Bulletin Daily Paper 05-15-15

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FRIDAY May15,2015

Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1

INSIDE

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< SPECIAL WRAP:Howthe change could provide new opportunity • EVENTSCHEDULE• SPECTATORGUIDE PLUS:More PPPin Sports, in GO! and online: bendbulletinA:omlppp

Also inside: SPECIAL INSERT Local food directory ye

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

IN SALEM: REVENUE FORECASTSAYS EXTRA MONEY

•.•FOR YOU, TOO

I(icker credit likely

Deepwater discoveryScientists have found the first fully warm-blooded fishthe opah.A2

coming yourway

Plus: Poordees —More than 40 percent of honeybee hives died over theyear. That's not the surprising news.A3

By Scott Hammers For the first time

Cuhgfuss —Action on NSA spying, trade and Iran.A2

By Abby Spegman

cost-of-living increases for emcalling the extra money "a solid ployees and a lower end fund balIn a budget year when educators step towards the right direction." ance than originally planned. and lawmakers agreed schools The Legislature approved $7.255 The budget committee voted on weren't getting enough, some good billion for K-12 schools for the 2015- the budget 'Ittesday; next it heads news came Thursday in the form 17 biennium but included a trigger to the school board. of the strong economic forecast that would send 40 percent of new Thursday's strong report does litthat will send about $105 million revenue to schools if the economy tletooffsetlosses districts acrossthe more to Oregon's K-12 schools. showed improvement in the May state are preparing for in the form Bend-La Pine Schools gave economic forecast.School leaders of higher retitement ooet. The state initial approval to a 2015-16 bud- statewide had said they needed at Supreme Court last month ruled get earlier this week that would least $7.5billion over the twoyears. some of the 2013 cuts to the Public cut teachers and raise class sizes. Bend-La P i ne's p r oposed Employees Retirement Systemwere Thursday's report means the dis- $151 million general fund bud- unconstitutional, and higher costs trict can revisit those cuts, accord- get called for cutting about four are expected to arrive in2017. ing to Brad Henry, chief opera- teachers, which would raise the SeeRevenue/A6 wrote in an email to The Bulletin,

The Bulletin

2016 —ABC newsmanis found to havedonated to the Clinton Foundation. Plus, Jeb Bush's definitive answer on invading Iraq.A4 All AgaS —The challenge of raising a babywhile doing time in prison.E1

tions and financial officer.

'Petiquette' —Knowthe

PIUS —Retiring with a pet.E3

since 2007, Oregon taxpayers could be receiving a "kicker" income tax rebate from the state.

Thursday, the state Office of Economic Analysis released its

latestprojections of tax collections, which cited strong economic

growth in predicting it's "highly likely" the state will end the two-year

budget cycle on June 30 with $473 million more than was forecast two

years ago. SeeKicker/A6

student-teacher ratio by about one

"This will allowus to direct more student in kindergarten through dollarsto our classrooms,"Henry second grade. It included lower

do's and don'ts, and the laws, on pets in public.E5

HDW muCh?

The Bulletin

• Also inSalem:Governor signs bill allowing advertising of raw milk, B1

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Vietnam turns to old rival —Lls-

for weapons

i n time to a m o

Bloomberg News

HANOI — Vietnam's

The Bulletin

The oldest structure in Deschutes County marked the end of an

arduous journey by wagon from the Willamette Valley to Central Oregon.

— The Agriculture

By Mary ClareJalonick

The Hindman barn

Department has de-

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON

and the Camp Polk

veloped a new government certification and labeling for foods that are free of genetically modified ingredients.

Meadow Preserve it sits on are about 5 miles

northeast of Sisters. It was built in the ear-

ly 1870s when High

USDA's move

Desert settlers were

traveling east across

comes as some consumer groups push for mandatory labeling of the genetically modified organisms, or GMOs. The certification

the Cascade Mountains

in search of gold or a suitable tract of land to Kelly Madden, a member of the Deschutes County Historic

military is going shopping.

Landmarks Commis-

Anxious about a more

sion, presented a timeline of events at the

assertive China on its doorstepand frictions over territory in the South Chi-

na Sea, officials in Hanoi recently hosted a group of foreigndefense contractors looking to sell the Communist nation everything

from radarsystems to night vision technology and aircraft.

The military's top officerswere notpresent because of the sensitivity

of hobnobbing with U.S. defense companies eight

is the first of its kind,

wouldbe voluntary — and companies would have to pay for it. If approved, the foods would be able to carry a"USDA Process Verified" label along with a

Andy Tullis/Ttte Bulletin

Deschutes Land Trust volunteer naturalist Kelly Madden, dressed in pioneer clothing, leads a "history walk"

historically significant through the historically significant Camp Polk Cemetery northeast of Sisters on Thursday morning. Below, a Camp Polk area during gravestone (with cause of death). Another in this cemetery is marked "cowboy kicked byhorse." a guided tour Thursday. The event was part of a series of opportunities to celebrate Historic Preservation Month in May. The 151-acre

meadow is part of the Deschutes Land Trust, which organized the event with the land-

marks commission. SeeHistory/A4

Historicalevents

Several more historical tours andevents will take place throughout DeschutesCounty this month. Tours of historic downtown Bendare held every Saturday and Sunday starting at10 a.m. at theBendVisitor Center.

e

claim that they are

free of GMOs. Agriculture

Secretary Tom Vil-

sack outlined the new certification in a May 1 letter to

COMINGSATURDAY What's happening in Central Oregon for the rest of Historic Preservation Month?

USDA employees, saying it was being done at the request of a "leading global company," which he

days beforecelebrations

for the 40th anniversary of the defeat of America and its allies. But the meeting

shows how Vietnam's leaders are looking past ideology to practical realities. "There are no permanent friends or enemies, only permanent interests,"

Alexander Vuving, a security analyst at the AsiaPacific Center for Security

Studies in Hawaii, said. Squeezed by slower U.S. military spending, defense firms are looking to South-

Sources: Oregon Department of Revenue; Oregon Office of Economic Analysis

soon tobe areal label

By Ted Shornck

raise cattle.

By John Boudreau

'Refund estimates based on 2013 tsx returns, a kicker amount of$473 million and forecast for tax liability.

'Certified' GMO-free

And a Web exclusiveThis is no sci-fi convention: Arms control advocates are rallying to prevent the very real development of killer robots. bentlbnlletin.cnm/extrns

($10,200 $11 $ 10,200-$23,800 $ 6 3 $23,800-$43,800 $146 $43,800-$79,900 $274 $79,900-$157,100 $546 $157,100-$336,400 $1,249 ) $336,40 0 $5,3 7 3 Average=$53,900 $284

USDA

HISTORICPRESERVATION MONTH

tri a c

Anyone who filed a2014 Oregon personal income tax return would receive a refund this year because actual incometax collected by the state exceededthe final revenueforecast for the biennium. * Income Ref n nd

did not identify A

Mystery ofchemicalexposureinIraq clears, abit By C.J. Chivers

theyhad been exposed to them. The military acknowledged the Since fall, the United States exposures after years of secrecy military has acknowledged that — and of denying medical trackU.S. soldiers found thousands ing and official recognition to of abandoned chemicalweap- victims — after an investigation ons in Iraq, and that hundreds by The New York Times. New York Times News Service

of troops notified the military

medical system they believed

Even then, the affliction of the members of the 2nd Platoon

copy of the letter was obtained by The Associated Press. A USDA spokes-

of the 811th Ordnance Compa- IR this state ny had quietly remained one of • Court overturns $85 million award the unsolved mysteries of the for sickened Oregonsoldiers, B2 Iraq War, and a parable of what

man confirmed Vilsack sent the letter

several of the victims describe

cation program. Vilsack said in the letter

the sickened soldiers have com-

as thecorrosive effects of the plained of health effects that government's secrecy on troop they say may be linked to hanwelfare and public trust. dling leakingbarrels. Since the incident, several of SeeChemical/A6

but declined to comment on the certifithe certification "will

be announced soon." SeeGMOs /A4

east Asian nations for

new markets, capitalizing on their concerns about China's outlays on longrange planes, ships and submarines. SeeVietnam /A6

TODAY'S WEATHER Cloudy High 61, Low 35 Page B6

INDEX All Ages Business Calendar

E1-6 Classified D 1 - 6Dear Abby C5-6 Comics/Puzzles D3-4 Horoscope E6 $ n Gi 4 In GO! Crosswords D 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies E6, GD!

The Bulletin AnIndependent

Q I/I/e use recyclnewspri ed nt

voi 113 No 135

e sections

0

88 267 0 23 29


A2

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NATION Ee ORLD

ressureon ena e or rae, is Bulletin wire reports House's lopsided bipartisan

FBI uses for criminals who voted Thursday to take up legfrequently switch cellphones. islation that would grant the A third provision makes it eas- president negotiating freedom

vote to end the National Secu-

ier to obtain a warrant to tar-

WASHINGTON — After the

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356

B.B. Kihg dieS —Attorney Brent Bryson said blues legendB.B. King died peacefully in his sleeplateThursday night at his home in Las Vegas. Theonetime farmhand brought newfans to the blues andinfluenced a generation of musicians with his heartfelt vocals andsoaring guitar on songs such as"TheThrill Is Gone." King sold millions of records worldwide andwas inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame andthe Rock andRoll Hall of Fame.Although he hadcontinued to perform well into his 80s, the15-time Grammywinner suffered from diabetes andhadbeenin declining health during the past year.

to complete an expansive trade accord with 11 nations on the

rity Agency's bulk collection get a "lone wolf" terror suspect of Americans' phone records, who has no provable links to a the Senate is under consider- terrorist organization. able pressure to pass a similar McConnell has said he will measure. If it doesn't, lawmak- put a bill on the floor to reauers risk letting the authority to thorize all three provisions collect the records expire June without changes. Wednesday's 1, along with other important vote suggests the House won't counterterrorism provisions. pass such a bill, several House The House bill, known as leaders said. And some sena-

Pacific Rim, setting off a contentious congressional debate

on one of Obama's top priorities for his remaining time in

CamP DaVid —President Barack Obamapledged America's "ironclad commitment" to anxious PersianGulf nations Thursday to help protect their security, pointedly mentioning the potential use of military force andoffering assurances that a potential nuclear agreement with Iran would not leavethem morevulnerable. At the close of a rare summit at the presidential retreat at CampDavid, Obamasaid the U.S. would join the Gulf Cooperation Council nations "to deter andconfront an external threat to anyGcc state's territorial integrity." The U.S. pledged to bolster its security cooperation with the Gulf oncounterterrorism, maritime security, cybersecurity and ballistic missile defense.

office. Earlier in the week, Senate

Democrats demanded guarantees that a deal provide strong

enforcement provisions, includingmeasures aimed atcurbing "The Republican leader currency manipulation. Repubsystem to search the data held is isolated in his desire for a lican leaders agreed to vote on by telephone companies on a clean extension of illegal spy- a separate enforcement bill, case-by-case basis. It passed ing programs," Sen. Harry and 13Democrats joined 52 Re338-88. Reid, the ranking Democrat, publicans in a procedural vote In the Senate, however, the said Thursday, making note to move forward with fast track legislation faces a 60-vote hur- of arecentappeals court rul- legislation, providing the 60 dle to begin debate. A similar ing declaring the phone re- votes necessary to break what bill failed to do so last year cords program unlawful but had been a united Democratic after passing the House by a keeping it in place for now. filibuster. wide margin. And the Senate "We have achance to take biThe vote was a boost for majority leader, Republican partisan action that protects Obama, who summoned 10 the USA Freedom Act, would replace bulk collection with a

M itch M cConnell, ha s Dtsouies rr

Iran dill —The Housegave overwhelming approval Thursday to create a congressional review of the potential nuclear deal with Iran, sending the bill to President BarackObama's deskas he headsinto the final weeks of negotiations with the Islamic country. Following a similarly lopsided roll call last week in theSenate, the House's 400-25 vote concluded months of tense talks betweencongressional leaders and administration officials over what degree of oversight Congress would have if Obamafinalizes a deal with Iranian leaders to assure their nuclear program won't shift into military use.

tors have vowed to filibuster it.

e x - Americans' civil liberties, it

ISlamiC State —Amid reports that its reclusive leader hadbeen injured and possibly incapacitated, the Islamic State terrorist group released anaudio statement Thursday it said wasfrom the manhimself, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. If authentic, the 34-minute recording would be the first public address byal-Baghdadi in six months. Also Thursday, an Iraqi manwho worked as atranslator for the U.S. military was arrested Thursday inTexas by FBIagents whosay hepledged allegiance to al-Baghdadi last yearand misled them about his travels to Syria. The Justice Department said Bilal Abood, 37, a naturalized U.S. citizen who lives in Mesquite, Texas,was charged with lying to an agent.

pro-tradeSenate Democrats to

pressed his opposition to the would be irresponsible for us current House bill. to squander this opportunity." What's different this year, President Barack Obama though, is that if Congress supports the House legislation, doesn't act, three provisions which is in line with a proposal will expire. Not just the law he made last March. authorizing the bulk collec-

the White House on Tuesday

tion of phone records, but also

Tradewar

earlier this week over the en-

a measure allowing so-called roving wiretaps, which the

Two days after Democratic senators blocked it, the Senate

after an initial test vote failed. Earlier on the Senate floor,

Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., who

Amtrak —The deadly Amtrakderailment near Philadelphiaappears to be yet another accident that didn't have tohappen. It could have been avoided if a long-sought safety technology hadbeenoperating on its tracks and trains, according to information gathered byaccident investigators. OnThursday, Amtrak President Joseph Boardmansaid the nation's passenger railroad will begin operating the technology, called positive train control, throughout its busy Northeast Corridor by the end of the year.Thetechnology wasinstalled on thetracks where the accident occurred, but it hadnot beenturned on becausefurther testingwasneeded,hesaid.Sevenyearsago,CongressgaveAmtrakand freight and commuter railroads until the end of this year to install the technology. Also: In themoment this train was supposed to beslowing down at acurve, it wasaccelerating, investigators said Thursday.The National Transportation Safety Boardsaid thetrain engineer, Brandon Bostian, hadagreed to beinterviewed by the NTSBand the meeting will take place inthe next few days. Aneighth body wasfound in thewreckage Thursday,with all other people onboardaccounted for.

negotiated the fast track bill

with congressional Republican leaders then stalled it forcement concerns, declared "a new day for trade policy."

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SeCret SenriCeSCandal —FormonthsnewSecret Service Director JosephClancy hadbeenwarning agents and officers that misconduct anddrunkenshenanigans would not be tolerated in the once-vaunted lawenforcement agency. Andyet, according to investigators, two senior Secret Service agentsspent five hours at abar, ranup a significant tab, andthendrove back tothe White House,wherethey shoved their car into aconstruction barrier and drovewithin inches of a suspicious packageearlier this year. All this just months after Secret Service Julia Pierson director wasousted in theaftermath of a series of embarrassing security breachesinvolving Secret Service agents and officers. GeorgeOgilvie and Marc Connolly were "more likely than not" impaired byalcohol whenthey drovethrough a secure areaatthe White House earlier this year, theHomelandSecurity Department's inspector general said in anew report released late Wednesday.

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Burundi CriSiS —Gunfire andexplosions rang out Thursdayas military forces backing anattempted coupagainst President Pierre Nkurunziza battled troops loyal to him inBurundi's capital. Weeksof turmoil in this impoverishedCentral African country boiled overWednesday when an army generalannouncedNkurunzizawasbeingousted.

:i

— From wire reports NOAAFisheries west Coast via flickr / Submitted photo

It's one of the most basic biology facts we're taught in school growing up: Birds andmammalsare warm-blooded, while reptiles, amphibians and fish are cold-blooded. But newresearch is turning this well-known knowledge onits head with the discovery of the world's first warm-blooded fish — the opah. In a paper publishedThursday in Science, researchers from the National OceanicandAtmospheric Administration describe the uniquemechanism that enables the opah, adeepwater predatory fish, to keep its body warm. Thesecret lies in a specially designed set of blood vessels in the fish's gills, which allow the fish to circulate warm blood throughout its entire body. Some other types of fish, such astuna, have

similarly designed bloodvessels in certain parts of their bodies, allowing for "regional endothermy"warm-bloodednessthat's limited to certain organs or muscles, such asthe eyes, liver or swimming muscles. But the opah istheonly fish scientists know of that has this design in its gills, wheremost fish losethe majority of their body heat to thesurrounding cold water. Being warm-blooded givesthe opah amajor competitive advantage. Evenfish with regional endothermy usually can't keeptheir heart warm. "If your heart's cold, there' sonlysomuchyoucando,"saysHeidiDewar, a researcher atNOAA'sSouthwest Fisheries Science Center andoneof thepaper's authors.

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Inside

Big gaps instate, national test scoresfor samekids By Renee Schoof

are proficient, but by external McClatchy Washington Bureau benchmarks they're not preA report on student testing pared at all," said Michael Coreleased Thursday finds big hen, the president of Achieve, gaps in most states between the education reform group the percentage of students that conducted the survey. Coshown to be proficient in read- hen added that improvements ing and math on state tests are expectedwiththenewtests. and the much lower number Achieve helped the National found to be proficient on a na- Governors Association andthe tional benchmark test. Council of Chief State School Dozens of states showed Officers develop the Common significant gaps b e tween Core, the standards that define theirstate tests in the 2013-14

school year and the results of Educational Progress on tests of reading and math in fourth and eighth grades. The picture is expected to change in upcoming years because many states have raised

theiracademic standards and started using new t ests to

measure them this year. Results will be available in many states in the fall. "Too many states are not lev-

what students should know and be able to do in math and

English in each grade. The report also found some states had a narrow gap. For

example, in eighth-grade math,

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The National Assessment of

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Sales Service A Installation 917 Southeast 3rd Street, Bend

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proficiency levels differed from the national assessment by 15 percentage points or fewer.

tional measure of all students. eling with students or parents. It is given every other year to a They're being told students sample population.

TheBulletin

DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE? YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS

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14 states showed their state

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the National Assessment of All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS r552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem Communications Inc., 777 1 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR9770Z Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulationdepartment, PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97708. TheBulletin retains ownershipandcopyright protection of all slaff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not be reproducedwithout explicit prior approval.

Enferlainment

— The Washington Post

CORRECTIONS The Bullotin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-383-0356.

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FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Friday, May15, the135th

day of 2015. Thereare230 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS CaPitOI —The Houseis expected to vote on anormally bipartisan defense policy bill, with the fight centering on automatic spending caps

TerrOriSm — Khaledal-Fawwaz, aformeraide toOsama bin Laden,facessentencing following his conviction onconspiracy charges inthe1998 U.S. embassyattacksinKenyaand Tanzania that killed 224people.

SCIENCE

o ein e cimaewi oLi u in i more

HISTORY

By JohnMarkoff eNew York Times News Service

Highlight:In1975, U.S. forces invaded theCambodian island of Koh Tangandcaptured the American merchant ship Mayaguez, which hadbeenseized by the KhmerRouge.(All 39 crew members hadalready been released safely byCambodia; some 40 U.S.servicemen were killed in connection with the operation.) In1776,Virginia endorsed American independencefrom

It is perhaps the most daunting challenge facing

Britain.

In1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed anact establishing the Department of Agriculture. In1911, the U.S.Supreme Court ruled Standard Oil Co. was a monopoly in violation of the ShermanAntitrust Act and ordered its breakup. In1980,registered nurse Ellen Church, the first airline stewardess, went onduty aboard an Oakland-to-Chicago flight operated by BoeingAir Transport (a forerunner of United Airlines). In1940, DuPontbeganselling its nylon stockings nationally. The original McDonald's restaurant was opened inSanBernardino, California, by Richard andMauriceMcDonald. In1970, just after midnight, Phillip Lafayette Gibbsand James Earl Green, two black students at Jackson State College in Mississippi, were killed as police opened fire during student protests. In1972,Alabama Gov.George Wallace wasshot and left paralyzed by Arthur Bremer while campaigning for president in Laurel, Maryland. (Bremer served 35 years for attempted murder.) In1988, the Soviet Union began the process of withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan, more than eight years after Soviet forces hadentered the country. In2000,bya5-4vote,the U.S. Supreme Court threw out akey provision of the 1994Violence Against WomenAct, saying rape victims could not suetheir attackers in federal court. Tnn yearsago:Themovie "Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith" had its world premiere at the CannesFilm Festival. Five years ago: Jessica Watson, a16-year-old Australian who'd spentsevenmonthsat sea in her pink yacht, became the youngest person to sail around the world solo, nonstop and unassisted as shearrived in Sydney. Lookin at Lucky, ridden by newjockey Martin Garcia, won the Preakness. One year ago:President Barack Obamadedicated the National Sept. 11 Memorial Museum deepbeneath ground zero, calling it a symbol that says of America: "Nothing can ever break us."

BIRTHDAYS Playwright Sir Peter Shaffer is 89. Counterculture icon Wavy Gravy is 79. Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright is 78. Singer LennyWelch is 77. Former Health andHuman Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius is 67. Baseball Hall of Famer GeorgeBrett is 62. Actor Lee Horsley is 60. TV personality Giselle Fernandez is 54. Hall of FamerEmmitt Smith is 46. Actor Brad Rowe is 45. Actor David Charvet is 43. Actor Russell Hornsby is 41. Rock musician Olympic gold-medal gymnast Amy Chow is 37.Actor David Krumholtz is 37. Actress Jamie-Lynn Sigler is 34. Actress Alexandra Breckenridge (TV: "TheWalking Dead") is 33. Tennis player Andy Murray is 28. — From wire reports

experts in both the fields of climate and computer science — creating a supercomputer that can accurately model the future of the planet in a set of equations and how the forces of climate change will affect it. It is a task that would require running an immense set of calculations for several weeks and then recalculating them hundreds of times with different variables.

PHENOMENON

Survey: More than 40percent

of bee hivesdied in past year Big lossesfor deekeepers

By Seth Borenstetn The Associated Press

A federal survey finds beekeepers in the U.S.have lost more than WASHINGTON More than two out of five 40 percent of honeybeecolonies since April 2014. American honeybee coloPercentage of bee colonies lost nies died in the past year, e ~ ~ ~ ~ No data 10 2 0 30 40 50 65% and surprisingly the worst die-off was in the summer, according to a federal survey. Since April 2014, beekeepers lost 42.1 percent

»

~fL

of their colonies, the sec-

ond-highest loss rate in nine years, according to an annual survey conduct-

ed by a bee partnership that includes the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

"What we're seeing with this bee problem is just some bad things happening with our agro-ecosys-

up from 19.8 percent the pre-

tems," said study co-au-

vious summer.

thor Keith Delaplane at the Seeing massive colony University of Georgia. "We l osses in summer is l i k e just happen to notice it seeing "a higher rate of flu with the honeybee because deaths in the summer than they are so easy to count." winter," vanEngelsdorp said.

Such machines will need to

approach is more appropriate

be more than 100 times faster

for weather and climate mod-

than today's most powerful supercomputers, and ironi-

eling because the vast grids of cells that separately calculate

as it sounds. That's be-

cally, such an effort to better understand the threat of cli-

local effects like cloud forma-

beekeepers then split their surviving colonies to start

tions, wind, pressure and other variables can be calculated

mate change could actually contribute to global warming. without great accuracy. "I see it as a necessary tool If such a computer were built using today's technologies, a we need now to move the sciso-called exascale comput-

ence forward," said Tim Palm-

er would consume electricity equivalent to 200,000 homes and might cost $20 million or more annually to operate.

er, a University of Oxford climate physicist. "We can't do

For that reason, scientists planning the construction of

a lab experiment with the cli-

mate. We have to rely on these models which try to encode the complexity of the climate,

these ultrafast machines have and today we are constrained been stalled while they wait by the size of computers." for yet-to-emerge low-power Palem says the technologies computing techniques capable used to build current superof significantly reducing the computers will be too costly to power requirements for an ex-

create acomputer capable of

ascale computer. Developing such t e c hniques, however, has been particularly vexing because virtually every aspect of designing faster computers consumes more electricity and

an exaflop — a billion billion

shortcut.

of 30 megawatts. But Andreas

He has been stirring debate among computer architects by arguing that a

Bechtolsheim, a high-performance computerand network designer, noted that based on

com p u ter current technology, that would

design approach — one that he originally proposed to give smartphones longer battery life — can also be used to build faster and less power-hungry supercomputers. Palem says his method of-

cause aftera colony dies,

require a tenfold improvement over today's most efficient

designs. Palem has been imploring the computing world to back

away from its romance with precision for more than a de-

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al cooperation is crucial for like weather and climate mod- realizing the infrastructure eling are generally, inherently they need to do cutting-edge inexact," Palem said. "We've science," he wrote. "It is time to shown that using inexact recognize that climate prediccomputation techniques need tion is 'big science' of a similar not degrade the quality of the league." weather-climate simulation." Palem's effort r e ceived

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and compute the equations. his computer architecture Current climate models used ideas will be applicable. "Inexact computing works

sizes of about 100 kilometers, well for mobile applications representing the climate for where the consequence of that area of Earth's surface. choosing incorrectly is low," To more accurately predict the said John Shalf, department long-term impact of c l imate

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pesticides are to blame for the bee deaths. USDA bee scientist Jeff Pettis said last

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Climate models use an im-

Delaplane and v a nEngelsdorp said a combination of mites, poor nutrition and

Dick Rogers, chief beekeeper for pesticide maker new ones, and the numsylvania, Maine and Wiscon- Bayer, said the loss figure is bers go back up again, sin all saw more than 60 per- "not unusual at all" and said said Delaplane and study cent of their hives die since the survey shows an end reco-author Dennis vanEnApril 2014, according to the sult of m ore colonies now gelsdorp of the University survey. than before: 2.74 million hives "Most of the major com- in 2015, up from 2.64 million of Maryland. What shocked the ento- mercial beekeepers get a in 2014. mologists is that is the first dark panicked look in their That doesn't mean bee time they've noticed bees eyes when they discuss these health is improving or stable, dying more in the sum- losses and what it means to vanEngelsdorp said. After mer than the winter, said their businesses," said Penn- they lose colonies, beekeepvanEngelsdorp. The sur- sylvania State U niversity ers are splitting their survivvey found beekeepers lost entomology professor Diana ing hives to recover their loss27.4 percent of their colo- Cox-Foster. She wasn't part es, pushing the bees to their nies this summer. That's of the study, but praised it. limits, Delaplane said.

fers a simple and straightforward path around the energy bottleneck. By stripping away

among some climate scientists. "Scientific calculations

"You just don't expect colonies to die at this rate in the summer." Oklahoma, Illinois, Iowa,

But it's not quite as dire

The Associated Press

calculations per second. Rath-

er, he argues, computing the rate of global warming may be possible with a new kind of computer that would use specialized low-power chips to generates more heat. Comsolve a portion of the problem. puter engineers now believe He describes his approach that sometime between 2020 as "inexact" computing. "This and 2023 is a likely arrival is a lower-energy way to comdate for the next generation of pute," he said. supercomputers. The stated goal of the enBut Krishna Palem, a com- gineers who are trying to deputer scientist at Rice Univer- sign anexascale computer is sity, believes he has found a to stay within a power budget

counterintuitive

Sources: Apiary Inspectors of America Bee Informed Partnership

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A4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

2016 ELECTIONS

Fallout after ABCanchor is found to have donated to Clinton group "If we're all supposed to anThe Associated Press because of the organization's ABC News anchor George work on global AIDS preven- swer hypothetical questions, Stephanopoulos will not mod- tion and deforestation, Steph- knowing what we know now, erate a Republican presiden- anopoulos said. what would you have done'?" tial debate next winter, part The network news diviBush said with a twinge of of the fallout after revelations sion said in a statement that annoyancewhile campaignthat the network's top political "we stand behind him." ing in Arizona. "I would have anchor contributed $75,000 Some Republicans have not engaged. I would nothave over a three-year period to the harbored long suspicions gone into Iraq." Clinton Foundation.

about Stephanopoulos be-

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It was an answer the for-

Stephanopoulos voluntarily cause of his past life as a top mer Florida governor and stepped away from the Feb. aide to Clinton during his likely Republican candidate 6 debate, ABC News spokes- 1992 presidential campaign for president had refused woman Heather Riley said and in the White House af- to give in several public apThursday. It is one of nine terward. Clinton's wife, for- pearances this week, even as debates sanctioned by the Re-

mer Secretary of State Hil-

most of his GOP rivals did so

publican National Committee. lary Clinton, is now running and criticized him for sideThe co-host of "Good Morn- forthe Democraticpresiden- stepping the question. ing America" and host of the tial nomination in 2016. Bush said Thursday his reSunday morning public affairs sistance was caused both by program "This Week" earlier Jeb Bush: No Iraqinvasion loyalty to his older brother, had apologized for not disclosAfter days of refusing to George W. Bush, who ordered ing his contributions to his em- say whether, with the benefit the invasion as president, and ployer and viewers. The three of hindsight, he would have to the families of those lost donations of $25,000 each in ordered the invasion of Iraq in the decadelong war. Bush 2012, 2013 and 2014were made in 2003, Jeb Bush relented said he had not spoken to his to the foundation set up by Thursday and said he would brother before talking about former President Bill Clinton not have invaded. Iraq on Thursday.

GMOs Continued from A1 The letter continued, "other companies are already lining up to take advantage of this service." Companies can already put their own GMO-free labels on foods, but there are no government labels that only certify a

food as GMO-free. Many companies use a private label developed by a nonprofit called the Non-GMO Project. The USDA organic label also certifies that foods are free of genetically modified ingredients, but many non-GMO foods ar-

en't organic.

V ilsack said t h e U S D A certification is being created

through the department's Agriculture Marketing Service,

'

bill, introduced by Rep. Mike Consumer advocates who Pompeo, R-Kan., provides for are pushing for mandatory voluntary USDA certification labeling say the voluntary and would override any state USDA labels aren't sufficient laws that require the label- to help c onsumers know ing. The food industry has what is in their food, arguing strongly backed Pompeo's that labels that are on some bill, arguing labels would be foods but not others could misleading because GMOs just lead to more confusion. are safe. Gary Hirshberg, chairman Pompeo said U S DA's of the Just Label It campaign move shows his approach is and co-founder of the organgathering support. ic yogurt company Stony"I look forward to working field Farm, said the labels with the secretary and with were a small step in the right my colleaguesin Congress direction but more is needed. "Mandatory labeling of to ensure that we come to the best possible policy to GMOs would allow consumprovide families in Kansas ers to vote with their dollars and America with clarity at and have a say in the type of the grocery store affordable agriculture they would like and abundant food supply," to see in this country," Hirshhe said. berg said.

Andy Tullie/The Bulletin

Kelly Madden, with the Deschutes Land Trust, leads Thursday's "history walk" through the Camp Polk

Meadow Preserve. The Hindman barn, some140 years old, and a cemetery sit on a camp built during a period of conflict between pioneers and Native Americans. Now a historical preserve, Camp Polk is about 5 miles northeast of Sisters.

History

tected from significant alter-

"We'd like to have it look

ations by land use laws. The the way it did," Madden said.

Continued from A1 Hindman barn was added to Madden stood in front of the the Deschutes County list of barn's haggard frame and de- historical sites in 1979.

Deschutes Land Trust hopes

to acquire grants that would help with straightening and scribed the importance of the Samuel andJane Hindman strengthening the decades-old structure to early settlers. s ettled at Camp Polk w i t h frame. "The timber is holding up their children in 1869. It soon Madden also led visitors to pretty good for 140 years," she became known as Hindman's Camp Polk Cemetery, origsard. Station and a post office was inally known as Hindman The meadow preserve gets established there in 1875. Cemetery, which was estabits name from Capt. Charles Madden said the Camp Polk lished in 1880. Lafollett and a group of 40 area had a store, lodging, placMadden leads a tour of the soldiers w h o est a b lished es to get a meal and feed for cemetery every October and Camp Polk there in October animals. The store sold match- recruits friends to portray the 1865. The soldiers named it es, salt, meat, coffee and work historical figures buried there after their home, Polk Counshirts. and tell their stories based on ty. They intended to protect Hindman built a b r idge written accounts. commerce and travelers who spanning the Deschutes RivA story she shared Thursfeared N a t iv e A me r i can er, but by 1878 travelers were day recounts the death of a attacks. crossing Whychus Creek near 19-year-old cowboy in Sisters "Nobody really k n o ws present-day Sisters on their in 1905 who was reportedwhere their camp was or what way to Tetherow Crossing. ly kicked in the head by his it looked like," Madden said. The post office was moved to horse. "No one ever knew his T he s oldiers s p ent s i x Sisters in 1888. "Camp Polkbegan to fade name and his gravestone says, m onths at t h e c a m p a n d 'cowboy kicked by horse,'" helped clear wagon roads by 1890," Madden said. through the Cascades, but latThe Hindman house was Madden read from a historical er abandoned the area. torn down in 1960. Although account. Historically de s i gnated still standing, the barn is in — Reporter 541-617-7820 structuresin Oregon are pro-

need of restoration.

tshorach@bendbulletin.com

which works with interested

companies to certify the accuracy of the claims they are making on food packages — think "humanely raised" or "no antibiotics ever." Companies pay the Agricultural Marketing Service to verify a claim, and if approved, they can market the foods with the

USDA process verified label. "Recently, a leading global company askedAMS to help verify that the corn and soybeans it uses in its products are not genetically engineered so that the company could label the products as such," Vilsack wrote in the letter. "AMS

worked with the company to develop testing and verification processes to verify the

non-GE claim." Genetically modified foods come fromseedsthatare originally engineered in laboratories to have certain traits, like resistance to herbicides. The

majority of the country's corn and soybean crop is now genetically modified, with much of that going to animal feed.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

Chemical

grams, identified the contents

request for the documents related to the soldiers' exposure.

But instead of finding the Army concerned or committed

multiple industrial uses.

belated release, but also anger

to their well-being, they faced years of shifting stories about whatexactlyhadmade themill. Earlier this year, the Pentagon adopted guidelines for screening hundreds of veterans who were exposed to chemical weapons in Iraq. And last week, after requests by the Times, the Army declassified a two-page document that appears to answer the veterans' first question:

calledthe compound"a carcin-

Continued from A1

What was in the barrels?

as benzenamine 3,4-dimethyl, an organic compound with Inboldface letters, the report ogen and poisonous chemical." When asked why the Army had not shared its information

for more than a decade, Brad Carson, an acting undersec-

Continued from A1 Redmond School District's proposed general fund budget is nearly $70 million, up from $64.2 million that was approved for 2014-15. Still, the proposed

budget would mean less state money per student than in the current year and would not allow the district to add two days back to teachers' contracts that were cut during the recession.

and a sense of vindication after having been what he called

"slow-rol led"foryears.

rA>

"The government knew beyond doubt that it was toxic

E

and failed to inform and prop-

retary of defense, who led the

erly treat the troops, and kept that information from them for

Pentagon's review of chemical casualties, said he was at a

a decade-plus," Marcello said. "There is no denying this now."

loss, beyond the fact that the

Thomas Blanton, director of

CHEVROLE T

Iraq Survey Group was not in the National Security Archive, the Army's chain of command, which advocates open governwhich may have limited the in- ment, said the government's formation flow. "All I can do is refusal to share its information

The document,a site sur- level with them now," Carson vey report written after liquid said of the veterans. samples were tested by the One of them, former Sgt. 1st Iraq Survey Group, the task Class Dennis Marcello, had force organized by the Penta- been fighting for the records gon and the CIA to examine since 2009, when he first filed Iraq's special weapons pro- a Freedom of Information Act

Revenue

He expressed gratitude at the

crecytrumpingcommon sense. "Soldiers exposed to something really dangerous cannot find out what it was because 'Sorry it's classified'?" he said. "It's creepy and it's crazy."

,

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Central Ore on's Exclusive Buick-GMC Dealer I

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sued to taxpayers in the form

of a credit on their 2016 state Continued from A1 tax returns. Under Oregon's kicker law, State economist Mark Mcif state income tax collections Mullen said at the current pace exceed forecasts by more than of tax collection the kicker 2 percent,the diff erence be- would be equal to 6.7 percent tween collections and the fore- of state income tax owed — tax cast — the kicker — is refund- filers would get a $67 discount ed to tax filers. for every $1,000 owed. A 2012 ballot measure approved by voters modified the Strong economy? kicker law in regard to corpoAlso Thursday, the Office of rate income taxes, with any Economic Analysis issued its corporate kicker instead dedi- forecast for the upcoming twocated to the state school fund. year budget cycle, between Under the newest projections, this July 1 and June 30 of 2017. the corporate kicker will add The forecast anticipates in-

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ness development at Exelis Inc., which provides night-vision technology, said in an email. "New markets only occasionally open up," Adams said. "There was obvious interest from both the U.S. and

of International Studies in Sin-

Vietnamese side."

station.

Vietnam's military will be eager to buy spare parts for

willing to get them whatever

and forth between American U.S. military aircraft left becompanies and their potential hind after the war, Tuong Vu, Vietnamese clients," said Vu an associateprofessor of poTu Thanh, chief Vietnam rep- litical science at the Univerresentative of the U.S.-ASEAN sity of Oregon, said. Vietnam Business Council, who attend- will spend one or two years ed the daylong symposium. reviewing what the U.S. has "There is a surge of interest to offer and what fits with the among American defense country's current systems, Tucontractors." ong sald. "They got the ban lifted and More than a dozen defense companies, including Boeing, they have started shopping for BAE Systems, Lockheed Mar- weapons," he said. "The militin and H oneywell Interna- tary is especially happy about tional were invited to the April

that."

U.S. firms in Vietnam," U.S.

tensions with China, accord-

embassy spokeswoman Lisa Wishman said in an email. Vietnam's procurement of defense equipment is in line with its policy of pursuing "peace and self-defense," Le Hai Binh, foreign ministry spokesman, said in an email.

ing to an April report by the

gapore, said by phone. Russia supplies Vietnam with planes and submarines — the third of

six kilo-class submarines was delivered in January — and is helping build a nuclear-power

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boats and communications C hina placed an oil r i g systems, Thanh said. in the South China Sea last "Any defense related sales M ay near the Paracel islands to Vietnam will follow devel- claimed by b ot h c ountries, opment of U.S. government triggering a diplomatic row. policy on Vietnam," Boeing Its work to create artificial isspokesman Jay Krishnan said lands in the region, with satelin an email. "We believe Boe- lite photos showing dredgers ing has capabilities in mobility reclaiming land in seven arand intelligence surveillance eas, has drawn criticism from Vietnam and other countries. Still, Vietnam, which has

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technology such as advanced surveillance systems, he said. "The Vietnamese do have short-range surveillance systems on its coast," Koh said.

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hinder efforts to sell systems to Vietnam, whose human rights record has been crit-

icized by members of Conbudget jumped 9.6 percent in gress,Wezeman said. More 2014 to $4.3 billion, it said. than 150 dissidents are deThe U.S. is providing Viet- tained in Vietnam, according nam with six patrol boats, part to Human Rights Watch. of an $18 million military aid V ietnam f a ces a st e e p "This activity reflects a tru- package. learning curve on how to ly normal development of the Vietnam is expected to navigatethe complex process comprehensive partnership continue its pace of military of purchasing U.S. military between the two countries," spending,Siemon Wezeman, equipment, Murray Hiebert, a Binh said. "It's not contrary to a seniorSipriresearcher,said Washington-based senior felinternational laws nor harms by phone. "Its economy is not low at the Center for Strategic p eace and stability in t he in acrisis and there are secu- and International Studies, said region." rity issues," he said. "They are in an email. Companies made pitches increasing." The Hanoi symposium prousing PowerPoint presentavided U.S. companies with an

Territorial tensions

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"Russia has always been

22 event, according to the Vietnam's military spend- Humanrights concerns agenda for the meeting. "The ing has risen 128 percent since The U.S. places conditions symposium sought to promote 2005, reflecting its territorial on weapons sales which could Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. Its defense

$24,63r7

that their bullish expectations

Continued from A1 The April roadshow, organized by the U.S. embassy, follows Washington's easing of curbs on sales of nonlethal defense systems to Vietnam

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stood up and asked, 'Can you tell us the annual defense bud-

long relied on Russia for weap- get?' The general at the podions, is unlikely to become a um said, 'I know it, but I can't by "multiple top-ten defense major U.S. client, Collin Koh, tell you.'"

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procurement process, Thanh said. There were one-on-one huddles between company representatives and officials from the defense ministry, though no deals were announced, Thanh said. "It was very businesslike,"

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The meeting was attended

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an associateresearch fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School

and reconnaissanceplatforms that may meet Vietnam's mod-

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w as a caseofthe habits of se-

tee is set to vote on the propos- cy calls for," she said. Superintendent M i c hael al Wednesday before it heads — Reporter: 541-617-7837, McIntosh said Thursday's re- to the school board. aspegman@bendbulletin.com

GNC

I

II


Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

BRIEFING RPAstudent injured in fight A student was injured during an altercation involving a knife at Redmond Proficiency Academy onThursday morning, according to Executive Director Jon Bullock. In a statement from the RedmondSchool District, Communications Coordinator Kelly Richard wrote that Redmond Police andRPA staff responded to the fight at 7:45 a.m., at the

en acesun e un e s ree s • Biennial budgetto be adopted in June By Tyler Leeds

effort was scheduled to wrap up Thursday night, with presentations on city administration, including human

The Bulletin

The Bend City Council

and Budget Committee spent hours Thursday night trying to find more money in the city's proposed 2015-17 bud-

resources, IT and the city

manager's office. The focus of the night, however, was on

get for street maintenance.

streets. City Manager Eric

The group has been meeting for the past three days to review the proposed $630 million biennial budget. The

King insisted he and his financestaffhad done asmuch as they could to get more

deteriorating streets. However, as press time ap-

proached, the group was discussing the possibility of cutting general fund reserves by $2 million, which would drop reserves from 25 percent of the entire fund to 20 percent. Mayor Jim Clinton, however,

see now," King said, referencing the $14 million set aside for street maintenance in the biennial budget. "We got our reserve funds down to the minimum and gave more to streets. We've gone

opposed this measure, saying such discussions could and should play out at a later

through this thoroughly to give as much to streets as possible." The quality of Bend's streets is declining based on

time. Instead, he proposed

a federal standard and cur-

accepting the budget as is.

rently rank as poor. As the roads decline, repair costs

"It was less than what you

money to patch up the city's

Hugh Hartman Campus on West Antler Avenue in Redmond. "During the altercation, one student brandished a brokenpiece of a small pocket knife, causing minor injuries to the other student," according to the statement. The wounded student was taken byambulance to St. Charles Bend,and a crisis response team has beenactivated for students and staff who might need counseling. Redmond Police are investigating the incident, and the student who used aknife was taken into police custody, according to anearlier statement distributed through the school's social media accounts.

The cost of a trip to Crater LakeNational Park is going up. The Oregonian reports that Oregon's full-service national park has charged a $10entrance fee per vehicle since 1997.Last fall officials proposed raising the fee to$25 but the public protested. Instead officials will gradually increase the price. Officials say they will bump up the price by $5 today, with more increases in 2017and 2018.

The cost to walk, bike or ride a motorcycle into the park will rise Friday to $10, a $5 increase. Park officials plan to raise those fees in 2017 as well. The cost of an annual pass, now $20, will grow to $30 today and to $40 in 2017. The increased revenue will help maintain parking areasandtrails.

— From wire reports

The City Council is mulling a 5 cents per gallon fuel tax that could generate about $2.5 million annually, based on early staff estimates.

However, Councilor Casey Roats noted such a proposal, which must be approved by voters, would face "strong, organized opposition." SeeBudget/B2

sewer and •

water rates going Llp

By Ted Shorack The Bulletin

The La Pine City Council voted Wednesday to

adopt new sewer and water ratestructures aswellas fee increases that will be-

gin July 1. The changes mark an overhaul to the two utilities the city took over in 2012 from the La Pine Water District and La Pine Special Sewer District.

Drought Council backs Deschutes

Fee increasing at Crater Lake

maintenance.

La Pine's

— Bulletin staff report

The state Drought Council has endorsed seven more county drought declarations and sent them on to the governor. Water Resources Department spokeswoman Racquel Rancier says the council on Thursday forwarded drought declarations from Deschutes, Grant, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Morrow and Umatilla counties to the governor's office. The governor's declaration allows increased flexibility in how water is managed to ensure that limited supplies are used asefficiently as possible. According to the state Water Resources Department website, 14 of Oregon's 36 counties have declared drought disasters, and the governor has followed up with declarations in seven of them. Federal declarations, which make it possible to apply for drought loans and aid payments, have been made in15 counties.

rise exponentially, according to city staff. The city has about $80 million in deferred

The city first presented the changes in public meetings earlier this year. The water rate will increase by 3 percent and the sewer

rate by 10 percent beginning in July. City councilors and Mayor Ken Mulenex expressed approval for the changes at a meeting in February. City Manager Rick Allen

I t~ 'I

-

. c..

said Thursday the new system for both water and

t

k"-

: il ~

2

sewer is based on flow and usage instead of a flat rate. "That's more of a tra-

e

I

ditional way and you pay for what you use, and it's

Billie Johnson, owner of Windy Acres Dairy, looks over her cows Thursday afternoon in a field northwest of Prineville. Windy Acres sells

a more equitable system," Allen said. The first monthly bill with the changes could increase or decrease for La

raw cow milk through a herdshare program. Johnson also sells raw sheep milk to cheesemakers.

Pine residents in compari-

• Milk producersin Central Oregon say they've donewell without muchmarketing

*

e

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

By Beau Eastes The Bulletin

U.S. District Court against the Oregon Department of

After years of what they

Agriculture after officials told

say was a raw deal, Oregon raw milk producers can final-

her to take down milk prices

ly hawk their products out in

the open. On Wednesday, Gov. Kate Brown signed a bill that allows dairies to advertise the sale of raw milk. One of 30 states that permits the sale of

unpasteurized milk, Oregon had a law on the books from the 1950s that banned farms

from advertising raw milk. In 2013, though, Christine Anderson of Cast Iron Farm in McMinnville filed suit in

from Cast Iron's website. Anderson and the Department

of Agriculture negotiated a settlement in February 2014

in which the state stopped prosecuting farms that advertised their raw milk and

promised to change the law in the future. Anderson in turn dropped her lawsuit. "This lends some validity to the benefits of raw milk," Jeff Severson, a small-acreage farmer who owns and runs

Hope Springs Dairy in Tum-

First Amendment rights, but

son with the current fees. The new fixed rates, established Wednesday, are based on meter size. The metersvary and determine

the research and see if raw

that they've done just fine

how much water can be

milk is the right decision for

without much of an advertis-

them."

ing budget. "We make a pretty good product and so word of mouth

distributed to a household or business. Aprice is

alo, which sells raw cow and

goat milk, said Thursday. "It might help some people start

appreciate the change in the law and its protection of their

Supporters of raw milk claim it has a higher nutritional content than pasteurized works for us," said Travis milk, helps with digestion and Kalebaugh of Kalebaugh tastes tremendous. Critics Family Farm, a small farm counter that unseen bacteria on Deschutes Market Road and parasites can make the between Bend and Redmond. milk unsafe. Raw milk cannot "We have a waiting list all be sold in stores in Oregon. the time, sometimes with as "More and more people many as 20 or 30 names on it." "I go more on my reputaare learning about raw milk," Severson said. "They're distion," added Billie Johnson of

assigned to the meter size,

and a charge based on the volume of water used is added. The changes were proposed after a rate study was conducted for the two utihties. Allen said an

additional study is being done on the city's system development charges for

covering for themselves that

Wind Acres Dairy northwest

new construction. Recommendations from that

the facts and statistics don't

of Prineville. "My word is

study could lead to future

add up in favor of the scare tactics."

spread from current herd-

changes to the water and

share members to the next herdshare members."

sewer charges.

Severson and other local raw milk advocates say they

SeeMilk/B2

— Reporter: 541-617-782O, tshorach@bendbullettn.com

DeschutesCounty prepsreturned ballots for Election Day By Kailey Fisicaro The Bulletin

In smaller elections, processing ballots can be less hectic for the Deschutes Coun-

N@,= MAY19 ~

ELE CTION

bentlbulletin.com/electiens

ty Clerk's Office. But in some respects, staff wishes that

have greatly improved in the

wasn't the case.

lastfew years, afterthe state

If processing is hectic, that decided to let "early scanning" means more ballots have been take place — Deschutes Counreturned and more voters

ty scans votes on returned

have participated. That's what Deschutes County Clerk Nan-

ballots the Fridaybefore Elec-

cy Blankenship wants to see.

tion Day. Still, the machine is locked down so that as it

The office began processcollects the information, the ing ballots this week so they clerk's office cannot export are ready to begin scanning the totals until Election Day; through the tabulator maDeschutes County waits to do chines today, the Fridaybefore that until 8 p.m. Tuesday's election. Things It used to be that by about

Ballot returns Returns by county, as of Thursday Creek County: 17.89 percent neschutes County: 12.2 percent Jefferson County: 21.28 percent 8 p.m. on Election Day, only 10 to 15 percent of returned ballots had been scanned in

Deschutes County; now, by 8 p.m. it's usually about 40 percent. See Ballots /B5

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Election workers look over ballots and prepare them for counting Thursday morning at the Deschutes County Clerk's Office in Bend. The deadline for ballots to be received is 8 p.m. Tuesday.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

REGON

ou ove urns

mi ion BwBF Of i'e on so Iefs By Steven Dubois The Associated Press

P ORTLAND — T h e 9 t h U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned an $ 8 5 m i l l ion

jury award to a dozen Oregon National Guard soldiers who

said they were sickened from guarding a water treatment plant during the Iraq War. The military c ontractor Kellogg, Brown and Root successfull y argued that Oregon was not the proper jurisdiction for the case. KBR is based in Houston, and similar cases

filed by soldiers from Indiana, West Virginia and South Carolina are pending in federal court there. "We are thrilled with the result; it is the right result and

we look forward to a successful conclusion to this and all the legacy tort claims that re-

late to KBR's work supporting the U.S. military in Iraq," KBR

attorney Geoffrey Harrison said by phone Thursday.

The three-judge panel heard oral arguments May 4 in Port-

low the rules. That's what we KBR witnesses testified that do." the soldiers' maladies resulted land and came back with a A federal jury in Portland from desert air and pre-exsurprisingly fast d ecision. found KBR guilty of negli- isting conditions. And even The brief opinion only ad- gence after a three-week trial ifthe soldiers were exposed dressed the question of juris- in late 2012. Each of the 12 sol- to sodium dichromate, they diction, and it found an insuf- diers was awarded $850,000 weren't around enough of it, ficient link between KBR and in noneconomic damages for long enough, to cause seriOregon. and $6.25 million in punitive ous health problems. The opinion mentions two damages. Rocky Bixby, one of the Orpossibilities for what comes U.S. District Court Judge egon soldiers, said his health next: Either the case is disPaul Papak acknowledged hasn't improved since the 2012 missed and then refiled in before the trial that the losing verdict. He said he has coughan appropriate venue, pre- side was likely to appeal. ing fits, lung problems, depressumably Texas, or it's simply KBR reconstructed the wa- sion and post-traumatic stress transferred there. ter treatment center shortly disorder. "We beat them in federal The plaintiffs could also afterthe March 2003 invasion ask the full court to review the while National Guardsmen court on the merits of the case case. defended the area. and now we have to retry it Mike Doyle, the lead attorThe soldiers said they had again," he said. "It's frustratney for the soldiers, said he respiratory ailments after ing that the appellate court will take a few days before their exposure to sodium di- basically threw out our whole deciding the next step. He chromate, a c orrosive sub- case." said KBR was fully able to de- stance used to keep pipes at The case has been going fend itself in Oregon, so it was the water plant free of rust. on since 2009. "I don't know tough to lose on jurisdictional Moreover, they feared a car- how many of us will survive to grounds. cinogen found in sodium di- the end of this, but we'll push "But that's the law," he said. chromate could cause cancer through and see what hap"We'll follow the law; we'll fol- later in life. pens," Bixby said.

AROUND THE STATE WOman dieSafter prOpOSal —AGrants Passwomanwaskiled in a car crashhours after accepting her boyfriend's wedding proposal at WhalesheadBeach.TheGrants PassDaily Courier reports that 28-yearold Melissa Hudsondied Sundayandher newfiance, JakeZeliff, was seriously injured whenthe 2002 Jeep they weredriving veered into the left-hand turn laneandcollided head-on with anoncoming Lexus on the RedwoodHighway inGasquet, California. Hudson waspronounced dead shortly after being transported to Sutter CoastHospital in Crescent City, Califonia, andZeliff remains in stable but serious condition following surgery for a brain injury at OregonHealth ScienceUniversity in Portland. BrandonRandow,whowas driving the Lexus, sustained moderate injuries andwastreated at Sutter Coast Hospital. Rape aCquittal —Pendleton jury has sided with a state social worker who prevented aMilton-Freewater man from returning home after he wasacquitted of raping his daughter. The East Oregonian reports that Randell Kerbysuedsocial worker GayDavis after the 2011 acquittal, saying she violated his civil rights. Kerby said thejury's decision in favor of Davis onTuesday is anexample of government workers being untouchable.Thefederal lawsuit and asubsequent civil trial beganwhenDavis confronted Kerby inthe courthouse parking lot moments after a jury found himnot guilty of multiple sexcrimes against his adopteddaughter. Daviswarned Kerby that hecould face consequences if hereturned homebecause state humanservices still considered him a threat to his children. PubliC iudeCehClf —Police arrested a health care executive accused of masturbating in acar parkedoutside aBi-Mart store in Woodburn. A city spokesmansaid Rick Cagen,64, the president and CEO of Silverton Health, wastaken to jail Thursday after hewasarrested on one count of public indecency.Thejail website lists Cagen's bail at $5,000 andsayshis initial court appearance is Friday. Car arSOu —Police said they believe several car fires in Hillsboro were set on purpose.Ragswere stuffed into the gas tanks of at least six cars and lit on fire. Theybelieve the fires are all connected. Police called in a K-9 unit to search but did not find anysuspects. — From wire reports

Man accusedot abdLjcting California girl arrested onOregoncoast The Associated Press

Beach, The Daily Astorian

The man is accused of abducting the girl Saturday in Sanger, California. She reabducting a 15-year-old Cali- investigation of offenses in- portedly thought she was fornia girl he met online, sexu- cluding first-degree kidnap- meeting an 18-year-old man. ally assaulting her and finally ping, first-degree rape and The man left her Monday eveletting her go in Oregon was first-degree sexual abuse. He ning at a fast-food restaurant arrested Thursday by police had been sought on a nation- in Astoria. and FBI agents on the north wide felony warrant. Police say a passer-by spotOregon coast. Deviney was expected to ted the man in a privately Russell Wayne Deviney, 48, appear today in Clatsop Coun- owned wooded area south of ASTORIA — A n E v erett, reported. Washington, man accused of The man was arrested for

was arrested near Cannon

ty Circuit Court.

Milk

The bill Brown signed intolaw only changes the advertising restrictions on raw milk and does not lift Oregon's limited direct sales ordinances.

Continued from B1 While onsite sales of raw

Cannon Beach. When authori-

milk sales are allowed in the

state for farms with fewer than "three cows, nine sheep,

The bill Brown signed into law Wednesday only changes including H op e S p r ings, the advertising restrictions on Kalebaugh Family Farm and raw milk and does not lift OrWindy A cres, utilize herd- egon's limited direct sales orshares. In herdshare pro- dinances. The regulations surgrams, consumers typically rounding raw milk, though, pay a monthly fee for raw milk have done little to wean Cenproduced from cows they own tral Oregon consumers off collectively with other herd- their love of raw milk. or nine goats," most farms,

share members. What con-

sumers do with their own milk is entirely up to them.

"When I

f i r s t s t arted, I

didn't know anything about the laws," Kalebaugh said.

"I put a sign at the end of the

ties asked his name, the newspaper said he replied, "I'm the guy you're looking for." Court documents say the girl had spoken on Instagram with someone she thought was a teenager called "JR."

with an overnight bag and went to meet her online con-

tact. When she first encountered the man, he was wearing a hood, hiding his face. He eventuallyacknowledged he w as older, thedocuments said. She told investigators she had The girl told investigators been upset with her mother that the man received a phone last Friday and told "JR," who call Monday from police. suggested they take a one-day Court papers said he parked vacation. She left her home his pickup at a McDonald's in

Astoria, collected his belongings and left. The girl walked inside and said she had been abducted.

• 30 YearsExperience

• Honesta Fair • No iob Toosmall • State-of-the-ArtComputerDiagnostics

2449 Cady Way • 54I-389-38I5

Colors of Summer ... let the Fun begin!

property before I got cows, advertising fresh, raw Jersey cow milk. In the first week I

had 52 calls. Two were from the county saying I couldn't have the sign, but I was off and running after that. I took the

sign down, got the cows and havebeen going likemad ever since." — Reporter: 541-617-7829, beastes@bendbulletitt.com

Colorit Hot

Budget Continued from B1 On 'Itresday, Jeff Eager, an attorney and former Bend mayor, sent the council and Budget

Committee a letter opposing the tax on behalf of eight fuel businesses in town, including Space Age Fuel and Arco. Clinton pointed out the city has one of the lowest property tax rates in the state, "and if the community wants better streets, they should step up and

sibility, fire and transit, such we really need to move up our as the bus service provided by plan and look at a new downCascades East Transit. town campus," King said. "Our King noted such an ap- current City Hall, the conproach would largely be felt by straints of the council champolice, who receive the lion's bers, having to lease buildings share of the general fund. The and having people in different one additional police position locations, it's becoming a chalallocated in the proposed bud- lenge. We need a long-term get, King said, would likely solution, this piecemeal aphave to be cut if Chudowsky's proach is not working." plan were followed. King said he doesn't anticDuring the meeting, there ipate any construction occurwas also a discussion about ring in the upcoming biennithe future of city government um, but the City Councilshould buildings. be ready to begin planning for While it doesn't appear as new facilities. King added he a line item on the budget, the envisions a new d owntown city has "significant facilities campus developed through a needs," King said, referenc- public-privatepartnership. ing that City Hall staffers are The City Council is schedsplayed across multiple down- uled to adopt the budget in June.

pay for it." Councilor Victor Chudowsky suggested creating a contingency budget in the event voters reject a fuel tax. One of his ideas included "shaving" a few million worth of funds from every program reserving general town annexes. "Over the next two years, fund dollars, exduding acces-

Cozy warmth of a Fire Pit

AqColorit Mellow

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tfeeds@bendbulletin.com

Relax with your Family

NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update Items In the Police Logwhensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges oracquittal, must beverifiable. For moreinformation, call 541-633-2117.

BEMD POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported at2:33 p.m.May 7,inthe2500 blockofNEU.S. Highway 20. Theft —Atheft was reported at12:46 p.m. May8, in the2100block of NEU.S. Highway 20. Burglary — Aburglary wasreported at 6:53 p.m. May10, inthe 20900block of Desert WoodsDrive.

Burglary — Aburglary wasreported at 10:07 p.m.May11, inthe100 block of NW HawthorneAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:32 p.m. May12, in the2300blockof NE Atherton Court. Theft —Atheft was reported at 2:55 p.m. May12, in the2300blockof NE Atherton Court. Theft —Atheftwas reported at910 p.m. May12, in the1800blockof NE Division Street. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at8:07 a.m.May 13, in the900block of NEWiest Way. Theft —Atheft was reported at4:34 p.m. May7, Inthe1700blockofSE Tempest Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at8:37 p.m. May12, in the21200block of U.S. Highway 20.

Colorit Fun

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT Vehicle crash — An accident was reported at10:33 a.m.May13, inthe area of NE Loper Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at8:03 p.m.May 13, in theareaof SEJuniper Street.

BEND FIRE RUNS Wednesday 7:48a.m. — Passengervehicle fire, U.S. Highway 97nearmilepost129. 2:07p.m. — Unauthorized burning, 62888 MontaraDrive. 22 —Medical aid calls.

Entertain your Friends

Patio World 222 SE Reed Market Road - Bend 541-388-0022 PatioWorldBend.com

Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 Sun 10-5


FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

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1881 NWHarfford Ave. Main level mastersuite Open great roomplan Stylish finishes Large recreation room 8520>000

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e arner rou

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his is a stylistic representation of homes for sale by Harcouils The GarnerGroupReal Estate. Locations on the map maynot be entirely accurat .


B4

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EDj To

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o one pretends that Oregon's new clean fuel standard is going to slow or stop global climate change. Gov. Kate Brown says she supported the standard, but not because it would actually achieve any-

ir

thing on climate change. She says she is committed to the goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and California and Washington are doing things, so Oregon should hold up its end of the bargain. tdO t f thi

Raise the speed limit On some highways

O

regon lawmakers are considering a measure, House Bill 3402, which would raise speed limits on Interstate 84 east of The Dalles and several other highways east of the Cascades. It should be approved. The new limit would be 70 miles per hour for most vehicles on Interstate 84 and on U.S. Highway 95 fromthe Idahoborder to the Nevada border.In this area,U.S. Highway 97 from its junction with U.S. 197 in Wasco Countyto Klamath Falls and U.S. 20 from Bend to Ontario would see speed limits raised to 65 miles per hour for most drivers. Speed limits also would increase to 65 mph on highways from La Pine to southern Lake County, from Burns Junction in southern Malheur County northwest to Burns, from John Day to Burns and Riley to the Californiaborder, from Burns to Frenchglen and, finally, from John Day east to Vale. The Oregon Department of Transportation does not support the bill, in part, it says, because it will make highways more dangerous. That may be true, but only if one as-

~g

g o vernment take action to protect consumers'?

