Bulletin Daily Paper 08-14-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

THUR . Y Aug@14,2014

RVshow SPORTS • C1

BUSINESS • C6-

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

ousin rou oa

Oregon care —Naturopathic doctors setting sights on insurance coverage.D1

ii ea Bend wants to be more like Portland," said Andy High,

• The proposalwould easethe wayfor accessorydwellings in Bend

chairman of the committee By Hillary Boriud

Elks bounced —walk-off

The Bulletin

homer pushesCorvallis past Bend in the playoffs.C1

The shortage of affordable rental housingin Bend has placed local officials in the unusual position of calling for the cityto emulate an infill development tactic used by Portland.

Dedilitating crampsWhatcausesthem andways to keep clear, especially in the summer.D1

Bend city councilors will soon hear a proposal from the city's Affordable Housing Advisory Committee that would make it easier for property owners in Bend to build ac-

cessory dwellings, commonly referred to as mother-in-law

apartments. The small homes are already allowed under city

and staff vice president of gov-

code, but the approval process

Oregon Builders Association.

required in older areas of the city makes it simple for a neighbor to halt a project. "It's not too often you hear

However, High said that with

ernment affairs for the Central

astreamlinedprocess,people couldbuild these small homes

LOCAL COURT

New judge Miller will be getting early start

in as little as two months.

SeeHousing/A5

something come out where

By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Randy Miller will take

his seat as the newest judge on the Deschutes County

GeCke feet —Theamazing

Circuit Court early, Gov. John Kitzhaber announced Wednesday. Miller, a Bend attorney, defeated Thomas Spear in

appendages arebeing studied as inspiration for wall-climbing robots.A3

the May election to succeed

Judge Barbara Haslinger. Haslinger, the first fe-

(t

male judge in Deschutes

w-

" -. =

County histo=

ry officially

In national neWS — Esca-

retired on June 30 after

M ille r

lation in Missouri.A2

nearly 24 years on the bench.

Haslinger was most recently elected in 2010,

And a Wed exclusiveJohnny Cash's boyhood home banks on his big name. bentlbunetin.com/extras

and left her four-year term

early. Without action by the governor, Miller would not have been seated until Jan. 1.

Judge Alta Brady, presiding judge for the court, said that although Haslinger retired before completing

EDITOR'SCHOICE

U.S. takes

her term, local courts have not been short-handed.

Haslinger has remained on

tentative

the job under a state pro-

gram that allows retired judges to boost their retirement benefits by serving as a substitute judge of sorts, Brady said, and will con-

approach to Iraq

tinue to do so until Sept. 5,

one day after Miller will formally be seated. SeeMiller/A6

By Greg Jaffeand GregMiller

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

The Washington Post

wo chimpanzees underwent electrocardiograms Wednesday morning at the Chimps Inc.

WASHINGTON — Se-

nior U.S. officials describe

sanctuary in'llrmalo. Thiele and Herbie, both 28, underwent Oregon's first known captive

the threat posed by the

Islamic State in chilling terms, but have mounted a decidedly modest military campaign to check its advance through northern Iraq.

chimpanzee ultrasounds. The EKGs were conducted by veterinarian Wendy Krebs, with assistance from sonographer Sarah Oberle, and inspired by the Great Ape Heart Project, a nationwide effort to monitor and combat heart disease in captive apes. Both chimpanzees, who were sedated, also

The radical Islamist

underwent routine dental exams and had bloodwork done to check their kidneys and thyroids.

organiza-

ANALYSIS tion has

Inside

"Everything went well," sanctuary director Marla OrDonnell said Wednesday. "We expect results

attracted

Study tests salt limits for many By Mariiynn Marchione The Associated Press

more • Refugee fighters, situation said controls to improve,AS more

within a week and a half."

A large international study questions the conventional wisdom that

Here, from right, veterinary student Christy Copeland, Krebs, certified veterinary tech Anne

territory

Hornberger and Chimps Inc. senior caregiver Shayla Scott tend to Herbie while preparing to give

and has access to a larger stream of money than

back on salt,

suggesting

him his EKG and physical exam.

al-Qaida did before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to U.S. officials

most people should cut that the amount

Inside • A different lookat proc essed foo ds, D1

and terrorism experts. Its

most folks consume is

refusal to rein in its brand

OK for heart

of rampant violence ac-

health — and too little may

As shifts vary, only family constant ischaos

counts in part for its break from the better-known terrorist group. "This is serious busi-

ness," Secretary ofState

By Jodi Kantor

without setting off family or

John Kerry told reporters earlier this week. "I think

New York Times News Service

financial disaster.

SAN DIEGO — In a typical

In contrast to the joyless

the world is beginning

last-minute scramble, Jan-

to come to grips with the

nette Navarro, a 22-year-old

work she had done at a Dollar Tree store and a KFC franchise,

degree to which this is unacceptable." So far, though, the Obama administration's response to the group's blitzkrieg through northern Iraq has been defined primarily by the limits it

Starbucks barista and single m other, scraped togetheraplan for surviving the month of July

the $9-an-hour Starbucks job gave Navarro, the daughter of a drug addict and an absentee

TODAY'S WEATHER Variable clouds High 73, Low49 Page B6

has placed on the U.S. military's intervention.

SeeIraq /A5

father, the hope of forward motion. She had been hired be-

I

e

I ' I

I

scientists. Limiting salt is still important for people with

asking for work, and she had a way of flicking away setbacks — such as a missed bus on her three-hour commute — with

co-workers were. See Work/A6

million deaths each year.

The Bulletin

Q Weuserecyclednewsprint

times, cheerful and persistent,

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

The findings came under immediate attack by other

Newly off public assistance, she was just a few credits shy of anassociatedegreein business and talked of getting a master's degreeassome ofher

cause she showed up so many

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope Ef-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State Bf-6 TV/Movies

I

the phrase, "I'm over it."

be as bad as too much.

B5 D6

AnIndependent Newspaper

30 pages, 5 sections

high blood pressure — and in fact, a second study estimates that too much sodium contributes to up to 1.65 See Salt /A6

' IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329

I I

Nore than 85 motorhomesin one location for your one=stop shopping conveniencei vnee.eiecRv.coM ®


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

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NATION Ee ORLD

oc e cas in OU on cease- ire in By David D. Kirkpatrick and Jodi Rudoran New YorJz Times News Service

CAIRO — Palestinian leaders said early today that in the last moments before the

midnight expiration of their previous cease-fire with Isra-

a.m.; none caused any damage to the cease-fire extension, or injuries. which was announced by PalHamas, the m ilitant Pal- estinian negotiators meeting estinian group that controls here for Egyptian-brokered Gaza, denied responsibility peace talks. But the Palestinian for the rockets, suggesting that negotiators and Egyptian ofother militants outside its control had carried them out.

el in Gaza, the two sides had In the early hours today, agreed to hold their fire for an residents of Gaza reported additional five days to contin- the sound of Israeli missiles ue talks about a more durable striking Gaza. A representatruce. But an exchange of rock- tive of the Israeli military said ets and missiles around the thatits forces had carried reend of one cease-fire and the taliatory strikes inside Gaza beginning of the next cast im- against what the military remediate doubt about whether it ferred to as "rocket-launching would even last until dawn. strikes, weapons stores and Israeli officials said that a se- terror strikes." The military ries of as many as eight rockets said in a statement that it stood had beenlaunched from Gaza ready "to address renewed toward Israel, beginning with aggression." one at about 9:30 p.m. and endIsraeli officials did not coning with two fired at around I firm or deny their agreement

ficials appeared to believe the

extension could survive the exchangesaround midnight,and the Egyptian state news media

cent conflict. Israel, in turn, is

Virginia trial —Prosecutors have cast Bob McDonnell, the former governor of Virginia, as adesperate politician who was short of cash and more than willing to promote adonor's dietary supplement product if it meant that heand his wife, Maureen, could live a more lavish life. After enduring three weeks of unflattering testimony, the governor will soon get to respond. Prosecutors said they would rest their case today. OnMonday,the defense will begin to call its own witnesses to defend the character of the McDonnells and provide testimony that the first couple did not have a quid-pro-quo relationship with the businessman, Jonnie Williams.

seeking provisions to disarm Hamas or limit its access to

COunterterrOriSmdellatleu — Increasinglyworried aboutthe

taken effect. The talks for a longer-term

truce have been hung up mainly on Palestinian demands for

steps to loosen the Israeli and Egyptian blockade of Gaza, as well as for Israel to release the

roughly 50 Palestinian prisoners it captured during the re-

spread of Islamist militant extremism, Saudi Arabia donated$100 million to a fledgling U.N.counterterrorism agencyWednesday andexpressed hopethat such an infusion would strengthen its abilities and set an examplefor other donor countries. The moneywasthe second big contribution by SaudiArabia to the United Nations in the pastfew months, largely in response tocrises caused bythe ascent of radical Sunni Islamist militancy. Last month, Saudi Arabia provided $500 million to U.N.humanitarian relief efforts in Iraq, where hundreds of thousands of peoplehavebeenuprooted by the Islamic State.

more weapons.

Dtschuiersr

CalifOrnia pOliCe ShOOting —Thepolice shot and killed an unarmedbl ackmaninSouthLosAngeleson Mondaynight,theLosAngeles Police Department said. Thepolice said that the man, whom the department did not identify, had tackled anofficer and lungedfor the weapon in his holster before being shot at byboth the officer and his partner. Family members told a local television station onTuesdaythat the man wasEzell Ford, a24-year-old whose "mental problems" they said were well known to thepolice. Friends andfamily are planning a protest in front of the Police Department headquarters on Sunday.

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California drought bill —Driventoaction bythestate's historic drought, California lawmakers onWednesdayvoted to place a $7.5 billion water plan before voters in November.Themeasure marks the largest investment in decades inthe state's water infrastructure and is designed to build reservoirs, clean upcontaminated groundwater and promote water-saving technologies. It replaces an existing water bond that wasapproved by aprevious Legislature but was widely considered too costly and too bloated with pork-barrel projects to win favor with voters.

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-363-0356.

Ebela Outbreak —A second leading Sierra Leoneandoctor has succumbed to theEbolaepidemic sweeping across West Africa, dealing another blow to the country's faltering efforts to stem the disease. Dr. ModupehCole, 56, died Wednesday at the Ebolatreatment center operated by Doctors Without Borders in the northeastern town of Kailahun, officials at the health ministry said. Hehadapparently been infected while seeing apatient at Connaught Hospital, in the capital, officials said. Thepatient later tested positive for Ebola.

reported that the cease-fire had

MISSOURI PROTESTSESCALATE

Si sil.AvL

POpe in KOrea —AsFrancis becamethe first pope in 25years to visit South Koreaearly today, Seoul's never-timid rival, North Korea, made its presencefelt by firing three short-range projectiles less than an hour before hearrived, officials said. Although North Korea declined an invitation to Seoul for the papalvisit, Francis plans to reach out to North Koreaduring his five-day trip in a Massfor peaceand reconciliation on thewar-divided KoreanPeninsula. Theapparent test firing was conducted from Wonsan on the North's east coast andthe projectiles flew about135 miles, according to aministry official who spokeon condition of anonymity, citing office rules. It wasn't immediately clear what the projectiles were.

— Fromwirereports

David Carson I St. Louis Post-Dispatch

A protester takes shelter Wednesdayfrom smoke billowing around him in Ferguson, Missouri. Protests in the St. Louis suburb rocked by racial unrest since a white police officer shot and killed an unarmedblack teenager turned violent Wednesdaynight, with some people lobbing Molotov cocktails and other objects at police, who respondedwith smoke bombsand tear gas to disperse the crowd. FergusonPoliceChiefThomas Jackson,whohas been the public face of the city torn by Saturday's death of18-year-old Michael Brown, told reporters earlier in the daythat the St. Louis County investigation of the shooting could takeweeks to complete. In the meantime, hesaid, his department welcomes

Ilo ur Hands Hurt'V

Justice Department training on racial relations in the suburb, where two-thirds of the 21,000 residents are black while all but three of the police force's 53 officers are white. "Unfortunately, an undertow (of racial unrest) has bubbled to the surface," said Jackson. "Race relations is the top priority right now." Jacksonhasfaced mounting demands from protesters, clergy andevenhackers to reveal the identity of the officer who shot Brown. Jackson argues that revealing that detail could bring retribution to the officer. Jackson saidWednesdaythat the officer involved sustained swelling facial injuries.

Do your hands turn white, blue, purple or transparent when cold? Are the back of your hands shiny with no lines on your knuckles? Do you have unexplained weight loss? Do you experience shortness of breath? Do you have swallowing difficulties or heartburn?

— The Associated Press

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All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,Po.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

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Ukraine fighting intensifies;death toll spikes asRussianconvoy is paused By Sergei Grits and Alexander Roalyakov The Associated Press

DONETSK, U k r a ine A rebel-held city in eastern Ukraine came under inten-

trict in the city showed the ef-

A spokeswoman for the U.N.'s human rights office, Cecile Pouilly, said the orga-

veal a shattered interior. Others

had entered the 11th straight

day without power supplies. Running water has dried up and the few working shops are selling only basic essentials.

At least 12 militiamen fight-

ing alongside the army were Associated Press on Wednes- killed overnight Tuesday in day that rocket attacks had in- an ambush outside Donetsk, creased in intensity. a spokesman fortheir radical Several high-rise apartment n ationalist m ovement s a id blocks in a southwestern dis- Wednesday.

Raising Awarenesswith Strength R Courage

for moreinfovisit www.lclerodermalnlel.orl

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Petrovsky district. The local government said three were

killed, a figure that adds to the sharply mounting death toll. nization's "very conservative Shelling in Donetsk has estimates" show the overall damaged power plants and gas death toll has risen to at least pipelines, leaving large parts 2,086 people as of Aug. 10, up of the city without electricity from 1,129 on July 26. or gas, city councilspokesman Pouilly said at least 4,953 Maxim Rovinsky said. others have been wounded in Damage t o re s idential the fighting since mid-April. buildings is an apparent result While the humanitarian cri- of two combined factors: The sis reaches a critical stage in army has refrained from goat least one major Ukrairuan ing into Donetsk, favoring an city, trucks apparently carry- artillery campaign of attrition ing some 2,000 tons of aid have over close urban combat. And lain idle at a military depot in local residents have regularly Russia. Moscow insists it co- revealed that damaged houses ordinated the dispatch of the areoften to befound near rebgoods, which range from baby el firing positions, suggesting food andcanned meat to por- that the rocket attacks are retable generators and sleeping sponses to outgoing strikes. bags, with the i nternational Government troops and the Red Cross, but Ukraine says it's volunteers fighting with them worried the mission may be a are also sustaining heavy losscover for an invasion. es while making regular terriA spokesman for local au- torial advances. thorities in the main rebel-controlled city of Donetsk told The

The situation in Luhansk,

fect of artillery strikes. In one, also in rebel hands, is yet the facade of one of the top more serious. City authorifloors was blown away to re- ties said Wednesday that they

bore smashed windows and sified shelling Wednesday gaping holes. as the U.N. revealed that the Associated Press reportdeath toll from the fighting be- ers saw two bodies lying in a tween government troops and street Wednesday morning separatists has nearly doubled in Donetsk's southwestern in the last two weeks.

If you areexperiencing any one ormoreof thesesymptoms, it may be anautoimmune diseasecalled Scleroderma.Call your doctor for an appointmentwith documentedsymptoms as soon aspossible to either rule out or confirm Sclerodermadiagnosis.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

T TODAY

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

It's Thursday, August14, the 226th day of 2014. Thereare 139 days left in the year.

PHENOMENON

RESEARCH

HAPPENINGS

Ancient forestgiants face potential trouble

VeteranS — VASecretary Robert McDonaldis scheduled to visit the VAhospital in Memphis, Tennessee.

PriSOn time —TheU.S. Sentencing Commission meets to vote on priorities for the coming yearand has expressed an interest in examining punishments for white-collar crime.

It turns out they can stick and unstick instantly, making the little critters even more interesting to engineers looking for inspiration for future creations.

BIRTHDAYS Broadway lyricist LeeAdams ("Bye ByeBirdie") is 90. Singer BuddyGrecois88.Comedian-actor SteveMartin is 69. "Far Side" cartoonist Gary Larson is 64. Basketball Hall ofFamer Earvin "Magic" Johnson is55. Actress HalleBerry is 48. NFL quarterback TimTebowis 27. — From wire reports

By Jim Robbins

tree here called the General

New Yorh Times News Service

Sherman, the world's largest

SEQUOIA NA T I O NAL by volume. Preservation efPARK, Calif. — High in the fortsare hampered by thefact Sierras, biologists are strug- that so little is known about gling to find ways to protect big trees, from their root syssome of the world's oldest tems to how they die. and most storied trees from As the climate changes, drought, forest fires and di- so do conditions in which

HISTORY Highlight:In1944, the federal government allowed the manufacture of certain domestic appliances, such aselectric ranges andvacuum cleaners, to resume on a limited basis. In1848, the OregonTerritory was created. In1900, international forces, including U.S. Marines, entered Beijing to put down the Boxer Rebellion, which was aimed at purging China of foreign influence. In1909, the newly opened Indianapolis Motor Speedway held its first event, a series of motorcycle races. In1935, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed theSocial Security Act into law. In1945, President Harry Truman announcedthat Japan had surrendered unconditionally, ending World War II. In1947,Pakistan becameindependent of British rule. In1951, newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst, 88, died in Beverly Hills, California. In1969, British troops went to Northern Ireland to intervene in sectarian violence between Protestants and RomanCatholics. In1973,U.S.bombing ofCambodia came to ahalt. In1980, workers went on strike at the Lenin Shipyard in Gdansk, Poland, in ajob action that resulted in creation of the Solidarity labor movement. Actress-model Dorothy Stratten, 20, was shot to death by her estranged husbandand manager, Paul Snider, who then killed himself. In1989, South African President PW. Bothaannounced his resignation after losing a bitter power struggle within his National Party. In1994, llich RamirezSanchez, the terrorist known as"Carlos the Jackal," was captured by French agents in Sudan. Tea years age:A visibly weak Pope John Paul II joined thousands of other ailing pilgrims at a cliffside shrine in Lourdes, France, telling them heshared in their physical suffering and assuring them the burdenwas part of God's "wondrous plan." Nobel Prize-winning poet Czeslaw Milosz died in Krakow, Poland, at age93. Fiveyears age:Kicking off a four-state push for his health care overhaul plan, President Barack Obamadenounced what he suggested wasnews media overemphasison scenes of angry protesters at town-hall meetings, telling his own gathering in Belgrade, Montana, that "TV loves a ruckus." Charles Manson follower Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, 60, convicted of trying to assassinate President Gerald Ford in 1975,was released from aTexas prison hospital after more than three decades behind bars. One year age:Israeli and Palestinian negotiators kicked off their first substantive round of peace talks in nearly five years, meeting at an undisclosed location in Jerusalem. Riot police swept awaytwo encampments of supporters of ousted Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi in Cairo, sparking running street battles.

A3

mate change.

sequoiasand other big trees grow. The coastal redwoods quoias, some of them 2,000 of California, for example, are to 3,000 years old, and they fog drinkers, taking as much are just one of several ancient as 40 percent of their water in Western species, induding through their needles. In the redwoods and bristlecone past half-century, the number pines, that face a daunting of days in which the trees are future. shrouded by fog has dedined Although the sequoias are by 30percent. not at immediate risk, even In some places, that apfrom California's current pears, paradoxically, to be drought, scientists say they contributing to i n creased were not built to withstand growth: With less fog covdecades of dry and warm- er there is more light, said ing weather. Their seedlings Todd Dawson, a biologist at and saplings are susceptible the University of California, to fires, which are likely to Berkeley. But on the redwood increase, especially at higher range's southern and eastern elevations. And if the drought edges, which are warmer and persists, the lack of melting drier, scientists are documentsnow may keep the seedlings ing changes inthe bigtrees. "They are self-pruning," from developing a robust root system. Dawson said. "The crowns "If there's l o n g-term are beginning to thin out, and drought, within 25 years, we they are droppingneedles." could see seedlings in trouBristlecone pines at ble," said Nathan Stephen- 4,000 years or more, the oldson, an ecologist with the est trees in the world — have U.S. GeologicalSurvey. "In adapted to some of the harsh50 years, the whole popula- est conditions on the contition could be in trouble," he nent. But rapid warming atop went on, and within a century mountain ranges in Colorado, "most of the big trees could be New Mexico and elsewhere gone." has allowed bark beetles to Sequoias are found in only gain a foothold. Once thebrisone place on Earth: the Sierra tlecones are infected, nothing Nevadas in California. There canbe done to save them. And are 65 to 70 groves, most in a although the beetle threat has narrow 70-mile band on the waned of late, the pines have w est sideoftherangeat5,000 also been hit by blister rust, to 8,000 feet. Theyindude one an invasive fungus from Asia. The trees are the giant se-

r Bjorn ChristianTorissenvia The Washington Post

When agecko goes from hanging off a ceiling to scurrying down a wall, it does so without losing speed or energy. By Rachel Feltman

chanical engineering P. Alex by or based on the concept of Greaney. "These are really gecko adhesion," Greaney said Geckos are known for their fascinating nanoscale systems in a release, "we envision that remarkably adhesive feet. In and forces at work," Greaney robots will use gecko adhesion a study published Tuesday in said in a press release. "It's in extreme environments in the Journal of Applied Phys- based not just on the nature of the future." ics,researchers describe just the seta, but the canted angles how remarkable those feet and flexibility they have, and are. ability to work under a wide It turns out gecko feet are range of loading conditions." The Washington Post

able to stick and unstick them-

selves instantly — so when a gecko goes from hanging off of a ceiling to scurrying down a wall, it does so without losing speed or energy. This mechanism makes gecko feet, which were already being used as inspiration for wall-climbing robots and space-age adhesive materials, even more interesting to engineers. In 2000, researchers deter-

The setae work at the na-

noscale to turn stickiness on and off instantly, Greaney said, and expend hardly any energy in doing so. It only takes a small, angled force to

push setae into their "sticky" p osition, and w i t hout t h at force they unstick seamless-

ly. That's why, according to Greaney, setae can support 50

times a gecko's body weight as it hangs from the ceiling

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mined that the reptiles rely on but don't stop the gecko from van der Waals forces — the running at speeds of 20 bodyvery small forces between lengths per second. molecules — to accomplish Complex networks of sethe feat. Their toes are cov-

tae, which can create millions

ered with hairs called setae, arranged in gill-like rows. Each tiny hair produces only a small van der Waals force when interacting with a sur-

of contact points between a gecko's feet and the rough surface it's climbing on, have already inspired dry adhesives

face, but together the multitude create reliable suction. There's more to it than that, according to lead study author

ogy. But Greaney thinks this

and Oregon State University assistant professor of me-

for robots and other technolmathematical model will improve on those efforts. "While we don't envision

'Mission Impossible' sticky gloves, which are inspired

Surprisefinding could lead to new Alzheimer'sapproach By Nicole Ostrow

brain function, a notion that

Bloomberg News

could lead to a new approach Loss of function of the gene for treating the disease, re-

in the brain tied to Alzheimer's s e archers said. "Minimizing A POE4 l evdisease may not lead to memo-

ry and thinking problems, ac- els in the brain may provide cording to a surprise us with a new venue finding that upends DISCOVERY for intervention with some theories about Alzheimer's disease the disease. and other cognitive disorders," Researchers found that a M a r y Malloy, a study author man with no apolipoprotein E, and professor of medicine and or APOE, in his body was cog- pediatrics at the University of nitively normal and showed California at San Francisco, no other neurological signs of said in an Aug. 8 telephone inAlzheimer's, according to a te r v i ew."The observations of case study published Monday this patient suggest this stratein the journal JAMA Neurol-

g y can now be entertained se-

ogy. Those with a mutation of riously. We think the potential the gene called APOE4 have harm in minimizing APOE4 a higher risk of developing levelsseemstobenonexistent." Alzheimer's. There are three types of More than 5 million Amer- APOE, which helps transicans have Alzheimer's dis-

p o r t cholesterol, in the body.

ease, the most common form About 20 percent of people of dementia, and the number is carry APOE4, which is linked expected to triple by 2050, ac- t o Alzheimer's, Bruce Miller, a

cording to the Alzheimer's As- study author and a professor of sociation. The findings show neurology at UCSF, said in an that APOE isn't necessary for

i n t erview.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Housing Continued from A1 "In my view, this is the quickest way to get rental housing up," High said. "This is a great

U.S. says far fewer refugees on Sinjar Mountain

Continued from A1 The disconnect between the unnerving assessments

of the Islamic State and the apparent lack of urgency in confronting it reflects a mix of political and mil-

way to put an issue out in front

of the community to see how much we ... care about affordable housing." Members of the advisory committee said during a meeting on Wednesday that they do anticipate their ideas will run into some opposition. The proposal would allow accessory dwellings without a conditional use permit on all lots across

itary constraints. Among

them are no clear military strategy for reversing the group's recent territorial

gains, a war weariness that pervades the Obama a dministration a n d

th e

country, and significant uncertainty about the ex-

the city and increase the cap

tent to which the Islamic

on size to 800 square feet, a change that committee mem-

:. '

State is prepared to morph from a regional force into

bers said is necessary to allow

a transnational terrorist

for two-bedroom apartments

threat that could target Eu-

and to make the units pencil out

rope and the United States. The U.S. military's cam-

financially. High said the committee will likely present this

paign a~

the I s l am-

WASHINGTON — Farfewer refugees remain on Iraq's Sinjar Mountain and aU.S.-led rescue mission is far less likely, U.S. officials said Wednesday night. A team of U.S. military personnel assessedthe situation and reported that only several thousand refuges are onthe mountain and that they appear to be in relatively good condition, the Pentagon said in a statement. Tens of thousands hadbeenreported on the mountain last week. Defense Secretary ChuckHagelcredited airdrops of food and water for sustaining those onthe mountain and airstrikes for pushing back Islamic State militants andallowing refugees to leave. "As a result of that assessment, I think it's most likely far less likely now that wewould undertake any kind of specific humanitarian rescue mission that wehavebeen planning," Hagel told reporters as hereturned to Washington from aworld tour. "That doesn't mean that wewon't." Iraq remains a troubled country, Hagel said, but hecalled the assessment of Sinjar Mountain a bit of good news. Ofthe U.S. effort in Iraq, he said: "It's not over. It's not complete." Attacks across Iraq's north and west by the Islamic State group and its Sunni militant allies this summer havedisplaced members of the minority Christian andYazidi religious communities and threatened neighboring Iraqi Kurds in theautonomous region. — The Associated Pess

recommendation, along with

ic State has focused on

a couple of other ideas it is still developing to increase the supply of affordable rental hous-

protecting U.S. c itizens in Baghdad and Irbil and very low," he said. delivering aid to as many Pentagon officials do not as 40,000 Yazidi refugees dispute that assessment, but trapped on Mount Sinjar in are deeply skeptical about the northern Iraq. effectiveness of U.S. air power But the ongoing U.S. air- without credible Iraqi partners strikes are equally notable on the ground. "My major imfor what they have not tried pression is that they just don't to do. U.S. military officials know what to do right now," have emphasized that the said Celeste Ward Gventer, a strikes are not designed to former senior Pentagon official reverse the gains Sunni ex- and adviser to the U.S. military tremist fighters have made, inIraq. or open up a ground corriThe current generation of dor for the Yazidi refugees Islamic State fighters seems to to make their way off the be better armed and trained mountain. than the largely homegrown "We've had a very tem- insurgents that fought the U.S. porary effect," Lt. Gen. military in the years after the William Mayville, a senior American invasion, military

Hillary Borrud/The Bulletin

Bend is looking for strategies to ease the shortage of rental September. Earlier this year, housing in the city. One option is to make it easier for property City Manager Eric King asked owners to build accessory dwellings, also known as mother-in-law the committee to pitch ideas to apartments, such as this small home on the same lot as a larger easethe housing shortage. house in northwest Bend. ing, to the City Council in late

Portland is the most dramatic example in the state of

the infill development that occurs when it is easier to build

accessory dwellings. ~perty owners used to build about 30 accessory dwellings each year, but Portland received approximately 200 permit applications for the structures in 2013, ac-

cording to the city. The increase followed a 2010 Portland City Council decision

to waive development impact fees for three years, in an effort to encourage construction

of more small homes. The change allowed homeowners to save as much as $11,000 per

project in city fees. Portland also increased the allowable

size of accessory dwellings, from the previous limit of 33 percent of the living area in the primary home to75 percent. An overall cap on the size of the homes remains800 square

Accessorydwellings inother Oregoncities • Hew Portlandresidents usetheir accessory dwellings: As someone'sprimary residence,currently occupied: 77.7 percent As someone's primary residence, currently vacant: 1.9 percent For short-term housing (less than one-month stays):4.5 percent Extra room orworkspacefor main houseoccupants:11.4 percent Not currently being used:0.8 percent Other:3.8 percent • How residents useaccessory dwellings across Portland, Eugene andAshland: As someone's primary residence,currently occupied:78.6 percent As someone's primary residence, currently vacant: 2.7 percent For short-term housing (less than one-month stays):4.2 percent Extra room or workspace for main house occupants: 10.4 percent Not currently being used:0.6 percent Other:3.6 percent Source: Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Portland State University

push militants out of cities such as Fallujah, Mosul and Tikrit. Such a force would include

counterterrorism commandos, intelligence specialists, medical personnel and a large advisory presence to work with Iraqi soldiers and help persuade Sunni tribal fighters to take up arms against the insurgents, said retired Col. Derek Harvey, a for-

mer top U.S. official in Iraq and at U.S. Central Command.

"I had been saying we'd need as many as 6,000 (troops)," he said. "But it's probably dose to 8,000."

President Barack Obama, who campaigned on ending the wars in Iraq and AfghanArmy officer on the Joint officials said. The United States istan, has repeatedly said that Staff, told reporters this now has far fewer warplanes a U.S. presence of that size in week. operating over Iraq than it did Iraq isn't under consideration. The limited nature of during the height of the Iraq "American combat troops will the airstrikes has drawn war. not be returning to fight in Iraq, "We had a vastly larger Air because there's no American criticism from more hawkish Republicans and some Force inIraq from 2003-2009, military solution to the larger former U.S. military offi- and it didn't defeat the insur- crisis in Iraq," he said. cials who have said that the gency," said Stephen Biddle, a Obama administration is professor at George Washingsquandering an opportunity ton University and frequent adto deliver a crippling blow viser to the U.S. military. "If we against the insurgents. couldn't do it then, it is hard to "Time is of the essence," imagine a much smaller effort said Adm. James Stavridis, willbe more effective today." a former Supreme Allied The United States could Commander at NATO and make more inroads with a current dean of the Fletch- largerground force,but some er School at Tufts Univer- military analysts have said sity. The longer the air- that the Obama administration strikesdrag on, the more would have to be willing to detime Islamic State fighters ploy several thousand troops to •

Fritz said she heard "mostly

feet, according to the Bureau of concern about the integrity of Planning and Sustainability. the neighborhood, and getting City officials there have ex- a big (accessory dwelling) over tended the fee waiver through a garage that is then looking June 2016. down over this smaller propSo far, no one in Bend has erty's yard, so the privacy is proposed waiving any fees for lost." accessorydwellings. Jim Landin, an architect and The Bend Planning Commis- member of the affordable houssion has also started to discuss ing committee, said he knows possible changes to the city de- of accessory dwelling projects velopment code for accessory that stalled because of opposidwellings, and two commis- tion from neighbors. A neighsioners attended the affordable bor might object that an aparthousing meeting Wednesday. ment above a garage will inC ommissioner L a ur a F r i t z vadehisorherprivacy,despite said the concerns that residents the fact that the property owner raised at planning commission could increase the height of the meetings were that it can be existing home and add a deck expensiveto build accessory that would be just as intrusive. dwellings, and the new apart- Landin said he believes the real ments can change the feel of reasonsome peopleobject to neighborhoods. the accessory dwellings is that

they will be occupied by renters, and some property owners do not believe the renters will

care as much about the neighborhood. "It's the fact that now it's renters," Landin said.

High said the $1,400 fee for the city to review conditional use permit applications — as

currently required for lots developed before 1998 — discourages many people from trying to build apartments above theirgarages orotherforms of accessory dwellings, because one neighbor could derail the project

fast and serious response, including Special Operations forces on the ground, the chances of reversing IS gains or even breaking their evident momentum is

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"I know that's not a ton of

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

A5

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

Work

Miller

down and that he could not do online degrees — that many rewhat he wanted — go back to tailers do not. (Navarro said she school and get a better jobwas three classes shy of being amid the whirl of Navarro's able totransfer and take advanlast-minute logistics. tage of the tuition offer)

Continued from A1 Her take-home pay rarely topped $400 to $500 every two weeks; since starting in

"I bit off more than I could

$900 toward a car — her next step toward stability and independence for herself and her 4-year-old son, Gavin.

30th of June, and came back on July 1 full-time, so

ticated workplace technology against some fundamental requirements of parenting, with particul arl y hanA consequences for poor single mothers. Along with virtually every major retail and restaurant chain,

Peoria, Illinois, when the com-

how she was, pointedly but not

matching, stock and tuition for

Starbucks relies on so~ puters say sales are slow. The that choreographs workers in same sometimes happens to precise, intricate ballets, using Navarro at Starbucks. sales patterns and other data to By Saturday afternoon of the determine which of its 130,000 Fourth of July weekend, Navarbaristas are needed in its thou- ro had made it through "clopensands of locations and exactly ing," dosing late at night and when. Big-box retailers or mall opening again just a few hours dothing chains are now capa- later.

unkindly. Through the grapevine, they had heard the news that Navarro was struggling to accept: Martinezwas breaking up with her, and she and Gavin

changingSmiles

itedresources,had also turned their lives into a chronic crisis over the dock. She rarely

learned her schedule more than threedays beforethe startofa workweek, plunging her into urgent logistical puzzles over who would watch the boy. Months after starting the

job, she moved out of her

aunt's home, in part because of mounting friction over the er-

ratic schedule, which the aunt felt was also holding her family captive. Navarro's degree was on indefinite pause because her shifting hours left her unable to

commit to dasses. She needed to work all she could, sometimes counting on

dimes from the tip jar to make the bus fare home. If she dared ask for more stable hours, she

feared,she would get fewer work hours overall. "You're waiting on your job to control your life," she said, with the scheduling software used by her employer dictating everything from "how much sleep Gavin will get to what groceries I'll be able to buy this month."

Last month, she was scheduled to work until 11 p.m. Fri-

day, July 4; report again just hours later, at 4 a.m Saturday; and start again at 5 a.m.

Sunday. Like increasing numbers of low-income mothers and fa-

thers, Navarro is at the center of a new collision that pits sophis-

would lose another home. Martinez had told her the

evening before, explaining that he hadbeen feelingtoo weighed

ISI I Q

Denture a Implant center

that transition, Brady said,

and having Miller on the bench sooner should make

for a smoother process. "It's not just the judges learning how to work with-

in the system; the judges are helping create the system," Brady said. "So we

want his elbow grease on that as well." In a n e m a iled s t ate-

ment Wednesday, Miller thanked the governor for the appointment.

"I look forward to joining our hard-working judges, court staff, local attorneys, law enforcement and other professionals in t h eir tirelesseffort to increase

access to justice and to improve our justice system," he wrote. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbuIIetin.com

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The studies are in today's 8 to 15 grams of salt) had the New England Journal of lowest risk of heart problems Continued from A1 Medicine. or death from any cause during T he s t udies b ot h h a v e Yusuf's is o bservational, the nearly four-year study. strengths and weaknesses, and rather than a s t rict experi- More or less sodium raised come asthe U.S. government is ment, and has big limitations risk About three-fourths of the preparing to nudge industry to in its methods. But its size lends world's population is in the idetrim sodium in processed and strength — more than 100,000 al range. Americans average restaurant foods. people in 17 countries, the larg- roughly4 grams a day. The first study's leader, Dr. est on this topic. It's also from a Guidelines f ro m va r i ous Salim Yusuf of McMaster Uni- generalpopulation, not justpeo- groups for heart disease preversity's Population Health Re- ple at high risk of heart disease, vention recommend 1.5 to 2.4 search Institute in Hamilton, as manypast studies havebeen. grams of sodium a day. The Ontario, urged keeping an open Researchers found: American Heart Association mlIld. • Sodium levels generally advises nomorethan 1.5grams. "There are those who have correlate with the risk of high "These are now the best data made a career out of promot- blood pressure. But this link is available," Dr. Brian Strom said ing extreme sodium reduction strongestwhensodiumintakeis of the new study. Strom, the that will attack us," he said. It's high andwasn't seen at all when chancellor of Rutgers Biomedibetter to focus on healthy life- consumption is low. The link cal and Health Sciences, led an styles and overall diets instead alsois stronger aspeople age. Institute of Medicine panel last of a single element, "and that is • A different nutrient — po- year that found little evidence to something everyone can rally tassium, found in vegetables supportvery low sodium levels. "Too-high sodium is bad. around. and fruits — seems to lower No one should view this as blood pressure and heart risks, Too low also may be bad, and permission to eat more salt, he and offsets sodium's effect. sodium isn't the whole story," said, adding that "most people • People who consume 3 to Strom said. "People should go should staywhere they are." 6 grams of sodium a day (about for moderation."

it's been absolutely seamless," Brady said. Seating Miller early will allow him to participate in

By August, Navarro and Gavin were staying on an air

Her failure to find time to

practice driving and get her licensehad sealed his decision: mattress at the home of a forThe deadline on the refrigerator mer co-worker, with occasional had been his final one, and she nights at her aunt's house, and had missed it. With no child of no idea where they would go his own, he did not feel as sty- next. Gavin was crying more mied by the shifting hours as than usual, exhausted and unSam Hodgson / New York Times News Service she did, and he blamed Navarro sure of where Martinez had Jennette Naverro, e 22-year-oid Sterbucks bariste end single moth- for failing to move ahead fast gone. Over the past month, she er, works e shift in Sen Diego. Naverro's fluctuating hours, comenough. had downgraded her ambitions; "If you want something bad- the best she now hoped for was bined with her limited resources, has turned her and her 4-year-old son's lives into e chronic crisis over the clock. ly enough, you'll get it done," he to be promoted to shift supervitoldher. sor. The only happy news was She had spent the night on that she had passed her driving ble of bringing in more hands Several days later, on July the couch, sobbing, panicking, test. in anticipation of a delivery 8, she had to tug her son out of envisioninghow everybit ofher Then her wallet was stolen, truck pulling in or the weather bed just as early, rousing Gavin hard-won progress could dis- leaving her without even a bus changing and sending workers before5am. fortheirlong com- appear. She and Gavin would pass. Navarro was so desperate home when real-time analyses mute. But this time her boy- have no place to live. He could that she finally threw herself on show sales are slowing. Man- friend, Martinez, helped her be kickedout of day care for her manager's mercy, taking agers are often compensated get ready for the day. He had having no home address. With her into the backroom to exbased on the efficiency of their been a supportive force, invit- no day care, she would not be plain the misery of her situation staffing. ing her and Gavin to share the able to work. and pleadfor more and better bedroom he had in his sister's hours. Erraticschedules "I need the full 40," she said, apartment, enjoying moments Notalone Yet those advances are in- of surrogate fatherhood with Andrew Alfano, a s enior slumped on the floor because jecting turbulence into parents' the littleboy. vice president of retail at Star- she was too tired to stand. routines and personal relaIn turn, Navarro had helped bucks, said that an experience Later, asked by a reporter tionships, undermining efforts Martinez get a job at her Star- like Navarro's was an anomaly about Navarro's situation, a to expand preschool access, bucks store, and together they and that the company provid- Starbucksspokesman saidthe driving some mothers out of had become ateam, both poor ed at least a week's notice of company would work to stabithe workforce and redistribut- but pooling their resources to work hours, as well as stable lize her schedule. ing some of the uncertainty of get ahead. schedules for employees who Even before then, Navarro's doing business from corporawant them. However, in inter- manager was taking a doser tions to families, say parents, The long commute views with current and recent look at her hours. A few days child care providers and policy Navarro hatedwaking Gavin workers at 17 Starbucks outlets aftertheir discussion, a new experts. so early, but the trip from home around the country, only two schedule appeared. Navarro In Brooklyn, Sandianna to day care to work took a mile- said they received a week's no- would still have to arrive beIrvine often works "on call" long walk, two trolleys, a bus tice of their hours; some got as fore dawn on the weekend. But hours at Ashley Stewart, a ride and over three hours. little as one day. she would now work nearly 40 "If for some reason we hav- hours a week, which happened plus-size clothing store, rushAt the day care center, her ing tomake arrangements for scatteredschedule created a en't lived up to what we aspire rarelybefore. An dforthreepreher 5-year-old daughter if the perpetual blizzard of paper- to, it's really disappointing," ciousweekdays, herjob at Starstore needs her. Before Mar- work, w it h N a varro d ocu- Alfano said. "We want to know bucks, her job as a mother and tha Cadenas was promoted menting her ever-changing aboutit, wewant tofixit." the day care schedule would be to manager at a Wal-Mart in hours, lest she lose the precious Another spokesman said the in alignment: She would start Apple Valley, Minnesota, she placement. company would reiterate its around 8 in the morning and had to work any time the store Once Gavinwas settled atthe schedulingpoliciestomanagers finish around 4. needed; her mother "ended up day care center, Navarro raced across the country. having to move in with me," onto another bus, panicked Like many employers, StarSee us for retractable she said, because of the unpre- when it skipped her stop, got off bucks also says that its variable awnings, exterior solar dictable hours. Maria Trisler and ran back to Starbucks, and hours can be a plus, adding that screens, shade structures. is often dismissed early from walked in 10minutes late. the coffe e chain provides benSun ehen Jou wantit, her shifts at a McDonald's in Her co-workers asked her efits — like health care, 401(k)

But Navarro's fluctuating hours, combined with her lim-

here. She retired on t h e

Fluctuating goals

chew," he said later.

