Bulletin Daily Paper 07-20-2014

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Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q

SUNDAY July 20,2014

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IN COUPONS INSIDE

CYCLING • D1

TRAVEL• C1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Meen Iending —Readthe

AP's original report of the 'giant leap for mankind' from 45 years ago today.A3

HIGHWAYS

Oregon expores

OREGON'S COORDINATED CARE EXPERIMENT A three-part Bulletin series:Oregon is conducting a unique experiment on Medicaid, to see if a regional system of "coordinated care organizations" can improve health care, improve health and lovver costs.

Friday:TheBulletin exploredhow reforms are changing health care.

Saturday:Weexamined howreform affects actual health — andhow to measurethat.

funding

Today: W einvestigatehow money is being spent differently.

options

Q» Follow along atbeedbelletin.cem/ceerdinatedcare

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — As lawmakers in the nation's capital

Supel' PACS — Big money donors are turning their eyes toward Oregon this cycle.B3

struggled this week to find additional revenue for the almost

depleted Highway

Luna Malvada —Ivlanwlth

Trust Fund, a pilot

Bend roots wins accolades for tequila.E1

program in Oregon may offer a glimpse of how America will

pay for its roads in

Leaving America — com-

the future.

panies seek lower taxes.F1

Since 1956, the Highway Trust Fund has been supported by a federal gas tax,

In WOrld neWS —Palestinians flee violence.A2

which has stood at

18.4 cents per gallon since the beginning

And a Wedexclusive

By Lily Raff McCaulou• The Bulletin

— The island of Tasmania produces 85 percent of the world's poppies for pharmaceutical use, but drug companies worry that all their flowers are in one basket. beedbelletin.cem/extras

More dads want paid paternity eave

the growing use of gas-sipping hybrid and electric cars has

ince March, St. Charles Health SysLOCAL AND LEADING THE WAY

tem has faced a new financial in-

led to a decrease in revenues for the trust

Gov. John Kitzhaber's model for Medicaid, and

centive to keep Oregon Health Plan patients out of its hospitals.

EDITOR'SCHOICE

of the Clinton administration. But

Before then, the hospitals were reimbursed by

eventually all of health care, focuses on prevention, and ours is among the first communities to test it, especially at the hospital level.

fund, even as Americans are driving more miles than ever. Over a decade ago, Oregon began

LOCAL PATIENT

ways to pay for high-

the state Medicaid program only if a patient walked through the doors and sought treatment. This is

exploring alternative

the standard financial model known as "fee for

way maintenance

and upkeep besides a gas tax. SeeHighways/A4

service."

Patients who are insured under Oregon's version of Medicaid are still covered if they have to go to the hospital. But under a new contract, St. Charles

now receives a monthly payment for each Central Oregon member of the Oregon Health Plan — and will profit the most if the patients don't have to be admitted.

Jet's dead

That shift is part of a big experiment in health care,to encourage coordinated care that emphasiz-

es prevention. Gov. John Kitzhaber developed this model for Medicaid, in an effort to accomplish the

By Brigid Schulte

are still in

so-called triple aim: better health care, better health

The Washington Post

and lower costs. Securing the third leg of that tripod — lower costs — involves what is likely the most revolutionary change of alL It also involves a generous definition of "lower," as the state is cutting the

war zone

Marc Carlson, a senior

manager at Ernst & Young in Detroit, took two weeks

of the company's standard paid parental leave for dads when his daughter, Rebecca, was born last year. Then, when his wife,

Instead of paying health care providers for each

Diana, went back to work

as a physician, Carlson declared himself the primary

bonuses. Several primary care clinics have switched to

caregiver and took the

this payment system. But for hospital services, Cen-

maximum four additional weeks of paid leave. Carlson, 35, changed diapers, took Rebecca for walks and struggled for

tral Oregon is the first community to put its money where the governor's mouth is.

get the uncooperative baby to drink from a bottle. "From the beginning, my wife and I really wanted our child care to be shared. And I wanted to

be engagedwith my kid," Carlson said. "I was a lit-

New York Times News Service

Andy TullisI The Bulletin

service they perform, the new system offers a fixed

per-member,per-month sum. The monthly payments are augmented by possible performance

what seemed like hours to

ByDavtdM.Heraxenhorn andSabrinaTavetnise

rate of growth in per-patient spending, not the total dollar amount.

KIEV, Ukraine — The Ukrainian

Lisa Severa's experience illustrates the state's overall strategy for reducing the cost of care, as a comprehensive checkup this spring, and later a colonoscopy, helped prevent what likely

government said Saturday that it had proof

that Russiahad provided the surface-to-

would have been costly treatments later.

air missile system that

shot down a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet

This could someday become the new model for all health care in Oregon. Earlier this year, the

state Public Employees' Benefits Board, which insuresmore than 130,000 public employees and their families, announced plans to switch its insur-

ance plansto more closely resemble the one used for the Oregon Health Plan. Regardless of how you get your health insurance — whether through Medicare or a private insurance company such as Moda — the story of Medicaid in Oregon could be a glimpse into your own

How Central Oregon's coordinated care organization performed on key benchmarks

on Thursday, killing al1298people aboard.

Chart ee A7 SeeCCOs/AG

That daim came

JEFFERSON

as officials from Malaysia and the Netherlands pleaded

for politics to be put aside so they could recover their dead, still lying in a field in

CROOK

in its first full year.

future.

tle hesitant about taking

over eastern Ukraine

AND: LOCAL REPORTCARD

DESCHUTES

a war zone. SeeJet/A4

the full six weeks off. But I wasn't worried about the stigma, or whether it

would affect my career advancement.Iwas more worried about the moun-

tain of work I'd return to." Carlson is part of a generation of young fathers who tell pollsters they

Teen's death putsfocusoncaffeine powder dangers By Ann Sanner The Associated Press

But it was one of the world's

drawn a warning from federal health authorities urging consumers to avoidit.

weeksbefore theirpromking's

most widely accepted drugs that killed Logan Stiner — a powdered form of caffeine so

death, students at an Ohio high

potent that as little as a single

"I don't think any of us reallyknewthat this stuff was

schoolhad attended an assembly on narcotics that warned

teaspoon canbe fatal.

out there," said Jay Arbaugh,

survey of 1,000 fathers,

about the dangers of heroin and

the majority rated paid parental leave as important

prescriptionpainkillers.

Mayhas focused attention on the unregulatedpowder and

want to be more than a

paycheck, or the fun dad on weekends, and instead to be fully involved in parenthood. In a recently released Boston College

COLUMBUS,Ohio — A few

The teen's sudden death in

superintendent of the Keystone

Local Schools. The Food and Drug Admin-

istration said Friday that it's

of Cleveland.

investigatingcaffeinepowder and will consider taking regu-

Stiner, awrestler, had more than 70 micrograms of caffeine latory action. per milliliter ofblood in his A n a utopsy f o un d t h a t system, as much as 23 times the Stiner had a lethal amount of amount found in a typical cofcaffeine in his system when fee or soda drinker, according he died May 27 at his home in to the county coroner. LaGrange, Ohio, southwest See Caffeine/A8

or extremely important,

although 96 percent reported they could take two weeks or less. Some said

their companies gave them one day. SeeDads /A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 85, Low51 Page B6

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

Ef - 6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles c6 D1-6 82 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts G f - 6L ocal/State B f -6 Opinion/Books Ff -6 TV/Movies C8

The Bulletin AnIndependent

Q We use recycled newsprint

vol. 112, No. 201,

4e pages,

7 sections 0

88 267 0 23 3 0

7


A2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

The Bulletin

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Baghdad demdihgS —Fivebombs explodedin the Iraqi capital Saturday, killing 30 people, astensions continued between Baghdad and Jordan, signaling the inexorable spillover of Iraq's troubles to the region. Thedispute betweenthe two nations centered on ameeting held in Amman,theJordanian capital, on Wednesdayevening by11 Iraqi Sunni groups, including somethat areactively fighting the Iraqi government. TheJordanian government was not involved in the meeting, but Iraqi Parliament membersareaccusing Jordan of knowing the groups werethere andnot arresting them.

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AfghaniStan withdrawal —Afghanistan's disputedelection and

Iraq's unraveling aregiving members of Congressand U.S.allies in the region reason to think President BarackObamashould rethink his decision to withdraw virtually all Americans troops fromAfghanistan by the close of 2016.TheWhite Housesays Afghanistan is different from Iraq, mired in sectarian violencesince shortly after U.S. troops left, and that the drawdowndecision is adonedeal. Somelawmakers, however, are uncomfortable with Obama'splan, which responds totheAmerican public's war fatigue andhis desire to becredited with pulling the U.S. from two conflicts. Tensenators, Republicans andDemocrats, raised the drawdown issue at acongressional hearing Thursday.

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Sergey Ponomarev / New York Times News Service

Palestinian refugees unload mattresses at a United Nations shelter on Saturday in Rafah, Gaza Strip. The number of Palestinians who have left their homes for official U.N. shelters reached 50,000, according to a U.N. spokesman. But the true number who have fled is probably much higher, as most have taken refuge with friends and family.

ousan s ee aza as vio ence esca a es By Anne Barnard and Jodi Rudoren

another incursion, a militant

destroy them.

slipped through a different

New York Times News Service

tunnel into I sraeli territory

Though the government has said the ground campaign will

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — Eight Palestinian militants emerged from a tunnel some

and, according to the military, be limited and focused at the fired on troops who killed him. tunnels, the growing intensity The infiltrations came even of the battles that are pushas the Israeli military pressed ing deeper into civilian areas deeper into Gaza, killing 48 suggested that the impact on Palestinians in an intensifying Gaza's civilians could grow far ground war it says is focused worse. both on destroying a labyrinth Tens of thousands of Gazans of tunnels before they can be have been forced to flee. The used for launching attacks and day's death toll appeared to be on quelling rocket fire from the highest since July 8, when the Palestinian endave. Israel began air strikes it said The morning clash was the were meant to quell rocket at-

300 yards inside Israel on Saturday morning,armed with automatic weapons and wear-

ing Israeli military uniforms, the Israeli military said. The gunmen fired a rocket-propelled grenade at two Israeli military jeeps on patrol, starting a battle that killed two

Israeli officers and one of the militants, according to the military. The rest then retreated

first time in the war that the militants killed soldiers in-

underground, back to Gaza. Hours later, the military

tacks. At one hospital in northern Gaza, the director said that 40 casualties arrived in just

side Israel. It came just three days after 13 Hamas gunmen four hours Saturday morning, says, two more militants en- poured from another tunnel a number that had been typitered Israel either through a into Israel in an attempted as- cal for an entire day before the tunnel or by breaching the sault. Israeli officials framed ground invasion. border fence.The Israelis re- the encounters as successes The Palestinian death toll ported the men were carrying in thwarting attacks on Is- in Gaza rose to 336 since the tranquilizers and handcuffs; rael. But they were also an start of that campaign, with one militant was fatally shot indication that Hamas could more than 2,400 wounded, the and the other died when the strike even during the inva- Palestinian health m i n istry explosive belt he was wearing sion through a t u nnel net- said. About 75 percent of the detonated, a military spokes- work that Israeli officials just casualties have been civilians, man sald. revealed they had been study- according to a United Nations And Saturday night, in yet ing for a year to plan a way to count.

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

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

HIV diagnosisrate fell by athird in the U.S.over the past decade By Mike Stobbe

look at these trends than any

The Associated Press

previousstudy, said another study author, Amy Lansky of

NEW YORK — The rate of

HIV infections diagnosed in the United States each year fell by one-third over the past decade, a government study finds. Experts celebrated it as hopeful news that the AIDS epidemic

may be slowing in the U.S. "It's encouraging," said Patrick Sullivan, an Emory University AIDS researcher who

was not involved in the study. The reasons for the drop aren't clear. It might mean fewer

new infect ions are occurring. Or that most infected people already have been diagnosed so more testing won't necessarily find many more cases. "It could be we are approach-

ing something of a 'ceiling effect,'" said one study leader, Da-

vid Holtgrave of Johns Hopkins University. The study was released on-

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

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line Saturday by the Journal of the American Medical As-

OtoOtrO aa04aO aa6

Health Organization estimates

The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.

the virus. In the United States,

MEGABUCKS

don't know it. The study is based on HIV

The estimated jackpot is now $5.3 million.

sis rates dropped even as the amount of testing rose. In 2006,

dinics, hospitals and laboratories. The data span a decade, making this a larger and longer

57,000 young migrants coming without their parents, most from Central America, havebeenapprehended atthe southwest border since October.Administration officials andlawmakers in Congress want to stem theinflux by speeding upreviews to determinewhether they should bedeported. But interviews over the past weekwith many young migrants suggest the risks of accelerating initial screenings. Minors questioned shortly after being caught in locations, like Border Patrol stations, wherethey mayfeel unsafe often donot disclose dangers at home orabusessuffered during their journey, lawyers who are counseling themsay. LadmiehaPS —Therecently documentedmistakes at federal laboratories involving anthrax, flu andsmallpox haveincited public outrage. But theepisodeswerejust a tiny fraction of the hundreds that have occurred in recentyears across asprawling web of academic, commercial andgovernment labsthat operate without clear standards or oversight, federal reports show.Therehas never beena national plan for howmanylabs areneeded, or howthey should bebuilt and operated. Themore of these labs there are, the GovernmentAccountability Office warnedCongress last week,thegreater the chancesof dangerous blunders or sabotage,especially in afield where oversight is "fragmented andlargely self-policing." Fatal NYC arreSt —A NewYork City police officer involved in the arrest of a man who died in custody after being placed in anapparent chokehol dhasbeenstrippedofhisgunand badgeandplacedondesk duty, police saidSaturday. Officer Daniel Pantaleo, aneight-year NYPD veteran, and an officer who has beenwith the force for four years were both taken off the street after the deathThursday of43-year-old Eric Garner on Staten Island, police said. The department would not identify the second officer but said hewould retain his gunand badgewhile on desk duty. Thereassignment is effective immediately andwill remain in effect while Garner's death is being investigated, police said. — Fromwirereports

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diagnoses from all 50 states' health departments, which get test results from doctors' office,

ImmigratiOn Surge —Inan unprecedented surge, morethan

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35 million people globally have I.l million people are thought to be infected, though many

MeXiCan Child Shelter —For more than six decades, poor parents struggling to support their children or raise troubledyouths sent them to agroup home in western Mexico run by awomanwho gained a reputation as a secular saint. Rosadel CarmenVerduzco raised thousands of children inTheGreat Family home.Shecultivated patrons among Mexico's political and intellectual elites, andwasvisited by presidents andrenownedwriters. Then, lastyear, parents begancomplaining to authorities that they couldn't visit their children at thehome. Residents told investigators of Dickensian horrors — rapes,beatings and children heldagainst their will for years in trash-strewn rooms with filthy toilets. OnTuesday, heavily armedfederal police and soldiers raided the home andarrested nine caretakers, including the 79-year-old woman known asMama Rosa.Therevelationsspawneddisgustand horror, but also arush to Mama Rosa's defense bysupporters who include some ofMexico's most respected intellectuals andsomeof the very children whosaythey weremistreated at herfacility.

not, she and other experts said.

HIV is the virus that caus-

es AIDS, which destroys the immune system. The World

4 Q7 Q 15Q 21Q 41 Q3Q

cordingto CDC data. Lansky acknowledged that the federalCenters for Disease given the testing increases, the Control and Prevention. new findings may seem like a The findings: 16 out of every bit of a paradox. One might as100,000 people ages 13 and old- sume that "if more people get er werenewly diagnosed with tested, you're more likelyto find HIV in 2011, a steady decline m ore people who are infected," from 24 out of 100,000 people she said. in2002. But several factors could exDedines were seen in the plain the decline. rates for men, women, whites, One is Holgrave's 'ceiling efblacks,Hispanics, heterosex- fect' theory. Another is a possiuals, injection drug users and ble ebb in new infections. most age groups. The only The CDC has been estimatgroup in which diagnoses in- ing about 50,000 new infections creased was gay and bisexual occur each year and that nummen, the study found. ber has been holding steady in The diagnosis rate is a direct the past decade. That estimate measure of when people actu- comes from reportsfrom 25 ally tested positive for the virus. city and state health departThe diagnoses may be identi- ments, joined with statistical fying infections that happened modeling. recently oryears before. Lansky said maybe new inThe study found diagno- fections are waning. Or maybe

How could new infections be the CDC recommended routine holding steady when diagnoses sociation. It is part of the jour- HIV testing for all Americans are falling? Perhaps the infecnal's special report on HIV re- ages 13 to 64, saying an HIV tion count might be buoyed search, issued ahead of the In- testshould be as common as by the expanding epidemic ternational AIDS Conference a cholesterol check. The per- in young gay and bisexual that starts today in Melbourne, centage of adults ever tested for men, said Sullivan, the Emory Australia. HIV increased from 37 percent researcher.

The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:

The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:

in 2000to 45percent in 2010, ac-

arrested one ofColombia's most-wanted criminals, a 40-year-old man nicknamedthe Ratwho is allegedly one of the leaders of a ruthless drug cartel linked to 400 murders andthe shipment of largest amounts of cocaine to Europeandthe United States. HernanAlonso Villa was arrested Friday while driving on a highway on the outskirts of the southeastern Mediterranean port city of Alicante, police said in a statement. Hewasfound carrying 40,000 euros in cash, police said. Police in Colombia said Alonso Villa is leader of the military wing of the so-called EnvigadoOffice, namedfor the district in Medellin where one of the country's largest and most-violent drug trafficking organizations arose in the 1990s following the dismemberment of Pablo Escobar's Medellin cartel.

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SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Sunday, July 20, the 201st day of 2014. Thereare164 days left in the year.

ANNIVERSARY

HAPPENINGS

eaISa 0: anwa San emaan

International AIDSconferenCe —The meeting in Melbourne, Australia, is set to begin even assix people who were traveling to attend it died when a Malaysian Airlines flight was shot down over Ukraine.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1944, an attempt by a group of Germanofficials to assassinate Adolf Hitler with a bomb failed as theexplosion only wounded the Nazi leader. In1861,the Congress of the Confederate States convened in Richmond, Virginia. In1871, British Columbia

entered Confederation as a Canadian province. In1917, the World War I draft lottery went into operation. In1923, Mexican revolutionary leader Pancho Villa was assassinated. In1954, the GenevaAccords divided Vietnam into northern and southern entities. In1968, the first International Special Olympics Summer Games,organizedbyEunice Kennedy Shriver, were held at Soldier Field in Chicago. In1969, astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin became the first men to walk on the moonafter reaching the surface in their Apollo 11 lunar module. In1974, Turkish forces invaded Cyprus after a coup bysupporters of union with Greece. In1976, America's Viking 1 robot spacecraft made a successful, first-ever landing on Mars. In1989, Burmese activist Aung San SuuKyi was placed under house arrest by the military government of Myanmar. In1999, after 38 years at the bottom of the Atlantic, astro-

naut Gus Grissom's Liberty Bell 7 Mercury capsule was lifted to the surface.

In2012, a gunman opened fire inside a crowded movie theater in Aurora, Colorado, during a midnight showing of "The Dark Knight Rises," killing 12 people. (Suspect James EagenHolmes has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to more than 160 counts of murder and attempted murder.) Ten years agn:Former national security adviser Sandy Berger quit as an informal adviser to Democrat John Kerry's presidential campaign after disclosure of a criminal investigation into whether he'd mishandled classified terrorism documents. Iraqi militants freed a Filipino truck driver after the Philippines government gave in to their demands to withdraw troops from Iraq. Five years agn:A roadside bomb killed four American troops in eastern Afghanistan. The astronauts aboard the shuttle-station complex celebrated the 40th anniversary of man's first moon landing with their own spacewalk. One year agn:People rallied in dozens of U.S. cities, urging authorities to press federal civil rights charges against George Zimmerman, the former neighborhood watch leader found not guilty in the shooting death of unarmed teen Trayvon Martin. Five employees of an Italian cruise company were convicted of manslaughter in the Costa Concordia shipwreck that killed 32 people, receiving sentences of less than three years. Longtime White House correspondent HelenThomas, 92, died in Washington.

BIRTHDAYS Author Cormac McCarthy is 81. Rockabilly singer Sleepy LaBeef is 79. Actress Diana Rigg is 76. Rock musician Carlos Santana is 67.Rocksinger Chris Cornell is 50. Actor Josh Holloway is 45. Singer Vitamin C is 45. Actor OmarEpps is 41. Supermodel GiseleBundchen is 34. — From wire reports

Forty-five years after it was first published, The Associated Press has made its original report on the first moonwalk available. By John Barbour Associated Press

Editor's note: On July 20, 1969, at 10:56 p.m. EDT, man took his first step on the moon. It was an event that would cleave humans' relationship

stepped down, Aldrin followed. "Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful," he said. "A magnificent desolation."

He remained out for one hour and 44 minutes.

with space in two, separating

Their spacecraft Eagle landed on the moon at 4:18 p.m.,

the millennia in which human

and they were out of it and on

beings had merely served as the surface some six hours observers, and the moment later. that humans became visitors At the end, mission control to planetary bodies their an-

granted them extratime onthe

cestorscould see only from a distance.

lunar surface. Armstrong was

News coverage of the event

was a massive undertaking, involving thousands of reporters, photographers, editors, technicians and other staff from all over the world. "There was little sleep for

given 15 extra minutes, Aldrin 12.

interior was picking up the shudders created by Aldrin as he hammered tubes into the lu-

the more than 3,000 news per- nar crust to take soil samples. sonnel at the Houston Space Center during those two his-

Earlier, mission control re-

ported that a laser beam shot toric days. Meals were hasty. from earth to the moon had Pressure was immense. Time been reflected back by a small flew," A P s t a ffer R i c hard mirror set on the surface by Beene wrote in a story about the astronauts. But scientists AP's coverage of the mission

launch and moonwalk. Dozens of AP r eporters would build on that to tell al-

most every conceivable angle of the story, working 24 hours a day from desks at the Space Center in Houston, watching

the landing with astronauts' families, and elsewhere. Lead-

garoo-hop, but found it un- Lt. Col. Michael Collins, 38, satisfactory. "The so-called keeping his l onely patrol kangaroo-hop doesn't seem around the moon for the moto work as well as the more

ment when his companions

conventional pace," he said. "It would get rather tiring after

the trip back home. Collins

several hundred."

in suburban New York. "It took

of carefully selected, if not doc-

people a while to come down from the high of when (Neil Armstrong) said, 'One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.' When we heard

umented samples," Armstrong said, referring to the contents

those words it was just electric; we knew then that the mission

unforgettable for them, and for the world.

its own," he said. "It's different.

But it's very pretty out here." They took pictures of each other, and Aldrin shot views

blast off and return to him for

of the spacecraft against the lunar background. said he saw a small white obIn a world where temperaject on the moon, but didn't tures vary some 500 degrees, think it was the spacecraft. It from 243 degrees above zero was in the wrong place. in sunlight, to 279 below in Back in Houston, where the shadow, the men in the spacenearly half-moon rode the sky suits felt comfortable. in its zenith, Mrs. Jan ArmAldrin reported, "In genstrong watched her husband eral, time spent in the shad-

In the lesser gravity of the moon, eachof the men, 165 pounders on Earth, weighed failed because the beam was something over 25 pounds on 50 miles off target. the moon. There were humorous moArmstrong began the rock ments in the awkward climb- picking on the lunar surface. ing out and in the spacecraft. Aldrin joined him using a on television. "I can't believe it When Aldrin backed out of the small scoop to put lunar soil in is really happening," she said. hatch, he said he was "making a plastic bag. Armstrong surveyed the sure not to lock it on the way Above them, invisible and rocky, rugged scene around out." nearly ignored, was Air Force him. "It has a stark beauty all at Lick Observatory in California later said the initial testhad

ing the AP's coverage of the mission was Lou Boccardi, in A rmstrong, o n t h e s u r his first field assignment for face, laughed. "A pretty good the company. Boccardi would thought," he said. go on to become AP's president Once back in the spaceship and chief executive officer. they began immediately to re"Everyone was just so ener- pressurize the cabin with oxygized and high on the excite- gen. They stowed the samples ment of the event," Boccardi of rocks and soil. "We've got about 20 pounds said this week from his home

had been successful."

Buzz Aldrin / NASA via The Associated Press file

Apollo 11 astronaut Neil Armstrong walks on the lunar surface. Apollo 11 astronauts trained on Earth Even while they were on the to take individual photographs in succession in order to create a series of frames that could be surface, the seismometer they assembled into panoramic images. This frame from Aldrin's panorama of the Apollo11 landing site is installed to study the moon's the only good picture of mission commander Neil Armstrong onthe lunar surface.

ow doesn't seem to have any

thermal effects inside the suit. There is a tendency to feel cooler in the shadow than out

of the sun."

SELC© COMMUNIT1 C1EDIT UNION

of one of two boxes filled with lunar material.

The minutes behind were The moments ahead were

"There we were, a few feet

still full of hazard. Monday, at

from Mission Control talking 1:55 p.m., they are scheduled to the guys up in the capsule, to blast off from the moon to about the time that man land-

catch up with their orbiting

ed and walked on the moon," Boccardi recalled. "I was di-

mothership above for the trip home.

recting the finest news staff

P resident N i x on's

v o i ce

you could imagine assembling came to the ears of the asand we were constructing part tronauts on the moon from of history." the Oval Room at the White Armstrong maintained be- House. "This has to be the most hisfore his death in 2012 that the actual words of his famous

toric telephone call ever made,"

quote were, "That's one small step for a man, a giant leap for

he said. "I just can't tell you

analysis of the original recordings found evidence that

heavens have become part of

how proud I am ... Because mankind." A 2006 computer of what you have done the this was the case, but the "a"

man's world. As you talk to us from the Sea of Tranquillity, it

AP's original stories and tran-

quillity to man.

was uttered too quiddy to be inspires us to redouble our efpicked up by human ears. The forts to bring peace and tran"All the people on earth are scripts of the audio recording do not include the "a." surely one in their pride of The original report follows: what you have done, and one in their prayers that you will return safely ..."

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SPACE CENTER, H ouston — Two Americans landed

Aldrin replied, "Thank you on the moon and explored its Mr. President. It is a privilege surface for some two hours to represent the people of all Sunday, planting the first hu- peaceable nations." Armman footprints in its dusty soil. strong added his thanks. They raised their nation's flag A rmstrong's s teps w e r e Both civilian N eil

A l d en

"The surface is f ine and

Armstrong and Air Force Col. powdered, likepowdered charEdwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin Jr. coal to the soles of the foot," he reported they were back in said. "I can see my footprints their spacecraft at 1:11 a.m. of my boots in the fine sandy EDT Monday. "The hatch is particles." Armstrong read closed and locked," Armstrong from the plaque on the side of reported. Eagle, the spacecraft that had Millions on t heir home brought them to the surface. In planet watched on television

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a steady voice, he said, "Here

as the pair saluted their flag and scoured the rocky, rugged

man first set foot on the moon, July,1969. We came inpeace

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His first words standing on the moon were, "That's one small step for man, a giant leap earth. Then he tried wide gazelle-like leaps. for mankind." Aldrin tried a kind of kanTwenty minutes after he

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

Highways

years, if not months, take this

across the country. There is Continued from A1 the capacity now," he said. "The current system is unO regon's e ff ort s al s o fair, and as the Congress man- showed that privacy concerns dates higher and higher (fuel — fears of a mandatory little efficiency) standards for the black box in every vehicle inentire fleet, the problem is only forming the government of its getting worse," said state Sen. whereabouts — can be suffiBruce Starr, R-Hillsboro, who ciently addressed, he said. "There are many ways to servesas vice chairofthe Senate Committee on Business keep track of how far people and Transportation. "The real- go without dealing with where ity is that most folks who have they go. It's irrelevant; we don't looked at how we fund our care," he said. eroding highways in America have come to the conclusion Measuring impact that the fuel tax is a declining Without implementing a revenue source, and ultimately

fairer system, the burden will

one that will not do the job as continue to fall most heavioriginally intended." ly on rural drivers, who are Starr was chairman of the

more likely to drive farther in

House transportation commit- less-efficient cars, he said. Blutee in 2001 when Oregon first menauer envisions a nationset up its Road User Fee Task

al VMT that would take into

Force. The group eventually

consideration where and when drivers are using public roads,

recommended a vehicle mileage tax, or VMT, which would

with higher rates for drivers

charge drivers based on how who cause more wear-andfar they drove, not how much tear and congestion. "This new system would gas they consumed. permit making adjustments Pilot programs for people who aren't putAfter two small pilot proting (as many) demands in grams, the Oregon Legisla- the system," he said. "There's ture passed legislation during less stress caused driving on the 2013 session establishing

wide-open roads in Jefferson

a voluntary 5,000-vehicle test program starting July 1, 2015. The upcoming pilot program will give participants a choice between several options, including one where an outside firm collects mileage information essentially an odometer reading — and assessesand collects the resulting fees for the Oregon

County."

Department o f

Rep.

to cover up their role by

calls for a thorough interna-

blocking recovery workers from the crash site, removing evidence and driving three missile launchers back to Russia just hours

tional inquiry. On Saturday, the Russian Foreign Ministry

after the crash.

possibleto enable access for i nternational experts to t h e

a ccused

u l t imately that's

probably where we're going to go, especially if there's a higher and higher penetration of nonfossil-fuel vehicles on the

state 205 in Portland or cross-

Participants would choose ing the Columbia River during which option they preferred, rush hour is creating congeshe said. tion and adding to the burden "ODOT needs to d emon- on the road, he said. "I don't think you should strate with this volunteer program that the system is viable, have an identical charge for that it works in a way that is all times and places," he said. simple, easy and effective," "(But) if you go down that

said it "appeals to both sides

of the Ukrainian conflict, urging them to do everything

At a news conference in Kiev, Vitaly Nayda, the head of counterintelligence for the Ukrainian State Se-

airplanecrash areain orderto take action necessary for the

investigation." In Malaysia, where officials are grappling with the tragedy of losing a second major jetliner this year, the govern-

Vadim Ghirda / The Associated Press

curity Service, displayed photographs that he said showed the three Buk-Ml missile systems on the

A paramedic walks by a part of fuselage at the crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight17 near the village of Hrabove, eastern Ukraine, Saturday. World leaders demanded Friday that pro-Russia rebels who control the eastern Ukraine crash site of Malaysia Airlines Flight17 give immediate, unfettered access to independent investigators to determine who shot down the plane.

road to the Russian border.

Two of the devices, missile

ment has joined the call for an

investigation but is reluctant to assign blame for the crash.

launchers mounted on armored vehicles, crossed the

Experts and officials said two

border into Russia about 2

the Netherlands, which had

a.m. Friday, or less than 10 hours after the jet, Flight 17,

the most citizens aboard the

the town of

concerns shaped the Malay-

the devices had not yet been

found, local news services plane, urged that the crash reported. site be secured and that recovThe Kremlin has forcefully ery operations be allowed to denied any role in the downproceed. ing of the plane and has gone Prime Minister Mark Rutte on the offensive, saying that of the Netherlands said at a the Ukrainian military's annews conference that he asked ti-aircraft weapons may have President Vladimir Putin of been responsible. Russia to persuade the rebels Ukrainian officials called for to release the bodies and stop an international investigation. "messing around" with the " We have proof that t h e crash site before European fo- terrorist attack was planned rensic inspectors could exam- and carried out with the inine it. volvement of representatives "I told him that the entire of the Russian Federation," country is desperate," Rutte Nayda, the intelligence ofsaid. "These bodies must come ficial, said. "We know that home." Russia is trying to hide its terLiow Tiong Lai, the Malaysian transportation minister,

was blown apart in midair, he said. The third weapon crossed about 4 a.m. Nayda said that the missile had been fired from S nizhne, in

rebel-controlled territory, echoing U.S. intelligence showing the missile coming from eastern Ukraine. Both the Ukrainians and

to the cost (of maintaining pubODOT's Office of Innovative lic roads), too," he said. "If you're going to do a VMT Partnerships and Alternative Funding. right, you've got to have a The department has also is- congestion charge. Because sued request for qualifications a rancher in Burns who hops for private firms to develop a in his pickup truck and drives marketplace of technological 20 miles to the feed store isn't options, which could include putting any burden on the naGPS tracking (so that a user tional highway system or the would not be charged if he or Highway Trust Fund," DeFazio she drove outside of Oregon, sald. or on private roads) or other But someone using Inter-

rebels would have needed

help from Russia in order to fire such a weapon. Tensions flared on several fronts Saturday with

reports of heavy fighting between rebels and gov-

sian government's wariness:

its bruising experience with confusion after the loss of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 more than four months ago, and a desire not to alienate Russia and China, its main partner in East Asia.

The Ukrainian government charged that rebels had

moved at least 38 bodies of victims to a morgue in Donetsk, a regional capital and rebel stronghold. Officials had planned to take victims to Kharkiv, a city in the east out-

side rebel control, and where they said a special lab would help identify remains.

said that the crash had be-

come "a geopolitical issue, but

ernment forces in the east-

ern city of Luhansk, a re-

we must not forget that it is a minder that the crash site human tragedy." "Days after the plane went is in an active combat zone. M eanwhile, t h e K re m - down, the remains of 298 peolin announced that it was ple lie uncovered," he said.

imposing economic sanc- "Citizens of 11 nations — none tions on 12 Americans in

of whom are involved in the

retaliation for a new round conflict in eastern Ukraineof economic sanctions an- cannot be laid to rest." nounced last week against In Kiev, officials said there Russian companies. was still no clear information The allegations of a about the location of the flight cover-up, both to hide the data recorders. They were said weapons in the hours immediately after the missile

to have been recovered at the

e vidence, threatened t o

turn them over to international investigators. On S atur-

Eanaration QM& T E RING Venetian S Decorative Interior Plastering Specialists

scene but then taken by rebels. strike and to stop invesOn Friday, rebels said they tigators from collecting had the recorders and would inflame an already highly charged event. Officials from Malaysia and

day, however, a rebel leader, Alexander Borodai, said that

route, then you have some

The program was designed fairly extraordinary privacy so that it could easily transfer issues, to know where your veto other states, Whitty said. hicle was when." Other Western states, inAs chairman of the Senate cluding California, are inter- Finance Committee, Sen. Ron ested in Oregon's VMT pilot, Wyden, D-Ore., is one of the said Starr. main lawmakers tasked with "The goal is to test all of finding revenue to keep the these things at the state level

Highway Trust Fund solvent.

to see what works and doesn't work," he said.

Like DeFazio, Wyden said

America's interstate high-

Russia and separatist rebels in the east of trying

R ussian officials h a ve stopped short o f d i r ectly pointing a finger at Kiev, but they have issued their own

Ukraine also

the Americans said they believed that the separatist

tion, said Jim Whitty, head of

said Whitty.

Continued from A1

DeFa z io,

T r a nsporta- road. They need to contribute

technology-based alternatives.

rorist activity and their direct involvement."

D-Springfield, supports the development of a national VMT, but says the technology isn't ready yet. "I think

Pe t e r

Jet

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hower administration, and the

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Contr. ¹ OR148786

follow (Oregon's VMT) experand the President's Council of iments, but I didn't spend all Economic Advisers released these years trying to rein in last week, 14 percent of the na- overreaches with the (National tion's 4,076,236 miles of public Security Agency) to suddenly roads are in poor condition, get into a tangle with the (Dewhile a quarter of the nation's partment of Motor Vehides)." 607,751 bridges are deficient or Becky Straus, legislative diNational Economic Council

obsolete.

rector for American Civil Lib-

e a

Oregon compares favorably erties Union of Oregon, said with the national averages, the availability of options that with only 6 percent of its pub-

do not require GPS locations,

lic roads in poor condition and and the ability of drivers to 23 percent of its bridges defi- choose their own plan, helped cient or obsolete, according to

secure the organization's sup-

the report. Still, Oregonians port for Oregon's VMT pilot consume 519.29 gallons of gas program. each year per capita, more DeFazio ha s i n t r oduced than California's 461.27 and legislation that would repeal Washington state's 482.44. the gas tax, and instead imOregon drivers spend an av- pose a tax on barrelsofoilreerage of $236.40 each year on fined into gasoline. Under this additional repairs and operat- plan, the per-barrel tax would ing costs stemming from the be pegged to inflation, so it state's road conditions. wouldn't lose its buying power More than half of the fund- over time. ing for Oregon's highway projDeFazio hopes the internaects comes from the Highway tional oil market will keep oil Trust Fund. Since 2008, Con- companies from just passing gress has had to transfer $54 the barrel tax on to consumers, billion into the fund to com- as a 2011 Rand Corporation pensate for declining revenues study suggested. to keep it solvent. Wyden said he supports tax Rep. Earl B l u menauer,creditbonds for transportaD-Portland, thinks Oregon's VMT could work nationally.

tion, like the ones authorized

LastDecember,he introduced

and Reinvestment Act, as a

PAT LYNCH C/0The Bulletin,P.O.B0X 6020 Bend, OR 97708 I

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or e-mail: plynch©bendbulletin.com

ELDERLAW

WILLS/PROBATE/ESTATE I have a trust and will that was prepared in California. I have moved to Central Oregon. Do I need to update my estate plan now that I am anOregon resident?

My aunt still lives in her home, but she hasdeveloped dementia and recently set the kitchen on Qre. What can we do?

There are several ditrerences between califomia and Oregon you should be aware of. First, Oregon is not a community property state like California. In Oregon you and your spouse canown separate properly. This may or may not aff ectyourestate plan depending on how the property you in Oregon is titled. Second, Oregon has a state estate tax that John D, Sorlie own may be assessed upon your death. California currently does not Attorney at Law have a similar tax. Therefore, your estate planning documents may BRYANT, LOVLIENnot be draAed properly to minimize this state estate tax. Finally, & JARVIS, P.C. many documents &om Califomia reference various California laws AlTORNEYSATLAW that apply to interpreting and administering your estate. This may the administrator of your estate to consult with a California 591 S.w. Millviewway require lawyer aAer your death, even if your estate is being administered Bend, Oregon 97702 in Oregon. For those reason, I usually recommend updating your 541-382%331 estate planning documents for Oregon.

Hopefully, your aunt has granted a broad power of attorney to you or someone who can step in and take care of her. However, it sounds like yow aunt has done no estate planning. Now that she has dementia, you will probably need to get a "guardianship." A guardian will help her get placed in a care facility and help design a plan of care. Since a guardiansbip deprives an individual of many civil rightg however, the courts will be involved. You need to petition the court, describing why a guardian is now needed for your aunt and who would be the best person to take on the guardian's duties. Notice needs to be given to your aunt and any adult children. A "court visitor" will interview you, your aunt, and the possible guardian and make a report to the court. If someone objects, the court will hold a hearing. In addition, if yow aunt has assets that exceed $10,000, someone needs to be appointed "conservator" to manage her finances.

Nancy Hoffman Attorney at Law

LAW OFFICE OF NANCY HOFFMAN 61329 Stardrift Dr. Bend, OR97702 541-5084087

by 2009's American Recovery

funding mechanism for the federal government to autho- Highway Trust Fund. rize voluntary pilot programs As of Friday, no other memlike Oregon's for other states. ber of Congress had signed on

REAL ESTATE

legislation that would allow the

"I am convinced that sometime in the next 10 to 15 years, this will be the system," Blumenauer told The Bulletin this

I O e SS i e n CI

to Blumenauer's national VMT

pilot legislation as a co-sponsor. Blumenauer said he is not

trying to build support based week. on partisan allegiances, but Oregon's previous pilot pro- based on a groundswell of grams, including a four-month public support for the concept. " What I want to do is to program comprised of 50 policy wonks, transportation of- build momentum for Congress ficials and interested lawmak- addressing it," he said, "and ers, have shown that a VMT build a tidal wave of support program can work, Blumenau- around the country." er said. — Reporter: 202-662-7456, "We could, in a matter of aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

What is a land sale contract? It is an agreement in which the buyer promises to make payments to the seller over a stated period of time, and the seller promises to give the buyer a deed to the property when the final payment is made. Generally used where there is no existing mortgage and the seller is willing to accept an income stream Craig Edwards instead ofbeing paid in fuB at closing, the land sale contract is a way for buyers to purchase real estate without Attonxey at Law having to borrow money from a bank If properly writEDWARDS LAW ten, the contract provides great protection for the seller, OFFICES PC while allowing a buyer sufficient time to restore credit 225 N.W. Franklin Ave. scores in order to qualify for bank financing if and when Suite 2 the contract calls for payoff of the remaining balance.

Bend, Oregon 97701 541N18-0061

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PATLYNCH doTheBulletin,PO.Box6020,Bend,OR 97708oremail: plynch©bendbulletIn.com Nyquestionis:



A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY20, 2014

O R E G O N ' S C O O R D IN A T E D C A R E E X P E R IM E N T

CCOs

treat Oregon Health Plan pa-

Continued from A1

Costlytreatment, prevented Lisa Severa's experience illustrates the state's overall

THE EXPERIMENT

Regardless of how you get your health insurance — whether through Medicare or a private insurance company such as Moda — the story of Medicaid in Oregon could be a glimpse into your own future.

strategy for saving money, as a comprehensivecheckup this spring helped prevent what likely would have been costly

"We hear a lot of anecdotes about the air conditioner story," says Deborah Cohen, with Oregon Health 4 Science University, about the elderly woman with heart disease who lives in an apartment without air conditioning - "or the one very expensive (patient) kept out of the emergency room. They are nice to create more energy around an idea, but unless it's happening consistently and unless the cost of health care is in some real way changing, you do worry a little bit about how successful these (coordinated care organizations) are going to be."

name was added to the rolls of

the Oregon Health Plan. That's when the Affordable Care Act raised the Medicaid income re-

quirements, to cover adults who earn up to about $16,100 a year for a single person, or $32,900 peryearforafam ily offour. Severa had been a patient at Mosaic Medical, a nonprof-

to Crooked River Ranch in 2012. But until she became an

Oregon Health Plan member, each visit to Mosaic cost Severa $24. If she didn't have the mon-

ey, she was sent a bill — for $30. Decades earlier, Severa had been diagnosed with irritable bowel syndrome, a chronic disease causing constipation, diarrhea, cramping and bloating. It's diagnosed by ruling out other possible causes. But Severa had never undergone a colonoscopy, so she wondered if there was some other explanation hidden inside her large intesti ne.The procedure "had been on my to-do list for eight years or so," she said. Out of pocket, a colonoscopy costs up to several thou-

WHO BENEFITS (FINANCIALLY)?

When a coordinated care organization succeeds in saving money, the savings are unlikely to end up in the pockets of doctors, nurses and therapists. To Michael Bailit, right, a health care economics consultant, that's a problem. He said it's important to commit to a payment method all the way down to the

individual clinician. If a CCO uses bonuses to promote coordination within a physician group, for example, but savings don't trickle down to the individual doctor, the incentive disappears as soon as the exam room door closes.

can calculate its report card. So the new health care sys-

ty measurements — and the financial incentives tied to them

— are based on the old "fee for service" system. "That's the reality that we

have," said Tina Edlund, director of the Oregon Health Au-

thority until she was recently being tapped to help switch Cover Oregon to the federal

exchange, H e althcare.gov. "We still collect claims and we still collect billing data. The idea of paying for outcomes is really still in its infancy. We're not there, and it's going to take

some time to get there." Last month, the U.S. Gove rnment Accountability O f -

fice published a report that identified a gap in the Centers for Medicare& Medicaid Ser-

vices' abilityto accurately audit Medicaid payments in states

switching to managed care programs, such as Oregon. ure to beef up CMS' auditing system "will leave a growing portion of federal Medicaid dollars vulnerable to improper payments." Studies repeatedly show

wasteful spending in health care. A 2012 report by the Institute of Medicine found that

roughly 30 percent of health 2011, the year before Medic- care spending is wasted on aid reform started. unnecessary or poorly delivHenderson said the down- ered services.Other studies ward trend was good news put the estimate closer to 40 for the patients who managed percent. Officials say if they to avoid the emergency room, can capture just a fraction and good news for the CCO's of that, it will add up to huge budget. She said, however, of- savings. "What a lot of patients don't ficials didn't want emergency room visits drop off too steep- understand is that more isn't ly, too quickly. better. In fact, sometimes more " We h ave t o be ver y is more harmful to a patient," thoughtful, to still keep the ba- said Bailit, the consultant. sic infrastructure in place so One of the state's metrics for that ... when your kid falls off evaluating the success of the a bike, there is a trauma sur- new Medicaid system focuses geon at St. Charles," she said. on an often-overlooked examMcConnell said it's too soon ple: the rate of children tested to know if moving away from for strepthroat before being months, down from 61.6 in

sand dollars. For Severa, it Health Plan. A doctor at Bend Memorial

Clinicperformed the procedure in April. When Severa woke up, she learned two polyps had been removedfrom her colon and sent to a lab for biopsy. For nearly a week, she wor-

were p r ecancerous, w h i ch

exam theyperform, so the state

The report said that a fail-

expansion flooded local primary care clinics, Central Oregon had reduced the rate of emergency room visits among Oregon HealthPlan patients. In 2013, members in Central Oregon made about 49.9 visits to emergency rooms per 1,000 member

was covered by the Oregon

ried. She Googled "colon cancer symptoms" and became convinced she was sick. Finally, her phone rang. The polyps

daims for each procedure or

tory: Even as it changes the ways people get paid, its quali-

BEYOND THE ANECDOTE

start of this year, when her

from Vancouver, Washington,

payment — still have to submit

tem is inherently contradic-

treatments later. Severa, 45, was uninsured from the fall of 2008 until the

it chain of clinics throughout Central Oregon, since moving

tients — even at clinics receiving a per-patient, per-month

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

LisaSevera,45,of Crooked River Ranch,was uninsured from the fall of 2008 until the start of this year, when her name was added to the rolls of the Oregon Health Plan.

means she'll simply need another colonoscopy in three years. If they hadn't been removed, they could have ence University researchers ly different than making sure insurance exchange, Cover turned into cancer — and cost studying CCOs. no one gets to the emergency Oregon. Earlier this year, he re"We hear a lot of anecdotes room in the first place." upward of $10,000 in treatsigned in disgrace as the state ment, not to mention lost time about the air conditioner stoIn the first year of the CCO website, despite nearly $250 at Severa's jobs as caregiver ry or the one very expensive experiment, the rate of growth million in costs, was scrapped for her wife's grandfather and (patient) kept out of the emer- in Medicaid spending — not in favor of the national exa neighbor. gency room," she said. "They the a m ount o f Med i caid change. The debade is now Severa felt doubly grateful are nice to create more energy spending, but the rate of in- under investigation by the FBI. for the procedure when, two around an idea, but unless it's crease — dropped 1 percent, In health care, Goldberg days after her colonoscopy, happening consistently and which is about what state offi- said in an interview before he her father told her he'd had co- unless the cost of health care cials had anticipated. Officials resigned,budgets were tradilon cancer. is in some real way changing, admit that curbing spending tionally set by actuaries who "I guess he just didn't want you do worry a little bit about is likely to get harder as the estimated prices based on me to worry about it," she said how successful these CCOs years go on and clinics have trends from previous years. with a laugh. "The things we are going to be." already made simple, obvious Annual increases of 6, 8 or do to protect our kids." A 2010 pilot study in Cen- improvements. even 12 percent were common. "The same system that retral Oregon focused on 144 of To make a biggerdent in The'hotspotting'strategy the prior year's most frequent costs, officials said, it's going warded ineff iciency also peIn 2011, facing a $2 bil- visitors to area emergency to take not only new ways of nalized efficiency," Goldberg lion hole in Oregon's budget, rooms. Health workers met caring for patients but new said. "Because if you saved Kitzhaber struck a deal with and devised an individual, co- ways of paying for that care. money this year, you would get the federalCenters for Medi- ordinated plan for each patient even less money next year." care & Medicaid Services. who agreed to participate. In 'Global budget' Now, he said, savings reCMS agreed to give the state six months, the patients' ER Michael Bailit, a he a l th main with the CCO and its $1.95 billion over the next five visits dropped 49 percent,and care economics consultant providers. years. In return, the Oregon the average per-patient costs from Massachusetts,said the In Central Oregon, the CCO Health Plan's budget would dropped 62 percent. problem with "fee for service" gets about $245 per month grow 2percentslower than othThis s t r ategy, c a l l ed health care is it encourages for each Oregon Health Plan er Medicaidprograms across "hotspotting," has been ad- care that doesn't necessarily patient, though the exact the country, saving an estimat- opted by most, if not all, of the benefit health. Instead, it offers per-patient amount depends ed $11billion in 10 years. state's CCOs. a financial incentive to perform on factors such as age. All of

the "fee for service" model will

prescribed an antibiotic. Anti-

actually save money. He and his team of researchers are using billing and performance-quality data to comparethe expenditures

biotics are effective in treating

of each CCO with estimated

public health threat. Dr. Knute Buehler, an orthopedic surgeon at The Center

equivalent costs under the old "feeforservice"m odel,toidentify exactly where the savings — if any — came from. By fall, he said, he expects to better

strep throat, but not viruses. The overuse of antibiotics can

lead to drug-resistant superbugs, which pose a growing

for Orthopedic & Neurosurgical Care & Research, is also a Republican running for Bend's understand how much money seat in the Oregon House of is being saved, how it's being Representatives. Buehler said saved and whetherthe state's estimates for future savings

he believes the CCO experiment could work. But addi-

are realistic. tional reforms could help its Michael Cannon, the Cato chances. Studies have shown, Institute's director of health for example, that doctors policy studies, is skeptical. sometimes order extra tests For one, the Oregon Health or images to avoid liability in Plan ballooned following the case of a malpractice lawsuit. Jan. 1 expansion under the "Defensive medicine" can run Affordable Care Act, also up the cost of care. "If you're really trying to called Obamacare. More than 971,000 Oregonians are now wring costs out of the system covered,including more than ... a big part of that is medical 357,500 who, like Severa, re- malpractice reform," Buehler ceived coverage since Jan. 1. SBld. Even if the state continues

Twenty states have laws to

capthenoneconomic damages

those with a highprofit margin. "It's inherently inflationary," he said. "And it doesn't age. Kitzhaber'sagreement, patients who make frequent reward desired behaviors." on the other hand, pledged to trips to the emergency room The vast majority of health improve health care quality, tend to be in the throes of a care in the U.S. is paid using a hitching funding to a set of short-term m e d ical c r i s is. "fee for service" model, though performance m easurements With or without intervention, others are gaining popularity.

often called the "global budget," to be spent according

From the global budget, PacificSource takes an adminis-

to chip away at the growth of per-patient costs, the massive spurt in membership dwarfs those savings, he said. C annon said e ve n i f Obamacare hadn'tprompted Oregon Health Plan membership to swell, he believes enrollment would have surged because of plans to pay primary care clinics per-member,

sometimes called metrics.

A survey of Blue Cross insur-

"There's always a l arge ers released this month found The primary care physician that $1 out of every $5 those assignedto— or,in some cas- chunk of the Medicaid-eligible

trative fee.

per-month.

New math for clinics

insurers spent on health care

es, selected by — each patient

population that is not enrolled

a board of directors that in-

last year was tied to perfor-

receives a monthly payment,

because they're healthy," Can- cludes patients as well as repnon said. "Now there's a huge resentatives of the various incentive to find these people hospitals, clinics and agencies and enroll them because the in a region. provider will get the full ... A global budget means

Cutting health care costs

But John M c Connell, a isn't a new goal. But most sav- h ealth c ar e e c onomist a t ings are achieved by dropping OHSU, isn't convinced it's a enrollment or slashing cover- smart move. McConnell said

Today, Oregon is about two years into its five-year experiment. So far, 16 coordinated

he said, they usually revert to a normal rate of ER visitation within two years. "There's a lot of intuition be-

care organizations, also called hind (hotspotting, but) not a lot CCOs, have popped up around of empirical evidence yet that it's going to work," he said. the state, each tasked with managing the Oregon Health Even if it does, McConnell Plan in their surrounding ar- said, those savings might not eas. Central Oregon's CCO add up to much. " You look a t t h e t o t a l is PacificSource Community Solutions. Each CCO gets a amount spent on Medicaidpool of money based on the and what's happening in the number of Oregon Health Plan emergency department, per members it serves,and greater se, is small," he said. freedom in how that money is Emergency room costs are spent. about 2 to 9 percent of total One of the state's primary health care spending, with the strategies is to shift care away exact figure dependent on the from emergencydepartments accounting method. and into primary care clinics. However, h o spitalizations While making his pitch for — overnight stays, generally CCOs, Kitzhaber repeatedly speaking — seem to make up a touted the anecdote of an el- much greater portion of Medderly woman with heart dis- icaid spending, McConnell ease who lives in an apartment said, though the exact amount without air

c onditioning. A

heatwave sends herinto heart failure. The state covers tens of thousands of dollars in medical

isn't known.

"The emergency room is responsible for a big percentage of people being admitted

bills, he pointed out, but won't to the hospital," he said. "You pay for a $200 air conditioner can find safe, high-quality that could have prevented her pathways out of the emergenhealth crisis in the firstplace. cy room and into an outpatient Deborah Cohen is part of a clinic (that) could generate team of Oregon Health & Sci- cost savings. But that's slight-

the most treatments, especially

that money goes into what's to the CCO's contracts, and

guidance from its board of directors, the Central Oregon Health Councib

mance measurements. usually about $20, again deT he reason fo r m o v i ng pending on factors such as

away from feefor service is not just to reduce costs, Bailit

said, but to align the financial incentives with the goal of high-quality care. The CCOs, which often act

age. Since March, when St. Charles signed its new contract with PacificSource, the

amount for a v ery l ow-risk patient."

hospital system has received a monthly payment for each pa-

Payfor performance

like insurance companies, tient enrolled, too, to cover inmust negotiate contracts with patient and outpatient hospital

for patients who win medical

malpractice suits, but Oregon is not one of them. To Buehler's mind, this contributes to Ore-

gon's access problem. "It drives up malpractice insurance rates. And that's a fac-

tor whenpeople finish medical schooland decidewhere to set up shop," he said. Each CCO is overseen by

these players have to come

together to divvy up the pie. That's a tall order among entities used to competing. Provid-

One of the biggest changes ers are wary of losing money, to the state's new Medicaid especially as Medicaid is long health care providers in their services for all Oregon Health system is the idea of paying for known for offering the lowest regions that serve Oregon Plan patients in the region. health outcomes. reimbursement rates. Health Plan patients. Instead The remaining money in In 2013, 98 percent of OrIn May, the Central Oregon of paying per treatment or of- the global budget is used to egon's Medicaid budget was Health Council, which overfice visit, a CCO may give a pay specialists, who are reim- claims-based. The remaining sees the local CCO, reviewed clinic a lump sum of money per bursed for actual treatments 2 percent was set aside and two pilot projects it funded month per Oregon Health Plan provided, using a tradition- awarded according to perfor- last year. One added a pediatpatient. It may offer financial al "fee for service" payment mance,once datafromtheyear ricnurse care coordinator to bonuses for excellent perfor- system. was collected and verified. Central Oregon Pediatric Asmance. Each CCO has flexibilRobin Henderson, chief beEach quarter, the state pro- sociates, to work with the 100 ity, and some may try different havioral health officer and di- duces a report card for each patients with the most commodels with different provid- rector of government relations CCO, with 33 grading catego- plex medical cases and highers. That means Oregon could for St. Charles Health System, ries,or metrics. Of those, 17 est rates of h ospitalization. soon be home to dozens of ex- said moving from a "fee for are tied to financial incentives. The program cost $78,000 and perimental payment methods. service" model to a global-pay- (See how Central Oregon's saved an estimated $1.3 milDr. Bruce Goldberg, a former ment model requires thought- CCO performed in 2013 on the lion to $2.6 million. family practice physician, was ful decision-making. facing page.) A second pilot project devel"Everything that you touch director of the Oregon Health Most of the scores, however, oped a multidisciplinary pain Authority until late 2013, when in this space is interconnect- are gleaned from the old "fee clinic for patients with chroned," she said. Kitzhaber tapped him to run for service" claims system. In ic, unmanaged pain. the state's beleaguered health Until this year's Medicaid other words, providers who Continued next page


O R E G O N ' S C O O R D IN A T E D C A R E E X P E R IM E N T

sUNDAY,JULY20,2014 • THEBULLETiN

A7

From previous page Rebecca Babcock, a29-year-

REPORT CARD

old single mother, enrolled in the eight-week clinic and said it changed her life. After more

than a year of being bedridden, she is now a full-time psychology student. Last year, she went to the emergency room six times and urgent care four times, she said. This year, she

hasn't gone once. The program's organizers had not yet completed their fi-

nancial analysis but said the pretreatment population spent an average of almost $15,000 peryear on health care. During their board meeting, COHC members were enthu-

siastic about continuing both projects but struggled over how to divide their costs.

"The outcomes sound fabulous," said Karen Shepard, chief financial officer for St. Charles Health System. "But

I'm having a hard time weighing what the cost savings to

(St. Charles) is." Mike Shirtcliff, of Advan-

tage Dental, said, "If you're gonna help me save a million dollars, then I'll write you a check to do it. But it sounds

like we don't know how much it saves (each of) us yet. We

Each coordinated care organization is graded on 17 quality-improvement measures, reported quarterly. Central Oregon's CCO, PacificSource Community Solutions, also covers the Hood River area — though the two regions are managed separately, their data is combined for reports to the state. Pre-reform health care data from 2011 is used for comparison with 2013 numbers and goals. The state's overall performance for 2013, the first full year to measure, is still being verified by an independent contractor, with a final report expected in January, but here are the preliminary results for our local CCO:

17 CCO incentives

Description

2011 2013 Improved? Goal : ' 53 3% : Percentageofadolescentpatients(ages (2-2() who had apdmarpcare : 35 3%: 39 3%: / checkup in the pastyear. , : )3% Percentageofadoltpatients(tgand older) who hadappropriatescreening and: P Q)%: 3%:

Adolescent well-care visits Alcohol orother substance misuse Use of emergencydepartments

don't have that data." The interaction illustrated

the difficulty of getting stakeholders to agree on a shared pool of finances. "Youhave to monetizehealth,

and that's hard to do," said Buehler, who also serves on St. Charles'boardofdirectors.

Some providersare skeptical that achieving "lower costs" within the Oregon Health Plan

will translate into anything buteven lower reimbursement rates for them.

Earlier this year, CentralOregon Family Medicine, in Red-

the clinic said the recent Med-

icaid expansion meant hundreds of patients had switched from commercial insurance to

the Oregon Health Plan, and the clinic was suddenly losing money. Nationwide, the percentage ofprimary carephysicianswho accept Medicaid has declined in recent years, despite a 2012 increase i n

re i m bursement

rates. According to a survey by health care consulting firm Merritt Hawkins, 50.6 percent

of primary care physicians accepted Medicaid in 2013, down from 65.4 percentin 2009. Dr. Dan Murphy is a primary care physician who coowned a Redmond medical practice, Cascade M e dical

Clinic, for 15 years. Several years ago, he learned about coordinated, team-based care and wanted to offer it at his

Satisfaction with cure Colorectal cancer screening Developmental screening inthe first 36 months oflife Early elective delivery Electronic healthrecords Follow-up after hospitalization for mental illness Follow-up curefor children prescribedmedicine forADHD

44.4 87% 84%

10.6 50% 5% 49.2%

68% 51%"

Mental and physical health : Percentage of children under care of theOregonDepartment of Human assessment within 60daysfor : Services who received appropriate assessments (including mental health for : children ages 4andolder) within 60 days of the state notifying the CCOthat a children inDHScustody : child has beenplaced in foster care.

: 479%: 5Q%

90%'

Patient-centered primarycare Percentage of patients within a CCO who havea designated primary care home enrollment : prov(der. Timeliness ofprenatal cere : Percentage of pregnant womenwho had aprenatal care visit in their first , trimester or within 42 days of enrollment in the OregonHealth Plan.

: 73.9%: :91%

N/A

69.4%

74S. 75.3%

*Note: These metrics were considered to be either "improved" or not improved" for scoring purposes, whether or not long-term goals were met.

