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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
LES SCHWAB AMPHITHEATER
IN SALEM
Northwest Travel — In the Channel Islands, nature's beauty and cruelty are both on display.B1 FOOd 'CluSterS' —Central Oregon food-makers team up forsuccess.F1
Marriage pioneersThese two mentied the knot in 1971 — legally (sort of).A5
an
Reunlen —Twosisters, raised separately, find each other in a story that's stranger than fiction.A9
e us i e s e a r e
By Jasmine Rockow
T
"Entourage" movie will land in a transformed Hollywood. beutibullutiu.cumlextrus
his year marks the Les
Schwab Amphitheater's biggest concert line-
up to date — the result of S
economic boon for Cen-
SALEM — Gov. Kate Brown and other political
Ifthefunds areapproved, Oregonwould create aprogram involving state-ownership of as many as 4,000 newhousingunits that developers wouldbuildusingmoney from the Oregon Housing and Community Services agency. The state
tralOregon, and Bend in particular. Meanwhile, the amphitheater has
The search for a better school can lead to jail
The Bulletin
realities and concerns about whether nowis the time for that kind of investment.
a rapidly changing music industry that could be an
EDITOR'SCHOICE
By Taylor W.Anderson
forces in Oregon are standingbehind alandmark request for $100million for new affordable housing that will face off againstbudget
The Bulletin
And a Wed exclusive-
$100M for affordable housing is soon to be considered
pared down the number of free Sunday concerts
f
and infused the lineup
with more localbands. The amphitheater has
tiII
'll
15 ticketed concerts on
its 2015 summer roster. Big names include Robert Plant, The Doobie Broth-
ers, Willie Nelson and Alison Krauss, Sheryl Crow and a double dose of the jam
Back formoire in 2015
wouldn't act as landlord, the
< Willie Nelson,A Sheryl Crow and YThe Doobie Brothers are all returning to the Les SchwabAmphitheater stage this summer.Full schedule iusitie
own theunits and work
Bulletin file photos
band Phish.
agency says, but it would with developers whobuild them and contractors that
manage them. SeeHousing/A6
Most years the amphitheater
By Kyle Spencer
has shown between eight and 10 ticketed concerts, with a low of six in 2009 and a high of 12
The Hechinger Report
SAN FRANCISCO
— Just over a year ago,
in 2008. Thisyear's roster
Hamlet Garcia climbed
has 15 shows booked,
up the steps of a stately
almost double what the venue showed the
courthouse in Norristown,
Pennsylvania, wondering how much longer he would
past two years.
be free.
not so much a decision made by am-
T he boost
The Philadelphia resident and his wife, Olesia,
was
p hitheater staff
or
its booking company, Portland-based Monqui
an insurance agent, were
about to go on trial for theft of services, an offense usuallyreserved forcableservice pilferers and restaurant bill dodgers. Their alleged crime: stealing an education for their 8-yearold daughter, Fiorella.
Presents, but th e
By Catherine Saint Louis New York TimesNews Service
After nearly 20 years on
r esult
of bands simply needing to make more money. SeeActs/A6
AVERAGEATTENDANCE
Big-nameconcerts hoost Bend amphitheater
1 5----- - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - -
bars. 12--
SeeSchool /A4
The Les SchwabAmphitheater will host15 big-name concerts this summer — the most in the venue's 13-year history. Hard hit by the recession, the amphitheater held only six concerts in 2009 but has steadily ramped up bookings. Visit Bend credits the amphitheater with being one of the region's largest tourism drivers.
TODAY'S WEATHER Spotty t-storms High 68, Low41 PuguB8
0
INDEX
The Bulletin
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol.113, No. 137,
54 pages, 7 sections
Source: Les Schwab Amphitheater
*In 2013, eightconcerts were scheduled
Graphics: Pete Smith t The Bulletin
5,000people.--DaveMatthewsandJack 4ppp Johnsondrewtarftecrowds.
: 'IIIIIIIIIII I
7
nessee, has seen his share of marijuana seizuresdry green buds stashed in trunks or beneath seats, often double-bagged to smother the distinctive
scent. But these days, Jeffries
is on the lookout for something unexpected: lollipops and marshmallows. Re-
cently his officers pulled
3,000--
over a Chevy Blazer driven 2,000-
by a couple with three children in tow. Inside, the offi-
-
cers discovered 24pounds
1,000-'09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14
of marijuana-laced cookies and candies, plus a tub of pungent marijuanabutter perfect for making more. See Edibles/A7
How massivewildfires contribute to global warming By Chris Mooney
they go up in flames — and
The Washington Post
experts forecast a verybad
The state of California, al-
Q I/I/e use recyc/ed newsprint
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0
'09 '10 '11 '12 '13* '14 '15
— Locals — Other Oregonfans — Ont-of-staters Tot a l
butonlyseven wereconducted.
Business E1-6 Milestones D2 Calendar B2 Obituaries 86-7 Classified G1-6 Opinion Ff-6 C om. Life D1-8 Puzzles D 6 Crossword D6G2 Sports C1-10 Local/State B1-8 TV/Movies DB
o
the job, Jim Jeffries, the police chief in LaFollette, Ten-
CONCERTS PERYEAR
He was staring at pos-
sibly seven years behind
bb
Edible pot is new test for police
ways bullish on trying to cut back on its greenhouse gas emissions, received abit of a shock recently. It learned that the expanse of its droughtparched forested lands, when
fire season this year — may actuallybe contributing to global warming. A2006 law mandated that
California would bring its emissions back down to 1990
levels by the year 2020. The
Inside • More on the drought: water that goes from toilet to tap,F1
But a study released last
occurring largely in areas
month by researchers from
burned by wildfire." And that
the National Park Service, the University of California,
helped drive the state's ecosystems to contribute "as much as
target, though, assumed that
Berkeley, and several other
five to seven percent of state
the state's forests — packed with carbon, stored in its biological form — wouldn't contribute any net emissions.
institutions suggests that's not a safe assumption. From 2001
carbon emissions," having lost
to 2010, it found, the state had
seen "a carbon stock decrease
some 69 million metric tons of carbon over the time period. SeeWildfires/A7
A2
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• . i saseniol samic a e ea By Helene Cooper and Eric Schmitt New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Ameri-
can Special Operations forces mounted a rare raid into eastern Syria e arly
S atur-
day, killing a senior leader of the Islamic State and about
State has been advancing in the Iraqi city of Ramadi,
they found Abu Sayyaf and
remains very fluid. Yet the Pentagon's description of a nighttime raid
ity in Iraq, officials said. The raid came after weeks of surveillance of Abu Sayyaf, using information gleaned from a small but growing net-
h is wife, k nown a s U m m demonstrating that the fight Sayyaf, in a room together. against the Sunni m i l itant His spouse was captured and group in both Iraq and Syria later moved to a military facil-
that found its intended target
deep inside Syria without well as capturing his wife and any American troops being freeing an 18-year old Yazidi wounded or killed illustrates woman whom Pentagon offinot only the effectiveness of cials said had been held as a the Delta Force, but also of slave. improving U.S. intelligence In the first successful raids on shadowy Islamic State by U.S. ground troops since leaders. the military campaign against A D e f ense D e partment the Islamic State began last official said Islamic State year, two dozen Delta Force fighters who defended their commandos entered Syr- building and Abu Sayaff tried i a aboard Black Hawk h e to use women and children licopters and V-22 Ospreys as shields, but that the Dela dozen militant fighters, as
and killed the leader, a man
ta Force commandoes "used
work of informants whom the
CIA and the Pentagon have painstakingly developed in Syria, as well as satellite im-
agery, drone reconnaissance and electronic eavesdropping, American officials said. The
White House rejected initial reports from the region that
cessful, comes as the Islamic
DEPARTMENT HEADS
entered the building where
of President Bashar Assad of Syria. "The U.S. government did not coordinate with the Syrian regime, nor did we advise
known as ISIS.
PROTESTS IN GUATEMALA
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
Moises Castillo/The AssociatedPress
Protesters gather outside the National Palaceto demand the resignation of Guatemalan President Otto Perez Molina in GuatemalaCity, on Saturday. The protest comesafter PerezMolina's Vice President, RoxanaBaldetti, resigned earlier this month amid a corruption scandal involving what prosecutors
al and glass cage built in the the court system. New York Times News Service courtroom. Some of his co-deHours after the verdict was CAIRO — A n E gyptian fendants, induding other senior issued, three Egyptian judges court on Saturday sentenced Brotherhood leaders, also ap- werekilledby gunmen on abus to death the deposed presi- peared in the cage. in the Sinai Peninsula. Egypt dent, Mohammed Morsi of the In a sonorous tone, el-Shami has been shaken by an upsurge Muslim Brotherhood, along read a list, spanning three pag- in attacks by insurgents in Siwith more than 100 others, for es,ofthose sentenced to death. nai since Morsi was deposed by fleeing prison during the 2011 His pronouncement set off the military in 2013. It was not revolt against former President cries of "Allahu akbar!" (God immediately clear whether SatHosni Mubarak. is great) from the prisoners. As urday's attack was connected M orsi's conviction i s
t h e the session ended, the prison-
latest sign of the undoing of the uprising that overthrew M ubarak. Morsi, wh o
The estimated jackpot is now $3.8 million.
ers waved and chanted "Down
with military rule!" was Before they can be carried
Egypt's first freely elected lead- out, the death sentences must er, now faces the death penalty be approved by Egypt's top for escaping extralegal deten- Sunni Muslim religious aution — a form of detention that thority, the grand mufti, who many Egyptianshoped would is scheduled to make a ruling
moud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian Authority, as an"angel of peace" during a meeting at theVatican on Saturday. TheVatican also expressed hopethat Israel and the Palestinians would resume talks "to find a just and lasting solution to the conflict" that has roiled the Middle East for decades.Theencounter came days after the Vatican announced that it would sign a treaty recognizing the "state of Palestine," tacitly endorsing the Palestinians' bid for sovereignty.
Online
bendbulletin.com
to the verdict against Morsi.
The caseagainstMorsi centers on a prison break that took
place at the peak of the revolt against Mubarak. Morsi and other Brotherhood officials
had beendetained,taken from their homes or from street
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protests, along with many oth-
by June 2. The convictions are er Egyptians swept up in the If carried out, the sentence also subject to appeal through turmoil.
be eliminated by the revolution. could make Morsi a martyr to
millions of Islamists in Egypt and around the world. In a statement about the sentencCabinet minister under Morsi,
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allege was amultimillion-dollar scheme in which bribes were paid to avoid customs duties on imports. Baldetti's private secretary is being singled out by authorities as the alleged ringleader of the scheme, but Baldetti has not beencharged and denies any involvement.
By Jared Malsin
040aeO as 0 4sgsa@ The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
Yemen fighting —Fighting was underway Saturday in multiple Yemeni provinces on thefourth day of a humanitarian truce between a Saudi-led coalition and Shiite rebels, security and tribal officials said. The five-day truce hasbeen repeatedly violated, with each side blaming the other. Theofficials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they werenot authorized to brief journalists, reported fierce fighting Saturday in the southern city of Aden, thewestern city of Taiz and the province of Marib. Medical andsecurity officials say three civilians were killed in Aden bymortar shells during an exchange of fire. Two civilians were killed and three others werewounded in clashes in Taiz, officials said. Saleh al-Anjaf, a spokesmanfor an anti-Houthi tribal alliance in the northern Marib province, said hundreds of fighters loyal to the Houthis and their allies havearrived in the area as reinforcements, as heavy fighting continued with local tribesmen.
Egyptian court sentencesousted Find It Islamist president Morsi to death All
ing, Amr Darrag, a Muslim Brotherhood leader who was a
MEGABUCKS
Kerry in China —China's top diplomat, emerging from talks in Beijing with Secretary of State JohnKerry, suggested Saturday that China had nointention of scaling back island-building efforts in the South ChinaSeathat haveaggravated tensions in waters claimed by a number of neighboring governments. At anews conference, Foreign Minister Wang Yisaid Chineseclaims over a collection of uninhabited reefs off the coast of the Philippines were "unshakable," suggesting that Kerry's messagethat China help reducetensions in the region had fallen on deafears.
— From wire reports
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare: The estimated jackpot is now $121 million.
NePal heliCOPter CraSh —Eight bodies were found at the site of the crash of a U.S.Marine helicopter that disappeared in Nepalwhile assisting earthquake relief efforts, the Nepalese army said Saturday evening. Six Marines andtwo Nepalese soldiers were aboard the UH-1 Hueywhen it lost radio contact Tuesday after a 7.3 magnitude earthquake, the worst aftershock since theApril 25 quake that killed more than 8,000 people. Thenamesof the Marines andthe Nepalese soldiers were not released.
PaleStinian leader at VatiCan —PopeFrancis praisedMah-
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Targeting CliittOh —For months now, a conservative group called America Rising hassent out a steady stream of posts on social media attacking Hillary RodhamClinton, some of them specifically designed to bespotted — and shared — by liberals. The posts highlight critiques of her connections to Wall Street and theClinton Foundation and feature images of Democrats like Sen.Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Mayor Bill de Blasio of NewYork. America Rising is not the only conservative group attacking Clinton from the left. Another is American Crossroads, the group started by Karl Rove,which has been sending out its own digital content.
RIISSiail IOCkOt CISSll —A Russian-made rocket ferrying a Mexican telecommunications satellite crashed in eastern Siberia minutes after its launching Saturday, Russian newsagencies reported, citing officials at the country's spaceagency.The Proton-M rocket was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome inKazakhstan at11:47 a.m. and crashed in theChita region of Siberia. Thefailure appeared to have occurred with the rocket's third stage, which was intended to take the satellite to analtitude of about110 miles. Thestream of telemetry data sent back bythe rocket failed about a minute before the satellite was to enter orbit, news agencies reported.
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BOStOll FOOCiiOh —Since bombs went off two years ago, all of Boston has claimedthe finish line of the Boston Marathon on Boylston Street as asymbol of how this city came together in the aftermath to tend to the deadandthe maimed; it came to represent the city's resilience. But since afederal jury on Friday sentenced theconvicted bomber to death, the marathon's finish line suddenly seems to be a place of ambivalence. Tomany, the death sentencealmost feels like a blot on the city's collective consciousness: Bostonians overwhelminglyopposedcondemningthebomber,DzhokharTsarnaev,todeath.
attributed the raid to forces
known as Abu Sayyaf. One very precise fire" and "sepU.S. military official d e- arated the women and chil- them in advance of this operscribed him as th e I slamic dren." The official said the op- ation," said Bernadette MeeState's "emir of oil and gas." eration involved close "hand- han, the National Security Even so, Abu Sayyaf is a to-hand fighting." (The ac- Council spokeswoman. "We midlevel leader in the orga- counts of the raid came from have warned the Assad renization — one terror analyst military an d g o vernment gime not to interfere with our compared him to Al Capone's officials and could not be im- ongoing efforts against ISIL accountant — and likely is re- mediately verified through in- inside of Syria," she added, placeable in fairly short order. dependentsources.) using another name for the And the operation, while sucThe U.S. forces eventually Islamic State, which is also
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TrainS 'rOCked' —Federal andrailway officials say being struck by rocks, bricks andeven bullets is a longstanding problem for trains in the country's rail systems.Getting "rocked," as locomotive engineers call it, is so common onthe Northeast Corridor that trains long had metal grills over their windshields to act asarmor and nowthick glass is specifically designed towithstand the impact of a cinder block. Investigators havenot assigned acausefor thecrash of Amtrak's Northeast Regional Train188, but areexamining the possibility that a flying object hit the train before it lurched off the rails Tuesdaynear Philadelphia.
said it was "one of the darkest days of Egyptian history" and a symbol "of the dark shadow of authoritarianism that is now
cast back over Egypt." Judge Shaaban el-Shami issued the ruling in a courtroom in a converted auditorium on the grounds of a police academy on the outskirts of Cairo. Morsi, wearing a blue prison uniform, stood inside a met-
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, May17, the 137th
day of 2015. Thereare228 days left in the year.
Study shows a livestock programcan help thepoor
SCIENCE
HAPPENINGS NeW SaintS — Twonuns who lived in what wasthen Ottoman-ruled Palestine in the 19th century will be canonized by the RomanCatholic Church, the first from the region to receive the honor since theearly days of Christianity.
•
•
By Malcolm Ritter The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The very
HISTORY Highlight:In1875, the first Kentucky Derby was run; the winner was Aristides, ridden by Oliver Lewis. In1792,the NewYork Stock Exchange hadits origins as a group of brokers met under a tree on Wall Street. In1814, Norway's constitution was signed, providing for a limited monarchy. In1912, the Socialist Party of America nominated Eugene Debs for president at its convention in Indianapolis. In1939,Britain's King George Vl and his wife, QueenElizabeth, arrived in Quebec onthe first visit to Canada by areigning British monarch. In1940, the Nazis occupied Brussels, Belgium, during World War II. In1954, the U.S.Supreme Court, in Brown v. Boardof Education of Topeka, unanimously struckdownracially segregated public schools. In1961,Cuban leader Fidel Castro offered to release prisoners captured in the Bayof Pigs invasion in exchangefor 500 bulldozers. (The prisoners were eventually freed in exchange for medical supplies.) In1973,a special committee convened by theU.S.Senate began its televised hearings into the Watergate scandal. In1980, rioting that claimed18 lives erupted in Miami's Liberty City after an all-white jury in Tampa acquitted four former Miami police officers of fatally beating black insuranceexecutive Arthur McDuffie. In1987, 37 American sailors were killed when anIraqi warplane attacked the U.S.Navy frigate Stark in the Persian Gulf. (Iraq apologized for the attack, calling it a mistake, and paid more than $27 million in compensation.) In1995, JacquesChirac was sworn in as president of France, ending the14-year tenure of Socialist Francois Mitterrand. In2004, Massachusetts became the first state to allow legal same-sex marriages. Ten years ago:British lawmaker GeorgeGalloway denounced U.S.senators in testimony on Capitol Hill, denying accusations that he'd profited from the U.N.oil-for-food program andaccusing them of unfairly tarnishing his name. Five yearsago:The Supreme Court ruled, 5-4, that young people serving life prison termsshould have"ameaningful opportunity to obtain release" provided they didn't kill their victims.
Oneyear ago:Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper signed a "Right To Try" bill allowing terminally ill patients to obtain experimental drugs without getting federal approval.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Peter Gerety is 75. Singer Taj Mahal is 73. Rock musician Bill Bruford is 66. Singer-musician GeorgeJohnson (The Brothers Johnson) is 62. TV personality Kathleen Sullivan is 62. Actor Bill Paxton is 60. Boxing Hall of Famer Sugar RayLeonard is 59. Actor-comedian BobSaget is 59. Singer Enya is 54. Actor Craig Ferguson is 53. Rock singer-musician PageMcConnell is 52. Singer-musician Trent Reznor is 50. Actress Paige Turco is 50. Actor Hill Harper is 49. TVpersonality/ interior designer ThomFilicia is 46. Singer Jordan Knight is 45. Singer Kandi Burruss is 39. Actress Kat Foster is 37. Actress Ginger Gonzaga is 32. Folk-rock singer/songwriter Passenger is 31. Dancer-choreographer Derek Hough is 30. Actor Tahj Mowry is 29. Actress Nikki Reed is 27. — From wire reports
poorest of the poor can be helped with a program that includes providing goats, sheep, chickens or other livestock and training in
Jennifer Doudna helped discover a relatively easy way to alter any organism's DNA, but now she is embroiled in a patent fight over the revolutionary technique.
how to make money from
them, a large six-nation study concludes.
By Andrew Pollack New York Times News Service
That a p proach
BERKELEY, Calif. — As
d i dn't
wipe out poverty for participants, but they became "significantly less poor," said economist Dean Karlan of
a child in Hilo, one of the less touristy parts of Hawaii, Jenni-
fer Doudna felt out of place. She had blond hair and blue eyes,
Yale University and the nonprofit Innovations for Poverty Action.
and she was taller than the
other kids, who were mostly of Polynesian and Asian descent.
Karlan and colleagues
"I think to them I looked like
conducted an independent
a freak,"she recently recalled. "And I felt like a freak."
evaluation of the anti-poverty strategy, which is widely used in Bangladesh, to see
Her i solation c ontributed
to a kind of bookishness that propelledher toward science. Her upbringing "toughened her up," said her husband, Jamie Cate. "She can handle a lot of pressure." These days, that talent is be-
if it would work in a variety of settings. Their review included more than 10,000
households in
ingput to the test.
were published Thursday by the journal Science. The assessment focused on the poorest within vil-
Matt Edge Irhe New York Times
Three years ago, Doudna, Jennifer Doudna, a biochemist, at the University of California, Berkeley, on May 8. She helped discova biochemist at the University er an easy way to alter an organism's DNA. of California, Berkeley, helped
lages. About half the households had i n comes that
make one of the most monu-
mental discoveries in biology: a A'dumbstruck'moment relatively easy way to alter any Doudna was 7 when she organism's DNA, just as a com- moved to Hilo, where her faputerusercan editaword in a ther taught literature at the document. University of Hawaii campus The discovery has turned there, and her mother lectured Doudna into a celebrity of sorts, on history at a community the recipient of numerous acco- college. Their daughter loved ladesand prizes.The so-called exploring the rain forests and CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing was fascinated by how things technique is already widely worked. She found her calling used in laboratory studies, and in high school after hearing a scientists hope it may one day lecture by a scientist about her help rewrite flawed genes in research into how normal cells people, opening tremendous became cancerous. "I was just dumbstruck," new possibilities for treating, even curing, diseases. Doudna recalled. "I wanted to But now Doudna, 51, is bat-
tling on two fronts to control what she helped create.
ents, Doudna began hearing thing I ever worked on," she reports that researchers were
translate to earning less than $1.25 per person a day
sald.
inthe United States.
is probably the most obscure
trying to use CRISPR-Cas9 to
It would prove to have wide make inheritable DNA changuse. At a conference in ear- es in embryos. Genetically ly 2011, she met Emmanuelle altered monkeys had already Charpentier, a French micro- been created in China using the biologist at Umea University technique. "It's very far afield from the in Sweden, who had already made some fundamental dis- kind of chemistry I think about coveries about the relatively and know about," she said. Still, simple Crispr system in one she felt it would be irresponsible bacterial species. to ignore the rumors. The bacterial expert and the She organized a meeting of structural biologist decided to leading biologists in Napa, Calwork together. ifornia, in January. In a subse"It was very enjoyable, be- quent commentary publi shed beher." cause we were complementa- in Science, the group called for After studying biochemis- ry," said Charpentier, who re- a moratorium on attempts to try at Pomona College in Cal- called sitting in her office near create altered babies, though
Key components of the programs include providing assets like livestock and training in how to manage them, a regular stipend to
provide basic support, and encouragement to s a ve money. To evaluate the program, the study randomly assigned eligible households to either participate or not, and thencompared the outcomes for the two groups
over threeyears. Most of the program's activity was in the first few months. At th e t w o-year
While everyone welcomes ifornia, she went to Harvard the North Pole while Doudna they said basic research on inCRISPR-Cas9 as a strategy to for graduate school. There her regaled her with stories about heritable changes should stillbe treat disease, many scientists
adviser, the future Nobel laureate Jack Szostak, was doing
are worried that it could also be used to alter genes in hu- research on RNA. Some sciman embryos, sperm or eggs in entists believe that RNA, not ways that can be passed from DNA, was the basis of early generation to generation. The life, sincethe molecule canboth prospectraises fears ofa dysto-
store genetic information and
Hawaii. Along with postdoctoral re-
searchers Martin Jinek and Krzysztof Chylinski, the two
theory. But her inability to visualize this catalytic RNA hin-
ready used the technique in an dered her work. attempt to change genes in huSo as a p o stdoctoral rem an embryos, though on defec- searcher in Colorado, she detive embryos and without real cided to try to determine the success. t hree-dimensional atom i c Doudna has been organiz- structure of RNA using X-ray ing the scientific community diffraction — and succeeded, to prevent this ethical line though she had had no forfrom beingcrossed."The idea mal training in the technique. that you would affect evolu- Structural and biochemical tion is a very profound thing," studies of RNA in action have she said. beenher forte ever since. She is also fighting for conIn 2000, while on the facultrol of what could be hugely ty at Yale, she won the Alan T. lucrative intellectual property Waterman Award, given each rights to the genome editing year by the National Science technique. To the surprise of Foundation to an exceptional many, the first sweeping pat- young scientist. She moved to ents for the technology were Berkeley in 2002. granted not to her, but to Feng In 2005, Doudna was apZhang, a scientist at the Broad proached by Jillian Banfield, Institute and MIT.
an environmental researcher
The University of California at Berkeley who had been seis challenging the decision, and quencing the DNA of unusual the nasty skirmish has cast a microbes that lived in a highly bit of apall over the field. acidic abandoned mine. In the "I really want to see this tech- genomes of many of these minology used to help people," crobes were unusual repeating Doudna said. "It would be a sequences called "dustered shame if the I.P. situation would regularly interspaced short palblockthat."
The development of the CRISPR-Cas9 technique is a
Doudna said it was not practical to prohibit basic research. "You can't really put a lid on it,
even if you wanted to," she said. how two pieces of RNA join up She and others are trying to with a protein made by the bac- organize a bigger international teria called Cas9 to cut DNA at meeting with participants from a speci fi cspot.Theresearchers companiesand governments as
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
well as universities, possibly to
set new guidelines.
Connect Hearing
In a eureka moment, the scientists realized that this cel-
lular defense system might be used to edit genomes, not just kill viruses.
A specifi c sequence ofguide RNA could be made to attach
to a spot virtually anywhere on the genome, and the Cas9
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protein would cleave the DNA at that spot. Then pieces of the
DNA could be deleted or added, just as a film editor might cut a
film and splice in new frames. The researchers demonstrated this using DNA in atest tube.
While there were other genome editing techniques, they found that CRISPR-Cas9 was much
simpler. The paper describing the technique, published by the journal Science in June 2012, set off a race to see if it would work in human, plant and ani-
mal cells. Doudna, whose expertise was in working with molecules, not cells, reported such a demonstration in human cells in January 2013. But her report
came four weeks after two papers were published simultaneNo one was quite sure what ously, one by George Church at they did, though over the next Harvard and the other by the indromic repeats," or CRISPR.
story in which obscure basic few years scientists elsewhere Broad Institute's Zhang. biological research turned out established that these sequencfight to have huge practical implica- es were part of a bacterial im- The patent tions. For Doudna, though, it is
mark, when the program ended, the participating group was doing better across a wide range of measures.
done.
scientists eventuallyfigured out
pian future in which scientists catalyze chemical reactions. create an elite population of Doudna earned her doctoral designer babies with enhanced degree by engineering a cata- also found that the two RNA intelligence, beauty or other lytic RNA that could self-rep- pieces could be combined into traits. licate, adding evidence to that one and still function. Scientists in China reported last month that they had al-
E t hiopia,
Ghana, Honduras, India, Pakistan and Peru. Results
mune system. Between the re-
only one accomplishment in a peated sequences were stretchstellar career. es of DNA taken from viruses "She's been a high-impact that had previously infected the scientist from the time she bacteria — genetic most-wantwas a graduate student," said ed posters, so to speak. Thomas Cech, a Nobel laureate If the same virus invaded and professor of chemistry and again, these stretches of DNA biochemistry at the University would permit the bacteria to of Colorado, for whom Doudna recognize it and destroy it by was a postdoctoral researcher. slicing up its genetic material. "New topics, new fields of sci- Doudna was trying to figure ence, but she just has a knack out exactly how this happened. "I remember thinking this for discovery."
Now the University of California and the Broad Institute
are arguingbefore the federal patent office over whether Doudna or Zhang, who last year received the Waterman
Award for young scientists that Doudna had won years earlier, was the first to invent the ge-
nome editing technique. So far, the patents have gone to Zhang. Even before the dust settles,
researchers are moving ahead. While contending with the pat-
II
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A4
TH E BULLETiN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
School
suspected of living in another
Continued from A1
the girl lived near the school
town. It was later discovered
Garcia, who came to th e
United States from Cuba
i n t h e home of her mother's
e mployers. She was allowed
when he was 18, remembers t o
s tay in the district school,
rom ia
um erstic ersto an i — 0 s,cam ai nswa iesu
thinking one thing as h e a f ter her mother agreed to headed into the courthouse: make the couple she worked "This isn't the kind of thing f or official caregivers. that happens in America." In Beverly Hills, California, Their case is one of a hand- where officials say they deal
By Lisa Mascaro
ful in recent years in which
Tribune Washington Bureau
w i t h a t l east one confirmed
f amilies living in d istricts e nrollment fraud case a with failing schools have m onth, the school board last been accused of "stealing an summer voted to enact a meaeducation." Some have been sure to impose fines of $150 a heavily fined for lying about day or up to $14,000 a year on where they live on official dis- families who seek entry with trict documents. Others have forged leases or utility bills. been criminally charged and, Bo s to n p u b li c s c hools in some cases, jailed. maintain an anonymous tip Such draconian measures line forparents to expose are helping to popularize a s tudents they suspect are new term: "education theft."
l y i n g about where they live.
There havebeen no defini- And the Bayonne school t ive reports on the number
d i s t r ict, i n n o r t h ern N e w
stand for something bigger than all of us ... liberty," the site says about the candidate's clothing line. Not everyone welcomes
W ASHINGTON — A s
Republican p r esidential hopeful Rand Paul travels the country asking crowds to help him "defeat the Washington machine," his campaign's website is delivering the same message in a decidedly American way: hawking gear and collectibles that allow supporters of the libertarian-leaning
the "Rand" brand, however. When it was stamped on $150
Ray-Ban Wayfarer sunglasses — touted on the site as the "intersection of politics and
cool" — the eyewear company objected and the shades are no
longer offered, according to the Hill newspaper.
candidate to express their political views with a credit
Other candidates have been
of school districts cracking J ersey, promises parents a down on enrollment fraud, $200 bounty when they probut civil rights groups and v id e c r edible i nformation
card and a mouse click.
education activists say anec-
T-shirt, in yellow cotton, stamped with the image of a black unmanned aerial Online campaign stores vehicle. "A classic for any are not necessarily big monRand Paul supporter," the eymakers, party officials acsite's online store gushes. knowledge, but they provide a Or you can shell out $100 decent revenue stream as well for the beanbag toss game. as the emailaddresses of ar"Have fun, make a differ- dent supporters, which can be ence," the product descrip- helpful for future fundraising tion says. appeals. There's even a Hillary Perhaps most important, Clinton-inspired computer the online shops provide dishard drive, which mocks tinctive new ways to market the recent flap over the the candidates, attract volformer secretary of State's unteers and donors and fos-
t h a t leads to a student being
dotal evidence suggests these kicked out. practices may be on the rise. Jimm i e Mesis, the found"I'm hearing about it more er of VerifyResidence.com, and more every year," said a N e w J e rsey-based priGloria Romero, a f o rmer v ate investigating firm that California state senator and l aunchedlocallyin2000,says founder of the California Cen- he has expanded across the ter for Parent Empowerment.
c o u n try and now works with
The examples are many. morethan 200 districtson enA nd w h il e p e r rollment issues and haps extreme, they residency fraud. are worrying civ- "WtlBt'S Parent rights oril rights activists, (y pIIbjIIIg I Ip~ g a n i zations t h a t parent a d vocacy . <j l seek to protect par~P <j ents f rom discrimigroups and some local po l i ticians tf I BP 6IStl'ICPS na t ory actions say who say strict en- BIg IIyijjjgg gp they are increasingly finding themforcement s t r a te~ U gies unfairly affect ~ selves advocating poor families of reS i d e nCy f or pare n ts w h o color, who cannot pf f j C gIS have been targeted and — insomecaseasilypaytheirway " j es — harassed by out of trouble by refunding the value eV er, Bnd school districts that of their children's ~Q jS pyBCgjCg a r e cracking down. In Mic h igan, allegedly s t o l en ~8 pare n t s c onvicted schooling. Jonah Edelman, fB ml j16S of providing false the CEO of Stand /jkg $Qgy'yg docu m ents to satisfor Children, a nafy student residentional e d ucation"PbbBd B cy r e quirements advocacy g r oup, kl BAk. Ik tlBS can b e j a i led for says that his group Q~CpiTI~ ~Q~ up t o 2 0 days. In does not condone Washington, D.C., " P ~ " ~B ~ t h ey can get up to parents breaking the law. t hem like 90 day s f or pro"But the r eal Cp j TI jIIBlS " viding false doccrime, which needs u mentations, a n d to be prosecuted, — Gwen Samuel, in Oklahoma, the is the glaring ineq-
found e r of the s entence can be up
uity in the quality of schools in ric h areas versus poor
Connecticut to a year. Pare nts Union "It's a 'gotcha' thing," said Gwen Samuel, the found-
F or $25, there i s t h e " Don't Drone M e , B r o "
Andrew Harrer / Bloomberg News file photo
"i'm Ready for Hillary" mouse pads sit on a shelf at the Ready For
ter alternative forms of civic
ed-edition $99.95 drive is described as a "100% genuine erased clean email server. ... Buyer beware, this product has had heavy use and it currently is no longer working." Forget old-fashioned buttons and lawn signs. These days, political campaigns are tapping into Americans' seemingly endless appetite to shop online.
engagement. "It is a way to, literally, show y our support ... t o t ell t h e
world — the people who see you on yourdail y commute, who get behind your car on the freeway — what you believe in," said Matt Compton, digital director at the DNC,
whose website sells $5bumper stickers reading: "Like this Road? Thank a Democrat."
Some dismiss the trend to-
H ate Tea ward swag as a form of "slack(Parties)" travel mug ($30) tivism" — lazy activism that From the " I
sold by the Democratic
gives Internet users a sense of
National Committee to the
political participation without
Republican National Com- the trouble of actually knockmittee's nostalgic replica of ing on doors for a candidate or former Vice President Dick attending a rally. Cheney's cowboy hat ($72), But according to Compton, the race is on to cash in, buying politically t hemed commercially and political- merchandise is sometimes the ly, on the 2016 presidential first step toward greater politcampaign. ical involvement. "When you
Ted Cruz, the Texas Re-
publican senator, was dinged for showing up at campaign
Hillary PAC headquarters store in Arlington, Virginia, last year.
deleted emails. The limit-
slower to embrace the merchandising trend.
events without so much as
signs or flags for the crowd to wave, and his recently opened a Democratic tote bag ... it online shop carries mainly becomes a natural thing to fol- standardpoliticalfare — shirts, low up on that with volunteer- hats, mugs and a bumper sticking on a campaign or giving to er that reads, "This vehicle a cause you support." makes right turns only." The Political memorabilia has bumper sticker, for $10, is in long been a m ainstay of such demand that the store American campaigning, with asks shoppers to "allow extra the Teddy Roosevelt "Rough time for delivery." Rider" campaign button, the Democratic candidate Clinre-elect Eisenhower 1956 pot- ton is expected to launch an holder and the "I Stand With online store by the end of the Rand" flip-flops of today. month. Until then, supporters When he was a candidate, can receive a free, limited-ediPresident Barack O b ama's tion "I (heart) H" bumper image, as depicted by artist sticker only if they're on her Shepard Fairey, became an email list. icon of its own, launching a Sen. Marco Rubio's team generation of copycats. The says his online shop also will Smithsonian houses an entire be ready soon. In the meancollection of campaign mem- time the campaign offered orabilia at the National Muse- a special one-day-only sale um of American History. of stickers and T-shirts as a But the rise of cybershop- chance for supporters to show ping has given the candidates they were with him when he a fresh way to compete for announced his campaign last take the time to wear a Democratic Party button or carry
new voters and raise a little
cash. Paul's humorous offerings speak to the candidate's renegade spirit, including the top-selling National Security Agency "spy-cam blocker"which is little more than an adhesive strip that covers the
month. The Florida senator's politi-
cal action committee, Reclaim America PAC, until recently
sold bottled water at $25 a pop — a self-effacing nod to the senator's awkward reach for
a sip of water as he delivered the official GOP 2013 tele-
built-in cameras on laptops. vised response to the State of "When you wear the Rand the Union speech. The bottles Brand, you look good and quickly sold out.
ones," he said. In the case of the Garcias, e r of the Connecticut Parents
the father says that during U n ion, which has helped to the 2011-12 school year, his supportahandfulof families wifeanddaughterspentnine t hat have been criminally months during a marital sep- charged for enrollment fraud aration living with his wife's and other related offenses. father in Lower Moreland, a "What's troubling now is the quaint, suburban township l ength that districts are willof rolling hills and stone colo- ing to go. You see residency nials. His daughter attended officers more than ever, and the district's much-sought-af- this practice of treating famterelementaryschool, where ilies like they've robbed a she read p icture books, b a nk. It has become the norm learned th e a l p habet an d to t r eat them like criminals." W illiams-Bolar, th e A k made friends.
Thelocaldistrictattorney's ron special education aide office contends Garcia and c onvicted of records tamperhis wife were never truly sep- ing, says often families can arated and that they always avoid fines if they take their lived in neighboring north- c h ild out of the out-of-district west Philadelphia, where s chool right away. She advismany o f
t h e s c h ools ar e e st hem to do that and then to
struggling, and lied to gain s eek out charter schools, hoentry into the Lower More- meschooling options or magnet schools. But sometimes land schools. They "essentially stole n one of those are possible, from every h ard-working and families end up back in taxpayer who resides within t h eir low-performing neighthe Lower Moreland School borhoodschools. District," Montgomery County District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman told reporters. The couple entered into a
A 201 0 C alifornia law aut h o red by Romero when she
was a state senator permits
pa r e nts of s t udents attend-
plea bargain last year, agree- ing one of a thousand Caliing to pay nearly $11,000 in fornia schools identified as back tuition in exchange for poor-performing to transfer no charges against Olesia t heir children into higher Garcia and a reduced charge quality schools anywhere in and fine for her husband. Le-
t h e state, if there is space.
gal fees ran about $70,000. C a l i fornia's D epartment They are hoping to send their of Education does not keep daughtertoaprivateschool. t r a c k o f how many famiIn 2 011, K elley W i l - li e s make use of the law, liams-Bolar, a special educa- but Romero says many par-
t ion aide in Akron, Ohio, was e n t s a ren't aware of i t . "A convicted of r e c ords t am - l o t o f parents think they are
pering and spent nine days in jail for sending her two daughters to a school in the high-performing school district where her father lived. Thatsameyear, TanyaMcDowell, a homeless mother in Bridgeport, Connecticut, was arrested for sending her 5-year-old son to a Norwalk school. And in 2009, Yolanda
t rapped in these zones," she s a id. Aro u n d the country, parent groups are fighting back: by p u blicizing the cases, lobbying against jail time and arguing that school residency laws are unconstitutional because they discriminate a g ainst parents in struggling
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s c h ool districts.
Hill, a Rochester, New York, Sc h ool and county officials mother, was charged with c o ntend that they are protecttwo felonies after enrolling i n g taxpayersfromthieves. her children in a nearby subB u t Ryan Smith, the executive director of The Education urban district. This w i nter, t h e
ENERGY COSTS TOO HIGH'? TRY LOOKING AT IT IN A DIFFERENT LIGHT.
s c hool T r u s t-West, a foundation that
district in Orinda, Califor- f o cuses on improving schools nia, a wealthy enclave near i n p oor communities, said, San Francisco, made nation- "The real issue is, how do we al headlines when officials p r ovide quality schools for hired an investigator to spy al l children so parents don't on the 7-year-old daughter have to make decisions that of a local child care provider ultimately break the law?"
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
ame-sex marriae? one a ac In By Erik Eckholm
century after they joined their lives and earned a place in the M INNEAPOLIS — L o n g history of gay rights, helping before the fight over same-sex to make Minnesota an early marriage began in earnest, center of gay activism. long before gay couples began Baker said he was proud lining up for marriage licens- that the Supreme Court this es, Jack Baker and Michael year heard the very same conMcConnell decided to wed. stitutional arguments of equal The year was 1967. Homo- protection and due process sexuality was still classified as that he had identified as a law a disorder, sodomy was illegal student in 1970. in nearly every state, and most In 2013, when the Minnegay men and lesbians lived in sota Legislature authorized same-sex marriage and a fearful secrecy. But from the age of 14, state senator announced, "Toeyeing young men in his fa- day, love wins," McConnell ther's barbershop, McConnell watched, enthralled, from the dreamed of living "happily gallery. But the couple did not ever after" with a partner. join the rush for an undisputed So when Baker proposed license. "No," Baker said, pounding moving in together, McConnell challenged him. "If we're an oak table in their living going to do this," he replied, room. "To reapply now be"you have to find a way for us comes an admission that what to get married." we did was not legal, and I will Baker remembers his initial never admit that." New Yorh Times News Service
reaction: "I had never heard of
lilies along their street in south Minneapolis. They are finishing a memoir, to be published in January by the University of Minnesota Press, and have donated thousands of documents, let-
McConnell obtained a marriage license in Minnesota four decades before the state legalized same-sex unions. ABOVE: Baker and McConnell are still together and still live in Minneapolis.
ters and clips to a university
library. "This was the age of the
"To reapply (for a marriage license) now becomes anadmission that what we did was not legal, and l
s exual revolution, an d w e
were a part of that; we weren't prudes," McConnell said of their early years together. "But we were also focused on a long-term, committed
will never admit that."
relationship."
— Jack Baker
Paul R. Hagen via The New York Times file photo
For a time in the early 1970s,
. US. Cellular.
such a thing." the two had starring nationHe enrolled in law school to al roles as spokesmen forgay try to make it happen. equality, especially Baker, an In 1970, in
Angela Jimenez I New York Times News Service
LEFT:Jack Baker and Michael McConnell celebrate their wedding in Minneapolis, on Sept. 3, 1971. With some legal sleight of hand, Baker and
M i n neapolis, intense, clean-cut figure who
Baker and McConnell became the first same-sex cou-
spoke with uncompromising logic, rejecting civil unions or
ple known to apply for a mar- other alternatives to marriage riage license. Turned down by as a"cop-out." Hennepin County, they fought In Look magazine's Jan. 26, to the U.S. Supreme Court, 1971, issue on "The American where they lost their case in Family," they were featured as a one-sentence dismissal that "The Homosexual Couple." "Some homosexuals — a has reverberatedin federal courts and played an indi- minority — live together in rect role in pushing same-sex stable, often long-lasting remarriage to the high court this lationships, like Baker's and year. McConnell's," the article said. The couple, though, did not When Baker w a s e l ectgive up. With some sleight of ed in 1971 as the openly gay hand involving a legal change student-body president of to a gender-neutral name, they
the University of Minnesota,
obtained a marriage license in Walter Cronkite reported it another county, and in 1971, on the nightly news. The couin white bell-bottom pantsuits pleappeared together on the and macrame headbands, influential Phil Donahue and they exchanged vows before a David Susskind shows. Methodist pastor and a dozen
guests in a friend's apartment. Their three-tiered wedding cake was topped by two plastic grooms, which a friend supplied by s plitting two bride-and-groom figurines. Ever since, they have maint ained that t heirs wa s t h e country's first lawful same-
But by 1980, frustrated as
the marriage issue failed to take off and under attack by gay leaders who called them "crazies" for refusing to make political compromises, they dropped out of public life. Since then, they have been leading quiet lives, still ren-
McConnell, w h o
r e t i r ed
pastor, Roger Lynn, 76, calls as a senior official after a 37theirs "one of my more suc- year career with the Hennecessful marriages." pin County library system, "They are still happily mar- cooks in his dream kitchen ried, and they love each other," and grows herbs. Baker, after Lynn said. years of private legal work The couple, now in their and a job editing technical early 70s, spoke this month in
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ovating the Arts and Crafts
sex wedding. The state and house they bought as a wreck federalgovernments have yet in 1979. to grant recognition, but the
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manuals, and after weather-
a rare interview in the house ing medical challenges, tinthey share here, nearly half a kers in the yard and plants
As HIV and hepatitis
•
•
~
ssisssNQ
cases surge, support for needles does not By Carl Hulse
have remained anathema to
New York Times News Service
many politicians, particularly Republicans who have long archconservative Sen. Jesse framed opposition as an essenHelms successfully pushed tial element of their antidrug Congress to prohibit feder- image. "As Republicans, we don't al dollars from being used to WASHINGTON — In 1988,
distribute sterile syringes to intravenous drug users, equat-
want to look like we are fa-
cilitating drug use," said Rep. ing an effort meant to slow the Tom Cole, R-Okla., chairman spread of AIDS and other dis- of the appropriations subcomeases to federal endorsement mittee that distributes health of drug abuse. funding. "We want to get you Now, with a severe outbreak help, but we want to do other of HIV and hepatitis due to a things." surge in heroin use in states inWhile expressing resercluding Indiana, Kentucky and vations, Cole acknowledged West Virginia, the question of that public funding of needle whether to let federal money exchanges could be more cost support needle exchanges is effective than th e p otential back. Still, Congress appears public expense of treating inunlikely to overturn the mor- creasing numbers of AIDS atorium even with drug prob- and hepatitis cases. He said lems hitting hard in states rep- he expected the issue to come resented by those responsible up as Congress put its health for the spending bills that im- spending bill together and said pose the ban. he was open to exploring the Rep. Harold Rogers, the issue. Republican chairman of the To some Democrats, there House Appropriations Com- is no question that the ban mittee, has seen drug addiction should be eliminated and that spread in his rural district in Republicans are stuck in the southeastern Kentucky, lead- past when it comes to both ing him to direct money home drug and health policy. "We should lift the ban," for both treatment and law enforcement. But a spokeswom- said Rep. Rosa DeLauro of an says he remains opposed to Connecticut, a senior Demoneedle exchanges. crat on the appropriations subT hough e v idence h a s committee. "Health, and not m ounted t ha t n e e dle e x - ideology, should be the deterchanges are effective, they mining factor."
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Wildfires
A7
fire regimes equilibrate, then fire-induced atmospheric CO2 Continued from A1 emissionsare balanced by up"In California, two-thirds of take from surviving vegetation the carbon loss came from the or via regeneration," noted a 6 percent of the land that had major 2009 study on the relaburned in our nine-year peri- tionship between fires and the od," says Patrick Gonzalez, a dimate system. researcher with the National But in a climate where there's Park Service and lead author of a changetothe size,number or the study. Since the study peri- intensity of wildfires, it's possiod ended (in 2010), meanwhile, ble that forests could burn and the state has seen several more release carbon considerably megafires, induding the gigan- faster than regrowth allows it tic 2013 Rim Fire, the third big- to be replaced. Fire "has a subgest ever in California's history, stantial positive feedback on consuming over 257,000 acres. the dimate system," the 2009 It's not just California. Many study concluded. "Fires have been part of ecoforest scientists today are signaling a disturbing idea: That systems for 420 million years or forestsacrossthe wo rl d could, more, and they've been a prinlike California's, start to burn cipal mechanism for recycling more, or burn in more devas- carbon," explains William
"Right now we're a significant carbon sink, and emis-
tating fires — ultimately con-
also an important side of the
sions from forest fires right
now are relatively small," said Robert Bonnie, under secretary for natural resources and environment at the Agriculture Department. "I think
the more compelling thing to think about is the role of fire and morebroadly disturbance going forward. Forest Service scientists predict that we could see a doubling of forest fire by mid century." To be dear — it's not that
fires alone could flip the U.S.'s forests into a net emitter. Var-
ious other types of land use changes are also at play. But worsening fires and other disturbances, such as thoserelated to pests like bark beetles, are
Sommers, awildfire research-
tributing a volume of green- er at George Mason University. story. house gases that could be large "But like everything else, with The global picture is similar — but the magnitude is potenenough to further stoke climate anthropogenic dimate change, Elias Funez /The Modesto Bee via The Associated Press file photo change. Which would be sadly the acceleration of natural pro- A firefighter keeps a close eye on a 'slop over' fire that jumped a highway while fighting the Rim Fire in tially greater. ironic, in that these same sci- cesses makes it a very difficult 2013 in the Stanislaus National Forest. The fire was the third-largest in the state's history. According to one 2010 study, entists think climate change
situation."
between the years 1997 and
is making fires worse to begin
One piece of the puzzle is with. already clearly in place: Scien- creasing. That gives us the largtists now say that wildfires are er acreage." A worsening fire climate? indeed worsening, and one of And it's not only that. The Here's how it works: Just as the reasons is climate change. bigger fires combust so much, "We c ertainly know a n d scorch so much earth, that growing plant life pulls carbon out of the atmosphere through have seen the wildfire extent "there is, at least in a portion of the processof photosynthesis, — in other words, the numbers these large fires ... an area that so decomposing — or burn- of acres ofwildfire— increase is more difficult to regenerate," ing — plant life releases it back dramatically since the late Cleaves said."And so ifthearea again. In the meantime, the 1980s," said David Cleaves, the cannot regenerate, or we cancarbon is stored in the plant, or recently retired climate science not get to it and reforest it, then in the case of forests, the trees. adviser to the U.S. Forest Ser- it doesn't get back into the carIn a climate in which wild- vice. "The proportion of the bon sequestration and storage firesare a steady,regular oc- area burned is increasingly in game as quickly as it would currence — but don't change larger fires," Cleaves contin- otherwise." much in intensity or number ued. "So it's not just the numOne region where wildfires from year to year — they will ber of fires, as a matter of fact, could have a large climate still release carbon, but the they're not actually increasing impact is in the forest of the regrowth of forests and other that much ... it's just that the A rctic. The fear is of a future plant life will also pull much of distribution of fires in larger, featuring more fires like the it back in again. "If dimate and higher severity events is in- gigantic, "unprecedented" 2007
Edibles Continued from A1 Thebags of Kraft marshmallows looked innocent enough. found in the car. After searchprobablyhadbeeninfusedwith the marijuana butter and heat-
sealed into theirbags. "This is the first time that we have ever seen marijuana
butter or any of this candy containing marijuana in the county," Jeffries said. "We hope it's
to think of gummy bears, mints or neon-colored drinks as potential dope.
Some experts worry that smuggled pot edibles will appeal to many consumers, particularly adolescents, who are ill prepared for the deceptively slow high. Impatient novices can easily eat too much too fast, suffering anxiety attacks
and symptoms resembling psychosis. Already, young children have eaten laced sweets left within reach. Many live in states where there has been no public edu-
cation about responsible consumption of marijuana. "Citizens in nonlegalization
states are far less likely to be receiving those messages, so their risks are probably greater," said Robert MacCoun, a professor of law at Stanford
single-handedly giving off 2.1 million metric tons of carbon. And 60 percent of that, a team of scientists found i n 2 011,
came not from vegetation but from the Arctic's carbon-rich permafrost soils, which the fire
had burned away. But the problem of worsening fires, and their resultant
impacts on how forests store carbon, extends far beyond the Arctic. In the U.S. overall, the 2014 National Climate Assessment
west, followed in turn by drier
of the Earth's land area, said
suggested that currently, 16 eastern forests and then finally percent ofourtotalgreenhouse wetter ones, which will likely gas emissions from fossil fuels be the least impacted.
Gonzalez, in regions ranging
Buyers may not realize that the psychoactive effects of eating marijuana, which are largely due to a chemical called tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC,
m arijuana and 50 packages of marijuana candies. "It's just now gaining in popularity," he said of pot edibles
from the Amazon to Australia to northern India.
from around the country can be overwhelming," he said. Still, Howler said, he declines
them all. "It is highly illegal,
in north Alabama. "We'll try to
stay on top of it."
Until last year, Sgt. Jerry King, who works for a drug task force in Alabama, had never seen pot edibles in the mail. In February, postal inspectors flagged a package, and the task force seized roughly 87 pounds of smokable
ly for each person from day to day, depending on what else is Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics via The New York Times
A variety of commercial marijuana products have been seized by unlikely. Across the country, the Oklahoma Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. Police law enforcement agencies face a challenge because such products are easier to smuggle. long accustomed toseizuresof bagged, smokable marijuana are now wrestling with a surge state police last month seized Demand in Colorado and in marijuana-infused snacks 80 pounds of homemade mar- Washington state has spawned and confections transported ijuana sweets from the car of a stunning assortment of illegally across state lines for a Brooklyn, New York, man. snacks and sweets, from Monresale. In July, the Oklahoma Bureau do's sugar-free vegan bars to
ten have no telltale smell. And few police officers are trained
meters of North Slope tundra,
2009, half a billion metric tons are in effect offset by carbon worth of net carbon per year storage in forests and wood came from global fires (these products each year. However, were emissions that, the study global warming and the loss said, "may not be balanced by of forested land is "projected to regrowth following fire"). reduce thisrate of forest CO2 The future could portend uptake" inthe future. even more. In 2014, the U.N.'s Depending on assumptions I ntergovernmental Panel on about future levels of emis- Climate Change noted that a sions, the report found that by "reduction in terrestrial car2030 or even earlier, the na- bon sink" could be a medium tion's forests could flip from to high range risk over the being a net carbon "sink" (stor- course of this century, with an ing more carbon than they lose "increase in fire frequency due each year) to being a "source" to dimate change" as one key of emissions. Most vulnerable, cause. Fires are projected to inin general, are forests in the crease in frequency on a third
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sumption can vary dramatical-
That seems increasingly
P ot edibles, as t hey a r e
consumed 1,039 square kilo-
than smoking it. An edible can take one to three hours to produce its maximal high, while smoking takes minutes. Inexperiencedconsumers easilyeat too much, winding up severely impaired. Moreover, the effects of con-
ing the Internet, Jeffries realized that the marshmallows
called, can be much easier to smuggle than marijuana buds: They may resemble candy or home-baked goodies, and of-
f i r e t h at
and stupid to think we would are much more unpredictable risk everything," he said.
But a meat injector was also
the last time."
A naktuvuk R iver
of Narcotics and Dangerous
Dixie Edibles' white chocolate
Drugs confiscated roughly 40 peppermint squares. pounds of commercial mariToday consumers 21 and oldjuana products in one seizure, er can legally buy pot edibles induding taffy-like Cheeba in those two states; soon adults Chews and bottles of cannabis in Oregon and Alaska will join lemonade. them. Pot edibles are available "There's no doubt there's a to medical users in at least a growingmarketforediblem ar- half dozen of the 23 states with ijuana products," said Mark medical marijuana programs. Woodward, a spokesman for Edibles make sense for theOklahoma bureau. marijuana entrepreneurs. In In states where marijuana the past, marijuana buds were remains illegal, some entre- sold, and the rest of the plant preneurs have begun cooking was usually discarded. But large batches of pot edibles with an extraction machine, for sale. In February, an ille- makers ofedible products can gal bakery making marijuana use the entire plant. "In a world where THC bebrownies and cookies in an industrial-size oven was shut comes inexpensive, you would down in Warren County, Ohio. like to differentiate your prodThe popularity of confec- uct from otherpeople' s prodtions laced with marijuana has ucts in ways that allow you to caught many health officials maintain a higher profit marby surprise. Pot edibles tookoff gin," said Jonathan Caulkins, in 2014, the first year of recre- a co-author of "Marijuana Leational sales in Colorado, when galization," who has studied nearly 5 m i l l ion i n dividual blackmarkets for cocaine and items were sold to patients and marijuana. "Edibles offer some adult users. opportunities for that."
in the stomach, said Kari Fran-
son,an associate professor of clinical pharmacy at the University of Colorado. "Compare that to smoking — within minutes you have a maximum ef-
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ficking last year after discovering that 42 pounds of marijuana-infused chocolate had been sent to his home.
The chocolate was traced to a medical dispensary in California. Officers declined to pur-
sue charges against the dispensary, saying its staff had done nothing wrong. The manufacturers themselves say they receive constant requests for out-of-state
shipments. James Howler, the c h ief executive of Cheeba Chews,
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itorial in The New England Journal of Medicine urging stronger regulation of p ot edibles. There are no hard numbers for the amount of pot edibles
being trafficked interstate, but police departments in a variety of jurisdictions without legal sales report seizing increasing
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quantities suggest the products are intended to supply a growing demand, law enforcement officials say. In February, Missouri troopers confiscated400 pounds of
commercially made marijuana chocolate, including Liquid Gold bars, hidden in boxes in an Infiniti QX60. The driver
was arrestedon suspicion of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance.
In New Jersey, which has medical dispensaries where pot edibles cannot be sold, the
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DOERNBECHER FOUNOATIONS
AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
IN FOCUS:WESLEY CLARK
New federal report documents
A former presidential candidate, chronicshortageof dronepilots now the penny-stockgeneral By Brian Fung
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — The
By Zachary Mider and Zeke FauxeBloomberg News
Pentagon's drone pilots
WASHINGTON — Sixteen years ago, Wesley Clark was the four-star U.S. Army general running the Kosovo war. These days, he's been pitching foodtruck franchises to military veterans and helping a convicted felon raise money to grow hydroponic lettuce. "We'd love it if you joined with us in an investment," the silver-haired Clark, 70, says in a promotional video for a company called the Grilled Cheese Truck. He's pictured standing in front of a statue of a bald eagle in a replica of the Oval Office. "We're going to be one of the fastest-growing young companies
Retired U.S. Army Gen. Wesley Clark
chisees, and the lettuce opera-
participates in
Vi
tion is being sued for failing to pay its bills. They're just two
a Bosnian War panel at the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock,
I
the Army with the self-pro-
Arkansas, in
claimed goal — a joke, he says , .s ! ' . now — of making $40 million. v Clark is one of many former governors, generals and congressmenwho've found second in Europe during the war in
2013.
careers lending their name to
Kosovo. He ran for the 2004
tiny companies that are will- Democratic presidential noming to pay for prestige. Since ination, dropping out after he ran for president in 2004, losing early primaries. His imClark has joined the boards of mersion in the world of penny at least 18 public companies, stocks followed. By 2007 he
The Associated Press file photo
got a great model that's proven, and we think we're going to get a lot of uptake on it."
Helping vets? Clark says his role in the grilled cheese venture is to find
10 of them penny-stock outfits,
was chairman of investment
whose shares trade in the"over
bank Rodman & Renshaw trucks or buy franchises. He and had joined the boards of was brought in and promised
the counter" markets, a corner of Wall Street where fraud and
military veterans to staff the
some of its penny-stock clients,
fees of more than $200,000 a
induding a shipper that went bankrupt and a rice-bran comue during Clark's tenure. Three pany whose CEO was later inwent bankrupt shortly after he dicted for fraud. Clark says he left their boards, and the chief helped force out the CEO. executive officerof onepleaded Rodman closed its securiguilty to fraud. Only four of the ties business after many of 30,958 people in Bloomberg's the Chinese companies it took database ofoverthe-counter public in the U.S. turned out to board members have served be frauds. Clarksays hehelped
year by a group of penny-stock promoters who'd taken over a couple of orange-colored trucks in Los Angeles that had developed a following for their
manipulation are common.
All but one of the 10 lost val-
on more boards than Clark.
the bankuncover the problem.
"His appearance on a board is a huge red flag," said Joe Spiegel, whose fund, Dalek Capital Management, made money shorting the stock of one of
He says he also sensed trouble at privately held Innovida, whose product — a new type of building material — he once pitched to the president of Hai-
Clark's ventures. "These com-
ti. After further researching
the company, Clark says he rejected an invitation to be on Clark's also been a director the board. Innovida's foundof large, well-capitalized com- er is serving a 12-year prison panies such as CVR Energy, sentence for fraud. Clark's anan oil refiner listed on the New nual fees have ranged from alYork Stock Exchange, and most nothing to $250,000 per Amaya, a Canadian online board. paniesuse people's names to get legitimacy."
poker company that trades on
Levine, Clark's client in the
mac-and-rib-and-cheese sand-
wiches. They laid plans for a nationwide expansion and said in presentations to investors
that they were a "first mover" in the "gourmet grilled cheese space." In the promotional vid-
eo, aimed at investors, Clark says buying the stock would provide a career opportunity for returning heroes. "This is leadership," he says, over gauzy footage of soldiers in fatigues returning from overseas and embracing wives and children. "This is really boot-level nation building." Clark says he asked the company more than a year ago to stop using the video because he thought it was misleading; it finally dis-
the Toronto Stock Exchange. lettuce venture, pleaded guilty appeared from YodIItbe this Clark says he's proud of his to securities fraud in the 1980s month. business record, and that he's investigation t h a t br o u ght The company raised $5 helped support small-time en- down Ivan Boesky and Mi- million in private sales of setrepreneurs with promising chael Milken, the junk-bond curities, and its stock started ideas and emerging technol- king. A dapper dresser who trading in January, giving it ogies, rather than trading on drove a red Ferrari, Levine a market value of $108 milhis connections to work for served two years in prison and lion — about $10 million for a big defensecontractor as was banned from the securi- each truck in operation. The do some former Washington ties industry for life. In Decem- stock has declined almost 70 officials. Companies turn to ber, Clark helped Levine raise percent since then. The comhim for his global connections $500,000 from two investors pany's executives have paid and engineering background, through a small investment themselves more than $1.7 not an endorsement, he says. bank he runs, Enverra Capi- million, which doesn't include "Nobody's going to invest in a tal. Securities filings show that Clark's fees. companyjustbecause General was the first step in a planned Grilled Cheese Truck reClark is a director," he said. $5 million fundraising. "We cruited its first five prospects, Besides serving on boards, checked him out," Clark said, in Phoenix, from the Wounded Clark has worked as a consul- "and he seemed honest and le- Warrior Project two years ago. tant and an investment banker. gitimate in this business." Only one is still working for the His clients indude the man beOn it s w e bsite, Levine's company, and not as a franchihind the lettuce project, Dennis closely held company, VFT see. Three of the veterans say Levine, whose role in a 1980s
centralpart of U.S. oper-
ations overseas, conducting round-the-clock aerial surveillance and support-
ing U.S. soldiers at ground level. But a new federal audit also finds that the
pilots are overworked and undertrained. And it's tak-
ing a tolL
G lobal, declares that it w i l l
important drone fleets op-
An MQ-9 Reaper is piloted during a combat mission over southern Afghanistan. A new federal audit has found that the pilots who fly
erate out of the Air Force
such drones are overworked andundertrained.
and the Army. Both ser-
trucks, and the company didn't follow through. Raoul Olivier,
vid Paterson, the former New
He's made little money for him-
United States," Levine says.
quest for comment. m ent Accountability O f Front-line drone pilots tend fice report, one that makes to log a lot of training hours. it hard for operators of un- The Air Force, for example, manned aerial systems to allows pilots to record miskeep their skills sharp and sion time as training time. even to train new drone But even these pilots fly pilots. predominantly one or two Army pilots are con- types of missions out of the stantly being assigned to half-dozen they're supposed other duties that prevent to be proficient in. As a rethem from logging the sult, the Air Force pilots are flight hours they need disproportionately t r a ined to stay current, the GAO in surveillance and reconsaid. n aissance, compared w i t h , "Army UAS (unmanned say, interdiction. Imagine if a aircraft system) pilots in baseball player practiced his all of the focus groups we swing all day long but never conducted stated that they threw or caught a ball. That's had difficulty completing w hat you've got in th e A i r UAS pilot training in units Force. because they spend a sigThe Air Force has pushed n ificant amount of t i m e
most of its drone pilots into
performing additional duties such as lawn care, janitorial services, and guard duty," the report reads. One pilot interviewed by GAO flew an average of 12 training hours per year
flying operations — to the point where there just aren't enough to go around. The
term ended. "You've got a lot
of connections, you've got a name, and they'd like to leech
Army has beefed up the number of pilots learning to be drone instructors. The prob-
lem is, with so few pilots in the system with adequate ex-
perience, the Army has had to lower the entry requirements to the teachers' school.
Those prerequisites include things like a soldier's rank, a baseline number of flight hours w it h a d r o n e,
recent f l i ght
e x p erience
and a demonstrated level of
readiness. The Army began waiving some of these requirements in 2013 so that its instructor
school could graduate more trainers. Between then and
service estimates that it has
2015, about 40 percent of students got some kind of waiv-
only 83 percent of the UAS
er, the GAO said. That prac-
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a former marine, said he didn't
know Clark was paid for his endorsement. "We all felt very used and abused," he says. "We quitv because of all the lies and
our surgeons live here.
well-treated; one quit because he didn't like the longhours and
Our technology is built-in.
Drs. Ida Alui and Patricia Buehier are the on/y LASIK surgeons who live and practice in Central Oregon.
bs Clark says the veterans were
another because he moved to
InFocus is the only LASIK provider in Bend with a permanently-based laser that never leaves our clinic.
Mexico; and two were fired for misbehavior. He acknowledges that the company's cash crunch
has prevented it from offering franchises to more veterans.
self, he says, because the comtime." pany hasn't had enough cash Recently, Levine says he's to pay his fees. "We're doing started buying lettuce from our best here," said Chairman other companies' greenhous- Robbie Lee. "We have abig ames and marketing and dis- bition that we've been working tributing it. That hasn't been on for a few years here, and without hitches, either. One we really are believing we can of his growers, in Cleveland, make a significant difference daims in a lawsuit that VFT for veterans that's sustainable."
onto you," he says."They tell you about all this money you're going to make." He learned to be more wary last year, he fell behind on its bills within says, when a CEO he'd been in 11 weeks of signing a contract negotiations with was arrested and now owes about $167,000. for fraud. Levine says the lettuce was A West Point valedictorian of low quality or never delivand Rhodes scholar, Clark re- ered. Clark says he's optimistic
In March, Grilled Cheese Truck started its latest fundraising
tired from the Army in 2000
at least 10 penny-stock com-
about Levine's project. "There's
into the hands of pilots, the
tice ended in February, but fectively, and that figure has the result is that some of the for the last three yearsbeen declining. In December military's newest drone pilots roughly half the yearly 2013, the Air Force said it had are being trained by people amount required by the 85 percent of the requisite pi- who themselves lack suffiArmy. lots, according to the GAO. cient training." O ther c onstraints i n T he mi litary h a s t a k en The Army has not fully adclude a lack of equipment, some steps to fix the problem. dressed the potential risks of a failure by higher-ups To keep pilots from quitting, using less proficient and less to recognize the kind of the Air F orce dramatically experienced instructors," the training that's required of increased the monthly bo- GAO said. pilots and the fact that ex- nus it hands out when pilots perienced pilots are often near the end of their six-year asked to spend their time c ommitments. T h e A r m y training less-experienced has reviewed the training SUN FoREsT units. problem and come out with CoNSTRUcTION A Defense Department a set of recommendations for spokesperson didn't im- improvement.
Bladeless LASIK is now at Infocus. Infocus is the first to offer Bladeless LASIK in Central Oregonthe very best LASIK technology available anywhere.
York governor who faced eth- "That's the game plan over has worked for several penny-stock companies since his
But some of the stop-gap measures the Pentagon has implemented so far may be unsustainable, the GAO suggested. To get more training
m ediately respond to a r e -
they werepromised theirown
insider-trading ring helped in- solve the planet's food, water, spire the Charlie Sheen charac- and energy shortfalls with a ter in the movie "Wall Street." network of high-tech greenhouses. "All crops are grown Cashinginon fam e in completely soil-less and As long as there have been controlled environments with stocks to tout, promoters have all-natural nutrients," it says. used the names of prominent Levine, 62, acknowledges in people to gain the confidence an interview that the compaof the public, and there's noth- ny has never grown anything; ing illegal about it. British lords since forming in 2009 it's who served on the boards of mostly sought financing for questionable companies in big ideas that haven't materialthe early 20th century were ized yet, such as a $20 million nicknamed guinea pigs, for greenhouse in Arizona to be the one-guinea fee they were paid for mostly by the Navajo paid to attend meetings. Da- Nation. "We will blanket the ics scandals while in office,
Lt. Cot Leslie Pratt/U.S. Air Force via The Associated Press file photo
The military's two most
shortage of pilot training, according to a Govern-
The grilled cheese venture is losing money and hasn't signed any veterans as fran-
with which Clark has been associated since he retired from
years, they've become a
vices suffer from a chronic
in America."
of a dozen precarious ventures
are some of the best in the world. In a few short
effort, targeting another $5 million.
There is a difference in LASIK
Infocus
eye care
cataract
•
•
Iasik
visio n
The bottom line: Since 2004,
Clark has joined the boards of
after serving as NATO's Su- so much interest in fresh food panies. All but one lost value preme A l l ie d C o m mander right now," Clark says. "He's during his tenure.
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 9
2 womenmove to write uncovera surprisingly personalstory By Corey KllgannoneNew York Times News Service
online searches that revealed she appeared to be here in the Parker's criminal record, her same classroom. "All the pieces police photo and the horrifying just came together for me," re- details of a tortuous life that called Olson, who nevertheless included being attacked by a well-known serial killer. (The was hesitant. "I worried that she'd think killer, Gary Ray Bowles, is on I was stalking her," she said. death row in Florida after con"But I didn't want to let her get fessing to the murders of six away.Icouldn'tgo home and gaymen.) sit for a week without getting Valverde urged her sister to an answer to this question." contact Parker, which Olson So she approached Valverde has done in online exchanges, after dass and began blurting but not yet by phone. been unsuccessful, but now
NEW YORK — Lizzie Valverde and Katy Olson were strangers when they enrolled at Columbia University a few years ago. Valverde is from New Jersey, while Olson had grown up mostly in Florida and Iowa. Their lives crossed in Janu- year with a degree in creative ary 2013, on the first day of a writing and is pursuing a maswriting class, when they took ter's degree in the same subject part in one of those familiar
out such detailed questions about her personal life — about
at Columbia, will be there to
around-the-table introductions congratulate her. that by the end had led them to So will their birth mother, a stunning realization. Leslie Parker, 54, who had both These strangers were sisters. girls when she was a teenager
Todd Heisler/New York Times News Service
Katy Olson, left, and Lizzie Velverde, biological sisters who were adopted by different families more than 30 years ago, pose in the
The two women had come to Columbia to learn the fin-
in Tampa, Florida. It will be the first time she and Olson will
er points of storytelling and wound up in the middle of a
speak. Discussing their story pub-
doozy: an intertwined tale of
licly for the first time, the sis-
their own that they say they could never have conjured.
ters described this week how
from each other in a classroom in Kent Hall, where the in-
they both moved to New York
structor asked the students go Olson had recently learned
Their shared story line — a City to pursue careers and dechance reunion three decades cidedataround age 30tostudy after being born to the same writing full time. troubled mother in Florida and In the first of a series of cothen raised by adoptive fam- incidences that would bring ilies in different parts of the them together, both applied country — has been knitted to- to, and were accepted at, the gether by years of curiosity on School of G eneral Studies, both women's parts about their which is unique among Ivy origins. League schools in offering reAnd when Valverde, 35, turning students a full-fledged graduates Monday with a undergraduatecollege experibachelor' s degree in creative ence. Both registered for WRIT writing from the university's W3680, a literary-reporting School of G eneral Studies, dass. Olson, 34, who graduated last Once there, they sat across
Question:What happens to my estate if I die without a will? Answer: If you die without a valid will in Oregon the intestate statutes r for the State of Oregon will determine who will receive your probate estate after your death. Your probate estate is generally your assets that do not Jphrr D, $prijie Pass to someone uPon your death by other means such as joint ownership or beneficiary designation. Under the intestate statutes, if you are married, your spouse will inherit your estate. However, if you have children that are not children of you and your spouse, the estate will be divided '/2 to your spouse and '/2 to your children. If you are not married, your assets pass to your children, with the share of a deceased child being distributed to the deceased child's descendants. If you have no spouse or descendants, then your estate passes to your parents. If your parents are not living, your estate passes to your siblings and so on. The intestate statutes are generally designed to distribute assets the way the legislature believes most people would want their estate to be divided in the absence of a will. However, in many circumstances the results can be somewhat arbitrary, so it is generally recommended that you have a will to meet your specific needs.