November, she had set aside

Continued from A1 "Judge Haslinger's been

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

BRIEFING Bicyclist injured in Powell Butte Oregon State Police continues to investigate a bicycle-versus-pickup crash that happened Tuesday afternoon. According to OSP, around 4:45 p.m. on Tuesday Frederick Bouwman, 53, of Ontario, Canada, was riding his bicycle westbound along the shoulder of state Highway126 east of Powell Butte. He was struck from behind by the front right

quarter panel and side mirror of a westbound 2003 GMCSierra driven by 44-year-old Norman Chadwick, of Powell Butte.

Bouwman, whowas thrown from his bicycle and seriously injured, was flown byair ambulance to St. CharlesBend with serious injuries that are not life-threatening. Bouwmanwaswearing a helmet. Chadwick wasn't injured and hascooperated with the investigation.

oea a 0 meaSureS a S 0 • 4 campaigns failed to get enough signatures to go to voters

the dam as an updated hydro-

By Scott Hammers

for a measure concerning

operate it as a nongenerating

The Bulletin

Four citizen-initiated cam-

the Bend Park & Recreation District — for verification by

paigns to put ballot measures before Bend-area voters in

the clerk's office in order to qualify their proposals for

November have fallen short,

the Nov. 4 ballot. None of the

the Deschutes County Clerk's Office confirmed Wednesday.

campaigns submitted any

Petitioners had until Aug.

6 to submit signatures — 15 percent of all registered voters in the city for three

measures concerning the city, and approximately 3,000

signatures to the clerk's office prior to the deadline, elections

supervisor Barbara Hagen said Wednesday. Three of the proposed ballot measures sought to restrain the city and park

district from spending money on acquiring the Mirror Pond dam or addressing siltation in the pond without taking

electric generation facility, or the state water right permit to dam.

proposed boosting pay for members of the Bend City

Foster Fell was collecting signatures for two measures, one concerning the park district, the other concerning the city. Both measures sought

CounciL

to bar the two bodies from

Spencer Dahl had been circulating a petition that would

spending public funds on the pond or the dam unless they

have blocked the city from

took steps to provide fish pas-

acquiring the dam until it had one of two permits: the feder-

sages and improve habitat for wildlife. See Measures/B6

certain steps, while the fourth

al permit needed to operate

a ines ate ar wor

'Send

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-li FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.Forthe latest information, visit • http://inciweb.nwcg. gov/sfnt e/38 • http://centrnlorfire info.blogspot.com • www.nwccweb.us/ information/ firemnp.nspx 1. Staley Complex • Acres: 225 • Containment: 15% • Cause: Lightning 2. Rowena • Acres: 3,673 • Containment: 100% • Cause: Unknown

News of Record, B2

3. Nene Creek • Acres: 335 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Lightning

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

4. South Fork Complex • Acres: 64,272 • Containment: 30% • Cause: Lightning

The Bulletin

5. Bald Sisters • Acres: 1,108 • Containment: 0% • Cause: Lightning

— Bulletin staff report

Call n reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine..................541-383-0367 Sunriver ................541-383-0367 Deschutes............541-383-0367 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 Salem ...................541-383-0367 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Letters andopinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsofteens' academic achievements to youth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events: Email eventsto communitylifesb bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submit anEvent" onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117

STATE NEWS

Rain dampens spreading fire

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Employees of7 PeaksPaving,ofBend,lay skateboarders helping to raise money for the down anasphaltpadWednesday morningthat park features and LaPine Park and Recreation will be the future site of a newskatepark in La donating the land. Themajority of the work is Pine. being donated by areabusinesses, including 7 The asphalt rectangle, which will be 2 Peaks Paving. inches thick, 20 feet wide and100 feet long, is With funds raised in the community, La the first phase of the Dream toSkate project, Pine Park and Recreation purchased the a grass-roots cooperative project with local ramps, which will be installed when the as-

Disputed

canal pipe delayed

• Curry County: Residents sprayed by errant pesticide are challenging the Right to Farm law,B3 • Elsewhere:A Portland man wins the National Scrabble Championships,B3

ation at 541-536-2170.

Re mon ex an in rants or owntown usinesses By Leslie Pugmire Hole

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

The Deschutes County

The Bulletin

REDMOND — A city

approved a hold on an application that, if approved,

of Redmond grant program designed to boost downtown businesses and encourage building

would allow the Central Ore-

improvements has proved

gon Irrigation District to pipe a portion of a canal in north-

so successful that its scope has been broadened.

Commission on Wednesday

east Bend, allowing time for

the district and homeowners opposed to the plan to enter a

— From wire repoits

Well shot!

Since 2007, more than

Reader photos

financial partners for what

100 downtown businesses have used city grants to improve their building facades or make small interior improvements. The grants are forgiven after five years. The facade program requires a 10 percent

Businesses in the "old creamery building" on Sixth Street in Red-

has been dubbed phase two

owner match and grants

mond took advantage of the city's grants to improve their facades.

of the Juniper Ridge project will hold funds for a year to

up to $4,000. The small improvementgrantrequires

allow time for the mediation

a 50 percent owner match

process. Before mediation can begin, however, a professional facilitator paid for by the county will assess

for up to $5,000 in grant

formal mediation process.

The delay was requested by COID in a letter to the County Commission. The letter noted the district's

funds.

would make sense. Depending on the findings, the two

When business owners enter the grant program, they agree to give the city a lien on the property, ensuring that the improve-

parties could enter into medi-

ments are in place for a

ation beginning sometime in November.

minimum of five years. If the building or business is

The plan would affect around 4,500 feet of the Pilot

sold before that time, the

whether such a process Curry County

phalt cures, from the old Sisters skatepark. A ribbon-cutting ceremony for the La Pine skatepark, located near Heritage Park on Huntington Road, has beenscheduled for Sept. 13. For more information on the skatepark, call Sharon Walling of La Pine Parkand Recre-

Butte Canal near Juniper

grant must be paid back. However, the program

Ridge. Residents have testi-

was set up to benefit busi-

fied the piping would lower property values and the area's quality of life. SeeCanal/B6

ness owners only once per individual property — or storefront, in the case of a

tenant business.

Light rain falling over southwestern Oregon helped crews stop an explosive burst of a wildfire threatening scattered homes onthe outskirts of ShadyCove. Fire spokesmanDon Hickman said athunderstorm blowing over the Rogue River Drive Fire Tuesday afternoon blew it out of containment lines. Eight helicopters lined up to dip water from the RogueRiver one after the other, three air tankers dropped pink loads of fire retardant, and bulldozers cut fire lines to protect homes and head off the advancing flames. By Wednesday morning, the rain and cool temperatures had calmed down the fire, andnoneofthe130 homes and outbuildings that had been threatened was lost, the Oregon Department of Forestry reported. "They're probably doing the happydance right now," said Hickman.

Meg Rouseos i The Bulletin

Facing a recovering economy and downtown buildings changing hands and tenants, city staff recently brought an idea to the Downtown Urban Renewal Advisory Committee: As long as requirements

are met — grant payback or five years have passed — why not open the grants to proper-

ties more than once'? "We'd like to be able to help new owners in their endeav-

ors," said Gabriel Martin, urban renewal project coordinator for the city. "And we

expectto see more and more properties changing hands." The program changes will

remove the one-time-to-the-

well rule, allowing follow-up grants to properties or businesses as long as the time pe-

riod has passed or there has been a payoff of the grant. "This gets funds rolling through the program even more, which is what we want," said DURAC Chairman Brad Smith. In other downtown news,

• Keep sending us your summer photos for another special version of Well shot! to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best workat bendbuueti n.com/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to renderphotosO bendbuuetin.com and tell us a bit about where and when you took them.We'll choose the best for publication.

Martin said the redevelopment and sale of the New Redmond Hotel is moving along and city staff support the approach of the prospec-

Submissionrequirements:

tive owners.

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

See Redmond/B6

Include ae much detail as

possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell ae your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must he high resolution


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

E VENT TODAY FMCA 90THFAMILY REUNION AND MOTORHOME SHOWCASE: Local dealers will be showcasing motor homes, RV accessories,

motor home components,camping supplie sand home products;$7; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. DISCOVERNATUREDAYPREDATORS ANDPREY: Presented by The Environmental Center, learn about the critters that call

Central Oregonhome,games and interactive science activities, recommended for kids 5-10 years old; free; 11 a.m.-noon; Ponderosa Park, 225 SE15th St., Bend; www. deschuteschildrenforest.org or 541-383-5592.

ENDA R

royal finery, featuring local artists, crafters, face painting and more; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; parking lotacross from Downtown Bend Public Library, 600 NW Wall St.; 541-420-9015. QUILTS INTHEPARK:More than 200 quilts displayed; free;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pioneer Park,1525 NW Hill St., Bend; www.mtbachelorquiltersguild. typepad.com,mbqginfoIegmail.com or 541-389-7275. BEND BREWFEST: Eventincludes tastings from multiple brewers, food vendors and more; free admission, ID required for entry, must purchase mug andtasting tokens to drink; noon to11 p.m., children admitted until 7 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive; www.bendbrewfest.com or 541-312-8510.

CENTRAL OREGONCOMEDY SCENE LIVE SHOWCASE: Featuring comedyand adultthemes;$5;8 p.m., doors open at 7:30 p.m.; Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SWOdem Medo Road;scottie©cocomedyscene.com or 480-257-6515. JERRY JOSEPHANDTHE JACKMORMONS: The California rock band performs; $10; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

FRIDAY FMCA 90THFAMILY REUNION AND MOTORHOME SHOWCASE: Local dealers will be showcasing

motor homes, RV accessories,

reneeb©deschuteslibrary.org or

motorhome components,camping supplies and home products;$7; 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.expo. deschutes.org or 541-548-2711. BEND BREWFEST:Event includes tastings from multiple brewers, food vendors and more; free admission, ID required for entry, must purchase mug andtasting tokens to drink; noon to11 p.m., children admitted until 7 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive; www.bendbrewfest.com or 541-312-8510. SISTERSFARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West Cascade AvenueandAsh Street;

541-312-1055. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Sense of an Ending" by Julian Barnes; noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend, reneeb@deschuteslibrary. org or 541-312-1055. MUNCH & MUSIC:Featuring rock andsoulmusic byCooper8 the Jam, with Sarah Billings; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 NWRiverside Blvd., Bend; www.munchandmusic. com. "RIFFTRAXLIVE,GODZILLA": Film screening of the1998 remake; $12.50; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.

VFW DINNER:Fish and chips; $6; 3-7 p.m.; VFWHall, 1503 NEFourth St., Bend; 541-389-0775. DAVID JACOBS-STRAIN: The Oregon bluesman performs with the Crunk Mountain Boys; $5$10; 7 p.m.; Angeline's Bakery & Cafe,121 W. Main Ave., Sisters; www.angelinesbakery.com or 541-549-9122. BEND IMPROV GROUP: Thecomedy group performs; adult themes; $8 in advance, $10at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave.; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "BRIGHTONBEACH MEMOIRS": Part one of Neil Simon's

BEND BREWFEST: Eventincludes tastings frommultiple brewers, food vendors and more; free admission, ID required for entry, must purchase mug andtasting tokens to drink; noon to11 p.m., children admitted until 7 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive; www.bendbrewfest.com or 541-312-8510. THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Tell the Wolves I'm Home" by Carol Rifka Brunt; noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond,

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

sistersfarmersmarket©gmail.com.

Submitted photo

Jerry Joseph and the Jackmormons perform tonight at Volcanic Theatre Pub in Bend. autobiographical trilogy; $20 adults, $15 seniors 60 and up, $12students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. SUNRIVERMUSIC FESTIVAL CLASSICAL CONCERTIII: Featuring music inspired by Shakespeare; $35$70, $10 for children18 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.sunrivermusic.

org, tickets©sunrivermusic.org or 541-593-9310. BRICK FIELDS: The Arkansas blues band performs, with Jerry Joseph and TheJackmormons; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

SATURDAY CENTRAL OREGONGREAT GIVEAWAY:Community donations collected and given awayfor free; donations accepted today and Friday; 8a.m.-noon; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 52680 Day Road, La Pineand2555 NW Shevlin Park Road, Bend; www.cogga.net or 541-536-1945. PRINEVILLEGREATGIVEAWAY: Community donations collected and given away for free; donations accepted today and Friday; free; 8

541-389-1783. POETRYREADING:High Desert Poetry Cell poets will read original works from their two books; free; 6:30 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. HoodAve., Sisters; 541-549-0866. TWILIGHT CINEMA:An outdoor screening of "The Lego Movie"; bring low-profile chair or blanket, no glass or pets; free; 6:30 p.m.; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive; www.sunriver-direct.com or 541-585-3333. "MRS. DOUBTFIRE":Tribute to Robin Williams and fundraiser for mental health awareness in Deschutes County; $5 suggested donation; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

PRINEVILLEOREGON BAND OF BROTHERSSPAGHETTI FEEDAND AUCTION:Food, silent auction and more, benefiting the Oregon Band of Brothers Prineville Group; $10 suggested donation for feed; 1 p.m. silent auction, 4 p.m. spaghetti feed; Elks Lodge,151 N. Main St.; www.elks.org or 541-420-6477. "GMO-OMG":A screening of the film about a father's journey to find out how GMOsaffect his children motor home components,camping and the planet, sponsoredby The supplie sand home products;$7;9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Sierra Club; free, open to the public; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.expo.deschutes.org 827 SW Deschutes Ave.; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or or 541-548-2711. 541-389-0785. MADRASSATURDAYMARKET: 9 ROCKCHUCK RAMBLE: 327a.m.-2 p.m.; Sahalee Park, Seventh yard fun run, proceeds benefit and B streets; 541-546-6778. American Diabetes Association; NATIONALMODEL AVIATION DAY $15, registration required; 2:07 p.m.; FUN FLYANDFUNDRAISER: Watch Redmond Arch, on Sixth Street; pilots perform flight demonstrations 541-480-7186. and learn about radio-controlled model aviation, with food, raffles and AUTHORPRESENTATION: Smith Henderson will present more; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Horse his book, "Fourth of July Creek"; Ridge Trail, Horse Ridge Frontage free, reservations requested; Road, Bend; www.bamrc.com/ 5-6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Books events 1-1.html, info©bamrc.com or 8 Music, 57100 Beaver Drive; 541-330-5508. www.sunriverbooks.com/event/ NORTHWEST CROSSING smith-henderson-4th-july-creek, FARMERSMARKET: 10a.m.-2 sunriverbooks©sunriverbooks.com p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, Mt. or 541-593-2525. Washington and NWCrossing "FROZEN":Showing of the 2013 drives, Bend; www.nwxevents.com animated musical, with a raffle; free, or 541-312-6473. donations accepted;6:30-9 p.m.; PRINCEANDPRINCESS DAYAT High Desert Community Grange, THE CENTRALOREGONSATURDAY 62855PowellButte Road,Bend; MARKET:Come dressed in your www.unitycentraloregon.com or a.m.-1 p.m.; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 333 S. Idlewood; St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 807 E. First Street; Prineville Church of the Nazarene, 780 E.First St. 541-350-5788. FMCA 90THFAMILY REUNION AND MOTORHOME SHOWCASE: Local dealers will be showcasing motor homes, RVaccessories,

SHOW US YOURSPOKES:Twangrock band Harley Bourbon plays a benefit for Commute Options, with Tuck & Roll; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 NW14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. BRIGHTON BEACHMEMOIRS: Part one of Neil Simon's autobiographical trilogy; $20 adults, $15 seniors 60and up, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. JPNSGRLS:The British Columbia band performs, with Tentareign; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

SUNDAY "BRIGHTONBEACH MEMOIRS": Part one of Neil Simon's autobiographical trilogy; $20 adults, $15 seniors 60and up, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. NATALIEGELMAN:The California artist performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet Cl™assifieds www.bendbulletin.mm

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-633-2117.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 7:49 a.m. July 30, in the 60800 block of Taralon Place. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 2:10 p.m. Aug. 5, in the500block of NW Florida Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:49 p.m. Aug. 7, in the1100 block of SE Third Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:21 p.m.Aug.9,inthe20600 Beaumont Drive. Burglary —A burglary was reported and an arrest made at2:13 p.m. Aug. 9, in the19400 block of Rudi Road.

Theft —A theft was reported at 3:49 p.m. Aug. 9, in the area ofColumbia Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 8:41 p.m. Aug. 9, in the 20100block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Theft —A theft was reported at11:43 a.m. Aug. 10, in the19500 block of Green LakesLoop. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:01 a.m. Aug. 11, in the1100 block of NE Third Street. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at 7:32 a.m.Aug.11, in the 63000 block of PlateauDrive. Theft —A theft was reported at12:37 p.m. Aug. 11, in the2500 block of NE U.S. Highway20. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at IO:03 a.m. Aug. 12, in the100 block of NW OregonAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at l1:24 a.m. Aug. 12, in the20600 block of Blanca Drive. Theft —A theft was reported at1:09 p.m. Aug. 12, in the700block of SE Third Street.

Theft —A theft was reported at 4:08 p.m. Aug. 12, in thearea of Mt. Washington and NW Summit drives. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:42 p.m. Aug.10, in the1900 block of NE Third Street. Thelt —Atheft was reported at1:02 p.m. Aug. 9, in the 900 block of NW Bond Street. Thelt —Atheft was reported at1:06 p.m. Aug. 5, in the 500block of NW Delaware Avenue. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 8:40 p.m. Aug. 9, in the1700 block of NE Wichita Way. Burglary —A burglary was reported at 3:51 a.m. Aug. 11, in the1300 block of SE ReedMarket Road. Thelt —Atheft was reported at 5:45 p.m. Aug.12, in the 61500blockof American Loop. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 9:44 p.m. July25, in the1900 block of NW Monterey Pines Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:02 a.m. Aug. 8, in the19800 blockof Touchmark Way.

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~ •

~

I-


THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON NATIONAL SCRABBLECHAMP

Right to Farmlaw

challenged incourt By Jeff Barnard A group of people whose

Qp

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• >

"We have the right to defend

-rh

our families and our private under a doud of herbicides property from chemical tresmeant for neighboring timber- pass," John Burns, an assislands is challenging the consti- tant chief of the local volunteer tutionality of the Oregon Right fire department and one of families, homes and pets came

to Farm and Forest Act.

tcan

P

the plaintiffs, said in a written

The Associated Press PORTLAND — The Ore-

gon board that oversees education from preschool to college held a daylong retreat to assesswhere itstands after three years, and there were some concerns about h ow

things are going. Members at the Tuesday meeting said the public either overestimates the power of the Oregon Education Investment Board or doesn't know it exists.

The board was created in 2011 to better coordinate early

childhood programs, public schools and public higher education so the state can attain

its "40-40-20" goal by 2025. The goalcalls for 40 percent of Oregon's young adults to have four-year degrees, another 40 percent to have

two-year degrees or industry certification, and the final 20 percent to have high school diplomas. The board, however, has

— From wire reports Gary Wiepert/The Associated press

Conrad Bassett-Bouchard started his championship Scrabble game Wednesdaywith the word "zilch" and finished with the opposite — the $10,000 prize andtitle of national Scrabble champion. The 24-year-old player, of Portland, beat 29-year-old Jason Li, of Montreal, in the final round of the five-day 25th National Scrabble Championships played at theBuffalo Niagara Convention Center. Bassett -Bouchard,thetournament'ssecondseed,said heknew luck was with him when hedrew a wild-card blank tile and an "s" on his first seven-tile rack. Heled for most of the match, winning by a score of 477-350. Li, the18th seed, said, "I was playing catch-up right to the end." Li had the letters to play anobscure but potentially high-scoring word but didn't see it, creating a buzzamong experienced onlookers. "He's going to be kicking himself for missing 'gramarye,'" tournament director John Chewsaid after the play. The tournament drew 525players from 11countries.

-

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REDMOND

541-383-1733

541-504-2134

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• •

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of the Legislature and the governor." Oregon's chief education officer, Nancy Golden, told board members they have

led to tens of millions of dol-

Insurance Services

ALL SALE & CLEARANCE APPAREL AND SELECT HOME ITEMS!

than they might think. She said their proposals from 2012

C ON SUh1 E R,„,"„' „'„,„",

Brim-Edwards, a Nike executive. "That is the purview

i n f luence

-

SUSPENSIONS DUIIss TICKETS

more power an d

over education spending. "We don't have the ability el," said board member Julia

SR-22 5S

little authority and no control to increase the funding lev-

walked away from the Mill CreekCorrectional Facility in Salem has been captured. Thestate Corrections Department says officers arrested Jerry Teixeira late Tuesday inStayton along with suspected accomplice LacyEvans.Theinmate had beensince missing Saturday. He entered state custody last October after hewasconvicted of burglary, meth charges andbeing afelon in possession of a firearm.

s ssociation

partment of Agriculture deter-

mined the Pacific Air Research legal fees to defendants who helicopter pilot "more than daim immunity, Winter said. likely" allowed herbicides to The lawsuit was brought by fall over the homes as it flew 17 residents of the Cedar Val- to spray neighboring timberley area north of Gold Beach, lands. But it reached no conduwho were victims last fall of sions about whether the small herbicides meant for neigh- amounts found on the ground boring timberlands. People accounted forpeople's health reported respiratory problems, complaints. headaches, balance problems, This week, the department swellingofeyesandhands,and fined Pacific Air Research and stomach cramps. The lawsuit applicator Steven Owen$10,000 seeks a ruling that the immuni- each and suspended their pestity granted to pesticide applica- cidelicensesfora yearforprotors is unconstitutional. It also viding false information that asks ajudge to bardefendants misled investigators.

Education board assesses itself

ESCaped inmate Captured — Authorities sayaninmatewho

BBLE

The lawsuit filed Wednesday statement. "Nobody should in Curry County Circuit Court have to l iv e t h rough what in Gold Beach argues that im- we've experienced over the munity the law grants to pes- past several months. These irticide sprayers treating farms responsibl e practicesare makand forests violates the Oregon ing us sick, killing our pets and Constitution's guarantee of the interfering with the use of our right to seek a legal remedy to land." violations of property rights. The lawsuit was filed against "If you are a commercial the pesticide applicator, Paciffarmer and your crops are ic Air Research Inc. of White sprayed, you can sue the per- City; t imberlands owners son who sprayed your crops for Crook Timberlands LLC of damages," said attorney Chris Coos Bay and Joseph Kaufman Winter of Crag Law Center in of Gold Beach; the Barnes and Portland, which is represent- Associates logging company ing the plaintiffs. "But if you of Roseburg; and Pro Forestry are just a regular person, if Consulting LLC of Coos Bay. you get sprayed, or your pets Defendants did not immeget sprayed, you can't sue the diately return telephone calls person who sprayed those seeking comment. pesticides." In April, the Oregon DeThe law carries an extra deterrent to lawsuits, by awarding

AutiSm ruling —A federal judge in Portland has ruled that a major Oregon health provider cannot denycoverage toautistic children for a specific treatment. Judge Michael Simon found ProvidenceHealth Plan violated state andfederal laws in its denial of Applied Behavior Analysis, or ABA.ABAcan cost up to $50,000 a year. Last year, the Oregon Legislature passed abill requiring insurers to pay for ABA starting in 2016. Because it was a class-action suit, the decision could affect hundreds of children and other Oregon insurers and plans who havedenied ABA.

gQAQs

from claimingimmunity andto award unspecified damages.

The Associated Press

AROUND THE STATE

Slo oFF

YOUR PURCHASE OF $25 OR MORE. VALID 8/15 'TIL 1PM OR 8/16/14 'TIL 1PM LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER.

II 0IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 22802'j 75 8 2 2 110

L

s

Also excludes:EverydayValues (EDV), spedals, super buys, furniture, mattresses,floor coverings, rugs, ele<trits/elettrosits, cosmetics/fragrances,athletic shoesfor him,hertr kids, Dalas Cowboysmerchandise, gift cards, jewelry trunkshows, NewEra, NikesnField, previouspurchases, special orders, selected licensed depts.,specialpurchases, services, ma<ys.tom. Cannot be combinedwith anysavings pass/coupon, extra discountorcredit offer, except opening anewMaqr's account.Dollarsavingsareallocated asdistmuttts off eacheligible item, asshownon receipt. Whenysu return att item,ysu forfeit the savingsallocated ts that item. Thiscouponhasnocashvalue attd may sot be redeemed for cash, usedts purchasegift cardssr appliedaspayment srcredit ts youratcouttt. Purcha se must be 525srmsre,exclusivesftax attd delivetyfses.

i

r •

s

+lTiCCyS WOW! $20 OFF ALL SALE & CLEARANCE APPAREL AND SELECT HOME ITEMS!

Alsoexcludes:Everyday Values(EIW), spstials, super buys, furniture,mattttsses,floor coverings, rugs, electrics/electronics,cosmetics/fragrances, athletic ShOeS fOr him,hertr kidS,DalaSCO WbO ySmerChandiSe,

gift cards,jewelrytrunkshows,HswEra, NikeottField, previouspurchases, special orders, selectedli<ettsed depts.,specialpurchases,services,matys.com.Cannot becombinedwithanysavingspass/coupon,extra discountoi credit offer,exceptopeninganewMaty's account.Dollarsavingsareallocated asdiscountsoff YOUR PURCHASE OF $50 OR MORE. eacheligible item,asshown ss receipt. Whenyos VALID 8/15 'TIL 1PM OR 8/16/14 'TIL 1PM return att item,ysuforfeit the savingsallocatedto that item. Thisatupss hassscashvalueandmaysot LIMIT ONE PER CUSTOMER. be redeeme dfor cash, usedts purchase gift cardsor appliedaspaymentorcredit ts ysuractoust.Purchase must be 550ormore,exdusivesftsxasd deliveryfees.

CANNOT BE USED ON DOORBUSTERS OR DEALS OF THE DAY

$20oFF

II000228021075'j8082114 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Gov. John Kitzhaber will

also strongly weigh the advice of the panel as he crafts his proposal for th e state's next two-year budget, she

said. The board is publicly vetting almost 30 proposals to improve results. In September, it will vote on which ones it thinks the Legislature

should fund.

•s•s Fine jewelry doorbusters areonlyat stores that carry fine jewelry. WREG. &ORIG. PRICESAREOFFERING PRICESAND SAVINGSMAYNOT BEBASEDON ACTUALSALES. SOMEORIG. PRICESNOT IN EFFECTDURING THEPAST 90 DAYS. ONE DAYSALEPRICES IN EFFECT 8/15 & 8/16/2014. *Intermediate price reductions mayhave been taken. +II carat weights (ct. t w) are approximate; variance may be.05 carat. Jewelryphotos may be enlarged or enhancedto show detail. Finejewelry at select stores; log onto macyscom for locations. Almost all gemstones have been treated to enhancetheir beauty & require special care, log on to macyscom/gemstones or askyour sales professional. Clearance items are available while supplies last. Advertised merchandise maynot be carrted atyour local Macy's & selection may vary by store. Prices & merchandise maydifferat macys.com. Electric items & luggage carry mfrs' warranties;to see a mfr's warranty at no charge before purchasing, vlslt astore or write to: Macy's Warranty Dept., PO Box 1026, Maryland Heights, MO 63043, attn: Consumer Warranties. N4070015.

OPEN A lt/IACY'S ACCOUNT FOREXTRA20% SAVINGSTHE FIRST 2DAYS, UPTO $100, WITH MORE REWARDSTO COME. Macy's credit card is available subject to credit approval; newaccount savings valid the day youraccount is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, restaurants, gourmet food & wine. The newaccount savings are limited to a total of $100; application must qualify for immediate approvalto receive extra savings; employees not eligible.


B4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

EDj To

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on't tell anyone, but the Deschutes Public Library

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system has made big improvements in its electronic

.

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lending of books. It's spending a lot more to buy them — about $200,000 a year, compared to $50,000just a few years ago. And as of two months ago, all five major publishers sell electronic books to libraries. That means there are more e-books available,and there's a better chance the library will have what you want. Library Director Todd Dunkelberg adds: "We now have Stephen King." The Deschutes library system has the highest rate in the state for downloads per capita. If digital borrowing were its own separate library, it would be the third busiest library in the local system behind the Downtown Bend Public Library and the Redmond Public Library. The library system loaned out about 212,000 e-books in fiscal year 2013-14. Digitalbooks are more expen-

sive for the Deschutes libraries in some ways. Library digital copies can cost at least three times more than an ordinary customer would pay for the digital version, Dunkel-

berg said. Some publishers require that libraries buy a new digital copy after 26 checkouts or so. Some publishers charge more and have no limits. Many peopleprefer real books rather than the electronic versions or preferbuying their own copy. But when the library has a book you want, you cannot beat the

price. If you tried the e-books at the library before and were frustrated, you may want to give them a try again. But let's keep it between us, so we don't have to wait to get what we want.

State records could use modernization

t

magine a mile of files, each one containing the medical records of one of 40,000 or so former Oregon state prisoners. Add to that mile the records of the more than14,000 men and women currently held in the state prison system. Now imagine having to find the records ofa single person somewhere in that mile. It's no wonder the Oregon Department ofCorrections wants to switch to electronic record keeping. The most obviousreasons for the change are the time and space saved by doing so. More important is this: While DOC employees are good at finding specific files in all that paper, it can take time, sometimes asmuch as a day.That can be arealproblem ifsomeone needs immediate treatment that depends upon knowing his or her complete medical history. Paper presentsother problems, as well. If records are handwritten, they might have to be deciphered by someone other than the writer.Files can be dropped and paper scatteredand lost.And so

on.

If medical record-keeping for the general public is any indication, a switch might not be universally embraced, however.Some doctors have found the switch to digital record-keeping an unnerving process, for one thing. Also, accordingtoThe Oregonian, some inside the DOC are concerned that well-kept records might expose them to liability, should a prisoner or formerprisoner decide to sue. The state has been working to put the change in place for at least since 2011. Its first effort fell apart when thecompany ithad hoped to hire was subjected to a criminal investigation. Then, in 2013, Gov. John Kitzhaber pulled a request for money for the conversion from his budget before the Legislature could vote on it. The DOC's estimated cost for the project, $3 million, should pay off in improved record-keeping. But there will be many projects clamoring for th e attention of legislators in the next session. As much sense as it makes to digitize the records, it should be weighed against the state's many other needs.

Ben nee ssensi e in i By Christine Herrick

t

IN MY VIEW

t is exciting to be a Bend resident

parking be dumsily shoehorned into older, traditional neighborhoods. Fig-

during this time of upheaval they have been for Portland develop- ure out how to make infill happen in caused by the city of Bend's need ersoverthe years since the UGB con- tasteful ways that don't harm existto readjust its approach to expan- cept was imposed. The economies ing strong neighborhoods. sion of the urban growth boundary. gained by being able to bulldoze a Bend finds itself at an important Plans and opinions abound: For ex- hundred or more acres and build a juncture. It can choose to continue on ample, the proposed Third Street largedevelopment from scratch are the path to becoming a sprawled, disdevelopment plan seems clearly not your future, at least not under ex- persed city, fighting land use battles in line with state land use infill isting land use law. all the way, or it can turn back now, requirements. It represents a posThink creatively about what you and focuson becoming the more itive response to the earlier failure can do in smaller spaces, fitting into compact city that Oregon land use by the city to obtain incorporation smaller parcels that I observe, as laws mandate. A recent book states a of all the land it sought within the I drive around town, are still plen- powerful case in favor of compaction: "Despite all we have invested in UGB. tiful. Move away in your thinking Land is a finite resource. State land from the wasteful 2-acre single fam- this dispersed city, it has failed to use laws, as much as some may hate ily lot concept (for example, the new maximize health and happiness. It them, are binding unless changed. "Farm" development planned off is inherently dangerous. It makes us My understanding is that those laws Skyliners) and focus more on dus- fatter, sicker and more likely to die mandate that a city fully develop the ter housing and multifamily hous- young. "It makes life more expensive existing land within its boundaries ing, all of which can be done in fine before it may expand the UGB to include more land for additional devel-

opment. This effectuates the Oregon goal, articulated eloquently years ago by revered Gov. Tom McCall, of protecting our beautiful wild places and important agricultural lands

from California-style sprawl. As Oregon's population expands, so do its land use challenges. Here's the challenge for developers, especially the west-side developers who seek expansion of the UGB westward: think creatively about do-

ing smaller, infill projects. Even "affordable housing" infill projects can be veryprofitablefora developer,as

style. For instance, the NorthWest

than it has to be. It steals our time. It

Crossing cluster home on the recent makes it harder to connect with famCOBA tour is an outstanding exam- ily, friends and neighbors. It makes ple of development on a tiny piece of us vulnerable to the economic shocks land. Well-done multifamily housing and rising energy prices inevitable in should also be popular and lucrative. our future. As a system, it has begun Here's the challenge to the city: Be to endanger both the health of the strict in your requirements for infill planet and the well-being of our dehousing. Encourage sensible infill, scendants." — from "Happy City," by like accessory dwelling units. But Charles Montgomery (2013, pg. 315). don't let infillbecome theuglyhodgeI hope all of us who love Bend will podge mess that has occurred, for ex- help steer its future toward good ample, in inner Northeast Portland, density and not delude ourselves where giant new McMansions have that expanding city limits will solve been crammed in next to still-via- the issues created by our population ble smaller cottage homes. Don't let growth. large dorm-style apartments with no — Christine Herrich lives in Bend.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBuiietin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nickei's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: leiters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickei's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Real mwboys don't summer on Martha's Vineyard By Margaret Carlson Bloomberg News

or most people, summer is a trea-

F

problems of people like you." People like you don't summer among tenured Ivy League professors — or use "summer" as a verb — in a 17-room house

sured time to cool your heels in a cottage by a lake or in a ham- on 10 acres worth an estimated $12

mock in the backyard. It's not so sim-

million.

winter and inaccessible except by pri- thechoice, mightheadsomeplace cool- publicans-only event. It's just that the vate plane. Trying to wipe the wussy er, like a beach. Deep-fried Twinkies presumptive Democratic candidate, liberal elitist cast off his vacations, Bill on a stick and butter sculptures are Hillary Clinton, probably won't face a Clinton polled to find out where the worth avisit, but maybe not when tem- primary challenge. She doesn't need family should go and got the message peraturesare so high the emergency to rub shoulders with horses out West to saddle up, buckaroos. They head- tent is crowded with victims of heat or gobble down deep-friedtrans fats in ed toa campfire and a chuck wagon exhaustion. Iowa. in Wyoming, forswearing the swells, Justbecause the clothes arecasual, This August, she's thrown caution oceanand otherwise,oftheVineyard. the food down-home and the sun is to the wind, or to the breeze, off GarOnce was enough, apparently. shining doesn't mean it's a picnic. Paul diner's Bay, renting an $18 million Romney's sacrifice wasn't in vain, dropped his hamburger mid-bite and property in the Hamptons to frolic however. If you're a Republican run- skedaddled when a Dreamer, a teen- (Katie Holmes helicoptered in) and do ning for Obama's job, the former Mas- ager who'd come to the United States a little politicking. Ink's been spilled sachusettsgovernor's missteps are a with her undocumented parents, over the cost, given how "dead broke" cautionary tale: Apparently, the safest walked up to his table to talk immigra- she daimed her family was a few vacation is no vacation at all. So wel- tion and arch-conservative Rep. Steve yearsago.The restorative powers of come to Iowa in August, two years King, R-Iowa, proceeded to insult her. $250,000 speaking fees can't be overbefore the presidential election but There's bound to be a few bad mo- stated. But it's not all play; there are not too soon to forgo the semblance ments when you squeeze in 10 stops fundraisers. You can't soak the rich of normality in favor of multiple trips over three days as you try to build a for campaign money if you don't go to the site of the first-in-the-country bigger tent. Perry, who is trying to where the rich are soaking. caucuses. show that he gets it on immigration by How someone spends their time That's why instead of vacationing calling up the Texas National Guard when freed from shirt, tie, pantsuit like normal Americans, Sen. Rand to deal with the border crisis, is spend- and handlers could give us a rare Paul, Sen. Ted Cruz (his sixth trip), ing four days in the state, attending glimpse of who they really are. But not Texas Gov. Rick Perry, and Rick 11 events, and he hasn't found a diner this year, and not these people. They Santorum and Mike Huckabee are he doesn't want to eat in. Along with are so warped by their career choice swamping the Hawkeye State. Gov. Cruz, Jindal, Santorum and Hucka- they can no longer mimic how reguBobby Jindal is haulinghis whole fam- bee, Perry spent last Saturday wooing lar people behave, even when they are ily there for the Iowa State Fair. evangelicals at the Family Leadership supposed to be at rest.

ple for politicians. For them, deciding He probably should allow a decent when and where to vacation can be interval before that next speech on inperilous. Repair to a beach on the East come inequality. Coast and you're an out-of-touch elitPerhaps worse, this two-week soist; stay away too long and you'll be journ on One-Percenter Island probasked who's minding the store. ably won't even score him any points Take ~ sident Barack Obama. with the fat cats, whose jets have to How dare he go away while he's drop- abide by an elaborate set of security ping bombs in Iraq, even though he restrictions as long as Obama's bigger can orderthem to be dropped from jet is there. (How much more can they wherever he happens to be? He's tak- endure'?) ing the political hit of returning to Republicans are at home in a Martha's Vineyard. He had skipped 10-gallon hat and boots. The outside a visit while running for re-election of ahorse is good forthe inside ofa in 2012. His opponent, Mitt Romney, m an, Ronald Reagan explained ashe didn't have that foresight: He was pho- blithely broke the then-record for days tographed jet-skiing past his lakeside spent away from the White House at mansion, reinforcing his image as the his California ranch (349 days). Reakind of plutocrat who hides money in gan kept his title until another cowthe Cayman Islands. boy,George W. Bush,came along and This time, it's th e t erm-limited spent 490 days at his ranch in CrawObama who istaking a chance by ford, Texas. playing among the canape eaters and Democrats just can't pull off the white wine sippers. He may kill any spurs-and-chaps lookandseemable to chance he has to restore his formerly let down their hair only in places that No offense intended to Iowa and its Summit. high numbers for "understanding the are cool in the summer, warm in the stellar fair, but a nonpolitician, given Storming Iowa isn't usually a Re-

— MargaretCarlsonis a columnist for Bloomberg.


THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DE~TH NP TjgES Ruth Ellen McKenzie, of Portland Aug. 6, 1941 - July 3, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home, Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com

Services: Services have been held by the family in Portland.

Rita Marie Chambers, of Bend Sept. 7, 1939- Aug. 11, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net

Services: Funeral service will be held at Autumn Funerals, 61555 Parrell Rd., Bend, at 12:30 p.m., on Aug. 16, 2014. Interment to follow at Pilot Butte Cemetery at 1:30 p.m.

Frances Duescher Colburn, of Bend Aug. 22, 1912 - Aug. 10, 2014

Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 Hvww.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held at this time. Contributions may be made to:

Charity of one's choice.

Katherine Louise McPheeters, of Bend June11, 1958- Aug. 6, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at 1:00 p.m., on Aug. 15, 2014, at Pioneer Park, Bend, OR. Reception to follow from 2:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97702

Kerry Darlene Zuber, of Culver, OR April 12, 1949 - Aug. 7, 2014

Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Redmond 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held Sat., Aug. 16, 2014, at 11:00 a.m., at the Metolius Friends Church, 575 Hood Ave., Metolius, OR.

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe 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 anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

FEATURED OBITUARY

Court sideswith deputy who rescuedhorse was property and that the exception shouldn't apply to egon Supreme Court ruled property. that a sheriff's deputy acted the horse was in imminent The S u preme C o u rt legally four years ago when danger. agreed the horse was properhe entered private property The appeals court ruled ty, but decided the exception without a warrant to rescue t hat B a r tholomew h a d applies in "circumstances a starving horse in Douglas grounds under the emer- that require swift action to County. gency aid exception, which prevent harm to persons or The ruling issued last allows an officer to enter property." week affirmed decisions property without a warrant In a w r i t ten s t atement, made by circuit and appeals to prevent harm to someone. Fessenden's attorney said courts. Bartholomew said he thought the ruling disappointed her

son's constitutional right to

T eresa An n D i c ke, 5 3 , it would take between four to and Linda Diane Fessenden, eight hours to obtain a war-

The Associated Press

R OSEBURG — Th e O r -

Golan was passionate B-movie director

that Dicke was sentenced to

eight months in jail after a Douglas County jury found her guilty of first-degree animal neglect and first-degree animal abuse. Fessenden was found guilty of second-degree animal neglect and sentenced to 90 days in jail. T he

e m a ciated ho r s e

By Anita Gates

argued that Deputy Lee Bar-

New York Times News Service

tholomew violated the Oregon Constitution and Fourth

pealed to the state Supreme

and workable rule that balances the societal interest in

Amendment of the U.S. Con-

Court, contending Grace

animal welfare with a per-

28.

Menahem Golan,the colorful Israeli filmmaker who

52, shared ownership of the horse named Grace. They

client. The attorney, E l izabeth Daily, wrote that Fessenden is concerned that the opinion

rant, and the horse might have fallen or d ied within that time.

does not establish a narrow

Fessenden and Dicke ap-

began his prolific B-movie career with Roger Corman, introduced audiences to Jean-

Claude Van Damme and during his 1980s heyday directed action stars like Sylves-

ter Stallone and Chuck Norris, died Friday in Jaffa, Israel. He was 85.

His family announced his death. No cause was given. Golan's best-known f i l ms

as producer, director or both included "The Delta Force" (1986), in which terrorists go up against elite commandos including Norris and Lee Marvin; "Over the Top" (1987), starring Stallone as an arm wrestler; and the four "Death Wish" sequels, with Charles Bronson.

CALIFORNIA

Soaking upCatalina, tourists posedilemma By lan Lovett

they use. Most turn off the water while they are soaping up

New York Times News Service

AVALON, Calif. — Just

in the shower. Their cars have

an hourlong ferry ride from Los Angeles, Catalina Island is enjoying a renais-

gone unwashed for months.

ii~H . iYWATER

sfe usrr

Getting tourists to cut back

EkiA'IlEI .

can be more difficult. Aggressive conservation does not exactly make for a relaxing vacation, and businesses have tried to shield them from the water

71IIINii'

sance. After years of dechn-

ing tourism, businesses here have spent more than $40 million updating this quaint

EMER F1RST

Golan producedmore than

island town. Hotels have

restrictions so they will keep

200 films, directed more than

been remodeled and new

comingback.

40 and wrote almost as many (often under the name Joseph Goldman), including works as serious as a 2002 production of

r estaurants added. A z i p

M ariella Zapata, who r e cently visited the island with

filmed less than four months

line overlooking the ocean was installed. The beachlong among the dirtiest in California, befouled by an aging sewer system — was Monica Almeida/ New YorkTimes News Service deaned up. Kris Kugler, the head technician for PureSafe Water Systems, The plan worked. Tour- tops off a 275-gallon tote with purified water in Avalon, California. ists have been flooding off Avalon is the only city on Catalina Island, which has spent millions

after the fashion designer Gi-

ferries here in near-record

anni Versace's death. An article in The New York Times

arts tournament. Van Damme

numbers thisyear. nesses and homes to reduce use by 25percent. There is just one problem: Catalina is quiddy running out of water, a situation Arranged around aglittering a drought as extreme as this that is threatening to curturquoise bay, Avalon has been one would have been all but tail the island's economic a popularsummer getaway for impossible. "We're isolated from any othresurgence. Southern Californians since With the island's reser- William Wrigley Jr., the chew- er resource, unlike our countervoir approaching a record ing-gum mogul, bought the parts on the mainland, which low, draconian conservation island in 1919 and Hollywood have aqueducts," Hite said. "We measures are going into ef- stars like Charlie Chaplin be- built infrastructure to plan for fect. Starting this week, ev- came frequent visitors. recurring drought, but not for ery business and home will Potable water has always the most severe drought in 120 be required to cut water use been a problem; a century ago, years." by 25 percent. it was barged over from the A reprieve may be on the While several other com- mainland. Currently, about a way: a deeper well, which munities in California face quarter of the island's summer can tap water in the island's a more imminent danger of water supply comes from a bedrock that has so far been the taps running dry, Catali- seawater desalination plant, a out of reach. But it will not be na is in a unique position be- dependable but very expensive completed for months or even cause of the tourist economy source that opened in 1991. The years. In the meantime, Catahere. With about 1 million restcomes from groundwater lina residents, most of whom

was paid $25,000, and the film earned almost $12 million in

visitors a year, the amount of water that th e i sland

the United States alone. At the annual Cannes Film

requires each summer is

"Crime and Punishment," with John Hurt and Vanessa Red-

grave, and as exploitative as "The Versace Murder" (1998),

described one of Golan's contributions as standing behind the camera throwing fake blood on the actorplayingthe killer. To say that Golan discovered Van Damme, when he was a

Belgian kickboxer who had appeared only in tiny parts in a handful of films, is to give Van Damme too little credit. As he

has told the story, he spotted Golan outside a restaurant in

Beverly Hills, California, and leapt into action, executing a karate kick above the film-

maker's head. Golan promptly gave him his first starring role, in "Bloodsport" (1988), about a potentially deadly martial

Festival in France, Golan became a celebrity. Working with Yoram Globus, his cousin

and business partner in Cannon Films, he promoted his

high-minded films and his less lofty action titles with equal fervor. Perhaps the oddest deal

washing. When customers

releasedin 1987endedupbeing a science-fiction comedy about post-Chernobyl culture, induded Norman Mailer, Woody

ask for water, they are offered bottled water for 50

berias, a city on the Sea of Gal-

ues into next year, even

ilee, in what was then Palestine

these measures may not be enough. By spring, a 50

Israeli war of independence; in 1948, when the state of Israel

was established, he changed his surname to Golan. He studieddrama in London and in the United States and worked in

Savitt, 16, a high school student

who has grown up here. "It's kind of annoying."

TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO

•J

Low Cost Reverse Mortgage Call Jerry Gilmaur (NMLS¹ 124521)

done enoughto accommodate the island's growth. "There has been a real outcry about Edison," said Ann

17 years reverse mortgage experience ln person, professional consultation

Marshall, the mayor of Avalon.

"They should have done more to keep up withthepopulation,"

P~ WillametteValleyBank HOME LOAN DIVISION

Ron Hite, Edison's district

manager for Catalina, said that on an island, planning for

541-382-4189

I I

likely to close some rooms,

and jobs here would begin to evaporate. Unlike cities on the main-

tant on Corman's "The Young

in water from elsewhere.

Racers" (1963), a race car dra-

Instead, the island offers a sobering glimpse of the sac-

Golan, who lived in Jaffa and whose survivors include

rifices, both personal and

his wife and three children,

sary to survive in California without imported water — a

'

economic, that are necesprospect that more Califor-

"Mack the Knife," an earthy

nia communities may have

1989 version of "The Threepenny Opera" in which 19th-cen-

to face as the population continues to grow and the

tury characters carry semiau-

climate gets even drier. "We think we're ahead

the world:

New York Times: "Believe it or not, in Berlin they've done a

will have to deal with in the

punk version. People are doing it with green in their hair."

future," said Ben Harvey, the city manager of Avalon,

In the same ariide, David

where almost all of the is-

~

of what a lot of California

of the Chicano art movement.

like it, but it works. It's made for

Died Saturday in California.

cinema, and Menahem Golan

land's residents live."Please, come visit the island, but do you really need that shower? Go jump in our bay

is a real cinema man."

water."

Toguri, the film's choreographer, said: "The purists won't

just hose them off outside for however long," said Susanna

use could be mandated. At that point, hotels would be

land, about 22 miles away, Catalina cannot simply pipe

sometimes defendedhis artistic choices. When he was filming

"When theycome back from thebeach with theirkids, they'll

percent reduction in water

theater before landing his first film job, as a production assisma starring Mark Damon.

les. And they have complained that Southern California Ed-

watching tourists carelessly waste water.

cents. Hotels plan to start

Sellars. Golan was born Menahem Globus on May 31, 1929, in Tiand is now Israel. He served as a pilot and bombardier in the

counting every drop of water

beginning to serve food on which has more than doubled paper plates to reduce dish- since 1970.

sending some of their sheets and towels to be laundered on the mainland,a huge expense. If the drought contin-

Allen and the director Peter

one-minute showers." Locals spoke with ire of

work in tourism, have taken to

ison, the utility company that controls water here, has not

cast of that film, which when

"We've been trying," Zapata,

55, said. "But we cannot take

Residents already pay up to five times more per gallon than

rationing may imperil the island's viability as a summer destination: Already, tourists have been feeling the drought's squeeze on Avalon, the island's only city. Signs in hotel rooms beg guests to keep showers brief. Some restaurants are

asked them to shower "for like aminute."

wells. their counterparts in Los Ange-

he made at the festival was an agreement with Jean-Luc Godard, said to have been signed on a napkin at a hotel bar, to direct a version of "King Lear." The

her family, said the manager at their rental property had

to revive tourism but, with limited water sources, is requiring busi-

many times more than what its 4,000 full-time residents consume. And strict water

tomatic weapons, he told The

— From wire reports

privacy. The newspaper reported

gained attention through a Facebook page established following her 2010 rescue. Grace had more than 6,000 fans when she died in July 2011 from the lingering effects of starvation. She was

Deathsof note from around Emigdio Vasquez, 75:Painter whose bold use of color and uncanny ability to capture everyday people in dramatic moments made him one of the most influential pioneers

stitution when he seized their property without a warrant and that he couldn't prove

II

I •

••~I


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

I

o

i

'

I

I f '

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH

LGW

73'

49'

Variable clouds with a shower or t-storm

I

ALMANAC EAST: Variably cloudy TEMPERATURE with a couple of Yesterday Normal Record showers and athun73 82 99' in 1 9 14 derstorm. Some of the 54' 47' 28'in 1949 thunderstorm canbe severe north. PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.03" CENTRAL: Acouple of 0.16"in 1916 showers and a Record thuno Month to date (normal) 0.3 1 " (0.19 ) derstorm acrossthe o o Year to date (normal ) 5.33 (6.47 ) region. Moreclouds Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 9" than sunshine.

SUN ANDMOON

Seasid 65/56

Cannon 63/56

iQ

Fir s t

79/

ee/54

Lincoln

Full

UV INDEX TODAY ~ 6~ N 4

The highertheAccuWcnibcrxmmuy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eycnndskin protccgcn.0-2 Lcw, 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exircme.

POLLEN COUNT G rasses Absent

T r ee s Ab s ent

Wee d s Mo d erate

Baker City

srcckings

sums

Mostly sunnyandpleasant

79/55

Granitec 73/49

1/60 • Mitch 0 75/52

77/53

La plne

/56

'Baker C 75/47

tario 8 58

Valec 85/58

Ham ton

Nyssa 84/ 5 8

untura • Burns J83/57

Riley 77/46 76/53

71/47

Roseburg

77/52

• John cU Day 7/49 76/ 5 2

• Pa lina

• Fort Rock Cresce t • 74/47 •

Beaver Marsh

80/59

Condon 0/56

' Se d B rothers Su iVerc 73/49

• 72/ Grove Oakridge

Jordan V aey

Frenchglen

79/51

79/52

• Burns Jun tion • 81/51 Rome 82/52 McDermi 81/52

Yesterday Today Friday

Yesterday Today Friday Hi/Lc/Prnc. Hi/Lc/W Hi/Lc/W

C ity Hi/Lc/Prec. Hi/Lc/W Hi/Lc/W city Ln Grande 88/52/0.00 76/51/I 80/48/I Portland Ln Pine 71/46/0.40 72/48/t 78/50/pc Princviiie Mcdlcrd 7 8 /60/0.44 84/59/c 90/60/pcRedmond Ne w port 64/5 4 /0.03 62/53/c 62/52/pc Rcscburg N o rth Bend 7 0 / 55/0.00 65/56/c 65/54/pc Salem O n tario 87/58/0.01 84/58/t 88/56/s Sisters P e ndleton 85/ 5 6/0.05 79/59/I 8 2/59/I The Dalles

78/6 3/0.0177/63/sh 80/62/ pc 79/ 5 3/0.0677/53/1 78/53/pc 77/ 5 1/0.2874/48/I 81/46/pc 76 / 60/0.03 80/59/c 86/59/pc 77/58/0.00 79/58/c 83/59/p c 74/52/0.03 74/50/1 81/49/pc 8 3 / 63/0.02 80/65/I 86/63/I

Eugene Klamnth Falls Lnkcview Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-clcudy, sh-shcwcrs,t-thundcrstcrms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwI-icc,Tr-trscc,Yesterday data asc15 p.m.yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER

National high: 103 at Imperial, CA National low: 34 at Bodie State Park,CA Precipitation: 13.51" at Islip, NY

~ f os ~2 09 ~sos ~40s ~50s ~eos ~709 ~aos ~gos ~toos ~ffos + + + +cnlgn

o

82/57

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84/85

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klnhcmn c

Albuquc uc

84/ss

Juneau

9

chnrlc

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• A ntn Litil Rock •

• Dnlln 98/74

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wv.v.'e

85/ 8 2

88/8

vine GP'

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4

Houston

amdc

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83/85

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92niL~.K>,. „ „ „ ,' E 'oiii i i i i ~ ~ ~ ~ ,

Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Cold Front

Source: USDA Forest Service

Measures

lot by then. Fell and Boozell have both

Continued from B1 filed to run for City Council A petition proposed by Ron seats this fall. Boozell would have increased Boozell said he'll continue the pay for members of the

to focus on the council pay is-

Hi/Lo/Prsc. HiRo/W Abilene 98/69/0.00 97n2/s Akron 76/61/0.10 69/50/pc Albany 71 /67/0.1 7 71/55/pc Albuquerque 83/69/Tr 84/65/I Anchorage 59/53/0.30 62/53/r Agnnbr 84/68/0.00 86/65/s Atlantic City 82n1/0.80 78/62/pc Austin 98/64/0.00 99/71/s Baltimore 82/70/Tr 80/54/pc Billings 94/69/Tr 86/63/I Birmingham 85/64/0.00 89/64/s Bismarck 90/62/0.00 88/66/pc Boise 88/65/0.02 86/63/I Boston 68/65/0.96 77/60/pc Bridgeport, CT 82/67/1.69 79/61/pc Buffalo 70/62/0.00 65/55/pc Burlington, VT 71/68/1.19 68/55/c Caribou, ME 75/58/0.00 68/57/r Charleston, SC 93n6/0.90 90/74/pc Charlotte 84/68/0.00 84/64/s Chattanooga 83/64/0.00 86/63/s Cheyenne 87/58/0.00 81/59/I Chicago 82/57/0.00 75/54/s Cincinnati 80/59/0.00 80/53/pc Cleveland 73/61/1.04 68/52/pc ColoradoSprings 85/55/0.00 84/58/I Columbia, MO 82/58/0.00 85/62/s Columbia, Sc 91n2/0.00 91/69/s Columbus,GA 89/72/0.00 90/67/pc Columbus,OH 80/62/Tr 77/51/pc Concord, NH 66/63/2.10 73/50/c Corpus Christi 100n4/0.00 97nsn Dallas 95/71/0.00 9Sn4/s Dayton 80/57/0.00 76/48/pc Denver 90/60/0.00 86/61/I Des Moines 84/57/0.00 84/65/s Detroit 78/57/0.00 71/48/s Duluth 74/58/0.03 74/58/s El Paso 92/69/0.00 gon2/s Fairbanks 77/52/0.00 76/56/c Fargo 85/58/0.00 86/66/pc Flagstaff 64/56/1.08 73/50/I Grand Rapids 79/53/0.00 73/47/s Green 6sy 78/53/0.00 73/50/s Greensboro 80/66/0.00 82/62/s Harrisburg 79/67/0.03 76/52/pc Hsrffcrd, CT 73/66/2.29 76/54/pc Helena 91/60/0.03 86/58/I Honolulu gons/o'.os gonS/s Houston 94n3/0.00 93/74/s Huntsville 85/60/0.00 85/60/s Indianapolis 79/55/0.00 78/52/s Jackson, MS 87/66/0.00 88/64/s Jacksonville 86n6/0.09 90/73/I

Hi/Lo/W 98/76/pc 73/53/s 70/54/pc 89/65/pc 63/51/sh 89/67/pc 78/62/s 99/73/s 78/55/s 87/62/I 91/66/pc 83/63/I 88/63/pc 75/61/pc 77/63/pc 71/56/s 67/55/c 71/52/sh 92/75/pc 86/65/pc 88/64/pc 84/58/pc 80/67/pc 79/58/pc 71/56/s 83/59/pc 88/69/pc 93/71/pc 92/68/pc 78/57/pc 72/50/c

54'

Warm with plenty of sunshine

Amsterdam Athens

67/57/sh

Little Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wi Memphis Miami

76/59/pc 81/62/I

gtn2/pc 70/50/sh 86/65/pc 76/50/pc 77/61/pc 78/63/pc 83/63/pc 75/51/s 77/55/pc 82/56/I 89/77/pc

95n7/s

87/63/pc 77/62/pc 91/68/pc 92/73/I

sation," Boozell wrote in an

email Wednesday. "I only need four (signatures) to make that happen. If I'I on the council in January, only three more." Public agencies within Deschutes County still have time

94ngn 89/69/I

Sanr/s

70/55/sh 65/48/c 76/57/pc 65/49/pc 91/75/I

ganS/s 75/55/I

gonsn 63/50/pc 63/49/pc 64/47/r 72/48/c 91/83/1

88nws

85/65/s 73/47/s 65/58/pc 82/63/s 70/53/pc 89/59/s 91/77/pc

92/78/I

92/78/I

70/54/n 77/65/pc 82/67/s 83/68/pc 86/63/s 89/65/pc 92/75/I 93/76/pc 79/63/pc 77/64/pc 80/61/pc 79/61/s ssn4/0'.to 82/68/s 80/67/s OklahomaCity 92/65/0.00 94/70/s 95/74/pc Omaha 83/58/0.00 82/67/n 83/70/I Orlando 93/74/0.00 91/75/I 88/74/I Palm Spdngs 100/83/0.00 103/77/s 105/78/s Peoria 83/57/0.00 81/63/s 85/69/pc Philadelphia 85/69/0.14 78/60/pc 77/61/s Phoenix 95/73/0.11 100/83/pc 102/83/pc Pittsburgh 73/62/0.13 72/49/pc 72/49/s Portland, ME 66/64/1.98 74/55/c 73/55/c Providence 73/68/1.43 78/57/pc 78/59/pc Raleigh 82/68/0.00 84/63/s 84/65/pc Rapid City 89/61/0.00 87/62/I 82/61/pc Renc 85/64/0.00 86/55/s 90/58/s Richmond 84n2/o.oo 85/62/n 83/62/s Rochester, NY 74/65/0.32 64/55/sh 72/53/pc Sacramento 88/57/0.00 87/57/s 89/58/s Si. Louis 82/61/0.00 86/66/s 88/72/pc Snit Lake City 85/63/0.00 87/66/pc 88/64/pc Ssn Antonio 100/75/0.18 98nS/s 98/78/s Ssn Diego 78no/o.oo 77/68/pc 78/69/pc Snn Francisco 77/61/0.00 73/59/pc 73/58/pc Snn Jose 81/61/0.00 77/57/n 78/56/s Santa rc 80/59/0.01 80/58/I 84/57/pc Savannah 94ns/o'.oo 92/73/I 93/74/pc Seattle 73/59/1.33 76/61/sh 78/59/c Sioux Falls 83/53/0.00 78/65/pc 75/65/I Spokane 82/59/0.00 79/60/I 80/58/I Springfield, Mo 84/55/0.00 86/64/s 90/69/pc Tampa 91/75/0.43 88/78/I 87/78/pc Tucson 94/73/Tr 94/75/pc 96/74/pc Tulsa 88/60/0.00 90/69/s 92/75/pc Washington, DC 86/73/0.00 83/62/pc 81/63/s Wichita 86/63/0.00 91/70/s 92/72/pc Yskimn 85/58/Tr 81/60/I 84/58/I Yuma 98/83/0.01 103/82/s 105/82/s

85/71/I

57/47/pc 116/88/s

92/79/0.24 74/58/0.00 83/63/0.00 83/60/0.00 92/79/0.00 82/68/0.65 86/69/0.53

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

99/78/s 76/57/pc 87/61/pc

gsnr/s

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 58/52/0.22 63/55/r 64/52/sh 82/58/0.00 83/65/s 88/71/pc 77/53/0.00 69/45/s 75/58/pc gsn7/0.00 98/75/s 100/75/s 79/57/0.00 80/57/n 81/60/pc 87/53/0.00 86/68/s 88/67/I 86/66/0.00 86/65/s 88/69/pc 81/65/0.00 82/64/pc 83/64/pc 81/60/0.00 85/62/n 84/65/pc 82/55/0.00 76/52/pc 82/65/pc 85/66/0.00 87/66/s 89/69/pc

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vcgns Lexington Lincoln

gen7/s

68/55/0.07 68/56/sh 100n7/0.00 98/75/s Auckland 53/46/0.17 56/49/sh Baghdad 113/82/0.00 115/86/s Bangkok 91/81/0.02 92/78/I ecijing 76/66/0.22 86/67/s Beirut 86n9/0.00 9Onr/s Berlin 76/54/0.22 72/56/pc Bogota 66/50/0.07 64/48/I Budapest 86/64/0.00 70/56/pc BuenosAires 61/33/0.00 62/48/s Csbc SnnLucns 92/77/0.00 91/76/pc Cairo gsn7/0'.00 98/76/s Calgary 84/59/0.01 82/57/pc Cnncun 90n3/0.05 gonsn Dublin 66/54/0.00 63/48/pc Edinburgh 68/54/0.13 64/48/sh Geneva 68/59/0.63 67/51/pc Hsrnre 72/43/0.00 73/51/pc Hong Kong 88/81/0.84 90/82/I Istanbul gon7/0.00 9On4/s Jerusalem 85/69/0.00 87/67/s Johannesburg 69/44/0.00 73/48/s Limn 65/57/0.01 65/58/pc Lisbon 75/63/0.00 78/63/s London 72/54/0.00 70/52/sh Madrid 84no/0.00 87/59/s Manila 89/78/0.00 gon7/s

Yesterday Today Friday

City

o x d d

81/8 n n c Iccc Salt Lnmt 87ISS 'X V.V. • onn 73/59

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dd

o

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chc

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'eXX X'e

Mostly sunnyand comfortable

city

JosePh Grande • 76 51 union

He ppner

• Prineville

• Eugene

" -"

o

• 79 56

75/51

78/56

H i/Lc/Prnc. Hi/Lc/W Hi/Lc/W 62/56/0.46 68/56/c 68/56/pc 83/49/0.00 75/47/I 78/43/1 62/55/Tr 65/53/c 65/52/pc 82/46/Tr 7 7/46/I 8 2/45/I 77/55/0.00 79/55/c 83/55/pc 75/52/0.17 73/46/pc 81/48/s 81/45/0.01 75/43/pc 81/44/s

FIRE INDEX Mod~erate ~ High Mode~rate High od ~erate ~

5 1'

Yesterday Today Friday

Meac am Lostl ne 78/53 Entenrlse

dleten 70/

• Ch ristmas alley Silver 74/47 Lake 70/45 Po 0 74/47 Gra • Paisley 66/ a Chiloquin Gold • 55 Medfo d '73/46 63/ • 4/ 9 Klamath • Ashl nd ' Falls • Lakeview Bro Ings 81/5 73/46 65/5 75/43

~ fos ~os ~ o s WATER REPORT NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 348 4 1 63% YESTERDAY 37'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 73256

Bend/Sunriver ~ Redmond/Madras Sisters ~ Prinevige La Pine/Gilchrist ~M

upi

0am 0 Ser an R 0 d n

0 r9 U I 8

65/55

Source: OregonAiicrgyAssccintcs 541-683-1577

Crescent Lake 6 9 5 14 80% Ochoco Reservoir 20142 46% Prinevige 109506 74% River flow St a tion Cu. ft./sec. Deschutes R.below Crane Prairie 413 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1730 Deschutes R.below Bend 133 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2140 Little Deschutes near LaPine 139 C rescent Ck. below Crescent Lake 1 2 6 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 215 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 83 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 9

9

• pray

Yesterday Today Fridny

2 p.m. 4 p.m. Actcrin

• 'W co 6 /63

68/ 8/55

OREGON EXTREMES YESTERDAY High: aa' Bandon at La Grande

city

• 80/65 Gove nt •

lington 83/60

8

MONDAY

TRAVEL WEATHER

/63

heaaa

79/

Newpo

1:34 p.m. 1 1 :41 p.m. 10:09 p.m. 1 1 :01 a.m.

4 N(~ 6

6/62

Sale

65/55

S ep 8 Low: 45' THE PLANETS at Lakeview T he Planets R i se Set Mercury 6:39 a.m. 8: 3 5 p.m. Venus 4:29 a.m. 7: 2 1 p.m. 0 ' Mars 1:08 p.m. 1 1:05 p.m. Jupiter 4:47 a.m. 7 : 3 0 p.m.

10 a.m. Noon

andy •

Mc Innv

62/53

Aug 17 Aug 25 S ep 2

Saturn Uranus

51'

'r~p

Partly sunny

Partly cloudy

Portland so/ss

Tdlamo •

WEST:Variably cloudy Today Fri. 6:08 a.m. 6 : 0 9 a.m. with a a shower in the Yach 62/54 8:12 p.m. 8: 1 0 p.m. area, especially across 10: 25 p.m. 11 :01 p.m. northern regions. Floren e 65/55 11: 03 a.m. 1 2 :12 p.m.

Ne w

50'

SUNDAY

0

83

Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 85/60 RiVer Rufus • ermiston

ria

MOONPHASES Last

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

FRIDAY "'" 79'

8

I

Mecca Mexico City

108/87/0.00 112/84/s 74/56/0.07 70/54/I Montreal 70/64/0.62 63/54/sh Moscow 74no/o.os 79/65/pc Nairobi 77/59/0.04 75/58/c gong/0'.09 92/78/pc Nassau New Delhi 99/81/0.00 94/79/pc Osaka 90/71/0.10 88/77/I Oslo 63/50/0.22 64/49/sh Ottawa 75/64/0.34 60/48/sh Paris 70/55/0.03 70/55/sh Ric dc Janeiro 81/68/0.30 67/64/r Rome 86/73/0.00 83/64/pc Santiago 73/30/0.00 70/42/s Snc Paulo 64/63/0.22 57/54/r Snppcrc 81/68/0.05 79/64/pc Seoul 81/72/0.14 79/69/r Shanghai 86/78/0.73 ssnsn Singapore 82/77/0.24 83/77/I Stockholm 70/54/0.26 73/55/pc Sydney 59/44/0.00 63/47/pc Taipei 93/81/0.51 96/81/pc Tei Aviv 90/73/0.00 90/77/s Tokyo 84n2/D.os 88/79/I Toronto 72/63/Tr 66/53/pc Vancouver 68/61/0.16 74/62/pc Vienna 72/59/0.44 70/58/pc Warsaw 73/55/0.23 73/56/pc

110/84/s 73/54/I 64/55/c 75/54/pc 76/57/c 92/79/pc 92/77/pc 88/78/I 68/51/sh 64/51/c 69/53/pc 72/66/pc 82/64/s 69/47/s 66/56/sh 78/66/c 85/67/pc 87/74/c 85/77/1 72/55/pc 64/48/pc 94/80/I

9Ons/s

89/78/pc 71/58/s 72/60/c 73/56/pc 73/56/pc

PREMIUM HEARING AIDS at Factory Direct, Retail Outlet Prices

Bend City Council, from $200 sue through the election and a month to $30 a day. beyond, regardless of whether to file ballot measures for the Dahl could not be reached he is elected. November election — t he "Spring might be too early county and city governments for comment on his proposaL Fell said he's reset his to expect 10,000 signatures, have until Friday, Hagen said, sights on the May 2015 elec- but the City Council may be while other government bodtion, and hopes to have col- brave enough to push through ies have until Sept.4. lected enough signatures to a council-sponsored initiative — Reporter: 541-383-0387, put his measures on the bal-

with me creating the conver-

shammers@bendbulletiILcom

CALL TODAY FOR DETAILS:

Free Lunch

Canal

ty planning commissioners to pipe other canal sections. "It's a divide-and-conquer recommending to reject the Continued from B1 code change and the Bend strategy," said Jeff Perreault, COID wants to pipe the City Council voting unani- who lives just beyond the canal in order to save water mously to support the plan. area COID hopes to pipe. "We heardtherewere a lot "We think at a minimum they that evaporates or otherwise leaves the canal and to help of things that didn't go well, want to extend (piping) to Ema nearby hydro facility pro- and this is an opportunity to pire (Avenue) and probably duce more power. In order to take a breath and see if there beyond." do this, COID is requesting are things we can do better," Final consideration of the a change to county code that said COID Manager Craig proposed code change rests would make it easier for the Horrell. with the County Commisdistrict to replace canals in Members of the opposition sion,regardless of any decilow-density areas with pipes. at a Wednesday County Com- sion reached by a potential Opponents have contested mission work session were mediation process. The comthe district has other options not thrilled with the proposal, mission has said it intends to to save water while also sav- noting the district may be of- vote on the issue on March ing the canal. The dispute has fering to meet with residents 25, 2015. also divided local government affected by this phase of pip— Reporter: 541-633-2160, bodies, with Deschutes Coun- ing, but that COID may intend tleeds@bendbulletiILcom

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'

Redmond

Bates and his wife, Leisa, began the process of purchasContinued from B1 ing the New Redmond Hotel According to c ommittee last spring. Since then, they've member Anne Graham, who been busy executing the due has said she is a friend of the diligence needed when connew owners, the hotel sale is templating buying an 86-yearexpected to close in September. old building, hiring experts Reached in Portland 'Ibes- and working with their bank day, Mark Bates was busy and the city. "There are loads and loads packing and making arrangements for a visit to Redmond of paperwork involved in this weekend, in preparation something like this," Mark for an imminent move to the Bates said. "Everyone wants community. to make sure all the require"You can take that as a vote of confidence," he said.

ments are met." The couple

has begun the process of ap-

Arts & Entertainment Every Friday

plying for the city's Jumpstart Loan Program, which is potentially forgivable if a long

4

list of requirements are met. The Bates are working with a

A •

e

r

• •

a

Bend-basedrealestate development firm, Further Development, LLC, to navigate all

a

4

the elements of the deal. "All the inspection reports

aren't in yet but so far there's no fatal flaw," Bates said. "I

hate having things up in the air but everyone seems happy with the progress so far." —Reporter: 541-548-2186, Ipugmireibendbulletin.com

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Col l ege football, C2 Sports in brief, C2 M L B, C3

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

NBA

GOLF: U.S. AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP

NBA announces 2014-15 schedule The Portland Trail Blazers will open the 2014-15 regular season at home on national television. The NBAreleased the regular-season schedule Wednesday,which features the Trail Blazers hosting Western Conference foe OklahomaCity on Oct. 29 onESPN.The Blazers will be featured 23 times on national TV, including 10 games on ESPN,sixgames on TNT and sevengames on NBATV. The NBAseason opens Oct. 28, with defendingchampionSan Antonio Spurs hosting the Dallas Mavericks in one of the three games

Heinly continues runwith upset • Bend golfer makes it out of 17-person morning playoffandtopsthe No.2seed

who entered the U.S. Amateur — where the winner

By Zack Hall

Heinly survived a 17-player playoff for four berths into

ish Open — ranked as the No. 940 amateur golfer in

Jesse Heinly began Wednesday needing to beat long odds just to make

match play, then upset No.

the world.

2 seed Taylor Moore, of Edm ond, Oklahoma, 3 and 2,in

"Yeah, it's been a pretty good day" Heinly the

match play at the U.S. Ama-

the first round of match play

tournament's No. 63 seed,

at the Highlands Course

said Wednesday evening by phone. "A pretty long day,

The Buuetin

teur Championship. Jesse Hoinly watches his shot on the 13th hole The 22-year-old from Wednesday at the U.S. Amateur Championship at Bend ended up doing far John Mummert/ tJSGA

Atlanta Athletic Club in Johns Creek, Georgia.

more than that.

at Atlanta Athletic Club in

gains entrance in the Masters, U.S. Open and the Brit-

too."

Johns Creek, Georgia. Not a bad day for a guy

GOLF

WCL PLAYOFFS

Walk-off home run ends Elks' season

LeBron Jamesand the ClevelandCavaliers will play at Miami in one of five gameson Christmas Day.The other Christmas games are: Washington at New York, OklahomaCity at San Antonio in aWestern Conference finals rematch, the L.A. Lakers atChicago,andGolden State at the LosAngeles Clippers. For the Trail Blazers' complete schedule,see Scoreboard, C2.

ByGrant Lucas The Bulletin

With a runner on first and two outs away

— Bulletin staff report

from forcing a deciding third game in the first

MOTOR SPORTS

round of the West Coast

Leagueplayoffs,theBend Elks were searching for a ground ball and a game-endingdouble play to keep their season alive.

Death prompts

rule changes

—TheAssociated Press

The 21st annual Northwest Cup roller hockey tournament begins Friday at Bend's Cascade Indoor Sports. More than 40 games are scheduled for the three-day event, which ends Sundayevening. The tournament includes divisons for youth, adult and recrecational players. Admission to watch is free. For more information, go to the 21st Northwest Cup's Facebook page. — Bulletin staff report

swing can reverse any ballgame. That swing came courtesy of Kevin Kline on Wednesday night. The Corvallis slugger belted the first pitch he saw over the left field fence at

I

Goss Stadium in Corvallis

for a two-run, walk-off ho-

'k~<

mer to send the Knights to a 2-1 victory in Game 2 of

the best-of-three series. See Elks /C4

KNIGHTS 2, ELKS0

Gamo1:Corvallis 2, Bend1 Gamo 2:Corvallis 2, Bend1 Gene J. Puskar/The Associated Press

Fred Funk watches a drive during the Senior Players Championship in June. Funk, a two-timo champion at the Jold-Won Tradition, is returning to Central Oregon on Tuesday to host a golf clinic at Pronghorn Club.

• Three-time PGA Tour champion won Jeld-WenTradition twice at Crosswater By Zack Hall The Bulletin

The last time Fred Funk was in Cen-

tral Oregon, he was standing on the 18th green at Crosswater Club hoisting

the winner's trophy for the Jeld-Wen Tradition.

Nearly four years to the day since — which moved from Sunriver Resort to Alabama before the 2011 tournament

and was renamed the Regions Tradition

Roller hockey tourney ontap

But as Elks head coach Marty Hunter noted, one

r

Funk won the 2010 Jeld-Wen Tradition

HOCKEY

U.S. Amateur Championship, Roundof 32:Jesse Heinly vs. Corey Conners When:6:05 a.m. PDTtoday TV:Round of 16, 3:30 p.m., Golf Channel

SeeHoinly/C4

that night.

NASCARcould issue an edict as early as this weekend's raceat Michigan International Speedway that makes it mandatory for drivers to stay in their cars until safety personnel arrive. Tracks around the country have changed their rules in the wakeof Kevin Ward Jr.'s death in a sprint car race. Brewerton Speedway and Fulton Speedway, New York dirt tracks under the samemanagement, announced new rules that drivers would be required to stay in their cars following an accident. "If a driver, for whatever reason, exits a car on the track during a caution period, the race will automatically be placed under a redflag and all cars will come to a complete stop," a news release onthe tracks' website says. "A driver may exit a car if requested by asafety crew member or if safety warrants in cases such as a fire. Drivers that exit a car without permission, for whatever reason, are subject to fine and/or suspension at the discretion of track management."

