SUNDAY June14,2015
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
CRIME IN DOWNTOWN BEND
un eI IeSSule on exe uSion
Museum selfies —Institutions that once forbadephotography are nowencouraging it. Still no selfie sticks, though.A6
Summervacation —That trip to DisneyWorld is going to cost you a lot.A6
• Constitutional rights atcenterof effort to change Why isthecity pushingfor anexpandedexclusion zone? Bend wants to expand thezone QEN$il'f QF NQNEMERG ENQ> ANQQFFgER QA I $ (2012 15) expandedboundarywhere offendersarebanned that bans people cited for certain By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
Unusual home —Life in a
The city of Bend is moving toward excluding individuals
treehouse, full time.C1
who are found committing
SEALTeam6
— An investigation into the hid-
den history of the secretive special ops team best known for killing Dsama bin Laden.F1
tended to cement individual rights, according to Bend Assistant City Attorney Gary Firestone. The city has had an exclu-
crimesin a broaderarea of downtown, but opposition
sion zone in the downtown breezeway to and through
from the public and two city
the Riverfront Plaza and all
councilors has influenced city officials to amend the current
publicly owned property from
ordinance. Recent amendments to a
proposal to expand Bend's
violations based onthearea where most police calls are made. ' Exclusionzone ~ ' boundaries ree
s++o •
Drake Park
n
j 9jjt j < ++~+ 4
e$
I
Proposedboundaries oi expandedexclusionzone
Franklin and Oregon avenues since 2012.
SeeExclusion/A5
l~ s@n
4
odttAve
the eastern side of Brooks Alley to Drake Parkbetween
civil exclusion zone are in-
'aoaula
T ] ISSEss i s s
el
• aa lt:tlioradllAie.
Source: Bend Police Department
Pete Smith I The Bulletin
COCC graduation — About 400 of the college's 900 students receiving degreesand certificates walkedSaturday. B2
And a Wed exclusive-
Can I bike to Dry Canyon?
Busy times for the woman behindthepope'supcoming visit to the U.S. bendbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Obama's
BICYCLING IN REDMOND How can we be safe from cars?
legacy How can I find rny way?
!..'
i 'I
C
How can we cross Highway 97?
faces tests in court
allellle
By David G. Savage and Michael A. Memoli Tribune Washington Bureau
Searching for Earhart, despite doubters
w
*
than six years, President
UO students may
.
' have the answers
By Martha lrvine The Associated Press
OXFORD, Pa. — There
are manypeople with theories about what happened to Amelia Earhart. But few stir up more excitement — or more ire — than Ric
Gillespie. The longstanding official theory is that the famed
This image is taken from one of the presentations University of Oregon students showed Redmond city staff, with questions that other student groups attempted to answer. See their solutions onAl
REDMONDike boulevards, "walking school buses" and more cycling access points into Dry Canyon could all be in Redmond's future.
mayor and former Bulletin
Undergraduate and grad-
Noonan, ran out of gas and
uate students from the Uni-
crashed into deep ocean
versity of Oregon presented city staff with a bike-load of
land Island, a tiny speck in the South Pacific that the
ideas last week on how to
pair missed while attempt-
make Redmond more cycleand pedestrian-friendly. The
ing a round-the-world flight
bike/ped project was the first
in 1937.
collaboration between the city and the university as part of
Since 1989, Gillespie and The International Group for
UO's Sustainable City Year
Historic Aircraft Recovery,
Program. "I was really impressed
or TIGHAR, have been test-
ing another theory — and they've headed back to the region this month. They
administration's most
significant domestic achievements. The fate of Obama's
Submitted image I llluetration by David Wray/The Bulletin
again in a case that will
decide this month whether the administration may continue to subsidize
her disappearance was marriedtoformer Bend
waters northwest of How-
Barack Obama and his lawyers will spend much of his remaining time in office fighting in the courts to preserve the
health care law rests with the Supreme Court
By Beau EasteseThe Bulletin
pilot — who at the time of
publisher George Putnam — and her navigator, Fred
WASHINGTON — Af-
ter battling Republicans in Congress for more
with the quality of the work,"
Redmond City Councilor
Anne Graham said. "My university days didn't produce that kind of quality output." In April, students from UO professor Marc Schlossberg's bicycle transportation planning course traveled over the Cascades to see Redmond's
current bike and pedestrian situation firsthand. City staffers directed the students
to focuson severalspecific goals. Improving bike and pedestrian routes near schools was one of the top priorities,
premiums of millions of
as was making streets with heavy car traffic such as 15th
said Heather Richards, Redmond's community develop-
Street, Highland, Rimrock
ment director.
and Veterans avenues safer. Redmond officials also point-
Some of the more practical ideas that proved popular with city staff and councilors alike were bike boulevards and protected bikeways. Bike bou-
low- and middle-income Americans.
Likewise Obama's effort to defer deportation and extend work permits for
pedestrian opportunities. After two months of re-
er cars and are marked with "sharrows"thatalertusers of
as many as 5 million immigrants here illegally is stalled in a Texas federal court. And legal battles are just getting underway in Washington over his plan to fight climate change by forcing a 30 percent reduc-
their shared status. Oftentimes
tion in carbon pollution.
search and planning, 11 differ-
stop signs are altered so that
ent student groups came back
traffic on the bike boulevards is more free flowing. A specific
ed out the need for better bike
and walking connections from downtown to Dry Canyon and the need for more
community events to build awareness about cycling and
levards direct bike traffic to
streets that generally have few-
example students looked at
Though all presidents have their share of legal battles, particularly at the end of their terms,
betterbike racks to encourage
was turning Deschutes Avenue
Obama's accomplishments
cycling to a bike/pedestrian bridge over U.S. Highway 97. "When you get a fresh perspective, you get things you
from Centennial Park to Dry Canyon intoa bike boulevard,
in office to an unusual degree will turn on how
better connectingthe city's two most popular parks. SeeRedmond/A6
he fares at the high court,
to Redmond with proposals that included everything from
never would have thought of,"
legal experts say. SeeLegacy/A5
surmise that Earhart made
an emergency landing on a flat stretch of coral reef off what was then known as of Howland. And they've
Dire predictions onaging boomer drivers aren't realized
raised millions in private funds to finance several
By Katherine Shaver
treks to the distant atoll,
The Washington Post
now called Nikumaroro.
Aging baby boomers were supposed to bring a grayhaired danger to U.S. roads,
Gardner Island, southwest
Set to arrive this weekend, the TIGHAR team now
wants to check an anomaly seen in sonar imaging on an underwater cliff where
the reef drops off. Could it be the fuselage
with traffic safety experts
predicting years ago that the number of deadly accidents involving older drivers would soar as boomers reached their
golden years. "I remember people talking about 2015 being when we'd really see catastrophic consequences," said Loren Staplin, a traffic safety consultant for the U.S. Department of Trans-
portation. Instead, as the first wave of boomers approach their 70th birthdays, older mo-
torists are involved in fewer fatal accidents than a decade ago, even as they hit the road
more than previous generations of seniors and hold on to their driver's licenses longer. Just as boomers — people born between 1946 and 1964 — made 50 the new 40, they're
transforming the stereotype
of the little old lady behind the wheeL
"As a group, they're fitter to drive than previous genera-
The dire predictions made in the early 2000s were based on the assumption that fatal
collisions involving older peo-
tions,e said Jessica Cicchino, a senior research scientist at the
ple would continue to rise, as they had since the 1970s, and
Insurance Institute for High-
then soar once the outsized
way Safety. "It seems they're
post-World War II generation
changing what we thought an 'older driver' is."
became increasingly frail. SeeDrivers/A4
of Earhart's Lockheed Elec-
tra 10E airplane'? Gillespie makes no promises: "There's no guarantee
TODAY'S WEATHER
ofsuccess." He's far from the only
one looking for Earhart. See Earhart/A4
rr%
Sunny High 79, Low44 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B5 Sp o rts Gf -6 Local/State B f -6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies
AnIndependent
C6 01-6 C8
Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt
Vol. 113, No. 1es,
7 sections
0
88 267 0 23 30
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
HOW to reaCh US
USS GABRIELLEGIFFORDS CHRISTENING
STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
Cleveland police — Investigators have found nohard evidence a Cleveland police officer who fatally shot a12-year-old boy carrying a pellet gun ordered him to raise his handsbefore opening fire. Documents releasedSaturday by the prosecutor handling the racially charged casedetail the moments before the brief, deadly encounter — and how the responding officers seemedalmost shell-shocked as Tamir Rice lay dying outside a reccenter. Cleveland police have said the officer who fired the fatal shot, Timothy Loehmann, told Tamir three times to put his hands up, then openedfire when the boy reached for the pellet gun tucked in his waistband.
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Syria fightillg — Hundreds of Syrian refugees poured into a Turkish-Syrian border crossing Saturday, fleeing intense fighting as Syrian Kurds closed in on anIslamic State-held town — the only passageway linking Turkeywith the extremist group's stronghold of Raqqa. Some13,000 refugees havealready crossed into Turkey in the last10 days, according to the Turkish Foreign Ministry. Hundreds more could be seenSaturday on the Syrian side of the Akcakale border crossing, waiting to cross into Turkey. Astatement by the main Syrian Kurdish fighting force, known astheYPG, said its fighters have encircled the Islamic State-held town of Suluk, afew miles southwest of the strategically important town of TalAbyad.
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Gabrielle Giffords (LCS 10)
NEW S R O O M FA X
June 13, 2015
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'Peacekeeper babies' — TheU.N.peacekeepers arrive; months later, some leaveinfants behind. Nowthe United Nations has quietly started to offer DNAtesting to help prove paternity claims and ensure support for the so-called "peacekeeperbabies." It's a delicate step, as countries that contribute U.N. troops might not welcomea practice that could prove not only fatherhood but wrongdoing. Of the dozen paternity claims received lastyear, four wereassociated with alleged sexual abuse of aminor. Thenew effort comes adecade after a groundbreaking report on sexualabuseand exploitation by peacekeepers suggested that the U.N.secretary-general beauthorized to "require DNAandother tests to establish paternity" so peacekeepers would be pressured to support the children they "father andabandon."
Mike Brantley/AL.com via The Associated Press
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OUR ADDRESS
Former U.S. Rep.Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona, from right, her husband, retired U.S.NavyCapt. Mark Kelly, and Austal USA President Craig Perciavalle watch as Jill Biden, wife of Vice President Joe Biden, smashes achampagne bottle on the bow to christen a ship namedafter Giffords. Giffords was badly wounded in a2011 shooting
that left six deadand 13injured in Tucson. TheDemocrat left Congress andlater founded anorganization that supports gun control. The 419-foot USSGabrielle Giffords was built at the Austal shipyard in Mobile, Alabama,and is the Navy's 10th littoral combat ship designed to operate in shallow waters near the coast.
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u se e a a e r a ac on a aS oiCe
Taliban attaCk —Afghanistan's police force took another severe blow from the Taliban onSaturday, as17 officers were killed in a clash with the insurgents in the southern province of Helmand, officials said. The insurgents overran apolice base near thecenter of the strategically important district of MusaQala, the officials said. "There are also casualties to theTaliban, but we do not knowthe figures," said OmarZwak, the spokesmanfor the governor of Helmand province. Of the19 police officers stationed at the base,17 were killed and two were wounded, hesaid.
By Manny Fernandez and Ashley Southall
Police did not say wheth-
thinking of what could of hap-
Ruhingya refugeeS —Thegovernment of Myanmarsays it is
er thesniper fire caused the man's death. His body was
pened with his intent and how
DALLAS — A gunman attacked police headquarters at
sent to the Dallas County Med-
the edge of downtown here from inside an armored van early Saturday, shooting at officers and leaving bags filled with pipe bombs around the building in a brazen assault that led to an hourslong standoff.Hours after negotiators
official determination. For more than 12 hours Sat-
Brown said. Boulware had previous contact with police related to three
determined to stop thedepartures of migrants fleeing religious persecution in places like thebitterly divided port city of Sittwe, but it will not budge in its refusal to address theconditions driving the exodus across the sea.Tensof thousands of Rohingya, a Muslim ethnic group, fled the country in recent months, setting off a regional crisis when boatloads of migrants wereabandoned atsea or abused and held for ransom bytraffickers. But the government insists that most of the migrants do not belong in Myanmar, referring to them asBengalis.
New YorJz Times News Service
ical Examiners Office for an
we literally dodged bullets,"
"family violence" cases, authorurday, from shortly after mid- ities said. He was also involved night when the assault began in a custody battle with his to shortly before 1 p.m. when it mother over his 11-year-old son. ended with police confirming In April, a judge gave custhe suspect was dead, the gun- tody of the boy to Boulware's man — identified by the au-
Ifull SullCtlullS —With a little more than two weeksbefore the deadline for a nuclear deal, Iran's president, HassanRouhani, said Saturday that heexpected relief from economic sanctions within a "couple of months" after an agreement with six world powers was signed. Speaking at anews conference in Tehran, Rouhani dismissed reports that Iranians would have towait more than afew months for the lifting of sanctions, which havecrippled Iran's economy.
mother and limited Boulware's
thorities as James L. Boulware, access, according to relatives 35, of Paris, Texas — set Dallas and court documents. Boulware's father, Jim Boulware, suspect was found dead in the onedge. van after being shot by a police One officer searching the said Saturday that his son was sniper, police said. headquarters for explosives al- devastated. No officers or bystanders most tripped over a package in were killed or injured in the at- a parking lot that later explodtack, which began outside the ed the moment it was moved by headquarters and spread to the a police robot. The explosion parking lot of a restaurant in a from that package burned the Dallas suburb. front of an SUV parked next to After the suspect fled from it. Saturday afternoon, the popoliceheadquarters, officers lice bomb squad set off two expursued him and cornered him plosions under the van as it was at the parking lot, where police parked at the restaurant followsnipers fired at the vehicle with ingthe end of the standoff. .50-caliber rifles and disabled Police Chief David Brown it. Negotiations went on until said that his officers narrowly around 5 a.m., when a police escaped injury and death. "It sniper shot the suspect through raises the hair on the back of the van's windshield. your neck pretty quickly just who had tried to persuade him to surrender lost contact, the
— Fromwirereports
D
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Ag Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, Po. Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-preparednewscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
U.S. heavyweapons may go to EasternEurope By Eric Schmitt and Steven Lee IIyers
New YorJz Times News Service
RIGA, Latvia — In a signif-
ful shift in policy," said James Stavridis, a retired admiral and the former supreme allied commander of NATO, who is now
•
dean of the Fletcher School of Russian aggression in Europe, Law and Diplomacy at Rdts the Pentagon is poised to store University. "It provides a reabattle tanks, infantry fighting sonable level of reassurance to vehicles and other heavy weap- jittery allies, although nothing ons for as many as 5,000 U.S. is as good as troops stationed troops in several Baltic and full time on the ground, of Eastern European countries, course." U.S. and allied officials say. The amount of equipmentinThe proposal, if approved, cluded in the planning is small would represent the first time compared with what Russia since the end of the Cold War could bring to bear against that the United States has sta-
•
the NATO nations on or near its borders, but it would serve
Q zeQ 4t Q 4s Q szQ s4
as a credible sign of U.S. comber nations in Eastern Europe mitment, acting as a deterrent that had once been part of the the way that the Berlin Brigade Soviet sphere of i n fl uence. did after during the Berlin Wall Russia's annexation of Crimea crisis in 1961. "It's like taking NATO back and the war in eastern Ukraine have causedalarm andprompt- to the future," said Julianne ed new military planning in Smith, a former defense and NATO capitals. White House official who is It would be the most prom- now a senior fellow at the Ceninent of a series of moves the ter for a New American SecuUnited States and NATO have rity and a vice president at the taken to bolster forces in the re- consulting firm Beacon Global gion and send a dear message Strategies. The "prepositioned" stocks of resolve to allies and to Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, — to be stored on allied bases that the United States would and enough to equip a brigade
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of 3,000 to 5,000 soldiers-
would be similar to what the expansion of United States maintained in
NATO to include the Baltic nations in 2004, the United States
Kuwaitformore than a decade after Iraq invaded it in 1990 and
and its allies avoided the per- was expelled by U.S. and allied manent stationing of equip- forces earlythe nextyear. ment or troops in the east as The Pentagon's proposal still they sought varying forms of requires approval by Defense partnership with Russia. Secretary Ash Carter and the "This is a very meaning- White House.
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SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, June 14, the 165th
day of 2015. Thereare200 days left in the year.
Waterhot enoughto kill germs?
TREND
HAPPENINGS Yemell —Peace talks are scheduled tobegininGeneva.
Flag Day —The U.S.commemorates the adoption of its
By C. Claiborne Ray
flag in 1777.
New York Times News Service
• If you can put your
HISTORY
• hands in the water
while washing dishes, is it really hot enough to kill germs? And if not, what's
Highlight:In1777, the Con-
tinental Congress, meeting in Philadelphia, adopted the original design of the Stars and Stripes, specifying a flag containing 13 redandwhite stripes and13 stars. In1775, the Continental Army, forerunner of the United States Army, was created. In1801, former American Revolutionary War general and notorious turncoat Benedict Arnold died in London. In1922, Warren G.Harding became the first president heard on radio, asBaltimore station WEAR broadcast his
speech dedicating the Francis Scott Key memorial at Fort McHenry. In1934, Max Baerdefeated Primo Carnera with an 11thround TKO to win theworld heavyweight boxingchampionship in Long Island City, New York. In1940,German troops entered Paris during World War II; the sameday the Nazis began transporting prisoners to the Auschwitz concentration camp in German-occupied Poland. In1943,the U.S. Supreme Court, in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, ruled 6-3 that children in public schools couldnot be forced to salute the flag of the United States. In1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed ameasure adding the phrase "under God" to the Pledge of Allegiance. In1965, Paul McCartney recorded the main track for his song "Yesterday" at EMIStudios on AbbeyRoad in London. In1972, the Environmental Protection Agency ordered a ban on domestic use of the pesticide DDT, totake effect at year's end. In1982, Argentine forces surrendered to British troops on the disputed Falkland Islands. In1985, the 17-day hijack ordeal of TWAFlight 847 began as a pair of LebaneseShiite Muslim extremists seized the jetliner shortly after takeoff from Athens, Greece. In1990, the U.S.Supreme Court upheld, 6-3, police checkpoints that examined drivers for signs of intoxication. Ten years ago:U.S.Army deserter Charles Jenkins, who'd crossed into North Korea in 1965, arrived in the United States for his first visit in 40 years. Five years ago:During his latest visit to the Gulf Coast,
President BarackObama promised that "things are going to return to normal" and that the region's fouled waters would be in evenbetter shape than before the catastrophic BP oil spill. One year ago:President Barack Obama forced union workers in Philadelphia's commuter rail strike to return to the job, granting Pennsylvania Gov. TomCorbett's request to create a presidential emergency board to mediate the contract dispute.
BIRTHDAYS Actress Marla Gibbs is 84. Writer Peter Mayle is 76.Actor Jack Bannon is 75.Country-rock musician Spooner Oldham is 72. Rocksinger Rod Argent (The Zombies; Argent) is 70. Realestate mogul andTV personality Donald Trumpis 69. Singer Janet Lennon(The Lennon Sisters) is 69. Rock musician AlanWhite (Yesj is 66. Actor Will Patton is 61.
Jazz musician Marcus Miller is 56. Singer BoyGeorge is 54. Actress YasmineBleeth is 47. Actor Faizon Love is47. International Tennis Hall of Famer Steffi Graf is 46. Screenwriter Diablo Cody is37.Actor-singer Kevin McHale is27. — From wire reports
Experts worry that rising costs at theme parks have left middle-class vacationers behind.
the point of using all that
By Drew Harweg
and marching-band parade
how to persuade parkgoers to pay even more. Disney surveys sent last month to guests suggested the giant was considering a tiered pricing structure that would
down Main Street U.S.A., admission for an adult cost $3.50,
clock peak-time "Gold" tickets, during summer and w i nter
about asmuch then as three gallons of milk Disney has raised the gate price for the Magic Kingdom 41 times since, nearly doubling
holidays, at $125. "Bronze"-levtrance during less busy times, such as weekdays. Wahler, the Disney spokes-
it over the past decade. This
woman, would not say whether
year, a ticket inside the "most magical place on Earth" rock-
the pricing would change, adding, "We regularly survey our guests on a variety of ideas." But analysts said it could prove to be one of Disney's biggest, boldestpricing hikesyet. "They've been aggressively raising pricing because they're looking at themselves as a premium price, a premium brand,"
The Washington Post
When Walt Disney World
opened in an Orlando swamp in 1971, with its penny arcade
el $105 tickets would allow en-
eted past $100 for the first time
Matt Stroshane I Bloomberg News file photo
in history. Ballooning costs have not
Guests ride the Dumbo attraction at Walt Disney World in Lake Buena Vista, Florida, in 2006. Disney World has led the way for the
slowed the mouse-eared mass-
theme-park industry to boost its prices.
es flooding into the world's busiest theme park. Disney's main attraction hosted a record
But as long as places like 19 million visitors last year, a ment, having expanded asout- the Magic Kingdom can pull number nearly as large as the growths of low-cost getaways in more than 80,000 visitors a population of New York state. such as New York's Coney Is- day, experts said the industry But rising p rices have land, dubbed the "Nickel Em- is happytoprofit off aricher¹i changed the character of Big pire" for its thrift. entele. In recent years, Orlando Mouse's family-friendly empire W hen Walt D i sney, t h e tourists' average household inin unavoidably glitzy ways. A cartoonand business mogul, come peaked at about $93,000, visitor to Disney's central Flor- opened Disneyland in South- m ore than $20,000 higher than ida fantasyland can now dine ern California in the mid-'50s the average U.S. household on a $115steak, enjoy a $53-per- for $1 a ticket, many expected wage, data from the tourism plate dessert party and sleep it would fail. Most amusement bureau Visit Orlando show. in a bungalow overlooking the parks then were raucous afThe price hikes won't slow Seven Seas Lagoon starting at fairs, with free admission. until the park sees a dip in de"I could never convince the mand, experts say. If anything, $2,100 a night. For America's middle-in- financiers that Disneyland was Disney is experimenting with come vacati oners,the Mickey feasible," Disney famously said, Mouse club, long promoted as "because dreams offer too little "made foryou and me,"seems collateral." increasingly made for someone But over the years, as Diselse. But far from easing back, ney's movie and toy d eals the theme-park giant's pric- helped it explode into a $184 es are expected to climb even billion behemoth, its theme more through a surge-pricing parks became one of Mickey's system that could value a sum- most unstoppable moneymakm er's day ofrides and linesat ers. Disney's parks and resorts' $125. profits have nearly doubled "If Walt (Disney) were alive over the past five years, to $2.6 today, he would probably be billion in fiscal2014. uncomfortable with the prices
they're charging right now," said Scott Smith, an assistant professor of hospitality at the
middle-dass family entertain-
said ScottSanders, vice pres-
ident of pricing for Disney's parks and resorts between 2004 and 2009.
"Every child feels like they're
energy'? • The Food and Drug • Administration code
for dishwashing by hand in a commercial food establishment calls for a wash
solution temperature of 110 degrees Fahrenheit, which is uncomfortably hot for
hands but not hot enough to kill most germs. The stated
r e asoning
behind the relatively low temperature requirement for the washing stage of the three-part washing-rinsing-sanitizing s t a ndard is not direct germicidal action. Rather, according to the FDA, it is to make sure that the water is hot
enough to remove organic matter from the dishes and to dissolve animal fats that
may be present on them. A lower temperature might also interfere with the per-
formance of the detergent being used, the guidelines state.
entitled to a Disney vacation,
A study by food scien-
and I think they've played off
tists at Ohio State University, published in June 2007
that, letting the emotions lay
in until the family says to do it. They're recognizing they can capture demand across the price curve. So why not take advantage of what people are willing to pay?"
~
in The Journal of Food Engineering, found evidence that even lower tem-
peratures may be effective at germ removal in many circumstances.
N® l
I
Advertised for years as a
once-in-a-lifetime experience, Disney's parks have continually set new visitor records:
University of South Carolina
During the winter holidays, its
whose first job was as a cast member in Disney's Haunted
Orlando parks hosted 250,000 guests at a time, chief executive
Mansion. "They've priced mid-
Bob Iger told analysts this year.
dle-class families out."
Attendance rose 17 percent last
As one of the biggest man- year at Universal Studios Flormade attractions on the planet, ida, America's biggest non-DisDisney World has led the way ney park, because of the sucfor the theme-park industry to
cess of its Harry Potter-themed
boostitsprices,often on ayear- num-towns. ly basis. Universal, Six Flags Disney park a dmissions and other parks in Orlando, revenue has grown about 10 Southern California and else- percent every year for the past where have followed in Mick-
ey's big footprints, worriedthey will otherwise look like bargain-barrel runners-up. Disney and theme-park leaders have defended their rising prices as a logical response to record-setting attendance, with Disney spokeswoman Jacquee Wahler saying the company is "committed to ensuring all our guests have a magical experience." "We continually add new experiences, and many of our
decade, to total more than $5 billion in 2014, financial filings
show. (That's not including park food, drinks or merchandise, which brought in another $5 billion.) The parks have faced little
resistance, even as prices have climbed. Tickets for the Magic Kingdom were increased 6 percent this year, to $105 plus tax, while entrance to other
Orlando parks — Epcot, Animal Kingdom, Universal Studios — can't be bought for less guests select multi-day tickets than $90. or annual passes, which proThose costs have in recent vide great value and additional years helped shunt tourists to savings," Wahler said. "A day at smaller regional parks — but a Disneyparkis unlike any oth- many of those have raised er in the world." prices as well. Six Flags, which But some see Disney's mag- runs 800 rides across 18 North ically ascending price tag as a American parks, increased reflection of the country's econ- prices last spring and now omy, where stagnant wages charges $62 at its Maryland and growing inequality have park. t ransformed even th e w a y Americans take time off.
At American theme parks,
land, this was a middle-class
to about $56.23, data from the
p er-person spending h a s "When Walt created Disney- climbed 33 percent since 2008,
country. But Disney now ... as International Association of far as pricing out the middle Amusement Parks and Attracclass, they think: What middle
dass?" said Robert Niles, the editor of Theme Park Insider, an industryblog. "Disney's made a strategic decision that they're not going
tions show. Park watchers have worried
that the rising costs are blocking out wishful visitors, especially because a third of the Americans visiting the counto discount to hold onto people try's theme parks are younger at the middle part of the econ- than 18, data from industry reomy," he said. "They're going searcher IBISWorld show. In a to set their prices at the top 10
percent of family incomes and make their money where the money is." American theme p arks were built on deep roots in
report this month, the Themed Entertainment A s s o ciation,
an industry group, called "the continued stagnation of mid-
dle-class incomes" one of its biggest challenges.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
Chimps just got major new protection — from researchers
Drivers Continued from A1 Instead, boomers have remained healthier and stron-
ger than anticipated. They've also benefited from unfore-
By Darryl Fears
federal permits issued by
The Washington Post
W ASHINGTON —
Wild
chimpanzees have been protected under the Endangered S pecies Act
f o r n e a rl y a
quarter of a century, but not captive chimps. Without that oversight, they have been held in pens, bought and sold for research, and poked, prodded and injected to find cures that
might benefit humans. The U.S. Fish and W i ldlife Service changed that last
ened Species. "Extending captive chimFish and Wildlife. When the new rules were proposed two panzees the protections afyears ago following a request forded their endangered cousby primate specialist Jane ins in the wild will ensure huGoodall and the Humane mane treatment and restrict Society of the United States, commercial activities under agency Director Dan Ashe the Endangered Species Act," called the earlier decision to Ashe said. "The decision relist wild chimps as endan- sponds to growing threats gered and captive chimps as to the species and aligns the threatened, with less protec- c himpanzee's status w i th tion, "flawed," and said the existing legal requirements. proposal "would correct this
Meanwhile, we will continue
inconsistency." to work with range states to week by announcing new Ashe said the new rule is a ensure the continued survival rules that pull captive chim- clear message that, contrary and recovery of chimpanzees panzees under the umbrella to popular belief, the survival in the wild." of federal protection.The des- of all chimps is threatened. Although the rule hurts an ignation put an end to the ser- More than a million have dis- industry that trades chimps vice's only "split listing" under appearedfrom the wild since as exotic pets for entertainthe Endangered Species Act the beginning of the 20th cen- ment uses, such as circuses in its history, designed in 1990 tury, according to estimates and movies, it hits medical reto allow the National Instiby the International Union for search in the United States the tutes of Health to fund medi- the Conservation of Nature hardest. The U.S. is the only cal experiments using captive and Natural Resources. Mil- developed nation that continchimps. lions of chimps once roamed ues to use apes for research, Under rules that go into the wild, but as humans in- at the insistence of the NIH. effect in September, import- vade chimpanzee habitats European nations banned the ing and exporting chimpan- to create farms and hunt the practice years ago, though they zees across U.S. borders, and animals for meat, fewer than continue to use large numbers across stateborders, for bio- 300,000 remain, according of rhesus macaques and spider medical research will require to IUCN's Red List of Threat- monkeys for tests.
seen safety improvements — particularly side airbags and crash-avoidance systems,
such as automatic braking and lane-departure warnings — credited with reducing road fatalities for all ages. But some traffic safety experts say it's too soon to cel-
cident was about the same as "When that happens, what happens to our transportation and 50s, a federal study found. options? I think we need some By their 80s, drivers were as creative minds to look at those likely to contribute to a crash options." as teen drivers.) Joseph Coughlin, director Kathy Sifrit, a research of the AgeLab at the Massapsychologist for the National chusetts Institute of TechnolHighway Traffic Safety Ad- ogy, said communities need ministration, said the agency to begin expanding shuttle is doing more research into van service for seniors and the relationship between exploring other ways to help driving, chronic health con- them get around, such as usditions and older people's ac- ing school buses during their tivity levels. That indudes an- midday down times. alyzing the best ways for state Older people's transporfor motorists in their 30s, 40s
ebrate. Despite their overall better health and safer vehi-
agencies to determine who
tation needs permeate en-
should have their driver's li-
cles, older drivers remain dis-
censes renewed and whether more active lifestyles result in
tire families, Coughlin said, because many of those who
proportionately involved in fatal accidents. It's not so much more physically fit and menbecause their driving deteri- tally sharp drivers. "We want to u nderstand orates, experts say. Rather, their more brittle bones and what it is about some older chronic ailments, such as dia-
betesand heartdisease,m ake them more likely to die from
an accident that might leave a younger person with a few broken ribs. While the number of ve-
hicular fatalities for all age groups fell by 24 percent between 2004 and 2013, drivers
70 and older saw a less impressive 15 percent drop over that
same period, Staplin said. When the grim predictions of boomer doom didn't play out, "I think a lot of people drew the conclusion that there wasn't a problem after
all," said Staplin, managing partner of the traffic safety rosy either."
sense of embarrassment. At a recent AARP driver safety
of Americans 70 and older is
class in Northern Virginia, several participants said they took the dass to qualify for their auto insurance compa-
systems?
expected to reach 64 million, Adding to the urgency, exor 16 percent of the popula- perts say, is that many boomtion. That compares with 29 ers are among the first genermillion people, or 9 percent ation to spend much or all of of the population, in that age their lives in the post-World group three years ago, accord- War II auto-centric suburbs, ing to the insurance institute. where taking transit or walkMoreover, some experts ing is often inconvenient or say the demographic bubble's difficult. They also expect to true impact won't be felt on work and remain active lonthe road for another eight or so ger than their parents did, years. That's when the oldest increasing their need to drive boomers will reach their late longer or have other ways to 70s — the age at which more get around. recent studies have shown
drivers' odds of contributing TIGHAR via The Associated Press
studies have shown that older
people's ability to go where they want to (say, out for ice ability to drive safely," Sifrit cream with a friend) versus said. "We don't quite know only where they need to (a how to identify these drivers doctor's appointment) is key yet.... The goal is to help peo- to preventing depression and ple stay mobile as long as they physical illness. "Really, the older driver can, and to do so safely." Of course, the question of issue isn't just about safety," how long motorists are safe to Coughlin said. "It's also about drive dates back to the Model the emerging mobility gap T. But boomers are prompting in the U.S. A baby boomer is a broader debate: How can turning 69 every eight secstate licensing agencies now onds. When driving is no lonfocused on the quality of older gerpossible orcomfortableor drivers' eyesight better assess safe, you have a real crisis for those with Alzheimer's dis- families, for individuals and, easeor othertypes ofdemen- frankly, for society." Asking boomers in their tia? Are doctors or occupational therapists in a better po- 60s if they consider themsition to regularly gauge their selves to be "older" drivers patients' physical and mental draws laughs and even a
agency? How well do older Boomers' sheer numbers drivers handle the additional remain worrisome, too. Over "cognitive load" of dashboard the next 35 years, the number technology, such as navigation
Ric Giilespie, the co-founder of The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery, stands on a beach during an expedition to the South Pacific island of Nikumaroro in Kiribati. Giliespie and TIGHAR team members have made several trips to the island in search of any sign of Amelia Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan. So far, nothing can be proven — but he says several artifacts they've found
to driving will depend on their children to get around. He said
drivers that undermines their
consulting firm T r ansAnalytics. "But it's not quite that fitness than a state licensing
e
don't have good alternatives
to an accident increase signifi-
"There are a lot of us who
ny's "safe driver" discount, not
becausethey've come to doubt their driving abilities. None of the participants ofboomer age were willing to be quoted by their full names. One 65-year-old man said he thinks of "older" drivers as
his 89-year-old mother, whom he had to convince last year to
stop driving after she hit the wall of her garage. "When our parents turned
65, they wanted to sit back and watch television," said the
are going to outlive our ability retired federal worker, who to drive," said Ann Dellinger, would only give his name as
cantly. (The chances of a driv- transportation safety chief at Mark. "I want to go out and er at the traditional retirement the Center For Disease Con- grab everything life has to age of 65 contributing to an ac- trol's Injury Center in Atlanta. offer."
are from the right era.
Earhart
, Hawaii
Continued from A1 An Australian researcher
thinks wreckage spotted by members of his country's military years ago on a Papua New Guinea island could be hers. Others are investigating
Papua New Guinea
wz+-
local island lore that Earhart
Howland . • ISland P
pac rric Ocean
Nikumaroro Island
and Noonan crash landed on Mili Atoll, 800 miles north-
west of Howland, and died in Japanese hands. Various teams who believe
the crashed-and-sank theory — an explanation supported
800 km Source: The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery
an old castaway camp. These,
they say, aren't as easily exnian's Air and Space Museum plained — heel fragments — have tried to find the plane from a woman's shoe, a rusted using sophisticated equipment jack knife and fragments of by curators at the Smithso-
to scan the ocean floor. No one
has found a verified plane part or bone fragment. But Gillespie says he and his team are building their case, slowly but surely. He has his admirers. In 2012, then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recognized Gillespie at a reception hon-
800
Australia
toiletries they believe are from the 1930s. Their own expert's
high-tech analysis of an object in an old photograph of the is-
The Associated Press
his assessment of Gillespie.
"It's a business for him ...
even though he calls it a charity," Mellon said in a telephone interview. N ow Mellon has f i led a c omplaint w i t h t he IRS , claiming that TIGHAR is vi-
olating nonprofit guidelines. Already, public records show be Lockheed landing gear jut- Gillespie has a state tax delinting from the reef before being quency in Delaware for more washed away, they say. than $55,000 — an amount In England, the team also Gillespie's wife and TIGHAR land determined that it could
found records of human bones
co-founder, Pat Thrasher, says
found long ago on the island. they're working to pay back him, she said, "This great ad- The bones are missing, but after getting into debt to pay venture embodies the very Gillespie says modern-day for a defense in the Mellon hope, ingenuity and boundless analysis of m easurements lawsuit. optimism of t h e A m e rican indicate they could've come Gillespie, meanwhile, says spirit" — a reference to the from a woman of European the IRS complaint is unfoundexpedition that year in which descent. ed — "the pique of a pissed-off TIGHAR collected several unNone of it is definitive proof, millionaire." Dismissing his derwater sonar images. he and his team realize. critics, he adds, "Amelia in"We have compileda pre- spires passion. I understand But there have been disappointments and controversy, ponderance of evidence sug- that. But my skin got thick a too. gesting — not proving — that long time ago." There was the filing cabinet our hypothesis is true," says And so the 68-year-old pilot discovered on Nikumaroro Tom King, T IGHAR's lead with a background in airplane that the team thought came archaeologist. accident investigation continfrom Earhart's plane but later S ome critics i n sist t h at ues his search. linked to a military aircraft. Gillespie has found nothing His intrigue started with oring Earhart. In a letter to
The team also excavated a grave that turned up bones,
remotely tied to Earhart — and
that remnants on the island not of the famous pilot but of a are more likely from a former tiny infant. Coast Guard station or from One of T I G HAR's m ore islanders who settled on Nikucontroversial finds is a piece maroro afterEarhart's disapof metal, likely from an air- pearance until the mid-1960s. Then there's Tim Mellon, a plane, which the team found at Nikumaroro in the early one-time supporter and now 1990s. Gillespie's latest theory critic, who thinks quite the opis that it's a patch that covered posite — that Gillespie knows a window on Earhart's plane. more than he reveals. Two
Many critics dispute that, though Gillespie has at least one notable supporter — MIT engineering professor Thomas Eagar, who thinks it may be "the real thing." Over the years, Gillespie and his team have found other items in what they think is
"zhe Bulletin allows us consistent and agordable advertising while working mithin our budget Wefocus onc. lientsatisfaction, value and service and Zhe Bulletin has helped us do this for thelast 25 years Beltone has been in Bend." — Denise Underwood
Beltone-
Earhart's last reported "line
of position," which eventually runs past Nikumaroro. It's continued with the purported
castaway camp and shortwave radio distress calls af-
ter Earhart's disappearance. Many have dismissed the calls as hoaxes, but he and his team
believe dozens arecredible. Tom Crouch, a senior cura-
Client Satisfaction
Value
Service
tor in the aeronautics depart-
years ago, Mellon accused ment at the Smithsonian's NaGillespie in an unsuccessful tional Air and Space Museum, lawsuit of hiding the fact that doesn't agree. he'd found Earhart's plane so "We've argued a bout Mellon would donate more this stuff for 30 years," says than $1 million in stock to help Crouch, who considersGillesfund the 2012 expedition. A pie a friend. "But," he adds, "I could be judge rejected Mellon's appeal last month, but he's sticking to wrong."
The Bulletin bendbulletin.com
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Legacy Continued fromA1 "Not since the New Deal has the court been as involved
in defining a president's legacy," said Irving Gornstein, a Georgetown law professor who directs its Supreme Court Institute. "Health care
is Obama's defining achievement. It's the one thing that everyone associates with him.
If health care goes down, the Obama legacy will be seriously compromised." White House aides say they are confident the president's initiatives will survive legal challenges, noting that the high court upheld the Affordable Care Act as constitution-
Exclusion
of the right to habeas corpus word clause to mean subsidies gave prisoners held by U.S. are limited to policyholders in authorities the right to appeal only 16 states. in court. Such a ruling — coming Among the most famous from the five Republican apclashes between the high pointees of the Supreme Court court and a president came — could blow up in the face of during President Franklin GOP leaders in Congress and D. Roosevelt's first term. The in state capitals. In states such justices struck down a series as Texas, Florida, Ohio, Pennof his New Deal measures, sylvania and North Carolina, but after Roosevelt's landslide several hundred thousand resre-election in the fall of 1936, idents who recently obtained the justicesreversed course. insurance could be hit with a They upheld minimum wages steep hike in their rates. and the Social Security Act, The White House is ready and new Roosevelt appointees to blame the court and Reto the court ensured his lega- publicans if the subsidies are cy would survive in law. struck down. "If th e Supreme Court For Obama, the most important ruling will come in were to throw the health care King v. Burwell by the end system in this country into of June. If the justices decide utter chaos, there would be federal subsidies are illegal no easy solutions for solving
al in 2012 by a 5-4 vote and that other federal judges allowed his previous immigra- in states that did not create tion reform plan, Deferred Ac- their own insurance exchangtion for Childhood Arrivals, to es under the law, more than take effect. 6 million people could lose They also say the policies their coverage, unravelingthe now facing court challeng- program in two-thirds of the es represent only a fraction states. of his legacy, which includes The case centers on a fourthe economic recovery from word clause that had gone unthe Great Recession, restor- noted in 2010 when Congress ing diplomatic ties with Cuba under D e mocratic c o ntrol and implementing Wall Street passed the law. Though the reforms. legislation promised subsidies Obama is not alone in hav- to help people buy insurance, ing to defend his record in one provision said these paycourt. ments would go for coverage President George W. Bush bought through an exchange faced his own Supreme Court "established by the state." battles and suffered three However, 34 states, many successivedefeats over his with G O P-controlled s t ate handling of the U.S. military governments, decided against prison at Guantanamo Bay, establishing an exchange and Cuba. Bush insisted that as opted to rely on the federal commander in chief, he alone exchange. The justices could could set the rules for detain- decide that the law, read as a ing foreign prisoners. The whole, shows that all qualified justices disagreed, ruling that buyers may obtain subsidies. the Constitution's protection But they could read the four-
Continued from A1 The expanded zone would stretch from Green-
wood Avenue south to Idaho Avenue, and east to
Lava Road and Harriman Street f r o m Br o a dway Avenue and the border of Drake Park. The most recent draft, read by the council June 3,
changed requirementsfor obtaining a specific exception to the exclusion zone.
People excluded from the area may obtain a variance to see an attorney, attend
a religious service or "otherwise exercise a constitutional right." Under the same draft, the ordinance no longer
that problem," White House
c ontains
press secretary Josh Earnest
cancel or suspend specific
said Wednesday. "We've seen
exceptions to t h e
many Republicans be very willing to try to play politics in a rather cynical way on
sion if someone is found downtown at a time and for a purpose not covered by that specific exception, called a variance. "We are trying to be as
this issue, but not a lot of con-
structive engagement to solve problems." House Majority Leader
p r o visions t o e xclu-
certain as we can that we
are not limiting people's
Kevin M c C arthy, R - Calif., said that Republicans were
rights," Firestone said Friday. He said that certain
working to prepare for the decision.
provisions such as going to church or visiting family
"Don't expect us to prede-
termine the Supreme Court," he said when pressed by re-
hadn'tbeen written into the
porters to outline what the
because the current exclu-
party'sresponse might be.
sion zone does not extend to residential areas.
original ordinance in part
"What we have to first see
(is) what their decision is and
Bend Police Chief Jim Porter called the r ecent
what we have to solve. But I
feel comfortable with where
amendments "democracy
we are right now, that we are
in action."
"We'd received direct feedback from the council
prepared for whatever decision they make to be able to have an answer for a solution
on some of their concerns," Porter said in an interview Thursday. "So we went in and strengthened some of
quickly."
those areas in protecting an individual's rights." He has argued that the
expanded exclusion zone could increase efficiency — last year the department
ramped up downtown foot patrols, to the tune of about
$62,000 in regular and overtime police hours. Between 2013 and 2014, downtown calls for service
uis Treimann I The Associated press
Frank FranklinII /The Associated Press
Jeb Bush made a visit to the former Soviet republic of Estonia this weekend as Hillary Ciinton gave a
speech in NewYork at her largest campaign event yet.
Clinton launchescampaign in earnest as Bushpreparesto officially join race New York TimesNewsService Hillary Rodham Clinton,
cannot stand for change or mo-
dernity. Offeringher campaign in a speech that was at times contact information, she spoke sweeping and at times policy- about the lives of gay people, laden, on Saturday delivered a saying Republicans "turn their pointed repudiation of Repub- backs on gay people who love lican economic policies and a each other." populist promise to reverse the gaping gulf between the rich Bush's reboot and poor at her biggest camJeb Bush had a plan for the paign event to date. last six months he spent as an Under sunny skies and sur- unannounced candidate for rounded by flag-waving sup- president. He would raise tens porters on Roosevelt Island in of millions of dollars, distinNew York, Clinton pledged to guish himself from his brothrun an inclusive campaign and er's controversial presidency, to create a more inclusive econ- start winning over conservaomy, saying that even the new tives and establish himself as voices in the Republican Party the Republican to beat for his are still pushing "the top-down party's nomination. economic policies that failed us
Other than raising the mon-
before." "TheseRepublicanstrip over themselves promising lower taxes for the wealthy and fewer rulesfor the biggestcorporations without any regard on how that will make inequality
ey, little has gone as he had hoped. As hepreparestomake his candidacy official Monday, Bush finds himself in a position he could not have imagined:
worse," she said before a crowd
abouthisown competence and
Downtown'scommercial district repuires the mostpolice responses Of the1,950 calls to police about problems in primary business areas in the past two years, 80 percent camefrom downtown. That's compared to the 12.5 percent that camefrom Cascade Village Shopping Center on the north side of Bendandthe 7.5 percent that came from the OldMill District.
AVERAGENUMBER OF POLICEDISPATCH CALLS (2013-14) & P roposed
M
Casc a deViliage W O l c lMIII
0 20 4 0 Armed subject Assault Code/ordinance violation Criminal mischief Dispute Domestic dispute Drug offense Harassment Intoxicated subject Juvenile problem Minors in possession Sexcrime Suspicious circumstances Theft, shoplifting and forgery Unauthorized entry of vehicle Weapons offense ormenacing
6 0 8 0 100 120 140160
CITATIONSISSUED IN BEND'S EXCLUSION ZONE" Violation type 2 013 2014
** 2 0 15 Aggressive dogs 2 0 0 Assault 1 0 0 Disorderly conduct 0 3 0 Drinking on unlicensed property 2 2 1 Possesion of controlled substance 9 5 0 Sexcrime 0 I 0 Trespassing 3 0 5 Individuals who had two or more violations 2 2 0 Total people served for violations 19 13 6 Violators who returned to the exclusion zone 5 5 0 Bend's exclusionzoneincludes all city parksin addition to a downtownarea *'Jan. 1-March 31,2015
Source: Bend Police Department
"I ask this over and over:
Does anybody think we're actually going to stop those crimes'?" Campbell said in an interview Friday. "The answer has never been yes. We're just
Pete Smith/The Bulletin
Bend unless a police supervisor has approved it, according to the ordinance.
People excluded also have five business days to appeal the order. In the short history
of Bend's exclusion zone, howShe worries crime will be dis- ever, no one has appealed. placed to other areas of the T he next reading of t h e city, such as NW Galveston ordinance will t ake place Avenue or the Old Mill District, Wednesday. If approved, the and may be unfairly applied. ordinance will go into effect 30 Other Oregon cities have days thereafter. experimented with exclusion — Reporter: 541-383-0376, moving it out of downtown."
zones. Both Portland and Eu-
decreased about 15 per-
gene opted to do away with
cent and person-to-person
them. In Portland, an exclu-
crimes such as assault decreased 26 percent. By excluding certain repeat offenders,Porter has said, it may help fur-
sionary policy was found to be disproportionately exercised against minorities, according to the ACLU of Oregon. In 2007 then-mayor Tom Potter
ther reduce the number of
elected to let the zone expire.
calls downtown, which ac- The city of Eugene let its excounts for 1 percent of the clusion zone expire in 2013. city's landmass yet yields Firestone said Friday that 5 percent of calls for police the city of Bend has considservices. ered those cities' experiences Bend Police have served "to some extent." An exclusion six people with exclusion cannot be handed down in notices this year, and ex-
I
cwithycombe@bendbuIIetin.com
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE? Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
FORMERLY
LEAQELDHEARINGAIDCENTER
1-888-568-9884
cluded 13 last year and 19
in 2013, according to data provided by the police department to The Bulletin.
Barb Campbell, the most vocal opponent of the zone on the city council, said as
advisers and associates. "There's a bias against him
an owner of a downtown
— that he's another Bush, that
business, she doesn't feel the ordinance will resolve
somehow he's a moderatethat isn't fair and that he has to work t o overcome," said
the issue of crime down-
Andrew Card, a Bush family friend who was White House
is connected in large part to the number of drinking
chief of staff for Bush's broth-
establishments downtown.
er George W. Bush and transportation secretary for their
Campbell also sits on the county's local public safety
father.
coordinating committee.
town, which she believes
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Part of a pack of candidates,
and the target of questions
estimated at 5,500, according conservatism. to the campaign. Frustrated, according to his "I'm not running for some Americans, but for all Americans," Clinton said. "I'm run-
associates, by elements of his
political operation and performance so far, he appointed a new campaign manager last week who is preparing an aggressive new approach to the
ning for all Americans." Offering her case for the presidency, she rested heavily on her biography. Her candida- race. Yet Bush still faces fundacy, she said, was in the name of mental challenges in appealing "everyone who has ever been to a Republican primary elecknocked down but refused to
be knocked out." Clinton portrayed herself as a fighter, sounding a theme her campaign had emphasized in recent days. "I've been called many things by many people; quitter is not one of them," she SBld.
"Having o four-year university in Bend is o completegame changer." Christy McLeod Chief Operating Officer, Bend Memorial Clinic
torate that is much different from the one his father or even
his brother faced. "He just hasn't met the ex-
pectation level of what we expected of a Bush," said Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz. "And
that's been a hindrance to him."
•
While some Republican deWhile Bush knows he has tractors have tried to make an to change course in some issue of Clinton's age (if she ways, he also does not want won she would be 69 when she
took office in January 2017), the image of a calm, seasoned she sought to embrace it and leader that he has sought to to rebut the notion that she project, according to several
-
•
•
r
to overreact and risk losing . •
.
•
-
-
A5
•
•I'
A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
useumsmaese iesana ra ion By Deboreh Vankin
inspires creativity." Like many museums, the Hammer once barred picture-taking inside its galleries. Then in February last year it reversed the policy to allow flash-free photography. "We saw it as a necessity and also as an opportunity," Philbin
Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — In one photo, a tourist in a baseball cap stands
heroically, face scrunched with effort, raising a 340-ton boulder above his head. In another, a spin-
dly yogi, flat on her back and legs in the air, balances the rock on her
said. "In the last five years, muse-
ums have loosened up around this issue. People want to photograph
feet.
"The Boulder Holder" pose, a selfie that museum-goers take
things to remember them. Camer-
with artist Michael Heizer's "Lev-
as arean extension of our bodies
itated Mass" sculpture at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,
at this point."
The Hammer's spinning chairs in its main courtyard — which in-
4' '3
is so popular that one Instagram
count of pictures of the artwork under the lacma hashtag potentially reached 175,000 people in a week. Mel Melcon/ LosAngeles Times The museum selfie is having Monica Carter, of Chicago, takes a selfie in front of the "Levitated Mass"
vite visitors to take a whirl — have
a moment. Institutions around
sign of Heatherwick Studio," hun-
become the unexpected selfie standout. Since they were installed
W
in February as part of "Provocations: The Architecture and De-
boulder sculpture at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Museums that
the globe — even some that once once frowned on photography are encouraging the practice. frowned on photography or that
dreds of visitors a week have unleashed their inner child, twirling
h ave banned the selfie stick -
on the chairs and documenting it
are creating even more selfie o pportunities, sans stick, a s
a
way to attract visitors, especially millennials. Some museums are even de-
signing architecture that encourages the phenomenon. At the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, an expansion set
of people taking selfies outside the than tangible. The selfie screams: building and mimicking the 'ocu- "I was actually here!" lus' — a place where the veil of our "Social media put a huge premibuilding indents into the museum." um on the instant sharing of expeThe pose: Making a fake dim- rience," said Kate Flint, a Universiple by pressing a finger into your ty of Southern California art hischeek. tory professor. "And not just with With their visual focus, art mu- immediate family and friends, but seums arenaturalplaces for the with a whole network of people trend to flourish. Just ask Beyonce who, it's implicitly assumed, will and Jay Z, who in October famous- be somewhere between envious ly posted selfies with "The Mona and admiring that you've actual-
to open next year includes terraces with views partly designed to encourage selfies. The museum's curators are also discussing ways Lisa" at the Louvre in Paris. to incorporate selfie-friendly moThe Philadelphia Museum of Art's selfie spots are its "Rocky" ments into exhibitions. "It'd be foolish for museums not statue and the inspiring run up its to actively consider this. It plays stone steps, fists overhead. The ¹ such an essential role in terms of tional Gallery in Oslo has Edvard word of mouth," said the museum's Munch's "The Scream," glutting the chief content officer Chad Coerver. Internet with agonized selfies. "We are definitely looking at what There's even an interactive art those iconic selfie moments are go- museum in the Philippines, Art in ing to be at the new SF MOMA." Island, that opened in December During its recent Jeff Koons dedicated to taking selfies with retrospective, the Centre Pompi- artworks. "The upside is that people share dou in Paris placed stickers on the floor guiding visitors to the best their experiences, word spreads, selfie spots with the artist's shiny more peoplecome, young people "Hanging Heart." can relate," said Ann Philbin, diThe Broad museum, which will rector of the Hammer Museum in open in downtown Los Angeles in West Los Angeles. The downside: September, didn't consider selfies
when configuring its architecture, founding director Joanne Heyler said. Nonetheless, a selfie meme associated with the Grand Avenue building is already emerging. "The best selfie spots seem to come about organically," Heyler said. "We've recently seen pictures
They don't often have intimate or contemplative experiences with the art, she said. "That's what
we're giving up." Though the selfie speaks to a culture that values uniqueness and
ly made it into the Louvre or the Uffizi."
The Associated Press
a hashtag, spunday," Philbin said. "Now every Sunday we post our favorite pictures in one of the Spun chairs." At the Getty Museum in Brent-
wood, California, curators last month rearranged the ornamental mirrors in the South Pavilion
decorative arts galleries to make mirror selfies easier to achieve. In January, the Getty launched
Among major museums, LACMA was among the first to embrace the selfie trend. Its "Urban Light" installation by Chris Burden went up in the pre-Instagram year of 2008, and almost imme-
diately began attracting cellphone-wielding self portraitists.
MusePose, asking visitors to imitate specific artworks each month and share their selfies on Insta-
gram. Last week alone, MusePose appeared 618,000 times in users' Instagram streams.
"It's about observing what visitors are already enjoying, noticing what they're noticing, and facilitat-
Continued from A1 Protected bikeways, on the other hand,
move auto parking away from the curb, creating a barrier from car traffic for cyclists. "Some of these fixes, the infrastructure is
already here," said Scott Woodford, an associate planner and project specialist for the city of Redmond. Mayor George Endicott liked a pair of specific ideas that would be fairly cost-effective. Walking school buses are groups of children who walk or bike to school with an adult. And bicycle wayfaring is when communities mark and create bike routes, using
signs and maps similar to how bus routes are displayed. "Those are both great ideas," said End-
icott, who was so enthralled with the students' proposals he passed on a message to Gov. Kate Brown's staff about the quality of
their work. Schlossberg's class also proposed building more of a cycling culture in Redmond through various events. The cityhosted abike scavenger hunt earlier this year that proved
popular, Woodford said, and is considering an event similar to Portland's popular Sunday Parkways in which a select loop through the city is dosed to car traffic for a few hours and made available to cydists, skaters, walkers and other nonmotorized vehicles. "Our next step is to gather more informa-
tion," Woodford said. "Then we start building community support which then turns into political support." A key part of the proposals, Graham said, was seeing graphics and illustrations highlight just what is possible in Redmond. Many of the cycling ideas have been talked about in the abstract before, she said, but having
a clear picture of what a bike boulevard or protected bikeway looks like is invaluable. "They gave us a visual to put in our head," Graham said. "People have talked about certain (bike/ped) things before, but it's not until you have a consultant or a group like this
go into much more detail that you can start to really talk about ideas and come up with an actionable plan for our Transportation
System Plan." The bicycle/pedestrian proposals are just
The sculpture is now the muing that — showing them it's not seum'scrowd favorit e for selfies, this stuffy quiet place you can't spawning nearly 10 times the pho- have fun in," digital engagement tos on Instagram compared with manager Annelisa Stephan said.
the first in multiple joint projects between
Heizer's rock star. In its most interactive social
year. Redmond jump-started the program
Not everyone, however — like the Norton Simon Museum in Pas-
media campaign to date, LACMA's portrait exhibition "Faces of
America" asks visitors to take selfies with artworks, then projects
selected images back to visitors on monitors. Everyday LACMA looks for selfies to re-post, said Scott Tennent, who oversees the museum's social
adena, California, — is chasing the selfie op. "We see other museums do that, but that's not the Norton Simon style," said Leslie Denk, director
of public affairs. "It's a serene contemplative experience here, especially in our sculpture garden. We certainly enjoythatvisitors takethe time to capture and share their ex-
self-expression, it could also be a media. "It helps lower the intimireaction to the digital world, where dation factor that so many muse- periences, but we don't coordinate experiences are virtual rather ums have to wrestle with, and it any efforts to encourage that."
Prison break casts spotlight on staff-inmate relationships By De.pti Hejela and Jennifer Peitz
in pictures. "Once we noticed it, we created
Redmond
the UO and Redmond as part of the Sustainable City Year Program, which will go into full effect at the start of the 2015-16 school a bit earlier than usual to take advantage of
Schlossberg's knowledge. An internationally renowned bike planner, Schlossberg is taking a sabbatical from UO next school
year to teach abroad. "They'll be helping us with our affordable housing issues and looking at additional ways to revitalize downtown," said Graham,
listing a few of the upcoming collaborations she's most excited about. "I'm really looking
forward to the rest of the program." — Reporter.541-617-7829, beastes@bendbu/letin.com
LEARN ABOUT TODAY'5 SOLUTIONS
FOR YOUR HIP/ICNEE PAIN
loved ones or expose the workIn California, prison guards ers forbreaking a rule. sent nude photos and love let"You spend more waking ters to inmates and an office
NEW YORK — Training to hours with them than your technician had what authorities work i n m a x i mum-security family, you get to know them, believed was a prisoner's child,
prisons indudes stern warn- you see them age over the the prison system's inspector ings that add up to one mes- years," said Catarina Spinaris, general said in a 2012 report. sage: Don't get too dose to the executive director of Desert In Mitchell's case, she was inmates. Waters Correctional Outreach, investigated months before Never treat the relationship a training organization. "You last weekend's breakout over as anything other than pro- have tobe very cognizant of the a possible relationship with fessional. Never reveal per- need to maintain distance." one of the escapees. The two sonal details an inmate could Inmates have all the time in w ere apparentl y separated for use to compromise you. And the world to study prison work- a while, but the investigation never forget you are dealing ers for any vulnerability they didn't turn up anything that with hardened, often cunning, can exploit, experts say. warranted firing or disciplincriminals. Their "No. I objective is to ing her, District Attorney AnInvestigators say prison tai- make you forget they're an drew Wylie said. lor shop instructor Joyce Mitch- inmate," said Anthony GanCourt documents say she ell ignored those gi, who has been working in smuggled hacksaw blades, a dmonit i o n s corrections for more than a chisels, a punch and a screwwith frightening decade and has a company driver bit t o h elp th e m en consequences, that offers training in avoiding escape. actually helping inmate manipulation. "You forInvestigators also believe the a pair of convictget they're an inmate; you for- 51-year-old Mitchell pledged to ed killers make M i tchell get the role you have to play." pick up the prisoners after their their power-tool Terry Pelz, professor of breakoutbut didn't showup, acbreakout from upstate New criminal justice at the Univer- cording to a person close to the York's Clinton C orrectional sity of Houston and a former investigation, who wasn't auFacility. She pleaded not guilty Texas prison w arden, said thorized to discuss it and spoke Friday night to charges of fel- newer employeestended to be on condition of anonymity. ony promoting prison contra- more at risk than longtime emMitchell's family has said she band and misdemeanor crim- ployees, who "know the games wouldn't have helped the ininal facilitation linked to the inmates play." mates escape. escape. At Baltimore's city jail, an Experts say non-guard prisIt doesn't have a catchy inmate gang so corrupted and on employees — such as vocaname like "Stockholm syn- co-opted guards that its lead- tional instructors, educators drome" — in which hostages er impregnated four of them, and health care providersbecome sympathetic to their prosecutors said in a 2013 rack- face particular challenges in captors — but the phenome- eteering case against 44 peo- keeping a"security mindset." "When you're in a support non of improper ties between ple, including 27 corrections inmates andprison staffers has officers. Authorities said graf- service, you're somehow balbeen a touchy subject in cor- fiti on a jail wall named 14 of- ancing the fact that ... you are rections foryears. ficers willing to have sex with to care about your patients and "It's embarrassing to the inmates for $150 a tryst. the patient population" with the industry, it's embarrassing to In another notorious case, realities of prison, said Lorry management, but it occurs," convicted New York City cop Schoenly, a nurse who consults said Michael Alexander, who killer Ronell Wilson impreg- on correctional health care spent more than a d e cade nated a guard at a federal issues. working in different prisons lockup. Their son was born And an employee can be and who has written about in- a month after his m other's made vulnerable by personal mate and staff relationships. 2013 arrest for having the issues, including bad relationImmersed in a world of in- relationship. ships and financial hardships, mates who can be excellent The guard later pleaded Spinaris said. manipulators, some p r i son guilty, with her lawyer saying Spinaris suggests routine workers wind up doing inap- she had "a misguided emo- remindersabout the dangers propriate things for them out tional belief that being impreg- of letting professional boundof compassion, greed, or ro- nated by Ronell Wilson was aries slide, and creating an mantic attraction, experts say. providing him with a lasting atmosphere that lets prison Other staff ers are swayed by purpose to his otherwise tragic workers be honest when probinmates' threats to harm their and dysfunctional life." lems arise.
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SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
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Snapshots ofthestudents' presentations andthe ideasthey show
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One group of students created what it called the "Centennial Bikeway,n a bike boulevardA connecting Dry Canyon (left in this image from the presentation) with downtown Redmond and the popular Centennial Park (right). Thegroupsuggestedapavedroad intoDryCanyon» and included a free-flowing nature of the boulevard so cyclists have fewer stop signs.
Protected Btkeways tt Bicycle Boulevards
One group included the possibility of bicycle wayfinding, the concept of usingsigns to label bike routes around town» — similar to how bus routes are marked. •
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i Medians, greenstrips andmorecrosswalks wereall proposed as ways to slow auto traffic and makeRedmond morebike- and pedestrian-friendly. Another group's big-picture idea suggested a newRedmond neighborhood with limited parking for cars andplenty of space for biking andwalking paths. »
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Graphic by Beau Eastes, David Wray and Andy Tullis /The Bulletin
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AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
South Korea's MERS response is faulted By Choe Sang-Hun
parent and rapid distribution
so many people were infected the broader population. "How-
New York Times News Service
of information, which is the most important thing to do,"
in South Korea in a relatively
S EOUL, South Korea -
4rrr
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The South Korean government's failure to share information quickly with the public and establish an efficient disease-control system contribut-
il
ed to worsening the outbreak !
Nurphoto/ Sipa USA via Tribune News Service
of Middle East respiratory syndrome in the country, a joint panel of experts from the World Health Organiza-
Communists stand with a portrait of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin
tion and South Korea said
during a ceremony tomarkthe 70th anniversary of the end of WWII
Saturday. The experts have spent the past week visiting hospitals and meeting with health authorities to assess the outbreak, which has killed 14 people, and make recommendations.
in front of the Memorial of the Unknown Soldier in Kiev last month.
in maesa iesui ence in u in's ussia By Carol J. Williams Los Angeles Times
dent Levada Center found 39 percent of respondents had a
MOSCOW — Only six years positive opinion of Stalin. As to ago, President Vladimir Pu- the millions killed, 45 percent tin visited the Polish port of
of thosesurveyed agreed that
Gdansk, birthplace of the Sol- the deaths couldbe justified for idarity movement that threw the greater accomplishments off Soviet domination, and re- of winning the war, building assured his Eastern European modern industries and growneighbors that Russia had only ing to eventually give their U.S. friendly intentions.
"One of the things South Korea failedto do was a trans-
ever, continued monitoring
short period of time. On Sat- for this possibility is critical Lee Jong-koo, leader of the urday, Keiji Fukuda, the chief throughout the e ntire outSouth Korean side of the joint World Health Organization break," he said. "Now, because mission, said at a news confer- official on the panel, pointed the outbreak has been large ence Saturday. to severalfactors:South Kore- and is complex, more cases A "failure to establish prop- an doctors' unfamiliarity with shouldbe anticipated." er governance" in controlling MERS; the country's "overBoth Fukuda and Lee said the outbreak in its early stages crowded" emergency rooms; the rate of new infections was also contributed to "confusion" the practice of "doctor shop- decreasing, as South Korean ping" for care at many differ- officials have improved their amongthe public, Lee said. The disease, known as ent clinics; and the fact that communications with the pubMERS, is known to have in- hospital rooms here tend to be lic and carried out stronger fected 138 people in South bustling with visitors. Nearly infection-control measures. Korea since the first patient all of the country's confirmed Twelve new MERS cases were was identified on May 20. The MERS patients were infected reported Saturday. outbreak is the largest to date while seeking care or while The government has come outside the Middle East, where visiting patients at hospitals. under heavy criticism for withthe virus first emerged in 2012 Hospital staff members were holding critical information in Saudi Arabia and has killed also infected. early in the outbreak, like the more than 400people. Fukuda said the panel had names and locations of hosOne of the tasks of the joint found no evidence to indicate pitals where infections had mission was to determine why that MERS was spreading in occurred.
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nemesis a battle for supremacy
Putin spoke harshlythat day in the arms race and conquerof the notorious World War ing outer space. II-era pact that former Soviet
The share of Russians who
leader Josef Stalin had signed look back approvingly has with Adolf Hitler — an agree- been increasing steadily in rement that deared the way for centyears,and the segment the Nazi occupation of Poland of those who tell pollsters they and Soviet domination of the have no opinion on his place Baltics — calling it a "collusion in their history has shot up to solve one's problems at oth- even more sharply, said Deers' expense." nis Volkov, a sociologist with But Putin's view of history
<0-
«0-
the Levada Center. He points
appears to have undergone a to this year's massive Victory startling transformation. Last Day events as the Kremlin's month, the R ussian leader message to ungrateful neigh-
Tvsat
praised the 1939 nonaggres- bors that they owe their peace sion accord with Hitler as a and prosperity to the wartime clever maneuver that f o re- deaths of more than 20 million stalled war w i t h G e rmany. Soviet citizens.
"The figure of Stalin is beStalin's 29-year reign, generally seenby Russians in recent ing justified through the war," years as a dark and bloody Volkov said. "There is an attichapter in the nation's history,
tude now that, yes, there were
has lately been applauded by repressions and, yes, there Putin and his supporters as the were huge losses, but we won foundation on which the great
the war after all."
Soviet superpower was built. Victory exonerated Stalin's Across a resurgent Russia, excesses, just as it does Putin's Stalin lives again, at least in
"strongman" posture toward
the minds and hearts of Rus- neighbors and former Sovisian nationalists who see Putin et subjects now outside the as heir to the former dictator's
'4 Q O
Russian Federation's borders,
model of iron-fisted rule. Re- Volkov said. cent tributes celebrate Stalin's Stalin's standing among military c ommand a cumen
his countrymen has waxed
and geopolitical prowess. His ruthless repression of enemies, real and imagined, has been brushed aside by today's Kremlin leader as the cost to be paid for defeating the Nazis. As Putin has sought to re-
and waned with the political upheavals that have wracked the Soviet Union and Russia.
