Bulletin Daily Paper 07-17-14

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THUR Y

Serving Central Oregon since190375

Ju ly17,2014

Cosmeticrisks SPORTS • C1

HEALTH• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Organic doons — Areview of past studies finds benefits to organic food, adding fuel to a debate.D1

Homeduyerdoost —Local lenders point to programs to aid first-time buyers and those recovering from the crash.C6

Oregon'sRomanianprin-

By Scott Hammers

Army National Guard.

The Bulletin

Bush, a member of the department

Hours after Prineville

city officials announced his firing, former Police Chief Eric Bush filed suit against

into an unspecified

since 1990 and chief

since 2003, was fired Tuesday, the

Bush

the city and others in Crook

city announced in a

County Circuit Court, alleging he was fired as a result of his service in the Oregon

two-sentence press release Bush's dismissal followed

since September. As of March

31, the city had paid nearly $61,000 in wages and benefits to him since the beginning of the investigation. The suit filed Wednesday

matterprepared by the

names the city, interim chief

in 2013 to train South Korean

Captain Michael Boyd and

and American forces sta-

independentLocal Government Personnel Institute.

the Local Government PerBush has been on paid leave sonnel Institute as defendants.

a 10-month investigation

In an email, Bush's attorney Roxanne Farra wrote that she

"personnel matter," as previously described by CityManager Steve Forrester, and a yet-undiscl o sed report on the

intends to prove Bush, a brigadier general with the National

Guard, was fired as a result of accepting an assignment tioned in South Korea. See Bush /A5

CeSS —Irina Walker pleads guilty in connection with a rural cockfighting enterprise.B3

Changing minds — Toget

Bendman

people to think your way, try agreeing — strongly — with their way.A3

pleads

guilty in illicit hunts

ln world news —Obama announces tougher sanctions on Russia.A2

And a Wed exclusiveThree siblings hope to beat the odds andswim the English Channel together. benttballetin.cam/extras

By Valerie Smith The Bulletin

A Bend man has pleaded guilty to charges related to running an illegal hunting guide service, in what Oregon State Police say may be one of the largest inves-

EDITOR'SCHOICE

tigations for its Fish and Wildlife Division.

Policy for digital lives of the dead pi'oposed

In announcing the case Wednesday state police

said Alan Roy Aronson, 43, became the primary suspect in an investigation that led to more than 200

charges against Aronson and 22 others. Oregon electronic court information

shows Aronson faced more than 150 counts in Wheeler

and Deschutes counties. The case involved the

By Anne Flaherty

killing of dozens of elk, including several large

The Associated Press

WASHINGTON-

trophy elk and at least nine

You've probably decided who gets the house or that

buffalo. Aronson pleaded guilty

family heirloom up in the attic when you die. But

in Wheeler County in June to two counts of first-de-

what about your email ac-

gree theft and three misde-

count and all those photos stored online'? Grieving relatives might want access for sentimental reasons, or to settle

meanor counts of failing to register as an outfitter or

guide. He was sentenced to 30 days in jail and a lifetime suspension of his hunting license and ordered to pay about $66,050

financial issues. But do you

want yourmom reading your exchanges on an online dating profile or a spouse going through every email?

in fines and restitution. See Hunts /A4

The Uniform Law Com-

mission, whose members are appointed by state gov-

A storage room yields more viruses

ernments to help standard-

ize state laws, on Wednesday endorsed a plan that would give loved ones access to — but not control of — the deceased's digital accounts, unless specified otherwise in a will.

By Brady Dennis and Lena H. Sun

SeeDigital /A4

The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — Fed-

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly sunny High 91, Low50 Page B6

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,>' .

,yay r+,',, t.'. a i.,' .tti',I,." ,I(„ ls', 4 j '

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eral officials found more than just long-forgotten smallpox samples recently in a storage room on

, i y;,'e...

Andy Tullts/The Bulletin

John French, of SanJose, California, jumps a barrier Wednesday while riding Paco, a10-year-old Argentine Warmblood, as the two

INDEX Business C5-6 Calendar B2 Classified Ef-6 Comics/ Puzzles E3-4 Crosswords E4

Dear Abby D5 Health Df -6 Local/State B1-6 Obituaries B5 Sports C1-4 TV/Movies D5

The Bulletin An Independent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 198,

ride their way to a double clean run in the1.10-meter jumpers division of the Oregon High Desert Classics at J Bar J Boys Ranch in Bend. SeeWednesday's High Desert Classics results,Page C2.

'Biological pacemaker' created in a pig By Pam Belluck New York Times News Service

By injecting agene into a

the National Institutes

for Health campus in Bethesda, Maryland. The discovery included 12 boxes and 327 vials holding an array of pathogens, including the virus behind the tropical disease dengue and the bacteria that can cause spotted fever,

according to the Food and Drug Administration, which oversees the lab in

prove to be a promising examporarily reprogram ordinary ple of gene therapy, which so far heart cells into rhythm-genhas shownglimmers of success erating cells. Human trials of

one of the authors of the study,

question.

which appeared in Science Translational Medicine, said

"The fact that these materials were not dis-

30 pages, 5sections

pig's heart, scientists have cre-

in just a few other conditions.

the technique are at least three

the work was the first in which

covered until now is unac-

Q i/l/e use recyclednewsprint

ated a"biologicalpacemaker" that can regulate heartbeats, which may eventually lead

Researchers at the Ce-

yearsaway,andifsuccessful, the approach wouldbe, at least

this genetic approach, called "somatic reprogramming,"

ceptable," Karen Midthun, director of the FDA's

Los Angeles reported Wednesdaythat theyhad injected a gene into a tiny section of pigs'

at first, limited to a small subset

had been used to address a

Center for Biologics Eval-

hearts and were able to tem-

tor of the heart institute and

:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

88 267 02329

to an alternative to electronic

pacemakersinsome people. The technique also may

dars-Sinai Heart Institute in

of pacemaker users. Dr. Eduardo Marban, direc-

life-threatening condition in a large animal. SeePacemaker/A5

uation and Research, told

reporters Wednesday. SeeViruses/A4


A2

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rie cease- irein aza; ta ro u n o ensive

California death penalty —Afederal judgein LosAngeles ruled Wednesdaythat California's death penalty violates the U.S. Constitution's ban oncruel and unusual punishment. U.S. District Judge CormacCarney ruled on apetition by death row inmate Ernest DewayneJones,whowassentencedtodienearlytwo decadesago. Carney said the state's death penalty has created long delaysand uncertainty for inmates, most of whom will never beexecuted. He noted that more than 900 people have been sentenced to death in California since1978 but only13 havebeenexecuted.

By Jodi Rudoren

could eradicate terrorism

New York Times News Service

from Gaza and indicated that

addition to the 42,000 troops already mobilized. With no Israel was even considering a progressreported from Cairo, long-term reoccupation of the where President Mahmoud

TEL AVIV, Israel — Even

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bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

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as Israel and Hamas agreed to pause hostilities briefly

coastalterritory. Abbas of the Palestinian AuBut with t h e P alestinian thority had gone to discuss

Thursday at the request of the

United Nations, a senior Israeli military official said that his government was increasingly likely to order a ground inva-

death toll reaching 214 on

terms to end the fighting, Is-

W ednesday, Israel and t h e

rael's airstrikes intensified de-

Gaza militants agreed to end spite what the military official the violence for five hours acknowledged were diminishThursday, from 10 a.m. to 3 ing returns. "Every day that passes p.m. For Israel, it was a move that might help mitigate in- makes the possibility more

sion of the Gaza Strip that it

NEW S R O O M FA X

had hoped to avoid. Though Israel initially set limited goals of halting the rocket assaults against it and

ternational criticism of rising civilian casualties, and that

evident," the military official

541-385-5804

degrading Hamas, the Isla-

carried little cost: The military

The official, who has been

mist movement that d ominates Gaza, the group's tenac-

warned that if Hamas or oth-

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and spoke on the condition of

anonymity, said that his assessment was based on "the signals

Bergdahl attorney —Sgt. BoweBergdahl, freedafter yearsof

said of a ground campaign.

I get" and that the likelihood of

an invasion was "very high."

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Egypt Sex IISSSIIltS —An Egyptian judge on Wednesdaysentenced nine men facing charges of sexual assault in four attacks to terms of 20 years to life, handing down the lengthy penalties weeks after the government pledged that sexual violence against women would be moreseverely punished. Avideo of one attack at a mass celebration after the election of Egypt's new president, Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, in Tahrir Square last month provoked widespread outrage.

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captivity in Afghanistan and returned to active duty this week, has retained anattorney — a military law expert from Yale. EugeneFidell, who teaches military justice at YaleLawSchool, told the Los Angeles Times that he hasbeenrepresenting Bergdahl for about a weekand is working pro bono. Fidell said hespoke with Bergdahl but declined to discuss manydetails, citing confidentiality. "He is deeply grateful to President BarackObamafor having saved his life," Fidell said, "by doing whatever had to bedone." IFSII IIUCI88f t8lkS —President Barack Obamasaid Wednesday that he believed theUnited States had "acredible wayforward" in its nuclear negotiations with Iran, andstrongly suggested that after consultations with Congress, he would seek anextension of the talks beyond Sunday's deadline. TheIranian proposal is widely judged as insufficient by U.S.officials and intelligence experts. Theyargue that it would not give theWest the minimum Secretary of State John Kerry said last year wasacceptable: at least ayear's warning time that Iran was racing to produceenough bomb-grade fuel for a nuclear weapon.

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Climate initiativeS —President BarackObamaannounced a series of climate changeinitiatives Wednesday aimed at guarding the electricity supply; improving local planning for flooding, coastal erosion and storm surges; andbetter predicting landslide risks assea levels rise and storms anddroughts intensify. Theactions, involving a variety of federal agencies, wereamong the recommendations of the president's State, Local andTribal LeadersTaskForce on Climate Preparedness andResilience, agroup of 26 officials who haveworked since November to develop the proposals.

briefing Israeli ministers reer groups "exploited" the "hu- sponsible for strategic decisions

ity and surprisingly deep ar- manitarian window" to attack senal have led to widespread Israel, it would "respond firmcalls to expand the mission. ly and decisively." The military official said that Hours earlier, Israel had only "boots on the ground" called up 8,000 reservists in

Birth COntrOI bill —Senate Republicans have blocked a bil aimed at restoring free contraception for womenwho get their health insurance from companies that object on religious grounds. The voteWednesday was56-43tomoveaheadonthemeasure,short of the 60 votes necessary to proceed. Democrats sponsored the election-year bill to reverse last month's SupremeCourt ruling that closely held businesses with religious objections could denycoverage under President BarackObama's health care law.

Jacquelyn Martin /The AssociatedPress

Presid entBarackObama speaksWednesdayinthe White Houseabout foreign policy and escalating sanctions against Russia in response tothe crisis in Ukraine. The Obamaadministration brought its toughest sanctions to date against major Russian banks, energy companies andweapons makersinabidtoconvince the Kremlin to end its "provocations" in Ukraine. Among the entities targeted are two Russian banking giants and Kalashnikov Concern, the company

that makes AK-47s —the standard Soviet and Russia assault rifle — along with the head ofRussia's Federal Security Service. Thesanctions target Russia's oil and gas industry for the first time, limiting access to U.S. capital for new projects. Obama said the newsanctions are significant but targeted to hit Russia's economy without affecting Europe or U.S.businesses. — McClatch y Washington Bureau

BOSIIia maSSaCre —A Dutch court ruled Wednesdaythat the government was liable for the deaths of about 300 of theestimated 8,000 Muslims slaughtered in the1995 Srebrenica massacre inBosnia, Europe's worst ethnically motivated massmurder since World War II, saying that aUnited Nations team of Dutch peacekeepers had failed to prevent thosedeaths. Thepeacekeeping force, outnumbered by raiding BosnianSerb forces, hadhanded over nearly 300 Bosnian Muslim menandboys of fighting age to be "screenedfor war crimes." The district court in TheHagueruled the peacekeeping force should have known that the Muslims were likely to bekilled by theSerbs. PhilippineS typhOOII —At least 20 people havebeen killed and seven others injured in atyphoon that ripped through the Philippines, government officials said Wednesday.Typhoon Rammasun, which made landfall early Tuesday, blasted the island nation with105 mph winds and heavy rain, knocking down power lines andleading to the collapse of somebridges and buildings. Officials have begun to survey the damageasthe worst of the storm moved west off the coast of the country and toward China. — From wire reports

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

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revealmore si de effects from niacin, a drug that hundreds of

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thousandsof Americanstakefor effect information, including a cholest erolproblems and gener- troubling rise in deaths among al heart health. Some prominent niacin users in one study, also doctors say the drug now seems was known but many doctors too risky for routine use. have been waiting for full deNiacin is a type of B vitamin

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THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, July17, the 198th day of 2014. Thereare 167 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS GM — The company's chief executive and thehead of its legal department are scheduled to testify before aSenate committee on thedefective ignition switch that GMhas linked to at least13 deaths.

CUTTING EDGE

I

RESEARCH

I

To alter attitudes, don't argue, agree aiines — extremely

0 0 COWS On c3 I'0

in'un eswi

Gaza — Israel and militant groups say they will suspend attacks for five hours as a humanitarian gesture at the request of the United Nations. A2

In1962, the United States con-

ducted its last atmospheric nuclear test to date, detonating a 20-kil otondevice,codenamed Little Feller I, at the Nevada Test Site. In1974, Baseball Hall of Famer Jay Hanna "Dizzy" Dean,64, died in Reno,Nevada. In1975, an Apollo spaceship docked with a Soyuzspacecraft in orbit in the first superpower link-up of its kind. In1981, 114peoplewere killed when a pair of suspended walkways above the lobby of the Kansas CityHyattRegencyHotel collapsedduring a teadance. In1996, TWA Flight 800, a

Europe-bound Boeing747, exploded andcrashed off Long Island, NewYork, shortlyafter leaving John F.Kennedy International Airport, killing all 230 people aboard. In1998, Nicholas II, last of the Romanov czars, was formally buried in Russia 80years after he and his family were slain by the Bolsheviks. Ten years ago: California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger mockingly used the term "girlie men" during a rally as he claimed Democrats were delaying the state budget by catering to special interests. Five years ago: FormerCBS anchorman Walter Cronkite died in NewYork at 92. Bombs ripped through two luxury hotels in Jakarta, Indonesia, killing seven victims andwounding at least 50 more. Thespace shuttle Endeavour arrived at the international spacestation to deliver the third and final

component of a billion-dollar Japaneselab. One year ago: In aheated House Judiciary Committee hearing on domestic spying, members of Congresssaid they'd never intended toallow the National Security Agency to build a database ofevery phone call in America, while top Dbama administration officials countered that the once-secret program waslegal and necessary to keepAmerica safe.

Actor Donald Sutherland is 79. Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, is 67. Actress Lucie Arnaz is 63. Actor David Hasselhoff is 62. GermanChancellor Angela Merkel is 60. Actor Jason Clarke is 45. Actor TomCullen (TV: "Downton Abbey") is 29. — From wire reports

raelis and exposed half of them

What if the best way to change minds isn't to tell

to video clips that related the conflict with Palestinians back

but to tell them why they're righto Scientists tried this

ss

p

recently and discovered that agreeing with people can be a surprisinglypowerful way to shake up strongly held beliefs. Researchers found that showing people extreme

h

Sgt. Sarah Dietz/U.S. Marine Corps

The LeggedSquad SupportSystem, orLS3,cancarry as much as400 pounds ofequipment and enough fuel to walk 20 miles over 24 hours.

dear. The other half watched

neutral TV commercials and served as acontrol. But instead of pointing out

how the conflict stood at odds with Israeli values — a common approach in persuasion — the experimental videos illustrated how the conflict was

versions of ideas that confirmed — not contradicted

consistent with many partici-

attribute this to the fact that the new information caused

searchers showed participants a video that claimed Israel

pants' beliefs, taken to their ex— their opinions on a deep- treme limit. "For example, the fact that ly divisive issue actually causedthem to reconsider they are the most moral society their stance and become in the world is one of the most more receptive to o t her basic beliefs of Israeli society," points of view. The scientists Halperin said. So when the repeople to see their views as should continue the conflict so

By Dan Lamothe

sion of the Marine Corps War-

The Washington Post

fighting Laboratory. Check it

More than a 1,000 U.S. Ma- out in action: rines are participating in the The L S 3 i s co n s tantly Rim of the Pacific military ex- checking its footing, making it ercises in and around Hawaii useful in uneven terrain where this month as 49 ships and six a vehicle might not be. In typisubmarines from 23 countries cally funny and blunt fashion, test a variety of equipment the Marines using it in Hawaii

to maneuver quite as much terrain as the LS3. On the flip

irrational or absurd, accord-

that its citizens could continue

side, Marines are able to hop

ing to a study published this to feel moral, people reacted week in the Proceedings of angrily.

in and drive it whenever they

the National Academy of

want, or if the sensors that allow it to drive itself aren't

Sciences. "We truly believe that in

working. I imagine attempting to ride a robotic cow wouldn't be nearly as enjoyable. and work to integrate it. It's have taken to calling it "the Berry said there are onthe robot on shore, however, cow," said Lt. Col. Charles going conversations about that is getting an inordinate Berry, who is leading the ex- how the two robots can best amount of buzz because of its periment. Three of them are be used. There also are confunny looks and potential util- on hand, allowing the troops cerns about relying on them ity to U.S. troops pulling foot to use at least one of them at too heavily — if they were to patrols. most times. break down in a combat zone, The "cows" aren't the only they'd likely need to be pulled Meet the Legged Squad Support System, or LS3. De- robots getting use right now, out, pushed or carried. veloped by Boston Dynam- however. The Marines also For now, though, the Maics, it can carry as much as are testing a new "internally rines are content to gather 400 pounds of equipment and transportable vehicle" about information and see what the enough fuel to walk 20 miles the size of a small Jeep that two robotic haulers can too. over 24 hours, the compa- can drive itself. Known as the And yes: That cow might not ny says. It began a two-year "Ground Unmanned Support be mooing, but it is pretty loud. testing phase in 2012 and is Surrogate," or GUSS, it comes A unit with it won't be sneakgetting some serious work at in handy carrying water and ing up on anyone anytime RIMPAC under the superviother equipment, but isn't able soon.

most intractable conflicts,

the real problems are not the real issues," said Eran Halperin, a psychologist at

eYou take people's most basic beliefs and turn them into

something that is absurd," Halperin said. "For an outsider, it can sound like a joke, but for them, you are playing with their most fundamental belief."

the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya in Israel and an author of the study. In reali-

Although participants did not enjoy watching the clips,

ty, he said, both sides know what needs to be done; however, there are many "psychological barriers that prevent societies from identifying opportunities for peace." To see if tightly held attitudes could be pried loose,

posure over a period of months leading up to the 2013 Israeli

cades-old conflict between

like the idea that Palestinians

afternumerous rounds of exelections, participants' a t ti-

tudes softened considerably; they reported almost a 30 percent increase in their will-

ingness to re-evaluate their position compared with particthe scientists looked to one ipants in the control group and of the most polarizing is- took a more neutral stance on sues on the planet, the de- common political narratives Israelis and Palestinians bear responsibility for continuthat flared again violently ing the conflict last week. People on both

sides hold strongbeliefs that make compromise difficult, as years of failed negotiations have proved.

DID YOU HEAR?

UAE plansfirst Arabspaceshipto Mars By Aya Batrawy

ship to land but only got 20 The journey is complicated seconds of data. and many missions to Mars The world's overall success

DUBAI, United Arab Emir-

ates — Having scaled the

have failed. Countries first

h eights of E a rt h w i t h t h e trying to launch into space world's tallest tower, the Unit- usually fail more often than ed Arab Emirates is now aim- they succeed and that's just ing for the stars, or just a little getting into Earth's orbit. Getbit closer, with an ambitions ting to Mars is the hardest job trip to Mars. The energy-rich for even veteran space councountry on the eastern tip of tries. Russia — the first counthe Arabian Peninsula an- try to go to space — failed fre-

nounced plans Wednesday to

rate in Mars missions since

the 1960s is less than 50-50. NASA has the best success

by

FIIR

Halperin'sgraduatestudents

,DEO

Boaz Hameiri and Roni Po-

has sent 21 missions to Mars since the 1960s, and all but six have succeeded. The U.S. is

the only nation so far to land and operate long-term an unquently with landers, got one manned ship on Mars.

spaceship to Mars in 2021. The ruler of the UAE's emir-

NO-MESS BIRD FOOD

ate of Dubai, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum,

said the mission will prove the Arab world is still capable of delivering scientific contributions to humanity, despite the

Bend Park 9 Recreation

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Shevlin Park: Public input isneededto help inform anewpark management plan designedto balanceparkuseanduser experiencewith conservation of thepark's natural resources.

many conflicts across the Middle East.

"Our region is a region of

civilization. Our destiny i s,

Questionnaire available now

once again, to explore, to create, to build and to civilize,"

through August 29, 2014

said Al Maktoum, who is also

at www.bendparksandrec .org/current projects/park-projects/.

UAE's vice president, in a

statement. For years, the UAE has been

0 SHELLS OR GROWTH, JUST BIRDS

pushing Arab League nations to create a pan-Arab space

agency similar to the European Space Agency.

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not

say how much the program is expected to cost, but said the space agency would report to the Cabinet and be financially and administratively independent otherwise. The UAE said that its unmonths and travel more than 37 million miles to Mars, mak-

ing the emirates one of only

WiIId Zh(k RnAeif~,d'

nine countries with space pro-

Nature Shop

grams to try and explore the red planet. A UAE Cabinet statement

said the project aims to advance human knowledge and develop Emirati human capital and economy, but did not list specific scientific goals for

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rate at around 70 percent. It

send the first unmanned Arab

T he government did

T he scientists, led

DESCIIITES COIIITY

the probe.

The Associated Press

manned probe will take nine

BIRTHDAYS

rat, recruited more than 150 Is-

Los Ange(es Times

people why they're wrong, to values thatmany Israelis hold

HISTORY Highlight: In1944, during World War II, 320 men, twothirds of them African-Americans, were killed when apair of ammunition ships explodedat the Port Chicago NavalMagazine in California. In1821, Spain cededFlorida to the United States. In1918, Russia's CzarNicholas II and his family wereexecuted by the Bolsheviks. In 1936, the Spanish Civil War began as right-wing army generals launched acoupattempt against the SecondSpanish Republic. In 1938, aviator Douglas Corrigan tookoff from New York, saying hewas headedfor California; he ended up in Ireland,supposedlybyaccident, earning the nickname"Wrong Way Corrigan." In 1954, the two-day inaugural Newport Jazz Festival, billed as "The First American JazzFestival," opened in RhodeIsland; among the performers the first night was Billie Holiday, who died in NewYork on this date in 1959 at age44. In1955, Disneyland had its opening day inAnaheim, California.

By Julia Rosen

••~8

If you would like a papercopy mailed to you, call (541)389-7275.

Citizen Advisory Committee Members Needed The Oistrict is seeking adiverse group of citizens to represent the community-at-large and to participate with the District in the development of the Shevlin ParkManagementPlan. Qualifications: Experience/knowledge/interest in community planning andability to evaluate diverse viewpoints andmake recommendations based onwhat is best for the park andthe broader community. Committee membersmust be District residents. To Apply: Pleasevisit the BPRDwebsite's Shevlin Park Management Plan pagefor submission guidelines or call (541)389-7275. Deadline to apply is August 8,2014.

ForinformationontheShevlin ParkManagement Plan, questionnaire andcommittee, visit www.bendParksandrec.ortI.


A4 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

Hunts ContInued from A1 He was also ordered to

forfeit property i n cluding two utility task vehicles and a 2005 Ford pickup. Many of the charges filed in Wheeler County, and all in Deschutes

some of it, not all of it," Ouelk. The dimensions refer to sley said. "He owned 160 the elk's rack and size. acres of r a nch, and t h ere She was sentenced to a was about 120,000 acres sur- three-year h u nting-license rounding him. He wandered suspension and ordered to

onto neighboring property, and at least nine buffalo were shot and taken from the property." County, were dismissed. Aronson killed dozens of Aronson's lawyer could elk, including several large not be reached for comment trophy elk shot by individWednesday, and two l i sted uals without valid hunting telephone numbers for Aron- tags, according to OSP. son were disconnected. Aronson charged individuThe investigation began in als from $500 to $5,000, and October 2012 when troopers possibly more, for the guided in OSP's Fish and Wildlife hunts, according to Ousley. Division received an anonDuring t h e ex e cution ymous tip alleging illegal of search warrants in Deguided hunting was taking schutes and Wheeler counplace in Wheeler County. ties, i nvestigators seized Troopers from across the documents, a computer, unstate coordinated efforts and tagged trophy elk and deer conducted over 10 0 i n t er- mounts, vehicles, a rifle and views, according to OSP. three freshly skinned buffalo From 2 0 10-12, l i c ensed hides, state police said. and unlicensed hunters parOf the others charged, nine ticipated in Aronson's guid- have also pleaded guilty or ed hunts, which he solicited no contest, and cases are through Craigslist and by pending for 13 others, acword-of-mouth, said Daniel cording to state police. Ousley, Wheeler County's Aronson's wife, Emily Ardistrict attorney. onson, pleaded no contest to "Aronson was trespass- a charge of unlawfully shooting on private property for ing and killing a 6-by-7 bull

Viruses very seriously, and we're working to ensure that this doesn't happen again." The disclosure came hours after Thomas Frie-

10, 1954 — Frieden said last for countries in the Southern week, adding that it appeared Hemisphere, where flu season arrives later, is likely to be afthat whoever left them at NIH "didn't do so out of malice." fected by the moratorium, he The FDA said Wednesday sald. that it is reviewing its safety At several points during protocols and digging through the hearing, Murphy held up all other s imilar storage a Ziploc bag containing petri rooms, at its headquarters and dishes with photos of anthrax

Hunting suspensions for

den, director of the Centers

nationwide, to make sure no

Emily Aronson and the oth-

for Disease Control and

pay fines and restitution of $15,350 for the illegal taking of the bull elk, according to OSP.

ers totaled 34 years, state police said. They've also been ordered to pay $152,000 in fines, fees and forfeitures. Duane Dungannon, state coordinator of

t h e O r egon

Hunters Association, said illegal hunting and poaching activities have become an

increasing nuisance in Oregon. The association pays rewards for tips that come

into its hot line, and much of the funding comes from court-ordered restitution, he

said. " Someone may se e a poaching case like this and think it doesn't affect them," Dungannon said. "But in re-

ality, it really does in one way or another. These types of things have a trickle effect." — Reporter: 541-383-0325 vsmithibendbulletin.com

Digital

ContInued from A1 "We take t hi s m a tter

ical pattern," he told law-

makers. "And the pattern is an insufficient culture of safety." Both the smallpox discovery and the previously

people in the 20th century alone, remain th e m o st

the legislation would have to be adopted by the legislature. If it did, a person's online life could become as much a part of estate planning as deciding what to do with physical possessions.

fever, the additional vials

contained such microbes such as influenza and Q fever, a bacteria that can

cause complications with

said Karen Williams of Beaverton, who sued Facebook for

the heart, lungs and liver.

The Associated Press file photo

"Our email accounts are 22-year-old son Loren's account after he dled In a 2005 motorcycle our filing cabinets these days," accident. "I could understand where some people don't want to said Suzanne Brown Walsh, share everything," she says. "But to us, loslng him (our son) unexa Cummings & Lockwood pectedly, anything he touched became so valuable to us." attorney who chaired the d rafting committee on t h e

proposed legislation. But "if you needaccess to an email account, in most states you wouldn't get it."

Privacy activists are skeptical of the proposal. Ginger McCall, associate director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington,

said a judge's approval should be neededforaccess,toprotect the privacy of both the owners

of accounts and the people who communicate with them. "The digital world is a different world" from offline, McCall said. "No one would keep 10 years of every communication they ever had with dozens or even hundreds of other people under their bed." Many people assume they can decide what happens by sharing certain passwords with a trusted family member, or even making those passwords part of their will.

But in addition to potentially exposing passwords when a will becomes public record, anti-hacking laws and most

dead person's account.

sentative of the deceased, such

as the executor of a will, would get access to — but not control tions. Facebook, for example, of — a person's digital files so will "memorialize" accounts long as the deceased didn't by allowing already confirmed prohibit it in the will. The law friends to continue to view would trump accessrules outphotos and old posts. Google, lined by a company's terms of which runs Gmail, YouTube service agreement, although and Picasa Web Albums, of- the representative would still fers its own version: If people have to abide by other rules indon't log on after a while, their cluding copyright laws. accounts can be deleted or That means, for example, shared with a designated per- a widow could read her deson. Yahoo users agree when ceased husband's emails but signing up that their accounts couldn't send emails from that expire when they do. account. And a person could Several tech providers have come up with their own solu-

But the courts aren't con-

access music or video downloads but not copy the files

vinced that a company supplying the technology should if doing so violated licensing get to decide what happens agreements. to a person's digital assets. Williams said she supports In 2005, a Michigan probate letting people decide in their judge ordered Yahoo to hand wills whether accounts should over the emails of a Marine be kept from family members. "I could understand where killed in Iraq after his parents argued that their son would some people don't want to share have wanted to share them. everything," she said in a phone Likewise, a court eventually

r e searchers

inactivated, but scientists at

the CDC bioterrorism lab had not killed the bacteria before transferring samples to other

labs. Witnesses also described the lack of coordination and

oversight at laboratories inside and outside the federal

cident "sloppy" and "inexcus- Nancy Kingsbury, a managing able," saying the agency's labs director of the Government are supposed to be "the gold Accountability Office, told the

ria that can cause spotted

Karen William of Beaverton sued Facebook for access to her

Frieden said

working with those samples thought the anthrax had been

He called the most recent in-

idea what is about to be lost,"

Loren's account after he died in a 2005 motorcycle accident.

dangerousmaterialwa stransferredin Ziplocbags.

storage room in Building 29A. Those samples were

and rickettsia, the bacte-

access to her 22-year-old son

ernment watchdogs have doc-

restricted hallways and that

inside the third-floor cold

On Wednesday, the FDA

people don't think of until they are faced with it. They have no

said last week that there had

umented numerous systemic government that conduct resafety lapses over the years. search on microbes that could

said that along with dengue

"This is s omething most

other safety failures, samples

sampleswere transferred from of the bacteria were stored in one lab to others. The agency unlocked refrigerators in un-

disturbing find this month

shown growth in tissue cultures, meaning they are viable, or alive.

To become law in a state,

posed to live anthrax when

been at least four other incidents in the past decade in undisdosed safety lapses at which deadly pathogens were the CDC have sowed doubt mishandled, including one in about how the nation's pre- which employees mistakenly mier public health and re- sent a sample contaminated search institutions are safe- with the deadly H5N1 influguarding some of the most enza virusto government relethal organisms on Earth. searchersin Georgia.None of The vials of smallpox, a those incidents hadbeenpreviscourge that was eradicat- ously disclosed. ed decades ago after killSubcommittee C h a irman ing hundreds of millions of Tim Murphy, R-Pa., said gov-

flown to the CDC in Atlanta, and at least two have

ContInued from A1

bacteria glued to them and

more vials are tucked away in asked why scientists would P revention, t estified o n forgotten corners. be using plastic bags to transCapitol Hill that researchFrieden was summoned to port dangerous pathogens. ers at the agency mishan- testify before a House Energy Murphy was referring to an dled live anthrax and othand Commerce subcommittee investigation by the Agriculer deadly pathogens in a about last month's incident ture Department's animal and string of mishaps in recent in which more than 80 CDC plant health inspection seryears. "We missed a crit- employees may have been ex- vice, which found that, among

The samples were in wellpacked, heat-sealed vials and showed no signs of leakage. No evidence exists that anyone has been exposed to the pathogens, the agency said. "The reasons why these samples went

u n noticed

for this long is something that we're actively trying to understand," said Pe-

standard" for the U.S. health

be used as bioterrorism agents.

committee that since the 2001

anthrax attacks that killed five people, her agency has noting that Frieden had made repeatedly warned about probsimilar promises to improve lems that could arise from the safety and accountability in proliferation of biosafety labs. the wake of previous incidents, Nearly 1,500 registered laboasked, "Why should we be- ratories in the United States lieve you this time that things conduct this kind of research, are going to be different'?" according to the GAO. Although Frieden pointed But no single agency sets out that no one had been hurt national standards or provides and that all pathogens were oversight, she said. No one, she killed in the incidents, he said said, has been able to address that was no excuse and vowed key questions: "How many do to improve the agency's overall we really need? For what pursafety culture, as well as put in pose? Against what threat?" place stronger oversight meaRichard Ebright, a chemical sures. He said workers must biology professor at Rutgers be encouraged to report any University who conducts bioincidents that happen and "ap- safety research, said multiple ply the same rigor" to safety safety lapses at CDC labs over as to disease prevention and the years have been documentresearch. ed by government watchdogs, In response to the recent including the inspector generlapses, the CDC has closed al's office at the Department system.

Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich.,

ter Marks, CBER's deputy two labs — its bioterrorism of Health and Human Services director, adding that the rapid response lab and an in- and the GAO. boxes were in a seldom-ac-

fluenza lab that deals with

highly pathogenic flu viruses. It also has halted shipment of 32 of the samples were de- biologic materials from 22 of stroyed at an NIH facility. its highest-security labs until An additional 279 w ere a safety review is complete. transferred to the Depart- Priority for reopening will go ment of Homeland Secu- to those doing work related to rity's National Biodefense immediate patient care and Analysis and Countermea- public health, Frieden said. suresCenter in Maryland. The CDC's work on this year's No additional smallpox upcoming flu vaccine is finsamples were found. ished and won't be affected, The FDA said the collec- agency spokesman Tom Skintion "was most likely as- ner said. But work on vaccines cessed storage area. Agency officials said

Last month's event was "not an isolated event," Ebright

said. It occurred, he said, because "hubris is a fundamental part of the problem," noting that researchers often think

they can proceed without restrictions or management.

Pure. &md.6 CO.

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sembled between 1946 and

1964 when standards for work with and storage of

biological specimens were very different from those used today." The smallpox vials were labeled with a date — Feb.

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THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Taliban militants take aim at KabLII airport By Jawad Sukhanyar and Carlotta Gall New York Times News Service

KABUL, Afghanistan — Tal-

iban fighters fired rocket-propelled grenades at Kabul's airport early today after seizing control of a nearby building. The airport was closed, and

flights were diverted as Afghan security forces battled the militants, news agencies reported.

No information about casualties

was

imm e diately

available. Witnesses said the fighters

UPDATE: CONFLICT IN SYRIA

Bush

rianre es acec a en es in oicin areas e conro

Continued fromA1

By Raja Abdulrahim

eryone is daiming they are with the (opposition) Free Syrian Army," said Mudaar Najjar, who heads the securi-

standing with t h e

ty establishment for the rebel Islamic Front, which indudes

office said he had no comment

Los Angeles Times

ALEPPO, Syria — The in-

warrants for t h e

been willing to give up his en along byheavil y armed officers to this busy cobblestone street in the historic Bab al-Hadid neighborhood of Aleppo's Old City, he was clearly scared.