Nextup

— the 58-year-old veteran of the PGA and Champions golf tours will return to Cen-

tral Oregon. This time Funk will not be competing against the best senior golfers in the

world. Instead, he will be here to host a

DeLuca that hosts birthday parties for homeless children in the area.

Ifyou go What:Golf clinic hosted by FredFunk, three-time winner on thePGATour When:5 p.m. Tuesday Where:Pronghorn Club; 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Bend Cost:$30 donation to local nonprofit Devin's Destiny, includes beer, wineand bottled water Register:541-317-0077 On the woh: www.devinsdestiny.org

New York Times News Service

nine weaving in and out of the creek was really neat. The setting, Mount Bachelor

Coinciding with Little League Baseball's 75th

in the background and the climate was really good. The cool nights and the real-

anniversary, the backdrop for its World Series that

ly hot days, I really like that. It was fun."

commences today in Wil-

liamsport, Pennsylvania, are two other milestones.

gon remains a special place for him.

Both relate to gender.

SeeFunk/C4

In the four years the Jeld-WenTradition was held at Crosswater Club in Sunriver, Funkwon twice, joining Jack Nicklaus and Gil Morgan as the only players to win the tournament multiple times. Hecompleted the four-year run at acombined 47 under.

In the

firstyear ofthe Jeld-Wen Tradition,

Funk finished with a 5-under 283, 11 strokes

back of winner Mark McNulty.

lir

(

By Mike Tierney

foot in Central Oregon. Yet Central Ore-

Funk atTheTradition

2007

Girls playing baseball less of a novelty

Nonetheless, he is looking forward to returning to the region. "I really liked it," Funk says of Central Oregon. "I loved the golf course (Crosswater). I just loved the way it was designed around that river (the Little Deschutes). I loved both sides, but the front

Before turning 51, Funk had never set benefit clinic Tuesday at Pronghorn Club for Devin's Destiny, a Central Oregon charity directed by Bend resident Rick

LITTLE LEAGUE WORLD SERIES

2008

2009

Funk dominated the front nine on Sundaywith a 6 under and finished the tournament with a19-under 269, three strokes aheadof Mike Goodes to win his first professional major championship. A late bogey and double-bogey took him out of the running to break the Tradition record of 23-under.

Funk was oneshot off the leadwith a 7under after two rounds, but took himself out of contention with a 1-over 73 in the third round. He finished tied for fifth

with TomWatson, five strokes back of winner Mike Reid.

A discrimination lawsuit

had been brought by the National Organization for Women on behalf of Maria

Pepe, a 12-year-old from Hoboken, New Jersey, who

had been banished by her league when opposing teams protested. See LLWS/C4

2010 In the final year of the Jeld-WenTradition, seven different golfers held or ~ shared the lead in the final round. Funk emerged with a one-stroke victory over Michael Allenand ChienSoonLu.

I//rr

Forty years ago, the New Jersey state Supreme Court upheld a ruling that allowed girls to play Little League Baseball.

Inside DITIO I

• The teams andfirst round schedule of the Little League World Series. Scoreboard, C2


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY GOLF

EuropeanTour, Made inDenmark LPGA Tour,Wegmans Championship PGA Tour,WyndhamChampionship EuropeanTour, Made inDenmark

Time TV/Radlio 6:30 a.m. Golf 9:30 a.m. Golf noon Golf 2:30 a.m. (Fri.) Golf

BASEBALL

MLB, L.A. Dodgers at Atlanta

9 a.m.

MLB

OR Pittsburgh at Detroit

10 a.m.

MLB

LLWS,CzechRepublicvs.SouthKorea MLB, Oakland at KansasCity LLWS, Chicago vs. Lynnwood (Wash.) LLWS, Australiavs. Puerto Rico MLB, Washington at N.Y.Mets OR Arizona at Miami LLWS, Rapid City (S.D.) vs. LasVegas (Nev.)

10 a.m. E S PN noon MLB n oon ESP N 2 p.m. E SPN2 MLB E SPN2

5 p.m.

E S PN

10 a.m., 6 p.m.

E SPN2

TENNIS

Western 8 Southern Open

FRIDAY GOLF

EuropeanTour, Made inDenmark LPGA Tour,Wegmans Championship PGA Tour,WyndhamChampionship EuropeanTour, Made inDenmark

6:30 a.m. Golf 9:30 a.m. Golf noon Golf 4 a.m. (Sat.) Golf

BASKETBALL

U17 World Championship, semifinal

7:45 a.m. ESPNU 8 a.m., 4 p.m.

E SPN2

MOTOR SPORTS

NASCARSprint Cup, Michigan, practice NASCARTruck Series, Michigan, practice NASCARTruck Series, Michigan, final practice NASCAR Sprint Cup, Michigan, qualifying

9 a.m. FS1 10:30 a.m. FS1 noon FS1 1 :30 p.m. F S 1

BASEBALL

LLWS, Canadavs. Mexico LLWS, Philadelphia (Pa.) vs. Nashville (Tenn.) LLWS, Japanvs. Venezuela MLB, Seattle at Detroit LLWS, Cumberland (R.l.) vs. Pearland (Texas) SOCCER MLS, Philadelphia at Houston England, Manchester United vs. SwanseaCity

10 a.m. E S PN n oon ESP N 2 p.m. E SPN2 4 p.m. Roo t 5 p.m. E S PN 6 p.m. NBCSN 4:45 a.m. (Sat.) N B CSN

BOXING

Friday Night Fights

6 p.m.

E SPN2

FOOTBALL

NFL preseason, SanDiego at Seattle Australian, Gold Coast SUNS vs. Port Adelaide

6 :30 p.m. F o x 9 p.m. FS2

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby Tfv'or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.comnnthebleachers

[grgH)

SOunderS Star Yedlinheading to England —Seattle Sounders andU.S. national teamdefender DeAndreYedlin signed a four-year deal with TottenhamHotspur onWednesday but will remain in the United States through the remainder of the MLSseason and potentially into 2015. Both clubs announcedthedeal after Yedlin spent last weekend in Londonvisiting with Tottenham officials and thesides were able to finalize thedeal. Tottenhamsaid Yedlin would join the club ahead of the2015-16season, but Seattle general managerAdrian Hanauer said the windowfor the move is still unknown. Yedlin burst onto the international scenewith his performancefor the U.S. at the World Cup, where hecameoff the bench in three of the team's four games.

7 Atl-I

FOOTBALL NFL Preseason AU TimesPDT

Today'sGame Jacksonville at Chicago,5p.m. Friday's Games PhiladelphiaatNewEngland,4:30 p.m. Tennessee at NewOrleans, 5p.m. SanDiegoat Seattle, 7p.m. Detroit atOakland, 7p.m.

Saturday'sGames

NWSL

FIRST ROUND

NATIONAL WOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE All TimesPDT Seattle FC Kansas City Washington

Chicago Portland Sky BlueFC WesternNewYork Houston Boston

WL T 16 1 6 12 7 5 10 8 5 9 7 7 9 8 6 7 8 7 8 12 3 5 14 3 5 16 2

BASKETBALL Pts GF GA 5 4 50 19 4 1 39 32 3 5 36 42 3 4 29 23 3 3 38 35 2 8 28 37 2 7 39 35 18 23 42 1 7 36 53

Bend ODD 010 ODD— 1 7 1 Corvallis ODD ODD 002 — 2 8 0 Wednesday'sGames Hamann, Cohen(7)andNewlon;Haddeland,CalSky BlueFC3, WesternNewYork2 omeni(9)andIce.W—Calomeni. L—Cohen. HRChicago 2, Bo ston 0 Bend:New lon; Corvallis: Kline. Saturday'sGames SkyBlueFCatWashington,3:30p.m. Little League Western NewYorkat Chicago,5p.m. Sunday'sGames LITTLELEAGUE WORLD SERIES Seattle FC at Portland,2 p.m. At WiUiamsporl,Pa. Housto natBoston,3:30p.m. All TimesPDT

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER AU TimesPDT Seattle RealSalt Lake FC Dallas Los Angeles

Vancouver Colorado Portland SanJose ChivasUSA

TENNIS ATP World Tour Weslera BSoutheraOpea W ednesday atMason,Ohio SecondRound AndyMurray(8), Britain,def.JoaoSousa, Portugal, 6-3,6-3. JerzyJanowicz, Poland,def. GrigorDimitrov(7), Bulgaria,6-4, 3-6,6-3. Yen-hsunLu, Taiwan, Taiwan, def. Tomas Berdych (4), Czech Republic, 3-6,6-3, 6-4. MikhailYouzhny,Russia, def.AndreasSeppi, Italy, 6-3,6-4. John Isner (11), UnitedStates, def. MarinkoMatosevic, Australia,6-3,7-6(I). TommyRobredo(16), Spain, def. SamQuerrey, UnitedStates,6-2,6-4. JulienBenneteau,France,def.JamesWard,Britain, 6-2,6-2.

RogerFederer(2), Switzerland,def. VasekPospisil,

Canada, 7-6 (4),5-7,6-2. FabioFognini(15),Italy, def.LleytonHewitt, Australia, 6-1,6-4. DavidFerrer(6), Spain,def. PhilippKohlschreiber,

Germany, 6-7(4), 7-6(4), 7-6(4). Marin Cilic(14),Croatia,def. FernandoVerdasco, Spain,7-6(6), 7-6(5). SteveJohnson,United States,def. ErnestsGulbis (9), Latvia6-4, , 6-4. Milos Raonic(5), Canada,def. RobbyGinepri, UnitedStates,6-2,6-2. Gael Monfils, France,def. Roberto Bautista Agut (13), Spain6-4, , 6-1.

W L T Pls GF GA 13 6 2 4 1 36 28 WTA 10 4 9 3 9 36 27 10 7 6 3 6 38 32 Weslera BSoutheraOpea 9 4 7 34 34 1 9 W ednesday atMason,Ohio 7 4 1 1 32 33 29 SecondRound 8 9 6 3 0 32 31 Elina Svitolina, Ukraine,def. Petra Kvitova(3), 7 7 9 3 0 3 8 3 8 CzechRepublic, 6-2, 7-6(2). 6 8 6 2 4 25 22 AngeliqueKerber (6), Germany,def. Ekaterina Ma6 11 5 2 3 21 36 karova,Ru ssia, 6-4,6-1. SerenaWiliams(I), United States, def. SamSto-

Friday's Game

Philadelphiaat Houston, 6p.m.

Saturday'sGames Seattle FC at Real Salt Lake,11:30a.m. Chicago at Montreal, 3:30p.m. LosAngelesatColumbus,4:30p.m. PortlandatNewEngland,4;30 p.m. TorontoFCat Sporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. FCDallasatSanJose,7:30p.m. Vancouver atChivasUSA,7:30 p.m. Sunday'sGames Coloradoat D.C.United, 5p.m.

U.S. Open Cup AD TimesPDT SEMIFINALS Tuesday'sGame PhiladelphiaUnion1, FCDalas1, Philadelphiaadvanced 4-3 onpenalty kicks Wednesday'sGame SeattleSounders6, Chicago Fire 0

sur, Australia7-6 , (7), 7-6(7). SabineLisicki, Germany,def. SaraErrani (14), Italy, 6-4,2-6, 7-6(2). CarlaSuarezNavarro(15), Spain,def. Pauline Parmentier,France,6-3, 7-5. Anastasia Pavlyuchenk ova, Russia, def. Karin Knapp,ltaly,6-1,6-3. Sloane Stephens,United States,def. Barbora Zahlavova Strycova, CzechRepublic,7-5, 6-1. LucieSafarova(16), Czech Republic, def.Zarina Diyas,Kazakhstan,6-4, 6-2. AgnieszkaRadwanska (4), Poland,def. Kurumi Nara,Japan,6-2,6-2. FlaviaPennetta (13), Italy,def. TaylorTownsend, UnitedStates,6-4,6-3. Ana Ivanovic(9), Serbia,def. Christina McHale, UnitedStates,6-4,6-0. Svetl anaKuznetsova,Russia,def.EugenieBouchard (7),Canada,6-4,3-6, 6-2. JelenaJankovic(8), Serbia,def.AnnikaBeck, Germany, 6-1, 7-6(0).

FINALS

Tuesday,Sept. 16 Seattle atPhiladelphia,TBA

FOOTBALL

Wednesday'sGames Today'sGame NewYorkat Indiana,4 p.m. Friday's Games Washington at Connecticut,4 p.m. TulsaatAtlanta,4:30p.m. MinnesotaatSanAntonio, 5p.m. Seattleat LosAngeles,7:30 p.m.

WESTCOAST LEAGUE All TimesPDT

Today'sGames Game1: Asia-Pacific vs.Europe-Africa,10a.m. Game2:GreatLakesvs.Northwest,noon Game3:Caribbeanvs. Australia, 2p.m. Game4:Midwest vs. West, 4 p.m. Friday's Games Game5:Mexicovs.Canada,10a.m. Game 6:Mid-Atlantic vs.Southeast, noon Game7:Latin America vs.Japan,2p.m. Game8:Southwestvs.NewEngland,5p.m.

3'/t 4)yt 6

Chicag o72,Washington69 Atlanta96,Phoenix 82

WCL playoffs

BOtSwana runner faCeS dOPing dan —Formerworld

SOCCER

LXQIlt

BASEBALL

Teams International:Asia-Pacific, Seoul,SouthKorea; Australia, Perth Metro; Canada,SouthVancouver, B.C.; Caribbean,Miguel Luzanaris, Hum acao, Puerto Rico;Europe-Africa,SouthMoravia, Brno,Czech Republic;Japan,Tokyo Kitasuna; LatinAmerica, Coquiv acoa,Maracaibo,Venezuela;Mexico,Guadalupe LindaVista. United States: GreatLakes,Jackie Robinson West, Chicago;Mid-Atlantic, Taney,Philadelphia; Midwest ,CanyonLake,Rapid City,S.D.;New England,Cum berland (R.l.) American;Northwest, Lynnwood(Wash.) Pacific; Southeast,SouthNashvile; Southwest,Pearland(Texas) East; West,Mountain Ridge,LasVegas.

14 17 . 452 1 3 18 . 419 1 2 20 .375

WesternConference W L Pct GB x-Phoenix 27 5 . 8 44 x-Minnesota 2 4 8 . 750 3 Los Angeles 1 5 17 .469 12 SanAntonio 1 4 18 .438 13 12 20 .375 15 Seattle Tulsa 12 20 .375 15 x-clinched playoffspot

Central Chrislian Registration forms available — Students interested inparticipating in fall sportscanaccess registrationformsatwww.centralchristianschools.com as well asattheschool MondaythroughThursdaybetween9a.m,and1p.m. Volleyball — Practicesbegin Aug.18at alocation to bedetermined Boys soccer —Practicesbegin Aug.18at Umatilla Park Sporls physicals —Physicalswil be offered from 9a.m.to noonAug. 20at Central Christian;cost is $25

Knights 2, Elks1

Pct GB 18 14 .563 1 5 17 .469 3 1 5 17 .469 3

Chicago Washington Indiana NewYork Connecticut

Sporlsphysicals —Freephysicalsfor students looking toparticipatein fall sportswill beavailable at CulverMiddleSchoolfrom4to 7 p.m. today. Football —Practice beginsat 3 p.m.Aug.18at the highschoolfootball field Parent meeting — Ameetingforparentsofstudentsparticipating infall sportsis scheduledfor6:30 p.m. Aug.22inthehighschoolcafeteria.

igest-of-three; x-if necessary) Wednesday'sGames Corvaffis2, Bend1, Corvaffiswinsseries 2-0 Bellingham 4, YakimaValley 3, Bellinghamwins se ries 2-0

EaslernConference W L

x-Atlanta

Summit GridironRibFeed—Thesecondinstalment of the GridironRibFeedis slatedfor Friday,whichincludesarib cookingcontest opento bothamateur and professional chefs. OrganizedbytheWestsideAthletic Foundation,theeventraises moneyfor equipmentand safetyupgradesfor theStormfootball team.Volunteers orthoseinterestedin attendingorofferingitems for the silentauctionareencouraged to visit www. gridironribfeed.org.

TRACK & FIELD champion runner Amantle Montsho of Botswana faces a two-year suspension after testing positive for a banned substance, track and field officials said Wednesday. Montsho failed a doping test at the Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, which lasted from July 23 to Aug. 3. She finished fourth in the 400 meters there. Montsho tested positive for methylhexaneamine, which the World Anti-Doping Agency has listed as a bannedstimulant for more than a decade. In 2011, WADAreclassified it as a "specified substance," meaning that it was likely to be consumed inadvertently. While the drug is still banned, the automatic two-year suspension may be reduced under certain circumstances. In 2011, Montsho won the world title in the 400. She finished fourth in the event at the 2012 London Olympics.

WOMEN'S NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

Calendar To submitinformationto the prep calendar,email TheBulletin at sporls@bendb ulletin.com

TENNIS

Western 8 Southern Open

WNBA

fN THF QLE4('HER

Culver

4 p.m. 4 p.m.

FOOTBALL

NFL Preseason, Jacksonville at Chicago

PREP SPORTS

NBA NAT IONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION

Trail Blazersschedule 2014-15 Portland AU TimesPDT

GreenBayatSt. Louis, 1p.m. Baltimoreat Dallas, 4 p.m. N.Y.GiantsatIndianapolis, 4 p.m. N.Y.Jetsat Cincinnati, 4p.m. BuffaloatPittsburgh, 4:30p.m. Miami atTampaBay, 4:30p.m. Atlantaat Houston, 5p.m. ArizonaatMinnesota, 5:30p.m.

Preseas ea

Dct. 7 Dct. 9 Dct.12 Dct. 21 Dct. 22 Dct. 24

at Utah 6p.m. Utah 7p.m. L.A. Clippers 6p.m. at Denver TBA vs. L.A.Lakers, atOntario,Calif. at L.A.Clippers

Dct. 29 Dct. 31 Nov. 2 Nov. 4 Nov. 6 Nov. 8 Nov. 9 Nov.11 Nov.12 Nov. 15 Nov. 17 Nov.21 Nov.23 Nov.24 Nov.26 Nov.28 Nov.30 Dec. 2 Dec. 4 Dec.7 Dec. 9 Dec.10 Dec.12 Dec.13 Dec.15 Dec.17 Dec.19 Dec.20 Dec.22 Dec.23 Dec.26 Dec.28 Dec.30 Jan. 3 Jan. 5 Jan. 8 Jan.10 Jan.11 Jan.14 Jan.16 Jan.17 Jan.19 Jan. 21 Jan. 22

Oklahoma City

Regularse ason 7:30p.m. at Sacram ento 7p.m. Golden State 6p.m. Cleveland 7p.m. Dallas 7:30p.m. at L.A.Clippers 12:30p.m Denver 6p.m. Charlotte 7p.m. at Denver 6p.m. Brooklyn 7p.m. NewOrleans 7 p.m. Chicago 7:30p.m. at Boston 6p.m. at Philadelphia 4p.m. at Charlotte 4p.m. Memphis 7p.m. Minnesota 6p.m. at Denver 6p.m. Indiana 7p.m. 4:30p.m. at NewYork at Detroit 4:30p.m. at Minnesota 5p.m. at Chicago 4p.m. at Indiana 4p.m. SanAntonio 7 p.m. Milwaukee 7p.m. at San Antonio 5p.m. at NewOrleans 4p.m. at Houston 5p.m. at Oklahoma City 5p.m. Philadelphia 7p.m. NewYork 6p.m. Toronto 7p.m. atlanta 7p.m. L.A. Lakers 7p.m. Miami 7:30p.m. Orlando 7p.m. at L.A.Lakers 6:30p.m. L.A. Clippers 7:30p.m. at SanAntonio 5:30p.m. at Memphis 5p.m. 7p.m. Sacramen to at Phoenix 6p.m. Boston 7p.m. Jan. Washington 7p.m. Jan. 26 at Brooklyn 4:30p.m. Jan. 28 at Cleveland 4p.m. Jan. 30 at Atlanta 4:30p.m. Jan. 31 at Milwaukee 5:30p.m. Feb. 3 Utah 7 p.m. Feb. 5 Phoenix 7:30p.m. Feb. 7 at Dallas 5:30p.m. Feb. 8 at Houston 4p.m. Feb.11 L.A. Lakers 7 p.m. Feb.20 at Utah 6p.m. Feb. 22 Memphis 6p.m. Feb.25 SanAntonio 7:30p.m. Feb. 27 Oklahoma City 7:30p.m. March1 at Sacram ento 6p.m. March4 at L.A.Clippers 7:30p.m. March5 Dallas 7:30p.m. March7 at Minnesota 5p.m. March11 Houston 7:30p.m. March13 Detroit 7 p.m. March15 at Toronto 4p.m. March16 at Washington 4p.m. March18 at Miami 4:30p.m. March20 at Orlando 4p.m. March21 at Memphis 5 p.m. March24 Golden State 7:30p.m. March25 at Utah 6p.m. March27 at Phoenix 7p.m. March28 Denver 7 p.m. March30 Phoenix 7p.m. April1 L.A. Clippers 7p.m. April 3 at L.A.Lakers 7;30p.m. April 4 NewOrleans 7 p.m. April 8 Minnesota 7p.m. April 9 at Golden State 7:30p.m. April11 Utah 7 p.m. April13 at Oklahoma City 5 p.m. April15 at Dallas 5 p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL AmericanLeague BALTI MORE DRIDLES— PlacedINFMannyMacaha-

do onthe15-dayDL,retroactivetoTuesday.TransferredC

ESPN MattWieterstothe60-dayDL.SelectedthecontractofINF TNT

NBATV

ESPN

ESPN

ESPN

TNT

ESPN

NBATV NBATV

TNT

ESPN ESPN ESPN TNT ESPN

CordPhelpsfromNorfolk (IL). HOUSTONASTROS— DptionedOFDomingoSantana toOklahomaCity (PCL). ReinstatedDFDexter Fowler fromthe15-dayDL. KANSASCITYROYALS— PlacedLHPScottDowns on the15-day DL,retroactiveto Augl3. LOSANGELESANGELS— DptionedRHPCalebClay to SalLake t (PCL). RecalledOFBrennanBoeschfromSalt Lake. NEWYORKYANKEES— Designated RHP Chris Leroux forassignment. ReinslatedRHPMichael Pinedafrom the 60-day DL TEXASRANGERS— PlacedRHPYuDarvishonthe 15-dayDL,retroactivetoAug.10. Purchasedthecontract of LHP AlexClaudiofromRoundRock(PCL). TORONTOBLUEJAYS— DesignatedLHPBradMills for assignm ent. Claimed LHPColt Hynesoffwaiversfrom the L.A.DodgersandassignedhimtoBuffalo(IL). NationalLeague CHICAG OCUBS—Sent LHPFelix Doubront tolowa (PCL) forarehabassignment. LDSANGELES DODGERS— Released 38 Chone Figgins. PITTSU BRGHPIRATES— ClaimedCRamonCabrera off waivers fromDetroit. DesignatedRHPWirfin Obispofor assignme nt. ST.LOUISCARDINALS—Extended their playerdevelopment contract wit StateCollege (NYP) throughthe 2016season. SANDIEG OPADRES—AgreedtotermswilhINFNiko Gallego onaminorleaguecontract. FOOTB ALL NationalFootball League DALLASCOWBOYS—Released DLAndreCureton. SignedDLStephenGoodinandPTomHornsey. TENNE SSEETITANS—ReleasedTEDorinDickerson. MIAMI DOLPHINS— ReleasedWRRaymondWebber. PITTSU BRGHSTEELERS— PlacedPAdam Podlesh on the reserve/did not report list. HOCKE Y NationalHockeyLeague DALLAS STARS—RenewedIheiraffiliation withIdaho (ECHL) for Ihe2014-15season. MOTORSPORTS NASCAR —FinedKevin Harvick's crewchief Rodney Childers$25,000for unapprovedweight inhis carduring Sundayhrarn. SOCCE R Major LeagueSoccer MLS —Suspended D.C.UnitedFEddieJohnsontwo games andfinedhiman undisclosedamount for violent conductdurinS gaturday'sgame. SEATTL ESOUNDERS— AgreedtotransferDDeAndre YedlintoTottenham(England) at theconclusionofthe currentMLSseason. COLLEG E NEWME XICO— Reinstated RBCrusoeGongbay and CB SaQwanEdwardsto thefootball team.Promoted 'AHavahlaHaynestoassociateheadcrosscountrycoach. NORTHWESTER N— AnnouncedRBVenricMarkwill transfer. PROVIDE NCE— NamedBobSi monmen'sassociate headbasketbalcoach.

FISH COUNT TNT NBATV NBATV NBATV

ESPN TNT

NBATV

Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsghd Bonneville 1,554 3 8 1 6 ,144 2,720 T he Daffes 636 1 4 1 1 ,218 6 3 4 John Day 42 8 114 440 217 McNary 2 3 2 60 552 231 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonTuesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsghd Bonneville357,858 53,891 149,045 73,360 The Daffes284,778 42,120 73,143 39,712 John Day 248,460 37,503 43,170 21,934 McNary 229,498 33,458 38,138 19,146

Seattle rOOkie MarSh to haVe MRI after injury —Seattle Seahawks rookie defensive endCassius Marsh will undergo anMRI after appearing to suffer a kneeinjury in practice. Marsh was hurt after getting tangled in a pile during Wednesday's practice, the final one before Seattle broke training camp.TheSeahawks have alight practice today before Friday night's second preseasongameagainst San Diego. Theteam did not haveany further details. Coach Pete Carroll is expected to talk after Thursday's practice. Marsh wasa fourth-round pick out of UCLA andwas expected to contribute right away as apass rusher for the Seahawks. Marsh hadfour tackles and a sack in Seattle's preseason opening loss to Denver.

BEAVERS FOOTBALL

Defensive taekle a powerposition for Beavs By Kevin Hampton Corvallis Gazette-Times

GOLF

CORVALLIS — Mike Riley

did not hesitate when asked

WOOdS pullS Oilt Of Ryder Cilp COnSideratiOn —Tiger

about Oregon State's defensive

Woods has removed himself from consideration for a U.S.Ryder Cup captain's pick because of backproblems. Woodsposted astatement on his website Wednesday,saying: "I've beentold by my doctors and trainer that my backmuscles need to berehabilitated and healed. They've advised menotto playorpracticenow."Woods'season ended last weekwhen hemissed the cut by five shots in the PGA Championship, his fourth event since having surgery to alleviate pain from a pinched nerve.

tackles. "That," said the v eteran OSU football coach, "should

be a strength for the Beavers." For good reason. The Beavers ar e

e x perienced and

deep. Seniors Siale Hautau and Bud Delva are back after get-

BASEBALL

ting plenty of playing time in

ROCkieS SS TIIIOWitZki Out fOr SeaSOn —All-Star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki will have surgery on his left hip Friday in Vail, Colorado, and miss the rest of the season, theColorado Rockies said Wednesday. Tulowitzki, whose.340 batting average remains tops in the big leagues, has a torn labrum in his hip, the team said. — From wire reports

the rotation last season. Hautau had a total of five tackles

— two for loss — last season, while Delva finished with 11 tackles.

"Bud Delva's a way different player right now than he was a

year ago," Riley said. "He was ing and it comes with techgood a year ago, but he's much nique," Grimble said. "Coach improved, better physically." Joe, he drills technique and I Then there is Jalen Grimble, think that's the biggest thing a 6-2, 307-pound junior who becausewhat heteaches,ifyou transferred from the Univer- do it every play, there's no reasity of Miami and sat out last son why you should get beat, season. He has shown flashes there's no reason why (any) ofof his athletic ability this pre- fensive lineman in the country season, at one point breaking should be able to handle us." through to reject a pass. Junior Ali'i Robins, sopho"Jalen's actually r e ally more Noke Tago and Brandon good," said Oregon State defen- Bezmett-Jackson also return. sive line coach Joe Seumalo. Freshman Kalani Vakamei"He's been real consistent and lalo (6-3, 338) could also get a he's definitely playing at a dif- shot. "Kalani, he's very powerful," ferent level, but so is Bud and so is Siale." Delva said. "So I think if he just Grimble said he is trying to getsmore explosive,he should focus on dominating on every be good in a couple years." play. The Beavers allowed 190.3 "With that comes condition- yards a game on the ground

last season, 88th in the country.

Having a strong interior line is a good start to improve on that.

"We got pretty experienced guys in there, so we as a defensive unit should know how to stop the rtm," Delva said. "So

we should do a pretty good job of stopping the rktn this year."

Grimble said he is confident in this group of defensive tackles.

"As long as we keep working and listening to coach Joe, there's nothing we can't accomplish," he said. "We can't

gettoo far ahead of ourselves. Practice is the key right now, and we've just got to focus on practice and the task that's at hand and that's getting to the

next practice."



C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

LLWS

Jim,aformer pro. Bryn Stonehouse played Continued from C1 softball exclusively as a child And 30 years have passed in Texas until her family since the reserve outfielder movedto SaudiArabia, which Victoria Roche, an expat Lit- did not offer the sport. To stay tle Leaguer on a team from

active, she took up baseball

Belgium, became the first girl to dig her cleats into the dirt at

with boys and, after being cut the first season there, was

Williamsport.

able to join the all-blond Saudi

lowed Roche to th e L i ttle

team — a superstitious ritual accomplished with hair dye

League World Series, with

— that headed to the Series in

the latest two set to take part

in this year's competition.

2009,15yearsafterW endell. Stonehouse said Tuesday

One of them is Mo'Ne Davis,

she looks back at that expe-

of Philadelphia, a showstopping pitcher whose flowing braids obscure her jersey name and number and whose three-hit shutout Sunday in her team's regional final created a loud buzz. The other

rience as "one in a million," made extra-special by the presence of a second girl, Katie Reyes from Vancouver.

is Emma March, of Vancouver, British Columbia, a first

all the attention unduly affect-

The presence of Davis and March marks the third time in the last 10 years that two

this select group," said Stone-

Seventeen girls have fol-

ed her play, though her final baseman-pitcher who often at-bat produced a bunt single exhibits bright nail polish in for a run batted in. "I amreall y proud and exgames and whose twin brother, Evan, is her teammate. tremely blessed to be a part of

ii

3

house, who has circled back to Texas to begin studying girls will be playing at Wil- social work in college but will liamsport in the same year. limit her softball playing to What began as a phenome- intramurals.

I~~

non — it took five years after Roche's debut for another girl Jesse Heinly reacts to his missed birdie at the 2014 U.S. Amateur Championship at Atlanta Athletic Club in Johns Creek, Georgia, on W ednesday. Heinly upset No. 2 seed Taylor Moore, 3 and 2,to advance to today's Round of32.

Heinly Continued from C1 Heinly's long day started with 16 other golfers, all of whom had shot 2 over par through two rounds of stroke-play qualifying, trying to advance into the round of 64.

The deadlocked players were grouped in threefoursomes and a fivesome, and Heinly was one of six golfers that birdied the par-5 first hole at Atlanta Athletic

Club's Riverside Course. Then, playing the 191-yard, par-3 eighth hole, Heinly played it safe and made par. That was all he needed after two golfers made bogey, sending Heinly and three others into single-elimination match play. "I went to the range and warmed up like I normally would," Heinly said of the unusually large sudden-death playoff. "It's one of those things that if you make birdie on the first hole, great, you make it. If not, it happens. It's one hole, do or die. You have

"They don't even knowwho I am, and I am not really supposedtobe in m atch play based on my ranking.... When I p/ay we/I I can p/ay as well as any of these guys."

ing the match. Moore, who was the co-medalist after

care of Atlanta. The pool of

femaleathleteshasdeepened, Meghan Sims made that he said, and with expert in- trip in 2004 and on Tuesday

of the year in 2012-13 and was among the

struction honing the biome-

looked back, too.

most highly touted high school golfers in the country (Golfweek Magazine ranked

chanics of all youngsters, "you can be a standout player not just because of your physical prowess." As well, he said, boys gen-

She said she avoided softball as a child, sensing it lacked the skinned-knee aggression that baseball provided. She would swing a bat at anything thrown by her father — baseballs, marshmal-

him the nation's No. 2 player in the class of

2012). And it does not figure to get much easier.

Up next for Heinly in today's round of 32 is 31-seeded Corey Conners, a Canadithe logjam after Moore found water on the an who plays college golf at Kent State and

erally do not start to separate

themselves muscularly from girls until about age 15, when lows, sunflower seeds — and higher testosterone levels gen- eventually hit her way onto a erate more bulk. team that went to the World

is ranked the No. 44 in the World Amateur

Golf Rankings. But Heinly said he is not intimidated by

As for Little League's elite

With a tough side-hill lie in the rough on the resumes ofhis competitors. "They don'teven know who I am, and I

the par-4 13th hole, Heinly hit the shot of

the match when he stuck his approach to within 8 feet of the hole, leading to a birdie

and a three-hole advantage. Heinly did flirt with disaster when he shanked his tee shot on the par-3 15th hole,

am not really supposed to be in match play based on my ranking," Heinly said. "It's another kid who I have to play golf with, and when I play well I can play as well as any of these guys." Heinly tees off against Conners at 6:05 a.m. PDT. If he wins, he will play in the round of 16 this afternoon. Live television coverage of the Round of 16 begins at 3:30

an embarrassing shot that was shown live on the Golf Channel, leading to abogey. "I had a feeling that was going to happen That put him in a first-round match with Moore, a rising junior at the University of one time on this trip, and it happened to be Arkansas who was one of two golfers to the first shot I get on TV," said Heinly of his p.m. on the Golf Channel. card 8 under in stroke-play qualifying. shot on 15. The championshipmatch is scheduled The two went back and forth on the But he showed resiliency on the diffi- for Sunday. front nine, though Heinly never trailed. cult uphill par-4 16th when he hit two solid — Reporter: 541-617-7868, The Summit High School graduate broke shots to get to the green and made par, endzhall@bendbulletin.com.

to get lucky."

came via western Kentucky.

two rounds of stroke-play qualifying, was theSoutheastern Conference co-freshman

— Jesse Heiniy

par-4 11th hole, and Heinly extended his lead to two holes with a birdie on the par-5 12th.

Dotting this female honor

roll is another player from the Saudi league, along with players — some of them American-born — from Japan, Germany, Russia, Guam

to make it to Williamsporthas becomemore ofaregular occurrence. All of this is no mystery to Dr. David Popoli, a primary and the Czech Republic. Until care sports medicine physi- Davis this week, the shortest cian with Children's Health- commute to Williamsport

John Mummert/ USGA

Funk

says Funk, adding that he be- took in the final round of the lieves Crosswater could host 2010 Tradition, to win the LegContinued from C1 another pro tournament one ends of Golf team competition. His golf star burned bright day. "I couldn't get enough of But otherwise he has logged in the four years he played in that golf course." just two top-10 finishes this the Jeld-Wen Tradition — a Funk was among the elite season. "It's been a frustrating year major championship on the golfers on the Champions C hampions Tour t ha t w a s Tour during the Tradition's in a lot of regards," Funk says. "It's still fun, and when I am held annually at Crosswater run in Central Oregon. Clubfrom 2007 though 2010. A late bloomer, Funk i n playing well it's a lot of fun. It's The Maryland nativewon 2005 became the oldest what I want to do. But I don't twice in four appearances at player ever to win The Play- enjoy playing poorly and I don't enjoy playing when I am The Tradition and dominated ers Championship, doing it Crosswater in a way that no three months shy of his 49th hurt." other golfer could. birthday. On his way to play in the In those four appearances His peak as a professional Boeing Classic, a tournament he combined to shoot 47 un- golfer continued after turning that begins Aug. 22 near Seder par, by far the best of any 50. He split time between the attle, Funk says he still has player at Crosswater those PGA Tour and the Champions plenty to share with Central four years, and he never fin- Tour, winning a tournament Oregon golfers. ished worse than a tie for sev- on both circuits in 2007. He will get that chance on "During that stretch back Tuesday. enth place. He posted 19 under in his then I was playing really pretThe annual event is open to win in 2008 while not shoot- ty good golf," Funk says. "I the public for a $30 donation to ing a round higher than a played my best golf between Devin's Destiny and includes a 4-under-par 69, and he was 44 and 52." question-and-answer session three shots better than anyT hese days, Funk h a s with Funk after the clinic. "We're just going to freeone else in the field. He also slowed down considerably c ontended until l ate i n t h e while dealing with a litany wheel it," Funk says. "I'll give final round of the 2009 Tradi- of nagging injuries that have them my knowledge of how tion before settling for a tie for resulted in multiple surger- I kind of try to work on my fifth place. ies, including a 2009 knee "Some guys didn't l i ke replacement. (Crosswater) and called it a This year he paired with little quirky, but I l oved it,"

She said that she encountered

no harassment or teasing over the fact she was a girl but that

Series.

sorority, it is aneclecticgroup, including a lot of other girls besides Roche who played baseball overseas and some who were accidental stars, landing in the World Series without being laser-focused on the sport. Krissy Wendell, for instance, was a hockey prodigy in Minnesota who picked up a

Sims also pitched, serving up a mammoth home run at Williamsport that, to this day,

her former coach teases her about, joking that the ball is still rolling. "It was such an awesome experience," Sims said. Pleasant reminders still greet her

daily when she wakes up — a mounted bat from the event,

bat and catcher's mitt largely

Little League posters on bed-

room walls.

lels to other sports and how

to tag along with her brother. And because her parents locked up the skates during summers. C ompeting w it h an d against boys was hardly intimidating, Wendell having done so on the ice when she was 5 years old. "It was fairly normal to me," she said Tues-

it works into golf. (I will talk about) how they can improve

day in an interview. At W i l liamsport, where

Murray State until quitting

as she became a magnet for the news media. "Enough is

ing tidbit about themselves.

game and try to make paral-

she had fantasized about

s omeday playing in t h e major leagues. "I hated the thought of playing it," she said about taking up softball. But she did, playing at

to concentrate on her nursin 1994 Wendell became the ing studies. To this day, Sims fifth female participant and said, she relishes the classthe second based in the Unit- room routine of students beed States, normalcy ended ing asked to cite an interest-

and maybe get them a little

different understanding on how they can work on the game themselves." The Devin's Destiny event

"I played baseball — with the enough," she remembers tell- boys — on ESPN," Sims haping her father, a team coach. pily announces. The interviews were stealing Any hostility she sensed her awayfrom the video ar- at Williamsport emanated, if cade and swinuning pool that mildly, from her own dugout. teammates were enjoying. A first baseman, she said she Memories of her stay at detected hints of j e alousy Williamsport are otherwise from some backups bothpositive, and she flew home ered that a girl was in the before the rest of the team lineup and not them. only because hockey beckPart of her sympathizes. oned. A stellar career on "It's a boys' sport, clearly," skates culminated with her she said.

has made a habit of attracting some notable tour players.