BRYANT, LOVLIEN 8 J A R V IS, P.C.
Attorneys at Law 591 S.W. Mill View Iay, Bend 541 -382-4331
Q uestion: I r e c ently a p plied f o r Social Security D isability B enefits and was told that I d i d n o t h ave enough "credits" to qualify. I do not understand because I worked until I became sick. Is that right? Answer: Social Security actually has Philip H. Garrow two separate disability p r ograms; Arro y r L S upplemental Se c u rit y Inc o m e (SSI) and Social Security Disability Insurance Benefits (SSDIB). SS I i s i n c ome/asset limited and pays disability benefits regardless of your work status, if you qualify. SSDIB only pays benefits to individuals who have worked at least 40 quarters of coverage (Le., have paid FICA taxes) and have worked at least 20 quarters out of the last 40. That means if you have not worked for several years, you may not be eligible for Social Security Disability. You may be eligible for SSI benefits, depending on your assets and family income. You can review the rules by contacting the Social Security Administration at 1-800-772-1213 or go to www.ssa.gov and click on the Benefits link. If you have applied for benefits and been denied, contact a legal professional for advice and assistance.
PHILIP H.GARROW
Attorney at Law Practice Limited to Workers Compensation Cases and Social SecurityDisability/SSI Claims
127 SW Allen Rd., Bend 541 -382-3736
Columbia University classroom where they first met. Valverde's personal infor-
mation matched closely what
around the table and introduce
about her own adoption and
themselves. Valverde, who had regis-
biological family. She realized that the classmate across the
table could be her biological before itbegan, introducedher- sister. "It fit together with lot of self and told the class, among tered for the class just minutes
other things, that she had been
stuff that I knew," Olson said,
adopted as a child and was including information gleaned raising ayoung daughter of her through online searches about own. She also disclosed what
her birth mother's identity as
she described as her goofy ob- well as hints that the womsession with the Olsen twins. an had had an older daughter Olson was stupefied.
who seemed to be a student at
"It looked like she was hav- Columbia. ing a panic attack," Valverde Olson's attempts to contact sald. that older daughter online had
Question: I recently had to place my husband in a m emory care facility. Our combined incomes are insufficient to pay for his monthly care bill and support me in the home. O u r o nly assets are our home, one vehicle and my husband's retirement account (IRA). When I went to apply for Medicaid, the caseworker told me my husband LiseBertelen >r™s.«. did not qualify for benefits and I would have to liquidate my husband's IRA and spend the funds on his care. Why isn't the IRA just counted as income to my husband and I? Answer: Under the Medicaid rules, an asset is either counted as a resource or as income, but never as both. As for retirement accounts, despite their required income distributions to th e a ccount holder upon reaching age 70 and I/2, the value of the IRA in the hands of the Medicaid recipient is counted as a disqualifying resource to the extent it exceeds $2,000, your husband's resource allowance under Medicaid. Once liquidated and distributed to you, there are ways to preserve the funds for your future care and support, however, liquidation of the IRA w il l have certain income tax consequences. Thus, you will want to discuss this with your CPA as well as an elder law attorney.
HENDRIX, BRINCH & BERTALAN, L.L.P.
Attorneys at Law 716 NW Harriman St. Bend 541-382-4980
Question: "Have I made a mistake by not purchasing it?" Answer: No. Many seniors tend to be critical of themselves for not having purchased long-term careinsurance. T hey believe that w i thout i t t h ey will be financially ruined by costly long-term care costs. Even with the WriiDerrrr;s insurance there is usually a 3 month waiting period before benefits begin, a maximum daily benefit rate and a maximum payout during life. If the insurance is not used there is no death benefit or other repayment for the monies paid in, you either use it or lose it. Long-term care insurance may be a good option but it is not the only option. Seniors still have options and resources available to them to avoid being financially ruined by long-term care costs. Through proper evaluation you can determine what works best to protect resources that may be needed in the future. I offer a no charge initial consultation to see how I might help you do just that. Address your longterm care questions today by giving me a call. You will find peaceof mind.
WILL DENNIS
Medicaid Planning Attorney Irving Professional Building 160 NW Irving Ave., Ste. 204, Bend 541-388-3877 wdOwilldennislaw.com
In an interview Thursday,
Parker called the reconnec-
her maiden name, if she had tion to her daughters an anbeen adopted in Florida and swer to 30 years of prayers, whether she lived in New Jer- adding, "I felt like the world sey — that Valverde, who never was coming full-circle." In the knew she had a biological sis- years since putting the girls ter, was stunned. up for adoption, Parker raised "I think we're sisters," Olson three sons while continuing recalled saying. to struggle through a meager All Valverde could do was existence. utter, "Is this real life?" She said she always wanted With that, tw o
s t rangers to be writer, but a hard-knock
were now family. They headed life riddled with poverty, drug to a nearby bar and peppered abuse and emotional probeach other with get-to-know- lems had been too much to each-other questions: Do you overcome. love Buffalo wings with beer? As a teenager, she let the Spicy food? Do you have girls go because, she said, "I weird pinkie toes? Do you love was not in a position to raise avocados? them," adding, "If I had raised On a m ore serious note, them, they wouldn't have had Valverde told Olson that she the privileges they had," as adtoo knew about their motheropted children. "They're brilliant, beautiful in fact, she had met her. Valverde explained that she young women," Parker said. had discovered Parker's maid- "In them, I see what I had the en name under a whited-out potential to be. They're both section of an adoption certifi- living what I always wanted to cate, and had then conducted be."
Question: How much should I ask for an earnest money deposit? Answer:The amount of an earnest m oney d eposit s h ould b e yo u r reasonable estimate of th e d o llars you will lose if the buyer decides to terminatethe purchase for any reason o ther than a s a l l owed under t h e earnest money agreement. Estimate the amount you may lose as a result of taking your property off the market while you're waiting to close; consider a new, lower sale price and the expenses you're likely to incur, and ask for that amount as the earnest money. If the deposit amount won't cover those costs, it's too low. If the deposit greatly exceeds the likely or actual loss amount, a court may rule that the deposit is an unpermitted "penalty", and you may be required to refund it to the buyer who walks away.
EDW A R D S LAW O F FICES PC
Attorney at Law 225 N.W. Franklin Ave., Suite 2, Bend 541-318-0061
Ask one Ofour Legal Professionals a question... My question is:
Send your questions to: Ask A Legal Professional • Pat Lynch By email: plynch@bendbulletin.com Or mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 We are looking for attorneys in legal fields that are not currently represented. Please contact Pat Lynch for more information.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B6-7 Weather, B8
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
ELECTION DAY REMINDERS As Election Dayapproaches,county officials have remindersfor voters who haven'tyet returned their ballots. Ballots must beto election officials by 8p.m. Tuesday. Ifyou didn't already mailyourballot, take it to anofficial drop site, county officials say. The last safedayto mail has alreadypassed. Postmarks donot count. Find your county's official drop sitesonline here: • deschutes.org • co.jefferson.or.us • co.crook.or.us The most important thing to rememberafter filling outyour ballot is to sign the outerenvelope. Ifyou forgot to signyour envelope orthe signature on your ballotdoesn't match yourvoter registration card signature,county officials will contact you. Youcanthen visit your county clerk's office to sign yourballotor submitan updatedsignature on the voter registration card sent toyou. Inboth cases youhaveupto 14 days after theelection to resolve theissue. To markyour ballot, fill in the ovalswith ablack or blue pen.Forwrite-ins, don't forget to alsofill inthe ovalnext to the name youwrite in. And the secrecyenvelopeis optional.
BRIEFING
Guard unit demobilizes in ceremony By Scott Hammers
gon last June, one of three Or-
The Bulletin
approximately 190 soldiers with a Bend-based Oregon
egon Army National Guard units selected and deployed to provide security in Afghanistan during the drawdown of American and coalition
Army National Guard unit
troopsafternearly 14 years of
officially came to an end Saturday, with a demobilization
war, according to the Oregon
15-hour mission away from
Military Department.
the base to locate a radio re-
ceremony atVince Genna Stadium.
The squadron spent nearly peater used by Taliban forces, down was handed over to the half of its deployment in west- repeatedly trading fire with Afghanistan National Army,
The 1st Squadron, 82nd Cavalry Regiment left Ore-
ern Afghanistan at Shindand Air Base, the second-largest
A nearly yearlong deployment to Afghanistan for
airfield used by coalition forces. Even with the war winding down, members of the squadron routinely encountered hostilities on pa-
soldiers in the unit earned a Combat Action Badge, with
trols around the base. Squadron soldiers were sent on a
In December, the squadron was the last U.S. military unit to leave Shindand Air Base, which as part of the draw-
Taliban in the area. More than 90 percent of the
Bendmanrescued near river falls A Bend manwho fell while taking photos of kayakers goingdown Lava IslandFalls onthe Deschutes Riverwas helped to safety Saturday by members oftheDeschutes CountySearch8 Rescue swiftwater team.
26 soldiers receiving Bronze Star Medals and three award-
ed the Purple Heart.
Matt Deacon, 32,
was injured when hefell on rocky terrain onthe island betweenthe two channels of the river shortly before 4p.m., according to anewsrelease from theDeschutes County Sheriff's Office.
the military department said.
See Guard /B2
LET'S PLAY CATCH
illiore briefing, B2
WASHINGTON WEEK U.S. HOUSE VOTE
• On Wednesday,the House ofRepresentatives passed thePain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, which wouldban abortions after 20weeks of pregnancyand require rape victims to receive medical andcounseling services 48hoursbefore obtaining anabortion. The bill passed242-184, with four Democrats joining 238Republicans in voting for thebill and four Republicansjoining 180 Democrats invoting against it.
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Walden (R) ........................... Y Bonamici (D)........................ Blumenauer(D) ................... N DeFazio(D)........................... Schrader(D).........................
STATE NEWS • Salem: Lawmakers consider gap inODFW budget,B3 • Portland: Police say ex-sheriff with dementia shot wife,B3 • Adair Village:New windmill improves fishing hole,BS • Pendleton: Dog reunited with owner after four years,B5
• Also Wednesday,the House overwhelmingly — 338 to 88 —supported a bill creating newlimits on the federalgovernment's bulk phonerecord collection program run by the NationalSecurity Agency. Forty-one Democrats joined 47Republicans in voting against the bill, which facesstrong opposition in theSenate. A compromisemust be made byJune1 because the Patriot Act provision allowing the bulkcollection expires atthat time.
S.
Scott Hammers/The Bulletin
Little League teammates Andrew Imhoff, left, and Peyton Merkord, both 8 and of Bend, reel in their lines at Saturday's free youth fishing event at Pine Nursery Park in Bend. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife staffers and volunteers helped the young anglers at the event learn how to bait a hook, cast a rod and even land a fish. ODFW is holding a free fishing day June 6.
CLOSURES Railroad track replacements and road improvements at China Hat Road will meana temporary detour for dnvers. On Mondayand Tuesday, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad will remove and replace existing railroad tracks at the China Hat Roadrailroad crossing east of U.S. Highway 97.Thecity of Bend will also work on road improvements at the tracks during this time. The city asks that
drivers in the areausea detour at Knott, Country Club, Murphy andParrell roads. Access to Old Back Nine will remain open.
Sen. Wyden atcenter of 'fast track' trade debate By Laude Kellmnn
to show he's for
by a company called Fight for
father of five — includingtwin
The Associated Press
trade, against government
the Future that flew over the senator's town hall meeting last month.
7-year-olds and a toddler — a
WASHINGTON — Running flat out for a new term at home
intrusion, and
and tiptoeing through tough issues in the Capitol, Ron Wyden Wyden
pragmaticeven if it means
Wyden acknowledges the hubbub and shrugs it off.
"It comes with the territory," embarrassinghis Oregon." president, irkinghis colleagues he said last week, hurrying Not everyone sees that as a and angering labor and envifrom the Capitol to his office good thing, though, at least in ronmental groups back home. nearby. "I'm a big guy." the Senate. In the space of just As the senior Democrat on the Six-foot-four, to be exacta few hours last week, Wyden Senate Finance Committee, tall enough to play Division I managed to offend RepubWyden is at the center of the basketball in college. Instead licans and Democrats alike debate. of a sportscareer,heopted for "Wyden trying to pull a fast law school and politics. At 66, over legislation he co-authored permitting President Barack one on fast track," blared the W yden is a35-yearveteran of Obama to cut"fast-track" trade headline of a recent Oregon the House and Senate, facing re-election to a full fourth term deals that Congress could ap- AFL-CIO newsletter. "Save the Internet, Stop Fast nextyear amid a dizzying prove or reject,butnotchange. It's part of Wyden's effort Track," read a 30-foot blimp array of other details. He's a
I/Valden(R)........................... Y Bonamici (D)........................ Blumenauer(D) ................... N Y DeFazio (D)........................... Schrader(D).........................
cancer survivor and a key negotiator on tax policy, privacy law, health care policy and
U.S. SENATE VOTE • The Senatevoted on two revisions to IRScode Thursday, including one thatamends theprocess for determining whether organizations are tax-exempt under 501(cj(4j status. That bill passed 97-1 with two senators not voting.
trade.
"Some days I look at him
brags that he's "different, like
and I know he's got to be tired," said Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del.
What's high-energy and
a "wide bandwidth" to some is considered frenetic and
unpredictable by others in the Senate. But no one doubts
thatWyden commands an unusually large portfolio of high-profile legislation or that his brand of pragmatism can be effective. See Wyden /B5
Merkley(D)........................... Y I/I/)den (D) ...........................Y — Sheila G.Miller, The Bulletin
— Detour
Paid Advertisement
YESTERYEAR ~o cy oo~
oadclo
Construction to start on mill in 1915 Compiled byDon Hoiness
fmm archived copiesofThe Acces 01 ackN e emain en Greg Cross i The Bulletin
Correction In a story headlined "What city is the most like Bend?" which appeared Saturday, May16, on PageB1, an accompanying map showed incorrect locations for the Colorado cities. The dataaccompanying the mapare correct. The Bulletin regrets the error.
00
Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending MGF 16, 1915
Shevli n-HixonCompany will buildin Bend Announcement that the
Shevlin saw mill would be under construction within two
weeks was authorizedby John E. Ryan last night. The mill will be situated on the west side of
the Deschutes in section six just above the site of the present mill of The Bend Company, and is planned to cut 80million feet per year. A box factory will be operated in connection.
Of the site to be occupiedby the new mill, approximately ed by The Bend Company which, when the mill was first planned, offered to give a site forthepurpose on eitherside
to the railroad a spur will be built crossing the river by abridge tobebuiltbythe railroad companies jointly. All lumber shipments will be loaded directlyonto cars at the planing mill, doing away with
of the river. In the transaction,
the intermediate handling.
W.D. Cheney has given to The Bend Company40 acres adjoining the remainder of the
While as yet onlyestimates canbe made itis safe to saythat employment will be given in the mill, theboxfactory and inthe logging operations to 500 men, who will receive an average wage of $3 per day. Estimating for each man employed there
140 acres have been donat-
Sisemore place on the east side
With the announcement of the mill construction comes the statement that the Shevlin
Syndicate has purchasedthe Rogers (and) Bend Timber Company's holdings adjacent to Bend thereby adding some
Minimum Balance of $1,000 for?)rtoqths l'
~
For a limited time only
*
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of 1,500. Increased employment
in other lines ofbusiness created by the mill growth will add
for years to come.
still other hundreds.
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HIGH DESERT BANK
the population of the city from the mill alone gives an increase
in this vicinity and assuring sufficient timber for their mill
en
ttster~
will be an addition of three to
35,000 acres to their holdings
To give the newmill access
7 month GD
"Local Service-Local Knowledge"
1000 SW Disk Drive, Bend, OR 97702
www.highdesertbank.com FttlC ....~«e
See Yesteryear/B7
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
Center Foundation and local athletic trainers; 7 p.m.; $7, $5 for students; Bend High School, 230 NE Sixth St., CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY Bend; 541-390-5831. SPRING CONCERT: The Central SLICK RICK:The classic hip-hop OregonSymphony,directedby artist performs; 9 p.m., doors open Michael Gesme, will conclude its at 8p.m.;$25 plusfees inadvance, 2014-15 season, with COSAYoung Artist Competition featured soloists; $28at the door; Domino Room,51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. 2 p.m.; free, ticket required; Bend bendticket.com or 541-383-0800. High School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; www.cosymphony.com or BROTHERGRAND:The San Jose 541-317-3941. folk-rock band performs, with Avery James and The Hillandales, and Leif "VENUS INFUR":Partof the Black James;9 p.m.;$5;VolcanicTheatre Box series, a playwright seeks an actress for his adaptation of a classic Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. tale; 2 p.m.; $15, $12 for seniors and students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; WEDNESDAY www.cascadestheatrical.org or MATTHEWSZLACHETKA:The 541-389-0803. folk-rock and blues artist performs; "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right Francis School,700 NW Bond St., as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 3 p.m.; $19, Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or $16 for students and seniors; 2nd 541-382-5174. Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette SIXTH ANNUALBENDBICYCLE Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. FILM FESTIVAL:A film festival to com or 541-312-9626. showcase local short films about "SEUSSICAL":B.EA.T. Theatre Central Oregon cycling culture; 7 presents a musical based on the p.m.; $12plus feesin advance,$15 words of Dr. Seuss; 4 p.m.; $15 at the door; Tower Theatre, 835 NW for adults and seniors, $10 for Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. students 18 and younger; Summit org or 541-317-0700. High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.beatonline.org or THURSDAY 541-419-5558. JUPITER 8 TEARDROP: The TRAVEL OREGON'SBACK ROADS Americana and jazz band performs; AND HIDDENGEMS:Kim Cooper 7 p.m.; free; Broken TopBottle Findling, editor of Cascade Journal, Shop, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite the author of Day Trips From 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or Portland, and aTravel Oregon 541-728-0703. ambassador, will speak about Oregon's popular destinations and
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.comlevents and click 'Add Event" at least 10 days before publication.
Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: communitylife@bendbulletin.com,541-383-0351.
Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
TODAY
MOMDAY HISTORIC PRESERVATIONIN CENTRAL OREGONEXHIBIT: Learn about preservation efforts with displays of historic projects at Deedon Homestead, Liberty Theater, French House, Redmond Freight Depot and Trinity Episcopal Church; 10 a.m.; free; La PineChamber of Commerce, 51425 U.S. Highway 97, La Pine; www.lapine.org/calendar. html or 541-536-9771. "OF THEEARTH, THEWIND, AND FIRE: CONCERTAND READINGS": The OSUChamber Choir, Oregon State University's premier choral ensemble, performs, with the Bend High School Choir; 7 p.m.; free, ticket required; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY SPRING CONCERT: The Central OregonSymphony,directedby Michael Gesme, will conclude its 2014-15 season, with COSAYoung Artist Competition featured soloists; 7:30 p.m.; free, ticket required; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; www.cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941.
TUESDAY SECONDANNUALMR. CENTRAL OREGON PAGEANT: A pageant with the winners of seven local high school pageants benefiting The
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued from Bf
One of the kayakers called dispatchers to report Deacon's injury, and Search & Rescue personnel were sent to thescene. The swiftwater team was able to rescue Deacon without the use of a boat, using a fixed rope strung across the channelandhelping him to walk to the riverbank. Deacon was taken to St. Charles Bend by friends for treatment, the release sald.
hidden gems;noon; free; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; 541-312-1034. 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.;$3
for members, $5for nonmembers; HighDesertM useum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 541-382-4754. PREVIEW NIGHTOF "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 NW Galveston Ave., Bend; www. fleetfeetbend.com or 541-389-1601. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Bob Welch, author of "Cascade Summer," will give a talk and present a slideshow about his 2014 adventure on California's John Muir Trail; 6:30 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422SW Sixth St.,Redmond; 541-526-1491. LINCOLNAND THE OREGON COUNTRY:Richard W. Etulain is professor emeritus of history at the University of New Mexico, presents Lincoln and the Oregon Country; 6:30 p.m.; free; A.R. Bowman
Terrebonnehiker rescued at Smith Rock A Terrebonne woman injured while hiking at Smith Rock State Park on Saturday was assisted by DeschutesCounty Search &Rescue. In a news release,the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office stated 911 dispatchers received a call about the injured hiker ataround1:11 p.m. Stacy McCullough, 40, had slipped on loose rock while on the Mesa Verde Trail and was unable to continue hiking.
SATURDAY KIDS' DAY INMAY: Featuring food, games and activities;11 a.m.; free; The Village at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; www. villageatsunriver.com/events or 408-621-5377. JAPANESEFESTIVALAND SILENT AUCTION:Enjoy traditional Japanese arts and crafts, with Hokule'a Polynesian dancers, asilent
auction andmore;noon; Summit
. "c'
Submitted photo
Matthew Szlachetka will play at 7 p.m. Wednesday at McMenamins Old St. Francis School. Memorial Museum, 246 N. Main St., Prineville; www.bowmanmuseum. org or 541-447-3715. CASEY NEILL &THE NORWAY RATS:The Portland modern rock band performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174. "ANTONYANDCLEOPATRA: STRATFORDFESTIVALHD": A showing of the Shakespeare play about the ancient affair of Antony and Cleopatra; 7 p.m.; $18; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D 79 right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.;
$19, $16for studentsandseniors; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "TRUE WEST":A tragicomedy that involves two estrangedbrothers 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 541-323-1881. 2BLESSED TOUR2015: 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 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com. "FOR THOUSANDS OFMILES": A movieaboutoneman's bike journey across America; 9 p.m.; $5;
Redmond Fire 8 Rescue paramedics arrived atthe parkand useda large raft to ferry 14Search 8 Rescue personnel across the CrookedRiver to reach McCullough. A wheeled litter was used to transport her to the edge of the river. Anambulance met the raft on the opposite bank, and McCullough was transported to St. CharlesRedmondataround 3:10p.m.
Bend drushfire extinguished Crews from theBendFireDepart-
McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174.
High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; 541-355-4053. CENTRALOREGON BEERWEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. YOUTH CHOIROF CENTRAL OREGON CONCERT: Featuringa range of traditional, jazz, gospel and Broadway classics in honor of the choir's 25th Anniversary; 7 p.m.,
doors openat6:30 p.m.;$10; Bend High School, 230 NESixth St., Bend; www.ycco.org or 541-385-0470. RYAN ADAMS:The singersongwriter performs, with Jenny Lewis; 7:30 p.m.;$42 plusfees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 520 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.
bendconcerts.com.
"HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; CENTRALOREGON BEERWEEK: $19, $16 for students and seniors; Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette and music from 7-9 p.m. every Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle com or 541-312-9626. Shop, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite "TRUE WEST":A tragicomedy that 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or involves two estranged brothers 541-728-0703. reconnecting in their mother's THE DECEMBERISTS: The Portland home after years of separation; indie folk-rock band performs, with 7:30 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre Spoon and The Districts; 6 p.m.; $42 Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; plus fees; Les Schwab Amphitheater, www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 520 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. www.bendticket.com. DENNISMCGREGOR BENEFIT TEEN OPENMIC NIGHT:AteenCONCERT:Dennis McGregor will focused open mic night; 6 p.m.; perform, in celebration of Dennis free; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe, Jakab, a musician and friend, and 135 NW MinnesotaAve.,Bend; to assist his wife Ellen; 7:30 p.m., www.deschuteslibrary.org or doors open at 7 p.m.; $20 suggested 541-312-1032. donation; Harmony House, 17505 AUTHORPRESENTATION: Bob Kent Road, Sisters or 541-280-1821. Welch, author of "Cascade Summer," MATTWAX:Theelectronic artist will give a talk and present a performs, with Royal Louis, slideshow about his 2014 adventure Welterweight and DJ Lonely on California's John Muir Trail; 6:30 $tacks; 10 p.m.; $5; TheAstro p.m.; $5;PaulinaSpringsBooks,252 Lounge, 939 NWBond St., Bend; W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116. "HOT SPOT INPOMPEII": An Italian comedy set in Pompeii A.D. 79 right May 24 as Mt. Vesuvius blows; 7:30 p.m.; $19, $16 for students and seniors; DOG DAYS:Featuring an amateur 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette dog talent contest, vendors, a 5K Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. and more; 11 a.m.; The Village com or 541-312-9626. at Sunriver, 57100 Beaver Drive, Sunriver; www.villageatsunriver. "TRUE WEST":A tragicomedy that com/events or 408-621-5377. involves two estranged brothers reconnecting in their mother's CENTRALOREGON BEERWEEK: home after years ofseparation; Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. 7:30 p.m.; $15; Volcanic Theatre and music from 7-9 p.m. every
FRIDAY
ment extinguished asmall brush fire reported in theDeschutes Rivercanyon Saturdayafternoon. The fire wasreported at 3:30 p.m. near the edge of the river below the River Canyon neighborhood. People walking along the Deschutes River Trail reported the fire, the department said in a news release, and their reports helped crews arrive quickly and keep the fire from spreading upthe hill andthreatening homes. Two juveniles were seenrunning from the area ofthefire, but it is not
day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. MACHINE:The Portland rock 'n' roll band performs, Bravey Don, and MoonRoom; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
May 25 2015 MEMORIALDAY CEREMONY 8 FLAG PLACEMENT:TheVFWand local Boy Scouts will place flags on Central Oregon's veteran graves, featuring speaker Robert McHaney, World War II veteran; 1 p.m.; Deschutes Memorial Chapel and Gardens, 63875 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-5592. CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. ROBERTPLANT8(THE SENSATIONALSPACESHIFTERS: The rock artist performs with his band; 6:30 p.m.; $49 plus fees, $99 for reserved seating; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 322 SWShevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www.bendconcerts. com or 541-312-8510.
May 26 CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop, 1740 NWPence Lane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703.
May 27 CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m.
and music from7-9 p.m.every
day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703.
May 28 CENTRAL OREGONBEER WEEK: Featuring tastings from 5-7 p.m. and music from 7-9 p.m. every day; 5 p.m.; Broken TopBottle Shop,1740 NW PenceLane, Suite 1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. BOB SCHNEIDER: TheAustin,Texas, folk-rock band performs; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; $23.50-$35 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre. org or 541-317-0700.
May 29 OPEN 'TIL DARK:Celebrate the end of Central Oregon BeerWeekand 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.
known whether they were involved. The department is seeking information about the juveniles, the fire and anybody else seen in thearea. Anyone with information is asked tocall the departmentat 541-693-6911.
the Central Oregon Prescribed Fire Training Exchange,involvingfire specialists from the DeschutesNational Forest, Bureau of LandManagement, the state of Oregon,The Nature ConservancyandGraybackForestry. Residents of the Crossroads and Tollgate subdivisions may see and Burn plannedwest smell smoke during the burn. Signs of Sisters will be postedandflaggers will beon A 70-acre controlled burn is dutyalong Highway242. planned for todayapproximately 4~/2 If weatherconditions arefavorable miles west of Sisters along state Monday, crewsmayconduct a 350Highway242. acre burn nearMetolius. The burn is ajoint effort as part of — Bulletin staffreports
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Guard
deployment. Knopp read a letter from Gov. Kate Brown
Continued from B1 Following the h andover, thesoldiers were reassigned to defend the headquarters of the International Security
welcoming the unit home, and will be delivering the flag to Brown as part of the demobilizationprocess. Walden recalled being at Assistance Forces in Kabul, a demobilization ceremony the capital of Afghanistan, for the same squadron five provide security at Kabul In- years ago, when soldiers reternational Airport, and as- turned from deployment to sist with base closings, base Iraq. Not since World War II security and equipment re- has theOregon Army Nationdistribution before returning al Guard been asked to do so home. much, Walden said, and the Several local elected of- sacrifices of today's soldiers ficials at t ended S a turday's and their families are every ceremony, including all three bit as historic and important members of the Deschutes as thesacrifices of those who County Co m mission, Re d- camebeforethem . mond Mayor George Endi- As others who spoke Saturcott, state Sen. Tim Kn opp, day, Walden emphasized the R-Bend, and U.S. Rep. Greg importance of reintegrating Walden, R-Hood River. Repre- into civilian society now that
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RESEARCH CENTER
WEI G HT LOSS SPECIALISTS
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
a e awma ersconsi el' Ll e
Of IS BA
By Jeff Barnard
I
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But the prospect of raising license fees is producing a lot of grumbling among the public. Oregonians buy about 243,000 hunting licenses, with nonresidents buying another 16,000. Oregonians buy about 500,000 fishing licenses, and nonresi-
The Associated Press
G RANTS PASS — L a w makers are considering how to
plug a $32 million funding gap for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife through a combination of raising hunting and fishing license fees,
dents 122,000.
"We are going to have a lot of very cranky people about it," said Troy Whitaker, a fishing guide and tadde shop owner in Grants Pass, who sells hunting and fishing licenses. "The word I am getting, being a tackle shop owner, is people complain
devoting more state revenues
to the department and cutting personnel. Sales of hunting and fishing licenses have been dedining the past 30 years, and static the past decade, despite a growing population. Without an increaseforlicensefees,Fish and
a lot about the Rogue River,
says the department will have Chris Allen, right, from the U.S. Forest Service, and Patrick Barry, to close some fish hatcheries from the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, reintroduce the
saying we used to catch a lot of fish, the hatchery is not doing its job, only putting in so many
and the state Fish Hatchery Re-
Wildlife Director Curt Melcher
Thomas Boyd/The Oregonian via The Associates Press file photo
AROUND THE STATE NnrOViruS Ontdreak —Five senior living facilities in the Eugene area havereported outbreaks of norovirus in recent weeks. LaneCounty health officials said theyaresurprised bythe timing. In atypical year, the county receivesthree orfour reports of norovirus outbreaks, usually in winter. This winter, thecounty received only onesuch report. Norovirus generally causesnausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fevers, sweats, chills and body aches.TheCenters for DiseaseControl and Prevention said it's the most commonstomachand intestine infection in the United States, affecting up to 21million people andkilling up to 800 peryear. Nodeaths have beenreported in the LaneCounty outbreaks. 4-wheel gnnShnt —Authorities said a womanfrom Scio was hospitalized Saturdaywith a bullet wound tothe left leg. According to Linn County Sheriff BruceRiley, 35-year-old Sabrina Hernandeztold deputies asemi-automatic handgunaccidentally discharged while she and her boyfriend weredriving off-road on SnowPeaknear Upper Neal Creek. Shesaid it happenedwhile they werecheckingthetires on her boyfriend's1986 Fordpickup. Twofriends four-wheeling in aseparate vehicle gaveHernandeza lift home, andshe waslater taken byambulance to aCorvallis hospital. Riley said thewoman's condition is stable and the investigation is notover. LyOnS mayOr reSignS —Themayor of Lyons resigned this week during a hastily scheduledspecial meeting. Mayor DanBurroughs cited a dysfunctional city council as hisreasonfor stepping downThursday night. In anemail Friday,Burroughssaid it was anhonor to beelected twice, but he's tired of beingquestionedandthreatened at every public meeting. City recorder Kristin Reaquit Wednesday,saying stress caused byhostile council membersled to emotional and medical issues.
fish, when they should be
TaX eVasinnSnntnnnlng —A RogueRiver lawyerwassentenced
search Center and lay off more Oregon lawmakers are considering how to plug a $32 million fundfisheries biologists and other ing gap for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife.
cranking out fish like crazy." Getting big returns of salm-
staff to balance its 2015-2017
on and steelhead to rivers is
to five years onprobation after pleading guilty to not payingmorethan $125,000 in federal incometaxes. ShaneReedreported $880,000 of income during 2006, 2007and 2008,but didn't paytaxes. Prosecutors sayheusedthemoneytobuyexpensivethings,and makemortgage payments on a$1milion home, according to court records, Reedhas since paid all of his taxesfor 2006 through 2008, but still owesthe Internal RevenueService about $150,000 in backtaxes for 2012and2013. As part of his probation, the53-year-old Reedmust payall his taxesand perform community service.
first bull trout back to the Clackamas River near Estacada in 2011.
budget of $345 million. who did not want to see cuts The department is looking to programs. The bill has to go licensefees aren't increased, for a 56 percent increase in rev- through a Ways and Means plans to cut 42 more. enue from the general fund for Committee work session beBut fishermen and hunters the 2015-2017 budget, arguing fore going to a floor vote. are not happy with the idea that it does far more than serve WaterWatch, a conservation of raising license fees with- hunters and anglers, and a 10 group, submitted formal testiout better fishing and hunting percent increase in license fees, mony supporting fee increases, opportunities. said Deputy Director Roger noting that one of the proposed "Steps must be taken to im- Fuhrman. cuts would eliminate three poprove the quality of big game Rep. Peter Buckley, co-chair- sitions that review water dehunting and fishing in the man of the House Ways and velopment projects for possible state, and then the customers Means Committee, says that harm to fish and rivers. " There's already too f ew will return," Oregon Hunters argument makes sense, but Association state coordinator there is not enough money people doing this work," seDuane Dungannon wrote in an available from the general nior policy analyst Kimberly email. "ODFW can't keep rais- fund to cover all the shortfall, Priestly said. "It would be deving prices for a product that's making license fee increases astating to Oregon's rivers and declining in quality; no busi- necessary. streams if this program is cut." ness could stay in business for A bill laying out license The Oregon chapter of Trout longby doing that." fee increases over the next Unlimited, a con s ervation The fishing and hunting six years (SB 247) to ease the group, also urged passage of licenses and tags sold each sticker shock received strong the bill, noting that the loss of year cover nearly a third of the support in committee testimo- fish biologists and the Hatchdepartment's current budget, ny this past week from conser- ery Research Center would be and the general fund covers 5 vation groups and individuals, harmful. The departmenthas already eliminated 50 positions, and if
percent.
Police: Womansbot by husband with dementia By Steven Dubois
The Wasco County Major
The Associated Press
Crimes Team is handling the
PORTLAND — An Oregon
woman was hospitalized in serious condition after she was
investigation. Darrell H il l w a s e l ected Wasco County sheriff in 1996
shot by her husband, a former and served two terms. Before sheriff who has dementia. that, he was police chief in The Officers from The D alles
responded to a report of an accidental shooting about 9
Dalles, a Columbia River city
85 miles east of Portland. A September article in The
Dalles Chronide said he was lena "Dee" Hill with a gunshot diagnosed the year before wound to the abdomen, the Or- with rapid progressive demenegon State Police said in a news tia and eventually needed a release. wheelchair. The article said Hill, 75, had surgery at he had worked in law enforceMid-Columbia Medical Center ment for more than 40 years and was in serious condition and hadbeen a certified firelate Saturday afternoon, the re- arms instructor for the FBI and a.m. Saturday and found Dar-
lease states.
Though the investigation
the National Rifle Association.
Darlena Hill, a
t eenager
isn't complete, detectives think
when she married Darrell, told
the gun fired while 76-year-old Darrell Hill was handling a weapon he mistakenly thought was unloaded. He was not arrested.
the paper that what her husband has is usually fatal in six
more complicated than just releasing more baby fish in the river. Studies have shown
hatchery fish do not survive as well in th e w ild as f i sh
spawned in the river, and hatchery fish that make it back from the ocean are less likely to bite than wild fish. Increas-
ing hatchery releases can also harm wild fish by filling up limited habitat. After several
years of favorable ocean conditions producing lots of food for fish, climatic cycles have flipped, making declines in future returns likely. Melcher attributed the stat-
ic license sales to a combination of more people living in cities, where they are farther from hunting and fishing, and declining opportunities for success, due to lower deer numbers and more fish off limits to harvest due to wild fish
OWI ntt3Ck —A southwest Portland mansaid his early-morning walk homefrom work turned violent when aphoto-shy owl attacked him. Kelly McCrillis waswalking around 3a.m. Thursday whenhe stopped to take a photo andthe owl swoopedtoward him. It flew straight into him, damaginghis hat andscratching his hand before coming backfor more. In asecond attack, the owl ripped off the man's backpack, scratchedhis backand relentlessly tried to hit him as hegathered his stuff. McCrillis is amember of the Audubon Society of Portland and said he thinks he wasencroaching onthe owl's territory. Hesaid the attack was "alittle bit terrifying" but also "kind of cool, actually. That's an experienceyou don't really get." Salad dar arreSt —Police in Portland said theyarrested a woman accused of repeatedly using herhands tograb food from aMexican restaurant saladbar, ignoring thetongs provided, andthen hurling the tongs at aworker whoaskedherto stop touching the food. Theutensils hit the restaurant worker in theneck. Police arrested the49-year-old woman for investigation of aggravatedharassment. Theysayshe spit into an officer's faceafter her arrest.
protections.
— From wire reports
U NAGAZINE CBITRALOREGON'S WOMEFS AND FAMILY MAGAZINE They raiSe familieS, fOCuS on their CareerS and Still mana ge to find time
to make a differenCe intheir COmmunitieS. Theyare the wOmen of Central OregOn. UMagazine iS abright, intelligent and inspiring magazinewith a focus
.v
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U Magazine offers its readers content to eduCate, emPOWerand inSPire.
Each edition highlights women, their families and the positive impact they have on Central Oregonandtheir communities.
to 12 months and it was hard to
acceptthat each day could be his last.
WHEN TO LOOK POR IT:
Saturday, June6
Man convicted ofplotting to kill 70-year-oldneighbor The Associated Press EUGENE — A jury delib-
wouldn't have killed the neighbor, but he played along when erated for less than two hours Leonard pitched the idea bebefore convicting a Eugene cause he wanted to get paid. man of plotting to kill his Carey said he decided to 70-year-old neighbor. alert authorities in the hopes Jeffrey Wright Leonard, it would get him out of jail 57, showed no emotion Friday following his arrest in a vewhen hearing he was guilty hicle-theft case. That didn't of attempted aggravated mur- happen, but Carey said he reder, solicitation to commit ceived a reduced sentence in murder and conspiracy to exchange for his cooperation. commit murder, The (Eugene) He is serving a three-year Register-Guard n ewspaper prison sentence for stealing reported. cars. Judge Jay McAlpin schedThe victim testified that he uled sentencing for Tuesday. and his girlfriend endured Eugene police investigated years of harassment while livthe murder-f or-hire plot after ing next door to Leonard, and a Lane County Jail inmate re- it was bad enough that he got ported in December that Leon- a restraining order against ard offered to pay him $800 to Leonard in 2013. "Justice was served," the run the neighbor's pickup into a telephone pole. victim said outside the courtThe inmate, Christian Car- room afterthe verdicts were ey, testified Thursday that he
announced.
taahsi ' 'i
The Bulletin
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WWW.bendbulletin.Com
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INSPIRED BY IRAQFRi%L VtIBICI
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
T HE
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For California salmon,summerof truck rides Railroads in the Northwest working onsafety upgrade
The Associated Press L AGUNITAS,
C a lif.
What do you do when you have 30 million young salmon ready fortheir big journeys downstream, but drought and developmenthave dried your
The Associated Press SEATTLE — Freight railroads in the Pacific North-
west are working on installing the type of safety system that regulators say could have prevented Tuesday's deadly Amtrak crash in Philadelphia.
I
D1< PARTMEihiT ©F
riverbeds to sauna rocks? In
California this year, you give the fish a ride.
*
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I i ISH.
& GAMK
r r4:S ~
State and federal wildlife
agencies in California are deploying what they say is the biggest fish-lift in the state's history through this month, rolling out convoys of tanker
But KUOW radio reports they are unlikely to meet an
trucks totransport a genera-
tion of hatchery salmon downstream to the San Francisco
Bay. California is locked in its driest four-year stretch on re-
~65
Z/.
cord, making the river routes that the salmon normally take
Rich Pedroncelli /The Associated Press
Rich Cain of the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, prepares a tanker truck filled with young salmon, called "smolts," to be unloaded into a floating net suspended on a barge at Mare Island, California, on Wednesday. The smolts have been transported by tanker truck from the Coleman National
to the Pacific Ocean too warm and too shallow for them to survive.
Fish Hatchery, near Anderson, and loaded into the barge for release into San Pablo Bay.
"It's huge. This is a massive
effort statewide on m ultiple
systems," said Stafford Lehr, make the trip themselves. chief of fisheries for the CaliAnd California's wild native fornia Department of Fish and fish should pack a sandwich Wildlife, which since Febru- and something to read; they'll ary has been rolling out four be spending a lot of the sumto eight 35,000-gallon tanker mer on the road too. "Bone dry. Bone dry," said trucks filled with baby salmon on their freeway-drive to fish biologist Don Portz of the freedom.
forcedtoextreme measures."
Drought and heavy use of water by farms and cities have devastated key native fish in
California. Last year, for example, 95 percent of the state's died. The fish is vital for California's fishing industries and for the food chain of wildlife.
For the first time, all five big government hatcheries in California's Central Valley for fallrun Chinook California salmon — a species of concern under
the federal Endangered Species Act — are going to truck their young, r elease-ready salmon down to the Bay, rather
than release them into rivers to
venile salmon out on the road-
way, where they died. bucket brigades get there too For some of California's late for the stranded salmon. who is sixyears into an effort to native fish, the rescue from "Ifthey survived the raccoons" restore the southernmost salm- drought often is by bucket, not and other predators, "they on stream in the U.S., the Cen- truck. dried up and died," Brown said. tral Valley's San Joaquin River. Near the town of LaguniLehr, the fisheries chief, exDrought, a dam and heavy tas, in Northern California's pects some individual steelhead use of the river's water for irri- Marin County, watershed biol- trout in Southern California gation have dried 60 miles of ogist Preston Brown stood an- will get truck rides two or three the San Joaquin. For the young kle-high in a coastal tributary, times this summer, as parts of salmon, whose life cyde for searching for endangered Cal- rivers and creeks disappear. millions of years has involved ifornia coastal Coho salmon As a last resort, when some travel from the river back and and other, native fish. Decades rivers have no pools of water forth to the San Francisco Bay, ago, so many coho salmon left to shelter fish, wildlife ofthat now means a It/z-hour ride filled the water that the noise ficials will remove survivors down California Highway 99 in of their jumping kept people in to a hatchery to wait out the apickup-mounted fish tank. nearby houses up at night. On drought. Two such i solated "You give them that taxi this day, Brown and his team native species from dried-up ride down, they make it to the find none. waterways have been living in ocean, and come back" in a Starting in June, months government hatcheries since few years for trapping and a earlier than usual because of last year, snacking on flies that taxi ride back up to spawning the drought, Brown and others rangers catch in bug-zappers grounds, Portz said. with local environment group for them, Lehr said, and waitThe rolling fish rescues oc- Salmon Protection and Water- ing for wetter times.
be I ' • The , marketing package is designed to reach nearly everyone in Central Oregon. The savvy advertisers in this unique promotion will saturate the marketplace with more than
TWO MILLIONREADER IMPRESSIONS... that get results!
out herein the
Pacific Northwest. — Gus Melonas, BNSF
Railway spokesman collision-avoidance system in
end-of-the year deadline set by Congress to install the new technology. The technology is designed to automatically stop or slow a speeding train when it senses an accident or collision could occur. It will also be programmed to know the speed limit on every stretch of rail. So if a train is going
Southern California by the
too fast for whatever reason, it will initiate automatic
Pacific's route miles nation-
braking. A deadly commuter rail accident in 2008 in Southern California prompted Congressto require rail safety upgrades. BNSF Railway spokesman Gus Melonas in Seattle said his railroad can't promise on-
During a quarterly earnings conference call with
dors that we have to finalize
onas sBld. Sound Transit and Portland 8 West e rn/TriMet awarded contracts to equip locomotives and make track
endof2015. Spokesman Francisco Castillo said the roll out of the technology will expand from there pending favorable results, first to Northern California and then onward to the Pacific Northwest.
N eeded signaling u p grades have been completed on over 70 percent of Union wide, Castillo said. analysts last month, the rail-
road's executives said despite "a good-faith effort" Union Pacific will not achieve full
implementation of positive train control by the fast approaching deadline. time completion of the very Union Pacific is hopeful expensive and complicated Congress will pass an extensystem. sion. The railroad told Wall "We are certainly making Street analysts it has spent great strides out here in the more than $1.7 billion to date Pacific Northwest," he said. on the mandate. "In terms of implementation, BNSF has already spent much of the technology is in $1.23 billion on development place. But there is testing (to and deployment of positive do). We still have some corri- train control nationwide, Mel-
Sometimes, Brown said, the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation,
"We're going to unprecedented drought," Lehr said. "We're
winter-run of Chinook salmon
curring up and down the West shed Network, will search the Coast haven't always gone waterway. In cooperation with smoothly. In January, Oregon wildlife agencies, they will try authorities charged a trucker to rescuecoho and other fish with drunken driving after he stuck in drying pools of water 4 hit a pole and flipped 11,000 ju- or 5 inches deep.
"We are certainly making great strides
workon." Commuter rail operators Sound Transit in the Seattle area and TriMet/Portland % Western Railroad in subur-
and signal upgrades for posiban Portland said in federal tive train control in 2013 and filings that they will meet the 2014. For Oregon commuters, year-end deadline to install that electronic safety net to what is officially known as weed out human error ap"positive train control." Union Pacific Railroad said it is on track to implement the
plies to the Westside Express
Service rail corridor between Wilsonville and Beaverton.
11eti
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B5
"l remain committed
Wyden Continued from B1 Wyden, from his post on the finance panel, is his party's chief negotiator of trade legislation that would allow
Obama to negotiate trade deals, such asahistoricaccord with 11 Pacific Rim nations.
to expanding trade opportunities for Oregonians and all Americans. But we're going to do it right." — Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
And should Senate Republicans try next week to extend
the Patriot Act's expiring spying powers, Wyden says he'll try to block the effort with a filibuster.
If he does, little love would be lost between him and majority Republicans, who spent the week openly questioning Wyden's credibility. A dozen
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Andy Cripe/Corvallis Gazette-Times via The Associate Press
Members of the Northwest Steelheaders install barbed wire around the new windmill at the pond in the E.E. Wilson Wildlife Area in Benton CountyOregon on May 7.
W in mi ee s is in By Nathan Bruttel Corvallis Gazette-Times
ADAIR VILLAGE — Four-
o e a i ve
The windmill oxygenates the water by driving a compressor that pushes air into a submerged
and calm and there's plenty
of fish because they keep it well-stocked."
standards with the U.S. trad-
stood up for the enforcement
ing partners and crack down of labor standards some in the on currency manipulation by Democratic base demandforeign governments. both answers to the backlash An only - in-the-Senate he's facing over the issue in spectacle ensued: Wyden and Oregon.
too low to support fish after the pond was
vice all over Benton and Linn counties.
sputtered about the "snafu."
Adair Village. Wilson, wife Roz, grandson Brady McCullum, 4, and Angie Weeks and her two children, Quinn Moss and 5-year-old Isabella Moss, decided to make the trip to the
popular fishing hole so that the kids could experience the tradition Ray's known since
he was aboy. "This is what my dad did for me and what I'm hoping to do with my grandson today," Wilson said. "It's not about catching fish, it's about getting closer to the outdoors and having fun experiencing something out here. How many times do you get to do something like this?" Without the help of a newly installed windmill at the pond, the answer to Wilson's
question would've been much more bleakforthe hundreds of anglers from Adair, Corvallis, Albany and Monmouth who visit each year. The Ore-
gon Department of Fish and
of those fish died.
Karen Hans, ODFW salmon
trout enhancement program biologist, to install the windWildlife and the mid-valley better, but the improvements mill and provided the labor chapter of the Association of and the unseasonably warm to design its platform, build Northwest Steelheaders built weather led to spiking water concretepads,erectthewindthe windmill in late April to temperatures. mill and make the aeration "When the algae died, its system functional, according help trout breathe a little easier and hopefully extend the decomposition used up a lot of to ODFW. E.E. Wilson Wildfishing season a few more the oxygen in the pond, leav- life Area staff assisted in the months. ing less oxygen available for project. Visitors may notice bubfish," said Elise Kelley, ODFW Following the windmill's bles surfacing near a red- district fish biologist. "When completion, officials stocked and-white buoy in the center. we tested the dissolved oxy- the pond with 1,750 rainbow The windmill o xygenates gen levels in the pond after trout and will stock an addithe water by driving a com- the fish died, only the top six tional 2,300 trout. "If you look around the pressor that pushes air into a feet of the pond had sufficient submerged airline that bub- oxygen to support trout." area, we have a few other bles into the pond, increasDon Wenzel, past presi- spots, but not many that are ing oxygen levels needed for dent of the Northwest Steel- this great," said Wilson, while fish to survive, according to headers, said he helped con- smiling and watching grandODFW. Biologists discovered struct the windmill because son Brady cast his first line. that dissolved oxygen con- he wanted to help preserve a "This is so handy for everyone tent had fallen to levels too popular fishing area and en- in town. It's a great idea to put low to support fish after the sure that the pastime contin- the windmill out here so we pond was stocked with trout ued in Benton County. can come out here more. It's "I brought my grandson out so much fun and gets the kids earlierthis year and some of those fish died. ODFW previ- here a few times and now he's outside and lets you introduce ously drained the pond to re- an avid fisherman," Wenzel them to nature. And it keeps move aquatic vegetation and said. "It's a great place to take fishing alive, which is what it's make the fishing experience young kids because it's open all about."
the dozen Democrats voted
East Oregonian
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nously, "have been broken." Does he think Wyden, his negotiating partner on the Finance Committee,had been dishonest?
"I'm not going to talk about our r elationship," replied Hatch, the committee chair-
man. "Was I disappointed? Yes. That's all I'm going to say." It remained unclear what
had transpired between the two, but Wyden insists he did not promise to move forward without the enforcement and
currencybills. "I would not have agreed to
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ed two other pit bulls. Eventu-
ally, they moved to Pendleton, where Sullenger now manages the PAWS animal shelter.
THURSDAY, JUNE 11 Slack 8 arn
E.J. Harris/ East Oregonian via The Associated Press
Crystal Sullenger, the manager for PAWS animal shelter, pets her pit bull, Star, on Thursday. Star had
gone missing four years agowhile Sullenger was living in Portland.
FRIDAY, JUNE 12 Rodeo 7 pm
Services emailed to inform her "I was in tears," she said. "It
has an appointment for spaying and microchipping. Sullenger said she lives on neighborhood. Star still wore Star's rear left leg and "toenails lenger household, has gotten tribal land, which doesn't have her original collar with the curled under so far she could extra pampering. She's been dog licensing, but she urged same now-expired license. hardly walk." The toenails trimmed and groomed and is those who have the option to "They were too cheap to li- were painted red. The dog's up-to-date on her shots. She "license your pets." cense her on their own," Sul- body showed evidence ofbeing lenger said. bred multiple times. She viewed an online photo The dog doesn't venture too of the dog and knew instant- far away from Sullenger these ly it was Star. She arranged days. "She sits with her paws over for a friend to transport the dog as far as Biggs, where she the edge of the bathtub when I was transferred to a driver take a shower," Sullenger said. from Traveling Paws for the Star also accompanies Sulremainder of the journey. Sul- lenger to work. As Sullenger =:= lengerrendezvoused with the talked, the pit bull wandered I I 541-389-9690 driver at the Pendleton Burger around the PAWS entry area, Technology King on May 9. Star initially wagging her tail as a custom141 SE 3rd • Bend Hearing Aid System seemed uncertain, then ran to er entered and then bent down Exp 5-29-15 Sullenger. to scratch the dog behind the that Star had turned up. Police
TIN
"THE BICGESTLITTLESHOW IN THEWORt.ov
high-energy puppy. She drove slowly down neighborhood streets, gradually expanding the search to a 10-mile radius. "I looked for her and looked for her," Sullenger said. "After two years, I stopped looking." She and her husband adopt-
shock when someone from Multnomah County A n imal
ultimatum. "I remain committed to ex-
GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch omi-
r t II
hood with photos of the sweet,
On May 8, Sullenger got a
re-election campaign issued a release bragging about the
operates substantially on rela-
tionships and trust. "Words," grumbled Utah
I
Crystal Sullenger's dog vanished four years ago, she gradually gave up hope she would ever see Star again. Sullenger had stepped out intoher fencedyard one day to check on her 11-month-old pit bull only to find her dog was gone. Distraught, she plastered her North Portland neighbor-
W ithin h o ur s o f vo t i n g down the initial bill, Wyden's
Obama summoned Senate panding trade opportunities Democrats for a meeting. And for Oregonians and all AmerRepublicans thundered about icans," he wrote. "But we're the perceived double-cross going to do it right." by Wyden, in a chamber that
Dog, owner reunited inEasternOregonafter 4 years By Kathy Aney
tional bills to enforce existing labor standards with overseas
trading partners, and to crack down on currency manipulation by foreign governments. cover with unions and other And Wyden could claim both, groups. including co-authorship of the Abruptly, Wyden aban- main bill to grant Obama the doned the legislation he had authority to strike the Pacific helped write. He joined the RimdeaL "He did the right thing," said dozen protesting Democratic senators in the last-minute ul- Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio. timatum, demanding that maFrom Wyden's viewpoint, jority Republicans also offer the gambit succeeded. He's votes on bills to enforce labor pro trade, but can now say he
that moment al l
the corner of the E.E. Wilson Wildlife Area just north of
can
tried to force through addi-
against moving ahead on the package they, and Obama, support. Stunned, the White House
The group worked with
P ro-trade l a w makers
could tell labor unions they
plus members of the Northwest Steelheaders, a fishing advocacy group that provides fishing-based community ser-
stocked with trout earlier this year and some
agreement inched forward.
legislation weren't happy, ei-
oxygen levels needed for fish to survive, according to ODFW. Biologists discovered that dissolved oxygen content had fallen to levels
It's Quinn's first time fishing at the small pond tucked in
strike a historic Pacific trade
ther. On the brink of Senate action, they let Wyden know
airline that bubbles into the pond, increasing
m o r ning.
ocratic demands. And the legislation allowing Obama to
Democrats who support the
year-old Quinn Moss' face lit up as he cast his first line Wednesday morning. Family friend Ray Wilson said he'd been waiting for
Wenzel is one of the 170-
cans had agreed to the Dem-
say they voted for giving the United States a bigger piece of overseas markets. Democrats
they would vote against itunless Republicans agreed to demands on other measures that would give them political
I
that," he says. Within 24 hours, Republi-
found the dog during a drug was amazing." raid on a house in the St. Johns She noticed an injury to
SATURDAY, jUNE 13 Rodeo Parade 9:30 am Rodeo 1 pm R 7 pm SUNDAY, JUNE 14 Buckaroo Breakfast 7-11 am Cowboy Church 9 am Rodeo 1 pm
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Dick Crawford Weaver, Sr., of
James Lee(Jim) Reynolds
Richard Maurice Donald A. Owen
Spencer
Donald Alan Owen 74, of Fairfield Glade, Tennessee, d ied o n A u g us t 2 8 2 0 1 4 n olds o f Re d m o nd , O r - April 30, 2015, died peace- d ue to c o m p lications f o l egon, died peacefully May fully i n h i s s l eep, at 5 :00 lowing a h o u sehold a cci12, 2015 f r o m c o m p l i ca- p .m., on T h u r sday, A p r i l dent. tions du e t o P r o g r essive 30, 2015. He w as SupraRichard born in St nuclear was a vetLouis, Palsy eran of Missouri WWII, (PSP). to His p a ssserving in Fredrick i ng wa s the United D. Owen merciStates and Helen fully swift Navy M. L esand he from F eb. ponald pwen per an c e /0 w as s u r 19, 1 9 44, wen. rounded until June He married on March 18, James by hi s Richard 5, 194 6 1961 to his surviving wife, Reynolds Spencer loved He began Andrea Lee Dennis/Owen. o nes. H e h is mi l i Donald graduated from was 72. t ary service at t h e N a v a l Verdugo High School and A Funeral Mass will take Training Station, NTS Farentered the U n i ted States r agut, I d a ho, l o c ated o n Air Force. Donald was displace Wednesday, May 20, 2015, at 2 :0 0 P M a t St . Lake Pend Oreille in Baycharged from the Air force Thomas Catholic C h urch, view, Idaho. He went on to i n 1 960. D o n al d w a s a located at 720 NW 19th St., s erve on th e n e wl y c o m - General Contractor and Redmond, Oregon. missioned U SS D oy le House Painter by trade. Jim w a s b o r n M a y 3 , (DD-494/DMS-34), a In S o uthern C a l i f o rnia, 1943 in Memphis, Tennes- Gleaves-class destroyer. D onald man a g e d or see. On Ma y 21, 1974, he After b e i n g d i s c h a rged coached many L itt l e married Diane S im one from the Navy, Richard League baseball teams of Bourassa. worked as a p l umber and his three sons. In O r egon Jim retired in 1999 after s team fitter, u n ti l h i s r e - he continued to coach and w orking as a teac h e r , tirement in the mid 1990s. manage teams i n S i sters, c oach an d p r i n c i pal f o r His work took him to Los O regon. T h e f a m i l y b e o ver 30 y e ars . M u c h o f Angeles, and in t h e e arly longed to a 4 - wheel drive t hat time was spent in th e 1950s he met Barbara Jean c lub i n C a l i f o r ni a w h e r e b ush of A l a ska al ong t h e Eller. T h e y m ar r i e d in f amily m e mbers, in c l u d K uskokwim R i v e r . H e 1 954, and sh e g a v e h i m ing many nieces and nephlived most of his life in Orfour sons, Mark, W i l l i am, ews, enjoyed: c amping, egon, W a s h i n gto n an d Darien and Ross. Barbara f ishing, hu n t i n g , du n e Alaska. a nd Richard d i v o rced i n racing and rock climbing J im l o ve d f o o t b al l a n d 1972. Richard married hi s w ere r e g u l a r w ee k e n d will be remembered for his s econd wife, L u ann L i l l y , events. knowledge of past games, i n 1 9 87 , a n d r em a i n ed The f a m i l y mo v e d t o coaches an d s p e c tacular married until his death. C entral O r e gon i n 1 9 7 7 . lays. I n h i s r e t i r ement, R ichard wa s t h e so n o f D onald loved p l aying t h e e enjoyed riding his HarW illiam Spe n c er , w h o organ, roller skating, wood ley-Davidson m o t o r cycle, passed in 1962, and Beatworking and dancing with m etal d et e c t i ng , an d rice Skaggs, who passed in h is w i fe . D o n al d w a s a "surfing the net". 2003. He leaves behind a l ong time m e mber o f t h e J im i s s u r v i ved b y hi s wife, a br other, four sons Cloverdale Volunteer Fire w ife o f 4 1 y e a r s , D i a n e and t h re e g r a n dchildren, D epartment b ecom i n g Reynolds of Redmond, OR; a long w i t h m a n y n i e c es Captain in 1996 and retirdaughter, Lisa R eynolds and nephews. i ng i n 19 9 8 . In 200 3 , and her husband, Rrc ParD onald f o r ced i nt o e a r l y dini of Bend, OR; son, Guy retirement, he and Andrea (wife Valerie) Marcucci of l eft t h e C e n t ra l O r e g o n W etumpka , A L; tw o a rea for T e nnessee to b e g randchildren, L u k e a n d n ear Andrea's family. A n G abriella P a r dini ; a n d a June 12, 1965 - August19, 2014 drea f o n d l y r em e m b ers brother, Jerry Williams. C hristopher L e e Ow e n Donald's creed "Iam not He is preceded in d eath 49, of Farrfield Glade, Ten- without fa u lt a n d un t i l I by both parents. nessee, died on August 19, am I wi l l fi n d n o fa u lt i n Memorial co n t r i b utions others". of a heart attack. i n Jim's m emory m a y b e 2014, Donald was p r eceded in He was born in Burbank, made to the Redmond St. C alifornia, to D o n ald a n d death by both parents and V incent d e P au l o r C u r e Andrea Dennis Owen. his only brother, David, as PSP Foundation. M oving t o O r e g o n in well as hi s y o u ngest and A utumn Fu n e r a l s of middle sons, Michael and 1977, Chris and his brothR edmond h a s b e e n e n - ers were active in the local Christopher. trusted wit h t h e a r r a nge- l ittle l e a g ue . C h r i s ex Donald leaves his wife of ments (541) 504-9485. c elled in p i t c h ing, t a k i ng 5 3 years A n d r ea, hi s e l P lease vi si t o u r on l i n e m any o f h i s t e a m s i n t o d est son, M a r k a n d h is register book a t w w w . a u- championships, famous for w ife, Lori o f C u l v er, O R ; tumnfunerals.net. his "wicked" fast and curve h is son M i c hael's w i d ow , balls. Chri s a l s o e n j oyed Annette and her husband, 'Butch', D o nald's h u n ting bowling and chess, always and fishing companion, of looking for a challenge. Chris w as a Hou se Bend, OR. Also left behind h is m oth e r - i n-law, P ainter by t r a d e an d e x - are Jene18, 1949- April 9, 2015 c ellence w a s h is mot t o Margaret, of Amanda, OH; and m a n y ni e c e s a nd Former B e n d r e s i d ent, learned by his mentor and ephews, an d l o n g t i m e Joseph Sheppherd, passed father, Donald. He moved n friends, many w h o c a l l ed to Tennessee, in 2004, to away in T r n ava, Slovakia h im t he gen t l e gi a n t . be near his parents. Chris on April 9 after a short illwas known i n t h e n e i gh- 'PAKA' leaves five grandn ess. J o children and seven greatborhood for his generosity s eph w a s grandchildren. helping and spending time b orn on F amily a n d fr i e n d s o f J une 1 8 , with the elderly. C hris w a s p r e c eded i n Donald will be meeting at 1949 in d eath by h i s b r oth e r , G reenwood C emetery o n Merced, M ichael. H e l e a v e s t w o M onday, M e m o r ia l D a y , Califor25, a t n o o n , a t t h e nia. H e children, Amanda and Jef- Mray avesite o f D o n a l d a n d f ery; h i s f a t h er , D o n a l d obtained a is sons to r eminisce and who followed him in death M aster o f pay respects. nine days later; his mother, PhilosoA Celebration of L ife for Andrea; and h i s b r o t h er, p hy de Donald a n d Ch r i s t opher Joseph Mark and his wife, Lori all Sheppherd g ree fr om of C u l v er , O r e g on . He will follow at 20663 Blanca CamDr., Bend, Oregon. b ridge U n i v ersity i n E n - l eaves m an y n i e ces a n d nephews. l and. H e l i v e d i n B e n d rom 1995 to 2007. Joseph and his w i fe , Jan W i l s on S heppherd moved t o S l o vakra in 2007. J oseph became a Baha'i 50 years ago at the opening ceremonies of the House of Worship in G ermany. O n e o f h i s f a vorite passages from the B aha'i scr i p t u re s w as , "The w orld i s b ut on e c ountry, and m a n k in d i t s c itizens." T h r o u ghout h i s life, Joseph demonstrated a consciousness of w o r l d citizenship. He visited over 60 countries, learning and sharing the wisdom he ac), ~~~ '] quired along the w ay . Joseph was a n a r t i st, p o et, t eacher an d a u t h or , p u b l ishing o v e r 1 0 0 b o o k s , HOMER M. HEPWORTH m any a b o u t t h e B a h a ' i August 19, 1921 — May9, 2015 Faith. Joseph i s s u r v ived by his wife, 3 children and Survived by his beloved wife Cindy Hepworth, his four children 4 grandchildren. A m e(Diana Byrd, Judy Gilbert, Jed Hepworth and Paul Hepworth), eight morial for Joseph will be grandchildren, seven great-grandchildren, and Grayson, the latest in a held at a f r i end s home in long line of spoiled and treasured cats. Culver o n M a y 2 4 , 2 0 15. For information and direcBom in Star Valley, Wyoming, Homer traveled the world as an Army tion s p l ease call Ait Force pilot and intemational agricultural specialist. He settled in 541-546-7175. Bend in 1987 with Cindy, the love of his life, to spend his retirement laughing with their adored friends, championing peace and individual
Nev. 18, 1927 - April 30, 2015 May 3, 1943- May12, 2015 James Lee ( Jim) R ey- N ovember 1 8 , 1 9 2 7 t o
Terrebonne April 25, 1931 - May 11, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
Nancy Ann (Reiter), Nave, Brassel, of Bend Sept. 25, 1937 - May 13, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private Celebration of Life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
St. Charles Hospice
Earl C. Williams, of Bend July17, 1928- May 6, 2015 Arrangements:
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 Celebration of Life will be held on Fri., May 22 at 2 PM at the Bend Community Center.
Andrew J. Hedesh,of Bend Mar. 28, 1948- May10, 2015 Arrangements: 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 celebration of his life will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Wizard Falls Fish Hatchery C/0 Phil McKee PO Box 130, Camp Sherman, OR 97730.
Ann Scovel Farry,of Bend June 13, 1933 - May 14, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Celebration of Life and reception will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend 97701.
Stephen "Steve" Dean Barclay, of Sisters Oct. 17, 1948 - May 12, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Andrew J. Bay, of Bend Sept. 27, 1923 - May 12, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: No services will be held at this time.
Brenda Sue Balfour, of Prineville Jan. 21, 1947 - May 15, 2015 Arrangements: Prineville Funeral Home, 541-447-6459
Services: Family and friends may contact Prineville Funeral Home for service times and information.
Michael James
Campbell,of Bend Sept. 3, 1942 - April 20, 2015
Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held Sunday June 14, 2015 11:00 A.M. at the Bend Senior Center / Holy Communion Church, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road, Bend, Oregon . Contributions may be made to:
Friends of St. Dominic's, 500 Western Highway, Blauvelt, NY 10913.
Christopher Lee Owen
Joseph Sheppherd
Weekly Arts flr Entertainment
Find It All Qnline bendbulletin.com
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Every Friday In Imhoazmez TheBulletin
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Sept. 24, 1939- Aug. 28, 2014
rights as a member of the Deschutes County Coalition for Human Dignity (and as the author of many published lettersto the Editor of the Bulletin), and serving as "porcupine docent" at the High Desert Museum. Everyone who knew Homer understands well that he doesn't want flowers or ceremony — just laugh in memory of the humor he found in life and share a memory ofhis passion for Cindy and his Bend friends. If you want to honor Homer in a tangible way, please make a donation to the Deschutes County Coalition for Human Dignity or the High Desert Museum.
Deaths of note from around
John Lo Schiavo, 90: Rev-
the world: erend and former president Franz Wright, 62: Pulitzer of the University of San FranP rize-winning p oe t w h o se cisco who presided over the
work illuminated his passage from abiding despair to religious transcendence. Died Thursday at his home in
university's resurgence and
remembered for a Super Bowl
day. His place of death was not
a shutdown of its basketball
program. Died Friday in Los Gatos, California. Waltham, Massachusetts, of Jacob Jensen, 89: Danlung cancer. ish industrial designer who Garo Yepremian, 70:Former gave ultramodern, minimalist NFL kicker who helped the Mi- forms to high-end products ami Dolphins win consecutive including consumer electronNFL championships but is best ics and kitchenware. Died Friblooper. Died Friday in Media, reported. Pennsylvania, of cancer.
— From wire reports
Emil Beguhl 1922 . 2015
Emil Beguhl was bom to Herman and . Edit h Beguhl in Dupree, South Dakota, on October 22, 1922. The family moved to the Caldwell, Idaho area in the 1930's. After being a student in the Caldwell schools, Emil , 'attended Baker's School in Portland, Oregon, and served as a baker on several ' ships while enlisted in the Merchant Marines from 1941-46. He worked for 10 years at Dairymen's in Caldwell and later moved his family to Boise, where he had a 30 year career with Pacific Trailways, a bus company based in Bend. Many lasting friendships were created in Central Oregon. Emil married Shirley Smith in Adrian, Oregon on July 15, 1950. Love for family was paramount in Emil's life. His advice and guidance to his children and grandchildren was always given with love, support and encouragement. The positive influence he had on the lives of others was one of his greatest gifts. He taught by example and instilled a strong work ethic in his children and grandsons. Emil had a very special relationship with his son-inJaw Herb. Every year he looked forward to spending quality time with Herb at the family cabin on Flathead Lake — working, planning and enjoying the beauty of Montana. His smile brightened many of our days. Emil took great pride in his home and yard. He walked miles around Boise, and loved baking donuts and making homemade ice cream to share with his family and friends. Emil is survived by his wife, Shirley; two children, Lynne Ekstrom (Herb) of Bend, Oregon, and Jim of Indiana; grandsons, Erik and Jason; one sister and two brothers; four great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. His parents and five siblings preceded him in death. Emil was a member of Good Shepherd Lutheran Church in Boise and for many years was involved with the Dairymen's and MCE Credit Union. The family would like to express their gratitude to Assisting Angels, caregiver Bette Newbom and Encompass Hospice for their wonderful care of our husband, father and grandfather. In lieu of flowers, the family would appreciate donations in Emil's memory to Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 5009 Cassia, Boise, ID
(
83705.
Elizabeth "Betty" L. Dever September 26, 1923 - May 2, 2015 On May 2, 2015 our beloved mother Elizabeth "Betty" L. Dever peacefully ™~ pass e d a way s urrounded by l oved ones inBend, Oregon. Mom was born September 26, 1923 in Independence, Oregon to Charles and Maude Bullis and spent her childhood in Valsetz and Beaverton, Oregon. She attended school in Valsetz, where she worked on the school paper and was valedictorian of her senior class. She met her future husband, William J. Dever (Bill) when he was stationed at Fort Lewis, WA during WWII and they were married January 26, 1943 at the Fort Lewis Chapel. While Dad served overseas Mom lived in Philadelphia and when he returned they moved to Westfir, Oregon where they started their family and had six children. They later moved to High Prairie in Oakridge, Oregon where they made their home for several years. While living in Oakridge, Mom was an active member of St. Michael's Catholic Church. In 1974 she moved to Yakima, WA, then to Sultan, WA and finally to Bend, Oregon making many friends and memories along the way. Mom was a lifelong learner and an avid reader of a wide variety of books. Reading gave her a lot of pleasure, stretched her mindand kept her sharp. She even became computer savvy in her late 80s and kept in contact with loved ones via email. She loved working with her hands and was a gifted seamstresswho handmade ourclothes when we were young and continued to create special items for family and friends throughout her life. The bread she baked was so delicious our school teachers commissioned her to bake and deliver loaves to them. Like many of her generation, Mom had a strong work ethic and excelled at the occupations she held. She enjoyed crocheting, nature walks, painting with watercolors, music, and visiting with people of all ages. Being one who was always up for an adventure, her eyes would light up when she'd recall a hike she made across a glacier on Mt. Rainier, her role as co-pilot in a small aircraft, riding on the back of a motorcycle, and her trip down the Willamette River in a small boat. Family and friends were very dear to her and even in her golden years she would travel many miles to visit them. In her final days she commented, "the only thing to live for is the joy of talking to your children". Words cannot expresshow deeply she was loved and how much she will be missed. She is survived by her children, Beth (Bill) Edmunds of Bend, OR; Bill (Karen) Dever of Springfield, OR; Cecelia Dever of Bothell, WA; Trish (Mike) Fischer of Yakima, WA; Kathleen Dever of Chinook Pass, WA and Maureen (Dan) Nelson of Ellensburg, WA; eleven grandchildren and nine great grandchildren of whom she was extremely proud, many family members and friends. She was preceded in death by her parents, her brother Robert W. Bullis and her husband William J. Dever. The family would like to thank Pauline Clark, her staff and residents for their loving care and friendship to Mom. A celebration of her life will be held in Oakridge, Oregon at a later date. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the Oakridge Library.