Pacemaker Continued fromA1 Pig hearts are similar to hu-

man hearts in many ways. In the heart, a small area of cells, called the sino-atrial

node, acts like a metronome, setting the pace of its beat. Certain conditions cause the

heart to beat too slowly or with a dangerously irregular rhythm. Electronic pacemakers correct that problem for some 300,000 people a year, but a small number ofheart patients cannot use them safely. About

" I don't

forthelast23years,"shewrote. Bush remains i n g o od N ational

ternoon. Boyd also said he had

no comment in an email. City Councilor Jack Seley said Wednesday afternoon

that he was unaware Bush had been fired, while Councilor Steve Uffelman said he was "not in a position" to speak

same work as the regime," said Ali Abu Hussein, who

about the matter, but encouraged The Bulletin to continue

heads the militia police, be-

fore quickly correcting himself: "Not like the regime, like a government. Building

filing records requests to force the city to make the details of

the investigation public. "Believe me, there's no objection to your doing that and

a country that is safe and

modern."

k n ow, I d o n ' t

Community that he has served

phone calls placed between Tuesday and Wednesday af-

"We are trying to do the

station the accused thief had

nity to present the facts of his case to the members of the

on the Bush matter, while Forrester declined to return three

key parts of the country, rebels continue their struggle for independence and self-governance in areas they control.

s uspects

Bush welcomes the opportu-

City attorney Carl Dutli's

ident Bashar Assad recapture

sought. In the safety of the police

"After nine months of coop-

erating with every aspect of the City's 'investigation,' Eric

Guard, spokeswoman Ursulla Bischoff said.

the militia police. "These are people who were originally criminals." Even as forces loyalto Pres-

"Where are their places?"

f ellow criminals. But t a k-

the airport, the witnesses said.

d

' 't"

officer Abdullah Waisi demanded, holding four arrest

sives at the gate of a duster of apartment buildings near the airport known as Qasaba. Gunmen then occupied abuilding that was under construc-

Ia '

formant began to beg as soon as he was pulled from the police truck, which was painted hot pink, blue and black in a poor attempt at military camouflage.

detonated a truck with explo-

tion and fired 16 grenades at

A5

The Islamic Front's militia

getting that i n formation to

know," theman whined, hold- Officers with the military police in Aleppo, Syria, guard the ing his head and cowering as perimeter as other officers search for suspected criminals in an an off icergrabbed him by the abandoned house. arm. Around them militia po-

police force was established in 2012, before the newer cientered the cityof Aleppo and

come out," Uffelman said. On Wednesday, Prineville City Recorder Lisa Morgan denied a public records re-

lice fanned out, rifles aimed at

the new territory saw an in-

quest filed by The Bulletin the

crease in crime among opposition fighters. In deserted Aleppo neigh-

day before seeking access to the report prepared by the Lo-

Raja Abdulrahim/Los Angeles Times

a five-story building, ready to ameasureoforderin law less raid one of the apartments. locales. Of late they have be"It's not perfect, but God gun forming civilian police willingitis agoodbeginning," forces as the latest step in creAhmad Istaini, a former facto- ating a civil society even as ry worker turned rebel turned the Syrian conflict drags on police commander, said ofthe into a fourthyear. nascent force at workin oppoThe policing efforts face sition-held Aleppo. some of the same shortcomNot long after Syrian op- ings that have beset the fragposition fighters began seiz- mented opposition's attempts ing control of entire neigh- at self-government: lack of exborhoods and towns, they perience and funds, questions established administrative of legitimacy and conflicts councils and courts to impose between competing rebel

groups. But as one man involved

vilian forces, as rebels first

in Aleppo's law enforcement noted, "If we disappeared for borhoods, from which resi10 days, Aleppo would be- dentshave fled as a resultof come ajungle." the government's airstrikes, The large swaths of Syria the opposition police officers under the control of myriad conduct nightly patrols to disopposition factions have be- courage thieves from raiding come fert ile ground for crim- empty homes and businesses inals taking advantage of a or attacking remaining cilaw-and-order vacuum. vilians. They also find them"These days there is no selves increasingly having security among people, and to resolve disputes among everyone is armed and ev- neighbors and even families.

cal Government Personnel In-

stitute. A similar request filed in late June was also denied. The Bulletin has appealed the denial of the most recent

request to Crook County District Attorney Daina Vitolins

and filed an additional request Wednesday asking how much the city paid the institute to

conduct its investigation. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

2 percent of pacemaker users

develop infections that require the device to be removed while 7

the infection is treated, Mar-

ban said. Some require a temporary pacemaker until the infection clears.

The 12 pigs in the study had

/ '•

, se as~

I

a condition called "complete h eart block," in w h ich t h e

sino-atrial node gets disconnected from the main pump-

ing chambers of the heart, causing a very slow heart rate. Marban said there are only several thousand sino-atrial

node cells in the heart, while billions of ordinary heart cells act to spread the pulse that allows the heart muscle to pump blood throughout the body. The researchers noticed that a gene called TBX-18 is activated briefly in the sino-atrial

node of developing embryos, suggesting that it may play a role in creating rhythm-generating cells. So the researchers decided to try injecting TBX18 into pigs' hearts. Half of the pigs were injected with the gene, while the

RV ROAD),SHOW a SAEE Al the IIeschulesCounlVfair a KxloCenter 4 QAYSSNE Y.. IIIIY 1I1-2$

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others were given an inactive

„[gTgCi

green protein to monitor the activity of their hearts and a backup electronic pacemaker

if they needed it. In pigs given the gene, heart rates quickened as they would

j

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with electronic pacemakers. Heart rates also responded

to the pigs' physical activity, accelerating when the pigs exercised, slowing when they rested, Marban said. The effect lasted only two weeks, and began tapering off around 11 days, but the researchers are continuing

CIj

<a

4

jcr,

experiments to see if the effect

can last longer. For now, even if the approach ends up being

i

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successful in humans, it would

be useful only in situations in which implanted pacemakers

=-

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must be removed because of

infection or in the rare cases of fetuses experiencing complete

$i

heart block in utero, said an-

other study author, Dr. Eugenio Cingolani. Still, experts not involved in

the study said the work represented a significant step. Dr. Ira Cohen, director of

®k@'

the Institute for Molecular Cardiology at Stony Brook,

@%©~1,

who has worked on other ap-

®i' "

proaches to biological pacemakers, called the new r e-

/

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' lleells "~ At the iieschites ' Coilllty Falrirounlis '

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search "remarkably clever" because Marban "picked a specific problem and did it in a very specific way." "Other people have tried it — he made it work," Cohen said.

llamoe

"It is very disappointing

FREE

how much the efforts in gene

therapy and cell therapy have yielded, so this little advance gives the hope that using a creative gene therapy approach can work," he added.

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1. The Estate Department has spent many years in the jewelry, watch, coin and antlque buslness. Experlence In dlamond cuttlng, wholesale, retall and manufacturing of fine jewelry gives them the knowledge and expertise to know how much to pay you for your treasured items.

2. The Esbate Department Is Ilcensed by your State and Local Governments. 3. We guarantee that you wlll be comfortable and treated with the utmost mspect and courtesy. Brlng everythlng. Don't make the mistake of thlnklng your things aren't good enough for us. We have discovered arbcles of great

value for many people from items unused for years. We hope we can give you thousands for your unwanted Items.

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5. Banks say durlng hard tlmes "CASH IS KING." In case of an emergency, your safe deposlt box should be full of cash not hard-to-sell dlamonds, jewelry or coins. Remember, cash in the bank is better than unused items sittlng in a safe deposit box or drawer.

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BUYERS AVAILABLE DAILY • FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT THIS EVENT, CALL 800-462-2888


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

BRIEFING Bend mandies in motorcycle crash A 57-year-old Bend man was killedTuesday when he lost control of his motorcycle on U.S. Highway 395near Ukiah, and the bikewent down an embankment, according to Oregon State Police. A preliminary investigation indicated Mark Hall Pfenning was riding a 2009 Buell north on Highway 395 nearstate Highway 244 whenhe lost control on a curve to the left. The motorcycle slid on its side across the turnout on the shoulder, according to an OSPnews release, and traveled down the embankment. The time of the crash has not beenconfirmed. However, a motorist stopped on the side of Highway 395about 12:50 p.m. when hesaw a motorcycle over the edge of the road, the news release stated. Emergency responders found Pfenning lying near the motorcycle. He was dead at the scene, according to OSP. State police are continuing to investigate, the news release stated.

Emer en ec are over wi ires By Dylan J. Darling

Relaied

National Weather Service in Pendleton said Wednesday

As wildfires burned around Central and Eastern Ore-

contained and • Northwest caused highway fires,BS closures, evacuation warnings

gon, Gov. John Kitzhaber on

and thick smoke that reached

tion from Bend.

The Bulletin

Wednesday declared a state of

emergency, which allows the Oregon National Guard to join firefighting if necessary. "Oregonisfacing asevere fire season," he said in a news release. "This declaration gives the resources and tools we need to respond and protect people, property and Oregon's natural areas. This crisis is a reminder that each of us has a responsibility to our state to

prevent new wildfires." Most of the wildfires burning Wednesday were still not

night that fires were putting off smoke in almost every direc-

"Pretty much whichever Bend. The fires were ignited by lightning earlier this week. wind blows. you are going to Smoke from the fires put a get smoke coming at you until haze around Bend on Wednes- they get those fires put out," day, and more smoke could be he said. in store the rest of the week.

A fire northeast of Madras

While obscuring the city's signature mountain views,

prompted the Oregon Department of Transportation to close Highway 97 late Wednesday afternoon as the fireburned near the highway's junction with U.S. Highway 197. Around 7 p.m. ODOT started piloting traffic through the smoke pouring over the highway, which remained dosed.

the smoke didn't cause the air

quality to reach unhealthy levels, according to data from the Oregon Department of En-

vironmental Quality. Looking at a satellite image of Central Oregon, Dennis

Hull, meteorologist with

The fire, called No. 347

by dispatchers, was burning about a mile from the Cow Canyon grade rest stop on Highway 97. Kassidy Kern, spokeswoman for the Central Oregon

Interagency Dispatch Center in Prineville, said the fire, which is on a mix of public and private land, hadburned at least

1,500 acres. Local firefighters had been trying to corral it since Sunday and were joined Wednesdayby five federal fire Complex Fire, continues to keep U.S. Highway 26 closed

amination and discussions with area builders,

northeast of Prineville. See Wildfires /B6

the city of Redmond is proposing amendments to the residential design standards it adopted last year. A public hearing on Tuesday. The city adopted architectural design standards for single-family and du-

esoun so summer

plex residencesmore than

a year ago but with the new year began hearing from builders dismayed at the cost burden and other restric tions.Afterseveral meetings with area

building contractors and the Redmond Urban Area

Planning Commission, which helped draft the standards, city staff began considering changes. "We're all looking at it from different per-

spectives," said Heather Richards, community development director, during a workshop with the

Redmond City Council on Tuesday. "The builders are looking at point of sale,

Call a reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 sisters...................541-548-2186 LaPine..................541-383-0367 Sunrlver ................541-383-0367 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 Stateprojects...... 541-410-9207 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Emaileventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand noticesofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsofteens' academic achievements to youth@bendbulletim.com. Emailcollege notes,military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358

Well shot!

After months of re-ex-

the amendments will be

The Bulletin

• Civic Calendarnotices:

By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

Email:letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickersworth or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact:541-383-0358

Council backs off ofhome design regulation

engines and two air tankers. Another fire, the Waterman

— Bulletin staff report

Submissions • Letters andopinions:

REDMOND

and we look at how it will impact our community in

years to come." The goal of the standards was to keep the

quality of housing stock in Redmond highand to avoidthe monotony and

cheap look that occurred in some neighborhoods during the boom years. "Curb appeal has longterm economic benefits in a community," said Evan

Dickens, chairman of the planning commission. One key concern from the builders is a new man-

JoeKline/The Bulletin

John Brown, left, and other attendees listen and dance to the music of Heart by Heart during the first Alive After 5 event on Wednesday in the Old Mill District in Bend. Alive After 5 features live music,

date to screen mechanical equipment and trash

food and drinks, and continues each Wednesday through Aug. 6. For more on Alive After 5, see GO!

areasfrom streetview. Roof-mounted equipment

Magazine in The Bulletin on Friday.

is exempted. Since the new code does not dictate what type of screening must be used, most build-

ershave opted tom eet the requirement with

Council OKsroundabout delay By Hillary Borrud The Bulletin

The Bend City Council voted Wednesday night to allow the Bend Park 8 Recreation

District to put off building a roundabout at Simpson

Avenue and Columbia Street when the district builds a multi-use pavilion nearby. The intersection is currently

a four-way stop, and existing city zoning requires the owner to build a roundabout when the property is developed. Scott Wallace, chairman of the park district board, said the pavilion project is a great example of local governments working together. "This community will really appreciate what we're build-

inexpensive plastic wall shields, which, according

Simpson Avenue pavilion

ing here," Wallace said. "For the last 40 years, a project like this has been talked about in the community."

The total estimated cost of the pavilion project is approximately $10.6 million. On top of that, the district has estimated

it would cost roughly $2.5 mil-

to city staff, defeats the

purpose of using the code to elevate the quality of residential development in

gO

Redmond.

Qe

Conversations with

S' p onAve.

Other end Park Rec. Distric ro

lion to build the roundabout.

See Roundabout/B3

ND big

builders and planning commissioners led to a recommendation to amend the code to allow

/ Andy Zeigert I The Bulletin

landscaping as an option to screen the utility areas. SeeHomes/B5

Reader photos

• We want to see your photos for the next special theme ofWell shot! — "psyched about summer" — to run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at bentlballatin.cem/ summer2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphetes© beatlballetia.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you tookit, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot bealtered.

Numerous chip-sealing projects set acrossRedmond By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

accordingto Peters. "Seal coating works well

REDMOND — Twenty streets in Redmond andthe

on those low-use streets and

parking lot of one busy city park are going to be dosed at some point next week for roadwork, but city officials

five to sevenyears," he said.

say there shouldn't be much

inconvenience. "We work really hard to coordinate through all the other

can extendtheir life another "If we can seal20streets for $50,000, that's a lot better than the $10,000 it would taken to

repave a single street." The seal coat, a protective mixture of sand and oil, should cure in a matter ofhours inthe

city departments and get the word out to the public, so I'm not expecting any problems," said Rob Peters, transportation division manager.

summer heat, Peters said. The city is warning homeowners that crews may dose streets from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m., but all of

The streets are all cul-de-

needed. Residents are asked to refrain from parking on the

sacs or dead ends, places where getting equipment for chip sealing can be problematic. This is year four of a five-year plan to seal-coat all nonthrough streets in Redmond,

that time is not expected to be street on their affected day and

turn off sprinklers the daybeforebecausemoistureadversely affects the curing. SeeSealing/B5

Redmond street-sealing projects July 21 • 28th Court from ReindeerAvenueto end • American Legion Park parking lot July 21 • Salmon Court from SalmonAvenueto end • Xere Court from XeroAvenueto end • Volcano Court from VolcanoAvenueto end • Salmon Court from 33rd Street to end • Reindeer Court from 31stStreet to end July 23 • Wickiup Court from 25th Street to end • Volcano Court from 28th Street to end • 28th Court from Wickiup Avenueto end • Umatilla Court from 28th Street to end • Umatilla Court from 26th Street to end Source: City of Redmond

July 24 • Spruce Court from 22ndStreet to end • Oak Court from 22ndStreet to end • 20th Street from Wildflower Place to Maple Place • Larkspur Court from19th Street to end July25 • Maple Rim Court from Rimrock Courtto end • Redwood Place from12th Street to end • Ninth Court from Ninth Laneto end • Maple Lane from 8th Street to end July 28 • North Canal Boulevard from Antler Avenue to Birch Avenue

Greg Cross/The Bulletin


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

E VENT

ENDA R

RINGO STARRAND HISALL STARR BAND:The former Beatles drummer performs; $49 general admission, OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS $105 reserved seating, plus fees; I:A U.S. Equestrian Federation 6:30 p.m., gates open 5 p.m.; Les class AA international hunterSchwab Amphitheater, 344 SW jumper equestrian competition; Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. proceeds benefit J Bar JYouth bendconcerts.com or541-322-9383. Services; free admission; 8 "LORD OF THEFLIES": An a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar JBoys Ranch, adaptation of William Golding's 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; www. famousnovelbythe Bend oregonhighdesertclassics.org, Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 tryan©jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. for students; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street SUMMER SHOWDOWNHORSE Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., SHOW:Reined cow horses and their Bend; www.beattickets.org or riders will compete in cutting, reining, 541-419-5558. roping and working cow horse; free; CENTRAL OREGONCOMEDY 8 a.m.; Rim Rock Riders Arena, SHOWCASE: Featuring 17037 SW Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; SCENE LIVE Brad Knowles, Juan Knutson and www.nwrcha.com, nwcowhorsece Randal Knight; adult themes; $5; gmail. com or425-226-6376. 7-9p.m.;Redmond Cinemas, CASCADE CYCLINGCLASSIC: The 1535 SWOdem MedoRoad; 16-mile Time Trial stage begins and scotti e©cocomedyscene.com or ends at Crooked River Park; free for 480-257-6515. spectators; 10 a.m.; Crooked River "GRATEFULDEADMEET-UP AT Park, Amphitheater,1037 S. Main St., THE MOVIES:BEAT CLUB 4/21/72": Prineville; www.cascade-classic.org A screening of a live performance by or541-388-0002. the Grateful Dead in1972; $12.50; SUMMERTIMECARSHOW 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 BENEFIT:Featuring live music, 8 IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, food, raffles andmore to benefit Bend; 541-312-2901. the Alzheimer's Association; 11 "THE DUMB WAITER": A play by a.m.-1 p.m.; The Summit Assisted Harold Pinterabout two American Living Center, 127 SE Wilson Ave., assassins awaiting their kill orders Bend; www.summitalf.com or in England; $10 plus fees in advance; 541-317-3544. 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or and discuss"Little Century" by 541-323-1881. Anna Keesey; noon; La PinePublic Library, 16425 First St.; www. JERRY JOSEPHTRIO:Theveteran deschuteslibrary.org/lapine/, rock band performs; 9 p.m.; reneeb©deschuteslibrary.org or Dojo, 852 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-312-1055. 541-706-9091. MUNCH 8 MUSIC:Featuring bluesrock music by TooSlim and the FRIDAY Taildraggers, with Hobbs the Band; free; 5:30 p.m.; Drake Park, 777 BALLOONSOVERBEND NW Riverside Blvd., Bend; www. CHILDREN'SFESTIVAL:Balloons munchandmusic.com. launch over Bend, weather

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

University of Oregon; free; 6-7 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; www.oxfordhotelbend. com or 541-346-3236. AMOS LEE: The soulful folk singer performs, with Black Prairie; $34

TODAY

general admission,$59 reserved, plus fees;6:30p.m.,gatesopenat5

Submitted photo

Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band will play at Les Schwab Amphitheater tonight. permitting; followed by afestival with activities, food, crafts and more; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 6 a.m. launch, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. festival, followed by Nightglow at dusk; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St.; www.balloonsoverbend.com or 541-323-0964.

The110-mile and 72-mile Cascade Lakes Road Racestage begins at Summit High School and ends at Mt. Bachelor's Sunrise Lodge; free for spectators; 8:30 a.m.; Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 SWCentury Drive,

Bend; www.cascade-classic.org or

541-388-0002. CHIMPS INC.GIANT ESTATE SALE: OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS Proceeds go directly to the care of I:A U.S. Equestrian Federation the chimpanzees, the improvements class AA international hunterof the sanctuary and maintenance; jumper equestrian competition; free; 9a.m.-4 p.m.; Hooker Creek proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Ranch, Chimps Inc. Sanctuary, Services; free admission; 8 65525Gerking MarketRoad,Bend; a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J BoysRanch, www.chimps-inc.org, info©chimps62895 Hamby Road, Bend; www. inc.org or 541-410-4122. oregonhighdesertclassics.org, tryanjejbarj.org or 541-389-1409. SISTERS FARMERSMARKET: 3-6 p.m.; Barclay Park, West SUMMER SHOWDOWNHORSE Cascade AvenueandAsh Street; SHOW:Reined cow horses and their riders will compete in cutting, reining, sistersfarmersmarketIegmail.com. roping and working cow horse; free; VFW DINNER: Fish andchips;$6; 8 a.m.; Rim Rock Riders Arena, 3-7 p.m.; VFWHall,1503 NEFourth 17037 SW Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; St., Bend; 541-389-0775. www.nwrcha.com, nwcowhorse@ PARTY WITHTHESTARS: Learn gmail. com or425-226-6376. about observational astronomy from CASCADECYCLINGCLASSIC: Dr. Scott Fisher, presented by the

p.m.; Les SchwabAmphitheater, 344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; www. bendconcerts.com or 541-322-9383. "LORD OF THE FLIES": An adaptation of William Golding's famousnovelbytheBend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students; 7 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.beattickets.org or 541-419-5558. FREAK MOUNTAINRAMBLERS: The Portland roots-rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. JESSICAHERNANDEZ5 THE DELTAS: Theretro-rock 'n' roll group performs; $5; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Grill, 635 NW14th St., Bend; 541-617-9600. "THE DUMB WAITER": A playby Harold Pinter about two American assassins awaiting their kill orders in England; $10 plus fees in advance; 7:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. JERRY JOSEPHTRIO:Theveteran rock band performs; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 NWBrooks St., Bend; 541-706-9091. M-SECTION:TheNorthern California punk band performs, with Hog's Breath, EFA and TheBeerslayers; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.

SATURDAY BALLOONSOVERBEND CHILDREN'SFESTIVAL:Balloons launch over Bend, weather permitting; followed by afestival with activities, food, crafts and more; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; 6 a.m. launch, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. festival; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St.; www.balloonsoverbend.com or 541-323-0964. OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS I: A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunterjumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar JYouth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J BoysRanch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; www. oregonhighdesertclassics.org, tryan©jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. SUMMER SHOWDOWNHORSE SHOW:Reined cow horses and their riders will compete in cutting, reining, roping and working cow horse; free; 8 a.m.; Rim Rock Riders Arena, 17037 SW Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; www.nwrcha.com, nwcowhorse© gmail. com or425-226-6376. CHIMPS INC.GIANT ESTATE SALE: Proceeds go directly to the care of the chimpanzees, the improvements

of the sanctuaryandmaintenance; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Hooker Creek Ranch, Chimps Inc. Sanctuary, 65525Gerking MarketRoad,Bend;

www.chimps-inc.org, infocechimpsinc.org or 541-410-4122. CORVETTES ONTHE HIGH DESERT: See more than100 Corvettes including seven generations and 2014 models, food and refreshments available; free; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.highdesertcorvettes.com or 541-923-4653.

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NEWS OF RECORD p.m. July12, in the1200 block of S. U.S. Highway 97. Unauthorized use —Avehicle was The Bulletin will update items in reported stolen at11:03 a.m. July14, the Police Log when such arequest in the 400 block of NEButler Market is received. Any newinformation, Road. such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more Theft —A theft was reported at 8:53 information, call 541-633-2117. p.m. July14, in the 60800 block of Sawtooth Mountain Lane. DUII —Kurt Michael Page, 32, was BEND POLICE arrested on suspicion of driving DEPARTMENT under the influence of intoxicants at 9:54 p.m. July14, in the 61300 block Theft —Atheft was reported at12:12 of S. U.S. Highway 97. p.m. July 7, in the1000 block of NE Theft —A theft was reported at Fifth Street. 10:25a.m. July15, in the 300 blockof Theft —A theft was reported at 2:24 NE Third Street. p.m. July 8, in the 600 block of NW Theft —A theft was reported at1:51 Colorado Avenue. p.m. July15, in the area of Knott Criminal mischief —Anact of Road and Country Club Drive. criminal mischief was reported at 7:03 a.m. July12, in the1900 block of Theft —A theft was reported at 2:50 p.m. July15, in the 800 block of NE Bear Creek Road. Sixth Street. Criminal mischief — An act of Theft —A theft was reported at 2:59 criminal mischief was reported at 10:12 a.m. July12, in the 63100 block p.m. July11, in the 61200 block of Parrell Road. of Iner Loop. Theft —A theft was reported at11:50 a.m. July12, in the 60800 block of PRIMEVILLE POLICE Windsor Drive. DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 12:52 p.m. July12, in the areaof Criminal mischief —Anact of NW Harriman Street and NWIrving criminal mischief was reported at Avenue. 8:48 a.m. July15, in the area of SW Theft —A theft was reported at1:35 Fifth Street.

POLICE LOG

20I

Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 8:12 a.m. July15, in the area of N. Main Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 11:22 a.m. July 15, in the area of E. First Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 4:53 p.m. July15, in the area of SE Dunham Street.

BEND FIRE RUNS Monday 6:06 a.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 60005 Cinder Butte Road. 12:58 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 61433 Davis Lake Loop. 4:34p.m. — Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 347 SELogsden St. 7:26p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 60820 Bobcat Road. 19 —Medical aid calls.

REDMOND FIRE RUMS July7 10:32 p.m.— Brush or brush-and-

bendbulletin.com grass mixture fire, 6700 NWRiver Springs Road. 10:55 p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, 4600 NWCoyner Ave. 11 —Medical aid calls. July8 1:49a.m. — Building fire, 3757 N. U.S. Highway 97. 8 — Medical aid calls. July9 6:25p.m.— Barkdust fire, 850 SW Rimrock Way. 7 —Medical aid calls. Thursday

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10:09 a.m.— Passenger vehicle fire, 2522 SE JesseeButler Circle. 6:13p.m.— Unauthorized burning, in thearea of NW38th Street. 13 —Medical aid calls. Friday 14 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 6 — Medical aid calls. Sunday 1:57 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 5385 NE 15th Drive. 6:10p.m.— Barkdust fire, in the area of NW27th St. 8 — Medical aid calls.

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THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Princess pleads in cockfighting case By Steven Dubois

ers had k nives attached to their

The Associated Press

legs and fought

PORTLAND — Romanian

princess Irina Walker pleaded guilty Wednesday to operating an illegal gambling Walker business in connection with a

cockfighting enterprise in rural Oregon. Walker and her husband,

John, accepted plea deals in which the government dismissed charges of animal fighting and conspiracy to violate the animal welfare act. Sentencing has been scheduledforOct.22.The government recommends a sentence of probation for both Walk-

to the death.

to make crowd-pleasing tacos said her mother rode horses, and burritos. gardened, studied the BiPeifer said the people who ble and raised two children brought roosters to f i ght while living for many years

"I p r o vided paid $1,000 to enter, and the food a n d bever- pool ranged from $10,000 to

age, your honor, and the location," she said.

$18,000. The person whose

She declined to speak with

took home the money, except for the 10 percent takeout

reporters. The Walkers were arrested last summer after author-

roosters won the most fights kept by the referees. More than a dozen other

ities said they staged at least people were indicted in the 10 cockfighting derbies in a case. Charges against the barn at their ranch in Irrigon, 175 miles east of P ortland

and just south of Washington state. Assistant U .S .

A t t o rney

ers, along with the forfeiture of $200,000.

woman who made the Mexi-

in Coos County in southwest

Oregon.

Coos County shooting victim identified — The victim of a shooting in the parking lot of aCoosCounty community center has been identified as a21-year-old reforestation worker. District Attorney Paul Frasier says anautopsy confirmed that Luis Mario Castillo Murillo died of a gunshot wound to thehead. Hewas killed early Sunday while a birthday party was underway atthe North Bendcenter. The World newspaper reports that aCalifornia man, 29-year-old Miguel Alejandro Iniguez, wasbooked on amurder charge. Frasier says it doesn't appear the two kneweach other before the day of the shooting.

The princess later divorced

her husband and married John Walker, a family friend and neighbor. The couple moved to sparsely populated Irrigon, living in a triple-wide manufactured home.

John Walker, 68, was a s heriff's deputy i n C o o s

can food were later dropped, County from 1998 to 2003. and two defendants remain He told Judge Mosman that fugitives: Ruben Saltos Go- an experienced cockfighting dina, known as Chino; and referee, Mario Perez, came Antonio Dominguez Robles, to him seeking a place to hold known as Tono. derbies. The fights were first Everyone else p l eaded held outdoors until W alker guilty, either in Oregon or put up a barn-like structure Washington state. with a metal roof.

Stephen Peifer said the Walkers charged spectators $20 to Irina Walker, 61, is the third enter, and the crowds generdaughter of former Roma- ally exceeded 100 people. The nian King Michael I, who was couple also made money from forced to abdicate by commu- the sale of alcohol. Irina Walker moved to the nists in 1947. Irina Walker initially made U.S. from Switzerland in the She admitted to U.S. Dis- food forthe spectators,Peif- early 1980s with her former trict Judge Michael Mosman er said. But when her dish- husband, John Kreuger, her that she profited from a gam- es proved unpopular, John daughter, Angelica Kreuger, bling venture in which roost- Walker brought on a woman told the AP last year. Kreuger

AROUND THE STATE

"I had built the barn to hold

hay," he told the judge. Walker, who owned many guns, handled security. He also arranged for a company to supply portable toilets.

Killing SuSpeCt hunted —A suspect in a Southern Oregon killing has given lawenforcement officers the slip on amotorcycle during a manhunt in the forests near theCalifornia border. TheState Police said Wednesday officers are chasing 44-year-old Daniel Joseph Martinson near a snowpark in southeast Josephine County. Officers from both states and federal agenciesare involved. Martinson is wanted in the killing of 39-year-old Aaron LeeClouser of CaveJunction. Clouser's body was found in astreet. Authorities haven't said how hedied. Authorities said Martinson is considered armed,and people shouldn't approach him. He was reported wearing camouflage clothing and riding a black motorcycle with a redtank. He's described as white, 5-foot6 and155 pounds, with a shavedheadanda missing front tooth. Quake hitS COaSt —A magnitude 4.5 earthquake wasrecorded Wednesday morning in thePacific Oceanabout125 miles west of BandononthesouthOregonCoast.TheBandonpolicedepartment said there were noimmediate reports of shaking or damage.The quake was at8:30 a.m.TheU.S. Geological Survey website said it was at a depth of more than 6miles. — From wire reports

Ashland ready to lift

Nonprofit losesgrant overgayrights stance ban onpotdispensaries By GosiaWozniackand Lisa Leff

its t i es,

t h e o r g a nization American Life League has criticized what it sees as lax administration by the Cath-

cut off long-standing funding to a Portland immigrant rights group that works with day laborers over its affilia-

"self-disqualified" itself from the funding process, McCloud sard. In June, the bishops approved more than $14 million in grants to 205 organizations. The bishops had sup-

tion with an organization that

ported Voz since 1994, via 10

supports same-sex marriage. Voz Workers' Rights Edu-

grants, McCloud said. "It's certainly difficult and

cation lost a $75,000 grant in

painful, because Voz has done

June from the Catholic Cam-

some tremendous work," McCloud said. "But it became

The Associated Press

PORTLAND — A Catholic organization has decided to

paign for Human Development, which is the national anti-poverty, social

obvious that they were asj u s tice sisting in something that was

program of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. Catholic Campaign director Ralph McCloud said the group asked Voz to cut ties

contrary to the teachings of

with the National Council of

the teachings of the Catholic Church."

La Raza, a large Latino civil rights organization that en-

dorses marriage equality, to be considered for the grant. Voz has been an affiliate of

NCLR since 2009, primarily as a grantee. After Voz refused to cut

our traditions. And we have

to honor our donors' intent that this money be spent on issues that are not contrary to Voz is not the f i rst non-

profit to lose church funding because of ties to organizations that endorse same-sex

marriage. A coalition of conservative

Catholic groups led by the

California and several other states have either had to de-

cide whether to forgo their olic Campaign and has been grants or sever their r elaworking since 2009 to call tionships with larger groups attention to CCHD grantees whose views the church conwith activities, positions or siders problematic. affiliations with other nonThe lost grant represents a profits that contradict Church large portion of Voz's annual teachings on abortion, contra- budget of $310,000, said Voz ception and gay rights. director Romeo Sosa. But he The U.S. Conference of said the decision to withdraw Catholic Bishops conducted a from the grant competition review of the grant program allowed Voz to maintain its and adopted several changes values. "Marriage equality is not in 2010 that were designed to clarify the eligibility rules the focus of our work; we and strengthen the appli- focus on immigrant rights. cation review process. As But we work with everyone, a result of the review, nine we don't discriminate," Sosa nonprofits that were part of said. "There may be gays and coalitions led by groups that lesbians among our staff or supported reproductive rights workers, and we can't turn or same-sex marriage no lon- our backs on them." ger qualified for the funds, Local labor, i mmigrant McCloud said. Others chose rights, and groups that supnot to apply, or re-apply. port gay rights have vowed to Community organizations fundraise for Voz to fill the fiserving immigrants and the nancial hole left by the grant's poor in Colorado, Illinois, loss.

The Associated Press ASHLAND — The Ashready to

moratorium are targets of a l i f t a m o r atori- proposed recall election.

um on medical marijuana dispensaries. It gave initial approval Tuesday and expects to take final action Aug.5. The Legislature has approved medical marijuana dispensaries but allowed cit-

Dispensaries existed for years in a legal gray area until the Legislature acted to put them on a legal footing. But many local officials objected, and the Legislature then voted to give local of-

ies and counties to impose

openings. The state has given pro-

moratoriums lasting as long as ayear. The Oregon Health Authority lists 146 cities as having imposed bans, out

Continued from B1 A park district official said

to comply with th e A m ericans with D i sabilities Act and street features intended to slow traffic in the area.

in June the district could begin building the ice rink as The park district will also soon as October and finish by pay the city $98,000 to imNovember 2015. prove the nearby Simpson The park district has esti-

mated the Simpson Pavilion, a covered structure where there will be ice skating in the winter and a variety of hard-court sports in summer, will cost approximately $8.1 million. District plans for the

Avenue and Century D r ive roundabout to make it easier

for fire vehicles to navigate, and contribute $25,000 to a city study of the improvements necessary to handle future traffic increases in the area.

pavilion include a concession The pavilion will only ocarea, changing rooms, 120 to cupy part of the 11-acre prop150 lockers and a Zamboni erty, and the park district will storage area. Other site im- still have to build the roundprovements will include land- about at Columbia Street and scaping, a rock garden, a fire Simpson Avenue when it depit and benches. velops the remainder, unless The previous p roperty the city traffic study shows owner, Proterra Bend, suc- that is unnecessary. cessfully sought a city zoning In other business Wedneschange to allow for mixed- day night, the City Council use development. voted to approve a $200,000 During the process to re- increase to a contract with zone the property, the city re- consultants developing new searched the amount of traf- water, sewer and stormwater fic m i xed-use development rates, which brings the total would generate. contract ceiling to $450,000. A hearings officer initial- The consultants' earlier work ly recommended denial of under the contract included the zone change because of developing financial plans for the traffic it would generate, citywater and sewer services but the officer ultimately ap- and providing information proved the change after the to a city advisory committee city and Proterra negotiat- working on sewer plans. ed a package of street work The City Council also votthat included the roundabout

ed to approve a new franchise

at Simpson Avenue and Co-

agreement with Cascade Natural Gas for the company's

lumbia Street, according to

a cityreport.Proterra never developed the property, and it went through foreclosure.

t h e i n tersection

and pay the city $83,000 to

The Associated Press PORTLAND — A

P o rt-

land man charged with aiming a laser beam at two commercial airliners flying toward Portland I n t erna-

tional Airport has pleaded guilty in federal court. When the beam struck a United Airlines flight Oct.

public property. The new agreement raises the fran-

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

visional licenses to two dis-

pensaries in Ashland, but city officials say one is too close to houses to open.

The second will need to 26 of 36 counties. Most juris- get a conditional use permit. dictions imposed the bans The new regulations would lasting until May. be effec tive 30 daysafterthe The agency doesn't keep council gives final approvtrack of cities that are end- al. A conditional use permit ing th e i r mor a t oriums could take at least 45 days.

quickly.

The council has given

A spokesman for the Ore-

a tentative OK to a tax of

gon League of Cities, Kevin up to 5 percent on medical Toon, said the organization marijuana and a tax of up is aware of only one oth-

TOUCHMARK SINCE 19$0

40, a former security guard. He entered his plea Tuesday in federal court. Sentencing is scheduled forOct.24,and the government plans to seek a two-

to 10 percent on recreational marijuana. An initiative to

legalize recreational pot is on the November ballot.