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He was so dominant a figure in Soviet citizens' lives by the time of his death on March 5,
4••
1953, that hundreds of thou-
cover territory lost in the 1991 sands poured into the streets Soviet breakup, hi s S t alin- of Moscow in a chaotic out-
esque claim to a right to a "sphere of influence" has al-
break of mourning when word of his passing reached a public
lowed him to legitimize the sei-
taught to believe that life was
r 4
/p'
zure of Crimea from Ukraine impossible without Stalinand declare an obligation to the Bolshevik nom de guerre defend Russians and Russian he adopted, signifying "man of speakers beyond his nation's steel." borders. On May 9 the70th anniver-
N ikita K h r ushchev, w h o
portraits of the mustachioed generali ssimo were carried by marchers in Red Square's Victory Day parade and in the million-strong civic procession
finally prevailed in attaining the leadership after five years of Kremlin infighting, began a campaign of de-Stalinization in 1961, moving Stalin's embalmed remains from public display next to Lenin's to a less prominent grave near the Kremlin wall. Stalingrad, the hero city that symbolized the Soviets' watershed battle to
that followed to honor all who
turn back the Nazis, was re-
sary of the Allied war victory was marked and Stalin was
put on display with glorifying war films, T-shirts, billboards and posters. Framed
fell in what Russians call the named Volgograd, and statues Great Patriotic War. Putin's embrace of Stalin's
and busts were removed, and streets, institutes and schools
power-play tactics is applaud- were renamed. ed by many Russians and othBut the erasure of Stalin's er former Soviet citizens as name and likeness served also the sort of decisive leadership to stifle discussion of his vast they longed for while watching crimes: Siberian exile or death communism collapse around sentences for political oppothem. To the proponents of a nents, collectivization of agrireinvigorated Russia, reform- culture during which millions ist Mikhail Gorbachev and his starved, deportation of minorisuccessor,Boris Yeltsin, are ties and property seizures that seen as having submitted Rus- impoverished generations. It sia to Western domination.
OA|
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wasn't until Gorbachev came
Stalin "kept us all together, to power in 1985 that a canthere was a friendship of na- did recounting of his era was tions, and without him every-
®i
attempted.
E ven Putin, earlier in h i s thing fell apart," said Suliko Megrelidze,a 79-year-old na- presidency, fell in line with the tive of Stalin's Georgian birth- collective spirit of criticism of place who sells dried fruit and Stalin's errors. During the visit
. US.Cellular.
spices at a farmers market. to Poland in 2009, a year after
"We need someone like him if he had sent troops to seize terwe want peace and freedom ritory in sovereign Georgia, from those fascists in Europe
Putin appeared to r eassure
and America." Russia's nervous neighbors Such sentiments are no lon- that the nonaggression pact ger confined to those with actu-
that paved the way for war and
al memories of the Stalinera. A division 70 years earlier was to poll this spring by the indepen- be remembered as immoral.
Thlttpswewant yottto know: NewRetail InslalmentCon tract atid SharedConnect Planrequired.Gredit approval required. Re gulatory Gast Recovetr Feeapplies (currently S1.82/line/morith); thisis notatax or gvmt requiredcharge. Add. fees,taxesand termsapply andvarybysrc. arideqmt Ofersvalid in-store at participating locationsonly, maybe fulfiled throughdirect fulfilment andcannot becombined. See store or uscellular.com fordetails. S100discount offtheMSRPof iPhone 6. KansasGttstomers: InareasinwhichU.S. Cellular receivessupportfrom theFederal Universal Service Fund, all reasonablerequestsfor service must bemet Unresolved questions concerning servicesavailability canbedirected to theKansasGorporation Commission Officeaf Public AffairsandConsumer Protectionat1-800-662-0027. Limited-timeoffer. Trademarks and tradenames arethe praperty af their respective owners. Additional termsapply. Seestoreoruscelularcomfor details. ©2015 U.S.Cellular
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
WASHINGTON WEEK
O www.bendbulletin.com/local
PUBUCOFFICIAlS
CENTRAL OREGON
e icien
WASHINGTON-
U.S. HOUSEVOTE • The Housepasseda spending bill lastweek thatappropriatesfunding to the Department ofDefense for militaryactivities through September2016. The bill directs fundsfor military personnel,operation andmaintenance, weapon procurement, researchandother expenses.Thebilhad overwhelmingsupported by Republicans. Itpassed Thursday278-149,with 144 Democratsvoting against thespending bill, joinedbyfive Republicans. The 235Republicansvoting for thebill werejoined by43 Democrats.
• That doesn't mean that they aren't safe to drive across,but they're in needof repair By Ted Shorack
bridges listed as deficient;
The Bulletin
Deschutes County has five
A new study reveals that
Central Oregon counties have 15 structurally deficient
bridges based on criteria in a national bridge inventory. Structurally deficient
doesn't mean a bridge is unsafe to drive across, but is in needofrepairorreplacement and should be closely monitored. Crook County has six
and Jefferson County has four. Crook County Judge Mike McCabe said the county has already replaced several bridges in the Powell Butte
money to help fix that," Mc-
Cabe said. "We're going to try and get to them and get them replaced." Transportation for America, a nationwide advocacy
percent of the tax goes to
counties and 20 percent goes to cities. State legislators have entrenched themselves
group for transportation funding, released the study of Oregon bridges last week. The data were compiled from inspection reports
along party lines over a transportation funding package proposed in the Legislature.Oregon Republicans are unwilling to support a gas
sent to the Federal Highway Administration.
tax increaseafter Democrats
area. Most of the bridges
The study comes as state
listed as deficient in Crook
lawmakers butt heads over a
County are canal crossings, he said.
transportation funding package that would potentially in-
"We're looking at all the options to try and get the
and bridges. Oregon's gas tax is $.30 per gallon. Thirty
creasethe state'sga s tax and
passed a bill establishing a low-carbon fuel standard.
The legislation proposes cutting 10 percent of greenhouse gases in transportation fuels by 2025.
improve funding for roads
SeeBridges/B2
Wa/den(R).............................. Y Blumenauer(D)........,........... Bonamici (D).............,........... N DeFazio(D)................,........... Schrader(D)..............,...........
• On Tuesday,the House passed abill appropriating $55.3 billion for the departments ofTransportation, HousingandUrban Developmentfor fiscal year 2016.Thespending bill providesfunding for infrastructure including highways, railwaysand other transit. Thebil narrowly passed216210, with themajority of Democratsvotingagainst. Three Democratsvoted with Republicans infavor of the bill and31Republicans votedagainst.
• Gev. KateBrown, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor. oregon.gov • Secretary of State Jeanne Atkins, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR 97310 Phone: 503-986-1523 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sosO state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon State Capitol 900 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon. treasurer@state.or.us Web: www.ost.state. OI'.US
The Senatedidnot pass legislation lastweek, butvoted onamendments and motionsaheadof roll call votes.
• AttorneyGeneral Ellen Rosenblum,D 1162 Court St. NE Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax:503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state. or.us • LaborCommissionerBrad Avakian 800 NE OregonSt., Suite 1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.
— TedShorack TheBulletin
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OI'.US
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Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem .................. 406-589-4347 Business............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Publicsafety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Lettersand opinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Maii: My NickersWorth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-633-2117
• Civic Calendarnotices:
Photos by Teee Freeman/The Bulletin
Some Sisters Rodeo royalty from thepast 71 years wait on their float before the start of the Sisters Rodeo parade Saturday morning. By Kailey Fisicaro Over 75 years, a lot has changed forthe Sisters Rodeo,
according to the queens who ruled it. But there's one thing
queen, Cathy Maul Kaech, 66,
that remains: The connection
traveled to Sisters from Mid-
they feel to rodeo life. Saturday, in the sunshine,
vale, Idaho. There, she said,
33 formerSisters Rodeo
a small hay farm in an area where cows outnumber the people. Back when Kaech lived in Redmond, she did barrel racing. Around 1964, her parents bought her a 2-year-old wild
in their cowgirl hats, boots,
fringe leather and turquoise, smiling and waving to the crowd. They'd been rounded up to participate again for the 75th anniversary of the rodeo. For the queens and prin-
and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0367
rodeo, on the shady lawn of the rodeo grounds clubhouse.
• Schoolnews andnotes:
With ice teas and black and
Email newsitemsand notices otgeneralinterest to news@bendbuiieiin.com. Email announcements ofteens' academic achievements 1oyouih@bendbuiieiin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletinObendbulieiin.com. Contact: 541-633-2117
white photos spread among
• Community events: Visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "AddEvent" at least10 days beforepublication. Details on the calendarpageinside Local andGO!Magazine. Contact: 541-383-0351, communitylife@bendbuiietin.com
• Engagements,weddings, anniversaries, birthdays: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Forms areavailable online at bendbulletin.com/milestones. Contact: 541-633-2117, milestones@bendbulletin.com
she and her husband have
queens and courts rode in the parade, seated on hay bales
cesses though, a lot of the fun
Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbuiietin.com
To hear some oftheQueens' favorite memories visit: beoffbulletio.com
The Bulletin
Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name
• Obituaries, DeathNotices:
U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep. GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone: 202-225-6730 Web: http://walden. house.gov Bendoffice: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON
Walden(R)..............................Y Blumenauer(D).....................N Bonamici (D)................. .........N DeFazio(D)................... Absent Schrader(D)...........................N
Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine ...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831
U.S. SENATE • Sen. JeffMerkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298 • Sen. RenWyden, D-ore. 223 Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington, D.C.20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http://wyden. senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142
came in between their appearances in the parade and
i
Past Sisters Rodeo queenswear chaps representing the year they were queen during the 75th annual Sisters Rodeo parade.
mare at the Redmond auction. Kaech was able to train the
horse, Sapphire, on her own. "She went from wild to very responsive.... It was
pop-up tables, the women sat and discussed memories from when each of them were
chosen. Each of the women wore
lanyards with their first and
maiden name, title and year. Although many of them stayed in Central Oregon over the decades, one former
very fulfilling," Kaech said. "I think girls today can learn a lot from those kinds of
examples." SeeQueens/B6
Web: www.oregon. gov/boli STATE SENATE • Sen. TedFerrioli, R-Disirici30(Jefferson, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioli© state.or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/ferrioli • Sen. TimKnopp, R-Disirici 27 lpart of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@ state.or.us Web: www.leg.state. or.us/knopp • Sen. DougWhitsetf, R-Districi 28 lCrook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,S-303 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen. dougwhitsett©state. OI;US
Web: www.leg.state. or.us/whitse11 Nore officials, B2
YESTERYEAR
Mower ready to cut down aquatic weeds inMirror Pond in 'l940 Compiled by Don Hoiness
from archivedcopiesof The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.
For the week ending June 13, 1915
Wonderful sopranocoming to Chautauqua here Like the abandoned ripple of the mountain stream, the ecstatic swirl of the bursting
storm, and the unbridled dash of the crystal waterfall, the silveryvoiceofCharlotteBergh gushed forth in all its splendor and led her up the golden
she captivates the hearts of all her listeners in every city in which she appears. Of Norwegian descent, she
stairs to fame and renown, the
istics of her race. Stately, and blessed with an appealing
evening she made her debut before an assembly of eastern operatic and Chautauqua
magnates five years ago. In all her glory, she is coming here
possessesallthe character-
grace, she excites the admiration of the most exacting
critics in America. By far the youngest soprano singer in this summer under the manChautauqua, she is in great agement of the Chautauqua. A demand in all parts of the beautiful girl, scarcely entered United States. upon her life of achievement, She was born in a small
mining town in Idaho and discovered on an Idaho
only needed the magic touch of enterprise given to some
homestead.
of its resources to make a
juntura heard fromJuntura Times newspaper The little city of Bend, over
on the Deschutes River, is booming in fine shape, owing
pay-roll and a lively burg. The Bulletin tells us that the new company will start work at
once on its large mills and will be working 500 men before another year passes. That this
timber that they bought in that
good fortune has long been due the Bend people is admitted by all, and we are glad to see them reaping the reward
vicinity last spring.
of patienceand persistence.
to the fact that the Shevlin
Lumber Company will soon start milling the large body of Bend is a fine little city and
SeeYesteryear/B4
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R the hand of a beautiful but slowwitted courtesan named Philia; 2 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre,148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-
TODAY BUCKAROOBREAKFASTSISTERSRODEO:Featuring a breakfast; 7 a.m.; $10, $5 for kids ages 4-12, free for children 3 and
0803. (Page12)
younger; Sisters RodeoGrounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. sistersrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. ART START:Draw, paint, create collage masterpieces with your kids; 9:30a.m.; $45; Art Station, 313 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-617-1317. SISTERSARTIN THEPARK: Featuring arts, crafts, a kid zone, food and live entertainment, to benefit a local wish from the MakeA-Wish Foundation of Oregon;10 a.m.; Creekside Park, Jefferson Street and Highway 20, Sisters; www.centraloregonshows.com or 541-420-0279. OREGON OLD-TIMEFIDDLERS SUNDAYJAM: All ages welcome, listen and dance; 1 p.m.; free, donations accepted; Powell Butte Community Center, 8404 SWReif Road,PowellButte;408-858-9437. 75TH ANNUALSISTERS RODEO: The final rodeo performance; 1 p.m.; $12-$17; Sisters Rodeo Grounds, 67637 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; www. sistesrodeo.com or 541-549-0121. CELEBRATINGPETESEEGERAND THE POWER OFSONG: Come for an informal celebration of the life and music of Pete Seeger, including performance, singalongs and stories; 1:30 p.m.; free; Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; 541-385-3908. "A FUNNYTHINGHAPPENED ON THEWAY TO THE FORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave who struggles to win
"THE CEMETERY CLUB": A play about three Jewish widows who meet once a month for tea before going to visit their husbands' graves; 3 p.m.; $19, $16forseniorsand students;2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. JOHN CRAIGIE HOUSE CONCERT: The indie-folk singer-songwriter performs, with Bill Valenti, 7 p.m. concert; 6 p.m. potluck/social; $15$20; House Concerts in the Glen, 1019 NW Stannium Road, Bend; www.houseconcertsintheglen.com/ rsvp.html or 541-480-8830. YOUNG ARTISTSSCHOLARSHIP CONCERT:A showcase of scholarship students in a program of vocalists and instrumentalists; 7 p.m.; free; Holy Trinity Catholic Church, 18143 Cottonwood Road, Sunriver; 541-593-1084.
MONDAY "GUN HILL ROAD": TheLGBTQ Stars and Rainbows Pride Week film; 6 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "BEND BACKWARDS"COCKTAIL CABARET:A nightlife theatrical singing show; 8-10 p.m.; $16 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-760-4961. THE STUPIDDAIKINI: The California
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.
indie-punk band performs; 9:30 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY REDMOND FARMERS MARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Centennial Park, corner of SW Seventh Street and Evergreen Avenue,Redmond;541-550-0066. BELLAACAPPELLAHARMONY CHORUSGUESTNIGHT: Aguest night to welcome women and girls who love to sing; 6 p.m.; free; Bend Senior Center,1600 NEReedMarket Road, Bend; 541-306-7493. GENDERS!:The Portland rockand roll band performs, with BDYBAG;
GRACEASKEW:The Voice finalist and country-blues singer performs; 8 p.m.;$5 plusfeesin advance, $7 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
band from Seattle performs, with Harley Bourbon; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $20at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
WEDMESDAY
THURSDAY
50TH ANNIVERSARYTOURFOR HORSELESSANDCARRIAGE CLUB OF AMERICA: Acar show with Portland Regional Horseless Carriage Club; 11:30 a.m.; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. BEND FARMERSMARKET: Featuring food, drinks and more; 3 p.m.; Brooks Alley, NWBrooks St., 6 p.m.; free;Crow's FeetCommons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-728- Bend; www.bendfarmersmarket.com or 541-408-4998. 0066. (Page 4) BIKERODEO — LOVE YOUR THE DOOBIEBROTHERS: The BRAIN:Featuring a bike obstacle classic-rock band performs, with course, helmetdemo and checks, Pat Simmons Jr.; 6:30 p.m., gates bikemechanicalassessments openat5 p.m.;$38 plusfees,$79 and more; 5:30 p.m.; free; High for reserved seating; Les Schwab LakesElementarySchool,2500 Amphitheater, 520 SWPowerhouse NW High Lakes Loop, Bend; Drive, Suite 626, Bend; www. bendconcerts.com or 541-312-8510. www.centerfoundation.org or 541-408-7269. "INSIDERACCESS TO DISNEY 2015 DRUMCORPS PIXAR'S INSIDEOUT": Featuring INTERNATIONALTOUR PREMIERE: an early screening of the movie, Featuring six of Drum Corps behind-the-scenesfootage, International's top marching interviews and more; 7 p.m.; $25; m usic ensembles;5:30 p.m.;$15; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. 844-462-7342. "BEND BACKWARDS"COCKTAIL JP HARRIS &THETOUGH CABARET: A nightlife theatrical CHOICES:Thecountry band singing show; 8 p.m.; $16 plus fees performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins in advance,$10at door for standing room/seat; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or or 541-382-5174. 541-760-4961. SUPERSUCKERS:The rock 'n' roll
7:30p.m.; $20,$16for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE CEMETERYCLUB": Aplay about three Jewish widows who
meet once a month for tea before going to visit their husbands' graves; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
COCC GRADUATION
Continued from Bf STATE HOUSE • Rep. Knute Buehler, R-District 54(part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.knutebuehler©state.
Central OregonCommunity College graduates march in to start their commencement ceremony onSaturday morning at MazamaField. More than 900 graduates received degrees andcertificates and 400 were expected to attend the ceremony. Rep. Knute Buehler gave the keynote address.
OI'.Us
Web: www.leg.state.or.us/buehler • Rep. John Huffman, R-District 59 (part of Jefferson) 900 Court St. NE,H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. MikeMcLane, R-Dlstrlct55 (Crook, part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whisnant, R-District53 (part of Deschutes) 900 Court St. NE,H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Deficientdridges Inspectors rate a bridge's deck, superstructure and substructure on a scale from 1 to 10. If any of these receives a score of four or less, the bridge is considered deficient. Some of the more prominent bridges in Central Oregon that were ruled deficient by inspectors.
REDMOND coyne ve. T row Ro
RE
Bridge over DeschutesRiver at TetherewRd. 183 carsperday Scores: Deck:6 Superstructure: 5 Substructure: 2
PRINEVILLE OchocoCreekat Elm . 3,139 carsperday Deck:5 Superstructure: 5
FERMENTATIONCELEBRATION: Featuring beer tastings from Bend breweries, live music and more; 4 p.m. $20 for drink tickets and glass; Old Mill District, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-0131. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Scott Cook and Aimee Wadewill present atal kand slideshow based on their newest book, "PDXccentric: An Odyssey of Portland Oddities"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books,422 SW Sixth St.,Redmond; www.paulinasprings.com or 541-526-1491. JOHN DOE: The rock-folk artist performs, with Jesse Dayton; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "A FUNNYTHING HAPPENED ON THEWAY TO THE FORUM": A musical about Pseudolus, a crafty slave who struggles to win the hand of a beautiful but slowwitted courtesan named Philia;
INEVIL I
Laughlin Rd.
Substructure: 4
OchocoCreekat CombsFlat Road 4,600 carsperday Deck: 6, Superstructure: 4,Substructure: 5
BEND, TUMALO Tum ond.
Bridge everDeschutes River at TumaloRead 2,591 carsperday
I
u AO
Bridges
sard.
Contlnued from B1 The number of br i dges listed as deficient in the study were far higher in
a bridge connects to the ground with t h e su per-
The
the Willamette Valley com-
pared to Central Oregon. Linn County had 84bridges listed as deficient, about 15 percent of the bridges located there.
All five of thebridges listed in Deschutes County are
sub s tructure
of
structure on top supporting
the deck. Inspectors rate a bridge's deck, superstructure and substructure on a
scalefrom 1 to 10. If any of the three receive less than a scoreof 4, the bridge is considered st r u cturally deficient. The NW Tetherow Road
owned and maintained by bridge that spans the Dethe county. Chris Doty, the schutes River nor t h west county's road department of Redmond is one of the director, saidthe Oregon De- bridges listed in the study partment ofTransportation's as structurally deficient. A statebridge program is "se- replacementof the bridge is verely lacking in helping to expected in 2016.About 90 fund bridge replacements." percent of the design on the "This is yet another piece new bridge has been comof infrastructure that doesn't pleted. The county matched get the attention it deserves about 10 percent of s tate when funding is tight," Doty funding for the project. AcsaKI. cording to the study, about Doty said bridges last a 183 cars travel across the long time, but are very ex- Tetherow Road bridge evpensiveto replace. He added ery day. Thebridge is single that it is hard for funds to be lane, but t he re placement funneled to the local level for bridge will betwo lanes. bridge upkeep. The full report can be "Bridges unfortunately found at ww w . t4america. are easily overlooked in the org. grand schemeof things, and — Reporter:541-617-7820, especially politically," Doty tshorackibendbulletin.com
Bridge everCentral Oregon canalat American Lane 5,492 carsperday Deck:5 Superstructure: 5 t Rd.
Substructure: 6
FRIDAY 4 PEAKSMUSICFESTIVAL: 4 Peaks is celebrating eightyears of welcoming national and regional touring bands to Central Oregon with camping, workshops, a kid's
area, roomto dance,andgreat local vendors; 9 a.m.; $135 plus fees, $150 at the gate, includes camping; Rockin' A Ranch, 19449 Tumalo Reservoir Road, Bend; www.4peaksmusic.com or 541-382-8064.
Crook County Court • Mike McCabe (Crook County judge) Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe©co.crook.or.us • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren©co.crook.or.us • Seth Crawford Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: seth.crawford@co.crook. OI;us
JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 SE DSt., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us
Jefferson County Commission • Mike Ahern,MaeHuston, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email:commissionericolefferson.orus
Free pipeinstallation estimates
Deschutes CountyCommission • TammyBaney,R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email:Tammy Haney@wdeschules.or.us • Alan Unger,D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us • TonyDeBone,R-LaPine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©o.deschutes.or.us CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThird St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration©co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
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Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com or 541-382-5174.
COUNTR S IDE LIVING A Nice Place To Call Home
541-61 0-3063 Source: U.S. Federal HighwayAdministration
Alliance; 9p.m.; $5; McMenamins
You deserve a lawn you love.
Deck: 7
Superstructure: 7 Substructure: 4
DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 NWWall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone: 541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
seniors and students; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. RHYTHM DRAGONS:The rockabilly band from Arizona performs, with Big Evil; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. FUNK THIS!:Featuring an evening of NuDisco, with DJ RrlTime and Mark & Matt; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/ farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. STEEL PULSE:The reggae-roots band from the United Kingdom performs, with Neil Mangicaro & the Current, DJ Raider and The Colonel; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; $27 plusfees in advance,$30 at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com or 541-388-8111. "COMES WITHBAGGAGE" AND "THE BLACK CANYONTRAIL" — A BACKPACKINGDOUBLEFEATURE: Featuring two short movies, to benefit the Central Oregon Trail
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THELMA'S PLACE Adult Day Respitefor those living with memory loss Donate your Vehicle to Thelma's Place lilt Make a Difference in Memory Care! FREE PICK-UP i TAX DEDUCTION i IT'S EASY! Call: 541-548-3049 ~ www.thelmasplace.org
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
as wee in e e i s a ure: Con I'0, SIC eave, uns By Sheila V Kumar
or switches prescriptions. The
The Associated Press
bill passed with overwhelming bipartisan support.
SALEM — Here's a look at
highlights of the past week in the Oregon Legislature.
12-monthbirth control Oregon became the first state in the nation requiring health insurance providers to
cover up to 12 months of birth control at a time. Gov. Kate Brown signed the first-of-its-
kind insurance bill into law, saying it would increase access and decrease barriers to
contraception. Advocates of the measure say it will also reduce the number of unwanted
pregnancies and promote consistent birth control use. Some critics said it could increase
health care costs and might cause wastage if a full year's worth of pills is dispensed and then thrown out if a woman decides to stop taking them
agriculture, and paperwork challenges.
Guns —domesticabuse
collect a firearm from some-
one. They also said the bill is unnecessary because of the
existing federal law. The Legislature gave biparOver the objections of Re- tisan support to a bill making Ban the box publicans, the Oregon Leg- it easier for local law enforceSenators backed a proposal islature advanced a bill re- ment officials to confiscate the making it illegal for potential quiring many businesses to firearms of convicted domes- employers to ask about crimgive their employees paid sick tic abusersand some people inal records on job applicaleave days. Only Democrats who are under a restraining tions. The so-called "ban the backed the bill, arguing that order. The bill lines up Oregon box" bill would prohibit that w orkers shouldn't h ave t o state policies with a federal question on job applications, choose between recovering lawbarring people from keep- but an employer could still ask from an illness and preserv- ing guns if they've been found about convictions during an ing their paycheck. The bill guilty of domestic abuse or interview. Supporters said it's requires that employers with are under a restraining order very difficult for people with at least 10 workers provide up that was upheld after a hear- a criminal record to find emto 40 hours of paid sick leave ing. Backers of the bill say ployment because of a previeach year, which can be used there aren't enough agents to ous conviction. They argued to take care of their own illeffecti vely enforce the feder- it gives job-seekers a chance nesses or a family member's. al version of the law, and the to explain their conviction, Businesses smaller than that measure gives local officers their more recent conduct would have to offer unpaid more authority to implement and their qualifications. Critleave. But Republican said the that ban. Opponents argued ics said they were worried it bill could lead to higher costs it could put the lives of police would increase lawsuit risk for businesses, especially in danger if they're sent to for businesses.
Paid sick leave
Fire crewsface danger from aforest of deadtrees By Tim Fought The Associated Press
PORTLAND — Crews mo-
bilizing to fight a new fire in southwestern Oregon face a
them will have to be cut down Saturday afternoon that crews lines, the boundaries firefightbefore crews can safely dig were monitoring its growth in ers dig and then widen to concontainment lines around the hot, gusty weather that could tain a fire. "We're just kind of getting new fire, she said. contribute to its rapid spread. The new fire is called BuckAmong the fuel is brush that our legs underneath us," she skin after a nearby peak, and has grown in the area since sard.
danger left over from a major fire 13 years ago: dead, stand- it's within th e B i scuit Fire the Biscuit Fire, Sichting said. ing trees that could fall on area. The Biscuit eventually The fire is in the Rogue Rivthem. burned a mosaic of land cov- er-Siskiyou National Forest Those dead trees are called ering 780 square miles — half about 10 miles south of the snags, always a danger for fire a million acres — and was the town Cave Junction, populacrews working in the woods. biggest fire in the nation that tion about 1,900. No structures The extensive Biscuit Fire year. were reported in jeopardy. of 2002 left behind what fire The Buckskin Fire was esHelicopters were bringing spokeswoman Pam Sicht- timated at less than 2 square in firefighters and supplies, ing described Saturday as "a miles — 1,100 acres — Friday, Sichting said, and a crew of 10 multitude of snags." Some of and the fire team reported on was scouting for potential fire
U.S. radar to beupgraded to reduceimpact of turbines The FAA says the upgrade, P ENDLETON — A n A i r developed over three years, Force radar on a remote Ore- should improve the detection gon mountain will get a soft- of aircraft while reducing ware upgrade to allow more clutter from the turbines. wind-power turbines to be The radar received a softinstalled in the region, two ware upgrade in 2010 to allow federal agencies announced. for construction of a large Eastern Oregon and Wash- wind farm called Shepherds ington state are already a F lat that's i n G i l l iam a n d
C rews reported that
he-
licopters dropped water on the Buckskin Fire Saturday afternoon. Fire officials said
they planned to close an area around the fire for public safety, and they said motorists on U.S. 199 southeast of the fire and other nearby roads
should be watchful of fire traffic.
AROUND THE STATE POliCe Subdue mall —Multnomah County authorities said a man who escapedfrom a burning pickup truck on Interstate 5 has been accused of trying to carjack another motorists' car. Prosecutors allege 56-year-old BurkeEdwardsWardall rolled out of his truck Wednesday, ran to another car andgrabbed the driver. Thedriver told officers Wardall appeareddelirious. A witness reported seeing him pull a multitool knife. Witnesses andfirefighters fought him and held him until police arrived. Wardall was treated for burns andthen booked Friday on robbery, strangulation andassault charges. Calls to public defenders Saturday werenot immediately returned. Court officials said Wardall's last address was inRedmond, Washington, and he has nocriminal record. The fire began in thecab of his truck, which carried chemicals. Unidentified bady —North Bend police are asking for help identifying an elderly manwhosebody wasfound in the water by a city employee. Police said the manwasfound Mondaymorning about 50 feet offshore near Harbor Street. They believe the bodywas in the water for a fewhours at most. Police said there are no signs of trauma or injury. They havenot ruled out the possibility that the man had dementia. Hewasfound with no identification, only clothing and a pair of reading glasses. Theman is described as 75 to 85years old, just over 6 feet tall and mostly bald, with gray hair and blueeyes. Authorities said heappears to have hadexcellent hygiene and grooming habits. High-Speed ChaSe —The Jackson County sheriff's office said one man hasbeenarrested after a high-speed chase in southern Oregon left seven vehicles damaged. Noonewas hurt Friday afternoon in the brief pursuit in White City. Thesheriff's office said the fleeing green Dodgetruck hit two vehicles during the chase. Thedriver finally crashed through afront yard and into two additional vehicles parked in a nearby driveway.Deputies tried to usetheir patrol cars to disable the fleeing truck. Twopatrol cars weredamaged, aswasthe truck. The sheriff's office said a30-year-old man wasarrested on warrants and for investigation of driving with a suspendedlicense. Helikely will face several additional charges related to the pursuit and property damage. CyCliSt Suing —A North Portland bicyclist whose spine wasbroken when apickup driver struck him andthen drove off is suing the city, TriMet andthe Oregon Department of Transportation for $21.4 million. Michael Cooley's lawsuit claims that a roughly mile-long stretch of North Interstate Avenue is sodangerously designed that it's contributed to at least onecyclist's death and nine cyclists' injuries in the past12 years. According to the suit, the city's Bicycle Master Plan states that the car laneand bicycle lanewhere Cooley wasstruck are too narrow. Thecity declined to comment about the lawsuit, citing the pending litigation. TriMet said it couldn't offer immediate comment, and ODOT didn't return a call for comment. Willamette Weekly —Willamette Weekpublisher Richard Meeker is stepping awayfrom that role after 32 years. The Portland alt-weekly said Friday that editor Mark Zusman will take over as publisher. Hewill oversee the business side of the operation while continuing to lead thenewsroom. The66-year-old Meeker isn't retiring. Instead, hewill supervise the company's alt-weeklies in Santa Fe, New Mexico andRaleigh-Durham, North Carolina. The paper said the transition should be complete by theend of the month. Willamette Week has beenpublished since1974. Oneof its reporters, Nigel Jaquiss, won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting. — From wire reports
CENTRALOREGOI'8 ORIGINALHOME AID llVING NIAGAZIIE
The Associated Press
boom area
f o r e l e ctricity Morrow counties.
generation powered by wind. Wyden called for the sysOfficials had said the wind tem to be replaced entirely, farms were a potential haz- but he said the upgrade was a ard because the turbines gen- step in the right direction. erate false alarms, or clutter, He said he'd press for a on radar screens.
U.S. Sen. Ron W yden, D-Oregon, objected, saying the radar was preventing new
wind-energy development in eastern Oregon and Washington state, the East Orego-
nian reported. The long-range surveillance radar is near the town
of Fossil in Wheeler County northwest of the Blue Moun-
tains. It is jointly managed by the Defense and Homeland
solution that "maintains def ense capabilities an d a i r
safety while preserving every opportunity to develop wind energy to its complete potential." The FAA, the Defense Department and Homeland Se-
curity say they will continue to look at ways of mitigating the effects on radar by wind
A sneakpeek at the next CentralOregon Living coming 3une 27th... Chefs onTour Learn about the third annual pre-Tour of Homes™event and how it has evolved since 2013. Find out which builders and restaurants will be participating.
Tour ofHom es™ Preview A showcase of some of the finest homes in Central Oregon. Get t e what, when andwhere plus the history and whatto look for this year.
"OutdoorLivinl" Features • Outdoor kitchens • BBQ innovations • Backyard trends 8 must-haves • High desert gardening
turbines and evaluate pro-
posed wind farm projects on a case-by-case basis. There are 12 wind-energy projectseither proposed or ation Administration flagged in the permitting process in Security departments. It is also used for air traffic control, and the Federal Aviseveral turbines as potential
Oregon, most in eastern Ore-
hazards because they obstruct the radar's ability to
gon, according to the Renewable Northwest Project based
monitor airspace.
in Portland.
Womangets13 years in fatal wrong-way crash The Associated Press
MQj4-'
Thanksgiving holiday when
SALEM — M arion Coun-
lt
their vehide was hit on Nov. 25.
ty prosecutors in Salem say a On Friday, Audrey Blivens, woman has been sentenced 49, pleaded guilty and was sento 13 years in prison for a fatal One woman was killed in the
vestigation found that Blivens
crash and aman and 7-year-old crashed into a vehicle drivenby child were injured. The dis- Juan Ledesma and occupied by trict attorney's office says the
IMa0aga
tenced for manslaughter, two
wrong-way crash last Novem- counts of assault and DUI. ber on Interstate 5. An Oregon State Police in-
Deana Deleon and a 7-year old
three hadbeen traveling for the passenger. Deleon died.
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Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
••
TheB u lle '
S MRYBIEIIGY~S M
. The Bulletin
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
T HE
ES T
saes os are
ore ucewi ireris s
By Keith Ridler The Associated Press
BOISE, Idaho —
I n terior
Secretary Sally Jewell has announced $10 million for land restoration projects in 13 states in a strategy to reduce cata-
strophic wildfires. Jewell said Friday making land more resilient to fire is es-
sential for vulnerable species and for healthy rangelands, forests and watersheds.
"These projects will restore critical landscapes, which is essential for mitigating the impacts of fire and dimate change," Jewell said in a state-
v .I
t
Adam Eschback/The Idaho Press-Tribune via The Associate Press
ment. "Theseprojects support
Emergency responders dumpwater onto a wildfire near Celebra-
our efforts to protect our nation's landscapes for this and
tion Park south of Melba, Idaho, on June 6.
future generations."
Eight of the states are in the Program intended to unite West, with projects in conifer
federal agencies, tribes, states
forests and sagebrush rangelands, where wildfires have been especially destructive in thelastdecade.Sagebrushalso is habitat for sage grouse, an imperiled bird under consideration for federal protections. To the east, Georgia, Florida, Virginia and North and South Carolina are receiving $770,000to help restore long-
and other groups to create fire-resilient landscapes. The projects also are in line with
Jewell's secretarial order in January requiring projects include multiple jurisdictions collaborating on a large scale. Of the $10 million, about $4 million is designated for the Greater Shelton Hart Mountain project located in Oregon,
are the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, U.S. Bureau of Land Darin Oswald /The Idaho Statesman via The Associated Press Management, Summit Lake U.S. Secretary ofthe Interior Sally Jewell examines a p atch of cheat grass on the side of Hull's Gulch Paiute Tribe, county agencies, Trail in the BoiseFoothills, in Boise, Idaho, on May19.Jewell announced $10 million for projects to private landowners, hunting restore landscape health to help mitigate the impact of wildfires for 13 states, including Oregon. and conservation groups, and universities.
Four projects on the list benefitgreater sage grouse and cost a combined $7.3 million. The wide-ranging bird found in 11 states is under consider-
John Freemuth, a Boise State
University professor and a pub-
other places," Freemuth said. One of those is the Santa
where $89,000 is being spent on the Grants Grove Peninsu-
Clara Pueblo project in New la to restore fire resiliency in reflects Jewell's business back- Mexico, where $400,000 is be- sequoia groves and other forground and penchant for try- ing spent to restore the natural ests needed by the weasel-like ation for f ederal protection, ing to find ways to get things frequency of fire on mesa top Pacific fisher, a candidate for leaf pine forests, home to the Nevada and California. and another giant habitat-con- accomplished despite differ- lands to protect ancient cliff federal protections. endangered r e d -cockaded The project there aims to suming fire could factor into ences among participants. dwellings and traditional food The National Park Service "To me, the message is, 'Sage sources. The Bureau of Indian and the California Departwoodpecker. restore sagebrush and native the decision. Experts say an The projects are part of the perennial grass and forbs by endangered-species l i s ting grouse is the biggest issue right Affairs is the lead agency on ment of Forestry and Fire ProInterior Department's Wild- controlling juniper expan- could damage Western states' now, but we understand and that project. tection are taking part in that land Fire Resilient Landscapes sion. Among the participants economies. know that there are issues in Another is i n C a l ifornia, prolect. lic lands expert, said the list
Tweet promptsschool rulechanges,diversity discussionin Tualatin By Nuran Altier TUALATIN —
i m age didn't understand the racism aspect of it," Stark Haydon School website manipulated said. The students appeared to In February, an
The Oregonian
showing the Tualatin H i gh What a
change a tweet can make. In 2014, just 12.4 percent of
Tualatin High School students polled in the Oregon Student Wellness Survey said they had experienced racism. But this year, nearly 42 per-
to be portrayed as "White Su-
premacist High" and "Home of the KKK" was making rounds on Twitter.
"It was kind of heartbreaking to know that the people you go to school with, they're cent of students who partici- not the people you thought pated in a student-led survey they would be," said Evelin said they've seen racism at Tu- Gutierrez, 16, an incoming sealatin High School. nior at'Ittalatin High School. District officials attribute The school website wasn't that sharp rise to the after- hacked. District officials said math of a single tweet, shared the image appeared to have hundreds of times, just weeks originated on someone's combefore TuHS Unity Club stu- puter and was shared initially dents conducted their class- on Snapchat. room surveys. The tweet's More than 10 0 p eople content shaped some of the
retweeted the image, which
menace, and if a late cutting is
Continued from B1
that the weeds are too thick to cut.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending June 13, 1940
Machine ready to cut weeds in Mirror Pond
50 YEARSAGO
decided on it might be found However, the city plans to start early and do quite a bit of experimenting before swinging into the main part of the weed harvest.
For the week ending June 13, 1965
Statetrack meet hadmany sidelights There were many sidelights at the Oregon High School Track and Field Champion-
Minister says Nazis will lose ships at Bell Field in Corvallis. long war One thing that caught the
It will soon be harvest time down on th e M i r ror Pond, Minister of Economic Warcity officers indicated today fare Hugh Dalton said in a
as they announced that the construction of an underwater mower had been completed and that this mower will be
used in cutting aquatic weeds. If plans materialize the underwater mower will be started
early next week. However, before the mow-
fancy of sportswriters covering the event was the high-jumpbroadcast tonight that despite ing style used by Medford's Germany's onslaught in north Dick Fosbury. France, "We shall get them Quiddy tabbed the "Fosbury Flop," it is probably unique in down in the long run." Adolf Hitler's only hope is Oregon track circles. for quick victory because he Instead of the usual sciscannot win a long war, Dalton sors or roll approach, Fosbury said. The Allied victory will vaults over the crossbar on his eventually strangle the Ger- back — a kind of back bend in man war machine. midair, and his method must "We shall not let them win be effective. He took second
er canbe placed in operation, a good sturdy boat, about 16 feet in length, will be required. a short war," he said. "AlThe city advertised for such a ready streaks of shortage are boat today. The powered mow- spreading across the economer will be attached to this boat ic body of Germany." and lowered into the water. The mower will be used not
Juneau ark resumesslow
In the teen issues category,
students were asked if they've be more attracted to the tech- experienced or seen someone nological aspect of having cre- face an array of topics from ated the image, she said, rath- depression to racism. Students er than the content. could pick multiple topics, but Parry Aftab, a nationally bullying/cyber-bullying, derecognized cybersecurity ex- pression, alcohol and drug pert from New York, inferred use andracism were listed as as much. top issues, according to results "It's far less about radical- from the student-led survey. ization, and more about 'look On the other hand, in the at that; isn't that funny,'" said oppression category, students Aftab, founder and executive were asked what type of opdirector of Wired Safety. pression they've seen. Racism Members of the TuHS Unity was listed higher than topics Club said the offensive tweet such as heterosexism and became an opportunity to get classism. timely feedback in a project The Unity Club students they had been working on were quick to explain that the over the past two years. The results are not definitive of stuclub had been putting together dent attitudes at 'Ittalatin High a packet of activities and ques- School. Stark Haydon also tionnaires to collect data on pointed out that the results
discourse on race and bullying receivedmore than 200 favorin the school, and prompted ites and countlessresponses the Tigard-Tualatin School — some of which appeared to Board to adopt district-wide find the image funny. student attitudes in three catepolicy changes to allow for Administrators immediate- gories: oppression, teen issues discipline related to hateful ly reached out to the students and school culture. off-campus, online speech. who shared the image, acJust a few w eeks before "Really it's just been a pro- cording to Stark Haydon, who club members went into classcess of figuring out what the added the district hadn't seen rooms, the tweet had already right thing to do is," said Su- something like this before. been circulated dozens of "When they talked to the times among students. san Stark Haydon, spokeswoman with the Tigard-Tuala- students who tweeted it, they Unity Club advisor Bret tin School District. seemed very sincere that they Bunke said that may h ave
Yesteryear
skewed the results.
place with an effort of 6 feet, 3'/4inches.
How did Fosbury come up with the method'? "I k i nda
stumbled on to it by accident when I was practicing and
only in cutting weeds which trip to Alaska it just seemed comfortable. I might interfere with floats enPaul Satko's unwieldy Ark couldn't scissorand Iw ashavtered in the annual water pag- of Juneau was ready today to ing trouble with the roll." eant, but if possible, in cutting resume the slow journey to weed growth in other parts of Alaska where he, his wife and Good showing Bend's competitors in the the Mirror Pond. family hope to establish their One of the problems which newhome. state meet deserve a pat on the at present face city officers is Satko brought his craft here back. Their efforts not only at that of determining the proper yesterday to Prince Rupert Corvallis but over the entire time to cut the weeds. An ear- B.C. after spending two days season were c o mmendable ly cutting might prove of little at Swanson Bay repairing her and helped put the Bruins on value in reducing the weed engine. the state track map.
versation over some of these
the situation."
issues." The survey data will be
tion
used to help create an agenda
for the school's annual Unity Week, which takes place in February and is put on by the Associated Student Body in conjunction with campus clubs, including Unity. The response to the tweet also prompted Tigard-Tualatin School District to address
hateful speech within the virtual environment, something the district had never done
a d m inistrators w o u ld
have taken if they found graffiti on campus. "One of the things we want
to do is make kids feel safe, so first we want to get rid of it — make it seem like it was
never there," Stark Haydon said, adding the district was not able to find the person who
created the image. Tigard-Tualatin
Sc h o ol
District now has an Equity
Compliance Officer position
before.
to review discrimination comAt f i r st, s chool o f ficials plaints, whereas before stutreated the incident as a disci- dentswere encouraged to talk plinary one — aimed at find- to a teacher or counselor. Cur-
ing the person responsible and rently, the job will be assigned punishing them accordingly. to district's human resources About a month after the image director.
went out on 7witter, the school and district issued a state-
ment condemning the racist Wellness Survey, a state-spon- content. sored an d re s earch-based "There was a delay" in resurvey of Oregon students in sponding to the image, said grades 6, 8 and 11. Superintendent Ernie Brown. The Unity Club students "That was a mistake on our went back into classrooms part. We did not respond as during the last two weeks of quickly as we should have. I school to present the results think part of that is embedded and "have a courageous con- in how we initially approached vary from the Oregon Student
The Lava Bears' showing as a team was hampered by Craig Usher's injury in preliminary competition. As it turned out, Usher probably could have
It was the same type of ac-
On arrival in Bend, Boyle found a college in turmoil. "All of my professi onal associates advised me not to come," Boyle
The Student Rights a nd
Responsibilities Handbook is also being updated to address off-campus speech that "creates a disruption to the school environment."
Those changes, which include disciplinary action for similar speech in the future,
were adopted unanimously at the TTSD Board meeting on Monday night.
"I developeda concept there of
what excellence is all about," Boyle said. "I was taught that
anything I wanted be I had to work for, and that work was won the event, or at least taken here that maybe the others satisfying." didn't see." a second place. From high school, he went But even without those valuWhat he saw when he talk- on toserve in theMa rines and able points, the other five who ed to students and wandered later attended the University of qualified for the finals put through Bend, stopping in Idaho. He received a bachelor's Bend in 12th. at barber shops to chat with degree with majors in English, Bend trackmen impressed the patrons, was a public that mathematics and p hysical some people at Corvallis Sat- "wanted the best for its college education. urday in th e same manner and would support it," he said. After teaching for two years they have impressed many He came away from Bend in South Dakota, he won a felothers the pastyears. convinced too, that the faculty lowship from the federal govOutfitted in sharp looking members at COCC were better ernment to study at Harvard blue traveling jackets — as op- than the staff members he had University, where he earned a posed to faded blue jeans and a just finished hiring at Rock- master's degree. letterman's sweater some wore ingham Community College He spent four years at the — the Bend group not only in North Carolina. He decided University of Alaska and then competed well, they looked to accept the president's post. ended up at the University of " He hasn't tried to b e a Florida where he earned his goodtoo. popular president; he's tried doctorate. to be a good president," said The word "excellence" has 25 YEARSAGO Judy Roberts, who has served become a catchword for Boyle. For the week ending Boyleeither as a secretary or He developed a philosophy of June 13, 1990 as an assistant for the past 12 excellence that he has applied years. "Some people might to all phases of COCC over the COCCpresident leaves say he was autocratic, but I years. behind a job well done don't think that anyone would Looking back on his long caLured to Bend in 1967 to say he did not do well by the reer at COCC, Boyle freely adinterview for the presidency college. mits that originally he had no of COCC, Fred Boyle knew To Jim Crowell, who from intention of staying at the tiny only one thing about Bend. A 1966 to 1975 served as an as- college more than three years. "I planned to use this as a beautiful trout stream flowed sistant professor of journalism through the middle of town. and then assistant to the pres- stepping stone to something Flying east past Mount ident, Boyle's acceptance of bigger and better," he said. "But Hood he viewed a panorama the presidency marked a turn- somewhere along the line, I deto the south that included the ing point for a college that had cidedthatbigger wasn't always snow-covered Cascades, he started out as a night school. better, and it dawned on me fell in love with the rugged terHe attended a private boy's that, in a sense, I had the best rain of the High Desert. high school in New England. job in the United States." recalled. But I saw something
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B5
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTIt ES Dale Gene Kanski, of Redmond Jan. 24, 1946 - May 29, 2015 Arrangements: Fehrman Mortuary & Crematory, Quincy, CA Services: Celebration of Life with full military honors was held on Wed., June 3, 2015, at Gansner Park, Quincy, CA. Contributionsmay be made to:
In lieu of flowers, send memorial donations to: Quincy Friends of Library, 445 Jackson St., Quincy, CA 95971 or Wildland Firefighters Foundation, 2049 Airport Way, Boise, Idaho, 83705
Caroline (Carol) Marie Smith August 9,1922- May 28, 2015
Roger Calvin Graham, of Redmond April 30, 1936 - June 11, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A memorial service will be announced at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Fossil School District Education Foundation, PO Box 26, Fossil, OR 97830
William "Bill" Aldrich Battey III June 8,1945- June 8,2015 " Bill" A l d r i c h William Battey I II , 70 , o f S i s t ers, Oregon, died at home on Monday, June 8, 2015. H e w a s b o r n in B ry n M awr, P e n n sylvania, o n J une 8, 1945, to t h e l a t e Mia and William Battey. B ill g r ad u a te d fr om Swarthmore H i g h S c h ool i n 1963 a n d e a r n e d h i s
chology from Westminster C ollege in 1968. H e m a r ried Diane Elizabeth Moss shortly thereafter on June 22, 1968. Bill volunteered to serve his country and was commissioned as an officer in t he United St ates M a r i ne C orps in 1 9 68 . B i l l w a s a warded a P u r p l e H e a r t f a nd a D i s t i nguished Fl y Caroline passed away in ing Cross for hi s h eroism her home at the age of92. while flying combat CH-53 H er d aughter, L y n n a n d h elicopter mi s s i on s i n r anddaughter, T a n n a k a Vietnam. A f t e r t e n y e ars a d l i ve d d w i t h h e r an d o f m i l i t ar y s e r v i ce, B i l l c ared for he r f o r t h e l a st t ransitioned h i s a v i a t i on few years. career, f l y i n g f or K ey S he was b or n i n L a k e - s tone H e l i c opters, M B B s ide, Nebraska an d c a m e ( Messerschmitt B ol k o w t o O r egon i n 1 9 4 7 . S h e Blohm), Atlantic A v i ation, married Jess H. Smith, Jr. a nd f i n a ll y to Bo ei n g , who preceded her in death serving as manager of V22 in 1978. They had resided b usiness d evelopment i n in Bend. P hiladelphia u n ti l h i s r e C aroline wa s a c o o k a t tirement. the Deschutes County j a il B ill spent his r etired lif e f or 20 years. T h o s e w h o u rsuing hi s l o v e o f R V knew he r w i l l r e m e mber amily travel, retired greyher for her hearty appetite, h ounds, a n d r i d i n g hi s her love of flowers, and Harley-Davidson. the importance of her lovB ill i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s ing family and friends. wife, Diane Battey of Si sS he is s u r v ived b y h e r t ers, Oregon; t h ei r t h r e e three c h i l d r en - Barry, c hildren, R o b er t Ba t t e y L ynn a nd Rob e r t , si x (Bend, OR), Jonathan Batgrandchildren a n d fo ur tey (Maple Valley, WA), great-grandchildren. and L i e u t e nan t Com A private m emorial serm ander L yd ia B att e y vice wa s h e l d . A r r a n g e- Haase (Active Duty Navy). ments are under th e c a re H e i s a l s o s u r v i ve d b y of Ni sw o n g er-Reynolds seven grandchildren. F uneral H o m e ww w . n i sB ill will be buried at A r wonger-reynolds.com l ington Cemetery. D o n a t ions in memory of B il l t o the Se m p e r Fi Fun d
Oct. 27th, 1936 - May 27th, 2015
was larger than life. You knew when he walked into the room." Field was born on March, 11, 1921, in New Brunswick in
LOS ANGELES — Mervin
Field was a college dropout. He had no formal training in polling or statistics. He bagged groceries while growing up
fell ill shortly after his birth,
ly goal of starting a one-man marketing research f i r m. Business was so slow that he worked nights pumping gas.
with an aunt and uncle, who raised him until he was 15. He
But while Field was still in EYinceton, in high school,
before joining the merchant
he had worked part time for
most trusted national polls.
His four siblings — David, Simon, Sally and Claire — died before him. His first marriage, to Virginia Fallon in 1949, ended in divorce. He
Gallup gave him some advice: Political polling might not
remarried in 1957, to Marilyn Hammer; she died in 2006.
make him money, but it could
His survivors include a son, David, and two daughters, Melanie and Nancy. The Field Poll was not a big moneymaker, Field said in an
and he spent two years in an orphanage before moving in studied at Rutgers University and the University of Missouri marine.
George Gallup, who would go on to found one of America's
be a publicity bonanza, a way to win h igh-paying, glamour-seeking corporate clients. Field listened well. In 1945, he founded Field
interview with The New York
Research Corp. in San Francisco. Two years later, he cre-
Times in 1980. "It lost money," he said. "It always loses. It still loses money." Nonetheless, it bought him
ated the California Poll — later renamed the Field Poll. And
over the next half-century, the poll would build and solidify its reputation as one of the Mickey Pfleger via The New YorkTimes file photo best-known and most respect- Mervin Field, the California pollster, goes over data at hie desk, ed nonpartisan surveys in the
nation, year after year mining Californians for their views on
June 11, 1980. Field died Monday in Marin County, California. He was 94.
do with taxes or the environment, or even the state's recent
historic drought. By the time Field died Monday at 94 at an assisted living
facility in Marin County — one month after he had helped produce, in retirement, Field Poll
No. 2,508, his final one — he was as closely identified with the political culture of this state
as many of its leading politicians, most of whom knew him
would: a shining reputation and a thick portfolio of corporate clients. M ark D iCamillo, the
ern would beat Humphrey in day in his second go-round in California by 20 points. (The the job? "It's an amazinginstitutional actual margin was closer to 5.) He also famously, and erro- memory for California public neously, predicted in 1982 that opinion," said Bill Carrick, a Tom Bradley, the Democratic Democratic consultant here. mayor of Los Angeles, would "He was a huge pioneer. Gallup defeat George Deukmejian, a was doing it nationally, and he Republican, and become Cali- was doing it in California." fornia's first black governor. If some pollsters are deskDeukmejian's victory set off bound slaves ofdata,scouring a wave of introspection among piles of printouts and cross-tabpollsters about whether white ulations, Field enjoyed being voters had responded can- a man about town in San didly about their preferences Francisco.
by sight and name. He achieved this in a state in a contest that involved an that seemed to have no end of African-American candidate. attention-getting, nationally (The phenomenon came to be known political figures — Ar- known as the Bradley Effect.) nold Schwarzenegger, Jerry Field, chagrined, announced Brown, Dianne Feinstein and an internal investigation of his
California's economy — Field read thenews release closely before it went out. But with his
health deteriorating, he said, Field seemed to know that for him there would be no Poll No. 2,509.
"He told me this is going to
be it for him," DiCamillo said.
"He said, 'I just can't do it anymore.' That was a sign to me.
He so loved the Field Poll."
"He was a real San Francis-
co personality," Carrick said. "He loved political people. He knew the elected officials.
Most pollsters are reclusive; he
• 30YearsExperience • Honest II Fair• No Iob TooSmall • State-of-the-ArtComputerDiagnostics
2449 Cady Way• 54I-389-38I5
Donald Lee Vineyard II
account for Deukmejian's ef-
Feb. 24, 1978 - May 27, 2015
in what was once a boutique
profession. His record of accuracy in measuring public opinion was strong, though hardly perfect. In 1972, aides to former Vice
fort to line up absentee ballots.
Donald Lee Vineyard II, born Feb. 24, 1978, passed away on May 27, 2015, as a result of injuries he sustained in an automobile accident. He was born and raised in Spokane, WA, before the familymoved to Albany, OR. He attended South Albany High School.
That failure was the exception, rather than the rule, for
Field. His operation was largely known, certainly before The Los Angeles Times began its own poll, as the standard for polling in California.
He is survived by his wife, Katherine;sons Garry Lee (and Raine) Vineyard II and Greggory Devlin Vineyard of Madras, OR; his mother, Tamara Vineyard, also of Madras, OR; brothers Nicholas (and Shawna) Vineyard of Payson, AZ, and Nathan Vineyard of Tempe, AZ; aunt and uncle Wes and Terry Wood of Prineville; cousins James and Jennifer Derrick of Terrebonne, OR, and John and Jennifer Probst of Prineville, OR;nieces Isabella and Riley Vineyard; granddaughter Nyx; and Papa's girls, Jenni Young and Paige Shepherd.
Indeed, the dedine in Hum-
phrey's fundraising was testimony to just how influential the Field predictions could be.
Taken together, Field's polls were useful as a vast historical
repository of data tracking the changing culture and views in a state that always seemed to
A memorial was held in Madras, OR, on Wed., June 3.
be one step ahead of the rest of
P resident Hubert H .
H u m - the nation. In that respect, Field's lonfor the Democratic presidential gevity may have been his best nomination, blamed Field for asset.Where else could one a last-minute collapse in the go to find out, say, what voters
Donald, known to his friends and family a5Vin, celebrated life. Known for his quick wit and humor, he had a greatlove of reading and, music. lo v ed being outdoors ang spending, time ca ping or playing board e s an d ' ' 4tch' mo ies with his famii e l,7 r
phrey, who was again running
campaign's fundraising. thought of Jerry Brown when Four daysbefore the state's he was governor in the 1970s presidential primary, Field pre- and compare that information dicted that George S. McGov-
DEATHS
ing, fishing, camping, and
ELSEWHERE E lizabeth D u n can, b o r n October 6th, 1924, former r esident of Redm o n d , p assed a wa y M a y 3 1 s t , 2 015 in T ucson, AZ . S u r vived by J oh n B r o ussard, M ary R o se, R ut h S t a r k s ( Fletcher) - T u c s on , A Z ; Ian Br oussard - B o u l d er, CO; J a c k Br o u s sard B ellingham, W A 8 Pau l F letcher - R e d m ond, O R ; 14 g r a n d c hildren , f iv e great grandchildren.
Deathsof note from around the world:
Frank Zachary, 101: Celebrated magazine editor and art director who pioneered g raphic i n novations a n d creative photography while chronicling postwar America. Died Friday in East Hampton, New York. — From wire reports
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeandwill be run for one day, but specific guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes.They may be submitted by phone,mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the secondday after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication,and by9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
di-
rector of the Field Poll, who confirmed th e d e ath, said that even on his last poll — on
political candidates, the latest
California initiative having to
what Gallup had told him it
the country, whether on taxes, same-sex marriage, immigration or drug legalization. Field, a physically towering figure who could often be found standing in front of blackboard, chalk in hand, (www.semperfifund.org) in a l ieu of f l o w er s w o ul d b e hung in through 50 years of appreciated. Semper Fi upheaval in his businessFund, 825 C o l l ege B l v d ., the challenges of cellphones, Suite 1 0 2 , PMB 609 , Internet polling, push polls, Oceanside, CA 92057. suspect partisan surveysD eschutes M em or i a l and increasing competition
T homas J ames M e r r i ck l eft u s t o j o i n h i s w i f e , Carol, on May 27, 2015. An honored Navy veteran and a ctive member o f t h e L a Pine Moose Lodge 8 Band of Brothers, he loved golf-
Fax: 541-322-7254
Eastern Europe. His mother
in Princeton, New Jersey. He went to San Francisco after World War II with the unlike-
he might have gone wrong; he concluded that he had failed to
October6, 1924- May 31, 2015
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
ents who had immigrated from
operation to determine where
Elizabeth Duncan
Phone: 541-617-7825
Canada, the fifth child of par-
Willie Brown, to name a fewand no shortage of cultural battles that reverberated across
Chapel tfr. Gardens is hono red to s e rve th e f a m i l y . V isit t he web s i t e at www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
h unting w i t h f r i e n ds . A g ifted woodcrafter w it h a quick wi t an d s t r ength of will that is amazing. He is l oved b y h i s ch i l d r e n , Sheri M e r r i ck-Greatwood, T eresa Po l l a r a , K ar e n Merrick and David Merr ick, a s w e l l as se v e n g randchildren a n d s e v e n g reat-grandchildren. S e r vice will be held at the La Pine Legion Hall July 18th at 1 P.M. Donations can be sent to the La Pine Band of Brothers.
By Adam Nagourney New York Times News Service
a hometown pollster named
bachelor's degree in psy-
Thomas James Merrick
Pollster took pulse of anopinionated California
l
with how they think of him to-
~
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tE
CLIFFORD HENRY CHRISTENSEN 1913 - 2015 Clifford Henry Christensen, 101, died June 8, 2015 in his sleep at Prosser, Washington. He lived a long and productive life sincehis birth in 1913 at the family farm near Woodland, Washington. He began hiscareer in electrical power when he helped a lineman install the first electrical serviceon the farm — a light in the milking shed. After finishing high school, he and his brother headedto work on construction of the Grand CouleeDam. Tiring of pouring concrete, they joined a power line transmission crew building the main line south from the dam. He volunteered to serve in the Army during WWII, was stationed in India and supported the China-Burma-India campaign, the "forgotten theater". After the war, he worked for Pacific Power until his retirement in 1978. He was a member of the IBEW for 77 years. He married Elizabeth Anne McDonald in 1948 at Portland, Oregon. They hadtwo children, Charlotte (Allen) Friberg and David (Ruby) Christensen. Cliff was always involved in activities that supported the communitieswhere he lived. He was the volunteer fire chief at Arlington, Oregon and led statewide training for fire crews as buildings were razed in preparation for the pool behind the John Day dam that required relocating thetown. He was a leader in the Boy Scoutsfor many years and was awarded the Silver Beaver Award in recognition of his leadership. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge, the Veteransof Foreign Wars, and churches in Arlington, Springfield, and Bend, Oregon where he retired. After retirement, he helped develop cross country ski trails with Virginia Meissner and led ski groups during the week. Summers found him on extended bicycle trips. Most people he met became friends becauseof his focus on them instead of himself. He relocated to Prosser in 2006 to be close to his daughter and grandchildren. He leaveshis daughter and son, four grandchildren, and 12 great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his wife in 2000 and many friends. There will be a gravesideservice at the Pilot Butte Cemetery ia Bend on June 16 at 10 am. A memorialservicewill be held at Grace Fellowship in Prosseron August I, 2015.Prosser Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. You may leavean online messageof condolence for the family at www.prosserfuneralhome.com s' '"t~-
B6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
i
'
i
TODAY
I
TONIGHT
HIGH 79
+L Jg
LOW
Partly cloudy
ALMANAC
TUESDAY +k Jg
Q
8]
TEMPERATURE Yeslorday Normal Record
EAST: Plentiful sunshine todaywith a seasonably mild after-
Sunshine andpleasant
Sunny
/5
Seasid
Hood
61/50
Rlyer
87/50
Rufus
• ermiston noon. Clear to partly Cannon 75' 7l' 92'in 1933 High lington 87/49 Portland ss/s4 eac am Lostine cloudy tonight. • Meac 60/50 39' 41' 26'in 1976 Low /5 • W co 77/43 Enterpriso dletOn75/ he Oaa • 76/42 Tiaam • • 83/ 9 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Plenty of 66/48 M c i nnvia andy• 89/55 • Heppner Joseph sunshine todaywith 3 Gove n t • Grande 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" upi • • Condon 46 7 45 Record 0.69"in 2006 a warm afternoon. Union Lincoln 81/ Month to date (normal) 0.6 0" (0.37") Clear to partly cloudy 61/49 Sale pray Granite e Year to date(normal) 6.02 " (5.39") tonight. 84/5 • /51 'Baker C Newpo 76/37 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 6" • ~® 48 57/47 • Mitch H 77/41 •
•
WEST:Areasof low clouds this morning Yach Mon. 59/48 near the coast; oth5: 2 2 a.m. erwise, mostly sunny Floren e 6 : 5 0 p.m. across the interior. 62/49 4 : 5 8 a.m. 7: 5 6 p.m. OREGON EXTREMES Last
SUN ANDMOON Today 5:22 a.m. 6:49 p.m. 4:12 a.m. 6:54 p.m. First Fu ll
J un16
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Ju l1
Jul G
ToufgtrPo otttff Withsummerjust a weekaway, the NorthemHemisphere is seeingthe longest days of theyear.Today,the sunrises earliest at 5:21a.m.,PDT andsetsat9:01D.m.,PDT.
High: G9' at Medford Low: 33' at Redmond
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
8
~ 8
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POLLEN COUNT G rasses
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Wee d s F
As of 7 a.m.yesterday
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71
5
FIRE INDEX Bend/Sunriver ~ Redmond/Madras ~ Sisters ~M Prineville ~M Lo Pine/Gilchrist ~
Mod~erate ~ M od~erate ~ o d~erate ~ o d~erate ~ Mod~erate ~
Source: USDA Forest Service
•
9/40
Roseburg
Valee 85/52
82/46
72/
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82/44
81/46
• Burns Jun tion • 85/48
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Bro ings
Jordan V Hey
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86/5
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85/47
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•
85/54
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•
tario 8 51
Fort Rock Riley 82/45 Cresce t • St/44 82/46 79/45 • Chr i stmas alley Beaver Silver 81/44 Frenchglen Marsh Lake 82/49
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86/48
Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday Yesterday Today Monday City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoria 64/53/0.00 67/50/c 64/52/pc L a Grande 73 / 52/0.00 78/45/s 83/48/s Portland 77/5 1/0.0085/56/s 82/53/pc Baker City 74/38/0.00 77/41/s 82/46/s La Pine 77/34/0.00 79/44/s 79/45/s Prineville 81/ 4 1/0.0081/45/s 79/47/s Bruokings 88/68/0.00 67/51/s 65/51/pc Medford 8 9 /53/0.00 90/55/s 88/54/sRedmond 78/ 33/0.0081/43/s 84/45/s Bums 82/34/0.00 82/45/s 85/46/s Ne wport 59/4 8 /0.00 57/47/c 56/47/pc Roseburg 82 / 53/0.00 85/54/s 81/53/pc Eugene 78/41/0.00 83/47/s 80/48/pc N o rth Bend 6 1 / 48/0.00 61/50/c 59/50/pc Salem 79/46/0.00 84/51/s 83/49/pc Klamath Falls 83/45/0.00 85/47/s 82/45/s On t ario 86/56/0.00 86/51/s 92/60/s Sisters 74/34/0.00 82/43/s 84/45/s Lakeview 82/54/0.00 84/46/s 82/44/s Pe ndleton 79/ 4 5/0.00 83/49/s 87/55/s The Dages 8 3 / 51/0.00 89/55/s 91/60/pc WeatheriW):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-shuwers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snuw flurries, sn-snuw i-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asuf 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ t eo ~ 08
~ 08
~ t es
Ca p acity NATIONAL 73% EXTREMES 67Vo YESTERDAY(for the 66yo 46 contiguousstates)
134942 C rescent Lake 7 4 5 46 Ochoco Reservoir 26926 65% Prinevige 97003 65% River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./aec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 311 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1620 Deschutes R.below Bend 147 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2130 Little Deschutes near LaPine 66 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 27 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 14 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 231
• Pa lina
• Re d e rothers 81 47 44 Su juere 79/44 e 79 Ham ton Co e • l.a Plne Grove Oakridge
Source: OregonAllergyAssociates 541-683-1577
WATER REPORT
8
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81/45
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83/47
61/50
UV INDEX TODAY 6 I~
• Eugene
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67/51
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Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham
Charleston, SC osn4rri Charlotte 94/72/0.00 Chattanooga 91no/0.00 Cheyenne 81/52/0.00 Chicago 86/56/0.09 Cincinnati 89/68/0.10 Cleveland 78/60/0.95 ColoradoSpdings 80/52/0.08 Columbia, MO 84/68/1.71 Columbia, SC 94/73/0.00 Columbus, GA 91/67/0.46 Columbus,OH 90/69/0.16 Concord, NH 83/64/0.21 Corpus Christi 92n7/0.04 Dallas 89n8/0.01 Dayton 91no/0.04 Denver 85/54/0.00 Des Moines 77/65/0.07 Detroit 71/58/0.46 Duluth 69/52/0.00 El Paso 99/68/0.00 Fairbanks 67/39/0.00 Fargo 82/60/0.00 Flagstaff 75/48/0.02 Grand Rapids 75/57/Tr Green Bay 64/56/0.01 Greensboro 93n3/0.00 Harrisburg 82/69/0.14 Harfford, CT 85/69/0.08 Helena 79/47/0.00 Honolulu 86n2/0.00 Houston 86n5/0.29 Huntsville 92/71/0.00 Indianapolis 88/71/0.00 Jackson, MS 91n1/0.65 Jacksonville 93n1/0.00
osns/s 97ns/s 96/71/s 98/72/s
94nt/s 94n2/s
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105/80/0.00 106/83/s 85/69/0.08 81/69/1 85/59/0.07 75/53/s 85/67/0.00 83/57/pc
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horse trailer was sobeat up, she
was surprised her mare's feet didn't fall through the bottom. On the way there, the car full of
4 Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow
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kids broke down. "There I was in my white outfit standing on the side of the
road," Kaech said. No one was stopping to pick up the mom and bunch of children. Finally a driver towing a boat pulled over and told them to climb in.