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Yesteryear
BITUARIES
To the railroads the mill will mean an addition in
traffic probably doubling cialist. H e settled in Bend i n 1987 w i t h C i n d y , t h e love of his life, to spend his r etirement l a u g hing w i t h their adored f riends, Aug. 19,1921 - May9,2015 c hampioning p e a c e a n d r ig h t s as a Survived by h i s b e l oved i ndividual member of t h e D e schutes w ife Cindy H e pworth, hi s C ounty Coalition f o r H u four children (Diana Byrd, J udy G i l b e rt , J e d H e p - m an Di gnity ( an d a s t h e worth k P a u l H e p w o r th), author of m any p u b lished l etters to the Editor of t h e eight B ulletin), an d s e r v in g a s grand" porcupine docent" at t h e children, .: High Desert Museum. i-. seven Everyone wh o kn ew great-gra H omer u n d erstands w e l l ndchilthat he doesn't want flowdren, an d e rs o r c e r e m on y — j u s t Grayson, l augh i n m e m or y o f t h e the l a t est in a long humor he found in life and m e m o r y o f hi s line o f share a Homer spoiled p assion for Cindy and h i s HePworth Bend friends. I f y o u w ant a nd t r e a t o honor H omer rn a t a n sured cats. gible way, please make a B orn i n Sta r V al l e y , donation to the Deschutes W yoming, H o m e r t r a v - C ounty Coalition f o r H u m an Dignity o r t h e H i g h elled the world as an Army Air Force pilot an d i n t er- Desert Museum. n ational a g r i cultural s p e-
Homer M. Hepworth
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that which they now have. Cutting 80 million feet in
a year and shipping the whole cut would mean that
over 20 cars would go out from Bend daily for 365 days. Halving this and putting the shipment at only 10 cars a day means an increase in yardage here and added population on the railroad end alone. It is understood that as soon as
market conditions warrant the capacity of the mill will be doubled.
The Future(editorial) The word for which Bend
has waited so long has come. Now is justified the city's
expenditures for a costly sewer, for good streets and private investments in mod-
ern business buildings and handsome residences. All that for which we have been
called foolish now proves that we were wise.
FEATURED OBITUARY
Hamptonsarc itect esigne or stars 6y Sem Roberts
The mill which has been announced and the one whose announcement is expected will cause the population of Bend to double and quadruple in the next few years. Other industries will
be attracted here. An impetus toward the construction
of railroads which will centerhere maybe looked for. To the city as a whole all this will bring much more
Maria Freile, is a psychoanalyst. Besides his brother and mother, he is survived by his
than gratification at seeing Bend grow. Many respon-
wife, the f o rmer Stephanie
necessity for the extension of the sewer w il l
tons on Long Island from the relatively modest, minimalist
Turner; a daughter, Catherine Newsome; a stepson, Michael Orhan; three grandchildren; and two sisters, Carmen Paul
beach houses that reflect ed
and Charlotte Fleetwood.
New York Times News Service
F rancis F leetwood, w h o drew on the work of Stanford White to transform the architectural aesthetic of the Hamp-
postwar modernism to the After moving to New York shingled Victorian behemoths with his m other and o lder that evoke the Gilded Age, died brother before turning 2,he atMay 8 at his home in Welling- tended the Dalton,Fessenden ton, Florida. He was 68. and Riverdale Schools, gradThe cause was a blood dot, uated from Bard College and his brother, Blake, said. earned a master's degree in arAfter opening his own firm, chitecture from the MassachuF leetwood &
M c M ullan, i n setts Institute of Technology in 1973.
1980, Fleetwood designed more than 200 homes in the Hamp-
At Bard, before deciding to
tons, many of them encompass-
pursue a career as an architect,
sibilities will be added. The c o me.
Undoubtedly, we shall be obliged to go for a water supply further up the river. New schools will be needed. A city park system should be planned.
75 YEARSAGO For the week ending May 16, 1940
Churchill to lead Britain in war effort Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain today named
ing tens of thousands of square Fleetwood had different defeet, costing tens of millions of signs on the kind of capitalists dollars and commissioned by who would become his dients. "I was a Marxist back then," dients who did not blink at the price. Among them were ce- he told the college's alumni bullebrities such as Alec Baldwin, letin, "and we would hold secret Lauren Bacall, Calvin Klein meetings every week, planning and Paul McCartney, as well the overthrow of the school, the as private-equity investors and government, the world." commoditiestraderswhowould Before establishing his own
aggressive Winston Churchill to supervise Great
let Architectural Digest photo-
again. Shouts of "resign!" and cries of "who missed the bus?" interrupted Cham-
firm, in
E ast H ampton, he
graph their trophy habitats on worked for an architect in Asthe condition that the magazine pen, Colorado, and for Philip not reveal their names. Johnson in New York on the Architects of the angular, AT&T and Neiman Marcus flat-roofed houses that prolif- buildings and other projects. erated on the East End of Long In 2001, Forbes magazine put Island in the 1950s and beyond Fleetwood on its list of leading also catered to the wealthy. architects, calling him "the But those buildings — made of architect for the A-list in the wood, stone, poured concrete Hamptons." and glass — were unassuming His asymmetrical style feaby comparison. Fleetwood's tured gables, turrets and exshingled, sprawling creations, pansive porches that connected produced for a later and more the interior ofhis houses totheir extravagant moneyed dass, typically spacious grounds and suggest a kind o f h omey vistas. Another hallmark was grandeur. a low, sweeping roofline with "The shingle style is the only an Oriental curvature and redtrulyindigenous architecture of brick chimneys that rose well the United States," Fleetwood aboveit. told The New York Times in
Fleetwood houses are typi-
1991. "Every other style, indud- cally shingle style, the architecing modern architecture, had tural historian Vincent Scully's its roots elsewhere."
"I think people are looking
for roots," he said in another interview. "They'd all love to
term forthe houses designed by McKim, Mead & White in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Among them is an
be born into a grand old house 11,000-square-foot mansion with eight and a half baththrough the generations. So rooms on Sagg Pond in SagawouldI." ponack. gt was on the market Francis Freile F l eetwood in 2012 for $65 million.) Anoththat had been handed down
the war against Germany and called upon an angry, heckling House of Commons to close ranks and "set our teeth" in the face of imminent danger that Adolph Hitler w il l s t r ike
Guaranteed for 7 years!
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night and Winston Chur-
chill agreed to form a new government. The new government-
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national unity in which la-
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bor, liberals and conservatives alike join to meet the
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threat of the dread German
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March and April headlines
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Nazis drop bombs on Paris
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British retreat successful Nazis capture city of Dunkirk French advance
a d mit
Nazi
War is declared by Italy German drive nearing Paris; French quit, Britain alone
Guaranteed for 4 years!*
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blitzkrieg.
— British flee
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900
it was agreed without exception — shall be one of
Nazis advance through gap left by Belgium; channel ports taken Nazi plans blast retreat
Fax: 541-322-7254
*
Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain resigned to-
within its 25,000 square feet.
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com
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Churchill new leader
Belgium surrenders to Nazis
Phone: 541-617-7825
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Chamberlain resigns;
Hampton Village's western border, includes 14 bathrooms
Mail: Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
Poo
to new heights with a fixed annuity.
central Norway.
er, on Georgica Pond, on East
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
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plain to the House of Commons how Nazi aggression and superior air power had caused the failure of the expeditionary campaign in
Santiago, Chile. His father,
Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
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berlain as he sought to ex-
was born on June 17, 1946, in
Obituary policy
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Britain's armed forces in
Nazis reach Boulogne 30 miles from England
Harvey, was an international banker. His mother, the former
was paid a very small amount, hopes to profit from a disasFohrer was in the military but the conditions were good. ter that changed this region's "The English," Fohrer said, economic life as surely as it in England when May 8, 1945, "stuck very closely to the Ge- rearranged the landscape. was declared Victory in Europe day. Only he spent the neva 'book' regarding treat- He's been scouting out land, day a little differently than the ment of POWs during the war. thinking of starting up a majority of military troops in When it was over and there small tourist resort. "Someday," he said, "this England. were no English POWs to get He whiled away his time reciprocal treatment, we were place will be beautiful again." in an English prisoner of war still treated well. We w ere Before it erupted Mt. St. camp for Germans. probably better off after the Helens was a snowy, symFohrer lives in Bend with war in England than we had metrical seemingly dormant his wife Frieda. Both are nat- been in Germany." volcano surrounded by tall uralized U.S. citizens. They Fohrer explained he learned evergreen forests. Thousands own and operate Frieda's his father, and brother and of campers experienced their restaurant. b rother-in-law w er e k i l l e d first real wilderness along Twenty years ago European during the war. "I remember crystal-clear Spirit Lake, on fighting had officially stopped. my father saying back in 1940 the mountain's north side. Germans in Italy had surren- we would lose the war. My The idyllic couldn't last. Mt. dered to Allied troops in late brother could not believe it St. Helens, historically one ApriL On May 4th, Germans and argued with him," Fohrer of the Cascade Range's most began surrendering to Amer- said. "My father was right." active volcanoes, had not ican, English and French erupted since 1857. Geologists troopstoescape the Russians. warned it was overdue. 25 YEARS AGO Fohrer recalls V.E. Day At 8:32 a.m. on May 18, from a German point of view. For the week ending 1980, after weeks of sputter" The 3,000 POWs in m y May 16, 1990 ing and rumbling, the volcano camp near Coventry," Fohrer roared awake. An earthquake said, "were assembled out- Decadesoftens St.Helen's jarred loose a huge slab that side as if there was going to destruction slid into the lake, weakening be a roll call. I noticed quite a Ten years. Time enough for the mountain's north side. bit more armed guards than a forest to spring back from Magma, that for m o nths usual. Also outside the prison lifeless ash. Time enough for had risen slowly up the volwere a large number of ar- people in the shadow of a rest- cano's vents suddenly let mored vehicles. less volcano to recover, even loose in a sideways explosion "An English colonel, a fair profit from catastrophe. of gas, rock and ash 2,500 and just man, told us the war But never time enough to times more powerful than the was over and the Allies had forget. atomic bomb that destroyed won. His message was relayed Even as nature heals this Hiroshima. to us by an intelligence trans- s hattered mountain w it h a A super-heated cloud of lator. He said we would be sent blanket of green, the violence pulverized rock, focused horhome to Germany as soon as of May 18, 1980, remains izontally by the misshapen possible." seared in memory. That was crater flattened 150-foot-tall Fohrer said all the prison- the day that Mt. St. Helens ex- fir trees like pieces of straw. ers, ages 14 to 68, greeted the ploded, killing 57 people, flat- Across Spirit Lake, a mamnews quietly. After the talk, tening a forest and spitting out moth wave caused by the the men returned to barracks an ash cloud that circled the l andslide sloshed over t h e and talked among themselves. globe. opposite ridge, washing the "Our general reaction was Don McElwain remembers. slopes bare of th e d owned we were happy about it. He was camping 20 miles timber. "Actually it didn't come as away when hot ash engulfed Harry Truman, who had much of a surprise. We had him, turning his day to night. l ived on t h e m o untain 5 4 "I'm a former Army Ranger years,defied orders to leave access to English newspapers. A couple of fellows would and not much scares me," he his Spirit Lake Lodge, declartranslate the war news, type said. "But I'll tell you, I was ing, "That mountain is a part it up and put it on the bulletin doing some praying." of Truman, and I'm a part of board. We knew what was McElwain and two camp- it." happening and that it was just ing partners barely escaped His words were prophetic. a matter of time." on h orseback, b reathing Truman and his lodge were Foher said that some, in- through rags torn from their buried under 120 feet of debris cluding a 14-year-old soldier shirts as they rode across ash and 180 feet of the new, deeper were returned to G ermany that singed the hair on the Spirit Lake, a steaming caulthat year. Most remained in horses' legs. dron of mud and water covEngland for several years. But the ordeal did not de- ered by a floating layer of upFohrer worked as a cook for stroy his love of Mt. St. Hel- rooted trees scoured of bark. English officers until he was ens. Like many of the volca- Note to Readers: Next week sent home in 1948. He said he no's neighbors, McElwain — Life rises up from the ashes. ner Fohrer.
Continued from 61
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50 YEARS AGO
SELCO
For the week ending May 16, 1965
Bendman recallsGerman prisoners knew endnearing How did you spend this day 20 years ago? Some can't r emember.
But many can. One such person is Wer-
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BS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
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l
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TODAY
rI
TONIGHT
HIGH 68' i I '
1
ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 59 37'
Low
65 37'
89' i n 1922 11'in 1903
PRECIPITATION 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Record 0.56" in 1925 Month to date (normat) 0.6 6" (0.41 ") Year to date(normal) 2.42 " (4.54") Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 29 . 9 4"
SUN ANDMOON
EAST: Moreclouds than sunshine with a couple of showers and thunderstorms. A shower or thunderstorm this evening. CENTRAL:Cloudsand some sunshinewith a shower or two in spots. Mostly cloudy tonight with a shower in spots early. WEST: Cloudsand sunshine with a shower or thunderstorm acrossthe south. Mostly cloudy tonight.
4
Seasid
g w
Cannon 58/50
73/4
Tillamo 62/48
J un 2
Ju n 9
I
'Baker C 64/40
•
61 0
•
Bandon
64/42
Rosehurg
61/50
•
Beaver Marsh
76/51
64/42
Gra
9/ Gold ach 67 48
• Silver Lake
Chr i stmas alley
65/42
65/42
69/
64/44
67/45
• Burns Jun tion • 67/44 Rorne 67/46 McDermi
• Paisley
• Chiloquin
MedfO d '66/43 • Klamath • Ashl nd 'Falls
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen
• Lakeview 62/39
66/43
67/42
Yesterday Today Monday
Yesterday Today Monday
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 58/51/0.03 62/49/pc64/51/pc La Grande 63/48/0.00 66/44/c 69/45/t Portland 59/5 4/0.0074/54/pc78/56/ pc 63/46/0.07 64/40/t 66/40/t La Pine 51/34/0.00 64/41/pc 61/44/t Prinevigo 63/ 37/0.0070/42/c 61/44/t Brookings 64/47/0.00 60/49/pc 58/50/pc M edford 69/5 2/0.00 73/52/pc 69/53/t Redmond 61/ 35/0.0070/42/pc 66/43/t Bums 63/43/0.05 65/43/c 64/40/t Ne w port 55/5 0 /0.08 57/48/pc 56/50/pc Rosoburg 64 / 51/Tr 76/51/pc 72/53/sh Eugene 63/50/0.01 71/48/pc 72/50/pc N orth Bend 5 9 / 52/0.00 61/51/pc 59/51/pc Salem 63/52/0.00 72/50/pc 74/52/pc Klsmath Fags 61/29/0.00 66/43/pc 60/44/t O n t ario 70/53/0.02 74/50/c 72/49/t Sisters 57/42/0.00 70/43/pc 68/45/t Lakeviow 57/39/0.00 62/39/pc 60/42/t Pe n dleton 70/ 5 2/Tr 7 2 /48/c 7 3/49/t The Dagos 6 9 /54/0.00 78/52/c 81/57/t
Wee d s A b sent
Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showors, t-tbunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday
Source: OregonAgergyAssociatos 541-683-1577
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
~ 108 ~gs
As of 7 a.m.yesterday
Acr e feet 479 1 7
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•
Yesterday Today Monday
POLLEN COUNT
Reservoir Crane Prairie
union
City Astoris Baker City
The higherthe AccuWoaffter.rurmIIY Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyeaodskin protecgoo.0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlreme.
G rasses T r ee s Moderate Moderate
69/42
60/
4
•
JosePh
•
Grande •
ee44
• John eu 73/48 • Prineville Day 1/40 tario 70/42 • P a lina 6 4/ 4 5 7 50 • Eugelle o Re d Brothers 66 45 Valeo 41 Su iVero 68/41 72/52 Nyssa • es/ 1 • l.a pine • Ham on e 72/50 Juntura Grove Oakridge • Burns 68/47 72/4B /46 • Fort Rock Riley 65/43 Cresce t • 65/42 66/43
Gro ings
2 p .m. 4 p .m.
n
•
Graniteo 55/38
1/49 • Mitch II 69/44
• 71/44
Camp Sh man Red
R
Yach 60/49
UV INDEX TODAY ~ 7
A p.m. showeror thunderstorm around
~ gs
~ t e s ~ 2 08 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~ ecs ~ 708 ~ ags ~ ggs ~tccs ~ttcs v
Ca p acity NATIONAL
Wickiup 162626 Crescent Lake 7 4 B21 Ochoco Reservoir 30766 TOVo Prinevige 108947 73Vo River flow Sta t io n Cu. f t./sec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 362 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 9B2 111 Deschutes R.below Bend Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 15SO Little Deschutes near LaPine 126 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 2B Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 29 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 273 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 203 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 12
SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
s v Qoe
B7% EXTREMES 81% YESTERDAY(for the states) 86% 4B contiguous
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HiRo/W 86/66/s 80/66/1 85/57/c 69/48/s 60/43/s 84/71/pc 75/67/c 84/70/t 81/66/pc 46/33/sh 84/68/1 57/31/r 70/52/c 73/51/pc 80/56/c 77/63/c 78/52/pc 60/45/pc 84/67/pc 86/65/pc 83/67/pc 58/35/c 78/64/1 81/65/pc 79/65/1 64/43/pc 83/65/1 88/67/pc 87/68/pc 81/65/1 83/50/pc 86/77/c 82/69/t 82/67/pc 63/41/c 82/57/pc 81/66/c 62/46/t 79/58/pc 78/47/s 69/37/sh 59/31/s 80/64/c 75/58/1 86/66/pc 79/65/c 89/57/c 49/36/c 83/69/pc 87/75/c 85/66/pc 80/66/pc 86/71/t 87/66/pc
Hi/Lo/W 85/66/1 82/62/t 77/58/c 77/54/s 61/45/s 87/70/t 72/65/pc 85/69/pc 86/64/1 53/37/s 87/66/1 47/23/pc 71/51/1 59/51/pc 66/55/c 78/59/t 82/59/c 69/49/pc 88/70/pc 90/67/1 86/66/1 52/39/pc 79/43/pc 80/60/1 81/61/1 56/39/pc 80/50/pc 92/70/t 89/68/1 81/61/1 68/48/c 86/76/pc 82/67/pc 81/61/1 57/44/pc 65/41/pc 83/56/1 47/30/r 89/62/pc 78/49/s 42/31/sh 59/33/pc 79/47/pc 77/41/pc 89/68/1 83/63/1 76/54/c 58/36/pc 83/70/pc 88/73/pc 85/63/1 80/56/1 86/69/1 90/68/pc
Amsterdam Athens
58/48/c 82/62/pc 61/52/pc 100/73/s 95/80/1 87/61/1 81/73/s 59/44/c 68/50/t 71/45/pc 73/64/pc 88/65/pc 93/67/s 51/26/pc 89/76/s 55/43/sh 53/42/r 68/47/pc 77/48/s 90/82/t 78/63/s 93/64/s 76/51/pc 75/64/pc 87/63/s 62/47/c 85/56/s 96/80/s
57/48/r 82/62/pc 62/56/c 104/74/s 96/81/t 83/58/s
Source: OoThoSoow.com
Yesterday Today Monday
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Lituo 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 HiRo/W 66/45/0.00 71/45/s 71/46/s 81/67/0.01 81/58/pc 72/44/s 77/55/0.00 81/64/c 80/47/pc 78/55/0.00 81/62/s 78/59/pc 73/67/0.68 80/65/pc 81/64/1 80/64/Tr 78/50/pc 64/39/s
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72/62/1 76/43/pc 75/45/1 52/36/c 84/67/1 82/65/1
86n6/t 87n4/t 85/62/c 65/58/c
86/66/c 85/69/pc 84/64/pc Omaha 78/49/pc Orlando Sgno/o'.oo 87//1/t Palm Springs 80/52/0.00 85/61/s Pooria 83/66/0.10 82/66/1 Philadelphia 86/59/0.19 83/67/c Phoenix 75/57/0.54 85/66/s Pittsburgh 78/66/0.66 78/64/c Portland, ME 63/47/Tr 74/49/pc Providence 67/53/Tr 83/53/c Raleigh 85/60/0.00 88/66/pc Rapid City 73/45/0.71 61/36/r Rono 65/46/0.02 61/46/pc Richmond 89/62/0.00 87/69/pc Rochester, NY 77/57/Tr 78/61/c Sacramento 76/53/0.00 71/51/pc St. Louis 79/69/0.09 82no/t Salt Lake City 52/44/0.17 61/50/c San Antonio 86/6$Tr 84//3/t Sao Diego 67/59/Tr 67/60/pc Sao Francisco 61/54/0.00 64/54/pc San Jose 67/50/0.00 65/54/pc Santa re 52/33/0.12 66/40/s Savannah 82/64/0.00 86/67/pc Seattle 60/52/0.00 70/54/c Sioux Falls 78/58/1.43 68/38/c Spokane 74/50/Tr 70/49/c Springfield, Mo 82/69/0.11 83/65/pc Tampa 92/72/Tr 92n3/t Tucson 75/53/0.06 85/60/s Tulsa 83/6$Tr 86/65/pc Washington, DC 88/67/0.62 84no/pc Wichita 72/61/2.75 82/57/s Yskima 80/58/0.00 77/53/1 Yuma 79/50/0.03 86/62/s OklahomaCity
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Ski resort New snow Base 0-0 Mt. Bachelor 0 M t. Hood Meadows 0 0-0 0-51 Timberline Lodge 0 Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 0-0 0-0 Park City Mountain, UT 0
Today Monday
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 86/65/0.00 Akron 78/66/0.16 Albany 75/55/0.05 Albuquerque 60/40/0.08 Anchorage 59/47/0.00 Atlanta 85/67/0.00 Atlantic City 78/57/0.05 Austin 88/64/0.08 Baltimore 88/56/0.19 Billings 61/46/0.78 Birmingham 80/69/0.28 Bismarck 65/51/1.57 Boise 65/50/0.04 Boston 71/55/Tr Bridgeport, CT 69/56/0.38 Buffalo 67/59/Tr Burlington, VT 76/58/0.01 Caribou, ME 75/48/0.00 Charleston, SC 82/60/0.00 Charlotte 87/62/0.00 Chattanooga 80/64/0.03 Cheyenne 64/39/0.02 Chicago 79/62/0.03 Cincinnati 76/63/0.09 Cleveland 73/65/0.01 ColoradoSprings 63/44/0.02 Columbia, Mo 79/65/0.22 Columbia, SC 86/62/0.00 Columbus,GA 86/66/0.00 Columbus,OH 76/66/0.10 Concord, HH 71/46/Tr Corpus Christi 85n1/0.00 Dallas 84/69/0.20 Dayton 78/66/0.04 Denver 64/45/Tr Dos Moines 82/62/0.01 Detroit 78/63/0.06 Duluth 64/40/0.00 El Paso 78/57/0.00 Fairbanks 70/50/0.00 Fargo 70/52/0.01 Flagstaff 48/32/0.20 Grand Rapids 79/55/0.01 Green Bay 72/52/0.00 Greensboro 84/62/0.00 Harrisburg 86/57/0.31 Harfford, CT 73/56/0.02 Helena 49/46/0.90 Honolulu 83/70/0.03 Houston 89n3/0.05 Huntsville 83/69/0.62 Indianapolis 71/64/0.61 Jackson, MS 87/71/0.58 Jacksonville 82/60/0.00
59/43/0.65 75/59/0.00 v,v 7 Auckland 59/50/0.02 Baghdad 93/70/0.00 Bangkok 97/82/0.00 41/so Beijing 84/54/0.00 Col m b 82/57 W ' ko Beirut 81/66/0.00 at Wichita, KS an o c ivco • Doh /47 Berlin 61/42/0.08 44/54 43/4 Wovhi II us tto Lav V ov Bogota 66/50/0.08 8 81/e Budapest 72/50/0.00 Konvov CI Buenos Ai r es 79/57/0.00 • ovbvu Chorto Los Ao tov 49/48 Cabo Sao Lucas 84/67/0.00 v++V. 84/6 'ty • • Old h oma • Cairo 86/63/0.00 pboen Allchorouo 84/ 4 • At Calgary 48/45/0.21 • 86/Cie 0 eo/4 o 0 S4n1 Caocun 88n9/0.00 Bir in uho 6 /eo Juneau al Po Dublin 55/43/0.01 84/ 8 9/5 Edinburgh 54/45/0.28 71/45 Geneva 68/46/0.00 o< • rlohdo Harare 77/49/0.00 r .e v.<<>' worteonv 7/75 8 Hong Kong 83/80/0.73 Honolulu Chihuahus Sd/76 0 Istanbul 82/64/0.00 83/49 se/54 Miami Jerusalem 80/53/0.00 Monte y 87/TK OS/73 Johannesburg 77/56/0.00 e Lima 75/64/0.00 Lisbon 86/59/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 64/52/0.00 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 82/48/0.00 Manila 97/80/0.00
National high: 95 at Presidio, TX National low: 19 at Leadville, CO Precipitation: 2.B3"
Cloudy with a t-storm in the afternoon
TRAVEL WEATHER
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WED NESDAY
OREGON WEATHER
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High
TUESDAY
65' 43'
LOW
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105/79/0.00 108/86/s 76/53/0.31 76/55/1 Montreal 70/59/0.00 77/52/s Moscow 48/42/0.46 53/41/r Nairobi 79/63/0.04 79/59/1 Nassau 82/75/0.38 86/75/pc New Delhi 99n2/o.oo 104/82/s Osaka 73/67/0.03 80/58/pc Oslo 49/41/0.22 46/41/sh Ottawa 70/55/0.02 77/50/s Paris 64/43/Tr 65/45/pc Rio de Janeiro 75/67/0.02 78/69/pc Rome 70/55/0.00 83/61/1 Santiago 73/41/0.00 74/44/s Sao Paulo 72/57/0.00 73/59/c Sapporo 64/49/0.01 61/52/pc Seoul 74/48/0.00 74/54/pc Shanghai 77/61/0.00 77/68/s Singapore 86nwo.o4 90/80/1 Stockholm 55/28/0.19 49/38/sh Sydney 64/57/0.04 67/55/pc Taipei gonT/o'.oo 87/77/pc Tel Aviv 80/55/0.00 92n3/s Tokyo 73/68/0.05 75/65/pc Toronto 77/55/0.00 73/55/c Vancouver 66/54/0.00 66/52/c Vienna 73/50/0.01 68/48/pc Warsaw 64/36/0.04 59/44/c
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INSIDE: SPORTS SECTION W
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
O w w w.bendbulletin.com/ppp
• Without a traditional nordic skiing leg on the course, thePPPgoes off without a hitch
• The modified, run-heavy courseplays into the hands (andfeet) of first-time champions
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Morgan Arritola crosses the finish line to win the elite women's division of the Pole Pedal Paddle on Saturday morning in Bend. Arritola finished with a time of 2:05:37.
Thomasrunsaway from 6-timewinner Greenefor 1stwin
Now back home, Arritola earnsher rite of passage
By Mark Morical
By Mark Morical
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Jesse Thomas made what he called a "soft"
For Morgan Arritola, Saturday was a home-
promise to his friend Matt Briggs. If he won Saturday's U.S. Bank Pole Pedal
coming of sorts. The former U.S. Cross Country Ski Team
Paddle, Thomas, a professional triathlete,
member and now professional trail runner was
would return next year to race when the event will likely include a nordic ski stage again.
born in Bend, moved away when she was 6, and moved back to Bend just last September from Sun Valley, Idaho. Saturday marked her first time racing in the U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle as an individual. "I feel like it's a rite of passage in living in
With that stage replaced by a 2.34-mile
trail run this year due to a lack of snow at Mount Bachelor, Bend's Thomas was utterly dominant as he crushed his opposition to win the elite men's race in 1 hour, 42 minutes, 50
Bend," Arritola said.
seconds.
The petite 29-year-old cruised to victory
Marshall Greene, also of Bend, finished
in the elite women's division with a time of 2
second in 1:48:14, more than five minutes behind Thomas. Briggs, also of Bend, was third in I:50:36.
SeeMen/C9
ghgt
Jesse Thomas runs out of his kayak during the Pole Pedal Paddle on Saturday to run to the finish line. Thomas finished first in the men's elite division in1:42:50.
CYCLING RUNNING A 22-mile mostly A5-mile run through Mt. Mount Bachelor, addedto downhill ride from Bachelor Village andalong Mount Bachelor to the the Deschutes River Trail courseontheLeewayRunreplace the race's usual at Mt. Bachelor ski area. 8-kilometer nordic ski leg. Athletic Club of Bend. to the Riverbend Park.
ALPINE SKIING
A 200-foot uphill sprint and a racedown agated
PPP?
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
hours, 5 minutes, 37 seconds. Bend's Mary Wellington finished second in 2:11:53, and Carolyn Daubeny, also of Bend, took third in 2:16:22.
SeeWomen/C9
RUNNING
PADDLING
Inside
A 2.34-mile trail run at
A1t/t-mile paddle on
• The Pole PedalPaddle is much more than a race: Alook at someof Saturday's craziness. Around thePPP,C2 • Atlas Cider Co.finds some ringers to get the overall fastest time,C9 • Complete results from the PPP, C10
SPRINTING A half-mile run along a the Deschutes River, paved path andgrass including upstream and to the finish at the Les downstream sections. Schwab Amphitheater.
Qo Q~Online: Complete coverage onour website at bendbnlletin.comlppp
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
POLE PEDAL PADDLE
Our favorite names
A unipueview
TEAMS Too OldForThis S¹*©: This team was in the femalepairs 65-69 age group. Apair of "attagirls" to you guys for finishing in 3 hours, 3 minutes, 25 seconds!
While most Pole PedalPaddle participants — andalmost everyone else in Central Oregon —are still enjoying someshut-eye, each year Greg andKathleenEvans wake up at 4a.m. onPPPday and head out to set upeachaid station along the entire race course, from Mount Bachelor to Bend. The Evanses, whoareaided by their children, Blake (14)andKarli (8), have beenaid station captains since they movedback to Bend11 years ago.
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Flaming Chickens:NoBend team event would becomplete without a shoutout to the city's most iconic piece of roundabout art. But I Hadthe Nordic Leg!:No worries — This coed16-19 team placed first out of four entries in the category. Wii UnFit:Would have received evenmorebonus Bend points for playing a solar-powered video-game console ona paddleboard. CleverTeamName: Congratulations, you made the list. Old:This was the lone entry in the tandempairs 60-64 age category, and they finished in 3:15:51. Sometimes, simple and to the point is the best. Rob Schneider's ¹1: An A-plus troll job, but if you REALLYwant the most annoying team name,may we suggest "Nickelback." INDIVIDUALS Dr. Bones, Dr.Buns, Elvis TheWhite, Elvis The Black:Everyyear some individuals perform entry list shenanigans. For the record, the doctors have their first names listed as "Dr.," while the Elvises (Elvisses? Elvii?) have their last names as"TheWhite" and "The Black."
Andy Tullie/The Bulletin
A aitskier races through the downhill gates during the Pole Pedal Paddle on Mount Bachelor on Saturday morning
a ora a i vea e e s The crowd at Saturday's Pole Pedal Paddle gave a special cheer for 9-year-old Emmy Pfankucke as she pushed herself in her wheelchair across the finish line, closely followed by her parents, Jill and Bill. Emmy served as the anchor leg for Onward!, one of three Oregon Adaptive Sports teams designed to give athletes with physical or developmental disabilities the opportunity to participate in the she was 4. This was her second PPP. "It's awesome," Emmy said when asked how she felt about the race.
Missingsomething?
Myles Bagley, a 27-year-old Bend resident, said he decided to join an OAS team about a month ago after failing to persuade his friends to form a team in the PPP's open division. "I always kayak, so I was trained, but I didn't know I was going to do it until a month before," said Bagley, who completed the paddling leg for True Grit. "I had a blast, it was super fun." — Victoria Jacobsen
You're doing it wrong
of team Ya Ya Sisters, from left, Deb Pertner, Brad
Pertner, Karen Jordan, Diane Tipton, Janice Vetter, and Katherine Procter.
d ' '\
Tees Freeman /The Bulletin
DUR LEASTFAVORITES We found far too manyentries punning off "Young and the Restless" or "Fast and Furious."
Ya YaSisters go outontop —mayde Fifteen years ago, the YaYaSisters, a team of five Bend special education teachers, agreed they would compete in five moreeditions of the Pole Pedal Paddle. But they bypassed thedecade mark andjust kept going, and on Saturday, Karen Jordan, Diane Tipton, JaniceVetter, Katherine Procter and DebPertner finished the race, met at the finish line and popped abottle of champagne to celebrate their 20th year as aPPPteam. As they celebrated in front of the scoreboard, theYa-YaSisters saw their nameappear atop the the women's team55-59 division results, marking their third age-group win in a row. "When we started, wewould finish in seventh or eighth place, but we always hadchampagne andtoasted to our greatness," said Pertner, who completed the cycling leg for the Sisters. The YaYaSisters said they thought this would be their final hurrah, but after winning their age group onceagain, they just might be backfor No. 21.
— Peter Pietrangelo
— Victoria Jacobsen
So you're telling me it's a race?
Teee Freeman/The Bulletin
A team member of the Loe Bonely Boyz paddlee a kayak with hie arms during the
paddle stage. Usually, the paddle stage is done with actual paddlea.
Plenty of typical items turn up at the PolePedal Paddlelost and found eachyear. There areski poles and pullovers, not to mention quite a few pairs of shoes. But as theafternoon wears on, larger items start trickling in after it becomes clearthat theowner is not comingbacktotheexchangearea to claim his or hergear. Volunteer "Danger" DaveRicher says he has seenentire sets of skis, bikes, canoes andeven an inflatable raft or two turn up inthe lost andfound. Danger Dave,asheiscommonly known amongfellow volunteers and PPPenthusiasts, says the lost and found tends to befuller on warmer racedayswhenparticipants removemorelayers of clothing during thecompetition. The misplaced gear,which is spreadout on the porch of the"white house,"a small white building behindthe Les Schwab Amphitheater, is packedup soon after the beergarden closes and hauledbackto the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation headquarters. Items that arenot eventually recovered atthe MBSEFoffices are sold in theSkyliners Winter Sports Swap inOctober. Some individual competitors who do not haveasupport crew intentionally leavetheir equipment behind, knowing theycan recover their gear atthe endof the day. Butin manycases, teamsjust forget who it was thatwassupposedto pick up thekayak. "They figure it out whenthey want to go out of townandcan't find the boat," Richersaid. — Victoria Jacobsen
Gilpinstill goingstrongat 79
-sy. e.
The oldest individual competitor at the Pole Pedal Paddle, 79-year-old Ernie Gilpin of Bend, said there are two things that keep him coming backyear after year. "Intestinal fortitude, and I'm chicken to quit," Gilpin said Saturday after finishing
While a fewPPPcompetitors are in it to win it, plenty of participants are just happy to spenda little time with their friends.
TakeTeam Seabass,whichfinishedsecondinthetandem 40-44 category with a time of 2hours, 33 minute sand35seconds,all while decked-out in orangeand blue polyester tuxedos a laDumb & Dumber. "It's an homage to acouple of great buddies," said Gerard Lester, 48, said of his creamsicle orange costume tux. "They're terrible to run in, awful to bike in, andpretty bad for boating." Lester and his tandempartner, Nick White, 33, cut off the costumetuxedosatthekneesand poked holes in thebrims of their tops hats to buckle their helmets (safety comes first, after all.) "They're really not good for anything, but they look spectacular,"
— Yictoria Jacobsen
multisport PPP. Emmy, who lives with her family in Salem, has participated in OAS activities since
Members
WILD CARD Nils Ericksson was amember of A Viking and aSicilianguess which one he is —and lists his duties on the official volunteer roster as "Handsome Swede." Sounds like good work if you canget it.
"It's the family tradition at this
point," Kathleen Evanssaid as they unloaded garbagebagafter garbage bagfull of discarded paper cups andbananapeels from the back of a U-Haul truck late Saturday afternoon. "It's our give-back to society," Greg Evanschimed in. The Evansesareamong 450 volunteers who staff the PPP course on theday of the race,and Kathleen said sheand herfamily enjoy their role in the classic Bend event — aside from the 4a.m. wake-up call. They typically watch the first few elite runners cross the finish line before driving back up Mount Bachelor to breakdown each aid station as the final competitors pass through. Over the years, they haveseen plenty of outrageous costumes, a few snowstorms andseveral traffic misdirections. But there are also plenty of thank-yous. "The people in the racesee us, and they're like, 'Thank youfor setting up the stations for us!'" Kathleen Evanssaid. "I'm like, how dotheyknow us? Iguessit's because they recognize our faces. It's a really good reward."
the PPP for the 21st time.
be using the same get-ups at the
Gilpin, who finished the course in 3 hours, 51minutesand42seconds,said his times havebeenfairly consistent over the past few years even as hegets older. "It's gotten harder — they seemto be making everything longer and harder every year," Gilpin joked. "I run the same speed all the time andkayakthe same speed, so I'm pretty consistent. It takes me four hours, so if you're within four or five minutes every year you must be pretty consistent." Gilpin, who finished third out of three in the 75-79 agedivision, said he is not done
next PPP.
with the PPP just yet.
Teee Freeman/The Bulletin
Members of Team Seabaea, Gerrard Leater, left, and Nick White cross the finish line of Pole Pedal Paddle dressed aa characters from the movie Dumb & Dumber.
said White said of their costumes. Lester said heandWhite drove from their homes inPortland the night before theevent with a kayak stapped to the roof anda tandem bicycle in theback ofthe car. Unfortunately, the duowill not
"This is a one-usegarment. I don't think it's going to survive," Lester said. "Thesewill not be washed." — Yictona Jacobsen
"Oh heckyes!"hesaidwhenasked ifhe plans to compete again in 2016. "I'll be 80 — I'll be the only one in the 80group."
Teee Freeman/The Bulletin
Ernie Gilpin, 79, greets hie family near the finish line of — Victoria Jacobsen the Pole Pedal Paddle. Gilpin competed in PPP for the 21st time.
Scoreboard, C4 N HL, C7 Sports in brief, C4 Motor sports, C8 MLB, C5 Golf, C8 Preps, C6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
SOFTBALL
PREP BOYS TENNIS
HORSE RACING COMMENTARY
Ducks finish off regional with win
Jockey Victor Esplnoza
celebrates
EUGENE— Oregon finished off the Eugene Regional with a 6-1 victory over North Dakota State and will advance to a Super Regional next week. Janie Takeda had two hits, including a home run, to lead the Ducks' offense. Hailey Decker also belted a homer for Oregon. Nikki Udria, Jenna Lilley, Koral Costa and Lauren Lindvall each had a double. Pitcher Karissa Hovinga threw six innings and gave up two hits with six strikeouts to take the win for Oregon. Cheridan Hawkins, who was named the Eugene Regional MVP, closed out the game by throwing the final inning. Hawkins led the Ducks to a 4-3 win Friday over NDSU.A loss Saturday would have set up a deciding Game 7.
t" •
ness Stakes horse race at Pimlico
Race Course Saturday in Baltimore. Matt Slocum/The Associated Press
Pharoah'svictory impressive,but not a lock at Belmont
e
A
By Andrew Beyer Special To The Washington Post
— Bulletin staff report
BALTIMORE-
nder the dark skies
U
over Pimlico, American Pharoah shone
MLS
Dynamopull away, deat Timders HOUSTON — Will
Bruin scored twice, Giles Barnes hadthe goahead score in the75th minute, and the Houston Dynamo beat the Portland Timbers 3-1 on Saturday night. Bruin opened the scoring with a header
— The Associated Press
BOXING Holyfield jads Romneyfor charity SALT LAKE CITY
— Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney andfivetime heavyweight boxing champion Evander Holyfield squared off in the ring at a charity fight night event in Salt Lake City.
Romney, 68, and Holyfield, 52, sparred, if you could call it that, for just two short rounds before Romney ran away from the boxer and threw in the towel, giving up a roundearly in the lighthearted fight that came amidseveral other fights by professional boxers andan auction. The two barely threw any punches andlargely just danced around, occasionally lightly jabbing each other in the midsection in what
was much more of a comediceventthanan actual bout. The black-tie affair raised money for the Utah-based organization CharityVision, which helps doctors in developing countries perform surgeries to restore vision in people with curable blindness. — The Associated Press
147th Belmont Stakes When:3:30 pm. Saturday, June 6 TV:NBC
Yet the circumstances of his
tenders who handled with
that American Pharoah will
aplomb the wind, the driving
still have plenty of doubters
rain, the mud and even a
three weeks from now at Belmont Park.
time.
Under most circumstances, a Kentucky Derby
winner who proceeds to capture the Preakness in a runaway would justly be hailed as a superstar and a strong favorite to complete a
r ns
Nextup
brightly in the Preakness. He not only displayed his usual high speed, but he was the only one of the key con-
lightning flash right at post
in the ninth minute and
added an insurancegoal on a chip shot in the 83rd to help the Dynamo (4-4-4) win back-toback gamesfor the first time this season. Barnes made it 2-1 with a blast after a patient back-and-forth with Alexander Lopezin the middle of the box. It was his sixth goal of the season. Fanendo Adi tied it at 1 for the Timbers (3-44) in the 48th minute, shirking a physical challenge from defender DeMarcus Beasleyand finishing DiegoValeri's lead pass.
aboard American Pharoah after winning the 140th Preak-
seven-length victory Satur-
day were so bizarre, and in many ways so ambiguous,
The reason is this: In the eight-horse Preakness field, there appeared to be only three horses who could conceivably win, American Pharoah, Firing Line and
Dortmund — the top three finishers in the Derby.
sweep of the Triple Crown.
See Pharoah/C8
.c
NBA PLAYOFFS
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Summit's Carter Quigley returns a shotwhile facing off against teammate Chandler Oliveira during the
Atlanta inally c eerin Haw s
Class 5A Special District1 boys tennis championship match in Sunriver on Saturday. Quigley won.
By Paul Newberry The Associated Press
• Teammates battle in the finals at the district 1 championships Bulletin staff report SUNRIVER — This weekend featured some of the best
tennis played by the Summit boys all season. And it all
InSide • Bend High girls tennis wins districts for first time since 2011,C6
championships. "We were hoping for six (state qualifiers)," said Summit coach Josh Cordell, whose team accomplished that feat
came at the right time on the
defeated teammates Thomas
schedule. Carter Quigley defeated
Wimberly/Hudson Mickel 6-3, 6-4 in the doubles final,
teammate Chandler Oliveira
and the Storm finished with
4-6, 6-3, 6-4 in the singles championship, the tandem of Logan Hausler/Daniel Pino
a district-record 56 team points Saturday at the Class 5A Special District I tennis
when three singles players and threedoubles teams advanced to the semifinals on Friday.
"That was our early goal. To get it was pretty awesome.... It was all we were hoping for." SeeStorm /C6
ATLANTA — From Cliff
Levingston taking the final shot instead of Dominique Wilkins to the largest fourgame blowout in NBA histo-
ry, the Atlanta Hawks have plenty of playoff lowlights. Now, finally, there is something to cheer about. For the first time, the Hawks are headed to the
Eastern Conference finals, just one step away from playing for the first championship since the franchise moved from St. Louis to the Deep South in 1968.
"They deserve it," said
Wilkins, a Hall of Famer and
PREP TRACK AND FIELD
Nextup
Cleveland at Atlanta When:5:30 p.m. Wednesday TV:TNT
probably the greatest player in team history. "They really just came together as one." Wilkins was part of a
memorable era in Hawks history, the leader of a high-flying team that, until now,
came the dosest to advancing past the second round. SeeHawks/C7
NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE By Jim Vertuno
Emory Rains
The Associated Press
High School's Charlotte
AUSTIN, Texas — For three years, Char-
lotte Brown has been chasing a medal by trying to jump over a bar she couldn't see. The senior pole vaulter cleared that bar Saturday, earning a third-place finish at the Texas state high school championships. And proudly joining her on the podium as the
Brown, who is legally blind,
competes in the Conference 4A girls pole vault
Helmet sensorsare a sensitive issue
bronze medal was draped around her neck-
competition
By Brett Martel
but also the legal and ethical
her service dog Vador. Brown is blind, yet that has not stopped her
at the UIL Texas State
The Associated Press
pitfalls that come with them.
quest to become one of the best in an event
Track and
When big-money NFL ca-
it clear the NFLPA wants to
that would seem next to impossible. "I finally did it," Brown said. "If I could
Field Cham-
reersare atstake, the use of
pionships Saturday in
impact-measuringsensors in football helmets is not as
pursue placing sensors in helmets as soon as the technology meets its standards.
Austin, Texas. Brown won a
routine as one might expect.
But the union also wants to
The NFL Players Association's Mackey-White Com-
ensure that sensor data is not used in a way that infringes upon players' medical privacy rights ,orcreatesscenarios whereby careers are arbi-
send a message to anybody, it's not about
pole vaulting and it's not about track. It's about finding something that makes you happy despite whatever obstacles are in your way." Brown had qualified for the state meet
each year since 2013 with Emory Rains High School. She finished eighth as a sophomore and improved to fourth as a junior. SeeVaulter/C6
bronze medal with her thirdplace finish. Eric Gay/The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS-
mittee, which spearheads
player safety initiatives, spent considerable time in mid-April discussing not only the potential health benefits of helmet sensors,
Committee members made
trarily cut short by the teams
for which they play. See Sensors/C7
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Time 4 a.m. 10 a.m. noon noon 2 p.m.
GOLF
EuropeanTour, Spanish Open PGA Tour,Wells Fargo Championship PGA Tour,Wells Fargo Championship Champions Tour, RegionsTradition LPGA Tour, Kingsmill Championship
TV/Radify
Golf Golf CBS Golf Golf
Oregonmen,women lead atPac-12 Championships-
InbeePark 72-67-70—209 MariajoUribe 68-71-70—209 Christina Ki m 69-68-72—209 Monday NBA playoffs 75-69-66—210 Baseball:MountainViewysBend (DH)at VinceGenJessica Korda 73-71-66—210 naSt adium,4p.m.;Ridgeview atRedmond,2:30 Ai Miyazato NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION SarahKemp 73-69-68—210 p.m.;Redmond at Ridgeview,5p.m. All TimesPDT Soltball:MountainViewat Bend(DH), 3p.m.; RidCandieKung 72-70-68—210 a -Megan K h ang 72-70-68—210 gevie watRedmond(DH),2:30p.m. CONFERENCESEMIFINALS Boys golg 5Astatechampionshipat Emerald Valey Eun-HeeJi 70-72-68—210 (Besl-of-7) Golf & Resort in Creswell12:33 , p.m.; 4Astate Today'sGame LydiaKo 71-69-70—210 championship atQuail Valey Golf Coursein Banks, L.A. Clippers KatieBurnett 68-72-70—210 at Houston,12:30 p.m. 12:15p.mc3A/2A/1A statechampionship at Quail AnnaNordqvist 70-69-71—210 ValleyGolf Coursein Banks, 7:30a.m. 70-67-73—210 CONFERENCE FINALS CatrionaMathew Girls golf: 5A statechampionship at TrystingTree 71-72-68—211 (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) JeeYoungLee Golf Club inCorvaffis, 12:33p.mc4A/3A/2A/1A Tuesday'sGame AmyYang 71-72-68—211 statechampionship atEagleCrest RidgeCoursein HoustonORLA.Clippers at GoldenState,6 p.m. SooBinKim 73-68-70—211 Redmond,8a.m. Wednesday'sGame AmeliaLewis 72-69-70—211 Cleveland atAtlanta, 5:30p.m. 70-71-70—211 HaruNom ura Tuesday BrittanyLincicome 69-71-71—211 Baseball: Pendleton at Summit, 4:30p.mc Creswell Pornanong Phatlum 70-69-72—211 SOFTBALL at LaPine,5p.m. 67-72-72—211 JacquiConcolino SoNbaff:Creswell at LaPine,5 p.m. 73-71-68—212 Katherme Kirk Boysgolh5Astate championship at Emerald ValCollege DanielleKang 72-72-68—212 ley Golf & Resort in Creswell, 12:33p,ms4A Jane Park 74-69-69—212 NCAAtournament state championshipat Quail ValleyGolf Course K im Kauf m a n 71-72-69—212 All Times PDT in Banks,12:15p.ms3A/2A/1Astate champi70-73-69—212 Pernilla Lindberg onship at Quail ValleyGolf Course in Banks, 72-69-71—212 EugeneRegional AmyAnderson 7;30 a.m. (Double elimination; x-if necessary) Azahara Munoz 71-70-71—212 Girls golf: 5A statechampionship at TrystingTree Thursday' s Games Sarah Jane S m it h 68-73-71—212 Golf Club inCorvaffis, 12:33p.mc4A/3A/2A/1A NorthDakotaSt.4, FresnoState0 Paula Re t o 69-70-73—212 statechampionship atEagleCrest RidgeCoursein Oregon8,BYU0 74-70-69—213 SakuraYokomine Redmond, 8a.m. Friday's Games P.K.Kongkraphan 69-75-69—213 Game 3: O r ego n 4, N ort h D ak ot a St . 3 Sydnee Michaels 72-71-70—213 Thursday Game 4: BY U 8, F r e sno St . 7 (F re sno St . el i m i n at e d) Stacy Lew i s 69-74-70—213 Baseball: Summiatt Sisters, 4:30p.m. Game 5: N o rth D ak ot a St . 7, BY U 0 (B Y U eli m i n at e d) 66-77-70—213 M organ Pre ss el Boys tennis: 5Astatechampionship at WestHils Saturday'sGames 72-70-71—213 MiHyangLee RacquetandFitnessClubin Portland, noon 6: Oregon6, North Dakota St. 1 (NDSUelim- CharleyHull 71-71-71—213 Girls tennis: 5Astatechampionship at WestHils Game i n ated) Pat Hurst 66-76-71—213 RacquetandFitnessClubin Portland, 2p.m. Oregon a d v a nc es t o Su p e r Re g i o n a l s 74-67-72—213 Track andfield: 3A,2A,1Astate championships at JaneRah 65-75-73—213 HaywardField inEugene,10 a.m. Joanna Klatten Nannette Hil 68-71-74—213 GOLF Friday AustinErnst 68-71-74—213 Boys tennis: 5Astatechampionship at WestHils AlejandraLlaneza 75-69-70—214 PGA Racquetand Fitness Club in Portland, 9 a.ms 72-72-70—214 JennyShin 4A/3A/2A/1Astatechampionship at OregonState, 74-69-71—214 Wells FargoChampionship MeenaLee Ba.m. Saturday ChristelBoeljon 70-72-72—214 Girls tennis: 5Astatechampionship at WestHils At Quail Hollow Club I.K. Kim 72-69-73—214 RacquetandFitnessClub in Portland,9:30a.m.; Charlotte, NrC. JenniferJohnson 70-71-73—214 4A/3A/2A/1Astatechampionship at OregonState, Purse: $7.1million 71-69-74—214 BrookeM.Henderson Ba.m. Yardage: 7,662;Par 72 SeiYoungKim 69-71-74—214 Track and field: 5A, 4A statechampionships at Third Round Kelly WShon 75-69-71—215 HaywardFieldin Eugene,9 a.m.;3A,2A,1Astate RoryMcffroy 70-67-61—198 BelenMozo 74-70-71—215 championshipat s Hayward Field in Eugene,2:30 WebbSimpson 67-67-68—202 MariaHernandez 72-72-71—215 p.m. 65-69-71 —205 RobertStreb 70-74-71—215 JiYoung Dh Boyslacrosse:DHSLAplayoffs,secondround,TBD Brendan Steele 69-69-68—206 CydneyClanton 72-71-72—215 at Bend;TBDat Summit PatrickRodgers 68-68-70—206 SandraGal 71-72-72—215 69-73-65—207 PaolaMoreno JustinThom as 70-74-72—216 Saturday 70-71-66—207 Drtiz 72-71-73—216 HaejiKang Boys tennis: 5A state championship at Tuala- Carlos Will MacKen z i e 69-68-70—207 YueerCindyFeng 69-73-74—216 tin Hills Tennis Center in Beaverton, 9 a.mc BooWeekley 71-70-67—208 ChieArimura 76-67-74—217 4A/3A/2A/1A state championship at Oregon Jim Herm an 71-69-68—208 DanahBordner 73-70-74—217 State, 8a.m. 71-69-68—208 MarissaLSteen hadCampbel 72-70-76—218 Girls tennis: 5A state championship at Tuala- C Brown 71-68-69—208 KarinSjodin 74-70-77—221 tin Hills Tennis Center in Beaverton, 9 a.mc Scott Phil Mickel s on 71-66-71 —208 DemiRunas 72-72-77—221 4A/3A/2A/1A state championship at Oregon RetiefGoosen 72-70-67—209 Dori Carter 71-73-79—223 State, 8a.m. 70-71-68—209 Gary Wo o dl a n d Trackandfield: 5A,4Astate championships at Hay- DannyLee 71-69-69—209 wardFieldin Eugene,9:30a.m. Champions K.J. Choi 68-72-69—209 JasonBohn 72-68-69—209 RegionsTradition 69-70-70—209 BASEBALL Shawn Stefani Saturday 71-68-70—209 DanielBerger At ShoalCreek Matt Jones 69-70-70—209 Shoal Creek,Ala. College GeoffOgilvy 69-69-71 —209 Purse: S2.3million Pac-12 Scott Pinckney 76-68-66—210 Yardage:7,231; Par:72 All TimesPDT 74-69-67—210 SeanO'Hair Third Round 67-67-68 —202 H ideki Matsuya m a 69-71-70—210 Jeff Magge rt Conference Overall evinStreelman 69-71-70—210 KevinSutherland 68-66-69 —203 W L T PctW L T Pct K TonyFinau 73-67-70—210 FredFunk 70-69-67 —206 UCLA 20 6 0 . 7 69 39 12 0 .765 71-72-68—211 Jeff Hart 71-69-68—208 Glover Southerncal 16 9 0 .640 3516 0 .686 Lucas 67-76-68—211 GeneSauers 70-70-68—208 Stewart Ci n k OregonSt. 16 9 1 . 634 35 14 1 .724 71-70-68 —209 Peterson 71-70-70—211 TomPerniceJr. ArizonaSt. 17 10 0 .630 32 19 0 .627 John lThompson 67-71-73—211 BernhardLanger 73-66-70—209 California 1 5 10 0 .600 31 17 0 .646 Michae 73-71-68—212 Kenny Perry 70-69-70—209 Oregon 1 31 3 0 .500 33 22 0 .600 Pat Perez 70-71-71—212 TomLehman 76-66-68 —210 Randolph Arizona 12 1 7 0 .413 28 22 0 .560 Jonathan 75-71-65 —211 John Merri c k 71-70-71—212 John Hust o n Washington 11 16 0 .407 26 24 0 .520 68-72-72—212 Jeff Sluman 75-69-67 —211 WashingtonSt. 10 17 0 .370 28 25 0 .528 CarlPettersson 66-74-72—212 EstebanToledo 70-71-70—211 Uiali 7 18 1 .300 16 32 1 .336 PatrickReed 67-73-72—212 MichaelAllen 70-67-74—211 Stanford 7 19 0 . 269 22 30 0 .423 RickyBarnes 71-74-67 —212 MartinFlores 69-67-76—212 Billy Andrade S am Sa und ers 75-68-70—213 Mark McNul t y 73-68-71 —212 Saturday'sGames BenMartin 74-69-70—213 TomWatson 69-72-71 —212 Oregon 8, Utah5 71-71-71—213 Scott Hoch 71-74-68 —213 MarkWilson Southern Cal11,California 3 72-70-71—213 RodSpittle 74-69-70—213 Bill Haas Cal State Northridge6,Washington 0 74-71-69—214 KevinKisner 69-73-71—213 ChienSoonLu UCLA 6,Arizona0 StevenAlker 69-72-72—213 lan Woo snam 72-72-70—214 Oregon St. 7,Stanford5 Bo VanPelt 70-71-72—213 WesShort, Jr. 69-75-70—214 Arizona St. 6,Washington St.5 Today'sGames 70-71-72—213 ScottVerplank 74-69-71 —214 JasonGore 69-73-72 —214 Oregon atUtah,10a.m. BrianStuard 70-70-73—213 Colin Montgom erie 76-70-69 —215 Cal StateNorthridgeatWashington,1 p.m. KevinChapell 66-73-74—213 DuffyWaldorf Arizona at UCLA,1 p.m. GeorgeMcNeil 69-69-75—213 GuyBoros 70-75-70—215 Oregon St.at Stanford,1 p.m. 67-77-70—214 Larry Mize 75-72-68 —215 ChessonHadley Southern CalatCalifornia,4 p.m. 72-71-72 —215 AaronBaddeley 74-70-70—214 Woody Austin Monday'sGame 71-71-73 —215 Morgan Hoff mann 72-70-72—214 Olin Browne SouthernCalatCalifornia, 7 p.m. SteveWheatcrofl 74-66-74—214 Kirk Triplett 71-72-72 —215 69-70-75—214 J ohn Ri e gge r 72-68-75—215 ScottGutschew ski 75-69-71 —215 L ee Janz e n 78-68-70—216 Charles Ho w el l III SOCCER 74-73-69—216 CarlosSainzJr 74-69-72—215 PaulGoydos 70-74-72 —216 HunterMahan 70-73-72—215 DavidFrost MLS 70-73-72—215 MarkO'Meara 71-73-72 —216 MichaelPutnam 71-71-73—215 Gil Morgan 70-72-74—216 MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER RyanMoore 71-75-71 —217 All TimesPDT Martin Laird 72-70-73—215 Jay Don Blake 75-70-72 —217 ChadCollins 72-70-73—215 MikeGoodes EasternConference Bigy HurleIg y 67-75-73—215 BradFaxon 73-71-73 —217 W L T P t sGF GA Sangmoon 70-72-73—215 JohnCook 71-73-73—217 Bae D.C. United 6 1 3 21 13 8 74-74-69 —217 DavidToms 72-70-73—215 Sandy Lyle NewEngland 5 2 4 19 15 11 AlexCejka 72-71-74—217 71-70-74—215 BradBryant NewYork 4 1 5 17 14 9 RussellKnox 69-69-77—215 Joe Durant 73-75-69 —217 Columbus 4 4 2 14 15 12 73-71-72—216 LarryNelson 77-68-73 —218 JamesHahn TorontoFC 3 5 1 10 13 14 Steven 73-71-72—216 Bart Bryant 73-71-74—218 Bowditch Chicago 3 5 1 10 9 12 AndresRomero 76-70-73 —219 70-73-73—216 Tommy Armour ffl OrlandoCit y 2 5 3 9 9 14 Colt Knost 71-75-73 —219 75-68-73—216 RussCochran NewYorkCity FC 1 6 4 7 9 14 HenrikStenson 72-71-73—216 BobGilder 74-72-73 —219 Philadelphia 1 7 3 6 10 21 AndresGonzales 72-71-73—216 Mike Reid 75-72-72 —219 Montreal 1 3 2 5 7 9 WilliamMcGirt 75-72-72 —219 72-70-74—216 MarcoDawson WeslernConference 73-70-76—219 BobTwa y W L T P t sGF GA LPGA Jerry Smi t h 75-70-75 —220 FC Dallas 6 2 3 21 17 13 TomByrum 70-75-75 —220 Kingsmill Championship Vancouver 6 4 2 20 14 11 StevePate 74-73-73 —220 Saturday Seattle 6 3 1 19 17 9 73-75-72 —220 At Kingsmill Resort, River Course JoseCoceres 5 4 2 17 12 11 SanJose 72-76-72 —220 Williamsburgi ya. JoeySindelar 4 4 4 16 16 15 Houston Purse: S1.3 mi l lion Morris Hatal s ky 73-75-72 —220 S porting KansasCity 3 2 5 1 4 13 13 Yardage: 6,349;Par 71 TomPurtzer 72-75-74—221 Los Angele s 3 3 5 14 11 11 Third Round Willie Wood 77-71-73 —221 RealSaltLake 3 3 5 14 10 15 a-denotesamateur Portland 3 4 4 13 10 12 67-68-67 — 20 2 Colorado 1 2 7 10 9 9 PerrineDelacour HOCKEY 66-67-70—203 AlisonLee Saturday'sGames PaulaCreamer 67-71-66—204 Montreal4,RealSalt Lake1 So YeonRyu 67-69-68—204 NHL playoffs Seattle 2, Vancouver0 MinjeeLee 68-67-69—204 NewEngland1, Toronto FC1,tie NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE 72-66-67—205 Lexi Thomso pn Houston3,Portland1 All TimesPDT HyoJooKim 70-69-67—206 Colorado at Sporting KansasCity, Postponed Angel a St a n f o rd 68-70-68—206 SanJose2, Columbus0 CONFERE NCEFINALS SuzannPettersen 72-65-69—206 Today'sGames (Besl-of-7; x-if necessary) 70-67-69—206 Jing Yan Los Angeleat s OrlandoCity, 2 p.m. Saturday'sGame 74-69-64—207 NY Rang Kelly Tan D.C.UnitedatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. ers 2 TampaBay1 NYRangers leadsseRyann O'Toole 70-71-67—208 Wednesday,May2B ries1-0 MiJungHur 68-73-67—208 Today'sGame NewEnglandatSporting KansasCity, 5p.m Kris Tamulis 70-70-68—208 Chicag Friday,May22 oatAnaheim,noon 72-66-70—208 Chicag oatColumbus,5p.m. JulietaGranada Monday'sGame Housto natLosAngeles,7:30p.m. MariaMcBride 71-69-69—209 Tampa Bayat N.Y.Rangers, 5p.m.
Sam Crouser won themen'sjavelin title to help lead the Oregon men to the lead at thePac-12Championships in Los Angeles. Crouser had a throw of 252-feet, 10-inches to beatUCLA's Derek Eager.Oregon's women also leadbehind shot putter Brittany Mann, whotook the title with a throw of 56-6s/~. Daytwo of the competition takes place today.
BOXING
TENNIS
ATP/WTA, Italian Open SOCCER England, SwanseaCity vs. Manchester City England, Manchester United vs. Arsenal MLS, Los Angeles atOrlando City MLS, D.C.United at Philadelphia Women's, international friendly, U.S. vsMexico
4:30 a.m. Tennis 5:30 a.m. NBCSN 8 a.m. NB C SN 2 p.m. ES P N2 4 p.m. FS1 5 :30 p.m. FS 1
LACROSSE
Women's NCAA tournament, Northwestern at Maryland Men's NCAAtournament, Johns Hopkins vs. Syracuse Men's NCAAtournament, North Carolina vs. Maryland
9 a.m.
Bi g Ten
9 a.m.
ES P N2
11:30 a.m. ESPN2
AUTO RACING
IndyCar, Indianapolis 500, qualifying
10 a.m. 11 a.m.
NASCAR, Xfinity, lowa 250 BASEBALL
ABC FS1
College, Oregon atUtah MLB,New YorkYankeesatKansasCity College, Arizona atUCLA College, OregonSt. at Stanford
10 a.m. P a c-12 11 a.m. MLB 1 p.m. Pa c -12 1 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.),
MLB, Boston at Seattle College, Southern Cal atCalifornia MLB, Detroit at St. Louis
1 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m.
KICE 940-AM
Root Pa c -12 ESP N
SOFTBALL
College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional
10 a.m. ESPN, SEC 12:30 p.m.
College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional College, NCAA tournament, regional
3 p.m. ES P NU 4 p.m. ES P N2 6:30 p.m. ESPNU
ESPN, ESPNU, SEC
CYCLING
Tour of California
10 a.m.
NBC
HOCKEY
IIHF World Championship, gold-medal game 11:30 a.m. NBCSN NHL playoffs, Chicago atAnaheim noon NBC BASKETBALL
NBA playoffs, Los AngelesClippers at Houston 1 2:30 p.m. A B C
MONDAY GOLF
Ladies EuropeanTour, Turkish Airlines Open Ladies EuropeanTour, Turkish Airlines Open
5 a.m. 4 a.m.
Golf Golf
10 a.m. 4 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB ESP N Pa c -12
n oon
NBC SN
BASEBALL
MLB, Los AngelesAngels at Toronto MLB, St. Louis at NewYork Mets College, Southern Cal atCalifornia SOCCER England, West Bromwich Albion vs. Chelsea HOCKEY
NHL playoffs, TampaBayat NewYork Rangers 5 p.m.
NB CSN
Listingsarethe mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changesmadeby TI/or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL OregOn State winS SerieSOver StanfOrd — K.J.Harrison and Elliott Cary drove in three runs apieceand Drew Rasmussen scattered three hits and two runs in six innings to help guide theOregon State baseball team to a7-5 Pac-12Conferencewin over Stanford on Saturday night in Stanford, California. Jeff Hendrix and Logan Ice also had two hits for the Beavers (35-14-1 overall, 16-9-1 Pac-12), who recorded 10overall. Rasmussen (6-3j, meanwhile, retired the first eight batters he facedandtossed105 pitches over six innings. The freshmanwalkedfour but also struck out five. Stanford (22-30, 7-19) had two RB)seach from Drew Jackson and Matt Winaker.
Big 8th inning leadS DuCkS to Win —Oregonrallied from
a 4-2 deficit with a six-run eighth inning andearned an 8-5 Pac-12 Conference victory over Utah onSaturday in Salt Lake City. The Ducks claimed the series with an 8-3 win Friday night. Austin Grebeck had a three-run triple to score JakobGoldfarb, Kyle Kasser andTim Susnara to begin the rally in the eighth. Matt Eureste followed with a three-run double to score Scott Heineman, Mitchell Tolmanand Grebeck. Relief pitcher CooperStiles threw one-third of an inning and got the win for the Ducks (33-22 overall, 13-13 Pac-12j. Starter Carroll gave up five earned runs in seveninnings in the loss for Utah (16-32-1, 7-18-1j.
TRACK AND FIELD
CYCLING FranCe'S AIRPhiliPPO WinSto take CalifOrnia leadFrance's Julian Alaphilippe took the overall lead in theTour of California on Saturday with a victory in the mountainous seventh stage. The 22-year-old Alaphilippe, riding for Etjxx-Qujck Step, bolted to the front with 2i/z miles left and completed the 80-mile leg from Ontario to Mount Baldy ski resort in 3 hours, 42 minutes, 13seconds. Slovakia's Peter Sagan ofTinkoff-Saxo, 28 seconds ahead in theoverall standings after a winning the individual time trial Friday, finished sixth inthestage— 47secondsbehind.Hedropped2 secondsbehind Alaphilippe in the overall standings with one stage left.
Injured Contador retainS Giro lead — Alberto Contador's injured shoulder stood up to themountain test as heretained the overall lead in the Giro d'Italia on Saturday inCampitello Matese, Italy, while Benat Intxausti claimed asolo victory at the top of the eighth stage. Contador, who dislocated his shoulder in afall on the final sprint of Thursday's sixth stage, wasclearly in pain at times on the 115.6-mjle leg from Fiuggi to Campitello Matese, but hemanaged tostay in touch on the two categorized ascents, holding on during attacks from closest challenger FabioAru onthe climb to the finish. — From staffand wire reports
ON DECK
BASKETBALL
TENNIS Professional Italian Open Saturday atRome Men Semifinals NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. DavidFerrer(7), Spain,6-4,6-4. RogerFederer(2), Swilzerland,def.StanWawrinka (8), Swilzerland,6-4, 6-2. Women Semifinals CarlaSuarezNavarro (10), Spain, def.SimonaHalep (2),Romania, 2-6, 6-3,7-5. MariaSharapova(3), Russia, def.Daria Gavrilova, Russia,7-5,6-3.
MO TOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Sprint All-Star RaceResults Saturday At Charlotle MotorSpeedway Concord, N.C. Lap length: 1.5miles
(Start position inparentheses)
1.(1) DennyHamlin, Toyota,110laps, 114.2 rating, 0points. 2.(20) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 110,109.1, 0. 3.(16) KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 110,129,0. 4.(9) JeffGordon, Chevrolet, 110,93.7,0. 5.(17) MattKenseth,Toyota, 110,789,0. 6.(19) Kyle Busch,Toyota,110,69.9,0. 7.(5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, 110,1056, 0. 8.(11)JoeyLogano,Ford, 110,80.4,0. 9.(3) Brad Keselowski, Ford,110,111,0. 10.(7) DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet,110,64.9,0. 11.(13) AJ Allmendinger, Chevrolet, 110,59.5,0. 12.(4) ClintBowyer,Toyota, 110,61,0. 13.(2) Greg Biffle, Ford,110,43.3, 0. 14.(8) AricAlmirola, Ford,110,31.7,0. 15. (12)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet,110, 59.7, 0. 16. (14)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,110, 41.9, 0. 17. (10)Carl Edwards,Toyota,110, 45.4,0. 18. (18)RyanNewman,Chevrolet,110,30.8,0. 19. (15)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,110, 34.1,0. 20 (6) Danica Patrick Chevrolet 78 300
Race Statistics AverageSpeedol RaceWinner:106.452 mph. TimeofRace:1hour,33minutes, 0seconds. Margin ofVictory: 0.923seconds. CautionFlags:4for0 laps. LeadChanges:7among4drivers. Lap Leaders:D.Ham lin 1-14; K.Kahne15-25; B.Keselowsk i26-32;Ku.Busch 33;B.Keselowski3475;D.Hamlin76-77;Ku.Busch78-100;D.Hamlin 101-110.
LeadersSummary(Driver, TimesLed,LapsLed): B.Keselowski, 2 timesfor 49 laps; D.Ham lin, 3 timesfor 26laps; Ku.Busch, 2timesfor 24laps; K.Kahne,1timefor11laps. Wins:J.Johnson,3; K.Harvick, 2; Ku.Busch, 1; D.EarnhardtJr., 1; D.Hamlin, 1; M.Kenseth, 1; B.Keselowski,1;J.Logano,1. Top 16 in Points: 1. K.Harvick 437 2. M.Truex Jr., 391; 3. J.Johnson,389; 4. J.Logano, 375; 5. D.EarnhardtJr., 360;6. B.Keselowski,343;7. M.Kenseth,331; 8.J.McMurray,328; 9. J.Gordon, 317; 10. K.Kahne, 313; 11. A.Almirola, 312; 12.P.Menard,306;13.R.Newman,305; 14. Ku Busch,292;15.DHamlin,284; 16.C.Bowyer, 272.
