Bulletin Daily Paper 05-18-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1.5Q

SUNDAY May18,2014

Four-pagespecial section aroundSports Results onC10 Photo galleries andmoreat bendbulletin.com/ppp Elite men's winner:

Elite women'swinner:

Marshall Greene

Sarah Max MORE$Q ~~ IN C OUPONS THAN • ~ L J IN SIDE

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Northwest Travel —Avlslt

e ui ers o Lie en 's oom

in in

BUSINESS • E1

to Portland's RoseFestival. G1

Net neutrality —what an

MEDICINE

MEDICAL MARIJUANA

open Internet means.F1

Vexation,

progress

Summer COnCertS — Make the best of thoseterrible outdoor acoustics.Aa

in chronic vomiting

ContentiousprimariesFor Republicans in Kentucky, Idaho andGeorgia. A7 And in Oregon.B1-2

By Markian Hawryluk

Military recruitment-

The Bulletin

With a shrinking force, it's tougher to get in.A10

OregonMedical MarijuanaProgram cardholders, dycounty State data reveal that southwest Oregon hasthe largest share of medical marijuana patients out of total county population.

And a Web exclusiveOlympians "have bodies of Adonis and agarbage mouth," says dentist. bendbnuetin.cnm/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

More schools rushing to buy tablets By Michael Alison Chandler and Hayley Tsuknyama The Washington Post

WASHINGTON — So-

cial studies students in a District of Columbia middle school use a touch screen to

swipe through the articles of the Consti-

Related

tution. A fifth-

• Common grade teacher Core and in Arlington, iPads

Va., sends

locally,B1 video lessons to students

• Does Bend have more dispensaries than it needs? The Bulletin

Bend has one of

activities, directing home-

bound students to measure the snow drifts or follow a recipeforsnow icecream.

"It's like we didn't really miss a beat," said Blake, who teaches at Jamestown

Elementary School."W e just continued with our learning." Teachers like these are able to abandon textbooks or stretch out the academic

day because each of their students has a school-issued iPad.

See Tablets /A6

Tlllomoo

g pps tmg'

2%

pot storefronts.

There are eight licensed dispen-

1ol I

tg Clackama~ >

. 4$o

.1% Wasco Man 1.5%

Lincol

saries in Bend, the

third-highest number of any city in Oregon,

umatilla O.6% - nlon

Morrow p rog '

Crook

a owa

)

'$7%

Baker

heele

.4%

Grant

O$ol Linn

according to state

1.2%

Deschutes has theeighth-highest percent ageotcordhotdemto Oregon

Douglas

•5

2%

Malh e ur

1.3%

Harney s•

tion whether there

are enough medical

C ry

marijuana patients

3w O

in Central Oregon to support the large

K lama

Lak e

3.3%

1 .5%

1 .3%

1.2%

the map

gency department providers.

By Lily Raff McCaulou

this particular pop-

"The ED staff was quite frustrated with

The Bulletin

ulation of patients

PORTLAND — When John An-

who show up several times in a relatively

derson opened his medical marijuana dispensary, Herbalist

short period of time with this intractable

nausea and vomiting which would respond to nothing," the nursing professor at Central Oregon Community College said. SeeVomiting/A4

Farmer, a little more

than one year ago, he gave little thought to the history of its neighborhood, on the eastern edge of Oregon's largest city. Decades earlier,

GM legal unit focus of inquiry

Gresham. As both communities grew, .

the land between

was divvied up and annexed into the two cities.

Anderson's store Populationcounts are from 2013.

Nearly 4,500peopleinJosephine County (population 82,800) are medical marijuana cardholders.

*Note:Sherman, Gpliam and Wheeler counties have fewer than 50patients each, sothe state provided a totalof 72 patients and no other data. For mapping

purposes, thethree counties show an average of 24 patients ineach county.

By Bill Vlasic New York Times News Service

technically within Gresham. "To say that the

DETROIT — As GeneralMotors faces a number of continu-

gentleman who

ing investigations into its handling of a vehicle safety defect linked to 13 deaths, its legal department has become a focus of a broad internal inquiry

owned this particu-

lar dispensary was surprised to learn

Mothers Against Sources: Oregon Health Authority, PortlandState University Population Research Center David Wray/The Bulletin

he was in Gresham

was an understatement," said David

pensaries. Mothers

"I find Bend tQ be kind of a fascinating little

Against Misuse and Abuse educates peo-

experiment going Qn, just tosee how this all rolls

marijuana program and provides consulting physicians to help people qualify for the program.

stymied local emer-

had a Portland zip code. But it was

ackson HIGHEST

ple about the medical

provement project for her doctoral work in nursing practice, she learned of a group of patients that had

stretch of land between Portland and

8% ' 1.9% Coos

for a health care im-

How cities

it had been part of an unincorporated

t eschut

data. Only Portland and Salem have more dispensaries, and several other large cities have fewer, including Eugene, which has five. Some people ques-

Misuse and Abuse, said many patients grow their own pot and do not purchase medicine from dis-

4%a nd up

Only 72 peoplein Morrow County, with 11,500 total residents,have Gilliam* medical marijuana cards.

~ Multnomah1.4% Hood River1.2%

after the state began issuing licenses for

Arlington second-grade

3-3. 9 % •

LOWEST

Wash ington 0.8%

Oregon, two months

clinic manager for

ing daily messages with grammar lessons and math

1.5%

the largest medical marijuana scenes in

them in class. And Heather Blake, an

days this past winter, send-

2-2. 9 % •

Columbia 'Tol Clatsop 1.7 lo

number of pot retailers. Tristan Reisfar,

assignments flowing during the many snow

~ A L L OF OREGON:1.5% (59,177cardholders)

By Hillary Borrud

as homework so she can spend more time helping

teacher, was able to keep

H. 9%

When Maren

Nelson was looking

control pot: It's all over

Percentage of eachcounty's population with OMMPcards <1% •

LOCAL LAW

Qut. It's just an interesting little transition, because I

haven't seen any other place in Oregon that's super saturated with dtspensaries like (Bend is." ) — Rob Bovett, legal counsel for the Association of Oregon Counties

Ris, Gresham city attorney. Anderson's business was caught

into howthe company

handled the issue, according to two people with knowledge of the investigation. GM has insisted

between two cities

with wildly different rules governing dispensaries. Gresh-

that work on the ig-

nition problem was limited to a handful of midlevel employees.

am has banned all

dispensaries.

SeePot /A5

SeeLaw /A5

See GM/A7

TODAY'S WEATHER

The Bulletin

INDEX

Mostly cloudy High 59, Low37

Business Calendar Classified

page Be

Q We userecyclednewsprint

AnIndependent Newspaper

Ef -6 Community Life Gf -8 Milestones G2 Pu zzles G6 B2 Crosswords D2, G6 Obituaries B4 Sp o rt s Cf -1 0 Df-6 Local/State B f - 6 O pinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies G8

IIIIIIIIII I

Vol. 112, No. 13e, 52 pages, 7 sections 0

88267 0233 0

7

Open House SEARCH

AL L C E N T RA L O RE G O N M LS L I ST I N G S A T :

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e

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Our website makes it easier to find your next home from the comforts of your current one. ppIIIIIIIIIIIIII liiiliillllllll

See what homes are open and when on our webslte B


A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

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NATION Ee ORLD

amares u in a Ine wl By Jonathan Martin and Peter Baker

LaOS Plane CraSh —A military plane carrying senior Lao government officials crashed Saturday in awooded area as it approached an airport in the country's northeast, killing at least five people, including the defense minister and other high-ranking members of the authoritarian country's ruling party. Lao National Television showedvideo of the mangled wreckage of the plane, with smoke rising from its badly charred remains. Thefootage showed rescuers pulling awaypieces of aircraft debris and trying to dig through the remaining fuselage with shovels, as medical crews stood bywatching.

IC president approached the mayor about serving as Transportation secretary, but Castro in-

Barack Obama is preparing to

confirmation. Castro, 39, won national attention in 2012 as the keynote speaker at the Democratic National Convention, and he and

nominate Mayor Julian Castro

his twin brother, Rep. Joaquin

of San Antonio as his new secretary of Housing and Urban Development, elevating one of his party's Hispanic rising stars

popular speakers on theparty's prompted Castro' s change of fundraising circuit. Obama and heart about taking an adminis-

New YorJz Times News Service

WASHINGTON — President

Castro, D-Texas, have become the Democrats have predicat-

ed their future electoral hopes that has possible implications on appealing to the country's for the 2016 presidential race, growing Hispanic population Democrats informed about the as House Republicans have plans said Saturday. blocked their efforts to overCastro, who has often been haul the immigration system. mentioned a s a pot e ntial Obama's failure to push vice-presidential c a n didatethrough immigration legislaas part of a Cabinet shuffle

for the Democrats, would take the place of Shaun Donovan,

who would become director of the Office of Management and Budget. That job is being vacated by Sylvia Mathews Burwell, who has been tapped by Obama to be secretary of Health and Human Services and seems headed to Senate

Syria aid —The United Nations is under pressure to increase aid to nongovernmental organizations that can operate in thevast sections of Syria under opposition control, as most of the humanitarian relief sponsored by the organization ends up in thewestern slice of the country held by President BasharAssad. In the first three months of this year, more than 85percent of food aid and morethan 70 percent of medicines went to government-held areas, according to the United Nations. Next week, U.N.secretary-general Ban Ki-moon is due to reveal that inequity in his monthly assessment to the Security Council.

dicated that he preferred to stay in San Antonio. He could not be reached Saturday, and it is not clear what tration post.

The HUD job would become

AfriCan terrOr —The headsof state of five West African countries met Saturday with Western officials and agreed to share intelligence and strengthen military cooperation to combat the regional threat from the extremist Islamist group BokoHaram, which abducted more than 200 schoolgirls in northern Nigeria last month. At the request of Nigeria's president, Goodluck Jonathan, President Frangois Hollande of France organized themeeting, which was also attended bythe heads of state of Cameroon, Niger, ChadandBenin. Thegoals of the meeting were relatively modest, but meant to be a first step toward persuading the countries to work together.

available to Castro with Dono-

van's move to the budget office, replacing Burwell. She would succeed Kathleen Sebelius, who announced last month

that she was resigning as secretary of Health and Human Ser-

vices after presiding over the pressure onhim and his Demo- disastrous rollout of Obama's cratic allies from Latino groups Affordable Care Act in the fall. that have demanded in recent Although not formally part weeks that the president act to of the statutory Cabinet, the reduce deportations that break budget office position has Cabup immigrant families. inet rank under Obama, and Obama had previously tried its director can play an outsize to lure Castro to the Cabinet. role in shaping administration After the 2012 election, the policy. tion has increased the political

Turkey mine —Rescue workers removed the last remaining bodies from a stricken mine inSoma,Turkey, on Saturday afternoon asthe death toll in Turkey's worst mining accident rose to 301people, according to the prime minister's office. Thefinal recovery efforts were hampered by afire that broke out underground Saturday morning, as well as the leakage ofmethanegas, according to the energy minister, Taner Yildiz. Some ofthe 17 bodies removed overnight were so badly burned that DNA testing will be required to identify them, he said.

Si sil.AvL

Dtschuiersr

VietnameSe prateStS —Vietnamese officials signaled Saturday that further violence over adispute with China would not be tolerated, declaring that more than300 people involved in last week's attacks on for eign-owned businesseswould beprosecuted."Theyhave seriously undermined the country's image, andsuch action has to be punished," said Gen.HoangCong Tu,head of investigations at the ministry of public security. He told reporters that two Chinese workers had diedand140 were injured. The outburst of looting and arson that left scores of factories flattened was inspired byChina's deployment of a deep-seaoil rig in disputed waters about140 miles off Vietnam's coast.

CALIFORNIA WILDFIRES ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........54f-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt..... 54f -383-0370 Circulation Adam Sears...541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West..........54f-383-032f HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................54f-383-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............54f-617-7624

Big mOney duhuf —Tom Steyer, the billionaire climate activist, recently contributed $5 million to a superPACdedicated to keeping Democrats in control of the U.S.Senate, cementing his alliance with the party as the 2014campaign swings into high gear. Steyer, a retired hedge fund manager, hasusedsome of his fortune in an effort to make climate change amore potent political issue in pivotal states like Florida, lowa andVirginia. He is planning to raise $100 million to run campaigns on climate issues, including efforts to persuade lawmakers andthe Obamaadministration to block the proposed Keystone XL pipeline.

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran.........54f-383-0360 CifySheila G.Miler..........541-617-7631 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 Editorials RichardCoe.....54f-383-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home,All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....54f-383-0366 Sports Bill Bigelow............54f-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou...........54f-410-9207

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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at54f-383-0356

Duke laCrOSSe lawSuit —Eight years after three Dukelacrosse players were wrongfully accused of rape in acasethat put Durham and its police department under aharsh spotlight, a long-running lawsuit has beensettled. Under the terms of the settlement, the three players — ReadeSeligmann, Collin Finnerty and DaveEvans— will receive no money. Attheir request, the city will make a$50,000 grant to the North Carolina Innocence Inquiry Commission. — Fromwirereports

Bailey Bianco 1 The Associated Press

A paddle boarder watches astwo firefighting helicopters take onwater from the Pacific Oceanoff of San Clemente, Calif. The water-dropping helicopters were part of a larger effort combating three wildfires at the nearby Camp Pendleton Marine base.Thefires prompted about 8,400 military personnel andtheir families to be

sent home from various parts of the sprawling coastalbasebetweenLosAngelesandSanDiego. At least10 fires spanning 39 square miles have chewed adestructive path through SanDiego County since Tuesday,destroying 11 houses, an18-unit apartment complex andtwo businesses. A badly burned body wasfound in a transient camp.

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

POWERBALL

The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:

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Thousands flee, at least 25 die """"""-

in recordflooding in Balkans By Jovana GecAndAlmir Alic

lief efforts. "They come unannounced ulation — live in the affected M AGLAJ, Bos n i a area. in just a few seconds," said "Bosnia is facing a horri- Fahrudin Solak, a Civil ProPacked into buses, boats and helicopters, carrying nothing ble catastrophe," said Bakir tection official. but a handful of belongings, Izetbegovic, the chairman of Officials in Bosnia say 17 HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. tens of thousands fled their the Bosnian three-man pres- people died and more bodies (1 block West of Costco) homes Saturday i n B o snia idency. "We are still not fully could be found as water re541-323-S011 • stmrks.com and Serbia to escape the aware of actual dimensions cedesfrom dozens ofcities. worst flooding in a century. of the catastrophe ... we will Rapidly rising rivers surged have to take care of hundreds, into homes, sometimes reach- thousands of people ..." ing up to the second floors, Izetbegovic was touring sending people climbing to Maglaj, hard hit by floods. As rooftops for rescue. the waters mostly withdrew Hundreds were also evacu- on Saturday, Maglaj was covated in Croatia. ered in mud and debris, with Urinary incontinence can significantly impair your quality of life. Authorities said 25 peo- residents checking damage Incontinence can affect your work, your hobbies, and even your ple have died but warned the and bringing furniture out in death toll could rise. Tens of the streets to dry. relationship. If yoLI are making frequent trips to the restroom or "Everything is destroyed, thousands of homes were left avoid public outings dLie to leakage, we urge you to attend the without electricity or drink- but we are happy to be alive," Potty Talk. ing water. said Maglaj resident Zijad Landslides triggered by Omerovic. quarter of the country's pop-

The Associated Press

the floods also raised the risk

In th e

e a stern B o snian

of injury or death from land town of Bijeljina, some 10,000 mines left over from Bosnia's people were being evacuated 1992-95 war. The landslides Saturday after the rain-swolswept away many of the care- len Sava R i ver p u shed fully placed warning signs through flood defenses, enaround the minefields. dangering four villages outT hree months' wort h o f side the town. The peak of the rain has fallen on the region Sava flood wave was expectin three days this week, cre- ed in Bijeljina later Saturday, ating the worst floods since before advancing to Serbia. "We need everything, we records began being kept 120 years ago. are underwater," mayor Mico Observed from the air, al- Micic exclaimed. most a third of Bosnia, mostI n eastern C r oatia, t h e ly its northeast corner, resem- overflowing Sava spread over bled a huge muddy lake, with villages and farm land, sendhouses, roads and rail lines ing hundreds fleeing. submerged. Admir MalagThe rain caused nearly 300 ic, a spokesman for Bosnia's landslides in Bosnia, burying Security Ministry, said about dozens of houses and cars a million people — over a and further complicating re-

Join Meredith Baker, MD from Bend Urology and Diana Spring, DPT from Alpine Physical Therapy to learn more about your options.

Thursday. May 22nd Refreshments available at 6:45 pm Presentation begins at 7:Oopm

Located at Outside IN (Next to the Tower Theater)

845 NW Wall Street Bend Please Call 5 4 1-382-6447 to RSVP (RSVP is nof required for this free seminar)

BencIUrolo


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

T TODAY

A3

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

It's Sunday, May18, the138th day of 2014. Thereare227 days left in the year.

NEED TO KNOW

HAPPENINGS Vietnam — Moreanti-Chinese protests are planned.

HISTORY Highlight:In1944, during World War II, Allied forces finally occupied MonteCassino in Italy after a four-month struggle with Axis troops. In1642, the Canadian city of Montreal was founded by French colonists. In1765, about one-fourth of Montreal was destroyed by afire. In1896, the SupremeCourt, in Plessy v. Ferguson, endorsed "separate but equal" racial segregation, a concept renounced 58 years later in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka. In1910, Halley's Comet passed by earth, brushing it

The acoustics in outdoor venues can be terrible. Here are a few ways to make the most of the summer concert season.

third.

Clean living in a di b i rdbath

Outdoor

venues,such as Wolf Trap's

with its tail.

In1926,evangelist Aimee Semple McPherson vanished while visiting a beach in Venice, Calif. (McPherson reappeared morethan amonth later, saying she'd escaped after being kidnappedand held for ransom.) In1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed ameasure creating the Tennessee Valley Authority. In1934,Congress approved, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed, the so-called "Lindbergh Act," providing for the death penalty in casesof interstate kidnapping. In 1953, Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman to break the sound barrier as she piloted a Canadair F-86 Sabre jet over Rogers Dry Lake,Calif. In1969, astronauts Eugene Cernan, ThomasStafford and John Young blasted off aboard Apollo10 on a mission to orbit the moon. In1974, India conducted its first nuclear test explosion. In1980,the Mount St. Helens volcano in Washington state exploded, leaving 57 people dead or missing. In1994, Israeli troops completed their withdrawal from the GazaStrip as Palestinian authorities took over. Tenyears ngo: Former New York City fire commissioner Thomas VonEssenandformer police chief Bernard Kerik, lionized after the 9/11 attack, came under harsh criticism from some members of the September11 commission who said there'd been aninitial lack of cooperation between their departments. Stunning supporters, Sonia Gandhi announced she would "humbly decline" to be the next prime minister of India. Randy Johnson, at age 40, became theoldest pitcher in major league history to throw a perfect game; the lefty retired all 27 batters to lead the Arizona Diamondbacks over the Atlanta Braves 2-0. Five years ngo: President Barack Obamatold Israeli leader Benjamin Netanyahu during a White Housemeeting he needed to stop Jewish settlements and should grasp a "historic opportunity" to make peace with the Palestinians. Myanmar's pro-democracy leader Aung SanSuu Kyi went on trial, charged with violating conditions of her yearslong detention by sheltering an American man, JohnYettaw, who'd swum to her lakeside home. One year n9o: A car driven by an 87-year-old man plowed into dozens of hikers during a parade in Damascus,Va., injuring about 50 people. French President Francois Hollande signed a lawauthorizing samesex marriages andadoption by gay couples. Oxbow, ridden by Hall of Famejockey Gary Stevens, led from start to finish to win the Preakness; Kentucky Derby winner Orbcamein

Victoria Roberts/New YorkTimes News Service

Filene Center in Vienna, Va., do not usually have the long

New York Times News Service

narrow shape of a grand

don't birds get inQ •• Why fected when drirdmg

concerthall, but there are

feces-contaminated water in

ways to make

A McGowan, an ornithologist • they don't?" said Kevin

at Cornell University. "I'm

sure there is some disease transmission."

Tracy A. Woodward The Washington Post

The outdoor music season is upon us: a wonderful time

to sip wine and enjoy the fresh air and music while sitting on your favorite blanket. You know what's not so wonderful at outdoor concerts, though? The sound, which is a problem because that's sort of the whole point. Walls and ceilings play important roles in how we hear music. They absorb or reflect sound waves, or do a l i t tle

of both. A sound engineer's central challenge is managing these reflections, because

neath a layer of warmer air — sound traveling upward can reflect back down onto

the audience, fighting with the new sounds coming from the speakers in unpredictable

ways. The best tactic under these circumstances is to cre-

and treble. It helps to stop and

closeyour eyes occasionally: Our heavy reliance on vision "Flared speakers send mu- undermines fine l i stening sic in a particular direction, skills. much like a spotlight," Cox If all else fails, at least you says. "You can arrange dif- have wine. ate a focused beam of sound.

ferent directional speakers to create patterns and limit

the sound to a very focused area." When you're caught in a blast of sound like this,

you want rock-and-roll or

thor of "The Sound Book: The

area, with the stage at the

Scienceofthe SonicWonders

bottom. There's a reason that amphitheatershave been set

seconds of sound embellish the music and give you a sense of envelopment." In

the open air, the sounds drift away.

Making the best of it

Birdbath owners should try

to keep the water dean, especially if a sick bird shows up, zymes in the digestive tracts of but some contamination is in- birds andhumansbreakdown evitable,he said. most of what is ingested., both This risk is minimal for salubrious and contanunated, m ost birds, however, as they and usually disease agents do not really spend much time atte not consumed in sufficient at a birdbath, McGowan said. amounts to lead to infection. For the patrons of most feeders Abig difference is the speed andbirdbaths, thebenefits out- of birds' digestion, which is weighthe risks. much faster than that of othMany birds do have power- er vert ebrates because ofthe ful pttotedion from infection prmligious need for nutrients when it comes to eating rotten to meet their high energy and possibly diseased foods. requitements.

absorb high frequencies, so you get that robust-sounding thud when you close the door, Cox writes in his book.) As you walk, listen for the area with the best balance of bass

S •

they vastly change the sound the more upbeat jazz styles. b eing heard. Think o f a If you must go to an outdoor grand concert hall: long and c lassical concert, tr y f o r narrow, with hard surfaces. something snappy, such as That's no coincidence. baroque music. "In a concert hall, you hear reflections from the walls Amphitheater design and ceilings," says Trevor Some outdoor environCox, aprofessor of acoustic ments lend t h emselves to engineering at the University better sound than others. The of Salford in England and au- best venue is a sloped seating of the World." "Those extra

0

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0

4

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• • 0

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4

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• 8 •

I

up that way for thousands of

s

years, and it's not just to help people in the back see.

Baseball Hall-of-Famer Reggie Jackson is 68. Country singer George Strait is 62. Comedian-writer Tina Fey is44. Rapper Special Ed is40. — From wire reports

• •

"Greek amphitheaters are

amazing places," Cox says. "They seem to have used the stage area to add reflections

So how can you make the off the floor, and raised seats best of a sonicly sub-optimal prevent the sound from havsituation? ing to pass through too many For one thing, stick to heads." fast-tempo music. S o me Positioning yourself at a genres need reverberance spot with a n u n obstructed those reflecting sound line between you and sevwaves. Slow-moving piec- eral speakers will enhance es benefit from as much as your listening experience. three seconds of lingering But that's not the only factor sound. It blends the notes to- to consider when taking in an gether, lending an ethereal outdoor concert. feel. That's why cavernous First, don't sit too close churches with rock-hard, re- to the speakers. The sound flective surfaces are great they produce is designed to venues for o r gan music. reach people hundreds of feet Fast-paced music such as away, often through several rock-and-roll and h i p-hop obstructions. Putting y ourneed less: You don't want to self just a few feet away is the hear theaftereffects of a note sonic equivalent of drinking when the musicians are alfrom a fire hydrant. ready four beats ahead. Next, find the mixing desk. Outdoor venues typically The sound engineer will typhave little natural reverber- ically be located about twoance. The sound waves travel thirds of the way between the upward and outward w ith-

stage and the back of the au-

out striking anything, and the occasional objects they do strike — such as grass and human flesh — are absorbent. Even if reverb were possible, the sound engineers

dience area. If you sit nearby, you're getting the sound exactly as the engineer thinks it

should be heard. If the sound engineer has been shunted to the side of

the stage, you should wanto use it. They may have to der around before deciding keep the sound from drifting where to sit. Different surinto nearby homes. They also faces absorb sound at varyworry about the weather: In ing frequencies. (For examw ouldn't n ecessarily w a n t

a temperature inversion -

ple, manufacturers stuff car

when cool air is trapped be-

doors with materials that

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• •

BIRTHDAYS

and o t her birds rou-

tinely consume carrion, for example.One way they handle the risk is simply to digest pathogens, inciuding viruses andbacteria. Itis rare for anorganism to be both indigestible and pathogenic. People, too, are inevitably exposed to pathogens; as the old saying goes, you eat a peckof dirtbeforeyoudie. En-

acoustics.

By Brian Palmer

B~

birdbaths? 'Why do y ou t h ink

the most of outdoor

Special To The Washington Post

SCIENCE Q&A

By C. Claiborne Ray

i

I

I' I


A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

Vomiting Continued fromA1

mitochondrial issues as well.

in and know what medica-

But more research is needed to conclusively point to mito-

tions are most effective. Then care managers will follow up

coming back normal, yet

chondrial dysfunction as the with patients after the discause of CVS, much less to be- charge to ensure they get a gin to develop cures or treat- prevention plan in place and

patients continued to vomit. Doctors could treat them with

ments for it. "If you look at the litera-

anti-nausea and pain med-

ture, a lot of people undergo millions and millions of in-

T he staff w ould r u n d i agnostic test after test, all

ications to lessen their symp-

toms, but couldn't tell the patients what was causing their

v estigations, which I

illness. Within weeks, the pa-

tients would be back vomiting in the ED again. The emergency medicine doctors were stumped and began to wonder whether the patients were just "These are people who keep vomiting over and over again diagnosis," said Dr. Gillian Salton, medical director for

Central Oregon Emergency Physicians, the ED doctors at Joe Kline/The Bulletin St. Charles Bend. "Everybody Maren Nelson, an adjunct clinical faculty member at Central Oregon Community College, left, talks gets frustrated. The patient with a group of nursing students, including, from left, Madeline Winters, Katy Payne, and Anthony wants to know what's wrong Waite, after the students' clinical hours in a cafeteria at St. Charles Bend on Thursday. Nelson is leading an effort to better diagnose cyclic vomiting syndrome in the ER.

end up doing the same non-

does nothing to relieve their

system would be tremendous.

of the emergency room. With the costs of a single ED visit for CVS at $2,880, the savings to patients and the health care

f o und, The pot link There is, h owever, an are diagnosed with CVS, emerging concern about a there are treatments that help. link between CVS and chronOne study found tricyclic ic marijuana use. Some 40 antidepressants, such as am- percent of CVS patients have ytriptaline, on average, re- reported using cannabis, and duced the frequency of CVS clinicians have identified a episodes per year from 18 to separate condition, known five, cut the duration of the as cannabinoid hyperemesis episodesfrom a week to three syndrome, that causes prodays, and cut the number longed vomiting in those who of ED visits from 15 to four. smoke marijuana every day. "It's a little bit of a chicken-

epilepsy medications and cer- and-the-egg piece, because themselves in the same boat. tain supplements. Migraine many people say the marijua"There are no markers for it, treatments and other drugs na helps their nausea feel betthere's not a blood test, there's can help to abort the episode ter," Salton said. "But in some

T he patients ha d a li t tle-known condition named

cyclic vomiting syndrome, characterized by bouts of prolonged, intense vomiting that occur every few weeks or months, interspersed with periods of normal health. The

disorder has been long diagnosed in children, but only recently recognized in adults. Emergency rooms throughout the nation see scores of

not an X-ray. The history can

in its initial stages. Most CVS

be so wide and varied, all the way from somebody who has an episode three times a year to somebody like Molly (with an episode every six weeks)," Adams said. "All those factors put it in the cracks of the floor-

patients can feel when an ep- vomiting doesn't start until isode is about to start. Once people become daily marijuathe vomiting starts, however, there is often little that can be done other than to treat the

symptoms. "Essentially, the horse is out

awareness of the condition, patients are often sent home Submitted photo without a diagnosis or appro- Kristina Mcoiarmid, 21, of Eugene, has dealt with cyclic

Now Nelson and the emer- vomiting syndrome since she gency room physicians at St. was 2. Charles Bend are collaboratvisits in Bend over 12 months,

They are standardizing diag- about 10 percent of patients nosis and treatment protocols, had symptoms of nausea and and connecting patients with vomiting. They eliminated doctors who can help prevent patients whose vomiting had vomiting episodes or abort been linked to pancreatitis, them quickly when the cycle appendicitis or other diagstarts. If the effort is success- nosed conditions, and then ful, it could easily be rolled out looked at how many of the to the three other hospitals in remaining patients had visitthe St. Charles network, and ed the ED at least three times. possibly to other hospitals They were stunned to find 116 across the country. potential CVS patients. " It's insane for t h e size Moreover, it could for the first time tell patients in mis- of this community," Nelson erable condition with a horri- said. "That represents a fairly ble quality of life what is hap- healthy chunk." pening to them. As Nelson sought to learn how to better manage these

A miserable disease

patients, she reached out to the

Cyclic vomiting syndrome is much more than your garden-variety stomach bug. Patients can have episodes at any time, but they often start early in the morning, resulting in relentless nausea and repeated bouts of vomiting

Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome

or retching. Patients are of-

into a pattern of vomiting episodes every sixto eight weeks.

Association, whose founder, Kathleen Adams, happened to

be born and raised in Bend. Adams' daughter Molly had her first vomiting episode at 18 months, then a second six months later. Soon she settled "Her typical pattern for 11

years undiagnosed — she for days if untreated. Patients would wake up in the mornoften r equire e mergency ing and be the color of her room or hospital care to stop bedsheets and want to be the vomiting and to address flat," Adams said. "She would severe dehydration. Patients start vomiting every five to have been known to vomit so 10 minutes for several hours. long and violently that they She might sleep for an hour, damage their esophagus. wake up and start the process Kristina McDiarmid, 21, of again." Eugene has had CVS since The entire episode would age 2. Her episodes would go on for an average of two occur about once a month to three days. Before Adams and were so severe that she learned how to interrupt the was routinely hospitalized cycle, Molly would be admitthroughout her c hildhood. ted to the hospital every six to She was finally diagnosed at eight weeks for more than a the age of 7 and has standing decade. "Standing over the bed of orders for admission at the pediatric ward of her local a child who is retching and hospital. vomiting and that miserable During one episode, a doc- for that long, and that often tor tried a combination of the changes a family dynamic in s edative Ativan an d C o m - a big way," she said. pazine, an antipsychotic often In 1991, Adams, a nurse by used to treat migraines. The training, came across a letpain. Symptoms can continue

ter to the editor in a pediatric

cases, it seems like the cyclic na users."

Andrew Trompeter, 27, of Medford has lived with CVS for several years. Trompeter said sometimes marijuana is the only thing

of the barn and then it's just Surveys suggest that up to 2 supportive therapy, get the that keeps his nausea and percent of children might have patient comfortable," Venka- vomiting in check and allows CVS, numbers so high that tesan said. "All you can do is him to eat. His doctor has sugSubmitted photo even Adams finds them hard take care of them." gested he get a medical mariAndrew Trompeter, 27, and to believe. There are no good Patients can be given IV flu- juana card. Kateiyn Dias, 24, of Medford. estimates of how many adults ids to prevent dehydration, anTrompeter was scheduled ti-vomiting medications and Trompeter traveled to Bend in might have the condition. to travel to Bend this month to "I can tell you when I was sedatives. If the patient can be get more advice about his conMay to seek treatment for cyclic vomiting syndrome. taking Molly to the hospital put to sleep, Venkatesan said, dition from Dr. Glenn Koteen, time after time, I felt like I was the vomiting will stop. a local gastroenterologist who the only one in the world that Some 85 percent of patients is listed on the CVS website. medical journal describing cy- was dealing with this," Ad- respond to treatment to pre- Koteen has a number of CVS clic vomiting syndrome. That ams said. vent or reduce the number patients, mostly in their earled her to Dr. David Fleisher, of episodes. And that makes ly 20s, often with significant the grandfather of CVS re- Unraveling clues it all the more important for anxiety or depression due to search. Adams took Molly to While pediatric patients can doctors to recognize the con- difficult life circumstances. "It's hard to treat their nauColumbia, Mo., to see Fleisher, lean on their parents and pedi- dition. A recent survey of and on the morning of their atricians, the condition often CVS patients, however, found sea and vomiting as a sympappointment, her daughter leaves adults with little help or that 89 percent of adults pre- tom, if you don't treat the trigstarted vomiting. support. Their repeating vom- senting with CVS in the ER ger whichis depression, anxi"That was the only time I've iting episodes can carry all the left without a diagnosis. And ety and stress," he said. ever been grateful for an epi- consequences of bulimia: pro- perhaps more worrisome, 30 Yet many of these patients sode," Adams said. found weight loss, damage to percent left without a referral have had limited access to Fleisher immediately diag- teeth and throat, and frequent- to a specialist. Adults in the h ealth care, much l ess t o nosed Molly with CVS and ly, social isolation. survey averaged 15 emergen- mental health services. Many "What happens aside from cy room visits due to vomit- self-medicate with marijuana prescribed amitriptyline, an old anti-depression medica- sicknessitself,there are sig- ing and had gone to four or as much forthe stress reliefas tion that has been shown to n ificant s o cioeconomic e f five different EDs with their for their nausea. "They take it to feel better. reduce the frequency and se- fects," said Dr. Thangam Ven- symptoms. "Many o f t h ese p atients They take it to treat their anxverity of CVS episodes. katesan,an associate profesWith inroads into the med- sor of medicine at the Medical a re just bouncing into t h e iety, their depression, their ical community — her hus- College of Wisconsin, who emergency room all the time. stress. They take it because band was on the faculty at the has come to specialize in CVS Many times, they aren't being it helps them sleep," Koteen Medical College of Wiscon- cases. "All of this becomes ex- diagnosed," said Dr. Harald said. "And when you tell sin — Adams began to push tremely difficult and places a Schoeppner, a gastroenterolo- them, 'You have to stop this clinicians to research CVS, to huge burden on patients. They gist at Legacy Mt. Hood Med- for a month to see if the prostandardize diagnosis criteria have a terrible quality of life." ical Center in Gresham. "This cess starts to get better,' they and to find new treatments. Many CVS patients lose episodic nature makes it very look at you like you're crazy, In 1993, she established the jobs or drop out of college, hard to care for them." and they're reluctant because nonprofit association, which unable to overcome the reSchoeppner said most gas- obviously the marijuana is now boasts more than 800 peated episodes of vomiting troenterologi sts care for at helping them versus causing members. that leave them essentially least one or two CVS patients this." Over the next few years, disabled if not hospitalized for in their practice, and they're A lack of awareness about Molly'sepisodes decreased. days at a time. Marriages and often very difficult cases to CVS, i n c onsistent p a t ient hand-offs between providStress and excitement were relationships suffer when one manage. "The big thing is to teach ers, limited access to care frequent triggers, making partner is constantly sick. "The problem is there's the patient that they have and poor patient compliance birthdays and holidays a challenging time. The family only a handful of physicians, this, that they're not crazy or all make CVS a challenging routinely traveled on vacation people in the academic com- they're not doing it to them- disease. with an IV pump. munity mostly, who are some- selves. Validation is really a While some of those hurLike many other pediatric what aware of this diagnosis," big point," he said. "They can dles may be beyond the scope CVS patients, her vomiting ep- Venkatesan said. "You have to come in with the diagnosis, of local providers or CVS adisodes gradually transformed rely on your age-old skills of and then you get treated dif- vocates toovercome, efforts into recurrent migraine head- taking a history and coming ferently by other doctors, like like those in Bend can at least aches in l a t e a d olescence. up with a diagnosis." a genuine diagnosis, and not begin to give patients a startAt age 36, she still relies on Researchers have identi- just treated as malingering or ing point for seeking help. "These things have not the amitriptyline to keep her fied some genetic mutations drug seeking." condition in check. But a tur- that are associated with CVS, been understood well for a bulent flight over the Rocky but no smoking guns. Many Life interrupted long time, and a lot of them Mountains from Denver to her pediatric patients have been In Bend, Nelson and the have been told they're drug family's home in Durango can shown to have a defect in their emergency physicians are seeking, they're anxious, it's still setoffa recurrence. mitochondria, the energy-pro- hoping that more of the local all in their head. The same The association has now ducing portion of their cells. patients can get a diagnosis things people heard about miheld multiple scientific con- Mitochondria is passed down and a care plan. They have graines," Salton said. "So (it's ferences about the condition along maternal lines, and ge- embedded protocols for di- important) to have some valand helped to published re- netic charts have shown for agnosis and treatment into idation that everybody who search in medical journals. some CVS patients a maternal the electronic health records, told them that was wrong." Still, 20 years after Molly went family history of other dis- helping doctors to identify — Reporter: 541-617-7814, a decade without a diagnosis, orders that may be related to those cases when they come mhawryluk®bendbulletin.com boards of medicine."

CVS patients, but with little

combo worked and has since

their CVS and keep them out

Some patients also respond to

over and over again."

ten pale and listless, and can experiencesevere abdominal

help patients better manage

are futile," Venkatesan said. "One in five patients actually have surgery for it, like their gallbladders taken out, which is a pretty drastic step and it

other CVS patients still find

productive testing over and

ing on an effort to better identify and treat CVS patients.

time, the new protocols will

however, that once patients

and don't have an established

priate treatment.

become her standard treat ment. McDiarmid has also learned that stress or excite-

ment can trigger her vomiting episodes. "My family lives in Canada, and we try to go there once a year, and every time I try to go there, I get sick," she said. "Every Christmas I've been hospitalized or I've been sick

Give in the Best

Way Possible

at home. I still look forward

to it, but it's really disappointing because I miss the holiday and all the fun."

A CVS diagnosis requires at least three such vomiting episodes within a 12-month

period, interspersed with periods of no nausea or vomiting

whatsoever, and the absence of any other factors that could explain the vomiting. Without a billing code for the diagnosis, Nelson and the ED docs used the diagnosis criteria to get a better handle

on how many CVS patients were coming to the hospital in Bend. Out of 30,000 ED

a b ort

emerging episodes. Nelson hopes that, over

symptoms." Venkatesan has

there seeking narcotics.

with them. We can't tell them what's wrong with them. We

t hink

have medications to

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OHSU & DOERNBECHER F OUNDATI O N S


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Law

sue over the law. The city recently filed a l awsuit in

allow these dispensaries to get set up, are we aiding and

Continued from A1

Josephine County Circuit abetting a f ederal crime?' Court, arguing that the state Well, yeah, technically." lation of marijuana dispen- law permitting dispensaKerin added that federal saries up to the state. Even- ries should be struck down prosecutors usually prioritually, Anderson moved his because it violates federal tize extreme cases involving shop from 162nd Avenue to law. The lawsuit names the violence, drug trafficking, 122nd Avenue, which is inState of Oregon and the Or- gang activity or other extenside Portland. egon Health Authority as uating circumstances. Oregon has allowed the defendants. David Ris, Gresham's city possession of m a r ijuana And a recent court ruling attorney, said the change to for medicalpurposes since has cast new doubt over the licensing regulations was 1998. But the drug couldn't legality of the Oregon Med- made in 2010, before dispenbe sold legally until the state ical Marijuana Program. saries were even legal under Legislature passed a bill The City of Medford revoked state law. But city officials last year, allowing — and the business license of a dis- noticed which way public regulating — dispensaries. pensary called Mary Jane's opinion was drifting, and Since then, some cities and Basement, citing the sale of figured dispensaries would c ounties throughout t h e marijuana as a violation of be allowed eventually, so statehave scrambled to pass federal law. The company the city added the requiretheir own marijuana-related sued the city but, last week, ment during a regular enregulations. a Jackson County C ircuit forcementand code review "Oregon is a 'home rule' Court judge ruled in favor of process. state, and one of the stron- the city, even going on to call The city of Tualatin, on gest 'home rule' states in the the state marijuana program the other hand, is taking nation," Sean O'Day,general "unenforceable." An appeal a "wait and see" approach counsel for the League of Or- is expected. to regulating dispensaries, O'Day said there are sev- said City Manager Sheriegon Cities, said at a recent conference in Portland. eral reasons that cities have lyn Lombos. 'Iitalatin's city That means local gov- their own interest in regulat- council has passed a temernmentshave the power to ing marijuana dispensaries porary moratorium and is — zoning, stormwater treat- looking into amending its enact regulations unless a state law specifically claims ment related to fertilizer use zoning laws to prohibit disotherwise. and public nuisances such pensaries beyond next year, According to O'Day, state as smoke and grow lights, Lombos said. law regarding marijuana among others. Earlier this year, the coundispensaries does not preThere are other ways that cil considered adopting a empt local control. cities could step in to regu- business license requirement But that legal opinion late dispensaries, too. While similar to Gresham's, manhas not been fully vetted in state law requires back- dating compliance with state court. ground checks for dispen- and federal laws. "It caused some angst For now, plenty of cities sary owners, for example, — and some counties — are it doesn't include any such from the business communiplowing ahead with their requirements for dispensary ty," Lombos said. own marijuana laws. Al- employees. Business leaders worried ready, 159 of the state's 242 Gresham banned dispen- that the clause could emcities have passed temporary saries by adding a clause to power the city to shut down moratoriums on marijuana its business license regula- businesses for all sorts of dispensaries, including all tions: "No business license reasons, such as Department Central Oregon cities except shall be issued to any ... of Environmental Quality viBend. The moratoriums had business that does not com- olations or hiring practices to be in place by May 1 of ply with federal, state or city that go against federal immithis year, and are set to ex- law." gration laws. pire in May 2015. Federal law still prohibThe council voted against Many cities are also work- its the possession or sale of the requirement, 4 t o 3 . ing to enact permanent rules any amount of marijuana. Lombos said she expects that will prohibit dispensa- At a conference hosted by the council to watch how ries beyond that date. the League of Oregon Cities the l awsuits i n M e d f ord Cave Junction, a small city earlier this month, Assistant and Cave Junction play out in Southern Oregon, voted U.S. Attorney Scott Kerin, before taking up the issue against a moratorium, be- who runs a Portland-based again in the fall. cause doing so would have drug prosecution unit, said: — Reporter: 541-410-9207, meant forfeiting its right to "I repeatedlyget asked, 'If we lraff@bendbulletin.com Portland leaves the regu-

A customer

looks over the selection of medical

marijuana and other

products at Bloom Well

dispensaryin Bend earlier this month. Joe Kline/The Bulletin file photo

Pot Continued from A1 Reisfar is also amember of a citizen advisory committee for the Bend Police Department.

dispensary regulations, but police were drawn into an enforcement role when dispensary operators began to complain that other stores were violating state medical marijuana law. Bend Police Capt. Ken Stenkamp said recently that the

"Just from my humble opinion, there's not that many patients needing to purchase cannabis out there to keep department investigates crimthese places busy," Reisfar inal activities, which in Oresaid in an i nterview earlier gon does not include medical this month. "It's still cheaper pot operations as long as they to buy cannabis on the black comply with state law. "We market in this town than from don't go out and close busia dispensary." nesses," Stenkamp said. "It's Rob Bovett, legal counsel such a gray area. We're just for the Association of Oregon trying to feel our way through Counties, said it will be inter- this." esting to watch how the Bend Law enforcement has interdispensary scene develops un- vened at least once when they der the new regulations. believed a medical marijuana "I find Bend to be kind of a facility was operating outside fascinating little experiment

of state law. In August 2013,

pensaries must close. "It is not a license to operate," Fish said. Fish said the health author-

ity received only a handful of complaints that dispensaries continued to operate

after they were denied licenses. The agency investigated these complaints and when

dispensaries appeared to be out of compliance, the agency informed the owners. In Bend, the Police Department sent a letter to the Cannaco-

pia Collective, informing the dispensary that the department received a complaint that Cannacopia continued to

operate after the state denied its application for a dispensary license. The state had already

issued a provisional license to The Herb Center dispensary across the street, and state

going on, just to see how this the Central Oregon Drug Enall rolls out," Bovett said. "It's forcementtask force arrested

law prohibits more than one

just an interesting little tran-

radius. Keith Doyle, managing di-

the owner of the only medi-

sition, because I haven't seen cal marijuana dispensary in any other place in Oregon Crook County on suspicion that's super saturated with dis- of selling pot to people who pensaries like (Bend is)." were not medical marijuana The Bulletin's analysis of

state data reveals Josephine County has the highest percentage of medical marijuana patients out of its total population. The percentage of De-

patients. Bend Lt. Paul Kansky is a member of the Central

dispensary within a 1,000-foot rector of C a nnacopia, said in an interview on May 6 his

dispensary already met all the security requirements under

the new dispensary law, and it seemed unfair for the state

Oregon Drug Enforcement multi-agency task force. Kan- to issue provisional licenses sky said Friday the task force to inadequately equipped dismight not be the appropriate pensaries. Cannacopia closed schutes County residents with agency to investigate a report and Doyle is appealing the medical marijuana cards — 1.9 that a dispensary is violating state's decision to deny him a percent — is the eighth highest administrative rules, but the license. Doyle posted a note on in the state, after Jackson, Cur- team would likely investigate the door of Cannacopia, critiry, Coos, Lincoln, Douglas and any report of drug trafficking cizing the state for forcing his Tillamook counties. by a dispensary. dispensary to close while othOnly 21 cities have licensed The Oregon Health Author- ers managed to remain open dispensaries. ity oversees medical pot pro- while applying for licenses. The number of dispensaries vidersand is preparing to be- He called upon Cannacopia in Bend continues to shift on a gin enforcement. Karynn Fish, customers to boycott a di sweekly basis, as some stores an agency spokeswoman, said pensary in Bend that Doyle closed because they did not the three inspectors for the believes complained about meet new state regulations, Oregon Medical Marijuana Cannacopia. such as a prohibition on more Program will begin inspecting Michael Hughes, a lawyer than one dispensary within a all the licensed dispensaries in who represents Cannacopia 1,000-foot radius. The large a couple of weeks, something and other marijuana businessnumber of dispensaries in they are required to do within es around the state, said the Bend also has not deterred the first six months after the dispensary believed it could more people from getting into new state regulations took continue to operate throughthe business. The Good Leaf effect. out the license application dispensary has a provisional Fish said the health author- process. "They were operating license and plans to qualify ity issued provisional licenses under the same assumption for a regular license and open to many dispensaries to pro- that everybody else was after Monday,according to Kevin vide time for them to install March 1," Hughes said Friday. Fehrs, whose wife is in charge expensive security systems. Stenkamp, with the Bend "Because it's expensive to Police Department, said the of the dispensary. As the medical marijuana build out a security system, market will probably resolve landscapeshifts,so too does the Oregon Health Authori- any overabundance of marilaw enforcement's role in its ty allows people to apply and juana stores. "Let's see what's regulation. meet all the other require- still here in a year," Stenkamp The Bend Police Depart- ments except th e s e curity sard. ment was not searching for system. They have 60 days to — Reporter: 541-617-7829, violations of th e new state get that." In the meantime, dishborrud@bendbulletin.com

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

Poorer health of patients on Medicaid may raisecosts By Robert Pear New Yorh Times News Service

W ASHINGTON —

Sur-

gery patients covered by Medicaid arrive at the hos-

pital in worse health, experience more complications, stay longer and cost more than patients with private insurance,

a new study has found. The study, by researchers at the University of Michigan, may offer a preview of what to expect as millions of unin-

sured people qualify for Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act.

Although Medicaid patients in the studywere generally younger than the privately insured patients, they were twice as likely to smoke and

had higher rates of conditions that made surgery riskier. The study, published this month in the journal JAMA

Surgery, analyzed data on nearly 14,000 patients who

in Michigan from July 2012 to address these issues pre-opJune 2013. eratively, we can cut down Dr. Darrell Campbell, chief the problems we see after an medical officer of the Univer- operation." sity of Michigan Health SysAbout half the states have tem, who led the study, said: expanded Medicaid,and the "The Medicaid patients were White House is urging others sicker, and they did not do as to do so. well following surgery. They The Michigan researchers stayed in the hospital longer, reported these findings: • In the month after their and that increases the cost." Michigan has just expand- operations, the Medicaid paed Medicaid, and nearly half tients had two-thirds more a million people may become complications and were more eligible. Since the state began than twice as likely to die, taking applications on April compared with those on pri1, more than 237,000 people vate insurance. have enrolled. • Medicaid patients typi"We supported the expan- cally needed extra time in the sion of Medicaid because it hospital — three days, on avmeans that we can get pa- erage, rather than two — and tients into medical care and were more likely to return afget them into optimum shape ter being discharged. for an operation," Campbell • Medicaid patients "had said in an interview. "For a more emergency operations diabetic, if blood sugar is out and used 50 percent more of control, that increases the chances of a wound infec-

had operations at 52 hospitals tion after surgery. If we can

hospital resources than patients with other k i nds of insurance."

IN FOCUS:HOLLYWOOD AUCTIONS

By Daniel Miller Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — From the moment A J P almgren learned of Lot 397, he knew he had to have it. But he had never bid at an

auctionbefore, and as he took a seat toward the back of the gallery, his nerves took over. "I hoped I wasn't going to space out," he said. A mustachioed auctioneer

was disposing of lots quickly, sounding off prices and signaling winners with a rap of his gavel. Nearby, several employees sat at a long table, receiving bids from clients on the telephone and Internet. All around them, collectibles gleamed behind glass in hulking display cases.

Cheryl A. Guerrero / Los Angeles Times

A giant statue of David Hasselhoff was set to be auctioned in Beverly Hills, Calif., last month. But before the first bid, the item was pulled. Turns out, the actor had grown attached to the prop and decided to keepit.

It was time for Lot 397.

P almgren fidgeted in h i s seat, gripping paddle No. 129 tightly. Early online bidding had already pushed the price to $3,700. P almgren l i stened a s auctioneer Michael Doyle shouted out the asking price. Palmgren made his move.

auctions of collections related to or from Cher, Barbra

Lot 271, a taupe corduroy ensemble worn by early Holly-

Streisand, the Beatles and

wood star Mary Pickford in the 1921 movie "Little Lord

Michael Jackson. T his weekend, a

m u - Fauntleroy" sold for $11,000,

sic-themed auction in N ew York, featured items con-

well above a pre-auction esti-

"Sotheby's and Christie's

the auction catalog in his lap was filled with neon Post-it notes.

mate of $6,000to $8,000. nected to Madonna, Bruce Although only about 10 S pringsteen an d Elv i s people sat in the galleryH e t h r ust h i s pa d d l e Presley. and few were bidding — a into the air, making a bid As part of the company's slight man in a yellow baseat $4,000. The room fell si- for-the-masses bent, its auc- ball cap perked up when the lent. Doyle asked whether tions are free and open to the auctioneer called out Lot there were any other bid- public. 274. He cradled an iPad, and ders. Palmgren scanned the

gallery, trying to suppress a smile. When the gavel came down, Palmgren let out a "whoop!" that sent the room into wild applause.

... they have this persona that you have to be a moneyed person to attend — that's one of the things that we've tried to break down," said Darren

The item, a pale green beaded gown worn by actress

C a r ol e L om b a rd,

Julien, the company's foundHe'd just won th e f r ont er and president. "We want bumper of a KITT car from fans here. You never know the 1980s television series who is going to become a "Knight Rider." long-term client." The company puttingon

loomed large for Brown. He'd acquired the dress at a

the event, Julien's Auctions,

in "Doomsday," he said. But Brown later researched the gown and found a publicity image of Lombard wearing it, establishing a higher-profile provenance. Bidding began at $3,500 and increased in $250 incre-

A personalcollection

had expected the item, beBefore jerseys worn by Iceing sold by star David Has- T's pet bulldogs and lifeguard selhoff, to fetch as much as buoys used by Hasselhoff on $800. But Palmgren, 42, a "Baywatch" could b e a u ccommercial real estate inves- tioned, the first day's aftertor who has dubbed himself a noon session started off on "Knight Rider" historian, be- a serious note: the sale of 99 lieved he had scored a deal at lots from Glenn Brown, a colfive times that much. lector of film costumes who "I have a special place in long worked in movie studio MGM's archives department. my home for it," he said.

Christie's auction in 1990 for $1,000. At the time, it was de-

scribed as having been worn by actress Florence Vidor

ments. At first the contest

was between several online and phone bidders, but most dropped out when the man

in the yellow cap entered the fray at $6,000. From there, he Palmgren was at a swanky stead spent the day taking went up against a bidder who auction in Beverly Hills, but care of his 92-year-old father was on the phone with Nolan. the two-day event last month in Dana Point. The price shot past $10,000 "It's an emotional thing. and kept rising in $1,000 inwasn't your typical sale of Old Masters paintings or vin- I 've had th e s tuff f o r 4 0 crements. The man in the cap tage wines. years," said Brown, who signaled his bids with a nod, He's just the sort of buyer amassed most of his collec- or by calmly raising his hand. that Julien's cultivates. tion at a 1970 auction of items The phone bidder pressed "For me, that is th e r eowned by MGM, acquiring on, and Nolan whispered into ward — when you have given 1,500 costumes, props and the microphone of his mobile someone like him the chance furniture for a total of $1,500. phone's headset, keeping his to buy something important The auction began with client apprised. to him," said Martin Nolan, two costume pieces from the When Nolan's bidder ofexecutive director of Beverly 1937 MGM film "The Good fered$27,500,auctioneerTim Hills-based Julien's. "He may Earth." Expected to fetch as Luke set his sights on the take a few months to pay off much as $400, the lot went for man in the cap. "I need an even $30,000, his credit card, but for him, $450. The next two items — a he has a treasure." costume from the film "The looking for $30,000, one more Founded in 2003 by a for- Student Prince in Old Hei- at $30,000," Luke intoned. mer Sotheby's consultant, Ju- delberg" and a prop from Hal "Are we done? Fair warning." lien's is a major player in the Roach Studios — didn't sell. It The gavel cracked. Phone world of Hollywood memora- was a middling start. bidder No. 825 had won the bilia. The company has held But things would heat up. dress.

Not elitist auctions

Brown, 68, couldn't bear to attend the auction and in-

Tablets Continued from A1

pho e Ad htp d 58AI

One-to-one computing — in

which each student receives a computer for Internet access and digital learning — took root with laptops in schools well over a decade ago, but it has gotten a huge boost in recent years with the advent of lower-cost tablet computers.

NS

U.S. schools are expected to

purchase 3.5 million tablets by the end of the year, according to industry analysts, giving students access to an array of modern educational

.14rr '

'

Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post

Ingrid Soracco scans the QR code for her iPad book report at

Jamestown Elementary School in Arlington, Va. Soracco is in a the technology. Worldwide, second-grade class that is part of a pilot program in which stuK-12 spending on tablets has dents get IPads that they can take home to work on assignments, opportunities that come with

increased 60 percent over last

like book reports that include QR codes to launch digital versions.

year.

Rebootingeducation The rush for schools to buy tablets and other computers comes ahead of a looming deadline for new online standardized tests, scheduled to be introduced next year in 45 states that signed on to the

book. It's turning the page. It's Education. "If you need help, ask your interacting with other classmates," Foster said. "It's that neighbor or scan the QR code person-to-person communi- on your w orksheet," said cation that is still the most important piece of our instruc-

Tanesha Dixon, their social

tion. Teachers feel strongly

studies teacher. "You have four minutes," she added, indi-

about that."

cating the iPad timer she had

new national Common Core In the Washington area, stu- displayed on the television at learning standards. dents in hundreds of schools the front of the classroom. But many advocates for ed- already have access to tablet As the clock ticked down, ucation reform, including U.S. computers. The vast majori- the teens peeked at one anE ducation Secretary A r n e ty are kept in classrooms or other's screens, sharing ideas Duncan, see the scaling up rolled around on communal a bout which ar ticle of t h e of classroom technology as a carts, but more schools are Constitution answered the much bigger opportunity to re- giving the devices directly to question Dixon had posed. think schools, to untether them students. Dixon quietly told students to from a calendar designed in In addition t o A r l i ngton, get ready to share their own an agrarian era, a bell sched- which has a one-to-one pilot answers with the class via Apule that tells students when program in every school, Vir- ple's screen-sharing AirPlay and where to go, and a teacher ginia's Prince William County feature. in the middle of the classroom is preparing to give tablets to who is considered the source all freshmen and sophomores Engaging students of all knowledge. at three high schools next fall The introduction of individ"Before, it was more sit and as part of new state grant pro- ual tablets to the classroom get," said Leslie Wilson, chief gram for struggling schools. during the past two years has executive of the One-to-One Prince George's C ounty, helped some of her students Institute, which advises school Maryland ha s p u rchased blossom, Dixon said. Children districts. "In this transformed more than 4,500 iPads for pro- who never pipe up in dass ping environment, students can di- grams in select classrooms at her constantly with emails. rect their own learning." more than 60 high-poverty And the data that the tablets Computers can help stu- schools, and officials in Alex- and online curricula can coldents learn at their own pace, andria, Va., are considering lect has proven invaluable for based on what they know updating a decade-old laptop her and her students' parents. rather than on whatever class program with tablets starting Parents can see online what they are in. Experts say this next year. Fairfax County, their children did in dass that can be particularly helpful for Va., invites students to bring day, and they also can sign in a ninth-grader who reads at a their own devices to school, on their own computers to look fourth-grade level. Comput- another increasingly popular at information such as their ers also have the potential to approach. child's grades. engage students through the Wilson and other technoloIf a student does poorly on a same kinds of games, videos gy advocates say that in many quiz or is struggling with a topand social networks that cap- districts, the impulse to buy ic, Dixon knows immediatelyto tivate them during their free cheap computers is wildly out- drill down and provide custom time. pacing school districts' abili- assignments. But offering every student ties to accommodate them and She has, however, been haman easy window to the Web use them in meaningful ways. pered from pushing too much raises steep challenges for of the curriculum online. If school districts. They must Big business students don't have the same provide enough bandwidth The steady growth and technology access at home that and professional development,

and they have to have enough

stability of the K-12 market, combined with the excitement

they do at school, they can fall

trict of Columbia's Trinidad

Student Zachary Kjiri said

behind. "All this rich learning stops from school districts, is endevices from becoming easy couraging all kinds of technol- at 3:15," Dixon said."They leave tools for the distractions of on- ogy companies to hawk their andit's like ... a digital canyon." line shopping or instant mes- tablets for classroom use. District of Columbia officials saging that could easily lure Apple, which has a long his- said that while they are increasstudents away from their math tory of marketing to schools, ing access to technology in the classes. is leading the pack with a schools, they are not sure that There are no recent nation- market share of more than 90 sending computers home is al counts of districts that issue percent in 2013, said Interna- the best approach, particularly their students tablets or lap- tional Data Corporation se- when many students would be tops, Wilson said. nior analyst Rajani Singh. But carryingthe expensive equipBut many d i stricts have Google and its less expensive ment on public transportation launched ambitious efforts in (about $150 each), lightweight and when an unknown numthe past few years, including Chromebooklaptops are gain- ber of students lack reliable Ina laptop initiative approved in ing ground quickly. School ternet accessathome. Baltimore County, Maryland districts also are turning to School leaders in Arlington this spring and a $1 billion other tablets that run Google's hope to use the tablets as a way effort in Los Angeles, the na- Android operating system to bridge the digital divide, as tion's second-largest school or low-cost e-readers such as well as other gaps in the kinds district, to give every student Amazon.com's Kindle. of learning resources that chilan iPad. That plan has been Some nontraditional com- dren have at home. By giving fraught with problems, in- panies have created arms students devices loaded with cluding an investigation into devoted entirely to education educational games and books its bidding process and inad- technology, such as News and videos (along with direcequate filters, which students Corp.'s Amplify, run by former tions to neighborhood WiFi quickly broke through to ac- New York City schools chan- hotspots), theyhopetheir learncess non-educational content. cellor Joel Klein. ing will continue even if no one The infusion of new techSeveral start-ups are dedi- at home can read to them or nology also raises troubling cated solely to education tech- help with homework. questions for educators and nology, creating apps that Plans for a di s t r ictwide parents. Many worry that the teachers and students can use rollout of computers are in seven hours a day an aver- on their new devices to cre- flux now, but the number of age child already spends us- ate seating charts or simulate teachers piloting one-to-one ing electronic media is more a frog dissection or analyze programs isexpected to grow than enough and that the art poems. next year. The teachers all use of teaching will be reduced Textbook publishers have the tablets differently and plan to connecting students to the moved quickly to capture the to share what works with their most helpful apps or software. growing digital market — and colleagues. Some question the notion of stay in business — by creating For Virginia teacher Kathabuilding major change around interactive electronic books rine Hale's fifth-grade dass at a device that did not exist five with videos and multimedia Abingdon Elementary School, years ago. features that can be updated many lessons actually start afThat debate is playing out regularly. ter the school dayends. Her stuIt's questionable whether dents use their iPads to watch now in Arlington, where the school board recently voted switching to online textbooks videos that Hale has recorded against a proposal by Super- can save money. Typically, dis- from her desk at school or her intendent Patrick Murphy to tricts buy textbooks every six dining room table about the give tablets to all students in years. But given how quickly order of operations in math or second and sixth grades next tablets can become outdat- how to identify different kinds year, part of a longer-term ed, procurement cycles have of nonfiction essays. plan to give tablets to every shrunk to two or three years, The videos are short — ofstudent a device by 2017. said Jay Diskey, executive di- ten just five minutes, followed Darryl Joyner, an instruc- rector of the PreK-12 Learning by a short quiz or activity. But tional technology coordinator Group division at the Ameri- the activities provide feedback for Arlington schools, echoed can Association of Publishers. thatsaves her precious classother school leaders when he At the same time, a growing room time the next day. Based said he thinks of it not as a number of free, open-source on how well they understood technology initiative, but as instructional m a t erials i s the material, she is able to iman "opportunity to completely available online. mediately break students into change instruction and do it Eighth-graders at Wheatley groups or work with them better." Education Campus in the Dis- individually. network control to prevent the

But most teachers are not interested in dramatic change

neighborhood spent a recent he likes being able to watch through technology, said Jaim morning tapping and swiping thevideosmore than once and Foster, president of the Arling- their way through the U.S. knowing that he can text his ton Education Association. Constitution on their iPads. teacher if he has questions. "Best practice is still with The students were using a "It's kind of like bringing your "Techbook" from Discovery teacher home," he said. a live teacher. It's holding a


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A7

LOOKING AHEAD:2014 MIDTERM ELECTION

As GOP targets Harry Reid, voters

are asking 'who?' By Kathleen Hunter Bloomberg News

petitive Senate races have been invoking Reid on the

WASHINGTON — Repub-

stump, m campaign ads and

licans are invoking a harrowing image of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to lure independent voters away from

in fundraising memos as they work to help their party win the net six seats needed

to secure a majority in the Democrats an d mo t i vate 100-member chamber. their party base ahead of NoThe Republican National vember's election. Committee released an April The strategy has a big 22 memo criticizing Reid, arglitch: Almost half the voters guing that "firing Harry Reid don't know who Reid is. from his position as majority Republicans needn't worry leader" was a reason to vote too much, though, as Reid's Senate Democrats out of ofline of attack against them fice in November. isn't muchbetter. He's focused Reid figured prominently on an even lesser-known pair in North Carolina Republiof bogeymen, the energy bil- can Thom Tillis's acceptance lionaire Koch brothers, who speech after securing the parare financing a number of ty's U.S. Senate nomination. pro-Republican groups. Tillis, the state House "To normal i ndependent

speaker, told supporters that

voters, the most obscure sto- his "primary mission" is to ry possible would be a fight defeat Democratic incumbent between Reid and the Koch Kay Hagan "and make Harbrothers over Benghazi," said ry Reid irrelevant." He addJohn Pitney, a political scien- ed that Hagan and Reid "are tist at Claremont McKenna

nothing but an echo chamber

College in Claremont, Calif., for President Obama's worst in a reference to the 2012 at- ideas," according to the News tack on a Libya diplomatic and Observer of Raleigh. post that left four Americans Colorado Rep. Cory Garddead. ner, who is challenging first"Most normal human be-

term Democrat Mark Udall,

ings outside of the state of ¹

pledged "to make Harry Reid vada neither know nor care a footnote in history." And in who Harry Reid is. I'm sure Georgia, Rep. Paul Brounmost people associate the one of a half-dozen RepubliKoch brothers with a certain cans seeking to win a May 20 colabeverage," Pitney said. primary take on Democrat Unlike presidential cam- Michelle Nunn — referred paigns, elections held in the to Nunn in an email to supmiddle of a White House porters as "the anointed canterm tend to lack broad didate of the president, first themes and big personalities. lady and Harry Reid." Even so, that hasn't stopped Reid said on the Senate leaders in Washington from floor May 13 that an unidentrying to latch onto Reid and

the Koch brothers to personify the traits of the other party that could turn voters away.

e Li icanesa is men aces ess rom eri in rimaries

tified Democratic senator had told him he wished Republi-

cans would go after Reid in his state because "nobody

Democrats had some luck knows who you are." "They are getting desperwith a similar strategy in seizing on a series of Repub- ate for something to change lican scandals in 2006 and their tune," Reid said. rode a t hrow-the-bums-out New York Sen. Charles campaign to the House ma- Schumer, the chamber's No. jority. During the 2010 mid- 3 Democrat, said the Repubterms, Republicans joined a lican strategy won't work in grassroots rebellion against the November m atch-ups, the passage ofObamacare while his party's plan to tart o regain c ontrol o f t h e get the Kochs will. "I think the Koch brothers chamber. Other messages flopped. are an issue — the fact that To try to salvage their ma- three or four wealthy people jority, congressional Republi- can set the whole agenda in cans in 2006 attempted to use this country," Schumer said. a family's fight over whether The Kochs' political spendto keep alive Terri Schiavo, ing makes them a target. Reid a Florida woman in a vege- Thursday called them"a coutative state, as an emblem of ple of billionaire oil barons" their support for the sanctity who were staging a "bid for of life. It never caught on with a hostile takeover of Amervoters. ican democracy" designed In this year's election, Re- to "make themselves even publican candidates in com- richer."

weeks, as a former U.S. attor-

WASHINGTON — Mitch Mcconnell, the Senate's most powerful Republican, will get his first big 2014 electoral test Tuesday as he faces a tea party

an internal investigation that

But a review of internal documents, emails and interviews

is being closely watched by lawmakers, federal regula-

paint a different picture, showing that high-ranking officials, particularly in GM's legal department, led by the general counsel Michael Millikin, acted with increasing urgency in the last 12 months to grapple with the spreading impact of

tors and Justice Department investigators. Transportation

defective ignition switches.

A number of departments in the company stepped up efforts to fix the switches once

Kentucky's Republican primary is the main attraction Tuesday, when six states will provide the biggest day of tests yet for the Republican establishment and the grass-roots tea party movement, which has roiled the party. Two other states will be closely watched for clues about who's winning the struggle

with tw o

ber of over-50 voters to show

W a shington out-

up, and they tend to be more

nomination. In Idaho, veteran

analytical and less angry at the government than tea party loyalists are. Handel is a wild card, since she's used social media extensively to boost her candidacy, and Perdue has positioned himself as the outsider candi-

Related

Rep. Mike Simpson is battling

• Oregon tea party favorite primary B r y an Smith. coverage Underscorandvoting ing all of it is a info,B1-2 strong a n t i-in-

date. A Handel-Perdue runoff

symbolizes insider Washington like McConnell, who's

that voters wanted little to do with Washington incumbents.

in. Even if Bevin loses — and he's far behind in a recent poll

"'If we hate Washington, if

the chief executive officer of

and three deaths, according by The New York Times. And complaints from owners about

vehicles suddenly stalling continued to be made on the safety agency's website.

in the Melton case forced their

hand. GM had conducted at least

eight separate internal inquiries into switch problems dating to 2004 by the time its chief

But the company has conceded that more fatalities

Melton case last April 29. DeGiorgio testified to the

could be linked to the problem,

Melton family's lawyer, Lance Cooper, that he had never approved a change in the switch, despite evidence presented by Cooper that GM made significant upgrades to the part sometime in 2006.

from the Justice Department

Documents later obtained

by regulators from GM, howthe family of Brooke Melton, a ever, show that DeGiorgio did Georgia woman who died in a authorize major changes to

of information brought to its

and the Securities and Ex- attention in the Georgia case. change Commission, intently Yet from the time that GM focused on whether GM's top employeesbegan giving depoofficers deliberately ignored sitions in the case in April 2013

the switch in 2006.