'
So Kaech rode to her rodeo parade in the back of a boat. She laughed recalling the details, realizing both her and Sapphire had a bit of a traumatic
vug-:.
experience making it there that
P~f; W
Tess Freeman/The Bulletin
day. Still though, she got there Georgie Elliott Surplus, the1959 Sisters Rodeo princess, left, and in time, white outfit unharmed, ready to ride and wave to the
cmwd. Kaech doesn't rodeo any-
Janell Coomler Powell, the1959 Sisters Rodeo queen.
for Sisters' 75th year. Her main tool to start finding and contime, but she still enjoys attend- queen, Helen Filey O'Brian, tactingpeople? "Facebook," she said. She ingthem. 88, of Bend, was also happy to "I'm down to a slow donkey," be back at the rodeo. Her con- began searching in August she said. nection to Bend, and to Central 2014. Saturday, her husband Patty Hammack Hall-Toll, Oregon, goes way back. and 18-month-old daughter rodeo princess in 1963, said she Her son, Steve Cornelius, joined her for the fun. Fincame from a rodeo family, and was there supporting her for gers crossed, Anstett said, her passed rodeo down to her sons the big day. Cornelius ex- daughter will continue the roas well. plained his mom grew up in deo tradition. Antstett loves the "I just loved rodeo all my the Old Mill longbefore it was a culture and was excited to get life," said Hall-Toll, 67. She lives shopping district. O'Brian's dad so many past rodeo royalty to in Redmond now but still feels was the barn foreman at the return. Out of the 121 queens the connection to Sisters living Old Mill for Brooks-Scanlon and courts, Anstett located and on Sisters Highway (U.S. High- Lumber Co., where he worked invited 56 women; 33 made it to way 126). Her best friend, Suzie for 25years.O'Brian had to the 75th parade to join Mikaela Lowery Tewalt, the 1963 Sisters borrow a bay horse when her Koellermeier, the 2015 Sisters Rodeo queen, lives down the big day came for the parade in Rodeo queen, in the festivities. road. The women, who attend- 1945. Her horse was with foal. Another one of the newest "It was 70 years ago!" O'Bri- queens, Whitney Richey, from ed first through 12th grade together, remained close through an said, raising her arms in 2013, traveled one of the fartheyears. celebration. thest distances to make it back After marrying a rodeo man, Fast forward more than 50 to Sisters. Richey, 25, now lives Hall-Toll became a rodeo clown years, and Amorita Patterson in Hermiston, so it took her and barrel lady from the late Anstett was the one chosen about a four-hour drive. To her, '60s to early '70s. To teach her to be queen, in 1998. Anstett, it was worth it to feel connected how to withstand a bull hitting 35, grew up in Prineville and to the other women. "We all share something," her in the barrel, at home her Madras and now lives in Redhusband would hit the barrel mond. She still barrel races she said, then stopped to reslowly with a pickup. Hall-Toll but didn't compete in the Sis- mark on how old she'd be at the said she learned how to tense ters Rodeo events. She helps 100th anniversary of the Sisup her neck to get ready for with that rodeo and was the ters Rodeo."I'llbe 50!" the blow. Her clown name was one who planned the reunion —Reporter: 541-383-0325, "Bloomin' Idiot" because she of so many past rodeo queens frfisicaro®bendbulfetlrLcom more, attd hasn't for a long
wore a big flower on her hat.
The 1945 Sisters Rodeo
' .
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to thegrounds, and her mom
drove Kaech, her siblings and their friends. Kaech said the old
76/58/c
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108/87/0.00 110/84/s 110/84/s 76/57/0.10 75/58/1 75/58/1 81/55/0.00 77/57/pc 71/64/sh 79/50/0.00 81/64/pc 80/60/1 Nairobi 73/55/0.00 76/58/pc 76/57/pc Nassau 88/81/0.01 87n6/sh 88/76/sh New Delhi 103/91/0.26 101/82/pc 100/82/pc Osaka 83/66/0.02 78/64/r 84/67/c Oslo 66/46/0.03 56/45/sh 57/46/pc Ottawa 79/54/0.00 75/56/pc 74/61/sh Paris 77/59/0.00 79/59/pc 75/54/pc Rio de Janeiro 81/70/0.03 86f/0/s 77/67/sh Rome 86/68/0.02 79/64/pc 78/62/pc Santiago 55/34/0.00 57/28/s 64/30/s Sao Paulo 81/61/0.00 79/59/s 62/55/sh Sapporo 71/60/0.09 74/65/pc 78/63/pc Seoul 82/63/0.28 79/64/t 82/65/pc Shanghai 87/76/0.01 82n3/r 83/71/c Singapore 86/78/0.14 86/79/t 87no/t Stockholm 73/57/0.02 65/45/c 60/45/pc Sydney 65/54/0.00 65/53/pc 65/57/r Taipei 91/79/0.08 90/80/1 93/81/1 Tel Aviv 82/68/0.00 83/70/s 85/71/s Tokyo 81/70/0.37 75/68/r 82/68/pc Toronto 73/59/0.00 68/62/1 79/61/1 Vancouver 66/52/0.00 72/54/pc 73/53/pc vienna 86/63/0.09 88/66/1 76/57/1 Warsaw 84/63/0.00 81/59/1 72/49/pc
91no/0.00 87/69/pc ssn2/s
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65/45/0.00 79/51/s 79/66/0.08 80/67/1 72/57/0.01 79/66/1 104/81/0.00 105/81/s
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Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest BuenosAires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hl/Lo/W Hl/Lo/W
City
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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
L.
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>
/
Girin chef Brandon Kirksey
The Dahlia Lounge, opened
presents a "ssam" — aKo-
in 1989, was the first Seattle restaurant owned by famed lo-
rean-style lettuce wrap with
grilled pork belly, apples and gochugaru sauce —during an evening happy hour. The upscale steakhouse is located adjacent to the north entrance
calchefTom Douglas.Douglas now has18 restaurants in the greater Seattle area, including his newest, the Asian-themed Tanakasan, which opened in 2013.
of Seattle's CenturyLink Field.
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin
Famed for its Caribbean roast pork sandwiches slathered in a "secret" sauce, Paseo almost disappeared from the Seattle dining scene last November. It survived when a new owner purchased the tin-shed cafe in an auction sale, vowing to keep
the menu as before.
A cook arrives for work at Altura, an elegant Capitol Hill restaurant where dining can
A photo of Rock Creek, chef-owner Eric Donnelly's favorite Montana trout-fishing
be an experience. Executive
IN THE
chef NathanLockwood offers a high-priced tasting menu of 10 to 15 courses, paired with
wines selected by a teamof sommeliers.
stream, dominates decor in his two-story urban "fishing lodge." Seafood dominates the
menu,from barbecued octopus to a fine selection of oysters by the shooter or the half shell.
• Seattle's under-the-radar culinary scene hasplentyto offer to discerning diners By John Gottberg Anderson For the Bulletin
SEATTLEf Portland seems to have eclipsed Seattle as the hub of creative fine
NORTHWESTTRAVEL
locations wit h
Next week: Going "Goonie" in Astoria
growth. "The economy is looking up these days," Sundstrom told me just last week at his classy new restaurant,
p l an s f o r f u r t h er
dining in the Pacific Northwest, rants.com) has moved even more Lark, near Seattle University. "We've it may be that the region's largest rapidly. His first foray into the local got to strike while the iron is hot." metropolitan city is only flying under food scene came with Union (since Canlis sees no need for major the radar. closed) in 2006, but he's been busy change. A Seattle institution since Consider that self-taught celebrity
with Anchovies & Olives, How to
1950, it overlooks Lake Union and the
chefs such as Tom Douglas and Ethan Cook a Wolf,Staple & Fancy MerStowell have built culinary empires cantile and Tavolata, among others.
Cascade Range from the south end of
that continue to grow with each pass-
His 11th restaurant, the Goldfinch
Tavern, was scheduled to open this
warehouse. The restaurant incorporates the Bitter/Raw
ingyear. Douglas opened th e D a h lia Lounge in 1989; his website (www. tomdouglas.com) now lists 18 Seattle restaurants, including his newest,
of thegrandsons ofitsfounder,Peter Canlis, it continues to receive nation-
seafood bar on asecond-story
Tanakasan, which opened in 2013.
John Sundstrom, owner and executive chef of favorite Capitol Hill restaurant Lark, displays his cookbook — "Lark: Cooking Against the Grain" — at his
new restaurant in a renovated
Stowell (www.ethanstowellretau-
loft.
week at th e Four Seasons Hotel Seattle.
the Fremont Bridge. Still in the hands al acclaim.
Douglas, Stowell, Rautureau and Other exceptional regional chefs, Sundstrom are all past winners of the including Thierry Rautureau and James Beard Award as the best chef John Sundstrom, have opened new in the Pacific Northwest. restaurants or expanded into new SeeSeattle/C4
Chef Thierry Rautureau, known in Seattle as "The Chef in the Hat" during a 25-year tenure at Rover's in Madison Park,
opened Loulay as adowntown Seattle bistro last year. Serving three meals a day, it is named for his hometown of St.-Hilaire-
de-Loulay, France.
Leaving the ci to build his ownNeverland in the trees By Steven Kurutz New Yorh Times News Service
WASHOUGAL, Wash.-
People talk about chucking their jobs. They say they will leave behind the madness of the city and hit the road. A few drinks and they're telling you about the epic hiking trip in the Sierra Nevada they'll take or how magical the surf is in Baja California Sur, Mexico. But nobody ever does it. No-
body. Except for one guy. His name is Foster Huntington, and he used to work
in New York. He had a bright future in the fashion industry.
erty, or else in tents or in their
Taylors, the same clothes he would wear for the next two
trucks. When they weren't
days.
sawing and nailing boards, they loaded up bows and shot
Since last fall, Huntington,
27, has lived among a stand of Douglas firs on a grassy hill-
arrows; they skateboarded;
they swam and fished in the Columbia River; they got
top in southwest Washington
state. The spot is God-kissed: wide, flat-ish land overlooking
stoned and raced motorbikes.
One night Huntington slaughtered a goat and gave a big barbecue for the crew. "I think of it as abig-boys' camp," said Tucker Gorman, a buddy of Huntington's from their time together at Colby College. Gorman is a builder
a verdant farm valley. Just
over a ridge to the south is the Columbia River Gorge. And at night, from up in the treehouse, you can see the faint glow of Portland 20 miles to the west.
strisgr.,
There are actually two treehouses: what Huntington calls
and the one who designed the
structures with the help of
the Studio, a red cedar cabin
Kyle Johnson / New York Times
do you know where he lives
sheltered within three trees, 20 feet above the ground, so
now? In a treehouse.
that it seems to float; and the
With help from his friends, Foster Huntington built treehouses on property his family owns near the Columbia River Gorge, in Washougal, Washington. Huntington, 27, was an up-and-comer in the New York fashion industry, but since last fall he has lived among the stand of Douglas firs on a grassy hilltop.
But then he cut the cord. And
"I could've bought a house," Huntington said one recent afternoon. He stood at the
base of a massivefirtree,his face hidden behind a scruffy beard. "But this is so much better. For me, it's realizing a
childhood dream." He wore a black T-shirt,
dirt-stained jeans and Chuck
Octagon, shaped like its name says, which clings, 35 feet in the sky, to the trunk of a lone fir tree.
Two bridges — one a swaying rope bridge, like something out of the Ewok
a skate bowl.
A'big-boys'camp'
Village — connect the midair structures. Down below there
Huntington built the tree-
houses over several months
is a sinuous wave of concrete:
last year with the help of
what he called a"bronado" of friends.He hired contractors to build the skate bowl at the
same time. The treehouse crew slept in a bunkhouse on the prop-
Michael Garnier, a treehouse expert. "It's very much like
For a time he was paid to
be a social media consultant for the outdoor apparel brand Patagonia, and he has collaborated with German financial services company Allianz and computer-maker
HP, starring in online ads that played up his off-the-grid lifestyle. He also works as a freelance photographer and publishes A Restless Transplant,
an adventure travel blog he began in 2008, while still a student at Colby.
He is an outdoorsman entrepreneur who has invented his own career. The treehous-
Neverland up there," Gorman
es serve as his home and as an alluring backdrop for adver-
sard.
tisements for himself.
Huntington gave the place a name: the Cinder Cone, an
and videos of the Cinder Cone
allusion to its setting on an old volcano site.
to his 965,000 Instagram followers, and he is working on a
But the Cinder Cone is not
Huntington beams photos
book about the project — part
a 24/7 fun park. Huntington
how-to guide, part lavishly il-
may have left New York City behind, but he didn't forsake
lustrated art tome — which he plans to publish and market through his site.
ambition or the fashion
world.
SeeTreehouse/C7
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
M II ESTONr ~
s+ L7
Fo/ms f o r s ngogsms/ttw,eddinga,nniversary//rbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatbsndbuttsti/tcom/mitsstsnss F.o/msandphotos must b e submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestones®bendbulletin.com, 541-633-2117.
ANNIVERSARIES
MARRIAGES
ENGAGEMENTS
®
Dick and Shirley (Lindley) Huff
Huff
NicoleFischer and Joshua Peckham
Fischer — Peckham
ert Clevenger, of Prineville. They have two sons, Shawn
Dick and Shirley (Lindley) Huff, of Redmond, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary July 3. The couple were married July 3, 1965, in Bakeoven, near Maupin, at the home of
Mrs. Huff's parents, Wendell and Anna Lindley. The ceremony was officiated by Mr. Huff's uncle, Rev. Rob-
(and Gena) and Josh, all o f R edmond; an d tw o grandchildren. Mr. Huff
Nicole Fischer and Joshua
Peckham,both ofBend, plan to marry Aug. 8 in Bend.
w a s a d i s t rict
manager for Abby's Pizza and he retired in 1990. Mrs. Huff owned Clothes Encoun-
ters, a women's clothing store. She retired in 2007.
Science University, where she majored in radiation therapy. She is a radiation therapist at St. Charles Cancer Center.
T he future bride is t h e
The future groom is the
daughter of James and Andrea Fischer, of Salem. She is a 2007 graduate of Sprague High School and a 2012 graduate of Oregon Health
son of Troy and Patty Peckham, of Bend. He is a 2009 graduate of Mountain View
High School. He is a self-employed metal fabricator.
They have lived in Redmond for 50 years. Shari Abell and William Ballard
Abell — Ballard
The bride is the property manager at Reserves at Pi-
Shari Abell and William lot Butte. The groom works Ballard, both of Bend, were as an executive chef for married June 4 at A L i ttle
American Queen Steamboat
White Wedding Chapel in company. Las Vegas. The couple honThe couple will settle in eymooned in Las Vegas. Bend.
BIRTHDAYS Aubrey Bolin and Joshua O'Brien
Bolin — O'Brien s
and works as a certified medical assistant at Bend
Aubrey Bolin and Joshua Memorial Clinic. O'Brien, both of Bend, plan The future groom is the
6
to marry Jan. 27, 2016, at Olowalu Plantation House in Maui, Hawaii. A reception
son of Jim and Pat O'Brien,
of Bend. He is a 1995 graduate of Redmond High School
will follow. and is o w ner o f O ' B rien The future bride is the Events. daughter of Megan Phillips, They will honeymoon in of Bend. She is a 2006 gradu- Hawaii. The couple will setate of Redmond High School tle in Bend.
Home Uisitins Doctor Tired of wasting time sittingin your doctor's waiting room only to have a fewminutes of their time to answer yourquestions?
Ruth (Reichert) and Theodore Thoren Howard Heimbuch
Thoren D r. Theodore an d
cian for Bay Clinic in Coos Ruth
(Reichert) Thoren, of Bend, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary with a trip to Black Butte Ranch with
their children and grandchildren and a monthlong trip to
France and Greece. The couple were married
Bay. He retired in 2003. He is a member of Theta Xi and
enjoys golfing, hiking, biking, reading and spending time with his family. Mrs. Thoren was a middle school English and Social Studies teacher for the North Bend School District. She retired in 2002. She is a member of Delta Gamma
and PEO, and enjoys golfing, Springs, Illinois. They have hiking, biking, singing in a two children, Ted (and Kim), praise band, reading, travelof Tigard, and Tim (and Jason ing and spending time with Rice), of Springfield; and two her grandchildren. grandchildren. They have lived in Central Dr. Thoren was a pediatri- Oregon for 11 years. June 12, 1965, in W estern
Heimbuch H oward H e imbuch,
tor of Bethany Foursquare
Had enoughof medical clinics treating youlike a number, indifferent andimpersonal?
Church in Bend (now Westside Church) for many years
We are thealternatiue!
and retired in 1980. He was
We wlll see you on tlme, In YOUR home, oNce or assisted llvlng facllity. No walting wlth sick people in a waiting room and no drlvlng through bad weather to see your doctor.
in 1950 and was the pasof
Bend, will celebrate his 90th birthday with a party from 2-4 p.m. on June 20 at the Heimbuchhome inBend. Mr. Heimbuch was born June 21, 1925, in Lincoln,
also a part-time bus driver for the Bend-La Pine School District for 20 years. He en-
joyed pastoring for several churches and loved working
Nebraska. He married his wife, Velma, in 1948. They with children while he was have two children; and five a bus driver. He enjoys visgrandchildren. iting people in the hospital,
Doctor Vlsser and his nurse wlll spend up to an hour wlth you on your visit. Plenty of tlme to ask questions or address any concerns. We can see you for same day, or guaranteed next day vlslts during our standard work week, and strive to keep you out of
Mr. Heimbuch served as a
fishing with his brother and
emergency room.
medic during World War II. He graduated from North-
pulling weeds. He has lived in Oregon for 51 years.
Our misslon Is to SERVEour patlents whlle providing excellence ln primary medlcai care.
west Bible College in Seattle
pils pessonalmedlcalsewce cos8 only 5IA7/momry. Se also acceptand blllmosf Ssurancasfornfskr,Iyln'rae ibe &rpersonzlsenfceEsnorbikhble to /nsurtlyce. See our ppebskc for dcCdb;
Is online stalking the norm?
I ntey rit y
bendbulletin.com By Erika Ettin
to put it all in the back of your
Tribune News Service
mllld.
In some ways, three years seems like no time, and in oth-
er ways, it seems like a lifetime ago. Three years ago, I wrote an article called "To Google or Not to Google? That is the Question." The article discussed how much "research" to do before meeting someone from an online dating site in person. At the time, I said this: "When it comes down to it, it's hard to resist the urge to
Google or Facebook your date once you have his or her full name staring you in the face, yelling, 'Search me! Search me!' I'm not going to tell you that you can't look (who wouldn't?). But no matter what you find, try your hardest not to create a firm impression of
this person in your mind before you meet. Unless you find out that he or she is a criminal
(which actually happened to one of my clients who discovered that her date was wanted
for securities fraud!), just go on the date, have fun and try
fore I mentioned that I did that.
Today, I kind of expect it. I stand by this statement. People, understandably, see In three years, nothing has your online footprint as a way changed. I then went on to say to verify that you're real. Unthis: fortunately, they don't just stop "If you decide to look up there, which is where things your date, feel free not to men- get hairy. It's onethingto check tion you did so unless you're my LinkedIn account to make sure he or she won't put you sure I am, in fact, a business in the 'creep' category be- owner. It's another to look at all cause of it. (And for those un- of my Facebook pictures and der 25, it's probably assumed comment on my trip to Prague that you looked!) Stalking = last year. I can't tell anyone not to do OK. Talking about stalking = creepy. Know the difference." their due diligence — though H ere's where a l o t h a s I do give the advice not to exchanged in three years. I change last names over an can't remember the last time I online dating site if you don't showed up to meet a new per- want to. I can tell you, though, son, date or otherwise, and the just as I did in the article that person didn't already know feels like it was written just something about me. Maybe it yesterday, to draw your own was the fact that I own a busi- conclusions about someone ness, maybe that I have a dog, separate and apart from what or maybe that I play in a week- you find online. Degrees, ly mahjong game. you can find photos and jobs you can find anything online! Three years online. Character, values and ago,Im ight have been offend- essence, you can only discover ed if someone asked me a ques- for yourself in person. tion about how I enjoyed going — Erika Ettinis the founder to business school at night beof A Little Nudge.
TheBulletin iw ' tt
Wellness
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& uee
CtyllVpnekenslveIt/Mmcaa pmvldtbdln Ae convcekace ofyyurINymeoroNce.
541 420 9482
InteOjutegyjtyweiiuess'net
The Bulletin MI LESTONES
GUIDELINE If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey GlenGolf Club Bad Boys Barbecue Bend Park 6b Recreation District Bend Wedding S. Formal Cordially Invited Bridal Deschutes County Fair S. Expo Center Faith HoPe 6b Charity Vineyard Illuminate YourNight
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SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
ow o e
e mos ou o e na iona ar s
By Rachel Lee Harris
sin, the park's newest land
New Yorh Times News Service
acquisition.
Last year there were a record number of visitors to the
California
National Park Service's more
Tioga R o ad ,
now on finding gaps in our collective history and culture. Not to take anything away from the classics, but the parks are more than wilderness."
q$' t, Q<P;PpP)~
Y o semite's
than 400 parks, monuments, main corridor, has undergone battlefields, seashores and major repairs to fix paveother sites. Those numbers ment and signs, add parking areexpected to increase asthe and improve bathrooms. In agency approaches its centen- March, the park reintroduced nial on Aug. 25, 2016. a herd of endangered Sierra The wealth of visitors is Nevada bighorn sheep to Cagreat but spreading it around thedral Range. can be a c h allenge, said Kathy Kupper, a spokeswom- Colorado an for the park service in W etherill M e sa , k n o w n Washington. as the quieter side of Mesa "The iconic parks are al- V erde National P ark , w i l l ways jammed, but there is in- have an extended season credible wildlife in Theodore this year (through mid-OcRoosevelt, too," she said, re- tober), giving cyclists ample ferring to the national park in time to enjoy new access to North Dakota. "It's just not on the park's 6-mile Long House people's radar." Loop as well as backcounThe same is true for t he try routes on the park's most agency's historic and cultural popular hike. sites, she said. "There's a lot of focus right
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Andrew Kearns/ National Park Service via The New YorkTimes
Petrified Forest National Park in northeastern Arizona.
Barack Obama gave Chica- Maine
South Dakota
A cadia National Park i s
to begin managing a new campground on Maine's Sc-
the birthplace of the first Af-
fans of "Jurassic World" this summer. The 40-acre grounds north of Moab will focus on the Historic Site sounds more like tracksof area dinosaursfrom The new visitor center at the Minuteman Missile National
h oodic Peninsula this f a l l . The site will offer almost 100 RV and tent sites, as well as
a museum than an information desk. Interactive exhibits
new hiking and biking trails connecting to Gouldsboro Village and existing park
tercontinental ballistic missile
and films there cover the in-
la's tip. Look to book a spot beginning in September.
system and its role in the Cold War. New programming will begin at the facility in a leadup to the grand opening on Sept. 26.
New Hampshire
Tennessee
trails leading to the peninsu-
the early Jurassic through the
early Cretaceous periods.
Virginia Shenandoah National Park
is expanding its programming for children. In addition to re-
designing its Junior Ranger program, the park is to designate Blackrock Trail an offi-
cial Kids in Parks Track Trail.
Once home to the sculptor
Chimney Tops, the most
has one of the oldest artist-in-residence programs in the system and a significant body of work from which to choose pieces for its retrospective exhibition opening in September.
sure its long-term sustainability and safety.
Augustus Sai n t -Gaudens, heavily trod t r ail i n G r e at Wyoming S aint-Gaudens Nati o n a l Smoky Mountains National Three of five lodges planned H istoric Site, New H a m p - Park, has reopened after ma- for Yellowstone's Canyon shire's only national park, jor maintenance to help en- Lodge and Cabins complex
should be ready in August. The $70 million project was set in motion to replace more
Utah Moab Giants, a new dino-
than 300 outdated cabins and to increase sustainability
saur exploration park, should practices at the park's largest open just in time to feed on the accommodations.
« Il«««rnes Remember F a t h e r ' S D a y !
DECOR AND FUNCTIONAL a DECORATIVE METAL ACCESSORIES INCLUDES METAL CONTAINERS IN OUR FLORAL a CRAFT DEPARTMENTS OOES NOT INCLUDE FURNITURE
move beyondtents person a night, including room, board, equipment and guides.) The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs plans to open a camp
won't go anywhere without a
private room and Wi-Fi," he
ryall Creek this month. People have been fly-fishing Colora-
SBld.
do's streams for a long time,
about 70 miles north along Tar-
New camps are catering to a said Allison Scott, Broadmoor's new breed of anglers: families director of communications, and couples, those who might "but not the way we're doing it."
camp is its five miles of property along private waters, allowing for creek-to-table dining, with meals prepared by Broadof the Middle Limay with an moor chefs. Horseback riding on-property put-in a few miles and hiking also willbe offered. from a contemporary lodge, (Rates have yet to be detergiving anglers quick and easy mined but will likely start at access to tail waters teeming around$600 to $800a nightfor with brown and rainbow trout. double occupancy)
Seasonal Ilsms
• Statuary • Garden Planters • Gazing Balls • Garden Wall Decor a Nore
""-" ' 50'OFF DOESHorlNt1tlDE SEASONALllFPAIITMENT
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But the real catch of this
be in the water all day, he said. The Limay River Lodge in Patagonia, Argentina, is the first lodge to open on the banks
• All Wicker, Decorative Boxes 8 Storage
• Trays, Coasters 8 Place Mats • Knobs, Drawer Pulls 8™andles Decor Sale • Decorative Nemo Soards, • Glass INcLUDEs GlAss DEPARTMENT, FLQRAL GlAssVAsss a Chalkboards & Corkboards CRAFT GLASS CONTAINERS
to rooms with private baths. Historically a sport for bareThe owner, Patagonia Outbones tent camping, fly-fishing fitters, provides traditional Aris upping its game, said Mike gentine cuisine prepared by Fitzgerald, the president of the company's chef. (Packages
izes in fly-fishing trips and other excursi ons forthe outdoorsy type. "There are some serious fishermen with resources who
DOES NOT INCLUDE SEASONALDEPARTNIENT
CHOOSE FROM WOOD WALL DECOR a FINISHED DECORATIVE WOOD ACCESSORIES DOESNor INCLUDE FURNITURE OR UNFINISHED CRAFT WOOD
New York Times News Service
WALL & TABLE
• Framed Art & Canvas Art
• Wood Decor Sale
In the evening, they can return
want a fishing focus but won't
• Men's Metal, Wood, Resin & Ceramic Decor
HomeAccents
Campsfor fishing
from Frontiers start at $850 a
,
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GPS-enabled mobile app is planned industrial commuin the final stages of develop- nity in the United States and
Frontiers Travel, which special-
'
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go its first national park site when he designated the PullDistrict of Columbia man Historic District a n aT he R oc k C r ee k P a r k tional monument. The f i rst
ment, according to the Rock
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k
Creek Conservancy, and is rican-American labor union, Park visitors are likely to likely to be ready in time to as- the remaining Pullman Palace see a nominal increase in en- sist with the park's 125th anni- Car Company buildings are "an evocative testament to the try fees, the upside of which is versary in September. enhanced programming and evolution of American industry," the presidential proclavisitors' centers, lodging ex- Hawaii pansion and trail restoration, Hawaii Volcanoes National mation stated. especially for bike use. Park is helping campers take Below are highlights by a load off at its Namakanipaio Louisiana state. campground with a tent and The New Orleans Jazz Nasupply rental option. Hawaii tional Historical Park is now Arizona Volcanoes Lodge Company offering weekly Jazz Pilates Petrified F o rest N a t ion- will set up and break down a classes taught by Stephanie al Park i s n o w m apping campsite for two, including a Jordan, a jazz vocalist and Piself-guided hikes to its more tent, a mattress, linens, a cool- lates instructor who integrates off-the-beaten-path d e s t i- er, a lantern and chairs. the traditional practice with nations leading to p etrodance and the music of John Coltrane, Kidd Jordan and glyphs, Triassic-era conifers Illinois or fossil beds in the Red BaIn F e b ruary, P r e sident others.
By Rachel Lee Harris
C3
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* DISCOUNTS PROYIDED EYERY DAY;MARKED PRICES REFLECT COMPARABLE PRICES OFFERED BY OTHER SELLERS FOR SIMIEAR PRODUCTS.
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PRICES GOOD IN STORES MONDAY,tUNE Ir —SATURDAY,tUNE 10, 101S PRICES GOODONUNESUNDAY,tUNE 14 SATVRDAv,tUNE2A20rs SOME ADVEILTsKl ITEMSNor AVAllABlf ONUNE SALES SUBJECT To SUPPLY IN STOCIC SELECTION AND QUANTITIES VARY BY STORE. Ao DOES NOT APPLY To PRE-REDUCEo ITEMS
STORE HOURS: 9 A.M. - 8 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY
• 5ENP: North Highway 97 in the 5end Kiver I romenade (541) 582-7559
®) ppi~ 0 Offer goodfor one'nem atregular priceonly. Limitonecouponpercustomerperday.Mustpresentcouponattimeofpurchase. Offer isnot valid withany otherroupos dismunt orpreviouspurchase. ExcludnHeidiswapp Minc roilApplicatorcRlcUl'produtanmHolrz'vagatend Machine, silhouettecAMEQ'Machine, candy8 snack producv,gums mina helium tanks, giftcardg customorders eeaal orders,labor rentalsandclassfeesAsingle <utof fabric orrnm 'bythe yard'sqUalone s item.Qnline fabric s trim discount is limited to 10yards, singlecut. cashval vloc.
S HOP A N Y T I M E @ H O BBY L O B B Y . C O M
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
uiet ote room
Fin in By SlephanieRosenbloom
noise reduction, according to
New York TimesNews Service
a spokeswoman for the brand. If all else fails, there are
Is there such a thing as a quiet hotel room anymore?
wI
At a time when hotels are
some effective white n oise
~l
ii ~'
court millennials, it seems as
ss i ss '-
if sleeping is the last reason to check in.
l,
gadgets on the market I like Sound Oasis Sleep Therapy Pillow S peakers
oo
turning their lobbies into bars and game rooms to
JOUf-lf,', 'itl
with volume control, thin ste-
reo speakers that you place under your pillow to envelop your head with music or white noise from your digital device (from about $22 online), though when it comes to blocking noise for me,
And it's not as if hotels
didn't already provide nighttime soundtracks: the slamming of hallway doors, the thump of music in the ballroom, the din of children or
John Gottherg Anderson/For The Bulletin
Two of Fremont's finest restaurants, Joule and The Whale Wins,
share a converted warehousewith a snow-sports shop. Joule offers a unique vision of contemporary American andKoreancuisine;
nothing can beat the Tranquil
Moments Bedside Speaker & Sleep Sounds device from Brookstone ($99.99). It's got a dozen sound programs (including "ocean surf" and "white rain") and r efined volume control that you can bump up bit by bit until you've
a television in the next room.
"It's one of the most reported problems," said Rick
The Whale Wins features dishes prepared in a wood-burning oven.
Garlick, head of the travel
From previous page • Sitka & Spruce:Located at
coconut, cashews and nori seaweed, and Italian anchovy
and hospitality practice at
the back of the Melrose Mar-
sauce adds a new dimension in
ket — a foodies' paradise with a sandwich counter, a shell-
a steak sauce. Abonus: Service is always superb.
fish bar, butcher, cheesemak-
Details: The restaurant at
to moderate. More information
search company. Noise is tllustration by Graham Roumieu/ New YorkTimes News Service also one of the most daunting challenges. make things more transpar- any number of Crowne PlaA hotel that's too quiet or ent by testing hotel rooms za Hotels in places as varied too empty is a turnoff, Gar- and offering its own sound as Los Angeles, Toronto and lick said. And while it may insulation services to those Helsinki, where over the last end up receiving high guest that are not up to snuff. They two years the brand has introsatisfaction scores, he said it don't promise absolute si- duced designated quiet zone was likely to lose out on rev- lence, but r ather, classify floors, part of its Sleep Advanenue. Rather than risk such rooms into one of three si- tage program. prospects, many brands are lence tiers — Category III The program includes an choosing to appeal to trav- (in which the maximum aromatherapy kit, plush linelers and locals who want allowed sound level is 54 ens, and a special quiet zone high-energy scenes l i ke decibels, or the approxi- of the hotel where there are no those at the W hotels in New mate volume of a refrigera- housekeeping or engineering York where, as Garlick put it, tor hum); Category II (up to activities Sundays through "You don't go there to sleep." 48 decibels); and Category I Thursdays from 9 p.m. to 10 And so the quest for a si- (up to 43 decibels) — based a.m. unless requested by a lent night has proved elusive. on measurements of differ- guest. Wake-up callsareguarSome companiesare try- ent types of sound in and anteed, meaning that if you're ing to change that. This year, around the room. not awakened within 5 minKnowledge Center Sound In March, L ucas K eizutes of your requested time, Insulation, a network of er, the chief executive of your hotel stay is free. acoustics and sound insula- Knowledge Center Sound Sleep Advantage, which tion specialists based in the Insulation, announced that varies by country, is available Netherlands, began bestow- t he Doubletree Hilton i n at Crowne Plaza Hotels & Reing a "Quiet Room" label to Amsterdam had acquired a sorts in North America, Mexihotels to alert travelers that Quiet Room label, followed co, Latin America and Europe, one or more rooms will meet by the Hilton Paris Orly Air- and in some places in the Asia
is available at wwwpaseoseat-
certain standards.
er, wine bar and flower and produce shop — is this hidden treat. The ever-changing menu focuseson small platesofseasonal ingredients for diners with
J.D. Power, the market re-
3621 Stone Way N. is open for dinner Tuesday-Saturday. Prices are moderate. More infor-
mation can be found at www. manolinseattle.com, or call
a d v enturous p a l ates. 206-294-3331.
Don't be surprised to wait for a
table, even with a reservation. Details: The restaurant at
1531 Melrose Ave. is open for brunch on weekends, lunch Monday to Friday and dinner every day. Prices are moderate. More information can be found at ww w.sitkaandspruce.com,
• Paseo:Famed nationwide for its impossibly sloppy Caribbean roast pork sandwiches
slathered in a "secret" sauce, Paseo almost disappeared from the Seattle dining scene
last November after 21 years. It survived when a new owner purchased the tin-shed cafe in
or call 206-324-0662. • Trove:If you like Fremont's Joule (see later), as I do, you may want to try this fun, casual cafe from the same owner-chefs, RachelYang and Seif Chirchi. Up front, there's abudget-priced noodle bar, flanked by an indoor food-truck window with parfaits and frozen custardsundaes fordessert.In
an auction sale, vowingto keep the menu (try the sea scallops in garlic tapenade) the same as before. A second outlet is on
the rearare a cocktailba r and
tle.com, or call206-545-7440.
a Korean-st yle barbecue with great food at reasonable cost. Details: The restaurant at 500 E. Pike St. is open for lunch
Seaview Avenue in Ballard. Details: The restaurant at 4225 Fremont Ave. N. is open
for lunch and dinner Tuesday-Saturday. Prices are budget
• Restaurant Roux: Owner
information can be found at wwwtroveseattle.com, or call 206-457-4622.
Fremont area
Roux, they stretch it beyond Seattle's city limits, with meats
like rabbit, gator and crawfish, along with crispy pig ear and fried chicken gizzards. Perhaps the most popular dish is
h otel brand and Van d er Valk Hotels & Restaurants,
similarly muted neighbors.
which has the bulk of its ho-
206-547-5420.
• RockCreek Seafood & Spirits: Chef-owner Eric Donnelly named this restaurant after his favorite trout-fishing stream
streets. And they know to
Seasons, have their own soundproofing methods, offering white noise machines or soundproof windows and insulated walls.
steer clear of what Garlick referred to as large urban
Quiet zones
know to ask for a room far from the elevators, on a high
floor and away from bustling
Insulation is attempting to •
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Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offeredto Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.
c all
206-395-9227. • The Whale Wins: Another
winner from owner-chef Renee Erickson (The Boat Street Cafe,
The Walrus andthe Carpenter),
112 WAYS
this tidy, market-like restaurant
specializes in vegetable dishes cooked in a wood-burning oven. Unlike Joule, just across
TO,DISCOVERCENTRAL OREGON
the hallway, the menu is 100
IS 'A COMPREHENSIVE GUIDE
3506 Stone Way N. is open for percent American; the marrow weekend brunch and dinner bones are particularly good. every day. Prices are moderate.
• •
DISC OVERTHEVERYBESTCENTRALOREGONIIASTOOFFER,: :
Whale Wins (see below) and for dinner every day. Prices
Details: The restaurant at
•
And for that one can turn to
0 ~O
Details: The restaurant at 4743 Ballard Ave. NW is open
t hewalrusbar.com, or
i d
••
It seems the most foolbecause they're typically full proof thing to do is to cluster and noisy. What's left to try? guests who want quiet rooms Knowledge Center Sound in the same area of the hotel.
Ethan Stowell's Staple & Fan-
ther of its neighbors, offering wildly original versions of contemporary cuisine that is not quite Korean, not quite American, but falling somewhere between. Short ribs come with grilled kimchi, gai lan (a form of broccoli) with walnut pesto, mackerel with cilantro green curry.
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com
In October, Crowne Plaza
hotels and convention hotels
M ore information can b e cy Mercantile. Chef Renee Erfound at www.facebook.com/ ickson's 5-year-old oyster bar b ourbonandbones, o r cal l specializes in shellfish raw and 206-582-2241. cooked, along with a handful • Joule:Yang and Chirchi's of cheeses and sweets.
are moderate.More informat ion can be found at w w w .
COVERINGS
tel brands, such as the Four
By now most travelers
found at www.rockcreekseat-
a snow-sports shop. But Joule has little in common with ei-
s®aC,~ssIC
tel to choose between being
room by an elevator bank.
becue, this is the place to come ner every day. Prices are mod— for "sweet heat" ribs, crispy erate. More information can be
lead restaurant shares a converted warehouse with T he
See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures
Germany. Hotels that qualify can use a Quiet Room logo in their advertising and promotions, post a "Quiet Rooms Avail-
Yet that method is hardly a
the half shell. and his no-frills roadhouse reDetails: The restaurant at flects no-nonsense Southern 4300 Fremont Ave. N is open roots. But if you like great bar- for weekend brunch and din-
es are budget and moderate.
See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
guarantee of peace. It comes a library or a disco. It allows down to luck of the draw: for bustling public spaces who has the room next to while also allowing guests you, for instance, or whether to retreat to the relative quiyou happen to be assigned a et of their rooms. Many ho-
and raised in North Carolina,
douille sausage or Southern tle.com, or call 206-557-7532. fried chicken. Wash it all down • The Walrus and the Carwith a beer or bourbon. Come penter:Named for Lewis Caras you are and be ready to roll's "Through the Looking share a table. Glass" poem ("0 oysters, come Details: The restaurant at and walk with us!"), this old 4350 Leary Way NW is open Ballardhaunt shares an inner for dinner every day. Pric- window, but not a menu, with
HunterDouilas
as Expedia.com and TripAd- able" sign at their entrance, visor. (Hint: Do a Google and display a Quiet Room search for "quiet hotel room certificate at the reception in L ondon," o r w h a tever desk. "Soundproofing could poyour desired destination, and TripAdvisor reviews for tentially get you the best of the 30 best quiet hotels in both worlds," said Garlick, that city will appear.) because it doesn't force a ho-
in Montana. So there's no surprise that, while there are a few Details: Th e r e s tauarant meats on the daily-changing at 1054 N. 39th St. is open for menu here, it's all about the dinner W ednesday-Sunday. seafood in this two-story urPrices are moderate. More ban-industrial take on a fishing information can be found at lodge. Look for monkfish bourwww.artofthetable.net, or call guignon, barbecued Alaskan
fried oysters, house-made an-
Visit Central Oregon's
tels in the Netherlands and
search reviews on sites such
restaurantroux.com, or call
along with a fine selection of oyster shooters and oysters on
Re-
separate "quiet zones" in their hotels for travelers who want
travelers generally have to rely on word-of-mouth or
t ion can be found at w w w .
octopus and Icelandic char,
outrageously loud snoring from an adjacent room.
Africa.
A pollo Hotels an d
To find a quiet hotel room
for dinner every day. Prices are moderate.More informa-
• Bourbon and Bones:Owner-chef Mike Law was born
hallway and, as I can attest,
sorts and Golden Tulip hotels also carry Quiet Room
Transparency
blackened catfish with authenDustin Ronspies offers this ad- tic white grits. vice on how diners should enDetails: The restaurant at joy the meals he prepares: "Put 4201 Fremont Ave. N is open
206-282-0942.
room neighbors, voices in the
began introducing beds with tinental Hotels Group, are padded curved headboards rolling out new padded head- labels. And K e izer w r ote that in consumer tests showed boards to help reduce noise in an email that he is also a 30 percent improvement in while also continuing to offer speaking with the Accor
• Art of the Table: Chef
away your phone, eat your fish skin, slurp your broth, gnaw your bone, eat your microgreens, lickyour plate, eat your cheese rind, use your fingers when applicable, enjoy your time here." The menu, for the bold culinarian, changes from night to night. The rustic cafe is located steps away from Fremont, in adjacent Wallingford.
masked the chatter of hotel
Pacific, the Middle East and
a s get the certificate.
Crowne Plaza Hotels & Resorts, part of the InterCon-
jun-Creole cuisine of the New and dinner every day. Prices Orleans area. At sophisticated are budget to moderate. More
port, the first French hotel to
A nd chains such
Matt Lewis and chef Michael R obertshaw know t h e C a -
C5
to places, e v ents a n d a c t ivities t a king place throughout Central Oregon d uring the year.
The name comes from a paint-
More information canbe found ing by modern American folk at w w w j oulerestaurant.com, artist Mary Maguire. orcall206-632-5685. • Manolin: At this low-key,
Details: The restaurant at
food rules the roost. Dishes like halibut with chestnut honey, and white prawns with turnip and turmeric, are prepared
are moderate.More informat ion can be found at w w w .
k
3506 Stone Way N. is open neighborhood hangout, sea- for dinner every day. Prices
on a wood-fired grill. Scallop ceviche is wonderful with
t hewhalewins.com, or
The Bulletin
call
206-632-9425.
www.denddulletin.com.:
— Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com. •
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C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
SU D O K U
co mpletegri the d so
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
6 47 9 8 9
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FR THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
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by David L Hoyt and Jaff Knurak
Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square,
Wowl ndt only daae It laok grmll, lt'a dha al our baat and we're pradtlaaay glvlng lt away today!
to form six ordinary words.
LOTUWA
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TOVMIE
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SPIMAH
WITH THE HAIRPECE ON 5ALE AT ycx OFF, HE CON5IPSREP HI5PIJI ZCHASE TO BE A —-
TOARET
Now arrange the circled letlers
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon. PRINT YOUR ANSWER INTHE CIRCLES BELOW
w
DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
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JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
sunday, June 14t 2015
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency C)
let the queen of hearts ride. He could cash the K-A of clubs, ruff his last club in dummy and exit with a trump for an end play. East must assume that South has 5-4-2-2 distribution and no ten of hearts. Then if East ruffs with the king of trumps, South has no useful discard. After he draws trumps, he must attack the hearts himself and go down against proper defense. South dealer Both sides vulnerable
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LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD ted by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols LeWis 58 Modern 90 Gooffona mIssIves tangent 59 Experience a 92 Inconsistent links mishap? 93 Comebacks 94 "Too Many e1 Exasperate e4 Simon Says Girls" co-siar, Housecow player familiarly 3I Pump bottoms e5 Airport shuttle, 99 Clear UP 101 "The Ransom 33 IndIan territory often se political e7 Fight against of Red Chief" channel writer e9 Least worn 37 U.S. auto sInce 7I CUI 102 Exams for Ieee 72 Toy with long sophsandlrs. 38 Independent hair, briefly 103 Noi SOrt 73 Vase-shaped bootlegged 39 Namibian vessel 104 It may be currency 74 Shallow involved in 40 Guides channel snoring 43 Many museum 7e Spoiforlounge 105 Money order hangings chairs order 45 Chatn Usedby 78 AYIgnon's river Ioe wrinklecampers 79 Haunting resistant fiber 4e Once, long ago memory 107 Mono player 47 Make turbulent 80 "Good 109 Case for small 48 Reunlon heavens!" tools attendee 83 possible cause Iie FIsh Used for 49 Bread with of glistening bait Iabbouleh blades 112 Prepare Io 52 Knight's 84 Sports footwear shoot outerwear brand 113 Watson of Se Jo in Dickens' 87 "Yankee Doodle "Noah" "BleakHouse," Dandy" subject 114 Swarm e.g. 88 Wall Street 118 Made a break 57 pool employee for II 2I Tribe Inthe 187e Great Sioux War 28 Thlrd of eight 30 Last president Io keep a White
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expecting you" I20 ee Jack's predecessor e7 Communications t24 line e/14/15
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"When they do, they tend to leave." That I had come to Ilicson, out was evident. It remained to be seen precisely what. I
arrived — as snowbirds have
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f o l dout c a l l ed ments stud Broadway for most
"Broadway: Born Modern," of its length, delightful and which is one in a series of fine largely unremarked. Among guides t h e pr e servationist my favorites are Rysdale's elgroup hasproducedto findTuc- egantly restrained geometric son's varied wonders. Haas Building of 1957; Juan The speci ficfocusof"Broad- Worner y Bas' quirky 1961 way: Born Modern" is a check- Murphey Building, with its e rboard assortment of m i d- scalloped parapet and ter-
them from the harsh summer sun. Blank f i eldstone walls
I05 106
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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
and the dassic open-front facade Friedman designed in 1954 to house Hirsh's Shoes. uIn 1954 we stood alone,"
read a tagline in an advertisement for Hirsh's Shoes I came
across in a program printed to accompanyTucson Modernism Week. "Sixty years later, we still stand alone."
Happily for Hirsh's Shoes and other imperiled local landmarks, that is not altogetherthe
case. Since being restarted, the Tucson Historic Preservation
Foundationhas committedpassionately to identifying, recordlllg aild conservlllg unsung
fringes of the Sonoran Des-
of brick hacienda-style struc-
Although on
r ecent trips
ert, a cyclical boomtown that suffered badly in the financial
tures designed in the 1930s by I've made it a modest goal to the Swiss-born Josias Joesler, seek out some of Tucson's more
crash of 2008 and that, even
arguably Iiicson's most cele-
oddball modernist structures, I
beforehand, had in many ways brated architect. In the contrast
tend to lodge at one of its gen-
seen better days.
tler traditional ones. Built in
It is a city whose loopy retail landscape skews heavily toward yoga studios, thrift shops and vape stores. And one of the city's better-kept secrets is how oftenthese places occupy structures that could easily be counted among the more sig-
between thetwo can be traced
a shift in a city's ambitions and 1930 by Isabella Greenway, a radical progression away Arizona's first congresswoman from Tucson's pueblo past to- and a lifelong friend of Eleanor ward an undefined future in
Roosevelt, the Arizona Inn was
the Space Age.
added to the National Register
The more recent of the two is a stark white, cast-concrete
of Historic Places in 1988 and is
building set back from a broad nificant examples of mid-20th plaza ornamented with a large century architecture in the sculpturalamoeba; ithas ahigh country. That is, if anyone were columned overhang, a soaring bothering to look. glazed expressionist frieze to While builders on the East- bring in light and overall an air ern Seaboard a ssembled of unassailable exuberance.
now run by Will Conroy, Greenway's grandson. I often turn west onto Orade Drive toward the Oro Valley
and Tohono Chul Park, a small botanical garden on a patch of desert bought in the '60s by
Jean and Richard Wilson and later established as a nonprofBank, it is now a Chase. There it to save the land from mall Built as a Valley National
developers.
of international style modern-
Tucson, of course, most with drive-thru windows to facili-
Not the least of the things
Some preservationists claim
on the i nternal combustion
flora are the rattlesnake warn-
Broadway and park the rental
ter's exhibition space, partly to
amples are not nearly as easy seems to frame and elevate the to find as similar ones clustered puniest of transactions. throughout entire midcentury I feel expansive making an neighborhoods in Phoenix, just ATM withdrawal. And uextwo hours away. pansiveness and optimism,"
tions but more candidly to pre-
Tucson possesses some of the engine. It pleases me, though, ings posted along its paths. Yet densest concentrations of mid- when I'm in Tucson to drive up the real reason I visit is the cenjust to conduct my insignifi- check one of its fine and concant banking in a building that stantly changing art installa-
above the largest desert in
ervation Foundation in 2008
characteristics of 20th-century boomtowns of the American West. "Partly what attracted many of us to the West in the first
North America and suddenly
nois native and architect who lived in New York and Los
struck me as central to any un-
— grants that about the only way to eyeball prime modernist gems by architects like Tom
ttg t23 t27
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Gist, Anne Rysdale, Robert Swaim or Arthur T. Brown that lie scattered in the foothills or
secluded in stands of saguaro is on one of the guided tours his group conducts every autumn during its Tucson Modernism Week. Yet they're quick to note that plenty of astonishingly individualistic architecture lies scattered throughout the city.
as Andie Zelnio, of the Tucson Historic Preservation Founda-
tend the Santa Fe-style adobe structure housing it is mine. Parking myself on a deep leather sofa at Tohono Chul Park not long ago, I gazed
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Its
Broadmoor Medical Center;
drowsy Tucson Historic Pres- tion, once told me, are signal
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and saints; the adobe brick
Even Clinco — who was instrumental in resuscitating the
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ra-cotta statues of philosophers
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100 tol
gg
both wondrous and seemingly inhospitable. The results of their experi-
local treasures, from a historic courtyard motel to a refined and muchdegraded centercity sides Rome. Road. Directly opposite it on Tucson is no Rome, howev- Broadwayis the historic Broad- parkby the landscape architect er. It is a dusty outpost on the way Village, a gentle ensemble Garrett Eckbo.
conceding that the finest ex-
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87 88
informative
Southwestern city. I am, assuredly, mindful of those — aware form thefacades of coolintethat Tucson is well situated in a rior caves. Soaring organic valley basin geologically lofted shapes vault sculpturally from to an altitude (2,600 feet) that the sere landscapelikethe ramin my mind qualifies it as high parts ofa cathedral consecratdesert; that its signal feature ed to some wacko progressive is a series of jagged mountain religion. ranges endosing its flanks like One such structure, created a palisade; that its extravagant in 1971 by Bernard Friedman skies, particularly at twilight, and John Whitmire of Friedhave a way of vaulting the spir- man and Jobusch Architects, its in a manner I have seldom stands sentry at a corner of experienced anyplace else be- Broadway and Country Club
in the Southwest, reluctantly
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are wheels and a map. To guide me I used a slick,
history — fleeing a bitter and prolonged East Coast winter, a season during which the blackened mounds of ice blocking century holdouts still standing city stieets and crosswalks, lonely but proud amid the when they finally melted, left big-box stores and stucco strip behind a tideline of crud. malls on a stretch of Broadway This was unlikely to bring from Eudid Avenue to Country joy to the hearts of its civic Club Road. boosters, who would perhaps Cantilevered roofs canopy prefer visitors to focus on the glass curtain walls, shading
century modernist architecture
66
All that is needed to find them
I like about this ingeniously ism to their city's magnKcent though challenging terrain. tate the American dependence designed garden of arid zone
39
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A Chase Bank, originally built as a Valley National Bank.
Tucsonan and former member of the Arizona House of
thousands, Tucson developers instead adapted the austerities are Chase branches all over 35
42 CS
old-fashioned, Clinco, a native
cookie-cutter colonials by the
30
StOP
44 Pilfer Christmas 3 6 3 7 supplies?
an optimism of their own. Pulling on hi s b ourbon
positive aspects of this midsize
(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
/4 al
tails. The cocktails produced
for much of the state's recent
4AQ
89 "GImmea 124 Greatly amuse coupla 125 They carry MILLER 90 Pry charges 91 Roll In one's 12e Black shade ACROSS pocket? 127 Dutch export I SIde sometimes 95 resort puion a ee Understress DOWN sandwich 97 eWhai does I Really moved 5 Literature mean?" 2 Really enjoy Nobelist Nelly 98 Chicks' hangout oneself 3 eNoi a chance!" 10 Some workers 100 Waist 14 LandInthe management 4 Gingerbread SldS housefeature? ocean 18 Italian tourist ie2 KIngs or 5 Jungle activity e 'eos sportsorg. city queens, e.g. Ie Keyoftwo 105 Western band 7 Relatives of ie7 Word of nails Schubert impromptus contempt 8 Bangs on the head? 20 Range restraint Iee Spell caster 22 KIng or queen, seen 9 Bumblebee infrequently? feature e.g. 10 Short song 23 "StupidityIsthe I11 Tarp hole II Chihuahua same as If 115 II flows In Madrid youngsters youjudge by 12 Chewy treat the results": IIe Class 117 SIde problem? I3 Course of Atwood 119 Field protector, action 24 Panache maybe I4 Distressed 25 Deduce 120 Informal speech IS Areasewedby 2e Fatty LAX 27 Aptly named 121 Coach peibedding 122 Like the manin Ie Fiat in the the moon movie "Cars" spray brand IT Nipped in the 29 Chronicle one's 123 Readyfor anything bud travels? 32 Garden places I 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 34 Ccn target 35 Cookware 19 cover 3e Heat unit 23 39 Hardly all thumbs 40 Liquidation 27 28 29 4I Seek (OUI) 42 Plymouth pit 32
the 85-year-old Arizona Inn, drinking anachronistic cock-
Arizona, to figure something
0 Q5
aIN IT TO WIN ITn By IIIIELANIE
cool desert evening, beneath were seatedon the terrace of
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West 3 0
"People tend to come to Tucson to figure something out,n
Representatives, added a fillip,
4K7
South 1 4b
New York Times News Service
a sky so boundless it made all things seem possible. We
Lt
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By Guy Trebay
Demion Clinco remarked one CD
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finesse.
As West was dealing the next hand, he found his voice. "You know," he told East genially, "you beat that contract if you ruff the t hird diamond with th e k in g o f trumps and exit with a trump." A whale gets harpooned only when he comes up to spout, but East was irate and showed it. "You're nuts," he spouted. "Ruff your winner with my natural trump trick? Only a mad genius would find that defense." East should have stayed under w ater. A s W e s t e x plained, t h e winning defense was logical. If South had a hand such as Q J 8 5 3, A 6 5, Q 5, A 4 3,he could ruff the third ihamond, take the ace of trumps and
CD
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NORTH 4 A1064 2
A neon sign lights up the Miracle Mile in Tucson, Arizona
isarc ie ura oasis oesunsun in rizona
Harpooning a whale Cover today's West and South cards and defend as East. West's j ump t o th r e e d i a monds w a s p reemptive. He leads the K-A of diamonds, and South plays the five and queen.Next comes the jack of diamonds. How do you defend? When I watched the deal, East threw a club. South ruffed, led a trump to dmnmy's ace, took the A-K of clubs and exited with a trump. East was end-played. If he led a heart, the defenders' heart trick would vanish; if a club, declarer could ruff in his hand, discard a heart from dummy and take the rest with a winning heart
Photos by John Burcham/The New YorkTimes
n
at the doud armadas sailing
recalled something Glasston, the Etherton Gallery director, hadsaid. uWhy do peoplecome to place is that sense of space and places like Tucson'?" she asked, possibility," said Zelnio, an Illi- before offering a reply that derstanding of the American Angeles before relocating to Southwest's enduring allure. Tucson permanently in 2004. ''When you come down to it, it's Add to that an unfettered abili- pretty simple. We don't like to ty to think and design in novel be shoehorned into categories." ways, as many architects did When you come down to it, neiwhen faced with a landscape therdoI.
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C7
staircase was a platform made ofredcedar.Opening thedoor
paragus for his guests.
of the Studio, Huntington not-
the temperature plummeted.
The next day, it rained, and
ed that both treehouses have Huntington went on a h ike, worked on t h e t r eehouse stay hunkered in, even during book and geeked out online the Pacific Northwest's cold, over new cameras unveiled stormy nights. at the National Association of Inside, the space was toasty Broadcasters convention in and light-filled, decorated in Las Vegas. a cabin-y version of Young I n th e b i t in g c ol d t h a t Bachelor. A shelf by the door night, he was splitting kinheld Huntington's cameras dling before firing up the hot and lenses; his iMac sat on a tub to give his guest "the full simple desk against one wall, experience." a surfboard propped next W ith th e v a lley an d i t s to it. Large windows looked lamp-lit houses shrouded straight into green-needled in a chilly mist, Huntington limbs. soaked in the tub and reflected wood stoves, allowing him to
Huntington regards the Stu-
dio as his workspace and the Octagon as his bedroom; he regards the small house his mother built, 100 feet away, as a source of electricity and
plumbing.
on his time in New York: the overpriced apartment on the Upper West Side, the corpo-
ratejob, the more-more-more rush of it all.
"That world seems so distant," he said.
The'full experience' To get to the upper treehouse, he raced across a kind of ladder lying almost flat across the sky to another tree that supported yet another platform. From there he
dashed across the swinging rope bridge to the Octagon's
Photosby Kyle Johnson/New York Times News Service
A swaying rope bridge connects the two treehouses at Cinder Cone, the home of Foster Huntington.
dool'.
ble working in his previous
The perch afforded him an Cinder Cone. expansive view of the valley, Ned Siegel and Kai Kors- creating the awesome senmo, members of the "bronado" sation of being not 35 feet off crew, were helping him build the ground but 1,000 feet up. his latest project, an outdoor When a strong wind whips shower to accompany the ex- across the Cinder Cone, as it isting wood-fueled outdoor hot would that night, the whole
home, a custom camper he
tub. Now they sat at a long ta-
drove around the West. "I lived on the road for three
ble on a cement patio, taking a and treehouse — sways and
Treehouse Continued from C1 One reason Huntington built the t reehouses, in fact, was that he was having trou-
break. "Kai is a
years," he said. "And it's awe-
some. It's an amazing way to live. But it's hard to get things
Huntington said with a laugh. after Korsmo riffed on drones, That evening, he manned the process of tanning ani- the parrilla, an open-flame mal hides and a robot capable grill popularized by South of leaping onto rooftops, all American gauchos. He stoked while rolling a joint. hot coals and threw on some One wonders how Hunting- steaks, burgers, yams and as-
He shook his head and uttered the lament of the 21st century nomad: "Internet is
unreliable." Four years ago, Huntington was working as a menswear designer at Ralph Lauren. He
.
"It wasn't cult-style," he said,
and presentations behind each collection: say, the bush pilots
referring to how the treehouses were built. "It's capitalism.
of Alaska and their ruggedly stylish world.
I paid them all competitive
rates." The coolness of the project
It was his first job out of
college, and he initially found it fun and creatively challenging. But after ayear and ahalf, he realized he didn't care that
is also a factor, Gorman said.
Getting tasked with roofing the Octagonon a windy day
much about clothes.
KIDZ CKNTER SCHOOL
was hard work, not to mention
"I remember looking at photos of bush pilots and think-
Huntington's exit was de-
HUMRNC SOCIGY OF CCNTRRLORCGON/SPCR 6 1170 S.C. 27th St. BEND ~s (541) 38R-3531
back in person, can marshal small armies of men to build the things he dreams up. Does he have some strange charisma? He laughed at the notion.
dled concept design, coming up with the stories, themes
cisive, said Phillip Annand, a friend who runs Madbury Club, a New York creative agency. "He was literally, like: 'Hey, I just bought this van. I'm going to drive to Washington
dog needs.
ton, who is reserved and laid-
was part of a team that han-
want to go do something else.'" For New Yorkers, leaving the city can be a long, agonizing, maybe never-fulfilled process.
creaks. "It's not exactly to code,"
m a d s cientist,"
Huntington said admiringly,
done."
ing: 'I can take photos. I don't want to live my life in the city. I
structure — bridge and tree
Aoxie
Meet Roxie! She is a spunki/ and triendlt/ 2-t/ear-old Rustralian Cattle Dog and Labrador Retriever mix. Roxie was surrendered to us because she was not getting along too well with the chickens on the propertt/. That being said, her periect forever home would be one that is not around ani/ livestock PLUS a home that has all the time and energt/ that this active i/oung
scary, he said, but "you had an unbelievableview anywhere Foster Huntington lived in a custom camper he drove around the West for three years before he built his treehouses.
Preschool (age 3), Preschool (age 4) Now Enrolling for Fall 2015
you looked. It was certainly
my dream job." Siegel and Korsmo planned
549 SW 8th St.in Redmond
to do more work on the out-
up enough to buy a used van and quit his job in two years. But then HarperCollins paid him a m i d-five-figure advance tomake a book out of The Burning House, a blog
(541) 548-7128
Nevada campsites. Drive any- door shower, but because where. No obligations. "It was everything I wanted it to be
H untington wanted to
NOTICE OF NON-DISCRIMINATION AS TO STUDENTS
film
and more," he said. "I was 23."
them, they were waiting. They would work in perfect light.
He encountered other free spirits living in their vans. The
Meanwhile, Huntington ascended into the trees. At the
Kidz Center School admits students of any race, color, national, and ethnic origin to aii the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarships, loan programs, athletic and other school administered programs.
subculture had existed since top of an increasingly steep people what they would take the '60s, but now it would get along with them if their homes its own hashtag, ¹vanlife, caught fire. which Huntington slapped on "I'dnever had that much the photos he posted to social and live in it.'" A aron L e vine, t h e v i c e money," Huntington said. "I media. Staying digitally conpresident for men's design at thought, 'I can live for a year nected, in fact, is what allowed Club Monaco and a former off this money and buy a van.'" him to live off the grid. colleague of H u ntington's, In July 2011, he flew to Reno, The photos eventually besaid he has a way of turning Nevada, bought an '87 Volk- came a book, "Home Is Where pipe dreams into reality. "The swagen Vanagon and drove You Park It," whose publicathings other people talk about it up to the hilltop property in tion he self-funded via a Kickdoing, Foster does," Levine Washington for a visit. starter campaign that raised said. "He's a positive, wildHis parents, real estate more than $65,000. He sells eyed, go-for-it kid." agents who are outdoors en- the book for $65 through his thusiasts, had bought the land site. The call of the road years earlier; it lies a few miles The road has always held from the rustic wood house Cinder Conedreams a romantic appeal for t h e where Huntington had grown But when he grew weary young American male. So up. When he got back to New of bean burritos and spotty has the notion of ditching of- York, he gave his notice. Wi-Fi, he called Gorman, his "I flew out here and then im- friend from Colby, who was fice life for something more self-determined. mediately went on a road trip living on a sailboat in the San Huntington said he knew with my brother," Huntington Francisco Bay. he createdin 2008 that asked
that with each year he stayed
said. "After that, I went to Cal-
at Ralph Lauren, it would only be harder to leave. "I'd be making more money,"he said, "which means I can have a nicer apartment and more
ifornia and just drove up and
"One day Foster was, like, 'Dude, I want to build some
treehouses up a t C i n der He atecheap Mexican food Cone,'" Gorman said. "That's or cooked out. To cut down on how it happened." gas costs, he would park for On a recent afternoon, Hunstuff." several weeks, spending time tington had some friends over, He thought he would save on Baja beaches or at Sierra a common occurrence at the down the coast."
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Foster Huntington's Cinder Cone property includes a skate bowl.
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
'season o s viewers ca ive TV SPOTLIGHT "Orange ls the New Black" Netflix By Kristin Tillotson (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
When the third season of
"Orange Is the New Black" premiered Friday, you could lock up its fans and throw away the key — as long as they had a computer screen and an Internet connection. "OITNB," as its fans short-
hand it, is an original Netflix series following the lives of women serving time at Litchfield Penitentiary, a fictional
JoJo Whilden/ Nefflix/TNS
Beth Fowler, from left, Vicky Jeudy, Lin Tucci, Adrienne Moore, Constance Shulman, Samira Wiley and Danielle Brooks in season 3 of Netflix's "Orange Is the New Black."
upstate New York women's prison. The central character, Piper (Taylor Schilling), is a man. classic blonde WASP busted A brief explainer for the for toting drug money after her unincarcerated, er, uninitiatstreet-smart former girlfriend ed: "OITNB" is adapted from Alex (Laura Prepon) rats her a book by Piper Kerman, an out. u pper-middle-class S m i t h A preview of the first few of grad who really went to pristhe 13 new episodes reveals a on for a year. In the hands of lighter overall tone this season, Jenji Kohan, the genius writwith one-line zingers galore, eriproducer/director behind new guards, an intriguing new "Weeds," the show not only inmate or two, a bedbug infes- breaks ground in character detation that forces everyone to velopment for women of color, run around in granny panties who are underrepresented on and bullet bras, and the usual
television. It's also one of the
strife, subterfuge and side-eye from Crazy Eyes. Boring Larry is gone, but so is fabulously loathsome abusive guard Pornstache. Still no back story, so far, on why Crazy Eyes is doing time, but we get to see Sophia (Laverne Cox) as a
most compelling, well-written series running anywhere, be it prime-time network, pay ca-
ble or on-demand streaming. Along with "House of Cards," "OITNB" has made Netflix a
major player in original online programming, leading to new
successes such as the Florida d rama "Bloodline" and t h e
Tina Fey-helmed comedy "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt." Early critics of the series complained that it t ook t he
story of a white blonde to get the show made in the f irst
place, but Piper is arguably the least interesting character on the show, perhaps by design. Cliques at Litchfield divide along racial and cultural lines African-American, L ati-
na, white-trash meth heads — and do battle verbally and physically. Suzanne, aka Crazy Eyes (Uzo Aduba, who won an Emmy last season), barrels her way in and out of sanity. Doggett, aka Pennsatucky (Taryn Manning), has had more abor-
tions than she has good teeth, is guilty ofbinge-watching. Not and has softened her aveng- Yael Stone. "I can't do more than three ing evangelical angel act. Red (Kate Mulgrew), a formidable episodes at a time of anything," Russian chef, has been ban- said Stone, who plays sweet, ished from her domain, the scrappy and delusional Morelprison kitchen, which has been lo, imprisoned for stalking a taken over by Gloria (Selenis man she claimed was her fianLeyva) and her "Spanish Har- ce. This season Morello has a lem" Latina gang. different fantasy keeping hope This season, Gloria steps alive, as well as a new way to up her Santeria rituals, which pursue love interests. "I feela personal connecLeyva calls "Catholic plus." "I told a writer in the first tion to her; she's optimistic and season that I dabble in it, and hopeful," said Stone, an Aussie suddenly it was written into who affects a not-quite-placemy character, " Leyva said in able broad-voweled East Coast an interview this week. "You accent to play Morello. "Most of have to watch what you say to the people on the show really the writers." love their characters, because While the Latina women get they feel like real people. How plenty of screen time, Leyva connected we feel to them said, she doesn't feel that they plays a huge role in its success, have been acknowledged in because the audience feels it, the media as much as some of too." the prison's other groups. With so may big personali"Our story is so layered, you ties jockeying for screen time, get to see who we really are," surely some behind-the-scenes she said."The waywe separate t ension flares up no w a n d into groups, that's real life, but then? "You'd be surprised," Stone it's interesting to see how even the media segregates us, like said. "It sounds idealistic, so putting all the black women Baby-Sitters Club, but there is a on a magazinecover together. greatdealofrespect,love and The Latinas haven't been on a joy on set, across the board." cover." Added Leyva: "Jenji doesn't What's in store for Gloria allow any BS on the set." in the second half of the seaAnother giant step forward son? Leyva only offered this is the way the showpictures all teaser: "The journey she goes types ofbodiesinvarious states on got really uncomfortable. of undress, unself-consciously. "We've got all shapes, sizes, But it's going to be a great conversation." ages and colors," Stone said. Many an "OITNB" follower "It's been very liberating."
us an ismverst at iswie wasa 0 te utneveI to im Dear Abby:I have been happily Dear Abby:I am a college sophmarried for 30 years. Many years omore and have aboyfriend, alago I found out, inadvertently, that though we keep our relationship my wife is adopted. (My wife has no to ourselves. I get asked out a few siblings, and her partimes a week by ents died when she other boys who are was in college.) Conclearly interested. DFP,R cerned that she might My boy f r iend not know about it , I c ontacted senior
Ag gy
doesn't mind that I have male f r iends,
want to be friends — one can never
have enough friends and you're not looking for another romance. If the boy respects you, he'll accept it and not try again while you and your boyfriend are together. Dear Abby:I feel that the longer you go to the same hairdresser, the more she takes you for granted. The service gets worse. When I have
members of her family to confirm. They all confirmed what I had heard and said my wife knows about it. I think it's odd she never shared
but my problem is the shared this opinion with some of other boys are never direct about her other clients, they agreed.
this with me. It wouldn't change
To accept would make me feel I'm
is working on a customer or not.
things between us, but it bothers me that she has never told me. To the best of my knowledge, she has no idea that I know. I am having major heart surgery in the fall, and
leading them on somehow, but to refuse"because Ihavea boyfriend" would make it look like I'm jumping to conclusions about them.