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The laser beam Bukucs used was a high-powered

www.shadeondemand.com

version, Peifer said, not the

type used as a pointer in an office presentation. cockpit" and the pilot was Investigators looking into temporarily blinded and reports of laser attacks flew disoriented, federal prose- two airplanes as decoys in cutor Stephen Peifer said. August 2013. The FBI says the airport One, a Portland police is a hot spot for attacks on aircraft, was targeted by a aircraft with laser beams. laser beam and relayed the The man arrested after location of the light's origan aerial investigation is ination to officers on the Stephen Francis B u kucs, ground, Peifer said. 13, one of the pilots reported that it "lit up the entire

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The park district asked the chise fee from 4.5 percent to city not to require construc- 5 percent. tion of th e r oundabout beThe council also voted to cause the district does not ex- approve an enterprise zone pect the pavilion will generate tax exemption for A gere the amount of traffic that the Pharmaceuticals Inc., which development planned by the could cost the city more than previous owner would have. $20,000 in lost property tax Instead, the park d i strict revenue over five years, acagreed to i mprove street cording to a city report. striping at

Man admits aiming lasers at airliners

ficials authority to delay the

of a total of 242, along with

In the Southern Oregon

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B4

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Public Library and the library system's administration building is back. It doesn't look the way it did a month or so ago, and its designers hope the changes will help

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keep the park on the corner of Northwest Wall Street and

I

Northwest Kansas Avenue a safe and welcoming spot. It hadn't been recently. Like public libraries across the country, the Downtown Bend Public Library draws its share of homel ess people, drawn in p art b y warmth, computers and public restrooms. It should come as no surprise that an adjacent and attractive outdoor space would also bring in its share of folks, homeless or not. The resultbecame a realproblem for library employees and patrons alike, who were subjected to loud, threatening language and even criminalbehavior on a regular basis. The problem was so bad the park closed in mid-May and reopened only about three weeks

ago. In the interim, the park itself changed. Gone are the benches and much of the lawn. They've been replaced with a landscape that does not lend itself to hanging around.There is no seating,

/~~/

and the grassy area has largely been replaced by boulders and ornamental landscaping. Meanwhile, a large group of public and private officials, ranging from representatives of the Bend City Council to the Cascade Youth and Family Center, continue to work on the problems that made the library'spocket park so attractive in the first place. Among possible solutions are a drop-in center that would offer showers, laundry facilities and access to food and social services. Long-term solutions are, however, not likely to come on line overnight. They require planning, fundraising and more planning, and none of that happens quickly. Also, it's no doubt likely to take a variety of things, from law enforcement to services, to resolve the issues that led to the park's

GGP~~>.

M 1Vickel's Worth Need compassion innew St. Charles CEO

St. Charles system.

Bill Smith Bend

Interest in Pilot Butte is heartening

Enforcelawsabout dogs

they want todo even more. The de-

town, I noticed numerous signs stat-

The days of Sister Catherine Hell- lineators they installed on the road mann are long gone, but not forgot- edge made a noticeable difference. ten. It was an era when the principle The new "share the road" signs help of humaneness was at the top of the alert drivers to the conditions ahead. list. Health care and humaneness Changes in opening times for the went hand in hand. gate, and fixing the road edge, are It is no secret that medical care things people have wanted, and now has become big business. Nonprofit they may happen.

ing no dogs are allowed (from the summer festival website: "Bringing your dog down to the event is a violation of city code(s): 7.396 (I) 'Interfered with conduct of special event by bringing dog to

three finalists for the St. Charles Health System CEO position was

encouraging. Near the end of the It's great seeing so many people article you reported that the Chief I have been increasingly disNursing Officer of two of the sys- weighing in on issues affecting Pilot turbed by the number of scofflaws tem's hospitals was a caring, com- Butte. Right now, people seem most in Bend, particularly concerning passionate supervisor. Hopefully, concernedabout driver/hiker con- dogs at public events. I like dogs; I these charactertraits have become flicts. Not mentioned is the fact that simply have no respect for the ownhealth system priorities and will be the state has taken steps recently ers who ignore the law. Having just sought-after traits in the CEO selec- to increasesafety,and we've heard attended the summer festival down-

from simply moving elsewhere.

tion process.

Fightthe good fight against invasive plants Then there's this:About 40 percent of plants and animals listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act are in trouble largely because of invasive plants or animals. Nonnative animals, wild horses among them, cost millions of dollars to control and do tremendous damage to native plants and animals unless they are controlled. fight. Nonnative plants, meanwhile, We all should care. Invasive choke out indigenous plants, deplants do tremendous damage, stroying the food supply of native not only on federally owned lands animals, including helpful insects, but on private property. Invasive in the process. They cost agriculplants and animals cost the U.S. ture billions annually, and, Corsome $120 billion in damage each nell estimates, the public and priyear,according to the U.S. Fish vate cost of damage and of trying and Wildlife Service. The U.S. to keep them and nonnativeanDepartment of the Interior, mean- imals and diseases in check may while, spends $100 million annu- run as high as $136 billion each ally to eradicate or control their year. spread in addition to what states The city of Bend has an orand localgovernments spend on dinance that requires property the effort. owners to keep invasive weeds Consider cheatgrass, which in check. In Bend, knapweed is has been particularly plentiful this particularly common, and it's just year. When cheat takes over on now blooming. You shouldn't pull land that has a natural fire cycle of it, for some people are sensitive once every 60 to 110 years, as it has to the chemicals it contains, but in parts of Idaho, the cycle chang- poisoning or cutting is viable so es dramatically, to once every 3 to long as flowers haven't produced 5 years, according to a study by mature seeds. Getting rid of knapresearchers at Cornell University. weed here will help slow its spread Maintaining forest health means, toward public land and keep local in part, keeping cheatgrass in propertyvalues — which too much check. knapweed can lower — high.

gether we'll find solutions. You can Bud Beamer count on that. Madras

Y our article pertaining to t h e

closing and keep the problem

he U.S. Forest Service continues to fight the good fight against invasive plants in this part of Oregon. This summer, as it has in years past, it will both spray and pull plants that have no business on national forest and grassland. That's the good news. The bad news is that without help from property owners throughout the region, the USFS may lose the

NEVv ACCOUNT

event.'

status has become a meaningless

People sometimes forget that the

term. Madison Avenue veneer, the biggest and latest expensive diagnostic equipment, and such things as the Electronic Medical Record probablyaren't going to have a significant effect on our overall health. What we long for is genuine, caring and emotional attachment between provider and patient. Newer

rickety road itself is more a blessing than a curse. Responsible drivers

7.398 (2) 'Failing to comply with condition of special event by bringing dog to event.' City of Bend Police will be on

and walkers will use more cau-

hand and violations are a Class A

tion under such conditions. What we're reallymost concerned about

civil infraction and could result in a $500 fine."

areirresponsible people.There are solutions for them: peer pressure,

dogs at the festival Saturday, but

warnings and citations. Maybe that

didn't take a count. In the span of

business. Respectful relationships

will only get worse with time. Let's

lowed to blatantly disregard them? I

in the front lines as well as in every department will determine the overall quality of care. Hopefully, the Board of Directors will take this opportunity to

keep that rickety road as long as we can and keep thinking about solutions to the bigger problem that lies ahead. Historically, there's been an unbelievable partnership between

suspect a hefty fine would discourage dog owners from bringing their

restore respect and quality to the

the state park and the people. To-

I noticed a number of nonservice

should be a next step after every- 10 minutes on Sunday morning, I thing else is in place. That said, the passed three people at the festival methods and techniques are dis- biggest issue here isn't being ad- with dogs, all of whom had to have tancing one from the other. dressed. There's such a thing as too passed the signs stating no dogs Compassion and caring need to many cars, especially with limited are allowed. Where were the police, be emphasized from the top down. room for them at the summit. I drove who should have issued warnings An exceptional business mind is to the top yesterday and there was or citations? What's the point of great, but health care is a human no available parking. This problem having codes, if scofflaws are al-

pets to future events where dogs are

not allowed. Laureen Lampe Bend

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Merkley is Out Of tauCh On jObS,Small buSineSSeS By Monica Wehby

that — they forget that the bottom

ew things in this world have an

line of a business isn't just a bottom

impact on someone's life like

line; it's food on someone's table or

F

IN MY VIEW burdensome government.

that of a job. For a recent col- the clothes on someone's child; they lege graduate, a job is the first step forget that bad policy has real-life toward realizing a dream; for the consequences. unemployed, it is a sense of renewed As someone who hasn't spent a confidence; for a mother, it is the lifetime in politics, I haven't lost sight means by which she can promise her of that. On the contrary, as a medical

And, it would seem behind each and every hardship is a tax, regulation or policy supported by Oregon'sown senator, Jeff Merkley.

child a future of opportunities. For

death knell on small business hiring;

doctor I'm in tune with the pain and

many, a job offers us hope, gives us suffering of my patients, never seepurpose, and provides us the means ing them as numbers, but as a real to take care of the truly important people. things in life. With that in mind, this week I emWhen we discuss jobs in the barked on a tour of small businesses course of politics, our discourse is of- to see the jobs Oregonians rely on to tenrelegated tonumbers and spread- support themselves and their famisheets. Our economy becomes a lies. Each business brings with it, its measure ofprofits and losses,rather own unique story, its own achievethan the individuals and families af- ments, and its own hardships. Not fected by it. In doing so, we lose sight surprisingly, most achievements are of what it means for someone to lose the result ofperseverance and hard a job, or for a business to close. Too work, while the hardships are the many politicians today are guilty of consequence of an overreaching and

Whether it's his unabashed support for Obamacare, which has been a

When we discuss jobs in the course of politics, our discourse ts often relegated to numbers and spreadsheets. Our economy becomes a measure of profits and losses, rather than the individuals and

families affected by tt. In doing so, we lose sight of what tt means for someone to lose a job, or for a business to close.

cap and trade, which would result in

needless, higher energy costs; or his repeated votes against repealing the policies are why five years after a estate tax; Merkley is out of touch

with the issues affecting Oregon's mains above 6 percent and an anesmall businesses. mic growth rate still plagues our Instead, Merkley has been noth- economy. I'm ready to change all that. As ing more than a rubber stamp for every big-ticket item that has come a former small business owner, I across his desk since assuming of- understand this issue better than fice in 2009. His devotion to a far-left Merkley and will do what's best for agenda has left independent-mind- the job creators of our state. It's why ed Oregonians without a voice, and

endorsement of me, and small busi-

recession our unemployment re- ness ownersfrom allacross the state

this week the National Federation of

small business without a friend. His Independent Business announced its

are getting behind our campaign. I want to ensure Oregon remains a place of opportunity, and that means

ensuring that which gives us hope, gives us purpose, and provides us the means to take care of what mat-

ters, is there when we need it. — Monicawehby is oregon'sRepublican nominee for United States Senate. She lives in Portland.


THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

BITUARIES DE~TH NP TIgES Kathy Elaine

(Goodwin) Rainey Seibert, of Christmas Valley Sept. 4, 1949 - July 14, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine 541-536-5104 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Gathering will be held in Lebanon at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Ct. Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org 541-382-5882

FEATURED OBITUARY

Architect Stout was

known for museum designs By JosephGiovannini New York Times News Service

William F. Gent, of Bend

Randall Stout, an environmentally sensitive a rchitect

Aug. 27, 1930 - July 3, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend, 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A celebration of life will be held at St. Mary's Catholic Church Social Hall, 501 NW 25th St., Corvallis, OR on Aug. 2, 2014 at noon.

who earned a national reputation for designing dynamically shaped regional museums, mostly in his native South, died Friday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 56.

Micheal "Mike"

Joseph Hubinak,of Bend Mar. 17, 1958 - July 14, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Celebration of Life will be held in August.

Jason "JJ" John

Snyder,of Bend Mar. 18, 1986 - July 11, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private Celebration of Life gathering has already been held.

Phyllis J. Stuewig, of Bend Mar. 14, 1937 - July 14, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471.

Services: A memorial service will be held Thursday, July 17, 2014 at 11:00 A.M. in the First United Methodist Church in Bend. Contributions may be made to:

First United Methodist Church, 680 NW Bond St., Bend, OR 97701.

Willis B. Hamby, of Redmond April 12, 1953 - July 10, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond. www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held at his request.

Roy Robert 'Bob' Trantham

His brother, Steven, said the

cause was renal cell cancer. Stout, an associate in Frank

Gehry's office before establishing his own firm in 1996 in Los Angeles, explored the relationship between architecture and energy in holistic designs that were no less sculptural and

humane for being ecologically responsible. Sustainability helped shape form. He started his firm with a series of internationally admired

commissions for energy plants, fire stations and sports centers in Germany. The structures — turbulent forms and can-

yonesque spaces, with sculptural solids juxtaposed against light-filled voids — were often built on tight budgets using inexpensive, matter-of-fact, ener-

gy-smart materials. In the United States he specialized in cultural projects, es-

pecially midsize museums. His portfolio includes the difflike Hunter Museum of American

Art in Chattanooga, Tennessee, perched on a bluff along the Tennessee River; the gla-

closure of a 35-mile stretch of were expected Thursday. The Associated Press U.S. Highway 2, stretching to Fire spokesman Mi ck SPOKANE, Wash. — Res- Stevens Pass in the Cascade Mueller said there was no idents of hundreds of homes Mountains. confirmed loss of any homes were urged t o e v acuate A spokesman earlier esti- by Wednesday evening. Wednesday as a wind-driven mated the fire's size at nearState fire assistance was central Washington wildfire ly 2 square miles but Acosta ordered for the Carlton raced through heavy timber, said it was so smoky and the Complex of fires burning sending up a towering col- fire has moved so quicklythat in north-central Washingumn of smoke. officials just didn't know how ton's Methow Valley, where Residentsof 860 homes big it was. residents of about a dozen have been told they should Worsening wildfire activ- homes have been toldto leave. l eave i m mediately, f i r e ity has prompted the gover- Spokesman Jacob McCann spokesman Rick A c osta nor's office in Washington to said Wednesday evening that said Wednesday night. A declarea state ofemergency, complex has burned across Chelan County emergency a move that enables state of- 7 square miles with z ero management spokeswoman ficials to call up the National containment. said earlier that another 800 Guard. The declaration covThe Washington National homes were less seriously ers 30 easternWashington Guard sent two helicopters threatened. counties. Wildfires were also and 14 people to help battle There was zero contain- burning in Nevada, Idaho, the blaze. ment on the Chiwaukum Utah, Oregon and California. In central Idaho, the lightCreek fire burning about 10 The Chiwaukum C r eek ning-caused Preacher Fire miles north of Leavenworth, fire, first detected Tuesday, has scorched nearly 53 square Acosta said. Smoke from the was believed caused by light- miles in two days, burning blaze hung over that nearby ning. It sent a smoke plume quickly through grass and Bavarian-themed village and 25,000 feet into the air. brush.But firem anagers said a light dusting of ash fell. Continuing ho t w e ather Wednesday they had made The blaze has prompted the and winds gusting to 25 mph good progress.

Homes

required to use smaller col-

Continued from B1

Councilors expressed concern at the possibly short-

umns with caps every 8 feet.

New standards for fences

in residential areas are be- lived nature of some of the ing considered for significant standards. "How can we mandate they changes, including materials used and architectural fea- keep up these nicer fences?" tures. The code adopted last said Councilor Jay Patrick. You can't compel year requires "architectural "We can't. elements," including 12-inch someone to keep up their own wide masonry columns, ev- property." ery 16 feet of fence line. BuildAnother standard irritating ers said the cost passed on the developers is increased to the homebuyer would be restrictions on how close to prohibitive and suggested al- each other identical or externatives, such as requiring tremely similar house styles the new standards only for can be sited. Avoiding monothomes on arterial streets or ony in neighborhoods is the only on fences longer than goal of that standard, which 160 feet. staff agreed to amend slightNeither planning commis- ly, allowing the same house sion members nor city staff model after a spacing of two felt comfortable not requir- lots on any side, instead of ing the fence standards on all three, the current standard. streets but did agree the code One change builders asked could be changed to require for received little support columns only at c orners, from the planning commiswith the exception of homes sion or city staff. Currently, w ithside-orrear-yard fences homes are required to have abutting arterial or collector at least five different "wall streets, which would also be elements" such as porch-

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

Alabama.

His museums project a strong civic presence, inviting Deathsof notefrom around

in late June in New York City.

Arthur Walker, 79:Conspiring architecturd gestures and Paul Gibson, 86: Lawyer ator in one of the biggest U.S. quiet, luminous galleries. The and vice president of Ameri- spy cases since World War designs helped put the muse- can Airlines who in 1974 be- II who sold secret Navy files ums on the national cultural came New York City's first to the Soviets. Died July 5 in map, lifted local economies and black deputy mayor. Died on a federal prison in Butner, saved energy. Friday at his home in Jamaica, North Carolina. Besides museums, his com- Queens. Jack Tocco, 87: Reputed missions included vigorously On Kawara, 81:Conceptual Detroit mob boss who was angled, improbably avant-gar- artist who recorded the pas- convicted of racketeering in de police stations in Southern sage of time as factually and 1998 in a federal crackdown. California and rugged, eco- self-effacingly as art would al- Died Monday in Grosse Pointe logically friendly houses in the low: by painting the date on a Park, Michigan. mountains. With inexpensive monochromatic canvas. Died — From wire reports materials — wood framing, standing-seam roofs and common stucco — he made one visitors inside with welcom-

modest commission, the lowcost Dockweiler Beach Youth Center at D o ckweiler State

the world:

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. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.

architects do, in architecture

Phone: 541-617-7825

as a spiritual calling, not just a profession," said Marcy Good-

Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

turbulent roofscape of broken

planes evokes the crashing waves just beyond it. The complexity of his geyR oy R o b er t Tr a n t h a m sers of space,eruptions of assed away peacefully at ome on Friday, July 11th. form andcollages ofdisparate materials was not just for the

sake of complexity, Stout made clear. His open system of design reflected the dient's input,

the site, the budget Stout had to work with and the project's physical and historical context.

"He believed, as many great

Email: obits@bendbulletin.com

win of M. Goodwin Museum

Planning, a Los Angeles consulting firm. Stout worked with her on a dozen large-scale (Gary) Black, and grand- museum planning projects, inson, Zachary al l o f P o c a- cluding the master plan of the his son, Michael (Janet) Trantham of C oon Rapids MN, his daughter, Kr tstin

t ello, I d a ho , a n d man y nieces and nephews in the Barnesville area.

Low Cost Reverse Mortgage Call Jerry Gilmour (NMLS¹ 124521) 17 years reverse mortgage experience ln person, professional consultation

P~ WillametteValleyBank HOME LOAN DIVISION 541-382-4189

gudy JVamsey 35u tinson 1 956 2 0 1 4

North Carolina Museum of Art

in Raleigh.

Continued from B1

Ifyou go What:Redmond City Council public hearing on residential architectural design standards When:6:30 p.m. Tuesday Where:777 SW Deschutes Ave., council chambers es, window trim or shutters

minutes to apply the materials, then it just needs to cure," Peters said. "If we get

there and there are cars on the street, we just knock on doors and ask them to park it around the block. This

has been a very successful program so far, we've only had to tow a couple of cars and that's because they weren't running." T he parking l o t a t American Legion Park in southwest Redmond will

be closed for seal coating as well, beginning Monday. The lot will be closed the next day for striping. Access to the park will be

available using the Redmond High parking lot and walking through the Highland Avenue tunnel or

parking on Southwest Canyon Drive and using the pedestrian path into the park. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, lpugmire@bendbulletin.com

According to R i chards, nearly all the home construction in Redmond now is being done by "production builders," who aim for fast construction, fewer features and less-expensive materials.

Planning Commissioner Anne Graham spoke in defense of not watering down

the standards too much. "It's the only way we're going to get away from filling the rest of our available land with

on their front facades and a cheap houses," she said. "But lesser number on their sides.

I do think we need to find a

Builders requested a reduc- way to incentivize the design tion in all requirements and elements we want to see." staffsuggested a concession Even diluting th e s t anof reducing the number of dards a bit from their original elements on house sides not intent is certainly better than very visible because of prox- what Redmond had beforeimity to an adjoining house. which was nothing, Dickens Planning c o m missioners,sard. "I guess we want custom however, did not support that change. homes at affordable prices," "We spent a lot of time Councilor Camden King said. discussing this issue," Evans "I don't know if we can have said. "Builders were very our cake and eat it too, but we honest with us, saying that can try." they picked the cheapest ele— Reporter: 541-548-2186, ments for every house." lpugmire@bendbulletin.com

Find It All Online

Plae Well, Retire Well

bendbulletin.com 775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728 -0321~www.elevalioncapilalslralegies.com

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand willbe runfor one day,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 orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Beach in the Playa del Rey section of Los Angeles, into an informal monument whose

Sealing "It only takes about 30

By Nicholas K. Geranios

cierlike Taubman Museum of Art in Roanoke, Virginia; and the strikingly cantilevered Abroms-Engel Institute for Visual Arts in Birmingham,

April 24, 1943-July11, 2014

B ob was b or n o n A p r i l 24, 1943 i n F e r gus F alls, Minnesota. Roy, or Bob as his friends called him, was a long time Bend, Oregon resident and worked for W i l l amette Industries for over 30 years. Bob was a l o v ing f a ther and a f r i end t o e v e ryone he met. B ob i s s u r v ived b y h i s sister, Helen Hanneman of Barnesville, M in n e s o t a,

Washington wildfire threatenshomes

B5

/

A Celebration of Life for Judy RamseyMartinson will be held at the Riverhouse Convention Center in Bend on Sunday, July20 from 3-6p.m.

Judy left us suddenly on July 4th. Judy was born in Auburn, CA, November 10, 1956.She graduated from Bend High School, Class of 1975. She is survived byher daughter, Sabrina Ramsey-Martinson; two sisters, Vickie Dimick of Casper,Wyoming, and Conni Ramsey ofBend, brother,Mike Ramsey ofRedmond; niece Salma Ramsey-Parnell ofBend, and many otherniecesand nephewsas well as cousins. She had a large extended family and many friends throughout her life. She was a kind and givingperson who will be missed. In lieu of flowers, donations may be madeto 'Ihe Humane Society. Please join us and celebrate her life with us.

Robert Keith McWhorter ~ Feb. 4 , 1 9 20-June 26, 201 4 ~ Robert (Bob) Keith McWhorterdied June 26, 2014 in Bend, Oregon. Born to Alma Lee.(Devenport) and William Bee McWhorter February 4, 1920 in Hedrick, Oklahoma. He grew up in the panhandle of Texas. Marrled Lissia (Liz) Amanda Flemingon Feburary12, 1944. They were married 56 ye'ars; shepassedaway in March 2000. Bob and Liz raised three children, Rusty, Karen & Bob while living in Long Beach, CA. He is survived by his sister Lou MacKenzie,son Bob McWhorter, daughter Karen Rawnsley, grandchildren ErlnDonnell, Jennifer Coakley, Pat Rawnsley; and great-granddaughter Elizabeth Rawnsley. Over theyears, Bob had several different careers, was always a hard worker, and dearlylovedchildren and animals. After growing up during the Great Depression, he left high school early to work and helpsupport hisparentsand siblings. He worked in the shipyards as a welder/riveter until hewent into the Army Air Corpsto be a cook during WWII; he was stationed in the AdmiraltyIslands.After finishing his tour of duty, Bob continued to cook andoperated his own restaurant (TheGrass Shack drive-in and family restaurant in Long Beach, CA.) He was a CubScout leader and a little league baseball coach for 10years. His next endeavor was operating his own landscape/gardeningbusiness. After retiring the secondtime, he got licensed to sell real estate. All throughout this time, he raisedpedigreedBrittany Spaniels to be showdogs, and competed in field trials in Madras, riding his Appaloosahorse Comanche. In 1985, he retired again andmovedto Bend, OR.Soon after, he acquired another horse,an Arabian named Stetsan.Throughout the years, Bob rode Stetsan in all ot the parades in Central Oregon, wenton numerous trail rides, and belonged to the ArabianHorse Club. He was quite a "cowboy."Neverone to be idle, he also signed up through the Employment Office ... todo oddjobs work for "old folks" who needed help. One of his favorite memories is about being a lightweight boxing champion as ateenager back in the panhandle of Texas. Hls claim to fame was aroundhousepunch he handed out to his competitor, a one punch knockout. But then hedecided to quit boxing, so he could "stay good looking." The family issograteful for all the care and support from our "family" at AspenRidge Memory Care and Partners In Care Hospice of Bend. Autumn Funerals is handling arrangements;no services will be held. Donations can be made to Partners lnCareHospice of Bend.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

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

I

o

i

I

'

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 91' Partly sunny, breezyand warm

I f' I

ALMANAC periods of cloudsand Seasid Yesterday Normal Record suntoday.Mainly 64/55 95 82 100' i n 191 2 clear tonight. Plenty of Cannon 64' 48' 29'in 1902 sunshine tomorrow. 63/56

PRECIPITATION

24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.27"in 1916 Record o Month to date (normal) 0.2 1 " (0.31 ) Year to date (normal ) 4.73o(6.03o) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 2"

SUN ANDMOON Fri. 5: 3 9 a.m. 8: 4 4 p.m. none 1: 2 0 p.m.

/

Tdlamo • CENTRAL:Partly 70/51 Mc innvie cloudy and hot today. Mostly clear tonight. Lincoln Not as hot with plenty 65/53 Sale of sunshine tomorrow 85/5

Newpo

iQ

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Fir s t

mostly sunnytoday. Mainly clear tonight Mostly sunny tomor row.

SQ

~P Yt~

SUNDAY

53

~

Abundant sunshine

90/48

• EUgene

66/53

Baker City Srookings

sums

93/47

• Pa lina

n Be d Brothers 91 51 90/ 7

86/51

Bandon

/52

Ro s eburg

67/53

90/56

Ham ton

• La plne

Grove Oakridge

• Fort Rock Cresce t • 92/48

ss/48

• Burns Riley 96/49 94/50

• Ch ristmas alley Silver 93/48 Lake 89/46 92/49 • Paisley Chiloquin 93/52 •

Beaver Marsh

• Ashl nd Falls 94/6

68/5

fi /65 Valen 101/64 u INysse 101/62 Junture 99/57

te

Jordan V gey 93/57

95/53

• Burns Jun tion • 96/60 Rome 99/60 McDermi

Fields •

• akeview

92/62

tario

Frenchglen

Po 0 Gra GN Gold ach • MedfO d 90/52 • 57 98/61 66/ Klamath

Bro ings

96/so

93/53

Yesterday Today Friday

95/61

city

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

Portland Prineviiie Redmond Rnseburg Salem Sisters The Dalles

90/6 3/0.00 81/55/s 78/60/s 95/ 5 8/0.00 94/51/pc 84/52/n 100 /52/0.00 93/45/pc 87/47/s 98/ 6 8/0.00 90/56/s 86/57/s 96/61/0.00 85/52/s 83/57/s 94/54/0.00 92/46/pc 86/49/n 1 0 2 /68/0.00 90/61/pc 85/64/s

Eugene Klamnth Falls Lnkeview Wenther(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shnwers,t-thunderstorms,r-rnin, sf-snnwflurries, sn-snnwi-ice,Tr-frsce,Yesterday data asnf 5 p.m. yesterday

35 Moderate; 6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme.

POLLEN COUNT G rasses T r ee s Wee d s • Hi g~h ~Lo~w ~Lo~w

NATIONAL WEATHER

Source: OregonAiiergyAssocintus 541-683-1577

~ 108 ~os

WATER REPORT

~os

~ t o s ~ 208 ~ 30s ~ 40s ~ 50s ~e cs ~7 08 ~a os ~g os ~toos ~ttcs

'o .,'

NATIONAL

As of 7 n.m.yesterday

Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 393 0 3 71% YESTERDAY 50'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 100346 Crescent Lake 7 3 8 03 85% National high: 120 Ochoco Reservoir 25277 57% at Death Valley,CA Prinevige 122262 82% National low: 36 River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. at Tomahawk, Wl Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 507 Precipitation: 4.58" Deschutes R.below Wickiup 1600 at Currituck, NC Deschutes R.below Bend 134 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 2080 Little Deschutes near LaPine 106 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 78 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 1 Wnchnrae Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 217 '69/5 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 81 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 10

Portland /55

8

Billings

x

x x x x Qucb

I hl nne T ndnr Bny 2 7

4v

Bismarck

. » » » i n

87/61

Hi/Lo/Pruc. HiRo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 93/70/0.00 85/68/I 82/66/pc Akron 72/54/0.00 75/55/s 82/61/pc Albany 80/65/0.15 78/55/pc 80/57/s Albuquerque 86/61/0.02 92/64/I 93/67/I Anchorage 69/56/0.00 69/56/pc 67/57/pc Agnnfs 83/64/0.00 85/67/pc 86/71/pc Atlantic City Trno/0.21 81/64/pc 80/65/pc Austin 94n4/0.1 6 91/74/I eonzn Baltimore 81/69/0.25 83/61/pc 84/65/pc Billings 83/61/0.00 92/63/pc 94/64/pc Birmingham 83/62/0.00 85/63/pc 86/69/c Bismarck 79/54/0.00 87/61/s 92/64/pc Boise 97/65/0.00 101/65/pc 97/64/s Boston 76/69/0.85 81/64/pc 81/62/pc Bridgeport, CT 81/68/0.20 81/63/pc 81/64/pc Buffalo 70/57/Tr 73/57/pc 79/59/s Burlington, VT 82/67/0.10 77/56/pc 81/58/s Caribou, ME 75/69/0.28 77/54/pc 75/54/pc Charleston, SC 91n5/0.41 89/71/pc senupc Charlotte 85/66/0.87 86/65/pc 86/67/pc Chattanooga 83/61/0.00 84/64/pc 86/68/c Cheyenne 70/54/0.51 74/52/pc 83/58/I Chicago 72/55/Tr 77/60/pc 79/60/pc Cincinnati 74/52/0.00 76/57/s 81/62/pc Cleveland 67/55/0.09 73/56/pc 79/61/s ColoradoSprings 78/55/0.50 69/53/pc 80/57/I Columbia, MO 76/56/0.00 78/60/pc 78/62/pc Columbia, SC 89n3/Tr 90/69/pc 90/69/pc Columbus,GA 88/70/Tr 89/65/pc 92/71/pc Columbus,OH 74/56/0.00 77/59/s 83/64/pc Concord, NH 77/68/1.16 80/54/pc 80/52/pc Corpus Christi esns/o'.oo 94/78/pc 95/78/pc Dallas 92/69/Tr 85nzn 82/69/I Dayton 73/55/0.00 75/57/s 80/61/pc Denver 75/58/0.06 76/56/pc 88/61/pc Des Moines 77/59/0.00 78/60/pc 79/60/pc Detroit 71/53/0.00 76/58/pc 79/60/s Duluth 75/45/0.00 76/57/s 78/60/pc El Paso 96/68/0.03 95n4n 97n54 Fairbanks 68/55/0.04 69/55/c 65/50/sh Fargo 78/50/0.00 84/63/s 86/66/pc Flagstaff 78/58/Tr 81/52/pc 80/50/I Grand Rapids 71/54/Tr 75/55/pc 79/59/s Green 6sy 74/50/0.00 78/57/pc 79/59/pc Greensboro 83/66/1.26 85/65/pc 84/66/pc Harrisburg 78/64/0.00 80/57/pc 82/63/pc Hsrffnrd, CT 81/68/0.16 83/58/pc 84/58/pc Helena 86/53/0.20 93/59/pc 93/57/pc Honolulu 88/76/0.00 88/74/pc ssnwpc Huusinn 90n3/0.00 eonsn ssnsn Huntsville 82/58/0.00 83/63/pc 85/67/c Indianapolis 72/53/0.00 75/56/s 79/60/pc Jackson, MS 82/63/Tr 85/67/pc 81/69/1 Jacksonville 89n4/0.65 9On1/pc 88/69/pc

FIRE INDEX High Veryghh~i Mode~rate High High

• 101

81/5

8

it

Amsterdam Athens

4e e v.v.

84/67/pc 90/73/s 54/40/s 110/84/s 91/80/c

esns/s

83/75/pc 83/62/s 66/47/c 87/65/pc 58/39/s

esns/s 92/73/s 82/54/c

eone/s 70/56/r Tf/57/I 88/59/s 74/42/s 89/83/r

84n2/s

e

Source: USDA Forest Service

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 64/52/0.00 60/49/r 63/52/pc 76/55/0.00 76/61lpc 77/62/pc 70/51/0.07 73/54/pc 78/58/s 107/84/0.00 104/82/pc 102/81/pc 77/54/0.00 79/59/n 82/63/pc 79/48/0.00 79/57/pc 81/63/s

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Lus Angeles

82/63/0.00 81/67/0.00 77/57/0.00 74/48/0.00 80/62/0.00 89/78/0.19

78/64/I

76/64/pc 81/62/n 77/58/pc 81/65/pc 90/76/I 71/54/Tr 76/59/pc 77/55/0.00 79/61/s

Lnumvule

Madhsnn Wi Memphis Miami

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

74/65/r

76/64/pc 84/66/pc 78/58/pc 76/66/r

eonsn

76/62/pc

79/66/s 80/57/0.00 83/63/pc 83/64/c 88/73/pc 88/75/I ssns/o.oo 81/69/0.05 81/66/pc 82/68/pc 84/70/0.02 82/63/pc 84/66/pc 77/73/0.07 84/69/pc 84/70/pc 72/63/0.13 70/62/r 77/60/pc 78/53/0.00 78/59/pc 78/65/s 86/73/0.67 89/72/I 92/73/I fosnwo.oo104/77/s 102/77/s 77/55/0.00 77/58/s 79/61/pc 83/72/0.02 83/65/pc 85/67/pc 107/84/0.00 106/84/s 106/83/s 73/55/0.00 75/54/pc 80/60/pc 72/65/0.19 78/57/pc 78/55/pc 76/71/0.46 83/61/pc 83/60/pc sono/o'.oo 87/64/pc 87/63/pc 77/52/0.00 81/58/s 89/60/pc 97/68/0.00 96/68/pc 91/64/s

OklahomaCity

Omaha Orlando Palm Spdngs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME

Providence Raleigh

Rapid City Reno Richmond 86/73/Tr 87/63/pc Rochester, NY 74/58/0.00 74/55/pc Sacramento 86/66/0.00 84/60/s Sf. Louis 79/59/0.00 81/64/pc Snit Lake City eonz/o.oo 92/69/pc

San Antonio Ssn Diego Snn Francisco Snn Jose Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Falls Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa

97nT/o,oo 94mn

88/64/pc 79/58/s 84/59/s 81/64/pc 95/73/I

93/78/I 72/67/pc 72/68/pc

77/69/0.00 78/62/0.00 83/62/0.00 81/58/0.23

71/60/pc 71/60/pc 76/60/pc 78/60/pc 85/57/I

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88/58/0.00 79/57/s 78/47/0.00 80/59/n 99/67/0.00 92/63/pc 77/54/0.00 70/60/pc 84/74/2.91 88/76/I 98/73/0.00 99/74/n 74/61/0.08 71/61/r Washington, DC 82/71/Tr 85/66/pc Wichita 68/63/0.05 67/59/r Yskimn 107/62/0.00 99/60/n Yuma 109/81/0.00 105/79/s

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H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W 63/55/0.0066/56/pc 65/58/pc Ln Grande 97/55/0.00 94/51/pc 88/54/s 94/49/0.00 93/47/pc 88/49/s L n Pine 92/49/0.00 89/48/pc 84/48/s 69/55/0.00 68/53/pc66/53/pc Medford 1 0 3/70/0.00 98/61/pc 93/60/s 94/47/0.00 96/49/pc 92/48/s N e wport 63/5 2 /0.00 63/51/s 62/53/s 97/60/0.00 88/51/s 85/54/s No r th Bend 64 / 54/0.00 66/54/s 66/55/s 97/59/0.0092/52/pc 88/51/s Ontario 101/66/0.00 103/65/pc 99/64/s 93/57/0.00 93/53/pc90/51/s Pendleton 105/67/0.00 97/60/pc 91/61/s

2 p.m. 4 p.m. Asfurin

The highertheAccuWnniberxmmUVIndex number, the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin pmfecgon. 0-2 Lnw,

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ria

EAST:Hotwith

TEMPERATURE

Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset

SATURDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday

Today 5:38 a.m. 8:45 p.m. 11 : 52 p.m. 12: 11 p.m.