There's no guarantee. SB 324 has united Republicans in the Legislature. To oppose it, they createda roadblock to something the state actually needs: a transportation package of road and About the only guarantee is that bridge improvements. They say the standard will make costs at the theyaren'tgoingto budge.The govgas PumP go uP " ernor has been trying to negotiate a How much'? compromise. A few cents'? A lot of cents'? NoBro w n should get Oregon what body knows. it needs, not what feels good. WhatSenateBi11324doesisreOregon'sclean fuels standard quire distributors to lower the car- gets government more involved in bon intensity of vehicle fuel by 10 p icking winners and losers in the percent over the next decade. That energy market when the benefits doesn't make fuel cheaper. of the standard are questionable. It There are supposed to be protec- should be repealed or substantially tions in place to shield Oregonians altered to allow the transportation from price spikes, but will state p ackagetomoveforward.

sumes most motorists are obeying the current 55 mph speed limit. We suspect they're not. Personal experience leads us to believe that while most motorists in eastern Oregon try to keep their speed comfortably under 70, few actually spend much time at the designated 55mph. But there's more to ODOT's complaint than just safety. In written testimony submitted to the House Committee on Transportation and Economic Development, ODOT officials noted that they have statutory power to raise speed limits, had looked at the idea and decided not to. Nothing in the intervening 11 yearshas changed offi cials'm inds. Again, however, there's the reality of what is happening today. If most motorists are driving at 65, raising the speed limit and enforcing the higher limit would not m ake highways more dangerous in the future. That makes more sense than continuing to allow thousands of Oregonianstobecome lawbreakers every time they get behind the wheel of the family car.

W at to o a outsc oo s By BobMarkland JanetStevens'recent column on

IN MY VIEW

school board elections was short of the mark. While she points out

influence our state leaders who ultimately are responsible for funding

some inherent, and rather obvious, schools across the state. concerns around uncontested elecAdvocate, every year, for intions, she misses the opportunity creased community-wide support to address what specific direction of our schools via the local option our local group of elected leaders tax. The topic receives regular, albemight take in the future to bolster it armchair, discussion but always public education in our community. seems to run into a wall when disWhile Stevens takes a stab at iden- trict officials caution against it due to tifying problems that might arise public polls. Whether or not it passes, when school boards lose touch with it offers the board a clear opportunithe community they represent, she tyto demonstrate their keen desire to offers little in the way of concrete ex- find additional financial assistance amples as to whether or not that's the for local schools. If they're not willcase currently. Bend school boards ing to place some responsibility on have run the gamut frombad to good our citizenry simply because it may over the last 30 years. I would sug- not besuccessfulis passive leadergest the current board falls in the de- ship, atbest. Bring the effort forward cent category with the ability to im- if only to demonstrate the dire finanprove. And to that end, here's a short list of opportunities for Bend-La Pine

Ensure quality hiring of proven

creating "world class" schools. While the term

has a nice ring, the simple truth is that our schools

struggle with inadequate funding to sustain our current education needs. local teachers and their families. During the past 20 years of educational reform efforts, teachers have

become mired down in the seemingly endless efforts of state and national politicians to legislate student

achievement. It seems a noble intention but unfortunately has tied the hands of staff and students to do the

meaningful work that has allowed our society to become the social,

our current education needs. Seek

wants to live in Bend. While that

out speaking and writing opportu- might be true to some extent, teachnities to help local citizens under- ers working in the Portland region stand the critical need to increase are not likely to take significant pay the tax money spent on students' cuts just to live in this town. The education. Without proper financial board needs to recognize that atinvestment, it's next to impossible tracting outstandingteachers means to attract the type of high perform- competing with other districts in ing teachers needed to move in the terms of salaries. In 2014, Bend direction of world class. The board ranked 41st when it came to top-end needs to help our community under- salary offerings. We ranked 80th for stand what they can do to promote starting salaries. We need to be in local schools. They should be setting the top 10 for both. a more public example of how to Do everythingpossible to promote

P.L. Thomas of Furman University so eloquently put it, "It's time to put

aside the failed pursuit of accountability, the corrosive insistence on rigor, and the dehumanizing commitment to standardization."

The board's number one priority should be to provide students and

teachers the tools and resources they need to be successful. — Bob Markland is current president of the Bend Education Association and has taught in the Bend-La Pine Schools for25years.He livesin 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 TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

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

Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

Fax: 541-385-5804

o i n a r e u ees

I visited these camps last year and

ne of the world's most beautiful

O

regions, the seas of Southeast Asia — hometo sparklingwhite NICHOLAS beaches and $7,000-a-night beach vilKRISTOF las — is becoming a scene of a mass atrocity. Thousands of refugees from the persecuted Rohingya minority in are towing these people out from their Myanmar, fleeing modern concentra- shoresback toopen sea,which is tantamount to mass murder."

in boats, and many have drowned. One appalling chapter of World Fearing a crackdown, smugglers have War II came when the SS St. Louis abandoned some of those boats at sea, left Germany in 1939 full of Jewish and neighboring countries are push- refugees fleeing the Nazis. Cuba and ing the boats back to sea when theytry the United States barred them from toland. disembarking, and — after passing so The Obama administration, which close to Miami that passengers could has regarded Myanmar as one of its see the lights on shore — the ship rediplomatic successes, is largely un- turned to Europe, where many died in helpful as this calamityunfolds. the Holocaust. "The Andaman Sea isabout to beNow refugees fleeing concentration come a floating mass grave, and it's camps are again denied landfall. "We're talking about a flotilla of St. because of the failure of governments, including our own, to do what is nec- Louises, and people are going to die," essary," says Tom Andrews, a former Andrews told me. member of Congress who ispresident Rohingyas are a Muslim minority of United to End Genocide. "Not only reviled by the majority Buddhist popis there not a search-and-rescue oper- ulation in Myanmar. The government ation going on right now — with thou- has confined some 150,000 of them sands outto sea — but governments

cial needs of our district.

Lose the fixation on

School Board members to consider educators. Great schools are typical- political and economic leader of the in the coming two or three years. ly filled with great teachers. For too world. It didn't happen by accident Lose the f ixation on c r eating many years the district has fooled and the art of teaching and learning "world class" schools. While the themselves with the belief that hun- has not been lost. It has been signifiterm has a nice ring, the simple dreds of applicants for job openings cantly hamstrung, however, by outtruth is that our schools struggle is a sign of quality applicants. They side influences with little to no eduwith inadequate funding to sustain rest on the belief that everyone cational background or training. As

esareaverte ro m tion camps at home, have fled to sea

<II I(IIII(Iff IIfIf(t(~ f(I(!III»'«

to 21st-century concentration camps:

search-and-rescue effort to save the drifting refugee ships and assist with passengers — so far, unsuccessfully. search and rescue. camp inmates dying for lack of mediCome on! If a suspected terrorist Obama must also make clear cal care. were on board, intelligence agencies Myanmar cannot have a normal reOn Wednesday, there were uncon- would use that cellphone number to lationship with the United States as firmed reports of 20 Rohingya-owned locate that boat. But 350 desperate ref- long as it engages in crimes against shops being burned down in Maung- ugees adrift at sea, and we're going to humanity. Just this month, the adwrote about starving children and

daw in western Myanmar near the

shrug and let them drown?

borderwith Bangladesh. The United Nations says more than 130,000 Rohingyas have fled by sea since 2012. Many fall prey to human smugglers who torture, rape and

Governments are probably uninterestedin rescuing refugees for fear

starve them in Thai camps until rela-

tives pay ransom. The discovery of a mass grave this month from one such camp embarrassed Thai authorities

into cracking down on human smugglers, leading the crews to abandon the ships, with their human cargo

adrift at sea. Chris Lewa of The Arakan Project, a human rights group, said she has been in cellphone contact with two shipsfullofrefugees,andshesuspects there are more farther from land and

thus out of cellphone range. One is drifting without engines or adequate food, and she, as a private citizen, has

been frantically trying to organim a

ministration welcomed to the White House a senior official of the Myanmar government,Thura Shwe Mann,

who has allied himself with extremist in. Thailand has long had a policy of anti-Rohingya positions. In its statesending refugee boats on their way, ment afterward, the White House's and Indonesia this week pushed two press office even avoided using the ships carrying hundreds of Rohingya word"Rohingya," apparently so as not back to sea. As for Malaysia, "we won't to offend Myanmar. That's craven, but what's worse is let any foreign boats come in," an admiral said. the way American and Asian offiEurope alsohas a refugee crisis, cials alike seem determined to avert but at least European countries are their eyes from atrocities in one of the mounting search-and-rescue opera- world's most beautiful regions. "People are dying at sea," said Mattions to try to save lives. What Southeast Asian governments are doing is thew Smith of Fortify Rights, a human the opposite. rights group that has done excellent As a first step, President Barack work monitoring the Rohingya. "We Obama should call the leaders of Thai- know that, right now. And it could land, Malaysia and Indonesia, urging worsen considerably in the coming them to rescueand shelterrefugees. weeks." The United States can also use mili— Nicholas Kristof is a columnist tary and intelligence assets to locate at The New York Times. they would then have to take them


FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Ballots

BITUARIES

Reminder:

Continued from B1

Secrecy envelope is optional. The Deschutes County Clerk's Office's most popular question by phone during elections? Whether aballot can still be counted if it wasn't put in the secrecy envelopebefore the signed envelope. It can. The ballot must be inserted in the outer envelopeand signed, but the secrecy envelope is optional. County officials also advise registered voters who havenot yet mailed in their ballots to instead useofficial drop boxes. Postmarks do not count; ballots must be to election officials by 8 p.m., Tuesday.

Before they can be scanned

though, ballots are first run through a machine the size of an MRI scanner that orga-

DEATH 1VOTIt ES Wilburn Harold Keffer Jr., of Bend Nov. 9, 1943 - May 3, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Memorial Service at 2 PM on Sat., May16, 2015at St. Charles Medical Center Chapel, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR.

James Lee Reynolds, of Redmond May 3, 1943- May12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Mass will take

place Wednesday, May

20, 2015 at 2:00 PM at St. Thomas Catholic Church, located at 1720 NW 19th St., Redmond, OR. Contributions may be made to:

St. Vincent De Paul 1612 SW Veterans Way Redmond, OR 97756 (541) 923-5264.

Margaret (Marty) Strong

1940-2015

Margaret (Marty) Strong was born i n J a c ksonville, I L, th e d a u g hter o f E d w ard W . a nd M ar g a r et Goebel Cleary. S h e spent her early years in Urbana, IL, a t t e ndin g U n i v e r sity High School and th e U n tv ersity o f I l l i n o is, w h e r e she b ecame a member

DEATHS ELSE%THERE

Fred Mann, of La Pine

Deaths ofnote from around

Mar. 22, 1932 - May 10, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life with military honors will be held on Saturday, May 23, 2015 at 1:OOPM, at the La Pine American Legion Post 45, located at 52532 Drafter Rd. in La Pine. Immediately following will be a Potluck Reception at the Mann residence. Contributions may be made

the world:

to:

St. Charles Hospice, 2500 NE Neff Rd., Bend, OR 97701, 541-706-6700, www.stcharleshealthcare.org

Lorena M. Cran,of Bend

Fran Fisher, 91: Man who

Niswonger-Reynolds

Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: A graveside service will be held Friday, May. 15, 2015 at 1:00 PM in Pilot Butte Cemetery, Bend.

most counties in t h e s t ate

still complete this process by hand. Comparing ballot signatures to voter registration cards by hand, a county employee caninspect about 300

ball games on the radio for many years. He was found dead Thursday morning but mayhave died Wednesday i n S t at e C ollege, Pennsylvania. Cecil Jones Attuquayefio, 70: Ghana soccer forward

an hour; with the machine's help, it's about 800 an hour. Deschutes got the machine in 2011.

Blankenship said it's common for signatures to go through quite a lot of changes over a p erson's lifetime for various reasons or peo-

ple may have their "quick"

African Cup of Nations ti-

signature they use with the

tles for Ghana in 1965. Died 'Ittesday in Accra, Ghana.

delivery man, and a clearer signature for important doc-

Chris Burden, 69: Con-

uments. When a ballot signature doesn't match a voter

ceptual artist who in the line

of duty had himself shot, pierced, starved, crucified,

registration card, the person

electrocuted, cut by glass,

the issue by submitting a new card with an updated signature up to 14 days af-

kicked down stairs, locked up, dropped from heights and nearly drowned. Died Sunday athis home in Topanga, California. Gertrude Schimmel, 96: Broke gender barriers in the New York Police Department as one of the first

Sept. 5, 1922 - May 10, 2015 Arrangements:

nizes them by precinct and scans the signatures. The machine is one of five in Oregon;

broadcast Penn State foot-

who was part of the squad that c l inched s uccessive

two women to become a sergeant and ultimatelythe first to be named a chief. Died on Mondayin Manhattan.

Rachel Rosenthal, 88: Performance and theater artist

who embraced environmentalism during a half-century career devoted to the

avant-garde. Died Sunday in Southern California. — From wire reports

whom he married on July 22, 1995. G eorge entered t h e i n of Kappa surance business while in Alpha C alifornia w o r k in g a s a n May15,1963- April16, 2015 Theta soa gent for S t at e F ar m I n rority. George Rausch Elsom Jr., surance an d s u c cessfully r Ui ,' For her 52, of Bend, Ore., passed w orked hi s w a y i n t o a c remaina way Thursday, A p ri l 1 6 , q uiring his ow n o f f ice l o i ng t h r e e 2015. He was born on May cated in H e r m osa Beach, y ears o f 15, 1963, in Alameda, CaliCA. I n 2 0 04. George and Marty Strong c ol l e g e fornia, the his young family moved to s he t r a n s son of the Bend, O R, w h e re he ferred to Stanford Univerlate worked for Century Insursity fr o m w h i ch she George R. ance for a number of years g raduated wit h a B . A . i n Elsom, before he and Monica purE nglish i n 1 9 62 . S h o r t l y Sr., an d c hased P r i n evill e I n s u r t hereafter, s h e mar r i e d Deanna J. ance. George and M o n i ca J ohn W . S t r o n g , w h o s e Elsom. a lso pu r chased R oss I n loving and dedicated wife George surance located in B r o okshe remained for almost 53 g rew u p ings, Oregon. y ears unti l h e r d e at h i n spending A bove h i s p a s s io n f o r Medford on May 2, due to George R. h is e a r l y business was his love and complications of intestinal Elsom, jr. y ear s in devotion to h i s w i fe infection. Castro M onica, and his tw o c h i l Due t o h e r hu s b a n d 's Valley, California, Johandren Kaylee, 13 and A u sp rofession, Marty, a s s h e nesburg, South Africa and tin, 11. George spent endr eferred t o b e cal l e d , f inally s p ending m o s t o f l ess hours h e lping h i s ived in several university h is yout h i n S a l em , O r - children i n a n y w a y he towns, including egon where he g r a duated could. H e a t t e nded their L awrence, K S , D u r h a m , h igh s c hool f r o m S o u t h swimming an d b a sketball NC, Eugene, OR, Lincoln, Salem High School in 1981 e vents, e n c ouraged a n d N E, Tucson, A Z , a n d f i - and went o n t o g r a d uate c oached th e m , h elp e d nally, in retirement, at the from the University of Or t hem w i t h t h e i r h om e Rogue Valley Manor in egon. D u r ing his youth he w ork, reviewed their v i d Medford, OR. F o rty years h ad a p a s sion f o r m u s i c eos of sporting events with o f su mmer r e s i dence a t a nd played th e d r um s i n them and most of all, just B lack B u tt e R a n ch , O R , the South Salem High jazz had fun w i t h t h em . T he g ave o t h e r w is e l a c k i n g e nsemble. M a n y w i l l r e - f ondest m e m ories o f a l l permanence. D e s pite h er m ember h i m f o n d l y fo r w ill b e t h e f a m i l y t i m e s r elocations, M a rt y f o u n d b eing a n or i g i n a l b a n d t hey s p en t to g e t he r a t t ime to comp l e t e a member for many years in Shasta Lake on their boat Master's degree in Educa- the group "The Boys Next water skiing, laughing and t ion at t h e U n i v ersity o f Door" which i s st ill i n t act s oaking up th e su n w h i l e O regon, after w h i c h s h e and plays in th e P o rtland e njoying th e i r p r e c i o u s t aught E n g lish a n d S p e - and Salem area to this day. time together as a family. c ial E d ucation f o r m a n y In hi s e a rl y 2 0 ' s G e orge George is survived by his years, and in doing so imdecided it was time to venw ife, M o n ic a E l s om ; h i s pacted many young lives. t ure of f t o w ar d t h e s u n - two children, K a ylee and S he alw ay s p l a ced t h e s hine an d m o v e d t o t h e A ustin E l s o m ; M oth e r , n eeds of he r f a m il y f i r s t , beaches of California and D eanna Elsom, Bend O r but when time allowed her settled in Hermosa Beach. egon; Si s t e r , Tam my favorite p as t i m e w as H e m ad e m a n y li f e l o n g Beckley, Portland Oregon. reading and discussing litfriends while living in CaliServices will be held Saterature, a n d sh e r ead f ornia and very m uch en urday, May 16, at 2 p.m. at widely throughout her life. ' oyed h i s y e a r s o n t h e the Fir s t Pr es b y t erian S he a l s o Io v e d t r a v e l , each a s t he p er p e tual Church in Bend. In lieu of which took her to many smile on his face indicated f lowers, we as k t h a t y o u p arts o f t h e w o r l d , o u t - to all who knew him then. consider s u p p o rtin g t he door a c t i v i tie s s u c h as It was also at this time that Rimrock Tr ails of P r i n evhiking an d c a noeing, and h e would m eet hi s f u t u r e ille and Crook County Roplaying any g am e t n volvw ife M on i c a M ass a r i tary. ing a r a c quet o r p a d d l e. H er role as a F a ir y G o d mother during her years in M edford, g av e h e r g r e a t s atisfaction a n d r e w a r d ing relationships with sevDeath Notices are freeand Deadlines:Death Notices are eral p r o m i s in g y oun g w omen. S h e w a s a l s o a will be run for oneday, but accepted until noon Monday great lover of animals and specific guidelines must be through Friday for next-day t he family h a d a d o g a l followed. Local obituaries are publication and by4:30 p.m. most constantly t h r o u ghFriday for Sunday publication. paid advertisements submitted out her life. by families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received I n addition t o h e r h u s Theymay besubmittedby by 5 p.m. Monday through b and, she i s s u r v ived b y Thursday for publication on phone, mail, email or fax. The h er tw o s o ns, F r ank a n d Bulletin reserves the right to the second dayafter subBen and t h eir w i v es, Geedit all submissions. Please mission, by1 p.m. Friday for nie and Christina, respectively of McLean, VA, and include contact information in Sunday publication, and by T ucson, AZ ; h e r t w o s i s all correspondence. 9 a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday t ers, Judy Sibert o f A l e x publication. Deadlines for For information on any of these andria, V A , an d A n n display ads vary; pleasecall services or about the obituary K earns o f A m h e r st, M A ; for details. policy, contact 541-617-7825. and h e r f i v e g r a n d c hildren, Matthew, Katherine, W illiam, C a m e r on , an d Kenneth. Phone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries S he wil l b e i n t e r red i n P.O. Box6020 Email: obits©bendbulletin.com A shland, O R , n e a r her Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-322-7254 c hosen favorite center o f theatre and art. A t her r equest no memorial service will be held. Contributions in he r m e m o r y m a y be made to Southern Oregon I II • • ClaSSifiedS Humane Society.

George Rausch Elsom Jr.,

is contactedand can resolve

ter the election. For this rea-

son, some people have more than one voter registration card on file with their varied

signatures. After ballots are divided

by precinct and signatures areconfirmed,election board

-

Comparing ballot signatures to voter registration cards by hand, a county employee can inspect about 300 an hour; with the

machine's help, it's about 800 an hour. Deschutes got the machine in2011. ing in the election process for decades. On Thursday the all-female group of workers inspected the ballots in pairs. Each pair is made up of people

during a bigger election; election night still runs into the

early-morning hours even for a smaller election like this one. Blankenship said she's no night owl. She wasn't the from two d i f ferent parties, type to pull all-nighters in Blankenship said, whether college, but on Election Day that means a Democrat and the long hours become necRepublican, an Independent essary to get the job done. and an unaffiliated or other Blankenship f el t c o n fident combination. Thursday workers could finIn many ways the work is ish processing the returned almost mechanical, but Blan- ballots so far. "We might even finish kenship said sometimes they run across a ballot that's a today." little different, like including — Reporter: 541-383-0325, notes suggesting what the kfisicaro@bendbuttetin.com county should do with taxpayer money. "Sometimes people need

to express themselves and move the ballots from their they will write 'love notes,'" envelopes to check there ar- said Blankenship, smiling. en't any spills and that ovals The determination she has are filled in correctly. Some to keep things good-natured of these people are former is essential during election poll workers who helped out time. long before Oregon decided On Election Day, county to expand vote-by-mail to pri- staff and the people at the mary and general elections election boards can easily in 1998, so they've been help- work for 20 hours or more workers in another room re-

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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015

i

1

i

I

'

TODAY

i I

TONIGH T

HIGH 61'

ALMANAC

-"'"-

LOW 55'

Variable cloudiness

i I ' 1

SATU RDAY

SUNDAY

-

51'

35'

Plenty of clouds

MONDAY

55' 39'

b

Partly sunny with a passing shower

Partly sunny

TEMPERATURE

UV INDEX TODAY

POLLEN COUNT

NATIONAL WEATHER

WATER REPORT

O

(for the Wickiup 153555 S2% YESTERDAY Crescent Lake 7 4 S21 S5% 46 contiguousstates) Ochoco Reservoir 30941 70vo National high: 95 Prineville 109696 74vo at Winter Haven,FL River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. National low:23 Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 365 at SaranacLake, NY Deschutes R.below Wickiup 11BO Precipitation: 2.07" Deschutes R.below Bend s5 at Pleasanton,TX Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 16SO Little Deschutes near LaPine 115 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 26 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 22 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 275 Mchoia ue Crooked R. near Terrebonne 209 i '4 l /44 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 12

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

Ski resort New snow Base 0-0 Mt. Bachelor 0 M t. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 0-52 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 0-0 Park City Mountain, UT 0 Source: GnTheSnuw.com

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Today Saturday Hi/Lo/W 80/66/1 82/62/pc 75/54/pc 63/42/t 60/43/pc 78/67/c 66/61/pc 79/67/1 77/60/s 61/46/1 81/66/c 64/51/c 61/48/1 68/53/pc 72/56/pc 70/57/pc 72/53/pc 71/46/s 80/63/c 82/61/c 81/65/1 59/39/1 76/60/pc 85/63/pc 80/61/pc 65/41/1 79/65/1 84/61/c 79/66/1 84/63/pc 74/48/pc 83/75/t 79/66/1 84/65/pc 65/42/t 79/65/1 75/62/r 62/45/pc 81/60/pc 79/47/pc 67/55/pc 44/28/t 70/58/1 72/51/pc 80/61/pc 77/60/pc 78/53/pc 58/43/1 83/70/s 85/72/t 82/64/c 81/65/pc 86/69/1 81/67/1

Hi/Lo/W 85/61/1 81/64/pc 81/60/sh 59/42/t 58/42/pc 83/68/t 75/68/pc 86/70/t 87/67/1 50/39/r 81/67/1 78/49/t 65/48/sh 73/56/sh 75/60/c 73/60/c 75/55/c 71/47/pc 83/66/pc 86/62/pc 81/66/1 58/40/1 78/63/1 81/63/pc 80/64/pc 59/41/1 78/66/c 88/63/pc 84/67/1 81/64/pc 71/51/sh 86/77/pc 81/68/1 80/66/pc 61/41/1 79/67/1 81/65/c 63/53/c 76/52/s 73/44/pc 78/59/1 49/28/c 78/64/c 76/59/c 85/63/pc 86/65/pc 79/60/sh 51/39/r 83/69/s 87/74/t 79/65/1 78/65/pc 82/70/t 83/66/pc

alifax 1/44

w York

v 1/47

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Kansas Ctty

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Auckland Baghdad

Bangkok Beijing Beirut Berlin

Bogota Budapest BuenosAires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary Cancun

5;

59/46/0.00 81/54/0.00 65/54/0.68 93/79/0.00 93/81/0.08 81/54/0.05 75/64/0.26 55/44/0.00 66/52/0.10 73/54/0.09 75/50/0.00

gon4/0'.00

58/43/pc 58/46/sh 83/64/pc 81/63/pc 61/51/r 62/51/pc 94/69/s 94no/s 92/80/pc 93/80/pc 78/51/s 85/61/s 74/65/s rsno/s 64/43/pc 65/45/pc 68/47/t 68/49/c 66/50/sh 72/48/pc 71/61/pc 73/63/s 86/64/pc 87/63/s 84/63/s 85/65/s 60/40/1 56/25/r 88/77/s Sgn6/s 59/44/pc 54/43/pc 58/44/sh 53/42/pc 54/48/t 69/48/pc 78/49/s 78/50/s 91/82/pc 90/83/sb 77/64/s 79/64/pc 77/52/s 83/58/s 78/53/s 75/49/pc 75/65/pc 76/65/pc 71/61/s 83/66/s 63/53/pc 63/45/pc 75/49/s 82/54/s 94/80/pc 96/81/s

4

e

4

Cloudy with a shower possible

4

Yesterday Today Saturday

City

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

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

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 68/43/0.00 67/43/s 68/43/s 74/56/0.76 76/63/1 76/65/pc 65/37/0.00 75/63/Tr 74/49/0.00 70/54/0.88 84/64/0.16 68/56/0.16 74/53/0.00 66/40/0.03 81/64/Tr

ssns/rr

57/40/0.03 57/51/0.26 82/53/0.00

srn4/rr

73/50/0.00 74/50/0.00 65/58/0.00 OklahomaCity 85/63/0.16 Omaha 70/55/0.66 Orlando 92/72/0.00 Palm Springs 78/62/Tr Peoria 69/50/0.22 Philadelphia 72/50/0.00 Phoenix 87/73/0.00 Pittsburgh 69/38/0.00 Portland, ME 68/40/0.00 Providence 71/45/0.00 Raleigh 72/56/0.00 Rapid City 64/46/Tr Reno 58/47/Tr Richmond 72/50/0.00 Rochester, NY 64/38/0.00 Sacramento 74/49/0.00 St. Louis 77/59/0.05 Salt Lake City 72/55/0.01

72/57/1 78/63/c 67/52/c 77/58/pc

84/64/pc 81/65/pc 78/62/t 76/60/1 85/68/1 83no/c 69/56/r 70/59/pc

88/69/pc 83/69/pc 74/58/pc 79/63/c 85n1/c 81no/t 87n7/pc 87n7/t 71/55/pc 72/57/c 71/60/pc 83/66/1 85/66/pc 79/67/1 82n4/t 83n6/t 74/60/pc 82/68/pc 77/60/pc 84/67/pc 74/61/s 84/67/pc 78/65/1 75/63/1 78/63/1 77/63/1 87//1/t srnfn 72/55/sh 80/60/pc 81/65/1 80/67/1

75/61/pc 86/69/pc 74/59/1 75/61/c 80/63/sh 82/64/pc 68/48/pc 61/50/sh 74/53/pc 75/58/c 81/61/pc 87/63/pc 61/47/1 72/44/pc 55/44/sh 65/45/pc 79/62/s 89/68/pc 72/58/pc 77/58/sh

70/51/pc 83/69/1 61/46/1 San Antonio 86nO/r'r 78//0/t San Diego 66/60/0.04 66/59/r San Francisco 65/56/0.00 63/52/pc San Jose 68/53/0.45 65/52/pc Santa re 69/43/0.00 62/38/1 Savannah 83/62/0.00 81/65/c Seattle 64/49/0.01 67/51/pc Sioux Fags 63/52/0.32 76/59/1 Spokane 67/42/0.00 73/50/pc Springfield, Mo 79/57/0.15 79/66/1 Tampa 93/74/0.94 90n3/t Tucson 86/69/0.00 75/55/1 Tulsa 82/59/0.00 83/65/1 Washington, DC 73/53/0.00 80/66/s Wichita 78/57/0.33 79/64/t Yakima 70/49/0.00 80/49/pc Yuma 79/64/0.00 69/54/1 i

Amsterdam Athens

81/64/0.00 47/43/Tr 'umv xxx x xx x U 7 4 k 88n9/0.00 ~aiu Wuku , X Xaualla Dublin 52/39/0.11 /gggye/4 x Nx xg / Edinburgh 52/38/0.00 I Paso d,~u+u Geneva 75/55/0.21 Xkkv 8 40 'o'ktuaotutrt' Harare 80/52/0.00 v<<V' ' ' vvtrr'tuuss 'senK ' 5/72 • Hong Kong 86/79/0.04 o~ Chihuuhuu 82/74 o ~.t Istanbul 68/55/0.00 se/57 Miami Jerusalem 67/55/0.05 arpÃ, se/~ee Johannesburg 76/51/0.00 Lima 78/66/0.00 Lisbon 72/59/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 50/48/0.96 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 91/66/0.00 Manila 95/78/0.00 % '

4

63' 40'

i

Yesterday

City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 82/65/0.00 High 57 54 SS' in 1939 Akron 67/36/0.00 41' 36' 19'in 1943 Low Albany 70/37/0.00 Albuquerque 75/55/0.00 PRECIPITATION Anchorage 56/45/0.00 Atlanta 84/63/0.00 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace Atlantic City 66/49/0.00 Record 0.24" in 1959 Austin 86/66/0.04 Month to date (normat) 0.5 5" (0.36") Baltimore 72/47/0.00 Year to date(normal) 2.31 " (4.49") Billings 60/43/0.00 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 7B" Birmingham 88/57/0.00 Bismarck 53/47/0.64 SUN ANDMOON Boise 71/47/Tr Boston 69/49/0.00 Today Sat. Bridgeport, CT 69/49/0.00 Sunrise 5:39 a.m. 5: 3 S a.m. Buffalo 67/38/0.00 Sunset B:24 p.m. 6: 2 5 p.m. Burlington, VT 66/36/0.00 Moonrise 4 :1S a.m. 4:55 a.m. Caribou, ME 67/39/0.00 Nyssa • 59/ Ham ton Charleston, SC 79/60/0.00 Moonset 5:4 5 p.m. 6:5 6 p.m. La pjne Juntura ef/ 4 9 Grove Oakridge Co Charlotte 75/58/0.00 • Burns OREGON EXTREMES New Fi r s t Full Last 57/44 62/46 45 Chattanooga 84/61/0.00 59 0 • Fort Rock Riley 55/39 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 59/34 Cheyenne 69/39/Tr d iv' 5 55/39 56/35 Chicago 66/43/0.01 High: 77 Bandon Roseburg • Ch r i stmas alley Cincinnati 69/47/0.00 at Ontario Jordan V Hey M ay17 May 25 J u n 2 Ju n 9 59/50 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 65/50 Cleveland 64/35/0.00 Low: 30' 55/42 Marsh Lake 53/41 ColoradoSprings 70/39/0.00 Touight'6 ufttnTheMilky Way appears to be 55/34 at Klamath Fags 57/35 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MG 68/55/0.85 • Paisley 7/ missing, but is really along the surrounding a Columbia, SC 80/58/0.00 • 55/42 Chiloquin Columbus,GA 90/58/0.32 Medfo d 'sess horizon before midnight in May. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 65/40/0.00 56/ e66/46 55/42 Klamath Concord, NH 71/32/0.00 Source: JimTodd,GMSI • Ashl nd • FaRS • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 86n5/0.03 Bro ings 62/ 57/32 59/47 51/34 55/43 Dallas 83/64/Tr Dayton 68/45/0.00 Denver 74/41/0.00 10 a.m. Noon 2 p .m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Des Moines 62/54/0.51 4 I~ 6 ~ 6 I 4 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 63/39/0.00 The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrm IIV Index number, Asturia 62/41/0.00 58/50/pc60/48/s La Grande 68/37/Tr 62/48/sh 65/44/sh Portland 71/4 7/0.00 67/52/pc 65/51/pc Duluth 52/40/0.13 the greatertheneedfor eyeandskin protecgun.0-2 Low Baker City 66/33/0.00 59/43/sh 63/37/sh La Pine 53/34/0.04 57/35/sh 59/37/pc Prinev ige 59/39/0.00 63/36/c 59/37/pc El Paso 85/61/Tr 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Extreme. Brookings 65/44/0.00 59/47/c 59/47/s Me d ford 59/4 4/Tr 66 / 46/sh 72/47/pc Redmond 6 1 /41/0.00 64/34/c 65/33/pcFairbanks 76/46/0.00 Bums 62/36/0.03 55/39/sh 62/34/sh N ewport 57/4 5/0.00 55/48/pc 55/46/s Roseburg 72/ 4 9/Tr 6 5 /50/c 6 9/46/pc Fargo 57/53/0.29 Eugene 67/49/Tr 64/46/c 64/41/pc NorthBend 63/50/0.00 58/50/pc 59/47/s Salem 72/49/0.00 66/47/pc 65/47/pc Flagstaff 57/39/0.19 Klamath Fags 60/30/0.00 57/32/sh 64/35/pc Ontario 77/44/0.00 63/50/sh 70/49/c Sisters 59/38/T race 64/35/c 65/35/pc Grand Rapids 65/40/0.00 G rasses T r ee s Wee d s Lakeview 54/36/0.00 51/34/sh61/34/c Pendleton 66/41/0.00 71/52/c 73/46/pc The Dages 7 6 / 48/0.00 71/53/pc 69/50/pc Green Bay 63/38/0.00 Greensboro 71/54/0.00 Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-tbunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday Lo~w g Lo~w Abs ent Harrisburg 71/43/0.00 Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harfford, CT 73/40/0.00 Helena 64/45/0.19 82/70/0.00 ~ g s ~ t e s ~ 20s ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ ecs ~ 708 ~ ags ~ ggs ~fccs ~ttcs Honolulu ~ 108 ~gs Houston 87n2/0.05 As uf 7 a.m.yesterday Huntsville 85/53/0.00 Indianapolis 70/49/Tr Reservoir Acr e feet Ca p acity NATIONAL Jackson, MS 87/68/0.00 EXTREMES C rane Prairie 462 4 5 dr/51 S7% Jacksonville 85/67/0.00

Yesterday Normal Record

63' 42'

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON WEATHER Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST: Cloudsand ria /5 some sunshine in Umatilla Seasid Hood 77/53 the north today with 57/50 RiVer Rufus • ermiston shower possible; Cannon /52 lington 76/51 portland 67/Bo Meac am Losti ne mostly cloudy in the 56/51 53 • W co 56/44 Enterprise south with showers. dieten 58/ he Dall • • 53/42 Tillamo • • 71/ 2 CENTRAL: Mostly andy• 56/49 Mc innvill • 71/53 Josegh • HeP Pner Grande • cloudy in the south Gove nt • upi Condon /48 41 • 69 6 48 today with showers; a Lincoln Union 61/ mixture of clouds and 57/49 Sale • pray Granitee sunshine andmostly 66/4 • 7/47 'Baker C Newpo 48/38 dry north. /47 55/46 • Mitch II 59/43 camp sh man Red WEST: Cloudsand 64/41 n orv Iijs eU Yach 61/se • John occasional sunshine 66/47 • Prineville Day 3/40 tario today; spotty showers, 57/49 63/36 • P a lina 5 7/ 4 5 50 mainly acrossthe Floren e • Eugene 'Re d B rothers 5942 Vatee 58/50 south. Su Were 61/35 63/51

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

TUESDAY

8

73/49/pc

82no/t

60/48/sh 84n2/t 66/59/pc 64/52/pc 65/51/pc 55/37/1 83/65/pc

61/50/pc 77/58/1 70/49/pc 82/66/pc 88n2/t 72/54/pc 80/67/1

88n1/t

74/62/1

80/49/pc 82/62/pc

I

Mecca Mexico City

112/83/0.00 110/81/s 74/54/0.14 73/57/1 Montreal 64/43/0.00 70/50/pc Moscow 63/50/0.02 57/43/r Nairobi 77/64/0.17 81/62/pc Nassau 86/77/0.03 86/74/s New Delhi 99/73/0.00 99n6/s Osaka 68/61/0.18 83/67/c Oslo 55/39/0.00 55/44/pc Ottawa 66/36/0.00 71/49/pc Paris 61/55/0.15 62/44/pc Rio de Janeiro 75/68/0.00 77/66/c Rome 75/59/0.00 77/57/pc Santiago 73/41/0.00 71/43/s Sau Paulo 68/57/0.00 71/57/pc Sapporo 58/51/0.00 58/56/r Seoul 76/54/0.00 73/50/pc Shanghai 81/71/0.32 81/63/1 Singapore 93/82/0.13 90/80/1 Stockholm 52/39/0.03 50/36/pc Sydney 63/46/0.00 65/58/pc Taipei srn5/0'.00 91/77/pc Tel Aviv 75/61/0.01 79/62/s Tokyo 78/64/0.00 80/66/pc Toronto 63/39/0.00 61/53/pc Vancouver 61/52/0.04 65/52/s Vienna 68/55/0.32 63/51/r Warsaw 61/48/0.10 63/38/pc

m k

109/85/s 76/56/1 72/53/c 53/43/r 79/60/pc 85/74/pc 103/79/pc 76/57/r 50/43/sh 75/48/c 64/46/pc 78/67/pc 72/58/t 76/44/s 71/57/pc 63/56/pc 74/48/s 73/58/c 90/80/1 57/42/pc 67/57/sh 91/76/pc 83/66/s 77/65/r 75/54/c 62/50/pc 72/56/pc 65/49/pc

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N BA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Preps, C4 MLB, C3 Golf, C4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

POLE PEDAL PADDLE

WCL BASEBALL

PREP LACROSSE

Bend Elksseek host families

Lava Bearsbeat Storm, finish season perfect

The 2015 Bend Elks

summer collegiate baseball season starts in three weeks, andthe West Coast League team is seeking host families for incoming players. Families that put up one or more players over the summer, providing a few meals a day, receive free barbecue meals at all Sunday Elks games atVince Genna Stadium. Host families also will receive team shirts and season preferred tickets, and youngsters could be chosen to serve asan Elks batboy or batgirl. Those interested in becoming a host family should contact Kelsie Marick at kelsie@ bendelks.com or 541312-9259. Theseason is scheduled to begin June 5. For more information, visit www.bendelks. com.

Bulletin staff report There is no disputing who the High Desert Conference champion is this season.

A year after winning the regular-season title but falling to Summit in the league championship, Bend High completed a perfect season in defeating the same crosstown boys lacrosse foe 11-8 at Summit High on Thursday. The victory improves the No. 6 Lava Bears to

15-0 on the year as they await an opponent for the Oregon High School Lacrosse Association playoffs, in which Bend, and No. 8 Summit (13-4), expect first-round inside byes. • La Pine Cade Hinderlider had three boys goals and an assist for Bend, w l leE11Plteaddedt o g o ~ s toquick and two assists. Quinn Fettig and Sean Joyce each scoredtwice for districts the Bears, Chance Beutler had C4 a goal and two assists, and Cohl

Johnston scored once. Nikos Skoufos was

— Bulletin staff report

credited with 13 saves for Bend. For the Storm, who led 2-1 before falling

behind 7-3 in the first half, Nick Rasmussen

MOTOR SPORTS

had three goals. Stu Bledsoe scored twice and dished out an assist for Summit, which has

dropped only four games this season, including

Indy carscontinue to flip at practice

two to Bend.

Brint MacDonald had two goals for the Storm, A.J. Weichman scored once, Charlie

INDIANAPOLIS-

Three big crashes in Indianapolis 500 practice this week haveraised one big question. Are the new oval aero kits, along with speeds that have topped 230 mph, the cause? "We're still learning, to be honest," Helio Castroneves said. "There are so many little details

Stuermer hadan assist,and Reid Yundt record-

ed nine saves in goal.

WOMEN'S SOCCER

Morgan soars in whirlwind

with the newaero kit

that we're just starting now to go through that phase. My teammates are going through that phase aswell and we're just starting." The three-time Indy 500 winner lost control of his car before it hit the wall, went airborne andflippedW ednesday. On Thursday, Josef Newgarden flipped his car in the latest crash. Newgarden, the 24-year-old Tennessee driver, was checked, cleared and released from the speedway's medical center. Team Penske's Simon Pagenaud ledThursday's practice with a fast lap of 228.793 mph. Colombia's Carlos Munoz had thesecond-fastest time at 228.126, American Sage Karamwasthird at 228.126, NewZealand's Scott Dixon was fourth at 227.634, and Brazil's Tony Kanaanwasfifth at

• U.S. soccer star gets past advertising andmodeling and puts her focus onWorld Cup By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

Marshall Greene, left, and Jesse Thomas are the favorites to win Saturday's Pole Pedal Paddle.

• Bend triathlete Jesse Thomashas ashot to dethrone six-timechampion Marshall Greene By Mark Morical The Bulletin

In any other year, Jesse Thomas would not even consider entering Central Oregon's most re-

nowned multisport race. But Saturday's U.S. Bank Pole Pedal

Paddle just might be aperfect fit for the

227.527.

professional triathlete

Newgarden lost control of the CFHRacing entry car going into the first turn at Indianapolis Motor Speedwayand the car flipped and rested on its side after it slapped into the wall. Both Castroneves and Newgarden drive Chevroletcars and both crashes were similarthey happenednearthe same part of the track, and both cars flipped when the car turned backward.

from Bend. With no nordic ski stage in this year's race due to a lack of snow, the stage has been replaced with

— The Associated Press

NBA Rockets rally to beat Clippers Houston comesback from19downto beat Los Angeles,C4

GOLF Stred leadsPGA Golf roundup,C4

a 2.34-mile trail run at Mount

Bachelor. Add that to the 5-mile run in Bend later in the race and a half-mile sprint to the finish, and

that makes for nearly 8 miles of running in the race. Because there is no nordic leg

to give elite skiers an edge, and because running and cycling will

make up the bulk of the race (the cycling leg from Bachelor to Bend is 22 miles), a triathlete could be extremely competitive.

And Thomas is no average triathlete. The 35-year-old Bend resident recently won his fifth straight Wild-

flower long-course triathlon, which in-

cludes a 1.2-mile swim, 56-mile bike ride and 10.9-mile run south of

San Francisco. Thomas — who is married to

professional runner Lauren Fleshman — grew up in Bend and is a 1998 graduate of Mountain View

High School. But he says he has never cross-country skied in his life, so competing as an individual in the PPP never made much sense to him.

39th annual LS. BankPole Pedal Paddle What:A six-stage multisport race that includes a downhill ski stage, a 2.34-mile trail run, a22mile bike ride, a5-mile run, a1t/2-mile paddle,

and a half-mile sprint. Where:A course that starts at Mt. Bachelor ski area andfinishes at Bend's Les Schwab Amphitheater. Whe:About 2,300 participants competing as individuals or as members of teams. When:Saturday; start waves go from 9:15 a.m. to 11:25 a.m.; first finisher is expected at about11 a.m. Contact: www.pppbend.com

Alex Morgan was a bright-eyed University of California graduate for her first soccer World Cup back in 2011 and instantly became a star.

Now she is a savvy vet, handling her fame with aplomb as she prepares for her World Cup sequel. Morgan's star rose quickly following her performance in Germany four years ago. As the youngest player on the U.S. World Cup team, she became a super sub with a goal and an assist in the final against Japan. She hassince become one of the most rec-

ognizedplayerson theU.S.team. She isa spokeswoman for ChapStick and her image appears on cereal boxes. She has been featured

in Sports Illustrated's swimsuit edition twice, and she has even been animated for "The Simpsons." But she really just wants to play soccer. "I don't get wrapped up in that because I don't want to dwell on something like a com-

mercial or doing something off the field," she said recently. "I don't want to dwell on something like that too long. I don't want to think,

'Wow, that's really cool, that's me.' Once I start to think like that, then I've changed my focus from what I do onthe field to what I do off the

field." The past four years have been a whirlwind for the 24-year-old striker.

SeeMorgan/C4

SeePPP IC4

Bend'sArritola favorite inwomen'selite division Bend's Morgan Arritola appears to be the favorite to win the women's elite race in a field of just four competitors. Arritola, 29, who moved to Bend last September, was on the U.S. Cross Country Ski Team for several years and she is now a professional trail/mountain runner. "I kind of feel like, living here, everyone should experience the PPP," Arritola says. "I have never done a race with so many modes of transportation! I think the race will be an adventure. I have no idea what to expect. I feel like such a pain in the butt having to borrow so much gear from people." Arritola says she raced the nordic leg of the PPPas

part of a team several years ago. "I think the hardest part will be staying calm in the mayhem and justfocusingonyourownrace,"she says. "For me, downhill biking isn't my forte but it gets me out of my comfort zone, which is good." The other three female elite racers, all from Bend, include Mary Wellington, 44, Carolyn Daubeny, 50, and Layla Billowitz, 42. Neither Sarah Max, the reigning women's champion, norStephanieHowe,who between them havewon the past seven PPPwomen's elite titles, is expected to be racing Saturday. — Mark Morical Jeff Roberson/The AssociatedPressfile

United States' Alex Morgen controls the ball as New Zealand's Rebekah Stott looks on during an exhibition soccer match in St. Louis in April.


C2

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY GOLF

EuropeanTour, Spanish Open EuropeanTour, Spanish Open Champions Tour, RegionsTradition PGA Tour,Wells Fargo Championship

Time T V /Radie 2 :30 a.m. G olf 6 :30 a.m. G olf 9 :30 a.m. G olf noon Golf

TENNIS

ATP/WTA, Italian Open ATP/WTA, Italian Open

3 a.m. 9 a.m.

Tennis Tennis

AUTO RACING

NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Sprint Showdown, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup,All-Star Race, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Showdown, qualifying NASCAR, Truck Series, Charlotte 200, qualifying NASCAR,Sprint Cup,Sprint Showdown NASCAR,Truck Series, Charlotte 200

9a.m. 10:45 a.m. 1 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 4 p.m. 5:30 p.m.

FS1 FS1 FS1 FS1 FS1 FS1

SOFTBALL

College, NCAA tourney, South Carolina Upstate vs. Washington 10:30 a.m. College, NCAA tourney,Lehighvs.TexasA8M 10:30 a.m. College, NCAAtourney, California vs. Pittsburgh12:30 p.m. College, NCAA tourney, Alabama vs. Fairfield 1 p.m. College, NCAAtourney, Michigan vs. Oakland 3 p.m. College, NCAAtourney,LSUvs.TexasSouthern 4 p.m.

ESPNU SEC ESPNU

SEC ESPNU ESPN2

BASEBALL

MLB, Pittsburgh at ChicagoCubs College, Nebraska at lllinois College, Washington State at ArizonaState College, Oregon atUtah College, LSU atSouth Carolina MLB, Detroitat St. Louis

College, Arizona atUCLA College, OregonState at Stanford

11 a.m. MLB 4 p.m. Bi g Ten 4 p.m. Pa c -12 4 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) 5 p.m. ES P NU 5 p.m. MLB 7 p.m. Pa c -12 7 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.), KICE 940-AM

MLB, Boston at Seattle EQUESTRIAN Horse Racing, Black-EyedSusan Stakes

7 p.m.

Root

noon

NBCSN

2 p.m.

NBCSN

CYCLING

Tour of California BASKETBALL

NBA playoffs, Atlanta at Washington NBA playoffs, Golden State at Memphis

4 p.m. 6:30 p.m.

ESPN ESPN

BOXING

Boxing, ReynaldoOjedavs.MontyMezaClay

6 p.m.

ESPN2

FOOTBALL

Australian, Adelaide vsSt. Kilda SOCCER England, Southampton vsAston Villa

8:30 p.m.

FS2

4:45 a.m.

NBCSN

5 a.m. 9 a.m. 4:30 a.m.

Tennis Tennis Tennis

SATURDAY TENNIS

ATP/WTA, Italian Open ATP/WTA, Italian Open ATP/WTA, Italian Open SOCCER England, Relegation Breakaway England, Liverpool vs Crystal Palace Australian, Melbourne vs. Sydney

7 a.m. NBCSN 9:30 a.m. NBCSN 10 p.m. FS2

BASEBALL

College, OklahomaState at Michigan College, Virginiaat North Carolina College, Mississippi State atTennessee MLB, Atlanta at Miami College, Nebraska at lllinois College, Southern Cal atCalifornia MLB, Pittsburgh at ChicagoCubs College, Vanderbilt at Alabama College, Arizona atUCLA College, LSU atSouth Carolina MLB, Boston at Seattle College, Washington State at ArizonaState College OregonState at Stanford

9 a.m.

Bi g Ten

9 a.m.

ESP N U

10 a.m. SEC 10 a.m. FS1 noon Big Ten 1 p.m. Pa c -12 1 p.m. FS1 1 :30 p.m. SE C 4 p.m. Pa c -12 5 p.m. SEC 6 p.m. MLB, Root 7 p.m. Pa c -12 7 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.), KICE 940-AM

SOFTBALL

College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional

9 a.m. ESPN 11:30 a.m. ESPN 1 p.m. ESPN2 2 p.m. ESPN 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESPNU 6:30 p.m. ESPN

GOLF

EuropeanTour, Spanish Open PGA Tour,Wells Fargo Championship PGA Tour,Wells Fargo Championship Champions Tour, RegionsTradition LPGA Tour, Kingsmill Championship EuropeanTour, Spanish Open

4:30 a.m. 10 a.m. noon noon 2 p.m. 4 a.m. (Sun.)

Golf Golf CBS Golf Golf Golf

HOCKEY

NHL playoffs, TampaBayat NewYork Rangers 10 a.m. EQUESTRIAN Horse racing, PreaknessStakes Prep 11:30 a.m. NBCSN Horse racing, PreaknessStakes 1 :30 p.m. NBC

ON DECK Today Baseball: Bendat Redmond, 4:30 p.m.; Summit at Mountain View,4:30p.m.; CrookCounty atCorbet, 4:30 p.m.;JunctionCityat Sisters, 4:30prm.; Madras atGladstone,4:30p.m.; LaPineat Glide(DH), 2p.m.;CrookCounty JVat Culver,4p.m. Soflbalh BendatRedmond,5 p.m.;Summit at Mountain View, 5p.m.; Corbettat CrookCounty, 4:30 p.m.; SistersatJunction City, 4:30p.mcGladstone at Madras,4;30p.m.;LaPineatGlide(DH),2p.m. Trackandfield: Bend,MountainView,Redmond,Ridgeview,Summit at Intermountain Conferencechampionships at Mountain View,3 p.m.;CrookCounty, MadrasatTri-VaffeyConferencechampionshipsin Madras,2 p.m.; Culverat ColumbiaBasin Conferencechampionshipsin Stanfield,10a.m. Boystennis:Bend, MountainView,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict 1 cham pionships in Sunriver; Redmond, Ridgevi ewatMidwesternLeaguechampronshrps atAshlandHrgh Girls tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict1 championships inSunriver, 8 a.m.; Redm ond, Ridgeview at Midwestern League champi onshipsatEugeneSwim andTennisClub; Sisters at Class 4A/3A/2A/1ASpecial District 3 championshipsatBlackBute Ranch Boys lacrosse:RedmondatRidgeview,7p.m. Girls lacrosse: OGLAplayoffs, quaderfinals, Summit at WestLinn,6p.m.

Saturday

Baseball:Sistersat Burns,3:30p.m. Soflbalh Union/Cove at Culver(DH),11a.m. Track and field: CrookCounty, Madras at Tri-Valley Conferencechampionships in Madras, 1:30 p.m.; Sisters at Sky-Em League championships in JunctionCity,11 arm.;LaPineat MountainValey Conferencechampionships in Glide,TBD;Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencechampionships in Stanfieldr TBD;Gilchrist atClass1ASpecial District 2championshipsatMountain View,11a m. Boys tennis:Bend,MountainView,Summit atClass5A SpeciaDi l strict1 championshipsin Sunriver,8a.m. Girls tennis: Bend,Mountain View,Summit at Class 5A SpeciaDi l strict 1 cham pionships in Sunriver; Sisters at Class 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 3 championshipat s BlackBute Ranch

BASKETBALL NBA playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All TimesPDT CONFERENCESEMIFINALS

(Best-of-7) Thursday'sGames Cleveland 94,Chicago73,Clevelandwins series4-2 Houston119,L.A.Clippers107, seriestied 3-3 Today'sGames AtlantaatWashington, 4p.m., Atlantaleadsseries3-2 GoldenStateat Memphis, 6:30p.m., GoldenState leadsseries3-2 Sunday'sGames x-Memphisat GoldenState,12:30p.m. L.A. Clippers atHouston, 8 or9:30 p.m. Thursday'sSummaries

Rockets119, Clippers107 HOUSTON (119)

GOLF PGA WellsFargoChampionship Thursday AtGuail Hollow Club Charlotte, NrC. Purse: $7.1 milliorr ) Yardage : 7,562; Par72 (SB-SB First Roundlead ers RobertStreb 33-32—65 32-34—66 PatrickReed 33-33—66 KeviCh n appeff 34-33—67 WebbSimpson 32-35—67 RickyBarnes 34-33—67 Michae lThompson 32-35—67 StewartCink 34-33—67 ChessonHadley 34-33—67 Billy HurleIIIy 34-~8 K.J.Choi CarlPettersson 33-35—68 PatrickRodgers 34-34 —68 MattJone s 32-37—69 KevinStreelman 35-34—69 J.B.Holm es 35-34—69 HidekiMatsuyama 34-35—69 BillLunde 35-34—69 Shawn Stefani 34-35—69 Brendan Steele 36-33—69 Steven Alker 34-35—69 JustinThomas 35-34—69 MarlinFlores 35-34—69 RussellKnox 35-~9 GeoffOgilvy 34-35—69 AngelCabrera 34-35—69 KevinKisner 36-33—69 Will MacK enzie 35-34 —69 36-33—69 George McNeiff 35-34—69 ScottGutschewski 35-35—70 JohnHuh 36-34—70 Bo Van Pelt 36-34—70 GaryWoodland 35-35—70 PadraigHarrington 35-35—70 HunterMahan 35-35—70 Andres Romero 34-36—70 BrianStuard 38-32—70 Cameron Percy 34-36—70 Freddie Jacobson 37-33—70 MichaelPutnam Sangm oonBae 34-36—70 RoryMcffroy 34-36—70 JasonGore 33-37—70 CarlosOrtiz 35-35—70 Jonathan Randolph 32-38—70 JohnPeterson 35-36—71 RyanMoore 37-34—71 Lucas Glover 38-33—71 AlexCejka 35-36—71 MarkWilson 35-36—71 ScotlBrow n 33-38—71 Phil Mickelson 36-35—71 Nicklaylor 35-36—71 DanielBerger 36-35—71 DannyLee 35-36—71 GonzaloFdez-Castano 35-36—71 JohnMerrick 37-34—71 35-36—71 AdamSc ott 34-37—71 BooWeekley 34-37—71 ChadCampbell 40-31—71 RyoIshikawa 37-34—71 BlayneBarber 36-35—71 OscarFraustro 36-35—71 Jim He rman 33-38—71 Matt1hompson

Ariza 4-122-2 13, Smith5-9 5-8 19, Howard LPGA 7-12 6-1620,Terry3-8 0-0 7, Harden5-20 11-11 23, TJones6-83-316,Brewer6-145-719,Prigioni KingsmiaChampionship 0-3 0-0 0,Capela1-1 0-02. Totals87-87 32-47 Thursday 119. At KingsmillResort, RiverCourse L.A. CLIPPERS (107) Williamsburg,Va. Barnes4-120-09, Griffin12-20 3-7 28,Jordan Purse:$1.3 million 2-5 4-6 8, Paul10-1910-1131, Redick4-13 4-4 Yardage:6,349; Par71(SB-SB) 15, Crawford4-130-1 9, Davis0-1 2-2 2, Rivers First Roundleaders 2-81-1 5, Hawes 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 88-91 24a-denotesamateur 82 1BT. Joanna Klatten 31-34—65 Houston 25 37 17 40 — 119 PatHurst 34-32—66 L.A. Clippers 29 8 5 28 15 — 107 AlisonLee 35-31—66 MorganPressel 34-32—66 JacquiConcolino 35-32—67 Cavaliers 94, Bulls73 PaulaCreamer 32-35—67 P errine D ela c ou r 33-34—67 CLEVEL AND(94) S o Yeon R yu 35-32—67 James 7-23 1-2 15, Thompson4-11 5-5 13, atieBurnet 32-36—68 Mozgov 2-6 3-4 7, Irving 2-2 1-2 6, Shumpert K ustinErnst 34-34—68 5-141-213, Smith3-6 3-312, Jones3-6 0-0 9, A Nannette H i l 35-33—68 Dellavedova7-11 2-2 19, Harris 0-0 0-0 0, PerM iJung H u r 35-33—68 kins 0-0 0-0 0, Miller 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 33-79 MinjeeLee 35-33—68 16-20 94. Sarah JaneSmith 35-33—68 CHICAGO (78) A ngel a S ta n fo rd 34-~8 Dunleavy3-90 07,Gasol3-82-28, Noah1-22-2 MariajoUribe 36-32—68 4, Rose 7-160-014, Butler8-222-220, Gibson1-3 Yueer 36-33—69 CindyFeng 0-0 2, Hinrich0-10-0 0, Mirotic 3-81-2 7, Brooks Christina Kim 36-33—69 2-40-04, Sneff 1-32-25,McDermott0-00-00,Mo35-34—69 eiYoungKim hammed 0-20-00,Moore1-20-02.Totals30-80 S 35-34—69 PK. Kon g k ra ph a n 9-1B 78. 36-33—69 Cleyeland SS 25 15 21 — 94 StacyLewis 34-35—69 e Chicago 81 13 16 13 — 73 BrittanyLincicom 36-33—69 PaulaReto 35-35—70 ChristelBoeljon Eun-HeeJi 37-33—70 BASEBALL 34-36—70 JenniferJohn son 36-34—70 MoriyaJutanugarn College 35-35—70 HyoJooKim Pac-12 PernrffaLmdberg 33-37—70 All TimesPDT CatrionaMatthew 38-32—70 PaolaMoreno 35-35—70 Conference Overall HaruNomura 35-35—70 W L T PctW L T Pct AnnaNordqvist 36-34—70 UCLA 18 6 0 .7 50 37 12 0 .755 JiYoung Oh 36-34—70 ArizonaSt. 16 9 0 . 640 31 18 0 .633 RyannO'Toole 36-34—70 SouthernCal 15 9 0 .625 3416 0 .680 Pornanon gPhatlum 36-34—70 California 1 5 9 0 . 625 31 16 0 .660 Kris lamulis 36-34—70 OregonSt. 14 9 1 . 604 3314 1 .705 Ayako Uehara 36-34—70 Oregon 1 11 3 0 .458 31 22 0 .585 JingYan 35-35—70 Arizona 12 1 5 0 .444 28 20 0 .583 DoriCarter 34-37—71 Washington 11 16 0 .407 26 22 0 .542 CheffaChoi 38-33—71 Washin gtonSt. 9 16 0 .360 27 24 0 .529 Emma deGroot 36-35—71 Utah 7 16 1 .313 16 30 1 .351 Sandra Gal 35-36—71 Stanford 7 17 0 . 2 92 22 28 0 .440Brooke M. Henderson 36-35—71 Charley Huff 37-34—71 Thursday'sGame 37-34—71 KimKaufman Arizona St. 5,Washington St.0 LydiaKo 36-35—71 Today'sGames 34-37—71 Ju,Young Lee OregonatUtah,4 p.m. 35-36—71 MariaMcBride WashingtonSt.at ArizonaSt., 4 p.m. 35-36—71 Azahara Munoz Cal StateNorthridge atWashington, 5p.m. 35-36—71 Brooke Pancake Arizonaat UCLA, 7p.m. 35-36—71 AmyYang OregonSt.at Stanford, 7p.m. 36-36—72 AmyAnderson Saturday'sGames 38-34—72 CydneyClanton 36-36—72 Oregon atUtah,1 p.m. JodiEwarlSha doff 34-38—72 Southern CalatCalifornia,1 p.m. JulietaGranada 37-35—72 Cal StateNorthridge atWashington, 2p.m. MariaHernandez ArizonaatUCLA,4p.m. HaNaJang 36-36—72 OregonSt.at Stanford, 7p.m. Danieffe Kang 36-36—72 WashingtonSt.at ArizonaSt., 7 p.m. HaejiKang 35-37—72 Sunday'sGames a-Megan Khang 36-36—72 Oregon atUtah,10a.m. I.K. Kim 38-34—72 Cal StateNorthridgeatWashington,1 p.m. JenniferKirby 36-36—72 Arizonaat UCLA,1 p.m. CandieKung 38-34—72 Oregon St.at Stanford,1 p.m. MiHyangLee 35-37—72 Southern CalatCalifornia,4 p.m. Min Lee 36-36—72

hampions

TENNIS

Regions Tradition Thursday At ShoalCreek ShoalCreek,Ala. Purse:$2.8 million Yardage:7,231;Par:72( 36-36) Firsl Round leaders 31-36 —67 JeffMaggert KevinSutherland 33-35 —68 34-35 —69 lom Wa tson ColinMontgome 35-34 —69 Wes Short, Jr. 33-36 —69 TomByrum 36-34—70 Gil Morga n 35-35—70 GeneSauers 35-35—70 KennyPerry 36-34—70 FredFunk 34-36—70 DavidFrost 33-37—70 Esteban Toledo 34-36—70 Michael Allen 35-35—70 GuyBoros 36-34—70 37-34—71 ScottHoch 34-37 —71 JohnCook 34-37 —71 OlinBrowne 35-36—71 TomPerniceJr. 34-37 —71 JayDonBlake 35-36—71 Billy Andra de 34-37—71 MarkO'Meara 35-36—71 KirkTripletl RussCochran 37-34—71 JeffHart 36-35—71 BrianHenninger 35-37—72 BradBryant 35-37—72 lom Purlzer 34-38—72 PeterSenior 34-38—72 JoeySindelar 36-36—72 JohnRiegger 37-35—72 ScottDunlap 35-37—72 lanWo osnam 37-35—72 JoeDaley 37-35 —72 36-36—72 Woody Austin MorrisHatalsky 37-36—73 37-36—73 BobTwa y 36-37—73 JoeDurant 37-36—73 BradFaxon 37-36—73 BartBryant 36-37—73 JoseCoceres 36-37—73 MarkMcNulty BernhardLanger 35-38—73 36-38—74 ScottVerplank StevePate 35-39—74 BobGilder 39-35—74 MarkCalcavecch 36-38—74 ChienSoonLu 37-37—74 MarkWiebe 37-37—74 PaulGoydso 36-38—74 SandyLyle 36-38—74 RodSpittle 37-37—74 LorenRoberts 39-36—75 JohnHuston 37-38—75 LarryMize 39-36—75 37-38—75 MarcoDawson 38-37—75 NickPrice 40-35—75 JerrySm ith 35-40—75 MikeReid 37-38—75 MikeGoodes 37-38—75 RogerChapman

SOFTBALL College NCAAtournament All TimesPDT

EugeneRegional (Double elimination; x-if necessary) Thursday'sGames NorthDakotaSt.4, FresnoState0 Oregon8, BYU0 Today'sGames Game3:North DakotaSt.vs. Oregon,11a.m. Game4: FresnoSt.vs. BYU,2p.m. Game5:G3Loservs. G4Winner, 5p.m. Saturday'sGames Game6:G3Winner vs. G5Winner, 10a.m. x-Game 7: 4p.m.