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague CLEVEL AND INDIANS — Recalled RHPAustin AdamsfromColumbus (IL). DesignatedLHPBruce Chenforassignment. KANSAS CITY RDYALS —Selected thecontract RHPJoeBlantonfrom Omaha(PCL). DptionedRHP AaronBrooksto Omaha. Recalled LHPBrian Flynn fromOmahaandplacedhimonthe60-dayDL. MINNES OTATWINS— Placed OFJordanSchafer onth e15-dayDL.ActivatedOFShaneRobinsonoff the familyemergencylist. NEW YORKYANKEES — Recalled RHP Bryan Mitchell fromScranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). Optioned RHPJoseRamireztoScranton/Wilkes-Barre. National League CHICAGO CUBS— Recalled RHPBrianSchlitter from lowa(PCL). DptionedDFMatt Szczurto lowa. COLOR ADOROCKIES— Placed1B Justin Morneau onthe7-dayconcussionDL,retroactiveto May 15. Recalledinfielder Rafael Ynoafrom Albuquerque (PCL). NEWYOR KMETS —Placed INFDilson Herrera on the15-dayDL.Recaled 3BEric Campbell fromLas Vegas(PCL). PITTSBURGHPIRATES — Recalled RHP Wiff redo BoscanfromIndianapolis (IL). DptionedINFSteve Lombardozzito Indianapolis. TransferredRHPBrandonCumptontothe60-dayDL. ST. LOUISCARDINALS— Activated OFRandal Grichuk fromthe 15-dayDL Dptioned18 Xavier Scruggsto Memphis (PCL). SANFR ANCISCOGIANTS—ActivatedOFHunter Pencefromthe15-day DLDptionedCHector Sanchez to Sacram ento(PCL). AmericanAssociation FARGO-MDORHEADREDHAWKS — Released RHPSeth Harvey, LHPAlex Sogard and RHPJosh Wright. LAREDOLEMURS — Signed LHP Kevin Brandt and INFAbel Nieves.ReleasedINFNick Giarraputo. WICHITA WINGNUTS—SignedINFTyler Coughenour.ReleasedDFLuis Montanez, 1BChris Garcia and RHP AndyMoye. WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Signed RHP Anthony Smith COLLEGE VIRGINIA — Announcedjunior QBGreysonLambert will transfer.
FISH COUNT Upstreamdaily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selectedColumbiaRiverdamslast updated Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 1,392 333 15 5 The Daffes 1,755 40 2 1 1 -1 -1 John Day 1,272 207 McNary 1,894 270 1 0 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslastupdatedFriday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd Bonneville 183,373 6,995 4,515 2,356 The Daffes 159,259 5,711 340 16 7 John Day 134,376 5,100 510 321 M cNary 122,982 3,635 670 41 0
Middleweight champGolovkin stops Monroe The Associated Press INGLEWOOD, C a lif.
Gennady Golovkin's latest big drama show had a few extra twists and turns. The
middleweight champion still finished it
w i t h h i s u s u al
show-stopping flourish. Golovkin stopped Willie M onroe Jr. 45 seconds into the
sixth round Saturday night, retaining the 160-pound belts with hi s
2 0t h c o nsecutive
knockout victory. Golovkin (33-0, 30 KOs) put on another masterful perfor-
mance in his adopted home, knocking d ow n M o n r oe
Southern California crowd of 12,372 backing the Kazakh 14th consecutive title defense. When G olovkin f l o ored championwho has gone from The former Kazakh Olym- Monroe (19-2) with a long se- anonymity to stardom in less pian has stopped each of ries of heavy punches in the than three years. Golovkin his 20 opponents since June sixth, the challenger declined realized a southpaw coun2008, and even a surpris- to continue after his final trip terpuncher with Monroe's ingly strong fourth round to the canvas. pedigree would provide a "I'm done," Monroe told ref- new challenge while he waits from Monroe couldn't throw Golovkin off his path to the eree Jack Reiss. for the world's best fighters top. Nicaragua's Roman "Choc- to take him on, and Monroe "It was a good big drama olatito" Gonzalez also defend- proved to be tough and elushow," Golovkin said. "I was ed his WBC flyweight title sive while hitting Golovkin happy with my performance. in style at the historic Forum regularly. Willie is a very tough fight- with a furious second-round Yet Golovkin s t il l d e liver. I felt very strong tonight. I stoppage of Mexican veteran eredforhis large fan base in knocked him down twice, but Edgar Sosa. Southern California, where I didn't want an easy round But Golovkin delighted a he now lives with his family. twice in the second round and
the next round. I wanted to
again in the sixth round of his keep working."
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C5
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL THAT'S GONNA HURT
eatandings All TimesPDT
Texas Rangers shortstop
AMERICANLEAGUE
NewYork Tampa Bay Boston Toronto Baltimore Detroit Kansas City Minnesota Chicago Cleveland
Houston Los Angeles Seattle Texas Oakland
East Division W L 22 20 18 17 15
16 18 19 21 19
CentralDivision W L
23 14 23 14 21 16 16 17 14 21
West Division W L
24 13 19 17 16 20 15 22 13 25
Pct GB .579 .526 2
NATIONALLEAGUE East Division
Elvis Andrus, left, is unable to tag out Cleveland's
.486 3'/t .447 5 .441 5
Lonnie
Pct GB
Chisenhall as he slides in with a double during the ninth inning
.622 .622 .568 2 .485 5 .400 8
Pct GB .649
Saturday in
.528 4'/r .444 7'/r .405 9 .342 tf'/r
Saturday'sGames Minnes ota6,TampaBay4 Detroit 4,St. Louis3,10 innings L.A. Angel6, s Baltimore1 N.Y.Yankees5, KansasCity1 Houston 6, Toronto5 Cleveland 10,Texas8 Chicag oWhiteSox4,Oakland3 Boston 4, Seatle 2 Today'sGam es L.A. Angels(Richards3-1) at Baltimore (M.Wright 0-0),10:35a.m. N.Y.Yankees(Capuano0-0) at KansasCity (Volquez 2-3),11:10a.m. Tampa Bay(Archer3-4) at Minnesota (Gibson3-2), 11:10a.m. Toronto(Buehrle5-2) at Houston(McHugh4-1), 11:10a.m. Cleveland(Carrasco4-3) at Texas(N.Martinez 2-0), 12;05p.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Samardzi)a 2-2) at Oakland(Kazmir 2-1),1:05p.m. Boston(SWright1-0)atSeattle(Paxton1-2),1:10 pm. Detroit (Simon 4-1) atSt. Louis(Lynn2-3), 5:05p.m. Monday'sGames LA. Angelat sToronto, 10:07a.m. Milwaukee atDetroit,4:08 p.m. ClevelandatChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. Oakland atHouston,5:10 p.m.
Phiiiies 7, Diamoodbacks 6
Arlington,
Texas. Cleveland scored three runs in the top of the ninth and won 10-8. Brandon Wade / The Associated Press sc'
indians10, Rangers 8 ARLINGTON,Texas— Jason Kipnis had three hits, including a tiebreaking two-run home run in
'
Twins 6, Rays4
MINNEAPOLIS —Brian Dozier homered, Eduardo Escobar had four hits and Minnesota tookadthe top of the ninth inning that liftvantage of a rareTampaBay error ed Cleveland to consecutive wins to win. Entering Saturday, the for the first time since their season Rays tied for the fewest errors in opening series at Houston. baseball with13.
National League Ctlbs 4, Pirates1 CHICAGO — Kris Bryant went 2-for-2 with two walks andscored twiceastheChicagoCubswon their sixth straight and movedsix games over.500 for the first time since they were83-77 on Oct. 3, 2009, according to STATS. It is the longest win streak for Chicago since a seven-gamerun in 2011.
Rockies 7, Dodgers1 LOS ANGELES— CarlosGonzalez, Daniel Descalso andNolanArenado homered for Colorado, which handed LosAngeles' Zack Greinke his first loss of the season.
PHILADELPHIA — Jeff Francoeur hit a home runand Grady Sizemore had four hits to lead Philadelphia to a fourth straight win. Arizona rookie YasmanyTomas hit his first major league homer. Arizona
Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r hbi Inciartcf 5 1 1 0 OHerrrcf 5 0 0 0 Trumorf 4 0 1 0 Galvisss 3 1 0 0 Gldsch1b 4 1 1 2 Sizemrlf 5 1 4 0 DPerltlf 4 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Tomas3b 4 1 2 1 Howard1b 5 1 2 1 Owings2b 4 2 3 0 Franco3b 4 1 1 0 Gswschc 4 0 1 1 Utley2b 3 1 2 2 Ahmedss 3 0 1 1 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 P nngtnph 1 0 0 0 Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Bradlyp 1 0 0 0 Revereph-If 1 0 0 0 JCRmrp 0 0 0 0 Francrrf 4 1 1 1 H illph 1 0 0 0 Ruizc 412 1 Chafinp 0 0 0 0 Willimsp 2 0 0 0 Burgosp 0 0 0 0 ABlancph 1 0 1 1 Pollockph 1 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 Reedp 0 0 0 0 CHrndz2b 1 0 0 0 Ziegler p 0 0 0 0 Pachecph 1 0 0 0 Totals 37 5 105 Totals 3 8 7 136 Arizona 0 00 121 010 — 0 Philadelphia 013 030 ggx— 7 E—Ahmed2 (3), Utley(5). DP—Arizona1, Philadelphia 1.LOB—Arizona 5, Philadelphia 11.2BOwings(6), Sizemore(3), Howard (7), Utley(3), Ruiz (4), A.Blanco (4). HR—Goldschmidt (10), Tomas(1), Francoeur(3). SB—Galvis (4). IP H R E R BBSO Arizona BradleyL,2-1 2 5 4 4 3 1 J.C.Ramirez 1 0 0 0 0 0 Chafin 1 3 2 2 0 1 Burgos 1 2 1 1 0 3 Reed 2 1 0 0 1 1 Ziegler 1 2 0 0 0 2 Philadelphia WilliamsW,3-3 5 7 3 2 0 4 DeFratus 1 2 1 1 0 0 DiekmanH,2 11 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 GilesH,B PapelbonS,9-9 1 0 0 0 0 2 Bradleypitchedto 5batters inthe3rd. Chafinpitchedto 2battersin the5th. PB — Gosewisch. T—3:14 (Delay:1:17). A—33,649(43,651).
Colorado LosAngeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Blckmncf-If 4 0 0 0 KHrndzcf 3 1 1 0 NewYork Cleveland Texas TampaBay Minnesota LeMahi 2b 5 1 1 1 Rollins ss 4 0 1 0 Interleague Washington 553 r/2 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi CGnzlzrf 5 2 2 1 HKndrc2b 3 0 1 0 Atlanta .472 3r/r K ipnis2b 6 2 3 2 Choorf 5 2 3 1 Kiermr cf 4 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 2 1 1 1 Arenad3b 4 1 1 2 JuTrnr1b 3 0 0 1 Miami .432 5 S ouzJrrl 4 0 0 0 TrHntrrf 5 1 2 0 C Santn1b 4 0 0 1 DShldslf 4 1 0 1 D ickrsnlf 1 0 0 0 Guerrrlf 4 0 0 0 Tigers 4, Cardinals 3 (10 inn.j Philadelphia .395 6r/t Longori3b 4 1 1 0 Mauer1b 3 1 1 0 Brantlylf 3 1 1 1 Peguerlf 0 0 0 0 Stubbsph-cf 3 0 0 0 VnSlykrf 4 0 0 0 CentralDivision Loneydh 4 0 1 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 DvMrpdh 4 2 2 1 Fielderdh 5 0 1 0 Pitlsburgh Chicago WRosr1b 4 0 2 0 Uribe3b 3 0 0 0 W L Pct GB M ossrf 5 1 2 1 Beltre3b 4 1 2 1 Forsyth1b 3 1 1 2 KSuzukc 2 1 1 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi M cKnrc 3 1 0 0 Ellisc 3 0 0 0 ST. LOUIS —Miguel Cabrera hit St. Louis 24 12 .667 DeJesslf 3 1 2 0 Edfscrss 4 1 4 1 JHrrsn3b 5 0 2 0 Fowlercf 3 1 1 0 Chsnhll3b 5 1 3 1 Morlnd1b 5 1 1 1 Descalsss 4 1 2 2 Greinkp 1 0 0 0 his 400th career homerun, and Chicago 21 15 .583 3 Guyerph 1 0 0 0 ERosarlf 3 1 1 1 NWalkr2b 5 0 1 0 Bryant3b 2 2 2 0 Bourncf 4 0 2 2 Andrusss 3 1 2 1 JDLRsp 3 0 0 0 Pedrsnph 1 0 0 0 nearly five hours later Jose IgleCincinnati 18 19 .486 6r/t Acarerss 4 0 2 0 Hickscf 4 0 0 0 Mcctchcf 4 0 0 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 2 1 RPerezc 3 0 0 0 LMartncf 4 0 0 0 Betncrtp 0 0 0 0 Santosp 0 0 0 0 17 20 .459 Martelf 4 0 3 0 SCastross 3 0 0 2 Pittsburgh S wisherph 1 0 0 0 Field2b 3 1 1 1 TBckh2b 4 1 1 2 DSantndh 4 0 1 2 sias had anRBIsingle in the10th Ynoaph 1 1 1 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Kangss 4 0 3 0 Coghlnlf 4 0 0 0 Milwaukee 13 24 .351 I fr/t H ayesc 0 0 0 0 Chirinsc 4 1 3 1 Rivera c 3 0 0 0 Obergp 0 0 0 0 Ethierph 1 0 0 0 inning to lift Detroit. Cabrera's H art1b 3 0 0 0 Solerrf 3 0 2 0 West Division JRmrzss 4 3 1 1 JButlerph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 7 7 9 6 Totals 3 01 3 1 W L Pct GB Totals 39 101410 Totals 37 8 137 Totals 3 5 4 9 4 Totals 3 16 116 Polancrf 1 0 0 0 D.Rossc 4 0 1 0 milestone shot gavehim the most C olorado 100 0 0 0 231 — 7 LosAngeles 23 13 .639 Cleveland 3 1 1 1 0 0 103 — 10 T ampa Bay 0 0 0 1 0 0 201 — 4 S Rdrgzrf-1b 3 1 1 1 Lesterp 2 0 0 0 Los Angeles 00 0 000 001 — 1 homers by a Venezuelan-born PAlvrzph-1b 1 0 0 0 JHerrrph 1 0 0 0 SanFrancisco 19 18 .514 4r/t Texas 2 11 030 010 — 8 Minnesota 0 3 0 0 0 0 2 1x — 6 E—Descalso (4), Arenado (3), Guerrero (2). player, passing AndresGalarraga. E—Jepsen (1), SouzaJr. (1). DP—Tampa Bay Stewartc 3 0 0 0 Schlittrp 0 0 0 0 SanDiego 19 19 .500 5 E—R.Perez (3), Salazar(1), Moreland(1), Field DP —Colorado2.LOB— Colorado5,LosAngeles5. .colep 1 0 1 0 Cokep 0 0 0 0 Arizona 15 20 .429 Zr/z 2 (2). DP—Cleveland 2. LOB —Cleveland 10, Tex- 2.LOB— TampaBay5,Minnesota8.2B— Longoria G 28 — Ynoa(3), K.Hernandez(3), Rolins (7).HR—C. The solo shot came inthe first Colorado 13 20 .394 Br/t as 6. 28—Kipnis(9), Brantley(12),Chisenhall (7), (10), DeJesus (4), Edu.Escobar 2 (7). 38—A.cabre- M ercerph 1 0 0 0 Mottep 0 0 0 0 Gonzale(4), z Arenado(7), Descalso(1). inning just before a rain delay of 1 Bourn (6), Moreland(5), Chirinos(7). 38—Choo ra (3). HR —Forsythe (4), T.Beckham(4), Dozier (6). Caminrp 0 0 0 0 Castigoph 1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Saturday'sGames Kiermaier (1). CS —Dozier (1). SF —Forsythe, Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 TWoodp 0 0 0 0 (1). HR —Kipnis (4), Choo(6),Field(2), Chirinos(3). SB — hour, 20 minutes. Colorado Cervelliph 1 0 0 0 ARussll2b 3 1 0 0 Atlanta5, Miami3 SB — Jo.Ramirez2 (5), Andrus (5). CS—Andrus (3). K.Suzuki. J.De LaRosaW,1-2 71-3 2 0 0 0 3 Totals 3 6 1 11 1 Totals 2 9 4 8 3 Detroit 4,St. Louis3,10 innings SF — C.Santana,Brantley, Dav.Murphy,Beltre. IP H R E R BBSO 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Detroit Si. Louis P itlsburgh 0 0 1 0 0 0 000 — 1 Betancourt Chicago Cubs4, Pitsburgh1 IP H R E R BBSO TampaBay Oberg 1 1 1 1 1 3 ab r hbi ab r hbi 101 000 20x — 4 Philadelphia 7, Arizona5 Cleveland Colome 31-3 6 3 3 1 0 Chicago RDaviscf 4 1 1 0 Grichkrf 4 0 2 0 E—Hart(3), Stewart 2(2). DP—Pittsburgh1, Chi- LosAngeles N.Y.Mets14,Milwaukee1 42-3 9 7 5 1 4 Bellatti 22-3 2 0 0 3 4 Salazar 6 4 1 1 0 5 Kinsler2b 5 1 3 1 Mcrpnt3b 5 1 1 1 —Pittsburgh10, Chicago8. 2B—Marte GreinkeL,5-1 SanFrancisco11,Cincinnati2 2 - 3 2 2 0 1 0 cago1. LOB Rzepczynski 2-3 1 0 0 1 0 JepsenL1-3 2 3 5 5 1 5 Micarr1b 5 1 1 1 Hogidylf 4 0 1 0 (6), Kang (5). HR —S.Rodriguez(2). SB—Marte(6), Santos Washington 4, SanDiego1 Geltz 13 0 0 0 0 A.Adams 1 0 0 0 1 0 PRodri g uez 1 2 1 1 0 1 JMrtnzrf 3 1 1 0 JhPerltss 2 1 1 1 Colorado 7, LA.Dodgers1 1 1 1 1 0 0 Kang(2),Rizzo(8), S.castro(4), A.Russell (1). CS Hagadone 1 1 0 0 0 1 Frieri Fowler(4).S—G.cole. SF—Rizzo,S.castro. HBP —byOberg(K.Hernandez,Ju.Turner), byGreinke Cespdslf 5 0 3 1 Kozmapr-ss 0 0 0 0 Today'sGam es AtchisonW,1-1 2- 3 2 1 1 0 0 Minnesota Cstllns3b 5 0 2 0 MAdmsph 1 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO (Blackmon).WP —Santos2. Atlanta (S.Miller 4-1) at Miami (H.Alvarez0-2), Allen S,6-7 62-3 7 3 3 0 3 1 0 0 0 0 1 May Romine3b 0 0 0 0 Rynlds1b 5 0 0 0 T—2:54.A—48,378 (56,000). 10:10 a.m. DuensingW,1-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Pitlsburgh Texas JMccnc 4 0 1 0Molinac 5 0 2 0 G .cole L,5-2 6 7 2 2 1 8 Milwaukee(W.Peralta1-4) at N.Y.Mets(Syndergaard Lewis BoyerH,6 1 0 0 0 0 0 5 7 6 5 3 7 Jlglesis ss 5 0 1 1 Wong 2b 4 0 0 0 nero 1 0 2 2 3 1 0-1),10;10a.m. 2 1 1 0 2 Cami ClaudioH,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 PerkinsS,13-13 1 Meis14, Brewers1 Pricep 3 0 0 0 Bourioscf 4 1 1 1 Bastardo 1 1 0 0 0 2 San Francisco (Heston 3-3) at Cincinnati (DeSclafani KelaBS,2-2 —byColome(Dozier). 2-3 3 1 1 0 1 HBP N esbittp 0 0 0 0 Lyonsp 1 0 0 0 Chicago 2-3),10:10a.m. Sh.Tolleson 11-3 2 0 0 1 2 T—3:03.A—27,128 (39,021). HPerezph 1 0 0 0 Villanvp 1 0 0 0 Lester W, 4 -2 7 9 1 1 1 7 NEW YORK — Jacob deGrom had Arizona(Collmenter 3-4)at Philadelphia(O'Sullivan Feliz L,1-2BS,3-9 1 2 3 3 1 0 Schlitter 0 2 0 0 0 0 three singles — including two in a Chmrlnp 0 0 0 0 Heywrdph 1 0 1 0 0-2),10:35a.m. WP — Feliz. 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 BHardyp 0 0 0 0 Siegristp 0 0 0 0 Astros 6, BlueJays5 CokeH,3 Pittsburgh(Burnett2-1) atChicagoCubs(Arrieta 4-3), T—3:37. A—31,045(48,114). 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 10-run fourth inning — to become Goseph 1 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Motte H,3 11:20a.m. Soriap 0 0 0 0 T.cruzph 1 0 0 0 T.WoodS,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 0 the second pitcher since at least Colorado (K.Kendrick1-4) atLA,Dodgers (Bolsinger White Sox HOUSTON — Chris Carter, MarSchlitter pitched to 2baters in the8th. Belislep 0 0 0 0 4, Athletics 3 1-0),1:10p.m. 1914 to have three hits batting win Gonzalezand EvanGattis HBP —by Bastardo (Soler). WP—Caminero, Lester. Totals 4 1 4 13 4 Totals 3 8 3 10 3 Washington(Strasburg 2-4) at SanDiego(Kennedy B alk — C am in ero . Detroit 102 000 000 1 — 4 eighth, according to STATS. 2-2),1:10p.m. OAKLAND, Calif.— Melky Cabre- homered, andHouston won — 3 T—3:05. A—38,883(40,929). Si.Louis 110 001 000 0 Detroit (Simon 4-1) atSt. Louis(Lynn2-3), 5:05p.m. its fourth straight. This is the DP — Detroit1, St. Louis1. LOB—Detroit11, St. ra hit a go-aheadsingle in the Milwaukee New York Monday'sGames Louis 9. 28 —Kinsler (10), Grichuk(2), Heyward (8). latest point in a seasonthe AL seventh inning after yet another Nationais 4, Padres1 Milwaukee atDetroit, 4:08p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi 38 — R.Davis (3). HR —Mi.cabrera(10), M.carpenter ArizonaatMiami,4;10p.m. West-leading Astros havebeen CGomzcf 3 0 2 0 Grndrsrf 5 2 3 2 costly error by Oakl a nd, which (7), Jh Peral ta(6), Bour)os(1). SB—Kinsler (4). CSSt. LouisatN.Y.Mets, 4:10p.m. KDavislf 1 0 0 0 Lthrschp 0 0 0 0 SAN DIEGO — MaxScherzer Cespede s(1). in first place since May22, 2004, committed an error in its 13th Philadelphia at Colorado,5:40p.m. GParralf-cf 4 0 1 0 Lagarscf 5 1 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO struck out a season-high 11as Central. Braunrf 2 0 0 1 Duda1b 4 1 1 0 straight game, the longest streak when they topped the NL Detroit HGomz3b 1 0 0 0 Cuddyrlf 4 2 2 2 At 24-13, Houston has its best 37Washington won for the14th time Price 62-3 7 3 3 2 9 History for the franchise since13 in a row Lind1b 2 0 0 0 Goeddlp 0 0 0 0 tt 13 0 0 0 0 0 in 18 games. game start since1999. EHerrrrf 1 0 0 0 Mayrryph-rf 1 0 0 0 Nesbi THIS DATE IN BASEBALL from April 7-21, 1983. Chamberlain 1 1 0 0 1 0 ArRmr3b 3 0 1 0 DnMrp2b 3 2 1 2 B.HardyW,1-0 1 0 0 0 1 2 Washington San Diego May17 Toronto Houston Cottsp 0 0 0 0 Te)adaph-2b 1 0 0 0 SoriaS,12-12 1 Chicago Oakland 2 0 0 0 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi 1939 — Thefirst basebal gameonteleyisionwas ab r h bi ab r hbi Jeffrssp 0 0 0 0 Camp03b 5 1 2 1 ab r hbi ab r hbi St. Louis Spancf 4 0 2 1 Spngnr2b 3 0 0 0 broadcastbyW2XBS, anexperimental station runby E atoncf 5 2 2 0 Burnscf 4 1 1 0 Travis2b 4 0 1 0 Altuve2b 3 1 0 0 JRogrsph 1 0 1 0 Plawckc 3 2 1 2 32-3 7 3 3 2 5 Lyons Dsmndss 5 1 2 0 Venalecf 3 0 1 0 NBC inNewYork. Bil Sternhandledthe play-by-play Mecarrlf 5 2 3 1 Semienss 4 1 2 0 StTllsn 2b 0 0 0 0 Valuen 3b 4 0 1 0 Gennett2b 4 0 0 0 deGrm p 3 1 3 1 31-3 4 0 0 1 2 Villanueva Y Escor3b 4 1 2 1 Kemprf 4 0 1 0 as Princeton beatColumbia, 2-1, in10innings. Encrncph 1 1 1 2 Springrrf 4 0 0 0 Maldndc-1b 3 0 0 0 Niwnhslf 1 0 0 0 Abreu1b 4 0 2 1 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 Siegrist 1 0 0 0 0 1 H arperrf 3 1 2 0 Uptonlf 3 1 0 0 1940 —For thefourth timein four days,every LaRochdh 4 0 1 0 BButlerdh 4 1 2 2 Dnldsn3b 3 1 1 0 Gattisdh 4 1 2 2 Garza p 1 0 0 0 Flores ss 4 2 2 4 Rosenthal 1 0 0 0 0 1 Zmrmn1b 4 0 0 1 Solarte1b 3 0 1 0 Ameri canLeaguegameinthecountrywaspostponed AGarcirf 3 0 3 2 Fuldpr-dh 0 0 0 0 B autistdh 2 1 0 0 Tuckerlf 3 1 1 0 Kintzlr p 1 0 0 0 Belisle L,1-1 1 2 1 1 1 1 WRamsc 3 0 1 1 Mdlrks3b 4 0 0 0 by rain. RuMrtnc 4 1 1 2 CIRsmscf 4 1 2 0 Centenc 1 0 0 0 WP—Chamberlain. G illaspi3b 4 0 1 0 Vogtc 3010 Espinos 2b 3 1 1 0 Amarst ss 4 0 2 1 1961 — RogerMaris hit hisfirst homerunofthe GBckhpr-3b 0 0 0 0 Lawrie3b 3 0 1 0 Smoak1b 4 0 1 1 Carter1b 4 1 1 3 Sardinsss 3 1 2 0 T — 3:54 (D e l a y:1:20). A — 45,313 (45,399). MTaylrlf 4 0 1 0 Hedgesc 2 0 0 0 season at YankeeStadiumonhis waytoa record 61. Colaeglf 4 0 0 0 Congerc 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 1 1 7 1 Totals 3 9141614 A IRmrzss 4 0 1 0 Crisplf 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 DeNrrsph-c 2 0 0 0 1963 —DonNottebart pitchedHouston's first Flowrsc 4 0 0 0 Canha1b 3 0 0 0 Pillarcf 4 0 0 0 MGnzlzss 4 1 1 1 Scherzrp M ilwaukee 0 0 0 001 000 — 1 Thrntnp 0 0 0 0 Cashnrp 2 0 0 0 no-hitter astheColt.45s defeatedthe visiting Phila- CSnchz2b 4 0 0 0 Sogard2b 4 0 0 0 Carrerrf 3 1 0 0 — 14 Leaders Newyork 010 ( 10)00 30x TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 delphiaPhilies 4-1. Goinsss 4 0 1 0 DP — Milwaukee2, NewYork2. LOB—Milwaukee Totals 3 7 4 134 Totals 3 3 3 7 2 Barrettp 0 0 0 0 Almontph 1 0 0 0 AMERICAN LEAGUE 1979 —DaveKingmanof the Cubshit three Chicago Totals 3 3 5 6 5 Totals 3 26 8 6 Storenp 0 0 0 0 Maurerp 0 0 0 0 0 02 000 200 — 4 5, NewYork 4. 28—Duda (12), Cuddyer (5), Dan. BATTING —Jlglesias, Detroit, .350; Brantley, homerunsand MikeSchmidt of thePhilies hit two, Oakland Toronto 300 000 002 — 5 2 00 000 010 — 3 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Murphy (10), Camp b el l (4). HR — G ran der son (4), Clevel a nd, .348; Ncruz, Se a t le, .348;Kipnis, Cleveand PhiladelphiabeatChicago23-22in 10innings 002 004 ggx — 6 E—Fe.Rodriguez(1). DP—Chicago 1, Oakland2. Houston Totals 34 4 11 4 Totals 3 1 1 5 1 Plawecki(2), Flores(6). SF—Braun. land, .340;Fielder,Texas,.340;Vogt,Oakland,.337; at WrigleyField. Bill Bucknerhada grandslamand LOB E—Springer(3). LOB— Toronto 6, Houston 6. W ashington 30 0 1 0 0 000 — 4 —Chicago9,Oakland6.2B—Abreu(6),A.Garcia IP H R E R BBSO AGarcia,Chicago,.336. 28 — Travis (10), Donaldson(9), Col.Ra smus (6). S an Diego sevenRBlsfor Chicago. Thegameincluded11 home (7), Lawrie 0 0 0 0 0 0 001 — 1 Milwaukee RBI — Ncruz,Seattle, 30;Vogt,Oakland,30; Mi(6). HR —B.Butler (4). — Ru.Martin (1). HR —Encarnacion (9), Gatis (7), runs and 50hits. E—Kemp (3), Cashner (1). DP—Washington 1, GarzaL,2-5 31-3 10 10 10 3 2 IP H R E R BBSO 3B Cabrera,Detroit, 29;Hosmer, Kansas City, 29; KMo1998 —DavidWells pitchedthe 13thperfect Chicago Carter(6), Ma.Gonzalez(2). SanDiego2.LOB— Washington7,SanDiego7.28Kintzler 12-3 3 1 1 0 2 rales,KansasCity,29; Reddick, Oakland,28;Teixeira, IP H R E R BBSO Span(9), De gamein modern major leaguehistory asthe NewYork DanksW,2-3 smond(11), YEscobar(4), Espinosa(7), Cotts 2 3 3 3 0 3 NewYork,28. 7 3 2 2 3 6 Yankees beatthe MinnesotaTwins 4-0. Venable (1), Solarte (7). CS—Desmond(2), M.Taylor Jeffress 2-3 2 1 1 0 0 Toronto 1 0 0 0 0 2 DukeH,7 DOUBLES — KMorales,Kansas City,14;CesEstrada 5 3 2 2 4 8 (2). SF —Span. New York Petricka 0 1 0 0 0 0 pedes, Detroit, 13; Brantley,Cleveland, 12; Cano, F rancis L,1-2 0 2 2 2 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Da.Jennings 0 1 0 0 0 0 HendriksBS,1-1 2 deGromW,4-4 6 5 1 1 1 6 Seattle,12; 9 tiedat10. American League 2 2 2 0 3 Washington RobertsonS,8-9 11-3 0 0 0 0 0 Goeddel 2 1 0 0 0 3 HOMERUNS—Ncruz, Seattle,15; Teixeira,New Cecil 1 1 0 0 0 2 ScherzerW,4-3 7 4 0 0 2 11 Leathersich Oakland 1 1 0 0 0 1 York,11; Micabrera,Detroit,10; HRam irez, Boston, Thornton 1 0 0 0 1 0 T—2:56.A—30,208 (41,922). Chavez 6 8 2 2 2 3 Houston 10; ARodriguez,NewYork,10; Trout,LosAngeles,10; Red Sox4, Mariners2 Barrett 2-3 1 1 1 1 1 F eldman W3-4 6 2 -3 5 3 3 3 10 Fe.Rodriguez L,0-1 2-3 3 2 2 0 0 Encarnacion,Toronto,9; Valbuena, Houston, 9; Vogt, 1-3 0 0 0 1 1 StorenS,11-12 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 FieldsH,1 Oakland,9. Giants11, Reds2 SEATTLE —David Ortiz andPablo Abad 1 0 0 0 0 3 San Diego Mujica 1 2 0 0 0 1 Sipp H,4 STOLENBASES—Ellsbury, NewYork, 14; Al9 4 3 2 6 1 2 2 1 1 CashnerL,1-7 6 Otero 1 0 0 0 0 0 GregersonS,9-10 1 tuve, Houston,13;Gardner, Ne wYork, 10; Springer, Sandoval eachhomered for BosQ uackenbush 1 1 0 0 0 0 Franci s pi t ched to 2 b att e rs i n the 6t h . pitchedto 1batterin the8th. Brandon Crawford Houston,10;DeShields,Texas,9; Marisnick,Houston, Maurer 1 0 0 0 1 0 CINCINNATI — ton, while Seattle aceFelix Hernan- Petricka WP — E str a da, F el d m an. P B — R u.M a rt i n . Da.Jennings pitchedto 1batterin the8th. 9; RDavisDet , roit, 8. Kimbrel 1 1 0 0 0 2 hit a grand slamand drove in a T—3:08.A—27,102 (41,574). dez uncharacteristically struggled, HBP—byOtero(Abreu). WP—Chavez2. ERA —Gray, Oakland, 1.61; Keuchel, Houston, WP — Scherzer. career-high six runs, and Hunter T — 3: 0 6. A — 28,445 (35, 0 67). 1.87; NMarti nez,Texas,1.88; FHernandez, Seatle, losing for the first time sinceSept. T—2:53. A—45,282(41,164). 2.30; Odorizzi,TampaBay,2.36;Santiago,LosAngeAngels 6, Orioies1 Pence scored three times in his 23, 2014. Heleft after finishing the les, 2.41;UJimenez,Baltimore, 2.43. Yankees 5,Royais1 return from a brokenforearm to Braves 6, Marlins3 STRIKEOUT S—Kluber, Cleveland, 64; Archer, sixth inning, his second-shortest BALTIMORE — Matt Shoemaker TampaBay,58; Pineda,NewYork, 55; FHe rnandez, lead San Francisco. outing this season, having allowed KANSASCITY,Mo.— ChaseHead- scattered three hits and allowed Seattle,55;Buchholz, Boston, 54;Gray,Oakland,53; MIAMI — Atlanta rookie Jace PeSalazar, Cleveland,52. four runs andsevenhits. Hernanley and AlexRodriguez homered, San Francisco C i ncinnati one run over seveninnings, leadterson hit a grand slamfor his first SAVES —Perkins, Minnesota, 13; AMiler, New ab r hbi ab r hbi dez walked four andstruck out five, and NewYork snapped its skid at ingLosAngelestoaseason-high York, 13; Soria, Detroit, 12;Street,LosAngeles, 12; major league home run. GBlanclf-cf 5 2 2 1 Cozartss 3 0 0 0 and his three walks in the sixth oxberger,TampaBay,10; Uehara, Boston,9; Rodney, four. CCSabathia madequick work five-game winning streak. Mike P anik2b 5 0 0 0 Byrdlf 5000 B Seattle, 9;Gregerson, Houston, 9. inning were morethan hehadalAtlanta Miami Pagancf 3 0 1 0 Votto1b 5 0 0 0 of the Royals, allowing thelone run Trout and David Freesehomered NATIONAL LEAGUE ab r hbi ab r hbi Aokiph-If 2 1 1 0 Frazier3b 3 0 0 0 lowed in any of his starts this year. on six hits without awalk to win his for the Angels. TheOrioles have BATTING —DGordon, Miami, .425;AGonza lez, Petersn2b 5 1 2 4 DGordn2b 5 0 1 2 Poseyc 4 1 2 1 Negron3b 1 0 0 0 Los Angeles,.356;Rizzo,Chicago,.349; Galvis, PhilThe Mariners lost for the third time second straight start. 3b n 5 0 1 0 Prado 3b 5 0 1 0 S usac c 1 0 0 0 Brucerf 4 1 2 1 lost eight of their past11 games. Gossel adelphia,.347;Goldschmidt, Arizona,.341;YEscobar, FFrmn1b 4 0 1 0 Stantonrf 5 1 1 1 Belt1b 5 2 3 2 Phillips2b 2 1 1 0 Washin in four games. gton,.328;Hogiday,St.Louis,.328. Markksrf 4 0 1 0 Ozunacf 4 0 1 0 P encerf 3 3 2 0 Matthsp 0 0 0 0 New York KansasCity LosAngeles Baltimore RBI — Stanton, Miami, 36; Harper,Washington, ASmnsss 4 1 1 0 JBaker1b 3 0 2 0 Maxwgrf 1 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Boston Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi 33;Goldschmidt,Arizona,32;AGonzalez,LosAngePrzynsc 4 1 1 1 ISuzukilf 4 0 1 0 Bcrwfrss 5 2 3 6 Mesorcph 1 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Ellsurycf 4 1 0 0 AEscorss 4 0 1 0 Calhonrf 5 0 1 0 Machd3b 4 0 0 0 les, 32; Zimmerm an, Washington, 28;Marte, PittsC nghmlf 4 1 3 0 Realmtc 3 1 0 0 McGeh3b 4 0 1 1 Ju.Diazp 0 0 0 0 B.Holtrf-lf 4 0 0 1 S.Smithlf 4 0 0 0 CYounglf-rf 5 0 0 0 Mostks3b 3 0 0 1 Troutcf 5 1 3 2 Paredsdh 4 0 1 0 Maybincf 4 1 3 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 3 0 burgh,25;Upton,SanDiego, 25. Vglsngp 2 0 1 0 Boeschcf 3 0 0 0 Pedroia2b 5 0 2 0 BMigerdh 3 2 2 2 ARdrgzdh 4 1 1 1 L.caincf 4 0 1 0 Pu)ols1b 5 0 0 0 A.Jonescf 4 0 0 0 DOUBLE S — AG alez, LosAngeles, 17;McarA .Woodp 3 0 0 0 Latosp 0 0 0 0 M achip 1 0 0 0 Brnhrtc 3 0 1 0 penter,St. Louis,16;onz O rtizdh 4 1 2 1 Cano2b 4 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 3 1 1 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Aybarss 4 1 1 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 FFreeman,Atlanta,14; DeNorris, JiJhnsnp 0 0 0 0 Koehlerp 0 0 0 0 Kontos p 0 0 0 0 Leake p 2 0 1 0 HRmrzlf 5 0 1 0 N.cruzrf 4 0 0 0 Beltranrf 3 1 2 1 KMorlsdh 4 0 0 0 Giavtll2b 4 1 1 0 Pearce2b 3 1 2 1 San Diego,14;Tulowitzki, Colorado,13;Duda,New YongJrph 1 0 0 0 DSolanph 1 0 0 0 Badnhp p 0 0 0 0 Bettscf 0 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 0 1 0 Gregrsss 1 0 1 0 AGordnlf 4 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 1 2 1 DeAzarf 3 0 0 0 ork,12;Arenado,Colorado,11; Desmond,WashingGrigip 0 0 0 0 Massetp 0 0 0 0 Schmkrph-2b 2 0 1 1 Y Sandovl3b 4 1 1 1 Morrsn1b 4 0 1 0 Headly3b 5 1 1 3 S.Perezc 4 0 1 0 Fthrstn3b 0 0 0 0 JHardyss 3 0 0 0 ton,11; Lind,Milwaukee,11. Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Totals 4 1 111611 Totals 34 2 7 2 Bogartsss 3 1 0 0 Ackleycf 3 0 1 0 Pirela 2b 3 0 0 0 Infante 2b 3 1 1 0 J oyceIf 3 0 0 0 LoughIf 3 0 0 0 HOME RUNS—Harper, Washington,13; Frazier, Bourph 1 0 0 0 San Francisco 021 242 000 — 11 Cincinnati,12;Stanton,Miami,11; Goldschmidt,AriNava1b 3 1 0 0 CTaylrss 3 0 0 0 Gardnrlf 1 0 0 0 Orlandrf 3 0 2 0 Cowgillph-If 1 1 1 0 Josephc 2 0 0 0 Totals 3 8 5 135 Totals 3 5 3 103 C incinnati 000 0 0 2 000 — 2 S wihartc 4 0 2 1 Sucrec 2 0 0 0 Drewss-2b 4 0 2 0 lannettc 4 1 2 1 Sniderph 1 0 0 0 Pederson, LosAngeles,10; AGonzalez,Los Atlanta 0 60 000 000 — 6 DP — Cincinnati1. LOB—San Francisco 5, Cin- zona,10; BrdlyJrcf-rf 3 0 0 0 Blmqstph 1 0 0 0 JMrphyc 3 0 1 0 Kraussdh 3 0 1 1 Lvrnwyc 0 0 0 0 Angeles,9;5tiedat 8. Miami 0 11 000 001 — 3 cinnati 11. 28 —Pence (1), B.crawford(7), Leake Zuninoc 0 0 0 0 Totals 36 5 9 5 Totals 3 3 1 6 1 Cron ph-dh 1 0 0 0 STOLEN BASES —Hamilton, Cincinnati, 17; E—F.Freeman(4), Gosselin (2), Cishek(1). DPTotals 3 5 4 8 4 Totals 3 22 5 2 N ew York 001 0 3 0 001 — 5 Totals 39 6 125 Totals 3 0 1 3 1 ker (3). 3B—Aoki (2). HR—G.Blanco DGordon,Miami,12; Polanco,Pittsburgh,11; Aoki, Miami1. LOB —Atlanta6, Miami9. 28—A.Simmons (2), Schuma K ansas City 0 0 1 0 0 0 000 — 1 (1), Bel (2), t B.crawford (6), Bruce (6). S — V o g e lBoston 0 11 002 000 — 4 Los Angeles 000 000 213 — 6 10), Hecha SanFrancisco,9;Fowler,Chicago,9; Rizzo,Chicago, varria (8). HR —Peterson(1), Stanton(11). song. Seattle 1 00 010 000 — 2 E—Pirela (1), Infante(2), D.Duffy (2). LOB —New Baltimore 000 1 0 0 000 — 1 8; Upton,SanDiego,8. —Latos,Koehler. IP H R E R BBSO ERA LOB —Boston 9, Seattle 5. 28—Swihart (3), Ack- York 10,KansasCity 6. 28—Gregorius (4), Drew E—Machado(9). LOB—LosAngeles6, Baltimore2. —Greinke, LosAngeles,1.52; Burnett, PittsIP H R E R BBSO —Trout(10), Freese(6), Pearce(3).CS—Trout(2). San Francisco ley (4).HR —Ortiz(5), Sandoval (5), B.Miger 2(4). 7), S.Perez (7). HR —A.Rodriguez((10), Headley (5). HR burgh, 1.60;SMiler, Atlanta,1.60;Scherzer,WashAtlanta 8 — E g sbury (14), A.Escobar (3). S — J.M urp hy . V ogel s ong W ,2-2 52-3 6 2 2 4 2 IP H R E R BBSO IP H R E R BBSO A.WoodW,2-2 7 ington, 1.75;Harang,Philadelphia,2.03;Wacha, St. 7 2 1 2 1 21-3 1 0 0 1 2 Louis, 2.06;Harvey,NewYork, 2.31. SF —Beltran, Moustakas. Boston LosAngeles Ji.Johnson H,11 1 1 0 0 0 1 Machi 1 0 0 0 0 1 PorcelloW,4-2 6 2 - 3 5 2 2 2 6 IP H R E R BBSO Shoemaker W,3-3 7 3 1 1 0 7 Grigi S,11-12 STRIKEO UTS—Scherzer, Washington, 66; Ker1 2 1 1 0 1 Kontos Cincinnati Layne H,1 1 0 0 0 0 2 NewYork J.SmithH,11 1 0 0 0 0 2 Miami shaw,LosAngeles, 66; Shields, SanDiego,64; Cueto, 1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 L eake L,2-2 5 11 9 9 1 2 TazawaH,7 SabathiaW,2-5 7 6 1 1 0 5 Salas 1 0 0 0 0 0 LatosL1-4 3 8 5 5 0 1 Cincinnati,56;Hamels, Philadelphia, 55;TRoss, San 1 4 2 2 0 1 Diego,54;Gcole,Pittsburgh,53. UeharaS,9-10 1 0 0 0 0 1 BetancesH,9 1 0 0 0 0 1 Baltimore Koehler 3 2 0 0 0 4 Badenhop Seattle A.Miller 1 0 0 0 0 0 U.JimenezL,3-3 7 7 2 2 0 6 Masset 1 1 0 0 0 1 Mattheus 1 0 0 0 0 1 SAVES —Familia, NewYork, 13; Rosenthal, St. O'Day F.Hernandez L,6-1 6 7 4 4 4 5 KansasCity 1 1 1 1 0 0 Cishek 2 2 0 0 0 0 Hoover 1 1 0 0 0 2 Louis, 12; Grilli, Atlanta, 11; Storen,Washington, Beimel 1 0 0 0 0 1 D.DuffyL,2-3 5 4 4 4 4 3 Britton 1 4 3 3 0 1 Latospitchedto2 baters inthe4th. Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 2 11; Kimbrel,SanDiego, 10; Papelbon, Philadelphia, HBP —byMachi(Negron). Farquhar 2 1 0 0 1 3 Blanton 4 5 1 1 0 2 WP — Britton. PB — Realmuto. 9; Casiga,SanFrancisco, 8; HRondon, Chicago, 8; T—2:48.A—45,055(47,574). T—2:52. A—31,871(37,903). T—2:28.A—29,102 (45,971). T—2:59. A—18,166(37,442). T—2:53.A—40,889 (42,319). Melancon,Pittsburgh,8. W L 21 16 21 17 17 19 16 21 15 23
Pct GB .568
C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
ava earscaim isric crown Bulletin staff reports -
the bottom of the inning, the
Outlaws secured the victory. doubles teams finished in the Ryan Funk led the way for top four, including the cham- Sisters with two hits, includpionship tandem of Sierra ing a double, and drove in the Winch and Jesse Vezo, as game-winning run. J ustin Bend High posted 23 points to Harrer also had two hits and a win the Class 5A Special Dis- double for the Outlaws, includtrict 1 girls tennis title on Sat- ing an RBI. HERMISTON
Three
who finished first in the 400
The La Pine boys took first
and second in the 200. Zach place in the six-team MounSmith won the shot put and tain Valley Conference champlaced second in the discus
pionships with 164 points, 41
for Crook County, which went points ahead of second-place 1-2-3 in two events: the 800 Harrisburg. Keegan Kritz led (Emmet Bailor, Zachary Law- the way for the Hawks, winson, Liam Pickhardt) and the ning the 400 and taking third 3,000 (Nathan Carmack, Ty- in the 200. Tyress Turnsurday — Bend's first district ler Lawson, Connor Chaney). Plenty was first and Hunter Softball crown since 2011. Brent Sullivan won the high Schaffer was second in the The fifth-seeded team of Union/Cove 21, Culver 0: jump for Madras and Aidan 800, while Brenden Wolf finRuby Ladkin/Lauren Handley CULVER — The Bulldogs lost G oodwin took t hird i n t h e ished second in both the high finished third for the Bears, in five innings, then had to for- pole vault. The Crook County jump and the triple jump. while Kyla Collier and Syd- feit the second game of a sea- girls finished in fourth place The La Pine girls posted 131 ney Meeuwsen took fourth. son-ending Class 2A/IA Spe- with 118.5 points, and Madras points to finish third in the For Summit, which tied with cial District 6 doubleheader was sixth with 41 points. Lak- team standings, as McKenna The Dalles for second in the when an injury left them with en Berlin led the Cowgirls, Boen won the 110 hurdles and s even-team standings w i t h
too few players. Josi Harrison
21 points, Autumn Layden claimed the singles championship, and Siena Ginsburg finished fourth.
had the only hit of the game for Culver, a fourth-inning single. She was then out trying to steal second base and was Also on Saturday: hurt while sliding. Harrison left the game with a leg injury. Girls tennis The Bulldogs (1-10 SD6, 7-16 Outlaws on to state: SIS- overall), who started the day TERS — The Sisters doubles with only nine players, finteam of Brenna Weems and ished the game with eight but Jesse Farr fell in the third- by rule were not allowed to place match o f t h e C l a ss start the second game without 4A/3A/2A/IA Special District nine players.
3 tournament but will prepare for next w eek's state tour-
nament by way of a top-four finish.
Track
finishing first in both the 100
took second in the 300 hur-
and 300 hurdles. Ashton Morgan won the discus for Crook
dles. Jordynn Slater won the
shot put, while Caitlin MuhleCounty, and Madeline Ber- man took second in both the
Emory Rains' Charlotte Brown, right, who is legally blind, sits with her guide dog, Vader, as she waits to receive her award after competing in the Conference 4A girls pole vault at the UIL Texas State Track and Field Championships Saturday in Austin, Texas. Brown won a Bronze medal with her third-place finish.
the competition at the Sky-Em
Heitzman led th e
League championships, re-
boys with a third-place performance in the javelin and pole
Continued fromC3 At her hotel room Fnday
cording ateam score of 169.5
Crook County boys domi- points. Erynn Ricker won nate: MADRAS — The Crook
Eric Gay/The Associated Press
nard took second in the 100. 400 and 800. Mariah Stacona won the 800 Gilchrist boys third, girls for Madras, Cera Clay fin- sixth at districts: The Gilchrist ished third in the shot put, and boys came in third at the Class Elle Renault took third in the 1A Special District 2 Chamjavelin. pionships at Mountain View Sisters girls first, boys fifth with a team score of 63.5 at Sky-Em: JUNCTION CITY points, while the girls finished — The Sisters girls blew away sixth with 43 points. Jonny
the 100 and the 200 for the
County boys ran away with Outlaws and ran a leg in the Baseball the Tri-Valley Conference winning 400 relay team. Aria Sisters 7, Burns 6: SISTERS championship, totaling 212.5 Blumm took the 1,500 for Sis— The Outlaws picked up a points to fi nish 80.5 points ters. The Sisters boys finished nonconference win to improve ahead of second-place Mo- with 53 points, paced by Jadon to 21-3 overall on the season. lalla. Madras finished fifth Bachtold, who took second in Sisters needed eight innings with 60 points. The Cowboys the 1,500. to win, but with three runs in were led by Sam Santiago, Hawks take first: GLIDE-
G i lchrist
vault. Hunter Nelson was first in the 3,000 and third in the
long jump. For the Grizzlies' girls, Cassie Blum won the 100 hurdles, finished fifth in the long jump and was sixth in the 100. Sierra Shuey finished second in the triple jump
Vaulter night, Stori Brown tried to counsel her daughter that it
was important to remember that she was one of the few to make it this far, whether
she won a medal or not. "No," Charlotte replied. "I
need to be on that podium."
and third in the discus for the
B rown wa s b o r n w i t h normal vision, but she de-
Gilchrist.
veloped cataracts when she
"If there's a way to do something for yourself, that's a good idea. When I need to know if my socks match or not, it's a good time to ask for help. Can't find Waldo? Probably
need to ask for help." — Charlotte Brown
was 16 weeks old. That led to the first of several oper-
ations, including insertion of artificial lenses. Her vi-
Storm
sion stabilized until she was about 11, when it started to
Continued from C3
worsen. By 2013, she still had pinhole vision but could not see color or distinguish shape
Josh Maitre and Peter Rutherford defeated Bend's Zach Hiteand Aaron Banquer-Glenn
in the doubles third-place match for Summit, which tied for the Class 5A state team title last 6-0, 6-0, of the singles third-place match, but by
reaching the semifinal round he gave Summit six state qualifiers for next week's state tournament, where the Storm will shoot for their
fourth outright team state championship in the last seven years. "The boys are really excited," Cordell said. "They have been looking forward to state since last state tournament. We've made everything revolve around those goals. We knew that if we
could be playing our best tennis at this point we could be in really good shape, and we think we are."
Bend finished second in the seven-team standings with 22 points, and Mountain View win the consolation bracket 6-3, 6-2 — was fifth with eight points.
ss 'e
Ryan Brenaecke/The Bulletin
Summit's Chandler Oliveira returns a shot againstCarter Quigley on Saturday in Sunriver. Oliveira lost to Quigley in the finals.
PREP SCOREBOARD Baseball Burns Sisters
Class 4A Sky-EmLeague (8 innings)
220 000 02 — 6 8 4 001 010 23 — 7 7 1
Softball Class 2A/1 A Special District 6 (5 innings) Union/Cove (11)0514 — 21 23 0 Culver 000 00 — 0 1 7
Track and field Tri-Valley Conferencechampionships At MadrasHigh School Boys Team scores —CrookCounty 212.5, Molala t32, Gladstone117, Corbett 79, Madras60, Estacada 45.5
Winner andlocals in topsix
100 — 1,JessePummel, G,11.39;5, Parker Lapsley, CC, tZ03. 6, MichaelKaltsukis, M,1Zt1. 200
— 1, ArmandJayne,G,23.39.2,SamSantiago,CC, 23.5t. 400— 1,Sam Santiago,CC,5t58;4,Shane Viescus,CC,54.02; 6, Miklo Hernandez, iyi, 56.11. 800 —t, EmmettBailor, CC,2:06.21. 2, Zachary Lawson, CC,2:06.20.3,Liam PIckhardt,CC,2:07.95. 1,500 —1, LiamPickhardt, CC,4:25.00. 2, Nathan Carmack, CC,4:25.36; 5, TylerLawson, CC,4;31.86. 110h —t, DrewVandeitbroeder, Mo,15.6Z 2, MichaelSeyl,CC,15.67;4, NoahCarmack, CC,18.25; 6,Tommy Ross,CC,18.65.300h— t,MichaelSeyl, CC, 39.87;4, NoahCarmack, CC,43.14. 5, Tommy Ross, CC,45.23.400-melerrelay— Gladstone, 45.18; 3, CrookCounty, 45.43.1,600 relay — t, CrookCounty,3:33.98; 5, Madras,3:59.70. Javelin — 1, CodyPartlow,Mo,166-11;4, HarrisonManu,M,137-5;6,ZachRIctor,CC,129-3.N 1, BrentSullivan,M,6-4; 3, Parker Lapsley, CC,6-1; T5,AidanGoodwin,M,5-4.T5,JacobHehn,CC,5-4. TJ — 1, Dilon Zheol,E,43-7.5; 5, BrentSullivan, u, 38-6.75. 6, JacobHehn,CC,37-10. Girls Team scores —Molala 145.5,Corbett137.5, Estacada 123.5, CrookCounty 118.5, Gladstone78, Madras4t Winner attd locals in topsix 100 —1, ToriJohnson,E,1Z75. 2, Madeline Bernard,CC,t3.07; 4, Kaeli Hancock, CC,13.50. 200 — 1, ToriJohnson,E,25.96;4, Danlelle Michael, CC, 27.00.5,AudreyBernard, CC,27.47.6, Madeline Bernard,CC,27.66. 400—1, ElisabethKrieger,C, t:00.49; 3, AudreyBernard, CC,1:Oz48; 5, Kalan Wolfe, M, 1:06.09. 6,JanaMenciotti, CC, t:06.43. 800 —1,MariahStacotta, u, 2:2Z26.1,500 —1, Amanda Clarizio, Mo,5:09.3z100h—t, LakenBerlin, CC,16.34;5, LauraStahancyk, CC,17.65. 300h — 1, LakertBerlin, CC,47.80. 400-meterrelayCrook County,50.18. 1,600relay — t, Corbett, 4;11.33;3, CrookCounty, 4;29.77. Shttt — 1, RachelBring, Mo,39-4; 3, CeraClay, u,31-1. 4,AshtonMorgan,CC,29-7.5. Discus—t, AshtonMorgan,CC,109-3; 4, Victoria Augustine, CC, 96-3.Javelin —1, MaddiThomp son, E,131-6; 3, Elle Renault, u, 120-10. pv—t, McKeiInaStreed, G, 10-8. 2,DanieleMichael,CC,10-4; 6, Marissa Shults,CC,80.TJ—1,JessIcaWheeler E,34105.
behind the jumpers as they went through each attempt. Brown missed her f i r st attempts at 10-0 and 10-6
but cleared both on her second try. She cleared 11-0 on her first attempt, then
soared over 11-6. She seblind. While she is not faced c ured a medal when tw o with t otal d a r kness, her other vaulters bowed out at mother describedwhat re- that height, leaving Brown mains as a "jigsaw puzzle" among the last three in the of mixed-up shades of light field. and dark. She made three attempts Despite her d i sability, at 11-9 but m i ssed each Brown takes pride in h er one. She briefly slumped fierce spirit o f i n depen- her shoulders and shook dence, born out of growing her head after her final atup in a family with two old- tempt, then got to her feet to er brothers who pushed her acknowledge the standing to help herself in the rural ovation from several huntown of Emory, about 76 dred fans she could hear but miles east of Dallas. not see. "If there's a way to do "She came to win," said something fo r y o u rself, her father, Ian Brown. "As that's a good idea," she said. parents, we are thrilled she " When I need to know i f got on the podium." from shadow. Brown is now
season. The Storm's Cole Younger fell to Hood River Valley's Scott Zeigner in straight sets,
— highlighted by the doubles team of Adi Wolfenden and Austin Pfiefer, who went on to
up area and stretched out
Sky-EmLeaguechampionships AtJunction CityHighSchool Boys Team scores —Elmira208, Sweet Home 122, Junction City 122,CottageGrovet18, Sisters53, Sutherlin20. Winner andlocals itttop six 100 —1, ZachBeltz, E,11.34; 4,SamGarbrecht, S, 11.68.200 —1,ZachBellz, E,22.9Z 400—1. ConrtorHoward, CG,50.62; 4, Keegan Greaney, S, 5Z61; 5, Andreaspedersen, S, 53.30. 800— 1, MorganMcAdams, JC,2:01.37. 1,500 —1, Jakob Hiett, SH, 4:t0.42; 2, JadortBachtold, S, 4:1Z59. 3,000 — t,JakobHiett,SH,9:04.63;Z JadonBachtold, S, 9:09.54.110h —t, MichaelTharpe,CG, 15.44.300h —1, Eric Flierl, SH,40.36; 6, Tristan Kaczmar ch,S,43.84.400-msterrelay— 1,Junction City,44.35.1,600 relay —1,Sisters 3:29.68. Shot — 1, ZaneWardwell, E,47-0. Discus —1, zanewardwel, E,147-z Javelin—t,GaryYounce, E,154-9.HJ—1,Garrett Nepper, JC,6-0. PV—t, Jeff Linn,E,12-4. LI —1,ZachBeltz, E,21-1. TJ1, Zach6eltz, E,41-4.75. Girls Team scores — Sisters169.5, Junction City 113.5,CottageGrove113,Sutherlin t00, Sweet Home 85.5, Elmira64.5. Winner andlocals in top six 100 —1, ErynrtRicker,S,13.13; 4, MandiCalavan, S, 13.56.200 —1, Eryrtn Ricker, S,26.78; 3, Mandi Calavan,S,27.40.400— 1,RickiMock,SU, 1:00.29; 3, MacadiaCalavan,S, t:03.78; 4, Dallas Knoop, S,1:05.23.800— 1, ShaylaSolomon, JC, 2:25. 50.1,500— t,AriaBlumm,S,4:57.50.3,000 —1, AriaBlumm,S,10:59.77; 6, MeganCalarco, S, 12:12.88.100h— 1, MichaelaMiler, S, 16.06;3, SabrinaReifschrteider,S,16.95.300h— 1,Michaela Miller, S, 47.84; 2,SabrinaReifschtteider 49.0Z 400-meterrelay —t, Sisters.1,600 relay —t, Sisters. Shot — 1,ConnerBorigo, CG,36-Z75. Discus — 1, CourtrteyHammel, CG, 118-6. Javelin — 1, Julianne Meeter,S,t 14-4. HJ—t,KamrynKnox, JC, 4-10; 3, Madison Boetner. PV— 1, ErynnRicker, S, 9-8; 2,TessaO'Hern, S,9-8; 3, Natalie Marshall, S, 7-8.LI — 1, KamrynKnox, JC, 15-9; 2, Michaela Miller, S, t5-8.5.TJ— 1, BrittanyColeman, SU, 36-0. Class 3A MountainValley Conferencechampionships At Glide HighSchool Boys Team scores — La Pine164, Harrisburg 123, coquille 12z5, pleasantHill 110.5, creswell 107, Glide24. Winner andlocals in top six 100 —t, SeanKounovsky,Cr,0.33. 200—1, HunterJeldert, H,23.39;3, Keegan Krilz, LP,23.76. 400 —1, KeeganKritz, LP,51.43; 6, Austin Kentner, LP, 58.30.800—t, TyressTurnsPlenty, LP,2:04.88. 2, HunterSchaffer,LP,2:07.91;6, MathewSmith, LP, 2:15.0Z1,500 —1, Hunter Murphy,PH,4:30.37; 5, HunterSchaffer,LP,4:46.21. 110h— 1, SeanKounovsky,Cr,16.11;6, TroyPlamortdon, LP,19.03. 300h —1, SeanKounovsky,Cr,41.23;5, TroyPlamohdoh,
LP,45.6t. 400-meterrelay—1, Harrisburg, 45.10; 3, La Pine,45.33. 1,600 relay — 1, Harrisburg. 3:3z37; 4, La Pine, 3:46.05. DiscU8—t, Brartdon6owen,Co,150; 3, Tanner Hanson, LP,139-8. Javelin— 1,Austin Klecka,PH, t75-9; 3, Justin Pelz, LP,t62-6. 4, lart Johnson,LP, 148-2. HJ — 1,AlexChurchman, PH,6-Z T2,larI Johnson,LP,6. T2, BrendertWolf, LP,6. TJ— t,
BradleyRomine, Co,40-3.5. 2, BrendenWolf, LP,398.75; 6,TreyPlamorIdort, LP,36-6.5.
Girls Teamscores—Coqttile167, PleasantHil 139, La Pine131,Harrisburg8t, Cresw ell 64,Glide63 Winner andlocals in top six 100 — 1, Megan Miler, PH,1z40. 200— t, Megan Miller, PH, 26.19. 2, SydneyBright, LP, 27.40.400—1, Charlie Yates, Co,1:01.47. 2, Caitlin Muhleman,LP,t:OZ93. 3, EmlleeMcGuire, LP, 1:03.94. 800—1, SavanahEspinosa,G,2:28.62. 2, Caitlin Muhleman, LP,2:30.35. 3, Emilee McGuire, LP, 2:33.15.1,500 —1, Joselyrt Kaufma n, Co, 5:25.00. 110h — 1,McKennaBoen, LP,1t.30: 4, AllisynBeckwith, LP,18.97.300h—1,JessicaBrown, H,51.37. 2, McKenna Boen, LP, 54.96; 4, SophiaSazama, LP, 56.36.400-meterrelay—t, pleasantHil, 5z14; 4, La Pine, 53.76.1,600relay—t, LaPine,4:18.94. Shol —t, JordyhnSlater, LP,37-8. PV—1,Joselytt Kaufman,Co,8-6; 3, Brittney Martson, LP,7-6. TJ — 1,DarianWilson, Co,34-3.
NewHopeChristian 29,Prospect22, UmpquaValley Christian22,Trinity Lutheran18.5,Powers16. Winner andlocals in top six 400-meter relay — 1, Chiloqtiin,54.16.1,500 — t, SarahMcCuistott, TC,5:29.90. 3,000 —1, Ashley O'Leary,Pai, 13:01.00.100 — 1, Kendra Murphy, NL,13.30;6,CassieBlum,G,13.87.400 — t, SahalieCraiIt, C, 1:01.94.110h —1, Cassie Blttm, G, 17.89. 800 —t, Breartrta Kinney,Po, 2:36.18; 4, MadisonBean,G,2:53.18. 200 — 1, KendraMurphy, NL 27.35. 300h — 1, Sahalie Crain,Cq,49.49. 1,600 relay —1, Cam asValley, 4:25.81. HJ —t, KendraMurphy, NL5-3. Discus—1, LakotaSizemore, Pr,105-4; 3, SierraShuey, G,98-0. PV —t, MadisonMcCuistoI, TC,7-10.Shot— 1, JenaeWilder,31-11.5. Javelin — 1, WhitneyLindsey,129-7; 3, Noemiamalia Bernabe,G,95-0. TJ—1, KrystaColahan,Pai, 33-3. 2, SierraShuey,G,32-3.5. LJ —1, Matti Wilson,NL 15-5.5; 5, CassleBlum, G,14-7.
my socks match or not, it's
Brown medaled in a tal-
a good time to ask for help. ented field. Sydney King, Can't find Waldo? Probably who won gold at a height of 12-3, has signed with need to ask for help." Run down a track and Oklahoma to pole vault in hurtle herself more than college. "Idon'thow many people 1 1 feet into th e a i r ? N o problem. do could that," King said. Brown first took up pole "Her story, she's what keeps vaulting in seventh grade me going when things arbecause she wanted some- en't going right for me." t hing a l i t t l e "dangerous Brown is headed to Purand exciting." She competes due on an academic scholwith a combination of fear- arship and plans to walk less abandon and meticulous attention to detaiL She
on in
t r ack. Her b r other
Lachlan is a hurdler for the
counts the seven steps of her Boilermakers. "It took me three years left foot on her approach, listening for the sound of a to get on the podium, and I faint beeper placed on the finally did it," Brown said. mat that tells her when to "This story ... really wasn't plant the pole and push up. about me. It was about evOn S aturday, V ador erybody that struggles with walked her to th e w a r msomething."
ClassjA Special District 2 championships At MountainView HighSchool 80tts
Teamscores— Pacific166.5, HosannaChristian 108,Gilchrist 63.5, Chiloqttin 63, Powers50, TriadChristian49,CamasValley 44, Umpqua Valley Christian28,NewHopeChristian 21, Elkton 20,Paisley 20,Trinity Lutheran14, North Lake3, Prospect 3. Winner andlocals in top six 400-meter relay —1, CamasValley, 45.16; 5, Gilchrist,47.44.1,500 —1, JasonEllittt, HC, 4;4z48; 6, HunterNelson,G,4:54.04. 3,0001, HunterNelson, G,10:Ot.49. 100— t, Mitchell Cole, HC, 0.77.400 — 1, Cole Kreutzer,pac. 110h —t, Justin Hall, Pac,16.30. 800 —t, Matt Spencer,C,2:08.55. 200—1, Cole Kreutzer,Pac, 23.09.300h— t, PioFigueroa,Pac,4z91, 5, MichaelJensen, G,48.40. 1,600 relay —1, Pacific, 3:38.86, HJ — t,lan Hickey,Pac,6-0. Discus—t, Tyler Sky, E,127-5;4,JakeBlood,G,u 3-11;6,LJLink,G, 101-4.PV— t, Camd enJones, Pai,12-0; 3,Jonrty Heitzmart, G,11-6;4, MichaelJensen,G,9-6. Shtttt, Tylersky,E,41-45;5,JamesWible, G,36-10;6,LJ Link,G,36-4. Javelin—1,JohnnyJackson,C,168t; 3, JonnyHeitzman, G,146-8; 6, Jttstin Melzler,G, 125-11. TJ —1, ColeKretttzer, Pac,41-0.5. LJ—1, ColeKretilzer,Pac,20-5.5;3,Hunter Nelson, G,t9-5; 6, MichaelJensen,G,18-3.
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Girls Teamscores—Chiloquin 91, Paisley66, North Lake61,HosannaChristian 57,Elkton53.5, Gilchrist 43, TriadChristian42, Pacific39, Cama sValey 38,
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
NHL PLAYOFFS
"There has to be
Sensors
ries by a 2-1 score. N EW YORK — T h e N e w Y o rk The series opener was unlike any of Rangers aren't the same team the Tam- the three games between the Rangers pa Bay Lightning dominated in the and Lightning in the regular season. regular season. Tampa Bay won all three by a comGame 1 of the Eastern Conference bined 15-7 margin. finals showed that. D erek Stepan, wh o s c ored t h e Dominic Moore scored with 2:25 Game 7 winner against Washington to play and the Rangers defeated the on Wednesday night, also scored and Tampa Bay Lightning 2-1 Saturday to Henrik Lundqvist made 23 saves. move within three wins of returning to Ondrej Palat tied the game on a powthe Stanley Cup finals. er-play goal early in the third period. The game-winning goal came just Ben Bishop had 28 saves for the Light-
Eric Winston, the NFLPA president and a Ci n-
cinnati Bengals offensive tackle, sits on the Mackey-White Committee. Win-
30 secondsafterMoore stepped out of
ning in losing to New York for the first
time in nine games.
this postseason and have seven victo-
to protect individual
players' health information, and we
will certainly respect
ston said players are also that."
wary of how the NFL could
— NFL vice president Jeff Miller
use or manipulate sensor data to limit its liability in
The Associated Press
the penalty box, and it capped another nail-biter for the Rangers, who have played 15 consecutive one-goal games in the postseason. The Rangers have won nine games
protocols in place
Continued fromC3
Rangers start series with victory over Lightning
C7
current or future concus-
sion lawsuits. "That's extremely concerning," Winston said. "We want (helmet sensors) to make sure that our players are healthy, and if they aren't healthy, let them know why and how we can help train them. But we never want it to be used against them. So as we're trying to protect our
IGHt,
Carolina, where Dr. Kevin M. Guskiewicz of the Department
of Exercise and Sport Science has conducted studies with helmet sensors. Guskiewicz noted that the
NFL's decision to move up kickoffs, thereby increasing touchbacks and reducing returns, was influenced by a study that used helmet sen-
in trouble when Moore swung his stick
New York center Derek Stepan (21) celebrates his second-periodgoalagainstTampa Bay inGame
and took former Ranger Anton Stral-
1 of the Eastern Conference final Saturday in
guys healthwise, we're also sors on college players. It demaking sure t hat w e 're termined that kickoff returns protecting their rights at produced a higher frequency the same time." of jarring head hits than other NFL vice president Jeff plays.
man down with 4:55 to play.
New York. The Rangers won2-1.
Miller, who oversees the
The Rangers took three penalties in the third period and they seemed to be
Kathy Willens/The Associated Press
Guskiewicz said
c u r rent
league's health and safety helmet sensors have "great repolicies, said the league's search utility."
Arra o ex erienceinconerence inas „
Kimmo Timonen made his
National Hockey League debut in 1998, Anaheim Ducks
icine for t h e b etterment to lessen, if not avoid, such
of players and the game, impacts. that's where the league's Guskiewicz added "With
E® ~
— gi
nals, which opened with New York's 2-1 victory over Tampa Chicago visits Anaheim in Game I of the Western Conferencefinals today.