Three other midlevel employees — Gary Altman, Brian Stouffer and Victor Hakim

— were deposed in the weeks after DeGiorgio. It would have

o u t l ook f o r

Kentucky

Connell's lifetime American

A recent NBC News-Marist

the chairman of a powerful appropriations subcommittee and close to Speaker John

Boehner, R-Ohio. The conservative Club for Growth Political Action Com-

mittee made Simpson an early target, endorsing Smith last July and branding Simpson's record "atrocious." The club spent hundreds of

poll found McConnell ahead thousands of dollars to boost among likely Republican vot- Smith — and then last month ers, 57 to 25 percent. Still, tea it apparently stopped, accordparty backers have surprised ing to The Idaho Statesman. "We're in a constant state of the experts before, and even if he wins, McConnell's totals assessing and reassessing our will be scrutinized for clues to races, moving resources in voter sentiment. and out — depends on the day or week," said club spokesGeorgia man Barney Keller. Three ca n d idates ar e Idaho tea party candidates thought to be in the running are having a rough time, said for two top spots in Georgia's

Marty Peterson, a

Republican Senate primary. If no one gets a majority of

Boise-based political activist who's a member of The Idaho

votes, the top two f i nishers

Statesman editorial board.

will compete in a runoff July 22. Polls find that top tier in-

v e teran

"They are saying, 'We are the true Republicans,'" he said of the tea party, but people

cludes former Secretaryof are well aware that Simpson State Karen H a ndel, busi- has a strong conservative nessman David Perdue and voting record. Simpson's lifeRep. Jack Kingston — and not time American Conservative Reps. Phil Gingrey and Paul Union record is 81.96, not Broun. Broun was once seen

in the league that tea par-

as the darling of the tea party

ty activists would like but

movement, but the Tea Party

well in the ballpark for a true conservative.

Express is behind Handel.

also asked to produce documents about a possible switch

23. His testimony, it became er, Delphi, in mid-October for clear, had th e p otential to information about the switch. "It's been a long time since alteration, but by mid-July, it crack GM's wall of secrecy on had failed to do so. the switches. we communicated," Stouffer About the same time, the For more than a year, Fed- wrote to a Delphi executive, head vehicle defect investiga- erico was in charge of an in- Gary Greib. "I am working on tor for the National Highway ternal i n v e sti- an investigation for the ChevTraffic Safety Administration g ation into t h e rolet Cobalt and was looking sent GM a letter, dated July 23, troubled switch for some help." with a blunt accusation: The and had sought Over the next two weeks, a company was slow to act on a r ecommen d a team of Delphi employees dug number of safety problems. tions from staff- up the evidence that had eludThe letter was circulated Barra ers on how to fix ed GM on its own for years. widely among prominent GM it. He was also a "Hey Brian," Greib wrote to executives with safety re- top lieutenant to Mary Barra, Stouffer on Oct. 29. "We besponsibilities, including two GM's chief executive who, at lieve we found the change vice presidents for product, the time, served at its global records." John Calabrese and Alicia product development chief. Those r e c ords s h o w ed Boler-Davis, who is now GM's Then, on th e day b efore conclusively that the ignition chief quality officer. Also in- Federico was to be deposed by switch in GM's small cars had cluded was the company's vice Cooper, the lawyer represent- been drastically improved in presidentfor regulatory af- ing the Melton family, GM's 2006 withouta corresponding fairs, Michael Robinson, and a legal department stopped his change in the part's identificatop engineer, Jim Federico. testimony in its tracks. tion number. A copy of the letter also After more than two years More important, no safewent to Gay Kent, GM's direc- of fighting the lawsuit, GM ty recall had been ordered at tor of product investigations, lawyers made a surprise of- the time for vehicles equipped who had been involved in safe- fer to mediate and settle the with th e o r i ginal, f aulty ty issues relating to the Cobalt case. After first rejecting a switch. as far back as 2006. Anoth- settlement figure proposed by That discovery was then er copy was sent to William the Melton family, a GM offi- circulated to an undetermined Kemp, one of the automaker's cial, Trish Jankowski, turned number of GM employees intop product liability lawyers. around and accepted the deal. volved in evaluating the need While the letter plainly stated It was the fifth confiden- for a recall. that GM was delinquent on re- tial settlement approved by By the time a senior safety solving safety issues, it did not GM lawyers in fatal accidents committee met i n m i d -Degalvanize the company to ad- involving vehicles equipped cember, employees in several dress the switch defect. with defective ignitions. GM departments — including That happened only after But the legal strategy could engineering and regulatory Federico was on the verge of not control the damage at GM affairs as well as product intestifying under oath in t he much longer. vestigations and legal — had Melton case. Only after the settlement some knowledge of the switch was completed in September problems.

sizable effect on their careers: settlements Altman and DeGiorgio were Surprise

did GM set in motion events

suspended with pay after the

that would lead to its huge

until the end of the year, there recall, and Stouffer retired. Of switches in some of its vehi- have been at least 112 crashes the four, only Hakim is activecles. The toll on management involving the now-recalled ve- ly employed at GM. GM's legal department was is expected to grow in coming hicles, resulting in 122 injuries

the need to fix faulty ignition

H ere's th e

Atlanta-based InsiderAdvan- Conservative Union rating is tage, a political media and 90.16 (out of 100), a solid conpolling firm. servative showing. "We don't expect the same Some Bevin miscues have

crash data and complaints do not appear to have spurred GM employees and executives to find answers about the switches until the settlement

Cobalt crash in 2010.

Timothy D. Eaeley/The Associated Press

Senate Republican leader Mltch McConnell of Kentucky, left, faces

people in Congress, we must In 2010, tea party hero Rand hate you more (than) anybody Paul upset McConnell's Senelse,'" said political analyst ate candidate, Trey Grayson. Charlie Cook. McConnell took notice. "I Establishment candidates don't think any other Repubhave rebounded this year so lican candidate has prepared far. They've been ready for the for this kind of primary bettea party challenges. In many ter than him," said Scott Jencases, insurgents have proved nings, a Louisville, Ky.-based to be poor candidates or un- R epublican s t rategist w h o able to mobilize the same pas- was a political adviser to Pression that boosted the tea par- ident George W. Bush. ty when it became a political The Tea Party Patriots Citforce in 2010. izens Fund, as well as other Turnout in state after state conservative groups, is beis expected to be very low, hind Bevin. McConnell has meaning the nontraditional been able to counter with a grass-rootsvoters the tea par- "strong conservative record," ty attracts are more likely to said Brad Shattuck, a Lexingstay home, said Matt Towery, ton, Ky.-based consultant. Mc-

lies of crash victims and other

Despite its agreement Fri-

Simpson is another con-

we hate Congress, if we hate Tuesday: what's going on and you're one of the most ... powerful

Idaho summate Washington insider,

a primary challenge from Louisville businessman Matt Bevln. — a strong showing by the challenger would signal that McConnell is in for big trouble degree of impassioned voting also helped, notably the chalin the general election against this year," he said. People are l enger's appearance at a likely D emocratic nominee somewhat better off econom- pro-cockfighting rally. Bevin Alison Lundergan Grimes. ically, and voters have soured said he thought it was a rally People are thinking that, on the political system. for states' rights.

any of the accidents. But the

day to pay a $35 million penDocuments show that GM alty, the automaker faces sev- restarted its nearly dormant eral investigations, including internal investigation because

eEyrseB~~

Senate. McConnell is being challenged in the primary by Louisville businessman Matt Bev-

switch engineer, Raymond DeGiorgio, was deposed in the

day before.

would be seen as evidence

seeking his sixth term in the

er and deactivate air bags.

suddenly settled the case the

e

sider mood. And no one on the ballot Tuesday

had about defective switches with regulators most likely cost lives in accidents. "Literally, silence can kill," Foxx said in a news briefing.

likin or any other executives even asthe number of GM available for interviews. Since employees involved in switch the recall began, four senior investigations was steadily executives have resigned or eXpaildlilg. left the company, including a A turning point came in top engineer who avoided be- September, when GM lawyers ing deposed in a lawsuit last unexpectedly approved a setsummer when GM l a wyers tlement of a lawsuit filed by

Turnout is key. Towery ex-

sidersfor the party's Senate

its actions secret from famioutsiders. GM declined to make Mil-

O2014 MCT

pects a disproportionate num-

ness to share information it

depositions threatened to enGM has said that it knows snare senior officials. of 13 deaths tied to the failure And as the automaker final- of ignition switches, which lybegan to face up to the issue, caused Chevrolet Cobalts and GM lawyers moved to keep other cars to lose engine pow-

Ark. Judy Treible

In Georgia, three incumbent congressmen are vying

Secretary Anthony Foxx said It is not clear whether defecFriday that GM's unwilling- tive switches played a part in

A fatal recall

Six states have Republican Senate primaries Tuesday. Teaparty challengers are on the ballot in Kentucky, Georgia and Idaho. Ky Pa. Ore. Idaho

challenger who's trying to mobilize anti-incumbent sentiment

ney Anton Valukas concludes to federalrecords reviewed Continued from A1

GOPprimaries

By David Lightman «McClatchy Washington Bureau

Federico, an executive en-

gineer who supervised hun- recall. dreds of employees in GM's A product investigator desmall cars program, was posed in the case, Stouffer, scheduled to be deposed Aug. contacted the switch's suppli-

Still, it was not until Jan. 31 that, by Barra's account,

she and other top managers learned of the defective switch. That day, the commit-

tee finally ordered the recall.


AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

IN FOCUS:SWEDEN

nta in rimea, utin ainsasea o oi reserves — t e ea By William J. Broad New York Times News Service

When R u ssia s e ized C rimea in M arch, it a c -

quired not just the Crimean

Jonathan Nackstrand I New York Times News Service

landmass but also a maritime more than three times its size with the rights to underwater resources potentially worth trillions of

dollars.

Alex Berthelsen, right, slips through subway station gates in Stockholm last month. A group known as Planka.nu, which roughly translates to free-ride.now, offers instructional videos on slipping through station gates without paying, and it uses monthly

takeover as reclamation of its rightful territory, draw-

dues to cover fines for anymembers whoare nabbed.

ingno attentionto the oil and

Fare o in as or anize re eion in s success By Matt Flegenheimer New York Times News Service

STOCKHOLM — The first

paying members, only about 15 reported being caught per month. In 2004, the group said,

target stumbled through the about 80percent of fees were Hornstull metro station here needed to cover fines. w ith her nose in her purse, too harried to notice the man si-

An arms race

dling up behind her. There have been public She swiped her fare card. A pleas from Swedish authoripair of barriers slid apart, and ties and international searches before they could close, two for a dodger-proofturnstile, train rides had been unlocked

instructional videos teaching

for the price of one. Too easy, the fare thief announced, returning through the gates. "I've got a little practice,"

new group members how to evade payment, and at least one fare-beating dog trained to open the barricades for its

said the man, Christian Teng-

owner. That maneuver: Let the ani-

blad, 32, stealing a look back at mal squeeze through the small a station agent. space beneath the gates, then Every transit network has coax it to jump up and down its fare beaters, the riders who until the sensor is set off to view payment as either option- open them. Well-developed caal or prohibitively expensive. nineleg musdes arerequired. Many cities, most notably New Most other strategies appear York, view turnstile-jumpers to involve closely following a as a top policing priority, rea- fellow traveler, using a scarf or soning that scofflaws might jacket to set off sensors on the graduate to more serious far sideof the barriers, or,for

crimes if left alone. But in Stockholm, the offendersseem to have defeated

the system.

Payingfeesinsteadoffares

the city's slender evaders, simply slipping through the sliding gates. The dodgers' ubiquity seems to have weakened the resolve of those charged with stopping

R ussia portrayed

the ont-Doherty Earth Observato-

gas rush that had recently ry of Columbia University, said been heating up in the Black Moscow's Black Sea acquisiSea. But the move also ex-

tion gave it what are potentially

tended Russia's maritime boundaries, quietly giving

"the best" of that body's deep oil reserves.

Moscow dominion over vast

Oil analysts said that mount-

oil and gas reserves while dealing a crippling blow to Ukraine's hopes for energy independence.

ing economic sanctions could slow Russia's exploitation of

Moscow did so under an international accord th at

ogy. But they noted that Rus-

gives nations sovereignty

siahad already taken over the over areas up to 230 miles Crimean arm of Ukraine's nafrom their shorelines. Rus- tional gas company, instantly sia had tried, unsuccessful- giving Russia exploratory gear ly, to gain access to energy on the Black Sea. "Russia's in a mood to be-

resources in the same terri-

tory in a pact with Ukraine

it has about 500 official mem-

bers, the organization has helped lead many thousands more to simply stop paying fareson their own, according

reach them." During a recent gathering at the group's headquarters in the Sodermalm district of central Stockholm — a space

decorated with protest stickers, a half-dozen empty beer cans and a vegan takeout menu for

the occasional late-night session — members outlined the to transit officials. Pettersson ideology underpinning their said that about 15 million trips actions. The transit system last year were not paid for — 3 should be financed through percent of all rides. The Planka taxes, they said, ensuring that Facebook page has more than a greatersharecomes from af30,000"likes." fluent residents and drivers. High rates of evasion have Each evasion is treated as been reported among high- part of a"collective fare strike," school students, particularly Berthelsen said, and is a signal in the city's suburbs, Tengblad to fellow travelers that the syssaid. Thegroup has also sprout- tem should be fare-free. The ed sister organizations in Gote- more ostentatiously a rider can borg and Oslo, and is credited breach the system, according with influencing the free-fare to this logic, the better. protesters of Movimento Passe As a result, group leaders Livre in Brazil, who carried out

have chafed ata recent trend

demonstrations last year. of forged electronic tickets, disEfficiency has i mproved played on phones, which can with time. Planka's organizers said that 30 to 40 percent of

fool transit personnel without

creating a scene. "It normalizes that people membership dues were typically required to pay off fines. have tickets," said one member, That means that of the 500 Sandra Lindquist, 32.

ation. Buried in the document — in Article 4, Section 3 — a single bland sentence said international law would govern the drawing of boundaries

ingthrough deep bedrock off through the adjacent Black and Romania found a large gas field Azov Seas. in waters more than half a mile

deep. Moscow moved fast. In April 2012, Putin, then

R yan estimates that t h e newly daimed maritime zone

around Crimea added about 36,000square miles to Russia's

Russia's prime minister, pre- existing holdings. The addisided over the signing of an tion is 3t/2times the size of the accord with Eni, the Italian en-

Crimean landmass, and about

lumbia estimated that the size of that zone, which existed be-

Crimea in those terms. An ex-

ception was Romania, whose fore the Crimean annexation, Black Sea zone had been adjaamounted to roughly 26,000 cent to Ukraine's before Russia square miles, about the size of stepped in. Lithuania. "I want to assureyou that the

"Romania and Russia will be

neighbors," Romania Libera, a newspaper in Bucharest, ob-

have aggressi vely," said Vlad- Russian government will do imir Socor, a senior fellow at everything to support projects served on March 24.

less than two years earlier.

"It's abig deal," said Carol the Jamestown Foundation, a researchgroup in Washington

of this kind," Putin said at the

As for oil extraction in the

gram of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "It deprives Ukraine of the possibility of developing these resources and gives them

signing, according to Russia's newly claimed maritime zones, that follows Eurasian affairs. Interfaxnews agency. companies say their old deals "It's already seized two drilling A month later, oil explora- with Ukraine are in limbo, and rtgs. tion specialists at a European analysts say new contracts are The global hunt for fossil petroleumconferencemade a unlikely to be signed anytime fuels has increasingly gone lengthy presentation, the title of soon, given the continuing turoffshore, to such places as the which asked: "Is the Black Sea moil in the region and the Unit-

to Russia. It makes Ukraine

Atlantic Ocean off Brazil, the

Saivetz, a Eurasian expert in the Security Studies Pro-

the Next North Sea?n The pa-

more vulnerable to Russian Gulf of Mexico and the South per cited geological studies that pressure." China Sea. Hundreds of oil rigs judged the waters off Ukraine Gilles Lericolais, the di- dotthe Caspian, a few hundred as having "tremendous explorector of Europeanand miles east of the Black Sea. ration potential" but saw the international a ff a ir s at Nations divide up the world's Russianzone as less attractive. France's state oceanograph-

potentially l u crative w aters

ic group, called Russia's annexation of Crimea "so obvious" as a play for offshore riches.

according to guidelines set forth by the 1982 Law of the

In August 2012, Kiev announced an accord with an Exxon-led group t o e x tract

Sea Treaty. The agreement lets

oil and gas from the depths of

coastal states claim what are known asexclusive economic

Ukraine's Black Sea waters. The Exxon team had outbid

In Moscow, a spokesman for President Vladimir Putin

Lukoil, a Russian company. said there was "no connec- nautical miles (or 230 statute Ukraine's state geology bureau tion" between the annex- miles) from their shores. Inside said development of the field ation and energy resources, these zones, states can explore, would cost up to $12 billion. "The Black Sea Hots Up," adding that Russia did not exploit ,conserve and manage even care about the oil and deep natural resources, living read a 2013 headline in GEO gas. "Compared to all the and nonliving. ExPro, an industry magazine potential Russia has got, The countries with shores published in Britain. "Elevated there was no interest there," alongthe Black Sea have long levels of activity have become zonesthatcan extend up to 200

the spokesman, D m itry

seen its floor as a potential en-

Dutch Shell and other major

he said, "I think we will never

Crimea and the Russian Feder-

ergy giant, to explore Russia's the size of Maine. ations by reducing access to economic zone in the northAt the time, few observers Western financing and technol- eastern Black Sea. Ryan of Co- noted Russia's annexation of

group known as Planka.nu station agent sipped an energy (rough translation: "free-ride. drinkbeside the gates as riders now"), an organization with filed past. "If someone does it, like, 20 only two prerequisites for admission: Members must pay a yards from here," he said, "I'm monthly fee of about $15 and, not goingto run." as part of a continuous demonOne group member, Alex stration against the fare, prom- Berthelsen, 29, said that many ise toevade payment every guardsand fare controllerstime they ride. If travelers keep employees in yellow suits who their side of the agreement, are expected to checkticketsthe group will cover any of the had come to recognize him, but roughly $180 fines that might still failed to stop him. result. (An unlimited ride pass Now, Berthelsen said, he for 30 days costs about $120.) often exchanges knowing The group's efficiency in nods with them during station evasion has created an envi- demonstrations held by the able business model. Last year, group. "They're doing their job, I'm the group took in more than twice as much money — more doing my job," he said. than $7,500 per month — as it The agency said it had made paid out in fines, organizers gains with "the leisure dodger," satd. citing a reduction in revenue The agency that operates losses since higher gates were the metro system, Stockholm installed. (The figure is still esPublic Transport, seems to timated to be about $36 million have grown increasingly dis- annually) couraged, especially after But Pettersson a cknowlthe failure of a recent invest- edged that the most determent in taller gates to stop the mined evaders would probfare-beaters. ably remain a problem in "We could build a B erlin perpetuity. "These hard-core dodgers," Wall in the metro stations," a said. "They would still try to find ways to dodge." Since Planka's founding 13 years ago, its legend and influence have grown. Although

a treaty of annexation between the newly declared Republic of

its Black and Azov Sea annex-

Peskov, said Saturday. ergysource,m ainly because of Exxon Mobil, R oyal modest oil successes in shallow

spokesman, Jesper Pettersson,

Ukraine on March 18, it issued

— New YorkTimesNewsService

d ecade, them. On a recent afternoon at Tengblad has belonged to a Stockholm Central Station, a

For more than a

apparent throughout the Black Sea region," the artide said, "particularly in deepwater." When Russia seized the C rimean Peninsula f r om

Ukraine talks —Senior Ukrainian officials on Saturday held a second session of national "round-table" talks aimedat ending the country's political crisis, this time in theeastern city of Kharkiv, in the region that has beenbesieged bypro-Russian separatist violence. Themeeting brought together a broader cross-section of leaders from eastern Ukraine than the first set of talks, in an attempt to show thegovernment's commitment to dialogue. But representatives of the region said it would bedifficult to resolve the crisis until the government endedmilitary operations aimed at suppressing the separatists.

~IRm

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waters.

oil companies have already

Just over two years ago,the explored the Black Sea, and prospects for huge payoffs some petroleum analysts soared when a giant ship drillsay its potential may rival that of the North Sea. That

kEDM OND

rush, which began in the 1970s, lifted the economies

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"I can't see them jumping into new deals right now."

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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 9

TODAY'S READ: PRESERVING HISTORY IN CHINA

Ancient Bu a statues ave outaste

nasties; now t e re c o e soot By Edward Wong

A nearly 50foot hIgh Buddha, datIng to around the sixth century,

New York Times News Service

D ATONG, China — T h e colossal Buddhist statues in the cliffside caves outside this

northern Chinese city, carved from golden sandstone by Turkic-speaking nomad conquerors in the fifth and sixth cen-

isendangered by pollution In Datong, China. Officials

have begun

turies,were so covered in coal dust that when visitors blew on

an ambitious effort to protect the UNESCO World Heritage site,

them, black clouds rose up. Called the Yungang Grottoes, the relics had survived the rise and fall of dynasties,

even shutting down nearby

modern wars and the Cultural

Revolution. But the scourge of a more prosperous China — in-

coal mines.

dustrial pollution — had been

Gilles Sabrie I New YorkTimes NewsService

eating away at the sandstone. Chinese officials and preservationists have embarked tect them that could become a model for saving antiquities at

on an ambitious effort to pro-

thing in common: they suffer from the air and the water," Huang said. "So these places

other sites. They have not only

can draw directly from the

Yungang experience." created a vast park, but also A large part of the problem shut down nearby coal mines is coal. Burning coal emits and removed or regulated oth- sulfur dioxide, which further er sources of air pollution. oxidizes in the atmosphere and "You don't know how bad then combines with water to it was before," said Huang producesulfuricacid. Jizhong,the head engineer at In the 1980s and 1990s, as the the Shanxi Province Cultur- coal industry here in Shanxi al Relics Bureau and former province powered growth research director at the grot- throughout China, the impact toes. "The contrast is very of acid rain and air pollution dramatic." on the statues in the Yungang Vast parts of China have Grottoes was "severe," said some of the world's worst out- Liu Xiaoquan, a senior mandoor air pollution, and ancient ager at the Yungang Grottoes sitesacross the country are Research Institute. A nationfalling prey to its effects, offi- al highway ran in front of the cials and scholars say. Among grottoes, where 51,000 statues the antiquities damaged by stand in 254 niches and caves. acid rain are the giant Buddha Up to 20,000coal trucks passed at Leshan in Sichuan province each day. Villagers burned coal and an 800-year-old thou- for cooking and heating. sand-armed statue of GuanRestoration efforts, promptyin, a revered Buddhist figure, ed by a bid for UNESCO World at Dazu, according to Chinese Heritage List status, started in news reports. A professor in the late 1990s. Officials moved Guangzhou, a provincial cap- the highway in 1998 and ital in the south, warns that barred coal trucks from using acid rain is also eroding the red it. About 10 small coal mines cleaned the statues here and

sandstone buildings there from

were ordered shut, Huang said.

the Ming dynasty.

Officials also moved six villag-

Even the terra-cotta war-

es from the area, a total of 4,750 households, over the reported

riors of Xi'an, a symbol of Chinese civilization, may be under objections of some villagers, threat. Lee Shun-cheng, an who said the compensation engineering professor at Hong was too low. Kong Polytechnic University, Workers used soft brushes has called for glass walls to be to remove the coal dust that

have grown. On a recent after-

the rainwater, whichmakes the

noon, dozens of nuns in gray sandstonebrittle and more vulrobes arrived on tour buses. nerable to the wind. The wall The park has 1.5 million to surroundingthe entrance of 2 million annual visitors, up cave number 20 has collapsed, from half a million a year less leaving the sitting Buddha than a decade ago, Liu said. there exposed. The mostintense preservaThe oldest caves were used tion and restoration work is by the early Tuoba rulers of the underway at four of the most Northern Wei to help spread stunning caves. Workers are the idea they had the divine building wooden roofs to shield right to rule over the conquered the statues from rain. After locals, Ma said. The Tuoba that, experts from the Mogao eventually moved the seat of Caves of Dunhuang, another their dynasty south to Luoysanctuary ofBuddhist art,are ang, in present-day Henan expected to restore some of the province. There, they built paint. The last time the cave more grand Buddhist statues was painted was in the Qing at the Longmen Grottoes. Offidynasty, which ruled China cials at Longmen, which is also from the 17th century to the a UNESCO site, have been carearly 20th century. rying out preservation efforts W orkersare also trying to similar to those at Yungang, make digital recordings of all following what is becoming the artwork. Those would help standard practice for local govwith construction of three-di- ernments that have sought inmensional renderings of the ternational recognition. caves that visitors and scholars What Chinese officials have canview. been unable or unwilling to A mine run by the Datong control are the stratospheric Coal Mining Group, a state- levels of air pollution. Xinhua, owned enterprise, is still op- the state news agency, reporterating within sight of the ed that acid rain hit 135 cities grottoes. But the company has in early 2013. Of those, 23 were closed some shafts, and "they severely affected. Huang said, do well with dust and pollution control," Liu said.

"The current air pollution still

poses a threat."

After election loss, an end to Gandhi political dominance? By Annie Gowen and Rama LakehmI

Friday in the state of Rajasthan. "The party has failed to

The Washington Post

connect with the new India of

NEW DELHI — On Friday, as opposition leader Naren-

aspirations. We haven't been able to tap into the imagi-

dra Modi swept to victory and nation of the new India, the fireworks exploded through- youth and the middle classes, out the capital, the mood at the upwardly mobile people. the governing Congressparty ... Somewhere our message headquarters was grim. was not dear, was not approLate in the afternoon, the priate forthenewera." mother and son who lead InThe Congress party has dia's oldest political dynasty governed the country for finally emerged to speak to most of the years since India's fight for independence supporters and journalists. "There's a lot for us to think about," said a chastened Ra-

hul Gandhi, the party's heir apparent andchiefcampaign-

its policies today have roots in the vision shaped by the country's first prime minis-

er. "As vice president of the

ter, Jawaharlal Nehru, Rahul

party, I hold myself responsi- Gandhi's great-grandfather, ble for what has happened." of upliftingthe masses. But then, as he stepped Yet despite that history of aside to let his mother speak, political success and its rehe smiled— some observers cent 10-year rule, the party thought with relief. The 7wit- seemed woefully unprepared terverse took note. as it headed into the 2014 Gandhi, whose lineage in- elections. cludes three prime ministers, Both Rahul and his mothhad been groomed for India's er, Sonia, the Congress partop job for a decade. But his ty president, campaigned in evident ambivalence about their usual way, appearing at the prospect was among the large rallies where they emdrivers of the Indian National phasized signature subsidy Congress party's worst drub- programs such as distribution bing in its history, analysts of wheat and grains to the said. The party won just 44 poor and rural employment. seats in the 543-seat lower

M odi, m eanwhile, w a s

house of Parliament, while spreading his message of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Par- economic opportunity via a ty took 282 in a landslide. sophisticated 24-hour camEven before the Gand- paign operation with millions his departed without taking of volunteers, including many questions, the postmortem from the H i ndu n ationalhad begun: The Congress ist movement, and teams of party was out of touch with tech gurus who managed his voters, analysts said. Its lead- wide-ranging social media ers were corrupt and ineffi- efforts. Modi's campaign "was not cient. And unlike the canny chief minister preparing for about this dole or that dole, it his triumphant arrival in the was not about how much free capital, they had missed In- rice or free wheat his party dia's moment. Even its own will give. It was about all the members, still dazed by the things that were wrong with enormity ofdefeat,could see the country — unemploythat.

ment, corruption, inflation,"

"India has changed," said said Manisha Priyam, the InSachin Hlot, 36, one of the diancoordinatorforresearch Congress party's younger on elections at the London leaders who was defeated School of Economics.

On a recent morning, two photographers were setting up lighting equipment inside the first cave to take photos for

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the research institute. The cave

from Britain in 1947. Many of

has a stone pagoda in the cenbuilt around the warriors, now coated the statues. Many of ter, typical of a sculpture in the protected only by a roof. the Buddhas now appear in middle period, said Ma YexExperts working on t he the golden glory envisioned by ia, an official guide. A nearby Yungang Grottoes, in the heart their creators. On some statues, twin cave also has a pagoda, of China's coal country, are vivid paint added during later though its base has been erodnow advising officials seeking dynasties is visible again. The ed by water that once filled the to preserve sites elsewhere. biggest Buddha, a seated statue bottom of the cave. The water Huang visited the mountain- 56 feet tall, has a thin layer of was pumped out sometime afside relics at Xiangtangshan gold paint on its face. ter 1949, when the communists and Yaowangshan, both in The grottoes were desig- took over, Ma said. heavily polluted areas of north- nated a World Heritage site in Running water, which can ern China, and told officials 2001, and further work began damage sandstone carvings, there to shut down or move ce- in 2008, including the banning has been a danger for centument fact ories.In some cases, of tour buses from the nearby ries. During the Jurchen Jin officials complied, and where national highway, expanding dynasty, in the 12th and 13th they could not they built glass the park that includes the grot- centuries, a river that ran in enclosuresaround the statues, toes to sixtimes its original size front of the caves threatened Huang said. and planting trees. In a court- the statues, and agreat warrior At the Dazu rock carvings in yard is a shiny copper statue ordered the river to be redirectChongqing and the Longmen of Tan Yao, a monk from the ed, she said. Grottoes in Henan province, in Northern Wei dynasty who Cave numbers 16 through 20 central China, preservationists oversaw the building of the have the oldest statues, built by are using moisture monitoring first grottoes for the imperial the monkTang Yao.The simdevices that were invented at rulers. ple Buddhas here were carved Yungang. The numbers of Buddhist from rock at the rear of the "All these things share some- pilgrims and other tourists caves. Ma said one enemy was

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

Chihuahuas atop export from Arizona after population boom

bv

By Fernanda Santos New York Times News Service

PHOENIX — A pack of

26 stray Chihuahuas rode 2,400 miles in the back of an SUV in late March, a

cross-country trip from an animal shelter here to another just outside Philadel-

phia, where all but one were adopted in days. That same week, a re-

tired orthopedic surgeon, Peter Rork, loaded 30 other Chihuahuas into his retro-

fitted Cessna 206 and flew them from Phoenix to BoiDavid Eulitt/ Kansas City Star

Kyle Bayard, 20, struggles to hold a stationary push-up position while exercising in the parking lot

behind the Armyrecruiting station in Grandview, Mo. Entrance requirements for joining the military have become morestringent as the military prepares for fewer personnel.

se, Idaho, where small dogs Samanttta Sais / New York Times News Service are a hot commodity. Next Chihuahuas jump on a visitor in Chi-Town, a designated section at month, he will fly about 36 the Maricopa County Animal Care and Control Center in Phoenix. Chihuahuas from Scotts-

dale, Ariz., to the same destination.

iita recruiters et ic

as wars come to anen By Rick Montgomery

fore World War II.

The Kansas City Star

finished schooling to massive credit card debt, the report

"Supply and demand,

that's what it boils down to," said Judy Zimet, a real es-

tate lawyer here who serves as executive director of Dog Is My Copilot, Rork's rescue group. "In Phoenix, Chihuahuas are a dime a dozen; in Idaho and Montana, there

are so few of them you have to get on a waiting list to

Further shrinkage would be necessary if sequestration sald. Army Sgt. 1st Class Terrence fights resume in coming years, Hoard must reach potential Hagel and other defense lead- Economicconsequences r ecruits early t o s e t t h e m ers said. A leaner, pickier military straight. Jessica Wright, acting un- sends ripples through the They think anybody can dersecretary for defense per- broader economy. Young enlist. Many see the military sonnel and readiness, recent- adults who don't land meanas a last resort in a tough job ly told U.S. senators that the ingful workby age 22, or those market — but always an op- Pentagon's budget plan spares unable to tap military benefits tion, the youth assume. The only the Navy from force re- for college tuition, are apt to truth is, the Class of 2014 now ductions next year. earn lessmoney than they'd leaving high school will face The A i r F o r ce, M a r i ne otherwise collect for at least a more difficulty qualifying for Corps and military Reserve decade into their future, studthe armed services than ever and Guard units would shrink ies have found. "They call it 'scarring,'" said in the 40-year history of the over the next several years, all-volunteer force. Wright said, though troop cuts economist Sarah Ayres of the So Hoard tells them long are not expected to be as deep Washington, D.C.-based think before graduation day: Don't as in the Army, the largest re- tank Center fo r A m e rican ever get caught with a joint. cruiter of all. Progress. "It's not just a rightWork out, shed weight. And now problem. It's a problem Fewer opportunities be extra careful about getting that lingers years down the

adopt them."

tattooed.

ping them to faraway states

K ANSAS CITY,

Mo.

What does this spell for

road."

"We're turning down twice America's young adults, ages And still, dropouts march to as many as before," said 17 to 24, already buffeted by Hoard'srecruiting office exHoard, who supervises the 14 percent unemployment and pecting to sign up. Teens with Army recruiting station in ever-soaringcollege costs? stretched piercings in their "There'll be fewer opportu- earlobes, so-called gauges, Grandview, Mo. His office several years back needed to sign nities in military service, as leave dejected after a recruiter up 16 to 20 soldiers per month there have been in the overall with a flashlight confirms that to meet r ecruiting t argets. economy," Byrd said. And few- light shines through the openNow, 10 or 12 will do. er young veterans means less ing, a disqualifying trait. Earlier this month, a doz- opportunity to have college I n r e c ent we e ks , t a t en fresh recruits and wancosts covered by GI benefits. toos have been the surprise nabe warriors showed up for The Army nationwide is on disqualifier. push-ups and jumping jacks. pace to hit its fiscal year 2014 With the aim of buffing Among them: Kyle Bayard of goal of signing up 57,000 re- up the appearance of serDrexel, Mo., whose lifelong cruits for active duty. vice members in uniform, That's down from about the Army in April rolled out dream of serving was held up for a year because he had been 80,000 new recruits each year restrictions on tattoos below prescribed a t tention-deficit from fiscal 2005 through 2008. the elbows and knees. Only medicine in high school. Only once,in 2005,did Army four such tattoos are now alMauricio Lonza maintained

recruiters fail to hit their mark.

Arizona's most popular exports have long included the "four C's," as they are

known here: copper, cattle, citrus and cotton. And late-

ly, Chihuahuas could almost join that list.

The breed is so popular in Arizona that some neigh-

borhoods of Phoenix have become overrun with them. Stray Chihuahuas roam the

streets, overcrowd animal shelters and have exhausted the charitable network

of foster families who take them in but say they can no longer take one more. To avoid euthanizing the dogs, animal welfare workers have started shipand even repatriating them abroad: Arizona Chihua-

huas have emigrated to

Asi -8 BDt

calLIHs

~s

lowed, and they must be small

owed to commanders grant-

Armed Services Vocational

ing waivers for conduct and health issues that, in peace-

Aptitude Battery before he got a passing score. "Math

time, would keep candidates out of the military. Only 86

~ ~ yC ; olhislc&4

appQaNGts!

a B average in high school In those years, much of enough to be covered by the and through a couple of years their recruiting success was wearer's hand. at Kansas State University. But three times he failed the

Canada and Russia, said Joe Bunten, breed rescue chairPyritz, a spokesman for Pinal woman at the Chihuahua Club County, whose animal shelter of America. cares for Chihuahuas carried On average, purebred pupby migrants caught crossing pies sell for $300 or $400, but theborder illegally. Chihuahuas are a lot more Only pit bulls outnumber common in states bordering Chihuahuas in the Maricopa Mexico, Bunten said. Shelters County shelter, and the number in San Antonio, where she of Chihuahuas has risen steadi- lives, are "brimming with Chily since 2011 while the number huahuas," and in California, of pit bulls has dedined. At the several cities have passed ordiArizona Humane Society, the nances requiring that Chihuastate's largest animal welfare huas be spayed or neutered in agency, Chihuahuas overtook an effort to legislate population pit bulls this year in number. control. Since January, the Arizona Arizona's Maricopa CounChihuahua Rescue, a volunteer ty, where the shelters take in organization that takes in Chi- more animals than any county huahuas nobody wants, has besides Los Angeles County, is posted a warning message on discussing a partnership with its home page: uWe are unable one of Phoenix's most popular to accept any new dogs." Spanish-language radio staThe reason Chihuahuas and tions, La Campesina, to spread their many mixes are among the message that sterilizing the dogs most often found in dogs "is part of the responsibilanimal shelters, animal-care ity of owning a pet," said Meworkers say, lies somewhere in lissa Gable, spokeswoman for the intersection of geography, the county's Animal Care and pop culture and immigrant Control. tastes. Breeders play a role, too: The countyis also inthe midSome do not realize that female dle of a three-year, $6 million Chihuahuas are so small that campaign to curb pet homethey often need a cesarean sec- lessness, focusing on Chihuation, an expensive procedure huas, pit bulls and cats, which that can wipe out potential are the most commonly found profits and prompt people to (and euthanized) animals in its abandon the dogs, said Lynnie shelters.

No tattoos whatsoever are

allowed on the wrists, hands, neck or head. One person inquiring at the

a

O'-5"

Grandview recruitment sta-

esom

was never my category," said

percent of new recruits at the tion last week had an engageheight of the war in Iraq had ment band tattooed around On Hoard's desk were slips completed high school. Many her ring finger. bearing the names of four with felony convictions were Out. local candidates rejected for allowed in. Others had tattoos that exhaving tattoos that crept too Today,99percentofrecruits tended below the cuffs of longlow on their forearms. All four have graduated from high sleeved shirts, or above the were turned down the week school. The military branch- collar. Also out. after the Army's tattoo restric- es expect higher scores in the Roger Lawrence of Archie, Lonza,21.

tions took effect April 29.

Higher standards With t h e

ASVAB test, which quizzes candidates on tools and elec-

trical circuitry as well as on

U n i te d S t ates language and math. Even a

Christian beliefs. "I was way younger and not t hinking about anything," said Lawrence, now 19 and eager to

past misdemeanor may disqualify a potential recruit.

it is, about four of every five

Army Recruiting Comthe quality of military recruits mand at Fort Knox, Ky., has right now is the highest it's told recruiters to monitor and been in 40 years." report back on how the new

adults who seek to join don't qualify. "All this belt-tightening has caused the Department of Defenseto chase afterthe same successful, highly motivated high school graduates that everyone else is chasing," said re-

serve. "The recruiter asked me to

+ 14

i

Mo., was 16 when he got a forearm tattoo reflecting his

drawing down its troop numbers from wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the active-duty prospects for a generation that grew up in the age of terror aren't apt to improve, say area recruiters and educators. As

"It's not that we have a zero-defect mentality, because

I

f

' -"' „ . .

s

'

' Woul4 love a W-~ He~ I

we don't," said Nathan Chris- try covering it with my hand. tensen, a Navy officer in pub- It was 2 inches too big." lic affairs for the Defense Department. "But it is true that

Out.

Many p o tential r e c ruits restrictions affect enlistments. "It's tough to look a fine candon't know that. They're out

of luck when they show up at

didate in the face and tell them

Hoard's recruiting office with

they can't serve their coun-

drug charges in their back- try" because of a wrist tattoo, tired Army Lt. CoL Mike Byrd, ground, without a high school Hoard said. an instructor for Van Horn diploma or GED, or carrying In other cases, such as with High School's Junior ROTC greater girth than the Army Bayard, 20, the candidate will program in Independence. allows. show his or her mettle taking "It's very expensive to re"Five years ago, if a kid had steps to qualify. When the cruit," he added. "We don't gotten caught with a (marijua- Army informed him he needhave the flexibility we once na) joint in his car, that person ed tobe medication-free fora had to get it wrong with one would be pretty much a shoo- year before enlisting, "I went kid and hope the next one in" to enlist under a waiver, cold turkey" from his ADD works out." Hoard said. "Now, you're not pills, Bayard said. "It was easy." In February, Defense Sec- authorized." retary Chuck Hagel unveiled Societal trends aren't helpTwice a week during his plans to reduce the Army's ing. As a slumping economy wait, Bayard attended workactive-duty strength from its fueled increased interest in outs at the recruiting station. current force of 520,000 to military service, a 2009 study He sweated off 40 pounds and 490,000 by autumn 2015. by an organization of educa- learned to recite the Soldier's Should Congress stick with tors and retired military lead- Creed from memory, all 121 defensefunding caps enacted ers estimated that 75 percent words. He's headed to Fort Benin December as part of a fed- of Americansages 17 to 24 eral sequestration agreement, were ineligible to enlist. ning, Ga., for basic training. "Bayard's one of those desthe Army over the next two Obesity alone disqualified years could shrink toward 27 percent; many others were tined to be in special forces," an active-duty force of about ruled out by problems rang- Staff Sgt. Danielle Colson pre440,000, its smallest since be- ing from juvenile crime to un- dicted. "You can just tell."

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

PUBLIC SCHOOLS

BRIEFING Crashkills one north of Madras A motorist was killed Saturday in a two-vehicle collision on U.S. Highway 97about15 miles north of Madras, according to Oregon State Police. At about noon Saturday, a southbound pickup with two occupants apparently crossed the center line and struck the side of a northbound truck pulling a semi. The driver of the pickup, Jordan Alan Dunaway, 21, of Prineville, was pronounced deadat the scene, while the passenger was transported to St. Charles Madras for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries. The driver of the semi was not injured.

ommon oresa s for pilot iPadprogram ecoursein re on

Redmondstarting slow

By Tyler Leeds

more competitive with stu-

that gives students their

dents from other nations.

own iPads as part of a sum-

school year, offering students an early introduction to their high school and additional support throughout the year. "We have a compelling interest in preparing kids for

Recently, however, many states have debated delaying or even dropping the stan-

mer camp meant to help

the next generation of educa-

eighth-graders transition to high school. Support for the program comesfrom a $187,500grant from the Oregon Depart-

tion," said Redmond Super-

The Bulletin

• Educators voice caution, if not outrage, over standardsthat will be tested this week By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Last week, the Oregon Department of Education refused a request by the state's

teachers union to delay the implementation of new, more rigorous standardized tests.

Locally, superintendents stand behind the state's decision, while opinions among othereducation leadersrange from cautious to outraged. The new assessments,

which will go through field tests at some Central Oregon

The Redmond School District will pilot a program

schools this week, are being developed with federal help by dards, with Indiana officially a multistate group under the dropping Common Core after title Smarter Balanced. The tests are pegged to the contro-

earlier adopting the standards.

standards, which benchmark

In Oregon, the standards were adopted in 2010, and students will begin taking Smarter Balanced tests in spring 2015. In a statement, the Oregon

when students should acquire

Education Association, which

certain skills and knowledge, were developed by the Na-

represents the state's teachers, called for the testing to be delayed, noting not enough is

versial Common Core State Standards, which have been adopted by most states. The

tional Governors Association and the Council of Chief State

School Officers in an effort to make American students

known about the test's ability

to measure learning. SeeCommon Core/B5

ment of Education. Unlike

the Bend-La Pine Schools digital conversion pilot program, which brought iPads to eight schools, Redmond's program will be much smaller in scale, with only 100

students attending the camp and receiving devices. Titled "Camp Nine," the program begins during the summer and continues through the

intendent Mike McIntosh. "We will ultimately shift to

a digital curriculum, and we've seen districts around the nation do this in different

ways. Our approach is to move slowly and learn from some of the mistakes made by other districts." McIntosh said he had "no

idea" of the timing for expanding the program, and a larger implementation could be "five or 10 years down the road."

SeeRedmond/B5

Motorcycle hits bear on highway A motorcycle rider was injured Saturday when she hit a bear while riding along the Cascade LakesHighway. Sgt. Vance Lawrence with the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office said the crash, near Cultus Lake, wasreported at about 4:45 p.m. The rider was takenby helicopter to St. Charles Bend for treatment of what are believed to be non-life-threatening injuries, Lawrencesaid. The bear ran off into the woods.

MAY ELECTION Tuesday's election serves as a primary for avariety of statewide offices. Local races andmeasures will also be onthe ballot.

BALLOTS • County election offices reported the following ballot returns Friday: Deschutes........... 22.5% Crook.......................24% Jefferson............. 24.8% • To ensure your ballot is counted, take it to a

— From wire reports

local drop site before 8 p.m. Tuesday.Thedate for mailing your ballot for guaranteed arrival has passed, andpostmarks do not count. • What's on the ballot:

I I

I

Well shot! Reader photos

OESCHUTESCOUNTY

• We want to see your photos "on the river" for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the

Scott Hammers/The Bulletin

Outdoors section. Submityour best work at hendbulletin.cem/ riverphotosand we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphetes© bentlbulletin.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best photos for publication in the newspaper.

With help from her father, J.R. Bowling, of Bend, Natalie Bowling, 8, reels in the second of two rainbow trout she caught Saturday at a free youth fishing event at Pine Nursery Park in northeast Bend.

Submission requirements:

The Bulletin

Include as much detail as

Young anglers ringed the pond at Bend's Pine Nursery Park on Saturday

possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phonenumber.Photosmust be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.

WASHINGTON WEEK U.S. SENATEVOTE • Senate Republicans blocked an energy-efficiency bill from advancing Monday by requiring Democrats to assemble 60 votes to end debate. Instead, the bill, which contained provisions to push federal agencies and building codes toward increased conservation and efficiency, failed to advance by a55-36 margin. The bill had bipartisan sponsorship, but ultimately only three Republican senators voted to end debate and proceed to a final passage vote. All 36 no votes were cast by Republicans. Jeff Merkley, O................... Y Ron Wyden, O................... Y

for an Oregon Department of Fish 8z

Wildlife-sponsored free fishing day. Terry Schrader, a biologist with ODFW, said the pond was restocked

with rainbowtrout last weekin preparation for Saturday. Schrader said a large group of volunteers, primarily drawn from the Central Oregon Flyfishers club, came out to teach thebasics ofbaiting a hook, casting and landing a fish. "The pond is open year-round, but today we come and supply rods and bait and instruction, if they need it," he said.

"We geta lot of young kids showing up that have never fished before, and parents,

up that have never fished before, and

too. I'd bet half the people

fish of her life Saturday, a pair of roughly footlong rainbow trout. She said reeling

here have never fished." — Jennifer Luke, who volunteers with the Oregon Department of Fish & Wildlife

parents, too," Luke said. "I'd bet half the people here have never fished." Natalie Bowling, 8, caught the first two in her fish was more difficult than she'd

expected, but she had no trouble holding up the slimy creatures for her dad to snap a picture. "It was hard to pull it in, but it

was real easyto hold it," she said. Jennifer Luke, volunteer coordinator Bryce Stevens, 13, caught and filleted with ODFW, said the free fishing day his two fish for the day early and was is intended to expose those ages 17 and waiting for his friends to catch their under to a sport they won't necessarily limits. learn otherwise. SeeFishing/B5

CROOKCOUNTY

YESTERDAY

In 1914, ajailed politician-lawyer-groombreaksfree Compiled byDon Hoiness from archivedcopies ofThe Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending May17, 1914

Bold jailbreakermakes escape inbroaddaylight That Bend's new brick jail is

not adequate to hold a desperSeeWeek/B3

"We get a lot of young kids showing

By Scott Hammers

• District Attorney Patrick Flaherty is seeking re-election, and Bend attorney John Hummel has also filed to run for the position. • Commission seats held by TonyDeBone and TammyBaneyare up for election. DeBone, a Republican, hasfiled to run againandfacesa primary challengefrom Richard Esterman.Jodie Barram, nowa Bendcity councilor, has filed asthe Democratic candidate. • Circuit Judge Barbara Haslingerhas announced she'll retire. Herseat on the benchwill be upfor election. RandyMiller and ThomasSpearare vying for the position. • Circuit Judge Stephen Forte is upfor re-election. • The county assessor position is on the ballot. • A five-year local option fire levy would tax property owners 20 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value. The fire department currently receives acut of $1.18 per $1,000 in assessed property value from the city's permanent tax rate of $2.80 per $1,000.

ate character was proved con-

clusively yesterday afternoon when a prisoner escaped in broad daylight. The jailbreaker in question

other victims were concerned, this particular groom had always taken a leading part. Mr. and Mrs. Forbes re-

given half a chance. However,

was Vernon A. Forbes, state representative, city attorney

turned from their honeymoon

the getaway. At all events the

trip Monday evening. Yesterday afternoon an impromptu

following rhyme was found pinned to Bert Robert's door this morning: Ding dong, bell. Vernon's in the cell.

andbridegroom. Two weeks ago, Mr. Forbes and Miss Anne vigilante committee seized Markel were married at The the city attorney and jailed Dalles, the bridal couple sliphim, but while it adjourned to ping out of town secretly and arrange the details of a kanwithout receiving any of the garoo court, in some mysteriattentions usuallybestowed ous way the prisoner escaped, upon such occasions and in the demonstrating again that love conduct of which, where the can overcome bolts and bars if

some accomplice beside Dan

Cupid is suspected of having supplied the "makings" of

We don't care who put him there. But we'd sure like to know Who it was that let him go.

SeeYesterday/B4

• The commission seat held by SethCrawford is up for election. Crawford has filed to runagainand faces a primarychallenge from Prineville CityCouncilor JackSeley.Michael Shank hasfiled asa write-in candidatefor the Democratic primary. • A measure to make commission andcounty judge positions nonpartisan is on theballot. • The county assessor position is ontheballot.

CROOK/JEFFERSON • Circuit Judges Daniel Ahern andGary LeeWilliams are running unopposed for re-election. • All Jefferson races, plus a ballot drop site list,B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

E VENT TODAY CIVIL WAR RE-ENACTMENTAND LIVING HISTORYCAMPS:A full re-enactment by the Northwest Civil War Council, with camps presenting living conditions of early1863 and more; $8, $5 seniors and students, free for ages younger than 6; 9 a.m.4:30 p.m.; West Side, House on the Metolius, P 200, Deschutes National Forest, Camp Sherman; 866-9046165 or www.metolius.com/maps. KIDS'MINI POLE PEDAL PADDLE: Participants alpine ski, crosscountry ski, bike, run, canoe or kayak and sprint to the finish; 9 a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3126047 or www.bbbsco.org. LLAMA FESTIVALAND SHOW: Hosted by the Central Oregon Llama Association, view llamas on display, purchase llamas, see competitions for obstacle courses and more at the Black and Blue Festival; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Crook County Fairgrounds, 1280 S. Main St., Prineville; 541548-4158, lamabetty©aol.com or www.centraloregonllamas.net. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Craig Johnson will read from and sign his newest Walt Longmire novel, "Any Other Name"; $5;1 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY SPRINGCONCERT:Thesymphony combines forces with the Central Oregon Mastersingers to present Clyde Thompson's "We Have

Spoken"; free,donationsaccepted, but tickets are required; 2-4 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E.Sixth St.; 541-317-3941, info©cosymphony.

com or www.cosymphony.com. SHAKY FEELIN'.The California punk band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

MONDAY CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY SPRING CONCERT: The sym phony combines forces with the Central Oregon Mastersingers to present

Clyde Thompson's "WeHave

Spoken"; free, donations accepted, but tickets are required; 7:309:30 p.m.; Bend High School,

ENDA R

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

230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941,

info©cosymphony.com orwww. cosymphony.com. DEATH BY PIRATES:The Spokane band performs, with Wichita and

JapaneseGameShow; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

TUESDAY COLD RIVERCITY:The Colorado band performs, with Santa Barbara's Rainbow Girls; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. Joe Kline /The Bulletin filephoto

WEDNESDAY

Mini Pole Pedal Paddle teams paddle a stretch of the Deschutes Riv-

SEEINGTHEPOSSIBILITIES WITH RACHEL SCDORIS: RachelScdoris, of Bend, shares her stories of being a legally blind sled dog racer in hopes of inspiring others in their personal challenges, registration required; $25 for ConnectW members, $40 for non-members; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541848-8598 or www.connectw.org. JASON FREIBOTHKIDS'FISHING CLINIC:Volunteers and donated equipment to help families and kids learn about fishing, parent/ adult must participate with the child, ages 5-11; $4 for indistrict, $5 out-of-district; 6:15-8 p.m.; Shevlin Park, 18920 Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 389-7275 or www. bendparksandrec.org. 2014 BENDBICYCLEFILM FESTIVAL:Featuring local short films about Central Oregon cycling culture; $10 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St.; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. MAJOR POWERS &THE LO-Fl SYMPHONY:The Oakland, Calif., rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. LISA DOLLANDTHE ROCK'N' ROLL ROMANCE:The Baltimore band performs, with The Kronk

Men; $5; 9p.m., doors open8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

er at last year's kids version ofthe PPP.This year's event is today.

THURSDAY NO EVENTSLISTED.

FRIDAY FUNFRIDAYS:Featuring a petting zoo, hay rides and other kids events; $5;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; DD Ranch, 3836 N.E. Smith Rock Way,Terrebonne; 541-548-1432,duggan©ddranch. net or www.ddranch.net. THE NATIONAL:The indie-rock band performs, with Tune-Yards; $39 plus fees;6 p.m.,doorsopenat 5 p.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-322-9383 or www.

bendconcerts.com. "SNIP ANDSNAP":Volcanic Theatre Pub and the Bend Spayand Neuter Project present a screening of the documentary film "One Nation Under Dog: Stories of Fear, Loss and Betrayal"; free; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881. C-SPAN CITIESTOURBEND SCREENING:Part of Deschutes County Historic Preservation Month, watch C-SPAN interviews of Central Oregonians as part of American History TV; free; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St.; 541-317-0700. "NEBRASKA":A screening of the 2013 film about a son and his father

making a trip to Nebraska to claim a prize (R); free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. HILLSTOMP:The Portland blues

duo performs; $8 inadvance, $10at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122. THE BENDCOMEDYVARIETY SHOW:Hosted by Ryan Traughber, featuring music by Rand Berke and the Two/Thirds Trio and comedy by Juan Knutson, benefiting the Central

Oregon Humane Society; $15 in advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave.; 541-419-0111, BendComedy© traughberproductions.com or www.

bendcomedy.com.

SATURDAY CENTRALOREGON FLEAMARKET: Freeadmission;8a.m .-4 p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo.,64619 U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-385-3364, info© centraloregonfleamarket.com or www.centraloregonfleamarket.com. 2014 MEMORIALDAY FLAG PLACEMENT:Join to watch the VFW and Boy Scouts placing flags

on Central Oregonveteran graves; free; 10 a.m.; Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-5592.

YOGOMAN BURNINGBAND: Skaand soul;noon-3 p.m.;W est Village Lodge, Mt. Bachelor Ski Resort, 13000 Century Drive, Bend; 541-382-2442. AUTHORPRESENTATION:William Dietrich presents on his book"The Three Emperors," with refreshments and prize drawings; free, reservation requested; 5-6:30 p.m.; Sunriver Books & Music, Sunriver Village Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or www.sunriverbooks.com. BATTLEBUDDIES OFCENTRAL OREGON SPAGHETTIFEED: Featuring a raffle and silent auction; 5-8 p.m.; Redmond VFWHall, 1836 SW Veterans Way, Redmond97756; 541-548-4108. CHEYENNEWESTCDRELEASE PARTY:Country; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-8331. KURT VANMETER:The Portland country artist performs; $6 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. RUINS OF 00AH: The Eugene band performs, with Junk Yard Lords; $5; 9 p.m.,doorsopen8 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

songs, items will be collected for displaced veterans such as clothing, sleeping bags,food and dog food; free, donations accepted; 7 p.m.; St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, 807 E. First Street, Prineville; 541-447-7085.

SUNDAY

May 27

May 25

CLASSIC BOOK CLUB: Read and discuss "The Cossacks" and "Hadji Murad" byLeo Tolstoy;6 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1046. MR. CENTRALOREGON PAGEANT: High school pageant winners compete for the first title of Mr. Central Oregon, benefiting the The Center Foundation, audience support will be factored in judging; $5 for students, $7 for adults; 7-9 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-322-2399 or www. centerfoundation.org. SPIRIT, SOUL & SONGS TOUR: Featuring CasHaley, Mike Love, Kimieand Tubby Love;$10 plus fees in advance, $13 atthe door; 8 p.m., doorsopenat7 p.m.;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

CENTRALOREGONFLEA MARKET:

Freeadmission;8a.m.-4p.m.; Tumalo FeedCo., 64619 U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-385-3364, info© centraloregonfleamarket.com or www.centraloregonfleamarket.com. ANNUAL NORTHAMERICAN POND SKIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS:Try to make itacross the100foot long pond without wiping out, all ages welcome, sponsored by Deschutes Brewery and Maui Jim; $25 entry fee, spectators free; 11 a.m.; West Village Lodge, Mt. Bachelor Ski Resort, 13000 Century Drive, Bend; 541-382-2442 or www. mtbachelor.com/winter/mountain/ tickets/springtacular/index. html/119342231. CONCERTFORVETERANS:

Featuring anevening of musicand

jjwpct= LOCAL BALLOTS Continued fromB1

ON THEBALLOT INJEFFERSON COUNTY • County commission seats held by Mike Ahern and John Hatfield are up for election. Ahern, seeking re-election, faces achallenge from Floyd Paye;Tom Brown, MaeHuston andMike Throop have filed for the other seat.

• Lake Chinook Fire & Rescue is seeking a $660,000 general obligation bond to build anewfire station. The average annual tax rate for the 30year bond isestimated at50.9 cents per$1,000 of assessedvalue.

• Find a copyatthe state elections webpage:ses.eregen.gev/veting.

TUESDAY

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CROOKCOUNTY All sites open Mondaythrough Friday until Tuesday. • Crook County Clerk's Office, 300 N.E. Third St., Room 23, Prineville; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; openuntil 8 p.m. Tuesday • Courthouse drive-up, 300 N.E.Third St., rear entrance, Prineville; 24 hours; open until 8 p.m. Tuesday • Powell Butte Elementary School, 13650 S.W.Highway126, Powell Butte; open during school hours; openunti l8 p.m.Tuesday • Crook County Library, 175N.W.Meadow Lakes Drive, Prineville; openduring library hours; until 8 p.m. Tuesday • Post GeneralStore, 28550 S.E.Paulina Highway, Post; open during store hours; openuntil 8 p.m.Tuesday • Crook County Treasurer's Office, 200 N.E.Second St., Suite100, Prineville; open during office hours; openunti l8 p.m.Tuesday JEFFERSONCOUNTY All drop boxesare open 24hours. • Culver City Hall, 200 W. First St., Culver • Metolius City Hall, 636 Jefferson St., Metolius • Crooked River Ranch, Administration area • Warm Springs, 2112Wasco St. • Jefferson County Clerk's Office, 66 S.E. D St., Madras

MEMORIALDAYCEREMONY:Robert McHaney, WWII Veteran, will speak; free;1 p.m.; Deschutes Memorial Gardens, 63875 N. U.S.Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-5592 or kallen© deschutesmemorialchapel.com. "TRU LOVE":Ascreening of the 2013 film about a relationship between two women, presented by the LGBT Stars; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881.

dominate the production of commodities like sugar beets,

BALLOT DROPSITES BEND • Wall Street and Lafayette parking lot; open 7a.m.-8 p.m.Tuesday • Deschutes County RoadDepartment, 61150 S.E. 27thSt.,24/7dropbox;open until8 p.m.Tuesday • Deschutes Service Center (on parkway side of building), 1300 N.W.Wall St.; 24/7 drop box; open until 8 p.m.Tuesday • Deschutes County Clerk's Office 1300 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 8a.m.-5 p.m.;open7a.m.-8 p.m.Tuesday ELSEWHERE INDESCIIITES COUNTY • La Pine Public Library, 164251st St., La Pine; open until 8 p.m. Tuesday •Redmond PublicLibrary,827 S.W .DeschutesAve., Redmond;24 hours;open until8p.m.Tuesday • Sisters City Hall, 520 E.CascadeAve., Sisters; normalbusinessdays8a.m.-5p.m.;open8a.m.-8p.m. Tuesday • Sunriver Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane,Sunriver;8a.m.-6p.m.Monday;open8a.m.-8p.m.Tuesday • Terrebonne Sheriff's Substation,815411th St., Terrebonne; Monday, 8a.m.-1 p.m. and 2 p.m.-5 p.m.; open 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Tuesday

May 26

y'

egon. Agriculture companies have fought back hard against efforts around the country to increase regulations on genetically modified crops, which

-

VOTER'SGUIDE

MONDAY

NOW OPEN.

Tuesday'sprimary: what's at stakeacrossthe state The Assoclated Press ber. Pediatric neurosurgeon populist wing are promising to Oregon's Ibesday primary Monica Wehby, of Portland, represent thevoices of conserfeatures only a couple of ma- has tried to stake out moderate vativeslooking for a firebrand jor racesand ballotmeasures positions that won't hurt her to lead the charge against of statewide interest, but they with Democratic and unaffil- Democrats. They're battling are important ones — includ- iated voters come November. Republicans backed by the ing choosing a Republican Her chief rival, Bend state Rep. business community and othopponent to run against Sen. Jason Conger, is running to er establishment interests. The Jeff Merkley in November her right, hitting her especially tensions are especially apparand deciding on the future of hard on social issues. ent in four districts centered in genetically modified crops in Governor: The p r i mary Silverton, Dallas, Keizer and the Rogue Valley of Southern seems merely a formality for Pendleton. Oregon. both John Kitzhaber, the DemGMO measures: Voters in Here is a rundown of what ocratic incumbent, and Den- two counties in Southern Oreis at stake: nis Richardson, a Republican gonwill weigh in on a growing U.S. Senate: Republicans state representative seeking to national debate over genetiaround the country are hoping unseat him. Neitheris facing a cally modified organisms and to take the majority in the Sen- serious challenger for his par- foods. Organic farmers, who ate. While they face long odds ty's nomination. With the pri- can't use genetically modified in Oregon, they hope President mary out of the way, the cam- crops, are seeking toban them Barack Obama's unpopularity paignwill begin in earnest. from Jackson and Josephine combined with the disastrous Legislature:A fight for the counties. Though it's alocal isrollout of Cover Oregon, the soul of Oregon's Republican sue,the measure attracted nastate's health insurance ex- Party is playing out in a hand- tional interest and money. The change, can make the race ful of state House primaries. two campaigns raised $1.3 milhere competitive in Novem- Candidates from the party's lion, mostly from outside Or-

JOHN CRAIGIE: The singersongwriter folk musician performs, with Benji Nagel from Sisters; $15 donation, reservation requested; 7 p.m., doors open at 6p.m. for potluck; The Glen at Newport Hills,1019 N.W. Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-4808830 or houseconcertsintheglen© bendbroadband.com.

541-382-181 1

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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

e ecisiontosen t inmate to eat row: i e a a l n?

SaVed at POrtland heart Walk —Cardiologists taking part in

The Associated Press

since Oregonians reinstated

ed murderer David Ray Taylor

capital punishment in 1984.

should be sentenced to death

Gov. John Kitzhaber ordered a moratorium on the state death penalty in 2011. Crawford said the testimony from three state prison in-

spent much of their conversation on one question: Would he commit future violence?

Jury foreman Ron Crawford said the panel concluded that sending the 58-year-old Taylor to death row was the only way to keep others safe. "His threat to the other in-

mates, the (prison) staff and visitors was a very real deal," Crawford told The Register-Guard newspaper.

the pecking order, it sounded like he'd have a fairly decent life in prison," Crawford said. Prosecutors said the killing of Gutierrez was done at Taylor's home, and he planned it along with younger associates, one of whomposed as a stranded woman in a bar parking lot and askedGutierrezforaride.

Oregon's death row. Just two inmates have been executed

EUGENE — Jurors deciding whether two-time convict-

mates who appeared as char-

The Register-Guard

David Ray Taylor, 58, listens to the jury's guilty verdict in a

Lane County courtroom May8.

the American Heart Association's annual Portland Heart andStroke Walk saved a fellow participant who went into cardiac arrest. Dr. Joaquin Cigarroa wasjust a few steps behind the manwhocollapsed Saturday. Thedoctor immediately performed CPR.Cigarroa andanother cardiologist on thewalk, Brad Evans, pumped onthe man's chest and detected spontaneousheartbeats. Paramedics whohadstruggled to get to the scenebecause ofthe big crowd and aclosed bridge then used a defibrillator to restore the man'sheart rhythm. Theunidentified man was taken to ahospital; Cigarroa heard the manwill survive. COOS Bay LNGmOney — Local officials are considering a unique plan to divide the property taxes that would comewith the proposed construction of a$7.5 billion liquefied natural gas export terminal on the North Spit of CoosBay.Thetax moneywould befunneled into private nonprofits whose unelected boardmembers would havefinal say over how thedollars are used. Supporters saythe maneuverwill create a long-term funding streamfor schools and economic development. The natural gasexport terminal, power plant and pipeline areexpected to add at least $4 billion to the local property tax base.Theplan must be approved bythe North Bendand CoosBaycity councils, as well as Coos County andthe Oregon International Port of Coos Bay.

After Gutierrez was killed,

acterwitnessesforthedefense "probably did (Taylor) more harm than good." The inmates all know Taylor from his previous prison term and spoke highly of him

his body was dismembered and buried in a forest south-

west of Eugene. Crawford praised the work

of prosecutors and said TayHe is being sentenced to death in court. But they also testi- lor's attorneys had a difficult for murder. fied that Taylor, because of his job, considering that trial evThe seven-woman, f i v ecriminal history, might return idence left little question reman jury ruled last week that to the penitentiary with some garding Taylor's guilt. "I think the defense did what Taylor should be sentenced to previously served 27 years for measureofstatus.Prosecutors death, after previously con- the killing of a young Eugene said his position in the prison they could to establish reasonvicting him of robbing two woman in 1977. hierarchy could allow him able doubt, and that was an imbanks and killing 22-year-old Taylor will be officially sen- to influence other inmates to possible task," Crawford said. "We looked for reasonable Eugene resident C e lestino tenced Tuesday. He will join 33 commit violence. "Because he'd be higher in doubt, and we found none." Gutierrez Jr. in 2012. Taylor other men and one woman on

BOdieS faund —State police and Josephine County authorities are investigating the death of amanfound near acreek on rural property southwest of Grants Pass.Authorities say the body of Johnny Hamlin, 43, was discovered Friday afternoon and anautopsy was planned. Hamlin wasthe property's caretaker and lived in a trailer at the site. Meanwhile, police in Linn County recovered abodyfrom the Santiam-Albany Canal. Acaller reported seeing the body late Thursday afternoon and it was later recovered by thesheriff's water rescue and recovery team; police haveyet to releasethe person's nameor saythesuspectedcauseofdeath.

ASTORIA

Week

'19th-centurycannon:dug upand restored 1

By Ted Shorack A STORIA —

Continued from B1 U.S. SENATEVOTE • On Thursday, the Senate similarly failed to advance an$85 billion tax bill as Republicans protested their inability to offer amendments. Usingaprocedural device known as filling the amendment trees, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., prevented Republicans from offering any amendments of their own. If the bill had advanced, Reid offered to haveSens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the chairman

In 2008, an

The Associated Press

excavator A f ter f ive

lowered one of two

years of painstaking resto-

cannons

ration work , t w o c a n nons from a 19th-century Ameri-

from the USS Shark into

can ship that surveyed the region are now ready to be displayed at the Columbia River

an Oregon State Parks vehicle in

Maritime Museum. Museum staff used a forklift to hoist the 1,300-pound iron

Arch Cape for restoration.

cannons and carefully place

Photos hy Alex Pajunas

them in replica wooden car-

cannons still technically be-

longtotheU.S.Navy.The mu- and drifted south along the seum partnered with the Navy coast. The first cannon from and the state of Oregon to re- the ship was found in 1898 and store and display them. gave Cannon Beach its name. "To us it's so much more than Survivors of the shipwreck just a maritime story," said made it to Astoria and set up Dave Pearson, deputy director cabins while they waited for of the museum. "This was the two months for passage to San dawn of the Oregon territory. Francisco.On a stone slab,

And

own separate chemical bath. that were part of the original Smith said they had to slow- mounting were too unstable to ly change the chemistry to be used in the display, but will reduce the chloride-level that be ina separate case forvisiaccumulated from so many tors to view. years ofsaltwater exposure. The museum already has The iron pieces were even other artifacts from the Shark, given a jolt of electric current including an officer's sword

to remove buildup. It allowed the rust to turn back into iron. "That was th e stabilization "Here the Shark was lost. Sep- process and that took years," Smith said. "Each object untember 10, 1846."