During my last haircut, which usually lasts about half an hour, she
their intentions. Usually, they'll say
The salon does not have a recep-
it's to "hang out" or "grab dinner" tionist. Whoever is there just picks — very casual, vague invitations. up the phone, whether the stylist
this is somethingI would like to dis-
Is there a polite way to tell someone that you're seeing someone-
cuss with her before I do. I'm curi-
withoutbeingaccusatory — but that
ous to hear your thoughts.
you would still like to be friends?
—Left Out Dear Left Out: Tell your wife what you learned, that you're sur-
—Jumping to Conclusions Dear Jumping:Say it this way: "I'd love to, but, you know, I have a prised she never mentioned it, and boyfriend. Would that be a problem ask her why. It's a fair question, for you?" If the boy says no — then and being adopted is nothing to be go. If he hits on you after that, tell ashamed of. him you think he's great, but you
answered the phone six times. I pay
for my appointment, and it should be at least relaxing. Have your readers had the same experience? — MikeinNew York
Dear Mike:I'm sure some of them have, unless they told the stylist
they're using they don't like being treated that way. So speak up. As a paying customer, it is your privilege. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 800-326-3264. • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) 11:20 a.m. • ALOHA (PG-l3) 12:40, 3:45, 6:55, 9:50 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 11:10 a.m., 2:35, 6:25, 9:50 • ENTOURAGE (R) 1:05, 3:55, 7:40, 10:25 • FAR FROMTHE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)2:05,3:05, 6:15, 9:40 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 2:05, 4:30, 7:10, 10:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 4:05, 6, 7, 9, 9:55 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) 11a.m., 2, 3, 5, 6:30, 7:55, 9:30, 10:45 • JURASSICWORLD IMAX 3-D(PG-13)noon,3:30,7:30, IO:30 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) 10:55 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 12:35, 3:40, 7:20, 10:20 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 1,4:15, 7:35, 10:35 • SPY(R) 11:45 a.m., 12:15,2:45, 3:20, 6:45, 7:15,9:45, IO:15 • TOMORROWLAND (PG) 11:35 a.m., 3:15, 6:40, 10:05 •
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 6 p.m. on NGC, "Drain the Titanic" —It's been 103 years since the doomed luxury liner Titanic sank in the frigid Atlantic and nearly 30 years since its wreckage was discovered, but interest in the disaster remains undimmed. Using state-ofthe-art technology, this new special digitally "drains" water from the section of the Atlantic where the Titanic sank, an attempt to better explore the
world's most famous wreck while searching for more information about its sinking as well. 7 p.m. on10, "Bob's Burgers" — When the Belchers embark on a family train trip together, Bob and Linda (voices of H. Jon Benjamin, John Roberts) fear the worst when the kids wind up assigned to a separate compartment. Sure enough, while their parents are having a wine tasting with another couple, Louise (voice of Kristen Schaal) coerces her siblings (voices of Dan Mintz, Eugene Mirman) into helping her steal a vast store of chocolate from the restaurant car in "The Kids Rob a Train." Another episode immediately follows. 9 p.m. on lIBD, "Game of Thrones" —Season 5 of this stirring adaptation of George R.R. Martin's epic fantasy draws to a close in the season finale, "Mother's Mercy," which sees Stannis Baratheon (Stephen Dillane) marching out to embrace his destiny for good or ill. Elsewhere, at a time when she is feeling particularly vulnerable, Dany (Emilia Clarke) finds herself surrounded by strangers. As Cersei
(Lena Headey)seeksforgiveness, Jon (Kit Harington) faces
an immensechallenge. Peter Dinklage also stars.
10 p.m. on SlIO, "Penny Dreadful" —Understandably fearful for their safety in London, Vanessa and Ethan(Eva Green, Josh Hartnett) flee to what used to be the Cutwife's cottage on the desolate moors. There, the two of them grow closer, but any intimacy is cut short as a figure from her dark past resurfaces in the new episode "Little Scorpion." Back in the city, Lyle and Victor (Simon Russell Beale, Harry
Treadaway) gleanevenmore
disturbing information from the Verbis Diablo relics. Billie Piper also stars. © Zap2it
e
•
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View our presentation at Tompkinswealthpresents.com
Charles Tompkins,CFPI 541.204.0667
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend,541-330-8562 • THEAGE OF ADALINE (PG-13) 6 • HOME (PG-13) 11:30a.m., 2:30 • POLTERGEIST (PG-I3) 9 • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegal g/Jaldi'en.
securitiess Advisory services offeredthrough KMS Financial sen/ices,Inc.Member FINRA/slpc
FITMESS*1440 II *541-305-6757* ~ c •
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • CLOUDS OF SILS MARIA (R) 2:30 • THE SEARCH FORFREEDOM(NR) 7:30 • WHILE WE'RE YOUNG(R) 5:15
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORSUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015:This yearyoudisplay
YOURHOROSCOPE
unusual creativity andmental astuteness. By Jacqueline Bigar Others admire your strengths and often come to you for advice. Manypeople might want more from you, butyou'llneed to calls ,andcatchuponalovedone'snews. set some boundaries; you will avoid hurt Tonight: Where theaction is. feelings that way. If you aresingle, your CANCER (June21-July22) charisma attracts ** * * You see a situation differently from Btsfs showths kintf admirers like honey howyour contemporaries seeit. Don't feel of dsy yos'll hsys attracts a bear. If as if you have toconvince others of your ** * * * D ynamic you are attached, point of view. Theywill pick up on it on their ** * * Positive ma ke more time for own. A new loveinterests suddenly could ** * Average you r sweetie, as he become challenging. Tonight: Take anight ** So-so or she easily could off. * Difficult feel left out. Remember the impor- LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * * You have a vision ofperfect a tance of sharing. A fellow GEMINImight be Sunday. Dowhatyou can to create this type very different from you but just as diverse. of day. Your ability to adjust will open youup ARIES (March 21-April19) to a new type of thinking. A family member ** * * You might be too energized for might start to act up. Clearly, this person others this morning. Don't be surprised if needs more time with you. Tonight: Live it you getastrong reaction. Youcouldbe in Up now. averbal tangowithsomeonewho seems a VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) bit down. Youcan't change this person; any change must be his or herdecision. Tonight: ** * * You'll be in a position whereyou'd feelmuch better if you could just kick back Cut loose with friends. and let an older relative or friend call the TAURUS (April20-May20) shots. Be sure to makespecial time with *** Youhave beentakinganew lookata aspecial loved onelater in the day.Tosituation around you.Yousuddenly might night: Know that you don't need toexplain feel a lack of support from someoneyou yourself. count on. Fatigue onboth your parts could result in a tiff. Goout to afavorite spot and LIBRA (Sspt.23-Oct. 22) ** * * * H owyou deal with a loved one relax together. Tonight: Listen to someone else's opinion. could changedramatically onceyougaina new perspective. Yourability to see past the GEMINI (May21-June20) ** * * * You'll beamin whatyou want, obvious and encourage aloved one todo the same will emerge. Behonest with yourperhaps to your own surprise. A lovedone self aboutwhatyou want. Tonight: Youhave or keyassociate who hasbeen difficult might be more prone to lightening up if you reason to celebrate! ignore his or her detachedmood. Make SCORPIO (Dct.23-Nov.21)
** * Follow through on aresponsibility. You might start to feel slightly overwhelmed, but don't worry so much. Revisit a decision you havemade inthe past to help you. Begrateful that you havethis experience to rely on. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * * * Stay upbeat. You can trusta dear friend or loved one tomakethe right choices, especiallyas this person's decision will affect only his or her plans. Lighten up. Don't allow someonewith depressing thoughts to mar the moment. Tonight: Get with the program.
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CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • ALOHA (PG-13) 3, 5:15 • FAR FROMTHE MADDING CROWD (PG-13)2:30 • JURASSICWORLD (PG-13)2:15,4:45,7:30,7:45 • MAD MAX: FURYROAD (R) 5,7:30 • SPY (R) 2:15, 4:45, 7:15
** * * Defer to a loved one, especially if he or she frequently expresses adesire to indulge you. Youarelikely to see achange coming forward with a friend. This person
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505
can beoverly serious, butheor sheneeds and appreciatesyouradvice. Tonight: Whatever you do, havefun.
AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * * * Your playfulness will come across as being extremely seductive. Recognize thatyoumight be stirring the pot. Someone you look up tocould be extremely difficult later in the day.Observe rather than inquire. Tonight: Let yourself be awild thing.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Youhave a way of pacing yourself so thatyou can doeverything you want. You might find that a mellow day in thecountry or at the beachwill be exactly whatyou need to relax. You need tostop the hectic pace that marks your daily life. Tonight: Getsome extra zzz's. © King Features Syndicate
•
• ENTOURAGE (R)12:IO,2:35,5,7:25,9:50 • INSIDIOUS: CHAPTER 3 (PG-13) 1:05, 3:15,5:25, 7:35, 9:40 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 1:20, 7 • JURASSIC WORLD 3-D (PG-13) 4:10, 9:50 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) noon, 2:25, 4:50, 7:20, 9:55 • SPY (R)1:45, 4:25, 7:10, 9:45 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., Prineville, 541-416-1014 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) 1,4,7 • PITCH PERFECT2 (Upstairs — PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
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•
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • JURASSIC WORLD (PG-13) l2:45, I, 3:30, 3:45, 6:15, 6:30, 9:15, 9:30 • SAN ANDREAS (PG-13) 11,1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • SPY (R)1:15, 1:45, 4:15, 6:45,9:15
716 SW11th St. Redmond 641.923.4732
BAMB Sweetness comes in small packages and Bambi is living proof of that. This tiny Chihuahua short coat/ mix likes other small dogs and steers clear of cats, who invariably are larger than she is. If you are looking for a pocket-sized pooch with Saint Bernard-sized love to give, please come meet Bambi at the shelter Tues.-Sat., 10-5. See more adoptable dogs at brightsideanimals.orgiadoptable-dogs.
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Scoreboard, D2 Sports in brief, D2 Baseball, D2-3 Soccer, D4
Golf, D5 NBA, D6 NHL, D6 Motor sports, D6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
WCL BASEBALL
COLLEGETRACK AND FIELD
Elks top Victoria, improve to 7-1
Oregon's Jenna Prand-
Behind strong pitching from Aaron Leasher, the BendElks defeated the Victoria HarbourCats 5-1 inWest Coast Leagueaction Saturday night at Bend's GennaStadium. Leasher of Morehead State threw five complete innings, giving up only two hits and one earned run in his first start of the season. Relievers MacGauland Jake Forrester each pitched two innings of scoreless relief. On the offensive side, Tyler Davis was3-for-4 with two RBls, including his second homerun in as many nights. Davis is batting .471 after the first week of WCLplay. The Elks (7-1WCL) host Victoria (3-5) again today at1:05 p.m. at GennaStadium. — Bulletin staff report
ini celebrates winning the
women's100 meters during the NCAA track and field cham-
I
A
pionships in Eugene Saturday. Don Ryan/The Associated Press
NBA FINALS
uc women'oin menwit teamtite By Bob Baum The Associated Press
second straight team title, making it the first time the Ducks men and women
EUGENE — It was a Duck feast at home at the NCAA track and field
have won the championship the same year.
championships.
James
readyfor whatever Cavs need
They did it on their home track, in the
By Brian Mahoney
second of an eight-year contract to host the championships at Hayward Field. "We sawthem go out there and win. We saw how pumped up they were,"
The Associated Press
women to their first team champion-
Prandini said. "We didn't want the men
corner, an otherwise or-
ship in 30 years. A day earlier, under the new meet
to outshine us, so we got on the track and did our thing."
dinary shot with a higher degree of difficulty given the backpack hanging over his shoulders.
Jenna Prandini won the 100 meters and finished second to Kentucky's
Dezerea Bryant in an exceedingly fast 200 on Saturday, leading the Oregon
format, the Oregon men cruised to their
See Duck/D5
OAKLAND, Calif.
-
LeBron James casually swished a jumper from the
In the NBA Finals,
James might have to carry something much heavier than a backpack.
SISTERS RODEO
He might have to put the
Cleveland Cavaliers on his back. "Well, I'm in a spot
where I have to be very productive, and that's just the spot I've always been
GOLF
in," James said Saturday. See Finals/D6
Bend's Gooktops invitational field Defending champion Rosie Cook, from Awbrey GlenGolf Club in Bend, shot1-under par 71, making four birdies on the day, to distance herself from the field at the 50th annual Bend Ladies' Invitational Saturday at BendGolf and Country Club. Cook has a4-shot lead over DebbieFriede, who shot 3-over-par 75 to lead the chasers. Friede, a1-handicap, made the trip from Royal Oaks in Vancouver, British Columbia, along with16 other women from the club whocame to Bend for this year's tournament. Royal Oakshasthe second most members represented in the field; host Bend Golf and Country Club has20 members competing. Bend G8CCmembers Amy Anderson andNettie Morrison shot 76 and 77, respectively, to trail the leader in third and fourth place. Mountain View High School and Oregon State product Chelsea Lind shot 79 on theday, after a tough front nine. Five states (and Canada) are represented in the 98-women field, competing in four different flights. The leaders will tee off the first tee today for a 9 a.m. shotgun start. Spectators are welcome free of charge. — Bulletin staff report
CAVALIERS2,WARRIORS 2
i/]Ikh s~4 t L
All TimesPDT; x-ifnecessary
SOCCER
Reformer needed to fix FIFA By Stephen Wade The Associated Press
RIO DE JANEIROSepp Blatter thinks FIFA can reform itself. Anti-cor-
ruption experts say an Handlers and rodeoworkers separate and movelivestock between pens in between the afternoon and evening performances onSatur-
institution in that much trouble won't be able to
day at the Sisters Rodeo Grounds.
clean itself up without an
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
• Cowboys getthe glory, but strategically bred stock animalsprovidethe thrills By Victoria Jacobsen
as the spectators groaned in
The Bulletin
disappointment. The crowd at the Sisters
SISTERS — Rider after rider was thrown from his
MLB Ellsdury expected to return inJuly There remains no firm timetable for Jacoby Ellsbury's return, but Yankees general manager Brian Cashmansaid he expects the center fielder back before July's All-Star break. "Yeah, I would think so," Cashmansaid Friday. Ellsbury, out since May 20 with a right knee sprain, started baseball activities earlier in the week, progress that continued Friday. He did some light base running for about 10 minutes, then played catch with bench coach Rob Thomson. Joe Girardi estimated Ellsbury ran at about "60 percent." "He's starting to do a little bit of everything now," Girardi said. "He felt good again today." — NeM/sday
Game1: Warriors108,Cavs100 Game 2:Cavs95, Warriors 93 Game 3: Cavs96, Warriors 91 Game 4:Warriors103, Cavs82 Today at Golden St. 5 p.m. June16 at Cleveland 6 p.m. x-June19 at GoldenSt. 6 p.m.
bull before recording a full eight-second ride. Five seconds, and a cowboy would disappear in a cloud of dust. Four-and-a-half seconds, and the next cowboy would
fall and scamper to safety. A few cowboys lasted a tick past seven seconds, but down they went at the last moment
Rodeo Grounds cheered when
Justin Rickard, of Nuevo, California, became just the third bull rider of the afternoon
(and sixth of the weekend) to make a qualified ride, but the fans booed when officials
awarded Rickard a not-quitestellar 67 points out of a possible 100.
outsider. The arrest of seven top
Redmond's Peedlesscoresan83 in haredackridingSaturdayafternoon David Peebles, of Redmond, led the bareback riding competition after the Saturday afternoon performance at theSisters Rodeo. Peebles wasawarded ascore of 83 by thejudges for his ride. Clint Laye, of Cadogan,Alberta, and Josi Young, of Buhl, Idaho, were tied for second, after each scoring an 80. Kyle Lucas, of Carstairs, Alberta, was in the lead in tie-down roping after the Saturday afternoon performance with a time of 18.7 seconds. Will Smith, of Marshall, Missouri, held the lead insaddle bronc riding with a score of 80. Results from the rodeo's Saturday night performance wereunavailable by press time. Saturday afternoon's results are in Scoreboard, D2. TheSisters Rodeo continues today at1 p.m. — Bulletin staff report
SeeRodeo/D4
soccer officials in Zurich and Blatter's resignation provide an opening for transforming what Transparency International's managing director Cobus de Swardt termed FIFA's "sordid empire of corruption."
But any change clashes with the reality of politics at FIFA: Its 209 members from Vanuatu to Venezuela, and the powerful executive committee are
unlikely to act against their own entrenched power and
privileges. See FIFA/D4
GOLF
No Sundaygolfers allowed on Old Courseat St.Andrews By Sam Borden New York Times News Service
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — For those who arrive at the
ting a drive or rapping a putt. Frisbees are fine. Picnics,
too. Locals might tell you that pushing a baby stroller (or pram, in the vernacular) can get a little challenging on some of the more uneven
birthplace of golf on a sunny Sunday morning, the rules of play are simple. You can pretty much do anything you parts of the course, but if your want on the historic grounds little one will be soothed by of the Old Course, as long as it the strong winds whipping in does not involve actually hit-
off the North Sea then, well,
so be it.
Wedding photos on the famed Swilcan Bridge are no problem, either, though guests in formal attire should
be advised that they may not fit in with the more casual university students who
like to loll about on the 18th fairway. SeeSt. Andrews/D5
Kieran Dodda/The New YorkTimaa
Locals and tourists wander the grounds of the Old Course, the birthplace of golf, in St. Andrews, Scotland, in Mey. Golfers are unwelcome onthe Old Course on Sundays, when pretty much
anything else goes.
D2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time T V/Radie 10 a.m. FS1 noon N B CSN
AUTO RACIiiG
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Michigan 400 IndyCar, HondaIndy Toronto
Sisters Rodeo
BASEBALL
MLB, KansasCity at St. Louis MLB, Seattle at Houston NCAA World Series, LSU vs. Texas Christian MLB, Cincinnati at ChicagoCubs NCAA World Series, C.S.Fullerton vs. Vanderbilt
1 1 a.m. ML B 1 1 a.m. R o ot n oon ESP N 5 p.m. E S PN 5 p.m. E SPN2
BASKETBALL
WNBA, Chicago at Indiana WNBA, Minnesota at Phoenix NBA Finals, Cleveland atGoldenState
10 a.m. ESPN2 noon E S P N2 5 p.m. ABC
GOLF
PGA Tour, St. JudeClassic LPGA Tour ,LPGA Championship PGA Tour, St. JudeClassic LPGA Tour ,LPGA Championship Champions Tour,Constellation Senior Players SOCCER UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Slovenia vs England UEFAEuro2016qualifier, Ukraine vs Luxembourg UEFAEuro 2016 qualifier, Belarus vs Spain MLS, D.C.United at Orlando City
1 0 a.m. noon noon noon noon
Go l f NBC CBS NBC Golf
8:50 a.m. ESPN
9a.m. FS2 11:30 a.m. FS2 4 p.m. FS1
MONDAY BASEBALL
NCAA World Series, Game5: TeamsTBA MLB, Atlanta at Boston NCAA World Series, Game6: TeamsTBA MLB, Seattle at SanFrancisco SOCCER Women's World Cup,Thailand vs. Germany Women's World Cup,Cotedolvoire vs. Norway Women's WorldCup,Netherlandsvs.Canada Women's WorldCup,Chinavs.New Zealand
noon 4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
E S P N2 E S PN E SPN2 Roo t
1 p.m. 10 1 p.m. FS1 4 :30 p.m. F S 1 4 :30 p.m. F S 2
HOCKEY
NHL, Stanley CupFinal, TampaBayat Chicago
5 p.m.
NBC
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Werdum takeS heavyweight title — FabricioWerdumof Brazil defeated a rusty CainVelasquez bytap-out in the third round to become the undisputed heavyweight champion at UFC188 onSaturday night in Mexico City. With 2:13 left in the third round, Werdum (20-5-1) took downVelasquez, whowas coming of a 20-month layoff after suffering injuries in his shoulder andknee. It was Werdum's sixth straight win. TheBrazilian jiujitsu specialist was able to cut local favorite Velasquez(13-2) in the left eye since the first round and the former heavyweight champion struggled through the rest of the fight to overcome it. Prior to the mainevent, Mexican-American middleweight Kelvin Gastelum (12-1) got aTKOin the second round to defeat Nate Marquardt (36-15-2j, a 36year-old former strikeout champion.
BASEBALL MarinerS deSignate WeekS, reCallRHPFarquharThe Seattle Mariners have designated Rickie Weeksfor assignment and recalled right-hander DannyFarquhar from Triple-A Tacoma. The moves comeafter Seattle had to use its bullpen for 5N innings on Thursday and 7/s innings on Friday in tough starts by J.A. Happ andFeli x Hernandez.ManagerLloydMcClendon saysheappreciated what Weeks brought to the team, but "with the stress that we had on the bullpen it was just a movethat we had to make." Weeks hit.167 with one homer and nine RBls in 37 gameswith the Mariners. Farquhar vvas0-3 with a 6.46 ERA in 20appearances with the Mariners this season before being optioned to Tacoma onMay 25. He was1-0 with a 6.75 ERA infive games with one start for the Rainiers.
TRACK AND FIELD BOlt CallS 200 PerfOrmanCe WOrSt OfCareer — UsainBolt called his performance in the 200meters Saturday the worst of his career after he posted anuncharacteristically slow time in winning the race at theAdidas Grand Prix in NewYork. The last time he ranat this meet, Bolt set his first world record sevenyears agowith a stunning victory in the 100. But onSaturday, the six-time Olympic gold medalist was surprised anddisappointed at how poorly he ranthe curve and expressed frustration that his training hasn't been translating to strong showings in competitions. Bolt had wanted to break 20 seconds for the first time this season, but he finished in 20.29 seconds Saturday. His world record is 19.19. — From wire reports
COLLEGE WORLD SERIES
Florida's11-run inning fuels win over Miami The Associated Press
RODEO
tion game that afternoon.
Logan Shore (10-6) scattered seven hits and struck inning to tie a College World out six in five innings for Series record, and defeat- the win. Suarez (9-2) took ed Miami 15-3 on S atur- the loss in a 3 1/3-inning outday night, the Hurricanes' ing that matched his second most lopsided loss in their shortest oftheseason. long and proud postseason Also on Saturday: history. Virginia 5, Arkansas 3: The G a t ors' ou t b urst OMAHA, Neb. — Kenny broke open a surprisingly Towns hit a tiebreaking RBI sloppy game and ended with double in the eighth inning Florida having turned a 2-1 after Daniel P inero stole deficit into a 10-run lead on second and third base, and nine hits off Andrew Suarez Virginia opened the College OMAHA, Neb. — Florida scored 11 runs in the fourth
and two relievers.
World Series with a victory
Florida (50-16) advanced to a Bracket 1 winners game against Virginia on Monday night. Miami (49-16) and Arkansas will play an elimina-
over Arkansas. Ernie Clement added a run-scoring single in the ninth for Virginia (40-22), which scored all five of its runs with two outs.
Standingsafter Saturdayafternoon (secondperformance) Tie-downroping secondgo-round leaders1, Blair Burk,Durant,Oklahoma,8.4seconds.2 (tie), Trevor Knowles,MountVernon,Oregon, andClint Robinson,SpanishFork, Utah,8.6. 4(tie), JakePrat, Ellensburg,Washington, andJared Parke, Gooding, Idaho,8.8.6, CimarronBoardman, Stephenvile, Texas, 8.9. 7,DoyleHoskins, Chualar, California, 9.0.8, Kyle Lucas, Carstairs, Alberta,9.1. Tie downaggregate leaders— 1, KyleLucas, Carstairs, Alberta, 18.7. 2, JeremyLenKempker, Eugene,Missouri,18.8. 3, CimarronBoardman, Stephenville,Texas,19.2. 4(tie), TrevorKnowles, Mount Vernon,Oregon, andTaylor Santos, Creston, California,198. 6, JoeHoffman, Chehalis, Washington,21.6. 7, Jordan Ketscher, SquawValey, California, 22.8.8, Justin Brinkerhoff,Corrine, Utah,23.2. Barebackriding leaders — 1, DavidPeebles, Redmond,Oregon,83points. 2(tie), Clint Laye,Cadogan, AlbertaandJosiYoung,Buhl,Idaho,80.4,Jessy Davis ,Power,Montana,76.5,LukeCreasy,Lovington, NewMexico,75.6(tie), TeddyAthan,Livermore, California, andTrenten Montero, Winnemucca, Nevada, 72. 8,CavanWrzesinski, Boulder,Montana,65. Steer wrestlingsecondgo-round leaders—1) TravisCarnine,Stanfield, Oregon,4.6.2 (tie), Miles Switzer,Morro Bay,California, andBlakeKnowles, Heppner,Oregon, 4.9. 4, LukeBranquinho, LosAlamos, California,5.0. 5 (tie), CharlesHarris, Salinas, California,andAustin Manning, Kuna,Idaho,5.2. Steer wrestlingaggregateleaders —1, Blake Knowles,Heppner, Oregon, 9.4. 2, LukeBranquinho, Los Alamos,California, 9.6. 3 (tie), ClaytonMoore, PouceCoupe,British Columbia,andMatt Reeves, CrossPlaines,Texas,10.3. 5,Charles Harris, Salinas, California,10.4. 6,JackVanderlans, Temecula, California,10.8. Saddle broncriding leaders — 1,Wil Smith, Marshall, Missouri,80. 2(four-waytie), HardyBraden,Welch,Oklahoma;Brad Rudol f,Winnemucca, Nevada;ChuckSchmidt, Keldron,SouthDakota, and DustyHausauer, Dickinson, NorthDakota, 79. 6,Clay Elliott, Nanton,Alberta,74. 7(tie), JakeWatson,Hudsons Hope,British Columbia,andRyan Mackenzie, HomedaleIdaho, , 69. Team ropingsecondgo-round leaders — 1, DoyleHoskins,Chualar,California,andWyatt Cox, ArroyoGrande,California, 4.7.2 (tie) Spencer Mitchell, Colusa,California, andJustin Davis, Cottonwood, CaliforniaandDerrick Begay,SebaDalkai, Arizona, and ClayO'BrienCooper, Gardnervile, Nevada,4.8. 4 (tie) HayesSmith, White City, Oregon,andJasonDuby,Bonanza,Oregon,andBilly Bob Brown, Stephenvile, Texas,andGarrett Jess,CouleeCity, Washington,5.1. 6, BrycePalmer, Milton-Freewater, Oregon, andTaylor Justin Duby,Homedale, Idaho,5.8. Team ropingaggregate — 1, GarrettRogers, BakerCity,Oregon,andJakeMinor, Elensburg, Washington,12.0, 2,Spencer Mitchell, Colusa,California, and Justin DavisCottonwood, , California, 15.7. 3, RyanReed,Witman, Arizona, andMonty JoePetska, Turlock,California,17.8.4, MikeMcGinn,Haines, Oregon,andBil Justus,Haines, Oregon,17.9.5, Tanner Patzke,KlamathFalls, Oregon,andBoPatzke,Klamath Falls, Oregon,22.3. 6, ClaytonHansen, Pendleton, Oregon ,andChaseHansen,Homedale,Idaho,22.6. Barrel Racingleaders — 1, Taylor Jacob, Carmine,Texas,17.81. 2,JadeCrossley, Hermiston, Oregon,17.83. 3, Kaley Bass, Kissimmee, Florida,17.86. 4, KelsieMiler,Riley,Oregon,17.89. 5, Rachel Dice, Livermore,California,17.90. 6, AmberLeigh Moore, Salem, Oregon,17.92.7,JackieGudmundson,Monroe, Washinton,17.96. 8, Pam ela Capper, Cheney, Washington,17.97. 9 (tie), SharonGow, Roseburg, Oregon andHannahCarlilse, Bend,Oregon,18.06. Bull Riding leaders — 1,KaninAsay,Powel, Wyoming,85. 2, A.J. Hamre, LosMolinos, California, 77 3, TrentenMontero,Winnemucca,Nevada,75.4, DylanVick, Escalon, California, 74.5,Justin Rickard, Nuevo,California,67. 6, Dalton McMurtrie, Imyokern, California,40.
ThirdRoundleaders
GregOwen FabianGomez ScottBrown BrooksKoepka Matt Jones AustinCook Tim Wilkinson CamiloVilegas Arjun Atwal DavidToms ChadCampbel RyanPalmer TomHoge Chris Smith ChezReavie MaxHoma Michae lThompson KevinChapel
a-amateur
64-70-67—201 66-68-67—201 65-69-68—202 64-67-71—202 69-67-68—204 68-64-72—204 70-70-65—205 71-68-66—205 72-65-68—205 70-66-69—205 69-66-70—205 64-71-70—205 69-65-71—205 67-67-71—205 70-70-66—206 68-70-68—206 69-69-68—206 71-64-71—206
Gross:1,DebbieFriede,Royal OaksC.C., 75 Nek1(tie),NettieMorrison,BendC.C., MarySias, RockCreekC.C., AthenaDouglas, llaheHils C.C.,72. 2nd Flight eross:1, Patricia Jensen,RiversideC.C.,80. Nek1, DebbiSmith, BendC.C., 69. 3rd Flight eross:1, Barbara Gahr,Bend C.C.,83. Net:1, ShirleyThom pson, ClubGreen Meadows, 71. 4th Flight Gross:1, Eloise Elliott, BendC.C.,90. Nub1, Jane Roberts, llaheHils C.C.,71.
PGA St. JudeClassic Saturday At TPCSouthwind Memphis, Tenn. Purse: ggmillion Yardage: 7,239;Par: 70
BASKETBALL
Champions
Saturday's tinescore
Elks 5, HarbotlrCats1 Victoria ggg 001 ggg — 1 4 0 Bend 030 010 01X — 6 13 3 Kennedy,Ryan(7), Francis (8) andThoreson. Leasher, Gaul(6), Forrester(8)and Wolf. W—Leasher. L —Kennedy.
College NCAATournament All Times PDT COLLEGEWORLD SERIES At Omaha,Neb, (Double elimination; x-if necessary) Saturday'sGames Virginia 5,Arkansas3 Florida15,Miami3 Today'sGames
Houston SanJose R eal SaltLake 4 Colorado
5 5 5 5 5 4 5 6 2 4 8
20 19 18 14
21 14 13 11
19 15 18 12
Saturday'sGames
NewYorkCity FC3,Montreal1 NewEngland2, Chicago0 Columbus1,LosAngeles1, tie Seattle 3,FcDalas 0
NBA playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Alf Times PDT
Today'sGame D.c. Unitedat OrlandoCity,4 p.m.
FINALS
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Cleveland 2,GoldenState 1 June 4:GoldenState108,Cleveland100,OT June 6:Cleveland95, Golden State93,OT June 9:Cleveland96, Golden State91 June11;GoldenState103, Cleveland82 Today:Clevelandat GoldenState,5 p.m. Tuesday,June 16:GoldenStateat Cleveland,6 p.m. x-Friday,June 19: ClevelandatGoldenState, 6p.m.
LPGA Women'sPGAChampionship Saturday At WestchesterCountryClub, WestCourse Harrison, N.y. Purse: $3.5 million yardage: 6,670;Par: 73 Third Roundleaders InbeePark 71-68-66—205 Sei Young Kim 70-68-69—207 SuzannPetersen 74-66-71—211 BrookeHenderson 67-73-71—211 KarrieWebb 68-71-72—211 MorganPressel 73-70-69—212 ShanshanFeng 73-72-68—213 BrittanyLincicome 70-74-69—213 Hyo JooKim 70-74-69—213 SakuraYokomine 74-71-69—214 71-73-70—214 AnnaNordqvist JulietaGranada 72-71-71—214 Lexi Thom pson 70-72-72—214 70-71-73—214 StacyLewis 72-72-71—215 So YeonRyu 72-70-73—215 GerinaPiler 70-72-73—215 CristieKerr 74-71-71—216 QBaek 70-74-72—216 ChellaChoi 69-75-72—216 KarineIcher 70-72-74—216 CandieKung 74-71-72—217 Mika Miyazato 73-72-72—217 CatrionaMathew Wei-LingHsu 74-71-72—217 Mirim Lee 72-72-73—217 JaneRah 70-74-73—217 CharleyHull 68-74-75—217 JennyShin 66-75-76—217 Ha NaJang 72-73-73—218 LizetteSalas 74-71-73—218 Mo Martin 72-71-75—218 JenniferSong 70-73-75—218 AzaharaMunoz 70-73-75—218 PaulaCreamer 71-76-72—219 MinjeeLee 72-74-73—219 Na Yeon Choi 76-70-73—219 MiJungHur 71-74-74—219 SandraGal 70-74-75—219 Dori Carter 72-72-75—219
Senior PlayersChampionship Saturday At BelmontCountryClub Belmont, Mass. Purse: $2.7million yardage: 6,812;Par: 71 Thrrd Roundleaders 65-65-67 —197 BernhardLanger 69-65-71 —205 RussCochran 69-71-66—206 ScottVerplank Colin Montgom erie 68-71-67—206 70-69-67—206 Jeff Hart GuyBoros 67-70-69—206 Billy Andrade 70-71-66—207 Esteban Toledo 69-71-67—207 Olin Browne 69-70-68—207 CYCLING MarkBrooks 72-67-68—207 Joe Durant 70-68-69—207 High Desert Omnium Kirk Triplett 70-68-69—207 Steve Pa t e 73-63-71 —207 Saturday's Results Lee Janz en 67-69-71 —207 9.5 Mile TimeTrial at BendMunicipal Airport MarcoDawson 69-69-70—208 Men Cat1/2 auers 68-71-69—208 1, Dillon Caldwell, 18:00.91minutes. 2, Colby GeneS Sutherland 71-66-71 —208 Wait-Molyneux,18:38.94. 3, PaulBourcier, 19:02.73. Kevin Jesper Parne vi k 70-66-72—208 4, DanieLil ncoln,19:04.45.5, AdamOliver,19;13.97. Calcavecchia 69-72-68—209 6, Joshua Liberles, 19:26.86. 7, JonathonLevie, Mark 73-67-69—209 19:37.41. 8,KyleWuepper, 19:45.65. 9, Carl Hoefer, PaulGoydos Scott Dunl a p 73-66-70—209 19:53.02.10,StevenR.Holland, 20:34.67. Kenny Pe rry 70-69-70—209 Men Cat 4/6 69-69-71—209 1, Dan Litwora, 19:47.48. 2, ChristopherRam- LorenRoberts 72-72-66—210 Coston sey, 20:16.97.3, JasonWhitley, 20:38.07.4, Justin Jeff 67-74-69—210 Mediate Guidroz,20:41.81.5, ChrisSarrett, 20:44.60.6, Alex Rocco 71-70-69—210 Willie Wood Wilson, 21:26.65. 7,Adrian Bosch,21:27.85. 8, Mi70-70-70—210 Gibson chaelCollins,21:35.82.9, DrewMoore, 21:51.14.10, Rick 72-68-70—210 TomLehman BruceHaserot, 21:53.09. 73-66-71 —210 MichaelAllen Men Masters 71-68-71 —210 Jeff Magg e rt 1, TimMarcotte,20:10.77.2, RonSines, 20:12.27. 71-67-72 —210 Austin 3,ScottPeterson,20;26.88.4,RobAngelo,20;26.96. Woody 74-69-68—211 JohnRiegger 5, BenjaminBrainard, 20:36.98.6, Thomas Hainisch, Jones 72-74-66—212 20:38.01.7, Scott Carrol, 20:58.37.8, SteveSimone, Steve 72-71-69—212 Waite 21:20.5. 9, KeithLevesque,21;20.92. 10, Douglas Grant J eff Sl u ma n 73-69-70—212 Wilcox,21:29.45. Bart Bryant 72-70-70—212 WomenCat1/2 Mouland 71-71-70—212 1, Julie Cutts, 20:59.33. 2, Kristina Hughes, Mark Wes Short, Jr. 74-69-70—213 21:49.15. 3,GinaKavesh, 22:26.49. 4, JennaApp, JerrySmith 73-69-71 —213 22:47 .53.5,MarthaWalsh,23:42.87. JoeySindelar 72-70-71—213 WomenCat8 Reid 71-72-71—214 1, Christine A.Holland,23:27.70. 2, LaurenTrolley, Mike BrianHenninger 71-72-71 —214 23:49.03. 3,SophiaAndrews,24:54.70 Brad Bryant 73-70-71—214 WomenCat4/5 Frost 70-73-71—214 1, Lisa Bowe rman, 23:22.64. 2, Allison Halpin, DavidLane 75-73-67—215 24:17 .37.3,TraceyMarch,24:47.48.4,RachelMavis, Barry Tom Byrum 72-75-68—215 25:18.96.5,ToniDecker,25:40.55. 6,Jennifer Bartloff, Tom Perni c e Jr. 70-75-70—215 29;28,66r7, Vikki Bourcler,29:43.57. 70-74-71 —215 ScottHoch Criterium atBendMunicipal Airport RogerChapman 72-71-72—215 Men Cat1/2 Brad Faxon 74-64-77—215 1, ColbyWait-Molyneux. 2, CarlDecker. 3, Colton Brookshire. 4,BenThompson. 5, Daniel Lincoln. 6, Dillon Caldwell. 7,JonathonLevie. 8, KyleWuepper. BASEBALL 9, Sandor Delgado Jr.10, AdrianRichardson. Men Cat3 WCL 1, CassidyBigby.2,Justin Buel. 3,AhmedZuhairy. 4, ErikYoung.5,ToddBerger.6, Erik Hammerquist. 7, WESTCOASTLEAGUE MaxRitzow.8, MattKline. 9, BrandonGallagher. 10, All Times PDT Joe Chave s. Men Cat4/5 South Division 1, DanLitwora. 2, ChristopherRamsey. 3, Felipe W L Pct GB Nystrom.4, MathewFischer.5, DonovanBirky. 6, Eric 7 1 875 Birky. 7,AdamDeMarzo. 8, AdrianBoscho. 9, Chris 5 3 625 2 Sarrett.10,JustinLair. 4 4 500 3 Men's Masters3/4/6 1 7 125 6 1, Rob Angelo.2, TimMarcotte. 3, Benjamin BrainEast Dtvtston ard. 4,RonSines. 5, Scott Carroll. 6,AlanWhitney. W L Pct GB 7, ScottPeterson.8, Casey Patton. 9, David Hart. 10, Yakima Valley 5 2 714 SteveSimone. Kelowna 5 3 625 '/z WomenCat1/2 WallaWalla 4 3 571 1 1, KristinaHughes.2, JenniferLuebke.3, Julie Wenatchee 1 4 200 3 Cutts. West Division WomenCat8 W L Pct GB 1, Lauren Trolley.2, Christine A.Holland. 3, Sophie Bellingham 5 3 625 Andrews.4, LisaHeathman. Victoria 3 5 375 2 WomenCat4/5 Kitsap 3 5 375 2 1, TraceyMarch. 2, Rachel Mavis, 3, LisaBower- Cowlitz 1 4 200 2H man. 4, Taylor Philips, 5, PatriciaStrange.6,Jennifer Bartloff. 7,SusanPalmer. Saturday'sGames KlamathFals 7, Belingham5 Kelowna4,Medford2 GOLF Kitsap 6,Cowlitz 5 Bend 5, Victoria 1 Bend Ladies' WallaWalla4, Yakima3 Corvallis 8,Wenatchee4 Invitational Today'sGames Saturday Victoriaat Bend,1;05 p.m. Bend Golf tgCountry Club Cowlitz atKitsap,3 p.m. 1st RoundLeaders, June13 WallaWallaatYakima,5:05 p.m. Overall Gross:1,RosieCook,AwbreyGlenG.c., Bellingham at KlamathFals, 5:05p.m. 71. MedfordatKelowna,6:05 p.m. Overall Net:1,BarbaraBelland, StoneCreekG.c., C orvallis at Wenatchee,6:05p.m. 62. 1st Flight
Game3:LSU(53-10)vs.TCU(51-13), noon Game 4: Cal State Fullterton(39-23) vs. Vanderbilt (47-19), 5p.m.
WNBA WOMEN'S NATIONALBASKHBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT
EasternConference W L Pct GB 3 1 .7 5 0
NewYork Connecticut Washington Atlanta Chicago Indiana Minnesota Tulsa Phoenix Seattle Los Angeles SanAntonio
2 2 2 1 1
1 1 2 2 3
.6 6 7 'I~ .6 6 7 '/z .5 0 0 1 .3 3 3 t ' /z .2 5 0 2
3 2 1 1 0 0
0 1 2 2 1 2
1 . 000 .6 6 7 1 .3 3 3 2 .3 3 3 2 .0 0 0 2 00 0 2 r/z
WesternConference W L Pct GB
Today'sGames
Chicago at Indiana,10a.m. Minnesota at Phoenix, noon AtlantaatConnecticut, noon Tulsa atSanAntonio,1:30 p.m. SeattleatLosAngeles,2p.m. Washingtonat NewYork, 3p.m.
TENNIS Professional TopshelfOpen Saturday atDenBosch, Netherlands Men Semifinals NicolasMahut, France, def. RobinHaase, Netherlands,5-7,6-3, 6-4. DavidGoffin(2), Belgium,def. GilesMuller, Luxembourg, 7-6(4), 6-4. Women Semifinals BelindaBencic (4), Switzerland,def.JelenaJankovic (2),Serbia,6-3, 6-3. CamilaGiorgi (5), Italy, def.Kiki Bertens,Netherlands,6-2,6-4.
ATP Mercedesgup Saturday atStuttgart, Germany Semifinals RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. GaelMonf ils (4), France,6-3,6-4. ViktorTroicki(8),Serbia,def. Marin Cilic (2),Croatia, 6-3,6-7(1), 7-6(2).
HOCKEY NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE Alf Times PDT STANLEYCUPFINAL
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Chicago 3,TampaBay2 Saturday:Chicago2, TampaBay1 Monday: TampaBayatChicago,5p.m. x-Wedne sday:ChicagoatTampaBay,5p.m.
SOCCER Women's World Cup All Times PDT GROUPSTAGE GROUP A W L T GF GAPts 1 0 1 1 0 4
Canada Netherlands China NewZealand 0
1 1
1 0 1 0
1 1
1 1
1 1 0 1 Monday'sGames Canada vs. Netherlands, 4:30p.m. Chinavs.Ne wZealand,4;30 p.m.
3 3
1
MO TOR SPORTS NAinCAR Sprint Cup OuickenLoans400Lineup After Fridayqualifying;race today At MichiganInternational Speedway Brooklyn, Mich. Lap length: 2miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (5)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet, 201.992mph. 2. (4)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,201.613. 3. (2)BradKeselowski, Ford,201.449. 4.19) CarlEdwards,Toyota, 201.067. 5. I21) RyanBlaney, Ford, 201.056. 6. (24)JeffGordon, Chevrolet, 200.988. 7. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,200.915. 8. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,200.658. 9. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, 200.579. 10. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,200.468. 11. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford, 200.418. 12.20Matt Kenseth,Toyota,199.579. 13.I11I DennyHamlin,Toyota,199.933. 14.(88)DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet, 199.928. 15.(14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 199.662. 16.(42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, 199.435. 17.(27PaulMenard,Chevrolet, 199.352. 18. 55IDavidRagan,Toyota, 198.983. 19.(10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 198.462. 20.6) TrevorBayne,Ford, 198.38. 21.I16) Greg Biffle, Ford,198.216. 22.(33) TyDilon, Chevrolet, 198.183. 23. (31)RyanNewman,Chevrolet,198.129. 24. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,197.585. 25. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,196.727. 26. 43)AricAlmirola, Ford,196.694. 27. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,196.56. 28. (7)AlexBowman, Chevrolet,196.415. 29. (40)LandonCassil, Chevrolet,196.399. 30. 9) Sam HornishJr., Ford,195.716. 31. (47)AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet, 195.588. 32. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,195.578. 33.(17RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,195.578. 34. 38I DayidGililand, Ford,195.487. 35. (46)MtchaelAnnett, Chevrolet,194.679. 36.51Justin Allgaier,Chevrolet,194.049. 37.I34I BrettMoffitt, Ford,ownerpoints. 38. (26)JebBurton,Toyota, ownerpoints. 39. (98)JoshWise,Ford, ownerpoints. 40. (35)ColeWhitt, Ford,owner points. 41.(23J.J. Yeley,Toyota, ownerpoints. 42. 32)MikeBliss, Ford,owner points. 43. (83)MattDiBenedeto, Toyota, owner points. Failed toQualify 44. (62)BrendanGaughan, Chevrolet,187.349.
IndyCar Honda IndyToronto After Saturdayqualifying; racetoday At TorontoStreet Circuit Toronto Lap length: 1.756miles (Car numberin parentheses) Alf cars Dalfarachassis 1.(1) WillPower,Chevrolet, 106.314mph. 2.(22) Simon Pagenaud, Chevrolet, 105.99. 3.(2)JuanPabloMontoya, Chevrolet, 105.964. 4.9) ScottDixon,Chevrolet, 105.497. 5. I11) Seba stien Bourdais, Chevrolet, 105.474. 6.(20) Luca Filippi, Chevrolet, 104.896. 7.(3) HelioCastroneves,Chevrolet, 105.486. 8.14) TakumSaato, Honda,105.388. 9. I10) Tony Kanaan, Chevrolet,105.142. 10. (15)GrahamRahal, Honda,105.083. 11. (67)JosefNewgarden,Chevrolet,105.068. 12. (7)JamesJakes, Honda,104.503. 13. 26)CarlosMunoz,Honda,104.112. 14. (41)JackHawksworth, Honda,102.804. 15.83) CharlieKimball, Chevrolet,103.82. 16.I28)RyanHunter-Reay, Honda,102.572. 17. (8)Sebastian Saavedra, Chevrolet,103.586. 18. (27)MarcoAndreti, Honda,101.919. 19. (5)ConorDaly, Honda,103.144. 20. (4)StefanoColetti, Chevrolet,101.25. 21. 19)TristanVautier, Honda,102.721. 22. (98)GabbyChaves, Honda,101.247. 23. (18)Rodolfo Gonzalez,Honda,97.175.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague
CHICAGO WHITESOX— Agreed to termswith RHPsDrewHasler, BrandonMagallones, Brandon Quintero,ChristopherComito, DannyDopico, Corey Zanga ri,JordanStephensandJackCharleston;LHPs Johnat hanFrebis,RyanRiga,RyanHinchleyandZack GROUP B W L T GF GA Pts Erwin; CsJacob Cooper, Casey Schroeder andBlake German y 1 0 1 1 1 1 4 Hickman;SSsDaniel Mendick, BradleyStrong, Grant andLandonLassiter; OFsFrankCalifano, TyNorway 1 0 1 5 1 4 Massey Thailand 1 1 0 3 6 3 ler SullivanandJacksonGlines;INF SikesOrvis; and Walkeronminorleaguecontracts. IvoryCoast 0 2 0 2 13 0 2B David CLEVEL AND INDIANS — Reinstated RHPScott Monday'sGames A tchison fromthe15-dayDL.OptionedRHPC.c. Lee Thailandvs.Germany,1 p.m. to Columbus (IL). IvoryCoastvs.Norway,1 p.m. DETROITIGERS— Optioned RHPAngel Nesbitt to Toledo(IL). ReinstatedRH PJustin Verlanderfrom GROUP 0 W L T G F GA Pts the15-dayDL. KANSAS CITYROYALS—PlacedLHPJason VarJapan 2 0 0 3 1 6 the15-dayDL,retroactive to Tuesday.Recalled Cameroon 1 1 0 7 2 3 gas on Switzerland 1 1 0 1 0 2 3 LHPBrandonFinneganfromOmaha(PCL). NEW YORKYANKEES — Assigned RHP Esmil Ecuador 0 2 0 1 16 0 Rogersoutright to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). OpTuesday'sGames tionedLHPJacobLindgrento Scranton/Wilkes-sarre. Ecuadorvs.Japan,2 p.m. Selectedthecontract of RH PSergioSantos fromTrenSwrtzerlandvs. Cameroon, 2p.m. GROUP 0 W L T 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 2 0 1 1
UnitedStates Australia
Sweden Nigeria
ton (EL).Recalled RHPJose RamirezfromScranton/
GF 3 3 3 3
Tuesday'sGames Nigeriavs.UnitedStates,3 p.m. Australiavs.Sweden,5 p.m.
GROUP E W L T GF Brazil CostaRica Spain SouthKorea
2 0 0
0 0 0 2 1 1
3 3 1
0 1 1 2 Saturday'sGames
Brazil1 Spain 0 SouthKorea2,CostaRica2
Wilkes-Barre. OAKLAND ATHLETICS— Sent 18 Ike Davisto GAPts 1 4 Nashville(PCL)for arehabassignment. S EATTLE MAR INERS — Designated OF Rickie 3 3 3 2 Weeksfor assignment. Recalled RHPDannyFarquhar coma(PCL). 5 1 fromTa TAMPA BAYRAYS—OptionedOFMikie Mahtook to Durham(IL). RecalledCCurt Casali fromDurham. TORONTOBLUEJAYS— Sent2BSteveTolleson to Buffalo(IL)forarehabassignment. National League ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Designated RHP GA Pts J.c. Rami r ezforassi gnment. Recalled RH PAllenWeb0 6 Reno(PCL). 3 2 ster from ATLANT ABRAVES—AssignedLHPYean Carlos 2 1 4 1 Gil outrightto Carolina (Carolina). LOSANGELESDODGERS— OptionedINFRonald Torreyesto Tulsa (TL). Designated2B Darwin Barney for assignme nt. SentOFScott VanSlyketo Rancho
Cucamonga (Cal) forarehabassignment. MIAMIMARLINS— OptionedRHPs Andre RienzoandKendryFloresandLHPAdam ConleytoNew Orleans(PCL). Recalled RHPSteveCishekfromJacksonville(SL)and28DerekDietrich fromNewOrleans. GROUP F W L T GF GA Pts ReinstatedRHPMat Latos fromthe15-day DL.
Wednesday'sGames
CostaRicavs. Brazil 4 p.m. SouthKoreavs. Spain,5 p.m.
Colombia England France Mexico
1 1 1 0
0 1 1 1
1 0 0 1
3 2 1 2
Saturday'sGames
1 2 2 3
4 3 3 1
Colombi2, a France0 England 2, Mexico1
Wednesday'sGames England vs.Colombia,1 p.m. Mexicovs.France,2 p.m.
MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER Alf Times PDT
NEWYORKMETS— Placed RHP ErikGoeddelon the15dayDL Recalled28DannyMunofromLasVegas (PCL).ClaimedOFKirk Nieuwenhuis offwaivers from theL.A. Angels. TransferredLHPJerry Blevins tothe 60-dayDL PITTSBU RGHPIRATES— Agreed to termswith RHPsBretHelton,Seth McGarry andJonathan Brubaker onminorleaguecontracts. SANDIEGOPADRES— SentLHPCoryLuebketo LakeElsinore(Cal) for a rehabassignment. Acquired LHPBradWieckfromtheNewYork Mets to complete and earliertrade. WASHING TON NATIONALS — Sent RHPDoug Fister toHarrisburg(EL) forarehab a
EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA D.C.United N ewEngland TorontoFc O rlando Cit y NewYork Columbus Philadelphia Montreal Chicago N ewYorkcityFC
8 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 3
4 4 5 5 4 6 9 5 8 7
4 6 1 5 5 5 3 2 2 5
28 24 19 17 17 17 15 14 14 14
WesternConference
W L Seattle 9 4 Vancouver 8 6 S porting KansasCity 6 2 6 Portland 6 5 FCDallas 6 5 LosAngeles 5 5
2 0 15 22 2 0 19 16 19 1 9 1 7 17 2 1 22 18 25 14 18 1 7 22 1 5 19
T Pts GF GA 2 2 9 23 11 2 2 6 18 15 2 4 2 2 15 4 2 2 1 5 14 4 2 2 18 22 7 2 2 16 19
FISH COUNT
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL eatandings
MARINERS ROLLPAST ASTROS
All TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE
East Division
NewYork
Tampa Bay Toronto Baltimore Boston Kansas City Minnesota Detroit Cleyeland Chicago Houston Texas LosAngeles Seattle Oakland
W 33 34 33 31 27
L 28 29 30 30 36 Central Division W L 34 25 33 28 32 30 29 32 28 32 West Division W L 35 28 33 29 32 30 28 34 25 39
Pct GB
.541 .540 .524 1 .508 2 .429 7
Pct GB .576 .541 2 .516 3'/t
.475 6 .467 6t/t
Saturday'sGames
Toronto5, Boston 4, 11innings Texas11,Minnesota7 Cleveland 5, Detroit 4 TampaBay5,ChicagoWhiteSox4 St. Louis3,KansasCity 2 Seattle 8, Houston1 Baltimore 9, N.Y.Yankees4 LA. Angels1,Oakland0
NewYork Washington Atlanta Miami Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee Los Angeles SanFrancisco SanDiego Arizona Colorado
East Division W L 33 30 32 30 30 32 27 36 22 41
CentralDivision W L 41 21 34 27 33 27 28 33 24 39
West Division W L
36 26 34 29 32 32 29 32 27 34
Pct GB .524 ,516
r/t
484 2r/t
.429 6 .349 11
Pct GB .661 .557 6r/t
.550 7
.459 12'/r .381 17r/t
Pct GB
.581
.540 2'/t
.500 5
.475 6r/t .443 Br/t
Saturday'sGames
Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia3 Atlanta5, N.Y.Mets 3,11 innings Miami 4,Colorado1 St. Louis3,KansasCity 2 Washington 7, Milwaukee2 Arizona 4, SanFrancisco2 Chicago Cuhs4, Cincinnati3 SanDiego2, LA. Dodgers 1 Today'sGam es Atlanta(Foltynewic3-2) z atNY.Mets(Gee0-3),1010
a.m. Colorado(J.DeLaRosa3-2) at Miami (Haren6-2), 10:10arm. Philadelphi(Ha a mels 5-5) atPittsburgh(Burnett 6-2), 10:35a.m. Washington(Scherzer6-5) at Milwaukee(Jungmann 1-0),11:10p.m. Kansas City (C.Young5-2) at St. Louis(Lackey4-4), 11:15p.m. Arizona(R.DeLa Rosa4-3) at SanFrancisco(Heston 6-4),1:05p.m. LA. Dodgers (Bolsinger 4-1) at SanDiego(Shields 7-0),1;10p.m. Cincinnati(DeSclafani5-4) at ChicagoCubs (Lester 4-5), 5:08 p.m. Monday'sGames ChicagoWhiteSoxat Pittsburgh, 4:05p.m. Philadelphia at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Cincinnatiat Detroit, 4:08p.m. Atlanta at Boston,4:10 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Miami,4:10 p.m. TorontoatN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. Washi ngtonatTampaBay,4:10p.m. Cleve landatChicagoCuhs,5:05p.m. L.A. Dodgers atTexas, 5:05p.m. Coloradoat Houston, 5:10p.m. KansasCityatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. Minnesota atSt. Louis,5:15 p.m. Arizona at L.A.Angels, 7;05p.m. OaklandatSanDiego, 7:10p.m. Seattle atSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m.
Leaders AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —Fielder, Texas, .347; Micahrera, Detroit, .333;Kipnis, Cleveland,.331;Ncruz, Seattle, .328;Moustakas,KansasCity, .318;Donaldson,
Toronto, .316; Cespe des, Detroit, .308; Reddick, Oakland,.308. RUNS —Donaldson, Toronto, 51;Dozier,Minnesota, 50;Trout, LosAngeles, 47; Gardner, NewYork, 42; Bautista, Toronto, 41; Kipnis, Cleveland,41; MMachado, Baltimore, 38. RBI — Teixeira,NewYork,46;Donaldson,Toronto, 45; Micahrera,Detroit, 44;Fielder,Texas,43; KMorales, KansasCity, 41;Ahreu, Chicago,40; Ncruz, Seattle,40;Vogt,Oakland, 40. HITS — Fielder, Texas, 84; Kipnis, Cleveland,81; Donaldson,Toronto, 79;Pedroia, Boston,77;Ncruz, Seattle,76;Micahrera,Detroit, 73;Altuve,Houston, 72; Cespees, d Detroit, 72. HOMERUNS—Ncruz, Seattle,18; Puiols, Los Angeles, 18; Trout, LosAngeles, 18; Donaldson, Toronto, 17; Teixeira, New York, 17; Micabrera, Detroit, 13; CDavis, Baltimore, 13; Encarnacion, Toronto,13;HR amirez, Boston,13; Valbuena,Houston, 13. STDLENBASES— Altuve,Houston,17;Gardner, New York,15; RD avis, Detroit,14; Ellsbury, New York,14;DeShields,Texas,13; Springer,Houston,13; Burns,Oakland,11;Cain, Kansas City, 11;LMartin, Texas,11. NATIONALLEAGUE BATTING —Goldschmidt, Arizona, .355;DGordon,Miami, .353; LeMahieu,Colorado, .347; Harper, Washington, .343; Aoki, San Francisco, .326; Pollock,Arizona,.325; YEscobar,Washington,.319. RUNS —Harper, Washington, 48; Goldschmidt, Arizona,47; Frazier,Cincinnati, 44;Fowler,Chicago, 42; Pollock,Arizona,42; Stanton, Miami,41;FFreeman,Atlanta,40;Upton,SanDiego, 40. RBI — Stanton, Miami, 59; Harper,Washington, 51; Goldschmidt,Arizona,50; Arenado,Colorado, 47; SMarte,Pittsburgh,43; Braun, Milwaukee,41; Bcrawford,SanFrancisco, 40; AG onzalez, LosAngeles,40. HITS — DGordon, Miami, 90; Goldschmidt,Arizona,78;Aoki, SanFrancisco, 77;Pollock, Arizona, 76; LeMahieu,Colorado,75;FFreeman, Atlanta, 73; JhPeralta,St.Louis,73. HOME RUNS —Stanton, Miami, 23; Harper, Washington,21;Frazier, Cincinnati,18; Goldschmidt, Arizona,17;Pederson,LosAngeles,17;Arenado, Colorado,15; Votto, Cincinnati,14. STOLENBASE S—BHamilton, Cincinnati, 26; DGordon, Miami, 22; GPolanco, Pittsburgh, 17; Blackmon,Colorado,14; Pollock,Arizona,14; Revere, Philadelphia,14;Upton,SanDiego,13.
MIAMI — Mat Latos struck out a season-high11 over seven innings, Giancarlo Stanton homered and drove in four runs, and Miami beat Colorado. Latos (2-4), making his first start since May21 while being sidelined with left knee inflammation, earned his first victory since May 5 atWashington. He allowed onerun andfour hits. Stanton had atwo-run double in the first and a two-run home run,
PITTSBURGH — Gerrit Cole allowed two runs in six innings to become the first pitcher in the majors to 10 victories this season as Pittsburgh edgedPhiladelphia. Cole (10-2) struck out seven without a walk to trim his ERAto a major-league best1.71 while winning his fifth consecutive start. The 24-year-old is now 14-2 in 18 starts dating to last September.
Philadelphia Pittsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Revererf-cf 5 2 3 0 GPolncrf 4 1 2 0 OHerrrcf 3 0 0 0 SMartelf 4 1 3 1 Francrph-rf 1 0 1 1 Mcctchcf 3 0 1 2 Colorado Miami Utley2h 3 0 1 1 NWalkr2h 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Howard1b 3 0 0 0 JHrrsn3h 4 0 1 1 LeMahi 2h 4 1 1 0 DGordn 2h 4 1 1 0 Franco3h 4 1 2 0 PAlvrz1h 3 0 0 0 Dickrsnlf 3 0 0 0 Prado3h 3 0 0 0 B lckmncf 1 0 1 0 Yelichlf 4 2 1 0 Aschelf 4 0 0 0 SRdrgz1h 1 0 0 0 G alvisss 4 0 2 1 Kangss 3 1 1 0 Tlwlzk ss 4 0 1 1 Stanton rf 3 1 2 4 Ruizc 4 0 0 0 Stewartc 3 1 0 0 CGnzlzrf 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 0 0 0 OSullvnp 2 0 0 0 G.colep 1 0 0 0 A renad3h 4 0 1 0 Bour1b 2 0 0 0 P aulsn1b 4 0 0 0 Mathisc 3 0 0 0 ABlancph 1 0 0 0 Tahataph 1 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 McKnrc 2 0 1 0 Hchvrrss 3 0 0 0 JGomzp 0 0 0 0Watsonp 0 0 0 0 B Barnscf-If 3 0 0 0 Latosp 2 0 0 0 Halep 2 0 0 0 ISuzukiph 0 0 0 0 Rufph 1 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Ynoaph 1 0 0 0 SDysonp 0 0 0 0 Totals 35 3 9 3 Totals 3 0 4 8 4 P hiladelphia 10 0 100 010 — 3 B Brwn p 0 0 0 0 Dunn p 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 0 0 0 Bgx— 4 Hwkns p 0 0 0 0 ARams p 0 0 0 0 E—Stewart(3). DP—Philadelphia1. LOB —PhilaTotals 3 2 1 5 1 Totals 2 84 4 4 C olorado 000 0 0 1 000 — 1 delphia7,Pittsburgh7. 28—Revere(10), Franco(7), Galvis(4),G.Polanco(12). SB—Revere2 (14), G.PoMiami 200 002 Ogx — 4 (17).CS—S.Marte(4). S—G.cole.SF—Utley. E—McKenry (3). LOB—Colorado 6, Miami 4. lanco
12 RBls in the past six games.
.532 1'/t .516 2'/t .452 6'/t .391 IO'/r
NATIONALLEAGUE
Pirates 4, Phillies 3
his 23rd, in the sixth to give him
Pct GB
.556
Today'sGam es Cleveland (Kluber3-7) at Detroit (Simon6-3), 10:08 a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Sale 6-2) at Tampa Bay (Karns 3-3),10:10a.m. N.Y. Yankees (Warren 4-4) at Baltimore(M.Wright 2-1),10;35a.m. Toronto(Estrada3-3) at Boston(E.Rodriguez 2-0), 10:35a.m. Seattle(Elias3-3) at Houston (Mccullers 2-1), 11:10 p.m. Kansas City (C.Young5-2) at St. Louis(Lackey4-4), 11:15p.m. Minnesota(PHughes 4-6) at Texas (N.Martinez5-2), 12:05p.m. Oakland(Gray7-3) at L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 4-4), 12:35p.m. Monday'sGames ChicagoWhiteSoxat Pittsburgh, 4:05p.m. Philadelphiaat Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Cincinnatiat Detroit, 4:08p.m. Atlanta at Boston,4:10 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat Miami,4:10 p.m. TorontoatN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. Washi ngtonatTampaBay,4:10p.m. Cleve landatChicagoCuhs,5:05p.m. L.A. Dodgers atTexas, 5:05p.m. Coloradoat Houston, 5:10p.m. KansasCityatMilwaukee,5:10 p.m. MinnesotaatSt. Louis,515 pm. Arizona at L.A.Angels, 7;05p.m. OaklandatSanDiego, 7:10p.m. Seattle atSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m.
Marlins 4, Rockies1
o
Jason Fochtman/The Associated Press
Seattle's Logan Morrison celebrates with teammate MarkTrumboafter hitting his second home run in the third inning during Saturday's game at Houston. The Mariners won 8-1.
American League
Mariners 8,Astros1 HOUSTON —LoganMorrison homered twice andtied acareer high with five RBls to help Seattle cruise to a win over Houston. The Mariners jumped onCollin McHugh (6-3) for five runs in the first inning, a dayafter Houston roughed upFelix Hernandezfor eight runs in the opening frame in a10-0 win.
Orioles 9, Yankees 4
Rays 5, WhiteSox4
BALTIMORE — Manny Machado homered and hadfour RBls, Nolan Reimold hit a two-run drive and Baltimore beat the NewYork Yankees. David Lough addeda solo shotfor the Orioles, who have won six straight to climb over.500 (31-30) for the first time since May 4.
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Steve
NewYork
Baltimore ab r hbi ab r hbi Gardnrlf-cf 4 0 0 0 MMchd3h 5 2 3 4 Headly3h 5 2 3 0 Reimldlf-rf 5 1 2 2 ARdrgzdh 5 1 1 2 A.Jonescf 5 0 1 0 Teixeir1b 4 1 2 1 DYongrf 3 0 0 0 BMccnc 4 0 2 1 Loughph-If 1 1 1 1 Beltranrf 4 0 1 0 C.Davisdh 4 0 1 0 Gregrsss 4 0 1 0 Wietersc 4 2 2 0 Drew2b 3 0 1 0 JHardyss 4 1 1 1 MWlmscf 2 0 0 0 Pearce1b 4 0 2 1 CYoungph-If1 0 0 0 Flahrty2h 4 2 2 0 GJones ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 4 11 4 Totals 3 9 9 15 9 N ew York 200 0 0 2 000 — 4 Baltimore 002 0 2 3 2 0x— 9 DP — Baltimore1. LOB —NewYork8, Baltimore 6.
Souza Jr. hit a tying RBI single, stole second with the help of a replay challengeand scored the winning run on anerror, lifting Tampa Bay to avictory over the Chicago White Sox.
DunnH,11 1-3 0 0 0 0 A.RamosS,8-11 1 0 0 0 0 T—2:43.A—26,647 (37,442).