The Blackhawks are the
The Associated Press file
Chicago Blackhawks defenseman KimmoTimonen, left. At right, New York Rangers' Dan Boyle. Eight of Anaheim's best players are 24 oryounger, andTampa Bayhasthe youngest remaining player in the
respect to the issue of pro-
The league and union have managed to work
tecting data and who has access, we have never had
h e lmet a n athlete complain, or b e
sensor technology, and they even agreed on the
concerned about data being protected. A carefull y drafted
results of an initial study a
consent form protects study
couple of years ago. Miller
participants." Of course, many amateurs
NHL playoffs in 20-year-old winger Jonathan Drouin. The Blackhawks counter with 20-year-old for-
and NFLPA medicaldirector Dr. Thom Mayer both
ward TeuvoTeravainen, and the oldest remaining player in 40-year-old defenseman KimmoTimonen.
said the sensors tested in
The Rangershave seasoned veterans Martin St.Louis and Dan Boyle.
a collaborative study were n ot consistently able t o
oldest and m os t s easoned team remaining in the NHL
playoffs, according to STATS, with an average age as of Friday of 29 years and 205 days among their players with at
interest is." together t esting
in this year's conference fiBay on Saturday afternoon.
it's good at counting the num-
ber of times somebody's head is impacted." i nformation, and we w i l l Colleges and high schools certainly respect that," arealready using helmet senMiller said. "The league's sors to modify players' behavconcern is the health and ior, Guskiewicz said. safety of players and makBy looking at a w eek's ing the game better and worth o f d a t a f r o m p r a csafer for those who play it. tice linked to video footage, Whether it's identifying in- coaches can see when players juries, treating or investing invite excessive helmet conin new technology and new tact on certain types of plays, science to catalyze med- and then work on techniques
(i'~
defenseman Hampus Lindholm was 4 years old. New York Rangers forward Martin St. Louis had played in 1,154 games when forward Jonathan Drouin logged his first appearancewith the Tampa Bay Lightning in October. It is part of an intriguing mix of youth and experience
the research question is," he said."Regardless ofprecision,
"There has to be protocols in place to protect individual players' health
The Associated Press
CHICAGO — When Chica-
"It all comes down to what
sensors, is making football safer.
By Jay Cohen go Blackhawks defenseman
focus, as it relates to helmet
are aware thattheir chances
of making millions of dollars playing professionally are remote, so they may be more in-
measure the magnitude, clined to err on the side of pro-
there's a lot of parts that (are) ference finals. They take on starting to fall into place. the youngest team left in the I'm sure they're going to be NHL playoffs, with an aver- a really good line for a lot of least one appearance in the age age of 26 years and 92 years." 2015 postseason. They also days, for Tampa Bay as of Tampa Bay coach Jon Coolead the way with 1,706 career Friday. per said his players are learn"You take something every ing with each game. playoff games for the same "We're writing our own hisgroup, compared with 692 for year from different players the Ducks. and different situations, dif- tory right now and it's a lot of "We like to think that it's ferent experiences," said Hen- fun to be part of this," he said going to help us," Chicago rik Lundqvist, who had 23 Friday. "But you have to be forward Patrick Sharp said, saves in New York's Game I part of it, to experience going " and it's helped us t o t h i s win. "So you learn from that. through these towns and evpoint. A lot of ups and downs You add it all together, and as ery single time this team has throughout the season, but you get older, I think you get a passed the test. I don't see that we've seemed to come togeth- better understanding of what changing." er at the right time and then it takes and how to prepare T he Blackhawks ar e i n play our best hockey. and how to get away from the the conference finals for the "Sometimes that youth can game better." t hird s t raight s eason a n d help you this time of year. Six of the 10 youngest play- fifth t im e i n s e ven y ears. You know they got some ers among the four remain- They won the Stanley Cup in fast players, some guys that ing teams play for Tampa 2010 and 2013. are playing really well the Bay, topped by the 20-yearTimonen, 40, who was acfirst or second time through old Drouin, who played in quired in a February trade the playoffs. So it's however three games in the first two with Philadelphia, is the oldyou want to use it. We like rounds. Nikita Kucherov, 21, est player still in the postseathe experience on our side. is second on the team with son. He could take on a more Hopefully we can use it to our six goals and ll points in the prominent role against the advantage." postseason while playing on Ducks after Michal Rozsival The Rangers, who lost to the second line with 24-year- broke his left ankle in the secLos Angeles in the Stanley olds Tyler Johnson and On- ond round against Minnesota. Cup finals a year ago, are drej Palat. With 97career postseason "I haven't seen a line that the next most experienced appearances, Timonen fits team, with an averageage has as much chemistry as right in with a group that has of 29 years and 20 days and they have," teammate Anton seen it all. "I think at the end of the 1,235 career playoff appear- Stralman said. "I think that ances heading into the con-
day when you talk about our
l ocation or d i r ection o f the force from a hit to the
e xperience we have in t h i s room, I think that means the
head.
"It's exciting technolo-
most when you get in tough
Continued fromC3 The Hawks were up 3-2 on Larry Bird and the Boston Celtics in 1988 but squan-
dered a chance to wrap up the conference semifinals in Atlanta. Clinging to a two-point lead in Game 6, the Celtics
double-teamed Wilkins on the final possession, forcing Levingston to put up an awkward left-handed shot with one sec-
ond remaining. He missed, of course, and the Celtics
wrapped up the series in the deciding game, an epic duel between Wilkins and Bird in which Boston held on for a 118-116 vlctory. Atlanta has made it t o t h e second round only eight times since then, three
of those ending in sweeps. Most notably, theHawks took anunprecedented thumping at the hands of the Orlando Magic in 2010, losing four straight games by an average of more than 25 points. Booed
Toews said, "whether you're down a couple goals in a game oryou might bedown a game or two in the series, regardless of the situation that you don't want to be in, we
find ways to stay alive and to creep back into the position that we want to be in." The situation with Timonen also shows the downside of
e y-White C o mmittee,
patient."
t h at
Riddell, which manufac- sounds good in theory. But in tures football helmets and part because of the distrust also has developed helmet
between the NFLPA and the
a fleet of athletic 20-some-
sensors, said it could not
things spread t hroughout
comment on decisions by the NFL and NFLPA not
league on a number of issues recently, committee members say embracing helmet sensor technology is not so simple. "The committee views this
their lines and defense, could try to attack Timonen when
to use its sensors. But in
he takes the ice. "We've got a lot of young guys that haven't been this far in the playoffs before, but
a written response, Rid-
dell said its helmet sensor as a positive if used correctly system (SRS) has already and in the right hands," Mayer demonstrated it can be a said. "But like most emerging valuable tool at a mateur technologies, it's always golevels of football, including ing to raise medical, legal and college. ethical issues as you figure out "Highly respected re- how to use it, what to do with it searchers and research and where to go with it."
at this point in the season, I
think everybody is a veteran," Anaheim center Ryan Getzlaf said. "It's not about
how much experience you have. It's more about your will an d
institutions have and continue to support efforts to
y o u r c o mpetitive
side, and I think we've got a
better protect athletes with
lot of that, and I know Chica-
data from Riddell SRS," the
go does too."
company's statement said. One such institution is
teams." itage, embracing a culture of basketball, Rivers, who now coaches the Los Anand embracing the history of this team." geles Clippers, praised his former teamThat history includes a few highlights especially after a tumultuous offseason in and plenty of bumps. which owner Bruce Levenson was forced When the Hawks moved to Atlanta 47 to sell the Hawks and general manager years ago, they were one of the NBA's top Danny Ferry went on indefinite leave for teams. Playing at tiny Alexander Memori- racially charged comments. "It's really good, especially with what al Coliseum on the Georgia Tech campus, they continued their strong play by reach- they went through," Rivers said Saturday. ing the division final the first two years These Hawks are a definite underdog in their new home, only to get blown out in the conference finals, despite an imboth times by the Los Angeles Lakers. pressive60-22 mark during the regular The city barely seemed to notice its new- season, winning three out of four against est big-league team, which averaged 4,474 the Cavaliers and having home-court fans during its debut season and just 5,210 advantage. the next even though the Hawks won the They don't mind a bit. "We have a whole team that's been unWestern Division title. Things changed after Wilkins, a star at derdogs for the majority of their lives," the University of Georgia, was acquired Hawks guard Kyle Korver said. in 1982. By the late 1980s, Wilkins was
that the NFL could start out
experience, with his long career exacting a toll on his legs. The speedy Ducks, who have
view. "We're finally embracing our her-
joined by Levingston, Kevin Willis, Antoine Carr, Doc Rivers and Spud Webb on one of the league's up-and-coming off the court in the final two contests at teams. The Hawks sold out the Omni on home, the team fired coach Mike Wood- a regular basis and won at least 50 games son shortly afterward. four years in a row (the only time that has There will be nothing but adulation happened in franchise history), but they when the Hawks open the conference never figured out a way to get by those finals against LeBron James and the great Boston teams and other Eastern Cleveland Cavaliers on Wednesday night, powerhouses. "Everybody was so good, particulara sign of how much the city has adopted this team after years of apathy. ly in th e East," Wilkins remembered. "It's been incredible," Wilkins, now a "Boston had five Hall of Famers. There team executive and television commen- was also Detroit, Chicago, Philadelphia, tator, said Saturday in a telephone inter- Cleveland, Milwaukee, just so many good
medical privacy rights. Guskiewicz also suggested
gy," Mayer said. "There's by using only aggregate data new things happening ev- — or data compiled from a ery day, but it's not ready group of players — to at least f or prime t ime w hen i t get a better understanding comes to how we make a of the frequency and force of diagnosis of a concussion head hits on various types of ... which is likely to be for plays, or for players at various the foreseeable future a positions. That way, a player's clinical diagnosis made individual data could remain by the medical staff based private. on an examination of the For members of the Mack-
situations," captain Jonathan
t he University o f
Hawks
tecting their health over their
N orth
SOIIQS OH WIIH ES '' ' I ' I' I
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Sales Service 4 Installation 917 Southeast 3rd Street, Bend I
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H o me I n t e ri o r s
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Wilkins likes Atlanta's chances.
"They played 'em well during the regular season," he said. "A lot of times, that
doesn't mean anything because the playoffs are a different type of basketbalL But it gives them confidence going into the series. Getting to the Eastern Conference finals, we believe we can win. We know we can win."
Wilkins does not want to look too far ahead, but he cannot help envisioning
what it would be like if the Hawks advance to the NBA Finals. "Oh man, this town would be out of control," he said, his voice rising. "And
we'd be right in the middle of it."
Widgi Meek G OLF C L U B
18707 SW Century r . , e n www,wid i,com (541) 382-4449
CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
GOLF ROUNDUP
MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP
Hamin o so Harvic or victory in A -Starrace The Associated Press
Hamlin collected the $1 million prize while giving
CONCORD, N.C. — Den-
ny Hamlin gave Joe Gibbs Racing its first victory in NASCAR's Sprint All-Star race
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by using clean air to hold off Kevin Harvick at
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AII-Star," Hamlin said from
Motor Speedway. Hamlin won the pole for Saturday night's race, was delap segments, but was slotted sixth based on average finish for the mandatory final pit Chuck Burton /The Associated Press
Rory Mcllroy reacts after making a birdie putt on the 16th hole during the third round of the Wells Fargo Championship in Charlotte, North Carolina, Saturday.
stop. His No. 11 team, one of the top pit crews in the Sprint Cup
Series, got him back on track in first. Hamlin wa s aided when Brad Keselowski, who
raced Hamlin off pit road but exited second, was flagged for speeding. Keselowski dropped to the rear of the field — taking him
61 gives Mcllroy course record Pharoah
out of contention — and put-
ting Kurt Busch, Harvick and Kasey Kahne right behind Hamlin.
Hamlin controlled the re-
start and jumped out to a huge lead, and Harvick moved into
-
When Rory McIlroy rolled in an 8-foot birdie putt on the 13th hole, he started
thinking about shooting 59. He didn't quite get there
S aturday, settling
victory lane. Harvick f i n ished second
DIANAPOLIS — Ryan Hunter-Reay was the faster of two
qualifiers for the Indianapolis 500. Rain washed out the rest
and was followed by Busch, of the session. The defendwho believed Hamlin jumped ing Indy500 champion had the restart. a four-lap average of 229.845 "We restarted second and mph. Carlos Huertas was the we're going to have to go to only other car to complete a the tape and look at it to see if run, posting an average of Denny went too soon," Busch 228.235. Terry Renna/The Associated Press said. "I was asleep at the wheel Indianapolis officials planDenny Hamlin does a burnout after winning the NASCAR Sprint on the restart." ning to renovate track: INDIAll-Star race at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Jeff Gordon finished fourth ANAPOLIS — I n dianapolis Carolina, Saturday. in his final All-Star race and Motor Speedway officials was followedby Matt Kenseth. are planning to renovate the Also on Saturday: historic track in time for the second and tried to chase leader, in clean air, is very difCruz Pedregon tops Funny 100th running of the Indiadown the leader. ficult to pass. Car qualifying:COMMERCE, napolis 500 next May. The But it was never going to be Although Harvick briefly Ga.— Cruz Pedregon took the next phase of this roughly $90 an easy task — every driver in closed the gap, he had to get No. 1 spot in Funny Car qual- million project will improve the 20-car field wanted to be out of the throttle when his ifying in the Summit Racing gateway entrances, grandout front for the final 10-lap car drifted too far up the track, Equipment NHRA Southern stand seating, and the overall sprint to the finish because and he never got close enough Nationals at Atlanta Dragway. fan experience. It's all part of a N ASCAR's c u r r ent r u l e s to even attempt a move for the The two-time season champi- broader plan to modernize the package has shown that the lead. on had a 4.010-second pass at facilities.
Continued from C3 All three are superior race-
The Associated Press CHARLOTTE, N.C.
appearances. "Everybody wants to be an
C h arlotte
cent through the first four 25-
manufacturer T o y ot a its first win in the All-Star race and Gibbs its first win in 24
313.95 mph in his Toyota Camry for his second No. 1 qualifier of the season and 59th of his career. Rain washes out 1st day of qualifications at Indy 500: IN-
for
an 11-under 61 to break
t he Quail H o llow r e cord and take a four-shot lead in the Wells Fargo Championship. After making nine birdies in a 10-hole stretch, the top-ranked McIlroy pushed his 7-iron on the par-3 17th hole to the right side of the
horses, and the other five in the lineup weren't in t h eir
league. But Firing Line failed to show any of his usual speed and was never in contention; he lost by more than 45 lengths. Dortmund displayed brief speed as he chased the favorite, but faded and lost by 16 lengths. The second-place finisher was Tale of Verve, a colt who had won nothing more than a
slow maiden race and looked, on paper, like a cinch to finish last in the Preakness. If he
could finish, nobody behind him gave a creditable per-
green 40 feet from the cup.
formance under the stormy
He settled for par and the
conditions. So how good was
dream was dashed. "I was little disappointed
American Pharoah's effort?
with not finishing it off the way I wanted to, but still it
was a great run," McIlroy said. It was M c I lroy's best round on the PGA Tour, but
It's anybody's guess. The weather became the story of the Preakness in late afternoon, as T V c h annels
showed a green mass on the weather map bearing down on Baltimore. By the time the
not his best ever.
horses were coming onto the
He said he had a putt for 59 on the 18th hole at The
track forthe post parade, the torrential rain blew across the
Bear's Club in Jupiter, Florida, leading up to the Masters, but missed it.
"I left it short," McIlroy said with a laugh. He didn't leave much shortSaturday.
track, sending thousands in the infield scurrying to find cover. But all through the week, the main story line had been
the more mundane subject of racing tactics. All three of the
He started the balmy af-
top contenders are speedsters,
ternoon three shots behind Webb Simpsonand Robert
and racing fans were speculating who would try to take
Streb. B ut after tw o p ars t o start the day m ade five birdies on the front nine for
the lead and who would stalk.
a 31. He didn't let up on the back, birdieing six of the
and Dortmund, who presum-
first seven holes.
going head-to-head with each other.
McIlroy had a sense early on this could be his day to go low after he saw Jus-
Much of this speculation centered on Bob Baffert, trainer of both A m erican Pharoah ably didn't want his two colts The storm rendered most pre-race p l an s i r r e levant.
tin Thomas shoot a 65 and
"Rain can change the whole
a few others go low in the
dynamics of a race," Baffert
morning.
said. When jockey Victor Espinoza was asked after
"I knew that there were scores out there to be had
— and I got a little more aggressive," McIlroy said. That included driving the green on the 345-yard, par-4 14th hole for the fourth time in his career
— more than any player in tournament history. "I feel like it's one of
these courses I can get on a roll with," McIlroy said. McIlroy is looking to
the victory whether his plan
was to go to the lead, he replied, "Not before. But after the rain I changed my mind." Front-running horses typically have an advantage under such conditions, because they don't have to contend with a
wall of slop being kicked in their faces.
The rain was pelting Espinoza in the face so hard that it was difficult for him to see.
become the first two-time winner of the event. Also on Saturday:
There was a virtual river in front of his inside stall in the
Delacour leads LPGA heading to final round:
gate opened, Espinoza reacted immediately and his
WILLIAMSBURG, Va.
intentions were immediately
-
France's Perrine Delacour took advantage of Alison
Lee's late two-hole meltdown to t ake th e t h ird-
starting gate. But when the
obvious. Coming out of post position No. 1, he was shoving hard on his mount, trying to get clear of the field.
Patrick Semansky/The Associated Press
Jockey Victor Espinoza, center, celebrates while riding American Pharoah after winning the 140th Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course Saturday in Baltimore.
Triple Crown successesandfailures NEW YORK — Eleven 3-year-olds have won the Triple Crown (Kentucky Derby, Preaknessand BelmontStakes).Twentyhave failed by losing in the Belmont. How they raced in the Belmont.
FAILURE 2014 —California Chrome, was fourth with five furlongs to go, ranged upand wasset down coming five wide into the stretch, but failed to pick up the pace to finish in a deadheat for fourth with Wicked Strong. SUCCESS 1978 —Affirmed duels with archrival Alydar 2008 —Big Brown finishes last to Da'Tara, for about the final five-eighths of a mile and the longest shot on theboard. Big Brown is rank at the start and fails to respondwhen beats him by ahead. Theother three startKent Desormeauxaskshim to run in the last ers finish far back. turn. At that point, Desormeauxeases himup. 1977 —Seattle Slew has no problems dis2004 —Smarty Jones extends his lead posing of seven rivals, leading all the way approaching the quarter pole andmaintains and winning by 4 lengths. a clear lead inside the furlong marker. Fights 1973 —In probably the greatest perforinto deep stretch then yields grudgmance ever by aracehorse, Secretariat wins gamely ingly while weakening in the late stages to t/4 by from 31 to 45 lengths over four rivals in finish second, a length behind Birdstone. 2:24, which still stands as aworld record for 2003 — Funny Cide leads to the far turn, 1/2 miles on dirt. relinquishes the lead to Empire Makerat 1948 —Citation leads seven rivals every the three-sixteenths pole, battles along the step of the wayand wins by 8lengths. inside to the top of the stretch then weakens 1946 —Third with about an eighth-mile finishing third, five lengths back. remaining, Assault charges to victory by 3 2002 —WarEmblemstumbles badly out of lengths in a seven-horse field. the gate then bumpsMagic Weisner at start 1943 —Count Fleet gets no competition in an11-horse field. Is rank for three-quarters from two rivals and wins by 25 lengths. of a mile andtakes brief lead nearing the half1941 —Whirlaway opens a 7-length lead mile pole. Remains afactor to the turn and at midpoint, then finishes in hand for a t2/2 gives way finishing eighth, 19t/2 lengths back. length win in a four-horse field. 1999 —Charismatic takes the lead briefly 1937 —War Admiral takes lead shortly after at the turn but Lemon Drop Kid andVision start and holds it for a 3-length win in sevand Verse fly by him on the outside and he en-horse field. finishes third1t/2 lengths back. 1935 —Shuffled back at the start, Omaha 1998 —Four lengths aheadwith an eighthovertakes Firethorn in the stretch and wins mile remaining, Real Quiet gets nipped by a by1t/2 lengths in a field of four. nose at the wire by Victory Gallop in a nine1930 —Gallant Fox leads almost all the way horse field. and wins by 3 lengths in a four-horse field. 1997 —Silver Charm fails to hold off Touch 1919 —Sir Barton hasnotrouble beating only Gold in the final eighth-mile and finishes two rivals, winning by 5lengths over1 3-8 second three-quarters of a length back, in a miles. Distance becomes1t/2 miles in1926. seven-horse field.
1989 —SundaySilencecan'tmatchEasy Goer in final quarter of a mileandfinishes second, eight lengths back in a10-horse field. 1987 —Checked sharply on final turn, Alysheba finishes fourth, 14 lengths behind winner Bet Twice in a10-horse field. 1981 —Pleasant Colony, never better than third, finishes a little more than1t/2 lengths
behind Summing, with Highland Bladesecond in an11-horse field. 1979 —The 1-5 favorite, Spectacular Bid leads with a quarter-mile left, but weakens to finish third in an eight-horse field,3t/4
lengths behind Coastal and another head behind Golden Act.
1971 —Canonero II leads12 rivals for the first mile before finishing fourth, 4t/4 lengths
behind winner PassCatcher. 1969 —Majestic Prince closes to second in a six-horse field with an eighth-mile remaining, but he can't catch Arts And Letters and is beaten by5t/4lengths.
1968 —Forward Pass leads until eighthpole, then finishes second by1'/4 lengths to Stage Door Johnny in nine-horse field. 1966 —Leading 10 rivals with a quarter-mile remaining, Kauai King fades to fourth, 7 lengths behind winner Amberoid. 1964 —Northern Dancer is second in a ninehorse field with an eighth-mile remaining, but he finishes third 6 lengths behindQuadrangle. 1961 —Carry Back never gets into contention and finishes seventh in a nine-horse field, 13'/4 lengths behind winner Sherluck.
1958 —Tim Tamis unable to cut in Cavan's lead and finishes second by 6 lengths. 1944 —Pensive leads with a quarter-mile remaining, but he loses by ahalf-length to Bounding Home in aseven-horse field.
round lead in the Kingsmill Championship. Late birdies help Maggert stay on top: BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Jeff Maggert birdied the final two holes
Martin Garcia, in t h e stall next to him, wasn't nearly as
for a 4-under 68 and sole
cluding three trained by Baffert and two ridden by Espinomoment watching him come za. American Pharoah will go Wayne Lukas made no secret past them. tives about this colt since the down that stretch. He's an in- to Belmont amid widespread that he wanted his colt to seize American Pharoah shook early days of his career. He credible horse. What he does acclaim, but he won't scare the lead. off Mr. Z on the backstretch. said frequently that Ameri- is amazing." away challengers, partly beMr. Z f o r ced A m e rican Dortmund never got within can Pharoah can maintain His victory sets the stage cause it is hard to assess the Pharoah to run hard. He sped five lengths. Instead it was a strong cruising speed that for the most compelling event significance of a seven-length the first quarter mile in 22.90 two longshots, Divining Rod enables him to shake off chal- in American thoroughbred victory in the slop over Tale seconds and the half mile in and Tale of Verve, who briefly lengers — as he did by beat- racing: a horse's pursuit of the of Verve. "I know everybody's 46.49 These were (no pun in- looked as if they would mus- ing Firing Line in the Derby. Triple Crown. No horse has sharpening their knives, gettended) lightning-fast frac- ter a challenge. As the field Even though he won the ros- swept the 3-year-old classics ting ready," Baffert said.
possessionof the lead after the third round of the Champions Tour's Regions Tradition.
Two share lead in Spain: T ERRASA,
S p ain
James Morrison shot a 4-under 68 for a share of the Spanish Open lead with
English countryman David Howell.
aggressive; it appeared as if the prerace plan might have been for Dortmund to sit just
tions under the c onditions.
reached the turn, Jill Baffert
behind his stablemate. Instead It was the kind of pace that exclaimed to her husband, the challenge to A m erican could easily cause formidable "They're coming to him!" But Pharoah came from a speedy front-runners to collapse and thetrainerwas unperturbed. longshot, Mr. Z, whose trainer allow stretch-runners to fly He has spoken in superla-
es, Baffert said, "At Churchill Downs he didn't bring his 'A' game. He brought his 'A' game today. It was a magical
since Affirmed in 1978. Thirteen have tried and failed, in-
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
POLE PEDAL PADDLE
By thenumders
PPP NOTEBOOK
$1,000
5:24 Cash prize for winning Margin of victory for JesseThomas, the individual elite men's the widest ever in the men's elite cateor women's races. The gory since the racefinish was moved second-place elite man from Drake Park in downtown Bendto and elite womaneach the Les SchwabAmphitheater in the receives $500, andthird- Old Mill District in 2004. Previous replace finishers get $250. cord: 4:16, by Marshall Greene in2006.
31, 32 Jesse Thomasand Morgan Arritola became the31st and 32nd different elite division winners in the 39-year history of the PPP.
15 Percent of the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundati on'sannualbudgetfunded by money raised by the PPP.The race is the biggest annual fundraiser for the nonprofit, whose mission is to "encourageacademicachievementand promote the positive values of competitive alpine, cross-country skiing, snowboarding, andcycling."
$11,000 AmountspentonmugsbyMBSEF, which awards hand-crafted mugs to the top three finishers in eachPPP agecategory.Morethan600 mugs were given out Saturday. Themugs cost $17 apiece. — Bulletin staff reports
Atlas Cider findssomeringers for fastest time By Mark Morical
The Atlas Cider
The Bulletin
Co. team posted
The Atlas Cider Co. team
McCoy, for his part, ran the final half-mile sprint, posting a
second consecutive year. The team, whose members are all
the fastest overall time in Saturday's Pole Pedal Paddle, 1:34:55. Members of the all-Bend team,
from Bend, finished in 1 hour,
clockwise from top
ding leg. McCoy explained
34 minutes and 55 seconds to win the Open Teams category. (Men's elite individual winner Jesse Thomas finished in 1:42:50.)
left, include Robbie
that the extra weight would make them faster on the mostly downhill ride. Martin and
on Saturday posted the fastest overall time in the PPP for the
Donohue (trail run), Max King (run), Brian Seguin (bike), Jason Tedrow (paddle), Kelly Simpson (ski), Eric Martin (bike), and Dan McCoy (sprint).
Last year, Atlas Cider finished in 1:44:05.
This year the all-male team had a ringer in world-class runner Max King, who completed the 5-mile running leg in a sizzling 25:18. Dan McCoy, owner of Atlas Cider Co., has made a point
Dan McCoy/Submitted photo
hme of 2:27. The team tried to gain an
edge by having two members, Eric Martin and Brian Seguin, ride a tandem bike on the cy-
Seguin completed the stage in 33:06.
"They were saying they reached 60 miles an hour and they passed 200 people," McCoysaid. Other members of Atlas Cider and their split times:
• Kelly Simpson, alpine ski,
of assembling the fastest PPP
2:04. • Robbie Donohue, trail run, 13:58.
teameachof thepasttwoyears. guys to rally together," McCoy is a lot of us are buddies. I just thing has evolved, somebody "It's been cool to get all these said. "The coolest thing about it invited Max. The way every- knows somebody."
18:02.
• Jason Tedrow, paddle,
Timessimilar to yearspast Although this year's snow-deprived PPP featured a 2.34-mile trail run replacing the usual 8-kilometer nordic ski stage, finishing times remained pretty close to normal. In designing the trail run, race organizers tried to set the course at a distance that would yield times similar to those typically produced on the nordic ski leg. "We neededtime for transitions," said MBSEF executive director John Schiemer. "It's important for the pairs andtandems to beable to get from the downhill ski over to the bike. That
was the main reason." Schiemer noted that the overall time for Saturday's women's elite winner MorganArritola (2:05:37) was just three seconds off the time of 2014 women's elite winner Sarah Max (2:05:34). Marshall Greene,who won the men's elite race in 2014 with a time of 1:46:58, finished second Saturday in 1:48:14, just 1:16 off his time from last year. — Mark Morical
Women Continued from C1 The 2.34-mile trail run at
Mount Bachelor, which replaced the nordic ski stage this year due to a dearth of snow, was perfect for Arritola, who excels at running technical trails.
"The more technicaland
along the Deschutes River Trail — a much less technical route — was 32:43. "I wasn't confident until I crossed the finish line," Ar-
2015hasfewer competitors
ritola said. "The second you are complacent or ready to be done, you tip over (in the kayak) or do something stupid. I was super nervous, because there are so many ele-
ments and components. I feel competitive," Arritola said. like overall it went smoothly. "To me, that's like my home. There were glitches here and harder trail, I expect to be
I like that. I would prefer for it to be more technical than that. That's where I was the most comfortable in the race
there, but I know what I need to work on for next time."
Wellington, 44, was racing the PPP as an individual for the 10th time. She knew go-
— ups, downs, twisty, bad footing. I knew any second ing in that the new trail-runI could get from anywhere I ning stage would put her at a would have to take it, because disadvantage. "Morgan is such an excelI knew I would lose a lot on the bike." lent runner," Wellington said. Arritola even passed sever- "I was just very happy with Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin al elite men's competitors on just finishing today. But I run Mary Wellington paddles along the Deschutes River while competing in the Pole Pedal Paddle women's elite division. The Bend resident finished second. the trail run, as she complet- a lot, so it was OK." ed the stage in 16:03. Several Wellington said there was of those men then passed her considerably less snow on the "Now that I live in Bend," on the 22-mile cycling stage trail-run course than there out from earlier." seven PPP elite women's tifrom Bachelor to Bend, but was earlier in the week. Neither 2 0 1 4 wo m e n's tles, raced Saturday. she said, "I'll start accumulat"That was nice," she said. champion Sarah Max nor she held a firm grip on the Arritola said she "absolute- ing proper equipment." "They (race organizers) really Stephanie Howe, who be- ly" plans to return to race the women's race the entire way. — Reporter: 541-383-0318, Her time for the 5-mile run did a great job of smoothing it tween them had won the past PPP next year. mmorical@bendbulletin.com
Men
of Bend. But that lead surged
Continued from C1
'd t
"I owe it to Matt and Marshall to let them show every-
to 5:15 at the run-paddle transition at Riverbend Park. "I knew at that point it was
body that I would get my (butt)
going to require a major mishap on Jesse's part, flipping
kicked with the nordic ski,"
his boat or something," Greene
a happy-but-humble Thomas said just after crossing the
said. "I was getting splits from random spectators (during the 5-mile run), so I knew that I was hemorrhaging time." Thomas said he approached
finish line of the 39th annual
multisport race in Bend's Les Schwab Amphitheater. "I'll have to get the blessing of my coach, which means I'll have to do some nordic cross-training
the 5-mile run t hrough Mt.
Bachelor Village and along the Deschutes River Trail as if
over the winter just to make
itwere a stand-alone race and he did not have a It/~-mile river
sure I don't go up there and hurt myself in the middle of the
paddle after it. "I ran the run like I didn't
the trail run to the bike leg at
sure. He said his name as the 2015 PPP winner should prob-
the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center. As a triathlete, Thomas is ac-
ablyhave an asterisknext to it. "We can show everybody
customed to transitions.
what a real Pole Pedal Pad-
— Victoria Jacobsen
Thomas, 35, said he has never cross-country skied in his
have anything else to do," Thomas said. "I ran hard. And then the kayak was just surviv-
life, but as a triathlete he is a
world-class runner and cyclist. Born and raised in Bend, the
al, and lean as hard as I could to the left so I don't tip over."
former Mountain View High Teaa Freeman/The Bulletin School (and Stanford Univer- Jesse Thomas completes the final half-mile sprint on his way to winning the men's elite division of the sity) track and cross-country Pole Pedal Paddle in Bend on Saturday. Thomas finished with a time of 1:42:50.
outrigger on the left side to prevent him from tipping into
star had never raced the PPP as
the cold Deschutes. He was norun included a little bit of ev-
Thomas' boat included an
ticeably slower than Greene as they paddled through the Old
erything: grass, rocks, loose Mill District on the cool, cloudy sand, snow, uphill, downhill, morning, but at that point it did and sharp turns. not matter. "It was really tough," ThomThomas was so dominant as said. that Greene said the triathlete "It was a REAL trail run," might have a chance to win Greene added. next year even with the nordic Thomas passed Greene and ski stage. But Thomas is not so
that the nordic ski leg would be
replaced with a trail run. This version of the PPP was ideal
for his skill set, and everybody knewit. Thomas' split for the trail
run — the race's second stage — was 13:45, which was 1:23 faster than G reene. Thomas later ran the 5-mile run in 28:05, which was 4:25 faster than Greene. The triathlete's
Briggs in the transition from
running ability is what won him the race.
Greene said he kept Thom-
dle athlete is like (next year),"
as in his sights for about the Thomas said. "But this was a firstthree-quarters ofthe 22- fun year to do this ... to have mile cycling leg down Century my name with that list of guys Leeway Run at Mt. Bachelor Drive. But by the time Greene (PPP champions) that I looked ski area in one piece. He said this little kid who was probaThomas was in last place reached Widgi Creek Golf up to when I was a little kid, he has not skied in about eight bly 6 years old just ripping it among the 11 elite men com- Club on the outskirts of Bend, even if there's going to be a years. down the slope — way fast- ing out of the alpine ski, but he "he was gone," Greene added. giant star next to it. I'm happy "It was absolutely nuts," er than I would ever go. I was quiddy made up time on the T homas held a bout a with that." Thomas said. "I was riding like, 'What am I getting myself technical trail run near Bach- one-minute lead at the bike-run — Reporter: 541-383-0318, elor's West Village Lodge. The transition at the Athletic Club up the chairlift, and there was into?'" mmoricalibendbulletin.com Butbefore anyof that, Thom-
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
as had to make it through the Marshall Greene paddles on hisway tofinishing second. opening alpine ski stage down
Although the PPP
is the largest MBSEF fundraiser of the year, Schiemer said the organization has other sources of revenue, and the 500 or sofewer registrants for the 2015 PPP will not hinder programs in the coming year. "I wish we would have more participants, but it's not really going to have aneffect because wehad record enrollments (in MBSEF programs)," Schiemer said. "We took on alot of extra races at the mountain this year because of the low snow across the West —we did 33 race dates, and normally we do16."
triathlon season."
an individual — he registered this year only after learning
Pole Pedal Paddle race director Molly Cogswell-Kelley said the total number of participants was about 2,400 this year, down from about 2,900 in 2014. Cogswell-Kelley attributed sluggish registration to the uncertainty surrounding the nordic ski leg, which was scrapped andreplaced by atrail run due to a lack of snow. "Once wemadethe announcementabout the trail run (on May5), so many people registered," Cogswell-Kelley said, explaining that many potential participantsdid not want to register until they were sure what events they would need to be prepared for. "People were waiting to the last minute." Although somenordic skiers decided not to compete in this year's PPP, Cogswell-Kelley and MBSEFexecutive director John Schiemer said the course change did open the field to athletes who arenot comfortable nordic skiing. "There were abig surge in out-of-area registrations, because you get people from the Willamette Valley, where nordic is not something they do," Schiemer said. "Mount Hood doesn't do lot of nordic, and that's where most of the people from the valley ski."
Suhmitphotos We are looking for your PPP photos! Goto hendbulletin.cem/ppp for your pictures to become part of our reader submitted slideshow.
C9
C10 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
r I
0 21 20
Andy Tuuie/The Bulletin
Elite racers, led by Kevin Brown, of Portland, sprint uphill toward their downhill skis at the start of the Pole Pedal Paddle at Mount Bachelor on Saturday morning.
Female Elite 1, Morgan Arritola, Bend,2:05:37. 2, MaryWellington, Bend,2:11:53. 3, CarolynDaubeny, Bend, 2:16:22. 4,LaylaBilowitz, Bend,3:04:06. Male Elite 1, Jesse Thomas,Bend, 1:42:50. 2, Marshall Greene, Bend,1;48:14. 3, MattBriggs,Bend,1;50;36. 4, Saw yerKesselheim,Bozeman,Mont.,1:54:22. 5, KevinBrown,Portland, 1:55:00.6, JasonAdams, Bend, 1:56:41. 7, PeterVraniak, Bend,1:59:09. 8, Andrew Jensen,Bend,2:02:26.9, TimMonaco, Bend. 2:08:05.10,LucasZetle, Portland,2:08:54. Female13-15 1, Annie McColgan, 2:41:34. Female16-19 1, SadiAnn e Gorman,24740.2, ClarissaSprague, 2:52:22. 3, KierstenRowles, 2:52:34. 4, Hannah Fowkes,3:19:49. Female 20-24 1, TaylorWithers,3:00:40. Female 25-29 1, KadeeMardula, 2:28:49. 2, BrittanyManwil, 2:30:43. 3, BrennaLewis, 2:40:30. 4, Stephanie Brown,2:53:38.5, ElenaPressprich, 2:53:47.6, Ashleigh Griffin,2:56:08.7, Kendall Kramer,3:21:49. Female 30-34 1, Juli Huddleston, 2:19:59. 2,Julie Baird,2:29:06. 3, Elisif Harro, 2:30:37. 4, HaileyGarsideTalbot, 2:33:31. 5, AmyRowles,2:52:53. 6, Kyla Danos,
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3:24:36.
Female 35-39 1, StacieMathews,2:24:32. 2,Jennifer Lockwood, 245 58.3,StacyKingsley 253 10.4,Jessica Milnes, 3;11;18.5,JennyGoffrier,3;40;57. Female 40-44 1, LauraO'Connell, 2:25:46. 2, ShellieHeggenberger,2:34;13.3, KimberlyHarr, 2:48:57.4, Aimee Williams Metcalf, 3:13:56.5,StaceyNiles, 3:22:21. Female 45-49 1, ColleenSulivan,2:29:34.2, Patricia Smaldone, 2:35:33. 3,CharlotteHarvey, 2:52:29.4, AimeeSmith, 2:55; 27.5,AliceHodgdon,3;03:45.6,BethDavies, 3:15:35.
Female 50-54 1, Mary S Mara,2:27:51. 2, Valerie Wodrich,
2:48:30.
Female 60-64 1, GroBuer,3:29:05.2, BethMiler,3:48:59. Male12-and-under 1, Aidan Whitelaw, 2;08:24. Male13-15 1, RJGorman,2:35:33. Male16-19 1,CaseyShannon,2:05:05.2,KimbertRobinson, 2:05:45. 3, lanChurchill, 2:09:03. 4, MaxStamler, 2:19:11.5, JeremyMoon,2;57;08. Male 20-24 1, NolanKing,2:04:22. 2, SageDeenik, 2:29:49. Male 25-29 1, BenBrewer, 2:15:54. 2, AndrewLund, 2:25:10. 3, JohnWunder, 2;29;53.4, Taylor Andrews,2;30;18. 5, Greg Hoeschele2:34:08. , 6, Leeeroy Jenkins, 2:43: 43.7,Nick Wilhite,2:45:06.8,Jacob Schumacher,3:08:11. Male 30-34 1, BradleyHowk,2:11:34.2,Scott Rowles,2:12:19. 3, JeffreyMeyrowitz, 2:14:48. 4, MatthewWright, 2:15:04. 5, Eric Hinderager,2:20:42. 6, Kalin Lee, 2:22; 41.7,GlennMacLean-Talbot,2:35;20.8,Joseph Rasca,2:40:43. 9,JonathanMerrell, 2:41:32.10, Paul Singer,2:46:00. 11, EricHand,2:46:11.12, MattJohnson,3:03:56. 13, Aaron Wichman,3:09:57. Male 35-39 1,ZachWinter,2:05:54.2,WesKapsa,2:09:50.3, NathanDecker, 2:12:02.4, MikeRueter, 2:12:40. 5, Tyler Maddox, 2;13;57. 6, Chris Martin,2:17:16. 7, Brook Jackson,2:22:30.8,DanielKingsley,2:23:12. 9, Spencer Schaub,2:23:15.10, Travis Bower,2:29:25. 11, Ethan Anderson,23003.12, JonathanBradley, 2:35:02.13,JohnGibbon,2:39:31. 14, AntonGrube, 2:41:19.15,DavidGregory, 2:42:00. 16, SheaAiken, 3:28:59. Male 40-44 1, Ryan Singleton,2:06:57. 2, MattMallet,2:07:46. 3,JohnSwanson,2:08:11.4,TeagueHaff ield,2:09:18. 5, Ben Marean,2:1046. 6, AdamWilliams, 2:16:08. 7, JanHolan,22424.8,BrianForbess,22919.9,Maro Paz,2:31:11.10,AaronQuiett, 2:32:47. 11, Tim Hoiness, 2:36:34. 12, Mike Spencer, 2:38:26.13,DavidThomason, 2:42:09. 14,Britt Sexton, 2:50:29.15, Billy Curtiss,3:00:11.16, Elvis The White,3:11:05.17,WiliamKinane,3:16:07. Male 45-49 1, TomSt.Clair,2:06:54.2, BarrettFord,2:13:19.3, Scott Herrick,2;15:43.4, JakeBell, 2:17:57.5, Chris Clemow, 2:24:11. 6, AaronGordon, 2:27:32. 7, David Quiett, 2:27:41.8,AlexanderGrover,2:32:57. 9, Ralph Tadday Tadday,2:49:50.10, TomPowers,2;57:17. 11, Jason Wells, 3:29:17. Male 50-54 1, MichaelNyberg,2:12:33. 2, ToddSaunders, 2:18:57. 3, GregStevens, 2:21:30. 4, Rick Peters, 2;22; 29.5,MarkPetersen,2;23:07.6,MichaelMcLandress ,2:23:54.7,KentReynolds,2:27:53.8,Michael Coe,2:28:28.9,StephenCrozier, 2:29:54.10, Michael Claywell,2:31:41. 11, DanThompson, 2:41:27. 12, StevePappas, 2:53:48. 13, Patrick Sheahan,3:01:16. 14, Randy Stutzman, 31335.15, ThomasKiley, 31522.16, Jeff Kohlwes,3:20:38. 17,BobKavanaugh,3:26:26. Male 55-59 1, Jeff Spangler, 2:16:00. 2, Dieter Hoffman n, 2:21:21. 3, JustinRipley,2:24:04. 4, KenBronson, 2;29:52. 5, BradNicholson, 2;36:49. 6,JohnFairgrieve,2:48:24.7,Russell Marz,2:51:11.8, AlTompkins, 3:09:21. Male 60-64 1, RobSweeney, 2:26:41.2, Craig Mavis, 2:30:32. 3, Dr. Bones, 2:39:06. 4, BruceWiliams, 2:47:22. 5, Jim Kiley, 2:50:31. 6,TomAmundson, 3:17:11. 7, StewartPatrignani,3:35:38.8,TomCoehlo, 4:34:35. Male 65-69 1, Dr. Buns,2:30:07. 2, JamesElliott, 2:42:20. 3, GaryReynolds,2:44:33. 4, LewBecker,2:51:27. Male 75-and-over 1, ReiderPeterson,3:27:13. 2,Bil Martin,3:33:05. 3, ErnieGilpin, 3:51:42 Coed pairs13-15 1, Teenage Nightmare, 2:44:41. Coed pairs16-19 1, Toby's Titans, 2:12:01. 2, VictoriousSecret, 2:20:50. Coed pairs20-24 1, Team Skemma, 2:15:47.
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Boats fill the Deschutes River during the Pole Pedal Paddle on Saturday in Bend. Coed pairs25-29 2, Breaking Newsies,2:50:50. 1, Drinkerswith a RunningProblem,2:10:29. 2, Female pairs30-34 Wildlyfe-Rebound West, 2:18:48. 1, A NicePair, 2;21;04. 2, Liquid Fire!,2:34:03.3, Coed pairs30-34 Goony Goo-Hoo,2:35:12. 1, Life'stooBusyto Train, 2:07;03.2, TeamGilFemale pairs35-39 Coq, 2:13:20.3, Livin' theGoodLife, 2:21:34.4, New 1, Muffy &Zoe,1:58:40.2, RainforestRunaways, JerseyStrong,2;28;09. 5, BoxersScolere, 2:29;23.6, 2:08:23. 3,KashStrive to Thrive,2:33:36. 4, Clever KimBark ,2:41:44.7,Team GoGose,2:43:21.8,The TeamName, 2:37:49.5, Megan, 2:49:02. Female pairs40-44 WeddingDancers,2:45:29. Coed pairs35-39 1, The MileageClub Moms,2:19:33. 2, Pink 1, Smishido, 1:55:11. 2, TeamYogaSlackers, Panters,2:41:11.3, SuperWomen, 2:46:09. 2:03: 15.3,YoMama,2;07:17.4,OldRancher&His Female pairs 45-49 Hot Wife,2:08:12. 5, OleAndLena, 2:15:14. 6, The 1, Voxy,2:44:31. 2, CRLAandCOLM, 2:57:11. Lemondrops,2;20;47. 7, Lateto theParty, 2:21;01.8, Femalepairs50-54 CooperSchenk,2:24:04. 9, JCB,2:29:33. 10,OutTo 1, Julie D &Julie W21516. 2,Jakikiski,22438. Lunch,2:36:56. 3, Teacher!Teacher!, 2:39:40. 4, Two of a Kind, 11, WikyShenanigans,2:47:27.12, First Place, 2:50:04.5, Stormin' ForNorman, 3;00;06. 2:53:16. Female pairs55-59 Coed pairs40-44 1, FlamingChickens,2:07:56.2, InfoBabesUn1, Still Swee tcheeks, 2:15:03.2, DosGauchosCan- leashed,2:42:49.3,AdventureGirls,2:46:02. sados,2:30;55. 3, RedWine Canoe, 3:07:08. 4, The Femalepairs65-69 Smorning's3:18:10. , 1, TooOldForThis Sr*@,3:03:25. Coed pairs 45-49 Male pairs12-and-under 1, DreamKilers, 2:15:07. 2, AlbanyAscending, 1,Ski Boys,21036.2,DynamicDuo,21359.3,2 21536.3, NoNookie UnlessI Bookie,22017.4, Mr. Slow 2Win2 DumbToQuit, 2:18:12. 4,TheDynamic & Mrs.PotatoHead,2;26;10.5,Jonica,2;54;07.6, Duo, 2:20:54. Let It Be,2:57:31. Male pairs 13-15 Coed pairs50-54 1,WildGooseChase,2:18:18.2,TeamTR,2:29:28. 1, Go DogGo,2:22:51. 2, DagDozeMS, 2:35:03. 3, TheShort Spartans, 2:38:12 3, KBAM,2:46:30.4, TwoProfs WhoPPP,2:46:46.5, Male pairs 16-19 The VikingandtheSicilian, 2:58:07.6, GreatDanes, 1, Doyle & Blackburn, 2;29;13. 3:00:03. Male pairs 20-24 Coed pairs55-59 1, Mug Brothers, 1:54:06. 2, Breaking Brad, 1, LoveyAndTheSkippah,2:16:06. 2,TeamRasta, 2:31:48. 2;23: 06.3,MontanaSpecial,2:39;54. Male pairs25-29 Coed pairs60-64 1,IfYouMustache,2:06:52.2,TeamYogaSlackers 1, DisposablTh e umbs, 2:29:48. —Men,2:07:41. 3, Cruisin Ewen, 2:09:06.4, Stauffer, Coed pairs65-69 2:13:25. 5, TaccAttack,2;23;18. 6, XtremeTeam, 2:34:38. 1, OddCouple, 2:35:42. Female pairs13-15 Male pairs 30-34 1, Liv' N Large,2:30:56.2, FastandFurious 13, 1, Boondoggled,1:46:10. 2, Master Debaters, the Pain, 2:07:48. 4, Carnett, 2:51:36. 3,Seoulto Soul,2:52;57.4, Seoulto Soul 2:00:25. 3, Embrace Sisters,3:04:10. 2:10:48. 5,Outcasts,2:18:42. 6, DoubleD's, 2:19:41. Female pairs 20-24 7,Well-Malley,2:29:24.8,Kenna Can,2:33:04.9, 1, MountainBabes, 2:15:32. HereForBeer,2;51:57. Female pairs25-29 Male pairs 35-39 1, New YawkGuidettes, 2:37:00. 1, Table 5 p/bCopperline,1:52:19. 2,Jeradam
Schreding,2:07:21.3, McRingers, 2:09:50. 4, Velvet Hammer, 2:11:35. 5, Smokeyandthe Bandit, 2:19:59. 6, OutdoorProjectRainbowTrout, 2:25:33.7, Panda Boom,22723. 8,TheBaldAndTheBeautiful,22940. 9, Tunuts,2:35:14.10, BeerCrushers, 2:36;58 Male pairs 40-44 1, S&W Builders, 1:55:04. 2, Fearthe Spear, 2:08:59. 3, PatronReps,2:14:00. 4, Liquid Force, 2:26: 37.5,Vince'sManMuff s,2:32:55.6,ThrownTogethe r...Again!,2;46;49.7,TwoGoodMen,2;47;37. Male pairs 45-49 1, LongTrail, 2:01:24. 2, ORP , 2:15:01. 3, Albany Athl etics,2:20:42.4,Bangers & Mash Unabashed, 2:21:40. 5, Juststopthebleeding, 2:25:19. 6, The Works,2:27:36.7, NumbNuts9, 2;31;49. Male pairs 50-54 1, Waylon&Wilie,1:54:56.2, Viejos,2:01:45.3, 2 Bodacious 8's, 2:18:03. 4, CarpePesce, 2:22:28.5, Dumbassery,2:36:03. 6, FourCreakyKnees,3:15:10. Male pairs 55-59 1,Sniff anWagg,2:10:40.2,GazeWest,2:13:52. 3, MOBSG— Churchill,2:25:29.4,MOBSG- Punt, 2:35: 37.5,MOBSG -Wales,2:36:06.6,MOBSGRobinson,2:42:12. Male pairs 70-74 1, Peons,2:33:01.2, Lew&Jeff, 2:57:09. Tandempairs 16-19 1, It'sGenetic, 2:23:54. Tandempairs 30-34 1, Pole &Pray,2:10;10. 2, CincoHijas, 2;16:45. 3, Llama Drama, 2:22:20.4, Hurl NRally, 2:25:12.5, Walker andtheTexasStrangers,2:37:29.6,TwoTowers, 2:40:35. Tandempairs 35-39 1, Took 3for theTeam, 2:09;02. 2, ForestHall Reunion,2:10:12.3, JoeandHis Smokin' HotWife, 21714.4,TeamHenry,21809.5,Wellby,24008.6, Two for G,2:41:19. 7, Team Barr, 2:45:13. 8, Sparkle Party,3:06:35. Tandempairs 40-44 1,Off Constantly,2:33:28.2,Seabass,2:33:35.3, Hodads,2:49:07. Tandempairs 45-49 1, TheGeriatric andTheJunior, 2:16:21. 2, Green MountainBros,2;38:03. 3, Out-of-Towners, 2;40;24. 4, Argonauts,2:41:54. Tandempairs 50-54
1, Faster in our Minds,2:22:37. 2, TwoTipsy,
2:32:16.
Tandempairs 55-59 1, Let'sGetThis Right, 2:22:33. 2, DazedandContused,2:23:31.3,BlueBasalt, 2:57:41. Tandempairs 60-64 1, Old,3:12:51. Adaptive teams 1, NoBoundaries, 2:37:56.2, Onward!, 3:00:54. 3, TrueGrit, 3:10:27. Businessteams 1, GreenRidgePT., 1:55:16. 2, LosBonely Boyz, 1:59: 12.3,Magnum G5,2:08:12.4,Medline Magnums,2:08:50.5,GraceBibleChurch,2:16:28.6, WCP Sol utions,2:17:04.7,TheJoneses,2:17:58. 8, WalkerMacy,2:20:07. 9, Gutterballs, 2:21:06.10, Humm Kombucha, 2;23:18. 11, NV Wild, 2:23:34. 12, Airlink, 2:23:55. 13, OutdoorProject Orcas,2:24:09. 14, TheTechAvengers-FiyeTalent, 2;26:02.15,NVWest Coast, 2:26:30. 16, Life Flight, 2:26:44.17, U.S.Bank-BankingOn Bend, 2:27:29.18,Keeping Up with the Joneses, 2:30:08.19, LesSchwabTeamA, 2:30:50. 20,The MackPack,2:32:12. 21, Vacasa,2;33;32. 22, U.S.Bank-Business As Usual, 2:34:51.23,Sq1Doust, 2:35:24. 24, AreWe There Yet,2:35:44. 25,BrokenTopMulligans, 2:36:51. 26, PacificSource,2:37:38.27, TheHigh Desert Hotshots, 2: 38:38.28,Sq1 Holmes,2:38:43.29,GBD Young & Restless, 2:39:00.30,Schusters Mercantile &Banked Goods, 2:39:25. 31, Columbia Bank Non-Performing Athletes, 2:40: 27.32,Team HOC,2;40;32.33,PaulinaPounders, 2:40:36. 34, BLRBDraft Monkeys, 2:41:13. 35, SEANoEvil, 2:41:20.36, TheReal MikeRueter, 2:44: 34.37,LightSpeedos,2:44:55.38,Team Navis, 2:45:15.39, DarkSpeedos, 2:48:38.40, Sq1Winslow, 2:49:39. 41, Mmm dotBaDubaDop,2:49:40.42, Financialy Fit-ButThat'sIt!,2:50:05.43, GBDCalm&Collected, 2:51:41.44, 3J-Consulting(2), 2;55;16.45,Wine'd Up Toys, 2:56:33. 46, 3J-Consulting (1), 2:56:52.47, Team Lollygag, 3:01:02.48,GoldenPaddleWinners, 4;51:51. Coed teams12-and-under 1,JustMaKeMiLkshakes,2:21:00.2,TheEugene Rockers,2:37:31.3,TheSpeedyHalf Dozen, 2:45:32. 4, Oak Hill School, 2:56:07. 5, JarasicUnicorns, 3:15:20. Coed teams13-15 1, Fab-4, 2:20:50. 2, Fast Furiousand First, 2:30:33. 3,Pohsters, 2;42;11. 4, Half&Half, 2;45;59. 5,KeepIt'G',2:49:36.6,S'mores,3:04:41. Coed teams16-19 1, But I HadTheNordic Leg!, 2:12:26.2, Power of Pentagon,2:19:34. 3, Hella, 2:51:07. 4, OakHil School A Team, 2:53:41. Coed teams 20-24 1, TheCaryKanes, 2:42:41. Coed teams 25-29 1, Wii Unfit, 1:54:58. 2, BasXly TWEIRock, 1:59:10. 3,WantaTrade Kayakers, 2:01:41. 4, Manzama,2:20:10.5,Goldeneyes,2:20:23.6,FiftyShades ofSchnee,2:24:13.7,We GottheRuns,2:24:59.8, Stench GoosePosse, 2:29:00.9, Mountain Push-ups, 2:2929.10,Hum -Bolt ToTheFinish,2:31:23. 11, We'rH eerefor theBeer, 2:35:27.12, ER.I.E.N.D.S!, 2:38;46.13,HighFivers,2;39:16. Coed teams 30-34 1, Silver FoxandHis Whelps, 2:07:18. 2, Team 10 Barrel2:13;23. , 3, GrantLudwick's Mom,2:13:30. 4, RagamuffinClan,2:25:42. 5, CorvaffisCrushers, 2:28:47. 6, MiloGoesto College,2:29:38. 7, Best Lookin gTeam intheWorld,2:32:44.8,TheUcking Fidiots, 2:33:09. 9, GetMooreD unn, 2:34:23. 10, A PilotandHisPosse,237:17. 11, Standard Deviators,2:37:40.12, WorkingOnlt, 2:38:10.13,CoolRunnings, 2:44:09.14,Parametrix Posse,2;48:36.15, BlackButte Express, 2:53:52. 16, Chicks & Ducks,30017.17, BallsandDolls,30331. Coed teams 35-39 1, Teem Stoopid, 2:17;12. 2, ProNation, 2:18:24. 3, FastandOblivious, 2:21:19. 4, BrooklynFoodMuseum, 2:22:31.5, Where'sTheBeer Tent?, 2:25:17. 6, ButResistWeMuch,2:28:31.7,Rebound-Eastside, 2:29:29. 8, WhyWasTraffic Problem Em ail Sent, 2;32;32. 9, CloseEncounters, 2:34:21. 10, Donkey Show,2:35:09. 11, StenchGooseAttack, 2:46:30.12,TheAaron Burrs, 2:55:16.13,AreWeThere Yet?, 2:56:44. 14, Jess & TheBarleyJamKinetic, 2:56:59.15, TheDevil's OnionRings,3:02:47. Coed teams 40-44 1,'S AffGood Man!,1:49:49.2,TheMarvinos, 1;58;57. 3,TeamTAI- ACBPts, 2;09;54. 4, Big Hairy Posse,2:11:31.5, Staggering Geniuses, 2:22:28. 6, ThreePalesanda Stout, 2:25:34. 7, Not DeadYet, 2:26:10.8, Lowe'sDownAnd Dirty,2:34:14. 9,Blazing Sloths,2:35:58.10,Lookout Humanity!, 2:37:52. 11, NewsDucksof Bend, 2:43:15. 12, BadKnees Bears,2:51:39.13, 4WitchesandaPrince,3:11:20. Coed teams 45-49 1, Vlachness Monsters, 2:06:40. 2, Gonadal Shields,2;1202.3, GluttonsforPunishment,2;17;18. 4, BeerMakesUsPPP , 2:25:35. 5, Ex Neighbors, 2:31: 35.6,We'reGonnaNeedaBiggerBoat,2:35:37. Coed teams 50-54 1, Half Fast,2:02:19.2, TheHigh Desert Porsche Club, 2:06:19. 3, Kamakani, 2:31:12. Coed teams 55-59 1, X Tektronix2,2:14:12. 2,AutoNetWork,2:14:50. 3,RatHoleWoodRiverRats,2:22:54.4,Buff aloson Nitro, 2:41:32. Coed teams 60-64 1, Yes WeCan, 2:22:57. 2,TheFrozen6,2:43:41. Coed teams 65-69 1, TeamAgeless, 2:40:20. 2, Ain't Dead Yet!, 2:41:36. 3,TheMavericks, 3:13:40 Familyteams 1, HappyBlackmore's,2:16:31. 2, Gotta Race, 2:18:18. 3,Yeegans, 2:21:10. 4, Hart Family, 2:22:48. 4, NoTime To Train,2:22:48.6,Buono Beaters, 2:25:28.7,TheYoungsAndMoreRestless,2:26:22. 8, Seein gDoublex2,2:27:07.9,Team Vostok,2:28:23. 10, Mimi &theAffStars,2:28:27. 11, HA-JO,2:28:28. 12, Goodpe ople Redeux, 2:28:39.13, Bonn-fire,2:28:45.14, Malcolm'sMen, 2:31:53.15, Rev enge of theBrennans, 2:32:26. 16, HoofHarted,2:34:11.17, Outties, 2:34:41.18, Machado,2:34:58.19, 4 Squirrelswith2 Nuts,2:35:06. 20, TheYoungsAndTheRestless,2:35:24. 21, Little Dipper,2:36:10. 22, Meatball, 2:36:12. 23,Team Evans,2:37:43.24,DoanStop Believing, 2:38:09.25,SuperGrover, 2:38:17.26,TheSinister Six, 2:41:15.27, 35 Cent, 2:41:39. 28, Slowlybut
Shirley,2:42:19.29, RadSter's, 2:42:23. 30, RunKids Run!, 2:42:55.
31,Up SchimdtCreek,2:43:23.32,Team Herman,2:44:22.33,Y'AllReadyForThis,2:44:29.34, PushetRealGood, 2:45:21. 35,TheYoung And The RestOfUs,2:46:20.36,Innies,2:48:16.37,Team Frey, 2:48:59.38, FearsomeFivesome,2:49:16. 39,
Feel GoodFoodsFamily,2;49;50.40,Angie' sArmy, 2:50:22.
41, RenoZ!nnB ruechnerWoods, 2:52:31. 42, TrophyBoys,2:52:40.43,TheKillerRabbits,2:56:20.44, ScrambledLeggs, 2:57:22. 45,NOTLAST, 2:57:38.
46, The AmazeingSisters Family, 2:59:14.47,Scouts Honor,3:02:41.48,Jag-Wires, 3:04:57.49, TheBlazes,4:51:23. Femaleteams12-and-under 1, Pop Rocks, 2:19:52. 2, Walker'sWarriors, 2:25:02.3,DragonWarriors, 2:25:15. Femaleteams13-15 1, HighVoltage,2:17:43.2, ThreeAmigos,2:53:55. Femaleteams16-19 1,Um ...RU GonnaEatThat?,2:24:08. Femaleteams25-29 1, Trolling for Gold2:08:05. , 2, Black, Like My Soul, 2:41:23. Femaleteams30-34 1, NEPReps, 2:22:49. 2,TeamDo-Over, 2:44:17. Femaleteams35-39 1, WonderGirls, 2:16:57.2, FreaksWithout Warning, 2:22:21.3, Queensof theBeach, 2:24:26.4, Girls Just WanttoHaveFun,2:33.53.5,ThreeNonBlondes, 2:44:15. 6,Miles toMartinis, 2:59:42.7, DeStEmMi, 3:01:48. Femaleteams40-44 1, Recharge,1:53:05. 2, Powerof She,2:18:05. 3, BendOver,2:29:52. 4, SuperflyGirls, 2:30:19.5, BrightBarryPieQuagmire, 2:55:12.6, Bimbo'sWithoutBoundaries,2;59:04.7,Huffnpuff ,3:02:39.8, Team Teach&Treat, 3:03:08. Femaleteams45-49 1,BadassMug Chasers,2:18:45.2,Mountain Mommas, 2:41:45. Femaleteams50-54 1, BloodyMarvelousChicks(BMC), 2:05:48.2, D& D GirlsDown8 Dirty, 2:06:48.3, Where's the Snow?,2;16:32.4, StrongForceGale, 3:16:52. Femaleteams55-59 1, YaYaSisters, 2:41:21. 2,WeNeedMore Cowbell, 2:44:43.3, Fifty Shadesof GreyHair, 2:54:58. Femaleteams60-64 1, PolkaDotPowered,2;36:55. 2,TeamBringIt On, 2:44:29.3, PushPain Party, 2:53:51.4, Mental Pausal, 2:53:55.5,Ovarian Cysters, 2:58:50. Femaleteams65-69 1, GrayHares,2:32:28. High schoolteams 1, What's Your Summit?, 2:09:23. 2, 2XC4U, 21241.3,Tonto,21829.4, DoYouEvenPP22719. 5, TheSubordinateSquad, 2:29:56. 6, FroshPosh, 2:33: 35.7,SummitAlpineSkiTeam,2:34:25. Male teams12-and-under 1, SillySausa ges,2:20:29. Maleteams13-15 1, WestKorea,2:19:44. 2,ThreeNot SoWisemen, 2:20:17. 3,JustHavin' Fun!,2:30:04.4, No!WeLost Cuz UR 2Fat, 2:35;16. Maleteams16-19 1, GrandTheft Exercise,2:05:47. 2, Endurance, 2:14:11.
Maleteams20-24 1, Three RighteousDudes,2;17:21. 2, FreeShmurda Gang,2:17:56 Maleteams25-29 1, RobSchneider's Pt, 2:06:46.2, TheDukeSilver Trio, 2:18:10. 3, MOPIAV,2:22:48. 4, Undertrained and Overconfident,2:23:05.5, Going SnowhereFast, 2:35:09. 6,CCBend Avengers, 2:37:51. 7, TheInnocentKegstanderz, 2:51:22. Maleteams 30-34 1, MarkieV'sHungoverAII-Stars,1:53:50. 2,Three MenandaBaby,2:01:08.3,MtBachelorParty-Team MVA,2:02:45.4, BeerPPPlease, 2:04:01. 5, LosLocos Diecisiete,2:19:03.6, All Hat,NoCattle, 2:19:12. 7, EpicPPP , 2:39:02. Maleteams35-39 1, HammsSamich, 2:12:45. 2, UnicornMagic, 2:16:49.3,Slightly FasterthanSteve, 2:32:22.4, Beer Run,2:41:11. Maleteams 40-44 1, Southof Ruth, 2:11:05.2, OldNews, 2:23:46. 3, HealthyPawsPet Insurance,2:26:02. Maleteams 45-49 1, Just Doggin' It, 1:58:04. 2,Racingfor Mom, 2;03;40. 3, SnapCrackle Pop,2:21;46. 4, CBG B, 2:25: 28.5,Team Whiskey Dicks,2:29:29.6, The Break fastClub,2:33:05.7,ABOOG,2:36:52.8, Nick'sinittowin,2:40:37.9, TeamGeezers, 2:59:39. Maleteams 50-54 1, Are WeWorthy?, 2;14:06. 2, FGOB , 2:15:38. 3, UncalledFourPlusOne,2:16:08. 4, Mirror Pond Sediment,2:20:38. Maleteams55-59 1, WeakendWarriors, 2:18:35. 2, TheGood, the Bad andthe Ugly, 2:23;59. 3, HardarseMacoca, 2:25:42.4, PerformsWell Hungover,2:29:59. 5, Trails Wild International2:31:55. , Maleteams60-64 1,Team Passinggas,2:28:20.2,ThereGoesthe Neighborhood,2;28:24. Maleteams65-69 1, MACSage Cliff ,2:24:47.2,Zack' s Team, 2:34:24.
Maleteams 70-74 1, TheFlame,2:52;40.
Municipal teams
1, ChasedbyCops, 2:00:00.2, PPPlayfor Life, 2:02:32. 3, SparksAnd Wreck, 2:16:34. 4, Menof Miller, 2:17:05.5,JCFD,2:25:15. 6, Cityof Hilsboro, 2;34;55.7,TheDrips,2;46:34. 8, DPCDPers, 2:51:56.
Openteams
1, AtlasCiderCo,1:34:55.2, Tinh'sVuDoo Magic, 1:39:48. 3,Chuggin' NotMuggin', 2:15:48.4, Kelly's Heros,2:20:31.5, PPPfor Winters, 2:27:39. 6, Team Topo,2:30:49.7,ZagBeavers, 2:36:07.8,TriggerHappyBunnies,2:38:32.9,TheFlamingMarshmallows, 2:38:43.10,UnitedBeer Council Alter Egos, 2:41:43. 11, Don'Be t Jealous,2:45:17.12, CuppaYoMomma, 2:48:25.13,FinishIt, 2:52:41. 14,KissesFrom Summit 8Bjorn,2:55:35.15, Mike'sBabyBlueBeatles, 2:55:44.16,Legendz, 2:56:21. 17, FireBreathing Kittens,2:56:55. 18,TeamHassonÃ1, 3:02:01. 19, PastyRacers, 3:15:48.20, TeamHassond2,3:23:01. 21, SweatyBalls, 3:24:42. 22, FastandFurious, 3:51:07.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, D2 Travel, D4-5 Puzzles, D6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
O www.bendbunetin.com/community
• The California coastal reserveisone of our most isolated national parks
*
a.
rv s~
s .';,C
i
Photo by Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin
Remarkable in its serenity, Scorpion Anchorage once served only the historic Scorpion Ranch on eastern Santa Cruz Island. Today,
campers and kayakers visit this beach, while others continue to rocky Anacapa Island, on this photo's horizon.
CALIFORNIA Santa Barbara Miles
By John Gottberg Anderson«For the Bulletin 0
OXNARD, Calif.
to
20
Santa Barbara Channel
entura
SAN
-
o ~i s
n the wilderness, it turns out, beauty and cruelty are not so far removed from each other as one
®
might like to think. SANTA
That's as true in a wilderness of water, where most human visitors don't see more than a few feet
*'
RDSA
Pacific Ocean
beneath the waves, as it is in mountains or forests or rocky coastlines. It is certainly true in one of the more isolated national parks in the Lower 48, Southern California's Channel Islands National Park. Dozens of schoolchildren were witness to the capricious
Santa Cruz Island.
ways of nature this year,
and I were with them one idyllic
tance, their blow dearly visible
during a 21-mile crossing of
morningaboardthe Islander, a tour boat operated by park con-
above the horizon. A synchronized symphony of dolphins
cessionaire Island Packers. It
danced upon the waves on all
the Santa Barbara Channel — between Oxnard's Channel
Islands Harbor andthe historic gently rolled in the ocean swells sides of us. Scorpion Ranch, main portal to as the channel's prolific marine Someone sighted two orthe largest island of the group, life staged a show for which Sea cas, or killer whales, directly
unmistakable. immense power theyused to hurl their 4,000-pound bodies
Channel IslanltsNational Park
Monterey CALIFORNIA Area of Pacific detail Ocean Los Angeles
World has no parallel. Two gray ahead. Their distinctive blackPhotographer Barb Gonzalez whales spouted in the near dis- and-white markings were I was impressedbythe
""
SANTA BARBARA 0 ISLAND
Miles
0
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
50
NORTHWEST TRAVEL
through the surf in unison, in theirconstant search forfood.
Next week: Crater Lake Lodge's 100th birthday
SeeChannelIslands/D4
Paid Advertisement
ncien OC rine COu e incom a in cima ec an e,„„,„„„„„ „„„, By Mac McLean The Bulletin
A 1,500-year-old legal principle known as the public trust doctrine could hold the secret
to fighting climate change and other modern environmental
Ifyou go
at Central Oregon Community College's Wille Hall, 2600 NW What:University of Oregon College Way in Bend professor Mary Wood presents "Nature's Trust, Climate Change Private Reception:5 to 6:30 p.m. BrokenTopBottle Shop, & The Law: ThePublic Trust 1740 NWPence Lane in Bend Doctrine 8 Oregon's Climate Future." Cost:$10 per person for prePresentation:7 p.m. Tuesday sentation only, $25 for presen-
concerns the state and federal governments are either unwilling or ill-equipped to handle. "The public trust doctrine is a very old doctrine," said Justinian in A.D. 535, the pub- in charge of making sure Mary Wood, a professor at the lic trust doctrine declares that these items are put to their University of Oregon's School the animals, minerals, naviga- best possible use. of Law and faculty director of its Environmental and Natu-
ble waterways and seashores
But while the doctrine has
that lie within a state's bound-
ral Resources Law program.
aries belong to its residents. It
such a vast history, Wood said many people don't know it
"It requires the government to
makes members of the state's legislature or another gov-
to hold government officials
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
M II ESTON
Oe + ~ L7
For ms f o r e ngogementw,eddinga,nniversary orbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatbendbuiietinconvmiiestones F.onnsand photos must b e submitted within one month of the celebration. Questions: milestones@bendbulletin.com, 541-633-2117.
Bet enny Fran e s ares essons romher mistakes inrelationships
ENGAGEMENTS tt
ll.
,c
'
By Vicki Salemi
Frankel, 44, who
Chicago Tribune
B ethenny F r a nkel
is
TRE
known for being many things: Skinnygirl mogul, TV personality on "The Real Housewives of New York City," best-selling author and a
Y
m om . But
she admits her new book emerged from one thing EliseJackman and Adam Payne
she hasn't quite accom-
Jackman — Payne
of Art in San Francisco, Cali-
plished yet. "I'velearned more from
fornia. She works for Pioneer
m y m i stakes t ha n
Elise Jackman and Adam Millworks in Portland. Payne, both of Portland, plan The future groom is the to marry July 10 at the home of
son of Ed Payne and Kathie
the bride's parents in Jackson, Wyoming. A reception will follow. The future bride is t he daughter of Heidi Mamerow
Bauch, of Bend. He is a 1998 graduateofBend High School and a 2004 graduate of Port-
To: 10 Rules for Not Screw-
land State University, where he earned a bachelor's degree and James Jackman, of Jack- in marketing and advertising. son, Wyoming. She is a gradu- He works as a logistics coordiate of Southlake Carroll High nator for Hampton Affiliates. School in Southlake, Texas, The couple will honeymoon and attended the University in Nicaragua. of Arizona and the Academy They will settle in Portland.