7rfrtu'ek ck pe~

t h ought t h e

cannons could be from the USS Shark, a schooner that

termine that one was American-made and the other was made in Great Britain.

navigated the Columbia River The cannons have been at in 1846. After closer examina- the Center for Maritime Artion, it turned out to be true. chaeology and Conservation The ship was deployedto set- at Texas A & M U n i v ersity tle territorial disputes with the since April 2009. The process British along the river, but was of restoring them has been lanever used in combat. When borious. A thick layer of sand the crew tried to cross the and rock that had formed Columbia River bar to leave, around the cannons had to be the ship was ripped apart on delicately chipped away. Experts found pieces of a sandbar near Fort Stevens State Park. A chunk of the ship wood, leather and rope inside. w as suckedoutinto the ocean They were all soaked in their

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Columbia River Maritime Museum staffers lower one of two iron The cannons will be on display in climate-controlled cases to keep down the relative humidity.

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more specif ically as carronades, were discovered in 2008 Carronades were short- derwent its own particular unveiled Saturday for all visiduring Presidents Day week- range naval weapons and com- chemistry and treatment." The iron rings and guards tors to see. end. Mike Petrone of Tualatin monly used in the early 19th and his daughter Miranda, century. Jeff Smith, CRMM cuwho was 12 at the time, dis- rator, said the British navy used covered the first cannon while them for close combat naval walking along the beach in battles with France during the Arch Cape. Two days later the Napoleonic wars. During the second one was found by Sha- War of 1812, the British were risse Repp of Tualatin. outmatched by American ships Staff with the Nehalem Bay with longer-range cannons. State Park and others had to The carronades that were use a backhoe for the first can- dug up in Arch Cape were Oreck Magnesiume RS NEWOreck Touch™ non and dig trenches along- among 12 total cannons on I FOR side it before pulling it out. board the Shark, which was Both were displayed in tubs built in a Washington, D.C., ultra-Iightweight cleantng power brlnglng easy tobagless at the park as officials tried to shipyard in 1821. Because of determine their origin. a maker's mark on the botOHLY: When they were first extom, officials were able to de*

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the cannons complete the story of the ship and are a reminder of the dangers crews faced when crossing the riverbar. The exhibit will be officially

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—Andrew Clevenger, The Bulletin jP X X

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and ranking member, respectively, of the Senate Finance Committee, work out a compromiseonwhichamendments should go with the bill. Republicans rejected this offer and required a 60-vote supermajority for the bill to advance. It failed by a tally of 53-40. OneRepublican joined 52 Democrats in supporting the measure, while all of the no votes were cast by Republicans. The House of Representatives was out on adistrict work period and did not hold anyvotes in the past week.

Daily Astorian

riages and original mounting pieces. Although the ship was bro-

This is something that I think

— From wire reports

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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

Fishing Continued from B1

" I've found o u t i n certain times of day, they like to switch from one bait to the other to the other, from

t

worms to eggs to Powerbait," he said.

y

A regular visitor to the pond,

•,W

Bryce said he could confirm reports of a handful of large fish lurking in the depths of

d

the pond. Earlier this month,

he said, he spent several minutes fighting to keep a trout he'd hooked away from the st jaws of a circling bass, even- Chamberlin Campbell, 11, of Bend, inspects a freshly landed rainr tually landing his catch. Hold- bow trout Saturday. s ing his arms more than 2 feet apart to describe the pursuing bass, Bryce said the bass was ing to a close soon, Schrader next stocking of trout, in the one of the biggest fish he's ever said, as climbing water tem- fall, Schrader said, but youth seen in person. peratures will eventually kill trout fishing should remain "This is crazy. I've never off any trout remaining after brisk in the pond at Shevlin seen anything like this," he Saturday. Park through the summer due Photos by Scott Hammers I The Bulletin sard. Bluegill and l argemouth to cooler waters. Amy Moldenhauer, 6, and Callie Howland, 5, both of Bend, scan the waters of the pond at Pine Nursery Trout fishing season at Pine bass will be the only fish to — Reporter: 541-383-0387, Park for signs of fish. Nursery Park is likely com- be found at the pond until the shammers@bendbulletinieom ik

u

Redmond

"It's for kids who may be disengaged in school.

Continued from B1 "We're going to be very me-

smart and leaders, but maybe not leaders in school or part of any club. They may get average grades but see school as secondary."

thodical and intentional with

the process," McIntosh said. "We think Camp Nine is a

They may have all the ability in the world, they're

— David Burke, director of secondary education

great place to dip the toe in the water and put technology in

Rob Saxton, the state's dep-

uty superintendent, rejected that request.

"Somethingwe keep being told is, if we do delay, then we're going to lose millions of dollars," OEA President Hanna Vaandering said in an interview. "But our focus is not on millions of dollars; it's

on doing what's right for our students."

Vaandering added that she questioned whether parents would support spending millions on a test that the state

has projected65 percent of students will fail.

The Associated Press SEATTLE —

scores is expected any time

said. "There are so many dif-

you switch assessments. "The short version is, I don't

ferencesnot compensated for

protested in front of fast food restaurants, marched d own c it y

s t r eets a n d

implored city leaders to demand an immediate increase in the miniumum

wage to $15 an hour for all employees. "We're not patient!" a man shouted at

the rally, to cheers from the crowd. While the Seattle may-

or is proposing to raise the wage to $15 in the coming years to the highest level in the nation, some activists say that's too slow and are threatening to take the

issue to voters with a ballot measure that would force a

raise sooner. Accounting for

rant Association, says it supports a wage hike, but with City Council member and a some key caveats. The group leader of the group 15 Now. wants a phase-in and a temAs the plan is being debated porary training wage. It also by the council, businesses are wants health care, commissounding the alarm that rais- sions, tips and bonuses to be ing the wage too quickly could counted in total wages. hurt their revenue and force Mayor Ed Murray presentthem to hire fewer workers or ed his plan, forged from an let go of some employees. Pop- agreement among labor, busiular restaurateurs have em- ness and nonprofit represenphatically argued for counting tatives. The group crafted a tips in total compensation. plan that 21 of the 24 members Minority chambers of com- agreed on. It created a unified m erce have banded together to front for Murray to present to argue that a quick increase to the city. Murray's proposal $15 would kill their family-run gives businesses with more businesses. Their argument: than 500 employees nationally Who is going to hire immi- at least three years to phase in grants learning English for theincrease. $15 an hour? Cities and states nationOneSeattle, a group made wide have proposed raising up of small and medium-sized minimum wages. The current employers with the backing of minimum wage in Washinglarge business organizations ton state is $9.32 an hour — al-

workers still won'tbe at 15," said T h e y've Kshama Sawant, the socialist

lies at a Seattle union hall,

David Burke, director of sec- velop a mentorship role with teachers involved in Camp ondary e d u cation. "They teachers, while also allowing Nine, who will begin meeting may have all the ability in students to build relationships with students in the summer the world, they're smart and with peers." and then serve as the camp- leaders, but maybe not leadBurke noted that current ers' regular English and math ers in school or part of any high school leaders will be teachers, will receive focused club. They may get average i nvolved in t h e c am p a n d training on how to integrate grades but see school as students will get early tours iPads into instruction. secondary." of their schools, maybe even "It's not enough to just hand Burke said the summer por- having the chance to pick out teachers devices and say, tion of the program will not lockers before other students. 'These are cool,'" McIntosh resemble a typical class but On the first day of school, said. instead will feature multiple the campers will likely serve Camp Nine, which the dis- field trips and will be centered as tour guides, helping other trict said is already full, tararound developing relation- freshmen through their first gets those students who mid- ships between students and day. "We know attendance those dle school teachers, principals teachers. "Developing a quality rela- first few weeks is really imand counselorsfelt w ere not reaching their potential and tionship with a teacher is a key portant, and we believe this may be at risk of falling off ingredient for success," Burke will help connect students to track in high school. said. "An early chance to do school," Burke said. "It's for kids who may be that in an informal setting will — Reporter: 541-633-2160, disengaged in school," said be a great opportunity to detleeds@bendbulletinicom

Continued from B1

Leading thenation, but too slowfor some crowded into stuffy ral-

the hands of kids." M cIntosh added that t h e

Common Core

WASHINGTON'S WAGE FIGHT

i n f la-

tion, "even in 10 years' time,

on students and having opportunities for kids to get involved

when trying to teach one thing in activities and their comto adiverse group oflearners. munities. If student success McIntosh added. "I guess I can It robs creativity from k i ds is supposed to look like a test be a little frank in that I'm not and teachers." score, that's a sad commentotally excited about taking Perry said he does support tary on where public educathis debate to the public school increasing the rigor of Ore- tion is going." system, which is expected to gon's standards, but that he — Reporter: 541-633-2160, implement it. It's not mine to doesn't believe Common Core tleedscmbendbulletin.com debate. That's why we have a is the best way to do that. "Massachusetts had toughjudicial system, why we have Food, Home Sr Garden public office elections — that's er standards. Oregon could In AT HOME where it is. I'm not going to have gone there and learned engage in a conversation that from them," Perry said. "As a TheBulletin would put me against my su- federation, each state is a lab periors or the state of Oregon." for good ideas. Massachusetts Bob Perry, a R edmond had the best students; why did school board member, is vehe- we need to go with a national mently opposed to Common thing?" Core, leading presentations The president of Bend-La across the region on what he Pine's teachers union, Bob sees as the pitfalls of the stan- Markland,takes a more caudards and assessments. Perry tious approach, sympathizing think we have any option,"

like the Washington Restau-

ready the highest in the nation.

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"Teachers have absolutely not had enough time to prepare," Vaandering said. "Some districts have had pro- doesn't want the state to delay with the desire to slow things fessional development; some the test, but rather abandon down without calling for the have not. We had 650 edu- the test and the standards to state to abandon assessments cators come together to talk which it is tied. tied to Common Core. "We're not opposed to the "What I t h ink i s i nterestabout this issue, and we believed very strongly that we ing is now I find myself, as a Smarter Balanced testing are not ready." school board member and as idea, but I t h in k w e s h are Bend-La Pine Schools Su- someone politically involved, the same concerns as OEA," perintendent Ron Wilkinson on the same side as the teach- Markland said. "How effecthinks his district is ready, ers union, which is pretty un- tive is this going to be? How and that parents and students usual," Perry said. "But what l ong will i t t a k e u n ti l w e will understand the lower pass

the heck, at least it's an oppor-

know how effective it is? Ev-

ratesifthey are prepared for

tunity to get a slowdown and call time out."

erybody's a little in the dark

the results. "I am certainly sensitive to

P erry objects to what he

about what it will look like and mean."

the fact that teachers are feeling huge pressure, and part of my job is to continue to put things in context for our com-

describes as federal intrusion Markland said he supports into state education systems, an approach that slowly impointing out how the federal plements testing, allowing the government has linked ma- state to develop feedback and munity," Wilkinson said. "We jor federal grants to adoption to "understand what a s t udent's results really mean." try to do that whenever we of the standards. Additionshare data, telling people what ally, Perry criticizes the cost Nonetheless, he was adamant the limitations are

a r ound of implementation, the lack

that education shouldn't be

it. Oregon adopted Common of public input into the adopCore four years ago, and the tion and the unproven effec-

centered around tests, regard-

real key to the assessments

are tied to. "We didn't get to be the so-

tiveness of the standards and

is that they are aligned to the assessments. "The education community standards we now have. Four years into having the stan-

dards, it's time to have the assessment aligned to those standards so we can see how

is almost being forced to teach to the test, and that doesn't

work for every kid," Perry

less of what standards they cial, political and economic

leaderoftheworldbecause we were focused on test scores," Markland said. "We focused

we are doing." •

5 •

mentation of Smarter Balanced assessments will be a

standardized test so it could

better understand Smarter Balanced results. However, Wilkinson noted, the state

doesn't have the money for such an option. Redmond School District

Superintendent Mike McIntosh reiterated W i l k inson's

points, noting that a drop in

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ON THE INSIDE COMPLETE SPORTSSECTION W

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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

• Elite winners Marshall Greene and Sarah Max havenow combinedfor 10 Pole Pedal Paddletitles

Ilgmne@g

18

ux

Alex McDougall/The Bulletin

Marshall Greene celebrates with spectators as he nears the finish line at the Les Schwab Amphitheater on his way to winning the Pole Pedal Paddle men's elite race. It was the 33-year-old Bend resident's sixth win, which puts him tied for second all time.

WOMEN'S ELITE

Best ofthePPP

Max dominatesthe field for her 4th elite victory

With their wins Saturday, Marshall Greene andSarah Max moved up on the all-time victories list. MEN'S < Justin Wadsworth 8 Marshall Greene 6 B en Husaby 6 Dennis Oliphant 4 Peter Leach 3 < Dan Simoneau 3

By Mark Morical The Bulletin

MEN'S ELITE

Run iskeyfor Greeneas he earns 6th careerwin By Mark Morical The Bulletin

Sarah Max thought she had a comfortable lead, until she saw another runner across the Deschutes

River closing on her fast. Because the U.S. Bank Pole Pedal

t2

Paddle includes so many different

WOMEN'S < Suzanne King 5 Sarah Max Julie Verke 43 < Stephanie Howe

Busy with ayoung family and a full-time job, Marshall Greene had to find a quick and easy way to train for the U.S.Bank Pole Pedal Paddle.

Running was the answer. That might have made the dif-

race categories competing at once, it is sometimes difficult to determine

ference Saturday, as Greene used a strong effort in the 5-mile run stage

just who is in the lead.

to win his sixth men's elite title in the PPP.

"I saw her across the river and I

What isthePPP?

didn't know who she was, and as we were coming around at the turn-

around I saw her, but once I saw her help her husband into the water (for the paddle stage of the race), I breathed a HUGE sigh of relief," Max said. Turns out, the runner was a mem-

ber of a family team, and Max's

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Women's elite winner Sarah Max runs to her kayak.

fourth victory in the elite women's race was secure.

Max finished the six-stage race in 2hours, 5 minutes, 34 seconds.

Carolyn Daubeny, also of Bend, was second across the finish line at

Inside W • Complete results from the 38th annual U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle,C10

t•

• •

,

the Les Schwab Amphitheater in 2:12:56.

' , l e

Six stages for about 34 miles: Alpine skiing:A race down agated course at Mt. Bachelor ski area. Nordic skiing:An8-kilometer loop at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center. Cycling:A 22-mile ride from Mount Bachelor to Bend. Running: A 5-mile run in Bend. Paddling:A1 t/2-mile paddle on the

Deschutes River. Sprinting:A half-mile run to the finish.

SeeMax/C2

"The first half of the run I felt good,"

said the 33-year-old Greene. "I think

I ran a couple pretty fast miles, then definitely slowed down." Greene, of Bend, finished with a

time of 1 hour, 46 minutes, 58 seconds, high-fiving spectators as he crossed the finish line at Bend's Les Schwab

Amphitheater on a warm, comfortable morning. Andrew Boone, also of Bend, finished second in 1:47:30, just

32 seconds behind Greene. Bend's Matt Briggs was third with a time of 1:49:46.

Greene won five straight PPPs from

+

• Bend's Jason Adamshas been in the elite men's field since 2002 and is still looking for his first topthree finish. With his best time ever this year, he is upbeat.Notebook, C2

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Marshall Greene rides into the bikerun transition area.

• More photos, numbers, and our favorite team namesand costumes,Cg

On theWed

2006 to 2010, and after a two-year hia-

tus he finished second last year. See Greene/C9

Monday

A photo gallery with dozens• PPP weekendisn't over of pictures from this yet! The mini-PPPrace year's PPP,andall our coverage is today, beginning at 9 leading up to the big day.www. a.m. in Bend's Old Mill bendbulletin.com/ppp District.

•O


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

POLE PEDAL PADDLE NOTEBOOK

s an si reac in or

e o ium

By Beau Eastes and Mark Morical

"Definitely wear longer

The Bulletin

Jason Adams loves this race. "This exemplifies everything that's good about Bend," said the 34-year-old Adams, who finished

shorts. Riding downhill with short shorts, they kind of

turned into a thong."

fourth in the men's elite division in

— Damian Wylie, 29, of Seattle

Saturday's U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle. "It's a celebration of Bend." That passion helps explain why A dams, a

Backin Bend

1 997 M o untain V i ew

graduate, has participated in the

In high school, Bend's Alyssa

PPP's elite division for 13 consecu-

O'Connor won six individual state track and field titles at Summit and

tive years. "Where else can you alpine ski, nordic ski, bike, run, and kayak all in the same day?" Adams asked. "The paddle is probably my favorite. I'm the best paddler in the (elite) group and usually I'm able to pass a coupleofpeoplethere."

helped lead the Storm to multiple team championships in cross-country and track. Back in Bend after

tlttststtlt

'20

graduating from Cornell — she ran track and cross-country at the Ivy

League school — O'Connor partnered with Tosch Roy, a former

Adams competed in the PPP as

Summit classmate and standout nor-

part of a relay several times in ele-

dic skier, Saturday in her first PPP.

mentary school, but he never raced

ff

in middle or high school. Always wanting to do the PPP when he "grew up," he left Bend for college but upon his return signed up for the 2002 race, the first of many to

~

The former Storm athletes won the coed pairs 18-24 division in 2 hours

T

even. "I never got to do this during high school because we always had (track) districts or state," said O'Connor, now 22. "My first year back, I

IIW

come. "I thought, 'Well, I guess I'm

knew I wanted to do this. It's such

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

grown up now,' " Adams said about his mindset after college. "It was

a big part of the community, where

Jason Adams kayaks on his way to finishing fourth in the men's elite division of the Pole Pedal Paddle.

weekend warriors and elite athletes get to mix."

time to do this."

Twelve years later, Adams is still a consistent top-five finisher and

Wolves on the prowl

his time Saturday (1 hour, 52 minutes, 57 seconds) was his fastest mark yet, he said. "I'm still trying to crack the podium," Adams said about a top-three finish. "I'm getting closer and closer

Oregon's most famous wolf, OR-7 may have found amate — but don't tell that to Saturday's PPP team, OR7's Brides. " We're women wh o r u n w i t h wolves," said Hilary Garrett, who along with teammate Tina Pavelic

to the winners."

Even if Adams never tops the

r,

dressed as she-wolves while competing in the female pairs 55-59 divi-

s ttss /'

elite field, don't expect him to slow

down. In fact, this could be just the start of a long, long PPP career. "One of my heroes is Lew Hollander," Adams said of Central Oregon's 83-year-old Ironman triathlete. "Some guys talk about doing

sion. "We howl for OR-7." Veterans of the PPP — "This isn't

Beau Eastes/The Bulletin

Hilary Garrett and Tina Pavelic of OR7's Brides female pairs team.

our first rodeo," Garrett noted — OR7's Brides competed with veils and

tails as well as face paint and wolf ears.

the PPP until they hit their athletic

"We're trying to lure him out of

peak and then quitting. I want to

Jackson County (in Southern Oregon) andback to Central Oregon,"

win the 80-year-old division. Who

, "If@lllf.

knows? I could be doing this for the

Pavelic said.

1

next 50 years."

• •

PPP just not enough?

Cancer survivor meets her goal Redmond's Tanya Bruce, who is recovering from a mastectomy to treat breast cancer, finished fifth in the women's individual 40-44 division Saturday with a time of 3:08:17, easily meeting her goal of 3'/2 hours. "It was, like, three times better

than I could have imagined," Bruce said of racing the PPP as an individual forthe firsttime.

"I was really nervous at the beginning, but at the top at the moun-

tain, I just sort of took a second and looked back at the Three Sisters, and I actually got a little choked up. Suddenly, it became real to me that I was able to do this. It was really

The Bruce family competed as individuals. From left, Tanya, Ashley and Gary celebrate their finishes at the Les Schwab Amphitheater.

Next time warmer clothes,longer shorts First-time PPPers usually walk away with new ideas and lessons learned for the next time they com-

cancer.

— and not much else — during the

race. "Riding downhill with short shorts, they kind of turned into a thong." daughter, Ashley Bruce, placed secLogan, an experienced downond in the women's individual 16-19 hill skier but a bit of a novice on Her husband, Gary, finished

third in the men's 40-44 individual division in 2:19:23. The Bruces'

The 39-year-old Max said she felt relaxed on the 8-kilometer nordic ski leg and said the mostly downhill 22-mile bike stage

Continued from C1

gon this spring, the inaugural Hood 2 River Relay is scheduled for May The event will be contested on

division, just 20 minutes behind her father in 2:40:11.

For Bruce, racing the PPP solo w as abig step in herrecovery from

Max

Bend's Tosch Royand Alyssa O'Connor of Rebound-East coed pairs team.

31.

pete. Seattle's Damian Wylie and Jackie Logan, who competed in the coed pairs 25-34 division as BN Runs, were no different. "Definitely wear longer shorts," said Wylie, 29, who sported snug pink shorts and pink suspenders

emotionaL"

For those who are seeking even more multisport adventure in Ore-

Beau Eastes/The Bulletin

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

cross-country skis, also had some

advice. "Learn to nordic ski," Logan, 30, said. "I'd been cross-country skiing twice and that was five years ago." BN Runs finished in 2:14:54, good for third place in their division.

sion so that he could make Mountain View's district track and field

a course from Mount Hood to the

meet Saturday afternoon across

town of Hood River and includes a 1.2-mile alpine ski, a 2-mile nordic

town at Summit. Metcalf also was

ski, a 7-mile mountain bike ride, a

helping his wife and a friend get ready for their individual races, and he was assisting a relay team from the Sisters Athletic Club as well. "I was so busy I almost forgot my cycling shoes," Metcalf said. "And I did forget my nordic boots."

27-mile road bike ride, a 6.7-mile run, and a 1.5-mile paddle on the Co-

mit and watch the kids."

ter, visit www.hood2riverrelay.com.

lumbia River.

Like Central Oregon's Pole Pedal Paddle, the Hood 2 River Relay Buck Naked, aka Tate Metcalf, includes categories for individuals, placed 13th out of 13 entries in the pairs and teams. men's elite division of the PPP SatThat led to a mad scramble for But the Hood 2 River appears to urday. But all things considered, ill-fitting nordic boots at Mt. Bach- be a more grueling undertaking for just finishing the race was a pretty elor's Nordic Center. Before he even endurance athletes. The total dissolid accomplishment. got to the cross-country ski leg of tance of the event's course is 45.4 Metcalf, the owner of Sisters Ath- the race, though, Metcalf crashed miles, while the total distance of the letic Club and an assistant track twice on the downhill ski leg. PPP is about 34 miles. "It was a bit of a rough go," said and field coach at Mountain View, Deadline to register for the Hood 2 competed in the elite men's division Metcalf, who f i nished in 2 :25:01. River Relay is May 28. — the first group of racers to start "But I'll be able to head over to SumFor more information and to regis-

Busy day for BuckNaked

— instead of the men's 45-49 divi-

the bike; I like to go as fast as I ing hard for their mom at the can go. So my legs are usually bike-run transition at the Athlet-

funny." Bend's Allison Halpin fin-

vision on Saturday. "If anyone wanted help with

anything — transitions, adMax won the PPP last year to run. Sothat alwayshurts." of Max's, who dressed up as a Miles, also of Bend, was fourth vice — I would be happy to help and in 2008 and 2009. She is from Mount Bachelor to Bend Max had several family mem- Max look-alike, blond pigtails in2:49:40. them," Max offered. "There's so nowtied for second most all time was "really fun." bers and friends helping her andall. M ax said sheplans toracethe manygreat athletes inthis town, "But the run was hard," Max as support crew, induding her "I was just giggling at that PPP as part of a team next year. and I think it'd be great to see women's PPP victories with Julie Verke (1995, 1997-99). Bend's Su- said."It's always hardto run fast husband, Kevin, and their twin point," Max said, laughing. "I She hopes more women will some more girls get in the mix." zanne King has won five PPPs after you've alpine skied, nordic 11-year-old daughters, Isabel think my transition was proba- compete in the elite category, as — Reporter: 541-383-0318, (2001,2004-07). skied, cyded. I like to push it on and Fiona. The girls were cheer- blypretty slow because it was so just four females racedinthat dimmorical@bendbulletin.com ic Club of Bend, as was a friend

ished third in 2:34:31 and Allison

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Scoreboard,C4 Preps,C6 Motorsports,C9 Sportsinbrief,C4 NBA,C7 Golf,C9 MLB, C5 NHL, C8

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

PREP TRACK & FIELD

CYCLING

s rai or ummi,

Wiggins closeto winning California PASADENA, Calif. -

Slovakia's Peter Sagan won the seventh stage of the Tour of California in a field sprint Saturday and Britain's Bradley Wiggins closed in on the overall title. Sagan, riding for Cannondale, jumpedto the front just after the final corner to win the 88.7-mile Santa Clarita road race in 3 hours, 24 minutes, 33 seconds. "Finally, I got another one," said Sagan, a four-time Tour de France stage winner who claimed his11th career win at theTour of California and the66th victory of his career. "We (his team) pulled at the front all day until the finish. It was an important win for the teamand for me." With his victory secure with about 50 yards left, Sagan, known for his animated victory celebrations, raised his hands off his handlebars and appeared to beplaying the piano. "I was just waving to the fans," Sagansaid. Wiggins, the 2012 Tour de Francewinner who rides for Sky, finished15th in the main field to maintain his 30-second lead over Australia's RohanDennis of Garmin-Sharp. American LawsonCraddock of Giant-Shimano remained third overall,

O A OSB B SUNRIVER — For the

third straight year, Summit

Summit's Lindsey Brodeck,

remains on top.

who fell to Bend High's Sierra Winch in last year's district singles final, reclaimed the singles crown on Saturday by cruising past Winch 6-4, 6-2 in the final. The top four finishers in singles and doubles play qualify for the 5A state championships in Portland.

With champions in singles and doubles play, the Storm racked up 33 points to take

the Class 5A Special District 1 girls tennis team title on Saturday.

"I appreciate this tournament because it continues to show the value of team

The Storm tandem of

and gives experience for our younger players to get an eye

Kelsey Collis and Morgan DeMeyer posted a 6-3, 6-4 win in the semifinals of the

on what it takes to compete at

ahigh level," Summit coach Ryan Cruz said. "Although we

doubles bracket before recording a 6-4, 6-3 victory in the are not finished yet, I couldn't championship. have asked for abetter group of Roy finished fourth in sinplayers to take the district title." gles play after falling 3-6, 7-6, 6-4in the third-place match. After defeating teammate Brenna Roy in the semifinals, SeeGirls tennis/C6

i'

(i

C'

'

Storm swee tite matc es at istricts PREP BOYSTENNIS

Bulletin staff report HERMISTON — Summit's special season continues to treat the Storm well. After what Summit coach

1:48 back.

"It was a relatively straightforward stage," said Wiggins, who has held the race leadfor a week since winning the stage-2 time trial. "We didn't have to do too much. But it was apretty fast and tough run-in to the finish. Youalways have to beaware of a breakaway or acrash." Norway's Thor Hushovd of BMCwas second in the stage, followed by Dutchman DannyVan Poppel of the Trekteam.

PREP GIRLSTENNIS

Bulletin staff report

Photos by Alex McDougall/ For The Bulletin

Sarah Reeves ran the anchor leg of Summit High's winning 1,600-meter relay team during the Special District1 track and field meet Saturday afternoon at Summit.

the singles final, while the tandem of Liam Hall and Garen Gasparovic put away Josh Cordell called a "disThomas Wimberly and Hudappointing" first day at the son Mickel 6-4, 6-1 in the Class 5A Special District 1 doubles championship. In boys tennis championships on sweeping the top two spots in Friday, the Storm responded each bracket, Summit racked with teammates meeting in up 44 points to win the team both the singles and doubles title and tie the district-meet championship finals. record set by the Storm two Chandler Oliveira defeated years ago. Carter Quigley 6-3, 6-0 in See Boys tennis/C6

HORSE RACING

— The Associated Press

MOTOR SPORTS

• Summit's girls and boyssweep the Special District 1 teamtitles ByGrant Lucas The Bulletin

Dave Turnbull had never seen so dominant Jamie McMurray celebrates his win in the NASCAR Sprint All-Star auto race in Concord, N.C.,

Saturday.

McMurray scores shootout victory The 40-1 long shot wins the NASCARSprint Cup All-Star race,CS

a performance at one meet. That is, until the veteran Summit track and

field coach watched the Storm girls put on a showcase at the Class 5A Special District 1

championships. With 15 state qualifiers in 17 events over the course of the two-day meet, Summit

capped the district championships with an exclamation point on Saturday, finishing with a head-turning 286 points to run away with the team title.

"I think it's our kids saying, 'We're ready,' " Turnbull said."Theirperformances speak for themselves." The record for most team points at the

Oregon high school state championships, regardless of classification, is 120.5, set by the St. Mary's girls in 2010. On Saturday alone, Summit, which will be aiming for an eighth straight 5A state title, racked up an as-

tounding 184 points to put away second-place Mountain View (97 points). Since the beginning of the season, the Summit girls have had their eyes set on that state

record. After this weekend's district champiHeads up, St. Mary's of Medford. Your state onships, that goal is becoming more realistic. recordmay be in jeopardy come next week. SeeDistrict/C6

NBA PLAYOFFS Four remain in Conference Finals It's the Heatand Pacers in the Eastand the Spurs and Thunder out West in the quest for anNBA Championship,C7

CORRECTION

)

Matt Slocum/The Associated Press

California Chrome, ridden by jockey Victor Espinoza, wins the 139th Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course, Saturday in Baltimore.

California Chrome shines onwith Preaknesswin • Only Belmontstandsin the wayfor the first potential triple crownwinner since1977

Wlr Iet

tiyI

)

.

207 By Beth Harris

something that hasn't been

The Associated Press

done since Affirmed in 1978.

BALTIMORE — It gets even

A story headlined "Off the chain" and an accompanying photo caption that appeared in The Bulletin on page D1 of the May11 edition included incomplete in-

harder from here on out for

formation. The first elite

Now comes the toughest test of all, the Belmont Stakes

female finisher in the Chainbreaker mountain bike race wasSerena Bishop Gordon, of Bend. The Bulletin regrets the error.

California Chrome.

He won easily in his home state of California, he dazzled in the Kentucky Derby and he dug deep to win the Preakness on Saturday. in three weeks. Braden Bell, center, of Bend High won the 200-meter dash Saturday afternoon during the Class 5A Special District1 track and field meet at Summit High School in Bend. Mountain View's Gabe Wyllie, left, finished in second place, while Redmond's Jacoby McNamara claimed fourth.

The chestnut colt with four white feet will attempt to

sweep the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont,

Since then, 12 horses have won the first two legs and failed to complete the sweep in the 1 t/2-mile Belmont; the last was I'll Have Another, who was scratched on the

eve of the Belmont two years ago. "You have to have a very good horse to win these three races," saidArt Sherman,the winning 77-year-old trainer.

"I'm hoping I've got one right now."

SeePreakness/C6


C4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY HOCKEY

IIHF World Championship, Finland vs. USA NHL Playoffs, Los Angeles atChicago

Time TV/Radia 8:30 a.m. NBCSN noon NBC

SOFTBALL

NCAA Tournament, teamsTBD NCAA Tournament, teamsTBD NCAA Tournament, teamsTBD NCAA Tournament, teamsTBD NCAA Tournament, teamsTBD NCAA Tournament, teamsTBD

9 a.m. E SPN2 11:30a.m. ESPN2 1:30 p.m. ESPN2 2:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. E SPN2 5 p.m. E SPNU

AUTO RACING

IndyCar, Indianapolis 500, pole day NASCARNationwide Series at lowa ARCA Series, Toledo NHRA, Southern Nationals CYCLING Tour of California, Stage 8

1 0 a.m. AB C 11 a.m. E S PN 11 a.m. FS1 8 p.m. E SPN2 1 0 a.m.

NB C

BASEBALL

MLB, Pittsburgh at NewYork Yankees MLB, Seattle at Minnesota College, Texas atKansasState College, Washington at OregonState

1 0 a.m. ML B 1 1 a.m. R o ot 1 :30 p.m. F S 1 3 p.m. P ac-12, 940-AM

MLB, Detroit at Boston BASKETBALL

5 p.m.

E S PN

NBA Playoffs, Miami at Indiana

12:30 p.m. ABC

MONDAY Time TV/Radia 4 p.m. E S PN

BASEBALL

MLB, Detroit at Cleveland BASKETBALL

NBA Playoffs, OklahomaCity at San Antonio

6 p.m.

TNT

HOCKEY

NHL Playoffs, NewYork Rangers at Montreal IIHF World Championship, Germanyvs. USA

5 p.m. NBCSN 2:30 a.m. NBCSN

Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechangesmadeby 7Vor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOFTBALL DuCkS adVanCe to regiOnal final —Oregonbrokea1-1 tie with a five-run sixth inning anddefeated Wisconsin 6-1 in aregional semifinal Saturday. Oregonwill play in the regional championship game today at11 a.m. In the sixth, JanieTakeda hit a two-run double to break atie. The Ducks (51-7-1) scored on anillegal pitch, and Janelle Lindvall hit a two-run homer. Cheridan Hawkins (31-4j picked up the win with11 strikeouts while allowing two hits. TheDuckswill take on Wisconsin today after the Badgers eliminated Albany (N.Y.j 8-4 on Saturday night. If Oregon wins that gamethey advance to the Super Regionals, but if Wisconsin wins the two teamsplayagain at around 2 p.m. with the winner advancing.

BASEBALL One run enaugh aSBeaverS deat HuSkieS —Catcher Logan Ice slammed adouble off the right-field wall with one out in the bottom of the ninth inning to drive in the only run of the gameas Oregon State movedback into first place in the Pac-12 onSaturday with a1-0 win over Washington in Corvallis. Ice's blast ended aclassic pitcher's duel betweenOSU's (40-9, 21-5) Jace Fryand Washington's (38-12-1, 20-6j Tyler Davis, whoeach had ashutout going for 8~/~innings before the Beavers finally broke through andevenedtheseries at one gameheading into today's finale. DuCkS hOld Off BruiRS —Oregon pitcher Darrell Hall forced a double play with the basesloadedfrom a groundball in the seventh inning, and the Ducksheld on to beat UCLA4-1 onSaturday night in Los Angeles. KyleGarlikc hadtwo hits and two RBls to lead the Ducks (16-10 Pac-12, 39-16overall), while Tyler Baumgartner had two hits with a triple. Jeff Golf (10-1) scattered sevenhits over six innings, and Jake Reedpitched the ninth for the save.

CYCLING UliSSi WinS tOugh 8th Stage Of Giro; EVanS in lead —A final push from Diego Ulissi saw the Italian win atough eighth stage as the Giro d'Italia took to the mountains Saturday, while CadelEvans ended Michael Matthews' grip on theoverall lead. Ulissi madehis move inside the final 300 meters, bursting out of the peloton to edge out Robert Kiserlovski for a secondstage win in the race. Evansfinished fifth to take the leadfrom fellow Australian Michael Matthews, who had wornthepinkjerseyforsixdays.Evanshasa57-second advantage over Rigoberto Uran Uran, with Rafal Majka third.

SOCCER 10-maiI TimberS fight daCk to tie —GastonFernandez scored on aheader in the 85th minute to pull the10-man Portland Timbers into a 3-3 draw with the ColumbusCrew onSaturday night. There were aflurry of goals in the final10 minutes. Portland's Will Johnson tied the match at 2 in the80th minute. Ethan Finlay's shot deflected off a Portland player for an owngoal for Columbus aminute later. Federico Higuain had apair of goals for the Crewand Maximiliano Urruti opened thescoring for Portland (1-3-7) in the fifth minute. Portland's Alvas Powell wassent off in the 34th minute with a red card, leaving the Timbers to play amandownthe rest of the match. ArSenal winS FA CuP —Aaron Ramseyended Arsenal's nineyear trophy drought on Saturday, completing his team's comeback in extra time in the FA Cupfinal to secure a 3-2 victory over Hull. Arsenalclub concededtwice in the opening eight minutes against a Hull side which has neverwon amajor trophy in its 110-year history. But after goals from JamesChester and Curtis Davies, Santi Cazorla began Arsenal's fightback in the 17th minute, Laurent Koscielny tied the game in the 71st to force into extra time, whenRamsey completed a slick move to score the winner.

BOXING MarqIIOZ dOminateS AIVarado in ViCtOry — Juan Manuel Marquez won aclear unanimous decision over MikeAlvarado on Saturday night, dominating in his return to the Forum ring for its first boxing card in13 years. Marquez(56-7-1j dismantled Alvarado with 12 rounds of technical brilliance andvicious power, knocking down Alvarado in the eighth round andbouncing back from his own ninthround knockdown to finish strong. Marquezstaggered Alvarado right before the final bell, punctuating another for the 40-year-old four-division champion. The welterweight win likely sets up Marquezfor a fifth fight with Manny Pacquiao in the fall. Alvarado (34-3j never got rolling in his second straight defeat, struggling to land anymajor shots beyond the right that sent Marquez to thecanvas. Marquez improved to13-0 at the Forum, where hehadn't fought since1999. — From staffand wire reports

ON DECK

LPGA Tour

Today Equeslrian:OregonHigh School Equestrian Tea ms state cham pionships at Deschutes County Fair8 ExpoCenter,Redmond,8a.m.

Kingsmin Championship safurday At Kingsmin Resort, RiverCourse Winiamsb urg, Virginia Purse:$1.3 million Yardage: 6,347;Par:71 ThirdRound 67-68-65—200 LizetteSalas 66-68-69—203 HeeYoungPark 70-68-67—205 LydiaKo

Monday Baseball: KennedyatCulver,4;30 p.m. Soflbag: Kennedyat Culver,4:30 p.mr Boys golf:Class5Astate championshipsat Quail Valley GolCourse f in Banks, 7:30a.mcClass4Astate championshipats Eagle Crest RidgeCourse,8a.m. Girls golf: Class5Astatechampionships atEmerald ValleyGolfandResort inCreswell, 7:30a.m.;Class 4A/3A/2A/1Astatechampionships at TrystingTree Golf Clubin Corvagis,7:30a.m.

KatherineKirk StacyLewis Pornanong Phatlum YaniTseng Lexi Thom pson AustinErnst

69-68-68—205 70-65-70—205 71-69-66—206 68-70-68—206 67-69-70—206 65-74-68—207 70-69-68—207 68-69-71—208 67-70-71—208 65-71-72—208 72-70-67—209 69-71-69—209 70-69-70—209 68-71-70—209 67-68-74—209 70-72-68—210 71-71-68—210 72-70-68—210 72-68-70—210 72-68-70—210 70-69-71—210 69-70-71—210 67-71-72—210 74-68-69—211 69-72-70—211 73-68-70—211 67-72-72—211 69-70-72—211 73-65-73—211 72-65-74—211 71-73-68—212 71-72-69—212 70-72-70—212 68-74-70—212 70-72-70—212 70-69-73—212 69-68-75—212 74-70-69—213 74-69-70—213 71-72-70—213 72-70-71—213 70-71-72—213 68-71-74—213 70-69-74—213 72-71-71—214 72-71-71—214 72-71-71—214 68-74-72—214 69-72-73—214 70-70-74—214 71-67-76—214 69-69-76—214 67-77-71—215 70-74-71—215 68-74-73—215 71-71-73 —215 70-71-74—215 72-68-75—215 71-73-72—216 72-72-72—216 71-73-72—216 73-69-74—216 71-71-74—216 70-74-73—217 74-68-75—217 71-73-74—218 71-73-74—218 76-68-75—219 70-74-75—219 73-70-76—219 74-69-76—219 74-70-76—220 74-69-85—228

So YeonRyu Alejandra Llaneza Thidapa Suwannapura AzaharaMunoz ChristinaKim SandraGal JenniferRosales SarahJaneSmith BrittanyLang CarlotaCiganda Eun-Hee Ji lheeLee Wednesday Harigae Baseball :BendatLakeOswego,4:30p.mcRegisat Mina SuzannPetersen Culver,4:30p.m. CharleyHull Soflbag: Regisat Cuvl er,4;30 prm, Shin Boyslacrosse:Bend, Summit in OHSLAstate play- Jenny CristieKerr offs, TBD AnnaNordqvist JoannaKlaten Thursday Stanford Trackandfield: Class 2Aand1Astate champion- Angela DaniegeKang ships atHayward Field 10a.m Tamulis Boys tennis: Class5Astatechampionships at Tuala- KrisEch everria tin HillsTennisCenter 11am.; Class4A/3A/2A/1A Paz Mariajo Uribe statechampionships atOregonState,5 p.m. Katie Futcher Girls tennis: Class5Astatechampionships at Port- CandieKung land TennisCenter, 11a.mc Class4A/3A/2A/1A JenniferJohnson statechampionships atOregonState,5 p.m. Ai Miyazato KarrieWebb Friday JaneRah Baseball: SantiamChristianatSisters, 4:30p.m. Piler Trackandfield: Class5A,4Astatechampionships at Gerina ChieArimura HaywardField, 9a.m.; Class2A,1AstatechampiM i Hyang Lee onshipsat HaywardField, 2:30p.m. Mccloskey Boys tennis:Class5A state championshipsat Lisa Keating Tualatin Hills TennisCenter, 9:30a.m.; Class Stacey arahKemp 4A/3A/2A/1A statechampionships atOregonState, S Dori Carter Ba.m. Girls tennis: Class5Astate championships at Port- Pat Hurst Molinaro landTennisCenter, 9;30a,mcClass4A/3A/2A/1A Giulia BeckyMorgan statechampionships atOregonState,8 a.m. AlisonWalshe JessicaKorda Saturday Lincicome TrackandIield: Class5A,4Astatechampionships at Brittany Ryann O'Toole HaywardField,9:30a.m. C hega Ch Boys tennis:Class5Astatechampionships at Tuala- AlenaShaoi rp tin Hills TennisCenter,9 amcClass4A/3A/2A/tA KathleenEkey statechampionships atOregonState,8 a.m. Lee-Anne Pace Girls tennis: Class5Astatechampionships at TualaChangkija tin HillsTennisCenter,9 a.mcClass4A/3A/2A/1A Sandra JanePark statechampionships atOregonState,8 a.m. SeonHwaLee Mo Martin AnyaAlvarez NicoleJeray TENNIS MorganPressel LorieKane Professional JiminKang InternazionaliBNLd'Ifalia LouiseFriberg Saturday SilviaCavalleri At Foro Italico PerrineDelacour Rome AmyYang Purse:Men,$4.77million (Masters1666); Maude-Aimee Leblanc Women,$3.63 million(Premier) Kristy McPhe rson Surlace:Clay-Outdoor Sydnee Michaels Singles Lindsey Wright Men BelenMozo Semifinals CindyLaCrosse NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia, def. MilosRaonic (8), Canada, 6-7(5), 7-6(4), 6-3. Cham pgons Tour RafaelNadal(1), Spain,def. GrigorDimitrov (12), Bulgaria,6-2,6-2. RegionsTraditioIt Women Saturday Semifinals AtShoalCreek Sara Errani(10), Italy, def.JelenaJankovic (6), 8hoal Creek,Ala Serbia,6-3, 7-5. Purse: $2.2million SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, def. AnaIvaYardage: 7,231;Par:72 novic (11),Serbia,6-1,3-6, 6-1. Third Round 72-68-69—209 KennyPerry 72-72-66—210 John Inman 73-70-69—212 Jeff Magg ert GOLF 72-70-70—212 TomPerniceJr. Olin Browne 69-71-72—212 PGA Tou JohnCook 71-70-71—212 SteveElkington 70-71-71—212 ByronNelson MarkCalcavecchi 69-69-74—212 Saturday Jay Haas 69-70-73—212 Af TPCFourseaso ns Resorl 72-72-69—213 Colin Montgom er Irving, Texa s 73-72-69—214 Rocco Me di a t e Purse:$6.9miRion 72-71-71—214 DavidFrost Yardage:7,166; Par: 76 74-70-70—214 BernhardLanger (a-amateur ) Jeff Sluman 72-71-71—214 Third Round M ike Goo d es 74-71-70—215 68-68-64—200 LouisOosthuizen Corey Pa vi n 70-74-71—215 Brendon Todd 68-64-68—200 71-73-71—215 James Hahn 71-65-65—201 MarcoDawson t 74-73-69—216 GaryWoodland 68-67-66—201 Joe Duran 73-74-69—216 MikeWeir 68-66-67—201 MichaelAllen 69-77-70—216 C hien Soon L u PadraigHarrington 68-68-66—202 73-71-72—216 MarcLeishman 66-68-68—202 TomLehman 73-70-73—216 68-66-68—202 Jeff Hart GrahamDeLaet 74-69-73—216 68-66-68—202 WesShort,Jr. MorganHoffmann Fred Funk 71-72-73—216 71-67-65—203 GregChalmers Tom Wa t s on 72-72-73—217 67-68-68—203 BooWee kley 73-74-71—218 Charles Howell ffl 68-66-69—203 StevePate 74-74-70—218 JohnHuh 67-71-66—204 MarkMcNulty 74-70-74—218 Matt Kuchar 69-67-68—204 MarkO'Meara 70-75-73—218 Willie Wood AaronBaddeley 68-70-67—205 74-69-75—218 Vijay Singh 69-68-68—205 Nick Price 72-75-72—219 67-67-71—205 RodSpittle MartinKaym er 71-74-74—219 69-69-68—206 Bill Glasson DustinJohnson E steban T ol e d o 74-72-74—220 70-69-67—206 ScottGardiner G ene S a uer s 75-74-71—220 LeeWiliams 67-71-68—206 74-74-73—221 Keegan Bradley 70-68-68—206 Mike Reid 74-75-72—221 RobertGarrigus 74-64-68—206 Gil Morgan 75-74-72—221 AndresRomero 71-66-69—206 ScottSimpson 71-75-75—221 John Ri e gge r CharlieWi 73-67-66—206 72-77-72—221 an RetiefGoosen 70-65-71—206 RogerChapm 74-78-69—221 RyanPalmer 67-68-71—206 LorenRoberts 77-71-74—222 71-68-68—207 Hal Sutton JimmyWalker Tom Byrum 74-71-77—222 69-70-68—207 BriceGarnet Mark Wi e be 72-73-77—222 Billy Hurley ffl 70-69-68—207 m 73-72-77—222 CharlSchwartzel 73-67-67—207 lan Woosna 75-77-70—222 PeterHanson 65-73-69—207 WayneLevi 77-76-69—222 Shawn Stefani 74-66-67—207 BobbyClampett 77-72-74—223 Tommy Ar m our ff l Carl Pettersson 69-71-67—207 73-73-77—223 CharlieBeljan 72-65-70—207 LeeRinker 73-77-73—223 TyroneVanAswegen 67-68-72—207 DuffyWaldorf 71-78-75—224 70-71-66—207 ScottDunlap JamesDriscoll Mark Brooks 73-74-77—224 71-63-73—207 PaulCasey Tom Purt z er 74-72-78—224 68-70-70—208 JasonAllred 74-75-75—224 a-ScottieScheffler 71-68-69—208 PeterSenior 75-71-78—224 Lyle RickyBarnes 72-68-68—208 Sandy 75-75-74—224 JoshTeater 71-69-68—208 BobGilder 75-75-74—224 Bruce Fl e i s her AngelCab rera 73-67-68—208 74-77-73—224 70-70-68—208 FredCouples JohnSenden 75-76-73—224 66-71-71—208 TomKite Tim Wilkinson an 73-76-76—225 68-66-74—208 DanForsm Tim Herron Jim Rutl e dge 76-74-75—225 73-68-67—208 BrendondeJonge D oug Ga r w oo d 74-76-75—225 Kris Blanks 70-69-70—209 75-76-74—225 KevinKisner 69-70-70—209 SteveLowery 76-75-74—225 RorySabbatini 70-68-71—209 LarryMize 75-73-78—226 Wadkins JasonDufner 70-70-69—209 Bobby 73-81-72—226 Brad Faxo n J.J. Henry 70-71-68—209 73-76-78—227 SteveMarino 70-69-71—210 JoeySindelar 79-71-77—227 70-69-71—210 Jerry Pate PatrickCantlay 76-75-76—227 69-69-72—210 BrianHenninger ChrisThompson Morris Hatal s ky 76-75-76—227 67-71-72—210 Alex Prugh Joe Dal e y 74-75-79—228 71-67-72—210 BrianGa y 78-71-79—228 Jr. JordanSpieth 70-67-73—210 Jim Gallagher, 83-71-74—228 MartinFlores 70-71-69—210 GaryHallberg 74-81-73—228 KenDuke 70-69-72—211 PeterJacobsen 75-82-71 —228 DavidTom s 71-68-72—211 Rick Fehr 76-75-78—229 68-70-73—211 BobTway BenCrane 77-77-76—230 69-71-71—211 HaleIrwin Jim Renn er 80-78-73—231 73-67-71—211 Jim Thorpe JamieLovemark Larry Nel s on 78-82-71—231 70-70-71—211 MichaelPutnam 77-76-81—234 68-72-71—211 AndersForsbrand RodPampling BrianDavis 70-71-70—211 RobertAllenby 72-69-70—211 ChadCampbell 69-72-70—211 SOFTBALL Jim Herm an 70-68-74—212 69-72-71—212 LukeGuthrie College 72-69-71—212 BradFritsch 72-69-71—212 BrianHarman NCAATournament 69-72-71—212 SeanO'Hair AR TimesPDT BryceMolder 71-70-71—212 Made cutdidnotfinish Regionals DanielChopra 70-68-75—213 (Doubleelimination, x-if necessary) KevinFoley 70-71-72—213 Eugene Regional Ryo Ishikawa 73-68-72—213 Saturday'sGames Alex Cejka 67-70-77—214 Game 3: Oregon6, Wisconsin1 72-68-74—214 Game Will Wilcox 4: Albany(N.Y.)4, UtahValley 3 70-71-73—214 Game Jhonattan Vegas 5: Wisconsin8, Albany(N.Y.)4 73-68-74—215 Today'sGames MarkAnderson Johnson Wagner 73-68-74—215 Championship;Oregon(51-7-1) vs. Wisconsin Eric Axley 68-73-74—215 (35-19),11:30a.m. KyleStanley 74-66-76—216 x-ChampionshipGam : e2,folowing Tuesday Baseball: SistersatSummit, 4:30p.m. Boys golf:Class5Astate championships at Quail ValleyGolfCoursein Banks, 7:30a.m.; Class4A state championships at EagleCrest Ridgeview Course, 8a.m. Girls golf:Class5Astatechampionships atEmerald ValleyGolfandResort inCreswell, 7:30a.m.;Class 4A/3A/2A/tAstatechampionships at TrystingTree Golf Clubin Corvagis,7:30a.m.

BASEBALL

IndyCar

College

Indy 500Qualifying Saturday

At IndianapolisMotor Speedwa

Pac-12Standings AR TimesPDT Oregon State Washington

Conference Overall

Oregon ArizonaState USC Washington State Stanford UCLA

Arizona California Utah

21-5 20-6 16-10 16-10 14-14 12-14 12-13 10-16 11-19 10-16 4-22

40-9 38-12 39-16 29-21 26-23 22-27 25-22 23-28 32-30 22-26 16-32

Saturday'sGames

Stanford 9, Washington State4 Oregon State1, Washington0 California7,Arizona6 ArizonaState7, Utah1 Oregon4, UCLA1

Today'sGames

Washington Stateat Stanford, noon Oregonat UCLA,noon Utah at ArizonaState,12:30 p.m. WashingtonatOregonState, 3p.m. Arizona at California, 3p.m.

NCAADivision RITournament AR TimesPDT LinfieldRegion At McMinnvine Saturday'sGame Linfield 4, Wisconsin-Stevens Point 2, Linfield ad vances to NCAAFinals

BASKETBALL NBA Playoffs NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AR TimesPDT CONFERENCE FINALS

(Best-of-7;x-if necessary) Today'sGame Miami atIndiana,12:30p.m. Monday'sGame Oklahoma City atSanAntonio, 6 p.m. Tuesday'sGame Miami atIndiana,5:30p.m. Wednesday'sGame Oklahoma City atSanAntonio, 6 p.m. Saturday'sGame Indianaat Miami,5:30p.m. Sunday,May25 SanAntonioatOklahomaCity,5:30 p.m. Monday,May26 Indianaat Miami,5:30p.m. Tuesday,May27 SanAntonioatOklahomaCity, 6p.m. Wednesday,May28 x-Miamiat Indiana,5:30p.m. Thursday,May29 x-Oklahoma City atSanAntonio, 6p.m. Friday,May30 x-IndianaatMiami, 5:30p.m. Saturday,May31 x-SanAntonioat OklahomaCity,5:30 p.m. Sunday,June 1 x-Miamiat Indiana,5:30p.m. Monday,June2 x-Oklahoma City atSanAntonio, 6p.m.

Indianapolis With rank,carnumber in parentheses, driver, chas sis-engine,timeandspeedinparentheses: 1. (20) Ed Carpenter, Daffara-chevy,2:36.0735 (230.661mph) 2. (34) Carlos Munoz,Daffara-Honda, 2:36.2090 (230.460) 3. (3) HelioCastroneves, Dallara-chevy,2:36.2286 (230.432) 4. (27) James Hinchcliffe, Dallara-Honda, 2:36.2452

(230.407) 5. (12) Will Power, Dallara-chevy,2:36.3022 (230.323) 6. (25) MarcoAndretti, Dallara-Honda, 2:36.4306 (230.134) 7. (77)SimonPagenaud, Dallara-Honda, 2:36.4741 (230.070) 8. (67) JosefNewgarden, Dallara-Honda, 2:36.4993 (230.033) 9. (21) JR Hildebrand,Dagara-chevy, 2:36.5032 (230.027) 10. (26) Kurt Busch, Dagara-Hon da, 2:36.5493 (229.960) 11. (28)RyanHunter-Reay, Daffara-Honda, 2:36.5904 (229.899) 12. (98)JackHawksworth, Daffara-Honda, 2:36.6471 (229.81 6) 13. (2)JuanPabloMontoya,Dallara-chevy, 2:36.6681 (229.785) 14. (19) Justin Wilson,Dallara-Hond a, 2:36.7821 (229.61 8) 15. (9) Scott Dixon, Daffara-chevy,2:37.0111 (229.283) 16. (7) Mikhail Aleshin,Dagara-Honda, 2:37.1426 (229.091) 17. (8) Ryan Briscoe,Dallara-chevy,2:37.3252 (228.825) 18. (14) TakumaSato, Dagara-Honda, 2:37.3522 (228.786) 19. (83) CharlieKimball, Dallara-chevy,2:37.4043 (228.71 0) 20. (15) GrahamRahal, Dallara-Honda, 2:37.4364 (228.664) 21. (22) SageKaram,Daffara-chevy, 2:37.4460 (228.650) 22. (6) TownsendBell, Dallara-chevy, 2:37.5435 (228.508) 23. (10) TonyKana an, Dallara-chevy, 2:37.5944 (228.435) 24. (11)SebastienBourdais, Dalara-chevy, 2:37.6265 (228.388) 25. (63) Pippa Mann,Dallara-Hond a, 2:37.6474 (228.358) 26. (17) Sebastian Saavedra, Dallara-Chevy 2:37.6917(228.294) 27. (5)JacquesVtleneuve, Dallara-Honda,2:37.7766 (228.171) 28. (33) JamesDavison, Dagara-chevy, 2:37.7912 (228.150) 29. (16) Oriol Servia, Dallara-Honda , 2:37.8713 (228.034) 30. (18) CarlosHuertas,Dagara-Honda, 2:37.9011 (227.991) 31. (68) Alex Tagliani, Dagara-Hon da, 2:38.0246 (227.81 3) 32. (41)MartinPlowman, Dallara-Honda, 2:38.5601 (227.043) 33. (91) BuddyLazier, Dallara-chevy, 2:38.9102 (226.543)

SOCCER

WNBA

MLS

WOMEN"3 NATIONALBASKETBALL

MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AR TimesPDT

ASSOCIATION AR TimesPDT

W L T Pls GF GA N ew England 6 3 2 20 1 9 1 3 S porting KansasCity 5 3 2 17 15 8 Houston 5 5 2 1 7 16 19 Atlanta D.C. 4 3 3 1 5 14 12 Chicago 3 4 5 1 4 18 19 NewYork 1 1 .5 0 0 1 NewYork 3 4 4 1 3 13 14 Connecticut 0 1 .0 0 0 1'/z Columbus FC 4 4 0 12 9 9 Washington 0 1 .0 0 0 1i/z Toronto 2 6 5 11 15 2 0 Indiana 0 2 .0 0 0 2 P hiladelphia WesternConference Chicago 1 2 6 9 17 1 8 W L P c t G B Montreal 1 5 4 7 8 18 Los Angeles 1 0 1 . 000 WesternConference Minnesota 1 0 1 . 000 W L T Pls GF GA Phoenix 1 0 1 . 000 Seattle 8 3 1 2 5 23 19 SanAntonio 1 1 .5 0 0 '/z RealSaltLake 6 0 5 2 3 23 13 Tulsa 0 1 .0 0 0 1 FC Dallas 5 5 2 17 21 20 Seattle 0 2 00 0 1 ra Vancouver 4 2 4 1 6 16 12 Colorado 4 4 3 1 5 12 14 Saturday'sGames SanJose 2 4 4 1 0 10 12 Atlanta90, Indiana88,OT ChivasUSA 2 5 4 1 0 13 20 SanAntonio80,Tulsa76 Portland 1 3 7 10 16 1 9 Chicago79, NewYork65 Los Angeles 2 3 3 9 8 7 Phoenix81,Seatle 64

EasternConference W L PctGB 2 0 1 . 000 2 0 1 . 000

Today'sGames Connecticut at Minnesota 2 pm PhoenixatLosAngeles,6p.m.

HOCKEY NHL Playoffs NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

AR TimesPDT

CONFERE NCEFINALS

Saturday'sGame N.Y.Rangers 7, Montreal 2, N.Y.Rangers leadseries 1-0 Today'sGame Los Angeleat s Chicago,noon Monday'sGame NY Ran gersatMontreal, 5p.m. Wednesday'sGame LosAngelesatChicago,5p.m. Thursday'sGame MontrealatNYRangers, 5p.m.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR SprintCup AR-SfarRace

Saturday At CharlotteMotorSpeedway Concord,N.C. Lap length:1.5 miles (Sfarl positionin parentheses) 1. (11) JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet, 90 laps, 120.3 rating, 0 points. 2.(3) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 90,123.9,0. 3.(8) MattKenseth, Toyota,90, 88.3,0. 4.(6) Dale EarnhardtJr., Chevrolet,90,92.4,0. 5. (1)CarlEdwards,Ford, 90,99.1, 0. 6. (5JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet, 90,85.1, 0. 7. (9I ClintBowyer,Toyota,90, 67.8,0. 8. (16)BrianVickers, Toyota, 90,71.6,0. 9. (22)DennyHamlin,Toyota, 90,54.1, 0. 10. (13)BradKeselowski, Ford,90, 73.3,0. 11. (18)KurtBusch, Chevrolet,90, 57.8,0. 12. (15)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 90,41, 0. 13. (20)David Ragan, Ford, 90,36.4, 0. 14.7) KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, 90,95.3,0. 15.(19)JoshWise,Chevrolet, 90,32.4, 0. 16. (21)RyanNewman, Chevrolet, accident,77,44, 0. 17. (4)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, accident,60,87.1,0. 18. (12) MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet, accident,60, 37.6, 0. 19. (14)GregBiffle, Ford,accident, 60, 36.4r0. 20. (17) A JAllmendinger,Chevrolet, accident,30, 41.5, 0.

21. (2)KyleBusch,Toyota, accident,25,90.6,0. 22. (10)JoeyLogano,Ford, accident, 25,50.7, 0. RaceStatistics Average Speed of RaceWinner: 100.517 mph. Time ofRace:1hour,20minutes,35seconds. Margin of Victory:0.696seconds. Caution Flags:7for12 laps. LeadChanges:9among 6drivers. Lap Leaders: C.Edw ards 1-9; Ky.Busch 10-20; D.Hamlin21-25;C.Edwards 26-34; K.Kahne35-40; J.McMurray 41-46; K.Kahne47-60; J.McMurray6175; K.Harvick76-80;J.McMurray81-90.

Saturday'sGames TorontoFC2, NewYork0 NewEngland5, Philadelphia 3 D.C.United1,Montreal1,tie Houston1 LosAngeles0 FC Dallas1,ChivasUSA1, tie RealSaltLake2, Colorado1 SeattleFC1,SanJose0 Portland3, Columbus3,tie

Today'sGame SportingKansasCity atChicago,noon Wednesday'sGames Houstonat D.C.United, 4p.m. FCDallasatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Friday'sGame TorontoFCat Sporting KansasCity, 5;30p.m. Saturday,May24 Portlandat NewYork,4 p.m. Seattle FC at Vancouver,4 p.m. Chicag oatColumbus,4:30p.m. D.C. UnitedatNewEngland,4:30p.m. Montrealat Colorado,6p.m. FC DallasatReal Salt Lake,6:30p.m. Sunday,May25 PhiladelphiaatLosAngeles,5p.m. HoustonatSanJose, 7:30p.m.

DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L

AmericanLeague BOSTON REDSOX — Placed 38 Wil Middlebrooks onthe15-dayDL.Recalled INFBrockHolt fromPawtucket(IL). CLEVELANDINDIANS— RecalledLHPTJ.House from Columbus (IL). OptionedRHPC.C. Lee to Columbus. HOUSTONASTROS — SignedRHP KyleFarnsworth. OptionedRHPPaul Clemensto Oklahom a City (PCL). NationalLeague ARIZONADIAMONDBACKS — Named Tony La Russachief baseball officer. SAN DIEGOPADREW — Placed RHP Andrew Cashner on the 15-dayDL. RecalledRHPKevin Quackenbush fromEl Paso(PCL). FOOTBA LL NationalFootballLeague BALTIMORERAVENS — Sig ned DT Timmy Jernigan andDEBrent Urbanto four-year contracts. BUFFALOBILLS— SignedLBPrestonBrown. DETROIT LIONS— SignedCBNevinLawsonand WR TJ Jonesto four-yearcontracts. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— Signed SJerome JuniorandRBBeauBlankenship. NEW ORLEANSSAINTS— Signed CB Stanley Jean-Baptiste to afour-yearcontract. COLLEG E SOUTHCAROLINA — Named Mark Bernardino associateheadswimminganddivingcoach.

FISH COUNT

Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updated on Friday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wstlhd 77 6 LeadersSummary (Driver, TimesLed, Laps Bonneville 2,639 1,154 T he Daffes 2,199 89 8 14 1 Led):J.McMurray,3 timesfor 31 laps; K.Kahne, John Day 2,227 1,046 19 2 2timesfor 20laps; C.Edwards,2 timesfor 18laps; 994 8 0 Ky.Busch, 1 timefor 11 laps; K.Harvick, 1 timefor 5 McNary 2,870 Upstreamyear-to-date movement of adult chilaps;D.Ham lin,1 timefor5 laps. Wins:K.Harvick,2; J.Logano,2; Ku.Busch, 1; nook, jackchinook, steelheadandwild steelhead Ky.Busch,1; D.Earnhardt Jr., 1; C.Edwards,1; J.Gor- at selectedColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Friday. don, 1;D.Hamlin, 1; Bra.Keselowski,1. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Top12 inPoints:1.J.Gordon,394;2.M.Kenseth, 379; 3. Ky.Busch,373; 4. D.EarnhardtJr., 368; 5. Bonneville 158,196 17,840 4,605 1,265 C.Edwards,367;6.J.Logano,346;7. J.Johnson,340; T he Dalles 115,058 12,766 594 17 7 8.RNewman,332;9.GBiff le,328;10.BVickers,327; John Day 96,981 10,672 2,910 1,111 11. Bra.Keselowski,326;12.D.Ham lin, 318. M cNary 79,195 6,589 6 5 4 33 4


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C5

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Pd GB .537 .537 .523 'I~

seven innings to finally win in five Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 3 2 2 6 2 ew York 302 0 0 0 000 — 6 tries away from South Florida after N Washington 00 0 200 000 — 2 coming into his outing 0-3 on the E—T.Moore (2). DP—NewYork1, Washington1. LOB —NewYork6, Washington 4.28—McLouth(2), road to start the year. Heallowed Stammen (1). HR —Lagares(2), Desmond(6). four hits and walked two in his IP H R E R BBSO New York first road victory since Sept. 22 at ColonW,3-5 8 5 2 2 1 5 Washington. Meiia S,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 2

.432 4'/r

Miami

lotandings

GOLDSCHMIDT STRIKES GOLD

AN TimesPDT AMERICANLEAGUE

Baltimore NewYork Toronto Boston

Tampa Bay

Detroit Minnesota Kansas City Chicago Cleveland

Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston

East Division W L

22 19 22 19 23 21 20 22 19 25

CentralDivision W L 26 12 21 20 21 21 21 23 19 24

West Division

W L 27 16 23 19 20 22 20 23 15 28

476 2t/r

San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi Yelichlf 5 0 0 0 Pagancf 4 0 0 0 D ietrch2b 5 0 1 0 Pencerf 4 0 1 0 Stantonrf 4 1 2 1 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0

Pd GB .684

.512 6'/r .500 7 .477 8 .442 9'/r

McGeh3b 5 1 1 0 Morse1b 3 0 1 0 GJones1b 4 1 1 1 HSnchzc 3 0 3 0 Sltlmchc 2 1 1 1 Blancolf 3 0 0 0 Ozunacf 3 0 0 0Huffp 0 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 1 2 1 JGutrrzp 0 0 0 0

Pct GB .628 .548 3'/t .476 6t/t

.465 7 .349 12

Saturday'sGames

N.Y.Yankees7, Pittsburgh 1 Housto n6,ChicagoWhiteSox5 Oaklan d6,Cleveland2 Kansas City1, Baltimore0 Detroit6, Boston1 Minnesota 4, Seattle 3 Toronto4,Texas2 LA. Angel6, s Tampa Bay0

Today'sGam es Oakland (J.chavez3-1) atCleveland(Masterson2-2), 10:05a.m. Pittsburgh (Morton0-5) atN.Y.Yankees(Kuroda2-3), 10:05a.m.,1stgame Baltimore(U.Jimenez2-4) at KansasCity (Shields 5-3),11:10a.m. ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh.Danks3-3) atHouston (Peacock0-4),11:10a.m. Seattle(FHernandez4-1) at Minnesota(Nolasco2-3), 11:10a.m. Toronto(Dickey4-3) atTexas(N.Martinez0-1),12:05 p.m. Tampa Bay(Price4-3) atL.A.Angels(Shoemaker1-1), 12:35p.m. Pittsburgh (Cole3-3)at N.Y.Yankees(Nuno1-1),1:35 p.m.,2ndgame Detroit (A.Sanchez 0-2) at Boston(Peavy 1-1), 5:05 p.m. Monday'sGames Detroit atCleveland,4:05 p.m. Chicago WhiteSoxat Kansas City, 5:10p.m. Housto natL.A.Angels,7:05p.m.

Matt York/The Associated Press

Arizona's Paul Goldschmidt, right, high-fives A.J. Pollock after hitting a three-run home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the seventh inning of Saturday night's game in Phoenix. Goldschmidt had two home runs and six RBls to lead the Diamondbacks to an18-7 victory. SRdrgz2b 4 0 1 0 HKndrc2b 4 0 1 1

for the Tigers, who are amajors'

Washington G.GonzaleL, z3-4 3 7 Stammen 4 1 Barrett 1 0 Blevins 1 0 T—2:48. A—41,225(41,408).