That list includes Oregon nativePeterJacobsen and former British Open champion Ian Baker-Finch, but none has enjoyed near the professional success in this region that

Funkhas. "It will be neat to come back there," says Funk, who had a

reputation for being among t he m os t

She said that switching to

softball a year after the Series was painful for her, that

a c c essible a n d

friendly pros during the Tradition's run in Sunriver. "I really love that spot. It's a beau-

captaincy of the U.S. team at

But not entirely, as shown

the 2006 Winter Olympics. Now, as Krissy Wendell-Pohl, she coaches high school girls hockey with her husband,

tiful area. I love both the golf course (at Pronghorn) there and the whole facility. It's really special." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbuIIetin.com.

this weekend by waist-long hair on one player and colorfully painted nails on another.

AN'D" OLDER

Tom Lehman, whom he over-

I

Mon-Wed. Elks Continued from C1 "This one's much more difficult to swallow," Hunter

in six innings of work while scattering four hits. "He

was

o u t standing,"

Open to the pubhc at Pronghorn

Hunter said of Hamann. "He did a great job tonight."

said, comparing the game The Elks struck first with with Tuesday's 2-1 home loss. a solo blast to right field as "You hope these kids can take G rant Newton le d of f t h e this experience forward. The

top of the fifth inning with a

thing I always asked of them was just play hard. And they

home run to give Bend a 1-0 lead.

did. It was a good effort — a

Louis Cohen, in r elief of

very good effort. The Knights take on Bellingham in the championship series, which is slated to begin Saturday, in search of their

Hamann, helped the Elks escape two late-inning jams

third league crown in the last

four years. Grant Newton went 2 for 4 with a solo home run for

Bend, and Antonio Roque finished 2 for 2. Pitcher Kevin Hamann did not allow a

hit through 3 '/ innings and finished with five strikeouts

eighth to strand two Knights runners in each frame. But in the ninth, after Marc

Gallegos reached first on an error, Kline recorded a walkoff homer to send Corvallis to its fourth straight finals

appearance. — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas®bendbulletin.com.

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C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

+

N ASDAQ ~ 4 4 68

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16,651.80

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TOdap Consumer beltwether

1 g40 .

Wal-Mart has been suffering from weak sales in the U.S. for some time. Solid job gains and a recovering housing market haven't translated into stronger spending by Wal-Mart's consumers, who account for nearly 10 percent of nonautomotive retail spending in the U.S. The retail giant's latest quarterly results, due out today, should provide insight into the financial health of its shoppers. $74.03

WMT $77.08

.

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.

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.

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.

2,000 " 1,950 " 1,900 "

Operating EPS

2 Q '13

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2 Q ' 14

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Dow jones lndustrlals

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16670.29 16567.54 16651.80 +91.26 DOW Trans. 8236.06 8164.22 8209.57 +55.77 DOW Util. 543.63 539.14 541.42 +0.87 NYSE Comp. 10768.48 10717.49 10756.18 +50.40 NASDAQ 4434.31 4403.64 4434.13 +44.88 S&P 500 1948.41 1935.60 1946.72 +1 2.97 S&P 400 1393.31 1380.76 1391.50 +11.34 Wilshire 5000 20633.86 20476.17 2061 7.51 +141.34 Russell 2000 1143.23 1135.61 1141.78 +8.75

DOW

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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.0.55% +0.45% $.0.68% +1 0.93% $.0.16% +1 0.37% $.0.47% +3.42% $.1.02% L L +6.17% $.0.67% +5.32% $.0.82% +3.65% $.0.69% +4.63% $.0.77% -1.88%

NorthwestStocks

based on trailing 12 month results

Dividend: $1.92 Div. yield: 2.6% Source: FactSet

$97.59

The stock market posted modest gains Wednesday, helping pull the Dow Jones industrial average back into positive territory for the year. Investors set aside their concerns about Ukraine and Iraq, where geopolitical tensions have been quieter in the last few days, and focused on the latest batch of U.S. economic and corporate news. European markets also recovered Wednesday, after selling off sharply in the last two days, which in turn helped U.S. markets. Amazon was among the biggest gainers after the company announced a new payment system, while Macy's fell sharply after its earnings and outlooks disappointed.

"

16,800"

06

$19.81

... Close: 16,651.80 Change: 91.26 (0.6%) "

17,200"

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SstP 500

Thursday, August 14, 201 4

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S&P 500 1,946.72

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Macy's

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

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SEAS King Digital Ent. KING Close: $18.90V-9.25 or -32.9% Qose:$13.99%-4.21 or -23.1% The theme park and entertainment The makerofthe game "Candy company reported worse-than-exCrush" said its second-quarter revepected quarterly financial results nue fell short of expectations and it and cut its full-year guidance. cut its full-year guidance. $40 $25 30 20

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PE: . . . Yield: ...

Deere DE Close:$84.49T-1.99 or -2.3% The farming equipment maker reported a drop in quarterly profit and cut its full-year outlook on weak sales in the U.S. and Canada. $95

Alaska Air Group A LK 28.04 ~ 50.49 44. 6 7 + 1.00+2.3 L T T +21. 8 +4 5 .7 1 012 10 0 . 5 0 Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 33.60 31.6 0 +. 2 3 +0 .7 L T T +12.1 +14 .2 2 6 9 1 0 1. 2 7 Bank of America BAC 13 . 60 ~ 18.03 15. 2 5 + . 0 4 +0.3 L T T -2.1 + 5 .8 33272 18 0.20f BarrettBusiness B BS I 41 . 96 ~ 102.2 0 59. 93 + 2.45 +4.3 L L L -35.4 - 18.2 10 4 2 5 0 . 7 2 Sales rebound? 60 90 Boeing Co BA 101.77 ~ 144. 5 7 12 1.98 +1.51 +1.3 L T T -10.6 +18.1 2629 18 2 . 92 Wall Street anticipates that Kohl's 58 85 Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 11~ 6.50 5.18 ... ... T T T -1.0 -13.4 62 5 earnings improved in its fiscal second ColumbiaBokg COLB 2 3.17 ~ 3 0.3 6 25.46 +.17+0.7 T T T -7.4 +6 . 3 10 2 1 8 0 . 56f quarter. M J J A M J J A Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 89. 96 75.66 +.36 +0.5 LT T -4.7 + 2 3.4 8 3 24 1.12 52-week range 52-week range But the department store Costco Wholesale CO ST 109.50 ~ 1 26.1 2 11 8.64 -.37 -0.3 T L L -0.3 + 4 . 0 1 443 2 6 1 . 42 $42.18~ $6 1.26 886.76~ $94.89 operator's sales are expected to be Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 9.63 ty 18.70 12 .58 + . 0 5 + 0.4 L L L -23.4 +25.3 3 0 55 Vol.:18.0m (5.6x avg.) PE : 1 4 .5 Vol.:9.5m (3.3x avg.) P E:9. 3 flat with a year ago. Kohl's, due to FLIR Systems F LIR 27.91 ~ 37.42 33.9 8 +. 4 3 $ .1.3 L L T +12.9 +2.3 438 25 0.4 0 Mkt. Cap:$20.35 b Yie l d: 2.2% Mkt.Cap:$30.74 b Yield: 2.8% report financial results today, missed Hewlett Packard HPQ 2 0 . 25 — 0 36.21 35.30 + . 18 +0.5 L L L +26.2 +33 .6 6 7 57 1 2 0. 6 4 its goals in its fiscal first quarter and Intel Corp INTC 21.89 ~ 34.83 34. 1 0 +. 9 7 +2.9 L T L +31. 4 +5 0 .3 35775 17 0 . 90 Amazon.com AMZN Cree CREE its sales fell 3 percent. But the Keycorp K EY 11.05 ~ 14.70 13.1 6 +. 0 5 +0 .4 T T T - 1.9 + 9 . 5 4 583 1 2 0 . 2 6 Close: $326.28 L6.96 or 2.2% Close: $44.82 T-4.39 or -8.9% -.20 -0.4 L L L +25. 8 +3 0 .3 2 086 17 0 . 6 6 companysaw sales improve as the Kroger Co K R 3 5 .13 ~ 51.49 4 9. 7 4 The online retailer introduced a The LED lights and semiconductor Lattice Semi L SCC 4.17 ~ 9.19 7.14 ... ... L T T +30.1 +42 .5 9 3 0 34 quarter progressed. credit-card processing device to maker set its fiscal first-quarter profLA Pacific L PX 12.71 ~ 18.96 13. 5 9 +. 1 7 +1.3 L T T -26.6 -21.0 1167 cc helpbusinesses accept payments it and revenue guidance below Wall MDU Resources M DU 25 . 94 ~ 36.05 30. 6 8 +. 2 8 +0.9 L T T +0.4 +7.1 242 20 0. 7 1 through smartphones and tablets. Street expectations. Mentor Graphics MEN T 19.14 ~ 24.31 21. 0 4 + . 1 1 +0.5 L T T -12.6 - 1.3 33 4 1 7 0 . 20 $400 $55 Microsoft Corp M SFT 3 0 .84 ~ 45.71 44. 0 8 +. 5 6 +1.3 L ~ L + 17.8 + 35.7 22712 17 1 . 12 350 50 Nike Ioc B N KE 62.60 ~ 80.26 77.2 5 +. 5 2 +0 .7 L L T -1.8 +16.8 3200 2 6 0 . 96 300 45 T L + 10.2 +15 .1 2 5 98 1 8 1. 3 2 Nordstrom Ioc J WN 54.90 ~ 70.71 6 8.1 2 - .59 -0.9 T Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 47.50 43.7 7 +. 3 7 +0 .9 L T T +2.2 +4.7 55 20 1.84 M J J A M J J A PaccarIoc P CAR 53.07 ~ 68.81 61.9 8 +. 4 9 +0 .8 L T T + 4.7 +12. 6 73 0 18 0. 8 8 52-week range 52-week range Planar Systms PLNR 1.76 — o 3 .99 3 . 8 1 -.10 -2.6 L L L +50. 0 + 1 04.7 3 0 1 6 4 $278.3$~ $408.06 $44.11 ~ $75.98 Plum Creek PCL 40.29 o — 50.0 8 40. 7 1 -.16 -0.4 L T T -12.5 - 8.7 80 0 3 5 1 . 76 Vol.:4.9m (1.3x avg.) PE: 858.6 Vol.:11.2m (6.6x avg.) P E : 4 4.8 Prec Castparts PCP 210.79 ~ 275. 0 9 23 5.55 +2.97 +1.3 L T T - 12.5 + 7. 6 4 9 9 1 9 0 . 1 2 Mkt. Cap:$150.75 b Yield : . . . Mkt. Cap: $5.46 b Yield: ... Safeway Ioc S WY 22.20 ~ 36.03 34.5 3 +. 1 1 +0 .3 L T L +18.5 +57 .1 93 4 3 0.9 2 f RBBII b Lo mSchoffze r Steel SCH N 24.13 ~ 3 3.3 2 27.05 +.28+1.0 L L L -17.2 + 1. 1 1 5 5 d d 0. 7 5 Myriad Genetics MYGN Canadian Solar CSIQ Sherwin Wms SHW 166.32 — 0 21 5 .62211.75 +1.68 + 0.8 L L L +15.4 +19 .6 3 7 7 2 7 2. 2 0 Close:$36.04T-2.96 or -7.6% Close:$31.03 %6.06 or 24.3% StaocorpFocl S FG 51.98 ~ 69.51 62. 3 4 +. 5 1 +0.8 L T T -5.9 +16.0 1 4 3 1 3 1 .10f The molecular diagnostics company The solar panel maker reported a StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 82.50 7 7. 2 4 -.58 -0.7 T T T - 1.5 + 8 . 1 3 457 3 0 1 . 04 reported better-than-expected quar- quarterly profit, topping Wall Street terly results, but set lower-than-exexpectations, on a boost in revenue Triquiot Semi TQNT 6.80 — o 18.86 18 .88 + . 38 +2.1 L L L $.12 6.4 +139.6 2815 c c pected guidance. and moduleshipments. Umppua Holdi ngs UM P Q 15.56 ~ 1 9.6 5 16.96 +.28+1.7 L T T -11.4 +1 . 2 1 7 15 2 5 0. 6 0 $45 $35 US Bancorp U SB 35.69 ~ 43.92 41. 3 6 +. 2 0 +0.5 L T T +2.4 +13 . 3 4 5 40 1 4 0 . 98f Eye onunemployment Washington Fedl WAF D 19.53 ~ 24.53 21. 1 3 +. 1 4 +0.7 L T T -9.3 -4.1 23 3 1 4 0 .44f 40 30 Wells Fargo & Co W F C 4 0 .07 ~ 53.08 49. 9 9 +. 2 1 +0.4 T T +10.1 +18 .2 12069 12 1 . 40 The Labor Department reports its 35 25 W Y 2 6 .64 ~ 33.75 32.3 4 +. 0 1 ... L T T +2.4 +21. 6 1 4 27 2 5 0. 8 8 latest weekly data on applications for Weyerhaeuser M J J A M J J A unemployment benefits today. 52-week range 52-week range The number of Americans applying $26.62 ~ $42 .86 $16.88~ $4 4.86 for unemployment aid remains at a DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenet included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declareder paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:3.5m (3.6x avg.) PE :1 5 .3 Vol.:19.4m (5.9x avg.) P E: . . . relatively low level, pointing toward annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumef dividends paidthis year.Most recent Mkt. Cap:$2.7 b Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$1.7 b Yield: ... dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared cr paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend stronger economic growth. Weekly announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid ic preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP applications for unemployment value cn ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end feed - ne P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last 12 months. benefits declined to a seasonally adjusted 289,000 two weeks ago. InterestRates NET 1YR Applications are a proxy for layoffs. TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

"g Jc/~L

IIIIII

: ': Candycrushed

Initial jobless claims, in thousands seasonally adjusted week-ending total 350

305 303

est.

303

300

298

289 279

250

7 /4 7/11 7/1 8 7/25, :8/1 M t

Shares of King Digital Entertainment, the maker of the mobile game "Candy Crush," fell 23 percent Wednesday asinvestors sold off following disappointing second-quarter results. King Digital, which went public in March, earned $165.4 million, or 52 cents per share, in the April-June quarter. That's up from $125.9 million, or 39 cents per share, a year

King Digital (KING)

July. :August

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to from its May guidance of $2.55 2.42 percent billion to $2.65 billion. That figure Wednesday. represents the total amount users Yields affect pay for virtual items in its games and rates on mortfor access to game tournaments. gages and other consumer loans. * Wednesday's close: $13.99 T o t al return 1- M o. 3 - M o. S i nce IPO

52-WEEK RANGE Source: FactSet

IU HIS

earlier. Adjusted earnings were 59 cents per share, matching analysts' expectations. Revenue rose 30 percent to $593.6 million from $455.5 million. Analysts, on average, had expected revenue of $609 million, according to FactSet. King Digital said it now expects gross bookings of $2.25 billion to $2.35 billion for the full year, down

Price-earnings ratio: 7

$14

23

AP

T o t al returns through Aug. 13*March 26, 2014

(Saeed on tralling 12 month resulte)

AmdFocus

KING S&P 500

-32.8% -1.6

SelectedMutualpunds

AP

624303 593011 492132 465965 375333 373948 365400 357754 332722

15.46 -.72 194.84 +1.31 48.12 -.71 44.56 +.24 25.20 +.05 4.38 -.10 29.89 -1.76 34.10 +.97 15.25 +.04

Gainers NAME

Cerulean n Amedica n CdnSolar Ever-Glory Aemetis rs Fonar LiveDeal s GrubHub n Amtech InterMune

LAST 4.52 2.95 31.03 6.19 9.36 13.39 4.52 45.21 10.24 52.06

CHG +1.06 +.58 +6.06 +1.20 +1.67 +1.99 +.67 +5.85 +1.29 +6.57

Losers NAME

L AST 18.90 13.99 9.78 2.70 2.20

HendersonIotl0ppA m VALUE

HFOAX

B L EN D GR OWTH

Qo

o63 C3

%CHG + 30.6 + 2 4.5 + 2 4.3 63 + 2 4.0 m + 2 1.7 613 + 17.5 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 7.4 + 1 4.9 QeFund target represents weighted + 14.4 average of stock holdings + 14.4 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings

CATEGORY Foreign Large Blend

C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ***w w -9.25 -32.9 SeaWorld KingDEn n -4.21 -23.1 ASSETS $1,991 million -2.72 -21.8 ROI Acll o EXP RATIO 1.46% OneHorizn -.66 -19.6 MANAGER Tim Stevenson -.45 -17.0 Interphase SINCE 2002-12-30 RETURNS3-MO -0.7 Foreign Markets YTD -1.7 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +9.8 Paris 4,194.79 +32.63 + . 78 3-YR ANNL +11.2 London 6,656.68 +24.26 + . 37 5-YR-ANNL +7.3 Frankfurt 9,198.88 +1 29.41 +1.43 Hong Kong TOP 5HOLDINGS -.02 Fidelity Treasury Fnd695 Fnd695 Mexico 44,723.97 -10.08 Milan 19,537.26 +1 21.00 +.62 Capita PLC Tokyo Stockholm 1,361.82 + 11.86 + . 88 Continental AG -15.20 -.28 ProSiebenSat1 Media AG Sydney 5,507.90 Zurich 8,388.71 +58.91 + . 71 Sodexo

BONDS

L

L

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities AmBalA m 25 . 22 +.13+4.2 +12.4 +15.1+12.9 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.27 +.28 +5.4 +11.6 +12.1+10.4 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 46.54 +.29 +4.0 +14.2 +15.5+11.4 8 8 D edged higher EurPacGrA m 49.36 +.26 +0.6 +11.6 +10.6 +8.6 A 8 8 Wednesday, as FnlnvA m 53. 3 7 +.34+4.2 +16.4 +19.0+14.8 C C C traders GrthAmA m 45.14 +.35 +5.0 +18.0 +20.0+14.8 8 8 D shrugged off a IncAmerA m 21.51 +.11 +5.8 +12.8 +14.3+12.8 A A A bearish report InvCoAmA m 39.66 +.23 +7.2 +19.0 +20.2+14.7 A 8 C on U.S. crude NewPerspA m38.19 +.24 +1.7 +13.0 +15.5+12.8 C 8 8 supplies. In WAMutlnvA m41.69 +.27 +5.1 +15.2 +19.7+16.1 8 C A metals trading, Dodge &Cox Income 13.91 +.62 +4.7 +6 .6 +4.6+5.9 A A B gold rose, while IntlStk 45.80 +.24 +6.4 +17.9 +15.4+11.5 A A A Stock 177.11+1.61 +6.0 +18.6 +24.2+16.9 A A A silver and copFidelity Contra 99.35 + . 77 +4.4 +18.0 +18.6+16.6 C C B per declined. ContraK 99.3 5 + .78 +4.5 +18.1 +18.7+16.8 B C B Wheat slipped. LowPriStk d 51.22 +.22 +3.6 +13.8 +19.6+17.1 D D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 69.20 +.48 +6.6 +17.3 +20.8+16.3 B 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 55 +.61 +7.1 +13.0 +13.2+11.8 A A A IncomeA m 2. 5 2 ... +7 .6 + 13.3 +13.8+12.4 A A A Oakmark Intl I 25.60 +.68 -2.7 +4 . 4 +16.6+12.8 E A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 48 +.16+4.2 +13.4 +16.7+13.4 D E D RisDivB m 18 . 29 +.14+3.7 +12.4 +15.6+12.4 E E E RisDivC m 18 . 18 +.14+3.7 +12.6 +15.8+12.6 E E E SmMidValAm 46.67 +.35 +4.2 +13.6+17.0+13.6 D E E SmMidValB m38.76 +.30 +3.8 +12.8 +16.1+12.6 E E E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.72 + .12 +3.8 +12.3 +19.5+14.6 E C C Exchange GrowStk 54.3 3 + .52 +3.3 +20.9 +20.7+17.9 A A A The dollar HealthSci 65.5 3+1.21+13.4 +28.5 +35.3+26.8 B A A gained against Newlncome 9. 5 6 +.61+4.6 + 5.5 + 3.2 +4.9 C C D the British Vanguard 500Adml 180.62+1.24 +6.6 +17.3 +20.8+16.4 8 8 A pound and yen, 500lnv 180.60+1.25 +6.6 +17.1 +20.6+16.2 8 8 A among other CapOp 50.47 +.46 +9.3 +20.2 +24.9+17.1 A A A currencies. The Eqlnc 31.60 +.20 +5.6 +13.9 +20.6+16.8 C 8 A ICE U.S. Dollar IntlStkldxAdm 28.49 +.15 +3.6 +11.8 +9.6 NA A D index, which StratgcEq 32.29 +.27 +7.6 +20.9 +24.3+20.1 A A A compares the TgtRe2020 28.46 +.13 +5.0 +11.4 +12.0+11.0 A A A dollar's value to Tgtet2025 16.54 +.68 +5.0 +12.1 +13.1+11.6 A 8 8 a basket of key TotBdAdml 10.84 +.62 +4.3 +5.0 +2.7 +4.5 D D D currencies, Totlntl 17.63 +.68 +3.5 +11.8 +9.5 +8.0 A D C rose. TotStlAdm 49.67 +.36 +6.0 +16.9 +20.8+16.7 8 8 A TotStldx 49.65 +.36 +5.9 +16.7 +20.7+16.6 8 8 A USGro 30.65 +.25 +4.7 +19.3 +19.8+15.8 8 8 C Welltn 39.61 +.19 +5.7 +12.1 +14.7+12.2 8 A A

-0.01 T

T

-0.02 T -0.04 T -0.03 T -0.03 T

T T T T

PCT 3.79 3.09 3.07 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 3.06 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing fee2ndeither a sales or 2.92 redemption fee.Source: Morningstac

h5Q HS

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

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

~

.05 .07 .10

L .33 L 1.48 T 2.72 T 3.76

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

FUELS

METALS

L

+ 0 .01

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.04 3.07 -0.03 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.48 4.48 . . . T T -8.7 -71.0 Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.27 +0.01 T T PRIME FED Barclays US 2.4 14.1 High Yield 5.59 5.64 -0.05 T L RATE FUNDS M oodysAAACorpldx 4.14 4.10+0.04 T T Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.87 1.89 -0.02 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 2.94 2.93 +0.01 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

Henderson Global Equity Income focuses on dividend-paying FAMILY MarhetSummary stocks and has a higher percent- American Funds Most Active age of assets in foreign-based NAME VOL (60s) LAST CHG companies, according to SiriusXM 632082 3.49 +.09 Morningstar. Petrobras S&P500ETF iShBrazil iShEMkts Cisco Newcastle B iPVix rs Intel BkofAm

3 -month T-bill . 0 3 .0 3 6-month T-bill .05 . 0 4 52-wk T-bill .08 .09 2-year T-note . 4 2 .4 4 5-year T-note 1.58 1.62 10-year T-note 2.42 2.45 30-year T-bond 3.25 3.28

CLOSE PVS. 97.59 97.37 2.18 2.08 2.90 2.85 3.83 3.97 2.75 2.73

CLOSE PVS. 1312.80 1308.80 19.81 19.87 1469.90 1472.20 3.11 3.15 882.10 878.50

T T L T L T

3.51 5.16 2.35 6.18 4.4 5 1 61 . 3.2 5

%CH. %YTD +0.23 -0.8 +0.43 +1 4.1 +2.00 -5.7 -3.60 -9.4 +0.73 -1.1 %CH. %YTD + 0.31 + 9 .2 - 0.30 + 2 . 4 - 0.16 + 7 . 2 -1.37 -9.8 +0.41 +23.0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.48 1.50 -0.94 +1 0.2 Coffee (Ib) 1.85 1.85 +0.35 +67.3 Corn (bu) 3.58 3.59 -0.14 -15.2 Cotton (Ib) 0.64 0.63 +1.57 -24.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 346.70 344.10 +0.76 -3.7 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.43 1.44 - 0.35 + 5 . 1 Soybeans (bu) 12.65 12.90 -1.98 -3.7 Wheat(bu) 5.28 5.38 -1.86 -1 2.8 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6688 -.0123 -.74% 1.5448 Canadian Dollar 1.0 9 18 -.0003 -.03% 1.0345 USD per Euro 1.3369 +.0001 +.01% 1.3262 JapaneseYen 102.45 + . 2 2 + .21% 9 8 . 20 Mexican Peso 13. 1246 -.0177 -.13% 12.7237 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4838 -.0052 -.15% 3.5558 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1559 -.0212 -.34% 5.8868 South African Rand 10.5848 -.0458 -.43% 9.9698 Swedish Krona 6.8 7 52 -.0020 -.03% 6.5384 Swiss Franc 9073 - 0004 - 04% . 9331 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.0748 -.0033 -.31% 1.0984 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1535 .0045 -.07% 6.1235 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7509 -.0004 -.01% 7.7552 Indian Rupee 61.096 -.204 -.33% 61.338 Singapore Dollar 1.2495 -.0007 -.06% 1.2678 South KoreanWon 1030.57 +3.27 +.32% 1119.25 -.03 -.10% 2 9.98 Taiwan Dollar 30.05


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

BRIEFING

FMCA CONVENTION

HOUSING

Boeing building new wingplant Boeing executives and Washington state politicians marked the beginning of demolition work at the Everett, Washington, widebody jet plant Wednesdayto make way for the new 777X composite wing factory. Boeing is flattening three office buildings,

u a oanS By Matthew Goldstein New York Times News Service

the first one built in

1968 when the site was initially developed for thethen-new 747jumbo jet. Around those office buildings work is already in full swing, with about190 construction workers on site, projected to grow to apeakof as many as1,500 over the next two years. Some 70 dump trucks are nowarriving at the site each hour, bringing in loads of dirt that will be used to raise the grade level where the office buildings stand to that of the adjacent main factory. Attending the ceremony, Gov.JayInslee said the composite technology deployedat the facility is key to the state's manufacturing future and "will lift aviation for decadesto come."

Rises in housing prices 2015

have been profitable to private equity firms and institutional

investors that bought foreclosed homes to flip them or to rent them out. Now, the re-

covery in housing is fueling a niche market for newly mint-

ed bonds that are backed by the most troubled mortgages of them all: those on homes

on theverge offoreclosure. And it is not just vulture

hedge funds swooping in to try to profit from the last

Meg Roussos/The Bulletin

Josh Hastings, left, of Bend, and Allan Deane, of Prinevifle, wash the outside of a motor home Wednesday on the first day of the Family Motor Coach Association convention at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond.

cee rationo t e

remnants of the housing crisis. The investors making money off these obscure bonds — none are rated by a major credit rating agency — include American mutual funds. And one of the biggest sellers of severely delinquent mortgages to investors is a U.S. government housing agency. The demand for securitizations of nonperforming loans illustrates Wall Street's

never-ending hunt for higher-yielding investment op-

— From wire reports

portunities. The market also

reflects in part an effort by By Valerie Smith

PERMITS City of Bend • Jason A. Mendell, 975 NW RoanokeAve., $230,758 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC,61063 SE Ambassador Drive, $184,740 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC,61067 SE Ambassador Drive, $198,731 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61056 SEManhae Loop, $325,708 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61052 SEManhae Loop, $278,609 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61104 SEManhae Loop, $311,064 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61100 SEManhae Loop, $302,365 • Peter S. Taylor, 61567 Baptist Way, $339,140 • Michael Dasen, 61549 SE Chief Joseph Lane, $264,735 • KD Construction Services, 1148 NW18th St., $323,344 • Tucker H. Spohr, 19907 Ashwood Drive, $215,805 • Chase Holdings LLC, 1302 TamMcArthur Loop, $250,000 • Michael C. Knoell, 20242 NW Tris tenW ay,$229,575

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • RedmondProfessionals Network mixer:Free; 5:30-8 p.m.; ThePigand Pound Public House, 427 SW Eighth St.; 253223-3292 or charlie© visitredmondoregon.com. TUESDAY • CrookedRiver Ranch ChamberNetworking Social:Opento everyone; bring your putter and afew dollars; 5:30 p.m.; Crooked River RanchGolf Course, 5195 SWClubhouse Road; 541-923-2679. • Membership 101-Driving Your Membership:Learn how membership in the Bend Chamber of Commerce can become asales and marketing tool; 10-11 a.m. Bend Chamberof Commerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200, Bend. RSVP required. Contact Shelley Junker at shelley@ bendchamber.org or call 541-382-3221. WEDNESDAY • Pacific PowerBreakfast Seminar:Learn about saving energy and money with wattsmart programs and incentives, preregistration required; free; 7:30-10:30 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NWRippling

The Bulletin

REDMOND — When

asked about the benefits of a motor home lifestyle, a hand-

ful of men standing amid 1,500motor homes Wednesday at the Family Motor

Coach Association convention gave several answers. Camaraderie, said Walt

Jewell, of San Rafael, California. Fraternity, said another.

Freedom, said David Codromac. But it comes at a

Hear from oneFMCAmember about his motor home lifestyle atbsnffbullutin.csm/

o

FMCA

wife enjoy the convenience of being wherever they want to be at a moment's notice. The FMCA is holding its 90th Family Reunion and Motorhome Showcaseat the Deschutes County Fair

The public mayattend the Family Motor CoachAssociation's 90thFamily ReunionandMotorhome Showcase,whichcontinues through Saturday at theDeschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center in Redmond. Viewing motor homesand booth displays costs $7 per person perday;childrenages12and under,whenaccompanied byan adult, and those with anactive military ID will be admitted free. A daily passport, which provides access to exhibits, seminars and evening entertainment, costs $65 per person. For more information, visit www.fmca.com.

& Expo Center, where it has held four previous conventhe amount of travel, accord-

"Money pit is No. 1 for this lifestyle," said Codromac, of Redding, California, an FMCA member of 15 years.

is estimated to generate $6 million in direct and indirect spending for Central Oregon and about double that for the state overall, according to

ing to Robbin Gould, editor of Family Motor Coaching magazine and FMCA media representative.

"When you have this RV life-

Eric Sande, executive direc-

style and you can truly afford it, the whole world is literally at your disposal." Codromac owns a 40-foot Winnebago Itasca Horizon

tor of the Redmond Chamber

way the economy has gotten better, the motor home busi-

and travels with his wife, Ruth-Anne, to places like

Nova Scotia and Niagara Falls. The motor home cost

$303,000, and upkeep is steep, he said. Just this year, new tires, a new satellite dish

and repairs have cost over $6,000 for the couple. Still, he said, he and his

of Commerce & CVB. "It's great for ourecono-

my and great for tourism in our area," said Sande. "Our restaurants are full, and ev-

eryone's fueling up with gas." Buyinga motor home can be costly, depending on the size and how it's outfitted, but after the initial investment,

the money saved annually on hotels, food and other expenses can be as much as

Los Angeles Times

next month, just in time to duel with the iPhone 6.

Samsung has shed its traditional plastic shell for a metal frame on the Galaxy

Alpha, its latest smartphone, it announced Wednesday. The Galaxy Alpha is a shinier, ultrathin version of

Samsung's flagship Galaxy

Many of the features on the Galaxy Alpha are similar to what is expected for Apple's next smartphone. Notably, the Galaxy Alpha featuresa4.7-inch screen,the same size rumored for the

with the heyday of the mortgage-backedsecuritiesmarket before the financial crisis.

But the demand is expected to grow as institutional investors search for yield and analysts estimate that there are

still some $660 billion worth of delinquent mortgages in

"It's neat because of the

ness has gotten better," said

Many members are retired,

but not all, according to the FMCA. Retirees Walt and Jackie

Jewell, a married couple of 42 years, joined the FMCA in 2008. They drove their new 40-foot 2014 Fleetwood

Gould. "Production levels are up; purchases are up, and coming here is like moving a city into a city." The event is expected to at-

Discovery from San Rafael to Redmond. They've been part of a motor home group called The Blenders since 2003.

tract between 2,000 and 2,500

sunrise every morning," said Walt Jewell. "You sleep in your own bed, and get to enjoy camping with all the amenities in one spot, surrounded by good friends."

motor homes total. The FMCA counts more than 80,000 families as mem-

bers, with 2,500 calling Oregon home. About 800 members volunteer to help put on

"You wake up to a different

— Reporter:541-383-0325, vsmith@bendbulletin.com

Samsungunveilsthe metal Galaxy Alpha S5 and will go on sale early

is still small when compared

through Saturday.

$4,000 or more, depending on the event, which continues

By Salvador Rodriguez

on the housing mess. The market for these bonds

the U.S.

tions since 2001. The event

cost, he added.

regulators to close a chapter

If yougo

iPhone 6, and a metal frame, which has always been a defining characteristic of Apple's phones. The Galaxy Alpha is also just 0.26 inches thick, thinner than the current iPhone 5s.

Samsung is likely hoping the Galaxy Alpha can help its sales once Apple an-

nounces its next device. The South Korean giant has had

a tough time keeping up with Apple in 2014, with sales of the nearly year-old iPhone 5s continuing to eclipse those of the newer Galaxy S5.

Bend car

dealerpays restitution

to buyers Bulletin staff report The Smolich auto dealer-

ships in Bend agreed to settle complaints of unlawful trade practices involving five used car sales bypaying $5,800in restitution to the buyers and $29,000 to the Oregon Department of Justice, according to records in Deschutes County Circuit Court.

General Manager Mike Smolich, of Jim Smolich Motors Inc., said the company ac-

knowledges its mistakes. "We never set out to do anything illegal or malicious. We feel bad," he said Wednesday. "We screwed up, and we

Apple, meanwhile, is expected to announce the

screwed up twice over the

iPhone 6 on Sept. 9.

dures in place to prevent that

years. I thought we hadprocefrom happening." The Justice Department alleged that Smolich Motors

River Court, Bend; 541-3893111 or pacificpower.net/ seminar. THURSDAY • BusinessStartup Workshop:Two-hour session covers all the basic steps needed to open abusiness; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop,Redmond; 541-383-7290. AUGUST22 • Innovation DayBend, Aerial Robotics:Seeapplications for social good and aninnovation lab with demos, sponsored by Intel Corp. andSOAROregon, register online; registration required by Aug.19; 3-5 p.m.; Cascades Academy,19860 Tumalo Reservoir Road;619925-8191 or www.soaroregon.

com/innovation-day. AUGUST25 • Habitat for Humanity Affordadfe Homeowner Information Session:For families and individuals who earn 35-60 percent of the area median income interested in becominghomeowners in Crook County; contact DeeDee Johnson in advancefor more information; free; 5:30 p.m.; Crook County Library,175 NW Meadow LakesDrive, Prineville; 541-385-5387 Ext. 103 or diohnson@ bendhabitat.org. AUGUST26 • Awareness:Whois this Brand CalledYou?Part of the Bend Chamber of Commerce Professional Enrichment Series; whether starting a career or standing on the pinnacl e ofsuccess,knowing

your authentic self andhow to broadcast that message is essential to sustaining success; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. $25 chamber members; $30 nonmembers; BendGolf & Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221. AUGUST29 • Generating andManaging Customer Reviews:How to attract customer reviews while avoiding bad reviews; registration required; free; noon; Looney BeanRoasting Co., 961 NWBrooks St., Bend; 541-323-6418 or www. adfedco.org/meetinginfo. php?id=11&ts=t407863037. SEPTEMBER3 • Business Startup Workshop:Learn all the basic steps needed to open a business; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.;

COCCChandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. SEPTEMBER 4 • Impressionable Marketing: Learn tofind the right promotional products to marketyour business; registration required; free; noon; Looney BeanRoasting Co., 961 NWBrooks St., Bend; 541-323-6418 or www. adfedco.org/meetinginfo. php?id=12&ts=t407863111. SEPTEMBER 9 • Healthcare, Benefits and Wellness Seminar:Learn about post-Affordable Care Act benefit plan strategies and howto successfully implement a compliant wellness program; Oregon Employer Council Central Oregon; preregistration required by Sept. 4; $50;

7:30 a.m.; TheRiverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or www.eventbrite.com/e/ healthcare-benefits-wellnesstickets-12332796727. SEPTEMBER10 • LaunchYour Business: Participants work one-onone with a business adviser to develop aworking plan; course combines three onehour coaching sessions that start the week of Labor Day, with three evening classes Sept. 10, 24andOct. 8; preregistration required; $199 includes $25 workbook; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday Bul s letin or visit bendbuffetin.com/bizcaf

advertised reduced prices or lowinterest rates, thentold

prospectiv ebuyersthoseoffers no longer existed. An investigation discovered five suspect sales between July 12-14, 2013.

Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said the auto dealer was under a previous

agreement for similar alleged violations in 2012. None of the car buyers,

three couples andtwo individuals, knewbefore Fridaythat the state had investigated their pur-

chases, said DOJ spokeswoman Kristina Edmunson. They

received amounts ranging from $2,500 to $425, she said. The $29,000 will go to a consumer protectionfund, she sald.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Fitness, D2 Nutrition, D3 Money, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

FITNESS

No need to throw in the (beachj towel onvacation By Nora Krug

on a gym guest pass, yoga

The Washington Post

studio or bike rental.

A beach vacation can be a runner-mom's paradise:

doesn't have to be difficult,

fresh air, free time and, if

you're lucky, free babysitting. During annual trips

fitness through some basic

I realize that not everyone sees vacation as a time to

escalate a fitness routine.

exercisetools,such as resis-

If you're not a runner or a swimmer, or haven't both-

tance bands or jump ropes, says Jo Zimmerman, an in-

ered to lug a bike on the

structor in the department of

my extended family, I'm happily up before my kids' 6 a.m. cry for chocolate-chip pancakes, running longer and faster on the flat, stress-freeribbon of seaside

road than I do on the hilly, anxiety- and traffic-clogged streets of my suburban

neighborhood. Naturopathic physician Joshua Phillips, right, examines patient Mike Fief of Bend at the Hawthorn Healing Arts Center in Bend. Naturopathic doctors want to be covered by health insurance at the same rate as traditional medical doctors.

expensive or burdensome. You canmaintain your exercises, or even through beach activities you may be planning anyway — and if you decide to take the time off completely, the setback to your fitness level is easily restored, experts say. If you decide on the minimalist option, you could bring a mat or towel to the beach and fashion your own yoga practice. You could also pack some lightweight

to the Jersey Shore with

Meg Roueeoe/Ttte Bulletin

But exercise at the beach

kinesiology at the University have family around to watch of Maryland and a longtime your kids, it's not so easy to trainer. Sue Immerman, a maintain your regimen. And certified personal trainer back of your car or don't

with all that beautiful scen-

at MAD Fitness in Takoma

ery and fun family activities

Park, Maryland, suggests buying two gallons of water and using them for a simple weightlifting routine. See Vacation /D2

to enjoy, it can be hard to find the motivation or time

to exercise — or the justification for spending money

When musclecramps become debilitating By Leslie Barker The Dallas Morning News

The cramping began in Maggie Barton's toes during a tennis playoff match six s

••

4

r

4

• •

4

4

summers ago. It swept up her body like a torrent, overtaking her calves and her entire body, leaving in its wake excruciating pain

4

r

• •

4 •

4

L

4 •

4

4

4

4 •

4

4

of Texas Health Ben Hogan Sports Medicine. "But what you can't pass judgment on is the level of fatigue and the actual injury."

and an inability to move her

W hat causes it?

arms. "My arms were around

Full-body cramping is the way the body lets you

a bench, and it took three

know, "Hey, I can't handle

any more," he says. "If your brain doesn't tell you to stop, your body will. It's really, really painful, and one thing to get a cramp in it's scary. You feel the bed in your calf. l ike it's going to go M E DICI N E You pull your toes to your heart." back, and it stretchThough cramping can es and goes away. But when happen in any season, it's an elite athlete starts exespecially prevalent during periencing cramping, your summer. Heat, humidity body is basically shutting and an imbalance of elecdown and you're going into trolytes can bring down a form of exhaustion." anyone — even and espePhysically, continuing cially elite athletes like LeB- isn't an option, says Cindy ron James, who was debili- Trowbridge of the Univertated by cramps during the sity of Texas at Arlington. NBA finals. That's because During cramping, muscles the elite often try to push tighten so much "you're through cramps; everyday almost in rigor mortis withathletes tend to stop once out the death." Moving your they feel cramps beginning. arms and legs, like trying Though James got scoffs to unfurl someone's hand in for leaving the game, those rigor mortis, is all but imwho know about cramping possible, she says. also know he had no choice. See Muscle cramps/D5 says Barton, 39, of Dallas. "You're not in control. It's

4

trainer at an area branch

people to get me off of it,"

4

• •

"You can pass judgment on the dramatics," says Scott Galloway, an athletic

re rocesse oo sas a orusaswe By Tara Bannow The Bulletin

eor, you can take a food that's formulated to have a lot

would be helpful. Not everyone has access to

foods. The problem was, they were high in sugar, Weaver said. Nowthat consumers want less sugar and no arti-

Yale University's Prevention

Research Center, responded to the paper in a statement criti-

IA ?

sional opportunities — annual meetings and journals and

A group of nutrition experts recently put out a polarizing paper defending a class of food that doesn't tend to get much love: processed food. The basicpoint of the paper, published in the American

of fat and sugar and salt in it

raw fruits and vegetables-

and hardly any nutrients, and that canbe a poor nutritional

because of the climate in their region, their economic situa-

choice," she said. "It's not about

tion or other factors — so pro-

turers need to develop new

the extent of processing, it's about the formulation of it." The paper also pointed out

cessed foods are a necessary way to ensure more people

alternatives. "There's a lot of effort to try to reformulate, but if the

mins and minerals, the paper consumers don't choose it with says. their dollars, they have Ultimately, the NUTRITION to try something else," authors call on food she said.

one point.

manufacturersto develop

foods rather than expect to

professor of health promotion and sports medicine at Oregon Health & Science University, said she recognizes some of the authors, including W eaver, aswell-respected

see a sudden, massive shift to

researchers in her field. Al-

Journal of Clinical Nutrition,

that there is a lot of confusion

was that despite the prevalent negative views on processed

around the definition of a

foods, the extent to which a

paper defined as a food that's been manipulated through at

food is processed doesn't necessarily correlate with itbeing less nutritious.

