.$31,000 Call Dick at 541-408-2387
Winnebaqo View, J 24', 2008 22K mi, loaded,
Mercedes diesel, 16mpg, stored covered, $62,000. 805-245-0747 (in Bend)
/ Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to e ~ a~lle obus.co or email trainwater1 57@ g 8I.co or call 858-527-8627
Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric
National RV
Forest River 27' by Wildwood 2004, winter pkg, slide, AC, oven, tub-shower, outside shower, micro, awning, always stored. $12,500. Prineville, 541-447-9199
00
1990 5th Wheel Transporter
Low miles, EFI 460,
4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500. 541-260-4293 1997 Komfort 27' 13' expandable s l ideout. $5500. With 5th wheel hitch, $5800. With 1993 Ford XLT F250 /mou n ted hitch, $7300 541-536-1962
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Keystone Laredo 31' RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around Winnebago Advenbed w/storage underChaparral 2130SS i/~', gas, turer 2005 35 neath Tub & shower Clean, well m ainless than 20,000 miles, 2 swivel rockers. TV. tained 21 ' f a m ily excellent condition, 2 Air cond. Gas stove & ski/wakeboard slide-outs, work horse refrigerator/freezer. open-bow runabout chassis, Banks power Microwave. Awning. with new Barewest sho w er. brake system, sleeps Outside tower/Bimini. Great sound system, new People Look for Information 5, with al l o p tions, Slide through stor$62,000 / negotiable. a ge, E a s y Li f t . dual battery system. About Products and Call 5 4 1-306-8711or $29,000 new; Stored under cover, Asking $18,600 fresh water use only, Services Every Daythrough email a ikistu@bend541-4947-4805 The Bulletin Classifieds cable.com 2nd owner. J u st b ought a lar g e r Chaparral! $16,000. 541-419-9510
Keystone Cougar 2010 326MKS. Like new. 908 S tored indoors. 4 Aircraft, Parts slideouts, queen bed, mirrored w a rdrobe, & Service skylights in bath and bedroom. DVD, TV, AM/FM CD p l ayer with i n terior/exterior speakers, retractible awning, etc. M a ny e xtras. So l d w i t h h ousehold and R V 1/3 interest in extras an d R e e se Columbia 400, Hitch. $29,950 (OBO) Financing available. Ron - 541-549-1089
$150,000
(located @ Bend)
Laredo 30' 2009
541-288-3333
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USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
$'28,000
541-419-3301
Arctic Fox 29' 2003, covered storage, slideout, exc. cond inside & outside 2016 tags, $14,900. 541-678-1449 MONTANA 3585 2008, or 541-410-6849 exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, CHECK YOURAD Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.
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Mdl P 27RL 31', 15'
Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-480-7930
CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Wind River 201127ORLDS (Four Seasons) 28' by Outdoor RV in LaGrande, OR. 2 Slides in living room, separate bdrm, power jack,elect awning, solar panel, flat screen, surround sound, micro, air cond, day/night shades, ext speakers,ext shower. Like new!$24,000. 541-548-2109
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com Check out the classifieds online www.bendbaffetin.com Updated daily
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " 172 Cessna Share TV/stereo syst., front IFR equipped, new front power leveling Garmin 750 jacks and s cissor avionics, touchscreen, center stabilizer jacks, 16' stack, 180hp. awning. Like new! Exceptionally clean 541-419-0566
& economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 36-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 obo. Call Peter,
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
RV
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
Tropical, 1997,
35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included.$19,900. 541-815-4811
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Outback Kargaroo 2008 Nearly new, 23KRS, 28' w/rear queen slide, alum. on the first day it runs to make sure it is corframe, front cargo ATV area/bdrm, remote AC 8 rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do ocheat, micro, dbl sink, tub/shower, AM/FM CD cur. If this happens to w/exterior spkrs, your ad, please conawning, anti-sway pkg, tact us ASAP so that upgraded wheels/tires, corrections and any springover, exterior adjustments can be stove, heated underbelly, made to your ad. stored inside, more 541-385-5809 extras.$17,500. The Bulletin Classified 541-504-8111
Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011
tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425
BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
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541-420-3250
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881
Travel Trailers
The Bulletin
(2) 10' Kayaks; Old Town Otter, Ocean Frenzy Si t -on-top, KOUNTRY AIRE both with p a ddies, 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, $225/ea. and one slide-out, 541-593-6053 Only 47k miles and good condition. Ads published in the "Boats" classification $25,000. include: Speed, fish541-548-0318 (photo aboveis of a ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. similar model & not the actual vehicle) For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875.
only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $13 900 OBO. 541-382-9441
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Ask for Theo,
Like NEW! Trail-Lite 2011 Crossover Trailer A/C, awning, AM/FM CD, custom queen bed, custom drawer pullouts. Dry axle wgt 2,566; dry unloaded wgt 2,847. EquaFlex suspension, exterior shower, indoor tub/ shower combo, stabilizer jacks, 2 batteries, plus MORE!$12,995. Call 541-280-9516 for info, or to see - in Bend.