HOCKEY NHL playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AR TimesPDT CONFERN ECEFINALS (Besl-of-7;x-if necessary) Saturday'sGame Tampa Bayat N.Y.Rangers, 10a.m. SundaytsGame Chicag oatAnaheim,noon Monday'sGame Tampa Bayat N.Y.Rangers, 5p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AR TimesPDT

EasternConference T Pls 3 21 3 18 4 16 2 14 0 9

W L D.C. United 6 1 N ewEngland 5 2 NewYork 4 1 Columbus 4 3 TorontoFC 3 5 3 5 Chicago OrlandoCit y 2 5 NewYorkCity FC 1 6 Philadelphia 1 7 Montreal 0 3

0

9

3 3 3 2

9 6 6 2

WesternConference

GF 13 14 14 15 12 7 9 7 10 3

W L T Pls GF Vancouver 6 3 2 20 14 FC Dallas 6 2 2 20 1 7 Seattle 5 3 1 16 1 5 SanJose 4 4 2 14 1 0 S porting KansasCiy 3 2 5 14 13 L os Angele s 3 3 5 14 11 RealSaltLake 3 2 5 14 9 Portland 3 3 4 13 9 Houston 3 4 4 13 1 3 Colorado 1 2 7 10 9

Today'sGames

ChicagoatNewYorkCity FC,4p.m. NewYorkatFCDallas, 6p.m.

Saturday'sGames

RealSaltLakeatMontreal,1 p.m. SeattleatVancouver,4 p.m. Toront oFCatNewEngland,4:30p.m. Coloradoat Sporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. Portlandat Houston, 5:30p.m. ColumbusatSanJose, 7:30p.m.

Sunday'sGames Los AngelesatOrlandoCity,2 p.m. D.C.Unitedat Philadelphia, 4p.m.

GA 8 10 9 10 13 10

14 12 21 8 GA

9

13 9 11 13 11 11 9 14 9

Professional Italiaa Opea Thursday atRome Men Third Round DavidGoffin, Belgium,def. AndyMurray (3), Britain, walkover. RafaelNadal(4), Spain,def. JohnIsner(16), United States,6-4, 6-4. DavidFerrer(7), Spain,def.GuiffermoGarcia-Lopez,Spain,6-1,6-3. Stan Wawrinka(8), Switzerland, def. Dominic Thiem,Austria, 7-6(3), 6-4. TomasBerdych(6), CzechRepublic, def. Fabio Fognini, Italy,6-3,3-6, 7-6(2). RogerFederer(2), Switzerland,def. KevinAnderson (15),SouthAfrica, 6-3, 7-5. Kei Nishikori(5),Japan,def.Viktor Troicki, Serbia, 6-4, 6-3. NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia, def. ThomazBeffucci, Brazil, 5-7,6-2,6-3. Women Third Round ChristinaMcHale, United States, def. SerenaWilliams(1),UnitedStates,walkover. Carla SuarezNavarro (10), Spain,def. Eugenie Bouchard(6), Canada, 6-7(2), 7-5, 7-6(7). AlexandraDulgheru, Romania, def. Ekaterina Makaroya(8), Russia,6-4, 6-3. SimonaHalep(2), Romania, def. VenusWiliams (14), UnitedStates,6-2,6-1. Maria Sharapova (3), Russia,def. BojanaJovanovski,Serbia,6-3, 6-3. Daria Gavrilova,Russia,def. TimeaBacsinszky, Swilzerlandr 6-4, 7-6(0). PetraKvitova(4), CzechRepublic, def.JelenaJankovic (16),Serbia,6-3,6-2. Victoria Azarenka,Belarus, def. Irina-Camelia Begu,Romania, 6-4, 5-7,6-1.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— PlacedRHPJustinMasterson onthe15-dayDL, retroactiveto Wednesday. RecalledLHPRobbieRossfromPawtucket(IL). Assigned 3B LuisJimenezoutright to Pawtucket. CHICAGO WHITESOX— Optioned INFMicah Johnson to Charlotte (IL). CLEVELANDINDIANS— AssignedRHPAnthony Swarzak outright to Columbus(IL). OAKLANDATHLETICS— TradedC BlakeForsythe to Philadelphiafor cash.SentLHPSean Doolittle to Stockton(Cal)fora rehabassignment. TAMPA BAYRAYS—Claimed RHPPrestonGuilmet off waiversfromToronto andoptioned himto Durham (IL). TEXASRANGERS— OptionedRHPSpencerPatton toRoundRock(PCL). ReinstatedRHPKyuji Fujikawafromthe15-dayDL. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—PlacedOF Kely Johnsonon the15-dayDL.Recalled OFTodd Cunninghamfrom Gwinnett(IL). LOSANGELES DODGERS— PlacedRHP Pedro Baezonthe15-dayDL RecalledLHPDanielCoulombe fromOklahomaCity (PCL). MILWAUKEEBREWERS — Optioned RHP Jim Henderson to ColoradoSprings(PCL). NEW YORKMETS— PlacedRHPBuddyCarlyle on the15-dayDL,retroactive toTuesday. Recaled LHP JackLeathersichfromLasVegas(PCL). ST.LOUISCARDINALS— PlacedOFJonJayon the 15-dayDL, retroactiveto Sunday.Recalled 1B XavierScruggsfromMemphis (PCL). WASHIN GTONNATIONALS— Sent RHPErik Davis toHarrisburg(EL)forarehab assignment. BASKETB ALL USABASKETBALL— NamedSeanMillercoach and EdCooleyandArchieMiler assistantcoachesfor the 2015USAbasketball men'sU19world championship team. Women's National BasketballAssociation MINNESOTA LYNX— SignedFAsjhaJones. FOOTBAL L NationalFootballLeague BUFFALO BILLS—SignedGJohnMilerand RB KarlosWiliams. CINCINN ATI BENGALS—Agreedto termswith TE C.J. Uzom ah,SDerron Smith andWRMario Alford. CLEVELANDBROWNS — Signed DB Ifo Ekpre-0lomu. DALLAS COWBOYS— Released LBsKeith Smith and WillSmith.SignedSDanny Mccray, LBDonnie Baggs andTEGeoffSwaim. DETROILION T S—Signed DECoreyWootton toa one-yearcontract.PromotedLanceNewmarkto director ofcollegescouting, CedricSaundersto senior vice presidentof football operationsandScott McEwento seniorpersonnelexecutive. PRTSBU RGH STEELERS — Signed TEJesse James to afour-yearcontract. TENNE SSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms with RBsDavidCobbandJalston Fowler.NamedJimmy Stantonvicepresident of communications. Promoted RalphOckenfels to vicepresident of marketingand broadcastanddigital rights,GaryGlennto senior director of digitalmediaandRobbie Bohrento senior director ofmediarelations. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague VANCO UVERCANUCKS—SignedDJordanSubban toanentry-level contract. WASHINGTONCAPITALS— ReassignedD Nate SchmidttoHershey(AHL). COLLEGE BAYLOR —AnnouncedGManuLecomtePoint has joined themen'sbasketbaffteam. BYU—NamedGuardYoungwomen'sgymnastics coach. INDIANA —Dismissed FsDevin DavisandHanner Mosquera-Perea fromthe men'sbasketball team. SAINTROS E — Named Kyle Wilkins baseball coach. WAYNE STATE(MICH.) —NamedE.J. Henderson assi stantfootballcoachandRobFeemanandJeffFantuzzi graduate assistant football coaches.

FISH COUNT Upstreamdarly movement of adult chrnook,Iack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbia Riverdamslast updatedWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,597 30 2 34 9 TheDaffes 1,530 296 3 2 John Day 2,174 36 7 8 2 -1 McNary 2,560 270 7 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedWednesday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 179,800 6,086 4,468 2,347 T he Daffes 156,340 5,114 337 16 6 John Day 131,639 4,625 509 321 McNary 119,186 3,069 67 1

414

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOFTBALL OregOn WinS regiOnal OPener OVerBYU —Oregon broke open

Hawks gamethat he plans to play for the Falcons in2016. Irvin, whogrew up in Atlanta, told BlackSportsOnLine.comthat "I'm going to be in Atlanta next season. I'm ready." Irvin, of course,maywell havehis choice of where he wants to playfollowing the 2015 seasonasthe Seahawks did not pick up an option for the2016seasonthat would havepaid himalmost $7.8million.

a 2-0 lead with a five-run fifth inning en route to an8-0 win over BYUin six innings in the Ducks' first game of theEugeneRegional of the NCAA LACROSSE tournament on Thursday. No. 2seededOregon will face North Dakota College, NCAAtourney, Notre Dame vs. Albany noon ESPNU State in Game 3 at11 a.m. today. BYU will meet Fresno State, which took CYCLING College, NCAA tourney, Ohio State vs. Denver 2:30 p.m. ESPNU a 4-0 loss to North Dakota State onThursday, in the loser's bracket of the double-elimination regional. Pitcher Cheridan Hawkins went the distance CaVendiShraCeS to3rd TOur OfCalifOrnia Stage ViCtOryAUTO RACING for the Ducks, recording12 strikeouts. Britain's Mark Cavendish raced his third Tour of California stage victory IndyCar, Indianapolis 500, qualifying 1 p.m. ABC and Latvia's TomSkujins retained the overall lead Thursday in the rainy NASCAR,Sprint Cup,All-Star Race, qualifying 4 p.m. FS1 fifth stage in SantaClarita, California. Cavendish, the Etixx-Quick Step FOOTBALL NASCAR,Sprint Cup,All-Star Race 6 p.m. FS1 rider who won the first two stages, powered to the front in the final 200 Brady aPPealS SuSPenSiOn in 'Deflategate' — rom Bradyhas yards to win the 95.7-mile leg from SantaBarbara to SantaClarita in 3 CYCLING appealed his four-game suspension for his role in using deflated foothours, 51 minutes, 37 seconds. Tour of California 1:30 p.m. NBCSN balls during the AFC championship game. Theexpected appeal was filed FOOTBALL Thursday aheadofa5 p.m.deadline.TheNFLannouncedthequarterGriePOI SPrintS tOStage 6 Win, Contador keePS Giro lead back's suspension on Monday,also fining the NewEngland Patriots $1 — Andre Greipel sprinted to victory on the sixth stage of the Giro d'Italia Australian, West Coast vsGold Coast 2 :30 a.m. FS 2 on Thursday, while Alberto Contador remained in theoverall lead despite Arena, Los Angeles at Portland 7 p.m. C S NNW million and taking awaytwo draft picks. Brady's appeal only deals with the suspension andmust be heardwithin10 days. being involved in acrash in the rush to the finish. Greipel was perfectly ledoutbyLottoSoudateammate GregHendersonandhehadenough Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis SeahawkS' Irvin SayS he'S gOingtoAtlanta in 2016 — Seattle power to beat Matteo Pelucchi by abike length. — From staffand wire reports not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations. linebacker BruceIrvin said Wednesdaynight while attending theAtlanta


FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

C3

MLB

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

NewYork Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore

CIlbS 6, MetS 5

HAMMERING IT HOME

All TimesPDT

CHICAGO — Dexter Fowler homered and scored the winning run in the seventh inning Dna passed ball, and theChicago Cubsrallied from a four-run deficit to beat the New York Mets, completing a fourgame sweep.

AMERICANLEAGUE East Division W L Pct GB

Kansas City Detroit Minnesota Chicago Cleveland

21 20 17 17 15

15 16 18 19 17

.583 .556 1 .486 3'Iz .472 4 .469 4

14 16 17 21

Pct GB .629 .600 1 .543 3 .452 6 .364 9

Central Division W L 22 13 21 19 14 12

West Division

W L 22 13 17 17 15 19 15 20 13 23

Houston Los Angeles Seattle Texas Oakland

Pct GB .629 ,500 4'/2

Thursday'sGames St. Louis2,Cleveland1 Detroit13, Minnesota1 Kansas City6,Texas3 TampaBay6, N.Y.Yankees1 Houston 6, Toronto4 Boston 2, Seatle1 Today'sGames LA. Angels(Weaver 1-4) at Baltimore(W.Chen 1-1), 4;05 p.m. Cleveland(B.Chen0-1) at Texas (W.Rodriguez 1-1), 5:05 p.m. N.Y.Yank ees(Pineda5-0) at KansasCity (C.Young 2-0),5;10p.m. TampaBay(Odorizzi 3-2) at Minnesota(PHughes 2-4),5:10p.m. Toronto(Dickey1-4) at Houston (Keuchel 4-0), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Greene 3-2) at St. Louis(C.Martinez3-1), 5:15 p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Rodon 1-0) at Oakland(Hahn 1-3), 7;05 p.m. Boston(Buchholz2-4)atSeattle (Happ3-1),7:10 p.m. Saturday'sGames Tampa Bayat Minnesota,11:10 a.m. Detroit atSt. Louis,11:15a.m. L.A. Angelat s Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. N.Y.Yankeesat KansasCity, 4:10p.m. TorontoatHouston,4:10 p.m. Cleve landatTexas,5:05p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxatOakland,6:05p.m. Bostonat Seattle, 6:10p.m. Sunday'sGames L.A. Angelat s Baltimore,10:35 a.m. N.Y.YankeesatKansasCity,11:10 a.m. Tampa Bayat Minnesota,11:10 a.m. TorontoatHouston, 11:10a.m. ClevelandatTexas,12:05 p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxatOakland,1:05p.m. Bostonat Seattle,1:10 p.m. Detroit atSt. Louis,5:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

East Division

NewYork Washington Miami Atlanta Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee

Los Angeles SanDiego SanFrancisco Arizona Colorado

L 15 16 19 19 23

Pct GB .571 .543 1 .457 4 .441 4r/r ,361 7'/x

W L 24 10 19 15 18 17 17 18 12 23

Pct GB .706

W 20 19 16 15 13

Central Division

West Division W L 22 18 17 15 11

11 17 18 18 19

.I

441 B i/z

.429 7 ,361 9'Iz

.559 5

514 6r/x 486 7'/2

.343 12r/r

Pct GB .667 .514 5 .486 6 .455 7

.367 9'/2

Thursday'sGames St. Louis2,Cleveland1 Philadelphi4, a Pittsburgh2 Chicago Cubs6, N.Y.Mets 5 Cincinnati 4,SanFrancisco3 Coloradoat L.A.Dodgers, lategame WashingtonatSan Diego,lategame Today'sGames Pittsburgh(Locke2-2) at ChicagoCubs(Hendricks 0-1),11:20a.m. Arizona (C.Anderson0-1) atPhiladelphia(Bilingsley 0-2), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta(Teheran3-1) atMiami(Phelps2-0),4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Lohse2-4) at N.Y.Mets(B.Colon 6-1), 4:10 p.m. SanFrancisco(Bumgarner3-2) at Cincinnati(Marqufs 3-2),4:10p.m. Detroit (Greene 3-2) atSt. Louis(C.Martinez3-1), 5:15 p.m. Colorado(E.Butler 2-3) at L.A. Dodgers(Kershaw 1-2), 7:10p.m. Washington(Zfmmermann 2-2) at SanDiego(Despaigne 2-1), 7:10p.m. Saturday'sGames Atlantaat Miami,10:05a.m. Detroit atSt. Louis,11;15a.m. PittsburghatChicagoCubs,1:05 p.m. Arizona at Philadelphia, 4:05p.m. MilwaukeeatN.Y. Mets, 4:10p.m. SanFranciscoatCincinnati,4:10 p.m. Washington atSanDiego,5:40p.m. Coloradoat LA. Dodgers, 6:10p.m. Sunday'sGames Atlantaat Miami,10:10a.m. Milwaukee atN.Y. Mets,10:10 a.m. San Francisco atCincinnati,10:10a.m. Arizona at Philadelphia,10:35 a.m. PittsburghatChicagoCubs,11:20a.m. Colorado at L.A.Dodgers,1:10 p.m. Washington atSanDiego,1:10 p.m. Detroit atSt. Louis,5;05p.m.

This Date in Baseball 1918 —Washington's Walter Johnsonpitcheda 1-0, 18-inningvictoryoverLefly Wiliamsof the ChicagoWhiteSox, whoalso went thedistance. 1919 — After 12scoreless innings, Cincinnati scored10runsoffAl Mamauxin the13th to beatthe BrooklynDodgers10-0. 1941 —JoeDiMaggio beganhis 56-gamehitting streakagainstChicago'sEddie Smith, going1-for-4 with oneRBI. 1944 —ClydeShounoftheRedstossedano-hitter againsttheBostonBravesfor a1-0 victory in Cincinnati.ChuckAleno's onlyhomerunof theyearwas the difference. 1962 —Detroit'sVirgil Truckspitchedhis first of two no-hittersfortheseason,beating theWashington Senators1-0. VicWertz's two-out homerintheninth off BobPorterfield wonthe game. 196B —DonCardwell becamethefirst pitcherto throw ano-hitter in his first start after beingtraded. TheChicagoCubsbeat theSt. Louis Cardinals 4-0at WrigleyField.

I.

' I(r Tony Deiak/The Associated Press

St. Louis' Matt Carpenter, right, is congratulated by Matt Holliday after Carpenter hit a two-run home run off Cleveland relief pitcher Marc Rzepczynski In the eighth Inning of Thursday's game In Cleveland. Peter Bourjos scored on the play and the Cardinals won 2-1.

American Lea ue

Royals 6, Rangers 3

Red Sox 2, Mariiters1

ARLINGTON, Texas— Alcides Escobar had three hits andacSEATTLE —Brock Holt doubled counted for five runs, Eric Hosmer ai)d scored the go-ahead rUITDIT homeredandKansasCitybeat Rickie Weeks' error with oneDIJtin Texas for a split of the four-game the ninth inning, ShaneVictorino series. Escobar led off the game hit his first home rufT Df the season with a single andscored DnAlex ai)d Boston beat Seattle for its fourth witT in five games. Holt lined Gordon's fielder's choice on a the second pitch of the ninth from shattered-bat grounder. Escobar added a twD-run single IIT the Seattle closer FernandoRodney fourth, then had GITRBI single (1-2) into left-center andwas easil ysafeatsecondwhenWeeks' before scoring DITHosmer's drive throw sailed over Robinson Cano's in the sixth. head. KansasCity Texas

Tigers13, Twiits1 DETROIT — Miguel Cabrera homered twice anddrove in five runs, and Anibal Sanchezpitched eight sharp innings tDlift Detroit to a victory over Minnesota. NickCastellanos andBryanHoladayalso went deep for theTigers, andAnthony Gose addedacareer-high four hits.

Phillies 4, Pirates 2

Minnesota Detroit ab r hbi ab r hbi D ozier2b 3 0 1 0 Gosecf 5 2 4 0 Bernierph-2b1 0 0 0 Kinsler2b 5 2 2 1 KSuzukc 3 1 0 0 HPerezph-2b 1 0 0 0 Mauerdh 4 0 0 0 MiCarr1b 5 3 3 5 Pfouff e3b 4 0 1 0 Romine1b 0 0 0 0 EdEscrlf 3 0 1 1 JMrtnzdh 4 1 2 0 Kvargs1b 3 0 0 0 Cespdslf 4 1 0 1 ab r h bi ab r hbi Boston Seattle A Escorss 5 2 3 3 Choorf 4 0 3 0 ERosarrf 3 0 0 0 Cstgns3b 3 2 2 1 H ickscf 3 0 1 0 RDavisrf 5 1 3 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi Mostks 3b 5 0 1 0 Andrus ss 3 0 0 1 DSantnss 3 0 1 0 Holadyc 5 1 3 3 Bettscf 4 0 1 1 S.Smithrf 3 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 5 1 3 2 Fielderdh 2 0 1 1 Jlglesis ss 5 0 1 1 Pedroia2b 4 0 0 0 Rugginph-rf 1 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 4 0 2 0 Beltre3b 4 0 0 0 Totals 30 1 5 1 Totals 4 2 132013 Ortizdh 4 0 0 0 BMillerlf 3 0 1 0 AGordnlf 5 0 0 1 Morlnd1b 4 0 0 0 Minnesota B g g 1 g g ggg — 1 HRmrzlf 5 0 4 0 Weeksph-If 1 0 0 0 Infante2b 5 1 2 0 Peguerlf 4 0 0 0 Detroit SG1 B13 32x — 13 B rdlyJrlf 0 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 1 0 O rlandrf 4 1 1 0 Field2b 4 1 1 0 E—PIouffe 2 (3). DP—Minnesota 1, Detroit 2. Napoli1b 4 0 0 0 N.Cruzdh 3 1 3 0 Buterac 3 1 2 0 Corprnc 4 1 1 0 LOB —Minnesota 3, Detroit 10. 28—Kinsler 9 Victornrf 3 1 2 1 Seager3b 4 0 2 0 JDysoncf 2 0 0 0 DShldscf 2 1 1 1 R.Davi s(3), Holaday(1). 38—Gose (2), KinslerI2. B.Holt3b-ss 3 1 2 0 Morrsn1b 3 0 0 1 Totals 38 6 146 Totals 3 1 3 7 3 Mi.Cabrera2(8), Castelanos (3), Holaday(1). Bogartsss 3 0 1 0 Zunfnoc 4 0 0 0 K ansas Cit y 1 0 0 2 0 3 ggg — 6 HR — SB — D.Santana(3). SF—Cespedes. S.Leonc 0 0 0 0 Ackleycf 4 0 0 0 Texas ggg G20 1gg — 3 IP H R E R BBSD Swihartc 2 0 0 0 CTaylrss 2 0 0 0 E—Corporan(1). DP—KansasCity1. LOB—KanMinnesota Sandovlph-3bg 0 0 0 sas City9,Texas8.28—K.Morales (13), Infante(10), PelfreyL,3-1 42- 3 10 5 4 2 1 Totals 32 2 10 2 Totals 3 2 1 7 1 Butera(1).HR —Hosmer(7). CS—A.Escobar(2). SDuensing 2-3 3 3 3 1 0 Boston 000 100 G01 — 2 Butera,J.Dyson,Andrus.SF—Andrus. Pressl y 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 Seattle 000 001 ggg — 1 IP H R E R BBSD Graham 2 6 5 5 0 3 E—Weeks (1). DP—Boston 2, Seatle 1. LOBKansasCily Boston11,Seatle 7. 28—H.Ramirez (1), B.Holt (4). GuthrieW3-2 5 6 2 2 0 1 Detroit W,3-4 8 5 1 1 1 9 HR — Victorino (1). CS—H.Ramirez(2). S—Bogaerts, Madson 1 0 0 0 0 1 An.Sanchez 0 0 0 0 1 Swihart. SF —Betts. 1-3 1 1 1 1 1 Afburquerque 1 Hochevar T — 3: 0 3. A — 31,785 ( 41, 5 74). IP H R E R BBSD K.HerreraH,5 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Boston W.DavisH,3 1 0 0 0 0 0 J.Kelly 61-3 5 1 1 3 2 G.HogandS,7-8 1 0 0 0 2 0 National League 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Texas Layne BarnesW,2-0 1 2 0 0 0 0 DetwilerL,0-5 5 9 3 3 1 3 Reds 4, Giants 3 UeharaS,8-9 1 0 0 0 0 0 Bass 1-3 2 2 2 0 0 12-3 1 1 1 0 1 Seattle S.Freem an 61-3 8 1 1 2 2 Fuiikawa Elias 1 0 0 0 0 0 CINCINNATI — MarlDITByrd hit 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 Claudio Lowe 1 2 0 0 0 1 a bases-loaded single ai)d a tie1-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP Furbush —by Guthrie (Fielder, Fielder), by Detwiler breaking solo homer IIT the eighth Ca.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 2 (J.Dyson).WP —Guthrie. PB—Corporan. RodneyL,1-2 1 1 1 1 1 0 T—3;11.A—33,818 (48,114). inning, leading Cincinnati to a HBP —byRodney(Sandoval). WP—J.Kelly. victory over SanFrancisco. The T—2:53. A—20,172(47,574).

I,

Astros 6, Blue Jays4 HOUSTON — Jonathan Villar's two-rUIT double pi)t Houston Dn

top in a four-run seventh inning af)d the Astros beatToronto. Rookie Preston Tucker's RBI double off Aaron Loup (1-2) with no outs in the seventh brought the Astros within 4-3. Villar's groundball double down the right field line scored two more to give Houston the lead.

Rays 6, Yankees1

Reds have wotT 12 Dftheir past

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.— Rene Rivera homered and drove IIT four

15 regular-season gamesagainst the Giants at GreatAmerican Ball Park. Byrd's two-run single off struggling Tim Linceci)m put Reds starter Johnny Ctfeto in position for a win. Heturned a 3-2 lead over to the NL'sworst bullpen IITthe eighth, and it got away.

runs, Erasmo Ramirez allowed one hit over five innings and Tampa Baybeat the NewYork Yankees. After losing the series Dpei)er11-5, the Rays rebDUITded

New York Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi Grndrscf 5 0 2 0 Fowlercf 3 3 2 1 D Herrr2b 5 1 1 0 Rizzo1b 2 0 1 1 Duda1b 4 1 2 0 Bryant3b 4 0 1 1 Cuddyrlf 4 0 0 0 SCastross 4 0 0 0 Mayrryrf 4 0 1 2 Castilloc 3 0 0 0 Floresss 4 1 1 1 Grimmp 0 0 0 0 Reckerc 4 2 2 2 JRussllp 0 0 0 0 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 Coghlnlf 0 0 0 0 T eiada3b 2 0 0 0 Solerrf 4 1 1 0 D nMrpph 1 0 1 0 Szczurlf 3 1 1 1 N iesep 3 0 0 0 Stropp 0 0 0 0 Roblesp 0 0 0 0 MMntrph-c 1 0 0 0 Lthrschp 0 0 0 0 TWoodp 1 0 0 0 M onellc 1 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 D.Rossph-c 3 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 ARussll2b 3 1 0 1 Totals 37 5 105 Totals 3 1 6 6 5 N ew York 01B 2 2 B 000 — 6 Chicago ggg 14B 10x — 6 E—Flores (8). LOB—New York 6, Chicago5. 28 — Duda (11), Szczur (2). HR —Flores (5), Recker 2(2),Fowler(3). SB—Granderson(3), Coghlan(4). IP H R E R BBSO New York 61-3 6 6 4 1 2 NieseL,3-3 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Robles Leathersich 0 0 0 0 1 0 Goeddel 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago 41-3 7 5 5 1 5 TWood 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 Motte Grimm 1 0 0 0 0 3 J.Russell 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 StropW,1-2 11- 3 0 0 0 0 2 H.RondonS,8-9 1 1 0 0 0 1 Leathersich pitchedto1 batterin the8th. HBP—byNiese(Rizzo,Rizzo). PB—Recker. T—2:49.A—31,496 (40,929).

tD win the final three games. Ramirez (1-1) didn't allow a hit San Francisco C i n cinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi after Jacoby Ellsbury opened GBlanclf 2 2 2 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 the first with a single. The rightSusacph-c 0 0 0 0 Cozartss 3 1 1 0 hander struck out four and walked P anik2b 3 1 1 0 Votto1b 3 0 0 0

PHILADELPHIA —Aaron Harang scattered five hits over eight scoreless innings andRyan Howard hit his team-leading seventh home run, leading Philadelphia to a victory over Pittsburgh. Philadelphia PiNsburgh ab r hbi ab r hbi Polancrf 4 0 0 0 Reverelf 5 1 1 0 JHrrsnlf 4 1 3 0 Galvisss 3 2 3 0 NWalkr2b 4 0 0 0 Utley2b 4 0 0 0 Martecf 4 1 3 1 Howard1b 4 1 3 1 PAlvrz1b 3 0 0 1 CHrndz3b 3 0 0 1 Kang3b 2 0 0 0 Sizemrrf 4 0 1 1 M ercerss 3 0 0 0 Gilesp 0000 McCtchph 1 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Stewartc 3 0 0 0 OHerrrcf 4 0 1 0 W orleyp 1 0 0 0 Ruppc 3 0 2 0 Lmrdzzph 1 0 0 0 Harangp 2 0 0 0 Lizp 0 0 0 0 Francrph-rf 1 0 0 0 H artph 1 0 1 0 LFrms p 0 0 0 0 Totals 31 2 7 2 Totals 3 3 4 113

PiNsburgh g g g g g g 002 — 2 Philadelphia 2 B 1 01B ggx— 4 E—N.Walker (1), Mercer(2), Galvis (5). DPPittsburgh 2, Philadelphia 3. LOB —Pittsburgh 5,

Philadelphia9.28—Marte2(5), O.Herrera(7), Rupp (1). HR —Howard (7). SB—Galvis (3). CS—J.Harrison (2),Marte(2), Revere(3). S—Harang. IP H R E R BBSO Pittsburgh WorleyL,2-3 4 8 3 1 1 0 Liz 3 2 1 1 2 3 LaFrombois e 1 1 0 0 0 1 Philadelphia HarangW,4-3 8 5 0 0 1 6 Giles 13 2 2 2 0 0 PapelbonS,B-B 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 HBP —byHarang(Kang), by Papelbon(Kang). PBRupp. T—2:40.A—29,205 (43,651).

All-Star game will be safe for catchers By Joe Kay The Associated Press

CINCINNATI — One of the most famous All-Star

endings won't be repeated when the game returns to Cincinnati this summer.

Cincinnati's Pete Rose bowled over

All-Star Game at R i verfront Stadium. Fosse suf-

fered a significant shoulder injury that curtailed his career.

Major League Baseball has tried to eliminate those home plate collisions the

last two years. All-Star catcher Joe Torre, who is MLB's chief baseball offi-

cer, watched the collision from the National League bench and thought the hit

was clean, though devastating to Fosse's career.

"Being a catcher myself, I sort of knew the drill," Torre said on Thursday during a conference call. "That's pretty much what you do. You try to defend your t e rritory.

try to keep the run from scoring. As it turned out, it

was devastating. "Obviously going forward, we're trying to eliminate any repeat of that kind of stuff."

The 1970 game was one of nine in Torre's playing career. As a catcher,

he could empathize with Fosse as he tried to keep the winning run from scoring in the 12th inning. "It was: Ouch, I've been there," he said. "The fact

that we won the game was cool, but everybody — you went up an d w a nted to

check on Ray and see if he was OK, and you could see he was pretty well dazed. "It was a clean hit. Pete

didn't go in spikes-first. He basically bowled him over." Torre t h inks M a j or League Baseball has made a lotof progress in protecting catchers the last few years. Rule 7.13 was

Interleague

adopted last season giving runners a path to the

Cardinals 2, Indians1

plate. A catcher who blocks

CLEVELAND — Matt Carpenter hit

a two-run homer Dff reliever Marc Rzepczynski in the eighth inning after Cleveland replaced starter Trevor Bauer, rallying St. Louis to a win over the Indians. St. Louis

Cleveland ab r hbi ab r hbi Bourioscf 3 1 0 0 Kipnis2b 4 0 2 0 Pagancf 3 0 1 1 Frazier3b 2 1 1 0 twD. MCrpnt3b 4 1 1 2 CSantn1b 4000 P oseyc-1b 4 0 1 1 Byrdlf 2123 Toronto Houston Hollidydh 3 0 0 0 Brantlylf 3 1 1 1 B elt1b-If 4 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi New York TampaBay M Adms1b 4 0 0 0 Mossrf 3 0 1 0 Maxwgrf 4 0 1 0 B.Pena c 4 0 2 1 Travis2b 4 0 1 1 Mrsnckcf 5 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Rynldslf 4 0 2 0 Raburnph-rf 1 0 0 0 BCrwfrss 4 0 0 0 Schmkr2b 3 0 0 0 Dnldsn 3b 4 0 1 0 Altuve 2b 3 2 2 0 Ellsury cf 4 0 2 0 Kiermr cf 3 0 0 0 Wong2b 3 0 2 0 Chsnhll3b 4 0 1 0 McGeh3b 4 0 1 0 Cingrnp 0 0 0 0 Bautistdh 3 1 1 1 Valuen3b 4 0 1 1 Gardnrlf 3 0 1 0 SouzJrrf 4 2 2 0 Molinac 4 0 2 0Swisherdh 4 0 0 0 Linccmp 2 0 0 0 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 Encrnctb 4 1 1 1 Springrrf 3 0 0 1 ARdrgzdh 4 1 2 1 Longori 3b 4 0 1 1 Heywrdrf 4 0 0 0 Bourncf 4 0 2 0 Lopezp 0 0 0 0 Mesorcph 1 0 0 0 Pillarcf 4 1 1 0 CIRsmslf 4 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 3 0 0 0 Loney1b 3 0 2 1 Kozmass 3 0 0 0 RPerezc 2 0 0 0 Aokiph 1 0 0 0 AChpmp 0 0 0 0 Colaelllf 4 0 2 0 JCastroc 3 1 1 0 BMcCnc 4 0 0 0 Forsyth2b 4 0 1 0 DvMrpph 1 0 1 0 M achip 0 0 0 0 Cuetop 3 1 1 0 Goinsss 4 0 0 0 Carter1b 2 1 0 0 CYoungrf 4 0 0 0 DeJesslf 3 1 1 0 JRmrzss 3 0 0 0 Romop 0 0 0 0 Negron2b 1 0 0 0 Tholec 2 0 0 0 Tuckerdh 4 1 3 1 Headly3b 2 0 0 0 Guyerph-If 1 0 0 0 Waltersph 1 0 0 0 Affe fdtp 0 0 0 0 Carrerrf 1 1 0 1 Villarss 3 1 1 2 Gregrsss 3 0 0 0 ACarerss 3 1 0 0 Totals 3 1 3 7 2 Totals 2 94 7 4 Totals 3 2 2 7 2 Totals 3 41 8 1 Totals 3 0 4 7 4 Totals 3 16 8 5 Pirela2b 3 0 0 0 JButlerdh 3 1 1 0 S t. Louis ggg g g g 020 — 2 San Francisco 1G1 ggg 01B — 3 Toronto 201 000 100 — 4 Rivera c 4 1 2 4 C leveland ggg g g 1 000 — 1 Cincinnati ggg 1 2 g 01x — 4 Houslon 100 001 40x — 6 Totals 3 0 1 5 1 Totals 3 26 10 6 DP — San Francisco 2, Cincinnati 2. LOB—San DP — Cleveland1. LOB —St. Louis 6, Cleveland9. E—Thole(1). DP—Toronto1, Houston 3. LOBNew York ggg g g g gg1 — 1 Francisco5, Cincinnati 8.28—G.Blanco(6), Frazier 28 — Reynolds (6), Kipnis (8), Moss(8), Chisenhag — 6 Toronto 3,Houston7. 28—Travis (9), Colabello (3), Tampa Bay 1 3 0 1 00 1gx 6). 38—Bourn (1). HR —M.Carpenter (6), Brantley (5). 38—Panik (2). HR —Byrd (8). SB—Votto (5), Altuve(9),Valbuena(5), Tucker2 (2), Vilar (1).HR E—B.McCann(2). DP—NewYork1, TampaBay1. Frazier(6),Bruce(3).CS—Panik(1), Cozart (2). 4). CS —Wong(2), Chisenhag(1). —NewYork5, TampaBay6.28—SouzaJr.2 (6). IP H R E R BBSO Bautista(6),Encarnacion (8). SB—Carrera(1), Altuve LOB IP H R E R BBSD HR —A.Rodriguez(9), Rivera(2). SB—Egsbury (12), San Francisco St. Louis 2(13). SF —Carrera. IP H R E R BBSD A.Cabrera(1).CS —Loney(1). S—Gardner. 42-3 5 3 3 5 4 Wacha 5 5 1 1 2 7 Lincecum IP H R E R BBSD 1 0 0 1 2 Toronto Lopez 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 SregrrstW,2-0 2 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Hutchison 6 5 2 2 1 9 New York Machi 1 0 0 0 0 1 ChoateH,3 1-3 1 1 1 1 0 Loup L,1-2BS,1-1 0 3 4 3 1 0 WhitleyL,1-2 12 - 3 2 3 3 2 0 RomoL,0-2 ManessH,5 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 31-3 5 2 2 2 3 Affefdt Osuna 1 0 0 0 1 2 E.Rogers 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 RosenthalS,12-13 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 3 Delabar 1 0 0 0 3 2 D.Carpenter 1 0 0 0 0 1 Cincinnati Cleveland 7 1-3 4 1 1 3 10 Houston Shreve 1 3 1 1 0 2 Cueto 7 5 2 2 3 9 Bauer R.Hernandez 61 - 3 6 4 4 3 0 Pinder 1 0 0 0 0 0 CingraniBS,1-1 1-3 2 1 1 1 0 RzepczynskiL,1-1 0 1 1 1 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 FieldsW,2-0 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 TampaBay Ju.DiazW,2-0 2 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 McAllister NeshekH,B 1 1 0 0 0 0 E.RamirezW,1-1 5 1 0 0 2 4 A.Chapman S,7-7 1 0 0 0 0 2 B.Shaw 1 2 0 0 0 0 —by Lincecum (Frazier). WP—Lincecum. Rzepczynskipitchedto1batter inthe8th. QuallsS,4-5 1 0 0 0 0 1 Andriese S,2-2 4 4 1 1 0 4 HBP WP — Whitley, Andriese. Louppitchedto 4baters in the7th. Balk—Cueto. Wacha pitchedto 2batters inthe 6th. WP—Delabar. T—2:45.A—11,977 (31,042). T—2:58. A—21,792(42,319). WP—Bauer. T—2:48. A—15,777(41,574). T—3:12.A—15,865 (36,856).

I)

the plate can be called for obstruction. T he

Howard added 20 points and C o - 21 rebounds for the Rockets,

rey Brewer scored 15 of his who have won two straight 19 points in the fourth quar- games. ter and the Houston Rockets G ame 7 i s S u nday i n erased a 19-point, second-half Houston. deficit to stun the Los Angeles The Clippers were cruisClippers 119-107 on Thurs- ing with a 19-point lead in day night to force a Game 7 the third quarter, seemingly in the Western Conference assured of earning the fransemifinals.

chise's first berth in the con-

James Harden, who played ference finals. The Rockets l ess than a m i n ute i n t h e f ourth q u arter, s cored 2 3

scored nine straight to cut it to 13 heading into the fourth.

points — making all 11 of his Houston hit seven 3-pointfree throws — and Dwight ers in the fourth and stymied

r ule h a s be e n

tweaked to force plays and

cove r o ther

circumstances.

"We haven't carried anybody off the field yet, which means it's working," Torre

said. "If we see a catcher lining up or blocking without the ball, we like to just

remind them.And again, they may not know they're doing it

b ecause it's so

much of a habit to defend your territory. "But I think it's worked

well. I still keep my fingers crossed because you don't

want anybody's career ending." Giants catcher B uster

Posey broke his lower left leg when he was run over by Florida's Scott cousins in 2011 during the 12th

inning of a game, which sparked talk about prevent-

ing home plate collisions. Torre talked to Giants man-

ager Bruce Bochy after the collision to come up with ideas for a new rule.

Los Angeles Clippers center DeAndre Jordan, right, is fouled

Rocketsstun Clippers,force deciding Game 7 L OS A NGELES —

W h ether

you had the ball or not, you

NBA PLAYOFFS ROUNDUP

The Associated Press

C l eveland's

Ray Fosse to end the 1970

the Clippers offensively. Blake

Cavaliers 94, Bulls 7 3:

Griffin, who finished with 28

CHICAGO — LeBron James

points, didn't score in the final

struggled to score 15 points, Kyrie Irving limped off the

quarter.

by Houston forward Josh Smith during the second half of Game6in a

wL», 'J

The once-raucous crowd court and Cleveland still beat was reduced to a low mumble Chicago to clinch its Eastern while the Rockets went on a Conference semifinal series

eecond-round NBA playoff

series in Los Angeles,

23-2 run to take a 111-102 lead with 1:44 left. Dazed fans be-

in six games. Matthew Della-

vedova scored 19 points and Tristan Thompson added 13

Thursday.

gan clearing out with time left on the clock. Chris Paul had 31 points

points and 17 rebounds to help

Jae C. Hong /The

and 11 assists for the Clip-

the Cavaliers advance to the conference final for the first

pers and J.J. Redick added 15 time since 2009 even though points. their superstar played like a Also on Thursday: mere mortaL

Associated Press

x


C4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

PPP

a bit of time on me after the ski, even though it's super

Continued from C1

short. I think a lot of it will

"Then when I found out

come down to how much they were canceling the time can I put into them on nordic ski, I was like, yeah, the (5-mile) run, versus how why not'? I did a little bit of much time can they get back downhill skiing when I was on the kayak. "Those guys are incredible young. I can get a boat from a friend," Thomas says. athletes. Marshall Greene is Thomas' stiffest compe- a great cyclist, and he runs tition will likely come from really well off the bike. I six-time PPP winner Mar- think it could be a very, very shall Greene, an elite nordic close race." skier from Bend, and Matt Because he was raised in Briggs, another Bend resi- Bend, Thomas knows the dent, who finished third last significance of winning the year. Greene says it will be PolePedal Paddle. He coma "long shot" for him to beat peted in the running stage Thomas on Saturday. of the PPP as part of a team "He will put a LOT of time when he was in high school. on me in the run, and prob-

Thomas refers to the PPP

ably put significant time on as the "Bend world chamme in the bike," Greene says pionships," and he notes of Thomas. "It makes it fun that winning it on Saturday and exciting. It certainlyputs would give him as much nome at a disadvantage, but toriety in his hometown as that's fine. I've been second winning the Ironman World before. I don't have too much Championships, the pinnapride to get beat." cle of triathlon. " I always admired t h e While Thomas may have the advantage in running guys that won t hat r ace," and cycling, Greene should Thomas says of the PPP."I have the advantage in gear, never thought I had a chance logistics and t r ansitions, at it because I'm not a nordic and in simply knowing how skier. So I was like, this is to navigate the complica- kind of my one year. I don't tions of racing the PPP as an have a race that weekend, and I'm in town, so I'll try to individual. Thomas says he has bor- throw something together rowed some alpine skis and and do it. "I'm totally comfortable boots from his brother, and a friend has lent him an owning that asterisk if I do outrigger kayak for the pad- place well or win it. Cleardle stage. Longtime friend ly, this is an asterisk year. and Bend resident Andrew Those guys would hand me Boone, who won the PPP my (rear end) if there was a in 2011, has been helping nordic ski in the race." Thomas preparefor the alG reene estimates t h a t pine ski leg down Leeway Thomas could be as much as run at Bachelor. four minutes faster than the Last week, Thomas went reigning PPP champion in to Bachelor and skied for the 5-mile run. "That's not something you what he says was the first time in eight years. can overcome with the (I'/z"I went d ow n L e eway mile) paddle," Greene says. "Really, I think it's Jesse's three times and I was really sore afterwards," Thomas race to lose." says. "Those guys (Greene — Reporter: 541-383-0318, and Briggs) will have quite mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

Morgan Continued from C1

readiness.

Coach Jill Ellis said Morgan is too important to the

PREP ROUNDUP

La Pinetakesleadat leaguechampionships Bulletin staff report

Meeter (javelin) and Erynn Ricker (pole vault) each 1-2 finish in the long jump and claimed wins for the Sisters won the pole vault, helping the girls, who posted 46.5 points La Pine boys rack up 58 points on the first day of the Sky-Em on the first day of the Moun- League championships. Tessa tain Valley League track and O'Hern was second in the pole field championships at Glide vault for the Outlaws. For the High on Thursday. Sisters boys, who are fifth in The top two finishers in the six-team standings, Jadon GLIDE — Justin Petz led a

next summer when the Lon-

To date, Morgan has 51

don Olympics rolled around. She scored an extra-time game-winner in a semifinal against Canada that sent the U.S. into the final against

goals and 32 assists in 84 international appearances.

J apan in L o ndon and a n

national match to become the third-fastest American

e ventual O l ympic g o l d medal. While her ascent may appear quick, Morgan believes it was just part of her ca-

reer's progression. "I've had a couple of injuries in between the Olym-

pics and now, but I feel like for me, it's almost been building blocks, it's never

nal send-off match against South Korea in New Jersey been like I've been thrown on May 30. The U.S. opens into something all of a sud- the World Cup on June 8 den," she said. "I feel like against Australia in WinniI'vehad a good amount of peg, Manitoba. time to prepare and realize Given how she has looked what I've been getting into." recently, there is no need to Morgan was considered be concerned about the laya rising star even before off. She is certainly at the Germany. level she needs to be for the She was the leading scor- competition, said Paul Riley, er in each of her four years coach of Morgan's Nationat California from 2007 to

2010, and she even graduated a semester early, with a degree in political economy. Her total of 45 career goals ties her for third on the university's all-time scoring list.

She grabbed international attention in 2008 when she

scored the winning goal for

al Women's Soccer League team, the Portland Thorns.

M organ was with t h e Thorns for about two weeks

and played in one match before leaving for training camp with the U.S. team. "She looked brilliant in

MADRAS — Crook County's Elsa Harris was true to her

pole vault to qualify for the state meet. For the La Pine girls, who are tied for third in the sixteam standings, f r eshman Jordynn Slater won the discus

Eve she married her longtime boyfriend Servando Carrasco,a midfielder for Major L eague S occer's Sporting KC and a fellow California graduate. All told, Morgan is in a good place — despite the pesky knee bruise — and ready to prove herself on soccer's biggest stage. "Being on the national

jures over the past year and a half. Late in 2013 she in-

jured her left ankle during training camp, then injured it again during the group stage of CONCACAF qualifying last fall. "That was probably the hardest thing about being injured, that I wanted nothing more than to be on the

team, we're in a lot of pressure moments, and I think

trict meet, which concludes

Saturday at Glide High. Also on Thursday:

sure moments," she said.

send-off tour for the United States as it makes its final

strives off t h i s p r essure. And I think we've done well with that. I think there's another level for myself. That's why I'm so excited for this

Cup in Canada nextmonth.

She has what she calls a minor bone bruise in her

Baseball

Bend Summit

two triples and two singles as the Cowboys improved to 8-6 in the Tri-Valley Conference.

Trevor Slawter pitched four innings and earned the win

their

Conference win. Bend (9-4 IMC, 14-9 overall) scored six

Kohlter Kee and Chase McCall both had two hits, while

6-3, 6-3 victory over Cascade's

runs in the sixth inning to win

Tyler Lockey went 2-for-4 with

(6 innings) 200 406 — 12 13 1 100 100 — 2 5 6

n i n t h In t e rmountain for Crook County. Slawter,

Sky-EmLeaguechampionships Al Junction CityHighSchool Boys Team scores —Elmira80, CottageGrove36, JunctionCity34, Sweet Home30, Sisters10, Sutherlin4. Top six placers 3,000 — 1,JakobHiett, SH,9:04.63. 2, Jadon Bacht old,Sis,9:09.54,3,GannonJones,E,9:15.30. 4, Ben Douthit, E, 9:45.86. 5, Tyler Ledford,CG, 9:51.10. 6,PeteFrazee, JC,9:55.45. HJ—1, Garrett Nepper,JC,6-0. 2,GaryYounce, E,5-10. 3,Nicholas 60ykin, E, 5-10. 4, EthanFrolov, E, 5-6. 5, Tucker

Porter,CG,5-4. 6, JacobErickson, SH,5-4. Discus —1, zanewardwell, E,147-z 2, BradGeisler, GG, 125-4. 3,CooperMitchell, JC,121-5.4, SethGreen, GG, 02-1. 5,AdamRastaeter, Jc, u2-1. 6, Tristan Needham, Sut,111-10. PV— 1, JeffLinn, E,12-4. 2, RusselGrzec l zkowski, E,12-0. 3,Dilon Stutzman, SH, 12-0. 4,T.J. Baham,SH, 12-0. 5, JakeRogers, JC, 0-01. 6, CooperSchauer, E, 10-8. TJ — 1, ZachBeltz, E,41-4. 2, GaryYounce, E,40-8.50. 3, EganShamek, SH, 39-9. 4,JaydenTucker, CG,394.50. 5,Tuckerporter, GH,39-z50. 6, Ryanparker, JC, 38-0.50.

Class 5A IntermountainConference

39, Sutherlin32,JunctionCity 31,SweetHome30, Elmira16.5. Top six placers 3,000 — 1, AriaBlumm,Sis, 10:59.77. 2, Hud-

son weybright,cG,u;34.75. 3, came rin Feagins, Sut, 11;41.40. 4, McKenna Straube, JC,12:02.5z 5, SydneyThielman,JC, 12:10.83. 6, MeganCalarco,

Class 4A

Standings IntermountainConference Team Conference Overall Ridgeview 14-0 20-1 Bend 9-4 14-9 M ountaiVine w 6-7 10-13 3-12 8-15 Summit 2-0 4-18 Redmond

Girls Team scores — Sisters46.5, CottageGrove

Sis, 12;1z88. PV — 1,ErynnRicker,Sis, 9-8. 2, TessaO'Hern,Sis, 9-8. T3,NatalieMarshall, S,7-8. T3, AnnalisaLinn, E,7-8. 5, DanaHiett, SH,7-0. 6, NatashaRasmussen, SH,7-0. Shot — 1, Conner Borigo,CG,36-z75. 2, OliviaGuliford, Sut,35-8.50. 3,JosieKnight, SH,34-3.4, TayleePratt, JC,33-4.50.

5,KamrynKnox,Jc,32-z 6,Gracewilson,Jc,3110.25. Javelin — 1, Julianne Meeter, Sis, 114-4. 2, Jordan Miler,SH,I01-3. 3, MelissaPowers, CH, 99-8. 4,Emilia Carpenter, E,96-5. 5, Kaitlyn Brooks, CG,95-6.6,KamrynKnox,JC,94-4. TJ—1, Brittany Coleman, Sut,36-0. 2,Brittany Hanson,Sut, 34-1.50. 3, IndiaPorter,SH,32-1.50. 4, HaleyForte,JC,316.50. 5,AlexOlsen,E,30-3. 6, DeliaNichols-Ferguson, CG, 29-4.50.

Class 3A MountainValley Conferencechampionships At Glide HighSchool Boys Teamscores—LaPine58,Coquile 26,Harrisburg 23,PleasantHil 20,Creswel 20, Glide9. Top sIxplacers 3,000 — 1, HunterMurphy, PH,9:54.3z 2, Turess TurnsPlenty,LP, 10:02.79. 3, JesseWittenborn, Cres, 10:04.28. 4, Zachary Lathrom, Coq, 10:18.47. 5,DevinDheldon,G, 10:47.5z 6, WilliamByrd, G, 11:09.26. PV —1, Justin Petz,

LP, 16-6. 2, BradenSeiber, Cres,12-5. 3, Keegan Kriz LP 12-5. 4 JosephPetz LP 12-0. 5 Travis Waggener,H,11-0. 6, HenryScolari, Coq, 10-6. Shot — I, Brandon Bowen,Coq, 51-9.25. 2, Bryce Kuschel, H,42-5.75. 3, BenHarrison, LP,41-6.25. 4, NoahStevens,PH,41-6. 5, TannerHanson, LP, 41-4.75.6, KlaytonBorden, H,40-6. LJ— 1,Justin Petz,LP,20-4.75. 2, Austin Kentner,LP,20-1.75. 3, Bradenseiber, cres,19-0. 4, AlonzoRanch, H, 19-10. 5,BradleyRomine, Coq,19-3.25. 6, Parker Callison, PH,18-4.50. Girls Team scores —Coquille 59,PleasantHil 51, Harrisburg28,LaPine28, Creswell 15,Glide14. Top six placers 3,000 — 1,JoselynKaufman,Coq,11:40.88. 2,

Annasweeney, coq, u:55.40. 3, Daelynwilde, pH, 12:18.53.4, CarleaBolingeI; G,1306.94.5, Magdalena llic, H,13:25.56.6,NadineKas, LP,14:48.88. HJ

—1, sierraBriggs,H,5-z 2,McKennawilson, coq, 5-0. 3, Baylee Jushel, H,4-10. 4, BriannonBarrett, PH, 4-10. 5,DachelleChurch,Coq,4-8. 6, Alyssa Dufault, Cres,4-8. Discus — 1, JordymISlater, LP, 106-8. 2,JessicaSchwerdffeger, Coq,94-0. 3, MaddieVanis, PH,93-3. 4, Allison Smith, PH,89-

u. 5, caleyTrimble,G,87-0. 6, Dachelle church, Coq, 85-9.Javelin — 1, DanaBrooks, PH,124-2. 2, Jordynnslater, Lp,04-4. 3, carolina Allen,cres, 101-8. 4,MiajaGeeI G, 93-z 5,MaddievanIs, pH, 92-7. 6,Rebeccapeasley,pH,91-z LI — 1, Darian Wilson,Coq,15-9.50.2, MadisonFisher, PH,14-9. 3, CharlieYates,Coq,14-3.50.4, SydneyBright, LP, 14-1.25. 5, AlexisThomas, H, 13-10.25. 6, Alyssa Dufault,Cres,13-10.

GOLF ROUNDUP

Streb takes1st-round lead in Charlotte The Associated Press Mickelson faded early and Rory McIlroy tailed off late.

pressed his affinity for Quail Maggert up one stroke at Hollow, saying it suits his Tradition: BIR M I N GHAM, game perfectly. Yet, he is win- Ala. — Jeff Maggert birdied less in 11 tries, although he three of the final four holes for

Robert Streb just kept on mak-

has come close with five top-5

a 5-under 67 and a one-stroke

ingbirdies. Streb shot a 7-under 65

finishes. Also on Thursday: Klatten on top after run of

lead over Kevin Sutherland after the first round of the Re-

Kingsmill Championship.

Spanish Open.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Phi1

on Thursday to take a one-

gions Tradition at Shoal Creek. birdies: W I L L I A M SBURG, Fisher tops Spanish Open Va.— France's Joanna Klatten leaderboard: TER R ASA, had five birdies in a six-hole Spain — South Africa's Trevor stretch and finished with a Fisher opened with a 7-under 6-under 65 to take the first- 65 at Real Golf Club El Prat to round lead in the LPGA Tour's take a one-stroke lead in the

shot lead over Patrick Reed and Kevin Chappell after the first round of the Wells Fargo

Championship. McIlroy appeared on the verge of a late run at the lea-

derboard before making a double bogey on the difficult par-3 17th hole. The world's

top-ranked player appeared stunned when his tee shot hit the rock wall in front of the

"One big mistake," McIlroy

sald.

McIlroy had just made par on the 16th hole by hitting a 9-iron pin high from 166 yards. He went with an 8-iron

Chuck Burton 1 The Associated Press

Robert Streb watches his tee shot on the fifth hole during the first round of the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Thursday.

Despite the error, McIlroy

said overall he was pleased with his round. "I did what I wanted to," said

AMERICAN PHAROAH WINS THE DERBY!

McIlroy, who won the event in 2010 for his first PGA Tour title. "I took advantage of the

par 5s and made birdie on a couple of par 4s." Mickelson had his troubles

from 178 yards on No. 17, but it too after a fast start. wound up not being enough to Lefty opened with three birdcarry the water when his ball ies, but had a double bogey on got held up in the wind. the 18th hole when his tee shot wound up in the creek on the

left side of the fairway. He shot 71, leaving him six shots back. Mickelson has long ex-

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year, because I think I'll see people that."

Crook County 10, Madras 6: MADRAS — John Tolmsoff drove in five runs with

Gwyneth Ptomey came from behind in the final for a 5-7,

Track and field

Class 5A IntermountainConference 000 000 1 — 1 7 0 000 100 1 — 2 5 0

born into this culture that

ing any chances with her

also had two hits for the Lava Bears.

sophomores Laura Fraser and

Bend Summit

Standings IntermountainConterence Team Conference Overall 12-3 20-3 Summit 8-5 Bend 15-8 7-6 Redmond 11-11 Ridgeview 5-9 8-16 M ountaivine w 2 - 0 5-16

pics, it's almost like I was

that, and I'll be able to show

and Dylan Albertazzi all added a hit. J.J. Spitler led the way for Bend (8-5, 15-8) with two hits, induding a double. Elliot Willy

PREP SCOREBOARD

"You can just see from the World Cup and the Olym-

left knee, and no one is tak-

B end 12, Summit 2: T h e

also prevailed in the doubles Lava Bears put away the bracket, where No. 2-seeded Storm in six innings to earn

Cal Waterman, Baxter Halligan

Elizabeth Suelzle and Andrea via the 10-run rule. Brooke an RBI and a run scored for Wood. Cascade captured the Berry led t h e L av a B ears the White Buffaloes. Madras Track and field district team championship, with three hits, while Awbrie is 5-9 in league play and 8-14 Sisters girls lead after Day and Crook County finished Elle Kinkade had two hits, in- overall with one regular-sea1: JUNCTION CITY — Aria second. Harris, Fraser and cluding a two run home run. son game remaining;Crook Blumm (3,000), Julianne Ptomey all qualified for the Hailey Nelson paced Summit County is 15-8.

we do well with those pres-

field and to help my team succeed on the field and win. But you feel helpless, in a way," she said. Morgan is sitting out a preparations for the World

trict champ. Crook County

and placed second in the javelin. Coquille leads the girls' field with 59 points heading into the final day of the dis-

high into the air and into the water. He finished with a 70.

newlywed. On New Year's

vie for third place today. For

the Cowboys, Jack StubbleNo. I seeding, sweeping Mo- field won 6-2, 6-2 to qualify lalla's Heather Loughridge for state as a singles player, 6-2, 6-0 to claim the Class though, like the Madras duo, 4 A/3A/2A/IA S p ecial D i s - Stubblefield fell in the penultitrict 2 singles championship. mate round. The victory made the Cowgirl senior a four-time dis- Softball

cleared 12 feet, 5 inches in the

green and hisball caromed

Cup final against North Korea. Morgan has struggled with a few inopportune in-

Cowgirls win district titles: then fell in the semis but will

ond in the3,000-meter run for La Pine, and Keegan Kriz

best I've ever seen her."

the U.S. in the U-20 World

teamed up to defeat Crook

Tyress TurnsPlenty was sec-

practice," Riley said. "It's the Off the field, Morgan is a

Buffs, Cowboy on to state: Conference title with a close vicMADRAS — Madras' Jered tory over Bend in an error-free P ichette an d O b i e E r i z a game, one that Summit coach

spot at next week's state tournament. Pichette and Eriza

victory over England, she scored in her 79th inter-

and she could miss the fi-

Summit 2, Bend 1: The Storm dinched th e I n t ermountain

Girls tennis

ner-up to Petz i n t h e l o ng

E arlier this year, in a 1-0

woman to reach the 50-goal mark behind Michelle Akers (49 games) and Abby Wambach (64). Morgan will miss Sunday's match i n C a rson, California, against Mexico,

Boys tennis

jump for the Hawks, who lead Coquille by 32 points.

Softball

r esponsibility, more of a leadership role," Ellis said.

Baseball

County's Garrett Harper and A ndre McNary 7-5, 6-2 i n

nal during the United States' an integral part of our team. I think she's taken on more

run scored.

at Oregon State University in Corvallis.