5 0 0 0

5 0 0 0

2 1 0 0

4 2 1 1

Cubs 3, Brewers0 CHICAGO — Edwin Jackson

Koehlerp 2 0 0 0 Poseyph 1 0 0 0 struck out11 in seven innings and ARamsp 0 0 0 0 B.Hicks2b 4 0 0 0 Welington Castillo hit a two-run JeBakrph 1 0 1 1 Bcrwfrss 3 0 0 0 Sloweyp 0 0 0 0 Linccmp 2 0 0 0 double to lead theChicagoCubsto C ishekp 0 0 0 0 Colvinlf 2 0 0 0 a win over Milwaukee.Starlin CasTotals 35 5 9 5 Totals 3 3 0 6 0 Miami 0 10 002 101 — 6 tro also added anRBIdouble for San Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 E—Pence (2). DP—San Francisco1. LOB —Mi- the last-place Cubs,whowon for ami 8,SanFrancisco9. 2B—McGehee (11), H.San- just the third time in13 games. chez (5).38—Stanton (1), G.Jones(1), Pence(3). HR—Stanton (12). SF—Saltalamacchia. Milwaukee Chicago IP H R E R BBSO ab r hbi ab r hbi Miami E Herrrlf 4 0 0 0 Bonifaccf 4 1 1 0 KoehlerW,4-3 7 4 0 0 2 7 Gennett2b 4 0 0 0 Coghlnlf 2 0 0 0 A.Ramos 1 0 0 0 0 1 Braunrf 4 0 1 0 Lakeph-If 0 0 0 0 2-3 2 0 0 1 0 Lucroy c 4 0 2 0 Rizzo1b 4 0 1 0 Slowey CishekS,9-10 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 MrRynl1b 4 0 0 0 Scastross 3 1 1 1 San Francisco Segura ss 3 0 1 0 Schrhltrf 2 1 0 0 Lincecum L,3-3 6 7 3 3 3 6 LSchfrcf 2 0 0 0 Castilloc 3 0 1 2 22-3 2 2 1 1 2 Bianchi 3b 3 0 0 0 OII3b Huff 3000 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Garzap 2 0 0 0 Barney2b 3 0 0 0 J.Gutierrez WP —Lincecum. Overayph 1 0 0 0 EJcksnp 2 0 0 0 T—2:57.A—41,619(41,915). D ukep 0 0 0 0 Kalishph 1 0 0 0 NRmrzp 0 0 0 0 HRndnp 0 0 0 0 Cardinals 4, Braves1 Totals 31 0 4 0 Totals 2 7 3 4 3 0 00 000 000 — 0 ST. LOUIS —Rookie Kolten Wong Milwaukee Chicago 300 000 ggx — 3 E—Bianchi (1). DP —Milwaukee1. LOB —Milkeyed the St. Louis offense with S.castro (10), Castilo waukee5, Chicago3. 28 — his legs in support of Shelby (8). — S Coghlan. Miller's strongest outing of the IP H R E R BBSO Milwaukee season, and theCardinals beat GarzaL,2-4 4 3 3 1 7 Atlanta. Wong scored onYadier Duke 0 0 0 1 0 Chicago Molina's sacrifice fly just beyond E.JacksonW,3-3 7 4 0 0 1 11 the infield to tie it in the fourth. He N.RamirezH,4 1 0 0 0 0 2 H.Rondon S,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 bunted for a hit and drew awild P— E.Jackson. throw in St. Louis' go-ahead, two- W T—2:57. A—36,671(41,072).

National Lea ue YEscorss 3 0 1 0 Crondh 4 0 1 0 best 26-12. Detroit won for the Forsythdh 2 0 0 0 Aybarss 3 0 0 1 Diamondbacks18, Dodgers 7 L oney1b 3 0 0 0 lannettc 4 1 2 0 14th time in 17games. Porcello (7J Molinc 2 0 0 0 Greenlf 3 1 1 2 1) gave upone run, six hits, strikPHOENIX —PaulGoldschmidt Kiermrcf 3 0 1 0 LJimnz3b 2 1 1 0 Totals 29 0 5 0 Totals 3 0 6 9 6 ing out four andwalking one. homered twice, had acareer-high Tampa Bay 00 0 000 000 — 0 six RBls and set ateam record LosAngeles 222 000 ggx— 6 Detroit Boston DP —TampaBay1,LosAngeles3.LOB— Tampa with five runs scored, helping Ariab r hbi ab r hbi Bay 4,LosAngeles7. 28—Puiols (11), lannetta(6). Kinsler2b 4 1 1 1 Pedroia2b 4 0 1 0 zona bash the LosAngeles DodgH R — G r ee n (1). SF — T rou t, A y bar . TrHntrrf 5 1 1 1 Victornrf 4 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE ers. The Diamondbacks hired Hall IP H R E R BBSO Micarr1b 5 1 3 2 D.Ortizdh 4 0 1 0 East Division VMrtnzdh 5 1 2 0 Napoli1b 4 0 3 0 of Fame managerTony LaRussa W L Pct GB TampaBay C.RamosL,1-3 1 1 -3 4 4 4 1 1 AJcksncf 3 0 1 0 GSizmrcf 4 0 0 0 Atlanta 22 19 .537 22-3 3 2 2 0 2 B.Gome s C stllns3b 4 0 1 0 Carplf 3 0 0 0 as chief baseball officer before the run rally off Aaron Harang (4-4) in Washington 22 20 .524 t/t Oviedo 11-3 1 0 0 2 1 Avilac 3 1 1 1 Przynsc 4 0 0 0 gameandbeatuponCl aytonKer- the sixth. Miami 23 21 .523 '/t Interlea ue 12-3 0 0 0 0 1 AnRmnss 4 0 0 0 Bogartsss 3 1 2 1 NewYork 20 22 476 2r/r Lueke shaw (2-1) once it started, scoring 1 1 0 0 0 1 R Davislf 4 1 1 1 Holt3b 3 0 0 0 Philadelphia 18 22 .450 3'/r Boxberger Atlanta St. Louis Yankees 7,Pirates1 LosAngeles seven runs in the second inning Totals 3 7 6 11 6 Totals 3 3 1 7 1 CentralDivision ab r hbi ab r hbi C.Wil s o n W5 -3 9 5 0 0 2 7 Detroit 0 11 022 000 — 6 W L Pct GB off the two-time CyYoung Award Heywrdrf 4 0 2 0 Mcrpnt3b 3 1 0 0 NEW YORK — Mark Teixeira hit HBP —by C.Ramos (L.Jimenez), by Boxberger (L. Boston 0 00 010 000 — 1 Milwaukee 27 16 .628 J.upt onlf 4 0 0 0 Wong2b 4 2 2 0 Jimenez). WP—Oviedo. E—Muiica (1). DP—Detroit1. LOB—Detroit 7, winner. St. Louis 23 20 .535 4 K imrelp 0 0 0 0 Hollidylf 4 0 1 0 a two-run homer, Zoilo Almonte T — 2: 5 9. A — 42,224 (45, 4 83). Boston 6. 2B—Kinsler (10), TorHunter(9), Mi.cabreCincinnati 19 22 .463 7 F Frmn1b 2 0 0 0 Craigrf 3 0 1 1 connected in his first start of the Arizona ra (12),A.Jackson(9), Avila(7), R.Davis (5). HR —Mi. LosAngeles Pittsburgh 17 24 .415 9 Gattisc 4 0 0 0 YMolinc 2 0 1 1 C abrera(7), Bog ae rts (2). SF — K ins le r . ab r hbi ab r hbi season andthe NewYork Yankees Chicago 14 27 .341 12 CJhnsn3b 4 0 0 0 MAdms1b 3 1 1 0 Blue Jays4, Rangers2 IP H R E R BBSO DGordn2b 4 1 1 0 Pollockcf 6 3 4 2 West Division Buptoncf 4 0 0 0 JhPerltss 3 0 0 0 went deep five times for a victory Detroit Puigrf 5 1 1 2 Owingsss 5 4 3 2 Smmnsss 3 1 3 0 Bourioscf 3 0 2 1 W L Pct GB ARLINGTON, Texas— Eighth-inover Pittsburgh. Brett Gardner and PorceffoW,7-1 8 6 1 1 1 4 VnSlykrf 0 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 5 5 4 6 SanFrancisco 27 17 .614 Harangp 2 0 1 0 SMifferp 2 0 0 0 Coke 1 1 0 0 0 0 HRmrzss 5 0 1 0 C.Rosslf 2 1 1 0 Colorado 24 20 .545 3 Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Descalsph 1 0 0 0 Alfonso Soriano also homeredoff ning doubles byKevinPillar and AdGnzl1b 4 1 2 0 Inciadpr-If 1 1 0 0 LosAngeles 23 21 .523 4 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 CMrtnzp 0 0 0 0 Jose Reyesproducedthe go-ahead Boston a struggling Edinson Volquezto LackeyL,5-3 51 - 3 9 6 5 2 4 Kempcf 5 1 2 0 Prado3b 5 1 3 3 SanDiego 21 23 .477 6 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 2 -3 0 0 0 0 0 Crwfrdlf 5 1 1 3 AMarterf 3 0 0 0 Muiica Arizona 17 28 ,378 I 0'/t run as Toronto beatTexas. RightJSchafrlf 0 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 back five scoreless innings from Capuano 2 1 0 0 0 3 uribe3b 4 1 2 0 GParraph-rf 2 0 1 1 Pstrnck2b 2 0 0 0 hander Steve Del a bar (3-0) retired David Phelps (1-0). Brian McCann C.Perezp 0 0 0 0 Pnngtn2b 5 1 2 2 Uehara 1 1 0 0 0 1 Totals 30 1 6 0 Totals 2 8 4 8 3 Saturday'sGames Buterap 0 0 0 0 Gswschc 5 1 2 1 four straight, including striking out T—2:49.A—37,608(37,499). Atlanta 0 10 000 000 — 1 added a two-run drive in the eighth St. Louis4,Atlanta1 A.Effisc 4 1 1 0 CAndrsp 2 0 0 0 St. Louis 000 1 0 2 1 0x— 4 Chicag oCubs3,Milwaukee0 the side in theeighth, to earn the against reliever Vin Mazzaro as Kershwp 0 0 0 0 EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 E—Gattis (5), Wong (3). DP—Atlanta1, St. Louis N.Y. Mets5,Washington2 Astros 6, White Sox 5 victory. The Blue Jays added an J Wrghtp 1 0 0 0 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 New York won for only the second 3. LOB — A tlant a 5, St. Loui s 2. 28 — Sim m ons (5). N.Y.Yankees7, Pittsburgh1 Figginsph 1 0 0 0 Zieglerp 1 0 0 0 38 — Ma.Adams(2). SB—Wong (5). CS—Craig(1). time in its past eight homegames. Philadelphia12,Cincinnati1 unearned run in the ninth. Leaguep 0 0 0 0 Echavzph 1 1 1 1 HOUSTON — Jason Castro hit a SF — YMolina. Arizona18,L.A.Dodgers7 1 0 1 2 A.Reedp 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Pittsburgh SanDiego8, Colorado5 three-run homer andDexter Fowl- Ethierph NewYork Toronto Texas Withrwp 0 0 0 0 Atlanta Miami5,SanFrancisco0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi er homered and drove in two runs JuTrnr3b 1 0 1 0 Today'sGam es H arang L,4-4 6 6 3 2 0 7 Reyesss 3 0 1 1 Choicerf 4 0 1 1 Tabatarf 4 0 1 0 Gardnrcf 3 2 1 1 Totals 4 0 7 137 Totals 4 3 182118 Varvaro 1-3 2 1 1 0 1 N Walkr2b 3 0 0 0 Jeterss 4 1 2 0 Pittsburgh (Morton0-5) atN.Y.Yankees(Kuroda2-3), Mecarrdh 5 0 0 1 Andrusss 4 0 0 0 to help Houston outlast the ChiLosAngeles 002 005 000 — 7 Avilan 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 AMcctcf 3 0 0 0 Teixeir1b 4 1 1 2 10;05a.m.,1stgame B autistrf 2 1 2 1 Choolf 4010 cago White Sox. Castro's home Arizona 070 201 44x — 18 Kimbrel 1 0 0 0 0 1 PAlvrz3b 4 0 0 0 Mccnnc 4 1 1 2 Cincinnati(Cingrani2-2) at Philadelphia(CI.Lee3-4), Encrnc1b 3 1 0 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 0 0 E—A.Marte (1). DP—Los Angeles 1, Arizona1. St. Louis run came in Houston' s four-run 10:35a.m. L awrie3b 5 0 2 0 Riosdh 4 0 1 0 SMartelf 3 1 3 1 ASorinrf 4 1 2 1 —Los Angeles 8, Arizona8. 28—Kemp (11), S.MillerW,6-2 7 5 1 0 2 7 I.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 0 0 0 0 N.Y. Mets(Z.Wheeler 1-3) at Washington (Zimmer- DNavrrc 4 0 0 1 Morlnd1b 4 0 0 0 first inning. The White Soxscored LOB A.Effis (1), Ethier (6), Ju.Turner(4), Owings(9), C.MartinezH,11 1-3 1 0 0 1 1 GSnchzdh 4 0 1 0 Solarte3b 4 0 0 0 mann 2-1),10:35a.m. StTllsn2b 4 0 0 0 Chirinsc 3 1 1 0 Goldschmid2 t (18), Prado(7), G.Parra (7). 3B—Pol- ChoateH,4 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Atlanta(Floyd0-1) atSt. Louis (J.Garcia 0-0), 11:15 P illarlf 4 1 2 0 Odorph 1 0 0 0 two in the second andone in the 4 0 1 0 KJhnsndh 3 0 0 0 lock (3),Owings(2), Pennington (1). HR —Puig (9), RosenthalS,13-14 1 0 0 0 0 2 Mercerss a.m. third to cut the lead to onebefore Gosecf 3 1 1 0 LMartncf 2 1 2 0 TSnchzc 4 0 2 0 BRorts2b 3 0 1 0 C .crawford (3), Pol l o ck(5), Ow i n gs (2), Go l d schm i d t HBP — by H ar an g (M .carpent e r). Milwaukee(Estrada 3-1) at ChicagoCubs(TWood ZAlmntff 3 1 1 1 Sardins2b 3 0 2 1 Fowler's solo shot in the fifth in2 (9), E.chavez (2). SB—Polock (6), A.Marte(1). T—2:31.A—44,981(45,399). 3-4),11:20a.m. Totals 3 2 1 8 1 Totals 3 27 9 7 33 4 8 4 Totals 3 3 2 8 2 Miami (Ja.Turner 0-1) at SanFrancisco (Vogelsong Totals ning. His RBI single in the seventh S—C.Anderson. IP H R E R BBSO P ittsburgh 000 0 0 1 000 — 1 Toronto 1 00 000 111 — 4 1-2),1;05p.m. New York 201 0 0 1 1 2x — 7 Texas 0 01 000 100 — 2 inning pushed the lead to 6-3. Philiies12, Reds1 LosAngeles L.A. Dodgers (Haren5-1) atArizona(Collmenter1-2), DP — Pittsburgh1, NewYork1. LOB —Pittsburgh E—Moreland(2). DP—Toronto1, Texas1. LOBKershawL,2-1 1 2 - 3 6 7 7 2 3 1:10 p.m. 8, New Y ork 2. 28 — S.M arte (4), G.Sanchez(6)r A.SoToronto12, Te xa s 5. 28 — R e ye s (10), La w ri e (6), Pi l J.Wright 21-3 5 2 2 1 0 Chicago Houston PHILADELPHIA — Col e Hamel s San Diego (Roach 1-0) atColorado(Nicasio 4-2), lar (1),Gose(2). HR—Bautista (11). SB—Gose(2). riano(5). HR —S.Marte(2), Gardner(2), Teixeira(5), 1 1 0 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r hbi League 1:10 p.m. CS — Rio s(5). SF—D.Navarro. threw seven sharp innings to earn Mccann(5), A.Soriano(5), Z.Almonte(1). SB—A. Withrow 12-3 4 5 5 2 3 GBckh2b 5 1 2 1 Altuve2b 5 1 2 0 Pittsburgh (Cole3-3)at N.Y.Yankees(Nuno1-1),1:35 Mccutchen(5), S.Marte(6), Gardner(5). CS—S. IP H R E R BBSO Giffaspi3b 5 0 1 0 Springrrf 4 2 2 1 C.Perez 2-3 3 2 2 1 2 his100th career win, Domonic p.m.,2ndgame Marte(1). Toronto Butera 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 JAreudh 3 0 0 1 Fowlercf 4 2 3 2 Monday'sGames Brown had a career-best five IP H R E R BBSO Buehrle 62-3 7 2 2 1 4 Arizona Konerkph-dh 2 0 0 0 Jcastroc 5 1 1 3 Cincinnatiat Washington, 4:05p.m. Pittsburgh LoupBS,2-4 0 1 0 0 0 0 A.Dunn1b 3 1 1 0 MDmn3b 2 0 0 0 C.Anderson W2-0 51-3 7 5 5 2 2 RBls and Philadelphia beat CinMilwaukee atAtlanta, 4:10p.m. VolquezL,1-4 61 - 3 6 5 5 0 3 DelabarW,3-0 1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 3 2-3 3 2 0 0 0 cinnati to end a E.Marshall 4 2 2 0 Krauss1b 3 0 1 0 four-game losing J.Hughes 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Janssen S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 Viciedolf 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 AIRmrzss 3 1 2 1 Guzmnph-1b 1 0 0 0 ThatcherH,2 Mazzaro 1 2 2 2 1 0 Texas streak. Cody Asche snapped ZieglerH,10 11- 3 1 0 0 0 3 American League DeAzacf 2 0 1 1 Carterdh 3 0 0 0 RossJr. 41-3 3 1 1 4 2 A.Reed 1 1 0 0 0 1 Philadelphia's 23-inning scoreless NewYork Flowrsc 3 0 0 0 Presleylf 4 0 2 0 PhelpsW,1-0 5 5 0 0 3 5 Sh.Tolleson 12-3 0 0 0 2 1 Sierrarf 2 0 1 1 MGnzlzss 3 0 0 0 E.Marshalpi l tchedto1batter in the7th. Twins 4, Mariners3 streak with a two-run double that BetancesH,4 2 2 1 1 0 3 Poreda 2-3 1 1 1 0 0 Totals 32 5 105 Totals 3 4 6 116 WP — C.Anderson2. Balk—Kershaw. Warren 1 1 0 0 0 2 Ogando 0 1 0 0 2 0 Chicago T—3:55. A—36,688(48,633). 0 21 000 020 — 5 sparked a six-run fourth. Cesar MINNEAPOLIS— Brian Dozier's Daley 1 0 0 0 0 1 11-3 2 1 1 0 1 Houston Cotts L,1-3 400 010 10x — 6 Hernandezcapped the scoring HBP —byPhelps(S.Marte). Frasor 1 1 1 0 0 1 three-run homer in thefifth inning E—S.Downs (1). DP—Houston 2. LOB—Chica- Padres 8, Rockies 5 T — 2: 5 6. A — 47,353 (49 , 6 42). pitchedto 3batters in the7th. with his first career homer. go 9, Houston10.28—G.Beckham (4), AI.Ramirez put Minnesota aheadfor good, and Ogando Loup pitched to1 batter inthe7th. (8). 38 — Springer (1). HR—Fowler (3), J.castro HBP—by Frasor (Bautista). WP—Ogando. PBSamuel Dedunotossedsixsharp DENVER — Seth Smith homered Cincinnati Philadelphia (6). SB —De Aza (5), Altuve(14), Presley(1). SLeaders Chirinos. Ma.GonzaleSF z. —AI.Ramirez,DeAza, Sierra. ab r hbi ab r hbi innings for his first win as the against his former teamearly, ThroughSaturday'sGames T—3:09. A—39,723(48,114). IP H R E R BBSO BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 Rollinsss 4 0 1 0 Twins beat Seattle. With MinnesoCarlos Quentin added atwo-run, Chicago Cozartss 4 1 1 0 Brigncph-ss 1 0 0 0 AMERICANLEAGUE ta trailing 2-1, Dozier followed con- Athletics 6, indians2 P hillips2b 2 0 0 0 Ruizc 4121 NoesiL,0-4 6 8 6 5 3 6 pinch-hit home run, andSan BATTING —VMartinez, Detroit, .336; KSuzuki, 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 RSantg3b 1 0 0 0 utley2b 3 1 1 1 S.Downs secutive singles byAaron Hicks Minnesota,.322;AIRamirez, Chicago,.322; Solarte, 12-3 2 0 0 1 2 Diego hung on to beatColorado. Frazier3b 3 0 1 0 CHrndz2b 1 1 1 1 D.Webb NewYork, .315; Mecabrera,Toronto, .311; Loney, CLEVELAND — Brandon Moss and EduardoEscobar bysending San Diego staked RobbieErlin Heiseyrf 1 0 0 0 Howard1b 3 2 0 0 Houston Bay,.311; Micabrera,Detroit,.305. L udwcklf 3 0 0 1 Byrdrf 5 2 2 0 Tampa CosartW,3-3 5 7 3 3 4 2 (3-4) to a 6-1 lead byroughing up a curveball from Roenis Elias (3-3) hit a two-run homer anddrove in RUNS —Dozier, Minnesota,40; Bautista, Toronto, Schmkrrf-2b 4 0 0 0 Asche3b 4 2 2 3 Fields H,1 1 1 0 0 0 2 three runs andJosh Donaldson into the seats in left field. It was N .Soto1b 3 0 1 0 DBrwnlf 5 2 2 5 35;Donaldson,Oakland,34;JAbreu,Chicago,29; Sipp H,2 1 0 0 0 0 1 previously unbeaten Jordan Lyles Mecabrera,Toronto, 28;HKendrick, LosAngeles, 27; Lecurep 0 0 0 0 GwynJcf 3 1 1 0 Dozier's11th homer of the season. also had three RBls, helping FarnsworthH,1 2- 3 2 2 2 2 0 (5-1), who walked acareer-high six Kinsler,Detroit,27. D.DownsH,1 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 batters in a season-low 3t/s inning Brnhrtc 3 0 0 0 Hamelsp 2 0 0 0 Oakland overcomestarter Scott RBI — JAbreu,Chicago, 42;Micabrera, Detroit, 37; Baileyp 0 0 0 0 Mayrryph 1 0 1 1 QuaffsS,3-4 1 0 0 0 0 1 Seattle Minnesota Ncruz,Baltimore,37; Moss,Oakland, 36; Donaldson, Kazmir's ejection in the second Ondrskp 1 0 0 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 Noesi pitched to1 batter inthe7th. outing. ab r hbi ab r hbi Oakland,34;Bautista, Toronto, 30;Brantley, Cleveland, WP — Cosart. Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 inning to beat Cleveland. Dan J.Jonescf 4 1 1 1 Dozier2b 3 2 2 3 30; ColabelloMi , nnesota,30;Encarnacion, Toronto, 30. T—3:26.A—20,612 (42,060). SMrshllp 0 0 0 0 MSndrsrf 3 1 1 2 Mauer1b 4 0 0 0 San Diego Colorado HITS — MeCabrera, Toronto,57; Altuve,Houston, Otero (4-0) relieved Kazmir and BPena1b 1 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 1 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Totals 3 0 1 3 1 Totals 3 6121312 55; AIRamirez,Chicago,55; Cano,Seatle, 50;Hospitched 3Ys scoreless innings to Hartdh 4 0 1 0 KSuzukdh 3 0 1 1 Denorfilf 4 1 1 0 Blckmnrf 5 0 2 0 Royals1, Drioles 0 C incinnati 100 0 0 0 000 — 1 mer,KansasCity, 50; Markakis,Baltimore,49; Rios, S eager3b 4 0 0 0 Pintoc 3 0 0 0 Ecarerss 4 1 1 0 Stubbscf 4 2 3 0 help seal Oakl a nd' s eighth win in Philadelphia 00 0 6 0 0 51x— 12 Texas,49. Smoak1b 3 0 2 0 Colaellrf 3 0 0 0 S.Smithrf 3 2 1 2 Tlwlzkss 4 2 3 1 PITCHING —Buehrle, Toronto, 7-1; Porcello, LOB —Cincinnati 5, Philadelphia 7. 28—Cozart nine games. KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Danny Headl y3b 3 0 0 0 CGnzlzlf 3 0 2 3 Gillespipr 0 0 0 0 Parmelrf 0 0 0 0 7-1;Tanaka, NewYork, 6-0; Scherzer, Detroit, (6), Byrd(14), Asche(8), D.Brown (6), Mayberry(2). Detroit, A ckleylf 4 0 0 0 Nunezlf 3 0 1 0 Alonso1b 5 1 2 2 Arenad3b 4 0 0 0 Duffy carried a perfect gameinto 6-1; KazmirOakl , and,5-1; Gray,Oakland, 5-1; VerHR — C.Hernandez(1), D.Brown(2). S—Hamels. Zuninoc 3 0 0 0 A.Hickscf 2 1 1 0 Oakland Cleveland Gyorko2b 4 0 1 0 Mornea1b 3 1 1 0 IP H R E R BBSO lander,Detroit, 5-2; Wchen,Baltimore,5-2; Lackey, ab r hbi ab r hbi the seventh inning, Billy Butler Venalecf 2 1 0 0 Pachecc 4 0 1 1 BMifferss 1 1 0 0 EEscorss 3 1 1 0 Boston, 5-3; Shi elds,KansasCity,5-3. Cincinnati C rispcf 5 2 1 0 Bourncf 4 0 1 0 drove in the only run andKansas Grandl c 5 1 1 1 LeMahi 2b 4 0 2 0 Romerph 1 0 0 0 ERA —Scherzer, Detroit, 1.83; Gray, Oakland, BaileyL,3-3 32- 3 7 6 6 2 2 2.10; Jasodh 3 0 0 0 Swisherdh 4 0 1 0 E rlinp 3 0 2 1 Lylesp 1 0 0 0 Blmqstss 1 0 0 0 BuehrleToronto, , 2.11;Tanaka, NewYork, 2.17; City held on to beat Baltimore. The Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 Ondrusek 11-3 1 0 0 0 1 Callaspph-dh1 1 0 0 Brantlylf 3 1 1 0 Totals 32 3 6 3 Totals 2 8 4 6 4 Hoover 1 0 0 0 0 1 Darvish,Texas,2.32; Kazmir, Oakland, 2.39; Ventura, ph 1 0 0 0 Seattle 0 02 000 010 — 3 Dnldsn3b 4 2 3 3 CSantn3b-1b 4 0 1 0 25-year-old Duffy (2-3) retired the Quentin ph 1 1 1 2 Culersn Kansas Ci t y, 2. 4 0. 2-3 3 5 5 2 1 S.Marshall Moss1b 3 1 2 3 Raburnrf 4 0 1 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Belislep 0 0 0 0 Minnesota 100 030 Ogx — 4 first 20 batters he faced, rarely STRIKEOUT S—Scherzer, Detroit, 73; Lester, 11-3 2 1 1 1 1 Lecure E—Plouffe (4). DP—Seattle 2, Minnesota 1. Cespdslf 4 0 0 0 Acarerss 2 1 0 1 Benoitp 0 0 0 0 CMartnp 0 0 0 0 Boston,73;Price,TampaBay, 70; Kluber, Cleveland, running the count to three balls Philadelphia LOB—Seattle 6, Minnesota2. 2B—Hart (5), Smoak Lowriess 4 0 0 0 YGomsc 4 0 1 0 Hundlyph 1 0 0 0 Dickrsnph 1 0 0 0 66; Tanaka, Ne w York, 66; Darvish, Texas,65; FHerHamelsW,1-2 7 3 1 1 2 10 Streetp 0 0 0 0 Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 (10), K.Suzuki(10). 38—J.Jones(1). HR —M.Saun- DNorrsc 4 0 1 0 Aguilar1b 1 0 0 0 and flirting with the first perfect nandez,Seatle, 60. Diekman 1 0 0 0 0 0 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 JRmrzph-2b 1 0 0 0 Massetp 0 0 0 0 ders (2),Dozier (11). SF—M.Saunders. SAVES —Perkins, Minnesota,12; Rodney, Seattle, game in franchise history. Adam Papelbon 1 0 0 0 1 0 McKnrph 1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO Punto2b 4 0 1 0 Aviles2b-3b 3 0 1 0 11; Holland,KansasCity, 11;TomHunter, Baltimore, HBP— byS.Marshaff(Ruiz).WP— Ondrusek.PBT otals 3 6 6 8 6 Totals 3 02 7 1 Jones finally ended it with a weak Totals 3 5 8 108 Totals 3 5 5 145 Seattle 11; Nathan, Detroit, 11;Axford,Cleveland,9; Uehara, 0 03 000 300 — 6 S an Diego 2 2 2 0 0 0 200 — 8 Barnhart. Elias L,3-3 7 6 4 4 1 4 Oakland Boston,9. groundball up the middle with two T — 2: 5 4. A — 30,07 5 (43, 6 51). C leveland 010 0 0 1 000 — 2 C olorado 100 1 1 2 000 — 5 Medina 1 0 0 0 0 1 E—Donaldson(8), A.cabrera(6), C.Santana(5), outs in the seventh. E—C.Gonzalez(1). DP—SanDiego5,Colorado3. Minnesota NATIONALLEAGUE LOB —SanDiego10, Colorado5. 2B—Denorfia (6), Mets 5, Nationals DedunoW,1-2 6 2 2 2 2 4 Aguilar(1). DP —Oakland3, Cleveland1. LOB—Oak2 BATTING —Tulowitzki, Colorado, .400; Utley, Cleveland5. 28—Crisp (4), Moss(8), D.Nor- Baltimore Alonso2(11),Gyorko(2), C.Gonzalez2(12),Morneau DuensingH,1 1 1 0 0 1 0 land 5, KansasCity Philadelphia, .347; Blackmon, Colorado, .333; BurtonH,6 1 2 1 1 0 1 ris (7),YGomes(7). 38—Donaldson(1). HR —Moss (12). HR —S.Smith (4), Quentin (1),Tulowitzki (12). WASHINGTON —JuanLagares ab r hbi ab r hbi SSmith ,SanDiego,.333;Puig,LosAngeles,.329; E.cabrera(8), Blackmon(9). SF—C.Gonzalez. PerkinsS,12-14 1 1 0 0 0 1 (9). SF—A .cabrera. M arkksrf 3 0 0 0 Aokirf 4 1 2 0 SB — Morneau,Colorado,.325;YMolina, St.Louis,.325. IP H R E R BBSO drove in three runs with a homer HBP—byElias (Dozier). WP —Elias, Deduno. PBIP H R E R BBSO Machd3b 4 0 1 0 Dysoncf 0 0 0 0 RUNS —Tulowitzki, Colorado,40; Goldschmidt, San Diego Pinto.Balk—Elias. Oakland A.Jonescf 4 0 1 0 AEscorss 2 0 0 0 Arizona,35;Blackmon, Colorado, 34; Yelich, Miami, and a single, and Bartolo Colon 1 1-3 1 1 1 3 1 T—2:26.A—29,717 (39,021). Kazmir Erlin W,3-4 5 9 4 4 0 2 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 33; Pence,SanFrancisco, 31; Mcarpenter,St. Louis, VincentH,3 1 2 1 1 0 0 allowed five hits in eight innings OteroW,4-0 32 - 3 4 0 0 0 1 N.cruzlf 4 0 1 0 BButlerdh 4 0 1 1 29; Stanton,Miami, 29. AbadH,4 1 2 1 1 0 0 Hardyss 3 0 0 0 AGordnlf 3 0 0 0 ThayerH,5 1 2 0 0 0 0 and the New RBI — Stanton, Miami, 43; Puig, Los Angeles, York Mets defeated Angels 6, Rays 0 BenoitH,6 Gregerson 2 0 0 0 0 3 DYongdh 3 0 0 0 L.caincf-rf 2 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 35; Tulowitzki, Colorado,34; Goldschmidt, Arizona, Washington. Lagar es came i n 5 Doolittle 1 0 0 0 0 2 Schoop StreetS,13-13 1 0 0 0 0 2 2b 3 0 0 0 Mostks 3b 3 0 1 0 32;Blackmon,Colorado,30;Morneau,Colorado,30; Cleveland ANAHEIM, Calif.— C.J. Wilson CJosphc 2 0 0 0Gi avtll2b 3 0 0 0 Colorado for 27 in his past11 games, but he AdGonz alez,LosAngeles,28;CGonzalez,Colorado, 31-3 5 6 6 6 3 TomlinL,2-1 6 5 3 3 1 2 Clevngrph 1 0 0 0 Ciriaco2b 0 0 0 0 Lyles L,5-1 28;McGehee,Miami,28;Morse,SanFrancisco,28. scattered five hits in his second 12-3 0 0 0 1 0 provided a jolt for the struggling Rzepczynski 2-3 1 2 0 1 0 Kahnle H ayesc 3 0 0 0 HITS — Goldschmidt, Arizona,59;Blackmon, Colcareer shutout and Grant Green Shaw 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 Totals 3 0 0 3 0 Totals 1 2 0 0 1 1 Mets. 2 81 4 1 Belisle orado,54;DanMurphy,NewYork, 54; Stanton, Miami, Axford 1 0 0 0 0 0 C.Martin 1 2 2 2 0 2 B altimore 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 54; Tulowitzki,Colorado,54; Arenado, Colorado,52; homered, leading the LosAngeles House 1 0 0 0 0 0 Brothers 1 0 0 0 1 2 Kansas City 10 0 000 Bgx— 1 NewYork Washington DGordon,LosAngeles,52. Angels to a victory over Tampa WP — Kazmir. 1 1 0 0 0 2 E—Machado (4). LOB—Baltimore5, Kansas City Masset PITCHING —Greinke, Los Angeles, 7-1; Wainab r hbi ab r hbi Erlin pitched to1batter inthe6th. 6. SB —Aoki(5),L.cain (3). S—A.Escobar. Bay. Wilson (5-3) threw127 pitch- T—3:00. A—18,358(42,487). EYong If 5 0 0 0 S pancf 4 0 0 0 wright,St.Louis,6-2;SMiler, St.Louis, 6-2;9tied at5. HBP — by V i n cent (Mornea u), by Lyl e s (Venabl e ). IP H R E R BBSO ERA —Cueto, Cincinnati, 1.25; Sama rdzia, ChiDnMrp 2b 4 1 2 0 Rendon 3b 4 0 0 0 es, struck out five andescapeda WP — Erlin, Lyles,Belisle, Masset. Baltimore DWrght3b 41 1 0 W erthrf 3 1 1 0 cago, 1.62;Greinke, LosAngeles, 2.03; WP eralta, Tigers 8, RedSox1 bases-loaded jam in theseventh B.NorrisL,2-4 71 - 3 4 1 1 1 1 T—3:39. A—40,508(50,480). CYoungrf 3 1 0 0 WRamsc 4 0 0 0 Milwau kee,2.05;Hudson,SanFrancisco,2.09;Wain1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 Matusz Campff 1b 4 1 2 2 Dsmndss 4 1 2 2 wright, St. Loui s ,2.11; Te h er an, At l a nta,2.20. by inducing his third double-play BOSTON — Miguel Cabrera hit a 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Marlins 5, Giants Tom.Hunter Lagarscf 4 1 2 3 Espinos2b 4 0 1 0 STRIKEO UTS—Cueto, Cincinnati, 76; Strasburg, 0 grounder of the game. KansasCity Reckerc 4 0 0 0 TMoore1b 3 0 0 0 Washi ngton,70;Fernandez,Miami,70;Wacha,St.Lousolo homer andRBIsingle, Rick DuffyW,2-3 7 2 0 0 0 2 Floresss 3 0 1 0 McLothlf 3 0 1 0 is,62;Greinke,LosAngeles,61;Kennedy,SanDiego, Porcello pitched eight solid in— Giancarlo TampaBay LosAngeles W.DavisH,B 1 0 0 0 0 2 SAN FRANCISCO Meiiap 0 0 0 0 GGnzlzp 1 0 0 0 60; Bumg arner,SanFrancisco,59;Harang,Atlanta, 59. ab r hbi ab r hbi 1 0 0 2 3 Stanton homeredand tripled, and Colonp 3 0 0 0 Stmmnp 1 0 1 0 SAVES —FrRodriguez,Milwaukee,17; Romo,San nings to win his sixth straight start G.HollandS,11-12 1 Guyerlf 4 0 1 0 Cowgillrf 4 2 2 0 Duffypitchedto1batter inthe8th. Teiada ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Barrettp 0 0 0 0 Francisco,14;Street, SanDiego, 13;Rosenthal, St. Miami beat SanFrancisco. Tom M yers rf 4 0 0 0 Trout cf 2 1 0 1 and red-hot Detroit beat Boston. It HBP —byB.Norris (A.Escobar). Waltersph 1 0 0 0 Louis, 13;Jansen,LosAngeles, 12; Papelbon, PhilLongori3b 4 0 1 0 Puiols 1b 4 0 1 1 was the10th consecutive road win T—2:37.A—24,064 (37,903). Koehler (4-3) struck out seven in Blevinsp 0 0 0 0 adelphia,11;AReed,Arizona, 11.



SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C7

NBA PLAYOFFS: CONFERENCEFINALS

Heat, Pacerseagerfor next playoff battle

Oklahoma City forward

Serge Ibaka, center, will likely miss the rest of the playoffs with

By Michael Marot

EasternConferenceFinals

The Associated Press

e calf injury.

I NDIANAPOLIS — I n diana and Miami spent a

whole season hearing about

Mark J. Terrill/The Associated Press

the rematch. Today, the tw o

E astern

Conference heavyweights will meet in the most intrigu-

Thunder confident even without Ibaka By Cliff Brunt

NBAgame. "It was hard," Adams said.

The Associated Press

"My body afterwards — I felt Thunder players fondly de- like an old man. Going forscribed Serge Ibaka's contri- ward, I got familiar with playbutions to the team this season ing while I was fatigued. I'm and explained how much he familiar with it. I need to get would be missed. comfortable with it." Then, they moved on. Adams had gained his Ibaka, one of the NBA's top teammates' confidence shot blockers, hurt his left throughout t h e pl a yoffs. calf in Game 6 of the Western They say he's ready for more Conference semifinal against responsibility. "The last tw o s eries, he the Los Angeles Clippers. A day after the team learned played extremely well for us," it would likely be without its Durant said. "Doing anything bestdefender for the rest of we need him to do, playing the playoffs, Oklahoma City hard, physical. We're going began practicing for the West- to need him this series to do ern Conference finals against the same thing. The coaches the San Antonio Spurs. Game have been preparing him. He's 1 is Monday night, and the learning, and he's getting betThunder will take a busi- ter every day." ness-as-usual approach into Still, San Antonio has to San Antonio. be ready for anything. The "It's unfortunate for us and Thunder have 10 players who for Serge," league MVP Kevin have started at some point this O KLAH OM A

CI T Y

Durant said after practice Sat-

urday. "He's a guy that loves

season.

"They are going to change their lineups," Spurs forward Tim Duncan said. "They have son, being in the playoffs. But a lot of very capable players, it happens in this league. No- very good players and they're body's ever going to feel sorry a very good team. Obviously, it's big to lose such a part of for us. "We're not going to pan- their team, but we're going to ic. We're going to continue to do what we do and show up stick to what we do." how we have to show up and During the regular season, bring the energy that we have Ibaka had career highs with to bring." averages of 15.1 points and San Antonio's guards, espe8.8 rebounds while leading cially Tony Parker and Manu the league in total blocks for Ginobili, won't find as much the fourth consecutive season resistance at the rim. "Of course, he's a big part of with 219. The Thunder don't expect to duplicate Ibaka's what they do because defenexplosiveness or his ability to sively he's everywhere blockthe game so much and has to sit out at the peak of the sea-

protect the rim.

"We're going to play team defense," guard Russell Westbrook said. "We're not going to take the onus on ourselves to block shots and do what Serge does, because nobody can do

ing shots, and the last few

years, he'sbecome abig threat knocking down those 18-, 17-footers," Ginobili said. "He's

quite a loss for them. Hopefully we use that to our advantage." Oklahoma City has been in

that." Brooks wouldn't say how he would fill the minutes or who

similar binds. Westbrook and

would start in Ibaka's place. He jokingly named almost every reserve as a possible replacement. Based on past

at least 20 games this season, and the Thunder still finished

patterns, rookie center Steven

starters Thabo Sefolosha and Kendrick Perkins each missed with the league's second-best

record. Because of those experiences, Brooks said the team

Adams and veteran forward remains confident it can adNick Collison will likely step vance to the NBA Finals. "We've had to overcome in for Ibaka. Adams has been exception- some injuries this past season, al recently. The 7-footer from and we have an expectation New Zealand was especially thatour locker room setsfor effective in Game 6 against themselves to come out and the Clippers, when he had 10 play your minutes hard, repoints and 11 rebounds in 40 gardless of circumstances, " minutes. He had never played he said. "We definitely have more than 31 minutes in an enough to still win this series."

ing fight of the year. There is the possibility of a head-tohead matchup between the world's best player, LeBron James, and the NBA's next young superstar, Paul George. There are battle lines drawn be-

tween Miami's perimeter David Santiago/The Associated Press shooters and Indiana's tough Miami Heat guard Ray Allen, inside guys. There is histo- left, and forward LeBron ry with Miami eliminating James look on during precIndiana each of the past two seasons despite the Pacers

tice Friday in Miami. The Heat

pushing the Heat further

the NBA Eastern Conference Finals today in Indiana.

than anyone expected both

face the Pacers in Game1 of

times, and, of course, everyone wants to see if the young challengers will de- want to go out and play hardrail Miami's quest for a third er, so I like being the understraight NBA championship. dog and everybody talking It's no wonder this is the about us and trying to bring most anticipated matchup of us down but we stay together the playoffs. as a unit, stay poised in the " Tt/tro best teams in t h e locker room. It just makes us Eastern Conference. It's that stronger." simple," James said. "I mean Here are five more things both teams defend at a high to watch in this series: level, both teams share the Big Roy:Nobody has been ball, both teams get into the more inconsistent in these paint, both teams have a de- playoffs than Roy Hibbert, sire to win, so that's why it's and yet nobody may be more been equal." crucial than Hibbert in this It's taken three years to series. A year ago, the Allreach this point. Star center caused so many In the second round in problems that Miami signed 2012, the Pacers took a 2-1 injury-prone Greg Oden. Aflead only to see Miami re- ter an abysmal start to the bound with three straight playoffs, Hibbert regained wins before winning the first his footing against Washtitle with James, Dwyane

ington. But if the Pacers are

Wade and Chris Bosh.

going to win this series, they need Hibbert to play well evprised everyone by pushing ery night. the Heat to the brink before Smell ball: Hawks guard faltering in a Game 7 loss Jeff Teague thought his as the Heat won a second team provided the blueprint Last year, Indiana sur-

straight crown. This season, the Pacers

made it clear from the start they wanted the No. 1 seed

No. 1 INDIANAPACERS(56-26 regular season, 8-5 in playoffs) vs. No. 2 MIAMI HEAT(54-28, 8-1) Seasonseries: Tied, 2-2. Thehometeams held serve in eachof the four meetings betweenthe teamswith the best records in the conference. Thefirst three games of theseries weredecided by a total of10 points before theHeatblewout the Pacers onApril11 to briefly moveaheadof Indiana inthestandings. Roy Hibbert was his enigmatic self in theseries, averaging 22.5 points in Pacers wins and 5.5 points in thetwo losses. LeBronJamesaveraged 28.8 points in the series, including 38and36 in the final two meetings. Story line:This is a series everyone has beenwaiting for. The teams seemeddestined for an Eastern Conference finals rematch after the Heat beat thePacers in sevengames last year enroute to their second straight title. The Pacers surged out of the gates when this season opened, but staggered downthe stretch and looked sloppy for long stretches of their first two rounds against Atlanta andWashington. TheHeattook a more measured approach to the seasonanddispatched the Bobcats and Nets with ease in the playoffs. Key matchup I:Hibbert vs. Heat frontcourt. The Pacers big man has been amystery for most of the past two months, but he does have the size to give theHeattrouble in the paint. If he plays with the aggressiveness andconfidence that hedid in Indiana's two wins in the regular season, the Pacers will have chance. a If not, it could be aquick series. Key matchupII: Heat's poise vs. Pacers' volatility. The Pacers can look like confident world-beaters one night and adisjointed team falling apart the next, a sign of agroup that is still getting used to life in the spotlight. The veteran Heathavelived in the headlines going on four years nowand rarely get rattled, which serves them well during a long playoff series. X-facter:Dwyane Wade.The Heat guard missed 28 games in the regular season for injuries or rest, all with an eyetoward being ready for this series. He'saveraging 17.9 points on 50percent shooting in the postseason, including 28 in the clinching victory over Brooklyn in the semifinals Prediction:Heatin 6. — The Associated Press

points and 4.0 assists while all season. Not surprisingly, shooting 50 percent from the the Pacers have won in the field. If Wade continues play- postseason, too, when they've ing this way, it could spell been solid defensively. Miami trouble for Indiana. But this might not have the defensive may be his biggest challenge. reputation of the Pacers, but De-fense:There is a lot of they've played well enough star power in this series, but to win eight of nine playoff ultimately, it will come down games — and good enough to to defense. Indiana had one of have beaten the Pacers in their the league's stingiest defenses last two playoff series.

to beating Indiana. Atlanta

stretched Indiana's defense by using five 3-point shooters, and when the Wizards copied the approach and

to assure Miami had to play in Indy if there was a Game knocked down shots, that, 7. That long slog didn't end too, gave Indiana trouble. until the third-to-last night Will Miami go small this of the regular season, and time? Perhaps, and it may it's the reason they will play be one way to make Hibbert Game 1 of this best-of-seven less of a factor, too. series at home. Holding at home:Indiana Still, most observers con- finished the regular season sider Miami the favorite and with the best home record with good reason. The Heat in the league (35-6). It hasn't swept Charlotte in the first helped the Pacers at all in round and beat Brooklyn 4-1 the playoffs. Indiana is 3-4 in the second. at Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Indiana, meanwhile, has giving away h ome-court been tested. It had to win the advantage Game 1 losses in last two games to beat Atlan- each of the first two series. ta 4-3 in the first round, beat

Washington 4-2 after failing to clinch the series at home and had to block out all the

outside distractions emanating from their second-half swoon. And for a change, the Pacers don't seem to mind what's being said. "I think we like being the underdogs," Lance Stephen-

n

Awbrey Glen

Indiana knows it can't do that this time. "We can't allow ourselves to come out

flat," George said. "Whatever it is, we've got to find it and come out with energy — treat

this one like it's Game 7." Wading through: Miami played it safe with Wade all season, giving his problematic knees extra rest so he son said. "We like when ev- could excel in the playoffs. erybody is talking about us. So far, that decision has paid I think it makes our game a dividends. He has played in little bit better. It makes us all nine games, averaged 17.9

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WesternConferenceFinals No. 1 SANANTONIOSPURS(62-20, 8-4) vs. No.2 OKLAHOMA CITYTHUNDER (59-23,8-5) Season series:Oklahoma City won 4-0. Both teams were missing key players at different points of the seasonseries, so it's hard to draw too manyconclusions. But the Thunder's athleticism certainly stood out. DKCgrabbed 23 morerebounds in the four games and had anaverage margin of victory of 9.3 points. Story line:The rematch. These teams, which have beenthe most consistently successful squads in theWest over the past five seasons, squared off in the 2012conference finals. The Spurs jumped out to a 2-0 lead, but OKC ripped off four wins in a rowbefore losing to Miami in the NBA Finals. All told, the Thunder have won10 of the past12 against the Spurs, bringing the latest in a long line of doubts about SanAntonio's ability to stay on top. Key matchup I:Kevin Durantvs.KawhiLeonard.Theleague's MVP meets one of theNBA's rising young stars in Leonard, the unflappable third-year swingmanwho relishes a challenge. The 6-foot-7 Leonard will be asked todefend perhaps the most gifted offensive player in the league, but hehas hadsome success against Durant in the past. Key matchup II:Gregg Popovichvs.ScottBrooks.Popovichhas won coach of the yearhonors two of the past three seasons and is widely considered the game's best coach. All Brooks hasdone is win at least 50 games infour of the past five years andlead the

— The Associated Pess

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Thunder to the finals in 2012. But he is often criticized when the

offense stagnates andcould still be on the hot seat if Oklahoma City falls short this season. X-facter:Serge Ibaka. TheThunder's defensive specialist was terrific against the Spurs this season, averaging 14.0 points, 11.5 rebounds and4.0 blocks in the four games. But the power forward will miss the rest of the playoffs with an injured left calf. Reggie Jackson. TheThunder guardaveraged21.3 points on 68 percent shooting against SanAntonio in the regular season. "If anybodywatched ourgames,theywatched ReggieJacksonbasically be the Spur killer every time weplay them." — Popovich. Prediction:Spurs in 6.

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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

NHL PLAYOFFS

MOTOR SPORTS ROUNDUP

McMurra u so sur riseA - tarwin The Associated Press

f1t

riq gI

/g~

We had the best car here by far.Great, great car."

CONCORD, N.C. — Jamie

McMurray, a 40-1 long shot, had a $1 million payday Saturday night with an upset

Kahne wound up 14th. Also on Saturday:

Carpenter grabs top seed in Indy's pole shootout:INDI-

victory in the Sprint All-Star

Race. McMurray

ANAPOLIS — Ed Carpenter posted the fastest time ear-

w a s s e c ond

on the restart for the 10-lap sprint to the checkered flag.

ly in qualifying, then did it again late in the afternoon to

New York defensemanRyan Mcoonagh, left, embraces goal-

Lined up outside of pole-sitter Carl Edwards, McMur-

take top seed into today's In-

ie Henrik Lundqvist after their 7-2 win over Montreal in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals in Montreal on Saturday.

ray waged a door-to-door

dianapolis 500 pole shootout. Last year's Indy pole winner

battle with the leader for a

hadn't been in an I ndyCar

lap around Charlotte Motor Speedway, with McMurray surging slightly ahead several

all season — until last weekend. But his four-lap average of 230.661 mph was just ahead of Carolos Munoz. The Colombian, who drives for

Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press

Rangers roll over Canadiens in Game1 The Associated Press MONTREAL — Martin St.

Louis and the New York Rangers had a reason to smile in the midst of a weekend of sadness. St. Louis, who will attend

his mother's funeral with his teammates on

S unday,

scored the opening goal of the Eastern Conference finals to pace New York's suddenly high-powered offense in a 7-2 rout of the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday.

New York got goals from six other players, and Henrik Lundqvist quieted talk of a

Montreal jinx in a 20-save effort. It was his first victory at the Bell Centre in more than

times.

The two cars appeared to touch more than once, and

Andretti-HVM, was second

McMurray finally cleared

at 230.460. Three-time Indy winner Helio Castroneves,

Edwards for the lead two laps into the fifth segment.

"A million bucks, that's Gerry Broome/The Associated Press what I kept telling myself," Jamie McMurray does a burnout following his victory in the NASCAR Sprint All-Star race at CharMcMurray said. lotte Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C., Saturday. McMurray then e a sily pulled away for his first victory in the event. Murray's at Roush Fenway tempt to avoid running into tled up and about get in the "For me, in the car, that was Racing. the back of o l der brother, wall, so he had to check-up as much fun as you can have, It seemed to be a popular Kurt. real hard and my shot was in a 10-lap shootout, me and "His brother forced his the middle, to go across three victory as several drivers Carl going side by side," said made a point to congratulate hand," Clint Bowyer said of lanes and underneath BowMcMurray, who scored the McMurray in their post-race the accident that nearly col- yer," Busch said. "But Bowfirst victory of his career in interviews as the driver took lected his car. "Hell, I don't yer blocked it and when he 2002 at Charlotte. "Carl and his Chevrolet to Victory Lane. know how I didn't wreck." did, I got into him. Those are I were just going for it. That's He was met there by team The Busch brothers were the opportunities you have to awesome." owners Felix Sabates and running together when Kurt take in the All-Star." Kevin H a r vick f i n i shed Chip Ganassi, who flew into was too close to the outside Kasey Kahne went on to second, Matt K enseth was North Carolina before the wall and Kyle tried to dart win that segment, and the third and Dale Earnhardt Jr., race after Indianapolis 500 into the middle lane to avoid third segment. "I say just leave the car for who complained earlier he qualifying. hitting him. Instead, Kyle hit was driving a dump truck, It was a tough day for Ga- the back of Bowyer as he tried now, felt pretty good right was fourth. nassi in Indianapolis, where to swing around Bowyer into there,"Kahne radioed after Edwards faded all the way none of his five cars made a third lane. Bowyer clipped the third segment as his crew to fifth. it into the Fast 9 qualifying him as Busch surged ahead, debated pit strategy. Kurt Busch was 11th after round and Scott Dixon was and it began a spin that sent But his night fell apart in qualifying for the Indianapo- his fastest driver at 15th. Busch into the path of Joey the fourth segment when he lis 500 earlier in the day. Kyle Busch won the first Logano. hit the wall to damage his "Really happy to see Jamie segment, but his night endBusch failed to finish the Chevrolet. "I hit it hard. I blew it bad," win, it's always nice to see ed early in the second 20-lap All-Star race for the fifth time good guys win," said Kenseth, segment when he used an in nine years. he radioed. "Sorry, guys. I "I saw Kurt get really bot- can't believe that happened. a former teammate of Mc- aggressive move in a fast at-

of Team Penske, was third

at 230.432.Chip Ganassi's four drivers were all shut out of the top nine spots. Kurt

Busch, who is attempting "the double," just missed the shootout, finishing 10th. The

top 30 qualifiers Saturday will start in the May 25 race, though none of the 33 start-

ing positions will be set until today. DeJoria, Enders-Stevens top NHRA qualifying: COMMERCE, Ga. — Alexis DeJo-

ria topped Funny Car qualifying, and fellow female racer Erica Enders-Stevens led the Pro Stock field in the NHRA Summer Nationals at Atlanta

Dragway. De Joria, the wife of television personality Jesse

James and daughter of entrepreneur John Paul DeJoria, took the No. 1 spot with her

Friday run of a track-record time of 4.012 seconds at 313.95

mph. She won this year in Arizona and Las Vegas, and is trying to give female drivers their 100th career victory.

two years. The Rangers have wrest-

ed home-ice advantage away from the Canadiens, heading into Game 2 of the series Mon-

day night in MontreaL "It was an emotional time for everyone, but the guys have been behind me and supported me," said St. Louis, who received a long ovation from the crowd when he was named the game's first star.

NASCAR: SPRINT CUP

A racing prodigycomesinto hisown after hard lessons By Viv Bernstein

"My teammates are behind me

The New York Times New Service

and supporting me, and their effort was unbelievable. "We feel really close right now and we're trying to keep feeding off that." The Rangers galvanized and drew inspiration from St. Louis after his mother's unex-

MOORESVILLE, N.C.— The boyish grin has not changed much over the years although the boy who ar-

pecteddeath before Game 5 of

rived in NASCAR before he was even

18 is all grown up, is engaged to be married and has a hairline that is beginning to thin. Joey Logano turns 24 this week. Maybe it only seems as if he should be

New York's second-round series against Pittsburgh. Rangers coach Alain Vigneault said his team is trying to support St. Louis while staying focused on playing a sound team game. "Emotionally, for us, that is something really strong right now," Vigneault said. "I know quite a few of our guys went to the wake (on Friday), and I

older.

texted with Marty last night to make sure that everything

the No. 20 Toyota at Joe Gibbs Racing in2012. But those who wrote Logano off were also mistaken. Turns out, he

was good. "He's handled it in an incredible way that probably has helped our team come closer together. (Sunday) is going to be atough day.We need to be there to support him, and

we'll do that and get ready for Monday."

A lot has happened since the veteran Mark Martin declared Logano the next great driver in NASCAR back in

2005, when Logano was only 15. He is in his sixth season in the Sprint Cup series, and it has not been quite the

victory parade that Martin predicted. The nickname "sliced bread" — as in "the best thing since ..." — was dis-

carded after the can't-miss kid missed badly enough to lose his prized seat in

learned a lot in four years trying to live up to expectations. Now that he's driving the No. 22

tion, I made the comment then that Joey was like a slot machine that

ed: "It was a tough situation at Gibbs

the team's at that level. I feel like I'm at that level." It is hard to believe this is the same driver who had two career wins in

career and what I've learned and what

Michigan in August, became a regubecause he wasn't mature enough. lar in the top 10 and qualified for the somebody had beenputting money He had a second chance at racing and playoff for the first time in his career. into, and he was going to pay off for took advantage of it." He finished eighth. the next player," the longtime driver Logano knows he is lucky to be in That momentum has continued into and broadcaster Kyle Petty said. the No. 22. When it became obvious 2014. "He's a closer," Gordon said. "When Here's the payoff so far: Logano in 2012 that he would be replaced by was sixth in the Cup standMatt Kenseth at Joe Gibbs Rac- it's time to get it done, he's got anothings going into in the annual ing, Logano scrambled to find er level left, so I don't think people All-Star event, which offered another Cup ride. Among the should be surprised about it." no points, at Charlotte Motor team owners Tom Logano said Logano's ability to run with the Speedway on Saturday. More they had approached was Rog- leaders has changed the way he is significantly, Logano also has er Penske. At the time, Tom Lo- viewed, not only on the track, but in two victories in 11 races. Logano gan o said Penske had decidedthe NASCAR garage. "He definitely has elevated himself In the new playoff qualifyto stick with A.J. Allmendinger ing format, which heavily favors wins in the No. 22 in 2013. in my eyes," the veteran driver Carl over points, Logano is one of tw o That was until Allmendinger was Edwards said. "If you look at the hidrivers (Kevln Harvick, also with two fired after failing a drug test late in erarchy of the garage and as drivers, wins, is the other) locked into the 16- 2012. we all look at which cars are running car postseasonfield.Logano has six Joey Logano was signed to take the best and which team is at what top-five finishes, tied for best, and has over in 2013. point and who's learning things quick"I looked at it and said, 'hey, here's er, and Joey kind of threw that whole led 447 laps over all, third highest. "If we keep doing what we're doing, my last shot,' " Logano said. "In all thing on its head by just going out and we'll be the team to beat," Logano said honesty, this was kind of it. basically speeding up a half-second "Now I'vegotto produce.So Iwas everywhere he went." last week from the sprawling Team Penske headquarters here. "I feel like able to take the first four years of my Now that Logano has figured out

"I wouldn't trade starting at 18 years

and put it all to use here."

Ford for Team Penske, Logano is be- four full seasons at Joe Gibbs Racing. The transformation was quick. ginning to prove Martin might have Then again, he is not the same. Paired with the crew chief Todd Gor"He grewfrom aboyto a man,"said don, the team established itself in the been right all along. "When he left the Gibbs organiza- Tom Logano, Joey's father, who add- first season together. Logano won at

GOLF ROUNDUP

IRVING, Texas — Louis Oosthuizen is

time last season, and is still bothered by

LIAMSBURG, Va. — Lizette Salas moved

the backeven though he won at home in

into position for her first LPGA Tour victory, playing 25 holes in 6-under par to take a three-stroke lead in the Kingsmill Championship. The 24-year-old former

still looking for a remedy for his recurring South Africa in January. back issues. Mike Weir, James Hahn and Gary A victory at the Byron Nelson Cham- Woodland were a stroke back. "That's what I've been working toward pionship would sure make him feel much better. the last few years, to get myself back here "The last year and a half was really in this position, and looking forward to frustrating," he said. the challenge," said Weir, the 44-year-old Oosthuizen birdied four of the last five left-hander. holes for a 6-under 64 on Saturday and a Weir, the 2003 Masters champion who share of the third-round lead with Brendon hasn't had a top-25 finish since 2010 when Todd.The 2010British Open champion had the Canadian had an elbow injury, shot 67 the low round of the day after recovering while missing 4-foot putts on Nos. 15 and from bogeys on two of the first four holes. 16. Hahn's 65 included five birdies in a "I made a nice birdie on 5, and just re- row ontheback nine,and Woodland shot ally made some good putts," Oosthuizen 66 with a double bogey at No. 7. said. "Every opportunity I had for birdie Morgan Hoffmann twice fell out of the I actually made. My eye was good today, lead after hitting drives left into the waand I hit a lot of them really close." ter and making double bogey, at Nos. 11 Todd made 12consecutive pars before and 18. He finished with a 68 and was tied holing a 4-foot birdie at No. 18 for a 68 to for sixth at 8 under with three-time mamatch Oosthuizen at 10-under 200. jor champion Padraig Harrington, Marc On the morning of the Nelson's final Leishman and Graham DeLaet. round last year, Oosthuizen withdrew beAlso on Saturday: cause of a neck issue. He missed extended Salas up three at Kingsmill: WIL-

old and getting thrown to the wolves; I wouldn't trade that for a million dol-

lars," Logano said. "No way, because it's made me who I am now."

Oosthuizen, Toddshare Nelson lead The Associated Press

how to win, the question for him is,

I've figured out and matured and how much morecan he win along the grown up throughout all those years way?

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Southern California player shot a 3-under

68 in the completion of the rain-delayed second round and birdied three of the last five holes in the afternoon for a sea-

son-best 65. Perry on top heading to final round: BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Kenny Perry

a

J

shot a 3-under 69 at Shoal Creek to take a

one-stroke lead over John Inman after the

)

third round of the Regions Tradition. Per-

ry is seeking his third Champions Tour major title after winning the Senior Players Championship and U.S. Senior Open in consecutive tour starts last year. Pieters maintains lead in Spain:GIRONA, Spain — Belgium's Thomas Pieters shot a 1-under 71 to extend his Spanish

Open lead totw o strokes over50-year-old Spanish star Miguel Angel Jimenez. Pieters had 7-under 209 total on PGA Catalunya Resort's Stadium Course.

v,

Widgi Creek GOLF CLUB

18707 SW Century Dr., Bend

www.widgi.com l (541) 382-4449


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN C 9

Pole PedalPaddlebythe numbers

The namegame QO Total number of registered teams in this C %7 year's PPP. The vast majority of racers compete as teams.The racealso included 209 pairs, 205 individuals, and 17elite individuals.

1 • g g, Q g , The fastest time by any entrant, e f f e l JaN postedbyAtlas CiderCo., of Bend, which won themaleteam 40-44 division. The team wasnearly 3 minutes faster than Marshall Greene, the winning elite individual male.

QQQ

As always, PPPparticipants got creative this year whencoming up with their team names.Someof our favorites: • Beer Makes UsPPP • Sometimes a GreatMotion

Cash prize for winning the individ-

I ylJlJlJ ual elite men's or women's races. $ The second-place elite manand elite womaneach receives $500, andthird-place finishers get $250.

• E = MC Hammered

• Old Farts With Broken Parts • Sprint Leg Is 4 Wussies • Victorious Secret • College Major: Trophy Husbandry • Damian Lillard Is On ThisTeam* • Ovarian Cysters • Just for the Halibut • Innies and Outies (Separate teams that finished close together) • There's No Place Like127.0.0.1 • Our Parents Made UsDo It • Mustache Mafia

Yes, the PolePedal Paddle is ashowcase for the world-class athletes in Central Oregon, but it is so muchmorethan that. Everybody from ex-Olympians to weekend warriors participates, andThe Bulletin's photographers were atevery stage of the race tocatch the action.

Q

* Editor's note: The Bulletin was unable to confirm if Portland Trail Blazers point guard Damian Lillard was, in fact, on that team

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Creative costumes

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A reminder that while the PPPis a serious athletic endeavor for many participants, it is also acelebration of Central Oregon culture — with all the weirdness it entails.

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Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

Racers compete in the cycling stage of the U.S. Bank Pole Pedal Paddle race Saturday with Mount Bachelor in the background.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Team BN Runs.

Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

Above, a runner jumps as the band Trees Are For Hugging plays in the background. Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Right, a sit skier races around a gate. Left, a kay-

akerraces down the Deschutes River.

Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

Runners cross the Deschutes River as

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

volunteers cheer on.

Dean Guernsey/The Bulletin

JosephRandolph anda competitor with the Wonder Girls team.

Greene

sitions and gear logistics — but the bike stage might be just as important fourth in 1:52:57, and Dakota Black- as race savvy, according to Greene. horse-von Jess, also of Bend and a While the PPP winner is typically a PPP first-timer, was fifth in 1:54:31. talented nordic skier, the cycling leg Greene and Boone, who is also is what creates separation among 33, agree that PPP experience usu- those skiers. "If you haven't biked at a pretty seally trumps youth. Briggs is 26, and Blackhorse-von Jess is 28. rious level, the bike is where people "I look forward to Matt Briggs and are goingto lose time," Greene said. Dakota putting together the piecBoone said he plans to return to es and giving us old guys a run for race nextyear, but Greene was a little By then he pretty much had the win our money in years to come," Boone undecided after his sixth PPP win on secured. But Greene said he was says. Saturday. "We'll see," Greene said. "I maynot wary of Boone passing him during Briggs plans on it, and he had a the 5-mile run. challenge for Greene after Satur- do it every year, just alternate years. "When I heard he was only 20 sec- day's race. But that being said, I'm afraid if I "It was lot harder than I thought, take oneyear off I'll never get in good onds behind me in the bike, I was literallyrunning scared,"Greene said. but I've got to come back and beat the enough shape again." "I knew he was going to be strong. old guys," Briggs said, smiling. "I'll He was certainly fit enough this Boone had a great day, too." beat him (Greene) before he retires." time around. Boone managedto close the gap To win the PPP, experience is cru— Reporter: 541-383-0318, by about 30 seconds during the pad- cial — including dialing in the tranmmorical@bendbulletin.com Boone reached the bike-run transi-

tion at the Athletic Club of Bend, he Continued from C1 was only 20 seconds behind Greene. "Coming off the bike I thought I His sixth win ties him with Bend's Ben Husaby (winner from 1999 to had it," Boone said. "I just couldn't 2004) for No. 2 on the all-time PPP get a rhythm going (on the run). victories list. (Bend's Justin Wad- Once we got to the pavement I found sworth won the race eight straight my legs again, but at that point he years from 1989 to 1996.) (Greene) had pulled too far away." Briggs, a PPP rookie, was in first Greene hadnearly a one-minute place coming out of the 8-kilometer lead on Boone atthe run-paddle nordic ski leg at Mt. Bachelor ski transition at Bend's Riverbend Park. area. Greene passed him a few miles

into the 22-mile bike stage along Century Drive, then Briggs regained the lead at the climb near the Sunri-

ver cutoff. But on the next descent, Greene blew by Briggs again. "I have no idea how he was going that fast," Briggs said. Boone then passed Briggs to move into second place, and by the time

dle and sprint stages. Bend's Jason Adams finished

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A member of the Tinker Bellas.