7 1 0
5 0
2
Indians 5, Tigers4
Diamondbacks 4,Giants2
ARLINGTON,Texas— Mitch Moreland and JoeyGallo hit back-toback, impressivehome runsand Texas won for Colby Lewis' first career victory over Minnesota. Minnesota has lost five games in a row after starting the weekas the AL Central leader.
DETROIT —Carlos Santana homered and Carlos Carrasco shook off a bad history in Detroit to lift Cleveland to avictory over the Tigers. Carrasco (8-5) struck out eight and allowed three runs and seven hits in 5 /s innings.
SAN FRANCISCO — Allen Webster pitched into the sixth inning to win in his Arizona debut, Paul Goldschmidt had two hits and an RBIand theDiamondbacksbeat San Francisco. Webster wascalled up before the gameand didn't allow a hit until Joe Panik's double with one out in the sixth.
Cleveland Detroit ab r hbi ab r hbi Kipnis2b 4 0 1 1 RDavisdh 5 1 2 1 CSantn1h 4 1 1 1 Kinsler2b 5 0 0 0 Brantlylf 4 1 1 0 Micarr1b 4 0 2 1 Mossrf 5 0 0 0 Cespdslf 5 1 3 0 DvMrpdh 3 2 2 1 JMrtnzrf 4 1 2 2 YGomsc 3 0 1 2 Cstllns3b 4 0 0 0 Urshela3h 2 1 0 0 JMccnc 4 0 0 0 Bourncf 4 0 2 0 Jlglesisss 3 1 2 0 A vilesss 3 0 0 0 Gosecf 4 0 1 0 Totals 32 5 8 5 Totals 3 8 4 124 C leveland 000 1 1 2 010 — 6 Detroit 1 01 100 010 — 4 E—Urshela (1). DP—Cleveland 2, Detroit 1. LOB —Cleveland 8, Detroit 10. 28—YGomes (3),
4 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
1 1 1
2 0 1 0
7 0 0 1
1 0 1 0
0 0 1 0
Cnbs4, Reds3
Nationals 7, Brewers2
Rangers11, Twins 7
Minnesota Texas ab r hbi ab r hbi Dozier2h 4 1 1 1 DShldslf 4 3 2 1 E Rosarrf 4 1 1 2 Choorf 4 1 3 3 Mauerdh 4 0 1 1 Fielderdh 5 1 2 1 Plouffe3b 4 0 1 0 Morlnd1b 5 1 2 4 Kvargs1b 4 0 0 0 Gallo3b 1 2 1 1 Nunezss 4 1 1 0 Andrusss 4 0 1 0 Hrmnnc 3 1 1 1 Rosales2h 0 0 0 0 EdEscrlf 4 1 1 1 LMartncf 4 0 1 1 SRonsn cf 4 2 2 1 Chirins c 4 2 2 0 Alherto2h-ss 4 1 1 0 Totals 35 7 9 7 Totals 3 5 111511 M innesota 0 0 3 0 0 0 004 — 7 Texas 012 620 Bgx — 11 DP —Minnesota4,Texas1.LOB— Minnesota4, Texas5. 28—Dozier (19), E.Rosario (4), Mauer(12),
1 2
R E R BBSO
CHICAGO — Starlin Castro's RBI single in the ninth inning lifted the Chicago Cubs to awin over Chicago TampaBay MILWAUKEE — Yunel Escobar ab r hbi ab r hbi Cincinnati in a rain-delayed game. and Wilson Ramos hit two-run Shuckcf 4 0 1 0 Kiermrcf 3 2 2 0 Kris Bryant led off the ninth with homers and BryceHarper continFlowrsc 1 0 0 0 Jsutlerdh 4 0 2 0 AIRmrzss 4 1 2 0 Longori3b 4 0 1 2 a double before Miguel Montero ued his offensive surge by driving Ahreu dh 4 1 2 1 DeJesslf 3 1 1 0 was hit by a pitch to bring up in two runs asWashington beat L aRoch 1h 4 0 1 0 SouzJrrf 4 1 1 1 Castro, who singled to center field AvGarcrf 4 0 0 0 Acarerss 3 0 0 0 Milwaukee. It was just the type MeCarrlf 4 0 1 1 Elmore1h 4 0 1 0 off Tony Cingrani (0-3). Jason of performance the struggling GBckh3h-2b 3 0 0 0 Frnkln2h 4 1 1 0 Motte (3-1) allowed two hits and Nationals neededfrom its 3-4-5 C Snchz2h 2 0 0 0 Casalic 2 0 0 0 Eatonph-cf 1 1 1 0 Forsythph 1 0 0 1 struck out one in ascoreless ninth hitters after coming in losers of11 S otoc 2 0 0 0 Riverac 0 0 0 0 for the Cubs, whohavewonfive of14. While Harper hasbeen hot Gillaspiph-3h1 1 1 2 of seven. Eugenio Suareztied the Bonifacph 1 0 0 0 all season, Escobar and Ramos Totals 35 4 9 4 Totals 3 2 5 9 4 game for the Reds inthe top of Chicago 1 00 100 020 — 4 both slumped recently at the plate. the sixth with a two-run home run Tampa Bay 1 0 1 0 00 12x— 5 Against the Brewers, the three E—AI.Ramirez(6). DP—TampaBay1. LOB—Chioff James Russell soon after the looked fearsome, going 7 of13 cago 6,Tampa Bay 6. 28—J.Butler (10). 38—Kiergame wasresumed from a2-hour, maier(5),Franklin(1). HR —Gillaspie(3). SB—DeJe- with six RBls andchasing starter sus (2),SouzaJr. (8). 48-minute rain delay. Jimmy Nelson (3-7) in the sixth. IP H R E R BBSO
Houston ab r hbi ab r hbi S.Smithlf-rf 4 0 2 0 Springrrf 4 0 2 1 AJcksncf 5 1 2 1 Correass 3 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 1 1 0 Gattisdh 4 0 0 0 N.cruzrf 5 1 2 1 Carter1h 3 0 1 0 Ackleylf 0 0 0 0 CIRsmslf 3 0 1 0 Seager3h 4 0 1 1 Mrsnckcf 4 0 0 0 Trumodh 5 2 2 0 Valuen3h 3 0 0 0 Morrsn1b 5 2 25 MGnzlz2h 4 0 0 0 BMillerss 4 0 1 0 Jcastroc 3 1 2 0 Zuninoc 3 1 0 0 Totals 39 8 13 8 Totals 3 1 1 6 1 Seattle 6 03 000 000 — 8 2B — Headley (9), Teixeira (12), B.Mccann(9), GreHouston 000 010 000 — 1 (7),Drew(9), Wieters 2(3), Pearce(3). 38E—Seager(6), Correa(1). DP—Seattle 3, Hous- gorius Reimol d (1). HR —ARodriguez(12), MMachado(11), ton1. LOB —Seattle 8, Houston8. 28—S.Smith(17), Rei m ol d (2), Lough(2). Chicago Cano(16), B.Miler (9), Springer(14), Col.Rasmus IP H R E R BBSD Samardziia 7 6 3 3 1 (13), J.castro (8). HR —Morrison2 (8). SF—Seager. York PutnamL,1-2 BS,1-1 2-3 2 2 1 1 IP H R E R BBSD New Sahathia 5 8 4 4 0 3 Petricka 13 1 0 0 0 Seattle Ch.MartinL,0-2 1 4 3 3 0 0 TampaBay MontgomeryW,1-1 6 6 1 1 3 4 Santos 2 3 2 2 0 1 Archer 7 5 3 3 1 Farquhar 2 0 0 0 2 2 Baltimore BoxbergerW,4-3 BS,2-17 1 3 1 1 Nuno 1 0 0 0 0 1 B.Norris 52-3 8 4 4 0 5 2 Houston McFarl a nd 0 0 0 0 1 0 McGee S,3-4 1 1 0 0 1 McHughL,6-3 3 9 8 8 2 1 21-3 3 0 0 0 2 Archerpitchedto1 hatter inthe8th. W,2-0 R.Hernandez 4 4 0 0 0 5 Roe O'Day 1 0 0 0 1 2 HBP — hy S am a rdz i a (K i e rm ai e r). WP —Archer. Qualls 1 0 0 0 0 0 McFarlandpitchedto1hatter inthe6th. T—2:46. A—20,248(31,042). Gregerson 1 0 0 0 0 1 WP — C h.M a rti n 3. HBP—byMcHugh(S.Smith). WP—Montgomery 3. T—3:14.A—38,909(45,971). T—2:47. A—36,762(41,574). National League Seattle
IP H 28—LeMa hieu (9), Stanton(12). 38—McKenry(2). HR — Stanton (23). SB—LeMahieu (6), Blackmon Philadelphia O'SullivanL,1-5 6 8 (14), D.Go rdon(22),I.Suzuki (5). 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO DeFratus J.Gomez 1 0 Colorado HaleL,2-1 6 4 4 4 3 5 Pittsburgh 5 B.Brown 1 0 0 0 1 1 G.coleW,10-2 6 1 Hawkins 1 0 0 0 0 0 CamineroH,9 1 W atson H,15 1 3 Miami 0 LatosW,2-4 7 4 1 1 2 11 MelanconS,20-21 1 S.DysonH,6 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 T—3:05. A—37,516(38,362).
Cincinnati Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Schmkrlf 5 1 1 0 Fowlercf 4 0 1 0 Suarezss 4 1 1 2 Coghlnlf 3 0 1 0 Votto1h 4 1 2 1 Rizzo1h 4 0 0 0 Frazier3h 3 0 1 0 Bryant3h 4 3 3 0 B rucerf 3 0 0 0 MMntrc 3 1 2 2 Negron2b 4 0 2 0 Scastross 4 0 1 2 B rnhrtc 4 0 0 0 Baxterrf 3 0 2 0 Leakep 2 0 0 0 Hndrckp 1 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Phillipsph 1 0 0 0 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 Matthsp 0 0 0 0TWoodp 0 0 0 0 CDmngph 1 0 1 0 Denorfiph 1 0 0 0 C ingrnp 0 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 B Hmltncf 4 0 1 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 ARussll2b 3 0 1 0 Totals 35 3 9 3 Totals 3 0 4 11 4 C incinnati 000 1 0 2 000 — 3 Chicago 020 100 001 — 4 No outswhenwinning runscored. E — G ri m m (1). DP — Cincinnati 4. LOB —Cincin(3). HR —Y.Escohar(3),W.Ramos(5). SB—Span(5). nati 7,Chicago5. 2B—Fra zier (18), Fowler (9), Bryant IP H R E R BBSO 2 (11), A.Rus sell (14). HR—Suarez(1), Votto (14), Washington (9). SB—B.Hamilton (26). S—Hendricks. J.RossW,1-1 8 7 2 2 1 8 M.Montero IP H R E R BBSD Janssen 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cincinnati Milwaukee 5 5 3 3 0 1 NelsonL,3-7 5 10 7 7 2 3 Leake 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cotts 2 1 0 0 0 3 M.Parra Mattheus 2 4 0 0 0 0 W.Smith 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 1 0 0 Blazek 1 0 0 0 0 1 CingraniL,0-3 0 Chicago Nelsonpitchedto2 batters inthe6th. Hendri c ks 5 4 1 1 0 7 HBP—byBlazek(Harper), byNelson(Desmond, RenJ.RusselBS,1-1 l 0 3 2 2 0 0 don). WP —J.Ross. Grimm 1 0 0 0 1 2 T—2:52.A—36,800 (41,900). TWood 1 0 0 0 0 0 Strop 1 0 0 0 0 1 Braves 5, Mets 3(11 innings) MotteW,3-1 1 2 0 0 0 1 J.Russelpil tchedto 3batters inthe 6th. Cingranipitchedto 3batters inthe9th. NEW YORK— Cameron Maybin HBP —hyLeake(Coghlan), hyCingrani (M.Montero), had a two-run single in the11th hy Strop(Frazier). inning, and Atlanta's beleaguered T—2:39 (Delay: 2:48).A—40,693(40,929). Washington Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi Spancf 5 1 1 0 CGomzcf 4 0 0 0 Rendon 2h 3 2 1 0 Lucroy c 4 0 2 0 YEscor3h 5 1 2 2 Braun rf 4 0 0 0 Harperrf 3 1 3 2 Lind 1h 3 1 1 0 dnDkkrpr-rf 0 0 0 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 0 0 WRamsc 5 1 2 2 GParralf 4 0 1 0 Espinos1h 5 1 1 0 Segurass 4 1 2 1 Dsmndss 4 0 0 0Gennett2h 4 0 2 1 MTaylrlf 4 0 1 1 Nelsonp 2 0 0 0 J .Rossp 4 0 0 0 Cottsp 0 0 0 0 Janssn p 0 0 0 0 SPetrsn ph 1 0 0 0 WSmithp 0 0 0 0 Blazek p 0 0 0 0 JRogrs ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 7 117 Totals 3 5 2 8 2 W ashington 10 2 0 3 1 000 — 7 M ilwaukee 0 2 0 0 0 0 000 — 2 E—Blazek(1). DP—Milwaukee 1. LOB—Washington 9,Milwaukee7.2B—Espinosa(11), Gennet 2
San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi P ollockcf 5 0 2 0 Aokilf 3100 Lamh3h 4 0 0 0 Panik2h 3 1 1 0 Gldsch1h 4 1 2 1 Kontosp 0 0 0 0 T omasrf 3 1 1 0 Pagancf 3 0 0 1 D elgadp 0 0 0 0 Poseyc 3 0 1 1 Z ieglerp 0 0 0 0 Belt1h 4 0 1 0 DPerltlf 4 1 2 1 Bcrwfrss 4 0 0 0 A.Hill2h 3 0 0 0 MDufly3h-2h 4 0 0 0 S ltlmchc 3 0 0 1 JrPrkrrf 3 0 0 0 Ahmedss 2 1 0 1 Vglsngp 1 0 0 0 W esterp 3 0 0 0 Y.Petitp 0 0 0 0 bullpen shut down the Mets over R.Davis(7), J.Martinez(13). 3B—Dav.Murphy (1), Chafinp 0 0 0 0 Ariasph 1 0 0 0 Interieague the final four-plus innings in a R.Davis (6). HR —C.Santana (7), J.Martinez(11). Inciadrf 1 0 0 0 Brodwyp 0 0 0 0 SB—J.lglesias(8). CS—J.lglesias (4). SF —Kipnis, come-from-behind victory over Affe ldtp 0 0 0 0 Cardinals 3, Royals 2 Plouffe(11),Nunez(6), Herrmann(3), S.Rohinson(3), YGomes. McGehph-3b1 0 1 0 New York. Maybin came upwith DeShields2 (9), Choo(12), Moreland(12), Chirinos IP H R E R BBSD Totals 32 4 7 4 Totals 3 0 2 4 2 (10). HR —Moreland(8), Gallo (3). ST. LOUIS —Call-up Tyler LyCleveland Arizona 3 00 100 000 — 4 runners on second and third and IP H R E R BBSD CarrascoWr8-5 5 2-3 7 3 3 1 8 San Francisco 000 002 000 — 2 ons had asolid outing and Mark one out, and sent a liner off CarMinaesota RzepczynskiH,9 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 DP — San Francisco 1. LOB—Arizona 6, San PelfreyL,5-3 32- 3 11 8 8 3 0 B.ShawH,9 12-3 3 1 1 0 1 Francisco5. 28—Panik (14), Posey(10), Belt(17). los Torres (2-3) into left-center. Reynolds hit the go-aheadhomer 11-3 3 3 3 1 0 Allen S,14-15 1 Graham 1 -3 2 0 0 1 2 SB — D.Peralta(3). CS—Tomas(1). SF—Pagan. in the fifth inning for St. Louis, Facing a Mets bullpen without Duensing 1 1 0 0 1 1 Detroit IP H R E R BBSO closer Jeurys Familia, whose son which beat KansasCity for the Tonkin 1 0 0 0 0 1 Verlander 5 3 2 2 2 2 Arizona A.Thompson 1 0 0 0 0 0 B.HardyL,2-1BS,1-1 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 WebsterW,1-0 5 2 -3 2 2 second straight day. AlexGordon 2 3 2 was born while he was finishing Texas A Wilson 1 1 0 0 0 0 ChafinH,5 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 and Salvador Perezhomered for off Friday night's win, the Braves LewisW,6-3 7 4 3 3 1 6 Krol 1 1 1 1 0 2 DelgadoH,3 1 1 0 0 0 0 12-3 5 4 4 1 1 Alhurquerque Bass 1 1 - 3 10 0 2 0 ZieglerS,8-10 1 the Royals, who took two of three rallied for two in the ninth to end 1 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Edwards 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 Gorzelanny Francisco from the Cardinals at homelast a five-game skid against New HBP—hyLewis(Herrmann). WP—Lewis. HBP —byCarrasco(J.lglesias), hyKrol (Dav.Murphy). San VogelsongL,4-5 32-3 6 4 4 5 1 T—4;03(Delay:1;19).A—28,661(48,114). WP — Gorzelanny. month and will be trying to avoid a Y.Petit 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 4 York. T—3:34.A—41,620 (41,574). Broadway 1 1 0 0 0 1 sweep in the finale. Matt Carpenter Affeldt 1 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta New York Angels1, Athletics 0 and Jason Heywardeachadded an 1 0 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Blue Jays5, RedSox4(11inn.) Kontos RBI for St. Louis, which is amajor W P — D e lg ado. J Petrsn2h 5 1 1 0 Grndrsrf 5 1 2 0 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Albert Pujols T—2:50. A—42,006(41,915). Maybincf 6 0 3 3 dArnadc 5 1 1 1 league-best 41-21 overall and 24-7 BOSTON — Russell Martin delivhomered in thefirst inning and FFrmn1b 6 1 2 2 Duda1h 4 0 2 1 at home. Markksrf 5 0 1 0 Cuddyrlf 4 0 0 0 ered the go-ahead hit for the secC.J. Wilson pitched seveninnings Padres 2, Dodgers1 KJhnsnlf 3 0 0 0 Lthrschp 0 0 0 0 ond straight day, a leadoff home of two-hit ball as theLosAngeles JGoms ph-If 3 0 1 0 Parnell p 0 0 0 0 KansasCity St. Louis run in the11th inning that sent SAN DIEGO — Justin Upton hit a Przynsc 5 0 0 0 Camp03b 1 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Angels beatOakland. Wilson (4-5) CJhnsn3h 3 1 0 0 WFlorsss 5 0 1 0 AEscorss 4 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 1 2 0 solo homer with two outs in the struck out eight andwalked three in Toronto to its 10th straight win, JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 Cecilincf-If 5 0 2 0 Lcaincf 4 0 2 0 Mcrpnt3b 4 0 1 1 eighth inning off Zack Greinketo Cnghmph 1 0 0 0 DHerrr2h 5 0 2 0 Riosrf 4 0 0 0 JhPerltss 4 0 0 0 his first scoreless outing sinceApril over Boston. Grillip 0 0 0 0 Muno3h 3 0 0 0 KMorls1h 4 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 give San Diego avictory over the 7, when heallowed two hits over WPerezp 0 0 0 0 Rohlesp 0 0 0 0 S.Perezc 4 1 2 1 Rynlds1b 4 2 2 1 Toronto Boston Los Angeles Dodgers. eight innings in avictory at Seattle. ASmnsss 4 1 4 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 JDysonpr 0 0 0 0 Molinac 4 0 2 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi SMigerp 1 0 0 0 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 Buterac 0 0 0 0 Heywrdrf 4 0 2 1 ss 5 0 1 1 Pedroia 2h 5 0 1 0 The left-hander was1-3 with a 6.00 Reyes Los Angeles San Diego Evelndp 0 0 0 0 MyryJrph 1 0 0 0 A Gordnlf 3 1 1 1 Grichklf 3 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3h 5 0 0 0 B.Holt 1h 5 0 1 0 ERA his previous five starts. ab r hbi ab r hbi Massetp 0 0 0 0deGrmp 2 0 0 0 C.col on3h 2 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 B autistrf 4 0 0 0 HRmrzlf 5 1 2 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Lagarsph-cf 3 1 1 0 FMorlsp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 E ncrncdh 5 1 2 0 Ortizdh 4 2 1 1 Pedrsncf 3 0 1 0 Myers1h 4 0 1 0 P uigrf 4 0 2 0 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Uriheph-3b 2 1 1 0 KHerrrp 0 0 0 0 Manessp 0 0 0 0 Oakland LosAngeles Colaelllf 4 1 2 0 Bogartsss 5 1 1 1 Totals 4 4 5 135 Totals 4 3 3 112 WDavisp 0 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Carrerpr-If 1 0 0 0 Sandoyl3h 3 0 2 2 AGnzlz1h 4 0 0 0 Venalecf 4 1 2 0 H Kndrc2b 4 0 0 0 Uptonlf 4 1 1 1 Atlanta 100 0 0 0 002 02 — 6 Hosmerph 1 0 0 0 Kozmass 1 0 0 0 B urnscf 4 0 1 0 Aybarss 4 0 0 0 RuMrtnc 5 2 2 1 Bianchi3h 2 0 0 0 J uTrnr3h 2 0 1 0 Kemprf 4 0 1 1 New York 0 0 0 000 300 00 — 3 I nfante2h 4 0 0 0 Jaycf-If 2 0 0 0 C anhalf 4 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 0 1 0 S moak1h 4 0 1 0 DeAzarf 5 0 1 0 Ethierlf 3 0 0 0 Alonso3h-1h 3 0 0 0 E—Mayhin (1), Muno3 (3). DP—Atlanta1, New G uthriep 1 0 0 0 Lyonsp 2 0 1 0 Zohrist2b 4 0 0 0 Puiolsdh 4 1 2 1 Valencipr-1b1 0 0 0 Rcastllcf 5 0 0 0 Grandlc 3 1 1 1 DeNrrsc 3 0 1 0 York 2.LOB—Atlanta12, NewYork9.28—J.Peterson Mostks3b 2 0 00 Bourioscf 0 0 0 0 BButlerdh 2 0 0 0 Calhonrf 3 0 1 0 Pillarcf 5 1 2 1 S.Leonc 3 0 0 0 Sogardpr 0 0 0 0 Freese3h 3 0 2 0 Goins2h 5 0 2 2 Swihartph-c 1 0 0 0 Rollinsss 3 0 0 0 Spngnr2h 2 0 1 0 7), Maybin(6),Grande rson(9), Duda2(19), WFlores Totals 33 2 5 2 Totals 3 2 3 10 3 City 0 1 0 1 0 0 000 — 2 Pheglyc 3 0 0 0 Giavtll2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 44 5 125 Totals 4 3 4 9 4 Greinkp 3 0 0 0 Amarstss 3 0 1 0 8). HR —F.Freeman (12). SB—Maybin (11). S—J. K ansas Kenndy p 2 0 0 0 Peterson,S.Miler 2. St.Louis 002 0 1 0 Bgx— 3 Reddckph 1 0 0 0 ENavrr1b 3 0 1 0 Toronto 030 1 0 0 000 01 — 6 IP H R E R BBSO E — R i o s (1), C. c ol o n (3), W ong(9), M.carpenter Lawrie3h 2 0 0 0 C.Perezc 3 0 1 0 Boston 000 3 0 1 000 00 — 4 Solarte ph 1 0 0 0 E—Donaldson (9), S.Leon(1). DP—Boston 1. V ogt1h 3 0 0 0 Joycelf 3 0 0 0 Maurerp 0 0 0 0 Atlanta (6). LOB —Kansas City 7, St. Louis 8. 2B—L.cain LOB— Toronto7,Boston7.28— Sandoval(7),DeAza 61-3 8 3 3 2 4 Semienss 3 0 1 0 Mdlrks3h 0 0 0 0 S.Miller 11). 38—Wong (2). HR —S.Perez (10), A.Gordon F uldrf 2 0 0 0 (5). HR—R u.Martin (10), Ortiz(8). Totals 29 1 5 1 Totals 3 0 2 8 2 Eveland 0 1 0 0 0 0 8), Reynolds(4). ) SB—L.cain (11), Wong(5). S2 -3 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 28 0 2 0 Totals 3 0 1 8 1 IP H R E R BBSO L os Angeles 00 1 0 0 0 000 — 1 Masset Guthrie,Bourios. IP H R E R BBSD Oakland 0 00 000 000 — 0 Toronto San Diego 1 0 0 0 0 0 01x— 2 Ayilan 1 0 0 0 0 1 E—Greinke (1). DP—LosAngeles1, SanDiego Ji Johnson LosAngeles 100 000 Bgx— 1 Dickey 6 6 4 3 1 5 1 0 0 0 0 1 KansasCity E—Ayhar (6). DP—Oakland 1, LosAngeles 2. Hendriks 2 3 0 0 0 2 2.LOB— LosAngeles3,SanDiego5.28— Venable Grilli W2-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 GuthrieL,4-4 5 10 3 3 1 4 LOB —Oakland5, LosAngeles 5. 28—Semien(10). Delahar 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 (5). HR —Grandal (7), Upton(13). SB—Amarista W.PerezS,1-1 1 2 0 0 0 0 F.Morales 1 0 0 0 1 0 HR—Puiols(18).CS—Puiols (2), Freese(1). LoupW,2-3 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 (3) NewYork K.Herrera 1 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO Cecil S,4-5 1 0 0 0 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO deGrom 7 5 1 1 1 9 W.Davis 1 0 0 0 0 2 Oakland Boston LosAngeles LeathersichH,1 2- 3 1 0 0 0 0 St. Louis Graveman L,3-3 8 8 1 1 0 7 Buchholz 6 8 4 4 1 7 GreinkeL,5-2 8 8 2 2 1 7 ParnelH,1 l 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 LyonsW,1-0 5 3 2 2 1 6 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 San Diego 2-3 2 2 2 1 1 Belisle H,7 11-3 0 0 0 1 2 LosAngeles Layne RohlesH,4 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 C.Wil sonW4-5 7 2 0 0 3 8 Ogando 1131 0 0 0 0 Kennedy 7 4 1 1 1 4 A.TorresBS,1-2 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 ChoateH,6 J.SmithH,17 1 0 0 0 0 1 Uehara 1 1 0 0 0 1 MaurerW,4-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 C.TorresL,2-3 2 3 2 2 1 1 ManessH,7 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 StreetS,19-21 1 0 0 0 1 1 M.BarnesL,2-2 2 2 1 1 0 1 KimhrelS,16-17 1 1 0 0 0 1 Eveland pitchedto1 hatterin the7th. Siegrist H,12 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—2:27. A—43,540(45,957). PB — Ru.Martin 3. HBP —byKennedy(Pederson). WP —Eveland,deGrom. RosenthalS,21-22 11-3 1 0 0 0 2 T—3:26.A—37,158(37,221). T—2:30. A—43,525(41,164). T—3:39.A—37,734 (41,922). T—2:46 (Delay: 0:24). A—45,981(45,399). Arizona
I)
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
Rodeo
'
C.
Continued from 01
.r
'c j'
" • .
n
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
I
Don't worry, the announcer reminded the crowd. He's still
i
in the money. In the age-old battle be-
Leslie, Oregon City coach enter Hall
.pV-
tween man and beast, the beasts took this round. It was a similar scene at
'*
' *
' ; ,
~
i
@
the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association XTreme
/
Bulls competition Wednesday
II
night, when some of the best bull riders in the world recorded just nine successful rides in 48 attempts. "That wouldn't have hap-
.I,
By Steve Megargee
pened 20 years ago, they would've rode a lot of them," said Jeff Davis, a stock con-
'!
The Associated Press
r ';.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn.
tractor who provided 20 bulls
for the 75th annual Sisters Ro-
.Iitsts
deo. "But now the bull power has gotten so much better.
+
We've not bred the cowboys." The caliber of cowboy has not declined, but in the last
few decades the emphasis on strategic breeding of stock animals has created bulls and bucking broncos that are
Jj,
stronger and m ore athletic than ever. The PRCA current-
"Understand and learn
ly recognizesmore than 75ro-
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Handlers and rodeo workers separate and move livestock between pens in between the afternoon and evening performances on Saturday at the Sisters Rodeo Grounds in Sisters.
deo stockfirms spread across the United States and Canada,
and each one of them is dedicated to raising animals that
will give competitors a stiff challenge at the nation's biggest rodeos. "Back 30 years ago there were one or two superstars, now everybody has a superstar," said Davis, who was a bull rider himself before join-
the main stock contractor for the Sisters Rodeo, said he had
70 bucking bulls, 120 bucking horses and 150 head of cattle on hand for the weekend.
"(The bulls are in the arena) no more than twice, Wednesday through Sunday," Corey said. "They're individuals like
ing Four Star Rodeo, a Cot-
tonwood, California, opera-
any athlete, and that's what we consider them. It's like the
tion he now owns. "Back then
you'd just take a few bulls off the range and buck them or find some horses that were bucking guys off, and that's what you'd use.
NBA playoffs — they don't play every day. They rest a day, play a day. (The animals) have to have their rest, too."
Caring for several hundred
"I've got some bulls that are
animals takes time, space and
big and scary and mean and buck hard, and Ithink, 'M an, I'm glad I'm not riding them.'" The stock providers regularly discuss their animals the same way one would describe human athletes, and some of the best competitors become stars in their own right. (In-
hard, fair and square. But the the same in this deal." not provide the audience with very bull that bucked him off, When he's on t h e r o ad, an exciting spectacle or allow you and I could go out there Corey will leave the rest of the competitors to record a and pet him right now. I can his herd with his staff on the high score. (In bull, bareback call him to the fence." ranch. "There are certain times of and saddle bronc riding half Just like the cowboys who of the competitor's score is rope, wrestle and ride them, the year we dedicate to buckbased on his form and half the stock animals and their ing the young horses and the on the difficulty rating of the o wners spend much of t h e young bulls, breaking them animal.) year traveling from one rodeo in, teaching them the system," "You have to worry about to another. Corey said. "There are certain "I go to enough I don't count rodeos I take them to the first having enough room for them, so they can lay down and be them," said Corey, whose time, that are smaller so you comfortable. They have to be ranch is l ocated in M o ses don't overpower them right able to rest and sleep just like Lake, Washington. "It's year- off the bat. There's a system an athlete does," Davis exround anymore. From now to it." And while the stock providplained. "Just like you would until the 20th of September, treat yourself, they need to get we have one weekend off, ers like to give the competitheir rest and food and water. and I've been going since tors a challenging animal, if a They can't provide that for January." cowboy wins on their animal, imals. A listless animal will
quite a few hands. "As of (Thursday) morning, we've decided that we're running out of room, because this themselves, so we have to prorodeo has grown so much in vide it for them." the last few years, so we're alThe bulls and bucking ready making plans for more broncos may be tougher than
page dedicated to animal allstars, with headlines such as
"Big Tex recovering from colic surgery" and "Meet Chuckulator: the nation's top bucking
bronco"). Mike Corey, whose company, Flying Diamond Rodeo, is
SOCCER: WOMEN'S WORLD mp
By Anne M. Peterson
drinking when she arrived at the home of her half-sister,
The Associated Press
WINNIPEG, Manitoba-
Teresa Obert, and was the
The head of U.S. Soccer defended the federation's handling of goalkeeper Hope Solo's domestic assault case in a
aggressor in the altercation, including slamming the teenager's head into the floor.
Solo's lawyer, in response to a question from ESPN
letter to U.S. Senator Richard
Continued from 01 Mark Pieth is a Swiss law His work for FIFA ended last
s hort-term c a retaker
from
year with all of his key reform proposals being rejected.
outside. She calls for immediate rePieth wants Blatter to go strictions on "the giving or renow — not i n s even to 10 ceipt of gifts and lavish hospimonths after a new president tality." And she wants leaders is elected. He is calling for an to have a "one-time chance" to interim caretaker from outdisclose conflicts of interest. "Thereafter, there should be zero tolerance for conflicts
"Blatter cannot cling to his members "from outside the job now for months as a lame soccer world."
their stories on multiple oc-
duck," Pieth told The Associ-
casions and twice refused to answer questions under oath,
ated Press. "There is no use in wasting time and getting into political games. You don't step down in bits and pieces." Pieth suggested "someone
and its members have ben-
caretaker. He mentioned for-
we'll have another president a lot like Blatter who owes his
United States vs. Nigeria When: 6 P.m. Tuesday TV:Fox
m issed t h e
charges earlier this year. B I u menthaI
(D-Conn.)
wrote to U.S. Soccer President Sunil Gulati
Teresa's son, not Hope, was JohnWoods/The Canadian Press
the true aggressor, and that Hope suffered a concussion
United States goalkeeper
as a result of her nephew's
Hope Solo blows a kiss to the crowd after a draw against
unlawful conduct." The ESPN report came the
Sweden Friday in Winnipeg,
day beforethe U.S. team and
on Thursday regarding Solo, Manitoba, Canada. calling domestic violence "unacceptable, particularly for an athlete representing considered domestic and the United States of America familyviolence a very serious on the global stage." matter. The federation underSolo is currently starting stands its role and obligation for the U.S. women's nation- as the national governing al team at the World Cup in body forthe sport of soccer Canada. The U.S. played to and will continue to investia 0-0 draw with Sweden in a gate and address such issues group-stage match on Friday as they arise." night. She did not speak to reBlumenthal's letter came
its star goalkeeper opened play at the Women's World
Cup in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The monthlong event is being played across six Canadian cities.
Gulati said U.S. Soccer did not suspend Solo because statements made by her
half-sister and nephew were inconsistent, but he acknowl-
porters following the match.
in the wake of an ESPN re-
edges that the federation never spoke to the relatives. U.S. Soccer, relying on the advice
Gulati's response said U.S. Soccer investigated the matter as thoroughly as it could at the time, but its approach was guided by limited access
port that brought new infor-
of counsel, decided to let the
to information and contradic-
tory accounts of the incident, as well as legal concerns. "The federation has been
a long-standing leader in the pursuit of gender equity in sport — a role of which we are quite proud," Gulati wrote. "Accordingly, rest assured that the federation
case play out. light, including allegations Gulati's response acknowlthat the goalkeeper was com- edged that new information bative with police officers. was presented in the ESPN Solo pleaded innocent to the report that the federation did charges. not have initially. That information about Solo's arrest to
ESPN said the report was
based on police records, two sworn depositions obtained by the network program "Outside the Lines," other documents and interviews with one of Solo's alleged victims. It said Solo had been
mation was contained in records that were sealed.
er Janeth Arcain, former Louisiana Tech and Oklah oma State coach K u r t
Budke, former Duke and Texas coach Gail Goesten-
kors, former Georgia star Janet Harris and former
The Hall of Fame also recognized the Immaculata College teams that won t hree straight AIAW n ational titles from 1972-74 as
"trailblazers of the game." Leslie, a former Southern California and Los An-
geles Sparks standout, is a three-time WNBA MVP
who won Olympic gold medals in 1996, 2000, 2004 and 2008.
checks," a move that has al-
ago." Wrage also supports a
to two years.
amined under oath subject to
m e m b er
and Houston Comets play-
that he rejected a few years
professorand FIFA's former top anti-corruption adviser.
demonstrate that the alleged victims radically changed
the penalty of perjury, the defense would have proven that
national t e a m
structure o f
court
Washington. A judge dis-
cluded former Brazilian
t h e e x ecutive
to 'push through' reform mea- committee. He said members sures in the next few months should undergo "integrity
lence assault stemming from
case proceeded to trial and the witnesses been cross-ex-
Leslie headlined an induction class that also in-
talking about his commitment
fourth-degree domestic vio-
in Kirkland,
there."
coach Brad Smith.
should there be an election, that come to light," she said. which may not happen for up Wrage is pushing for at
despite court orders. Had the
and we all represent each other. Do your best out
" You always root for t h e
ed with a statement saying: "Police reports and other
old nephew at a family g atheri n g
all woven together as one. We're a basketball family
ified semis, and Corey said even the young bulls will walk right onto the truck without
side to stabilize FIFA and restore its credibility. Only then
and 1 7-year-
to understand that we're
Oregon City High School
about the reports, respond-
an altercation last June with h er si s t e r
coming in, you guys have
providers as well.
Blumenthal on Friday night. Solo was charged with two misdemeanor counts of
d o c uments c l e arly
now that we're moving on and this new generation is
well, that is a win for the stock
FIFA
U.S. soccerdefendsSolo decisions
the history of our game because it's a precious history," Leslie said. "Those of us who've played, and
The animals are transported from state to state in mod-
bull. You always want your corrals to house them," Corey ever in the arena, but it is a bull to perform good," Davis said. "As for feeding, I've got different scene once they get pl'oddnlg. said. "There's nothing I like " They learn i t f r o m t h e better than watching one of five guys working around the back in their corrals. "I know it's hard for people old bulls. When I find a good these guys riding my best bull. clock, feeding and caring for the animals. They start at 6 or to believe, but even the bulls, young bull, he goes right with That does not bother me a bit. 7 inthe morning, and we go they're like your dog or your the old bulls," Corey said. If they're going to ride Broken till everything's put to bed at cat. They know who you are," "There's no better way to be Spoke and get 92 points on around midnight." Corey said. "(On Wednes- taught — I don't care if you're him, that's great. That's what The success of the rodeo day), a world champion bull a hunter or a football player in I want." is largely dependent on the rider, Shane Proctor, got on a the NFL. The seasoned veter— Reporter: 541-383-0305, quality and health of the an- bull and got bucked off really ans break in the rookies. It's vjacobsen@bendbulletin.com
deed, the PRCA website has a
NIXt NP
-
Lisa Leslie wants today's generation of players to respect the game and its history. W hile e ntering t h e Women's Basketball Hall of Fame on Saturday, the four-time Olympic gold m edalist t h anked t h e women who preceded her and offereda message to those who are following her.
least two executive committee "This is a tightly knit club e fited enormously from t h e status quo," she said. "It will
ready been rejected by FIFA's member confederations. He said many question FI-
FA's transparency. He said FIFA should publicize the "compensation of the presi-
dent and executive committee members."
Peter Alegi, Michigan State University Peter Alegi, a historian at
Michigan State University who has studied sports governance, said a quick exit by Blatter increases the chances for change. "If the noose tightens more on Blatter, if it reaches a lot of top FIFA executives, then I think there is a real possibility
take seismic change to restore that at least the old guard will FIFA's reputation and there be thrown out, if not imprison the outside, but someone is no certainty we'll see that. oned," Alegi said. who knows the inside" as the There's a very real risk that He also called for more dimer German football association president Theo Zwanziger or Sunil Gulati, the head of the U.S. Soccer Federation. He also said Gulati might be a strong candidate for the
versity inside FIFA — women, former athletes, fans and even
position to many of the same academics. "Everyone who is now in people."
Transparency international Transparency has issued
FIFA comes from the same
kind of class," he said. "Obviously there'll all men, and with
long-term presidency. "It has to be somebody out
seven recommendations. One key is that FIFA dis-
of the midst football, but someone who is not tainted by the
close officials' pay, expenses revolution.
very few exceptions." He is not e xpecting a
and detail how money is spent.
"It's likely there will a kind
National federations also shouldn't be one of these old should publish how much hands because they will be money they get from FIFA, immediately in great trouble and how it is spent. again and find themselves Transparency also calls discredited." for term limits for executive This won't please the pre- committee members and asks sumed frontrunners — Michel sponsors to "take collective Platini, head of the European action to pressure FIFA ... to federation UEFA, or Issa Ha- meet the highest standards of yatou, president of the African compliance and ethics." federation. It also asks for " t ougher A selection of ideas for and more transparent complichanging FIFA: ance standards in TV-rights companies."
of moderate reformer who
former system," Pieth said. "It
Alexandra Wrage, president of trace
DomenicoScala
comes forward," he said.
Otherthoughts There have been suggestions to turn FIFA into a pub-
lic company. Others argue the regional confederations are the problem, especially those in countries with weak judicial systems. Many of the regional confederations lack transparency and work like mini-FIFAs.
Roger Pielke Jr. of the University of Colorado published a study several years ago en-
Wrage was part of an IndeScala is th e i n dependent titled: "How Can FIFA be Held pendent Governance Commit- Chairman o f F I FA's A u dit Accountable?" "FIFA demonstrated time tee at FIFA before resigning in and Compliance Committee.
He said U.S. Soccer is looking at the new information. Following the ESPN report's release, U.S. coach Jill
2013.
Scala spoke the day Blatter re-
emaiL "I don't believe he was
Ellis said the team was not impacted.
seriousabout reform then,and it's a bit absurd to hear him
signed and listed priorities for ly no hierarchical, supervisochange. He said "nothing will ry, peer or public reputational be off the table" in reforming accountability, and m i nimal FIFA. fiscal accountability," Pielke He also focused on the wrote.
"Blatter wanted to appear to be a reformer," she said in an
and again that it has essential-
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
GOLF ROUNDUP
Owen, Gomezto St. Ju e ea er oar The Associated Press MEMPHIS, Tenn. — En-
tled all afternoon and went into the final hole tied at 13-under
gland's Greg Owen has never had apieceofa54-holelead on
par. But Park made her seventh birdie of the day on 18, and Kim
the PGA Tour. Now he hopes
missed a 4-foot putt for par.
he can stay relaxed with the great short game that has him
Langer up eight strokes at Senior Players Championship:
in position to win his first title in his 214th tour event.
BELMONT, Mass. — Bern-
P
And winning would mean so much more than simply having a title on every tour Owen's ever played. "Just a huge, huge relief that what you've been striving for your whole life you can say you've achieved," Owen said Saturday. Owen and Fabian Go-
hard Langer shot a 4-under 67 in the third round of the Senior Players Championship to open an eight-stroke lead heading into the final day. Russ Co-
s
chran was even for the day and I
in second in the third Champions Tour major of the year at 8
under. Scott Verplank shot a Mark Humphrey/The Associated Press 66 in the third round to move Fabian Gomezacknowledges applause onthe16th green during the into a four-way tie for third at third round of the St. Jude Classic Saturday in Memphis, Tennessee. the 6,812-yard, par-71 Belmont
mez of Argentina each shot
a 3-under-par 67 to share a
Country Club. He was tied with Colin Montgomerie, Jeff
one-strokelead after 54 holes at the St. Jude Classic, tied at
He had six birdies. "I'm reading them well, and 9-under 201 total. Swirling wind and tough my pace is good and I feel pins kept everyone guessing good with the putter," Owen on a hectic day at TPC South- said. "I've been working hard." wind, where as many as six Gomez credited hitting his players had a piece of the lead. driver well and finding fairBoth Owen a n d G o m ez ways with leaving him plenty putted well on the firm greens of short putts. "I've been working since the despite hitting only 11 of 18 greens. Owen needed 26 putts beginning of the year," Gomez in making four birdies and said through a translator. "You one bogey,while Gomez had know when you make some 24 putts despite three bogeys. putts, the confidence gets
higher and the game is easier." Hart and Guy Boros. Also on Saturday: Bourdy maintains lead in lnbee Park shoots 66, leads Austria: AT ZEN B R UGG, after 3rd round at Westchester: Austria — Gregory Bourdy of HARRISON, NY. — Two- France carded a 69 to maintime defending champion In- tain his lead at the Lyoness bee Park shot a 7-under 66 to
Open, two strokes clear of
overtake fellow South Korean Spain's Rafa Cabrera-Bello Sei Young Kim for the lead af- and five ahead of England's ter three rounds of the KPMG Chris Wood. Bourdy, eyeing Women's PGA championship. his fifth European Tour win Kim, a rookie who came into and the first since the Wales the round with a one-stroke Open two years ago, had four lead, shot a 69. The twohadbat- birdies to go 15-under 201.
Don Ryan/The Associated Press
Oregon's Raevyn Rogers celebrates her win in thewomen's 800 meters during the NCAA track and field championships in
Eugene Saturday.
Duck
finishing second in the 400 hurdles. She hasn't decided if
Continued from D1 she will focus on just one event Coach Robert Johnson after college. "I'd still like to do both," she called his team's double triumph "awesome." said. "I can get a lot faster in "You can't put it into both events, so we'll see." words how we're feeling In one of the meet's most on the inside,'" he said. "We stirring finishes, Mississippi put in a lot of work to get to State's Rhianwedd Price, from this point. For us to be able Wales, ran down defending to achieve it here in front of champion Shelby Houlihan of our Hayward Field faithful Arizona State over the final 10 — outstanding." Texas A8M is the last
school to win the men's a nd women's title in t h e
meters to lean across the tape
just ahead, winning by .89 seconds. "I was just super excited,"
same meet, accomplishing Price said. "I could see the line it in consecutive years from coming closer and closer and 2009 to 2011. I was getting more and more Freshman Raevyn Rog- excited. I had to look at the ers gave Oregon an un- screen just to double check.... expected boost when she
I thought she knew that I was
pulled away to win the 800, there. I thought she was going shaving nearly two sec- to kick harder." onds off her personal best with a run of 1:59.71. The Ducks finished with 59 points, 26 of them from
Houlihan, who led v i rtu-
ally the entire race, said she thought she had pulled away from Price with a
b u rst of
Prandini, who was sec- speed some 200 meters from ond in the long jump on the finish. She didn't know Thursday. Kentucky was Price was closing fast. "I was very surprised," Housecond with 50, by far the Wildcats' best finish. Texas lihan said. "I'm very disapA&M was third with 47. pointed in myself." Prandini could have had R ogers dropped to h e r a hand in more points but knees in joy after pulling away
r
the Ducks' 4 x 100 relay
in the final turn to win go-
team was disqualified for
ing away in the 800. Claudia Saunders of Stanford was sec-
passing the baton out of
the exchange zone. Flori- ond in 2:00.63. "I was so excited because it da won the relay in 42.95 seconds. happened,"shesaid."Iprayed Cheered on by a huge about it. I almost threw up family delegation in "Go twice before my race and I
,';g~ "
Jenna" T-shirts, Prandini
was super nervous, so when
used a late surge to barely
it happened I blessed."
beat Texas' Morolake Akinosun in the 100. Prandi,
~
•
ni, a redshirt junior from Clovis, California, won in
.. $t
10.96 seconds, .01 seconds
ahead of Akinosun. Kieran Dodds/The New YorkTimes
ish, with Bryant winning
Locals and tourists wander the grounds of the Old Course, the birthplace of golf, in St. Andrews, Scotland, in May.
St. Andrews Continued from D1 P ut another way: All a r e
welcome at the home of golf on Sundays. Except golfers. "Why is i t t h i s w ay?" Alastair Matheson, 86, said as he led a small group of visitors on the daily guided tour of the Old Course in the spring. "Because that's the way it has always been." As with many regulations from a different era, the Sunday slumber for the Old Course is a rule that is simultaneously charming and maddening. For most purists — a
group that seems to include a majority of the residents of this town on Scotland's east
coast — the centuries-old edict to refrain from golf on Sundays is a sacred part of the
Old Course's venerable traditions. For many golfing tourists — a group that has only been more feverish this year ahead of next month's British
Open on the Old Course — it is downright cruel. In a city where good weather means it rained for only
half the day, and at a course that most every golfer in the
world would dearly love to play, why would anyone ever think it's a good idea to close
onaweekend? Jonathan Kwiatkoski, who
traveled here from Chicago on a golf vacation, paused near the renowned Road Hole bunker alongside the 17th green on a recent Sunday morning. He was on his way to play one of the other courses at St. An-
drews, and he grinned when asked about the Old Course's weekly hiatus. "This is all a little strange, for sure," Kwiatkoski said, motioning around at the ar-
ea's general stillness while watching another man, presumably also a visitor, squat
"It's hard to imagine a public course in America closing on a Sunday. Usually, that's when everyone plays, not when nobody plays." — Vacationer Jonathan Kwiatkowski
down and appear to closely examine the famous bunker's
was attending a university nearby.
grains of sand. M atheson, on e o f fou r "It's hard to imagine a pub- guides handling the daily lic course in America closing tours, recalled seeing fisheron a Sunday," Kwiatkoski men spread their nets on the added. "Usually, that's when fairways so they could mend everyone plays, not when no- them. He shook his head body plays." when relating a story about a H istorians trace the O l d woman in high heels trying to Course's Sunday closure to re- walk across one of the greens. "That happens more than ligious laws dating at least to the 16th century, when some you would think," he said. residents of St. Andrews were "Then you sometimes see cited in town criminal logs some of the boys out w ith for playing on the Sabbath. a football trying to have a According to Gordon Moir, propergame before they get director of greens keeping at chased away." St. Andrews, it was not until Matheson said he had nev1941 that the other courses at er heard of any serious disthe complex were opened for cussion about changing the play on Sundays. Sunday rule. He noted that The Old Course, though, Old Tom Morris, the legendhas always stayed shuttered, ary player and greenskeepessentially morphing into a er who revitalized the Old bumpy, sand-dotted parkland Course in the mid-1800s, was that attracts an i n o rdinate said to have preached, "Even number of joggers, dogs and, if the golfers don't need a rest, sometimes, joggers with dogs. the course does." (Several signs warn visitors Moir, who is charged with against "dog fouling" and keeping the course in top threaten to assess a fine of shape, heartily endorsed that roughly $60 against any of- line of thinking, particularfender who might, say, think ly in a year when the British about leaving a companion's Open will be played on the bowel movement in a bunker.) Old Course. Each Sunday is a S unday activities on t h e full workday for Moir and his Old Course over the years crew, with about 20 workers have run the gamut. A local dispatchedoverthe course to woman named Marie-Noel, handle tasks from spreading who declined to give her sur- sand to filling divots. name, said she recalled memSundays are the chance to bers of her family laying out tackle more labor-intensive their laundry on the course repairs and get a full reading some weeks and added, with on what the course needs. a mixture of sheepishness (The course will be closed to and pride, that she and her the public — golfers and picfriends used to participate in nickers alike — beginning an on-course drinking game Friday to prepare for the Britknown as Port Golf when she ish Open.)
I n the 200, i t w a s a four-woman race to the finin 22.18 seconds. Prandini was second at 22.21.
If members of Moir's staff see any particularly unruly behavior on Sundays — he chuckled as he detailed the time he
w i t nessed several
students engaged in a snowball fight on one of the fairways — they will not hesitate to admonish the offenders,
though most visitors are respectful.
For a long time, Moir said, the biggest problem was the
races, but I went in there
flagstick on the 18th green.
S enior K e n dr a Ha r rison scored 18 of K e n-
house standing majestically in the background, the tiny
Johnson is well aware of the perception that the Ducks
have an unfair advantage in having the NCAA championship staged on their home track every year. But he said the Hayward F i eld c r owd d oesn't just c heer o n t h e
Ducks.
"The one thing I t h ink Kamaria Brown of Texas peoplemiss is they cheer for A&M was third and Kyra everybody," he said. "If you Jefferson of Florida fourth. guys go back and look at Both were timed at 22.24. Marques Denby on the long Counting the relay, Pran- jump and triple jump runway, dini ran three races in a those were some tremendous little over 90 minutes. This roars they gave him, and he on top of her long jump deserved every one of them. They're knowledgeable and semifinal races on Thursday. enough that they cheer for ev"I felt good," she said. erybody, no matter what uni"I mean, obviously a lit- form theyarewe aring." tle bit tired from my other
number of peoplewho wanted to take pictures next to the With the w ell-known club-
f el t r e ally
focused."
9 ILSONSo f Redmond 541-548-2066
tucky's points, winning the 100-meter hurdles and
ropes that staff members put
up to deter people did little to slow traffic across the putting surface.
These days, however, Sunday visitors will find an authentic St. Andrews flagstick
stuck in the ground to the side of the green about halfway
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toward the adjacent first tee.
This way, Moir said, both the ground and everyone's selfies are preserved.
There are, of course, some
•
•
exceptions to the Sunday rest. Practice rounds for the Brit-
ish Open, for example, are scheduled to begin on July 12 — a Sunday — and play will, naturally, be allowed on
(
Vge
r
u
the next weekend, when the
final round is played on July 19. There are also a few other tournaments throughout
the year when Sunday play is permitted.
a
•
On a vast majority of week-
ends, however, this gem of a courseseparates itself from most of its brethren. Indeed,
while the rest of the golf world is on the first tee at dawn or
traipsing through a six-hour round at a packed municipal course or trying to squeeze in a quick nine before sunset,
the birthplace of it all stays quiet.
Widgi Creek.,: G OLF C L U B
18707 S W Century r . , en www.wid i,com (541) 382-4449
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
NHL: STANLEY IP "iv
NBA FINALS
erma in sacriices, arriors' uo aa emer es
vvgvvvv
By BenjaminHoffman New York Times News Service
With the heavily structured
salary cap in the NBA, depth is a luxury most teams cannot afford. The value of having options beyond your superstars was on full display in Game 4 of the NBA finals Thursday
night when Andre Iguodala led the Golden State Warriors
vvv:w
w
e
r
to a road win that evened the
-W rW I C:
series at two games apiece. For th e in j ury-ravaged C leveland C a valiers,
who
have endured devastating injuries to Kyrie Irving and Kev-
H I& u m
in Love, Golden State's ability
to insert Iguodala, a former All-Star still in his physical John Raoux /The Associated Press
Chicago center Antoine Vermette, right, celebrates with left wing Teuvo Teravainen after scoring a goal against Tampa Bay during the third period of Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final Saturday in Tampa, Flori da.Th e Blackhawks won 2-1.
Bac aw se eLi tnin, on rin o Stane Cu tite By Greg Beacham
BLACKHAWKS 3,LIGHTNING 2
win two straight to claim the
The Associated Press
second Stanley Cup title in
TAMPA, Fla. — With another tenacious road victo-
franchise history. Game 5 w a s a n other chapter in what's shaping
(0 Ivvl ry in this agonizingly close Stanley Cup Final, the Chicago Blackhawks earned an opportunity to raise that Game1: Blackhawks 2, Lightning1 Lightning4,Blackhawks 3 silver trophy on their home Game 2: ice. Game 3: Lightning3,Blackhawks 2 Antoine Vermette scored Game 4:Blackhawks 2, Lightning1 the tiebreaking goal early Game 5: Blackhawks 2, Lightning 1 in the third period, and the Blackhawks moved to the Monday atChicago 5 p.m. Bay 5 p.m. b rink of t h eir t h ir d N H L x-June17 at Tampa championship in six years All Times PDT; x-if necessary
with a 2-1 victory over the
Tampa Bay Lightning in Game 5 onSaturday night. Corey Crawford made 31 saves and Patrick Sharp
scored an early goal into an accidentally unguarded net for the Blackhawks, who took a 3-2 series lead
by surviving another tense game in this incredibly even series. The first five games all have been decided by one goal for just the second time
in Stanley Cup Final history, and the first time since 1951.
Ben Bishop stopped 27 shots after missing Game 4 with an undisclosed injury, but the goalie's ill-advised venture outside the crease led to Sharp's goal.
Valtteri F i lppula scored
up as the tightest Final ever
played. Neither team has even held a two-goal lead through five games, staying tied or one goal apart for all 300 minutes. The clubs started the third
period in a tie for the third straight game, but Vermette
cashed in on a loose puck in the slot just two minutes in. Bishop kicked the puck straight
o n t o V e r m ette's
for the Lightning, who have scored just two goals while losing two straight games for only the second time in their 25-game postseason.
tape after stopping a rush by
Tampa Bay also lost sec-
third-period tiebreaker at Amelie Arena in the series opener 10 days ago. While t h e Lig h tning didn't know their goalie's
ond-leading scorer Nikita Kucherov to a first-period injury when he crashed into the Chicago net. Game 6 is Monday night in Chicago, and seven remaining members of the Blackhawks' two-time champion core will have the chance
to skate the Stanley Cup
Kris Versteeg. Vermette, the
veteran forward acquired from Arizona near the trade d eadline, also scored t h e
identity until earlier in the
day, Crawford d elivered another outstanding night
in Chicago's crease right when he was most needed. He capped the performance
around the United Center for the first time after winning
with 16 saves in the third pe-
the other two Cups on the road. The Lightning must
down the stretch just as he
riod, performing flawlessly did in the previous game.
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
Edwards returns to Michigan, but with JoeGibbs, not Roush
prime, into the starting lineup
had to be demoralizing.
The talk in the NBA finals
about Iguodala had been of his sacrificing his starting spot for the good of the team. By dominating on both ends of the floor and guiding Golden State to an
I
easy 103-82 win in Game 4, he
changed the conversation. Iguodala, who had come off the bench in his previous 95
(,'
games this season after never having done so in his first
Eric Risberg /The Associated Press
10 seasons, started in place
Golden State forward Andre lguodala helped lead the Warriors to a
of Andrew Bogut in Game 4 and had 22 points and eight
road win over Cleveland onThursday. TheWarriors and Cavaliers playGame 5 of the NBA Finals tonight.
rebounds. But his impact was
far greater than that, as a pair of breakaway dunks and a few key 3-pointers helped add some bounce that had been missing from the Warriors'
Iguodala, who befuddles de- lenge ofhis matchup," Warriors fenses bybeing able to split the guard Stephen Curry said. lane and dunk over a center as Iguodala said the biggest well as knock down a 3-point- problem guarding James was step in this series. On the de- er over the hands of a leaping not with his size but with his fensive end, he continued to guard. His presence opens broad skill set. "He's probably one of the keep the Cavaliers' LeBron s pace on the court for t h e James honest despite f r e- team's elite shooters and he smartestand best passers out quently being asked to guard consistently looks for an open of all the scorers, which really him one-on-one. teammate before considering makes him dynamic," IguodaCoach Steve Kerr, who ac- a shot for himself. la said. "But the foundation is knowledged that he had lied On defense, his sacrifices the same. Make him work as when he said he would stay come into play even more. hard as possible. Make him with the lineup that he started The Warriors have largely take tough shots." in Games 1 to 3, thus preserv- abandoned the tactic of douAs for whether he has been ble-teaming James, an almost the best player in the finals, ing the Warriors' element of surprise, said the decision to unstoppable force. James Iguodala was quick to point go small and start Iguodala responded in the finals with out that the team's stars, Klay was an easy one. some of the best raw statistics Thompson and Curry, always "I mean, he looks great out of his career, but at great ef- make their teammates better, there," Kerr said. "He's been fort, and in Game 4, Iguodala even when they are not at their our best player through four seemed to have worn down best. "As we get older and magames." his bigger opponent, reminisTo those who adhere to cent of the rope-a-dope strat- ture and play this game, great basketball's inc r easingly egy by Muhammad Ali that players like that understand complex statistics, Iguodala's so effectively toppled George maybe it's not my night but emergence in the finals may Foreman. someone else is going to have "The guy is brilliant at both a huge game because of me," come as a surprise. A glance at his season shows pedestri- ends," Kerr said. "He sees the Iguodala said of Curry and an averages of 7.8 points, 3.3 game. If he wants to coach Thompson. rebounds and three assists a someday, he'd be a g reat With Iguodala consistently game. Advanced statistics do coach." sacrificing his playing time not paint a prettier picture: His Few would look forward to and statistics for the good of player efficiency rating of 12.3 the idea of guarding James, the team, Curry and Thompwas well below the league av- especially when working with son have an excellent role erage of 15, and his 0.117 win a dramatic size disadvantage model for that approach to shares per 48 minutes ranked — their rosters list Iguodala the game. But much to Cleveas 6-foot-6, 215 pounds, and land's chagrin, Iguodala has 12th on his own team. But close watchers under- James as 6-8, 250 — but Ig- reminded the basketball world stand that if there is an aruodala, who has been asked that when the team needs him gument against statistics as to guard James throughout his to stop sacrificing and start the final word on basketball career, has yet to back down. producing, he is still far more "I think he likes the chal- than a role player. evaluation, it should include
Finals
Carl Edwards acknowledges this trip to Michigan feels a
day's race. Kasey Kahne took the pole Friday and was followed in qualifying
bit different to him. "It is alittle strange to come
by Kevin Harvick and Brad Keselowski.
here to this race and not be driving for Jack Roush, because we put so much emphasis on this event for so many years," he said. "To win this race would be really special for me now just because
Also on Saturday: Busch wins at Michigan in return to Xfinity Series: BROOKLYN, Mich.— Kyle winning his first race back
I know from the other side
at M i chigan
how much everyone prepares — Jack and the other teams
Speedway. Busch broke his right leg and left foot in a
James but his whole team, which after a q uick start Continued from 01 Thursday was a step behind He's certainly been in this the rest of the night trying to very spot in the finals, Game keep up with the deeper, quick5 of a tied series, the game er Warriors in a 103-82 loss. "We've had a couple of days that has historically foretold who would win the title. So it's here to recover. I believe that's all about the next game, with going to be helpful," Blatt said. no reason to get hung up on "This is a tough series for both what happened in the last one teams, a lot of things happen— no matter how bad things ing. It's the best-of-three to win appeared. the NBA championship, the "I think when you get to a world championship. So I like championship-level type game the situation we're in. I l i ke with it being 2-2, I don't think the challenge that's in front anyone hasthe momentum," of us, and I can't wait to play James said. "Obviously, every- tomorrow."
February crash at Daytona.
one would say them because
He resumed his Sprint Cup schedule last month, but the
they'recoming back home, who weren't particularly imand then after the game they pressive while splitting a pair had the other night, but the of overtime contests in Games momentum starts once the 1 and 2. But now that they have game starts." regained home-court advan-
The Associated Press
t he second row
BROOKLYN, M ich.
Busch returned to the Xfinity Series with a f l o urish,
— because for the domestic
car manufacturers, this is their backyard."
for Sun-
Bob Brodbeck/The Associated Press
Carl Edwards waits in the ga-
I n ternational
now for Joe Gibbs Racing
rage Saturday after practice for race at MIS was his first in NASCAR's second-tier series since the injury. It was Bus-
haps that makes him a bit
tory on this circuit. He won the 250-mile, 125-lap race
Edwards drives a Toyota
today's NASCAR Sprint Cup after more than a decade race in Brooklyn, Michigan. with Roush Fenway, so per-
ch's record 71st career vic-
of an outsider for Sunday's
the Chase for the Sprint Cup.
NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Michigan International Speedway. Toyota hasn't won a Cup race at MIS since 2011,
His old team has been struggling. Greg Biffle is in 18th place, Ricky Stenhouse Jr. is 28th and Trevor Bayne is 30th. None of those three
by 0.477 seconds over Chase Elliott.
R oush drivers has won
est lap time late in the qualifying session at Honda Indy Toronto. He completed the
with Chevrolet and Ford winning three each since then. Edwards has won twice at
a
Power captures pole position in Toronto:TORONTOWill Power recorded the fast-
race. "You take that whole group He was out of the top 20 in at Roush Fenway Racing, 1.755-mile, 11-turn Exhibition his two attempts last year for they don't quit," Edwards Place street circuit in 59.4280 Roush Fenway and Ford. said. "They're the toughest seconds and will start from "For me to win in a Toyota guys in the world. They will the pole position today. It was would be really special here," keep working and I don't his 41st career pole position ever — I always expect them and fifth this year. Penske Edwards said. E dwards is 16th i n t h e each week to come back and teammate Simon Pagenaud points standings this year, be faster and faster. They're will join hi m i n t h e f r ont but he already has a victory, great competitors." row after finishing second in so he's in good shape to reach E dwards i s s t a rting i n 59.6095. this track, but not since 2008.
Neither can the Warriors,
Golden S t at e
c o n tained tage, they will win the NBA title as long as they don't lose time in Game 4. The Cavaliers a second game in an arena
James and won big for the first
don't have an obvious lineup where they lost only twice all adjustment like the Warriors season. made, so C l eveland's best They did lose twice in the chance — maybe only chance playoffs at home, against — couldbe forJames to score Memphis and Cleveland. "I think if you look at the Sunday the way he did in the first three games. entire playoffs, the first two James appeared rested and games at home have been a relaxed before practicing at struggle," said coach Steve the Warriors' training cen- Kerr. "Part of that is just trying ter, surely helped by the extra to adapt to your opponent and day between games when the get a feel for what they're doseries moved west. He scored ing. Easing into the series. Not only 20 points on 7-of-22 shoot- easing in, but trying to get a ing in Game 4 after averaging grasp on what you're wanting 41 through the first three.
to accomplishment. So I think
Coach David Blatt believes we should be better tomorrow the break will benefit not only because we have a feel for our
opponent, and I'm looking for abetter game at home." He wouldn't say if he would
went.
stick with the small lineup the
Warriors unveiled in Game 4, with swingman Andre Iguodala starting in place of center Andrew Bogut. But given Golden State's success in speeding up the tempo, there seems little reason to switch
back. James acknowledged after the game that the Cavaliers don't have many lineups they can go to, but Blatt isn't so sure
a change is necessary given the way the first three games "If you look at the one game, it makes you think, 'OK, we've got to change this, that and the
other thing," he said. "If you look at the four games, in three out of four of those games we
were pretty good doing the things that we did. So I think you'll see a combination of
both of those possibilities." Teams that won Game 5 when the finals are tied have
gone on to win 20 of 28 times, according to STATS, though not last time it happened. Mi-
ami fell behind San Antonio 3-2 in 2013, then James led the Heat to two wins.
So he knows not to overreact to anything this time of
year. "We're going to play our game," he said. "We've gotten to this point by playing the way we play, and we're not going to change."
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
Wearable tech 2.0 aims to alter mind
Pew-maker fills Florida's churches
andbody By Heather Somerville
Fla. — If you're sitting on a church pew somewhere in Central Florida, chances are good it came from F1orida Millworks and Church
San Jose Mercury News
Furniture.
By Jeff Kunerth Orlando lFla.) Sentinel
WINTER GARDEN,
The company, based in this Orlando suburb, is the only major manufacturer of
LOS GATOS, Calif.-
Grandmothers are wearing Fitbit, Jawbone bracelets pack the shelves of big-box stores and Apple's smartwatch is expected to be one
custom-made pews, pulpits,
chairs, communion tables and church railings in the
of the most coveted Christ-
state, said owner Gaylen
mas gifts this year. Wearabletechnology — wireless-connected gadgets that come in the form of eyeglasses, bracelets,
Reddick. "I'm the only one in Florida," said Reddick, 64, who estimates the companyhas furnished 70 percent to 80
wristwatches and other
percent of the churches with
small accessories for the body — have gone from nerdy and outlandish devices to popular purchases for the average consumer, a sign of how comfortable we have become with tracking our daily activi-
pews built in Central Florida during the past 40 years.
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
At Bend-based Picky Bars, Jesse Thomasstands in front of a poster featuring athletes that the companysponsors. Three profes-
His competitors are in
Ohio, Texas, Pennsylvania,
sional athletes, including Thomas, founded Picky Bars, which makes nutritional bars.
Arkansas and North Caro-
lina. But the biggest threat to his church-pewbusiness is chairs.
we sleep or how many cal-
The trend, especially among churches unaffil-
ories we burn. Now entrepreneurs
iated with major denominations, is the multipur-
are working to push the technology to new heights, creating gadgets that don't simply collect data on the
pose-room seating of chairs
ties, whether it's how well
body but can alter the us-
er's physical and mental state. It's a largely underex-
rm
m ni
that can be rearranged or
removed.Amongthe large churches, it's the replacement of pews with theater-
like seats for sanctuaries that double as performance
plored area that offers the
venues.
potential to alleviate pain and improvebrain func-
Iust chatrs," Reddhck sald.