Bachtold was second in the 3,000. The top two individu-

Class 4A Tri-Valley Conference Crook County 302 031 1 — 10 12 1 Madras 000 230 1 — 6 9 2

Cup and was fully established as a starter by the

(3-12, 8-15) with two hits and a

Alan Embree called, "One of the best high school baseball week's Class 3A state champigames I have ever been a part onships, as do any individuals als in each event qualified for the quarterfinals of the Class of." Alex Bailey led Summit who meet the qualifying stan- next week's Class 4A state 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District (12-3 IMC, 20-3 overall) with dards set by the OSAA. meet.The Sky-Em champion- 2 championships, earning two hits, induding the walk-off Austin Kentner was runships conclude on Saturday. the White Buffalo tandem a home run that ended the game. each event qualify for next

The S outhern C a l i for- team. "She kind of came on as a nia native became the first American player with both super sub and now she's esa goal and an assist in a fi- tablished herself as a starter, loss to Japan in the World

4A/3A/2A/IA state championships, which start next Friday

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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 18255.21 18062.49 18252.24 +191.75 DOW Trans. 861 4.64 8526.65 8598.51 +39.00 DOW Util. 579.90 572.62 579.01 +6.46 NYSE Comp. 11208.75 11161.64 11207.33 +90.33 NASDAQ 5051.72 4999.66 5050.80 +69.11 S&P 500 2121.45 2100.43 2121.10 +22.62 S&P 400 1532.17 1518.06 1531.99 +1 6.07 Wilshire 5000 22390.11 22159.94 22387.05 +227.11 Russell 2000 1245.12 1232.53 1245.11 +1 2.83

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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

A LK 40.69 ~ Source: FactSet Alaska Air Group Avista Corp A VA 30.35 ~ Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ Economic bellwether Barrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ty Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ Economists predict that a key C A C B4 .11 ~ gauge of industrial production was Cascade Bancorp Columbia Bnkg COL B 23.59— e unchanged last month. ColumbiaSportswear COLM 34.25 ~ Industrial production, which Costco Wholesale CO ST 113.51 ~ 1 includes factories, utilities and Craft Brew Alliance BREW 9.89 o — mines, slid 0.6 percent in March, FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ the biggest drop since May 2009. HewlettP ackard H PQ 31. 00 ~ The decline reflects the weak start Intel Corp I NTC 25.74 ~ that the U.S. economy got off to Keycorp KEY 11.55 — 0 this year. The Federal Reserve Kroger Co KR 4 5.97 ~ issues its April data on industrial Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 0 — production today. LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ MDU Resources MDU 19 . 88 o — Mentor Graphics ME N T 18.25 trMicrosoft Corp M SFT 3 9 .27 ~ Nike Inc 8 NKE 72.37 ~ Nordstrom Inc J WN 60.51 ~ Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.81 ~ PaccarInc P CAR 55.34 ~ Planar Systms P LNR 2.12 ~ ty Plum Creek PCL 38.70 Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCH N 1 5.06 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 195.85 — e Stancorp Fncl SFG 57.87 — 0 StarbucksCp SBUX 34.64 ~ Umpqua Holdi ngs UM P Q 14.70 ~ 1 US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 — o WellsFargo & Co WFC 46.44 Weyerhaeuser WY 2 9 .76 ~

71.40 66. 1 3 + 1.42+2.2 V L 38.34 32.1 6 +. 4 6 +1 .5 L V 18.21 16. 5 2 + . 0 5 +0.3 L L 63.45 37.10 +1.60 +4.5 V V 158. 8 3 14 7.96 +2.34+1.6 L w 5.65 4.90 ... ... L 30.54 30 .61 + . 31 +1.0 L L 64. 9 2 58.88 +1.23 +2.2 L W 56.8 5 142.60 -.64 -0.4 V W 17. 8 9 10. 32 + . 1 4 +1.4 W W 36.36 31. 9 2 +. 1 2 »0.4 L L 41.10 33.7 0 +. 4 0 +1.2 L L 37.90 32.9 7 +. 3 3 »1 .0 L L 14.97 14 .93 + . 0 1 +0.1 L L 77.7 4 72. 4 4 + 1.21+1.7 L w 85 .8 6.14 +.0 7 +1 .2 V V 17.76 17. 3 4 +. 3 3 +1.9 L L 35.4 1 20. 27 + . 2 5 +1.2 V V 25. 43 24 . 67 + . 4 6 +1.9 L L 50.05 48. 7 2 + 1.10+2.3 L L 103. 7 9 18 3.44 +1.28 +1.3 L L 83.16 74.1 5 - 2 . 02 -2.7 V V 52.57 44.6 8 +. 7 6 +1 .7 L W 71.15 66.8 2 +. 2 5 +0 .4 L L 9.17 4.30 +.0 6 » 1 .2 V W 45.45 41 .67 + . 5 0 +1 .2 T W 275. 0 9 28 7.61 -.59 -0.3 L L 28.44 17 . 4 8 + . 0 5 +0.3 L L 29 2 .51291.30 +3.37 +1.2 L L 74.85 74 .36 + . 6 4 +0.9 L L 52.0 9 60. 5 6 +. 9 7 +1.9 L L 8.3 9 17.40 +.09+0.5 L V 46.10 44.3 8 +. 2 4 +0 .5 L L 3.4 3 22.07 +.09+0.4 L W 56.29 56.04 + .44 +0.8 L 37.04 32. 5 3 + . 5 0 + 1. 6 L

V +10. 7 +3 3 .7 9 6 5 1 4 0. 8 0 V - 9.0 + 3 . 3 3 2 6 1 0 1 . 3 2 L -7.7 +10.6 54525 25 0 .20 V +35.4 - 22.2 285 d d 0 . 88 v +13. 8 +1 1 .6 3 440 19 3 . 6 4 L - 5.6 + 1 . 4 1 0 3 5 4 L +10. 5 +2 5 .1 2 1 1 1 9 0 . 72f W +3 0.4 +33.6 179 29 0.60 V +0.6 +29 . 0 2 971 28 1 .60f W -22.6 -12.4 6 8 94 L -1.2 - 5.7 40 4 2 1 0 . 44 L -16.0 + 2. 0 5992 1 3 0 . 64 L -9.1 »26.9 20475 14 0 .96 L +7.4 +9.9 1 1 31 0 14 0 .30f v +12. 8 +5 4 .4 4 129 21 0 . 74 V -10.9 - 27.2 61 8 d d L »4.7 +7.3 14 8 6 d d V -13.7 - 39.4 806 1 4 0 . 73 L + 12. 5 +1 7 .8 34 8 2 0 0 . 22f L +4.9 +20 . 1 29501 20 1 . 2 4 L +7.6 +38 . 4 2 6 76 3 0 1 . 1 2 V - 6.6 +23.8 3254 2 0 1 . 48 W -10.5 + 4.5 9 2 21 1.8 6 L -1.7 +8 . 0 1 3 79 1 6 0 .88a V -48.6 +86.4 3 1 0 1 3 T -2.6 - 0.4 73 8 3 3 1 . 76 W -13.8 -17.9 1668 17 0 . 12 L -22.5 - 34.5 322 d d 0 . 75 L +10. 7 +4 5 .3 47 5 3 2 2. 6 8 L +6.4 +21. 1 62 14 1.3 0 f L +23. 2 +4 1 .1 7 145 30 0 . 6 4 L + 2. 3 +9 .6 1396 21 0.60 L -1.3 +11.3 4059 14 0 . 98 L -0.4 + 7 . 0 2 6 4 1 4 0 . 52f L +2.2 +14 . 5 10696 14 1.50f V - 9.4 + 8 . 7 3 147 2 6 1 . 16

P BY I Prestige Brands

Close:$170.67V-39.05 or -18.6% The biotechnology company reported results from a breast cancer drug study that fell just short of Wall Street expectations. $250 200

Manufacturing sunfejr

F

M

A

M

Empire State Index seasonally adjusted 10.0 7.8

6.9

est. 5.0

Cypress Semiconductor has proposed to buy fellow semiconductor maker Integrated Silicon Solution for $19.75 per share, topping an existing offer. The company said Wednesday that it sent a letter to the board of ISSI with the offer. Its bid tops the $19.25 per share that a consortium of investors in China offered ISSI in March.

Cypress Semiconductor (CY) -1.2

52-wEEK RANGE 16

$8 D i J '14: '15

F

M

A

M

Integrated Silicon Solutions agreed to the deal With the 003900ium 336 i9 hOlding 9 SPeCial

shareholder meeting in June to hold a vote. The company dtd not respond p f tr f o tr 9vt to a request for comment. Cypress' offer represents a nearly 20 percent premium over ISSI's closing price on March 11, the day before the deal with the Chinese consortium was announced.

Th u rsday's close: $13.14 T o t a l return

AP

*annualized

AmdFocus Invesco American Value has posted a solid record under its co-leadmanagers who took the helm in 2009; the fund carries Morningstar's bronze-medal analyst rating.

3 -yr*

5-yr*

39 5 4/ Price - earnings ratio: Lost money (B a sed on past 12-month results) plv yt e ld • 3 4% Dividend •$0 44

AP

Source: FactSet

1- yr

SelectedMutualFunds

Source: FactSet

M

A

M

52-week range

$53.63~

$2 79.37

Vol.:3.1m ( 8.5x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$5.49 b

$30.02~

$4 5.24

E: . . . Vol.:1.2m (3.1x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap: $2.27 b

Sally Beauty Holdings

PE:3 2 . 4 Yield: ...

SB I-I Ctrip.com

Close:$30.91 V-0.24 or -0.8% The beauty products seller confirmed that it has suffered its second data breach in just over two years and notified customers. $36 34

CTRP Close:$71.14L5.78 or 8.8% The Chinese travel services company reported better-than-expected first-quarter financial results and a positive outlook. $80 60

32

F

M

A

M

F

52-week range $24.09~

M

A

M

52-week range $3 5.27

Vol.:922.8k (0.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.87 b

PE: 20.1 Yield:...

Perry Ellis

PERY Close:$26.09%2.06 or 8.6% The clothing maker reported better-than-expected first-quarter financial results and raised its earnings guidance for the year $28 26

$4D.74~

$ 76.00

Vol.:12.0m (4.1x avg.) P E: 4 4 .8 Mkt. Cap:$10b Yield:...

Cypress Semi.

CY Close: $13.14%0.49 or 3.9% The semiconductor company is proposing to buy Integrated Silicon Solution for $19.75 per share, topping another offer $16 14

M A 52-week range

$14.40~

l:,;""Cypress Semi. to bid for ISSI

F

52-week range

F

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.

PBH Close:$43.41 %1.76 or 4.2% The medicine distributor reported better-than-expected fiscal fourth-quarter financial results and gave a positive outlook. $45 40

24

The strong dollar and sluggish consumer spending may be holding back manufacturing activity. The Empire State Manufacturing Index fell to a negative 1.2 reading in April. That's the lowest reading since December. A reading below zero indicates manufacturing is contracting. The May report is due out today. Economists anticipate the latest index will be positive.

+.0043

Kohl's

NorthwestStocks

90

+

1.1399

Stock indexes bounced back from a losing streak on Thursday, finishing with gains for the first time this week. The Standard & Poor's 500 index closed at another all-time high. The economic news offered traders some encouragement. The Labor Department said that fewer people applied for unemployment benefits last week, pushing the four-week average to its lowest level since April 2000. Apple and UnitedHealth Group led gains among the 30 big companies in the Dow Jones industrial average, while technology and consumer-staples companies led all 10 sectors of the Standard & Poor's 500 index higher.

"

.

2,000

+ -.62 '

StoryStocks

......... Close: 18,252.24 Change: 191.75 (1.1%)

"

'

$59.88

Dow jones industrials

.... Close: 2,121.10 Change: 22.62 (1.1%)

.

NYSE NASD

100

10 YR TNOTE 2.23%

+22.62

2040 " " " " " " " " " " " " .

not seasonally adjusted

93.6

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

M $2 7.DD

Vol.:534.2k (4.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $400.25 m

PE: . .

F

M A 52-week range

$5.04~

M $ 16.25

Vol.:9.8m (1.2x avg.)

P E: .. .

Yie ld: ..Mkt.Cap:$4.36 b Yield: 3.3%

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU HS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.24 percent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

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

. 0 1 .01 . 0 8 .08

52-wk T-bill

.20

.22

2-year T-note . 5 5 .5 8 5-year T-note 1.51 1.57 10-year T-note 2.23 2.28 30-year T-bond 3.05 3.09

BONDS

... ... -0.02 V

L L

L W

.02 .05 .08

-0.03 V

L

W

.37

-0.06 w

L

L 1.5 7

-0.05 L -0.04 L

L L

L L

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.88 2.90 -0.02 L L L Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.43 4.43 . . . L L L

Barclays USAggregate 2.28 2.28 ...

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities MarhetSummary American Funds AmBalA m 25 . 20 +.17+2.6 +9.2 +13.7+12.2 A A A Most Active CaplncBuA m 61.78 +.62 +4.6 +6.4 +11.4+10.6 A A A The price of CpWldGrlA m 49.11 +.49 +6.9 +7.1 +16.3+12.1 C 8 C natural gas rose NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG EurPacGrA m 52.24 +.44 +10.8 +6.7 +13.9 +9.7 8 8 C above $3 per S&P500ETF 823549 212.21 +2.19 FnlnvA m 54. 8 6 +.52+5.4 +13.5 +18.6+14.7 C C C 1,000 cubic feet Avon 693704 7.07 + .40 GrthAmA m 45.54 +.42 +6.7 +15.8 +20.0+15.0 C A C for the first time Penney 576216 8.04 -.67 Invesco American Value (MSAVX) IncAmerA m 22.11 +.15 +3.2 +6.8 +12.8+11.8 D 8 A since early Cisco 552791 29.05 -.30 InvpoAmA m 38.24 +.39 +4.3 +12.1 +19.0+14.4 D 8 C March. Gold VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH BkofAm 545246 16.52 +.05 NewPerspA m39.63 +.40 +9.2 +12.2 +17.0+13.4 A 8 A also rose a third Facebook 484598 81.37 +2.93 WAMutlnvA m41.70 +.38 +2.3 +10.2 +17.3+15.1 C C A straight day and Apple Inc s 432263 128.95 +2.94 o03 CSVLgprde 389110 3.72 -.04 Dodge &Cox Income 13.79 +.82 +0.8 +2 .3 + 3.5 +4.7 C A B Do hit its highest MktVGold 373955 20.82 +.04 Cc IntlStk 46.12 +.49 +9.5 + 3 .3 +17.9+11.1 C A A iShEMkts 354493 42.82 +.42 Stock 183.97+1.74 +3.0 +11.4 +22.3+15.9 B A A price in nearly oFidelity Contra 102. 6 9+1.28+5.8 +17.2 +18.1+15.8 C C B three months. Gainers 03 ContraK 102 . 65+1.29+5.9 +17.3 +18.2+15.9 C C B e CD Q NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 53.26 +.42 +6.0 +13.1 +19.1+15.6 B C B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 75.80 +.81 +3.8 +14.6 +19.1+15.7 B 8 A VascuBio n 6 .44 +2 . 3 6 +5 7 .8 Oncothyr 2 .02 +.54 +36 . 5 FrankTemp-Frank li n IncomeC m 2.45 ... +2.7 -0.1 +9.6 +9.0 E A A QKL Strs 3 .10 +.83 +36 . 5 03 IncomeA m 2 .43 +.81 +3.4 + 0.9 +10.3 +9.6 E A A CastleAM 6 .01 +1 . 1 5 +2 3 . 7 Oakmark Intl I 25.80 +.26 +10.5 +2.6 +18.6+12.0 D A A RevanceTh 2 4.29 + 4 . 0 0 +1 9 .7 DO Oppenheimer RisDivA m 20 . 39 +.23+2.3 +12.7 +15.6+13.5 C E D Sientra n 2 0.61 + 3 . 0 9 +1 7 .6 MorningstarOwnershipZone™ RisDivB m 18 . 81 +.20+1.9 +11.8 +14.6+12.5 D E E YoukuTud 2 2.84 +3 . 3 5 +1 7 . 2 RisDivC m 17 . 88 +.20+2.0 +11.8 +14.8+12.6 D E E Clovispnc 1 00.40 + 14.40 +1 6 .7 OeFund target represents weighted SmMidValAm 60.50 +.39 +3.8 +12.2+19.5+13.0 B C D Inuvo 2 .73 +.39 +16 . 7 average of stock holdings SmMidValB m42.41 +.33 +3.5 +11.4 +18.5+12.1 C C E QIWI plc 3 4.64 + 4 . 7 6 +1 5 .9 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 33.23 + .20 +1.7 + 6 .5 +16.2+12.7 E D D Exchange Losers GrowStk 66.3 6 + .62 +8.5 +21.8 +20.0+17.5 A A A The dollar CATEGORY:MID-CAP VALUE NAME LAST CHG %CHG HealthSci 78.8 5 +.62+16.0 +46.6 +37.5+31.0 B A A continued its Newlncome 9. 6 6 +.81+0.6 + 2.6 + 2.4 +3.8 C C D monthlong -.73 -25.8 BIORNINGSTAR GigaTr h 2.10 Hlthlnslnn 5.86 -1.89 -24.4 BATINB~ ***trtr Vanguard 500Adml 196.87+2.11 +3.8 +14.6 +19.1+15.7 8 8 A decline against -1.00 -21.1 MillerE pfC 3.75 500lnv 196.85+2.11 +3.7 +14.4 +18.9+15.6 8 8 8 the euro, British ASSETS $1,242 million PumaBiotc 170.67 -39.05 -18.6 Cappp 55.94 +.71 +6.1 +22.2 +26.5+17.2 A A A pound and EXPRATIO 1.17% -1.57 -17.6 Identive rs 7.33 Eqlnc 32.86 +.33 +3.4 +10.7 +17.6+16.0 C C A other MIB.INIT.INVES T. $1,000 IntlStkldxAdm 28.80 +.24 +11.1 +3.2 +12.2 NA C D currencies. It PERCEN T L O A D 5.50 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 34.25 +.34 +6.4 +17.1 +23.5+18.4 A A A held steadier HISTORICALRETURNS TgtRe2020 29.64 +.20 +3.8 +8.0 +11.4+10.0 A A A against the NAME LAST CHG %CHG TgtRe2035 18.75 +.16 +5.1 +9.7 +14.7+12.0 8 8 8 Japanese yen. Return/Rank Paris 5,029.31 +67.45 +1.36 Tgtet2025 17.23 +.13 +4.2 +8.6 +12.5+10.7 A 8 8 London 6,973.04 +23.41 + . 34 YEAR-TO-DATE +4.3 TotBdAdml 10.81 +.82 +0.4 +2.7 +2.0 +3.7 B D D Frankfurt 11,559.82 +208.36 +1.84 1-YEAR +13.0/8 Totlntl 17.22 +.15 +11.1 +3.1 +12.1 +8.3 C D D Hong Kong27,286.55 + 37.27 + . 1 4 3-YEAR +17.5/D TotStlAdm 63.46 +.66 +4.1 +14.6 +19.2+15.8 8 8 A Mexico 45,271.47 +233.32 + . 52 5-YEAR +14.8/8 Milan 23,548.59 +337.62 +1.45 TotStldx 63.44 +.66 +4.1 +14.5 +19.1+15.6 8 8 8 -.98 3and5-yearretants areannualized. Tokyo 19,570.24 -1 94.48 USGro 31.96 +.37 +6.9 +20.5 +20.6+16.8 A A A Stockholm 1,622.01 +21.91 +1.37 Rank: Fund's letter gradecomparedwith others in Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -18.30 -.32 the same group; an Aindicates fund performed in Sydney 5,692.50 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing fee$odeither a sales or Zurich 9,050.66 +5.68 + . 06 the top 20 percent; an E, in the bottom 20 percent. redemption fee.Source: Mornirgstar. FAMILY

h5Q HS

3.16 4.51

L L

L 2.28 W 4. 99 Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.05 4.01 +0.04 L L L 4.20 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.87 1.92 -0.05 W L L 1.81 Barclays US Corp 3.16 3.16 ... L L L 2.96

PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.02 6.08 -0.06 RATE FUNDS

YEST3.25 .13 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 1 YRAGO3.25 .13

2.54 3.38

FUELS

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

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

CLOSE PVS. 59.88 60.50 1.64 1.64 2.01 2.01 3.01 2.94 2.06 2.04

L

%CH. %YTD -1.02 +1 2.4 - 1.34 + 1.0 + 0.02 + 8 . 6 + 2.49 +4.1 +0.83 +43.4

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1225.40 1218.40 + 0.57 + 3 .5 17.45 17.21 +1.41 +1 2.1 -3.9 1162.40 1150.80 +1.01 2.95 2.95 - 0.14 + 3 . 8 779.50 789.40 -1.25 -2.4

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -7.2 1.54 1.52 +1.20 Coffee (Ib) 1.36 1.34 +0.93 -1 8.6 -9.1 Corn (bu) 3.61 3.56 +1.40 Cotton (Ib) 0.67 0.66 +1.16 +1 0.4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 256.30 236.50 +4.02 -22.6 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.15 1.16 -0.61 -18.0 Soybeans (bu) 9.63 9.75 -1.23 -5.5 Wheat(bu) 5.02 4.81 +4.31 -1 4.9 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5770 +.0026 +.16% 1.6772 Canadian Dollar 1.1 994 +.0024 +.20% 1.0875 USD per Euro 1.1399 +.0043 +.38% 1.3708 JapaneseYen 119.22 + . 0 9 + .08% 1 01.77 Mexican Peso 15. 0912 -.1834 -1.22% 12.8977 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.8211 -.0143 -.37% 3.4540 Norwegian Krone 7 . 3776 -.0051 -.07% 5.9298 South African Rand 11.8019 -.0898 -.76% 10.3072 Swedish Krona 8.2 4 4 3 + .0140 +.17% 6.5640 Swiss Franc .9129 -.0039 -.43% . 8 899 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.2392 +.0048 +.39% 1.0663 Chinese Yuan 6.2003 -.0054 -.09% 6.2292 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7506 -.0010 -.01% 7.7519 Indian Rupee 63.410 -.552 -.87% 59.510 Singapore Dollar 1.3204 -.0047 -.36% 1.2504 South KoreanWon 1 089.54 2 . 66 -.24% 1027.70 -.11 -.36% 30.18 Taiwan Dollar 30.54


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com): REGULARUNLEADED: •SpaceAge, 20635 GrandviewDrive, Bend............ $2.85 • Fred Meyer, 61535 S.U.S.Highway 97, Bend......... $2.91 • Ron'sOR, 62980 U.S.Highway97, Bend............ $2.98 • Shell,235 SE Third St.,

Bend............ $3.09 • Quick WayMarket, 690 NEButler Market Road, Bend...... $3.09 • Chevron, 61160 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend......... $3.03 • Chevron, 1745 NE Third St.,

Bend............ $3.05 • Chevron, 1095 SEDivision St., Bend............ $3.05 • Chevron, 3405 N. U.S.Highway97, Bend............ $3.09 • Chevron, 2100 NEU.S.Highway 20, Bend ........ $3.09 • Texaco, 2409 Butler Market Road, Bend...... $3.09 • RiverwoodsCountry Store,19745 Baker Road, Bend...... $3.09 • Shell, 16515 ReedRoad, La Pine.......... $3.05 • Shell, 992 SW U.S.Highway97, Madras ......... $2.98 • Safeway, 80 NECedarSt., Madras ......... $2.99 • Texaco, 178 SW Fourth St.,

Madras ......... $3.09 • Chevron, 1210 SWU.S. Highway 97, Madras...... $2.99 • Denny'sExpressway,999 N. MainSt., Prineville........ $2.89 • Chevron, 398 NWThird St.,

Prineville........ $2.99 • Fred Meyer, 944 SW Ninth St.,

Redmond ....... $2.86 • Chevron, 2005 S. U.S.Highway97, Redmond ....... $2.99 • Chevron, 1001 Railway, Sisters.......... $3.09 DIESEL: • Ron'sOR, 62980 U.S.Highway97, Bend............ $2.95 • Chevron, 3405 N. U.S.Highway97, Bend............ $3.09 • Chevron, 1095 SE.Division St., Bend............ $3.05 • Texaco, 178 SW Fourth St.,

Madras ..........$3.15 • Safeway, 80 NECedarSt., Madras ......... $2.99

BEST OF THE

BIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • DeviceWorkshop:Learn aboutcellular devices;6:30 p.m.; U.S.Cellular,1380 SW CanalBlvd., Suite101, Redmond or541-548-8830. TUESDAY • Business Startup:Cover the basics inthistwo-hour class anddecideif running abusinessisforyou;6p.m. $29; registration required; Central Oregon Community Colleg eMadrasCampus, 1170 EAshwood Road, Madras;www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. • SCORE free business counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferenceswith local entrepreneurs;checkinatthe library desk onthesecond floor; 5:30-7p.m.; Downtown Bend PublicLibrary, 601 NWWall St.;www. SCORECentral0regon.org. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal

en oor anize CuS erS By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

The city of Bend is betting on further growth of business clusters with a $50,000 grant

to pay for an administrator to handle the day-to-day work that keeps the organizations

alive. Bend is home toscoresof businessesin separate sectors

like high-tech, bioscience, outdoor equipment, food processing, brewing and others. Some are established while others are still finding their legs. "Clusters is an old economic

theory," said Carolyn Eagan, city of Bend business advocate. "Basically, it's the idea that, for

some companies, clustering in the same place gives them a

products, she said. Clusters already formed in Bend indude Tech Alliance,

ganized, extremely supportive of each other.

members from approximately 50 firms; the Bend Bioscience

ecosystem is what drives the

programs and orgaruzmg meetings and events. English said she hoped to obtain grant funds from another source to bringthe

town's vision," she said.

total to $100,000 and keep the

Consortium, with 170 mem-

bers; and the Oregon Outdoor Alliance, with 65 members representing approximately 30businesses, accordingto Linda English, a business con-

The grant money is left over from the city's now defunct Business Opportunity Fund, Eagan said. The Business Development Advisory Board requested proposals on how to

coordinator position intact for two years. The measure of the

sultant who wrote the grant

put the money to use. A con-

member groups, Eagan said.

application. She said Looking Forward, a nonprofit group of business people and professionals in Central Oregon, looked at

sortium led by Tech Alliance and joined by the bioscience and outdoor groups submitted the winning proposal, Eagan

English said the fact that three diff erentsectors are

sald.

what makes towns like Austin,

English said the money would pay for a membership

economy against the effects of another deep recession.

"In Boulder, they will tell you that the entrepreneurial

with about 500 individual

Texas, and Boulder, Colorado, for example, successful busi-

coordinator manages to create a lasting organization that ultimately results in success in its

working together is a start toward inoculating the local

nomic Development for Central Oregon, foroneyeartohandle

jobs inthese areas," she said. "It would be so much smarter than being the sleepy tourism

An advantage, that is, in recruiting talent, bringing

communities do?" she asked.

fundamental tasks for each of

town that got killed the last

"Well, their business com-

time around."

new products to market and

munities are really, really connected, extremely well or-

the three groups, induding recruiting new members, collecting dues, coordinating training

market advantage."

increasingdemand forthose

While the Klamath

"It's diversity, and it creates

coordinator, overseen by Eco-

New boot store opensin Bend Drew's Boots, an established name inOregon shoe retailing, will hold a soft opening at its new Bend store today on NE Third Street near Franklin Avenue. Established in Klamath Falls in1918, Drew's Boots' website, name and assets were sold in 2011 to Baker's Boots 8 Clothing, which began operating in Eugenein 1957, said ownerGene Baker, whose father and uncle started the business.

grant's success is whether the

ness hubs. "What did their business

BRIEFING

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

Falls store closed, Baker's kept Drew's Boots alive with sales via the Web and at theNational Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas and theNational Western Stock Showin Denver. Earlier this year, Baker's decided to open Drew's Boots in Bend, at 637 NE Third St. Both

businesses offer work and outdoor boots, such as those worn by wildland firefighters, police officers, emergency medical technicians and others, GeneBaker said. The store will be open Mondays-Saturdays, and Baker expects to hold a grand opening for Drew's Boots on Father's Day. — Bulletin staff reports

Soda removed fromkids menu Elaine Thompson/The Associated Press

Several kayakers float in view of oil drilling rig Polar Pioneer while it is towed toward a dock Thursday in Seattle. The rig is the first of two drilling rigs Royal Dutch Shell is ouffitting for oil exploration and was towed to the Port of Seattle.

eatte ecomes e s rctic ase distance from the rig, were dwarfed by the 400-foot-long SEATTLE — An oil rig structure rising nearly 300 feet outfitted for exploration in the above the water. The image remote Arctic Ocean parked suggests how outmatched in Seattle's harbor Thursday, Shell's opponents have been as marking a pivotal moment for they try to keep the petroleum an environmental movement giant from continuing its $6 increasingly mobilized around billion effort to open new oil dimate change. and gas reserves in one of the Activists paddling out in world's most dangerous mari-

the United States by

By Phuong Le

nel before spending the brief

barely rescued the Kulluk's

The Associated Press

Arctic summer in the Chukchi

crew. Federal investigations resulted in guilty pleas and fines for rig owner Noble Drilling. The Kulluk ended up on a scrap heap in China. Shell is leasingthe Polar Pioneer in its stead, again backed by the Noble Discoverer. But Shell says it has gained vital experience and can safely drill on its leases in the Chukchi Sea, as well as the Beaufort Sea, an even

kayaks to meet the rig off Se-

attle's picturesque waterfront

time environments.

Environmental groups in

Hurricane-force winds

and 50-foot seas can quickly threaten even the sturdiest ships in the seas off Alaska.

But Shell cleared a major bureaucratic hurdle Monday when the federal Bureau of

Ocean EnergyManagement approved the multiyear exploration plan.

If exploratory drilling goes well, Shell plans to invest bil-

said it's their moment to stand

the Pacific Northwest are

against opening a new frontier of fossil fuel exploration. "Unless people get out there

sensing a shift in the politics that surround energy pro-

and put themselves on the

against a series of projects that would transform the region into a gateway for crude oil and coal exports to Asia. Shell still needs other per-

front lines and say enough is enough, then nothing will ever change," said Jordan Van Voast, 55, an acupuncturist who was going out on the

Sea.

more remote stretch north of the Alaska National Wildlife

lions more in infrastructure to

duction and have mobilized

open this new frontier, buildingpipelines under the ocean

Refuge.

and onto the tundra of Alaska's

Smith called Monday's approval an important milestone

Shell spokesman Curtis

North Slope, along with roads, air strips and other facilities.

that "signals the confidence

Shell's last effort to do ex-

water to confront the Polar Pi-

agencies, including one to

oneer. "I'm hopeful that people are waking up."

actually drill offshore in the Arctic and another to dispose of wastewater. But it's moving

ploratory drilling in the Arctic Ocean also leftfrom Seattle and ended badly. The Noble Discoverer and the Kulluk — a rig Shell had spent hundreds

ahead meanwhile, using the

of millions of dollars to cus-

Port of Seattle to load drilling

tomize — were stranded by equipment failures in terrible

About two dozen kayakers

paddled around Elliott Bay as the towering rig passed the city's Space Needle. The tiny boats, which kept their

mits from state and federal

rigsand afleetofsupportvessels with supplies and person-

weather, and the Coast Guard

State agencyto sell land inDeschutes • The ForestService,which ownsthe surrounding land,would buythe parcel The Oregon Department

possibly at the board's June 9 meeting, according to the

Landsale The state wants to sell 40 acres of land in southern Deschutes County known as Red Butte to the U.S. Forest Service. DESCHUTES COUNTY

notice. The Department of State Lands will accept comments

border, the parceliscompletely surrounded by Forest Service land, according to in southern Deschutes Coun- the notice. The only nearby ty to the U.S. Forest Service, roads are unpaved Forest

about the proposed sale until M ay 22, according to thenotice. Comments may be sent to: realpropertyidsl.state.

according to a notice from

Service roads.

the state agency. Located roughly 20 miles

Staff from the state agency would like an OK from

of State Lands, Real Property Program-Public Com-

east of La Pine and just

the State Land Board to

north of the Lake County

continue the sale process,

of State Lands wants to sell 40 acres of state-owned land

regulators have in our plan." Officials in Alaska have welcomed the drilling, even flying to Seattle this week to lobby for Shell's plan. Labor groups representing port workers noted that Foss Maritime is employing more than 400 people already to service the Shell fleet.

EWBERRY NATIONAL

VOLCAMIC MONUMENT

or.us, or Oregon Department ments, 775 Summer St. NE, Suite 100, Salem, OR 97301. — Bulletin staff reports

ine

Rel Butte

21

T LAKE COUN Y Pete Smith / The Bulletin

Dairy Queen isjoining its fast-food peers by removing soda from its kids menu. The changeswill be seen across all of the Minneapolis-area company's more than4,300 franchise locations in Sept.1. The newswas announced in aletter sent earlier this week tothe Center of Science in the Public Interest from Dairy Queen'sexecutive vice president of product development andquality, William Barrier. Dairy Queen's Franchise Advisory Council approved thedecision at its quarterly meeting at the end of April. "Children's nutrition is important to everyone here at DQandwe have been working for a while with our FranchiseAdvisory Council to providing more, andhealthier, options," said Dean Peters, associate vice president of communications for Edina-based American Dairy Queen Corp. The chain is the latest in a list of fast-food companies, including McDonald's, Burger King and Wendy's, to remove soda from its kids menu board. Soft drinks are already absent from kids menus at Subway,Panera Bread andChipotle. Following the change, a kids meal atDairy Queen will consist of entree, aside andeither milk or water. There is also the choice of oneof DQ's signature treats, a kids cone or Dilly Bar. While milkand water are the only beverages that will be listed on the kids menu board, the company won't stop customers whowanta soft drink for their kids. — From wire reports

DISPATCHES • Deep CanyonOuffitters, of Bend, distilled spirits, maltbeverages,cider has beennamedOrvis Endorsed and wine for consumption onthe Expedition of theYearfor 2015. Deep licensed premises. Canyon Outfitters specializes in guided • Chi Chinese andSushi Bar,70 fly-fishing andcamping trips on the NW Newport Ave.,Bend,applied May lower Deschutes River. 4 to the OLCC for afull on-premises commercial sales license, which allows • EI Sancho,335 NEDekalb Ave., thesaleandservice ofdistilled spirits, Bend, applied April 30 to theOregon maltbeverages,cider and wine for Liquor Control Commission forafull on-premises commercial sales license, consumption on the licensedpremises. which allows the saleandservice of • Capitol Entertainment Inc.,190

NW OregonAve., Bend, applied May 4 to the OLCC for afull on-premises commercialsaleslicense, which allows the sale andservice of distilled spirits, malt beverages, cider andwine for consumption on thelicensed premises. • Ida's CupcakeCafe, 1314NW GalvestoAv n e.,Bend,applied May4 to the OLCC for anoff-premises sales license, which allows thesale of malt beverages, wineandcider in factory

sealed containersfor consumption off the licensedpremises andallows approved licensees tooffer sample tasting of malt beverages,wine and cider. • Ida's CupcakeCafe, 1155SW Division Ave.SuiteA7,Bend, applied May 4 to theOLCCfor anoff-premises saleslicense, which allowsthe sale of malt beverages,wine and cider in factorysealedcontainers for

consumption off the licensedpremises and allows approvedlicenseesto offer sample tasting of malt beverages,wine and cider. • Dawg House II,507 SWEighth St., Redmond, applied May 7to the OLCC forafull on-premises commercial saleslicense, which allows the saleand service of distilled spirits, malt beverages, ciderandwinefor consumption onthe licensed premises.


ON PAGES 3R4 COMICS & PUZZLESM The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com To place an ad call 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 210

Furniture & Appliances

212

245

253

260

Antiques & Collectibles

Golf Equipment

TV, Stereo & Video

Misc.ltems

Antiques Wanted: Tools, furniture, marbles, coin-op machines, beer cans, pre-'40s B/W photography. 541-389-1578

DESK

202

30 nx54n

Want to Buy or Rent

Leather Top $250. 541-382-6664 Wanted: $Cash paid for Grandmas old/newer jew- G ENERATE SOM E elry. Top $ paid for gold/ EXCITEMENT in your Oak frame 28" x31", silver. I buy by the esneighborhood! Plan a scroll work. $40obo tate/load. Honest Artist Elizabeth, 541-633-7006. garage sale and don't 541-419-6408 forget to advertise in The Bulletin reserves WANTEDwood dressclassified! the right to publish all ers; dead washers & 541-385-5809. ads from The Bulletin dryers. 541-420-5640 newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet web208 site. Pets & Supplies

The Bulletin

The Bulletin recomKing bedroom set mends extra caution I when purc h as- 6 piece solid cherry; f. ,vi headboard footing products or serboard, side rails, 27" vices from out of the TV armoire, bed side area. Sending cash, chest w/drawers, checks, or credit inking mattress/box f ormation may be springs, top quality subjected to fraud. Vintage wash bowl & Lexington brand For more informapitcher set, large, $85 REDUCED $1600 tion about an adverobo 541-419-6408 obo. Call or text tiser, you may call 435-770-8079 215 the O r egon State Sunriver Attorney General's • C oins & Stamps Office C o n sumer Boy h ide-a-bed Private collector buying Protection hotline at La-Z 3x7' exc. cond, $450 postage 1-877-877-9392. stamp albums & o bo. Matching r e - collections, world-wide cliner extra. Pix avail. The Bulletin and U.S. 573-286-4343 ServingCentral Oregon sinceagg 541-330-1843 (local, cell phone). sofa, 8 months Adopt a great cat or Leather paid $2200, selltwo! A ltered, vacci- old, ng for $900 nated, ID chip, tested, i541-510-6624 more! CRAFT, 65480 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, NEED TO CANCEL 1-5p.m. 541-389-8420 YOUR AD? www.craftcats.org The Bulletin Classifieds has an Deposit c a n s/bottles "After Hours"Line needed for local all Call 541-383-2371 volunteer, non-profit 24 hrs. to cancel cat rescue. Donate at your ad! Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 E, Bend, Petco in New dark gray recliner. R edmond; Smit h Make offer. Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, 541-647-2009 Bend; CRAFT in Tumalo. Can pick up Ig. Outdoor table Brown & amounts. 389-8420. Jordan, 4 chairs, $100 Sisters, 54'-719-0563 www.craftcats.org

Giant pe t ad o ption Find exactly what event a t P e t smart May 15-17! Various you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS rescues/shelters will f eature dozens o f dogs, puppies, cats, kittens, 3 days, 10 to 4. Low adoption fees, free items from Petsmart. Come m e et your next best friend! PATIO TABLE

Queensland Heelers Standard & Mini, $150 & up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com

54" Tropitone table 4 chairs, tilt awning, $350. 541-382-6664

Scottie puppies ready Queen bed Simmons now, mom and dad on BeautyRest like new site, AK C p a pers, $200. 541-389-8697 shots. 541-771-0717 Range 30" Magic Chef black glass top, s/c, $100. 541-504-1549 s

Bulletin rThe recommends extra '

Silver to y p o odle,f beautiful p u rebred. AKC, 1.5 years old, neutered M, kennel trained, al l sh o t s, $350. 541-598-5032 f

caution when pur- f chasing products or •

from out of I I services area. Sending ~ I the cash, checks,, or I• credit i n f ormationf may be subjected to St. Bernard puppies, 6 / FRAUD. For more/ wks., $500 ea. Call or information about an g text 541-233-9837. I advertiser, you may I ,

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

L ' "" " J

I

541-416-0551

Pilates bench, $300 > n ew, $ 7 5 OBO . 951-454-2561.

to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotl ine Now ! 800-285-4609

(PNDC)

PREV E N T FORECLOSURE & Save Your Home! Get FREE Relief! Learn about your legal option to possibly lower your rate and modify your mortgage. 800-971-3596

(PNDC)

210

(2) 90-inch Couches Cane bamboo with silk upholstery, $500 each,obo. •

s

s

s • s

Mahogany Media Armoire, 2drawers, 2 shelves,SOLD 619-884-4785(Bend)

o i0

2 large bookcases, any offer accepted. 541-647-2009

,„gNei trI le- bu

ctfafff staf 6 Toff slarft $1gu0(@+ k gehifffaab ls0 5100NSiac tfsftats)

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The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809

541-589-3092

6 foot banquet table, brown, folding legs. $25. 541-312-1651

a

g6j ijjN'„>S<Offfffftst asser ndden 2@fu- out. @st atUfa s as faallf 81drff Edge sf c~n seat kafassfid E4 affff.ttsX stay a" FftsEs"-s

Some reslricffens apply

j ' j

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242

Furniture & Appliances

Shitff@o

308

Farm Equipment & Machinery

I I

Yorkies 2 males 8 wks, 1st shots, $600. Can deliver. 541-792-0375

5000 series Maytag dryer, like new, 4000 series Maytag dryer, will hold 2 queen size quilts. $850. Brand new, still under warranty, Whirlpool convection 5 burner glass top stove with warming station. Has Aquolist technology. $700. 1 909 $ 2 .50 g o l d piece, $400. 2 viles of gold nuggets, a little over a gram ea. $45. ea. Sterling silver, 24 diamond earrings, still in box, $200. 2 (set) cubic zirconia sterling silver e n gagement rings, sizes 7 and 8, $50 e a . Mi c hael

REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 Madras 541-475-6889 Prineville 541-447-7178 or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.

selling multiple systems/ software, to dis- Rainbow play structure 60" Landpride weed Prineville Habitat the name of the - super sized castle, ReStore cutter, 3ptto, u s ed Street legal mags- lift close $4000 new, n eeds Building Supply Resale business or the term + Peat Mixes once. $1100. CRR kit, split windshield, "dealer" in their ads. some care, you haul, 1427 NW Murphy Ct. + Juniper Ties 503-936-1778 l eather seats, b a ll Private party advertis- $800. 541-815-2505. 541-447-6934 + Paver Discounts cleaner, ice c hest. ers are defined as Open to the public. + Sand+ Gravel 316 $3000 obo. those who sell one Reduce Your Past Tax + Bark 541-389-1966 Bill by as much as 75 Irrigation Equipment computer. Instantlandscapfntr.com I 266 Percent. Stop Levies, 246 Liens and Wage GarHeating & Stoves FOR SALE 257 Guns, Hunting nishments. Call The Tumalo Irrigation Musical Instruments Tax DR Now to see if & Fishing NOTICE TO 270 Water you Qualify ADVERTISER $4,500 per acre Lost & Found The Drum & Guitar 1-800-791-2099. 540+ rnds .308 PMC Since September 29, Call 541-419-4440 Shop now open! (PNDC) FMJ-BT & 80+ rnds 1991, advertising for Border Collie lost east63830 NE Clausen 325 • C ra f ts & Hobbies Winchester FMJ. Ex- Rd., Suite 103, Bend Sell your s t ructured used woodstoves has side Bend on May 6, tra brass and MTM/ been limited to mod- her name is Sunny, Hay, Grain & Feed 541-382-2884 settlement or annuity Two V iking s e wing Piano ammo boxes payments for CASH els which have been chipped, wearing red /quilting ma c h ines (two .308, one .40/.45, NOW. You don't have certified by the Orcollar. We want her Wheat Straw for Sale. 260 with extras. Very good and one . 38/.357). Also, weaner pigs. to wait for your future egon Department of back so bad! Please Misc. Items condition. $700 each $ 360 c a s h obo . Environmental Qual541-546-6171 payments any longer! ity (DEQ) and the fed- help. 541-948-4785. Call 54 1 -706-0448 541-977-3173 Call 1-800-914-0942 Buying Diamonds eves or weekends. eral E n v ironmental Found chainsaw along 341 Bend local psys CASH!! (PNDC) /Gofd for Cash Protection A g e n cy Highway. Call (541) for firearms & ammo. Saxon's 241 Fine Jewelers SOCIAL SE C URITY (EPA) as having met 389-0198 to i nquire Horses & Equipment 541-526-0617 541-389-6655 D ISABILITY B E N - smoke emission stan- about its return. Will Bicycles & Where can you find a E FITS. U nable t o dards. A cer t ified n eed caller t o I D Accessories work? Denied ben- w oodstove may b e BULLETINCLASSIFIE08 make, model, day lost helping hand? efits? We Can Help! identified by its certifi- and highway. Search the area's most Bikes 5 speed 1 male, 1 From contractors to WIN or Pay Nothing! cation label, which is comprehensive listing of female w / he l met yard care, it's all here Contact Bill Gordon & permanently attached F OUND: Husky M i x classified advertising... $200 541-416-0551 at to the stove. The Bul- dog, has tag, phone real estate to automotive, Associates in The Bulletin's Deluxe showman 1-800-879-3312 t o letin will not know- number on tag dismerchandise to sporting 3-horse trailer Sil"Call A Service goods. Bulletin Classifieds start your application ingly accept advertis- connected, found in verado 2001 29'x8' Professional" Directory appear every day in the today! (PNDC) ing for the sale of Macy's parking lot, 5th wheel with semi uncertified call to ID. print or on line. living quarters, lots of The Bulletin Offers CASH!! woodstoves. 541-280-3001 Call 541-385-5809 extras. Beautiful conFor Guns, Ammo & Free Private Party Ads dition. $21,900 OBO Reloading Supplies. www.bendbulletin.com • 3 lines - 3 days RANS Wave recumFound: Mtn bike, NW 267 541-420-3277 541-408-6900. • Private Party Only B end. Contact b y bent. 60" WB, older The Bulletin • Total of items adverFuel & Wood email only, jlcorso© N EW SADDLE A N D model some wear on C ombine Bo w w i t h Serving Central Oregon sinceigie tised must equal $200 bendcable.com with TACK SALE! $950 frame. W e l l main- case, practice and or Less BUYING tained. New: chain hunting arrows, like full description. Final and lower. No Early WHEN BUYING FOR DETAILS or to Lionel/American Flyer date to claim 8/10/15. r ings, t i r es, se a t new, $240. Birds! CASH ONLY FIREWOOD... PLACE AN AD, trains, accessories. cushion. Cateye Velo 541-233-6520 at., M a y 16t h , 541-408-2191. Call 541-385-5809 Lost 2 dogs on May S To avoid fraud, 7 computer/odometer. Complete reloading set 1 0am-3pm 12 3 4 5 Fax 541-385-5802 The Bulletin 11th, West of L ake $350 541-504-5224 NW Dylan C i rcle, -up. Including reload- BUYING & SE LLING Billy Chinook. 1st dog, CRR/ recommends payTe r r ebonne ing bench with stor- All gold jewelry, silver Wanted- paying cash ment for Firewood white, 50 Ibs, long tail, 541-548-0639 and gold coins, bars, for Hi-fi audio & stu- only upon delivery age draws, $250 + spotty ears; 2nd dog, extra co m ponents rounds, wedding sets, dio equip. Mclntosh, and inspection. German Short Hair Western style saddle sz class rings, sterling sil- JBL, Marantz, D y- • A cord is 128 cu. ft. available. Pointer, 72 Ibs, very 12, tooled l eather, ver, coin collect, vinnaco, Heathkit, San541-719-1217 Sisters. 4' x 4' x 8' shy. Reward, Call Bob $80. 503-639-3355. tage watches, dental sui, Carver, NAD, etc. • Receipts should 541-420-0154. tags for Deer & Elk gold. Bill Fl e ming, Call 541-261-1808 ROCKY M O U NTSLOP include name, access in Con- 541-382-9419. 345 telescoping R4 bike Huntinq; phone, price and Livestock & Equipment rack. Carries single, don, OR. 541-384-5381 kind of wood YOU KNOW 7 IN tandem or recumbent PRICE REDUCED! DID purchased. 10 Americans or 158 Ready to work, regisbikes up to 78" WB. Nosier MDL 48 Patriot million U.S. A dults • Firewood ads " agaa ene tered yearling Angus Pivoting, push-button 30-06 rifle NIB never r ead content f r om MUST include bulls. Gentle, good $1195. axle; easy load/un- fired. species & cost per n ewspaper m e d i a 541-408-4522 dispositions, popular, load. Fits Thule and LOST POS S UM! Winegard Carryout auto cord to better serve each week? Discover Yakima crossbars. Early May, NE Bend. proven b l o odlines. portable satellite anour customers. WANTED: Collector the Power of the Pa- tenna with a t tachUsed twice. $250. seeks high quality fishIf you see her, please Raised in long-estabcific Northwest News541-504-5224. don't hurt her. She is lished herd. $1800 & $500 obo The Bulletin ing items & upscale fly paper Advertising. For ment 54 1 - 480-8096, loving and harmless. up. 5 41-588-0068 cel l rods. 541-678-5753, or a free brochure call Madras Check out the 541-280-8972 541-549-4834 home 503-351-2746 916-288-6011 or classifieds online email 248 tffftfvffv.hendbutletirbcom cecelia©cnpa.com Updated daily Health & (PNDC) Beauty Items

h o t line at I Ii tion 1-877-877-9392. iervlng Central Oregon sinceiggi

270

Lost & Found

DIRECTV Starting at How to avoidscam All YearDependable $19.99/mo. FREE Inand fraud attempts Firewood: Seasoned; s tallation. FREE 3 VBe aware of internaLodgepole, split, del, months o f HBO B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 tional fraud. Deal loS HOWTIME CIN or 2 cords for $365. whenever posEMAX, STARZ. FREE cally Multi-cord discounts! sible. Tempur-pedic twin HD/DVR U p grade! 541-420-3484. on the first day it runs 2015 NFL S u nday Y Watch for buyers electric bed & remote. to make sure it is corwho offer more than Top mattress has a Ticket Included (Se269 rect. nSpellcheckn and asking price and water-proof mattress lect Packages) New your Gardening Supplies human errors do ocwho ask to have cover. $500. Hoyer ustomers Onl y . money wired or cur. If this happens to C & Equipment Classic Lift with sling. CALL 1-800-410-2572 your ad, please con- (PNDC) handed back to them. Will lift up to 400 lbs. tact us ASAP so that Fake cashier checks $125. 4 wheel BarkTurfSoil.com corrections and any D ish Network - G e t and money orders Scooter. New batteradjustments can be are common. M ORE fo r LE S S ! ies purchased April made to your ad. Starting $19.99/month s/Never give out per2 015, charger i n - PROMPT DELIVERY 541 -385-5809 542-389-9663 (for 12 months.) PLUS sonal financial inforc luded. SOLD! The Bulletin Classified Bundle & SAVE (Fast mation. 541-317-1188 I nternet f o r $15 YTrust your instincts Gold balls - $5/dozen, and be wary of like new. more/month.) CALL 265 For newspaper someone using an 541-593-8400 Now 1-800-308-1563 delivery, call the Building Materials escrow service or (PNDC) Circulation Dept. at Golf club sale, 3 sets agent to pick up your 541-385-5800 custom irons, drivers La Pine Habitat merchandise. 255 To place an ad, call RESTORE hybrids and putters. 541-385-5809 Computers $300 per set, Building Supply Resale ServingCenirel Oregon since Sggg or email 541-788-3743 Quality at claeeified@bendbulletin.com T HE B ULLETIN r e - Infrared Sauna, 220-V LOW PRICES I quires computer ad- hook-up, no building, 52684 Hwy 97 vertisers with multiple $3000 value, asking ServingCengel Oregon sinceigia 541-536-3234 ad schedules or those $1000. 541-536-7790 Open to the public .

Oregon $ Exercise Equipment Got Knee Pain? Back State Attor ney ' Pain? Shoulder Pain? Qe / General's O ff ice Inversion table Get a pain-relieving / Consumer Protec- • New $75. brace -little or NO cost

> TheBulletin

267

Fuel & Wood

CHECK YOURAD

I c all t h e

Tiny Malti-Poos, born 3/17. Taking deposit call/text 541-467-2674

261

edical Equipment

Item Priced af: • Under $500............... • $500 to $999........... • $1000 to $2499...... • Over $2500...............

Your Tofol Ad Coston .....................................$39 .....................................$49 .....................................$59

.....................................$ee

Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace

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'Prlvcfeparty merchandise only - excludespets 8 livestock, autos, Rvs, moforcycles,boats,airplanes, cnd garage sale categories.

280

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282

284

j

288

Sales Northwest Bend Sales Southwest Bend Sales Southeast Bend

ESTATE SALE HUGE GARAGE SALE MOVING SALE Fri Sat 127 Airpark Dr. Sale! Beautiful home, La-Z 1027 NW H a rmon 7-4. furniture, pool Fri./Sat. 8-2, furniture, B oy recliner, 2 d i - Blvd. Thurs 8:30 a.m. table, custard glass, kitchen, crafts, clothes, nettes w it h r o l ling thru Sun until 1 p.m. Garfield C h ristmas, Christmas, TV, c o lchairs, small furniture Neighborhood Sale Bud steins, p lenty lectibles, quality stuff. pieces, queen 8 full Sat. 8-2 62741 more. 18964 Choctaw Enter off Pettigrew. Mt. beds, full kitchen, lots J efferson Pl. i n 3 286 Garage Sale. Furniture, of artwork & decor, Pines sub.off Shevlin home goods, c raft Oriental items, many Park Rd. Le a t herSales Northeast Bend items, exercise Chinese style rugs, c ouch, L a- Z B o y G r a nd 100's pieces designer chair, several bikes, BIG GARAGE SALE e quipment, ladies clothing, Men's s tationary a s w e l l , Sat and Sun, 9am- Targhee Dr. B end, Sat. 16th, 9-2. XL clothing, sewing & mens back country 3pm. 3344 NE Palmer craft items, Antique skis & boots, back- Dr. Houseware, con- Garage Sale Sat. 16th, Hoosier, pie safe, Ar- packs, nice womens struction tools includ21145 Bayou moire, McCoy pottery, clothing & s carves, ing saw, clothes and 8:30-3. Dr. A little bit of evvintage glassware & kitchen items, CDs, purses, jewelry, fur- erything. camping china, lots of linens & many designer items, niture, bedding, patio s e t, lamps, lots of lots of equipment, seasonal 290 Gazebo, lots of outbooks, current & Id + d ecorations, TV & door decor, ebony of- children's books, golf DVD player, luggage, Sales Redmond Area s crapbooking s u p fice furniture, lamps, clubs, and art items plies, dog clothes and AFTERNOON DECK clocks, fishing poles, R ain or shine , SALE! 1-5, Sat. 5/16, pet supplies. exercise equipment, m ulti-family sal e , 5/17. corner of 1998 Toyota Camry 64940 Glacier View Just bought a new boat? Sun SW 27th St. & CasLE with 70K miles. Sell your old one in the off Old Dr., Loads misc! Ask about our cade Ave. Rare 6 f/s Bend-Redmond Hwy. classifieds! size shoes, handbags FRI. & SAT. 9-4 Super Seller rates! Tons o f clo t hes, galore, many books Numbers Fri. 8 a.m. 541-385-5809 1 6W-20W, sho e s and CDs, Irg - x-Irg 21180 Wilderness Way sz.8, freezer, dryer, womens clothes incl off 27thin Bend d ishwasher, tra s h ** FREE ** jackets, most never www.atticestatesanmasher, lots of men's Garage Sale Kit worn, toys & pretties! dappraisals.com stuff too. Fri.Sun., 541-350-6822 Place an ad in The 8am. THE GREENS Bulletin for your ga282 124 SUMMIT R O B OTICS rage sale and re- Yew/Ext Sales Northwest Bend RUMMAGE SALE Sat ceive a Garage Sale 5/15 10am to 4pm 5/16 8am to 4pm 5/16 8 am to 1 pm at Kit FREE! PLEASE NO PARKING Summit High School IOW'IIS TMI IN FR O N T OF KIT INCLUDES: Commons. DRIVEWAYS • 4 Garage Sale Signs Annual School Yard • $2.00 Off Coupon To 284 Sale: Fri. & Sun. May Use Toward Your 292 15 & May17,8-4 (no Sales Southwest Bend Next Ad Sales Other Areas Sat. sales). Furniture, • 10 Tips For "Garage 5/16 Jumble Sale books, kids items, lots Sale Success!" Fri. & Sat. 5/15-16 from 19679 Hollygrape St of nice quality trea8-5. 1 6 68 3 B i t ter9am-1pm sures. Take Hwy 97 brush, Sisters. A lot of PICK UP YOUR N. to Tumalo Rd., exit Lots of what you want good stuff! and need! GARAGE SALE KIT at a t o v erpass, t u r n 1777 SW Chandler w est, school i s a t Sale benefits women's N EW SADDLE A N D service organization bottom of hill. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 TACK SALE! $950 Soroptimist Interna21155 Tumalo Rd. lower. No Early The Bulletin and tional of Bend 541-389-2091. ierving Cenrrei Oregon sinceiggg Birds! CASH ONLY C AMPING G EA R Moving Garage Sale S at., M a y 16th , W omen & me n ' s (60964 C reekstone MOVING SALE. This 1 0am-3pm 12 3 4 5 c lothes, 137 4 N W Loop) May 16th-17th Sat. 8-1 & Sun. 9-12 NW Dylan C i rcle, Baltimore, Corner of 8AM. Everything must 6 3174 P e al e S t . , CRR/ Te r r ebonne 14th 8-2, Sat. 541-548-0639 go! 541-419-2917 quality items!


02 FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015• THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

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.

• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •

Starting at 3 lines

*UNDER '500in total merchandise

OVER'500 in total merchandise

7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00

Garage Sale Special

4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 26 days .................................................$61.50

4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00

(call for commercial line ad rates)

*llllust state prices In ad

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421

Schools & Training IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get JoAs! 1-888-438-2235 WfWW.DTR.EDU 470

Domestic & In-Home Positions Relief caregiver needed in Sisters area. Call 541-598-4527

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

s U B A RU

Auto - Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r de a ler Subaru of B e nd. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $2000 guara ntee. Dress f o r success. P l e ase apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.

Caregi vers w anted t o j o i n OijI' caring

476

Employment Opportunities

m emory

Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bullefin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.

Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

care

c ommunity. A i i shifts a v ailable. Must be reliable.

Also needed part

t ime c hef. F o r more inf o r mation, o r any

questions,

please call 541-385-4717 Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

Accounting

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Accounts Payable Specialist Responsible for maintaining vendor accounts, including posting vendor invoices, researching and resolving vendor and pricing discrepancies, maintaining accurate payee data, and maintaining strong v endor r elationships. R equires experience o r ed u cation i n accounting and proficiency with Excel, data entry and 10-key. Must have the ability to learn new software and work well independently and in teams. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Please go to www.lesschwab.comtoapply.No phone calls please. Les Schwab is proudto be an equal opportunity employer.

LN66HW4B

•Variable Shifts - Shift differential applies to nights and weekends. •CPR Certification required eACLS required within 6 months. •TNCC, PALS Certification preferred. •Prior OB & ER Experience. Preferred. •Excellent Benefits Package.

Equal Opportunity Employer Visit our website at wchcd.org or contact Linda Childers O 541-426-5313

c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmuller©bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE Pre-employment drugscreen required.

Narketing Coordinator

Consumer Cellular.

Disbursement Agent Looking for your next C onstruction Ris k employee? Management firm locaution when purPlace a Bulletin help cated in Sunriver is seeking highly moti- chasing products or I wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 vated individual to as- services from out of readers each week. sist with construction I the area. Sending c ash, checks, o r Your classified ad funds disbursements. will also appear on Position is Full-Time. I credit i n f ormation bendbulletin.com Individual should have • may be subjected to which currently a minimum of t wo I FRAUD. more informa- I receives over 1.5 year experience in For million page views construction adminis- tion about an adver- • every month at tration or commercial I tiser, you may call the Oregon State no extra cost. lending. Construction I Attorney General's Bulletin Classifieds terminology and acC o n s umer a Get Results! counting experience tt Office Call 385-5809 needed. Must be pro- Protection hotline at I or place ficient in Microsoft Ex- I 1-877-877-9392. your ad on-line at cel. Excellent com- LThe Bulleting bendbulletin.com munication, w r i ting and or g anizational skills required. Competitive salary DOE & benefit pkg. Firm is Circulation an EOE. e-mail to: The Bulletin Circulation department is lookali.schaal@tetra ing for a District Representative to join our tech.com Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The BulleSay"goodbuy" tin newspaper. These apply to news rack locato that unused tions, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a item by placing it in company vehicle to service a defined district, The Bulletin Classifieds ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for the district, building relationships with our cur5 41-385-580 9 rent news dealer locations and growing those locations with new outlets. Position requires EMPLOYMENT total ownership of and accountability of all HIGH SCHOOL single copy elements within that district. Work SENIORS schedule will be Thursda throu h Monda Are you a Senior in 8AM to 4:30PM with Tuesda and WednesH igh S chool a n d da off. Requires good communication skills, a wondering what's next ~ strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 f or you a f ter y o u pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to g raduate? The O r multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong egon Army National service/team orientation, sales and problem Guard i s se e king solving skills. Must be insurable to drive comyoung motivated men pany vehicle. and women like you to Send resume to: mewingObendbulletin.com join our ranks! JoinApplications are available at the front desk. ing the Guard will 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 open many doors for No phone inquiries please. you with benefits such as college tuition assistance, the MontServing Central Oregon since t903 gomery Gl Bill, and Pre-employment drug testing required. excellent on the job EOE/Drug Free Workplace training. Plus, it's one of the best part-time jobs you can have while pursing your career goals. Applicants must be 17 g a i t years old prior to obtaining a contractual obligation. Eligibility restrictions ap p l y. Contact your l o cal National Guard representative and secure your future now. SSG Oxford Meet singles right now! 541-617-1342 No paid o perators, oregonarmyguard.com just real people like Wildland you. Browse greetings, exchange mesFirefighters sages and connect To fight forest fires must live. Try it free. Call be 18yrs old & Drug now: 8 77-955-5505. free! Apply 9am-3pm (PNDC) Mon-Thurs. Bring two forms of ID fill out Thank you St. Jude & Federal 1-9 form. Sacred H e ar t of No ID = No Application Looking for someJesus. j.d. one who knew my mom (then) Ruby K, Take care of fall of 1967 in Redyour Investments mond. I think she with the help from worked at Peden's. PatRick Corp. The Bulletin rs She was fun and 1199 NE Hemlock, sassy. Very important. "Call A Service Redmond Contact Cheri Professional" Directory 541-923-0703 EOE 303-204-0332

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The Bulletin

Landscapin~ard Care

Mid Oregon Credit Union is a drug-free workplace

r

** * * * * ~

* / * Great Supplemental Income!!