SOME QUALITYMETRICS WERE REQUIRED TO SUBMIT A "TECHNOLOGY PLAN" RELATED TO THE METRICS: Technologyplanandproof of concept data submitted to thestate undapproved? Screening for clinical depression andfollow-up plan Controlling HhA1c level in diabetic patients Controlling highbloodpressure

clinic. But as a small, independent practice, he couldn't

g

80.6%: , )(

Access to cure

mond, announced it would no

longer accept Oregon Health Plan patients. A physician at

intervention for misuse of alcohol or abuse of drugs, usually during a primary : care visit. Rate of patient visits (reported per1,000 member-months) to emergency 6$ 6 49.9 rooms. According to the state, a lower rate indicates moreappropriate uses of , care, so a lower score is better. From an annual patient-satisfaction survey, percentage of patients who were: g % able to get timely appointments for care. From an annual patient-satisfaction survey, percentage of patients who g% 83.5%.: thought they received the help or information they needed. : Rate of adult patients (ages 50-75, reported per1,000 member-months) who : $0 3 10.3 : had appropriate screenings for colorectal cancer in the past year. : Percentage of children whowere appropriately screened for developmental, 30.8%: behavioral and social delays in the12 months preceding their first, second or third birthdays. Percentage of pregnant womenwho hadanelective delivery (either vaginal or gQ3% 0.6%: : C-section) before 39weeks of gestation. A lower score is better. Percentage of providers within a CCO'snetwork that have switched from paper 2g 3% 57.8%: to electronic medical records. Percentage of patients (ages 6 and older) who had afollow-up visit within 679%: 65 8% seven days of being discharged from the hospital for mental illness. Percentage of children (ages6-12) who had afollow-up visit during the 30 58 8%: 5g 3% days after being prescribed anewmedication for attention deficit hyperactivity : disorder.

Percentage of adults (18 andolder) appropriately screened for depression, : then put under afollow-up plan, if needed. : As it's phased in gradually, this metric measures the percentage of diabetic pa: tients who don't have their blood sugar under control. A lower score is better. : As it's phased in gradually, this metric measures the percentage of adult pa. tients with high blood pressure whohavethe condition under control. :

Source: Oregon Health Authority

Andy Zeigert and David Wray/The Bulletin

figure out how to make the finances pencil out. Three years Johns Hopkins University. So ways to reap the greatest cost Charles. The hospital system saving Jones' foot led to hun- savings, she said, and make now operates primary care dreds of thousands of dollars the biggest improvements in clinics t h roughout C e ntral in savings for the state, at least patient health. Oregon that specialize in this in theory. In Central Oregon, officials model of coordinated care. A medical assistant for the said there have been technical Experts say the kind of inte- surgeon who treated Jones, Dr. obstacles to integrating care gration encouraged by CCOs Ryan Pederson of South Coast for behavioral and physical favors large practices that can Orthopaedic Associates, said health. Privacy laws made it afford to employ staff — nurse she couldn't disclose the exact tough for medical providers care coordinators, community agreements the clinic has with to access information on pahealth workers and behavioral different insurers. But Shan- t ients' mental h ealth. A n d health specialists, for example na Toney, a medical assistant thereare separate systems of — who provide care that isn't for Pederson,said,generally billing codes for mental health reimbursed under the "fee for speaking, private insurance and physical health. service" model. reimburses 45 to 50 percent Despite the intended flexibilMurphy said his annual of the bill amount, Medicare ity within the state, Medicaid is salary hasn't really changed 33 percent and the Oregon largely funded by the federal since the clinic switched own- Health Plan 21 percent. government. And it turns out ership and payment models. In total, Jones' charges sur- the state's bills to the federal When a CCO succeeds in passed $14,000, according to government are still restricted. "They still don't have the saving money, the savings Toney, but the clinic was only are unlikely to end up in the paid $3,300 by the Oregon (billing) codes they can use pockets of doctors, nurses and Health Plan. to report they bought that therapists. In the throes of contract ne- air conditioner," said Dennis To Bailit, that's a problem. gotiations, CCO officials from McCarty, professor in the DeHe said it's important to com- across the state were wary partment of Public Health and mit to a payment method all of speaking to The Bulletin Preventive medicine at OHSU, the way down to the individ- about what their new finances referring to Kitzhaber's camual clinician. If a CCO uses will look like. paign trail story. McCarty is bonuses to promote coordinaIn the last couple of months, studying the impacts of health tion within a physician group, Cohen, from OHSU, said, care reform on addiction treatfor example, but savings don't more information has started ment and mental health. ago, he sold his practice to St.

trickle down to the individual

doctor, the incentive disap-

to trickle in.

"What we're getting is sort

"There are anecdotes emerg-

ing that (CCOs) are doing creative things by being flexible,

pears as soon as the exam

of the 5,000-foot view: What

room door closes.

are the real principles and ap- but CMS isn't as flexible as you proaches that are informing would hope they would be," he

Trickle-downeconomics Joel "Charley" Jones is an

Oregon Health Plan patient on the southern Oregon coast who shattered his heel in late

2012.Aftera seriesofsurgeries to rebuild the foot, his surgical wounds became infectedand

doctors saidhis lowerleg would have to be amputated. A nurse care coordinator employed by the region's CCO, Western Oregon Advanced Health, helped Jones, 45, avoid amputation.

An amputee's lifetime costs related to the missing limb average $509,000, according to a 2007 study by the Center for Injury Research and Policy at

how they think about their

ssud.

budgets? Not who gets the McCarty said this will likely money," she said. become more of a problem as Because funding for mental CCOs look for more innovative health organizations has been ways to bend the cost curve. separatefrom the rest of the Right now, there is still plenty Oregon Health Plan budget of low-hanging fruit, he said. for almost two decades, Cohen said pooling those finances Changes to'charity care' has been tricky. Because Oregon has fewer "Of all t h e system-level uninsured patients since Medchanges, integration of physi- icaid was expanded this year, cal and behavioral health ser- some clinics, such as Mosaic vices is one of the hardest ones Medical, report spending less to make," she said. "This is like on unreimbursed care, also years and years and years of called charity care. (financial) silos that have been S hepard said t h at's n o t setup." true at St. Charles, however. Integration is also one of the First, some patients are still

uninsured.

Also, the hospital usually loses money on Medicaid pa-

Shepard conceded that

viders upset about their Medic-

aid reimbursement rates. One its — or losses — will depend suit was dropped and the other tients, she said, so instead of on the region's primary care is pending. covering the uninsured, what providers. She said the hosState officials acknowledge St. Charles calls its "communi- pital wanted to offer a real in- some of the current CCOs ty benefit" budget is filling the centive. And there are many may fail. Providers could walk gap between what it's paid to costs — including some per- away from contract negotiacare for the Medicaid popula- formance metrics — that the tions, for example. But officials tion and the actual cost. hospital can control. To help said they expect other CCOs Marydair Jorgensen, direc- cut down on readmissions, for will form to replace them. tor of health plan administra- example, St. Charles is workThe new system means the tion, payer relations and con- ing to improve its system for state is experimenting with ils tracting at St. Charles, said the notifying primary care pro- most vulnerable population: hospital is seeing more private- viders that a patient has been patients who have the fewest ly insured patients who can't admitted to the hospital. resources to get help if shifthg afford their high deductibles. Currently, primary care awayft tom"feeforservice"turns So the hospital is using more of providers have to log into a se- out tomean"fee forno service." its charity care budget on pri- cure website each day, to see if Some are skepticalthe state's vately insured patients, too. any of their patients have been cost-cutting measures can be Last year, Medicaid ac- hospitalized and then sched- expanded to other populations. "We are trying to create a counted for 14 percent of the ule any follow-ups. The hospihospital's income. This year, tal is working to automatically lot of initiatives on the lowest with so many new Medicaid notify each patient's primary payer in the system," said Dr. enrollees, that has swelled to care provider as soon as he or J. Mark Maddox, who was 19 percent, Shepard said. she is admitted. This kind of medical director for PacificSo far, according to Shep- change will affect all patients Source until April, when he ard, emergency room visits at the hospital, not just Oregon accepted a job in California. "Most providers balance the are not down in 2014. She at- Health Plan members. tributed the steady flow of hosKitzhaber, who is a former number of government propital visits to the dearth of pri- emergency room physician, viders (such as Medicaid) with mary care providers accepting has said he wants to reform all private providers (which pay Oregon Health Plan patients. of health care, but Medicaid more). So if you change a little "There's a backlog. ... It will offers a way of easing into a on the Medicaid side, they can get caught up, but so far (this new system. make it work. When you start Before this year, Medicaid to ... roll in other populations, year) we haven't had any lower volume inthe emergency patients made up, on average, it becomes very challenging." room," Shepard said. 10 percent of a typical Oregon St. Charles officials decided In most communities, said doctor's patient load. The state to accept the riskof CentralOreCohen, of OHSU, hospitals are figured providers would be gon'snew Medicaid agreement viewed as "cash cows." They more willing to experiment in part because the contract provide the m ost c o mplex when only a small portion of involved the lowest reimbursecare for the most complicated their business is involved. ment rate amonginsurers. "So, generally, it's a loss conditions — at the highest Lawsuits have already been cost. But St. Charles, through filed against at least two CCOs, anyway," Shepard said. "And its new contract with Pacific- in Salem and Portland, by pro- it's the right thing to do." Source, is banking on coordinated care keeping more patients out of the hospital. Lily Raff McCaulou writes about state issues Jorgensen said St. Charles for The Bulletin. She has been following changes will withhold about $5 mil-

lion of its Medicaid dollars this year, and redistribute it

to primarycare providers in the region, depending on their performance on certain prevention-related metrics.

some of the hospital's prof-

to Oregon's health care system for months; this is the third and final installment in herin-depth serieson coordinated care.Read the whole series online atbendbulletin.comlcoordinated care. Contact: 541-410-9207, fraffibendbulletin.com.


AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

Caffeine

department visits i nvolving

Continued from Af

energy drinks doubled

a person can experience ad- just because you see it every verse effects in a matter of min- day, just because it's naturally

from 10,068 visits in 2007 to 20,783 visits in 2011, accord-

utes, said Dr. Bob Hoffman, a New York University medical

His mother has said she

was unaware her son took caffeine powder. He was just days away from graduation and had planned to study at the University of Toledo. Caffeine powder is sold as a dietary supplement, so it's not subject to the same federal regulations as certain caf-

The number of emergency

"The thing about caffeine is

In that concentrated amount,

After high school wrestler Logan Stiner died after con-

occurring — it comes from a plant — doesn't mean that it's

ing to the federal Substance toxicologist.

safe," Hoffman said.

Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Most

Back in Ohio, the superintendent of the district where

The brain becomes alert,

then agitated and confused. of thecases involved teens or The heartbeat picks up and young adults. can become dangerously irA full teaspoon of caffeine regular. A person can suffer powder could contain 3,200 nausea, vomiting and potenmilligrams of caffeine. tially a seizure.

suming pure powdered caffeine, the FDA

Stiner attended school plans to

4

is warning consumers.

take steps of his own. He wants

to add the dangers of caffeine powder to drug and alcohol awareness programs.

SteveManheim The Chronicle Telegram via AP

feinated foods. Users add it to drinks for a pick-me-up before workouts or to control weight

gain. Atiny amountpacks apunch.

R ID E S • AR I K A L S • E X H I B I T S • POO D • G A K E S • K O R E

A mere one-sixteenth of a

teaspoon can contain about 200 milligrams of caffeine, roughly the equivalent of two large cups of coffee. That means a heaping teaspoon

/ag' Hi'c'i»

could kill, said Dr . R obert

Glatter, an emergency physi-

O»kbHSX

u

cian at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York.

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said. "The difference between

Enjoy Old-Fashioned Fnn Every Day

a safe amount and a lethal dose of caffeine in these powdered products is very small," Dooren said. Glatter said he's seen sever-

alyounger patients experience complications from caffeine in

~ r a a a n 4 a 4 Xaa

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POWER P R O DUCTS

FDA spokeswoman Jennifer

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7 pml

Wefhses|hy, Jely3o

the last few months. Some arrive with rapid heart rates.

"They're starting to latch

cause they see it as a more potent way to lose weight," Glat•

ter said.

Health officials worry about caffeine powder's potential popularity among exercise enthusiasts and young people seeking an energy boost. Dr. Henry Spiller directs a poison control center at ¹

auaaau

4

onto the powders more be-

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in Columbus, Ohio. Over a week or so this month, the center took reports of three

people hospitalized for misusing caffeine powder. "I can't believe you can buy this," Spiller said. "Honestly, I mean, it's frightening. It makes no sense to me."

Federal investigations have recently prompted some com-

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—Jr. Uvestoch Buyers BBg 11 am to 1:$0 pm Beef Auction at noon, All animals to he auctioned in Swine Ring

sions with the FDA. In 2010,

the agency forced manufacturers of alcoholic caffeinated beverages to cease production of those drinks.

A uthorities h av e a l so pledged to take action if they are able to link deaths to con-

RIDES

sumption of energy drinks. Hospitalizations from those

Roundfripfrom Bend,Redmond,

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Sisters to the Fair - seeThe Bulletln or www.expo.deschutes. org for a detailed schedule.

SHLt1IX'C4LgrASSQLlNt' 2

drinks have been on the rise.

Jury awards $23.68 in tobaccocase

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New York Times News Service MIAMI — A jury in northwest Florida awarded a stag-

gering $23 billion judgment late Friday against the country's second-largesttobacco com-

pany for causing the death of a chain smoker who died of lung cancer at age 36.

The company, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., promised a prompt appeal. Michael Johnson died in 1996 after smoking for more than 20 years. In 2006, his

PEPSIDAY Wednesday,July 30

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The BuIJetm Midoregon CredttUmoe bendbulletin com

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brand cigarettes her husband had smoked, arguing that the company had deliberately concealed the health hazards its

Chute ¹9 rodeo dance to follow. Centml Omyen o fa fa

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The Bulletin

product caused. The four-week trial ended

W ednesday. The jury deliberated for 18 hours over two days,

first awarding $17 million in compensatory damages and then emerging at 10 p.m. Friday with a $23.6billion punitive judgment.

Presented By:

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"When they first read the verdict, I know I heard 'million,'

and I got so excited," Robinson said in a phone interview Saturday. "Then the attorney informed me that was a 'B' — billion. It was just unbelievable."

Efforts by the tobacco industry to reverse such awards are oftensuccessful.In Octo-

ber 2002, a Los Angeles jury awarded $28 billion in punitive damages against Philip Morris USA. In August 2011, an appealscourt reduced the punitive damages to $28 million.

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New this year-FarmYardFunwith waterpumping stations, Bessie's Milking Parlor,PetesPotatoPlace,andmore. PlusJDPlatts K9 Kings Entertainment! Frompieandwatermelon eating contests tofreepony rides, freepetting zoo. Campfire, RedmondParks8 Recandspecial area hosted bylocal fire co-op memberswill be theretoo!

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

BRIEFING

WASHINGTON WEEK

Large swath of Ochoco closing Because ofwildfires, the OchocoNational Forest has closedall national forest lands fromU.S. Highway 26 onthe west to Forest Road12 on the east, following theforest boundaries onthe north and south, with additional acreagenorth of Mill Creek Wilderness,according toa newsrelease from the ForestService. The closure covers all campgrounds, trailheads, forest roads and developed facilities. Fires within the closure area include theBailey Butte fire, which is being managed aspart of the Waterman Complex,and five fires that makeup theOchocoComplex. Information on both fires and a map oftheclosure area can befound at inciweb.nwcg.gov. SeeLocal Briefing/B3

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• The House of Representatives voted Thursday to permanently extend tax deductions for charitable donations of food. The tax credit was among a handful that expired at the end of last year. Critics argued that the measure offered no way to offset the lost tax revenue, which is projected to be $16billion over the next decade. The measure passedby a 277-130 margin, with 221 Republicans and56 Democrats voting in its favor. OneRepublican and 129 Democrats voted no.

JA

U.S. HOUSE VOTE • Measure to permanently extend tax deductions for charitable donations of food. Greg Walden(R)............... Y Ead B/umenauer (D) ..........N SuzanneBonamici (D) ......N Peter DePaz/o (D)............... Y Kurt Schrader (D)..............N

Photos by Joe Kline I The Bulletin

Corvettes are everywhere as people check out the different models on display Saturday. Moro than100 Corvettes were displayed for the Corvettes on the High Desert car show.

• 'America's first sports car' grabsspotlight at Corvettes onthe HighDesert carshow +(K]se hre~ls

: ,~ 0

L: 50

FIRE UPDATE Reported for Central and Eastern Oregon.Forthe latest information, visit www.nwccweb.ns/ information/ firnmnp.nspx 1. BinghamComplex • Acres: 477 • Containment: 20% • Cause: Lightning 2. Logging Unit • Acres: 6,000 • Containment: 0% • Cause: Lightning 3. Bridge 99 Complex • Acres: 6,700 • Containment:10% • Cause: Lightning 4. Shaniko Butte • Acres: 27,000 • Containment: 20% • Cause: Lightning 5. Jack Knife • Acres: 12,850 • Containment: 45% • Cause: Lightning 6. Pine Creek • Acres: 28,100 • Containment: 5% • Cause: Lightning 7. Oscar Canyon • Acres: 315 • Containment: 79% • Cause: Lightning 8. Waterman Complex • Acres: 10,645 • Containment: 35% • Cause: Lightning 9. Sunflower • Acres: 5,300 • Containment: 10% • Cause: Lightning 10. Gumboot • Acres: 4,420 • Containment: 90% • Cause: Lightning 11. Buzzard Complex • Acres: 368,961 • Containment: 20% • Cause: Lightning 12. Radio Tower • Acres: 3,320 • Containment: 100% • Cause: Unknown 13. Hurricane Creek • Acres: 120 • Containment: 10% • Cause: Lightning 14. Moccasin Hill • Acres: 2,535 • Containment: 95% • Cause: Unknown

I

By Scott Hammers

was introduced to the public,

The Bulletin

Burgess, a Sisters resident,

than 100 Corvettes descend-

is on his eighth one and can find something to get excited

ed on Eagle Crest Resort on

about with every new modeL

EAGLE CREST — More

"It's something you just fall in love with and keep on doing," Burgess said. Burgess said the show has historically been held every other year, and each time, club members select a

Saturday morning for Corvettes on the High Desert, Central Oregon's biggest show celebrating the vehicle often called America's first sports car.

John Burgess, president of the High Desert Corvette Club, said he, like many other Corvette enthusiasts, was captivated by the earliest models when he was a high school student. Sixty-one yearsafterthefirstCorvette

local charity to donate the

proceeds to. This year, the money will go to the KIDS Center, a Bend organization that aids victims of child

abuse. James White, of Boise,

Bob Chilton, of Albany, sets a model Corvette on the engine block of his 1982 Corvette during the Corvettes on the High

Desert car show. was so taken by the 1954

Dakota hometown to watch

Corvette, he went down to the dealership in his South

them being unloaded. See nVettes /B5

OSU-CASCADES

• On Thursday, the House of Representatives passed abill that would keep the Highway Trust Fund solvent through next May. Without congressional action, the fund, which pays for maintenance and upgrades for the nation's highways, is projected to run out of money by the endof August. Moneyforthe fund comes from the federal gasoline tax, which has beenat18.4 cents per gallon since 1993. In recent years, the government has collected about $34 billion from the gastax each year, but highway spending approached around $50 billion, leaving a large shortfall each year. The Housebill provides $10.9 billion of funding, enough to fund projects through May. It passed by a367-55 margin, supported by 181 Republicans and 186 Democrats. Ten Democrats and 45Republicans voted against passage.

Studyingclimatechangein remoteAlaska • Anthropologist based herdissertation on island communitythreatenedbya rising tide

hopes to have out by August 2015. The Louisiana native

"This was right after 9/11, when people were thinking

The Bulletin

thropologist and program

Instead of examining the composition of the atmo-

lead for the social science de-

Denali National Park. After

gree track, based her dissertation on a small island com-

graduating from the Univer-

Marino said. "At the same

sity of Notre Dame, Marino returned to the state to work

of a nation, and some of these people from these small, remote villages were going off to Afghanistan and Iraq,"

soon be displaced by rising tides. Marino, 35, who began

as a journalist, covering

time, many of them only spoke (the tribal language) and were getting 75 percent

tribal towns only accessible

of their caloric intake from

munities — in particular,

teaching at OSU-Cascades in

communities on the edge of disaster.

2007, is currently turning that

by plane, the kind of places, Marino said, where whaling

hunting and gathering. It was just such a fascinating place."

work into a book, which she

activities were big news.

ph t

sphere, the resident climate change expert at OSU-Cascades studies com-

Elizabeth Marino, an an-

munity in Alaska that may

A new liftfor Bachelor in'64 YESTERDAY

STATE NEWS

about what it meant to be part

couldn't shake the appeal of Alaska following a summer working beneath the peaks in

By Tyler Leeds

SeeWeek/B3

SeeClimate/B2

Salem

• Salem:A look back at the week in politics, including a superPAC targeting Oregonand surprise contributions for Kitzhaber,B3

Fire destroyssoutheast Bendduplex By Scott Hammers

"V:

The Bullettn

A cigarette discarded in a plastic trash can sparked a fire that destroyed a south-

Compiled by Don Hoinessfrom archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARSAGO For the week ending July 19, 1914

Lunch, speech andbaby show Towards the end of the ball

game andupon its completion, people gathered on the lawn beside Wall Street and lunched. Many

hadtheir ownbaskets, andthose who did notwerecaredforbythe Ladies Committee with many vol-

east Bend duplex Saturday, sending up a tall plume of smoke visible across much

of the city. Bend Fire Department crews were called to Riviera

Drive just east of Ponderosa Park at 12:35 p.m. and found

the building burning too hot to allow them to enter,

with the flames spreading to nearby brush and trees.

A total of 26 firefighters helped fight the flames, including firefighters from the Sunriver and Sisters fire departments. Crews from the Oregon Department of

unteer helpers, whokept two long tables well suppliedwithmeat,

Forestry, and Cloverdale and

cake, sandwiches and other "eats"

were called in to provide fire coverage while Bend fire-

while some 15 gallons of steaming coffee were consumed. SeeYesterday/B5

f

Redmond fire departments fighters battled the fire. SeeFire /B3

Ryan Brenneoke/The Bulletin

Firofighters battle a fire in the1600 block of SE Riviera Drive in Bend on Saturday. The duplex

was destroyed.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

E VENT TODAY BALLOONSOVERBEND CHILDREN'SFESTIVAL:Balloons launch over Bend, weather permitting; followed by afestival with activities, food, crafts and more; $10 plus fees in advance, $12at the door; 6 a.m. launch,10 a.m.-3 p.m. festival, noon Balloon Blast; Riverbend Park, 799 SWColumbia St.; www.balloonsoverbend.com or 541-323-0964. USHJA INTERNATIONAL HUNTERDERBY:A-rated event with derby-themed breakfast available; free, $20 for breakfast; 7:30-11 a.m.; J Bar JBoys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; www. oregonhighdesertclassics.org or 541-389-1409. OREGON HIGHDESERT CLASSICS I: A U.S. Equestrian Federation class AA international hunterjumper equestrian competition; proceeds benefit J Bar J Youth Services; free admission; 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Road, Bend; www. oregonhighdesertclassics.org, tryan©jbarj.org or 541-389-1409. SUMMERSHOWDOWNHORSE

ENDA R SHOW:Reined cow horses and their riders compete in cutting, reining, roping and more; free; 8 a.m.; Rim Rock Riders Arena, 17037 SW Alfalfa Road, Powell Butte; www.nwrcha. com, nwcowhorse@gmail.com or 425-226-6376. "PLANES:FIREANDRESCUE": Private viewing of the new Disney movie, benefiting the Wildland Firefighter Foundation; $7, $6.25 for children and seniors; 10 a.m.; RedmondCinemas,1535 SW Odem Medo Road; www.j.mp/ planesfiremovie or 541-548-1244. "MONTY PYTHONLIVE(MOSTLY)": Showing of the 2014 reunion of the Monty Python cast performing their greatest hits; $18; 11:30 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. CASCADECYCLINGCLASSIC: The 83- or 51-mile Awbrey Butte Circuit Race begins and ends at Central Oregon Community College; free for spectators; 1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cascadeclassic.org or 541-388-0002. "LORD OF THE FLIES": An adaptation of William Golding's

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

blanket; $3-$10 for members, $5-$20 for nonmembers; 6-8 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. STARDUST,CELLSANDSCIENCE, THE ORIGIN OF LIFE REVISITED: Dr. David Deamer, research professor of bio-molecular engineering, will speak; free, registration suggested; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "GLENN BECK'SWE WILL NOT CONFORM":Showing of the 2014 film about the pursuit of changing America's education system; $18; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. THE LITTLESTBIRDS:The California old-time folk band performs, with the Blackberry Bushes Stringband; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

TUESDAY ALZHEIMER'SASSOCIATION BACKYARD BASH: Featuring food, activities and more, learn about the upcoming Walk to EndAlzheimer's; free, registration requested; 4-7 p.m.; Stone Lodge, 1460 NE27th St., Bend; www.holidaytouch.com or 541-233-9914. FLOATRUN:Featuring a run and a float down the river, with raffles

and more;$5, registration required; Disney via The Associated Press

Redmond Cinemas is hosting a private viewing of the newDisney

angela©foo tzonebend.com or

movie "Planes: Fire and Rescue" today as a benefit for the Wildland Firefighter Foundation. novel by the BendExperimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students; 2 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www. beattickets.org or 541-419-5558. THE BALLROOM THIEVES: The Boston-based folk-rock band performs; free; 2:30 p.m., gates open at1 p.m.; Les SchwabAmphitheater,

5:30p.m.;FootZone,842 NW Wall St., Bend; www.j.mp/footzonefloat,

344 SW Shevlin Hixon Drive,

Bend; www.bendconcerts.comor 541-322-9383. PHILLIP GIBBS:TheTexas blues act performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.

541-317-3568. CHARLIEPARR:TheDuluth, Minnesota, folk-blues guitarist performs, with The Gold Rust; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www.

crowsfeetcommons.comor 541-728-0066. PICNIC IN THEPAST: Enjoy live music by the Thorn Hollow String Band, historical games and activities, bring picnic dinner and

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FO +ATER + FOURTH ANNUAL

Submitted photo

Sunriver Marathon for aCause

OSU-Cascades researcher Elizabeth Marino, left, and a friend scrape a caribou skin in Shishmaref, Alaska, where Marino studied the impact of climate change on the local population.

Climate

more likely to feel the negative effects of climate change.

Continued from B1

In this instance, the native

To further explore the state,

M arinoearned a master's degree in linguistic anthropology,making a place-name map using the native language. While working on her project, a seriesof severe fl oods occurred,and Marino realized the names she found offered

population went from being a mobile, adaptive society into one based around a single

In the heart of Central Oregon's inspirational running country, with breathtaking views of Mt. Bachelor, Sunriver Resort is proud to host the Sunriver Marathon. Enjoy a weekend of events for

spot, in the model of European

runnerS Of all Skill leVelS inCluding a MarathOn, Half

societies. In her book, Marino will discuss policy that could help the native population make

Marathon, 10K,5K,Kid'sRace,and Speedgolf.The gUggg g

the leap from the island to a

a window onto past ecologi- new settlement, a process, she cal conditions. For instance, said, that would benefit from a barren area may have been major input by the Shishmaref named, "Place With an Aspen population. Marino believes Stand," giving a sense of what the addition of social scienhad changed. tists into the realm of climate "As it became clear this change, which is often seen as oral history data was really the domain of natural scienhelpful to climate scientists,

AUGUST 30TH Bz 31ST

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USATF certified course, a Boston qualifier, takes you through the area's most stunning High Desert landscapes. Benefiting Oregon Komen. •

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tists, is essential for the man-

the place where I was work- agement of ecological change ing experienced three floods and its impact on humans. that exceeded 100-year levels

"Understanding the whole

in four years," Marino said.

cycle of what's happening in " Over time, i t b e came i n - the upper atmosphere and creasingly important for me how it affects people and what to think about what these eco- role policy can play requires logical changes would do to people who can cross discipopulations." plines," Marino said, adding This pursuit led Marino to a that social scientists are now doctoral program at the Uni- common at climate change versity of Alaska-Fairbanks conferences. and, eventually, to ShishNatalie Dollar, OSU-Casmaref, an island community cades associat e dean of arts of about 560 just north of the Bering Strait. "It's about a half-mile wide

L

and sciences, characterized

Marino's work as the "future of scholarship."

"When I l ook f o rward, I and 3 miles long, and I spent a lot of time there," Marino said. think research is going to be "I first flew in about a decade much more i nterdisciplinago and for my dissertation ary, and it already is here at spent about six months there OSU-Cascades," Dollar said. observing the c ommunity "We're bringing people toand how their leaders inter- gether from fields in the social acted with state and federal sciences like (Marino) with agencies dealing with disaster people from the hard, physical policy." sciences, like chemists." Seven years ago, the Army Dollar said Marino's work Corps of Engineers estimated is "drawing so much attention" the island had 15 years left be- to the university, noting her fore becoming uninhabitable participation on grant review because of erosion. Because

of this, Marino's research focused on the impending demise of the community's home

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panels and conferences, such as a NASA and National Sci-

ence Foundation-sponsored meeting this winter.

and the population's inevitable

Looking forward, Marino hopes to continue exploring how ecological change affects solid plans for. communities, with the possi"This is an example of what bility of shifting her focus to has been seen all over, where Oregon. "It would be interesting to marginalized populations experience climate change with look at the issue of flooding harsher consequences than on the coast and how people others," Marino said. "And are coping with the loss of it's important to r e member marine resources," Marino that these are societies who said. "Another thing is risk have contributed the least to perception, something I was greenhouse gases. There's thinking about during the Two only one car on the island, and Bulls Fire. Disasters are interall it does is bring your lug- esting moments in social life, gage from the landing strip to they expose all of our greatwhere you are staying." est flaws and attributes as a Marino also said one of her community." "big claims" in the book is — Reporter: 541-633-2160, that colonized populations are tleeds@bendbulletirt.com migration, a future, she said, which the government has no

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SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

State prison official steps down amid etbiv probe The Associated Press

PORTLAND The deputy director of the Or-

CAMPAIGN TRAIL

s en

AROUND THE STATE

ans o in re on

icized in a Department of Justice report for allegedly abusing his office and assuring his son was hired by

"Outside groups wouldn't be he said. The Associated Press investing that kind of money if The Associated Press wasn't SALEM — A conservative theydidn't see the opportunity." able to reach Rick Miller late on super PAC with ties to the Koch Friday. brothers is buying into Ore- Kitzhaber opponents National GOPtargets gon's Senate race. Gov. John givehimmoney Kitzhaber picked up some Kitzhaber'scampaign re- OregonLegislature surprising donations. And a ported two surprising contribuThe n ational R epublican national Republican group is tions this week. group in charge of boosting targeting Oregon's Legislature. Rick Miller, founder and the party's state legislative Here's a look at some of the chairman of Avamere, which prospects says it's targeting more interesting news in Ore- owns assisted living centers, Oregon's House and Senate for gon politics this week, and it's gave the Democrat $25,000. pickups.

the Department of Correc-

all about the money:

Andrew Miller, chief execu-

Super PACin Senate race

tive of Stimson Lumber, gave ed on the Republican State $10,000. Leadership Committee's list of

egon prison system has announced his retirement while a state ethics commission is three months into a

six-month investigation of his conduct. Mitch Morrow was crit-

tions and paid more than is typical for the position. The Oregonian reports Morrow remained on the job after the Oregon Government Ethics Commis-

sion conduded in April that it had objective reasons to believe Morrow had violat-

ed state ethics laws. Ethics officials opened a full investigation of Morrow,

saying the process could take six months.

Morrow contends he did nothing wrong, and prisons spokeswoman Betty Bernt

said Morrow had been planning his retirement for years. He joined the prison system in 1983.

Morrow handles the dayt o-day operations of

the

prison system and is paid a $147,324 annual salary. The probe into Morrow's

conduct came as part of a larger investigation into Oregon's independent prison industries operation. In 2012, Oregon Corrections Enterprises Ad-

ministrator Rob Killgore presented state officials with 875 pages of material detailing what he said was $5 million worth of misap-

By Jonathan J. Cooper

A super PAC aligned with

Both men, who are unrelat-

Both chambers were includ16 Democratic chambers they

ed,were leaders ofthe Oregon hope to flip. work has signaled its intent to Transformation Project, a poThe group wouldn't say how spend big in Oregon, buying at litical action committee that much it plans to spend in any least $1.5 million in television was credited with helping con- particular state. ads. servatives win a majority on Asked to identify specific The Koch brothers own a the Clackamas County Com- pickup opportunities in Orevariety of companies in oil and mission in 2012. They tend to gon, spokeswoman Jill Bader natural resources,amongother support Republicans, and both pointed in an email to the Alan industries, and are big donors supported Kitzhaber's 2010 ri- Bates-Dave Dotterrer rematch to conservative candidates and val, Chris Dudley. in Southern Oregon. She also causes. They're also vilified by Andrew M i l ler a c k nowl- said, "Several House incumthe Koch brothers' political net-

Democrats, and D emocratic

edged that his donation "has

Sen. Jeff Merkley's campaign perplexed a lot of people." But was eager to tell the world that he said he's in the natural rethe Freedom Partners Action sources business, and on farm Fund is getting involved in and forestry issues, Kitzhaber Oregon. has been collaborative, inclu"The Koch brothers hate sive andbalanced. "He's proven himself to me," how Jeff's stood up on behalf of middle-class Oregonians to Miller said. "If somebody's powerful special interests just

demonstrated their ability to

bents will have to answer for

their support of the expensive embarrassment" of the Cover

Oregon failures. Campaign finance records show the group has spent about $420,000 on Oregon legislative races in the last two election cycles. Democrats aren't worried.

'%'e're really confident we're like them," Merkley spokes- lead in an area, I don't see why woman Lindsey O'Brien said in they shouldn't be supported." going to win Senate District 8," anews release. Miller's company, Stimson said Michael Sargeant, director Significantly, the ad buy Lumber, gave $20,000 to Re- of the Democratic Legislative shows national Republicans

publican Dennis Richardson's

Campaign Committee. "If that

haven't abandoned Wehby, de- campaign in October. Miller happens, I don't see a path for spite a string of bad publicity. said that early contribution was the Republicans to take the "It shows there's a legitimate meant to help Richardson get majority." shot to put Oregon on the map his campaign off the ground. That district pits incumbent "I really do believe they're Republican Sen. Betsy Close for Republicans," said Dean P etrone, a s p o kesman f o r two good candidates who are of Albany against Democratic Wehby. qualified to serve and lead," Rep. Sara Gelser of Corvallis.

Sheriff's sergeant killed in traffic crash — Salempolice say a Polk County sheriff's sergeant died in a traffic crash on state Highway 22. The StatesmanJournal reports that Salem officers responding to a single-vehicle crashFridayafternoon found thevictim was48-year-old Randy Whittaker of Dallas. Police sayWhittaker was eastbound inthe right lane whenanother vehicle passed.They sayhemovedinto the left lane, lost control of his vehicle andstruck the large cement barriers running along theside ofthe highway.

School backsoff duyingCorvallis park to expand —After protests from residents, theOregon community college based inAlbany has backedoff the idea of buying city parkland to expand its Corvallis branch. Thepresident of the Linn-Benton Community College,Greg Hamann, saystheschool will instead examinealternatives to buying part of the 4-acreWashington Park inthe central part of the city. — From wire reports

Medford studiesideaof paying councimembers l By Damian Mann

he could ultimately endorse it.

"I don't know if we're ready A scarcity of candidates to cross that bridge," he said. for the Medford City Council After Bunn e x pressed seat formerly held by the late ~a t i on about his inability Karen Blair prompted some to attract candidates, councouncilors to ask for a study cil voted by a slim majority about making their jobs paid Thursday to study the idea of positions. paying councilors. "Two weeks ago, I would Councilor John Michaels have been dead set against it," made the motion to study the Councilor Daniel Bunn said. creation of a paid position, B unn said h e "begged" saying it has been financialtwo residents to apply for the ly difficult for him to give up council position left open af- paid hours of work to donate ter Blair died June 11, but the his time to the council. residents declinedbecause it's He said that paying counan unpaid position. cilors is an issue that would To tryto fill the vacancybe- have tobe put to the voters. fore the election in November, According to a 2006 survey the council decided to seek by the League of Oregon CitMedford Mail Tribune

applications from residents of

ies, 46 of the 137 cities that re-

Ward 2. The council typically

sponded offered a stipend to councilors orthe mayor. Central Point offered a

likes to have three applicants to choose from when appoint-

ingsomeone. The deadline for $3,000 annual stipend to the filing was 5 p.m. Friday, and mayor and $1,800 to its countwo candidates had filed their dlors. Ashland pays $500 applications, though not all of to its mayor and $350 to its the details were available.

councilors, but elected offi-

Bunn said he'dbe willingto study the possibility of making council membership a paid position but wasn't sure

clals receive a health and benefits package. Bend offered $2,400 to both the mayor and

councilors.

propriated expenses dat-

ing back 10 years. Killgore said he was forcedto hire Morrow's son, who worked

as a coordinator in OCE's laundry operation. Killgore told investigators he had to double a moving allowance for the son and increase his

Umatilla wolf packwithin two strikes of lethal control

Fire Continued from 61 Investigators determined that the discarded cigarette

ignited the plastic garbage

pay "because of Morrow's complaints."

By Rob Davis

life, a cow in a fenced-in pas-

The Oregonian

ture was repeatedly bitten by

can, starting a f i r e t h at spread to a couch on the

Investigators concluded that Morrow had recom-

A wolf pack in Umatilla County is two strikes away

a wolf but not killed in early

back deck and then into the

mended his son for an OCE job and "made follow up

from a possible state kill order.

June. GPS data from OR-14's collar showed he was in the

attic area. The loss was estimated

Two confirmed attacks on livestock in June by the Umatilla River pack have qualified as formal strikes against the wolves. When a pack gets four

pasture around the time the

at $195,000. Residents of

cow was attacked. So was another wolf, OR-23.

the western unit of the duplex were able to recover

ment report said there was

strikes in six m onths, state

no evidence Morrow tried

wildlife managers can kill the

pasture without any calves, an ODFW report says, knowing

wolves involved.

that wolves frequented the area.

calls to make sure that his

son was paid more than the typical moving expenses." The state Justice Depart-

to"directlyinfluence"OCE's personnel office to hire his son.

According tothe Oregon Department of Fish and Wild-

The cow's owner had put the cow and 21 others in the

The other attack happened a few days later a mile away.

some possessi ons after the fire was extinguished, but everything inside the eastern unit was lost. Vinyl siding on a nearby apartment building sustained heat damage. The Red Cross is assisting

FREE CONSULTATION

the residents of the duplex

with food, temporary lodging and other necessities. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulietin.com

LOCAL BRIEFING Continued fiom Bt

An alternate driving route through the Ochoco National Forest between Prineville and Mitchell is still open, but the forest roads can be steep, rocky, and washed out in places, according to the Forest Service. From Prineville, turn south on CombsFlatRoad andcontinue east on state Highway 380 past Post and Paulina. Continue east by northeast until the road becomes Forest Road 42and passes Salters Cabin campground and Wolf Creek campground as it enters the national forest. Follow Forest Road 42 to Six Corners junction, then turn onto Forest Road 12 which leaves the junction heading east before turning north. Stay on Forest

Road 12 all the way to its junction ters will still be using the river with U.S. Highway 26, about10 for dipping, and rafters may be miles east of Mitchell. asked to hold up temporarily while helicopters are working. Lower Deschutes Rafters should avoid pulling will reopen today off in areas that have recently burned, according to the center. The Lower Deschutes River Black areas may still have hot will reopen at 6 a.m. today, spots, stump holes or rolling according toanannouncement material. from the Central Oregon InterFire restrictions are in place agency Dispatch Center. from canyon rim to canyon rim The approximately 31 miles on the Lower Deschutes. The of river between Trout Creek and Long Bend had been closed canyon has light, grassy fuels that allow fires to ignite and since Thursday because of spreadquickly.Peoplemay use wildfires. Although the area will be open white gas/propane stoves and to day and overnight use, rafters may only smoke in a vehicle or on the water. should use caution, the center — Bulletin staffreports said in a news release. Helicop-

Continued from Bt

Greg Irlralden(R)................ Y Earl Blumenauer (D)..........N Suzanne Bonamici (0) ...... Y Peter OeFazi o (D)............... Y Kurt Sohreder (D).............. Y

•SenateRepublicansblocked a Democratic bill Wednesday that would force companies to provide birth control as part of their health care coverage.Democrats intro-

duced the bill in response tothe U.S. SupremeCourt's Hobby Lobby decision, in which thejustices held, by a 5-4 margin, that corporations with religious objections did not have to provide femaleemployees with birth control as mandated under Obamacare.Thebill, which needed60votestoovercome the threat of aGOPfilibuster, failed to advance by a56-43 margin. Three Republi cansand53Democrats voted in favor of cloture, while

••

Full Set of Braces Expire s09/01/2014.MUSTPRESENT COUPON at your FREE Consultation. Savings applied et start of case. New patients only. Not valid with any other offer or to eXiStingaCC OuntS.

42 Republicans votedagainst it, enough to stall the bill. Senate Majority LeaderHarry Reid, D-Nev., voted against cloture sothat he can reintroduce the bill later.

Jeff Merkley (D)................. Y Ron Wyden(D).................. Y — Andrew Clevenger, TheBulletin

The Bulletin (

a„

'r

J D Plat t K 9 K i n g s Central Oregon's fun mix of comedy, audience participation and high-flying trick dogs. Wednesday - Saturday. Check main schedule for times.

U.S. SENATE VOTE • Bill to require companies to provide birth control as part of their health care coverage.

TheBulletin

Three performances each day.

WEEK U.S. HOUSEVOTE • Bill to keep the HighwayTrust Fund solvent.

Weekly Arls & Entertainment inslde MAGAZINE

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH 1VOTIt ES Kenneth Mark Sipel, of Bend

Glenn Franklin Hawkins, of Redmond

May 5, 1965 - July 14, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals of Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Services will be held in San Francisco at a later date.

Feb. 2, 1943 - July 14, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals Redmond is honored to serve the family. Services: A memorial will be held July 26, 2014 at 1pm at Eagle Crest Convention Center.

Daniel "Dan" Eby Wilkerson, of Bend

Yoshiko "Yoshi" Benzel, of Redmond

May 22, 1936 - June 29, 2014 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemodalchapel.com

Services: A graveside service will be held at 11:00 AM on Friday, July 25, 2014 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend with a celebration of Dan's life to follow at 4:00 PM at the DRRH Neighbors Club, 17200 Milky Way Road in Sunriver. Contributionsmay be made to:

Partners In Care or to St. Charles Heart and Lung Center.

Nov. 5,1933- July14,2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services:

No formal services are planned, per Yoshi's

request.

Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Jeannine Bloom Jan. 20, 1926- July12, 2014

Tierneyelevatedpaperdollsto anart form By Margalit Fox

to Obama; Henry VIII and his

New York Times News Service

wives (buyers craving histori-

Tom Tierney, who quite by accident found fame and fortune dressing — and undressing — notables from George Washington to Greta Garbo to Pope John Paul II, died on July

cal accuracy can take scissors to Anne Boleyn and Catherine

12 at his home in Smithville,

colored, and annotated with historical information, Tier-

Howard); and silver-screen stars like Rita Hayworth, Ve-

ronica Lake and Lana Turner. Meticulously drawn and

(ft i I '~l

Texas. Tierney, who almost single-handedly revived the lost art of paper-doll making, was 85.

The cause was lung cancer, Kathy O'Tierney, his niece, sald. From the mid-1970s until his

death, Tierney reigned as "the undisputed king" of the international paper-doll world, as

ney's paper-doll books are not just for children — and some are not for children at all. His

aim, he often said, was to con-

Cl

tribute to the visual literature

/$ p

I J

The New York Times wrote in 1999 — a milieu that comprises thousands of collectors

of costume history. r

w

A former Manhattan resi-

dent who began his career as a fashion illustrator, Tierney was renowned for his prodigious research. Many of his books depicted actual outfits

in the United States alone.

and accessories with which his subjects were associated:

Over the years, he created

the Sarah Burton wedding

more than 400 paper-dolls books, most issued by Dover

dress wor n

Publications. His Dover titles have sold

Prince William, Carmen Miranda's turrets of fruit, Vivien

4 million copies, according to

b y Ca t h erine

Middleton on her marriage to Leigh's gowns from "Gone

Jeannine Bloom died Sat- the company. With the Wind." u rday Jul y 1 2 o f n a t u r al "Tom Tierney is probably Verisimilitude broke down, Lorna Mae Dahms, of causes in her home. the largest influence on conh owever, when i t c a m e t o Bend Jeannine was born Janu- temporary paper dolls," Jenunderclothes. Sept. 23, 1919 - July 17, 2014 ary 20, 1926 i n M o n t real ny Taliadoros, the publisher "I was not privy to George Dith Pran/The New York Times file photo Arrangements: Q uebec Canada. She m e t of Paper Studio Press, which Tom Tierney, a prolific artist of paper-doll books, is shown here at Washington's u n derwear," Deschutes Memorial the true love of her life, our issues paper-doll books by his apartment studio in New York in1985. Meticulously drawn and Tierney said on NPR in 2010. Chapel 541-382-5592 dad, Bill Bloom. They had www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com Tierney and other artists, said colored, and annotated with historical information, Tierney's titles In another interview, he extwo children, Nanette and Services: in a n i n t erview T h ursday. sold by the millions for Dover Publications. He died July 12 at 85. plained: "I just put them in the Michael. No services will be held. B ill an d J e a nnine w e r e "During the lull in paper-doll underwear of the period. If I'm Contributions may be made lifelong entrepreneurs and production in the 1970s and wrong, I'm wrong." to: they pursued their dream of '80s, he was th e on e t h at wardrobe. largely eclipsed the humble Tierney's books were prized Alzheimer's Association, becoming a M c D o nald'sbrought paper dolls back." In the 19th and early 20th paper doll. by collectors, who o f ten 1650 NW Naito Parkway, franchise. They opened the Paper dolls are thought to centuries, newspapers and After Tierney entered the bought two copies of each title Suite 190, Portland, OR first McDonald's in Central 97209, www.alz.org have originated in 18th-cenmagazines regularly printed field, a spate of d i minutive — "one to cut and one to keep," O regon in 1 9 73. A s t h e i r two-dimensional figu r es Taliadoros explained. t ury F r ance, w hen M a r i e paper dolls for r eaders to cut business g re w o v e r t he Tierney moved back to Texy ears t o in cl u d e thr e e Antoinette's dressmaker cre- out. But by the 1970s, televi- sprang to life on his drawing ated miniature documenta- sion — along with mass-pro- board, including American as in 2007. His survivors inthriving restaurants, so did their family to include four ry records of her m i stress' duced dolls like Barbie — had presidents from Washington clude a brother, Hal. grandchildren, Scott, Courtn ey, T u lley, a n d M e g a n ; March 7, 1927 - July15, 2014 and on e g r eat-grandchild, Fred was born i n A l b e e, Cruz. OR to Jacob and Caroline The most prevalent thing Schilling. He was raised on t hat Jeannine believed i n Death Notices are freeand Deadlines:Death Notices are t he family r a nch w it h h i s t hroughout he r e n t ir e l i f e S E 9t pb will be run for oneday,but accepted until noon Monday siblings until events forced was to always help others through Friday for next-day them t o and give back to her comspecific guidelines must be Annette "Mickey" Hanel move t o munity. As a y o ung immifollowed. Local obituaries are publication and by4:30 p.m. July 23, 1923 - March 21, 2014 Pendlegrant to th e U n ited States paid advertisements submitted Friday for Sunday publication. Annette "Mickey" Hanel of La Pine, passed away on March 21, ton, OR. she taught English as a secby families or funeral homes. Obituaries must be received gl During 2014 in LaPine.Shewas90 years of age.Shewaswell caredfor o nd language to other im They may besubmitted by by 5 p.m. Monday through W W2, h e m igrants, v o l u nteered a t with love andcompassion in herfinal days by BarbaraMcVayat Thursday for publication on phone, mail, email or fax. The enlisted in h ospitals, a n d m o s t r eBulletin reserves the right to the second day after subCascadeLakesAdul tFosterHome,La Pi ne,OR. t he N a v y cently enjoyed helping eledit all submissions. Please mission, by1 p.m. Friday for and w as e mentary st udents i n t h e A Graveside Urn Committal Service for Mickey will be held on include contact information in Sunday publication, and by very SMART reading program. Wednesday, July 23, 2014, 10:00AM at the La Pine Community all correspondence. 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday p roud o f To honor her life, we esFred Schilling h i s Cemetery located at the end of ReedRoad in La Pine. ser- tablished the Bill and JeanFor information on any of these publication. Deadlines for v ice to hi s c o untry. A f t er nine B l o o m Sc h o l arship display ads vary; pleasecall services or about the obituary Immediately following at11:00AM a Reception will be held the service, Fred moved to F und a t C O C C t o h el p for details. policy, contact 541-617-7825. B end and b egan w o r k i n g celebrating the life of Mickey onher birthday at the La Pine n ursing s t u d ents p u r s u e for theU.S. Forest Service. their d r e ams. I n h e u o f Moose Lodgelocated at 52510 Drafter Road. He married Mary " B eth" flowers, please send donaPhone: 541-617-7825 Mail:Obituaries McCurley and raised three t ions t o B i l l 8 Jea n n i n e children. He was an i n deP.O. Box6020 B loom S c h olarship, C e n Email: obits@bendbulletin.com endent man a n d s t a r ted tral O r e go n Co m m u nity Bend, OR 97708 MICHEL "MITCH" TODD MERRILL Fax: 541-322-7254 is own e x c avation b u si- College Foundation, 2 6 00 DEcEMBER 29, I 955 — JULY 8, 20(4 ness, and later owned and NW College Way, Bend, OR operated Agate W a t er 97701; or on li n e at Mitch Merrill, a loving father, husband, brother Company. http://www.cocc.edu/founandfriend,passed away suddenl y on July 8, F red w a s p r e c eded i n dation/online-donations/ death by his parents; three Please select "options" and 2014 at his vacation home on the McKenzie siblings; and h i s b e l oved indicate "Bloom S c h olarRiver. Hewas born to OsmondJed Merrill and wife, Beth. He will be f or ship." Maria Monserrat Merrill on December29, 1955 ever loved and m i ssed by The family will hold a priin Eugene,OR. h is children, John, K e r r y vate c e r e mony i n her and Ly nn ; g r a ndchildren, honor. Mitch grew up inEugeneand graduated from South EugeneHigh School J oleen, Br a n d on , Er i c , in1974 wherehewasanavid memberof the dramaclub asheloved acting John, Cody and Hydee; his on stage. After graduation, Mitch moved toBend, ORwith his brother 0. s isters, R u t h M cA l a v y , Jay doing odd jobs while enjoying skiing and fishing with their friends. Dorothy Grosh; and all his Weekly Arts 5 w nieces and nephews. Upon moving back to Eugene in 1977, Mitch joined his cousin Maxat Entertainment In The Mt. Bachelorski community lost a special man Services will be held 1:00 ShurWayConstruction where hegained all of his construction knowledge p.m. July 25, 2014 at Partwith the passing o( Kurt Schmidt onJune24, 2014 including learning to operatemanydifferent types of machinery. In 1979 n ers i n Ca r e , 2 0 7 5 N E after a brave fight with cancer.Hewas72. he opened OregonArt Supply, his first entrepreneurial endeavor. Then Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701. Kurt's love ofskiing washis life. Hewasproudof the in 1982, he moved to Sausalito, California and worked for Logitech, In lieu o f f l o w e rs, d o n ations can be made to Partfact that hehad beenskiing Mt. Bachelorfor 55years. His last dayonthe mountain expanding his interests in computer technologywhile honing his lifelong ners in Care Home Health was April I1,2014. salesmanshipskills. • • TheBulletin Hospice. Kurt grewUpin KlamathFalls, Oregon.Fortunately, the Blannfamily wereneighbors, While inCalifornia hemethiswife, CindyBahr-Merrill. After thebirth of their andtheytaughthim toskiatage I3.TheBlannswerelikehissecondparents,andthe daughter ,Deena,theymovedbacktoBendin1996.In2002Mitchbecame 4 children hisbrothersandsisters. Eventually, theymovedto Bendwhere Cliff Blann a founding partner atDBGLoyalty, a databasetechnology companywhere becamethemountain manager. he soon became well knownwithin the Affiliate Marketing community. In

John Fredrick 'Fred' Schilling

Obituary policy

/

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Kurt Schmidt-

I

~ r'i

LYNDON KEljI ONAKA October 1, 1958 — Jatiuarlf 27, 2014 Lyndon Keiji Onaka was born and raised in Kona, Hawaii and moved to Oregon in 2004. As a single parent, he raised his daughter Lyndsie who was the most important and best part of his life. His extended family in Bend was alsovery dear and significant to him. Lyndon was a b r i ght l i ght w h o to u c hed ma ny p e ople throughout his lifetime with his joy and his love of music. He was an accomplished pianist, keyboardist tk ukulele player who entertained at many hotels in Hawaii, the Bend Golf tk Country Club, Touchmark, Stone Lodge and other venues. A Celebration will be held in his honor on Sunday, July 27th at the Elk Lake Resort event site from 4:00-7reo pm. potluck dinner - no host bar- bring your own non-alcoholic drinks. Please bring your musical instruments for a spontaneous jam, one of Lyndon's favorite things to do, to celebrate his life and his love of music. Lyndon is survived by his daughter Lyndsie Onaka of Portland, Oregon, Mother Rose Onaka of Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, and sisters: Roslyn lshirl) Petersonof Holualoa, Hawaii, Stephanie lRobert) tvtcGeeof Las Vegas,N evada, C athy (Melvin) Agena of Honolulu, Hawaii, nieces, nephews,and many friends. For questions about the event or donations, call or text Lucie at 541-598-5043 or email: jlucieum@hotmail.com.

Kurt earned his industrial engineering and businessdegreesfrom Oregon State University in 1966. After college, he returned home to work in the engineering departmentof Weyerhaeuser.However, his passionandloveof skiing wastoo enticing. Off he went toBendto workfor Cliff asassistant managerfor two years—1968-1970. Those twoyears"on thehill" remainedaspecial part of his life. Hecontinued to stay on the SkiPatrol for thenext eight years. I970 sawKurt backin Klamath Fallsworking for ModocLumberCo. Hewaspassionate about the lumber industry andstayedwith Modocfor25 years Until it closed. He marriedLeahLamb in Klamath FallsonJune9, I973. However,Kurt did not stay retired. Hewasthen employed byJeldWen/Eagle Crest Resortsto work on theproposedPelican Butte SkiArea.Todevelop aski areanear KlamathFallswasahugedreamfor Kurt that grewwhile hewasin college. Hemade many skirunsdownPelicanandhadenvisioned that its developmentwould boostthe Klamatheconomy.Unfortunately, this developmentdid notcometo pass. Kurt was40 a year member of RotaryandHoo-HooInternational, serving aspresident of both clubs. He alsoservedon various boardsthroughout theyears. Hewasstill on the boardof Collier MemorialParkand LoggingMuseum. Survivors includehis wife, Leah,of KlamathFalls; sonand daughter-in-law, Michael and AndreaSchmidt, of Tigard, Oregon;mother-in-law, IdaLamb,o(Klamath Falls. He was precededindeathbyhisparentsandanewbornson,JamesSchmidt. Memorial donations may be made to Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation (MBSEF),563SW 13th St., Suite20I, Bend,OR97?02, or the charity of your choice. Private intermentserviceswereheld onJune28th in Klamath Falls. Therewill be a special memorial to honorKurt on August 7, 2014at 2 o'clock at ReamesGolf and Country Club,KlamathFalls,Oregon.

2013, hesold his ownership in DBGLoyalty to take a well-deserved break dedicating his time to family andfriends. During his semi-retirement this last year MitchandCindy wereable to spendtheir time together traveling, camping andenjoyingtheir getawayhomeon the McKenzie River. Mitch was a devotedfather to Deena. Overtheyears he was aconstant influence in her life supporting her manyactivities such as coaching her soccer team,helpingwith Girl Scouts andattending her manydanceand singing recitals. He taught her many life skills such as how to pitch a tent, build a campfire, drive acar anddo her taxesas well as instilling the fisherman'sethics of 'catch-and-release'. All who knewMitch knowhe wasseldom idle, alwaysactively working on something, be it cars, boats, houses orelectronics. Hewasa passionate fishermantaking every possible opportunity to doso, andrecently hewas getting backinto golf. His ideaswerebrilliant and healways knewthe right thing to say. He loved meeting newpeopleandleft a permanent imprint on all, even if met just one time. Hewasfriends with all who knewhim and loved to be a part of the party. Mitch is survived byhis wife, Cindy,andhis daughter, Deenaof Bend, OR; his two sisters, Victoria "Vicki" Channer ofSiletz, ORand Debra Jones of South BeachOR;his brother, 0. Jay Merrill of Bend, OR;and numerous nieces. A "Celebration of Mitch's Life" will be held in Bend inthe nearfuture, all friends arewelcome,F5


SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Yesterday

BITS FEATURED OBITUARY

LiOnelFeIbOS ,

a legend inthe New Orleans jazz scene The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS — Centenarian jazz musician Lionel Ferbos died Saturday at

his home in New Orleans, just days after celebrating his 103rd birthday on July 17 with friends and family in the French Quarter. His granddaughter, Lori Schexnayder,said the trumpeter she called "paw-paw" died peacefully, surrounded by friends and family. Ferbosperformed allover New Orleans and its suburbs

for decades. His ability to read music made him

an i n -demand musician

for

gigs that took him to pa r k s,

Ferbos

schools, church-

es, dance halls and even prisons. He also performed at his 102nd birthday party and at every New Orleans Jazz and H eritage Festival until t h i s

past year. Ferbos was believed to be the oldest working jazz musician, performing regularly until last year. He was also the last living member of the

W P A b a nd , w h i ch

was formed during the Dep ression by l a b orers i n the city's Works Progress Administration.

He had recently become too weak to hold his trumpet,

but family members would o ccasionally hold it to h i s mouth so that he could blow

into it, Schexnayder said. "He missed it so much, but his arms just weren't strong

enough to hold it up," she said. Early on, Ferbos performed with Ne w

O r l eans society

jazz bands at well-known venues such as the Pelican

Club among a string of clubs along Rampart Street — a d owntown strip that in t h e

1920s and '30s was the epicenter of the city's bustling black entertainment district. He performed with W a l -

ter Pichon and Captain John Handy in the '30s, earning lit-

ichskanzler (chancellor of the Pomalift and, among other realm). projects, construction of a waContinued from B1 Now it is ordered in Germa- ter system and the creation of The band added much with ny that the second appellation additional parking. several well-played numbers. be dropped forthereasonthat Expanded ski lift facilities Then H.H. D e A r m o nd the title of chancellor gave will be ready for use when the made a brief and appropriate Hitler "an air of being a func- old volcano cone is covered address of welcome, first call- tionary of politicians, whereas by snow this fall, William A. ing upon the Rev. Smith for he is the beloved leader of his Healy, who heads the Bachedivine invocation. The Bend people." lor Butte development group, Glee Club Quartet, Mrs. PutAs chancellor, he is a func- said. nam, Mrs. Powelson, Mrs. tionary, it is true, but he is also U.S Forest Service officials Forrest and Miss Trautner dependent for his tenure on

gon routes, with their many attractions.

75 YEARS AGO

probesthe mysteries ofdeath.

New chairlift being installed at Bachelor

For the week ending July 19, 1939

Preliminary work on a new Sometimes it's a harder task but that makes solving the puzzle more satisfying.

double chair lift at Bachelor Butte that will take skiers to the 7,480 foot level is under way, with a Bend firm, Dun-

Mamie Smith.

A title discarded

and technical for his time,"

of Germany Adolf Hitler has been known to the outside can Bros., in charge. world as der Fuehrer (the leadThis is part of an extensive er) but his official title has in- summer job that will also cluded the designation of Re- include the relocation of the

"He was very advanced

said Dixieland jazz musician Lars Edegran, who performed with Ferbos for de-

cades with the New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra, a group

Since he became dictator

formed in the 1960s to revive the old music unearthed in the jazz archives at Tulane University. in the orchestra, and Lionel

Deathsof note from around

was a very well-trained musician," Edegran said. "He was very professional on stage, a beloved person, and there's just nobody else like him." Ferbos had a unique voice and a knack for soft, sen-

the world:

"The Beautiful Dreamer."

"One of the things I like best

about natural death cases is telling a family how a person died, and if the children face

a risk from something hereditary," said Gunson who gradu-

DEATHs ELsEwHERE

"You needed advanced music reading skills to play

t imental hits l ik e ' W hen I Grow Too Old to Dream" and

Using the scalpel and the saw, she does autopsies to find out how people died — a knife wound, a bullet hole, traumatic injuries from a car accident.