10 Rulesfor Not ScrewingUp Your Happily Ever After
I've
learnedfrom my successes. It's a 'do as I say, not as I've done' book," she says about "I Suck at Relationships So You Don't Have
filed for divorce from second husband Jason Hoppy in 2013, hopes to steer readers away from her own mistakes as she remains "hopeful and wishful" for success in her love life. Much of her advice is targeted at those who are in the
midst of, or coming out of, unhappy relationships, including herself.
ing Up Your Happily Ever After" (Touchstone). Frankel, 44, who f iled
for divorcefrom second husband Jason Hoppy in 2013, hopes to steer readers away from her own
anyone who isn't sure whether their life and/or current re-
lationship is balanced, Amador suggests revisiting your datebook over the past few months or even year.
mistakes as she remains
"hopeful and wishful" for success in her love life. Much of her advice is tar-
geted at those who are in the midst of, or coming out of, unhappy relationships, including herself. We talked to Frankel for
ANNIVERSARIES
REIY YORK YIIA I G -'STSEIIIUG AUTUOR
and what you want in your
life day to day, week after week, month after month," he
some lessons-learned ad-
vice, along with her therapist, psychologist Dr. Xavier Amador, who contributed to the book. Amador
WITH EVE ADAIUISOH Courtesy Touchstone
Bethenny Frankel, knownfor her TV personality on "The Real
says. Does your partner complement or dominate your life? "A relationship, by definition, is an interaction between two
is founder of Long Island, Housewives of New York City" and success with Skinnygirl, shares people," Amador says. "It's a N ew Y ork-based L E A P her failed relationships with the hopes of sharing ways for readers dance. And you can't dance Institute, which focuses to avoid similar mistakes in "I Suck at Relationships So You Don't unless you're moving on avon conflict resolution and Have To." erage 50 percent of the time trust-building workshops. in the same direction." Own your vulnerability: If Frankel has learned anyFrankel spends a lot of Be honest with yourself: don't know who they are," thing, she says, it's to enjoy time in the book touting The better you know yourself, Frankel says, "and you're h er own life, with or w i t h the values of vulnerability. the more successful you'll be pretending you're somebody out a relationship. Ensure She's not advising for when you start a relationship. you're not." you don't neglect your own Self-awareness is also im- career, hobbies, avocations, people, particularly wom- That means being honest en, to become doormats. with yourself as well as the portant, Amador adds, be- family and friends, she says, Still, she says, it's import- person you're dating. "You cause we can control only our "instead of waiting for the ant to own vulnerability don't want to get to the point own behavior. other person to (determine) as proudly as you own (in a relationship) where you Re-evaluate the past: For what you're doing." your toughness. "When you're vulnerable and
m I ,rem
tr- 4
honest and o pen a bout
something, regardless of how the other person feels," she says, "that could be powerful." One example: that point
Set ATaste For
Food, Home & Garden Every TUesday In
AT HOME
in a relationship when one party wants more than the
other. Instead of denying it or drowning in it, just be upfront about it — and take the next step. " Be honest an d
Mike and Jane (Genske) Widmer
Widmer
and multisport events. He en-
joys fly-fishing and traveling Mike and Jane (Genske) to national parks. Dr. and Mrs. Widmer, of Bend, will cele- Widmer have visited 34 nabrate their 25th wedding an- tional parks. niversary with a trip to Mesa Mrs. Widmer is a full-time Verde National Park in Colorado later this year.
homemaker. She was born in
Sheboygan, Wisconsin, and The couple were married graduated from the UniversiMay 26, 1990, in Sheboygan, ty of W isconsin-Madison in Wisconsin, at J ane's child1986. She earned a master's hood parish of Holy Names. degree in microbiology at Her parents traveled by train Oregon Health Sciences Uni-
s ay,
times," he explains. "What does it mean to surrender?
versity, and worked in the en-
It really m eans to
docrinology lab at Dartmouth
Minnesota, Jack, of Omaha,
St. Francis Catholic School, is a board member of the Bend
trying to control things. You're not going to change (another) person." W alking away a l s o helps you gain perspective
Nebraska, and Teddy. Dr. Widmer is a cardiologist, and was born and raised in Medford. His grandparents were sheep ranchers in Bend in the 1920s and 1930s. He is
an avid athlete, and participates in many local running
Endurance Academy and volunteers for the SMART read-
ing program. The couple met while both attending OHSU.
They lived near Boise, Idaho, beforemoving to Bend. They have lived in Bend for 15 years.
1
A: e,
to surrender to win a lot of
ceremony. They have three children, Michael, of Duluth,
College. She volunteered at
eBu etm
'Look, I'm being a little needy. I'm going to pull it together,'" Frankel says. And then take back your power, and back off for a while. Brave th e ti m eout: When a relationship is unbalanced, stepping away can offer many benefits, Amador says. "You have
from Medford to attend the
' st
"Your calendar isa reflec-
tion, hopefully, of your values
s t op
and can reduce anxiety.
"Whenever we're less anxious, we're less likely to behave in ways that hurt
our relationships," Amadorsays.
The Bulletin MI LESTONES
e, ee tt ,.
GUIDELINE
L'
• dg
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey GlenGolf Club Bad Boys Barbecue Bend Park S. Recreation District Bend Wedding S. Formal Cordially Invited Bridal Deschutes County Fair S. Expo Center Faith HoPeEIbCharity Vineyard Illuminate Your Night
Meadow Lakes Nicole Michelle Northwest Medi Spa Pboeoix Picture Framing professional Airbrush Tanning Revive Skin Services Salon Je' Danae SHARC Aquatic ISt.Recreation Center Tbe Bend Trolley The Bridal Suite 6. Special Occasion The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
0 Sout me swit newi easinGeor ia'sMacon By Mary Ann Anderson
comes in from time to time,
emergedfrom these tree-lined
Tribune News Service
dishing out those heaps of fried chicken and pork chops and swapping stories with Allman Brothers fans who still flock to
streets. Everywhere there are dogs. Although most of the musi-
Big dogs, little dogs, fluffy dogs, and not-so-fluffy dogs, all playing catch with their masters, happily leaping in the air after Frisbees and beach balls, or
cians are gone now, moved on or passed on, it's what they left
behind that is so fascinating. On College Street, for example, right beside one of the city's
the restaurant.
If soul food doesn't soothe your soul, trythe Tic Toc Room.
maybe taking a quick snooze. most historic structures known As one of those confirmed as the Bell House, is a grass lot
Once known as Miss Anne's
Tic Toc, a busy nightclub, it's where Little Richard got his
crazy cat ladies, I watch the
where once stood a home with dogs warily but know they are a two-room apartment. In that well-behaved. apartment lived Duane Allman It's a second Sunday in late and from time to time other summer, and I'm at Washing- members of the Allman Brothton Park in Macon, a small ers. It was called — and you city right smack in the heart of have to love this — the hippie
start and then over the years
where James Brown and Otis Redding joined in the lineup of singers who passed through to make rock and roll history behind these doors. Now, like the
Georgia. The super pet-friendly park is sloped on a magnolia-strewn hillside in a neighborhood dubbed the College
crash pad. The building is long gone, but fans still flock to this place marked by a sidewalk etching of a mushroom, the Hill Corridor. The music is logo of the Allman Brothers. Interestingly enough, the good, a Southern rock group that's not too loud is playing, front porch of the Bell House, and the atmosphere is festive a Victorian landmark built in with plenty o f e n t husiastic 1855, was the setting for the dancing and toe-tapping. At cover of the first Allman Broththe bottom of the hill scattered ers 1969 self-titled debut album with blankets and lawn chairs, "The Allman Brothers Band."
a young man appearing to be in his early 20s has one of those giant bubble wands and is sending huge iridescent bubbles into the summer breeze, a simple act that for a moment
Corridor, it's a revived Macon
institution where owner Cesare Mammarel serves up favorites induding shrimp and grits and steaks. Another idea that has sprung from the well of revitalization Mary AnnAnderson/Tribune News Service
The Bell House, built In 1855, has 18 massIve Corinthian-style columns and Is now home to the Robert McouffIe Center for Strings, sometimes referred to as the "JullIard of the South."
Woodruff House high atop
bit farther from there is the All-
Coleman Hill, one of the finest
examples of Greek Revival architecture in the United States. Even Mercer University, with
ern rock who first recorded the
years of fricassee-hot and hu-
Renaissance-style Hay House
the back seat of a Greyhound
ed what seems eons ago, with downtown Macon's business district. In essence, it's a mashup of hip and historic, with the Cor-
grand three-story Tudor home, where again various members of the band lived, including
ridor linking several historic
er Gregg, fronts on Highway 41
neighborhoods, those that are
brothers Duane and his broth-
)
'
,
totally worth it." I took that as
changed, everything around it good sign. If you love Southhas grown vibrant and busy. I ern rock, or really any music, call it the wow factor.
as an axis from which some of
Man" was written here — and
the South's greatest musicians is now filled with rare personal and writers have spun. Macon's artifacts too many to even bemusic scene, the one of iconic gin to mention. Southern rock and soul legends Moving back along College — think the likes of the Allman Brothers, Otis Redding, Little R ichard and Wet W i l l i e -
Street and o t her n eighborhoods within the Corridor is
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Furnlture
• Garlands. Swaas, wreaths a Teardrops
Floral
Categorles Listed
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• Statuary • Garden Planters • Gazlnl Balls • Garden Wall Decor a Nore
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
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like taking a step back into an-
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU
WALL s TABLE
• Demratlve Memo
All It&ms' Lhbeled
then you really should visit this
Since the renaissance be- placethat' sbecome a must-see gan, the Corridor has become destination for Allman Broththe South's newest destination ers pilgrims from all over the hotspot, but even way before world. This is where the band now it's always been known really took off - "Ramblin'
0
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to Macon was my first in a long peace sign at our small group time, and although the state- and grinning, "Man, that was ly red brick of Mercer hasn't
Catelorles Usted DOESNOT INCLUDESEASONALDEPARTMENT
ITEMS LABELED THE SPRING SHOP AND SUMMER ARE NOT INCLUDED IN HOME ACCENTS SALE
to round from the parking lot came from the exit, flashing a
8c Camras Art
OR CRAFT4 PAPERCRAFTING STORAGE
— it's also known as Vineville Avenue — and exits through
lage with its melange of restau- to the front to go in, a shagrants, lofts, live entertainment gy-hair hippie-type young man venues and boutiques. The visit
And that takes the storyback
a Corkboards ITEMS IWCEDs2499 st UP • Trays. Coasters a Place Mats • Decorative • Knobs, Drawer Pulls a Handles Lanterns, SirdcaSes Decor Sale • All Wlcker, Decoratlve • Glass INCLUDES GLASSDEPARTMENT. FLORAL GLAssYAsss s cRAFT GLAsscoNTAINERs • Decorative yggetable Soxes & Storage DOES NOT INCLUDE LAAGE TRVNKS
The entrance to th e s till
resplendent with antebellum homes with the more contem- the back. Just as I was about porary ventures of Mercer Vil-
Dog Park that is a doppelganger to Snoopy and Woodstock's "Peanuts" doghouse.
• Collage Frames • Nen's Netal 8 Wood Decor
CHOOSE FROH NETAL WALL DECOR AND RJNCTIONAL s DECORATIVEMETAL ACCESSORIES INCLUDES METAL CONTAINERS IN OUR FLORAL s CRAFT DEPARTMENTS DOES NOT INCWDE FURNITURE
Mercer, from where I graduat- bus, rollin' down Highway 41."
station and another at Macon
to the dogs again. Beautiful parks dot the Corridor, including Washington Park, Tattnall Square Park and Coleman's Hill, but the place to be is Macon Dog Park, a fully fenced park for unleashing the hounds and mingling with other dog fanciers. Featuring "Yappy Hour" every third Thursday with Louise. Since then, tons of said that it was all right with with music and drinks, it's the fried chicken, grits, cornbread, her because she was already yappiest place in the College okra, tomatoes, corn and col- a mama. Mama Louise still Hill Corridor.
The College Hill Corridor is man Brothers Band Museum at once featured on "America's a 2-square mile neighborhood the Big House, opened in 2010, Castles," and the imposing where the Old South melds appropriately enough located with new ideas. The Corridor on Highway 41. Fans will get launched from an i dea that the connection. Aportion of the • Wood Decor Sale emerged in 2006 as a Senior lyrics to "Ramblin' Man," one CHOOSE FROM WOOD WALL DECOR 5 FINISHED DECORATIVE Capstone project for a small of the Allmans' greatest hits, WOOD ACCESSORIES DOESNOT INCLUDE FURNITUAE group of graduating Mercer goes like this: "Lord, I was born OR UNFINISHED CRAFTWOOD University seniors. Their goal a ramblin' man. Tryin' to make • Candleholders was to transform the area, a livin' and doin' the best I can," WALL8I TABLE some of it quite rundown, into a and then, "And I was born in • Netal Decor Sale lively destination that connects
conceptthat anyone can pick up a book and leave anoth-
lards have been served at the diminutive freestanding book iconic diner, which is in the exchanges are scattered across same block as Capricorn Re- town, induding one that looks cords, the key player of South- similar to an old English police
its lofty spires and the anchor Allman Brothers. instantaneously transports me past spring. In Macon it's called mid Georgia summers. Macon of the Corridor, dates to 1833. Over time, Louise Hudson the "Julliard of the South," and has an incredible 5,500 build- Ask around for dining options, became simply Mama Louise. back to childhood. The concerts are free and comes complete in all its an- ings listed on the National Reg- and eventually you'll be direct- Legend, and plenty of truth, draw pups, their masters, non- tebellum glory with a perfor- ister of Historic Places, among ed to the H&H, Macon's most holds that the Allmans, who dog owners and crazy cat la- mance hall and practice and them the 1853 Greek Revival famous soul food restaurant, were just getting started as a dies alike from allacrossGeor- teaching rooms. Cannonball House, which was opened in 1959 by Inez Hill and band, often ate at the restauIf you're still on the trail of waywardly struck by a can- Louise Hudson. gia to Washington Park every rant because the food w as second Sunday of the month, the Allmans, almost a stone's nonball during the Civil War, Inez, who died in 2007, was cheap and Mama Louise gave from April until October. Sec- throw away is Rose Hill Cem- and the Sidney Lanier Cottage, from south Georgia. The sto- the long-haired boys extra ond Sunday concerts are a pret- etery, where Duane and fellow built in 1840 and the birth- ry goes that she grew tired of helpings. ty big deal in Macon, and most band member BerryOakley, place of one of the South's best walking behind a mule and She took such good care of make aneveningof it andbring who both died in motorcycle known poets. plowing fields so she moved them that they asked her if they a picnic basket or buy food and accidents, are interred.And a Nearby is the 1859 Italian to Macon to open a restaurant could call her Mama, and she wine from local vendors.
Libraries, based on the simple er one to share. Seven of the
The Bell House, withits 18mas- other century. General Shersive Corinthian-style columns, man in his March to the Sea is on th e N ational Register bypassed Macon, so scores of Historic Places and is now of antebellum homes remain, home to the Robert McDuffie somehow surviving 150-plus Center for Strings, opened this
is Macon's system of Little Free
• CharmSe a seasse>e LChenn Ma Only
FEATURING STORY LOCKETSAND TNE MONOGMM COLLECTION
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
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Barb Gonzalez/For The Bulletin
TOP:From the beach at the Embassy Suites Mandalay Bay Hotel 8 Resort, just north of Oxnard's Channel Islands Harbor, Santa Cruz Island looms large against the sunset. Channel Islands National Park embraces five islands off the Southern California coast. BELOW: Two killer whales, also known as orcas, travel through the Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. Minutes later, these creatures
were feasting on ajuvenile sea lion. Barb Gonzalez /For The Bulletin
was the site of the Vail and
in 1916, there have Channel Islands America been few better opportunities
Continued from 01 The schoolchildren, enjoying a field trip with their thirdand fourth-grade classes, squealed with delight to see a young sea lion following along beside the boat. The sea lion's whiskered mug glanced up at them and seemed to smile and
nod approval as it continued on its course, moving ahead of the Islander. But the children and other
cruise passengers weren't the only ones following the sea lion's movements. The orcas also took notice. As the kids looked on, hor-
rified, the young sea lion became fastfood. The orcas covered 100 yards of ocean
more rapidly than an Olympic sprint champion. In seconds, a mere whirlpool had replaced a happy pinniped. It was a classic case of survival of the
fittest, and speed and strength had played their trump card. A couple of little girls were in tears. A few of their male
13,000 years ago. But the Chu- Vickers Ranch, where a visitor mash population vacated the center now sits beneath rare for city people to be thrust islands for mainland missions Torrey pines, beside Bechers face-to-face with life in the by the 1820s. Bay. wild — where nature makes Beginning in the late 1830s, There are ranger stations no apology for throwing its land-grant ranches were es- on all five of the islands but naked truth, often but not al- tablished by Mexicans and most notably on Santa Cruz, ways beautiful, on a primitive Americans on the three larger where I d i sembarked. This canvas for all to see. islands of Santa Cruz, Santa is the best choice for a first Established in 1980, Chan- Rosa and San Miguel. With visit to the Channel Islands. nel Islands N ational P ark the settlers came their live- The historic Scorpion Ranch consists of the islands of San- stock: thousands of s heep, house, built in 1887 and the ta Cruz, Santa Rosa, San Mi- along with cattle, pigs and center of livestock operations guel, Anacapa and Santa Bar- horses. They devastated the until acquired by the National bara, which parallel the Santa grasslands and drove many Park Service 90 years later,is Ynez Mountains. A l though unique species to the brink of now an interpretive museum, protected as a national mon- extinction. and it's surrounded by other ument since 1938, only later As environmental aware- ranch buildings, including a were the i s lands accorded ness increased in the 20th cen- bunkhouse and storage shed. national park status and their tury, and with help from cap- A quarter-mile away, near the surrounding waters declared tive breeding programs, wild- primitive campground, remthe Channel Islands Nation- life began making a recovery. nants of a hand-dug 19th-cenal Marine Sanctuary. (Three Sea otters, elephant seals and tury water system add to the more southerly islands — San white abalones are protected historic intrigue. Nicolas, San Clemente and by law; brown pelicans and Day visitors, who may have well-populated Santa Cata- bald eagles have re-estab- five hours on the island, are lina — are not within park lished colonies; three subspe- wise to spend most of their boundaries.) cies of island foxes, whose time hiking. As California's I solated from t h e N o r t h population had dropped to 15, largest island (24 miles long Americanmainland sincepre- are living freely on the three and up to 6 miles wide, capped historic times, these semiarid main islands; and nearly all by 2,450-foot Diablo Peak), islands are home to more than livestock and feral pigs have Santa Cruz claims more than 140 species of plants and ani- been removed or eliminated. 60 endemic species, including
counterparts high-fived. But all had learned a harsh les- mals that live nowhere else on son about the food chain and earth. Evolution has proceed- Day hiking the constant cycle of life and ed independently of the adjaIsland Packers has served death to which all living crea- cent California coastline. all five of the national park tures are subject. I hope their Spanish galleons sailed this islands since 1968. Campers, teachers later took the oppor- coast in the 16th and 17th cen- hikers, kayakers and snorkeltunity to build a lesson upon it. turies. Explorer Juan Rodriers in search of solitude will guez Cabrillo, the first Euro- find it here, especially on fogUnique isles pean to set foot in California, gy, windy San Miguel Island; Isn't this one of the rea- is believed to have been buried on tiny, out-of-the-way Santa sons that we so highly value on San Miguel Island. And Barbara Island; and along the our national parks? Since native Chumash Indians were rocky 5-mile spine of Anacapa the time the National Park no strangers to these shores: Island, once a mariners' nightService was established in There is ample archaeological mare. Santa Rosa Island, 15 an increasingly more urban evidence of human habitation miles long and 10 miles wide,
its fox and its one-of-a-kind is-
land scrub jay. Although a majority of Santa Cruz is owned and strictly managed by the Nature Conservancy, dozens of miles of trails to spectacular viewpoints are readily accessed from the Scorpion anchorage.
5 miles of moderate terrain.
Serenaded by two jays and another small bird we couldn't ridge that ascended steeply above the ranch, then continued on a bluff-top trail to
Cavern Point — so named for the large sea cave at its foot.
We let our gaze settle upon the surf, crashing below upon stark cliffs to our east and
west, and surveyed the horizon in search of whales. Seeing none, we ventured
along a less well-trodden path that followed the plateau west. It eventually merged with an
old Jeep road that came to an end atop Potato Harbor. Here we sat to enjoy a lunch
of sandwiches, fruit and bottled water overlooking this serene inlet, its turquoise waters
cupped within cliffs as if by
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two hands. There's no trail down to the
water here, however, so we returned to the Scorpion Ranch in plenty of time for the return
cruise to Oxnard.
Harbor side John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
Heritage Square in downtown Oxnard features more than a dozen historic homes, built between1877 and1912, that were moved from other locations and restored. Guided tours are offered weekends, but
any day is goodfor self-guided tours.
Yachts, large and small, fill slips at the Channel
tween Harbor View Park and
Islands Harbor in Oxnard.
the masts of myriad sailing vessels.Several of the area's
The expansive small-boat harbor, the nearest to the
best restaurants are located
northern islands, is one
here, including The Waterside
of two ports served by the
Restaurant & Wine Bar and Moqueca Brazilian Cuisine, both in the same Marine Em-
national park concessionaire Island Packers.
porium Landing area as the Island Packers' launch.
The harbor's leading attraction is the Channel Islands Maritime
M u seum, w h o se
collection ironically has little or nothing to do with the islands themselves. Exhibited
here are historic paintings of seascapes and classic sailing
Free pipeinstallation estimates
vessels — 17th-century Dutch
masters, 19th-century French impressionists — along with shipwreck artifacts and more than a score of intricate models, ranging from a Chinese Ming Dynasty treasure ship to exotic soup-bone models carved by Napoleonic War prisoners.
Continued next page
www.AgateBeaehMotel.som Private,vintage,oceanfront getaway N wport, O~R 1 0' ' 755-- 7 4
tlt Setl( Otel
HWY 20E & Dean Swift Rd.
(1 block West of Costco)
541-323-3011• starks.com
Gonzalez and I set out for
Cavern Point and wound up at Potato Harbor, covering about
identify, we climbed a 400-foot
zr
paved walk, suitable for bicycling or strolling, slices be-
Oxnard's Channel Island Harbor is a pleasant enough place for a stroll, before or after an island excursion. A
MemoriaL
~' a~
Wewill de closed Monday, Nay 28, 2018 RETAIL Sa CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES DAY Monday, 5/25...................... Tuesday — At Home, 5i26 ... Tuesday, 5/26 ..................... Wednesday, 5i27................
DEADLINE .....Wed. 5/20 4 p.m. .....Wed. 5/20 4 p.m. ...... Thur. 5/21 Noon ......... Fri. 5/22 Noon
CLASSIFIED PRIVATE PARTY DEADLINES Tuesday 5/26 ................................. Fri. 5/22 Noon
C lassifieds • 541-385-580 9
Thc Bullctin b endb u l l e t i n . c o m
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
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Barb Gonzalez/For The Bulletin
TOP: Lush grasslands, accented by brushy trees, are home to a population of Santa Cruz Island scrub jays, a species found nowhere else. More than 80 endemic species of birds, animals and plants inhabit this largest of the Channel Islands. BOTTOM: Built in1887, the
Scorpion Ranchwas alivestock producer until it was acquired by the National Park Service in1977. Today the ranch house (second from
Barb Gonzalez /For The Bulletin
left) is an interpretive museum with displays that describe Santa Cruz Island history.
From previous page Downtown Oxnard, about 3f/z miles inland from the harbor, doesn't have a lot to im-
press this visitor. The Henry
exhibits of modern California impressionism and Latino art. H eritage
blocks southeast of central Plaza Park, displays more
than a dozen historic homes, built between 1877 and 1912, founding father, who made his moved here from other locafortune on sugar beets — com- tions around Ventura County
*
Expenses for two
Gas:LosAngelestoOxnard (round-trip), 130 miles at $3/ gallon: $15.60 Lodging (twonights with breakfast):Embassy Suites Mandalay Bay: $365.04 Admission:Carnegie Art Museum: $3 Dinner:Tierra Sur Restaurant: $151.76 Purchase oflunchfood: $16.20 Santa CruzIslandtrip with Island Packers:$108 Admission:Channel Islands Maritime Museum: $5 Dinner:Moqueca: $68.32 TOTAL:$732.92 (Our trip was anadd-on to a personal visit to Los Angeles. Round-trip air fare from Redmond to LAX runsabout $273 per person.)
and restored to their original condition. Guided tours
are offered on weekends, but self-guidedtours are always an option — along with visits to the square's restaurants
lands Harbor. 3231 Peninsula Road,Oxnard;http://hampioninn3.hilion.com, 805-9851100, 855-271-3622. Rates from $133. DINING La Dolce Vita. 740 S. B St.,
Blvd., Oxnard; www.thewa-
5730.
ATTRACTIONS Oxnard Convention & Visitors Carnegie Art Museum.424 S. Bureau. California Welcome C St., Oxnard; www.carnegCenter, Exit 62B, U.S.Highway ieam.org, 805-385-8157. 101, Oxnard; www.visitoxnard. Channel Islands Harbor. www. com, 805-988-0717, 800-269- channelislandsharbor.org 6273. Channel Islands Maritime MuLODGING seum. 3900 S.Harbor Blvd., Best Western Oxnard Inn. Oxnard; www.cimmvc.org, 1156 S. Oxnard Blvd., Oxnard; 805-984-6260. http://book.bestwestern.com, Henry T. OxnardNational His-
Beach Hotel & Resort. 2101
Mandalay BeachRoad, Oxnard; www.mandalayembassysuites.com, 805-984-2500, 800-321-3232. Rates from
$169. Hampton Inn — Channel Is-
ioric District. www.oxnardhis-
ioricdistrict.com, Heritage Square. 715 S. A St., Oxnard; www.heritagesquareoxnard.com, 805-483-7960. Island Packers. 1691Spinnaker Drive, Ventura; www. islandpackers.com, 805-6421393 (Ventura), 805-382-1779 (Oxnard).
were seeking a model like the
Get A F RE E Retirement Kit
Much of the Oxnard area Channel Islands to encourage
remains agricultural. John Lennon might well have writ-
spiritual health, maybe Ojai would be a good place to beten about i t s s u r r ounding gin looking. strawberry fields, which seem — Reporter: janderson@ to stretch forever in all direcbendbulletinrcom.
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tions. That season is celebrat-
ed each May at the California Strawberry Festival. O ther events, such as the Salsa Fes-
~
residents. Cgllssa uollg eentaal esallen Sagtttafea1
Ventura and Ojai Although the county seat
of Ventura has half the popu-
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dents where they went to eat town, 8 miles northwest.
Once a thriving Chumash community, Ventura has a modern history that dates from 1782, when
F r ancis-
can Father Junipero Serra founded the Mission San B uenaventura. Restored i n
the 1950s and '70s, the mission is a major point of inter-
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June 5
2 STORES Ig BEgg: NE 3rd & Revere541-389-7272 S Hwy 97 &Murphy Rd541-382-6767 REDMOND : SW10Ih& Highland 541-382-6767
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Ventura is the 1928 Majestic Ventura Theater, an art deco
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when I asked Oxnard resiand drink, they invariably suggested that I head to this
nuo~ciatt entrai Oretton's Iewest Grattnates
Q p gI QQU ftciQI QQ~ ~
tival in July and the Tamale
lation of Oxnard, it is a more vibrant community. Indeed,
iersiderestaurantandwinebar. com,805-985-4677.Lunch and dinner Tuesday io Sunday. Moderate
Rates from $110. The Embassy SuitesMandalay
magnificent dining room.
3600 S. Harbor Blvd., Oxnard;
INFORMATION Channel Islands National Park. 1901 Spinnaker Drive, Ventura; www.nps.gov/chis, 805-658-
805-483-9581, 800-780-7234.
( m a in- including multiple species ofsea lions, seals, dolphins andwhales. BOTTOM: Hidden from view by insurmountable bluffs and framed by prolific kelp beds, the entrance ite is the Herzog Wine Cellars, luxurious boutique hotels and to picturesque PotatoHarbor is located in an industrial park on organically oriented restau- a highlight of a Santa Cruz Island Oxnard's east side. The kosher rants. To stimulate local small hike. Three quarters of this iswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN establishment incorporates the businesses, the city council has 24-mile-long island is owned manages your lovedone's medications Tierra Sur restaurant, which prohibited chain stores other and managed by the Nature presents farm-to-table special- than a few gas stations. Conservancy. ties with top-end service in a If u r b a n en v i r onments
Festival in December, are favorites of the region's Latino
(all addresses in California)
Tourism hereis geared to outdoor r e creation
integral part of the Ventura ly hiking and bicyding) and County Wine Trail. My favor- spiritual retreats attended by
Heritage Square, Oxnard; www.ladolcevitadimare.com, 805-486-6878. Lunch and dinner Tuesday to Sunday. Moderate Moqueca Brazilian Cuisine. www.moquecarestaurant.com, 805-204-0970. LunchTuesday io Saturday, dinner every day. Moderate to expensive Tierra Sur Restaurant. Herzog Wine Cellars, 3201 Caminodel Sol, Oxnard; www.herzogwinecellars.com, 805-983-1560. Lunch and dinner Sundayto Thursday, lunch only on Friday. Expensive The Waterside Restaurant & Wine Bar. 3500S. Harbor
If yougo
15 miles from the coast.
In all, this city of more than S q uare, t h r e e 200,000 has four wineries, an
T. Oxnard National Historic District — named for the city's
prises about six square blocks of private homes in craftsman bungalow and Spanish colonial styles. Nearby, the neoclassical Carnegie Art Museum displays ever-changing
and winery.
TOP: A scale model of the18th-century British sailing ship HMS Victory, the work of Edward Marple, is one displayed at the Channel Islands Maditime Museum. MIDDLE: California sea lions loll on a buoy offshore of Oxnard. A wide variety of marine mammals inhabit the Santa Barbara Channel either permanently or seasonally,
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
SU D O K U
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that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
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* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
Photos by Doug Oster / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A French couple head toward a bridge, flanked by tulips at Keukenhof in the Netherlands.
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
Sunday, May 17, 2015
Keukenhof's spring gardens
Cy on 'nine never' By ~
STEWA R T
Tribune Content Agency C)
Cy the Cynic is a serious cyniche contends that life is not a battle of good and bad, but of bad and worse — but Cy i s especially wary of bridge's "rules" of play. He is sure, for example, that "eight ever, nine never" is the product of some warped mind.
"Look at this," Cy told me in the club lounge. "When East opened three clubs, I stretched to overcall 3NT, hoping my partnerhad a few points. Unfortunately, he had more than just a few and put me in slam. "West led a club," the Cynic went on, "and I wo n w it h the queen, cashed the ace of diamonds and next led a diamond to dummy's jack. Since East had held seven clubs to West's one, the odds heavily favored the finesse. But East produced the queen, and I had no chance." "Don't you k now about ' n i ne
never'?" I asked, in jest. "Baloney," Cy growled. "Even with no clue from the bidding, to finesse for a missing queen with a nine-card holding is only slightly worse percentage-wise than to play for the drop." Cy was right, but in this deal he must take the A-K of diamonds. Even if Cy wins five diamond tricks, he is still a trick short. His only chance for a 12th trick would be to squeeze West in the major suits. But then Cy would need to assume that East did not have
three cards in e i ther major and couldn't guard the suit. So Cy would have to place East with 2-2-2-7 distribution. After Cy takes the top diamonds, he plays a low club from both hands to "rectify the count" for his squeeze. He wins East's club return and runs t he diamonds, and W est m u st concede the slam. East dealer N-S vulnerable
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positioned her phone for one amazing selfie. "It's beautiful," she says, turning back toward the carpet of flowers. "The colors are breathtaking." Keukenhof is a gardener's paradise, a place to spend at least one full day, although I wished I had longer. Some beds are massed with the
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same flowers. When it's some-
thing like hyacinths, the fragrance is remarkable. Since there's always a breeze in Hol-
land, the scent of flowers was never far away. Other bedsoffered incredible combinations of different bulbs, all blooming in consort. It's the scale that astounds.
One bed that stretched for hundreds of yards had been planted with repeating patterns of white daffodils, pink
ABOVE: Tulips and daffodils bloom in consort along a curved bed at Keukenhof in Holland, which displays more than 7 million bulbs and is open for eight weeks when the spring flowers are at their peak. BELOW: "Auxerreu tulips blooming in one of the inside pavilions at Keukenhof in Holland.
hyacinths, white a nemones and tulips. Behind them ran a
Ritter said. uI'm in heaven."
parallel bed of orange tulips. The garden is filled with more than 7 million flowering bulbs, including 800 kinds of
of her daughters with her on the trip. They wanted time in
tulips. The 80-acre park has
blooms. At 82, she is spry striped tulips back-lit by the and wanted to see as much as lateafternoon sun.They were possible, but she never com- framed by a flowering crabapplained as I lay on the ground, ple tree in full bloom. It was stood on benches and stopped stunning and a fitting end to to shoot even more pictures. the day. I've been lucky enough to As we stood in front of an impossibly long, curving bed see some ofthe world's great-
There were about 10 of us
the gift shop, and Ritter want-
As we headed back to the bus, I looked behind to see
ed time with the magnificent
several small beds filled with
looking over the gardens together, but I lost my traveling companions as I lagged photographing everything in sight. As the sun dipped lower, some of white and blue hyacinths set bulbs became l uminescent, off by bright yellow daffodils, highlighted from behind as we were able to carefully exthe light streamed through the amine the bed and saw a thick trees. row of unopened tulips that Finally, I ran into Winnie would put on a show a week
Doctrine
I04
107
E
later. nI'm so glad I got to see this,"
est gardens, but Keukenhof
stands alone. It's one of the only places that has exceeded the hype and expectations. I
dream of seeing it again and spending a couple of days of bliss among this wonderful tapestry ofbulbs.
87
702 103
105
S'
82 83
86 89
•e
own, as our guide pointed in one direction and told us to enjoy the bulbs. I worked my way
sylvania, who brought three
76
80 81
84
' . '
their peak.
Ritter of Monroeville, Penn72
72 SiteS fOr
74 Say "ma'am,n
through the bus windows. Keukenhof (http://www. keukenhof.nVen/) might be the world's greatest display of spring bulbs. It's open for eight
been putting on the annual display since 1950.
32
•
her face. She m eticulously
28
30 37
.
back to the fields as the afternoon light fell perfectly across
21
24
27
;
row canal. Michelle Nawaz of New York City stood with her
roof 65 Itmaybefiled missile 66 Showed 104 Protective respect, In a trench way 106 '60s Israeli 68 Rapper's deputy prime demand minister 69 Hardly 108 See I8-Across paparazzi 109 Agile quarry 111 Some choftsters 70 De: actual 112 Elided adverb 72 Brand named I I3 Lamb sandwich for an old Indian 114 "The Big Bang Iea garden Theott/' 73 Envelope abbr. astrophysicist 76 Precise 115 Hagen of the 79 [Alas!I stage 80 KenIUCky'S I I6 Hair accessory Arena 117 Eisenhower's 81 "One land, WWII PUIYISW n I19 Carrier units, 82 Barney'sboss briefly
20 23
.
all scrambled to get photos
garden, trying to get a better photo of the flower fields separated from the park by a nar-
120 Tiny particle 12I Morning staple pELuso for some 122 Sharp-tasting ACROSS 123 More fetching Denny's, say 124 Thriller set in the I Light wood 90 "QUIt dilly6 Purged seaside townof 9 Tray contents dallying!" Amity 14 "High Voltage" 94 CCV doubled 125 Hair nei band 95 Target of a 126 One cf Iwo Mad I8 With 108-Down, military press rivals tired comment 96 Bigeye tuna 127 VP before e Ig O mio babbIno 97 IO-Down Nelson ": Puccini aria creation 20 Speed 98 Friend of 97DOWN 2I It's sometimes Across I Acrimony held in a deli 100 Attaches 2 Yucaiaft yearS 22 Pirate once 102 Civil rights otg. 3 Singer Horne portrayed by I04 File 4 Naturally Orson Welles 105 Coastal raptor followed 24 Relative of the 107 When some 5 sm., med.or Marquis and seafood Is Ige. MoniclaIr available 6 Standing 26 Genesis twin 110 1987"Crying" 7 "Dies 27 Enjoys an duettistwith 8 Iditarod afternoon OrbISOn conveyances snack, across II4 Cartoonist 9 State of the pond known for hIS disbelief? 29 Old Burma IO "Thimble intricate neighbor contraptions Theatre" creator 30 Paradise II8 MUSIC II nLetmesee ...n 32 Defense publishing 12 nAeneId,n for secretary under nickname one
~
lips, hyacinths and any spring bloomer you can imagine. We
Opening lead —4 2
85 Shortens 86 Grassy cluster 87 Gulf State native 88 Skipped
:
i
Now substitute daffodils, tu-
around the perimeter of the
ted by RiChNOrriS arid Joyce Nichols LeWts STYLE" By INIKE
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Think of d r iving through field after field of Iowa corn.
All Pass
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD nELEIIIIENTS OF
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Luckily, we were left on our
4AQ3 34
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weeks, when the bulbs are at
9A32
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hyacinths drifts through our bus of 26 travelers. Our tour guide thought we might like to see the growing fields filled with blooming bulbs. She was right. No one could believe the seemingly endless rows of flowers, the sights and smells.
sls54
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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
we're driving toward Keu-
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exceed all expectations
xwordeditor@aol.com
CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
©2015 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.
strategy where someone files to get the federal government a lawsuit against the govern- to immediately implement a Continued from D1 ment on behalf of children climate recovery plan in 2011. "Every citizen has public and future generations — is The plaintiff's lawsuit was trust rights," she said. "They one of the most common ways dismissed by the U.S. District can assert these rights to ex- people use the public trust Court for the District of Coplain actions their agencies doctrine in t oday's modern lumbia about a year after it and legislators need to take. landscape. was filed and attempts to have ... It's all about popular sovS upported by t h e E u - the U.S. Court of Appeals for ereignty, the people's rights gene-based nonprofit Our the District of Columbia and against their g overnment Children's Trust, a group of the U.S. Supreme Court reand holding the government five teenagers called upon the consider this decision proved accountable." public trust doctrine when to be unsuccessfuL Wood said a t mospher- they filed an atmospheric — Reporter: 541-617-7816, ic trust litigation — a legal trust litigation lawsuit trying mmclean@bendbulletitLcom
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 7
ettin t e oo timesro at ouisianas ce eco l"
By Pam LeBlanc ~Austin (Texas) American-Statesman
'Pj
'• .
'-i,
magine a bike ride where speed doesn't matter and every pedal stroke II
carries you closer to another helping of Louisiana music, food or drink. I lived that dream at Cycle Zydeco, a 200-mile rolling Cajun culture
y '~4'+j/g.
festival. Po'boys, etouffee and jambalaya fueled four days of bicycling,
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punctuated by the sounds of rubboards, fiddles and accordions. -
"
This was no endurance event to be feared. Mileage hovered between 40 and
- qpfjgi'95KSec
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65 absolutely flat miles per day, and no one hurried as we spun past crawfish
1
ponds and cow pastures in the heart of Cajun Country.
r
•
At times I pedaled behind with an accordion on the two women o n a ta n d em wrapper, into my pocket. I'm bike, dressed in multicolored trying to pace myself.
tutus and fishnets, blasting zydeco music and waving at farmers as they sped down the road. I watched someone named T-Boy make boudin, looked for alligators lurking in a swamp, tapped my toes to the finest zydeco music in
ed by ride organizers to get to the start each morning. Here's how my experience went down.
W ednesday: "Into Cajun Country" My friend Gretchen Sanders and I pass a dead alligator on the highway during the seven-hour drive from Austin, Texas, to Lafayette, Louisiana,
where we unload our bicycles and queue up for pit-roasted pork at a kick-off party. As we pig out, Grammy-winning zydeco musician Chubby Carrier (he weighed a whopping 10 pounds at birth) and the Bayou Swamp Band fill Blackham Coliseum with the steamy sounds of Louisiana
music. "It's our music, the music I grew up on," says Todd Ortego, a 56-year-old disc jockey at radio station KBON in nearby Eunice, who has come to
watch the fun. "I love the passion and I love the stories."
Farms, where someone un-
We wrap up the night with a visit to Pont Breaux's (formerly known as Mulate's), a famous
do.)
Cajun restaurant where we meet a busload of tourists all
the way from France and nibdions, and often you can hear ble hush puppies and grilled traces of Irish jigs, rhythm shrimp while couples swirl and blues, and even rock 'n' around the wooden dance some folks roll out sleeping bags inside the coliseum, and others pop tents outside. We've
floor.
Friday: "Swamp thing" Distance: 42miles
~
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photos by pam Lesjanc/Austin (Texas) American-statesman
Cyclists make their way down a rural road during the Cycle Zydeco bike ride in Southern Louisiana.
V.
whole town!" someone hollers
I
out the window of a passing
+ 'y.r ri'
car. It's 13 more miles to Eunice,
home to the Cajun Music Hall of Fame. Along the way we pass an array of road killnutria and armadillos, snakes, turtles and frogs. Per Cycle Zydeco tradition, many of the carcasses are adorned with Mardi Grasbeads tossed there
by passing bikers. In Eunice, we clean up and grab plat efuls of chicken and sausage sauce piquant and sweet potatoes before head-
A zydecoband playsatFred's Lounge in Mamou, Louisiana.Fred's
ing to the L iberty Theatre.
is only open from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. Saturdays and is famous for
World. There I'm mesmerized
Saturday: "Hot Damn, we m ade it to Fred's"
The forecast calls for rain,
it's filled with tea. We see lots
ting next to Johnny Hauck, a 61-yearold stevedore from Even before we get to Fred's New Orleans who has done CyLounge in Mamou, I'm pret- cle Zydeco 11 times. "I love zydeco dancing," he ty sure this is going to rank as my finest day on a bicycle. says. "I love cyding. I love the Ever. hospitality of the people in An hour in, we stop at Southwestern Louisiana and I T-Boy's Slaughter House, love the out-of-towners enjoywhere we sample boudin and ing it all, trying to learn how cracklings and watch T-Boy to danceand experiencing the himself whip up some sau- new and different foods." 0thsage. I'm incredulous, watch- er highlights'? Listening to the ing as ground meat and on- birds as he pedals down desertions shoot out of a tube, inflat- ed roadways, and looking at ing yard after yard of casing the trees. "It's the attitude of having like circus balloons.
•
It's a rousing finale to our
leg-powered, two-wheel trip through Cajun country. And we're already plotting a way to do it again.
See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun ehen you wantit, shade when you needit.
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tles of a cinnamon-flavored
I stuff a few Zydeco Bars, a
Boudreaux and T hibodeaux
Louisiana-made energy bar
jokes nearly nonstop, but not
of its life. The crowd, including a bunch of folks wearing clattery bike shoes, surges around
Schnapps called Hot Damn.
And the music — some guy is bending over an accordion, squeezing it to within an inch
him. A tiny little white-haired woman named TanteSue (the
wife of the bar's namesake Fred, who died in 1992) walks around smiling, waving a little homemade no-kissing sign and warning patrons
.;. ~®
not to dance on the cigarette
machine. When we finallybreakback out into the sunshine, our ears
are still ringing. Across the street, we sit down with bowls
"I'll"' E
Dancers whirl around the floor at Ruby's in Eunice, Louisiana.
of homemade jambalaya served up by the Mamou Athletic Booster Club. "You've taken o ver th e
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drinks, most notably little bot-
of cypress trees and draping I n less than an hour w e Spanish moss (once used as reach our first stop, Parish pillow stuffing and wall insuBrewing Company, where cy- lation) as we putter through clists sample a little beer and the mist, and the guide spews away witha cheerat9 a.m .
1
stage when the power blows, so they do what they have to dothey hop off the stage and into the crowd, where they play, enthusiastically and fantastically unamplified.
in Lafayette. I find myself sit-
but we head out on our bikes it calls for plenty of rain, so we by 8:30 a.m. anyway. Soon We don't d a lly, b ecause fun, not just riding from point A we're streaking toward the we're on our way to Fred's to point B," he says. "I feel like head to a nearby hoteL Atchafalaya Basin, America's Lounge in Mamou, which is I'm breathing the air when I'm Thursday: "Hey, Tom largest wetland. Our agen- only open from 9 a.m. until Sawyer, want to boilsom e da calls for a swamp tour, 2 p.m. Saturdays. A couple crawfish?" and we're hoping to see some hundred bicycles are parked Distance: 38miles alligators. outside the unassuming litChubby's here bright and At McGee's Landing, we tlebar when we arrive. We early, this time astride a shiny pedal up the levee and join the swing open the door and are red beach cruiser. A police es- crowd of cyclists piling onto immediately hit with a sort of cort fires up its sirens, the mu- boats for a 30-minute tour. The liquid Louisiana — it's hot and sician climbs astride his bike million-acre swamp looks like dark, and people are swilling seen theforecast,though, and
and the whole parade rolls
•
in the morning." It's 9:30 a.m.
Distance: 50miles
sounds of fiddles and accor-
roll in it. As the show winds down,
'
.
Zydeco legend D.L. Menard, its music. tracted by Mark Thibodeaux, by the accordion played by one who wrote the widely covered 54, and Greg Latiolais, 66, of of the members of the Back 0' zydeco hit "The Back Door," is B&L Boilers, who are prepar- Town Playboys. Squeezed shut celebrating his 83rd birthday on a bike. I like the wind in my ing to cook up 300 pounds of it shows a crawfish and when tonight, and he's the featured face and looking at wildflowers crawfish for the group. expanded, it's a crab. g uest on t h e "Rendez-vous on the side of the road. It gives We're innocent bystanders The skies darken again and de Cajuns" radio show that's me time to ponder." That's the thing about bike until suddenly we're enlisted to it starts spitting as we ride over being broadcast. The Cajun help. Soon we're slitting open a highway overpass and merge French accents are so thick trips. Everything slows down. sacks of crawfish and pouring onto a frontage road. We're it's hard to understand every- You can chat with other folks them into boiling water, dump- soaked by the time we arrive thing that's said, but the mu- on the road. You smell things. ing in jars of okra and stirring in Opelousas, Zydeco Capital sic draws couples young and You feel the place as much as the vat with giant paddles. of the World and birthplace old to the floor in front of the see it. "They're so sweet and tasty," of Clifton Chenier. The town's stage. W hen we get back to LafayThibodeaux says, swooning a Yambilee Building, where the When the show ends we're ette, we get in our car and take F e s tival still humming, so we move a much speedier ride to Scott, little as he explains that these now-defunct Y a m crawfish were harvested with- once took place, will serve as down to Ruby's, where we to catch the Boudin Festival, in 40 miles of where we're toil- our headquarters for the night. practically wear the soles off where we'd originally planned ing. He shows us how to hold Pooped and chilled, we our shoes spinning around the to ride. As it turns out, the rain isn't so bad, and we feel a little the head in one hand and twist stash our bikes and settle in dance floor. the tail off to get at the meat. "If with plates of grilled catfish sad that we didn't pedal this you're born and raised here, topped with crawfish etouffee, Sunday: Rain or Boudin? last leg of our journey. you suck the heads to get the then mingle with our fellow Distance: Omiles We take a fewhours to salute It's pouring when we wake the local sausage, traditionaljuice and the fat. It tastes like riders as Corey Ledet and his heaven." Zydeco Band take the stage. up. A few hardy souls hop on ly made here with a mixture We eat a pile of our hand- Some folks dance; we slide their bikes, but we're worried of pork and rice. There's more iwork, then grab our bikes over a table, where a fellow rid- about slick streets and the fore- music,too, of course. Horace again. We hear there'sa drive- er has drawn a crowd painting cast, which shows a 90 percent Trahan and the Ossun Express through daiquiri shack down fingernails in purple, green to 100 percent chance of rain, are pounding away on the the road, and we are in Loui- and gold. so instead we pile onto a shuttle siana, after all. (Hint: Try the bus headed back to our truck truck, but Gretch and I are dis-
little about the Cajun, zydeco
ally it features the whirling
rr
ting next to us, who leans over
corks bottle after bottle of white wine and we dip crackersinto crocks ofgoatcheese. That's when Gretch lets out a squeaL She's found a days-old dairy goat with tiny rosebud ears, and I swear it smiles and
White Russian. And walk your bike home afterward like we
hear this week. Sometimes it's still sung in French. Usu-
'
We ride another hour or so, and says, "Ladies, you can't then pull off at Belle Ecorce drink all day if you don't start
As Chubby belts out a rendition of "Who Stole the Hot Sauce?," Ortego explains a and swamp pop sounds we'll
W
a single 'gator shows its head — unless you count the guy sit-
and he already has a beer in his hand. Back at the landing, we sample beignets, pass on the bloody marys and hop back on the land and shared it all with our bikes. We whiz past a Pigcyclists who came from all gly Wiggly and a bunch more over the country for the same bleats as we cradle it in our crawfish ponds, and pull into experience. arrrls. Bayou Teche Brewery, where "The priorities are dancing, A few more miles and we we take teeny tiny samples of eating and drinking, and (the roll into St. Martinville, the passion fruit-infused wheat participants) just happen to heart of F r ench L ouisiana. beer. Delicious. ride a bike," says Scott Schil- There we feast on crawfish Down the road in Arnaudling, 43, president of Transpor- etouffee, listen to more music ville, where 40 percent of the tation Recreation Alternatives and rest in the shade of Evan- population speaks French and in Louisiana, which took over geline Oak, the subject of a ro- an etouffee festival takes place the event, now in its 14th year, mantic poem by Henry Wad- every May, we park our bikes in 2012. sworth Longfellow. in front of the Little Big Cup This year's ride drew 316 Then it's back on our bikes. cafe.We eat gumbo on the party-loving cyclists, most- We roll past an old sugar refin- back porch as rain pounds like ly in their 50s and 60s, many ery, then into Breaux Bridge, bullets on the metal roof. When from the Midwest; organizers self-proclaimed Cr a w fish the rain eases we strike out hope to grow it to 1,000. About Capital of the World. Cyclists again, heading for the small half camped along the way; are putting up tents and mak- town of Sunset, the newly dethe rest booked hotels and ing their way to the shower clared Rubboard Capital of the used a shuttle service provid-
r
DS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
M. Ni t S ama an's a ictive new e ort TV SPOTLIGHT
By Hank Stuever
the hospital in search of help, which he gets from Beverly (Juliette Lewis), a nervous bartender who cryptically scribbles a warning on the back of his check: "There are no crick-
The Washington Post
ets in Wayward Pines."
"Wayward Pines" 9 p.m. Thursdays, Fox
TV watcher more than to catch a new show in the act of be-
ing utterly derivative, if not downright plagiaristic. "That looks just like 'Twin Peaks!'
Liane Hentscher / Fox via The Washington Post
Ethan (Matt Dillon, left) meets Dr. Jenkins (Toby Jones) in the pre-
miere of "Wayward Pines." books on which "Wayward helping of Shyamalan's own Pines" is based, has said that trademark teasing, as seen in "Twin Peaks" served as his
"The Sixth Sense" and other
inspiration. That's merely the beginning,
films that usually delivered
some unexpected twist near the end. In "Wayward Pines," Matt ingredient list for the casserole that is "Wayward Pines." Dillon is precisely in his eleWithin t h e fi r s t e p i sode, ment (at long last) as Secret however, of the pop-culture
you'll catch hints of "Lost" Service agent Ethan Burke, executedepisodes made avail- (of course), CBS's "Under the who is injured in a car accident able for this review. The series Dome" (and "Extant," now that while hunting for two agents (billed as "limited") is prepos- I think about it), CW's "The who disappeared weeks earliterous on an entirely manage- 1 00," any iteration of " T h e er in Idaho. One of the missing able and entertaining scale. Stepford Wives" (and other agents is his former lover, Kate It's true enough that "Way- tales of perfect-community (Carla Gugino). M. Night Shyamalan as executive producer, intends at
first to seem like a faint homage to David Lynch's groundbreaking 1990 series. Novelist Blake Crouch, who wrote the
er than keep the citizens in,
When Ethan discovers the
That it seems to have no inter-
rotted corpse of one of the agents he was searching for,
est in leaving you in the interminable dark? That it answers
every single question it raises? (Terrence Howard), is unhelpIndeed, by episode five, ful and dismissive. When he viewers will get what could finds Kate, she first pretends very well be the entire story not to know him and then cau- explained to them — the kind tions him to play along with of precise details it took "Lost" the rules of this strange Pleas- a few seasons to cough upantville. When Ethan steals a which would make "Wayward car to escape, he finds that the Pines" the a n t idote "Twin road out of Wayward Pines Peaks" (and TV's reliance on leads right back into town. guessing games) rather than Meanwhile, Ethan's worried a ripoff of it. We're so used to wife (Shannyn Sossamon) and being strung along that it's alteenage son (Charlie Trahan) most shocking to be handed so set out from Seattle to find many answers at once. him; pretty soon they'll also be And then a chilling thought stuck in Wayward Pines. arrives: Something about this " You think yo u w an t t o show is too tidy. It would be so know the truth," Sheriff Pope M. Night Shyamalan to lure us tells Ethan, "but you don't. to this point in precisely this It's worse than anything you manner, saving the big twist could even imagine." for the end. In which case, And thus smart v i ewers "Wayward Pines" is doing begin guessing what that a fine job of what it set out to truth will turn out to be, and do — making you desperate the local sheriff, Arnold Pope
thing right in the six tightly
ward Pines," with filmmaker
it'? The electrified wall around
Wayward Pines is meant more to keep something out, rath-
right'? Sure enough, Ethan finds a Settle down, settle down. stereo speaker in a sidewalk You're all correct, to some explanter that's emitting ersatz tent, but would you believe that chirps. It dawns on him that the point of "Wayward Pines" the entire town is fake. is not to keep you guessing?
Nothing pleases a grouchy
"such a viewer has perhaps already scoffed aloud (for the benefit of his long-suffering couch companion) during the ads for Fox's sci-fi mystery seri es,"Wayward Pines," which began a 10-episode run Thursday. If that opening sounds like you're getting ready to read a viciously negative review of "Wayward Pines," think again. When it comes to being jerked around by a complicated mystery series, you know I'm in no mood right now, but "Wayward Pines" does every-
and observedby scientists,aren't they? It's a crazy cult, isn't
dystopia), random n7wilight Zone" episodes, the lyrics to
Ethan wakes in a hospital
in a mountain village called
"Hotel California," Syfy's "As- W ayward Pines, under the cension," "Millennium" (a de- care of creepy Nurse Pam liciously bad 1980s movie that (Melissa Leo), who refuses to starred Kris Kristofferson and let him make any phone calls. Cheryl Ladd) and a telltale Disobeying her, Ethan leaves
if it's worth their time to stick around for the big reveal: It's
to know how it ends, even if,
as the sheriff said, it's worse a government experiment, than anythingyou could even right'? They're being watched imagine.
Boy's questionnee scareLj answer
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may tte an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change atter press time. t
Dear Abby: I have a question with one of my grandsons. "Rory" came to me recently to talk about
his mother. Dear Abby: My sister and her husband are well-to-do, but cheap. They recently invited themselves to
religion. His mother is Christian;
stay three nights in our snowbird
I am not. He asked what I thought about his mother forcing him to go to church. He has many doubts about Christianity. I tried to understand C hristianity DFP,R for more than 50 ABBY years and about 20 years ago I found peace with the faith I now practice. My daughter doesn't
condo on their way to a vacation in the Caribbean. My wife and I
about how to handle a situation
want me to talk to her children
hosted them, and during their stay we went out twice for
that because peoplehave money
doesn't necessarily mean they have class. Dear Abby: For many years I have been depressed about my father's opinion of me. Dad died 30 years ago thinking I was a screwup who wouldnever amount to any-
dinner. Both times my sister was quick to request separate bills. In the mean-
thing, and at the time it was true. Since his death I have turned my
time, we had provid-
successful in my career.
ed lodging and all their other meals for them. I am offended that they didn't
about my path. My question is, how do I address this issue with my grandson without confusing him even more'? Any help would be appreciated because
show appreciation for our hospitality by at least taking us to din-
I don't want to go against his moth-
me I shouldn't. What would you
er's wishes.
band's behavior was rude. It shows
life around. I havebeen married for 38 years, raised a fine son and I am Still, I can't get past his feeling of disappointment in me at the time of his death. It haunts me daily that I
was a loser while he was alive. Any advice to stop feeling guilty? ner once. I have wanted to con— Regretful Son front my sister about my feelings, Dear Son:Not everyone matures but my wife has vehemently told at the same rate, and you may have been a late bloomer. Try tell-
suggest? — Found MyPeace — Unequal in Pennsylvania Dear Found Peace:Answer your Dear Unequal:I see two ways of grandson's question honestly. He dealing with this. Keep your mouth asked you what you thought about shut, avoid confrontation and the his being forced to go to church. He next time your sister tells you she's did NOT ask you how you found coming for a visit, roll up the welyour peace — or if you did. Sooner come matsaying you already have
ing yourself that you are sorry for whatever your sin of omission was, and then give yourself a dose of forgiveness.
or later, he will find his own peace,
other plans. Or, tell your sister how
change the past. We can, however,
and probably the same way you did — by searching for it. Do not push him — or pull him — in any direction and keep the peace with
you feeL change the present, and by doing so, Personally, I think it would be positively affect our future. healthier to express your feelings, — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com because your sister's and her hus- or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORSUNDAY, MAY17, 2015:Thisyearyou are un-
If that doesn't do the trick, then instead of torturing yourself, discuss this with a licensed mental health
professi onal.Remember, no onecan
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
usually dynamic and creative. Thespark By Jacqueline Bigar that emanates from you attracts others like a moth to a flame. As aresult, you'll counsel and say little for now, until you are become a bit me-oriented. A change onthe homefront will be for the better. You might surer of yourself. Tonight: Slow down the decide to remodel or buy anewhome. If hectic pace. you are single, you CANCER (June 21-July 22) Stsfs showthe klud will want to become ** * * * D on't allow yourself to be alone. of day you'll have more exclusive Join friends at a favorite spot. Zero in on ** * * * D ynamic with someone you what is important to you within a friend** * * Positive me et after summer. ship. The other party seems to berather ** * Average Thi s person could unpredictable. Look beyond the obvious ** So-so be very special. If when having a discussion withhim or her. * Difficult you are attached, Tonight: Where there is music. be careful, as your LEO (July23-Aug. 22) significant other might get fed up with ** * * Someone might be trying to rethis me-orientation. You will find it easier to relate to each other comefall. TAURUS strict you or push you in acertain direction. Read between the lines. Let this person reflects some of your values. have his or her way, at least for now. A ARIES (March 21-April19) close loved onecould have aspecial idea ** * * Try to shake things up, especially thatyou'll want to jump onimmediately. with a loved one.This person absolutely Tonight: Out late. adoresyou, andno matter whatyou do, it will be OK. Bring others together for a late VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) brunch. You might be surprised by anolder ** * * * M ake a round of calls to friends person's stance. Tonight: Make it your treat. and loved onesyou rarely see. This type of attention will mean more to them than you TAURUS (April20-May20) realize. If you are single, you could meet ** * * * You'll notice how receptive someone who knocks your socks off. A others are at this point. A family member's response could be slightly exaggerated but new beginningbecomespossible. Tonight: Escape into a movie. delighfful. Weigh the pros andcons of a change onthe homefrontand getfeedback LIBRA (Sept.23-Oct. 22) from a loved one.Tonight: Make animport** * * Make a point of speaking to an ant resolution. individual away from the group to let him or her know how cared about he or sheis. If GEMINI (May21-June20) ** You know what works for you. Have this person pulls away, rethinkyour bond. a long-overdue conversation with a loved A new beginning becomes possiblewhen one in the morning. As always, this person dealing with a moneymatter. Tonight: A will be unusually upbeat. Keepyour own close associateneedsyour time.
** * * * Defer to others, and listen to an older friend's feedback. Youmight needto take extra time to handle apersonal matter that has been onyour mind. A conversation could be difficult, as itappears as though the other party wants to be in control. Tonight: Call the shots.
SAGITTARIUS (Itiov.22-Dec.21) ** * Dive into a project that means a lot to you. Youhave moreendurance to follow through right now. In fact, you might accomplish whatyou want rather quickly. Don't forget the power of a nap. A family
member hasawayofaddingconfusion. Tonight: Pace yourself.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) ** * * Allow your imagination to emerge. Make a point of delighting a child or loved one. If you want, funnel someenergy into a creative project. You might be surprised by how dynamic the results will be. Tonight:
Tap intoyour resourcefulness. AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18) ** * A family member might needyour time and attention. Howyou deal with this person could change ifyou would just relax. The results will be positive if you can look for the similarities and not focus on the differences between you.Tonight: Factor in
some exercise. PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Don't hold back your feelings, but also don't stand on ceremony. Instead, make a call or apologize, if need be.Eyea change in howyou proceed with handling a neighbor or close relative who might be quite difficultat this time. Tonight: Visit with a friend. © King Features Syndicate
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:30 a.m., 2:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 6 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)9:15 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • GETT: TH ETRIALOFVIVIANE AMSALEM (noMPAA rating) 1:30 • THE SALTOFTHEEARTH (PG-13) 4 • WILD TALES(R) 6:30 I
6 p.m.on NGC, "Wicked Tuna" — With only three weeks left to fish in this season and the number-one position still up for grabs, every captain is desperate to stack the deck with bluefin tuna for some final earnings. Dave Carraro of FV-Tuna.com, last season's winner, is leading the pack again, but he hasn't
made any friends this season with his treatment of other boats in the fleet, giving his competitors even more incentive to beat him. In short, it's the closest race in the history of this series in the new episode "Tuna Trifecta." 7 p.m. on 2, 9, "America's Funniest Home Videos" — After15 seasons as the program's host, Tom Bergeron signs off from the job with this final episode of the show's 25th round, largely taped at Southern California's Disneylandan appropriate setting, given the nature of the show and the owner of the program's network. Bergeron will continue on "Dancing With the Stars," but here, the focus is on the long run he's had introducing viewers' videos of various foibles ... many of them showcasing kids and animals. 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "2016 Billboard Music Awards" — Ludacris and Chrissy Teigen are the hosts of the music-industry magazine's annual honors at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas. Teigen isn't likely to be very objective when it
comes to one ofthenominees, and that's understandable — since John Legend is her husband. Among the show's scheduled highlights are performances by Legend, Britney
Spears (with Iggy Azalea), Sam Smith, Kelly Clarkson, Ed Sheeran, Meghan Trainor, Nick
Jonas andHozier.
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: AGEOFIjLTRON (PG-13) 11:35 a.m.,12:45, 3:15, 4:30, 7:15, 9:25, IO:30 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRONIMAX3-0 (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) I2:15, 3:35, 6:50, 10:05 • HOME (PG) 1,3:40 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 12:25, 2:55, 7:10, 10:35 • 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:FURYROAD3-0 (R)noon, 12:30, 3,3:45, 5, 7, 8:15, 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 forsome movies.
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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
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8 p.m. on 6, "I LoveLucy Superstar Special" — After colorizing a couple of the classic sitcom's episodes for a Christmas special, CBS does it again with two more tales in this new offering. First, Lucy
(Lucille Ball, of course) encounters Oscar-winning actor William Holden upon arriving in Hollywood in "L.A. at Last!" Then, she promises Little Ricky (Richard Keith) she'll get the Man of Steel to his birthday party in "Lucy and Superman" — and when she poses as the
hero, she ends upstuck on a ledge. o zap2it
WILSONSsf Redmond 541-548-2066 ~ett" 6
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 • HOT PURSUIT(PG-13) 11:30a.m., 1:30, 3:30, 5:30, 7:30, 9:30 • MAD MAX:FURY ROAD (R)11:30a.m.,2,4:30,7,9:30 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 11:15a.m.,1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AVENGERS: AGEOFIjLTRON (PG-13) 3, 6:15 • EX MACHINA(R)4:45, 7 • MERCHANTS OFDOUBT (PG-13)4:15,6:30 • MONKEYKINGDOM(G) 2:15 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) 2,4:30, 7 • WHILEWE'RE YOUNG (R)2:30 i ) ~ i
Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THE AGE OFADALINE(PG-13) l2:40, 2:55, 5:10, 7:30 • AVENGERS: AGEOFIjLTRON (PG-13) 12:15, 3:20, 6:30 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(R) 1:45,3:50, 7:10 • MAD MAX: FURYROAD3-D (R)4:30 • PITCH PERFECT2(PG-13) I:15, I:50,4:25,6:30, 7 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • AVENGERS: AGEOFULTRON(Upstairs — PG-13) 1:10, 4:10, 7:30 • MAD MAX:FURYROAD(R) 1,4,7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
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Fearl Peorlis o 10 Veor old Lob/Pointer mix who arrived at HSCOas a stroV. She hos o mu«h laid back tempernment, but does get a bit excited on leosh ond can pvlla bit. Pearl would benefit From doilV exercise to help her loss o rew extrn pounds nnd boost her stamina. If Vou think Vou have the perfe«t horne for this deserving girl, come bV and meet Peorl todoV!
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Back in college (longer ago than I care to a dmit), I r e member noticing a c o u pl e o f p e o p le having soft drinks for breakfast. I t seemed so b i zarre a t t h e time. Now i t' s common. Next, nutritional paranoia about eggs led to a significant reduction in the number of people eating a proteincentric breakfast. These days, family and work pressures and the resulting time crunch lead people to either skip breakfast or eat the
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Leukemia Risk European researchers analyzed the relationship between blood cancers and vitamin D l e v els in 1,127 patients and the same number of control subjects. People with high blood levels of vitamin D had a 60percent lower risk of developing chronic lymphocytic leukemia.
The lesson is clear: Make the time for a healthy breakfast. You'll feel better and have more energy on day one. — Jack Challem
Reference: Lncn rnsta A. Amencan Journal of Clinical Nutrition,2013;98:827-838.
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Other t i mes p e ople w r o ngly believe they can reduce their daily calorie intake and lose weight by skipping breakfast. But that's a fallacy. A study several years ago found that people who skipped breakfast actually consumed 400 calories more over the subsequent 36 hours.
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Countless studies have shown that breakfast really is the most important meal of the day. And yet a lot of people say they are simply not hungry at breakfast time. Sometimes the reason is that elevated blood sugar from a late meal the night before suppresses appetite.
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
10-year-old lands her lemonade at Whole Foods
5 ways women can take it to the next
level in business
By Pamela Yip The Dallas Morning News
DALLAS — For a young entrepreneur still learning
By Kert Gohman
aboutfinance,Mikaila
Special to The Washington Post
Ulmer has done pretty well for herself and her
WASHINGTON — Women are running more than a
company. Mikaila, 10, is chief
third of the privately owned businesses in the United
executive of BeeSweet
States. With their job num-
Lemonade, which she
bers, income and overall growth rates accelerating at a rapid dip, it's no surprise they are feelingoptimistic about business conditions
after launched at age4t/2
participating in a children's business competition and in Lemonade Day,a national program that teaches
and their prospects for the future. In fact, our
children financial literacy by empowering them to
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Spark Business Barometer
open their own business-
Tim Moore, co-founder/VP of sales for JemRawOrganics, holds a jar of Cinnamon Red Maca at the Jem RawOrganic offices in
recently showed women
a lemonade stand.
Bend on Wednesday morning. Jem Raw Organics is one of the companies participating in EDCO's food cluster.
business owners were more likely to have experienced higher sales over the past six months, feel good about current business conditions and feel optimistic about the
future economy. But there is also evidence
suggesting that gaps remain — from earnings statistics to the percentage of women
executives at larger companies. We still have work to do to ensure there are equal opportunities for women to
pursue their dreams to lead businesses both big and small. Throughout my career, I've learned my share of lessons and observed workplacedynamics and barri-
Ashley Landis /The Dallas Moming News
Mikaila Ulmer, 10, of Austin,
Texas,speaks afterjudging the Advocare Best Tasting Lemonade Contest at NorthPark Center in Dallas. Ulmer
ers to success for women at
is a past winner and now owns BeeSweet Lemonade, which is sold in Whole
Foods grocery stores. She was also given a $60,000
enterprises of all sizes. Here are a few opportunities that we — as women and busi-
• Networking helps burgeoning industry grow
ness leaders — can leverage to enable success as entre-
deal on the television show "Shark Tank."
preneurs and leaders.
Have a plan:My first piece of advice to every entrepreneur who is either
By Stephen Hamwaye The Bulletin BeeSweet has been so
successful that Whole Foods is now carrying the drink, and in March, Mi-
kaila accepted a $60,000 investment offer from Daymond John of "Shark Tank"
in exchange for a 25 percent stake in the company. Not bad for any young business, much less one launched with a lemonade stand.
Lemonade Day was created in 2007 by entrepreneur Michael Holthouse,
co-founder of the Houston nonprofit organization Pre-
pared 4 Life. It's inspired by lessons he taught his young daughter when she set up her first lemonade stand.
on the cusp of startup, or
Jem Raw Organics was a small-scale
lookingto scale and grow a business: Have a well-
production when it was founded in Bend
thought-out, well-commu-
nicated plan. Map outyour financials, do your home-
in 2009, selling handmade truffles to a
work, know your market
collection of local stores.
(<lkCHEf(, ,tlmttyBRltMLIt
Tim Moore, vice president of sales
-/
and one of the co-founders of Jem
ticipated in last year's Lem-
onade Day. Nearly 50 cities will take part this year, and organizers are aiming for an eventual goal of 1 million lemonade stands in 100 cities across America.
SeeLemonade/E5
Then, be prepared to share it confidently with potential
partners, investors, bankers and other influencers who
Raw, said the company eventually abandoned the truffles, but he and Some of the other brands participating in EDCO's food cluster include Justy's
his partners used the same basic formula
Jelly products, clockwise from top, cereal
to create their first hazelnut spread, which Moore
producer Straw Propeller and Picky Bars.
likened to "organic, healthy Nutella."
Nationwide, more than 225,000kids from pre-kin-
dergarten through high school in 35 U.S. cities par-
and customers, and have a growth strategy outlined.
maybe able to support or enable your business goals. Be willing to take risks. I've mentored manytalented women whose biggest hangupsstemmed from their fear of failure. While being prepared and doing your research is important, you'll neverbe fullypreparedforwhat the future
Since then, Jem Raw has
are so harsh for startups."
in Central Oregon, with
tribution from a city that's more than 80 miles from the nearest interstate. "No matter what business
about 500 accounts across
you're in, there's fundamen-
tral Oregon, Brian Vierra
the United States. But like most small businesses, Jem
tals that have to be followed," Moore said. "If you're start-
spends a lot of time meeting
Raw faces challenges, from marketing itself on a budget to dealing with product dis-
ing a business and you don't have access to those funda-
with local startups to gauge what they need to be successful. During his meetings
mentals, that's why the stats
with Jem Raw and other
become oneofthelarger specialty food companies
In his capacity as venture catalyst manager for Economic Development of Cen-
specialty food companies, he realized he was hearing a lot of the same challenges, from getting into the right stores to improving distribution.
maybring. Believe inyourself and your ideas, and
"It would just make sense for these companies to sit
will prove to be valuable les-
don't be afraid to take risks
and make mistakes along the way. Those nustakes
down with other people in
sons and experiences that make you an even smarter
the industry," Vierra said.
business woman.