Orbit 21' 2007, used
For Sale
TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles
Komfort Ridgecrest 23', 2008, queen bed, sleeps 6, micro & AC, full awning, living room slider, yule tables, outside shower, 4 closets, fiberqlass frame, as new, $11,500. La Pine call 541-914-3360
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
• 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150
Redmond: 541-548-5254
541-447-8664
Serv>ngCentral Oregon sinre 1903
DreamoarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
Fifth Wheels
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, Fleefwood Discovery $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h eated shop. $84,900 O.B.O.
The Bulletin
$4995 DreamCar Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend
Fifth Wheels
call 541-602-8652
541-385-5809
Triumph Da y tona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536.
Travel Trailers
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019
Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su p er C Duramax d i e sel, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u ble slide, 5500 O n an diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach Sales & Service, Bend 541-914-8438
541-516-8985
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
Motorhomes
541-480-6900
great. Sell or trade. $2900 obo.
HDFatBo 1996
882
Motorhomes
541-419-8034
18' SAILBOAT with trailer, V-berth, works
Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000 or best offer. 541-316-6049
882
Navion IQ Sprinter chassis RV 2008, 25' Mercedes Benz diesel, only 24k miles, excellent condition, automatic rear slide-out w/queen bed, full bath w/shower, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking.$69,500. 541-382-2430
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
Motorcycles & Accessories
FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shotexhaust, StageI with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
881
„s
860
2005 HD Super Glide custom, fuel injected 7k mi, new tires, like new cond. $8500 541-639-9657
880
15'
541-408-3811
:e.
Moto r homes
880
( in La Pine )
2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
307-221-2422,
WILL DELIVER
Holiday Rambler 37' Presidential model 2003, all factory options, 3 slides, 2 A/C units, 4 door fridge, fireplace, generator, electric jacks front and rear, flat screen TV, e n tertainment center, bay window, exc. cond., MUST SEE! Sacr i fice $24,500 OBO. 541-223-2218
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today! RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
Garage Sales Garage Sales
Garage Sales
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
1974 Bellanca 1730A
541-548-5254
541-385-5809
1976 Cessna 150M Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 hrs since out of frame major, Horton Stol Kit. Avionics Apollo 65 GPS & additional radio (4 frequencies can be monitored at once). Transponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digital density, temp & amp monitor. Nice paint & upholstery w/memory foam seat bottoms. Oil filter & block htr. 1 owner past 14 yrs; always hangared, no damage history. N9475U.$26,000. 541-480-4375
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Victory TC 2 0 0 2, 40K mi., runs great, Enclosed raft t r ailer, s tage 1 kit, n e w 12'x7', pulley system to help load, wired for tires, rear brakes 8 12 volt ai r p u mp. more. Health forces $750. 541-593-6053 s ale. $4,50 0 . 541-771-0665
875
Earn $500 to over $1,000 per week!
Watercraft ds published in "Wa tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal Fo Yamaha Ro a d star watercrafts. "boats" please se Warrior, 2002 excelClass 870. lent condition, 29k, Mustang seat, cruise, 541-385-5809 LED signals - fun bike! $3,900 Sisters, Serv>ngCentral Oregon since 1903 541-410-8522, Tony Honda Aquatrax 2002 865 F-12X Turbo, 2005 ATVs Honda Aqu a t rax F-12X Turbo, b o th A rcticCat AT V 7 0 0 Seat 3. 2006 Shore2008 t w o-rider ve- lander double place h icle, EFI LE . L o w trailer wit h e x tras, hours, high p e rfor- Package only $7650. mance. Nice wheels, consider trade for winch, extra equip., Will boat. 541-815-0728 $5000. Moving causes sale. 541-447-3342. 880 otorhomes 870 Boats & Accessories
We are looking for a responsible and ambitious individual who wants the opportunity to build their own sales team, work independently, and earn a big weekly in-
The Bulletin
12'1969 Searsaluminum fishing boat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape! $1600. 541-382-2599
12' aluminum fishing boat, t r ailer, motor, fish finder, accessories, $1200. 541-389-7234
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Alfa See Ya 2006 36' Excellent condition, 1 owner, 350 Cat diesel, 51,000 miles, 4-dr frig, icemaker, gas stove, oven, washer/dryer, non-smoker, 3 shdes, generator, invertor, leather interior, satellite, 7'4" ceiling. Clean!$77,500. 541-233-6520