For the week ending July 19, 1964

Henry "Hank" HartsfIeld

Jr., 80: Retired U.S. astronaut

who flew on three shuttle missions, including as commander of the Discovery's maiden flight. Hartsfield pi-

space as part of a two-person Rosemary Murphy, 89: A crew. The landing at Edwards Broadway and film actress Air Force Base in California

known for her role in "To Kill a

was met by President Ronald Reagan and a crowd of 1 mil-

Mockingbird" and for her Emmy-winningperformance in the

lion spectators. Died after an

TV drama "Eleanor and Frank-

illness, NASA space agency lin." Died July 12 in New York said Saturday. — From wire reports

loted Columbia on the orbit-

er program's final test flight in 1982, spending a week in

Daniel Eby Wilkerson M ay 22, 193 6 - J u n e 2 9 , 2 0 1 4

Daniel Eby Wilkerson passed aeay on June 29, 2014 at Hospice Housein Bend.

Dan wasbornin Martinez, California onMay22, 1936 to Earl L. and Margaret (Eby) Wilkerson.

He moved to Nampa,ID at9 monthswhere he was raised and graduated from NampaHigh Schoolin 1955.

In1957 hemarried GeralDean(Geri) Jacksonof Nampa.They had two sons, Daniel EbyWilkerson, Jr. and Randal DeanWilkerson.

Dan worked in the floor covering business andcontinued after he and his family moved to Bend, OR in 1966. From 1980 until his retirement in 2005 he was in the towing business.

He enjoyed camping, fishing and, his biggest passion, anything with wheels. Survivors include his wife, Geri; two sons, Daniel (Dusty) of

Sunriver and Randal (Rusty) and his wife Darin of Redmond; two grandsons, Otto and Jett; and two brothers, Richard of Crescent Lake and Robert of Nampa, ID. Services will be held at11:00 AM on Friday, July 25,2014 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens with a celebration of Dan's life to follow at 4:00 PM at the DRRHNeighbors Club17200 Milky Way Road in SunrIver.

f handu~ 4 4 b ~

I+

~

Memorial contributions may be made fo Partners In Care or to St.Charles Heart and Lung Center. Deschutes Nemorial Chapelis entrusted with Dan's arrangements.

'Vettes

in 1972. Gunson came with her family to Bend in 1960. Her

Continued from B1

parents, Roger and Caryl

shopping for a car, the Corvette

Gunson, in 1965 bought

wasn't even on his mind. White said he had his heart set on an

Magill Drug in the O'Kane Building i n do w ntown Bend, and have been operat-

ing it ever since. When she set off for college she had no clue she would end up coaxing secrets from dead bodies

then sang, after which Vernon the vote of the German parA. Forbes delivered the oration liament. Germany still retains vertical rise of 1.140 feet. Ca- as a deputy state medical of the day. Mr. Forbes' address the form of representative gov- pacity of the new lift will be examiner. waswell delivered andwellre- ernment and the chancellor 1,000 persons an hour with After graduating from ceived and besides inciuding must control the reichstag, in 125 chairs. Whitman College with a dethe usual matter expected of one way or other, if he is to be The present Pomalift is to gree inbiology, she attended a speaker touched upon polit- returnedto that office. be shortened and placedatthe the Oregon Health Sciences ical policies. Now Hitler not only gives top of the present Lift No. l. University in Portland and The baby show, well han- up the title but orders that it be Also planned is an electric became a doctor in 1981. dled,undertheauspicesofthe no longer used. He still holds rope tow on a high snow field She finished her four Ladies Committee, proved a the office, but it means little to used by Olympic skiers in years of residency in 1985, center of interest immediately him. The body which elects to traininglastyear. but became bored with hosafter the luncheon. that office apparently means pital pathology — hours at Nearly 50 youngsters be- as little to him. The next logi- Marina Meyers a microscope diagnosing tween the ages of one and cal step would be the abolition '64 pageant queen diseases and looking at PAP two years were entered, and of it, too. Thenthe form as well A blue-eyed blonde, 18 smears. three brave men were found of the fact of absolute dictator- years old Marina Meyers, Such routine work ended to act as judges, to-wit: T.E.J. ship would be complete. was crowned queen of Bend's when Dr. Larry Newman Duffy of Prineville, at present 1964 water pageant. She is the was named acting state a bachelor, D.C. Thoms, of Jef- Portland gets daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lou m edical e x a miner a n d ferson, Oregon and I.J. Cody. another coach Meyers. asked Gunson to join him. "I knew after the first After careful deliberation Bend football fans will be She and her court will lead this trinity of baby experts regretful at the loss of Johnny the 24th parade of lighted few months here that this picked three winners. Billy Londahl, high school coach, floats, on t raditional swan was my niche," she said. "I Van Catlow, as the healthiest w hose deci sion to acceptapo- barges, July 24, 25 and 26 on couldn't go back to looking baby, Maxine Dickinson as sition at Franklin High School, Mirror Pond. at hospital slides." the prettiest and David Bin- Portland, was announced in Also in the royal retinue The job has its moments ney Putnam as the happiest. the news Thursday. The loss, were 1963 queen, Ann Bran- in the spotlight, such as There was no appeal from the however, is of a sort to which dis, escorted by Lyman C. when she testifies in murder decision and everyone seemed they should by now, be fairly Johnson, and Mrs. Ed Thur- trials. For example she did reasonably satisfied. well accustomed. ston, chaperone of this year's the autopsies on Rod and An accident nearly marred Jerry Lilly, in one season, court, escorted by B.A. Stover. Lois Houser of Terrebonne, the exhibition, for while the established an enviable rep- Bill Hatch Jr. escorted Queen killed in their home by a babies and many mothers utation as a B end athletic Marina. Other escorts were trio of young gunmen, and were gathered on the plat- instructor. He did not refuse Hugh McNair, Wayne Thomp- on the body of the first vicform where the speaking had when Grant High School of son, Hal Peck and Ron Young. tim of convicted serial killer occurred, the horses beneath Portland asked him for his Chris Johnson, daughter of Dayton Leroy Rogers. broke in two and the heavy services. Miller Nicholson Mr. and Mrs. Lyman C. JohnGuilty verdicts in those planks parted and down came turned in two high school state son, was flower girl. Bob Mc- trials sent two men to the the entire platform, with a track championships in suc- Nair, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh state's Death Row. shrieking mass of babies and cessive years and accepted an McNair, was crown bearer. Some peoplemight gag women. By the greatest good offer from Portland 12 months Kessler Cannon, master of at doing autopsies, especialfortune no one was hurt in the after Lilly's departure. Nichol- ceremonies, outlined the full ly on decomposed bodies, slightest. son is onthe Washington High schedule of activities planned but it's business as usual for School faculty. Londahl, in his forpageant weekend. Gunson. An opportunity(Editorial) firstyear,produced one ofthe The Bend MunicipalBand The story in Bend is, her With the improvement in outstanding teams of the state, provided a concert during the parents are understandably the McKenzieroad across the unbeatenand untied in a hard dinner. Afterwards the court proud of their daughter. Cascades being made, and as- inter-sectional schedule. His members described highlights Some may think Karen's job surance of a very heavy auto departure comes one year af- of the pre-pageant whirl. is a bit different, but her fatouring travel for 1915, a plan ter that of Nicholson. While the judges marked ther puts it in simpler terms. "We make 'em, they take their ballots a group of danc"I think of her as being a comes to mind that has been suggested to exploit the Cen- 'em," was one of the comments ers from the Warm Springs In- darn good doctor," Roger tral Oregon routes is worthy heard yesterday regarding the dian Reservation entertained Gunson said. "She's one of of consideration and approval. third transfer to Portland, a with colorful tribal dances. the few people who passed The scheme is to prepare statement which might break A s pectacular f i reworks the forensic boards the first a map showing the roads down somewhat under close d isplay c o mpleted t h e time around, and all of her through this section by which analysis, but catching enough entertainment. colleagues think very hightravelers to and f rom San to bear repeating. It would be ly of her." "She does her job and Francisco may vary their better if we could "hold 'em" 25 YEARS AGO routes south and north. Thou- but lacking that ability there does it well." sands of cars next year will is a measure of satisfaction For the week ending Note to readers: Dr. Kargo from North-Pacific points in reviewing the regularity July 19, 1989 en Gunson is now the state to California and from Cal- with which Portland schools medical examiner and has ifornia to the Northwest. If turn to Bend to fill coaching She coaxessecrets been for manyyears. from corpses proper attention is called to vacancies. the matter, hundreds of them In a n o rthwest Portland will choose the Central Orebuilding, Dr. Karen Gunson 50 YEARS AGO

tle more than a dollar a night.

He also performed with saxophonist Harold Dejan and trumpeters Herbert Leary, Gene Ware and Sidney Desvignes, as well as blues singer

said the length of Chair Lift No. 2 will be 3,700 feet, with a

ated from Bend High School

B5

A decade later, when he was

Austin-Healey, but after a bad experience at the dealership, he went elsewhere and found the 1954 Corvette he still owns

today. White said the car mostly

travels from show to show on a trai lerthese daysbecause of the risk of damaging the paint and the fact it doesn't really drive all that well. "You have to really drive this

car. You can't put it in cruise control and just let it go like you can with the newer ones," he SBld.

Bob Chilton, of Albany, was something of a rarity at Satur-

day's show — he drove his 1982 to Eagle Crest and will drive it

back. If the weather's nice, he'll head home with the T-tops secured to a clunky rack bolted through the lid of the trunk, a modification that allows him to

carry a modest amount of luggagebehind the front seats. Chilton said he's a bit puzzled at how some of his fellow

Corvette fans put so much money and effort into their cars and then are reluctant to take

them out on the road. He said his car is fun to drive, though it does have some notable

shortcomings. "When you're younger you can'tafford it,and when you're

older, you can't get in and out of 'em," he said. "You just sort of roll in and roll out."

JerryWesse,ofPortland,describes his 1954 Corvette as a badlyfl awed machine. When the cars first came off the line, a design error in the air intake system led to a spate

of car fires. The trim and the doors don't line up right, a relic of their handmade origins; a worker on the 1954 assembly line once told Wesse they routinely swapped out nuts and bolts from the nearby GM truckassembly line when supplies ran low. And the solid rear

axle makes for a rough ride on winding roads. While restoringhis car about

seven years ago, Wesse met a fellow enthusiast who offered

to help him with the project. After inspecting Wesse's Corvette, the man promised

he could make it perfect, but Wesse balked. "I go, 'I don't want it perfect,'" he said. "I want it the way it's

supposed to be." — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbuIIetin.com

SR-22 9S

SUSPENSIONS DUII'S TICKETS

C ON S Uh1E R,„,"„;" „'„„, Insurance Services BEND

REDMOND

541-383-1733

541-504-2134

HennITaftEaton,Jr 4uguSt29,1918- June27,201II Mr. Henry Taft Eaton, Ir, age 95 passed away Friday, June 27, 2014. Mr. Eaton was born in New York City, New York on August 29, 1918, to Henry Taft Eaton and Ina Kissel Eaton. A 1937graduate ofMi ddlesex School (Concord, MA), E aton attended Harvard University before serving in the United States Army. During WW II, he was commissioned from 1st Lt to Captain and was transferred to Southern France where he was decorated with a purple heart for being wounded in combat. He was honorably discharged in 1945. An I n t ernational F orest P r oducts E xecutive an d s e r ial entrepreneur, Eaton was also competitivelypursued as a consultant for companies worldwide. Beyond his profession, Eaton was an author, and inventor (TIM Time Wheel). In his leisure time, he loved skiing, tennis, and world travel (circumnavigating the world many times in his life — often piloting portions of such travel himself - in his own aircraft with his wife, family and friends. Eaton also enjoyed Service-To-Others. He is remembered for making renowned contributions to the Boy Scouts of America, as wellas forwarding numerous other Economic Development, Social, Historical, and Human Service initiatives. Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by his first wife (of over 50 years), Gladys Foote Eaton (1989); two daughters, PenelopeEaton Onstott,and Barbara Gay Eaton; two brothers, Frederick William Eaton, and Peter Kissel Eaton; and sister, Eleonora Eaton Brooks. He is survived by his second wife (of nearly 25 years), Phyllis Eaton; his daughter, Wendy King (Edward); grandchildren, Ame Eaton, Rusty Remick, Dan Groening, and Kimberly McNie; stepchildren, Vaile 'Ihompson (Rita), Terry Thompson (Valerie), Daniel Thompson (Cindy), and Theresa Rose (Jim); seven step-grandchildren; twenty step-great-grandchildren; and one step-great-great-grandson. Mr. Eaton will be laid to rest in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii. A private ceremony will be held in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, near where he spent many delightful years with family and friends. Please share his life story at oxleyheard.com OXLEY-HEARD FUNERAL DIRECTORS


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

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

I

o

i

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I

TODAY

iI

TONIGHT

HIGH 55' I f '

Partly sunnyandsmoky

I

ALMANAC TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record 83 48'

97' in 1902 32'in 1915

PRECIPITATION

SUN ANDMOON Sunrise Sunset Moonrise Moonset New

Mon.

5: 4 2 a.m. 8: 4 1 p.m. 1:3 9 a.m. 4:2 7 p.m.

MOONPHASES F i rst

5 1'

~

~

Full

Last

rs.

74

5 0'

43

• 8 4 / 9 • La pine Ham ton C e Grove Oakridge • Burns 82/53 /54 • Fort Rock Riley 92/54 Cresce t • 87/50 91/55

Bandon

Nysse

64/53

Po 0 65/ Gold 63/

UV INDEX TODAY The highertheAccuWnniberxmmuy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eyenndskin protecgcn.0-2 Low, 35 Moderate; 6-7High;8-10 VeryHigh; II+ Exireme.

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

IOamath

91/5

64/5

Yesterday Today Monday

city

88/54

• Lakeview 89/55

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Ln/Prec. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W

H i/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W C i ty 69/57/0.00 65/54/c 66/52/c Ln Grande 91/61/0.00 88/55/pc80/58/pc 88/51/0.00 88/54/pc 78/53/I Ln Pine 85/48/0.00 83/49/pc 75/49/pc 62/51/0.00 64/53/pc 63/52/c M e dford 99/5 8 /0.00 96/63/pc 84/64/pc 92/49/0.00 92/54/pc 79/47/I Ne w port 68/5 2 /0.00 62/50/pc 62/51/c 93/59/0.00 83/53/pc 81/58/c N o rth Bend 7 3 / 54/0.00 66/54/pc 66/55/c 92/49/0.00 88/54/pc 76/52/I O n t ario 95/64/0.00 98/70/pc 85/63/I 91/52/0.00 89/55/pc77/49/I Pendleton 97/63/0.00 88/58/pc 86/61/pc

2 p.m. 4 p.m. Astcrin

~ 8~ 5 5

83

Baker City

ercokings

eums

Jordan V gey

Frenchglen 92/58

90/60

Fields • 93/63

• Burns Jun tion • 93/63 Rome 96/64 McDermi

' 86/54

• Ashl nd Falls

Bro Ings

3:09 p.m. 1: 1 9 a.m. 11:48 p.m. 1 2 :40 p.m.

Medfo d •

• Ch ristmas alley Beaver Silver 89/51 Marsh Lake 83/47 87/51 • Paisley Chiloquin •

86/60

Gra a

Juntura 94/61

82/48

Roseburg

city Portland Prineviiie Redmond nnneburg Salem Sisters The Dalles

91/58

Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Ln/Prnc. Hi/Ln/W Hi/Ln/W 85/6 2/0.0073/56/pc78/60/ c 87/ 5 5/0.0088/52/pc75/55/ pc

90/ 52/0.0088/51/pc 80/55/pc

95 / 63/0.00 86/60/pc 80/62/ c Eugene 91/62/0.00 80/55/pc82/60/ c Klamnth Falls 86/51/0.00 86/52/pc 81/53/pc Lnkeview 92 / 68/0.0081/61/pc 84/66/pc Wenthnr(W):s-sunny,pc-pnrtlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-shcwers,t-thunderstorms,r-rnin, sf-sncwflurries, sn-sncwi-ice,Tr-frsce,Yesterday data ascf 5 p.m. yesterday

NATIONAL WEATHER

Source: OregonAiiergyAssccintus 541-683-1577

~ t o s ~ 208 ~ 30s ~4 0s ~5 0s ~e cs ~ras ~aos ~9 0s ~toos ~ttcs ~ tgs ~os ~ o s WATER REPORT cnlg NATIONAL As of 7 n.m.yesterday Queb 6 I ~ 9 . » » o. • i niitouf ~ ndnr Sny 81/5 Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity EXTREMES (for the C rane Prairie 386 8 9 70% YESTERDAY 48'yo 48 contiguousstates) Wickiup 96784 Crescent Lake 7 3 3 37 84% National high: 117 sui Snnfnnv g. Ochoco Reservoir 24741 56% at Death Valley,CA 8 2 • 97/67 95% Prinevige 120803 81% National low: 35 River flow St a tion Cu. ft.lsec. at Stanley, ID ul 9/65: y y v che Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 493 Precipitation: 3.01" 91/6 I 90 » » » jindni • Deschutes R.below Wickiup 965 at Smyrna, TN n j c incn S alt L@eify« omn nuln V > • • Dnn 73les v % 93VL ' Deschutes R.below Bend 131 6 'LnnV nn" n nle 9 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1990 Kansas ci 10 Little Deschutes near LaPine nun 86 Ssfl2 6 1/89 O ' ~ ~. v Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 78 Lnn An len Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 0 Phcnn x \ Ancllnmg Albuque ue k l nhumn C • 8 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 184 • Ige/8 57 n 0 95$9 9 Crooked R.nearTerrebonne 80 ming nm o 7 8 • Dnlln El Pnn , gunnnu Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 10 92/74 59/49 OO/7

FIRE INDEX

Source: USDA Forest Service

0

~P Yn~

Sunny

o

cify

Hi/Lo/Pruc. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 90/65/0.00 94/74/pc 95/73/s

Abilene Akron 70/63/0.71 80/65/I Albany 78/60/0.00 82/61/pc Albuquerque 93n1/0.00 95/69/I Anchorage 68/54/0.02 67/53/pc Atlanta 85/69/2.24 81/69/I Atlantic City 75/66/0.07 76/65/c Austin 86no/0.00 95nz/pc Baltimore 80/66/0.00 82/67/pc Billings 97/60/0.00 93/66/s Birmingham 87no/0.07 87/69/I Bismarck 83/51/0.00 95/63/pc Boise 93/62/0.00 97/67/pc Boston 72/63/0.00 75/60/c Bridgeport, CT 75/64/0.00 77/63/sh Buffalo 70/62/0.75 78/64/pc Burlington, VT 81/57/0.00 83/61/pc Caribou, ME 81/54/0.00 81/56/pc Charleston, SC 88n2/0.03 87/73/I Charlotte 74/67/0.17 81/69/c Chattanooga 78/64/1.13 84non Cheyenne 90/56/Tr 91/61/s Chicago 80/57/0.00 84/66/pc Cincinnati 74/63/0.02 82/65/I Cleveland 72/63/0.24 78/64/I ColoradoSprings 88/56/Tr 92/61/s Columbia, MO 81/58/0.00 87/67/s Columbia, SC 83n3/0.05 86/72/I Columbus,GA 79/71/1.17 83/70/I Columbus,OH 73/64/0.27 83/67/I Concord, NH 78/54/0.00 77/51/pc Corpus Christi 92n5/0.06 95m/pc Dallas 78/69/0.00 92/74/pc Dayton 76/63/0.16 82/65/I Denver 96/59/0.00 96/65/s Des Moines 83/64/0.00 85/73/s Detroit 73/66/0.02 82/64/pc Duluth 77/64/0.00 85/68/pc El Paso 104n7/0.00 100/76/I Fairbanks 62/53/0.03 62/48/pc Fargo 81/61/0.00 95/69/I Flagstaff 81/55/Tr 81/51/I Grand Rapids 82/57/0.00 83/63/pc Greeneuy 81/59/0.00 84/66/pc Greensboro 79/67/0.01 80/67/c Harrisburg 78/64/0.00 80/63/pc Hsrffcrd, CT 78/58/0.00 82/56/c Helena 88/59/0.00 89/60/s Honolulu 88/74/0.00 88/76/sh Houston 85n2/Tr 93/77/I Huntsville 84/67/0.66 85/68/I Indianapolis 77/58/0.00 82/63/pc Jackson, MS 79/68/0.07 86/67/I Jacksonville 89n4/0.02 gonz/I

Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lns Vegns Lexington Lincoln

86/68/I 84/65/pc

gsnO/pc 70/55/s

81/69/I 77/66/pc

Litiie Rock Lcs Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami

96/71/pc 84/68/pc 86/63/I

ssn1/pc 91/64/I 84/64/1 76/62/pc 80/66/pc

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

83/66/pc 85/66/pc 80/59/pc 83/72/I 82/68/I

OklahomaCity

87nO/pc

Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Poorin Philadelphia Phoenix

90/60/pc 88/73/pc 86/66/pc 83/68/pc 91/60/pc 93/71/c

Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 64/53/0.23 59/49/r 66/48/sh 80/59/0.00 88ft2/s 93/74/s 79/58/0.00 81/62/pc 85/69/pc 100/86/0.00 103/80/pc 102/80/s 76/63/0.05 82/64/I 88/67/pc 85/58/0.00 96ft6/s foont/pc 78/64/0.00 85/66/pc 88/68/s 75/66/Tr 78/64/pc 78/63/pc 76/65/Tr 85/68/I gono/pc 80/59/0.00 84/66/pc 88/73/pc 79/66/Tr 83/68/pc 88/72/s 91/78/1.53 gomtf 88/77/I 77/57/0.00 81/66/pc 84/73/pc 79/67/0.00 89ft2/pc 94/76/pc 78/65/1.30 86/67/I 90/69/pc 91/74/0.60 87n4/I 88/73/I 76/68/0.00 79/65/nh 81/68/pc 78/68/0.00 81/63/sh 83/66/pc 79nz/0.00 82no/c 82/70/c 82/64/0.00 91no/pc 94/71/s 83/62/0.00 92/76/n 96ns/pc

94n4/o'.oo 93f/4/I

~4r + S]Nc%

84/71/I 86/69/1 87/69/pc 81/59/pc

95ns/s 95n5/s

85/67/pc 96/63/pc 92/76/pc 85/67/pc 90/65/I 101/80/I 70/55/pc 92/68/1 82/50/I 86/71/pc 87/71/pc 82/68/1 84/66/pc 85/62/pc 81/62/I 89/76/sh

94nsn

sgn1/pc 85/66/s 90/69/pc

85non

74/63/s 93/72/s 54/41/pc 106/77/s 89/78/I

94n4n

83/75/pc 87/65/s 67/48/c 91/66/I

65/51/pc 97/76/pc 92/76/s 72/48/I

SOn7/pc 71/55/pc 72/53/c 66/60/r 72/45/s 92/81/I 85/72/sh 78/63/s 61/39/s 70/59/pc 80/63/s 79/61/pc 89/61/s

85m/r

4

83/59/0.00 81/68/0.00 I 04/88/Tr 68/63/1.06 77/56/0.00 78/61/Tr 82/66/0.00

I

Mecca Mexico City

111/90/0.00 108/84/c 75/55/0.20 76/54/I Montreal 81/63/0.00 82/64/pc Moscow 77/55/0.00 78/54/s Nairobi 81/57/0.00 77/58/c Nassau 88/79/0.30 89/78/pc New Delhi 91/78/0.00 93n8/I Osaka 90/79/0.15 86/70/I Oslo 77/57/0.00 73/58/pc Ottawa 79/55/0.00 78/60/pc Paris 86/72/0.25 76/60/I nic de Janeiro 72/68/0.07 77/63/pc Rome 88no/o.oo 87/71/s Santiago 72/39/0.00 64/41/pc Snn Paulo 66/54/0.00 66/52/n Snppcrc 76/67/0.00 78/67/pc Seoul 86n5/o.o4 88/73/pc gong/0'.00 92/78/s Shanghai Singapore 88/82/0.08 89n9/pc Stockholm 75/57/0.37 77/59/pc Sydney 57/41/0.11 63/46/sh Taipei 95/81/0.00 95/81/pc Tei Aviv s5n4/o.oo 87n4/pc Tokyo 79/72/0.11 82/73/I Toronto 70/61/0.06 75/62/pc Vancouver 73/61/Tr 68/55/sh Vienna 86/63/0.00 90/69/n Warsaw 84/63/0.00 82/62/I

See store for details.

" lncludes select Tempur-pedic,Stressless SrBeautyrest Black Closeout hliodels. Excludes select Tempur-pedic,Stressless & Beautyrest Black Models

0 Cmon I'

4

Wilson's Olive Garden

4

•I I

I

'

' i

I

Instant Credit! Applyon lineat: www.wilsonsofredmond.net

Gallery-Bend u

'

9

88/73/I

fo4ns/o.oo103n7/s 104/77/s

84/66/s 89/72/pc 82/66/pc 85/68/pc 106/84/pc 106/85/pc Pittsburgh 79/65/pc 86/67/I Portland, ME 73/54/c 74/57/pc Providence 76/57/c 80/61/pc Raleigh 84/68/c 84/67/I Rapid City 87/60/0.27 95/65/s 96/65/I neno 99/68/0.00 88/63/I 87/61/s Richmond 84/67/0.00 87/69/pc 86/68/pc Rochester, NY 75/58/0.13 79/62/sh 83/65/pc Sacramento 93/59/0.00 86/62/pc 84/60/s Sf. Louis 84/63/0.00 88/69/s 93/75/s Snit Lake City gsno/o.oo 93/71/I 94/68/s San Antonio 90/73/0.00 95ft6/pc 96/76/pc Ssn Diego 74/69/0.00 75/68/pc 76/69/pc Snn Francisco 74/61/0.00 73/62/pc 73/60/pc Snn Jose 78/62/0.00 79/61/pc 78/60/s Santa rc 90/62/Tr 91/61/I 94/63/pc Savannah 86nz/0.47 86n2/I 83/71/I Seattle 78/59/0.00 70/54/c 76/54/c Sioux Falls 77/63/0.00 90/72/n 94/76/pc Spokane 89/62/0.00 79/58/pc 80/62/pc Springfield, Mo 82/57/0.00 86/66/s 91/68/s Tampa 91/78/0.00 92n6/I 89/75/I Tucson 101/76/0.00 102/75/pc 102/79/pc Tulsa 79/58/0.00 89/69/pc 94nws Washington, DC 84/73/Tr 83/69/pc 86/70/pc Wichita 82/57/0.00 91no/pc 94/72/pc Yakimn 94/62/0.00 85/53/pc 86/61/pc Yuma 105/84/0.00 1O4ng/s 105/80/s o

Amsterdam Athens

Yesterday Today Monday

City

+ y •

See store for details.

76' 44'

Brilliant sunshine

Yesterday Today Monday

93/68/0.02 76/63/I 88n2/0.03 9On4/s Auckland 53/39/0.23 55/48/c Baghdad 106/84/0.00 107/78/s Bangkok 86/79/0.24 89/79/I eeijing 96n7/0.00 94/80/pc Beirut 86n7/0.00 84/76/s Berlin 90/63/0.00 91/70/s Bogota 64/48/0.07 66/49/pc Budapest 88/66/0.00 89/67/s BuenosAires 70/48/0.00 66/49/s Cnbc Snn Lucns 93/78/0.04 95/78/pc Cairo 91/73/0.00 91/74/s Calgary 79/59/0.01 69/49/I Cnncun 91/81/0.00 91/77/s Dublin 68/59/0.00 70/52/pc Edinburgh 63/59/0.16 73/54/c e Geneva 84/61/0.00 75/61/I k@'e~ . • rinndawwww Hsrnre 76/44/0.00 76/46/s > W'e'e4nv. ~ 'Onnnhd 9 Hong Kong 90/82/0.56 91/81/r HnnnfufuV+ • srn4 ~~""hihunhun > un un 0 Istanbul 81/72/0.03 82/72/sh ssns Minnuyyy Jerusalem 78/64/0.00 78/63/s Mnnfnr ny SIVVXv.+IVt, . 95/75 Johannesburg 60/38/0.00 62/38/s '+ Limn 67/59/0.00 70/60/pc Lisbon 73/66/0.13 76/60/s Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 82/68/0.18 77/61/pc T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 73/68/0.00 81/58/s Manila 84/80/0.26 84/78/r •

Bend/Sunriver High Redmond/Madras ~ Veryghh~i Sisters ~M o d~erate ~ Prinevige ~v e ry~high ~ La Pine/Gilchrist High

TH U RSDAY

TRAVEL WEATHER

OREGON EXTREMES Co 66 4 YESTERDAY

WEDNESDAY

Some sun, at-storm in spots in the p.m.

Smoky with times of clouds and sun

Mostly cloudy

A ug 10 A ug 17 THE PLANETS at Meacham T he Planets R i se Set Mercury 4:16 a.m. 7: 2 9 p.m. Venus 3:43 a.m. 7 : 0 3 p.m. 0 ' Mars 1:34 p.m. 1 2 :12 a.m. Jupiter 5:56 a.m. 8: 5 2 p.m.

5 N(~ 8

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Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST: Warmand na breezy weather today Seasid I umatiaa Hood 91/61 along with smoke 63/55 RiVer Rufus • ermiston from wildfires. Areas Cannon lington 90/59 Portland Meac am Losti ne of smoke tonight and 62/55 75/51 • W co 88/53 Enterprise into tomorrow. dl +n 80/ he Daa • • 87/52 Tdlamo • CENTRAL: Breezy andy • 67/52 Mc innvi • 81/61 JosePh 2/56 Goven • He PPner Grande • and warm todayalong n t • u p i Condon 7/56 u'nion 52 Cam • 83 88 55 with areas ofsmoke Lincoln 68/ from wildfires. Areas 64/53 Sale Graniteu • pray of smoke tonight and 80/5 /57 a 'Baker C Newpo 85/51 into tomorrow. • 87 54 9/52 62/50 • Mitch 8 88/54 0am p Ser an R6d n WEST:Clouds and 85/5 3 O rV 8 I 8 uu Yach 82/52 • John some sunshinetoday. 62/52 79/53 • Prineville Day 0/53 tario Generally clear tonight 88/52 • Pa lina 88 / 5 6 0 with some low clouds Floren e • Eugene 'Be d a r others 8651 Valen 65/53 toward the coast. Su iVern 85/51 96/67

High: 99 at Medford Low: 48'

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24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" 0.35"in 1944 Record o Month to date (normal) 0.2 1 " (0.36 ) Year to date (normal ) 4.73o(6.08o) Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 8" Today 5:41 a.m. 8:42 p.m. 1:0 1 a.m. 3:2 8 p.m.

TUESDAY

OREGON WEATHER

Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday 88 54'

MONDAY

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84/62/pc 76/63/pc 79/63/s 78/65/I 56/36/c 70/55/s

80/65/pc 86/74/pc 91/78/pc 89/79/pc 79/59/s 64/45/sh 95/81/pc 86/73/s 83/74/pc 82/65/pc 70/55/c 89/66/I

80/62/pc


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C3-7 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/community

SPOTLIGHT

WildernessAct commemoration The public is invited to an artist's reception and film screening from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Friday to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Wilderness Act, a law that protects nearly110 million acres of wilderness in the U.S. The event, called The Art of Wilderness, will feature a showing and talk from landscape photographer Jeffrey Murray, in addition to a film about the legendary photographer Ansel Adams. Reservations arenot required; adonation of $5 per personis suggested. The event will be held at theSunriver HomeownersAquatic & Recreation Centerat 57250 Overlook Roadin Sunriver. Photography will be for sale,with proceeds going towardDiscover YourForest, aBend organization dedicatedto protecting andpromoting the Deschutesand Ochoco National forests and the CrookedRiver National Grassland.

- a;.-

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Children's art on display Deschutes County is hosting the art exhibit "Bend's llluminations, through the Eyesof Our Children," on display now through October. Located on the second floor of the Deschutes County Services Building, 1300 NW Wall St., Bend, the hanging wall pieces use multiple forms of recycled materials. The unusual collection, the collective effort of 40 young artists who are consumers of children's services, highlights each child artist's life experience. The children havefaced illness, emotional trauma and other challenges in their lives. The works speakto strategic themes for a Well-Planned City from the Bend 2030Vision Plan.

r 1

I

Photos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin

Top left: Two golfers leave the first tee at Bandon Dunes, having struck their opening shots down the fairway. Top middle: Erik Peterson, director of communications

at Bandon Dunes, tees off onthe par-3 sixth hole of the resort's original 18-hole course. Top right: The fourth green at Bandon Dunes. Bottom: The BandonDunes Lodge, left of center, is the hub of the acclaimed Bandon Dunes Golf Resort on the south Oregon coast. To its right are a pro shop and clubhouse, the popular McK-

ee's Pub for casual dining, and aspa and fitness facility.

• Throwback resorton the coastis amongthe top spots in theworld to play a round

previewsseason Cascades Theatrical Co. will host three sneak peeks of its 36th season at 7 p.m. Aug.1 and 2 and1:30 p.m. Aug. 3 at its Greenwood Playhouse, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., in Bend. The season includes Neil Simon's "Brighton Beach Memoirs" and TennesseeWilliams' "The Glass Menagerie," along with five other main-stage shows. Each event begins with a reception featuring complimentary appetizers and cashbar. Each of the main-stage directors will then introduce his or her upcoming show aswell as a scene from the show. A donation of $10 is suggested. Contact: www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. — From staff reports

Contact us with your ideas • Community events: Email event information to events@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351.

• Story ideas: Email communitylife@bendbulletin.com.

Buttarde Beach , State Park

By John Gottberg AndersoneFor The Bulletin

BANDONt's time for the rest of Oregon to understand what golfers already know: The Bandon Dunes

Banflon Dunes Golf

Resort

Golf Resort is one of the best in the world. Far from population centers, old-fashioned in design (right down to a ban on motorized

Contact: 541-3304640.

Bend theater

PA CIFI C OCEAN

carts), the original Bandon Dunes course opened in 1999 on a remote Pacific coastline blanketed in thorny gorse. Yet its resemblance to traditional Scottish and Irish courses made it immediately Banffon

attractive to golf purists, and the resort's subsequent growth — new 18-hole courses in 2001, 2005 and 2010, plus a par-3 executive course in 2012 — only added to its legend. There are places on these

havecommon elements,

ing terrain. Just inland,

links where you can stand

each hasa character of its

atop a sandy dune and see nothing in any direction but fairways and greens, save the flinty blue of the Pacific Ocean. Caddies in

own. Bandon Dunes, the original, is very open and

Bandon Trails begins and ends in the dunes, but in between, forges a path

exposed to wind and obsta-

through coastal forest that

their white coveralls tote

golfers' bags past red and yellow flags that flap in the brisk breeze, marking the ultimate goals of every pockmarked ball struck by a wood or an iron or a putter. While these golf courses

Next weefz: Canada's Okanagan Valley Greg Cross /The Bulletin

cles of native vegetation. Pa- reveals the resort's only cific Dunes, which bounds it on the north, rolls through

water hazards.

tects its greens with a pleth-

"Our founder and owner, Mike Keiser, wanted to give peoplea golfexperience

ora of sandy bunkers. Old McDonald, the

similar to that of Scotland and Ireland, where the roots

undulating hills and pro-

of golf lie," said Erik Peterbecome known for vast, son, the resort's director of carefully manicured greens communications. amid otherwise unforgivSeeBandon/C4

newest of the quartet, has

Exploring theorigin of life onEarth By Mac McLean

NORTHWESTTRAVEL

~+~ coolsculpting.

-.w~

"It has a r eally strange they leave unanswered during

The Bulletin

smell,"said Deamer, a re-

David Deamer likes to pour a thick, dark liquid containing

searcher with the University

F e ar No Beach

a 'Iltesday lecture at the Tower

Theatre (see"If you go," C7). "We'vecome a long way tochemicals he extracted from chemistry and b i ochemis- ward understanding how life a meteorite that hit southern try department. "It's kind of could happen," Deamer said of Australia 45 years ago into a otherworldly." his field, which he likes to call wine glass whenever he gives a Deamer said scientists are astrobiology or stellar evolulecture about the origins of life. just now beginning to under- tion. "But what we need now is He passes the glass around stand how the chemicals con- discovery into the unknown." to audience members sothey tained in his wine glass might Deamer said the building can smell its contents — a mix- have come together 4 billion blocks of life originated in a ture of amino acids, nucleo- years ago to form the f irst vast area of gas clouds and cosbases, phosphates and sugars bacterial cells and other, more mic dust between the stars and — and get a sensory image of complex forms of life on Earth. the planets that's known as the the basic ingredients needed to He'll be talking about these de- interstellar medium. create life. velopments and the questions SeeOrigin /C7 of California, Santa Cruz's

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C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

M II ESTON~ + ~L

7

Formsforengagementw,eddinganniversary orbirthday announcements areavailableat TheBulletlnl,777gytrChandlerdve v Bendor by emai l i n g m ilestones@bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must besubmittedwithinonemonthof the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.

ENGAGEMENTS

MARRIAGES

ANNIVERSARIES

'dtSl,-

7

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Ai'

5,

John and Sandra (Earl) Strickler

v~g'

Ashley Gesme and Tyler Lambert

Gesme — Lambert Ashley Gesme and Tyler Lambert,both of Sacramen-

where she graduated with a bachelor's degree in echocardiography. She works as a senior cardiac sonographer

to, California, plan to marry June 20, 2015, at Gold Hills Estates and Gardens in Newcastle, California.

at Sutter Medical Center in

The future bride is the daughter of Tina Mohler, of

neth Lambert, of Klamath

Redmond, and Kevin Gesme,

Sacramento. The future groom is the son of Louise Lesher and KenFalls. He is a 2002 graduate of Klamath Union High School

of Bend. She is a 2004 gradu- and studied at Klamath Comate of Redmond High School munity College. He works as and a 2011 graduate of the Or- a national account manager egon Institute of Technology, at MSA, Inc. in Sacramento.

Krlsten Inglls and Brooks Morgan

Inglis — Morgan

The groom is the son of Dawn Wilson, of Redmond. Kristen Inglis and Brooks He is a 2011 graduate of RedMorgan,both of Redmond, mond Proficiency Academy. were married July 7 in Bend. He works as a helicopter meThe bride is the daughter chanic and crew chief in the of Guy and Nancy Inglis, U.S. Army. of Redmond. She is a 2011 The couple honeymooned graduate of Redmond Profi- at a resort in Central Oregon. ciency Academy. She works They plan to settle near as a waitress. Fort Drum in New York.

Strickler

Josh (and Cassie), of Sherwood; and Joe, of Redmond; John and Sandra (Earl) 25 grandchildren and three Strickler, of Redmond, will great-grandchildren. celebrate their 40th wedding Mr. Stridder worked for anniversary with a family cel- Top Notch Electric and retired ebration July 26 in Redmond.

in 2012. Mrs. Strickler works

The couple were married for St. Charles Redmond. The July 20, 1974, at The Church couple were both in the Navy: of JesusChristof Latter-day

Mr. Stridder was an electri-

Saints in Redmond. They cian's mate and Mrs. Strickler have six children, John (and was a dental tech. Nancy), of Hayden, Idaho; They enjoy traveling to the Lori Ann O'Brien, of Sweet Oregon coast and John's ship Home; James (and Kath- reulllons. leen), of Hahira, Georgia; They have lived in Central Jennifer Jackson, of Bend; Oregon for over 40 years.

A in ora uture: anasummerromance ast? By The Chicago Tribune Popular culture would have

ty of Rochester in New York. Be honest with yourself and

us believe finding love in the decide if you envision a fling, summer is as easy as finding or a future, and make sure sand on a beach. Countless

both partners in the relation-

movies, novels and TV shows ship are clear about the plan perpetuate the notion that come autumn. "Justlook at 'Grease,'" Es-

when school's out, the tem-

peratureisup and clothesare trada said. "You've got one scarce, romantic encounters person who thinks, 'Oh, we're

with a t tractive, thoughtful,

chiseled strangers happen all the time. But, remember, we live in

a real couple,' and the other

person thinks, 'This has an expiration date for me.'" Can it last?

reality. While there's no definitive data to prove more people hook up in the summer, something about the season does make it seem naturally

Three years ago, when Katie Steinharter decided to take

conducive for romance.

who owned a summer camp

"There are a lot of ingredi-

ents for the summer that amp up the desire to meet some-

one," said Ramani Durvasula, a licensed clinical psychologist and professor of psychology at California State University, Los Angeles.

a hiatus from conventional

employment, she accepted a job as a nanny for a family in Maine. One balmy night, Steinharter was sitting in the bleachers next to a volleyball

court, chatting with fellow camp employees, when a guy, brown-haired with an athletic

build, plopped down beside her.

soirees, exotic vacations or

"He asked if he could sit down to put his shoes on,"

lighter workloads at the office,

Steinharter, now 25, remem-

Whether it's th e o utdoor

people tend to be more affable bers. He told her his name, and carefree, which improves Teddy Sorenson, and that their odds of attracting potential love interests, she said. A

he worked as a wakeboard instructor at the camp. The

change in routine — or better

exchange was brief, but the

yet, location — can also boost

two kept crossing paths over

the chances. Don't be disappointed if

the next few weeks, and although there was initially a

your summer doesn't unfold

mutual f a scination, S oren-

uate your expectations as you

" Every time h e saw m e ,

like the plot of a Nicholas son's game-playing soured Sparks novel. It's key to eval- Steinharter. become involved with some- he would call me the wrong one, said Marie-Joelle Estra- name. I honestly thought he da, visiting assistant professor

was a complete jerk and want-

in psychology at the Universi-

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE

ZQSLK X

SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU

2 396 1 8 7 4 5 l 8 64 7 9 5 2 3 1 1 57 2 4 3 6 8 9 4 2 1 3 8 7 9 5 6

Answer: G ROWT H

G U ILTY

While there's no definitive data to prove more people hookup in the summer, something about the seasondoes make it seem naturally conducive for romance.

IN V E S T

ALWAYS I M PAIR NO T I ON He was dressed in a giant bird COStume and Was-

WAITING IN THE WINGS JUMBLE IS ON C6

ed nothing to do with him,"

Sept. 1, that real disconnect in

lifestyle doesn't promote the Eventually, he dropped the likelihood of (the relationship) act. On the Fourth of July, succeeding," she said. as Steinharter sat with her However, couples who mancampers under a sky lit by age to establish a good founfireworks, Sorenson again dation of intimacy and trust plopped down beside her and over those few months and apologized for all the times he who have similarities in lifepretended toforget her name. style and priorities will have They grew closer over the greater prospects of sticking next two months; as the clos- together, Estrada said. ing of camp loomed, neither F or Steinharter an d S o knew what would become renson, the ending so far is a of their dalliance. Sorenson, happy one. After the two geofrom Idaho, and Steinharter, graphically parted ways at the from Connecticut, jetted off to end of that summer, Steinharopposite sides of the country. ter took a job in Spain, but not That wasn't the end of the sto- before she and Sorenson dery, as it turned out. clared themselves an official W hether s u mmer ro - item. "We managed to make it mances can endure when routine sets in can depend on the work despite the geographical settings in which they started. obstacles and warnings from If yo u r rela t ionship a few other campers who bloomed in an environment said summer r e lationships that seemed idyllic and im- wouldn't l a st," S t einharter mune fromday-to-day drudg- said. She and Sorenson now ery, it might not be able to live together in Denver. weather the monotony of However things seem to routine. be going, watch out for signs "Many summer relation- from your summer love that ships are based on drama," he or she sees an end in sight. with long walks on the beach "If the person you're seeing is and nights spent under the communicating less and gostars, Durvasula said. The ing out more, your summer rem ore consistency there i s lationship has gone from sizbetween how a couple's life zle to fizzle," said Steve Ward, Steinharter said.

looked in th e summer and how it will look the rest of the

CEO of Master Matchmakers

year, the more likely a rela-

ducer of the VH1 show "Tough

tionship is to succeed. "While it's super-romantic

Love." Pay attention to your love

and host and executive pro-

to take up with that footloose interest's comm u n ication and fancy-free musician, if style. If he or she stops initiyou're an accountant, come ating conversation or takes

8

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P R S I A N UT R S S P A T E T H R E E E G G

L A C E E V E L N G L E A C O D A T U A P R S G R E A T H U E A T R I O T R S C U R E L A T I H E R E S R I V E R H A T E O M E G A M U E A L A L W I L T R I T E M U P G R ON E E A E T S S T

E P S O M A M A I N O W E N S E G O

M A G T A I R 0 C R A P I K P E L C H E E J 0 I N T U N T S I S E R C T A S E S N I S P A R M A R T I R S E I S E A S E L P A R E ER A R E A S S E K L E T L E R E O D SW

CROSSW ORD IS ON

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Don't consider an exhila-

self to random guests at your

rating summer fling, however n eighbor's c o okout. D o n 't brief, a waste of time. Every mention the weather. Instead, romance can be a

t eacher, ask open-ended questions to

Durvasula said, prompting people to stray from their

see if you can find a common interest.

• Separate from the pack: quently grow as individuals When you pull yourself away and discover characteristics from your social group, you're comfort zones an d

c o nse-

about themselves.

more likely to meet someone

cian," Durvasula said. "Even

be independent. If that's too

"I think it's wonderful when new. A clique is a comfortable the accountant dates the musi- crutch, but don't be afraid to if she doesn't marry him, she extreme, be the third wheel will listen to music differently to a married couple. That the rest of her life." way, you're not only more approachable, but it also gives Tips for finding a off the impression that you're

summer flame:

serious about commitment.

Even if you'll be stuck in the office every weekday this summer, your mind clouded with daydreams of sailing Italy's Amalfi Coast or walking the festive streets of Barcelona,romance may find you or vice versa. Lori Bizzoco, relationship expert and founder of CupidsPulse.com, offers these tips for meeting people closer to

• Just say "yes": If a pal invites you to a dinner party at

home:

• Talk to strangers: Meeting someone in a local coffeehouse can be just as romantic

as at a Parisian sidewalk cafe.

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SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

wo-w

C3

rave in rou ou scenic as a

By Charles Fleming Our quest was emblazoned

turned west at Glennallen onto the Glenn Highway. We had saved some of the most scenic riding for last.

on the T-shirts we were given

The road back toward Wasil-

beforewe leftfor Alaska: "8 men, 4 highways, 5 days, 865

la cuts through mountains that stand like jagged sentries, overlooking glaciers 10 miles wide and 50 miles long. We lunched on Glacier burgers and berry crisps at the LongRifl e Lodge,among stuffed bear, moose and bi-

Los Angeles Times

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -

miles." On motorcycles.

We were a mixed group of Sunday motorcycle-riding friends. Roger and Rod, both 71, had been pals since high school, and Roger had brought his son Josh, 31. Chris and Jonnie, both 48,

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son, and stayed the night at

the cozy Sheep Mountain Lodge, in clean, well-appointed cabins set on a grassy hillside with views of the Chugach Mountains.

and Steve and John, 53 and

51, respectively, had ridden together for years. All were veteran riders. We set out from Anchor-

I t was our l ast n i ght i n

age under a leaden early June sky, an uneven line of seven

Alaska, a time for reflection.

~ i'I ' ~

rented BMWs and one rented

Triumph. T he weather report h a d

told us to expect 45 degrees and cloudy skies, with some rain. We were dressed for it in helmets, boots, gloves

and waterproof riding suits, our saddlebags and tank bags filled with cold- and wet-weather clothing. But the sun was out before we left the city limits, headed

northeast on Alaska 1 along

A wood-plank bridge is one of the few paved sections of the Denali Highway. It is one of the sights encountered by eight friends who decided to take an 865-mtle ride around Alaska.

After a light morning rain, Rod Perth rides past the thundering Bridal Veil Falls, on the Richardson Highway, north of Valdez, Alaska.

Our fi rst-day destination

was Talkeetna, reputedly the

f L.:s

town that served as the model for the 1990s cult TV favorite

that we were at the end of

the road, on the top of the world. There had been 25 feet

empty but for the occasional

River was still dotted with

logging truck or camper van. Behind and ahead of us were

chunks of ice. We'd been told to expect

s n owmelt mosquitoes. At Tangle Riv-

tion; 907-822-3970, www.

tangleriverinn.com. Cabins from $157. • Best Western Harbor Inn, 100 Harbor Drive, Valdez; 907-835-3434, www.valdezharborinn.com. Singles from $161. • Sheep Mountain Lodge, 17701 W. Glenn Highway, Glacier View; 907-745-512, www.

snowy peaks. It was 40 degrees but felt colder at high speeds. I was glad I'd prepared for this, dressed in a long-sleeve shirt

sheepmountai n.com. Cabins from $169. WHERE TOEAT • Open Cafe, 606 S. Alaska St., Palmer; 907-745-3330. • Wildflower Cafe, 13578 N. Main St., Talkeetna; 907-7332695.

• Long Rifle Lodge, 31406 Glenn Highway, Sutton; 907-745-5151, www.longri-

flelodge.co. • Sheep Mountain Lodge, 17701 W. Glenn Highway, Glacier View; 907-745-512, www. sheepmountai n.com. TO LEARN MORE • Websites for Denali National Park (www.nps.gov/ dena/index.htm) and the BureauofLand Management (on.doi.gov/VspBDK) have useful information on driving and riding.

The next day, after more moose and eagle sightings, we parted in Anchorage. The other men had afternoon flights. I'd booked the redeye. I spent the remaining hours riding south through a rainstorm along Cook In-

let. That evening, I ate a bowl of seafood chowder at the Seaview Cafe, in the tiny

town of Hope, missing the

outfitted w it h

b a ttery-pow- guys, but happy to be riding, ered heat coils, made by warm and dr y d espite the

the cleverly named Mobile Warming, and a waterproof jacket and pants. We left Valdez in a light rain, stopping to take more photographs and videos at

weather, the amazing Alaskan road.

Pure. &md.6 Co.

Bridal Veil Falls and Horsetail F a lls. W e s u m m i tted

aj. B~ dU

Thompson Pass again and

LE F F E L GEN T E R R

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John Day

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Burns Lakeview

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SMOLICH

er, we met them in force:

C

monstrous insects as big as

WHAT TO RIDE • Motoquest (4346 Spenard Road, Anchorage; 907-2722777, www.motoquest.comj rents motorcycles and equipment. Most riders on this trip were on BMWGS1200s, which are $170 to $210 aday. WHERE TOSTAY • Swiss-Alaska Inn, 22056 S. F St., Talkeetna; 907-7332424, www.swissalaska.com. Singles from $125. • Tangle River Inn, Mile 20, Denali Highway, Delta Junc-

ter five days, I wanted more.

our motorcycles against the

miles of unpaved road, open of snow on the ground only Valley, we saw a sign saying, only a few months of the year, weeks before, and the Tangle

feeding the Susitna River,

New Zealand, Thailand and Patagonia. And Baja. For some, the highlight of our Alaskan adventure had been the flightseeing trip to the glacier at McKinley. For

The road to Valdez took

"Northern Exposure." to spend the night in TalkeetThe ride took us across the na before moving on to towns Matanuska Valley, through to the north and east, follow- broad p a stures s t i tched ing a route developed by team with glacier-fed creeks and leader Steve, based on intel streams. In the distance, ever from motorcyclefriends and closer, were the mountains of Alaska locals. the Alaska Range, a jagged, Photos by Charles Fleming I LosAngeles Times Our lunch destination was snow-tipped line o f t o w er- Top: Chris Day churns up dust on the Denali Highway of Alaska. Palmer, 45 miles away. By ing peaks, among them the Eight friends decided to take an 865-mite ride around Alaska. the time we got there, we had 20,237-foot Mount McKinley. Bottom: Fishing boats, reflected in the water, glow in the soft eveseen a bald eagle, our first (Locals in need of a weather ning light at Veldez Harbor. It is one of the sights encountered by moose, our first glimpses report, rather than ask if the eight friends who decided to take an 865-mtle ride around Alaska. of Mount McKinley — aka day is cloudy or sunny, simply Denali — and a high-speed ask, "Is the mountain out?") chase that left a pickup truck We spent the night at the which we paralleled for an afternoon, we skirted shiny in a ditch, its occupants flee- tiny Swiss-Alaska Inn, strug- hour before crossing it on a white lengths of the Alaska ing on foot and state troopers gling to sleep after a fresh long, wood-plank bridge. oil pipeline as it threaded its At day's end, we rolled into way out of the mountains to in hot pursuit. salmon dinner at the WildWe recovered from the flower Cafe on T alkeetna's the Tangle River Inn, a hom- the coast. roadside drama at the Valley quaint main street. Even in ey set of low buildings on a We had m ore w i l dlife Inn's Open Cafe in Palmer early June, days are endless. barren landscape, one of the sightings too — not the grizbefore heading west through Sunset was pegged at 11:30 Denali Highway's few way zlies and brown bears we had Wasilla, home of Sarah Palin, p.m. stations, where we'd booked worried about, bu t m o o se on the South Parks Highway. The next day, we began the cabins for the night. It was and caribou. Our feelings Because of Alaska's vast journey's serious riding north hard to shake the sensation about them were mixed: love-

icy peaks, t heir

soon. But we also had to ride

us through Thompson Pass, a high promontory between deep, icy canyons still being carved byactive glaciers.We rode through the clouds, stopping to take photographs of

the Knik River. We planned

interrupted periodically by scenic vistas. I soon saw I was wrong. It's all scenic vistas — sudden peaks appearing through the clouds, broad green valleys split by milky, glacial rivers — sort of Yo-

and thatwe had to come back

"Moose Crash Area," and telling us that 257 of the big ani- others, it was the river raft mals had been killed by cars trip near Sheep Mountain. in the last year. For me, it was the riding. Af-

semite on steroids.

size, I had expected Texas, from Talkeetna to the Denali with s no w a n d i m m e nse Highway. This was the adstretches of empty highway, venture we'd come for — 110

We agreed that Alaska was the best motorcycle trip ever,

H

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hummingbirds, though happily not as voracious as their smaller Southern cousins.

The Denali Highway dawn came early; the sun had been up hours before we met for a 7:30 a.m. breakfast. Fed

and fueled, and after a short hike along a local lake, we returned to the scenic roadway. It was slow going. Every photo op became a video shoot. Every gas-station stop turned into a s i ghtseeing

HURRY, GREAT DEALS ARE HEATING UP.

event. Two men would start

fueling, two would go into the gas-station store, one would go to the restroom and

one would visit the gift shop. Then he would emerge, saying, "They're selling a petrified walrus penis for $63.50," and half an hour would be lost as everyone rushed to

take a look. Our destination was Valdez, the port town after which

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C4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

Bandon Continued from C1 To that end, Peterson said, course architects let the terrain

dictate the layout, extending fairways acrossnatural sand

hills rather than sculpting preconceived designs within the landscape.

Defying wisdom "Thisplace seemed to defy all conventional wisdom," au-

thor Stephen Goodwin wrote in his 2006 book, "Dream

Golf: The Making of Bandon Dunes." " From the point o f

4

l-: zI".

v i ew

of the golf industry, (Keiser) had done everything back-

,k k

a areu ~sh kklL -~ s

ward. He'd built a resort that

'sw

was nowhere near any kind of 'market.' He'd built a golf course that was deliberately

s~

and proudly designed not as a contemporary course, but as a 'throwback.' He'd ignored advice to hire a name architect and chosen, instead, a young, unknown,

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Scotsman, David (McLay) Kidd. "He had also decreed that

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the course would be for walkPhotos by Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin ers only. He kept it free of A hub of activity at the resort, the Lodge at Bandon Dunes is home to the Gallery restaurant and Tufted Puffin bar adjoining the main-floor lobby. The Bunker cigar bar is on carts, cart paths and real es- the basement floor, and asmall number of guest rooms are located on the upper level. tate. He was never tempted to make the course private; Scores of "Some golfers consider this he wanted it to be open to the sea birdspublic and to be priced so that a bucket-list experience," Pewestern gulls, locals could enjoy it." terson told me as I took a divot common It remains that way today. A from the fairway with a 7-iron. murres, sign over the door of the Ban- I felt unworthy. But by the time brown don Dunes clubhouse encap- we joined a n u n concerned pelicans, sulates the sentiment: "Golf as wild porcupine browsing on Brandt's corit was meant to be." low foliage beside the 16th tee, morants, even Although the resort is priIhad put a checkmark on my tufted puffins vately owned (by Keiser), they bucket list, as welL The imper—soarabove are public links — and as such turbable creature ignored us Elephant are priced, especially during as we hit across a gulch to the Rock near CoI the winter season, for anyone upper level of a split fairway, quille Point. to enjoy. What's more, golfers avoiding a red-sandstone bluff For much of don't need to stay at the resort that fell rapidly to crashing the year, harto play the courses. surf on our right. bor seals may A majority of visitors, howDeer also are frequent visialso be seen k.

ever, do choose to immerse

tors to the Bandon links. As I

on the lower

themselves in a complete golf experience. Bandon Dunes Golf Resort offers a range of lodging units, four restaurants, two lounges, a spa and a massage center, along with practice facilities and pro shops. But it has no swimming

hacked my way through Pacific Dunes, ranked by Golf Magazine as the No. 1 public golf course in the United States (ahead of Pebble Beach Golf Links in California), caddy

rocks, and tide pools are

pool, no tennis courts, no gal-

leries or boutiques. "We want

thickets of shore pine. A veteran career caddy who

Patrick Fox told me that he often sees them loping between

it to be all about the golf," Pe-

divides his year between Ban-

terson said. The guest rooms — 186

don and courses in Florida and New York's Hamptons,

of them, in several locations around the resort's 2,400 acres

Fox was a real asset to my

— are desi gned forrelaxation without being overdone. My a ccommodation in t h e L i l y

game, such as it is. Not only did he carry my golf bag, relieving me of extra weight on a 5-plus-mile hike around each course; he chose my clubs, rec-

Pond Cottages had a deck overlooking said coastal pool ommended strategies, comand an exceptionally spacious plimented my better strokes bathroom area.The 50-min- and withheld judgment when ute massage I received in the

accessible at low tide.

Left: A bagpiper offers a touch

resemblance to Scottish and

G0g ~, 8 1)g~

I found the bunkers. "Sand

Irish courses was not accidental: Founder Mike Keiser directed that the design recall the birthplace of golf.

m~imt tt) b •

to the Bandon area in 1873

by Irish immigrant George particular, The Gallery, at the Bennett, who considered it as main Bandon Dunes Lodge, an ornamental shrub, this soand the Pacific Grill, at the Pa- called "Irish hedge" wreaked cific Dunes clubhouse, were more havoc than the undefirst-class est a b lishments, niable beauty of its yellow serving such entrees as huck- spring blossoms could justify. leberry duck breast and con- It has been responsible for nufit (The Gallery) and spice- merous major fires, including rubbed sturgeon on sweet a 1936blaze that destroyed the corn (Pacific Grill). Overall little harbor town of Bandon, 5

This slogan, above the front door of the BandonDunes proshop, he established the renowned resort15 years ago. Manygolfers

such places as the Skamania

resort. It's most evident at the

In 2008, Fox noted, he was caddying on Pacific Dunes w orkers, housekeepers an d Lodge in the Columbia Gorge, when he observed layers of gardeners who might never the Salishan Lodge on the Or- flames and smoke raging lift a golf club. egon coast and The Canyons through gorse just to the north. And in 2010, resort owner at Park City, Utah. He's been Shortly thereafter, Pacific was Keiser established a new orin Bandon for 10 years. evacuated for fear that the fire ganization: the Wild Rivers "We try to keep things fa- would spread. Instead, it was Coast Alliance, which funds miliar and comforting," Mc- controlled — and the clearing grants that prioritize conCradic told me. "We get a little of the land for the Old McDon- servation and community, more creative with daily spe- ald course, which opened in blending ecological initiacials. We use as many local in- 2010, became much easier. tives with economic opporgredients as we possibly can, tunity. Supported by greens from the farms to the fish mar- Local support fees paid to play the 13-hole, ket in the town of Bandon." Fox and I were accompa- par-3 Bandon Preserve pitchnied on one of our rounds by and-putt course, it has had

Dramatic beauty

Labyrinth, an oasis on the property's '/4-mile Woodland

Trail. A maze for walking meditation — at a slow pace,

SATURDAY

FARMERS

MARKET

me todov!

p resented by narcourts The Garner Group Real Estate

HUMRNE SOCIEIY OF C(NTRAL OR(GON/SPCA 61170S.r.nthSh BEND~~ (541) 38s-3551

Every Saturday( 10am-2pm NorthWestCrossing Neighborhood Center

you can make it to the center in about 6 minutes — it is

NORTHWEST CROSSING

a memorial to Keiser's close

s "

www.nwxfarmersmarket.com

friend Howard McKee, who helped him to establish Ban-

don Dunes. The Labyrinth replicates

a

13t h - century

maze on the floor of the Char-

CO> N1 PlA JNINI

tres Cathedral in France.