SeeFood cluster/E2
SeeWomen/E5
a timore stores lnsi ere vita to communities By Lorraine Mirabella The Baltimore Sun
BALTIMORE — The day
afterrioting damaged scores of Baltimore businesses, Dwayne Weaver found his small pharmacy in shambles, the doors smashed
day of the funeral for Freddie Gray, whose death after a spinal injury while in police custody sparked protests in Baltimore. Weaver had hoped trou-
ble would bypass Keystone Pharmacy, a fixture in its
neighborhood for more than Looters had emptied bins of threedecades.He briefly prescriptions drugs, stolen weighed closing for good bethe fax machine along with fore changing his mind. "We saw how much we'd soda and chips, upended boxes and files, and left trash invested in the neighborhood everywhere. and how much the patients "My heart sunk to the had invested in us," Weaver floor," said the pharmacist, said. "We're very entrenched who had sent employees in the neighborhood. It's been home early and locked up a loyal, appreciative clientele. April 27 as demonstrations It has a reputation as a rough erupted into violence on the neighborhood, but for me and the glass shattered.
as a business owner, I came back for the good patients.
Those weren't the ones vandalizing the store." Among 350 businesses identified by city officials as damaged in two nights of rioting were drugstores and grocersconsidered the lifeblood of some of Baltimore's poorest areas. Many custom-
Rite Aid, according to the city Health Department. Another
nine stores with pharmacies had reopened after sustainRite Aids and a Target that was the site of a standoff be-
w
tween protesters and police that escalated into violence April 27. Last week, CVS said it will rebuild its two stores
ers are elderly or have chronic health problems and live
burned by rioters.
in "food deserts" with limited
ular serve as the "backbone" of today's inner-city neigh-
access to transportation and healthy food. As of last Friday, five drugstore/pharmacies remained closed, including two CVS Pharmacy locations, two independent pharmacies and a
n *enDsop
ing damage, including seven
Small businesses in particborhoods, said Robert Blum, director of the Urban Health Institute at Johns Hopkins
University's Bloomberg School of Public Health. SeeBaltimore/E3
N app /
(
Amy Davis /The Baltimore Sun
Keystone Pharmacy at1358 West North Ave. added a sign with balloonsto let customers know that it was open again onMay 7, after the store was badly damaged and looted on the night of the riots in Baltimore.
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
BUSINESS TUESDAY Business Startup: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; 6 p.m.; $29; registration required; Central Oregon Community College Madras Campus, 1170 E Ashwood Road, Madras; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-on-oneconferences with local entrepreneurs; check inat the library desk onthe second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org
WEDNESDAY Family Business Breakfast-
E ND
To submit an event, visit bendbulletin.com/events and click "Add Event" at least 10days before publication. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Questions: businessibendbulletin.com, 541-383-0323.
30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check inat the library desk onthe second floor; 5:30-7p.m.;Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 NWWall St.; www. SCORECentralOregon.org
Multiple Generations Working manage your business; 6 p.m.; $89; Together: Learn to better collaborate registration required; COCC Chandler between generations to help ensure Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bend; asmoothbusinesssuccession plan www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. for your family business; 7:30 a.m.; Networking with ConnectW$40; registration required; DoubleTree Branding on a Budget: 5 p.m.; $25by Hilton Hotel Bend300 NW $40, includes dinner; St. Charles Bend, Franklin Ave., http://bit.ly/1Qr89qk or 2500 NENeff Road, Bend;www. 541-737-6017. connectw.org or 541-678-8988. Growing Your Business with OuickBooks: Threeclassescoverthe fundamentals of business accounting THURSDAY and QuickBooks operation, plus Board Fair: Visit with over 25nonprofit daytime advising sessions; 6 p.m.; organizations; discover opportunities $199; registration required; Central Oregon Community College Redmond to serve on anonprofit board and find a meaningful way toget involved; 3:30 Campus— Technology Education p.m.; Bend's Community Center,1036 Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, NE Fifth St., Bend;http://bit.ly/1lzL1n1 Redmond or 541-383-7290. or 541-385-8977. HowtoDevelopa Business Plan:A two-evening workshop for people in May 26 the preliminary stages of developing a business. Discover the tools you SCORE free business counseling: need to successfully plan, build and Business counselors conductfree
May 28 Launch Your Business: Learn about starting or being in theearly stages of running a business; 6 p.m.; $199; registration required; COCC Redmond CampusTechnology EducationCenter, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290.
May 29 Contractors CCBTest Prep course: Two-day live class to prepare for the state-mandated test to becomea licensed contractor in Oregon; 8:30 a.m.; $299 or $359 with required manual; registration required; Central
Oregon Community College Redmond Campus— TechnologyEducation Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; www.cocc.edu/ccb or 541-383-7290.
grants using Foundation Directory Online with assistance from staff;1 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmondor 541-6 I7-7089.
June 3
june 6
Business Startup: Cover the basics in this two-hour class anddecide if running a business is for you; 11a.m.; $29; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; www.cocc.edu/sbdc or 541-383-7290. What's Hot in Franchising: Explore the possibility of owning your own franchise; 6 p.m.; $29; registration required; COCC Chandler Lab, 1027 NWTrenton Ave., Bendor 541-383-7290.
Arduino Workshop: Work with an Arduino kit to create a project; noon East BendPublic Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road, Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org or 541-312-1032.
June 13
Nonprofits Open Lab: Search for
Homebuyer Education Class: Learn about services that can help with the process of purchasing a home;9 a.m.; $45 per household; Redmond Neighborlmpact Office, 2303 SWFirst St., Redmond; www.neighborimpact. org/homebuyer-workshopregistration/ or 541-323-6567.
13, Section 26,$540,000 • Donald K. and Jacqueline F.Corumto Elena Shultz, JDRanchEstates, Lot 6, Block1, $375,000 • John L. Prior and A. LeneRuppel-Prior, trustees of thePrior Family LivingTrust, to Warren A.andElizabeth Tausch, Deer Park II, Lot 26, Block13, $329,500 • Painted Ridge Investments LLCto Pahlisch Homeslnc., PaintedRidge at BrokenTop,Lots1-3 and12-16, $720,000 • Northwest Trustee Services Inc. Trustee toHSBCBank USAN.A. Trustee, Aero Acres,Lot 3, Block 4,$349,900 • Michael E. andCarol Kirkman to Jennifer andRobert Snyder, Meadowbrook Estates,Phase2,Lot5, Block 7,$250,000 • Tina M. Vickers to Wiliam B. and Virginia L. Johnson,TillicumVillage, Lot 8, Block 2,$187,500 • Hilary W. Gilmore, trustee of the Hilary WalkerGilmoreTrust, to Robert J. Higgins andCarolyn M. Wood,Highland Addition, Lot12, Block22,$400,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Edward F. Hughes III andDebraK. Hughes, McCall Landing, Phase1,Lot123, g329,950 • Pahli sch HomesInc.toJoeA.and Kathleen LVanPelt, trusteesofthe Joe A.andKathleenVanPelt Family Trust, Stonegate P.U.D., Phase1,Lot60, $489,950 • Beverly J. and Karrie L. Meglitsch to MatthewandTeresaFalkenstein, First Addition toBendPark, Lot1, Block123, $215,000 • Amber L. Siemsen, whoacquired title as Amber LKing, toSeanH.andMelissa J.McKenney,Majestic,Phase3,Lot6, $238,650 • Makena Custom HomesInc. to Patrick Howard,NorthWestCrossing, Phase19, Lot 797,$1,045,000 • Mary K. Berryman, trustee ofthe 2012 Mary K.BerrymanTrust, to Kenneth L. andAnnM.Dubas,trusteesoftheDubas Family Trust,RiverCanyonEstates No.4, Lot 256,$300,000 • Toney Construction Co. LLC,which
acquired title asPacific HomeBuilders LLC, toScott P.andTina M. Dilingham, Island Park,Lot12, $264,900 • Brandon P., KentS.andVicki P. Nogowski toBrochandHeather Inghram, Majestic, Phase1,Lot31,$225,000 • Peter and KathleenMartin, trustees of the PeterandKathleenMartin Revocable Trust, to Kimberly K.Dunn,Mountain Village East4, Lot10, Block26, $260,000 • Rebecca Peters, whoacquired title as Rebecca Stair, to Aaron R.andMarissa N. Urell, BraydonPark, Lot16, $189,000 • Deschutes Ventures LLCto Robert B. and CatherineS.McDonald, RiverBluff Section ofSunriseVilage, Lot2, Block 3, $670,000 Jefferson County • LaDonnaL EppleytoCraigL.andLinda S. White,CrookedRiver RanchNo.3, Lot 212, $285,000 • Madras LandDevelopmentCo.LLCto BeanFoundationInc., Yarrow,Phase1, Lots1-7,10, 32,36,38, 44-47and67-68, Phase 2,Lots97101, 107,123-127,129, 142-145and149-154, Phase2A, Lot 2, 4 and 6-12,$504,750 • JoyE.VibberttoSeanN.andMegan Vibbert, portions ofVibbert's First Addition, Lots1-6, 9,Block1, andportions of Township 9,Ranges13-14, Sections1720 and25, $1,250,000 • Clark Z.andNancyJ.CouchtoJamesM. and ElyssaJ. Roff, Partition Plat2011-07, $360,000 • Karen V. Potampa,formerly knownas Karen B.Vibbert, trusteeof the Potampa ContinuingTrustandthePotampa DisclaimerTrust, toSeanN.andH. MeganVibbert, Vibbert's First Addition to Gateway,Lots1-8, Block6, andportions of Township 9,Ranges13-14, Sections8, 17-20 and25,$240,070 • Jefferson County Sheriff to Federal National MortgageAssociation, also knownasFannieMae,SunnysideEstates, Phase1, Lot24,$178,274.41 • Double E Meat Inc., whichacquired title as DoubleEEMeat Co., to NewGrass LLC,Township10,Range13,Section 35, $300,000
their businesses reflect that."
Haney said she hoped the group would continue to maintain its mix of large and
June4
DEEDS Deechutes County • Janel J. Smith, trustee of theJanel J. Smith RevocableTrust, to LaneC.and Susan J.Morris, trusteeof theMorris Loving Trust,Ridgepointe,Lot18, $230,000 • Hayden Homes LLCto SockeyeELLC, AspenRim,Lots113-114,$516,403 • HaydenHomesLLCtoNorthwestLand FundOneLLC,Township15, Range13, Section 8,$516,403 • Glen W. andForrest A.Raymondto Mission LinenSupply, Township17,Range 12, Section32,$200,000 • Jay andValarie Story andBruceRomfo to Kraig A.andKimD.Salinas, River VillageCondominiumsStage4, Unit12, $375,000 • Debrah R. Atkinson to Christian Suder, Kings ForestSecondAddition, Lot28, Block 5,$365,000 • Howard F. Snider andHoward B.Snider toDeannaL.Tone,LazyRiver,Lot9,Block 1, $315,000 • Donna J. Thayerto Colin M.DuPlantis and Susan E.Altman, Township17,Range 13, Section33,$790,000 • Alan D. and NancyJ. Crandell, trustees of the AlanNancyCrandell Trust, to KentT. and Corrine J.McKenzie,DeerParkII, Lot 9, Block13,$449,900 • Steve and Kristine Pareira, whoacquired title as KristinaPareira, to Gunnar Johnson,BrightenwoodEstates, Lot1, Block 2,$272,000 • Steven J.andDianeM.VanDyketo James E. WoodsandCynthia A. Maples, Maplewood,Phase2, Lot 67,$225,400 • Hayden Homes LLCto SueA. Lundand James G. Schulz, ColdSprings South, Lot 8, $207,122 • West Bend Property Co.LLCto Michael KnightenConstructionCo.Inc., NorthWest Crossing,Phase24, Lot 891,$320,000 • Frank L. CenigtoaMoises Becerra Jr. andSheilaM. Becerra, Townsiteof Redmond,Lots 7-8,Block56,$405,000 • Bella Villa Homes Corp. to CalderaHome LLC, CalderaSprings, Phase2, Lot 281, $790,000
• Jerri R. Rico, whoacquired title as Jerri R.Schwab,toEmmanuelP.andKariE. Ramos,DeschutesRiverWoods, Lot13, Block HH,$350,000 • Ronald W. NeetandPatricia A. Gianone to Judith R.andGary E.Barker, trustees of the Judith R.andGary E.Barker1997 Living Trust,TamarackPark, Lot1, Block 2, $228,000 • Susan L.Forbes,as conservatorfor EdwardF.Forbes,aprotectedperson, and SusanL.Forbes,to DeannaM.and Jeffrey L Morris, PonderosaPines,Lot 87, $150,000 • Roger Barton to Shelter Properties LLC, Three Sisters,Lot 27,$560,000 • Todd M. Penhollowto Seanmichael G. GallowayandAllison F.Thompson, Willows PhaseIII, Lot48,$206,000 • Todd J. and AndreaL. Springer to Michael H.andChristie L. Shaw,Township 15, Range12,Section12, $555,000 • Daniel and LeannVogt to Marianne Fellner,EastBluff, Lot6, Block1, $385,000 • Eric J. and DawnE.Bader to Michelle L. Neal, Crane Prairie Estates,Lot 8, Block1, $292,000 • Dennis F. andSaiL. Patterson to Steven W. andElizabethA.Collins, Poplar Park, Lot 24,$345,000 • Jimmy V. andLauraL Copelandto Bil A. andAnnaM. Morrow, Majestic Ridge, Phases1-2,Lot72, $315,000 • Jerald B. and SueA.Beebeto Wiliam R. andSusanA.Gabriel, Tall PinesFourth Addition, Lots13-14,Block17,$209,500 • Michael Knighten Construction Inc. to CourtneyP.andJohnB.Souther, NorthWestCrossing, Phase24, Lot891, $320,000 • Dennis S. andMarcia A. Martin to Betsy Packard, trusteeofthe Betsy Packard Revocabl eTrust,Meadow HousesNorth, Phases3-4, Unit88,$315,000 • Paul M. Brown to BrynP.Gabriel and Lisa A.Lubbesmeyer,trustees of the Bryn P.Gabriel andLisa A.Lubbesmeyer Revocable Trust, WestwoodVilage, Lot 3, $304,500 • PacWestII LLCto Dustin B.Hamlet, SundanceMeadows, Lot13, $290,000
• Kristopher C. andKenesia L.Scholl to DarleneL. Kazarian, trusteeof the Darlene L.KazarianTrust, AwbreyButte Homesit es,Phase31,Lot6,$990,000 • Josh Sanserito Kerry Lang,Deschutes River Woods,Lot21,Block L,$211,500 • Gerhard S. andAnnB.Hansonto James M. andStarleneHaney,Shire, Phase1, Lot 12, $515,000 • DeanR. Kineto John W.Royand Estrelita M.Shon-Roy,Partition Plat 201430, Parcel1, $205,000 • SimchaC.andJenniferG.Lachman to Derek J.andBrittany L. Manwill, WestbrookMeadows, PU.D., Phases1-2, Lot17, Phase 2, $370,000 • TyeeDevelopmentInc.toNyamaS.and Martin A. Jacobi,NorthWestCrossing, Phases20-22, Lot839, $534,900 • Alvin and Irene Brandt, trustees of the Brandt FamilyTrust, to Frederick and HildegardHuss,FirstAddition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot 26, Block 3, $182,500 • Gregory M. Wilson, trustee of the Gregory M.WilsonTrust, to Earl I.and Janet L. Seekins,North RimonAwbrey Butte, Phase2, Lot42, $579,775 • Scott A. and Lisa A. Mekechto Kendra L. and David B.Morrison, Northwest Townsite Co.'sSecondAddition to Bend, Lots 1-2, Block25,$575,00 • Herbert J. Hoffart,trustee ofthe Herbert J. Hoffart Trust, toCharlesA. Meyer andKathleen A.Turner-Meyer, trustees of theMeyerFamily Trust, Fairway CrestVillage, Phase3, Lot 20, Block11, $225,000 • Herbert J. Hoffart,trustee ofthe Herbert J. Hoffart Trust, to Herbert J. Hoffart, trustee ofthe Herbert J. Hoffart Trust andCarol A.Smith, FairwayCrest Village, Phase3, Lot19, Block11, $225,000 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. to Jillian E.Cornejo, ParkwayVilage, Phases1-3, Lot52,$208,000 • Dan T. and Karen C.Devlin to Scott A. and Lisa A.Mekech,Sunridge, Phase2, Lot 20, $530,000 • MJ Homes LLCto Douglas Downer,
Food cluster
they don't have employees covered by unemployment
Continued from E1 From there, EDCO's food
insurance.
In addition to providing a network and
"It's not a huge part of the
product cluster wa s b o r n , local economy here," Run-
following in the footsteps of berg said. other local market clusters Vierra added that Central such as the Oregon Outdoor Oregon currently lacks the Alliance and Soar Oregon, type of large "anchor" food which supports the devel- companies that can buoy a opment of a drone industry. local economy.Without comWhile the food cluster is panies like that in place, Vistill new — it will be hold- erra said, it's up tothe region ing its second public meeting to grow its own, which the Wednesday — Vierra said cluster should help facilitate. "If there's going to be job around 60 companies have signed up to participate, in- growth in Central Oregon, it's going to be from clusters cluding Jem Raw. "There's alot of food prod- like this," Vierra said. uct companies around CenThere are signs that this tral Oregon,at a lot of differ- relative lack of employers is ent stages of development," beginning to change. Andy Vierra said. Hannagan is the CEO and He added that there were co-founder of Bou n c e, a no real restrictions on what brand of nutritional shakes type of food companies could and bars that Hannagan and participate, though he said his wife began in 2004 in breweries would not be inAustralia. "We're kind of li ke Clif volved in the cluster. In addition to providing a Bars in Au s tralia," Hannanetwork and re sources for gan said. burgeoning local food comBounce produced its bars panies,the group is designed in McMinnville even when to help move Central Oregon the company was headquarinto the na tional conversa- tered on th e ot h er s ide o f tion for specialty food. the world. When Hannagan
Food processing is Ore- and his wife were looking to gon's second-largest manu- move to the Un ited States, facturing sector, employing they landed in Bend in A u more than 27,000 Oregonians gust, and became one of the in 2014,according to Damon few global brands to join the Runberg, regional economist cluster. "The B ounce brand i s for the Oregon Employment Department. Moreover, food about clean, natural p r odproduction was one of the ucts, so having our headfew industries that continued quarters in Bend is a match to growduringthe recession. made in heaven," Hannagan "People still have to eat, said. but they don't always have to Having larger, established build new houses," Runberg companies in the food group sard. can provide fledgling start-
CalderaSprings,Phase2, Lot287, $165,000 • Jason L. and DeenaD.Sparks to Tiffany K.PriceandPhelanD.Curry, Mason EstatesFirst Addition, Phase2, Lot 20, $264,999 • Vergent LLC to Molly A. Davis, Deschute sRiverWoods,Lot6,BlockQQ, $232,000 • Sandra E.Peerto Neil and Elyse McDaniel, EmpireVillage, Phases1-3, Lot 6, $260,000 • Kikue Rich, trustee ofthe RichFamily Trust, to Jeffrey andKarenaSee, Stonebrook, Phase1,Lot5, Block1, $292,500 • Kenneth N. andBilie J. Thomason to Jayne A.Scarcella, Township14,Range 12, Section 36,$200,000 • JLS Rental Real Estate LLCto Gregory R. Knoll, QuailRun, Phases1-2, Lot12, $234,950 • FannieMae,alsoknownasFederal National MortgageAssociation, to DouglasandSherry Stott, Windsong, Lot 12, $224,000 • NNP IV-NCR LLCto Roderick J. and Lori A.Ray,trustees of the Ray RevocableTrust, Township17, Range12, Section 24,$270,000 • Peter Johnson to JoshuaJ. Klausand Margaret Hoffman,GrandviewAddition to Bend,Lots 6-7,Block8, $390,000 • NRN Investments LLC to Charles R. Ashley Jr.andTruitt G.Vance,Park Addition to Bend,Lots 3-4, Block30, $295,000 • Dutchland Properties LLC to JasonS. Offutt, Marea I,Lot 2,$290,000 • Thomas T. andCarrie E.Shaverto TamanaH. Shojai, Fairhaven,Phase10, Lot13, $270,000 • Clifford A. and Sandra K.Wyatt to Mary E.andRobert J. Adams, Remington Arms, Lot5,Block3,$150,000 • Michael H. and Nari M.Maidl to Eric M. andAnn M.Ottesen, Glacier Ridge, Phase 3,Lot24, $270,000 • Ross S. and AmyM. Coleman to Zachary J.Russell, Township14, Range
resources for burgeoning local food companies, the group is designed to help move Central Oregon into the national conversation for specialty food. ing are specialty producers who sell organic or paleo
business."
Changing tastes are helping Bend's local companies
products. "I think it has a lot to do
as well. Vierra said that while welcome to participate, many
all local food companies are
with the type of people in Bend," Vierra said. "They're
of the companies participat-
health-conscious, and I think
With salesof organic food projected to continue rising by more than 10 percent yearly and a lar g e-scale movement toward supporting local food producers, grocerystores are m orew illing to take chances on local products, according to Justy Haney, founder of J usty's Jelly, a Redmond-based jelly producerthat is participating in the food cluster. "If we'rebuying local products, it'sjust going to help the economy,"Haney said.
small companies, eventual-
ly moving toward meeting monthly, rather than q uarterly. Vierra said o nce t h e
cluster becomesmore established, EDCO would let com-
panies guide its development. "We're good at ge tting things started, but once the
infrastructure is in place,we want industry groups to take the lead," Vierra said. — Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletirLcom
"Our community needs this next chapter in our development." Shannon Sullivan Event Services Manager, Tower Theatre
N k:w a
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However,
C e n tral O r e - ups with va l u able e xpertgon is lagging behind. Food ence. Moore, of J em R a w,
processing employs just 302 likened the model to a ladder, people in Deschutes Coun- with companies onthe highty. Runberg said that the er rungs assisting thosewho Employment Dep a r t ment are just starting to climb. "I enjoy problem solving, did not have information on several of the firms involved and I enjoy helping," Moore in the cluster, because they said. "I get excited to talk are either new or so s mall
to other people about their
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN E 3
ixin cuisines, exicuemoves e on t e oo truc Ruby 'Ibesday and spent 40 years building it into an international brand, came onboard.
By Janet Morrissey
truck becomes a b rick-andmortar restaurant with chain When David Schillace told ambitions is a complicated one. his friends and family in 2010 Mexicue sits i n t h e f a stt hat he planned to quit h i s est-growing segment of the six-figure-salary job in sales restaurant industry. Its focus is New Yorh Times
and marketing, cash in his 401(k) retirement plan and start a new career selling a blend of Mexican and barbecue food
"I've invested a lot in Mexi-
cue because I believe in what we're doing," said Beall, who
"- isY
on using fresh, all-natural ingredients, buying locally when possible, using meat that has
holds a 25 percent ownership s take in M e xicue. A t h i r d
restaurant — a 2,400-square-
been produced without anti-
foot space at 225 Fifth Ave.
biotics or hormones, cooking from scratch and spicing it up. silence. Then camethe tears. The results, served quickly and "My mom cried — she literal- affordably, appeal to the soly cried — and said, 'What are called eating healthy crowd. you doing? You left your $150K Chipotle Mexican Grill is a corporate job for a truck?'" standout in this niche. Schillace recalled. Though Traffic to fast-casual restaucrushed by the reaction, he rants like Chipotle has dimbed pressedahead with hisdream. 7 to 9 percent each year, even Today, Schillace and his at the height of the recession, partner, Thomas Kelly, own since 2009, accordingto Bonnie Sam Hodgson/The New YorkTimes three Mexicue restaurants, em- Riggs, a restaurant analyst at The lunch crowd at a Mexicue restaurant in New York. David Schillace, who left behind a six-figure ploy about 200 people and have the NPD Group, a market infor- salary and cashed in his 401(k) to start the Mexicue food truck, now owns three Mexicue restaurants the backing of Sandy Beall, mation and advisory firm. with partner Thomas Kelly, with plans to open at least two new ones a year. who founded Ruby Tuesday By contrast, traffic to conrestaurants in 1972, and who ventional fast-food outlets was stepped down as CEO of that flat, while traffic to m i dtier for blocks to buy food from Colorado State with a bach- 2011, competition had soared chain in 2012. family restaurants declined in K ogi-branded trucks. It w as elor's in humanities in 2000, with about 75 branded trucks an "aha" moment for Schillace, he loved experimenting in the crowding into the market, Mexicue's revenue topped the same period. $6 million in 2014, up from who decided to bring the con- kitchen and cooking for room- which led to city crackdowns. $500,000 in its first year in 2010. Earlymotivation cept to New York."It was some- mates. Though he didn't go to Retail operators often comPlans are underway to open Schillace exhibited some thing I could start without hav- culinary school, after moving plained that their profits were at least two new restaurants a entrepreneurial i n clinations ing to raise a million dollars," to New York in 2001, Kelly threatenedby the presence of year in hopes of generating at early on. Born in Brooklyn, he said. "I thought I couldpull it worked at a marketing job by food trucks. least $20 million in annual rev- New York, he grew up in Holm- off with $50,000." day and trained as an unpaid In 2011, inspired in part by enue by 2017. del, New Jersey, where he sold Next, he needed a partner intern at the restaurants Craft a snowstorm that hur t t h e Ultimately, the two founders lemonade and baked goods to and chef. So, back in New York, and Hearth by night, where he food truck business, the partwould like to follow in the foot- neighbors as a youngster. He he approached a friend, Thom- honed his kitchen skills. ners opened their first bricksteps of Shake Shack, which studied business at Arizona as Kelly, who had hosted weekand-mortar restaurant, a also started as a small vendor State University, graduating ly dinner parties and served Putting the wheels 450-square-foot space on Sevin a park in Manhattan and with a bachelor's in business elaborate meals at Thanksgiv- Ih llWtIOh enth Avenue that offered both wound up with a valuation in administration in 2004. He then ing. "I always had this entrepreIn 2010, with $80,000 in their takeout and a small dining excess of $1 billionwhenitwent moved to New York, where he neurial itch like David," Kelly pockets, Schillace and Kelly area. (The truck was relegated public this year. "Seeing Danny took sales jobs at several For- SBld. bought a food truck off eBay, to music festivals and special Meyer stand on the New York tune 500 companies, including Kelly, born in Minneapo- drew up a Mexican-barbecue events.) Stock Exchange, ringing that T-Mobile, Forest Pharmaceuti- lis in 1978, developed a pas- menu and were on their way. As Mexicue's popularity bell — of course, that's inspir- cals and Integra LifeSciences. sion for cooking when he was Schillace said there was only grew, Schillace approached ining," Schillace said, referring to His career took a sharp turn a child. He would toil in the one other branded food truck in vestorsto raise about $500,000 the Shake Shack founder and in 2009. While visiting a col- kitchen alongside his mother Manhattan at the time. "It was to open a second restaurant restaurateur. "That's what we lege friend in Los Angeles, he and grandmother, and help like the Wild West," he said, — a 1,200-square-foot space want to do." discovered a food truck revo- his father fire up the barbe- adding that they could park on Broadway. That was when The story of how a fast-food lution, where people lined up cue. Before graduating from wherever they wanted. But by Sandy Beall, who founded
Baltimore stores,the corner food mar-
kets, and these really are the coreservicestructures ofthe neighborhoods," Blum said. "One of the things we continue to see in the poorest communities in Baltimore ... there
is a continual eroding of that small-business infrastructure." Shuttered or burned busi-
nesses have an immediate impact — leaving residents without access to food or crit-
ical medications for hypertension, kidney disease and other disorders, Blum said. But the
effects can linger in the longer term as well, he said. "It creates a t r emendous •
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comes a restaurant is undear,
but Julia Gallo-Torres, of Mintel, the marketing research firm, said it was probably an anomaly rather than the norm. "A lot of food truck startups just remain food trucks," and
often the owners burn out after aperiod of time, she said."Food trucks are not sustainable be-
cause of the lifestyle. They tend to be owned by people who have to work and do all of the jobs that are involved there. It's not something they want to do
longterm." And making the transition to a brick-and-mortar restau-
rant presents other challenges. "It's a cheap way to get into the restaurantbusiness," she
said. But many don't have the business wherewithal to start and run a restaurant. Having a
business background and having the backing of an experienced restaurant owner greatly
improvethechances ofsuccess, she said. Does Beall share the younger Mexicuefounders'zealthat the brand could turn into a major player in the restaurant in-
dustry and somedaygo publicg " Everybody at t hat a ge thinks that," Beall said, laugh-
ing."It could. But we take things one store at a time. I'm not worriedifwe have four or 100.Just
do it right one day at a time and you'll make plenty of money."
"I can walk here and the Rite shopped as usual inside. Aid to get my medicine." The s u p ermarket ha d At ShopRite in th e city's opened in one of the city's food Howard Park neighborhood, desertsto great fanfare last members of the Klein family summer after community and that owns the grocer stayed city officials had worked for in the store and parking lot, years to attract a grocer. along with managers and After the riots, the store store security guards, as maintained close to regular clashes and looting erupted hours the rest of the week, elsewhere in the city. closing early enough to alMembers of Baltimoreans low employees to get home to United in Leadership Devel- meet a citywide curfew, Klein opment, or BUILD, and some said. "Howard Park is very, very community members also stood in the parking lot, "just solid, with great community saying,'We're here,'"said Mi- leaders," Klein said. "They chael Klein, a vice president waited 12 years to have this for the nine-store chain. store open up. We made a
said. "It may not be easy for dals had smashed windows people to get i nformation and looted, the Save-A-Lot for people to invest in local about the nearest pharmacy. grocery store reopened last and particularly low-income If you transfer to a different week. A hardware store and communities. Th e q u e s- chain, it's not as straightfor- laundromat also were boardtions that entrepreneurs and ward. There are people with ed up but open. Workers spent small-business owners have limited mobility, so even going the week cleaning up the Rite are, 'Is it viable'? Is it secure?' If three blocks away could be Aid, which reopened. we're goingto help support the impossible." Shirley Williams wheeled neighborhood, we also have to The H ealth D e p artment a small cart down the aisles support small business." has been assisting residents of the supermarket where she Even the temporary loss via the city's 311 hotline with shops several times a month. of businesses such as Key- transferring or getting de- A resident of a nearby senior stone has proved a hardship liveries of prescriptions. The housing complex, Williams, for many over the past cou- department is working on 77, has lived in the neighborple of weeks, said Dr. Lea- arranging shuttles for senior hood for 21 years and was rena Wen, Baltimore's health citizens to get groceries and lieved to find the supermarket commissioner. health-related supplies. had reopened. While the Rite "It may sound easy to get "Peoplewho may not oth- Aid was closed,she'dreliedon people's prescriptions and erwise have support through her daughter to drive her to get transfer them from one phar- their families and their friends prescriptions. "It's very important to me," macy to another, but it's sur- tend to be affected," she said. prisingly complicated," Wen At a strip mall, where van- Williams said of the center. amount of uncertainty," Blum said. "It creates a disincentive
Continued from E1 "They're the corner drug-
-
opened in April. How often a food truck be-
out of a truck on the streets of Manhattan,there was stunned
M anagement never
c o n - commitment to stay open, re-
sidered closing, Klein said. gardless of what was happenHe saw police patrolling the ing anywhere else during that neighborhood, and customers troublesome week." •
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DISCOVERTHE VERY BEST CENTRAL OREGON HAS TO OFFER.
,
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Available at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce, hotels and other key points of interests, including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offeredto Deschutes County Expo Center visitors all year-round and at The Bulletin.
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SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
E5
Women
pP ,!
sl. "iI/
//~ ~
>yjf,
Continued from E1 Don't do it all by yourself: Greatleaders take charge and delegate (or outsource) supporting responsibilities and business functions to other experts so they can focus on leading their business. Taking on all the responsibilities and micromanaging will rarely get your business to its full potential — so don't be afraid to take the reins, lead the
way and empower your teams.
Find balance: Our research shows achieving work-life balance is especially important for wom-
Ashley Landis / Dallas Morning News
Mikaila Ulmer, 10, of Austin, Texas, left, asks contestant Madyson Mitchell, 11, questions while judging the Advocare Best Tasting Lemonade Contest at NorthPark Center in Dallas.
Lemonade Continued from E1 The second annual Lemon-
ade Day Greater Dallas was held earlier this month. "There will b e
l e monade
stands all across the city," Peggy Bessellieu, executive director of Lemonade Day Greater
Dallas, said in advance of the event. "Lemonade Day teaches youth about financial literacy
and the value of a dollar, and offers skills they need to become successful in all areas of their lives."
me do some research on the bees and from that research, I found out how incredibly important bees were to our
"What I've seen a lot of times when we sit down with these
kids, they want to do organic lemons and they want to have
freshraspberries inthere," Bessellieu said. "When we put the numbers to it, they realize they
would have to charge about $7 a glass to make a profit." For Mikaila, thebirth of BeeSweet started when she was 4
and her family encouraged her to make a product for a children's business competition and Lemonade Day in Austin, where shelives.
Then two events occurred
finance and operations back-
ground. Mikaila has had a bank account since she was in world." kindergarten. "Even when she was in kinA t th e s a m e t i me , h e r great-grandmother sent Mikai- dergarten when we started, la's family a 1940s cookbook, we tried to teach them good fiwhich included her special rec- nancial acumen, good business ipeforflaxseed lemonade. acumen and social responsibil"I decided to create aproduct ity," Theo Ulmer said. "The three things I do with that helped save the bees and use Great Granny Helen's rec- my money, even before I startipe as well," Mikaila said. ed with BeeSweet, was I give, "Mikaila took some license save and I spend," Mikaila by adjusting the formula to said. "So I give to organiza-
make it her own," said her faFor example, the kids have ther, Theo, whose title at his to learn how to determine their daughter's company is "Chief costs and budget for produc- Worker Bee." "She used the
tion expenses.
has been her dad, who has a
tions that help th e
h oney-
bees or to church. I also save for things that I may need in the future like college or fun original recipe as the basis for things that may cost more the lemonade." money and I have to save up to BeeSweet's flavors include get it, or I get to spend on fun mint, iced tea and " Prickly things for me, my friends or Pear." A ginger flavor was the my brother like arts and crafts idea ofher 7-year-old brother and toys." Jacob, the No. 1 salesman at Her company also donates a his sister's company. portion of its profits to organiMikaila's mother, D'Andra, zations fighting to protect bees. serves as "Chief Marketing One of the first lessons MiBee." kaila learned from her parents Mikaila is the first to admit was that to make lemonade, that she's still learning about you're going to have to spend finances. some money. "When I first started Bee"The first lesson is in order Sweet, I had a little trace of fi- to do anything relative to businance, but I didn't know exactly what it was," she said. "I had
ness, you have to first have
some money to start out, and if mentors along the way who you're going to spend $20, you "I got stung by two bees in helped me and I kept on learn- have to earn at least $21," Ulone week," Mikaila said. "I hat- ing, and I'm still learning right mer said. "The $1 is called a profit," ed the bees. I would freak out, now." but my parents — they made Her most influential mentor Mikaila chimed in.
that launched her brand.
en, yet men are the ones setting more guardrailslike limiting work hours, travel time and speaking events — to achieve it. Studies also show that even
Kate Patterson/The Washington Post
as their employment rates Keri Gohman, head of small-business banking at Capital One, led increase, women tend to a round table discussion with women business leaders at The take on more housework Washington Post's Women inBusiness live event. and family responsibilities, demonstrating how critical it is support networks (including a support team and sults, and have an even greater are to ensure roles at home technology) they can be better impact on our local and naand work can work seam- enabled to drive business re- tional economies. lessly and enable success. Aligning on roles and expectations with
s p ouses,
family and friends up front is also crucial — as starting and running a business requires a lot of flexibility, patience and support. Ask for help:Nine out of 10 women business owners do not have a mentor — a
I• +
huge lost opportunity! We should all seek out men-
r
tors to help guide and support us as we pursue our dreams and navigate the
inevitable ups and downs that come with starting,
owning and running a business. And the great news is there are some terrific resources (like Busin essAdvising.org) th a t can help you make those
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FRIDAY C LOS E
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
123 . 7 0
26.1
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% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
14.8 24.0 9.1 7.3 14.5
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9.7 7.8 20 . 3 -1.1 5.3
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FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1WK 1WK 1MO
-8.15
-11.0
-11.2
1 0 6.79
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-9.4
-14.9
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44.88
-4.24
-8.6
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70.25
-4.54
-6.1
-1.8
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27.6 8
-1.63
-5.6
-9.3
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34.5 9
-2.02
-5.5
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22.6 Cytosorbents Corp -43.1 Kandi Tech -36.0 Orexigen Thera -10.2 SandRidge Energy -4.7 Noranda Aluminum -32.4 EZchip Semicond -20.9 RadNet Inc 5.7 Contango 0&G -22.3 Synthesis EngySys 38.8 MakeMyTrip Ltd
s&P 500 % RTN Frankfurt DAX 1YR London FTSE100 -73.9 Hong Kong HangSeng -70.0 Paris C/jjc-40 ao Tokyo Mikkei 225
LAST 21 22.73 11447.03 6960.49 27822.28 4993.82 19732.92
FRL CHG +1.63 -112.79 -1 2.55 +535.73 -35.49 +162.68
FRL CHG WK MO QTR YTD +0.08% L L +3.1 0% -0 98'/ %16.74% -0.18% +6.01% +1.96% t17.87% -0.71% T L t16 . 88% +0.83% +13.08%
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1.98
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8.46
2.48
41.5
53.5
-35.4
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31.6
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26.39
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29.6
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7.70
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9.64
1.99
26.0
33.3
7.41
1.50
25.4
7.7
1.06
0.21
24.9
46.6
7.14
1.39
24.2
49.8
2.48
0.48
24.0
3.3
3.74
0.70
23.0
9.0
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
66.1 3
WYNN
TICKER
47.1 Pangaea Logistics PANL 9.2 Nttverra Environ NES - 27.6 Vascular Biogenics V B LT 95.1 Castle AM CAS 66.8 nTelos Holdings NTLS 0.0 Oncothyreon Inc ONTY 104.4 Blue Earth Inc BBLU 10.8 Revance Therapeutics RVNC 0.0 Carbylan Therapeutic CBYL 22.2 Signature Group Hldg RELY 41.5 Upland Software UPLD 34.3 GTx Inc GTXI 28.1 China Info Tech CNIT 9.6 Vaalco Energy EGY 21.7 eGain Corp EGAN
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Kohls Corp Wynn Resorts Ltd Moble Energy Inc Keurig GreenMountn KC Southern Antero Resources Hess Corp DuPont Marathon Oil Best Buy Co
GlobalMarkets
SOUTHAMERICA/CAHADA
ao /AFRICA ao EUROPE ao Amsterdam
-34.2 Brussels Madrid 57.1 Zurich -63.2 Milan -45.5 Johannesburg Stockholm
490.96 +0.27 -5.85 3674.05 1147.26 -7.95 91 09.92 +59.26 -75.13 23473.46 54028.18 +153.58 -5.53 161 6.48
+0 06'I L -0 16'/ -0.69% +0.65% -0.32% +0.29% -0.34%
4
+44. 26% L + 5.0 7% 4 +14. 4 8% L +3.2 5 %
+15.66% t1 1.83% L
i23.47% T
-20.4
-1.86 -0.42
-26.3
-41.9
2.32
-0.76
-24.7
-30.1
Seoul Composite 2106.50 Singapore Straits Times 3463.10 -11.5 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 7 30.00 -80.5 Taipei Taiex 9579.48 -24.3 Shanghai Composite 4308.69
EZCH
15.06
-4.53
-23.1
-23.5
-44.1
RDNT
6.86
-1.93
-22.0
-22.2
1z 5
Quotable
MCF
16.52
-4.36
-20.9
-25.1
-61.6
1.28
-0.31
-19.5
17.4
-15.8
"Amtrak takes full responsibility and deeply apologizes for our role in this tragic event."
17.93
-4.15
-18.8
-20.0
1.2
5.93
-2.25
KNDI
9.13
-3.45
OREX
5.01
SD
1.18
NOR
SYMX
-24.9
-33.6
-1.2
+8.55% +1 0.37%
ASIA
-2z5 -2z4 -2z1
CTSO
+10.05% +1.41%
-23.5
-13.83 + 7 . 32 + 37.50 -31.35 -69.62
-0.65% +0.21% +0.66% 0 33% -1 59%
+9.97% +2.91% 6 34% +2.92% +33.20%
— Joseph Boardman,Amtrak president and CEO, said about the accident that killed eight people and injured more than 200 this week
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
InsiderQ&A
Power play
Low natural gas, and resulting low power power that is reducing peak prices and sapping an important source of profits for prices helped bankrupt the electric-power generator Dynegy in the early part of this power generators. decade. Those market conditions also Everyone is getting rid of wholesale prompted electric utilities to abandon their so-called merchant power divisions, which, power plants but you are buying. Why? like Dynegy, sell power into wholesale The dynamic that existed over the past markets. To CEO Bob couple of years is that Flexon, that presented utilities really enjoyed the "Sometimesyou competitive space when the perfect chance to rebuild the company on natural gas was $8, $9, $10. have to buy inthe Then the cheap after it in 2012 it bottomed emerged from out at $1.95 or so. Investors bankruptcy in 2012. started really putting Flexon's latest move pressure on the integrated was to buy 21 power plants from Duke utilities to divest the merchant piece. You Energy and Equipower Resources in deals had more sellers than buyers, and so we that closed last month. Flexon is banking on were able to take our company from 9,000 rising power prices in the years ahead, megawatts to 26,000 megawatts in a despite increasing amounts of renewable relatively short time period, without a lot of
face offear."
Bob Flexes CEO, Dynegy Inc.
sources are reducing peak prices? Peak pricing can be a strong financial event but there are other ways of getting there. Why do you think power prices are Fortunately with gas plants you can quickly turn them on and off to meet demand. Our going to rise? Some of the cheapest generation in the gas generation assets have access to low country continues to be coal. Your power cost gas from the Marcellus and Utica prices are going to go Up over the course of (shale formations in Pennsylvania and this decade if for no other reason than you Ohio). What we've seen,even though gas are taking the lowest cost producer out. prices have really gotten soft, we're getting Our investment thesis around Dynegy it cheaper than the benchmark price and has been that the supply side is shrinking we're selling into markets that not everyone much faster than any new build coming into has that access. the market, and in some markets there is So even though we've seen some virtually no new build and that's going to decline in natural gas prices our profit from lead to higher energy prices. The steel in producing electricity at these gas plants has the ground is becoming more valuable. widened. competition. Sometimes you have to buy in the face of fear.
That's true even though natural gas prices remain very low, and renewable
Inten//et/t/ed by Jonathan Fahey. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, May 15, 2015
DOW 18,272.56 ~
i faSOaa ~ 5,048.29
4 474
+
S&P500 2,122.73
RUSSELL2000 1,243.95 ~
WILSHIRE 5000 M +82.89 22,402.17 ~
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
UNDAY D
R
ee an sma,
no a ssionBuick's ignition control module keeps failing
By Larry Printz Tribune News Service
For a number of years, Acura fielded the compact TSX, a tart-
By Brad Bergholdt
ed-up European Honda Accord that struck many consumers
Tribune News Service
a shorted ignition coil primary winding. This is a winding
Q
• My 2 0 0 2
Bu i c k of wire w ithin th e i gnition • LeSabre has 98,887 coil where each loop is sepmiles on it . I t s i g n ition arated by a very thin plastic
as being too small. Next in line
was the porky TL, which was also a tarted-up Honda Accord
control module is failing.
coating. Should the plastic insulation overheat and allow
but A m erican-made. Aside
Since November 2014 I
from the Acura faithful, many buyers found it too big. So Honda's upscale division ditched both and has now fieldedone sedan to replace
have replaced it t h r ee times. Can you please tell why my control module keeps failing'? It stops working without warning. • Bert, your ignition
the winding to touch itself, its electrical resistance will be
function and the engine
both succeedand fail.
less from end to end (imagine a Slinky with the paint wearing thin, allowing the metal coils to touch each oth• control module man- er). This causes an increase ages your V-6 LeSabre's in electrical current w hich three ignition coils. Each stresses the driver/transistor, ignition coil makes a spark causing it to fail. Testing the for two companion cyl- ignition coil winding resisinders in what's called a tance is fairly easy. The coils waste spark ignition sys- are reasonably inexpensive tem. Each time one of the so I would not hesitate to recoils fires, two spark plugs place one with even marginreceive a spark. One cylin- ally low resistance. der is on its compression If the r eplacement modstroke and the other is on ules are failing in a manner its exhaust stroke. During that prevents the engine from the following crankshaft starting, and the replacerevolution, they r e v erse ments are of good quality, I'd roles. It's a system that pre- ask your service tech to take dates the simple and more a very close look at the wirdirect coil-on-plug systems ing connector that attaches found on all new vehicles. to the module. Sometimes a My question is, when faulty terminal connection the ignition module fails, is jostled/cleaned during a does the vehicle not start disconnection/reconnection or does it just run poor- restoring operation, leading Iy? Tttrpically, when an ig- one to believe the component nition control module of was the problem, when it was this type fails it would be actually the connection. A one of the three drivers careful look at the module's (transistors) within it that power, ground and crankcontrols a specific igni- shaft position sensor circuits, tion coil giving up. Should using a lab scope or graphing this occur, the other two multi-meter as the vehicle is ignition coils would still driven, may indicate unsta-
Without a truly unique identity and feel to set it apart from
would run roughly on four
ble or intermittent readings, which are important for cor-
a less expensive Honda, its
cylinders instead of six. It
rect system operation. An-
customer will always be a value-oriented premium carbuyer,
is less likely for this type of ignition control module to fail in such a way that causes the loss of all ignition system function.
other possibility is one of the
A
them, the 2015
REVIEW T LX. This time, it seems, they have found their automotive
Courtesy Acura via Tribune News Service
The 2015 Acura TLX is a car that attracts attention thanks to its front-end styling.
Goldilocks: this one is just right. While the TLX's wheelbase
2015AcuraTN
is identical to the TL's, overall
length is almost four inches shorter, while also being slightly lower and an inch slimmer in
The V-6 engine and nine- ing assist, road departure mitigation, blind spot information, were potent and responsive, multi-view rear camera and a indulging my tendency to press rear cross traffic monitor. the throttle to the floor more And given its all-in price that than I shouldhave. tops out at slightly more than As is common on most mod- $40,000, you'd expect me to be ern premium products, the ravingabout it. driveline can be electronically I am and I am not. adjusted depending on your No question that this car is mood, offering Econ, Normal a great value, offering style, and Sport modes that change an upscale nameplate and an speed automatic transmission
Base price:$41,575 As tested:$45,720 Type:All-wheel-drive, fourdoorsedan Engine:3.5-liter SOHCV-6 Mileage:21 mpg city, 31 mpg highway
width.
The proportions are pleasing as well, Acura describing them as belonging to a red carpet athlete. With a taut surface
language and a presence that garners quite a bit of attention, the TLX looks sporting, at least
when looking up front. Styling TLX shares with other Honda is much more sedate out back, products, can it be something but that's sadly common these
days. The 2015 TLX comes in three flavors and it starts with the
base TLX, priced at $31,445 and powered by a 2.4-liter, 206-horsepower inline four-cylinder engine mated to an eightspeed dual clutch transmission. The mid-level TLX ,
w h i ch
starts at $35,320, replaces the four with a 290-horsepower 3.5-liter V-6 with a nine-speed
automatic transmission. Opting for Super-Handling All-Wheel Drive, rather than front-wheel
drive, will require ponying up $41,575. As you'd expect, these en-
gines power other Honda models, but boast more juice than their lesser stablemates. Still,
given all the family bits the
the TLX's throttle response,
chassis tuningand shifting. more than a Honda Accord on While the TLX has superior steroids and wearing designer moves to ordinary premium duds? front-drive sedans, it's not quite Well, let's c onsider t h at up to the feel and agility of a Acura is employing the latest true German rear-driver. It will in transmission technology, do all that you ask of it when along with Super-Handling the road twists, however, offerAll-Wheel Drive, to prove that ing a nicely balanced ride, with the automaker is serious about a firm feel that's countered by a fielding a credible performance trifling amount ofbody roll. luxury sedan. Certainly using The cabin i s a t t ractively all-wheel drive helps push that trimmed, and feels like apremipoint. Nevertheless, the du- um product rather than a true al-clutch employs a torque con- luxury car. There's good visibilverter like a traditional auto- ity in all directions, and kudos matic transmission and comes to the designers for not sacrificonly with the smaller engine. ing safety for style. While that's disappointing, Speaking of safety, Acura most drivers will be pleased to offers a boatload of it, includopt for a TLX like the test car: a ing adaptive cruise control, top-of-the-line, fully loaded rig collision mitigation braking, that proved very accomplished forward collision warning, lane at its assigned task. departure warning, lane keep-
'
•
•
unique bits that separate the driving experience from that of its lesser Honda brothers. But
somehow, when it all comes together, this is very nice premium sedan that wins over your brain, not your heart. For while the TLX is a very
good car, far better than the overstuffed TL it replaces, it's not a better car than the TSX. And that's where the under-
lying Honda DNA allows it to
not a true high-end customer.
That renders the TLX an ideal car forthose who are rational, rather than passionate, about
their rides.
•
spark plug wires, which contain high voltage, is accidentally routed near the module's
The common cause of one
wiring, and is allowing spark to hop over and zap the mod-
driver/transistor failing is
ule's tender electronics.
•
•
4•
s
attractive price. It also offers
4
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•
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•
•
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45 Lm l r"i~
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Reach more than 65,000 adult readers in the official Tour of Homes™ Guide -
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ADVERTISING DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17
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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion IJ • ' '
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he most surprising event of this political era is what hasn't
happened. The world has not turned left. Given the financial crisis, widening inequality, the unpopularity of the right's stances on social issues and immigration, you would have thought that progressive parties would be cruising from win to win. But, instead, right-leaning parties are doing well. In the United States,
Republicans control both houses of Congress. In Israel, the Likud Party led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pulled off a surprising win in an election that was at least partly about economic policy. In Britain,
the Conservative Party led by Prime Minister David Cameron won a par-
liamentary majority. What's going on here?
This was probably
Well, there are some issues in each election specific to that country,
but there are a fewbroader trends to be observed. The first is that the
cutting-edge, progressive economic arguments do not seem to be swaying voters. Over the past fewyears, left-ofcenter economic policy hasmo ved from opportunity progressivism to redistributional progressivism. Opportunity progressivism is associated
membranes to recycle wastewater that is then sent underground to help replenish the aree's aquifers in aptly named Fountain Valley, California.
with Bill Clinton and Tony Blair in the 1990s and Mayor Rahm Emanuel
of Chicago today. This tendency actively uses government power to give peopleaccessto m arkets,through support for community colleges, infrastructure and training programs
• Treated wastewater is anideathat might be too hardto swallow, but drought-strickenstatesareeagerto test it, or arealreadydoing that
and the like, but it doesn't interfere that much in the market, and it hesitates before raising taxes. This ten-
dency has been politically successful. Redistributional progressivism more aggressively raises taxes to shift money down the income scale, opposestradetreatiesand meddles
As California scrambles for ways to cope with its crippling FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif.drought and the mandatory ater spilled out water restrictions imposed last of a spigot, spar- month by Gov. Jerry Brown, an klingly c l ear, array of ideas that were long into a p l astic dismissed as too controversial, c up. Just 4 5 expensive or unpleasant are minutes earlier, getting a second look. One is to it was effluent, piped over from conserve more water; another Orange County's wastewa- is to turn nearby and abundant ter treatment plant next door. sources of water, such as the At a specialized plant, it then Pacific Ocean, into drinking went through several stages of water through desalination. purification that left it cleaner Yet another is to recycle the than anything that flows out w ater Californians have al of a home faucet or comes in a ready used. And therein lies a brand-name bottle. marketing challenge that can "It's stripped down to the H, 2 be greater than the technologiand 0," said Mike Markus, the cal one. general manager of the county Water recycling is common water district. He was not exag- for such uses as irrigation; gerating. Without the minerals purple pipes in many Califorthat give most cities' supply a nia towns deliver water to golf distinctive flavor, this w ater courses, zoos and farms. The
more in the marketplace. This ten-
dency has won elections in Massachusetts (Elizabeth Warren) and New York City (Bill de Blasio) but not in many other places. Ed Balls, the No. 2 figure in the Labour Party in Britain, co-led the group from the
Center for American Progress that wrote the most influential statement
of modern progressivism, a report on "inclusive prosperity." Balls could not even retain his own parliamentary seat in the last election.
The conservative victories probably have more to do with the public's skepticism about the left than with any enthusiasm toward the
right. Still, there are a few things that center-right parties have done
successfully. First, they have loudly (and sometimes offensively) championed national identity. In this era of global-
By John Schwartz
District, which serves 17 cities
New York Times News Service
in southwestern Los Angeles
tastes of nothing.
West Basin Municipal Water
County, produces five types of "designer" water for such uses
as irrigation and in cooling towers andboilers. At a more grassroots level, activists encourage
Californians to save "gray water" frombathroom sinks, showers, tubs and washing machines to water plants and gardens. Enticing people to drink recycled water, however, requires getting past what experts call the "yuck" factor. Efforts in the 1990s to develop water reuse
in San Diego and Los Angeleswere beaten back by activists who denounced what they called, devastatingly, "toilet to
tap." Los Angeles built a $55 million purification plant in the
1990s but never used it to produce drinking water; the water goes to irrigation instead. See Tap/F6
ization, voters are rewarding candi-
Thinkstock
dates who believe in their country's exceptionalism. Second, they havebeenbasically sensible on fiscal policy. After the financial crisis, there was a big debate
Y This is cleaned water in a holding tank at Orange County's purification plant. Photos by Stuart Palley/ New York Times News Service
u i«uuuul l u u 0
over how much governmentsshould
go into debt to stimulate growth. The two nations most associated with the "austerity" school — those who were
suspicious of debt-based stimuluswere Germany and Britain. This will not settle the debate, but these two
nations now have some of the strongest economies in Europe, and their political leaders are in good shape. Third, these leaders did not over-
r
read their mandate. Cameron in Brit-
ain promised to cut the size of government,and hedid,from 45.7per-
gl)' '
cent of GDP in 2010 to 40.7 percent
today, according to The Economist. The number of public-sector jobs there has gone down by 1 million. But he made these cuts without going overboard. Public satisfaction with government services has gone up. Globally, voters are disillusioned with large public institutions. They seem to want to reassert local control
and their own particular nationalism (Scottish or anything else). But they also seem to want a slightly smaller
public sector, strong welfare state reform and more open and vibrant labor markets as a path to prosperity.
For some reason, U.S. politicians are fleeing from this profile, Hillary Clinton to the further left and Repub-
licans to the right. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.
' F/
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
c usion zone nee ss u IFS
BNLC Q H55 . —
UME oF he Bend City Council is scheduled to consider a pro-
L
DMTH.
posal this week to expand the city's civil exclusion
,
ie,
zone to the downtown. Before the council acts, it F
should first ensure the zone has been used properly in the past. Exdusion zones allow police to exclude individuals from an area without a conviction. The zones have been challenged in some cities by thosewho argue they go too far in restricting individual rights in an attempt to improve public safety. Bend has an exclusion zone that indudes all the city parks, Riverfront Plaza and the adjoining breezeway. Bend police can bar an individual from that zone for 90 days if he is cited or arrested within the zone for a variety of misdemeanors and felonies. Bend's exclusion does allow an
should be used sparingly, with discretion and based on illegal behavior. Since 2012, he said it has been used 156 times. W hat happened inthose 156cases?The councilshould feelcomfortable with how it was used. Whenwe asked Deschutes County District Attorney John Hummel if he favored the expansion of the exdusion zone, he said he did, but he will monitor how it will be used. He did not know howit has beenused. There's another reason to ask questions about expanding the zone. Porter said some chronic ofappeal. Aperson can appealtheban fendersdiscovered they could move just as he can challenge the original downtown once they were exduded citation or arrest. The ban is sus- from the parks. The exclusion zone pended during an appeal moved the problem. So if the zone The change the council will con- is expanded to downtown, where sider would extendthe existingzone would the problem be moved to throughout most of downtown. next? Bend'sdowntown isa greatplace Bend Police Chief Jim Porter told the council recently that the exclu- to eat, shop and just to be. We want sion zone in the parks was "very to see it continue to thrive. But it effective" in helping the police man- won't help if Bend earns a reputaage chronic offenders. He said it tion for unreasonable exclusions.
et our a otsin t
f you haven't voted in the Tuesday, May 19, election, time's a-wastin'. Ballots must be at the county derk's office by 8 o'clockthat night. Mailingis nolonger an option. This election has lacked the fire of the one last November, to be sure. Most candidates in most districts are running unopposed: It's difficult to generate excitement about one's race for a seat on the Bend-La Bne Schools board of directors, for example, when there's virtually no chance any of those on the ballot will lose. And, in smaller water, sanitation and road districts, some races have no candidates at all. That doesn't make the election unimportant, of course. If you live at Black Butte Ranch, there's a local-option levy on the ballot to fund fire services at their current level. There are contested seats for the Central Oregon Community College board, the Bend, La Pine and Crook County park and recreation districts boards, and school districts in Redmond, Sisters and Jefferson County. The issues are different in each, but with contested seats voters can make changesin the way their school and park boards do business simplyby casting their votes. Here are The Bulletin's editorial endorsements in some contested races:
Crook County Crook County Park &Recreation District: Director, Position Kambak
4,
Kim
Deschutes County Bend Park & Recreation District: Director, Position 1, Brady Fuller Black Butte Ranch Service District local option levy:Yes Central Oregon Community
College: Director, Zone 5, Charley Miller La Pine Park & R ecreation District: Director, Position 4, Gary Gordon; Director, Position 5, Tobias Wilson Redmond School District: Director, Position 1, Rhonda Etnire; Director, Position4, Jane Allen; Director, Position 5, John Land Sisters School District: Director, Position 2, Lachlan Leaver; Director, Position 4, Stephen
King Jefferson County JeffersonCounty School Board: Director, Position 4, Courtney Snead; Director, Position 5, Stanley Ray Sullivan
DfED
,.— ;:,;., ~~ol ;"-"I', YEcttl
oo,
r eservin ir r o r o n or u ure enera ions By Knute Buehler IN MY VIEW atty and I met in medical school in Baltimore. After completing aks and fish. In addition, PacifiCorp our training in Portland, we would relocate the existing power chose to move to Bend to start our substation and turn over the propcareersand our family.Both have erty nearby to make room for develgrown over the 20 years we have opment, much-needed infill housing lived here. Many will agree Bend is a and park renovation. special place with a unique quality of As a doctor, I listen to concerns, life. I believe Bend is the best place to gather data and then go to work live, work and play and Mirror Pond solving the problem. The Mirror is the heart of our community. My Pond project is a complex issue,
p
ate to pass the bill, which would help fund the project. I met with 'Ibmalo Irrigation Dis-
trict to develop more options and continue to seek input from community
leaders, local citizens and business owners who will be impacted by the Mirror Pond project. As someone
who is passionate about preserving Bend's specialnatural resources, I am excited to work with such a diverse
coalition to restore a more natural and healthier flow to the Deschutes and we enjoyedMunch and Music been discussed for years. I am com- River by transforming two aging in the summertime. These days we mitted to continuing conversations dams. Both the Mirror Pond project enjoy walking our dogs and paddle- with all sectors of our community to and now the potential removal of boarding around Mirror Pond. Bend move Mirror Pond from 20th centu- Steidl dam present once-in-a-genfamilies have enjoyed Mirror Pond ry river management to 21st century eration opportunities for public and kids played at the Harmonboat park,
with a lot of v ariables that have
for more than 100 years, which is
innovation. The Bend Park and Recreation District, city of Bend and Deschutes
why it is so important that we preserve it for generations to come. The Mirror Pond project presents
a long-lasting vision for our com-
private economic development, im-
provement of existing parks and creation of new open spaces.
County all support the Mirror Pond
The Mirror Pond project is the re-
project and traveled to Salem to tes-
sult of a broad collaborative process and is supported by a diverse coali-
tify in support of this legislation. Thanks to the strong community tion of Bend residents, elected offifor our children and grandchildren support, the Rural C ommunities cials and local organizations. While while preserving an iconic symbol House Committee unanimously vot- there is more work to be done, I am of our city. ed for the bill and sent it to the Joint continuously impressed and proud The original preferred plan was Ways and Means Committee with a of our community for working todeveloped by the Mirror Pond Ad- recommendation to pass. gether on such important issues. Hoc Committee. It proposed reMirror Pond is special not only to Together we have come up with moving the Mirror Pond dam and Bend residents. Anyone who visits a solution that will create a more replacing it with a m ore natural friends and families or vacations free-flowing Deschutes River, open structure that would better prevent here knows Mirror Pond isn't just a up andimprove our parksand mainsilt build-up and still maintain cur- pretty label on good beer. We have tain Mirror Pond for Bend families rent water levels. Unlike the existing earned interest and gained bipar- for the next 100 years. Mirror Pond dam, the new structure tisan support from Democrats and State Rep. Knute Buehler, is a would allow passage for both kay- Republicans in the House and SenRepublican representing Bend. munity — a vision that will pass on a better Bend and healthier river
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Boo svs. a a mes: De atera esatRut ers By Joe Noceta
letic department has consistently
New York Times News Service
run large deficits; indeed, since the
t
t's not exactly a secret that bigtime college sports often distort
priorities on university campuses. But every once in a while, something bursts into public view to put those priorities in glaring relief.
2005-06 academic year, deficits have exceeded $20 million a year. In the last academic year, Rutgers athletics
generated $40.3 million in revenue but spent $76.7 million, leaving a deficit of more than $36 million. In other
words, revenue barely covered half taking place at Rutgers University. the department's expenses. The dispute pits facultymembers who And how did the university cover A recent example is a fight that is
want to restrain the athletic depart-
this shortfall'? Partly, it used its own
Big East Conference. But, with the exception of women's basketball, its
Ten, perhaps the wealthiest conference in the country. With football
ment's out-of-control costs against funds, to the tune of $26 million last some powerful alumni who want the year, money that might have gone to Rutgers athletic department to spend professors' salaries or otheracademeven more money to better compete ic needs. It also took it out of the hide in its new conference, the Big Ten. of the students themselves, who have Guess who's likely to win? been assessed steadily rising fees to Although Rutgers is said to have help cover the athletic department's played the first U.S. college football deficit. Last year, fees that went to game — against Princeton, in 1869 athletics amounted to $10 million. — it has never been an athletic powA few years ago, in an effort to reerhouse. In the 1990s, yearning to join lieve the financial pressure, Rutgers the elite, Rutgers became part of the accepted an invitation to join the Big overall athletic performance has gen- powers Ohio State and Michigan erally remained mediocre. State, the Big Ten not only has lucraWhat's more, the Rutgers ath-
tive deals with ABC and ESPN but
IN MY VIEW
The library, he noted, recently had would give Rutgers $25 million in tax its budget cut by more than $500,000. credits for i n frastructure projects, also has its own TV network. Thanks Meanwhile, Kyle Flood, the football clearly relishes the idea of Rutgers beto those TV deals, last year the Big coach, is getting a $200,000 raise next coming, as he puts it, "Big Ten-ready." Ten paid out some $27 million to its 11 year, takinghis salaryto $1.25million. So do other alumni, including Greg qualifying universities. In late March, the Rutgers faculty Brown, the chairman of the Rutgers Yet even with the Big Ten's money, senate approved, by a wide margin, Board of Governors. "We weren't interested in joining the Rutgers athletic department is a report written by its Budget and Fiprojecting deficits at least through the nance Committee that called on the the Big Ten," Brown said after one 2021-22. Indeed, according to figures athletic department to eliminate its board meeting. "We were interested compiled by a faculty committee, losses within fiveyears; to end the use in competing and winning in the Big Rutgers athletics is projecting a total of student fees to cover the athletic Ten." deficit of $183 million between now budget; and to treat the use of discreAnd if that requires spending monand2022. tionary funds as loans. ey, well, that's what the big boys do. You can see, of course, why this Almost immediately afterward, a Responds Killingsworth: "The would infuriate faculty memberspowerful Rutgers alumnus, state Sen. mantra has always been that if we or, for that matter, anyone who cares Raymond Lesniak, commissioned spend enough money, we'll have good about academics. Like most state a study aimed at showing that Rut- teams,and generate more revenue. schools, Rutgers has seen its state fi- gers needed to invest more in ath- It's never happened." nancing shrink drastically over the letics, not less. Why? One reason is Rutgers is an enormous public inpast decade, while tuition and fees the supposed economic benefits that stitution, with an annual budget of have been going up. come with asuccessful sports pro- $3.6 billion. It is responsible for edu"At the school of arts and sciences," gram. Another rationale is that now cating 65,000 students. Why isn't that said Mark Killingsworth, a Rutgers that Rutgers is in the Big Ten, it will more important that competing in the economics professor who has been a have to step up its game to competeBig Ten? leading voice against the athletic de- which, of course, would require lavish Why does the tail always wag the partment's costs, "we have been told facilities, just like those at Ohio State dog. that wecan hire one person for every and Michigan. — Joe Nocerais a columnist two who leave." Lesniak, who just filed a bill that for The New Yorh Times.
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
.wa
•
ay 8 marked the end of World
M
War IIin Europe 70 years ago—a horrific conflictthat is still fought over by historians. More than 60 million people perished — some 50 million of them in
VICTOR
DAVIS HANSON
Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union
and China.
The bitter
ri iant war in Hitler in June 1941. Before the sur-
and bombed, England would be unconquerable. Once the United States entered the war after the attack on Pearl
multaneous bombing campaigns against Germany and Japan while conducting surface and submarine campaigns against all of the Axis powers. At the same time, the U.S. supplied
Harbor, the Axis cause was largely doomed. America mobilized 12 million soldiers — about the same num- the Soviet Union with 400,000 heavy
backdrop to 2016 By Frank Bruni New Yorh Times News Service
ber as did the Soviet Union, despite
trucks, 2,000 locomotives, 11,000
having a population of about 40 milhad supplied Germany with sub- lion fewer citizens. haps 20 million of its own citizens stantial fuel, food and metals to help American war production proved in purges, exiles, collectivizations, it bomb Great Britain into near sub- astonishing. At the huge Willow forced famines and show t r i als. mission. For all practical purposes, Run plant in Michigan, the greatest Then it lost an estimated 25 million Russia had been Nazi Germany's generation turned out a B-24 heavy soldiers and civilians to the German most useful ally. bomber every hour. One shipyard army on the Eastern Front. Hitler's Duplicitous Soviet dictator Josef could mass-produce an ocean-going Germany bylate 1942 had occupied Stalin at one time or another both Liberty merchant ship from scratch almost 1 million square miles of So- fought against and followed nonag- in a week. viet ground. gression arrangements with every In four years, the United States The Soviet Red Army would Axis power — Germany, Italy and produced more airplanes than all eventually be responsible for three- Japan. In contrast, the United States of the other major war powers comquarters of Germany's WWII casu- was the only major power of the war bined. Germany, Japan, Italy and alties, but at a cost of approximately that did not start fighting until it the Soviet Union could not build a 9 million dead of its own combat- was directly attacked. successful four-engine heavy bombants. Nevertheless, the Allied defeat The war in Europe was not just er. America, in contrast, produced of the Axis powers is more compli- won with Soviet blood. When World 34,000 excellent B-17s, B-24s and
railcars and billions of dollars worth of planes, tanks, food, clothing and strategic resources. By 1943-44, the U.S. also supplied about 20 percent of
new findings daily. Which Republican is leading in New Hamp-
Britain's munitions.
shire? How do voters feel, at any
If the measure of wartime success is defined by quickly defeating and
evanescent moment, about Hillary
The prewar Soviet state in the 1920s and 1930s had killed per-
prise German invasion, the Soviets
humiliating enemies at the least cost
in blood and treasure, then America waged a brilliant war. Of the major powers, only America's homeland was not systematically bombed. It was never invaded. Although its 400,000 fatalities were
a terrible cost of victory, the United States lost the smallest percentage of
tionist and the Soviet Union collab-
By 1944, the new U.S. Navy had become the largest in the history of civilization at more than 6,000 ships. ItsB-29 heavy bomber program and
tang fighter, Gato-dass submarines, Essex-class aircraftcarriers and Io-
Nazi Empire that ranged from the Arctic Circle to the Sahara desert. British Prime M i n ister W i nston Churchill's s t eadfast l e adership, Britain's superb air force and its in-
Manhattan Project efforts togeth-
America did not win World War II
domitable Royal Navy ensured that
Africa, Italy and Western Europe.
only after it was double-crossed by even when outnumbered, isolated
The United States staged two si-
his eastern rear thus secure, Hitler then would be free to fight a onefront war in the West against the European democracies. The Soviet Union entered the war
and downs that a campaign endures
and as crucial to the outcome of the election as the clash of personalities that commands the lion's share of our attention.
It's a mood of overarching uncer-
so ingrained at this point that we tend to overlook it. For a stunningly long period now, American voters have been pessi-
heroic sacrifice of the Soviet soldier. World War II started largely bepartner up to divide Poland. With
try that's larger than any contender, strangely resistant to the sorts of ups
By late 1944, the American Ml rifle, B-29 heavy bomber, P-51 Mus-
B-29s.
1941 alone faced down the huge
Clinton? But there's a climate in the coun-
tainty and profound anxiety. And it's
War II started, America was isola-
cause the Soviet Union had assured Hitler that the two powers could
idential race is feverish, with
its population of any major power.
cated than just the monumental and
orationist. After the fall of France in June 1940, Great Britain until June
lready the polling for the pres-
wa-class battleships were the best
w eaponsoftheirclass.
er cost more $50 billion in today's alone. But without the United States, dollars. the war against Axis fascism would America sent troops through- have been lost. out the Pacific islands and to North — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the HooverInstitution, Stanford University.
Higher minimum wage isn't best solution
mistic about the country's futureand their own. They sense that both
at home and abroad, we have lost ground and keep losing more. And the presidency might well be determined not by any candidate's fine-tuned calibration on hot-button
issues or by cunning electoral arithmetic. It might hinge on eloquence, boldness and abigger picture. If one of the aspirants can give credible voice to Americans' insecurity and trace a believable path out of it, he or she will
almost certainlybe victorious. In a column a year ago, I noted that for asolid decade, the percentage of Americans who said that the United
By Davld Neumark
humans have not contributed to cli- families very welL Research estabmate change, and that supply-side lishes that it provides generous goveconomics did not c ontribute to ernment subsidies to these families' massive budget deficits. The most labor market earnings and it leads comprehensive survey of minimum more people to work, which probawage studies, which I c onducted bly explains its bipartisan support.