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R E A L T 0 R S


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Racers compete onthe Deschutes River in Bend. ELITEMEN 1, MarshalGreene, l Bend........1:46:58 2, Andrew Boone, Bend...........1;47:30 3, MattBriggs,Bend..............1:49:46 4, Jason Adams,Bend.............1;52;57 5, Dakota Blackhorse-von Jess, Bend....1:54;31 6, KevinBrown,Portland.........1:57:21 7, PeterVraniak,Bend.............1;59;23 8, NoelJohnson,Portland.......1:59:40 9, Bryant Mason, Boulder,Colo..2;00;55 10, JoelVergona,Bend.......... 2:03:00 11, Lucas Zetle, Portland........2:13:04 12, DavidLafferly, Harrisburg..2:13:33 13, Buck Naked,Sisters..........2:25:01 ELITEWOMEN

1, Sarah Max, Bend.................2:05:34 2, Carolyn Daubeny, Bend.......2:12:56 3, AllisonHalpin,Bend..........2:34:31 4, AllisonMiles,Bend............. 2:49:40 MALEPAIRS12 ANDUNDER 1, The13thSt.Raiders............2:27:47

4, Livin'TheGoodLife............2:22;08 5,2, HighlandMoms,Bend....2:24:18 6, Brooke AndSarah Bailed,Bend............................2:27:18 7,KillTheHill, Bend...............2:32:34 8, BuzzKil, Bend....................2:56:24 9, SparkleParly, Bend.............3;02;36 10, FastFriends,Bend...........3:03:45 11, Guvu Sana, Bend..............3;09;51 12, Wellby,Portland................ 3:21:03 FEMALE PAIRS45-54 1,TheFlamingChickens.........2:05;32 2, Downing&Wose, Bend...... 2:07:55 3, PinkSparkleQueens, Newberg..................................3:12:18 4, TumaloSisters, Bend.........3:38:57 FEMALEPAIRS55-59

TANDOM PAIRS 35-44 1, MikeyLikesIt, Bend............2:35:54 2, DamiaLi nlard Is On ThisTeam, Bend...........2:51:21 3, MightyMighty Strongbows,LaPine.............. 2:52:00 4, NorthMoon,Portland .........2:59:39 5, Team Barr, Bend.................3:01:25 6,RenoRiffRaff ,Kingston......3:22:37 TANDOM PAIRS 45-54 1, Dr.Heckyll& Mr. Snyde, Portland................2;21:37 2, Just2, Browns, Bend.........2:32:52 3,GreenMountainBros,Bend2:40:08 TANDOM PAIRS 55-59 1, LantzALot, Eugene............. 2:35:59

1, OR-7'Bri s des,Bend...........2:24:26 2,Just4,Fun,Bend................23810

TANDOM PAIRS 65-69 1, About Time,Bend................2:46:36

FEMALEPAIRS66-64

MALEIND12 ANDUNDER

1, Two GreyHares, Sisters ...... 2:44:50

1, Aidan Whitelaw,Bend........2:15:40 2, NateHenson, Bend..............2:19:21 MALEPAIRS13-17 COEDPAIRS13-17 3, CalvinKeane,Bend.............2:21:07 1, Casey AndLeo,Bend.........1:57:27 1, SprintLegIs 4Wussies ......22817 4, RobertJGorman,Bend.......2:37:12 2, Lazjack................................2:29:56 2, TeamPuppy........................2:43:27 5, TylerVergho, 3,WildGooseChase...............2:40:40 3, DistrictThirteen................... 3:07:28 Cupertino,Calif.......................3:05:16 MALEPAIRS18-24

1, Bosshogs, Bend..................2:07:47 2,5TalentGuys, Bend............21918 3, BreakinBr gad,Redmond.....2:40:51 MALEPAIRS25-34 1, TrailBoss,Bend.................2:06:17

2, PPP In Your Diaper, Not MyFace, KlamathFalls..... 2:12:47 3, Duck Hunt, Wilsonyile........2;14:00 4, Cube & Bob,Tualatin ..........2:18:12 5, So ItGoes,Bend................2;21:04 6, 0 Brother, WhereArt Thou?, Seattle.....................................2:24:32 7, Panda Boom, Bend..............2:26:20 8, Tacc Attack, Klamath Falls...2:30:33 9, Tunuts,Bend.......................2:31:07 10DoubleD's,Bend................2;32;13 11, WiiUnfit,Bend..................2:33:40 12, Kennama ra , Bend..............2;39;27 13, WinOrLose We Booze, Bend......................2:42:27 14, DelajamieAnd Bromagey, Encinitas, Calif.......2:44:23 15, Cascade Relays, Bend.......3:00:10 16, ThirdToLast, Portland...... 3:01:02 17, StairMasters,Redmond....3:06:56 18, Bj,Atlanta.......................... 3:43:13 MALEPAIRS35-44

1, Tachyon, HoodRiver........... 2:13:29 2, Fear TheSpear, Portland..... 2:14:07 3, TeamDe sski, Bend..............2:16:51 4, PowderThursday, Bend.......2:19:40 5, McRingers, Bend.................2:20:04 6, LiquidForce, Encinitas,Calif........................ 2:27:02 7, CruiseBrothers,Gaston...... 2:34:05 8, Mason'Mi s nions,Seattle.... 2:39:19 9, Thrown Together,Redmond.2:43:07 10Terzirwin,Redmond............ 2:58:46 11, Glove Daddys.................... 3:38:00 MALEPAIRS45-54

1, Waylon &Wilie, Bend.......1:54:28 2, LongTrail, Bend.................. 2:04:49 3, Pair Of Pauls, Bend............. 2:19:05 4, Team Ripsinger Anchorage, Alaska.................. 2:21:09 5, TheWold Brothers, Eugene.2:25:26 6, LaBonneVie, Eugene......... 2:25:49 7, (Noteamname)................... 2:30:06 8, 2 Bodacious E!'s, Bend......... 2:30:47 9, Sparving,Boise,Idaho........2:31:11 10 Dave AndJeff's GreatAdventure,Bend............. 2:32:42 11, Joka,Bend....................... 2:34;02 12, Janes Affliction, Bend........ 2:47:10 13, The Works,Bend...............2:47:52 14,HorseWithNoName,Bend2:48:43 15, NoComment, Bend........... 2;53;46 16, Fartsky AndCrutch Newberg..................................2;55:28 17, HighRollers,Bend............3:05:07 18, Creaky Knees, Seattle........ 4:36:38 19, Louscotts,HappyValey.... 5:05:16

COEDPAIRS 18-24 1, Rebound-E ast......................2:00:00 2, Duluthians,Duluth,Minn....2:00:12 3, Skemma, Bend....................2:17:55 4,Katieff beni,Bend................2:49:32

COEDPAIRS 25-34 1, Bivouac Boys?, Seattle........2:07:41 2, Team Rogue Bradley, Portland ..................................2;12:56 3, BnRuns,Seattle..................2:14:54 4, Moondancin' Ramblers, Bend.......................2:20:05 5, Team OleAndLena,Eugene2:20:12 6, Masters OfThe Uniyerse, Seatle .....................2:20:22 7, Gilcoq,Portland..................2:24:23 8, NoNookieUnless I Bookie,Bend.........................2:24:52 9,TornMeniscus,Port land.....2;25;20 10, D.I.N.K.S, Springfield........2:26:14 11, Leg AndDairy, Bend........2:27:26 12, Kazer, Bend......................2:30:43 13, Selfie,Portland..................2;31;04 14, TheUnstoppableA's, Bend2:33:46 15, Acd, Portland....................2:38:01 16, T-Rex GoesRawr!, Seattle.2:38:16 17, New JerseyStrong, Bend.2:39:12 18, Rhiannerton, Eugene......... 2:39:16 19, Team Turbopup, LaPin e....2:43:44 20, BigFatKitties, Caribou..... 2:46:08 21, Team Nichols, Bend.........2:50:10 22, Goho,Portland..................2:54:45 23, Hard-As-Stone,Bend....... 2:55:53 24, Jason&Tiff, Bend.............3:06:30 25, NotCompeting WithlanAndKali,Wa sco........3:23:58 COEDPAIRS35-44 1,GameOfMugs,Bend..........2:03:07 2, YoMama, West Linn.......... 2:09:59 3, Graham Crackers, Bend.......2:10:10 4, Dave AndLynn,Bend..........2:11:23 5, SweatyYeti And TheSquirrel,Boise,Idaho.......2:14:00 6, TumaloCreek, Bend............2:1544 7, Damel0, a Bend.................2:19:20 8, TheFlyingSnow Snakes,Olympic Valey, Calif..2:1956 9, Still SweetCheeks, Eugene. 2:23:06 10, S&m, Portland.................. 2:23:37 11, FlashFlood,Bend.............2:27:52 12, Wee kendLocals, Corvallis 2:30:11 13, Jesus IsKing, Parma........ 2:30:29

14, Team Apppocalypse;

TheEndIsB,Bend.................. 2:31:27

15, Coope rschenk

KlamathFalls .......................... 2:32:03

16, DosGauchos Cansados, Bend..................... 2:32:35 17, The Weight, Bend..............2;37;11 18, VictoriousSecret,Seatle .. 2:39:22 19, Thunder Rose,Corvaffis,.,,2:44:18 20, Teambo 4.0, Talent............ 2:45:06 21, Team Hawbooby, Bend..... 2:46:08 22, KentuckyProud, Bend....... 2:51:34 23, TalkNerdyToMe, Bend... 2;52;49 24, CorneredStarfish, Bend... 2:52:52 25, Chi-Guys,Bend................. 3:08:31 26, Oceans 2, Eugene............. 3:22:23 27, TheMurphs, WashougalWa , sh................... 3:23:29 28, Bound&Determined, Bend3:32:57

MALEIND13-15

1, Kimbert Schlichting-Robinson,Eugene2:19:44 2, Jonathan Wimberly, Bend....2:21:35 3, Morgan Tien, Bend..............2:48:52 4, KyleReed, Bend..................3:21:18 MALEIND20-24 1, NolanKing,Bend................2:13:42 2, DavidMoore,Bend............2:35:04 3,Steff anMoore,Bend............2:38:56

4, Anders Hatlestad, Bend.......24419

MALEIND25-29 1, Craig Francis,Portland.......2:20:49 2, BrianEngle,Bend................2:21:31 3, RexShepard........................2:25:03 4, JohnWunder, Bend.............2:33:13 5, SkylarJones,Springfield ....2:45:27 6, Nathanael Werner, Bend.....2:50:20 MALEIND30-34 1,JoshuaJohnston, Tucson,Ariz............................2:08;55 2, BradleyHowk,Bend............2:19:52 3,DavidUff man,Corvaff is......2:23:21 4, lanRoth,Corvaffis..............2:24:11 5, EricBreon,Boise, Idaho......2:27:34 6, KalinLee,Portland..............2:28:25 7, Matthew Wright, Bend.........2:31;14 8, JeffeyMeyrowitz, Portland..2:31:48 9, KalleCrafton,Portland........2:34:00 10 MarkMcCambridge Salt Lake City, Utah.................2:34:00 11, Todd Goselin, Hilsboro....2:34:25 12, Trevor Struble,Bend..........2:36:13 13, JavierOcariz-Elsen, Spooner,Wis...........................2:36:53 14, KyleWesffal, Powell Butte2:48:29 15, J.P. Mosser, Portland ........2:50:31 16,GregDausman, LakeOswego...........................3:15:01 17, Cale Miler, Corvallis.........4:25:37 18, MartinBenning Sammam ish, Wash.................4:44:19 MALEIND35-39 1, ErikHammer, Bend..............2:02:02 2, DerekHayner, Bend.............2:10:39 3, WesKapsa, Bend ...............2:16:22

4, Johnathan Rasca, Salem.....2:25:00 5,ShawnDimke,Portland.......2:25:37 6, ChrisMartin, Richland, Wash....................... 2:25:57 7, BrockMonger, Bend............2:28:35 8, DrewMoore, Bend.............2:28:54 9, ErikSteimle,Portland..........2:29:46 10, Matthew Gregory, Bend.....2:33:06 11,SpencerSchaub,Bend......2:35:32 12,BrookJackson, Bend.........2:45:41 13, Tomm yParker, Redmond.2;50;55 14, KellyPettit, Bend...............2:51:05 15, TraviBo s wer,Redmond.....2:52:31 16, Jesse Russel, Venice........2:54:18 17, KitBlackwelder,Bend........2;54;18 18, Sean Barry, Portland.........2:55:51 19, Brock Strunk,Bend..........3;02;02 20,ChrisHarmon,Gresham....3:08:05 21, AntonGrube, Philomath....3;16;50

MALEIND56-54 1, Brad St. Clair, Bend.............2:16:01 2, RickPeters,Bend................2:18:45 3, MichaelMcLandress, Bend.2:25:47 4, MarkPetersen,Bend........... 2:30:17 5, Stephen Crozier,Bend......... 2:34:52 6, Chuck Cox,Corvallis .......... 2:42:13 7, GregStevens....................... 2:49:01 8, DavidLenhart, Bend............2:49:37 9,JohnFairgrieve Vancouver,Wash..................... 2:59:44 10, Steve Pappas.................... 3:10:56 11, JeffKohlwes, Mill Valley,Calif...................... 3:11:38 12, Bob Kavanaugh................. 3;31;25 MALEIND55-59 1, BradNicholson,Sisters....... 2:27:05 2, StanKiefer,Bend................. 2;47;16 3,ThomasWimberly,Bend.....2:47:52

4, KenBronson,Sweet Home..2:50:51 5, DavidGroner,LakeOswego2:51:29 6, Al Tom pkins, Bend............. 3:00:19 7, Stephen Herr, Bend............ 3:19:15

MALEIND66-64 1, BobLandry, Rancho Cordova, Calif............ 2:14:57 2, MikeDirksen,Bend............. 2:24:56 3, Dr.Bones............................2:29:43 4, CraigMavis,Bend..............2:30:12 5, MichaelCappiego, Sunriver2:31:10 6, MichaelGueguen,Bend......2:31:43 7, DavidSmulin ..................... 2:39:44 8, BruceToien, Sherwood...... 2:51:10 9, JeffMonson,Bend............. 2:54:09 10, Roland Swenson.............. 3:00:23 11, Stewart Patrignani, Davis,Calif.............................. 3:22:09 12, Wiliams;Bruce, Leavenworth, Wash................. 3:25:33 13, Christman; Rich, Sammam ish, Wash................. 3:26:12 14, John Boylenr.,..........,.....,.. 3:37:59 15, James Cunnington, Bend. 3:49:41

MALEIND65-69 1, BertHinkley.........................2:28:32 2, GaryReynolds, Bend...........2:30:51 3, LarryBuwalda, Arcata,Calif.2:41:33 4, James Effiott, Bend..............2:59:51 MALEIND75-98 1, Biff Martin,Bend.................3;1725 2, ErnieGilpin, Bend...............4:00:37 FEMALEIND12ANDUNDER 1, Annie McColgan................2:33;44 2, BellaFasssett,Bend............2:45:13 FEMALE IND16-19 1, Jordan Schweitzer,Bend ....2;33;49 2, AshleyBruce,Redmond..... 2:40:11 FEMALE IND20-24 1, Makenna Tague, Bend.........2:25:05 2, SarahWest, Bend................3:55:26 3, TaylorWithers,Bend..........3:55:52 FEMALEIND25-29

1, Taylor Shekell, Tucson,Ariz.2:29:57 2,JuliHuddleston,Bend.........2:40:58 3, ElenaPressprich, Bend......2:48:43 4, Drew Jones, Bend..............2:49:30 5, Becca Cooper, Portland.......2:50:20 6, Stephanie Brown................3:18:30 7, I. Larson,Bend....................3:33:01 8, CaryGradovige, Corvallis ... 4:35:47 FEMALEIND30-34 1, Sarah Wiliamson, Bend......2:39:28 2, Elisif Harro,Bend................242:17 3, ChloeMurdock, Portland....2:51:12 4, JulieBaird,Portland............2:51:58 5, KatieFord,Bend.................2:59:46 6, AliaBreon,Boise,Idaho......3:05:08 7,MikaMast,Bend.................3:05:22 8, Andrew Wampler................. 3:30:14

FEMALE TEAM25-29 1, LadyOre-Boners, Portland..2:49:06 2, WigglyGigglyGals, Tigard. 3:20:45 3, TwoCali's AndCody,Bend..3.28.21

FEMALE TEAM36-34 1, You'reWelcome,Bend....... 2:21:17 2, N.E.P. Reps, Portland .......... 2:24:05 3, Thrive,Bend........................2:38:12 4, Three Tall Blondes,Bend..... 2:47:10 5, Team Cougar, Bend............. 2:48:04 6, Mira'sHumps Are GettingHitched,Seattle.....2:59:52 7, CatheterQueens, Bend........ 3:13:39 8, Team Mira-Culous,Seatle.. 3:17:44 9, SoleSisters, Vancouver, Wash..................... 3:51:21

Mirror,Bend........................... 2:59:08 25, TheGood, TheBad And The Ugly .......................... 2:59:17 26, IronBogAssKickers, Bend3:11:49 27, Agony OfDeFeet, Tucson. 3:18:39 28, This IsGe ting Messy........ 3:24:01 29, Mogy'sMistakes,Atlanta... 3:28:11 30,KaiBoise,Boise,Idaho.....3:33:37 31, The Caped Crusaders,Scotts Mils 3:33:55 32,0neMorePPP Won't Hurt,Atlanta.................. 4:08:24

COED TEAM35-39 1, Rebound East1, Bend........1:58:57 2, CheddarShreddars, Portland.................................. 2;05:10 3, Oregon Active, Camas......... 2:15:43 FEMALE TEAM35-39 4, Rebound East2,Bend.........2;17:43 1, Wonder Girls, Bend.............2:25:40 5, Pronation,Portland............. 2:20:24 2, Freaks Without 6, Golden Girls And Warming,Portland.................. 2:28:01 GrizzlyBoys,Bend................. 2:28:01 3, LuckyLadies,Bend............ 2;35;32 7, Team Dvc, Bend.................. 2;29:15 4, BlueFever,Bend................ 2:45:32 8, ExitStrategy,Bend............. 2:29:34 5, SscWarriors ....................... 2:46:36 9, Smartypints,Beaverton ...... 2:33:13 6, HealthyScratch,Portland....2:59:10 10, Speedy Weasels, 7, FI.LD.I., Bend..................... 3:01:15 Jacksonville............................ 2:40:47 8, Earth,WindAndFire, Bend.3:02:50 11, AreWeThereYet?, Bend... 2:47:50 12, FastYetFurious, Portland.2:52:15 FEMALE TEAM46-44 13,Rebound 1, Recharge Sport, Bend.........2:06:36 Redville-Prinemond, Bend..... 2:52:40 2, PowerOfShe,Sisters.......... 2:23:55 14, RebelDuck P ain Co mp a n y , Me d f o rd..........2:53:30 3, TheCatIn TheHat, Bend.... 2:28:43 4, Capable Of 15, Brightside,Bend................ 2:55:13 Multiples,Portland..................2.31.10 16, Replace ment Crew, 5, Lakum Dukum, Bend...........2:38:53 KlamathFalls.......................... 3:00:31 6, GirlsHavingFun,Bend...... 2:39:12 17, TheCool 7, Moms WhoRock, Bend.......2:39:27 Campagna 's,Ashland.............. 3:00:39 8, Blood,Sweat And 18, Jackie&The Beers!,Bend............................ 2:43:37 BalmyJetSirens, Portland...... 3:00:39 9, LuckB4, Ladies,Bend........ 2:48:47 19, Unknown, Coeur d'Alene... 3:03:37 10, I LoveBend,OR,Bend...... 2:55:27 20, Red Squadron,Sherwood. 3:08:33 11, LuckyCharms,Bend.........2:55:39 21,FunkySeattle,Redmond....3:09:59 12, NotThatKindOf Dr., Bend3:01:06 22, McCurry'sHarem,Portland3:11:18 13, TinkerBeffas..................... 3:06:24 23, Team Leaky 14, 50ShadesOf Canoes,Milwaukie.................. 3:15:29 Wheezing, Bend..................... 3:11:46 24, HalfFast 15, Fab4, Bend....................... 3:37:11 Halfminds,Portland................ 3:45:12 25, BywaterXc FEMALE TEAM45-49 Experiment,Portland............... 3:50:34 1, X FitChix,Bend................. 2:08:32 2, Rompe rs.............................. 2:55:35 COED TEAM46-44 3,VictoryVixens,Redmond....3:03:42 1, Vamonos, Bend...................2:00:13 4, FinishIt!, LakeOswego....... 3:23:29 2, TheMarvinos, Bend............ 2:07:10 3, Muckaroos, Eugene............ 2:12:37 FEMALE TEAM56-54 4, JustForThe 1, D And DGirls (Bar& Gril).. 2:06:08 Halibut,LakeOswego.............. 2:12:54 2, BlackButteBeffas,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,. 2:24;11 5, MockingbirdKilers, Bend... 2:25:12 3, Team Bring It On,Portland ..2:47:20 6, Meatgoats,Eugene.............. 2:25:34 7,It' sGoodToBeKing,Bend..2:34:49 4, MostInterestingWomen In TheWorld, Boise, Idaho...... 2:52:14 8, Team SexPanther, Corvallis 2:35:26 5, Ld-50,Vancouver,Wash..... 3;07;26 9, Blazin'Sloths,Bend...........2:36:43 6, BlastFromThe Last, Bend..3:31:50 10, Young And Rusting,Redmond................... 2:37:44 FEMALE TEAM55-59 11, SkinToWin, Bend.............2:39:00 1, YaYaSisters, Redmond......2:50;17 12, Buono Beaters, Portland....2:39:54 2, Floressence, Bend............... 2:53:24 13, Summe r Is Coming.......... 2:46:55 3, CinderBellas14, AceAnd ASubsidiaryOf,Bend.............2:56:51 TheTenderTendons, Portland.2:47:38 4, MartiniMam a's, Bend........3.02:11 15, Bfop'14, Portland............. 2:48:57 16, Staggering FEMALE TEAM60-64 Geniuses, Portland.................. 2:53:54 1, PolkaDotPower, Bend........2:46:31 17, Twice Baked,Boise, Idaho.2:56:52 2, MentalPausal, Bend.......... 2:57:03 18, HereForTheBeer, Eugene2:59:21 3, Yolo,Bend........................... 3:09:48 19, JustForThe 4, OvarianCysters, Eugene..... 3:26:20 Hali butToo,LakeOswego.......3:01:26 20, Grape ColoredGreen,Bend...3;02;52 FEMALE TEAM65-69 21, EatPrayRace, Bend..........3:06:32 1, GrayHare,Bend..................2:37:14 22, I.M.PainPortl , and.............30759 23, Hunkleys,Silverton........... 3:08:32 COEDTEAM12 ANDUNDER 1, PurpleUnicorns..................2:18:23 COED TEAM45-46 2, PinkPrickly Nosehairs........3:1716 1, Gonadal Shield.................... 2:16:56 2,Aces Of Bace, Bend.............2:19:56 COEDTEAM13-15 3, BeerMakesUsPPP, Bend... 2:25:40 1, Swag...................................2:52:17 4, Britt AndHisBitches, Bend.2:39:57 2, CoolKids............................ 2:55:46 5, Team HerbaLife .................. 2:43:51 3, Team Fantastic .......... 6, BeerMe,Bend..................... 2:57:34 7, Mountain Mommas,Lebanon................ 3:10:14

20, Deutscher Family, Lacey.... 2:38:58 21, Lost InBend,Tigard.......... 2:38:58 22, Klamburgians,EaglePoint 2:39:22 23, Payton'sTeam,Bend ........ 2:40:25 24, DogAlley,Bend................. 2:41:03 25, TheRevengeOf TheBrennans,Sunriver...........2:41:23 26, Snow Wolves,Bend......... 2:41:44 27, HoofHarted, Camas......... 2:42:35 28, Papa BobAnd Grandkids2-2014................... 2:43:17 29, J BirdFamily, Sherwood... 2:43:42 30, Bisuwipe14,SanJose...... 2:43:58 31, TheFastAnd The Furriest,Bend................... 2:45:15 32, SuperJast,Bend.............. 2:46:25 33,PolishSausage,Gallup.....2:47:03 34, Hunter-Rupe, Bend............ 2:49:44 35, Shenanigans, Portland...... 2:49:48 36, Team Sthorgel, Bend........ 2:51:11 37, The Young8 The Restless,Portland............. 2:51:26 38, LeisureLnSeniors WestLinn................................ 2:52:13 39, Fassett,Bend..................... 2:55:07 40, Good Times, Bend............. 2:55:17 41, Team Duke., Bend............ 2;55:56 42, Where'My s Ski?!?, SantaClara,Calif.................... 2;58:26 43, 4SquirrelsWith 2Nuts,Bend........................... 2:59:21 44,Outties,Bend.....................2:59:58 45, Innies,Bend..................... 3:00:45 46, Bob&Kitty's, Milwaukie... 3:01:11 47, EffCancer, Bend................ 3:03:35 48, We'lHaveAnother, Bozeman, Mont....................... 3:05:13 49, LeisureLnJuniors, WestLinn................................3:05:18 50, Team Meatball, Portland....3:05:55 51, TheBearPenny Victors,Bend...........................3;08:01 52, The7Amigos,Bend..........30817 53, McGrath'sMighty Minnows,Salem.................... 3:08:23 54,Ya'0Ready For This?!,Beaverton..................... 3:09:25 55, JediTraining,St. Paul.......3;09;41 56, SlowlyButShirley, Normandy Park, Wash.............3:10:29 57, NorthOfAverage, Bend....3:12:38 58, Powered ByCoffee, Bend..3:12:59 59, McCreeryFamilyBen , d.....3:13:58 60, Roes-En-G oes, Bend......... 3:14:05 61, Docked AndRoaded, Salem......................................3:15:54 62,KickassColeman,Kelso....3:35:18 63, McHiPortl , and..................3:41:14 64, Beaver Gems, Bend........... 3:43:58 BUSINESS/SERVICE TEAM 1, MacK attack.........................2:01:38 2, DesertOrthopedics.............. 2:03:33 3, Humm Kombucha2, Bend.21012 4, Paradigmisr,Bend...............2:10:37 5, News Channel21At6.........2:10:47 6, SunnysidSp e orts................2:13:08 7, TeamSuterra,Bend.............2:14:34 8, Vlookim...............................2:24:32 9, Whp GoBend, Bend............2:25:40 10, PracticallyPerfect PortlandTe,Portland...............2:26:45 11, FlexionPerfection, Redmond................................. 2:26:46 12, AirlinkCct,Redmond........2:28:14 13, Hasson BendTeam............2:29:33 14,WcpSolutions,Redmon....2:33:39 15, MackLoveNot War...........2:34:17 16, Humm Kombucha Numero Uno,Bend..................2:35:43 17, HdrPdx,Portland..............2;37;29 18, PicturePerfect PortlandTeam,Portland..........2:37:45 19, Columbia Bank LoanRangers, Bend................2:38;14 20, Pacificsource,Bend...........2:39:21

5, Bearcats,Portland............... 2:08:02

6,MedlineMagnums,Bend....2:14:51 7, Team Gleaves, Eugene.........2:16:45 8, Dirt Divas,Seatle................2:26:08 9, E-Team, Sisters...................2;26:48 10, 33(18AtHeart)................. 2:29:47 11, We GotTheRuns, Portland..2:32:48 12, Rear ViewMirror, Beaverton ...............................2:33:20 13, Team Topo, Bend...............2:37:21 14, Rad Mother Truckers, Bend2:39:40 15, MinaretManiacs, Bend....2;41:06 16, TheBendResearch Slick ScientiBend , .................2:41:50 17, Swearingen,Eugene..........2:43:02 = 18, Emc Ham mered,Bend.....2:45:06 19, Young And Breathless, Vancouver, Wash...2:45:29 20, MudSlingers, Seatle........2:47:15 21,RogueLemmings,Ashland...2:49:25 22, RaceJudicata,Bend..........2:52:17 23, HoofArted, Vancouver, Wash....................2:53:00 24, Ghostbbbusters,Eugene... 2:55:50 25, UnitedBeerCouncil (ubc),Bend............................3:01:48 26, There'No s PlaceLike 127.0.0.1,Bend...................... 3:08:50 27,TeamNightWolves,Bend.3:12:44 28, Lovatskinichs1, LakeOswego...........................3:32:14 29, Fabulous1stStreet, Bend.3:45:51 MALETEAM12ANDUNDER 1, Lkj Squared.........................2:27:13

2, JackStrang,Bend..............2:28;46 3, Brothers OfAnotherMother ..2:29:40 4, The12AndUnder Thunder. 3:34:01 MALETEAM13-15

1, Deschutes Destroyers.......... 2:14:23 2, Team OfAwesomeness........2:27:11 3,Jr3.......................................2:30:18 4, Super Scouts....................... 2:34:30 5, TheInfinite Crush................2:38:39 6, Zeros ToHeroes..................2:52;35 MALETEAM16-19 1, OurParentsMade UsDo It. 2:04:39 2, Grand Theft Exercise,Eugene..................... 2:11:21 3, NizaDaav............................2:32:53 MALETEAM20-24 1, InnocentKegstanders..........3:21:42 MALETEAM25-29 1, PolyesterPleasure Posse,Bend.r,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,1;57:55 2,RobSchneidersff,Salem..2:20:49 3, I'k Hungover And TheBachelor, Portland...........2:39;07 4, Bas......................................2:46:31 5,3Amigos, Newberg.............25725 MALETEAM30-34

1, TheThreeAmigos, Portland..................................2:03:42 2,Los Locos Diez Y Seis, Portland...............2:13:26 3, Team Blouses,Portland.......2:15:08 4, All Hat,NoCatle, Porland..2:22:23 5, Dispo14,Bend...................2:46:29 6, Team Costanza,Portland..... 2:55:51 MALETEAM35-39 1, Torhans,Bend....................2:00:12 2, TheBreakfast Club, Bend...2;09;41 3, TheNeighborhood, Bend...2:10:43 4, Alaskans AndA Bendite,Bend..........................2:16:51 5, Grace BibleChurch, Bend...2:23:31 6, Dirt Hugger, Bend................2:25:04 7, The Bachelorls Wearing ATutu, Portland........2:33:43 8, CoalKettleCattle,Eugene...23359 9, Duck Dynasty,Sherwood....2:36:15 10, Let'sGoToStarz,Bend......2;59;59


ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin

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Callaway RazrX 6-9 irons, The Bulletin recom PW, SW, graphite shafts c mends extra caution iti.'.. How to avoidscam + 3 & 5 hybrids w/covers, when purc h as and fraud attempts $300. 541-548-3604 ing products or ser YBe aware of interCHECK YOUR AD vices from out of the fraud. Deal area. Sending cash, German W i r ehaired national w h e never checks, or credit in Pointer pups, 6 weeks locally possible. f ormation may b e old. Amencan Kennel Y Watch for buyers subjected to fraud. Club Litter Certificate who offer more than For more i nforma ¹ SR821323. 4 Fetion about an adver males, $600 each, 5 your asking price on the first day it runs and who ask to have tiser, you may call Males, $500 each. to make sure it is corm oney wired o r the O regon State Gerri 541-413-0959. rect. nSpellcheckn and h anded back t o Burns, OR Attorney General's human errors do octhem. Fake cashier Office C o n sumer cur. If this happens to checks and money Protection hotline at Find exactly what your ad, please conorders are common. 1-877-877-9392. tact us ASAP so that you are looking for in the v' Never give o u t corrections and any CLASSIFIEDS personal f i n ancial The Bulletin adjustments can be information. made to your ad. Koi - small fish - 2n-4", Y T rust y o ur in 541 -385-5809 $2-$4 each. Prineville, stincts and be wary The Bulletin Classified 541-815-5885 or Adopt a rescued cat or of someone using an 541-416-2326 kitten! Fixed, shots, ID escrow service or Mens' McGregor set chip, tested, more! 65480 Lion Head-mixBunnies, agent to pick up your complete $150; La78th, Tumalo, Sat/Sun free to approved homes merchandise. dies McGregor set 1-5pm, 541-389-8420 only. 541-548-0747 www.craftcats.org with Mizuno drivers, The Bulletin $100. Taylor Burner Serving Central Oregon sincerarn bubble, $50; other Boxers AKC & V alley mixed irons, $ 10; Bulldogs CKC puppies. P eople g iving p e t s Antiques wanted: tools, shoes, size 6, $700-800. 541-325-3376 away are advised to furniture, marbles,early ladies $10, hats and ball B/W photography, be selective about the sets. 541-923-3298 decoys, jewelry. Donate deposit bottles/ new owners. For the toys,541-389-1578 cans to local all vol., protection of the aninon-profit rescue, for fe- mal, a personal visit to The Bulletin reserves Women's golf set, King ral cat spay/neuter. Cans the home is recom- the right to publish all Cobra woods, irons, bag, for Cats trailer at Gro- mended. ads from The Bulletin putter, $150 541-389-9905 cery Outlet, 694 SE 3rd; The Bulletin newspaper onto The 246 B end P e tc o ne a r SanrincrCentral Drnannsince Cals Bulletin Internet webGuns, Hunting Applebee's, donate M-F site. at Smith Siqn, 1515 NE POODLE, toys 8 minis, & Fishing 2nd; or CRAFT, Tumalo. also rescued older pup The Bulletin Sarriny CentralOregon since Care Lv. msg. for pick up of to adopt. 541-475-3889 Bend local pays CASH!! large amt, 541-389-8420. Queensland Heelers for all firearms & 240 www.craftcats.org ammo. 541-526-0617 Standard & Mini, $150 Crafts & Hobbies 8 up. 541-280-1537

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www.rightwayranch.wor dpress.com Siamese kittens, raised in home. Gorgeous! Only $25. 541-977-7019 Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, 2 girls, potty training, UTD shots, hea!th guar., $450 & up. 541-777-7743 210

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3 00-gallon fuel t a n k Hovv to avoidscam Swamp cooler, heavy and fraud attempts duty, like new, 3ft. x Two Snow Lion sleep- w/stand, filter & hose, 3 ft., p o rtable o r ing bags, used once. $850. 541-480-1353 YBe aware of interna$150. 541-330-8774 Are you in BIG trouble s tationary. $3 7 5 . tional fraud. Deal lo541-382-6773 with the IRS? Stop cally whenever pos253 wage & bank levies, sible. The Bulletin Offers TV, Stereo & Video liens & audits, unfiled Y Watch for buyers Free Private Party Ads tax returns, payroll iswho offer more than • 3 lines - 3 days DirectTV 2 Year Sav- sues, 8 resolve tax your asking price and • Private Party Only ings Event! Over 140 debt FAST. Seen on who ask to have • Total of items adverchannels only $29.99 CNN. A B BB. Call money wired or tised must equal $200 a month. O nly Di1-800-989-1278. handed back to them. or Less recTV gives you 2 (PNDC) Fake cashier checks FOR DETAILS or to YEARS of s a vingsAuto Accident Attorney: and money orders PLACE AN AD, and a FREE Genie INJURED I N are common. AN Call 541-385-5809 upgrade! Call AUTO A C CIDENT? PNever give out perFax 541-385-5802 1-800-259-5140. sonal financial inforCall InjuryFone for a (PNDC) mation. Wantedpaying cash free case evaluation. for Hi-fi audio & stuDISH T V Ret a iler. Never a cost to you. v'Trustyour instincts dio equip. Mclntosh, and be wary of Starting at Don't wait, call now, someone using an JBL, Marantz, D y $19.99/month (for 12 1-800-539-9913. naco, Heathkit, Sanescrow service or mos.) & High Speed (PNDC) agent to pick up your sui, Carver, NAD, etc. I nternet starting a t Call 541-261-1808 merchandise. $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask couch, and match261 The Bulletin About SAME DAY Ining recliner, $200. Serving Cancrar nraannsince r903 Medical Equipment stallation! CALL Now! l Bose stereo system 1-800-308-1563 series 321, $400. l Oak Entertainment Is Your Identity ProWheelchair tected? I t is our center, $350. Pronto I Can oe, $300. promise to provide the most comprehensive (by Invacare®) identity theft prevenpowered MusicNoice Studio tion an d r e sponse Buying Diamonds Includes: wheelchair, products a v ailable! • Pro Tools 8 software /Gold for Cash in good condition, • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 Saxon's Fine Jewelers Call Today for 30-Day $450. FREE TRIAL • Behringer B1 mic 541-389-6655 541-633-7824 1-800-395-7012. • Sony headphones BUYING • Samson USB studio (PNDC) Lionel/American Flyer Look at: mic w/stand; trains, accessories. • Training books Bendhomes.com 541-408-2191. Reduce Your Past Tax • Corrugated foam for Complete Listings of padding BVYING & SE LLING Bill by as much as 75 Area Real Estate for Sale Packaqe price new, All gold jewelry, silver Percent. Stop Levies, and Wage Gar$1200+and gold coins, bars, Liens 263 Offered at $550. rounds, wedding sets, nishments. Call The Tools Tax DR Now to see if (All reasonable offers class rings, sterling silBerettamOde185F380 Qualify considered) ver, coin collect, vin- you calpistolgesdrhan Contractor job box, Call 541-639-3222 tage watches, dental 1-800-791-2099. 2 0rrounddrhrought , 5'x2' x 2', $275. Bill Fl e ming, (PNDC) nickeglated@ags, REDUCE YOUR gold. 541-480-1353 541 -382-941 9. n earper f e c t c o n d . , w it h

c a se , $49 5 .

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CABLE BILL! * Get a

whole-home Satellite system installed at NO COST and proramming starting at 1 9.99/mo. FRE E HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW 1-866-984-8515. (PNDC)

ESTATE SALE! Mon-Fri, 9am-5pm, 570 ** FREE ** DO YOU HAVE 255 NW 5th St., Pnneville. Garage Sale Kit SOMETHING TO Some antiques, lots of Computers Place an ad in The SELL misc & kitchenware. Bulletin for your gaFOR $500 OR T HE B U LLETIN r e Look What I Found! rage sale and reLESS? You'll find a little bit of quires computer adceive a Garage Sale Non-commercial vertisers with multiple everything in Kit FREE! G ENERATE SOM E advertisers may ad schedules or those The Bulletin's daily EXCITEIIIIENT in your place an ad KIT INCLUDES: selling multiple sysgarage and yard sale Pure Trike neighborhood! Plan a with our • 4 Garage Sale Signs tems/ software, to dissection. From clothes "QUICK CASH garage sale and don't Deluxe • $2.00 Off Coupon To close the name of the to collectibles, from forget to advertise in SPECIAL" 3 speed, Use Toward Your business or the term housewares to hardclassified! 1 week 3 lines 12 Next Ad like new, $525. "dealer" in their ads. ware, classified is oi' 541-385-5809. • 10 Tips For "Garage 541-728-1265 Private party advertisalways the first stop for Sale Success!" aa eka nin ~ NEED TO CANCEL ers are defined as cost-conscious Ad must YOUR AD? those who sell one consumers. And if include price of Trek 2120 bicycles, (2) The Bulletin computer. you're planning your PICK UP YOUR 54cm and 58cm, car- n~ la ia oi aann Classifieds has an own garage or yard GARAGE SALE KIT at or less, or multiple bon fiber, Shimano 257 "After Hours" Line sale, look to the clas1777 SW Chandler 105, SP D p e dals, items whosetotal Call 541-383-2371 Musical Instruments sifieds to bring in the Ave., Bend, OR 97702 $400 each. Miyata does not exceed buyers. You won't find 24 hrs. to cancel kids Triathalon bike, $500. your ad! a better place The Bulletin $125. 541-410-7034 Serving Central Oregonsince 1903 DRUM SET for bargains! Call Classifieds at New complete set of 242 Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 Sleep Number Pearl drums, 541-385-5809 or www.bendbulletin.com Exercise Equipment King plus Zildjian Yard Sale, Sat. & Sun. email bed & box, bought cymbals 8 cases. classified@bendbulletin.com 8am-2pm. Childrens in October, 2010 for Call 541-728-1265 clothes, misc. 22945 Nautilus NS 200 TURN THE PAGE 282 $2199; for details. Alfalfa Mkt Rd., Bend like new! Pulley excellent condition, For More Ads Sales Northwest Bend system with extra new foam pad, The Bulletin weights, $600! asking $750. 290 DRUM SET: IMl'T RI%Tll Will deliver! Call 541-678-5436 REMO Master Glock 17, 9mm, adjustSales Redmond Area 541-388-2809 (ln Bend) able rear sites, 2 Touch drum set, Annual School Yard drums only no mags, box, exc. cond. Sale:Fri. & Sun. May16 HUGE Sale, Misc. items, 245 hardware, 22" bass $450. 541-419-6238 & 18; a-c ~oSat. sales . tools, some furniture, drum, 8", 10", 12", Furniture, books, kids compact campers kitchen The Bulletin Golf Equipment H-870 powder, 13 Ibs, 13", 16" and 18n items, lots of nice quality trailer, 4x9' tandem axle recommends extra ' $350. Win 9mm bullets, l caution when purtoms, 14n snare treasures. Take Hwy 97 utility trailer, Fri-Sat, 8-4, B9JHP115 w/c compdrum, $800/obo. N. to Tumalo Rd., exit at Sun, 8-12. 2036 SW 25th chasing products or • nent bullets (made 1994) services from out of I Excellent condition. overpass, turn west, 10,500 pcs, $1800; 3660 I the area. Sending I school is at bottom of hill. 541-410-4983 pcs, $700. 541-447-4101 292 ' cash, checks, o r ' 21155 Tumalo Rd. 541-389-2091. Sales Other Areas l credit i n f ormation Kimber Solo, C-D-P 260 may be subjected to We've Got Stuff! Lots of ADAMS GOLF CLUBS (L-G) 9mm p istol l FRAUD. For more Misc.ltems Yard Sale. 67170 Gist Paid $600baby items and toys, with 3 clips, $975. about an I Asking$550 Lawn mower (needs Rd (6 mi. east of Sis- information you may l Brand new Adams la- 541-420-7100 repairs), Cricut Ex- t ers off H w y 2 0 ) . i advertiser, call t h e Ore g oni 2012 Sim p licity qolf clubs with pression 2, Medela SAT, May 17 & SUN, ' State Atto r ney ' dies 700 .243 Weaver Gusto Hepa canisbag. Wgoods: 1,3,5,7 Rem women's May 18. 9 a m to 3 pump, 3x9, sling/ammo, ter v acuum with with headcovers. Hyclothes, construction pm. Yard tools, fish- l General's O f fi ce $850. 541-548-5667 Protec- • brids: 5 & 6 with headattachments, extra jackets, shoes, books, ing gear, some tools, Consumer h o t line at I covers. Irons: 7-PW + Wanted: Collector seeks filter and bags, exc. desk, coffee table, metal boxes, p atio tion t ube TVS, 2 w o o d tables, chairs. 2001 i 1-877-877-9392. SW & putter. Ladies high quality fishing items cond. Retail $1500, Asking $600 obo. scoot bikes... 20285 Jeep Wrangler new Cart Bag & rain- & upscale bamboo fly > Links 971-221-8278 (cell) Morgan Loop, Satur- soft top cover. Other i TheBulletin hood. Call Carol or rods. Call 541-678-5753, saraina central oregon sincefnna day 9-3; Sunday 9-1 stuff. All must go. or 503-351-2746 Brad, 541-548-3604

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Make Your

t;assiie 8 , to your ad 5 in print and online.

CUSTOM ACOUSTICGUITAR Plays and sounds beautifully. Includes hard-Shell CaSe and aCOuStiC Pr8-

amp. Solid top, sides and back. Must 386 to belieVe!

To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, visit www.bendbullefin.com, click on "Place an ad nand follow these easy steps: 1. Choose a category, choose a classification, and then select your ad package.

l

2. Write yOur ad and uPIOad yOur digital Photo.

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To place your ad, visitwww.bendbulletin.com

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3. Create yOur aCCOunt With any majOr Credit Card.

or call 5 41-385- 5 8 0 9

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All ads appear in both print and online. Pleaqse allow 24 hours for photo processing before your ad appears in print or online.



THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 03 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER

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

Finance City of Prineville is seeking an experienced, highly motivated, professional applicant for the position of Finance Assistant II. Full-time position and salary will DOE and DOQ. Full benefit package included. To v iew job description, go to www.cityofprineville. com. You may apply online. The City of Prineville is an equal o p portunity employer.

Forester $39,753-$56,916 Full Benefits Prof-Mgmt, Regular Full-Time

This position is located in Chiloquin. For more information contact: The Klamath Tribes PO Box 436 Chiloquin, OR 97624

'obs@klamathtribes.com

541-783-2219 x 113 HEALTHCARE JOBS.

Now hiring: R N's, LPN's/LVN's, CNA's, Med Aides. $2,000 Bonus - Free Gas. Call AA C O @ 1-800-656-4414 Ext.

26. (PNDC)

Healthcare

6

PeaetigaSenioe Livitgg LJ G

Start your

Career Today! Join our Prestige Care Team Prestige Senior Living High Desert Bend, OR

Lookinq for:

PCAs- F/T & P/T Medication Techs - F/T, P/T & On Call RN OversightP/T Temp Resident Care Manager Cook - P/T To apply, please visit our website: www.prestigecare.com/ careers EEO/AA Employer Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory i

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Larry's RV in Redmond is hiring for the following position: RV T e c h Must have experience. Salary DOE. Benefits include insurance, bonuses, and vacation pay. E mail resume t o resume©larrysrv.com

or apply in person.

541-475-7476.

Black Sutte Ranch

Current Job Opportunities! Maintenance • Manager• Grounds Maint.

-

$200Sign on Bonus!

• Maintenance Tech

Food& Beverage • Line CooksS250Sign on Bonus!

• Servers • Bussers • Dishwashers • Grill Cooks-

$200sign on Bonus!

Golf • Assistant Mechanic

• Greens Keepers Spa /SportsShop • Nail Techs

541-385-5809

Visit our website at www.BlackButte Ranch.com or contact Human Resources at 541-595-1523 & BBR is a drug free workplace/ EOE

Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

'~ S U BA R L l Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a rgest new ca r de a ler Subaru of B e nd. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success to work in our drug free work

place. Please apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20,

Patient Communications Specialist (Parf-Timej MyMD Personal Physician is hiring a part-time position responsible for patient communications that supports the membership-based, "personal medicine" practice. This position will maintain contact with 100% of MyMD existing patients and discuss memberships with potential new patients. The position is directly responsible for strategies that support existing patient retention and new patient growth. Minimum qualifications include a high school degree plus three years in customer service, sales or marketing position. To apply, email letter and resume to MyMDBend©Gmail.com. No phone calls will be accepted.

Business Manager LAKE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT ¹7 BUSINESS MANAGER POSITION:

A qualified applicant must have a BA/BS in Accounting, Business Administration, Financial Management, or related field and the ability to prepare and manage a $10+ million school district budget. A preferred candidate will have knowledge ofOregon School Funding Systems and experience as a school district business manager. The position closes at 4:00pm on 6/1 3/2014. Please submit a cover letter, resume, district application, and references to the District Office, 1341 South First St., Lakeview. It is also required to enclose documentation verifying your experience level which qualifies you for the position (degree or equivalency).

Rm!IICe)

® lRIARcQ©

Immediate opening in the Circulation department for an entry level Customer Service Representative. Looking for someone to assist our subscribers and delivery carriers with subscription transactions, account questions and delivery concerns. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, and problem solving skills. Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, performance-based customer call center environment and have accurate typing, phone skills and computer entry experience. Most work is done via telephone, so strong communication skills and the ability to multi task is a m ust. Additional projectsmay be assigned as needed. Work shift hours are Friday through Tuesday. Must be flexible on hours, as some Holidays, and early morning hours are required. For qualifying employees, we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term and long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test os required prior to employment. Accepting resumes through June 23, 2014.

tate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.

H0 L D R E L E T M HE AS YS B A R A B O L O D E U M TA P N UE T Z U A R D S A D I E D R E S

gerrrng Central Oregon rrnre t903

c/o Kurt Muller, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 or e-mail resume to: kmuller@bendbulletin.com

Copy CenterLead Clerk Provide timely and accurate reproduction of Copy Cen t e r prin te d mate r ials. $2,238-$2,665/mo.Closes May 28.

No phone calls, please

The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace/EOE

Accountant, COCC Foundation Responsible for managing all financial and accounting systems, such as reporting and budgeting, general ledger, cash receipts and disbursements, and analytical support for the College Foundation. Bachelor's Degree+ 3-yr exp.$3,558-$4,235/mo. Closes May 25.

Facility Administrator Community Counseling Solutions has an opening for a f ull time Facility Administrator.

Foundation Visiting Scholar Program Coordinator Develop and coordinate Visiting Scholar Program events. Continually analyze fund-raising efforts, facilitate production of advertisements, and monitor program budget. Bachelor's Degree + 2-yr exp. $3,348-$3,986/mo. Closes May 25.

The facility is located in John Day, Oregon and is a 9 bed acute care treatment facility working with mentally ill adults who are in an acute phase of their illness.

This individual will be responsible for the daily operation of the facility, including staff hiring and discharge, training, developing a nd i m p lementing p r a ctices an d procedures, working closely with insurance companies and other healthcare providers. The position will work closely with the Medical Director to coordinate health care services. The administrator will assist the Executive Director in meeting the needs of the community, overseeing a large and complex budget and facility, and program development. The position will report to the Executive Director.

Part-Time Instructor Positions Looking for talented individuals to t each part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

Applicants should have at least five years of progressive experience working in a health care related f i eld, p r io r e x perience supervising directly or indirectly at least 15 employees, a bachelor's degree in a health care related f i eld (master's degree preferred), ability to assist the Executive Director in managing a large and complex budget, facility and program development, and community relations. Experience may be substituted for education on a two for one basis. No certifications or licenses required, but preference will be given to applicants with an RN or related health care certification(s). T h i s i ndividual will be required to participate in an on call rotation.

Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.

The salary range fo r t h e s u ccessful candidate w ill be betwee n $69,000-$103,500 per y e ar. E xcellent Hbenefits.

The Bulletin

EOE

N O N E

E L S E

S O Y S

T HEA D R E S O R T WOO S A D F R E A N C RE 0 M A I A N T B I T A T E C A N I S S

A H L S E E

D A Y

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

~CES C

z DESCH!jTES COUNTY

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CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

ASSESSMENT TECHNICIAN I (2014-00057). Full-time position. Deadline: SUIIQAY, 05/18/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I,

Assertive Community Treatment (201400054). Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, 05/18114. BEHAVIORALHEALTHSPECIALIST II, School

Based Healt h Centers -Redmond and La Pine (2014-00005). Two full-time, limited duration, grant-funded positions. Extended Deadline:SUNDAY,06/08114. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III,

Supervisor, Redmond Office (2014-00034). Full-time position. Extended Deadline: THURSDAY,05/22/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III,

Supervisor, Intensive Community Support (2014-00036). Full-time position. Extended Deadline:THURSDAY,05/22/14. CLAIMS COORDINATOR (2014-00060). Full-time position. Deadline: THURSQAY, 05/29114. COMMUNICATION DIRECTOR,9-1-1 Service Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLEQ, WITH FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIONS 0!l MOIIQAY,

06/02/14. CORRECTIONSCULSSIFICATIOII SPECIALIST

(2014-00053). Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, 05/18114.

CORRECTIONSTECHNICIAN (2014-00055). Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, OSn8114. HEALTHEDUCATOR II,Tobacco Prevention (2014-00058). Part-time position, includes a limited-duration, grant-funded assignment from the Innovative Prevention grant. Deadline:THURSDAY,05/22/14. PROGRAM MANAGER,Behavio ral Health (201 3-00098). Full-time position. Extended Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. PROGRAMMANAGER, Public Health (201400008). Full-time position. Extended Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED.

Serrlng Central Oregons/nce lggg

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Adult Treatment Program (2014-00001). Will consider any full or part-time equivalent.

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Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. j

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Earn S500 to over S1,000 per week! We are lOOking fOr a reSPOnSible and ambitiOuS individual Who WantS the OPPOrtunity to build their OWn SaleS

team, work independently, and earn a big weekly inCOme. YOU CONTROL WHAT YOU EARN!WOrk yOur OWn deSignated territOry and eSSentially build yOur OWn buSi-

ness! • PEOPLE ORIENTED • RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION, CELL PHONE, COMPUTER WITH INTERNET ACCESS • SALES EXPERIENCE (OUTSIDE SALES ORINSIDE SALES EXPERIENCE, RETAILSALES ASSOCIATE OR TELEMARKETING) PREFERRED, • PROFESSIONAL PERSONAL APPEARANt:E.~

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PSYCHIATRIC NURSE I OR II

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(2014-00040). Will consider full or part-

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• Home Health RN Case Manager, day shift (fufi-fimej Primary responsibilities include providing care to patients in their homes / facilities. Hours: Monday thruFriday, 8:00am — 5:00pm and one night shift a month. Position eligible for benefits.

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C O U N T R Y

O V E R

PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER

A career with countless rewards.

s elf-pay;

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A R E M J N I T E 0 I N E T E D R EWB C N 0 H I I A R E D G E D T E S0 W N A N AN V T R E S A S H I P N T 0 L L T A L L I G A R T A R T M E Nl R T I D E N ME E R O 0 R I N D I C A M E R I L E NS

District (2014-00050j. Full-time position. General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment.

/n Care

A career with Partners In Care Hospice and Home Health is more than a job. It's an opportunity to make a powerful and lasting difference in the lives of your community members. Rediscover the patient-centered care that drew you to your profession in the first place.

H U B B A R D

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Custodian, Night Shift 2 positions (Fufl-Tfme and Part-Time) Responsible for cleaning and maintenance of College buildings. Assist in the security of campus buildings and event setup. 40hr and 20hr. $11.30 - $13.05/hr + shift diff. Closes May 21.

The Bulletin

P I U Nl TS T O M I S A N U T G R U O E R N A W T E I I 0 G N HL T E A SH S A ES X I S U L E P L A

PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2

Central Oregon Community College has openings l i s te d bel ow . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer.

Please c o n tact Ni n a Bis s o n at 541-676-9161 or n i na.bisson@gobhi.net with questions or to request an application.

and providing mental health screening IS services at a local medical clinic. Excellent salary and benefit pa c kage. Send letter of interest and resume to Cathy Stau f fer; Network Operations Center: S ymmetry Ca r e , Inc., 348 W. Adams, Computer Operator (Night Shift) Burns, OR 97720. Phone number Runs and monitors scheduled jobs, prepares 541-573-8376. and monitors data c e nter i nfrastructure E-mail: equipment, maintains proper documentation cathy.st auffer©gobh and performs routine equipment installation i.net. Position open and m a intenance. P e rforms n e t work until filled. monitoring and basic configuration tasks. Responds touser and system supportissues, trouble shoots problems and works with other Good classified adstell groups on p r oject o r su p port w ork. the essential facts in an Work hours: Thursday — Saturday, 8:00pminteresting Manner.Write 9:30am. from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent facts into benefits. Show customer service and over 400 stores in the the reader howthe item will western United States. We offer competitive help them in someway. pay, excellent benefits, retirement, and cash bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to This apply. Applications will be accepted through advertisingtip May 21, 2014. No phone calls please. brought to you by

The Bulletin

Employment Opportunities

Bend. See Bob or Devon.

Medical Symmetry C a re, Inc., an Ea s t ern Oregon Cou n ty Benefit eligible position: Health, Dental, Vision, non-profit M e n t al Vacationand sick pay Compensation: DOE Health and AddicRequirements: Current Oregon RN License, tions out - patient reliable transportation, CPR certified. clinic, is seeking a Licensed Master's • Certified Nursing Assistant, day shift Level Clinician to (on-cell/casuaf position —with the possibilprovide t r e atment ify of part-time services in a private Qualified applicants are encouraged to send practice setting. This includes providing cover letter and resume via email hr@partnersbend.org, or mail to: Partners In mental health treatment for p e rsons Care / HR Department, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct, with private insurBend OR 97701.

ance or

Employment Opportunities

r.=.-"-,.— ..v

RESORT

MECHANIC Needed Immediately ASE Certified Automotive/Diesel Mechanic in Review the application packet on-line: beautiful Baker City, OR. www.lakeview.k12.or.us Wage depends on experience. Great benefits. or at the District Office. EOE Call 541-523-3200 or apply on line at rum sre air.com Nurses Medical Jefferson C o unty EMS D i strict is seeking q u a lified pre-hospital providers for one full-time EMT a n d one full-time paramedic position. Closing Date:5pm, May 30, 2014. To apply or to learn more about these career opportunities visit our web site at: www.jeffersoncountyems.com or call

476

T A R P S T E E Salesperson Looking for your next B ig Country R V P LA T employee? Dealership s e eking caution when purPlace a Bulletin help PC salespeople looking chasing products or I wanted ad today and for a p e rformance-I services from out of I M 0 reach over 60,000 based pay plan, po528 area. SendingI readers each week. tential commissions of I the 0 H ash, checks, o r Your classified ad Loans & Mortgages up to 35% equaling I c N A P $100,000+, R e t ire- credit i n f ormationI will also appear on bendbulletin.com I may be subjected to ment Plan, paid vacaWARNING G R E I which currently The Bulletin recomtion, and a competi- FRAUD. receives over 1.5 tive medical benefit I For more informa- I mends you use cauP O L E million page views package. Looking for tion about an adver- • tion when you proC LA R every month at a team player with a I tiser, you may call I vide personal the Oregon State no extra cost. p ositive attitude t o information to compa- S S N operate with energy I Attorney General'sI Bulletin Classifieds nies offering loans or Get Results! and to be customer t Office C on s umert L credit, especially service-oriented. Will I Protection hotline atI Call 385-5809 those asking for adC O L A provide training. or place I 1-877-877-9392. I vance loan fees or Send resume to: your ad on-line at companies from out of A T E U LThe Bulleting bcrvhire© mail.com bendbulletin.com state. If you have or apply in person at T O N G concerns or ques63500 N Hwv 97 tions, we suggest you S H I H Bend, OR 97701 People Lookfor Information consult your attorney Find It in L or call CONSUMER About Products and The Bulletin Clnssifieds! Services Every Daythrough Just too many HOTLINE, P A L I 1-877-877-9392. 541-385-5809 collectibles? The fivfiefin Clnseifieds L EO N BANK TURNED YOU Sell them in DOWN? Private party U R G E CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE will loan on real es- G O O S The Bulletin Classifieds

This position is a supervisory position, 260 days/year. The salary is $60,000-$65,000 per/year plus benefits. The Business Manager is responsible for planning, supervising, and administering of business-related and fiscal support for the programs in the school district.

476

time equivalent, two POSitiOnS available.

Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. PUBLICHEALTH NURSE II,School Based Health Centers (2014-00059). Two halftime positions available. Deadline:MONDAY, 05126/14. RESERVEDEPUTYSHERIFF (2013-00013). On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS All ONGOING RECRUITMENT.

SUMMER INTERN(2014-00048). Temporary, hourly position, not to exceed 3.5 months. ExtendedDeadline:OPEN UNTILFILLED. COMINGSOON: BUILDING SAFETY INSPECTOR III IIESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT fi fww.deschutes.

orgflobs. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via email only. If )/ou need assistance, Please COntaCt the D6SChut6S COunty PerSOnnel

Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701, (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County encourages qualified persons wjth disabilities to participate in Its programs and activities. To request information in an alternate format, please call (541j 617-4747, fax to (541) 385-3202 or send email to acc6ssibilit)/@deschutes. Ol'g.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER

Women, minorities, anli the disableli are encouraged to apply.



THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18 2014 D5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880

880

881

881

882

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Travel Trailers

Travel Trailers

Fifth Wheels

o

x

00

932

933

933

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Pickups

DodgeRam 1500 SLT uadcab 1999

, ~~~ t f p ~ HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 6.1L 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

Lance 2013 Model 2385 Winnebago Adven- 24' w/large slide, 4-Seaturer 2005 35r/9', gas, son, fully loaded & used less than 20,000 miles, only 4 times. Has extra excellent condition, 2 Trident surface protecslide-outs, work horse tion coat, stinger w/sway chassis, Banks power bars, electric tongue jack, brake system, sleeps 6-volt batteries, queen 5, with a l l o p tions,walk-around bed, large $62,000 / negotiable. front kitchen w/pantry, Call 5 4 1-306-6711orcomplete entertainment email a i kistu@bend- system w/exterior spkrs, cable.com power awning. Like new, $34,900. 541-480-4148

Looking for your next employee? Place a Builetin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 Winnebago Aspect readers each week. Like NEW! Trail-Lite 2009- 32', 3 slide- 2011 Your classified ad Crossover Trailer outs, Leather inte- A/C, awning, also appear on AM/FM CD, will rior, Power s eat, custom queen bendbulletin.com bed, cuslocks, windows, tom drawer pullouts. which currently reAluminum wheels. axle wgt 2,566; dry Dry ceives over 1.5 milun17" Flat Screen, lion page views evloaded wgt 2,847. EquaSurround s o u nd, Flex suspension, exteery month at no camera, Queen bed, rior shower, indoor tub/ extra cost. Bulletin Foam mattress, Aw- shower combo, stabilizer Classifieds Get Rening, Generator, In- jacks, 2 batteries, plus sults! Call 385-5809 verter, Auto Jacks, MORE!$12,995. or place your ad Air leveling, Moon on-line at Call 541-280-9516for roof, no smoking or info, or to see - in Bend. bendbulletin.com p ets. L i k e ne w , $74,9OO „

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318 (photo above is of a

similar model & not the actual vehicle)

G R E AT

IRX.JM

National RV

Tropical, 1997,

35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811

882

541-460-6900

Fifth Wheels

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

541-385-5809

~

541-382-2430

S e de

• 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150

Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004

For Sale Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019 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

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

with living r oom slide, 46,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.$31,000 Call Dick at 541-406-2387

only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $13,900 OBO. 541-382-9441

Fieetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric

tongue jack, stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425

Aircraft, Parts

& Service

ROBBERSON

1/3interestin

Columbia 400,

Dodge Ram 2500 — 4esAS e • Keystone Cougar 2010 2008 Diesel, 326MKS. Like new. exc. towing vehicle, S tored i ndoors. 4 2WD, 55,000 slideouts, queen bed, miles. New battermirrored w a rdrobe, 1/3 interest in wellies, rear air bags, skylights in bath and equipped IFR Beech BoRoll-n-lock bed bedroom. DVD, TV, nanza A36, new 10-550/ cover, spray-in AM/FM CD p l ayer prop, located KBDN. liner. 5th wheel with i n terior/exterior $65,000. 541-419-9510 hitch available, too. Nissan Frontier 2013, www.N4972M.com speakers, retractible 11K mi., 4x4, crew cab, $19,000. awning, etc. M a ny Just bought a new boat? Plymouth B a rracuda 1966, original car! 300 4.0 L V6 cyl. 541-604-1285 e xtras. So l d w i t h Sell your old one in the VIN ¹725602. $27,495. h ousehold and R V classifieds! Ask about our hp, 360 V6, center(exp. 5/rs/i4) lines, 541-593-2597 extras and R e ese Super Seller rates! Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 S M OLICH Hitch. $29,950 (OBO) 541-385-5809 WHEN ONLY THE Power Stroke diesel, Ron - 541-549-1069 BEST WILL DO! turbocharged, 5-spd, V Q L V Q good runner & work 541-749-2156 truck. $4500 obo. Call smolichvolvo.com Laredo 30' 2009 541-389-5353 or DLR ¹366 •

541-647-8176

- ee

Transporter

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

Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500.

Buick Skylark 1972 Cessna 150 LLC 17K orig. miles. Please 150hp conversion, low see hemmings.com for details. $18,900. time on air frame and 541-323-1896 engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent per933 formance & affordPickups able flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds MONTANA 3585 2006, appear every day in the exc. cond., 3 slides, print or on line. king bed, Irg LR, Call 541-385-5809 Arctic insulation, all www.bendbulletin.com options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

expandable s lide-

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

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Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mdl P 27RL 31', 15' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-480-7930 The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.

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

Arctic Fox 29' 2003,

covered storage, slideout, exc. cond inside & outside 2016 tags,

Best 5th Wheel Selection in C.O.! Over 45 New & Preowned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly payments. Over 350 RVs In Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value

307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

WILL DELIVER 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:

CHECKYOUR AD

Komfori Ridgecrest 23', 2008, queen bed, sleeps 6, micro & AC, full awning, living room slider, yule tables, outside shower, 4 closets, fiberglass frame, as new, $11,500. La Pine call 541-914-3360

Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254

tact us ASAP so that

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

9

I I

F250 short bed, white in color, like new, $675. 541-416-9686

HOmeS Starting Mld-$300s

TEAM DELAY Principal Broker

LIIICOLM ~

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

00 UN UNTtl. SOL.D"

199gPLEETINOOO Wlttjerness slide queen bed, nlllgi , ow pSC, outsitjs sh RV motorcYc -> I,f, ,fabiiizsr er, Y ur autor Iiks new,been or airplane boat, o <.,1 B setts toretj S!eePs 6. ' ad runs un 12 monttt $18,95o or up to cotrtes first.) 541.800-000 (whicheve

The Bulletin

Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Some res/rictions app/y

541-385-5809 • The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The(entral OregonNickel Ads • bendbulleiin.tom

'Privatepartymerchandiseonly

THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM

Tour our Prairie-style yet contemporary custom home in

Homes starting in the Iow

R 8

sa

m Bend with the quality

19186 Mt. Shasta Dr.

Directions:She//Iin Park Rd, west, Home sites available! left on /rffrPark Commo/u Dr, le ft pn www.derink.com rtft. Je fferson Pi, follow signs.

Builder: D AVID M N K

Lic.<67716

I

$200,000s. Brand new homes

the pre-drywall

WWW.derink.COm T 0

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your ad wrii also appear /n:

SUNDAY 12PM-4PM

stage. FOR SALE in beautiful Three Pines

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0

541-948-2525

EDIE DELAY R E A L

6.0L Turbo diesel, full power, a u tomatic, AWD, less than 11k 6-disc CD, cruise, fog mi., auto, 6 spd. lights, running boards, vin ¹202364 tow pkg, bediiner, grill $30,977 guard, folding rear seat. Tan cloth inteROBBERSON rior, metallic tan exterior. 91,400 miles. Price reducedto 541-312-3986 $20,500 541450-6925 DLR ¹0205

I I

Taking reserr/utions. Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort like amenities: pools, club 20878SE Golden GatePlace,Bend house, gym, hot tub, sports Dfrsctions/from the parb//ay, eut center, 5 miles of walking on Reed Nar//et, south on 15th, then trails. Tour 9 variety of follo///sfgr/s single level and 2 story

9 50

2006 XLT 4-door Crew Cab

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Seisct your fot rrsd floor P/as is Phuse IL Nou

Hosted & Listed by/

541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

Volvo S60T5 2013

(55>~

Hyster forklift, H 30E

60 gal. air compressor 6.5hp, lightly used, $625. 541-385-9350 American Racing wheels (4), cast aluminum dish style, 15x7, 5 lug, 4.5" USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! spacing. $200. 541-604-0963 Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest Winter tires, siped, studway in the world to sell. ded, 16", off Camry, excellent tread, designer The Bulletin Classified rims, sensors installed. A sking $ 32 5 c a s h. 541-385-5809 541-848-4272

THURS. - SUN. 12PM - 4PM

plans.

$22,479 S UHA RU xrrxxxrrorrrxxrr.aorr

1976 Cessna 150M People Lookfor Information Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 About Products and hrs since out of frame Services Every Daythrough major, Horton Stol Kit. Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS The Bulletin Classiffatfs •• - rre & additional radio (4 frequencies can be monitored at once). Transponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digital density, temp & amp monitor. Nice paint & upholstery w/memory foam seat bottoms. Oil filter & block htr. 1 owner past 14 yrs; always hangared, no damage history. N9475U.$26,000. 541-480-4375 T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-362-8998. 916 Trucks & Heavy Equipment

931

0

Vin ¹146717 Stock ¹82918

D

SNUG TOP Pickup canopy for

Call Dick,

5

In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Peterbilt 359 p otable water truck, 1 990, gal. tank, 5hp Arctic Fox 611 2011, 3200 4-3" h oses, fits shori-bed pickup, pump, camlocks, $ 25,000. like new, $27,995. 541-820-3724 541-493-2458

corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified

541-480-1687. •

for 35 years. $60K.

propane, 2 stage, 672 hours, $1900 o bo. 541-389-7596

885

on approved credit.

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com

Dodge R a m 150 0 Mega Cab 2006, V8 HEMI, 4WD, pw, pdl, tilt wheel, tow pkg.

Canopies 8 Campers

your ad, please con-

541-447-4605

2160 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner

meme ~

Ford F-350 2006, bed liner, tow pkg, premium wheels. Toyota Tundra SR5 4x4 Vin ¹B94205 2007, double cab 4-dr, Stock ¹43923A1 tow pkg, 51,300 miles, 541-408-7826 $15,999 A .R.E. bed cover + spray, new tires, s u a A Ru Line-X Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 © 1 owner, perfect cond, with camper s hell, 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend just fully detailed, all svc ood cond., $1500 877-266-3821 records. $23,400 Call BO. 541-447-5504. Gary: Day 206-948-5769 Dlr ¹0354 Evening 541-447-6369 Ford F-350 4x4, 935 ,'"~4%~ j-' j Sport Utility Vehicles

®

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to

$10,999, 0 Down, $112 per month, 132 months, 5.75% apr, Tier One credit score,

1974 Bellanca 1730A

~

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.

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

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 36-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 obo. Call Peter,

ROBBERSON'L

2005 Diesel 4x4

$14,900. 541-676-1449 or 541-410-6849

541-548-5254

Salem Cruise Lite 18', 2014 Only $10,999! Zero Down! $112 Per Month!

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 160hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773

1997 Komfort 27' 13'

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

4WD, 4 dr. dbl cab, less than 33K mi. VIN¹123670 $36,977

find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

rening central oregonsincerrte

out. $5500. With 5th wheel hitch, $5800. With 1993 Ford XLT F250 /mo u nted hitch, $7300 541-536-1962

Ford F150 LIGHTNING 1993 500 miles on rebuilt engine. Clean interior & new tires. $7000, OBO. 541-647-8723

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional

$28,000

The Bulletin

Toyota Tundra Lrmited 2010

1/5th interest in 1973

1990 5th Wheel

- 'g

I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5460.

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

541-419-3301

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

thing, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179

Redmond: 541-548-5254

S

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

engine, power every-

:tge..~

Outback Kargaroo 2008 Nearly new, 23KRS, 28' w/rear queen slide, alum. frame, front cargo ATV area/bdrm, remote AC & heat, micro, dbl sink, tub/shower, AM/FM CD w/exterior spkrs, awning, anti-sway pkg, upgraded wheels/tires, springover, exterior stove, heated underbelly, stored inside, more extras.$17,500. 541-504-8111

matching canopy, 30k original miles possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-561-9190

5 .2L V 8 aut o . , 1 43,659 mi. R W D Vin ¹ 6 28726 B argain Corral. $4,977

$150,000

Ask for Theo,

Call on one of the professionals today!

Keystone Laredo31' RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969,was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original See to believe! 541-923-6049

(located @ Bend) 541-288-3333

881

Travel Trailers

S S

908

Financing available.

541-260-4293

I~~

TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

Orbit 21'2007, used

,

Forest River 27' by Wildwood 2004, winter pkg, slide, AC, oven, tub-shower, outside shower, micro, awning, always stored. $12,500. Prineville, 541-447-9199

Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to ww.m new w~ ~alle robus.com or email trainwater157@ gmail.com or call 858-527-8627

Holiday Rambler 37' Presidential model 2003, all factory options, 3 slides, 2 A/C units, 4 door fridge, fireplace, generator, electric jacks front and rear, flat screen TV, e n t ertainment center, bay window, exc. cond., MUST SEE! Sacr i fice $24,500 OBO. 541-223-2218

WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003

Navion IQ Sprinter chassis RV 2008, 25' Mercedes Benz diesel, only 24k miles, excellent condition, automatic rear slide-out w/queen bed, full bath w/shower, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking.$65,500.

Wind River 201127ORLDS (Four Seasons) 28' by Outdoor RV in LaGrande, OR. 2 Slides in living room, separate bdrm, power jack,elect awning, solar panel, flat screen, surround sound, micro, air cond, day/night shades, ext speakers,ext shower. Like new!$24,000. 541-548-2109

pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with

given ro allow for tons of Right on Sierra, Le f( pn Black Poi//der, natural light & much more. Right on Cometlane.Lookfor signs. Come by the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.