Continued next page

LP'Lm' (CILII)N'pI(C

an area high school student

training to become a caddygood. Earthworms tremble and, the student hopes, to win when I stand at the tee. I have a Chick Evans Scholarship. a talent for the beach — that Presented annually by the is, for finding sand traps. The Western Golf A ssociation, best part of my game is on the the Evans scholarships progreens, where I sink an occa- vide full college tuition and sional three-putt. housing, renewable for up to But that didn't stop me from four years, to deserving high appreciating the d r amatic school students with excellent beauty of Bandon's courses grades, outstanding charac-

Mq nnme is IzzV! I nm n vetV sweet 3 1/2 qenr old cot thnt wos brought to the shelter becnuse mq fnmilV wos not able to spend time with me Qnqmore. I enjoV using the scrntching post and wovld lovs to hnng out on someone's Inp.So come down to the shelter Ond 1st's gst to know ench other! I know Vou will wnnt to ndopt

consider the Dunes to be the most authentic Scottish-style links in North America.

Don McCradic, a veteran of

miles south of the resort.

Izzy

expresses the philosophy of founder and owner Mike Keiser when

The Bandon Dunes Golf Re- early success with sustainsort also provides hundreds able agriculture and fisheries of other jobs for residents of projects. Oregon's south coast regionThis might suggest a small many of them for restaurant spiritual element to the golf

credit goes to executive chef

.

of Old World ambience on the putting green outside the Bandon Dunes Lodge. The resort's

spa did wonders in alleviating therapy," he called it. aches and pains in my shoulOnly a few years earlier, ders and hips after daily dou- Fox told me, this land was at bleson thegolfcourses. the mercy of the highly flamThe restaurants, each with mable gorse plant. Introduced its own personality, were better than I had expected. In

" g < zv> fr, '

As a golfer, I'm not very

by the sea, and the genius that

ter, financial need — and a

went into their design. There was a steady northerly wind, and patches of blue sky peeked through a layer of clouds, when Peterson and I played Bandon Dunes. I thought about David McLay

demonstrated two-year work ethic as a golf caddy.

Kidd, the course architect who now makes his home at Teth-

year became one of 15 national universities with a residential

program's biggest supporters. Young caddies have the opportunity to join others at the Uni-

versity of Oregon, which this

world.

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Bandon Dunes is one of the

erow in Bend. Kidd was just house for Evans Scholars. 26 when he left his Edinburgh In all, there are 300 caddies home to study this coastline's employed by Bandon Dunes, potential for a golf resort. Five more than 250 of them in sumyears later, in 1999, the course mer. The training program is achieved immediate interna- extensive and highly respecttional acclaim and launched ed through the golf-resort Kidd's career.

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SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C5

.e

A Bandon Dunes visitor walks through the Labyrinth, set amid a pine forest on the resort'ssre-mile Woodland Trail. A memorial to Howard McKee, who helped establish the resort, the Labyrinth

replicates a13th-century maze onthe floor of France's Chartres Cathedral.

Photos by Barb Gonzalez i For The Bulletin

Built in 1896, the Coquille River Lighthouse stands on the river's north jetty opposite the town of Bandon. Its 40-foot tower warned ships of the river mouth until 1939, when it was decommissioned; restored in 1975, it is now a local visitor attraction.

From previous page Around the resort grounds

v•

r0<

are another10 miles oftrails Tony's Crab Shack is apopular

beach, dune, woodland

and creek-side trails. For the less-than-fully-committed golfer, they make a great way to explore the resort precincts.

waterfront hangout in "Bandon-by-the-Sea," as Bandon

www.AgateBeadlwotel.oom hivate, vintage,oceanfront getaway

is tagged by its chamberof

ewport, O iR 1- 0~0~-7SS-S674

commerce. The Bandon Dunes

Golf Course has helped boost

Bandon-by-the-Sea

ArateBeachmotfl

the economy of the town, which was destroyed by a fire in1936.

And then there's the town of

Bandon itself: Bandon-by-theSea, as the chamber of com-

• t •

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

merce would like you to know it. A port town at the broad mouth of the Coquille River,

which flows from the Oregon Coast Range, it was once the busiest center of commerce

and shipbuilding between Portland and San Francisco.

Lumber, gold and seafood were shipped from here well into the 20th century. After the devastating 1936

fire (16 of Bandon's 500 build- The rugged seascapes of the Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge stand just offshore Coquille ings survived), the town strug- Point in the town of Bandon. From this observation post, and a trail along the bluff, interpretive signs gled along as a tent city until it describe the rich bird life to be seen on Table and Elephant Rocks. could rebuild. Now the quaint blocks of Old Town are imbued with a flavor that speaks

to the 1800s, complete with a harbor boardwalk along the riverfront and several blocks

of galleries and gift shops along Second Street. Until Bandon Dunes was

built, Bandon remained a sleepy if picturesque coastal

beacon from a 40-foot tower forscoresof ships and boats until 1939, when i m provements to the r iver channel and installation of an automated light hastened its de-

retains many elements of that.

April to October.

Built in

and Elephant Rocks — home

to tufted puffins, common murres, Brandt's cormorants

1896, the white- a nd western gulls. An d

brick lighthouse shone its

Expenses Gas, Bend to Bandon, 535 miles (round-trip) at $3.90/ gallon $83.46 Lodging (3 nights), Bandon Dunes Resort $630 summer, $300 winter Golf (3 rounds), BandonDunes Resort $375 summer, $175 winter Breakfast buffets (threej $46.50 Dinner, TheGallery $73 Lunch, Trail's End $20 Dinner, Alloro $43 Dinner, Pacific Grill $66 *TOTAL $1,336.96 summer,

$806.96 winter "Rates vary widely, with highest costs in July-September, lowest from Thanksgiving through January

Ifyou go INFORMATION Bandon Chamber ofCommerce. 300 SecondSt., Bandon; 541-347-9616, www. bandon.com

LODGING Bandon DunesGolf Resort. 57744 Round LakeDrive, Bandon; 541-347-4380, 888-3456008, www.bandondunesgolf.

— Reporter: jaftderson@ bendbulletin.com

But they have enough sense

I

M ore readil y reached from the town of Bandon is Coquille Point, a rocky outcropping at

area offersviews across the Coquille River mouth to a historic lighthouse, which for the west end of 11th Street off more than 40 years guided Beach Loop Road. This is pervessels through the treach- haps the best place from which erous tides into the calm bay to view the Oregon Islands Nawhere the docks of Old Town tional Wildlife Refuge. From still stand. We reached it by a trail along the headland, indriving north across Bullards terpretive signs describe the Bridge, turning left into serene rich bird life on offshore Table river's north jetty.

of the Bandon Dunes courses.

PGGQT(GISG ATr : 'THIIE IES M S a lr S~Ag.:: ' •

II

101, Bandon; 541-347-4417,

800-526-0209, www.bandoninn.com. Lodging rates from $79 winter, $134 summer TableRockMotel.840Beach Loop Drive, Bandon; 541-347-

DINING Alloro Wine Bar &Restaurant. 375 Second St., Bandon; 541347-1850, www/allorowinebar.

com. Dinner every day. Moderate to expensive The Loft Restaurant & Bar. 315 First St., Bandon; 541-329-

0535, www.theloftofbandon. com. Dinner Thursday to Sunday. Moderate to expensive Wheelhouse Restaurant & Crow's Nest Lounge. 125 Chicago St., Bandon; 541-3479331. Lunch anddinner every day. Moderate

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IK3

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2700, 800-457-9141, www.

tablerockmotel.com. Lodging rates from $50 winter, $70 summer Windermere on theBeach. 3250 Beach LoopDrive, Bandon; 541-347-3710, www. windermereonthebeach.com. Lodging rates from $89 winter, $135 summer

'

P EA K vo PEA K

The main living is 3000 SF that includes the master. 1100 SF upstairs offers a 2 bedroom guest suite. Custom kitchen, 10' island with seating plus space for an 8' dining table, professional grade appliances, walkthru pantry with sink & 2nd refrigerator, Formal dining room. Large office with 2 work stations S. custom cabinets. Earth friendly PV solar system. Golf course HOA includes pool, hot tub, clubhouse, exercise room, tennis &. sport court. MLS¹201305684

most times of year, there are com. Lodging rates from $100 winter, $220 midsummer. Four restaurants and two lounges; prices moderate to expensive Bandon Inn. 355 U.S.Highway

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.

fal' r

abandoned until 1975, when

it was restored. The gift shop inside is open every day from

Bullards Beach State Park, then following the road to the

to stay clear of the little white T hese birds, as w el l a s balls flying off the tees of what brown pelicans, can often be many say is one of the best seen soaring past the pitches golf resorts in the world.

SAAQW>I19HIE.'4IftjffjG '6

commissioning. It then sat

town of about 3,000 people. It A harbor-side observation

harbor seals aplenty.

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Last year your United Way of Deschutes County contributions helped touch one-in-three people in our community through programs that focus on our most urgent human service needs: Helping kids get a great start in life Keeping youth onfrack forsuccess Neeting basic needs ofindividuals and families Keeping children and families safe from violence and abuse

LIVE UNITED

United Way of Deschutes County PObox 5969 Bend, OR 977oS www.tiveunitedco.org Q4Z) 389-65o7 Oliveunitedco „"'~~ ~


C6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

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Exploring Knoxville: a city that caters to your canine By Myscha Theriauit McClatchy-Tribune News Service

38

It's not news that today's

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As someone who travels full time with a pampered pooch, I consider pet-friendly infrastructure to be a huge priority. One city that's gone above and beyond in this regard is Knoxville, Tennessee. With

miles of trails, exceptional green spaces, numerous canine parks and a variety of dogs-welcome events, those traveling with a furry family member will find lots to love.

ss

Adractions

DAILY BRIDGECLUB

Part of traveling with a dog means incorporating outdoor

sMMdBy,JUiy 2o,20i4

experiences, and K n oxville

Taking charge

has a plethoraof places for romping and rolling. One of

By FRANK STEWART

the most expansive is the Ur-

Tribune Content Agency

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I found Cy the Cynic, a shameless chauvinist, and Wendy, my club's feminist, arguing again — this time over who holds sway in a household. "The husband is the boss at home," Cy insisted. "Some husbands are," Wendy said. 'Their wives put them in charge." "Listen," t h e C y n i c r e t orted, "when I was married I wore the pants

in my family."

"They probably didn't ht," Wendy sniffed. "Most men are too big for their britches." Smoldering, the two headed for a Chicago game, where they cut as partners. As West, Cy led the ten of spades against 3NT, and South won with the queen and led a heart to the king and a heart back to his ten. Cy took the queen and shifted to the eight of diamonds.

Wendy can count 10 tricks for South if he has the ace of clubs, but if Cy has it, Wendy wants him to take it at his first chance to lead another diamond. Since that may not be clear to Cy,Wendy should take charge of the defense by discarding the queen of clubs on the fourth heart. Cy would have no chance to go wrong. North dealer N-S vulnerable

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When dummy played the king, I lsA10 5 Wendy couldn't afford to win and lead another diamond — South might have held five — n o r c ould she afford to signal with the jack. She followed low. Declarer next took the ace and nine of hearts. Wendy let go a low club. South then led a club, and when the Cynic played low, South put up the king;he had no choice. Making three. "Thanks, partner," Cy growled. "Anyone accustomed to being in charge would h ave b eaten that contract."

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ban Wilderness project. Accessible less than 5 miles from the downtown area, the space

eateryarea ofMarket Square,

to your room to reassess your

offersroughly 1,000 acres for hiking, urban kayaking, the exploration of multiple Civil War heritage sites and more. Ijams Nature Center offers free walking-trail access as well as a number of nominal-fee activities where pets and peopleare welcome, including concerts in a natural

a number of pet-friendly ac-

options. Windows on the Park is located just off the lobby and

o utdoor a m phitheater a n d

tivities are offered throughout

the year, including Shakespeare performances, jazz

Opening lead — 4b 10 (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

ed by RiCh NOrriSaTId Joyce Nichols LeWIS 17 Curriculum 57 Word with ear 85 Dessert menu suffix or wear phrase way 119 Marshy lowland 18 One-word dei. 58 MCEYOyOI 87 Pace ACROSS 9I "KIngoithe 24 Reptilian tail? cosmetics 88 Asserts without I Rad relative Bullwhip" star DOWN 26 Hammer end 60 Voice of the proof 6 Take second 93 Logician Turing I Collars 29 Drum OUI IPhcne 89 Yogaclass I1 Downloaded 94 BrIngs Up 2 RSInes OI old 32 RISk taker 62 Talk like a need 'zine 96 Author Allende movies 33 Make fun of lush 90 Mistake-fixing I5 Most minIgolI 98 Loses 3 Zillions 34 Occasionally 63 Points at the tools pars crispness 4 Traffic sound amended doc. table? 92 Not much I9 "Good Eats" 5 "Well, II looked SS Cityoi 99 Baseball's 65 Shopping 94 Snuck alook host Brown Steroid 900CI southeastern 67 New Orleans 95 Sea divided by 20 Party hearty 100 Successor Ic 6 Dusting may Iraq protector shrinkage 2I Matching Bess reveal them 36 Urge forward 68 Get wise with 96 Beatnik's "Got 22 Smooth-talking 101 BrIS, e.g. 37 *Delayed 69 "That's the it!" 7 Olin OI v v 23 *HII that just 102 PUI forward ohoColat reaction general 97 River Io the clears the infield 8 ERA part: Abbr. 38 Flop 70 Not e'en once Rhone again, as a 25 *Recyclable claim 9 "Snow White" 40 Steroids, 7I Blackjack 98 Cleaning cloths metal 107 *TypIcal frame Slangily 101 PiPsqueak request 27 CIty on 1-5 Western 10 Sophocles 42 Nerve 72 Sports doc's 102 MOVe, toa 28 'Order UP!" 109 OnespansIwo tragedy 43 AI full throttle realtor PICS shouter wordsIneach II Derby town 45 *Run intO 73 Klutzy 103 Gumbo, for 30 PeqUOdCO answer to a 12 Vehicle brand 46 Lone Star State 74 Boxcars, for example owner starred clue with a bulldog sch. high rollers 104 Mount near 31 Plunk (down) 112 Back 47 "West SIde In IIS logo 76 The Phaniom's CatanIS 32 II's a Iact Story" hero 113 USed UP 13 Pump output rival 105 Irish dance 34 Inferior, In slang 114 Boston College 14 Golf club shaft 49 Dramatic 77 Berlin Olympics 106 One with rings 35 SBay users, at athlete material outpouring star 107 -crab soup times 115 Name meaning 15 Rest stop 50 Hound's prey 8I Like some 108 Bossy Stooge 39 Car loan figs. "born again" features 52 Charged omeleis 110 Informer 40 Ellortee 16 What spies 83 It's drawn In 111 It may be 116 Sport scored 56 Empathetic 41 Romantic affair electronically may wear words bars massive

concerts and outdoor movies. For other evening entertainment, take a short drive over to the town of Maryville, which is home to the Parkway Drive-In Theater, an old-fashioned outdoor movie venue

community gatherings at the where you can view popular water-filled quarry, with lo- flicks from your car. Adult cal food trucks available for

tickets are $7 and include two

snacks. It's a great place to stroll with your dog and enjoy nature. There are kayaks, paddle boards and other items

90 SkIP Ihe 117 Sees festivities, In a 118 PUI UPwith

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1883, it sells a variety of stan-

dard goods, including retro penny candy. In the downtown retail and

If Rover has a spotty record with restaurant behavior, din-

59 Quaker In the forest 6I Players In a July contest

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of vegetarian burritos and

quesadillas. High-value lunch selections include the $6.75 meatless melt known as the

Kepner and the $5.35 slice-ofthe-daypizza lunch combo, ing is outside your dog's skill set, consider a trip to Pizza

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Spectators Welcome!

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OPEN TO ALL 1979 & OLDER SPECIAL INTEREST VEHICLES

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11am-2:15ptir. Pre Show 'n Shine at Drake Park 2:00pm: Fun "Cruz" from Drake Park to NAPA and then returning to Drake Park 2pm-8pm: Registration at Drake Park Spm-8pm: Free Entertainment by "JP &the Soul Searchers" Band (Public aelcomesndencoursged)

SATURDAY August 9th

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with an available soy cheese substitution and a selection

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dipping sauce and black bean

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sheets 69 onkey 71 Toaster opening

is The Tomato Head. It offers artisan breads wit h t a h ini

Sponsored by: Central Oregon Classic Chevy Club 44 4 5

49 50

discoverer

68 Diagonal line,

for vegetarians and vegans

August 8, 9, 10

64 Radium CO-

65 Curt 66 Silk-stocking 67 Manymottoes are written In it

open arms. One fun option

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door patios, most of which will welcome Fluffy w i th

dog boutique with gear, gooding on-property will preserve ies, toys and more available the option of an easy return forfour-legged travelers.

55 *LegISlatiOnOI

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The lounge patio welcomes caninesand has a sturdy steel railing for securing leashes. The nearby historic Market Square has a number of

Palace, which serves Italian food in 1950s drive-in style. A number of vegetarian pizza options are available for less Fair Park. With pet-friendly than $10, including Greek, Activities patio dining on site, a small mushroom and green pepper Fans o f t h e T e n nessee on-property dog park with with onions. If you're looking Smokies baseball team will benches and shade trees and for something lighter, a grilled enjoy Tail Waggin' Tuesdays, strolling access to the pawsi- cheese sandwich here will run a program that allows pet tive options in Market Square, you less than three bucks. parents to bring their dogs to it's a high-value venue your For canine-appropriate cona home game one night per canine will find convenient. fections, take Rover to River week during the regular seaRoom rates start at $129, Dog Bakery, where a wide arson. A $6 ticket gets you ac- including access to an indoor ray ofpooch pastriesforfurry cess with your dog to a grassy pool and fitness center facili- patrons of all sizes is availarea of the stadium with water ties. Executive floor upgrades able. I purchased for Maggie stations and a chance to catch are available for $20 and in- a large bone-shaped cookie the game with man's best clude adaily breakfast offer- frosted with yogurt and sprinfriend. Want to beat the heat? ing so that pet parents can kles, which she wolfed down Work in a shopping excursion tag-team meal access without with gusto, making the $3 to Mast General Store, where leaving Fifi in the room alone splurge worth the financial dogs arewelcome to explore and feel ing stressed. throw down. Sampler packs the wares along with their featuring a variety of their human parents. Open since Appetites treats are also available. Sim-

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rings in at less than 20 bucks.

which comes with a salad. If sitting still for patio din-

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tive, along with the grilled Portobello tower entree, which

includes asmall beach where

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mushroom flatbread attrac-

street-side eateries with out-

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and affordable menu options. Vegetarians may find the $8

full feature films. The majority of the menu items are available for $5, including a decent-sized tub of popcorn. available for rent, with rates The city's visitor's center starting at $11. providesfree daily concerts In addition to the more than from Monday through Sat80 public parks that pets can urday starting at noon. The enjoy on a leash with their hu- acts encompass a wide range mans, Knoxville is known for of genres and offer a way to its free off-leash dog parks, enjoy complimentary live enseveral of w h ich p rovide tertainment in air-conditioned splash-oriented enrichment comfort. Thefree concertsare in addition to land-based rec- typically an hour in length, reational space. One of note perfect for extending your is Concord Dog Park, which lunch hour with a little tourist is located near a marina and fun. Dogs are welcome.

42 *Clara, Io

TabIIha, on "Bewitched" 44 Stopped operating, with

includes a number of t asty

dogs can walk in to swim at Accommodations I f you're looking for a their own discretion, as well as a lengthy wooden dock for p et-friendly h otel w i t h i n jumping into the water with walking distance of numerous gusto. Local canine dock-div- canine-appropriate itinerary ing competitions are a common items, you'll want to consider site duringsummer months. the Holiday Inn on W orld's

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD "FRAT PACK" By FRED IIISCOP

Myscha Theriault/McClatchy-Tribune News Service

A puppy enjoys some time at a dog park in Knoxville.

8em-4pm: CARSHOWat Drake Park with Free Shuttle Service I Show 'n Shine I Downtown 8em: Registration 8am-3pm: Raffle to benefit local charities Spm-8pm: "Cruz" (DowntownStreets) Free to the public and encouraged to attend 8pm-10pm: Free to public - Street Dance with "JP & The SoulSearchers" Band

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SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

In Chicago,the colorful neighborhood of Pilsen isthriving in arts andculture l

By Ceil Miller Bouchet While exploring Thalia Hall, the most happening new spot in Chicago's emerging Pilsen neighborhood, I do a double take. It's a freezing night, and there's a small woman with a guitar slung over her back standing in the recess of a doorway. "Come into my office," she beckons. So I do. She tells me that her

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Continued from C1 He said the gravitational fluctuations found in t his

area caused subatomic particles to form atoms, atoms

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sic types of molecules to

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form complex organic compounds such as amino acids (which come together to form proteins) and nudeobases (which form nudeic Submitted photo acids such as DNA). David Deamer, a researcher and scientist, will explore the cosmic "Carl Sagan said we are origins of life on Earth on Tuesday at the Tower Theatre. I

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name is Kez Ban, and would I

'I

like to hear her play? "This is the song I used to audition for 'American Idol,'" she says, stepping out onto the sidewalk across from St. Procopius Church, the opu-

all stardust, and that's absolutely true as far as I can

tell," Deamer said, referring to the famous astronomer who was best-known for his

work on the Voyager mis+

lent brick heart of this Lati-

no community. She begins Lucas Vasilko/The WashingtonPost strumming her guitar. I listen Chicago's Mexican-American community is an emerging scene in disbelief as the husky mel- of culture and culinary hot spots. At Dusek's, daily specials can ody spills out of her mouth. A include "Kentucky-fried quail" and "foie gras cornbread." South Asian man who says that his name is Girsh walks

by and smiles. "She's fantastic," he says. "Did you know she was on 'American Idol'? You should get her CD." A decade ago, unless you were a fan of authentic momand-pop Mexican cuisine, a pilgrimage to Chicago's Na-

Origin

to form the most basic types of molecules and these ba-

s

Special To The Washington Post

C7

the Moody Tongue. Imeet Rouben, who was formerly head brewmaster at Chica-

we devoured the crispy morsels glistening with maple glaze. The rest of our meal

sion and his television show, "Cosmos."

Eventually, these building blocks of life were trapped in large hunks of rock like the Murchison meteoritea 220-pound meteorite that landed on the outskirts of

a southern Australia city in September 1969 — which collided with the Earth at a time that predated the first fossilized plants and animals by at least 500 million

they come into contact with lip-

Ifyougo

ids and fatty acids. These membrane-covered ri-

What:Stardust, Cells and Science: TheOrigin of Life Revisited When:7 p.m. Tuesday Where: TheTowerTheatre,

bozymes, called protocells, expand as the RNA strands repli-

835 NW Wall St., Bend

of mutation. "We want to find out howthe

cate themselves and until they

split apart and eventually form new protocells that are capable

Cost: Free, but tickets are required Contact: 541-317-0700

material in the protocells takes the next step," Deamer said, ex-

plaining the big question that now lies before scientists is exyears ago, he added, they'll be plaining how these protocells one step doser to testing their form the actual cells that are theories about the very begin- thebasis oflife. "That's the pleasure of scining of life. That's because Deamer ence," he said, explaining that said some of the RNA strands every step scientists make to-

go's Goose Island Brewery, — "strange little whole wheat years. one Sunday morning atthe pastas stuffed with pistachio Deamer said some of Pilsen farmers market. He's goo" (per the menu), smoked these meteorites landed in formed in the laboratory act as ward understanding the orihovering over the homemade Illinois duck leg confit and warm puddles formed by catalysts capable of turning the gins of life onlybrings up more organic salsas at Yvolina's the Nightwood cheeseburgvolcanic hot springs. Over nudeobases into nucleotides mysteries and questions. "It's tional Museum of M exican Tamales stand. "These are er (best burger I've ever had) time, wet and dry cydes and then turning the nucleo- the questions that are fun." Art was practically the only great salsas," he says before — mirrored the happy amdissolved the meteorite, tides into nudeic acids. — Reporter: 541-617-7816, "We can make RNA that reason a "Northsider" would asking, "Have you been to the biance: unpretentious, local freed the nucleobases and mmciean@bendbulletin.com trek to Pilsen, the gritty com- chicken place'?" and totally enjoyable. combinedthese simple com- makes RNA," he said. 'We munity three miles southwest Yes, in fact, I have. On a We worked it of f a c ross pounds into the more com- don't knowhow that happened. N of Chicago's downtown. In previous visit to 18th Street, the street at 1932 S. Halsted, plex nucleic acids through ... It's all very mysterious." fact, the last time I v i sited I'd followed my nose, drawn a cavernous converted mana chemical process much Though he can't explain Smart, playChicago's Mexican enclave, to Pollo Express by the rich ufacturing space where artlike the one that turns sugar how, Deamer said the same ful, eager to my kids were small, and we aroma of charred chicken and ists live and work. Dodging crystals into caramel. type of RNA strands popped pleaseNook,a spent an enjoyable afternoon smoky spices. Inside, I found millennials clutching beer Deamer said scientists up in the warm puddles of waterrier/pit bull at the pocket-size museum in a long, narrow room with a cans and skirting strollers have been able to create ter that were hit by meteorites mix,scoredan a former boathouse. few bare tables and 25 plump parked by the main gallery, ribonudeic acids — a com- 4 billion years ago. He said sciA in trainabilSince then, the museum, birds, split and splayed and we found the back stairwell plex form of nudeic acids entists also know that someity; he knows the neighborhood and my sizzling away on the charcoal and climbed to where artist capable of coding, decoding, how these advanced strands sit, stay and recall. He's kids have evolved. Today, grill across the counter. Wait- Bryan Sperry, who transregulating and expressing of RNA, known as ribozymes, 10 monthsold and 58 pounds.He's my 18-year-old son could ing for my chicken, I spoke forms vintage mannequins genetic information — by can form a protective mem- doneOK withother dogs. Hegot very be one of the lanky guys in with the cashier, whose calm into dystopian creatures dripsimulating these conditions brane around themselves when excitedaroundcats but after getting knit caps visiting the crop demeanor and slight smile ping with found objects, was in alaboratory. scratched,hewalked away. Nook lacks "That is what we know," of new Pilsen art galleries gave her the air of a Mexican holding court in his trippy leash skillsandmannersbut is gaining experience.With exercise and further on the monthly "2nd Friday" Mona Lisa. Turned out, she's fifth-floor gallery. Deamer said, explaining the Amnnee,Dishwasher He's a P i lsen n ative. "I training, hewill be a great dog.Meet nocturnal gallery crawls. My the owner, and her brothernext major goal for scienhim Tues.-Sat., 10-5. Brightsideanimals. 16-year-old daughter awaits in-law's special adobo rub r emember running f r o m tists such as himself is to duorg/adoptable-dogs. the "House on Mango Street" recipe keeps clients beating gang-bangers here in the late plicate the laboratory exper'70s," Sperry told us. "I don't exhibit, based on the beloved down the door to the tune of iment in an actual volcanic @ Sponsored by book by Chicago-born au- 80 to 100 grilled birds a day, know where they've gone, environment to see whether BrightSide Animal Center thor Sandra Cisneros, which she said. but there's community pride the reactions and their byopens next January at the Down the street, murals everywhere now." B efore products would still exist. expanded National Museum cover the outer brick walls turning to another visitor, he If scientists are able to duB RIGHTS I D E o f Mexican Art, now a r e - of Simone's Bar. Inside, Sim- added, "My mission is just to plicate their controlled laboA NI M A L CE N T E R nowned center for Mexican one's new "Art Lab" curator, make art and let people see ratory experiment in an enBRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER and Mexican-American art Jessica Gorse, tells me that it." vironment that matched the 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE. REDMOND,OR TV.APPLIANCE and culture. the murals are by Chicago Kez Ban would fit right in. conditions on Earth 4 billion (541) 923-0882 And, well, my husband and artist Ruben A g uirre, and I drive down for Thalia Hall, that she's hoping to feature where you can sip a punch Chicago's vibrant urban art cocktail in the '80s throwback in an upcoming show. basementbar,eata succulent C reativity t h r i ve s h e r e, tagine baked in the ground- especially on the second Friloor restaurant's wood-fired day ofeach month, between 6 f oven and, as of May, enjoy and 10 p.m., when most small live music upstairs (I vote for businesses — plus studios "American Idol's" Kez Ban, and galleries — stay open she's just outside!), all in one late, and one section of South gorgeously restored 19th-cen- Halsted, between 18th Street tury limestone building that and South Canalport Avenue, was built as a Czech commu- takes on a life of its own. nity social hall. On a recent "2nd Friday," Dat's Chicago for you. Or, I found vintage clothing at rather, asi es Pilsen, which, Market Supply; a c h ocoas I learned on recent visits to late-making class u nderChicago's latest gentrifying way at Chocolat; and flowneighborhood, is home to one ers at Blumgarten 8t Co., a of the largest Mexican com- boutique florist owned by munities in the United States. self-described "Pilsen gals" And before M exicans, the Ilda Orozco and Michelle area hosted Czech and Slo- Vazquez. "I grew up here," s '.c 58 vak immigrants. Hence the Orozco told me, "and MiPilsen moniker. chelle's grandparents had a Today, a stroll t hrough furniture refinishing shop S W54 1 $ ' &Q I I I N S I I I C L L R S P gl&IIIC~PITpSS VISI H M O ' C K S , P ~ O I I C t l ~ the neighborhood brings a where Nightwood Restaurant wondrous sense of cultural is now located."

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whiplash, both artistic and

culinary.

Later, my husband and I

met for dinner at Nightwood. " Hope, R e spect, J o b s , In honor of early Pilsenites, Dignidad." Proud heritage many of whom toiled at the is trumpeted from murals now-demolished C h i cago splashed on the walls of brick Stockyards, we began with two-flats near the museum pig ears. "You can still see the and from street art such as hair!" my husband noted, as the lovely rendering of Our Lady of San Juan de los Lagos that I spot painted on a locked metal door along

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18th Street between Western

and Halsted, the community's commercial e p icenter. There's even a mural (on the wall of Benny's Pizza) reproducing one of the Mexican art museum's most famous works: "The Legend of Two Volcanoes," an iconic

painting of an Aztec warrior kneeling beside his dead princess. Farther east along 18th, cars are parked two deep in front of Carnitas Don Pedro.

Five patrons wait patiently in line b y t h e r e staurant's sidewalk stand for the best

taco in the neighborhood, or

As the community leader in hospice care, we've most likely supported one of your neighbors or a ktend. Central Oregon patients and their families have chosen Partners In Care for

so I've been told, where "you

hospice services for the past 35 years. If you need support

can get, like, a pound of roast pork and tortillas, fantastically delicious, for $6.50!" The person who shared this taco tidbit, Jared Rouben, is a g ood authority, a new Pilsen resident and business owner who recently opened acraftbrewery called

with end-of-life care, choose Partners In Care.

(541) 382-5882

p a r t n e rsbend.org

Hospice I Home Health I Hospice House Transitions I Palliative Care

Partners In Care HOSPICE


CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports

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a a er e e c ive

TV SPOTLIGHT

well-known Agatha Christie was never happy with any of the cinematic portrayals of her

By Craig Tomashoff New Yorh Times News Service

catches his eye. "Someone in

the cast must be working on that," mused Suchet, who is appearing in a production of "The Last Confession." "Personally, I'm not one who particularly enjoys putting together puzzles."

at Dinner," in which Peter Usti-

You'd think that after 25

le Poirot — h e m ight have

MichaelLewis/TheNew YcrkTimes

David Suchet has said he is ready to move on after 25 years playing Hercule Poirot, one of fiction's most legendary detectives, on "Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot."

the United States, however, The final five will be broad-

tance between himself and his

cast in the United States startt ailored-suit-wearing, wa l k - ing next Sunday, the first two ing-cane-toting alter ego. on PBS and the final three

"It's a pleasure to talk about

exdusively on Acorn TV, the

him, but there will come a time

streaming service that concen-

very soon where I say, 'I've done that, I am closing the door and moving on,'"explained Suchet, 68, dad in a very unPoirot-like blue dress shirt and jeans. He's lived with the character for 70 episodes of "Agatha Christie's Poirot," or just about all the stories ever written

with a father who was very

novplayed the detective. When Edwardian," so when he de-

years playing one of fiction's most legendary detectives — Agatha Christie's Hercu-

Suchet, a British actor, seems determined to put some dis-

more to the Belgian investigator than a French accent, a

healthy paunch and a musily house, and it made me ab- tache that looked much like a solutely well up when she said, stray piece ofblack licorice. 'My mother would havebeen For instance, they are both absolutely delighted with what formal men with a fondness for you've done.' suits and ties, a penchant for Despite his eagerness to holding doors open for women honor Christie's detective, he and a love of order that borders admits he never read her books on OCD. ("I do like symmetry while growing up. He did ap- as much as he does. If I see chapear as adifferentcharacterin os on my desk, I feel chaos.") a 1985 Poirot telefilm "Thirteen Suchet was "brought up

LOS ANGELES — As Da-

how to solve puzzles. As his final shows get set to air in

quickly discovered there was

characters. But Rosalind had my wife and I over to the fam-

vid Suchet walks into the green room backstage at the Ahmanson Theater, a half-finished jigsaw puzzle on a table

picked up a few clues about

novels and short stories, Suchet

for Christie's stories, he has worked consistently to bring the much-loved Belgian to life. The walk, the accent, the order and the method make Poirot

recognizable and, more importrates on British programming. tantly, believable." According to Suchet,some Even Christie's daughter, 730 million viewers worldwide

Rosalind Hicks, invited him to

have seen at least one episode. "David Suchet is the de-

dinner to explain how much

f initive Poirot," said

her mother, who died in 1976,

E i r i k would have loved his portrayal

Dragsund, a Christie expert

of her famous creation. It was and creator of a b l o g t h at "the most moving thing said to chronicles every episode of me during filming of the show," the series. "With a meticulous Suchet recalled. "I was always

about this Belgian detective. attention to detail and respect

scared stiff, because it was

the British network ITV approached him to star in a Poirot

cided to take the role, "I real-

series, however, he first intend-

up in the Edwardian era. So

ed to say no. "I only knew the character

I really went back to study that period's attitude and

ized Poirot would have grown

from seeing Albert Finney etiquette." and Peter Ustinov play him," Because the series managed Suchet recalled, referring to to turn every Poirot novel and Finney's O s car-nominatedshort story into an episode, role in "Murder on the Orient Suchet insists there is no reaExpress" and Ustinov's turn son for him to ever play the in several films and television character again. "I have heard rumors that movies. "So when they offered me the role, those were a new book might be written my only reference points for and a big feature film might Poirot. I rang my brother to get made, but for me to play ask his opinion, and he thought him again would be doing it for that the character seemed a bit very much the wrong reasons," thin. I thought it might be done he said. "If I've been anything, as light comedy, very two-di- I've been Agatha Christie's mensional. It was only when Poirot, so now I can happily I started reading the novels pass the baton to another actor. that I discovered what Agatha And I do hope there will be anChristie had written was not other. I just also hope my body what I had been seeing." of work will be regarded as After reading several Poirot most true to her original work."

na etoto ewit t e eat

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for3-Dand IMr4rmovies. • Movie timesere subject tochangeatter press time. f

Dear Abby: I am, once again,

under the category of "distractfaced with my annual dilemma. I Dear Hot and Bothered:Yes, I ed driving." Eating, drinking, cannot tolerate heat and humidity. do. Tell these people the truth. grooming and usinga handheld I become short of breath, my heart If they're your friends, they will cellphone are against the law in pounds and I perspire profusely. I understand. some states — including yoursrecover immediately if I go into an Dear Abby:My husband drives because folks who steer with their air-conditioned area. the car with his knees while shav- knees and use their rearview mirI have discussed this with doc- ing, drinking coffee, brushing his ror to shave, practice dental hytors. They attribute t eeth, t a l k in g o n giene or apply makeup have been it to my "thermostat" the cell and using known to cause serious accidents. and the fact that I am

a very air s inne redhead. My mothe r ha d

DFP,R

ABBY

the s ame

problem. Of course, I stay in air-conditioned places. The problem arises

— Hot and Bothered in New York

one hand to

s teer.

When I complain, he makes fun of me and says, "Those t h at can, do." I am in the shotgun/passenger seat and would prefer death to

when we're invited to cookouts being paralyzed in an accident or to the home of someone whose he causes. When I see him with place isn't air-conditioned. I don't

coffee headed to the car, I insist

know how to explain that I simply

on driving, but sometimes I don't catch him in time.

cannot come. I am forever trying to think of

excuses to get out of invitations. I feel bad because the problem is mine and I can't control it. Even

people who know about it don't

tion yet, but it may happen. There years, and I know he loves me and i s truth t o t h e w o nderful l i n e

isn't trying to kill me. He reads uttered by Martin Luther King your column, so maybe you can Jr.: "We must accept finite disaphelp me get through to him. pointment, but never lose infinite — Cringing in Long Branch, N.J.

have any thoughts on how to han-

D ear Cringing: What risk-loving husband is doing falls

HOPE." y o ur — Write to DearAbby at dearabby.com

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FORSUN-

YOURHOROSCOPE

DAY, JULY 20, 2014:This year you open up to many new ideas. You are willing to let go of rigid, outdated philosophiesand embrace new concepts. Many people around you might be amazedby how easily you can let go. If you are single, you could meet someone of interest in the next few months. You need to explore whether a relationship exists there. If you are attached, the two of you connect on a more profound level. What had been a barrier is no lonStarsshewthekinff ger there. Both sf dayyeu'll gave of you exPress a ** * * * D ynamic greater sense of ** * * p ~~~t~~~ fulfillment when relating to each *** Average other. TAURUS ** So-so might be very * Difficult different than you realize.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * A restrictive situation will move forward in the next few days. Still, your patience could be tested. Be open to a conversation about change. You will start to see a personal matter differently as a result. Express your new perspective. Tonight: Relaxand getsome much-neededdowntime.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) *** * Your words carry magic and energy to others, with the exception of one person. This individual's lack of receptivity might have more to do with someoneelse than withyou.Reach out to him or her, and try to be open-minded. Tonight: As you like it.

GEMINI (may 21-June20) ** * Slow down and take some m uch-needed personaltime .You could feel out of touch with many people around you. Don't allow a feeling of being overwhelmed to get the best of you.

Confidential to "Disappointed in Albuquerque":Do not give up on your dream to be of service to others. It may not have come to frui-

We have been married for 30

understand the extent of it. Do you dle this with tact?

Since you haven'tbeen able to get through to your husband, hang onto the car keys or insist that he finish with his "activities" before s tarting the ignition. And i f h e won't cooperate, for your own safety, get out of the car and arrange for other transportation.

By Jacqueline Bigar

Recognize when enough is enough. Tonight: Do your thing.

CANCER (June21-July 22)

or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

be best to do to warm up a relationship. Your response in the morning could be very different from your response at theend ofthe day.Don'tmake any decisions justyet. Tonight: Go along with

someoneelse'ssuggestion. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)

** * * * F o cus on what you want, and decide what is best for you. You might need to rethink a personal relationship, whether it is with a child or a lovedone.You willsense a change in the next few days. Relax and worry less. Hang with friends. Tonight: Do what you want.

** * * R emain in touch with your needs. You might want to take care of certain issues or run some errands that you have been putting off. If you were left alone, you might indulge in a nap or a lazy day. Do what you want for a change. Tonight: Consider yourself unavailable.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)

** * Honor a friend's needs. Your visits tend to lift his or her spirits. You couldhave second thoughts abouta family matter, but an insight will force you to stop and re-evaluate. The other parties involved also could change their tune suddenly. Tonight: A must appearance.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * * M ake an effort to explore a new area, and leave your worries at home. Aday escape willhelpyou gain a fresh perspective of your life. Respond in a positive way, and try not to be as worried as you have been in the past. Tonight: Be willing to try a new dinner spot.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) *** * A partner or close associate has ahabitofm aking heavy demands. Today, you will be able to juggle this person's different needs without a problem. What seemed like an intricate situation will start to simplify itself in the next few days. Tonight: Go for togetherness.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) ** * *

Y ou might wonder what would

** * * * T oday is one of those days when you can'tseem to contain your thoughts. Share some of your more whimsical ideas with friends. A loved one could be delighted to follow through on some of your new schemes. Tonight: Let your imagination emerge.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 16) ** * You might want to stay home and play it low-key. You will sense an impendingchange heading yourway. Look at where you encounter rigidity, as that area is likely to change. Meanwhile, enjoy the easy pace. Tonight: Order in.

PiSCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ** * * R each out to a neighbor you have wanted to catch up with. You will feel as if you can't make a decision about a certain issue just yet. New information is likely to come forward in the very near future. Be smart and play the waiting game. Tonight: At a favorite haunt. © King Features Syndicate

I

I

I

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Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

8 p.m. on10, "The Simpsons" — Should anyone wonder about the inspiration for the series' 550th episode, "Brick Like Me," just remember there was a big theatrical hit titled "The Lego Movie." Homer (voice of Dan Castellaneta) feels the effect directly here, since he finds himself in a world where everyone else is made of the toy pieces. It might be a child's dream, but it's a nightmare for Homer, who's desperate to get back to the Springfield he knows. 9 p.m. on 6, "Unfsrgettable" —A case forces Carrie

(Poppy Montgomery) to come cleanaboutpersonaldemons in the new episode "Cashing Out." When a murder victim turns out to have been a fellow player at an illegal casino, she risks her career by confessing her knowledge of the person. She also gets the chance to redeem herself by returning to the gambling operation to get clues about the killer. "American Idol" alum Constantine Maroulis guest stars. 9 p.m. sn 7, "Masterpiece Mystery!" — Three seemingly

unrelated casesmayproveto be connected after all in the new episode "Endeavour Season 2: Neverland." Morse and Thursday (Shaun Evans, Roger Allam)

probe aboy's disappearance,a

reporter's death and an inmate's escape. Possible links that aren't apparent at first eventually reveal themselves. The detectives

also investigate allegedcorruption within their own ranks. 9 p.m.on FOOD, "Food Network Star" —For a new episode called "One of a Kind Experience," the remaining finalists are divided into two teams, each of which is tasked with creating a memorable and appealing meal for the selection committee and special guest Penn Jillette of Penn & Teller magic fame. Alton Brown, Giada DeLaurentiis and Bobby Flay are the hosts. 10 p.m. on 6, "Reckless"Jamie and Roy (AnnaWood,

Cam Gigandet)becomepartners in trying to clear two football players of allegedly killing their coach in the newepisode "Blind Sides." Jamie also has acrisis

both personalandprofessional to

deal with, having spotted Preston (Adam Rodriguez) on the controversial tape involving LeeAnne Marcus (Georgina Haig). Linda Purl, Susan Walters ("The Vampire Diaries") and GregAlan Williams ("Baywatch") guest star. o zap2it

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Scoreboard, D2 W NBA, D4 Sports in brief, D2 Golf, D4 MLB, D3

NFL, D5

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

CASCADE CYCLING CLASSIC

BASEBALL Close call, but Elks beat Bears LONGVIEW, Wash.

— Bend Elks closer Kevin Sheets allowed a run and put the tying run on third before striking out Chris Iriart for a 5-4 win on Saturday night. Sheets earned his seventh save ofthe season. The Elks (21-15) scored three runs in the first and addedtwo more in the seventh, the first on a Billy King double to center field for his second hit and second RBI of the night. The Black Bears (16-20) cut the lead to 5-3 in the seventh before scoring again in the ninth. Elks starter Patrick McGuff (2-2) allowed two runs on five hits and struck out two in five innings. The Elks chased Black Bears starter Zabastian Valenzuela (2-1) after just two outs. He gave up three runs on three his and three walks.

• Defending champion,current leaderTvetcov is in commanding position after winning downtown criterium

t/

'4Cs

,,„$„. /

— Bulletin staff report

Cubs sueover fake mascot fight CHICAGO — The Chicago Cubs havefiled a lawsuit against several people whom the team accusesofbeing behind a fake mascot that has beenengaging in bad behavior near Wrigley Field, including getting into a bar fight that was captured on video and posted online. The team filed its

lawsuit on Friday in federal court in Chicago against John PaulWeier, Patrick Weier and three other unnamed individuals whom the team says dress in the bear costume. The fake mascotnot to be confused with the team's new official mascot, "Clark the Cub" — wears a Cubshat and number 78 jersey that has the name"Billy Cub" on the back. The team accuses those behind the fake mascot of demanding tips for photos, making "rude, profane and derogatory remarks and gesticulations," and punching a man at abar near the ballpark. — The Associated Press

TOUR DE FRANCE SATURDAY Rafal Majka, a Pole riding for TeamTinkoff Saxo crossed the finish line 24 secondsahead of second-place finisher Vincenzo Nibali, who leads the overall standings by 4 minutes, 37 seconds. JERSEY LEADERS Yellow:Nibali Polka dot:Joaquin Rodriguez Green:Peter Sagan White:Romain Bardet CHRIS HORNER A rough day for the 42-year-old Lampre-Merida rider from Bend, who finished 13:39 back in 55th place. He droppedto 22nd overall. TODAY Stage15:A mostly flat but lengthy138 miles across the lavender fields of Provence in southern France.The weather report is for storms and wind, which could add danger to a likely bunch sprint finish. For more, BS

4

Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin

Serghei Tvetcov celebrates after sprinting to the finish and winning the Cascade Cycling Classic's Downtown Twilight Criterium in Bend on Saturdaynight. Tvetcov hss n

21-second lead going into today's final stage of the six-day pro men's race. By Mark Morical The Bulletin

Typically in criteriums, overall race leaders plan to stay behind their team-

Joanne Kiesa-

At theCascadeCycling Classic

nowski

SATURDAY'SWIMMERS

mates to keep safe and finish in the

celebrates as

main pack. Plans go awry when serendipity

she wins the pro

intervenes.

women's

In a bold display of power and guts, Serghei Tvetcov won the pro men's

Downtown Twilight Criteri-

Downtown Tt/vilight Criterum in Bend

Saturday night while wearing the yellow leader's jersey in the 2014 Bend Memorial Clinic Cascade Cycling Classic. The 25-year-old Jelly Belly team rider from Moldova ecstatically pumped both fists in the air as he crossed the finish line on Wall Street in front of

second in the criterium, and Ty Mag-

thousands of cheering spectators.

ner of Hincapie took third.

um on Saturday night.

"Very rare, very rare," Jelly Bel-

The Stage 4 win gave Tvetcov a 10-second time bonus, and he now has a 21-second overall lead on Ruben

ly team director Danny Van Haute

said of an overall leader winning a criterium.

Zepuntke of Bissell. Ryan Anderson of Optum finished

See video andmore photos of Saturday night's downtown Bend stage, andall of our coverage of the CascadeCycling Classic on The Bulletin's website: bendbull etln.com/ccc

O

See Criterium /D6

Poisedforvictory Moldovan rider Serghei Tvetcov has a21-second lead heading into today's Awbrey Butte Circuit Race, better than the 8-second lead he held last year at this time on hisway to the overall title. Since at least 2007, no rider has lost the overall lead onthe final day. Here is how riders have fared, with leads heading into the fina ce and after. 2007

2008 L evi Zajicek L e ipheimer Phil

0 :13 0:28

4ts" 2009 ' Osca r S e villa

2 : 3 0 2:35 0 : 4 0 1 :00 '

-

.

=,(

=- '

2010 2011 2012 Rory Fra n cisco Fr a ncisco Sutherl and Mancebo M a ncebo 0 :20 0:20

0 : 4 0 0 :4 2

0: 2 2 0 : 2 3

2013 Ser ghei T vetcov 0: 0 8 0 : 0 6

2014 Serghei Tvetcov 0:21 ???

Men: Women: Serghei Joanne Tvetcov Kiesawonina nowski shockmade ing result for the yel- a move on the last low jersey wearer. corner to outsprint the field.

TODAY'SSTAGE Stage 5, AwbreyButte Circuit Race:A steep finishing climb up NWSummit Drive, as well as the traditional stiff climbs up Archie Briggs Road,mean thatthemencouldmakebig moves on the final couple passes of the fivelap race,C4 JERSEY LEADERS Men Women Overall: ~ ~ Overall: Serghei ,~~'t. L a uren Tvetcov Stehasa phens 21-second leadover is firmly in control Ruben Zepuntke with a1:14 leadover heading into today's 2001 CCC champion final stage. Amber Neben. Mountain:Travis Mou ntain: Stephens McCabe (worn by Krista Sprint:Logan Owen Doebel-Hickok) Sprmt: Best YoungRider: Jessica Cutler Zepuntke Best YoungRider: Kaitlin Antonneau

OREGON HIGH DESERTCLASSICS

MLB

A trip to Germany nets winning Westphalian

King Felix remains as

loyal ashissubjects By Larry Stone SEATTLE — The hype The rumblings could be heard

The Bulletin

It's a good sporting year for the Germans, and a German

Venezuela, from Everett and San

Westphalian horse and his

Colby Brown/For The Bulletin

Philippe Le Dorze, riding Cornet Fever, jumps n rail on his wny to winning Saturday night's Oregon High Desert Classics Grand Prix.

Group Grand Prix on Satur-

day night. Le Dorze and his 11-yearfrom Ios Ranch in Bainbridge Island, Washington, were

to qualify for the jump-off following a clean first round in the headliner jumper event at the Oregon High Desert

the first rider and horse duo

Classics.

old stallion Cornet Fever,

"The first go-round, my

Antonio and Taco-

fans who had just started a Mar i n ers blog called USS Mariner caught on to Her-

came first.

By Emily Oger

rider Philippe Le Dorze won the $25,000 Oxford Hotel

Three avid baseball

The Seattle Times

ioslde

nandez's burgeoning magic when

• H n dez ets yet another no- ball. Scouts were declslon MLB' starting to rave; sal-

>3

ivate, actually. The

ma — of a mythical talent on word-of-mouth was viral, the rise. even as social media was in A Mariners minor-league i t s infancy. One of the USS pitching instructor, Pat Rice, Mariner bloggers, Jason Mi-

distances were iffy, but he

saw Felix Hernandez throw at age 16 and wrote on his

ch a e l Barker, now a chef in Geor g i a, became the first to

jumped out of it for me," Le Dorze said. SeeGrand Prix/D5

report that the kid — a high- dub the prodigy "King Felix" school sophomore — had in a n email to his buddies. Hall of Fame talent. SeeKing Felix/D4


D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY CYCLING

Tour de France, Stage15

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

GOLF

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

5 a.m. noon noon 1 p.m. 2 p.m.

E S PN NBC Golf ABC Golf

BASKETBALL

High School, Nike PeachJam,firstsemifinal High School, Nike PeachJam,second semifinal High School, Nike PeachJam,final AUTORACING IndyCar, HondaIndy Toronto, Race1 Formula One,GermanGrand Prix Global Rallycross Series NHRA, Mile-High NHRANationals IndyCar, HondaIndy Toronto, Race2

6 a.m. E SPNU 7:30 a.m. ESPNU noon E S PNU 7:30 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. N BCSN 1 1 a.m. NB C 11:30 a.m. ESPN 1:30 p.m. NBCSN

BASEBALL

MLB, KansasCity at Boston MLB, Seattle at LosAngeles Angels MLB, Los AngelesDodgers at St. Louis SOCCER NWSL, Boston at Portland EQUESTRIAN Jockey Club RacingTour

10:30 a.m. TBS 12:30 p.m. Root 5 p.m. E S PN 2 p.m. E SPN2 2 :30 p.m. F S 1

MONDAY BASEBALL

MLB, Texas atNewYork Yankees MLB, NewYork Mets at Seattle

4 p.m. 7 p.m.

E S PN Roo t

FOOTBALL

Arena, TampaBayat Spokane

5:30 p.m. ESPN2

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TVor radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF EQUESTRIAN Three-year-Old hOrSeS win dig in POwell Butte — Champions were decided Friday night in a triathlon-style competition at Rim Rock Riders EventCenter in Powell Butte. Professional horseman DanRoeser of Marsing, Idaho, rode Miss Smart Enuf to the CascadeClassic Futurity championship during the Northwest Reined CovvHorseAssociation Summer Showdown. In the non-professjonal division, RandyGamble of Prineville rode Hickory Boon to the CascadeClassic Futurity crown. Miss Smart Enuf is a3-year-old American Quarter Horse mareowned b)/ Diane Edwards of Renton, Washington. Roeserand Miss Smart Enuf earned$3,724.50 Friday night. Non-professjonal rider Gambleand his 3-year-old American Quarter Horse gelding earned$1,150 in their division. The NWRCHA Summer Showdown continues through today. Admission is free. For more information, visit vvvvw.nvvrcha.com.

MOTOR SPORTS IndyCar raCe rained Out —IndyCar's weekenddoubleheader will be crammed into onedayafter Saturday's race was called because of rain. IndyCar hasscheduled tvvo, 65-lap races for today. The first one will have arolling start in the morning and the second one is set for a standing start in the afternoon. The order for the second race will be set by point, as of Saturday.

ElliOtt hOldSOff Bayne fOr NatiOnWide Win —ChaseElliott held off Trevor Bayne to win the Nationwide Series stop at Chicagoland Speedway onSaturday night in Joliet, lllinois. Elliott had a strong car all day long for JR Motorsports, qualifying third and leading the most laps during the race. Baynetried to chase him down on fresh tires in the final laps, but ran out of time. It was Elliott's third victory of the year, following wins at Texasand Darlington. Kyle Larson vvas third, followed by Kase)/Kahneand Ty Dillon to round out the top five.

Schumacher earnS tOPqualifying POSitiOn —Tony Schumacher raced to his first No. 1 qualifying position of the year and his career first at Bandimere Speedway for the Mopar Mile-High NHRA Nationals. Schumacher's TopFuel dragster earned the No. 1 qualifying position on Friday with a pass of 3.823 seconds at 319.75 mph. No onewas able to best the effort Saturday and Schumacher retained the No. 1 qualifying position, the 73rd in his career. He will face JennaHaddockvvho makesher career first Top Fuel start today.

ROSberg ClaimSPOle POSitiOnfOrGerman GP —Formula One leader Nico Rosbergearned pole position for the GermanGrand Prix as Mercedesteammate Lewis Hamilton crashed out in qualifying on Saturday andwill start15th on the grid in Hockenheim, Germany. Rosberg completed the fastest lap on theHockenheimring in1 minute, 16.540 seconds in the third part of the session for what wasalso the vveekend's fastest time.

BASKETBALL Leslie, OC'sSmith topwomen's Hall of FameclassFour-time Olympic gold medalist Lisa Leslie headlines the 2015vvomen's basketball Hall of Fameinduction class announced Saturday. She is joined by longtime OregonCity High School coach BradSmith, former Houston Comets star Janeth Arcain, University of Georgia standout Janet Harris, former Dukecoach Gail Goestenkors andOklahoma State coach Kurt Budke,vvhowas killed in a planecrash in 2011. The Immaculata teams that vvonchampionships from 1972-74 will receive the Hall's trailblazer award.

SOCCER TwO TimberS named tOAll-Star Squad —Portland Timbers mjdfjelders Will Johnson andDiegoValerj were named to the23man MLS All-Star team that will face Bayern Munich onAug. 6 in Portland. Valeri, a tvvo-time All-Star has four goals andeight assists in 20 gamesthis season, while Johnson, a three-time All-star, had five goals and tvvoassists. Timbers coach CalebPorter will coach the MLS team.