Los Ange(es Times
he slogans are everywhere:
T One Job Should Be Enough. Worsening income inequality and Fight for 15; People Not Profits;
States was on the wrongtrack had exceeded thepercentage who saidthat
it was on the right track, according to polling by NBC News and The Wall Street Journal. I wondered about a
the persistence of poverty have spurred a movement to raise the
with William Wascher of the Fed-
Some decry the EITC as "corporate
change in the very psychology and identity of a country once famous for
eral Reserve System, found that
minimum wage, at both the nation-
two-thirds of studies point to nega-
welfare," because the labor market entry it encourages pushes down
its sunniness about tomorrows. Since then the NBC News/Wall
al and state levels. Some West Coast cities have already boosted their minimum wage to $15, or more than double the federal standard. And Los Angeles and others are now considering a similarly aggressive move. The labor market problems that these higher minimum wages are in-
tive employment effects, as do more market wages. But that is precisethan 80percentofthe more credible ly why it increases employment. If studies. it did not lower wages, employers Another reason tobewaryofrais- would not hire additional workers, ing the minimum wage is that mod- and those not hired would be more est job loss overall might mask steep- dependent on public programs. er job loss among the least skilled. Of course we could still do more. Economists use the phrase "labor-la- We couldmake the EITC more genbor substitution" to describe employ- erous, including increasing it for ers responding to a higher minimum those without children who are eliwagebyreplacingtheir lowest-skilled gible only for minuscule payments. workers with higher-skilled workers, More radically, we might consider whom they are more willing to hire at whether all l ow-income families, the higher minimum. irrespective of employment, should Based on my research, I think it receivemore general income supis likely that a $15 minimum wage port in the form of direct cash payin Los Angeles will lead some teen- ments, what one might think of as a agers currently focused on their ed- "public dividend" from the extraorucation to take part-time jobs at the dinary productivity of the U.S. econnew, higher minimum and displace omy that has permitted those at the low-skilled workers from the jobs top to earn dramatically increasing they now hold. That seems like a bad incomes while incomes at the botoutcome. tom have stagnated. If we really want to help lowThese alternative policies would skilled workers, we need to recog- have to be financed by higher taxnize that the solutions that actual- es, but that's a good thing. Redistrily work are expensive, difficult to bution through taxes is paid for by achieve or both. those with the highest incomes. In Guaranteeing a minimally accept- contrast, higher minimum wages able standard of living for those who are paid for by those who happen work entails redistribution of some to own businesses in low-wage inkind. Minimum wage is one form of dustries, and the consumers of the redistribution — although we don't products of those industries, who always think of it as such — but it's a are more likely to be poor.
tended to fix are very real. But would
a higher wage floor address the underlying problems? A large body of research shows that the answer is
almost certainly no, and that there are better solutions, although these
solutions are harder for policymakers to embrace. There are several reasons work-
ers' wages are currently too low to provide what many view as an acceptable standard of living. One big factor is that technological changes have increased the value of higher-skilled workers and reduced the value of lower-skilled workers. Glo-
wages rather than low family incomes. And many minimum-wage workers are not poor or even in low-income families; nearly a quarter are teenagers who will eventu-
ally find better-paid jobs. Moreover, balization, meanwhile, has brought most poor families have no workers many l o wer-skilled A m erican at all. workers into greater competition As a result, for every $5 in higher with their counterparts in other wages that a higher minimum wage countries. imposes on employers, about $1 goes Simply requiring employers to to poor families, whereas roughly pay $15 won't provide much ballast twice as much goes to families with against these market forces. In fact, incomes above the median. data indicate that minimum wages Higher minimum wages also are ineffective at delivering bene- reduce employment for the leastfits to poor or low-income families, skilled workers. Certainly not every blunt instrument. Using the tax sysand that many of the benefits flow one of the hundreds of studies on the tem is clearly better. to higher-income families. That's topic confirms this conclusion. But The Earned Income Tax Credbecause minimum wages target low there are also studies claiming that it, for instance, targets low-income
— David Neurnarh is Chancellor's Professor of Economics and director, Center for Economics & Public Policy, at the University of California, Irvine.
Street Journal poll has asked the right track/wrong track question another 10times, and"wrongtrack" has continued to prevail without interruption and by substantial margins. The
split as of two weeks ago was 62 percent to 28 percent. Some projections validate voters'
gloom. In The Washington Post recently, Robert Samuelson observed
that although the U.S. economy expanded at an average annual rate of 4 percent from 1950 to 1973, it's pre-
dicted to grow 2.1 percent annually over the next decade. The 6 percent increases that weren't uncommon in
the 1990s are apparently long gone. "We can't do much about this," Samuelson wrote, citing the retire-
ment of baby boomers and the spread of new technologies that could sideline workers.
The latter dynamic is the focus of a new book, "Rise of the Robots," that's about as scary as the title sug-
gests. It's not science fiction, but rather a vision (almost) of economic Armageddon. Its author, Martin Ford, invokes ro-
bots as a metaphor for the technological innovations, including better soft-
ware and sophisticated algorithms, that have or will put machines in jobs once held by people. Computers, he notes, can now perform legal,pharmaceutical and medical work. They can produce journalism. In a conversation Tuesday, he told me: "If you automate all of these jobs,
and technology drives down wages, then consumers have less purchasing
Public pensions should be cut slowly, starting now Megan McArdle
already earned, and governments
Bloomberg News
shouldn't do this either. But private
w
hat do states owe workers?
That's a question we're going to be asking a lot as states wrestle with growing pension obligations that weren't properly funded. Illinois courts have just ruled that the state's attempt to cur-
tail its pension benefits cannot go forward. The Chicago Tribune boils it down: "In its ruling, the court restated that state worker retirement benefits that are promised on the
first day of work cannot be later reduced during their term of employment, only increased." Oregon courts made a similar ruling. That probably sounds reasonable to a lot of readers; after all, employ-
public pensions used lax account- are government workersspecial'? ing standards to hand out generous And why should new workers have
employers can tell you that the pen- benefits far in excess of what their sion fund is closed and you won't accrued investments will support. It's fair enough to say that workaccrue any further benefits, or that benefits accrued in the future will be ers aren't entitled to a certain benesmaller. Should governments be able fit when they haven't done the work to do this, too? yet. But many of those workers took There are a few issues that we thosejobs decades ago in theexpecneed to examine here. The first is tation that they would accrue those what, exactly, we owe to workers benefits in the future. This is espewho have been at it a long time. Pen- cially true for state and local worksions are another form of compen- ers, who frequently seek the job sation, like health care benefits or expressly for the purpose of obtainwages. But they're a strange form ing that lifetime security. Once they of compensation, because they're have essentially invested their work so heavily back-loaded. That can lives for the payoff of future benefits, have benefits for both employer and it does seem unfair to go to them at employee (for example, in reducing age 48, when they can't realisticalturnover). But it also has very high ly get a whole new career, and say costs. They reduce the mobility of "Guess what?" workers and can make a midcareer On the otherhand, one could job loss catastrophic. Meanwhile, point out that this sort of unfair-
ers shouldn't be allowed to renege on pay promises (except in bankruptcy). But Jane the Actuary, a frequent commenter on the religion they create enormous difficulties for website Patheos.com, argues that any employer who sees a shortfall in what should actually be at stake is the pension just when the employer not benefits that have already been itself has fallen on hard times — as accrued for past work, but those that is apt to happen during a bad receswill be earned in exchange for fu- sion. The problems are even worse ture work. Private employers are not for states and local governments allowed to take back benefits you than for businesses. Many of the
to bear all the burden of pension
cuts,as frequently happens when benefitsare kept for older workers?
Or taxpayers have to give up on needed services now because politicians 30 years ago were grossly irresponsible'? This is an especially pressing question as we see more big govern-
American moment is over.
The title of a gathering of professors, politicians and writers at the Wilson Center in Washington, D.C., last week asked: "Is the Unit-
ed Statesata Crossroads?" Specific panels were to mull related questions:
"America's Decline: Myth or Reali-
ty?" and "Is the United States Still the 'Indispensable Nation"?"
This sense of American drift, of American sputtering, informs Pres-
cannot be treated as an infinite re-
ident Barack Obama's current push
source; if you try to raise too much money off them to make good on de-
for a sweeping trade agreement and his support for energy exploration, including drilling in the Atlantic and the Arctic. He's after some economic juice.
cades-old promises, then taxpayers
will flee, making the problem worse. You are already starting to see some version of this in upstate New York,
It will inform the 2016 presidential
as the taxes needed to pay old-age benefits chase workers and firms
election, too. Politicians and voters will wrangle in the foreground over
to regions that are less, er, taxing.
taxes, the minimum wage, student
If governments cannot adjust their world of work. People that age lose benefits in a more gradual manner, businesses that go south because we are going to end up with more the economy changed,or they get catastrophic defaults on pension obdownsized by a company that's hit a ligations. And that doesn't seem fair efits cut when the company replaces the pension plan with a 401(k). Why
economic spiral." Lead to? We've known ample spiraling already, and the context for Americans'apprehensions is a flourishing debate about whether the
pay their pension bills. Taxpayers
ments, such as Detroit's, unable to
ness is not exactly unknown in the
rocky patch, or see their future ben-
power, which can lead to a downward
to anyone. — Megan McArdle is a columnist
for Bloomberg.
debt, immigration. But in the backgroundlooms a crisis ofconfidence that threatens to become the new
Americanway. Let' shope for a candidate with the vision and courage to tackle that. — Frank Bruni is a columnist for The New Yorh Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended May10 HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "14th Deadly Sin" by James Patterson andMaxine Paetro (Little, Brown) 2. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead) 3. "All the Light WeCannot See" by Anthony Doerr (Scrib-
ner)
4. "Memory Man" by David Baldacci (GrandCentral) 5."Gathering Prey" by John Sandford (Putnam) 6. "The Liar" by NoraRoberts (Putnam) 7. "Death Wears aBeauty Mask" by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon 8 Schuster) 8. "The BoneTree" by Greg lles (Morrow) 9. "A GodinRuins"by Kate Atkinson (Little, Brown) 10. "Rock with Wings" by Anne Hillerman (Harper) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Wright Brothers" by David McCullough (Simon 8 Schuster) 2. "Clinton Cash" by Peter Schweizer (Harper) 3. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed) 4. "Hope" by AmandaBerry and Gina DeJesus(Viking) 5. "American Wife" by Taya Kyle (Morrow) 6. "Legends & Lies" by Bill O'Reilly and David Fisher (Holt) 7."The Bookof Joan" by Melissa Rivers (CrownArchetype) 8. "And the GoodNewsIs" by Dana Perino (Hachette/ Twelve) 9. "It's a Long Story" by Willie Nelson (Little, Brown) 10. "The Road toCharacter" by David Brooks (Random) — Tribune NewsService
The weird side of baseball history
"Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future" by Ashlee Vance (Ecco, 392 pgs., $28.99) By Dwight Garner New York TimesNews Service
"We've become a nation of indoor cats," Dave Eggers wrote in "A Hologram for the King" (2012), his existential
By David L. Ulin Los Angeles Times
"The League of Outsider Baseball: An Illustrated History of Baseball's Forgotten Heroes"
novel about an American do-
ing IT work in the Saudi Arabian desert. "A nation of doubt-
by Gary Cierdkowski
(Touchstone, 234 pgs., $25)
ers, worriers, overthinkers."
Ashlee Vance, in his new biography of celebrity industrialist Elon Musk, delivers a
similar notion of the deflating American soul. An early Facebook engineer tells Vance, "The best minds of my generation are thinking about how New YorkTimes News Service file photo to make people click ads." The The latest biography of Elon Musk, "Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future," author quotes venture capi- is the first one written with the entrepreneur's cooperation. talist Peter Thiel: "We wanted
flying cars, instead we got 140 characters." veer toward hagiography and a woman want a week? Maybe If Silicon Valley was hold- the diction of news releas- 10 hours?" ing out for a hero after Steve es. After noting that Musk's Other eye-popping details, Jobs' death, a disrupter in grand vision is to colonize not all of them previously rechief, it has found a brawny Mars, for example, Vance ported, are flecked atop this one in Musk. This South Afri-
writes:
"He's the possessed genius tor and engineer is the animat- on the grandest quest anyone ing force behind companies has ever concocted. He's less (Tesla, SpaceX, SolarCity) that a CEO chasing riches than a have made startling advances general marshaling troops to in non-indoor-cat arenas: elec- secure victory. Where Mark tric cars, space exploration Zuckerberg wants to help and solar energy. He is all of you share baby photos, Musk can-born entrepreneur, inven-
43.
wants to ... well ... save the
Musk is about as close as we human race from self-imposed have, circa 2015, to early inor accidental annihilation." As dustrial titans such as Henry the Beast from "X-Men" likes Ford, Andrew Carnegie and to remark, "Oh my stars and John D. Rockefeller. Along garters." with his swagger, he totes surprise, style and wit. Tesla's A determinedman Model S sedan was not only Mostly, t hough, V ance Motor Trend's Car of the Year in 2013 — the first non-inter-
Coloring books for adults are
big sellers By Carolyn Kellogg Los Angeles Times
There's no denying it: Coloring books for adults are not going away. Perhaps you a l ready know about the coloring books craze; you might be one of the 1.4 million people who's bought Johanna Basford's "Secret Garden." Published in 2013, it con-
curbs hisenthusiasm and de-
livers a well-calibrated por-
nal-combustion engine vehicle trait of Musk, so that we comto win that award — but it also prehend both his friends and has a sound system that, in his enemies. It's a book with an homage to the film "Spinal many ancillary pleasures. Tap," you can turn up to 11. Vance brings us up to date on "Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, thestatesofgreen energy and and the Quest for a Fantastic space launches. He also veers Future" isn't the first biogra- away from his subject just ofphy we've had of Musk, nor ten enough, offering profiles of will it be the last. But it is eas- the frequently brilliant people ily the richest to date. It's also who work alongside Musk. the first one Musk has coopBits from this biography erated with, though he had no have already made Internet control, the author says,over gossip ripples. According to its contents. Vance is a tech- Vance, Musk berated a male nology writer for Bloomberg employee who missed a TesBusinessweek. He won over la event to be present for the Musk, who initially declined birth of his child. (Musk has to be interviewed, impressing denied this.) Either way, he him with his diligence after does not come off like Alan he had interviewed some 200 Alda. He has been married people. three times — twice to the The result is a book that is same woman — and, while smart, light on its feet and pos- thinking about fitting a new sesses a crunchy thorough- relationship into his schedule, ness. Vance can occasionally he asks: "How much time does
and made Musk $22 million. His interest in online bank-
children don't merely have
ing led to his part in the creation of PayPal. When it was sold to eBay, he walked away with roughly $250 million, the author says, enough to bank-
nannies but have had a nan-
roll his interests in space and
book like sea salt. His five
ny manager. He worries that Google is building a fleet of
green technology. Musk got started in space robots that might accidental- exploration by first learning ly destroy mankind. He rents all he could about it, somecastles and sumo wrestlersfor times r eading S oviet-era
spots ahead of Kim Kardashian's "Selfish" — and is the online retailer's mostwished-for book. Basford's
"The Blondes: A Novel" by Emily Schultz (Thom-
The books feature intricate designs that are far too
as DunneBooks, 400 pgs.,
est," is almost as popular.
sophisticated for a child's hand. But for adults, they're
a way to engage creatively with a relatively low barrier of entry: Coloring is easier than most crafts such as,
say, learning to knit. Basford hand-draws and
inks all her designs. "My creativity is cultivated by a curious imagination and a delight in the fantastic,"
she explained on her website. "Much of my work has
roots in the flora and fauna that surrounded me growing up on my parent's fish farm in rural Scotland." N ow t h e a r t i s t ha s s igned a c o n tract w i t h
Penguin Random House to publish two new books in the U.S. and worldwide.
Publishers Weekly reports that the next book, "The Lost Ocean: An Underwa-
ter Adventure 8 Coloring Book," will reach shelves in October. The book will be,
Basford promises, "an enchanting underwater world hidden in the depths of the
sea" filled with "exotic fish, curious octopi, and deli-
cately penned seahorses."
-
•
•
p+®® g ® ® '® g~„„..
those players who made it to the majors for one year, or even one game. Some of these figures linger with us now for other reasons: Sparky Anderson, for instance, who played the full 1959 season at second base for the
Philadelphia Phillies and then disappeared for a decade before emerging as a Hall of Fame manager in Cincinnati and Detroit. M y favorite of t hem r e -
mains Moonlight Graham, who threw one inning for the 1905 New York Giants
with the International Space Station.
heard about him in the pag-
Vance tells the stories of
the story of a determined one.
both SpaceX and Tesla with
novel "Shoeless Joe," which imagines a baseball afterlife for him, tracing his life as a small-town physician
Musk's work ethic has always intricacy and insight, often been intense. One observer stuffing the technological desays about him early on, "We tails, for those who are interall worked 20 hour days, and ested, into long footnotes. We he worked 23 hours." come less close to Musk himself. Though the author inter-
Aiming high
viewed him for several dozen hours, he remains a remote grew up in Pretoria, South Af- and somewhat chilly figure, a rica. His father was an engi- perfectionist not unlike Jobs, neer; his mother, whose family often given to confrontation had roots in the United States and fit sofrage. and Canada, was a model and What does come through is Musk was born in 1971 and
dietitian. There are indications his father was brutal, and that Musk is a tortured soul try-
a sense of legitimate wonder at
what humans can accomplish when they aim high, and aim ing to make up for a wrecked weird. The animosity and jealchildhood. But no one will ousy some feel toward Musk's speak specifically about any achievements put me in mind such events. of a great line from the HBO He attended college in Can- show "Silicon Valley," in ada before graduating from which the tech chief executive the University of Pennsylva- Gavin Belson comments, "I nia and moving to the West don't know about you people, Coast. His f i rst
s t artup, a
but I wouldn't want to live in
company that provided maps a world where someone else and business directories, was makes the world a better place boughtby Compaq Computer than we do."
bigger problem: She's preg-
will bear with, of all people, her lover's wife. How that happens, and the strangeness of it, are sad and human and the
heart of the book. adviser back in Canada, and Some of Schultz's choices he's married. Their affair was — Hazel holes up in a runpassionate, but sh e w a sn't down hotel called the "Dunn planning on having his baby. Inn" (sounds like "done in," get Yet her efforts to get an abor- it?) — fall a little short. Sometion are thwarted by the esca- times slapdash writing shows lating crisis around her. Final- through. This is Schultz's first ly she decides she must return book with a major American to Canada for the health ser- publisher, whose attention she e ver, thanks t o cident soon unfolds vices there. caught through a lucky coincireaders who enjoy as a w o r ldwide And what started out as a dence. She'd published a novel both and authors epidemic. Infected pseudo-zombie tale is now also with a small Canadian press in who write right w omen turn i n t o a road story, and a feminist 2005 called "Joyland"; in 2013, throughthem. beasts that assault, bildungsroman, and a parable Stephen King published a noE nter Emi l y maim, spread con- about prejudice and reproduc- vella with the same title. Some Schultz.Inhernovtagion, d e stroy tive freedom and immigration. confused King fans picked up el "The Blondes," themselves, even Hazel is an interesting fig- Schultz's book, and although '0 0 ® 4; kill. a rabies-like virus ure to take us through this the mix-up resulted in some sends those it inNo one has quite hazardous landscape. Pudgy nasty Amazon reviews, Schulfects into a violent enough informa- and clumsy, she inhabits her tz chronicled the upside with rage. Whom does it t ion, an d c o m - world with a determined phys- a popular blog about the uninfect? Blond wompeting theoriesemerge about icality, frequently throwing up expected windfall, Spending e n. Bleached blonde, natural w h a t i shappening. With fear and getting scraped and bleed- Stephen King's Money. blonde, highlights, it doesn't t aking hold, regulations ing through stitches. She's That sense of humor undermatter. And only women — no q u ite p ossibly over-harsh and also intellectually ambitious, lies the basic conceit of "The men — are at risk. irrational — are imposed. a f i rst-generation academic Blondes," in which blond womInto that sci-fi thriller plot Not just blondes but any from a single, working-dass en, so long objects of the male drops our heroine — or per- woman with a light complex- mom who drinks too much gaze, suddenly become fearhaps it's better to see her sim- ion is suspect. Hazel is a red- and has a string of mostly somely threatening. Whatever ply as narrator, because Hazel head who dyes her hair chest- lousy boyfriends. the book's faults, it earns its Hayes is more inclined to head n u t . Sto res can't stock enough We know from the story's keep with a posse of beautiful, to the library than do pushups dark dye, and natural blondes outset that Hazel makes it to impeccablyclad stewardesses and learn archery. She's a Ca- shave t heir heads, even eye- Canada and finds relative safe- wreaking havoc on the connadian working on her Ph.D. brows, with the hope that be- ty for herself and the child she course at JFK. -:
for the one-line careers,
many failures, and several near-bankruptci es, along the way to making SpaceX what it is today, notably the only private company to have docked
Y ork, ing hairless will keep them reading about things like "an safe. examination of the metonymic Amid all this, Hazel has a
progression in beauty product ingredients" and "a meanBy Carolyn Kellogg mg-based explanation for comLos Angeles Times plexionsused in advertising." I n the 1970s and '80s, genre H a zI ehappens to be in the books and literary fiction s ubwaywhen one of the first were sharply divided, kept a t tacks hit, and she's swept in separate sections of book- along wr'th the general chaos stores and libraries. Those di- of unkn owing that follows a divisions have faded saster. What seems into the past, howlike an isolated in-
pore through "The Baseball Encyclopedia" looking
knife thrower aimed at a balloon between the blindfolded Musk's legs. The best thing Vance does in this book, though, is tell Musk's story simply and well. It's the story of an intelligent man, for sure. But more so it is
in aesthetics in New
$25.99)
When I was a kid, I used to
rocket manuals. There were
Beware theinfectious beastsof 'The Blondes'
follow-up, "Enchanted For-
who give flavor to the sport.
his parties. At one of them, a
tinues to float among Amazon's best-selling bookscurrently it's at No. 10, two
What I love most about baseball is its weird history, the oddities and misfits
nant. The father is her thesis
and was never heard from again. Graham resonates for another reason: I first es of W.P. Kinsella's 1982
called back to the field of
dreams. Now,
G r a h a m has
shown up again, in the pages of Gary Cierdkowski's "The League of Outsider Baseball: A n
Il l u strated
History of Baseball's Forgotten Heroes." The book, which grew out of the author's blog, the Infinite Baseball Card Set, offers a lavishly illustrated, deeply researched collection of portraits of t he unexpected and t h e
obscure. Did you know about Jack Kerouac's fantasy baseball
league? You'll find that story in these pages. The ninegame minorleague career of Dwight D. Eisenhower? It's here as well.
From George HW. Bush to the House of David, Fidel Castro (who threw two innings in a 1959 exhibition
game, "striking out two and grounding out to shortstop in his only at-bat") to Kitty Burke (who batted once, against Paul Dean, in
a 1935 game between the Reds and the Cardinals), Cierdkowski takes ephem-
era and spins it into baseball lore. Lore, of course, is what
baseball does best; it is a game with a deep past, after all. "The League of Outsider Baseball," though, is not interested in myth, but rather in t h e u nder-
pinnings, the lost history. Sometimes, that
m e a ns
reading about names we recognize, albeit in a different c ontext: R o berto Clemente's lost 1954 season
with the Brooklyn Dodgers' Montreal farm club, or
Tommy Lasorda's role in the so-called "Fight of '57," which unfolded when the
future Dodgers manager was a pitcher for the old Los Angeles Angels of the Pacific Coast League. The illustrations, rendered in vivid throwback
style, recall "the beautiful old tobacco cards that were manufactured at the turn
of the century." Based not on photographs but rather on research and imagination, they offer a new lens through which to look at, or think about, these players,
a way of bringing them to life.
SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN F 5
'Luri
ute: an ex austin
ee intoanunreia emin
Prize-winning historian Ellis reflects on birth of Constitution "The Quartet: Orchestrating the Second American Revoiu-
"Lurid & Cute" telling his story from avantage afflicts you that is in fact not byAdamThirlwell(Farrar, poin t i n t he future, when he afflicting you, how can you Straus and Giroux, 358 pgs., i s " m a i med and aged and all ever tell the difference? Inside alone." the thought balloon it is abso$26)
tion,1783-89"
by Joseph J. Ellis (Knopf, 320pgs.)
men: George Washington, of Paris he negotiated with James Madison, Alexander
B ritain. Hamilton wa s
Hamilton and John Jay.
early and tireless advocate for nationalism, his ability to transcend regional biases in part a product of his being
"I had already written a book about the revolution of
an
By Hiiiei Itaiie
1776 ('Revolutionary Summer'), and I knew I wanted an immigrant, Ellis writes.
By JohnWilliams
"Lurid & Cute" lives on the textbook thinks.") One of the CrOWded tree t hat S pringS best of these extended riffs is "I wish confessions did not f rom Dostoyevsky's "Notes a contemplation of attending everneed to happen. Confes- From Underground." The epi- parties: "The motives for ever
The Associated Press
to write a book about how
Madison was the era's great-
New Yorh Times News Sen iee
NEW YORK — Joseph J. Ellis, the Pulitzer Prize-win-
we got to the Constitution," he says. "I wasn't looking to
est legislative strategist, skills fully required as he worked
ning historian, has an issue write about it from the top
for support in his native, and
sions, it seemed to me, were graph of Thirlwell's book is
with the Gettysburg Address.
crucial state, Virginia, and as drafter of the Bill of Rights.
In
g enealogical t erms, lutely as bad as the medical
leaving a house and entering atotalillnessofour t ime." So t a k e n f ro m K nut H amsun's society are often flawed or says the narrator of Adam "Hunger," another obvious even dangerous." Thirlwell's entertaining and p r ogenitor. Like most of the The dominant subjects come exhausting new novel, "Lurid n arrators in this genre, Thirl- to be the causes of fear and the well's is garrulous and neu- consequences of violence. Af& Cute." But to what is he confess- rotic. (Dostoyevsky's called ter many ruminations about ing? In the book's first himself an "irksome these themes, Thirlwell's narscene, he wakes , babb l er.") He is end- ratornotes the uselessness of ',' up in a hotel room g - le s sly a n a lytical, "protective thoughts," because » '. ~~ ' ,I, m i s anthropic and "when danger approaches it next to Romy, a tall, blond female = darkly funny. He's will still approach, however friend — "not my ,:," •, I , also logorrheic, the much you have worried about happy wife" kind of guide who it earlier." But is the narrator » who is asleep (or can over-explain the danger or the endangered'? -- — ~ unconscious) and an orgy, which he This unsettling question hangs bleeding. does for nearly 20 over the novel, and the protagA parade of un= ' pag e s. At the orgy, onist's seesawing unreliability certainties begins —.. s NpgsL SY which he describes feels intentional and well exe:* > ", ; here. The nature as the "quiet and cuted, not the jarring result of a nd extent of Ro- I industrious" kind, tonal indecision. It's often hard my's injury is not his wife and mis- to tell whether he is overreactclear, and the nartress cross paths, ing to something or psychotrator practices an ornate form s o to speak. ically understating a horror; of evasion, spending a lot of The b ook's plot, such as it whether he's a deluded, spoiled words on the scene without i s , has two main strands. The brat or a cunning sociopath. bringing it into sharper focus. first concerns the states of the In the literary circles of his
"I was at the middle school where my son teaches and I was listening to 28 kids recite
the speech,"Ellis,a professor emeritus at Mount Holyoke College, told The Associated
down, but the way in which
the (Constitutional) Convention was convened and the way in which the debates were managed and ratification was orchestrated — these guys kept being the ones
Press recently. "And I
who led the effort
w as
:
.
'
-
.
- '
'
=
We're in an unnamed city, in
n a r r ator's marriage and of his native Britain, Thirlwell, 36, is
the head of an unidentified affair,andhiscreepilyamoral man, witnessing what might or assessment of them. "It turns might not be an awful crime.
a lightning rod. Granta magazine twice named him one of
out , " he says, "that in the per- that country's best young novelists — the first time when he was 24 and hadn't published
Soon Thirlwell switches to fect marriage where you are a more comic register, as the absolutely trusted there is no narrator describes being just end to what you can do." The over 30, still living at home second is his friendship with a
a novel. ("Lurid & Cute" is his third.) Ever since, he has been with his parents and his wife, m a n named Hiro. They even- a high-profile Rorschach test Candy. He writes of his very t u a l ly turn to an almost casual for critics there. American comfortable upbringing and l i fe of armed crime, induding readers approaching his work education: "I suppose what I'm a holdup of a nail salon. These without strong opinions about trying to say is that everything i ncidents n o t withstanding, his precocity might be surwas very soft and delicious. very little happens outside the prised by the strongly dividThe juggernaut of meaning, narrator's head in "Lurid & ed reacti ons overseas. In the let's say, was not parked heavi- Cute." United States he can simply ly on our lawn." Inside his head it's a chatty be what he is, a very talented if An only child, he describes tour of quotidian philosophical fallible writer. himself as a dauphin, a prod- concerns: the nature of marIf Thirlwell had taken furigy — of what, he doesn't say riage ("a grand and perma- ther inspiration from "Notes — living a fattening existence. nent problem" and "the purest From Underground" and kept But beneath the recounting of of moral conundrums"); the his new novel to a tidier length, his everyday life lurks a fore- larger possibility of happiness; its pleasures would have been boding tone. "Events will be- how to spend one's time; and even more potent. As it is, the come much worse, "he tells us the curse of hypochondria. book, like its orgy scene, is early on. Later, he claims to be ("If you imagine something both stirring and tiresome.
also would rapidly compose some of the most famous and influential essays in Ameri-
can history, the Federalist Papers, arguments for the Con-
to assure some form of federal government." Each of the four leaders made dis-
stitution that ran in New York
tinctive contribut ions. After t h e war, Washington h ad r e tired t o
but Ellis writes that they were
singular, not at all a unified nation.
his plantation in
misunderstandings remain
Lincoln was in the middle of the Civil
Virginia, but at the urging of
,
,
Hamilton, Madison and Jay
thinking about 'Four score and seven years ago,' and how that put us in 1776. But at that time the United States was a
plural, and not a
Mount
War and there were political
newspapers in 1787-88. The Federalist Papers are now canonical works, often
cited in Supreme Court cases, "perhaps the supreme example of improvisational journalism." He believes similar
V e r non, about the Constitution. In his
Madison and others, he re-
book, he scorns the ideal of the founders as "quasi-divine creatures with supernatural
reasons for him to argue that
turned to public life. He was powers of mind and heart." such an idea predated the ex- theonlyman who seemed beI nstead, he w r i t es, t h e istence of the actual union. yond partisan criticism, and Constitution was a familiar But the country only comes hisagreement to preside over political trade-off. The two together in 1787-88 with the the Constitutional Conven- sides managed to agree on drafting and enactment of the tion in Philadelphia in 1787 issues ranging from federal Constitution." was essential. Washington's power over states to presiEllis' "The Quartet: Orches- wartime service had shaped dential authority either by trating the Second American his thinking; he was repeat- keeping the language vague Revolution, 1783-89" is the edly frustrated by the Con- and o pen-ended, avoidninth book by one of the lead- tinental Congress' inability ing the issue altogether or ing scholar of the country's to provide adequate funding finding the crude middle early years of independence. and supplies for his troops. ground of counting slaves as "The Quartet" covers a "The continental army was three-fifths of a person for disputed and vital era, the treated very badly and even determining Congressional years between the end of the sent home without their pen- representation. "Madison felt very disRevolutionary War and birth sions," Ellis says. "In truth, of the U.S. Constitution. In Washington believed we appointed and felt like they debates that continue to this could have won the war much had failed," Ellis says, noting day, the 13 original states sooner if the states had filled that Madison had i n itially were fiercely dividedbetween their quotas and p rovided opposed the need for a Bill those who feared the return the support that was needed. of Rights and favored giving of monarchy and wanted to People who had experience the federal government veto remainaloose confederation, in the continental army be- power over state laws. "But similar to what Europe is to- came some of the leading he came to the conclusion, day, and those who believed federalists." grudgingly, that the Constithe only way to prevent disMeanwhile, Jay helped tution is a set of compromissolution was a viable central vastly expand the young es. It doesn't have answers. It government. country's territory — and in- creates a framework in which Ellis tells the story through spiredreams of future empire the argument keeps going the words and actions of four — through the 1783 Treaty on."
CENTRAlOREGOI'S ORIGINAL HOME AND LIVING NIAGAZINE
A sneak peek at the next CentralOregon Living coming 3une 27th... Chefs onTolv Learn about the third annual pre-Tour of Homes™event and how it has evolved since 2013. Find out which builders and restaurants will be participating.
Tour of Homes™Preview A showcase of some of the finest homes in Central Oregon. Get the what, when and where plus the history and what to look for this year.
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"Outdoor Livinl" Features • Outdoor kitchens • BBQ innovations • Backyard trends 8 must-haves • High desert gardening
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Deposit c a n s/bottles New dark gray recliner. Two V i king s e wing T HE B U LLETIN r e - H ELP P REV E N T Sell you r s t r uctured needed for local all Make offer. /quilting m a c hinesBend local pays CASHII quires computer ad- FORECLOSURE & settlement or annuity volunteer, non-profit 541-647-2009 with extras. Very good for firearms & ammo. vertisers with multiple Save Your Home! Get payments for CASH n. cat rescue. Donate at $700 each ad schedules or those FREE Relief! Learn NOW. You don't have 541-526-0617 Outdoor table Brown 8 condition. Jake's Diner, Hwy 20 Call 541 - 706-0448 selling multiple sysabout your legal op- to wait for your future Jordan, 4 chairs, $100 E, Bend; Petco in eves or weekends. CASH!! tems/ software, to dis- tion to possibly lower payments any longer! p o odle, Sisters, 54 -719-0563 Redmond; S m ith Silver to y For Guns, Ammo & close the name of the your rate and modify Call 1-800-914-0942 241 p u r ebred. 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May Place an ad in The and fraud attempts Golf Equipment WANTED: Collector 15 & May17,8-4 (no Bulletin for your gaYBe aware of interseeks high quality fishSat. sales). Furniture, rage sale and renational fraud. Deal CHECK YOUR AD ing items & upscale fly books, kids items, lots ceive a Garage Sale locally w h e never rods. 541-678-5753, or of nice quality trea- Kit FREE! possible. 503-351-2746 sures. Take Hwy 97 FUTON (dbl bed) and Y Watch for buyers N. to Tumalo Rd., exit KIT INCLUDES: chair (twin bed) origi- who offer more than • 4 Garage Sale Signs 247 a t o v erpass, t u r n nally purchased from your asking price w est, school i s a t • $2.00 Off Coupon To Sporting Goods Rising Star. $600 for and who ask to have Use Toward Your on the first day it runs bottom of hill. both. 541-815-0395 m oney wired o r - Misc. Next Ad to make sure it is cor21155 Tumalo Rd. • 10 Tips For "Garage G ENERATE b ac k to SOM E handed rect. nSpellcheckn and 541-389-2091. Fake cashier Sale Success!" human errors do oc- Kelty frame back pack, EXCITEllIENT in your them. checks and money neighborhood! Plan a orders are common. cur. If this happens to medium, exc. cond. $85, 541-944-8705 HUGE GARAGE SALE garage sale and don't V N ever give o u t your ad, please conPICK UP YOUR 1027 N W H a r mon GARAGE forget to advertise in tact us ASAP so that SALE KIT at 248 personal f i nancial Blvd. Thurs 8:30 a.m. corrections and any classified! 1777 SW Chandler information. thru Sun until 1 p.m. Health & 541-385-5809. adjustments can be Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Y T rust y o ur in made to your ad. Beauty Items stincts and be wary 541 -385-5809 R ain or shine , The Bulletin of someone using an The Bulletin Classified Got Knee Pain? Back Serving Central Oregon since 1903 m ulti-family sale , escrow service or 64940 Glacier View Pain? Shoulder Pain? agent to pick up your Gold balls - $5/dozen, Get a pain-relieving Dr., off Old MOVING SALE. This like new. merchandise. Bend-Redmond Hwy. Sat. 8-1 & Sun. 9-12 brace -little or NO cost 541-593-8400 to you. Medicare PaTons o f clo t hes, 6 3174 P e al e S t . , King bedroom set The Bulletin Golf club sale, 3 sets 1 6W-20W, sho e s quality items! gerrlng Central Oregan slncefgtg tients Call Health Hot6 piece solid cherry; custom irons, drivers line Now! 1sz.8, freezer, dryer, headboard footd ishwasher, tr a s hVHS, $1 ea., paper- board, side rails, 27" The Bulletin reserves hybrids and putters. 800-285-4609 p er set, (PNDC) masher, lots of men's back western books, TV armoire, bed side the right to publish all $300 stuff too. Fri.- Sun., Louis L'amour, $2 ea., chest w/drawers, ads from The Bulletin 541-788-3743 DAY DEADLINE 263 8am. king mattress/box t newspaper onto The puzzles. Starts after 9. springs, top quality Bulletin Internet webTV, Stereo & Video 3120 Wells Acres Rd. Monday, 5/25...................... ... Wed. 5i20 4 p.m. Lexington brand site. 286 REDUCED $1600 DIRECTV Starting at Tuesday — At Home, 5126 ... ... Wed. 5/20 4 p.m. 290 obo. Call or text Sales Northeast Bend The Bulletin $19.99/mo. FREE In435-770-8079 Sales Redmond Area Tuesday, 5/26 ..................... ..... Thur. 5/21 Noon s tallation. FREE 3 Sunriver BIG GARAGE SALE Street legal mags- lift months o f HBO 215 ........ Frj. 5/22 Noon Sat and Sun, 9am- A FTERNOON D E C K kit, split windshield, S HOWTIME CIN - Wednesday, 5/27................ Coins & Stamps 3pm. 3344 NE Palmer SALE! 1-5, Sat. 5/16, La-Z Boy h ide-a-bed leather seats, b a ll EMAX, STARZ. FREE Dr. Houseware, con- Sun 5/17. corner of 3x7' exc. cond, $450 cleaner, ice c hest. HD/DVR U p grade! struction tools includ- SW 27th St. 8 Cas- obo. Matching re- Private collector buying $3000 obo. 2015 NFL S u nday t/g postage st amp al bums 8 541-389-1966 ing saw, clothes and cade Ave. Rare 6 cliner extra. Pix avail. Ticket Included (Secollections, world-wide purses, jewelry, fur- size shoes, handbags 541-330-1843 lect Packages) New and U.S. 573-286-4343 246 galore, many books niture, camping C ustomers Onl y . (local, cell phone). equipment, seasonal and CDs, Irg - x-Irg Leather sofa, 8 months Guns, Hunting TueSday 5i26 .................................. Frj. 5/22 Noon CALL 1-800-410-2572 womens clothes incl old, paid $2200, selldecorations, TV & Fishing (PNDC) 240 for $900. DVD player, luggage, jackets, most never ing 541-510-6624 Crafts & Hobbies s crapbooking s u p - worn, toys & pretties! 540+ rnds .308 PMC D ish Network - G e t plies, dog clothes and NEED TO CANCEL FMJ-BT 8 80+ rnds M ORE fo r LE S S ! a pet supplies. YOUR AD? Winchester FMJ. Ex- Starting $19.99/month THE GREENS Yew/Ext 124 The Bulletin tra brass and MTM/ (for 12 months.) PLUS Pollshers • Saws 5/15 10am to 4pm Classifieds has an Plano ammo boxes Bundle 8 SAVE (Fast "After Hours"Line Find It in 5/16 8am to 4pm (two .308, one .40/.45, Internet f o r $15 Call 541-383-2371 Repalr 8t Supplles and one . 3 8/.357). more/month.) C A LL The Bulletin Classifieds! PLEASE NO PARKING ' g IN FR O N T OF 24 hrs. to cancel s r $ 360 c a s h obo . Now 1-800-308-1563 b end b u l l e t i n . c o m 541-385-5809 DRIVEWAYS 541-977-3173 your ad! (PNDC)
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RETAIL 8 CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES
CLASSIFIED PRIVATE PARTY DEADLINES C lassifieds • 541-385-580 9
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G2 SUNDAY, MAY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
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51 Prominent parts 1Theater purchase: 54 Put-on Abbr. 55 Clinton secretary of 4 Fertility doctor's focus state 8 Little sucker? 5$ Ingratiate 11 Mountain-to60 Like the American pronunciation of mountain transport many Polish names 18 Sch. with a Manchester campus 62 71/2-foot Ming 64 Item extending over 1$ Apple product a gunwale 20 Fail to grant, in court 65 "Sesame Street" 21 Showed humility subjs. 22 "Spoon River 66 An airbag can Anthology" poet prevent it Edgar Mas t ers 70 Fixer-upper's need, 23 California's Rancho for short 72 Counterpart of 25 Appeared amazed Aurora 26 Tattler's threat 74 Good part of a record 28 At a high rate 75 Diverge 29 " Folks," Charles 78 Look good on Schulz's first strip 82 Citizen 30 Scheme 84 Camera option, for 31 Visibly sad short 33 Making 85 She's courted in "The environmentally Courtship of Miles friendly Standish" 38 No. expert 88 Shipping unit: Abbr. 40 One in a jungle trail 89 Country that's 41 Walk with swaying won the most hips medals in the historyof the Winter 43 Arduous Olympics 46 Relative of a Great 91+ or-thing Dane $2 How-to aid 47 6 letters? 48 Like cars in a used- 95 Kind of omelet $7 1990 Mike Leigh car lot comedy/drama 49 Source of feta cheese 100 Maven Online subscriptionin 101 First word of Today's puzzle and more Dante's "Inferno" than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords 102 "E.T." boy and ($39.95 a year). others
103"Would you let me take a look?" 106Plagues 109 Funny 110Coffee mate? 111Lady in "Lady and the Tramp," e.g. 113 Fix, as abraid 117 From the top 118 Battery size 120Put forth 121 107-Down subject 122Org. concerned with toy safety 123 Sea r c h (Bing forerunner) 124 Renaissance-fair wear 125Put on 126 Road 127Where costumes are worn DOWN
1 Dutch pot contents 2 Toll 3 1935 poem with one word per line ... as spelled out by this puzzle's circled letters 4 Startof a reminiscence 5 Where bills may accumulate 6 Sullied 7 Extinct wingless bird 8 California's Freeway 9 Common pizzeria name 10 Blue shade 11 Piece of Tin Pan Alley music
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12M idwest tr ibe 22 23 13Ahab, e.g. 14Decorative border 27 15 Writer of 3-Down 30 16 Exist 17 Pay-stub abbr. 38 39 20 Remove, in a way 24 Mad magazine cartoonist Drucker 48 27 Like about 45% of human blood 54 55 32 Internet troll, 60 61 intentionally 33 Cells that protect neurons 34 Ransack 72 73 35 In conclusion: Fr. 79 36 Levi's Stadium athlete, informally 85 37 Some Pontiacs 91 38 One who's much praised 97 98 99 42 Capt.'s inferiors 102 43 Clutch 44 Cause deja vu, 109 perhaps 45 talk 1 13 1 1 4 46 "Family Guy" 120 daughter 50 Certain heiress 124 52 Peri o d, 1603-1868 53 " Arizona Skies" (John Wayne 6$ Severe penalty movie) 71 Harp's home key 56 "Just a minute," in texts 73 Liberal arts subj. 57 Cousin of an aardwolf 76 Da , Vietnam 58 Army Rangers beret 77 Fright-wig wearer color 78 Comic impressionist 61 Branded footwear David 63 Circle 79 Lie in the hot sun 67 Cousins 80 Thick 68 Ones whose work is 81 Group mailing tool decreasing?
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$6 Flips 98 What may make you duck down? 99 Certain salt 100 Falafel holder 104 Steppes dwelling 105 "Beowulf" and others 107 It might have an escalator 108 Bias
110ArtistM aar depicted in Picasso's "The Weeping Woman" 112MCAT topic: Abbr. 113 r oom 114Intro to biology? 115Screen 116Lib. listings 118 Astronomer's std.
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place 8photo in your private party ad for only $75.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260
267
Misc. Items
Fuel & Wood
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Los t & Found
FREE FIREWOOD on private land. Call 541-593-9f 16 aaaa
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REMEMBER: If you
have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend
269
vslar
Gardening Supplies Winegard Carryout auto & Equipment portable satellite antenna w it h a t t achment $ 5 0 0 obo BarkTurfSoil.com 5 41-586-0066 cel l 541-549-4634 home
541-382-3537
Redmond 54f -923-0662 Madras 541 -475-6889 Prineville 54f -447-7f 76 or Craft Cars 541 -389-8420.
PROMPT DELIVERY
542-389-9663
261
Medical Equipment
Fornewspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. ar 541 -365-5600 To place an ad, call 541-365-5609 or email
325
Hay, Grain & Feed
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Tempur-pedic twin cleaeified@bendbulletin.oom electric bed & remote. The Bulletin Top mattress has a sarvsnecentral oreeon slncesate water-proof mattress cover. $500. Hoyer Classic Lift with sling. I sPEG I ALS 308 Will lift up to 400 lbs. + Raised Bed Soil Farm Equipment $1 25. 4 wheel + Peat Mixes 341 Scooter. New barter+ Juniper Ties & Machinery Horses & Equipment ies purchased April + Paver Discounts 60" Landpride weed 2 015, charger i n + Sand+ Gravel cluded. SOLD! + Bark cutter, 3ptto, u s ed 541-31 7-1 1Ss instantlandseaping.etsm once. $1 1 00. CRR, • . NS,
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Have an item to sell quick? If it's under Building Supply Resale '500 you can place it in Quality at LOW PRICES The Bulletin 1 242 S. Hwy 97 Classifieds for: 541 -546-1 406 Open to the public. '10 - 3 lines, 7 days 267 '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Fuel & Wood (Private Party ads only)
503-936-1 778
CASE 530 diesel tractor with backhoe attachment, $4500. 541 -389-7669.
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Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDMOND CAlviPUS Our GradsGet Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU 470
Domestic & In-Home Positions Relief caregiver needed in Sisters area. Call 54'I -598-4527 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFf EDS 476
Employment Opportunities 9-1-7 Public Communications Officer (Dispatcher)
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment O p porrunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p ositions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1 -503-376-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971 -673- 0764.
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Auto - Sales Central Oregon Community College has Sales professional to openings li s te d bel o w . Go ro Join Central hitps://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply Oregon'3 l a r gest online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, new ca r de a l er 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; Subaru of B e nd. (541)363 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Offering 40fk, profit Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. sharing, m e d ical COCC is an AA/EO employer. plan, split shifts and paid vacation. ExpePart Time Latino College rience or will train. Prep ProgramCoordinator 90 day $2000 guarServe as primary coordinator for students prea ntee. Dress f o r paring for post-secondary education. Estabsuccess. P l ease lish goals and objectives of the program. apply at 2060 NE $19.32 - $23.00/hr. 30hr/wk. ffmonths per Hwy 20, Bend. See year. Closes May 17 Bob or Devon. End User Support Coordinator Serve as lead technician for EUS ream. Responsible for project planning, implementation, Take care of troubleshooting, installations, train and assist campus technologyusers.Associates + 2-yrs your investments exp. A+, MCDST and MCSA Certifications. with the help from $45,755-$53,082/yr Closes Jun 12. The Bulletin's AssistantProfessor of HIT "Call A Service Provide classroom and lab instruction in the Health Information Technology Program. ProProfessional" Directory vide student advising and assistance. Associate Degree + 1-yr exp. in HIT profession. $42,722-$49,202 for smo contract.
Caregivers w anted t o
our
caring
Deluxe showman memory ca re 3-horse trailer Sil- CITY OF PRINEVILLE The Bulletin c ommunity. A l l Servtna Central Oregon since Saaa verado 2001 29'xs' POLICE shifts a v ailable. 541 -365-5609 315 5th wheel with semi DEPARTMENT Must be reliable. living quarters lots of Irrigation Equipment extras. Beautiful con- Accepting Applications Also needed part dition. $21,900OBO f or F u ll-time a n d Add your web address t ime c hef. F o r FOR SALE 541 -420-3277 Part-time 9-1-1 PCO. to your ad and readTumalo Irrigation more i nf o r maJob consists of radio ers onThe Bulietin's Water tion, or any dispatching for web site, www.bend$4,500 per acre questions, Want to impress the police-fire-ambulance. bulletin.com, will be Call 541-419-4440 Position is computer please call able to click through relatives? Remodel oriented with related 325 automatically to your 541-385-4717 your home with the paper record keeping. website. 270 • Hay, Grain & Feed help of a professional WHEN BUYING Applicants must be Lost & Found from The Bulletin's able ro multi-task beFIREWOOD... Wheat Straw for Sale. "Call A Service tween phones and Also, weaner pigs. Marketing Coordinator To avoid fraud, Border Collie lost eastradio's. This position Professional" Directory 541 -546-6171 The Bulletin side Bend on May 6, will work all s hifts, Crestview Cable Communications is looking for recommends payher name is Sunny, holidays and week- a Marketing Coordinator to join our conscienment for Firewood chipped, wearing red ends. A p p lications tious team focused on sales, customer educaonly upon delivery collar. We want her AUCTION CALENDAR and m or e d e t ails tion and service. and inspection. back so bad! Please JUNE 14- SUNDAY - LA PINE, OR available on-line at • A cord is 12S cu. ft. help. 541 -946-4765. www.ciryofprineville.c GUY STUFF: welders • Kubota B7500 HDS 4' x 4' x 8' include the ongoing development and om (Be sure ro com- Duties F OUND: Husky M i x 4WD tractor w/loader • 3 pt. equipment• oordination of t h e m a rketing plan f o r • Receipts should plete the "POLICE" c dog, has tag, phone Shop power tools • Hand tools • Sears riding Crestview's cable TV, Broadband Internet and include name, application from web Digital phone number on rag dislawn mower products. Sales ability, creativphone, price and site.) Faxed applicaconnected, found in kind of wood ity, good written communications, new media rions will not be acMacy'3 parking lot, JUNE 20 - SATURDAY - TUMALO, OR attention to derail and desire to be an purchased. c epted. Cont a c t skills, call to ID. Executive style furniture and miscellaneous • instrumental part of a cohesive ream are • Firewood ads Communications Di541-260-3001 Powder River livestock equipment• Tongue 8 requirements of the position. Drug and crimiMUST include ector Tobie R e y - nal groove pine lumber • Commercial grade rnolds background checks are pre-employment species & cost per Lost 2 dogs on May at criteria. woodworking equipment cord to better serve 11th, West of Lake 541 -447-8324 for our customers. Billy Chinook. 1st dog, more information on Benefits include but are not limited to, paid sick JULY 25 AND 26 - SALEM, OR white, 50 Ibs, long tail, the position. Wagons and buggies, wheels and part s • O l d leave, vacation pay, holiday pay and health The Bulletin spotty ears; 2nd dog, tools•W ood cook stove CLOSING DATE: Sarvine Central Oregon since f9t8 insurance coverage option with employer German Short Hair April 28, 2015. • Pocket watches• Household smalls • Lifecovering the majority of t h e n e w s taff Pointer, 72 Ibs, very member's premium. Staff members also shy. Reward, Call Bob time collection of antiques and collectibles Afl YearDependable BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS receive a free cable television package and Firewood: Seasoned; 541 -420-01 54. Search the area'3 most free Broadband Internet if they live in an area SEPT. 25, 26, & 27 - PRINEVILLE, OR Lodgepole, split, del, comprehensive listing of served by Cresrview in and around La Pine, Cowboy Collectibles fk Memorabilia Auction Bend, 1 f o r $ 1 95 Prineville and Madras, Oregon. Applicant and Show • Bits, spurs, chaps, saddles, classified advertising... or 2 cords for $365. clothing, Indian items • 400 lor auction and real estate to automotive, must have a driving record acceptable to our Illlulti-cord discounts! merchandise Io sporting insurer. 21/a days of vendors' display tables of all types 541 -420-3484. goods. Bulletin Classifieds of Cowboy and Indian memorabilia. appear every day in the The Marketing Coordinator will work out of the C.O. mixed wood, LOST POS S UM! Ijmlllii TIRNIII I I T ERPRIMK, LLL' print or on line. Prineville office. Please send resume to semi-dry, split, delivEarly May, NE Bend. DennisTurmon, Auctioneer • 541-9236261 • Cell: 5414800795 agautney©crestviewcable.com or ro Call 541-385-5809 ered in Bend. 2 for If you see her, please Cresrview Cable Communications, www.bendbulletin.com Powell Butte, Oregon $270. Cash, check, don't hurt her. She is Attn: Audrey Gautney, www.dennisturmon.com Visa/MC accepted. loving and harmless. 350 N.E. Dunham, Prineville, OR 97754. The Bulletin REDMOND Habitat RESTORE
541 -312-8746
54f -260-8972
serving CentralOregonsince eta
Part-Time Instructor Positions NEW -Veterinary and Librarian Looking for talented individuals ro teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
join
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IThe Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- I 5 day night shift and other shifts as needed. We5 • currently have openings all nights of the week.• I Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and I end between 2:00 a.m.and 3:30 a.m .Allpo• sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights.• I Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay aI 5 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts5 • are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of• I loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and I other tasks.
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IFor cluahfying employees we offer benefirsl I including life insurance, short-term 8 long-term disability, 401 (k), paid vacation and sick time.
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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 (keldred@bendbulletin.com).
No pho ne calls please * No resumes will be accepted *
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 17 2015 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
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Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Automotive Wanted
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
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CASH for V I NTAGE DID YOU KNOW 144 CARS Mercedes conmillion U.S. A d ults vertibles, P o r sche, read a N e wspaper Jaguar, Alfa, Lancia, print copy each week? Ferrari, C o r vettes, Discover the Power of hardly used. M ustangs. Earl y PRINT N e wspaper Winnebago Outlook Toyota Corolla 2013, Ford Escape 2014, Must sell $20,000 Japanese Cars GMC Sierra 2500HD Advertising in Alaska, Nissan Altima 2012, 2007 Class "C"31', 2.0L 1-4 cyl 2.5L 1-4 cyl, FWD. (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) 714-267-3436 Idaho, Montana, Oror take over payMercedes 380SL 1982 2007, clean, non- smoking Vin ¹053527 VIN ¹A46674.$24,995. rstevensjrOgmail.com Roadster, black on extended cab egon and Washing- VIN ¹212867.$16,988. ments. Call Stock ¹83072 exc. cond. Must See! (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 t on with j us t o n e (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 Other collector cars of black, soft & hard top, VIN ¹E89454. $25,598. 541-410-5649 Lots of extra's, a very $15,979 or $199 mo., significant value de- exc.cond., always ga(exp. 5/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 p hone call. Fo r a $2000 down, 84 mo., good buy.$47,900 sired. (PNDC) FREE ad v e rtising raged. 155K miles, 4 .49% APR o n a p For more info call network brochure call $11,500. 541-549-6407 proved credit. License The Bulletin 541-447-9268 916-288-6011 or and title included in To Subscribe call email payment, plus dealer inWinnebago Superchief cecelia@cnpa.com 541-385-5800 or go to 541-548-1448 541-548-1448 stalled options. 1990 27' clean, 454 (PNDC) smolichmotors.com smolichmotors.com www.bendbulletin.com 541-548-1448 C hevy, runs v e r y © s U s ARu Honda Civic EX 2010, ood. good t i res, Montana 34 ft. 2003, DONATE YOUR CAR, smolichmotors.com 112K miles, new tires 8500. 541-279-9458. w /2 s lides. N e w 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. TRUCK OR BOAT TO VW CONV. 1 9 78 and brakes, sunroof, 877-266-3821 HERITAGE FOR THE $8999 -1600cc, fuel t ires, brakes a n d 881 $8750. 541-382-0324 Dlr ¹0354 BLIND. Free 3 Day injected, classic 1978 awning - Very clean Travel Trailers V acation, Tax D e - Volkswagen Convertand u nder cover. WHEN YOU SEE THIS ductible, Free Towing, ible. Cobalt blue with $16,900 obo. Honda CRV 2007, Scion TCcoupe 2007, All Paperwork Taken a black convertible 541-536-5638 or ~O (exp. 5/17/15) (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) Care O f. CALL top, cream colored 541-410-9299 Ram Dakota Vin ¹064947 Vin ¹198120 1-800-401-4106 (a~ interior & black dash. Bighorn/Lonesfar Stock ¹44696A Stock ¹44193B (PNDC) This little beauty runs 2011, On a classified ad $13,999 or $175/mo., Hyundai Elanfra2014, $10,379 or $149/rn., and looks great and RV Crewcab, 4 door. go to $2900 down 72 mo. Got an older car, boat $2800 down, 60 mo., turns heads wherever 1.8L 1-4 cyl, FWD. CONSIGNMENTS VIN ¹504629.$21,998. 4 .49% APR o n a p - VIN ¹036676. $16,888. 4 .49% APR o n a p - www.bendbulletin.com Heartland Prow l er or RV? Do the huit goes. Mi: 131,902. WANTED (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 proved credit. License to view additional 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', mane thing. Donate it Phone 541-382-0023 (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 proved credit. License We Do the Work, and title included in and title i ncluded in photos of the item. like new, 2 slides-liv- You Keep the Cash! to the Humane Socipayment, plus dealer payment, plus dealer ini ng area & la r ge ety. Call 1On-site credit installed options. stalled options. closet. Large enough 800-205-0599 approval team, for your to live in, but easy to (PNDC) ® s U s ARu Looklng web site presence. ® s U s ARu next employee? tow! 15' power awWe Take Trade-Ins! 931 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Place a Bulletin help 541-548-1448 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. ning, power hitch & 541-548-1448 wanted ad today and 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 stabilizers, full s ize smolichmotors.com Automotive Parts, BIG COUNTRY RV reach over 60,000 smolichmotors.com Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 queen bed , l a r ge Bend: 541-330-2495 VW SunBug 1 974 Service & Accessories readers each week. 935 shower, porcelain sink exc. cond. Total inteRedmond: Your classified ad & toilet. $2 6 ,500. 541-548-5254 2 leaf Summit hard side rior refurbish, engine Sport Utility Vehicles will also appear on 541-999-2571 bendbulletin.com car top carrier. $199 OH, new floor pan, plus lots more! Sun408-656-1910 which currently rer oof. C l ea n ti t l e. ceives over 1.5 milKeystone Spring$9500. 541-504-5224 932 lion page views dale 2010 , 2 1 ' , Mercedes Benz CL Jeep Grand CheroSubaru GT Legacy every month at sleeps 6, DVD & CD Antique & 933 2001, kee Overland 2012, 2006, no extra cost. Bulleplayer, 60 g a llon Classic Autos (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) Pickups 4x4 V-6, all options, (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) tin Classifieds freshwater, porceVin ¹016584 BMW X3 35i 2010 running boards, front Vin ¹212960 Get Results! Call lain throne, 7 cu.ft. Wanderer by Thor 1998 Stock ¹83285 Exc cond., 65K Gooseneck 2 1 ft. guard, nav., air and $8,979 or $169/mo., Stock ¹83174 385-5809 or place fridge. Leveling hitch miles w/100K mile heated leather, cus- $1800 down, 46 mo., $14,972 or $179/rn., your ad on-line at & j acks, a wning, $4500. 541-419-3535 transferable wartom wheels and new 4 .49% APR o n ap - $2500 down, 84 mo., bendbulletin.com spare tire, lots of 885 ranty. Very clean; 4 .49% APR o n a p tires, only 41K miles, storage. New cond., proved credit. License loaded - cold Canopies & Campers proved credit. License $31,995 only 3,000 m iles. and title i ncluded in weather pkg, pre54'I -408-7908 payment, plus dealer in- and title included in $10,900. Call Rick Chevrolet Silverado Estate Sale mium pkg & techpayment plus dealer in stalled options. f or m o r e inf o . o (I Olds Cutlass Calais 2009 1500 Crew Cab, nology pkg. Keyless stalled options. Canopyfor short 541-633-7017 1981. 14,500 orig. 4x4, 5.3 Itr, 6 speed access, sunroof, S UBA R u box, lined interior, HILfjNCC SUMRUOHIRND ODM © s u a A Ru miles, new transmisauto, H D t r a ilering navigation, satellite green, good locking 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. sion w/warranty new pkg, black int, remote radio, extra snow Nomad Lite, 2001, 17', system. excellent 877-266-3821 tires, battery and s tart, 68k, 24 m p g tires. (Car top carfully loaded, $7000 shape. $995. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 obo. Leave message 541-389-7234. fluids. Factory hwy. $ 2 5,900. rier not included.) Dlr ¹0354 bucket seats, con541-382-6511 Lexus 400H 2006, at 541-548-4582. $22,500. sole shift, Beautiful 541-915-9170 premium pkg., suncondition. Drives like roof, hitch, heated GA L LW 1000 RV o new! $7900. leather, DVD, no acTODAYM CONSIGNMENTS Legal Notices 541-419-7449 cidents, kids, smoke 0 0 ChevyPickup 1978, WANTED or pets. Keyless, long bed, 4x4, frame We Do The Work ... LEGAL NOTICE NAV, 28/31 Hybrid Mercedes Benz E up restoration. 500 You Keep The Cash! The regular meeting Subaru lmpreza 2013, M PG, exc. cond., al l Class 2005, Cadillac eng i ne, On-site credit of the Board of Di(exp. 5/1 7/1 5) records, Ca r f ax, (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) fresh R4 transmisapproval team, rectors of the DesVin ¹027174 garaged, new tires, Vin ¹688743 BMyy X3 Sl 2007, sion w/overdrive, low web site presence. Stock ¹83205 chutes County Rural Reduced to $14,500. Stock ¹82316 Low Miles 68,500, mi., no rust, custom We Take Trade-Ins! or $249/rn., Fire Protection Dis541-410-1452 $11,979 or $155/mo., $20,358 AWD, leather Inteinterior and carpet, 908 $2600 down, 84 mo., trict ¹2 scheduled for $2500 down, 72 mo., Buick Electra 225 rior, sunroof, bluen ew wheels a n d BIG COUNTRY RV 4 .49% APR o n a p - T uesday, May 1 2 , Aircraft, Parts .49% APR o n a p 1964Classic cruiser tooth, voice com- LEXUS RX400H (HY- 4proved tires, You must see Bend: 541-330-2495 proved credit. License 2015 has been canLicense & Service with rare 401CI V8. mand system, and BRID) 2006, 35 mpg, and titlecredit. Redmond: itl $25,000 invested. and title included in celled. Instead a speincluded in Runs good, needs too much more to list 541-548-5254 54,000K miles,bam$12,000 OBO. payment, plus dealer in- payment, plus dealer cial meeting of the interior work, 168K 541-536-3889 or here. $15, 9 00. boo pear color, ex- stalled options. installed options. board will be held May miles. $5,995. Please call Dan at cellent condition, no 541-420-6215. 19 at 11:30 AM at the 541-815-6611 Donated to Equine accidents, $ 1 7,000. S UBA R U ® s U s ARu conference room of Outreach. Call Gary 541-610-6748 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. the north fire station, 541-480-6130 63377 Jamison St., The Bulletin's 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 975 Bend, OR. Items on "Call A Service Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Automobiles 1/3interestin the agenda include: Professional" Directory Mustang 2013 candy Springdale 2006 26' the fire department Columbia400, is all about meeting red coupe, exc. cond., report, a discussion of bunkhouse, exc. Financing available. V-6, automatic, Chevy Silverado 1500 yourneeds. capital projects, a cond, 12' p op-out, $125,000 leather, 19,600 miles, F ireFree grant r e stored in RV garage. 2004, (located @ Bend) Call on one of the CHECKYOUR AD $20,000. By owner. Well cared for. Many 4 dr., extended cab quest a discussion of 541-288-3333 on the first day of pub541-390-5294 VIN ¹199459. $20,998. professionals today! Policy s, a discussion extras. $13,500 obo. CHEI/ELLE lication. If a n e rror Subaru Legacy 541-588-0068, c e l l, (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 on the 14/15 audit and NfALIBV 1971 may occur in your ad, LL Bean 2006, 541-549-4834 home Chevy Tahoe 1995 two inter-fund trans57K original miles, p lease contact u s (exp. 5/17/15) 4 dr. 4x4, auto, tow fers. After the meet350 c.i., auto, Wilderness Lite 1999, Vin ¹203053 ing the board will tour pkg, leather interior, and we will be happy stock, all original, to fix it as soon as we 822W, 22'. One owner Stock ¹82770 a/c, anti-lock brakes, the Deschutes 9-1-1 Hi-Fi stereo non-smokers, sleeps can. Deadlines are: like new tires. reg. to $16,977 or $199/mo., center. $15,000 Weekdays 12:00 noon 6, awning, exc. cond., 1/5 share in v ery $2600 down, 84 mo. at 10/16. Runs g reat, Conv. 2011, 541-548-1448 new tags. $ 6 500. nice 150 HP Cessna .49% APR o n a p - The meeting location very good cond., must for next day, S at. 6Mustang speed auto, pony 4 smolichmotors.com 541-279-1072 11:00 a.m. for Sunproved credit. License is accessible to per541-389-4694 150; 1973 C e s sna see $48 0 0 . pkg 1 5 00 0 mi and title included in day; Sat. 12:00 for 541-385-4790 sons with disabilities. 150 with L ycoming Check out the $20,000. payment, plus dealer A request for interMonday. 0-320 150 hp engine classifieds online 541-330-2342 Looking for your installed options. 541-385-5809 conversion, 400 0 preter for the hearing next employee? www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified hours. TT a irframe. impaired or for other S UBA RU Place a Bulletin help Updated daily NISARUOP3RMD.ODII accommodations for Approx. 400 hours on wanted ad today and Advertise your car! Vehicle? 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 0-timed 0-320. Hanperson with disabilireach over 60,000 Add A Prcfure! fi Call The Bulletin 877-266-3821 ties should be made gared in nice (electric Reach thousands of readers! readers each week. and place an ad Dlr¹0354 at least 48 hrs. before door) city-owned hanCall 541-385-5809 Your classified ad Chevy Tahoe 2007, today! 1965 Mustang the meeting to: Tom gar at the Bend AirThe Bulletin Classileds will also appear on 5.3L V-8 cyl Hard top, l A s k about our port. One of very few Fay 5 4 1 -318-0459. bendbulletin.com 'Whee/ Deal"! 6-cylinder, auto trans, C-150's t h a t has TTY 800-735-2900. which currently rel f o r private party l power brakes, power never been a trainer. ceives over 1.5 milFord F-150 2007, PUBLIC NOTICE garaged, advertisers $4500 wi ll consider steering, lion page views evSuper Crewcab well maintained, trades for whatever. VIN ¹C09983. $25,998. ery month at no BPRD BOARD OF engine runs strong. Call J i m Fr a zee, 74K extra cost. Bulletin (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 DIRECTORS mi., great condiSubaru Outback XT 541-410-6007 Classifieds Get ReMEETING tion.$12,500. Chevy Malibu 2012, 2006, sults! Call 385-5809 Must see! CANCELLATION 541-548-1448 (exp. 5/17/15) (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) or place your ad NOTICE 541-598-7940 VIN ¹313068 smolichmotors.com Vin ¹299392 Call a Pro on-line at eSQ Stock ¹44631A Stock ¹44256A bendbulletin.com Dodge Journey Crew $15,979 or $189/mo., Whether you need a $11,999 or $149/rn., T he Bend Park & F ord p ickup 1 9 5 1 2012, V-6, 12k mi., 1 $2500 down, 84 mo., Recreation D i s trict $2800 down, 72 mo., fence fixed, hedges 541-548-1448 c ustom, o a k b ox. owner Sr., $19,800. 4 .49% APR o n a p 4 .49% APR o n a p - Board of D i rectors 882 smolichmotors.com trimmed or a house 54'I -388-2026 F35 Bonanza. Aircraft AM/FM cassette, new proved credit. License T uesday, May 1 9 , proved credit. License Fifth Wheels a nd title i n cluded i n 2015, meeting has is in exc. cond., w/ brakes, 289 V-8, '67 and title included in built you'll find payment, plus dealer inpayment, plus dealer been cancelled. The good paint 8 newer Mustang engine in this. professional help in CHECK YOUR AD stalled options. installed options. interior. Full IFR. Auto Edelbrock intake and next regularly schedThe Bulletin's "Call a uled meeting will be pilot, yaw d amper, carb CFM. 10,461 mi. S UBA R u ® s u a aau on engine. $12,500. engine monitor. 8USARUOBSEMD.OOII Service Professional" conducted Tuesday, 541-610-2406. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. J une 2, 2015. F o r 6485TT, 1815SMOH, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Directory 692STOH. Hangered 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 more information call Ford F-1502010, Dodge Nitro 2008, 541-385-5809 Dlr ¹0354 541-706-6151. in Bend. $32,000 or Dlr ¹0354 Super Crewcab 3.7L V-6 cyl VIN ¹B51865.$26,888. VIN ¹203433.$13,998. on the first day it runs $16,000 for y2 share. Call Bob Carroll (exp. 5/17/15) DLR ¹366 (exp. 5/1 7/1 5) DLR ¹366 to make sure it is cor541-550-7382 Ford T-Bird 1955, rect. "Spellcheck" and arcarroll9©gmail.com removable hard top, human errors do oc292 V8 engine, 3 cur. If this happens to HANGAR FOR SALE. s pd, w hite, e x c . your ad, please con30x40 end unit T original cond. Runs tact us ASAP so that hanger in Prineville. $25,000 Firm. corrections and any Dry walled, insulated, great. 541-548-1448 541-548-1448 541-923-5887 adjustments can be and painted. $23,500. smolichmotors.com smolichmotors.com made to your ad. Tom, 541.788.5546 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,
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SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL
FOUR WINDS 2003 5th
wheel 26L, A/C, CD, micro, awning slide o ut, m uc h m o re $9000. 541-876-5073. Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at Freightliner custom 541-447-5184.
5th wheel puller,
sleeper cab, rebuilt engine with 20k miles, 6.5 generator, 120 cu. ft. storage boxes - one 8' long. Gets 10.9 mpg. All in good shape. See to appreciate (in Terrebonne
area).$24,000 some trades considered. 503-949-4229
Take advantage of our specialmerchandise pricing starting at
Show your stuff, sell your stuff. Add a PhOtO to yOur Bulletin ClaSSified ad fOr juSt
$15 per week. Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/180 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$13,000. Call 541-815-2144
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, 925 rear island-kitchen, Utility Trailers fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, Tow Dolly, new tires, 2 sets of straps, exc. custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. c ond., capable o f New awning & tires. p ulling a f u l l s i z e Exc. cond. Tow vehicle pickup truck. If interalso available.$17,900 ested we will send obo.Morepics availpictures. $1000 obo. able.541-923-6408 951-961-4590
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Item Priced af: our To Ad Cosonl 1 • Under $500.....................................................................$39 • $500to $999....................... ...... $49 • $1000 fo $2499.................. ..........................................$59 • Over $2500........................... ..........................................$sg Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.
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To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.