FRIDAY

80/63/s 68/38/s 69/59/pc 76/64/pc 86/65/I 97/67/pc

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109/88/0.00 111/87/pc 112/87/s 72/54/0.44 73/57/I 73/56/I 75/63/0.00 73/57/pc 79/58/s 88/61/0.01 83/60/I 78/56/pc 70/55/0.00 74/56/pc 76/57/c Nassau efns/o'.o4 efm/pc 89/77/I New Delhi 95/82/0.00 91/79/I 86/77/1 Osaka 90/77/0.01 90/74/I 89/74/I Oslo 77/55/0.00 67/55/sh 70/57/I Ottawa 75/57/Tr 72/53/s 80/54/s Paris 82/64/0.00 86/68/pc 91/69/pc Riu de Janeiro 77/63/0.00 85/68/s 87/66/I Rome 84/66/0.00 87/67/pc 87/68/s Santiago 61/48/0.00 64/39/s 70/40/s Snn Paulo 75/57/0.00 78/61/s 72/53/I Snppnro 84/66/0.04 83/64/I 81/64/pc Seoul ssnz/D.oo 84/74/I 84/74/I Shanghai 86/76/0.23 ssne/pc 88/78/c Singapore 90/82/0.05 88/78/I 89/78/I Sfnckhuim 73/63/0.01 78/58/s 77/58/pc Sydney 61/46/0.00 68/44/s 61/46/s Taipei 95/81/0.00 97/82/I 96/82/pc Toi Aviv 86/73/0.00 85/71/s 85/72/s Tokyo 86/75/0.01 81/73/I 80/73/I Toronto 70/55/0.01 75/53/pc 79/58/s Vancouver 75/61/0.00 74/58/c 69/58/s Vienna 86/66/0.00 85/66/I 85/66/I Warsaw 82/64/0.00 81/62/pc 81/60/s Mexico CitY Montreal MosCOw Nairobi

Wildfires Continued from B1 ODOT dosed the highway, which connects Central Oregon and John Day, Monday night. It was still dosed Wednesday with no estimate

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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC

BASEBALL

BRITISH OPEN

Top Speed slows downElks The Bend Elks rallied for three runs in the bottom of the ninth inning on Wednesday night, but it was not enough to get past TopSpeed ina 8-5lossatVinceGenna Stadium. Kenton Brunson laced an RBIsingle in the first and Justin Erlandson did the same in the second to give the Elksa2-1 lead. Top Speed, from Northern California, scored five runs in the third to take control, and Bend's ninth-inning rally came up just short in the Elks' nonleague loss. Erlandson was 3for 5 to lead the wayfor Bend, Cole Ferguson went 2 for 3 with a run, and Curtis Wildung picked up two hits including a double. Trever Allen doubled and drove in two runs for the Elks, and Jason Rosen,Dalton Blackwell and Nick Osuna eachhad ahit. Bend returns to West Coast Leagueaction at

Royal 5 Ancient becomes modern • U.S. road race champion lives upto the title with win in Mount BachelorRoadRace

HOYLAKE, England

r

yf) ~ 1(tIti

'IN

— Old Tom Morris would barely recognize the British Open these days. It is one thing for golf to evolve from gutta-percha to polyurethane, from niblicks to hybrids, from hickory to graphite. Now the British Open is all

i'

about LED 'y/

u

SOCCER Sounders pair leads All-Stars II'

'-

cutting edge of digital technology among major championships.

4

I.

The British Open is be-

lieved to be the first major golf event to offer wireless

to the MLS All-Star

TOUR DE FRANCE WEDNESDAY French rider TonyGallopin continued his successful Tour by winning in a sprint to the line on the hilly, 116.3-mile stage.

in every grandstand, allowing spectators with mobile phones and tablets

to watch the BBC coverage, track their favorite player through GPS, and get details through up-to-the minute scoring updates. "The experience for our Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin

Eric Marcotte, right, sprints to the finish line to edge out the group for a victory in Stage1 of the Cascade Cycling Classic on Wednesday at Mt. Bachelor ski area. Marcotte takes the overall lead with the stage win.

By Mark Modcal The Bulletin

MOUNT BACHELOREric Marcotte saw Tom Zirbel make a move to the front of the race, so Marcotte knew it was time. With about 400 meters left, he sped to the front him-

self, then held on to cross the finish line first in Wednesday's pro men's 111-mile Mount Bachelor Road Race, the first stage of the 35th annual Bend

Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic. Marcotte, the 2014 U.S. pro-

Chris Wherry

005

Marty Jemison 1 99 9

out of a lead field of about 40

Bart Bowen

Mt. Bachelor's West Village

Lodge. By virtue of a 10-second time bonus for winning the

finish, Zirbel, who rides for Optum, pedaled hard into the

Eric Marcotte is the latest U.S. road race champion to find success at the CCC,though he says his SmartStop team is aiming to get Travis McCabe or RobBritton the overall victory .Seven men havewonboth the U.S. road racing championship and the CCC in their careers: LS. C CC Levi Leipheimer 2007 2 008

fessional road race champion who rides for SmartStop, won riders who came together to the finish in the parking lot at

About I kilometer from the

CCCsuccessfor the StarsandStripes

1992

two seconds ahead of Zirbel. Joe Lewis of Hincapie fin-

"I was one wheel behind

Zirbel, and I looked to my right and I saw the Hincapie guys going for it at about 300 or 400

meters and I just jumped in front of them," said Marcotte, a 34-year-old chiropractor from Scottsdale, Arizona. "It's

a pretty tight corner here with about 150 (meters) to go. It's kind of like whoever gets to first will end up winning 1 996 that it, so I just held on from there." 2002

Marcotte said if he performs

1993

1980 1984

stage, Marcotte claimed the lead in the overall standings,

lead to try to keep the yellow jersey.

1gg7 well in today's Crooked River Time Trial, he might have a shot Lance Armstrong 1993 1998 G reg Oravetz 19 8 9 1 9 91 to win the overall CCC title, but he added that SmartStop's team 1978 1983 Dale Stetina goal is to get Travis McCabe or Rob Britton in position to

win the overall. McCabe is the ished second in Wednesday's stage, and his teammate Joey Rosskopf was third.

JERSEY LEADERS Yellow:Vincenzo Nibali Green:Peter Sagan Polka dot:Joaquin Rodriguez White:Romain Bardet

current leader in the National

Racing Calendar standings. SeeCCCmen /C4

Stephenswins 2nd race in asmanydays

CHRIS HORNER The Lampre-Merida rider from Bendfinished near the back of the 35-person lead peloton. He sits 17th overall, 7:33 back of Nibali and just under 2 minutes behind 14th-place teammate Rui Costa. TODAY Stage12:An undulating 115-mile route from Bourg-en-Bresse to Saint-Etienne in southeastern France. For more, C3

screens, apps • Links and routers. Yes, there are means wireless rout ers affixed to g o lfers leave the every grandwoods at stand at Royhome in al Liverpool. favor of Leave it the 2-iron, to the Royal C3 & Ancient tobeonthe

Clint Dempseyand DeAndre Yedlin of the Seattle Sounders are among a group of eight players from the U.S. World Cup teamvoted

— The Associated Prass

By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press

Cowlitz. — Bulletin staff/apo/t

game. The gameagainst Bayern Munich is scheduled for Aug. 6 in Portland. Sporting Kansas City's Matt Besler and Graham Zusi, RealSalt Lake's Kyle Beckerman and Nick Rimando, Omar Gonzalez of the Los Angeles Galaxy and Toronto FC's Michael Bradley also represented the U.S. in Brazil and were voted to the MLS team. All-Star coach Caleb Porter of the Timbers will choose the rest of his game-day roster on Saturday, and the final list of 32 All Stars will be announced on byMLS on the day of the game. Also making the Fan XI are forwards Landon Donovan, Therry Henryof New Yorkand Obafemi Martins of Seattle.

• LED scoreboard, access toWi-Fi is now common

By Beau Eastes

leader of Team Tibco, sprint-

The Bulletin

ed to her second victory of th i s CCC, finishing the

MOUNT BACHELOR —

LaurenStephens concedes 54-mile racearound Mount that her victory

during Tuesday's prologue was an

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Lauren Stephens celebrates her stagewin Wednesday inthe Cas-

cade Cycling Classic.

ln+"O

Bachelor in 2 hours,

29 minutes, and 3

' Wednesday's seconds to keep the results, yell o w jersey she achievement in individual excellence. Scor eboard, e arned Tuesday eveC2 But her win ning. Amber Neben, Wednesday in the a two-time Olympian Mount Bachelor Road Race, a n d the 2001 CCC champion, the opening stage of the Bend finished second 3 seconds Memorial Clinic Cascade Cy- back, and Breanne Nalder of cling Classic, was a clinic in D N A Cycling was 4 seconds team tactics. Stephens, the 27-year-old

back to finish third.

SeeCCC women/C4

At theCascade CyclingClassic WEDNESDAY'S WINNERS Men:U.S. professional roadrace champion Eric Marcotte outsprinted a 41-man peloton at Mt. Bachelor ski area for the stage win. Women: Lauren Stephens '/ wonher second race isasmanydays,andwith a10-second time bonus, has a19-second lead over 2001 CCC champion Amber Neben JERSEY LEADERS Men's Overall:Eric Marcotte, SmartStop Mountain:Marcotte (worn by LoganOwen, Bissell) Sprint:Owen (worn by Taylor Williams, BMC Development) Young rider:Ruben Zepuntke, Bissell Women's Overall:Lauren Stephens, Tibco Mountain: Stephens (worn by AmberNeben, FCS Zngine) Sprint:Jessica Cutler, FCS Zngine Young rider:Kaitlin Antonneau

TODAY'SSTAGE Teams go up to Prineville today for the Crooked River Time Trial, which begins at CrookedRiver Parkand ends justsouth of there on CrookedRiver Highway,C4

spectators will, I believe, be the best they have ever received," said Peter Un-

sworth, chairman of the R&A's championship committee. "Using their own

smartphones and tablets, and our groundbreaking Wi-Fi network, which is

available in every grandstand, they will be able to enjoy live BBC television and radio coverage, live scoring and get news and updates without leaving their seat.

See Technology/C3

MLB

Easy pitch for parting gift isn't a new idea By Pat Borzi New York Times News Service

MINNEAPOLIS — Den-

ny McLain was the original Adam Wainwright, and

Mickey Mantle the original Derek Jeter. Twitter and ESPN did not exist on Sept. 19, 1968, when the New York Yankees met

the Detroit Tigers in a game of little significance at Tiger Stadium, before a modest crowd of 9,063. The Tigers had clinched the American

League pennant in the final year before divisional play, while future Hall of Famer

M ickey Mantlechased an elusive goal in the final days of his career.

Mantle, who retired the next spring, had 534 homers, tied with Jimmie

Foxx for third on baseball's career list. SeeGift /C4


C2 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY CYCLING

Tour de France, Stage12

Time TV/Radio 5 a.m. (Iive), 9 a.m., noon, 5 p.m., 9 p.m. NBCSN

FOOTBALL

Canadian, Edmonton at Winnipeg

5:30 p.m. ESPN2

GOLF

LPGA, Marathon Classic Web.com, BoiseOpen British Open

noon Golf 2 p.m. Golf 1 a.m. (Fri.), 4 a.m. (Fri.) ESPN

FRIDAY CYCLING

Tour de France, Stage13

5 a.m. (Iive), 9 a.m., 5 p.m. NBCSN

GOLF

LPGA Tour, Marathon Classic American Century Championship Web.com Tour, BoiseOpen British Open

noon Golf 1 p.m. NBCSN 2 p.m. Golf 4a.m. (Sat.) ESPN

AUTO RACING

NASCARNationwide, Chicagoland, practice 12:30 p.m. FS1 NASCARNationwide, Chicagoland, final practice 3 :30 p.m. F S 1 BASEBALL

MLB, N.Y.Yankeesat Boston, OR TampaBayatToronto MLB, Seattle at L.A. Angels

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

MLB Roo t

BOXING

Friday Night Fights Mercito Gesta vs. Luis Arceo

5 p.m. 7 p.m.

E SPN2 FS1

FOOTBALL

Canadian, Hamilton at Calgary Australian, St. Kilda vs. Fremantle SOCCER MLS, Colorado at Portland

7 p.m. E SPN2 11:30 p.m. FS2 8 p.m. NBCSN

Listingsarethemostaccurate available. The Bulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL NO ChargeS fOrfOrmer DuCkAuStin — Aninvestigation into an alleged sexual assault by two ProvidenceCollege basketball players has concluded with no charges, the RhodeIsland attorney general's office said Wednesday.Theoffice said it presented the investigation to a statewide grand jury, which determined there was insufficient evidence to chargeRodneyBullock. Theoffice said it then determined there wasinsufficient evidence to askthe grand jury to consider charges against BrandonAustin. Austin later left Providence College andenrolled at Oregon, where hewas also accused of rape. Authorities there declined to prosecute, saying there wasn't enough evidence. In June, hewassuspended as astudent from the school for a minimum of four years, and upto10 years.

StePhenSOn agreeS to3-year deal With HOrnetS —Following an all-night negotiating session, the Charlotte Hornets have come to anagreement to sign Indiana Pacers guard LanceStephenson. Under terms of the agreement, Stephenson will make $9million in 2014-15 and $9million in 2015-16. Stephenson will get a slight raise in 2016-17 if the Hornets pick up theteam option. 6-foot-5 playmaker had abreakthrough season statistically, averaging 13.8 points, 7.2 rebounds and4.7 assists. He shot 49 percent from the field and 35 percent from 3-point range.

BOXING PGCquiao to return to ring in MGCau —IulannyI acqulao will return to China for his next fight, taking on Chris Algieri in the gambling enclave of Macau.Thescheduled Nov. 22 fight for a piece of the welterweight title held by Pacquiao comes a year after the Filipino headlined the first big fight card there with a win over Brandon Rios. Promoter BobArum said the fight won't sell as well on pay-perview in the U.S. as it would if it was in LasVegas, but that will be offset by lower taxes onPacquiao's purse and abigger site fee from the Venetian hotel-casino. Hesaid plans arealso in place to sell the fight on TV in China, wherePacquiao is becoming better known.

BASEBALL BreWerS attempting to COntaCt Jean Segura —Milwaukee Brewers general manager DougMelvin said Wednesday he is in the process of trying to contact shortstop JeanSegura to seewhat the young shortstop's plans are to rejoin the team.Segura returned to the Dominican Republic last weekendafter learning his 9-month-old son, Janniel, had diedafter a brief illness. The Brewers put Segura on the bereavement list and hecanremain on there through Friday, when the club would have to put him onthe restricted list if he remains away.el've made phonecalls today to try to make contact with him," Melvin said. "I haven't beenable to makecontact at this time. I'm hoping to find out today. We've leftemessagesbut wehaven't heard back. We just don't know right now. Once Seguradoesreturn, the Brewers aren't sure what to expect as far as his readiness to return to play. "There are alot of unknowns here," Melvin said. "Whatever Jean decides, wewill support him. And we know his teammates will be there for him, too."

Stanton giveS injured fan glOve, ball —If JordanJacobson ever gets another chance to catch a HomeRunDerby ball hit by Giancarlo Stanton, he canhavethe slugger's glove with him. The 19-year-old ball-shagging fan stuck out his right hand Monday night at Target Field in an attempt to nab a blast from Marlins star during the All-Star competition among major league musclemen. But the ball deflected off Jacobson's mitt-less hand andwas pounced on by another fan in the crowded lower level more than 350 feet from where the 240-pound Stanton let it rip. Jacobson confirmed Wednesday that Stanton is sending him a gloveand aball from theHome Run Derby."Thankyou"wasallJacobsonwantedto say while verifying that Stanton's Twitter messageabout the gifts was true.

TENNIS NO rePOrted terrOr threat fOr Ij.S. OPen — Atop NYPD counterterror official said Wednesdaythere are no reported terror threats for the upcoming US Opentennis tournament despite its being named as a potential target by an al-Qaedagroup. Director of Intelligence Analysis RebeccaWeiner said the Queensvenue was suggested as a target in the most recent edition of Inspire, the English-languageonline publication of al-Qaeda inthe Arabian Peninsula. Shesaid the magazinedetailed how to build a car bomband suggested it be targeted at large gatherings of people, rather than buildings, and listed other locations in NewYork, Washington and Virginia. — From wire reports

CYCLING

IN THE BLEACHERS

Cascade Classic Wednesday Stage1: MountBachelorRoadRace Men (110miles) 1, EricMarcotte,SmartStop,4:11:22.2, JoeLewis, HincapieSportswear, sametime. 3, Joey Rosskopf, HincapieSportswear, sametime. 4, EricSlack,Canyon Bicycles-Shimno, a same time. 5, TomsSkujins, HincapieSportswear, same time. 6, Travis Mccabe, SmartStop,sametime. 7, JesseAnthony,OptumPro, sametime. 8, SergheiTsvetkov, sametime. 9, James Oram,Bissell, sametime. 10,Timothy Rugg,Marc Pro-Strava,sametime. 11, BenJacquesMaynes, Jamis Hagens Berman, sametime. 12, lanCrane,Jamis Hagens Berman, sametime. 13,JeffreyPerrin, Hagens Berman U23, sametime.14,Fabio Calabria, HorizonOrganic/EinsteinBros,sametime.15, WiliamRoutley,OptumPro, sametime. 16, Clement Chevrier, Bisseff,sametime. 17, Maxim Jenkins, MarcPro-Strava,sametime.18, AndresDiaz,Incycle-Predator, same time. 19, Justin Mauch,Airgas,sametime. 20, Dion Smith, Hincapie Sportswear,sam etime. Women (54 miles) 1, Lauren Stephens, Tibco,2:29:03. 2, Amber Neben,FCSZngine, 0:03.3, BreanneNalder, DNA, 0:04. 4, AnnieToth,GuruCycles, 0:12.5, JoanneKiesanowskiTi , bco,0:16. 6,AnnePerry, DNA,sametime.7, MirandaGriffiths, Vanderkitten, sametime. 8, Andrea Dvorak,Tibco, sametime. 9, Julie Emmerman, 0:19. 10, KaitlinAntonneau, Twenty16,sametime. 11, Krista Doebel-Hickok,Tibco,0:26. 12, Athena Countouriotis, 0:30.13,Karol AnnCanuel, ICE Sportswear,sametime. 14,Allie Dragoo,Twenty16, 0:46. 17, AlisonTetrick, Twenty16, 0:54. 16, Anna Sanders,FCSZngine, 1:01. 17, MariaLuisa, IndeportesAntioquia,sametime. 18, KathrynDonovan, Twenty16,1:07.19,KathrynHunter, FCSZngine,1:08. 20, Lauren Komanski, Twenty16, 1;21.

In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers

I l5Ehl I

6-4, 6-0.

AlexandrDolgopolov(4), Ukraine,def.JerzyJanowicz,Poland,6-4,6-1. DusanLajovic, Serbia,def. CarlosBerlocq(15), Argentina,6-3,6-4. AlexanderZverev,Germany, def. Mikhail Youzhny

(5), Russia7-5, , 7-5. PabloAndujar,Spain,def. ThomazBeffucci, Brazil, 6-4, 3-6,6-2.

Gilles Simon (12), France,def. Martin Klizan,Slovakia,walkover. AndreasSeppi (16), Italy, def.JuanMonaco, Argentina,1-6,6-0,7-6 (3). Dustin Brown,Germany, def. FernandoVerdasco (9), Spain4-6, , 6-2, 7-6(8). Philipp Kohlschreiber(7), Germany, def. Gastao Elias,Portugal,7-5,6-1.

WTA TEBBNPParibas Istanbul Cup Wednesday atKozaWorld ofSporls, Istanbul Purse:$250,000(Intl.)

Surlace:Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound KristinaMladenovic,France,def. KlaraKoukalova (3), Czech Republic,6-1, 6-3. ElinaSvitolina(4), Ukraine,def. StefanieVoegele, Swilzerland,6-0, 6-3. Francesca Schiavone,ltaly, def. BojanaJovanovski (7), Serbia6-1, , 6-4. CarolineWozniacki(1), Denmark,def. Karin Knapp, Italy, 4-6,6-2, 6-1.

Overallstandings(After twostages) Men

1, EricMarcotte,SmartStop,4:15:43. 2, TomZirbel, OptumPro,0:02.3,RubenZepuntke,Bissell,0:04.4, Joey Rosskopf,HincapieSportswear, 0:05. 5, Travis Mccabe,SmartStop, 0:08. 6, TimothyRugg, Marc Pro-Strava,0:09.7, Wiliam Routley, OptumPro, 0:10. 8, JoeLewis, HincapieSportswear, sametime. 9, Serghei Tsvetkov,Jelly Belly,sametime. 10, lan Crane, JamisHagensBerman, 0:11. 11, BenJacquesMaynes, Jamis Hagens Berman, 0:12. 12, JoeSchmalz, HincapieSportswear, same time.13,Oscar Clark,HincapieSportswear,sametime. 14, DanieEa l ton, CanyonBicycles-Shimano,0:13.15, Josh Berry,SmartStop, same time. 16, James Oram, Bisseff,sametime. 17,Justin Mauch, Airgas,same time. 18,AndresDiaz, Incycle-Predator, sametime. 19, JulianKyer,SmartStop, 0:16.20, CarsonMiler, JamisHagensBerman, 0:17.

Women 1, Lauren Stephens,Tibco,2:33;46. 2, Amber Neben,FCSZngine,0:19.3,JoanneKiesanowski,Tibco, 0:39. 4,Julie Emmerman, 0:41. 5, Kaitlin Antonneau, Twenty16,0:44.6, BreanneNalder, DNA, sametime. 7, MirandaGriffiths, Vanderkitten,0:51. 8, Andrea Dvorak,Tibco,0:52. 9, AnnePerry, DNA,0:56. 10, KristaDoebel-Hickok, Tibco,0:58. 11, KarolAnnCanuel, ICESportswear, 1:00. 12, Allie Dragoo,Twenty16, 1:06. 13,AnnieToth, Guru Cycling, 1:12. 14,AthenaCountouriotis, 1:17. 15, AlisonTetrick, Tw enty16,1:23.16, MariaLuisaCale, IndeportesAntioquia, 1:29. 17,AnnaSanders, FCS Zngine,1:31. 18,Kathryn Hunter, FCSZngine, 1:35. 19, LaurenKomanski, Twe nty16, 1:50. 20,Kathryn Donovan, Twenty16, 1:51.

Tour de France WednesdayatOyannox, France 11th Stage A116.4-mile hillyridefromBesanconto Oyannox,withfoursmall-to-moderate climbs near thefinish. 1. Tony Gallopin, France,Lotto Belisol, 4 hours,25 minut es,45seconds.2.JohnDegenkolb,Germany, Giant-Shimano,sametime. 3. MatteoTrentin, Italy, Omega Pharma-Quick-Step, sametime. 4. Daniele Bennati, Itlay,Tinkoff-Saxo,sam e time. 5. SimonGerrans,Australia, OricaGreenEdge, sametime. 6. Jose JoaquinRojas,Spain, Movistar,sametime. 7. Greg Van Averm aet, Belgium, BMCRacing, sametime. 8. Samuel Dumoulin,France,AG2R LaMondiale,same time. 9. PeterSagan, Slovakia, Cannondale, same time.10.KevinReza, France,Europcar,sametime. 11. RomainBardet, France,AG2RLa Mondiale, sametime.12.SylvainChavanel, France,IAMCycling, sametime.13. BramTankink, Netherlands, Belkin Pro Cycling,sametime.14. BaukeMollema, Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling,sametime. 15.JurgenVanden Broeck,Belgium,Lotto Belisol, sametime. 16. Paul Voss,Germany,NetApp-Endura, sametime.17. Jakob Fuglsang,Denm ark, Astana,sametime. 18. Frank Schle ck,Luxembourg,Trek Factory Racing,same time.19.GeraintThomas, Britain, Sky,sametime. 20. Vincenzo Nibali,ltaly, Astana,sametime. Also 21. Alejandro Valverde,Spain, Movistar, sametime. 22. Jean-Christophe Peraud,France,AG2RLaMondiale, same time. 24. RichiePorte, Australia, Sky,same time. 26.TejayvanGarderen, UnitedStates, BMC Racing,sametime. 28. Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland, OmegaPharma-Quick-Step, sametime. 30. Thibaut Pinot, France,FDJ.fr, sametime. 33. Christopher Horner, UnitedStates, Lampre-Merida, sametime. 48. Rui Costa,Portugal,Lampre-Merida, 1 minute, 36 secondsbehind.55.Peter Stetina,UnitedStates, BMCRacing, sametime. 79. Mathew Busche,United States,TrekFactory Racing, 8:14. 132. BenjamiKi nng, UnitedStates, Garmin-Sharp, 18:25.141.DannyPate, United States, Sky,sametime. 145. AlexHowes, United States, Garmin-Sharp, same time. 179.AndrewTalansky, United States, GarminSharp,32:05. Overall Standings (After11 stages) 1. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy,Astana,46hours, 59minutes, 23 seconds.2. RichiePorte,Australia, Sky,2:23. 3. AlejandroValverde, Spain, Movistar,2:47. 4. RomainBardet,France,AG2RLaMondiale,3:01.5. Tony Gallopin,France,LottoBelisol, 3:12.6.Thibaut Pinot, France,FDJ.fr,3:47. 7. Tejayvan Garderen, United States,BMCRacing,3:56.8. Jean-Christophe Peraud, France ,AG2RLaMondiale,3:57.9.BaukeMogema, Netherlands,Belkin ProCycling,4:08. 10.JurgenVan den Broeck, Belgium, Lotto Belisol, 4:18. 11. JakobFuglsang,Denmark, Astana,4:31. 12. MichalKwiatkowski, Poland,Omega Pharma-QuickStep, 4:39.13.Geraint Thomas, Britain, Sky,5:17.14. Rui Costa,Portugal, Lampre-Merida, 5:34.15.Mikel

Nieve,Spain,Sky,6:03. 16.Pierre Rolland,France, Europcar,6:47.17.ChristopherHorner, UnitedStates, Lampre-Merida,7:33. 18.Laurensten Dam, Netherlands,BelkinProCycling, 7:42.19. HaimarZubeldia, Spain,TrekFactory Racing, 8:01. 20.Leopold Konig, CzechRepublic, NetApp-Endura, 8:25. Also 44. Andrew Talansky,United States, Garmin-Sharp, 46;49.61.PeterStetina,UnitedStates, BMCRacing, 59:58. 95. BenjaminKing, UnitedStates, GarminSharp, 1:24:34. 134. Alex Howes,UnitedStates, Garmin-Sharp,1:46:49.144.MathewBusche, United States,TrekFactory Racing,1:55:20. 162.DannyPate, UnitedStates,Sky,2:09:24.

BASKETBALL WNBA W OMEN'S NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

BASEBALL WCL AH TimesPOT

East Division W L Yakima Valley Pippins 21 12 W enatchee AppleSox 16 16 W alla WallaSweets 1 6 16 Kelowna Falcons 10 23 SouthDivision W L CorvallisKnights 21 12 BendElks 19 14 MedfordRogues 18 15 KlamathFallsGems 9 24 Wesl Division W L BellinghamBel s 25 6 C owlitz BlackBears 1 5 18 V ictoria HarbourCats 13 19 KitsapBlueJackets 1 2 20

Pct GB .636 .500 41/2 .500 41/2 .303 11 Pct GB .636 .576 2 .545 3 .273 12 Pct GB .806 .455 I 1I/2 .406 121/2 .375 13

Wednesday'sGames

Kelowna4,KlamathFals 2 Cowlitz 4,Kitsap0 Wenatchee atWalla Walla, 7:05p.m. Victoria atBellingham,7:05 p.m.

Today'sGames

BendatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. Kelowna atMedford,6:35 p.m. Corvallis atBellingham,7;05 p.m. KitsapatWalla Walla, 7:05p.m. Wenatchee atYakimaValley,7:05 p.m. KlamathFallsatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Friday'sGames BendatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. Kelowna atMedford,6:35 p.m. Corvallis atBellingham,7;05 p.m. KitsapatWalla Walla, 7:05p.m. Wenatchee atYakimaValley,7:05 p.m. KlamathFallsatVictoria, 7:11p.m. Saturday'sGames BendatCowlitz, 6:35p.m. Kelowna atMedford,6:35 p.m. Corvallis atBellingham,7;05 p.m. KitsapatWalla Walla, 7:05p.m. Wenatchee atYakimaValley,7:05 p.m. KlamathFallsatVictoria, 7:11p.m.

Wednesday'sGame

Top Speed8, Elks5 Top Speed 105 001 010 — 8 10 0 Bend 110 000 003 — 5 12 5

Eddy,Slifer(7), Lathram(9)andSlaid; Schneider, Hamann (4), Martinez(6), Wilcox(9) andFerguson. W—Eddy.L—Schneider. 2B—TopSpeed:Koenig; Bend:Wildung,Allen, Rosen. Tuesday'sGame

Elks11, TopSpeed10 (12 inn.) Top Speed 121 300 011 001 — 10 12 0 Bend 121 200 030 002 —11 14 3

Milner, Lathram(6), Truex(8), Eddy(12) and Mitchell; Guzz on, Bennett (4), Albrecht(7), Pratt(9), Sheets(9), Cohen(11) andNewton. W—Cohen. L —Eddy.2B—TopSpeed:Haskings, Smith, Mitchell, Owen;Bend:Close,Peevyhouse,Osuna.3B —Bend: Peevyhouse,Allen.

MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AH TimesPOT AMERICAN LEAGUE

East Division

Baltimore Toronto NewYork

TampaBay Boston

Detroit KansasCity Cleveland

Chicago Minnesota Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston

Texas

L 42 47 47 53 52

Pct GB 553 510 4 500 5

W L 53 38 48 46 47 47 45 51 44 50 West Division W L 59 36 57 37 51 44 40 56 38 57

Pct GB 582

W 52 49 47 44 43

Central Division

454 91/2 453 91/2

511 6H 500 Plt 469 10'Iz 468 tgt/t

Pct GB

621 606 1'/~ 537 8 417 19'Iz 400 21

Friday'sGames CincinnatiatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. TexasatToronto, 4:07 p.m. Cleveland at Detroit,4:08 p.m. KansasCityat Boston, 4:10p.m. HoustonatChicagoWhite Sox, 5;10p.m. TampaBayatMinnesota,5:10p.m. BaltimoreatOakland, 7:05 p.m. Seattleat L.A.Angels, 7:05 p.m. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W

L

Wednesday'sGames

Minnesota93,Tulsa82 Today'sGames SanAntonioatTulsa,9:30a.m. Chicagoat Indiana,4 p.m. Connecticutat Phoenix, 7 p.m. Washin gtonatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGame All-Stargame,12:30 p.m.

EQUESTRIAN

WESTCOAST LEAGUE

Washington 51 42 Atlanta 52 43 EasternConference New York 45 50 W L P c t G B Miami 44 50 Atlanta 15 6 . 7 14 Philadelphia 42 53 Indiana 10 12 , 455 5'/z Central Division Connecticut 1 0 13 .435 6 W L Washington 9 1 3 , 4 09 6t/t Milwaukee 53 43 Chicago 8 1 3 . 381 7 St. Louis 52 44 NewYork 8 1 3 . 381 7 Cincinnati 51 44 WesternConference Pittsburgh 49 46 W L P c t G B Chicago 40 54 Phoenix 17 3 . 8 50 West Division Minnesota 17 6 . 7 3 9 1'/z W L SanAntonio 1 1 11 .500 7 Los Angeles 54 43 Los Angeles 10 11 . 476 Plt SanFrancisco 52 43 Seattle 9 1 5 . 375 10 SanDiego 41 54 Tulsa 7 1 5 . 318 11 Colorado 40 55 Arizona 40 56 NewYork77,Atlanta75

WorldTourbet-at-homeOpen Wednesday atRothenbaum SportGmbH, Hamburg,Germ any Purse:51.8million(WT500) Surlace:Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound TobiasKamke, Germany, def. FedericoDelbonis (13), Argentina, 6-3,6-4. LeonardoMayer, Argentina, def. GuilermoGarma-Lopez (10), Spain, 7-6(1), 7-6(3). LukasRosol,CzechRepublic,def.Joao Sousa, Portugal(14),6-2,6-4. Filip KrajinovicSerbi , a,def.FabioFognini(2),Italy,

Friday'sGames ColoradoatPittsburgh, 4:05p.m. CincinnatiatN.Y.Yankees, 4:05p.m. Milwaukee atWashington,4:05 p.m. SanFranciscoatMiami, 4:10p.m. PhiladelphiaatAtlanta, 4;35p.m. LA. Dodgersat St.Louis,5:15 p.m. Chicag oCubsatArizona,6:40p.m. N.Y.MetsatSanDiego,7:10 p.m.