SPOrting KClOCkSuP WOrld CIIP StarS ZuSi, BGSlerSporting KansasCity has signed U.S. national teamstars Graham Zusi and Matt Besler to long-term designated player contracts after both players generated interest from abroad following strong performances at theWorld Cup.Zusi appeared in all four gamesfor the U.S. in Brazil, contributing assists in back-to-back games in thegroup stage against GhanaandPortugal. — From wire reports

Chapin. Ponymodel — WiggleWorm/Red Gate Farm/Emm a Smith. Ponyconformation — Wiggle Worm/Red Gate Farm/Emma Smith. PonyhandyCascade Classic PaintTheTown/KatieKotler/Katie Kotler.Ponyu/sMoves LikeJagger/MckenzieLane/Mckenzie.ChilPro Men dren's pony —NorthwindsMidnight Dream /Hailie Stage 4,DowntownTwilight Criterium Mitcheff/Hai lieMitchell. Children'spony(2) —Miss (top 20) 1, SergheiTvetcov,Jelly Belly,1;16;54.2, Ryan Purrfect/SophieWojcik/Sophie Wojcik. Children's Anderson,Optum,sametime.3, TyMagner, Hincapie, ponyu/s— SpecialFeature/CooperLane Farm/ Pleasance.Low,fences2'9"— Henley/Kenst. 4, Ruben Zepuntke, Bisseff, st.5, KrisDahl, Smart- Lauren Carlson/KendaffCarlson. Low,fences29" (2) Stop,st. 6,ErikSlack,Canyon,st. 7,AdamFarabaugh, daff — 6lack Pearl/HilarySosne/LizaPeters. Lowadult/ Garneau,st.8,JoeLewis, Hincapie, st.9, Fabrizio Von Nacher, KHS,st.10, RobinCarpenter, Hincapie,st.11, child — Friday'sChild/MargoMarkl/Margo Markl. BenJacques-Maynes,Jamis,st.12,lanCrane,Jamis, Low adult/child (2) —Friday'sChild/MargoMarkl/ st.13, Federico,Marchiori, H&RBlock, st.14, Andres MargoMarkl. Children's15-17—Stoneridge/Alexis exisCristiano.Children's15-17(2)Diaz,Incycle,st.15, LuisAmaran,Jamis, st.16, Josh Cristiano/Al Z/Grace Salmon/Grace Salmon. Children's Berry,SmartStop, st.17,TylerCoplea, Gateway, st.18, Talisman & under—BlackPearl/Hilary Sosne/LizaPeters. QuintenBasTietema,BMC,st.19, TomZirbel,Optum, 14 Children's 14& under(2) — BlackPearl/Hilary st. 20,DionSmith, Hincapie,st. S osne/Liza Peters. Children's15-17u/s —Xanthos/ Overall standings (top 10) eenLewis/Celia Tonkin. Children's 148 under 1, SergheiTvetcov,Jelly Belly,10:24:59.2, Ruben Kathl — Valentino/MadelineCristy/MadelineCristy. Zepuntke,Bisseg,:21 back.3, AndresDiaz, Incycle, u/s ow,fences18"— SouthernBeff e/Eff acateDuke/El:41. 4, TomZirbel, Optum,:44. 5, JoeyRosskopf, L lacate Duke.Short stirrup, ponies—Pumpkin Spice/ Hincapie,:52. 6,James Oram, Bisseg,:52. 7, Daniel Hanna Meyer/Isabel White. Short stirrup, ponies(2) Eaton ,Canyon,1:20.8,BenJacquesMaynes,Jamis, Tuckev erlasting/Mackenzie Sentena/Mackenzie 1;28. 9,TomsSkujins, Hincapie,1;29.10,TravisMc- — Sentena. Shortstirrup, poniesu/s— TuckeverlastCabe,SmartStop,1:34. ing/Mac kenzie Sentena/Mackenzie Sentena.Low, fence s2'3"— Moonstruck/KennedyDuke/Kennedy Pro Women Duke.Shortstirrup, horses—Moonstruck/Kennedy Stage 4,DowntownTwilight Criterium Duke/Kennedy Duke. Short stirrup(2) — Donateffo/ (top 20) sRunLLC/Emily Steckler. Shortstirrup u/s 1, JoanneKiesanowski, Tibco, 51:09. 2, Joeffe Hunter' Feather/Brylee Dickey/Brylee Dickey.Low,fencNumainviffe,Optum, sametime.3, MiaLoquai, FCS, — 2'3"— Lady'sMan/Margo& Peter Markl/Peter st. 4, Kaitlin Antonneau,Twenty16, st. 5, Lauren es Markl. Long sti r rup — Just Now/Leah Lively/Leah Stephens, Tibco, st. 6, LaurenKomanski, Twenty16, Longstirrup — Fadeto Grey/Margaret Kost. 7, AllisonBeveridge,Trek,st. 8, Liza Racheto, Lively. ata/MargaretKolata.Longstirrup u/s—Something Vanderkitten,st. 9, AnneDonley, Guru, st. 10,Kate lS peci al /Maureen Buckley/Maureen Buckley.Low, Chilcott, Vanderkitten,st. 11, Olivia Dillon, FCS.st. fences 2'6" — Nevero/LongFarms/Corene Smith. 12, AgieDragoo,Twenty16,st.13, StarlaTeddergreen, Pre Adult — Lifestyle/AmyCorkery/AmyCorkery. TeamCloud,st.14, AndreaDvorak,Tibco,st.15, Joy Pre Adult(2) —Kangaroo/Hunter's RunLLC/LindMcculloch,KHS,st.16, ShoshaunaRoutley, Trek,st. say Morse.Pre adult u/s —Kangaroo/Hunter's Run 17, KristaDoebel-Hickok, Tibco,st.18, MaryMaroon, LLC/Lindsay Mo rse. Low,fences2'6" —Optimystic/ Twenty16,st. 19, SaraHeadley, Tibco, st. 20, Ash KendalGaylord/Kendal Gaylord. PreChildren'sDuban,Guru, st. WorthTheWait/Zoe Kim-Maskeff/ZoeKim-Maskell. Overall standings (top 10) Children's(2) — Wesley/JosiePaulson/Josie 1, Lauren Stephens, Tibco,7:34:44. 2, Amber Ne- Pre aulson.Prech>ldren's u/s — Padarco Dolce/Camben,FCS,1:14back. 3, Julie Emmerman, Raly Sport, P eron 6rown/Cam eronBrown. 1:34. 4, AlisonTetrick, Twenty16, 1;55. 5, Affie DraEquitation goo, Twenty16,2:03. 6, KarolAnnCanuel, ICE,2:31. RWMutchEquitation Classic—SydneyHutchins. 7, KaitlinAntonneau,Twenty16,2:44. 8, AndreaDvor- School i n g, 0.85 — Bi asino/StephanieGoodman/ ak,Tibco,2:45.9,JoanneKiesanowski,Tibco,3:01. GageCurry.OHJAjugniC or/senior medal —Bailey 10, Miranda Griffiths, Vanderkitten,3:09. Smith. Limit children's — GraceMathias. Ariat Nati onaladultmedal— Amy6ean.Pessoa/USEF NationalHunterSeatMedal— Bailey Smith. Walk, Tour de France trot — Addison Mathias. Walk, trot (2) —Gemma Saturday Haney.Walk,trot obstacle —Karma/Florde Maria At Risoul,France Rizo/AddisonMathias. Walk, trot obstacle—Karma/ 14th Stage FlordeMariaRizo/AddisonMathias. Crossrail —Pat A110-mile ride intheAlpsfromGrenoble to 6ennett.Crossrail (2)— Pat6ennett. Risoul, with aCategory1 climbfollowedby Top 12 a HorsCategorieclimbupthe Col d'Izoard 1, CorentFever/los Ranch/Philippe LeDorze.2, before aCategory1 summit finishat Montee Casco Juni o r/Dani e ffe Walker/John French. 3, Atlande Risoul is/NewVenture Investments/MeganJordan.4,Slevin/ 1. RafalMajka,Poland,Tinkoff-Saxo, 5 hours, 8 tC affieLayland/CaffieLayland. 5, Acer/Geraldine Pope minutes, 27 minutes.2. VincenzoNibali, Italy, AstaHansen. 6, Wulfric/NicolaMacMahon/ na, 24secondsbehind. 3. Jean-Christophe Peraud, 6idwell/Hap Maja Lindemann.7,Scandalous/LauraPiccard/Megan France,AG2RLa Mondiale,:26. 4. Thibaut Pinot, Jordan . 8 , N o bel /LindsayUyesugi/Lindsay Uyesugi. France,FDJ.fr,:50. 5. Rom ain Bardet, France,AG 2R Caprice VHLeliehof Z/KegySmith/Kelly Smith. La Mondialesam , etime. 6. Tejay vanGarderen,United 9, KonaCoast/Denise Youeff/Denise Youeg.11, Top States,6MCRacing,:54. 7. FrankSchleck,Luxem- 10, eGass/Megan Jordan. 12, Lancelot Du bourg,TrekFactory Racing,1:01.8. LaurenstenDam, Shelf/Margi L ac/N icoleHanson/AntonioCasteff anos. Netherlands,Belkin Pro Cycling, 1:07. 9. Leopold Konig,CzechRepublic, NetApp-Endura,1:20. 10.AlejandroValverde,Spain, Movistar,1:24. BASEBALL 11. HaimarZubeldia, Spain,TrekFactory Racing, same time.12. PierreRogand, France, Europcar, WCL sametime. 13.Jon Izaguirre, Spain, Movistar,2:18. WESTCOAST LEAGUE 14. MichaelRogers,Australia, Tinkoff-Saxo,2:34. 15. AU TimesPDT John Gadret,France,Movistar, 2:37.16.BaukeMollema,Netherlands,Belkin ProCycling, 2:40.17.Ben East Division Gasta uer,Luxembourg,AG2RLaMondiale,2:44.18. W L Pct GG ArnoldJeannesson,France, FDJ.fr,3:09.19. YuryTroYakima Valley Pippins 21 15 .583 fimov,Russia,Katusha,sametime. 20. NicolasEdet, Wenatchee AppleSox 19 1 7 .528 2 France,Cofidis, 3:20. W alla WallaSweets 1 8 1 8 .500 3 Also Falcons 12 24 .333 9 24. RuiCosta,Portugal, Lampre-Merida, 4:46. 26. Kelowna SouthDivision JurgenVandenBroeck, Belgium, Lotto Belisol, 4:59. W L Pct GG 36. BenjaminKing, United States, Garmin-Sharp, 23 13 .639 8:55. 41.PeterStetina, UnitedStates, BMCRacing, CorvaffisKnights Bend El k s 21 15 .583 2 10:18.46.Michal Kwiatkowski, Poland,OmegaPhar19 17 .528 4 ma-Quick-Step,10:57. 55.Christopher Horner, United MedfordRogues 9 26 .257 131/2 States,Lampre-Merida,13:39.65. MatthewBusche, KlamathFals Gems West Division UnitedStates,TrekFactory Racing,14:28.118. DanW L Pct GG ny Pate,UnitedStates,Sky,25:24.122. AlexHowes, Beff ingham Bells 26 9 .743 UnitedStates,Garmin-Sharp,sametime. C owlitz BlackBears 1 6 2 0 .444 101/2 Overall Standings V ictoria Harbourcats 16 1 9 .457 101/2 (After14 stages) 21 .400 12 1. Vincenzo Nibali, Italy,Astana,61hours, 52min- KitsapBlueJackets 1 4 utes, 54seconds.2. AlejandroValverde, Spain, MovSaturday'sGames istar, 4minutes,37secondsbehind. 3. Romain Bardet, 5,Cowlitz 4 France,AG2RLaMondiale, 4:50. 4. Thibaut Pinot, 6end 9, Medford 6 France,FDJ.fr,5:06. 5. Tejayvan Garderen, United Kelowna s2,Beffingham1 States,BMCRacing,5:49.6. Jean-ChristophePeraud, Corvagi Kitsap 8, Walla Walla 6 France ,AG2RLaMondiale,6:08.7.BaukeMogema, Wenatchee YakimaValley 2 Netherlands,Belkin ProCycling, 8:33.8. LeopoldKo- KlamathFal4,ls11, Victoria6(11innings) nig, CzechRepublic,NetApp-Endura,9:32.9.Laurens Monday'sGame ten Dam,Netherlands, Belkin ProCycling, 10:01.10. Aff-StarGame, 6:35 p.m. PierreRogand, France, Europcar,10:48. Tuesday'sGames 11. Jurgen Vanden Broeck,Belgium, Lotto Belisol, WallaWallaat Medford, 6:35p.m. 11:02.12.HaimarZubeldia, Spain,TrekFactory Rac- VictoriaatCowlitz 635p m ing, 11:10.13.Rui Costa, Portugal, Lampre-Merida, Corvagisat Kitsap,6:35p.m. 12:57. 14.FrankSchleck, Luxembourg, TrekFactory BendatKlamathFalls, 6:35p.m. Racing,14:37.15.Richie Porte,Australia, Sky,16:03. KelownaatWenatchee,7.05p.m. 16. Yury Trofimov,Russia, Katusha,19:12.17. Michal Beffmgham at YakimaValley, 7:05p.m. Kwiatkowski, Poland, OmegaPharma-Quick-Step, 19:24. 18.GeraintThom as, Britain, Sky,20:18.19. Saturday'sGame Brice Feiffu,France,Bretagne-SecheEnvironnement, 21:00.20.MikelNieve,Spain, Sky,21:04. Elks 5, BlackBears4 Also 22. Christopher Horner,UnitedStates, Lampre-Me300 000 200 — 5 8 0 rida, 23:59.38. PeterStetina, UnitedStates, BMC Bend 000 110 101 — 4 10 0 Racing, 1:16:59.57.BenjaminKing, UnitedStates, Cowlitz McGuff, Pratt, Wilcox, Sheets and Ferguson. Garmin-Sharp,1:48:14.123.Matthew6usche,United zuela,Serigstad,Cuse,OmanaandSalgado.W States,TrekFactory Racing,2:41:35.139.Alex Howes, Valen .L— Valenzuela.2B— Bend:Lopez,King, United States,Garmin-Sharp, 3:00:39. 163.Danny — McGuff Allen (2).3B—Cowlitz: Greco. Pate,UnitedStates,Sky,3:23:14.

CYCLING

EQUESTRIAN

GOLF

Oregon High Desert Classics

BritishOpen

Hunter/Jumper Competition AtJ BarJBoysRanch,Bend ClassificationWinners (Horse,owner,rider) Saturday'sResults Jumpers PNWYoung— Optical fflusion/Maplewood Inc/ Kevin WinkelYJC . 7 & 8 yearold qualifyingKilkenny Colbert/Kilkenny Crest LLC/Jeff Cook. 1.15 — Dublin/CorenaCulhane/Corena Culhane. 1.20 — Clicquot/SideBySide/Philippa Fraser.1.25 — Osophia/Maplewood Inc/Kevin Winkel. 1.10Winsor 6/MadeleineJohnston/MadeleineJohnston. Adult amateur,1.10— Adayen/Jennifer Mortensen/ Jennifer Mortensen.Modifiedamateur/junior, 1.15 — True Blue/GeraldinePopeBidweff/Brooke Bidwell. Children's,1.10 —Taxi/PaigeMorales/Paige Morales. 0.90 — Indy/AlexaWebber/Sara Katz. Special, 0.90— GenuineSaint/Sonya Huskey/Sonya Huskey.Adult amateur, 0.90— In Black& White/ Micheff eJones/ErinJensen.Children' s,0.90— Bouvier/MackenzieKorican/Mackenzie Korican.TAKE2, 1.00— DannyBoy/Bobwidmayer/LindseyGarner. TAKE2 (2) —Copperline/Cooper LaneFarm/Nancy Butano .Pony,0.95— Khaff MeLuna/LongFarms/ Kayla Long.1.00— MadisonAvenue/LaurenJanes/ LaurenJanes. Limit,1.00—Churchiff/AlanaFrancis/ Samantha Cristy. Adults amateur,1.00 —BBIsadora/ los Ranch LLC/Kirstian Le DorzeGarrett. Children's, 1.00 —Ulene/Emily Slusher/Emily Slusher.1.05Keyman/Sarah Hermanski/SarahHermanski. Hopeful, fences2' —Amore Lil Victory/AndreaSnyder/Nicole Cobb.0.70—Amore Lil Victory/AndreaSnyder/AndreaSnyder.Wishful, fences2' —ChristopherRobin/ Hanna Meyer/SamanthaCristy. Justajumper,0.70Bling ItOn/HunterRedding/Hunter Redding. 0.75SummerDream/Cindy Folkerson/CindyFolkerson. Beginning, 0.75 — Quicksilver/SarahPearl/Sarah Pearl.0.80—JackCade/LorraineWilcox/Lily Giffespie. Low,0.80— FancyGSF/RebeccaMurray/Vivian Keller. 0.85 —Mountain Rain/AnnSofie Andrews/ WendyBrownlee. Hunter Adult amateur,18-30 — Castle Hiff/Stephanie Peters/StephaniePeters. Adult amateur,18-30CastleHill StephaniePeters/Stephanie Peters. Adult amateur, 31 8 over — Casson/KathleenWaldorf/ KathleenWaldorf. Adult amateur, 31 & overCasson/KathleenWaldorf/Kathleen Waldorf. Adult amateur, 18-30u/s —Maestro/Barbara Butler/Leigh Darling.Adult amateur, 318 overu/s —Ferdinand/ SonyaMaxweff/SonyaMaxwell. Modifiedjunior/amateurowner—MyThoughtsExactly/EmmaGlaunert/ AveryFarley.Modifiedjunior/amateur owner (2)My ThoughtsExactly/Emma Glaunert/Avery Farley. Junior —Castine/SamanthaCristy/Samantha Cristy. Junior,handy—Castine/SamanthaCristy/Samantha Cristy. Junior u/s — Selfie/NickHane ss/Camiffe Leblond.Amateur owner —Maiffisko/Bailey Campbell/BaileyCampbel. Amateur owner, handy—Valentine/BaileyCamp bell/Bailey Camp bell. Amateur owneru/s— UltimeEspoir/Barbara Chapin/Barbara

RsrA Saturday At RoyalLiverpool Golf Club Hoylake, Engla IIII Purse: $9.24million Yardag e:7,312; P ar: 72 ThrrdRound RoryMcffroy 66-66-68—200 RickieFowler 69-69-68—206 SergioGarcia 68-70-69—207 DustinJohnson 71-65-71—207 VictorDubuisson 74-66-68—208 EdoardoMolinari 68-73-68—209 MatteoManassero 67-75-68—210 AdamScott 68-73-69—210 Jim Furyk 68-71-71—210 RobertKarlsson 69-71-70—210 CharlSchwartzel 71-67-72—210 72-72-67—211 DarrenClarke Graeme McDoweff 74-69-68—211 JustinRose 72-70-69—211 MarcLeishma n 69-72-70—211 Jimmy Walker 69-71-71—211 MarcWarren 71-68-72—211 RyanMoore 70-68-73—211 Byeong-Hun An 72-71-69—212 Branden Grace 71-72-69—212 Stephe nGaff acher 70-72-70—212 DavidHowell 72-70-70—212 Keegan Bradley 73-71-69—213 KristofferBroberg 70-73-70—213 Chris Kirk 71-74-68—213 ShaneLowry 68-75-70—213 BrianHarman 72-73-68—213 GeorgeCoetzee 70-69-74—213 Francesco Molinari 68-70-75—213 JordanSpieth 71-75-67—213 BenMartin 71-73-70—214 DavidHearn 70-73-71—214 LouisOosthuizen 70-68-76—214 Phil Mickelson 74-70-71—215 6ig Haas 70-72-73—215 AngelCabrera 76-69-70—215 KevinStreelman 72-74-69—215 Thongchai Jaidee 72-72-72—216 D.A. Points 75-69-72—216 GaryWoodland 75-69-72—216 HunterMahan 71-73-72—216 KevinStadler 73-72-71 —216 HidekiMatsuyama 69-74-73—216 KevinNa 76-70-70—216 Chris Rodgers 73-71-73—217 MartinKaym er 73-72-72—217 71-74-72—217 Matt Jones Thomas Bjorn 70-71-76—217 BrandtSnedek er 74-72-71—217 ZachJohnson 71-75-71—217 LukeDonald 73-73-71—217 JasonDufner 70-74-74—218 GregoryBourdy 75-69-74—218 Matt Kuchar 73-71-74—218 ChrisWood 75-70-73—218 PaulCase y 74-71-73—218 HenrikStenson 72-73-73—218

BrooksKoepka StewartCink ThorbjornOlesen Matt Every TigerWoods JohnSenden Brendon Todd JasonDay KoumeiOda RheinGibson

68-77-74—219 71-75-73—219 75-71-73—219 75-71-73—219 69-77-73—219 71-74-75—220 73-73-74—220 73-73-74—220 69-77-74—220 72-74-74 —220 73-72-76—221 74-71-76—221 73-73-75—221 73-73-75—221 74-72-76—222

Billy HurleyIII

RyanPalmer JamieMcLeary TomWatson Charl eyHoff man

LPGA ToLAI' MarathonClas src LPGAMa rathonCIassic Saturday At HighlandMeadows Goll Club Sylvania, Ohi 0 Purse:S1.4 million Yardage:6,512; P ar:71 Third Round

Lee-Anne Pace LauraDiaz JayeMarieGreen So Yeon Ryu LydiaKo AustinErnst Mo Martin BrookePancake CristieKerr KatherineKirk BrittanyLang Kris Tam ulis MirimLee Kelly Tan Caroline Hedwaff CandieKung Lindsey Wright Kayla Mort eff aro Ai Miyazato Manna Alex BrittanyLincicome Rebecca Lee-Bentham MeenaLee Pat Hurst Kim Kaufm an Katie M. Burnet Na Yeon Choi VictoriaElizabeth JulietaGranada CindyLacrosse StacyLewis BelenMozo LineVedel BeatrizRecari MariajoUribe LexiThompson JennyShin MarissaLSteen MoiraDunn ChristinaKim PernigaLindberg KristyMcPh erson CheffaChoi Tiffany Joh AmeliaLewis MiJungHur MariaHernandez Eun-HeeJi Maude-Aimee Leblanc Dori Carter Jeong Jang DanieffeKang HaruNom ura JenniferRosales MoriyaJutanugarn HeatherBowieYoung KatyHarris Ji Young Oh JenniferJohnson Sarah JaneSmith MinaHarigae PaulaCreamer Brianna Do Sydnee Michaels MorganPressel KarineIcher Julia Boland PaulaReto AyakoUehara LisaMccloskey Jodi EwartShadoff PaolaMoreno JennySuh Jimin Kang MindyKim ChieArimur

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT

EasternConference W L T P lsGF GA S porting KansasCity 10 5 5 3 5 29 18 D.C. 9 5 4 31 26 19 TorontoFC 7 5 5 2 6 26 23 NewYork 5 6 9 2 4 32 31 NewEngland 7 10 2 23 24 31 Philadelphia 5 8 8 2 3 33 35 Columbus 5 7 8 2 3 23 26 Chicago 3 4 1 1 2 0 26 28 Houston 5 11 4 1 9 22 40 Montreal 3 10 5 1 4 18 31

WeslernConference W L T P lsGF GA

Seattle FC Dallas RealSaltLake 7 Los Angeles Colorado Vancouver Portland ChivasUSA 6

1 2 4 2 3 8 35 24 8 7 5 2 9 32 29 4 8 29 28 25 7 4 6 2 7 26 16 7 6 6 2 7 28 24 6 4 9 27 29 27 5 6 9 2 4 32 33 7 5 23 20 27 SanJose 4 8 5 1 7 17 19 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie.

Saturday'sGames SportingKansasCity 2, LosAngeles1 NewYork1, SanJose1, tie Columbus 2, Montreal 1 Chicago1,Philadelphia1,tie FC Dallas2, NewEngland 0 Houston2, Toronto FC2, tie RealSaltLake1,Vancouver1, tie Today'sGames ChivasUSAat D.C. United, 5 p.m.

NWSL NATIONALWOMEN'S SOCCER LEAGUE All TimesPDT

Today'sGames BostonatPortland, 2p.m. Washin gtonatSkyBlueFC,3p.m. ChicagoatSeattle FC,4 p.m.

MO TOR SPORTS Formula 1 German GrandPrix Lineup After Saturdayqualifying; racetoday At Hockenheimring Hockenheim,Germany Lap length:2.842 miles Third Session 1. Nico Rosberg,Germ any, Mercedes, 1 minute, 16.540seconds. 2. ValtteriBottas,Finland,Wiliams,1:16.759. 3. FelipeMassa, Brazil, Wiliams,1:17.078. 4. KevinMagnussen,Denmark, McLaren,1:17.214. 5. DanielRicciardo,Australia, RedBuff,1:17.273. 6. Sebastian Vetel, Germany, RedBul,1:17.577. 7. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Ferrari,1:17.649. 8. Daniil Kvyat,Russia, ToroRosso,1:17.965. 9. NicoHulkenberg, Germany, ForceIndia,1:18.014. 10. SergioPerez,Mexico, ForceIndia,1:18.035. Eliminatedaftersecondsession 11. JensonButton, England, McLaren,1:18.193. 12. KimiRaikkonen,Finland,Ferrari,1:18.273. 13. Jean-EricVergne,France,ToroRosso,1:18.285. 14. Romain Grosjean,France,Lotus,1:18.983. Eliminatedafterfirsl session 15. LewisHamilton, England,Mercedes,1:18.683. 16. AdrianSutilr Germany,Sauber,1:19.142. 17. Esteban Gutierrez, Mexico, Sauber,1:18.787. 18. JulesBianchi, France,Marussia,1:19.676. 19. PastorMaldonado,Venezuela, Lotus,1:20.195. 20.KamuiKobayashi,Japan,Caterham,1:20.408. 21. MaxChilton, England,Marussia,1:20.489. 22.MarcusEricsson,Sweden,Caterham,DNF.

DEALS

TENNIS ATP World Tour ClaroOpen

Saturday At CentrodeAlto Rendimiento Bogota,Colombia Purse:$727,000(WT250) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor

Singles Semifinals Ivo Karlovic(2), Croatia,def.RadekStepanek(4), Czech Republic, 6-4, 3-6,6-4. BernardTom ic, Australia,def.Victor EstreffaBurgos (8),DominicanRepublic, 7-6(2), 6-7(5), 7-6(5). WorldTourbet-at-homeOpen Saturday At Rothenbaum Sport GmbH Hamburg,Germany Purse:S1.8 million(WT500) Surlace:Clay-Outdoor Singles Semitinals LeonardoMayer, Argentina, def. PhilippKohlschreiber(7),Germany, 7-5, 6-4. DavidFerrer(1), Spain,def. Alexander Zverev,Germany,6-0, 6-1.

WTA TEBBNPParibas Istanbul Cup Saturday At Koza Worldof Sporls Istanbul Purse:$260,000(Intl.) Surlace:Hard-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Roberta Vinci (2), Italy,def.AnaKonjuh, Croatia, 6-4,6-2. Caroline Wozniacki (1), Denmark,def. Kristina MladenovicFrance, , 6-2, 6-3. CollectorSwedishOpen Saturday At BastadTennisStadiun Bastad,Sweden Purse:$250,000(WT260) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Semifinals Chaneff eScheepers,SouthAfrica,def.JanaCepelova,Slovakia,7-5, 6-2. MonaBarthel,Germany, def. SilviaSoler-Espinosa, Spain,6-2,4-6, 7-5.

BASKETBALL WNBA WOMEN'SNATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION AU TimesPDT

Atlanta

Indiana Washington Connecticut NewYork Chicago

EasternConference W L

PctGB

15 6 . 7 14 1 1 12 .478 5 1 0 13 .435 6 10 14 .41 7 6'/z 8 1 3 . 381 7 8 1 4 . 364 7'/z

FISH COUNT

WesternConference Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack W L P c t G B chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected Phoenix 18 3 . 8 57 ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Minnesota 1 7 6 . 739 2 Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd SanAntonio 1 1 12 .478 8 Bonneville 1,169 33 2 3 ,134 1,732 Los Angeles 10 12 . 455 8'/z The Daffes 896 3 4 4 1 ,894 1,062 Seattle 9 15 . 375 10'/z J ohn Day 61 9 19 5 1 , 128 5 3 4 Tulsa 8 1 5 . 348 11 M cNary 8 6 2 258 1 , 037 5 6 8 Upstream year-to-datemovement ofadult chinook, Saturday'sGame jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadatselected East125,West 124(OT) ColumbiaRiverdams last updatedonSaturday. Tuesday'sGames Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Indiana at Chicago,5 p.m. Bonneville 290,310 48,666 55,933 27,945 TulsaatSanAntonio,5 p.m. The Daffes231,315 37,691 30,701 16,832 Atlantaat Minnesota,5 p.m. John Day 200,640 33,791 20,949 10,534 PhoenixatSeatle, 7p.m. McNary 185,096 29,995 15,318 7,694


SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL cotandingS

TONY, RICKEY AND THE ECK

All TimesPDT

MIAMI — All-Star Tim Hudson pitched into the eighth inning and got the run support he neededas San Francisco beat Miami. Hunter Pence drove in two runs andPablo Sandoval had three hits for the Giants, who havewonfour of five.

AMERICANLEAGUE

Baltimore NewYork Toronto Tampa Bay Boston Detroit Cleveland Kansas City Chicago Minnesota

Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Houston Texas

East Division W L 53 43 49 47 50 48 46 53 45 52 CentralDivision W L 53 41 50 47 48 48 47 51 44 52

West Division

W L 60 37 58 38 52 45 40 58 39 58

Giants 5, Marlins3

Pct GB .552 .510 4 .510 4 .465 Bt/r

.464 8'/r

Pct GB .564 .515 4'/r .500 6 .480 8 .458 10

San Francisco M i ami ab r hbi ab r hbi P encerf 5 0 2 2 Yelichlf 4 1 2 0 Panik2b 5 0 0 0 Vldspn2b 4 0 I 0 P oseyc 4 0 0 0 Stantonrf 4 1 I I Sandovl3b4 2 3 0 McGeh3b 4 0 I I Arias3b 0 0 0 0 GJonesIb 4 0 0 0 Morself-1b 4 0 0 0 Ozunacf 4 1 2 0

Pct GB .619

BeltIb I 1 1 1 Sltlmchc 4 0 2 I Colvinlf 2 1 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0

604 1'/t

.536 8 .408 20'/r .402 21

Alcantrcf 5 0 0 0 Inciartcf 4 2 1 0 Rugginrf 4 I I 0 A.Hill2b 4 2 2 0 Rizzo1b 3 0 I 0 Gldsch1b 3 3 3 3 Scastross 4 0 2 I Trumo If 5 0 1 1 C astilloc 4 I 2 I MMntrc 3 I 2 3 Lakelf 3 I I 0 Prado3b 4 0 0 0 V illanvp 0 0 0 0 C.Rossrf I 0 1 0 Schrhltph I 0 0 0 GParrarf 3 0 1 1 Rosscpp 0 0 0 0 Ahmedss 4 I 1 0 O lt3b 3 0 0 1 Mileyp 2 0 0 0 Barney2b 4 0 2 0 EMrshlp 0 0 0 0 T Woodp 2 0 I 0 Evansph I 0 0 0 Coghlnlf I 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 10 3 Totals 3 4 9 12 8 Chicago 1 00 200 000 — 3 Arizona 001 042 02x — 9

E—Alcantara (I), Olt(6). DP —Arizona1. LOB-

Chicago 7,Arizona7. 2B—Inciarte (4), A.Hill (18), Goldschmid(37), t M.Montero(15), Ahmed(I). 38-

Lake(3), Barney(2). HR—Castigo (7), Goldschm idt (18). CS —G.Parra(5). S—Inciarte, Miley.SF—Olt. IP H R E R BBSO Chicago

TWoodL,7-9 5 1-3 8 7 5 4 3 Bcrwfrss 2 0 0 0 HAlvrzp 0 0 0 0 12-3 2 0 0 0 1 Viganueva GBlanccf 3 1 2 0 SDysonp I 0 0 0 Rosscup 1 2 2 2 0 3 T Hudsnp 2 0 0 1 Solanoph I 0 I 0 Arizona Affeldtp 0 0 0 0 Hatchrp 0 0 0 0 Saturday'sGames Miley W,6-6 7 7 3 3 1 7 Romop 0 0 0 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Yankees7, Cincinnati 1 1 2 0 0 0 1 C asigap 0 0 0 0 JeBakrph I 0 I 0 E.Marshag Toronto4,TexasI O.Perez 1 I 0 0 0 1 ARamsp 0 0 0 0 Cleveland6, Detroit 2, 1stgame HBP —byMiley (Rizzo). Totals 3 2 5 8 4 Totals 3 53 113 T—2:55. A—32,528(48,633). Cleveland5, Detroit 2, 2ndgame San Francisco 020 300 000 — 6 Chicag oWhiteSox4,Houston3 Miami 1 00 000 002 — 3 Boston 2, KansasCity1 E—Saltalamacchia (11), Stanton(4). DP—San Nationals 8, Brewers 3 TampaBay5,Minnesota1 Francisco3, Miami2. LOB—San Francisco7, Miami Baltimore 8, Oakland 4 5. 28 — P e nc e (2 2), San do val (16), Bel t (5), Ozun a Seattle 3,L.A.Angels 2,12 innings — Matt Garzawas Ben Margot/The Associated Press (15). 38 —Ozuna(3). HR —Stanton(23). SB—McGe- WASHINGTON Today'sGam es knocked out in the first inning of hee(2).S—THudson. Former Oakland Athletics, from left, manager Tony LaRussa, Rickey Henderson andDennis EckersCincinnati(Cueto10-6)at N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda6-6), IP H R E R BBSO his shortest major league 10;05a.m. start, ley applaud during a pre-game ceremony honoring the reunion of players from the1989 world chamBan Francisco Texas (Tepesch 3-5) atToronto (Buehrle10-6), 10:07 and Ryan Zimmerman and Wilpionship team prior to Saturday's game against Baltimore in Oakland, California. T Hudson WB-6 71-3 8 I I 0 3 a.m. 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 son Ramos drove in three runs Affeldt Cleveland (Tomlin 5-6) at Detroit (Smyly5-8), 10:08 2 -3 2 2 2 0 0 Romo a.m. CasillaS,5-8 13- 1 0 0 0 0 apiece to leadWashington over KansasCity (Ventura7-7) at Boston(Lester 9-7), Miami Milwaukee. Garza(6-7) faced eight 10:35a.m. .AlvarezL,6-5 2 2-3 3 2 I 0 2 Houston(Cosart 9-6) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Joh. Orioles 8, Athletics4 White Sox 4, Astros3 Indians 5, Tigers 2(2ndGame) H batters and got just one out. S.Dyson 31-3 4 3 3 4 I Danks8-6), 11:10a.m. Hatcher I 0 0 0 0 I Tampa Bay(Archer5-5) atMinnesota(Correia5-11), OAKLAND, Calif.— Adam Jones Cleveland Detroit CHICAGO — Tyler Flowers had Washington Da.Jennings I 1 0 0 I 0 Milwaukee 11:10a.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi A.Ramos I 0 0 0 0 0 matched his career high of five three hits and drove in thegoSeattle (C.Young 8-6) at L.A.Angels (Skaggs5-5), Kipnis2b 2 1 0 0 AJcksncf 3 0 2 2 CGomzcf 4 0 2 0 Spancf 5 I 2 0 HBP —by S.Dyson (Colvin). WP—Affeldt, Casiga, 12:35p.m. Avilesss 5 0 I 0 Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 RBls to back Wei Yin Chen, and ahead run in the fifth inning to lead Gennet t 2b 3 0 0 0 R e n d o n 2 b 5I10 PB — S alt a l a m ac chi a . Baltimore(Gausman 4-2) at Oakland(Gray10-3), rantlycf 4 1 2 0 MicarrIb 4 0 I 0 M aldndph I I I 0 Werthrf 3 2 2 0 Baltimore beat Oakland. Jones hit the Chicago White Sox to avictory B T—3:01.A—24,882(37,442). I:05 p.m. CSantndh 5 0 I3 VMrtnzdh 4 0 0 0 K inlzlrp 0 0 0 0 McLothrf I 0 0 0 Monday'sGames Chsnhff 3b 4 0 0 0 JMrtnzlf 4 0 0 0 a three-run home run in the first over Houston. GeorgeSpringer Braunrf 4 I I 2 LaRochIb 2 I 0 1 Texasat N.Y.Yankees,4:05 p.m. S wisherIb 4 0 I 0 TrHntrrf 4 I 2 0 Padres 6, Mets 0 and had a two-run single in the hit his 20th home run, a solo shot, ArRmr3b 4 0 2 0 Zmrmn3b 4 I 2 3 Bostonat Toronto, 4:07p.m. DvMrprf 4 0 0 0D.Keff y3b 4 0 0 0 L ucroyc 3 I I 0 Harperlf 3 2 1 0 fourth. Baltimore's All-Star center and Jose Altuve had atwo-run R Perezc 4 0 I 0 Avilac 2000 ClevelandatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. KDavislf 4 0 I 0 Dsmndss 4 0 1 1 SAN DIEGO — All-Star Tyson ACarerpr 0 1 0 0 Suarezss 3 I 0 0 Kansas CityatChicagoWhite Sox,5:10 p.m. double for the Astros. fielder also walked and scored in yIb 3 0 0 0 WRamsc 4 0 3 3 YGomsc 0 0 0 0 Detroit atArizona,6:40 p.m. Ross threw sevenshutout innings, Overa M rRynlph I 0 0 0 Roarkp 3 0 0 0 the third. ChDckrlf 3 2 2 2 Baltimore atL.A.Angels, 7:05 p.m. and San Diego hit three homers Segurass 4 0 I 0 Hairstnph I 0 0 0 Houston Chicago N.Y.MetsatSeatle, 7:10p.m. Totals 35 5 8 5 Totals 3 2 2 5 2 Garzap 0 0 0 0 Blevinsp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi C leveland 001 0 0 1 003 — 6 in a victory that snappedthe New Baltimore Oakland Estradp 2 0 0 0 Detwilrp 0 0 0 0 0 10 000 100 — 2 York Mets' four-game winning NATIONALLEAGUE ab r hbi ab r hbi A ltuve2b 5 0 2 2 Eatoncf 4 0 3 0 Detroit LSchfr ph I 0 0 0 LOB—Cleveland 9, Detroit 7. 28—Brantley (24), East Division M arkksrf 5 2 4 0 Crispdh 4 0 0 0 Grzlnyp 0 0 0 0 Jcastroc 4 0 0 0 AIRmrzss 5 0 2 0 C.Santana(13), R.Perez (I), Mi.cabrera (36), Tor. streak. Ross (8-10) allowed only W L Pct GB Pearcelf 4 2 3 0 Gentrycf 3 0 0 0 I00 0 S pringrcf 4 I I I JAreuIb 5 0 I 0 Hunter(18). 38—A.Jackson(5). HR —Ch.Dickerson four hits in his first start following RWeks2b Washington 52 43 .547 L ough pr-If 0 0 0 0 Jaso ph I 0 00 Totals 35 3 9 2 Totals 3 5 8 12 8 C arterdh 3 0 0 0 Viciedorf 4 I I 0 2 (2). Atlanta 53 44 .546 A.Jonescf 4 2 2 5 Parrinolf 0 0 0 0 M ilwaukee 0 1 0 0 0 0 020 — 3 S ingltnIb 4 0 0 0 Sierrarf 0 0 0 0 his first All-Star appearance. He IP H R E R BBBD NewYork 46 51 .474 7 N.cruzdh 5 0 I 0 Cespdslf-cf 4 I 1 0 Washington 60 1 101 Dgx— 8 MDmn3b 4 0 0 0 Konerkdh 3 I 0 0 Miami 44 52 .458 Br/t C.DavisIb 4 I 2 2 Dnldsn3b 4 I 1 0 Cleveland struck out six and issued three E—C.Gomez(4), W.Ramos2 (2). DP—WashingGrssmnrf 3 0 I 0 Giffaspi3b 4 0 I I McAllister 51-3 3 1 I 3 6 Philadelphia 43 54 .443 10 J Hardyss 4 I I I DNorrsc 4 I 1 0 ton 1. LOB —Milwaukee6, Washington 8. 2B—LuKHrndzlf 4 I 3 0 GBckh2b 4 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 walks. CentralDivision AxfordH,2 Machd3b 4 0 0 0 Lowriess 4 0 2 3 MGnzl z ss 3 I 2 0 DeAzalf 3 2 2 0 croy (33),Segura(9), Span (29), Werth 2(22),Harper W L Pct GB H undlyc 5 0 0 0 Mossrf 3 I 1 1 A tchison BS , 3 -4 I 1 1 I I I Flowrsc 3 0 3 2 (6). HR —Braun(12). SB—Lucroy(4). SF—LaRoche. NewYork San Diego Milwaukee 54 44 .551 CarrascoW,3-3 I 0 0 0 0 I Schoop2b 4 0 0 0 Freimn1b 2 0 1 0 IP H R E R BBSD Totals 34 3 9 3 Totals 3 5 4 133 ab r hbi ab r hbi Allen S,13-14 I 1 0 0 0 2 St. Louis 54 44 .551 Vogtph-Ib 2 0 1 0 Milwaukee Houston 0 00 120 000 — 3 Detroit Grndrsrf 4 0 1 0 Amarstss 4 1 I 0 Cincinnati 51 46 ,526 2r/r Punto2b 3 0 0 0 — 4 Garza L,6-7 1-3 5 5 5 2 1 Chicago 012 010 Dgx 52-3 6 2 2 4 4 DnMrp2b 4 0 1 0 Headly3b 4 1 2 I Pittsburgh 51 46 526 2r/t Totals 39 8 13 8 Totals 3 4 4 8 4 Estrada 52-3 5 3 3 2 2 E—Ma.Gonzalez (4). DP—Houston 1, Chicago Scherzer D Wrght3b 4 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 4 1 I I I 1-3 0 0 0 0 I Chicago 40 56 .417 13 Krol B altimore 401 2 0 0 001 — 8 1. LOB Gorzelanny 1 I 0 0 0 2 —Houston 8, Chicago11. 2B—Altuve(30), Chamberlain DudaIb 4 0 1 0 GrandlIb 4 1 2 I West Division I 0 0 0 0 0 Oakland 001 201 000 — 4 Kintzler Flowers(9). 38—De Aza (5). HR —Springer (20). NathanL,4-3 1 I 0 0 0 1 W L Pct GB I 2 3 3 2 2 d Arnadc 4 0 1 0 Venalerf 3 1 I I E—Punto (6). DP—Baltimore I, Oakland 2. S— Ma.Gonzalez,Eaton. Washington NiwnhsIf 3 0 0 0 Denorfiph-rf I 0 0 0 WP—McAffister,Axford,Scherzer. PB—Avila. SanFrancisco 54 43 .557 LOB —Baltimore 9, Oakland5. 28—Pearce 2 (16), IP H R E R BBBD R oark W, 9 -6 7 6 I I 1 5 Lagars cf 4 0 1 0 CNelsn 2b 3 0 0 0 T—3:40. A—42,044(41,681). LosAngeles 54 45 .545 I C.Davis(10), Donaldson(14), Lowrie(25). HR—A. Houston Blevins 1 3 2 2 0 0 Te)ada ss 3 0 0 0 Maybin cf 3 0 0 0 SanDiego 42 55 .433 12 Jones(17), C.Da vis (16), J.Hardy(4), Moss(22). KeuchelL,9-6 5 12 4 3 2 5 Detwiler 1 0 0 0 0 2 G ee p 0 0 0 0 Rivera c 3 0 I 0 Arizona 42 56 .429 12'/t SB — Late Fridaynight A.Jones2(6). T — 3:17. A — 38,649 (41, 4 08). Bass I 0 0 0 0 0 EYong ph 0 0 0 0 T.Ross p 2 1 0 0 Colorado 40 57 .412 14 IP H R E R BBSD Sipp I 0 0 0 0 2 CTorrsp 0 0 0 0 Goeertph I 0 0 0 Baltimore Quaffs I I 0 0 0 1 Angels 3, Mariners 2 (16 inns.) Carlylep 0 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Saturday'sGames Phillies 2, Braves1 W.chenW,10-3 5 5 3 3 1 4 Chicago CYoungph I 0 0 0 Qcknshp 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Yankees7, Cincinnati1 Brach 2 2 I I 0 2 NoesiW,4-7 6 6 3 3 1 2 Beatile Los Angeles E dginp 0 0 0 0 Boyerp 0 0 0 0 St. Louis4,LA. Dodgers2 O'DayH,15 12-3 I 0 0 1 0 Guerra 0 2 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ATLANTA —Cole Hamels held the B lackp 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh3, Colorado2,11 innings ZBrittonS,16-19 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 BelisarioH,9 2 0 0 0 1 3 E nchvzrf-cf 8 0 2 I Calhonrf 7 0 I 0 Totals 31 0 5 0 Totals 3 2 6 8 4 Braves to four hits through seven Washington 8, Milwaukee3 Oakland PetrickaH,B 2-3 I 0 0 1 1 J .Jonescf 6 0 2 0 Troutcf 7 I 3 0 N ew york 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 innings, Jimmy Rollins hit a twoPhiladelphia 2, AtlantaI HammelL,0-2 2 6 5 5 2 2 PutnamS,3-4 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 1 H artph 1 0 0 0 Pu)olsIb 7 0 I 0 Ban Diego 0 1 2 1 0 1 01x — 6 San Francisco 5, Miami3 Otero 2 3 2 2 1 0 Guerrapitchedto 2battersinthe7th. R omerrf 0 0 0 0 JHmltnlf 6 0 0 0 E—Nieuwenhuis (I), C.Nelson (I). DP —San run homer, andPhiladelphia beat Arizona9,ChicagoCubs3 Abad 11-3 2 0 0 0 0 HBP —byKeuchel(Flowers). WP —Noesi. C ano2b 6 0 4 0 Aybarss 4 0 I 0 Diego1. LOB —NewYork7, SanDiego2. 28—Dan. Atlanta. Hamels (4-5) won for the SanDiego6, N.Y.Mets 0 Cook 12-3 0 0 0 1 3 T—3:18.A—28,210 (40,615). Seager3b 7 0 0 0 JMcDnlpr-ss 2 0 0 0 Murphy(24), He adley(11). HR —S.Smith (11), GranToday'sGam es Gregerson 1 I 0 0 0 1 Morrsndh 5 0 0 0 ENavrrph 1 0 I I second time in three starts, giving dal (8),Venable(3). CS—E.Young(4). Cincinnati(Cueto10-6)at N.Y.Yankees(Kuroda6-6), Ji Johnson 1 I I I 1 1 Smoak1b 5 0 2 0 HKndrc2b 5 I 2 0 IP H R E R BBSO up one run, striking out nine and 10:05a.m. Red Sox2, Royals1 Hammelpitchedto 3battersin the3rd. Blmqst pr-tb 1 0 I 0 Freese 3b 6 I 2 I New york San Francisco(Lincecum9-5) at Miami(Hand0-2), T—3;14. A—36,067(35,067). A ckleylf 5 1 2 0 Crondh 6 0 0 0 threw 71 of 95 GeeL,4-2 5 5 4 4 0 8 walking none. He 10;10a.m. BOSTON— Rubby DeLa Rosa BMigerss 7 1 2 I Congerc 6 0 I I C.Torres I 2 I I 0 I pitches for strikes. Colorado(Matzek 1-4) at Pittsburgh (Locke2-1), Zuninoc 7 0 0 0 Blue Jays4, Rangers1 Carlyle I 0 0 0 0 I pitched sevensolid innings and 10:35a.m. Totals 5 8 2 152 Totals 5 7 3 123 2-3 1 I 0 0 I Edgin Milwaukee(Gallardo 5-5) at Washington(G.Gonzalez Atlanta Mike Napoli hit a tiebreaking hoBeatne 000 000 200 000 000 0 —2 1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Black 6-5),10:35a.m. TORONTO — Marcus Stroman ab r hbi ab r hbi Los Angeles 000 020 000 000 000 1 —3 mer to lift Boston to a victory over Ban Diego Philadelphi(K. a Kendrick4-9) atAtlanta(A.Wood6-7), Twooutswhenwinningrunscored. pitched sevenshutout innings to TRossWB-10 7 4 0 0 3 6 GSizmrcf-If 4 I 3 0 Buptoncf 4 0 1 0 10:35a.m. Kansas City. It was the sixth win E—Zunino(5), Freese(2). DP—Seattle1, LosAn- A.Torres 2-3 1 0 0 0 2 ChicagoCubs(Arrieta 5-1) at Arizona(Collmenter snap a three-start winless streak, 5 I I 2 ASmnsss 4 0 0 0 eles 2.LOB—Seattle14, LosAngeles9.28—Smoak Quackenbush 1 - 3 in seven gamesfor the defending 0 0 0 0 0 Rollinsss 7-5), I:10p.m. Utley2b 4 0 0 0 FFrmnIb 4 0 0 0 13), Ackl e y (15), Trout 2 (28), E. N a varro (7), Fre es e two RBlsand Boyer I 0 0 0 0 2 Howard1b 3 0 0 0 J.uptonlf 4 I 1 0 N.Y.Mets(Za.Wheeler 5-8) at SanDiego(Despaigne Dan Johnson had World Series champions, who 11). SB —J.Jones (18). CS—B.Miller (2), Calhoun PB — d'Arnaud2. 2-1),1:10p.m. Toronto beatTexas.Melky Cabrera are looking to climb from the AL Byrdrf 4 0 2 0 Heywrdrf 2 0 0 0 (2). S —Ackley2, H.Kendrick. T—2:41.A—42,702 (42,302). L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw11-2) atSt. Louis(C.Martinez had three hits as theBlueJays won Asche3b 3 0 0 0 CJhnsn3b 3 0 1 1 IP H R E R BBBD East's basement. 2-4), 5:05 p.m. DBrwnlf 4 0 2 0 LaSteg2b 3 0 1 0 Beatne for the first time in four games. Monday'sGames Iwakuma 7 6 2 2 0 3 Pirates 3,Rockies2(11 innings) Gilesp 0 0 0 0 Bthncrtc 3 0 0 0 L.A. Dodgers atPittsburgh, 4:05p.m. KansasCity Boston Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Harangp I 0 0 0 Beimel 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 San Francisco at Philadelphia,4:05p.m. Texas Toronto ab r hbi ab r hbi Ruppc 4 0 0 0 Pstrnckph I 0 1 0 Medina 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 PITTSBURGH — Jordy Mercer Miami at Atlanta,4:10p.m. ab r hbi ab r hbi J Dysoncf 3 I I 0 B.Holtss 4 0 I 0 Furbush Hamelsp 3 0 I 0Smmnsp 0 0 0 0 1-3 1 0 0 0 I Cincinnatiat Milwaukee,5:10p.m. Choodh 4 0 0 0 Reyesss 5 0 2 0 Infante2b 3 0 I I Pedroia2b 4 0 0 0 Revereph-cf I 0 0 0 Shrevep 0 0 0 0 Farquhar 2 1 0 0 0 3 doubled homeNeil Walkerwith one WashingtonatColorado,5:40 p.m. Andrusss 4 0 I I Kawsk2b 5 0 1 1 Hosmer1b 4 0 I 0 D.crtizdh 4 0 0 0 Varvar p 0 0 0 0 Maurer I 0 0 0 0 2 out in the bottom of the 11th inning Detroit atArizona,6;40p.m. R iosrf 0 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 4 I 3 0 S.Perezc 4 0 0 0 NapoliIb 3 2 2 I Doumdph I 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen 4 1 0 0 0 4 to lift Pittsburgh to a victory over N.Y.MetsatSeatle, 7:10p.m. D Rrtsnph-rf 4 0 2 0 Bautistdh 2 I 1 0 A Gordnlf 3 0 I 0 JGomslf 3 0 I 0 LeoneL,2-2 DCrpntp 0 0 0 0 2-3 2 1 I I 0 ABeltre3b 4 0 I 0 DNavrrc 4 0 1 1 B Butlerdh 4 0 I 0 Victornrf 3 0 I 0 LosAngeles T otals 35 2 9 2 Totals 3 0I 5 1 Colorado. Walker ledoff the inning Smlnsklf 4 0 0 0 CIRsmscf 4 I 2 0 Mostks3b 3 0 0 0 Bogarts3b 3 0 0 0 P hiladelphia 00 0 000 200 — 2 Weaver 6 6 2 2 2 8 with a single against Colorado's American League LMartncf 3 0 0 0 DJhnsn1b 2 I 1 2 A okirf 2 0 0 0 BrdlyJrcf 3 0 I 0 Morin BS,2-2 Atlanta 0 00 000 100 — 1 2-32 0 0 0 I Arencii1b 4 0 I 0 JFrncs3b 2 0 0 0 Ibanez ph 1 0 0 0 Vazquz c 2 0 0 0 LOB —Philadelphia 10, Atlanta 3. 28—G.SizeChad Bettis (0-2), moved to second Thatcher 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Mariners 3,Angels 2(12 inns.) Odor2b 3 I 0 0 StTllsnph-3b 2 0 0 0 AEscorss 3 0 0 0 more(2),J.upton(21), C.Johnson(19), LaStella (9). Jepsen I 0 0 0 I 0 on a sacrifice bunt, andscoredone C hirinsc 3 0 I 0 Goserf 4 0 1 0 T otals 3 0 I 5 I Totals 2 92 6 I HR—Rollins (12). CS—B.upton (5), Pastornicky (1). J.Smith I 1 0 0 0 I Totals 3 3 I 6 I Totals 3 44 124 K ansas Cily 0 0 1 0 00 000 — 1 Griffi batter later when Mercer hit a drive S—Asche. ANAHEIM, Calif.— Logan MorI 1 0 0 0 0 — 2 Texas 000 000 010 — 1 Boston 000 101 00x IP H R E R BBSO Salas I 1 0 0 0 0 deep into the gap in l e ft-center. rison hit a go-aheadRBIdouble — 4 E — A .E sc ob a r (9), J. G om es ( 3). DP — K an sa s C ity Toronto 000 200 20x Philadelphia Cor.Rasm us 2 1-3 2 0 0 I 2 during Seattle's two-run 12th E—Feierabend(1). DP—T exas I, Toronto 1. 1,Boston2.LOB— KansasCity7,Boston6.28HamelsW4-5 , 7 4 I I 0 9 H.SantiagoW,2-7 22-3 2 0 0 0 2 Colorado PINsburgh exas 7, Toronto10. 28—Reyes (20), Me. Infante (12). 38 —J.Dyson (3). HR—Napoli (11). Weaverpitchedto 2batters inthe7th. GilesH,3 1 I 0 0 0 2 inning, and the Mariners hung on LOB—T ab r hbi ab r hbi Cabrera(22), D.Johnson(1). SB—Col.Rasmus (1). SF—Infante. P apel b on S, 2 3-25 1 0 0 0 0 0 Furbush pi t ched to1batter i n the 9t h . Blckmncf 4 0 1 0 GPolncrf 5 0 0 0 to beat the LosAngeles Angels. SF—D.Johnson. IP H R E R BBSO T—5:14. A—42,517(45,483). Atlanta Arenad 3b 4 1 1 0 JHrrsn If 4 1 0 0 Kansas Ci l y IP H R E R BBSD 6 5 0 0 3 4 The AL West rivals playedextra C Gnzlzrl 3 1 1 2 AMcctcf 4 0 I 0 Harang Duffy L,5-10 62- 3 6 2 1 3 2 Texas .SimmonsL,1-1 2-3 2 2 2 0 1 innings for the second straight T lwlzkss 2 0 0 0 RMartnc 5 0 I 0 S 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 National League LewisL,6-7 5 8 2 2 3 5 Frasor Shreve 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Rutledgss 2 0 1 0 NWalkr2b 5 2 3 I 12-3 4 2 2 0 2 W.Davis I 0 0 0 0 0 night, less than 24hours after the Feierabend Varvaro 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 CDckrslf 4 0 2 0 GSnchzIb 2 0 I I 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Boston Cardinals 4, Dodgers 2 Mendez D.carpenter 1 0 0 0 0 0 Angels won the series opener3-2 Rosarioc 4 0 0 0 Sniderph I 0 0 0 R.DeLaRosaW,3-2 7 5 I 1 4 2 Toronto HBP — by H am els (H e yw ard ). Culer snIb 3 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 T—2:57. A—38,602(49,586). in 16 innings. JoeThatcher (0-1) I 0 0 0 0 1 ST. LOUIS —Matt Adams homStromanW,5-2 7 4 0 0 0 5 A.MigerH,11 LeMahi2b 3 00 0 JuWlsnp 0 0 0 0 1-3 I I I 1 1 UeharaS,20-22 I 0 0 0 0 1 Cecil gave up aleadoff double in the BAndrs p 2 0 0 0 JHughs p 0 0 0 0 ered to cap afour-run first inning, McGowan H,B 2- 3 I 0 0 0 3 WP—R.DeLaRosa. Barnesph I 0 0 0 CStwrtph 0 0 0 0 12th to Kyle Seagerbefore MorriInterlea ue LoupS,3-6 1 0 0 0 1 0 T—2:39.A—37,878 (37,499). and St. Louis beat the Los Angel e s Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 PAlvrz3b 4 0 I 0 WP — Lewis. PB—D.Navarro. son drove him in with a hit down Dodgers to send All-Star Zack Ottavinp 0 0 0 0 Mercerss 4 0 I I Yankees 7,Reds1 Indians 6, Tigers 2(1st Game) the left field line. Pinch-hitter Jus- T—3:02. A—45,802(49,282). Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 Mortonp 2 0 0 0 Greinke to losses in consecutive B Brwnp 0 0 0 0 Mrtnzph I 0 0 0 tin Smoak drove in pinch-runner NEW YORK — Brandon McCaregular-season starts for the first S tubbsph I 0 1 0 Frierip 0 0 0 0 DETROIT —Carlos Santana hit Willie Bloomquist with an infield 0 0 0 0 I.Davis1b I 0 0 0 rthy earned his first win for the Rays 5, Twins1 time in nearly four years. JoeKelly Bettisp a tiebreaking, bases-clearing Totals 3 3 2 7 2 Totals 3 83 8 3 hit. (2-1) gave upfour hits, struck out Colorado 000 000 200 00 — 2 Yankees with an impressive debut double with two outs in the ninth MINNEAPOLIS —Pushing the Pittsburgh 000 100 010 01 — 3 in pinstripes, and Brett Gardner four and walked one in his second Los Angeles i n ning, lifting Cleveland to a wi n Seattle Tampa BayRays backtoward Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. drove in three runs from the ab r hbi ab r hbi outing since a three-month stint that sealed asweep of the doubleE—Arenado (9). DP—Pittsburgh 4. LOB —Col.500 might be David Price's way J.Jonescf 6 0 1 0 Calhonrf 5 0 0 0 l e adoff spot to sendNewYork on the disabled list caused by a orado 2, Pi t tsburgh 10. 28 — A re nad o (20), N. W a l k er header. The Indians have won four R omerrf 5 0 0 0 Troutcf 5 0 I 0 of dampening trade rumors. The ( 13), G.San c he z (1 3), Me rcer (15). HR — C .G onz a le z past Cincinnati. Carlos Beltran strained left hamstring. Cano 2b 5 0 0 0 Puiols Ib 3 1 0 0 straight, three in a row atDetroit, All-Star left-hander pitched eight (9). CS —Blackmon (5), Co.Dickerson (5). SSeager3b 5 1 2 0 JHmltndh 4 0 I 0 homered, Kelly Johnson hit a twoLeMahieu, C.Stewart. t/a games of the AL to pull within 4 MorrsnIb 4 0 1 1 HKndrc2b 4 0 2 0 scoreless innings to win five LosAngeles Bt. Louis IP H R E R BBSO run single and theYankeesended Blmqstpr 0 1 0 0 Freese3b 4 1 I I Central-leading Tigers. Cleveland ab r h bi ab r h bi Colorado straight starts for the first time Alfredo Simon's six-game winning Z uninoc 0 0 0 0 ENavrrlf 5 0 0 0 DGordn2b 4 1 3 0 Mcrpnt3b 3 I 0 0 won the first game 6-2 thanks to BAnderson 7 4 I I I 8 in his major leaguecareer, and H artdh 4 0 0 0 lannettc 5 0 0 0 C rwfrdlf 3 0 0 I Wong2b 4 I 2 0 streak in the right-hander's first B rothers H,14 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 Corey Kluber's strong outing. Enchvzph-dh1 0 1 0 JMcDnlss 2 0 0 0 P uigrf 1 0 0 0 Hollidylf 2 I I 2 Tampa Baybeat Minnesota for its Ottavino 0 1 I I 2 0 outing since the All-Star game. Ackleylf 5 1 2 0 Greenph I 0 0 0 Kempph-cf 1 0 0 0 Bour)osph-cf 1 0 I 0 KahnleBS,1-1 1 2 - 3 1 0 0 I I fourth consecutive victory. BMifferss 4 0 0 0 H Rmrzss 4 0 I I MAdms1b 4 I I 2 Cleveland Detroit B.Brown I 0 0 0 0 I S ucrec 4 0 1 1 New york ab r hbi ab r hbi AdGnzl1b 4 0 I 0 JhPerltss 1 0 0 0 1-3 2 I I I 0 Cincinnati Bettis L,0-2 Minnesota Smoak ph-1b I 0 1 1 TampaBay Kipni s2b 5 0 2 2 AJcksncf 4 0 2 I VnSlykcf-rf 4 0 I 0 Taversrf 2 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi Pittsburgh T otals 4 4 3 9 3 Totals 3 82 5 I ab r hbi ab r hbi Acarerss 5 0 I I Kinsler2b 4 0 0 0 uribe3b 3 0 0 0 Craigph-If 1 0 0 0 Morton 7 5 2 2 I 3 B Hmltncf 4 0 I 0 Gardnrlf 2 0 1 3 Seattle 000 001 000 002 — 3 DJnngscf 4 0 0 0 DaSntncf 4 0 0 0 Brantlycf 5 0 I 0 Micarr1b 4 I 3 0 M ahlmp 0 0 0 0 Kottarsc 2 0 I 0 Frieri I 0 0 0 0 2 C ozartss 4 0 0 0 Jeterss 3 0 1 1 LosAngeles 000 000 100 001 — 2 Zobristrf-If 4 0 I 0 Dozier2b 3 I 0 0 Frazier3b 4 0 2 0 Ellsurycf 4 0 0 0 CSantnIb 2 0 00 VMrtnzdh 4 0 0 0 Ethierph 1 0 0 0 M.Egisph 1 0 0 0 Melancon I 0 0 0 0 I E—B.Miler (14). DP—Seattle 2. LOB —Seattle Guyerlf 3 0 2 0 Plouffe3b 4 0 1 0 A.Eff isc 3 0 0 0 Rosnthlp 0 0 0 0 Chsnhll3b 3 I 2 0 JMrtnzrf 4 0 0 I Ju.Wilson I 1 0 0 0 0 Brucerf 4 0 0 0 TeixeirIb 4 0 0 0 8, Los Angele7. s 28—Seager (23), Morrison(6), Kiermrph-rl I 0 0 0 KMorlsdh 3 0 1 0 esorcc 4 0 I 0 Mccnnc 4 I 1 0 Swisher dh 4 I I I Cstgns 3b 4 0 I 0 Greinkp 2 0 0 0 Jaycf-If-rf 4 0 2 0 J.HughesW,5-2 I 1 0 0 0 0 M Ackley(16),Trout(29), H.Kendrick (18). HR —Freese Longori3b 4 0 I 0 Fryerpr 0 0 0 0 B.Pena1b 3 0 I 0 Beltrandh 4 2 2 1 YGomsc 4 3 3 0 Suarezss 3 I 0 0 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 J.Kellyp 3 0 0 0 Ottavinopitchedto3 baters inthe8th. LoneyIb 4 I 2 0 KSuzukc 4 0 1 1 N.Sotoph I 0 0 0 ISuzukirf 4 0 0 0 (5). SB—En.chavez (2), H.Ken drick (12). CS— J. D vMrprf 2 I 2 2 Holadyc 3 0 I 0 JuTrnr3b 0 1 0 0 SFrmnp 0 0 0 0 HBP —byMorton (Blackmon), byJ.Hughes(CulberHamilton(1). Forsyth2b 3 I 2 0 Colaell1b 4 0 0 0 Heiseylf 4 I I I BRorts2b 4 3 2 0 Raburnlf 4 0 0 0 RDavislf 3 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 son). WP — O ttavi n o. IP H R E R BBSO YEscorss 4 I 2 0 Parmelrf 4 0 1 0 Lutzdh 3 0 I 0 KJhnsn3b 3 I 2 2 ChDckrlf 0 0 0 0 Tcruz ph-c 1 0 0 0 T—3:31.A—37,396 (38,362). Seattle JMolinc 4 I I 2 EEscorss 3 0 1 0 Totals 34 6 126 Totals 3 3 2 7 2 Negron 2b 3 0 0 0 Totals 30 2 6 2 Totals 2 9 4 8 4 F.Hernande z 7 2 I 0 4 9 S Rdrgzdh 4 I 2 3 Nunezlf 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 4 I 7 1 Totals 3 27 9 7 C leveland 000 0 3 0 102 — 6 Los Angeles 001 000 010 — 2 Medina 2-3 0 0 0 I 0 T otals 3 5 5 135 Totals 3 2 I 5 1 Detroit Diamondbacks 9, Cnbs3 C incinnati 000 0 1 0 000 — 1 0 00 010 001 — 2 St. Louis 400 000 00x — 4 Beimel 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 T ampa Bay 0 3 0 0 00 200 — 5 E—Holaday (5). DP—Cleveland I, Detroit 2. E—C.crawford (3), D.Gordon(8), M.carpenter(9). New york 011 0 2 3 Dgx— 7 Maurer I 1 0 0 0 2 M innesota 0 0 0 0 0 0 001 — 1 LOB —Cleveland 6, Detroit 5. 28 —Swisher (17), DP— LosAngeles2,St.Louis3.LOB— LosAngeles PHOENIX E—Bruce (4). LOB —Cincinnati 6, NewYork 4. — Mi g uel Montero hit a Rodney I 0 0 0 I I E—Y.Escobar (9), Da.Santana (2). DP—Tampa YGomes 28 — B .H am i l t on (20), Lutz(2). HR —Heisey(4), Bel(13), AJackson(21), Mi.Cabrera(35), Cas- 5, St. Louis8. 28—D.Gordon(15), Wong(8). HR LeoneW,3-2 I 2 I I 0 I Bay1,Minnesota5.LOB— TampaBay4,Minnesota tellanos(22).CS—Brantley (1), Chisenhag(I), Dav. Ma.Adam(12). s SB—D.Gordon(44), Bourios(6), Jay go-ahead, three-run double in the tran (10).SB—Frazier (15),Jeter(7). SF—Gardner 2. FurbushS,1-1 I 0 0 0 0 0 6. 28 — YEscobar (11), Plouffe(28). HR —S.RodriIP H R E R BBBO Murphy(3). (5). S —Bour)os.SF—C.crawford. fifth, Paul Goldschmidt addeda IP H R E R BBSO Cincinnati LosAngeles guez(10). IP H R E R BBBD two-runhomer, and Ari z ona beat Richards 8 3 I I I 7 IP H R E R BBSD Cleveland LosAngeles SimonL,12-4 5 5 4 2 1 4 Street I 1 0 0 0 I TampaBay KluberW,10-6 8 2-3 7 2 2 1 10 GreinkeL,11-6 5 2 - 3 6 4 4 5 3 the ChicagoCubs. Goldschmidt, Hoover 1 4 3 3 0 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 PRodriguez J.Smith I 1 0 0 0 I PriceW,10-7 8 4 0 0 0 9 Shaw 1-3 0 0 0 0 I Contreras 1 0 0 0 0 0 with Montero a Nati o nal League Al l 1-3 I I I 1 0 Detroit Jepsen I 0 0 0 0 I Oviedo Maholm 2 2 0 0 I I Ju.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 1 Star, went 3 for 3. He al s o scored ThatcherL,O-I 0 2 2 2 0 0 McGeeS,8-9 2 3- 0 0 0 0 1 VerHagen L,0-1 5 5 3 3 3 4 Bt. Louis New york B.Hardy 11-3 2 I 1 2 1 J.KellyW2-1 Morin I 2 0 0 I I Minaesota 7 4 1 I I 4 three runs and MccarthyW,1-0 6 6 I I 0 9 walked twice, raisThatcher pitchedto 2batters inthe12th. PHughes L,10-6 7 11 5 5 1 1 Coke I 2 0 0 0 0 S.Freeman H,B 1- 3 1 1 I I 0 Warren 1 0 0 0 0 1 ing his batting average to.314. I 2-3 3 2 1 0 3 NeshekH,15 11-3 I 0 0 0 3 Leone pitchedtoI batterin the12th. Burton 1 I 0 0 0 1 Knebel 2 3- 0 0 0 0 2 Kelley HBP —by Medina (Jo.McDonald), by Richards Fien Knebel. PB—Holaday. 1 I 0 0 0 1 WP — RosenthalS,30-34 I 1 0 0 0 0 Thornton 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 T—3:02.A—38,109 (41,681). (Romero).WP—Medina. HBP—byOviedo(Dozier). WP —Fien. HBP—by J.Kelly (Puig).WP—J.Kelly. Chicago Arizona WP — Kelley.PB— Mesoraco. T—4:07.A—40,231 (45,483). T—2:51. A—36,117(39,021). T—3:02.A—43,922(45,399). ab r hbi ab r hbi T—2:41. A—47,606(49,642).