"The new churches are
The other change in church pews is the gradual disappearance of the plain-
tionality, but also carries
a host of concerns about whether using startup technology to change our body chemistry poses unnecessary risks. Thync, a startup based in the Bay Area town
of Los Gatos, launched publicly last week with a device that sends electricity to the user's nerves to alter their mood and
mentalstate. The user has two options: become calmerormore energized. The mood-altering fix is delivered through a Bluetooth-connected headpiece,
a strip attached to the neck or behind the ear to stim-
ulate nerves that emerge directly from the brain,
wood pew. There are a few
churches that still go with pews lackingupholstery,
By StephenHamway e The Bulletin
but most want a little pad-
dingand comfort addedto
com, a research and review
site. "So there absolutely is a consumer appetite for this, and that's been
the case for millenniums. What's new is we are now
entering a phase where technology can provide that stimulant."
SeeWearable/E5
Think mauve. Florida Millworks dates
back to 1964, when the com-
and the companies that support them, but on a slightly
pany started as Southern
Seatinginnearby Ocoee. Reddickjoined the business
different level.
in the 1980s and purchased
Michael Hansen, business administration professor companies often simply use athletes to draw
and CEO of Wearables.
contemporaryfabriccolors can quiddybecome dated.
However, the same relationship exists for local athletes
at Central Oregon Community College, said national
Luis Rincon, co-founder
last 50 years, but trendy,
athletes such as Peyton Manning and LeBron James.
and a smartphone. Leave
Unequivocally, yes," said
The challenge, Reddick said, is that the wood will
Nike get most of the attention for their work with superstar
your yoga mat or Red Bull at home. "Are people looking for some sort of stimulant to alter their mental state?
the hardwood.
n the world of athlete sponsorship, global companies such as
it in 1994, changing the name to Florida Millworks and Church Furniture.
Threeyears ago, he moved into a former cit-
rus-packingplant in Winter Garden. Florida Millworks is all bare-wood floors, ex-
attention to products, but many local businesses that work with athletes are marketing athletic products,
posed rafters, fluorescent
and using sponsorships as a way to build their brand while
lights and sawdust. There are stacks of unfinished pew endpieceson fl at carts and dusty industrial sanders, band saws, rout-
Courtesy Picky Bars
ingratiating themselves into those communities.
Picky Bars
sponsors 16 "For the local companies, I think it's a little more of a win-win," Hansen said. Bend-based professional triathlete Matt
professional athletes, including eight based in Bend.
since then. "Back then, the focus was just trying to
get products," Lieto said. "I didn't worry Lieto began working with sponsors around about whether the products would be good 10 years ago, though he has gotten more for me or for my brand." discerning about the companies he endorses SeeSponsorship/E2
ers,fabric stretchers and
drill presses. Templates of different-style crosses hang on the walls, along with a
Star of David template for synagogues. See Pews/E5
e erson oun OunCeS ae romreeeSSion By Stephen Hamway
with the Oregon Employment
The Bulletin
Department, said last week
employers. "Manufacturing here has
For Deschutes County's neighbor to the north, the eco-
that Jefferson County's job been great," said Janet Brown, growth was third among Economic Development for nomic low point came someOregon counties between Central Oregon manager for time in the spring of 2009. April 2014 and April 2015. The Jefferson County. The unemployment rate in county added 310 jobs during Bright Wood is leading the Jefferson County reached 15.5 that time, and for an area with job growth on the manufacpercent in April of that year, in around 22,000 residents, that turing side. While the company's layoffs during the rethe midstofa four-yearperiod numberrepresentsa signifiwhere Bright Wood Corp., one cant increase. cession forced it to reallocate "In Jefferson County, the of the largest employers in the resources, Brown said Bright Wood's decision to remain in county, laid off more than 400 narrative is that two indusemployees. triesarecarryingtheeconoCentral Oregon helped Jeffermy," Runberg said. Contrast that with where son County avoid the dramatJefferson County is today. The two industries are iclossesseen in otherareas. "I grew up here. It's kind of The April 2015 numbers from wood products manufacturing the Oregon Employment and local government, which hard tomove," Bright Wood Department showed that the county's unemployment rate
sat at 6.7 percent, less than
combined to contribute 290 of
President and CEO Dallas
the 310 jobs added during that period. Manufacturing, which
Stovall said. And now, buoyed by an expanded product line and the improving economy, the company is hiring again. The company employs around 750people nationally, including around 600 in
half of where it was six years prior. Moreover, the coun-
includes almost a third of
ty's growth has intensified
the county's 3,550nonfarm private occupations,added
over the past year. Damon
120 jobs over the previous
Runberg, regional economist
year, largely from existing
Madras, according to Stovall. While these numbers are well below Bright Wood's pre-recession employment figure of 896, they show a significant improvement over numbers from the depths of the recession.
On the other side, local government employment in Jef-
JeffersonCounty's growthsectors
2 ,500jobs------------ - - - 2,000--
as well, due in large part to expansions on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation. Runberg said that many of the businesses onthereservation
1,5oo- 2,160lob
are treated as "enterprises,"
1,000-
ernment subset "Indian tribal"
showed an increase of 50 jobs over the previous year, suggesting that the businesses on thereservation aregrowing. SeeJefferson/E2
Crook County Jefferson County DeschutesCounty Oregon United Qates
~ L ocal government ~ Wood predsct manufacturing
ferson County has increased
which are classified under local government. In the employment data, the local gov-
Unemyloymentrates
11% unemployment--------
g 8.3%
(An 8.5 percent increase) 7% 500-
6%-
760 jods
5.6% 5.4%
(An18.8 percent increase) 5'/
April 2014
s.7%
April 2015 April 2014
Source: Oregon Employment Department
5.2'/o
April 2015 Pete Smith /The Bulletin
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
BUSI1VESS
E1VD
exposure to it and how your privacy can be better protected; 11:30 a.m.; $20, members, $35 nonmembers; Census Data for Grant Writers: St. Charles BendCenter for Health Learn about the benefits of using & Learning, 2500 NENeff Road, census data in grant proposals with Bend; www.cityclubco.org or Census Data Dissemination Specialist 54 I-633-7163. Linda Clark; 1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St., June 22 Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-6 I7-7093. Build a Business Website with WordPress Intermediate:Learn basicHTML and CSS,how to make THURSDAY customizations to your WordPress site with child themes andhow Business Startup:Cover the basics to best protectyour site from in this two-hour class and decide if hackers and malware; running a business is for you; 11 a.m4 spammers, $29, registration required; Redmond continues July1; 6 p.m.; $179; registration required; Central Oregon COCCCampus — Technology Community College, 2600 NW Education Center, 2324 NECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc College Way,Bend; 541-383-7270. or 541-383-7290. Pitch Your Biz with Passion Privacy and Security, Obsolescent & Prowess:Join Diane Allen, who has been apitch coach for Values in the Digital Age:This forum will discuss digital theft, your the Bend Venture Conference;
WEDNESDAY
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0323.
6:30 p.m.; BendCreative Space, 19855 Fourth St., Suite105, Bend; tiny.cc/pitchpassionprowess or 541-617-0340.
June 23 Women AndMoney: Are YouReady For Change?:Learn howto organize important papers, complete financial documents, review your investment goals and identify reliable resources; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NECushing Drive, Bend; www. midoregon.com or 541-382-1795.
June 25 Lunch and Learn — Illlonthly Market Overviews:Jacob Fain, financial adviser, for monthly market overviews at the Morgan Stanley office, will speak; noon; Morgan Stanley, 705 SW BonnettWay,No. 1200, Bend; 541-617-6013. Meet with Haggen Leaders:
Haggen invites those interested to discuss selling their wares on Haggen shelves, for nonprofitsto learn about the community-giving program, small businesses canexplore comarketing programs; 5 p.m.; COCC Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; www.haggen. com/ or 502-250-4750.
great idea that you think could be a successful business, but just don't know how to get started? Cover the basics and decide if running a business is for you; 6 p.m.; $29, registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.
June29
JA11/ 7
Bend Area Habitat for Humanity — Homeownership Information Session:Bend Area Habitat for Humanity is looking for families to apply for our partnership program. Attend an information session to learn more; 5:30 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NENinth St., Bend; www.bendhabitat.org or 541-385-5387.
Real Estate Broker License Course:This course prepares you to qualify for the Oregon Real Estate Broker's License Exam in10 weeks and meets the150-hour requirement of the Oregon Real Estate Agency; 6 p.m.; $600; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
July 1 Business Startup:Do you havea
prepare for the state-mandated test, which is not included, to become a licensed construction contractor in Oregon; 8:30 a.m.; $359 registration required; COCC Redmond Campus —Technology Education Center, 2324 NE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ccb or 541-383-7290.
Contractors CCB Test Prep course:A two-day class to
HomebuyerEducation Workshop: An education and coaching service to help homebuyers understand the buying process, access safe mortgage loans and prepare for the responsibilities of homeownership; 9 a.m.; $45 per household; Bend Neighborlmpact Office, 20310 Empire Ave., Suite A100, Bend; www.neighborimpact.org/ homebuyer-workshop-registration/ or 541-323-6567.
Lot8, Block4, $415,750 • Elsie I. Dicksonto RamonaK.andTracy J. Hackbart, TimberRidge, Lots1-2, Block 3, $225,000 • Delean G. Brennan,trustee ofthe James A. BrennanJr. RevocableTrust, to Donald S. andJanieL. McMahan,West Hills Fifth Addition, Lot23, Block5, $175,000 • KaromaProperties LLCto Jason Brewer,Ni-Lah-Sha,Phases2-3, Lot161, $253,500 •PacWestIILLCto DavidJ.andRebecca L. Bexley,SundanceMeadows, Lot21, $294,433 • Broken Top Medical ParkLLCto Mario MendozaJr. andJadeE.Ice, Badger Forest, Phase 2, Lot 28,$237,500 • HL DevelopmentLLCto Mil ViewVilage LLC,Township18, Range12,Section8, $1,435,000 • Beverly M.Evansto NoahVonBorstel and TurquoiseN.VonBorstel, Bend CascadeViewEstates, Tract2, Unit 2, Lot 6, $155,000 • Rex L. andDorothy L.Jamison, trustees of the Jamison1993Trust, toRobertJ. and TheresaM.Kirsch, GlazeMeadow HomesiteFifth Addition, Lot227, $592,000 • Cariesa G. and Patrick E.Kearney to Joseph M. Craig, OregonWater WonderlandUnit 2,Lot1, Block 57, $430,000 • Deutsche Bank National Trust Co., trustee for IxisRealEstate Capital Trust, to CombinedResourcesLLC, CenterAdditionto Bend,Lot4, Block51, $232,000 • Charles T. and DebraC.Ebner to Benjamin J.Ebner,Quail Crossing, Phase 2, Lot 40,$387,000 • Sally H. Mann, trustee ofthe Sally HaseltineMannTrust, andAllan R.Mann, trustee of theAllan R.MannTrust, to Steven C.Goins, trusteeof theSteven C. GoinsTrust, AwbreyGlenHomesites, Phase 6,Lot106, $589,000 •William R.andJacqlyn R.Evansto Ronny L.Welton, DavisFirst Addition, Lot 5, Block5, $233,500
• Kathleen Keeton,trustee of the Kathleen KeetonTrust, to Justin Guidroz, Skyliner Summitat BrokenTop, Phase9, Lot149, $415,000 Crook County • HSBC Bank USAN.A., trustee for MortgagelTSecurities Corp.Mortgage Loan Trust, toRobinC.andTonya D. Moore, Partition Plat2002-42, Parcel2, $430,000 • Gerhard andMarleneGrieser to Robert S. and LisaE.Hoogenboom, Brasada Ranch 2,Lot 248,$405,000 • James A.Weeksto ShawnL. and Tara N.Peschel, GoldenHorseshoe RanchHomesUnit1, Lots1-2, Block11, $201,000 • Stephen E.andCheryl A.Asherto Ceck Properties LLC, Township15, Range15, Section 29,$225,000 • Patti L. Miller, Lisa McLeanandToni G. Lewis toWilliam R.Tye, Partition Plat 2005-05, Parcel1, $555,000 • John L. andMichelle M. Crafton to JosephM.andMichelleA.Jones, Township14, Range15,Section 2, $385,000 • Garth W.Brandaw,trustee of the Garth W. BrandawLiving Trust, andJoan M. Brandaw,trustee of theJoanM. Brandaw Living Trust, toJaredM.andJessica B. Zabaldo,BrasadaRanch2, Lot244, $425,000 • Aaron andTami Semasto McKayCreek Family RanchLLC,Township13, Range 16, Sections33-34,$1,725,000 • Linda Skomski-Saupto Margaret M. Olson, Prineville Lake Acres Unit 2,Lot 3, Block16A, $165,000 • Brian M.Readto Keith R.Vieira, Township 13, Range15,Section19,$225,000 • Steven P. Vollmer to David Neumanand Cynthia Nelson,Prineville LakeAcres, Lot 84, Block1, $210,000 • LawrenceE.andJoan K.Adamsonto ShawnAdamson,Township14, Range15, Section 24,$273,000 • Adam J.Learyto LawrenceE.andJoan K. Adamson,Crystal SpringsSubdivision, Phase 2,Lot 36,$231,000
JA1Y10
DEEDS Deschutes County • Daniel P. andAngela K.Brobst to Nicholas LubsenandRebecca Hurley, Hidden Hills, Phase1,Lot12, $279,500 •Jess andYvonneReynolds to Shannon and DavidW.Cooper, WagonTrail North, Lots 6-7,Block3, $187,500 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to DavidA. and Jennifer A.Bock, Bridgesat ShadowGlen, Phase2A, Lot122, $365,450 • Robert A. Fultonand Patricia WhelanFulton, trusteesofthe Fulton Revocable Trust, to JenniferGunnell,Shevlin CommonsP.U.D.,Phases4-5, Lot44, $1,590,000 • Neil and MelodyZweigart to David J. and Kimberly A.Gockel,Terrango Glen East, Phase2, Lot 21,$267,449 • UmpquaBankto CascadeEnergy LLC, NottinghamSquare, Lot 6, Block5, $155,650 • Joseph M.Craigto Christopher E.and Maureen T. Bayless, Partition Plat200511, Parcel 2,$530,000 • PacWestII LLCto Barbara C.McGil, Eagle's Landing,Lot 61,$289,947 • Deborah Van Dusen, trustee of the DeborahVanDusen2014 Living Trust, to Sharon E.VanDusen, TaraViewEstates, Lot 4, Block 3,$200,000 • Jenna Walden to Pivotal Construction Services LLC,Somerset, Phase1, Lot11, Block 4, $375,000 • Brian T. Jones andJ.M. Brauneto Gregory L.andCarol H.Opfel, Brookside, Lot 9, Block 2,$239,500 • Jean L. Stryker to NathanA.and Lynnea A. Avenetti, TamarackParkEast, Phase6, Lot13, Block 4,$257,900 • Noel E. HansonII to Wiliam Myers and Alison J.Cobb,GrayButte Estates, Phase 1, Lot 3, $199,900 • Beale Ridgway-Jonesto Jeffrey R. Stevens, ShevlinMeadows,Phase3,Lot 8, $495,000 • Dennis D. and DianaB.Stott to Wiliam E. AkinsJr.andAmandaA. Akins, Woodside Ranch,Phase5,Lot4,Block 13, $318,000 • David I. andCareyA. Hughesto Donald
Jefferson Continued from E1 Harold Baugus, general manager of Indian Head Ca-
W. andShari Noldge,Ridgeat EagleCrest 57, Lot 158,$255,500 • Robert L andJodie H.Hall to Stephen and ElizabethOrnellas, Wild River,Phase 3, Lot19, Block4, $480,000 • Paul E.andElizabeth A. Beatty to Elisa GinabredaandKia Kopacz,Riverrim P.U.D.,Phase5, Lot438, $315,000 • Emerson RealtyLLCto Beale RidgwayJones, trusteeof the BealeRidgway-Jones Family Trust, HiddenHils, Phase1, Lot 19, $388,000 • Judy March,trusteeof the Gordon ForslundRevocableLiving Trust, to Cheri P. andEdwardMartinen, LazyRiver South, Lot61,Block3,$174,000 • NorthwestTrusteeServices Inc.to Gorilla CapitalOR201LLC,Cascade Cottages,Phase1,Lot1,$181,000 • Maurice andLelaBassett to RichardW. Carter andJudith C.Dyer, River Vilage1, Lot 20, Block1,$469,000 • Jeffrey M. Jacques,trustee of Jeff's Trust, whoacquired title asJeffrey M. Jacques, toAnnBoydandKurt Brocker, Plat of WestBendVilage, Phases3-5, Lot 80, $419,000 •Gusta voEstradatoJohnC.andLaura B. Pings, ViewRidge,Lot1, $305,000 • DwayneT.Friesento Donald S.Gordon, The Bluffs atRiverBend,Phase5, Lot 5, $425,000 • Doug Tippett to RobertA. Kuehn, WilliamsonParkSecondAddition, Lot 10, Block 6,andaportion of Wiliamson ProfessionalPark,Lot7,$279,900 • Donald G.andSandraA. Crozier, trustees ofthe DonaldandSandraCrozier 2002Trust, to Albert J.andGayle M. Stone,Township18,Range12,Section 24, $1,092,500 • Douglas W.andJordan A. Lorensento StevenandBarbaraWellin, MasonEstates First Addition, Phase2, Lot21,$255,500 • David W.and ReneeD. Mael to Antoinette Vanavichai,OregonWater WonderlandUnit 2, Lot2, Block39, $240,000 • LawrenceE.and Rosemary S.Coxto Dorothy A.Starr,trustee ofthe Dorothy
By Bob Batz Jr.
reservation in 2012, said he had seen the casino add 20 new employees since he ar-
PittsburghPost-Gazette
rived in October 2013. While
gan more than a decade ago, the brewery has sold
Runberg cautioned that job
growth in smaller counties, particularly those reliant on just a couple industries, can be
harderto project. However, Gus Burril, city administrator for Madras, said
the county's largest city seems to be well-positioned to absorb
some of the potential expansion due to the growth of its airport and the city's location
alongHighways 97 and 26. He addedthat the city is budgeting for future growth, including the recent expansion of the county's enterprise zone on the north side of town by the Madras Airport in the face
of increased demand from companies. Housing dev e lopment, which has stayed relatively stagnant in Madras, could see
a sharp uptick soon. "We're anticipating housing breaking loose, because there isn't
much available," Burril said. With most of the growth
coming from existing companies, Burril said there has been plentyof shifting in locations, but very little construc-
tion on the commercial side. But if constructionjobs return, the region should see higher employment goingforward. "I think we're in a position to welcome a lot of people to
the community," Burril said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.com
Lot10, $243,000 • Chantal J.W.Rose,trustee of the Chantal J.W.RoseFamily Trust, toSteve McBurnettand KatrinaHays,River Bend Estates, Lot 26andthewest half of lot 63, $699,000 •FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to 3100 LLC, MountainVillage East4, Lot12, Block 27,$276,000 • Paul E.Elbekto Janice Elbek,Cimarron City, Lot 25,Block2, $277,000 • TheodoreE.andMeganM.Strand to Zachary D.andLeahM. Roberts, Summerfield, Phase 3, Lot26,Block5, $164,000 • TetherowGlen58LLCto RoxaneL.and Brock N.Olson,Tetherow,Phase2, Lot 36, $209,000 • Arne I. andLaurel A.Cherkossto Jeremy R.TurpenandRandolph F.Brock, GrandviewAddition to Bend,Lots 3-4, Block 2,$367,000 • Alan andVicky Hughes,trustees ofthe Alan andVickyHughesRevocableLiving Trust, to Joseph A. andElizabeth R. Casper,Township18,Range13,Section 17, $185,000 • Casie A.andMichael J.Josephto Walter J. Kennedy,PineCrest Ranchettes, Lot12, Block1, $190,000 • The Filipek DefinedBenefit Pension Plan toGaryandDeborahW.Schubert, Ridgewater IIP.U.D.,Lot41, $439,000 • Fritz M. Schmitz, trusteeof theFritz M. Schmitz RevocableTrust, whoacquired title as Fritz M.Schmitz, to LindaBarker, Golf CourseHomesite Section, Lot1, $288,000 • Jerry S. andAlisha M.Capsonto Mark D. and Karin S.Raitz, Justin Glen,Phase3, Lot 50, $220,000 • Scott Alldridge to AandAProperties NW LLC,QuelahEstates,Lot2,$800,000 • Jared Calderto Aaron J.andMonica M. Huey,Township15, Range13,Section 20, $183,000 • Joseph andMary A.Madruga, trustees of the MadrugaLiving Trust, to MikeP. and TonnaM.Wilkins, Valhalla Heights III,
o i e so ution to cra t eer cannin nee s
sino, which opened o n t h e
he declined to give specific numbers,he said the majority of the casino's visitorswere comingfrom the three-county region. "Our base is Central Oregon,"Baugus said.
A. Starr Trust,CopperRidge, Phase1, Lot 60, $239,900 • Gregory A.andCindy M.Anderson to Charles W. andEdith M. Carlson, Highland Addition, Lot11,exceptthewesterly 3 feet thereof, Block22,$425,750 • Gail D. Skelton-Dayto Loganand Chelse aJohnson,ChuckanutEstates, Phase1, Lot14, Block1,$213,000 • Federal Home LoanMortgage Corp. to DanielandJessica Stockel, Forest Meadow,Phase1,Lot 13,$350,000 • Sarah L.Robertsonto Robert J. and Raeceil A.Day,MountainView Lodges Unit 21,$291,000 • Benjamin A.andAmi C.Zimmerman to GentjanandLindaR.Saliu, Northpointe, Phase 2,Lot 71,$223,500 • Allen J. and Anita M.Yoder, trustees of the AllenJayYoder andAnita May Yoder JointRevocableLiving Trust, also appearing ofrecord asAllenJ. Yoderand Anita M.Yoderastrustees ofthe AllenJay Yoder andAnita MaeYoderJ.R.L.T., to Cas and Theresa Schrunk, Hilman,Lots17-25, Block19, $160,000 • Holly Shoemaker-Groce to Michele Gougeson,HaydenAcres, Phase3, Lot 11, $167,500 • Charles B.and Linda L.Lewis to RonD. Lange, FieldstoneCrossingP.U.D.,Phase 1, Lot13, $215,000 • Jayne A.Scarcella to RichardJ. and Deborah L.McAlexander,Township14, Range12,Section 36,$372,500 • JD NeelConstruction Inc. to Jennifer R. and David S.Moyer, HiddenHils, Phase1, Lot15, $365,000 •JamesC.and BettyA.Ince,trustees of the James andBetty Ince Revocable Trust, to EddieandKatie Blodgett, Ince Subdivision, Lot10, Block1,$300,000 • David E.andMary J.Lattin to Andrew O. Sullivan,Northpointe, Phase1,Lot33, $240,000 • Michelle L andDavid M. Bjorkto Nicholasand KaariVaughn, AwbreyGlen Homesit es,Phase6,Lot138,$764,000 • JKC LLC, which acquired title as JKC LLC, toStevenA. Riper, Scott's Landing,
colleague Jason Cichoskiefinished setting up andsanitizing PITTSBURGH — Since their machine.
East End Brewing Co. bealmost all draft beer — ei-
ther in glassjugs known as growlers, in glasses or in kegs. But on a recent Wednes-
day afternoon, 20 barrels of BigHop India paleale went into 6,600 brilliant green cans, thanks to a 6 -footlong, stainless steel con-
traption operated by two guys from We Can Mobile Canning, based in Danville, about 50 miles north of Harrisburg. "There are hot dog carts
that are bigger than that," quipped East End owner Scott S mith as We C a n
owner Pete Rickert and
Sponsorship Continued from E1
team hooked up the hose and turned thecanner on.
month, working from Cincin-
He opened one of the very first BigHopsever canned, the For years, Smith has talkder. They might hit the same tab giving way with a telltale ed about canning, which has clinking into a fare box as brewery oncea week. pop. "That's a good sound," become increasinglypopular three cans at a time moved Hesaid they're oneof about he said with a grin, before exwith craft brewers interested alongthe length of the canner. 20 such mobile operations changing "Cheers!" and clinkin the containers' protection Tubesfirst displacedthe air in- in the country. This was We ing cans with fellow brewer from sunlight and air, lighter side the cans with heavier car- Can's first time in Pittsburgh, Jim Hicks. "I love it. I think it's the best shipping weightlcost, portabil- bon dioxide,then other tubes though their first clientity and recyclability. He even displaced the CO2 with 12 back in 2013 — was Lavery packagefor beer," said Hicks, considered buying a small ounces of foam-topped beer. Brewing Co. of Erie. They've who came from out of town manual canner. Finally, with another puff of canned for wineries, too, and for the occasion. Having past Instead, he ended up rent- CO2, themachine plopped on soon will be canning coffee. canning experience, he even ing this onefor a long day — a a top — click! — and sealed it Smith started selling t h e helpedby hand-loading empcourse that many small- and with a spin that sent flecks of polished new packaging that ties onto the little line. medium-sized breweries are foamflying. night for $12 per six-pack or They still were at it late in taking. We Can is able to fill about $46 acase (plus tax). the afternoon. When they flnHe's going to keep close ished, the itinerant canners The topless cans — Smith a caseworth of cansa minute, ordered 94,000 separately up to 55 casesan hour. Rick- watch on th e be er and i t s were scheduled to head on to and had them designed by lo- ert, the "Head Six Packer," can shelf life, as well as customer the nextbrewery. "I'm waiting to be pulled cal Commonwealth Presspick up a caseat a time, with demand before distributing floated in a stainless steel bin two six-packs in each of his canned brews more broadly, over," Rickert said. "That of sanitizer. Once the brew- big hands. which is perhaps the cans' big- would be an interesting stoers had the pressure right in The company's 11 other gest advantage overgrowlers. ry. 'You smell like a brewery.' the beer tank, the We Can employeescan 10,000 casesa "For a lot of people, this will be 'Well, as a matter of fact ...'" It sounded like a train clacking down the track with coins
er Trek, to the Bend-based an opportunity to maintain
products in that particular extension of the founders' ef-
Rebound Physical Therapy. support within Bend's biking
niche.
forts to further leverage their
Take the Bend-based energy bar company Picky Bars.
own social media followings. He saidthe company receives 65 to 70 percent of its sales online, despite being in more
He estimated that there are s p o n sorships around two dozen individu-
community.
"It's creating relationships, will generatean estimated al athletes in Bend who are really," Bonacker said. "It's Founded in 2 010 by t h r e e $45 billion in revenue in paid by sponsors, with many about meeting people who professional athletes who 2015, according to a 2011 others benefiting from less are good ambassadors." were looking to design a nuprojection by Pricewater- formal ar r angements. I n Lieto a d ded th a t e v e n tritional bar for athletes withhouseCoopers. However, addition, some c ompanies, non-monetary sponsorships out artificial ingredients,the Lieto said sponsorships such as theBend bicycle store can be helpful, as the service company announced a partcan take many forms, Sunnyside S ports, choose and supporthe receives from nership with 16 pro athletes from "pro-deal" discounts to sponsor entire teams of these companies can be in- in April, including Lieto and with co mpanies, a ll t h e cyclists. valuable to his career as a seven others in Bend. "The ethos of the compaway up to tr a d itional Susan Bonacker, co-own- triathlete. "The only companies I'll go ny is to support professional payment for en d orsing er of Sunnyside Sports, said products. In general, the the shop sponsors the Sun- after are oneswhere I think athletes that are pursuing sponsorships get m o r e nyside Sports Racing Team, their product is the best prod- their goals and their dreams," lucrative as the athlete which in c l udes ab o ut 3 0 uct on the market," Lieto said. said co-founder JesseThombecomes more successful people. No money changFor companies attempt- as. "And in doing so, inspire and experienced. es hands, but team member ing to brand their products age-groupers and amateurs Today, Lieto works with Gina Miller said the store of- as a performance item for to achieve their own goals as about eight companies, fers discounts and free labor athletes,Hansen said this ar- well." with sponsorships rang- to keep bikes in good work- rangement acts as a stamp of Thomas said he saw the ing from the bicycle-mak- ing order. For the store, it's approval, helping to solidify sponsorship campaign as an Athlete
the first East End they have."
nati to Ocean City, Maryland, to the New York-Canada bor-
than 400 stores across the
country. Bend's own branding as a hub for
ou tdoor r ecreation
helps as well. Hansen said Bend-based brands that use snowboarders
an d t ri a t h -
letes in their marketing are appealing to local customers' sense of their town.
"We love this place, and we feel like we know what it stands for," Thomas said.
"That's part of what Picky Bars are, so it makes sense for us to tie that in." — Reporter: 541-617-7818 shamway@bendbuiletin.com
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
•
QUESTION: Is paying my bills onlinemore secure than mailing physical checks? ANswER: Generally speaking, paying bills online (~ can be more secure and faster than mailing physical checks. Below are just some of the benefits to switching from mailing a check to online bill payment. 1. Faster. In today's electronic world, paying bills online is much quicker than writing a check, finding Kathleen anenvelope and stamp, and mailing the check. Bailey 2 . Mo re cost-effective. Paying bills online is more cost-efficient than sending payment by mail. 3. Easyto use. Over the past decade, online bill payment has become more and more user friendly. You'll usually know instantly if there's a problem with your payment or if you need to reenter or confirm some of your information. 4. More secure.This may be the most important benefit of online bill payment. When you pay by mailed check,allofyourbank account information, including your routing and account number, is vulnerable to mail thieves. Be sure to do your research before you submit your personal payment information online. Avoid using public computers and public Wi-Fi Internet connections to pay your bills. This same rule applies to using public Wi-Fi with your smart phone. If you are using your personal computer, with a secure Internet connection, to pay bills, you'll also want to be sure the website that you're submitting your payment information to is secured with encryption. This can be done by looking for a secure transaction symbol, such as a lock symbol, in the lower righthand corner of your web browser, or "https://..." in the address bar. (The "s" in the address indicates "secured" and means the website's encrypted.) If you're smart about it, paying bills online can be more secure, convenient and cost-effective.
•
QUEsTioN: I am a public employee and will be receiving a pension in a few years. One of my friends told me that you can get more money from your pensioneach month by using life insurance - how does that work?
ANswER:When you retire with a pension there are several disbursement options available. You can get a bigger monthly installment if you elect to receive payments for your lifeKaren time rather than receiving them for the life of Brannon you and your spouse. Unfortunately, if you elect payments for your lifetime to maximize what you receive and you die shortly thereafter, your spouse receives no benefits from your pension after your death. Permanent life insurance, either whole life or universal life, can be used as a tool to allow you to take the higher disbursement and still protect your spouse. By purchasing a permanent life insurance policy before you retire and selecting the disbursement for your lifetime, you can fund the life insurance policy with the extra money from the higher disbursement. If you die first, the income from the life insurance policy replaces the loss of income for your spouse. If your spouse dies first, you can cancel the life insurance policy, receive the cash value from the policy, and get the higher disbursement for the rest of your life. Pension optimization only makes sense if the cost of the life insurance is close to the additional disbursement you would receive when you select the lifetime only option.
j~veSt e
FA R M E R cs I N s U RA N cE
www.farmersagent.com/kbrannon
541-771-0064
S
Patrick O'Keefe
QUEsTIQN:I am making contributions to my flexible spending account each month through a payroll deduction. I thought I was going to have amedical procedure done this year so I am putting more into that account than I have in pastyears. There is a possibility that I won't need to have thisprocedure done afteran.This will leave me with more in my account than I will need. Can I change my deduction so I don't lose this money at the end of the year?
ANswER: The contribution you are making to your flexible spending account (FSA) is deducted from your paycheck on a pre-tax basis. This allows you to use basically tax-free dollars for a number of health-related expenses, such as medical, dental, and vision expenses that are not covered by your health or dental plan. Beginning in 2013, the maximum pre-tax contribution an employee can make to an FSA was limited to $2,500 and indexed for inflation. At the beginning of the year you told your employer how much you wanted to put into your FSA for the year and authorized that amount to be evenly divided and deducted from eachofyour paychecks.Unfortunately,undermost circumstances, you cannot change this amount mid-year. The "use it or lose it" rule applies to these funds. Historically, any funds that you didn't use in a calendar year would be forfeited.However,in 2013 the IRS amended therulesregarding FSAs. Employers are now able to allow employees to roll over up to $500 of an unused balance from the current year to the following year. You should check with your employer if they have adopted this provision as you may be able to carry over some of your unused funds to next year.
QUEsTloN: I have student loans from when I obtained my degree. How will that affect my ability to purchase a home with a mortgage loan? ANswER:Many first-time homebuyers are facing student loan debt as an obstacle when trying to qualify for a home loan. Student loans
have become the second highestform ofconsumer debt, as most graduates owe an average of $33,000 in student loans. McClurg Student loan debt affects qualifying for a mortgage through: Credit scores: Making a late payment, or missing one altogether, can negatively affect your credit score. On the other hand, on-time student loan payments can help positively increase your credit score and help build your credit, increasing your ability to qualify for more affordable loans. Debt-to-Income (DTI) ratios: Student loan payments reported on a credit report are counted towards borrower DTI c@culations. A positive change in Fannie Mae's guidelines effective April I, 2015, requires lenders to count the greater of either 1% of the b@ance of the student loan or the actual documented payment to determine a borrower's recurring monthly payment on student loans not showing on a credit report due Judy
to a deferred status. Don't perceive your student loan debt as a major obstacle to qualifying for a mortgage. Meet with me early in the process to alleviate concerns and obtain an accurate picture of your ability to qualify.
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QUEsTIQN: I can't obtain the credit I desire. What can I do? ANswER: First and foremost, obtain your credit reports from all three of the nationwide consumer credit reporting companies — Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. There is onlyone authorized source for free annu8 credit reports under federal law, either online at annualcreditreport.com, or by calling 877.322.8228 to have them mailed to you. If you obtain these reports online, we recomm end you print for later reference and review. Beware, these reports can be lengthy; the reports that are mailed are much more compact. No credit scores are provided. An excellent option is to pay and receive your reports through an online site. We prefer Wells Fargo Enhanced, which also provides scores for $15.99 per month. Beware of the advertisedfreereports ...they usu@ly aren'tfree! Then take a proactive, two-pronged approach to improving your credit through ongoing management of your credit and fixing the errors in your credit reports. You should see dramatic results in a relatively short period of time. We offer an individu&zed and detailed Credit Rescue Path for only $49. Other companies charge as much as $150. And this is not a simple credit report summary or consultation, which somecompanies offer forfree.
QUEsTioN: Is it worth the money to have a professional stage my home when I sell? ANswER:Having your home staged by a professional home stager is always the best way to go if it's in your budget. A professional can see details that many of us who have lived in our homesfor severalyears take for granted. However, if your budget doesn't include this, Sue Marx there are some things you can do yourself to make your home more attractive to a potential buyer. Start with the decluttering process. You are moving anyway so put away all the unnecessary items that you don't use or don't need during the time your home is on the market. This will make your home look larger and give the buyers a chance to see themselves living there. Other things you can do to enhanceyour home's appearance are give the frontentry a good cleaningand sweeping (curb appeal),make sure everything is in good working order (I recommend a pre-home inspection so there are no surprises, if it's in your budget), clean EVERYTHING — carpets, cabinets, windows, and organize closets. If you are willing to put a little time and effort into your home, if a professional stager is not in your budget, you can still make your home stand out among the competition.
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QUEsTIoN:We are looking for Riverfront or View Property, is there anything we should know about it?
QUEsTioN: Our widowed mom just passed away and we kids are inheriting, among other things, her IRAs. Does the estate pay the taxes when we cash out the IRAs?
ANswER: A few things that are important to consider.
ANswER: Please accept my condolences on your loss. If your mom died before or after her required date to take her minimum distributions, you as beneficiaries need to figure out and distribute the amount of the IRA to be taxed in the year she passed away. That withdrawal is taxed at her rate and her estate should pay the taxes. The estate does not pay taxes when you cash out the IRAs as beneficiaries. You will be subject to taxes at your taxable rate if you cash out the IRAs and that amount could push you into a higher tax bracket! The IRA does allow five years in order to cash out the inherited IRA and pay all taxes due. You might want to think about each of you "stretching" the IRA so that you only need to take a required minimum distribution each year and pay taxes on that amount based on your individual ages. There will not be a 10% early withdrawal penalty if you are under 59.5 and have the IRA set up this way. Make sure the title of the new IRA is set up correctly and you can continue to Iet the bulk of the money build till your retirement. Also note, you may not add any additional money to the stretch IRA. You can find further information in IRS publication 590-B.
Barbara Seaman
Representative is registered with and oirers only securities and advisory services through PlanMember Securi ties Corporation, a registered broker/dealer,investment advisor and member FINRA/SIPC. 6187 CarPenteria Ave, CarPenteria, Ca 93013 (800)874-69IO. Cornerstone Financial Planning Group LLC and PlanMember Securities Corporation are independently owned and operated. PlanMember is not responsible or liable for ancillary products orservicesoireredbycornerstone,FinancialplanningGroup or thisrepresentative.
If you have horses now or plan to in the Diane I ozito fu ture, there are many View Properties that have CCkRS, rules that state horses are not allowed. Yet buyers go to a Listed Property and not know to ask that question and have even bought property to later find that out. So if someone has a few horses then finds out after the fact, they are either Boarding off property or selling that home in a hurry. So just because it's on acreage, don't assume it allows Horses or even Chickens. And if you want to be on the River, consider being out of town a bit, as there are great River View and River Front Properties outside of Bend, thatare more affordable and offermore acreage and privacy. And with somuch Open Space and Trails,there are more places outside of town to venture off on with our large trail system. I specialize in View and Horse Property and can help with any questions you might have. See my Current Listings at www.CentralOregonHomesandLand.com
•
CFPG
Cornerstone Financial PlanningGroupLLC www.CornerstoneFinancialBend.com 5 4 1-388-1708
•
, Diane Lozito/Broker, ABR, RSPS ~ Licensed in the State of Oregon 541.548-3598 primary, 306-9646mobile www.Central0regonHomesandLand.com
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sueOsuemarx.com• 541-408-4204
Answer a local Financial Question. Reach 70,000 local readers with your Financial Answer. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL OR EMAIL K AREN S T O W E
5 41 -383 - 0 3 0 1 kstowe@bendbulletin.com
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
E5
Pews Continued from E1 There's the smell of freshcut wood, the sounds of
drills, the manufactured breezefrom largefl oorfans. Reddick c a l l s his church-furniture business "custom production" work.
The company, which employs fewer than 10 workers,can turn out 600 feet of
pews a week. But the pews, pulpits and other decorative woodwork are designed to match the individual style of
Charles King / The Orlando Sentinel
a church sanctuary.
Gaylen Reddick, owner of Florida Millworks and Church Furniture,
A church w it h G o t h- has been making pewsand other church furniture since1973.
ic-style windows, for example, will be matched
"That level of
tion can be scary terrain, but
i n vestment
easy-to-use devices such as
shows us that it's not just a fad, and it's something that's going wearables 2.0. With a growing to be around for a long time," market and explosion of new Rincon said. companies — not to mention Thync has raised $13 million the gorilla of consumer elec- from investors including Khostronics stormingonto the scene la Ventures. Its founders, Jamie in April with the Apple Watch Tyler, a neuroscience expert — companies such as Thync and Arizona State University are looking to stand out from associateprofessor, and Goldthe crowd. wasser, a longtime tech exec"All wearables today are utive, have spent the last year trackers," said Thync co-found- and a half testing the device on er and CEO Isy Goldwasser. 3,500 people. "Our wearable is working in "We spent a very long time synergy with the body." trying to beat the placebo efOther companies are going fect," Goldwasser said."People a step further to offer medical can put it on and we don't have treatment or therapy. Massa- any doubt that it's working." chusetts-based Quell, for inThey have tracked changes stance, sells a wearable that in users' temperature, body uses electrodes to provide chemistry and facial expreschronic pain relief for those sions — all of which are altered with fibromyalgia, sciatica, ar- as electrical pulses from an thritis and other ailments. iPhone are transmitted into the The Consumer Electronics skin and through the nerves Association predicts 10.8 mil- that act as superhighways to lion wearable devices will ship the brain. The idea, the foundin 2015, up from more than 3 ers said, was to give busy peomillion last year. Technology ple an alternative to alcohol or research firm Gartner predicts Red Bull — which many prothat 70 million to 100 million fessionals use to wind down devices will be purchased in or rev up. The device starts at 2016. While not yet as ubiqui- $299. Fitbit have paved the way for
sit there for an hour. If they're not comfortable, will they real-
slightly unnerving. And the sedateness lasted only briefly
it together. He built what I asked for."
— less than an hour — perhaps
In one room of F1orida Millworks, Reddick has
"Most people don't meditate; creasefrom the previous year, most people don't have the when VCs invested $172 mil- time," Tyler said. "It's sad, but That's a nearly fourfold in-
Continued from E1 Mind and body manipula- lion in the space.
Reddick said. "People have to
pieces for the pews. For his
felt inauthentic, and therefore
pulses to cranial nerves to either makeyour calmer or more energized, depending onyour preference.
Wearable
with G o thic-shaped end
church needed benches in the lobby. more than 3,000 customEach time, he fashioned ers throughout F1orida and ly be paying attention? My ex- church furniture that matched the Caribbean, this means perience says no." the architectural style of the Reddick brings something Reddick's relationship with church. "It's unique to us. Nobody unique to each sanctuary. his customers sometimes lasts At the Soorp Haroutiun as longas his pews made of else has that particular deArmenian Church in near- red oak. Twenty-one years sign," said Clarice Hopkins, by Windermere, it was the ago, Reddick installed pews at church administrative assisArmenian style of the cross Macedonia Missionary Baptist tant. "People always comment that he added to the pews Church, across town in E a- on how beautiful our sanctuand pulpit. tonville. Years later, he came ary is, and it's because of Gay"He gives advice, but he back when a balcony was built. len and the work he has done lets you make the decision," He returned again when the here." said Lucine Harvey, who worked with Reddick in furnishing the church built in 2010. "We sort of designed
Jim Gensheimer / Bay Area News Group
Dan Wetmore demonstrates the Thync, a bluetooth-connected wearable device that sends electronic
that's the world we live in." The San Jose Mercury News
tried Thync, finding the "calm" vibrations did indeed have an effect: Breath slowed, anxi-
ety disappeared, facial tension relaxed and worries gave way to a still mind. But unlike meditation, the sensation ar-
rived as an outside force and
due to keeping the strength of the electrical stimulation at a
built a pew to the architect's
minimum. These are, after all,
design for a mission-style
electronic currents from a cellphone going directly into one's
church in South Florida. It has a flat seat and straight,
forehead.
flat back, no cushions or upholstery. It looks so un-
"It's probably no more crazy than taking a bunch of supplements that you don't really know anything about," said
•
I
Steve Holmes, Intel's vice president of new devices. "But just
slanted seat and back.
to do it recreationally, I would
he wanted, and then I came
Call BeckyVaughan 541-31 8-0026 www.horizonps.com 723 LylleStreet Bend,OR97702
a research and data provider.
be cautious."
up with another design," • Suite 102 + 1446 Rentable Sq. Ft. • $1.00 per sq. ft. plusNNN as is, tenant i improvements possible, rate will depend d ea buildout costs, duration of lease, etc. •Cenrtguredas Lab, could be med offices, counseling center or??? • Good sigaage Available • Adjacent to St. Charles Redmond hospital campus, great visibility from bypass. Nearby tenants include Oncology Center, Dentist, Imaging, St. Charles Rehab,ENT aad more. TetTificopportunity forreferralbase.
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10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
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0.0 Alliance OneIntl AOI 9.0 Vical Inc VICL 48.9 MariunusPharma MRNS 18.5 KEYW Holding Corp K EY W 0.8 Global Sources Ltd G SOL 37.4 Layne Christensen LAYN -4.0 Isle Capri Casino ISLE -9.5 Mediwound Ltd MDWD 20.9 Aoxing Pharmaceut AXN 0.0 Tobira Therapeutics TBRA -1Z7 One Horizon Group OHGI 8.1 Sigma Designs SIGM 23.0 Egalet Corp EGLT 51.5 Shopify lnc SHOP 54.8 Pozen Inc POZN
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Mewmont Mining Regeneron Pharm Chesapk Engy Wynn Resorts Ltd Swst Airlines Sthwstn Energy Micron Tech Yahoo Inc CDK Global Inc Antero Resources
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"There had been optimism over Greece, and now it seems like we've had a complete 180." — Ninh Chung,head of investment strategy at SVB Asset Management, as talks between Greece and its creditors hit a setback
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
InsiderQ&A
Currency concerns
Ieny Webman Chief Economist, Oppenheimer Funds
A strong U.S. dollar and a sharp drop in oil prices have weighed on corporate profits this year. The dollar has risen about 18 percent in the past 12 months against a basket of overseas currencies. That makes U.S. goods more expensive, reducing exports, and lowers the dollar value of profits earned by U.S. companies overseas. Lower oil prices, meanwhile, have hit energy companies' earnings. Yet Jerry Webman, chief economist at Oppenheimer Funds, says profits grew faster in the first quarter than most analysts expected and sees stock values generally in line with profits. Given the dobsr's drag on profits, are earnings healthy enough to justify current stock market levels? I think they're about appropriate. People
thought profits would be really weak in the first quarter, and they were up 3.2 percent. So they are OK, not great, by no means collapsing. Someone recently said the only bubble right now is in the use of the word bubble. At this level, U.S. stocks are not cheap, but they are at reasonable levels given where earnings have gone and given where we are in the economic cycle, which is to say growth should continue at a moderate rate.
The economy actually shrank in the first quarter, its worst showing in a year. Where doyou see the economy going from here? One thing that's held us back is that the U.S. consumer continues to be cautious. But economic expansions don't die
because people are too cautious. They die because people get overly exuberant and create excess that stresses the financial system, which gets central banks to clamp down on growth. I believe this economy can continue to grow at this modest level and generate earnings for the best-positioned companies.
Will the strong dollar continue to weigh on profits this year? It looks to me as though the dollar has gotten to an economically reasonable level. It doesn't mean it won't overshoot, as it typically does, so you may see more dollar strength if, as we expect, the U.S. economy strengthens as we get into m id-year and beyond. Ithink we've seen the majority of the move. Still, views on currency ought to be a big factor for a U.S. dollar-based investor. They should be looking at whose earning capacity has been helped and whose has been shaded, and I think on balance now it tips in favor of European-based companies.
What about credit? Are companies taking on too much debt, particularly those involved in the recent spate of corporate acquisitions? Bank credit climbed about 8 percent over the last 12 months. That's in line with long-term averages, it's not irrational exuberance levels. You're getting a lot of mergers and acquisitions, but you're not getting a lot of these over-levered, highly-speculative deals. Inte/viett/ed by Christopher S. Rugaber. Answers edited for clarity and length. We're not at points of excess.
AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, June12, 2015
+
17,898.84
N ASDaa ~ 5,051.10
1 73 6
+
S&P500 2,094.11
RUSSELL2000 ~ 1,265.02 ~
4 li2
WILSHIRE5000 ~ 22,173.67 ~
6 01
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
UNDAY D
R
Tribune News Service
Let's find outhowbad that engineknockis
If I were to ask you what attributes make for a really
By Paul Brand
Car? mo
OUI'- OOI'S 0 By Larry Prlntz
larly harmful. As the engine warms up the aluminum pis• I have a 2007 Cam- ton expands, reducing clear• ry V-6 that has an ance to the cylinder wall and engine knock when cold reducing the slapping sound. but goes away as the enO nce you confirm t h e gine warms up. The deal- source of the noise, you'll be er said this was normal better prepared to make a and would not affect the good decision on whether to life of the engine. The car continue to drive the car or (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
great sports car, most likely you'd reply, "a powerful motor, aggressive styling and two doors." If you're a motorhead, you might add, "not to
Q
mention rear-wheel drive and
a manual transmission." So you might wonder how Nissan can get away with calling its flagship, the Nis-
now has 80,000 miles on it
san Maxima, a f o u r -door sports car, also
and the noise seems more
REVIEW known by the
thinking about t rading
acronym 4DSC.
it in at the same dealer. I think it is piston slap but
pronounced. I have been
After all, the new M axima
has four doors, not two. And while it has a powerful V-6 engine and distinctively aggressive styling, the Maxi-
am not sure. What should I do? • If the knock is a se• rious, l i f e-threaten-
ma funnels its power to the front wheels through a con-
tinuously variable automatic transmission. There's even a
foot-operated parking brake. Not that there's anything wrong with that; the formu-
la has led Nissan to sell 2.9 million Maximas since 1981. So, sure, the Maxima must
Photos courtesy Nissan viaTribune News Service
be a real four-door sports car, The 2016 Nissan Maxlma ia 1.3 inches lower and 2.2 inches longer than the previous generation right? design. Well, it certainly looks the
part. The 2016 Maxima i s 1 .3 inches lower and 2.2 inch-
es longer than the previous generation design. Nissan's aggressive new grille, bookended by boomerang framed headlamps, endows the assertive front end with a na-
tionalistic identity anyone can recognize. Clearly, this is a Japanese car. The lines
2016 Nissan Maxima
) •
,
Base price:$32,410$39,860 Type:four-door sports car Engine:3.5-liter SOHCV-6, 300 horsepower Mileage:22 mpg city, 30 mpg highway
a'
arch back into the body as the roof arcs over the passenger compartment, and a
b l a ck than any other CVT t r ansrear roof pillar gives it the ap- mission. In fact, it's the best pearance of floating. The pil- I've experienced. Unlike most lar also accentuates the rear CVTs, which respond with
haunch that bulges upward
a delayed, or rubber band
to meet it. Someone seriously spiked the sake when this car
feel, th e
was designed, but it makes
expect, with the promptness
mission responds as you'd
of a p erformance-oriented This daring design exercise automatic transmission or a recaptures the extremes that well-engineered dual-clutch The interior of the 2016 Nissan Maxima offers a driver-oriented American stylists once com- transmission; you just won't instrument panel, which Nissan claims was inspired by Blue Angel monly used to entice buyers feel it shift. Things are a bit fighter planes. in the 1950s and 60s; it works less exciting in Normal mode; well. the steering is light and it Climbing i nside, y ou'll feels like a geezer pleaser. sy of four-wheel power disc only), 19-inch summer tires find a driver-oriented instru- Engineers at Nissan would brakes that are equipped with full-size aluminum-alment panel; Nissan claims be wise to make the Sport with anti-lock brakes, elec- loy wheel spare (SR only) and Blue Angel fighter planes in- the Normal mode, and make tronic brake force distribu- unique 18-inch alloy wheels. spired it. Perhaps. But fighter the Sportmode even sportier. tion and brake assist. Upper But no matter which trim planes have inspired design- Unfortunately, every time the level SL, SR and Platinum level you get, you'll find the ers for decades, so this just car shuts off, the DMS resets models have additional safety Maxima to be a truly rewardreinforces that when it came to NormaL A better solution features, including forward ing premium sedan. Four-door sports car? That to styling, Nissan played by would be to have it remain in collision warning, intelligent t ime-tested rules. But N i s - whatever mode it was left in. cruisecontrol,forward emer- may be stretching a point. san's stylists used some new Of course once underway, gency braking, rear cross Four-door sporty car? No tricks as well, offering fin- you'll want to push this 4DSC traffic alert and blind spot doubt. ishes that give the Maxima a around because the new plat- warning. feel of a pricier ride. Unique form expertly balances out Nissan is not offering long touches abound, such as the the dual demands of a firm lists of options. Instead, each for a car that stands apart.
starter button t h a t p u l ses ride and occupant comfort. While i t l a ck s t h e i m pact cabin, or th e f l at-bottomed harshness of the Europeans, steering wheel trimmed in it does retain enough to make Alcantara t hat f e els c o m- the car communicative while
when the driver enters the
fortable during long drives. ensuring the body remains There are soft touch surfac- flat during cornering. es everywhere,including the Braking comes courte-
model, base S, SV, mid-lev-
el SL, sporty SR and topo f-the-line P l atinum,
have
increasing levels of equipment. There are six factory installed: splash guards, illuminated kick plates, premium spoiler, sport spoiler (SR
leased a new 2015 Q •• IHjust onda C R - V. W h e n
I back up I get a very loud grinding noise. I brought my car into the service department twice for them to check
A ing noise from the engine,
out this p roblem. Unfortu-
stethoscope is the tool for
• ed of t h e d e a ler n o t to utilize the evidence from
nately, every time I bring it in, it never makes the noise. Last the trade-in option would week it happened again so I make sense. But is it an videotaped the noise, which eventually terminal noise? is coming from the passenThat's the question. ger's side rear wheel. Again, It should not be terribly the dealer said everything difficult to pinpoint the looks good and they need to origin of the noise. A long hear the noise themselves, wooden or metal rod or an not from my video. inexpensive mechanic's • Seems a bit shortsightthe job. With the engine cold and not r u nning, practice placing the sensing end of the tool against the lower part of the engine block above the oil pan adjacent to each cylin-
the video. They do utilize r ecorded data from a
Brake rotors are cast iron with machined contact sur-
facesthat are very prone to light rusting. When vehicles
cylinder head. Also work your way along the valve/ cam cover and t iming cover on the front of the engine. Once you've practiced finding a n d li s t ening at these spots quickly, start the cold engine and go to w ork. K nocking
are first driven after sitting
overnight or longer, particularly in humid environments,
a light grinding is often heard as the brake pads clean this light corrosion from the rotor
surfaces. This is not a problem, just a characteristic of some brake rotors. If this is
the issue, no worries. However, you only hear
gine could well be a serious main or rod bearing problem. Light knocking or slapping at the top of the block is likely piston slap, usually not a serious threat to engine durability. Knocking, clattering
this noise from the right rear
Piston slap occurs when
the brakes while the noise is
wheel. This should focus the technician's attention on the rear rotor and pad, the
parking brake on that side and the rear wheel bearing/ hub assembly. Do you apply the parking brake when or rattling from the valve/ you park? If so, try not using cam cover indicates valve it to see if the noise stops. If lash or wear issues, noise there's no more grinding, the from the front of the en- parking brake may be draggine points t o t i m i ng ging and not fully releasing. components. If applying or r eleasing
the bottom skirt of the piston slaps against the cyl-
occurring changes or eliminates the grinding, the issue
inder wall as combustion
is with the brakes.
pressure drives the piston
— Brand is an automotive troubleshooter andformer race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. rnclude a daytime phone number.
downward.
I t ' s c a u sed
by excess clearance between skirt and wall, but is typically not particu-
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate TheBulletin
edge of the center console
where the driver's right leg
A Free Public Service
rests as well as the center console lid. Accent stitching
throughout the cabin enhances the premium feel, and
most passengers will find the amount of space pleasing. That c ertainly a p plies when it comes to the power
under the hood. As before, Nissan uses its 3.5-liter V-6
engine, but the automaker has completely revised it, using 60 percent new parts. The engine is rated at 300 horsepower and 261 pound-feet of torque. It's matched with a
continuously variable automatic transmission, which
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
Nissan has dubbed Xtronic.
Since the transmission lacks fixed ratios, as in other transmissions, Nissan says that
the Xtronic is always in the right gear at the right time. In addition, the Maxima also
has a Drive Mode Selector with two modes, Sport and
I
Normal. The system adjusts
throttle response, transmission timing, steering feel and while not a sports car, more
0 © Kggh
than makes a case for being a credible sports sedan. With
o~
the exhaust note.
It adds up to a car that,
the DMS set to Sport, the
steering feels lively, responsive and is nicely weighted, although it does lack road feel. The engine responds with gusto, and the transmission is much more refined
I
I
~ i or use the
® gg ) service to be automatically
emailed of notices that match your needs.
®g]
I
,
,
t e st
drive to diagnose driveability problems.
der. Do the same along the top of the block below the
at the bottom of the en-
M a x i ma's t r ans-
trade it in.
gg .
I p a pa
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
DAVID BROOKS
Mobilizing the base is a mistake
TRES PASSING BEY ONDTHISPBINT NILITIN LYI'NOIIENW
very serious presidential can-
E
didate has to answer a fundamental strategic question: Do
I think I can win by expanding my party's reach, or do I think I can win
by mobilizing my party's base? Two of the leading Republicans have staked out opposing sides on this issue. Scott Walker is trying to mobilize existing conservative voters. Jeb Bush is trying to expand his party's reach. The Democratic Party has no debate on this issue. Hillary Clinton
has apparentl y decided to run asthe
SEAL Team 6's headquarters are just south of Virginia Beach, Virginia, in an area closed off to the public.
Democratic Scott Walker. As The New York Times' Jonathan Martin
and Maggie Haberman reported this week, Clinton strategists have decided that, even in the general
election, firing up certain Democraticsupportersiseasierthan persuading moderates. Clinton will adopt
left-leaning policy positions carefully designed to energize the Obama coalition — African-Americans, Latinos,
single women and highly educated progressives. This means dispensing with a broad persuasion campaign. As the Democratic strategist David Plouffe told Martin and Haberman, "If you
run a campaign trying to appeal to 60 to 70 percent of the electorate,
you'renotgoing torun avery compelling campaign for the voters you need."
A secret history of quiet killings and blurred lines
The Clinton advisers are smart, and many of them helped President Barack Obama win the last war, but
this sort of a campaign is a mistake. This strategy is bad, first, for the country. America has always had tough partisan politics, but for most of its history, the system worked because it ha d leaders who could re-
frame debates, reorganize coalitions, build center-out alliances and reach compromises. Politics is broken
The unit's first high-profile rescue was of Pfc.
todaybecause thosesortsofleaders have been replaced by highly polarizing, base-mobilizing politicians who hew to party orthodoxy, ignore
a stretcher after being found in Iraq in 2003. Inset, Lynch is safe at home in West Virginia.
the 38 percent of voters who identify as moderates and exacerbate par-
Jessica Lynch, pictured being removedon
The unit best known for killing Osama bin Laden has been converted into a global manhunting machine with limited outside oversight.
sI
I '.
I
'
I
•
s
e
f
tisanship and gridlock. If Clinton decides to be just another unimaginative base-mobilizing politician,
she will make our broken politics even worse.
Second, this base mobilization strategy is a legislative disaster. If the next president hopes to pass any actual laws, he or she will have to create
a bipartisan governing majority. That means building a center-out coali-
tion, winning 60 reliable supporters in the Senate and some sort of majority in the House. If Clinton runs
on an orthodox left-leaning, paintby-numbers strategy, she'll never be able to do this. She'll live in the White
Then there's the story of Dilip Joseph, rescued from the Taliban in 2012. Though
House again, but she won't be able to do much once she lives there. Third, the mobilization strategy
corrodes every candidate's leadership image. Voters tend to like politicians who lead from a place of convicti on,who caremore abouta cause than winning a demographic.
grateful, Joseph saysone of his captors Another success came in 2009: Richard Phillips, captain of the Maersk Alabama, had been held captive on this lifeboat in the Indian Ocean.
was killed after being safely subdued. His account is disputed by the military.
Photoscounterclockwisefrom top: New YorkTimes, Defense Department, The Associated Press(inset), U.S. Navy, New YorkTimes. Below: New YorkTimes.
If Clinton seems driven by demo-
graphics and microtargeting, she will underline the image some have that she is overly calculating and shrewd. Finally, the base mobilizing strategy isn't even very good politics. The mobilization strategy over-
reads the progressive shift in the electorate. It's true that voters have drifted left on social issues. But they
have not drifted left on economic and fiscal issues, as the continued
unpopularity of Obamacare makes clear. If Clinton comes across as a stereotypical big-spending, big-government Democrat, she will pay a huge cost in the Upper Midwest and the Sun Belt.
Today's political consultants have a lot of great tools to turn out reliable voters. They're capable of creating amazing power points. But as everybody from Ed Miliband to Mark Udall can tell you, this approach has not succeeded at the ballot box. Vot-
ers want better politics, not a continuation of the same old techniques. By
adopting base mobilization, Clinton seems to have made the first big decision of her presidential campaign. It's the wrong one. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
A NEW YORKTIMES ANALYSIS By Mark Mazzetti, Nicholas Kulish, Christopher Drew, Serge F.Kovaleski, Sean D. Naylor andJohn Ismay
distinguished not by battlefield wins and losses, but by the relentless killing of suspected militants. hey have plotted deadly missions from secret bases in the Almost everything about SEAL Team 6, a classified Special Operabadlands of Somalia. In Afghanistan, they have engaged tions unit, is shrouded in secrecy — the Pentagon does not even publicin combat so intimate they have ly acknowledge that name — though some of emerged soaked in blood that its exploits have emerged in largely admiring was not their own. On clandestine accounts in recent years. raids in the dead of night, their weapons of But an examination of Team 6's evoluchoicehave ranged from customized cartion, drawn from dozens of interviews with bines to primeval tomahawks. current and former team members, other Around the world, they have run spying military officials and reviews of government stations disguised as commercial boats, documents, reveals a far more complex, posed as civilian employees of front compaprovocative tale. The weaponry of SEAL Team 6: The Heckler niesand operated undercover at embassies While fighting grinding wars of attrition & Koch MP7 firearm, fitted with a suppressor as male-female pairs, tracking those the in Afghanistan and Iraq, Team 6 performed to reducemuzzleflashesand sounds,is used United States wants to kill or capture. missions elsewhere that blurred the tradionly by Delta Force and SEAL Team 6 in the Those operations are part of the hidden tional lines between soldier and spy. The Ij.S. military. team's sniper unit was remade to carry out historyof the Navy's SEAL Team 6, one of the nation's most mythologized, most secreclandestine intelligence operations, and the tive and least scrutinized military organizations. Once a small group SEALs joined CIA operatives in hunting adversaries. reserved for specialized but rare missions, the unit best known for Team 6 has successfully carried out thousands of dangerous raids killingOsama bin Laden has been transformed by more than a de- that military leaders credit with weakening militant networks, but its cade of combat into a global manhunting machine. activities have also spurred recurring concerns about excessive killThat role reflects America's new way of war, in which conflict is ing and civilian deaths. SeeSEALs /F5
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ruth in Site is off to a flying flop. The Bend group lost its bid to stop the Oregon State University-Cascades Campus before a hearings officer. It lost before the Bend City Council. And last week, it lost before the
Jl I)
state Land Use Board of Appeals. Three stri kes and it's headed for supporters have produced a stream another failure at the Oregon Court of chest-thumping letters to the ediof Appeals, where Truth in Site t o r. But a poll shows strong support says it will next fling its legal briefs. across the community for the camReading the LUBA decision, p u s o n t hewestside. TruthinSite Truth in Site must be clinging to auditions best in the role of sPoil some shriveled hopes. The decision sPort. did not waver or equivocate. It said Our point is not to indict all of the city's decisions about the site Truth in Site's concerns. There will stand. Truth in Site's legal argu be dysfunctions and anxietiesborn ments fizzled. by the new campus. OSU-Cascades The group's hope must be that s hould take seriously the parking Oregon's higher courts will enthu- and traffic problems and provide a siastically transform themselves vision for the expansionbeyondthe into land planning agencies. Now 10acres. that would be a nasty turn for the Truth in Site's members know they could become part of soluWe have to wonder: If Truth in tions The group's attack and po Site is the answer, what is the ques- larize approach is only addmg tion?Theanswerisnotobvious. costs and delays, and running It has been told no, no, no that u p the billable hours for lawyers. its legal arguments are wrong. Its W h ere is the reward in that?
Healthy forest management will save state from wildfires By Paul Sunset he project being developed
T
handle violent situation
w
e don't know if you saw the brief news story about the incident in Bend's Orchard Park on Tuesday. But when so much attention is being paid across the nation to how police deal with violent situations, it's worth noting. Bend Police faced down an armed, erratic, bloody suspect, baying that he wanted to kill them. They are tobe commended formanagingto subdue him before he could hurt himself or others. It began when a police officer stopped a car on Northeast Sixth Street by Orchard Park. The car had been seen leaving the address where police had been called about a domestic dispute. The offi cerfound out the passenger, Christopher Michael Nolan, had allegedly violated his parole and his paroleofficer requested he be arrested. Another officer arrived. Nolan grabbed a large knife from inside the car, according to a news release. The police ordered him to drop it. He told the officers to kill him and cut himself on his wrists and neck. He ran into the park. A third police officer arrived. They urged him to drop the knife
and surrender, according to police. Nolan threatened to kill them, waving and pointing the knife. Two officers managed to get into position to use their Taserson him. They managed to do so. Nolan was not seriously hurt. The offi cerswere notinjured.Nolan was treated for his injuries, his mental health was evaluated and he was booked into the Deschutes County jail on charges of three counts of menacing, unlawful use of a weapon and the parole violation. Bend policehave made a commitment to training this summer through interactive scenarios to learn better how to deal with people in mental health crises. The two trainers are giving up their Sunday's off to ensure everyone gets that training to better handle incidents that couldbe deadly. Training is, of course, training. It only has some of the flavor of a real incident. And as Bend Police Chief Jim Porter told us: "Sadly, it's almost assured there will be a time here in Bend when all the training in the world will not prevent one of our officers from having to respond with deadly force to protect others or themselves."
IN MY VIEW
responsible for determining and monitoringareastobetreated, contracting
products such as methanol, biodies-
our skies, wasteenergy, and addmore for removal and transportation, and greenhouse gases to our atmosphere. the commercialprocessors. Across There is abetter alternative. the state thousands of jobs, especialBeetle-killed trees, snags in re- ly in rural areas would be created. cently burned areas and areas over- Workers in the field would be trained grown with juniper are additional in firefighting and could be readily sources of woody waste. If the mate- deployed when fires are still smallrials are chipped on site, some chips before they erupt into conflagmtions. should be spread on site to help with It's not just how many workers are on regeneration of the soil. With current the fire line, but how effectively they drought conditions, cutting some of are deployed. I paid much of the way the juniper is especially important, as for my college education by working well as reducing its water consump- for fivesummers for state forestry tion during growth, since processing agencies in Oregon and Idaho. the wood releases energy, liquid fuWildfireintensityhasbeenincreasels and water. I'm not talking about ing, not only due to too much fire supclear-cutting or other abusive practic- pression in the past, but mainly due to es but those that are environmentally lack of funding for effective healthy sound. Eventually Oregon's forests forest management. Most older Orecould sustainably use as many as 10 gonians remember the catastrophic
el, and a number of "plastics" such as
or 12 of these facilities, minimizing
in Lakeview to replace controlled burns with collection of
thinned and waste forest materials on Winema National Forest lands
should serve as a model for all of Oregon. The woody materials are to be transported to the Lakeview facility
Bend policecorrectly
I
where they willbe processed into fuel for jet aircraft. There will be no carbon dioxide or particulate emissions.
Some of the water produced will be recyded through the process with the balance to waste treatment. Since I
million tons of wood waste produces about 22 acre-feet of water, it would be desirable to purify the water to the
extent the excess could be returned to the aquifer. If more facilities were developed around the state, other
plywood glue, Formica, polypropyl- the size and intensity of forest fire, enebottle polymers, etc. could also be significantly cuttingthe costs of forest produced. Currently, these materials fire fighting, and improving Oregon's are produced from treatment of fos- economy. sil fuels such as natural gas and coal. Due to need tocapture methane Forests and other cropland are our from fracking wells, there are now a huge reservoi r of stored renewable number of companies — both public solar energy. and private — developing modificaBefore wigwam burners were tions of the Fischer-Tropsch process banned due to reduction of visibility which was discovered in the '20s. and particulate effects on those with With the need to develop renewable respimtory problems, it was a rare energy sources, these processes also day when we had dear skies. Today, apply to nearly all types of biomass. controlled burns unnecessarily cloud The federal land agencies would be
Tillamook fires that devastated their timber-based economy. Much of the
burned area was on state land. As soon as possible, volunteer groups — from schools, Boy and Girl scouts,
church and fraternal groups came to plant trees. Today that is a beautiful, healthy producing forest. Let's save all of Oregon's forests and property from catastrophic wildfire and at the same time decreaseour dependence
on fossil fuels. — Paul Sunset is a retired chemist and taught college level chemistry. He lives in Redmond.