Pct GB .548 .547 .474 7 .468 7A .442 10

Pct GB .552

.542 1 .537 1H .516 3'/z .426 12

Pct GB

.557 .547 1 .432 12 .421 13 .417 13'/z

CollectorSwedishOpen Wednesday atBastadTennisStadiun Bastad,Sweden Oregon High Desert Purse:$250,000(WT250) Classics Surlace:Clay-Outdoor Singles Hunter/Jumper Competition First Round AtJ BarJ Boys Ranch, Bend GabrielaDabrowski, Canada, def. CamilaGiorgi (3), Italy,3-6,6-3, 6-2. Wednesday's Results Julia Goerges,Germany, def. Maria-TeresaTorClassificationWinners(Horse, owner,rider) ro-Flor(7),Spain,6-2, 6-0. Jumpers Barthel,Germany, def. TerezaMartincova, Beginning, .75-meters — Bobbi/Laurie Mona Republic,6-4, 6-4. Rogers/LaurieRogers. Children's, .90-meters Czech Silvia Soler-Espinosa, Spain, def.SofiaArvidsson, — Bouvier,MackenzieKorican/MackenzieKorican. 6-3. Children's, 1.gg-meters —Ulene/EmffySlusher/ Sweden,6-7(3),6-3, Second Round Emily Slusher. Children's1.10-meter — CapilaJanaCepelova,Slovakia, def. AnettKontaveit, Esno/Sage SkyFarm/MadisonWiltse. Adult amateur tonia, 6-4,6-3. .90-meter —J Crew/Randi Ray/Randi Ray.Adult Chanelle Scheep ers, South Africa, def. Laura amateur1.00-meters — Carma/Bit ByBit Resale, Siegemund ,Germany,3-6,6-4,7-5. LLC/Baffey Fuller. Adult amateur1.1g-meters Lara Arruabarrena, Spain, def. AnnikaBeck(6), — Keepsake /Denise Tiley/MeganSpencer. Ama2-6, 6-4,7-6(2). teur owner/junior 1.25-meters —Loverboy/ Germany, YuliaPutintseva,Kazakhstan,def.DinahPfizenmaiBailey Smith/BaileySmith. Hopeful, fences 2' ny, 6-3, 4-6, 6-2. — AmoreLil Victory/AndreaSnyder/Natalie Cobb. er, Germa 0.70 —Anthem/ShannonHunnex/Angie Chamberlin.0.75— Quicksilver/SarahPearl/SarahPearl. SOCCER 0.80 — Cadell/Maplewood,Inc/Kevin Winkel. 0.85— Mount ainRain/AnnSofieAndrews/Wendy MLS Brownlee.0.90 — Hudson/ChristineLoper/Nicole Bourgeois.1.00 — CapistranoCat/RobinTomb/ MAJORLEAGUESOCCER MeganGarcia.1.05 — Alchemy/Hannah Simson/ All TimesPOT Tess Harris.1.10 —WinsorB/MadeleineJohnston/ Tami Masters.1.15 — Dublin/CorenaCulhane/ Wednesday'sGames CorenaCulhane.1.20— Odysseus/TaylerCobb/ Philadelphia3, NewYork1 TaylerCobb.1.25 —LaTache/Caffie Layland/Callie SportingKansasCity 2,Columbus1 Layland. 1.30—CortesiaLS/Scott King/TamiMas- Toronto FC1,Vancouver1, tie ters.1.40 —LastCall/ClodmirFarm/Krista Vangs- Los Angele5, s NewEngland1 tad.Jusl a jumper,.70 —Bobbi/Laurie Roge rs/ Friday'sGame Laurie Rogers.Limit, 1.00 — Carma/BitByBit ColoradoatPortland, 8 p.m. Resale,LLC/JohannaSiefert. Low,.Bg—Vinyasa/ Saturday'sGames AlexandraPotter/AlexandraPotter. Modified am- Los Angeleat s Sporting KansasCity,3 p.m. ateur/Iuntor, 1.15 —Imnana/Sarah Asby/Taylor SanJoseat NewYork,4 p.m. Bowman. Pony,.95— KhafMeLuna/LongFarms/ Montrealat Columbus,4:30p.m. Kayla Long.Schooling,.85— Cafi e/MaforyMc- PhiladelphiaatChicago,5:30p.m. cool/Mallory Mccool.Special, .90 —TheGipper/ NewEnglandat FCDallas, 6p.m. RobinTomb/MeganGarcia. Wishful, fences2'TorontoFCat Houston,6 p.m. ChristopherRobin/HannaMeyer/SmanathaCristy. Vancouverat Real Salt Lake,7 p.m. BabyGreenWorkingHunters Babygreenworking firstclass— Lubeck/ DEALS MeganGoss/Megan Goss.Baby green working secondclass — Lubeck/Megan Goss/Megan Goss. Babygreenworking U/8 — Lubeck/MeTransactions gan Goss/MeganGoss.Firstyeargreenworking BASEBA LL — Rabelais/GretchenRice/Rachel Nicholas. First AmericanLeague year working 2 —Rabelais/Gretchen Rice/Rachel BALTIMOR EORIOLES—Agreedtotermswith RHP Nicholas.Conformationmodel — Christmas Edward Fabianona minorleaguecontract. List/RingsideFarm/JimDahlquist. Conformation C HICAG O HITESOX—Claimed RHPRaul Fer— Christmas List/RingsideFarm/JimDahlquist. nandezoffwaivW fromColorado andassigned himto Conformation 2 —Broderick/Natalie Hiff/Corene Winston-Saleers m (Carolina). Smith.Just a workinghunter — LoneStar/ K ANSAS CI T Y ROYALS— Designated38Jimmy DebbieBrawley/Rachel Nicholas. Justa working Paredesforassignm ent. OptionedRHPLouisColeman hunter 2 — Lone Star/DebbieBrawley/Rachel to Omaha (PCL). Nicholas.Justa workinghunter U/S —Ladys' SEATTLE MARINERS—ReleasedCJohn Buck. Man/Margo & Peter Markl/WendyBrownlee.Large TEXAS RANGERS—Traded RHPJason Frasorto working — HydePark/Patty Osberg/CoreneSmith. Kansas Ci t y for RHPSpencer Patton andassignedPatLargeworking 2 — Padarco Dolce/Cameron ton toRoundRoc k(PCL). Brown/KellySmith.Largeworking U/8 — Hyde NationalLeague Park/PattyOsberg/CoreneSmith. Lowworking, A RIZON A D IA MONDBACKS— Signed18 Frangel fences 2' — Karma/FlordeMarianRizo/Marisa Feliciano. Metzger.Lowworking, fences2'3 — HuckLOSANGELES DODGERS— Assigned 1B Clint leber ry Finn/Sophie Passadone/Rebekah Swan. Robinsonoutright toAlbuquerque(PCL). Low work ing 2'6"— RomanCandleRK/Pamela PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—Sent38 Reid Brignac Zicker/NicoleCobb.Lowworking, fences3'to Clearwater (FSL) for arehabassignment. Optimystic/Kendal Gaylord/Angie Chamberlin. Low ST. LOUIS CARDINALS— Agreedto terms wtih working, fences 3'6 n —Veritas/AlexaPeterkin/ RHPSilasBohannanona minor leaguecontract. Jim Dahlquist.Non-Thoroughbred workingSANFRANCI SCOGIANTS— Assi gned28Brandon Gilsten/View Point Farms/PaulBennett. Non-Thor- Hicksoutrightto Fresno(PCL). oughbred 2 —Glisten/ViewPoint Farms/Paul BASKETB ALL Bennett.Non-Thoroughbredworking U/8NationalBasketball Association Friday'sChild/MargoMarkl/WendyBrownlee. PerGOLDEN S T A T E W A R R IO R S —Agreedtoterms with formance,3'6n —UltimateEspoir/BarbaraChap- FBrandonRushonatwo-yearcontract. in/JohnFrench. Performance, 3'3" — Etienne/ OKLAHOMACITYTHUNDER— SignedGAnthony Anna Lise Ericson/Ben son Carroll. Pre-green, Morrowtoathree-yearcontract. fences 3' — Campari/Alexis Taylor-Silvernale/ WASHINGTONWIZARDS— Acquired CDeJuan Alexis Taylor-SilvernalePre-green . l fences 3' Blair in asign-and-tradedealwiththeDallas Mavericks — Crosstown/Kelly Schuessler/Alexis Taylor-Sil- for therightsto FEmir Preldzic. vern ale.Pr e-green,fences 3'u/8 — Campari/ FOOTBALL Alexis Taylor/Silvernale/Alexis Taylor-Silvernale. NationalFootballLeague Pre-green3'3 n —Heathrow/ArtisanFarms/JessiBUFFAL ca Rooks. Pre-green3'3" — Seffie/Nick Haness/ AlexisTaylor-Silvernale.Schooling—OptImysff c/ KendalGaylord/AngieChamberlin. SchoolingKangar oo/Hunter's Run LLC/Meghann Gjertsen. Schoolin g 2 — Kangaroo/Hunter's Run LLC/ Meghann Gjertsen.Schooling U/8 — Kangaroo/ Hunte r' sRunLLC/MeghannGjertsen.Secondyear green/ highperlormance— SaintCloud/Andrea Snyder/Phiffippa Fraser.Small — Off TheChart/ AudreyIsackson/AlexisShaw.Small 2 — Off The CHart/Audrey Isackson/Alexis Shaw.Small U/8 — Off The Chart/Audrey Isackson/Alexis Shaw. TAKE 2 Thoroughbred —Gilded Opportunity/ Kelly Smith/Kelly Smith.TAKE2 Thoroughbred — Henley/KendaffCarlson/Lindsey Garner. TAKE 2 Thoroughbred —Kipling/Judi Gilmore/Angie Chamberlin.Training — SouthernBeffe/Efaca te Duke/KendalBourgeoi l s.Training — Kangaroo/ Hunter'sRunLLC/MeghannGjertsen.Training U/8 — Kangar oo/Hunter' sRunLLC/MeghannGjertsen. Wishfulworking —Donatello/Hunter's RunLLC/ Meghann Gjertsen.Wishful working2 — Pumpkin Spice/HannaMeyer/Josie Paulson.Wishful working u/8 —First Wish/CeffidahMcKay/Maddy Weber. Equitation Limit children's — Kenedi Timm.

TENNIS ATP World Tour ClaroOpen Wednesday at Centro deAlto Rendimiento Bogota,Colombia Purse:5727,000(WT250) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round JamesWard, Britain, def.MatthewEbden(7), Australia, 6-4,3-0,retired. Victor Estreffa Burgos, Dom inican Republic, def. JuanIgnacioLondero, Argentina, 7-5,6-3. Peter Polansky,Canada, def. Nicolas Barrientos, Colombia3-6, , 6-4, 6-3. JimmyWang, Taiwan,def. Michal Przysiezny,Poland, 7-6(4),4-6,6-3. SecondRound VasekPospisil (3), Canada, def. AlexKuznetsov, UnitedStates,7-5, 7-5. RadekStepanek(4), CzechRepublic, def. Guido Pella,Argentina,7-6(2), 6-2. BernardTomic, Australia, def.AlejandroFalla(5), Colombia6-1, , 7-6(2). AlejandroGonzalez (6), Colombia,def. ThiemoDe Bakker,Netherlands, 6-3,6-4.

FISH COUNT


THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TOUR DE FRANCE

C3

BRITISH OPEN

Brushing off the 2-iron, bracing for the links By Karen Crouse New York Times News Service

HOYLAKE, England Players take great care setting the table for the British Open, a formal — and for many, foreign — event. For this one week, many will take

ant club," he said. On the lush courses of the PGA Tour, nearly every tee

box calls to mind a baseball batting cage, with the players swinging freely at targets at a specific distancebecausethey know the ball, once it lands, out and polish off the club typically will not roll very far. that, like a salad fork, is re- On the harder ground of the servedfor specialoccasions. windswept links courses, the It is the 2-iron, the nearest ball can run for several yards. thing the golfers have in their The advantage of using bag to a repellent for the Brit- a long iron as opposed to a ish links courses'biggest pest, wood is that the ball's trajecthe potholebunker. tory is flatter, so it is less vulIn 2006, the last time the nerable to the gusts. tournament was held here at

4' C.

Laurent Cipriani/The Associated Press

American rider Andrew Talansky rides alone after losing contact wIth the peloton because of back paIn durIng the11th stage of the Tour de France on Wednesday. Talansky finished more than 32 minutes behind the leaders but still under the maximum time allowed.

cial to know how far a ball flies with any given club,"

his way to his 11th major title.

ferent and the bounce is so not an exact science." M cIlroy i s ta k i n g t h e

note. When it came time to pack for this event, Watson, the

room for his 2-iron. "I just think for this terrain

reigning Masters champion, and the conditions and the made a trip to the golf room in wind, the 2-iron just goes that his Florida house — the same

little bit lower, and there's a bit

one Woods called home in

of a better flight on it," he said,

2006 — and retrieved a 2-iron from a storage unit.

"which is obviously better for these conditions."

until this week," Watson said.

2-iron as just a fierce-weather

:) yfg . gv '

week. But he became another kind of cycling hero Wednesday: the rider who would not

quit when he probably should. Talansky started the 115mile stage from Besancon with

a prominent bandage on his right knee, a legacy from his

r<~

dramatic crash near the fin-

I

ish in Nancy on Friday. Other scrapes, cuts and bruises were added to his body Saturday when he became tangled with severalother riders on a rainy descent.

Peter Dejong1The AssociatedPress

Andrew Talansky crashes near the end of Friday's seventh stage. That crash, along wIth another spill

By the end of Monday's Saturday, left Talansky in so much pain Wednesday that he could not keep up. After Wednesday's stage, Talansky, 25, was so stiff race, Talansky could not even climb the stairs to hIs team's bus without assistance. that he was unable to remove

his jersey at the finish line bike and the broom wagon, the member. van that sweeps up riders who The masseurs and phys- abandon the race but who do iotherapists of T a l ansky'snot get into a team car. Garmin Sharp team spent French television frequently Tuesday's rest day attempting switched between the action at to get him back in form. But the increasinglydistant front of there was no miracle cure. the race and Talansky's odysAt least Wednesday's race sey. In case anyone forgot why took place under sunny skies he was suffering, the broadcast in summerlike temperatures, often split the screen to rerun unlike most of the cold and images of Talansky's crash in wet French stages of this year's Nancy. Tour. After continuing for about But when the pack sped up 30 miles, it appeared that Tawith about 51 miles remaining lanskymighthavehad enough. to the finish, Talansky, his ped- He dismounted, unable to aling somewhat labored, lost stand up straight because of contact Drifting backward, he his stiff back. He carefully had a prolonged conversation leaned his bike against a metal with his team directors in a fol- guardrail and sat down. Minlowing car. utes passed as Talansky and The conversation was in- his team director, Robbie Huntaudible on television, but the er, talked. "I'd never encourage a perdecision soon became apparent. Talansky pressed on, even son to get off their bike," Huntthough he soon fell behind not er, a former rider, said later. "I only contact with the riders but myself have been in a position also the long tail of team cars, where I've stopped Tour de official vehicles and press cars Frances previously and a couthat drag along behind the ple of hours later I regretted race. it. The only thing I said to AnThat left hi m p ainfully drew is: 'If you're going to stop, alone. His only company was make sure it's the right deciwithout help from a team staff

a team car, a television motor-

sion.' "

Technology Continued from C1 "The information available to our spectatorshas never been so readily

Talansky, still obviously in after Gallopin to loud cheers pain, remounted his bike and from the spectators who stuck continued at a steady pace, it out. with Hunter shouting encourAs one team official ran agement from the car. ahead to clear a path through "He got the emotion out of the milling spectators swarmit and that kind of thing and ing the road, another pushed thought about it for a couple of Talansky to the team bus. To secondsand decided to contin- add to his misfortune, the bus ue to get to the finish," Hunter was second to last in a long said. line of buses that stretched for Tony Gallopin, a French rid- about three blocks from the er for Lotto Belisol, won his finish. second stage of this Tour, a solo Talansky stiffly dismounted victory that was so tight that directly from his bike onto the the 36 riders behind him were stairwell of the bus. As its door given the same time. swiftly swung shut, through But now Talansky had a its window it was apparent deadline. Under the Tour's that Talansky could not climb time elimination rule, he had to the stairs until a team official come across the finish line 37 reached down and pulled him minutes 17 seconds later, or he Up. would not be allowed to start Minutes later he emerged the next day's stage. to a crush of cameras and reAs the digital clock ticked

The R&A last year installed wireless signals as an experiment, with the source of streaming capabilities coming from London. It was so pleased with the result that it now has installed its own fiber optic net-

work at most of the links courses where it holds The Open, starting with Hoylake. Malcolm Booth, the R&A's communications director, said the sig-

nal is strong enough for as many as 20,000 fans to stream video at the same time.

his next step.

"Now we can sit down toloudspeakers to remain and recognize Talansky's courage. night and make a proper deAshen-faced, T a l ansky cision," Hunter said, "and see came across the line 32:05 where we can go with this."

links courses. The 2-iron is to Mickelson, Watson and oth-

love with hi s

2 -iron after

week was important," said

to Manchester.

very well to hit it perfectly, but you need to understand with

"There were holes where

walking the course Sunday ers what grass-courts shoes with Woods. They were supare to the world's top tennis posed to play a practice round players: aone-major curio. together, bu t Wo o dland's "That's why playing last clubs did not make his flight "It was great for me to Justin Rose, who made liberal use of his 2-iron on the way get out there and walk with to winning the Scottish Open Tiger and see the way he in his tuneup for the 143rd strategized around this golf British Open. "Because it's all course," Woodland said.

if it doesn't go to plan. I don't think you only really know

you think of maybe hitting 3-wood or driver, but he was laying back. You can see his strategy." One of the more memo-

that once you get a scorecard

rable 2-iron shots in British

in your hand." Mickelson, who last year

Open history was struck by Tom Watson on the final day

became the first player to win the Scottish Open and British

of the 1983 tournament at

said a short practice session

son had 213 yards to the pin.

your club what your miss is or what the tendency is for it,

Royal Birkdale. After putting Open in consecutive weeks, his drive in the fairway, Waton the range was all it took to He struck his 2-iron to 15 feet. "Best 2-iron of my life," he get reacquainted with his old friend, the 2-iron.

said after a two-putt par gave

"Maybe a half-hour of him a one-stroke victory over practice on the range just to Andy Bean and Hale Irwin. develop the confidence in it,"

Watson, a five-time British

Mickelson said, adding: "You Open champion,said Monwould think it would take a little bit more time to get used to, but it's not like it's a new club. It performs the same as

it did last year and the year before." R ory M c I lroy, wh o smashed a drive 430 yards downwind in the first round last week at Royal Aberdeen,

said he planned to use his 2-iron as much as his driver. "I think it will be an import-

day: "There was a l eft-toright wind and the ball start-

ed just right of the flag and hooked left of the flag. Alfie Fyles, my caddie, said, 'Stop hooking!' I said, 'Alf, don't worry. Watson, who will play his 37th British Open this week, added: "You practice long irons all the time. That's where you beat your competitors."

"They're in the modern age," Wat- erpoolin 2006 when spectators took son said. so many pictures with their phones Dawson said former championship that mobile devices were banned the embrace this technology is something that golf also has committee chairman Jim McArthur following year. The R&A finally reto embrace." was a strong advocate for getting up lented on that strict policy in 2012 at — Royal 8 Ancient chief executive Peter Dawson to speed with digital technology, and Royal Lytham & St. Annes.

"But I thinkin the modern era, the way that people now

available." And to think this major only three years ago banned cellphones from the golfcourse. Now spectators are A popular theme at the R&A over being told they are missing out if they the last 20 years has been finding a don't have them.

porters and said that he had

on, the day's awards were giv- continued for his teammates en to Gallopin; the race leader, "after all they've done for me." Vincenzo Nibali; and assorted Hunter s ai d T a l ansky other riders. The crowd began would meet with team doctors to wander off. Some fans heed- Wednesday night and decide ed the announcer's call over

Not everyone regards his

friend. Gary Woodland said he has put a 5-wood in his bag only once in his six years on the PGA Tour, preferring to use his 2-iron. "The 2-iron's always been of days with it, and I've hit it my go-to club," said Woodpretty decent," Watson said land, who is 14th in driving 'Iiiesday. "Now, in the pres- on tour. "That's why I like sure of the golf tournament it this place. Over here I can might not feel the same." hit it low and let it run and I Phil Mickelson, who today don't feel like I'm losing any opens defense of the title he distance." earned at Muirfleld, is anothWoodland, who has made er player who uses his 2-iron the cut in both British Opens only when competing on he has played, fell more in

OYONNAX, F r a n ce American rider Andrew Tavanished after two crashes last

5-wood out of his bagto make

For Watson, whose driver is like his security blanket, it is a psychological stretch to stake his fortunes on a seldom-used club. "I've played the last couple

New York Times News Service

lansky's hopes of winning the Tour deFrance had effectively

ments are so drastically dif-

314.1-yard average drive, took

"I haven't used it all year

By lan Aus!en

Rose said. "Because the ele-

The other players, including unpredictable and the calcuBubba Watson, the longest lations that you're making, it's hitter on the PGA Tour with a

on, one, ainu ri e or aans , u e m a ei

"In links golf it's not as cru-

Royal Liverpool, Tiger Woods used his long irons to steer clear of the penal fairway bunkers, never finding one on

it then was turned over to Booth and

the communications department.

notice some of the changes during a Booth said it was not a hard sell to practice round Monday. the Royal & Ancient, though "there "What happened to the yellow was a lot of explaining to do." balance between tradition and tech"There was a need to explain how nology. R&A chief executive Peter scoreboards?" he said. Dawson always thought that would For starters, t h e s c oreboards this could impact on the experience involve only equipment. Now he is changedfrom yellow to green years for spectat ors," he said. "Having a tryingto grasp a world oflive stream- ago, but point taken. For the longest radio at the Open is not new. People ing and second-screen channels. time, a manual scoreboard stood have been doing it for decades. Hav"What it will be 10 years from now behind each green showing the cu- ing a television picture on a handI can scarcely imagine," Dawson mulative score of the players on that held device has been pretty common said. hole, and the scores of the group next at big events like the PGA ChampiTraditions die hard at t h e o ld- toplay. onship and Ryder Cup. They were est golf championship in the world, Those are gone, replaced by LED aware of thesedevices. What they which dates to 1860. Tom Watson, screens that now give scores, news were not sure about was how easy it a five-time champion who played updates on the championship, and was to take that technology and have his first British Open before Tiger even a rules quiz during the practice it on each person's phones." Woods was even born, could not help rounds. Oddly enough, it was at Royal Liv-

Now it has Wi-Fi networks, rout-

ers, live streaming, geofencing. Is there anything still ancient about the

Royal 5 Ancient?

"Me," Dawson said with a smile. He retires next year after 16 years

as chief executive, the last few years filled with technology changes he never imagined. He still likes the balance between old and new. The Open still is played on the same turf where Old Tom Morris and Willie Park Sr.

vied for championships. The claret jug has been passed around for 86 years. "But I think in the modern era," Dawson said, "the way that people

now embrace this technology is somethingthat golf also has to embrace."


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

gave him one more shot, and Continued from C1 Mantle had not homered in almost a month. The Ti-

unfortunately he didn't miss it." Wain w r i ght's c o mments c i r c ulated quickly through

gers were leading, 6-1, in the social media, creating a eighth inning, with McLain f i restorm. Wainwright later well on his way to his 31st saidhewasjoking,tellingrevictory, when McLain decid- porters he faulted himself for ed to do the aging Mantle a anymiscommunication. "Usually I kind of like to favor. Catcher Jim Price approached the mound as the think about things before crowd cheered Mantle. Mc-

I s a y t h em, and obviously

Lain, the ace right-hander, I didn't do that very well," clued him in. he said. "And I'm " When I g o t an idiot. I made a there, Denny said, I wBS hppfng mi stake." 'Hey, big g u y , j t w p U/d Q e The hit p r oved P hit one?' " Price the first pitch told The New York B n d (Jeter) Times in 2009. "I

r

O nce

Ryan Brennecke/Ttte Bulletin

renStephens won thestage,hersecond win inas many days,and leadsthe raceby19seconds.

vidual win," said Stephens,

a former high school algebra teacher who entered this week's stage race first in USA

Cycling's pro women National Racing Calendar standings. "Today took the whole team. We rode well together and they kept me safe, kept me comfortable and kept me

hydrated." Wednesday's short course, which started at Wanoga Sno-

park southwest of Bend and ended in the parking lot of

Today'sstage CROOKED RIVERTIME TRIAL Start:Pro men, 10 a.m. start, 16 miles; pro women, noon start, 16 miles. Breaking bown the stage: Thetime trial stage is based out of Crooked River Park in Prineville. Cyclists will race on anout-and-back route on the CrookedRiver Highway, which follows the path of the Crooked River south of Prineville. The route is relatively flat but gently rises on the way out anddescends on the way back. Participants will ride out about halfway to Prineville Reservoir before turning around and heading backto Prineville. Best place to watch:Time trials are not the most exciting races, but the aerodynamic gear the riders use is fairly interesting. Themost accessible place to watch is the start/finish area nearCrookedRiver Park.

old dimbing specialist, made Bachelorski area after riders a move near Sparks Lake. Stelooped around Mount Bache- phens chased her down and lor, was originally scheduled took the lead when Nalder was to runthrough Jefferson and slowed briefly by a mechanical the West Village Lodge at Mt

Wasco countiesas the Warm

same Sparks Lake climb and sprint to West Village Lodge.

STA Croo

stage. "At that 5K mark I was

cyclists, who stayed in the Forest Roads 45 and 40 and front for most of the race until Continued from C1 on Cascade Lakes Highway/ the second of two steep climbs "Travis and Rob have really Century Drive. The race was from Sparks Lake to Bachelor done well in the (overall) at oth- one of the longest stages in along Cascade Lakes Higherraces,"M arcottesaid."W e're the 35 years of the CCC, but way. After those four cyclists still keying up on them. They the smoke from area wildfires were absorbed by the main didn't lose time today either, so and the heat did not seem to pack, the field of 40 emerged we're still looking good." bother the riders. from the climb and sprinted "I'm used to the heat," Mar- into the finish. Wednesday's stage was an alternate to replace the Warm cotte said. "Smoke, I don't Zirbel, a time trial specialSprings Road Race, which know. I'm p robably used ist who won Tuesday night's w as canceled due to w i l d - to the smog in Phoenix or prologue, hopes he can make fires. But conditions were still something." up the two seconds in today's smoky and hot along the upJust 3 miles into the race, Crooked River Time Trial in dated stage, which took pro a group of six riders broke Prineville. "I'm pretty thrilled," Zirbel men's cyclists from Wanoga away from the peloton. That Sno-park and up and around lead group dwindled to four said. "I wasn't sure I would

won, 5-3.

Jeter , who added a bl o op single to rig h t f ield before leaving the game i n the fourth inning, handled a question about W ainw r i g h t ' s origin a l comments wi t h h i s usual grace. "If he g r ooved it, thank you," h e said. "You

If Wainwright

McLain to put it in Mantle's

did Jeter a favor, h e has company, at least in

wheelhouse, but M a ntle f o lklore. eventually homered. ManIn 1 9 63, the Los Angeles tle lessened the stigma of D odgers' Don Drysdale, a McLain'sgiftbyhitting No. H all of Famer, supposedly 536, his last, the next day off threw a fat fastball for his for-

FINI

Boston's Jim Lonborg in the Bronx.

Crooked River Highway

m e r teammate Duke Snider, then with the New York Mets

"What we didwas a ges- and approaching the end of ture to a great player at the

h i s c areer,tohitout.

end of his career," Price told The Times. "It was offered

rnaround

S o m e observers believed C h a n Ho Park grooved Cal

by the pitcher — it was his Ripken Jr.'s home run in Ripsuggestion, and M i ckey k e n's final All-Star Game Crooked River

went along with it. We'd al-

Prineville Reservoir

MILES going into the finish," Stephens explained. "I'm more of an all0 1 2 aroundrider and the otherriders I was with are dimber and Greg Cross / The Bulletin time trial girls." Stephens heads into today's season now includes 12 road Crooked River Time Trial in wins, looks to add to her over-

Mount Bachelor twice along

ho m e r

in the t h r ee-run firs ti nning as the American League

Wainwright Th ank you."

o n how m a ny p itches it t o o k

't/er Par

so revved up I just kept going." race, (racing) was pretty agStephens rode solo for the Prineville first in the overall all lead at today's time trial. "Last year my time trial here gressive from the get-go," rest of the climb while Neben standings in 2:33:45. Neben, said Stephens, who earlier and Annie Toth of Guru Cydes who at 39 is hoping to win an- was all right," she said. "Since this year won the Joe Martin worked together to reel her in, other CCC 13 years after her I've gone full time (into cyStage Race i n F ayetteville, setting up a four-woman sprint first victory here, is second at cling), I've really taken a step Arkansas. "My team, though, to the finish 750 meters away 19 seconds back, and Joanne up, especially in time trials. responded to every move and after Nalder battled her way Kiesanowski, Stephens' Tibco That's where I've seen the most kept the yellow jersey safe." back to the lead group. Ste- teammate, is third at 39 sec- improvement." With about 5 kilometers left phens was too strong, though, onds back. — Reporter: 541-383-0305; in the race, Nalder, a 29-year- and outsprinted the pack. The Stephens, whose stellar 2014 beastes@bendbulletitt.com.

CCC men

t wo-run

M a ntle

Accounts vary

"I was definitely confident

issue.

"I knew this course enough Springs Road Race. Wildfires, though, forced race organizers to know that this would be a to move the first full stage of good day for me," said Nalder, the 35th annual CCC to Mount who at last year's CCC placed Bachelor, which will also be no higher than 24th in any the site of Friday's third stage. "With it being a really short

Texas native also won l ast year's stage race around Mount Bachelor that ended with the

home, andMiguel Ca b rera added a

realized Price and g McLain m e ant O n e mp l e i t, he said, ac- S h p t B n d cording to Price, "High and tight, Un OrtUnB e Y mediocre cheese." he did n't Cheese is base- m jss jt " s till got to hit i t . ball parlance for a I appreciate it if fastball. — Adam that's what he did.

The women's peloton makes its way up the first climb of Wednesday's Mount Bachelor Road Race of the Cascade Cycling Classic. Lau-

Continued from C1 "Yesterday was an indi-

MVP, tripled Jeter

WpU/d tBke jt.

said it was a great Then / wpU/d idea. Mickey was alwaysnicetome. SBQ Bll I'Ight; "So I went back / plped hl m behind the plate n dh and Mickey, like healwaysdid,was di d n 't SWing, tapping the plate Sp / CpU/d withhisbatwhen p t -t g t I said, 'Want us g to groove one for I Spiked it you?'" jn the d jrt

:r

CCC women

Trout, the game's

make it over the climb. It just is

of Tuesday night's All-Star G ame in Minneapolis, Wainers outside th e

N a t ional c e r t ainly is not limping to

League clubhouse that he t h e finish the way Mantle, intentionally grooved the 1-0 Snider or even Ripken did. A fastball Derek Jeter slashed

it was today. All eight (Optum) guys did their job to perfection and it took seven guys to get

Asked to confirm that he meant to give Jeter some-

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

. 3 11careerhitter, Jetertooka

down the right-field line for r espectable.272 average into a first-inning double. He did the All-Star break. not appear tobe kidding. When Jeter approached Wainwright bounced the t h e plate in the first inning first pitch to Jeter. Tuesday night, Wainwright " I was going to give him a dropped hi s g l ove a nd couple of pipe shots," Wain- stepped off the mound in a wright said. "He deserved show ofrespect,letting Jeter it. I didn't know he was go- acknowledge astandingovaing to hit a double or else tion from the sellout crowd I would have changed my o f 41,048 at Target Field. mind. I thought he was going Jeter hardly needed any to hit something hard to the more generosity. "If that's what he wantright side for a single or an out. I probably should have

leaders. I'm just really proud of their effort today because it was impressive."

i n t entions. Thou g h J e ter, 40 , w i l l

wright told about 30 report- retire after this season, he

always so much sweeter when it's a complete team effort like

me over that dimb with the

a p p earance in 2001 in Bal-

ready clinched the pennant. I timore, even though it hapdon't feel that I did anything pened in a scoreless game wrong at all." and it was Park's first (and So what of Wainwright? last) All-Star appearance. Shortly after coming out P ark never confirmed his

e d to do, that's fine," Detroit

pitched him a little bit better." pitcher Max Scherzer said o f W a inwright. "I just know t h a t i f I ' m o n t h e mound,

thing to hit, Wainwright add- you've got to earn it off me. "He's one of the best of ed:"Iwashopingitwouldbe the first pitch and he would

a l l t ime. It's his last All-Star

take it. Then I would say, all Game. He should have his right, I piped him one and he moment. If I was on the didn't swing, so I could go to mound facing him, I want to it. But I spiked it inthe dirt. I gethimout."

August 8, 9, 10 Sponsored by: Central Oregon Classic Chevy Club

e

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Spectators Welcome! OPEN TO ALL1979 & OLDER SPECIAL INTERESTVEHICLES FRIDAY August 8th 11am-2:15pm: Pre Show 'n Shine at Drake Park 2:Oopm: Fun "Cruz" from Drake Park to NAPA and then returning to Drake Park 2pm-Bpm: Registration at Drake Park 6pm-8pnu Free Entertainment by "JP & the Soul

ACascam

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

The peloton climbs toward Mount Bachelor with South Sister in the background.

Bam-4pm: CAR SHOW at Drake Park with Free Shuttle Service i Show 'n Shine [ Downtown 8am: Registration Bam-3pm: Raffle to benefit local charities 6pm-Bpm: "Cruz" (Downtown Streets) Free to the public and encouraged to attend Bpm-10pm: Free to public — Street Dance with "JP & The Soulsearchera" Band

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© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

BRIEFING GM chief before Congress again A Senate paneltoday will zero in on how General Motors hid a deadly vehicle defect for years, and what can be done to prevent corporations from keeping safety issues secret from consumers and regulators. The hearing in Washington will be the fourth appearance before Congress by Mary Barra, GM's chief executive, since the automaker began recalling millions of small cars in February to repair a faulty ignition switch tied to13 deaths. But lawmakers are now looking beyond why GM repeatedly did not fix defective switches, and focusing on how it kept accident victims, their families and government officials in the dark. Joining Barra on the witness stand will be Michael Millikin, GM's general counsel, whose legal staff fought ignition lawsuits for years despite knowing that company engineers and investigators were aware of safety issues and related accidents.

o a es ecomin easier 0 By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

First-time homebuyers and homeowners recovering from the housing crash may still qualify for a mortgage, according to local lenders. The government is still in

the business of helping people buy their own homes, which means programs still exist to

help eligible buyers with little or no down payment or a recenthistory offoreclosure.

"Certainly the desire is there" on the part of prospective homebuyers, said Lynne McConnell, associate director of HomeSource, a homebuyer's program run by NeighborImpact. We are definitely getting a ton of calls." Local lenders said they

adhered to stricter lending requirements even before the

called 100 Percent, in which

qualified homebuyers may

New Beginnings allows prospective homebuyers who ex-

cial lenders. However, borrowing with

federal Consumer Financial

borrow with little or no down

perienceda recent foreclosure

less than 20 percent down

Protection Bureau imposed them in January. The new

or short sale to qualify for a mortgage without waiting

regulations do away with

payment. The program is open to those looking for a single-family home in which

loans based on no verification

to live, Bernardo said. He

ofincome,and cap theborrower's debt-to-income ratio

said the borrower's ability to pay the monthly mortgage

at 43 percent, among other

is a better indicator for the

their credit scores, said Rockland Dunn, the bank's Central Oregon regional manager for mortgages. Borrowers still must verify their credit and ability to pay, for example, but lenders have some flexibility to balance one factor against

means paying mortgage insurance until the mortgage holder builds equity. A low down payment also means

measures. Borrowers need to bank than the size of a down demonstrate a good credit and payment. "We found that if the boremployment history, as well. "We would look at that rower truly had means to and say, 'That's just common afford and make the payment, sense,'" said Russ Bernardo, whether (the borrower had a) real estate lending manager 20 percent or 0 percent down for Springfield-based Northpayment really didn't sway west Community Credit whether we were going to Union. take a loss on that or not," he Northwest, which has branches in Bend and Red-

sald. At Bend-based Bank of the

mond, offers a program

Cascades, a program called

five to seven years to improve

another.

"It may not work for everybody, but it will work for some," he said.

State and federal programs also assist targeted groups, such as first-time or rural

homebuyers and veterans, by insuring loans from commer-

the borrower makes a larger

monthly payment. Nonetheless, the notion that mortgage loans are hard to find is mistaken, McConnell

and Dunn agreed. "Certainly there's a lot of

opportunity here again that m ight nothave been herea couple years ago," said McConnell, of NeighborImpact. "There are good opportunities if you can pull all the pieces together and make it work." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

Treasury urges end to foreign tax flights

— From wire reports

By David Gelles New York Times News Service

PERMITS City of Bend • Land's Bend LLC,21307 NE Brooklyn Court, $212,917 • Toney Construction Company LLC,61520 Alstrup Road, $249,859 • Triad Homes Inc., 21186 SE Kayla Court, $203,736 • KeystonePartners LLC, 550 NW Franklin Ave., $135,000 • Stonegate Development LLC, 20198 Stonegate Drive, $256,230 • Herb Living TrustL Living Trust, 2927 NWCelilo Lane, $309,272 • Stonegate Development LLC, 20194 Stonegate Drive, $334,452 • Alta I. Carsey,655 NE Lafayette Ave., $214,565 • Leonard T. Haaby,21055 Don St., $210,056 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC,61059 SE Ambassador Drive, $258,738 • Bridges at Shadow Glen LLC,61055SE Ambassador Drive, $198,995 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61049 SEManhae Loop, $258,066 • Bradley A. Sall62773 , NW SandLilyW ay, $309,219 • Bridges at ShadowGlen LLC, 61053 SEManhae Loop, $239,798 • West Bend Property Company LLC,2748 NW Crossing Drive, $135,000 • Dutchland Properties LLC, 155 SERice Way, $188,995

Lawmakers say they want to stop United States companies from rein-

corporating overseas to lower their taxbills, but the Obama administration and

Congress appear unlikely to take any action to stem the tide of such deals any-

time soon. On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew sent letters to the top members

of the House Ways and Means Committee and

Senate Finance Committee, urging Congress to Fernando Vergara/TheAssociated Press

A three-story Starbucks in Bogota, Colombia, is the first of 50 that the Seattle-based company plans to open in the country in the next five years. The huge flagship store won't be the only one of its size, CEO Howard Schultz said. One is set to open in the United States, but the location hasn't been disclosed yet.

s tar ue S ex an S O a ex ectmore i co ees o s By Leslie Patton Bloomberg News

ilar to what Apple and Nike-

how much the new store cost tobuild.

Starbucks' new three-story cafe in Bogota could be the type of location the coffee-shop chain's customers see

town have been able to do," he

Starbucks plans to open

more often.