I /

/ I~ Please submit a completed application . I

tsroterielletae

Znrfe~ Qart/iep 84rattsrdCt e /gss.

iVantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital 2011 & 2015

Full Service

Landscape Management Spring CleanUp •Leaves •Cones •Needles •Debris Hauling

Weed Free Bark & Flower Beds

Lawn Renovation Aeration - Dethatching Overseed Compost Top Dressing

'

Les Schwab is proudto be an equal opportunity employer.

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attention Kevin Eldred.

Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldredObendbulletin.com).

I I

ExcellentBenefit Package

No phone calls please.

Visit ovr website at w h d. r~ rcorccoontact

* No resumes will be accepted *

LindaChilders e ~541 426-5313

. . I Drug test is required prior to employment.

Landscape Maintenance

The Bulletin

I

Senior Discounts

L +**** * * * * * * * * * * + g

The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809

541-390-1466 Same Day Response

Aerate I Thatchlng Weekly Service

Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial

Bend, Redmond, and Eagle Crest. COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/l 541-480-9714 Hedge Trimming, Yard Makeovers, Best and Cheapest. Call Bigfoot 541-633-9895

Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing Malntenance

People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Sulletin Classifferfs

eThatch & Aerate

~caoeaca in •Landscape Weekly,monthly Construction or one time service. eWater Feature

I

Landscaping & Painting

CCB¹204254

with monthly program

Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006

CPR Property Maintenance

USE THECLASSIFIEDS! • Spring clean ups • Aeration/de-thatching Door-to-door selling with • Lawn repairs fast results! It's the easiest • Weekly maintenance mulch way in the world to sell. • Bark Call 978-413-2487

• Spring Clean up Full or Partial Service eWeekly Mowing •Mowing eEdging & Edging •Pruning eWeeding •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Water Management Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc. Fertilizer included

.

Servtng Central Oregon srnceteas

I

TNCC, PALS Certification Preferred Prior OB & ER Experience Preferred

Equal Opportunity Employer

EOE.

I

541 782 8356 newportave

landscaping.com

General

/ /

Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service, with over 450 stores and 7,000 employees in the western United States. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Please go to w ww.lesschwab.comtoapply. No phone calls.

Midoregori

IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I • day night shift and other shifts as needed. We• • currently have openings all nights of the week.• / Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts WALLOWA MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Accountant I start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and LOCATED IN ENTERPRISE,OR end between 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoResponsibilities include preparing checks, / • sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. • MED SURG RN FULL TIME maintaining check r e gisters, r econciling I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI account balances with vendors, processing I minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shiftsI payroll, performing b an k r e conciliation, • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• maintaining loan a mortization schedules, / loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackVariable Shifts — Shift differential applies updating S Corp distribution and partnership ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and draw reports, coordinating property tax / other to nights and weekends tasks. statements and preparing/distributing 1099s. Other duties include assisting with fixed asset IFor qualifying employees we offer benefitsl CPR Certification Required transactions an d m a i ntaining e l ectronic I including life insurance, short-term & long-term ACLS Required within 6 mos. records system and physical vault records. disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Requirements include Associates degree in Accounting or comparable job experience (5+ years), 3-5 years direct bookkeeping experience, strong mathematical and problem solving skills, strong communication skills, proficiency in Microsoft Word and Excel and excellent customer service skills. Qualified candidates must be able to work independently, prioritize, maintain strict confidentiality and establish and maintain cooperative and professional work relationships.

I I I I

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II

Employment Opportunities

Disbursement Agent C onstruction Ris k Crestview Cable Communications is looking for Marketing Coordinator to join our conscienManagement firm lo- a cated in Sunriver is tious team focused on sales, customer education and service. seeking highly motiNow Hiring vated individual to asCustomer sist with construction Duties include the ongoing development and funds disbursements. c oordination of t h e m a rketing plan f o r Service cable TV, Broadband Internet and Position is Full-Time. Crestview's Representatives Individual should have Digital phone products. Sales ability, creativ• Starting Wage: ity, good written communications, new media a minimum of t wo $13.50 — $14.25 skills, attention to detail and desire to be an year experience in • Comprehensive instrumental part of a c ohesive team are construction adminisBenefits Packet tration or commercial requirements of the position. Drug and crimibackground checks are pre-employment lending. Construction nal Apply onhne criteria. terminology and acwww.consumer counting experience Benefits include but are not limited to, paid sick cellular.com/Aboutl needed. Must be proCareers vacation pay, holiday pay and health ficient in Microsoft Ex- leave, cel. Excellent com- insurance coverage option with employer covering the majority of t h e n e w s t aff w r i t mg DID Y O U KNO W munication, and o r g anizational member's premium. Staff members also Newspaper-genera free cable television package and required. Com- receive a ted content is s o skills free Broadband Internet if they live in an area petitive salary DOE & valuable it's taken and benefit pkg. Firm is served by Crestview in and around La Pine, repeated, condensed, an EOE. e-mail to: Prineville and Madras, Oregon. Applicant broadcast, t weeted, must have a driving record acceptable to our discussed, p o sted, ali.schaal@tetra insurer. tech.com copied, edited, and emailed c o u ntless The Marketing Coordinator will work out of the times throughout the Prineville office. Please send resume to Get your day by others? Disagautney©crestviewcable.com or to cover the Power of Crestview Cable Communications, business Newspaper AdvertisAttn: Audrey Gautney, ing in FIVE STATES 350 N.E. Dunham, Prineville, OR 97754. with just one phone a ROWI N G call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspawith an ad in SuperintendentiPrincipal per Association NetThe Bulletin's work brochures call Call 54I 3855809Ioprgmgteyourservice• Advertise for 28daft stortinggt'I4I Irtt statttgactatt 'rsaateesttaarnaarrnttteI The successful candidate will be required to 916-288-6011 or "Call A Service obtain an Oregon Commercial Driver's Liemail Professional" cense. The candidate will oversee the maintececeliaOtcnpa.com nance and transportation operations of the Directory (PNDC) Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care Paisley School District under the supervision of the Superintendent. The successful candiNOTICE: Oregon Landdate will be required to pass an Oregon finger- NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Banking print based criminal history records verificaa • who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all tion. construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o pe r form SALARY: Commensurate with experience. Construction ContracLandscape Construc2* Free Weeks This full time position includes a generous tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Credit Union health insurance package including an (HRA); of Yard active license p lanting, deck s , two weeks paid vacation, three days personal Maintenance means the contractor fences, arbors, Contact Center Member leave and cumulative annual sick leave; fully is bonded & insured. water-features, and inService Representative paid PERS (Retirement); family housing at an Verify the contractor's Service includes: stallation, repair of iraffordable rate and a cell phone stipend. The CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be • Mowing Part-time, 25 hours per week position requires successful candidate will possess the physical www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e • Edging prompt, accurate, and courteous over-thecapabilities to bend, reach, stand and walk for contractor.com Landscape Contractelephone service to members while process• Weed Control long periods of time and to lift objects of up to or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit ing routine financial transactions, researching forty pounds; self-motivation; positive and ef• Fertilizer The Bulletin recomnumber is to be inissues and answering questions. The Contact fective communication skills; efficient planning, • Irrigation mends checking with cluded in all adverCenter MSR cross-sells Mid Oregon Credit problem solving and multi-tasking skills; a the CCB prior to contisements which indi• Blowing Union products and services and makes willingness to work collaboratively and assertracting with anyone. cate the business has referrals as needed. Qualified candidates will tively with staff, students and community Some other t rades a bond, insurance and We a/so offer possess excellent customer service and members. also re q uire addi- full-service workers compensacommunication skills. Must be able to work in tional licenses and tion for their employa team environment and be PC-proficient. landscaping Application forms and a job description are certifications. ees. For your protecCompetitive salary based on experience. available upon request. If you have questions, including tion call 503-378-5909 please call Superintendent William Wurtz at or use our website: Handyman patios, fire pits, See our web site at 541-943-3111, Paisley School District, PO Box www.lcb.state.or.us to water features. www.midoregon.comfor an application. 97, 260 Green Street, Paisley, OR. 97636. check license status I DO THAT! Please send resume, A complete resume and application must be before contracting with Home/Rental repairs *When signing up for cover letter and application to: the business. Persons received by 4:00 p.m. on May 29, 2015. Small jobs to remodels a f ull s eason o f Nfid Oregon FCV Position will remain open until filled. doing land scape Honest, guaranteed maintenance. maintenance do not Attn: Human Resources work. CCB¹151573 r equire an LC B l i P.O. Box6749, Paisley School Districtis an Dennis 541-317-9768 cense. Bend, OR97708 equal opportunity employer. LCB ¹9153

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Accounting

Med Surg RN Full-Time

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladlyacceptresponsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to acceptor reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 476

Wallowa Memorial Hospital Located in Enterprise, OR

The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. Strong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. Computer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we b elieve in p r omoting from w i thin, s o advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:

A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

Employment Opportunities

iVantage Top 100 Critical Access Hospital 2011 & 2015

Home Delivery Advisor

Place a photo in your private party ad for only$15.00per week.

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Employment Opportunities

r.=.-"-,.— ..a

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

Employment Opportunities

Installation/Maint. •Pavers •Renovations •Irrigations Installation •Synthetic Turf

Senior Discounts Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 LCB¹8759

Painting/Wall Covering

KC WHITE PAINTING LLC Interior and Exterior Family-owned Residential 8 Commercial 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-vear warranties SPRING SPECIAL! Call 541-420-7646 CCB ¹204918

All About Painting Exterior, interior, deck seal, light maint. Free Estimates. CCB ¹148373 541-420-6729

10% Off exterior or interior job booked.



D4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii'shortz

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B Ftld y,May15,2015

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TO PLACE AN AD CALLCLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

Employment Opportunities

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15 2015 05 880

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Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Automotive Wanted

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

HOUSEKEEPERS!

McMenamins Old St. Francis

Safari 1998 motor-

home 30', low mileage, 300 HP MagCat motor with Alfa See Ya 2006 36' num turbo, always inside, Excellent condition, 1 850 white leather inteowner, 350 Cat diesel, Snowmobiles 52,000 miles, 4-dr frig, rior, like new, has extr a s . icemaker, gas stove, m any oven, wa s her/dryer, $55,000. S e r ious only. non-smoker, 3 slides, callers generator, inv e rtor, 541-548-8415 leather interior, satellite, 7'4" ceiling. C l ean! 4-place enclosed Inter- $72,000. 541-233-6520 state snowmobile trailer w/ RockyMountain pkg, $8500. 541-379-3530 • i I iit.--

CASH for V I NTAGE CAL LW CARS Mercedes convertibles, P o r sche, TODAYW Jaguar, Alfa, Lancia, ChevyPickup 1978, Ferrari, C o r vettes, long bed, 4x4, frame M ustangs. Earl y up restoration. 500 Dodge Nitro 2008, Japanese Cars Cadillac eng i ne, Montana 34 ft. 2003, 3.7L V-6 cyl 714-267-3436 fresh R4 transmisw /2 s lides. N e w rstevensjr@gmail.com sion w/overdrive, low VIN ¹203433. $13,998. t ires, brakes a n d (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 Other collector cars of mi., no rust, custom awning - Very clean interior and carpet, significant value deand u nder cover. sired. (PNDC) n ew wheels a n d $16,900 obo. 541-536-5638 or DONATE YOUR CAR, tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. 541-410-9299 TRUCK OR BOAT TO $12,000 OBO. HERITAGE FOR THE 541-536-3689 or 541-548-1448 BLIND. Free 3 Day 541-420-6215. smolichmotors.com RV V acation, Tax D e CONSIGNMENTS ductible, Free Towing, WANTED All Paperwork Taken We Do the Work, Care O f. CALL You Keep the Cash! 1-600-401-4106 On-site credit (PNDC) approval team, web site presence. Got an older car, boat FordEscape 2014, We Take Trade-Ins! or RV? Do the hu- Chevy Silverado1500 2.0L 1-4 cyl 2004, mane thing. Donate it VIN ¹A46674. $24,995. BIG COUNTRY RV 4 dr., extended cab to the Humane Soci(exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 ¹199459. $20,998. Bend: 541-330-2495 ety. Call 1- VIN (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 Redmond: 800-205-0599 541-546-5254 (PNDC) 4 Have an item to 541-548-1448 sell quick? smolichmotors.com If it's under 541-548-1448 F ord Explorer XLT 2012 smolichmotors.com '500 you can place it in 4x4, navy blue Wanderer by Thor 1998 The Bulletin Gooseneck 2 1 ft. Classifieds for: $4500. 541-419-3535

NOMIHIRING 632 Qualified app l icants must have an open & Apt JMultiplex General flexible schedule including, days, eveCHECK YOUR AD nings, weekends and holidays. W e ar e looking for applicants who have previous or exp. related exp. and enjoy working in a busy customer ser- on the first day it runs v ice-oriented e n v i- to make sure it is cor"Spellcheck" and ronment. We are also rect. human errors do ocwilling to train! We If this happens to Want to impress the Ready to makememories! offer opportunities for cur. ad, please conTop-selling Winnebago advancement and ex- your relatives? Remodel tact us ASAP so that 31 J, original owners, noncellent benefits for elicorrections and any your home with the ALLEGRO 27' 2002 smokers, garaged, only gible employees, inadjustments can be help of a professional 58k mi., 1 slide, vaca- 18,800 miles, auto-levelcluding vision, made to your ad. tion use only, Mich- ing jacks, (2) slides, upfrom The Bulletin's medical, chiropractic, 541-385-5809 elin all weather tires graded queen bed, bunk dental and so much The Bulletin Classified "Call A Service w/5000 mi., no acci- beds, micro, (3) TVs, more! Please apply Professional" Directory dents, non-smokers, sleeps 10! Lots of storonline 24 / 7 at age, maintained, very Workhorse e n gineclean! www.mcmenamins.co Garage Sales $67,995! Ex860 261-A, Allison Trans., tendedOnly m or pick up a paper warranty and/or fiGarage Sales backup cam e ra, a pplication a t a n y Motorcycles & Accessories avail to qualified heated mirrors, new nancing McMenamins location. refrig. unit., exc. con- buyers!541488-7179 Mail to 430 N. Killing- Garage Sales ditioned, well cared sworth, Portland OR, Find them for. $34,000. obo! 97217 or fax : 541-549-8737 Iv. msg. 5 03-221-8749. C a l l in 503-952-0596 for info The Bulletin o n other w ays t o What are you H arley Road K i n g Classifieds a pply. Please n o looking for? Winnebago Outlook Classic 2003, 100th phone calls or emails '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Anniversary Edition, 2007 Class "C"31', to individual locations! 541-385-5809 You'll find it in 541-598-3750 Need to get an ad clean, non- smoking '16 - 3 lines, 14 days 16,360 mi. $12,499 E.O.E. www.aaaoregonautoFord F-150 2007, Bruce 541-647-7076 The Bulletin Classifieds exc. cond. Must See! in ASAP? 634 (Private Party ads only) source.com Super Crewcab Lots of extra's, a very MEDICAL Aptlllllultiplex NE Bend Honda Magna 750cc VIN ¹C09963. $25,998. good buy. $47,900 T he N o rth L a k e Fax it to 541-322-7253 (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 motorcycle. 1 2 ,000 932 541-385-5809 For more info call Onlya few left! Health District is miles, $3250. 541-447-9268 Antique a Two 8 Three Bdrms ~OMQ4, The Bulletin Classifieds 541-548-3379 looking for a Classic Autos with Washer/Dryer Winnebago Superchief Clinical and Patio or Deck. 1990 27' clean, 454 Director/Provider (One Bdrms also avail.) 885 C hevy, runs v e r y ee Honda CRV 2007, to manage a nd Nlountain Glen Apts ood. good t i res, Canopies & Campers (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) operate a primary 541-546-1446 541.383.9313 8500. 541-279-9458. Vin ¹064947 care facility in a rusmolichmotors.com Professionally Allegro 32' 2007, like Stock ¹44696A ral setting. managed by Canopy for short new, only 12,600 miles. 881 Kawasaki KLX125 $13,999 or $175/mo., Norris 8 Stevens, Inc. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 box, lined interior, Travel Trailers $2900 down, 72 mo., Please reply with 2003, good condiBuick Electra 225 transmission, dual exgreen, good locking 4 .49% APR o n a p qualifications to tion. $800 obo. 1964 Classic cruiser haust. Loaded! Auto-levsystem. excellent proved credit License nlhd@ymail.com or 541-593-6748 with rare 401CI VS. eling system, 5kw gen, shape. $995. B sntl R@R@ Rs and title i ncluded in North Lake Health Runs good, needs power mirrors w/defrost, 541-389-7234. payment, plus dealer District, P.O. Box Vce ©nlh interior work, 168K 2 slide-outs with awinstalled options. FordF-150 2010, 844, Christmas nings, rear c a mera, miles. $5,995. Valley, OR 97641 Super Crewcab trai(er hitch, driyer door Donated to Equine © s u a aau within 30 days. w/power window, cruise, Heartiand o Outreach. Call Gary VIN ¹B51665. $26,888. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Pr o wler (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 exhaust brake, central 2012, 29 PRKS, 541-460-6130 33', 677-266-3821 vac, satellite sys. Asking like new, 2 slides-livPerfect Pizza Company Dlr ¹0354 is looking for a franTwo Twin Yamaha $67,500. 503-781-8812 4 i ng area & la r g e TW200 sto c k w i t h chisee/area d e v el732 ounder, 1999, 3 4 ' , closet. Large enough oper for Eastern Or- Commercial/Investment fatty tires 2006 with B one slide, low mile- to live in, but easy to 1155 miles, 2007 with egon. Best pizza in very clean, lots tow! 15' power awProperties for Sale Oregon. Perfectpizza1069 miles.$3775 for age, 541-548-1448 storage, $26,500. ning, power hitch 8 company.com. Call for one or $7250 for two of smolichmotors.com 541-639-9411 stabilizers, full size information, obo. 5 4 1 -586-0068 908 HIGH PROFILE queen bed, l a r ge CHEVELLE 503-655-4893 cell, 541-549-4834 hm Jeep Grand CheroLOCATION IN shower, porcelain sink Aircraft, Parts MALIBV 1971 kee Overland 2012, DOWNTOWN & toilet. $2 6 ,500. RANCH HELP & Service 57K original miles, 4x4 V-6, all options, REDIIIIOND 541-999-2571 Sisters-area employer 350 c.i., auto, running boards, front seeks full-time sumstock, all original, guard, nav., air and mer ranch hand who Keystone SpringHi-Fi stereo heated leather, cusis comfortable around 2010 , 2 1 ' , GMC Sierra 2500HD Fleetwood D i scovery dale tom wheels and new $15,000 horses and can prosleeps 6, DVD & CD 2007, tires, only 41K miles, Yamaha V-Star 250cc 40' 2003, diesel, w/all player, 60 g a llon vide b a si c l a b or. extended cab options - 3 slide outs, 541-279-1072 $31,995 2011, 3276 mi., exc. Please call Dale at freshwater, porceVIN ¹E89454. $25,598. 541-408-7908 This commercial cond. $ 4700 OBO. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, lain throne, 7 cu.ft. 541-549-0859 for info. (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 1/3 interest in etc., 34,000 miles. Dan 541-550-0171. building offers exWintered in h e ated fridge. Leveling hitch Call The Bulletin At Columbia 400, cellent exposure ~OMQ4, j acks, a wning, 870 shop. $78,995 obo. & Financing available. 541-385-5809 along desirable NW spare tire, lots of 541-447-8664 6th Street. Boats & Accessories $125,000 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail storage. New cond., Currently housing (located © Bend) At: www.bendbulletin.com only 3,000 m iles. ee 12' Sears aluminum The Redmond 541-288-3333 $10 900. Call Rick Spokesman newsboat. Min-kota elec541-546-1446 Sales Person wanted Lexus 400H 2006, f or m o r e inf o . paper offices, the t ric motor w / v e s t 1965 MUstang for growing manufacsmolichmotors.com 541-633-7017 premium pkg., sunHard top, cushions. New trailer, tured home dealer- 2,748 sq. ft. space is roof, hitch, heated 6-cylinder, auto trans, perfect for owner/ never used. $ 575. ship. Call leather, DVD, no acpower brakes, power 541-548-5511 user. Two private Redmond. cidents, kids, smoke RV Freightliner 1994 steering, garaged, offices and gener541-546-7137 or pets. K eyless, CONSIGNMENTS SALES - W ork f rom Custom well maintained, ous open spaces. NAV, 26/31 Hybrid WANTED 16' 1976 Checkmate ski home as an Indepen1/5 share in v ery engine runs strong. Three parking Motorhome M PG, exc. cond.,all We Do The Work ... boat, 90HP Mercury Will haul small SUV 74K mi., great condident Contractor and nice 150 HP Cessna places in back+ records, Ca r f ax, You Keep The Cash! motor, restored; new or toys, and pull a tion. $12,500. Ram Dakota be your own Boss! 150; 1973 C e s sna street parking. On-site credit garaged, new tires, seats, new c a rpet trailer! Powered by Must see! C ommission On l y Bighorn/Lonestar 150 with L ycoming Reduced to $14,500. approval team, floor, new prop, with 8.3 Cummins with 6 541-598-7940 Based Pro g ram. Call$259,000. 0-320 150 hp engine 2011, Graham Dent 541-410-1452 web site presence. trailer. Have receipts. speed Allison auto S elf-Starter, Mot i Crewcab, 4 door. conversion, 400 0 541-383-2444 We Take Trade-Ins! $2500. 541-536-1395 VIN ¹504629.$21,998. vated, Experience in hours. TT airframe. trans, 2nd owner. Advertising Sales a COiVIPZSS ~„.„, Approx. 400 hours on F ord p i ckup 1 9 5 1 (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 LEXUS RX400H (HYVery nice! $53,000. BIG COUNTRY RV o a k b ox. plus. Send Resumes 0-timed 0-320. Han- c ustom, BRID) 2006, 35 mpg, 541-350-4077 Bend: 541-330-2495 to cecelia©cnpa.com 54,000K miles,bamgared in nice (electric AM/FM cassette, new 4 Redmond: '67 brakes, 289 V-6, boo pear color, exor fax 916-288-6022. door) city-owned han- Mustang engine in this. 541-548-5254 N o p h on e ca l l s TURN THE PAGE cellent condition no gar at the Bend AirEdelbrock intake and accidents, $ 1 7,000. please! (PNDC) port. One of very few For More Ads carb CFM. 10,461 mi. C-150's t h a t has 541-610-6748 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 541-548-1448 Senvoy, LLC is looking The Bulletin never been a trainer. on engine. $12,500. Wakeboard Boat smolichmotors.com for a 26ft box truck Nissan Murano 2005, $4500 will consider 541-610-2406. I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, driver for a Mon.-Fri. 744 trades for whatever. Toyota Tacoma TRD ABS, 3.5L V6 engine, tons of extras, low hrs. o vernight route. A l l AWD, 61,849 miles, 2008, V6 4x4, 61K, Open Houses Call J i m Fr a zee, Full wakeboard tower, G rand Manor b y candidatesmust have 541-410-6007 tow pkg, b e dliner, Black/Tan, $ 3 , 600, light bars, Polk audio Thor 1996, 35' very clean b a ckground. Springdale 2006 26' call o r tex t at: loaded, ex. cond., 1 16th, 11-2. Large speakers throughout, good condition, 454 F or d e t ails cal l Sat. bunkhouse, exc. 609-337-2934 completely wired for Ford T-Bird 1955, o wner, $24, 6 5 0 home i n T o r engo gas engine, 50,050 503-688-5110. cond, 12 / p o p-out, removable hard top, 541-388-3063 Glenns on canal, fam- amps/subwoofers, unmiles, 2 pop outs, stored in RV garage. 975 292 V8 engine, 3 ily room + formal din- derwater lights, fish new tires, $16,999. 486 Well cared for. Many 935 Automobiles ing and living room, finder, 2 batteries cuss pd, white, e x c . Call 541-350-9916 extras. $13,500 obo. Independent Positions mtn. views, walkable tom black paint job. original cond. Runs Sport Utility Vehicles 5 41-588-0068, c e l l , to Pine Nursery Park. $12,500 5414!15-2523 great. $25,000 Firm. 541-549-4834 home F35 Bonanza. Aircraft 541-923-5887 K aren White i d , Sales Help is in exc. cond., w/ 541-977-2953 1966 Cuddy 21 foot, Wilderness Lite 1999, good paint & newer Wanted: En e rCHECK YOUR AD new outdrive rebuilt 622W, 22'. One owner interior. Full IFR. Auto getic kiosk sales 745 on the first day of pubmotor, many extra non-smokers, sleeps pilot, yaw d amper, person ne e ded lication. If a n e r ror Homes for Sale parts. Excellent con6, awning, exc. cond., engine monitor. immediately for the may occur in your ad, d ition. $5,75 0 . Jayco M e lbourne new tags. $ 6500. 6485TT, 1615SMOH, Central O r e gon By owner Woodside 541-480-1616 BMW X3 35i 2010 p lease contact u s 692STOH. Hangered 2010 29D Class C, 3 541-389-4694 area. Secured loand we will be happy Ranch, 2+ acres, 3 Exc cond., 65K in Bend. $32,000 or slide outs, 1 2 ,500 to fix it as soon as we cations, high combedroom, 2ye bath, miles w/100K mile 882 Mercedes 360SL 1982 $16,000 for ~/2 share. miles on Ford 450 Irg. Iiving rm with firecan. Deadlines are: missions paid transferable warRoadster, black on Fifth Wheels Call Bob Carroll chassis, Immaculate Weekdays 12:00 noon place, dining rm, famranty. Very clean; weekly! For more black, soft 8 hard top, 541-550-7382 cond., loaded, f u ll ily rm with fireplace, for next day, S at. loaded cold information, please exc.cond., always gabody paint, c herry FOUR WINDS 2003 5th arcarroll9©gmail.com Irg. kitchen, laundry 11:00 a.m. for Sunweather pkg, prec all H oward a t raged. 155K miles, wheel 26L, A/C, CD, rm, 2-car attached gacabinets, s t a inless day; Sat. 12:00 for mium pkg & tech541-279-0962. You HANGAR FOR SALE. $11,500. 541-549-6407 19' Bayliner 1998, I/O, micro, awning slide appliances, very age + 2 - car d e Monday. nology pkg. Keyless 30x40 end unit T can a ls o e m a il rtached in t e rior. o ut, m u c h mo r e garage, + car- great shape, call for home-like 541-385-5809 access, sunroof, hanger in Prineville. tcoles@yourneigh$9000. 541-676-5073. info. $8500. In Bend AutoSeek dish, two port. $525, 0 00 navigation, satellite The Bulletin Classified Dry walled, insulated, borhoodpublica541-389-6256 661-644-0384. TVs, Nav., CD/DVD, radio, extra snow and painted. $23,500. tions.com for more back up an d s i de tires. (Car top carHouse (structure only) Tom, 541.788.5546 information. cameras, 500 0 l b. rier not included.) for sale in historic distrailer hitch. $74,500. $22,500. trict, $1. 1 Bdrm, 541-312-8974 541-915-9170 Estate Sale bath. House must be r emoved from l o t . Olds Cutlass Calais RIM(jj)(81 PINNACLE 1990 Freightliner custom 1981. 14,500 orig. Buyer responsible for Chevy Nlalibu2012, 30' motorhome, all moving costs. 536 19' Pioneer ski boat, 5th wheel puller, miles, new transmis(exp. 6/1 7/1 6) 1983, vm tandem clean. Rear sleeper cab, rebuilt sion w/warranty new NW Colorado Ave. Do Vin ¹299392 walk-around bed. engine with 20k miles, Save money. Learn not d isturb t e nant. trailer, V8.Fun & tires, battery and Stock ¹44256A No smokers, no 6.5 generator, 120 cu. to fly or build hours fluids. Factory ksmccord@live.com fast! $5350 obo. $15,979 or $189/rn., mildew, no leaks. ft. storage boxes - one with your own air541-815-0936. bucket seats, con$2500 down, 84 mo., c raft. 1968 A e ro 8' long. Gets 10.9 NOTICE $8500. sole shift, Beautiful BMM/ X3 SI 2007, 4 .49% APR o n a p Commander, 4 seat, All real estate adver541-306-7268 mpg. All in good condition. Drives like Low Miles 66,500, proved credit. License FUN 4 FISH! 150 HP, low time, tised here in is subshape. See to apprenew! $7900. AWD, leather Inteand title included in 528 541-419-7449 ject to th e F ederal ciate (in Terrebonne full panel. $21,000 payment, plus dealer inrior, sunroof, blueLoans & Mortgages obo. Contact Paul at F air Housing A c t , area). $24,000 some stalled options. tooth, voice comRV 541-447-5184. which makes it illegal trades considered. mand system, and CONSIGNMENTS BANK TURNED YOU to advertise any pref© s u a aau 503-949-4229 too much more to list DOWN'? Private party erence, limitation or WANTED here. $15, 9 00. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. We Do The Work ... will loan on real es- discrimination based Please call Dan at 677-266-3621 You Keep The Cash! tate equity. Credit, no on race, color, reli2006 Smokercraft 541-615-6611 Dlr ¹0354 On-site credit problem, good equity gion, sex, handicap, Sunchaser 820 approval team, is all you need. Call familial status or na- model pontoon boat, DID YOU KNOW 144 VW CONV. 1 9 78 web site presence. Chevy Tahoe 1995 Oregon Land Mort- tional origin, or inten75HP Mercury and million U.S. A d ults We Take Trade-Ins! $8999 -1600cc, fuel 4 dr. 4x4, auto, tow gage 541-368-4200. electric trolling motion to make any such Superhawk N7745G read a N e wspaper injected, classic 1978 Keystone Everest 5th pkg, leather interior, print copy each week? tor, full canvas and Owners' Group LLC l i mitaVolkswagen ConvertLOCAL MONEY:Webuy preferences, BIG COUNTRY RV Wheel, 2004 a/c, anti-lock brakes, many extras. Cessna 172/180 hp, the Power of ible. Cobalt blue with secured trust deeds & tions or discrimination. Bend: 541-330-2495 Model 323P - 3 slides, like new tires. reg. to Discover Stored inside full IFR, new avionics, PRINT N e wspaper a black convertible note,some hard money We will not knowingly Redmond: rear island-kitchen, 10/1 6. Runs g reat, Advertising $19,900 GTN 750, touchaccept any advertisin Alaska, loans. Call Pat Kellev top, cream colored 541-546-5254 fireplace, 2 TV's, very good cond., must Idaho, Montana, 541-350-5425 screen center stack, ing for r eal e state Or541-382-3099 ext.18. interior & black dash. CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner see $48 0 0 . exceptionally clean. which is in violation of egon and WashingThis little beauty runs w/surround sound, A/C, 541-385-4790 Healthy engine 573 this law. All persons and looks great and t on with j us t o n e Bayliner 185 2006 custom bed, ceiling fan, reserve fund. turns heads wherever p hone call. Fo r a Business Opportunities are hereby informed open bow. 2nd owner W/D ready, many extras. Hangared at KBDN. it goes. Mi: 131,902. that all dwellings ad- — low engine hrs. FREE adv e rtising New awning & tires. One share Phone 541-382-0023 network brochure call DID YOU KNOW that vertised are available — fuel injected V6 Excellent condition. available, $13,000. 916-288-6011 or not only does news- on an equal opportu- — Radio & Tower. $19,750.More pics Call 541-815-2144 email Great family boat available.541-923-6408 paper media reach a nity basis. The BulleMonaco Monarch 31 ' tin Classified cecelia©cnpa.com Priced to sell. HUGE Audience, they 2006, Ford V 10, 925 ChevyTahoe 2007, (PNDC) a lso reach an E N$11,590. 775 Laredo 31' 2006, 26,900 miles, 5.3L V-8 cyl 541-548-0345. GAGED AUDIENCE. Utility Trailers 5th wheel, fully S/C auto-level, 2 slides, Dodge Journey R/T Manufactured/ VIN ¹139115. $23,888. Discover the Power of one slide-out. 2010 AWD 880 (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 queen b ed & Newspaper AdvertisMobile Homes Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 Awning. Like new, ¹122475 $13,995 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k ing in six states - AK, Motorhomes sets of straps, exc. V W S unBug 1 9 74 hardly used. gen, convection miID,MT, OR & WA. For List Your Home c ond., capable o f exc. cond. Total inteMust sell $20,000 a free rate brochure JandAIHomes.com 3 Cu.ft. fridge for RV. crowave, 2 TVs, tow p ulling a f u l l s i z e rior refurbish, engine or take over paycall 916-286-6011 or We Have Buyers Norcold, 110 V o lt, package. pickup truck. If inter- OH, new floor pan, ments. Call email Get Top Dollar ested we will send 541-598-3750 propane or 12 Volt. PRICE REDUCTION! plus lots more! Sun541-410-5649 cecelia@cnpa.com Financing Available. $250. 541-549-1736 $59,000. pictures. $1000 obo. r oof. C l ea n ti t l e. 541-546-1446 www.aaaoregonauto541-548-5511 or 541-647-0081 541-815-6319 951-961-4590 smolichmotors.com source.com (PNDC) $9500. 541-504-5224

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06 FRIDAY MAY 15, 2015• THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

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Automobiles

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MercedesBenz CL 2001,

MercedesBenz E Class 2005,

SubaruGT Legacy 2006,

Subaru Impreza 2013,

SubaruLegacy LL Bean 2006,

Vin ¹016584 Stock ¹83285

Vin ¹688743 Stock ¹82316

Nissan Altima 2012, 2.5L 1-4 cyl, FWD. VIN ¹212867. $16,988.

Vin ¹212960 Stock ¹83174

Stock ¹83205

Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹82770

Subaru Outback XT 2006, (exp. 5/17/15) VIN ¹313068 Stock ¹44631A

Toyota Corolla 2013, (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072

Honda Civic EX 2010, 112K miles, new tires and brakes, sunroof, $8750. 541-382-0324

(exp. 5/1 7/1 5)

Hyundai Elantra2014, 1.8L 1-4 cyl, FWD. VIN ¹036676. $16,888.

(exp. 5/1 7/1 5)

(exp. 5/17/1 5) DLR ¹366

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(exp. 5/1 7/1 5)

(exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366

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541-548-1448

GarageSales 54'I -598-3750

www.aaaoregonautosource.com Lexus RX 400H 2006, AWD ¹027427 $14,995

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Mustang 2013 candy red coupe, exc. cond., Scion TCcoupe 2007, V-6, automatic, (exp. 5/17/15) leather, 19,600 miles, Vin ¹198120 $20,000. By owner. Stock ¹44193B 541-390-5294 $10,379 or $149/mo.,

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354

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$2500 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in

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(exp. 5/17/15) Vin ¹027174

S US A R u

(exp. 5/1 7/1 5)

$20,358 or $249/mo.,

$2600 down, 84 mo., $16,977 or $199/mo., or $149/mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - $2600 down, 84 mo. at $11,999 $2800 down, 72 mo., proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n a p and title i ncluded in proved credit. License proved credit. License payment, plus dealer and title i ncluded in and title included in

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S UBA RU. sessaeossaeo con

$15,979 or $199 mo.,

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Toyota Sequoia 2002 Looking for your Limited Sell an Item next employee'? The Bulletin is your ¹111510 $10,995 Vehicle? Place a Bulletin help Employment Call The Bulletin wanted ad today and and place an ad reach over 60,000 Marketplace today! readers each week. 541-598-3750 Ask about our Your classified ad Call www.aaaoregonauto"WheelDeal"! If it's under$500 will also appear on source.com for private party bendbulletin.com you can place it in advertisers 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 which currently reThe Bulletin's The Bulletin ceives over 1.5 mil"Call A Service lion page views to advertise. Classifieds for: every month at Professional" Directory no extra cost. Bullewww.bendbulletin.com is all about meeting $10 • 3 lines, 7 days tin Classifieds Look at: yourneeds. Get Results! Call $16 - 3 lines, 14 days Bendhomes.com 385-5809 or place Call on one of the for Complete Listings of your ad on-line at SereingCentral Oregon since t9IB (Private Party ads only) bendbulletin.com Area Real Estate for Sale professionals today!

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LEGAL NOTICE CIRCUIT COURT OF OREGON FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY. W ELLS FARG O BANK, N.A., S U CCESSOR BY MERGER TO WELLS FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, NATIONAL A SSOCIATION A S T RUSTEE FOR FIRST FRA N KLIN M ORTGAGE L O A N TRUST 200 2 - FF4 A SSET BAC K E D CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2002 - FF4, Plaintiff, v. JUVENAL CASTANEDA-SALINAS; ANGEL NOBLE; CRECENCIA ORT EGA; STATE O F OREGON, DEPARTMENT OF H U MAN RESOURCES; STATE OF OREGON, DIVISION OF CHILD S UPPORT; V I S T A RIDGE HOMEOW N ERS' ASSOCIATION, INC.; AND PERSONS OR PARTIES UNKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN,

D efendant(s). N O . 15CV0074FC.

PLAINTIFF'S SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO:JUVENAL CASTANEDA-SALINAS and PERSONS O R PARTIES U NKNOWN CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, OR INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN THE COMPLAINT HEREIN: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON:

the relief sought to be o btained therein i s fully set forth in said complaint, an d is briefly stated as follows: Foreclosure of a Deed of Trust/Mortgage. Grantors: Juvenal Castaneda-Salinas. Property address: 63329 Brody Ln., Bend, OR 97701. Publication:The Bend Bulletin. DATED this 10 day of April, 2015. Brandon Smith, OSB ¹ 124584, Emai l : bsmith O robinsontait.c om, Robinson Tait, P.S., Attorneys for Plaintiff, Tel: ( 206) 676-9640, Fax: (206) 676-9659.

LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT C OURT FOR T H E STATE OF OREGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF D E SCHUTES. N ATIONS TAR M O R T G A G E

LLC, its successors in interest and/or a ssigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS OF C OY CLIN T O N C ROWE; TA W N A CROW; R I C HARD CROW; K I MBERLY KNAPP; JACK LIGTERINK, Trustee of the Jack Ligterink and Elsche M. L igterink Trust Under Agreement Dated November 4, 1991; STATE OF OREGON; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES; and THE REAL P R O PERTY 246

NO R T HWEST O'NEIL WAY, REDM OND, OREGON 97756, D efendants. Case No. 14CV0937FC. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. TO THE DEYou are hereby re- FENDANTS: quired to appear and UNKNOWN H EIRS defend against t he OF COY CLINTON allegations contained CROWE: In the name in the Complaint filed of the State of O ra gainst you i n t h e egon, you are hereby above entitled pro- required to a p pear ceeding within thirty and answer the com(30) days from the plaint filed against you date of service of this in the above-entitled Summons upon you. Court and cause on or If you fail to appear before the expiration and defend this mat- of 30 days from the ter within thirty (30) date of the first publidays from the date of cation of this sumpublication specified mons. The date of herein along with the first publication in this required filing f e e, m atter is M a y 1 5 , W ELLS FARG O 2015. If you fail timely BANK, N.A., S U C- to appear and answer, CESSOR BY plaintiff will apply to MERGER TO WELLS the abo v e-entitled FARGO BANK MIN- court for th e r e lief NESOTA, NATIONAL prayed for in its comA SSOCIATION A S plaint. This is a judiT RUSTEE FOR cial foreclosure of a FIRST FRA N KLIN deed of trust, in which M ORTGAGE L O A N the plaintiff requests TRUST 200 2 - FF4 that the plaintiff be A SSET BAC K E D allowed to foreclose CERTIFICATES, SE- your interest in the RIES 2002-FF4 will following d e scribed apply to the Court for real property: THAT the relief demanded in PORTION OF THE t he Complaint. T he NORTHEAST QUARfirst date of publica- TER OF T HE tion is May 15, 2015. SOUTHEAST QUARNOTICE TO DEFEN- TER (NE1/4SE1/4) DANTS: READ OF SECTION T HESE PAP E R S THIRTY-THREE (33), CAREFULLY! You T OWNSHIP FO U R must "appear" in this TEEN (14) SOUTH, case or the other side RANGE T H IRTEEN will win automatically. (13), EAST OF THE To "appear" you must W ILLAMETTE M E file with the court a le- RIDIAN, DESgal paper called a CHUTES COUNTY, "motion" or "answer." OREGON, The "motion" or ean- BOUNDED AS FOLswer" must be given LOWS: ON T HE to the court clerk or WEST BY THE EAST administrator w i thin BOUNDARY LINE OF thirty days along with THE RIGHT OF WAY the required filing fee. OF THE It must be in proper DALLES-CALIFORform and have proof N IA HIGHWAY A S o f service o n t h e NOW LOCATED AND plaintiff's attorney or, ESTABLISHED if the plaintiff does not OVER AND ACROSS have an a t t orney, SAID PREMISES; ON proof of service on the THE NORTH BY THE plaintiff. IF YOU N ORTH LINE O F HAVE ANY Q UES- SAID N E 1 /4SE1/4, TIONS, YOU ON THE SOUTH BY S HOULD SEE A N A LINE 19 8 F E ET ATTORNEY IM M E- S OUTH, AS M E ADIATELY. If you need SURED ALONG THE help in finding an at- EASTERLY R I GHT torney, you may call O F WAY LINE O F the O regon S t ate THE DALLES-CALIBar's Lawyer Referral FORNIA HIGHWAY S ervice a t (503) AND BEING PARAL684-3763 or toll-free LEL TO THE NORTH in Oregon at (800) LINE OF SAID 452-7636. The object NE1/4SE1/4, AND ON of the said action and THE EAST BY A LINE

PARALLEL TO AND or the lawyers for the 330 FEET EAST OF personal representaTHE EAST BOUND- tive. Dated and first ARY LINE OF SAID published on May 1, RIGHT OF WAY OF 2015. LYDIA HOWE, THE S A I D THE Personal RepresentaDALLES-CALIFORtive. PER S ONAL NIA HIGHWAY; EX- REPRESENTATIVE: CEPTING T H E RE- L YDIA HOWE, P O FROM THAT BOX 1743, LA PINE, PORTION CON- OR 97739. LAWYER VEYED T O THE FOR PER SONAL STATE OF OREGON, REPRESENTATIVE: BY AND THROUGH RYAN P. CORREA, ITS D EPARTMENT OSB ¹071109, HurOF T RANSPORTA- ley RE, P.C., 747 SW TION BY WARMill View Way, Bend, R ANTY DEED R E - OR 9 7 702. (541) 317-5505 CORDED (Phone); NOVEMBER 9, 1989 (541) 317-5507 (Fax), IN BOOK 196, PAGE rpcorrea©hurley-re.com 793, D E S CHUTES LEGAL NOTICE COUNTY RECORDS. IN THE C I RCUIT Commonly known as: C OURT OF T H E 246 Northwest O'Neil S TATE O F OR Way, Redmond, OrE GON FOR HE egon 97756. NOTICE COUNTY OF T TO D E FENDANTS: C HUTES. In DESthe READ THESE P Aof the Estate PERS CAREFULLY! Matter JOSE F RANA lawsuit has been of: ISCO ALZ U R I started against you in C A R A NTZ, the abo v e-entitled MAYA D eceased. Case court by N ationstar No.: 14P B 0154. Mortgage LLC, plain- PUBLICATION tiff. Plaintiff's claims N OTICE T O OF INare stated in the writ- T ERESTED P E Rten complaint, a copy SONS. NOTICE IS of which was filed with H EREBY GI V E N the abo v e-entitled t h e un d e rCourt. You must eap- that signed has b e en pear" in this case or appointed personal the other side will win representative of the automatically. To Estate o f Jos e "appear" you must file F rancisco with the court a legal M aya Arantz.AlAzl ul ri

having claims against t he estate are r e quired t o pr e sent them, with vouchers attached, to the undersigned attorney for the personal representative, Will Dennis, Attorney at Law, 438 NE Irving Ave., Bend OR 97701, within four months after the date of first publication of t his notice, o r t h e claims may be barred. All persons whose r ights may b e a f fected by t h e p r oceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the p ersonal representative, or the lawyer for the A dministrator, Wi l l Dennis, Attorney at Law, 438 NE Irving Ave., Bend OR 97701 Telephone

97701; Salem Contractor's Exchange, 2256 Judson Street S . E., that the following ve- Salem, OR 97302; hicle will be sold, for Medford B u ilder's 305 cash to the highest Exchange, Bart l ett, bidder, on 5/26/2015. North The sale will be held Medford, OR 97501; at 10:00am by TRAC Oregon Contractor TOWING, 63066 NE Plan Center, 14625 D r i ve, PLATEAU CT., SE 8 2n d OR B END, OR . 20 0 5 C lackamas, FORD TAURUS 4DR 97015. No bid will considVIN ered unless f ully 1FAFP53U15A128952. Amount due on lien completed in man$2330.00. R e puted ner provided in the o wner(s) ROB I N Bid form provided in these specifications KERSHNER. and accompanied LEGAL NOTICE by certified check or River Forest Acres bid bond executed Road District w i ll in favor of Owner in have it s a n n ual a mount not l e s s meeting on May 30 than ten (10) perat the Sun River Licent of total amount brary from 1:30-3:30 of bid. Said certified p.m. All River Forcheck or Bid Bond 541-388-3877. Dated est property owners shall be forfeited as are invited. Anne and first published on fixed and liquidated Ness 503-848-6467. May 1, 2015. /s/Will damages s h o uld Dennis, Attorney for bidder neglect or LEGAL NOTICE A dministrator of t h e refuse to enter into bids for conEstate, E r ic h M. Sealed Contract and prostruction o f the Voester. suitable bond C entral Ore g on vide for faithful perforCommunity College LEGAL NOTICE mance of Work in NOTICE OF Campus Services event Contract is BUDGET Servery Remodel awarded to him. COMMITTEE will be received Rich The College may Brecke, ConstrucMEETING reject any bid not in A public meeting of tion Project Mancompliance with all the Budget Comager, at the Camprescribed p u blic mittee of the Sisters Center pus procedures Park & Recreation B uilding, R o o m contract and r e quirements District, Deschutes 103, 2600 NW Coldocument called a and may reject for p ersons hav i ng County, State of Orlege Way, Bend, OR "motion" or "answer." good cause all bids against the egon, to discuss the 97701 until 2:00pm The "motion" or ean- claims upon a finding of the estate are required budget for the fiscal local time, June 4, swere (or "reply") must agency that it is in present them, year July 1, 2015 to 2015 and then pubbe given to the court to the public interest to vouchers atJune 30, 2016 will licly opened a nd clerk or administrator with do so. The College tached, to the attorbe held at the SPRD read aloud. Bids rewithin 30 days of the ney of the underreserves the right to Coffield Community ceived after t h us date of first publica- signed waive any and all p e r sonal C enter (1750 W. time will not be action specified herein representative, minor informalities M cKinney But t e cepted. a long with the r e - whose office is loor clerical errors as Road). The meeting Briefly, the Work is q uired filing fee. I t cated at 1558 SW described in OAR will take place on d escribed as f o l must be i n p r oper Nancy Way, Suite 1 37-049-0350. N o Tuesday May 26, lows: Expansion form and have proof 101, Bend, Oregon bidder may w ith2015 at 5:30 p.m. A and r econfigurao f service o n t h e 97702, within four draw his bid after second meeting of tion of Kitchen and plaintiff's attorney or, m onths after t h e t he hour set f o r the budget commitServery areas. if the plaintiff does not date of first publicaopening until after a tee may be held on A MAN D ATORY have a n a t t orney, tion of this notice, or lapse of thirty (30) M ay 27, 2015 a t pre-bid conference proof of service on the the claims may be days from the bid 5:30 pm i f a d d iand project site-visit plaintiff. If you have barred. All persons opening. This tional ti m e is will b e he l d at any questions, you whose rights may project is subject to needed b y the 11:00am on M a y should see an attor- be affected by the p revailing wa ge c ommittee to r e 20, 2 0 15, at t h e ney immediately. If laws and is subject p roceedings m a y view th e b u dget project loc a tion: to Oregon Revised y ou need help i n obtain d itional proposal. The purCampus C e nter Statutes finding an a ttorney, informationadfrom (ORS) the pose of the meeting Dining Hall, 2600 you may contact the records of the court, 279C.800-870 is to r eceive the NW College Way, Oregon State Bar's the personal repredealing with paybudget message, to Bend, OR 9 7 701. Lawyer Referral Ser- s entative, o r t h e ment of prevailing receive c o mment The purpose will be vice onl i n e at lawyers for the perwages. No bid will from the public on t o a n swer a n y www.oregonstatebar. be received or consonal r e presentathe budget and requestions b idders org or by calling (503) tive, sidered by the ColM a ri o F. view the 2 0 15 may have, review 684-3763 ( in t h e lege unless the bid E l l iott, 2016 budget prothe scope of work, Portland metropolitan Riquelme, contains a s t a teAnderson, Riquelme posal. A copy of the tour the site, and to area) or toll-free else- & Wilson, LLP, 1558 ment by the bidder budget d o cument consider any sugwhere in Oregon at that ORS 279C.838 SW Nancy Way, may be inspected or gestions B i d ders (800) 452-7636. This or 279C.840 will be 101, Bend, OR obtained at the Siswish to make. Any summons is issued Ste. complied with. This (541) ters Park & Recrestatements made by pursuant to ORCP 7. 97702, project is subject to 383-3755, Fax: ation District office the College's repreRCO LEGAL, P.C., (541) ORS 279 C . 370 330 1480. between the hours s entatives at t h e A lex G und, O S B Dated and first pubdealing with discloof 9:00 a.m. and visit will not be con¹114067, sure of first-tier subished on May 8, 5:00 p.m, sidered bin d ing contractors, agund Orcolegal.com, l2015. Maria C a rMonday-Friday. The upon the College Attorneys for Plaintiff, men Bildarraz Al2 79A.120 gi v i ng proposed budget is unless confirmed by 511 SW 10th Ave., preference to resiPersonal Repalso available on written addendum. Ste. 400, P ortland, zuri, d ent bidde r s, o ur w e bsite a t The conference is OR 97205, P: (503) resentative. 2 79A.125 gi v i ng Personal R e p rewww.sistersrecreheld for the benefit 977-7840 F: ( 5 0 3) s entative: p reference to r e Ma r i a ation.com. This is a of the bidders. For 977-7963. cycled materials and Carmen B ildarraz meeting where dethe project, lump 279A.110 discrimiAlzuri, Paseo Miraliberation o f the LEGAL NOTICE sum bid will be renation in s ubconBudget Committee c eived o n f o r ms tracting. IN T H E CI R CUIT concha No.:21, Eswill take place. Any COURT O F THE calera Derecha No.: provided in t hese Central Oregon 4 I zquierda, San person may appear specifications. BidSTATE OF OREGON Community College at the meeting and FOR THE COUNTY Sebastian (Guipuzding documents for Matthew J. McCoy, d iscuss the p r o the work are those OF DES C HUTES coa) C.P. 2 0007, Vice President for Spain, Tel: posed budget, proPROBATE DEPARTprepared by Steele Administration 34-626-946-894. grams and services MENT. In the Matter Associates ArchiPUBLICATION AND o f th e E s tate o f L awyer fo r P e r - of the Sisters Park & Prime tects. DATES: sonal RepresentaRecreation District JAMES A. G RANT, Bidder/General Bend Bulletin, with th e B u d get C ontractors m a y Deceased, Case No. tive: Elliott AnderBend, OR son Riquelme 8 Committee. For 15PB0039. NOTICE purchase sets for Daily Journal of more i n f ormation the cost of reproTO INT E RESTED Wilson, LLP, Mario Commerce, p lease call L i am PERSONS. NOTICE F. Riquelme, OSB¹ duction and delivPortland, OR Hughes at ( 5 41) ery from Central OrIS HEREBY GIVEN 024409, 1558 SW First Advertisement Nancy Way, Suite 549-2091. that the undersigned egon Buil d ers May 15, 2015 01, B e nd, O R Exchange (COBE), Mandatory Site Walk have been appointed 1 LEGAL NOTICE personal representa- 97702, T e lephone located at 1902 NE May 20, 2015 Public Auction 38 3 - 3755, B-14 tive. All persons hav- (541) unit rented by: 4th Street Bend, OR 11:00am (541) ing claims against the Facsimile 97701. Marissa R. Wright of Bidding Documents LEGAL NOTICE estate are required to 330-1480, Klamath Falls, OR. mat10©eaattorneys.com present them, w ith TO INTERESTED May 30, 2015, 9:00 will also be availvouchers attached, to LEGAL NOTICE PERSONS a.m., Bend Self Stor, able for examinathe undersigned per- IN T H E CI R CUIT 63273 Nels Anderson tion during the bidS cott Reeder h a s ding period at the sonal representative COURT O F THE Road, Bend, Oregon been appointed Perc/o RYAN P. CORSTATE OF OREGON 97701, 541-389-1664. following B u ilders sonal Representative REA at 747 SW MILL FOR THE COUNTY Exchanges an d of the estate of MarVIEW WAY, BEND, OF DE S C HUTES, Plan Centers: Daily v el L . L u t on, d e Tick, Tock OR 97702, within four PROBATE DEPARTJ ournal of C o m- ceased, by the Circuit months after the date MENT. In the Matter merce Plan Center, C ourt, State of O rTick, Tock... of first publication of of the Estate of Erich 921 S.W. Washingegon, Des c hutes t his notice, o r t h e M . V o ester, D e - ...don't let time get ton St., Suite 210, C ounty, Case N o . claims may be barred. ceased. Case No. Portland, OR 97205; 15PB0047. All peraway. Hire a All persons whose 15-PB-0044. NOTICE Eugene B u i lder's sons having claims r ights may b e a f - TO IN T E RESTED professional out Exchange, 2460 W. against the estate are fected by t h e p r o- PERSONS. NOTICE 11th Avenue, Eurequired to p resent of The Bulletin's ceedings may obtain IS HEREBY GIVEN gene, OR 97402; them, with vouchers "Call A Service additional information that the undersigned C entral Ore g o n attached, to the Perfrom the records of has been appointed Builders A ssociasonal Representative Professional" the Court, the perAdministrator of t he tion, 1051 NE 4th at 250 NW Franklin Directory today! Estate. All persons Avenue, Suite 402, sonal representative, St., B e nd , OR LEGAL NOTICE PURSUANT TO ORS CHAPTER 819 Notice is hereby given

Bend, Oregon 97701, RECON C O R P., within four m o nths whose address is after the date of May 621 SW M orrison 1, 2015, the first pub- Street, Suite 425, lication of this notice, Portland, OR 97205, or the claims may be will on 8 / 11/2015, barred. Ad d i tional at the hourof 11:00 information may be AM, standard time, o btained from t h e as established by records of the court, ORS 187.110, AT the Personal Repre- THE BOND sentative, or the law- STREET ENyer for the Personal TRANCE S T E PS Representative, Patri- T O T H E DES cia Heatherman. CHUTES COUNTY COURTHOUSE, LEGAL NOTICE 1 164 NW B O N D T RUSTEE'S N O S T., B E ND, O R TICE OF SALE TS 97701, sell at public No.: 024 5 09-OR auction to the highLoan No.: est bidder for cash * *** * * 4006 R e f er- the interest in the ence is made to that above-described certain trust deed real property which (the "Deed of Trust") the grantor had or executed by ELLIS had power to conJ. SMITH, JR. AND vey at the time it DENA M. S M ITH, executed the Deed AS TENANTS BY of Trust, together THE ENTIRETY, as with an y i n t erest Grantor, to FIRST which the grantor or AMERICAN TITLE his successors in INSURANCE interest a c quired COMPANY OF after the execution OREGON, AN ORof the Deed of Trust, EGON CORP., as to satisfy the foreTrustee, in favor of going o b l igations DIRECTORS thereby secured and MORTGAGE LOAN the costs and exCORPORATION A penses of sale, inCALIFORNIA cluding a r easonCORPORATION, as able charge by the Beneficiary, dated t rustee. Notice i s re5/23/1 994, further given that corded 6/6/1994, as any person named Instrument No. in ORS 86.778 has 94-22680, in Book the right to have the 341-2697, in the Off oreclosure pro f icial Records o f ceeding dismissed Deschutes County, a nd the Deed of Oregon, which covTrust reinstated by ers the following depayment to the benscribed real propeficiary of the entire e rty s i tuated i n a mount then d ue Deschutes County, (other than the porOregon: LO T 2, tion of principal that BLOCK 4, THIRD would not then be ADDITION TO due had no default WOODLAND PARK occurred), together HOMESITES, DEw ith t h e cos t s , SCHUTES trustee's and COUNTY, ORattorneys' fees, and EGON. APN: curing any o t her 141432 Commonly default complained known as: 5 2128 of in the Notice of ELDERBERRY LN., Default by tenderLAPINE, OR 97739 ing t h e per f orThe current benefimance required unciary is: PNC BANK, d er the Deed of NATIONAL ASSOTrust at any time not CIATION Both the later than five days beneficiary and the before the date last trustee have elected set for sale. Withto sell the o ut l i m iting t h e above-described trustee's disclaimer real property to satof r epresentations isfy the obligations or warranties, Orsecured b y the egon law requires Deed of Trust and the trustee to state notice has been rein this notice that corded pursuant to some r e s idential ORS 86.752(3). The property sold at a default for which the trustee's sale may foreclosure is made have been used in is the grantor's failmanufacturing ure to pay w hen methamphetamines, due the f ollowing the chemical comsums: D e linquent ponents of w hich Payments: Dates: a re known to b e 11/01/1 4 thru toxic. P r ospective 0 1/01/1 5; No.: 3 ; purchasers of resiAmount: $ 5 60.55; dential pro p erty Total: $ 1 , 681.65. should be aware of Dates: 02/01/1 5 thru this potential dan0 3/01/1 5; No.: 2 ; ger before deciding Amount: $ 5 80.63; to place a bid for $ 1,161.26. Lat e this property at the Charges: $129.15. t rustee's sale. I n Beneficiary Adconstruing this novances: $1,910.32. tice, the masculine Foreclosure F ees gender includes the and Exp e nses: f eminine and t h e $939.46. Total Reneuter, the singular quired to Reinstate: includes plural, the $5,821.84. TOTAL word "grantor" inREQUIRED TO cludes any succesPAYOFF: sor in interest to the $33,542.54. By reagrantor as well as son of the default, any other persons the beneficiary has owing an obligation, declared all obligathe performance of tions secured by the which is secured by Deed of Trust imthe Deed of Trust, mediately due and the words "trustee" payable, including: and 'beneficiary" inthe principal sum of clude their respec$29,113.03 totive successors in gether with interest i nterest, i f any . thereon at the rate Dated: 3 / 2 7/2015 of 8.5 % per annum, C LEAR RE C O N from 10/1/2014 until CORP 621 SW Morpaid, plus all acrison Street, Suite crued late charges, 425 Portland, OR and al l t r u stee's 97205 fees, f o r eclosure 858-750-7600. costs, and any sums a dvanced by t h e Need to get an beneficiary pursuad in ASAP? ant to the terms and c onditions of t h e You can place it D eed o f Tru s t online at: W hereof, not i c e www.bendbulletin.com hereby is given that the un d ersigned 541-385-5809 t rustee, CLE A R


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over the years will be more of a triathlete's race this year. And for some teams, perhaps they will find

he 2015 edition of the U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle will feature the most significant

change in years to the long-running multisport race.

more success without the nordic

stage. "You kind of have this hope that

Because of the dearth of snow at Mount Bachelor, no nordic ski-

ing leg will be staged Saturday. In

it changes the race," says race organizer Dan Simoneau. "I hope some

its place will be a 2.34-mile trail

triathlete or some runner shows up

run near the West Village Lodge parkingarea and the Mt.Bachelor

and wins. I hope some teams that have had their struggles to find a nordic skier... suddenly find new hope in the race." Continued back page

Nordic Center. For individual racers, what has

been largely a nordic skier's race

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About 2,300 racers areexpected to compete — asindividuals or members of teamsin Saturday's 39th annual U.S.BankPolePedal Paddle. Themultisport race is made upof six stages, for a total course distance of about 32 miles: Alpine skiing:A 200-foot uphill sprint through snow to skis and snowboards, and a race down a gated course onthe Leeway Runat Mt. Bachelor ski area. Trail running:Newthis year is a 2.34-mile trail run at Mount Bachelor, added to replace the race's usual 8-kilometer nordic ski leg, which could not bestaged dueto a lack of snow. Thenewrun includes a descent from the alpine leg finish tag zoneandfollows service roads andtrails in the West Village Lodgearea before finishing at the nordic center. Cycling:A 22-mile mostly downhill ride along Century Drive from Mount Bachelor to the Athletic Club of Bend. Running:A 5-mile run through Mt. Bachelor Village andalong the Deschutes River Trail to the boat exchangenear Riverbend Park. kayak or canoe(or other PPP-approved watercraft) on Paddling:A1 t/2-mile paddle in a the Deschutes River, including upstream anddownstream sections. Sprinting:A half-mile run from the paddle finish along a pavedpath and grass to the finish at Les SchwabAmphitheater.