Hosted & Listed by/ 0.8. RINK

CONSTRUCT ION

20781 NE Comet I,ane

under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen,extra attention Directfoss/North on Boyd Acres,

$200,000s

RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker

541-306-0939

R E A L 7 0

R S


06 SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN 935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 940

975

975

975

975

975

975

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Mercedes Benz

WHEN YOU SEE THIS

Ford Fusion Sgort

C300 S ort2012

al

MoreP ixatBendbnletin.com On a classified ad BMW X3

2 0 07, 99K

miles, premium package, heated lumbar Less than 14k mil, supported seats, panoramic moo n roof, AWD, 7 spd, leather Bluetooth, ski bag, Xevin ¹700716 non headlights, tan & $30,977 black leather interior, ROBBERSON y n ew front & re a r brakes @ 76K miles, t lllcocs ~ ~ one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-312-3986 541-388-4360

BMW X3 2011 black on black, sport/prem packs, leather, 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k miles, 19« wheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015.$38,000 One owner, 503-789-9401 (Portland)

Honda Odyssey2012, 10K mi., leather, alloy wheels. VIN ¹135296. $30,995. (exp. 5/19/14)

SMDLICH

V Q LV Q 541-749-2156

smolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366

Mercedes-Benz CL600 Subaru Forester X S Coupe 2001, 2003, p w , pl , til t 2011 - 2. 5 L 4 cyl., 64K m)., leather. wheel. Vin ¹761625 FWD, auto., 64k VIN ¹010538. $23,995. Stock ¹82964 miles, Bordeaux Re(exp. 5/19/14) $13,979 serve vin¹324193 SMDLICH $20,997 ® s u a A Ru V Q LV Q ROBBERSON 541-749-2156 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. L INCOLN ~ I tsg t t g g smolichvolvo.com 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 DLR ¹366 541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205 FIND IT! BUT IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an Just bought a new boat? interesting Manner.Write Sell your old one in the from the readers view -not classifieds! Ask about our the seller's. Convert the Super Seller rates! facts into benefits. Show 541-385-5809 I the reader howthe itemwill help them in some way. Nissan Murano SL Ford Mustang 2004, This 2011 V8, manual, RWD, advertising tip power seats, r e ar brought toyou by spoiler, leather. l VIN ¹232501 The Bulletin Ssr ' g Cegt«t tt«go si te fgtg Stock ¹82459A l DLR ¹0205

975

black w/ leather seat trim, 3.4L V6, 27,709 miles. vin¹362484 26,977 ROBBERSON

Automobiles

©

$12,979

Ne e d to sell a

Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today!

A s k about our "Wheel Deal"! advertisers

s u a A Ru

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

l

f o r private party l

J

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

I The Bulletin recoml

I mends extra cautionI • when p u r chasing •

f products or servicesf from out of the area

f S ending c

ash ,f

checks, or credit in- a formation may be I [ subject toFRAUD. For more informa-

I

f tion about an adver-f tiser, you may call

I the Oregon Statel I Attorney General's I

> Office C onsumer I f Protection hotline atf 1-877-877-9392.

The Bulletin Sgrtr/ng Central Oregonsince tgtg

Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT Limited 2005, loaded, leather, roof, a l loy wheels. VIN ¹2'I 0360 Stock ¹42935A

$14,979

®

s u a A Ru

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

L'"'" " "

go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Looking for your next employee?

877-266-3821

Dlr ¹0354

1000

1000

1000

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

Legal Notices

property described in Supplemental ProviLEGAL NOTICE Estate of WALTHER the Complaint herein sions, creating a new DCC JOHN REUBER. NO- and located at 21771 section Ave n ue, 18.116.310 while deReach thousands of readers! TICE T O IN T E R- Obsidian Need to get an clllc«cs ~ ~ Bend, O R 9 7 7 02; leting DCC 17.16.115; Call 541-385-5809 ESTED P ERSONS. ad in ASAP? The Bulletin Classifieds Case Number: Defendants. Case No. change the p erfor541-312-3986 SUM - mance standard for You can place it 14PB0044. No t i ce: 1 3CV0728. BMyy 328i 2011, dlr ¹0205 MONS. TO:DEFENnew County facilities 33K mi., AWD, alloy The Circuit Court of online at: Pontiac G6 2007, wheels. VIN ¹658869. the State of Oregon, DANTS MICHAEL A. from Level of Service www.bendbulletin.com AND (LOS) C to LOS D, just 36,000 miles, for the County of Des- MARSDEN $24,997. (exp. 5/19/14) Ford Thunderbird Toyota Landcruiser in very good chutes, h a s ap- BEVERLY K. MARS- matching the LOS re2004 VX 1999 S M D L I C H DEN: IN THE NAME quirement for existing 541-385-5809 condition, pointed John Reuber Convertible OF THE STATE OF County roads. APV Q LV Q with hard & soft top, $8900. Subaru Legacy 3.0 R as Personal Repre- OREGON: You are PLICANT:Deschutes sentative of the Es541-749-2156 silver with black 541-548-1422 Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., tate of Walther John hereby required to County. STAFF interior, smolichvolvo.com auto, AWD, leather, appear and defend CONTACT: Peter DLR ¹366 all original, m oon r o of , re a r Reuber, deceased. All the complaint filed Russell, P eter.Ruspersons having claims very low mileage, spoiler, alloy wheels. Porsche 911 Check out the in premium condition. against the estate are a gainst you i n t h e sellOdeschutes.org. 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., Vin ¹207281 Carrera 993 cou e required to p resent above case w ithin Copies of the staff reclassifieds online $19,900. 16 mpg Hwy, Vin¹ Stock ¹82547 BMyyX5 4.8! 2007, 702-249-2567 the same, with proper thirty days after the port, application, all 66902 Bargain Corwww.bendbulletin.com $23,979 78K mi., AWD, 6 speed vouchers to the Per- first date of publica- documents and evi(car is in Bend) ral $9,977 Updated daily auto, leather. ® s u a A Ru sonal Representative, tion of this summons, dence submitted by or VIN ¹Z38373. $24,997. c/o David E. Petersen, and if you fail to ap- on behalf of the appliROBBERSON (exp. 5/19/14) 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Merrill O'S u llivan, pear and defend, the cant and applicable CHECK YOUR AD tlscotll ~ mt sgc stg Garage Sales 877-266-3821 criteria are available SMDLICH LLP, 805 SW Indus- plaintiff will apply to Please check your ad 1996, 73k miles, Dlr ¹0354 the court for the relief for inspection at the t rial Way, Suite 5 , V Q L V Q 541.312.3986 on the first day it runs Garage Sales Tiptronic auto. the Planning Division at Bend, O R 97 7 0 2, demanded i n DLR¹0205 to make sure it is cor541-749-2156 transmission. Silver, within four m onths complaint. Th e o b- no cost and can be rect. Sometimes in- Garage Sales smolichvolvo.com blue leather interior, ject of the complaint p urchased fo r 2 5 from the date of first s tructions over t h e DLR ¹366 moon/sunroof, new Find them publication of this no- and the demand for c ents a page. T h e phone are misunderquality tires and tice as stated below, relief are: The plain- staff report should be stood and an error in battery, car and seat e seven or t hey m a y be tiff seeks to foreclose made availabl can occur in your ad. covers, many extras. The Bulletin barred. All p ersons its trust deed on the days prior to the date If this happens to your Subaru Outback 3.6R Recently fully sersubject real property set for the hearing. ad, please contact us Classifieds Limited 2011, moon whose rights may be described in the com- Documents are also viced, garaged, Toyota RAV4 2 007, the first day your ad roof, AWD, pw, pl, affected by this pro- plaint as d e scribed available online at : looks and runs like ceeding may obtain AWD, pw, pl, CD, roof appears and we will 541 -385-5809 leather, Vin ¹381548 new. Excellent conadditional information below in the amount www.co.deschutes.or. rack. Vin ¹064476 be happy to fix it as Stock ¹44184A Chevrolet Trailblazer dition $29,700 from the records of of $219,183.92, plus us/cdd/. 2008 4x4 Stock ¹44268B s oon as w e c a n . 541-322-9647 $23,979 interest, late charges, the court, the PerLEGAL NOTICE Deadlines are: WeekAutomatic, 6-cylinder, $13,979 Representative, costs, advances, and NOTICE OF PUBLIC tilt wheel, power windays 12:00 noon for © s u a A Ru sonal attorney's fees and to or the Attorney for the HEARING next day, Sat. 11:00 dows, power brakes, S US A R u Porsche 911 Turbo 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Personal Representa- cause th e s u bject The Desc h utes air conditioning, keya.m. for Sunday; Sat. property to be sold by 877-266-3821 tive. Dated and first 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. County Of12:00 for Monday. If less entry, 69K miles. the Sheriff of D es- ficer willHearings Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 p ublished May 1 1 , hold a Public Excellent condition; we can assist you, inliniti G37X 2013, chutes County, fore2014. Personal RepDlr ¹0354 Hearing on June 17, please call us: 7-Speed Auto, 15K tires have 90% tread. r esentative: Joh n closing the interests of 2014, at 6:30 p.m. in 541-385-5809 mi., AWD, leather. $11,995. all defendants in the Reuber, 63080 Dickey the Barnes and SawThe Bulletin Classified VIN ¹354008. $29,995. Call 541-598-5111 Road, Bend, Oregon real property with the yer Rooms of the De(exp. 5/19/14) proceeds applied to schutes 2003 6 speed, X50 97701. Attorney for Ser v ices SMDLICH added power pkg., Personal Representa- satisfy Plaintiff's lien. Center, 1300 NW Wall The real property is St., Bend, to consider V Q LV Q 530 HP! Under 10k t ive: David E . P e Volvo C70 T5 2012, miles, Arctic silver, 541-749-2156 OSB ¹82104, described as follows: the following request: VOLVOXC90 2006, convertible, 2 dr., auto, tersen, gray leather interior, Merrill O'S u llivan, Lot 8 in Block 4 of smolichvolvo.com F ILE NUMBE R : 75K mi., AWD, 6 speed leather, loaded. new quality tires, LLP, 805 SW Indus- ARROWHEAD S P-14-7. APPL I DLR ¹366 auto, leather. VIN ¹130852. $34,995. ACRES 3RD ADDIChev Trailblazer LS 2004, VIN ¹276223. $20,495. and battery, Bose t rial Way, Suite 5 , CANT:Sharon Tindall, (gxp. 5/tg/14) Corvette 1979 TION, Des c hutes AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, p remium sou n d Bend, Oregon 97702, (exp. 5/19/14) 13622 SW Canyon L82- 4 speed. SMDLICH clean title, 12/15 tags, stereo, moon/sunOffice: (541) County, Oregon, to- Drive, Terrebonne, 85,000 miles SMDLICH gether with that por- OR 97760. OWNER: $5995. 541-610-6150 roof, car and seat 3 89-1770 o r Fa c V Q L V Q Garaged since new. 7, Block 4 covers. Many extras. V O LV O simile: 541-749-2156 (541) tion of Lot Molony, P.O. I've owned it 25 ARR O WHEAD David Garaged, p e r fect 389-1777, Email: red- of 541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.com Box 1330, Scapyears. Never damACRES 3RD ADDIcondition, $59,700. sideOmerrill-osullismolichvolvo.com DLR ¹366 poose, OR 9 7 0 56. aged or abused. inliniti M37X 2012, TION, described as 541-322-9647 van.com. DLR ¹366 LOCATION: The $12,900. 7-Speed Auto, 36K follows: Beginning at property is identified LEGAL NOTICE Dave, 541-350-4077 the Southeast corner o n mi., AWD, leather. 940 the Cou n t y IN T H E C I R CUIT of said Lot 7; thence VIN ¹395955. $35,995. Vans Porsche Carrera 911 Assessor's tax map C OURT OF T H E (exp. 5/19/14) N orth 89 ' 1 6 ' 58 " 14-13-16CD, as Tax 2003 convertible with Ford Bronco II S TATE O F OR W est, 7 5 .0 0 f e e t ; Lots 100 and 500. It Get your hardtop. 50K miles, SMDLICH 4x4, 1989EGON FOR T HE thence North 120.00 has an assigned adnew factory Porsche business COUNTY OF DESAutomatic, power V Q L V Q Volvo S60 T5 2012, feet; thence North 18' dress of 8329 North motor 6 mos ago with & H h CHUTES P robate steering, stereo 22K mi., 6 spd auto, 44' 41g East, 233.37 541-749-2156 18 mo factory warHighway 97, TerrebDepartment. In the ranty remaining. FWD, Alloy wheels. feet; thence South onne. upgrade, set-up to smolichvolvo.com P ROPOSAL: a ROW I N G Matter of the Estate 3 41.93 feet t o t h e Site Plan DLR ¹366 $37,500. VIN ¹118621. $23,495. tow, runs good. review for a (exp. 5/19/14) of DAVID G. JUBA, 541-322-6928 point of b e ginning. $1700. Chrysler Town & coffee hut. S T AFF Deceased. No. with an ad in Commonly known as S M D L I C H 541-633-6662 Country LXI 1997, 14PB0036. NOThe Bulletin's and located at 21771 CONTACT: beautiful inside 8 REVISED V Q L V Q TICE TO I N TER- Obsidian Ave n ue, William.Groves©des"Call A Service out, one owner, nonCopies of Saturn 2001 station 541-749-2156 ESTED PERSONS. Bend, O R 9 7 7 02. chutes.org. smoker,. loaded with the staff report, appliwagon, dark blue, gray NOTICE IS Ford Escape XLT Professional" smolichvolvo.com NOTICE TO DEFENoptions! 197,892 mi. leather interior, V6, auto, 2010 DLR ¹366 H EREBY G I V E N DANT: READ THESE cation, all documents Directory Service rec o rds evidence sub(prtottg forillustration only) exlnt mileage, also set-up that Amy R. HayP APERS CARE - and available. $4 , 950. mitted by or on behalf Kia Forte SX Hatch- for RV towing, a great abusa has been apF ULLY! Yo u m u s t Vyy Jetta GL! 2012 Call Mike, (541) 815the applicant and back 2013, 4 Cy l , all-around car! $2950. p ointed and h a s "appear" in this case of 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 541-788-4844 applicable criteria are m oon r o of , re a r qualified as the Peror the other side will available for inspecspoiler, alloy wheels. sonal Representawin automatically. To tion at the Vin ¹684485 tive of the a bove "appear" you must file Division at Planning Call a Pro TiCk, TOCk Moon roof, roof rack, Stock ¹44118A Estate. All persons with the court a legal a nd can nboe cpoustr l eather, pdl, p w . Whether you need a h aving claim s $16,999 paper called a gmo- chased for 25 cents a CORVETTE COUPE TiCk, TOCk... against the Estate vin¹C15393 tion" or "answer." The page. The staff refence fixed, hedges Glasstop 2010 Bluetooth, pl, pw, © s u a A Ru are hereby required $16,997 "motion" or "answer" port should be made ...don't let time get Grand Sport - 4 LT manual trans. trimmed or a house to present these must be given to the available 7 days prior loaded, clear bra 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. away. Hire a Vin¹108574 ROBBERSON claims, with proper built, you'll find court clerk or admin- to the date set for the hood 8 fenders. 877-266-3821 $18,977 vouchers, wi t h in t lscottt ~ It tg tt g g professional out istrator within 30 days hearing. Documents professional help in New Michelin Super Dlr ¹0354 four months after of the date of first are also available onSports, G.S. floor of The Bullet)n's ROBBERSON y The Bulletin's "Call a 541-312%986 the date of first pubpublication specified line a t mats, 17,000 miles, The Bulletin LIIICOctt ~ It tg m a "Call A Service .desdlr ¹0205 lication of this noService Professional" herein along with the chutes.org. ww wDesCrystal red. To Subscribe call tice, as stated beProfessional" required filing fee. It 541-312-3986 Directory $42,000. 541-385-5800 or go to hutes Count y low, to the Personal must be i n p roper cencourages 503-358-1164. DLR ¹0205 541-385-5809 Directory today! persons R epresentative i n www.bendbulletin.com Ford Explorer XLT form and have proof w ith d isabilities to care of the Office of 2002 o f service o n t h e David A. R h oten, plaintiff's attorney or, participate in all programs and activities. 230 Oregon Buildif the plaintiff does not This event/location is i ng, 4 9 4 Sta t e have a n at t orney, to people Street, Salem, Orproof of service on the accessible with disabilities. If you egon 9730 1-3654, plaintiff. If you have need a c commodao r they ma y b e questions, you should tions to make particibarred. All persons ABS, 4WD, V6, front see an attorney im- pation poss i ble, fog driving lights. whose rights may mediately. I f you call the ADA be affected by the vin¹C23396 need help in finding please Coordinator at (541) proceedings in this $8,977 an attorney, you may 388-6584. Estate may obtain call the Oregon State ROBBER N additional informaBar's Lawyer Referral PUBLIC NOTICE tion fr o m the t lscottt ~ It tg tt g g Iit S ervice a t (503) The May 20, 2014, 4 records of the Court. 684-3763 or toll-free meeting of the Bend 541-312%986 the Personal ReprePark & R e creation in Oregon at (800) dlr ¹0205 sentative or the law452-7636. H E RSH- District Board of Diyer for the Personal rectors has been canNER HUNTER, LLP. t rl Representative. '/ By/s/ Nancy K. Cary. celled. The Board of Just bought a new boat? DATED AND FIRST Nancy K. Cary, OSB Directors will meet in Sell your old one in the PUBLISHED: May classifieds! Ask about our 902254, Of Attorneys executive session at 11, 2014. DAVID A. Super Seller rates! for Plaintiff, 180 East 5:30 p.m., May 20, RHOTEN, OSB 541-385-5809 2014/ at 799 SW Co11th Avenue, P.O. ¹610736, Lawyerfor Box 1475, Eugene, l umbia, Bend, O r Personal R e p re- Oregon 97440, Tele- e gon, pursuant t o sentative. phone: (541) ORS 192.660(2)(e) for 686-8511, Fax: (541) the purpose of disLEGAL NOTICE cussing real property IN T H E CI R CUIT 344-2025, transactions. The next COURT O F THE ncary©hershnerh unter.com. Firs t regularly scheduled STATE OF OREGON Jeep Wrangler UnlimDat e : meeting of the board FOR D E SCHUTES P ublication ited Sahara 20 07, will be June 3, 2014. C OUNTY WEL L S May 4, 2014. running boards, alloy T he a g enda a n d FARGO BANK, NA, LEGAL NOTICE wheels, tow pkg. supplemental reports also k n o w n as NOTICE OF PUBLIC Add a Photo to your Bulletin classified ad for just $15 Perweek. Vin ¹120477 will be posted Friday, WACHOVIA M O R THEARING Stock ¹43896A May 30, 2014, on the GAGE C O R P O R A- The V isit w w w . b e n d b u l le t i n .c om , c l ic k o n " P L AC E A N A D " Desc h utes $23,999 web s ite: TION and WACHO- C ounty B oard o f district's www.bendparksana nd follow th e e a s y s t e p s . V IA M O R T G A G E C ommissioners w i ll S US A R u FSB, a d i vision of hold a Public Hearing drec.org. For more 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend call W ELLS FARG O on Wednesday, June information All ads appear in both print and online. Pleaseallow 24 hours for photo processing 877-266-3821 BANK, NA, formerly 4, 2014, at 10:00 a.m. 541-389-7275. Dlr ¹0354 known as WACHO- in t h e before your adappears in print and online. D e s chutes V IA M O R T G A G E , County B o ar d of Advertise your car! FSB, formerly known Commissioners Add APicture! a s W ORLD S A VReach thousands of readers! H earing Room a t TiCk, TOCk INGS BANK, FSB; 1300 NW Wall Street, Call 541-385-5809 Plaintiff, v. MICHAEL Bend, to take testiThe Bulletin Classifieds TiCk, TOCk... A. MARSDEN; BEVmony on the following Lincoln Navigator 2003 ERLY K. MARSDEN; item: FILE NUMBER: ...don't let time get CITY OF REDMOND; TA-13-2. SUBJECT: 4WD, V85.4L, tow pkg, away. Hire a fully loaded with DVD, CAPITAL ONE BANK Relocate traffic study www.bendbulletin.com USA N.A.; and DOES r equirements f r o m heated leather seats, professional out 3rd row seating, runs & 1-2, being all occu- Deschutes C o u nty of The Bulletin's drives exc., well maint., To PlaCeyOur PhOtOad, viSit USOnline at w ww.be n d b u l l e t i n . c o m pants or other per- Code (DCC) Chapter "Call A Service 143k mi. Non-smokers. sons or parties claim- 17.16, S u bdivisions or call with questions, 5 41-385-58 0 9 New tires, brakes, roing any right, title, lien, and Master Plans, to Professional" tors and struts. $7,950. o r interest i n t h e DCC Chapter 18.116, Directory today! 541-604-4166 Advertise your car! Add A Prcture!

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y acob Schor, ND, FABNO ou've probably heard of m elatonin. It's the hormone made in~ the brain that helps us sleep and maintains our body's natural~ clock, or circadian rhythm. But did you know that it is also found in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and helps regulate and promote healthy digestion? In fact, the gut does not depend on the brain for melatonin. It makes its own. It was discovered that the brain makes melatonin in 1958, but it wasn't until nearly 20 years later, in 1977, that melatonin was detected in the mucous membrane of the GI tract. Researchers found that food triggers melatonin production in the gut, some of which enters the blood stream. That drowsy feeling you get after you eat a large meal? It may be due to this.

p aper c o mpar g t h e a c t i on o f t h i s m e l a tonin f o r mula ga i n st omeprazole, the most commonly prescribed drug f o r a ci d reflux. Researchers gave the melatonin-containing s u p p lement to 176 patients and 20 mg doses of omeprazole t o a n other 175 patients. According to the lead researcher, all 176 patients who received the melatonin supplements reported a complete regression of symptoms after 40 days of t r e atment. Only 115 subjects, or 66 percent, of the patients t a k in g o m eprazole reported similar i m provement. These r e sults are almost too good to believe.

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R e searchers aren't exactly sure how the melatonin works, but one theory is that it inhibits nihic oxide production, which prevents relaxation of the lower esophageal sphincter, thus p r e v enting acid reflux. Additionally, melatonin appears to be p r o t ective to the mucosal tissues of the upper digestive tract.

Although the pineal gland in the brain releases a surge of melatonin at night, primarily to help us sleep, during the day, the gut maintains baseline levels of melatonin. In fact, GI tract melatonin concentrations are 10 to 100 times higher than in blood.

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Melatonin may also be of benefit in treating diseases of the upper GI tract including bacterial, fungal, or viral infections in the mouth, and for healing tooth extractions, periodontal disease, and oral cancers.

Melatonin and IBS It really should come as no surprise that melatonin helps regulate activity in the digestive tract. People always report a circadian (daily) rhythm to their bowel habits; melatonin is what drives the clock that controls these rhythms. Melatonin also helps regulate peristalsis, the contraction of muscles that moves food through the digestive system. Additionally, it r educes spasms, normalizes transit times, and aids motility, or movement, through the GI tract. These properties suggest melatonin as a possible treatment for treating irritable bowel syndrome

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Night Light Suppresses Melatonin If melatonin is beneficial for all o f t hese conditions, one wonders if the incidence of reflux and other gastrointestinal conditions correlates with melatonin levels? S ure enough, gastrointestinal d iseases correspond w i t h melatonin levels, which correspond with n i ghttime light exposure. It is important to note that nighttime light exposure suppresses melatonin; this can be seen in night workers. For example, women who work night shifts make less melatonin compared to those who work during the day. And people suffering from shift w or k s leep disorder — the diagnostic name for complaints that stem from working either night shifts or swing shifts — have a higher than average incidence of gastrointestinal disorders. The strongest correlation is with peptic ulcer disease.

(IBS). In a small clinical trial of 18 patients with IBS, each patient received either 3 mg of melatonin or a placebo for eight weeks. Those receiving melatonin significantly improved their overall IBS scores — 45 percent compared to 16 percent in the placebo group. Improvements in quality of life scores were about 44 percent in the melatonin group and about 15 percent in the placebo group. Though a small group to gather data from, the improvements are significant. Melatonin and Acid Reflux Perhaps one of the most exciting applications of melatonin for digestive issues is with reflux disease. An article published in the Journal of Pineal Research brought this idea to our attention in 2006. The article told the case of a 64-year-old woman whose gastro-esophageal reflux

disease (GERD) symptoms responded favorably to a formula containing

While it is a great convenience to be able to turn lights on at night, our il luminated lifestyle may have inadvertently caused a hormone deficiency that has affected our health. Knowing this opens the possibility of correcting a range of gastrointestinal conditions. g

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

CITY DEVELOPMENT

The all

ijr

0 OLII'

nations malls

II lt

Thinkstcck

Dealflicks aims to

i

»Iht

"Ili II

By Amanda Eisenberg McC(atchy-Tribune News Service

fill empty

Once stomping grounds for loitering teens and serious shoppers alike, many malls are decrepit relics of the 20th century.

theaters

signs, waterless fountains and empty hallways are

t4

Yellow liquidation sale representative of the tra-

By Richard Verrier

jectory trend malls are seeing. Closings are expected to

Los Ange(es Times

On a quiet residential street in Mid-Wilshire,

hit 50 percent within 15 to

Kevin Hong and his sales

20 years, adding to the billion square feet of already vacant space, retail analyst

team huddled around a

parked Toyota Sienna emblazoned with a magnet sticker reading "Dealflicks Coupon Code: Man Van."

Howard Davidowitz said. Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

Taj Carino builds a new home Tuesday near Northwest18th Street and Northwest Hartford Avenue in Bend.

The original model for the shopping mall, a colossal suburban structure

They were loading the

"Dealflicks" T-shirts in

with big-box retailers as anchors, no longer attracts shoppers. Instead, consumers are looking for established

preparation for a six-week

town centers or downtown

road trip to visit movie

areas in walking distance from their homes — if they're not shopping from their phones or laptops. Developers are satiating consumers' wants by building artificial down-

converted minivan with

suitcases, sleeping bags, brochures and yellow

theaters in Kansas, Iowa, Michigan, Boston and Illinois. The sales team members planned to take turns

sleeping and driving as they stopped by theaters

towns as an alternative to the traditional mall. In the 1950s, commer-

to personally market their

service. After four road trips and loggingmore than 40,000 miles to dozens of

cities, Hong and his team

cial developers aggressive-

How to meet the dernand with workers and wages

ly reached out to the new

class of suburbanites with strong buying power, cre-

have helped transform

ating one-stop centers for

Dealflicks Inc. from a fledgling Los Angeles

maximum convenience. By the 1960s, the retail

By Joseph Ditzier •The Bulletin

start-up into a fast-grow-

ing discount ticketing servicefortheatersacross

he rap of hammers mingled with Pink Floyd's "Eclipse" flowing from a construction-site

the country.

"The idea is to increase as much face time as possible," said Hong, co-founder of Dealflicks. "We'll be hitting as many

Around him, fellow tradesmen labored. Every lot on the square block bounded by Northwest Hartford Avenue and 18th Street sprouted a home in some stage of construction, from

Billed as a Priceline or Hotwire for movie tickets,

skeletal frames of 2-by-4's clad in plywood or particle board to structures ready for sale.

theaters to offer discounts of as much as 60 percent on movie tickets and con-

cessions during periods when theaters are mostly vacant.

Mel Melcon i Lcs Angeles Times

Sean Wycliffe shows aposter for Deaifiicks, a company that helps theater owners fill

seats during slow seasons, at the compay's headquar-

Bend is on a building spree. And with it comes a shortage of the men and women who do the work. "Sky high," said Carino, the commercial guys, and describing the demand for they think they can handle framers, drywallers, plumb- somewhere around $150 (milers, electricians, painters and lion) to $200 million, barely other tradespeople on job half...," he said. sites around town. Construction workers at Almost $500 million worth Bend job sites say they have of construction projects lay plenty of work, and someahead in Central Oregon in times multiple job offers. "Bathe coming year. Most of it, sically, everybody's behind," approximately $300 million, said Ryan Jones, a framer is in big building projects, from Montana working two induding expansion of the lots from Carino. "Everyone's Pronghorn resort, three new trying to catch up." schools in Deschutes and Workers said wages, howCrook counties and renova- ever,lagbehindthosein2007, tion of the Oregon DMV of- at the height of the building fice in Bend, to name a few. boom. Carino, for example, Andy High, vice president said framers today earn $12of the Central Oregon Build- $18 an hour. In flush times,

A real labor shortage in the building trades will eventually manifest itself in higher wages, said Senior Economist Josh Lehner of the Oregon Office of Economic Analysis. A look at wage data from the Oregon Employment Depart-

ie ticket prices reached record levels in 2013

and theaters are experimenting with new ways to bring in customers to the multiplex. Last year,

is completely reinvented, will be a historical

annualaverage

employmentin construction,mining

anachronism — a 60-year

afifj logging

aberration that no

longer meets the public's needs, the retailers' needs, or the community's needs."

6,020

2005

6,950

2006

8,330

2007

8,070

2008

6,030

2009

4,040

2010

3,400

De-

2011

3,200

according to real estate information company Co-

some earned twice that, he schutes County today is another $150 million in resi- sald. barely half what it was sev"Wages are coming back," en years ago, approximately dential construction.

2012

3,160

Star Group.

2013

3,730

ment shows specialty trade

contractors in D e schutes County earned a slightly higher average pay in 2007 than 2013. That figure includes all employees of a firm, not just the workers on the job site, Lehner said. Total payroll data shows another side of the story: The number of specialty t rade contractors i n

ers Association, estimated

"I don't have exact data on this, but I've talked to a lot of

he said. "But they're not there

yet."

2,200 versus 5,000.

SeeConstruction/E3

Source: Oregon Employment Department

— Rick Caruso, CEO of Caruso Affiliated rentablesquare feet,

"The typical U.S. mall, unless it is completely reinvented, will be a historical

anachronism — a 60-year aberration that no longer

meets the public's needs, the retailers' needs, or

Women startingsmall businessesat rapidrate By Joyce M. Rosenberg

starting an estimated 1,288

AP Business Writer

companies each day, up

cult job market since the recession. But the numbers

been business owners. "More women are seeing

from 602 in 2011-12, Ameri-

of women business owners

themselves out there in their

can Express says. "Women are becoming

will keep rising as interest in entrepreneurship grows and younger women look to famous women as their role models, Duffy says.

heroes in the business world. They're saying, this is fab-

NEW YORK — If you go to work for a newer busiwoman.

Picture Association of

number of women-owned businesses in the U.S. rose

SeeDeaifiicks/E5

"The typical U.S. mall, unless it

2004

patrons, down from 1.5 billion nearly a decade ago, according to a recent report by the Motion

opportunity.

ters with at least 250,000

5,300

ness, there's a good chance you'll be working for a

D ealflicks sees as an

malls and shopping cen-

2003

theaters in the U.S. and Canada drew 1.34 billion

America. Just like hotels, theaters struggle with high rates of vacancy during off-peak times, a problem

are more than 200 U.S.

DeschutesCounty's

ters in Los Angeles.

That's an appealing pitch after average mov-

a large shift in retail that

peaked in the 1990s and early 2000s. Now there

boom box while framer Taj Carino finished up his lunch lbesday.

theaters as we can." Dealflicks partners with

industry brought money from major cities into suburban markets, displaying

more aware of the opportunities for entrepreneurship

Women are starting companies at a torrid pace.

in their lives. It's becoming

Between 1997 and 2014, the

rations: Oprah Winfrey, been in the past," says Susan designers Tory Burch and

more of an option for a career move than it ever has

by 68 percent, twice the

Duffy, executive director of the Center for Women's En-

growth rate for men and nearly one and a-half times

trepreneurial Leadership at Babson College.

the rate for all companies,

according to an American Express analysis of Census Bureau figures. They are

The number of new busi-

nesses started by women

Some of those inspiDiane Von Furstenberg and

Weili Dai, co-founder of chip maker Marvell Technology. The current head of the Small Business Ad-

and men has increased in

ministration, Maria Contreras-Sweet, and her predeces-

part because of the diffi-

sor, Karen Mills, have both

ulous, I want to be like her,"

Duffy says. Their role models also

include less prominent successful women in business. One of Summer Scar-

the community's needs," Rick Caruso, the CEO

of real-estate company Caruso Affiliated, told the audience at the National Retail Federation's annual convention in January.

For Simon Property Group, the open-air model, with its downtown vibe, has

been profitable. Simon's outdoorcentersincorporate mixed-use development,

from high-end retailers and restaurants to office, apartment and hotel space.

brough's inspirations has been her mother, Elizabeth,

RevenueforSimon, the nation's largest mall oper-

a former executive with a

ator, has grown in the past

medical devices company. The Scarbroughs own VinniBag, a seller of travel bags for wine and other bottles. SeeWomen/E2

four years; the company also built five new outdoor malls in 2013, two in the U.S. See Maiis/E3


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

B USINESS TODAY Entrepreneur's BootCamp:Learn the fundamental elements needed to start a business from start-up logistics to branding. Registration required; $129; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541383-7270. Mega Motorhome and RV Super Sale:Free, open to public; 9 a.m.6 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711. SEO Basics Workshop:Hands on workshop will cover SEO basics for local business owners from digital marketing experts, bring your laptop, registration required; 9-11 a.m.; 406Bend, 210 S.W. Wilson Ave., No. 213, Bend; 541550-7246, diana©406bend.com or www.406bend.com.

SEO BasicsWorkshop: Handson workshop will cover SEO basics for local business owners from digital marketing experts, bring your laptop, registration required; noon-2 p.m.; 406Bend, 210 S.W. Wilson Ave., No. 213, Bend; 541550-7246, diana©406bend.com or www.406bend.com.

SUNDAY Mega Motorhome and RV Super Sale:Free, open to public; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-5482711.

MONDAY Know Jobs and Resumes:Learn how to update your resume to get the job you want, Staff from the Goodwill Job Connection and Deschutes Public Library will share information; free, registration suggested; 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541617-7080.

TUESDAY Membership 101, Driving Your Memdership:Connect with other members and learn about opportunities and benefits available through the Chamber of Commerce. RSVPs are required.

END A R

Contact Shelley Junker to RSVP at 541-382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org; free; 10 a.m.; Bend ChamberofCommerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-3823221. Crooked River RanchTerrebonne Chamber of Commerce Networking Social: 5:30 p.m.; Juniper Realty,14290 S.W. Chinook Road. May Networking Social/Open House:May Networking Social hosted by Juniper Realty. This is also an open house and will be held at a home located at Crooked River Ranch. Everyone is welcome, bring a friend! To learn more contact Melonie Towell with Juniper Realty at 541-5045393, or Kathie Gangstead with Crooked River Ranch-Terrebonne Chamber at 541-923-2679; 5:30 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Home, 16751 S.W. Dove Road.

WEDNESDAY Young Professionals Network: Spring Fling Kickoff event for Chamber of Commerce members. Property tours of Brasada Ranch will be given. Register at www.bendchamber. org; $25 Bend Chamber Members, $30 Community Members; 11:30 a.m.; Brasada Ranch, 16986 S.W. Brasada Ranch Road, Powell Butte; 541526-6865. Seeing the Possibilities with Rachel Scdoris: Rachel Scdoris, of Bend, shares her stories of being a legally blind sled dog racer in hopes of inspiring others in their personal challenges, registration required; $25 for ConnectW members, $40 for non-members; 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-848-8598 or www.

Development Center. First-time business owners will have the opportunity to evaluate their finances, target their market and present their ideas in a written business plan. Pre-registration required; $69 includes materials.; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.

Typography, Communicating with Fonts:Experience how

the conscious and unconscious messages you receive through fonts can influence people's buying habits and perceptions about your business. Registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270.

THURSDAY May AdBite, Modern Marketing for B2B:Featured speaker David Smith with Babcock 8 Jenkins discusses marketing techniques and how to prepare a B2B strategy. Online registration closes noon May 20. Registration available at the door depending on space. To learn more visit www. adfedco.org; $25 AdFed Members; $45 non-members.; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541382-4321. InDesign, Beginning:Adobe

InDesign is an easy-to-use design

and layout program that allows you to create documents of many types. Registration required; $95; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-3837270.

May 27

Getting Traffic to Your Wedsite the EasyWay: Understand what it takes to get targeted traffic to your website using Google Adwords and then actually do it in this hands-on class. Registration required; $89; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. How to Develop a Business Plan:Two-evening workshop at COCC's Small Business

Professional Enrichment

MOMDAY

WEDNESDAY

June 2

June 11

Healthcare IT Technician: This class prepares you to take and pass the CompTIA HIT-001 Certification exam. Learn how to study in compliance with all the changing rules and regulations and the computer operations that make this possible. Registration required; $449; 5:30-8:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837270.

Illustrator, Create a Custom Designed Water Bottle:Learn the fundamentals of lllustrator: how to create artwork, use color, trace images and incorporate text. Registration required; $125; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

FRIDAY

May 28

May 30

SBIR/STTR Lunch & Learn Workshop:Businesses with a potentially technology-oriented product can learn how to apply

Nonprofit Grant Writing: Become skilled at selecting grant opportunities for nonprofit organizations and write successful applications. Registration required. This class will be held in the computer lab; $89; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; La Pine Community Center, 16405 First St.; 541-536-2223 or

and compete for research and

development grants. Register online at www.oregonbest.org/ what-we-offer/support-forstartups/sbirsttr-support-center/ sbirsttr-training-and-workshops/ or call 503-546-8813; s12; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend. Business After Hours:Celebrate the opening of Tetherow Lodges and learn about the growth Tetherow has experienced in the last year. Beer, wine and appetizers will be served. Opportunities for networking and prizes. Register at www. bendchamber.org; free; 5 p.m.; Tetherow Golf Club, 61240 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend;541-382-3221.

How to Developa BusinessPlan: Two-evening workshop at COCC's Small Business Development Center. First-time business owners will have the opportunity to evaluate their finances, target their market and present their ideas in a written business plan. Pre-registration required; $69 includes materials.; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837290.

May 29 Taste of Leadership Bend Class:Featuring highlights of the complete Leadership Bend program, followed by a catered networking reception at Elevate, the Cascades Culinary Institute, registration required; $30; 1-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way; www.bendchamber. org/community-is-on/communityevents/a-taste-of-leadershipbend-bend-or/. Search Engine Strategies1: Learn the "dos" and "don'ts" of search engine optimization. Registration required; $99; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

Series:Learn to prepare for retirement with financial planner and retirement expert David Rosell, author of Failure is not an Option: Creating Certainty in the Uncertainty of Retirement. To learn more call 541-382-3221; $25 Bend Chamber Members, $30 Community Members; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541382-7437.

www.lapineparks.org.

Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. Business Continuity/Disaster Planning:Come learn what Business Continuity/Disaster Recovery Planning is about and why it is important. Be prepared for unexpected events and disasters. Registration required; $69; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E. College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270.

WEDMESDAY

THURSDAY

TUESDAY

connectw.org.

THURSDAY June12

WEDNESDAY June4 BusinessStart-up Class:Learn what it takes to run a business, how to reach your customer base, funding options for your business, how much moneyyou need to get started and legalities involved, registration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.

THURSDAY June 5 Team Development for Greater Productivity:Increase collaboration to achieve company objectives. Registration required;

State of the Community Address: Discussion with community stakeholders about how they are managing taxpayer dollars and preparing for the future. Arrive with questions or send them in

advancetojamie©bendchamber. org. Moderated by Jamie Christman, Bend Chamber and David Blair, n-Link Corporation. Registration 7 a.m. To learn more or RSVP, visit www.bendchamber. org; $25 Bend Chamber Members; $35 Community Members.; 7:45-9:15 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541389-3111.

TUESDAY

$95; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon

June 17

Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. Build Your Business Website with WordPress II:Learn how to modify your themes, customize

Online Marketing with Facebook: Explore how to effectively use Facebook to market and advertise your small to medium business. Find out how to create an online brand presence on this social media site. Registration required;

content, advanced plugins, search engine optimization and discover the world of WordPress E-commerce. Registration required; $129; 9 a.m.-noon;

$69; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon

Community College 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.

Women

DEEDS Deschutes County • Lindsey Alexander to Melanie E. Knall, Foxborough, Phase 4, Lot 205, $227,000 • JLS Rental Real Estate LLC to Joshuaand Nicole McGowan, Quail Run, Phase1 and 2, Lot17, $237,500 •SFICascade HighlandsLLC to Nathan W. and Lauren K. Doudney, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot104, $258,742 • Jim and Patty Wishon to Stanley L. and Susan E.Humiston, Ponderosa Pines Fourth Addition, Lot13, Block 7, $343,000 • Michael C. Knoell to Frank Baker, Ponderous Pines, Lot 4, 10, 13, 16 and 17, $373,500 • Pac West II, LLC to Baerbel F. and Patrick J. McCaffrey, Eagles Landing, Lot 57, $308,570 • Royce G. and Carol A. Perkins, Trustees of the Perkins Family Trust, to Sandra L. and Gary E.Cheney, Eaglenest, Phase1, Lot 3, $229,000 • Darren F. and Amy J. Pierce to Kevin R. andTeresa A. Arndt, Ridge at Eagle Crest11, Lot 38, $167,500 • Jason A. Mendell to Jeri P. LaPoint, Lava Crest South, Lot 5, $163,500 • Sila LLC to John J. and Corinne J. Thornburg, Deschutes Pointe, Lot 2, $650,000 • Sarah E. Harlos and Jesse K. Shen to Andrew J. Zeigert and Michelle R. Wilcox, Centennial Glen, Lot 44, $195,000 • Gerald R. Falk, Trustee of the Falk Family Revocable Trust, to Catherine M. Kellington and Ragene E.Brown, Greens atRedmond, Phase6,Lot68, $250,000 • Gretchen V. Dakin, trustee of the Gretchen V. Dakin Survivors Trust, toAlanand Laketha Bookman, Lower Bridge Estates, Lot 2, Block1, $184,000 • William J. Hough and Bonnie L. Hough, who tooktitle as Bonnie L. Roberts, to Isla R. Grounds, Tillicum Village, Lot17, Block1, $205,000 • Central Oregon Medical Specialists LLC to Dana L. andNancy L. Bratton and Condado Group LLC,Rennolds Acres, Lot 3, Block1, $1,200,000 • Gary L. and Colleen S. Miller to Valerie Guinan and Randall Esperas, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites, Unit 5, Lots 19 and 20, Blocks 31, $289,000 • Central Oregon Regional Housing Authorityto Martin Figueroa, Canyon Point Estates, Phase 4, Lot129, $192,000 • Michelle Simmons to James C. Lampros, Liberty Heights, Lot16, $250,000 • Eileen B. Holt to Brian S. and Carolyn G. Rodgers, Township17, Range12, Section 23, $295,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Arthur G. Peterson Jr., McCall Landing, Phase 1, Lot 66, $252,500 • Michael Kane to Marita M. and Susan L. Mondry, Overturf Butte, Lot 3, Block 5, $295,000 • Chet Antonsen to Gregory M. and Susan L. Hall, Brentwood, Lot19,

Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

$333,000 • Chet Antonsen to Gregory M. and Susan L. Hall, Brentwood, Lot17, $333,000 • Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Cindy M. Leong, McCall Landing, Phase1, Lot 75, $206,000 • Donald A. and Connie M. Sealey to Jacob B. Hoag, RoanPark, Lot 2, Block 2, $285,600 • Marvin Mahrt, also appearing as Marvin and Bonnie Mahrt, to Adam and Danielle E. Nichols, Township17, Range 13, Section 19, $325,000 • Irina A. Downton to Richard A. Michell, Village, Phase1, Lot5, $232,000 Jefferson County • Donald I and Elaine R. Martin to LaRae L. Friederichs, Township11, Range13, Section 22, $250,000 • John and Shari J. Welling to Danny J. Walhood, Township 9, Range14, Section 27, $290,000 • Martha K. Durette, also known as Martha Du Rette now known as Martha Kay Jones, to Timothy and Martha Bewley,Township9,Range 13, Section 36, $205,000 • Larry L. Bramhall, trustee of the Larry L. Bramhall Living Trust, to Markand Belinda Chavez,Township I I, Range14, Section 6, $335,000 • Gordon C. Jones, Kelly W. and Dena R. Cassidy, Scrub Jay LLC, Mark A. and Candice W.Stayer, S3 Real Estate LLC,Central Cascade Ventures LLCandCherryandGray I LLC to Cascade Ridge of Madras LLC, Partition Plat1994-11, Parcel 2, $2,100,000

Continued from E1 "I knew from a very young age that she was one of the only women in her company at that level," says Scar-

brough, whose 5-year-oki companyis based in Ventura, Calif. Being a woman business owner is no longer as novel or unusual as it was decades

ago. "I know a lot of w omen

who are starting things as well," Scarbrough says. The growing number of resources for women busi-

ness owners, including the SBA-sponsored W o men's Business Centers and wom-

Ted S. Warren i The Associated Press

Consuelo Gomez, of the facilities management company"Marty K," works in her office in Bellevue,

en's business organizations W ash. Between1997and 2014,the number of women-owned businesses inthe U.S. rose by 68 are also encouraging women percent, compared to a 47percent increase for all companies, according to anAmerican Express to start companies, according analysis of Census Bureau figures. to Duffy. But women owners aren't

carbon copies of men. They tend to be more optimistic

to hire in the next year, com- and 32percent said they have companies is owned by a pared to50 percent of m en. less accessto new business minority.

than their male counterparts,

And 68 percent of wo men

according to a survey re- plan to expand their compaleasedthis week by Bank of nies; 63 percent of men have America. such plans. Seventy percent o f t h e The survey also found women owners surveyed women owners may face expect their revenue to rise different challenges than over the next year,compared men. Twenty-nine percent to 66 percent of men. Fif- said they feel they have less ty-six percent of women plan access to money than men,

opportunities.

The number of businesses

A woman entrepreneur is

owned by minority women

most likely to start a company that provides educational

has climbed to 2.9 million this

services, administrative or

in 1997, a 215 percent increase. During that time, the

waste management services or is involved in the arts, entertainment or r ec r e ation, the AmEx survey said. And nearly 1 in 3 women-owned

yearfrom justunder 930,000 number of companiesowned by minority men has more than doubled to nearly 3.7 million from 1.7million.

o e re urns ma e eas •

g •• •

!

No lines. No mess. No problem. I

755 NE 2nd in Bend BottleDropCenters.com


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN E 3

Malls

expectationisincreasing. The S e a rs' same-store sales in opportunity for retailers is: t he U.S. decreased by 3.8 per-

Continued from E1

How do you capitalize on that? c ent in 2013.

But the trend isn't keeping

consumers' dollars in the mall arena.

Bike shops, local offerings and green grocers like Trader Joe's and Whole Foods appeal to the younger generations, and until recently, malls ha-

There's potential traffic and sales opportunity."

Sim i larly, J .C. P enney's same-storesalesfellby 7.4per-

In the technology market,

c e nt in fiscal 2013, compared

applications and subscription to 24.7 percent the year before services such as Style for Hire under CEO Ron Johnson, a forand Bombfell offer the feel of a mer Apple Inc. executive.

consumers, according to the

J o h nson's failure to revive the brand prompted J.C. PenThe online component of ney to fire him in April 2013; shopping not only changes the retailer still has not fully

Urban Land Institute's 2013

the market for consumers, but r e covered from the botched

study on Generation Y buying patterns. "Smallerformats are more

also takes away business from overhaul. "That change takes time," traditional retailers, McAvey SBld. McAvey said. "They were los-

ven't offered those options to

suitable fo r

t i m e-conscious

shoppers, many of whom may just be looking at goods they will ultimately buy online," according to the study. Showroom models are popping up within urban spaces, where consumers can try on a product and have it delivered in-store or to their door, with-

out the option of purchasing it immediately. Although t h e co n cept of showrooming has been around — think fiddling with a phone at Best Buy before ordering it online through Verizon — reverse showrooming spins the idea. Shoppers can stop by popup boutiques for online-only retailers and try on items before heading to the computer and purchasing them. Gwyneth Paltrow's lifestyle blog Goop is the latest to open a pop-up store in Brentwood,

Calif., taking cues from retailers such as Warby Parker and Bonobos who pioneered the

"clicks-to-bricks" strategy. "Stores of almost any size and scale encourage you to see (a product) and buy it," even if it's not in the color or size you need," said Maureen McAvey, senior resident f ellow at Institute.

t h e U r ban L a n d

Personalized shopping The personalization aspect of shopping is gaining more traction, especially online, where analytics can recommend options for the consumer.

"Consumers are more willing than ever to share their information w it h

r e t ailers,"

Keith Mercier, an associate partner at IBM's Retail Center of Competence, told MarketWatch. "But there's ex-

pectation that if I share, you are going to personalize the information I

r e ceive. That

personal shopper without having to leave the couch.

E-commercegiantAmazon.

i n g old customers and not at-

com Inc., for example, had a tracting new customers fast 21.9 percent increase in net sales in 2013.

e n o ugh." Department stores aren't

Big-box retailers are most t heonlyretailersstruggling. vulnerable to online shopping because consumers can find T~rg~<lngt<<n> thecommodityitemtheyneed at a lower price than in-store,

Continued from E1 Inc., a Salem general contracIn 2007, specialty contrac- tor, this month finished buildt h e c o unty e arned i n g t h e lone apartment-com-

a combined total of $184.7 plex project erected in Bend million; in 2013, total payroll i n the past year. He recalled amounted to $79 million. arriving last summer to start Complicating the demand work, and sensing pessimism for labor, or driving it, are a mong the subcontractors in those public-sector jobs that t h earea. " Everybody h a d tha t a ttract available labor a n d pay higher wages. Builders bummed-out look on their withthosecontractsmustpay f aces," he said. "Now, that's prevailing wages, which are t otally changed." set by the Oregon Bureau of Sh a r p, who managed the LaborandIndustries. Sage Springs project for the "They're good-paying jobs, family firm, said he received Andy Tullis/The Bulletin $22, $23 bucks an hour for o nl y n ine bids from local some of the entry-level stuff," f i rms for the project on Boyd With such an influx of building projects and a shortage of workers, High said. Acres Road. He received 75 it remains to be seen how wages, budgeting and the overall labor Kirby Nagelhout Construc- bids from Salem sub-contrac- pool will be affected. tion Co., a commercial build- t ors and hired many of the ing contractor in Bend, holds tradesmen for the job from the contract from B end-La

severe yet I d on't o w,- he said recently. "The

tradesmen to start their own

firms, for young people to start a career and for the un-

employed to find work again. They also tend to be younger Job site managers said they're and more mobile than other hiring. And experience is not workers. necessarily required. "The great thing about conIn March, Gary North, vice president of R&H Construc- struction is that hard work tion Co., told a gathering of pays off quickly," North said. real estate professionals in Dave Harms, supervising Bend that about half the la- a framing crew Tuesday at bor force in Central Oregon a home site on N o rthwest had moved elsewhere to find Drouillard Avenue, said he's work after 2007. always looking for capable "If the market comes back, new hires. "I'd be happy with a guy and they feel it's sustainable, they'll come back," North who didn't know what he was said in April.. doing," he said, "but was willMany agreed the construc- ing to work and learn." tion industry presents op— Reporter: 541-617-7815, portunities for enterprising jditzler@bendbulletin.com he wrote in an email recently.

I

r t '

s

of Kirb Na eihout working today in Constructlon Co. Portland.

F orecast i n g public, pre v ailthe effect on eming-wage projects will draw p l oyment levels of a labor people because they're good pool that moves to find work, paying jobs. It's the private combined with s hortages, jobs that will have trouble demand and wage levels is drawing people. It's up to the about as easy as budgeting contractors to estimate their for a big construction project. jobsandpaytheirpeoplewhat Leh n er said his office unthey will."

workers make up a disproportionately large share of the long-term unemployed,

t h e W i l l ametteValley.

"If we rebid this project, it Pine Schools to build a new, $15.07 million elementary w ould be a completely differschool bet w een ent scenario," he Reed Market and said. "Guaranteed, Brosterhous roads Ti 7 6 PUbilC, toda y, I'd get a ton east of Third Street. pygya j/j17g of (lo cal) bids." The firm also bid on He said c on~ the contract to build struction workers a new middle school Pl PJBCtS Wlll in Ben d ex p ect between Miller Ele- Ql g Yy pgpp/g a hig h e r w a ge, mentary and Sum be C a u Se however. One, he mit High schools. said, they expect Nagelhout Gen- tt l 6 ttt' l6gppd w hat t h ey earned eral Manager Mike p g y/17g jpbS duri n g the boom, Taylor sald the f~ It ' and. two. the cost i to ttl had no trouble findof living in Bend is ing sub-contractors CpAPI'BCkpl'S high e r. Also, pay to work on the ele- gp 8Sgjmg~8 in the Po r t land . mentary school. He metro area is high"J expects competition er, about $56,ppp for labor when the an d P ay their ave r age in 2 013, summer construc- pg pp/g 14lgg~ t h a n i n C e ntral tion season is in full ~i Oregon. Contracii „ 1 swing. tors expect many "There's gonna be Q,Qe Teyior of th e w o rkers think we I

Seph Lawless I McClatchy News Tribune Service

likely accounting for store clo- ing as online-focused retailers Dead trees and shrubbery are splayed across the skeleton of an abandoned mall in Cleveland. Mall sures, McAvey said. such as Brandy Melville and vacancies make up approximately one billion square feet of retail space. While malls saw almost a Shopbop become more preva50 percent decrease in foot l ent, said Ki Bin Kim, director traffic during the 2013 holiday of U.S. real-estate investment Attractions like ice rinks and A stmng indicator for dis- malls in his book "Black Friseason, according to the Wall t rust equity research at Sun- indoor roller coasters aren't tress is the amount of money day: The Collapse of the AmeriStreet Journal, online retailers Trust Robinson Humphrey. attracting consumers any- brought in per square foot. can Shopping Mall." don't share the same concerns. "In our view, teens didn't more, and niche stores and Higher-quality malls will take "These are some of the last Online purchases consti- suddenly stop shopping; they food courts are dying. in at least $400 per square foot, images ever taken of (some of) tuted 5.8 percent of U.S. retail are simply spending a signifEven movie theaters haven't while a decent B-dass mall will these malls," Lawless said. sales in 2013, nearly tripling i cant portion online at very been able to bring in consum- yield about $350 a square foot. Police and demolition crews from 2004, according to the w ell-run online fashion retail- ers, but are still operational on Any time a mall's sales fall be- chased him out of a Cleveland ers," he said. U.S. Census Bureau. ticket costs. low $300 per square foot, it's mall April 3, he said. Large indoor shopTeen r e tailer The declining foot traffic likely in very serious trouble, Although Lawless said the ping areas rely heavAbercrombie & accounts for the disintegra- retail specialist Gerard Mason malls he photographed went ily o n d epartment Sm B i i Bl' Fitch Co. said it tion of the food court model, SBld. untouched by even scrappers, stores, but big-box fp l mgtS gl g e xpe c ts to close 60now replaced by restaurants Likewise, a healthy mall an- some developers are taking a retailers can't anchor mpyg SUjfgbg t o 70 stores in the in many malls. Food court sta- chor store should log $200 at new angle with the properties, malls as they did in U.S.duringthefis- ples Sbarro and Quiznos filed leastper square foot, and any rather than allowing them to the past when they're fOr timecal year through for bankruptcy in March. anchor that falls below $100 a deteriorate: a retrofit. competing a gainst Cpl)SCipUS lease expirations. Mall owners are t urning square foot is in imminent danDead malls have an opporTeen-focused to restaurants because that is ger of closure, according a 2012 tunity to be woven back into online prices and i t " r convenience. retailers haven't something the Internet can't report from CoStar. society, Ellen Dunham-Jones, Before Macy's ac- ma n y pf been ab l e to com- do, said Stephen Lebovitz, a professorof architecture and quired several depart- ~hpm mg y urban design at the Georgia pete w ith the ris- president and CEO of CBL & Growing vacancy ment-store chains in ing popularity of Associates, a real estate inThe average distressed or Tech School of Architecture, 2005, induding May's, JUSt b6 s tores like H& M vestment trust. They also are dosed mall was built in 1983 told her audience at a 2010 TED Kaufmann's an d IPP k l l lg Bt and Fore ver 21, investing more money into and has a vacancy rate of 50.6 Talk. Hecht's, they were all gppdS $$8y whe r e s h oppershealthy malls to increase the percent,according to CoStar Developers already have fighting for a p™e can purchase a shopping experience. data. transformed decrepit struclii i~im>~<i dress for $15 or a corner. At the W estfield Garden Those vacancies make up tures into educational instiNow, Macy's, Nord- buy Online." swea t er for $8. State Plaza shopping center in approximately 1 billion square tutions, libraries and medical "We're seeing Paramus, N.J., the developers feet of vacant retail space, facilities such as Vanderbilt strom, Neiman Mar2013 Ur~an I and so many p e o- opened a $160 million wing according to Edward McMa- Health, formerly One Huncus and Saks are at InstitutestudY ple buy through dubbed the Fashion District hon, chair for sustainable de- dred Oaks Mall in Nashville, the higher end, with J.C. Penney and Sears m ult i - c h a n n e l that features more than 20 velopment at the Urban Land Tenn. struggling to contend. shopping," where new luxury stores. Institute. Other malls have been "to"Overthe last20 years,we tally demolished and houses Sears has closed 305 stores teens can purchase everyThe renovation is much more since 2010, induding its tradi- thing in one place, including modern than the rest of the have built retail space five (were) put up," McAvey said, tional retail store in Bend and mainstream adult b r ands, mall and has tall windows to times faster than sales," he said. emphasizing the best practice its flagship location in Chicago. McAvey said. let light flood in, said Lisa HerrThose abandoned malls for utilizing vacancies is to "Historically, Sears was the Ath l etic apparel stores like mann, the mall's senior director have seen a surge in popularity evaluate the basic draws of the store (that) you could buy ab- Lululemon Athletica have of marketing. for photographers who docu- location. "People of all economic levsolutely everything," McAvey cornered the teen market, but Westfield Garden State Plaza menttheongoingdecay. said. "You can see byvari- weren'tpopularorinexistence generates a little under $1 bilA Cleveland-based photog- els are buying something," ous departments which ones fiveyearsago,sheadded. lion in sales annually, or about rapher using the pseudonym McAvey said. "It's just a matter expanded. That leaves malls weaker. $430per square foot. Seph Lawless depicts these of where."

Construction tors in

Ss

The t e e n market in bricka n d-mortar locations is declin-

I I

I

I

I

derestimated by its forecast

Meanwhile, the number of fo r j o b g rowth overall in workers available is climbing the construction industry in as word gets out that Bend has t h e p ast year. Construction



SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E5

PERsoNm FrN~cE Dealflicks

Berkeley, where he had just graduated with a degree in economics.

Continued from E1 "Right now, 88 percent of movie theaters are empty," said Sean Wycliffe, chief executive of Dealflicks. "We'll say, 'Give us some of your ex-

"It was a great movie, but

it was dead empty just a few t he T u r ner/Warner B r o s . days after the movie came Media Camp, an accelerator out," said Wycliffe. "I just had program for media start-ups, this idea. 'There should be a Priceline for movies.'"

cess inventory ... and we'll do

all the marketing for you.'" Dealflicks lets theater own-

fqgS

price and when. Unlike Price-

experience to pitch the idea to

line, there is no negotiation

theater owners. He partnered with Hong, a former stock

involved. Customers buy the tickets through Dealflicks' website or iPhone app. The company typically charges 10 percent to 20 percent of the

broker wh o

eration and hatched the man van idea as way to save mon-

ey. Kevin sold his Acura TSX

h a n dles busi- and bought his mom's Toyota

ness development. A third Sienna, removing the seats to co-founder, Zachary Cancio, make room for a mattress. is the chief technology officer Not only could they cut

ticket sales.

who runs the website.

Growth

Support

Since its launch nearly two

years ago, the company has 2,000 screens in California, New Jersey, New York, Con-

and Be Great Partners, a Los Angeles investor that leas-

Wycliffe, who had previ- es Dealfl icks office space on ously launched a business Wilshire Boulevard. selling cellphone services, The men didn't take a salfigured he could use his sales ary in their first year of op-

G dBcI|(If.

ers select which movies they w ish to d i scount, at w h a t

c ontracted with a b out 3 50 theaters that show films on

$50,000 in financing, while friends and family pitched in about $65,000. They also got help from

Mel Melcon / Los Angelese Times

Kevin Hong, right, snd Sean Wycliffe travel the country in their converted minivsn, setting up discounts and deals with them to lure customers into theaters. The guys who set up Dealflicks business discovered it wss more effective to connect personally with theater owners rather than making sales calls from their office, snd they found the minivsn wss cheaper than hotels and airfare.

down on ai rfare and hotel

expenses, but the van also e nables the sales team t o

D ealflicks l aunched i n July 2012 with backing from 500 Startups, a seed fund program created by former PayPal executiveDave McClure.500 Startups provided

personally connect with theaters, which the men discovered was far more effective

than making sales calls. "This is a relationship-driven business," Hong says.

necticut, Florida and Kansas.

Dealflicks recently signed up 65 theaters at the annual Cine maCon trade show in L a s

flicks then sends an email

eting is dominated by two

where big chains dominate. Local venues participating with Dealflicks include New Filmmakers, the Cinefamily, Arena Cinema in Hollywood, company that operates a Net- and Gardena Cinema. "When we first started a lot flix-type service that charges a flat monthly fee in exchange of people were reticent about for unlimited movie visits. it, but now we have a lot of case studies," Wycliffe said.

Vegas, offering cash prizesto theaters that sign contracts. Sales are projected to jump to more than $2 million this Special offers often are yearfrom $245,000 lastyear. combined with concessions. The company expects to be

For example, the MGN Five

profitable this year. Among Dealflicks' largest custom-

al other states.

Star Cinema in Glendale on Monday offered a small popcorn and admission to an Slow start afternoon screening of "SpiDealflicks has no t b e en der-Man 2" for $16.75, repre- immune to the challenges. It senting a 26 percent discount took 10 months for the comoffthe regular price. pany to sign up 100 theaters.

The buu

In theory, theaters stand to benefit from discounts if they

ers is Bow Tie Cinemas, the

nation's oldest theater chain w ith 377 s creens i n N e w York, Connecticut and sever-

i? VERWEI HT

c u stomers major players, Fandango and can take to the theater to re- M ovieTickets.com. A m o r e deem their ticket and/or con- direct rival to Dealflicks is cession items. MoviePass, a New York City voucher, w h ic h

"The more theaters we've

signed on, the more we've shown we can bring new customers in."

Wycliffe hatched the idea

Fewer than a dozen theaters

f or Dealflicks i n

Feet the Metabo(icDgierence! "I lost 30 pounds!" "Mywaistline was lost at age 65. Thanks to MRC, I sm happy to see my reflection again. I have more energy, more confidence and more FUN! The consultants went above snd beyond to make a difference for me. I feel like s sexy 40 year old again!" Metabolic Hormone Balancing Program

2 0 10 a f -

have signed up for the ser- ter watching "The King's "As c ustomers h a v e bring in more customers who vice in Southern California, Speech" at a movie theater in learned about it, they have buy lots of popcorn, soda and really embraced it," said Joe other high-profit concessions. "Right nOI/I/ 88 PerCent Of mOVie theaterS are M asher, chief operating officer for Bow Tie Cinemas. He Reluctance emPty...We'll Say, 'GiVeuS SOme Of yOur eXCeSS credits Dealflicks for helping Even so , s o m e e x h i biboost attendance at some the- tors have been reluctant to inventory...and we'll do all the marketing for aters by as much as 20 per- embrace discounting, fear- QOU. cent. "Those guys studied the i ng heavy m arketing of — Sean Wycliffe, chief executive of Deslflicks business and really under- low-priced tickets through stand how it works." discount services such as Customers go to the Deal- Groupon, LivingSocial and Urolo flicks website to browse a DailyCandy will erode their list of theaters and movies business by e n couraging < June15th,2014 with discounts. Once they se- moviegoers to wait for a barlect the movie and time they gain before trekking to the want, they log on to the web- multiplex.

Identifyimbalances and begin to increaseyour metabolism.

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COMPANY

TICKER

Nordstrom lnc Autodesk Inc Symantec Corp Expeditors Intl Netflix Inc Intuitive Surgical

FRIDAY C L OS E

% RTN 1YR COMPANY

GTIV UEC Provectus Biopharma PVC r Bluebird Bio Inc B LUE 2 2nd Century Grp XXI I C astlight Health Inc C SLT P ernix Therapeutics P T X Textura Corp T XTR

70. 55

9.08

14.S

16.0

ADSK

51. 6 7

4.82

10.3

6.6

21.3 Uranium Energy

S YMC

22. 4 4

1.65

79

8.4

-7.1

E XPD

46. 2 6

2.94

6 .S

15.6

20.5

NFLX

34 9 .8 8

21. 3 3

6.5

1.2

41.4

374. 0 9 24. 3 7 207 . 5 0 30.15 295 .4 3 11 4.4 8 70. 5 5 71. 4 1 191 . 56 85. 9 1

21. 0 3 1.35 11. 3 2 1.63 16. 0 2 6.01 3.56 3.44 9.30 3.96

6.0 5 .9 5 .S 5.7 5.7 5.5 5.3 5.1 5.1 4.S

-9.2

-24.8

ISRG cisco syst C SCO Actavis plc ACT Southern Copper SCCO Regeneron Pharm RE G N Keurig Green Mountn GMCR Monster Beverage MN S T Endo Intl plc E NDP T esla Motors lnc TSLA Wstn Digital W DC

5.0

17.3

5.1

65.9

1.0

-5.8 ohr pharmaceutical 0 H R p

-0.4

5.7 QiiickLogic Corp

16.4 4.4 24.7 - 3.3 - 5.6

QUIK

44.4 2U Inc TWOU 21.5 Rexahn Pharm RNN 113. 4 A ccelerate Diagnost A X D X 1 2 2 .3Lo Jack L OJN 45. 0 TearLab Corp T EAR

10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Chesapk Engy Prec Castparts

TICKER

2.1 G entiva HlthSvcs

J WN

FRIDAY C L OS E

INDEX

$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR

13.62 1.61 3.11 25. 1 8 3.00 15.6 0 6.33 19. 1 7

5.47 0.62 0.89 6.94 0.8 0 4.06

S Z1 62.S

40.1 3S.O 36.4 3 5. 2

1.55

32.4

4.57

31.3

8.88

2.01

29 .3

4.11

0.8 6

26.3

13 . 5 0

2.57

23.5

0.98

0.1 9

23.4

21. 2 5 5.40 4.80

4.00 0.98 0.83

23.2 22.2 20.9

76.3 54.8 0.0 27.2 8.7 -21.4 34.7 -6.2 -4.7 -19.2 3.4 -0.5 1 8.8 -1.1 3.7

10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

CHK

27.64

-2.17

-73

-1.9

42.0 D xp Enterprises Inc D x p E

P CP

240 . 2 1

-15.07

-5.9

- 6.6

14. 9 sorrento Therapeut s R N E

66.5 7 4.97 11.2 7

WEIGsT LOSS SPECIALISTS

6

Globalmarkets

15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS

$CHG %CHG %CHG 1WK 1WK 1MO

RESEARCH CENTER

* Resulh nol typicsl. OsMetaslim', most dienb canexpectto lose 1-2Ibs perweek.

Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS

Qmqyouc

541-225%918

-40.76

-ss.o -szs

36.9 -15.7

s&P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225

LAST FRI. CHs 1877.86 +7.01 9629.10 -26.95 6855.81 +1 4.92 22712.91 -f 7.95 4456.28 +11.35 14096.59 -201.62

FRI. CHs W K MO QTR Y T D +0.37% -0.28% +0.22% -P P8% +0.26% -1.41%

V L

L L

4 4

T V

V X V

7 j T

0.0 0.0 SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA 384.5 Aires M erval 6878.73 +94.99 +1.40% X X 0.0 Buenos Mexico City Bolsa 41898.84 +337.01 + 0 .81% L 4 88.6 Sao paolo Bovespa 53975.77 +120.22 + 0 .22% 4 4 0.0 -0.51% V 4 Toronto s&p/Tsx 14514.74 -74.15 8 7.8 /AFRICA 5 4.4 EUROPE 0.0 Amsterdam -P 17'/ 399.56 -0.69 -0.45% 3098.15 -1 3.85 2 27 . 1 Brussels f 071.33 +11.1 5 +1.05% 135. 9 Madrid Zurich 8683.62 +38.88 +0.45% 5 3.9 Milan 20648.59 +228.97 +f.f2% -53.5 Johannesburg 49159.77 -294.82 -0.60% -3.70 -0.27% Stockholm 1382.14

-38.5

6.7

-52.9

2.2

4 4 4 L

L

+ 1.60% + 0.81' / +1.58% -2.55% +3.73%

-13.47%

+27. 60% -1.94% +4.79 % +6.56%

-Q 56'/ +5 96'/ +5.86% +5.86% i16.56%

+6.28% +3.69%

ASIA

Seoul Composite 2013.44 +3.24 + 0 .16% +0.10% Singapore Straits Times 3262.59 -9.90 -0.30% +3.00% sonycorp sNE 16.38 -1.00 -5.s -12.5 -19.4 World Wrestling Ent W W E -5.99 -34.7 -47.8 1 22 . 8 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 4 58.90 -31.30 -0 57% +1.98% Aegon Nv AEG 8.44 -0.48 -5.4 - 4.3 36. 8 Enzymotec Ltd E NZY 12.9 0 -6.49 -33.5 -33.9 0.0 Taipei Taiex V 4 + 3.22 % 8888.45 +7 80 + 0 09% schwab corp S CHW 25 . 0 0 -1.36 -5.2 - 7.5 33. 0 Higher OneHldgs ONE 4.15 -2.00 -32.5 -29.9 -66.0 Shanghai Composite 2026.50 +1.53 + 0 .08% v v -4.23% H ilton Wwde Hldgs HL T 21.87 -1.20 -5.2 0.5 0.0 Kamada Ltd KMDA 9.08 -4.34 -32.3 -37.3 0.0 uota e Prudential Fncl P RU 79.6 0 -4.15 -5.0 - 1.6 20. 9 S mart Technologies S M T 2.67 -1.24 -31.7 -40.3 181 . 5 'VVe are in an unprecedented era of challenge at leadership levels." Lincoln Natl Corp LNC 47.25 -2.40 -4.S -1.7 34. 6 Glycouimetics Inc G LYC 6.48 -2.65 -29.0 -53.4 0.0 Incyte Corp I NGY 49.5 9 -2.49 - 4.s 11 . 3 113 . 8 H ydrogenics Corp HY G S 14.3 5 -5.30 -270 -28.9 6 6.5 — Mark Cohen,a former CEO of Sears Canada and a professor at Columbia University's Business School, commenting Brist Myr Sqb B MY 48.7 8 -2.40 -4.7 -1.4 13. 6 Insys Therapeutics IN S Y 23.8 5 -8.83 -270 -38.3 2 17 . 7 on the expanding range of skills CEOs are expected to master Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).

Bond UIQ

I s'd r Title:Chief Strategist for fixed income at Invesco Hls Inslght: Bond yields may offset any loss from rising prices in the mid term.

Rob Wsldner

Bonds have defied expectations this year. Many market watchers had expected prices to fall as the economy improved and investors shunned bonds in favor of stocks. Instead the opposite has happened and stocks have struggled to advance while bonds have gained. The rally in Treasury bonds is largely due to changing assumptions about the long-term growth prospects of theeconomy, says Rob Waldner, chief strategist for fixed income at Invesco. But even though bonds have already moved higher, there are still attractive opportunities in bonds and other fixed-income securities, he says. What's the primary factor behtnd

-3.02

the resurgence of the Treasury market? As this year has progressed, the market has started to realize that the declining labor force is indicating that the potential growth rate for the U.S. Is slower than we otherwise thought. What's become clear in the last six months is that the drop in the participa. tion rate is not temporary but is more permanent. So, it's driven by the baby boomers starting to retire, its driven by disability. There are fewer bodies in the labor force and the labor force is not growing as fast. Those two put together means that the Fed will raise rates sooner, but will get to a much lower Fed fund rate. Slower growth means lower interest rates. That's the primary factor we feel.

Can thts bond run continue? We think we will get higher yields in the coming year, as growth picks up again throughout the balance of the year, we're looking for 3 percent growth. If Interest rates are gotng to go up, why buy bonds? The question is will your capital losses from rising interest rates overwhelm your yield? We think, the answer is no, over the medium term. The man on the street has an assumption that rates will go back to where they were 20 years ago. The key point we are trying to make is that it's different going forward than it was in the '60s, '70s, '80s or '90s because the demographic situation

is completely different. Also, the longterm rate of growth trend is different and how far the Fed will have to hike rates to slow the economy, is different to what it was in previous decades. So where are the opportunities? We would highlight municipal bonds, bank loans and emerging market corporate debt as being areas of particular interest The fundamentals for the municipals markets are improving and as growth picks up, municipal finances and credit quality should improve. Bank loans will do well in a rising interest rate environment. Interviewed by Steve Rothwell. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, May 16, 2014

N ASDaa ~ 4,090.59

1 87 2

s&psos ~ 1,877.86

RUSSELL2000 ~ 1,102.91

4 31

WILSHIRE5000 ~ 19,863.96

3 25


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

UNDAY D

R

ience s 0 en ,an Ii By Dexter Ford New York Times News Service

LOS ANGELES — In ex-

plaining the new ELR plug-in hybrid, a Cadillac spokesman offered this rationale: "Mer-

cedes-Benz doesn't have anything like this." So true. As a corporate statement in the 21st century, the ELR makes a certain amount of sense. It's unique, beautiful,

efficient, serenely comfortable and electronically avant-garde. At $75,995 (the

REVIEW base price), or

CadillacEi.R Base price: $75,995 Astested: $82,132 Type:Electric hybrid coupe Engine:DOHC16-valve

kilowatt-hour lithium-ion bat-

der or vibrate. Two other interesting things occurred at

• F ocus. When m y car sits in the garage for a couple of days, some of the dash lights and dome lights will stay on

Ib-ft; AC permanent magnet synchronous electric drive motor, 181 hp*, 295 Ib-ft;

and there's a beep, even

combined power rating, 217 hp, 295 Ib-ft; 16.5kwh lithium-ion battery pack.

with no key in the ignition. I start the car, the beep stops and the dome

*157 hp in EV mode

light goes out but the dash lights stay on. The next day, everything is OK, then the cycle starts all over again. Any ideas'?

Mileage:Estimated at 34 mpg ci ty,38 mpghighway

A often are hard to pinpoint,

• Strange e l e c t rical • g remlins l i k e t h i s

with a standard 120-volt out-

Jordan Strauss IInvision for Cadillac via The Associated Press

For consumers looking to help the environment and their wallet, the Caddilac ELR might be a hard sell with such a hefty base price.

b ut in t hi s case I t h i nk

the ignition switch and/or lock cylinder are the likely suspects. My Alldata auto-

motive database pulled up quicker than an ELR. The ELR is not fast com-

and leg space, are best reserved for the young and the restless. The front-seat shoul-

pared with its gasoline-powered coupe competition. Or der belts are a significant obcompared with the similarly stacle to rear-seat access. priced all-electric Tesla Model Standard safety equipment S, which can accelerate to 60 includes frontal-collision and mph in less than 5 seconds. But lane-departure warning systhe ELR is sufficiently lively for tems. The Safety Alert Seat almost all real-world driving, vibrates through the left, right including an occasional uphill or forwardseatbolstersifyou pass. drift from your lane or come My test car's interior was up quickly behind another a rich combination of leath- car. It feels vaguely as if you're er, olive wood, carbon fiber running over Botts' dots — or On 240 volts, the Volt can and Alcantara. To exploit the as though you've found that be fully charged in four hours. silence of the electric power- long-lost cellphone.

tery, a primary electric-drive motor and a 1.4-liter gaso- The ELR t akes five hours, line-powered motor-generator. which means it is extracting In EV mode, the ELR sends 157 as much as 25 percent more horsepower to the front wheels, charge from the same battery. compared with 133 in the Volt. Could a current Volt produce In extended-rangemode, the an ELR level of power, and exgasoline motor-generator adds tract more charge — and thus 24more, for atotal of 181 horse- more range — from its existing power, versus the Volt's 151. battery? As far as I can tell, With a full battery charge, yes, it could. And because the the ELR has an EPA-estimat- Volt is more aerodynamic and ed driving range of 37 miles 274 pounds lighter, that hacked — roughly the average U.S. Volt would be considerably

neutral, the car will not shud-

(Minneapolisl Star Tribune

Q

1.4-liter inline-4, 86 hp, 94

sticker shock, but for the av- let, and about five hours at 240 erage green-car shopper, the volts. price is still quite a jolt. When the battery is disThe expense seems even charged,the gasoline engine higher when one realizes that fires up to keep the car humbeneath its lovely, high-cheek- ming. Car and Driver drove boned skin, sculpted under the the ELR from a standstill to 60 watchful eye of Bob Boniface, mph in 9 seconds in EV mode, Cadillac's exterior design di- clocked 8.1 seconds in gasorector, the ELR is a sister of the line-powered extended-range Chevrolet Volt. mode and reached a top speed If the Chevy Volt is a four- of 107 mph. wheel incarnation of, say, Ed To accomplish its 30-plusBegley Jr., think of the ELR as mile electric-only range — esan automotive George Clooney. sentially even with the lighter, The ELR's recalibrated elec- more slippery Volt — the ELR tronic control unit e x tracts software charges the battery to significantly more power from a higher state and allows it to its Volt-spec hardware: a 16.5 discharge more deeply.

By Paul Brand • I have a 2004 Ford

$82,135 as tested, it's also bracingly expensive. A $7,500 federal tax credit, state and local incentives and, for early buyers, a free 240-volt round-trip commute — i n charging system installed in all-electric mode. That charge their garages at Cadillac's ex- takes from 12.5 to 18 hours pense, will help to soothe the

Ford Focusimitates a haunted house

train, the ELR has hydraulic

The Cadillac ELR is an in-

suspension bushings, thick window glass and ample sound-damping i n sulation. Bose's active-noise-canceling technology helps to keep the cabin calm when the gasoline engine fires up, but the in-

triguing engineering effort and a striking piece of mod-

crease in ambient noise is still

pronounced. Front-seat room is ample,

but the cramped rear seats, with their limited headroom

ern automotive art. Whether it inspires buyers remains to

Ford bulletin No. 05-21-17 dated October 2005 that

outlines service procedures for replacing the ignition lock cylinder if the

the same time. The "check engine" light came on, and when I step on the brake both the

"Reverse" and "Drive" indicator lights are on. The car has no trouble shifting. My guess is that the torque converter is failing. Your thoughts?

A • were failing to disengage when the brakes are ap• If the torque converter

plied, you would experience a shuddering as the vehicle slowed to a stop. In fact, the engine would stall as you came to a complete stop, just as if you'd left a manual transmission vehicle in gear and braked to a stop. Since the shudder/vibration is occurring in a higher speed range, my first thought is that the transmission has failed to downshift as the car slows. Try driving with the trans-

mission's overdrive switch off to prevent the overdrive from

ignition chime beeps with the key removed. There's

engaging. Then try manually downshifting through also a t ro u b leshooting each gear, matching the gear guide for continuity test- to the road speed as the vehiing of the ignition switch cle slows. You could also try at

i ts

mu lt i - terminal downshifting to third or even

connector. second as you're experiencing I'd suggest locating, dis- the shudder in that 25-15 mph assembling and cleaning range. If any of these tests stop the multi-terminal switch the vibration, the problem is connector under the dash

to see if this restores proper switch function. If not,

it's probably time for a replacement.

I own a 1996 Toyo-

Q •• ta Camry V-6 with

most likely in the transmission itself.

Have a scan tool read the DTC fault code that triggered

the check engine light, but with 300,000 miles on the vehicle, the only transmission

300,000 miles.We have a

"repair" I'd suggest would be adding half a can of SeaFoam

who crave the eff iciency and

problem with the car vi-

T rans-Tune to th e

subtle environmental cachet of a long-range plug-in hybrid, and who are willing to pay far more than they would ever save in energy costs?

brating when I step on the

be seen. Is there a significant group of well -heeled drivers

f l ui d t o

clean any sticky solenoids or brake as the speed slows valves in the valve body. from 25 to 15 mph. The — Paul Brand is an automotive harder I brake, the worse the vibration. If I shift into

troubleshooter. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com.

lt's the spark of an idea. It's the ideas we shape together, the alliances we forge and the legacy we pass on. It's access to new markets while preserving quality of life. It's not just the place we live but the place we're all creating. And it's why we work to connect and cultivate the business community in Central Oregon. lN

hgt Wp Shcly p

bendbroadband" Business

Voice I Data I Video

bendbroadband.com/business I 541.312.6600


INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

SUNDAY READER

DAVID BROOKS

Climbing a stairway to wisdom

L

et's sayyou wanted to understand a social problem in depth.

Let's sayyou wantedto move from a dry, statistical understanding of a problem to a rich, humane one.

How wouldyou do it'? What steps would you take on your climb toward understanding? Well, obviously, first you'd start with the data. Let's say, for example, you were studying teenage pregnancy. You'd want to understand the basic facts and trends. You'd discover from

•a

a recent Brookings Institution report

that annual teenage childbearing rates have dedined by an astonishing 52 percent since 1991.

Nextyou'd want to get some grasp of the general causes for this phenomenon. At this stage, you would consult

the academic research. This research casts doubt on some

possible explanations for the amazing dedine. Teenage pregnancyrates are not fallingbecause abortion is on the

Tina Fineberg / New York Times News Servicev

rise. As far as we cantell, abortion rates are falling, too. Better sexual ed-

Tim Wu, the law professor who coined the term "net neutrality," diagrams the idea at Columbia University. Net neutrality holds that no providers of legal Internet content should face discrimination in providing offerings to consumers — end that users should have equal access to see any

ucation must have had some role, but that doesn't explainthe trend either.

legal content they choose. "It's got to beopen," he says, "... and people generally accept that."

Teen pregnancy is dedining just as much in states without comprehensive sexed, such as Texas, as it is in states

with it, such as New Jersey. This academic research offers a

look atgeneral tendencies within groups. The research helpsyou to make informed generalizations about

how categorie sofpeoplearebehaving. If youuse it correctly,you can even make snappy generalizations about dasses of people that are fun and useful up to a point. But this work is insufficient for

anyone seeking deep understanding. Unlike minnows, humanbeings don't exist just as members of groups. We all slip into the generalpatterns of psychology and sociology sometimes, but we aren't captured by them.

People live and get pregnant one by one, and each life and eachpregnancy has its own unlikely story. To move

the next rungup the ladder of understanding you have to dive into the tan-

gle of individual lives. You have to enter the realm of fiction, biography and journalism. My academic colleagues sometimes disparage journalhm, but, when done right, it offers ahigher form of knowing than social science research. By conducting sensitive interviews and by telling a specific story, the best journalism respects the infinite dignity of the individual and the unique blend of thoughts and feelings that go into that real, breathinglife.

But eventhis isn't the highest rung on the ladder of understanding. Stat-

isticians, academics and journalists all adopt a dispassionate pose. Academics rely on formal methodology and jargon. Journalists observe from behindthe wall of their notebooks. The highest rung on the stairway to understandingis intimacy. Ourmaster-teacher here is Augustine. As he aged, Augustine came to reject those

who thought they could understand othersfrom some detached objective stance. He came to believe that it takes

selfless love to trulyknow another person. Love is a form of knowing and being known. Affection motivates

you to want to see everything about another. Empathy opensyou upto absorb the good and the bad. Love im-

pels you not just to observe but to seek union — to think as another thinks

and feel asanotherfeels. There is a tendencynow, especially for those of us in the more affluent

classes, to want to use education to make life more predictable, to seek control as the essential good, to emphasize datathat masks the remorse-

less unpredictability of individual lives. But people engaged in direct contactwithproblems like teenage pregnancyarecured ofthoselinear illusions. Those of us who work with

data and for newspapers probably should be continually reminding ourselves to bow down before the

knowledge of participation, to defer to the highest form of understanding, which is held by those who walk alongside others every day, who know the firstnames, who knowthe smells and fears. — David Brooksis a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's columnwill return.

By Jeff Sommer e New York Times News Service he future of the Internet — which nior scholars, Wu developed a concept that means the future of communica- is now a generally accepted norm. Called tions, culture, free speech and in- "net neutrality," short for network neutrality, novation — is up for grabs. it is essentially this: The cable and telephone Commission is making decisions the plumbing of the Internet shouldn't rethat may determine how open the Internet strict how the rest of us use it.

telephone companies the right to charge content companies like Netflix, Google, Yahoo or Facebook for speeding up transmissions to people's homes. And this is happening as the FCC is considering whether to bless the merger of Comcast and Time Warner Cable, which could put a single company in control

will be, who will profit most from it and

of the Internet pipes into 40 percent of U.S.

The Federal Communications

companies that control important parts of Most everyone embraces net neutrality,

whether startups will face new barriers that yet the debate over how to accomplish it is so will make it harder for ideas to flourish. volatile that more than I million signatures Tim Wu, 41, a law professor at Columbia have been filed protesting FCC regulations University, isn't a direct participant in the that haven't even been implemented yet. rule making, but he is influencing it. A dozen What makes the current debate so conyears ago, building on the work of more se- tentious is that the FCC may grant cable and

The FCC andthe openInternet

homes. In other words, these arcane matters of

engineering and jurisprudence stir people up because they appear to violate net neutrality. See Neutrality/F6

Now,adecadelongdedatecomestoahead

This treatise comesdirectly from the Federal Communications ComThe idea that all Internet content should betreated equally as it flows mission's webpage on"net neutrality": from content providers to consumersand back, known as"net neutrality," has beendebatedfor at least a decade. During this time, a federal "One of the most important features of the Internet is its openness: appeals court has twice thrown out FCC attempts to codify permissible It uses free, publicly available standards that anyonecanaccess and behavior amongcompanies that provide high-speed Internet serbuild to, and it treats all traffic that flows across the network in vice. The practical effect of thesecourt rulings is that the FCC roughly the sameway. This design hasmade it possible essentially is forced to proposenewrules — onesthat for anyone, anywhere to easily launch innovative applimay allow companies like Disney,Google or Netflix to cations and services, revolutionizing the waypeople pay Internet service providers like ComcastandVericommunicate, participate, create, and dobusiness zon for special, faster lanes to sendvideo and other — think of email, blogs, streaming video, andoncontent to their customers. line shopping. TheFCCis focused on ensuring that In effect, the principle that all Internet content everyAmericanhasaccesstoopenand robust should be treated equally as it flows through cables high-speed Internet service — also knownas and pipes to consumers looks all but dead. broadband." Ist ~~~ Y( / i t THE LATESTPROPOSAL WHAT ISTHE 'OPEN INTERNET'? Last month, TomWheeler, the FCCchairman and "The 'Open Internet' is the Internet as weknow it, a P'1/'1 ' a Democratic member,saidhe would aim to geta level playing field where consumers canmaketheir new set of proposed "open Internet" rules before the own choices about what applications and services commission met again this month. Since then, tensof to use, and whereconsumers are free to decide what thousands of individuals, companies, interest groups and content they want to access, create, or share with others. others havevisited with or written to the FCCabout the topic, The FCC seeks to ensure that the Internet remains a powerful with most of them opposing anysort of paid access that might platform for innovation and job creation; to empower consumcause someInternet content to be favored over others. ers and entrepreneurs; to protect free expression; to promote competition; to increase certainty in the marketplace by providing AFTERTHEBACKLASH greater predictability for all stakeholders regarding federal policy in Wheeler decided last week to broadenthe scope of proposed open Inthis area; and to spur investment both at the 'edge,' and in the coreof temet rules, suggesting tougher standards for ISPsthat wish to create our broadband networks." paid priority fast lanes ontheir networks. On Thursday, theFCCvoted to invite public comment, for four WHAT IS 'NETNEUTRALITY'? months, on aset of proposed rules aimed at prohibiting high-speed "Network, or 'net,' neutrality is just another way of referring to Open ISPs from blocking or discriminating against legal content — but the Internet principles." proposal allows ISPs to provide faster service to acompany that pays to get its content to consumers in anunimpeded manner, aslong as DOES THEFCC REGUULTE INTERNET CONTENTORAPPUCATIONS? an ISP doesnot slow down the service that a consumer paysfor. "No, the FCC does not regulate Internet content or applications. Tothe Wheeler has said hehopes to complete final rules by the end of the contrary, the FCC seeks to develop and implement high-level, flexible year. Eventhen, the issue will probably be challenged in court. Any rules of the road for broadband to ensure that no one —not the govnew rules that impose restrictions on ISPsareall but certain to attract ernment and not the companies that provide broadbandservicelegal challenges. Most of the debateduring the coming months is can restrict innovation on the Internet." likely to focus on acouple of fundamental questions: Is high-speed InNEW PROPOSAL ternet service similar to a utility company's transporting water or elec"The FCCis currently considering a proposal for rules for the OpenIntricity, and therefore subject to heavy regulation? Or is broadbandserternet that would establish that behavior harmful to consumers or comvice so integral to what makesthe Internet thrive that regulation would petition by limiting the openness of the Internet will not be permitted." destroy the incentive for companies to create new technologies?

/i'

Source: fcc.gov

Sources: News reports, The New York Times, The Associated Press


F2 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

e s owar e er a mo e or oca eac ers

4%%,$655qiyII6 cyj~4~ r gea«

NE Q.NILEINAM Al lHE. OTNE'R IKELE4ON%R4 lFYOV COVLD

CSaN IIIIoRSqU<'ETLY'?

he Bend-La Pine school district is working on altering long-standing methods of setting teacher pay. The first changes may be tiny, but they are firmly in the

gS|I'~ •

right direction. Traditionally, teachers get socalled step increases each year until they reach a maximum. It's a utomatic, based only on t i me and university credits. A teacher gets a raise even if he or she gets an unsatisfactory performance evaluation. Bend-La Pine is still ironing out some details, but administration and unionhave agreed to a five-year pilot program in which the newest teachers would need to satisfy a list of requirements to earn step pay hikes. An added incentive would allow them to move to the fifth-year level in four years by completing the requirements faster. For example,step one requires the teacher to c omplete "safe schools training," i nitial d i g ital training, a first-year mentor program, "school improvement Wednesday t r aining," l i c ense and endorsement requirements, participation in a school or department team, professional goal setting and review, and a satisfactory performance evaluation. Many of these actions are already part of a teacher's routine, but not linked to raises. The current pilot plan affects only teachers in th e f i rst f i ve years,called "early career professionals." Some will have a choice about whether to join the pilot.

Further negotiation is planned to seek agreement for a similar program for"professional educators" teaching for up to 20 years, a nd "master educators" in t h e following six years. One possible change would beto require master educators to earn certification from the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards. Direct measures of s tudent performance are not part of the plan, but the district says the new requirements are correlated with student achievement. Student test scores are used as one element in teacher evaluations, which are themselves only one element in this program. Teachers nationwide have resisted linking pay to student test scores, and the concept of pay for performance is highly controversial. Bend-La Pine is participating in a grant-financed study examining the effects of merit pay, and educators are still struggling to find a way to use student performance to reward teacher performance. While those efforts continue, it's heartening to see Bend-La Pine start the move away from rewarding teachers just for showing up. These are baby steps, but they do represent a breakthrough toward linking pay and accountability.

Bulletin endorsements Below are The Bulletin's endorsements for this week's primary election. The editorial board interviews candidates only in contested races. Ballots must be returned to county clerks' offices by 8 p.m. 'Ibesday. To read the endorsements, please go to www.bendbulletin.com/endorsements. FEDERAL

Senate • Democratic nomination: Jeff Merkley • Republican nomination: Jason

Conger

nis Richardson House District 59 • Republican nomination: John Huffman

DESCHUTESCOUNTY • Circuit Court judge: Randy Miller • County commissioner, seat 1: Tony DeBone • Di s trict a t t orney: Patrick Flaherty • Bend firelevy,M easures 9-97 and 9-98: Yes

CROOKCOUNTY

• County commissioner, posiHouse District 2 tion 2: Seth Crawford • Democratic nomination: Aelea • Making commissioner officers Christofferson nonpartisan, Measure 7-62: Yes • Republican nomination: Greg JEFFERSON COUNTY Walden • County commissioner, posiSTATE tion I: Tom Brown Governor • County commissioner, posi• Democratic nomination: John tion 2: Mike Ahern Kitzhaber • Lake Chinook Fire and Res• Republican nomination: Den- cue District bond: Yes

< m g - =m A Q~»

gk~ g & hro~.w 6'l(T.ItII TRIIINSQNNt ~ y

M 1Vickel's Worth Vote for Flaherty

resolution to our dispute and not let our emotions dictate demands

that had no chance of being met by Oregon law. My wife and I were imtake over the Juniper Utility wapressed with his knowledge of civil ter company to city control which law, numerous aspects of which we resulted in a lawsuit and the city were ignorant, and his ability to paying Jan Ward $9.6 million in a communicate it to us in language settlement and an outlay of an ad- we could readily understand. He ditional $5 million to $7 million of clearly outlined the scenarios we taxpayers' funds to upgrade the were likely to face, articulated our system. He voted to hire a consul- options and their likely costs, and tant to develop Juniper Ridge, and gave us prudent guidelines for dethen the city had to pay the consul- ciding our course of action. His pertant $2.5 million to get out of the sonal conduct was at all times procontract. He voted to buy the inad- fessional, ethical and personable. equate old Bulletin property for a My wife and I earnestly believe new city hall location, which will Miller demonstrated knowledge cost the city $2 million to get rid of. and social skills we think a judge He voted to buy six used buses for should possess. Were I to come a city transit system for $220,000 before the 11th District's Circuit against a city mechanic's inspec- Court either as a plaintiff or defention and report they were junk. His dant, I would very much like to see experience in practicing law has a person of Miller's personal integbeen mainly as a defense attorney, rity and legal caliber sitting on the not a prosecuting attorney. Bend bench. I strongly urge you to vote deserves an experienced district for Miller. attorney, not a politician. Vote for Doug Barofsky As a member of the Bend City

Council, John Hummel voted to

tion is proposing to eliminate help oil and gas companies create new jobs and remain competitive in the worldwide marketplace. Many Oregon consumers depend on energy production and stable energy prices for their livelihood. Increased energy prices would ripple through our economy and have an adverseimpact on consumers as well as stifle the slow economic growth that we have seen in recent years.

I hope that Oregon's representatives in Congress will consider the negative effect of an oil and gas increase on the constituents.

Keith Rockow Redmond

Homes to be proud of Cookie Cutter Homes: Say what

you want about cookie cutter homes, but for my money I would prefer to

p u r chase one i n stead

of renting. Everyone said when Hayden Homes first came to town Patrick Flaherty. Bend over 20 years ago, the houses William Anderson would not last and no one would Bend Keep gas prices in check buy them. Looks to me like they are still standing and holding their Gas prices are on the rise here value. A home is what you make it. in Oregon, which is yet another re- Most people in Redmond are not in I am writing in support of Ran- minder that we typically pay more the Bend income bracketand need dy Miller for judge of the 11th Dis- for gas than most other states. So something that they can be proud trict's Circuit Court. My wife and I'm concerned that the administraof and afford to live in, renter or I retained Miller two years ago to tion is proposing to make gas pric- owner. Invest in a home; you can represent us in a quarrel with one es even higher. never go wrong. of our neighbors over the boundary In his fiscal year 2015 budget, Martha Lewis

Support Miller for judge

between our two properties. Mill-

P resident Obama

p r o posed t o

He counseled us to seek a realistic

tax credits that th e administra-

er's representation led to a fair and eliminate tax incentives available equitable resolution of that matter. to the U.S. oil and gas sector. The

Redmond

See more My Nickel's Worth letters on Page F3

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

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

The DA'so ice runse ectivelyun er Flaherty By David V. Pierce n 2013 I was subpoenaed for grand jury duty in Deschutes County. I was selected as a grand juror and told I would be serving for a month. I

t

thought I knew what to expect.

had also witnessed firsthand what happens to an organization when the person responsible is not given the opportunity or authority to make the necessary changes for an organization to progress and improve. After spending some time inside

After reading many of the numerous articles related to the legal com- the district attorney's office, my opinplaints, settlements and investiga- ion changed. tions that involved Deschutes County What I observed in that four weeks District Attorney Patrick Flaherty, I was anything but dysfunctional. Flahad developeda preconceived notion herty provided a discussion on the that the Deschutes County district roles of the grand jury and his expecattorney's office was probably a dys- tations, and then left us in the capafunctional organization, not working ble hands of his trial assistants and together as a team, run by a tyrant, deputy district attorneys. He checked with disgruntled employees working in now and then, and presented one in what we called a "chilled" working case to the grand jury but generally environment in my line of work. left the deputy district attorneys to I developed this notion even though do their jobs. There was no grumI had worked for several years as a bling or complaining by members of consulting engineer in at-will rela- Flaherty's organization even though tionships with consulting firms, and the felony case load presented to the

IN MY VIEW members of the grand jury was extremely high. In fact, I was impressed with the camaraderie and effective teamwork. The trial assistants did

Deputy district attorneys were professional, knowledgeable andalso respectful.... What I observed is the result of good leadership and organization.

an amazing job of coordinating the schedulingofthe cases,appearances served is the result of good leadership of victims, witnesses and members of and organization. local law enforcement to support the As I m entioned previously, the deputy district attorneys. It was also felony case load handled by Flaclear that there was a good working herty's staff seemed very high. I

other duties carried out by the county prosecutor's office that I did not have the opportunity to observe, but I

believe that if they are carried out in a similar fashion as those activities I relationship and mutual respect be- later learned that Flaherty's deputy observed, I believe a good choice was tween Flaherty's subordinates and district attorneys presented over 100 made by electing Flaherty in 2010. those members of local law enforce- casestothegrand jury teams during What I observed is the result of good ment who participated in the grand the four weeks that I served. I recent- leadership and organization. Not jury process. And most important, ly learned that this felony case load many citizens have the opportunity to the deputy district attorneys were is the norm and not the exception. see the internal operations of the disprofessional, knowledgeable and In the first four months of 2014, the trict attorney's office for four weeks, also respectful of those of us who number of felony cases presented to but I did. Flaherty will most certainly servedon the grand jury as wellas the grand jury averaged over 115 per get my vote for re-election as the Dethe other individuals who appeared month. schutes County district attorney. before the grand jury. What I obThere areobviously many, many — David V. Aerce lives in La Pine.


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

M Nickel's Worth Support Miller in election

ensuring justice in our community. He is an outstanding attorney with I am writing to express my strong vast experience in a wide range of support for Randy Miller as Circuit practice areas, including criminal Court judge. I am a 25-year Oregon law, family law, business law and lawyer who has worked extensively intellectual property. Additionally, with Miller over the course of the over the past seven years, Spear has last 10 years. Miller is a talented and gained himself an impressive repdedicated lawyer who works very utation as Deschutes County judge hard for our community. He has the pro tem. Spear is always respectful, strong legal skills and experience in efficient and very well-versed on

ment managers in La Pine and Sis- watchevery Congressional votecast ters; dedicating funds for a traffic in D.C.): As a conservative legislator light at U.S. Highway 97 and First Walden receives an "F" grade. Street which starts construction late So what does this mean'? Accord2014. ing to his full voting record, Walden

the courtroom that make him well

the issues. These attributes demon-

suited for the position of judge. In addition to these skills, Miller is fair

strate the high-quality judge he will

for use by La Pine Rodeo and Fron- Walden. Don't be fooled by fancy direct tier Days, and 750 acres to the city of

be for Deschutes County Circuit Court.

La Pine for wastewater treatment. I have known the DeBone family

m ail pieces that tell only part of

small tax rate for the La Pine Park & Recreation District, I observed

principle, the

and open-minded with the patience

and compassion that are critical to this important position. Please support Miller in the upcoming election. Thank you. Myles Conway Bend

Vote Spear for judge Let me see if I got this right: The

Bulletin endorsed Patrick Flaherty over John Hummel because even

though Hummel hasa more congenial personality, Flaherty has far more experience. However, The Bul-

Spear believes in public service and giving back to the community. He has volunteered his time to

DeBone worked on the La Pine

Walden is the real career politician.

By Frank BrunI

And as we all know, career politi-

New York Times News Service

acres to La Pine Park & Recreation

those with 30 years in politics like

the story. Do the right thing. Vote for 10 years. As he strived to pass a D ennis Linthicum — the man of

tion. He was a commissioned offi-

has a positive belief and attitude that

cer in the U.S. Navy aboard a fast attack nuclear submarine. And

working together, we can get things done; he is not swayed by negativity!

here in Deschutes County, Spear

The tax rate passed by a vote of the citizens.

them all the way to the state finals in Portland! I can honestly say that Spear is one of the most ethical, committed

La pine

Support Perkins for U.S. Senate

more experience because Miller is

19 years of experience conducting over 200 trials, make Spear the best Until last week, I thought there candidate for judge in Deschutes were only two Republican candiCounty. dates in the race for U.S. Senate in MIchelle Mclver Oregon. I was surprised and encourBend aged todiscover three more candi-

electing the judge who will be ruling on the cases the DA brings to trial. I think I'll be voting for Spear. Kate Bailey Bend

Miller will make

Those qualities, combined with his

Miller stays firm

under pressure

Although the two candidates for

Miller and I volunteered for the out-

cellent) — for Eric Holder, U.S. attor-

health care industry. She wants to

Klamath Falls

Flaherty excels as DA As a f ormer prosecutor myself

torney with Patrick Flaherty. In the

past four years, Flaherty has done a marvelous job in reorganizing the district attorney's office into a professional, well-run law firm whose

sole job is to fairly and firmly enforce those laws here in Deschutes County that protect all of us.

Hummel'scandidacy

troubling

fit together, withstood the grueling ney general. Several in attendance, abolish the income tax because no As a f o rmer D eschutes Countraining and elimination process including a recent writer to My one should be penalized for earning ty Sheriff's detective, I find myself when most did not, and received

Nickel's Worth, observed a critical

money. She believes that our lands

deeply troubled at the prospect of

our coveted Gold Wings during the same ceremony. Miller and I trained, deployed, jumped out of planes, traversed jungles and deserts and lived together. I know Miller extremely well — in a way very few ever wilL Miller is tough but fair. His character and integrity are solid. Miller's

difference in their responses. Both candidates articulated that they are legally bound to abstain from giving any semblance of endorsement to a public figure. However, when

should be returned to state control,

John Hummel becoming the district attorney. Hummel's lack of prosecu-

because the Constitution does not

give the federal government the right to take our forests away from

faith and care for his country, team-

us. Don't let the media convince you the audience questioner insisted on an answer, Spear relented and gave that a candidate doesn't matter withHolder a two, seemingly an attempt out big fundraising. Money doesn't to please the conservative-leaning decide elections; we do. Vote Perkins

mates, his loving wife and family

audience. Miller held firm and re-

are paramount in his life. Miller is

iterated the legal boundary that he would not violate. He demonstrated

torial experience and inconsistent

statements during the campaign are very disturbing.

t

putes may just have to wait." In my

ceed Judge Barbara Haslinger

view this prediction will occur unless

as Deschutes County Circuit Court

Spear is elected, as he will be able to step immediately into the courtroom to assist his colleagues in working to clear our crowded docket. I have been a trial lawyer for the past 38 years and practice primarily in the area of familylaw. As such, I have seen the terrible stress and damage done to children and families arising from protractedchild custody cases arising from our lack of available judges. The rights of individuals accused of crimes are severely impacted by the delays in getting their cases to trial as well. I believe Spear brings a substantial amount of civil and criminal law experience to the bench, most of which

judge. Without question, he is the onlycandidatewho hasthenecessary combination of legal knowledge, competence and trial experience essential for judicial office. What most citizens do not know is that there are over

20,000 court filings each year in Deschutes County, with only seven Circuit Court judges available to resolve

these disputes. Until the Oregon Legislature provides adequate funding for our judiciary, our sitting Circuit Court

judges will be tasked with attempting to deal with an unmanageable case-

10 percent of all sales of "The Fault

in Our Stars," a teenage love story to be released as a movie next

month. Never have I spent money with fewer regrets, because I believe in reading — not just in its power to transport but in its power to transform. So I was crestfallen Monday,

when a new report by Common Sense Media came out. It showed that 30years ago, only 8 percent of 13-yearolds and 9 percent of 17-year-olds said that they "hardly ever" or never read for pleasure.

Today, 22 percent of 13-year-olds and 27 percent of 17-year-olds say that. Fewer than 20 percent of

17-year-olds now read for pleasure "almost every day." Back in 1984, 31 percentdid.What a marked and

depressing change. I'm convinced that reading does things — to the brain, heart and spirit — that movies, television, vid-

eo games and the rest of it cannot. There's research on this, and

it's cited in a recent article in The Guardian by Dan Hurley, who wrote that after "three years inter-

During the Bend debate he said, "I

ligence have a relationship so close

Deschutes County has had a tradition of distinguished

judges, all of whom have had extensive trial experience prior to assuming the bench..... Spear has that experienceas is obvious by the overwhelming support he received from Deschutes County lawyers. up to speed in sufficient time to assist County has had a tradition of disour current Circuit Court judges. Mis- tinguished judges, all of whom have takes made dueto inexperience have had extensive trial experience prior tremendous impact on important indi- to assuming the bench. Our three vidual rights and can result in lengthy most recent judges had the experiand expensive appeals. ence and education to enable them Spear has already gained substan- to literally assume the bench and try

tem Circuit Court judge, which, in my load in the efforts to prove justice to view, confirms that he has the respect our community. of our current judges as is evident by In my view, The Bulletin's endorse- occurred in trials to the court or jury. his appointment to serve as a pro tem ment of Randy Miller was improv- In my view, many lawyers are not in- judge sevenyears ago. I am one of 139 idently granted and is inconsistent terested or suited for trial work, and Deschutes County lawyers who supwith the editor's acknowledgment instead focus on building a career in ported Spear in the recent Oregon Bar that if we donothave a dearwinnerin officepractice. They consequentl y Preference Poll. I believe Spear's 2-1 the Mayelection, "justice in Deschutes have had little, if any, experience that margin over Miller speaks volumes County will be slowed; families will is transferable to the courtroom. Cer- as tothe competence and experience not get resolution in divorce or custo- tainly a lawyer with no experience we, as trial lawyers, need to assure dy matters; criminal cases will take whatsoever in criminal trials or fam- that our clients' interests will be proplonger to dissolve; and business dis- ily law hearings will be unable to get erly and fairly adjudicated. Deschutes

has pulled off. But about books, I'm steady. Relentless. I'm incessantly asking my nephews and nieces what they're reading and why they're not reading more. I'm reliably hurling novels at them, and also at friends' kids. I may well be responsible for

scientists around the world," he'd concluded that "reading and intel-

for U.S. Senate because values mat- have never been a prosecutor." ter. Check PerkinsforUSSenate.com Equally alarming is Hummel's

tial courtroom experience as a pro

even Meryl, with all of her accents,

viewing psychologists and neuro-

Spear is est c oice or Circuit Court the only intelligent choice to suc-

She played Toto, a feat of trans-species transmogrification that not

The Source that " ... as a prosecutor I loved standing up for public safety."

for judge

IN MY VIEW

about too many things Birthdays, for example. M y nephew Mark had one recently, and I didn't remember — and send a text — until 10 p.m., by which point he was asleep. School productions, too. I saw my niece Bella in "Seussical: The

For example, Hummel first told

unfailingly dependable, intelligent, for more. trivialization of th e m ost serious possesses excellent judgment under intelligence, integrity and firmness Tasha Conner violent crimes. While discussing pressure, has tremendous work eth- in holding his position — the correct Roseburg Measure ll at the Redmond debate ic, leadership and a compassionate position. he said, "I have a place in my heart heart. I know Miller is at his best This truly was one of those un- Linthicum is the real for a 15-, 16- or 17-year-old kid who when serving others. Miller honor- scripted moments when we w ere conservative makes a mistake, a silly mistake, a ably served our country in combat fortunate to get a glimpse into what mistake that, but for the grace of as a United States Marine and your makes these individuals tick. MillRecently the Greg Walden cam- God, many ofus would have gone community as a police officer. And er's energy and presence of mind paign sent out a direct mail piece away for a long time." as Miller's former recon teammate, in decisi on-making under pressure that claims Walden is the real conI have investigated many MeaI can tell you The Bulletin nailed won the day and should propel him servative in t h e C o ngressional sure 11 crimes — including armed their endorsement describing him as to victory in this election. His perfor- race against Dennis Linthicum. robberies, aggravated assaults, "a man who does everything at full mance during that exchange left us Walden's claims are based on his rapes and murders.I have yet to see throttle, but thoughtfully." with the clear impression of superi- votes to cut spending, support for a one that approaches being a "silly Most people, and certainly those ority in judicial temperament and balanced budgetamendment and mistake." who served as we did, understand action. It foreshadowed his perfor- for providing disaster assistance I wonder what Hummel would do that such things are the difference mance as a judge. to farmersand ranchers.This sup- with cases like the Barbara Thomas between status quo and exceptional Dan and Pat Cooke posedly makes Walden the real aggravatedmurder, a case Iassisted performance. Because Miller is all of Bend conservative. investigating in 2001. After Thomas' those things, he will make an excepThere'sonly oneproblem. Walden son, 18, and his four teenage friends tional judge. I encourage you to vote DeBone is invaluable is only telling part of the story. As trashed her home, they discussed for Miller for Circuit Court judge. voters we deserve the full story, not methods for killing her, beat her Shane Terri! I When Tony DeBone was elected just the part that may make Walden with champagne bottles and shot Springfield, Mo. Deschutes County commissioner, he look good. her in the head. The Thomas murder was new to politics but not to comThere a r e fo u r co n s ervative was not a silly mistake; it was a premunity development. As he learned watchdog groups that track ev- meditated, brutal crime. Spearisbestcandidate the ropes in this new arena,he con- ery Congressional vote. Freedom Hummel's equivocation, lack of tinued working with groups he'd Works, Club for Growth, Madison experience and opposition to MeaBeing a Circuit Court judge re- been involved with in La Pine. Project and Heritage Action com- sure 11 make him unqualified to be quires an advanced understanding D eBone wa s i n s trumental i n : bine to give Walden a failing grade district attorney. of the law combined with a deep working toward a Goal 11 exception for his votes in Congress. Walden I strongly urge you to vote for Patcompassion for people in difficult as an option for sewers in southern only sounds conservative when he rick Flaherty for Deschutes County situations. Thomas "T.J." Spear has Deschutes County; the Local Rule talks to us, sends us slick direct mail district attorney. those qualities and has demonstrat- repealed two months after he took pieces and needs our votes. But the Tim Hernandez ed his long-standing commitment to office; dedicated economic develop- record is clear (by the experts who Grande Ronde

By Jon W.Hayner n my view, Thomas "T.J." Spear is

A

s an uncle, I'm inconsistent

Musical" but missed "The Wiz."

E. Werner Reschke

Flaherty's opponent has absolutely no experience in criminal prosedates, including Jo Rae Perkins. I cution and is uniquely unqualified encourage all conservative Republi- for this very important job. cans to vote Perkins for U.S. Senate. Thanks to Flaherty we finally She believes in small government, have a well-run nonpartisan district defending our borders, balancing attorney's office second to none. I the budget, reading every bill before encourage you to retain Flaherty as voting on it, supporting our military our district attorney. and veterans, and defending the Martin E. Hansen constitution, including the Second Bend

Deschutes County Circuit Court judge share some important reI've been a p olice officer in quirements, there was a "telling" Springfield, Mo., for about 15 years. interaction during an exchange in I'm Randy Miller's friend and for- Redmond a few weeks ago. They Amendment. She wants to repeal mer Marine Corps SpecialOper- were asked to give a job perfor- Obamacare because the federal ations reconnaissance teammate. mance rating — one (poor) to 10 (ex- government has no business in the

exceptionaljudge

r ea l c o nstitutional

conservative.

DeBone is invaluable to all of De- and practicing attorney for over 35 schutes County. We need him to con- years, I can say that the voters were tinue to work for us. absolutely right four years ago when Sunny St. ClaIre they replaced the past district at-

and compassionate people I know.

electing a district attorney but not in

cians will say whatever they need to in order to win elections, especially

help ourcommunity and our na- what I think is his best quality. He

routinely serves as a mentor to new attorneys, and coached the Summit High School mock trial team, taking

Kids, pick up a book and read

land transfer legislation for eight years. He worked closely with Sen. Ron Wyden and Rep. Greg Walden to see it through to completion: 150

letin endorsed Randy Miller over Thomas "T.J." Spear who has far enthusiastic and energetic. So apparently experience is important in

is not the real conservative. Instead,

F3

as to be symbiotic."

In terms of smarts and success, is reading causative or merely correlated? Which comes first, "The

Hardy Boys" or the hardy mind? That's difficult to unravel, but several studies have suggested that

people who read fiction, reveling in its analysis of character and motivation, are more adept at reading

people, too: at sizing up the social whirl around them. They're more empathetic.God knows we need that.

Late last year, neuroscientists at Emory University reported en-

hanced neural activity in people who'd been given a regular course of daily reading, which seemed to jog the brain: to raise its game, if youwill. Some experts have doubts about

that experiment's methodology, but I'm struck by how its findings track something my friends and I often discuss. If we spend our last hours or minutes of the night reading rather than watching television, we wake the next morning with

thoughts less jumbled, moods less jangled. Reading has bequeathed what meditation promises. It has smoothed and focused us.

Maybe that's about the quiet of reading, the pace of it. At Success Academy Charter Schools in New

York City, whose students significantly outperform mostpeers statewide, the youngest kids all learn and play chess, in part because it hones "the ability to focus and concentrate," said Sean O'Hanlon, who

supervisesthe program. Doesn't reading do the same? Daniel Willingham, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia, framed it as a potentially crucial corrective to the rapid

metabolism and sensory overload of digital technology. He told me that it can demonstrate to kids that

there's payoff in "doing something taxing, in delayed gratification." A new book of his, "Raising Kids Who Read," will be published later this year. Before talking with him, I arranged a conference call with David Levithan and Amanda Maciel. Both have written fiction in the

young adult genre, whose current robustness is cause to rejoice, and they rightly noted that the intensi-

cases the day after they were sworn

ty of the connection that a person

in.Spear hasthatexperience asisobvious by the overwhelming support he received from Deschutes County lawyers. I encourage all voters to

feels to a favorite novel, with which

give significant consideration to the

Books are personal, passionate. They stir emotions and spark

preference of local trial lawyers who are most qualified to assess the candidates' qualifications. Spear is the right choice to succeed Haslinger following her decadesofdistinguished service. Please join us in electing Spear for Deschutes County judge. — Jon Hayner lives in Bend

he or she spends eight or 10 or 20 hours,is unlike any response to a movie. thoughts in a manner all their own, and I'm convinced that the shat-

teredworld haslesshopeforrepair if reading becomes an ever smaller part of it. — Frank Bruni is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

Zambia is a rich

EDWARD SNOWDEN

backdrop for novel

"No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA, and the U.S. Surveillance State" by Glenn Greenwald (MetropolitanBooks, 259 pgs, $27)

"The Garden of Burning Sand" by Corban Addison

(Quercus,398 pgs., $26.95)

BEST-SELLERS

n insi e oo a

ea s

e

he contends that this process allows the "government to control disclosures and minimize, even neuter, their impact."

In one passage, Greenwald

By Michiko Kakutani

m akes the demonstrably false assertion that one "unwritten

New York Times News Service

rule designed to protect the

The title of the journalist

government is that media out-

Glenn G reenwald's i m pas-

lets publish only a few such secretdocuments, and then

sioned new book, "No Place to Hide," comes from a chilling

stop," that "they would report

observation made in 1975 by

By Amanda St. Amand From the opening scene of ayoung girlinperiltothe rich conclusion of whether

Sen. Frank Church, then chairman of a select committee on intelligence. The U.S. governThe Associated Pressfile photo ment, he said, had perfected "No Place to Hide: Edward Snowden, the NSA and the U.S. Surveil"a technological capability lance State" tells the story of the former NSA contractor, seen here

justice is served, "The Gar-

that enables us to monitor the

den of Burning Sand" gives readers a glimpse inside

messages that go through the air." That capability, he added,

the government and crim-

could at any time "be turned

inal system of Zambiaand it may make us appre-

around on the American peo- of the world's Internet traffic ple, and no American would at some point flows through have any privacy left, such is the U.S. communications inthe capability to monitor ev- frastructure — a residual byerything:telephone conversa- product of the central role that

St. Louis Post-Dispatch

ciate the American system

a bit more. A ft e r a uth o r i ties in the

'bo. ,' '

city of Lus aka a r e told that a

girl with D o w n

syndrome

tions, telegrams, it doesn't mat-

in 2013, who leaked documents revealing the broad reach of the NSA's surveillance programs.

on an archive like Snowden's so as to limit its impactpublish a handful of stories, revel in the accolades of a 'big scoop,' collect prizes, and then walk away, ensuring that

nothing had really changed." Many establishment media outlets obviously continue to

pursue the Snowden story. just how invasive U.S. surveil- Further, many of Greenwald's lance capabilities had become. gross generalizations about I realized the true breadth the establishment media do a of this system. And almost terrible disservice to the many nobody knew it was tenacious investigative reporthappening." ers who have broken importSubstantial sec- ant stories on some of the very CE t i ons of this book subjects like the war on terror deal not with Green- and executive power that Grewald's relationship enwald feels so strongly about.

the United States had

ter.Therewould be no placeto played in developing hide." t he network." A c That was nearly 40 years cording to the NSA, ago, and as the documents he says, Stormbrew leaked last year by the former "is currently comNational Security A gency prised of very sencontractor Edward Snowden sitive relationships

VS Pl~ l'I' »

with Snowden and the NSA, but with

When Greenwald turns his

fervor to the issue of surveil-

States. And those differ-

the communications links of m ajordata centers across the

ences are one reason this

world, that it has circumvent-

book turns into a compelling novel. Readers attuned

ed or cracked much of the encryption that protects sensitive

to a steady diet of "Law &

data on the Internet, and that,

Order" or criminal thriller novels expectfast reso-

according to its own records, it has broken privacy laws or ex-

lutions and instant DNA

ceeded its authority thousands

results. Corban Addison, a law-

of times a year. The first journalist Snowden approached by

yer and the author of "A

email was Glenn Greenwald,

his c o mbative view lance and its implications for of "the establish- ordinary citizens' civil libercom providers (covment media," which ties, he is far more credible. g [ he er terms ARTIFICE has denounced And hedelivers a fierce arguand WOLFPOINT)", for "glaring sub- ment in defense of the right of the identity of such servience to political privacy, quoting the Supreme corporate partners, power" and to which he conde- Court Justice Louis Brandeis' he adds, "is one of the most scends as inferior to his more famous dissent in the 1928 closely guarded secrets in the activist kind of journalism. case Olmstead v. United States, NSA." In "No Place to Hide," Gre- of the founding fathers' efG reenwald portr a y s enwald is critical of the pro- forts "to protect Americans Snowden — regarded by some cess by which publications in their beliefs, their thoughts, as a heroic whistle-blower, by like The Washington Post, t heir e m otions a n d t h e i r others as a traitor — as a cou- The New York Times and The sensations." rageous idealist who felt he Guardian speak with governThe makers of our Conneeded to act on his beliefs. ment officials before publish- stitution, B r andeis a r gued, That outlook, Greenwald sug- ing sensitive articles dealing conferred "the right to be let gests, was partly shaped by with national security issues; alone." books Snowden read growing up — Greek mythologyand "The Hero With a Thousand Faces" by Joseph Campbell, "I which convinced Snowden

Walk Across the Sun," does a thorough job of explaining just how different things are in Zambia. When a rape suspect is

a columnist for The Guardian

that, in his own words, "it is we

arrested, prosecutors want a DNAtest. Standard in the states. Not in Zambia.

power, and surveillance abus- Greenwald describes how es in post-Sept. 11 America. he received his first commu(Greenwald has since left The nication from Snowden on Guardian to work with Pierre Dec. 1, 2012, though he had Omidyar, the founder of eBay, no idea who it was from. The on building a new media ven- email came f rom s omeone ture, which includes the news calling himself Cincinnatus site The Intercept, of which and urged Greenwald to beGreenwald, Laura Poitras and gin using PGP encryption so Jeremy Scahill are founding that Cincinnatus could comeditors.) municate with him securely.

has been sexually assault-

revealed, the N SA's ability

ed and seems unable to speak, in comes Zoe Fleming, an American lawyer working on human rights cases in Africa.

to spy on our daily lives has grown exponentially to Orwellian proportions. The documents provided by Snowden revealedthat the agency has

It's pure luck that Zoe

an ability to monitor or collect

gets involved in the case early on: The justice sys-

information from hundreds of millions of people around the

tem in Zambia is vastly different from the United

globe, that it has broken into

"In five business days, (the lawyer's) legal team produced a rebuttal memorandum attacking the constitutionality, r a t i onality and morality of DNA test-

ing in a rape case. Ignoring the weight of foreign authority in the favor of DNA,

he cherry-picked and misconstrued a South African decision questioning the efficacy of profiling where only small samples were used. Worse, he referred

to Kuyeya (the victim) as a 'mentally disturbed child,' playing upon the African suspicion of people with intellectual disabilities." By then most r eaders

are hooked. Along with a tale of corruption and fear of

A I D S , A d d ison

delivers several back stories, including Zoe's. She is mostly estranged from her father, a senator who happens to be running for president. She also begins a romance with a Zambian police investigator working

~ ll

with two U.S. tele-

gRfENW

who infuse life with meaning yer who had frequently written through our actions and the about civil liberties, the dan- stories we create with them."

In "No Place to Hide," Green-

In the course of this book,

Busy with other projects, Gre-

wald recounts the story of how he and Poitras, a documentary

enwald procrastinated about installing the encryption profilmmaker, traveled to Hong gram, and Snowden was only Kong to meet with Snowden able to make contact with him and the race to publish articles months later, through Poitras. based on the documents he According to Greenwald, provided, all the while fearful Snowden would later describe of authorities' closing in. The his frustration: "Here am I outlines of this story will be fa- ready to risk my liberty, permiliar to readers who followed haps even my life, to hand this it in real time last year, and to guy thousands of Top Secret readers of the recent book"The

documents from the nation's

Snowden Files" (by The Guard- most secretive agency — a ian reporter Luke Harding), leak that will produce dozens just as much of the material if not hundreds of huge jourhere about the NSA will be fa- nalistic scoops. And he can't miliar to readers of articles that

even be bothered to install an

have appeared in The Guardian (many with Greenwald's byline), The Washington Post

encryption program." The most gripping sections

and The New York Times.

with her on the rape case.

Occasionally, the Fleming family comes across as

from the Snowden archive that help illustrate the NSA's meth-

contrived. Only the story

odology and that showcase its strange corporatelike boosterism (complete with sometimes corny graphics). And Greenwald fleshes out his portrait of

MacAskill met with Snowden in his hotel room. Greenwald

warms to her quickly, gives a soft edge to a complicated

describes the tradecraft they employed (removing batteries from their cellphones, or placing the phones in the minibar refrigerator) to avoid detection; Snowden with fresh observa- his initial five-hour, litigatortions from their exchanges. He like grilling of Snowden; and amplifies our understanding of the "giddy gallows humor"

character.

the NSA's sweeping ambitions,

The biggest obstacle facing Zoe is that she is West-

methods and global reach, versations ("I call the bottom and provides detailed insights bunk at Gitmo,"Snowden reinto what he calls the agen- portedly joked). cy's "corporate partnerships," G reenwald w r i t e s th a t which "extend beyond intelli- Snowden said one turning

of Kuyeya, the young girl who is the daughter of a prostitute, is riveting on its own merits. Zoe's involvement with the child, who

ern and must overcome

inherent suspicion of her motives, background and beliefs. Does she really want to help the Zambian people, or does she want the Zambian justice system

to become Westernized'? Addison tells a compelling, complex story of another culture and how it handles its crises — and should give readers food for thought about American culture.

point in his decision to be-

to include the world's largest

come a leakercame in 2010, when he was working as an

For instance, the agency's Stormbrew program, Greenwald writes, "gives the NSA access to Internet and telephone traffic that enters the United States at various 'choke

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,;,.;~',:t/t;"'t!$'j~'rp',

of "No Place to Hide" recount Greenwald and Poitras' 10-

"No Place to Hide" is enliv- day trip to Hong Kong, where ened by reproductions of doz- they and The Guardian's vetens of fascinating documents eran correspondent Ewen

— McClatchy-Tribune News Service

with my Beltone Hearing Aids. I have

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Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended May11. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. "Unlucky13" by Patterson/Paetro (Little, Brown) 2. "Field of Prey" by John Sandford (Putnam) 3. "The Target" by David Baldacci (GrandCentral) 4. "Walking onWater" by Richard Paul Evans(Simon 8 Schuster) 5."The Collector" by Nora Roberts (Putnam) 6. "Natchez Burning" by Greg lles (William Morrow) 7."The Goldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 8. "Chestnut Street" by Maeve Binchy (Knopf) 9. "I've Got YouUnder My Skin" by Mary Higgins Clark (Simon 8 Schuster) 10. "The Invention of W ings" bySueMonkKidd (Viking) HARDCOVERNONFICTION 1. "Finding Me" by Michelle Knight (Perseus/Weinstein) 2."Everybody's Got Something" by Robin Roberts (Grand Central) 3. "Good Call" by JaseRobertson (Howard Books) 4. "Capital in the TwentyFirst Century" by ThomasPiketty (Harvard/Belknap) 5. "Instinct" by T.D.Jakes (FaithWords) 6."The Closer" by Mariano Rivera (Little, Brown) 7. "The HopeQuotient" by Ray Johnston (Thomas Nelson) 8. "Girlboss" by Sophia Amoruso (Penguin/Portfolio) 9. "A Fighting Chance" by Elizabeth Warren (Metropolitan) 10. "Flash Boys" by Michael Lewis (Norton)

NSA contractor in Japan. "The

stuff I saw really began to disturb me," Snowden recalled.

"I could watch drones in real time as they surveilledthe people they might kill." He added: "I watched NSA tracking

points' on U.S. soil. It exploits people's Internet activities as the fact that the vast majority they typed. I became aware of

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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

WWI flying ' evou ion'isami ace showed • The book offers apleasant stroll through 'Enduring the history of themicrobrewing industry Courage'

a eo o

bought and revived the An-

chor Steam brewery in San Francisco, thus inspiring a generation of so-called home brewers to begin considering

"The Craft Beer Revolution" by Steve Hindy (Palgrave Macmillan, 272 pgs.)

commercial ventures.Some

had sampled ales and dark beers while traveling or working in Europe, and wanted to bring these strange new flavors to America, whose main-

I

"Enduring Courage: Ace Pilot Eddie Rickenbacker and the Dawn of the Age of Speed"

New York Times News Service

There's a great moment in

stream beers were, and large-

by John F. Ross (St. Martin's

Steve Hindy's shaggy little

Press,400 pgs., $26.99)

history of the craft beer in-

ly remain, pale lagers. Other pioneers were tinkerers who

dustry, "The Craft Beer Rev-

became fascinated with the

olution," in which Jim Koch, the sharp-elbowed m aker

home beer-making kits that spread during the 1970s.

By Tish Wells McClatchy Washington Bureau

By Bryan Burrough

during Courage" John F. Ross

of Samuel Adams, loses his temper at the author, himself

aims to revive the memory of

a brewer of note. It comes

World War I flying ace Eddie Rickenbacker, who was also an

after a 1993 industry meeting in which Hindy and oth-

early race car driver of renown,

ers circulated a petition that

and the creator of now-defunct

questioned Koch's marketing claims. As Hindy describes it, Koch accuses him of trying to subvert his business, shouting athim over and over and using far more colorful language than I am allowed to

WASHINGTON — In "En-

Eastern Air Lines. "I spent a lot of time reading

aboutEddie Rickenbacker,his buddies, the kids, the flyboys," said Ross at a book gathering, "and the early American air service over northern France flying against the real pros, the Germans, the F l y ing C ircus. Y o u

r ead

.:PWI

t h eir

jour n als and

'Og@g ": their letters l".%9u/f RlpfflsAilg[R

WI I I I i I I Nij

home, they're t~ g l i fe-and-death things."

Rickenbacker was born in 1890 in Columbus, Ohio, the

oldest son of two poor Swiss immigrants. His mother was

the strongest influence on Rickenbacker. "Eddie grew up watching his fiercely self-reliant mother doing whatever it was to survive," says Ross in the book. Ricken-

backer was no slouch on his own, selling newspapers as a 5-year-old and keeping goats

I

A 1976 federal tax reduc-

tion for small brewers fueled the industry's growth. There's not much of an over-

arching narrative for Hindy to relate of these early years, so he offers a genial walking the rise ofwhat are some- tour of the players and their times called microbreweries playthings. makes for a pretty good sucMany of the new brewers cess story. At a time overall stumbled into the business beer consumption is in de- by chance; my favorite is Rob cline — a result of stiffer en- Tod, who as a young man forcement of drunken-driving caught a whiff ofbeer coming laws, Hindy speculatesfrom a Colorado warehouse, craft beershave sprung from walked in, introduced himnowhere during the last 30 self and found out all he could yearsto command 10 percent about brewing. That led him of the U.S. beer market. (De- to start the Allagash Brewfining the term "craft beer," it ing Co. in Portland, Maine, in shouldbe noted,isa source of 1994. some controversy; in generThese early ventures are al, think of it as small, local sometimes marvels of Rube and, for many companies, Goldberg contraptions, cobunprofitable.) bled together with items as The story of craft beer's varied as discarded beer rise begins in 1965, when cookers and y ogurt-makFritz Maytag, an heir to the ing equipment. In the 1990s, Maytag appliance fortune, Sam Calagione of the Dog-

relate here. Were there more moments

like this, "The Craft Beer

Revolution" might be a more e ntertaining b o o k . A la s ,

Hindy, a co-founder of the Brooklyn Brewery, is either too amiable or too diplomatic to shovel much more dirt on his peers than that. And

this makes his book, while a pleasant-enough survey of his growing industry, less flavorful than it might otherwise

have been. Which is a shame, because

ee r s

fish Head Brewery, searching up selling his nascent distrifor a way to add hops into his bution network to Sheehan beer a little at a time, scat- and another company, which tered the grains across one began earning strong profits of those old electric-football after expanding it to several games, allowing the vibrating more states. table to dribble them through This led to a development a hole. Ah, American innova- that Hindy calls the "jailtion. Gotta love it. break," a kind of tipping point when other big wholesalThe'jailbreak' ers, defying Busch and the For years, the greatest chal- other megabrewers, began lenge for craft brewers was clamoring to sell craft beer distribution — simply get- brands themselves. As Sheeting restaurants and grocery han's Budweiser sales have stores to sell their product. been down sharply in BrookMost wholesale beer distrib- lyn, Hindy writes, Brooklyn utors, Hindy writes, were Brewery's craft beer distribuheavily reliant on the three tion network has been going megabreweries — Anheus- great guns. er-Busch, Miller and Coors In the end, "The Craft Rev— and couldn't be bothered to olution" is a n o t-too-taxing spend time pushing obscure stroll through the industry, brands whose makers rarely at once a tribute to its loosehad enough money to adver- limbedentrepreneursand an tise. In 1996, Augustus Busch airing of their familiar frusIII demanded that its distrib-

trations and triumphs. Hindy

utors devote a "100 percent

is amongthem — a former Associated Press correspondent

share of mind" to Busch products. That left most micro-

brewers to beg and wheedle the Miller and Coors distribu-

tors, a situation so frustrating that, in time, Hindy's Brook-

lyn Brewery began distributing its own products.

"The HeavenofAnimals"

lumbus, learning about all the

vehicles of the early automo-

ious state of manhood in the

tive industry.

new century. In almost all of

This led to racing cars during a very dangerous time.

the 15 tightly plotted entries, bruised and agitated men

The auto industry was in its

strive to rise above their rep-

ent once the men discover a

infancy, and race cars weren't made for safety. The drivers

tilian brains an d

(Simon & Schuster, 272 pgs., $24) By Tray Butler The Auanta Journal-Constitution

If you happen to be male, and you also happen to be a characterin a David James Poissant story, chances are

tory between the car and the

you're a conflicted father struggling to play caregiv-

airplane," Ross said. He dis-

er. Or an irritable husband

covered something he never knew: "Eddie Rickenbacker

facing a divorce. Or a son in exile from a broken home. Some particularly unlucky characters get to be all three.

Rickenbacker's love of the automobile started in his early

teens when he got a job with one of the small garages in Co-

were often casualties in the

preseatbelt, prewindshield era. Rickenbacker was a top race car driver before turning his abilities a different way: flying. In the early 1900s, airplanes had evolved quickly from the cloth and bailing wire of the Wright Brothers to the warplanes of the Western Front of World War I with their open

cockpits and lack of para-

do read a bit too much like ex-

tended features in a beer-incraftbeerbegan toabateafter dustry trade publication. One the turn of the millennium. might guess that there is a Hindy writes, after an inde- grittier version of this story pendent-minded Budweiser left for someone else to tell. wholesaler, Jerry Sheehan, If that book is to be written, noting the new brands' pop- it may need to come from an ularity, approached Hindy author who doesn't still have and his partners about sell- to work in the industry he is ing their beers. Hindy ended chronicling.

but story collection, takes a penetrating look at the anx-

sive father died in 1904, he lied about his age and got a job at a glass factory. Ross devotes most of "Enduring Courage" to two sections of Rickenbacker's life: the automobile and the airplane.

was a race car driver."

a co-founder of his beer company in 1988 and opened his brewery in Brooklyn in 1996. Hindy is a capable storyteller, even if sections of the book

The distribution woes of

The collection is framed ferocious nonhuman inhab- depleting its resources. The by two linked stories that itant, a real achievement in lucky few who don't follow h ammer home t h e a u - this crowded menagerie. the herd somehow "manage t hor's m ajor t h e mes v i a Other stories feature killer to outsmart evolution," Lisa crisp, brutal storytelling. bees, Gila monsters, pira- says. If gazelle can do it, the The opener, "Lizard Man," nha, sharks, a talking wolf storyseems to asks,wh y can't finds newly divorced Dan and an actual goose attack. humans'? "Refund," also set in AtlanLawson drowning in guilt In "Me and James Dean," after throwing his gay son a couple's faltering sex life ta, brings up similar questions through the family room becomes more complicated about inherited traits and the window. When Cam, Dan's thanks to an overprotective pressures of conformity. Un"last friend," asks for help beagle. The dog pays a grisly derachievers Sam and Joy putting his late fapricefor his bedside live in the smallest house in ther's house in order, meddling. their subdivision. He's a telethe two men embark A nimals also i n marketer; she sells cosmetics form "The Geometry to "those desperate to believe on a nervous mission into the swamps of of Despair," one of the in the restorative power of an northern Florida. collection's standouts, eyebrow pencil." When their Poissant, who which details a mar- 6-year-old is identified as a teaches writing at the riage in a far more budding prodigy, Sam wonUniversity of Central severe crisis. Richard ders how the proverbial apFlorida, fleshes out and Lisa, high school ple "sometimes falls far from a convincing landscape of teachers in a n un n a med the tree." Taking the boy to waterlogged dirt roads and Georgia suburb, attend group a neighborhood meeting for rural decay. His authority therapy sessions after the gifted children only leads to becomes even more appar- death of their infant daugh- a vicious hazing — a remind-

by David James Poissant

In the early 20th century,

and Newsday editor who was

Stories paint portraits of modern male angst

to sell their milk. After his abu-

"there was this incredible intersection in American his-

"The Heaven of Animals," Poissant's selfassured de-

ter. It's an

c h annel hissing, 500-pound alliga-

trope of contemporary short fiction — grieving parents, man's shack. Returning the one of them eying the door gator to the "quiet of mud and — but Poissant approaches fish and unseen things that the subject with empathy and thrive in deep, green dark- ingenuity. An outing to see ture, and not only in terms of ness" quickly proves to be a a documentary at Fernbank genetic predisposition. Pois- superhuman feat. The story opens the door to a telling sant's everyman cast — me- veers into allegorical mode discussion about Darwinism. chanics, teachers, telemarket- as both men wrestle with In the film, flocks of gazelle ers — long to find emotional their long-submerged father and zebra descend on a lush connections, but the forces of issues. basin in Kenya, "a kind of (human) nature keep getting The captive alligator wins heaven" for the animals, then in the way. the title for the book's most instinctively l e ave b e fore more nurturing mammalian instincts. The unspoken argument often driving the action comes down to the ageold debate of nature vs. na-

er that standardized testing is powerless next to nature's

pecking order. The ultimate dilemma for

Sam and countless other guys in Poissant's stories isn't so much survival of the fittest,

but choosing selflessness for the sake of another's survival. P oissant,

w h o s e wor k

has appeared in the Atlantic, Playboy and One Story, demonstrates that mankind,

especially American males, may not be so separate from the animal kingdom after alL However, he wisely resists a heavy-handed polemic on millennial angst. His f inest

stories focus on the nuts and bolts of narrative. Despite the preponderance of scales,

tails, fangs and feathers that occupy "The Heaven of Animals," its real subject is all too

human.