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said. There's a new flagship locationbeingplanned for the

about 1,500 new stores this fiscal year, including about 600

United States, Schultz said,

in its Americas region. Last

while declining to say where. The Colombian store may

around the world," Chief Executive Officer Howard Schultz

world's biggest coffee-shop operator asitopensmore

said in a phone interview

enormous locations. The Bo-

from the South American city.

gota cafe makes use of locally sourced wood, antique- and

year, the Seattle-based chain opened a 3,000-square-foot flagship store in Bengaluru, India, and two flagships in China. The two-story cafe in Beijing is decorated with mooncake molds, Chinese blue ceramics and has coffee

hammered-brass light fixtures

bars on both levels.

"We are designing and opening flagship stores

Wednesday, the chain opened its first location in Colombiaa 2,700-square-foot store with

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR

the kind of stores that are sim-

a heated patio, concrete columns, mirrors on the ceiling and walls of colorful plants.

"We are in aposition to open

serve as a blueprint for the

and sells Colombian- inspired food such as cheese sticks

In the U.S., Starbucks lists

There are more than 20,500

take immediate action to

halt the rush of companies abroad. Yet the wave of socalled inversions looks set

to continue unabated as a partisan Congress remains gridlocked, and Wall Street advisers continue encouraging companies to strike such deals while they still can. Lew said he hoped the administration could ad-

dress the issue through broad corporate tax reform. But absent that, he

Starbucks locations in 65 countries, induding about 740 stores in Latin America. In 2002, Starbucks opened its first location in Mexico.

encouraged congressional

Since then, the chain has expanded to Central and South

comprehensive reform of the business tax system,

American countries, including

there are concrete steps

Peru, Brazil, Argentina and Costa Rica. Starbucks also is

that Congress can take

planning stores in Bolivia and Panama.

Brazil is a big growth market for Starbucks that may rival Mexico, which has more

and croissants with a sauce

recently opened locations in New Orleans; Anaheim,

than 400 locations, Schultz sald.

similar to dulce de leche. The company declined to disclose

California; and Orlando, Florida, as "high-design" cafes.

in Brazil," he said.

"It could easily be 500 stores

leaderstoactbefore more

companies made similar moves. "Short of undertaking a

now that would address this urgent issue," Lew wrote. In his letter, Lew built

on a proposal by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., the chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, that would

essentially ban inversions, with an effective date of

May of this year. Levin said he hoped

Time Warner's not interested in Foxmerger By Joe Flint Los Angeles Times

Rupert Murdoch's 2lst Cen-

News and FX. Time Warner's board of directors said it was "not in the

tury Fox recently approached Time Warner about merging

best interests of Time Warner

the two companies in a deal

the proposal or to pursue any discussions with 21st Century

valued at $80billion, but the offer was rejected. In a statement, 21st Century Fox said it made its offer last month to Time Warner — parent of HBO, Warner Bros. and

Turner Broadcasting — but that Time Warner's board "de-

clined to pursue our proposal" and"we are currently not in any discussions." The assets of 2lst Century

Fox include Fox Broadcasting, the movie studio 20th Century Fox and cable channels Fox

or its stockholders to accept Fox." Motivating 21st Century

Fox's desire to acquire Time Warner is the rapid consolidation amongthe distributors that 21st Century Fox counts on to deliver its content. Com-

Warner fear that they will lose leverage in negotiating fees for carriage of their channels. Additional negotiating clout was not the only motivation for 21st Century Fox. It has

long wanted a strong pay-TV channel such as Time Warner's HBO. Also, Warner Bros.

is the biggest movie and television studio, and combining it with 20th Century Fox's television and movie units would create a content juggernaut.

castCorp.isin theprocessof acquiring Time Warner Cable and AT&T is buying satellite broadcaster DirecTV. As distributors merge,

But such a merger would have faced intense regulatory

content providers such as 21st Century Fox and Time

rules that could have derailed the deal.

scrutiny even though tech-

nically there are few Federal Communications Commission

To begin with, 2lst Century Fox owns Fox News and Time

Warner owns CNN. The idea of the nation's two biggest cable news outlets being under the same roof would have probably been a tough sell to Capitol Hill, as well as to advertisers. A sale of CNN would likely have been required. Also, the volume of content

the Ways and Means Committee would hold a

hearing on inversions this summer. He added that as

more companies pursued inversions, pressure was mounting to act before the

corporate tax base was further eroded. "They are sparks that

have lit a dry timber," Levin said. The focus on inversions

comes as the Obama administration and members of Congress wrestle over

how to proceed with broad-

and networks that a combined

er tax reform.

2lst Century Fox and Time

Warner would own and the power that would give them

Speaking at the CNBC Delivering Alpha conference on Wednesday, Lew

over the production communi-

called for legislation that

ty wouldhave raised serious issues.

would include a package of business reforms, one of which would bring corpo-

News of 21st Century Fox's

offer was first reported by the

rate tax levels into the 20

New York Times.

percent range.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Health Events, D2 Medicine, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

I

I '

I

«

'

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

FITNESS I

I I

Shampoo

Stylingproducts

43% use daily

28% usedaily

May contain parabens, chemicals

May be contaminated with formaldehyde,

with links to breast cancer.

a cancer-causing chemical.

Enjoying exercisemay lead to moreweight lost By Melissa Healy

lose weight. Sure, there's the old reassurance that

Los Angeles Times

It's a common rookie

muscles weigh more than

mistake, but plenty of di-

fat. But when the weight

et-and-exercise veterans make it, too: With an act of

gain comes before any evidence that we've changed our body composition

will, you muster yourself to the gym or the track, and you gut your way through an arduous workout.

Moisturizers

significantly, I think we

all know we're kidding ourselves.

When you sit down to

dinner or go to the break room later that day, you say to yourself, "By God, I've earned this (sugary soda, yummy snack, second helping, dessert, second glass of wine). I worked hard today!"

59% usedaily May contain oxybenzone, a hormone disrupter.

Lipstick Mascara

Found to carry lead,

39% use daily

which builds up in the

Colors may be madefrom

body and can harm

fossil fuels with toxic impurities

brain function

ence of exercise matters is

what atrioofresearchers at Cornell University's food psychology lab found. More specifically, they found, it influences not only what we choose to eat after the expe-

rience, but how much of it.

A week or so later, you're

28% use daily

"Framing," or the way we think about the experi-

standing on the scale wondering what happened.

When we think of the

physical activity we engage in as fun, or at least inciden-

Answer: You forgot to

have fun.

tal to fun, we make better food choices. When we

A new study delves into one of the great mysteries

frame physical activity as exercise, we're more likely to choose rewarding foods and to eat more of them, the study found. SeeEnjoyment/D4

of diet, exercise and weight loss: why, when you've started a grueling exercise regimen in a bid to shape up, it's common to gain, not

More antioxidants,fewer pesticides inorganicfood By Kenneth Chang

food could have."

New Yorh Times News Service

Greg Cross; Thinkstock image

The conclusions in the Adding fuel to the debates new report run counter to over the merits of organic tho s e of a similar analysis food, a comprehensive repub l ished two years ago view of earlier studies found by Stanford scientists, who substantially higher levels of found few differences in the antioxidants and lower lev-

nutr i t ional content of organ-

els of pesticides in organic ic a nd conventionally grown fruits, vegetables and grains f oods. Those scientists said compared with convention- t h e small differences that did ally grown produce. exist were unlikely to influ"It shows very clearly how

By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin couple of years have passed since reearchers in Oregon announced the startling revelation that some hair smoothing products contained an average of 8percent formaldehyde. While that case and the enormous clamor that

ensued improved the safety of those products, little has changed in the way personal care products and cosmetics are regulated. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which over-

sees this area, does not approve products before they hit

the market, nor does it require asserts it will take regulatory companies to prove their prod- action in the form of seizing ucts are safe, although many p r o ducts or taking criminal companies do perform safety a c tion. testing. In the case of several

In r ea l i ty, the FDA's reg-

keratin-based hair smoothing u l ation of over-the-counter products, which theOregon personal careproductsand Occupation Safety cosmetics is a far cry and HealthAdminME DIC I N E fr o m its oversightof istration reported in prescription drugs, 2010 contained high levels of s a id Michael Wood, adminisformaldehyde, the FDAissued trator of Oregon OSHAwho warning letters to their manufacturers and issued public

ove r saw the 2010 report.

"I think people do assume alerts about theproducts, but t h at there's alot morebeing the action stopped there. done to protect all of us than In the event unsafe cosmet-

g o v ernment actually does

ics injure consumers, the FDA and, frankly, more than gov-

ernment has the capacity to do, even if we decided that

that level of regulation is a good thing," he said. "I'm not sure that would be possible."

Reduce your exposure Although advocacy groups constantly urge Congress and the FDA to increase

oversight of the products, Jen Coleman, outreach director

for the Oregon Environmental Council said in the meantime, people should work to

reducetheirexposure,however difficult that may be. SeeRisky products/D3

the British Journal of Nutri-

The idea behind EDR,

she said.

about how much of a health

signed into law in March

A new statewide program designed to encourage com-

2013, is to improve patient

Open communication

and health care providers

takes, increase compensa-

Doctors' lawyers generally advise them to avoid communicating with patients

cuss what happened, how it

munication between patients

safety through encouraging communication about mis-

when patients are injured

tion for injured patients and reduce costs associated with

who've been injured, either

problem. Bruce said he's heard of

tralOregonians who receive

care through St. Charles Health System. That's because St. Charles

leaders say they've had a policy for years of notifying patients who've been harmed

as soon as possible. Under Oregon's Early Discussion and Resolution program, which took effect for injuries that occurred at the begin-

medical malpractice lawsuits

out of fear the patient will sue or the provider will ad-

and defensive medicine. There are many cases

mit fault. EDR is designed to turn that tradition on its head

which patients feel

they've been seriously MO harmed but wouldn't necessarily prevail in a malpractice lawsuit and simply want to talk to their provid-

ers, said Bethany Walmsley, executive director of the Oregon Patient Safety Commission, the group administering

ning of July, both patients EDR. "This program is designed and providers are urged to report injuries and outcomes to to bring people together so a patient safety group, which that they can talk and they in turn will prepare periodic can have a safe space to do statewide reports on patient

injuries.

affected the patient and what can be done to resolve the scenarios in which, after a long court battle, the patient

to meet and talk about what

like that, Bruce said he would

happened. feel as though he had failed Under the law, nothing said the hospital and its providers. "People just ... get disgustduring the discussions can legally constitute an admission ed by the fact that they know of liability, nor can it be used something went wrong and

ter injuries in the first place,

~+~ ~coolsculpting

face-to-face meetings to dis-

by providing a confiN EY dential platform for patients and providers

St. Charles never adopted the practice of going dark af-

SeeOrganic/D2

a patient is injured and has

says that if the provider had just just apologized, the lawsuit would never have happened. Ifhe ever got in a case

in a courtroom in the event the patient decides to sue.

tot a l market.

impact switching to organic

invites families back when

The Bulletin

while receiving medical care won't change much for Cen-

l ar g e, eliminates the use of

tion, stop short of claiming co n ventional chemical fertilthat eating organic produce i z ers and pesticides. Those will lead to better health. prac t ices offer ecological "We are not making benef i ts like healthier soils health claims based on this b u t produce less bountiful study, because we can't," harv e sts. The Organic Trade Leifert said. The study, he Ass ociation, an industry orsaid, is insufficient "to say gan i zation, estimated organorganic food is definitely ic f o od sales last year in the healthier for you, and it Unite d States at $32.3 billion, doesn't tell you anything or ju st over 4 percent of the

New injury programwon't alter localprotocol By Tara Bannow

e n c e the health of the people

you grow your food has an w h o chose to buy organic impact," said Carlo Leifert, fo o ds, which are usually aprofessorofecological m o re expensive. agriculture at Newcastle The Stanford study, like University in England, who t h e new study, did find pesled the research. ticide residues "If you buy organic NUTR I T ION we r e several times fruits and vegetables, higher on convenyou can be sure you have, tio n ally grown fruits and on average, a higher amount vegetables, but played down of antioxidants at the same t h e significance, because calorie level." even the higher levels were However, the full findings, largely below safety limits. to be published next week in Org a nic farming, by and

they feel like there's a cloak

and dagger — people are trying to hide the ball — and they pursue litigation really because they're angry," he said. "That's not a good rea-

said Gary Bruce, the health that under the confidentiality system's general counsel. In son to pursue litigation." that's afforded under the law," fact, he said the health system SeeInjury program/D2

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D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

Injury program

said. "That really is the position

down most of them.

me or my family, how would I

"I wanted to see a process wetake onthesethings: to compassionately do the right thing." where people who are basically being eliminated or shoved out Seriouscasesonly of the system are able to receive EDR applies only to situa- some compensation," he said. tions in which patients were Ultimately, EDR's supporters seriously injured or died. St. would like to see it expanded Charles, by contrast, initiates to include all levels of severity, communication with patients but those who created the legeven if the injuries were minor. islation decided to "start with As a health system, St. Charles low-hanging fruit," Walmsley is concerned not only with clin- said. Depending on how things ical issues but also patient satis- go, she said she and others may faction, Bruce said. eventually urge legislators to "For us, we don't have the expand its scope. luxury of ignoring those miIf, following meetings about nor incidents that wouldn't fall the injury, the provider and pawithin the purview of the early tient can't reach a desired outdiscussion law," he said. "We come, the Oregon Patient Safewant to make sure our patients ty Commission supplies a list feel well cared for." of reputable mediators to help, Vick said it's problematic although the provider and pathat the law doesn't apply to mi- tient have to split the mediation nor or temporary injuries, such bill. Once the two parties have as those thatrequired a second decided on a plan of actionsurgery later on. The legal and which could include further financial threshold to bring a treatment, forgiven medical malpractice case is already so bills, a settlement or a lawsuit high, those patients rarely get — they report back to the comcompensated, he said. In his mission. The commission, in firm, for example, Vick esti- turn, uses that data in its public mates he takes a closer look at reports on EDR's progress. The one or two out of 100 medical reports will not identify specific negligence inquiries that cross providers or hospitals.

want to be treated?'" Sandau

his desk and, even then, turns

Continued from D1 James Vick, a Salem person-

al injury attorney, rejects the idea that simply having doctors apologize would prevent lawsuits. Medical negligence cases require a vast amount of research, scientific evidence and

expert support, so it's wrong to assert that apatient couldbring a lawsuit simply because he or she feels upset, he said. "We have to spend so much money, so much time," Vick

said. "These are very complex cases and very difficult cases." If St. Charles learns through

its investigation that the provider was at fault, the team does not hesitate to disdose that to

the patient or his or her family, said Virgina Sandau, St. Charles' clinical risk manager. They might not know whose fault it was at first, but they'll

still talk about what happened with patients and keep them updated on what they learn,

she said. "These things really are dealt with a lot of compassion from the standpoint of 'If that were

How to submit Events:Email event information to healthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 daysbeforethe desired date ofpublication. Ongoing class listings must be updatedmonthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses.Contact: 541383-0358.

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

PEOPLE • Deborah Adams,registered nurse, has joined Partners In Care as the clinical operations director. Previously Adamswas the dlrector of home health and hospice services at Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center in Corvallis.

The resolution reports will

Organic

Early discussion and resolutiontimeline:

and patient. 4) Resolution report submitted to OPSC.

1) Injury occurs. 2) Provider or patient notifies the OregonPatient Safety Commission. • If provider files report, OPSC follows up within180 days of filing to seehowthings ended up. • If patient files report, OPSC notifies provider within seven days to encourage communication with patient; follows up within180 days to see how things endedup. 3) Meetings between provider and patient — mediators can be hired if necessary, cost must be split between provider

EDR conversationsmay include: • An explanation of what happened • An explanation of how and why it happened • The impact on health, treatment and follow-up • An apology • An offer of compensation or an offer to waive medical bills, if appropriate • An explanation how the incident may beprevented from happening to anyoneelse

will automatically be reported to the National Practitioner Data Bank, which tracks malpractice payments made on be-

half of all providers. That would be problematic, as EDR payments won't always

mean a specific provider is at fault — it could have been a medication error or something

that was out of the provider's control — yet the report in the Data Bank could make it ap-

pear that way, Walmsley said. She said she and other EDR leaders are working to change that, but have not yet figured out a solution. "I've heard many providers say out loud, 'We're just going to do the right thing anyway and that's just a cost of doing

-Source: Oregon Patient Safety Commission

business,'" Walmsley said. Sandau said that's not a ma-

be key in determining whether

has, it will report them to the

EDR prevents medical mal-

commission, Bruce said, adding he thinks the statewide data willbe valuable for all hospitals, assuming it highlights practices to improvepatient care.

practice lawsuits, among other important questions yet unan-

swered, Walmsley said. "What we're hoping to learn from this process is really big," she said. Although St. Charles will

the Data Bank regardless of the

new program. "If we did something wrong, we're going to admit that and report it," she said. "If we did

something wrong and we don't

Payments notsecret Among the concerns about

EDR is that payments made by ry cases the same as it always providersbecause of injuries continue to handle patient inju-

tional team of scientists did not analyzed the data in several conduct any laboratory or field different ways, and each time Continued from 01 work of their own. Instead, the general results remained What is disputed, vocifer- they compiled a database from robust. ously, is whether organic fruits 343 previously published studThe study cost $429,000, and vegetables provide a nu- ies and performed a statistical which came from the Europetritional lift. Many naysayers procedure known as a me- an Union and the Sheepdrove regardorganicasa marketing ta-analysis, which attempts to Trust, a British charity that ploy to charge higher prices. ferret robust bits of informa- supports organic farming re"The other argument would tion from studies of varying search. The scientists said the be, if you just eat a little bit designs and quality. money came with no strings, more fruits and vegetables, Some of the studies report- and their research passed the you're going to get more nutri- ed many measurements, some rigor of scientific peer review ents," said Alan Dangour, a re- only a few. Some included sev- for publication. searcher at the London School eral crops grown over multiple Charles Benbrook, a proof Hygiene and Tropical Med- years, while others looked at fessor at Washington State icine. Dangour led a review only a few samples. But if done University and another author published in 2009 that found properly, the results of a me- of the paper, said this analysis no significant nutritional dif- ta-analysis can be greater than improved on earlier reviews, ferences between convention- the average of its parts. in part because it incorporated al and organic foods. Overall, organic crops con- recent new studies. Such differences are diffi- tained 17 percent more antiThe findings fit with the cult to discern, because other oxidants than conventionally expectation that without pesfactors that can vary widely grown crops, the new study ticides, plants would produce from place to place and year found.For some classes of an- m ore a n tioxidants, m a n y to year, like the weather, also tioxidants, the difference was of which serve as defenses influence the nutrients. Even larger. A group of compounds against pests and disease. if differences exist, it is undear known as flavanones, for exThe study also found that whether they w ould affect ample, was 69 percent higher organicall y produced foods, consumer health. in the organic produce. particularly grains, contain In the new study, an internaThe researchers said they lower levels of cadmium, a

jor concern for St. Charles, as all payments are reported to

admit it and we go to trial, it's still a report." — Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com

toxic metal that sometimes

than conventional industrial

contaminates conventional

crops. Some studies in the past have found them to have more

fertilizers. Benbrook said the

researchers were surprised by of some nutrients. Other studthat finding; there was no dif- ies have not. This one looked ference in other toxic metals

at more studies and has better

likemercury and lead. statistics." Even with the differences D angour, however, r e and the indications that some mained entirely unconvinced. antioxidants are b eneficial, He said the researchers erred nutrition experts said the "So in not excluding the weaker what'?" question had yet to be studies from the analysis. "To

answered. "After that, everything is s peculative," s ai d

my mind, there's no convinc-

ing evidence that these foods Ma r i o n are different i n n u t r itional

Nestle, a professor of nutrition, food studies and public

composition," he said.

health at New York University.

"It's a really hard question to answer."

Nestle said she buys organic foods because she believes they are better for the environment and wants to avoid pes-

ticides. "If they are also more nutritious, that's a bonus," she said. "How significant a bonus? Hard to say." She continued: "There is no reason to think that organic

foods would be less nutritious

C om p l e m e n t s

H o me I n t e ri o r s

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

HEALTH EvENTs FRIDAY UNDERSTANDINGTHEABCS AND DS OF MEDICARE: Learn about who is eligible for Medicare, what is covered and not covered and enrollment timelines; free, registration requested; noon-1 p.m.; Partners in Care, 2075 NEWyatt Court, Bend; lisam©partnersbend. org or 541-382-5882.

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July 24 THE SCIENCEAND SPIRIT OF HEALING:Healer, author, international speaker and humanitarian Dr.Carl Hammerschlag will speak; free, donations of non-perishable food accepted; 7:30 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 NWLouisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter. com, info©hawthorncenter.com or 541-330-0334.

FITNEss EvENTs SATURDAY DANCEWORKSHOP: Learn two dance routines, benefiting the MVHS dance team; $20; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 NE27th St.,Bend;stanton.s@ comcast.net or 503-961-3580. NAVY SEALPHYSICAL TRAINING: Join a group of retired Navy SEALS in morning calisthenics; free, 18 and older, liability waiver form must be signed; 9-10:30 a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 SW Columbia St., Bend; 541-647-7078.

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SUNDAY FOAM ROLLERCLINIC: Learn

basic myofascial releaseusing a foam roller, bring a yoga mat; $5, registration required; 9:45 a.m.; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., Bend; www.footzonebend.com or 541-317-3568.

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THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

MEDICINE

Utilizing hypnosis instead of anesthesia By Josh Shaffer The News & Observer (Rareigh, N.C J

Riskyproducts Continued from 01 "If there's a product you really love and you really don't want to give it up, well, maybe you can use less of it," she said. "Maybe you can go with a makeup-free day once a week. Maybe instead of using three lotions, you can use

one." Coleman said she's seen,

Potentially harmful ingredients

The Environmental Working Group maintains a database called Skin Deep that compares personal care and cosmetics product ingredient information with data from nearly 60 toxicity and regulatory databases. The site contains safety ratings for nearly 70,000 products. To search for a product, visit: http://www. ewg.org/skindeep

Bob Dick recently toughed his way through a 90-minute total knee replacement without

h owever, how g r eat t h e

the aid of anesthesia, choosing

Oregon

to stay awake through the chisel and the buzz of the electric

Council released a survey to hair product, said Dr. Niof Portland State Univercole Rogers, a dermatologist

saw.

sity undergraduates about

When he reached Duke University Hospital, in Durham,

the products they used, it found the top 10 most popular brands — big names like Dove, Neutrogena, Cover Girl and Clinique

North Carolina, he

s t arted

breathing deeply, a signal for his body to relax. Next he held his thumb and forefinger together, imagining a walk around the pond at his home. Then he told himself, "Now it's

safe to go into a comfortable learning trance." So began Dick's surgery by hypnosis, which he describes as being so trouble-free that he

hardly realized it happened. He had nerve-blockers reducing the pain throughout the surgery, but his deep relaxation techniques made "going under" a needless step. Dick's sel f -administered treatment is a rare but increasingly common alternative to

general anesthesia, in which a patient is made unconscious through inhaled gases and intravenous drugs. In 1957, Dr. William Saul

Kroger demonstrated hypnosis on a breast cancer patient in New York, gaining notice in Time magazine. In 2006, British television

broadcast a patient having hernia surgery without any drugs, lulled into his inner peace. While anesthesia is widely considered safe, it carries the

small risk of stroke, heart attack and death, especially in older adults or those with a se-

rious medical history, according to the Mayo Clinic. With this in mind, and know-

ing that anesthesia can mean a longer time in the hospital and in recovery, Dick decided to try the method he's long employed

PARABEHS What they are:Chemically, they're esters of p-hydroxybenzoic acid.Commonly used in products as preservatives. Where they're found:Between 75 percent and 90 percent of personal care products contain parabens. They're commonly found in moisturizers, makeup, hair products and shaving products. What they're linked to:Parabens have been detected in breast tumors, and some animal studies have linked high levels of exposure to breast cancer and reproductive issues because they mimic the hormone estrogen. Both FDA and the Cosmetic Ingredient Review have said they don't think people should be concerned aboutthe use of products that contain parabens. What they're listed as:Cosmetics that contain parabens must declare so on the label. They're commonly listed as methylparaben, propylparaben, butylparaben or benzylparaben. PHTHALATES What they are:Groups of chemicals often contained in fragrances. Where they're found:The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics found 72 percent of personal care products contain phthalates, including fragrance-containing shampoos, deodorants, soaps, perfumes and hair gels. What they're linked to: Some research has linked exposure to phthalates to birth defects, asthma, early puberty and low sperm counts. While research has detected varying levels of phthalates

barriers to reducing exposure can be. After the Env i r o nmental is ever-present when it comes and hair transplant surgeon in Metairie, Louisiana, who

owns a private practice and teaches part-time in the Tu-

— had 544 products list-

lane University School of Medicine. In general, people tend to put

the Environmental Work-

they did decades ago. Thus,

ed as "high hazards" in

more stress on their hair than

ing Group's safe products products with common cleansdatabase. ers like sodium laureth sulfate Coleman tries to eduand sodium lauryl sulfate have cate people on the danger- come under unnecessary scruous ingredients lurking in tiny for being harsh on hair, most cosmetics. Between Rogers said. Many companies 75 to 90 percent of prod- are coming out with high-end ucts contain parabens, for "sulfate-free" shampoos, but example, which have been medical literature hasn't confound in breast tumors and firmed the usefulness of such linked to reproductive is- products, she said. "Now, people are getting sues. The FDA, for its part, says people should not be their h ai r r e l axed, t hey're concerned about parabens getting their hair highlightin products. ed, they're getting their hair And although OSHA's colored, they're doing more to research was restricted to their hair than they were 30, smoothing products used 40 or 50 years ago," she said. in salons, Coleman said "That has opened this market people don't realize that niche for people to then say, many ove r - the-counter 'OK, if you're going to choose a personal care products gentle cleanser, use something also contain f ormalde- that does not contain those hyde, a chemical linked typical SLS-ingredients.'" to allergy-like symptoms and certain cancers, such as leukemia. That's be-

A push for safer products

cause many products con-

ous chemicals increase in the

As reports about hazard-

l ipsticks

c o n tai n le a d ,

although the FDA does not consider that e x po-

The key comes from understanding what hypnosis is and isn't. Popular culture typically portrays the procedure being conducted as the patient watch-

sure harmful if used as directed.

es a metronome, listening to a

on the a ssumption that

Coleman said the FDA

• • •

bases its position that lipsticks with lead are safe

sented all this information

of trance. Someone meditating, praying or "zoning out" at

to a group of high school girls — a crucial audience

work is using the same tech-

for the message because

+Changing Smileshas

they're still forming their

changed my life,

habits — most of them said it won't change their be-

Thanks to them I can

Erickson, a psychiatrist who specialized in medical hypnosis. Rather than instructing patients with a direct order, he would offer suggestions, much like Dick's own: "Now it's safe to go into a comfortable learning trance." In his own practice, he refers

smile freely again>>

" Most o f t h e m w e r e like, 'Well, you know, I'm

The lack of regulation

I

t

g

r

Full Set of Braces

-

be forced into a trance, only willingly led. "I don't hypnotize people," Dick said. "I can't. I can't hypnotize anybody but myself." He tried it during a colonoscopy, which didn't work as well

I

o4gooFF I ,

ry about, from food and nutrition and all of these

Notjustmakeup

— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com

PLUS

these other things to wor-

terms of concern?'"

these chemicals from their chain," she said.

FREE CONSULTATION

said, 'Well, we have all of

concentration that can change

supplies them has to reduce

Your host at KSJJ 102.9

it,'" she said. "And others

what the mind perceives. Also, he stresses that a patient can't

means that everybody who

Lola Montgomery,

not sure that I'm going to change my mind about

other things. Where on the scale do you put this in

Institute

Denture 8: Implant Center

havior much.

to it as an altered state of consciousness, an intense form of

— Sources: Oregon Environmental Counal, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, National Cancer

changingSmiles

ie or book is actually in a sort

the early 1970s, he studied for a week in Arizona with Milton

OXYBENZOHE What it is:An organic compound used in sunscreens. Where it's found:The Environmental Working Group says nearly 600 varieties of sunscreen sold in the U.S. contain oxybenzone. It's also found in facial moisturizers, lip balms, conditioners and other items. What it's linked to:Research has linked oxybenzone exposure to hormone disruption, low birth weight and cell damage. What it's listed as:benzophenone-3. LEAD What it is:A naturally occuring metal. Where it's found:Testing has detected more than 60 percent of lipsticks contain lead,

FORMALDEHYDE What it is:A colorless, flammable chemical that can be man-made and also occurs naturally in the environment. Where it's found:Many beauty products such as shampoos, conditioners and lotions contain preservatives that release formaldehyde as theydecompose.Alsofound in keratin-based hair-straightening products used in salons. What it's linked to:From air exposure, people may experience watery eyes, a burning feeling in the eyes, nose and throat, coughing, wheezing, nausea and skin irritation. Long-term exposure is associated with certain types of cancer, such as myeloid leukemia. The International Agency for Research on Cancer classifies formaldehyde as a known carcinogen and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency calls it a probable carcinogen. What it's listerl as:Preservatives known to release formaldehyde include quaternium-15, DMDM hydantoin, imidazolidinyl urea, sodium hydroxymethylglycinate and diazolidinyl urea.

TheB u e tin

somethingpracticed everyday. A person engrossed in a mov-

niques that go into hypnosis. As a young psychologist in

What it is:An antioxidant used as a preservative and stabilizer. Where it's found:Used in products such as eyeliner, mascara, foundation, lipstick and lotions. What it's linked to:The U.S. National Toxicology Program says BHA is "reasonably anticipated" to be a carcinogen based on animal studies. The European Union bans it for use in cosmetics and the state of California requires special labels if a product contains BHA. What it's listed as:butylated hydroxyanisole.

with the highest levels found in Maybelline, L'Oreal, NARS and Cover Girl lipsticks. What it's linked to:High levels of exposure can cause anemia, kidney problems and neurological damage. Children are particularly susceptible. The FDAsays no lead levels in lipsticks have been found that would pose a safety hazard when used as intended. What it's listed as:Not listed on labels.

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they're not ingested. "Anybody who wears lipstick knows that ingestion does happen," she said. But when Coleman pre-

But to D i ck, hypnosis is

BHA (BUTYLATED HYDROXYAHISOLE)

p r e servatives t h a t media and elsewhere, conreleaseformaldehyde as sumer pressure on compathey decompose, she said. nies tooffer safer products is A lthough the amount i s making an impact, Coleman f ar smaller than i n t h e said. Walmart, for example, care and cleaning products, of move has enormous ripple smoothing products, it's pledged to eliminate 10 toxic although they d idn't s ay effects, Coleman said. "They're No. I of the Forstill concerning, Coleman chemicals from its personal which chemicals. That kind said. tune 500 in this country and Research also has found they sell billions of dollars more than 60 percent of worth of p roducts, which t ain

in his own practice.

heavily accented doctor chant, "You are getting sleepy ..."

in human urine — with elevated levels among women of child-bearing age — the FDA says it's unclear whether they negatively affect health. What they're listerl as:Fragrance ingredients, including phthalates, are typically not disclosed on labels.

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becausethe doctor asked him if it hurt, which focused his

mind on the pain. But hypnosis worked well for the cataract surgeries on both eyes, in which he was able to focus deeply enough to avoid seeingthe knife. But knee replacement took longer, and Dick practiced for two weeks ahead of the procedure, 30 to 45 minutes at a time. He also watched a You-

As the community leader in hospice care, we've most likely

Tube video showing the operation, so he knew what noises

supported one of your neighbors or a kieml. Central Oregon

to expect.

patients and their families have chosen Partners In Care for

With surgery, "The anxiety is just as bad as physical pain,"

hospice services for the past 35 years. If you need support

Dick said. "I didn't even know

with end-of-life care, choose Partners In Care.

Three w eeks a f t erward, Dick had shed both walker and

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cane, recovering quickly. He was hoping to be driving soon

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they'd started."

and back to his semi-retired

practice, encouraging his clients to relax.

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Partners In Care HOSPICE


D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

FrmEss Celebrating thepastandlooking toward the future of Jazzercise By Vicky Hallett

be wild and show our bellies," — and probably at least half

The Washington Post

revealed the c enter o wner

"I hear it," a woman proclaimed, and then darted down a hallway at the Wash-

ington Hilton. A tank-top-clad parade rushed closely behind, also drawn to the faint beat

of OneRepublic's "Counting Stars." The music intensified as they descended the staircase into the hotel's International Ballroom. On the other side of those

month, Washington played host for the first time. It's part rally, part fashion

show, with waving flags from several nations and attendees

decked out in branded apparel. And it's all a celebration of the life's work of Judi Sheppard Missett, who started teaching

her dance-based workout program 45 years ago. The 70-year-old didn't need a n i n troduction w i t h t h i s crowd, but the emcee gave her

a pretty great one, anyway: "Our founder,our chiefexecutive officer and the wind be-

neath our wings, Judi!" In a sparkly top and high heels that accentuated her leg-

(

I

t) -4

Continued from 01 The study, published Thurs-

day in the journal Marketing Letters, was ingeniously simple. College administrative staff members were told to wear comfortable shoes and

were promised a free lunch after they completed their task. Half the subjects were handed

a map, told that the purpose of the study was to exercise,and sent on a 30-minute, one-mile

course with occasional stops to assess their level of fatigue. The other half were given the same walking map but handed an MP-3 player and told that the purpose of the

study was to assess the clarity of the music at six different

stopping points along the way. Afterward, researchers offered their 56 subjects a lunch

recover after cancer, continue to exerciseafterknee replacem ents and made their m i -

b old to fix t h at. But at t h e same time, she added, "I want

she does decide to retire -

maybe to return to the performing career she put on hold

them to continue what they're dolng. Jazzercise's existing formu-

in the 1970s — her daughter is

preparedto step intoherdancla — which Missett describes ing shoes. as "consistency but variety" And her 11-year-old grand— is why so many people flew daughter isn't too far behind. J. Lawler Duggan I The Washington Post long distances and dropped One of the new songs preJudi Sheppard Missett, 70, the founder of Jazzercise, leads a workout at the Washington Hilton. a sizable chunk of change to sented in Washington was come to the event in Washing- the World Cup anthem "We ton. Decked out in red, white Are One (Ole-Ola)," which the who taught jazz in Chicago. it's why, she added, Jazzercise from the latest releases, han- and blue, they looked like a tween had choreographed for Women seemed to like her has some "big changes" com- dles all of the choreography political party. Their platform: her middle school classmates. classes but wouldn't stick with ing in the next six months. and tests her material on stu- Take one class, and you'll be Missett asked fo r p e r mis"Everybody knows what dents firsthand by teaching hooked on Jazzercise forever. sion to borrow the routine, them. The reason'? "I was teaching Zumba is. That's the cool thing nearly every day. Despite havE veryone i n t h e c r o w d which starts with some funky like they were going to Broad- right now," said attendee Lau- ing churned out thousands of had a success story to share. fist-waving. way. And they were going to ra McCabe, 38, a center owner routines over the years, she For Rose Cain, 53, of FredThose next two generations their class reunion," Missett from Kentucky, as she took said the process never feels erick, Maryland, Jazzercise "are my exit plan," Missett sald. a break during a two-hour- repetitive. has been a source of "in- said. That's certainly one way With simpler choreography, long exercise session later that To emphasize thatJazzer- stant friends" wherever she's to keep Jazzercise feeling they'd feel better about them- weekend. Jazzercise has fan- cise is more than just sashays moved. Her pal Lisa Brown younger. selves and keep coming, she tastic name recognition, but and single-single-doubles, the reasoned. And she was right. "people think of it as Grand- company launched five new

The week after that, it was 60

son, 45, had just warmed them — and Missett realized she up with a few fast-paced num- was onto something. "It's important to change bers.) Tonight, she explained, they were going to have a and listen to the cues that life conversation. gives you. Look where it led "I thought I'd talk to you me," said Missett, pointing to about how this all happened," the success of her now CaliforMissett said, taking them back nia-based company. Thinking to 1969, when she was a stu- about how to evolve for the dent at Northwestern Univer- future has guided her busisity and a professional dancer ness practices to this day, and

Enjoyment

Jazzercise had helped them

graines vanish for good. Magee said, and that makes it For now, Missett isn't ready tougher to get younger folks to to give up her day-to-day dugive it a chance. She'd like to ties, but she thinks a great see Jazzercisedo something deal about her legacy. When

s

gy figure, Missett welcomed The first class with this new the alreadysweaty audience. format had 15 students. The (Her daughter, Jazzercise second week, 30 showed up. President Shanna Missett Nel-

thusiasts gushed about how

in a class than 20-year-olds,"

doors awaited hundreds of women (and a handful of men) jammed together for the kickoff of Jazzercise Live, an annual event that swoops into a new city each year. Last

of the other women in attendance — raved about how it's led to remarkable weight loss. Other instructors and en-

from Dover, Delaware.) Magee has been doing Jazzercise for 22 years, and so have many other women — but even she doesn't see that as entirely a good thing. "The age range is skewed. There are more 50-year-olds

what choices they made.

ma's or Mom's workout," she

workouts this year: Fusion

said. Jazzercise'sblend ofcar- (based on high-intensity indio, strength and flexibility is terval training), Strike (with why McCabe looks better now a kickboxing focus), Core than she did 10 years ago, but (which targets the abs), and to most folks she meets, it's Strength45 and S t rength60 synonymous with "having a (45 minutes or an hour of takthong leotard up your butt." ing body sculpting "to the next And fighting that image is level"). tricky, she added, even with

members of her own family. Jazzercise distributes new music and moves to its 7,800

OSPICE

o f Redmond 54 1 . 5 4 8 . 7 4 8 3 You Have A Choice. Ask For Us By Name.