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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

POLE PEDAL PADDLE PREVIEW

Previous winners

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Drive up to Mount Bachelor will be open all day, but traffic back to Bend will be routed through Sunriver. Motorists should use caution, as many cyclists will be riding on Century Drive. In Bend, a prime place to watch some of the action unfold is at the bike-to-run transition on Emkay

MEN 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997

Marshall Greene Santiago Ocariz Kris Freeman Andrew Boone Marshall Greene Marshall Greene Marshall Greene Marshall Greene Marshall Greene Jan Spurkland Ben Husaby Ben Husaby Ben Husaby Ben Husaby Ben Husaby Ben Husaby Brad Page Brad Page

Street off Colorado Avenue. From there, spectators can walk down a staircase to the Deschutes River

1996 J u stin Wadsworth 1995 J u stin Wadsworth

Trail and watch the run-to-boat exchange just downstream.

1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981

The footbridges spanning the river in the Old Mill District are good locations to watch paddlers and sprinters. The first finishers are expected to sprint into the Les Schwab Amphitheater at about ll a.m. Food and beverages will be available from vendors at the amphitheater, where a beer garden will be open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. The last finishers should be trickling into the amphitheater at about 3:30 p.m. An awards ceremony is scheduled for approximately 3 p.m. Weather forecasts for Saturday call for high temperatures in the mid-60s and a slight chance of precipitation in Bend.

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the year for runners to shine.

director for the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation, for which the PPP is a fundraiser — is aformer

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"There are plenty of teams

Olympic nordic skier who

who walk around, going, 'We need a nordic skier,'" Simoneau says. "This may be the year where those teams don't need a nordic skier, it's

won the PPP three times

easier to find a runner, and

(1986-88).

that makes it easier for them to win or find success."

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TODAY 11 a.m.-6:30 p.m.:Racepacket pickup atCrankery/Plankery, 1441 SW Chandler Ave.,Suite101, Bend(next door toCascadeLakesLodge) 4 p.m.-n p.m.:Boatdrop-off at Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St. (elites/pairs at 4 p.m., individuals at 4:30 p.m., all teams at 5 p.m.) SATURDAY 6:30 a.m.-l a.m.:Late packet pickup at Crankery/ Plankery 6:30 a.m.-l a.m.:Late boat drop-off at Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend l:30a.m.:Bike check opens nearMt. Bachelor Nordic Center 8 a.m.:Pine Marten chairlift opens at Mt. Bachelor ski area 8:46 a.m.:Alpine venue is closed until race start 10 a.m.: FoodboothsopenatLesSchwabAmphit heaterin Bend 11 a.m.:Beer garden opens in the amphitheater 2 p.m.:All bikes must be picked up atthe bike finish area 3 p.m.:Awards ceremony at the amphitheater 4 p.m.:All boats must be picked up atthe paddle finish area 4 p.m.:Beer garden closes START TIMES:Elite males and females, 9:15 a.m.; adaptive, 9:15 a.m.; family, 9:20 a.m.; male pairs, 9:30 a.m., 9:35 a.m.; coedpairs, 9:40 a.m., 9:45 a.m.; female pairs, 9:50 a.m.; tandempairs, 9:55 a.m.; female individuals,10:05 a.m.; male individuals, 10:10 a.m.,10:15 a.m., 10:20 a.m.; open class, high school and municipal, 10:30 a.m.; female teams,10:40a.m.,10:45a.m.;coedteams,10:50a.m.,10:55a.m., 11:05 a.m.,11:10 a.m.; maleteams, 11:15a.m., 11:20 a.m.; business and service, 11:25 a.m.

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New this year, Salt LakeCity-based Milliseconds Sports Timing will provide live results and splits during the PolePedal Paddle, according to MBSEF. Eachparticipant will be required to wear a transponder on his or herankle, which will serve as the baton for teams. If racers do not wear the transponder, they will not receive atime. All racers must return the transponder once they finish, or they will be charged $95.

Schedule of events

Nordic Lodge

• West Village Lodge

Century Drive

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Justin Wadsworth Justin Wadsworth Justin Wadsworth Justin Wadsworth Justin Wadsworth Justin Wadsworth Dan Simoneau Dan Simoneau Dan Simoneau Dennis Oliphant Dennis Oliphant Dennis Oliphant Dennis Oliphant Simon Ansell

WOMEN 2014 Sarah Max 2013 Sarah Max 2012 Stephanie Howe 2011 Stephanie Howe 2010 Stephanie Howe 2009 Sarah Max 2008 Sarah Max 2007 Suzanne King 2006 Suzanne King 2005 Suzanne King 2004 Suzanne King 2003 Muffy Roy 2002 Mary Schultz 2001 Suzanne King 2000 Evelyn Hamann 1999 Julie Verke 1998 Julie Verke 1997 Julie Verke 1996 Angie Stevenson 1995 Julie Verke 1994 Muffy Roy 1993 Angie Stevenson 1992 Barbara Mettler 1991 Barbara Mettler 1990 Lisa Verke Husaby 1989 Marianne Irniger 1988 Christina Brugger Gilli 1987 Christina Brugger 1986 Leslie Krichko 1985 Wendy McDonald 1984 Lael Gorman 1983 Lael Gorman 1982 Ann Whitsell 1981 Ann Whitsell 1980 not available 1979 not available 1978 not available 1977 Marianne Duberow

because I could ski so much

Bend's Marshall Greene

faster than everybody else,"

has won six elite individu-

Simoneau says. "So there's a al titles and like other elite sad part deep inside me that cross-country skiers has histhere's no nordic leg. But on torically pulled away from the other hand, it's kind of the competition on the 8-kicooL It's going to be interest- lometer nordic stage. Also a ing. It's going to be fun and strong road cyclist, Greene different. I'm hoping for some has typically then pulled new results and new teams." away fromthoseotherskiers Simoneau and other MB- on the bike leg. "In the past, nordic skiing SEF officials have been removing snow and raking w as sort of the barrierto havthe new trail-run course to ing a shot at winning," says ensure it is safe. The new Greene, who is expected to be run includes a descent from

in the men's elite field Satur-

the alpine leg finish tag zone, day. "You had to be at a very and then a gradual climb on high level of skiing before serviceroads on the east side you had any hopes of winof the Sunshine chairlift. The ning the race, and then the run skirts the West Village other events were what sepaparking area before finishing rated among that elite group. near the nordic center for the Now, with no cross-country start of the 22-mile cycling skiing, and the length of the leg into Bend. runs, it will allow triathletes The other run leg of the to be competitive — which is PPP is a 5-mile course along awesome. I'm excited to have the Deschutes River Trail a little bit of change and new near Bend's Old Mill District. competition." With 7t/2miles of running on the modified course, this is

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


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-PILls, E2-3

Parents & Kids, E4 Pets, E5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages

Babychimp

BRIEFING

Millennialsmisuse businessdevices A recent survey conducted by thetechnology firm Absolute Software found 5 percent of baby boomersanda whopping 25 percent of millennials with access to an employer-owned laptop, tablet or smart phone haveused the device in awaythat could have compromised their company's IT security. According to the survey: • 8 percent of boomers and 35percent of millennials modified the device's default settings, • 37 percent of boomers and 64percent of millennials usedthe device for a personal, nonwork-related purpose,and • 5 percent of boomers and 27 percent of millennials used the device for a purpose that was deemed"not safe for work" such as checking their personal email, online banking, online shopping, social media, file sharing, visiting an e-health care site, streaming videos, online gaming, online dating, sexting, visiting adult sites, viewing pirated content and gambling.

starts a

new life in Florida By Chris Kaltenbach The Baltimore Sun

Keeva is a baby chimpanzee, an adorable, sweet little girl born

March 12 to a female chimp at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore. Un-

fortunately, her mom, 26-year-old Carole, seemed il l-prepared for the responsibilities of motherhood. She wasn't hostile toward Keeva or

trying to hurt her. The trouble was, she wasn't

trying to do much of anything with her baby — she wasn't nursing her or bonding with her. Photos by Nancy Stone / Chicago Tribune

LEFT: Inmate Kelsey Johnson comforts her son Douglas as they have "tummy time" in the afternoon at Decatur Correctional Center in Decatur, Illinois. RIGHT: Cayesha Shivers holds her son Kori Anderson in the private room she shares with her baby at Decatur Correctional Center.

% to 64: living longer, not aswell Dave Parkinson/(Tampa, Fla.)

A recent reportfrom the U.S.Centers for Disease Control andPrevention found amixed bagof news whenitcompared the overall health of today's 55- to 64-year-olds with peoplewho were in this age group10 years ago. According to aspecial section in agency's "Health, United States,

Lowry Park Zoo

Baltimore-born chimp Ke-

eva was transported to the Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, Florida, after her mother

was unable to give her the proper care. So it is that Keevahas

takenup residence at the Lowry Park Zoo in Tampa, Florida. Right now, she's

2014":

• Older adults are dying less thanthey did10 yearsago:The overall death rateswere 6 percent lower for men in this agegroup and11 percent lower for women in the 2012-2013biennium than theywere in the 2002-2003 biennium. The rates for thecountry's two leadingcauses of death — cancerand heart disease —decreased respectively by 14 percent and19 percent for menandby18 percent and 24percent forwomen, • Older adults are smoking lessandgetting more exercise:18.1 reported smoking in 2012-2013 compared to19.7 percent in 20022003, while15.7 percent reported engagementin some type of leisure-time aerobic andmuscle-strengthening activity in 2012-2013compared to12.8 percent in 20022003, • Older adults are taking more drugs: 20.3 percent of 55- to 64-year-olds reported taking five or more prescription drugs from 2009 to 2012compared to17.7 percent from 1999 to 2002, the per-

centage of older adults taking prescription drugs for cardiovascular conditions increased by3.7 percentage points, those taking cholesterol-lowering drugs increasedby 11.2 percentagepoints, and those taking gastric reflux drugs increased by 7 percentagepoints, and • More older adults are postponing medical treatments: 13.2percent of 55- to 64-year-olds reported postpoining or forgoing neededmedical treatments entirely during 2012-2013compared to 9.5percent in 2002-2003. — Bulletin staff reports

By Colleen Mastony e Chicago Tribune

under the care of the staff there — much as she was

in Baltimore, where about

DECATUR, 111.-

a dozen zoo staffers took

turns acting as Keeva's mom, holding her and feeding her in eight-hour shifts, makingher feelloved and protected. In Florida as in

ecatur Correctional Center's E-wing is a place of stark juxtapositions, where the crackle of guards'

Maryland, Keeva has never wanted loving attention

radios mix with the happy cries of a toddler

from her human surrogates. "She's a petite little girl.

learning to take his first steps. Colorful

She's tiny. She's starting small, but she's catching up

murals of Bert and Ernie from "Sesame

— let's put it that way," says

Lee Ann Rottman, general

Street" decorate the otherwise drab walls.

curator at the Lowry Zoo.

Keeva, who weighed just a tad over 3 pounds when she left Baltimore, has

And outside, swing sets and a plastic playhouse nestle into a corner of the prison

The courtyard of the nursery wing at the Decatur Correctional Center

grown to 5 pounds, Rott-

hasplaygroundequipment and benches formoms.

man says. The difference between

yard, which is surrounded by a tall chainlink fence and razor wire. For the past eight years, nonviolent offenders who give birth while in custody of the Illinois Department of Corrections have been able to keep their newborns with them as they serve time in the state's only prison nursery.

"I'm very grateful to be here," She is among the lucky few said Cayesha Shivers, 25, who who qualify to live on this unit, heldher 3-month-old baby boy, where eight private cells — each Kori, as she sat in her cell on a furnished with a bunk, a changrecent spring day. "Every mom ing table and a crib — offer womhere can agree with me. There's en thespace to diaper,sw addle nothing like being able to be and soothe their babies. Parentthere, hands on. Not watching ing classes, required by the prisyour child grow up through pic- on, cover everything from tumtures and through letters and my time to nursery rhymes. just phone calls." SeePrison/E4

the Baltimore zoo and

Tampa's is that they have a chimp mom who's a proven surrogate — 32-year-old Abby, who's already successfully raised two adopted chimp babies. Sadly, no Baltimore chimp could make the same claim. And so Keeva, at 3 weeks, was

flown to Tampa. SeeBaby chimp/E5

Bend FireDepartment assesseshomefall risk By Mac McLean The Bulletin

Deputy Fire Marshall

Susie Maniscalco stumbled forward when she caught her left toe under a small, flower-patternedrug thatmarked

SafetyOutreachfor Seniors Call 541-322-6300 to learn moreabout the BendFire Department's Safety Outreach for Seniors program, to schedule ahome visit with one of its inspection teams or find out waysyoucan volunteer or help out with its fall and fire prevention efforts.

the boundary between the

soft, white carpet of Shiela Coffman's living room and the hardwood floors of her kitchen. "You see what I did there," Maniscalco said as she con-

tinued her inspection of Coffman's home. "I just tripped." For the past six years, Man-

iscalco and other volunteers with the Bend Fire Department's Safety Outreach for

Seniors program have visited

healthy, independent lives

the homes of older Central

in the comfort of their own

Oregon residents to identify m ajor fallorfirehazards and

homes. They also go a long way toward preventing a type of injury that, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease

talk about ways to fix them.

Fire department officials say these inspections-

Control and Prevention,

which happen about four or five times each month — help

killed almost 50,000 seniors

make it possible for dozens

of people each year to live

in the 2012-2013 biennium alone. See Fall risk/E2

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Deputy Fire Marshal Susie Maniscalco discusses with Shiela Coffman, 65, the fall hazard of a rug in her dining room while conduct-

inga home inspectionofherBend home Tuesday.



5 0-P L U S

FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

Retirees 0 'ewit t e e

E3

'en s

o our-e e

By J. Peder Zane

rich with meat, poultry and

a wheelchair because of ar-

New Yorh Times News Service

fish — account for more than 40 percent of sales. And vet-

thritis, said his 9-year-old Shih scientists only began investiTzu is a constant source of joy. gating the health implications "She is so good for my ego," of the human-animal bond

Linda and Gary Childs go almost everywhere with their erinarians report a rise in pet "little girl." obesity. The retirees, from W e st Retiree pet owners seem esBoylston, Massachusetts, love pecially devoted as they buck to parade 3-year-old Chino older Americans' tendency to down busy streets in her stroll- give up pets. "As boomers beer. They take her to restaurants come empty nesters, they look dressed in her fur-lined vest or

Patterson, a

and theIr four-legged frIends. an afternoon cocktail. A vol-

is the director of the Center for the Human-Animal Bond at Purdue University. Other

for other things to nurture," "I've been in

t h i s b usiness

be the seashore, where Chino for 26 years, and during the wears sunglasses and one of last seven to 10 years I have her four beach dresses while

noticed that th e

lounging in a chair embroidered with her name. "Chino gives us so many laughs and so much love," Linda Childs, a 67-year-old re-

dream for many dients is still drinking a pina colada on the

tired schoolteacher, said of the

r e tirement

beach, but now they see a Lab next to them."

A pet paradise

12-pound Chihuahua-pug mix. The changing role of pets "She just makes everything and retirement can be seen at better." Brighton Gardens of Raleigh, The Childses are unusual an assisted living and memory in some respects. Retirement care community in Raleigh, remains a time when many North Carolina, that could alAmericans move away from most be mistaken for a menagthings they have to paint, feed erie. A pair of love birds greets or nurture. Only 41 percent of visitors at the door. A well-fed Americans 65 and older live Basset mix named Mr. Copper in households with pets, com- — the community pet known pared with 68 percent of those as the king of the table scraps 45 to 54 and 76 percent of 18- — lounges on the dining room to 24-year olds, according to a floor amid residents enjoying 2014 survey by Mintel, a market research agency. The golden years may have less bark, bite and meow, but in the last decade new scien-

r e tired i nvest- during the 1970s. "Until then

ment broker, said. "She thinks m ost research focused on the my wife and I are the most. harm animals might pose Sometimes I think, 'Dear God, through bites or spreading displease help me be the man my ease," he said. dog thinks I am.'" Herzog, the Western Carolina University professor, is less A boost for the body convinced that pets provide The growing belief that pets specific, widespread health are not just good, but good for benefits. He said studies showyou, may make ownership ing specific benefits received more appealing to retirees. wide attention in the media, Some studies find that pet whose addiction to "feelownership can help reduce good stories" about pets was blood pressure, triglycerides matched only by their penand cholesterol while increas- chant for reports of astounding one-year survival rates af- ing "medical breakthroughs." ter a heart attack, according to These studies, he said,are also Alan Beck, a researcher who trumpeted by the pet industry.

polo hoodie where "she sits in said Richard Rosso, a certified her own chair, very polite." financial planner in Houston. But their favorite place may

tens of thousands of years,

Jeff Swensen/The New YorkTimes

Paul and Jackie Caldwell wIth their10-year-old Pomeranian, Foxy, who travels wIth them from Pennsylvania to Florida, In Greensburg, Pennsylvania. Evolving attItudes about pets and changing family structures are reshaping the relationship between retirees

unteer pet therapist has a Shetland sheepdog in her lap as a smiling resident gently strokes it under the ear, while dogs and cats scamper down the

for Sunrise Senior Living, which operates Brighton Gar-

"We don'thear much about

the compelling research finding that pets do not improve

studies show that pets reduce our health, reduce our loneloneliness and stress, promote liness or make us happier," interaction between p eople Herzog said. "Or about the and encourage exercise. 85,000 or so people a year, "It is clear that animals are many of them older, who go good for your health" Beck to emergency rooms with brosaid, while cautioning that the ken bones each year because field is still relatively young, of their pets. Pets may be good

dens communities throughout the country. "It is hard to

measure all the benefits they bring — the happiness, the hallways with their owners. sense of purpose, the ability to "Every one of our 302 com- nurture something — but we munities has at least one com- know they make a meaningful munity pet," said Rita Altman, difference." with few comprehensive studsenior vicepresidentofmemoBlair Patterson, 79, a Brigh- ies to draw from. Although ry care and program services ton Gardens resident who uses people have owned pets for

for us, but, right now, I think it

is more of an hypothesis than a proven fact."

tific studies, evolving attitudes

about pets and changing familystructures have reshaped the relationship between retir-

ees and animals, even if much of the new research is not universally accepted.

A growing trend Erika Ribaudo, a senior adviser at A Place for Mom, which helps about 200,000

& I' l4, 3~5, 4 D~' AY ~'SO iNLY!! MAY 36Iti 17 Thursday,Friday,Satuiday II Sunday

families a year find living arrangements for retirees, noted

a growing demand for pets by retirees and the willingness of senior living communities to accept them. "As recently as 2005 there were very few communities that

a c cepted

pets," Ribaudo said. "Now, probably 40 percent of them are pet-friendly, and that num-

ber is growing. Science tells us that pets make people feel so much better, and more clients

just don't want to give up their beloved family member. Today, they don't have to." From 2010 to 2015, pet ownership in th e U nited States increased about 3 percent; 65

percent of households own a pet, usually a dog or cat. Duringthat same time, according to the American Pet Products Association, spending on pet items increased about 25 percent, to what is expected to be $60.5 billion this year.

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For retirees, smaller is bet-

ter. Younger pet owners are more likely to own dogs than cats — by a roughly 60-40 split, Mintel found. This gap begins to narrow with age, so that the

65 and older crowd is slightly more likely to own cats than dogs. There are no definitive statistics on the breeds of dogs favored by various age groups,

Qi~ EXPORE IIE GREAI U.SJL!

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but the American Kennel Club

suggests that less active retirees — as well as those living in apartments or who travel a lot — consider smaller breeds like

FRKE'l3Y~EIIR~PAS.S!

Chihuahuas or Dachshunds.

It is easier to trip over smaller dogs, but it is harder for them to knock down their owners.

As more Americans live alone and families have fewer children, "their attachment

to pets is deepening," said Hal Herzog, a psychology

I

professor at Western Caroli-

na University and author of

a

"Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat: Why It's

So Hard to Think Straight About Animals." "They think

of them as people, and they are making greater emotional and financial investments in their

pets." Glenn White, 87, a retired b usinessman o f W al t h a m

Crossings, M a ssachusetts, said he "spends a lot of time talking to my 8-year-old Havanese, Cody." "Of course," White added,

I'

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I

"he talks back. I even sing to

him" — though Cody has yet to respond with his own version of "Hound Dog." Just as helicopter parents try to provide their children with every advantage, pet owners primp and pamper their cosseted companions. Pet shops become superstores

with designer clothes and jewelry. High-end pet foods — including organic, holistic, grain-free, non-GMO offerings

REDNOND

FREE PARK'ING 8 ADMISSION Yew Ave.'

FREE I YEILR ~

CIL MPIIG PISS!

8j

RIdmonl Municipal


E4

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

PAHENTS + KIDS

To submit an event for the Family Calendar, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.

as a child.

FAMILY CALENDAR

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Family members agreed to take Kyle, but Shivers didn't

TODAY

MOMDAY

know what would become of

SEVENPEAKSSCHOOLART SHOW ANDGRANDPARENTS DAY: Featuring an all school art show and Grandparents Day celebration; 8 a.m.; Seven Peaks School,19660 SW Mountaineer Way,Bend; www.

STORYTIMES —ANIMAL ADVENTURES:Ages 3 andolder, live animals, stories and crafts with High Desert Museum; 10 a.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES —FIZZ! BOOM! READ!: Ages 3-5, stories and science with hands-on experiments;10:30a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-617-7097.

her baby. Two days before the birth, when she learned she had been accepted into the

nursery program, she wept. "It's a second chance," she sard.

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4

sevenpeaksschool.org or

Since moving to the nursery, she said she has learned

541-382-7755. STORYTIMES —PRESCHOOL PARADE: Ages 3-5 years; 10:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 507 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/Bend; 541-617-7097.

to better appreciate the small

m oments that motherhood.

m ak e u p

Still, she worries about her

older son. She hasn't seen him in ayear. "I can only imagine what is going through his head," she

i

I

r

SATURDAY

sard. Prison administrators say

they have tried to ensure that the nursery doesn't look like

a prison. In the outdoor play yard, a high hedge blocks the Nancy Stone/Chicago Tribune

Moms and their babies sit down for "tummy time" with volunteer Lisa Jones, who also sings with them and reads stories.

view of the chain-link fence and razor wire, so children

can play without seeing the signs of confinement. But this is still a

p r ison,

where life is h ighly regi-

Prison Continued from E1 Strict eligibility requirements mean that only a hand-

Legal Advocacy for Incarcer- oversee it, she said. In 2007, ated Mothers. "But the prison the program called Moms nursery is not a good envi- and Babies opened. ronment for a baby and not a At first, officials worried good environment for a new how women in other parts of

ful of the roughly 50 women who go into labor every year while in prison qualify for placement in th e nursery. Others are transported to a local hospital under guard and, after giving birth, have just24 to 48 hoursbeforethey

mother."

must relinquish their n ewborn to relatives or state child

ments to ensure the safety of the infants.

welfare officials. The forced separation of

a mother from her infant is a wrenching scenario that, prison officials say, tears at

For their part, prison officials acknowledge that more inmates could benefit from

the program, and say it can be heartbreaking to turn people away. But they say they must maintain rigorous require"We'vehad alotofsuccess,"

said Hansbro, the w a rden.

"But if one thing happened, that could really jeopardize this program. We could see

families and fuels the cycle the end of it." of incarceration. At Decatur Still, officials acknowledge Correctional, officials have

that there are limits. They say

seen multiple generations they don't allow a child to reserve time at the prison, and main in the nursery for much even seen mothers and their

grown daughters housed in the same unit.

Breaking the cycle At the nursery, officials say they are attempting to break

more than two y ears; they would never want a child to remember their time at Decatur Correctional.

The history of prison nurseries

that cycle. So far, 63 women The history of prison nurshave completed the program, eries in the United States

mented. Security

c a meras,

positioned above every crib, keep watch over the babies. Life revolves around a strict

schedule, in which breakfast is served at 4:45 a.m., chores facility holds low-level, non- are done by 8 a.m. and babies violent or otherwise well-be- are bathed by noon. Every 15 haved offenders. Roughly 85 minutes, a guard takes count percent were mothers, and of every mother and baby. officials wondered if the presBack in her cell, where ence of the babies would trig- the afternoon light filtered ger jealousy or depression. through a frosted-glass window, Shivers bounced nowPositive effect 15-pound Kori on her knee. A Those concerns, Denning bright-eyed baby with a sweet said, eventually proved un- smile and a halo of dark, curly founded. She recalled how, hair, he babbled happily and in the early weeks of the reveled in his mother's attenprogram, when new moth- tion. Shivers, too, seemed to ers brought their infants to enjoy doting on the boy, feedthe prison's gym for Sunday ing him a bottle of formula, c hurch services, other i n - gently wiping his chin after he mates fell silent. spit up and engaging him in "The women would be in small conversations. "Are you awe and the whole environ- going to smile?" she said. "Are ment would change. I think you?" "I think a lot of us didn't reit had a calming effect," said Denning, who is now retired. alize we weren't really good "Who can'tlook atababy and mothers when we wa s o ut smile?" there," she said. "We thought, In a large day room filled 'I provide a roof, I feed you and with sunlight from narrow, I clothe you.' We thought that ceiling-height wind o ws, was enough, when it wasn't. photos of each of the chub- So we're really learning the by-cheeked infant graduates importance of mothering." the prison would react. The

and only one has returned to

dates to the early 1900s, when

prison. By comparison, other women offenders have a 37

the prison reform movement — aghast at abuses that oc-

percent rate of recidivism, ac-

curred where men and wom-

cording to IDOC. That is evidence enough, officials say, to show the program is working. "I don't believe it is our responsibly to punish these women when they get here.

en were held together — led where, on a recent day, half to the creation of female-only a dozen women gathered to

hang on the wall. Below the portraits sit four blue sofas

sentence, which was handed down by the judge," said Warden Shelith H ansbro. "Now it's time for us to pro-

dozen states allowed children to remain with their mothers

until they turned 2, according

vide resources so they can be

to Mary Byrne, a professor at

their thoughts of the future.

T heir punishment i s

reformatories. There, wom-

en lived in dorms, managed domestic responsibilities and

could keep their children with t h e i r them.

By 1950, reformatories in a

better when they leave and go home. Because if they end up coming back here, that doesn't serve anyone well.

"I wonder how he's going Columbia University. Those programs closed over the to adjust to home. I wonder years, until only one was left, if he'll know the difference," Bedford Hills Correctional said Cayesha Shivers, as she

It doesn't serve the offender, and it certainly doesn't serve

Facility in New York.

the victim of a crime — or the taxpayers." In an era of shrinking budgets, the financial benefits of reduced recidivism might be the most powerful argument in favor of such a program. The price of incarcerating a prisoner at the minimum-se-

curity prison runs about $28,000 a year, according to IDOC. Officials say they rely on volunteers and donations to keep the nursery running "budget neutral." Critics question whether the nonviolent, low-level of-

NI6 IAt I tl6KI NMOR IHaltul

and eventually to the reintro-

5N 7%IMI IS •

duction of nurseries. Today, there are about eight prison nurseries in the U.S., experts

Amid the children's books and toys that stock the nurs-

ery's day rooms, a sense of regret lingers. Many mothers have other kids and, as they

say. Officials in Illinois became bond with their infants, they interested in the idea in 2001 and sent three IDOC staff

worry that their older chil-

members to tour Bedford Hills. "We were blown away by what we saw," said Debbie

m embers or in fostercare,are

Denning, who was then the

She was 2 when, she said, her motherbecame addicted

fenders who qualify for the nursery program should be held in prison at all. They argue that, even under the best of circumstances, prisons are noisy, aggressive places where access to fresh air and sunlight are severely limited — hardly an appropriate setting for a child, they say.

like to ache for her mother.

deputy director of Women and Family Services at IDOC. to crack cocaine and aban"There were children in pris- doned her to the Illinois foster on with their mothers who care system. "I would think, were absolutely the happiest 'My mom is going to come get children. You walked into a us. She's going to be there,'" room and they just glowed. Shivers said. "But she never The whole tone of the facility came." was different. I would have Theft, she said, became never have imagined babies "kind of like my therapy." What's more, critics say, being in a maximum security " Whatever issues I w a s the program requirements prison — and Bedford Hills going through or if I felt sad are so strict that they dis- was maximum security — but about something, I would go qualify all but a handful of you would see strollers with out and get me something women. Beds in the nursery children and their mothers, nice. And I would feel OK just often stand empty, and those and inmates would step off for a little bit," she said. women who do qualify are of- the sidewalks to make way She had served three stints ten addicts who were selling because they had that much in Illinois prison on theft and drugs to support their habit. respect." burglary charges when she Such women and their babies, critics contend, should be to-

D enning returned to I l l i was arrested again in 2014 nois, determined t o e stab- for taking a $60 pair of black

gether in halfway houses or

lish a nursery at Decatur

suede pumps from a Kohl's,

other community-based pro-

Correctional.

records show. At the time, she

grams that, they argue, are Afterseveral years of remore appropriate, m ore effec- search and planning, she tive and less expensive. pitched the idea as something "I know D ecatur does that could be run without exthe best they can," said Gail tra cost, except for the two Smith, an attorney and senior

policy adviser for Chicago

existing staffers who would shift their responsibilities to

was a single mother of a then4-year-old son, Kyle, and a few weeks pregnant. Among her greatest fears, when she was sentenced to two years, was that her children would

feel as abandoned as she had

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members,$15for nonmembers;

Bend Central Christian Central OregonChristian Home Educators CrookCountry Culver Gilchrist lapine Madras Marshall Mountain View North Lake Oregon National Guard Youth Challenge Redmond. RedmondProficiency Academy Sisters. Summit Trinity Lutheran

MutOrey)n INTRODUGING

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BACKPACKEXPLORERS: Parents and children ages 3-5 investigate science, art, music, stories and culture in a fun and hands-on manner; 9:30 a.m.; $10 for

High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www. SUNDAY highdesertmuseum.org/backpackM INI POLE PEDAL PADDLE: Inthe explorers or 541-382-4754. Mini Pole Pedal Paddle, teams of STORYTIME — MUSIC, six, each ranging in age from first MOVEMENTAND STORIES: to sixth grade, compete in river Ages3-5,movement and stories rafting (with a rafting guide), biking, encourage fun with music an obstacle course and a run; 9 and develop skills; 10:30 a.m.; a.m.; $150perteam; LesSchwab Downtown Bend Public Library, Amphitheater, Old Mill District, 344 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www. Southwest Shevlin Hixon Drive, deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or Bend; 541-388-0002. 541-617-7097.

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541-806-3268.

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Congratulate all Central Oregon Graduating Seniors with a fullcolor ad fromVour dusimessl

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BACKPACKEXPLORERS: Parents and children ages 3-5 investigate science, art, music, stories and culture in a fun and hands-on manner; 9:30 a.m.; $10 for members, $15 for nonmembers; High Desert Museum 59800 S U.S. Highway 97,Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/backpackexplorers or 541-382-4754. MOMMY AND ME ATTHEFARM: Ages 2-4 with adult, classes incorporate art, storytelling, animal demonstrations, games, movement, music, and literature into a class for both children andadults;10:30 a.m.; $33 for four classes, $10for drop-ins; Juniper Jungle Farm, 22135 Erickson Road,Bend;www. wildheartnatureschool.com/ mommy-me/or 503-680-9831. STORYTIMES —PAJAMA PARTY: Ages 0-5, evening storytime with songs, rhymes and crafts, wear your PJs; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar or 541-312-1070.

centraloregonshowcase.comor

~

Stricter d r ug-trafficking blond-haired inmate sitting laws and a national tough-on- across the room with a chubcrime agenda in the 1980s led by 9-month-old. "Do you ever wonder that?" to a dramatic increase in the number of women in prison Shivers asked.

WEDMESDAY

church — Main AVroom, 379 NW Rimrock Way Terrebonne www.

O ngratulatiOn~~

held Kori. She turned to a

STORYTIMES —ANIMAL ADVENTURES:Ages 3 andolder, live animals, stories and crafts with High Desert Museum; 11:30 a.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St., La Pine; www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar or 541-312-1090.

Terrebonne Assembly ofGod

S he turned to K o r i a n d

asked: "You want me to sing to you? You ready?" She lay him on her prison talk and watch each other's bunk and,leaning over him, children. softly sang "The itsy-bitsy A guard sat behind a desk spider." as a b ald-headed toddler The baby kicked his legs explayed on the floor. The wom- citedly, flashed a gummy grin en — all dressed in prison and stared up at his mother as scrubs, two of them holding if she were the most important babies — talked about the at- person in the world. mosphere of the nursery and

TUESDAY

MARCH OFCELEBRATION 5K: A5Kto benefit the Emergency Food Pantry; 8 a.m.; $15 for early bird, $20, $30 day of, registration required; The Salvation Army, 515 NE DekalbAve., Bend; www. salvationarmybendoregon.org or 541-389-8888. STORYTIMES —FAMILY SATURDAY STORIES: Allages, interactive storytime with songs, rhymes and crafts; 9:30 a.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760. FREE KIDSDAY: Bring your kids, and your friends' kids, to the Sunriver Nature Center, free all day; 10 a.m.; free for kids, $4 for adults; Sunriver Nature Center, 57245 River Road, Bend; www. sunrivernaturecenter.org or 541593-4394.yes it STORYTIMES — MUSIC, MOVEMENTANDSTORIES:Ages 3-5; 10:15 a.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar or 541-312-1070. STORYTIMES —BALLET STORYTIME: Ages 3-5, interactive storytime featuring trained dancers; 1:30 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar or 541-312-1080. 2015 CENTRALOREGON FILM FESTIVAL (COFF): A family-friendly festival for local filmmakers; 6:30 p.m.; free;

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Multiple pages listing all 2015 Graduates

from local Central Oregon High Schools will publish in The Bulletin

Saturday, June13

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FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN

PETS

To submit an event for the Pets Calendar, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10 days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com, 541-383-0351.

Learntonavi atet ewor o ' eti uette' By Vicki Salemi

PETS CALENDAR

my dog come in?'" Reed says. Even in a pet store where dogs are typically welcome,

Chicago Tribune

Pet ownership continues to be a booming trend in the U.S. In 2014, the American Pet

make sure Fido behaves. And

be mindful of the inventory, Reed says. If your dog puts a

Products Association reported, Americans spent $58 billion on their pets; the forecast

around the store, she suggests buying it. The spread of saliva

for 2015 is estimated at more

want (another) dog to get sick

trends, says pets have increas-

later from using that toy."

ingly become part of the family — and, like some parents,

Restaurants: As far as dining out with your pooch, Reed says, it's only OK if the dog "is well-behaved, can sit calmly through a meal and will not beg." It's also inappropriate for the dog to sit with paws on the table, she said. "If he starts barking uncontrollably, then you have a problem." Time to grab the check and go home. Apologies accepted: An-

is potentially a health hazard, she says, adding, "I wouldn't

pet owners don't always set

the proper boundaries for their charges, particularly dogs. "The subsociety has grown — your pet is like a fur kid," says Reed, author of "Miss Fido Manners Complete Book Mw

v.

1

i,

' ttr

to events, and after observing

I

many of these activities, I realized people (don't) know how Thomas Farley, aka Mr. Manners, an e t iquette and lifestyle expert at WhatMan-

nersMost.com, agrees. Owners have to be honest in their

assessmentof their pets'personalities, he says, to "avoid incidents by the pet whether

threatened or acted upon."

Rules from the experts Don't confuse manners with laws: Having your pooch on a leash and making sure licenses and vaccines are up to

date are requirements in most municipalities. There also may be laws re-

oster By Marc Morrone Newsday

Q

• Iam foste ring a 2-year• old pit bull from an animal shelter. He is people- and dog-friendly, walks well on the leash and is fairly well house broken. I want to adopt him, but there is one big problem. eat them all. At first, I never let He is extremely interested in Buddy loose in the yard unsumy 10 parakeets. While I can pervised. I always kept him on keep him away from their cag- a lead with me, and I would just es, he will lunge at them when sit in a chair and allow him to they are free to fly about in the sit next to me looking at the daytime. I have always let the birds. Every time he would birds out and wish to contin- lunge at them I would correct ue to do so. Is there any way him, andthen when he would to teach or condition him to sit quietly I would drop some ignore the parakeets as they treats randomly on the ground, swoop around the house? I re- which he would vacuum up.

June 6 DOG AGILITY EVENT: Featuring dogs and their handlers moving through obstacle courses, hosted by Bend Agility Action Dogs; 8 a.m. for spectators; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-280-4198.

June 7 DOG AGILITY EVENT: Featuring dogs and their handlers moving through obstacle courses, hosted by Bend Agility Action Dogs; 8 a.m. for spectators; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541-280-4198.

june 13

Q

3 months old. I would put him

day, he may be OK with it at night, as well.

a behavior — in this case, bark-

ing when he is lonely — and then is rewarded with attention from you. The problem is that

he learnedthat he hasto bark for a very long period of time before you will come down-

Q

• I

h a v e ab o u t ni ne

• birdhouses sprinkled throughout my property, and some are looking rather shabby. I want to take them down, clean them up and return them

in the cage at night when we go stairs and interact with him. to theirplaces. When is thebest to bed, cover the top with a light Obviously the cure is simple time to do this? Some of them blanket and turn out the lights.

and you do seem to know al-

He would sleep until 7 a.m., ready: Let him bark himself and then bark to be let out. He out and then he will figure out is now 11 months old. For the

that there is no point in barking

past five nights he has started anymore. barking as soon as I go to bed. However, you have not been Ichecked to see if he needed to

go onthe Wee Wee pad and if he was all right, but he just kept alize this is instinctive behav- We would just sit like that for barking. He spends time in the ior, but I cannot take the risk an hour at a time twice a day cage when I leave the house that he will inadvertently inevery day, and after a month of without a problem. One night I jure or kill one of the birds. this he would ignore the birds ignored him and he barked for • This is not easy to do as we sat there. Then I would more than two hours. A bark • but is possible. Farmers put him on a longer lead and collar does not work at all. He have long taught dogs like this walk about the yard with him has gotten very attached to me to leave the chickens, ducks doing the same thing — day and follows me everywhere. He and other farm birds alone. It after day. Eventually he got will not stay outside in the yard

A

consistent in your reaction to

BARKS AND RECREATION DOGGIE CONTEST: Registration is open for the 2015 Barks and Recreation Doggie Contest; competitions for best voice, owner looka-like, pie eating, big hair and best trick; $50 prize for winners; space is limited; 1-5 p.m.; $10 registration; Drake Park, 777 NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www.bendsnip.org/ events or 541-617-1010.

ican Humane Society:When

u won't eave ara eetsaone haviors that we frequently address here — the dog performs

and family; Sunriver Village, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; www.lapinebarkforlife.com or 541-536-7619.

from the website of the Ameryour dog does something to Courtesy Fotolia via Tribune News Service upset or inconvenience anothIt's important to follow "petiquette" when taking your pet — particularly dogs — out in public. er person, apologize. "Shrugging it off as an overreaction or a personal slight quiring cleaning up after your the Prevention of Cruelty to If your dog is rambunctious will not improve your dog's dog, aka "pooper scooper" Animals offers tips for walk- or aggressive, it may be worth behaviorand may negatively laws. ing your dog. (go to aspca.org investing in training. impact your reputation in the Owners should r e search and search for "walking 101"). Never let your dog approach community," notes the "Etiregulations not only for their Keep Fido off the neighbors' strangers without asking their quette for Dog Owners" artide municipality but also any lawns and gardens. Also use a permission, the ASPCA notes. (go to animalhumanesociety. public place. (Trained hearing leash that allows the dog space Even more important, never org, and type "etiquette" in the or service dogs are usually to roam but isn't too long. let your dog approach a child search field). "The well-trained city dog or another pet without the par"Dog owners have to realize permitted to accompany their owners wherever the public is needs to respond to a mini- ent's or owner's OK. that, wherever they go, they're allowed.) mum of four basic commands: Shopping: More stores are canine ambassadors," Reed Street sense: The website 'sit-stay,' 'heel,' 'leave it' and pet-friendly — but not all. "It's says. "Their behavior affects 'come,'" the website notes. of the American Society for always a good idea to ask, 'Can everyone around them."

My Cairn terrier Buddy had er bothered any of the birds for a very strong prey drive when the next 15 years. I cannot say he was first given to me, and if this would work with your I had many park birds such dog, but it is worth a try. as cranes and flamingos that I kept loose in my yard. My • Mypuppyhas been sleepother dogs left the birds alone, • ing in his cage with his but Buddy was determined to pillow and blanket since he was

BARK FOR LIFE 5K: A 5K poker fun run/walk with your dog on the trails of Sunriver; 10 a.m.; $15 for one dog

May 30

other point to consider comes

to behave."

May 24

and person, $20 for one dog

toy in its mouth and drags it

than $60 billion. But it's not just about money. Charlotte Reed, who tracks pet

of Dog Etiquette" (Adams Media). sYou can take (your dog)

E5

seem to be in use year-round, and I don't want to disturb any

active nests.

A • times hard to f i g ure out if a birdhouse is in active • As you said, it is some-

use. Careful observation is

DOG GONE RUN: The Dog Gone Run 5K fun run/walk for people and leashed pets begins and ends at Riverbend Park, register online or at FootZone and FleetFeet in Bend, and BrightSide Animal Center Thrift Store in Redmond; 9 a.m.; $30 before June1, $35 after June1, $40 day of; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www.runsignup.com/ race/OR/Bend/dogonerun or 541-923-0882. PET PAWLOOZA:PetPawlooza festival; contests, prizes, petrelated vendors, nonprofit groups, adoptable animals; livemusic;bounce house and beergarden;sponsored by Brightside Animal Center and Bend Pet Express; 10 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; www. brightsideanimals.org/events or 541-923-0882.

his barking. Sometimes you required. It does a great deal come down right away and of goodto dean them once a sometimes you do not, but year — when they are not beyou always do in the end so it ing used — as birdhouses can is now an interactive game for house mites, lice and other exhim.

ADOPT ME

ternal parasites that will bother

Since he does not feel lonely the babybirds. in the cage during the day, then The best way to clean out a one trick here is to make the

birdhouse is to pull out all the

living room at night the same old nesting material and then as it is during the day: Leave all wash out the interior with a is not easy with little birds like the idea that either the birds without me. I do not want him the lights on so it is fully bright mixture of one part bleach to parakeets that flutter about so were off limits or that the birds in mybedroom. and leave the TV on with a low nine parts water. Allow it to quickly and draw out a dog's were just not worth him both• This is another one of volume. Since he is comfort- dry out before putting the box instinctive reaction to grab. ering with. Either way, he nev• those self-rewarding be- able alone like this during the back up in its previous location.

A

Submitted photo

Baby chimp

"We are doing our best to

mimic anything she would

Continued from E1 "It truly seemed like Carole was a bit confused," Claire

MacNamara, the Maryland zoo's chimp forest area manager, said back in March, afterithad become clear Keeva couldn't stay in Baltimore.

have had," MacNamara said.

fj( ) 'i

(

tII, I L

"The female and the infant

were just not connecting." Such disconnects between mother andbaby chimp are rare, said Stephen Ross of Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo and chair of the Chimpanzee SpeKim Hairston i The Baltimore Sun cies Survival Plan committee, Claire MacNamara, left, Chimp Forest Area manager, holds Keeva, a project of the Association of a chimpanzee born recently at the Maryland Zoo in Baltimore, as Zoos and Aquariums. That's she sits with Carey Ricciardone, mammal collection manager, mostly because zoo officials aboard a Beech King Air in Maryland. keep a close eye on their female chimps, trying to ensure they will make good mothers one lucky chimpanzee. Had But when we tried to re-introbefore allowing them to be this happened in the wild, she duce Keeva, it didn't go as we impregnated. almost certainly would have had hoped. So the final deci"Over the past decade or so, dled. sion was made, and we started there's only been one or two Afterseparating Keeva and looking for a surrogate." where the mother had been Carole a first time, her keepers While Keeva was in Baltiincompetent behaviorally to in Baltimore tried a reintro- more, her handlers took every take care of her offspring," duction.Maybe, they hoped, step possible not only to keep he said. "Actually, Carole was the separation had made Car- her healthy and comfortable, identified as a potentially good ole feel a little more motherly. but also to make her think she "We thought that maybe, was being raised by one of her mom, and so we gave breeding recommendation for her. a few days after giving birth, fellow chimps. They held her "But when it came down to maybe Carole wasn't feeling almost continuously, wore fur it," Ross said, "she wasn't up to very well. Maybe a few days vests ("what you'd make a godoing all the hard work it takes later, she would be feeling bet- rilla suit out of," MacNamara upon becominga mother ." ter and would be more willing explained), groomed her and Still, Ross noted, Keeva is to take those maternal duties. made chimp noises to her.

sound directed at her adoptive family, which her keepers take as a good sign — especially since the other chimps an-

On March 29, Keeva and two of her Baltimore handlers swered her back. — MacNamara and Mammal Rottman says Keeva should Collection 8 C o nservation be ready to fully join her new Manager Carey Ricciardone chimp family, and thus go on — boarded a plane for Tampa. public display, in a couple of She may have been too young months. But for now, in a deto realize it, but the 17-day-old velopment any parent should chimp was getting the royal understand, she's mostly betreatment — pilot Jeff Luizza, coming, well, squirmy. "She's doing good," Rottout of Orlando, flew his own plane to Baltimore so Keeva man said."She's changing a lot couldbetransported safely and right now. She's awake for loncomfortably to her new home. ger periods of time, and she's Luizza is a volunteer pilot more interactive, kind of focuswith Animal Rescue Flights, ing in on her environment a lot a group that normally trans- more. She's wanting to move. ports rescued dogs and cats to Before, it was mostly eating new homes around the county. and sleeping. But now, she's So far, Keeva seems to be trying to get to the point where taking her relocation fine. She she can crawl. She's not there hasn't yet been put in with yet, but she's certainly trying."

Not as grumpy as he looks Here is Adam, a tiny Persian about 14 years old. Hewas abandoned, completelydeclawed, very matted andhadto be shaved. Helooks grumpy, but he is social with people and friendly with dogs and other cats. TomeetAdamand other adoptable cats at theCat Rescue, Adoption andFoster Team, call 541-389-8420,

email info©craftcats.org or visit www.craftcats.org. I

I

HOT SURE OFTHEVALUEstS WE1LEVIILIIIITE

"'ITFOR FREE!~

the other chimps, but she has

had some contact — through a mesh screen — with Abby

0+ A~INU~IL

5PRCA SEORO KIPOIIICES

and the other females. The

WEDNISMvi S ATURDAvi JUNE 13

mother and adoptive daughter seem to be taking to one another, and the other chimps

have been keeping an eye on things, clearly curious about this youngster. "She's watching the chimps a little more, but they spend a lot of their time watching her as well," Rottman said. Re-

cently, Keeva made her first

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E6

TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

a mie ee u I iSS i S 0 TV SPOTLIGHT

Hollywood. "They're lovely," she said. "They're all happy to have

Please do it with me,'" said

Curtis at an event Monday in By Alicia Ranciiio

New York.

The Associated Press

The show, now filming in New Orleans, will follow an anthology format like Mur-

the gig. There's not a rotten

one." Curtis is known for 1978's

no attitude. Everybody's here.

and "A Fish Called Wanda."

phy's "American Horror Sto-

Everybody wants to support Murphy's vision. They're all

She says she wasn't particularly looking to do television,

NEW YORK — Jamie Lee

Evan Agostini i The Associated Press

"Scream Queens" actress Jamie Lee Curtis and producer Ryan

Curtis says her reason for taking a role in Fox's upcoming horror comedy "Scream Queens" is simple. Ryan Murphy, the show's creator and an executive producer, called her.

apple in the bunch. There's "Halloween," "Trading Places"

ry" on FX. Season one takes place at a college campus

grateful for t h e c o nfidence or for work for that matter.

he's placed in them as I feel. And look, it's a job. We're all happy to have it, and if anybody starts to not be happy to have it, I will be the person to

where a number of murders

have occurred. It's set to premiere this fall.

Curtis plays the dean of the I picked it up.... He said, 'I'm university and her co-stars gonna write a show for you. are a who's who of young "He calledme on the phone.

Murphy attend the Entertainment Weekly and People New York Upfronts Celebration at The High Line Hotel in New York.

remind them that they should

This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday. It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitablefor children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13 are included, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational valuefor older children with parental guidance. Rating:PG-13 for innuendo and

language. What it's about:The Barden College Bellas get suspended from college competition, so they go to Europe to battle the bestacappella The kid-attractor factor: Cute coeds cutting uP and singing PoPhits in harmony.

Language: Scattered profanity. Sex:Not really, despite Fat Amy's big talk. Dru g s: None. pars n ts' advlsory Closer to a PG than a PG-13. Suitable for10 and

up "MAD MAX: FURYROAD" Rating: R for intense sequences of violence throughout, and for disturbing images.

Good lessons/badlessons:Senio' What it's about:Decades after civiyear in college is when you stop lization's end, a lone motorist fends concentrating on social life and off road raging tribes in the deserts extracurriculars, because it's "time we used to call Earth. to think about other stuff." Thekid-attractorfactor: Car Violence:None. chases and crashes, with real cars

j

Submitted photo

"Pitch Perfect 2" is afun, cleancomedysuitable for ages10and up.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after piess time. I

happened in that cabin when their

about her as often. Dear Abby: My

son was asleep or at the kids' club

learned who his donor was. He now wants to meet up with the

booked a cruise with his ex-wife to celebrate their son's eighth birth-

bo y f riend or when they had a bit too much to

person. Turns out, it was a woman. day. They plan to share the same I'm not usually a jealous per- cabin. He has mentioned at least son, but it's all he twice in the past that ever talks about evshe wants him back, ery single minute of but now he denies DFP,R the day. He wants to having said it. ABBY meet her two hours I didn't expect him from where we live. to pay for my ticket I am fine with it, but (I can afford it), but I'm tired of hearing how "great" an invite would have been nice. she is. What can I do to keep the I have included him in my children's celebrations and have stood peace in my house? — Wife of a Transpiant by him through difficult times. I Dear Wife: Because ofyourhus- have yet to meet the ex, so there's band's donor, you are a wife and no animosity between us. not a widow. A step in the right When I suggested separate direction would be to regard her cabins would be appropriate and as the person who saved your affordable considering they had husband's life at a point when you booked a suite, and two regular cabins are about half the price, he flat-out told me I'm not invited. He says this isn't about "us" but about

his son, whom I get along with. a bone marrow donor. I think she I love this man and feel this isn't is great, too. just about trust, although he has be tested to see if it's possible to BE

P lease calm down. W ith t h e

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015:This year you open

been less than truthful lately. I don't want to have to wonder what

everyday concerns LEO (July 23-Aug.22)

** * * Consider taking a trip or planning to do something new; it will refresh

your energy. Youhavea lot to do, so

don't allow others to distract you for too long. A call or email from someone at a ** * * You might have decided to clear distancecould be confusing.Askquesthe air with someone you deal with on an tions to clarify. Tonight: Be spontaneous. intellectual level. Hold back for now, as VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) your timing could be off and a nasty tiff ** * * A close relationship could might result. Be spontaneous, but make demand a lot of your time and attena point of returning all of your calls. Totion. You might feel as if someone has night: Embrace surprises. prevented you from doing something you want to do. You will make some TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * Try getting more information decisions involving a relationship. Hold on to them for now. Tonight: A close before making a decision. You could be in a position where it would be a mistake encounter. to say or do anything more. The unexLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) pected might throw off your plans; your ** * * You could be in a situation that imagination is likely to go haywire as a causes a dilemma. You might not be result. Tonight: Vanish while you can. sure which direction to head in or what GEMINI (May 21-June20) solution would work best. Allow greater ** * * You could be in a position where give-and-t akebetween youand others. you would prefer to relax. Nevertheless, Your conversations will prove to be most

ARIES (March21-April 19)

drink.

Am I unreasonable in thinking sharing such close quarters with an ex is inappropriate? Should I jump ship from this relationship'? He clearly could care less about

my feelings. — Waiting at the Dock

Dear Waiting: When parents separate, most children hope and

pray they will find a way to get back together. If your boyfriend and his ex are sure that isn't going to happen, then it really isn't right to bunk together and get their son's hopes up only to be disappointed when the ship returns to shore. That this man acts like your feel-

ings are irrelevant and isn't always truthful are huge red flags and do not bode well for your future if you continue with him. I don't know

how much time you have invested, but if more of the same is what's in

store, you'd be better off to cut your losses and bail. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box69440,LosAngeles, CA 90069

enlightening. Tonight: Inthe limelight.

YOURHOROSCOPE

up to many different options, though By Jacqueline Bigar you might not act on any of them right away. You have a tendency to reflect on someone close to you will make a dedecisions and observations for quite a while. Your perspective changes though mand of sorts. Lighten up the moment encounters with people who are very dif- — not with energy and conversation, but ferent from you. If you are single, check with a smile. It will be very much appreout any person you are dating with care, ciated. Tonight: Hang out with friends. as he or she might not be everything he TGIF! or she seems to CANCER (June21-July 22) Starsshowthekind be. Do notcom*** * You could be pushedbeyond mit until you are of tlay yoo 9hatte your limits and might feel more tired ** * * * D ynamic absolutely sure of than you thought was possible. Let go of ** * * p osltlve yo u r choice. If you a need to control others. The unexpected are attached, the *** Average will run rampant at the workplace or with two of you love ** So-so an older friend. Tonight: Greet the imposspending time * Difficult sible with laughter and a smile. away from the of life. Plan a special happening anytime from fall onward. You might be able to fool many of the signs, but you can't fool ARIES.

%~C

Drugs: None.

will not feel the need to speak

passage of time, your husband

~~

is a mistake." Violence: Almost constanttorture, impalings, shootings and spatterings under the wheels of cars and trucks. Language:An almost indecipherable patois, with no discernible profanity. Sex:Nudity.

Dear Abby: My husband of 28 years had a bone marrow transplant, and six months ago he

Of course he thinks she is "great." Not everyone is willing to

.

Goodlessons/badlessons:"Hope

us an wantstomeet onor

could have lost him.

r

— not digital renditions of them — post-apocalyptic villains, and violence.

Parents' advisory:Entirely too intense and violent for impressionable children. OK for13and up

"I don't care. I did yogurt commercials. I mean, honestly. I work, I go home. I'm happy to be doing this. They're lovely. I'd be very happy to be home," she laughed.

TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES "PITCH PERFECT2"

be very happy to have it. Not that I think there's gonna be

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * Pace yourself, and know what you m ust do. Touch base with a loved one who tends to be quite controlling and unpredictable. Learn to go with the flow of this person's different moods. You will like the results, as unpredictable as they might be. Tonight: Try a new spot.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) ** * * * Y ou could be more tired than you realize. You might want to rethink a personal issue that is affecting your day-to-day life. A loved one seems to be very touchy and difficult at the moment. Do not let this person's words get to you. Tonight: Be a little naughty.

CAPRICORN (Dsc. 22-Jan. 19) ** * * Focus on an investment that might not be financial but could involve emotions. You could feel as though someone is pushing you very hard to get you to do something. Consider asking a different person to help you with a project. Tonight: Invite some friends over.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed. 18) ** * * * Y ou seem to know what to say in order to calm down a situation and intrigue a loved one. In your playfulness,

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 2:50, 6:15, 9:45 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 11:35 a.m.,12:45, 3:15, 4:30, 7:15, 9:25, 10:30 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRONIMAX3-D (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3:30, 6:45, 10:15 • EX MACHINA(R)11:55 a.m., 2:40, 6:20, 10:50 • FURIOUS 7(PG-13) 12:15, 3:35, 6:50, 10:05 • HOME (PG) 1,3:40 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13)I2:25, 2:55, 7:10, IO:35 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) 12:20, 3:55, 6:55, 10:10 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD (R)11:40 a.m.,2:30,7:30,10:30 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD3-D (R)noon,12:30,3,3:45,5, 7, 8, 10, 10:45 • PAUL BLART:MALLCOP2(PG) 12:05, 2:35, 7:50, 10:20 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 12:30, 2:15,3:15, 6:30, 7:45, 9:30, 10:25 • THE WATER DIVINER (R) 6:25, 7:40, 9:15 • WOMAN IN GOLD (PG-13)12:40,3:25,6:35,9:20 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) ** * * Your ability to handle funds comes forward. You might feel justified in making a purchase right now, but it wouldn't be the best decision. Honor a change of pace, and seek outa friend for his or her feedback. You will feel more upbeat as a result. Tonight: Love doesn't have to cost. © King Features Syndicate

5 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "Chimes at Midnight" —Orson Welles spent much of his professional life obsessed with the Shakespearean role of Sir John Falstaff, and he considered this 1966 film, which he also wrote and directed, the best of his career. Initially dismissed by critics, this moving study of Prince Hal's (Keith Baxter) betrayal of Falstaff (Welles), his

former mentor, is nowregarded as a masterpiece.JohnGielgud, Jeanne MoreauandMargaret Rutherford also star. Welles' 1952 adaptation of the Bard's "Othello" immediately follows.

8 p.m. on 2, 9, "SharkTank" — GoPro founder and CEO Nick Woodman returns to the program as a guest Shark in this sixth-sea-

son finale. Arescue-pet concept thatfactors in a cafe is pitched

by a woman from BocaRaton, Florida, while a toy that's really more than a toy is on the mind of another entrepreneur. That innovator — from Lake Forest, California — presents an all-electric vehicle that goes anactual motorcycle one better in terms of beingmaneuverable.Updates on earlier ideas also are included. ct zap2it

ASSURANCE iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN manages your lovedone's medications

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 6 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)9:15 • Younger than 21 mayattend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguari'an. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • GETT: TH ETRIALOFVIVIANE AMSALEM (noMPAA rating) 3:30 • THE SALTOFTHEEARTH (PG-13) 6 • WILD TALES (R) 8:30

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 3:15, 6:15,9:15 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(R) 4:30, 7, 9:30 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 •3

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)7 • EX MACHINA(R) 7:45 • MERCHANTS OFDOUBT (PG-13)7:15 • MONKEYKINGDOM(G) 5: I5 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 5, 7:30 • WHILEWE'RE YOUNG (R)5:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THEAGE OF ADALINE (PG-13)5:10,7:30,9:45 • AVENGERS: AGE OFULTRON (PG-13)3:20,6:30,9:35 • MAD MAX: FURYROAD(R) 3:50, 7:10, 9:10 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD3-D (R) 4:30, 9:50 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 4:25, 6:30,7, 9:30

you could trigger someoneelse's temper. Try to remain sensitive to this person, not only for him or her, but also for you. Tonight: Let go of stress.

1 p.m. on 2, 9, "General Hospital" — Soon after its 52nd anniversary, the daytime staple tries something different with live (on the East Coast; tape-delayed in the West) episodes here and on the following Monday. Few plot details are being disclosed in advance, but viewers can expect such traditions as a secret, a wedding and a situation catching characters "in the crossfire." Tyler Christopher, Rebecca Herbst, Maurice Benard and Kelly Monacoareamong castm embers pivotally involved.

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(Upstairs — PG-13) 4:10, 7:30 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(R) 4, 7, 9:30 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GD! Magazine

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

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.,YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT DRINKS: Three local distilleries, three styles of gin, PAGE14

ARTS' Central Oregon Symphony Spring Concert, PAGE 20

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MAGAZINE EVERY FRIDAY IN THE BULLETIN

MAY 15, 2015

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PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE

C ONTAC T

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REPORTERS

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

in ez

David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasperObendbulletin.com Sophie Wilkins, 541-383-0351 swilkins©bendbulletin.com Kathleen McCool,541-383-0350 kmccoolObendbulletin.com

COVER STORY • 10

DESIGNER

• "A La Mode" opens for one-night only • A guide to out of town events

RESTAURANTS • 12 • A review of Pisano's Pizza in Tumalo • More news from the local dining scene

SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life LLS. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702

ADVERTISING 541-382-1811

DRINKS • 14 MUSIC • 3 • Grant-Lee Phillips visits The Belfry • Polysemy CD-release showSaturday at Ranch Records • Reed Pub hosts metal show • Slick Rick hits the Domino Room • The Hill Dogs play roots-rock at Cabin 22 • Freeway Revival brings Southern jams to Astro Lounge tonight

GOING OUT • 8 • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. et tn

OUT OF TOWN • 23

Pole Pedal Paddle changescourse

Tim Gallivan, 541-383-0331 tgallivan@bendbulletin.com

e

Cover design by Tim Gallivan/The Bulletin

MUSIC REVIEWS • 9 • Best Coast, Snoop Dogg and more

• Making gin in juniper country

CALENDAR • 16 • A week full of Central Oregon events

PLANNING AHEAD • 18

MOVIES • 26

• "Mad Max: Fury Road," "Pitch Perfect 2," "The Salt of the Earth,""Merchants of Doubt" and "Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem" open in Central Oregon • "Blackhat,""Mortdecai,""Still Alice," "The Cobbler," "Just Before I Go" and "Tracers" are out on Blu-ray andDVD • Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon

• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting

ARTS • 20 • Central Oregon Symphony presents Spring Concert • "True West" opens at Volcanic Theatre Pub • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 3

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

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Denise Siegei I Submitted photo

Pensive singer-songwriter Grant-Lee Phillips performs Saturday at The Belfry with Stephen Poltz.