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Paying o stu ent loans is har; 0 it anyway By Megan McArdle
couldn't pay his student loans; the best out the loans for my fancy business
tify. People whoseparents can't simply
Bloomberg View
he could do was to say he didn't want
front them $100,000 or so to get those
sually, when someone writes
U
an essay about why they defaulted on their student loans,
they strainto indude details that evoke
sympathy: the parents who struggle to feed and clothe their children and get them to school in a car that is forever
breaking down. The hapless victims of places like Corinthian Colleges, first-genemtion strivers who believed
that a degree would give them a ticket out of the grind. The law school graduates taken in by misleading employment statistics, thinking their six-fig-
ure debtwould be repaid when they got that first law job. The desperate
millions who found the financial crisis robbing their parents of the ability to pay tuition while well-paying jobs became a lot harder to come by. Who wouldn't be sympathetic to any of these folks'?
In last weekend's New York Times, Lee Siegel tried an entirely novel approach:He described his decision in the least sympathetic terms possible. H e offered not one good reason that he
40 percentofmy paycheck to a manageable $200 amonth. And asIearned to pay them. Did this involve selling shoes in my more, I paid them off entirely. Worse is the contempt he conveys spare time? Was I forced to abandon Many people are in similar situafor the drab, plebeian world of state my ideals and turn to Wall Street for tions. Were we an oppressed class? colleges and office jobs, and for the a soul-destroying sellout job? Nope. I Some folks from third-tier schools people who work hard for their de- paid off my loans by the simple expe- who were misled about the job prosgrees and then work hard at the best dient of living on as little as possible in pects for graduates might count as job that will let them pay their bills. Manhattan. oppressed. But those of us who went You know ... most people. I found a tiny, subterranean apart- to top-tier schools and freely signed "Maybe I should have stayed at a ment that initially rented for just under those promissory notes without anystore called The Wild Pair," he writes, a thousand dollars a month. I attend- one putting a gun to our heads have "where I once had a nice stable job ed every event that so much as hint- nothing to complain about. We got the selling shoes after dropping out of the ed at free food. I didn't drink unless degree, we owed the money, we paid it state college because I thought I de- someone else was buying. I learned back. I suspect most of those feel about served better, and naively tried to turn to clip coupons, and realized you get Siegel's guiltless confession the way I myself into a professional reader and a lot more value for your dollar if you do: What's so special about him? He writer on my own, without a college don't insist on the fancy brand-name didn't even get his degree during the degree. I'd probablybe district manag- ramen. I didn't buy new dothes until inflationary spiral of recent decades; er by now." the old ones literallyhadholes in them. he went to school when it was possible Perhaps I'm biased against Siegel During the more temperate months, to workyourway through college. because I too dreamed of becoming I wore through the soles of my shoes Is there a problem with student a writer while slightly hampered by a walking to work, to avoid the cost of loans'? Yes. College costs are rising mountain of student loan debt — high public transportation. Every spare much faster than inflation, and it's five figures, in my case. And like Sie- dollar I got in freelance money went to hard to see that they're actually adding more educational value for the gel, I ultimately decided to follow that that mountain of debt. dream. The difference is that while folSlowly, slowly, this tridde of mon- money. Employers who pay low salalowing my dreams I also paid off the ey wore down the mountain, until my ries demand educational credentials debt, as I promised to do when I took payments dropped from a terrifying that are far higher than the wages jusschool education.
credentials are faced with some difficult choices, which is bad for them, and bad for the occupations that are
increasingly staffed by a narrow mandarin class. But the fault is ultimately with the
colleges, and with the employers, not with the banks that lend you the money to fulfill their demands. Going back on your promises does nothing to change the behavior of the true culprits; it punishes a bank whose
mistake was lending you money. Of course, the borrower is punished as well. Siegel may be unpleasantly surprised when he discovers that the government garnishes the Social Security checks of people whose student loans
are still in default. But Siegel did not make a case for changing the system. He argued only that someone else should have to pay for his education. Namely: other borrowers. Perhaps the district manager
of the place that sells him his shoes. — Megan McArdle is a columnist for Bloomberg.
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
n' en sooner eventy-oneyears ago,the British, Canadians and Americans landed on the Normandy beaches to open a second ground front against Nazi Germany. Operation Overlord — the Al-
S
lied invasion of Western Europe
— proved the largest amphibious operation in military history, dwarfing even Xerxes' Persian invasion of Greece in 480 B.C. Brilliant planning, overwhelming naval support, air superiority and high morale ensured the successful landing of 160,000 troops on the first day — at a cost of about 4,000 dead.
Three weeks after the June 6 landings, nearly a million Allied soldiers were ashore, heading eastward
through France. Hitler's once-formidable Third Reich seemed on the
verge of collapse. On the Eastern Front, the Ger-
man army was imploding under the weight of 5 million advancing infantrymen of Russia's Red Army. At the same time, Allied four-engine bombers, with superb long-range fighter escorts, at last were beginning to destroy German transportation and fuel infrastructure.
Yet Hitler held off for another 11 bloody months. Why? What followed the D-Day land-
ings was as confused as the initial assault was superbly carried out.
Planners had underestimated the impassable terrain of the French boscage — dense thickets planted
along huge earthen berms — just miles beyond the American sector beaches.
VICTOR
DAVIS HANSON
of it. By early August, the Third
to help liberate occupied France all
Army was unleashed and off to the
slowed down the once-rapid Ameri-
races — in a series of brilliant armored outflanking movements that encircled and bypassed stunned German divisions. Taking great risks, the mercuri-
canadvance. In an unwise move, Eisenhow-
er in early September had diverted gasoline and ammunition from the
American sector to Montgomery's theater. Montgomery, in a r isky of his flanks to the U.S. Air Force. gambit, planned to leapfrog across to cut through the nearly impass- Patton plowed ahead, seeking to the Rhine from Holland into the Gerable, we ll-defended hedgerows. stun, bewilder and collapse German man Ruhr Valley, hoping to paralyze The stalled Allied armies had giv- resistance. Germany's industrial heartland and en time for the arrival of crack GerI t almost w orked. Th e T h i r d end the war outright. man Panzer reinforcements to bottle Army "rolled" with P atton r ight The result, however, was the diup the invaders. Finally, the Allies through France to near the largely sastrous Operation Market Garden, broke out with the help of massive unguarded German border. An ex- or "A Bridge Too Far," catastrophe. carpet-bombing of German posi- uberant American media dreamed Meanwhile, P a tton's a d vance tions some six weeks after D-Day. that the war in the West might be sputteredby early September and Unfortunately, the c o mmand over by autumn 1944. ran out of gas. The Third Army, like structure of the Allied invasion force Hundreds of thousands of trapped otherAmerican forces,prepared for was topsy-turvy. The swashbuckling Germans either surrendered or were a mostly static war near the German U.S. Gen. George S. Patton — in the killed by Allied pincers. British and border for the next six months. doghouse for the slapping of ill GIs American fighters blanketed the The American nightmares of a year earlier during the Sicily cam- skies above nearly 2 million Allied fighting in the Hiirtgen Forest and paign — came to Normandy late. soldiers, most of them motorized the Battle of the Bulge lay ahead, His superb Third Army was relegat- and protected by thousands of tanks as the war eventually turned into ed to a supporting role and assigned and artillery pieces. a World War I-style bloodbath unthe longest route into Germany. But then the wondrous American til March 1945. The stalled Allies In contrast, the professional (but August came abruptly to an end. would lose more casualties from auslow and methodical) Gen. Bernard Allied planners had never found tumn 1944 to the end of the war than Montgomery won the pivotal posi- a way to recapture intact the key they had in the rapid advance from tion in the north to break through French ports on the Atlantic Coast Normandy to the German border. to the Ruhr on the shortest path into from besieged German defenders. But for a brief moment in August the Third Reich. The farther Patton and o t her 1944, everything seemed possible, Meanwhile, U.S. Gen. Dwight D. Allied armies advanced from the as the American military had never Eisenhower, the supreme command- beaches, almost 400 miles away, the experienced abreakthrough quite er of the Allied Forces, and his sub- longer their supply lines grew — and like George Patton's roll through ordinates, Gens. Omar Bradley and the easier it became for the enemy to German-occupied France 71 years Courtney Hodges, were reconciled support its own retreating forces. ago this summer. to a slow, incremental slog through S horter late-summer days, i n — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist France along a broad front. clement weather, mounting casual- and historian at the Hoover Institution, Patton, however, would have none ties, supply shortages and the need Stanford University. It would take most of June and early July for the stalled Americans
al Patton outsourced the protection
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN
How to beat bots H ere's an i nteresting statistic
from a 2014 labor survey by burning-gl ass.com: 65 percent of new job postings for executive secretaries and executive assistants now call for a bachelor's degree, but "only 19 percent of those currently employed in these roles have a B.A." So four-fifths of secretaries today would
not be considered for two-thirds of the job postings in their own field because they do not have a four-year degree to do the job they are already doing! The study noted that an "increasing number of job seekersface being shut out of middle-skill, middle-dass occupations by employers' rising demand for a bachelor's degree" as a job-qualifying badge — even though it may be irrelevant, or in no way capture someone's true capabilities, or where per-
haps two quick online courses would be sufficient.
This is just one of the problems contributing to unemployment and underemployment today. It was the subject
of a seminar last Thursday jointly convened by New America, McKinsey, LinkedIn and OpportunityWork, a new civic group led by Byron Auguste, who headed President Barack Obama's recent efforts to reform the education-to-work pathway in Amer-
ica. The meeting's focus was a new McKinsey study on how we can use
Group seeks alternative path to justice By Noah Feldman
All this explains why it can be valuable for victims' families to have at least the option of going around the prosecutor' s office and seeking a court-orderedprosecution from an independent judge. The Ohio law
Bloomberg View
he Ohio law being used by
T land to seek prosecution of police officers involved in the fatal community leaders in Cleve-
shooting of 12-year-old Tamir Rice is highly unusual: It allows any citizen to petition a magistrate or judge
dates to 1960. At the time, as now, such laws were rare. In 1955, an anonymous student note in the Yale Law Journal reported that seven
to initiate prosecution, instead of
states then allowed courts to appoint
relyingon the usual process where the decision is up to a professional, in this case the Cuyahoga County prosecutor. Although very few states have such laws, they may be useful
ocratic society, runs the theory, you
shouldn't have to rely on your own means to get justice done. The state should do it for you. If the state fails,
the remedy is to elect new public officials — not turn back to a premodern system of private justice.
To some extent, the Ohio law protects against a retrograde tendency to private prosecutions. You can't
just bring a prosecution on your tor failed to bring charges. In 1957, own — you have to ask for a court a state appellate court in Ohio ruled to order it. Nevertheless, the law, if that an individual could proceed in it were actually used, would tend in criminal court with a private pros- the long run to give an advantage ecutor. The 1960 law seems to have to families with greater means or been intended to formalize that de- greater political clout. They, after cision, and require a judge or magis- all, would have the resources to coltrate to approve private prosecutions. lect affidavits and go to court. Tamir On the other side of the argument Rice's family has that capacity beis the modern reality that prosecu- cause this case attracted national tion is now conceived as a public attention and the help of clergy and function, not a private one. In the ear- civil rights leaders. But the families ly days of the common law, criminal of other, less heralded victims might prosecutions were typically brought not be so fortunate. by private parties, just like civil suits Nevertheless, the possibility of for damages. In that era, there were some inequality doesn't outweigh also no police forces in the English the value of a legal escape hatch for speaking world. The framers of the avoiding the prosecutor's office, esU.S. Constitution lived in a world in pecially when charges are sought which state prosecutions and state against police. Short of keeping an police were equally novel ideas. The independent ombudsman with the Bow Street Runners, often called the capacity to bring charges, prosecufirst modern police force in the En- tors' offices are always going to be glish-speaking world, were founded tempted to go easy on the police with in London in 1742 — originally with whom they must work. Ohio's law only six members. deserves to be copied — not just by a Official state prosecution grew up few jurisdictions, but by all. in tandem with police forces. Both — Noah Feldman, a Bloomberg columnist, a prosecutor if the public prosecu-
in situations where the prosecutors
are compromised — for example, by an ongoing relationship with the police force. But the Ohio law is also, in
a way, a throwback to a time before prosecutors — and beforepolice. Families of people victimized by police face structural problems when seeking their day in court. Under or-
police have to work together all day, every day. Without police participation, no case could ever be prosecuted. Thus, police departments and dinary circumstances, they have to prosecutorial offices are by necessity wait for prosecutors to decide wheth- institutionally aligned. Their interer to bring charges. To be fair, almost estsoverlap, and are in many cases all prosecutor's offices do sometimes almost identical. Many police offibring charges against police for cers treat prosecutors they encounter criminal wrongdoing. But the bur- off duty the same way they would den is generally extremely high. treat off-duty police. Prosecutors are There is at least one good reason frequent inclined to do the same for that the burden should be so high: the police in turn. Police officers risk their lives to do
to provide law and order. In a dem-
Given this alignment of interests
their job. No system of law enforce- and personnel, it's extraordinary ment can function if the police think difficult for prosecutors to bring they are constantly going to be sec- chargesagainstpolice offi cers.Poond-guessed in li f e-threatening lice departments often have quasi-insituations. dependent bureaus of internal affairs But the good reason for the high to investigate misconduct. But it's burden is counterbalanced by a fun- rarefora prosecutor' sofficeto have reflected the belief that the governdamental problem. Prosecutors and a specialsquad focused on police. ment had an affirmative obligation
is a professor of constitutional and international law at Harvard.
big data and online talent platforms to better nurture talent in the workforce, find it where it already exists but may
not be "badged" by a college degree and connect it both with the real demands ofbusinesses and with colleges looking to make their curriculum more rel evant to changing workforce needs.
The McKinsey study begins: "Labor markets around the world have not kept pace with rapid shifts in the
global economy, and their inefficiencies take a heavy toll." Millions of people can't find work, "yet sectors from
technology to health care cannot find people to fill open positions. Many who do work feel overqualified or underutilized." "The skills gap is real," explained Auguste, "but it is a symptom — not the cause — of a dysfunctional labor market, along with stagnant wages and declining job mobility." While it's true that more people need to master digital skills today, there are, he noted,
a lot of people with skills employers are seeking — like coding skills — but who may lack the traditional creden-
tials to be considered for the jobs. Check ou t lin k edin.com/edu. LinkedIn has a giant database of mil-
lions of workers, which it analyzed to see which schools are launching the most graduates into the top firms in a
variety of fields. Whether you want to be a plumber or surgeon, it is useful to know which schools' alumni keep rising at the leading firms. Technology is redefining work and commerce, and if we're smart it can
also redefine education for employment andadvancement so everyone can monetize, or improve, any skill and connect with any employer in need of it. "Up to 540 million people could benefit from online talent plat-
forms by 2025," McKinsey said. It is not that hard. We need to be making much better use of the federal govern-
ment's labor market data and that of
Questioning new standards for civil disobedience
websites like Monster.com, HireArt. com and LinkedIn,and even consid-
er creating skill equivalents of the Obamacare health exchanges. Online talentplatforms — that canlinkevery-
By Cass Sunsteln
not just over workplaces but over ev-
Bloomberg View
ery piece of property in the nation." ivil disobedience is an honorMurray calls for disobeying such able American tradition. The Boston Tea Party helped spark
C the Revolutionary War, and during
regulations whenever "no harm has
occurred." To defendthe disobedient, he calls for the creation of a privately the 1960s civil rights movement, Mar- funded Legal Services Corporation. tin Luther King Jr. celebrated civil dis- Becausethe federalgovernment has obedience as "expressing the highest limited resources, Murray thinks respect for law." Invoking King's idea that those who violate occupational (if not his name), prominent conser- safety and environmental regulations vatives are now calling for new forms could end up a lot like those who drive of disobedience. over the speed limit. In practice, state Consider Charles Murray's spirited troopers have to allow a lot of violanewbook, "Bythe People: Rebuilding tions; Murray hopes that OSHA and Liberty Without Permission," which EPA will, too. is rooted in an extraordinary claim: Murray is unusual in asking for a "America is no longer the land of the large-scale social movement, but othfree." Thesource ofthisunfreedom is er conservatives have made narrownot NSA surveillance or police mis- er arguments for civil disobedience. conduct. It is the rise of the modern With respect to a possible Supreme regulatory state, from the New Deal to the present, which has subordinat-
Court ruling in favor of same-sex
marriage, former Governor Mike
ed our founding commitment to free- Huckabee has not been alone in exdom. "What made America unique
pressingthe hope that "somewhere
to regulat e greenhouse gases.An d of the EPA's proposal violates both the course some people have argued that Clean Air Act and the Constitution. businesses, workers and state governCan all three be counted as King's ments should refuse to comply with faithful followers'? therequirements ofObamacare. King offered his own t est. He Many people dismiss these views meant to justify civil disobedience as extreme. But it's a lot more inter- only in the most extreme cases, such esting and productive to ask: On what as segregation, which "distorts the premises might they be right? soul and damages the personality." In his "Letter From Birmingham No society can function if people feel Jail," King argued that it is acceptable free to disobey any laws they personfor people to disobey a law that their ally abhor or think are inconsistent consciences declare to be unjust, if with the Constitution. they are willing the accept the penalSome peopleon the right appear ty "inorder to arouse the conscience
to think that those "instances of sub-
of the community over its injustice." stantial and dear injustice" include King also defended civil disobedience well-established practices of OSHA as an attack on laws, such as those and the EPA, a pending greenhousepromoting segregation, that were gas regulation, the Affordable Care themselves unlawful, because they Act and a potential Supreme Court violated the Constitution. At times, ruling that wouldbroaden the right to King said,"the law needs help." marry. In my judgment, that view is Murray also thinks the law needs quite implausible. But what's far more help. In his view, much of the work important — and illuminating about of modern regulatory agencies is not modern political divisions — is that so
first blurred, then faded, and today is there will be a governor who will sim- only immoral but also inconsistent many influential people now seem to almost gone," Murray writes. ply say, 'No, I'm not going to enforce.'" with th e C o nstitution. Huckabee embrace it. Chief culprits here indude the OcIn March, Senate Majority Leader believes that if the Supreme Court — Cass Sunstein, a Bloomberg columnist, cupational Safety and Health Administration and the Environmental Pro-
Mitch McConnell wrote a letter to the
tection Agency, which "has authority
they not comply with the EPA's plan
requires states to recognize same-
governors of all 50 states suggesting sex marriages, it will be defying the Constitution. McConnell thinks that
isdirectoroftheHarvardLavvSchool's program onbehavioraleconomics and public policy.
one's CV with every job opening, with
the skills needed for that job, with the
onlineand campus-based schools offering those skills with data showing which schools do it best — create more
employment, more relevant skills and the right education for them. Congress needs to create the legal,
privacy and financial incentives to nurture this new social contract, Warner argued:"The biggest challenge for thislabor force,and for federal policymakers, is the change in the traditional employer-employee relationship." If we used all our technology resources, said Aneesh Chopra, former chief technology officer of the United States, we could actually give people "personalized recommendations for every step of your life — at every step of your life." Adds Auguste: "We can use technology to do more than automate tasks. We can use it to accelerate
learning, optimize talent, and guide people into better jobs and careers." The robots will only take all the jobs
if we let them — solet's usetechnology to keep the middle skilled in the mid-
dle class. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New York Times
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Sunday,June7. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. "Finders Keepers" by Stephen King (Scribner, $30) 2. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead, $26.95) 3. "In the Unlikely Event" by Judy Blume (Knopf, $27.95) 4. "Radiant Angel" by Nelson DeMille (GrandCentral, $28) 5. "Piranha" by CliveCussler and Boyd Morrison (Putnam, $28.95) 6. "14th DeadlySin" byJames Patterson andMaxine Paetro (Little, Brown,$28) 7. "Memory Man" byDavid Baldacci (GrandCentral, $28) 8. "The Fateful Lightning" by Jeff Shaara (Ballantine, $28) 9. "Gathering Prey" by John Sandford (Putnam, $28.95) 10. "BeachTown," by Mary Kay Andrews (St. Martin's, $26.99) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" byMarie Kondo (Ten Speed,$16.99) 2. "The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough (Simon 8 Schuster, $30) 3. "Adios by America" by Ann Coulter (Regnery, $27.99) 4. "Legends 8 Lies" by Bill O'Reilly and DavidFisher (Holt,
$32) 5."TheWhole30"by Melissa Hartwig and Dallas Hartwig (HMH, $30) 6. "And theGoodNews Is" by DanaPerino (Hachette/ Twelve, $26) 7. "The Road toCharacter" by David Brooks (Random,
$28)
8. "Primates of ParkAvenue" by WednesdayMartin (Simon 8 Schuster, $26) 9. "American Wife" byTaya Kyle (Morrow, $27.99) 10. "It's a LongStory" by Willie Nelson (Little, Brown,
$30) — Tribune NewsService
Amazon investigated by EUover e-books
Editor's note:Alfred T. Goodwin is a circuit judge of
the U.S. Courtof Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
By Alfred T. Goodwin Proliferating
ro-chemicalexports and soar-
ing prices for compressed natural gas will soon produce a critical mass of
litigation over the rights of the people of the United
States versus the corporate capital now being invested in fracturing shale. If the
h o r i zontal
drilling to execute fracking is indeed poisoning the water needed to sustain human life on the land above the frack-
ing, plaintiffs who have standing will find lawyers, and sue in their state and federal courts.
Professor Mary C~ Wood of the University of Ore-
gon School of Law has recently authored an important and well-researched book explaining how common-law lawyers can bring about needed change by activating the third branch
of a government whose other two branches have shown no interest in taking on new work: "Nature's Trust: Environmental
Law for a New Ecological Age" (Cambridge University Press, 2014). Modern American law has evolved away from its roots in natural law, Roman law, and the common law, toward the continental pattern of civil
law. In part, reliance on statutory and administrative law by stateand federal courtsha s
been encouraged by the law schools. Academic focus is placed on positive law in preference to transitoryjudge-made law which in the first half of the Twentieth
Century had produced the Lochner invention of substan-
LONDON — The Euro-
pean Union has launched an antitrust investigation into online retailer Ama-
zon over its distribution of e-books, which have become increasingly popular in recent years. The European Commis-
sion said Thursday it will investigate certain clauses in Amazon's contracts
with publishers, including a requirement for publishers to inform the company
about arrangements it has with Amazon competitors. A mazon, which is t h e
l argest d i stributor o f e-books in Europe and owns the popular Kindle e-book device, has already faced pressure from the c ommission over its t a x
structures,
Footnotes 1. See Lochner v.NewYork, 198 U.S. 45 (1905), overruled in part by Ferguson v.Skrupa, 372 U.S. 726 (1963) 2. 146 U.S.387 (1892) 3. Id. at 455.
4. Alec L.v. Jackson, 863 F. Supp. 2d11, 15-17(D.D.C. 2012); aff'd, Alec L. exrel. Loorz v. McCarthy, 561Fed. Appx. 7 (D.C.Cir. 2014). 5. See, e.g., Kanuk exrel. Kanuk v. State Dep't of Natural Res., 335 P.3d1088, 109799 (Alaska 2014) (affirming dismissal of a climate trust suit, but finding that three of the plaintiffs' claims for a declaratory judgment on the nature of the public trust duty presented justiciable questions that were not barred by the political question doctrine although it was not prudent to resolve those claims at the time); Chernaik v. Kitzhaber, 328 P.3d 799, 804-08 (Or. Ct. App. 2014) (reversing the trial court's dismissal of plaintiffs' atmospheric public trust claim, finding it cognizable under the state's Declaratory Judgments Act and rejecting the state's position that a judicial declaration as to the scope of the public trust doctrine would violate the separation of powers principle). 6. 83 A.3d 901 (Pa.2013). 7. See, e.g., Mary Christina W ood, "AtmosphericRecovery Litigation: Making the Fossil Fuel Industry Pay for Damage to theAtmosphere from Carbon Emissions," 455 Envtl. L. (forthcoming June 2015); Mary Christina Wood, The Planet on the Docket:
Atmospheric Trust Litigation to Protect Earth's Climate System and Habitability, 9 Fla. A&M
U. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2015); Mary Christina Wood,Tribal Trustees in Climate Crisis, SU American Indian L.J. 518, n. 51-52 and accompanying text (2014). 8. Pa. Const. Art. 1, g27 (the "Environmental Rights Amendment").
In'Muse': Pu is in rivas, eu in overa oet "Muse"
ter that will affect both his ca-
By Jonathan Galassi
reer and his apprehension of himself. Galassi — president and publisher of Farrar, Straus and Giroux — draws on his own long-
By Pan Pylas The Associated Press
i n t ernational
demand for American pet-
t he harbor of a ymt city. . . The people have a right to [has] been allowed to pass into dean air ,pure waterand to the for statutory laweasesthework the control of a private corpora- preservation of the natural, sceof busy judges. A prudent re- tion. But the decisions are nu- nic, historic and esthetic values spectforseparation ofthepow- merous which dedare that such of the environment. Pennsylers of government gives consti- property is held by the State, by vania's public natural resources tutional comfort to judges hear- virtue of its sovereignty, in trust are the common property of all ing arguments for and against for the public."3 The Court cit- the people, including generathe enforcement of statutes and ed the decisions, and Professor tions yet to come. As trustee administrative orders intended Wood's eloquent and dosely, of these resources, the Comby their authors to protect the but dearly, reasoned book ex- monwealth shall conserve and environment. plains thenewparadigm. maintain them for the benefit of The current state Some federalandstatecourts, allthepeople.8 of affairs, however, however, are dosing their doors In holding that the statute reveals a whole- to such daims. For example, a violated th e E n v ironmental sale failure of the federal court recently dismissed Rights Amendment, the Robinlegal system to a suit by youth attempting to son Township plurality rejected protect humanity force federal agencies to protect concerns about separation of from the collapse the atmosphere, rejecting the powers and the political quesof f i n ite n a t ural existence of a federal daim un- tion doctrine because the Conresources by the der the public trust doctrine and stitution grants the court, as a u ncontrolled p u r leaving the task of carbon regu- coequalbranch ofgovernment, suit of short-term lation to federal agencies.4 Sim- the power to decide challenges profits. Professor ilar state litigaiion, while facing to the state's exercise of its legisWood d ocuments early barriers, has more recent- lative and police power. Resolvhow the modern ju- ly met with judicial recognition ing such challenges, it noted, is diciary has enfeebled itself to of the courts' role in enforcing the court's constitutional duty. the point that law enforcement the public trust in the constituWhether grounded in Artide can rarel y be accomplished by tional framework5 III or state constitutional protaking environmental predIn a recent landmark deci- visions, the third branch must atorsto court. To restore our sion, Robinson Township v. now recognize its obligation to government's primary function Commonwealth, however, the provide a check on government of protecting the sustenance of Supreme Court of Pennsylva- exercise of power over the pubits people, the book proposes a nia overturned, on state consti- lic trust. The third branch can, seriousand efficacious study tutional grounds, a statute that and should, take another long of the way state and federal promoted fracking.6 This care- and careful look at the barriers judges can be brought back to fully reasoned and well-docu- to litigation created by modern meaningful participation in mented decision was published doctrines of subject-matter jutheir constrtutional role as the too recently to be included in risdiction and deference to the third branch. the first edition of "Nature's legislative and administrative "Nature's Trust" is a com- Trust," but appears prominent- branches of government. As a prehensive presentation of a ly in Professor Wood's current coequal branch of government, new legal paradigm building WHtlllgs.7 the third branch must enforce upon Illinois Central Railroad Pennsylvania was one of the the legislature's obligation to Co. v. Illinois.2 In that case, three original states that placed preserve the public trust. As the Supreme Court addressed the word "commonwealth" in Professor Wood notes, 'The the problem created by the Il- its name. (Virginia and Ken- cornerstone of any trust lies in linois legislature's conveyance tucky also employed the En- judicial enforcement." to a railroad corporation of glish concept of commonwealth Recent events in coal-prothe entire Chicago shoreline of in forming their original con- ducing states provide strong Lake Michigan. The people of stitutions.) As Professor Wood evidence that state legislatures Chicago needed, and used, that explains, the commonwealth and regulating commission shoreline for fishing, naviga- framework reflects the public have become captives of the tion, and commerce. The Court trust doctrine's core populist industries they were formed held that the challenged grant concerns by framing individ- to regulate. The Pennsylvania was beyond the power of the ual land ownership within the court has demonstrated dearly legislature. It said: "We can- broader context of the commu- that only the judges are equal not, it is true, cite any authority nity. Pennsylvania's Chief Jus- to the task of protecting the where a grant of this kind has tice, in the Robinson Township people's rights to dean air and been held invalid, for webelieve plurality opinion, quoted the safe drinking water. Professor Wood's bookpoints the way. that no instance exists where state Constitution: tive due process.l In part, also, this drift toward a preference
(Alfred A. Knopf, 258 pages,$25) By Michiko Kakutani New York Times News Service
Jonathan Galassi's keenly observed debut novel, "Muse,"
is a carefully constructed literary echo chamber, haunted by the ghosts of two classics and peopled with some thinly veiled portraits of well-known publishing figures. As in Phil-
time experience in the business to give readers a tactile portrait of the New York literary world
in "the good old days," when publishing was a gentlemanly profession. The novel's hero, Paul Du-
kach, often bears more than a ip Roth's "The Ghost Writer," passing resemblance to the aua young man with literary as- thor, while his competing menpirations — in this case, an ed- tors have dearly been inspired itor instead of a writer — finds by two giants of 20th-century himself torn between two rival publishing: The profane, swagfather figures. As in Henry gering Homer Stern is recogJames' "The Aspern Papers," nizably based on Galassi's own an editor obsessed with a fa- largerthan-life former boss mous poet goes to Venice in at Farrar, Roger W. Straus Jr., search of some answers about while his patrician rival, Sterthe poet and the poet's lover ling Wainwright, has more and has a surprising encoun- than a little in common with
James Laughlin, founder and longtime head of New Directions, renowned for publishing works by authors like William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound,
over a writer theybothzealousThis novel also struggles at ly covet: one Ida Perkins. first to get going — too many These two t r iangles con- static, biographical asides verge dramatically when Paul about assorted characters' wins an audience with Ida in class, genealogical and literary Henry Miller and Tennessee Venice and finds himself privy connections — but it gathers Williams. to an astonishing literarysecret momentum as it p rogress"Muse" i s co n structedthat could rock the publishing es, providing us some telling around overlapping triangles: world and explode the life of glimpses of the publishing Paul finds his loyalties torn one ofhis father figures. world that are a lot more incibetween his boss, Homer, and In Ida, Galassi — who is him- sive and succinct than those in "Hothouse," Boris Kachka's his mentor and friend, Ster- self an accomplished poetling, two men who "cordially has created an avatar of a van- long-winded, over-the-top bidetestedeach other,and great- ished era in which poets could ography of Farrar, Straus and ly enjoyed doing so." Sterling, be huge celebrities and gives us Giroux (2013). founder of the influential Impe- some charming examples of At its best, "Muse" — much tus Edit ions regarded Homer, her work. The problem is that like John Updike's early Bech head of Purcell 8z Stern, as "a Galassi so inflates Ida's reputa- books — leaves insiders with crass and ill-mannered upstart tion and influence that he has a knowing portrait of the pubopportunist," while "Homer de- trouble persuading us that she lishing world before the digital rided Sterling as a playboy in- is a writer of such magnitude. revolution, and gives outsiders dulging his literary pretensions Or that her verse was so an entertaining, gently satirical without any practical acumen remarkable that Paul could look at the passions and follies or publishing savvy." plausibly dedare that "Ida Per- of a vocation peopled by "faHomer and Sterling are also kins is to American poetry as natics of the cult of the printed engaged in an ancient rivalry Proust is to the French novel." word."
s p ecifically
over whether its European
operations enjoyed an unfair competitive advantage by being based in low-cost Luxembourg. Margrethe V e stager, the commission's top offi-
'Pleasantville': Sequel to 'BlackWater Rising' of JayPorter series
cial on competition policy,
"Pleasantville"
stressed that the investi-
by Attica Locke (Harper Col-
gation, which will center on the largest markets of English and German
lins, 432 pages, $26.99) By Cindy Bagwell
e-books, doesn't call into
The Dauas Morning News
question Amazon's successful and comprehen-
On a busy election night in 1996, a neighborhood celebrates a native son's victory.
sive service.
"However, it is my duty
to make sure that Amazon's arrangements with
publishers are not harmful toconsumers, by preventing other e-book dis-
tributors from innovating and competing effectively with Amazon," she said.
"Our investigation will
show if such concerns are
justified."
r esidents have t u rned t h e
area into a political powerhouse whose support any candidate with citywide aspirations has to have. B ut times a n d the political land-
scape are changa lawyer is surveying some ing, and folks will puzzling damage left after a do desperate things break-in at his office. to hang on to powOn a deserted corner,a girl er — or to gain it. On one of its quieter streets,
waits for a comes.
r i d e that never
Welcome to Pleasantville, a Houston suburb born in postWorld War II segregation, advertised "for Negro families of means and class." Black
Attica L oc k e 's s econd installment i n
the
Jay Porter series finds our hero a hollowed-out man.
H is victory over Big Oil in 2 009's "Black Water Rising" is snarled in red tape, and his
disappearance, after a day of him. The only things handing out fliers, doesn't tarhe's living for these nish their man's campaign. days are his young The thrills take a little while son and teenage to come to a boil. When they daughter, and those do, like a pot of red beans, the of you who have or ingredients that are tasty on have ever been a their own blend deliciously. teenage daughter The candidate's campaign know that road's manager is a person of intern ot p a ve d wi t h est in the girl's disappearance. hugs and glitter. His alibi is a buried family P orter i s sti l l shame. The girl's presence in trying t o f i g ure the neighborhood has impli-
wi f e ' sdeath has almost killed
Will all these pieces click together? Suffice it to say you're in good hands with Locke, an Edgar Award nominee for "Black Water Rising" and winner of the Ernest Gaines
Award for Literary Excellence for her second novel, "The
Cutting Season." She's also a w riter and producer oftheFox drama "Empire." Locke, a Houston native, knows her turf. She pulls you past gleaming office buildout why s o meone cations that may e ventual- ings inside the beltway, and br o k einto his office and stole ly reverberate on a national into tiny neighborhood dives n o thin g when he's called in level. where blues are king, there's Jay's clients, unhappy at the killer 'cue out back, and you to confer on the missing girl. T h e neighborhood powers lack of progress on their suit can get a scotch at 10 in the w a nt h er found, of course, but against the oil company, ap- morning without anyone raist h e y 'r e equally driven that her pear ready to jump ship. ing an eyebrow.
SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
SEALs
w as appalled by the operators' long hair, beards and earrings. "My Navy?" the admiral asked him. "These guys are in my Navy?" That was the beginning of
Continued from F1 Afghan villagers and a British commander accused SEALs of i n discriminately killing men in one hamlet; in 2009,team members joined CIA and Afghan paramilitary
what Zinke referred to as "the
of youths dead and inflamed tensions between Afghan and NATO officials. Even a U.S.
hostage freed in a dramatic When suspicions have been raised about misconduct, outside oversight has been limit-
The Associated Press file photo
SEAL Team 6's role in the 2011 raid that killed terror mastermind Osama bin Laden
Excitement over Team 6's takedown of bin Laden also immediately
spawnedbooks and films,as
fueled SEAL mania, as public interest in fitness programs run by
ed. Joint Special Operations well as concerns that classified Command, which o v ersees information had been disclosed SEAL Team 6 missions, con- as details went public.
The Associated Press file photo
former members of the elite force took off. Above, men lift weights during a workout designed to mirror Navy SEAL training in California in 2011.
ducted its own inquiries into more than a half-dozen ep-
isodes, but seldom referred of missions and operations in the world, chasing after street them to Navy investigators. multiple geographic theaters, thugs." "JSOC investigates JSOC, and and consistently uphold the The unit pushed to make its that's part of theproblem," said highest standards required of operations faster, quieter and one former senior military of- the U.S. armed forces." deadlier, and benefited from ficer experienced in special a ballooning budget and from operations, who like many Fighting up close advances in technology since others interviewed for this arDuring a chaotic battle in 2001. Team 6's bland cover ticle spoke on the condition of
March 2002 on the Takur Ghar mountaintop close to the Paki-
anonymity because Team 6's activities are classified. stan border, Petty Officer 1st Even the military's civilian Class Neil C. Roberts, an asoverseers do not regularly sault specialist in SEAL Team examine the unit's opera- 6, fell from a helicopter onto tions. "This is an area where terrain held by al-Qaida forces. Congress notoriously doesn't Enemy fighters killed him want to know too much," said beforeU.S.troops were ableto Harold Koh, the State Depart- get there, mutilating his body ment's former top legal advis- in the snow. er, who provided guidance to It was SEAL Team 6's first the Obama administration on major battle in Afghanistan, clandestine war. and he was the first member Waves of money have sluiced to die. The manner in which through SEAL Team 6 since he was killed sent shudders 2001, allowing it to significant- through the tight-knit comly expand its ranks — reach- munity. America's new war ing roughly 300 assault troops, would be up close and ugly. At called operators, and 1,500 times, the troops carried out support personnel — to meet the grisliest of tasks: cutting new demands. But some team off fingers or small patches of members question whether the scalp for DNA analysis from relentless pace of operations militants they had just killed. has eroded the unit's elite culture and worn down Team 6 on combat missions of little impor-
tance. The group was sent to Afghanistan to hunt al-Qaida leaders, but instead spent years
conducting close-in battle against mid- to low-level Taliban and other enemy fighters. Team 6 members, one former operator said, served as "utility infielders with guns." The cost was high: More members of the unit have died over the past 14 years than in
all its previous history. Repeated assaults, parachute jumps, rugged climbs and blasts from explosives have left many battered, physically and mentally.
ly confined to the Bagram Air Base outside Kabul, the SEALs were frustrated. The
"War is not this pretty thing that the U nited States has come to believe it to be," said Britt Slabinski, a retired senior
CIA, though, was under no similar restrictions, and Team 6 members eventually began working with the spy agency and operated under its broad-
enlisted member of Team 6
er combat authorities, accord-
and veteran of combat in Af-
ing to former military and intelligence officials.
ghanistan and Iraq. "It's emotional, one human being killing another human being for extended periods of time. It's going to bring out the worst in you. It's also going to bring out the best in you."
'They have become sort of a1-800number'
name — the Naval Special
The missions, part of the
Omega Program, allowed the SEALs to conduct "deniable
operations" against the Taliban and other militants in Pakistan. Omega was modeled after the Vietnam-era Phoenix
Program, when CIA officers and Special Operations troops
ment and tactics for the broader SEAL organization, which also includes nine unclassified
tect body heat. The SEALs
were equipped with a new generation of grenade — a thermobaric model that is par-
discuss which SEAL units had
lethaL Several Team 6 mem-
bers said they herded women and children together and knocked men out ofthe way,
Richard Marcinko, a hardcharging Vietnam veteran, to
attempt at Cold War disinformation: Only two SEAL teams existed at the time, but Marcinko called the unit SEAL
together as important to SEAL Team 6's solidarity; his recruit-
ing interviews often amounted to boozy chats in a bar. Inside Team 6, there were
initially two assault groups, called Blue and Gold, after
the Navy colors. Blue used the Jolly Roger pirate flag as its insignia and early on earned the nickname "the Bad Boys in Blue," for racking up drunken drivingarrests,abusing narcotics and crashing rental cars on training exercises with near impunity. Young officers sometimes were run out of Team 6 for trying to clean up what they perceivedas a culture ofreddess-
— though some are still known
operate under the watchful
for pushing limits. Team 6's role in the 2011 bin Laden raid spawned a cottage industry of books and documentaries, leaving tight-lipped
eyes of their commanders-
bers and two bomb specialists who were killed in 2011 when
other attackers killed four U.S.
officersatoverseas operations
centers and at Dam Neck can routinely view live surveillancefeeds of raids provided Delta Force troops rolling their by drones high above — but eyes. Members of Team 6 are are also given wide latitude. expected to honor a code of While Special Operations silence about their missions, troops functioned under the and many current and former same rules of engagement as members fume that two of other military personnel in their own spoke out about their Afghanistan, Team 6 memrole in the al-Qaida leader's bers routinely performed their death. The men, Matt Bisson- missions at night, making nette, author of two best-sellers life-or-death decisions in dark about his tenure at SEAL Team rooms with few witnesses and 6, and Robert O'Neill, who said beyond theview of a camera. in a television special that he Operators would use weaphad killed bin Laden, are un- ons with suppressors to quietly der investigation by the Naval kill enemies as they slept, an act Criminal Investigative Service that they defend as no different over accusations that they re- from droppinga bomb on an vealed classified information. enemy barracks. "I snuck into Others have been quietly people's houses while theywere kicked out for drug use or quit sleeping," Bissonnette says in over conflicts of interest involv- his book "No Hero," written ing military contractors or side under the pseudonym Mark jobs. The Navy reprimanded Owen. "If I caught them with a 11 current and former opera- gun, I killed them, just like all tors in 2012 for disclosing Team the guys in the command." 6tactics or handing over dassiAnd their decisions tend to be fied training films to help pro- certain. Noting that they shoot mote a computer game, "Medal to kill, a former noncommisof Honor: Warfighter." sioned officer added that the With multiple deployments operators fi re "securityrounds" over the last 13 years, few of into those who are down to the unit's members are un- ensure that they are dead. gn scathed. About three dozen a 2011 mission on a hijacked operators and support person- yacht off the coast of Africa, nel have died on combat mis- one Team 6 member slashed a sions, according to a former pirate with a knife and left 91 senior team member. They in- wounds, accordingto am edical clude 15 Gold Squadron mem- examiner, after the man and a helicopter with the call sign
team during the Marcinko era
received his tomahawks, but after complaining of difficulties Latitude to kill did say many were paid for by in keeping his troops in line. Early on in the Afghan war, private donors. Ryan Zinke, a former Team SEAL Team 6 was assigned to The weapons were not just 6 off icerand now aRepublican protect the Afghan leader Hawall ornaments. Several for- congressman from Montana, mid Karzai; one of the Amermer Team 6 members said that recalled an episode after a icans was grazed in the head some men carried the hatchets team training mission aboard during an assassination aton missions, and at least one a cruise liner in preparation for tempt on the future president. killed an enemy fighter with potential hostage rescues at the But in the years that followed, the weapon. Dom Raso, a for- 1992 Summer Olympics in Bar- Karzai became a bitter critic mer Team 6 member who left celona, Spain. Zinke escorted of the U.S. Special Operations the Navy in 2012, said hatch- an admiral to a bar in the ship's troops, complaining that they ets were used "for breaching, lower level. "When we opened routinely killed civilians in getting into doors, manipulat- the door, it reminded me of 'Pi- raids. He viewed the activities ing small locks, hand-to-hand rates of the Caribbean,'" Zinke of Team 6 and other units as combat and other things." He said, recalling that the admiral a boon for Taliban recruiting
terpart, Delta Force, have delivered intrepid performances that have drawn the nation's two most recent presidents to
assassinations to try to dismantle the Vietcong's guerril-
added that hatchet and blade
la networks in South Vietnam.
with the SEALs. "Whatever tool you need to
by SEAL Team 6 members.
night raids entirely. Most missions were not
hostages. Operators are trained "to slice and dice every major Extortion 17 was shot down in artery," one former SEAL said.) Afghanistan, the most devasThe rules boiled down to tating day in Team 6 history. this, th e n o n commissioned Blasts from explosions used officer said: "If in your assessto breach compounds on raids, ment you feel threatened, in repeated assaults and the bat- a split second, then you're gotering from riding on high- ing to kill somebody." He despeedassaultboatsin sea res- scribed how one SEAL sniper ness. Adm. William McRaven, cues or training have taken a killed three unarmed people, American warrior — received who rose to head the Special toll. Some men have suffered including a small girl, in sepaa Winkler hatchet after their Operations Command and traumaticbrain injuries."Your rate episodes in Afghanistan first year in the squadron, ac- oversaw the bin Laden raid, body is trashed," said one re- and told his superiors that he cording to two members. In an was pushed out of Team 6 and cently retired operator. "Your felt theyhad posed a threat. Leinterview, Winkler declined to assigned to another SEAL brain is trashed." gally, that was sufficient. "But
conducted interrogations and
the deep resentment inside the
the Iranian desert. The Navy then asked Cmdr.
teams. The SEALs' armorers cus- Team 6 hoping that Soviet antomized a new German-made alysts would overestimate the rifle and equipped nearly ev- sizeofthe force. ery weapon with suppressors, He flouted rulesand fostered which reduce gunshot sounds a maverick image for the unit. and muzzle flashes. Infrared (Years after leaving the comlasers enabling the SEALs mand, he was convicted of milto shoot more accurately at itary contract fraud.) In his aunight became standard issue, tobiography, "Rogue Warrior," as did thermal optics to de- Marcinko describes drinking
Team 6 and its Army coun-
But an extensive campaign deploy them to an expanding of lethal operations in Pakilist of far-off trouble spots. stan was considered too risky, They include Syria and Iraq, the officials said, so the Omenow under threat from the Is- ga Program primarily focused lamic State, and Afghanistan, on using Afghan Pashtuns to Somalia and Yemen, mired in run spying missions into the continuing chaos. Pakistani tribal areas, as well Like the CIA's campaign as working with CIA-trained of drone strikes, Special Op- Afghan militias during night erations missions offer pol- raids in Afghanistan. A CIA icymakers an alternative to spokesman declined to comcostly wars of occupation. But ment for this article. the bulwark of secrecy around The escalating conflict in Team 6 makes it impossible to Iraq was drawing most of fully assess its record and the the Pentagon's attention and consequences ofit s actions, required a steady buildup of including civilian casualties or troops, including deployments
bassy in Tehran. Poor planning and bad weather forced commanders to abort the mission, and eight servicemen died when two aircraft collided over
Warfare Development Group build a SEAL unit that could — is a nod to its official mis- respond quickly to terrorist sion of developing new equip- crises. The name itself was an
ticularly effective in making buildings collapse. They often After the March 2002 cam- operated in larger groups than paign, most of Osamabin Lad- they had traditionally done. en's fighters fled into Pakistan, More SEALs carrying deadliand Team 6 would rarely fight er weapons meant that fewer another sustained, pitched enemiesescaped alive. battle against the terrorist netSome Team 6 assault troops work in Afghanistan. The ene- also used tomahawks craftmy they had been sent to take ed by Daniel Winkler, a knife on had largely disappeared. maker in North Carolina who At the time, the team was forged blades for the film "The prohibited from hunting Tali- Last of the Mohicans." During ban fighters and also blocked one period, members of Team from chasing any al-Qaida op- 6's Red Squadron — its logo eratives into Pakistan, out of shows crossed tomahawks concern about alienating the below the face of a N a tive Pakistani government. Most-
and eventually tried to block
great bloodletting," when the with a push or a gun muzzle, Navy purged Team 6's lead- to search homes. They freership to professionalize the quently took prisoners; a numforce. Current and former Team ber of detainees had broken 6 operators said the culture is noses after SEALs punched different today. Members now them in struggles to subdue tend tobe better educated, more them, one officer said. athletic, older and more mature The Team 6 members often
forces in a raid that left a group
rescue has questioned why the SEALs killed all his captors.
that doesn't fly" in Team 6, the
noncommissioned officer said. "You actually have to be threat-
ened." He added that the sniper was forced outofTeam 6. Civilian deaths are an inevitable part of every war but in
conflicts with no clear battle lines and where enemy fighters are often indistinguishable from noncombatants, some military law experts say, the traditional rules of war have become outdatedand new Geneva Convention protocols are
necessary. Continued next page
kills occurred during his time protect yourself and your brothers, whether it is a blade or a gun, you are going to use," said Raso, who has worked with
Winkler in producing ablade.
Many SEAL operators re-
jected any use of tomahawks — saying they were too bulky to take into combat and not as
effective as firearms — even as they acknowledged the messinessofwarfare.
"It's a dirty business," said one former senior enlisted Team 6 member. "What's the
difference between shooting them as I was told and pulling out a knife and stabbing them
countries where its members With the relatively small U.S. or hatcheting them'?" operate. The missions have military footprint in Afghanbecome embedded in U.S. istan, Taliban forces began to The culture combat with little public dis- regroup. Alarmed, Lt. Gen. SEAL Team 6's fenced-off cussion or debate. Stanley McChrystal, who headquarters at the Dam Neck Former Sen. Bob Kerrey, was leading Joint Special Op- Annex of the Oceana Naval D-Neb., a member of t he erations Command, in 2006 Air Station, just south of VirSEALs during the V ietnam ordered the SEALs and other ginia Beach, Virginia, houses War, cauti onedthat Team6 and
troops to take on a more ex-
other Special Operations forces pansive task in Afghanistan: had been overused. "They have Beat back the Taliban. become sortof a 1-800 numThat order led to years of ber anytime somebody wants nightly raids or fights by Team something done," he said. But 6, which was designated the relying on them so much, he lead Special Operations force added, is inevitable whenev- during some of the most vier U.S.leaders are faced with olent years in what became "one of those situations where America's longest war. A sethe choice you have is be- cret unit that was created to tween a horrible choice and a carry out the nation's riskiest bad choice, one of those cases operations would instead be where you have no option." engaged in dangerous but inWhile declining to com- creasingly routine combat. ment specifically on SEAL A former Team 6 member, Team 6, the U.S. Special Op- an officer, was more dismiserations Command said that sive of some of the operations. since the Sept. 11, 2001, at- "By 2010, guys were going aftacks its forces "have been ter street thugs," he said. "The involved in tens of thousands most highly trained force in
F5
a secretive military within the
military. Far removed from the public eye, the base is home not just to the team's 300 enlist-
Join a movement of exceptional individuals who are using their skills talents, and energy to help others.
Be a part of Bend Rotaract.
ed operators (they disdain the term "commandos"), their offi-
As a Rotaractor you can
cers and commanders, but also
• Build career contacts • Develop leadership skills
to its pilots, Seabee builders, bomb disposal technicians, engineers, medical crews and an intelligence unit equipped with sophisticated surveillance and global tracking technology.
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• Make new friends and have fun! Contact usto learn how you can join
T he Navy SEALs — t h e acronym stands for Sea, Air, Land forces— evolved from the
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6 arose decades later, born out of the failed 1980 mission to
rescue 53 U.S. hostages seized in the takeover of the U.S. Em-
F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015
From previous page But others bristle at the no-
"It took me weeks to come to terms with
tion, saying the long-standing, unambiguous rules of b e- the efficiency of the havior should govern murky, rescue. It was so modern combat. surgical." "Emphasizing these lines — Diiip Joseph, rescued by and rules becomes even more important when you're fightNavy SEALs in 2012 ing a l awless, remorseless enemy," said Geoffrey Corn, the former senior law of war to greater risk than on any
by the SEAL operators and sat on the ground, hands around his knees, his head down, the
doctor remembered. Wallakah, he believed, was the one who had shot the Team 6 operator.
Minutes later, while waiting to board a helicopter to free-
dom, Joseph said, one of his SEAL rescuers guided him back into the house, where he saw in the moonlight that
o p eration so Wallakah was lying in a pool that they can protect hostages of blood, dead. "I remember from being shot or otherwise those things as clear as day," harmed. The SEALs often end the doctor said. up killing most of the captors. Military officials, speaking The first high-profile res- only on background about the is not about revenge." cue came in 2003, when SEAL classified operation, contendNear the end of an Afghan Team 6 operators helped re- ed that all of the captors were deployment by Team 6's Blue trievePfc.Jessica Lynch, who quiddy killed after the SEAL Squadron, which concluded in had been injured, captured team entered and Wallakah early2008, elders complained and held in a hospital, during had never been taken pristo the British general whose the early days of the Iraq War. oner. They also said Joseph forces controlled Helmand Six years later, Team 6 mem- had seemed disoriented at the province. He i m mediately bersjumpedoutof cargoplanes time and never re-entered the called Capt. Scott Moore, com- into the Indian Ocean with house, and questioned whether mander of SEAL Team 6, say- their specially designed assault he could have seen what was ing that two elders had report- boats in advance of the mission happening on the dark night. ed that the SEALs killed civil- to rescue Richard Phillips, capTwo years later, Joseph reians in a village, according to a tain of the Maersk Alabama, mains grateful for his rescue former Team 6 senior member. a container ship hijacked by and the sacrifice made by Petty Moore c onfronted t h ose Somali pirates. The operators, Officer Nicolas Checque, the leading the mission, which captured in a video shown by team member killed on the miswas intended to capture or kill O'Neill, parachuted with swim sion. But he still wonders what a Taliban figure code-named fins strapped over their boots happened with Wallakah. "It took me weeks to come Objective Pantera. after releasing four boatsWhen Moore asked what small, fast and equipped with to terms with the efficiency had happened, the squadron stealth features to evade radar of the rescue," Joseph said. "It commander, Peter Vasely, de- — that were each suspended was so surgical." nied that operators had killed by a canopy of multiple paraexpert for the Army's Office
other type of
oftheJudge Advocate General and now a professor at South Texas College of Law. "That is when the instinct for revenge is going to be strong. And war
any noncombatants. He said
chutes. SEAL snipers eventual-
A global spying force
they had killed all the men they encountered because they all had guns, according to the former Team 6 member and a military official. Vasely,
lykilledthree of the pirates. In 2012, operators sky-dived
From a string of firebases along the Afghan border, Team 6 regularly sent Afghan
into Somalia to free a U.S. aid
worker, Jessica Buchanan, locals into the t r ibal areas and her Danish colleague, of Pakistan to collect intelliwho now oversees the regu- Poul Hagen Thisted. JSOC gence.The team transformed lar SEAL teams based on the considersits performance as the large, brightly painted East Coast, declined to com- the standard for such mis- "jingle" trucks popular in the ment through a spokesman. sions. The SEALs used a free- region into mobile spying Moore asked the Joint Spe- fall parachuting technique stations, hiding sophisticatcial Operations Command to called "HAHO," for high alti- ed eavesdropping equipment investigate the episode. About tude-high opening, in which in the back of the trucks and that time, the command re- they jump from a high altitude using Pashtuns to drive them ceived reports that dozens of a nd steer their way on t h e over the border. witnesses in a village were al- wind for many miles to cross a Outside the mountains of leging that U.S. forces had en- border secretly, an exercise so Pakistan, the team also vengaged in summary executions. risky that over the years sever- tured into the country's southAnother f o r me r se n i or al men died while in training. west desert, including the Team 6 member contended latBuchanan recalled that four volatile Baluchistan region. er that Slabinski, Blue Squad- of the kidnappers were within One mission nearly ended in ron's command master chief, 15 feet of her when the Team disaster when militants fired gave premission guidance that 6 members approached un- a rocket-propelled grenade every male at the target be der cover of darkness. They from a doorway, causing the killed. Slabinski denied that, shot and killed all nine cap- roof of their compound to colsaying there was no policy to tors while rescuing the aid lapse and a Team 6 sniper atop leave all men dead. "I didn't workers. "Until they identified it to fall through onto a small ever convey that to the guys," themselves, I did not believe a group of fighters. A fellow U.S. he said in an interview. rescue was possible," Buchan- sniper nearby quickly killed He said that around the an said in an interview. them, one former operator time of that raid he had been In October 2010, one Team recounted. disturbed after w itnessing 6 member erred during an Beyond Afghanistan and one of the younger operators attempt to rescue Linda Nor- Pakistan, members of Team 6's slashing at the throat of a dead grove, a 36-year old British Black Squadron were scattered Taliban fighter. "It appeared aid worker being held by the around the world on spying he was mutilating a body," Taliban. Disaster struck in the missions. Originally Team 6's Slabinski said, adding that first two minutes, after opera- sniper unit, Black Squadron he quickly yelled, "Stop what tors jumped from helicopters was reconfigured after the you're doing!" in the mountains of K unar Sept. 11 attacks to conduct The Naval Criminal Investi- province and slid down 90 "advance force o perations," gative Service later concluded feetof braided rope to a steep military jargon for intelligence the operator might have been slope, according to two senior gathering and other clandescutting off gear from the dead military officials. tine activities in preparation for fighter's chest. But Team 6 A s they sprinted i n t h e a Special Operations mission. leaders said they were worried dark toward the Taliban comIt was a particularly popular thatsome operators were get- pound, the newest member of concept at the Pentagon under ting out of control, and the one the team was confused, he lat- former Defense Secretary Doninvolved in the episode was er told investigators. His gun ald Rumsfeld. By the middle of sent back to the United States. had jammed. "Thinking a mil- last decade, McChrystal had Slabinski, suspecting that his lion miles a minute," he said, designatedTeam 6 to take on an men had not been following he threw a grenade at what he expanded role in global intellithe rulesofengagement prop- believed were a pair of fighters gence-gathering missions, and erly, gathered them for what he hiding in a ditch. Black Squadron operatives decalled a"very stern speech." But after an exchange of ployed to U.S. embassies from "If any of you feel a need to gunfire that killed several Tal- sub-Saharan Africa to Latin do any retribution, you should iban captors, the SEALs found Americato the Middle East. call me," he recalled telling the hostage — wearing dark One former member of them. "There's no one that clothing and a head scarfBlack Squadron said that in could authorize that o t her dead in the ditch.Initially,the Somalia and Yemen, operators than me." He said his message operator who threw the gre- were not allowed to pull the was intended to convey that nade and another unit mem- trigger unless the highest-valpermission would never come ber reported that Norgrove ue targets were in their sights. because such conduct was in- was killed by an explosive sui- "Outside Iraq and Afghanistan appropriate. But he conceded cide vest. That story quickly we were not throwing any that perhaps some of his men fell apart. Surveillance video nets," the former member said. may have misunderstood. shows that she died almost "It was totally different." JSOC cleared the squadron instantly from fragmentation Black Squadron has someof any wrongdoing in the Pan- wounds to her head and back thing the rest of SEAL Team tera operation, according to caused by the grenade blast, 6 doesnot:female operatives. two former Team 6 members. the investigative report noted. Women in the Navy are admitIt is not clear how many AfA joint inquiry by the U.S. ted to Black Squadron and sent ghans were killed in the raid and British governments con- overseas to gather intelligence, or exactl y where ithappened, cluded that the operator who usually working in embassies though a former officer said had thrown the grenade had with male counterparts. One he believed it was just south violated procedures for hos- former SEAL Team 6 officer of Lashkar Gah, the capital of tage rescues. He was forced saidmale andfemale members Helmand province. out of Team 6, although per- of Black Squadron would ofBut the killings prompted mitted to remain in another ten work together in pairs. It is a high-level discussion about SEAL unit. called "profile softening," makhow, in a country where many Arescue operationtwoyears ing the couple appear less susmen carried guns, Team 6 later succeeded in releasing a picious to hostile intelligence could "guarantee that we're U.S. physician, though at great services or militant groups. only going after the real bad cost. One night in December Black Squadron now has guys," one of the former senior 2012, a group of Team 6 op- more than 100 members, its team leaders said. erators wearing night-vision growth coinciding with the goggles burst into a compound expansion of perceived threats Rescue missions in Afghanistan where Taliban around the world. It also reYears ago, before the Af- militants were holding Dr. Dilip flects the shift among U.S. ghan night raids and the Joseph, who had been working policymakers. Anxious about wartime deployments, SEAL with an aid organization. The using shadow warriors in the Team 6 trained constantly to first operator to enter was felled years after the 1993 "Black rescue hostages — dangerous, by a shot to the head, and the Hawk Down" debacle in Mogdifficult missions they never other Americans responded adishu, Somalia, government got a chance toperform before with brutal efficiency, killing officials today are willing to 2001. Since then, the unit has allfive of the captors. send units like SEAL Team 6 attempted at least 10 rescues, But Joseph and military of- to conflicts, whether the Unitwhich have been among its ficials offer sharply different ed States chooses to acknowlmost celebratedsuccesses and accounts of how the raid un- edge its role or not. "When I was in, we were albitterest failures. folded. The physician said in Operators say that in res- an interview that a 19-year-old ways chasing wars," said Zincues — considered "no-fail " named Wallakah was the sole ke, the congressman and formissions — they have to move kidnapper to survive the initial mer Team 6 member. "These faster and expose themselves assault. He had been subdued guys found them."
'Stain's au ter': T e ieo t e ictator's itte sparrow "Staiin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetiana Aiiiiuyeva" by RosemarySullivan (Harper, 741 pages, $35)
Sullivan tells Alliluyeva's story with sympathy and sharp psychological insight. Sullivan does not cast Svetlana's life as an unmitigated tragedy or as a tready triumph against the odds. There were certainly many setbacks, financial
By Matthew Price Newsday
"Wherever I go, whether to
Embassy in New Delhi. What
unfolded next is something out of a cold war thriller as U.S. officials scrambled to get
Svetlana out of India before the Soviets found out what was afoot.
Svetlana's story made her a hot property, and she signed a
and emotional. She left two
children behind in the Soviet book contract that earned her Union; she was a compulsive millions. But such a windfall mover, always in search of made her a target. She found the next b e st herself mixed up place, even if she with Frank Lloyd could never find Wright's widow, it. She endured who ran a cultlike three d i vorc- Stalin's fellowship of the es and several Da u ghter architec t's disb roken r e l aciples. A subset ionships. S h e quent marriage to struggled in the one of them, Wes
Australia or some island, I will
always be the political prisoner ofmy father'sname." Such was the lament of Svetlana Al-
liluyeva, whose life sentence it was to be the only daughter of Joseph Stalin.
Born in 1926, she grew up with enormous privileges. Some called her the Princess
of the Kremlin; there was even a perfume, Breath of Svetlana, named after her. To Stalin,
West — w h en she ar ri v ed,
she was his "little sparrow."
Peters, ended in
shambles and fi-
Lavrenty Beria, the notorishe had no idea ous head ofthe secret police, how to balance bounced her on his knee, and a checkbook-
nancial distress. As Sul l i van
notes, it is sadly she in turn playfully bossed and could never ironic that Svetaround Stalin's henchmen. let go of her homeland. She lana, raised in a world foundBut grimness lurked all returned, briefly, to the Soviet ed on mistrust and suspicion, around as the dictator signed
Union in the 1980s.
was too trusting of the men
death warrants and consigned But this proud, stubborn, millions to the gulag. Even her sincere, volatile, polarizing own relatives were not imwoman, blessed with a sharp mune: Uncles, aunts and cous- intellect and abundant literins were executed or impris- ary gifts, was propelled by oned. Her mother committed a rare life force. "She had an suicide in 1932 and a teenage undaunted optimism, honed crush was sent off to prison by years of surviving so many camp. cruelbereavements,so many Svetlana would spend a disappointments and losses," lifetime coming to terms with Sullivan observes. "Somehow the cruelties wrought in her she continued to believe in the father's name. Her defection future." to the West in 1967 made her If anything, Svetlana was a a Cold War celebrity with a survivor. After Stalin's death sinister pedigree; she could in 1953, a seismic event, Svetneverquite escape the sobri- lana pursued literary studies quet "Stalin's daughter." "You and friendships among the can't live your own life. You intelligentsia. She took her can't live any life. You exist mother's last name. A love only in reference to a name,"
she fell for. "Stalin's Daughter" soars on details culled from dozens
of interviews and impressive archival research from KGB and CIA files. The glimpses into the Stalin household are invariably fascinating, and the subsequent wanderings of Svetlana as she searches for inner peace take on an epic quality. George E Kennan, the eminent Sovietologist and Cold War diplomat, who took in Svetlana on her arrival in
the States, called her journey an "incomprehensible Odyssey." It is to Sullivan's credit
that she makes the Homeric wanderings of Svetlana Alliluyeva — who died, almost penniless, in 2011 — not only
affair with a terminally ill In-
she mused. dian Communist brought her In her poignant biography, to India to scatter his ashes. comprehensible, but also unCanadian writer Rosemary She defected at the American forgettably moving.