Think about yogurt or whole-grain bread. Both are highly processed, but haven't lost any of their nutritional

processed food, which the leastone of more than a dozen

processes, including washing, grinding, mixing, freezing, concentrating and irradiating. That said, the authors wrote

have access to essential vita-

processed foods that contain less sugar, salt and fat. And the good news, they say, is that companies throughout history have tended to respond to what the masses demand.

nutrition professor and head

that although there are minimallyprocessedfoods and ultra-processed foods,those terms are subjective and ar-

of the nutrition science department at Purdue University.

bitrary, and definitions that account for nutritional content

for example, the industry responded with 300 new low-fat

content, said Connie Weaver, the paper's lead author and a

When aprominent dietary guidelines committee in 2000 called for foods with less fat,

ficial sweeteners, manufac-

A mixedreception Not surprisingly, others in

cizing the fact that its sponsor,

the American Society for Nutrition, receives much of its funding from companies that make processed foods. Nonetheless, he did agree on "I believe, as a public health

pragmatist, that we will indeed have to trade up processed

[fresh] produce," Katz said. the nutrition world had mixed Weaver emphasized that feelings about the paper. Some the paper had no direct links critics argued the authors to food manufacturer funding. should have done more to high- Further, most societies funclight the difference between a tion through industry support, minimally processed food, like she said. "I think it's a reality that the baby carrots, andhighlyprocessedfoods,likeFrootLoops. private sector works with the David Katz, the director of public in order to have profes-

things that otherwise would be

so expensive they couldn't participate," said Weaver, who personally receives funding from food manufactures as well. Diane Stadler, an assistant

though Stadler said she personally has not formed scientific partnerships with indus-

trybecause she doesn't want to be perceived as having compromised integrity, such partnerships have become a necessary part of performing expensive scientific research.

See Processed /D3


D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

FITNESS FITNESS EVENTS GOOD FORM RUNNINGCLINIC:

Learn about running easierand be injury free, focus onproper mechanics; 5:30-7 p.m. tonight; FootZone, 842 NW Wall St.,

Bend; www.footzonebend.com, angela©foot zonebend.com or 541-317-3568. PURE BARRE GRAND OPENING: Featuring refreshments, music, health and wellness stations, demos, raffles and more; free; 6-8 p.m. Friday; Pure Barre Bend, 360 SW Powerhouse Dr., Suite 150; www.facebook.com/ PureBarreBend or 541-678-6478. LIVINGA PEACEFUL AND JOYFUL LIFE:Learn inner awareness through proper breathing, positive focus exercise and silencing the mind; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 6:45-8:15 p.m. Friday; Namaspa, 1135 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; www.namaspa.com, angelheartofmotivation©gmail. com or 971-217-6576. NAVY SEAL PHYSICAL TRAINING:Join a group of retired Navy SEALs in morning calisthenics; free, 18 and older, liability waiver form must be signed; 9-10:30 a.m. Saturday; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078.

Study: determining ifyogaasa sole formef exercise is enoughfor hodystrength In general, the fewavailable experiments involving yoga suggest that it leads to measurable but limited and patchy gains in strength. Consider the results of a 2012 study of premenopausal womenwhowere randomly assigned to yoga or to acontrol group. Theyoga group completed twice-weekly, 60-minute sessions of Ashtanga yoga (which consists of sequential, standardized postures), while the control group continued their normal activities. After eight months, the yogapractitioners had developed more powerful legs comparedwith at the study's start and with those of the control group but had not increased strength in other muscles or improved their

cardiovascular fitness. Similarly, in a 2013study, 12weeks of Bikram yoga (a variety that consists of other specific poses done rapidly in a heated, saunalike space)enabled agroup of young adults to dead-lift more weight on abarbell than they could at the start but did not improve their handgrip strength or any other measures of health and fitness. Overall, yoga appears to betoo gentle physically to be anyone's loneexercise. In one of the most interesting studies of the activity to date, experienced yogaenthusiasts performed their favorite type of yoga for anhour in a metabolic chamber that tracked their caloric usageand

heart rate. Thevolunteers then sat quietly in the chamber and also walked on atreadmill there at a leisurely 2 mph and a brisker 3 mphpace. In the end, the measurements showed that yogawas equivalent in energy cost to strolling at 2 mph, anintensity of exercise that, the authors write, would "not meet recommendations for levels of physical activity for improving or maintaining health or cardiovascular fitness." So if you downward dog, jog occasionally as well and visit the gym to build full-body strength and wellness. — Gretchen Reynolds, New YorkTimesNews Service

Visually impaired athlete prepares for triathlon By Danielle Douglas

student with little desire to run, swim or bike. It wasn't until

The Washington Post

It is grueling enough to

Ament graduated and began clerking for a judge who had a penchant for exercise that she start working out.

swim 2.4 miles, bike 112 miles and run 26.2 miles,

but imagine doing all of that when you can only see

When she moved to Wash-

ablur of light ahead of you.

ington years later, Ament became acompetitive rower and picked up running, allthe while losing more of her eyesight. By the time Ament completed her

K ristina

A me n t ,

a

52-year-old federal prosecutor, has completed four Ironman triathlons under those exact conditions be-

first triathlon in 2010, she had

no "useful vision." "I still have light and shadow

cause of her Leber congenital amaurosis, a degener-

How to submit Events:Email eventinformation to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358.

Announcements: Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

DISPATCHES • Connie Ramseyreleased a new workout video called "Fundamentals Level 2 Pilates Workout." Ramsey owns Core Movement Piiates Studio in Bend, which she founded in1997. She has been acertified Piiates instructor for 22 years and teaches part-time at Ranch LaPuerta in Tecate, Mexico.

ative disease that causes

perception," Ament said. "It's

acute vision loss.

sort of like running drunk."

Now the Alexandria, Vir-

O n Oct. 11, A ment w i l l

compete alongside more

ginia, resident is training for October's world championship in Kailua-Kona,

Krlstina Ament, of Alexandria, Vlrglnia, holds on to a bungie cord connected to her gulde, Kevln Street-

Hawaii, as one of five win-

er, as they gofor a run in Gainesville, Virginia, while preparing for the Ironman Triathlon in Hawaii.

than 2,000 athletes in Kona,

KatherineFrey/The Washington Post

where 45 mph crosswinds and 90-plus-degree temperatures add an extra layer difficulty. She is worried about biking

ners of the Ironman lottery for physically challenged

visually impaired athletes who have completedthe Ironman world championship, but they say dozens have competed in the 32 years since a category was created for the disabled. They must complete the

describes the course in ad- sensory deprivation mode." vance, saying, for instance, Ament has also struggled it's a square. It's going to be to find other women who ride all left-hand turns. It's about tandem bikes or who are willthis many yards to the first ing to help her transport the buoy; this many yards to the h eavy, cumbersome set o f next," Ament said. "If we get wheels. Anne Thilges, who a system going and I know the has guided Ament in two course well enough, they can races and will join her in Hajust tap my shoulder when its waii, said the double-seated time to turn." bike can be hard to maneuver

completed in 14 hours, 3 min- in such windy conditions and utes in Arizona. competing in the heat. But the "I hadn't had any injuries, excitement beats all concerns. "I'm looking forward to so and I'd been doing a lot of running and a fair amount of many things, just the idea of cycling, over 90 miles," Ament being at an event where the said. "Things just really pulled best triathletes in the world together for me that day." are coming together," Ament In a typical week, Ament said. "Even though people are bikesfor 90 minutes and runs nervous and competitive, evabout 7 miles a day, extending erybody is supportive of each

three endurance events in under 17 hours, just like ev-

It is crucial for Ament to have a system down pat with

the distance to up to 20 miles

athletes.

Organizers could not provide an exact number of

around corners, but they've

gotten the hang of it. eryone else. her guide, especially in the waT ransitioning from o n e A ment relies o n o t h - ter, where lifting their heads up event to the next often preser athletes to guide her to talk could slow them down, ents a big challenge, too. For through the competition. she said. Thilges, it's a matter of keep"The swimming is really dif- ing track of each other's moves Every stroke or stride she takes is done while tethered ficult for a lot of blind athletes, so they don't get tangled in the at the waist or arm to some- becauseittakesaway hearing, tether. one who can see. It means which is the sense you rely on In her best time, Ament Ament must find a rhythm

the most to get an input," she

with her guide and create a game plan ahead of time to stay in sync. "The g u ide u s ually

said. "For me, learning to swim hours, 47 minutes at an Ironin open water was a challenge man in Panama City, Florida. for that reason; it's kind of like But she considers her best-exyou're suddenly in massive ecuted race to be the one she

other."

on the weekend. Getting to Hawaii was un-

imaginable when Ament first

WILSONSof Redmond

started watching the Ironman

World Championships on TV

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as good: as many as 454 calories per hour (all numbers Continued from D1 quoted here are approximate An even more minimalist and for a typical 150-pound option: Just use your family. woman or 200-pound man). "You have a 5-year-old neph- Even lugging all those chairs ew, you have a barbell," Zim- and buckets to the beach can merman says. "Piggyback do you some calorie-burning rides are great for the legs. good (as many as 73 calories Give a piggyback ride while burned for every 10 minutes doing squats and you have carrying 15 pounds of gear). done some weighted squats." And yet that iconic walk Most of us, understandably, on the beach isn't necessarily would prefer to have our back the best option, says Immerreclining into a beach chair. man, especially if brisk walkMany of her clients leave for ing isn't part of your regular vacation with the best of intentions, Immerman said in

an email, but return "saying

147 calories for a woman and

on eating well and exercise."

about 195 for a man, accord-

Rosemary Lindle, an exercise physiologist and an adjunct professor of kinesiology at the University of Maryland, studies show that you c an maintain your f i tness level

And, of course, be mind-

ful when doing exercises that seem to g o h a n ¹ i n-hand with eating. Biking to get a soft-serve cone, for example, isn't necessarily a net win: A 30-minute bike ride on a flat

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beach roadburns up to 264 cal- can be back to where you ories, according to Matthews' were when you left off." calculations. But t hat s w irl cone could tip the balance with

as many 335 calories, according to the USDA's Food Track-

er. A glass of lemonade, at walk (at a 3.5 mph pace on about 100 calories, might be a flat-packed sand) burns about better way to cool off. Or better routine. A 30-minute beach

that they threw in the towel Yet all is not lost. First, says

pose challenges to knees, yet, stick to water. hips and even shoulders and Once you're back home, backs. remember to ease back into

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recovery or c r oss-training period," she said in an email. "A well-balanced, periodized fitness program includes recovery breaks." On the beach, recovery could include lighter-level activities such as hiking, cycling, swimming, snorkeling, even beach volleyball. But how well do these activities compare to a more typical exercise routine?

As you might expect, it depends on both the activity and level of effort. An hour

of stand-up paddleboarding,for example, can burn as many as 545 calories, ac-

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

TION

With the globalpopulation rising, Chicagoans opt for healthy options fishfarming may havetochange when it comesto vending machines By Jane E. Brody

By Marwa Eltagouri

New Yorh Times News Service

Chicago Tribune

On a recent weeklong cruise along the shores of southeast Alaska, the dining room menu included wild salmon, Dungenesscrab and sablefish.Many of my fellow 63 passengers had neither heard of nor tasted sable.

CHICAGO — Chicagoans feeding dollars into park vending machines are buying granola bars and

No wonder: Almost all of this d e l ectable, n u t r itious

a study by Northwestern

"What Chicagoparks have done is prove a model where vendors can increase nutrition standards and see their revenuego up at the same time."

dried fruit instead of mini donuts and cheesy potato

— Kate Bishop, nutrition policy associate with the Center for Science in the Public Interest

chips — and they're not complaining, according to

University researchers re- journal, "Preventing Chronic leased last week. Disease."

fish caught by Americans is exported, along with a bout

It f o un d

t h a t n e a rly

The

N o r t hwestern r e-

one-third of all our wild catch. Instead, we dine on farmed

90 percent of C hicago searchers surveyed, interpark-goers said they were viewed and observed vending

seafood imported from coun-

s atisfied w it h

tries like China, Thailand and Chile; 86 percent of the sea-

in the new healthy-op- cago parks, selected for divert ions-only vendi n g sity based on the race, ethnic-

food we consume is imported.

Brian Stauffer/The New YorkTimes

With so much ofour fish coming from other countries, questions

Despite the overwhelming have arose about the farming methods and the way our seafood popularity of shrimp among makes it to our plates. Americans, none was served

on the trip. A naturalist who lectured on board cautioned responsibly, with an emphasis instance, include mackerel, that almost all t h e s h rimp on safety and future viability. bluefish, herring, sardines and reaching American tables is And those who shop for and anchovies. (Most of the latter imported, half of it farmed in dine on fish, whether wild or are usedto make fish meal for

Asia — mostly under condi- farmed, must do so knowltions that would ruin even the edgeably if future generations most voracious appetite. are to have the same options. I've repeatedly been admonShrimp farms in Asia have been swept by bacterial and vi- ished to avoid farmed salmon, ral infections. When a site be- for instance, a relative bargain comes unusable, shrimp farm- that sells in most markets for ers simply move on, destroy- $9 or $10 a pound. Yet wild ing more miles of mangrove salmon costs at least 50 peralong the shore and wrecking centmore because the supply habitats for all manner of wild- has been devastated — mainly life, including spawning fish. by the thousands of dams on There is nothing inherently American rivers that prevent wrong with farmed seafood, the fish from spawning. "If we are going to continue says Paul Greenberg, the author of two excellent books to eat wild salmon, we must on seafood, "Four Fish: The eat them sparingly as the rarFuture of the Last Wild Food" est of delicacies, and their price and, just published, "American should reflect their rarity in Catch: The Fight for Our Local theworld,"Greenberg wrote. Seafood." Greenberg describes But how many families of several efforts to produce and modest means can afford to market farmed seafood in do so? And is farmed salmon an environmentally s o und really so bad'? manner. Some critics have worried G overnments l i k e our s that farmed varieties might would be wise to divert some contaminate the gene pool of of the subsidies that sustain wild salmon. But as Greenberg animal husbandry on land noted, almost all the farmed to the underwriting of sound salmon we're now eating fish-farming practices. Fish comes from Chile, where there and shellfish are by far the are no wild salmon. There is most nutritious sources of an- little chance that those farmed imal protein, and we should be fish will cross the equator and eating much more of them. mingle genetically with our Even now, however, it is not

farmed salmon.) Stocks of cod have declined so much from overfishing that

m any Northeastern fi sheries were forced to shut down before the entire species disap-

peared. Those seeking a flaky, "nonfishy" wild a lternative might select Alaskan pollock, popular in fish sticks, fast-food fish sandwiches and Califor-

machines.

appetite with the wild catch

most popular fish on Amer-

w ith t h eir w a l lets: T h e start of the park district's 2011 healthier snacks boosted initiative. Of those surveyed,

average monthly per-ma- 88 percent reported enjoying chine salesfrom $84 to the healthy snacks they tried, $371 in a little over a year and 98 percent indicated they across the Chicago Park would purchase the snacks District. again. The sales climb chalThe district signed a fivelenges vendors' previous year contract with national resistance t o nu t r i tious vendor Compass Group USA, snacks — namely, the fear setting nutritional standards of losing revenue from on all 98 park machines for t ried-and-true items l i k e calories, sugar, fat and socandy and chips. dium, researchers said. The "What Chicago parks contract also specified unihave done is prove a mod-

form prices for the snacks to

el where vendors can increase nutrition standards

eliminate price as a driving factor.

consumers are buying the machines' healthier snacks initially because that's what is

available. "People are going to buy something, regardless, when they're hungry," said Northwestern University's Maryann Mason, one of the study's

main researchers. "When you have a mix of healthy and less healthy items they might

and see their revenue go

In the best of all worlds, mussels, nearly always sold from hygienically f armed stock, would replace shrimp as the leading shellfish. Like other bivalves, mussels are filter feeders that cleanse the water they live in, stocking up on valuable omega-3 fatty acids from algae in the process.

up at the same time," said — such as baked potato chips, new, but in this case all the Kate Bishop, nutrition pol- fiber granola bars, animal choices are healthier."

Mussels are also low in cal-

ories, and much lower in cholesterol than shrimp and squid. Two useful bits of advice for

The food items themselves

but researchers speculate that

nia rolls.

icy associate with the Cen-

crackers, pretzels, nuts and

ter for Science in the Public

driedfruit s — were chosen by Colleen Lammel-Harmon,

Interest. " Word w il l

c a tc h o n

be reluctant to try something

the district's wellness manag-

and vendors will be forced er and a registered dietitian. to switch to the model as She even hand-picked a more what's part of a l arger nutritious candy bar option: movement of l o calities, states and the country," she SBld.

The peer-reviewed study was published in the Au-

consumers: • At fish counters, look for

gust 2014 issue of the Cen-

the eco-label of the Marine

and Prevention's monthly

C om p l e m e n t s

ters for Disease Control

H o me I n t e ri o r s

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

Stewardship Council, which represents the international gold standard for sustainable

fishing practices. • When shopping or eating out, consult the color-coded

i

s a lmon, t h e rey Bay Aquarium, selecting

from oceans,riversand lakes. ican plates are sea bass, cod That amounts about 170 billion and tuna. Shrimp is by far pounds of fish a year, Green- the most popular shellfish. berg said in an interview. If ev- But many other species have eryone were to eat at least two all but disappeared from seaservings of fish a week, includ- food counters and restaurant ing one oily fish like salmon, menus. as nutritional guidelines sugWhere is the orange roughy gest, 60 billion more pounds that was all the rage a decade would be needed to meet the ago? When was abalone last demand. on a regular seafood menu? So the farming of fish and Consumers must begin to shellfish is here to stay. But if c onsider a l ternatives. O i l y we must farm, it must be done substitutes for salmon, for

ity and location of surround-

What's more, they spoke ing neighborhoods, since the

guide produced by the Monte-

possible to satisfy the world's

wild stock. A long w it h

t h e f o o d machine consumers at 10 Chi-

dark chocolate with almonds. One in five Chicago children entering kindergarten and almost one in three children entering the sixth grade are obese, according to data from the Consortium to Lower Obesity in Chicago Children. Alm ost 200, 000 Chicago children are enrolledin one or more park district programs, many of which are targeted to kids. It may seem doubtful that kids would willingly opt for a granola bar over a candy bar,

i i

mostly fish on the green list and avoidingthose red-listed. Greenberg argues that the

s

harvest of wild fish must be

better controlled if we are to

'I

I

i

I

MikeEdmondso~g,

maintain sustainable populations. We need an "ocean

policy that looks at wild and

'I

i

domesticated fish as two components of a common future," he wrote in "Four Fish." He pleads for a standard

I '

s

'I

I

i

s

that will boost fish supplies in as sustainable a manner as possible.

&comyom aena Cslllef

Processed Continued from 01 Stadler called the paper "important" and agreed that

more processing does not necessarily mean less nutrition, although many of today's highly processed foods tend to be less nutritious. Spaghetti noodles, for example, are

ters, enlargements of the thy"The vitamins and miner-

magnesium or iron if processedfoods were notfortified and enriched, meaning nutrients were added to the foods. Between 2003 and 2008, processed foods contribut-

ed 55 percentof Americans' dietary fiber, 48 percent of calcium, 43 percent of potassium, 34 percent of vitamin D, of folate and 46 percent of vitamin B-12, according to the

I

I

healthy. In fact, it can make it

safer and more available." With GMO and processed

The arguments the paper and its supporters make almost echo those made by sup-

I

1%8

nutrients in a variety of ways. foods alike, it's important to One is through food fortifica- talk about what exactly they tion and enrichment." are, why they are happening

Biotechnologyconfusion

'

I"(,

nology doesn't make food un-

We need to provide opportunities for people to consume those

I

tive, then it cannot be healthy,'" she said. "There is no evidence that that's the case. GMO tech-

can't just say it doesn't matter.

porters of producing foods using genetically modified organisms (GMOs), a broad term paper. On the flip side, they meaning an organism whose also contributed 52 percent of genome has been altered for Americans' saturated fat, 75 the purpose of improved crop percent of added sugars and production at lower cost, for 57 percent of sodium. example. The term GMO has If fortification and enrich- become highly politicized due ment were not happening, to concerns over potential imlarge pockets of the U.S. pop- pacts on human health. ulation would be at risk for One of the paper's authors, health issues related to nutri- Ruth MacDonald, a food scient deficiencies such as goi- ence and human nutrition pro64 percentof iron,65 percent

issue Oregon voters will take

als added to bread and cereal up in November. In an interproducts are there for a rea- view, MacDonald said it's a son," Stadler said. "It's to pre- fair comparison. vent the nutrient deficiencies There is a lot of confusion we have overcome by fortify- among the public around the ing those foods." intersection between biotechT he bottom l in e i s t h a t nology and agriculture and many people still consume how biotechnology influences only one serving of vegetables the food system, MacDonald per day, Stadler said. sard. "What do we do to preserve "There is the reaction of, the nutritionalhealth of individ- 'Oh, if it's got technology in it uals that aren't going to meet from the agricultural perspec-

a highly processed food that have been ground, reformulated and have a long shelf life, but do not contain a lot of sugar, salt or fat, she said. A crucial point the paper makes, Stadler said, is that a the recommendations of eating large proportion of the popula- five to seven fruits and vegetation would not have access to bles a day'?" she said. "Because adequate amounts of vitamins we know that happens, and we A, C, D and E, folate, calcium,

fessor at Iowa State Universi-

roid gland caused by a lack of ty, has also advocated against iodine in the diet, she said. the labeling of GMO foods, an

and what the benefits are,

MacDonald said. Similarly, with processed foods, people automatically tend to assume they're unhealthy, but that's not neces-

,-P~ fiil

IM"

sarily the case, she said.

"I think we all agree that

tateoftheart "CuttInd E4'~" Compounding Technology - Conventional Retail Pharm«Y I,ong-term Care pggyvgBcY

with all the factors we're try-

ing to address in the food system globally, we need to be able to preserve and process

— Convenient Drive Thru and Parking

food to reduce the waste that

happens abundantly throughout the world and to use the

technologies in an intelligent way," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com

• • 'I

I

I I

s I I


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

MoNEY sicians as primary care pro-

Educationalrepuirementsfor naturopathic doctorsandmedical doctors •

I I

I I

I

I

i

I I

• Admission to naturopathic medical school generally requires a bachelor's degree and premedical coursework.

• Admission to medical school requires a bachelor's degree. Most undergraduate training for future MDs places a strong emphasis on basic sciences, such as biology or chemistry and physics.

Professional training in school

• Four years of study — First two: Basic and clinical science, including biochemistry, human physiology, histology, anatomy, macro- and microbiology, immunology, pathology, neuroscience, pharmacology. — Final two: Students intern in clinical settings under supervision of a licensed professional.

• Four years of training consisting of preclinical and clinical portions. — The first year consists primarily of basic science education, including physiology, biochemistry, anatomy, cell biology, immunology. — Second year focuses on clinical skills to treat common ailments patients present. — In the third year, students rotate through different specialties in a medical setting to gain skills in each discipline. — In their fourth year, students complete rotations and prepare for residencies. Admission requires passing the Medical College Admission Test.

Residency

• Optional

• Required. — Newly graduated MDs are paired with residencies through a national matching program. They spend three to seven years or more training under the supervision of senior physicians. The length of residencies varies depending on the chosen specialty: family practice, internal medicine and pediatrics require three years; general surgery requires five years.

• 50 hours of continuing education every year, with at least10 of those in pharmacology.

researchnaturopathic mediPlans reimburses naturo- cine to determine whether the pathic providers in the same CO-OP would cover it. "What this really did for me manner as other providers, but does not designate them was take off my blinders and as primary care providers. open my eyes and say, 'I have Some of Oregon's coordi- to explore this option with an nated care organizations, the open mind,'" he said. "Plengroups responsible for dol- ty of my fellow Oregonians ing out Medicaid funding in have done that and they've Oregon, allow naturopathic reached a conclusion." physicians to serve as priAfter doing some reflecmary careproviders.While tion, Prows said he realized Central Oregon's CCO does that t r aditional p h ysicians not, a handful of CCOs do, in- spend too much time focuscluding HealthShare Oregon ing on the "disease du jour" in the Portland metro area and not enough on encourand Jackson Care Connect in aging healthy behaviors. The Jackson County, according to CO-OP covers naturopathic the OANP. physicians as primary care R alph Pr ows, t h e C E O providers. The company has of Oregon's Health CO-OP, between 80 and 100 naturosaid that as a cooperative, pathic physicians in its polihis company is supposed to cy networks, Prows said. He create its policies around the declined to say how many services its members want. clients have chosen naturoAt each meeting the compa- pathic physicians as their priny held with m embers, he mary care providers, but said said people would say they they've been popular.

I

Undergraduate education

Continuing education

at first, but knew he had to

viders. PacificSource Health

"It didn't come natural, no

wanted to see naturopathic

physicians, arguing that they pun intended," Prows said. felt more supported by natu— Reporter: 541-383-0304, ropathic physicians and that tbannow@bendbulletin.com those providers spent more time with them, counseling them on lifestyle issues like p a.re. &md.6 I"o. exercise and smoking. Prows, a medical physician

aj.s~ du rr

who was trained as an inter-

• 30 hours of continuing education per year

nist, said he was skeptical

Bend Redmond

John Day Greg Cross/The Bulletin

Sources: Association of Accredited Naturopathic Medical Colleges, National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, American Medical Association

look to suppress symptoms approach to taking care of when they come up, naturo- patients," he said. Continued from 01 pathic physicians strive to Naturopathic p hysicians Oregon is among the 17 treat the underlying cause of also say they're able to spend states plus Washington, D.C., those symptoms, he said. Na- more t im e w i t h p a t i ents, that licenses naturopathic turopathy is a more personal which allows for the deepproviders. approach to health care, one er dive into their conditions. But not everyone thinks it's that emphasizes a broader Phillips, for example, says a good idea for naturopaths range of therapies — botani- he sets aside 45 minutes to to serve as primary care phy- cals, nutrition, acupuncture, an hour for new patients, and sicians. It would essentially Chinese medicine and home- follow-ups are a half-hour to allow people to see a natu- opathy — rather than phar- 45 minutes. ropathic physician for their m aceutical m edications a s pointto risks annual primary care visits the first line of defense, Phil- Skeptics — which most insurers don't lips said. M ark Crislip, who h a s

'tt didn't come natural'

currently allow — and some

services, but does not cov-

Naturopathic

Although

nat ur o p ath- worked as an infectious dis-

say naturopathic physicians ic physicians can prescribe don't have the same level of p harmaceuticals, most r e training as medical doctors to gard it as a last resort. Philbe able to diagnose and treat lips said he wants to promote serious health issues. the body's natural healing process, and medicationsWhat'sthe difference? blood pressure medications, Becoming a medicalphy- forexample — only manage sician requires at least three physiology. "As soon as you stop a more years of medical training compared with a naturo- blood pressure medication, pathic physician. your blood pressure is goThat's because, although ing to come right back up, they each must undergo four probably even higher than it years of medical school, gen- was," he said. "So you've not erally with the first two years done anything to improve studying science and the fi- somebody's health. It's not a nal two working in clinical cure. So I guess just sort of settings under supervision, the ideal of hoping we can medical physicians are re- w ork toward a c u r e w i t h quired to serve in r esiden- somebody. To really faciliciesbefore they can become tate a healing process, which licensed. A residency is a means that when you stop three- t o s e ven-year s t int taking the therapy, whatworking in a medical setting ever it is, that you're better, under the supervision of se- which doesn't happen with nior physicians. pharmaceuticals." Family practice physicians, Other naturopathic phys icians

perform the primary care duties that naturopaths also provide, spend an average of threeyears in residencies. Naturopathic physicians, by

perspectives.

do residencies. Reid Blackwelder, a family physician and president of the American Academy of Family Physicians, said his

think that means naturopath-

ic physicians can take their place. Crislip, the president and

the leg, but rather than hav-

an environmentcancer cells cannot thrive in. The cancer

"Her cancer could have

performing primary c are, she said she specializes in

Although na t u ropathic physicians insist they have research has shown that fam- treating conditions like anxi- the training to recognize seriily physicians have received ety, depression and digestion ous conditions and refer their an average of 21,000 hours issues. primary care patients to spe"I try to do everything else cialists just as any other priof medical education, while naturopathic physicians have first because the first tenet of mary care physician would, received about 6,400 hours. naturopathic medicine is do Crislip said he doesn't believe Naturopathic physicians, no harm," she said. "That is they know what to look for. on the other hand, tend to not the case with most drugs. He said much of being good emphasize the similarities You hear on t elevision the at medicine means being able between their schooling and

list of side effects. It's not a

secret."

carditis, which is a d isease

h e ' s that takes six to nine months heard that a r gument f r om to kill people," Crislip said. A whole-person approach naturopathic physicians be- "That's what used to happen But naturopathic physi- fore. That's exactly what in the era before we had ancians are quick to highlight family medicine physicians tibiotics. That's the kind of the differences, too. For Phil- do, he said: They look at the stuff that can happen when lips, naturopathy represents whole person, not only their you have people who are una departure in philosophy body, but their social struc- trained to recognize real disfrom t r a ditional

B lackwelder sai d

m e dicine. ture and their community. "That's our foundational

Whereas medical physicians

541.382.6447

bendurology.com

not cover naturopathic physi-

ciansasprimary care providers, and instead of classifying

OSPICE

them under the major med-

ical sections of their plans, include them in smaller alter-

o f Redmond 54 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3

native or complementary sections that tend to have cover-

You Have A Choice. Ask For Us By Name.

age limits of around $2,000 annually. Moda Health, for example, reimburses for naturopathic

I I I I

er naturopathic physicians as primary care providers company's req u irements for the designation, which include having a dmitting privileges to a hospital and having another provider in their office available to treat

vider

non di s crimination

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eases. That's exactly the kind

of outcomes you get."

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because they don't meet the

Natural and herbal prod-

patient presents in the clinic."

• •

Most insurance companies that sell policies in Oregon do

to recognize unusual cases

when they walk through the door, a skill that simply takes turopathic doctor has been ucts such as St. John's wort time to develop. In February through a real similar routine are drugs, too, and can have 2014, for example, a Portland in terms of education in that side effects and dangerous woman died of endocarditis, we graduated from four-year interactions with other drugs, or inflammation of the heart university, did a lot of pre- Blackwelder said. chambers and valves. She med requirements, et cetera, As Culberson Farr put it, had been seeing naturopathic and then went on to at least "Naturopathic doctors are physicians for months before four years of naturopathic always going to try to get to her death. "I've never seen anybody in medical school an d s ome- the root of whatever might times longer," said Joshua be causing the disease rather all my career who is allowed Phillips, a naturopathic phy- than treat the symptoms the to die of progressive endosician at the Hawthorn Healing Arts Center in Bend.

La Pine

s

a method designed to lower the body's acidity and create

Burns Lakeview

ed her with alkaline therapy,

cations,she refers them else- been cured with an amputawhere. In fact, rather than tion," he said.

that of medical physicians. "Everyone who is a na-

e

ing surgery, she saw a natu- clause into their policies and ropathic physician who treat- reimburse naturopathic phy-

off e r e d

or high blood pressure medi-

founder of the Society for patients in case their primaScience-based Medicine, is a ry care provider is out of the vocal critic of n aturopathic office. Jonathan Nicholas, medicine. He said his interest a Moda spokesman, wrote in thesubjectbegan decades in an email that the compaago when he was asked to ny is working to potentially see a 24-year-old patient with change those rules. gangrene, an unusual diagRegence BlueCross Bluenosis for a young person. The Shield of Oregon and Orepatient had originally been gon's Health CO-OP have diagnosed with a sarcoma of each implemented the pro-

si mi l a r progressed, but the physician told her that meant her W endy Weintrob, a n a - body was fighting the canturopathic physician with cer. Eventually, the patient's Glow Acupuncture and Na- leg rotted until it eroded into turopathic Medicine in Bend, a major blood vessel and the said if patients want statins patient died, Crislip said.

those who most commonly

contrast, are not required to

ease physician in Portland for 30 years, said he agrees medical physicians generally cannot spend as much time with their patients, but he does not

-

t


THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MEDICINE

Sunburn isn't the only sign ofsummer that can leave you itchy and blistered By Jill U. Adams Special To The Washington Post

You've got a r ash. You quickly rule out the usual sus-

pects: You haven't been gardening or hiking or even picnicking, so it's probably not a plant irritant such as poison ivy or wild parsnip; likewise, it's probably not chiggers or tickscarrying Lyme disease; and you haven't been swimming in apond, which can harbor the parasite that causes swimmer's itch. Your rash may be coming from two hard-to-escaperealities of summer: heat and sun.

What makes staph bacteria produce biofilm'? Salt and water — or sweat. The bacteria

sense the salty wetness as a dangerous environment and throw out slime in defense.

The slime can block your sweat glands and trigger a rapid immune response that

causes an itchy rash. This sequence — you sweat and then your sweat glands clog — is more likely to occur, Allen says, "when you have too much clothing on — or too-tight clothes — or have been lying still on hospital bedsheets. There's no air flow."

Heat rash, called miliaria by doctors, can cause the skin to redden if the glands are blocked in a deeper layer of the skin. The skin can feel irritated and itchy, giving rise to another common term for the syndrome — prickly heat.

PMLE is an allergic reaction

Continued from 01 emy in Frisco, Texas, has seen "You can't do anything plenty of cramping, the most to straighten them because recent a 15-year-old player the muscles are so powerful, whose legs couldn't stop spasand it's painful," says Trow- ming and who needed four IVs bridge,associate professor at the hospital. Tennis matches of kinesiology and clinical are usually played at the most education coordinator for grueling time of day, plus temthe university's Athletic peratures rise 10 degrees on Training Education Pro- tennis courts. "Once you start cramping, gram."The pain is causing it's over," says Hull, who was more cramping." She describes cramping that boy's age when he had his as the nervous system being own cramping episode during "on overdrive. In particular, tennis practice. the motor nerves that cause

its severity varies widely. The

A

r e cent s t u d y t e s t ed

the muscle to contract are shortened. It's like putting

Who is prone? Some people mayhave apredisposition to cramping, Trowbridge says, but there's still no telling who will.

reaction can emerge sudden-

sunscreens on 15 women

your foot on the accelera-

ly in one place, such as on arms exposed to the sun that first warm day in April. "The c ondition tends t o occur in the spring or early summer," Sheu says. "It's too much sun, too quickly." So when exposing your

with a history of PMLE; for each woman, four p atches

tor and revving the car's engine." "What causes you to g et Normally, the body would say, "How much contraction them when someone next to do I need?" and shuts off you is losing the same amount

Let's consider heat first. Fresh air, a breeze, air conHeat rash occurs when the ditioning and fan-circulated sweat glands are blocked by air all help sweat evaporate winter-hidden skin parts to tiny blisters — they resemble and prevent heat rash. "Ade- the sun, go slow. The best small beads of sweat — that quate ventilation is the key," protection against PMLE is form on the skin. Heat rash, says Mary Sheu, medical di- avoiding exposure to the sun called miliaria by doctors, rector of the Johns Hopkins altogether. Next best is wearcan cause the skin to redden Dermatology & C o smetic ing clothes that offer sun if the glands are blocked in a Center. To prevent miliaria, protection. deeper layer of the skin. The wear lightweight clothingSunscreen products help, skin can feel i r r itated and and less of it, Allen says. but they can't entirely preitchy, giving rise to another Anyone can get heat rash. vent PMLE. "Sunscreens are common term for the syn- If you do, a heavy-duty mois- pretty good at blocking short drome — prickly heat. turizer, especially one con- UV rays, the UVB rays that The chain of events is the taining lanolin, can provide cause sunburn," Allen says. same inheat rash as in ec- relief, Allen says. Calamine "But they're not so good at zema. They both start with lotion or cortisone cream can blocking the long UV rays, staphylococcus bacteria liv- also help. the UVA rays. Even the best ing on the skin, says Herb As for rashes caused by sunscreens block only 40 to Allen, a d ermatologist and sun, polymorphous l i ght 50 percent of UVA rays." researcher at Drexel Uni- eruption is the most common Some sunscreens are betversity in Philadelphia. "It's culprit, affecting about 10 to ter than others. Products lanormal flora," he says. "It's on 20 percent of people in the beled "broad-spectrum" are everybody." Unites States. formulated to guard against Sometimes the bacteria While every type of skin b oth UVA an d U V B r a y s. produce a substance that sci- type can get s unburned, Those containing zinc or tientists call biofilm. "It used to

Brian Hull, tennis profesMuscle crampssional at Lakes Tennis Acad-

tanium oxide —

t h ese are

be called slime," Allen says. to the sun's ultraviolet rays. known as physical blockers "It coats and protects bacte- Its form varies — it can pro- — are the best bet for people ria." Biofilm can also clog up duce an itchy rash or blisters susceptible to P ML E r e acsweat glands. or raised red blotches — and tions, Allen says.

of skin were monitored. No reactions were seen after r epeated U V

e x p osure o f

patches lathered with a dose of a h i g h-UVA-protection sunscreen. When half t h at

amount was applied, five reactions occurred. (The American Dermatology Society recommends one ounce of sunscreen, the amount you can hold in your palm, to cover your whole body.) With a low-UVA-protection sunscreen, 11 and 12 PMLE

when it needs to shut off, she

isn't getting them'?" she says. "We're different. We digest cles are contracted and are things differently; we sweat contracting so hard and so certain amounts." fast, it ends up in a positive In addition, some people are feedback loop. Your body salty sweaters, whereas others don't sweat as much salt. turns on more cramping. "You're asking more and "When you're a sweater," more of your body, but it Galloway says, "your body recan't shut off," Trowbridge leases sodium. You have deplesays. "You're dehydrated. tion of sodium, and your mus"But this time, the mus-

reactions were seen when applied at the full dose and half

What that does is not only

that, respectively.

trolyte imbalance."