!


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

WNBA ALL-STAR GAME

Shoni Schimmel, of the Atlanta

Schimmelshinesin record-breaking, MVPperformance

Dream, holds the MVP trophy after the WNBA AllStar basket-

cluding a behind-the-head flip over 6-foot-8 Brittney Griner, Schimmel PHOENIX — Showtime Shoni gave the fans a great show. had quite the All-Star debut. Schimmel is only averaging 7.1 Shoni Schimmel, a rookie who points in limited time for Atlanta,

ball game on Saturday. Matt York/The Associated Press

By Bob Baum

huge accomplishment to go out

All-Star Game scoring record of 23

The Associated Press

there and be in the WNBA," Schimmel said. "To have the fans look up

set by Candace Parker last year. Schimmel is just the third reserve player ever to start a WNBA

to me and to a role model not only for my siblings but also the Native All-Star game, but any grumbling d oesn't even start for her o w n yet she was voted in as an All-Star American fans, the Native Ameri- about her inclusion vanished in an team, put on arecord-breaking starter because of her huge Native can people. It's huge. I take on my electric second half and overtime, performance —scoring29 points American following. With 17 fam- shoulders because I enjoy it." when she scored 24 points. "It was awesome, just to be able to help the East beat the West 125- ily members — the boys wearing Schimmel, who grew up on the 124 on Saturday in the first WNBA "Rez Ball Rules" T-shirts, cheering Umatilla Indian Reservation in to go out there and play my game, All-Star game to go to overtime. her on — Schimmel earned MVP the northeast Oregon town of Mis- have fun," Schimmel said, "feel Hitting big shot after big shot in honors. sion and played for Hermiston and free to go out there and play 'rez "Being Native American, it's a Franklin high schools, broke the balL' " the fourth quarter and overtime, in-

g ttf' iss

"We'veseen a lotofthese kids come down the road,and seen a lotofthem come and go,.But in Felix, it's obvious you see someone with a lot of passion, a lot of heart and desire, a lot of love for the organization he plays in, the city, the fans.... It's really a breath of fresh air to watch him." — Former Mariner Jamie Moyer

+g/

GOLF ROUNDUP

Mcllroy eagles late twice for 6-shot lead Bulletin wire reports H OYLAKE, England Despite ominous predictions

and extreme m easures, need to do." thunder and lightning nevMcIlroy now resides in er materialized to threaten South Florida, but this is still the players during the third as close as he gets to a home round at the British Open. major: with Royal Liverpool But when the l ast putt lying just across the Irish was holed shortly before the Sea. McIlroy has long been deluge Saturday, the Open, the great European hope, the world's o ldest m ajor and despite his struggles last golf tournament, was still in season and his surprise decigrave danger of turning into sion in May to break off his a rout. engagement with the Danish Rory McIlroy was ground- tennis star Caroline Woznied and befuddled as he acki, he is clearly back in

;~<p.

missed the cut at last year's

Open at Muirfield. This year, he is soaring above the field at Royal Liverpool: turning its par 5s into his personal playgrounds. Still just 25, McIlroy has won his two major titles by the same eight-shot margin, and a third such processional is now hardly out of the

e

Ted S. Warren 1 The Associated Press

With his "Kings Court" cheering section behind him, Seattle's Felix Hernandez begins his windup against Oakland earlier this month in a 3-2 win. Hernandez is having one of the best statistical seasons of his career and is a candidate to win his second Cy Young.

Hernandez Continued from D1 Dave Cameron debutedthe moniker in

a USS Mariner blog post in July 2003. On Aug. 4, 2005, as the anticipation

among Mariners fans built to feverish levels, Hernandez made hisma jor-league debut in Detroit. King Felix was 19, with

swagger, bushy hair and a fastball that touched 99 mph. "He was a young fireballer that came up and was supposed to be the second coming," said Willie Bloomquist, his teammate thenand now.

The King Felix file Full name:Felix Abraham Hernandez Ags:28, born April 8,1986, in Valencia, Venezuela Bats/throws:R/R Ht/wt: 6-3/225

Residence:Lives during the offseason in Valencia, Venezuela, andBellevue, Washington. Family:Wife Sandra, daughter Mia, son Jeremy. His older brother, Moises, is a pitcher in the Mariners organization.

Ten seasons have passed, and the hype has been transformed into wondrous achievement. Oh, the fastball has lost a

few miles per hour, but the legend of Felix Hernandez, who tossed a two-strikeout, scoreless inning in his start for the Amer-

with a no-decision, and another in which he gave up one run in 8 '/ innings and was saddled with a loss.

Over the course of his career, Hernandez has pitched 143 games in which he's worked at least seven innings and given up two or fewer runs — more than anyone in baseball over that span — and yet came away without a victory 57 times (14 losses,

43 no-decisions). Cameron crunchedthe numbers, however,and determined that Hernandez could

be expected to have just 12 more wins, approximately, based on historical data. He did this by looking at pitchers since 1985 — roughly when the modern bullpen came into effect — who had an adjusted ERA

free agency, and the chance for an even in Hernandez's range. Those 346 pitchers bigger payday. Last spring, as negotiations were awardeda victory 46 percent ofthe intensified, Hernandez's marching orders time; Hernandez has been credited with a

to his agent, Scott Pucino, were to get a deal ican League in the All-Star game on Tues- done with the Mariners, and to include a day — has never been stronger. Nor has no-trade clause to ensure that he can't be his connection to Seattle fans, who revere dealt. "He doesn't want to leave," Pucino said. Hernandez for his loyalty to the Mariners.

win in 42 percent of the games he's started.

Bumping that up to 46 percent would put his total at 132 — 12 more than he has. It's been incredibly frustrating to Mariners fans, at those times, to watch Hernan-

Twice he has bypassed opportunities to "Felix is a very, very loyal person. Look, he dez pitch his heart out and go unrewarded. hit the open market as a free agent, say- was signed bythe Mariners atage16.They But one of the most endearing elements of ing repeatedly that he loves it here too gave him an opportunity at 19, and he's the Hernandezlegacy is thathe hasnever much to leave. And meaning it. never looked back." complained, never sold out his teammates. "We've seen a lot of these kids come "It's baseball; it happens," Hernandez Hernandez has forged a happy life in the down the road, and seen a lot of them Seattle area with his wife and two young said, reiterating his typical response."If come and go," former Mariner Jamie children. And he's fully bought into the you get mad for not scoring runs, and the Moyer said. "But in Felix, it's obvious you rebuilding plan of general manager Jack next day they score 12, maybe you give up see someone with a lot of passion, a lot of Zduriencik, ever faithful that team success 13. What are you going to say? You can't heart and desire, a lot of love for the or- looms just around the corner. worry about that. You have to just go out ganization he plays in, the city, the fans. Only former teammate Aaron Harang there and pitch." ... It's really a breath of fresh air to watch among active pitchers, with 337, has made Modern baseball analysis has downhim." more career starts than Hernandez's 289 played the importance of a pitcher's wins without appearing in the postseason. The because so much is out of his control. HerStill loyal through the losing Mariners now own the second wild-card nandez won a Cy Young in 2010 with just Perhaps his greatest feat, a decade later, berth in the American League, but they 13 victories, fewest ever for a starter, so is this: Hernandez not only embraced the hype and didn't let it overwhelm him, like

so manyotherphenoms;heexceeded it. "The first few years were a little rough

still must navigate through 2 t/2 potentially treacherous months to get there.

"We're playing really good baseball," Hernandez said. "That's what I want. I

it can be overcome; for many traditional

observers, however,apitcher'srecord still carries weight. Cameron looks deeper,and settles on this stat as his favorite in the Hernandez

as hewent through an earl y careertran- want a playoff here in Seattle." He's even allowed himself to dream, in canon: An ERA adjusted for ballpark and sition," said Cameron, now managing editor of the baseball analytical website Fan- idle moments, of what it would be like to league — "ERA minus" is the official FanGraphs."Thelastfew yearshavebeeneven take the mound for a postseason start at a Graphs term — that is 24 percent better better than we could have imagined. He's a roaring Safeco Field. The Mariners haven't than average over his career, and 46 perHall of Fame pitcher; you can't expect more been in the playoffs since 2001. cent better than average this season. "That will be awesome. That will be thanthat from anyprospect." The former stat, he points out, puts HerAnd somewhere along the line, King great," he said. "I'll probably throw 97 nandez in the company of a Hall of Famer Felix became embedded in the fabric of Se- again because of the adrenaline." like Tom Glavine. And the latter? "It's peak Pedro Martinez or Sandy Koattle, a figure revered as much for his per,Hernandezreaching peak sonal attributes as his mound skills. While Amazingly ufax," he said. other Mariners superstars left town for

brighter pastures — Randy Johnson, Ken Griffey Jr., Alex Rodriguez, even IchiroHernandez has stayed, like the equally belovedEdgar Martinez. Sure, he was paid handsomely to do so, signing a five-year, $78 million deal in January 2010, and a seven-year, $175 million

Statistically, this might be Hernandez's

numlSerS

He leads his former am-

"If he shoots around even par or just over par, he is catchable," said Sergio Garcia, the Spanish veteran, who is tied with Dustin

Johnson for t h ird p lace at nine under par. "But I wouldn't expect a lot of bo-

geys out of Rory the way he's been playing." Also on Saturday:

R i ckie Fowler

Pace, Diaz share LPGA

by six shots heading into today's final round, and the remarkable part is that with five holes to play Saturday, he and Fowler were tied for the lead at 12 under par.

l ead: SYLVANIA, Ohio South A f r i ca's L e e-Anne

ateur rival

McIlroy, who started the

Pace, seeking a b r eakthrough win in the U.S., shot a 3-under 68 to grab a share of the lead with Laura Diaz in th e M a r athon Classic. Pace, an eight-time winner

round with a four-stroke advantage, took a long look at on the Ladies European the scoreboard on the 13th Tour, bounced back from bohole. Was the Open slipping geys at holes 11 and 12 to join away'? Hardly. Diaz at 11-under 202. All McIlroy did from there In Kansas, Meth is the was make a birdie on 14 and best: NEWTON, Kansasan eagle on 16. Then, after a Byron Methbeat Doug Ghim tap on the brakes at 17 with in the first playoff hole after a bogey, he nailed a 5-iron blowing a three-hole lead from 237 yards into the heart down the stretch to win the ofthe 18th green,then sank

an 11-foot putt for another eagle. It was indeed a Hollywood

U.S. Amateur Public Links

championship. Meth, a senior at Pacific, evened the match on the 36th hole of

ending, as one British radio regulation at S and Creek commentator put it, referring Station Golf course when to McIlroy's hometown in 18-year-old Ghim, who is Northern Ireland. heading to Texas, made dou"Obviously, the f i n ish ble bogey. speaks for itself; I was just Jo wins women'spubli c: sort of waiting for those two Fumie (Alice) Jo of China holes," McIlroy said of the beat Eun Jeong Seong of par-5 16th and par-5 18th.

South Korea 3 and 2 at the

But the real dream ending W omen's Public Li nk s a t can come only today, when The Home Course in DuMcIlroy, at 16-under-par af- pont, Washington. ter his 68, will try to win a

third major championship to go with the U.S. Open he won at Congressional Country Club in 2011 and the PGA

Championship he won at Ki-

DESCIIITES COIIITY

FIIIR „.DEO

awah Island in 2012. "I think w h enever you

have such a big lead, you really can't think about anyone but yourself," McIlroy said. "You have to think about

how you're going to control your emotions, how you're going to control whatever

Lloyd McClendon, the seventh Mariners

course, a wistful undertone to Hernan-

care for the arcane statistical evidence. He

All-Star Game S h utouts, Quality starts (at Games (of 289 Young app earances, tie d for secstarts) Mariners have least six innings, Award, 200 9 and ond-most in scored two runs or three earned runs 20i0 20« -« Mariners history. less while Felix was pitching. or fewer), most in team history

cy

question.

peak form at Europe's most important tournament.

best season, perhaps putting him en route manager to be eternally grateful to have to a second Cy Young award. There is, of Hernandez at his disposal, doesn't much

dez's Seattle reign, even beyond the lack doesn't need validation for what he knows of team success that has kept him largely viscerally from a lifetime in baseball: out of the national spotlight. That Hernandez, at age 28, has been Pitching behind an annually anemic worth every bit of the hype that still atextension in February 2013. That's when a offense, Hernandez has been denied an taches to him, giving Hernandez the mystearful Hernandez vowed, to cheering fans untold number of wins simply because terious aura of a baseball savant working and Marinersworkers who greeted him the Mariners have not scored enough in relative anonymity. "He's like a good wine: He just gets as he got off the elevator before his news runs to support his brilliant pitching. This conference, "I'm not going to disappoint year alone,Hernandez has pitched three better with age," McClendon said. "He's anybody." games of seven innings in which he's giv- special. He's in a different class. And not In bothinstances, Hernandez shunned en up one or zero runs and yet came away many in that class, either."

KingFelix dythe

thoughts you have, trying to stay completely in the present and focus on what you

Widgi Creek G OL F C L U B

18707 SW Century 0rr e n www,wid i.com (541) 382-4449


SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

NFL

Getting ready for the preseason Preseason campsget underway this weekfor NFLteams, including San Francisco anddefending Super Bowl champions Seattle. Here is how each team stacks upheading into the preseason.

Seatlle Seahawks

San Francisco49ers

Open camp: Friday, Renton, Washington. Last year:Seattle (16-3) won its first Super

Open camp: Thursday, Santa Clara, California. Lastyear:The 49ers made third a straight trip to the NFC title game but fell just short of return trip to SuperBowl when Colin Kaepernick threw amd interception in tje endzone in final minute of 23-17loss at Seattle. Important additions:WRsBrandon Lloyd andStevie Johnson; RB Carlos Hyde; DB Jimmie Ward; S Antoine Bethea;CB Chris Cook; QBBlaine Gabbert; OL Jonathan Martin. Important losses:S DonteWhitner; CBsTarell Brown and Carlos Rogers; OLJonathan Goodwin. Camp needs: The Niners face questions at linebacker, where All-Pro NaVorro Bowmancould miss half the seasonrecovering from a kneeinjury suffered in the NFC title game.The49ers also have to deal with disgruntled veterans TEVernon Davis and OL Alex Boone, whoboth skipped the entire offseason programas they seek newcontracts. Expectations:The49ers open their $1.2 billion stadium this season with hopes ofadding

Bowl title with 43-8 dismantling

of Denver. TheSeahawks had the best defense in theNFL, led by All-Pros Richard Sherman and EarlThomas. They got another standout season from RB MarshawnLynch, and Russell Wilson continued his progression toward being anelite quarterback. Important additioos:DTKevin Williams; QBTerrelle Pryor; WRs Kevin Norwood andPaul Richardson; DECassius Marsh; OT Justin Britt. Important losses:DEsChris Clemons andRedBryant; DT Clinton McDonald; CB Walter Thurmond; GPaul McQuistan; OT BrenoGiacomini; WRGolden Tate. Camp needs: Thereisnotmuch for champs to solve. Thedefensive line depth took ahit in free agency, butSeattlehasyoung

Photos by Colby Brown/ For The Bulletin

Hayden Herson-Hord, from Oregon City, riding Acclaim, jumps a rail during the Oregon High Desert Classics Grand Prix on Saturday night at J Bar J Boys Ranch in Bend.

Grand Prix

$ 100,000

Continued from D1 "So when I came out of the

yR=srg~

first round, I didn't really care if I won the class or not. I was

just really, really happy with the first round," he added.

In the field of 19, five more riders qualified for the jumpoff after completing a clean first round, but the 57-year-

old managed to out ride his competition, posting a time

of 41.819 seconds with no faults — 1.4 seconds ahead of second-place finisher John French, of San Jose, Hap Hansen, from Encinitas, California, jumps Acer over a rail California. during Saturday night's Grand Prix.

It

"For me, the jump-off is not

Sta t e s

talent that rarely saw the field last

season. SuperBowl MVPMalcolm Smith andBruce Irvin will fight for the starting OLBslot. RT and LG will be positions to watch on offensive line. Expectati ons:Expectationshaven't changed. Now,the narrative has gone from whether Seattle is a legit Super Bowl contender to can Seahawks be the first team in adecadeto repeat? They locked up ShermanandThomas with lucrative extensions. Wilson should continue to improve and the offense hasimpressive speed with Harvin healthy and the addition of Richardson. The only lingering concern is whether Lynch's desire for a reworked contract will become a distraction. Otherwise, the Seahawks are favored in theNFC.

The first week of the Or-

egon High Desert Classics

really a problem," Le Doze said. "To get to the jump-off, Grand Prix horse. Five years I'm much more nervous. I ago, Le Dorze traveled to might be a little bit tighter. Germany to purchase Cornet But once I get past the first Fever and has been training round, the jump-off is just a him for the Grand Prix level bonus so I'm much looser." ever since. Le Dorze won the event in 2000, but retired his former

U n i ted

Hunter Jumper Association (USHJA) International Hunter Derby in 2009, rode his way to second place aboard 10-year-old Holsteiner stallion Casco Junior, owned by Danielle Walker of Langley, British Columbia. "He jumps so high up in the air that we're probably a good half second behind everyone," French said of Casco Junior. "But I only just started riding him in Grand Prixs in June. My goals are to slowly bring him along, and this was a great place to bring him."

"My wife told me to travel

to Germany because I was

riding a bunch of young horses," Le Dorze said. "She said, 'Go and get yourself a good horse or you're going to get hurt.' So that's my retirement present."

concludes with the $10,000 USHJA International Hunter

Derby at 7:30 a.m. today and the $2,500 Mini Grand Prix around 3:30 p.m. The second week of the Classics begins Wednesday.

French, a w or l d - class h unter rider who won t h e

— Reporter: 541-383-0375, eoller@bendbulletin.com.

that sixth Super Bowl title that

has been soclose in the first three seasons undercoach Jim Harbaugh. Kaepernick hasan extension, andalso hasmore receiving options with the additions of Johnson andLloyd, a healthy Michael Crabtree, aswell Anquan Boldin andDavis when he reports. Theoffense might have to shoulder a bigger load with Bowmansidelined andstalwart DL Justin Smith starting to

show signs of aging at 34.Hovering over everything: Harbaugh's status as heseeks lucrative extension before entering final year of his deal in 2015. — The Associated Press

TOUR DE FRANCE

ri er,a n c ancea a s vi 0 OI' 0 IS

RRSLM

By lan Auslen New York Times News Service

RISOUL, France — For Ra-

fal Majka, persistence paid on Saturday. The day before, Majka, a Polish climbing specialist, found himself off the

SUMMER CLEARANCEEVENT

front of the final Alpine climb of a Tour de France stage with Leopold Konig, a Czech rider. But the two fell victim to a

show of force from the Tour leader, Vincenzo Nibali of It-

aly, who passed them for the win.

On Saturday, Majka, 26, was again off the front on the final climb, this time alone. And although Nibali put on a show again, he stopped short of overtaking Majka, who won the 14th stage 24 seconds

'-i((, ff-

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ahead of Nibali. It was the first win of this Tour for Majka's Tinkoff-Saxo

team, which includes Alberto Contador of Spain, who was

expected to challenge Nibali but quit the race after breaking his leg in a crash. Although some of the Alps' most formidable climbs awaited the riders well down Sat-

urday's 110-mile course, Joaquim Rodriguez of Katusha forced the pace not long after

Laurent Cipriani/The Associated Press

Poland's Rafal Majka celebrates winning the14th stage of the Tour

the race started in Grenoble. de France on Saturday. What resulted was a break that was eventually whittled

to 17 riders, including Nibali. The climbs along the way

Valverde, the Spanish rider from Movistar who is in sec-

Afterward, van Garderen

included the Col d'Izoard, the

highest point on this year's

ond place, than about catching Majka, who finished sixth

route, at about 7,740 feet. A Tour monument, it has pine

in this year's Giro d'Italia. "I don't know if I could have

said the effects of earlier crashes and bronchitis had curbed his performance. "I feel like I'm not too responsive now," he said. "I

forests that eventually give caught him," Nibali said after way to a desiccated landscape the stage. of rock and sand near the American Tejay van Garsummit known as the Broken deren of BMC, who briefly

seconds to Nibalk

don't have the same kick."

Van Garderen said that he hoped his usual form would

Desert. After several minutes, Maj-

lost the break on a n e arlie r descent, attacked w i t h

return w it h

ka madehissuccessfulbreak

Valverde in a bid to stay near Nibali. The effort was clearly

in the overall standings, he added, will come on the Tour's

ly for Nibali, he initially rode too much for Valverde. But standing on his pedals. Lat- van Garderen preserved his er he said it was more about fifth-place overall standing, gaining time over Alejandro although he lost a few more

penultimate day. "My trump card is definitely going to be my time trial," van Garderen said.

and Nibali attacked. Unusual-

M o nday's rest

day. His best hope to move up

-

541-3$9-1177


D6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

Criterium Continued from D1 "I think i t

s u r prised the

whole field, surprised everybody. Let me go see Serghei." Van Haute then ran over

to Tvetcovand gave him a bear hug as the sun set on the streets of downtown Bend and

fans lingered. Saturday's criterium was a short circuit around Wall Street, Idaho Avenue, Bond

Street and Oregon Avenue. T he pro men r aced for 75 minutes.

In the second-to-last corner on the final lap, 7vetcov found

himself alone in the lead after his teammate Fred Rodriguez helped lead him past a train of Optum riders. "I was surprised, too!" 7vet-

cov said of taking the lead. "OK, alright, nothing to lose now. I just go. That's it."

He said the long sprint from the corner of Bond and Oregon to the finish line on Wall and Franklin Avenue played

to his strength. "I wa s i n f i r s t p o sition coming into the third corner,

which is actually good for me, a pretty long sprint," 7vetcov said. He added that he did not even think he could win the

criterium until he crossed the finish line. Van Haute said he has never seen 7vetcov win a criteri-

Photos by Joe Knne /The Bulletin

um against some of the best Team Jelly Belly racers in the pro men's race make a turn on the Downtown Twilight Criterium course in Bend on Saturday night during the Cascade Cycling Classic. sprinters in North America.

"That's what the yellow jersey does for you, I guess," Van corner to outsprint the field Haute said. "To have Serghei and take the stage win. Joell win, that's just a testament to Numainville of Optum finour team right now. The first ished second, and Mia Loquai

that lined the orange barriers

along the race course. "They were just so appreciative of our efforts," she said. "They were cheering and we

Today'sstage

tacking, and we couldn't even Kiesanowski was led to the get it together it was so fast. front for the final sprint by her We just stayed safe and then teammate, overall race leader (Rodriguez) took him from Lauren Stephens. "When it came to the last eighth or ninth (position) ... and then Serghei wins." few laps, we were able to Tvetcov and his Jelly Belly ramp it up even more," Kiesa-

waved and it's just so motivat-

teammates will look to defend

co should be able to seal Stephen's overall title in today's

Start:Pro men, 1 p.m., five laps, 82 miles; pro women, 1:05 p.m. start, three laps, 49 miles. Breaking down the stage: New this year, both races will start off NW CollegeWayin west Bend, nearCentral Oregon Community College, and finish with a steep climb up NW Summit Drive, also near COCC.Thehilly, looping final stage of the CascadeCycling Classic passes byboth Shevlin Park and TumaloState Park and includes astiff climb up Archie Briggs Road —where moves may bemade— toward the end ofeachcircuit. Best piace to watch:The climb up Archie Briggs Road is THE place towatch some of the best U.S. cyclists earn their livings. The pro menwill ride it a gut-busting five times. The new finishing climb could make for a dramatic conclusion on the final stage.

20 minutes everybody was at-

of FCS took third.

ing to race in front of a crowd like this. It really drives me, that's for sure." Stephens maintained a 1:14

lead on Amber Neben of FCS in the overall standings. Tib-

nowksi said. "They did a text-

the yellow jersey in today's

book lead out. There was just 82-mile Awbrey Butte Circuit one teammate (Stephens) in Race. He will be going for his front of me to keep me going second straight overall win at through the last two corners the Cascade Classic. and that was enough to do the

49-mile Awbrey Butte Circuit

Race, but it's a tough stage. "We definitely know that it's not over until the last stage,"

In the pro women's 50-min- sprint from there. They made Kiesanowski said. "There can ute criterium, staged just be- it really easy for me." be some big time gaps, so we fore the pro men Saturday As she m ade he r c o ol- have tobe complacent." night, Joanne Kiesanowski of down lap, Kiesanowski was — Reporter: 541-383-0318, Tibco made a move on the last impressed with the crowd mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

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Spectators watch as

men's racers make e turn in

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the pro Downtown Twilight Criterium

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( except where noted)

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t's the end of a long day and exhausted, you tuck into bed and wait for sleep to come. But instead of sleep, the creepy, crawly sensation overcomes your legs. You stretch your calves, trying to overcome the urge to get up and move, but it doesn't work. And now here you are, wide awake, walking around trying to calm the restless feeling in your legs.

It is important to note that when serum ferritin levels are above 50 ng/

mL, iron supplementation does not appear to be effective in relieving your RLS.

a decreased production of th e neurotransmitter. Along w it h

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Folate is also involved in the production of dopamine and may play an important role in m anaging RLS symptoms. Researchers have found that pregnant women with low levels of folate are more likely to develop RLS compared to women who supplement with f o l ic acid during pregnancy. Low folate levels also appear to play a role in non-pregnancy RLS, but studies have used high amounts of folic acid to improve symptoms (5-30 mg daily). Typical doses of folic acid are measured in micrograms, so it is best to work with a healthcare practitioner when taking such high doses of the vitamin. RLS is often associated with magnesium deficiency and magnesium supplementation appears to lessen symptoms and improve quality of sleep in RLS patients. Magnesium plays an important role in promoting healthysleep and nerve and muscle health and most Americans have insufficient levels of this important mineral. Try 300-400 mg daily. In addition to smart supplementation, there are also lifestyle habits that help manage RLS symptoms: regular exercise (such as walking and biking), massage, cold or hot compresses, and cutting out cafFeine, alcohol, and smoking can all improve symptoms.

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Vitamin K2 and the Calcium Paradox By Kate Rheaume-Bleue, ND (Harper; reprmt edhtion, 2013)

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amino acid L-tyrosine is also necessary for the synthesis of dopamine. A clinical trial is currently underway to see how efFective tyrosine supplementation is for treating RLS, but in the mean time, you may consider adding the amino acid to your supplement routine. Try 1,0002,000 mg daily, divided into two doses and taken on an empty stomach. Taking tyrosine supplements with vitamins B6 and folate helps the body convert tyrosine into dopamine.

While the exact causes of primary RLS are still under investigation, it is believed that the disorder is largely related to an iron insuffiiciency in the brain. Researchers at Penn State College of Medicine and Johns Hopkins University performed autopsies on the brains of deceased RLS patients and found that the part of the brain thought to play a role in RLS (the substantia nigra) lacked a specific protein, called ferritin, needed for normal uptake and storage of iron. The lack of iron may cause a misfiring of neuronal signals, causing the physical sensations associated with RLS. One study found that 75 percent of subjects with RLS had reduced iron stores. Other research (substantiating anecdotal evidence) has found that iron supplementation can significantly decrease the symptoms of RLS. Try 50-65 mg of iron on an empty stomach up to three times a day, depending on the severity of deficiency. Take with at

Prenatal

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In addition to iron insufficiency in the brain, there is also strong evidence supporting the theory that RLS is related to dysregulation o f the n eurotransmitter dopamine, which i s i n v o lved i n n e r v e impulses that control movement. This is not surprising, as iron is an important building block of dopamine and insufficient iron can lead to

There are two types of RLS — primary and secondary. Primary RLS is thought to be genetic while secondary RLS is brought on by another medical condition, including, but not limited to pregnancy, hyper- and hypothyroidism, Parkinson's disease, fibromyalgia, and peripheral neuropathy (often caused by d i abetes). Certain medications may increase the symptoms of R LS, i ncluding certain antidepressants, antihistamines, and anti-nausea medications. Children and adults alike can suffer from RLS (the symptoms of RLS in children are often mistaken for growing pains or simple restlessness), and upwards of 10 percent of the population has a varying degree of RLS. As anyone with RLS knows, sleep quality, and thus overall quality of life, can be greatly diminished.

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symptoms. Have your ferritin levels tested to establish it as a cause for

Sound familiar? If so, then you likelyhave restless legs syndrome (RLS), a neurological disorder characterized by uncomfortable sensations in the legs accompanied with an overwhelming urge to move them to relieve the discomfort; symptoms typically worsen at night or during times of inactivity such as during long flights or car trips. For someone without the disorder, it's hard to imagine the sensations brought on by RLS, described by those who suffer as "creeping, crawling, itching, cramping, tingling, and burning." While researchers don't know the exact cause of RLS, new findings are pointing to nutritional deficiencies.

Country Life'

By Lindsay Wilson

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Organic Raw Sunflower Seeds Natural GrocersBulk Department

Millions of people take calcium andvitamin D supplements under the impression that they are strengthening their bones, bui the truth is that without the addition of viiamin K2, such a health regimen could prove dangerous. CAKIUM Without viiamin K2, the body cannot direct calcium to the bones where it is needed; ~ *; instead, calcium may collect in soft iissue, like the arteries, leading to a combination of osteoporosis and atherosderosis — the dreaded "calcium paradox." In Yitamin K2 and the Calcium Paradox,Dr. Kate Rheaume-Bisue illustrates the enormous health benefiis of vitamin K2, a fat-soluble viiamin that humans once thrived on. Anessertrial book for anyoneinterested in bone health, canliovascular health, or maintaining overall health, Yitamin K2 alld Ne Calcium Peradoxis the guide to iaking the right combination ofsupplementsI and adding viiamin K2to a daily legimen.

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Consumers want to believe that their dairy products come from cows that have grazed on verdant pastures, but the truth is that many dairy products, including some brands commonly sold in natural food stores, utilize milk from confinement dairies. These are dairies that place emphasis on mass production, where cows don't graze on pasture, but live their short lives confined to barns or dirt yards eating an unnatural diet consisting mostly of grains.

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'Ihis periodical is intended to present information we fed is valuable to our customers. Articles are in no way to be used as a prescription for any specific person or condition; consult a qualified health practitioner for advice.'Ihe artides appearing in Health Hotline' are either original artides written for our use by doctors and experts in the field of nutrition, or are reprinted by permiSSiOn frOm reputable SOurreS. Artidea may be eXCerpted due tO thiS neWSlener'S editOrial SpaCe limitatiOnS.If you WOuld like tO be added Oe Temasseti &OI the Health Hotline Mailing List or have a change of address, please call303-ct86MOO or online at natuealgtuscers.com/subscaibe. Pricing and availability may vary by store location. All prices and offers are subject to change. Not responsible for typographic or photographic errors.

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The incidence of asthma and other allergy-related diseases has skyrocketed over the past 20 to 30 years. A new study lays the blame on children eating more fast foods and fewer fruits and vegetables.

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Philippa Ellwood, MPH, of the University ofAuckland, New Zealand, and hercolleagues analyzed data from 319,000 teens from 51 countries and 181,000 younger children from 31 countries. The data were obtained &om questionnaires filled out by the teens and by the parents of younger children.

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Teens and children eating fast foods were also more likely to have eczema and rhinoconjunctivitis, the latter consisting of nasal congestion, runny nose, and red eyes. RafmnnCa: HHNOOd P, lnnaa Aahar M, GarCia-MarCOS RnCt al. DO faat fOOdS CauSeaSthma, ShiaOCOnjunCtiVitia and CCZCma7 G1Obal findinga finm the

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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6

© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

Business travelers fret over devices

Ecuador bets big on future dream city

LOCAL DEVELOPMENT

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By Joe Sharkey

By Jim Wyss

New York Times News Service

The Miami Herald

For business travelers flying into the United States from Europe, the

It's the year 2043 and this

UCURQUI, Ecuadorburgeoning city of 100,000 is a high-tech mecca. Using

Middle East and Africa, there was a lot of confusion

rare plants from the Ama-

last week over the announcement that laptops,

zon, university researchers have cured many diseases;

cellphones, smartphones,

factories churn out na-

tablets and other personal electronic devices would

no-sponges that soak up oil spills around the world; local software designers are the envy of Palo Alto. Ecuador is now the Silicon

not be allowed onto flights

in carry-on baggage at more than 15 international airports if they were found

to have dead batteries.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Construction workers build a new house Wednesday in the Stonegate subdivision near China Hat Road in southeast Bend.

Valley of the tropics, the

Singapore of the Andes. That's the vision authorities see in the swirling dust

The move was a re-

sponse to intelligence reports that al-Qaida's affiliate in Yemen is planning

kicked up by dozens of bulldozers and more than

to hide explosives inside

2,000 construction workers at a remote site almost two hours from the capital. It's called Yachay, the

battery-powered mobile devices.

Security officials declined to disclose which

City of Knowledge, and

airports were affected by

President Rafael Correa

the new measures and said the amount of screening would vary among airports.The new measures were adopted out of con-

refers to it as the country's moon shot — a $1.04 billion

cern that a phone could be hollowed out and filled

ultimately, a city. The project aims to at-

with explosives.

tract the world's brightest

initiative to build a research

university surrounded by labs, industrial parks and,

minds and most innovative

companies, propelling this small and impoverished South American nation into the 21st century as a

leader in engineering, clean energy, biotechnology and environmental sciences. Correa calls it "the most important project for the country in the last 100

Chi Birmingham/The New York Times

ByJoseph Ditzler • The Bulletin

By midweek, it became

apparent that the policy, to the extent that it is even

being widely enforced, had had minimal effect on airports. In fact, according to FlightView.com, the

on-time departure rate for flights into the United States last week from ma-

he city of Bend so far this year has

Some oftheproposedsubdivisions underway in Bend

University in Montreal,

reviewed developers' plans for at least a

Rock Ritige Park

half-dozen subdivisions that would add

the previous week, before

kinds, from individual lot-

the new policy took effect.

line changes to multi-unit housing projects, reached 677 in the fiscal year that ended June 30, said Colin Stephens, Bend city planning manager. Those numbers signal

must rule on subdivision

a climb back to levels

years. Recent applications

Interviews with passengers and industry officials found that there had been

little resistance among passengers — except for widespread complaints that the announcement, with scant information on what to expect and where,

not seen since fiscal year

createdmore confusion

2007-08, when the Community Development De-

than seemed necessary. Late last week, the

partment received 603 total applications.

Association of Corporate

"That tells me the econo-

bureaucratic review, from

a significant increase in the creation of new lots to put

permits later this summer

boarding." Most said the

new homes on."

Administration "did a

poor job" of keeping travelers informed about what to expect. SeeDevices/E5

of the building boom, the departmentreceived 830 applications. The current

crop of subdivision applications is in various stages of

in Indonesia, for example,

I

Suntiance

Neadows .-

was supposed to be a new administrative capital and a model for sustainable

growth. Although the project has burned through 75

ad

percent of its budget, it's

AspenReserve.

developmenton 20 acresat

happens to cellphones or laptops that are denied

In 2006-07, the height

Dompak, an "eco-city" C

Aspen Reserve, a 65-lot

provided about "what

Transportation Security

under the weight of their own ambition.

A

Eagle subdivision on the northeast side of Bend;

Stonegate, which would add

they were concerned that no information had been

Neff

include the 40-lot Glen

when we were doing 180, 190 applications," he said. "The (department) work volume has really increased across the board. But there's

those who responded said

by corruption and mismanagement or have collapsed

vaii Meatiows-

from 18 months to two

bership by email. Most of

ise, such as the $82 billion King Abdullah Economic City in Saudi Arabia, which includes much-needed ports and infrastructure. But many havebeen gutted

applications, called'Pype II applications, within 120 days, Stephens said. From first applications to breaking ground typically takes

my has rebounded significantly from where it was

Glen Eagle

pre-application meetings to final checklists. The city

Travel Executives questioned its worldwide mem-

of master-planned cities Some seem to hold prom-

jor airports in Britain, Germany, France, Israel, the Overall, the number of planning applications of all

is studying the new spate sprouting around the globe.

more than 400 new homes in the city.

United Arab Emirates and Kuwait was better than in

years," even as some worry that the country is plowing money into a mirage. Sarah Moser, a geography professor at McGill

Brosterhous and Alstrup roads; and phase three of

Ug

MILE

EL/

I C/3 LA

another 50 lots to a planned 187-unit development on

I

Stoaegate

China Hat Road. "We will begin pulling

~ne

KnntttRd. Sources: Ben Com unity Developmen Department, Monte Vista Homes

for phase three home building," wrote Dan Pahlisch, vice president for new business development at

in April 2013, and city

LLC, cited the "recent eco-

Pahlisch Homes, the builder

planners ruled it valid.

nomic downturn" for delay-

at Stonegate. Pahlisch Homes dusted

The Stonegate developer, Tualatin-based developer

off the Stonegate site plan

Stonegate Development

ing plans to build out the subdivision. See Subdivisions /E3

Greg Cross / The Bulletin

only one-third complete. The environmentally friendly city is now plagued by illegal bauxite mining. "I would argue, 'Why don't you spend the money on education and public transportation'?"' Moser saidofthe schemes. "Isee

these plans as sort of real estate development to make the rich richer, and they al-

ways have a veneer of 'ecocity' or 'smart-city' to make it more palatable. But I also

knowthat sometimes they canwork."

See Yachay/E5

en na ive's e ui a receives rave reviews By Valerie Smith

theprospect of makingtequila,

The Bulletin

they sealed the deal after one slp.

Tequilaused tobringback stomach-wrenching college memories for Bend native

Andy Rose, co-founder and president of tequila-maker Luna Malvada, based in Scottsdale, Arizona.

"Tequila seems tobe the one

drink that people blame their

"I am intrigued with the dif-

ferent flavors," said Cardenas.

"I brought the tequila to Andy, and he was not a tequila drinker. He had those tequila experi-

ences in college where you get sick, because it's just such bad

tequila. "He tasted it and was so surprised. I said, 'Dude, lets get

erraticbehavior on,"said Rose. "Do something crazy at a party, blame tequila." started onit."' But when Michael Cardenas, The accolades Luna Malvada's premium tequila has reco-founderofLunaMalvada, approachedRosein2008with ceived allowed the companyto

expand its distribution to bars and restaurantsin Or egon, oth-

lived in Scottsdale and invested

er states and a cruise line. It's

in Rose's plant product business. The connection ledthem

also led to a deal for a reality TVshowthat is scheduled to

to start the tequilabrand in 2011.

begin filming next month.

Many big-name tequilas,

Rose graduated from Moun-

such as Jose Cuervo or Patron,

tain View High School in 1983.

are verypopular because they are well-known, according to

He went on to attend Arizona State University, and started

working as abartender in Scottsdale. On a fluke, Rose invented a line of plant-care prod-

uctsand founded acompany in 1997, called The Direct Root.

Cardenas, who grew agave on landhe owns in Mexico,

The accolades Luna Malvada's premium tequila has received allowed the companyto expand tts distributionto bars and restaurants in Oregon, otherstates and a cruise line. and reposado tequilas at the 2011 San Francisco World Spir-

from the dry forests in south-

its Competition, and the plata

west Jalisco, Mexico. The agave is only harvested during

won't know how good it is," he

won first place at the 2011Ari-

the full moon, when the plant

said, referringto Luna Malvada's tequilas."I'dput ourtequila up against anybody's."

zona Tequila Expo. It was also named Readers Choice Best

is supposed to be at its healthiest and full of vitality, setting

Tequila on about.com in 2012.

Luna Malvada tequila apart,

Luna Malvada wonbronze

The blue weber agave plant used in Luna Malvada comes

according to Rose. SeeTequila/E2

Cardenas.

"Until you actually try it, you

and gold medals for its plata


E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

B USINESS MONDAY Bend Cultural Tourism Fund Commission Meeting: 3-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www.visitbend.com.

TUESDAY Professional Enrichment Series — Growing Bend's Entrepreneurs: Featuring Dino Vendetti with Seven Peaks Ventures; registration required; $25 Bend Chamber members, $30 community members; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541382-7437. RFP Analysis 8 Proposal Writing Skills/Understanding the RFP Process: Class offered by the Government Contract Assistance Program (GCAP) and Central

END A R

Oregon Community College Small Business Development Center; preregistration required; free; noon-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-736-1088 or www.

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.

Building 13, Bend; 541-322-1910 or www.sunlightsolar.com.

FRIDAY

Oregon Employer Services Portal — How will it work for you?: Learn about how this employer gcap.org. websitecan help businesses WEDNESDAY manage all aspects of their payroll obligations; RSVP required; Business After Hours: Network free; 8-9 a.m.; Central Oregon and celebrate the 25th Annual Community College, Hitchcock Oregon High Desert Classic; registration required; free; 5 p.m.; Auditorium, 2600 NW College J Bar J Boys Ranch, 62895 Hamby Way, Bend; 541-317-0100 or tanya©preciselypayroll.com. Road, Bend; 541-389-1409. QuickBooksSeminar: Designed Solar Drinks: Discuss emerging to train business owners on basic ideas and developments in functions needed for accurate renewable energy with a panelist accounting records; $97; 9 a.m.-1 of solar industry members and p.m.; Accurate Accounting and the Solar Oregon staff; doors Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway open 6:30 p.m., speaker begins 7 p.m.; RSVP required; 6:30-8 p.m.; 97, Suite A, Bend; 541-389-5284 Sunlight Solar, 50 SE Scott St., or admin©joyofquickbooks.com.

PhotoshopBeginning on Macs: Two-day class July 29 and Aug. 5; transform ordinary photographs into extraordinary pictures with Photoshop CS6; must have working knowledge of Macintosh; $79; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or cocc.edu/community-learning.

Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-3856908, Busch©teleport.com or www.pmiwv.org. QuickBooksSeminar:De signed to train business owners on basic functions needed for accurate accounting records; $97; 9 a.m.-1 p.m.; Accurate Accounting and Consulting, 61383 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite A, Bend; 541-389-5284 or admin© joyofquickbooks.com.

JHl1/31

Aug. 6

Making Project Management Indispensable for Business Results: Project Management Institute round-table discussion hosted by the Willamette Valley chapter; Project Management Professionals will earn

Business Start-Up Workshop: Two-hour session covers all the basic steps needed to open a business; preregistration required; $29; 6-8 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.

for attending; RSVP required; free; 7:15-8:30 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW

Aug. 11

July 29

professional development units

Facebook: Two-day class Aug. 11 and 13; learn how to effectively use Facebook to market and advertise your small to medium business; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7270 or cocc.edu/ community-learning. Basic Portrait Retouching with Photoshop: Two-day class on Aug. 11 and Aug. 18 covering techniques for retouching portraits with focus on complexion retouching, enhancing composition with cropping and lighting adjustments, color correction and

enhancement, and prepping and

Online Marketing with

exporting files for print; $129; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or cocc.edu/ community-learning.

Partition Plat1990-52, Parcel1, $460,000 • Cheryl Parker to BryanD.and Marico D. Oliveira,WestbrookVillage, Phase2, Lot1, $315,000 • GW LandAcquisitions LLCto Pacwest LLC, EaglesLanding, Phase2, Lots 4,5and 8, EaglesLanding, Lot7, $312,214.80 • Ronald L. andHelenK. Brooks, Danny R. PetersonJr. andSusanK. Peterson to Margaret A.Toltzman,Riverrim PUD, Phase 8,Lot 359, $455,000 •DavidSmytheto RyanandLaura Boehm,WoodRiver Village, Lot 8, Block 5, $155,000 • Bret and WhitneyDalesto Larry and Carole A.Milton, BrokenTop, Phase2-G, Lot 265, $220,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Kelly Jordan,ThomasandPamela Jameson,Skyliner Summitat Broken Top, Phase1,Lot 78,$398,000 • FC FundLLCto Pacwest 2 LLC,Eagles Landing, Lots 30-32,$212,500 • Bennett M. and Jennifer Brooks to Mark J. andKaren Hobbs, Copper Springs Estates,Phase2, Lot 45, $250,000 • OnewestBankNA,formerly known as Onewest BankFSB,to JayJ. and Kyong L LaTourette, DeschutesRiverWoods, Lot 81, BlockZZ, $280,000 • Pacwest 2 LLC,doing business as MonteVista HomesLLC,to RedPine Properties LLC,Northcrest, Lot36, $224,229 • Bell DevelopmentInc. to Shelvedine Griffith, YardleyEstates, Phase6, Lot 119, $390,000 •Arnett-Hamilton Properties LLCto L8A Properties LLC, Township15, Range13, Section 4, $911,981 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Lauri A.andAlbert R. Limon, Stonehedge on Rim,Phase2,Lot33,

$205,000 • 4-R EquipmentLLCto 7DProperties LLC, Township14, Range13,Section 33, $163,000 • Roger D.Cunningham,trustee of the MarieCunninghamTrust, to Kyle S. PierceandJennifer J. Germanos, Fieldstone, Lot 6,$165,900 • Brent Wesenbergand MaryA. Winters to John J.TrippleandCindy Hubbell, Awbrey Village,Phase2, Lot 93, $484,750 • Richard Clark andKevin Davis, personal representatives ofthe Estate of Carole B.Davis, to William A. Walker and Zane M. White, CrossroadsThird Addition, Lots137-138,$397000 •KyleJensentoJason RenziandAlison R. Groves,BrownsSecondAdditions, Lot5, Block5, $200,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Scott andRobin Buckles, Village atCold Spring, Phase4, Lot100, $207,403 • Elizabeth Simak,who acquired title as Elizabeth Moseley, toLauraPoueymirou, First Addition to Bend Park, Lots 22-23, Block113, $215,000 • Roger Agerto Jim and Dixie Fancher, Second Addition toWhispering Pines Estates, Lot 6,Block20, $1,140,000 •Jeffr eyL.Payne,doingbusiness as Panterra Homes,to Brian J.Buck, Pettigrew Highlands,Lot1, $252,385 • Fred C.andLinda D.Olson to Robert T.and DonnaK.Carter,Crooked River Ranch No. 4,Lot 6, $189,900 • Diane L Hodiak-Reulandand John R. Reuland toJulie A. Lowes,Ski House Condominium,Unit 5,$170,000 • Kristi K. Meltzer, trustee ofthe San Francisco Herb & Natural FoodCo. Inc. Retirement Plan,nowknown asthe San Francisco Herb & Natural FoodCo. Profit Sharing Plan,toHaydenHomes LLC, StonehedgeWest, Phase1,Lots16, 2629, $150,000

DEEDS Deschutes County • Donald L Ringenand EdnaLouringen, trustees of theRingenFamily1992 Trust, to William J.Alvarez,Croctaw Village, Lot15, Block 2,$205,000 • Lauraine K.Wilde to Joshua D.and AmandaL Bradley,GardensidePUD, Phase1, Lot 30,$199,900 • Kurt Schroeder, personal representative ofthe Estate of David M. Schroeder, toCheryl L. Blake,also known asCheryl BlakeTilman, and Andy Tillman,Township16, Range11, Section11, $200,000 •PacWest2 LLC toPENSCOTrust CompanyCustodianfor the benefit of Scott A. Bedbury IRA,Eagles Landing, Lot19, $241,387 •Adam S.andKathrynN.Bowlesto JohnD.SeasholtzandElaineJ.Knobbs, Mill Addition to Bend,Lots1-3, Block4, $631,000 • Stanley K. Suenaga,also erroneously appearing asStanley K.Suenage, and Kyle M.Suenaga,whoacquired title as Kyle M. Skidgel toTiffany L.Whitehurst and Cody N.Grimsley, PlateauEstates, Lot4, Block4, $330,000 • Richard andJanet H.Gearyto Stanley D. Nelsen,GlazeMeadow Homesite Section TenthAddition, Lot 301, $860,000 •John F.and Deborah J. Wilson, trustees of the Johnand DeborahWilson Family Trust, to Jason S. and Kristin J. Houck, Panoramic ViewEstates, Lot 4,Block 7, $214,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to Frank and StephanieVelarde,Stonegate PUD, Phase1, Lot 85,$425,000 • Lorie Caminoto John E. Balmer Jr., trustee of theJohnE.Balmer Jr. Living Trust, Justin Glen,Phase3, Lot43, $162,000 • Hayden Homes LLCto MichaelJavins, South Point, Lot 31,$200,016

• Ronald A. HendersonandChristina Knoxto Peter W. Shirk, AspenVilage at Mountain High,Lot18, $299,900 • Ralph T.Parkerto Charles T.Massey and Sarah L Phipps,NorthWest Crossing, Phase5, Lot173, $700,000 • Dana Madison, whoacquired title as DanaGreig, to DeborahA. Nielson, Higher Ground,Phase3, Lot1, $198,337 • Michael J. Balding to Albert R. Puchany,Providence,Phase3, Lot18, Block 5, $262,000 • Luke S. andKristin L Bryan, who acquired title asKristin L Downs, to John Fallini, Monticello Estates, Phase1, Lot1, $197,000 • Glenn J. andBrittany C. Beyerto Clairen J.Stone, ChoctawVilage, Lot3, Block 4, $199,900 • Matthew B.andJoann L. Engelto1132 Newport LLC,Kenwood, Lot4, Block7, $500,000 • Rachelle L. Gloverto Gerald L.andLyn M. Woodard,Glacier Ridge,Phase2, Lot 35, $210,000 • TLA Properties LLCto Wiliam N. and Tina M.Everett, MountainViewAddition, Lots 8-10, Block 7,$190,000 • Margaret Holman,nowknown as Margaret Killefer, toJames L.and Twila L. Merrill, Township17,Range13, Section 29,$392,000 • Micah C.Smith to Bonnie Pearce,Tri Peaks 2,Lot37,$189,500 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC to Brandon Smith, ParkwayVillage, Phases1-3, Lot 37, $226,050 • Bend AreaHabitat for Humanity to Rachelle Nickelson,Merrick Subdivision, Phase1-2, Lot13, $155,103 • Jenna Handke to David A. Bunzow, Clear SkyEstates, Lot15, Block 2, $159,000 •HanhH.NguyentoHanhH.,TiffanyT. and KhanhX. Nguyen, ForumMeadow, Lot12, $230,000

Tequila

received a95-point rating, out

Continued from E1 "It's part science,part myth, partlegend and partmystery," he said. "We figure, if they've beendoing it that way for centuries, and it producesone of

el, a beverage industry publication. It also producesreposado, which costs $49.95 a bottle and received a96-point rating. The company plans on releasing several anejo tequilas, agedin oak barrels, this year.

the world's best tequilas, why mess with tradition?"

The tequilais now served in

of 100, from The Tasting Pan-

The tequila market has sub-

about 12 restaurants and bars

stantially grown in the U.S.

in Central Oregon,including The Blacksmith Steakhouse,

From 2002to 2013, tequila imports increased 83percent, ac-

cording to the Distilled Spirits Paulina Lake Lodge. Council of theUnited States. Nekol Smith, owner of The Luna Malvada originally Blacksmith, was the first in started selling its tequila in Bend tosell Luna Malvada in Scottsdale, where Cardenas house — at $9 per shot. Rose and Rose are based, with its and a Luna Malvada represen- distillery located in Jalisco, tative went to the restaurant Mexico. The company graduand helped develop a vanilla allyexpanded toOregon, and and orange margarita. recently startedselling in Cali"It's fresh oranges, vanilla fornia, Nevada and Wyoming. and Luna Malvada reposado The tequila will also be availtequila. So good," said Smith. able on Princess Cruise lines "I went around after receiving startingin August. the five Hola! locations and

the tequila and sampled three

• Zachary E.Webbto Kevin E.and Holly C. Perry, SouthHeights Addition, Lot1, Block 5, $219,000 • Christopher M. Smith to Christopher and ReneeYouman,Shevlin Ridge, Phase1, Lot 14,$515,000 • David andLaurie Neil to Alison L. Gardner,WestsideMeadows, Lot41, $295,000 • Timothy C.andMeredith J. Copeto Michael R.McComband Katie M. Fuller, Shevli nCommons PUD,Phases4-5,Lot 63, $455,000 • Doug andLynneMyersto Tyler S. Vetter andAmandaT. Ruiz, Canyon Point Estates, Phase 4, Lot113, $234,500 • Steven Chan and DeanneAdams to Richard J. PrestonJr.and Shelley A. Chisum, Hillside Park,Phase5, Lot 21, Block 3, $700,000 • Franklin D. and Joyce E.Moore to James andTorrey McLaughlin, Hunters Highland atHigh Pointe, Phases4-5, Lot 102, $319,900 • Judy Corcoran to Doug and Deborah Hunt, Sterling Pointe, Phase1,Lot19, $285,000 •Lou-WayneSteigerto EugeneN.and Barbara B.Painter, RiversEdgeVilage, Phase 2,Lot16, Block1, $395,000 • Allison Dettrich to Clifford H. Hari, Centennial Glen,Lot25, $235,000 •DeschutesLanding LLCtoShaneM. and SamanthaC.Coleman, Deschutes Landing, Lot24,Common TractF, $447,100 • Richard A. Bueningto Robert R.Van Nice andBarbaraA.Wakeen, ParkPlace Estates, Lot19, $156,900 • David andJennifer Engelto John F. and Michelle N.Morris„Riverrim PUD, Phase 5,Lot385, $208,000 • Frank andShirley A. Sells, trustees of the Sells LivingTrust, to Sandy Summers, MountainViewAddition, Lot 3-4, Block15, $225,000

• Philip J. Swee to Justin M. Bendele, Hillman, Lots 9-12and 21-23, Block13, $227,500 • Joseph B.Atkins as bankruptcy trustee for Lynette Bryant, whoacquiredtitle as Lynnette A.Edwards, to JasonA. Mendell, RiverCanyonEstates, Lot114, $195,000 • Federal HomeLoanMortgage Corporation to Richard B.Hight Jr.and Vivien A. Hight,TetherowCrossing, Phase 3,Lot 5, Block11, $185,000 • Charles G.Holmto Nathaniel E.and Mary K. Ewen,Pinebrook, Phase1, Lot 5, Block 2,$312,000 • Jesse S.andJasmine J.D.Thomas to Michael J.H.and BrennaD. Balding, Hollow PineEstates, Phases3-4, Lot 69, $369,000 • Douglas P.Monson Jr. andHeather R. Monson toJohnA. andLeslie J. Carrot, Lake ParkEstates,Lot10, Block18, $240,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto NevaE.Caudle, Lawson Crossing, Lot 3,$181,490 • Malcolm C.Hil, trustee of the Malcolm and DonnaHill RevocableTrust, to Ronald E.Duffy,trustee of the Ronald E. Duffy Trust, North CourseEstates, Lot 12, $600,000 • Patti E. Masonto EdwardT.Rice, Sun MeadowNo.4, Lot108, $499,000 • KTE & CFE LLCto Kathleen Properties LLC,Huston/Ralston Office Condominium, Unit A,$360,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to Barbara A. Watson, BridgesatShadow Glen,Phase 1, Lot 89, $378,000 • Alan F.and Lori S.Petrich to Elizabeth Galleher andLoganS.Wiliams, HighlandAddition, Lot12, Block19, $481,500 • Columbia State Bank,whoacquired title as ColumbiaRiver Bank,successor by mergerto JuniperBankingCompany, to EdmondsonLandCompany LLC,

varez, producer and director for Coyote Point Productions.

hometown. "I'm working on moving

The show wi l l f o c us o n

back there and want to be sure

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

Luna Malvadaand the chal- I can have good tequila when lenges astartup brand faces I'm there," said Rose. "It is in the tequila industry. Rose

makes plata, which sells in Oregon for $46.95 abottle and

TheBu l l etm

important for me to have the

and Cardenas will be featured placethat has my heart, have in the show, as well as staffin my baby, too." Arizona and Mexico. Filming — Reporter: 541-383-0325 will begin next month, Rose vsmith@bendbulletin.com

TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980

sald.

Rose has family and friends living in Bend, and he visits every few weeks to take his

-

boat out on Paulina Lake. He's

also looking for a house in the area, which is why he focused on bringing his tequila to his

Com p l e m e n t s

H o m e I n t er i or s

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

•3

I

,j

l

mo.

"We don't want toexpand

different tequilas topeople sit- too quickly and outsell proting at our bar, seeing which duction and i n v entory, but one they would like the best. obviously want to share our Nine times out of 10 it was al- tequila with the world," said most always Luna Malvada." Currently, Luna M a lvada

••

Bundle everything

your business needs.

Rose.

Roseis currently in the process of developing a reality

PHONE, INTERNET 5 VIDEO

show with Matt and Carlos Al-

~b

e n d broadband tusineII

Courtesy Andy Rose

Bend native Andy Rose, president of Arizona tequila maker Luna Malvada, holds a brown trout caught in Paulina Lake about three

weeks ago.