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come. YOU CONTROL WHAT YOU EARN!Work your own
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Wgderness slide, 2 riing, queen bed, ~cc outside sh Ry raotorc'f er,E Z Iif( stabilizer been Y ul auto i h'tch, 'i Ilks new, or atrpta boa<, or tit it sells storet!. SleeP t ad runs untt 12 rnoneis $1O,N8 comes first!) 541.800-000 (whichever com 11 +'
designated territory and essentially build your own busiI
ness! • PEOPLE ORIENTED • RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION, CELL PHONE, COMPUTER WITH INTERNET ACCESS • SALES EXPERIENCE (OUTSIDE SALES OR INSIDE SALES EXPERIENCE, RETAILSALES ASSOCIATE OR TELEMARKETING) PREFERRED. • PROFESSIONAL PERSONAL APPEARANCE.(
Includ e s: 2" in length, with border, full
I . some reslrictions aPPly
5 4 'I 385 58 0 g
Yourad will also appear im
• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace
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• The (eitfral OregonNickel Ads + benditullefin.Lem
'Privatepartymerchandiseonly I
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THE BULLETIN 0 WEDNESDAY MAY 14 2014 E7
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIEDโ ข 541-385-5809
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
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Legal Notices
auction to allow the erty commonly known LEGAL NOTICE Deutsche Bank Na- Deschutes C o u nty as 62323 Byram Rd, tional Trust Company, Sheriff's Office to re- Bend, Oregon 97701. as Trustee of the In- view bidder's funds. Conditions of S ale: dymac INDX M ort- Only U.S. currency Potential bidders must cashier's arrive 15 minutes prior Trust and/or gage 2 007-FLX4, Mor t - checks made payable to the auction to allow gage Pass-Through to Deschutes County the Deschutes County Certificates, S e r ies Sheriff's Office will be Sheriff's Office to re2007-FLX4 under the accepted. Payment view bidder's funds. Pooling and Servicing must be made in full Only U.S. currency cashier's Agreement dated May immediately upon the and/or 1, 2007, Plaintiff/s, v. close of the sale. For checks made payable Evelyn Bell; persons more information on to Deschutes County g o to: Sheriff's Office will be or parties unknown this s al e claiming any r i ght, www.oregonsheriffs.c accepted. P ayment must be made in full title, lien or interest in om/sales.htm immediately upon the t he p r operty d e - LEGAL NOTICE close of the sale. For scribed in the com- Federal N a t ional more information on plaint herein, Defen- Mortgage Associathis s al e g o to: d ant/s. Case N o . : tion, its successors www.oregonsheriffs.c 13CV0599. NOTICE in interest and/or om/sales.htm OF SALE U N DER assigns, Plaintiff/s, WRIT O F E X ECU- v. James R. Beard; LEGAL NOTICE TION - REAL PROPanessa Clai r Green Tree Servicing, ERTY. N o tice is V Selco ComLLC, its successors hereby given that the Beard; Credit Union; and/or assigns, PlainDeschutes C o unty munity of O r egon; tiff/s, v. C ase No.: Sheriff's Office will on State Jewelers, 1 3CV1216FC NO June 5, 2014 at 10:00 Sterling a.k.a Kay JewTICE OF SALE UNAM in the main lobby Inc. elers; and O ccuDER WRIT OF EXof t h e D e s chutes of the PreECUTION - REAL County Sheriff's Of- pants Defendant/s. PROPERTY. Michael fice, 63333 W. High- mises, Case No.: R. Merickel; Katie M. way 20, Bend, OrNOMerickel; Mi d l and egon, sell, at public 12CV0500. T ICE O F SAL E Funding, LLC; and all o ral auction to t h e UNDER WRIT OF other persons or parh ighest bidder, f o r ties unknown claimcash o r ca s hier's EXECUTION REAL PROPERTY. any right, title, lien, check, the real prop- Notice i s h e r eby ing or interest in the real erty commonly known given that the Desproperty commonly as 551 NE Basalt Av- c hutes Coun t y k nown a s 608 1 1 enue, T e r rebonne, Sheriff's Office will Windsor Dr. Bend, OR Oregon 97760. Con- on June 12, 2014 at 97702, Defendant/s. ditions of Sale: Po1 0:00 AM i n t h e Notice is hereby given tential bidders must main lobby of the that the D eschutes arrive 15 minutes prior Deschutes County County Sheriff's Ofto the auction to allow S heriff's Of fi c e , fice will on June 5, the Deschutes County 63333 W. Highway 2014 at 10:00 AM in Sheriff's Office to re- 20, Bend, Oregon, the main lobby of the view bidder's funds. sell, at public oral Deschutes C o u nty Only U.S. currency auction to the highSheriff 's Office,63333 and/or cashier's est bidder, for cash W. Highway 20, Bend, checks made payable or cashier's check, Oregon, sell, at pubto Deschutes County the real p roperty lic oral auction to the Sheriff's Office will be commonly known as h ighest bidder, f o r accepted. P ayment 2461 t heast cash o r ca s hier's must