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chutes. It was also mostly for

the upper crust, and Rickenbacker faced discrimination

A Free Public Service

on account of his immigrant

background. That didn't matter in the long run; fliers died on a daily basis in dogfights between the Allies and Germany's flashy-painted squadron, the "Flying Circus," led by Baron Manfred von Richthofen. "Pilots were largely on their own, picking up insights from fellow fliers and always, if they wished to live, paying attention," writes Ross.

Rickenbacker became the American ace with 26 kills to

his name. After the war, he went into

Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties

business, succeeding and failing, but finally building Eastern Air Lines. He still r a n i n t o r i s k s.

During World War II, on a trip to Asia, he was on a B-17 that crashed into the Pacific Ocean. It took them over three weeks

I

to be rescued, and many of the survivors credited Ricken-

1

I

1

backer for keeping them alive. He died at 82.

"I think writing a book is, at its best, a kind of a voyage of exploration," Ross said. "You're surprised and baffled and challenged. "This book is about courage. This book is about new things,

new technologies, adopting and what it was like to take them to their end. This was the first 'Right Stuff.'"

F5

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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

Neutrality

David, is now a computer game softwaredeveloper.

Continued from F1

A biochemistry major at M cGill University, Wu w a s

the law is more important than what the law itself says. I think that's what's happened with headed toward a career in "the net neutrality. It's become a kind of norm of

"Sometimes what e v erybody thinks about the law is more important than what the law itself says," Wu told me

family business — science," when, he noted wryly, "I had a sort of rebellion." It took the

recently in his office. "I think that's what's happened with

behavior, what you can and can't appropriately do with the Internet."

form of an application to Har-

— Tim Wu, lew professor, Columbia University

net neutrality. I t's b ecome vard Law School, where he

a kind of norm of behavior, what you can and can't ap-

spent the next three years. But he didn't really know why he

propriately do with the Inter-

was at Harvard until he wan-

net. It's got to be open. Except dered into a cyberlaw class for legitimate purposes like taught by Lawrence Lessig, protecting the network itself, an early advocate of an open there shouldn't be discrim- Internet. "I didn't know what ination against one form of cyberlaw was exactly, but it content or another or one pro- seemed cool," Wu said. "Larry vider or another. And people gave me my calling." generally accept that. Until Lessig said he recognized now, the idea in a way has that Wu was "unusually giftbeen more important than ed" and helped arrange two what the regulations have ac- clerkships for him. (Several tually said." years later, Lessig recomBut what the law says is im- mended that another student portant, even paramount, and receive the same clerkships, Wu is one of the most influ- and she did; Kathryn Judge is ential voices arguing that net also a Columbia law professor neutrality be fully protected and Wu's wife.) by law and regulation, which, For one year, Wu worked in his view, means treating for Richard Posner, a federal the Internet like a regulated appellate court judge, influutility, for the good of alL That ential University of Chicago remedy may nothappen im- law professor, prolific author mediately. But his opinion is and blogger. "Richard Posner nonetheless sought out by rule is a kind of law demigod," Wu makers. said. "He didn't really need a clerk. He wrote everything on 'A perpetual frontier' his own. But he wanted someOn a rainy May afternoon, one to be his critic — to match Wu sat in his cluttered office wits with hi m i ntellectually, discussing the state of the In- to fight with him and tell him ternet and his place in it. why he was wrong." A child of peripatetic scienPosner encouraged Wu tists, he was born in Washing- to be a contrarian — and to ton and spent formative years find an independent road in in Basel, Switzerland, and To- the broad territory between ronto. His father, born in Tai- heavy-handed government wan, was a noted immunolo- interference and free-market gist. He died in 1981, when Wu anarchy. was 8. His mother, who moved

I n 1999 an d

2 0 00, W u

from London to Canada as a served as a clerk to Justice child, is an immunologist at Stephen Breyer of the U.S. SuYork University in Toronto. preme Court. There he played Thanks to his mother's far- a differentrole.Breyer's law sighted purchase of an Apple clerks, Wu said, were expectII computer in 1982, Tim Wu

ed to find out what the other

came to a close, the country revenues. was infected with dot-com feWu was untouched by the ver. And even at the Supreme investigations, but said he had Court, he caught a case of it.

known that t h i ngs w eren't

With his legal pedigree and programming skills, he was in high demand.He opted for a high-risk, high-reward opportunity: a marketing job with a

right. It all crystallized for him on Sept. 12, 2001 — the day after

show with other company called Riverstone Networks. employees.Theirbusiness enThe company, he said, "prom- gagements were canceled because of the attacks, and, with

Instead, it made him disillusioned. He says he was appalled by the business practices around him. "Network

no other plans, his colleagues decided to go to a strip club. On such a solemn day, the tawdry revelry repelled him. "I wondered how I'd gotten the law of the land." there," he recalls. "I realized

neutrality came out of the bad

things there," he said. The company sold industrial-size Internet routers that

were being used, Wu recalls, "to block and prioritize Internet traffic, to discriminate

against traffic, basically, to do many of the things that I think companies on t h e I n t ernet shouldn't be doing." He went

to China for the company and found that the equipment he

was dealing in was of interest to the Chinese for its potential to abet censorship.

"Helping the Chinese government censor dissidents

wasn't the way I w anted to

spend the rest of my life," he said. "It hit me that we weren't on the good side there." The

idea of net neutrality grew, in part, because "I had personal experience of violations of it,"

he said. That was only part of the problem.The company's top executiveswere engaging in

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those months was abhorrent." The argument today is not cates. "I don't think we'll know He had been living in a world so much whether net neutral- for a while whether they can based on nothing but money, ity is a good concept — most succeed." he said, and saw that "the idea people agree that it is — but Wu views the current batthat the private sector, the free what it means in practice. tles as the latest in a long cycle. market, on its own has all the Many companies — includ- His book, "The Master Switch: solutions is just a myth." He ing content providers like Net- The Rise And Fall of Informaadded: "When it's just about flix and Yahoo; social media tion Empires," describes how money, there are no values." sites like Facebook, Twitter the FCC, as a weak overseer He looked for a way out and Reddit; search sites like of the old A T&T t elephone and got a job teaching law at Google and Microsoft's Bing; monopoly, often acted less the University o f V i r g inia. and e-commerce companies in the public interest than to But the Internet preoccupied like Amazon — say they wor- promote the interests of the him. "I thought of it as a kind ry that the FCC might give company. Mergers like the one ga t ekeepers"now proposed between Comof perpetual frontier, the place "broadband where everyone gets a shot, control. cast and Time Warner Cable, where the underdogs have a In a letter to the FCC, these which he opposes, could crechance. The Internet has been companies and many others ate new behemoths that might that. And I wanted some prin- said the new rule-making overwhelm the FCC. Yet he "representsa grave threat to says the agency should perseciples that would keep it that way." the Internet." Cable and tele- vere, using the most powerful He got back in touch with phone industries respond that weapons at its disposal, which Lessig, wh o e n c ouraged it is in their own interests to include Title II. him in May 2002 to put his keep the Internet open. The He says media companies thoughts down on p aper. main question, they say, is will combine and grow — until The result was a sparkling whether content providers will they grow too large and start memo, "A Proposal for Net- help pay for the cost of operat- to fragment,and are replaced work Neutrality," that asked: ing and building the network. by moredynamic companies, "What principle can balance "That's just a financial issue," in an endless cycle. In his the legitimate interests of Powell said. "It's not a ques- book, he cites "The Romance broadband carriers in admin- tion of principle." of the Three Kingdoms," the istering their networks with Some scholars say there classic Chinese novel: "An emthe danger of harm to new are merits to the FCC's new pire long united must divide; a pplication m a r kets? A n d approach. Philip Weiser, dean an empire long divided must how can such a principle be of the University of Colora- unite." But when this process translated into both clear legal do Law School, said, com- takes place in t h e m odern guidelines and the practice of mon-carrier regulation "is not world, he says, government network design?" The answer a panacea." If the FCC were regulators must protect the was in the title: a new creation to use it, he said, there would public interest.

• • e

that what we'd been doing all

Internet transmissions to satisfy the courts as well as the

• • • e

y • • •

n e u t rality. most likely be years of litigaLessig began sending the pa- tion. Even if the classification per to his contacts the next withstood a legal challenge, month. he said, it might not improve Wu's ideas spread, reach- the situation. Priority service ing top s t af f m e mbers at would presumably be permitthe FCC, who brought them ted fora "reasonable fee" so to the attention of M i chael long as that fee was offered to Powell, then the commission everybody. "It's like FedEx," he said. chairman. "I was convinced by Tim "You pay a certain amount for Wu's ideas," Powell said. He overnight delivery and a cercited Wu in a major speech tain amount for two-day dein 2004, calling on Internet livery. You could end up with p roviders t o r e f r ain f r o m something like that for the blocking or restricting data or Internet." applications available to conThe agency's evident stratsumers. He asked consumers egy is fraught with problems, to "challenge their broadband and there has been dissension providers to live up to these in its own ranks. "The FCC standards and to let the com- appears to be attempting to mission know how the indus- thread a needle," said Christry is doing." In 2005, the FCC topher Yoo, a law professor enjoined Madison River Com- at the University of Pennsylmunications, a telephone com- vania. It wants to avoid inpany, from blocking phone voking Title II, he said, while service over the Internet. In adding enough conditions to a essence, Powell told me, "the standard of"commercial reaFCC made network neutrality sonableness" for prioritizing

ised to make us all rich."

justices were c ontemplat- activities that the Securities ing. "One of Breyer's favorite and Exchange Commission things was to ask, 'What does and federalprosecutors said Sandra think?,'" referring to were improper. His immedisard. Justice Sandra Day O'Con- ate boss, Andrew Feldman, In high school, Tim Wu got nor, who was often the pivotal ultimately pleaded guilty to a a part-time job writing soft- vote until she retired in 2006. felony count of violating interware, while operating an on- "He believed he had a big nal accounting controls, and line bulletin board, "the main job trying to defend the mid- Feldman and four other top purpose of which was to move dle ground in the court — to executives agreed to an SEC around pirated software," he form a caucus of reasonable settlement in a complaint acsaid. "Hey, it was a different adults." cusing them of a scheme to detime." His younger brother, In 2000, as Wu's clerkship fraud investors by misstating

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startup firm in Silicon Valley

says proudly that he became something of a geek. "That computer changed our lives, my brother's and mine," he

called n e twork

"Sometimes what everybody thinks about

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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, G2 Travel, G4-7 Puzzles, G6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT < The Portland Rose Festival's annual CityFair, a three-weekend-

A windowinto a Bend church'spast

long celebration

The First United

at Tom McCall Waterfront Park,

Methodist Church is

hosting a presentation on its Povey stained glass windows Thursday in Bend. The event is part of National Historic Preservation Month and features the Rev. Thom Larson andthe Deschutes County Historical Society's Kelly Cannon-Miller as speakers. The presentation will include history of the church, what the windows represent and details on four of their memorial panels. The windows are scheduled for renovation this week. Work begins the middle of next week. The event runs 7 to 8 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church, 680 N.W. BondSt., in Bend. It is free andopen to the public.

opens Friday with a giant fireworks

display. Concerts, carnival rides, food and crafts stalls, and a

beer garden will be among the highlights. It officially kicks off the century-old festival, as well

as gets locals

Tro'sE

and visitors ready for a summer of activities.

pp s r

:WASEFESTfVa

na W

Courtesy Portland Rose Festival Foundation

Contact: 541-382-1672

or www.bendumc.org.

Bend youthswin big at film fest A number of Bend filmmakers madea strong showing at the 2014 Central Oregon Film Festival & Awards Night, held last week at

Redmond Cinemas. In the10-14 age category, Trevor Allison earned a second-place trophy with "Are You Smarter than a 6th-Grader," a short, humorous documentary filmed in downtown Bend. Lauren Allison won a BestAmateur trophy for the short film "Mission Impossible." Ethan Allison won the Funniest Film trophy for the shortcomedy"The Name Game." In the 15-18age group, HannahAllison earned a first-place win with her film "Labeled: the Preview" and third place with "My Hero." She also won theBest All-around Film trophy for "Labeled: the Preview." Makenzie Hice won second placeand Best Amateur Film trophies with her film, "Technicolor." In the adult category, Cooper Anderson won first place with "Final Commercial Project 2013," a one-minute commercial about college. DaveJones won a Best Documentary trophy for his film "Queens of the Roleo Review." Jesse Locke earned a MostCreative Film Honorable Mention for the dark drama "Mad Mountain King." Contact: www.central oregonshowcase.com.

Event to benefit HumaneSociety The HumaneSociety of Central Oregon will host the ninth annual Tuxes andTails on June 7 at The Riverhouse Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S.Highway 97, in Bend. Theevening will include dinner, drinks and dancing, as well as live and silent auctions. All funds from the event will go toward supporting the abandoned, abused and stray animals annually cared for by the Humane Society of Central Oregon. Tickets are $100 per person or $900 for a table of10 people. Reservations are required. Contact: 541-3307096 or www.hsco.org. — From staff reports

By John Gottberg Anderson •For the Bulletin

PORTLANDt's Rose Festival time in Oregon's largest city. And what better time to ea

talk about the changes visitors may see on their next visit to the state's ,W

urban center? A giant fireworks display Friday at Tom

productions and photo exhibits. And the annual Rose Festival Art Show will run from June 3

McCall Waterfront Park will kick off the re-

Downtown Portland

nowned festival, now in its 108th year. The long through July 11. park that separates downtown Portland from But if you're targeting just one window of the Willamette River will host the Rose Festival

CityFair beginning that night and continuing for three straight weekends. Concerts, carnival

rides, food and crafts stalls and a beer garden will keep the McCall Park action lively well into the nights.

Through June 15, Portland will see a variety of parades, dances,fun runs,classiccarcruis-

on

time, make it June 4-8. That's Fleet Week on the Portland waterfront, when a variety of na-

Andy Zeigert /The Bulletin

val ships, including submarines, welcome the public aboard for tours. For flower lovers, it's

NORTHWESTTRAVEL

the time of the 126th annual Spring Rose Show,

where new hybrid varieties will be displayed beside esteemed classics,June 5-6 ontheice rink at the Lloyd Center shopping mall.

es, auto and boat races, suburban fairs, stage

In two weeks: Spokane, Wash.

See Portland/G4

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Sma commLini, i im act • Museum talk explores1900-era migrants, theBasques,whohelpedshapeourstate

Stubborn fat has met itsmatch.

These early immigrants had an almost immediate

impact on the region's cities and towns because

By Mac McLean

they started building large boarding houses that served

The Bulletin

Kevin Hatfield was

as the focal point of their communities.

working on a rather wonky dissertation about grazing rights when he noticed a lot of the people in his research had similar last names. He'd stumbled upon one of East-

They also helped shape the region's legal system, fighting a long battle with the federal government that still plays a role in determining who can use the country's natural resources. This legal battle, which is what first piqued Hatfield's interest in the Basques, unit-

ern Oregon's most influential

ethnic groups. "My whole research agenda shifted," said Hatfield, an

adjunct professor at the University of Oregon's history department and the author of

ed the entire state behind one

Photos onG3 of its smallest ethnic groups.

a book about Idaho and oregon's Basque community. Originally from an area that is part of present-day France and Spain, Basque

It will also be the topic of a

the High Desert's vast and

immigrants started settling

often empty range.

parts of Idaho, Nevada and

Thursday night lecture Hat-

Oregon during the late 1800s so they could raise sheep on

field will give at the Bowman Museum in Prineville (see "If you go"). SeeBasques/G3

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

M II ESTON

is + ~ L7

Forms f o r e ngagementw,eddinga,nniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatTheBulletint,777gytrchandlerdve .B,endo,rby emai l i ng milestones®bendbulletin.com. Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.

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Centola — Jayne

State University in June with a doctorate in veterinary medi-

Elsbeth Centola, of Bend, cine. She works as an associate and Rick Jayne Jr., of Hunlock veterinarian. Creek, Pa., plan to marry Aug. The future groom is the son 16 in Bend. of Rick Sr. and Valerie Jayne, The futurebrideisthe daugh- of HunlockCreek.Heattended ter of Chad and Juli Centola, of Lake Lehman HighSchool in Bend. She is a 2006 graduate of Dallas, Pa., and is a 2012 gradBend High School and a 2010 uate of Kutztown University of graduate of Delaware Valley Pennsylvania. He is studying College in Doylestown, Pa., and hydrogeology at Northern Illishe will graduate from Oregon nois University.

BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend J. Alonso Najera and NeldaCalderon, a boy, Osvaldo NajeraCalderon, 7 pounds, 4 ounces, April17. Luke and MartinIpue Pickerill, a girl, Genevieve Pickerill, 6 pounds, 8 ounces, April16. Ryan and AmyMcCloud, a boy, William FoxMcCloud, 8 pounds, 13 ounces, March 26. Zach and Michelle Cochran, a girl, Zoe Ryder Cochran, 7 pounds, April13. Mitchell StoreyandMinLangskov, a girl, VenIce JihyeAmIra Storey, 6 pounds, 3 ounces, April 5. Chase and Elizabeth Howard, a boy, Logan Scott Howard, 8 pounds, 10 ounces, April 8. Joshua Kttehne andKe'Liana Bailey, a boy, KastIn IzazII Kuehne, 6pounds, 13 ounces, April12. Timothy Tetzlan and Chelsea NowTetzlafl,agirl, McKenzle GaelNowTetzlaff, 5 pounds, 6 ounces,April11. Robert Warner, Sr. and Martha Alvarez, agirl, Juliet Savant Warner, 8 pounds, 3 ounces, April13. Robert and RobynLoxley, a boy, Alryk Scott Loxley, 7 pounds, 15

ounces, April 30. Ericand Lisa Calicdan, a girl, Vienne PanIssidI CalIcdan, 8 pounds, 5 ounces, April14. ChristopherandChristine Lytle, a girl, GenevieveMabel Lytle, 7 pounds, 2 ounces, April 9. Scott and Sara Blanchard, a boy, Tanner Scott Blanchard, 8 pounds, 4 ounces, April10. Cody James andPaige Litzie, a girl, Arlelle Nichole LItzIe, 6 pounds, April 30. Eric and Micah Campbell, a girl, Malia Elizabeth Campbell, 6 pounds, 2 ounces, April 7. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Skyler and Jessica Auzenne, a boy, Seely LouIs Auzenne, 7pounds, April17. Chris and Brittani Barker, a boy, Logan MIchael Barker, 8 pounds, 4 ounces, April 30. Yvette Molina, a boy, Leonel Alejandro Molina-Torres, 7 pounds, 6 ounces, April 21. Ronald Barrow and KieshaWalters, a boy, ClydeChampion Barrow, 7 pounds,11 ounces, May1.

wedding will be mostly your college frat buddies, then maybe your favorite campus band will be great." H e's quick t o

and children, the entertain-

You've probably heard about (or been to) weddings where a DJ, in a misguided attempt to emcee, talked more than he spun, with

ment should offer something for everyone.

Myth 9: Youhave to hire a DJ or band, not both

.>)Igi ) )

cringe-worthy results. But

If you can afford it, you can

an experienced wedding DJ will speak only when it's appropriate. "Every time a DJ speaks, To some extent, your lists he should have something should be guidelines for the

Thinksttyck

have the best of both forms of entertainment. Either hire a DJ to spin while the band is on

songs before your weddingbreak (and to be your emcee), most bands will learn between or divide the evening into two important to say, which you mix master, not hard-and- three and five songs if you give portions. and he planned in advance," fast rules. Your DJ should them enough notice. Another option is to hire a says Dr. Drax, national pres- know the genre you're interband for your reception and a ident and executive director

ested in, but let him choose

Myth 7: A DJwill save

of the American Disc Jockey the best way to mixthe music youmoney Association. — after all, it's his job to keep Although a DJ almost alTo ensure your DJ doesn't peopleon thedance fl oor. ways costs less than a band, abuse his proximity to the Give your band some that doesn't mean you should mike, be specific about when flexibility to react to the cheap out on this vendor. "If you're willing to pay for a you want him to talk and crowd and adjust the tempo when you don't. If you're accordingly. top-notch DJ, you can get way "When you hire somebody more than somebody to play nervous that yours is a chatterbox, consider sending an to bake a cake, you can tell songs," Dr. Drax said. "A great example of what you find them what flavors to use, DJ will talk to your photograinappropriate. but you don't try to tell them pher and tell him which songs "You can find a litany of how much flour or what kind are coming next. Photograbad DJ videos on YouTube," of sugar to put in," Dr. Drax phers capture the Kodak moDr. Drax said. But handle said. "It's the same with DJs ments; it is the DJ's job to crewith care so as to not offend.

M yth 2: Bands take a lot

ofbreaks

One common

ate the opportunity for them to

know what to do."

occur."

Or, if you can't spring for a whole band, see about combining just a few live musicians with a DJ. Some companies create packages where, for example, the musicians

will play for the ceremony and during cocktail hour, then complement the DJ during the

dancing, by adding percussion to a hot Latin set.

Myth10: Slowsongs first, then faster tunes after cake Some couples request that their entertainers play '50s

Dr. Drax knows a DJ who rock or big band-style songs got a tape of the groom sing- early on to please their older ing "You Are My Sunshine" guests, and then switch over The days when it was de to his mom as a little boy and to more lively beats so the rigueur for a wedding band created a custom mix, bring- younger crowd can dominate to encourage a conga line are ing tears to everyone in the the floor until last call. over. But if you're worried room during the mother-son But it can be more fun for about that kind of thing, be dance. you and your guests if you sure to see the band in action On the other hand: "I heard have your band or DJ mix it before you sign on. Ask for a story about an i n experi- up throughout the night. Altera DVD of a previous perfor- enced DJ announcing a fa- nating between speeds, styles, mance to get a sense of how ther-daughter dance, unaware and eras of music will keep the band interacts with the that the b ride's father had wedding guests of all ages crowd. passed away," Dr. Drax said. more engaged and encourage You should also try to Although the old adage "you them to broaden the range of see the performers live. But get what you pay for" isn't al- music they'll boogie to, with you can't crash somebody ways true, when it comes to truly memorable results. else's wedding — find out your music, it's certainly adif you can drop by to watch vice to consider. them play at another type Visit Central Oregon's of event. Just keep in mind Myth 8: Hiring a bar band that you can't alter a band's isa goodidea style as easily as you can Unless they also have a lot tweak a DJ's. If the band's of experience with weddings, live act is rambunctious and using a band or DJ that's oriinteractive (complete with ented primarily with nightSee 100 life sized samples of line dances), then asking to clubs is risky, since they won't the latest innovative and change might hamper the be adept at pleasing a diverse stylish Hunter Douglas performance, and y ou're crowd. "It's much smarter to find probably better off going window fashions! with a different group. somebody who has experi-

Myth 5: Bandslove c o ncern line dances

about hiring a band is that each 40- to 45-minute set

will be followed by a 15-to 20-minute break filled with music from a

— you need to trust that they

DJ to spin at the afterparty.

c o mpilation

CD — and that bored guests will vacate the dance floor. But you can manage your band's need for downtime so it doesn't disrupt the party too much. Ask the band

members to stagger their breaks so there's live music throughout the night.

Myth 3: A DJ will play cheesytunes Worried that your DJ has his mind set on "Y.M.C.A." and the Electric Slide, when

you're thinking more along the lines of "Brown Eyed doesn't have to be that way — your DJ wants to play what you want to hear, but

you have to communicate your tastes clearly.

HunterDouglas

Don't rely on words alone,

By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes The Dallas Morning News

photos of critters can be an enriching experience. Will you

since terms like "dance," Myth 6: A bandcan't offer "rock" and "slow songs" can enough variety You'd be surprised by the easily be misinterpreted. To make sure you are on the musical depth a quality wedsame page, give him a play- dingband can offer.One in-

Smile: It's a family photo. Here are ideas for adding photographic interest to your

get the shot when the lion roars,

vacation.

branch'? Remember that animals in the wild are just that:

list and a do-not-play list.

Get ln on the action. It's fun to capture the movement and

the giraffe reaches upward or the monkey swings from the

People pictures. Including people in your shot adds tre- wild. Keep a proper distance. mendous interest. Encourage

family to be the focal point of landscape images, providing context and great memories.

the exhilaration of the adventure — whether it's wild rides

Capture the faces of those who at the theme park, bike or live in the places you visit to running races or rafts in the add human interest to monu-

rapids. You don't need a fan-

cy camera to create fun shots that tell the story. Try clicking the shutter while moving your body atthe same pace as the action you want to record. Use your camera to take ily adventure. At the market, notes. Snap a photo of your for example, be on the lookout parking space, your hotel for brightly colored vegetables, address and room n umber, fruits, meat or fishunlike those restaurants that make your in your local grocery store. favorite list and the designated Stoke your children's natural family meeting spot. curiosity by asking the vendor When you are visiting a to explain the origin of items. new environment or feel like Give animal photos a shot. you're dragging after a full W hether at the zoo, in t h e day of traveling, it can be difcountryside, on safari or with- ficult to remember life's more in a national park, snapping mundane details. ments, scenes orcityscapes. Capture color. Markets, festivals and parades provide an arrayofcolorfulsubjects and unique experiences that will help tell the story of your fam-

and g r ooms

dication that a band has versatility is if it has more than

should be able to customize

one singer — if it has both

the playlist," says Dr. Drax. "People today have grown up with choice and personalization, and good DJs under-

male and female vocalists,

"Brides

stand that."

M yth 4: You can control everything

forexample,chances arethe band's open to a wider range of songs. Though a band may specialize in a style (like big band or soul), the people in it are professional musicians

and should be able to stray at One caveat to t h e l a st least a little from their niche. idea: You can give your DJ And if a few of the songs a milelong playlist, but you youhaveyourheart set on arshouldn't try to microman- en't in the band's repertoire, age the music. simply ask them to learn the

I

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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

G3

Basques Continued from G1

The immigrants The Basque people speak a common language that traces

its history back to a handful of prehistoric tribes that settled on Europe's Iberian Peninsula

between the Pyrenees Mountains and the Bay of Biscay. According to the Oregon Encyclopedia Project, the first Basque immigrants to settle

h

If they were going out on the range for a long period of time, some

Basque shepherds would take portable stone ovens like the one

th

in the American West sought

out parts of Nevada and California during the Gold Rush.

shown here so they could always have fresh bread.

They eventually moved north

to raise sheep on the High Desert range. Hatfield said the Basques

built large boarding houses in towns such as Burns, Jordan Valley, Juntura and Ontario

The first Basque immigrants who came to Oregon sought work as shepherds. Once they had settled

— an area he called the heart of Oregon's Basque country

in their communities, they often passed this line of work to the following generations. All of these photos were taken in Jordan Valley.

Photos courtesy Oregon Historical Society archives

— when they moved to a new

area so the shepherds could stay when they weren't out on

the range. These buildings got bigger and bigger as more Basque immigrants moved into a community and eventually mor-

or use that gave the shepherds

What: "We WereNotTramp Sheepmen": JoeOdiagaand the Oregon-Idaho Biskaian Basque Community,

they and theireldershad used in the past.

the ability to use the same land But these victories were

short-lived, because at the same time, the American sheep industry reached a point where it could no longer keep up with its foreign competitors and stopped bringing in the amount of money it generated

1890-1946

When: 6:30 p.m. Thursday Where: The BowmanMuseum's Community Room, 246 N. Main St., Prineville Cost: Free Contact: 541-447-3715

at the turn of the century.

These diminishing returns meant that fewer Basque immigrants moved to the Pacific

mediately rallied behind the Northwest to work as shepshepherds' cause when they herds and that their children learned about their struggles often had to look elsewhere for with the federal government work when they grew up. and its grazing policy. The size of Eastern OreWhile Odiaga and his co- gon's Basque communities

phed into a hotel, restaurant

and community center where people could pick up their mail,exchange money and receive sacraments offered by Catholic priests. s(The boarding houses) were the cultural hub of the community," Hatfield said,

't' u'

horts lost their initial court battle, their efforts did lead to

h \

adding that the restaurants in

many of these buildings are still open today, offering traditional Basque meals featuring

lamb, squid and cod. By the 1930s, southeastern Oregon's Basque immigrants numbered near 1,000 and made up about half of Once a Basque community established itself, the immigrants built larger "Basque hotel" complexes the region's total population,

Ifyougo

started to dwindle once these

two trends started taking hold, Hatfield said, and many of the large boarding houses that once served as their focal

the ouster of the Division of Grazing's top officials in late 1938 and persuadedthe secretary of the Interior to change TaylorGrazing Act's rules so they included the right of pri-

point now sit vacant. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean@bendbulletin.com

yrg/j ANtNiiAE.

that came complete with a dining room, rooms for shepherds and a place where they could worship.

according to the encyclopedia project. They started families, managed businesses and played an active role in just about every part of th e r e-

gion's day-to-day life. But even with this progress, raising sheep on the High Desert range continued to be the

primarysource of income for many Basque immigrants and their families.

This activity almost disappeared 80 years ago.

SINCE 1940

The battle President Franklin Roosevelt set out to create a way the fed-

JBIRl1,1 ,123,14,51j214

eral government could manage the more than 14 million

5 PRCA RoDEo PERFQRMANcEs

During the New Deal era,

acres of v acant, unclaimed

grazing lands it owned in Oregon so they were not overused Many Basque immigrants brought their families from Spain and France to stay with them once they He achieved this goal when established themselves in America. They often built large boarding houses so the shepherds could Congress passed the Taylor have a place to stay when not out on the range. Some married women worked at the boarding houses and lost forever.

Grazing Act of 1934. The new

and started their own families.

law divided federally owned grazing lands in Oregon and of land their families grazed on for generations and forced

other Western states into grazrng dkstrrcts.

It also created a system of them to find new, less produclocal grazing councils — man- tive land. "These folks were marginaged by the Division of Grazing, a new federal agency that alized," he said, explaining would become the Bureau of that losing access to the best Land Management — that grazing lands devastated the issued grazing permits to pri- Basque shepherds and the vate ranchers. communities they built in the Hatfield said one of the new High Desert and forced many law's biggest problems was of them to leave town or take that it gave people the ability up another line of work. to pick which tracts of publicHatfield said the financial ly owned grazing lands they losses suffered by the Basque wanted to use based almost shepherds also rippled across exclusively on how much pri- the state because they often vate land they owned.

rented tracts of state school Before the grazing act, these land — state-owned land that tractsof land were assigned was leased out to raise mon-

following the long-standing ey for its school system — so mantra "first in time is first they could have some extra in right," where people chose space for their sheep during which lands they wanted to

the winter.

use based solely on how long He said reporters from they had used them. across the state started paying Hatfield said the new sys- attention to the Basque sheptem proved disastrous for herds when they noticed the s mall operators like t h e money generatedthrough the Basque shepherds because it state school lands system was kept them from using tracts starting to dry up, and soon

many Oregonians were learn- trespassing, Odiaga and his ing about a small immigrant partners used their newfound community in the eastern part connections to keep the generof the state that they had never al public updated on the dayto-day proceedings of their heard of before. Hatfield said this newfound trials and the challenges they level of exposure proved es- had faced. p ecially i m p ortant t o th e Hatfield said Odiaga and his Basque shepherds when they defenseteam also shared docdecided to commit acts of civ- uments in which grazing offiil disobedience, where they cials used negative terms like grazed their animals on the "black Bascos" and "tramp grazing district lands with- sheepmen" when they talked out the local grazing council's about the Basque shepherds permission. because their skin was not One of these people was white and they could not afJoe Odiaga — a man Hatfield ford to buy their own tracts of called "the Basque Patrick grazing land. Henry" — who spent the night "(The public) saw them as in a Malheur County jail cell a group that wasn't receiving after he and two other shep- a fairshake from the federal herds were caught grazing government," Hatfield said, their sheep on public lands explaining people almost imwithout a permit in April 1936. When they were charged with three federal counts of

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G4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

For the Grand Floral Parade through downtown Portland, more than half a million spectators

cocktail list. In th e K i l ling-

annually line the route, making it Oregon's largest single-day event and the second-largest floral parade in the United States.

June 7. Kicking off with Chi-

sworth district, chef Naomi Pomeroy's highly acclaimed Beasthas added Expatriate as a lounge with its own distinc-

nese-style Dragon Boat Rac-

tive menu.

es in the morning, festivities continue with the coronation

The food cart scene continues to grow. My favorite

of the Rose Festival Queen at

of many new choices is the

the Memorial Coliseum, fol-

Grilled Cheese Grill, which offers seating in an old school

Portland Continued fromG1 The big day is Saturday,

lowed by the 4.2-mile Grand Floral Parade through down-

bus on Alberta Street. (There's

town Portland. More than half

a double-decker bus in anoth-

a million spectators annually line the route, making it Oregon's largest single-day event and the second-largest floral parade in the United States (af-

er location that I haven't visit-

ter California's Pasadena Rose

dudes in a food cart will be your mom," the online menu promises. Bollywood Theater, a success story on Alberta where

ed.) The menu isn't all grilled cheese; you can also get burgers, breakfasts and a couple of desserts. "A couple of bearded

Parade each New Year's Day).

Modern lodging If you haven't made hotel reservati ons for those dates,

a team of white Americans

it may already be too late. But

have recreateda casual Indian street cafe, has opened a

for now or later, put the renamed Sentinel on your Portland lodging radar.

spacious new restaurant on

Southeast Division. My sensi-

Known for more than 80

years asthe Governor Hotel,

bilities, however, directed me across the street and down a

the Sentinel was reincarnated

couple ofblocks to Ava Gene's,

in mid-Marchasa cornerstone

recently honored as Portland

of d o w ntown's

Magazine's best new restaurant of 2013.

r e v italized

West End neighborhood. The National Register of Historic Places property was built

E xecutive chef Josh M c -

Fadden offers a simple but thoroughly Italian menu that

in 1909 as the Seward Hotel.

During a major renovation in the early 1990s, the hotel ex-

ranges from meat-and-cheese

panded into the former 1923

plates to a range of salads, pastas and entree plates. My

Courtesy Portland Rose Festival Foundation

Elks Lodge on Southwest 11th "Find Your Party Animal," a float built by Reser's Fine Foods, was the grand sweepstakes winner of the Grand Floral Parade during the Avenue, and the McCormick IIs: Schmick's restaurant group

dinner featured two salads-

one asparagus with duck egg, the other red wheat with diced

2013 Portland Rose Festival. Always a highlight of the108-year-oid celebration, this year's Grand Floral Parade is June 7.

installed Jake's Grill beside

salami, provolone and pista-

the 10th Avenue lobby.

chios — and a pasta plate with lamb ragout, accompanied by

Two years ago, the Provenance Hotels group — which also owns the Lucia and deLuxe hotels in Portland, as

a Sicilian red wine. And I was

~l.

fortunate to pull up a bar stool next to r estaurant designer Andee Hess, who described

well as hotels in Seattle, Tacoma, Wash., and Nashville, Tenn. — bought the Governor.

- iil

her use of suspended lighting to pull attention away from a high industrial ceiling.

aeaatlsee

HeeSe

In partnership with developers, they invested $6 million and reopened as the Sentinel on March 14, after injecting a

R iLL , -

Summer exhibits Eating and drinking are the subjects of exhibits — current

touch of whimsy in the make-

over of 100 boutique-style guest rooms, 13 e l egant meeting rooms and grand ballrooms. The old Governor would

or soon-to-begin — at two of

Portland's popular museums. The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry is staging a photography exhibit that "invites you to explore what the

never have been called "chic,"

but that adjective is appropriate to the Sentinel, which stone sculptures on the historic building's roofline. From

Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin food we eat says about how The Grilled Cheese Grill on Alberta Street is one of the newer we live and who we are," acentries in Portland's thriving food-cart scene. "A couple of bearded cording to the museum webdudes," as described by the online menu, prepare sandwiches for site. "What I Eat: Around the diners who then can sit down to eat in a retired school bus. World in 80 Diets" is based

corridors to guest rooms, pho-

upon a popular book by Faith

takes its name from robotic

d'Aluisio and Peter Menzel

tographs and paintings honor some of the visionary thinkers and doers who have changed the modern world: people like John Lennon and Muhammad Ali, Steve Jobs and Martin Lu-

ther King Jr. The quaint lobby retains its original gilt plaster relief work beneath a towering ceiling. Adjoining it is Jackknife, which may be the coolest lobby lounge I've ever seen. Open just a month, but already a go-

After a $6 million makeover, Portland's venerable Governor Hotel has been reborn as the Sentinel. Although the original entrance was on the east side, built in1909, guests now enter the historic lodging property through the west-side facade of the1923 Elks Lodge. The restored hotel adds classic grace to Portland's West End neighborhood. Jake's Grill still offers fine dining, while the new Jackknife

lounge lures lovers ofdesigner cocktails.

to destination for hipsters and

intellectuals alike, Jackknife winds through several adjoining rooms with reclaimed wood decor — echoing the hotel's h i storical

with Spanish and Japanese and depicts 20 people from influences to accompany de- around the world — a camel hurst neighborhood; and it's signer cocktails. Across the herder from Egypt, for inconcealed behind a discreet street, Cheryl's on 12th boasts stance, and a sumo wrestler sliding bookshelf. Chef-own- a healthy lunch menu and the from Japan — and shows the er Akkapong (Earl) Ninsom best beignets this side of New food they eat in the course of a dishes up prix-fixe tasting Orleans. day, right down to serving size menus ($40 and $60) of regionDown the block on Stark and caloric value. al Thai specialties — it's north- Street, the Clyde Common Slated to begin June 7 and eastern Thai in May, but it was restaurant at the Ace Hotel has Continued next page southern Thai in April — on parlayeditsbarprogram'srepThursday through Saturday utation into a tiny around-thenights. cornercocktaillounge, Pepe Similarly in c onspicuous Le Moko. Similarly, minimalis the Multnomah Whiskey ist Laurelhurst eatery Navarre TOUCHMARK Slaos 1980 Library, on Alder Street just has added a next-door lounge, up the block from the Senti- Angel Face, which bucks tranel hotel. Behind a frosted, dition in not having a designer monogrammed doorbearing the number "1124," wedged www.AgateBeachMotel.com the corner of East Burnside Street near the city's Laurel-

c h aracter

and giving patrons a place for group gatherings or intimate

between "1122" and "1126," visitors climb a flight of stairs

tete-a-tetes. A mile and a half north, at

the top end of the Pearl Dis-

to find a handsome, spacious, wood-paneled room with

trict, the $49.5 million Resi-

plush couches that surround

dence Inn by Marriott opened on April 11. The six-story, 233-

a fireplace. But their vision is

A,,ateBei(hmOtel

menu is best described as with. The colorful Residence Inn by Marriott is a new hotel in Portland's Pearl District. Opened on April 11, the six-story, 233-room hotel was built at a cost of $49.5 million, thanks to investment from 90 Chinese citizens who invested $500,000 each to earn green cards.

along with a cafe, restaurant space. It is Oregon's first hoRoe opened in late 2012, and tel to be funded by the unique its chef-owner, Trent Pierce, EB-5 immigrant investor pro- already has garnered a James gram, created by Congress in Beard Foundation nomina1990. In exchange for equity tion as best chef in the Pacific

More restaurants A lso in the West End i s

a new trio of highly visible restaurants, standing side by

www.wallstreetsuitesbend.com

541.706.9006

www.facebook.com/wallstreetsuites

old-time speakeasy. 12th Avenue. Lardo is a gourLang Baan, which means met sandwich-and-beer joint; "back room" in Thai, is just Grassa serves h andcrafted that: It's the back room of pastas and fine wines; Racion Paadee, a Thai restaurant on is more eclectic, offering tapas

Northwest. S erved

like the

f o ur-course menu,

reservation-only dinners in intimate rooms that may seat fewer than two dozen diners,

and no more than three nights a week.

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In the food-and-beverage they are 100 percent seafood. industry, Portland continues There's nostreet signto direct to be a national trendsetter on you into Roe. If you make your many levels. A pioneer in the way through Block + Tackle, farm-to-table movement that a casual and often boisterous emphasizeslocalproduce,the seafood eatery on South East city also has perhaps more Division Street, you'll be digourmet food carts than any rected through curtains at the other of its size, along with a rear ofthat restaurant, as if plethora of craft distillers and you might be walking into an brewing companies. en fine dining into the back room. At such acclaimed new restaurants as Roe and Lang-

T h u r s-

business, the federal govern- day through Saturday nights, ment grants green cards to the the four-course menu ($70 investor and his or her family. without wine pairings) offers In the case of Portland's new threecreative seafood courses hotel, about 90 Chinese citi- and a choice of dessert. Sevzens invested $500,000 each. en-course chef's choice menus ($105) are also available, and

Behindcloseddoors

side on Washington Street at

and meeting and conference

investment in a job-creating

With 15 suites and 2 g u e st rooms, W al l S t r eet S u i t es offers an eclectic and relaxed atmosphere near the heart of downtown Bend!

comfort food to drink whiskey

cent to downtown.

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stacked like library books on 12-foot-tall shelves. The food

warehouse district that has become apopular dining and shopping neighborhood adja-

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drawn to 1,500 bottles, most of them scotches and bourbons,

room hotel is a welcome addition to the Pearl, the former

Designed by SERA Architects, the colorful hotel offers

Private,vintage,oeeanfront getaway ewport, o tR

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SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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Daniel Cole / Courtesy Museum of Contemporary Craft

Fashion designer Cassie Ridgway is an artist-in-residence for a summer exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Craft. Now through Oct. 11, "Fashioning Cascadia: The Social Life of the Garment" examines the craft of clothing design and the cultural identity embodied in fashion. • 0 •

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Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin

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The Multnomah Whiskey Library is a classy but inconspicuous new spirits parlor in downtown Portland. Some1,500 bottles of liquor, most of them scotches and bourbons, are stacked like library books on12-foot-tall shelves. or come shine. And then there's the Inter-

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national Rose Test Garden, also in Washington Park. The oldest public garden of its kind

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in the United States, it has more than 10,000 plantings of 500 different varieties, with

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more developed each year. Established in 1917, the 4.5-acre

garden also offers a stunning view across the Portland me-

tropolis toward perennially snow-capped Mount Hood. There's no better time to

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visit than right now, and most

of the flowers are coming into full bloom for the Portland

83 FREE SLOT

PLAY COUPO N

Rose Festival. It's no coincidence that Portland is known

around the world as the "City of Roses." — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com

LEAVETHEQRIVHIGTOUS! 54t.799.1529 ext. Z99

: 34333HWY.97HORTH CHI LOOOIR OR97624II '541.793.7529 HLAMOVACASIRO.COM: •

Suspended lighting pulls attention away from a high industrial ceiling at Ava Gene's, honored as Portland Magazine's best new restaurant of 2013. The chef serves a simple but authentic modern Italian

menu of salads, pastas and entrees. From previous page continue through Sept. 20,

how does the fashion industry shape the regional identity of

Washington Park

the Oregon Historical Society

the Pacific Northwest? On May 10, the Portland A rt M u seum o p ened t w o exhibitions interactive,

Park, for the child in all of us, the World Forestry Center's

Museum is presenting another photo exhibit: "Clink! A Taste of Oregon Wine." Offered by the Contemporary Landscape Photographers of Oregon in collaboration w i t h

L i n f i eld

College's Oregon Wine History Archive, this exhibit promises an in-depth look at "those individuals and i n stitutions

who propelled the Oregon wine industry onto the nation-

al and international stage." One of Portland's most intriguing summer exhibits opened last May 9 at the Museum of Contemporary Craft. "Fashioning Cascadia: The Social Life of the Garment" will run through Oct. 11. Presented by Pendleton Woolen

Mills, the exhibit studies both the craft of clothing design

In wooded Washington Discovery Museum will offer

Colors of Summer ... let the Fun begin!

"The Art of Dr. Seuss," begin-

stacked-newspaper sculptures ning Saturday and continuing by Montana artist Kate Hunt through Aug. 17. Chronicling (through Aug. 31) and "Two- t he life and c areer of a u Way Street," featuringthe work thor-artist Theodor Seuss Geiof New York street photogra- sel (1904-91), it will offer origphers Garry Winogrand and inal art from such books as Jonathan Brand, through Aug. "The Cat in the Hat," "Green 24. An exhibit called "Cobalt Eggs and Ham" and "The LoBlue," focusing on the use of rax," along with unique Seuscobalt ores in Chinese and oth- sian taxidermy. er medieval Asian porcelains,

continues through July 27. More in keeping with the Rose Festival theme will be "The Art of the Louvre's Tuil-

eries Garden" (June 14 to Sept. 21). This major exhibition will present more than 100 paintings, sculptures, photographs and drawings of the 17th to

A stone's throw away, the Portland Children's Museum

openedit s newest permanent exhibit, "Outdoor Adventure,"

Colorit Hot

on April 22. More than 1.3

acres adjoining the museum have been transformed into an education-based, outdoor

play space, featuring original works of art and focusing on

Cozy warmth of a Fire Pit

Aq-

20th centuries, by European natural elements that promote fashion embodies. It asks such a nd American ar tists w h o a sense of place in the Pacific questions as: What is being were inspired by the famed Northwest. And it's designed made here and why? And Paris garden. to be experienced come rain and the cultural identity that

Ifyou go INFORMATION Portland RoseFestival.120 S.W. Naito Parkway, Portland; 503-227-2681, www.rosefestival.org Travel Portland. 701 S.W.Sixth Ave. (Pioneer Courthouse Square), Portland; 503-275-8355, 877-678-5263, www.travelportland.com

LODGING Residence Inn Portland Downtown/Pearl District. 1150 N.W.Ninth Ave.(at Marshall Street), Portland; 503-220-1339, 888-236-2427, www.marriott.com. Rates from $189 Sentinel Hotel. 614 S.W.11thAve. (at Washington Street), Portland; 503-224-3400, 800-238-0767, www.sentinelhotel.com. Rates from $189

Lang Baan. 6S.E.28th Ave.,Portland; 971-3442564, www. langbaanpdx.com. DinnerThursdayto Saturday. Moderate Lardo. 1205 S.W.Washington St., Portland; 503-241-2490, www.lardopdx.com. Lunchand dinner every day. Moderate Multnomah Whiskey Library. 1124S.W.Alder St., Portland; 503-954-1381, www.multnomah whiskeylibrary.com. DinnerTuesday to Saturday. Moderate Racion. 1205 S.W.Washington St., Portland; 971-276-8008, www.racionpdx.com. Dinner Tuesday to Saturday. Moderate Roe. 3113S.E. Division St., Portland; 503-232-1566, www.roe-pdx.com. DinnerThursday to Saturday. Expensive

Dining

Attractions

Ava Gene's. 3377 S.E.Division St., Portland; 971-229-0571, www.avagenes.com. Dinner every day. Moderate to expensive Bollywood Theater. 3010S.E.Division St., Portland; 503-477-6699, www.bollywoodtheaterpdx.com. Lunch anddinnerevery day. Budget to moderate Cheryl's on 12th. 1135S.W.Washington St., Portland; 503-595-2252,www.cherylson12th.com. Breakfast and lunch every day, dinner Tuesdayto Saturday. Budget to moderate Grassa. 1205 S.W. Washington St., Portland; 503-241-1133, www.grassapdx.com. Lunchand dinner every day. Budgetand moderate The Grilled Cheese Grill. Three Portland locations including N.E.11thAvenue atAlberta Street; 503-206-8959, www.grilledcheesegrill.com. Lunch every day, dinnerTuesday to Saturday. Budget

www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org Oregon Historical Society Museum.1200 S.W. Park Ave., Portland; 503-222-1741,www.ohs.org Oregon Museum of Scienceand Industry. 1945 S.E. W ater Ave.,Portland;800-955-6674,www.omsi.edu Portland Art Museum.1219S.W. ParkAve., Portland; 503-226-2811,www.pam.org Portland Children'sMuseum.4015S.W.Canyon Road, Portland;503-223-6500, www.portlandcm.org World Forestry CenterandDiscovery Museum. 4033 S.W.CanyonRoad, Portland; 503-228-1367, www.worldforestry.org

Colorit Mellow

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Relax with your Family

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International RoseTest Garden.400 S.W. Kingston Ave., Portland; 503-823-3636, www.rosegardenstore.org Museum of Contemporary Craft. 724 N.W. Davis St., Portland; 503-223-2654,

Entertain your Friends

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

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


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Carey J. Williams/The Associated Press

The author, while riding the Trail of the Coeur d'Alenes, which is one of two dozen routes named to the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy Hall of Fame.

* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON G3

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DAILY BRIDGECLUB

Rails become trails, cross-country

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Chestnut of a deal By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

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A newspaper headlined a story about the unlikely recovery of a lost work of art: "Stolen painting found by tree." Those trees are known for their detective work. When I watched today's deal, Cy the Cynic wound up "unpoplar" with his partner. Cy was at the helm at a grand slam and had to find the queen of spades. He had to choose his play like a bee choosing which of two flowers to visit. Cy won the first club with the king and ruffed his low club in dummy. He took the A-K of diamonds and led the jack. West ruffed with the nine of trumps, and dummy overruffed. The Cynic nexttook the ace of spadesand drew trumps.West threw three clubs. Cy cashed his ace of clubs — East-West followed — and led a spade at Trick 12. When West played the nine, I saw Cy press his luck by putting up the king. Alas, East showed out. Down one. North voiced a resounding critique of Cy's play. "We will owe money after that one," North said firmly. "Yew s hould spruce u p y o u r technique.My dogwood have made that contract."

Cy was as penitent as a monk, but his play was spineless. He would soak up compliments instead of criticism aplenty if he counted EastWest's distribution. Cy could recall

that East had five diamonds and four trumps and had shown three clubs. So East had a spade singleton; a finesse with the jack would win. Speaking of detective work, can you find the names of 16 trees in this column, including its title? North dealer Neither side vulnerable

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and seven high trestles with

on a bus ($6 to $9).

The Associated Press

views of mountains in Idaho and Montana. The Taft 'Ilin-

Trail's first sections werepaved

W ALLACE, Idaho — I n many parts of th e country, abandoned train tracks have

been repurposed into multiuse exercise trails. The best of them — a little more than two

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you outside of city limits, perhaps following a river around a m ountain pass,offering an opportunity to see and hear birds

head.Visitors must purchase a trail pass for $10 ($6 for children) and have the option to pay for a one-way return trip

River, and near the Oaks Bot-

wildlife in an open meadow. And since the original tracks

had gradient limits for locomotives, the trails are relatively flat, making for an easy bike ride, hike or run.

The Hall of Fame trails, se-

and trailside amenities, his-

torical significance, excellence in management and maintenance of facility, community connections and geographic distribution." T he 72-mile Trail o f

the

Lake Coeur d'Alene, the South (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

I7 British stew

Fork of the Coeur d'Alene River and the peaks of the Bitter-

54 Beaniown

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120

many suburban cities with various Seattle neighborhoods. The Springwater Corridor, outside of Portland, runs through industrial and resifields, along the Willamette tom Wildlife Refuge, Tideman Johnson Nature Park and Powell Butte Nature Park.

The track, formerly occupied by Union Pacific Railroad, goes from Plummer, Idaho, to Mullan, Idaho. Parts go through protected marshlands near the chain lakes region (east of the lake), giving trail users a chance to see blue heron, swans, bald eagles, moose, elk and other wildlife. In the fall, the trail comes alive with

colorful autumn foliage from the aspen and larch trees. History buffs can visit Ida-

ho's oldest standing building, the Sacred Heart Mission, which was built in the 1850s, or tour a silver mine in nearby

Kellogg or Wallace. Lodging is available along the way for multiday trips, from campsites at Heyburn State Park to hotels and motels in towns. Less than 20 miles from

the trailhead for the Coeur d'Alenes trail is the trailhead for the Route of the Hiawatha,

located just across the Montana border. The Hiawatha trail, where

the Milwaukee Railroad once

Here's alist of the trails in the Rails-to-Trails ConservancyHall of Fame (www.railstotrails.org; see the webpageathtfp//bit.ly/fsiIP2irl) • COEUR O'ALENES(Idaho-Montana), http:/ifriendsofcdatrails.org • BURKE-GILMAN (Seattle area), www.seattle.gov/parks/burke gilman/bgtrail.htm • SPRINGWATER (near Portland), www.portlandoregon.gov/ parksifinder/index.cfm?action=ViewPark&PropertylD= 679, or http://bit.ly/1dSE81g

• PEAVINE & IRONKINGTRAILS (Arizona), http:licityofprescott .netiservices/parksitrailsi?id=40

• BIZZ JOHNSON TRAIL (California), www.blm.gov/ca/st/en/fol eaglelake/bizztrail.html

• FRED MARQUIS PINELLASTRAIL (Florida), www.pinellas county.orgitrailgd/ • SILVER COMET AND CHIEF LADIGATRAILS (Georgia-Alabama),

http:i/www.silvercometga.com/chief-ladiga-trail/index-ladiga.shtml • ILLINOIS PRAIRIE PATH (lllinois), www.ipp.org • MONON TRAIL(Indiana), www.indy.gov/eGoviCity/DPR/ Greenways/Pages/Monon%20Trai l.aspx • WABASH TRACE NATURETRAIL (lowa), www.inhf.orgitrails/ wabash-trace.cfm • PRAIRIE SPIRIT RAIL TRAIL STATE PARK(Kansas), www.bike prairiespirit.com • MINUTEMANBIKEWAY(Massachusetts), www.minuteman bikeway.org • PERE MARQUETTE RAIL-TRAIL OF MICHIGAN (Michigan), www.lmb.orgipmrt • PAUL BUNYAN STATETRAIL (Minnesoia), www.paulbunyan trail.com • LONGLEAF TRACE(Mississippi), www.longleaftrace.org • KATY TRAIL STATE PARK (Missouri), www.bikekatytrail.com

• THE HIGH LINE(NewYork), www.thehighline.org • LITTLE MIAMI SCENIC TRAIL (Ohio), www.miamivalleytrails.org/ little-miami-scenic-trail

•GREATALLEGHENY PASSAGE (Pennsylvania-Maryland), www.atatrail.org • EAST BAY BICYCLEPATH(Rhode Island), www.riparks.comi Locations/LocationEastBay.html • GEORGE S. MICKELSONTRAIL (South Dakota), http://gfp.sd.govl state-parks/directory/mickelson-traili • HISTORIC UNION PACIFIC RAIL TRAIL STATEPARK(Utah), http://stateparks.utah.gov/park/historic-union-pacific-rail-trail • WASHINGTON & OLDDOMINIONTRAIL (Virginia), www.wod friends.org • ELROY-SPARTA STATETRAIL (Wisconsin), http:I/dnr.wi.gov/ topic/parks/name/elroysparta/ • ISLAND LINE (Vermont), www.islandlinetrail.org

ran trains, offers 10 tunnels

State Representative

Trusted Leadership Proven Record Please Vote

@ John Huffman State Representative

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shot of an interstate or overrun with tumbleweeds. Others take

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highlight of the trip, but bring the line. It goes through the a headlamp because the pin- University of W a shington, ington and is popular for bi-

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in remote marshlands or spot

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD

oncetried for iI

for the trail and, for many, the

Burk e -Gilman

dozen routes in all — are in the tunnel doesn't provide enough Rail-to-Trails Co n servancy light for safe riding. Hall of Fame, and several of The 15-mile track is adverthose are located in the wider tised for bicycle travel and the Northwest: Idaho, Montana, non-paved, packed gravel surOregonand Washington. face can be ridden on hybrid Some routes are within ear- bike tires. Mountain bikes can

root Mountains.

"ADDRESSING THE CROWD" By JOHN LAMPKIN

nel is the main starting point

Seattle's

xwordeditor@aol.com

CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON G3

votehuffman.com

©2014 Tribune Content Agency,LLC.

Paid for by: Committee To Elect John E. Htgtffman


SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

G7

family getavvays Contact:rockymountainnational park.com, davenhavenlodge.com Make yours a grand and The Grand Tetons. Fill glorious family getaway. Here • your lungs with pine-

nn.

By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes The Dallas Morning News

are five ideas to consider.

The Grand Canyon.Hike, • photograph, raft or paint

1 this wonder of the world.

3

c

scented air. Raft the rivers, m arvel at t h e w i l d l ife o r

":A

travel by horseback into the backcountry. A visit to this historic moun-

The Associated Press file photo

Grand Canyon (Arizona)

The Associated Press file photo

Grand Lake, Colo. (pictured: Never Summer Mountains)

Hikers like the Bright Angel tain destination offers families Trail for great views of the in-

the best of the great outdoors

ner canyon. Choose day hikes paired with a glimpse into our to the Three-Mile Rest-house Western heritage. Stay in the or to Indian Garden. Better

tony town of Jackson, Wyo.,

yet, reserve a campsite at the Bright Angel campground (9.3 miles one way) or bunks at Phantom Ranch (9.8 miles one way) for a full experience.

or in more rustic quarters

Plan well in advance. Reservations for Phantom Ranch can

museums.

only bemade by mail,phone

within Grand Teton National Park. Take in the rodeo and

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The Associated Press file photo

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The Associated Press file photo

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GS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MAY 18, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

aers oeS e i TV SPOTLIGHT

erview in an upholstered chair, facing when he appeared in March Walters or one of her imitators. on thepopular online comedy Subject and interviewer would show "Between Two Ferns" to share in the reflected glory, in- encourage more young people creasing the celebrity of both to sign up for health insurance. newsmaker and newscaster. C elebrities can also go

By Jonathan Mahler New Yorh Times News Service

On a Wednesday night in early March 1999, Barbara Walters invited a small group of friends and colleagues to her

But the power of the Big Three networks has faded. The

New York apartment to watch her two-hour interview with

demise of appointment viewing and the proliferation of

Monica Lewinsky. During a commercial break, Walters stood by the window, looking out over Central Park, and noticed something peculiar.

alternatives to network news

the announcement — inher own words — via her web-

ing room to take a confession.

site, Goop. The post brought And how much value is there so much traffic to Goop that it in an "exdusive" when people crashed.

home watching the interview,"

ABC/The Associated Press

Oprah Winfrey wss among the surprise guests who bid Barbara Walters farewell last week as the legendary newswoman taped her final edition of "The View," ending a five-decade career on television. Both women were coveted interviewers, though their styles were far apart. Walters will continue to make ABC News appear-

ances for the occasional story or interview.

relationship with President Bill Clinton, more people than had ever watched a news program perfected and personified: the — or have watched one since. intimate sit-down with a world As was often the case with leader, the weepy celebrity conWalters' broadcasts duringher fessional, the jailhouse interprime, it was television as a view — the so-called"big get." form of national theater.

In her final weeks on the

On Friday, the 84-year-old air, when the disgraced Los Walters signed off from her Angeles Clippers owner DonABC daytime show"The View" ald Sterling was the man of for the last time. After five de- the hour, Walters interviewed cades in television, the wom- his girlfriend. About 7 million

so goes TV news," said Connie Chung, a longtime television news anchor. "There's no big payoff for an exclusive television interview with someone

for an hour. No one is going to watch it, anyway." Walters did not invent the

celebrity get. That distinction belongs to Edward R. Murrow and his 1950s show, "Person to Person." But Walters turned

an who started her career on

people tuned in. V. Stiviano is

camera as a pitchman forAlpo dog food and went on to cross the Bay of Pigs with Fidel Castro and to interview every U.S. president (and first lady) since Richard Nixon is retiring.

no Lewinsky, but the disparity the celebrity interview into a in ratings says as much about kind of art form. She was unthe changedmedia landscape threatening enough to land as it does about the interview- the big names, but probing ees' relative star power. enough to retain her journalisWalters' peers can't help but tic credibility. see her departure as more than For decades, this was how

As the sun sets on Walters'

band, Chris Martin, she did not sit for an emotional television interview. She made

correspondent with great hair to come into a celebrity's liv-

enue," she observed. "That's because everyone is

question Lewinsky, the former White House intern, about her

Gwyneth Paltrow "consciously uncoupled" from her hus-

have obviated the need for a

"There's no traffic on Fifth Av-

one of her producers said. It was only a slight exaggeration. Nearly 50 million people tuned in to see Walters

straight to their fans. When

career, it is also setting on the the end of one woman's career. form of television news she

"With Barbara's retirement,

can follow the interview in real time on their phones via 7t/vit-

rity choosing to break news

The very notion of a celeb-

ter, or watch the highlights later on YouTube?

in an interview could soon become outdated. A lot of young-

er stars simply keep their both wrangling and advis- fans updated on their ups and ing celebrities say it is hard to downs via social media. imagine a single newscaster But for disgraced celebrities again holding so much sway trying to redeem their reputaover the culture. tions, submitting themselves "There is no one biggest, to rigorous questioning is still most important a nything the recommended course of anymore," said Leslee Dart,a action. That is how ABC's Bob publicist who has represent- Woodruff landedJohn Eded such stars as Woody Allen wards in 2008 and how Oprah and Meryl Streep. "We just Winfrey landed Lance Armdon't live in that kind of media strong last year. world anymore." It is also how Walters landFor celebrities and their pub- ed V. Stiviano, and Sterling's licists, the fragmentation of the wife, Shelly. mediahas made life both hardOf course, by the time these er and easier. exclusive interviews were They no longer have the pos- shown, the Sterling scandal sibility of one-stop shoppinghad been playing out on the People in the business of

score that interview with Wal-

Internet for days. And it was

ters, andyourmedia campaign not Walters but CNN's Anderis basically done — but they do son Cooper who scored Sterhave more outlets from which ling himself. It was the biggest to choose. They can target a get of the whole sordid affair, we came to know presidents, particular demographic, as even if only 720,000 people w orld leaders and movie stars: President Barack Obama did were watching.

Toomuc a out i ininvitations

MOVIE TIMESTODAY

Dear Abby:My daughter's third tive guests should reply to the invibirthday is coming soon, and since tation by ASKING what gifts the the new thing is sending out web- child would enjoy or can use.

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site-generated invitations, I have

If the invitation was issued on-

stick to my guns and keep looking for that special someone who does not come with a family attached? — Montana Lonely

noticed it is becoming common to line, the question can be asked via include the child's interests, clothes/ texting or email. However, a phone shoe size, etc. in the invitation. call is more personal and, frankly, I'm uncomfortable more refined. about including this Dear Abby: I am information because a 38-year-old male DEP,R I feel a child should who has never been ABBY be grateful for any married. I have been thing he or she rein three serious relaceives as a gift. Am I tionships, all of them too old-fashioned, or is this tacky? with women who have children.

Dear Montana Lonely:If you prefer to start dating women who don't have children, that is your privilege. Your friends may think you will be missing out on a good thing, but it's

If it is acceptable these days, what's

Each time when these relationships

do with missing the children than

a good way to provide a child's wish list without sounding expectant of anything?

ended, I found myself heartbroken the woman you were seeing, a and traumatized. I experienced change of pace might be healthy a kind of withdrawal because of foryou. the emotional bond I had with the P.S. If you think these breakchildren. ups were painful for you, imagine

— Young Mom in San Mateo, Calif.

Dear Young Mom:I appreciate

that you want to teach your child

I have now decided to date only

really none of their business.

While I agree that by going in this direction you may miss out on a lovely lady who also happens to be a mother, because your sadness after your breakups had more to

what it was like for the children to

good manners and good values. women who have no children.But How else are children to learn if my friends and co-workers say I'm their parents don't take the time to being shortsighted and "closing the explain what they are'? door to several opportunities." BeI understand some parents try to cause of our disagreements, I find save time by including the informa- myself spending more and more tion you have described along with time away from them, and more their party invitations, but frankly, time alone. it IS tacky. The parents of prospecAre my friends right? Or should I

have a potential father to whom they had grown close disappear from their lives. This is why many mothers keep their dating lives completely separate until they

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) *** * Speak your mind,andclear upa

MAY18, 2014:This yearyou find that communication flourishes. You will start to feel far more relaxed than you have in years. You also will see life from a new perspective. If you are single, you will meet a lot of potential sweeties. Enjoy dating, but do not commit unless you are100 percent sure. You will note that you have a strong desire to Stars showthe kind live with someone. sf dayysu'Ilhsve Do not let this ** * * * D ynamic need to cohabitate take over. If you are attached, as a couple, you could * Difficult decide to purchase

asecond homeor

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

life. The conversation could cover many different topics, but be careful not to go overboard when a topic comes up that greatly intrigues you. Tonight: Consider being a little tamer.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * Defer to others, and think through an important decision that is on your mind. You also might want to discuss the issue with several people whose opinions you respect. You will make the correct choice with or withoutadvisers. Tonight: Let your hair down and relax.

are sure the relationship will be

permanent. — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

problem. Listen to the other side of this same issue. If you follow your intuition and let your feelings flow, you will land well. You can't deny this side of yourself. Your style of communication could change. Tonight:Outand about.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) *** * The cost of proceeding asyou have been could be higher than you had anticipated. Still, you'll enjoy discussing a potential purchase with a loved one. You might not be absorbing all the details surrounding a problem. Listen well. Tonight: Get into some good music.

GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * Share more of yourself with a loved one or several special friends. You ** * You might want to slow down will enhance the caring between you, and while you can. The pace will quicken soon you also will add to the trust that already enough. Take advantage of some free time exists between you. You might feel as if you're rebuilding trust in a key relationright now, and follow through only on ARIES (Marcb21-April19) whatyou want. A family member might ship. Tonight: As you like it. ** * * Make and return calls, and don't have a case of the grumps. Tonight: Stay forget about an older friend or relative. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) close to home. Your contact with this person will be ** * Back out of plans if you need a greatlyappreciated. Be willing to extend VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) break. Return calls. You might feel as if yourself a little more. A partner could be ** * * * M ake plans to get together you needto hold backsome ofwhatis on overserious. Tonight: Start thinking about with someone who lives at a distance. your mind. Trustyour judgments, but do tomorrow. You could be overserious with others in not be surprised when someone tries to conversations. Try to lighten up a little if coax you into verbalizing your thoughts. TAURUS (April 20-May20) you would like to establish more give-and- Tonight: Get some extra R and R. ** * * Reach out to someone at a take. Tonight: Add some naughtiness. distance and catch up on news. The unPISCES (Feb.19-March20) expected could occur, and it might open ** * Zero in on what you want. SomeLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) you up to a new vision or new possibility. ** * Stay close to home, if possible. one might askyou foryour opinion, and Discuss getting together with this person Invite friends or family over, even if you before you know it, you could be in the in the next few months. Tonight: Read are deciding to redecorate a room or two. midst of a brainstorming session. Your between the lines in a conversation. In fact, you might have some people offer creativity will emerge, and you'll funnel to help you. Use caution with spending, or some of this energy into other activities. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You'll decide to relate on a one- rethinka recent purchase. Tonight: Do not Tonight: Add some romance. on-one level with a key person in your go overboard. © King Features Syndicate simply remodel your current home. You will want to entertain more, and others will love being entertained. CAPRICORN can change directions mentally and physically in no time.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

I

I I

TV TODAY 7:30 p.m. on10, "American Dad" — Hayley meets a millionaire (voice of DeeBradley Baker) who helps her get over the loss of Jeff, but things take a complicated turn when Steve andSnot discover that Jeff is still alive and trying to get back to her. Comedian Sinbad guest voices his cartoon likeness in the season finale, "The Longest Distance Relationship." 8 p.m. on 29, "2014 Billboard Music Awards" —Airing from Las Vegas, this annual awards gala honors the year's top songs

and artists basedonrecord sales, radio airplay, touring, social media interactions and other measures of popularity. Of course the term "record sales" today

encompassesdigital downloads as well as CDs. 8 p.m. on 6, "TheAmazing Race" —The remaining teams

race throughLasVegasand undertake one last challenge. This one has beendevised by illusionist David Copperfield and will require the contestants to get in touch with their inner magicians. Phil Keoghan hosts the season finale. 8:30p.m.on10,"FamilyGuy" — You'd think Stewie would have learned by nowabout the perils of messing with time. In the season finale, he gets upset over having his television time interrupted and wishes he'd never beenborn, then he goes back in time to break his parents up so he won't be. Hestill is born, however — into a British family right out of "Downton Abbey" — in "ChapStewie." 9p.m.on6, "The Good Wife" — The season finale is called "A Weird Year," and did they ever get that right. A camera is accidentally left on after a teleconference between Florrick/Agos and Lockhart/Gardner, revealing a threat to the former firm. Lockhart/Gardner's future is also at stake when Louis Canning

(Michael J.Fox)seeksa bigger role. Alicia (Julianna Margulies) entrusts Zach's (Graham Phillips) graduation party planning to his grandmothers (Stockard Channing, Mary Beth Peil). 10 p.m. on 6, "TheMentalist"-

Lisbon (RobinTunney)postpones her plans to go toWashington, D.C., with Pike (Pedro Pascal) when the teamgets anew lead

on a coldcase.This buysJane (Simon Baker)sometime to process his feelings for her and decide what to do in theseason finale, "Blue Bird." Tim Kangand Amanda Righetti also star. © Zap2it

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

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