• The singer-songwriter will play a sold-out show at The Belfrywith fellow tunesmith StevePoltz

are right there under my nose." Raised in Stockton, California, Phillips moved to Los Angeles in his late teens. There, he formed

Shiva Burlesque in the late 1980s, The 53-year-old singer-song- followed by the acclaimed alterThe Bulletin writer, playing a sold-out show native-rock act Grant Lee Buffalo ashville singer-songwrit- with Steve Poltz Saturday at The in the early 1990s. They signed er Grant-Lee Phillips has Belfry (see "If you go"), said that with Warner Bros., but lack of a title for the album he while he doesn't go after themes promotional support precipitated hopes to release in the fall: "The intentionally, he doesn't ignore their late-'90s breakup. Narrows." them when they begin calling for Except for regrouping to do Taken from one of the songs his attention. some Buffalo shows a couple of "When they start to emerge, I years back, Phillips has been solo that will be on the record, "The Narrows" isa reference to the try to go with it, you know. I look since, releasing a steady string of treacherous part of a river, and for those parallels and those pat- introspective albums and turnserves as a pretty strong meta- terns that start to emerge on their ing up on TV's "Gilmore Girls" as phor for life's challenges, Phillips own," Phillips said. "Sometimes a sort of roaming troubadour in I'm struck with the themes that street scenes. told GO! Magazine. By David Jasper

N

Ifyou go What:Grant-Lee Phillips with Steve Poltz When:7 p.m. Saturday Where:The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters Cost:SOLDOUT Contact:www.belfryevents. com or 541-815-9122

Themes definitely emerged when he was working on his most recent a l bum, 2 012's "Walking in the Green Corn." It's described on his official bio

as "ten songs ... drawn from Phillips' intensive investigations into his native lineage. Phillips, who is Muskogee (Creek), elliptically explores the intersection of past and present, personal and

political." He told GO! that "in the last

couple of years, I moved from California, which was my home, and I moved to Nashville. That's been

a major part of the inspiration" for his recent songwriting. Like Los Angeles, Nashville is an entertainment industry town — only

it's one built on music and songwriting, not film and TV, Phillips sard.

Continued Page 5


music

PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

• Polysemy embraces experimental sounds in his debut album

Ifyou go What:Polysemy CD-release show When:7:30 p.m. Saturday Cost:Free Where:Ranch Records, 117 NW OregonAve., Bend Contact:www.facebook.com/ polysemymuslc, www.polysemy.bandcamp.com

By Ben Salmon For The Bulletin

T

o talk about Sisters-based musician Dalton M o ehn-

ke, who records under the name Polysemy, you first must define a couple of words. First, polysemy itself is the capacity for a word, phrase or symbol to have multiple meanings. And the verb form of "paw,"

finds time for Polysemy, if for no other reason than to continue his own personal artistic pawing process. "I wouldn't say music comes

according to Merriam-Webster,

means "to touch or hit (someone or something) with a paw or foot" or "to search by using your hands in an awkward or careless way." Moehnke, 19, is about to release his debut album as Polysemy. It's called "Pawing," and he'll cele-

naturally to me at all. I have a lot

of gaps in my musical ability. I don't really have any talent, but I've just kind of had to develop these rudimentary skills," he said. "For me, the songwriting process and the recording process are kind of the same thing." Playing live is another story.

brate with a show Saturday at

Ranch Records (see "If you go"). In the liner notes for "Pawing," Moehnke bendsthe meaning of

!

Polysemy's music isn't exactly the

er

the album's title word for his own

artistic purposes. "Pawing is a term that means

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4

someone is trying out something new," he writes. "They have no experience in what they are diving into, and for me, that encapsulat-

ed my mindset of experimentation when I began this project." Let's rewind. M oehnke h as

lived in Sisters since he was 9 years old. He learned to play guit ! tar ataround the same age from o his nephew Trevor Martell, the engine behind the fast-rising local rock band Patrimony. As a Submitted photo teenager, Moehnke spenta couple Sisters-based Polysemy will celebrate the release of his new album, "Pawing," at Ranch Records Saturday. of years in Sisters High School's AmericanaProject program, and he formed a band called Entry rock and the stuff I was listening them and I didn't really like it," bewildering and beautiful at once. "My style just started changing, Level with some buddies. They to throughout middle and high Moehnke said. "But one day it just recorded an EP and an album and school." kind of clicked and suddenly I'm and I started writing songs in that posted'em to Bandcamp. Moehnke moved away from obsessed. And now they're my fa- vein," he said. "It started out as just Growing up and with Entry bands like the White Stripes and vorite band." a couple of weird little tunes and Level, Moehnke played a lot of The Doors and began listening Indeed, "Pawing" is permeat- then suddenly I had two and then I straightforward rock and blues- to acts with a more experimen- ed with the influence of Animal had four and then I was like, 'Huh. rock, he said. So last year, he tal, psychedelic bent: Radiohead, Collective (and the group's best- I should maybe make an album.'" Moehnke officially releases spent some time on his own ex- Braids, Wild Ivy, Gauntlet Hair. known solo artist, Panda Bear). ploring new instruments and new But most of all, he discovered At 11 tracks long, it's a lush and "Pawing" today, and he says Enmethods and new sounds — paw- a new appreciation for Balti- immersive landscape of bubbly try Level is about 60 percent done more-based psych-pop heroes electro-pop that's weird and wa- with a new EP. He's also working ing at a new style, if you will. "I wanted to try and get away Animal Collective, who had been tery, sunbaked and psychedelic. at Sisters Bakery, attending classfrom (blues-rock) and I wanted a longtime favorite of Entry Level Using smeared guitars, found es at Central Oregon Community to see where I could go musical- drummer Jeremiah Perry-Weed. percussion,stray samples,gauzy College and is planning on transly," Moehnke said. "So I started "He kind of guided me toward vocals and an army of bleeps and ferring to Southern Oregon Uniplaying with some synths and which albums I should listen to, bloops, Moehnke builds an odd versity in Ashland later this year. So he's a busy guy. But he still listening to things besides classic and for a while I tried to get into little headphone world that's both

kind of thing Central Oregon music venues are clamoring to host. "There's really not a scene for it anywhere," Moehnke said. "Be-

cause I'm not very popular and I don't really have a fan base, the

only kind of shows I can get are at bars, but no one wants to listen to psych pop with trippy visuals at bars." Still, Moehnke has been working hard on an hourlong set for Saturday's show. He plans to blend his songs into one another, creating one continuous piece of

music,and he's creating an accompanying visual element, too, "to keep people engaged because electronic music is pretty boring otherwise," he said. "I'm hoping to expose people in this area ... to music they wouldn't otherwise be able to get their hands on," Moehnke said. "I feel

like I add enough of an accessible pop element that people who give my music a chance would enjoy it if they were at a show." Personal interaction, however, is a different story.

"Come hang out with me (Saturday night) if you want," Moehnke said. "But I'm kind of a weirdo

so you might want to just grab a CD and run away." — Reporter: bsalmon@ bendbulletinrcom


THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

music

GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 5

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MUSIC FESTIVAL

JUNE 19-21, 2015

H ~ WQ7E7-. AILQ " IRUKtIKI5 IRQQ lMM SEAILS8 J61"PQQR MANS WHIK lKOYlROGERS AND THE D.R.K. SRQTHERS COMATOSE " POLECAT DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS ACORN PROJECT" ASHER FULERO IAND -THE STUDENT LOAN ...P S MANY MORE

he Domino Room (51 NW Greenwood Ave.) in Bend will host a couple of hip-hop shows over the

T ent stages of their career. Here's what's up:

next week featuring headliners at two very differ-

• Tonight, fast-rising local MC Chandler P will cap a long night of rap, including openers Kid Cody, Big Price and more. But the primary draw will be Mr. P, a young and talented rapper and producer with a sizable fan base in town. His newest release, "The Missing Pieces"

EP, crackles with intriguing beats and rhymes that are raw and sturdy, but also engaging. Showtime is 8 p.m.,

I

doors open 7 p.m., and cover is anywhere from free to

$5,depending on what you can afford. • Then on Tuesday, the Domino's stage will host a rap-

RFOV

per with a few more years behind the mic under his belt.

We're talking Slick Rick, aka Rick the Ruler, aka a legit legend of the genre. Rick was one of superstars of hiphop's Golden Era, a smooth-talking story-rap specialist with an eye patch and an English accent. He's also the man behind some of the genre's most enduring early hits, like "La Di Da Di," "Teenage Love" and "Children's Story." A 5-year prison sentence forattempted murder in the mid-1990s slowed his career, but he's back now and heading to Bend. Showtime Tuesday is 9 p.m., with doors opening at 8 p.m. J-Meast opens. Advance tickets

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cost $25 plus fees; outlets are listed at www.randompresents.com. If you wait to buy at the door, it'll cost you

$28. — Ben Salmon, For The Bulletin

From Page 3

that Los Angeles didn't necessarily inform his writing to begin with. "I a lot of the country music I grew up always kind of feel like I'm going with in the '60s and '70s," he said. inward and pulling from experience "I think it feeds me in a way that I that could have occurred long ago, wasn't being fed in Los Angeles, in or I'm being inspired by history and terms of being in contact with na- projecting myself into another setture and being in a setting that isn't ting. There were songs like that with so constantly self-obsessed with Grant Lee Buffalo," he said. fame, with all of the trappings that Nashville, on the other hand, "excome with a place like L.A. It's not perienced a lot of war, a lot of trageall of L.A., but you really do notice dy as well. I can't help but be interhow different the place is when you ested in, and affected by all of that. get outside of it," he said. The Trail of Tears was just a few The birth of his daughter, now age miles from where I live and the Civil 7, influenced his 2009 record "Little War," he said. Moon," and partly inspired the move His father's death a month after to Nashville, he said. "We said, 'There he moved to Nashville further "afmust be some other place where we fected the things I was writing," he can raise our daughter, where you're said. "All of this made for a time of not so far off in the woods (and) pretty heavy reflection, and hope, as you've got a sense of balance, where well." If you're headed to The Belfry, you people are living their lives and doing their jobs," he said. can expect to hear some of the mateAsked if the move east has rial that will be on "The Narrows," changed his songwriting, Phillips some Grant Lee Buffalo tunes, and suggested it had — but first noted of course material from the last few "I'm not a country artist, but I love

Space Oddity solo outings in his hourlong set. I've got so many records to juggle now," he said."I don't make a set list; it's all there in my head somewhere. If I get derailed or somebody shouts out a song, it could send the set in a different direction. "I actually welcome that. It keeps

it fresh. There's a lot of routine in my day. When I put on the guitar and play, I let it take its course," he said. When Phillips spoke to GO! a week ago, he'd just met Poltz, with

whom he shares Saturday's bill, the evening prior. "It seems like we should have

known each other a long while ago. There's definitely a kindred spirit, and he's such a great songwriter and funny dude, so we're basically taking this opportunity to work up songs together," Phillips said. "So who knows. Give us a couple of more days, and we'll be ready for who knows what." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

YoungAmerican-MajorTom SuffragetteCitp Let'Da s nce-ChinaDoll-ModernLov

JUNE 3,10 Worthy Wednesday 6 Tee n TedX "David Bowie" 13 20-21 Alice in Wonderland 22 S u mmer Film Camp 24 F u ll Draw Film Tour 27 C entral Oregon Rhythm Project U ABBA" 28

JULY 13 21

J o hn Mayall B lue Lotus (, 541-317-0700

TheTowerTheatre

~a. www.towertheatre.org

f h eTowerTheatre y Ot o wertheatrebnd


musie

PAGE 6 e GO! MAGAZINE I

Batteries • Crystal • Bands

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and Spoon (indio rock), Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. May 23 —Ryan Adams(rock), Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. May 24 —Atala (dosort doom),Third Street Pub, Bend, 541-306-3017. May 25 —Rohort Plant & The Sensational ShapeShiftors (rock),Les Schwab Amphitheater, Bend, www.bendconcerts.com. May 25 —Sisyphean Conscience (progrossivo metal),Third Street Pub, Bend, 541-306-3017. May 28 —BobSchnoidor (poprock),Tower Theatre, Bend, www.towertheatre.org. May 30— Tony Smiloy(poprock),The Astro Lounge, Bend www.astroloungebend.com. May 30 —Wrockonizo

S] 000 INFINITY VATCHREPAIR Located between South Wendy's & Cascade Garden

541-728-0411 61383 S.Hwy.97, Bend, OR97702 Oflice: 541.728.0411• Cell: 503.887.4241 Daniel Mitchell, Owner S tem & Cr o wns • M o v e m e n t s

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May 22— The Docomborists

WATCH BATTERY

s

I

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

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(rap),Domino Room,Bend,

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1

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541-408-4329. May 31 —Scott Woiland nnd the Witdahonts (rock),Century Center, Bend, www.bendticket. com. June 5 —From Hell (motol), Third Street Pub, 541-306-3017. June6 — Pigs ontheW ing (fanx-Floyd),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. June 8 —Kottonmouth Kings

(rap-rock),Domino Room,Bend,

MPHONY Join us at our Spring Concert to hear th~ Young Artist CompetMto» Winners and the~t

Central Oregon Symph performing works by BruCh,

Chopin, Haydn, Beach ay Humperdinck.

May 16-18, 2015

www.randompresents.com. June 11 —Orgone(fnnk), Domino Room, Bend, www. p44p.biz. June12 —The Quick & Easy Boys (fnnk-rock),The Astro Lounge, www.astroloungebend.

com.

June13 —Space Oddity(Bowio tribute),Tower Theatre, Bend, www.towertheatre.org. June16 —The Doobie Brothers

(classic rock),LesSchwab Amphitheater, Bend, www. bendconcerts.com. June17 —J.P. Harris & The

ToughChoices(conntry),

www.cosymPhony.com

McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. June 17 —Snporsuckors (rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www volcanictheatrepub.com.

Supported by Charles Schwab

June18 —StoolPulse (roggno),

Saturday7:30pm, Sunday 2: 00pm, Monday 7:30pm

Bend High School Auditorium

Midtown Ballroom, Bend, www. randompresents.com. June 18 —JohnDoo (cowpnnk),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.

mcmenamins.com.

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The Freeway Revival channel the Allrnan sound

Billboard's Hot 100 chart. "Jessica" peaked at No. 65.) Anyway, I bring this up because I'm no A l l man B r others Band when I listen to The Freeway Reexpert, but I always did love the vival, a jammy Americana band crisp, rollicking sound of the song from A sheville, North C a r olina, "Jessica." the first thing I think of is "Jessica." The choppy acoustic strum. The The shared roots are obvious: blues, twin guitars. The fluid melodies. Southern rock, a bright, bendy guiThat bridge! tar tone and a breezy vibe. I'm not I'm not the only one. "Jessica" is saying The Freeway Revival are the one of the Allmans' most popular

equal of The Allman Brothers Band,

tunes. It's a longtime staple of clas- but there are sonic similarities. sic-rock radio, and is the band's The f iv e F r eeway R evivalists third most streamed song on Spotify would presumably take all this as a more than four decades after it was compliment, since they cite the Allreleased. mans as aninfl uence on both FaceSpeaking of which, "Jessica" was book and Reverb Nation. And they the second single off the Allmans' should. Rock 'n' roll with a South1973 album "Brothers and Sisters." ern twang is an easy thing to mess Can you imagine a band releasing a up, and The Freeway Revival gets long, instrumental boogie-rock jam it right. I suspect Bend would love as its second single from an album them if they give 'em a chance. these days'? Immediately after its The Freeway Revival; 10 tonight; biggest hit ever, no less'? ("Ramblin' $3; The Astro Lounge, 939NWBond Man," the first single from "Broth- St., Bend; w w w .astroloungebend. ers and Sisters," reached No. 2 on

com or 541-388-01 16.


musie

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 7

A God Or An Other:

think want or need a quick

length albums under their belt — 2 0 13's "Ghosts of Champoeg" and this year's "Hang in There" — and when you listen to 'em, you'll hear a likable blend of folk, pop and

history of black metal and its

rock that reminds me of the

local descendant, Cascadian black metal?

Philadelphia band Dr. Dog,

Three? Eight? Maybe 25? Fifty if I'm lucky. (Probably not 50.) Still, music is music — it's neither good nor bad; its quality and value exist only in the mind of the individual listener.

and a little less pure pop sunshine. Frontman Taylor Kingman belongs in the same

a musing ongenre

What percentage of GO! Magazine readers do you

but with a little more twang

Scruffy Emotive Voice Club

as Bright Eyes' Conor Oberst and The Felice Brothers. Kayla Stoik's violin adds a nice bit of elegant texture to the mix.

And there might be someone out there who is interested in

This is psychedelic roots-

A God Or An Other, the band playing Reed Pub Saturday night. GO! Magazine is for them,

pop-rock, then. On the band's Reverb Nation, it cites Polecat

and Fruition as similar acts, which should bode well for The Hill Dogs' connection

too.

Quickly: Black metal's origins can be traced back to Eu-

with Bend, since those two II I' '

rope in the 1980s, and it crys-

bands do really well here. Hear The Hill Dogs at www.hilldogs.bandcamp.

I

tallized as a true, distinct subgenreofextreme heavy metal in Norway in the 1990s. Since,

com.

pable of both beauty and bru-

ithas spread across theglobe, tality. Their 2013 album "Towand when it reached the West ers of Silence" is a stunner, Coast of the United States, packed end to end with lots of bands like Weakling, Xasthur muscle and even more meloand Leviathanbegan melding dy. Hear it at www.agodoranblack metal's basic elements other.bandcamp.com. — shrieking vocals, distorted A God Or An Other, with The guitars, speedy rhythms and Kronk Men and Rutabaga; 8 lo-fi recordings — with post- p.m. Saturday; $3; Reed Pub, rock, hardcore punk, folk, 1141 SE Centennial Court, prog and whatever else hap- Bend; ww w j.mp/agoao o r 541-312-2800. pened to float by. Which brings us to Cascadian black metal, a sub-sub-

genre whose mere existence has been the topic of much dispute. Whether it has a name or not, however, bands like Port-

land's Agalloch, Arcata's Ash Borer and Olympia's Wolves in the Throne Room have no doubt established a sound for our little corner of the planet that's rooted in black metal,

but marked by long songs, slow tempos, verdant imagery and lots of pretty, almost ambient atmosphere. A

God O r An

good! The Hill Dogs; 9 p.m. Sattion and the after-party. You The Hill Dogs have been urday; free; Cabin 22, 25SW should find a way to cover around for a few years, play- Century Drive, Bend; www. that ground and check out ing shows and recording p44p.biz or 541-306-3322. — Ben Salmon, For The Bulletin this Newberg band. They're tunes. They've got two fulltween the thrill of competi-

I O Q A

Wind down from PPP with The Hill Dogs

Ch

Bend's beloved Pole Pedal Paddle race is on Saturday,

and a bunch of folks will ski, bike, boat and run from Mt. Bachelor to Bend's Old Mill District. I don't k now w hat k i n d of distances are associated

with each of those race legs. I suspect you can find that info elsewhere i n

• • •

. dab'4 +<b'

t o d ay's

newspaper.

Othe r

I can tell you, however, that it is about 1 mile from the an band and a black metal PPP finish line at Les Schwab b and. Whether they fit t h e Amphitheater to Cabin 22 on bill of Cascadian black metal S outhwest Century D r i v e, is another question, one best where The Hill Dogs will be

self-identifies as a Cascadi-

left to heavy music's ever-ac- playing a post-PPP celebration tive Genre Boundary Debate Saturday night. Team. One thing is for sure: One mile. That's a pretty These guys are more than ca- short distance to travel be-

Get ATaste For Food. Home Sr Garden •

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PAGE 8 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents. p.m.; $5;VolcanicTheatre Pub 70 SW Century Dr, Bend; 541-323-1881.

I j.ti' tl,,',

FRIDAY ANVIL BLASTERS:Rock; 6 p.m.; $10; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 541-526-5075. THE PRAIRIE ROCKETS: Acoustic

WEDMESDAY OPEN MIC:Hosted by Mosley Wotta; 6 p.m.;TheLot,745 NW ColumbiaSt., Bend. AMERICANSONGBOOK:Jazz; 6 p.m.; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-604-6055. OPEN MIC/JAM NIGHT:with Denny Bales; 6 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. MATTHEW SZLACHETKA:Thefolkrock and blues artist performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174.

Americana; 6p.m.; Jackson's CornerEastside, 1500 NECushing Drive, Bend. CHANDLER P:The local hip-hop artist performs, with Big Price, Kid Cody, Jon-E, Kid Rubix, EYEMC,Ron Hughes and more; 7 p.m.; $2 plus fees, $10 for VIP; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-388-1106. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com or 541-548-4220. COYOTEWILLOW: Chamber-folk; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. MO LEVERETT: The Christian folk artist performs; 7-8:30 p.m.; free; Grace Reformed Presbyterian Church, 62162 Hamby Road, Bend; www.moleverett. com or 541-948 6212. JUST US:Blues rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. THE RIVERPIGS: Rock,blues and folk; 7:30 p.m.; Kelly D's Sports Bar & Grill, 1012 SECleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. OUTOFTHE BLUE:Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0899. MATT CORAKAND MARK BRODY: Deep house; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. CHEYENNE WEST: Country; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing. com or 541-388-8331. THE FREEWAY REVIVAL: The classic rock and blues band performs; 10 p.m.; $3; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St.,

Bend; www.astroloungebend.comor 541-388-0116.

SATURDAY HONEY DON'T: Americana; 11 a.m.; Chow, 1110 NWNewport Ave., Bend; 541-728-0256. HIGHWAY 97: Rock 'n' roll; 3 p.m.;

THURSDAY

MICHELLEVANHANDEL:Jazz; 6 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. LISA DAE:Jazz; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. SLICK RICK:Theclassic hip-hop artist performs; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance, $28 at the door;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-383-0800.

SUMMER BEER GARDEN:Featuring live music by the String Rats, food, drinks and more; 4 p.m.;CE Lovejoy's Market, 19530 Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-388-1188. LINDY GRAVELLE:Country-pop; 5:30 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. DAVE &MELODYHALL:6 p.m.; $5; Faith, HopeandCharityVineyards,70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com or 5415265075. BUCK'N THEDIGGS:Rock and soul; 6 p.m.;TheLot,745 NW ColumbiaSt., Bend. CASEY NEILL &THE NORWAYRATS: The Portland modern rock band performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. HIGHWAY97: Rock; 7:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. 2BLESSEDTOUR2015: A reggae and hip-hop night featuring J Ras, IrieFuse, Burnell Washburn, Marko and more; 8 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door, $8 with college ID; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.com. DJ HARLOW:House;9 p.m.;TheAstro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.

BROTHERGRAND:The San Jose folkrock band performs, with Avery James and The Hillandales, and Leif James; 9

• SUBMITANEVENTby visiting bendbulletimcom/ events and clicking "+ Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 541-3830351 or email communitylifeC!bendbulletin.com.

/„

Submitted photo

Matthew Szlachetka will play at McMenamins Old St. Francis School on Wednesday, May 20 at 7 p.m. Wickiup Station, 52600 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine; www.facebook.com/ TheHWY97Band. DEREK MICHAELMARC AND DOUBLE AA LIVE AT DAWGHOUSE II: Blues, Rock and Soul; 6 p.m.; Dawg House II, 507 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-526-5989. BUTTERFLYBREAKDOWN:Blues-rock; 6:30 p.m.; Bend Brewing Company, 1019 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-383-1599. LAUREL BRAUNS: Pop;7 p.m.;portello winecafe, 2754 NWCrossing Drive,

Bend; www.portellowinecafe.com or 541-385-1777. RENO HOLLER:Pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com/or 541-548-4220. HONEY DON'T: Americana; 7:30 p.m.; Redpoint Climbers Supply — Smith Rock Climbing Gear, 8222 N. U.S. Highway 97, Terrebonne; 541-923-6207. JUST US:Blues rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-548-3731. A GOD OR AN OTHER:The Cascadian black metal band performs, with The Kronk Men and Rutabaga; 8 p.m.; $3;

Reed Pub Company,1141 SWCentennial Court, Bend; www.j.mp/agoao or 541-312-2800. TONY G.'S FAREWELL SHOW: Tony G., co-founder of BendComedy, will perform, featuring Portland based comedian Alex Rios; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111. OUTOFTHE BLUE:Rock; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0899. BURNIN' MOONLIGHT:Bluegrass, blues and swing; 9 p.m.; The Life Line Taphouse, 249 NW Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-306-0797. DJ DMP:House; 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. JONES ROAD: Alternative rock; 9 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing. com or 541-388-8331.

SUNDAY COYOTEWILLOW:Chamber-folk; 10 a.m.; Chow, 1110 NWNewport Ave.,

Bend; 541-728-0256. JUPITER &TEARDROP:TheAmericana and jazz band performs; 7 p.m.; Broken Top Bottl e Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703.

MOMDAY HONEY DON'T:Americana and folkrock; 7 p.m.; The OpenDoor, 303 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-4994.

TUESDAY


GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

musie reviews Spotlight: Best Coast

Van Hunt "THE FUN RISES, THE FUN

SETS" GodlessHotspot Van Hunt was a rising R&B star a decade ago, with a brace of

, ~- Qg++%$ la

JohnDavisson/Invision/AP

Bethany Cosentino and Bobb Bruno are Best Coast. Their album, "California Nights," was released May 4.

Best Coast

ode to takin' it easy, except that

in part because he re-

then you're the one I fear the

sisted genre pigeon-holing — the Ohio-born singer has only become more difficult to pin down musically, and an even more fascinating

work of Best Coast.

The duo of Bethany Cosentino and Bobb Bruno move further toward mastering the vibe on their

third studio album, "California Nights." They do so not by celebrating carefree romps along Pacific Coast Highway, though, but by inverting the Beach Boys' fun-

like "Heaven Sent" and the Phil Spector-esque closer "Wasted Time" with earthquake-resistant

permanence.In a perfect world, these would jump to the top of the singles chart. But, as Cosentino

will be the first to tell you, that's not the one we live in. ON TOUR: June 5— Alhambra Theatre, Portland; www.ticket-

fun-fun narrative. With it s c atchy but d i stort- fly.com.

ed opening riffs, album-opener "Feeling Ok" may seem like an

— Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times

I l l s s nllRISL.i

'laes aa scta

lot of club music's best

bonds and tensions of friends

minds are looking now. and family, about isolation and It's no coincidence about something like romance. that

ing For?," touched on everythingfrom coun-

Charlie Wilson and Ken- to sympathize with someone drick Lamar all show up who has been close to her, then on "Bush." The album's changes her mind as a tsunami 10 graceful yet bawdy of grunge guitars crashes in: songs find the through- "What's mine isn't really yours/ line between '70s ses- But I hope you find what you're sion-band genius, '90s looking for," she snarls. Compton swagger and The title song of "Sprinter," a the modernpleasures of march through gusts of guitar a dark dub booth. distortion, revisits childhood les-

"The Fun Rises, the Fun Sets," narrows the focus

Classic Brill Building girders support songs

lun Qfllll(

His 2011 indie release,

The title track shimmers with jan-

swirl around it.

most," she warns after an overp roject, powering buildup in "New Skin." "Bush" sends Snoop into Torres sings about strugthe disco era, which also gling for and against the Baptist happens to be where a faith she grew up in, about the helming the

"What Were You Hop-

Of all the cultural archetypes

has ridden a wave into the present through the

With favored collaborator Pharrell Williams

artist.

try to hard rock. Now,

few years that sound

blunt, mercurial rock; it can smol-

der while she considers exactly where she stands, and it can roar into feedback-edged howls when her rageor despairboilover."If you do not know the darkness,

when Cosentino sings the phrase, she doesn't sound so convinced.

gle-distorted guitar that screams duced, the loosely defined genre sunshine, until Cosentino delivers known as "beach music" is one her lines: "I stay high all the time of its most enduring. That sunny, just to get by." Still, she's not the harmony-rich, melodically spir- most lyrically dexterous writer. ited permutation is the rope con- Most of her lines follow a similar sing-song cadence, and necting artists as varied as the Beach Boys, the her rhymes often feel Byrds, Fleetwood Mac, telegraphed. But she's the G o -Go's, S n oop an expert at feel and Dogg, Mazzy Star and exploring an emotion No Doubt. Over the last or idea while guitars

re-formed Chic, and now Snoop

writing credits for singers such Dogg: Somethingprofound took as Dionne Farris and Rahsaan hold in that era, where incandesPatterson and Grammy-winning cent soul got handsy on a club music of his own. But after losing floor with disco, funk and elechis major-label dealtronic experimentation.

"CALIFORNIA NIGHTS" Harvest Records that Southern California has pro-

er,"her second album, confronts relationships past and present, in one of music's most decadent songs that sound bravely open, (and unfairly maligned) decades. even if it's not immediately dear But go ask Daft Punk, a newly what's on her mind. Her music is

sicians and dub-goers could probably ask themselves about

his fifth studio album, slightly, a plunge into layered and trippy funk and soul. This is music

that dances between the headphones: subtle,

slinky, insinuating. It's funky — but not aggressively funky. It suggests a movie soundtrack as much as a collection of songs. "The Fun Rises" affirms that Hunt belongs in the conversation with master musical shape-shift-

S t evie W o n der, In "Strange Hellos," she tries

Even in t h e

D eath sons in church and comes to an

Row Records era, Snoop's hard- ambiguous realization: "There's estthreats asa rapperrode atop freedom to/ And freedom from," a velvet delivery indebted to electro-funk finery. There aren't

she sings, "And freedom to run/

From everyone."

many '90s rappers who could

In "Ferris Wheel," a slow waltz

floating in an echoey haze, she this, but Snoop is an excellent stu- sings about an evasive friend ers such as Kendrick Lamar and dent of his formative musical era. and how she longs "to show you D'Angelo — artists who respect Even though "Bush" looks back- that I've got the sadness too." The African-American tr a d i t ions ward,itproves he is once again album's finale, "The Exchange," and then find new ways of recon- ahead of his time. is even quieter: It's just Torres — August Brown, with a squeaky acoustic guitar, textualizing them. — Greg Kot, Los Angeles Times thinking about her parents and ChicagoTribune

Snoop Dogg

credibly settle into a sound like

about mortality: "Mother, Father, I'm underwater," she sings, al-

Torres "SPRINTER" Partisan Records

Mackenzie Scott, the songwrit-

most tearfully, "and I don't think you can pull me out of this." ON TOUR: May15— Doug Fir

OTHER

er who records as Torres, operates

Lounge, Portland; www.ticketfly.

What exactlyhappened on dance floors in the '70s?

in a primal realm where memo- com. ries, scars, traumas and new sen-

cl

ff

BUSH

D oggystyle Records/i a m

That's a question many mu-

8

8

— Jon Pareles, New York Times

sations are all still raw. "Sprint-

8

8

V INYI -D V D - R U D I O E Q U I P N E N T N EW R E L E R S E S , SPE C IR I O R D E R S , C ONCERT T I C K E T S Downtown Bend For Over 19 Years % Counting s •

-


PAGE 10 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

,ea

*

0

Andy Tullie /The Bulletin file photo

With the Three Sisters behind them, elite racers take off from the start of the 2014 Pole Pedal Paddle, near the top of Red Chair at Mt. Bachelor.

Ifyougo

• It's a big day for this outdoorsy community By David Jasper

and a half, but other than that,

The Bulletin

PPP is a lot like a holiday:

T

he Pole Pedal Paddle is not

just a quirky sporting event with alpine skiing, trail running, cycling, more running, paddling and a sprint. Instead, for spectators and

• Productivity grinds to a halt

— as traffic likely will, in parts of town.

whether you're racing orcheering onthe sidelines together. • Most tellingly, gallons of beer

which puts on the PPP, but he

are downed. Three-time PPP champion Dan

pics back in the 1980s. "It always cracks me up that

Simoneau needs no convincing as to how huge Pole Pedal Paddle is. Simoneau told GO! "It's like Bend's Olympics." formal wear. • Rivalries are born. participants, it's more like a local Those are interesting words •Egosballoon in size orare re- from Simoneau. These days, he's holiday. OK, you probably don't get the duced greatly. the nordic director for Mt. Bache• People pose f o r ph o tos lor Sports Education Foundation, day off from your job, or paid time • People get dressed up, only in Lycra and costumes instead of

competed in three Winter OlymI won PPP three times and went

to the Olympics three times, and I'm way more famous in Bend for winning PPP," he said, laughing. "I'm not one to tell my friends or people I meet about either, (but) we'll be standing on a soccer field

What:2015 Pole PedalPaddle festivities When:9:15 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday Where:Les SchwabAmphitheater, 344 S.W.Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend Cost:Free admission Contact:www.pppbend.com or 541-388-0002 ... and some mom, some dad will find out that I went to the Olym-

pics and they'll come up and talk about it; then they find out I won PPP and they'll be like, 'You WON PPPrPl m

See what we mean'?

Continued next page


cover story

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

GO! MAGAzlNE• PAGE 1 1

From previous page The race begins at 9 :15 a.m.

Saturday at Mt. Bachelor, releasing competitors in waves — elites,

J

• •

I

families, coed pairs and other categories. It should be noted that this

/

year, due to lack of snow, a trail run a little higher up on the mountain

replaces the usual ski leg at the Nordic Center. "We're going to be transitioning from alpine to trail running a little higher up the mountain than

•e

L

normal," Simoneau said. "That's

I

always kind of a fun transition. Skiers come in pretty fast and stop suddenly." You, dear reader, can be at Les Schwab cheering PPP athletes to-

II •

ward the finish line when the elite

athletes begin arriving about 90 minutes after the start. "The funnest place to be is literal-

Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photos

ly being on the side of the river. The Members of the "It's good to be King" team cheer from the bridge during the river is an adventure. A few years

II•

2014 Pole Pedal Paddle.

ago, I had some skiers I coached. There was a wonderful picture of them in The Bulletin paddling their

W i dg i C re e k G QLP C L U B

18707 SW Century Dr., Bend

canoe down by Red Robin. I com-

www.widgi.com i (541) 382-4449

mented, 'What a great picture of you guys in the canoe,' and the girl goes, 'Yeah, but we were supposed to be going upriver,'" Simoneau sald. This time of the year, melting

snow can fuel the river current, uand going upriver, for a lot of these

inexperienced paddlers, is a challenge," he said. Simoneau speaks from experience, having flipped his racing kayak five times in 1985, his first year competing solo, before going on to

(

u

4~

the start of his threepeat the follow-

ingyear. uI borrowed a kayak that was too

tippy, that I thought I could paddle and turns out I couldn't," he said. uAnd I had the most embarrassing

day of my life." He won the next three years because uI actually decided I should

practice kayaking," he said. For those competing — embarrassed or o t herwise —

I

e ncour-

I r

agement from the crowd "is really cool," Simoneau said. While cheering athletes on, you can chow down — food booths open at 10

II

a.m. The Bud Light beer station

opens at 11, because waiting till noon is for wimps. The Awards Ceremony will be held at approximately 3 p.m. It's a different event this year, Simoneau said, referring to the nor-

I

I

®Aa

dic leg's makeover into a run. "I think it would be cool to see

'$3FREESLOTPLAYCOlJPON : LEAVETHEDRIVINGTOUS! Bendbusrunsthe first Mondayofthe month : Call for reservations, location & times: 541.783.7529 ext.209

some triathlete step up and win," he

said. "Teams that struggle to find a nordic skier now can find a runner. We'll see how it pans out." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com

Valid forBend,LaPine and Redmond guestsonly;localzipcodesdo notapply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires May31, 2015

Boats navigate the Deschutes River during last year's race.

34333HWV.97HORTH CHILO HIH OR97624 541.793.7529 KLAMOVACASIHO.COM


PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

ui'

4 !t

r

A.NQSD

Joe Kline I The Bulletin

A Margharita and a Diavola pizza cook in the wood-fired oven at Pisano's Woodfired Pizza in Tumalo.

Pisano'sWoodfired Pizza

By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin

w

h en it

c o mes t o p i z -

za, Ed Barbeau is a perfectionist.

In a sense, these are the Olympics of pizza making. And Barbeau has morethan held his own

against chefs from Italy and New York, the hotbeds of the industry. The owner and chef — the "piz- He has placed as high as fourth zaoli," in Italian — of Pisano's in the international finals (with Woodfired Pizza is so particular an extreme Hawaiian barbecue about his h and-tossed artisan pizza), and he's been the Western pies, he tests them out every year regionalchampion. He placed at the International Pizza Chal- second in that division earlier this lenge in Las Vegas. year with his filet mignon pie.

"We

respect Italian traditions," Barbeau explained. "My pizza is made using traditional techniques and ingredients, like Double 00 Italian flours cold-fer-

mented for 36 hours. (They are) shaped by hand with respect for the dough — not tossed in the

air or machine-shaped — then cooked in a traditional Italian Pompeii oven." Continued next page

Location:64670 Strickler Ave. (Tumalo Junction), Bend Hours:11a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday to Thursday, noon to 9 p.m.Friday and Saturday, noon to 7 p.m. Sunday. Cuisine:Neapolitan-style Italian Price range:Appetizers $7 to $9.50, salads $4.50 to $12, pizzas $10 to $17.50 Credit cards:MasterCard, Visa

Kils' menu:Yes Vegetarian menu: The caprese salad and Mediterranea pizzamake a great meal. Alcoholic beverages:Beerand wine Outdoorseating: Yes Reservations:Large groups only Contact: ww w.pisanosbend.com, 541-312-9349

Scorecard Overall:AFood:A-. Outstanding artisan pizza, with only minor shortcomings in some other dishes. Service:A. Owner EdBarbeau complements his staff, delivering

pizzas straight from the oven. Atmosphere:A. Contemporary space is highlighted by acustom-built brick oven. Value:A-. Good price point on pizzas for one andother side plates.


restaurants

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13

Small dite

NEXT WEEK:

BEMDFOODCARTS

New Bendpizza PlaCe —Pacific Pizza and Brew expects to open its doors to business on Monday. More than18 months in the works, the custom-built, west-side Bend restaurant has two dozen taps for local beers and a menu of pizzas, salads, sandwiches and more. Openevery day for lunch and dinner. 340 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.pacificpizzabrew. com, 541-550-7887.

•I

CM

I

1iil~rl'I

Ih

For readers' ratings of more than150 Central Oregon restaurants, visit I beudbulletiu.cum/ restaurants. I0 0

a sausage pizza, but it had much more thanmerely savory bites of Italian sausage. There were caramelized onions and crushed tomatoes

V

with mozzarella, along with

sweet-and-spicy peppadews, a unique pepper grown in

— John Gottberg Anderson

M

South Africa.

There's only one sandwich shaved Parmesan c heese.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Diners have lunch at Piseno's Woodfired Pizza in Tumalo.

From previous page

Rossoand bianco Pisano's held a corner in Bend's NorthWest Crossing neighborhood from 2008 to 2013. When

B a rbeau l o st

his lease there, he r moved to Tumalo

J u nction, c u s-

tom-building his wood-fired brick oven in a former Subway sandwich shop. Here, he presents a smaller selection of individual specialty pizzas on light, yeasty crusts. Yes, you can get that Hawaiian pizza, which features not only Canadian bacon and

roasted pineapple, but also Ligurian pepperoni, crushed San

M a r z an o to m a toes,

minced jalapeno peppers and Memphis barbecue sauce. Or you might opt for the Mediterranea, a vegetarian choice with spinach, kalamata olives,

tables and at a six-stool bar. I had a Caprese salad, alThere's also a spacious sea- ways one of m y f a vorite sonal patio. starters when it's done right. But th e a m bient c h arm I know that I will prefer the is within the contemporary Pisano's Caprese when heircafe, which f eatures faux- loom tomatoes are in season; brick around its walls and an for the time being, it is being abstract mural of St. Mark's prepared with thick slices of Basilica in Venice in one cor- large, perfectly ripe Roma toner. Large cans of Pomodoro matoes. They are a suitable tomato paste are stacked on substitute, especially as they a high shelf, just beneath the are s a n dwiched b e t ween ceiling, and easy-listening mu- slabs of Buffalo mozzarella sic, Italian as well as Ameri- cheese,topped with coarsely can, adds a romantic twist. shredded basil , and drizzled Although the staff are few with extra virgin olive oil and in number, service is excellent, balsamic vinegar. They are with Barbeau himself often offered with two tangy sides exiting the open kitchen to — a garlicky house-made pedeliver pizzas and chat with sto and a mash of moderately patrons. spicy Calabrian chilies. The menu isn't solely pizza. My companion's Caesar On a recent visit, my dining salad bowl f eatured sliced companion and I both ordered romaine leaves and a genersalads, of which there are sev- ous handful of sun-dried toeral choices.

The creamy dressing was ditional meatball sub on a excellent, although she found warm ciabatta roll. The meat, the touch of anchovy paste which is topped with marinatoo subtle for her taste. Brus- ra sauceand melted mozzachettas baked with cheese are rella, is also blended with a presented as a side. mix of herbs, including parsley, that give it more flavor

Filet mignon

Barbeau's filet mignon pizThere's only so much food za, a "bianco" prepared on a a person can eat. From previtomato-free layer of mozza- ous visits, I remember being rella. Strips of prime steak, impressed by Pisano's Thaicooked in a spicy wine reduc- style chicken wings, which tion sauce, were generously have a sweet and spicy glaze. distributed with slices of car- And the New York cheeseamelized Maui onions and cake is a silky meal finisher. freshly roasted garlic. It was The only thing to do is to like lunch and dinner at the come back again. — Reporter: janderson@ same time. My friend's "rosso" was bendbulletin.com

matoes, topped with a mple

Thank YouGO! Magazine for the review on March 13th

Hawaiian is "rosso," or red; the Mediterranea is "bianco,"

or white, indicating that it is

Cf~ineseR,eststuratnt8. Lounge Szechuan Hunan•Cantonese Cuisine

made without tomato paste on the crust. There are five

in each category, and that's it — although diners are welcome to suggest their own combinations.

Spacious feel Pisano's isn't a large restaurant, but it feels spacious, with about 40 seats at high and low

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• •

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PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

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Bendistillery's Crater Lake Gin is made with Central Oregon juniper berries.

• Central Oregon craft distilleries are creating distinctive versionsthe juniper-infused liquor By Sophie Wilkins The Bulletin

C

entral Oregon has been a hub of the craft beer movement for quite some time

gin slowly morphed into the drystyle gin we know today.

Americanstyle B endistillery, th e m a ker o f Crater Lake Gin and the oldest

contains heavy sage notes, giving it a unique flavor profile. Crater Lake Gin is also an American-style gin, meaning that the juniper berries are infused with the spirit, after it is distilled. This is where the term "bathtub

gin" came from during prohibition. Bendistillery decided to make the American-style because

"soaking the berries after distillation gives you a much more coma splash on the scene with three ed in 1996 with two initial spirplex flavor profile," said Dietrich. companies in town now distilling its, vodka and gin. "Back then it Other styles of gin, such as the their own gin. was called Cascade Mountain English or London dry style, have Gin was rumored to have been Gin," said Alan Dietrich, CEO of the botanicals introduced during invented in Holland in the 1660s Bendistillery. "The name changed the distillation process. The vapors by a physician, who made a tinc- five years ago." in the still pass through the kettle ture with juniper berries for meCrater Lake Gin is a single-bo- or gin head, sort of like a botanical dicinal purposes. Supposedly it tanical gin, only containing juni- tea bag, and pick up the flavors as was used as a naturopathic or per berri es.Those berries are all they pass through. "When you're doing the dryhomeopathic medicine in many picked here in Central Oregon. cultures for stomach and kidney Juniper picks up flavors that sur- style ... you're only getting a tiny problems. When the marrying of round it, which is why it's differ- sliver of the available flavor in the British and Dutch cultures began, ent around the world. Our juniper botanical, because it only passes now, but a new trend is slowly growing. Craft spirits are making

craft distillery in Oregon, start-

through the still," said Dietrich.

"So consequently, the English-dry

Oregon Spirit Distillers opened in 2009, and began selling its gin

style distillers have to use a ton of

in 2011. Brad Irwin, owner and

botanicals to get the complexity." head distiller, makes their MerryFor the past two years Bendis- legs Genever with a malted barley tillery has also made an Estate and uses local and Italian juniper, Gin, using only botanicals and anise,pink rose, cardamom and juniper grown on its grounds. The other botanicals. The botanicals 2013 version was a mix of dry and soak in the spirit for three days compound style gin that was aged before being re-distilled. "It is a little bit in oak. The 2014 was a

fantastic with citrus, with pink

barley gin, made in the dry style, grapefruit and a little agave," Irwith a nod back to the original wln sald. Genever-style gin. Because it's not a dry gin, it doesn't mix in cocktails the same Geneverstyle way. "(Genevers) are awful with Oregon Spirit Distillers, of tonic, they don't mix," Irwin said, Bend, makes its gin in a Genev- claiming they tend to have flavor er style. Genever is the original profiles that can stand on their Dutch-style gin, preceding Amer- own. "My favorite words are 'Oh I ican, Western, new or dry gin styles. In Europe, Genever is kept don't like gin,'" said Irwin. "Those in its own section of the liquor people love this. It's not designed store, less as a style of gin, and for the gin lover." more as its own spirit. Continued next page


drinks

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

From previous page

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5

what's happening?

Western style The newest distillery on the local gin scene is Cascade Alchemy,

FRIDAY WINE TASTING:Sample aselection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97,Suite 4, Bend; www. traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. BEER ANDWINE TASTING:

which released its version about

three weeks ago. "We'd been working on it for quite a while, with different recipes, different

proofs and tasting panels," said Joe Hale, one of three owners.

Cascade Alchemy's gin uses western and common juniper, some of which is harvested in Bend. "It's

basically a London dry, with juniper, coriander, orris root, angelica root and cucumber," said Hale.

The gin is finished in a macerJoe Kline/The Bulletin ation of cucumber, soaked with Seedlings grow in a greenhouse at Bendistillery. The company grows a the botanicals and filtered out 20 R times through carbon. My favor-

variety of plants and herbs for use in its Estate Gin.

ite way to drink it is a gimlet with lots of lime juice," suggested Hale. cases at a time and only uses a "I don't even put tonic in it." couple pounds of juniper to do so. As for the amount of juniHere in one of the world's largper they use, most distilleries est juniper forests, where it's conwouldn't reveal their secrets, only sidered a native but invasive spesaying that a lot less juniper is cies, the setting is perfect for craft used than you would expect. Hale spirit gin. "If you want to predict the fusaid Cascade Alchemy makes 15

ture of craft spirits, I would look

at what happened with beer. It took forever for the traction to develop, and once it did it just blew up,u said Alan Dietrich, CEO of

Bendistillery. — Reporter: 541-383-0351; swilirins@bendbulletin.com

wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97,Suite 4, Bend; www. traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. MIXOLOGYWORKSHOP:Learn the ins and outs of creating cocktails; 4 p.m.; $60, registration requested; Sample rosewinesandsession Oregon Spirit Distillers, 490 NEButler beers; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Market, Market Road, Suite120, Bend; www. 1121 NWNewport Ave., Bend; oregonspiritdistillers.com. www.newportavemarket.com or SUNDAY 541-382-3940. WINETASTING:Sample aselection of WINE TASTING:Sample wines from wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97,Suite 4, Bend; www. Argentina, includes several Malbecs; traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. 5 p.m.; Cork Cellars, 391 W.Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.corkcellars.com or THURSDAY 541-549-2675. SUMMERBEERGARDEN: Featuring live music by the String Rats, food, SATURDAY andmore;4p.m.;CELovejoy's OYSTERAND BEER PAIRING:Sample drinks beer fromTheCommons Brewery Market, 19530 Amber MeadowDrive, in Portland and fresh oysters from Bend; 541-388-1188. Fosters; noon-6 p.m.; $30; Crow's • SUBMIT ANEVENTby visiting bendbulletin. FeetCommons, 875 NW BrooksSt., com/events and clickings+ Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Bend; 541-728-0066. Questions? Call 541-333-0351 oremail WINE TASTING:Sample a selection of communitylife@bendbulletin.com.

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CRAFT BEER CELEBRATION ="CENTRAL

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541-390-4324 (located insideWestBend liquor Store)

FEATURING MCMENAMINS, SUNRIVER BREWING COMPANY,WILD RIDE BREWING, DESCHUTES BREWERY, THREE CREEKS BREWING, BEND BREWING CO, WORTHY BREWING, BROKEN TOP BOTTLE SHOP, CROW'5 FEET COMMONS, RIVERBEND BREWING, DOWNTOWN BEND, AND MORE!

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PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE B ULLETIN• F R

running and kayaking, to benefit the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation; 9:15 a.m.; free for spectators, $40-$205 "SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T.Theatre presents a fee; Mt. Bachelor Ski Area to LesSchwab musical based on thewords of Dr. Seuss; Amphitheater, 344 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, 7 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 for Bend; www.pppbend.com or 541-388students18and younger; Summit High 0002. (Page10) School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; "SEUSSICAL":B.E.AT. Theatre presents a www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. musical based on thewords of Dr. Seuss; 2 ENSEMBLEPARADISO:TheLosAngelesand 7 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10 based group with piano, violin and cello for students18 and younger; Summit High performs, with High Desert Chamber Music School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; founder and violinist, Isabelle Senger; 7 www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. p.m.; $35, $10 for students and children; DINNER ANDDANCE:Featuring a prime Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; rib dinner, live music by Daveand Melody www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. Hill, to benefit the Veterans of Foreign CHANDLERP:The localhip-hop artist Wars Post; 5:30 p.m.; $20, registration performs, with Big Price, Kid Cody,Jon-E, requested; VFWHall,1836 SWVeterans Kid Rubix, EYEMC,RonHughesand more; Way, Redmond; 541-526-1371. 8 p.m., doors at 7 p.m.; free-$5, depending AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Molly Gloss on whatyou can afford, $10 for VIP; will present her newest novel, "Falling from Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., Horses"; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-388Books, 422 SWSixth Street, Redmond; 1106. (Page 5) 541-526-1491. MO LEVERETT: TheChristian folkartist 2015CENTRAL OREGON FILM FESTIVAL performs; 7 p.m.; free; GraceReformed (COFF):A family-friendly festival for Presbyterian Church, 62162 HambyRoad, local filmmakers; 6:30 p.m.; Terrebonne Bend; www.moleverett.com or 541-948 Assembly of God, 379 NWRimrock Way, 6212. Terrebonne; www.centraloregonshowcase. "HOT SPOT IN POMPEII": An Italian com or 541-806-3268. comedy set in Pompeii 79A.D. right STEVE POLTZAND GRANT-LEE PHILLIPS: as Mt. Vesuviusblows;7:30 p.m.;$19, The Americana folk artists perform; 7 p.m.; $16for students and seniors; 2nd SOLD OUT; TheBelfry,302 E.MainAve., Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 9122. (Page3) 541-312-9626. "HOT SPOTINPOMPEII": An Italian comedy "THE IMITATION GAME": Ashowing set in Pompeii 79A.D. rightas Mt. Vesuvius of the film with eight AcademyAward blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19,$16for students and nominations; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 Ave., Bend;www.2ndstreettheater.com or SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-312-9626. 541-475-3351. "TRUE WEST": Atragiccomedy "TRUE WEST": A tragiccomedy that involves two estranged brothers that involves two estranged brothers reconnecting in their mother's home after reconnecting in their mother's home years of separation; 7:30 p.m.; $15;Volcanic after years of separation; 7:30 p.m.; $15; Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. 1881. (Page21) com or 541-323-1881. (Page 21) CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY "VENUS INFUR": Part of the Black Box SPRING CONCERT: The Central Oregon series, aplaywright seeksanactress Symphony, directed by M ichaelGesme, for his adaptation of a classic tale; 7:30 will conclude its 2014-15 season, with p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors and students; COSA Young Artist Competition featured Cascades Theatre,148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or soloists; 7:30 p.m.; free, ticket required; BendHighSchool,230 NE SixthSt.,Bend; 541-389-0803. www.cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941. THE FREEWAYREVIVAL:Theclassicrock

FRIDAY

and bluesbandperforms; 10 p.m.; $3;The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-

0116. (Page6)

SATURDAY POLE PEDAL PADDLE:A multi-sport event that includes alpine skiing, cycling,

(Page 20)

"VENUS INFUR":Part of the Black Box series, a playwright seeks anactress for his adaptation of a classic tale; 7:30 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors and students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. A GOD ORAN OTHER: TheCascadian

black metal band performs, with The Kronk Men and Rutabaga; 8 p.m.; $3; ReedPub Company, 1141 SE Centennial Court, Bend; www.j.mp/agoao or 541-312-2800. (Page

COSA Young Artist Competition featured soloists; 2 p.m.; free, ticket required; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; www.cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941.

7)

(Page 20)

TONY G.'S FAREWELL SHOW: TonyG., co-founder of BendComedy, will perform featuring Portland based comedian, Alex Rios; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Summit Saloon, 125 NWOregon

"VENUS INFUR": Part of the Black Box series, a playwright seeks anactress for his adaptation of a classic tale; 2

Ave., Bend;www.bendcomedy.comor 541-419-0111.

SUMDAY CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY SPRING CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony,directed byM ichaelGesme, will conclude its 2014-15 season, with

p.m.; $15,$12for seniors andstudents; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "HOT SPOT IN POMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii 79A.D. right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 3 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626.

"SEUSSICAL":B.E.A.T.Theatre presents a musical based on thewords of Dr. Seuss; 4 p.m.; $15 for adults and seniors, $10for students18andyounger; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or 541-419-5558. JUPITER ATEARDROP:TheAmericana

and jazzbandperforms; 7 p.m.; free; BrokenTop BottleShop,1740 NW Pence Lane,Suite1,Bend;www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703.

MONDAY HISTORICPRESERVATION IN CENTRAL OREGON EXHIBIT: Learn about preservation efforts with displays of historic projects at DeedonHomestead, Liberty Theater, French House, RedmondFreight


GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7

IDAY, MAY 15, 2015

Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 541-382-4754. PREVIEWNIGHTOF "PRE'S PEOPLE": A preview of the documentary of distance runner Steve Prefontaine, also featuring "Fire on the Track," to benefit the Pre's People documentary; 6 p.m.; $10; Fleet Feet Sports,1320 NWGalveston Ave., Bend; www fleetfeetbend.com or 541-389-1601. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: BobW elch, author of "CascadeSummer," will present a talk and slideshow about his 2014 adventure on California's John Muir Trail; 6:30p.m.;$5;Paulina SpringsBooks,422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. LINCOLNAND THE OREGON COUNTRY: Richard W. Etulain, professor emeritus of history at the University of New Mexico, presents "Lincoln and theOregon Country"; 6:30 p.m.; free; A.R. BowmanMemorial Museum, 246 N.Main St., Prineville; www. bowmanmuseum.org or 541-447-3715. CASEYNEILL 8 THENORWAYRATS: The Portland modern rock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.com or541-382-5174. "ANTONYANDCLEOPATRA:STRATFORD FESTIVALHD":A showing of the Shakespeare play about the ancient affair of Antony and Cleopatra; 7 p.m.; $18; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. com or844-462-7342.

I• FRIDAY-SUNDAY "Venus inFur":A playwright seeks an actress in this Black Boxseries. ' I ' I

I'

'

I

MONDAY Historic Preservation Exhibit:Learn about local preservation efforts.

Bt

(Page 29)

THURSDAY Preview of "Pre's People":Catch a glimpse of the documentary about Pre.

Depotand Trinity Episcopal Church;10 a.m.; or 541-317-3941. (Page20) free; La PineChamber of Commerce, 51425 U.S. Highway 97, LaPine; www.lapine.org/ TUESDAY calendar.htmlor541-536-9771. SECOND ANNUALMR. CENTRAL OREGON "OF THEEARTH, THE WIND, AND FIRE: PAGEANT: A pageant with the winners of CONCERTAND READINGS": TheOSU seven local high school pageants benefiting Chamber Choir, Oregon State University's The Center Foundation and local athletic premier choral ensemble, performs, with trainers; 7 p.m.; $7, $5 for students; Bend the Bend High School Choir; 7 p.m.; free, High School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; ticket required; TowerTheatre, 835 NW 541-390-5831. Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. SLICK RICK: The classic hip-hop artist performs; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY SPRING CONCERT: TheCentralOregonSymphony, $25 plus fees in advance, $28 at the door; Domino Room, 51 NWGreenwood Ave., directed by Michael Gesme,will conclude Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-383its 2014-15 season, with COSA Young Artist 0800. (Page 5) Competition featured soloists; 7:30 p.m.; free, ticket required; Bend HighSchool, 230 BROTHER GRAND: TheSan Josefolk-rock NE Sixth St., Bend; www.cosymphony.com band performs, with Avery Jamesand The

Hillandales, and Leif James; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Dr, Bend; 541-323-1881.

WEDNESDAY MATTHEWSZLACHETKA:The folk-rock and blues artist performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com or 541-382-5174. SIXTHANNUAL BEND BICYCLE FILM FESTIVAL: A film festival to showcase local short films about Central Oregon cycling culture; 7 p.m.; $12 plus fees inadvance, $15 at the door; TowerTheatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. (Page29)

THURSDAY TRAVELOREGON'S BACK ROADS AND HIDDENGEMS:Kim Cooper Findling, editor of CascadeJournal, the author of "Day Trips From Portland," and a Travel

Oregonambassador,will speakabout Oregon's popular destinations and hidden gems; noon; free; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; 541-312-1034. HISTORYLECTURE:THE CHEMAWA INDIAN SCHOOL: Learn about the history of Native American boarding schools, with a special focus on ChemawaIndian School in Salem, discover the lives of the students through the school's extensive photographs; 6 p.m.; $3 for members, $5 for non-members; High Desert

"HOT SPOT IN POMPEII": An Italian comedy setin Pompeii 79A.D. rightas Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19,$16for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend;www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "TRUE WEST": A tragiccom edy that involves two estranged brothers reconnecting in their mother's home after years of separation; 7:30 p.m.; $15;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-3231881. (Page21) 2BLESSED TOUR2015: A reggae and hiphop nightfeaturing J Ras, IrieFuse, Burnell W ashburn, Markoand more;8 p.m .;$10 plus fees in advance, $12 atthe door, $8 with college ID; Domino Room, 51NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendticket.

com. "FOR THOUSANDS OFMILES":A movie about one man's bike journey

across America; 9p.m.; $5(cash only); McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com or 541-382-5174. (Page29) • BUBMtTANEVENTby visiting bendbulletfn.com/ events and clicking ev Add Event." Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions? Call 541-3830351 or email communitylife@bendbulletin.com.


PAGE 18 e GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

planning ahea

Meg Roussos/TheBulletinfilephoto

The Cascade Chorale will perform their "Best of Broadway" concert at First Presbyterian Church May 29-30.

MAY 22-28 MAY 22-23 — "HOT SPOT IN POMPEII":An Italian comedy set in Pompeii 79 A.D. right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. MAY 22,25-26— HISTORIC PRESERVATIONINCENTRAL OREGON: Preservation displays of historic projects: Deedon Homestead in La Pine, Liberty Theater in Bend, French House in Bend, Redmond Freight Depot in Redmond, and Trinity Episcopal Church in Bend;10a.m.; La Pine Chamber of Commerce, 51425 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine; www.lapine.org/Calendar.html or 541-536-9771. MAY 22 — THEDECEMBERISTS: The Portland indie folk-rock band

performs, with Spoon and The Districts; 6 p.m.; $42 plus fees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 520 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.com. MAY 22— AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Bob Welch, author of "Cascade Summer," will present a talk and slideshow about his 2014 adventure on California's John Muir Trail; 6:30 p.m.; $5;PaulinaSpringsBooks,252W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. MAY 23 — JAPANESE FESTIVAL AND SILENT AUCTION:Enjoy traditional Japanese arts and crafts, with Hokule'a Polynesian dancers, a silent auction and more; noon; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-355-4053. MAY 23— YOUTH CHOIR OF CENTRAL OREGON CONCERT: Featuring a range of traditional, jazz, gospel and Broadway classics in honor of the choir's 25th Anniversary; 7 p.m., doors open at

6:30 p.m.; $10; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St., Bend; wwwycco.org or 541-385-0470. MAY 23 — RYAN ADAMS: The singersongwriter performs, with Jenny Lewis; 7:30 p.m.; $42 plus fees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 520 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts.com. MAY 23— DENNIS MCGREGOR BENEFITCONCERT: DennisMcGregor will perform, in celebration of Dennis Jakab, a musician and friend, and to assist his wife Ellen, doors open at 7 p.m.;7:30 p.m.;$20suggested donation; Harmony House, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-280-1821. MAY 23— MATT WAX: Theelectronic artist performs, with Royal Louis, Welterweight and DJ Lonely $tacks; 10 p.m.; $5; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend. com or 541-388-0116. MAY25 — ROBERTPLANT &THE

SENSATIONALSPACESHIFTERS: The rock artist performs with his band; 6:30

p.m.; $49 plusfees, $99 for reserved seating; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 322 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. bendconcerts.com or 541-312-8510.