Other people may be deficient in calcium, so that miner-

In other words, you can al could be a trigger for them, be hydrated but your elec- he says. Just as vague as the

r e a ctions, s t e roid

creams offer some relief. In severe cases, phototherapy — periodic, gradual exposure

des need sodium to work."

cause water loss but an elec-

If you do get bothersome PMLE

of water and electrolytes, but

says.

trolytes can be off. Barton

cause is the solution. Some peo-

on sun-exposed skin. Heat rash occurs where the skin is

says she was diligent about ple swear by bananas, some by drinking water that f i rst yellow mustard. Barton says summer she s uccumbed people call her the "pickle juice to cramps. A native of Col- girl" because she always has a orado, she hadn't experi- bottle of the salty liquid in her enced summers like those in bag. "If anyone ever tells you Texas. "I had been drinking a theyhave the curefor cramps, ton because everybody said they're lying," Trowbridge to drink, drink, drink," says says. "Maybe for a few athletes Barton. they tested, something worked. "But nobody mentioned I'm not saying it didn't." electrolytes. Now I overdo

covered.

with electrolytes because

to UV light — can harden the

skin to the reaction. "A lot

o f p e o ple a r en't

aware of PMLE," Sheu says. "They may call it heat rash — which is kind of a catch-all term."

The m ai n

di f f erence?

PMLE, like sunburn, occurs

0

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once you've cramped, your bodytends to cramp earlier." She also leaves the tennis court the moment she starts cl"anlplng.

Exercising as aplatform to battle breast cancer By Melissa Healy

such a "dose response" might

Los Ange(es Times

For women past childbear-

ing age, a new study finds that a modest amount of exercise — four hours a week of walk-

ing, or more intensive physical activity such as cycling for just two hours a week — drives

down breast cancer risk by roughly 10 percent. If exercise were a pill, its

effectiveness in driving down a woman's breast cancer risk would occur fairly quickly, the new research says: When women reported at least this modest level of physical activity over the last four years, they were less likely to have developed malignancy in a breast. But, like a pill, exercise must

pausal women, weight gain have requireda more detailed was common: Roughly 69 perrecord of participants' energy cent reported a gain of more expenditures than was collect- than a kilogram (2.2 pounds) ed by the European research- over the previous two to three ers who designed the study. years. But th e exercise efThe new findings were fect was seenirrespective of culled from the French com- weight gain, and a woman's ponent of the European Pro- body mass index and waist spective Investigation Into circumferencehad no bearing Cancer and Nutrition. In all, on the cancer-reduction bene59,308 French women ages 43 fitsshe received from regular to 78 — most of them teachers — started answering detailed

surveys about their health

exercise. The medications tamoxifen and raloxifene can also drive

down the risk of breast cancer in those at higher than averuntil 2005. age risk. They come with side The researchers sought to effectssuch as an increased clarify the role of physical ac- risk of deep-vein thrombosis tivity in reducing breast can- or pulmonary embolism, and cer risk in postmenopausal their powers of risk reduction be continued for th e effect women, a stage of life in which are actually pretty modest: to endure: Even if a woman the probability of a woman If 1,000 women took either had been physically active developingbreastcancerrises tamoxifen or raloxifene for earlier in life, when her re- steadily. five years, eight breast canported physical activity levels The designers of the study cers would be prevented. dropped below the equivalent used a very rough measure of By comparison, regular of four hours of weekly walk- physical activity: They asked physical activity is powerfuL ing, her risk of developing women to quantify the aver- But, as with a pill, you need to breast cancer went back up. age time they spent walking keep taking it. If you're sedentary or don't At the same time, the re(including walking to work or search found that engaging shopping), cycling or engag- exercise routinely, boosting in more physical activity than ing in sports during a typical your physical activity to at 12 "metabolic e quivalents" two-week period in the winter least four hours of walking per week — either via greater and in the summer. They as- weekly has a 1 in 10 chance of intensity or longer duration signed walking a "metabolic preventing the most common of exercise — did not further equivalent task" value of three — and second-most deadlydrive down a woman's like- per hour, and cycling and cancer in women, at least in lihood of breast cancer. The sports a "MET" value of six. the near term. authors suggested that finding For the study's postmenoPast research has already and health behaviors in 1993

and did so every four years

established that regular exercise will help drive down the risk of heart disease, which is

a far more common killer of women.

0

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Alzheimer's disease affects more than an individual's memory, it also diminishes a person's ability to communicate and may cause unpredictable or erratic behaviors. This class providesan overview of common changes in behavior and communication, as well as strategies for identifying and responding to these challenges.

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St. CharlesCancerCenter GRAND OPENINGCELEBRATION Thursday, August 14, 2014 Comecelebratethe opening of the new,integrated St. Charles Cancer Centerat2500 NE NeffRd.,Bend. This newfacility will accomodatecomprehensive cancer prevention,treatmentandrmvery services -all in onelocation. 5:30p.m,Grand openingceremony 6 p.m, Ribboncutting 6:15-7:15 p,m.Toursof the cancer center

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

TomE is ainsnoticeasrene a e octor TV SPOTLIGHT

accepted at the Royal Scottish

"Rush" 9 p.m.Thursdays, USA By Luaine Lee

in Glasgow. "I remember the day I got a letter in the post saying I got a place at drama school and my mum and dad bringing it into my bedroom. And it was very unlike them. They came in together and they were quite

4

McClatchy-Tribune News Service

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.

and they'd give me a whole list of ailments. 'Could I just — I'm

Academy of Music and Drama

-

Ever since he was born, Welsh actor Tom E llis ha s enter-

tained an audience. "I have a

t

twin sister, and when we were born in Cardiff at the Univer-

sity of Wales hospital — it's a big training hospital — we were the heaviest twins ever

born on record," he says, seated in a noisy coffee bar here. "I was 9 pounds, 3 ounces

and my sister was 7 pounds, 5. My dad said, 'When you were born, there was a crowd

of about 20 people about to take on board this astonishing achievement.' And he said, 'So you kind of came out to an audience.'"

Ellis is shining in the medical arena once again. Only this time he's playing a renegade doctor in USA's edgy drama, "Rush," airing Thursdays. His physician makes Dr.

not a doctor." But I lookback on

those moments in my life and think those are the things that make you better, certainly as an actor. Anything rooted in re-

ality makes you a better actor." Finally, Ellis accumulated acclaim in England, especially

e xcited, and they had t h i s letter. It was a fat letter, not a slim, little rejection letter. And it had RSAMD on the front of

rsl

+L

for the sitcom, "Miranda." But,

like his compatriots, he longed to work in America and made

countless trips to the U.S. during TV's pilot seasons. None of them came to fruition until "Rush." "Three pages in I said, 'I want to do this.'" They asked him to send an audition tape. "I had a funny feeling about it. I said, 'I'm going to make this tape and I think I'm going to hear from somebody.' And lo and behold, within 24 hours, I get a call from JonathanLevine (executive producer) saying he loved my tape and he wanted me to do the job."

it. They said, 'You've got something! You've got something.'" And I opened it, and we all cried together. It was great." He landed an agent and a McClatchy-Tribune News Service job in the second term of his Billy Lush, left, becomes an emergency patient for the renegade final year of school. At first, doctor William Rush, played by Welsh actor Tom Ellis, on USA's everything went swimmingly. gritty drama, "Rush," airing Thursdays. But, after two years, his career began to stall. "I'd been doing really well. I had my first dry leather jacket squeaking as he got 12 girls and no boys.' I said, period where I didn't work for 'Just stop right there — 12 girls about six months." rests his elbow on the table. At 4, he played the trumpet, and one boy?'" And I went to a By then, his mother had changed to the French horn at couple of these classes and re- changed jobs, landing a job 9 and continued all through ally, really enjoyed it." in the medical field in Bristol. high school to a high standard, As it turned out it was more Once again, the medical world he says. than the abundance of girls was beckoning and Ellis, But, at 17, the course of his

life changed when he dropped resa with his unholy alliances a class he didn't like. "I was and affection for drugs. planning on going to univerEllis may have been seeking sity and doing sports injury, attention since he was an in- recovery and rehabilitation. fant, but he didn't know it. The Sports was a good part of son of a music teacher and a my life as well... I needed to pastor, it was music that dom- do another subject to fill my House look like Mother The-

The most difficult part of

all that, he says, was the fracture of his marriage to actress Tamzin Outhwaite last year.

t hat attracted h im .

W h e n 35, went to work for her as a receptionist. ter-school play, Ellis won the "I was answering phones

"It was really hard," he sighs.

his teacher presented an af-

The father of three daughters, 9, 6 and 2, Ellis says, "It's a

lead and found he loved the and meeting and greeting process. people. It was quite funny beThe mother of hi s f r iend cause everyone used to assume was a former actress. She when I answered the phone phoned Ellis the next day and that I was a doctor. They're told him he should pursue act- not used to a man answering inated his childhood. "It's just criteria. ing and offered to help him the phone as the receptionist. "My English teacher came with auditions. She tutored People wouldn't even let me something that I relish really. It doesn't make me nervous. up and said, 'I run the theater him on how to prepare for the get a word in edgeways. I'd say, It makes me comfortable. It studies group. I need some stringent drama school try- 'Hello.' They'd say, 'Oh, Doc, excites me," he says, his black boys in the group because I've outs. To his surprise, he was this is what's happening to me,'

us an ressures wi e to rin

bittersweet experience being over here. It's happening because I love it and this is what I've always wanted to do. But I haven't seen my kids for months, and that's hard.

They're back in London. As soon as I finish, I'll take a lit-

tle vacation and have some 'us' time."

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and iMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. t

Dear Abby: I'm not much of a drinker. I have nothing against drinking or those who do. I just do not like the taste of alcohol. Worse, I have a very low tolerance for it. After only half a glass of wine, I become so sleepy I can barely keep my eyes open. DEP,R It makes me feel ABBY physically awful. My husband takes offense to the fact

I was bullying her because of her bibes and feels less so if he has a being gay. Her mother yelled at drinking buddy (that's you), will- me and told me to "get my act toing or not. To say the least, his gether or get out of her life." Her behavior is inconsiderate — and I mother is like a second mother to scious about the amount he im-

mean ALL of it.

me.

When s omeone is

i n v olved w i t h

Other than this, Cecily has been a great friend. This has got-

a problem drinker, and from your d escription of h i s behavior your husband is one, t he that I don't want to drink. When place to start looking for answers we're out with friends, he'll have is Al-Anon. To find a meeting three or four beers and pressure close to you, go online to al-anon. me to the point of embarrassment org. Please don't wait. in front of them until I finally give Dear Abby:My best friend, "Cein and order a glass of wine. Of cily," has just come out to me as course, I then spend the rest of being a lesbian. We are both 15. the evening feeling terrible. When I have tried my best to make her we get home, he'll want to be inti- feel accepted and comfortable. mate, but I just want to go to sleep, But whenever she wants somewhich aggravates him further. thing from me and I refuse, she I have tried for several years to says I'm "treating her badly bediscuss this with him, but he can't cause she's gay." explain why he does this. What I let it go th e f i rst couple of can I do? times, but now she does this every — Just Water, Please time she wants something. When Dear Just Water:Your husband I finally confronted her about it, is adrinker.He may be self-con- she went to her mother and said

ten way outof hand. Abby, Ihave

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURS-

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE

DAY, AUG. 14, 2014:This year is the first year of a new12-year luck cycle. Focus on your goals, and you will be able to manifest them more easily. If you are single and romance and being ina com mitted relationship are your desires, it is more than likely to happen. There will be many different potential suitors as you zero in on finding Mr. or Ms. Right. If you are attached, the two of you demonstrate

By Jacqueline Bigar

tried everything. What do I do? — Way OutofHandinNew York

Dear Way Out of Hand:Cecily m ay react this way because she's newly out and h ypersensitive to being discriminated against forbeing gay.(Fortoo many gay teens, this is a sad reality.) Consider asking your mother to talk to Cecily's mother and explain that you're not homophobic but feel her daughter is being manipulative. If the woman hears it from another adult, she may talk to her

daughter about it. However, if that doesn't work, you may have to decide if it's worth it to contin-

ue the relationship under these circumstances. — Write toDearAbby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

** * *

You will want to move through

a problem morequickly than is possible.

Relax with a slower pace. An element of disruption could surround your day. pected twist could arise. Be aware of this Understand that the unexpected might person's perceptions. Tonight: Out till the prove to be more exciting. Tonight: Re-

wee hours. CANCER (Juns21-July 22)

lease stress through someexercise. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

Take a deep breath before start- ** * * You'll come up with one good idea after another. Your creativity seems a newfound close- ful if it involves someone whom you feel to flow in many different directions. A Stars showthe kind ness and a silliloved one will delight in your imaginative you have to answer to. Don't let a situaofdayyoo'Ilhavs ne s s that remind tion become too difficult; otherwise, you flights of fancy. Make some delightful ** * * * Dynamic others of young plans in the near future. Tonight: Act like ** * * Positive love. Youenjoy the could be on the receiving end of a strong the weekend is already here. reaction. Tonight: Play it low-key. ** * Average energy that ARIES CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ** So-so has, butyou won't LEO (July 23-Aug.22) *** Stay centered andclose to home, * Difficult want him or her to ** * * You'll be more than willing to try if possible. Youevenmight consider out a new idea or take a vacation to some influence you too working from home or taking a personal strange land. You understand the value frequently. day. You are likely to have a lot of events of offbeat situations opening up your ARIES (March21-April 19) coming downthepike. Zero in onyour ** * * You might notice that others are mind. For now, all you might be able to needsoncemore.Dealwithoneperson do is find a restaurant with unusual cuishielding themselves fromyou. Some directly. Tonight: Follow the music.

people evenmightbecome exhausted after speaking with you! Be your spontaneous self, and reach out to those who

enjoy your high-voltageways. Tonight: You are top dog. Go for what you want.

TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** You seem to be maintaining a lowkey position and a laid-back attitude around others. You might not expect any uproar, but you do see the possibility of a lotofsudden change.You could gain

** * *

ing an important conversation. Becare-

sine. Tonight:Haveaone-on-onechat. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) *** * You are very sure of apartner,

AQUARIUS (Jan. 29-Fsb. 18)

and you feel extremely stable. Your confidence could be a result of your ability to tolerate whatever heads your way. Think

some personal issues or agrudge. A loved one is asource of excellent ad-

aboutthiswhensomeonebringsanunusual dynamic into your life. Tonight: Do your own thing.

LIBRA (Sspt. 23-Oct. 22)

** * * O thers continue to dominate your plans, regardless of whatyou might about. Tonight: Get some extra zzz's. have decided your priorities would be. You work well with others, but know GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * You'll zero in on what you want. what will happen if this becomes a A meeting could allow greater give-and- pattern: You could become resentful. takebetweenyouandsomeoneelse.You Be careful. Tonight: Go along with a m ight be on thesame page,butan unex- suggestion.

unusual insight into someoneyou care

** * * M ake calls and listen to what others share. You will need to unravel vice, and he or she is likely to pitch in and help. Don't let anyone rain on your parade. Tonight: Meet up with a favorite

person. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) *** * A daily issue keepsarising, and you'll need to clear it out. Don't forget to make an appointment for a checkup with your doctor. You might feel frustrated by the lack of returned calls from a certain someone. Tonight: Treatyourself to a

new wardrobe item. © King Features Syndicate

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AND SO ITGOES(PG-13) 1:05, 3:30, 6:05, 9:15 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTH EAPES (PG-!3)3:35,6:45 • DAWN OFTHE PLANET OFTHEAPES 3-D (PG-13)11:45 a.m., 9:45 • THE EXPENDABLES 3 (PG-13) 7, 10 • GETON UP(PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 2:50, 6, 9:05 • GUARDIANSOFTHEGALAXY(PG-13) 11a.m., Noon, 1:45, 4:30, 7:15, 9, 9:55 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY3-D (PG-13)3,6:15 • GUARDIANSOFTHEGALAXYIMAX3-0 (PG-13) 11:15 a.m., 2, 4:45, 7:30, 10:10 • HOW TOTRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2(PG)1:l5,3:55 • THEHUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG)11:25 a.m.,3:15, 6:30, 9:25 • INTO THESTORM(PG-13) 12:30, 3:50, 7, 9:40 • LET'S BE COPS(R) 11:20 a.m., 1:55, 4:40, 7:20, 9:50 • LUCY(R)1,3:20,5:40,8,10:15 • AMOST WANTED MAN (Rj1:25,4:20 • PLANES:FIRE8 RESCUE(PG)11:55 a.m., 3:05, 6:20 • THE PURGE: ANARCHY(R)9:20 • RIFFTRAXLIVE: GODZILLA(1998 — PG)8 p.m. • STEP UPALLIN(PG-13) 3:45 • STEP UPALLIN 3-D (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 6:50, 9:30 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)11:05a.m., 1:35, 4:05, 6:35 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES 3-D(PG-13)11:35 a.m., 2:05, 4:35, 7:05, 9:10, 9:35 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • EDGEOFTOMORROW (PG-13)6 • A MILLIONWAYSTODIEIN THEWEST(R) 9 • After7p.m., shows are2t and older only. Younger than 2t may attend screenings before7pm. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. t

6 p.m. on WE, "Braxton Family Values" —A new episode called "Bright Lights, Big Breakdowns" opens Season 4, which finds the truce to which the ladies agreed at the end of last season already starting to crack. With her Broadway debut looming, Toni decides to blow off Tamar's 37th birthday party to rest up for opening night, which predictably results in hurt feelings. Old feuds rekindle during the trip to New York, climaxing in an epic meltdown from Towanda. 9 p.m. on 2, 9, "Rookie Blue" — With a subsidized housing complex slated for demolition, the cops' mission is to help the tenants relocate in the new episode "Moving Day." Simple assignment, right? Wrong: A supposedly empty unit contains an assaul ted man discovered by Andy and Chloe (Missy Peregrym, Priscilla Faia). Their hunt for the attacker eventually leads them to

acriminal ringthat's morepower-

ful than they bargained for. Gregory Smith, Ben Bassand Charlotte Sullivan also star. 9 p.m. on USA, "Rush" — A new episode called "Where Is My Mind?" finds Rush (Tom Ellis) burying himself in work, taking any medical call that comes his way in a bid to reduce the anxiety he feels following an unexpected rendezvous. Eve (Sarah Habel), meanwhile, handles a casethat confirms how important she is in Rush's life. Christina Pickles guest stars. 10p.m.on2,9,"NYMed"The unscripted series concludes its second season, with the staffs of New York Presbyterian Hospital and Newark's (New Jersey) University Hospital continuing to balance frequently emotional cases with challenges in their own lives. The access that the

program's producershavebeen given to medics and patients is quite remarkable, the result often being drama that's on par with anything seen in many scripted shows these days. 10 p.m. on 6, "Elementary" — Mycroft Holmes (guest star Rhys Ifans) is back in "The Man With the Twisted Lip," and his presence in NewYork isn't entirely welcome. It generates friction between his brother Sherlock and Watson (Jonny Lee Miller, Lucy Liu), but they still have a case to work. A missing

person andunmannedaeronautics are the main factors in their mission. Aidan Quinn also stars. Ct Zap2it

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)12:45,3:30,6:15, 9 • INTO THESTORM(PG-13) 1:15, 3:15, 5: I5, 7:15, 9:15 • LUCY(R)I:30,3:30,5:30 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)2:15,4:30, 6:45, 9 • THETHEATERWILL HOST THE CENTRAL OREGON COMEDY SCENESHOWCASE AT8 TONIGHT. Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • GETON UP(PG-13) 4:30, 7:15 • THE GIVER(PG-13) 8 • GUARDIANSOF THEGALAXY (PG-13)5:15,7:30 • THEHUNDRED-FOOT JOURNEY (PG)4:45,7 • LUCY(R) 5 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • GUARDIANSOFTHEGALAXY(PG-13) 1:30, 4:15, 7 • INTOTHE STORM (PG-13)3:20,5:25,7:30 • LET'S BE COPS(R) 2:20, 4:45, 7:10 • LUCY(R) 3,5:l0,7:20 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES (PG-13)4:30,6:50 • TEENAGEMUTANT NINJATURTLES 3-D(PG-13)2:15 •

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Furniture 8 Appliances Furniture & Appliances

Donate deposit bottles/ Love cats? Volunteers P ug-Chihuahua Mi x Refrigerator, only 90-days cans to local all vol., needed at C R A FT 9 -wk-old pups, 1 s t old, white. O r iginally non-profit rescue, for Responsible t e e ns shots, 3 l eft. $250 $559 selling for $300 feral cat spay/neuter. welcome! sanctuary, each. 541-923-7232 cash. 541-389-0415 Cans for Cats trailer as f oster h o mes, at Jake's Dlner, Hwy events & more ! QueensfandHeelers Chihuahua Teacuppup- 20 E; donate M-F at 5 41-389-8420, 2 8 0 - Standard & Mini, $150 Antique sideboard/ pies, 1st shots/dewormed. Smith Sign, 1515 NE 3172 or 598-5488; or & up. 541-280-1537 buffet:Walnut, $250. 541-977-0035 2nd; or CRAFT, Tu- info©craftcats.org. www.rightwayranch.wor beautiful 202 detail. Early malo. Leave msg. for Iiilin Pin AKC pups. dpress.com 1900's. Exterior has Want to Buy or Rent pick up of large amts, 2 females left! $400. top drawer & 3 doors 541-389-8420. Savannah Minx kittens, with original key. InTable and 6 chairs Born 4/14/14, potty CASHfor wood www.craftcats.org 1st shot included, ready training, shots, microside has 2 shelves cherry veneer, redressers & dead washnow, $100-$125 each. and a drawer. Meamovable leaf. $350. ers. 541-420-5640 English bulldog chipped, In La Pine, 541-489-3237 sures 71x21x36 Ex541-815-0395 602-284-4110 2g/g-year-old fe male, cond. Pick-up Dachshund minis, AKC $1000. 541-382-9334. Yorkie pups AKC, 2 tiny cellent only. $800 OBO. 203 arents, 2F, 4M, long 1-877-877-9392. girls, 1 boy, potty train- 415-279-9893 (Bend) Table and chairs, solid Holiday Bazaar air (except blond male) ing, shots, health guar., Border Collie-McNab ) Exotic Pheasants; Caoak, pedestal table, 4 Ibs at maturity. $375 naries, & Lovebirds. $1100. 541-777-7743 The Bulletin reg'd puppies, males & 5-8 windsor style chairs. & Craft Shows M; $450 F. 541-389-2517 541-410-9473 females, just 6 left! Couch, black leather w/ Great condition. $350. Working parents; 1st 210 2 recliners, like new, 541-382-6773 40th Year of French bulldogs 2-year wormed, microCute, Smart & No OBO. F urniture & Appliances $ 4 7 5 Central Oregon Adopt a rescue cat or shots, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! old, r etired S weet Shed. chipped, Ready now. Just bought a new boat? Min-Schnauzer 541-408-0846 Saturday Market! kitten! Altered, vacci- 541-408-8944 home or girls, 1 b oy . $ 500 Sell your old one in the Schnoodles. Tails Join the Prince 8 Door-to-door selling with nated, ID chip, tested, 714-943-2385 (cell) each. Also C ream docked, 1st shots, & A1 Washers&Dryers G ENERATE S O M E classifieds! Ask about our Princess Parade at 1:00 more! CRAFT, 65480 fast results! It's the easiest puppies $2000 ea. wormed. $350-$450. Super Seller rates! $150 ea. Full warEXCITEMENT in your pm. this Sat. 8/1678th St, Bend, 1-5 PM 54'I -382-9334. ranty. Free Del. Also 541-385-5809 way in the world to sell. neighborhood! Plan a Come earlyand make Good homesonly! Sat/Sun. 3 8 9 -8420 Find exactly what wanted, used W/D's 541-322-0609 garage sale and don't royalaccessories! www.craftcats.org. you are looking for in the German Shepherd AKC 541-280-7355 The Bulletin Classified forget to advertise in The Bulletin OpenSat., 10am-4pm POODLEpups, toy. Puppies. Great hips classified! Downtown Bend, CLASSIFIEDS 541-385-5809 recommends extra Airedales male 8 female, and elbows. Cham- Home raised w/love. 541-385-5809. acrossfrom library. I c autia a a pu ages 5 8 3, guarding/ 541-475-3889 pion bloo d lines. Where the Maker chasing products or • Get your hunting dogs, free to Boxers AKC & Va lley Dog Kennel, l a rge, Beautiful pups, ready Hide-a-bed by Basset, is the Seller!! P oodle, T oy , m ale good home only. while, mattress good services from out of I B ulldogs CKC puppies. good c o nd . $5 0 . to go, $1000 business 541-420-9015 puppy, ready to go, 760-876-4143 $500-800. 541-325-3376 5 4 1 -771-0009 LaPine shape. good shape, the area. Sending I Emily 541-647-8803 $250. 541-728-1694 cash, checks, or $75. 541-382-6773

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, Australian Shepherd checks, or credit inPuppy Red Tri Male 6 f ormation may b e Weeks. AKC/ASCAsubjected to fraud. Buyer backed out and now he needs a home. For more i nformation about an adver$500. 541-815-9257 tiser, you may call the O regon State Bichon Frise AKC reg'd Attorney General's puppies, 2 females, 2 Office C o n sumer males. 541-953-0755 or 541-912-1905. Protection hotline at

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Light wood dining set may be subjected to with 6 upholstered chairs, I FRAUD. For more $225. 541-548-4601 information about an 8 advertiser, you may I Like new queen spring 8 I c all t h e OregonI mattress, headboard & State Attor ney ' dresser, $200. I General's O f fi ce 541-536-6195 Consumer Protec- • tion h o t line at I Outdoor Furniture i 1-877-877-9392. Brown 8 Jordan triI TheBulletin I angular, smoked, ServingCentral Oregon since igto tempered glass top table and 4 sling back mesh chairs, 212 exc. cond., $6000 Antiques & new, sell $1800. Collectibles 5-piece Restoration Hardware conversaAntiques wanted: tools, tion set, 4 chairs, 1 furniture, marbles,early table crafstman B/W photography, style, all metal, beer cans, jewelry. $300. 541-420-8636 541-389-1578

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Antique Furniture 1880s-1930s 2 high beds/dressers, 2 Moving-Downsizing! SatBIG Sale! Hunting gear, Cars, clothes, furniture, SALE! Hous e hold, ESTATE SALE ESTATE SALE Bishop's chairs, Sun, 8716-17, 8-4, 20246 tent, household, lg dog bikes, electric scooters, decor, furn., B BQ, Sofa/recliner, 3 dressHome packed! Dining Victorian chair, misc. ers, bed, Queen Anne Sawyer Reach Ct. Enter crate, 8'x12' kennel w/ guitar, antiques, great set & hutch 2 shabby CDs DVDs, books, chairs, large oak exercise equip., qualdining set, small furni- off O.B. Riley. Eclectic roof, 4 studded truck tires pnces! Fri-Sat. 8-1, 1053 chic hutches, sofa & frame mirror, wall collection, vintage-mod- w/rims, more! Sat-Sun, NE Glenshire. ity clothing & shoes ture pieces, antique loveseat, side tables, cabinet, 2 radios for ern-style galore! Victo- 9-3, 19630 Topaz Ct., becedar chest and quilt, rian lamps, signed artwork, -much more! Fri/Sat 1940-1950s, a few loveseat & chair, nite hind El k Meadow School. antique glassware and stands, lamps, bar stools, antique ma h ogany 9-4, 3115 SW 34th smaller antiques** FREE ** china, Roseville, 3 dresser 8 twin beds, Sat. & Sun., 9-5. SW newer tables and full bed, 2 headboards, BIG SALE!! flatware sets, jewerly, trunks, rockers, treadle 23rd St./SW Timber, Garage Sale Kit chests. Tools, fishing, housepatio furniture, linens, kitchen, sewing, gasewing machine, an- Music & movies, ori541-548-3363. Place an ad in The men's-women's avg size hold, sporting goods. rage, misc. tique pictures, CanBulletin for your gaSat-Sun, 8/16-17, 9-5 clothing.Not yo' k n ick-knacks, Thur and Fri 9-4 dlewick Ruby & other ental rage sale and remama's garage sale! 207 SW Maricopa Dr. travel bags Irg, exerNumbers 8 a.m. Thur antique china & glass, ceive a Garage Sale chair, l e ather 21380 Pelican Drive, Blue Danube dishes, cise 282 The Big One! Fri.- Sun., Kit FREE! chair, yard off Eagle and Starling. Sales Northwest Bend 9-6. 60107 C i n der Vitamix, kitchenware, lounge supplies, kitchen acwww.atticestatesanKIT INCLUDES: W/D set, fishing stuff, cess., work bench, Butte Rd. Stow Masdappraisals.com Fri. 9-3, Sat. 8-4. Piano, ter tow b ar, r ifles, • 4 Garage Sale Signs yard 8 garden, rolling and woman's clothes. $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-350-6822 tool box, tools, jewelry, roll-top desk, 2 enter- ammo, 8'x20' flat bed •Use Toward Your Robo Vac, Mens & Latainment centers,like new trailer, antiques, oak Next Ad Call a Pro dies clothing, dolls, dinning set, tools, RV • 10 Tips For "Garage baby i t ems 8 much more, AUG. 15 & 16, 9-3 Danbury Mint cars, de- Whether you need a misc. Hou s ehold Sale Success!" priced to sell! 20774 Mira Lots of t o ols, saws, Circle (off Tumalo Rd.) cor 8 L O T S m i sc! fencefixed,hedges items, clothing, more. drills, ladders, nailFri-Sat 9-4 numbers '96 guns, brushcutter, trimmed or a house Fri eam. Take 15th or 288 PICK UP YOUR Geo Tracker, camp- HUGE NW B end Fargo to West View to built, you'll find Sales Northeast Bend GARAGE SALE KIT at 61538 Hiuridge. ing equip., mtn. bike, Moving Sale 1777 SW Chandler professional help in fishing poles, lefty golf Quality 8 something www.atticestatesanAve., Bend, OR 97702 clubs, lawn + garden for everyone. Ieather BIG MULTI F AMILY The Bulletin's "Call a dappraisals.com g GARAGE SALE! Iots supplies, plant con- couch 8 chair/FlexThe Bulletin 541-350-6822 Service Professional" e steel wing back of baby equip: bassigarv«pg Caarrat Oregonsince tg03 tainers, oak furniture, ski net, strollers, bouncer, Directory h ousehold ite m s , chairs/SeaRay 290 coffee & couch b reast pump, a n d records, CDs, cloth- boat, 541 -385-5809 corner office blankets.home school People Lookfor Information Sales Redmond Area ing, exercise bike, table, esk set, boo k and kids toys and acwheelchair and walker d About Products and 2 Household Garaqe 292 shelf/tables & chairs, tivities - from brand Services EveryDaythrough i , a- » 65029 97thSt.,off Large Patio Chef rocking chairs, denew. Girls' costumes, The Bulletin Classineds Sale! Sales Other Areas Tumalo Rd., Bend BBQ, small appliances, signer modern walw inter s l ed , dol l >014 UH~ttr books, puzzles, upscale Craft supplies, kiln and nut end tables, modh ouse, game s , clothing 8 shoes. SO<D* folding couch, k itchen items, a n d Household items, tools, Fri-Sat-Sun, doll molds, clothing, Just bought a new boat? ern 8/15-17, 9-4, hunting/fishing/ back yyTWPOD Sell your old one in the tools. Fri. & Sat. 8-2, propane stove, books, ski 1515 NW Teak Ave. misc. stuff. Fri-Sat., lift chair, speakers, classifieds! Ask about our packing/reloading/ 20725 Beaumont Dr. 9-4. 1890 SE Sagecamping, tools, kids >» 1kfttderness Karaoke, Sat.-Sun, 9-3 3750 SW Gene Sara- Brush Dr., Madras Super Seller rates! ?4' gvr 8' golf/kids stuff/ books, 3055 NE Fairmont Ct. 541-385-5809 zan Dr. Fri. 8-4 & Sat. BONANZA BLOWc, o«home dec o r/Wii Multi-FamilySale! 9-3 Fri8-2. Metal day bed, 2 OUT SALE! queen bed, gx u games & c ompoSat,8/15-18,OWW2 near end tables, china set. Stackable RubberMaid BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS nents, TV stand & gt8e showes Sunriver (S. Century Dr. Jacobs Estate and Sterilite storage Search the area's most v, much more. ReaHUGE SALE past Thousand Trails to ypur ®uto' Sale containers a ssorted comprehensive listing of Thur., Fri., Sat., Sun. Snowgoose, follow signs) sonable! SAT. ONLY tsnc been stored. nt.'w, by Farmhouse sizes. also S terilite • tts boat o 9AM to 3PM — 847 classified advertising... 8-4. TOOLS! 3-drawer dressers, tile EstateSales ~s «nttt +' real estate to automotive, TOOLS! T O O LS! Yarn, jigsaw puzzles, Qeefpg 6'. NW Poweu Butte end table, v i ntage merchandise to sporting 3965 NW Rocher Way Lp . o f f t o p of vintage nec k t ies, $10 950 50 yrs. of hoarding! cupboard w/drawers, goods. Bulletin Classifieds Brother is selling all in Bend Awbrey Rd. household stuff, old vsr gtifgg 541-000-000 & c h a ir, c e r amic (Take Putnam off Mt. every day in the my stuff!Many uprecords. Iots of good flower pots, Crafts- appear Washington, follow signs) print or on line. right tool c h ests, stuff! Sat & Sun. 10-6, Multi-Family Sale Fri. m an chop saw, 4 Fri.-sat., 9-4 8033 So. Red Cloud hand tools, saws, Call 541-385-5809 only, 8-5. Furniture, studded tires 165/15, www.bendbuuetin.com Entire contentsof large Ln., Powell Butte. power tools, storI l cI 2 " ' I l1 yar d decorator items. Very home! Antique furniture, h and-crafted, age cabinets, work nice clean c lothes: items, collectible & 2 oak dining room sets, benches, air comThe Bulletin NOTICE 2 Aubusson rugs (9x12 8 vintage, and more. 506 wmn's 12-XL, mn's ServingCentral Oregonsince igig pressors, blowers, Remember to remove NW Flagline Dr. XL. Black desk, ergo10x14), 2 Remington bold headline and Price. dust colyour Garage Sale signs 54 ] 385 5809 bronzes, oil paintings, Not your average yard nomic desk chairs, Huge Moving Sale! Years rototillers, Some reslrictictns app/y (nails, staples, etc.) Avon products, 5x7 of accumulation. Furni- lector, thousands of roll-top desk, brass 8 screws/nuts/bolts, after your Sale event 2 meta l copper pieces, antiques, sale. fri-sun 8-4. Vin- carpet, Your ad will also appear in: ture, tools, snowboards, tage Hawaiian art and etc... too much to is over! THANKS! clothes r acks on washer/dryer, newer furniture, d e corator w heels, infant c a r art 8 supplies. Thurs- list. Come see to From The Bulletin fridge, king bed, dressitems, lots of repur- seat. More details on Sun, 9-4, 63030 Cole Rd. believe. All priced and your local utility • The Bulletin • The Central Oregon Nickel Ads ers, garage items, t o go. 2 990 S W posed materials, tack craigslist hope to see companies. plus more.No restrooms and breeches, lots of you there. 1753 NE LOTS O F G O O D 83rd St., Redmond • Central Oregon Marketplace • bendbulletin.tom at this estate. eclectic stuff. 65180 STUFF! Fri. 7-4, Sat. on Cline Falls Hwy The Bulletin Rosewood Dr., Fri & See pix at and gatvtngCentral Cptagottatace fgt0 Highland, Tumalo, off Sat. 9-5. N o e a rly 7-noon. 20915 Bilyeu ( next t o Eag l e descriptions at 'Private parly merchandiseonly farmhouseestatesales.com Cline Falls Road. birds please! Court, Crest) www.bendbulletin.com Sales Southwest Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend Sales Redmond Area

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E2 THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

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Misc. Items

Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

How fo avoid scam Found Huffy bike in and fraud attempts water ditch by Bend Airport. Call to idenYBe aware of internatify, 541-385-8108

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin tional fraud. Deal lohelp wanted ad cally whenever pos- Found: Women's Rx today and sible. A nne K l ei n su n reach over sI Watch for buyers g lasses. Sun d a y 60,000 readers who offer more than m orning 8/1 0, o n each week. your asking price and Century Drive. ConYour classified ad who ask to have tact 541-231-5762 will also money wired or appear on handed back to them. Fake cashier checks bendbulletin.com and money orders REMEMBER: If you which currently are common. have lost an animal, receives over YNever give out perdon't forget to check 1.5 million page sonal financial inforThe Humane Society views every mation. Bend month at no YTrust your instincts 541-382-3537 extra cost. Redmond and be wary of Bulletin 541-923-0882 someone using an Classifieds escrow service or Madras Get Results! 541-475-6889 agent to pick up your

Employment Opportunities

®

S UBA R U .

AutoSales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r d e a ler Subaru of B e n d. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success. P l e ase apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.

Employment Opportunities DRIVER

Whispering Winds Retirement is seeking a part-time Driver with occasional evenings. Will drive co. van and car, as well as help with various activities. MUST have p r i or driving e x p erience. Must be o u tgoing, friendly and enjoy interacting with seniors. Please apply in person at 2920 NE Conners Ave., Bend, OR. Pre-employment drug test required.