be made in full S hadow Nor Broo check, the real propimmediately upon the Place, Bend, Or-k erty commonly known close of the sale. For egon 97701. Condias 60811 W indsor more information on tions of Sale: PoDrive, Bend, Oregon this s al e g o to: tential bidders must 97702. Conditions of www.oregonsheriffs.c arrive 15 minutes Sale: Potential bidom/sales.htm prior to the auction ders must arrive 15 LEGAL NOTICE to allow the Desminutes prior to the Deutsche Bank Na- c hutes Coun t y auction to allow the tional Trust Company, S heriff's Office to Deschutes C o u nty as Trustee of the In- review bid d e r's Sheriff's Office to redymac Indx Mortgage funds. Only U . S. view bidder's funds. Loan Trust 2006-AR7, c urrency an d / or Only U.S. currency Mortgage cashier's c h e cks and/or cashier's Pass-Through Certifi- made payable to checks made payable cates, Series Deschutes County to Deschutes County 2006-AR7 under the Sheriff's Office will Sheriff's Office will be pooling and servicing be accepted. Payaccepted. P ayment a greement da t e d ment must be made must be made in full March 1, 2006, Plain- in full immediately immediately upon the tiff/s, v. Cheryl L. Fle- upon the close of close of the sale. For sch; Patrick J. Flesch; the sale. For more more information on persons or parties un- information on this this s al e go to: known claiming any sale go to: www.orwww.oregonsheriffs.c right, title, lien or in- egonsheriff s.com/sa om/sales.htm terest in the property les.htm LEGAL NOTICE described in the comLEGAL NOTICE HSBC Bank USA, plaint herein, DefenN a t ional National A s sociad ant/s. Case N o . : Federal tion as Trustee for 12CV0359. NOTICE Mortgage AssociaMortgageit SecuriOF SALE U N DER tion (FNMA), Plainties Corp. Mortgage WRIT O F E X ECU- t iff/s, v. S co t D . Mceachern; Bonnie Loan Trust, Series TION - REAL PROP2007-1, Mortgage S. M ce a chern; ERTY. N o t ic e is Pass-Through Cerhereby given that the Washington Mutual tificates, its succesDeschutes C o u nty Bank, FA NKA JPCha s e sors i n int e rest Sheriff's Office will on M organ and/or ass i gns, June 3, 2014 at 10:00 Bank, NA; O ccuPlaintiff/s, v. Phillip AM in the main lobby pants of the PropGalvan; Le o n or of t h e De s chutes erty, D efendant/s. Case No.: Galvan; Mortgage County Sheriff's Of13CV0340. NOElectronic Registrafice, 63333 W. HighT ICE O F SAL E tion Systems, Inc., way 20, Bend, Orsolely as nominee egon, sell, at public UNDER WRIT OF EXECUTION for Mortgageit, Inc.; o ral auction to t h e REAL PROPERTY. Terrango Glen AFH h ighest bidder, f o r cash o r ca s hier's Notice i s h e r eby LLC; an d O c c upants of the Precheck, the real prop- given that the DesCoun t y mises, Defendant/s. erty commonly known c hutes Sheriff's Office will Case No.: a s 2 264/2266 S W 13CV0258. NOReindeer Ave., Red- on June 26, 2014 at T ICE O F SAL E mond, Oregon 97756. 1 0:00 AM i n t h e UNDER WRIT OF Conditions of S ale: main lobby of the EXECUTION Potential bidders must Deschutes County Of fi c e , REAL PROPERTY. arrive 15 minutes prior S heriff's Notice is h e reby to the auction to allow 63333 W. Highway 20, Bend, Oregon, given that the Desthe Deschutes County c hutes Coun t y Sheriff's Office to re- sell, at public oral Sheriff's Office will view bidder's funds. auction to the highon June 24, 2014 at Only U.S. currency est bidder, for cash 1 0:00 AM i n t h e and/or cashier's or cashier's check, checks made payable the real p roperty main lobby of the Deschutes County to Deschutes County commonly known as Sheriff's Off i c e, Sheriff's Office will be 21163 Charity Lane, B end, Oreg o n 63333 W. Highway accepted. P ayment 97702. Conditions 20, Bend, Oregon, must be made in full immediately upon the of Sale: P o tential sell, at public oral bidders must arrive auction to the highclose of the sale. est bidder, for cash For more information on 15 minutes prior to or cashier's check, this s al e go to: the auction to allow Desc h utes the real p roperty www.oregonsheriffs.c the County Sheriff's Ofcommonly known as om/sales.htm f ice to rev i e w 20994 Lupine AvLEGAL NOTICE bidder's funds. Only e nue, Bend, O r D EUTSCHE B A N K U.S. currency egon 9 7701-8330. TRUST C O MPANY and/or ca s hier's Conditions of Sale: AMERICAS AS checks made payPotential b i d ders TRUSTEE FOR RALI able to Deschutes must arrive 15 min2006-QA7, ITS SUC- County Sheriff's Ofu tes prior t o t h e CESSORS AND/OR f ice will b e a c auction to allow the ASSIGNS, Plaintiff/s, cepted. P a yment Deschutes County v. AMY MITCHELL; must be made in full S heriff's Office to PNC MORTGAGE, A immediately upon review bid d e r's D IVISION OF P N C t he close o f t h e funds. Only U .S. BANK, NA T I ONAL sale. For more inc urrency an d / or ASSOCIATION; AND f ormation on t h is cashier's c h e cks A LL OTHER P E R- sale go to: www.ormade payable to SONS OR PARTIES egonsheri ff s.com/sa Deschutes County UNKNOWN C L A IM- les.htm Sheriff's Office will ING AN Y R I GHT, be accepted. PayTITLE, LIEN OR INLEGAL NOTICE ment must be made T EREST I N THE Green Tree Servicing in full immediately REAL PR O PERTY LLC, its successors upon the close of COMMONLY and/or assigns, Plain- the sale. For more KNOWN AS 1338 NW tiff/s, v. Terry D. Har- information on this LEXINGTON AV- ding; and All Other sale go to: www.orE NUE, BEND, O R Persons or P a rties egonsheriff s.com/sa 97701, Defendant/s. unknown clai ming any les.htm Case No.: 13CV0503. right, title, lien, or inN OTICE OF S A L E t erest in t h e r e a l LEGAL NOTICE U NDER WRIT O F property c o mmonly IN T H E CI R CUIT EXECUTION - REAL known as 62323 By- COURT O F THE PROPERTY. Notice is ram Rd, Bend, OR STATE OF OREGON hereby given that the 97701, Defendant/s. DESCHUTES Deschutes C o u nty Case No.: COUNTY. Champion Sheriff's Office will on 1 3CV0929FC. N O - Mortgage Company, July 1, 2014 at 10:00 TICE OF SALE UNPlaintiff/s, v. Virginia AM in the main lobby DER WRIT OF EXL. Hough, individually of t h e De s chutes ECUTION - REAL and as Trustee of the County Sheriff's Of- PROPERTY. Notice is Survivor's Trust of the fice, 63333 W. High- hereby given that the Robert N. Hough and H o u gh way 20, Bend, OrDeschutes C o unty V irginia L . egon, sell, at public Sheriff's Office will on Family Trust dated o ral auction to t h e J une 19 , 2 0 1 4 a t A ugust 12 , 19 9 3 ; h ighest bidder, f o r 10:00 AM in the main Bonnie Moran; United cash o r ca s hier's lobby of t h e D e s- States of A merica, check, the real prop- chutes County other Persons or Parerty commonly known Sheriff's Office, 63333 ties, including Occuas 1338 NW Lexing- W. Highway 20, Bend, pants, Unkn o wn ton, Bend, Oregon Oregon, sell, at public Claiming Any Right, 97701. Conditions of o ral auction to t h e Title, Lien, or Interest Sale: Potential bid- h ighest bidder, f o r in the Property deders must arrive 15 cash o r ca s hier's scribed in the Comminutes prior to the check, the real prop- plaint herein, Defen-
d ant/s. Case N o . : BIDDER S H O ULD 1 3CV1003FC. N O INDEPENDENTLY TICE OF SALE UNINVESTIGATE: (a) DER WRIT OF EX- The priority of the lien ECUTION - REAL o r interest o f t h e PROPERTY. Notice is judgment creditor; (b) hereby given that I will Land use laws and on June 26, 2014 at regulations applicable 10:00 AM in the main to the property; (c) lobby of t h e D e s- Approved uses for the c hutes Count y property; (d) Limits on Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 farming o r for e st W. Highway 20, Bend, practices on the propOregon, sell, at public erty; (e) Rights of o ral auction to t h e neighboring property highest bidder, f or owners; and (f) Envicash o r ca s hier's ronmental laws and check, the real prop- regulations that affect erty commonly known the property. Attorney: as 52367 Glenwood Hunter Zook, OSB Drive, La Pine, Or- ยน095578, Pite Dunegon 97739, and fur- can, LLP, 621 SW ther described as, Lot Morrison Street, Suite Three, Block Three, 4 25 P ortland, O R Glenwood Acres, and 97205, 503-222-2246. Lot Three, First Addi- Conditions of S ale: tion o f Gl e nwood Potential bidders must Acres, De s chutes arrive 15 minutes prior County, Oregon. Said to the auction to allow sale is made under a the Deschutes County writ of execution isSheriff's Office to resued out of the Cir- view bidder's funds. cuit Court of the State Only U.S. currency o f Oregon for t h e and/or cashier's County of Deschutes. checks made payable The Notice of Sale will to Deschutes County be published in The Sheriff's Office will be Bulletin, a newspaper accepted. Payment of general circulation must be made in full in Deschutes County, immediately upon the Oregon, on the fol- close of t h e s a le. lowing dates: May 14, LARRY B L ANTON, 2014; May 21, 2014; Deschutes C o u nty May 28, 2014; and Sheriff. S c ot t B. June 4, 2014. The Haynes, Civil TechniNotice of Sale will be cian. Date: April 17, posted on the Oregon 2014. State Sheriff's AssoLEGAL NOTICE ciation (OSSA) website, h t t p://www.or- JPMorgan Chase egonsheriffs.com/sale Bank, National Ass.htm, for at least 28 sociation, Plaintiff/s, days prior to the sale v. Th e U n known and remain posted Heirs and Devisees of George Oster until the date of the sale. The first full day T urner, Jr. , D e of posting is May 13, c eased; th e U n 2014. BEFORE BID- k nown Heirs o f Mor g an; DING AT THE SALE, Pennie A PR O SPECTIVE Louis Turner; DesBIDDER S H O ULD chutes River Recreation Hom e site INDEPENDENTLY INVESTIGATE: (a) Property Owners, Unit 6, Part I and II; The priority of the lien o r interest o f t h e O ccupants of t h e judgment creditor; (b) Property, D e f enLand use laws and dant/s. Case No.: NOregulations applicable 12CV1253. SAL E to the property; (c) T ICE O F Approved uses for the UNDER WRIT OF property; (d) Limits on EXECUTION farming o r for e st REAL PROPERTY. practices on the prop- Notice i s h e r eby given that the Deserty; (e) Rights of Coun t y neighboring property c hutes owners; and (f) Envi- Sheriff's Office will ronmental laws and on June 12, 2014 at regulations that affect 1 0:00 AM i n t h e the property. Attorney: main lobby of the Kelly D. Sutherland, Deschutes County Of fi c e , OSB ยน873575, Sha- S heriff's piro 8 S u t herland, 63333 W. Highway LLC, 76 3 2 SW 20, Bend, Oregon, Durham Road, Suite sell, at public oral 350 T i g ard, OR auction to the high97224, 360-260-2253. est bidder, for cash Conditions of S a le: or cashier's check, Potential bidders must the real p roperty arrive 15 minutes prior commonly known as Whi t etail to the auction to allow 16295 the Deschutes County L ane, Bend, O r Sheriff's Office to re- egon 97707. Condiview bidder's funds. tions of Sale: PoOnly U.S. currency tential bidders must and/or cashier's arrive 15 m inutes checks made payable prior to the auction to Deschutes County to allow the DesCou n t y Sheriff's Office will be c hutes accepted. P ayment S heriff's Office t o bid d er's must be made in full review immediately upon the f unds. Only U . S. an d / or close of t h e s ale. currency c h e cks LARRY B L ANTON, cashier's made payable to Deschutes C o unty Sheriff. Blair Deschutes County Barkhurst, Fiel d Sheriff's Office will Technician. Date: May be accepted. Payment must be made 7, 2014. in full immediately upon the close of LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I R CUIT the sale. For more COURT O F THE information on this STATE OF OREGON sale go to: www.oregonsheri ff s.com/sa DESCHUTES COUNTY. Green Tree les.htm S ervicing, LLC, i t s LEGAL NOTICE successors and/or as- J PMorgan Ch a s e signs, Plaintiff/s, v. Bank, National AssoBrandon R ossman; ciation, Plaintiff/s, v. Angela K. Rossman; N ancy Lynn C o s and Mortgage Elec- grove; Occupants of tronic Re g i stration the Premises, DefenSystems, Inc., Defen- d ant/s. Case N o . : d ant/s. Case N o . : 1 3CV1550FC. N O 1 3CV1230FC. N O - TICE OF SALE UNTICE OF SALE UNDER WRIT OF EXDER WRIT OF EX- ECUTION - REAL ECUTION - REAL PROPERTY. Notice is PROPERTY. Notice is hereby given that the hereby given that I will Deschutes C o u nty on June 3, 2014 at Sheriff's Office will on 10:00 AM in the main J une 17 , 2 0 1 4 a t lobby of t h e D e s- 10:00 AM in the main chutes County l obby of t h e D e s Sheriff 's O ff ice,63333 chutes County W. Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff 's O ffice,63333 Oregon, sell, at public W. Highway 20, Bend, o ral auction to t h e Oregon, sell, at public highest bidder, f or o ral auction to t h e cash o r ca s hier's h ighest bidder, f o r check, the real prop- cash o r ca s hier's erty commonly known check, the real propas 2754 South West erty commonly known R eindeer Cour t , as 707 N.E. Shelley Redmond, O r egon Way, Bend, Oregon 97756, an d f u rther 97701. Conditions of described as, Lot 13, Sale: Potential bidBlock 7, Summerfield ders must arrive 15 Phase IV, Deschutes minutes prior to the County, Oregon. Said auction to allow the sale is made under a Deschutes C o u nty writ of execution isSheriff's Office to resued out of the Cir- view bidder's funds. cuit Court of the State Only U.S. currency o f Oregon for t h e and/or cashier's County of Deschutes. checks made payable The Notice of Sale will to Deschutes County be published in The Sheriff's Office will be Bulletin, a newspaper accepted. P ayment of general circulation must be made in full in Deschutes County, immediately upon the Oregon, on the fol- close of the sale. For lowing dates: April 23, more information on 2014; April 30, 2014; this s al e go to: May 7, 2014; and May www.oregonsheriffs.c 14, 2014. The Notice om/sales.htm of Sale will be posted on the Oregon State LEGAL NOTICE Sheriff's Association JPMorgan Chase (OSSA) web s ite, Bank, National Ashttp://www.oregonshsociation, its suceriffs.com/sales.htm, cessors in interest for at least 28 days and/or as s igns, prior to the sale and Plaintiff/s, v. K r isremain posted until tina M. Biever; and the date of the sale. O ccupants of t h e The first full day of Premises, Defenposting is April 23, dant/s. Case No.: 2014. BEFORE BID- 13CV0549. NODING AT THE SALE, T ICE O F SAL E A PRO S PECTIVE UNDER WRIT OF