MAY 29- JUNE 4 MAY 29-30— BEST OF BROADWAY CASCADECHORALECONCERT: Featuring music from "The Phantom of the Opera," "Les Miserables," "Rodgers & Hammerstein" musicals and more, including OperaBend with excerpts from their upcoming production "Into the Woods"; 7 p.m. May 29, 3 p.m. May 30; free, donations accepted; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NENinth St., Bend; 541-647-8720. MAY29 — OPEN'TILDARK:Celebrate the end of Central Oregon BeerWeek and the finale of the exhibit"Brewing Culture: The Craft of Beer," with a night of beer

tastings and live music; 5 p.m.; $8, $5 for children and students with ID; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.U.S.Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org/ open-til-dark or 541-382-4754. MAY 30— WRECKONIZE:The hip-hop artist performs, with Potluck, Prevail

andmore;8p.m.,doorsopenat7p.m.; $17 plus fees in advance, $20 at the door;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendtickets.com. MAY 30 — TONYSMILEY: The loopninja from Portland performs; 10 p.m.; $5 plus fees in advance, $7 at the door; The Astro Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; www,astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. MAY 31— SCOTT WEILAND AND THE WILDABOUTS:The former lead singer of the Stone Temple Pilots performs with his band; 6 p.m.; $25 plus fees in advance; Century Center, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.bendtickets.com.


planning ahead

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

Talks 5 classes

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 19

SHARC(Sunriver Homeowners

For a full list, visit bendbulletin. com/events. PLANT IDENTIFICATION, BOTANICALHIKEAND SPECIMEN PRESERVATION:Learn local flora, collection methods, and how to preserve your specimens, includes a botanical hike and making an herbarium; 10 a.m. Saturday; $120; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory, 57245 River Road, Sunriver; www. sunrivernaturecenter.org or 541-593-4394. WRITING FAMILYSTORIES: Emily D. Aulicino, professional genealogist from Portland, will be talking about how to write our family stories; 10 a.m. Tuesday; Williamson Hall, 2200 NE Highway 20, Bend; www.orgenweb.org/ deschutes/bend-gs/ speakers.html or 541-317-9553. SCIENCEPUB-PACIFIC LAMPREY:WHAT OUR MOST ANCIENT FISH ISTELLING US ABOUT OUR WATERS:Learn about the Pacific lamprey, a serpentine-like creature that inhabited the ocean long before Northwest tribes harvested it for food; 5:30 p.m. Tuesday; free, registration required;

Aquatic and Recreation Center), 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver;

www.osucascades.eduor

541-322-2054. NATURE'S TRUST:CLIMATE CHANGE & THE LAW:Author, law professor and environmental law expert, Mary Christina Wood, will discuss the latest climate science and present her workaround the Public Trust Doctrine; 7 p.m. Tuesday; $10; Wille Hall, COCC Bend Campus, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu/ foundation/vsp or 541-383-7257. PLANNINGFOR WILDFIRES AND DEVELOPMENT INFLAMMATORY ECONOMICS:EconomistRay Rasker will talk about the cost of defending communities in the path of forest fires and how land use planning can mitigate the cost.; 11:30 a.m. Thursday; $20-$35,

1

5 Submitted photo

Douglas Robinson, professor of Watchable Wildlife at Oregon State University and director of the Oregon 2020 Birds Project, will speak on the Oregon 2020 Birds Project at The Environmental Center on Thursday at 6:30 p.m.

$20 members;$35 non-members; St. Charles Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NENeff Road, Bend; www.cityclubco.org/. TRAVELOREGON'SBACK ROADS ANDHIDDEN GEMS: Kim Cooper Findling, editor of Cascade Journal, the author of "Day Trips From Portland," and a Travel Oregon ambassador, will speak about Oregon's popular

destinations and hidden gems; noon Thursday; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; bit.ly/1GrsOsB or 541-312-1034. RECYCLE INSTYLE: SCRAP METAL JEWELRY MAKINGFOR BEGINNERS:Explore the endless possibilities of repurposing scrap

metal by learning basic jewelry making techniques, leave class with a pair of earrings thatyou have made; 6 p.m. Thursday; $60, registration required; The Workhouse at Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; www. mkt.com/the-workhouse or 347-564-9080.

HISTORY LECTURE:THE CHEMAWA INDIANSCHOOL: Learn about the history of Native American boarding schools, with a special focus on Chemawa Indian School in Salem, discover the lives of the students through the school's extensive photographs; 6 p.m. Thursday; $3 for members, $5 for non-members; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 541-382-4754. OREGON 2020: A BENCHMARK SURVEY OFOURBIRDS: JoinDouglas Robinson,Mace Professor of Watchable Wildlife at Oregon State University and Director of the Oregon 2020 Birds Project, as he explains the Oregon 2020 Birds Project; 6:30 p.m. Thursday; The Environmental Center, 16 NWKansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908. TUMALO PROJECTHISTORY: Learn the full history of one of Central Oregon's most notoriously troubled water reclamation projects of the early 20th century; 7 p.m. Thursday; free, donations accepted; Central Oregon Association of Realtors, 2112 NE Fourth St., Bend; www.ascoinfo. org/calendar.html.

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PAGE 20 + GO! MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

S Jude Dow-Hygelund

Nicholas Dill

Submitted photos

Lauren Yoon

• Central Oregon Symphony'sspring concert features 3fresh-faced soloists By David Jasper The Bulletin

entral Oregon Symphony will conclude its

C

2014-2015 season with

this weekend's Spring Concert, which features as soloists winners from the Central Or-

by Humperdinck (not to be confused with the 1960s pop singer) were fairytale operas,

Ifyou go What:Central Oregon Symphony Spring Concert When:7:30 p.m. Saturday and Monday, 2 p.m.Sunday Where:Bend High School,

conductor Michael Gesme said.

The overture foreshadows t he melodies found in t h e opera. "It's like a Broadway over-

egon Symphony Association's ture — 'Here's the great tunes you're going to hear in this Young Artist Competition. Held in January, the com- next little thing' — but by the

230 NE Sixth St., Bend

p etition i n vited w i n ners t o

site

Cost:Free, but a ticket is required; available at below

time you get to the end of the

perform with the symphony overture, Humperdinck is layin the Spring Concert, in per- ering three or four of these formance Saturday-Monday at tunes together at t h e s a me Bend High School (see "If you time," Gesme said. "Hansel and Gretel" was so go"). The concert opens with "Pre- popularin Humperdinck's day lude to Hansel and Gretel" by that a touring company was Engelbert Humperdinck. created around it. "They would Among the works written literally take it around to dif-

Contact:www.cosymphony.com ferent towns," Gesme said. "Today, that happens all the time 'Cats' on tour in Portland, Seattle and L.A. — but mid19th century, to put a company -

together to tour an opera, that was not a likely scenario." Ten-year-old Jude Dow-Hygelund is the first soloist to take the stage, performing Haydn's Piano Concerto in D Hob. XVIII:11.

Gesme said in the press release for the concert.

Up after Jude is Nicholas Dill, a 13-year-old violinist

from Hockinson, Washington. M a j or, He'll perform M a x B r u ch's Violin Concerto No. 1 with its

"What's wonderful about (Dow-Hygeland) at 10 is that he's able to do whatever you

"passionate strains and fingerboard pyrotechnics." The third soloist, Lauren

ask him to do the next time

Yoon, 16, hails from the Port-

... or he'll go home and think land area and performs in about itand come back and Yoontrio with her younger be able to do it," Gesme said. sisters. She'll wrap up the first "That is so wonderful and will

half of the concert with The Pi-

bode so well for him as a stu-

ano Concerto No. 2, by Frederic Chopin. "Musically speaking, Chopin is all about the piano," Gesme explained. Continued next page

dent in the future." The Piano Concerto is "an

effervescent work that brims with classical rhythmic ener-

gy and graceful melodic lines,"



arts

PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE

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ART E KH I B I T S

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REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Synergy: Art 8 Literature II," featuring art inspired by the connection between visual, musical and literary arts; through May29; "Outside View: ASolo Photography ARTADVENTUREGALLERY: Exhibition," featuring photography by "Exclusive, Enjoyable, Estonian," Gary Wing in the silent reading room; featuring wall hangings by Epp throughMay;827 SW Deschutes Harmon;through June4;185SE Ave., Redmond; 541-312-1050. Fifth St., Madras; 541-475-7701. REDMOND SENIORCENTER: ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring watercolor paintings by Featuring the works of 30 local Paul Mathenia; through today; 325 artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, NW Dogwood Ave., Redmond; Building19, Sunriver; www. 541-548-6325. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. ROTUNDA GALLERY: "The 2015 Bachelor of FineArts Exhibition," THE ART OF ALFREDDOLEZAL: featuring work by 2015 graduates; Featuring oil paintings by the reception 4:30-6 p.m. Thursday; Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, Thursdaythrough June15; Robert 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; L. Barber Library, Central Oregon 541-526-1185 or www.alfreddolezal. Community College; 2600 NW com. College Way,Bend;541-383-7564. ATELIER6000: "Clark © 80: Six SAGEBRUSHERS ARTSOCIETY: Decades of Marks," featuring Featuring works by the"Wednesday drawings, prints and paintings by Submitted photo Painters"; through June 26; 117SW the studio's founder and master "Green Table," part of The Water Table Series by Atelier 6000 studio's founder and master printmakRoosevelt Ave., Bend; 541-617-0900. printmaker, Patricia Clark; through er, Patricia Clark, will be on display at the gallery through May 31. SAGE CUSTOMFRAMING AND May 31; 389SW ScalehouseCourt, Suite120, Bend; www.atelier6000. GALLERY: "The Serendipity Series," featuring mixed media byVivian org or 541-330-8759. Tumalo; 541-706-9025. W. CascadeAve., Sisters; www.artLUMIN ART STUDIOS: Featuring lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. residentartists Alisha Vernon, Olsen; through May30;834 NW CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points DOWNTOWN BENDPUBLIC Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. McKenzie Mendel,LisaSipeand of View," a continually changing LIBRARY:Novel Idea: "ATale for HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: Natalie Mason; byappointment; SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF exhibit of photographs by Diane the Time Being," featuring work Featuring photography by Stacie 19855 Fourth St., Suite103, Tumalo; COMMERCE: Reed, Ric Ergenbrightand John inspired by the book byRuthOzeki; Muller and Michael Wheeler; Featuring fiber art www.luminartstudio.com. by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E.Main Ave., Vito;1024 NW BondSt., Bend; through June1; 601 NWWall St.; 961 NW Brooks St., Bend; info© 541-382-8004. 541-389-9846. highdesertchambermusic.com or MOCKINGBIRD GALLERY:"Just Sisters; 541-549-0251. 541-306-3988. Around the Bend," featuring SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC LIBRARY: CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: FOOT ZONE: "OutsidelN," featuring watercolor and oil paintings by Joseph Featuring paintings of Sandra Neary HOODAVENUEART: Featuring Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; textured watercolor paintings Alleman; through May; 869 NWWall and fabric arts by KarenPadrick; 310 N. CedarSt., Sisters; www. wood sculptures by Jonathan Stark by Sarah B.Hansen; through St., Bend; www.mockingbird-gallery. and watercolors by Sarah Hansen; through June 27;56855 Venture canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or May 30; 845 NW WallSt.,Bend; com or 541-388-2107. 541-549-0366. 541-317-3568. through Monday; 357 W.HoodAve., Lane, Sunriver; 541-312-1080. Sisters; www.hoodavenueart.com or THE OXFORDHOTEL:Featuring oil SUNRIVERRESORT LODGE BETTY CENTURY 21LIFESTYLES FRANKLINCROSSING:"De La 541-719-1800. paintings by Ann Bullwinkel; through GRAY GALLERY: Featuring mixed REALTY:Featuring oil paintings by Cuisine," featuring art by Ann May 29; 10 NWMinnesota Ave., media byMargotThompsonand Kerry Crank; through May31; 550 Bullwinkel, Joanne Donaca, Bill HOP NBEANPIZZERIA:Featuring Bend; 541-382-9398. quilts by Janet Webster; Thursday NW Franklin Ave., Suite188, Bend; Logan, Mary Marquiss and Barbara landscape art by Larry Goodman; through June 26; 17600Center Drive; 541-382-3333. 523 E. U.S. Hi g hway 20, Sisters; PATAGONIA I BEND:Featuring Slater; through May31; 550 NW 541-382-9398 541-719-1295. photography by Mike Putnam; Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. CIRCLE OF FRIENDSART & 1000 NW Wall St., Suite140; JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: ACADEMY:"Friends Art StarS," GHIGLIERIGALLERY:Featuring 541-382-6694. "Future Vacation," featuring gouache WAREHOUSE: Featuring works featuring works by ClaudeBeterbide, original Western-themed and byJil lHaney-Neal;Tuesdaysand PEAPODGLASSGALLERY: painting by Carter Pierce; through May Shandel GamerandJaeYost; African-inspired paintings and Featuring oil paintings and 31; 835 NWBond St., Bend; 541-312through May 31;19889 8th St., sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery. sculptures by Lori Salisbury; 2001 or www.townshendstea.com. com or 541-617-6078. 164 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; TUMALOARTCO.: Featuring mixed 541-312-2828. JOHN PAULDESIGNS:Featuring media by Ingrid Lustig; through May custom jewelryand signature series PENCEGALLERY— PINCKNEY 31; 450 SWPowerhouse Drive, Suite with unique pieces; 1006 NWBond CENTERFORTHEARTS— COCC: 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. St., Bend; www.johnpauldesigns.com Featuring art by current COCC or 541-318-5645. students; through May 29;2600 NW VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO College Way,Bend;541-383-7511. • Fair trade coffee makes KARENBANDYDESIGNJEWELER: AND GALLERY:Featuring glass "Spring Rocks," featuring custom PRONGHORNCLUBHOUSE: art, photography, painting, metal a thoughtful gift .t. tt P'" jewelry and paintings by Karen Featuring paintings by Gil Dellinger; sculptur e and more;222W .Hood tr Bandy; through June 4; 25NW through Saturday; 65600 Pronghorn St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www. • Convenient before or Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend;www. Club Drive, Bend; 541-693-5300. vistabonitaglass.com. after the mountain karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. WERNER HOMESTUDIO & QUILTWORKS:Featuring quilts by LA MAGIEBAKERY& CAFE: Mary Klein and TheMaterial Girls; GALLERY: Featuring painting, • Supporting many of your' Featuring landscape watercolors and through June 3; 926 NEGreenwood sculpture and more byJerry Werner favorite non-profits pastels by Patricia W. Porter; 945 NW Ave., Suite B, Bend;541-728-0527. and other regional artists; 65665 +QA Bond St., Bend; 541-241-7884. 93rd St., Bend; call 541-815-9800 for RED CHAIRGALLERY:"Spring COFFEE CO. directions. • 2 great locations! LUBBESMEYERFIBER STUDIO: Fling," featuring various mediums Featuring fiber art by Lori and by Eleanor Murphy, Shelly Wierzba THE WINE SHOP: Featuring art by www.strictlyorganic.com Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW and Anne vonHeideken; through Hazel Reeves, Cheryl Buchanann Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; May 26; 103 NWOregon Ave., Bend; and Janet Rawlings; through May www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or www.redchairgallerybend.com or 29;55 NW MinnesotaAve.,Bend; ~ I 541-330-0840. 541-306-3176. 541-389-2884.

A SustainableCup Drink it up!

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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."

COMCERTS May16 —Cherry Poppin' Daddies, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland;

p v W'j

P5*

May16 —David Torn,Holocene, Portland; www.pdxjazz.com. May16 —Will Sparks G Jackal, * Roseland Theater, Portland; CT May17 —Timber Timbre, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May18 —The Wombats,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May19-20 —Of Monsters and Men, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;

CT*

MOXIE Contemporary Ballet presents "A La Mode" with Happydog and Muddy

Feet Contemporary Dance June 4 at Newmark Theatre in Portland. Lindgey Hille I Submitted Photo

I

By Kathleen McCool

snd regional resources to create wodr retrrt

The Bulletin

senting "the three coasts" and-multiple artistic

T

hree ofOregon's dance companies will disciplines. come together for a one-night collabMuddy Feet Contemporary Dance is a part-

oration titled "A La M o de" June 4 in Portland.

time contemporary dance company that en-

to set a new standard for real bodies in ballet. MOXIE's Artistic Director, Gina Candland,

resents a different genre of contemporary dance,

courages new works from dancers and choreThe program is presented by MOXIE Con- ographers spanning the full spectrum of contemporary Ballet of Portland — the Pacific temporary dance. Northwest's only contemporary ballet comThe theme Candland came up with for "A pany. Mixing elements of classical ballet and La Mode" is classical athleticism and how the modern dance, MOXIE presents classic yet in- body moves through symmetry. Each company novative and artistically fashion-forward per- willpremiere newworks covering a spectrum of formances. MOXIE is also proud of its efforts dance movement.Because each company rephas choreographed the performance joining together MOXIE, Happydog of Portland and Chicago,and Muddy Feet Contemporary

the program will offer various examples of contemporary dance techniques and methods. "A La Mode" will be held June 4 at Newmark Theatre in Portland. Tickets start at $28

with discounts for military, seniors and stuHappydog was founded in 2003 by chore- dents. For more information and to purchase ographer Muffie Connelly of Portland, dancer tickets, visit www.portland5.com. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, Leslie Cuyjet of New York and designer Anne Dance of Portland.

Novotny of Chicago. The trio unite their local

kmccool@bendbulletin.com

May19 —Rhiennon Giddens,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF May 20— SmaHpools,Wo nder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May 21 —Little Dragon, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* May 21 —The War onDrugs, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. May 22 —Dan Hicks fL HisHot Licks, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. May 22— FatherJohn M isty, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;www.etix.com. May 22 —Pink Martini, The LaSells Stewart Center, Corvallis; www. oregonstate.edu/lasells. May 22— TheW aterboys,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF May 23— TheGlitch M ob,Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* May 24 — Den Hicksand the HotLicks, Aladdin Theater, Portland; CANCELLED; TF*

May 25 —Paramore, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* May 25— RoyalBlood,Wo nder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May 26 —Black Pistol Fire, Star Theater, Portland; CT* May 26 —Glass Animals, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. May 26— HotChip,Roseland Theater, * Portland; CT May 26 —Jenny Lewis, WOWHall, Eugene; www.ticketweb.com. May 26— Shakey Graves,Mc Donald Theatre, Eugene; TW* May 27 —Shakey Graves, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;www.etix.com. May 27 —Streetlight Manifesto, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF*

May 27— Tame Impala,Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;www. etix.com. May 28 —Barry Manilow, Rose Quarter, Portland; www.ticketmaster.

com. May 28 —Laibach, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF May 28-30 —"Night Train to Memphis":Featuring music from the golden age of soul, blues and rock'n' roll, and from such legends as Otis Redding, Elvis Presley, Aretha Franklin, Robert Johnson, Sam and Dave, Wilson Pickett, Chuck Berry, Muddy Waters and Etta James; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. May 29 —Awolnation, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* May 29 —Cast Of Clowns: Featuring: Melvin Seals, Greg Anton, Mark Karan, Scott Gillian; Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*

May 29 —Merideth Keye Clark: Portland Center Stage; Ellyn Bye Studio, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. May 29 —ShyGirls, Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF May 30 —Awolnation, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* May 30-31 —Evynne Hollens, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. May 30— The M ountainGoats, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May 31 —King Chip, Roseland Theater, * Portland; CT

LECTURES8K

COMEDY May15 —Cristela Alonzo,Aladdin * Theatre, Portland; TF May17 —"Where's GodWhen": A live show featuring New York Times best-selling author William Paul Young with special guests Reba Riley, author of "Post-Traumatic Church Syndrome," and singer, songwriter, author and provocateur, Christian Piatt; Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* May18 —Dr. Robert Stern:Oneof the world's top researchers on the effects of trauma on the brain, will discuss concussion at all ages; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. May 21 —Oregon BookAwardsAuthor Tour: Lisa OhlenHarris endKristin Ohlson,Klamath County Library, Klamath Falls; www.literary-arts.org. May 27 —Cheryl Strayed: Author of "Wild," "Tiny Beautiful Things" and "Torche,n presented by PlayWrite, Inc; * Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5

Continued next page


out of town

PAGE 24 • GO! MAGAZINE From previous page

SYMPHOMY 5 OPERA

May 27 —Oregon BookAwards Author TourVisits La Grande: Justin Hocking, Cari Lunaand Dawn Diez Willis; Pierce Library Reading Room, Eastern Oregon University, La Grande; www. literary-arts.org. May 28 —Oregon BookAwards Author TourVisits Enterprise: Justin Hocking, Cari Lunaand Dawn Diez Willis; Fishtrap House, Enterprise; www.literary-arts.org.

*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www. ticketswest.com or 800-

May16 —Celebrate 25:Join Soromundi Lesbian Chorus of Eugene in celebrating 25 years of musical performance; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene;www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. May17-18 —Beethoven's Piano Concerto Ho.1,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. May19-20 —A Classical Menagerie with Pink Martini: Portland's favorite bands- Pink Martini and the OregonSymphonyput a salsa spin on Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf and romp through a kaleidoscope of classical favorites; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. May 29 — PortlandYouthRock Orchestra Summer Blast Off Concert:PYROgives students from all over the metropolitan area focused musical training and exposure to the greatest of rock and orchestral literature; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* May 30 —University of Oregon

May 29 — OregonBookAwards Author Tour: Cari Luna, Dawn Diez Willis and Willy Vlautin, Crossroads Art Center, Baker City; www.literary-arts.org. May 30 —Kids in the Hall: The groundbreaking five-man sketch comedy troupe discovered in the late 1980s bring its seminal, take-

no-prisoners comedyto stages

in cities bothnorth and south of the U.S./Canadian border; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; p5*

May 30 —TEDxPortland: Enjoy 16 brilliant talks, four thrilling performances, and delightful surprises as you see aglimpse into possible tomorrows; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5*

992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticket-

fly.com or 877-435-9849 CT:CascadeTickets, www.cascadeticekts.com or 800-514-3849 P5:Portland'5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5. com or 800-273-1530 SchoolofMusic and Dance Spring Concert,Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene;www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.

THEATER 8c DANCE ThroughMay 23 — "One Flew Over the Cuckoo'sHest": Presented by Craterian Performances' Next Stage Repertory Company; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org. Through May 23 —"The Phantom of the Opera":U.S. Bank Broadway

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OREGON

e

U PCOM IN G •

TRAININGS : •

Strategies for Working with Opioid Users May 15,* 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. White Stag Block, Portland, OR

Peer Support Specialist (Adutt Mental Health) May 8-10and 16-17,8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Baker Downtown Center, Eugene, OR

Integration Skills for Behavioral Health Providero

Cross-Cultural Communication

June 10, * 6:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. White Stag Block, Portland, OR

Youth Mental Health First Aid June 19, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Baker Downtown Center, Eugene, OR

Vicarious Trauma, Burnout, and the Need for Self-Care

* Save $$ with early bird registration. See website for details.

June 4, * 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

Baker Downtown Center, Eugene, OR

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in Portland; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.portlandopera.org or 503-241-1802. Through May 31 —"Ramona Guimby":Presented by Oregon Children's Theatre; NewmarkTheatre, Portland;P5* or503-228-9571. Through June 7—"Dontreg,Who Kissed the Sea":A present-day hero's quest Philharmonic exploring the lengths and depths wemust go to redeem history's wrongs; Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. Through June14 —"The Lion":One man, six guitars, and a true story of love, loss, family loyalty, and the redemptive power of music; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through Oct. 31 —Oregon Shakespeare Festival:The following productions are part of the Oregon ShakespeareFestival: "Fingersmith" (through July 9), "Long Day's Journey into Night" (through Oct. 31), "Much Ado about Nothing" (through Nov.1), "Guys and Dolls" (through Nov.1), "Pericles" (through Nov.1), "Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land" (April 15-Oct. 31), "Antony and Cleopatra" (June 2-Oct. 9), "HeadOver Heels" (June 3-Oct. 10), "The Count of Monte Cristo" (June 4-Oct. 11), "The Happiest Song Plays Last" (July 7-Nov1) and "Sweat" (July 29-0ct. 31); Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. May15, 17 —"Lost Horizon": Presented by FredCrafts' Radio Redux; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.radioreduxusa. com or 541-682-5000. May15-17 —SesameStreet Live "Let's Dance!":You,theaudience, are invited to dance asall of your favorite SesameStreet friends join you on the floor — dancing with fans of all ages!; Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland; www. ticketmaster.com. May17 —Panchatantra: Jayanthi

Ramanpresents amagical evening

May 29, * 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Bend Center, Bend, OR

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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

Eo/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. © 2015 University of oregon. AE 102e1

of Indian dance, music and theatre; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* May17-June 21 —"Three Days of Rain":This Pulitzer Prizenominated play will star beloved actors from the Portland-filmed NBC television series"Grimm": Silas Weir Mitchell (Monroe) andSasha Roiz (Captain Renard); Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the

Armory, Portland;www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. May 21-30 —"Cosmosis": BodyVox with the Amphion Quartet, BodyVox Dance Center, Portland; www. bodyvox.com or 503-229-0627. May 26-June 21 —"The Liar": An adaptation by David Ives; Artist Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage,

Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278.

EXHIBITS Through May 31 —Portland Children's Museum: Thefollowing exhibits are currently on display: "Circus Zirkus" (through May 31); Portland Children's Museum, Portland; www.portlandcm.org. Through July11 —Museum

of Contemporary Craft: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Living with Glass" (through May16) and "Extra Credit" (through July11); Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.

museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through Sept. 6 —JordanSchnitzer Museum ofArt: Thefollowing exhibits are currently on display: "NewArt Northwest Kids: Last Night I Had the Strangest Dream" (through May17), "Frozen Film Frames: Portraits of Filmmakers by Jonas Mekas" (through June 7), "Gifts from the Judith and JanZach Estate" (through June15), "Elegance 8 Nobility: Modern 8 Contemporary Korean Literati Taste" (through June 30), "Ten Symbols of Longevityand Late Joseon KoreanCulture" (through June 30), "Vistas of a World Beyond: Traditional Gardens in Chinese Material Culture" (through July 26), "Rick Bartow: Things YouKnow But Cannot Explain" (through Aug. 9),"GustavoGermano:Ausencias" (through Aug. 16), "TheWord Became Flesh: Images of Christ in Orthodox Devotional Objects"

(throughAug.30) and"Japanese Impressions from the Vault: The Rare, the Beautiful, and the Bizarre" (through Sept. 6); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene; jsma.

uoregon.edu. Through Oct. 18 —Portland Art Museum:Thefollowing exhibits are currently on display: "Classically Modern: The Portraiture of Vera Prasilova Scott" (through June 21), "APEX: Betty LaDuke" (through July19), "David Hockney: ARake's Progress" (through Aug. 2) and "Hand and Wheel" (through Oct. 18); Portland Art Museum, Portland;

www.portlandartmuseum.orgor 503-226-2811.

MISCELLANY Through May17 —McMenamins UFOFestival,McMenamins Hotel Oregon, McMinnville; www.ufofest. com. May16 —EurekaFest:A celebration

designed toempoweralegacy of inventors through activities that inspire youth, honor role models, and encourage creativityand problem solving; Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, Portland; www.omsi. edu or 800-955-6674.


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PAGE 26 e GO! MAGAZiNE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

movies

O+ty e O

Warner Bros. Pictures / Submitted photo

Tom Hardy stars as Max Rockatansky and Chariize Theron as imperator Furiosa in "Mad Max: Fury Road."

• 'MadMax'doesanamazingjobofupdating the franchisewhile remaining true to its roots ferocious awesome insane greatness of "Mad Max: Fury

again for a dialogue-driven character study. For now let's be grateful they're one of the best action

Road" that I'm not even ticked off

duos ever, in one of the best action

t

t speaks volumes for the sheer

about Tom Hardy getting stuck movies. wearing a face mask for a good Ever. chunk of the film.

"Mad Max: Fury Road" is a

I mean, come on! This guy's stunningly effective post-apocaone of thebestactorsofhisgener- lyptic fable, a chilling and yet exation, and it's the Bane of my ex- hilarating daytime nightmare pitistence to see him once again get ting blindly loyal and bloodthirsty the "Dark Knight" treatment. Let half-humans against implausibly the man be seen and heard. beautiful people clinging to their Then again, we can always sense of morality while doing hope Hardy and the equally bad- whatever they can to stay alive. a ss Charlize Theron team u p

In an action-movie world dom-

"Mad Max" maestro George

RICHARD ROEPER

"Mad Max: FuryRoad" 120 minutes R, for intense sequences of violence throughout, and for disturbing images inated by cartoonishly over-the-

top CGI effects and rapid-fire quick cuts, it's exhilarating to see so many set pieces and bat-

tle sequences filmed in unbroken tracking shots, some breathtaking wide-angle views and visceral, gritty close-ups.

in 1979, says 90 percent of the

a vicious, blood-spattered desert world, with only one goal: survival. (Even if you haven't seen any of the original "Mad Max" films,

effectsseen onscreen are practi-

"Fury Road" works as a stand-

Miller, returning to the franchise that marked his directorial debut

cal, i.e., sans computer-generated alone piece.) imagery or post-production wizAfter an opening chase seardry, and the result is an action quence more ambitious and visumovie so much better than most, ally stunning than the climactic it almost qualifies for its own scenes in most big-budget action films, Max is held captive in the genre. My best guess is "Fury Road" Citadel, a canyon city in which sits on the timeline somewhere the g r eat u n w ashed m a sses between "The Road Warrior" and await commands (and rations "Beyond Thunderdome," with of water) from the all-powerful Hardy picking up the blowtorch and all-hideous Immortan Joe, from Mel Gibson as Max Rock- a ghoulish sicko with a skeleton atansky, who is haunted by ter- face mask and his own personal rifying, "Shining"-level visions harem of supermodel-gorgeous of the daughter he couldn't save. "breeders." Now Max slogs his way through Continued next page


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27

eo

1C

I'm not making light of such problems by pointing this out. Consider Chloe, who keeps flunking on purpose so she

RICHARD

ROEPER

can remain a Bella. She's in her

seventh year of college. (That joke worked better in "Animal House.") Or Lilly (Hana Mae Lee), who speaks in a creepy whisper and says things like, "All my teeth come from different people." Or David Cross' beyond-eccentric millionaire, who wears a silk robe and a giant medallion and hosts a sing-off in the basement of his own house, with the winning group getting a $42,000 gift card

"Pitch Perfect 2" 115 minutes PG-13, for innuendoand language hat are we doing!," says Anna Kendrick's Beca,

about halfway through "Pitch Perfect 2." Good question.

For a movie about the cheerfully bizarre world of competition a cappella singing, "Pitch Perfect 2" seemsjustas obsessed,ifnot more so,with characters who

at Dave & Busters.

Every once in a while "Pitch

Perfect 2" takes flight. Rebel Wil-

seem tobe sexually confused.

Just some — some — examples: • "This is an all-a cappella par-

Universal Pictures i Submitted photo

Hailee Steinfeld, from left, Anna Kendrick, Brittany Snow, Alexis Knapp and Rebel Wilson star as the Barden Bellas in "Pitch Perfect 2.u

ty," a senior explains to a fresh-

man girl. "Get ready to meet a lot of sexually confused guys." • Confronting a gorgeous, Amazonian rival singer from Germany named Kommissar, Beca says, "I'm sexually confused right now." Later she tries to insult Kommis-

sar but winds up saying, "Your

(John Michael Higgins) rattles off a list of things he's been described as, his partner Gail (Elizabeth Banks) says, "I thought you were going to say gay."

ey Rapkin's book) and directed by Elizabeth Banks, has a few wickedly funny one-liners and occasional moments of zany inspiration, but the musical numbers are

of their title — but they're still

Weird. It's just ... weird. The first "Pitch Perfect" was

often curiously dull, and there are far too many scenes that serve as

"Pitch Perfect 2" strains to find

sweat smells like cinnamon!"

a surprise hit, thanks to an infectious soundtrack filled with

treat, they're squished together in

i nstrument-free r e nditions

• When the Bellas go on a re-

of

sleeping bags. Beca's best friend, dozens of pop and hip-hop hits, Chloe (Brittany Snow), her face an an unabashedly life-affirming atinch from Beca's, whispers that she titude and a winning cast, led by regrets having not experimented the ever-adorable Anna Kendrick. enough in college. Becaturns away, It was a pure confection of fun. and another Bella licks Beca's nose. • When the b o n ehead, rac-

ist, misogynist announcer John

"Pitch Perfect 2," written by

Kay Cannon (who penned the original script, inspired by Mick-

From previous page Once Max is sprung from the (In a ni c e t o uch, H ugh Citadel — what, you thought Mad Keays-Byrne, who was the infa- Max wouldspend the whole movmous Toecutter in the first "Mad ie bound and gagged and held as Max" movie, plays Joe.) a slave? — he forms a partnerAs for Max, he's literally a hu- ship-of-necessity with Imperator man blood bag — a "universal do- Furiosa (Charlize Theron, imposnor" hooked up to an IV to provide ing and beautiful and magnificent fuel to Nux (Nicholas Hoult), one with her buzz cut and her black of the hundreds of young "War eye makeup), who has gone rogue Boys" feverishly devoted to the with her precious cargo: thoucult of Immortan Joe. The War sands of gallons of "Guzoline" Boys sound like brainwashed ter- and Immortan Joe's harem of rorists, spouting verbal garbage beauties, one of whom is pregnant about the glories of reaching the with his child. gates of Valhalla where they will About those women. They're so be born again under the approv- ridiculous it's great. Rosie Huning eyes of Immortan Joe. They're tington-Whiteley is the Splendid half-mad warrior-fools.

Angharad, Zoe Kravitz is Toast

allowed to compete in the world championships because, if not, we're out of movie even as the movie is just getting started.

someplot conflicts whilebalancing time-killing filler and/or journeys the line between satire and rousinto head-scratching, "What was ing musical numbers. Beca gets an THAT'?" territory. internship working for a producWe pick up the story with the er (a very funny Keegan-Michael sorority singing group known as Key) "who sleeps on a bed made of the Bellas, three-time national Grammys," as he puts it. champions, performing for PresThis producer is clearly nuts. ident Obama and the first lady

He is one of at least a half-dozen

son's Fat Amy makes a grand romantic gesture while singing "We Belong" with a couple of great visual punch lines. Beca and Snoop Dogg (that's right) collaborate on a holiday musical mash-up I'd put on my playlist. New cast member Hailee Steinfeld sparkles as Emily, a freshman pledge who wants to sing original material. When Beca sneaks Emily into a studio to record a number, Beca

tells her, "Get your cute butt in there," and then says, "Don't touch

anything. You're gorgeous, but ... clumsy." Beca might want to have a talk with her boyfriend. Who wears

sleeveless shirts, loves to sing a cappella and hops around all the time like a male cheerleader. Not that t h ere's anything

(shown in cheesy cutaway shots). characters in "Pitch Perfect 2" wrong with that. — Richard Roeper is a film critic When things go disastrously who is in dire need of intense therwrong, the Bellas are stripped apy and perhaps medication, and for The Chicago Surt-Times.

the Knowing, Abbey Lee is the little bit about each other, and we and a thrash metal guitarist Dag, Riley Keough is Capable can catch our breath. strapped to the front of a truck, and Courtney Eaton is Cheedo What a feast for the eyes and just because. It's all perfectly, wonderfully, the Fragile. So there! They wear the adrenaline. The war rigs are strips of white linen fabric and hybrids of muscle cars,tanks, fantastically crazy. Amidst all those ingenious, they look as if they're on their way drag racers and land-speed rockto a shoot for Vogue, but each has et ships. War Boys spray silver power-packed road warrior seher own special brand of tough- paint on their mouths and cackle quences, "Fury Road" contains a ness and resilience. And given madly. Enemy soldiers on mo- surprising amount of depth and that Max often takes a passenger torcycles fly through the air like character development. There's seat to Theron's Imperator Furio- futuristic X-Gamers on PEDs. not a whole lot of dialogue, and sa, this is one female-empowered Warriors sway back and forth yet Max, Furiosa and Nux expeaction vehicle. on long poles, swooping in for rience something akin to growth. Once Max and Furiosa are on the kill and then bouncing away Fighting like animals against the run, with Immortan Joe's fleet like Velcro'd vaulters. Furiosa creatures with not a speck of congiving chase, "Fury Road" is one and Max devise ingenious de- science, they tap into their own extendedwarring sequence after fense plans on the fly. Immortan humanity. — Richard Roeper is a film critic another, punctuated by pauses so Joe's fleet includes minions literMax and Furiosa can learn just a ally banging on gigantic drums, for The Chicago Sun-Times.


movies

PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZiNE

ovin ANN HORNADAY

imie

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

Ol" 1"cll 0

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with the support of his wife, Lelia, chucked it in the 1970s to hone

his instinctive facility with the camera. "The Salt of the Earth" is directed by Wim Wenders and

Salgado's son, Juliano, and the "The Salt of the Earth" 110 minutes PG-13, for disturbing images of violence, humansuffering and nudity

two men trade off narrating what amounts to an unabashed love let-

ter to the man they both idolize. As Salgado's dazzling images prove, the admiration is not unjustified. And the arc of his careeror the past 40 years, the pho- which he temporarily left behind tographer Sebastiao Salgado after documenting the horrors has been creating stunning of Rwandan genocide and its afrecordsof contemporary society termath, then returned to after around the globe, his massive replanting the Atlantic rain forest black and white prints capturing on his family farm in Brazil — is intimate moments of death and wholesale environmental destruc-

clearly that of a man of conscience

tion with epic scope and scale. In such exhibitions as "The

"The Salt of the Earth" remains

Other

A m e r icas," "Workers"

and moral seriousness. Still, worshipful when it should be more probing, especially around questions of ethics, privacy and

and "Exodus" he has masterfully chronicled the lives of indigenous consent. Without knowing more people of South America, condi- about Salgado's own relational tions facing modern industrial processes with his subjects, his laborers and mass migrations aestheticized images of (mostbrought on by war and famine. As ly black) half-naked bodies, the adept at single-figure portraiture corpses of famine-stricken infants as startling, large-format group- and exotic tribes carry a whiff ings, Salgado possesses the eye of of hegemony and objectification an artist but the soul of the econo- rather than the f riendship and mist he trained to be: A critique of deep respect he avers in the film. late capitalism runs through even

his most romantic, lyrical work. Salgado's life, career and philosophical approach are the subjects of "The Salt of the Earth," an adoring, ultimately limited profile of the artist, who grew up on a farm in central Brazil, workedbriefly as an international economist and,

"The Salt of the Earth" nonethe-

less offers a magnificent primer, especially for those unfamiliar with Salgado's photographs. There are just as many breathtaking mo-

/

nn J

ments to be found in the film as

there are in the work it's about. — Ann Hornaday is a film critic for The Washington Post.

Sony Pictures Classics / Submitted photo

Photographer Sebastiao Salgado is profiled in the documentary "The Salt of the Earth."

'Merchants of Doubt': an engrossing portrait of enviro-spin e rchants of Doubt," a

fectively, especially in a hyper-par8 Knowlton, these campaigns tisan, intellectually lazy, spin-adANNHORNADAY successfully passed as fact-based dicted 24-7 news cyde. the 2006 global warming tutorial hard news, the invaluable "other Even more sobering is how trib"An Inconvenient Truth" left off, side of the story" that an unques- al fealty trumps objective reality. probing the dubious annals of clitioning press was eager to am- Nowhere is that m ore evident mate-changedenialandtheunhoplify in the name of fairness and than when a global warming de"Merchants ofDoubt" ly alliance between corporations, balance. nier, former U.S. congressman 96 minutes It's no surprise that, nearly half Bob Inglis of South Carolina, partisan politics, pseudo-science and marketing that has given it PG-13, for strong profanity deception to the 1950s and early a century later, the playbook in- changes his mind, only to be faced '60s, when DDT manufacturers ventedby Big Tobacco andperfect- with ignominy and the outrage traction despite clear scientific evidence and consensus. ning with a magician who, while and the tobacco industry began ed byfood and chemical compa- of his fellow Republicans. When As he did with his 2008 film explaining the art of misdirection pushing back their critics by false- nies should be exploited by energy "Merchants of Doubt" isn't mak"Food, Inc.," Kenner lures view- and legerdemain, adds that at ly insisting that no consensus ex- firms chary of government carbon ing you mad, it makes you very ers in with a brisk, bold visual least he and his brethren are"hon- isted regarding the harmfulness regulation. But what's dishearten- simply, and overwhelmingly, sad. — Ann Hornaday is a film critic look and engaging narrative est liars." The filmmaker neatly of their products. With the help ing about "Merchants of Doubt" is techniques - in this case, begin- juxtaposes that observation with of such often-controversial pub- that the strategy still works so effor The Washington Post. documentary by Robert Kenner, takes up where

the pundits, proxies and front organizations he's investigating: out-and-out con men whose dark arts, he maintains, possess no such charm or redeeming social value. ("Merchants of Doubt" is inspired by the book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway) Kenner traces the roots of their

lic relations companies as Hill


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

O N LO C A L S CREEN S Here's what's showing onCentral Oregon movie screens. Forshowtimes, see listings on Page31.

Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Moore, unlessothenvisenoted.

HEADS UP "Antony end Cleopatra" — The steamy story of a midlife affair that shook the foundations of the ancient world comes to vivid life in the Stratford Festival production of Shakespeare's Antony andCleopatra, starring Geraint WynDavies and Yanna Mclntosh asthe powerful rulers whose insatiable love leads to the greatest of tragedies. Director Gary Griffin paints an unforgettable landscape depicting the devastation wrought by the heart's transgressions. This event screens at 7p.m. Thursday at Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX in Bend. Cost is $18.Approximate runtime is170 minutes. (No MPAA rating) — Synopsis from theFathom Events Bend Bicycle Film Festival — The Bend Bicycle Film Festival launched in May 2009 with two purposes in mind: to showcase local short films featuring our uniquecycling culture here in Central Oregonand to create a social gathering where the cycling community can reunite every spring to get excited about riding bikesl The festival's mission is to celebrate artistic expression and stimulate excitement within and around the local cycling community. Proceeds from admission and raffle tickets directlysupport the TheBend Endurance Academy, alocal nonprofit offering youth, junior and masters development programs for cycling, rock climbing andNordic skiing. This eventscreensat7 p.m.W ednesday at Tower Theatre in Bend.Tickets are $12 in advance, $15day of show. (No MPAA rating) — Synopsis from the festival's vvebsite "For Thousands of Miles"Straddling the line between documentary and fiction, "For Thousands of Miles" is a unique road movie covering oneman's bike journey across America in search of something meaningful. "For Thousands of Miles" shares thestory of a young man's 4,200-mile bicycle ride across the Northern United States; Larry McKurtis, at the ageof 26, left for the Atlantic Ocean, leaving behind the small town hehadalways known, in search of newthings, new people andnewplaces. In his mind he had always imagined the road to be full of adventure andhappenstance, which it was, but in waysthat were often unnoticeable to the passing traffic; the summersunsets would burn colors in the horizon Larry would later be unable to describe; the fireflies would weave inandout of the tall midwestfields, with no onethere to share in every detail of the world around him. Theloneliness of the open road left him feeling alive, awake — himself in ways hewas never able to be before. After 64 days, hereached

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29

almost implausibly so. "Gett" is the third movie featuring Viviane that Ronit Elkabetz haswritten and directed with her brother Shlomi Elkabetz, after "ToTakeaWife" and "Shiva" aka "SevenDays," andtheir work here is assured, streamlined and bold. This film wasnot given astar rating. 115 minutes. (NoMPAArating) — Manohla Dargis, New YorkTimes "Med Max: Fury Road" — Tom Hardy andCharlize Theronmake one of the best action duosever in a stunningly effective post-apocalyptic fable, a chilling andyet exhilarating daytime nightmare that also contains a surprising amount of depth and character development. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Four stars. 120 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Merchants of Doubt" — "Merchants tv of Doubt," a documentary by Robert Kenner, takes upwhere Disney/ Submitted photo the 2006 global warming tutorial Britt Robertson stars in "Tomorrowland," which opens May 22 with early screenings Thursday. "An Inconvenient Truth" left off, probing the dubious annals of climate-change denial andthe unholy the Atlantic — andjust as quickly opens May 22with early screenings alliance betweencorporations, WHAT'S NEW and quietly as his trip had begun, it Thursday (available locally in 3-D). partisan politics, pseudo-science and was over .W hattheyoungma n never (PG-13) "Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem" marketing that has given it traction anticipated wasjust how long his trip — Synopsis from 20th Century Fox — The hypnotic"Gett: TheTrial of despite clear scientific evidence would go on after the roadhadcome and consensus. When"Merchants "Tomorrewland" — From Di s ney Viviane Amsal e m" is the story of a to an end. Part of Central Oregon of Doubt" isn't making you mad, comes two-time Oscar winner Brad Trail Alliance Movie Night. This woman wronged bymenandGod, it makes youvery simply, and Bird's riveting, mystery adventure event screens at 9 p.m.Thursdayat if finally, in asense, redeemedby overwhelmingly, sad. Rating: Three "Tomorrowland," starring Academy McMenamins OldSt. Francis School cinema. Under Israeli law, awoman stars. 96 minutes. (PG-13) Award winner George Cl o oney. in Bend. Cost is $5 (cashonly). (No canbe divorced only if her husband — Ann Homaday, Bound by ashared destiny, former MPAA rating) presents her with a religious bill of The Washington Post divorce called agett (sometimes — Synopsis from McMenamins boy-genius Frank (Clooney), jaded by disillusionment, andCasey(Britt "Pitch Perfect 2" — Thesequel to spelled get). Nogett, no divorce. "Poltergeist" — Legendary Robertson), a bright, optimistic teen The long-suffering title character 2012's surprise hit about acappella filmmaker SamRaimi ("Spiderman," bursting with scientific curiosity, desperately wants to befree of her singers has a fewwickedlyfunny "Evil Dead," "TheGrudge") and embark on adanger-filled mission to husband, who refuses to let her go.So one-liners andoccasional moments director Gil Kenan("Monster House") unearth the secrets of an eni g matic year after year, Viviane pleadshercase of zany inspiration, but the musical contemporize the classic tale about place somewhere in timeandspace before a rabbinic court, waiting for her numbers areoften curiously dull, afamil ywhosesuburbanhome known only as "Tomorrowland." What divorce asdaysslip into weeks and and there arefar too many scenes is haunted byevil forces. When they must do there changesthe world that serve astime-killing filler and/or the terrifying apparitions escalate then months, her pacificface glazed — and them —forever. This film journeys into head-scratching, "What with tears andherbodyoccasionally their attacks and hold theyoungest opens May 22with early screenings daughter captive, the family must rocked by alaugh tinged with knowing was THAT?"territory. Rating: Two Thursday in IMAX. (PG) stars. 115 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper come together to rescueher before andmadness.Thismakesfor she disappears forever. This film — Synopsis from WaltDisneyPictures gripping cinemafrom start to finish, Continued next page

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PAGE 30 + GO! MAGAZINE

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"About Time," andeven "Somewhere in Time." But building this film around all the willowy, world-weary gracethat Blake "GossipGirl" Lively canmuster pays off. As atwenty-something who stoppedaging 80yearsago, Lively suggests several lifetimes of experience in a love story that ranges from wisfful to hopeful, a romance whose femalehalf understands its consequences. Rating:Threeanda half stars.110 minutes. (PG-13) —Mooie "Avengers:Ageof Ultren"Captain America, Iron Man,Thor and the rest are back in agiant superhero adventure that's sometimes daffy, occasionally baffling, surprisingly touching and evenromantic with one

chucked it in the1970s to honehis instinctive facility with the camera. There are just asmanybreathtaking moments to befound in the film as there are in thework it's about. Rating: Two stars. 110minutes. (PG-13) — Ann Homaday, The WashingtonPost

From previous page "The Selt eftheEarth" — Forthe past40 years, the photographer Sebastiao Salgadohas beencreating stunning records of contemporary society around theglobe, his massive black andwhite prints capturing intimate moments of deathand wholesale environmental destruction with epic scopeandscale. Salgado's life, career andphilosophical approach arethe subjects of "The Salt of the Earth," anadoring, ultimately limited profile of the artist, who grew up on afarm in central Brazil, worked briefly as aninternational economist and, with the support of his wife,

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

STILL SHOIMG "The Age ef Adaline" — Hollywood long agoceded"love that standsthe test of time" to therealm ofscience fiction andfantasy, so "TheAgeof Adaline" falls neatly into agenrethat includes "TheTimeTraveler's Wife,"

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kinetic thrill after another. It earns a place of high ranking in the Marvel Universe. This film is available locally in IMAX 3-D. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 142 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Cinderella" —Disney's live-action "Cinderella" movie is anenchanting, exhilarating romantic adventure with gorgeous scenery, terrific sets, stellar cinematography andOscar-worthy costumes. Lily Jamessparkles in the title role, andCateBlanchett makesa deliciously terrifying evil stepmother. Instead of a re-imagined reboot, it's old-fashioned, and that's kind of refreshing. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 105 minutes.(PG) — Roeper "The DivergentSeries: Insurgent" — For what it is, "Insurgent" is a reasonably executed, sporadically enjoyable installment in the projected four-part"Divergent" series, based on the novels byVeronica Roth. Yet, there's no escaping what it is, and what it is ... is silly. The best thing to say for the film, and this is no small thing, is that "Insurgent" moves the story forward significantly. Much of the screen time in "Insurgent" is taken up with politics, the efforts of Tris and Four to forge alliances and launch a coup, but this makes for flat viewing. "Insurgent" would be amuch worse movie if the good parts were all at the beginning. But they aresaved for the end, and they leavethe viewer with a feeling of, "Well, that was OK,"even though most of it wasn't. Rating: Two stars. 116 minutes. (PG-13) — Mick LaSaile, The SanFrrncisco Chronicle "Ex Machina" — Ifyou're going to go all-in with the gorgeous, chilling and sometimes ludicrous "Ex Machina," you'll have to checkyour logic at the ticket counter. Oscar Isaacand Domhnall Gleesonstar in a dizzyingly effective sci-fi/thriller. Rating: Three and a half stars. 108 minutes. (R) — Roeper "Furious 7" —This is one of the most ridiculous thrillers I've ever seen,but I have to admit I wasentertained by the sheer audacity of the car chases and battle sequences —and there were evensomegenuinely touching moments. Rating: Threestars.137 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "Home" —Alittle Jim Parsons goes a long way,and hegrates on your nerves voicing analien on the runwith a smart seventh-grader (Rihanna). Kids will probably enjoy the colors and the music, but anyoneover10 will see the plot twists a mileaway. Rating: Two stars. 96 minutes.(PG) —Roeper "Hot Pursuit" —Cheap, short and slow, "Hot Pursuit" is a comedythat never lets your forget that pairing up Sofia Vergara with ReeseWitherspoon should haveworked better than this. A mismatch-misfire badly misdirected bythe director of "The Guilt Trip" and "27 Dresses," it wastes the Oscar-winning Reeseand the spirited spitfire Vergara, cast as acomically disgraced copwho escorts the wife of a drug lord's accountant to court. It's "Midnight Run" without enough running, "The Heat" without any heat. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 87 minutes. (PG-13) —Moore "Kingsman:The Secret Service"In a very violent andvery silly movie, Colin Firth gives adisciplined, serious performance as aspy from a supersecret British agency. "Kingsman," a relentless, hardcore spoof of the

old-school JamesBond movies, is the craziest movie I've seen in a long time. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 129 minutes.(R) — Roeper "The LongestRide" —These Nicholas Sparks movies tend to get jumbled into one big cliche-riddled story. This time around, weget two romances — oneset in modern times, one dating backto the1940s — with a twist that's so ridiculous I think we're almost supposed to laugh. Rating: Two stars. 139 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "MonkeyKingdom" —"Monkey Kingdom," Disneynature's latest Earth Day offering, is an intriguing peek inside the social structure of macaque monkey society in Sri Lanka. So while it's got plenty of cute macaque monkeys, playing andcavorting, there's also a little social commentary in the mirror the monkeymovie holds up to us. Rating: Threestars. 81 minutes.(G) — Moore "Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2" — Hello Paul Blart, our old friend. We'vecometo laugh at youagain. But the theater just echoes with the sounds ... of silence. Sorry, when amovie falls as flat, when every joke andgaghas a"just grind through it" quality, the mind wanders. (Kevin) Jamesmay not deserve better, but the kids they're pitching this to do. Rating: Onestar. 94 minutes. (PG) — Moore "The Water Diviner" —Russell Crowe's lifetime of experience onfilm sets shows in his directorial debut, afirst-rate post-World War I drama with a heavy dose ofsentiment and a gripping storyline. Hestars as a grieving Australian who journeys to Turkey to find the remains of his sons, all killed in battle. Rating: Threeanda half stars. 111 minutes.(R) — Roeper "While We're Young" —Ben Stiller and NaomiWatts star as aging Generation X'ers whoadopt the trappings of their fatuous new 20-something friends (AdamDriver, Amanda Seyfried). Though it takes a nosedive at the end,much of writerdirector NoahBaumbach's film plays like razor-sharp WoodyAllen in his prime. Rating: Threestars. 94 minutes.(R) — Roeper "Wild Tales" —As high-spirited as its title suggests, "Wild Tales" opens ona savage noteandends, well, that's for you to find out. In betweenits shocker start and equally startling windup, this Argentine anthology offers upa scabrous, often unsettlingly funny look at human behavior in extremis. It's a mad, madsocial Darwinian world, churning withmen andwomenwho, whether pushed alot or just a little, are all eager to dothe worst to one another. Theypounceandthentheypummel, engaging in drag-down fights that leave them black andblue andsometimes stone-cold dead.This film was not given a star rating. 114minutes. (R) — Manohia Dargis, New YorkTimes "Woman inGold" — Helen Mirren stars as anAmerican from Viennafighting to reclaim a Gustav Klimt painting of her aunt that had beenseized bythe Nazis. This fictionalization of a true story is shamelessly sentimental, but fascinating nonetheless, beautifully photographed andgreatly elevated by Mirren's brilliant performance. Rating: Three stars. 110minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper


movies

THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, IVIAY 15, 2015

T I M E S • For t:he meekof May15

MOVI E

• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subj ect to changeafter press time. I

Submitted photo

Chris Hemsworth stars in "Blackhat."

NEW O N D V D 8 a BLU-RA Y The following movies were released the week ofMay12.

mBlackhatm— Asfocused as the

blurred, often randommoments of unsteady steadicam shots and as coherent as co-star WeiTang's indecipherable Chineseaccent, Michael Mann's "Blackhatn is a classic January fire sale thriller. Mann's worst film since he transitioned into the pantheon of "major directors," the best reason Universal hadfor rolling it out at all must havebeensome misguided attempt to pander its way into Chinese favor. DVD Extras: One featurette; Additional Blu-ray Extras: Two featurettes. Rating: Oneand a half stars. 133 minutes.(R) — Moore mMortdecaim — Thestory is nonsensical and theaction tepid. So if you don't find the Brit-quips funny, there's not much for you in nMortdecai,n just vintage British motorcars, foppish gibberish and Depp curling and re-curling that mustache, punctuating every line with "Right!" or "Quite!" That makes for a quite watchable mess. DVD and Blu-ray Extras: Twofeaturettes. Rating: Twostars. 106 minutes. (PG13) — Moore "Still Alice" — At times maddeningly overwrought and heavy-handed, "Still Alice" tells the story of a 50-year-old professor and mom who has anidyllic life until she is diagnosedwith earlyonset Alzheimer's. What makesit worth the journey is JulianneMoore's brilliant and delicately calibrated lead performance. DVD and Blu-ray Extras: Deleted scenes andthree featurettes. Rating: Threestars. 99 minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper "The Cobbler," "Just Before I Go"and "Tracers."

Next Week:

"American Sniper,"eHotTub Time Machine 2" and "Strange Magic."

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• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium f6 fj IMAX

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716 SW11th St. Redmond 541.923.4732

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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 11:50a.m., 2:50, 6:15, 9:45 Thu: 11:50 a.m., 2:50, 9:45 • ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA(no MPAA rating) Thu: 7 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:35a.m., 12:45, 3:15, 4:30, 7:15, 9:25, 10:30 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON IMAX 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 11:45a.m., 3:30, 6:45,10:15 Thu: 11:45 a.m., 3:30 • EX MACHINA (R) Fri-Thu: 11:55 a.m., 2:40, 6:20, 10:50 • FURIOUS(PG-13) 7 Fri-Thu: 12:15, 3:35, 6:50, 10:05 • HOME (PG) Fri-Thu: 1, 3:40 • HOT PURSUIT (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:25, 2:55, 7:10, 10:35 • THE LONGEST RIDE(PG-13) Fri-Wed: 12:20, 3:55, 6:55, 10:10 Thu: 12:20, 3:55, 10:10 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri-Thu: 11:40a.m., 2:30, 7:30, 10:30 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD3-D (R) Fri, Mon-Wed: noon,12:30,3,3:45,5,7, 8, 10, 10:45 Sat-Sun: noon,12:30, 3, 3:45, 5, 7,8:15, 10, 10:45 Thu: noon,12:30,3,3:45,5,6:50,7, 10:15, 10:45 • PAUL BLART: MALL COP2 (PG) Fri-Wed: 12:05, 2:35, 7:50, 10:20 Thu: 12:05, 2:35 • PITCH PERFECT 2 (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:30a.m., 12:30, 2:15, 3:15, 6:30, 7:45, 9:30, IO:25 • POLTERGEIST (PG-13) Thu: 8:30, 10 • POLTERGEIST3-D (PG-13) Thu: 8, 10:30, 10:45 • TOMORROWLAND IMAX(PG) Thu: 7, 10:15 • THE WATER DIVINER(R) Fri-Wed: 6:25, 7:40, 9:15 Thu: 6:25, 7:40 • WOMAN IN GOLD (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 12:40, 3:25, 6:35, 9:20 Thu: 12:40, 3:25, 6:35 I

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend,541-330-8562 • CINDERELLA (PG) Sat-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2:30 Wed: 2:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 6 • FOR THOUSANDS OFMILES (no MPAA rating) Thu: 9 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R) Fri-Wed: 9:15 • Younger than 2f mayattendall screeningsifaccompanied by a legal guardian. I

Also available:

GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31

• t

Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • GETT:THE TRIALOFVIVIANE AMSALEM(no MPAArating) Fri-Sat ,Mon,W ed-Thu:3:30 Sun:1:30 • THE SALT OFTHEEARTH(PG-13)

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Submitted photo

JOHNSON B R OTHERS A P P L I A N C n m

James Marsden, left, and Jack Black star in "The 0 Train." Fri-Sat, Mon, Wed-Thu: 6 Sun: 4 • WILD TALES (R) Fri-Sat, Wed-Thu: 8:30 Sun: 6:30 I

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I

Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13) Fri: 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 Sat-Sun: 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 5:15, 8:15 • HOT PURSUIT (PG-13) Fri: 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30,9:30 Mon-Thu: 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri, Mon-Thu: 4:30, 7,9:30 Sat-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 • PITCH PERFECT2 (PG-13) Fri, Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sat-Sun:11:15a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13) Fri:7 Sat: 3:45, 7 Sun: 3,6:15 Mon-Thu: 6 • EX MACHINA (R) Fri: 7:45 Sat: 5:30, 7:45 Sun: 4:45, 7 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • M ERCHANTS OF DOUBT (PG-13) Fri: 7:15 Sat: 5:15, 7:15 Sun: 4:15, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • MONKEY KINGDOM (G) Fri: 5:15 Sat: 3:15 Sun: 2:15 • PITCH PERFECT2 (PG-13) Fri: 5,7:30 Sat: 2:30, 5, 7:30

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Sun: 2, 4:30, 7 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • WHILE WE'RYOUNG E (R) Fri: 5:45 Sat: 3: I5 Sun: 2:30 tI•

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Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • THE AGE OFADALINE (PG-I3) Fri: 5:10, 7:30, 9:45 Sat: 12:40, 2:55, 5:10, 7:30, 9:45 Sun: 12:40, 2:55, 5:10, 7:30 Mon-Thu: 5:10, 7:30 • AVENGERS:AGE OFULTRON (PG-13) Fri: 3:20, 6:30, 9:35 Sat: 12:15, 3:20, 6:30, 9:35 Sun: 12:15, 3:20, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 3:20, 6:30 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri: 3:50, 7:10, 9:10 Sat: 1:45, 3:50, 7:10, 9:10 Sun: 1:45, 3:50, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 3:50, 7:10 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD3-D (R) Fri-Sat: 4:30, 9:50 Sun, Mon-Thu: 4:30 • PITCH PERFECT2 (PG-13) Fri: 4:25, 6:30, 7, 9:30 Sat: 1:15, 1:50, 4:25, 6:30, 7, 9:30 Sun:1:15,1:50,4:25,6:30,7 Mon-Thu: 4:25, 6:30, 7 Pine Theater,214 N. MainSt., Prineville, 541-4I6-10 I4 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(Upstairs — PG-13) Fri: 4:10, 7:30 Sat-Sun: 1:10, 4:10, 7:30 Mon-Wed: 6:15 • MAD MAX: FURY ROAD(R) Fri: 4, 7, 9:30 Sat:1,4,7,9:30 Sun:1,4,7 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility

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PAGE 32 • GOI MAGAZINE

THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MAY 15, 2015

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JULY 9

Thissummer your ticketto one ofthe season's best concerts may be inside your GO! MAGAZINE. Look for it every Friday in The Bulletin.

JULY 2$

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MAGAZINE

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lllNGGNCERTTlCKETSTG GNEGFTHESEGREATSHGlIS Make sure you get a copy of The Bulletin every Friday for your chance to WIN! *Any Friday GO! MAGAZINE can hold a winning ticket! Winners receive two concert tickets. Golden Tickets must be redeemed a minimum of seven days prior to the concert printed on theGolden Ticket.Golden Tickets are only good during the 2015 Concertseries.Golden Tickets must be redeemed at the Ticket Mill in the Old Mill District, Mon-Sat 10-6, Sun 11-5. Original Golden Ticketmustbe presented.Golden Tickets have no cash value.

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