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bendbulletin.corn TODAY’ S READERBOARD
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
A1928 Bend High
class ring recently found at Cultus Lake was engraved with the initials RBC.
Doggy DNA Someapart›
ment-dwellers who don’t clean up after their pets havebeen facing a crackdown thanks to science. Youcanadd some who spent $2.5 million on their condos to the list.n1
County demolition
Chandler Avenue roundabout.
alumni recall late-night cram
76 acres
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extremist group created athe› ology based on rapeandsex slavery.Ao
sessions and freshman year high jinks, it’s possible their memories could be set atop a
remediated landfill. Next week, the university and Deschutes County will re›
view a nonbinding agreement allowing the school to explore the possibility of expanding onto a 76-acre demolition landfilL
mrm5r best places to take the leap, based on cost of living, quality of life and more.n1
the SW Century Drive and
The Bulletin
When future OSU-Cascades
landfill
Islamic State Howthe
Retiring adroad The
By Tyler Leeds
xiii ’acres Pete Smith /The Bulletin
OSU-Cascades is currently
constructing a four-year cam› pus on a 10-acre parcel near
The county’s west-side landfill is located directly to the north
of the 10-acre site, which is intended to support up to 1,900 students.
If signed, the agreement would give the university two years to evaluate the idea, something it will undertake with the help of OSU’s College of Engineering. The university is also de› ciding whether to purchase a 46-acre pumice mine located to the west of the 10-acre site. So far, the university is confident
the mine could be turned into a campus, though it hasn’t decid› ed if the costs will pencil out.
Becky Johnson, OSU-Cas› cades’ top administrator, said "everything is on the table," adding the university could ac› quire both the mine and land› fill or just one of the properties.
Johnson said having the land› fill in play could give the univer› sity more options for building student housing, noting critics of the campus have questioned
By Kailey Fisicaro The Bulletin
cheap, available rentals. SeeLandfill /A5
Neill found a tar›
Three weeks after Zach›
ary Hammond was shot and killed by police in a drug bust in a Hardee’s parking lot in South Caro› lina, federal officials have launched a civil rights in› vestigation into his death. Hammond’s death fit
the profile of many other officer-involved shootings
When Gina Mc› nished 1928 class
ring in Cultus Lake while snorkeling late last month, she won›
dered who the owner was: Thursday, the granddaughter of that owner came forward. While McNeill was
Bend focuses on conservation as consumption returns to pre-recession levels Bend’swater usage on the riseagain
By Dylan J. Darling eThe Bulletin
When it comes to his yard in northeast Bend, David Holstine faced a
"It had a shine
3 billion gallons-›
McNeill, 56, of Bend, said. She swam over
to it and picked it out of the shallow water, only about 2’/2 to 3/2 feet deep. Even
2› -
›
Holstine, 71, Wednesday during a visit from a city of Bend official.
though it was brassy in color she could tell it was gold, and
1.5.
Mike Buettner, the city’ s water conservation program
Great Recession, water use in
manager, came by Holstine’s home to inspect his sprinkler gram being tested by the city over the next year. The goal
the past two years Bend has seen explosive growth, more building and more tourism. "Everyone who moves here, builds here, comes here has to
of the Sprinkler Inspection
use water," he said.
system as part of a free pro›
Bend is up. Buettner said over
Pilot Program is to make home He expects total water use watering systems around Bend to keep rising in Bend. more efficient.
"I don’t know that we’ ll ever
As the city recovers from the see a reduction from year to
year because our population keeps increasing," Buettner sard. So, the focus for the city when it comes to water conser›
finishing up snorkel› ing July 31 in Cultus Lake, the ring caught her eye as she ap› proached the shore. and I looked at it,"
challenge that he may share with many other people around Central Oregon. "I’m trying to keep the lawn green and use the least amount of water," said
By Sarah Keplan The Washington Post
way home from lake
to live given the city’s lack of
Replacing iPhoneswith stargazing: State parks reach out to kids. bendbunetin.cern/extras
Civil rights inquiry eyes white teen police killed
ring finds
where students will be able
And a Wedexclusive
EDITOR'5CHOICE
’28 class
it looked like an old
27 percent increase since 2011
class ring. SeeRing/A5
0.5.
vation is helping individual wa› ter users improve their efficien›
cy. He said the bulk of Bend’s water customers about 19,000 out of 24,000 customers
have residential accounts. See Water /A5
2005 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’10 ’u ’12 ’13 ’14 ’15
For total water usage from January through July Source: City of Bend Pete Smith / The Bulletin
that have made headlines
this year. He was said to be unarmed and was initially approached by police for a relatively minor offense — possession ofa sm all
Millennials know a different Clinton
amount of marijuana.
By Colin Diersing
But Hammond was also white, and his parents have
Tribune News Service
wondered if that fact might
Democratic pollster
WASHINGTON›
explain why their son’ s death didn’t initially pro›
Celinda Lake has
African-Americans.
been asking voters how much they trust Hillary Rodham Clinton for more
The federal investiga› tion, announced Wednes›
than two decades. So when she recent›
day, involves the Depart› ment of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, the FBI office in Columbia, South Carolina, and the U.S. At›
ly asked a group of 10 young people
voke the same outrage as
similar shootings involving
about the issue, her
questions naturally turned to Whitewa› ter, the Arkansas
torney for South Carolina and will run parallel to the state’s own investigation,
land deal turned White House scandal
n n I
according to the Charles›
of the 1990s.
Instead of the
ton Post and Courier.
The news came the same day that Hammond’s parents gave a press con› ference pleading for pros› ecutors and the state law
heated answers the topic once invited, the
P
focus group respond› ed with confused
enforcement division to
release dashboard camera footage that might illumi› nate the circumstances that led to their son’s death.
"I hope it shows us some
answers to what happened that night," Paul Ham›
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Mike Buettner, water conservation programmanager for the city of Bend, holds up awater collection cup while testing the sprinkler sys› tem on Wednesday at the home of David Holstine in Bend.
silence. "Is that a new type of vodka?" one per› son finally offered. The participant was probably kid› ding, Lake said. SeeClinton /A4
mond, the teen’s father, toldreporters."...W e need
some kind of closure our› selves. Right now it is so difficult to move on with›
out having answers." SeeKilled /A5
TODAY’S WEATHER Showers in p.m. High 73, Low 44 Page B6
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