This slate is potentially a

RI EE!

peek at Jazzercise's new di-

s

rection, said Marianne Magee, 53, as she stood in line at the

instructors every 10 weeks. event's shopping expo to buy a Missett still picks each song blue crop top. ("We're going to

® ® ® ® ®

A second experiment used Compared with subjects the same walking course but who ambled along taking in but the reward is that you set one group on what was de- the campus' attractions, those won't negate the benefits of scribed as a sightseeing walk who perceived their walk as your workout with poor food while the other went on what exercise served themselves choices. "Do whatever you can to it was told was an exercise l arger portions of M & M s course. Afterward, research- upon completion of the walk. make your workout fun. Play ersoffered the 46 subjectsthe Finally, the r esearchers music, watch a video or simchance to help themselves to took advantage of a real foot- ply be grateful that you're M&Ms a n d s u r r eptitiously race and asked 231 runners working out instead of workweighed the bags that subjects who had run between five and ing in the office," said Wanpoured for themselves before 10 kilometers to fill out a brief sink. "Anything that brings sending them on their way. survey that assessed how a smile is likely to get you to Compared with the walkers much fun they had. Then they eat less." distracted by pleasant music, offered the runner a choice of the exercisers were more like- a chocolate bar or a cereal bar. ly to choose sugary soda over Sure enough, irrespective water. Although the exercis- of runners' hunger levels, ers were no more or less likely their body mass index or the to pick the chocolate pudding, distance they had run, those they servedthemselves more who indicated they had had of it, on average, than did the more fun running the race subjects who thought they had were more likely to take a ceI taken an enjoyable walk. real bar. The chocolate bars Interestingly, t he tw o were more often the choice groups consumed roughly of those who viewed the race the same number of calories' more as a test or a workout worth of pasta, sauce and than a pleasant challenge. green beans. That, said the The upshot is simple, said

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of pasta and meat sauce, green beans and a choice of either a sugary soft drink or water and applesauce or chocolate pudding. Researchers r esearchers, suggests t h at Brian Wansink, director of distracted their subjects not the workhorse subjects were the Cornell Food and Brand only so they wouldn't discuss rewarding themselves by Lab: If you think of your phystheir walking experiences choosing and eating more of ical activity as fun, you're less with one another, but so they the foods and beverages that likely to feel the need to recould measure how much they are tasty treats than they were ward yourself than if you see served themselves and record simply boosting their calorie your workout as an exhaust-

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D6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014

ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL

QUEsTiox:I found a lump in my breast? What do I do?

ANswER: If you find a lump in your breast contact your primary care physician or OB/GYN, who will order tests such as a mammogram, an ultrasound or a biopsy. JanaVanAmborg, When the resultsare received the course of treatment is discussed and you may be referred to a surgeon.

You should choose a physician specializing in breast care, who can educateyou on the many options and treatments availableto you. If you have breastcancer you have a choice in thespecialists you see.The treatment of breast cancer is advancing and changing continuously so choose physicians who are well educated, interested in breast cancer and compassionate to your individual situation. Ideally your surgeon will develop a treatment plan in conjunction with the St. Charles Breast Cancer Center and you. Youshould thoroughly understand your options before proceeding with definitive treatment. YOUR HEALTH ' YOUR CHOICE • OUR EXPERTISE Jana M VanAmburg MD, FACS Member ofthe American Society ofBreastSurgeons

J ana M . V anAm b u rg , M D , F A C S

QvEsrtow:I have multiple medications that I take forvarious health concerns. I have been told they are required to optimize my health. I'd like to stop them. Is it possible?

ANswER: I never recommend stopping any medication that you have been prescribed Azure Karli, wit h o ut first discussing it with the provider who recommended you take it. There can sometimes be major repercussions with stopping medications suddenly. I also like to emphasize that trying to switch from a pharmaceutical prescription to a natural one is often not the goal. The goal is to get at the root of the problem through other means (if possible) so that no medication or natural substances is needed at all. At the very least the goal is to be able to reduce the dose or the number of medications/natural substances required for optimal health. Often times natural substances are used to ease off of medications while being monitored by the provider/s. Genetics and sometimes external influences are beyond our control and in these cases extra support from natural or pharmaceutical substances are necessary; sometimes long term. T h e p r ocess of reducing and eliminating pharmaceuticals requires good communication with your provider/s about your goals, so that your health team can guide your progression. healthy + natural

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QvEsmoN: If s car t i ssue/adhesions are caused from surgical procedures and must be removed surgically, doesn't this create a vicios circle? Can one expect more scar tissue after scar tissue removal? ANswER: Scars are formed when we damage tissueseithersurgically or due to othertypes Each time we operate we healby Adam p Angeles, of trauma. making scaror adhesions...We can remove Board Certified most ofthe scar,however, a new scar ptasttesor eorr some or will be formed, which in some instances may be better than the old scar.Forexample a person who has had multiple abdominal operations and develops dense adhesions around the bowel may develop a bowel obstruction. If serious enough, they may need to have these adhesions released surgically. But when we do this, we also cause adhesions to form. Assurgeons,we hope thatnew scar ofadhesions doesn't become sosevere as to cause problems. This issue has plagued surgeons for centuries.

BEN D P LASTI C SURGERY

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QUEsrtox: Are the results of CoolSculpting permanent? My sister dropped 2 dress sizes! Answer: "Yes! CoolSculpting i s a safe, successful and FD A a p proved treatment available at the Leffel Center t o p ermanently r e move f a t . E a ch t reatment is one hour i n D r . L i n d a Leffel's plastic surgery office without D L' d J needles, without anesthesia and with no Leffel downtime. Our patients, immediately after treatment, have headed to Mt. Bachelor to ski! When you maintain your weight, the long term results are stable and permanent. If y o u a r e considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a board certified plastic surgeon, or physician with expertise and training in body contouring. Before CoolSulpting, you should have a consultation and exam by the treating doctor to thoroughly assess your general health, skin quality, and fatty areas to assess if CoolSculpting is the best treatment for you. CoolSculpting is a m edical treatment and should be performed in a doctor's office. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results. For more informationg or questions please call our office 541-388-3006 or visit www.leffelcenter.com.

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QUEsrtoN: H o w do I effecti vely communicate with my physician?

Answer: C o mmunicating w i t h yo u r p hysician can be difficult due to t h e fact that they have limited time, and the typical patient has limited to no medical experience. I have relayed thousands of Mic ae G ' flth pieces of information to physicians over my years as a critical care nurse and I do know that the more vague your examples or descriptions are in regards to how you feel, the more difficult it is for them to make an eff ective plan of care. When speaking with your physician in your clinical visit, try to provide descriptive and exact information. For example, relaying information on changes in your blood pressure or heart rate over the last month, or a new onset of shortness of breath when you walk short distances, and sudden blurred vision when you stand up can lead a physician to drastically change your daily medications or require immediate testing. Having these small but vital pieces of information readily available can make your outcome better and your physician happier.

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QUESTION: I w a nt t o h a ve permanent makeup! What are the best questions to ask?

ANswER: Choose a technician carefully by considering experience, training and portfolio. Oregon requires we MUST be licensed (as some states have little to no regulations). Training certificates don't Susan Gruber, alwa s translate into skill. The Societ of cerbhed pennanent Permanent Makeup Professionals is the largest organization in the industry and a CPCP (Certified Permanent Cosmetic Professional) is a mark of excellence and demonstrates the individual has the knowledge to provide a higher level of proficiency. Ask about years of experience, continuing education, blood borne pathology training, sterile (CDC) Center for Disease Control standards. Good questions should help you make a good decision. Ask to see before and after pictures. Interaction between you and the technician should be of u tmost importance. Questions? Please feel free to call for a personal consultation.

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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

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Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Sales Southwest Bend

Mary Lou Malchow

MOVING SALE

Garage Sale, Saturday, Take Brookswood Rd. south-turn right on PowJuly 19th at 1 9 671 ers Rd. and follow to Rock Bluff Lane Hollygrape St. Bend. Fri., July 18 • Sat., July 19, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Crowd control admittance numbers 8:00 a.m. Friday

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Annual Neighborhood Garage Salei NE Alpenview Lane off Bear Creek (follow signs), Fri. 8-5, Sat. 9-2. Clothes, books, home decor, crafts, dog kennel, rat cage, furniture, plus much more!

Mini Farm 2 complete estates Everything 50's 60's 70's 4 sofas, 8 dressers, 6 beds, 3 dining sets, China cabinet, amazing 1950's blonde oak billiards/game table, 5 dish sets, 2 silver plate sets and tea set, vintage and retro glassware, kitchen, artwork and decor, retro lamps, old trunks, saddles and tack, tools, bedding and linens, 2 corner cabinets, tea cart, storage cabinets, record players and records. Loads of everything! Thurs., Fri., Sat., 9-4 63310 Deschutes Market Rd. off Butler Market in NE Bend. Numbers THURSDAY 8 a.m. See pics I www.atticestatesandappraisals.com 541-350-6822

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Furniture 8 Appliances

Bicycles & Accessories

Bend Spay and Neuter Donate deposit bottles/ Weimaraner pups, parProject seeks owners of Twin E rgo-motion cans to local all vol., ents exc. disposition outdoor cat enclosures to non-profit rescue, for and on site. Ranch 500 automatic bed participate in a fundraiswith memory foam feral cat spay/neuter. raised and parents ing event called the Tour Cans for Cats trailer hunt, 3 males, 1 female, mattress, like new, of Catios (similar to the only used for a short at Jake's Dlner, Hwy $350. Please leave Tour of Homes!) Please 20 E & Bend Petco German Shepherd, 3 msg. 541-562-5970. t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . contact 541-617-1010 if 541-383-7603 near Applebee's, do- y rs old, n ame i s Santana you are interested in par- nate M-F a t S m ith Louie. Needs a loving Sovereign ticipating! It will be fun! Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or home. $300 adoption 1998" Tandem Call The Sullet!n At Must be only dog Boxers AKC & Valley CRAFT, Tumalo. Lv. fee. aluminum road 541 a385-5809 Bulldogs CKC puppies. msg. for pick up large in home! Neutered, bike,size Medium, pot t y $700-800. 541-325-3376 amts, 541-389-8420. v accinated, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail low usage, disc trained, knows basic Welsh Corgi puppies. At: www.bendbulletin.com www.craftcats.org brakes, good condiBrittany pups, AKC 8 commands, & micro 4 males to choose tion. New, was American Field Regischipped. Comes with ENGLISH BULLDOG from. Avail 7/20. $5000; selling now tered, born 5/31/14. Field Puppy, AKC registered, bed, blanket, toys, The Bulletin $500. 541-480-9567 for $1550. Champion bloodlines, male, 1st shots & micro- collars, leash, medirecommends extra ' $500. 505-220-2639 210 Call 541-923-2468 chipped. $2000. cation and bowl. Call I caution when pur541-416-0375 541-598-4472. Furniture & Appliances chasing products or, Dachshund AKC blk/tan services from out of I 245 pups, $425.541-508-4558 Lab Pups AKC, black & the area. Sending I Golf Equipment yellow, Master Hunter A1 Washers&Dryers go tobendweenies.com cash, checks, or sired, performance pedi$150 ea. Full warI credit i n f ormation ree, OFA cert hips & elCHECKYOUR AD Need to get an ranty. Free Del. Also may be subjected to ows, 541-771-2330 wanted, used W/D's ad in ASAP? I FRAUD. For more www.kirmamanretrieversecom 541-280-7355 information about an I You can place it Frenchton Puppies. 75% Labradors (chocolates), advertiser, you mayI online at: french bulldog, 2 5% no papers, ready 7/22. Gas stove, Whirlpool 30", / call O r e gon / terrier. Parents $300. 541-977-6844 white, self-clean, gd cond ' Statet h e Atto www.bendbulletin.com Boston r ney ' on site. Born 6/21, 2 left! $100 541-475-7013 on the first day it runs I General's O f f i ce $1350. Put your deposit Miniature S c hnauzer to make sure it is cor541-385-5809 down now. 541-279-3588 pups, Black, 3 female, G ENERATE SOM E Consumer Protec- • rect. aSpellchecka and 1 male, $700. Family EXCITEMENT in your tion h o t line a t I human errors do ocraised. 541-410-7701 neighborhood! Plan a 1 -877-877-9392. cur. If this happens to sale and don't Pixie Bob male c at, garage your please conI tact usad,ASAP to advertise in I TheBulletin Sereng Central Oregon since Sggg beautiful, 2 yrs old, forget so that classified! $50. 541-480-3809 corrections and any 541-385-5809. adjustments can be 212 POODLEpups, toy. Hutch solid maple, 5 made to your ad. Home raised w/love. Antiques & drawers, 2 cupboards, 541-385-5809 Schnoodle pups also! $200. 541-382-3479 Collectibles The Bulletin Classified 541-475-3889 K enmore Washer & c l ubs, l i g htly Queensland Heelers Dryer, gently used, black, 1930s armchair, walnut Youth 286 288 frame, white damask, used. includes bag, Standard & Mini, $150 $450 oto. 541-408-0846 $40. 619-988-2517 Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend $199. 541-350-5711 & up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor Natural gas (no propane) 246 Multiple Family Garage The Ultimate Sale! Guns, hot water heater, 2 vrs Antiques wanted: tools, dpress.com Guns, Hunting Sale! Furniture, house- ammo, huntng, i camping, furniture, marbles,early old, $150. 541-480-5188 wares, dishes, lots of golf gear, new bike, guiB/W photography, & Fishing Check out the Office Chair, leather, stuff. Fri-Sat, 8am-2pm, tar, more! Fri. only 8-4, beer cans, jewelry. classifieds online adjustable with arms, 541-389-1578 1730 NE Providence Dr. 1001 SE 15th St., ¹159. www.bendbulletin.com 1873 Springfield Trap $100. 541-598-7332 Door, original, $1250. Updated daily 290 The Bulletin reserves 541-383-7603 288 Sofa & loveseat, reclinthe right to publish all Sales Redmond Area ing, beige, microfiber, Sales Southeast Bend pays CASH!! ads from The Bulletin Bendforlocal Springer Spaniel $500. 541-598-7332 all firearms & newspaper onto The AKC, liver & white, 1 2-Family Downsizinq Bikes, antique furniture/ 1st shots and Table and chairs, solid Bulletin Internet web- ammo. 541-526-0617 glass, Fiesta dishes, kids Sale! Gently used DVD/ male. oak, pedestal table, 4 site. CASH!! items, clothes, lots more. VHS recorder, RV BBQ, dewclaws removed. windsor style chairs. For Guns, Ammo & Call 61367 SE King Jehu boat buoys, bow, turkey $400 Great condition. $350. The Bulletin Reloading Supplies. 541-885-8604. Way off 15th, Fri-Sat, 8-2 fryer, saw, books, bedSerelng Central Oregonsince fggg 541-382-6773 541-408-6900. ding, household, too Community Yard Sale: much to list! July 19, 8amr ' r r r gl r r r r r r r r r r r r si r r r r r Fri. & Sat. 8-3, Suntree 4pm, corner of SW 24th & r' r r r r l r r r r r r r Village, 1001 SE 15th, Reindeer, in Redmond. r r r r r r r r r r lots of great stuff, r r r r r r r r r r Whole House something for everyone! Huge Garage Sale July 18-19, 8amMulti family g a rageFri-Sat, 702 NW 21st Ct. sale, Sat. only, 8-3. 5pm. Most everything goes! 21038 Juniper Haven, r r offReed Market. MOVING SALE r 2 miles south of Redc r r r r r One Day Only Estate mond, 6316 S Hwy Sale Sat. 7/19, 9-5 97. Bringing out more stuff evervdav! 20604 WildGoose Ln, FRI 10AM - ONGOING (Brosterhous & Song Bird). Furn., freezer, Mt. View Mobile Home beds, kitchen items, Park's Annual housewares, lamps, Sale! art, linens. All must go. 6100 Yard So. Hwy 97, Redmond, July 18-19, 9-3

61374 ROCK BLUFF LANE

Sales Northeast Bend

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MOVING SALE! 20700 Barton Crossing Way, Sat. 8-4. Furniture, F riday, & garden decor, Corner of Erickson Sa t urday 8 S unday. home dog crates, etc. and NE Neff Roads. 8 a.m. to Noon. 1444 Galveston. 284

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PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

YARD SALE for HDWRR Sat., 7/1 9, 8-3. YARD SALE

Big Neighborhood Sale Sat. 8-3 NW Valhalla, Mt. Washington, Nordic to Rainbow Ridge, rugs linens, craft kits, patterns, sewing, fabric, books, bowling-mugs, home decor', misc. golf, collectibles, tools, ladder, housewares, garden stuff ,nice W+ size clothes, vintage lamps, new costume jewelry Lennox, and lots more! Everything must go! Discounts after 2 p.m.

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17-19. 429 NE Frank-

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Sales Northwest Bend

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Adopt a rescue cat or The Bulletin recomkitten! Altered, vaccimends extra caution nated, ID chip, tested, when purc h as- more! CRAFT, 65480 ing products or ser78th St, Bend, 1-5 PM vices from out of the Sat/Sun. 389 8420, area. Sending cash, www.craftcats.org. checks, or credit in202 f ormation may b e Want to Buy or Rent subjected to fraud. Find exactly what more i nforma- you are looking for in the Wanted: $Cash paid for For tion about an advervintage costume jewCLASSIFIEDS you may call eliy. Top dollar paid for tiser, the O regon State Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Attorney General's C o n sumer Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Office Protection hotline at Aussie mini/toy, red tri 1-877-877-9392. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! female, 8 weeks, $340 cash. 541-678-7599 The Bulletin Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Aussies, Mini AKC, way in the world to sell. 8 mo. old pups, goodblues, black tri, m/f, w atchdogs, h o u s e parents on site The Bulletin Classified dogs, ou t standing 541-788-7799 541-385-5809 looks, safe with children. $150 ea. Australian Shepherd 6 205 541-447-13237 wk old female Blue Items for Free Merle purebred, shots People Lookfor Information and worming. Ready About Products and Free horse manure will to go. $400. Services Every Day through load, Deschutes Mkt 541-410-2350 The Bvlletin Classilleds Rd., 541-318-8707

Estate Sales

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Multi-Home Yard Sale -Lots & lots of great stuff. You won't want to miss out on this sale!! Fri - Sun 9:OlM00, 7654 and 7408 SW Wickiup Ave.

World TravelerCollection plus Nore: King Bed, Queen Bed; Sofa; dining room set; Two recliners; two swiyel chairs; Brass and glass display shelf units; Oak bookcase; Corner desk unit; 292 Computer desk; Several small bookcases; UnSales Other Areas usual coffeetables, wood & glass; Lamps; Dansk dish set; China dish set; Lots of kitchen Sale, 1 day only, appliances and cookware; Lacruset pans; Garage Sat 7/1 9 9am-4pm, Keurig coffee maker; Thomasville headboard and dresser; Small chest freezer; Rattan Prin- 10836 SW Peninsula Dr., CRR. Boating, water cess chair; Keyboard; Vacuum; Rug Cleaner; sports, wet suits, dry Some ol the Oriental collector objects are: suits, life jackets, ski Carved wood lady figurine about 3' tall; Wood ropes, water skis, wakemasks; Brass and bronze figurines; MahJong boards, ski gloves, set; Sword; Tall "leaders" cane; Bone carved camping & fishing. cane??; Carved boxes; Brass teapots; Copper bowls and pots; Musical instruments; Brass NOTICE coffeetable;Many smallcopper and brass and Remember to remove bone items; Four puppets; Clothing; and paintings and Tapestry's; Dagger; Silk screen paint- your Garage Sale signs ings; scrolls and more. Aladdin Alacite Bowl; (nails, staples, etc.) Two Camel stools; Waterfall style cedar chest; after your Sale event Linens; Lots of Books-Cussler- Patterson; and is over! THANKS! More; Portable Elnalite sewing machine; Tea From The Bulletin Cart; Golf Clubs; Some tools; Lots of Christmas and your local utility houses and decor;Some jewelry. So much companies. more!!! Handled by ...

Deedy's Estate Sales Co.

541-419-4742 days • 541-382-5950 eves

www.deeedysestatesales. com

The Bulletin

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Item Priced af: YourTotal Ad Coston: • Under $500....................................................................... $29

• $500 to $999...................................................................$39 • $1000 to $2499.............................................................. $49 • $2500 and over............................................................... $59

*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)

Includes: 2n in length, with border, full color photo, bold

headline and price. Your ad will also appear tn: • The Bulletin, • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The Central Oregon Nickel Ads • bendbullefin.com

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon sincetggg

541-385-5809 Someresiriciions app/y


E2 THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

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

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Lost & Found Employment Employment Houses for Opportunities Opportunities Rent General Found small lime green purse at Fred TRUCK DRIVER PUBLISHER'S CDL Driver s:,,".':„,'„":,p;, canvas Meyers store Sunday National WANTED NOTICE wholesale distable saw; Band saw; 7/1 3. 541-610-6609 Must have doubles All real estate adverof waterworks Lathe; Jointer; Disk, Lost "Baby", small gray tributor endorsement. tising in this newspaproducts in Redmond is Sander and working part-Siamese cat, de- seeking Local run. per is subject to the motivated and tools; Shopsmith 12" clawed, vic. Revere & hard working part time/ Truck is parked in F air H o using A c t planer with s t and, Neff. 541-382-6013 seasonal individual with Madras.541-475-4221 which makes it illegal Sears 12" wood lathe to a d vertise "any good attitude. Candiwith Copy Crafter and Lost stainless steel flat a date must have good Looking for your next preference, limitation working tools. Tormek t ruck g r i ll , sa y s .communication skills, be or disc r imination Rico's Taco. $75 re- professional, punctual, a Placeemployee? Super grinder 2000 a Bulletin help based on race, color, with many a t tach- ward. 541-362-6726. self starter, and work as wanted ad today and religion, sex, handiments and i n struca team player. Primary reach over 60,000 cap, familial status, tions. Porter Cable job duties are driving readers each week. marital status or na4"x8" belt/disc bench and all warehouse funcYour classified ad tional origin, or an inREMEMBER: If you sander. Central MaSecondary duties will also appear on tention to make any have lost an animal, tions. chinery 4"x6" belt/disc involve counter sales, bendbulletin.com such pre f erence, don't forget to check answering phones, and bench sander; Sears which currently limitation or discrimiThe Humane Society various other d uties. 8tA" slide compound receives over 1.5 nation." Familial staBend miter saw. AMT 4600 Class A CDL is required. million page views tus includes children 541-382-3537 scroll saw; B e nch Ability to operate a forkevery month at under the age of 18 Redmond grinder; Router table lift, climb a ladder, mano extra cost. living with parents or 541-923-0882 with Sears r o uter; nipulate t o ol s and Bulletin Classifieds legal cus t odians, Madras e quipment, lift u p t o Makita router; Ryobi pregnant women, and Get Results! 541-475-6889 t able w i t h Se a r s 1 00lbs, and t yp e a Call 385-5809 people securing cusPlacea photoin yourprivate party ad Prineville minimum of 20 words PRIVATE PARTY RATES router; Makita router; or place tody of children under 541-447-7178 per minute is a must. for only $15.00par week. Ryobi t ri m r o uter; Starting at 3 lines your ad on-line at 18. This newspaper or Craft Cats We are looking to fill this Router bits; B ench will not knowingly acbendbulletin.com *UNDER '500in total merchandise 541-389-8420. OVER '500 in total merchandise position very quickly so vise; various clamps. cept any advertising please email your re541-549-9383 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 for real estate which is 466 sume to 14 days................................................ $16.00 violation of the law. 7 days.................................................. $24.00 aaron.bondi@fer uson.c Independent Positions in 265 O ur r e aders a r e *llllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 om if you are interested. Building Materials T he company is a n Sales Help Wanted: hereby informed that 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special all dwellings adverequal opportunity em- E nergetic kios k tised in this newspa4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 Icall for commercial line ad rates) Metal scaffolding, $100. ployer as well as a gov- sales person needed 2 10-ft extension ladders per are available on ernment contractor that $50 ea. 541-548-4051 shall abide by the re- immediately for the an equal opportunity basis. To complain of quirements of 41 CFR Bend-Redmond A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: REDMOND Habitat ca l l 60-300.5(a), which pro- area. Secured loca- d iscrimination RESTORE Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. hibits dis c rimination tions, high commis- HUD t o l l-free at 325 Building Supply Resale * BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) qualified pro- sions paid weekly! 1-800-877-0246. The Quality at Hay, Grain & Feed against tected Veterans and the For more informa- toll f ree t e lephone LOW PRICES REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well of 41 CFR t ion, p l ease c a l l number for the hear1242 S. Hwy 97 1st Quality mixed grass requirementswhich pro- Howard i m p aired is as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin at ing 541-548-1406 hay, no rain, barn stored, 60-741.5(A), 1-800-927-9275. hibits dis c rimination 541-279-0982. You bendbulletimcom $250/ton reserves the right to reject any ad at Open to the public. against qualified indi- c an a l s o em a i l Call 541-549-3831 any time. is located at: on the basis of 266 Patterson Ranch, Sisters viduals tcoles@yourneighdisability. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Badl IMnLII borhoodpublications. Heating & Stoves Excellent 1st cutting orcom for more inforBend, Oregon 97702 chard grass mix, small ~o ©+8 Executive NOTICE TO mation. bales, $245/ton. ADVERTISER Director Madras, Oregon PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Since September 29, 54'I -420-9736 for 1991, advertising for is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Rm(ji)(81 Sisters Chamber Premium Central Ore. to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these used woodstoves has Orchard Grass/Hay mix. of Commerce ® UKAIMKI been limited to modnewspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Excellent qualels which have been $230/ton. Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Please send cover ity, no weeds. Tumalo certified by the Orarea. 541-977-3181 letter, resume and Commercial/Investment egon Department of 246 246 266 260 salary requirement to Environmental Qual341 Properties for Sale 'obs@sisteracount .com Guns, Hunting Guns, Hunting • T r a vel/Tickets Misc. Items ity (DEQ) and the fed- Horses & Equipment by July 25, 2014. & Fishing & Fishing eral E n v ironmental 1352 NE 2nd St., Bend. V IP tickets fo r W i l - Hovv to avoidscam 526 Protection A g e ncy Beautiful commercial Fullj ob is available lamette Music Festiand fraud attempts CONCEALED (EPA) as having met Loans & Mortgages o ffice b u ilding i n at description at Taurus .45 ACP v al Aug. 15-17 i n VBe aware of internaHANDGUN PERMIT smoke emission stanBend. $579,000 High iste scou t Model 24/7- G2C B rownsville, OR 4 s~ dards. A cer t ified Class Sun., July 20 O Lakes Realty & Propfraud. Deal loWARNING coltlfobs Compact - SUPER tickets + par k ing tional ~ 12 noon, Redmond woodstove may be cally whenever posThe Bulletin recomerty Ma n agement DEAL includes dual pass, worth $ 1 75 sible. identified by its certifiAirport Comfort Suites. action semi-auto mends you use cau541-536-0117 LaborerPosition open each, but willing to cation label, which is $50 for OR, UT or AZ; Y Watch for buyers tion when you pro2001 Silverado istol, 1 10-rd mag & deal. 808-264-7069 at Adam Bright Tree permanently attached vide personal $140 for all 3! Call who offer more than 3-horse trailer 5th INE 12-rd mags, Service, drug testing, Lanny Fujishin information to compa- Multiplexes for Sale I your asking price and to the stove. The Bul- wheel, 29'x8', deluxe will train, need DL. RH black leather holNeed help fixing stuff? letin will not k now541-281-GUNS (4867). ster and all original nies offering loans or who ask to have showman/semi living 541-312-8746 Call A ServiceProfessional ingly accept advertisinfo@pistolCraft.com credit, especially money wired or quarters, lots of ex$285,000 • Duplex ackaging. Requires ing for the sale of www.pistolcraft.com find the help you need. FIND IT! those asking for ad- •2 Bdrm, 2.5 bath, spa handed back to them. tras. Beautiful condiFL transfer. $475. uncertified www.bendbulletin.com vance loan fees or Sisters, call Rob, Fake cashier checks tion. $21,900. OBO t$ttV tTI cious units woodstoves. Dan Wesson .357 mag, 928-310-8032 companies from out of •100% oc cupied and and money orders 541-420-3277 SELL ITr 4" bbl, 100% cond, belt state. If you have are common. p rofessionally m a n 260 The Bulletin Classifieds 267 buckle, original grips & concerns or quesPNever give out peraged Look at: Iillisc. Items info, $500. 541-306-0166 Fuel & Wood tions, we suggest you • Large yard, multi- level sonal financial inforOffice Assistant Bendhomes.com consult your attorney living mation. Buying Diamonds s/Trust Long-established or call CONSUMER Christin Hunter, Broker for Complete Listings of your instincts roofing company is /Gofd for Cash WHEN BUYING HOTLINE, REDUCED! 541-306-0479 and be wary of Area Real Estate for Sale Saxon's Fine Jewelers seeking to add an FIREWOOD... 1-877-877-9392. Windermere someone using an 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, energetic, well-orga541-389-6655 253 Central Oregon escrow service or 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good nized person to our To avoid fraud, BANK TURNED YOU DO YOU HAVE Real Estate agent to pick up your TV, Stereo & Video cond. Logan Coach Inc. office staff. Duties to SOMETHING TO The Bulletin DOWN? Private party BUYING merchandise. recommends pay- $4200 obo. 305-794-0190 include: Front Desk, will loan on real esSELL Advertise your car! 36" Sony flat screen TV, Lionel/American Flyer FOR $500 OR ment for Firewood tate equity. Credit, no A/R, Database ManAdd A Picture! trains, accessories. The Bulletin 383 excellent picture, servins centralore9on since fs03 only upon delivery problem, good equity Reach thousands of readers! LESS? agement, Typing/ed541-408-2191. Produce & Food $200. 541-419-9332 Non-commercial inspection. iting proposals. Expeis all you need. Call Call 541-385-5809 Kenmore propane BBQ, • and A cord is 128 cu. ft. rience with phones, Oregon Land Mort- The Bulletin Classifieds advertisers may BUYING & SE LLING tank & cover, $35. 255 4' x 4' x 8' THOMAS ORCHARDS Microsoft Word and place an ad gage 541-388-4200. All gold jewelry, silver 541-410-4596 Kimberly, Oregon Excel. $13-$15/hour Computers • Receipts should with our and gold coins, bars, Magazines. LOCAL MONEY:Webuy P o p ular include name, U- ickorread - ick (negotiable, based on "QUICK CASH Open Houses wedding sets, Mechanics 1972-1997 secured trust deeds & abihty and experiT HE B U LLETIN r e - rounds, phone, price and Dark Sweet Cherries SPECIAL" class rings, sterling sil- Free. 541-548-4677 note, some hard money ence. 1 week3lines 12 quires computer ad- ver, coin collect, vinkind of wood Pie Cherries, Apricots loans. Call Pat Kellev OPEN HOUSE 7/18-20 Call 541-363-3569 of' vertisers with multiple tage watches, dental Pacer gas p o wered purchased. Semi-Cling Peaches 541-382-3099 ext.13. & 7 / 25-27 1 2 -4pm ad schedules or those • Firewood ads Read - icked ~2 e ek s 2 N 2145 NW Poplar Ave, gold. Bill Fl e ming, water pump, w/ 2 rolls selling multiple sysMUST include Ad must 541-382-9419. Rainer herries Redmond, 3/2, 2076 of fire hose. $235. PREPPERS, tems/ software, to disinclude price of species & cost per BRING CONTAINERS sq. ft., FR, ofc, gas fr541-410-3425 SANDBLASTERS close the name of the cord to better serve si le l e Df s500 for U-PICK!!! ~ plc, AC, slab granite, steel f rame & QC NEEDED, The Bulletin business or the term Gazebo or less, or multiple our customers. SS, solatubes, hot 10x12 canopy. Open 7 days week, Work 40+ hrs, "dealer" in their ads. new To Subscribe call items whosetotal 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. ONLY! tub, RV, 3-car garage, $199. 541-389-7734. $10.00 to $15.00 Private party advertisdoes not exceed 541-385-5800 or go to The Bulletin Visit us on Facebook for depending on ex9135 sq ft, West Canservlns central creyon since fsre ers are defined as $500. updates and look for yon Estates $271,300 www.bendbulletin.com perience. No expethose who sell one • • I i call anytime to view for us on Wed. at Bend rience needed, but Swamp cooler motor kit, Affyear Dependable Call Classifieds at computer. Farmers Market and 541 923-3837 would be preferred; new, 115V, 1/3hp, 2spd Firewood: Seasoned; Sat. 541-385-5809 at NW Crossing. 257 will train. Need to Desperately s e e kingmotor, $85. 541-548-8718 Lodgepole, split, del, www.bendbulletin.com Open House Sat. 12-3 616 541-934-2870 lift up to 75 lbs. Rhonda O. I am an old Wanted- paying cash 1382 NE Drost — 3 Musical Instruments B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Want To Rent friend who has found it for Hi-fi audio & stubdrm, 2.5 bath, 1700 2 for $365. Call for APPLY AT: New Ruger 10/22 stain- New American Tribute extremely necessary dio equip. Mclntosh, or near Hollinsmulti-cord discounts! Elderly man & daughter sq.ft., 20554 Builders St. less carbine, scope, 2 elec acoustic guitar, case, and imperative on my JBL, Marantz, D yl ooking for 3 b d rm head Park. L ots of Bend, OR 97701 mags (10-rnd & 25-rnd) stand, $200. 541-306-0166 part that I speak with naco, Heathkit, San- 54'I -420-3484. in this open, home to rent. Have potential her. Please, please $350. 541-306-0166 bright home with lots d og. Prefer out o f Piano - Kimball console, call Werner (951) sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Pine & Juniper Split of storage and fenced Call 541-261-1808 town. 541-678-1398 TEACHER New Ruger 22/45 Lite, 22 good condition, $750 929-4535 or email me front & back yards. firm. 541-317-9063 wernsocal@gmail.com cal semi auto, threaded Wheelchair, $45. Re- PROMPT DELIVERY MS/HS Science Pull through carport to Where can you find a bbl, 2 mags, 250 rds .22, Single f e male 65 , cumbantbike $25.Futon, 541-389-9663 Teacher25x30 SHOP w/220 256 helping hand? $370. 541-306-0166 $45. 541-548-9619 MLS¹ seeking male over 60. Mitchell School power! Travel/Tickets From contractors to I am a kind and lov- WHEN YOU SEE THIS 201406782. $219,000 476 269 John Furrow, Broker ing woman. would like Enjoy small class yard care, it s all here TURN THE PAGE Employment Dave Matthe~s Band to meet someone for Gardening Supplies Fred Real Estate Group sizes, coaching opin The Bulletin's For More Ads 4 tickets, $600 each Opportunities 541-647-0910 companionship and portunities and & Equipment 8/26/14 6:00 P.m. PiXatBendt)IIletijl.COm "Call A Service ~he l&ulletin possible relationship. MOre collegial staff. 541-389-7145 On a classified ad Call 541-306-4252 Apply onEDZAPP Professional" Directory CONTROLLER go to BarkTurfSoil.com or contact Homes for Sale ACCOUNTING/ www bendbulletin com 632 Superintendent BUSINESS to view additional Tim Wilson at Apt./Multiplex General Great home in very dePROMPT DELIVERY OFFICE photos of the item. 541-462-3311. sirable location at the 541-389-9663 FULL TIME base of Pilot Butte. 3 CHECK yOURAD Call a Pro Closes July 28. bedroom 1 bath 1050 Wallowa Memorial sq ft. Extensive cusWhether you need a For newspaper Call54 I3855809topromote your service• Advertise for 28daysstarting st 'Ifl fftarfrrrtf packageir norarrftrrblre er wrbria) Hospital tom tile work includdelivery, call the fence fixed, hedges ing granite tile kitchen Circulation Dept. at Located in trimmed or a house and bath countertops 541-385-5800 Enterprise, OR caution when purand backsplash, cusbuilt, you'll find To place an ad, call Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care on the first day it runs I chasing products or I tom t i l e flo o ring 541-385-5809 professional help in BS Degree in • services from out of • to make sure it is cor- throughout most of or email NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- Allen Reinsch Yard rect. "Spellcheck" and Accounting or The Bulletin's "Call a l the area. Sending classifiedttbendbulletin.com large pantry law requires anyone scape Contractors Law Iillaintenance & Mowing human errors do oc- home, Business Admin. or c ash, checks, o r back deck, f enced Service Professional" who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all (& many other things!) cur. If this happens to yard. Extensive parkEquivalent Work The Bulletin l credit i n f ormation servlnr rcentraloregon slnce rscr construction work to businesses that adCall 541-536-1294 or Directory Experience your ad, please con- ing with d e tached l may be subjected to be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form 541-615-5313 tact us ASAP so that 541-385-5809 Min. 4 yrs. Exp. FRAUD. 2-car g a rage/shop, Construction Contrac- Landscape Construccorrections and any in a Supervisory For more informaI attached 1 car g ators Board (CCB). An tion which includes: BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS INSTANT GREEN adjustments can be Position Preferred tion about an adver• 261 rage & car~ort, RV active license l anting, deck s , Search the area's most made to your ad. McPheeters Turf Excellent Benefit l tiser, you may call parking. 218 , 000. Medical Equipment means the contractor ences, arbors, comprehensive listing of 541-385-5809 Lawn Fertilizer Package the Oregon State ¹201310366 is bonded & insured. water-features, and in- classified advertising... Visit our website at The Bulletin Classified l Attorney General's Jodi Clark, Principal Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- real estate to automotive, Cosco power scooter www.wchcd.org Office C o n sumer l Broker, 541-771-8731 like new $400. CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be merchandise to sporting or Contact 542-389-9663 Protection hotline at l Century 21 541-419-9332 or Get your www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e goods. Bulletin Classifieds Linda Childers at I 1-877-877-9392. 541-548-4774 Gold Country Realty contractor.com Landscape Contrac- appear every day in the business 541-426-5313 or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Rototiller Troy-Bilt rear print or on line. Lift recliner, $300. EOE LThe Bulleh'n Modern Architecture + The Bulletin recom- number is to be intine, 5 hp, works grt 541-419-9332 or Call 541-385-5809 Quaint Farmhouse mends checking with cluded in all adver- www.bendbulletin.com $200. 541-633-7017 a ROW I N G 541-548-4774 Rastra block c o nthe CCB prior to con- tisements which indistruction, passive soThe Bulletin tracting with anyone. cate the business has serwng cenrraf oregon since lst8 The Bulletin with an ad in lar, 4 b e droom, 3 General Some other t rades a bond, insurance and serving centraloregonsincer9ts The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturbath, 2954 sq ft. RaThe Bulletin's also req u ire addi- workers compensaThe Bulletin Circulation department is looking diant floors and reday night shift and other shifts as needed. We tional licenses and tion for their employ- Maverick Landscaping for a District Representative to join our Single "Call A Service cycled timbers keep weedeating,yd currently have openings all nights of the week. certifications. ees. For your protec- M owing, Copy team. This is a full time, 40 hour per week Professional" detail, chain saw work, t his h o m e eco Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts tion call 503-378-5909 position. Overall focus is the representation, friendly. Sits on nearly start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and or use our website: bobcat excv., etc! LCB Directory sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspa19 acres of Cascade end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoDebris Removal www.lcb.state.or.us to ¹8671 541-923-4324 per. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, view pastoral farmsitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. check license status Just bought a new boat? special events and news dealer outlets. Daily Senior Apartmentland. $899 , 000. before contracting with Sell your old one in the Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a JUNK BE GONE responsibilities include driving a company veIndependent Living MLS¹201404611 the business. Persons classifieds! Ask about our minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts ALL-INCLUSIVE hicle to service a defined district, ensuring I Haul Away FREE Call Terry Skjersaa, doing lan d scape Super Seller rates! are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, with 3 meals daily For Salvage. Also 541-383-1426 maintenance do not 541-385-5809 loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackmanaging newspaper counts for the district, Month-to-month lease, Cleanups & Cleanouts r equire an LC B l i Duke Warner Realty ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup building relationships with our current news check it out! Mel, 541-389-8107 541-382-8262 cense. Painting/Wall Covering and other tasks. For qualifying employees we dealer locations and growing those locations Call 541-318-0450 offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, with new outlets. Position requires total ownerOpen House short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid ALL AMERICAN ship of and accountability of all single copy eleDomestic Services Fri. & Sat. 1-4 p.m. PAINTING vacation and sick time. Drug test is required ments within that district. Work schedule will be Interior and Exterior 19319 Blue Lake Loop, Bend OR 97702 prior to employment. Thursday through Monday with Tuesday and Home is Where the Dirt Is Z~oe~ Qualrep in The Parks at Broken Top. This beautiful Family-owned Wednesday off .Requires good communication 9 yrs experience in model home offers a light, bright great room Residential & Commercial Please submit a completed application attenhousekeeping. Refs & Za~<da skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts floorplan with 3 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, den, tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available rates to fit your needs. 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to Full Service 5-year warranties plus a 4th bedroom/bonus room with custom at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanCall Julie 541 <10-0646 Landscape Management multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong upgrades Summer Special! throughout. In an ideal location with dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be or 641-410-1136 service/team orientation, sales and problem 541-390-1466 a neighborhood pool and parks, near schools Call 541-337-6149 obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Experienced solving skills. Send inquiries and resume to: CCB ¹193960 and with easy access to outdoor recreation. Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). Commercial & Residential circulation@bendbulletin.com Or relax in the serenity of your backyard with No phone calls please. Only completed appliHandyman WESTERN PAINTING maximum privacy, mature landscaping and a CO. Richard Hayman, cations will be considered for this position. No Applications are available at the front desk. Aeration/Dethatching hot tub! 2,964 sq. ft..22 acres. Gourmet resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reI DO THAT! Drop off your resume in person at 1-time or Weekly Services a semi-retired paintkitchen with stainless steel appliances. Masquired prior to employment. EOE. Home/Rental repairs ing contractor of 45 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702; Ask about FREEadded ter suite with sitting area and fireplace upSmall jobs to remodels svcs w/seasonal contract! years. S mall Jobs No phone inquiries please. stairs, Jr. suite and den/office on main level. Honest, guaranteed Bonded & Insured. Welcome. Interior & Pre-employment drug testing required. The Bulletin Offered at $569,000 serving central oregon sincefslo work. CCB¹151 573 COLLINS Lawn Maint. Exterior. c c b¹5184. EOE/Drug Free Workplace 541-977-5678 Dennis 541-317-9768 Ca/i 541-480-9714 541-388-6910 Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. For Sale By Owner: Commission to Buyer's Broker Tools