EXECUTION 13CV0803. NOLEGAL NOTICE REAL PROPERTY. T ICE O F SAL E Notice o f Pu b lic Notice i s h e r eby UNDER WRIT OF Hearing M e e ting given that the DesEXECUTION Type: Public Hearc hutes Coun t y REAL PROPERTY. ing by Police Chief Sheriff's Office will Notice is h e reby Jim Porter as the on June 12, 2014 at given that the DesJustice Assistance 1 0:00 AM i n t h e c hutes Coun t y Grant ma n ager. main lobby of the Sheriff's Office will Meeting Date: Deschutes County on June 26, 2014 at Tuesday May 20, S heriff's Off i c e, 1 0:00 AM i n t h e 2014. Meeting Time 63333 W. Highway main lobby of the 10am. Lo c ation: 20, Bend, Oregon, Deschutes County B end Police D e sell, at public oral Sheriff's Off i c e, p artment 555 N E auction to the high63333 W. Highway 15th Street, Bend, est bidder, for cash 20, Bend, Oregon, Oregon. Purpose: or cashier's check, sell, at public oral Public hearing for the real p roperty auction to the highw ritten an d o r a l commonly known as est bidder, for cash views to the City of 2 051 S W 32n d or cashier's check, Bend for the proCourt, R e dmond, the real p roperty posed use of t he O regon 977 5 6 . commonly known as 2014 Justice AssisConditions of Sale: 60280 Sunset View tance Grant for the Potential b i d ders D rive, Bend, O r City of Bend Police must arrive 15 minegon 97702. CondiD epartment. Y o u u tes prior to t h e tions of Sale: Pocan direct q uesauction to allow the tential bidders must tions or comments Deschutes County arrive 15 minutes on the above date Sheriff's Office t o prior to the auction by calling review bid d er's to allow the Des541.322.2992 from funds. Only U . S. c hutes Coun t y 10am to 10:30am. currency an d / or S heriff's Office t o Contact for a ddicashier's c h e cks review bid d er's tional que s tions made payable to funds. Only U . S. prior to this meeting Deschutes County c urrency an d / or please call Kristel Sheriff's Office will cashier's c h e cks Muirhead at be accepted. Paymade payable to 5 41.322.2994. A c ment must be made Deschutes County cessible m e eting in full immediately Sheriff's Office will information - this upon the close of be accepted. Paymeeting event/locathe sale. For more ment must be made tion is a ccessible. information on this in full immediately Sign Language, insale go to: www.orupon the close of terpreter s e r vice, egonsheriff s.com/sa the sale. For more assistive l i stening les.htm information on this devices, materials in sale go to: www.oralternate fo r mat, LEGAL NOTICE egonsheriff s.com/sa such a s Br a i lle, Nationstar Mortgage les.htm large print, elecLLC, its successor in tronic formats and interest and/or asLEGAL NOTICE any other accomsigns, Plaintiff/s, v. Nationstar Mortgage are Dena Marie Murnane; LLC, its successors modations upon adUnited S t ates of and/or assigns, Plain- available request. America; and all Other tiff/s, v. James L. Thill; vance Please contact Persons or P a rties United S t ates of Kristel Muirhead no unknown clai ming any America; and all Other later than May 15, right, title, lien, or in- Persons or P arties at terest in t h e R e al Unknown C l a iming 2014 Property c ommonly Any Right, Title, Lien, 541.322.2994 k nown a s 558 2 4 or Interest in the Real kmuirheadObenproWood Duck D r ive, Property commonly doregon.gov v iding at l east 5 B end, O R 97 7 0 7, known as 3698 SW days notice prior to D efendant/s. C a s e Helmholtz Way, Red- the event will help No.: 1 3 C V1218FC. mond, O R 9 7 7 56, ensure availability. N OTICE OF S A L E D efendant/s. C a s e LEGAL NOTICE U NDER WRIT O F No.: 13CV0806. NOEXECUTION - REAL TICE OF SALE UN- NOTICE TO INTERPROPERTY. Notice is DER WRIT OF EX- ESTED P ERSONS. hereby given that the ECUTION - REAL Scott B. Petrie has Deschutes C o unty PROPERTY. Notice is been appointed as the Sheriff's Office will on hereby given that the Personal RepresentaJ une 19, 2 0 1 4 a t Deschutes C o u nty tive of the Estate of 10:00 AM in the main Sheriff's Office will on Gordon Petrie, Delobby of t h e D e s- J une 26, 2 014 a t ceased, by the Circuit chutes County 10:00 AM in the main Court for Deschutes Sheriff 's Office,63333 lobby of t h e D e s- County, State of OrW. Highway 20, Bend, c hutes Count y e gon, under c a se Oregon, sell, at public Sheriff's Office, 63333 number 14-PB-0039. persons having a o ral auction to t h e W. Highway 20, Bend, All against the eshighest bidder, f or Oregon, sell, at public claim tate must present the cash o r ca s hier's o ral auction to t he c laim w i thin f o u r check, the real prop- h ighest bidder, f o r after the date erty commonly known cash o r ca s hier's months as 55824 Wood Duck check, the real prop- of first publication of this notice to the PerDrive, Bend, Oregon erty commonly known sonal Representative 97707. Conditions of as 3698 SW HelmSale: Potential bidholtzWay, Redmond, at Brian T. Hemphill, ders must arrive 15 Oregon 97756. Con- P.C., 339 SW Cent ury Dr. S t e . 