• •

• e

e

• ~oo oo g •


SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

E3

o in aroun or oans roves ro i a e By Robb Mandelbaum

rate offered by Home State. (Only Wells Fargo made no offer.) Ultimately, Fitzsimmons

burgh that has four employees. Two years ago, Nagy began looking for a $30,000 line

his first Stuft Burger Bar in

and Helton turned to Bank of

Fort Collins, Colorado, in 2010,

Colorado, a community bank

of credit, or "that little extra cushion," as she put it. But with

New Yorh Times News Service

Jake Fitzsimmons opened

her "consistently profitable" business burdened by debt incurred by a former partner, the most she was offered was a credit card with a $13,000

after the worst recession in based in Fort Collins, for a decades. It turned out to be an five-year loan with a five-year excellent time to open a burg-

er joint — Coloradans were downsizing their dinners out

renewal. By many accounts, as the

— but a terrible time to apply

economy adds jobs, more small businesses are looking

for a loan.

to borrow money, and more

limit or a term loan. Then an

adviser suggested this year that she get in touch with First Niagara Bank, based in Buffalo, New York. "It was the simplest phone

"Why even bother?" Fitz-

banks are eager to lend it — at simmons remembers thinking. least to the right borrowers. Instead, he used his own "It's actually a really great savings and borrowed mon- time to access small-business ey from his father. In 2012, capital," said Keri Gohman, Fitzsimmons and his partner, executive vice president and Tiffany Helton, did it again, head of small-business bankopening a second restaurant ing for Capital One. "Rates are without bank help. Last fall, low and banks are also feeling however, they tried a different the economic recovery.We reapproach. ally want to lend. Small-busiFitzsimmons an d

call I've ever had," she said.

.I(

First National Bank and Wells

Fargo — at Pickett's office one day in early September. In back-to-back, hourlong meetings, they made their case for a $500,000 loan. A week later, Fitzsimmons also met with a

loan officer from the bank that held his business accounts,

Home State Bank. Because the banks knew that the pair were talking to other banks, Fitz-

simmons said, "Our hope with that was that they would give

us their best offer originally." Within a couple of weeks, three of the lenders had re-

turned preliminary proposals. Bank of Colorado and First National offered nearly identical terms for a loan that

split the risk with the Small Business Administration, including a 5.25 percent interest rate that was lower than the

Kevin Moloney Irhe New York Times

sought a loan In Greeley, Colorado. As the economyimproves, more small businesses are looking to borrow money, and more banks are eager to lend It.

es manage their Dun & Bradstreet credit report. Accord-

Continued from E1 The previous owner, Elk

growth in lots and lot sales

approval process for 34 single-family homes on 8.3 acres

"Last year saw the biggest

that we've seen in the last four H orn D e v elopment L L C , years," he said. "In fact, most foresaw completing the en- of the homes in NorthWest tire four-phase project in four Crossing in the last year have years when it first submitted probably sold before the home plansin2004. is completed." By 2008, however, many In northeast Bend, Glen developers in Bend stymied Eagle, first proposed in 2006, by the housing market crash covers 7 acres near another, in 2007-08stopped moving larger project, called Mirada, dirt and instead moved paper- now under construction but work, filing requests to keep first approved in 2008. their plans current as they For a site near the Old Mill passed city deadlines to build. District, a firm from Portland " Probably f r o m 20 0 8 Project, filed a preliminary to 2012, we didn't see any plan to build 27 row houses on land-division a pplications," property bounded by ColoraStephens said. "Developers do and Arizona avenues, Wall kept getting extensions to Street and Industrial Way. keep their approvals alive THA A r chitecture filed the through the recession." rough plan, called Mill QuarIn southeast Bend, Aspen ter, on July 10 along with a Reserve, formerly known as

request to meet with city staff

Sun Ranch, a project of Hoviss Development Group LLC, was also on pause. Hoviss, of Vancouver, Washington,

to discuss the project, the first step in the development process. Project managingpartner Tom Cody said Friday the firm has not closed on the property and is exploring the feasibility of developingthe site. MonteVista

H o m es , of

plan, filed July 3, outlines 65 C lackamas, and C het A n lots for single-family homes and 81 units of multi-family

housing on the former mobile home park, a total of 147 units. The original plan outlined 432 multi-family housing units. Pete Mann, Hoviss' director of construction and land

development, said H o viss retooled its plans to meet demand for single-family homes. "It's pretty self-evident right now that multifamily isn't as

popular as single-family in the Bend real estate market. A lot of market conditions are in play right now," he said. Also, he said, the reconfigured plan for Aspen Reserve generates less traffic than the

original plan. I n n orthwest B end, t h e West Bend Property Co., the

developer behind NorthWest Crossing, in the past year recorded 113 lots in three phases

of its subdivision project, said David Ford, company general manager. He said NorthWest Crossing, unlike many other developers, never stopped actively recording and selling lots during the recession. In 2013, sales picked up. Today Bend is a seller's market, Ford

November 2011, James Marzilli started Marzilli Machine Co. in Fall River, Massachusetts, with a bank loan that he said required collateral worth twice as much as the loan it-

self. Today, he said, the comreasons the bank is so strong pany is "slightly profitable" owners' personal cash flows and has such a strong capital on revenue that will approach ing to Stibel, that is "because have improved, said Arora, base," said Lori Annand, Fitz- $750,000 this year, about twice they are oftentimes going to and the value of their homes, simmons's banker at Bank of what it was last year. But when he went back to the wrong bank. The reality which are often used for collat- Colorado. is that there are many lending eral, has stabilized if not risen. But recent surveys of bank his bank for a line of credit, institutions for any successful "The banks look at the overall lending officers by the Federal "the bank said, 'We'd love to hit Arora, Biz2Credit's chief small business." global cash flow, which in- Reserve have shownthat some give youthe money, but we executive. And, observers say, more cludes the business and per- banks have been easing credit don't know if we can, because Perhaps surprisingly, banks s mall businesses have r e - sonal side," Arora said. "And terms for smaller businesses you just don't have enough colseem more eager to lend than gained their financial footing both sides are improving, so since at least mid-2012. Some lateral,'" Marzilli said. "They small businesses are to bor- afteryears of hardship. "On as a result banks are seeing an banks, Stibel said, are "not want to take almost no risk row. "Demand is up 20 to 25 the back end of t hi s cycle, overall improvement in credit putting such a heavy reliance whatsoever." And, he added, percent from the trough of businesses are as healthy as quality." on a borrower's performance "I've had a checking account the downturn, but that's still we've ever seen them," said Some banks says they over the last t h ree years," withthese people for 15 years." very subdued compared to Ballew. "Balance sheets are have notloosened their cred- which most likely suffered Instead, Marzilli expects to get his line of credit from a local before the downturn," said in great shape, cash flows are it standards with the recov- during the slow recovery. Paul Ballew, chief data and in great shape and their abili- ery. "We're using the same And some banks are more economic developmentagenanalytics officer for Dun & ty to pay their bills is in great underwriting guidelines we willing to lend on lower cred- cy, Jobs for Fall River, Inc. Back in Colorado, perhaps Bradstreet. "From the peak to itscores, said James Chessen, chief economist at the Amer- the best part of th e agreethe trough, there was about a 50percent decline in that time. "It's actually a really great time to access small- ican Bankers Association, a ment Fitzsimmons managed We're a little beyond halfway trade group. "The economy is to negotiate was that the bank back, but we still have a long business capital. Rates are low and banks are getting better, and as the econ- agreed to give up its rights way to go." omy gets better, the risks that to his house once construcalso feeling the economic recovery. We really One reason loan demand want to lend. Small-business owners can shop banks won't get repaid goes tion on th e r estaurant was complete. might be tempered is that down," he said. "Everybody was asking me many small businesses as- around and work with banks to find the best One businesswoman who sume they will not qualify for rates." got a second look from a to pledge my home as securibank is Charlene Nagy, who ty," he said. "And I held the line a loan, said Jeff Stibel, chief — Keri Gohman, executive vice president and headof owns Confluent Translations, on that, and eventually they let executive of Dun & Bradstreet small-business bankIng for Capital One a translation service in Pitts- go of it." Credibility, a n i n d ependent company that helps business- shape."

t onsen of Pacwest II L L C , of Bend, in June started the

2007. Hoviss' tentative site

pany's financial situation has changed little. Still, even growing companies can be turned away. In

Jake Fitzsimmons and Tiffany Helton own a small chaIn of buIld-your-own burger bars and recently

sald.

prove changes to the original plan, which the city OK'd in

were no mounds of paperwork." Nagy received the line

/p

Subdivisions

in June asked the city to ap-

loan officers, she said, "there of credit even though her com-

H e l ton ness owners can shop around

w ere preparing to open athird and work with banks to find location in Greeley, Colora- the best rates." do, about 30 miles from Fort But industry observers cauCollins. Given Stuft's success tion that both demand for, and and the improving economy, access to, capital remain well their adviser, Richard Pickett, below where they might be executive director of the East in a strong economy. For exColorado Small Business De- ample, large banks approved velopment Center, offered an 20 percent of small-business alternative to going to each loan requests in June, up from bank "hat in hand," as Fitzsim- 9 percent three years ago, mons put it, to request a loan. according to data from Biz"Why don'tyou have them 2Credit, an online small-busibid on it'?" Pickett suggested. ness loan broker. But before So the pair hosted three the recession, the rate was banks — Bank of Colorado, around 36 percent, said Ro-

Unlike past encounters with

Plansfiledin Bend for suddivisions in the pastyearinclude:

were then, which is one of the

In addition, the business

in northeast Bend. The sub-

division, called Rock Ridge Park, would lie between Ror-

5

D

ick and Stonewood drives and Bobwhite Court. MonteVista

bought the property from the developers of adjacent Quail Crossing and drew up its own development plans, said MonteVista m a rketing

d i r ector

Luke Pickerill. "All of the developers have confidence i n t h e m a r k et

again," Pickerill said. "We all ... think it's going to be real good until the end of 2016."

MonteVista Homes also developed Sundance Meadows, a 43-lot subdivision of

single-family homes going up off 27th Street and Bear Creek

Road. Pickerill said builders barely keep up with eager buyers.

DURINS THE 2014 COBA TOUR OF HOME$™ ENTER TO WIN A

"Demand over the last 16

months means it's hard to build on spec," he said. "As soon as you get the walls up, they're selling." — Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com

Court • Seeking preliminary plan approval • Developer: PacwestII LLC, Bend Aspen Reserve • 65 single-family homesand Stonegate, phasethrae • 50 single-family homes on 81 multi-family units on 20 acres about 7acres • Bounded by Alstrup andBros- • Northeast corner of ChinaHat terhous roadsandthe Central and Parrellroads Oregon Irrigation District canal • Approved in 2013for building • Seeking city approval of • Developer: Stonegate Develchanges to the2007 master opment LLC,Tualatin plan SundanceMeailows • Developer: Hoviss Develop• 43 homes on 9.3acres ment Group LLC,Vancouver, • 27th St. and BearCreekRoad Washington • Underconstruction Glen Eagle • 40 single-family homes on 7 • Developer: MonteVista acres Homes, Clackamas • Bounded by Keyte, Eagleand Vail Meadows Daniel roads • 31 single-family homes on • Seeking tentative subdivision 3.61 acres plan approval • Bounded byVail Lane,Sixth & • Developer: C4 Inc., Lynnwood, Eighth streets, and anunnamed Washington lane south of Vail Rock RIIIIe Park • Seeking approval to turn 31 • 34 single-family homes on lots into 48 lots 8.27 acres • Bounded by Rorick & Stone- • Developer: Palmer Orchard wood drives andBobwhite LLC, Beaverton

OUTDOOR PATIO SET THERE ARE TWO WAYS To ENTER5 WIN:

lkl

1. STOP BY PATIO WORLD At 222 SEReed Market Road, Suite 200, Bend. Now through July 27 2.VISIT THE MONTE VISTA HOMES, TOUR OF HOMES HOUSE ¹43 at 63347 Kalamata Loop, Bend. During the Tour Of Homes™ July 18-20, 25-27

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• I



SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Yachay Continued from E1 H ector Rodriguez i s t h e

general manger of Yachay, but his job description is

Devices

In architectural renderings, Yachay looks gleaming and inevitable. But some question the wisdom of pumping more than a billion dollars into such an isolated area.

Continued from E1 Security officials said the TSAhad made an effort

to avoid confusion by sending a draft of the new policy to foreign governments, none of which objected,

somewhere between mayor

and foreman of the 10,550- search centersthat are close acre construction site. Sitting to large urban areas and a

being plowed into Yachay, but

didn't view the new instituw h i t e b u t ton-down critical mass of i n n ovative tion as a threat. "We see it as an important shirt and sunglasses on the companies," the study found. in hi s

steps of a refurbished sug-

Yachay has none of those

ar plantation that serves as

attributes.

and to the affected airlines. Another concern is the

project and part of the govprospect of having elecernment's plans to strengthtronic devices confiscatan administration building, Rodriguez argues t h at en public universities," he ed, said Greeley Koch, the Rodriguez says Yachay is al- Yachay needs virgin land to said. "Yachay is highly symgroup's executive director. "Everybody is virtual toready showing signs of life. fulfill its mission. The city bolic — it's a landmark that More than 17 0 s t udents will have redundant Internet the government has created day, and your office is basihave been recruited from connections, electricity and that all schools of higher educally your smartphone and across the country and are water supplies — all prereq- cation need to aspire to." your laptop," Koch said, "and you're thinking that taking intensive math and uisites for high-tech compaThere are also more munEnglish courses on campus nies — that would be difficult, dane issues. The only food you have to potentially part as they prepare for formal if not impossible, to replicate available on campus comes with that at a n a i r port? studies next year. in a city. from two fastfood restauYou have to make a deciAlthough Yachay is a 30While the trend started in rants. Getting to the nearest sion: Am I going to get on a year project, Rodriguez says oil-rich nations in the M id- grocery takes almost an hour flight without my office, or the country will start seeing dle East and Asia, less likely round-trip. Vivek Wadhwa, a am I going to stay behind results by 2017. By then the places such as Senegal, Mo- professor and researcher at and potentially jeopardize campus will be finished and rocco and Ecuador are get- Stanford and Duke and an insome sort of deal that I'm teeming with 2,000 students, ting into the game. fluential lecturer on entrepreworking on? That's why and there will be 200 compaThese are countries "that neurship, calls such centrally we thought when we heard nies on site, thriving off the really don't have the money planned science parks and about this policy that it was academic research, he said. but think this is a r equire- cities "snake oiL" going to cause all sorts of There will also be day-care ment for development," she He said there have been confusion." centers, elementary schools said. "This is the beginning of hundreds of such efforts but In general, business travand other signs of a city in a massive phenomenon." none have succeeded. But elers keep their electronic the making. S ince taking office i n theseideas don't die because devices charged, even if a "We'll see a social fabric 2007, Correa, a c h arismat- they're lucrative. lack of charging stations at "Consultants will make a that speaks to the idea that ic socialist, has embraced airports is a chronic comYachay is irreversible," he ambitious plans and grand lot of money, politicians will plaint, especially when a said. "That this is Ecuador's gestures. He's defaulted on make a lot of money and real traveler is on a long layover. principal motor for c reat- the country's foreign debt, estate developers will make a At the airports most ing an economy based on calling it illegitimate; offered lot of money, but it's the taxaffected by t h e p o licy knowledge." WikiLeaks f o under J u lian payers who will be left hold— Heathrow i n B r i tain, In architectural render- Assange safe haven in Lon- ing the bag," he said. Frankfurt in Germany, for ings, Yachay looks gleam- don when many nations were Instead of building utopiexample — airlines like ing and inevitable. But some treating him like a pariah; an cities, governments need British Airways, Virgin Atq uestion the w i sdom o f and embarked on one of the to focus on educating their lantic and Lufthansa have pumping more than a billion most innovative — but ulti- people and creating a busitheir own security-checkdollars into such an isolated mately failed — cash-for-con- ness-friendly e n vironment point areas for most longarea. servation programs. where entrepreneurship can haul flights, so employees P lanners say th e s ite i s But he has also made ed- thrive, he said. of those airlines would typ"I have almost no doubt strategically located in north- ucation a p r iority. The adically take custody of any ern Ecuador — almost equi- ministration says it has put that this is going to be a faildevice barred, as British distant from the capital, the 4.3 times more money into ure," Wadhwa said of Yachay. Airways says it is doing. Colombian border and the education than previous gov- "It will be many years before But in general, it is unclear nearest port. But to the lay- ernments and plans to spend people realize it's a failure, what the chain of custody is man, the site seems to be in almost $10 billion to build 900 but by that point (Correa) will for any confiscated device. the middle of nowhere. It's schools and overhaul 4,600. be long gone." Still, there are concerns almost two hours from Quito The government has also Correa has c h allenged and a half-hour from a town shut down for-profit "garage" naysayers and insists that of any size. universities, increased teach- Yachay will flip the equation And that could be a prob- ing standards and introduced in which developed nations lem. A 2012 study by the In- scholarships that have about value Ecuador only for its ter-American Development 8,000 Ecuadoreans studying resources. "We're building a new Plan Well, Retiie WellBank found that there were abroad. almost 150 technology and Nelson Rodriguez Agu- nation here," Correa said science parks in Latin Amer- irre is the acting dean of Ec- during the first day of class ica hoping to jump-start in- uador's Central University, in March. "Ecuador is going novation and attract invest- which has one of the nation's into the future as a sovereign ment, but almost all of them largest engineering depart- country that is basing its dewere failing. ments. He said that his and velopment on the only unlim"The rare exceptions are other n ational u n i versities ited resource — human talent onnetWay,Suite • en 541.728-0 321~www.elevaIioncapiIalslrategies.com those associated with r e- would welcome the money and knowledge."

about privacy of personal or can rebook a flight or hand proprietary files on devices the device to airline agents at that may fall into government the checkpoint to have it either "collected on your return" or or other hands. In the United States last shipped to a specified address. year,afederalcourtdismissed A British Airways spokesa lawsuit by the American Civ- woman said the airline would il Liberties Union challenging pay the shipping costs. the Homeland Security DeConfusion aside, the new partment's asserted right to policy might make travel execexamine the content of a trav- utives more wary about carryeler's electronic devices at bor- ing sensitive data on their deder checkpoints, and to hold vices. Of the travel managers on to devices or copy data on who responded to the email, them. most said they were rethinkA bit more confusion oc- ing policies about travelers c urred late last week w i th carrying proprietary informasome news reports saying that tion on those devices. the dead-battery policy was Some of t h i s c o n fusion being expanded to include could have been avoided. In randomly selected domestic an online survey of more than travelers in the United States.

COMPANY

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Time Warner Whiting Petroleum skyworks solution HCA Holdings Inc Blackstone Group Discovery CommA Intel Corp CamecoCorp Electronic Arts Cdn PacRailway g Microsoft Corp Perrigo Coplc Hunt, JB Transport Kinder Morgan Inc IntercontinentalExch

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85.84

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77.42

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0.0 Raptor Pharmaceut -1 z1 Mobilelron Inc 9.5 Infinity Pharmaceut 34.8 Accelerate Diagnost 13.7 Bind Therapeutics -z3 E20pen Inc 9.9 Rubicon Project

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Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times -21.4 Sydney All Ordinaries 0.0 Taipei Taiex -46.1 Shanghai Composite 136.8 0.0

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What's the appeal of the student lending business? It's an attractive demographic for Discover, a business not a lot of people are in. We're competing with a smaller set of very bIg competitors: Sallie Mae, Wells Fargo and Discover would be the

+0.64% +0.92% T

-6.60%

4

+ 60.67 %

404.40 -OA4 3129.24 +3.94 1075.59 -1.31 8511.43 -36.65 20737.12 +133.83 51695.05 -94.69 1387.37 +11.01

-0 11'/ 0 13% -0.1 2% -0.43% +0.65%

L + 3.6 3% 4 +10. 6 0% i + 12. 08%

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+Q 65'/ +7.03% +6.29% +3.76% i16.56%

-0.18% +0.80%

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-0.07%

+0.40%

+0.11% +0.17% -0.08% V +0.17%

+4.52% +3.10% +9 17% -2.69%

ASIA

4.19

Student debt, which has soared in recent years and now tops $1 trillion in the U.S., is also a new and growing profit driver for Discover Financial Services. The credit card company jump-started its student lending business when it bought Student Loan Corp. from CitIgroup in 2010. Discover focuses on private loans, a tiny chunk of the market that student-loan experts say borrowers should take out only after maxing out on government-backed loans.

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Who he Is: President of Discover Student Loans

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TICKER

"I think

who receive an SSSS security nitely some communications code on their boarding passes failure," said Emily Fisher, a and arepulled aside for extra Cheapflights spokeswoman. screening, might have their deKoch agreed. "Statements from the TSA vices subject to extra scrutiny by the TSA. should reassure and inform British Airways has an alter- travelers," he said. Last week's native approach. Those whose announcement, h e ad d e d, devicesmight be barred at se- "lacked the detail required for curity, British Airways says, reassurance."

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That policy, security officials elers by C heapflights.com, say, affects the small number nearly half said the policy was of fliers who are on the "se- unclear.

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top three in the space.

PLUS and Grad PLUS loans, and no origination fees. I'm not saying that private is right Student debt levels are soaring. Should students even be taking out for everyone, but people that have private loans? reasonably good credit, they really The first situation, if you're borrowing, say should put the options side by side. you're a freshman and you're borrowIng Not just the private competitors, but unsubsidized Stafford loans, your max is the federal program, and really look at goingto be $5,500.So based on allyour all the benefits. other forms of aid, If that doesn't cover It, you've got to come up with it somewhere What do you encourage borrowers else. Obviously that's one of the places to do? where private loans have traditionally If you can afford to make a payment played in the market. while in school, do so. In the last several years, specifically Successfully completing and being able the last two or three, the student to repay your loans, we see that driven lending industry on the private side has by students' success in the classroom. If introduced fixed-rate products. Last year you drop out, it's a pretty tough. We see all of our graduate products had prices dramatic differences In loan performance, that were better than the federal Parent if you're a dropout versus a graduate.

Should parents make kids take on debt, even If they don't have to? There's definitely an argument. You start establishing a credit history. I can see that view. It depends on your personal situation. I personally would probably say If you don't need to borrow, don't borrow. What's your advice on refinancing private loans? We launched a pilot program in April in refinance consolidation. There are several players that are now starting to offer some products in that space. We see a lot of people who want to convert from fixed-rate loans to variable.

Interviewed by Tali Arbel. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP

Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, July18, 2014

+

+156.37

NASDaa ~ +16.66 4,432.15

S&P 500

+

1,978.22

+10.65

RUSSELL2000 ~ I,ISI.BI

WILSHIRE 5000 ~ 20,912.56 ~


E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

UNDAY D

R

re o o

e e r a s miea eDoes mycar havean interferenceengine?

By G. Chambers Williams III Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Another fuel-sipping alternative is available to motorists

By Brad Bergholdt

weary of yo-yo pump prices: the gasoline-electric hybrid version of Honda's popular Civic compact sedan. It's affordable, too, as far as hybrid cars go: 2014 prices begin at $24,635 (plus $790 freight) for the base model. But it can go as high as $27,335 with leather seats and a navigation system, the model we

McClatchy-Tribune News

t ested for

A • topic because many engines can incur signif-

60,000 and 120,000 miles to

the pistons and rods to the

tation exists that the belt has been replacedon schedule,it's

play it safe. Belt replacement is not cheap,ranging from $500 icant i nternal d amage to $1,000, as the water pump, should a timing belt break. belt tensioner and other nearAutomotive and light truck by parts are often replaced at engines use either a chain, the same time. This is prudent, belt or, in rare cases, gears as anything that's driven by to synchronize the cam- or contributes to belt tension shaft(s) and crankshaft. could cause a failure that could A camshaft operates an break or derail the belt. Timengine's valves, and the ing-belt replacement should be crankshaft transfers the a consideration when purchasup and down motion of ing a used car. If no documen-

this

The car has better fuel economy for 2014,

too, Honda says. EPA ratings are now 44 mpg city/47 highway/45 combined, up from the Courtesy Civic i McClatchy-Tribune News Service 2013 model's 44/44/44. The 2014 Honda Civic Hybrid is a gasoline-electric hybrid version of the Civic. It's a classy looking car, inside and out — quite an im-

provement over the Civic that U n ited States

in the early 1970s as a basic econo-box. If you were around

2014 Honda Civic Hydrid Base price: $24,635 Astested: $27,335 Type:Gasoline-electric hybrid compact sedan Engine:1.5-liter four-cylinder gasoline engineand 23 horsepower electric motor Mileage:44 mpg city, 47 mpg highway

back then, you'llremember that Consumer Reports rat-

ed the early Civic as "unacceptable," based on its flimsy brakes. Today's Civic is just about as roomy as the larger Accord and in fact is as big as the Accord was a few years ago. terior looked as if it belonged in a premium car, but I suppose with a price approaching $30,000, the Civic Hybrid is pushing the boundaries between economy and luxury. Honda's hybrid system is called Integrated Motor As-

pickup for everyday driving. The electric motor helps make the hybrid feel as zippy as the regular Civic. New for 2014 in the hybrid are a 7-inch touch-screen audio display and an expanded-view driver's outside mir-

also works through the audio/ nav display screen.

ror. With the new audio dis-

headroom and 36.2 inches

does not have to be plugged into an external outlet to be

which is a

continuously variable auto-

sist, or IMA. The system in the 2014 Civic is the fifth-generation IMA and includes a

matic transmission (CVT),

engine and 23 horsepower electric motor. Total output is

Under the hood of the regular Civic sedan gasoline model is a 140-horsepower, 1.8-1iter four-cylinder engine, also conboth powertrains and found the hybrid to have plenty of

up and hard acceleration. It

s

' •

belts.

best to assume it hasn't been and to plan accordingly. In the case of a noninterfer-

enceor"free-wheeling" engine, the worst thing that should happen, if the belt fails, is that

the engine will simply stop running. This certainly has other consequences,from a safety

and convenience standpoint. Unfortunately, there is no

Many engines are designed so the valves can

way I'm aware of to determine

curtains with rollover sensors

collide with the top of the

or noninterference type via

for both rows, dual-stage front

piston should the belt or information attached to the vechain fail and the cam(s) hicle. The majority of modern and crankshaft lose syn- engines are interference type.

bags and front seat-mount-

ed side bags with Smartvent technology. Side-impact door

chronization. This is known as an interference engine,

b e ams

the right of the car, using cam- and Honda's Advanced Comera on the passenger-side out- patibility Engineering (ACE) side mirror. body structure f urther enHonda introduced the cur- hance passenger safety, along rent generation of the Civic for with anti-lock disc brakes 2012 but made more changes with brake assist and eleca year later, giving the sedan tronic brake-force distribubolder styling, a more-upscale tion, front-and-rear crumple interior and some extra stan- zones, daytime running lights dard amenities. and automatic pretensioning A rearview camera system front seat belts.

A lithium-ion battery pack nected to a CVT. I've driven the Civic with powers the e lectric m otor,

which kicks in during start-

transmission and ultimately to the wheels. Belt-drive systems have been popular on overhead-cam engines because they're inexpensive, quiet and lightweight. Chain-drive systems are making a comeback on many newer engines because they're sturdier and last longer than timing

p a ssenger-side tiple air bags, including side

activated. It shows the whole area to

which works better than a traditional transmission with the 1.5-liter four-cylinder gasoline electric motor integration. 110 horsepower and 127 foot-

s p ace

navigation features. LATCH system for child seats Standard i s L a n eWatch, in the rear, along with mul-

recharged; that occurs when b lind-spot c a m er a wh o s e the car is coasting or when the image shows up on the dash gasoline engine is running. audio/navigation screen The hybrid comes with a when the right turn signal is

pounds of torque.

There's a dequate

for two adults in the rear seat, three in a pinch (literally), which is typical in this class. The rear outboard passengers have 37.1 inches of

play, users can pinch, swipe of legroom. The middle seat and tap just like the screen is usable for a child or medion a tablet or smartphone to um-size adult but has slightly access audio, phone book, me- less legroom. dia, vehicle information and T he C ivi c i n c ludes t h e

Our test vehicle's leather in-

valves need to extend into the

• This is an important

REVIEW report.

came to th e

to find out how Q •• II want can identify if a car's

area swept by the piston, and engine is interference or that's where interference may noninterference from a lay- occur. man's point of view; that is, Timingbelts arehighlydurasome signs or writings on ble,and failures are rare.Most the vehicle. automakers recommend belt - Eric Knox renewal somewhere between

s

smaller-than-typical combustion chamber. This means the

'

and it is a compromise of performance vs. belt failure likelihood and consequences. Engine performance is all about breathing and a high compression ratio. Superior breathing requires large and/or multiple valves t hat open deep into t he

if an engine is an interference

Here's a link to the somewhat

dated Gates Rubber Co. timing belt application chart, which also indicates if an engine is of interference (star symbol) or free-wheeling design (no symbol): http://cdn603.ilcdn. net/files/20110223193902/gatesdocs/TimingBeltReplacement-

Guide.pdf If a vehicle/engine is not list-

combustion chamber, and ed in the chart, it likely has a high compression means a chain-drive system.

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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

JOHN COSTA

The legacy of OSU's Paul Risser ore than a decade ago, we had just come from a disappointing meeting with one universit y presidentandwere on our

M

S

S

way to Corvallis to meet then-Ore-

gon State University President Paul Risser, who died 10 days ago. We included Patti Moss, then the

head of the Bank of the Cascades, Barbara Schenck, the chairwoman of Central Oregon Regional Advisory Board, and Sally Collins, at the time the forest supervisor of the Deschutes National Forest.

We were the delegation from CORAB, which had been established by the state to consider

expansion of higher education in Central Oregon. Given today's expanded presence and continuing momentum of OSU

e •

in the community, it would be hard for any newcomer to understand the

• e •

challenge that CORAB faced. Calling it a steep, upward slope doesn't do justice to the term. At

times, it seemed like an unscalable cliff. But there had been a

breakthrough. Gov. Kitzhaber had declared that he would not then support the

construction of an independent university in Central Oregon, but when CORAB members asked him

if he would support a branch of one of the state's public universities, he

saidyes. We were off and running. The immediate question we had

to answer was which university, the most likelybeing either the University of Oregon or OSU, would rally to the cause. Our first stop was in Eugene,

COMMENTARY

where we were told UO did not want

to get behind something that could draw down the available funds for existing institutions.

Deflated, we headed for Corvallis, where we were ushered into a conference room off the president's

office. The reception we got from Risser and his staff was startling.

Barely after sitting down, as I recall, Risser said he supported us absolutely and would get behind a branch and an independent university in the future, if that's what Central

Oregon sought. As Schenck remembers, Risser "didn't give us a chance to say more than hello before he pre-empted our presentation." She recalls Risser saying, "'I see the need you see, and even though we've been involved for years, I know we haven't yet addressed it well enough. I'll do everything I can to help.'" "He not only offered help," she

Heather Bresch, chief executive of Mylan, the giant maker of generic drugs, in Southpornte, Pennsryvania, announced July14 plans to renounce her company's U.S. citizenship and becomeincorporated in

said, "he told us that he would sup-

the Netherlands, where tax rates are lower.

port and be part of any solution that fit our region's needs, whether that meant an OSU branch, a collaborative university solution, or an insti-

Jeff Swensen /The New York Times file photo

• Wave of companieflseeing U.S.for tax-friendly climates elsewhere

tution that started under the aegis of OSU and COCC and then flew free."

She added, "He stood by his word. He was a champion of OSU, but an even greater champion of education.

"We were lucky to know him." On that we can all agree. There was alotmore work todo.

We needed buy-in from the Oregon University System, which had other institutions and their constituencies

to worry about. And we needed money from the

Legislature. Other leaders would rise to the occasion. Joe Cox, then chancellor of the OUS, was instrumental, as was one legislator in particular — the late Ben Westlund.

By Andrew Ross Sorkine The New York Times

eather Bresch grew up around politics. Her father is Sen. Joe Manchin, the Democratic senator from West Virginia and a former governor. She has heard him say repeatedly, "We live in the greatest country on Earth," as he did in countless political advertisements. And it appeared to rub off on her: Bresch was named a "Patriot of the Year" in 2011 by Esquire magazine for helping to push through the FDA Safety Innovation Act. Bresch is chief executive of Mylan, the giant maker of generic drugs. Until now, Bresch ran anunabashedly proud American company based in a Pittsburgh-area suburb, one

Netherlands, where the tax rates are lower. She did so by agreeing to acquire Abbott Laboratories' European generic drug business. The deal is the latest example of a so-called

Kitzhaber hadn't blessed a branch

of a handful of success stories that kept the

inversion — in this case, it's actually called

or if Risser hadn't broken the ice of OUS support, a major university

once-thriving steel city relevant. But Monday, Bresch announced plans to renounce her company's U.S. citizenship and instead become a company incorporated in the

But, looking back on it, if

presence in our midst would still be a

pipe dream today. Now, because of Risser, an inspired, noble and visionary leader, it's a reality. He's gone, but his legacy, which is vast, includes every one of the

students who have walked across a graduation stage and secured a degree from OSU-Cascades. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com

a "spinversion" — and may be the most surprising of such deals given Bresch's family background. SeeAbroad/F6


F2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

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SOVeam Se

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et's see if we can help the Bureau of Land Manage-

g0gI6I6ES

Pg05lT5

ment solve the fence mystery of Steens Mountain. The question is: Who is supposed to build the fencing to keep cattle out of the cattle-free zones? There are two suspects: the BLM and ranchers. The BLM says it's the ranchers. The ranchers say it's the BLM. If we look at the language of the law itself, fencing is spelled out in two places. 1. "The Secretary (of the Interior) shall also construct fencing and develop water systems as necessary to allow reasonable and efficient livestock use of the (replacement) forage resources." 2. "The secretary shall be responsible for installing and maintaining any fencing required for resource protection within the designated no livestock grazing area." OK, those are not the easiest passages of law for ordinary mortals to decipher. And the BLM concluded that they meant that the BLM had to build fences in only two cases — on land involved in land swaps and for "resource protection." But we do have another critical

piece of evidence. We have U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River. He says the BLM should build the fencing for cattle in all cases. And he should know because he wrote the legislation that created the wildernesslike area on Steens Mountainmore than a decade ago. The BLM didn't take his word for it.

So Tuesday, Congress stepped in. The H ouse Appropriations Committee included explanatory language with the appropriations bill that includes BLM funding to spell it out: "The Committee is concerned that BLM has attempted to place the responsibility for fencing upon private landowners within the cattle-free area identified by the Act, despite the Act's clear mandate that fencing is BLM's responsibility. The BLM is directed to comply with the Act." Mystery solved? Let's hope the BLM finally gets it.

Spare Oregoniansmore health care whiplash

A

ll of the health care changes have been enough to give Oregonians whiplash. And in Oregon there's another

The legislation is not finalized. But the draft language suggests Oregon may adoptrules for network adequacy that already exist, change coming. such as those for Medicare. This one could be very good for That's a good approach. Oreconsumers — as long as it's done gon is still reeling from trying to right.But of course, Cover Ore- invent its own health care website. gon could have been very good Let's keep things simple for netfor consumers, if it had been done work adequacy. If insurers, proright. viders or consumers believe they The new problem targeted by need more flexibility than t he the Oregon Insurance Division national standard Oregon adopts, then there can be discussion about is this:Consumers can have a hard time figuring out just how Oregon coming up with its own good a healthinsurance network standards in addition to a national is when they are selecting health standard. insurance. The state should also be careful How are consumers supposed about overly strict requirements. to tell if there are enough provid- Smaller health care networks can ers in a network to serve patient hold down costsfor consumers. es needs? Even if a health insurer Large group insurance polici has a list available of all the doc- sometimes consciously choose tors in its network, it's often un- smaller provider networks for that clear if those doctors are accept- reason. Oregon's rules should be ing new patients. careful not to interfere, more than The Oregon Insurance Divi- is absolutely necessary. sion — in consultation with proMore transparency for conviders and insurers — is tackling sumers in picking a health plan this issue of network adequacy should be a good thing. The state's and trying to come up with leg- goal should be to achieve that with islation to propose for the 2015 zero whiplash for consumers, prosession. viders and insurers.

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Congress's pledge problem By Danny Westneat The Seattle Times

hould doctors who are behind

S

on their taxes be tapped to repair the nation's highway

system?

If you answered "what'?" or "that sounds like a nonsensical question," well, you are clearly not ready for a career in Congress. You may have heard the nation's Highway Trust Fund for repairing roads and bridges is about to go broke. That's because the tax used to pay for it — the federal gas tax — has been fixed at a flat rate of 18 cents per gallon for 20 years, going back to when gas cost only a buck a gallon. So Congress has been racing pellmell this month to fix this crisis,

which has been simmering for two decades. And what they've come up

with is a Rube Goldberg contraption even by their usual convoluted standards.

One idea is to fund the roads by seizing Medicare payments due to doctors who are behind on paying their taxes. Another lets companies

underfund their pensions in return for a temporary bump in taxes. Another just steals the money from a

up the roads. Another congressman est groups that promote them. said they were creating "a pothole in They lock politicians into posithe pension system to fill a pothole tions better than the most lavish in the highways." campaign contribution ever could. But then most everyone voted for The positions tend to ratchet in only these ideas anyway! one direction (no new taxes means Any sane person at this point you can never undo a tax cut, for might wonder: Why not just raise example). And because the pledges the gas tax a few pennies'? It's a tax bar politicians from responding to that hasn't budged in 20 years, even changing conditions, they can lead for inflation. It's paid by road users. to outcomes that make little sense And because gas is now four bucks and that the broader public may not a gallon, drivers would scarcely support. "In a world where voters disapnotice. The reason they don't is: They prove of pledge-breaking, interest can't. They signed pledges. So many groups can use pledges to lock-in R epublicans have committed t o policies that the majority would not "no new taxes" that this most obvi- freely choose," the paper concludes. So it's no surprise right now there ous solution is the only one that's a is a"Repeal Obamacare" pledge; a nonstarter. In this case it's not just the "No Climate Tax Pledge"; a no-inRepublicans. P r esident B a r ack crease-in-spending-ever pledge; and Obama didn't sign a pledge, but he a no-increase-even-in-legal-immidid state unequivocally through gration pledge. Last cycle, the left two national campaigns that he got into the act, too, with a pledge to would not raise taxes on the middle oppose any cuts or benefit changes class ever ("not any of your taxes," in Social Security. he clarified). So he's against the gas But the granddaddy of them all is the "no new taxes" pledge. tax, too. All this congressional adhering to People wonder why Congress pledges and promises has, ironical- just lurches from crisis to crisis of ly, made it dysfunctional. late. Or how in the world they end Recently two political science up with such strained schemes, like professors, from Stanford Universi- raiding pensions and targeting dety and the University of California, linquent doctors to pay for roads. Berkeley, studied the pledge pheThey pledged away their brains.

fund for cleaning up leaking underground storage tanks. Washington state Rep. Rick Larsen blasted all this as using "duct nomenon and concluded they are tape and some scrap metal" to prop political gold — for the special-inter-

— Danny Westneatis a staff columnist for the Seattle Times.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

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

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

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Bend, OR97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Many things to ear i China's economy crashes By William Pesek Bloomberg News

TOKYO-

ew moments in modern finan-

F

cial history were scarier than the week of Sept. 15, 2008, when first Lehman Brothers and t h en American International Group col-

er, and would hit resource-dependent

"We welcome China's peaceful rise. In many ways, tt would bea bigger national security problem for us tf China started falling apart at the seams."

Australia, batter trade-driven econ-

Radio. "We welcome China's peaceful rise," he said. "In many ways, it would be a bigger national security problem for us if China started fall-

omies Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan and whack prices of everything from oil and steel to gold ing apart at the seams." and corn. China's ascent obviously preoccu— President Barack Obama "China's importance for the world pies the White House as it thwarts economy and the rapid growth of its U.S. foreign-policy objectives, taunts

lapsed. Who could forget the cratering stock markets, panicky bailout in a July 14 Oxford Economics report. negotiations, rampant foreclosures, Lehman and AIG, remember, were depressingjob losses and decimated just two financial firms out of dozretirement accounts — not to men- ens. Opaque dealings and off-baltion the discouraging recovery since ance-sheet investment vehicles made then'? it virtually impossible even for the Yet a Chinese crash might make managers of those companies to un2008 look like a garden party. As the derstand their vulnerabilities — and risks of one increase, it's worth ex- those of the broader financial system. ploring how it might look. After all, The term "shadow banking system" China is now the world's biggest trad- soon became shorthand for potening nation, the second-biggest econo- tial instability and contagion risk in my and holder of some $4 trillion of world markets. Well, China is that foreign-currency reserves. If China and more. does experience a true credit crisis, it China surpassed Japan in 2011 would be felt around the world.

in gross domestic product, and it's

contagion risk," Adam Slater wrote

in the last decade. But the real explo-

"The example of how the global gaining on the United States. Some financial crisis began in one poor- World Bank researchers even think ly understood financial market and China is already on the verge of bespread dramatically from there il- coming No. 1 (I'm skeptical). China's lustrates the capacity for misjudging world-trade weighting has doubled

financial system, mean that there are

widespread concerns that a financial Since 2008, Chinese stock valuations crisis in China would also turn into surged from $1.8 trillion to $3.8 tril- a global crisis," says London-based lion and bank-balance sheets and the Slater. "A bad asset problem on this money supply jumped accordingly. scale would dwarf that seen in the China's broad measure of money has major emerging financial crises seen surged by an incredible $12.5 trillion in Russia and Argentina in 1998 and since 2008 to roughly match the U.S.'s 2001, and also be more severe than monetary stock. the Japanese bad loan problem of the This enormous money buildup 1990s." fed untold amounts of private-sector Such risks belie President Xi Jindebt along with public-sector insti- ping's insistence that China's finantutions. Its scale, speed and opacity cialreform process is a domestic afare fueling genuine concerns about fair, subject neither to input nor scrusion has been in the financial sector.

Japan and other nations with territo-

rial claims in the Pacific and casts aspersions on America's moral leader-

ship. But China's frailty has to be on the minds of U.S. policy makers, too The potential for things careen-

ing out of control in China are real. What worries bears such as Patrick Chovanec of Silvercrest Asset Man-

agement in New York is China's unaltered obsession with building the equivalent of new "Manhattans" al-

most overnight even as the nation's financial system shows signs of buckling. As policymakers in Beijing a bad-loanmeltdown in an economy tiny by the rest of the world. That's generate even more credit to keep that's 2/2 times bigger than Germa- not the case. Just like the Chinese bubbles from bursting, the shadow ny's. If that happens, at a minimum pollution that darkens Asian skies banking system continues to grow. it would torch China's property mar- and contributes to climate change, The longer China delays its reckonkets and could take down systemi- China's financial vulnerability is a ing, the worst it might be for Chinacally important parts of Hong Kong's global problem. President Barack and perhaps the rest of us. bankingsystem. The reverberations Obama made that clear enough in a — William Pesekis a Bloomberg View probably wouldn't stop there, howev- May interview with National Public columnist based in Tokyo.


SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

e ur uen summero T

he summer of 2014 will go down in history as the season when America fell apart. Let's

take a tour of the disasters.

Germany in 2008 enthusiastically hosted candidate Barack Obama for his so-called Victory Column speech. Now, Germans suddenly sound as if they are near-enemies of the U.S. Chancellor Angela Merkel reportedly was furious that her cellphone was tapped by American intelligence

VICTORDAVIS HANSON like by 2016 after Obama announced a pullout of all U.S. troops. They remember Saigon of 1975 all too well.

Crimea has become a Russian satellite. The fate of the Ukraine hangs in the balance. In between his con-

FRIEDMAN

— an artiTicialboomthateveryonebelieves will soon bust.

a video never had anything to do with the killing of four American The borrowing of $7 trillion has officials in Benghazi and know that proved no stimulus. A natural Amer- the Obama administration knew ican recovery was stymied by vast precisely that when it assured them federal borrowing, by the addition of otherwise. more incomprehensible regulations, No one has heard anything lately and byan Obamacare package that from Private Bowe Bergdahl, who proved to be the opposite of almost was traded for five of the most daneverything that was promised. Infla- gerous jihadists the U.S. had in its tion is said to be manageable, but only custody. The less we know about why by not counting soaring food, gas and Bergdahl went AWOL, the adminiselectricity costs that do the most to tration thinks, the better. erode familybudgets. The scandalsnow come so fast U.S. immigration law simply no and furiously that we no sooner hear longer exists. Incoming foreign na- of one than yet another new mess tionals more likely welcome arrest makes us forget it. than fear it. Tens of thousands of newWhat keeps the country afloat this

quests, Russia's Putin openly ridiofficial out of Germany, further en- cules the impotence of the U.S. He is raged that the U.S. had recruited at often called to the Middle East on the least one German official to provide perception thathe can addressprobintelligence on the German govern- lems that America runs away from. ment. Polls show that Germans find From his sanctuary perch in Vladimir Putin's Russian tyranny al- Russia, National Security Agency ly arrived immigrants expect that the most as popular as Barack Obama's turncoat Edward Snowden is once cynical coalition of commercial interAmerica. again releasing top-secret data that ests, ethnic activists and political opJapan is becoming similarly frus- shreds the credibility of the Obama eratives have subverted existing fedtrated with the U.S. It is rearming administration. eral law. America is now wide-open. like crazy to confront an aggressive Foreign leaders don't trust the U.S. Almostanyone can crossthe border China. Both Asianpowers apparently They are baffled as to whether Amer- and receivesubsidized sanctuary. If assume that Obama won't guarantee ica is guilty of incompetence in hiring you object, you are a nativist, racist or the security ofthe Japanese as Amersuch a roguish dropout snoop in the xenophobe — take your pick. ica had in thepast. first place, or guilty of cynically spyNo one denies that top IRS officials The Middle East is dissolving. ing on America's best friends — or lost or destroyed key documents conTaking U.S. peacekeepers out of Iraq both. cerning the agency's election-time proved a disaster. The radical jihadThe economy shrank last quarter. efforts to subvert conservative orists of ISIL are overrunning Syriaand Record numbers of adult Americans ganizations. The unbiased IRS that Iraq, as they extend their destruction are still not working. Zero interest we once knew has vanished. It has even to the mute stones of religious rates have destroyed the tradition of become an appendage of the ruling sanctuaries. passbook savings and the very idea government that punishes enemies War looms between Israel and the of thrift. and rewards friends — and dodges a Palestinians as they exchange rock¹i n terest financial policies ignit- high-level audit by lying in the same ets and bombs. Older Americans had ed a stampede to the stockmarket that fashion as the taxcheats it goes after. an idea of what Afghanistan will look has furt her enriched the 1percenters Americans accept the fact that agents. She just kicked the top CIA

THOMAS

terrible summer?

Some American companies produce moregas and oilthan ever despite, not because of, the Obama administration. Most Americans stiII

get up every day, work hard and pay more taxes than they receive in subsidies. American soldiers remain the most formidable in the world despite

the confusion of their superiors. The law, regardiess of the administration, is still followed by most. And most do

not duck out ontheir daily responsibilities to golf, playpool or go on junkets. It is still a hard thing to derail

America in a summer — but then again, we have a long way to go until fall. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution and Stanford University.

Order versUs dlSOI del

t

've argued for a while now that

it is always useful to study the Israeli-Arab conflict because it is to the wider war of civilizations what off-Broadway is to Broadway. A lot

of stuff starts there and then goes to Broadway.

So what's playing off-Broadway these days? The Israeli-Arab conflict has become a miniature of the most relevant divide in the world today: the

divide between the "world of order" and the "world of disorder." Israel faces nonstate actors in civil-

ian dothes, armed with homemade rocketsand drones,nested among civilians on four of its five borders: Sinai,

Gaza, Lebanon and Syria. And what is most striking about this play is that the traditional means ofbringingorder seem ineffective. Israel, a minisuperpower, keeps pummelingthe ragtagIslamist militias in Gazawith its modern

air force, but the superempowered Palestinian militants, leveraging cheap high-tech tools, keep coming back with homemade rockets and even a homemade drone. You used to need

The best way to stop Somali pirates'? By Anja Shortland and Federico Varese

arrangement for ships. The 15 attacks and suspicious approaches in 2013 show that once the navies leave and ships ditch their armed guards, the young men will be back for another chance of transforming their life. The more promising law and order ap-

Special To The Washington Post

magine you are a Somali pirate captain. You have hijacked a cargo ship after four weeks out at sea, 800 nautical miles from home. It will take maybe three, perhaps six, possibly 18 months to extract a $4 million ransom from the owner. You cannot stay indefinitely on the high seas, whichbristle with foreign navies, and on the coast there are rival gangs and anchoragetopirates:The more trade militias that may tryto take your ship. opportunities, the stronger the anBut you need the land for communi- ti-piracy stance — ranging from local cations, food, water and khat, the pre- anti-piracy demonstrations to puniferred drug of your crew.... Where do tive raids on pirates farther up the you find safe anchorage? coast. Instead, the pirate anchorages Imagine you are the imam or el- are all located in arid regions well off der of a village on the Somali coast. the main sea trade routes. They have The pirates offer you money for safe no connection to inland markets for anchorage. But do you want pirates their products, limiting their economswaggering around your t own, ic options to subsistence fishing and armed to their teeth and high on herding. drugs? They will put off trading boats And even then, not everyone in

t

proaches await a stable political settlement for Somalia and state structures

sance planesoverhead? What ifthey shoot? Anyway, most of the ransom

money will be needed for bribes further up the political chain.

Our thought experiment shows that piracy is not an attractive revenue source. Most local elites refuse

So who makes the choice to protect pirates'? Our analysis of the geography of piracy shows that no port city offered

essary. But the prospects for that are limited. No power these days wants to lay hands on the world of disorder because all you win is a bill. And even if they did, it would notbe sufficient. In my view, the only way Israel can

by simple economic self-interest. We

flict enough pain on all of Gaza to get a cease-fire, but it never lasts. The only

would advocate a developmental solunot greatly care who is in charge of tion based on infrastructure investtheanchorage:Whoever is in power ment tying remote coastal communi-

partneringwithmoderate Palestinians in the West Bank to build a thriving

will take their dollars — it is the only

state there, so Gaza Palestinians wake

economic desperation, the pirates do

ties into the wider Indian Ocean and

shots, you would expect the greatest

daughter marries a pirate, your nephew is killed in a skirmish or your son is tried for piracy in Kenya? How will your friends cope with reconnais-

more in stemming the spread of the world of disorder. That is certainlynec-

decision to host pirates is born out of

of organized crime in their territory.

of customers. Their money will undermine your authority. What if your

China, Japan, India and the European Union — were able to collaborate

contested between local clans and Islamist militias. However, because the

to protect pirates — just as mafias do not necessarily protect every kind

up prices and depriveyourfishermen

What to do? For starters, it would

be great if the big powers of the world of order — the United States, Russia,

that genuinely project power in the regions, and this maytake a longtime. We focus on where the pirates find protection and find that it is governed

option. Vesseltracks ofhijacked ships regional economy. The former presshow that pirates do not even bother ident of Puntland repeatedly asked to move their ships as battles rage on for a road to his hometown of Eyl. His land. supporters would have been more What is the policy implication of than compensated for giving up piracy this research'? International interven- revenue. We don't need a"contract out these regions accepted the pirate dol- tions have not solved the underlying of piracy" — with the right incentives, lar. We find that the intensity of piissues making hijack-for-ransom pi- self-interest will solve the problem. racy is strongly linked to local elites racy in Somalia possible. Sea-based A road will not solve all aspects of needing money for territorial defense deterrence is working — but we still maritime crime. Unlike piracy, most against other dans or Islamist mi- spend in the region of $3 billion ayear maritime crimes (smuggling, traflitias, or for regional election cam- on a problem that generated an annu- ficking, illegal fishing) are compatpaigns. We find that once political al revenue stream of just $50 million ible with legitimate trade. However, objectives were achieved, the pirates for Somalia in 2008-12 — almost all of infrastructure investment in remote were sent packing. The 2008 "pirate it on the high seas. With the reduced areas will help build a secure and capital" of Eyl deared its pirate an- level of attacks since 2012,the ques- stable state. Poor and cut-off areas in chorage in 2009 — shortly after the tion arises whether private-sector vig- Somalia have been fertile recruitment local clan's candidate moved into the ilance willbe relaxed andwhether the grounds and havens for all types of presidential villa in Puntland's capi- current level of naval commitment is insurgents. We see the road as comtal, Garowe. sustainable in the long run. What can plementary to state-building and the From the point of view of the pi- we do to change the operating envi- law and order agenda, not as a subratecaptain above, our results seem ronment of pirates in Somalia? stitute. But it is a good place to start perverse. If the pirates called the Most land-based approaches have land-based counter-piracy.

from Yemen and India. This will drive

a contract with Boeing to get a drone. Nowyou can make one in Gaza.

focused on "hearts and minds" and

demand for anchorage in politically "idle hands." But this strategy ignores stable places. Instead, we often see the fact that the hijack-for-ransom supply in disputed territories, such as business is not limited by labor supthe area around Harardhere, hotly ply, but by the long-term protection

— Anfa Shortland is a reader in political economy atKing'sCollegeLondon. Federico Vareseisa professorof criminology and senior research fellow at the Nuffield College at University of Oxford.

curtail the Hamas rocket threat is if the Palestinians of Gaza demand that the rockets stop. Sure, Israel can insustainable way to do it is by Israel

up every day and say to the nihilistic Hamas: "We want what our West Bank cousins have."

That is how the U.S. military defeated the earlier version of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL,

when the jihadists largely took over Iraq's Anbar province in 2006-07. The United States partnered with the Sun-

ni Muslim tribal leaders who didn't want puritanical Islam. But we did not just arm them. We

brokered an agreement of shared guns, shared power and shared values — about the future of Iraq — between

those Sunni tribesmen and Iraq's ruling Shiite president, Nouri al-Maliki. That is what ended the jihadist disorder there in 2007. And then what did al-Maliki do as

soon as we left Iraq'? He stopped paying the Sunni tribal militias and tried to arrest moderate Sunni politicians.

Rather than building on the foundation we laid of power-sharing, al-Maliki uprooted it. That is why ISIL found

it so easy to move in. Iraqi Sunnis weren't going to fight for al-Maliki's government. No trust, no power-shar-

When is the right time for the U.S. to use force'? of 9/11 for many who lived through jure force altogether. it was that passivity in the face of Some might argue that the United as the Iraq war the greatest threats was dangerous. This thinking States should return to a more tradistrategic error in recent de- surely informed the George W. Bush tional approach to the use of force, cades, as some pundits have administration's actions on Iraq, and perhaps presuming that the past desuggested recently? The simple an- it informed the support given those cade was abnormal. In fact, however, swer is no. That honor belongs to the actions by 77 members of the Senate, for more than a century the United failure to take action against al-Qaida induding a majority of Democrats, States has employed force as a tool of and Osama bin Laden before the at- when they authorized the use of force foreign policy rather frequently. tacks that killed nearly 3,000 Amer- in October2002. Then-Sen.JosephR. Depending on how one chooses to icans on U.S. soil on Sept. 11, 2001. Biden Jr. expressed the common view count, the United States has underAnd if one wants to go back a few de- at the time that Saddam Hussein, if taken roughly26 armed intervencades further, itwas the failure to stop left "unfettered," posed an "inevita- tions since 1898 across the Western Hitler in Europe and to deter war with ble threat" and the only question was Hemisphere, Asia, Europe and the Japan, failures that dwarf both Iraq whether "we address it now or do we greater Middle East: from Cuba and and Vietnam in terms of their tragic wait a year or two or three." the Philippines in the 1890s to the consequences and the cost in lives It is possible to argue, as historians Persian Gulf, Haiti and the Balkans and treasure. and analysts have, that in both cases a century later to Iraq and AfghanTherein lies the conundrum. One the pendulum swung too far, that ex- istan in the 2000s. If one includes kind of error can come from doing cessive complacency led to excessive the dispatch of smaller numbers of too much, from using force too quick- paranoia and activism. This is among troops, as well as naval and air oply, extravagantly or, as is usually the the central critiques that George Ken- erations such as President Ronald case, ineptly. The other can come nan and others have leveled against Reagan'sbombingof Moammar Gadfrom doing too little, from not us- the United States over the years, a ten- hafi, President Bill Clinton's four-day ing sufficient force quickly enough dency to swing wildly from one end air campaign a~ Ira q i n 1998 to remove or deter a threat before it of the spectrumto the other. or President Obama's action in Libstrikes or from hoping that there is The question now is whether the ya, the number is at least six times an alternative to force until it is too pendulum has swung too far in the higher. This does not indude covert late to act effectively. Nor should it be other direction, whether the response operations of the kind that President surprising that the first kind of error to what many perceive as the profli- Dwight Eisenhower ordered against often leads to the second. The lesson gate use of force is going to be to ab- Jacobo Arbenz inGuatemala and

ing — no order. Jewish settlers in Israel have done all they could to build more settlements

and undermine Palestinian trust that Israel will ever share sufficient power for a West Bank Palestinian state to

By Robert Kagan

Mohammad Mossadegh in Iran or

emerge. And the moderate, secular

Special to The Washington Post

threatening nuclear attack against recalcitrant nations, another favorite

Palestinian leadership in the West Bank all too often has shown too lit-

tool of Eisenhower's. Counting only

tle courage to compromise at crunch time. So no compelling West Bank

w

the larger interventions, with "boots

on the ground," there hasbeen one intervention on average every 4Y years

alternative to Hamas' nihilism exists.

Israel, the moderate Palestinians and

since 1898. Overall, the United States

al-Maliki all wasted the quiet of the

has beenengaged in combat somewhere in the world in 52 out of the past 116 years, or roughly 45 percent

past few years. And al-Maliki and Israel's leaders now insist on wiping out

of the time. Since the end of the Cold War, the rate of U.S. interventions has been higher, with an intervention

icals — before rebuilding or reconsidering any of the political alternatives

roughly once every three years, and U.S. troops intervening or engaged in combat in 19 out of 25 years, or more than 75 percent of the time, since the

fall of the Berlin Wall. The question today is finding the right balance between when to use force and when not to. We can safely

the military threats they face from radthat they themselves helped to scuttle. That won't work.

When all the old means of top-down control are decreasingly available or increasingly expensive (in a world of stmng people and strong technologies, being a stmngman isn't what it used to

be) leaders and their people are going to eventually have to embrace a new,

assume the answer lies somewhere

m ore sustainable, source of order that

between always and never. Perhaps

emerges from the bottom up and is builton shamipower, values andtrust.

we can move away from the current

faux-Manichaean struggle between straw men and caricatures and re-

Yes, yes. I know that sounds impos-

turn to a reasoned discussion of when

sibly hard. But when isolated Gazans can make their own drones, order

force is the right tool.

doesn't come easy anymore.

— Robert Kagan is a senior fellow at the Broohlngs Institution.

— Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


© www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

i sa oinin "The Mockingbird Next Door: Life with Harper Lee" by Marja Mills (The Penguin Press,278 pgs., $27.95)

tI=')P

By Dwight Gamer "Why does the w riting make us chase the writer'?"

Julian Barnes asked in "Flaubert's Parrot." "Why can't we

leave well enough alone? Why aren't the books enough'?" In the case of Harper Lee, *

'

but a book, singular. "To Kill a Mockingbird" was published in 1960, won a Pulitzer

Prize and became a classic of American literature. It still sells some 750,000 copies

annually. Its author stopped The AssociatedPress file photo talking to the press in 1965. Harper Lee, the reclusive To those who chase her, who

2011, playing up Mills's access to the sisters, Lee responded with a statement denying shewas willCall in Atticus Finch. ingly participating. Butts released his statement Only the scrupulously fair lawyer at the center at that time, and today heauthorized its release of Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, "To again, according to the publisher. Kill a Mockingbird," could get at the truth in the Lee and her beloved1960 novel — the only one latest conflict over the reclusive author's privacy. she has written — aresubjects of endless fasciThe clash erupted again with Tuesday's release nation. Her insistence onmaintaining her privacy of "The Mockingbird Next Door: Life with Harper only feeds the public's appetite for the facts of her Lee," by former ChicagoTribune reporter Marja life. "The Mockingbird Next Door" was ranked Mills. To gather material for her intimate portrait, Tuesday at No. 9 onthe Amazon bestseller list. Mills rented a house inMonroeville, Alabama, next Although Mills finds herself plunged into a door to the 88-year-old author and her older siscontroversy over the limits of privacy, she writes ter, Alice, and gradually got to know them. In the in the book that she "didn't feel... entitled to book, Mills claims shehad "the trust, support, and more from Lee than shewanted to share." The encouragement" of both sisters. book, she writes, is her attempt "to honor all that But in a letter released Monday, Leeinsists she the sisters shared with me." never authorized Mills to reveal anything about her PenguinPressstandsbythebook,saying ina private life. "Rest assured, as long as I amalive statement: "Mills' memoir is a labor of loveand any book purporting to be with my cooperation is Marja Mills has done anextraordinary job. We a falsehood," Leewrote. look forward to sharing her story of the wise and Mills reacted swiftly, issuing a statement of her wonderful Lee sisters with readers." own in which sheasserts that the sisters "gave Penguin didn't respond to a request to clarify me their blessing." She included a2011statement why it has persisted in promoting the book asauby Lee's good friend, TomButts, who said that the thorized despite Lee's public opposition. Lee sisters "were pleased that Miss Mills was goIn her letter Monday,Leewrote that when Mills ing to preserve ... stories of their lives in a book. showed up inMonroeville, shesoondiscovered the ... All in all the friendship was anopen andhappy visitor's true mission: "Another bookabout Harper experience for all concerned." Lee.... I immediately cut off all contact with Miss Long before its publication, "The Mockingbird Mills, leaving townwheneversheheadedthis way." Next Door" sparked asimilar disagreement. When — Steven Levingston, Penguin Press announced plans for the book in The Washington Post

Lee objech to new biography

New York Times News Service

there aren't b ooks, plural,

o r a i o a r er ee

author of "To Kill a Mocking-

can't leave well enough alone, bird," is the subject of a new she has developed a standard biography, "The Mockingbird response totheir proposed in- Next Door." She's seen here in terviews: "Not just no, but hell 2007. no."