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES :.q"„'. Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JUL 17, 2014

DAILY BRI DG E C LU B

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will SIIprtz

17,2014 Thursday,July

Finesse-happy

ACROSS 1 Like some libelers 5 Spencer of "Good Morning America" 9 Emergency message, for short 12Common flavorer in Italian sausage 14In working condition 16Line 22 on Form

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

"You never saw anybody with a finesse flxation like my partner," a fan writes. "He considers a deal wasted if he can't take a finesse of some kind. Double finesses, fake finesses, backward finesses, ruffing finesses, intra-finesses: He l o v es them all." My reader says his partner was declarer at six spades. He won the opening lead, drew trumps and tried a so-called idiot's finesse by leading the queen of diamonds. "I guess he hoped he could sneak it by," my fan says, "but West had no trouble covering. My p artner won and let the queen of hearts ride, but West won and cashed his jack of diamonds." YOUR PLAY?

passes. What do you say? ANSWER: The textbook response is four hearts, making it hard for the opponents to bid. That is the call I would choose, but I wouldn't like it. I would rather not have so many sidesuit controls and a potential source of winners in diamonds. Partner would passina fl ash with J 4 3 , A Q 7 3 2 , A 6, A 5 3 when six hearts would be a good contract. South dealer N-S vulnerable

DAILY QUESTION

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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JULY 17 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

745

Homes for Sale

Redmond Homes

Acreages

870

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

$450,000• River Ads published in the NOTICE Looking for your next HDFatBo 1996 "Boats" classification Frontage All real estate adveremp/oyee? include: Speed, fishtised here in is sub- Place a Bulletin help •Amazing view of Des chutes River ing, drift, canoe, ject to th e Federal wanted ad today and •Gated subdivision house and sail boats. F air H ousing A c t , reach over 60,000 For all other types of which makes it illegal readers each week. •21 Acre private loca tion watercraft, please go to advertise any prefYour classified ad 860 Bea Leach, Broker to Class 875. erence, limitation or will also appear on 541-788-2274 Completely 541-385-5809 Motorcycles & Accessories discrimination based bendbulletin.com Windermere Rebuilt/Customized on race, color, reliwhich currently reCentral Oregon 2012/2013 Award ion, sex, handicap, Seresn Cenesei Ose on since 1903 ceives over Real Estate Winner Iamilial status or na1.5 million page Showroom Condition tional origin, or inten875 views every month 13240 SW Horny HolMany Extras tion to make any such at no extra cost. Watercraft Low Miles. low Trail, Terrebonne preferences, l i mitaBulletin Classifieds - Nice acreage with $15,000 tions or discrimination. Get Results! 5-stall 36x48 horse 541-548-4807 We will not knowingly Call 385-5809 or FXSTD Harley barn and plenty of accept any advertis- place your ad on-line riding area. Separate Davidson 2001,twin ing for real estate at runs & foaling stall, cam 88, fuel injected, which is in violation of bendbulletin.com rubber matted floors & Vance 8 Hines short this law. All persons exhaust, Stage I aisle w/cross t ies, shot are hereby informed "s 16' Old Town Canoe, with Vance & Hines large tack room, up755 that all dwellings adfuel management spruce, cedar & canvas, vertised are available Sunriver/La Pine Homes stairs loft & hay stor- system, custom parts, HD Sportster, 2001 exc Lake model, 1 owner, age, plenty of storage on an equal opportugood cond, w/extras. extra seat. cond, 1 owner, maint'd, very nity basis. The Bulle- 56090 Snowgoose Rd, for toys in the 24x36 $1000. 541-388-3386 $10 500 OBO new t i r es , cu s t om metal pole barn/shop tin Classified new 3/2, 3-car gaCall Today chrome, leather saddle 1994 Yamaha Wave fl o o rs. 541-516-8684 approx /2 acre, w/concrete bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. Spacious and afford- rage, $149,950. Ki m at MLS¹201403194 Raider exc. cond, low Tom, 541-382-6501 able living! 2 b e d- $279,000. 541-954-3069 miles, $2250. room, 2.6 bath, 1416 Karin Powers, Broker, Take care of 541-480-3937 sq ft home has gas 541-410-0234 763 your investments fireplace, vaulted Century 21 Gold Just bought a new boat? ceilings, slate in the Recreational Homes Country Realty with the help from Sell your old one in the & Property guest bathroom and classifieds! Ask about our The Bulletin's tiled cou n tertops. Super Seller rates! 5.17 acres. 65694 Old Cabin hidden in woods Master bedroom has "Call A Service Bend/Redmond Hwy, 541-385-5809 Honda Rebel 250, 1986, on trout stream, 637 private access to the Mtn view, power, wa- Professional" Directory gets 60 mpg, excellent outside an d l a r ge acres, 75 mi. from ter, septic approved. commuter, 7213 miles, Bend, $695k. bathroom with plenty $174,OOO O.B.O. Caii Harley Davidson 2003 $1100. 541-788-6276 541-480-7215 of closet space. Great Brad 5 4 1-419-1725, Anniversary Road King, floor plan includes a or Deb 541-480-3956. Stage 1, pearl white, ex771 double attached gadebraObendbroad cellent condition, lots of Lots rage. Large patio over band.com chrome & extr a s. (2) '05 Yamaha Wavet he garage is w e ll $13,999. 541-279-0846 runners lo hrs, 1 has 258 shaded in the after- 9560 SW Geneva View C ascade M t . Vie w hrs, other has 239 hrs. noon for entertaining. Rd, Terrebonne. Nice, Property - Ready to Garaged when not in level 1-acre building Build. 9.90 Acres off $119,900 use. The pair $9000 obo lot w/many trees is ¹201404958 l Gribbing Rd. Ready Victory TC 2 0 0 2, 541-549-4834 / 588-0068 Dennis Clark, Principal perfect for b uilding for a home, horses 40K mi., runs great, Broker, 541-771-8730 your dream home or and toys. Backs to s tage 1 kit, n e w Ads published in eWa vacation home. Come c ounty l and, t h e n Century 21 tires, rear brakes & tercraft" include: Kay enjoy all that Crooked BLM. Avion water, Harley D a vidson Gold Country Realty more. Health forces aks, rafts and motor River Ranch has to 2006 FXDLI Dyna power at property and s ale. $4,00 0 . 750 Ized personal offer - Golf, tennis, approved for s tan- Low Rider, Mustang 541-771-0665 watercrafts. Fo swimming, hik i ng, dard septic. Beautiful seat with backrest, Redmond Homes "boats" please se fishing, disc golf, and land and outstanding new battery, windClass 870. the wild l ife. views. Bank owned, 3 bdrm, all MLS shield, forward con865 541-385-5809 MLS ¹201401000. 2.5 bath, 2080 sq.ft., $34,950 trols, lots of chrome, ATVs ¹201400593 home built in 2006 Screamin' Eagle ex$199,900. and located on 1 flat Karin Powers, Broker, haust, 11,360 miles. Ainslie Reynolds, 541-410-0234 Well maintained! acre, new carpet and Principal Broker Century 21 Gold vinyl. Extended front $8,650 in La Pine ReMax Key 880 Country Realty and rear decks. MLS (928) 581-9190 Properties. Motorhomes 201404793. $187,900 Cascade Mt. view prop541-410-1054 Cell Call P a m L e ster, erty - Ready to Build. 541-728-0033 Offi ce 1997 Bounder 34' Principal Bro k e r, Large corner lot in SW Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' w/slide. $17,900. C entury 2 1 Gol d bed, with ramps. $800 Land in Madras Prime Redmond ready for Excellent condition, Country Realty, Inc. obo. 541-549-4834 or and ready to b uilt, your dream home. must see! Ford 460 541-504-1338 541-588-0068 Great neighborhood, 2.44 acres located in w/Banks, new tires, an area of nice homes schools and views. All dual A/C, rear camJust too many and conveniently near 870 utilities. MLS Harley Davidson era, triple axle, Onan town. Lot is easy to collectibles'? ¹201403757. Boats & Accessories gen, 63k miles. 2011 Classic Limdevelop with water ited, $42,950. 54'I -306-9897 Loaded! 9500 and power nearby. miles, Ainslie Reynolds, Sell them in custom paint Owner terms may be Principal Broker The Bulletin Classifieds available. $ 6 4 ,950 "Broken Glass" by ReMax Key Nicholas Del Drago, ¹201303181 Properties. •M sm • - new condition, s 541-410-1054 Cell Jodi Clark, Principal 541-385-5809 handgrips, Broker, 541-771-8731 heated 541-728-0033 Offi ce auto cruise control. 12' Aluminum boat Century 21 Single Level Charmer in SW Quail Rd. Crooked $32k in bike, Gold Country Realty with trailer, 3hp motor, NW R e dmond only $20,000or best River Ranch. good cond, $1200.. 2007 Winnebago $ 315,000. 4 bed offer. 541-318-6049 503-307-6570 Outlook Class "C" rooms, plus o ffice/ Elevated 5.77 acre view lot. $90,000. 31', solar panel, Cat. den, 2.5 baths, 2410 Mara Stein, heater, excellent sq ft. Brand new concondition, more exstruction, fen c ing, Principal Broker, Pamir tras.Asking $58K. front lan dscaping, 541-420-3400 12' aluminum fishProperties, Inc. FACTORY SPECIAL Ph. 541-447-9268 custom tile. New Home, 3 bdrm, ing boat, t r ailer, Can be viewed at MLS¹201310781 $46,500 finished motor, fish finder, Find It in Western Recreation Call Jim Hinton, HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low accessories, $1200. on your site. 541-420-6229. (top of hill) Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & 541-389-7234 The Bulletin Classifieds! J andM Homes /n Prlnevllle. Central Oregon Realty 2 Vance & Hines pipes, 541-548-5511 541-385-5809 Group, LLC $13,500. 541-306-0166

The Bulletin

2

The Bulletin

880

880

880

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Allegro 28' Class A 2008 Ford V10 gas, 50K miles, 2 slides, satellite, 2 TVs, Onan gen, rear & side cameras, hydraulic levelers, 300w solar panel with inverter. Original owner. $49,500. 541-420-4303

'I

gg Iggi

-

~

.

Allegro 31 ft., 2006 original owner, 2 slides, Ford V-10, 28,000 miles, satellite

TVs, queen bed, sleeps 6, lots of storage, stored under cover, A/C, electric awning, 5.5 KW generator, auto leveling, no smokers, no pets, $52,900. 541.390.9932

Bigfoot 29 2003, sleeps Providence 2005 5, walk-around queen Fully loaded, 35,000 bed, 57K mi, 7.3L power miles, 350 Cat, Very stroke t u rbo d i esel clean, non-smoker, w/Banks power pak incl 3 slides, side-by-side auges, torque lock & refrigerator with ice ake brakes. Power ev- maker, Washer/Dryer, erything, auto levelinq Flat screen TV's, In jacks, air ride w/90psi motion satellite. compressor, 3.6kw pro$95,000 p ane gen set. V e r y 541-480-2019 clean, no pets, no smkrs, araged. N o sl i des. Find exactly what 36,500. 541-548-3985 you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

Redmond:

Fleetwood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, Allegro 32' 2007, like satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, TIFFINALLEGRO new, only 12,600 miles. etc., 32,000 m iles. BUS 2010 - FULLY Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 Wintered in h eated LOADED 40QXP transmission, dual exPowerglide Chassis / haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- shop. $82,000 O.B.O. 425HP Cummings eling system, 5kw gen, 541-447-8664 Engine / Allison 6 power mirrors w/defrost, People Lookfor Information Spd Automatic Trans 2 slide-outs with aw/ Less than 40K miles nings, rear c a mera, About Products and / Offered at $199K. trailer hitch, driyer door Services EveryDaythrough Too many options to w/power window, cruise, The Bulletin Classiweds list here! For more exhaust brake, central information go to vac, satellite sys. Asking e ~ $67,500. 503-781-8812 ese eees.co ~ or email trainwater157© e llil.CD

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar, $23,995. 541-383-3503 Good classified adstell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought tc ycuby

The Bulletin

ServingCentral Oregonsince Seee

A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e !

I

u,'

I

FLEETWOOD PACE ARROW, 1999 Updated interior, 36', 2 skdes, 42,600 miles, V10 as, 5000 watt generator, hydraulic levelers, auto steps, back-up camera, washer/dryer, central vac, ice m aker, l o aded, excellent condition. $27,500 541420-2135 (SeeCraigslist ¹4470374489)

HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEW TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008

I

I

I

I

GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck

are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul lt all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillneed. Roomtogrowinyour a t ough V8 engine will get the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.

*SPeCial PriVate Party rateS aPPly to

merchandise and automotive categories.

The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,

5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 541-548-5254

In Print CInd Online WithThe Bulletin'5 CICISSifiedS. I

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

or call 858-527-8627

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning seldom used; just add water and it's ready to go! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174 TOW EQUIPMENT

Brake Buddy, $500; Guardian rock shield, $200; Roadmaster 5000 tow bar, $450; OR $900 for ALL. Call 541-548-1422


E6 THURSDAY, JULY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

880

881

882

908

933

935

975

975

975

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

~

Laredo 30'2009

JEEP WRANGLER 2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt 8

Buick LeSabre 2002 w/cloth seats, $4695; and 1995 w/leather seats, $2999. Both auto., loaded, 130k miles 541-419-5060

(Photo for tllustratton only)

Subaru Outback 3.6R Limited 2011, moon roof, AWD, pw, pl, leather, Vin ¹381548 Stock ¹44184A

g Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995!Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers!541-388-7179

us

2013 R-Vision 23RBS Trail-Lite Sportby Monaco -Expedition pkg, Sport Value pkg, conyenience pkg, elec. awning, spare tire, LED TV/ent. system, outside shower, elec. tongue jack, black flush sys, beautiful interior, huge galley, great storage, 1/2-ton towable, alloys, queen bed. Like new,asking $21,500 Gordon,541-382-5797

iQg„~ overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

$25,500

541-419-3301

~~I • @ Winnebago A dventurer 2005 35~/s', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 / negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-8711or email a i kistuobendcable.com

Price Reduced! Komfort Pa c i fic Ridge 27 ' Like NEW deluxe NW des ign, 1 5 ' Su p e r Slide, private bdrm, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, always stored inside. A MU S T see ! $23,500 obo! Call Pam 541-788-6767 or Bill 541-480-7930

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... Winnebago Aspect You Keep The Cash! 2009- 32', 3 slideOn-site credit outs, Leather inteapproval team, rior, Power s eat, locks, win d ows, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Aluminum wheels. Free Advertising. 17" Flat Screen, BIG COUNTRY RV Surround s o u nd, Bend: 541-330-2495 camera, Queen bed, Redmond: Foam mattress, Aw541-548-5254 ning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon Looking for your roof, no smoking or next employee? p ets. L ik e n e w , Place a Bulletin help $74,900 wanted ad today and 541-480-6900 reach over 60,000 readers each week. Winnebago Sightseer Your classified ad 27' 2002. workhorse will also appear on gas motor, Class A, bendbulletin.com 8' slide living rm/diwhich currently renette, new tires. spare ceives over 1.5 miltire carrier, HD trailer lion page views evhitch, water heater, ery month at no micro/oven, generaextra cost. Bulletin tor, furn/AC, outside Classifieds Get Reshower, carbon diox- sults! Call 385-5809 ide & smoke detector, or place your ad fiberglas ext., elect. on-line at step, cruise control, bendbulletin.com CB radio, 60k miles, awning, TV antenna w 882 booster, flat screen 23" TV. A M/FM/CD Fifth Wheels stereo. $2 7 ,500. 541-548-2554

MONTANA 3585 2008,

exc. cond., 3 slides, king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

1974 Bellanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

In Madras, call 541-475-6302 3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16' bi-fold door. Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating,

and bathroom,

$155 000 Call Bill 541-480-7930

Winnebago Sightseer 30'

2004 with living room slide, 48k miles, in good cond. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.

$27,900

Sell for $3500. OR For Hire Call for quote Ask for Theo, 541-260-4293

Call Dick at 541-408-2387 881

Travel Trailers Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water 8 sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $28,500Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, Or. 206-715-7120

t!" -

,

I

Arctic Fox 29' 2003, covered storage, slideout, exc. cond inside & outside 2016 tags, $14,500. 541-678-1449 or 541-410-8849

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,

You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 WILDERNESS 28' 2000, heat, A/C, shower, queen bed, nice condition. $8775. 541-548-0875 885

Canopies & Campers

Keystone Laredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-4g47-4805 Komfort Ridgecrest 23', 2008, queen bed, sleeps 6, micro 8 AC, full awning, living room slider, yule tables, outside shower, 4 closets, fiberqlass frame, as new, $11,500. La Pine call 541-914-3360

Garage Sales

Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

Eagle Cap 850, 2005 with slideout, AC, micro, frig, heater, queen bed, wet bath, exlnt cond, $16,900. 541-388-3477 leave message.

Jeep Wrangler Sahara 2012 )

aM

Inspected & Ready! Bargain Corral Vin¹239718

Spotless! 3.6L V6, 4WD, automatic, 28k miles. Must See!

Bargain Corral

oi ~

~

sa so s

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

ROBBERSON~

ROBBERSON

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998. 916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

mama

IM s s a

877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354

Ford F250, 1997 heavy duty 4x4 Supercab, 7.5 L ® s U s ARu engine, auto, 111K mi, Hwy 20, Bend. runs g reat, $ 3 750.2060 NE 877-266-3821 541-848-7295 /389-8690 Dlr ¹0354

Ford F250 4x4 1996,

$3000 541-771 1667 or 541-633-3607

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, Ford Ran er 2005 3200 gal. tank, 5hp pump, 4-3" hoses, camlocks, $25,000. 541-820-3724 Utility Trailers 16' open bed utility

4'x6'x2' box, $150. 541-977-9873

Ready for some yard work! RWD, automatic, 78k miles $9,977 Vin¹A70560

ROBBERSON ~m

sm o a

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

932

Antique & Classic Autos

Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab

Extra nice 4x4, great

mpg. Only $19,977

Vin¹541238

ROBBERSON ~

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

Corvette Cpe 2004 two-tops (glass & painted), only 44k mi. pewter/black, CD, tinted windows, local Bend car showroom cond., CD, tires 80%, clear title, everything works!A Fun car to drive. $21 995 obo 928-210-8323 More photos at www.bendbulletin.com

Mercury Mariner 2008 52,250 mi., $12,950. Bill 541-312-0066

(photo forillustration only)

Nissan Murano 2012, AWD, auto, cloth, CD, pw, pdl.

VIN ¹715664 Stock ¹44326A

© 1/3 interestin

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located © Bend) 541-288-3333

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

541-389-9214

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! Kit Companion 1994, $13,500. good cond. 26' with one slide, Reduced! to Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773 $4000. 541-389-5788

$25,979 S UBA R u

SllBNIUOWBRNO COM

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

Convertible. Fun & economical for $12,998 ROBBERSON g LIIICOLN ~

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 VWJeffa GLi 2012

Mazda Miata 1991 fun car, good shape, 5 spd. $3500. 541-410-7282 Mercedes Benz e320, 1999 wagon, white 120k mi., incl. studded tires, exc. cond., $4500. 541-318-4502.

Sporty, Fun and a manual trans. Vin¹108574 $19,977 "«o. ®

Dodge Avenger 2013, k pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. 8USARUOBSEMD.OOII Vin ¹535474 Nissan 300zx 1993 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Stock ¹83015 Glass T-tops, 877-266-3821 5-speed n/t, 41,000 $14,979 Dlr ¹0354 miles, black with tan, Stillen upgrades, high S UBA R U Subaru Forester XT performance tires & Touring 2011 44k 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. battery, excellent ¹764342 $25,995 877-266-3821 condition. For more Dlr ¹0354 information go to www.buffalois.com/ 3~0D* . Il $20,000 541-598-3750 541-318-6368 www.aaaoregonautosource.com Toyota Sienna XLE Subaru Impreza Ford Focus Wgn, 2005, 2011, silver. 33k, 2.5i 2011 149K, premium sound, ¹152414. $29,995 auto, alum. wheels, traction control, great vehicle, 25-32 mpg, $3250.

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541-848-7295 /389-8670

541-598-3750

www.aaaoregonautosource.com 940

Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside 8 out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m.

VW Beetle 2007

ROBBERSON i

Buick Skylark 1972

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Lexus ES 350 2007, blue, 63k mi., ¹015468 $19,995

$16,979

®

power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218

541-420-3277

Vin ¹229346 Stock ¹83013

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible 17K miles. No rust, no leaks, eyerything works. (photo for illustration only) Amazing originality! Nissan Frontier 2013, Photosathemmings.com SV model, Crew cab, $20,900. 541 423-1898 4x4, 5 speed trans., pw, pdl.

Infiniti I30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo.

VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,

Vin¹419869

Vans

o

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

DLR¹0205

$6,979

x-cab, long wheel base, brush guard, tool box,

$13,979

© s un mu

541.312.3986

Lug nuts for running sgl whls on 18-wheeler. $50. 503-949-4229

Hyundai Eianfra 2011, Touring, leather, auto, CD, pw, pdl. Vin ¹090677 Stock ¹82995

ROBBERSON

$29,977

Vin¹B51951

$23,979

(photo for illustration only)

P-. -,

$4,977

Looking good for $13,998

$4,999

©

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541-447-5184.

Chevy C-20 Pickup 541-521-8629 1969,was a special order, has all the exLEAR CANOPY 2003 tras, and is all original See to believe! blue, fits Ford F-350 s hort b ox , $5 0 0 . $12,000 or best offer 541-923-6049 541-410-4354.

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003, 1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen+ sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700.

$23,900.

541-419-5980

Hyundai Accent GL 1999, auto, CD. VIN ¹584982 Stock ¹44383B

Cadillac Catera 2001 S UBA R U © s uIUShRUOPSEHD.(NM s A Ru 100k mi., $1750. Call 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. for info 541-389-5488 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Chevy Cavalier 2000 Volvo S60 turbo 2009 4 door, AWD, loaded, near perfect cond. 65,400 mi. $15,500. 541-410-0922.

Check out the classifieds online Chrysler 200 LX 2012, Save money. Learn pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. to fly or build hours www.bendbulletin.com VIN ¹292213 with your own airUpdated daily (photo for illustration only) Stock ¹83014 c raft. 1968 A e r o Mercedes ML350 2003, Commander, 4 seat, $14,979 AWD, moonroof, pw, 150 HP, low time, © s u a A Ru pdl, power seats. full panel. $23,000 Vin ¹414134 obo. Contact Paul at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Stock ¹44376A

Lance camper 8'6" 2001fiberglas sides, remote electric jacks, solar panel, non-smoker, very nice condition. $7,850.

your ad, please con-

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

trailer with large gear box, new wheels and t ires, $ 70 0 O B O .

908

tact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be JaycoJay Feather made to your ad. LGT 25Z 2005 541-385-5809 LR slide, central air, The Bulletin Classified micro, AM/FM/CD stereo, TV antenna with Say "goodbuy" booster, queen walk around bed, s leeps to that unused 4-6, outside grill, entertainment center and item by placing it in shower, awning, power The Bulletin Classifieds hitch, new g a s/elec water heater. All new tires, includes spare. 541-385-5809 Clean, Great Shape. $1 1,200 541-389-8154

Ford F-150 XLT 2006Su er Cab

925

CHECKYOURAD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

Chevy '/4 ton 1982, built 350 with 450 HP and $1000 tires. $3000 obo. 541-633-8951

LIIICOLN ~

541-548-3761 UTILITY TRAILER

5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,

Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 with camper shell, good cond., $1500 OBO. 541-447-5504.

Corvette Coupe 1964 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 530 miles since frame 877-266-3821 off restoration. Runs Dlr ¹0354 and drives as new. Satin Silver color with 935 black leather interior, Sport Utility Vehicles mint dash. PS, PB, AC, 4 speed. Knock «> >irr(photo for illustration only) P offs. New tires. Fresh Toyota Sienna 2011, 327 N.O.M. All CorLE model, 7 passenvette restoration parts ger, stow-n-go seatin & out. Reduced to ing alloy wheels. $57,950. 541-410-2870 Vin ¹019106. BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K Stock ¹43981A miles, premium pack$24,999 age, heated lumbar supported seats, pan- © s u a A Ru oramic moo nroof, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe877-266-3821 engine, power every- non headlights, tan & Dlr¹0354 thing, new paint, 54K black leather interior, re a r Call The Bulletin At orig. miles, runs great, n ew front & exc. cond.in/out. $7500 brakes O 76K miles, 541 -385-5809 one owner, all records, obo. 541-480-3179 very clean, $16,900. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail MGB 1973 convertible, 541-388-4360 At: www.bendbulletin.com 4-cyl, 2-barrel carb, new manifold, new alternator 975 & rotor assembly, Automobiles brilliant red with black top, beautiful little car! $3995 obo. 541-410-9942 Chevrolet Trailblazer 2008 4x4 Pontiac Automatic, 6-cylinder, Firebird 1998 tilt wheel, power win- Subaru Outback 2012 AlcoholFunny Car dows, power brakes, 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, Current certification, air conditioning, key- auto. trans., AWD, race-ready. less entry, 69K miles. leather heated seats, Photos on craigsiist Excellent condition; AWD, power moon $25,000 obo. tires have 90% tread. 541-388-1929 r oof, a n d mo r e ! $11,995. 25,600 miles. Below Call 541-598-5111 KB O $27 , 500 933 541-344-5325 Pickups annie2657oyahoo.com

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

Honda Civic LX 2010

Loves snow and ice! Automatic, 52k miles, Vin¹511494 16,998 ROBBERSON LlllcoLN ~

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

Find It in The Bulletin Classileds! 541-385-5809

FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN

Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythoussndsof buyers andsellers of goods and services do business in these pages.Theyknow you can't beatTheBulletin Classified Sectionfor selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use.Every item is categorizedandevery caitegoiyisindexed onthe section's front page. Whether youare lookingfor a home orneeda service, your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified.

The Bulletin semng centreloregonsince sts

Subaru Outback 2006, Limited, leather, 5spd pw pdl tilt VIN ¹361575 Stock ¹44255A

® Well cared for Great on gas! Vin¹076238 15,998 ROBBERSON

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

msma

$12,979 S UBA R U NISARUOP3RMD.ODM

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

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

1000

Legal Notices LEGAL NOTICE Public Sale SECURE STORAGE

Self Storage Facility, located at 63031 O.B. Riley Rd., BEND, OR 97701, must sell the contents in 2 storage units to coll e ct past-due rents. The public sale will take place on J u ly 2 6 , 2014 at 10 0 ' c lock a.m. Registration beins at 9:30 a.m. The jo llowing units a r e currently for Sale: Lot 422, Hollie; Lot 306, Stern.

YOUR iio WILL RECEIVE CLOSETo 2,000,000 EXPOSURESFOR ONLY$250! 0 g CI s uAd i ~ N~ k

nA on N r r

Ps I A

Week o July 14, 2014

The ulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

541-385-5809

DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5weeks possible.503-772-5295. Www. ParalegalalternativeS.COm legalalt©mSn.COm

Audi A6 Quattro 2008

2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags, $5995. 541-610-6150

Drivers-START WITH OUR TRAINING OR AWD, automatic. Ready to go for only $24,977

•$t Jeep Wrangler 2005, 4 cyl. soft top, totally gone through by auto shop. Have papers. $10,400. 541-815-7408

Vin¹055921

ROBBERSON y LINcoLII ~

I M RDR

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

CONTINUE YOUR SOLID CAREER.You have options! Company Drivers, Lease Purchase or Owner Operators Needed 877-789-8518 www. CentraltrljCkdriVingjobS.COm


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