Need to get an ad in ASAP? Call A Service Professional Call 541 N85-5809 You can place it merchandise. Prineville find the help you need. or place your ad 541-447-7178 online at: www.bendbulletin.com on-line at The Bulletin or Craft Cats Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad ServingCentral Oregon since 1303 PRIVATE PARTY RATES bendbulletin.com Cleaning team member www.bendbulletin.com 541-389-8420. foronly$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines Steel framed Patio needed for p r ivate 541-385-5809 276 Gazebo, canvas top, *UNDER '500in total merchandise Look at: homes, week days OVER'500 in total merchandise 10'x12'i new. View pix on Auction Sales Bendhomes.com only. No weekends, 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 craigslist ¹4607524089. eves or holidays. No Hospitality for Complete Listings of $175. 541-389-7734 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 smking. 541-815-0015 Days Inn now hiring EState AuCtion Area Real Estate for Sale *llllust state prices in ad part-time / f u l l-time 14 days .................................................$33.50 Wanted- paying cash Sat., Aug. 16, 2014. Customer service & pro341 desk and audit. for Hi-fi audio & stu28 days .................................................$61.50 at 10 am, Garage Sale Special duction, full & part-time, front no phone calls please, dio equip. Mclntosh, 4045 NW Orchard Ct., Horses & Equipment 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 icall for commercial line ad rates) apply in person: 849 JBL, Marantz, D yTerrebonne, OR. Apply in person: NE 3rd St., Bend. naco, Heathkit, San- Partial listing; Antiques, Mirror Pond Cleaners. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. c ollectable gla s s A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Call 541-261-1808 ware, hand and power Nurses Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. WHEN YOU SEE THIS tools, household fur* niture, patio furniture, BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) yard art, RV and auto 2001 Silverado REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well parts and supplies, 3-horse trailer 5th fishing and camping as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin On a classified ad wheel, 29'x8', deluxe Partners In Care equipment, h o usebcndbulletimcom showman/semi living reserves the right to reject any ad at go to hold appl., building Partners In Care (Home Health/Hospice) www.bendbulletin.com supplies, pallets of quarters, lots of exany time. is located at: is seeking applicants to fill the to view additional tras. Beautiful condilandscaping r o cks, 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. following positions: photos of the item. electrical s u pplies, tion. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277 water pumps, chains Bend, Oregon 97702 262 • Local RN residents within the communities of saws, weed eaters, Commercial/Office Madras and Prineville to provide on-call RN large shop equipment, care to our home health and hospice patients Equipment & Fixtures farm equipment, biPLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction living in those communities. Position requires cycles, flat bed trailis needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right current Oregon RN licensure. to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these H P office j e t 4 6 2 0 ers. newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party printer. scan fax copy This is a huge auction, • Full-time Home Health RN Case Manager. $30. 541-317-5028 there will be much S hilo bumper pull 3Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. more. All items sold horse trailer w/tack room, Schedule is primarily Monday-Friday with oc265 as is. 10% Buyers like new, more extras, casional weeknight or weekend call as re212 212 241 246 Building Materials quired. Position requires current Oregon RN Premium $5900. 541-923-9758 licensure. Previous Home Health and OASIS Antiques & Antiques & Bicycles & Guns, Hunting This sale conducted by 383 REDMOND Habitat experience highly preferred. Fred Bewley Auctioneer Collectibles Collectibles & Fishing Accessories RESTORE Produce & Food 503-434-3162 • Full-time Home Health/Hospice Support RN. The Bulletin reserves Bushmaster by Wind- Building Supply Resale TACK & SADDLE Quality at THOMAS ORCHARDS Primary responsibilities include supporting RN the right to publish all ham, stainless bolt, MagAUCTION LOW PRICES Kimberly, Oregon Case Managers. Schedule i s p r imarily pul upgrades, & more, ads from The Bulletin Sat. Aug. 16, 7:00 p.m. Monday-Friday with occasional weeknight or 1242 S. Hwy 97 $895. New MKA-1919 U-PICK newspaper onto The KolleCtible Preview 5:30 p.m. 541-548-1406 weekend call as required. Position requires (AR style) semi-auto 12 Freestone Canning Bulletin Internet webLiquidating 60 Saddles Peaches: Loring Elcurrent Oregon RN licensure. OI' Open to the public. ga, $735. 541-306-0166 site. including a large asSantana berta & Suncrest. 266 CASH!! sortment of a ntique Bartlett pears; plums Keepsake? Qualified applicants are encouraged to send The Bulletin "Sovereign For Guns, Ammo & and vintage saddles + Serving Central Oregonsince SO3 Heating & Stoves cover letter and resume via email READY-PICKED 1998" Tandem Reloading Supplies. an entire store's worth hr©partnersbend.org, or mail to: 215 541-408-6900. aluminum road of new inventory at Peaches, Bartlett pears, NOTICE TO Partners ln Care /HR Department, plums, dark sweet bike, size Medium, public auction, r eCoins & Stamps ADVERTISER Antique Colt SAA 44 spcl, 7 2075 NE Wyatt Ct, low usage, disc 1/2", N.F., 2nd gen Since September 29, gardless of loss or BRINGcherries. Bend OR 9770f. Appraisal Show CONTAINERS Local stamp collector has brakes, good condiNIB. Brass. $1550. 1991, advertising for cost. Top brand and with Celebrity for V-PfCK!!! custom made U.S. postage for sale at tion. New, was obo. 541-389-1392 used woodstoves has Appraisers as Bri d les, Open 7 days week, 70% of face value. Call $5000; selling now System Administrator been limited to mod- Saddles, 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! Are youa geek who can also communicate eff 573-286-4343 (local, cell seen on PBS! for $1500. ecels which have been Blankets, too much to Visit IOÃ NiitS RI$ us on Facebook for tively with non-technical executives and emEverything used phone). Call 541-923-2468 certified by the Or- list. and look for ployees? Would you like to work hard, play hard egon Department of on or around a horse. forupdates Private collector buying us on Wed. at Bend in beautiful Bend, OR, the recreation capital of Environmental Qual- C ash, Cards, N O DO YOU HAVE postagestamp albums & 245 Appraisal Ticket CHECKS. 10% BP. Farmers Market and the state? Then we'd like to talk to you. ity (DEQ) and the fed- Elks Lodge No. 1371 collections, world-wide SOMETHING TO Price $40 at NW Crossing. and U.S. 573-286-4343 • G olf Equipment SELL eral E n v ironmental63120 Boyd Acres Rd. Sat.541-934-2870 Each ticket admits We are abusy media company seeking an expeProtection A g ency Bend, OR 97701 FOR $500 OR one person and one (local, cell phone). rienced systems administrator who is also a CHECKYOUR AD LESS? (EPA) as having met item for verbal (503) 489-9103 forward thinker, creative problem solver, excelsmoke emission stanNon-commercial Garage Sales appraisal Mike Murphy, lent communicator, and self-motivated profesadvertisers may dards. A cer t ified Auctioneer sional. We have 8 locations throughout Oregon woodstove may be place an ad Garage Sales and California. with our identified by its certifi262 "QUICK CASH cation label, which is Sales Northwest Bend Garage Sales For Tickets: Job Res onsibilities: SPECIAL" permanently attached on the first day it runs Kollectible-or• Evaluation, selection and deployment of new Find them to the stove. The Bulto make sure it is cor- 1 week3lines 12 1630 NW 11th, Fri. & Keepsake.com n technology and tools oi' letin will not k nowrect. Spellcheck" and in • Provide expertise regarding system installations, 541-420-3387 ingly accept advertis- Sat., 9-4. Antiques, eweeke eot human errors do oc~ decor, clothes, books, configurations and ongoing maintenance The Bulletin Ad must ing for the sale of cur. If this happens to 421 furniture,lots more! Benefitting • Install, configure and administer stable Linux enuncertified include price of Classifieds your ad, please conSchools & Training Assistance League® vironments in ie eem oi $50O woodstoves. n~ tact us ASAP so that 268 of Bend • Maintain virtual server environments or less, or multiple corrections and any 541-385-5809 267 "Helping Local Sales Southeast Bend IITR Twck School • Monitor and maintain enterprise network security items whosetotal adjustments can be People in Need" REDMOND CAMPUS • Work with team to optimize system performance Fuel & Wood does not exceed made to your ad. 240 Yard Sale, Sat. 8-3, Our Grads Get Jobs! across applications, network and databases $500. 541-385-5809 20856 King David 1-888-438-2235 Crafts & Hobbies • Help team troubleshoot and repair both hardOld Gas Pumps/Soda The Bulletin Classified Ave. Housewares, WWW.I1TR.EDU WHEN BUYING ware and software Vending Machines Call Classifieds at dressers, exercise • Occasional travel to remote locations CraftersWanted FIREWOOD... WANTED! Will pay cash. 541-385-5809 So. Bay golf bag, 7 Ad464 bike, lots of misc! OpenJury • Participate in on-call rotation Kyle, 541-504-1050 www.bendbulletin.com To avoid fraud, Looking for Employment Sat., Aug. 16, 9:30 a.m. ams & B ear Tracker The Bulletin Check out the Highland Baptist Church, clubs $75 541-508-8980 Essential Ex ertise Needed: Glock 36, .45acp, Night recommends payRedmond. Tina Nanny available to care • *nix systems administration - Ubuntu, Solaris, classifieds online 246 Sights, 3 mags, $499. ment for Firewood 541-447-1640 or for your child, newborn to OpenBSD, FreeBSD vvvvvv.ftendbuffetin.com www.anowflaksboutiqus.org 541-508-3000 only upon delivery 2 yrs old, price nego- • ZFS/Solaris file servers Guns, Hunting Updated daily and inspection. tiable. References. Call & Fishing HUNTERS in S i lvies • A cord is 128 cu. ft. • Virtualization and Cloud experience - VMWare, 241 Linda 509-240-7883 (cell) XenServer Hunt Unit. Cabin in 4' x 4' x 8' Bicycles & pines, running water • Receipts should • Server Support - Windows Server 12g Browning Citari Accessories and amenities, green 2003/2008/2012, Active Directory, Group Policy Trap Special, must include name, Domestic & yard. 541-589-1130 • Network administration - Switches, routers and 41 years ago, you ab- A venir i n door b i k e see! $2,000. Inquire www.elkridgecabin.com phone, price and In-Home Positions ISPs about others. ducted and murdered trainer, kind of wood 325 • Firewalls/VPN - pfSense, OpenVPN. me. My name is Su- 541-508-8980 $50. 541-678-4302 L. H. SAKO RIFLES purchased. Experienced Caregiver • Domain registrations, SSL certificate manageHay, Grain & Feed san Wickersham. You Finnbear 30/06 blued • Firewood ads needed in Sisters for re- ment, DNS localpays CASH!! with wood stock, NIB made me unforget- Bicycle dog jogger, iike Bend MUST include lief 1-2 days per week. • Google Apps for Business for all rirearms & 1st Quality mixed grass new cond $30 ' $1100. Finnbear Cartable, and now i t's species & cost per 541-598-4527 ammo. 541-526-0617 rain, barn stored, 541-508-8980. bine full length wood your turn. cord to better serve hay, no$250/ton Preferred Ex erience: stock.300 Win. Mag, NIB our customers. 476 Call 541-549-3831 • Background in the media industry $1100. 541-251-0089 Employment • Apache and Nginx (Redmond) The Bulletin Patterson Ranch, Sisters Opportunities • PC and Apple hardware and software support Serving Central Oregonsince Sta New, in orig box, RCBS Quality 1st cutting orexperience Special 2 reload press, chard grass mix, small Add your web address •M ySQL, Rubyon Rails,PHP, PERL, VisualStuAll YearDependable $95. 541-410-3425 bales $225/ton. Madras, to your ad and readdlo Firewood: Seasoned; OR. 541-420-9736 ers onThe Bu//etin's • Confluence 255 Call54 I385580f tcprOm OteyO ur S erV iCe• AdrertiSefOr 28 dalt Startingat'lf0 ptis Stocl ftecteteis notevgfebfeenoergtfntef Lodgepole, split, del, web site, www.bend- • Telecommunications — Avaya Definity and AsComputers B end 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 TURN THE PAGE bulletin.com, will be terisk or 2 for $365. Call for able to click through • Adobe Creative Suites For More Ads T HE B U LLETIN r e - multi-cord discounts! automatically to your Handyman Aggregate Landscaping/Yard Care quires computer ad- 541-420-3484. The Bulletin website. We are Central Oregon's most comprehensive vertisers with multiple Log truck loads of news and information resource. This full-time Vic Russell Const. Inc. I DO THAT! Allen Reinsch Yard ad schedules or those green lodgepole position is located at corporate headquarters in Aggregate & Paving Home/Rental repairs Maintenance& Mowing Reporter selling multiple sys(& many other things!) firewood, delivered. the beautiful resort town of Bend, OR. Do you Res. & Comm. Small jobs to remodels tems/ software, to disBAKER CITY HERALD Call 541-536-1294 or love the outdoors? We have activities right outCB¹31500966MDI Honest, guaranteed close the name of the Call 541-815-4177 541-536-3478 541-815-5313 side your doorstep (literally) that include work. CCB¹151573 business or the term Log truck loads of GOVERNfyfEN7/ world-class mountain-biking, rock climbing, skiDennis 541-317-9768 Maverick Landscaping "dealer" in their ads. Juniper firewood logs. NATfJRAL RESOVRCES REPORTER ing, fly-fishing, rock-climbing, golfing, hunting Private party advertisBaths & Kitchens M owing, weedeating,yd $900 local. and mountain hiking trails. We have music and Landscaping/Yard Care detail, chain saw work, ers are defined as 541-419-5174. The Baker City Herald is looking for candidate seasonal events year-round. This is the place bobcat excv., etc! LCB those who sell one with a passion for community journalism, a Reid Construction NOTICE: Oregon Land- ¹8671 541-923-4324 everyonecomes to vacation. You couldn't ask computer. Pine 8 Juniper Split Bathroom & Kitchen love of rural living and understanding of public for a better lifestyle! scape Contractors Law remodel specialists! agencies and natural resource issues. 260 Good classified ads tell (ORS 671) requires all Daniel, 541-788-4676 PROMPT DELIVERY If you've got what it takes, email a cover letter businesses that adthe essential facts in an Misc. Items CCB¹200883 This reporter will be expected to keep current 54$.-389-9663 and resume toresume@wescom a ers.com vertise t o p e r form interesting Manner.Write on trends and developments, advancing and Landscape Construc- from the readers view - not 5/8's cord of wood following public meetings, and developing Building/Contracting tion which includes: the seller's. Convert the 269 $65. 541-788-8348 feature and enterprise pieces relating to this p lanting, deck s , facts into benefits. Show Gardening Supplies beat. It would be helpful to be versed in Orarbors, the reader how the item will Buyfng Diamonds NOTICE: Oregon state fences, Serving Central Oregon since f903 & Equipment egon public meetings and public records law. law requires anyone water-features, and in- help them insomeway. /Gofd for Cash The reporter in this position must be able to who con t racts for stallation, repair of irSaxon's Fine Jewelers EOE/Drug Free Workplace This convey the affect of local government proposrigation systems to be construction work to 541-389-6655 BarkTurfsoil.com advertising tip als and actions to readers. This position is be licensed with the l icensed w it h th e General BUYING brought toyou by also responsible for working with the news Construction Contrac- Landscape ContracThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturLionel/American Flyer team on special assignments and publicators Board (CCB). An tors Board. This 4-digit PROMPT D ELIVERY day night shift and other shifts as needed. We trains, accessories. The Bulletin tions, including elections coverage. active license number is to be in541-389-9663 SernngCentral Oregon stncefetg currently have openings all nights of the week. 541-408-2191. means the contractor cluded in all adverEveryone must work Saturday night. Shifts is bonded & insured. tisements which indiYou may be the right candidate for the job if Call The Bulletln At Masonry start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and For newspaper Verify the contractor's cate the business has you have relevant reporting experience, dem541-385-5899 end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoCCB l i c ense at a bond, insurance and Ellingson Illlasonry delivery, call the onstrated ability in news writing related to sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail www.hirealicensedworkers c ompensa- Custom stone work, Circulation Dept. at public meetings reporting, and can demonStarting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a tion for their employ- lic. bonded, insured. At: www.bendbulletin.com contractor.com 541-385-5800 strate good skills in understanding of the relaminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts or call 503-378-4621. ees. For your protecTo place an ad, call tionships of city, county, state and federal BUYING & SE LLING CCB¹ 157238 are short (1 t:30 - 1:30). The work consists of The Bulletin recom- tion call 503-378-5909 541-385-5809 government agencies. We also expect you to 541-480-9512 All gold jewelry, silver loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackmends checking with or use our website: or email demonstrate good grammar, spelling and and gold coins, bars, ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup the CCB prior to con- www.lcb.state.or.us to Painting/Wall Covering rounds, wedding sets, olaggified@bendtsulletin.oom punctuation, and have references that can and other tasks. For qualifying employees we tracting with anyone. check license status vouch for your accuracy and public relations class rings, sterling sil- The Bulletin offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Some other t rades before contracting with Serving Central Oregon since fgta skills. Experience in InDesign and using Maver, coin collect, vinALL AMERICAN short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid also req u ire addi- the business. Persons cintosh systems is helpful. tage watches, dental PAINTING vacation and sick time. Drug test is required tional licenses and doing lan d scape Interior gold. Bill Fl e ming, and Exterior prior to employment. certifications. maintenance do not 541-382-9419. INSTANT GREEN Located halfway between Boise, Idaho and the Family-owned r equire an LC B l i McPheeters Turf Tri-Cities, Washington on 1-84, Baker City is a Residential & Commercial C emetery Spac e Please submit a completed application attencense. R&TCustom Const. favorite destination for tourists with a historic Lawn Fertilizer exp.• Sr. Discounts Double depth intertion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Fine and Finish Car- Aeration/Dethatching 40 yrs downtown, outstanding outdoor recreation, 5-year warranties ment g r ave space at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanpentry. CCB ¹179914 1-time or Weekly Services Summer Special! great schools and idyllic small town lifestyle. with outer burial condler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Ron & Tammy Berg, Ask about FREEadded The Baker City Herald publishes three days a Call 541-337-6149 541-389-9663 tainer built-in. At Desobtained upon request by contacting Kevin 541-647-8701 CCB ¹193960 svcs w/seasonal contract! week, and shares sections with sister paper chutes Memorial near Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Bonded & Insured. The Observer in La Grande. This position will Pond Mea d ows. No phone calls please. Only completed appli270 WESTERN PAINTING be filled as soon as possible. COLLINS Lawn Maint. NEVER BEEN USED Debris Removal cations will be considered for this position. No CO. Richard Hayman, Lost & Found Ca/l 541-480-9714 $1200. 541-771-4800. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is rea semi-retired paintSend a letter with resume, references and the JUNK BE GONE quired prior to employment. EOE. CARLSENG DESIGNS ing contractor of 45 FAST TREES Found black zippered best examples of your work to editor Jayson I Haul Away FREE Landscape Design, years. S mall Jobs Grow 6-10 feet yearly! duffel bag 8/8 leaving Jacoby, jjacoby@bakercityherald.com, P.O. For Salvage. Also Consultation & GarWelcome. Interior & $16 - $21, delivered. Wickiup Reservoir. Call Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814 by Friday, The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincefgta Cleanups & Cleanouts dening. 541-610-6961 Exterior. c c b¹5184. www.fasttrees.com to i d entify c o ntents, August 22, 2014. Tanya Carlsen 541-388-6910 or 509-447-4181 541-350-8764 Mel, 541-389-8107

• • 5:00 pm Fri •

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, AUG 14, 2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

rsday,August14,2014 DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thu

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will shprtz

The luck element By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Games such as bridge and certainly poker have an element of luck. I can accept lucky and unlucky results, but I'm enough of an idealist to enjoy seeing good play rewarded and bad play punished. In today's deal from a pairs event, I wouldn't call South's bid of two spades bad. I' d c al l i t a t r ocious. North's two hearts had shown a sixcard suit; South had no reason to think his bi d w o uld i m prove the contract. When West led the queen of clubs, East won and shifted to a diamond. West took the queen and ace and led a third diamond to the king.

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and he bids two spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Partner's first two bids constitute a "reverse" and promise substantial extra strength. If he had a minimum opening bid such as A J 7 6, Q4,54, KQ J 6 5 , he wouldhaveno reason to mention the spades and would pass or rebid two clubs. Since he promises to bid again, bid three clubs to confirm a trump fit. East dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH 41A2

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East then led the 13th diamond; he knew South had no more side-suit losers. South ruffed with the nine of trumps, but when West overruffed with the ten, South had to overruff with dummy's ace. East was sure to get his queen of trumps. South took eight tricks, but plus 110 got him a bottom score, and there w as nothing unlucky about it. A t most tables South passed North's two hearts, and North took at least nine tricks.

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Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

record, e.g. 46 JFK-to-TLV option 48 Kind of paste 50 "Every good boy does fine," e.g. 54 Seminal 1962 book on the environment 58 Exude 59 Company providing financial assistance to college students 61 Chapter part 63 Some passiveaggressive behavior 64 Fatuous 65 Pizazz

BA L E T E EO S

T E A D EA R N S S A L E S T A R GE T

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A R S L O D Y E

DOWN 1 Rio residences 2 Dweller in San Lorenzo TenochtitlSn 3 Decree 4 Business associate uninvolved in management 5What a girl becomes after marriage, in an old expression 6 Sarcastic "Sure you can!" 7Squanders 8Tenant 9 Vaccine combo 100ne way to prepare chicken 11Jules Massenet opdra comique 12 Popular Christmas carol 13 Pen, in Paris 18Segue word 24 Great Hall locale 25 Mousseline de (fabric) 27 Rugby official, whether male or female 29 What there may be a lot of interestin, for short? 30 Zodiac starter? 31Punch

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12

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52 Pound and Stone 53 Singer Simon 55"... man with seven wIves

56 Certain iPods 57 "Is that clear?" 60 Big step 62 Reef dweller

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 Io download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:

32 Foil kin 34 -sci 35 Preposition for Poirot

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08/14/14



E6 THURSDAY, AUGUST 14 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

882

908

933

935

935

940

975

975

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Laredo 30'2009 0

W>iaiis

Hangarfor sale at Redmond Airport - not a T Hangar - $38,000. 541-420-0626

' h tt~

BMW X3

Ready to go to work!

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

¹A71612

$5,977 ROBBERSON i

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at

$25,500

541-419-3301

Lleeetll ~

~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Bargain

Corral pricing good

Looking for your next employee?

2 0 07, 99K (photo forillustration only)

(photo for illustration only)

® s un mu

541-388-4360

877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

(photo forillustration onlyJ

®

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354

541-447-5184.

877-266-3821

Dlr ¹0354

916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

541-420-3250

Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classileds Ford F250, 1997 heavy Chevrolet Trailblazer (photo forillustration only) Nissan Murano 2012, 2008 4x4 duty 4x4 Supercab, 7.5 L AWD, auto, cloth, CD, engine, auto, 111K mi, Automatic, 6-cylinder, pw, pdl. runs g r eat, $ 3 7 50. tilt wheel, power win541-848-7295 /389-8690 (exp. 8/17/14) dows, power brakes, Vin ¹229346 air conditioning, keyStock ¹83013 less entry, 69K miles. Say egoodbuy" Excellent condition; $16,979 to that unused tires have 90% tread.

975

Automobiles Cadillac CTS2011

541-548-5254 885

1995 Lance Camper, 11.3 ft., sleeps 6, self contained, very lightly used, exc. cond., TV, VCR, micro, oven, fridge, 3 burner stove, q ueen over c a b , $8000. 541-389-6256

Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969,was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. See(o believe! Reduced to $10,000, firm. 541-923-6049

+ 0 '2007 Extra nice 4x4, great mpg. ¹541238

$19,977

ROBBERSON easotr ~

~l la aaa

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing good thru 08/31/1 4

Buick Skylark 1972 17K miles. No rust, no leaks, everything works. Amazing originality! Jumping Jack tent Photos at hemmings.com trailer, many extras, $20,900. 541-323-1898 storage cover, short w heel base, h i g h clearance. Carry your ATVs, boats, other (photo for illustration only) Nissan Frontier 2013, toys to places others SV model, Crew cab, cannot go. Low mileage, used one hunt- Corvette Coupe 1964 4x4, 5 speed trans., ing season, $5500. 530 miles since frame pw, pdl. (exp. 8/17/14) 541-548-3363 VIN ¹715664 off restoration. Runs Stock ¹44326A and drives as new. Satin Silver color with $25,979 9 black leather interior, © s u a A Ru mint dash. PS, PB, AC, 4 speed. Knock 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. offs. New tires. Fresh 877-266-3821 327 N.O.M. All CorDlr ¹0354 vette restoration parts in 8 out. Reduced to $57,950. 541-410-2870 MGB 1973 convertible, 908 4-cyl, 2-barrel carb, new Aircraft, Parts manifold, new alternator & Service & rotor assembl, Toyota 2009 brilliant red with btack X-Runner top, beautiful little car! 29,500 miles, $3995 obo. 541-410-9942

1/3interestin

Columbia400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333

Studebaker C h a mpion 1957, all orig., Clean t i tle, r u n s/ drives, easy restore. $3900. 541-639-5360

6-spd, Access Cab, Snugtop hard tonneau cover, Foose wheels, 6-CD player, red, $22,500. 541-389-2426

equipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www. N4972M.com

el

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent perlormance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

t. 9

gta v yt,

2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 with camper s hell, good cond., $1500 OBO. 541-447-5504.

1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 180 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

In Madras, call 541-475-6302 3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16'

bi-fold door. Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom, $155,000, Call Bill 541-480-7930

TiCk, TOCk TiCk, TOCk... ...don't let time get

away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today! Dod e Nitro Heat

2011 Be cool and practical in this 4x4. Vin ¹ 520014 7.977 ROBBERSON tlvcevll ~

stsss s

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

Ford Expedition

2001 4x4 and lots of room! Vin A41537

$6,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN ~

stsss s

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Bargain

Corral pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

av

933

Pickups 1/3 interest in well-

Classifieds Thousands ofadsdaily in print andonline.

Toyota Tacoma 2004 Xtra cab SR5, off road, V6 4x4, manual 5 speed trans, A/C, cruise, tow pkg, bedliner, maint. records, very clean. 168k miles, $8650.

JEEP WRANGLER 2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8

cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

$22,500.

541-548-3363

541-419-5980

T OYOTA LIMITED

TAC O M A 19 98, Ext ended cab , d a r k g reen, V6, 4x4, 5 speed automatic, TRD off road, silver Snug top, one owner, high mileage, ca r efully(photo for illustrstion only) maintained, runs well. Jeep Wrangler Rubi$7,250. 541-576-2030 con 2010, 6 spd, A/C, pw, pd, Sound bar. (exp. 8/17/14) Vin ¹200918 Stock ¹83076

®

$25,979 S UBA R U

Volkswagen 1981 diesel pickup, 5-spd, great gas 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. mileage, canopy, Seri877-266-3821 ous inquiries only $3400 Dlr ¹0354 obo. 541-420-0366

~ E P U R LI C NCYllCES IM ~ RT~ An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate fo make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility io citizens who want io know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go io wwyK bendbulletin.comand click on "Classi%ed Adss

The Bulletin

Limited and AWD come see! ¹065241

$14,988

541-385-5809

infiniti i30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo. 541-420-3277

® s un mu

item by placing it in $11,995. Call 541-598-5111 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Peterbilt 359 p otable The Bulletin Classifieds 877-266-3821 water truck, 1 990, Dlr ¹0354 OPEN ROAD 36' 3200 gal. tank, Shp e 541-385-5809 2005 - $25,500 p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camlocks, $25,000. King bed, hide-a-bed Nissan Murano SL 541-820-3724 Ford F250 2000 Lariat, sofa, 3 slides, glass as, 127K miles, white, shower, 10 gal. wa925 8000. 541-280-3829 ter heater, 10 cu.ft. Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, fridge, central vac, Utility Trailers AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, s atellite dish, 2 7 " clean title, 12/15 tags, TV/stereo syst., front $5995. 541-610-6150 front power leveling 2011, 3.5L V6 AWD. C hevy Tahoe LTE jacks and s cissor vin¹154119 stabilizer jacks, 16' 2007, loaded, like new $25,977 awning. Like new! Ford F250 4x4 1996, 541-419-0566 x-cab, long wheel base, ROBBERSON 16' open bed utility brush guard, tool box, tlllt e t a ~ ~ trailer with large gear $3000. 541-771-1667 or RV 541-633-3607 box, new wheels and 541-598-3750 541-312-3986 CONSIGNMENTS t ires, $ 70 0 O B O . www.aaaoregonautodlr ¹0205. Pricibng WANTED 541-548-3761 source.com good trhu 8/31/1 4 We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! 932 On-site credit C J5 1 9 7 8 V-8 , Antique 8 Toyota Highapproval team, Lockers, new soft Classic Autos lander 2002 web site presence. top, power steering, Ford F350, 1999 7.3 a We Take Trade-Ins! oversized h e ater, Diesel 4x4, Lariat Free Advertising. extended cab, short box, many extras. $6,000 BIG COUNTRY RV obo. 541-519-1627 clean! Plus extras. Bend: 541-330-2495 $13,000. 541-593-6053 Redmond:

Canopies & Campers

There's a whole pile of "treasure" here!

Find It in The Bulletin Classifieds!

Reach thousands of readers!

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo.

You know what they say about "one man's trash".

Advertise your car! Add A Plcturel

MONTANA 3585 2008,

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 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

miles, premium pack- Mercedes ML3502003, Toyota Sienna 2011, Hyundai Elantra 2011, age, heated lumbar AWD, moonroof, pw, LE model, 7 passen- Touring, leather, auto, ger, stow-n-go seat- CD, pw, pdl. supported seats, pan- pdl, power seats. ing, alloy wheels. oramic moo nroof, (exp. 8/1 7/1 4) (exp. 8/1 7/1 4) (exp. 8/17/14) Bluetooth, ski bag, XeVin ¹414134 Vin ¹090677 Vin ¹019106. non headlights, tan & Stock ¹44376A Stock ¹82995 Stock ¹43981A black leather interior, $6,979 $13,979 n ew front & re a r $24,999 brakes @ 76K miles, S UBA RU svssaeovasea.eals one owner, all records, ® s u a aau 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. very clean, $1 6,900.

thru 8/31/14

Where buyers meet sellers

ett

Mazda Miata 2010

attv

AWD luxury, get there in style! $32,977

541-312-3986

Dlr ¹0205 pricing good thru 08/31/14

Chevy Cavalier R.

Well cared for, only 18k miles. Bring your suncreen! $18,977 Vin ¹208304 ROBBERSON I I e c 0IIt ~

The Bulletin recoml

extra caution t I mends I when p u rchasing I products or servicesI from out of the area. I S ending c ash ,I or credit in- • I checks, formation may be I

• le

The Bulletin is your

Employment Marketplace

Call I subject toFRAUD. 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 For more informaI tion about an advertiser, you may call to advertise. I the 8regon State I Attorney General's s www.bendbulletin.com Office C o nsumer I Protection hotline at

I

1-877-877-9392.

I TheMlet

ServingCentral Oregon since 1999

I I I The Bulletin

Sestaeg Central Oregon since 1918

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Special pricing good thru 8/31/1 4

$3,977 ROBBERSON ~

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 pricing god thru 08/15/14

Isssa s

2000 Inspected & Ready! Vin¹239718 Bargain Corral

Lleeetll ~

I

Vin ¹116768

ROBBERSON ~

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2008 Nearly perfect - a true must see! $14,998 Vin ¹050612 ROBBERSON e atot a ~

~maaOB

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

LEGAL NOTICE Aug. 14, 2014 TO: PATRONS, PARENTS, STUDENTS, STAFF AND OTHER INTERESTED PERSONS

controlled substances (ORS C hapter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or f acilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of controlled s u b stances (ORS Chapter 475).

On December 17, 1987, Con g ress Dlr ¹0205. Special signed into law an vIe c0 t II ~ Sta m a pricing good thru act titled "Asbestos 8/31/1 4 Hazard Emergency Chevy Malibu 2012, 541.312.3986 Lots of options; sunResponse Act DLR¹0205 pricing roof, 6 speed trans (AHERA)." This law good thru 08/31/1 4 with manual option, directed all schools, IN THE MATTER OF: bluetooth, o n Star, public and private, Sirius satelite, to inspect buildings Toyota Sienna for asbestos con(1) US Currency in the heated seats, pw, XLE Limited taining m a t erials, amount of $1,742.00, pdl, 4 cyl. echo tech Case No 14CV0091 engine, 20 MPG city, Subaru Outback 2012 develop an invens eized January 6 , 35 MPG hwy, USB tory of the materials, 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, 2014 from B raxton port, Ipod r e ady, auto. trans., AWD, and prepare a plan Monson. $14,900 OBO. leather heated seats, for management of 541-504-6974 AWD, power moon the asbestos conLEGAL NOTICE r oof, a n d mor e ! taining materials in 2005 AWD Minivan NOTICE TO Room for everyone! 25,600 miles. Below the buildings. INTERESTED COIC's Bend AlternaKB O $27 , 500 PERSONS ¹044690$18,977 tive School (1645 Michael D. McGill has 541-344-5325 ROBBERSON annie2657©yahoo.com NE Forbes Road, been appointed as the Bend, Oregon), utieesotr ~ ~magaa Personal RepresentaToyota Corolla 2009 lizing the services of tive of the Estate of LE, red, 79,500 mi. professional in541.312.3986 Chrysler 200 LX 2012, Andy Warren Lewis, DLR¹0205 pricing $11,995. vin¹050342 spectors and conpw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. Deceased, by the Cirsultants, has comgood thru 8/31/1 4 (exp. 8/1 7/1 4) cuit Court for Despleted this directive. VIN ¹292213 chutes County, State These m a n age- of Oregon, under case Stock ¹83014 ment plans h ave 541-598-3750 number 14-PC-0088. $14,979 been accepted by All persons having a www.aaaoregonautothe State Depart© s U s ARu claim against the essource.com ment of Education tate must present the 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Toyota Prius Four 2013 and are available for c laim w i t hin fo u r 877-266-3821 review at the COIC blue, 11k mi., $25,995. months after the date Toyota Tacoma 2012, Dlr ¹0354 Administration Of vin¹622490 of first publication of 5 spd, xcab, pw, pd, fice, 334 NE Hawthis notice to the Perbed liner. thorne Ave n u e, sonal Representative (exp. 8/1 7/1 4) Bend, Ore g on. at Brian T. Hemphill, Vin ¹014333 Q uestions ab o u t P.C., 339 SW Cen541-598-3750 Stock ¹83077 these matters may tury Dr. S te . 1 0 1, www.aaaoregonauto$23,979 be directed to the Bend, OR 97702, or source.com following p a r ties: t he claim may b e Avenger 2013, ® s u a A Ru Dodge K evin Bradley a t barred. All persons pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. (541) 447-9291 or whose rights may be (exp. 8/1 7/1 4) 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Paulsen E n v iron- affected by this proVin ¹535474 877-266-3821 mental Consulting, ceeding may obtain Stock ¹83015 Dlr ¹0354 Inc., Steven additional information $14,979 Paulsen at 940 f rom the cour t (541) 473-2243 records, the Personal Vans ® s U s ARu VOLVO XC90 2007 Representative, or the AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. LEGAL NOTICE attorney for the Perpower everything, 877-266-3821 NOTICE OF SEIZURE sonal Representative: grey on grey, leather Dlr ¹0354 FOR CIVIL Brian T. Hemphill. heated lumbar seats, FORFEITURE TO ALL Dated and first pub3rd row seat, moonPOTENTIAL l ished: August 1 4 , roof, new tires, alCLAIMANTS AND TO 2014. ways garaged, all ALL UNKNOWN Signed: /s/ Michael D. Chrysler Town & maintenance up to PERSONS READ THIS McGill, Personal RepCountry LXI 1997, date, excellent cond. CAREFULLY resentative. A STEAL AT$13,900. beautiful inside & 541-223-2218 out, one owner, nonLEGAL NOTICE If you have any interHyundaiAccent GL smoker,. Ioaded with est i n t h e s e i zed On Friday August 22, 1999, auto, CD. options! 197,892 mi. WHEN YOU SEE THIS property d e scribed 2014 at 12:00 noon at (exp. 8/17/14) Service rec o rds S E C l eveland VIN ¹584982 below, you must claim 345 available. $4 , 950. ve., A P l u s M i n i that interest or you will A Stock ¹44383B Call Mike, (541) 815Storage will handle lose that 8176 after 3:30 p.m. $4,999 MorePixat Bendbjjlletij.com automatically t he d i sposition o f interest. If you do not On a classified ad file a claim for the (Auction) the entire © s u a A Ru go to Ford Econoline Van, of unit 110, a property, the property contents www.bendbulletin.com 1983, clean, new tags & 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend may be forfeited even 10x20, rented by Adto view additional battery, 220K mi, $1300 877-266-3821 Ap p l iance if you are not con- vanced photos of the item. obo. 541-388-2760 Dlr ¹0354 victed of any crime. Repair, Lonny Smith. To claim an interest, LEGAL NOTICE Subcontractor you must file a written ©tt claim with the forfei- Proposals Requested YoUR /to wILLREcEIYEcLosE ro Z004000 0@ssficdl ture counsel named EXPOSURES FOR ONLY $150i below, The w r itten C ascade L a k es i gl eeg ci *ressd t v a 1 * f e o~ a ee p d l I s Mi ~ claim must be signed Highway Welcome NICI%©@ Peek of June23, 2014 by you, sworn to un- Station - Deschutes der penalty of perjury National Forest. The before a notary public, scope of work conand state: (a) Your s ists of t h e c o nServing Central Oregon since1903 true name; (b) The struction of a 2,083 541-385-5809 address at which you sf single story, stick will a c cept f u t ure framed building with m ailings from t h e composite roofing. court and f orfeiture Significant site work, water well, septic and (3) A DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, counsel; s tatement that y o u system are a part of an interest in the this project. The locustody, support, property and bills division. No court have seized property. Your cation of this site is for filing the l ocated near t h e appearances. Divorce jn 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772- deadline claim document with junction of the Cascou n sel c ade Lakes N a 5295. Www.parajegajajternatiyes.com jegajajt©msn.com forfeiture n amed below is 2 1 tional Scenic ByCentury days from the last day way of publication of this Drive/County Highnotice. Where to file a way 46 and Conklin claim and for more R oad/Forest S e r DRIVERS -START WITH OUR TRAINING OR CONTINUE i nformation: D a i n a vice R o a d 41. Crook County Davis Bacon wages YOUR SOLID CAREER. You have OPtiOnS! COmPany Vitolins, District Attorney Of- apply. Submit Bids 300 N E T h ird To: Synergy Sysdrivers, lease purchase or owner operators needed. fice, Street, Prineville, OR tems, Inc. 10100 W. 97754. 87th Street, Suite 877-369-7104 www.centrajtruckdrjvjngjobs.com. Notice of reasons for 204, Overland Park, Forfeiture: The prop- KS 66212, Attenerty described below tion: Danny Ginardi was seized for forfei- danny.ginardi@seal ture because it: (1) aska.com EARN $500 A-DAY: Insurance Agents Needed; Leads, No Constitutes the pro- 913-928-6736 Fax ceeds of the violation 913-928-6731. Bids Cold Calls; Commissions Paid Daily; Lifetime Renewals; of, solicitation to vio- Due August 19th, late, attempt to vio- 2 014. Plans a n d Complete Training; Health/Dental Insurance; Life License late, or conspiracy to Specs are located at violates, the criminal t he B uilders' E x laws of the State of change of WashRequired. Call 1-888-713-6020 Oregon regarding the ington or a weblink manufacture, distribu- can be provide per tion, or possession of request. ROBBERSON

541-312-3986

The Bulletin


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