1 0 1 , minutes prior to the ditions of Sale: Poauction to allow the tential bidders must Bend, OR 97702, or Deschutes C o u nty arrive 15 minutes prior t he claim may b e Sheriff's Office to re- to the auction to allow barred. All persons view bidder's funds. the Deschutes County whose rights may be Only U.S. currency Sheriff's Office to re- affected by this proand/or cashier's view bidder's funds. ceeding may obtain checks made payable Only U.S. currency additional information cour t to Deschutes County and/or cashier's f rom the Sheriff's Office will be checks made payable records, the Personal accepted. P ayment to Deschutes County Representative, or the must be made in full Sheriff's Office will be attorney for the Perimmediately upon the accepted. Payment sonal Representative: H e mphill. close of the sale. For must be made in full Brian T . and first pubmore information on immediately upon the Dated this s al e g o to: close of the sale. For lished: May 7, 2014. /s/ Scott B. www.oregonsheriffs.c more information on Signed: Personal Repom/sales.htm this s al e go to: Petrie, resentative. www.oregonsheriffs.c LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Nationstar Mortgage om/sales.htm O newest Ban k , LLC, its successors LEGAL NOTICE FSB, its successors and/or assigns, Plaininterest and/or tiff/s, v. Todd Butler; Nationstar Mortgage in Joan Butler; Mid Or- LLC, its successors assigns, Plaintiff/s, assigns, Plain- v. Unknown Heirs of egon Federal Credit and/or Union; Ene r bank tiff/s, v. Matthew Scott Georgia D. Currier; Higgins; Keybank Na- Belinda Ashenfelter USA; and All Other tional As s ociation; a s Affiant o f t h e Persons or P a rties Oregon of s mall e state o f unknown clai ming any Justice,Department Division of Georgia D. Currier; right, title, lien or inSupport; Kath- Keith Allyn Currier; t erest i n t h e r e a l Child property c ommonly ryn C. McMahon AKA Jeffery Scott CurKathryn Crowl; and all rier; Georgia Diane known as 1818 NW Other Persons or Par- Currier aka Georgia Fir Ave, R edmond, unknown claim- Diane Werner; AsOR 97756, D efen- ties ing any right, title, lien, set Acc e ptance, d ant/s. Case N o . : interest in the Real LLC; United States 13CV0662. NOTICE or OF SAL E U N DER Property commonly of America; State of as 65125 Hun- Oregon; Occupants WRIT OF E X ECU- known P r emises; TION - REAL PROP- nell Road, Bend, OR of th e and the Real PropERTY. N o tice is 97701, Defendant/s. No.: erty located at 2814 hereby given that the Case 1 3CV1233FC. N O - Southwest Volcano Deschutes C o u nty TICE OF SALE UNCourt, R e dmond, Sheriff's Office will on WRIT OF EX- Oregon 97756, DeJ une 17, 2 014 a t DER 10:00 AM in the main ECUTION - REAL fendant/s. Case No.: Notice is 12CV0793. NOlobby of t h e D e s- PROPERTY. SAL E chutes County hereby given that the T ICE O F Sheriff 's Office,63333 Deschutes C o u nty UNDER WRIT OF W. Highway 20, Bend, Sheriff's Office will on EXECUTION une 17 , 2 0 1 4 a t REAL PROPERTY. Oregon, sell, at public J10:00 AM in the main Notice i s h e r eby o ral auction to t h e lobby of t h e D e s- given that the Deshighest bidder, f or Count y c hutes Coun t y cash o r ca s hier's c hutes Sheriff's Office, 63333 Sheriff's Office will check, the real prop- W. Highway 20, Bend, on June 12, 2014 at erty commonly known sell, at public 1 0:00 AM i n t h e as 1818 NW Fir Ave, Oregon, main lobby of the Redmond, O r egon o ral auction to t he h ighest bidder, f o r Deschutes County 97756. Conditions of cash o r ca s hier's S heriff's Of fi c e , Sale: P otential bidcheck, the real propW. Highway ders must arrive 15 erty commonly known 63333 20, Bend, Oregon, minutes prior to the at public oral auction to allow the as 6 5125 H u nnell sell, Deschutes C o u nty Road, Bend, Oregon auction to the highConditions of est bidder, for cash Sheriff's Office to re- 97701. view bidder's funds. Sale: Potential bid- or cashier's check, must arrive 15 the real p roperty Only U.S. currency ders and/or cashier's minutes prior to the commonly known as auction to allow the So u t hwest checks made payable Deschutes C o u nty 2814 V olcano Cou r t , to Deschutes County Sheriff's Office to re- Redmond, Oregon Sheriff's Office will be view bidder's funds. 97756. C onditions accepted. P ayment U.S. currency of Sale: P o tential must be made in full Only cashier's bidders must arrive immediately upon the and/or made payable 15 minutes prior to close of the sale. For checks to Deschutes County the more information on this s al e g o to: Sheriff's Office will be accepted. Payment www.oregonsheriffs.c must be made in full om/sales.htm immediately upon the LEGAL NOTICE close of the sale. For more information on N ationstar Mor t this s al e go to: gage LLC, www.oregonsheriffs.c Plaintiff/s, v. David C. McKay; Jeanie C. om/sales.htm McKay; C i t ibank, N.A.; Sunset View Need to get an ad Estates in ASAP? Homeowner's Association, Inc.; OccuFax It to 541-322-7253 pants of the Property, D efendant/s. The Bulletin Classifieds No.: Case