A MAGAZINE DEDICATED TO DEFINING THE FUTURE OF CENTRAL OREGON
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ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
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Deposit c a n s/bottles5000 series M aytag The Bulletin recom Smith Rock needed for local all dryer, like new, 4000 The Bulletin mends extra caution volunteer, non-profit series Maytag dryer, recommends extra ' KAYAKS (2) Golf Course when purc h as cat rescue. Donate at will hold 2 queen size i caution when purin Redmond Necky Manitou-14, ing products or ser Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 quilts. $850. Brand chasing products or • $600. P e r ception vices from out of the 9 Hole Par 3 E, Bend; Petco in new, still under war- services from out of I Prodigy II 14.5 tanarea. Sending cash, & Full Length Redmond; Sm ith ranty, Whirlpool con- 8 the area. Sending 8 dem, $700. Werner checks, or credit in Driving Range Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, vection 5 burner glass • cash, checks, or • RANS Wave recumpa d d le Lyman ¹55 powder Cypress 202 f ormation may b e i n formation bent. 60" WB, older Bend; CRAFT in Tu- top stove with warm- i credit $225. 541-382-6664 measure, nev er used. subjected to fraud. may be subjected to 541-912-3426 Want to Buy or Rent malo. Can pick up Ig. ing station. Has Aquomodel some wear on $20. 231-360-5101 For more i nforma SmithRockGoff amounts. 389-8420. list technology. $700. i FRAUD. For more frame. W e l l maintion about an adver Course.com information about an 8 Wanted: $Cash paid for Reloading brass, variwww.craftcats.org 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d 248 tained. 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Sales Other Areas Also a foster home for Crafts & Hobbies Classifieds has an DRW. all 3. 541 598 5488, 3 gas golf carts: 2006 WOODWORKINGEQIIIPMEIT "After Hours" Line $20 0 0 . • Professional table saw ' Dust collector• 8" jointer • Rikon band sawe6x48 belt with 8" COMPLETE POT- Y amaha, 16405 Heath Dr., La Call 541-383-2371 TERY SET UP InOlder H yun d a i, Pine, Sat. & Sun. 8 24 hrs. to cancel 1996 disc sander• 2fr' extreme duty planer • 2 bench grinders • Akeda dovetail jointer • DeWalt Find It in cludes Skutt kiln, two $1000. a.m. Furniture, bike, your ad! $20 0 0. midi lathe• Delta16'/gmodel 17-900 drill press • Shop cabinets • Plus many moreitems. wheels, clays, glazes, E asy-Go, The Bulletin Classifieds! meat slicer, sausage small library shelves, Good carts - can de• LUMBER: Exotic hardwoods• Part unit Alaskan yellow pine tongue & groove • Small 541-385-5809 maker, golf c l ubs, scales, hea t e rs, liver within reason. unit cedartongue & groove •Used 4" cedarshiplap ePlus chainsaws, Stibl weedeater, multiple air tools, new tables, booth and too 541-576-2477 Standard Poodles, ATV trailer 9~/~'x6' 16' and 30' ladders. Check the website for better description. g much to list. $2,500 or Beautiful black grand 286 best offer. C ontact ALL CLUBS R IGHT champion bred pups. FARN AND UVESNCK EQIIIPMEIT H AND S R FL E X , Sales Northeast Bend HUGE MULTI Rodney at 13 weeks, fabulous G RAPHITE. 201 5 •1993GMC 2500pickup,only91,0!I miles•PowderRiverauto cmthehead gmte•6'PR hmy 541-728-0604 FAMILY YAR D c oats, heathy a n d PATIO TABLE m int T / M spe e d feeder •2PR 12'medium panels•4-8'to 14'gates W atertroughs•90steelT fenceposts•Fimeo SALE Sat u rday happy. Will bring great 54" Tropitone table blades, 6-SW, 7 pcs., 55 gal.• 3-Igoint sprayer• 2 section spring-tooth• 6'3-point scraper • BevalLTD • English saddle ** FREE ** 6/13 8:0 0 -4:00, joy to y our home. 4 chairs, tilt $380. Call a way Sunday 6/14 Garage Sale Kit • Big Horn saddle• Circle Y trails and park saddle eMisc. horse tack• Electric fencesupplies $2000. 541-601-3049 awning, $350. Driver, x2hot, 12-15, 8:00-12:00 1 7 1 53 Pollshers • Saws Place an ad in The 541-382-6664 a djustable-h.c p l u s Milky Way Bend Bulletin for your gaFIRHLRMS tool, $120. Callaway •Nearnew M ossbergm odel8353'//'12 ga.•SKS Ctginese7.62 •1208 rounds7.62 amm o 97707 (Sunriver rage sale and reRepalr & Supplles Titanium five wood, Used appliances for ceive a Garage Sale area) 2 P o ntoon s • Custom Mauser• 98.257 cal. WBY. Magnum $ 80. M izuno J P X sale in r u ral R edBoats, 2 E l e ctric Kit FREE! wedges 54-60, $60 Trolling mo t o rs, mond: great condiEXECIITIVE SI.E FURNITURE ea. All c lubs obo. tion stainless FrigidKIT INCLUDES: Futon, Bow Flex, Good classified adstell OverstuÃed brown armchairw/ottoman '2 overstuffed beigearmchairs•Largedark oak 951-454-2561 • 4 Garage Sale Signs double solid maple Wheaten Terrier Pup- aire refrigerator/ the essential facts in an pies AKC Soft-Coated freezer Professional • $2.00 Off Coupon To entertainment center 22" D x 6' H x 7' WeSmaller dark oak enter!3!nment center• Oval oak bed frame, 5 sets of CHECKYOUR AD $1200. H y po-aller- Series $600; white LG interesting Manner. Write Use Toward Your coffee table• Oakcrest rolltop desk ' Pressedback oak ofhce chair • High steel Ieg loungetable golf clubs, washer from the readers view not Next Ad genic, shedless. Lov- g as stove w it h 5 and dryer, skis and w/2 bear back high chairs• Small Yamaha stereo• Computer equipment • 2 oakframed twin i ng f a mily pe t s . burners and double the seller's. Convert the • 10 Tips For "Garage snowboards, f ish541-719-1292. beds w/linens• Books, boxesOfhousehold miscellaneous eThis h very expensive furniture. facts into benefits. Show Sale Success!" ing gear, tons of oven $850; stainless the reader howthe item will clothes and shoes, Wolf-Husky pups $500, GE dishwasher $250, Auctioneer's Note: Don't miss this exce tional auction 10 pairs brand new 38 yrs exp. Wolfsong and white Kenmore help them insomeway. PICK UP YOUR Direcrionsi From TumalgAgadSward Sisters gnHwy20about 3 mikg. Turn west on CouchMkt. 8if. This athletic shoes, Kennels 541-977-7019 e lectric stove f o r on the first day it runs GARAGE SALE KIT at Go another 2 mdgs io aucfion. advertising tip to make sure it is corTONS OF NFL AND Yellow Lab, AKC Reg- $200. C A S H only! 1777 SW Chandler brought to you by COLLEGE LOGO Call 303.915.2445 for rect. nSpellcheckn and Ave., Bend, OR 97702 istered, 3M.; $700/ea, more information to ' I I I human errors do ocCLOTHING: Sea4F; $750/ea, all yelThe Bulletin hawks, 49ers, ASU, serious buyers. Also, cur. If this happens to Food Available Serving Cent el Oregonsince lgee The Bulletin low. Parent g r eat www.dennisturmon.com Check website for photos Servng CentralOregon since lgge operational and FREE your ad, please conbaby items, lots of hunters. Avail. to go to those willing to Two Viking s e wing tact us ASAP so that Terms: Cash,Check, Visa, MC II Like us on Facebook 10% BUYER'SFEE books, board July 4th. 541-934-2423 move them: black /quilting m a c hines corrections and any games, l uggage, HUGE MULTI-FAMILY and much m u ch Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, Magic Chef gas stove, with extras. Very good adjustments can be Garage Sale - 62910 more! white Whirlpool elec- condition. $700 each made to your ad. 1F, adorable, UDT Dennis Nrmon R o mey Car/Cell: 541A80.0785 541-385-5809 Eagle Rd. Fri.-Sat., 541-771-7757 shots, health guar., pics tric dryer, and gold Call 54 1 - 706-0448 541.823.8281 4 0 8.840.1282 Powell Butte, Oregon 87753 Fax: 541.823.8318 9-5 & Sun., 9-2. Whirlpool refrigerator. eves or weekends. The Bulletin Classified $500/up. 541-777-7743
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G2 SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
THE CALL OF THE RACE
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81 Record number? 82 N.F.L. coach Carroll 85 Ollie's partner on old children's TV 87 Simple wind instruments $0 Skater Babilonia 91Comics "Oh nol" 83 Bidding 84Bad "Wheel of Fortune" buy for SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY
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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Placea photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 253
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Lost & Found
D ish Network - G e t Homedics Shiarsu back SOCIAL S E C URITY WHEN BUYING M ORE fo r LE S S ! & shoulder massage D ISABILITY BEN Starting $19.99/month cushion w/heat 8 re- E FITS. Unable i o FIREWOOD... (for 12 months.) PLUS mote control, like new. work? Denied benTo avoid fraud, Bundle & SAVE (Fast $85. 541-389-0919 efits? We Can Help! The Bulletin Internet f o r $15 WIN or Pay Nothing! recommends paymore/month.) CALL Hovv to avoid scam Contact Bill Gordon & ment for Firewood and fraud attempts Associates Now 1-000-300-1563 at only upon delivery 1-800-879-3312 to (PNDC) s/Be aware of internaand inspection. start your application • A tional fraud. Deal locord is 12S cu. fr. 255 today! (PNDC) cally whenever pos4' x 4' x 8' Computers sible. The Bulletin Offers • Receipts should u' Watch for buyers Private Party Ada include name, T HE B ULLETIN r e - who offer more than •Free 3 lines 3 days phone, price and quires computer adyour asking price and • Private Party Only kind of wood verlisers with multiple who ask to have • Total of items adverpurchased. ad schedules or those money wired or must equal $200 • Firewood ads selling multiple sys- handed back to them. tised or Less MUST include tems/ software, to disFake cashier checks FOR DETAILS or to species & cost per close the name of the and money orders PLACE AN AD, cord to better serve business or the term are common. Call 541-385-5809 our customers. "dealer" in their ads. YNever give out perFax 541-385-5002 Private party adverris- sonal financial inforBulletin ers are defined as Wanted- paying cash The Sarvine Central Oregon since tt8 mation. those who sell one YTrust for Hi-fi audio & stuyour instincts computer. dio equip. Mclntosh, and be wary of JBL, Marantz, D y- All Year Dependable someone using an 257 dry naco, Heathkit, San- Firewood: escrow service or Musical Instruments split, del, agent to pick up your sui, Carver, NAD, erc. Lodgepole, 1 /$195; 2/$3 65. Call 541-261-1808 Lowery Holiday Genie- merchandise. Multi-cord discounts! 261 Leslies organ. $150 The Bulletin cash, check, Visa, MC Serving Central Oregon since190S 541-548-1422 541-420-3484, Bend • Medical Equipment Infrared Sauna, 220-V HOSPITAL BED w ith 260 C.O. mixed wood, hook-up, no building, Misc. Items semi-dry, split, deliv$3000 value, asking hand-held electronic ered in Bend. 2 for control, overhead tra$270. Cash, check, 100% Alpaca poncho $1000. 54'I-536-7790 peze, works well! purple with s c arf,Men's navy dress/caVisa/MC accepted. $400 cash only 541-312-0746 $200. 541-419-1022 541-815-4219 sual jacket, s z.44, $30. 541-389-1821 Buying Diamonds 263 Ponderosa pine fire/Gold for Cash wood, split, $160 M ust sell: sold R V . • Tools Saxon's Fine Jewelers R eese 5t h cord. 541-419-1871 wh e e l 541I -389-6655 hitch, 20k p o unds,5250 WattGenerac gas 269 used once, $800 obo. powered electric genBUYING Slide out jack, SOLD. erator, Honda motor, Gardening Supplies Lionel/American Flyer 15' 50 amp electric fix even with top of trains, accessories. & Equipment 541-408-2191. c ord, S OLD. T i r e pickup bed, $ 3 50. shocks, SOLD. Tow541-419-2971 BUYING a S ELLING mirrors, u s ed BarkTurfSoil.com All gold jewelry, silver ing 265 SOLD. King-pin and gold coins, bars, once, s tabilizer, SOLD . Building Materials rounds, wedding sets, 541-548-7154 PROMPT DELIVERY class rings, sterling sil542-3S9-9663 REDMOND Habitat ver, coin collect, vin- Reduce Your Past Tax RESTORE tage watches, dental Bill by as much as 75 gold. Bill Fl e ming, Percent. Stop Levies, Building Supply Resale Quality at For newspaper 541-302-9419. Liens and Wage GarLOW PRICES delivery, call the DID YOU KNOW 7 IN nishmenrs. Call The 1242 S. Hwy 97 Circulation Dept. at 10 Americans or 158 Tax DR Now to see if 541-540-1406 541-305-5000 million U.S. A d ults you Qualify Open ro the public. To place an ad, call 1-000-791-2099. read content from 541-305-5009 n ewspaper m e d i a (PNDC) 266 or email cleeeified@bendbulletin.com each week? Discover Heating & Stoves the Power of the Pa- Sell your s t ructured The Bulletin cific Northwest News- settlement or annuity NOTICE TO paper Advertising. For payments for CASH ADVERTISER NOW. You don't have a free brochure call Since September 29, 916-288-6011 or ro wait for your future 1991, advertising for Check out the payments any longer! email classifieds online woodstoves has Call 1-800-914-0942 used cecelia@cnpa.com been limited to mod- www.bendbttlletitLcom (PNDC) (PNDC) els which have been Updated daily certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental + Peat Mixes Protection A g e ncy + Juniper Ties nesslstsas,aasaaaser + Paver Discounts (EPA) as having met BowTech, Elite, Hoyf, Matthews, PSE smoke emission stan+ Sand+ Gravel dards. A cer t ified + Bark Instanttandecaping.com I woodsrove may be • High Quality Bows L Accessories identified by its certifi• Bow Tuning and Service cation label, which is • 30 Yard Indoor Range permanently attached 270 • Lessons for Beginners and Adults to the stove. The Bul• Archery Leagues letin will not knowLost 8 Found ingly accept advertising for the sale of FOUND: set of keys on 1 611South 1st Street, Redmond uncertified McGrath rd. 6/S. Call 541-37 6-1 784 woodstoves. to ID. 541-3SS-4687
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Employment Opportunities
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have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend
Auto - Sales Sales professional to Help Desk Analyst Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r de a l er Responsible for providing support services to D u t ies include Subaru of B e nd. Company-wide IS users. responding to c alls r egarding computer Offering 401k, profit hardware and software related issues, training sharing, m e d ical users on new technology and technical plan, split shifts and processes and providing technical knowledge paid vacation. Expeto assist with rience or will train. 90 day $2000 guarRequires a CIS or MIS degree and 1 year a ntee. Dress f o r success. P l ease experience or a minimum of 3 years' experience working in technical support. Must have apply at 2060 NE strong knowledge of computer hardware, softHwy 20, Bend. See ware, terminology and iSeries. R equires Bob or Devon. strong analytical and problem solving skills, excellent verbal and written communication skills, ability to work in a fast paced environCaregivers ment with multiple priorities and excellent customer service skills. wanted to join
541-382-3537
Redmond 541-923-0002 Madras 541-475-6889 Prineville 541-447-7170 or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.
421
Schools & Training IITR Truck School
REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads GetJobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.IITR.EDU 476
Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p porlunities" include employee and independent positions. 308 Ads fo r p o sitions Farm Equipment that require a fee or & Machinery upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a p plying for jobs on1953 Ford Golden Ju- line and never probilee, one yard bucker, vide personal infor72" box drag, $4600 mation to any source obo. 541-914-1951 you may not have researched and CASE 530 diesel tracdeemed to be reputor with backhoe attable. Use extreme tachment, $4500. c aution when r e 541-389-7669. s ponding to A N Y 325 online employment ad from our-of-state. Hay, Grain & Feed We suggest you call the State of Oregon Wheat Straw for Sale. Consumer Hotline Also, weaner pigs. at 1-503-370-4320 541-546-6171 For Equal Opportunity Laws c ontact Take care of Oregon Bureau of your investments Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division, with the help from 971-673- 0764. The Bulletin's The Bulletin "Call A Service Servine Central Oreeon sinceSaet 541-305-5009 Professional" Directory
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5009 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Builetin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
Aquatics Program Office Manager $33,460-$40,642 Full Benefits Professional Mgmt Regular, Full time
This position is located in Chiloquin. For more information contact: The Klamarh Tribes PO Box 436 Chiloquin, OR 97624 iobs@klamathtribes.com 541-783-2219 x 113
s U B ARU
o ur car i n g memory care community. All shifts available. M ust b e r e i iable. For more information, or
Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United Stares. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Please go to www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls please. Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.
any questions, p lease cal l 541-385-4717
Child Support Enforcement Program iylanager $37,069 - $53,238 Full Benefits Prof-Mgr., Regular, Full-Time
This position is located in Chiloquin. For more information contact: The Klamath Tribes PO Box 436 Chiloquin, OR 97624
jobs©kIamathtribes.com 541-703-2219 x 113
General
Jefferson Coun Job 0
or r u nities
Maintenance Worker I Public Works Department $2,693.58 to $3,116.94 per month —DOQ Closes June 26th, 2015 For complete job description and application form go to www.co/efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms ro Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. Jefferson County is an Equal Employment Opporruniry Employer
Counselor Concrete Finishers Wanted! Roger L a n geliers Construction Co. is looking for experienced concrete finishers. $23.00 per hour base pay and $ 6.00 p e r hou r Fringe pay on private work. Current BOLI w a g e of $ 26.97 pe r h o u r base p a y and $13.43 Fringe pay on public work, plus full benefit package including health insurance, 401(k). We are a drug free comp any, EE O e m ployer, a n d an E-Verify participant. Minorities, women and veterans are encouraged to apply. Interested applicanrs apply at our office:62080 Mercury Place, Bend.
Oregon State University (OSU) - Cascades, in Bend, invites applications for a full-time (1.0 FTE), 12-month, fixed-term, Counselor position. The purpose of this position is to provide personal counseling to students experiencing psychological, social and/or other difficulties that negatively impact their student success at OSU-Cascades. OSU-Cascades provides resources to students and this resource contributes to retention and academic and personal
success.
Minimum/Required Qualifications include appropriate professional licenses in Counseling or Psychology. Preferred qualifications include a Master's Degree in Counseling or a related field from an accredited institution and 3-5 years' professional experience working with in a college or university setting. The anticipated start date is in July of 2015. The Closing Date is 06-25-2015. To review full p o s ting a n d app l y , go to http://oregonstate.eduffobs Apply to posting 0015070.
OSUia an AAIEOEIVera/Diaabled.
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
FIREFIGHTERS NEEDED NOW!
Immediate need for Wildland Firefighters to fight forest fires. Must be 18 years old and Drug Free! Apply 9am-3pm Mon-Thurs. Bring two forms of ID fill out Federal 1-9 form. No ID = No Application
PatRick Corp. 1199 NE Hemlock, Redmond 541-923-0703 EOE P ATR l c K
Home Delivery Advisor
The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
The Bulletin
c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller@bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drug screen required.
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
CUSTOMER SERVICE MANAGER Cascade Cleaners is looking for an organized, reliable computer literate manager with very strong people skills. Management ex p erience preferred, full time wage DOE. Submit resume with work references in person at 133 SW Century Dr. ¹ 200, Bend, OR 97702
Pre-employment drug testing is required. Please send your resume, cover letter and salary history to: Steve Hawes Advertising Manager shawes@wescompapers.com
You may also drop off your resume in person at 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 or mail it to PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708.
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 19ta
EOE/ Drug Free Workplace
Instructor, Chemistry Lab, Part-Time Oregon State University - Cascades in Bend is recruiting for a part-time Instructor to teach Chemistry lab on a term by term basis for the 2015-2016 academic year. This is a fixed-term a ppointment. Start date: A ugust 1 5 o r September 16, 2015. Appointment will be r eviewed for renewal or transition to an instructional position on an annual basis at the discretion of the Dean of OSU-Cascades.
Bend Park@ Recreation
Is Accepting Applications For: • Custodian • Lifeguard • Park Maintenance Worker For complete job announcements
or to applygo to bendparksandrec.org Equal Opportunity Employer DID Y O U KNO W Newspaper-genera ted content is s o USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! valuable it's taken and repeated, condensed, Door-to-door selling with broadcast, tweeted, fast results! It's the easiest discussed, p o sted, way in the world to sell. copied, edited, and emailed co u ntless times throughout the The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 day by others? Discover the Power of Newspaper Advertising in FIVE STATES NIECHANIC with just one phone call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspaper Association Network brochures call 918-288-6011 or email
cecelia©cnpa.com (PNDC)
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The Bulletin Classifieds
Full-time Administrator n eeded for a n e w Memory Care Facility opening s oo n in Advertising Account Executive Redmond, OR. Applicant must: Be at least The Bulletin is seeking a professional and 21 years of age, posdriven sales person to help local businesses sess a high school disucceed through advertising in ourCentral Orploma or the equivaegon Nickel Ads weekly publication. Distriblent, have at least 2 uted each Thursday throughout Deschutes, years of professional Jefferson, and Crook counties, The Nickel is a or management expeclassified shopper that delivers results for its rience within the last 5 advertisers. years, in a health or social service related This full time position requires a background in field, OR possess an consultative sales, territory management and accredited Bachelor's aggressive prospecting skills. Two years of Degree in a health or media sales experience is preferable, but will social service related train the right candidate. field. To apply, please
Compensationpackage consists of base plus commission. Full time, Mon-Fri.
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kathysOcountrysideliving.com
T ruck 8 Hea v y Equipment Mechanic position in sunny Central Oregon with a team of high quality professionals! R e quires general knowledge of repair. E n gine and Insight knowledge is a plus. Must have own tools and current CDL p r eferred. S uccessful candidate will perf orm s a fely a n d communicate effectively in an efficient, professional manner. Includes benefit p ackage. Wag e DOE. EO E / AAP. We are a drug free workplace. Please e mail resume t o hrmanager@hooker creek.net or fax to
Prior Service Military Are you prior service military, active or reserve? Do you need some extra cash and chasing products or I want to be a part of services from out of I your community and f the area. Sending serve your country c ash, checks, o r once again? Oregon f credit i n f ormation Army National Guard ~ may be subjected to ~ is seeking motivated FRAUD. men and women like For more informayou to join our ranks! tion about an adver- ~ Joining the Guard will f tiser, you may call open many doors for the Oregon State you with benefits such I Attorney General's C on s umerI as student loan re- II Office Protection hotline atI payment, the Montgomery Gl Bill, and I 1-877-877-9392. cheaper healthcare. LThe Bulletin g Plus, it's one of the best part-time jobs you can have while Truck Driver pursing your career FedEx Ground goals. Line Haul Driver You already know the Requirements: u runmatched pride that rent Class A C CDL comes with serving your country. The Na- with 1 year experitional Guard makes it ence; medical card, easy for you to con- doubles experience tinue to serving while preferred. Must pass b a c kreceiving v a l uable drug t e st , benefits a n d in- ground check, and creased flexibility in have clean driving many aspects of your record. Night run, life- your schedule, full time. choosing where you If interested please want to live and more. contact Perry at Contact your local Na541-420-9863. tional Guard representative and secure Looking for your next your future now! employee? SGT Oxford Place a Bulletin help (541)- 647-4582 wanted ad today and reach over 80,000 readers each week. Find exactly what Your classified ad you are looking for in the will also appear on bendbulletin.com CLASSIFIEDS which currently receives over 1.5 million page views RN - part time, for foot every month at and nail care busino extra cost. n ess. Position r e Bulletin Classifieds quires RN license, will Get Results! pay for training. For Call 385-5809 further info c ontact or place Dawn at your ad on-line at 541-788-4785. bendbulletin.com
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Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t unities
Enrollment Specialist, Bend Campus Serve as customer service staff to provide prospective students information about programs, enrollment, and admissions. 2-yr customer service exp + bilingual proficiency required. $2,301-$2,740/mo. Closes June 16.
Corrections Officer $2,934.00to $4,300.00 a month DOQ Closes July 1st, 2015
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 68 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. JeffersonCountyis an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Coordinator of Student Engagement Coordinate student/campus activities and events. Serve as advisor to the ASCOCC. Bachelors + 2 - yrs e vent planning exp. $40,'I 78-$47,830 fo r 1 1 -month c o ntract. Closes June 22.
Project CoordinatorlFaculty Research Assistant (FRA) - Part-time Oregon State University (OSU) - Cascades, in Bend, invites applications for a part-time (.40 FTE), 12 month, fixed term, Project Coordinator/Faculty Research Assistant (FRA).
Assistant Director of HR, EEOIAAITltle IX Officer Responsible for overall supervision of daily operations. Assist the HR Director with classification, compensation, employee relations, and policy development. Requires Bachelor's deree + 4-yrs exp, HRCI/SHRM certification. 45,376-$54,018/ yr. Closes June 30.
Courses to be taught may include Accounting, American Studies, Anatomy, Anthropology, Art, Art History, Biology, Business, Chemistry, Computer Science, Counseling, Creative Writing, Digital Arts, Early Childhood Education, Education MAT (Elementary and Secondary), English as a Second Language, Engineering, English, Exercise an d S p ort Science, Geology, Health Psychology, History, Hospitality, Human Development and Family Sciences,Human Physiology, Language Arts and Reading Education, Management Information Systems, Marketing, Mathematics, Natural Resources, Organic Chemistry, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Public Health, Science, Science and Mathematics Education, Sociology, Social Studies Education, Spanish, Speech Communication, Statistics 8 Tourism and Outdoor Leadership. Salary is commensurate with education and experience.
Required qualification is an advanced degree in one of the fields listed (or closely related field) and evident commitment to cultural diversity 8 educational equity. Preferred qualifications include PhD or terminal degree in one of the fields listed (or a related field), teaching experience at the college or university level, a strong commitment to undergraduate education and equity, service to students and a demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. For consideration to teach Fall 2015, applications should be received by 08/10/2015. For all other terms, applications will be accepted o nline throughout the academic year. T o review posting and apply, go to website: http:I/oregonstate.edu/jobs and review posting number 0014931. OSUis an AAIEOEIVetslDisabled.
Part Time Latino College Prep Program Coordinator Serve as primary coordinator for students preparing for post-secondary education. Establish goals and objectives of the program. $19.32 - $23.00/hr. 30hr/wk. 11months per year. Extended to open until filled. Part TimeMazama Gym Open Hours Supervisor(2 positions) Provide supervision of the Mazama Gym and Fitness Center. Summer schedule June 15 to Sept 25. Shift hours are 8:00am-1:00pm Mon-Fri, and 1:00-8:00pm Mon-Thur. Non-benefited position 10-15hrs/wk. $9.57/hr. Open Until Filled. Assistant Professor of HIT Provide classroom and lab instruction in the Health Information Technology Program. Provide student advising and assistance. Associate Degree + 1-yr exp. in HIT profession. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Open until filled.
Duties include but are not limited to development and implementation of professional development program for early childhood teachers: Conduct literature reviews and consult with the project team and other experts, receiving training and mentoring from project team experts, develop professional development program in close consultation with Dr. Lipscomb and the project team, and assist in implementation of the program. Research and Evaluation: Collaborate in the research design including development of instruments, assist with IRB documents, conduct cleaning and coding ofdata, analyze and draw own conclusions from the data. May also involve collection of research data which may include development and administering assessment/ survey tool to human subjects. Responsible for analyzing and drawing own conclusions from the collected research data. Contribute to publications, reports, and presentations for various audiences including practitioners, policy makers, academics, funders, and the general community.
Minimum/Required Qualifications include a Master's degree from an accredited institution in Child Development, Human Development and Family Sciences, Education, Educational Psychology,Developmental Psychology, Social Work, Psychology, Counseling, or other closely related field and ability to partner and collaborate with parents, teachers, schools, and community partners. The anticipated start date is 9/14/15. To ensure full consideration, applications must be received by 06/30/2015. To review full posting and apply, go to http:I/oregonstate.edu/jobs Apply to posting 0015076.
OSUis an AAIEOEfvetslDisabled.
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IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I • day night shift and other shifts as needed. WeI • currently have openings all nights of the week.• / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 8:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and / end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo• sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI E minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsg • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and / other tasks.
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IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl I including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time.
/ I~ Please submit a completed application . I '
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attention Kevin Eidred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com).
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WARNING The Bulletin
recommends that you i nvestigate eve r y phase of investment opportunities, espec ially t h ose f r o m out-of-state or offered by a person doing business out of a local motel or hotel. In- Apt JMultiplex General( vestment o ff e rings CHECKYOUR AD must be r egistered with the Oregon Department of Finance. We suggest you consult your attorney or call CON S U MER HOTLINE, on the first day it runs 1-503-378-4320, to make sure it is cor8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. rect. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to Need help fixing stuff? your ad, please conCall A Service Professional tact us ASAP so that find the help you need. corrections and any www.bendbulletin.com adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 DID YOU KNOW that The Bulletin Classified not only does newspaper media reach a Small clean studio close HUGE Audience, they to downtown. $575 also reach an ENmo., $550 dep., All GAGED AUDIENCE. utilities paid. No Discover the Power of smoking/no pets. Newspaper Advertis541-330-9769 ing in six states - AK ID, MT,OR & WA. For a free rate brochure TURN THE PAGE call 916-288-8011 or For More Ads email The Bulletin cecelia©cnpa.com (PNDC)
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Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,
TiCk, TOck TiCk, TOCk... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
AptJMultiplex NE Bendi BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Only a few left! comprehensive listing of Two & Three Bdrms with Washer/Dryer classified advertising... real estate to automotive, and Patio or Deck. merchandise to sporting (One Bdrms also avail.) goods. Bulletin Classifieds Nfountain Glen Apts appear every day in the 541.383.9313 print or on line. Professionally managed by Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com Norris & Stevens, Inc.
The Bulletin serving cenfral Dregonsince atB
Apt JMultiplex Redmondi Maintenance
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Rldgemont Apartments 2210 SMf19th Redmond, Oregon 97756
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Diesel Mechanic Les Schwab is looking for a Diesel Mechanic to join our Maintenance team! Responsibilities include preventative maintenance and repairs on tractors, trailers, dollies, corporate vehicles and forklifts. Also responsible for major component overhaul and diagnosis. Other duties include repair orders and cleaning and maintaining the shop area. Requirements include a high school diploma or equivalent, valid Class A CDL or the ability to acquire one within 3 months of hire (must meet DOT 3.96 regulations). Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. Pleasego to www.lesschwab.com to apply.No phone calls please.
Now accepting app lications for t h e waiting list of t his federally fun d ed housing community. 1 & 2 Bedroom units with rent based on income when available. Project Phone ¹: 541-598-7282 TTY ¹: 1-(800)-735-2900
This institute is an equal opportunity provider.
II, Ng!NNII We are currently accepting applications for the following positions:
No phone calls please. * No resumes will be accepted *
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Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE. .
The Bulletin
Performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliations, consolidation journal entries, intercompany eliminations and financial statement consolidation and distribution. Will assist in the specification, design, implementation and training for new ERP and CPM solution. Requirements include BS in Accounting (MBA/CPA preferred), 7-10 years' related experience, prior experience as Congnos/Hyperion/Host Analytics/Other CPM solutions administrator, prior experience with ERP implementations and proficiency with Excel.
Senjor Accountant Performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliations, journal entries and post-close account analyses and reports. Will participate in and support other team members during the design and implementation of new ERP and CPM solution. Requirements include BS in Accounting (MBA/CPA preferred), 5-7 years' related experience, proficiency with Excel and prior experience with large-scale ERP systems or implementations is preferred.
Staff Accountant Performs month-end financial close duties including account reconciliations, journal entries and account analyses and reports. Will participate in and support other team members during the design and implementation of new ERP and CPM solution. Requirements include BS in Accounting, 3-5 years' related experience, proficiency with Excel, and Prior experience with large-scale ERP systems or implementations is preferred.
Accountant (entry)
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Les Schwabis proud to be an equal opportunity employer.
Part-Time Instructor Positions NEW - College Level Writing, Developmental Writing, Veterinary Librarian, Geology and Chemistry Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https:I/jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
Faculty Researcher (FRA) - Full-time
M A Y O R S
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Business Opportunities
LOCALNIONEyrWe buy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.
EMT Practical ExamTest Proctor Seeking test proctor for EMT testing stations, during National Registry EMT practical exam. Test date is Saturday, June 20. Current CPR+ EMT Certifications req. $20/hr. Temporary, non-benefited position. Closes June 20.
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Rmijm89
DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.
has o p enings l i sted b e l ow. G o to https:/ffobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer.
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I M P A G U I T A F L A F A D O L F D E C S F O B A R B A C K U S T G R O U L A V E K U K A L T U N A A K E S I L A I T N B Y A M C T S O
PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2
BANK TURNED YOU
541-749-2024.
Oregon State University (OSU) - Cascades, in Bend, invites applications for a full-time (1.0 FTE), 12 m o nth, f i xed t e rm, F aculty Researcher (FRA) position. The person in this position will work under the guidance of Dr. Shannon Lipscomb who is conducting research on school readiness in young children and professional development of early childhood teachers.
A S I S I E S T L E A D Y O S P O O U T S E S A R O S L O T H E S S G A I N O O R H O Y S I N E T E S C U S O V M O N E O B E R V I A G A T R E
1-877-877-9392.
The project coordinator's duties include but are not limited to collecting and compiling reDuties include teaching Chemistry lab courses search data for school readiness in young and lab preparation and coordination for children and professional development of course instruction. Salary is commensurate early childhood teachers. Recruit participants, with education and experience. Required score tests, lead data entry and management qualifications include an advanced degree and maintain accurate records of information (M.S.) in Chemistry (or closely related field) collected, assist with IRB documents and parand an e v ident commitment to c u ltural ticipate in preparing publications, reports and diversity 8 e d ucational equity. Preferred presentations summarizing information based qualifications include a Ph.D. in Chemistry (or on research. Schedule and coordinate project closely related field), teaching experience at activities and dissemination of research findt he college or u niversity level, and a ings, including maintaining the project website. demonstrable commitment to promoting and enhancing diversity. Preferred qualifications include a Master's degree with coursework in Human Development For full consideration for the Chemistry lab and Family Sciences, Education, Educational position, applications should be received by Psychology,Developmental Psychology, So6/19/15 but position is open until filled. cial Work, or other closely related field and T o review posting and a pply, g o t o experience working in or in collaboration with http:I/oregonstate.edu/jobs. Apply to posting early learning (child care, preschool, Head 0014931. You will be required to electroniStart) settings. cally submit a letter of application describing your experience, qualification and interest in To ensure full consideration, applications must Chemistry la b i n s truction a n d d u t ies, be received by 06/30/2015. The anticipated resume/vita, and names/phone ¹'s of three start date is 9/14/15. To review full posting professional references. Please include a and apply, go to http:I/oregonstate.edu/jobs statement of teaching philosophy in your Apply to posting 0015081. documents. OSUis an AAIEOEIVetsfDisabled. OSV is an AAIEOEIVetslDisabled.
OSU-Cascades, in Bend, is recruiting for full/part-time Instructors to teach on a term by term basis for the 2015/2018 academic year. These are fixed-term appointments. Some of these appointments may be reviewed for renewal or t ransition to a n i n structional position on an annual basis at the discretion of the Dean of OSU-Cascades.
U P C S T E A D E A R L Y P H I LS A L O N T H E I C E A X S O M N I E S P C O B S G U R U O H A R A T U R N F T R Y L O A T A B A V O T E N I NT H E A L O E L A O S S Y S T
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This position involves general ledger accounting, fixed assets, payroll, internal audit and financial reporting and analysis. Will contribute to the overall success of new ERP solution. Recent Accounting Business Admin/Finance graduates or candidates with a few years' experience are encouraged to apply. Requirements include BS in Accounting, 0-2 years' related experience and proficiency with Excel. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. Pleasego to www.lesschwab.com toapply.N o phone calls please. Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer.
G4 SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN RV Parking
Open Houses
RV space for rent, NE Redmond, quiet setting, beautiful canyon views. $350/mo., includes water & sewer.
Open 12N 845 NW Fort Clatsop St. NorthWest Crossing Traditional Charm Kerri Standerwick, Broker 541-325-2534
541-419-1917
theGarnerGroup.com
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FSBO, Turn Key Ready 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq. ft. Extremely Motivated, $195K. Not Firm
744
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a ROW I N G
541-280-3804
TheGamerGroup.com
g IZh225
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with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
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Call 54 I -385-5809 to r o m ot e o u r service Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to SERVINGCENTRAL OREGON be licensed with the siace 2003 Construction Contrac- Realdeatlal & Cemmerclal tors Board (CCB). An Sprinkler active license means the contractor Actlvatlon/Repalr is bonded & insured. Back Flow TestlnII Verify the contractor's MAINTRNANCR CCB l i c ense at www.hirealicensed• Thatch & Aerate contractor.com • Sprlng Clean up or call 503-378-4621. • Weekly Mowlng The Bulletin recommends checking with & Edglng the CCB prior to con• Bl-Monthly & tracting with anyone. MonthlyMalntenance Some other t rades also req u ire addi- • Bark, Rock, Etc. tional licenses and IAMlSCAPING certifications.
Handyman
I DO THAT!
Handyman/Remodeli ng Residential/Commercial Small jobs ro Earire Room Remodels Garage Organisation Home Inspection Repairs Quality, Honest Work
Dennis 541.317.9768 ccag1 51573arrrrr/edl/nsgrer/
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: '10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only) andscaping/Yard Care
ZurrezQaa/ep Zarp4 gdr e r<g. Full Service
Landscape Management
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• H o mes for Sale •
WeedFree Bark & FlowerBeds
Lawn Renovation Aeration - Dethatching Overseed Compost Top Dressing
Landscape Maintenance Full or Partial Service •Mowing aEdging •Pruning aWeeding Water Management
Fertilizer included with monthly program Weekly, monthly or one time service.
Managlng Central Oregon Landscapes Slnce 2006 Senior Discounts
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
870
870
Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
Boats & Accessories
880
Moto r homes
Motorhomes
NEW Creek Company NOTICE ODC1624 3 man inAll real estate adverflatable pontoon boat. tised here in is subN ever used, w a s ject to th e Federal $ 3000, selling f o r F air Housing A c t , $2000 firm. which makes it illegal 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 24' 1988 Sweetwater Allegro 32' 2007, like Monaco Monarch 31' 541-981-0230 to advertise any prefWakeboard Boat pontoon boat, runs new, only 12,600 miles. 2006, Ford V 10, 850 erence, limitation or I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 28,900 good, $8000. miles, discrimination based Snowmobiles tons of extras, low hrs. Say agoodbuy" transmission, dual ex- auto-level, 2 slides, (661) 599-3852 on race, color, reliFull wakeboard tower, haust. Loaded! Auto-levto that unused ion, sex, handicap, b ed 8 light bars, Polk audio 9' eling system, 5kw gen, queen L ivingston, 6 h p amilial status or naspeakers throughout, item by placing it in power mirrors w/defrost, hide-a-bed sofa, 4k Evinrude motor. Very tional origin, or intenconvection micompletely wired for good cond. $300/obo The Bulletin Classifieds 2 slide-outs with aw- gen, tion to make any such amps/subwoofers, unnings, rear c a mera, crowave, 2 TVs, tow 541-480-6565 preferences, l i mitaderwater lights, fish trailer hitch, driver door package. tions or discrimination. finder, 2 batteries cusw/power window, cruise, PRICE REDUCTION! Ads published in the 5 4 1 a385-5809 We will not knowingly 4-place enclosed Inter- tom black paint job. exhaust brake, central $59,000. "Boats" classification state snowmobile trailer accept any advertisvac, satellite sys. Re$12,500 541-815-2523 include: Speed, fishw/ Rocky Mountain pkg, ing for real estate duced price: $64,950. 875 ing, drift, canoe, 503-781-8812 which is in violation of $7500. 541-379-3530 Watercraft 18' Bayliner 175 Capri, house and sail boats. this law. All persons 860 For all other types of like new, 135hp I/O, ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , Safari 1998 motorare hereby informed watercraft, please go ds published in aWa B one slide, low milethat all dwellings ad- Motorcycles & Accessories low time, Bimini top, home 30', low mileto Class 875. tercraft" include: Kay many extras, Karaage, very clean, lots age, 300 HP Magvertised are available 541-385-5809 aks, rafts and motor van trailer with swing of storage, $26,500. num Cat motor with on an equal opportuIzed personal 541-639-9411 neck, current registranity basis. The Bulleturbo, always inside, watercrafts. Fo tions. $8000. tin Classified gervrng Cenfral Oregon rinre rg03 white leather inte"boats" please se 541-350-2336 rior, like new, has Bayliner 185 2006 Class 870. m any extr a s . 41-365-5809 Just bought a new boat? open bow. 2nd owner $50,000. S e rious Sell your old one in the • g • r'. Harley Davidson — low engine hrs. callers only. -RR classifieds! Ask about our — fuel injected V6 Heritage Soft Tail 541-548-8415 Super Seller rates! Classic 2006, black — Radio & Tower. 541-385-5809 cherry pearl, Stage 1 Fleetwood D i scovery Great family boat 880 tune Vance 8 Hines 40' 2003, diesel, w/all NWX 3bdrm, 2baths, Priced to sell. Winnebago pipes, always gaMotorhomes options - 3 slide outs, s unroom, close t o $11,590. raged. TLC, 8100 Journey satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, schools, parks, priv. 541-548-0345. miles, new tires, etc., 34,000 m i les. 2001 36' 2nd owner, back yard, patio, Irg. $10,900 Wintered in h eated 300 Cummins Turbo porch, $545K. 2471 Compressor Ingersall 541-388-8434 shop. $78,995 obo. diesel, Allison 5 spd, NW Shields Dr. 5hp/60gal, $175/obo 541-447-8664 80k miles. D n v er Karen, 541.390.6584 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, 541-460-6565 s ide s l ide, g a s great shape, call for stove, oven, 2 flat Creek Company info. $8500. In Bend Planning a Move'? AlfaSee ya 2006 36' screen TVs, refer, ODC1220 2 man in661-644-0384. Choose a Realtor Price reduced to generator, inverter, flatable pontoon boat, $68,500! With Experience. King Dome, tow bar. Exc. cond., 1 seldom used, was owner, 350 Call for Information Non-smoker, no Cat diesel, Harley Road K i ng $ 2000, s elling f o r 52,000 miles, Harcourts 4-door pets, no c hildren. Classic 2003, 100th firm. $1000 The Garner Group fndge, icemaker, gas C lean, an d w ell Anniversary Edition, Freightliner 1994 541-981-0230 stove, oven, washer/ maintained, $47,500 541 383-4360 16,360 mi. $ 12,499 Custom 54'I -390-1472. TheGarnerGroup.com dryer, non- smoker, 3 Bruce 541-647-7076 Motorhome slides, generator, in19' Pioneer ski boat, Will haul small SUV Honda Magna 750cc vertor, leather interior, 1983, vm tandem or toys, and pull a motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 Notor Boaf Service satellite, 7'4 n ceiling. trailer, V8. Fun & trailer! Powered by miles, $3250. Clean!541-233-6520 fast! $5350 obo. 8.3 Cummins with 6 541-546-3379 Full Service 8 541-815-0936. speed Allison auto Repair on trans, 2nd owner. Outboard Motors Very nice! $53,000. Winnebago Outlook FIJN & FISH! 541-350-4077 n & Stern Drives. 2007 Class "C 31', Looking for your next clean nonsmoking 20571 Empire Ave, emp/oyee? exc. cond. Must See! Bend 541-647-1377 Place a Bulletin help RV Lots of extra's, a very Honda Shadow SaALLEGRO 27' 2002 wanted ad today and CONSIGNMENTS 56k mi., 1 slide, vacagood buy.$47,900 bre, 2002, 1100cc, reach over 60,000 WANTED For more info call excellent condition w/ tion use only, Mich- We Do readers each week. The Work ... 541-447-9268 elin all weather tires extras, 13k orig. mi. 2006 Smokercraft Your classified ad Keep The Cash! New battery and new w/5000 mi., no acci- YouOn-site Sunchaser 820 Winnebago Superchief will also appear on credit front tire. $3100 obo. model pontoon boat, dents, non-smokers, 1990 27' clean, 454 bendbulletin.com approval team, 703-244-3251 Workhorse e n gine 75HP Mercury and C hevy, runs v e ry which currently reweb site presence. 261-A, Allison Trans., electric trolling moood. good t i res, ceives over We Take Trade-Ins! GREAT FUN two Kabackup cam e ra, tor, full canvas and 8500. 541-279-9458. 1.5 million page 1200's heated mirrors, new wasaki many extras. views every month BIG COUNTRY RV w averunners wit h refrig. unit., exc. conStored inside at no extra cost. 541-330-2495 Find It in trailer. Ready to go. ditioned, well cared Bend:Redmond: $19,900 Bulletin Classifieds Low hours. $6000.00 for The Bulletin Classiledsl $3 4 000 o b o i 541-350-5425 541-548-5254 Get Results! CASH* 541-390-4836 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. 541-385-5809 Moto Guzzi B r eva Call 385-5809 or 1 100 2 0 07 , onl y place your ad on-line at 11,600 miles. $5,950. 206-679-4745 bendbulletin.com
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• Landscape Constructlon • Water Feature Installatlon/Malnt. • Synthetlc lbrf • Pavers • Renovatfons • Irrlgatlons Installatlon Recreational Homes Senlor Dlscounts & Property Bonded and Insured • 541-815-4458 Cabin in the woods on Lca» 87se trout stream, private, •
Two Twin Yamaha TW200 st o ck w ith off the grid, 80 mi. fatty tires 2007 with NOTICE: Oregon Land- from Bend. 638 ac. 1155 miles, 2007 with scape Contractors Law $849K. For d r one 1069 miles. $3600 for (ORS 671) requires all video li n k , call one or $7000 for two businesses that ad- 541-460-7215. obo. 5 4 1 -588-0068 vertise t o p e r form Landscape Construc- SNOW BIRD ESCAPE cell, 541-549-4834 hm tion which includes: Gold Canyon, AZ. l anting, deck s , (Mesa area) 1998 ences, arbors, Hallmark Park mdl. water-features, and in- w/AZ room (total 650 stallation, repair of ir- sq. ft.) Full view surigation systems to be perstition mtns. - Valicensed w i t h the and t u rn-key. Yamaha V-Star 250cc Landscape Contrac- cant 3278 mi., exc. 62,500. Call J i m : 2011, tors Board. This 4-digit $ cond. $4700 OBO. number is to be in- 541-388-3209. Dan 541-550-0171. cluded in all adverAdvertise your car! tisements which indiAdd APicture! cate the business has Farms & Ranches Reach thousands of readers! a bond, insurance and Call 541-385-5809 workers compensa- Beautiful Bend Oregon The Bulletin Classifieds tion for their employ- mini ranch. 2083 sq. ees. For your protec- ft., 3bdrm, 2.5 bath, 870 tion call 503-378-5909 single story on 5.03 or use our website: ac. close to t own. Boats 8 Accessories www.lcb.state.or.us to Large shop, 24x36 check license status horse barn, 2 4x36 before contracting with equip. bldg. 2 loafing the business. Persons sheds, round p en, doing lan d scape garden, greenhouse. maintenance do not Irrigated, cross fenced r equire an LC B l i - and gated. 6 1 667 cense. Somerset Dr. By appt. 14' Klamath, 15 hp $619,000. Johnson, all the exPainting/Wall Covering 541-389-3769, or tras, $2,500 f i rm. 541-213-6179. 541-389-3690
Spring CleanUp •Leaves •Cones •Needles •Debris Hauling
880
870
• Interior and Exterior • Family.Owned • Residential a Commercial • 40 years experience • Senior Discounts • 5.year Warranties
Aakahoutour SPRING SPECI/U,!
Call 541.420-7846 CCBg204918
MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License «166147 LLC
541-815-2888
List your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511
What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds
Association of
REALTORS.
Gain valuable sales experience by promoting The Bulletin (the most trusted media source in the region) to assist them with sale efforts. Your Neighborhood Publications, LLC offers you an opportunity to work in a social atmosphere that
16' 1976 Checkmate ski boat, 90HP Mercury motor, restored; new seats, new c a rpet floor, new prop, with trailer. Have receipts. $2500. 541-536-1395 16' Smokercraft Lodge SS 2001„ ha s t iller 40HP Yamaha, 6HP Yamaha 4 - strokes, galv. Smokercraft trlr, FishFinder and extras. current tags and lic. $6250. 541- 5 363045, 541- 420-0959
AVERAGES $300 - $500 WEEKLY. All we ask of you is that you are 18 years or older, dependable, have you own car and are self motivated.
541-385-5809 •
Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 8 77-955-5505. (PNDC) Thank you St. Jude & Sacred H e art of Jesus. j.d.
17.5' Bass Tracker 2011, V175, 90HP, less than 40 hrs. All welded hull. S eats five, walk-thru windshield. Folding tongue, custom cover, trolling motor, stored inside garage. Surge brakes, new tires and spare. Rad i o/disc player. 2 Lwe wells, ski pole, $ 16,000. 541-410-2426
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Y OUR NEIGHBORHOO D PUBLICATIONS, LLC ISSEEKING SALE PEOPLE TO START NOW.
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Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center & 2 miles of walking trails. Tour a variety of single level and 2 story plans.
Recently finished Pahlisch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances and all the Directions:North on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes is rlght on Sierra OR nonh on 18th known for. Now selling from Empire, lePonSierra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for SfgtK more information. Homes &om the
Hosted 6 Listed by
TEAM DELAY Principal Broker
EDIE DELAY
15th, at Road Detour Sign turn le ft on Ferguson. Right atSageCreek Drige, left ai /ifrmhae Lane, righl ai GoldenGate.
Homes Starting Mid-$200s Q
Hosted & Listed byi
RHIANNA KUNIKER ABR, SRS
541-420-2$50 PahllschHomes g • • • • o • a
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541-506-0939
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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
/?dn firSt eXII at rOundabaut On!O
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Directions: East on Reed /Ifar/ret
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Beautiful custom-built o ne level w / 3- c a r
garage. Hand-scraped maple floors throughout; travertine tile in baths.
Come see all the extras this 2230 sq. ft. 3 bed, 2 bath home has t o offer. No C C&Rs or HOAs for this .24 acre lot located in gorgeous Three Pines subdivision!
62701 Mt.Thiejsen Dr.Bend DiregrieagiNW Shgglia parh Rd. te Nrr Park CeagmoagDr. Take Iglt ee
Mt. Jefferson, left /irt. Shasta, rigbt Mt. Sbusta Ctn le ft/irt. ttuelgea.
$639,900
Hosted 6 Listed byi
CHRIS McPHEETERS Principal Broker
541-388-2111
AssistASell.
TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 881 882 908 Travel Trailers Fifth Wheels Aircraft, Parts
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY JUNE 14 2015 G5 932
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Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Pickups
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8
A ero Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.
Dodge Ram 1500 2 004, quad c a b , t 4x4, black, 1 owner, «. 'a. 90K m i. , $ 9 7 00. Ford F-150 2007, Super Crewcab VW S unBug 1 9 74 541-350-8678 VIN ¹C09983 $24,888. exc. cond. Total inte(exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 rior refurbish, engine OH, new floor pan, plus lots more! Sunr oof. C l ea n ti t l e. $9500. 541-504-5224 933
541-548-1448
Dodge Ram 1500 2009 4 dr., crew cab VIN ¹711891.$28,998.
Pickups
smolichmotors.com
(exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366
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Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,
t~
hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or refinance. Call
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Fun Finder 2008 21' sleeps 6, walk- around queen, extras, must see. $10,500 obo. 541-233-9424
541-410-5649 Justtoo many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
Heartland Pro w ler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r ge closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awning, power hitch & stabilizers, full s ize queen bed , l a r ge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571
541-385-5809 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,
You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$13,000. Call 541-815-2144
541-549-4834 home
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
sults! Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882
Fifth Wheels
CHECKyOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct."Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
541-385-4790
Ford Escape 2014, 2.0L 1-4 cyl VIN ¹A46674. $24,888.
Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland 2012, 4x4 V-6, all options, running boards, front guard, nav., air and heated leather, custom wheels and new tires, only 41K miles, $31,995 541-408-7908 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
(exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366
Chevy1992 % fon 350 V8, auto., 2WD. clean inside. Good tires, radio and GPS. $2899/OBO 541-419-5060
Nissan Frontier Crew Cab2013, 4.0L V-6 cyl VIN ¹727615 $24,997.
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.com
(exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366
SMOLICH
CAL LW
V Q LV Q
TODAYA
541-546-1448
BMW X3 Si 20 07, Low Miles - 68,500, AWD, leather Inte-
smolichmotors.com
Jeep Willys, metal top, big tires, ps, new paint, tow bar, new gauges, etcH. $5500. 541-233-7272
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an se our s u as In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds.
A dd c o l o r p h o t o s f o r p e t s , r eal e s t a t e , a u t o & m o re !
932
Antique & Classic Autos
CAR AUCTION Sat., July 11 Roseburg Graffiti Weekend Call to Consign
GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005.This truck are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillneed. Roomtogrowinyour a tough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.
1/3 interest in
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$125,000
(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333
CHEVELLE MALIBV 1971 57K original miles, 350 c.i., auto, stock, all original, Hi-Fi stereo $15,000
1/5 share in v ery nice 150 HP Cessna 150; 1973 C e s sna 541-279-1072 150 with L ycoming 0-320 150 hp engine conversion, 400 0 hours. TT a irframe. Approx. 400 hours on 0-timed 0-320. Hangared in nice (electric door) city-owned hangar at the Bend AirMustang port. One of very few Hard top1985, C-150's t h a t has 6-cylinder, auto trans, never been a trainer. power brakes, power $4500 wi ll consider steering, garaged, trades for whatever. well maintained, Call J i m Fr a zee, engine runs strong. 541-410-6007 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940 F ord p ickup 1 9 5 1 c ustom, o a k b ox. F35 Bonanza. Aircraft AM/FM cassette, new is in exc. cond., w/ brakes, 289 V-8, '67 good paint 8 newer Mustang engine in this. interior. Full IFR. Auto Edelbrock intake and pilot, yaw d amper, carb CFM. 10,461 mi. engine monitor. on engine. $12,500. 6485TT, 1615SMOH, 541-610-2406. 692STOH. Hangered in Bend. $29,500 or $13,000 for ys share. Call Bob Carroll 541-550-7382
arcarrollg©gmail.com
HANGAR FOR SALE. Mercedes 380SL 1982 30x40 end unit T Roadster, black on hanger in Prineville. black, soft & hard top, micro, awning slide Dry walled, insulated, exc.cond., always gao ut, m u c h mor e and painted. $23,500. raged. 155K miles, $9000. 541-876-5073. Tom, 541.788.5546 $11,500. 541-549-6407
FOUR WINDS 2003 5th wheel 26L, A/C, CD,
Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170
541-416-9686
541-689-6824
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-
Chevy Tahoe 1995, 4 dr. 4x4, auto, tow pkg, leather, a/c, like new tires. reg. to 10/16. Runs great, very good c ond., $4800 .
BMW X3 35i 2010
929
petersencollectorcars.com
Unique R-Pod 2013 trailer-tent combo, f ully l oaded, e x tended service contract and bike rack. $17,000. 541-595-3972 or 503-780-4487
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541-749-2156 rior, sunroof, blueChevy Pickup 1978, tooth, voice comsmolichvolvo.com long bed, 4x4, frame (Photo for illustration only) mand system, and up restoration. 500 Ford F- 150 2007, too much more to list Cadillac eng i ne, Super crewcab, 74K mi. here. $15, 9 00. fresh R4 transmis- VIN ¹C52685. $21,998. 925 Need to get an Please call Dan at sion w/overdrive, low Hyundai Veracruz (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 Lexus RX35002012, Utility Trailers ad in ASAP? 541-815-6611 2008, 63.8L V-6 cyl mi., no rust, custom 3.5L V-6 cyl interior and carpet, You can place it VIN ¹061266 $16,997. VIN ¹126992. $29,997. Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 n ew wheels a n d (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 online at: sets of straps, exc. tires, You must see FIND IT! SMOLICH c ond., capable o f it! $25,000 invested. www.bendbulletin.com SMOLICH BUT IT! p ulling a f u l l s i ze $12,000 V O LV O SELL ITr V Q LV Q pickup truck. If inter- 541-536-3889 OBO. 541-548-1448 or 541-385-5809 541-749-2156 ested we will send 541-420-6215. The Bulletin Classifieds 541-749-2156 smolichmotors.com smolichvolvo.com pictures. $1000 obo. smolichvolvo.com 951-961-4590
BIG COUNTRY RV Automotive Wanted Keystone SpringBend: 541-330-2495 dale 20 1 0, 2 1 ' , Redmond: DONATE YOUR CAR, sleeps 6, DVD & CD 541-548-5254 TRUCK OR BOAT TO player, 60 g a llon HERITAGE FOR THE freshwater, 7 cu.ft. BLIND. Free 3 Day 885 fridge. Leveling hitch V acation, Tax D e & j acks, a wning, Canopies & Campers ductible, Free Towing, spare tire, lots of Paperwork Taken storage. New cond., Canopy for Toyota p/up All Care O f. CALL only 3,000 m iles. short bed 60"wx63"L 1-800-401-4106 Priced below Blue $200 928-581-9190 (PNDC) Book, $10,500. Call Rick for more info. Got an older car, boat 541-633-7017 or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane SociRV ety. Call 1800-205-0599 CONSIGNMENTS WANTED Northlander 1993 (PNDC) 17' camper,Polar We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! 931 990, good shape, On-site credit new fridge, A/C, Automotive Parts, approval team, queen bed, bathService & Accessories web site presence. room, indoor/outWe Take Trade-Ins! door shower, lots of EAZ-Lift weight distristorage, custombution hitch system. BIG COUNTRY RV eized to fit newer 14,000 Lb.- 'I400 lb., Bend: 541-330-2495 pickups,$4500 obo. $85. 541-416-9686 Redmond: 541-419-9859. 541-548-5254 Snug Top white canopy for short bed pickup. L ike n e w , $300. Heavy duty l adder rack for pickup, 6' tool/parts boxes on each s i de, $ 2 7 5.
Springdale 2006 26' bunkhouse, exc. cond, 12' p op-out, stored in RV garage. Well cared for. Many extras. $12,000 obo. 541-588-0068, c e l l,
935
Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
Ldon'tlaS/!
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Extra clean 2005 For- Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 est River (Salem) 25' travel trailer. Sleeps 6. Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, Hard to find rear acfireplace, 2 TV's, cess storage. Walk CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner around queen size bed. A/C. 1 slide out. w/surround sound, A/C, Microwave, refrigera- custom bed, ceiling fan, tor/freezer. Awning. W/D ready, many extras. Level jacks. N o rth New awning & tires. West package. Must Exc. cond. Tow vehicle also avail.$17,900 obo. see! $8,975. More pics. 541-923-6408 541-410-2707
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automotive categories.
The Bulletin To placeyour photo ad,visit Usonline at
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5 4 1 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9 HOU RS : Monday-Friday 7:30 am to 5:00 pm
TELEPHONE H O U RS: Monday-Friday 7:30 am-5 pm. Saturday 10 am-12:30 pm 24 HOUR M E S S AG E L I NE: 541-383-2371 place, cancel or extend an ad after hours
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P erfect setup f o r a n i m a ls. Tw o l a r g e outbuildings with attached studio apartment. Walk-in meat cooler and meat cutting room. Fully fenced with room for RV and hookups included. Great potential! $299,000
ChriS MCPheeterS, Principal Broker
541-588-2111
Q j4siSI~e g,
G6 SUNDAY, JUNE 14, 2015 • THE BULLETIN 935
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Sport Utility Vehicles
Auto m obiles
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 975
975
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Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Porsche Cayman S 2 008, L i k e new , 14,500 miles, $35,000. 360-510-3153 (Bend) Toyota FJ Cruiser 2012, 64K miles. all hwy, original owner, never been off road or accidents, tow pkg, brand new tires, very clean. $26,000. Call or text Jeff at
Chevy Maiibu2012,
LEXUS SC430 2002 hard top convertible Vin ¹299392 only 54k miles, new Stock ¹44256A Mich P i lot t i r es, $15,979 or $189/mo., 6-pak cd + cassette, $2500 down, 84 mo., Nav, new custom 4 .49% APR o n a p - rims plus f a ctory proved credit. License rims, plugs, wipers, and title i ncluded in K&N air filters, cuspayment, plus dealer in- tom bra. All n ew stalled options. clean Carfax & title. SUBAR LL Like new only $18,750 obo 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 928-210-8323 Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Call a Pro
(exp. 6/1 7/1 5)
541-729-4552 940
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Vans
Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 54$ -385-5809
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Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹82770
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(exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366
$16,977 or $199/mo.,
SMOLICH V Q L V Q
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proved credit. License
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com
The Bulletin
$2600 down, 84 mo. at 4 .49% APR o n a p and title i ncluded in
payment, plus dealer installed options.
®
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S UBA RU. sessavovsano con
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Fax it te 541-322-7253
Dlr¹0354
DID YOU KNOW 144 million U.S. A d ults
FAST! If it's under$500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
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Volvo XC60T6 2014, 3.2L 1-6 cyl VIN ¹556445 $36,997.
sROWII)I6
Sell an Item
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read a N e wspaper print copy each week? Scion TCcoupe 2007, Discover the Power of MercedesBenz CL PRINT N e wspaper (exp. 6/17/15) auto, 133K mi. 2001, Vin ¹198120 Advertising in Alaska, VIN ¹192261 $6,888. (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Stock ¹44193B Subaru Outback XT (exp. 6/17/15) DLR ¹366 Idaho, Montana, OrVin ¹016584 egon and Washing$10,379 or $149/mo., 2006, Stock ¹83285 $2800 down, 60 mo., t on with j ust o n e (exp. 6/1 7/15) $8,979 or $169/mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p p hone call. Fo r a $1800 down, 48 mo., VIN ¹313068 FREE ad v e rtising 4 .49% APR o n a p - proved credit. License Stock ¹44631A and title included in network brochure call proved credit. License payment, plus dealer in- $11,999 or $149/rn., 916-288-6011 or and title i ncluded in $2800 down, 72 mo., stalled options. 541-548-1448 4 .49% APR o n a p email payment, plus dealer insmolichmotors.com proved credit. License cecelia©cnpa.com stalled options. SUBAR Ll snd title included in (PNDC) 975 © s u a A Ru 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. payment, plus dealer 877-266-3821 Automobiles installed options. Ford Fusion SE 2012, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 12,500+ miles, l i ke 877-266-3821 S UBA R U . new, $14,500 obo. Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 541-598-7718 or 877-266-3821 541-261-1445
(photo forillustration only)
Dodge Grand Caravan 2007,
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sembly, however, has e xtended the p r o gram through Sept ember 3 0 , 20 1 9 ; thus, the federal approval is necessary in order to meet Legislative requirements for the next biennium.
EFFECTIVE DATE: July 1, 2016
HOW TO COMMENT: Send written comA supplemental budments by fax, mail or get will be discussed email to: and adopted for the Janna Starr, f iscal year July 1 , Looking for your 1115 Demonstration 2014 to June 30, 2015 next employee? Manager for the City of Red- The Hospital TransPlace a Bulletin help mond, State of O rformation Per f o r- Division of Medical wanted ad today and egon. The meeting mance Pro g r am Assistance Programs reach over 60,000 will take place on the (HTPP) rewards hos- 500 Summer Street NE readers each week. 23rd day of June at pitals for i m proved Salem, Oregon 97301 Your classified ad Fax: 503-373-7689 6:30 pm at Redmond performance w h ich will also appear on Email: Council C h ambers. the s tate b e lieves bendbulletin.com janna.starr©state.or.us The purpose of the leads to better health Dlr ¹0354 which currently remeeting is to discuss care and better health ceives over 1.5 miland adopt the resolu- care outcomes for the lion page views tion for the supple- more than 1.3 million PUBLIC NOTICE every month at m ental budget. A people covered by the no extra cost. Bullecopy of the supple- Oregon Health Plan The Bend Park & Rectin Classifieds mental budget may be (OHP), and for others reation District Board Get Results! Call inspected or obtained throughout Oregon. of Directors will meet 385-5809 or place Toyota Corolla 2013, on or after June 17th, The program compli- in a work session at your ad on-line at (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) 2015. ments Oregon's larger 5:30 pm, T uesday, bendbuiietin.com Vin ¹053527 health system trans- June 16, 2015 at the Stock ¹83072 LEGAL NOTICE formation efforts and district office, 799 SW $15,979 or $199 rn., REQUEST FOR supports coordinated Columbia, Bend, Or$2000 down, 84 mo., Garage Sales COMMENTS health care by facili- egon. Agenda topics 4 .49% APR o n a p tating reform in hos- include alcohol sales proved credit. License Garage Sales PROPOSALTO pitals, a major part of and consumption, afand title i ncluded in EXTEND THE the health care deliv- fordable housing and payment, plus dealer in- Garage Sales OREGON HEALTH ery system. a fourth-quarter restalled options. AUTHORITY'S v iew of the CIP A Find them HOSPITAL BACKGROUND: regular bus i ness S UBA RU. eeesaeovaeeo.oort TRANSFORMATION Since July 1, 2014, meeting will convene in 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. PERFORMANCE under its 1115 Dem- at 7:00 pm for t he 877-266-3821 The Bulletin PROGRAM THROUGH onstration, the State Board to consider apDlr ¹0354 JUNE 30, 2017 has operated a hos- proval of a resolution Classifieds pital "incentive pool", on aff ordable housing. C OMMENTS D U E : the HTPP, to issue 541-385-5809 The Bulletin's July 15, 2015 payments to partici- The board will con"Call A Service pating hospitals for duct a n ex e cutive Professional" Directory The Bulletin recoml PROPOSAL: The Or- adopting initiatives to session pursuant to is all about meeting egon Health Authority improve the quality of ORS 1 9 2.660(2)(i) mends extra caution l ORS yourneeds. when p u rchasing x (OHA) is proposing to Oregon's health care and request approval from system and to mea- 192.660(2)(e) for the f products or services Call on one of the the federal Depart- sure that i m prove- purpose of reviewing from out of the area. professionals today! f S ending c ment of Health and ment. Specific quality and evaluating the ash , Ser v i ces metrics were devel- performance of an ofx checks, or credit in- x Human I formation may be I (HHS), Centers for oped by the Hospital ficer, employee, or Medicare and Medic- Performance Metrics staff member and for reg [ subject toFRAUD. aid Services (CMS) to Advisory Committee, the purpose of disFor more informaf tion about an adver- extend Oregon's Hos- OHA, and CMS as a cussing real property pital Transformation way t o me a sure transactions. tiser, you may call P erformance P r o - progress towards the I the ' Oregon State Toyota MR2 S pyder Attorney General's f gram through June state's health system T he a g enda a n d transformation goals. s upplementary r e 2 001 5 spd, e x c . Office C o nsumer 30, 2017. The procond., pre-sale in- f Protection hotline at gram began in July For more information ports are posted on 2014, and federal ap- on the HTPP, go to: the district's website, spection by Napa me- 1-877-877-9392. proval is currently due http://www.oregon.gov www.bendparksanchanic with r eport. to expire June 30, drec.org. For more /oha/analytics/Pages/ T rue s p orts c a r ! Serving Central Oregon sincetggs 2016. The 2015 OrHospital-Baseline-Dat information call $7900. 541-728-0445 egon Legislative As- a.aspx. 541-389-7275.
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BMyy328i XDrive 2011, 3.0L 1-6 cyl VIN ¹N81801 $23,995.
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smolichvolvo.com
Subaru GT Legacy 2006,
MercedesBenz E Class 2005, Ford FusionSEL2012, (exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Vin ¹1'I 7015 Stock ¹44382A
(exp. 6/1 7/1 5)
Vin ¹212960 Stock ¹83174
(exp. 6/1 7/1 5) Vin ¹688743
$14,972 or $179/mo.,
Stock ¹8231 6
$2500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p $2500 down 72 mo. proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p - and title i ncluded in $2400 down, 84 mo., proved credit. License payment, plus dealer in4 .49% APR o n a p and title included in proved credit. License payment, plus dealer in- stalled options. and title i ncluded in SUBAR Ll payment, plus dealer in- stalled options. stalled options. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 S UBA R U .
$11,979 or $155/mo.,
$15,979 or $199/mo.,
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Buick LeSabre 2005 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 Custom. Very clean, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 inside & out, only has 877-266-3821 Need help fixing stuff? 96k miles. If you drive Dlr ¹0354 Call A Service Professional it, you'll fall in love!! find the help you need. 32 mpg hwy, 22-25 in www.bendbulletin.com t own. $5799, o b o cash/credit/debit card. Trade-in considered. Call or Text Ron O Mustang Conv. 2011, 541-419-5060 6 speed auto, pony GEO Metro 1991 * 1 5 , 000 mi. %®~ ~ 5 spd manual trans., 3 pkg. * cyl., 40+ mpg, 151k $20,000. Subaru Impreza2013, 541-330-2342 miles. Runs good,. (exp. 6/17/15) CHECKYOUR AD $1500 or best offer Vin ¹027174 on the first day of pub- 541-419-5060, Ron Stock ¹83205 lication. If a n e r ror Vehicle? $20,358 or $249/mo., may occur in your ad, Call The Bulletin $2600 down, 84 mo., p lease contact u s 4 .49% APR o n a p and place an ad and we will be happy proved credit. License today! to fix it as soon as we and title i ncluded in l A s k about our can. Deadlines are: payment, plus dealer "Wheel Deal"! Weekdays 12:00 noon installed options. for private party for next day, S at. Lexus ES350 2010, advertisers 11:00 a.m. for SunS UBA RU. Condition sessavovsano con day; Sat. 12:00 for Excellent 32,000 miles, $21,000 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Monday. 214-549-3627 (in 877-266-3821 541-385-5809 Bend) Dlr ¹0354 The Bulletin Classified
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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com
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