There have been peeks inside Lee's world. Journalists have made the pilgrimage

book, "The Mockingbird Next Door," about her experience to M o n roeville, A l a bama, of being Lee's neighbor. Lee, where she has hidden in plain who is 88 and who moved into sight all these decades, and a nursing home after having a have sniffed around. In 2006, serious stroke in 2007, is said you, hon. You are a good egg." Charles Shields published to be outraged by its appear- "I don't know when I've en"Mockingbird: A Portrait of ance in bookstores. (See inset joyed a meal more." "Oomph. Harper Lee," a not-bad unau- for more details on the dis- I'm bushed." "I shouldn't have thorized biography. pute.) But it seems the cheese grits. But I'm goNo rep o r t er plain that she and ing to." Here she is on quitting has gotten closer her sister did in- smoking: "It's terribly hard. to this reclusive vite Mills into their But it can be done. I went cold writer than M a rl ives and w e r e turkey." On fishing: "I never ja Mills. In 2001, aware that a book get tired of this." she flew to Monwould s o meday Mills gets her on the record r oeville t o w r i t e result. as saying about "To Kill a about Lee for The I simply wish it Mockingbird," in a moment of Chicago Tribune. were a good book. pique, "I wish I'd never written "The Mockingbird the damn thing." Lee's first Unexpectedly, she became f r i endNext Door" is pain- name is Nelle, and f riends ly with Lee, who fully earnest (the call her that. She criticizes was 75 at the time, author's a v owed Mills after she writes, in The and with her older intent is "t o h onor Tribune, that Alice pronouncsister, Alice, then 89. Perhaps all that they shared with me") es her sister's name "Nail these women w ere l onely; and as sentimental as "Tues- Hah-puh." Lee told her, "You perhaps they saw in Mills the days With Morrie." It doesn't droppedhertwo socialclasses daughter neither had. When so much spill the beans about with one syllable." That's the Mills went on disability beLee as infantilize her. Harper Lee one longs to see cause of health problems, the Mills repeatedly tells us more of here. "The Mockingbird Next Lee sisters encouraged her what good company Lee is. to rent the house next door to "She was a woman of formi- Door" conjured mostly sad theirs. dable intellect," we read, and images in my mind. Lee has a (Joe McGinniss moved next "the best c o nversationalist regular booth at McDonald's, door to Sarah Palin. Mills gets this side of the Mississippi." If where she goes for coffee. She a place next to Harper Lee. I this is true, then Mills is a dire eats takeout salads from Burgsmell a next-level journalism Boswell. er King on movie night. When trend. Beware your perky new Nearly every direct quota- she fishes, she uses wieners neighbors, Thomas Pynchon.) tion from Lee is a banality: for bait. She feeds the town "Oh, bless his heart." "Thank ducks daily, with seed corn Mills has now delivered a

from a plastic Cool Whip Free container, calling "Woo-hooHOO! Woo-hoo-Hoo!" Somehow learning all this is worse than it would be to learn that she steals money from a local

orphanage. There are hints of a life of the mind. She keeps British

periodicals in the house: The Spectator, the Times Literary Supplement,The Weekly Telegraph. She talks a bit

turned into stage plays. Mills watched the 2004 Super Bowl, the one with Janet Jackson's

bared nipple, with Lee. Imagine what Janet Malcolm could do with that scene. She attends exercise class

with her. She watches an advance bootleg copy of the film "Capote," in which Lee is

played by Catherine Keener, with her. But these moments, here,aren'tmemorable.

doesn't pick up on much of

Reading this book put me in mind of a rare public appear-

this. When Lee mentions the British historian Thomas Ma-

ance Lee made inAlabama in 2007. "It's better to be silent,"

caulay's books, this is what pops into Mills' head: "Nowa-

she told an audience, "than to be a fool."

about her favorite books. Mills

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended July13. HARDCOVER FICTION 1. "Act of War" by BradThor (Atria) 2. "Invisible" by James Patterson, David Ellis (Little, Brown) 3. "Top Secret Twenty-One" by Janet Evanovich (Bantam) 4. "Power Play" by Catherine Coulter (Putnam) 5. "The Silkworm" by Robert Galbraith (LB/Mulholland) 6. "Mr. Mercedes" by Stephen King (Scribner) 7. "The City" by Dean Koontz (Bantam) 8."TheGoldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 9. "Written in My Own Heart's Blood" by DianaGabaldon (Delacorte) 10. "All Fall Down" by Jennifer Weiner (Atria) HARDCOVERNONFICTION 1 "America" by Dinesh D'Souza (Regnery) 2."Blood Feud" by Edward Klein (Regnery) 3. "Hard Choices" by Hillary Rodham Clinton (Simon 8 Schuster) 4. "One Nation" by BenCarson (Penguin/Sentinel) 5. "Everything I Needto Know I Learnedfrom a Little Golden Book" by DianeMuldrow (Random/Golden Books) 6. "Capital in theTwentyFirst Century" by ThomasPiketty (Harvard/Belknap) 7. "David andGoliath" by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown) 8. "Think Like aFreak" by Steven Levitt, Stephen Dubner (William Morrow) 9. "Instinct" by T.D.Jakes. (FaithWords) 10. "The Family of Jesus" by Karen Kingsbury (Howard Books) — McClatch y-Tri bune News Service

days, 'Home Alone' actor Ma-

caulay Culkin has far greater name recognition." This b oo k

d o e s t o u ch,

glancingly, on deeper matters. Lee is said to have a temper, to call people late at night af-

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surface.

There are scenes in this book that could, in a better w riter's hands, a l most

be

I • •

A feminist in the forestand apassionate cause "White Beech: The Rainforest Years" by Germaine Greer (Bloorsbury, 370 pgs., $34.95) By Dwight Gamer New York Times News Service

Germaine Greer, the Aus-

of mulch.

a b o ut with drinking, with sex, with

time." She talks about filming frog and lace monitor sex and

Greer's efforts to restore eco- young people, with toenail logically some 150 acres of fungus, with work, with loss.

putting it on a website. "White Beech" isn't the best

often heavily forested land, a

"White Beech" isn't that kind

love story I've ever read, but

former dairy farm, in southeast Queensland, Australia.

ofbook.

it's a love story, nonetheless. "I didn't fall in love with na-

Greer, who is 75, bought the

her property, coming to a full

"White Beech" i s

the long haul with marriage,

Greer focuses intensely on

property in 2001 and says she stop to explore and explain Eunuch" (1970), that garrulous has sunk millions of dollars its exotic pasture grasses, its classic of second-wave femi- into it. macadamia nuts, its choking nism, has been a lifelong agiShe had seen too much weeds and its few remaining tation artist. In her heyday she environmental d e spoliation white beeches, huge trees that tangled with William F. Buck- in her n ative country, she have been mostly logged out ley and Norman Mailer, her writes. "Give me just a chance of existence in Australia. skeptical blue-gray eyes bor- to clean something up, sort This is engaging enough as ing holes through to the backs something out, make it right, it goes, but Greer is so interesttralian author of "The Female

of their heads. Her sound bites,

I thought, and I will take it," she writes in a prologue. "I wasn't doing it out of altruism; I didn't think I w a s saving the world. I was in search of

lanky good looks and proclivity for posing nude prompted Life magazine to call her, on its cover, the "saucy feminist that even men like." heart's ease, and this was my Her aversion to being dull is chance to find it." unabated. In 2006 Greerthrew There's a sense that Greer icy water on th e mawkish- considers this project one of ness surrounding the death of her last acts. "I was 62 when Steve Irwin, television's "The Crocodile Hunter," who'd been speared by a stingray. "The

the forestbecame my respon-

sibility, with no idea how long I might be able to go on earnanimal world has finally taken ing my living by my pen and its revenge on Irwin," she com- tongue," she says. "Our culture mented in The Guardian, la- is not sympathetic to old wombeling him a "21st-century ver- en, and I was definitely an old sion of a lion tamer," one who woman, with a creaky knee trampled fragile habitats and and shockingly arthritic feet." manhandled all c reatures, Greer's prologue is intensegreat and small. To borrow Ir- ly personal ("I hadn't been win's catchphrase (which she the center of my world since deplored): Crikey! m enopause shook m e f r e e In some ways, that Guard- of vanity and self-consciousian column was Greer's com- ness"), and it leads you to think ing out as a nature writer and that "White Beech" will be an naturalist, a late-life swerve intimate book, one that blends that finds full expression in the story of her land with the "White Beech: The Rainfor- story of her recent life. est Years." It's an untidy and I have a weakness, I should mostly lackluster book, sad to say, for good books about say, one that buries her rhetor- old age. I like to know how ical gifts under several inches smart people have dealt over

ed in her land that she forgets to make it interesting to us.

There are pages of deep, dry ecological history, with tangles of Latin names, on almost every subject she encounters.

tive Australian vegetation until I was middle-aged," Greer writes, "and then I fell hard, as middle-aged women do." She declares, "I am glad to be the forest's fool."

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end somewhere." "White Beech" does deliv-

er a farmer's market basket of pleasures. I enjoyed her observations about sexism and natural history, what she calls "the blokiness of botany."

This stems, she says, "from its needing to be done in Latin; girls' schools were more likely to teach modern languages." She lights into eco-tourism:

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It's all so shapeless that, by

the end, she declares about the bird species on her property, "I would happily write about all of them, but this book has to

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"Animals are not performers,

and their behavior is not a spectacle." She tears crankily into feel-good environmentalism. "There's more to this than

T-shirts and stubby holders bedizened with good intentions," she says (a stubby, in Australia, is a beer), "and giving each other awards all the

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SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

ate oar er's ' ea! ea! ea!':a isto o o ament on ers c an ei n . . "Yeah! Yeah! Yeah!: The Story of Pop Music From Bill Haley to Beyonce" by Bob Stanley (WW. Norton, 599 pgs., $29.95)

"More Curious" by SeanWilsey (McSweeney's, 342 pgs., $22) By Michiko Kakutani New York Times News Service

dation, a c ontemporary-art museum founded by Judd that sponsors symposiums, internships and artist-in-residence programs — became an increasingly potent magnet for

Growing up in San Francis- artists and art tourists. co, the writer Sean Wilsey was By 2012, this little frontier an ardent skateboarder. He town had become what Vansays he never went anywhere ity Fair called a "Lone Star without his board. He skated Bohemia." There was a film in his room when it rained. festival in 2011 featuring 1970s He loved the "kickflips" and and early '80s "No Wave films "heelflips" of thepioneer skater alongside banned and sexually Rodney Mullen - "tiny, pre- explicit work" by Larry Clark, cise things that seemed like the Wilsey writes, along with a work of Swiss watchmakers, concert by a local punk band with perfect balance and total called Solid Waste. A "bookconcentration" — and w orstore/wine bar" had opened shipped the "grace and style on the main street, and a lot and imagination" of the street of what one local calls "those skater Natas Kaupas, who writer people" have taken up could jump onto a wall, "riding residence. it like a wave," moving from As Wilsey observes in anthe horizontal to the vertical other essay, skateboarding with supernatural has u n d ergone ease, defying the a similar sort of laws of physics. transformation: In his funny-tenWhat had been in the '70s and '80s der-raucous epic of a memoir "Oh the purview of outthe Glory of It All" siders, "parentless, ( 2005), Wil s ey rejected, l o nely" demonstrated that teenagers, became as a writer he can big business, he be as nimble — and suggests, with the high-profile (and as inventive — as a giftedskateboarder, lucrative) career of and his new collec-

Tony Hawk, "the first

tion of essays, "More Curious," similarly showcases his talent with words. Like Dave Eggers (whom he has worked with at McSweeney's) and David Foster Wallace (a onetime neighbor, who makes a brief appearance in this volume), Wilsey

human being for whom skate-

can write in a range of emo-

tional octaves, moving from the comic to the philosophical

of city streets with speed and flow. Perhaps the loss Wilsey

to the street-wise with ease,

mourns the most in A m eri-

boarding was a career instead

of a last resort or a refuge." Skaters became athletes, he

reportedly reading at the time. Wilsey began visiting regularly in the summer of 1996, when his girlfriend (and later, wife), Daphne Beal, was a reporter foralocalweekly.Hedescribes it, back then, as "a hardscrabble ranching community,"

from his role in th e curatorial British trio Saint

instead of the artful navigation

end somewhere — with the advent in 2003 of another in-

dustrial shift, from physical product to

d o w nloads and

streaming. Like many lifelong record collectors (and nearly all professional musicians), Stanley seems troubled by the digital era's decontextualizing free-for-alL "Without the detail, pop music doesn't have the desirability it once had; it's not as

wantable," he writes. Yet you never get the impression that

h e's stopped

listening. As clear-eyed about music as he is crazy in love with it, he's easy to picture

scrolling through the iTunes Store, clicking on the No. ls along with t h e o bscurities,

taking notes perhaps for a second volume: "The Story of

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is the world I want to live in." In this world: "G.D.P. is mean-

ingless. China is a nonentity. America has always lost."

Cup withdrawal after last Sun-

by 17 rules fills me with the

assist from the Chinati Foun-

.

conviction, perhaps ignorant, but like many ignorant convictions, fiercely held, that soccer can unite the world."

Y e ah!

Yeah!" concludes — it had to

As for soccer, he writes that

installations of his work, and he admired. Since his death in 1994, the town — with a big

541382-6447 ~ 2090NEWy ttC t ~ S it' 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com

from 1964 to 2006. " Yeah! Indeed,

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w orked as a w r i ter f o r NME and Melody Maker

during those U.K. music

he writes) and music-based television programming like the BBC's hugely influential "Top of the Pops," which aired

"the world of the World Cup

that he used for large-scale to exhibit the work of artists

market compilations. "His reb r o ke cording of Bob and Marcia's 'Young, Gifted and Black,'" out in the early '90s with a moody electro-house rendition of Neil Young's "Only Love Can Break Your Heart"), he a l so

to feel closer to their idols,"

• Retractable Awnings • Exterior Solar Screens • Patio Shade Structures

current hits for cheapo super-

Etienne (which

press ("consumers wanted ...

the United States has ever

day's final: "Every four years," he writes, "the joy of being one of the couple billion people watching 32 countries abide

to Marfa in the 1970s, having acquireda seriesofproperties

ia, too: I, for one, never knew

the sportbecame more and more about tricks and stunts,

In one passage, he declares: "I cannot resist the pageantry and high-mindedness, the apolitical display of national char60 miles north of the Mexican acteristics, the revelation of border, in "one of the least deep human flaws and unexpopulated sections of the con- pected greatness, the fact that tiguous United States," a place entire nations walk off the job so isolated that "if you laid out or wake up at 3 a.m. to watch the Hawaiian archipelago, and men kick aball." "What is soccer," he asks, the deep ocean channels that divide it, on the road between "if not everything that reliMarfa and the East Texas of gion should be'? Universal yet strip shopping and George particular, the source of an Bush Jr., you'd still have 100 infinitely renewable supply miles ofblank highway stretch- of hope, occasionally miracuing awayin front of you." lous, and governed by simple, There was so little to do uncontradictory rules ('Laws,' there, he writes, that people officially) that everyone can would "drive 100 miles just to follow." Wilsey's musings on the have something to do, the way the rest of the country goes to sport will doubtless resonate with readers going into World the mall." The well-known Minimalist artist Donald Judd moved

he comes to the job ade-

quately equipped. that Elton John made money Familiar to record nerds early on by singing covers of

anthologies of this kind. This done'?) annoying. But Wilsey is is partly because of Wilsey's able here to convey his feelings distinctive v oice t h r eading earnestly— be they amazethrough its pages, partly be- ment or anger, idealism or cause most of the articles ar- impatience — with the same ticulate, in one way or anoth- vividness and immediacy he er, his view of contemporary brings to his descriptions of America — a placedefined people, places and things. by the velocity with which it He conjures the Paleozoic changes, a country capable of landscape ofthe desert surthe miraculous (putting a man rounding Marfa; the courtly on the moon) but now reeling personality of his dog, Charlie from what Wilsey describes ("He'd've opened doors if he as an "end-times vibe" of ra- could have. 'After you,' Charbid consumption and blingy lie always seemed to be saying."); the surreal experience consumerism. The opening and closing that is zero gravity ("Direction chapters are about Marfa, Tex- doesn't matter when you're as: a high-desert town founded weightless. Up and down are in the 1880s as a railroad stop no longer markers. I suddenly and, by one account, named understood how in space there after a minor character in "The is only everywhere"). Brothers Karamazov," which a railway overseer's wife was

Find It All Online

says, and as videos went viral,

while putting body language can life is the country's radical on hisproseto give the reader downsizing of its space proan almost synesthetic sense of gram (a sentiment shared, apwhat he's saying. parently, with Eggers, in light The pieces here were origi- of that author's last novel). In an nally written for publications emotional outburst, after a vissuch as The London Review of it to NASA, Wilsey exclaims: Books, National Geographic, "When people think the best GQ and The New York Times thing we've ever done as a naMagazine. But while the book tion — put a man on the moon ranges over a wide array of — is a con, or a waste, and not subjects (from a profile of the a wonder — that is when we restaurateur Danny Meyer, to know we are truly lost." an account of a cross-country Some readers may find such drive in a 1960 Chevy truck, to hyperbole (is putting a man on an essay about Sept. 11), it has the moon really the best thing more coherence than many

papers' late-'80s glory days. Stanley notes, "was quite So he's a studio rat capable of something." explaining the mechanrcs of But i n an age virtually all dub reggae as well as a critic o f this information is readily unafraid — overjoyed, really available to any reader with — to declare that the Stones a s m a r tphone — th e f acts "were indirectly responsible and f igures on Wikipedia, By Mikael Wood Los Angeles Times for some of the worst the thousands of songs themI n 1 954, B i l l Ha l e y aspects of modern selves on Spotify shook, rattled and rolled. pop." Passion, skep— Stanley is best In 2003, Beyonce went cra- ticism and technical when he steps outzy in love. That's two pop know-how — these side the march of stars, among the biggest are the engines of of their time, using simi- Stanley's work. siders the whys and lar language (and similar And does he ever wherefores silently grooves) to describe more put some miles on e mbedded in t h e or less the same thing. them. S t r u ctured 8 08 STANLEY mu s l c . But think of all that hap- c hronolo g i c a l Writing about the pened over the half-cen- ly, "Yeah! Yeah! British Invasion, he tury that separates them: Y eah!" mov e s wonders if the sudElvis Presley, rockabil- c risply but m e den influx of U .K. acts can be attributly, "Why Do Fools Fall thodically through history in Love," girl g r oups, as the author takes up each ed to America's having "lost the Beatles, the Rolling successive scene or sound or f a i t h in itself" after the KenStones, "Like a Rolling movement and tries to under- nedy assassination. And he Stone,"Motown, the Beach stand its place in the I arger d e c ides that, despite its comBoys, the singer-songwrit- story — just how, for instance, mercial success, Motown was er, punk, disco, heavy met- it was that the "scrunched-up dismissed by many critics al, "Hotel California," new tinfoil" sound of mid-'50s En- a t t h e time because the label wave, New Order and new glish skiffle gave way to the w asn't "firming up the values jack swing. And Madonna! melodic and textural i nven- of its own local community." And country music! And tion of John Lennon andPaul T h a t, he adds, "is how a lot of "We Are the World"! McCartney. (usually white) purists, from This absurdly, deliriousThink of the book a s an A l a n L o max to Peter Gurally vast landscape is what e ncyclopedia in n a r ative r n i c k , like their black music." A cre a t ive w ho's a l so B ob Stanley sets out t o form, one shaped by the aumap in his sweeping but thor's subjective, sometimes worked on the other side of finely detailed new book, contrarian taste. (His f avor- t h e business as a label own"Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! The ite Bob Dylan record: "New er, Stanley digs too into the Story of Pop Music From Morning.") rise of music's ancillary inBill Haley to Beyonce." C rucially for a v olume dustries,such as the pop And though one of his cen- stuffed with as many proptral points is that creden- er nouns as this one, Stanley tials rarely matter in pop is strong with description: — which, by the way, he Presley's "Hound Dog" is defines usefully as music "two minutes of sustained made for "an audience that viciousness and sheer mathe artist d oesn't k n ow licious glee"; Van Morrison bendbulletin.com personally" — Stanley's has a "ruddy, sponge-pudding background ensures that face." He's got loads of triv-

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F6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014

BI1-

uc e I'om 0 SI I'i

i Won

"Here Comes the Night: The Dark Soul of Bert Berns and the Dirty Business of Rhythm & Blues" by Joel Selvin (Counterpoint,

320 pgs.) By Larry Rohter New Yorh Times News Service

known beyond the obsessives

who studied songwriters' and producers' credits on 45 rpm records and LP album jackets. And then, after his death

in 1967 at the age of 38, something truly odd happened: Though the songs he wrote and produced, like "Twist and Shout" and "Hang On Sloopy," proved to have durability, growing in stature and popDanny Ghitis/New York Times News Service ularity as the years passed, Actors perform "Piece of my Heart: The Bert Berns Story," a musical, at the Pershing Square SigBerns' own reputation receded nature Center in New York last month. Bert Berns, a songwriter and producer who died young and further into obscurity. largely unknown, is the focus of a biography, a musical and a planned documentary.

it." He

a dded:

known songs, "Piece of My "Even though Heart," opens off-Broadway at his music is so the Pershing Square Signature d iverse, t h e Center. songs are auto"He wasn't the best," Sel- biographical. vin said in an interview this T hat's w h y month. "But his best was as he's a great good as anybody's best." artist: He has a Certainly the story of Ber- voice and knew ns' life, short though it was, how to tap into it." lends itself to the same sense of

heIpI

Astandout style

songs. Born into a Jewish famiAt the time Berly in New York City that hoped ns was active, hyphenated he might become a classical songwriting teams, usually pianist, he instead developed with the responsibility for lyra love of Latin music that took ics and music dearly divided, him to Cuba, where he daimed dominated a scene centered to have run guns for Fidel Cas- on the Brill Building: Bachatro's rebels. A late starter in the rach-David, Barry-Greenwich, music business, he had a hand Goffin-King, L e iber-Stoller,

Continued from F1 Bresch says she entered the deal reluctantly, and she genuinely seems to means it. If Bresch's deal isn't a call to Washington to address what

is clearly a trend on which it has remained nearly silent, the nation will most likely contin-

ue to lose large employers and taxpayers in droves to countries with lower tax rates. Al-

in part, to pay less in taxes. (Bresch insists that the merger is being driven mostly by its

tale of love un-

of Berns' death, Janis Joplin had hits with both

"Piece of My Heart" and "Cry Baby." "Bert was really a purist, after a pure sound that was soulful, had simplicity and was rhythmically solid," said Garry

for the services that citizens

tax-driven acquisition of War-

even if U.S. tax rates were ner Chilcott in 2013, pay much lowered somewhat, B resch less in taxes. stopped me. "Well, I don't think you can Still, t h e re's s o m ething morally disconcerting about say that," she said. "I would

a company such as Mylan, which is a beneficiary of U.S. taxpayers who pay for Mylan's drugs through Medicaid and Medicare, leaving the country,

Wexler, who died in 2008, re-

chestrator and arranger, who

on the play. "The one thing he demanded was that every

step back and say our starting point today is 35, right'?" She added: "I can't say as a starting rate what's enough or not enough until you honestly

Mafia contacts to threaten him.

hear the pathology in the music." As a boy, Berns had rheumatic fever, which led to heart

is not the standard feel-good

not just a melody and words." One explanation endorsed by all three of the new works,

reductionist though it may seem, is that Berns took a

gloomy view of life because he knew he didn't have long to live — or as Selvin put it, "you can

seat,'" said Brooks Arthur, a

industry. "To me, there is no doubt he

ered through it. He'd talk about it in jazz terms: 'I don't know

how much song there is left in me.'"

Recapturing copyrights

Hall of Fame, not in the Rock

and Roll Hall of Fame. So, yes, there is agrievance. That's why we set out on this mission to tell his story, to get him recognized and championhim."

The Berns revival is occurAll three of the new works ring at amoment jukeboxmusi- about Berns point a finger at Sherman, Berns'favorite or- cals "Beautiful," "Jersey Boys," the men who ran Atlantic Re-

revision." It appears that more efforts

to raise Berns' profile are to come. There is talk both of a movie and a tribute album in

which today's stars would sing some of Berns' best-known compositions. In addition, his

heirs recently signed a deal with MPL

C ommunications,

the music publishing company founded by PaulMcCartney, an unabashed Berns fan, to distribute the more than 200

songs that make up the Berns catalog. All that stands in sharp con-

trast to the reception Selvin received when he was trying to get his book project off the ground a decade or so ago. "You can't imagine how many times editors and publishers

said to me, 'Nobody has ever nis Joplin" and "Million Dollar heard of him,'" he recalled. "But Quartet" have encountered colleague, Wexler. They were that turned out to be the hook." "Motown," "A Night With Ja-

cords: the Ertegun brothers, Ahmet and Nesuhi, and their

artist tell a story," and as a re-

sult "he was able to get performances that were meaningful,

OFFICIAL EVENT GUIDE

are able to sit down and look

most 20 large U.S. companies the high teens after three to it, don't like it, whatever. This have announced plans to give five years. Mylan will continue tax reform is even, in my opinup their U.S. citizenship in the to pay taxes in the U.S. on its ion, on a larger scale than that last two years. domestic profits, but not on its because it's a global economy." Just Monday, the Irish drug- business operations abroad. She added: "Our governmaker Shirecleared the way All of which raises an im- ment, right or wrong, has takfor a merger with AbbVie, the portant question: Even if the en the viewpoint of, 'We're not drugmaker based in Chicago, United States were to revamp negotiating.' It is what it is. I and Walgreen is considering its corporate tax code, how think that standoffish mentalan inversion through a deal low would the rate have to ity around tax has now continwith Alliance Boots, a Europe- drop to be competitive and still ued tocompound and complian drugstore chain. raise enough revenue to pay cate this issue." "It's not like I've not been

the extreme: In "Here Comes the N i ght" (Counterpoint Press), Selvin writes that when he asked to talk about Berns,

to note that the musical has

requited or gone recordingengineer who often wrong, often with worked with Berns and went has been overlooked and nethe words "cry" on to become a Grammy-win- glected," said Brett Berns, who or "heart" in the ti- ning producer. "The writing was 2 when his father died. tle: Within months was on the wall, but he pow- "He's not in the Songwriters

at a holistic proposal because everything from manufacturstrategic merits, and that the ing, physical assets, dependlower tax rate is just an added ing on how they would reform benefit.) this in entirety, would be how How much less will Mylan it applies, regardless of what pay. that starting point is." Bresch, who said the comBresch doesn't appear hopepany'scurrent eff ective tax ful about tax reform. "Obama had the wherewithrate is about 25 percent, said the rate would come down to al to muscle through an entire 21 percent in the first year of health care r e organization, the deal and then move into right?" she pointed out. "Like

vocal and up there talking to expect? anybody who'd listen to me," President Barack Obama Bresch told me in an inter- has proposed a top corporate view about the crusade she rate of 28 percent, and a rate of had been on in Washington 25 percentfor manufacturers. for years, talking to lawmak- However, that number would ers about overhauling the cor- appear to be too high to hold porate tax code to make U.S. on to the likes of Bresch. Even companies more competitive. 20 percent— some Republi"But you know what they all cans have floated that number say? 'Yeah, uh huh, OK. Uh — might still be too high. huh.'" This t ax-rate a rbitrage She added: "We were one among global companies creof the last ones in our sector ates a race to the bottom as to do this. So it's not like I was countries try to outcompete blazing the trail. If you put on one another until the rate beyour business hat, you can't comes zero, a number that maintain competitiveness by many shareholders might be staying at a competitive disad- thrilled about, but would be vantage. I mean you just can't. unlikely to produce enough The odds are just not in your money for th e T reasury's favor." coffers. She's right about her comThere have been proposals petitors. Teva Pharmaceuti- to curb inversions, but those cal Products, which is based are short-term solutions. in Israel, and Actavis, which When I raised the prospect is based in I r eland after a that Mylan would still leave

ns' son Brett, who is involved with both projects, took pains

disease and doctors' warnings story of recognition delayed obse r v ations w it h a that he was likely to die before and belatedly bestowed. It is h umorous str e a k . he reached 30. accompanied by a deep sense B ut Ber n s ' In the studio, "he used to of grievance, as well as accut radem a r k tell me, 'I don't want to jump sations that he was deliberatewas the dark, around too much, my heart ly denied his rightful place by / a n gst-ridden you know, I want to stay in the powerful enemies in the music

M ann-Weil. Berns was d i f - has come out of retirement to ferent. He either wrote alone work as the music supervisor

years, consorted with gangsters and succumbed to heart ("Here Comes the Night," "Tell diseasejust as the careers of Him," "Cry to Me") or with a his last three proteges, Neil revolving cast of collaborators Diamond, Van Morrison and a that included Jerry Ragovoy, studio guitarist named Jimmy Phil Medley, Wes Farrell, Jerry

Abroad

out that was acrimonious in

Rather than giving in, Berns prevailed by turning to a highbeen in the works for at least er-ranking friend of his own in sevenyears, andthat its origins the mob, Thomas Eboli, who go back further, to the 1990s, eventually became the boss of when the Berns family recap- the Genovese crime family. tured control of the copyrights That goes against the stanto the songs he had written. dard version of pop music "That was the impetus for history, especially as regards doing all these projects," Berns, Ahmet Ertegun, who died in 49, said. "We have this great 2006, 17 years after his brother, catalog of known songs by an and cultivated an urbane, manunknown songwriter, so what about-town image in his later are we going to do with this? years. "This is a r evisionist Really, for 20 years my sister history, a viewpoint from a difand I were music publishers ferent angle," said Selvin, forwho really worked the catalog. merly a music critic at The San That was our day job." Francisco Chronide and the author of several other books 'Overlooked andneglected' about pop music. "Berns is a But the rebirth of Bert Berns figure who needs and deserves

But now, Bert Berns is hav-

ing a moment. A new biography, Joel Selvin's "Here Comes Page, were gettingunderway. Wexler and the soul singer Sol"I had no idea who he was" omon Burke. the Night: The Dark Soul of Bert Berns and the Dirty before being invited to write The tone of Berns' composiBusiness of Rhythm & Blues," the book for Piece of My tions, many of which he wrote praises him as"one ofthegreat Heart," the playwright Daniel on a battered acoustic guitar, originals of the golden age of Goldfarb said. But now, "I feel was atypical, too. Burt Bacharhythm and blues," an argu- l ike B er t B e r n s rach and Hal David created a ment repeated in a documen- was an artist who cosmopolitan sound tary film about his life that is had a lot stacked with complex harmoin the works, tentatively called agamst hm and nies, and Jerry Leiber t ef 1 "Bang! The Bert Berns Story." had to fight his QPQ8$ and Mike Stoller ofAnd Monday, a new musical fered acute s ocial

in more than 50 hits in seven

called Bang (Bert, Ahmet, ¹ suhi, Gerald) but had a falling

plied, "I don't know where he's singers. buried, but if I did, I would" uriSo there is an understand- nate "on his grave." able temptation to view the Accordingtothese accounts, Berns musical and documenta- the Atlantic triumvirate tried to ry as somewhat late entrants in muscle Berns out of the music what is becoming an increas- publishing part of the soured ingly crowded field. But Ber- relationship by summoning

day, Bert Berns was barely

drama often expressed in his

partners with Berns in a label

In addition, a raft of documentary films about overlooked pop music figures have been released in recentyears, induding the last two Oscar winners in the documentary category, "Sugarman," about the Detroit singer Rodriguez, and "20 Feet from Stardom," about backup

Even in his mid-1960s hey-

named for another of his well-

success on and off-Broadway.

But Bresch is even more nervous about the larger im-

plications: "You know what makes me want to cry? I think whoever the next Facebook is,

why would you ever start that company here in the United States?"

That's tough love from the

daughter of a

U .S. senator,

who learned of the deal Monday for the first time. So what does he think of the

deal? "I am always disappointed

9RS'Iikti ES't

PUBLI$HES

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Thursday,August I 4, Friday August I 5 and Saturday, August I 6 The festival features great food and lots of fantastic beer. Over l 70 distinct craft beers from over 60 breweries will be available for public tasting. This is a festival where the focus is on tasting and enjoying fine craft beers. This fun and informative guide will be distributed to over 70,000 readers through The Bulletin, and will be available at The Old Mill District during the event.

when American companies

feel the need to move overseas because of the U.S. tax code," Manchin told me in a statement. "However, this decision

is systemic of a larger problem with our corporate tax code

that puts American companies at a disadvantage with their global competitors. Since

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the day I arrived in the Senate, I have been advocating for a complete overhaul of our tax

system, and I will continue to work with my colleagues on ways to reform our tax code so

The Bulletin Il' 'OldMill

we are competitive in a global market, and companies that manufacture and sell t h eir

products in America stay in America." So far, that's much easier

said than done.

e m- 4 L


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Requires You can place it Puppy, AKC registered, 541-408-6900. 210 FL transfer. $475. site. male, 1st shots 8 micro1-877-877-9392. online at: Dave Matthews Band Furniture & Appliances Sisters, call Rob, chipped. $2000. Dan Wesson .357 mag, www.bendbu! Ietin.com 4 tickets, $600 each The Bulletin 928-310-8032 205 541-416-0375 4" bbl, 100% cond, belt The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since19N 8/26/1 4 6:00 p.m. Items for Free buckle, original grips & A1 Washers8 Dryers 541-389-7145 541-385-5809 215 info, $500. 541-306-0166 $150 ea. Full warAdopt a rescue cat or V IP tickets fo r W i lTop Pin Archery Free horse manure will ranty. Free Del. Also Coins & Stamps lamette Music Festiwanted, used W/D's Pro Shop load, Deschutes Mkt kitten! Altered, vacci253 III'INIISHHS nated, ID chip, tested, v al Aug. 15-17 i n Rd., 541-318-8707 541-280-7355 We Now Have Private collector buying TV, Stereo & Video more! 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Items merchandise to sporting Aussie mini/toy, red tri and a FREE Genie advertisers may 247 goods. Bulletin Classifieds female, 8 weeks, $340 Dryer, GE electric Easy upgrade! Call Are you in BIG trouble AGATE HUNTERS cash. 541-678-7599 place an ad appear every day in the Sporting Goods Care, like new, $100. 1-800-259-5140. PoJishers • Saws with our with the IRS? Stop print or on line. 541-410-5457 Aussies, Mini AKC, Misc. (PNDC) "QUICK CASH wage 8 bank levies, blues, black tri, m/f, Call 541-385-5809 G ENERATE SOM E SPECIAL" Repafr & Supplfes liens & audits, unfiled www.bendbulletin.com parents on site Columbia Ascent down DISH T V Ret a i ler. EXCITEMENT in your 1 week3lines 12 s g s returns, payroll is541-788-7799 German Shepherd, 3 neighborhood! Plan a coat, XL, like new, $35. Starting ai tax oi' sues, & resolve tax The Bulletin y rs old, n ame i s 541-241-9100 $19.99/month (for 12 Australian Shepherd 6 Serving Cenlrsl Oregon sinceteet arage sale and don't ~eweeke te! FAST. Seen on Needs a loving orget 241 mos.) 8 High Speed debt wk old female Blue Louie. to advertise in Ad must CNN. A B BB . C a ll Jannd mtneering day- I nternet starting a t home. $300 adoption classified! Merle purebred, shots include price of Bicycles & 1-800-989-1278. pack/shoulder bag, tur280 Must be only dog 541-385-5809. (where and worming. Ready fee. e ~n le tem oi geoo quoise $15. 541-241-9100 $14.95/month Accessories available.) SAVE! Ask (PNDC) Estate Sales to go. $400. in home! Neutered, K enmore Washer & or less, or multiple v accinated, pot t y About SAME DAY In- People Lookfor Information 541-410-2350 items whose total Princeton Tec Vizz trained, knows basic Dryer, gently used, black, Bontrager 700c roadstallation! CALL Nowl Estate Sale - Riding lawn headlamp, $12. About Products and does not exceed bike racing wheel, 1-800-308-1563 m ower, p us h la w n Australian S h e pherd commands, 8 micro $450 obo. 541-408-0846 $70. 541-241-9100 541-241-9100 $500. Services Every Daythrough puppies. AKC/ASCA chipped. Comes with Kitchen table 3x5 w/1-ft (PNDC) mower, antique tools 8 The Sulletin Classiffeffs power tools, furniture, Excellent Bloodlines. bed, blanket, toys, leaf, laminate pine block, Giant 16 n Mtn bike, Call Classifieds at USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! REDUCE 6/24/14. collars, leash, medi- $100. 541-410-5457 YOUR Beautiful 2006 Hyundai Accent, Born wedd i ng commuter handlebars, 541-385-5809 cation and bowl. Call CABLE BILL!* Get a ammo, w a sher/dryer, $750-$950. www.bendbulletin.com dress, size 6, w/train, Door-to-door selling with Kitchen t a bl e 3' x 6 ', $115. 541-241-9100 541-598-4472. whole-home Satellite $60. 541-389-9377 freezer. Sat & Sun, 7-3, 541-815-9257 fast results! It's the easiest system installed at 61016 SW Chuckanut Bend Spay and Neuter Labradors (chocolates), butcher block, 1-ft leaf, Kryptonite U-Lock bike $150. 541-410-5457 l ock, n e w , $21 . Fly rod, new, never used, way in the world to sell. Buyfng Diamonds Dr., Bend, OR 97702. NO COST and proProject seeks owners of no papers, ready 7/22. 541-241-9100 /Gold for Cash 4-weight 9-ft w/case $65. ramming starting at NEED TO CANCEL 282 outdoor cat enclosures to $300. 541-977-6844 The Bulletin Classified 1 9.99/mo. FRE E Saxon's Fine Jewelers YOUR AD? participate in a fundrais- Miniature S c h nauzer Men's Huffy lllumina 18 850-264-81 05 (in Bend) Sales Northwest Bend ing 541-389-6655 HD/DVR Upgrade to 541-385-5809 event called the Tour The Bulletin speed bike, like new, pups, Black, 3 female, new callers, SO CALL New Ruger 10/22 stainof Catios (similar to the Classifieds has an $85. 541-389-4079 BUYING YARD SALE F r iday, Tour of Homes!) Please 1 male, $700. Family less carbine, scoPe, 2 yakima racksys,48"tow- NOW "After Hours" Line Lionel/American Flyer Saturday & Sunday. contact 541-617-1010 if raised. 541-410-7701 mags (10-rnd & 25-rnd) ers, smaller car w/ gut1-866-984-8515. Call 541-383-2371 trains, accessories. 8 a .m . t o No o n . you are interested in par$350 541-306-0166 (PNDC) ters, $199. 541-977-5178 24 hrs. to cancel 541-408-2191. Min Pin AKC pups. 1444 Galveston. ticipating! It will be fun! your ad! Born 4/14/14, potty 286 Boxers AKC & V alley training, shots, micro- Reclining Sofa in like Sales Northeast Bend Bulldogs CKC puppies. chipped, 2 females new condition, micro $500. 602-284-4110 $700-800. 541-325-3376 suede $450.00. Call Santana 541-322-6261 "Sovereign Just bought a new boat? ** FREE ** Sell your old one in the 1998" Tandem Sofa & loveseat, reclinclassifieds! Ask about our Garage Sale Kit aluminum road ing, beige, microfiber, Super Seller rates! Place an ad in The away are advised to $500. 541-598-7332 bike, size Medium, 541-385-5809 Bulletin for your gabe selective about the low usage, disc rage sale and reMaytag self clean, Brittany pups, AKC & new owners. For the Stoye, good condidigital, great cond, brakes, ceive a Garage Sale American Field Reqisprotection of the ani- white, tion. New, was $100. 541-410-5457 Kit FREE! tered, born 5/31/14. Field mal, a personal visit to $5000; selling now Champion bloodlines, the home is recom- Table and chairs, solid for $1550. KIT INCLUDES: $500. 505-220-2639 mended. oak, pedestal table, 4 Call 541-923-2468 • 4 Garage Sale Signs style chairs. • $2.00 Off Coupon To The Bulletin windsor Great condition. $350. gerving Centrercrregonsince sgta Use Toward Your 541-382-6773 Next Ad Pixie Bob male c at, • 10 Tips For "Garage beautiful, 2 yrs old, Sale Success!" Twin E rgo-motion $50. 541-480-3809 500 automatic bed ir Cavalier King Charles with memory foam PICK UP YOUR Spaniel AKC Chame mattress, like new, GARAGE SALE KIT at pion Pedigree PupExercise Equipment only used for a short 1777 SW Chandler pies Available NOW. t ime. $ 75 0 o b o . Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Gorgeous. ALL ColSears stationary exer541-383-7603 ors! $1800 with health cise bike, good cond, The Bulletin Poodle mix puppies, Serving Central Oregon sincetgog guarantee. Also, older $35. 541-548-5860 1st shots, dewormed, Two dressers, $40 and puppies plus New245 $275. 541-977-0035 $45; good shape. borns ready Sept. 6th. 288 541-504-9720. 541-848-7605 Golf Equipment POODLEpups, toy. Sales Southeast Bend Chihuahua p u p pies, Home raised w/love. Whirlpool one p iece CHECK yOUR AD Garage Sale, 61445 SE teacup, call for pix. Schnoodle pups also! s tacked w asher 8 541-475-3889 dryer, $300 obo. 54127th St. Sat. & Sun., $250. 541-420-4403 480-895; 541-385-6272 9am-5pm. B uffalo Queensland Heelers AFTER hides and all kinds of SEFORE Standard 8 Mini, $150 other hides, antiques, The Bulletin FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck & up. 541-280-1537 FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck collectables, saddles. www.rightwayranch.wor recommends extra ' can haul it aii! Extra Cab, 4X4, and can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and l caution when puron the first day it runs dpress.com 290 a tough V8 engine will get the job a tough VB engine will get the job chasing products or • to make sure it isn cordone on the ranch! Sales Redmond Area Chihuahua/Yorky fem. Weimaraner pups, par- services from out of I rect. eSpellcheck and done on the ranch! ents exc. disposition ~ the area. Sending ~ human errors do oc1yr housebroke, crate MOVING SALE and on site. Ranch ' cash, checks, o r ' cur. If this happens to trained. Ioves k ids 2 miles south of Redraised and parents l credit i n f ormation your ad, please con$300. 541-241-4914 mond, 6316 S Hwy hunt, 3 males, 1 female, may be subjected to tact us ASAP so that 97. Bringing out more Dachshund AKC blk/tan $350. Please leave l FRAUD. For more corrections and any stuffeve da ! pups, $425.541-508-4558 msg. 541-562-5970. information about an f adjustments can be FRI 10AM - OYIG8ING go tobendweenies.com made to your ad. advertiser, you may l / call t h e Or e gon / 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com ! Multi-Home Yard ' State Atto r ney ' The Bulletin Classified Sale -Lots & lots of l General's O f f i ce Mens Wilson To place your photo ad, visit Usonline at clubs,bag great stuff. You won't Consumer Protec- • & cart, 10 irons, want to miss out 3 wds tion h o t line at I ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or call with questions, on this sale!! $50. 541-389-8609 Welsh Corgi puppies. i 1-877-877-9392. Fri - Sun 9:00-4:00, c l ubs, l i ghtly Dachshund mini, larger 4 m a les to choose 7654 and 7408 TheBulletin > Youth male pup. Badger hunter! fro m . Avail 7/20. > Serving used. includes bag, SW Wickiup Ave. Centrer Oregon sincetggg $300 firm. 541-389-2517 $50 0 . 541-480-9567 $40. 619-988-2517

The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in202 f ormation may b e subjected to fraud. Want to Buy or Rent For more i nformaWanted: $Cash paid for tion about an advervintage costume jew- tiser, you may call elry. Top dollar paid for the O regon State Gold/Silver.l buy by the Attorney General's C o n sumer Estate, Honest Artist Office Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Protection hotline at

Sell you r s t u ff f ast . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds

S ell your st u f f f aster w i t h c o l o r .

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G2 SUNDAY, JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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I Fighting group 6 Understood 9 Scientific truth 12 Lives 18 Opposite of wind up 20 Bobby on the ice 21 Memphis-toNashville dir. 22 Like yesterday 23 Classic excuse for some misderneanors 26 Intimidating words 27 Prefix with -graphic 28 Mercury, but not Earth 29 Workman's aid 30 Heavy work 32 Carrier to Tokyo 33 World'slargest particle physics lab, in Switzerland 34 Many a drive-thru installation 35 Declaration from Popeye 38 Anne' s (popular pretzel purveyor) 41 Smugglers' worries 42 morta l 43 Doubt-dispelling words frorn Lady Macbeth 48 Follower of lop 4$ Follower of lop 50 Formerly, once 51 Spectrum Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nyumes.com/crosswords

i$39.95a year).

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53 "Alea iacta ( nThe die is cast") 54 Mutt'smutter? 57 "When You're Good to ("Chicago" song) 60 Aside, e.g. 63 Encyclopedic 65 Frequent features of John Constable landscapes 68 Atypical 70 Bearing in mind 72 Farnous Yogiism 76 Traditional Gaelic singer 77 Falafel holder 78 Food often with pentagonal cross sections 79 "All 80 Holy 82 Makes loop-theloops? 84 Chicken diable 86 Spanish "that" 87 One summing things up 89 They may come with covenants 92 Property areas 94 Match game? 97 Words disrnissive of detractors 102 Send, in a way 103 Urge to attack 104 Top choice 105 Expression of resignation 109 Baseballstat. 110 "Did gyre and gimble in ss, the "Jabberwocky"

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12 Some memory 27 28 29 triggers 13 Stereotypical 33 34 35 beatnik accessory 14 Hard water 38 39 15 Pushed back 43 44 45 46 16 Capture 17 Fuming 19 Bonding 53 54 5 5 58 57 molecule 24 Kind of ticket 63 65 66 67 25 Howl 72 73 74 31 "My, rny!" 36 Card game with a 76 "Chairman" 37 Ape 80 81 82 39 Letters of 87 88 certification? 40 Ending for how 94 9 5 96 97 98 99 or who, for Shakespeare 182 103 43 One that's a bore? 105 108 44 Fights 45 Where prints may 114 115 116 be picked up fra 120 121 122 46 Movement DOWN I Like some measures 47 Send in troops, say 125 126 48 Some wrestlers 2 Cell part 52 Bonkers 129 130 3 Whirlpool product 55 Went back over 4 Strike a chord 5 "Gross!" 56 Rapper Rida 58 Juin preceder 69 Certain rurninant 85 Small power 6 Source of great sources profit 59 1968 live folk album 71 "Summer Nights" 88 Ones that warn 7 Mercury or Earth musical 61 "Tender Is the before they attack 8 District in Rome Night" locale, with 73 Colorful, pebble-like $0 Former ernployer ssthess 9 Sheldon'sapartmentcandies for Vladirnir Putin, mate on "The Big 62 Mideast legislature 74 Bit of trip planning: for short Bang Theory" Abbr. 64 Determines the 91 Sunny room 10 " que s tions?" concentration 75 Roth $3 Rearns ll Emmy-winning of a dissolved 81 Take up again, as 94 Takes a turn drama four years substance a case in a row, with 95 Strict 66 Team V.I.P. n Thess 83 Yearbook sect. $6 Work for a folder 67 Ocho — dos 114Take it easy 115 Cast 116 Sushi topper, maybe 117 Hardly highbrow reading 118Material blocked by parental controls 119 Fantasy title character whose name is one letter different frorn the creature he rides 121 "We will tolerate this no more!" 125 Least plausible 126 Certain wardrobe malfunction 127 Filler of la mer 128Mess up 12$ Covers with goo 130 Austin Powers, e.g. 131 Record stat 132 Guide

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112 Corn chip since 1966 113 Clear sky 120 Pip 122 Barely beat 123 Chance, poetically

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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.

Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place 8photo inyour private party ad for only$15.00 per week.

OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50

Garage Sale Speclal

4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260

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Tools

Heating & Stoves

Fuel & Wood

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Lost & Found

Hay, Grain & Feed

BUYING St S E LLING

Reduce Your Past Tax Woodworking s h op NOTICE TO Juniper firewoodAll gold jewelry, silver Bill by as much as 75 equipment: Sh opADVERTISER Prompt Delivery and gold coins, bars, Percent. Stop Levies, smith with upgraded Since September 29, cut to 18-inch linksRock, Sand & Gravel REMEMBER: If you rounds, wedding sets, Liens and Wage Gar- table saw; Band saw; 1991, advertising for T errebonne a r e a Multiple Colors, Sizes have lost an animal, class rings, sterling sil- nishmenrs. Call The Lathe; Jointer; Disk, used woodstoves has (Lower Bridge Way). Instant Landscaping Co. don't forget to check ver, coin collect, vin- Tax DR Now to see if Sander and working been limited to mod- Free - you haul. Call 541-389-9663 The Humane Society at tage watches, dental you Qualify tools; Shopsmith 12" els which have been David Bend 971-801 -3544 gold. Bill Fl e ming, 1-800-791-2099. certified by the Orplaner with s t and, Push/Reel Mower, Mont541 -382-3537 641 -382-941 9. (PNDC) Sears 12" wood lathe egon Department of gomerv Ward, just sharpRedmond with Copy Crafter and Environmental QualCompanion Crypt Desened335. 541-4f 0-5457 Log truck loads of 54f -923-0882 working tools. Tormek ity (DEQ) and the fedchutes Memorial GarMadras Call a Pro green lodgepole Super grinder 2000 eral E n v ironmentalfirewood, lawn mower with dens. First Level Casdelivered. Riding 541 -475-6889 Whether you need a extra gas catcher purcade Mau s oleum with many a t tach- Protection A g e ncy Call 541-815-4177 Prineville ments and i nstruc- (EPA) as having met c hased at Big R i n $6300. 541-389-2f 66 fence fixed, hedges 54f -447-71 78 May. V er y l i g htly tions. Porter Cable smoke emission stanor Craft Cars trimmed or a house DID YOU KNOW 7 IN 4nxBe belt/disc bench dards. A cer t ified Plne & junlper Split used. Original cost 541 -389-8420. 1 0 Americans or 1 58 built, you'll find $1850, sell quickly at sander. Central Maw oodstove may b e million U.S. A dults chinery 4nx6e belt/disc identified by its certifi- PROMPT DELIVERY $1250. Located near r ead content f r om professional help in Tumalo bench sander; Sears cation label, which is 541-389-9683 n ewspaper m e d ia The Bulletin's "Call a Ss/4n slide compound permanently attached 503-329-5092. each week? Discover Service Professional" miter saw. AMT 4600 to the stove. The Bulthe Power of the Pascroll saw; B e nch letin will not know269 Where can you find a Directory cific Northwest Newsgrinder; Router table ingly accept adveriis- Gardening Supplies helping hand? 541 -385-5809 paper Advertising. For with Sears r o uter; ing for the sale of a free brochure call & Equipment From contractors to Makita router; Ryobi uncertified 91 6-288-601 1 or The Bulletin Offers t able w i t h Se a r s woodstoves. yard care, it's all here email Free Private Party Ada router; Makita router; in The Bulletin's BarkTurfSoil.com cecelia@cnpa.com • 3 lines - 3 days Ryobi t ri m r o uter; 287 (PNDC) "Call A Service • Private Party Only Router bits; B ench 325 Fuel & Wood of items adver- vise; various clamps. PROMPT DELIVERY Professional" Directory How to avoid scam • Total rised must equal $200 Hay, Grain & Feed 542-389-9663 541 -549-9383 and fraud attempts or Less 270 YBe aware of internaWHEN BUYING FOR DETAILS or to f si Quality mixed grass 265 tional fraud. Deal loLost & Found PLACE AN AD, FIREWOOD... hay, no rain, barn stored, For newspaper Building Materials cally whenever pos$250/Ion. Call 541-385-5009 delivery, call the To avoid fraud, sible. Found remote controlled Call 541 -549-3831 Fax 541-385-5002 The Bulletin Circulation Dept. at 2 white toilets, fs", good er' Watch for buyers lider about 7/7 in river Patterson Ranch, Sisters 541 -385-5800 $ 3 0 eac h . recommends paywho offer more than Wanted- paying cash c ond, tvv Old Mill. Call to idenment for Firewood To place an ad, call 541-4f 0-5457 for Hi-fi audio & stutify, 54f -948-0997 your asking price and Excellent 1 st cutting or541-385-5809 only upon delivery who ask to have dio equip. Mclntosh, Call The Bulletin At chard grass mix, small and inspection. or email Found small lime green money wired or JBL, Marantz, D ybales, 3245/ron. claeeified@bendbulletin.com • A cord is 128 cu. fi. 541-385-5809 canvas purse at Fred handed back to them. naco, Heathkit, SanMadras, Oregon 4' x 4' x 8' store Sunday Fake cashier checks 54f -420-9736 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Place Your Ad Or E-Mail • Receipts should The Bulletin Meyers Servlne Central Oregon slncaSaet 7/1 3. 54f -610-6609 and money orders Call 541-261 -1 808 AI: www.bendbulleiin.com include name, are common. Premium Central Ore. phone, price and FOUND STRAY CAT Orchard 261 YNever give out per9 light fixtures from reGrass/Hay mix. kind of wood black with white on INSTANT GREEN sonal financial infor5230/ton. Excellent qualMedical Equipment modeled home, $100 for purchased. paws and nose. mation. all, obo. 541-548-0406 McPheetera Turf ity, no weeds. Tumalo • Firewood ads In Terrebonne, sfTrust your instincts Lawn Fertilizer area. 541-977-31Sf Cosco power scooter MUST include 541 -548-8931 Bend Habitat and be wary of like new, $400. species & cost per RESTORE someone using an 541 -419-9332 or cord to better serve LOST DOG male adult Building Supply Resale 541 -548-4774 Get your escrow service or 541-389-9663 our customers. Yellow Lab vic. Hwy Quality at LOW agent to pick up your business 20, Byram 8 Gosney. Check out the PRICES merchandise. The Bulle6n Lawnmower, 21v Honda Lic. & collar wi "Deke", classifieds online 740 NE 1st Servlne Ceneal Oregon slnraSaea The Bulletin 541-31 2-6709 5.5hp, great cond, w/bag, has chip. Owner away. a ROW I N G www.bendbuttetin.com serving central oregon sincesses Call panicked grand$f 1 0. 541 -410-5457 Open to the public. Updated daily mother. 6100 reward! Leather jacket, Banana Aff Year Dependable Lawnmower, 21" Murray 541-840-2866 or 541 with an ad in Republic men's medium, Metal scaffolding, 5100. Firewood: Seasoned; 263 282-4067 2 10-ft extension ladders, 5.5 hp, good cond, w/bag, $45. 541 -24f -91 00 The Bulletin's Lodgepole, split, del, Tools $90. 54f-410-5457 $50 ea. 541 -548-4051 "Call A Service Bend, 1 f o r 5 1 95 Lost stainless steel flat Find exactly what or 2 for 6365. Call for L awnmower, M-Wards 21" truck g r i ll , sa y s . Professional" ypu aie Ipoklng fpr In the 28 f extension lad- Whitecon pedestal sink, good multi-cord discounts! 3.5hp Briggs & Stratron Rico's Taco. 575 rederType in mint cond, $195 d ition,$40. Directory 541-420-3484. CLASSIFIEDS obo. 313-312-5515 (Bend) 541- 41 0-5457 w/bag. $65. 541 -4f 0-5457 ward. 541 -362-6726. •

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5009 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 341

Horses & Equipmen

• ., II S ,

2001 Silverado 3-horae trailer 5th wheel, 29'xs', deluxe showman/semi living quarters,lots of extras. Beautiful condirion.621,900. OBO 541 -420-3277

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Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from our-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1 -503-378-4320

For Equal Opporiunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 97f -673- 0764.

The Bulletin

541 -385-5809 3-Horse Trailer, 22' long, 7' wide, 2 rear axles, good cond. Logan Coach Inc. $4200 obo. 305-794-01 90 Add your web address io your ad and readers on The Buiietin's 345 web site, www.bendLivestock & Equipment bulletin.com, will be able to click through 8 cross bred yearling ewes Sf 50 e a c h. automatically to your website. 541 -389-7853

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Homes starting in the Iow

July 18-20andJuly 25-27 Friday 12pm - 6pm Saturday tk Sunday 10am - 6pm Hosted 6 Listed byi

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EDIE DELAY

$200,000s. Brand new homes tn Bend with the quality

61041Manhaeloop,Bend Directions:From thepaifttsay, east onReedNariet, south on 15th, then

followsfgns.

20781 NE Comet I,ane

under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen,extra attention DirectiistssiNorth on Boyd Acres,

given iu allow for tons or Righton Sierra, Le f( on Black Potsder, natural light R much more. Right on Cometlane.Lookfor signs. Come by the model home for starting in the low moreinformation and plans.

Homes Stardng Mid-$200s lk

541-420-2950

Pahlisch is known f o r stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with

Hosted & Listed byi

$200,000s

RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker

TEAM DcLAY

RE

A L T 0

R S

541-306-0939

R E A 1 T 0

R S



G4 SUNDAY JULY 20, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

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

860

860

llllotorcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & Accessories

®

Harley Davidson 2003 Anniversary Road King, Stage 1, pearl white, excellent condition, lots of chrome & extr a s. $13,999. 541-279-0846

00

880

880

882

885

916

Watercraft

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Canopies & Campers

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

CHECKYOUR AD

t0lee

(2) '05 Yamaha Wave- HOLIDAY RAMBLER runners lo hrs, 1 has 258 VACATIONER 2003 hrs, other has 239 hrs. 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, Garaged when not in workhorse, Allison 1000 use. The pair $9000 obo 5 speed trans., 39K, 541-549-4834 / 588-0068 NEW TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS ds published in 0Wa- brakes, steel cage cocktercraft" include: Kay- pit, washer/dryer, fireaks, rafts and motor- lace, mw/conv. oven, Ized personal ree standing dinette, watercrafts. For was $121,060 new; now, "boats" please see $35,900. 541-536-1008 Class 870.

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000or best Harley D a vidson offer. 541-318-6049 2006 FXDLI Dyna 541-385-5809 Low Rider, Mustang seat with backrest, Iereng Central Oregnn ente 1903 new battery, windshield, forward con880 trois, lots of chrome, Motorhomes Screamin' Eagle ex- HD 2008 FXDL Dyna Low haust, 11,360 miles. Rider, 3200 mi. Stage 1 & Well maintained! 1997 Bounder 34' 2 Vance 8 Hines pipes, w/slide. $1 7,900. $8,650 in La Pine $13,500. 541-306-0166 Excellent condition, (928) 581-9190 must see! Ford 460 HDFatBo 1996 w/Banks, new tires, dual A/C, rear camera, triple axle, Onan gen, 63k miles.

to romote our service Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone COLLINS who con t racts for construction work to be licensed with the Construction Contrac- Aerstien/llethstching tors Board (CCB). An Ask aboutFRBE added active license services with seasonal means the contractor contract! is bonded & insured. • Spring Clean-up Verify the contractor's • Mowing 'Edging CCB l i c ense at • P00000tIIg eweedeattng www.hirealicensed• Feruuxtns 'Hauling contractor.com • Grounds Keeping or call 503-378-4621. ON000'030or 3000kly 00rui000PtioN O The Bulletin recomFREE ESTIMATES mends checking with Call IIotu to sc/Iedttrg! the CCB prior to con- j41-480P714 tracting with anyone. BONDED & IN URED Some other t rades also req u ire additional licenses and MAVERICK certifications.

DSCAPING

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles. 541-548-4807

t

HD Sportster, 2001 exc cond, 1 owner, maint'd, new t i res, cu s tom chrome, leather saddle bags, 32,400 mi, $4200. Tom, 541-382-6501

Honda Rebel 250, 1986, gets 60 mpg, excellent commuter, 7213 miles, $1100. 541-788-6276

@ott & Tssttstf Osrg

3t U00000d3t Bonded S 100010d • SP00igllZlng in ar0 Pgttmgter CI00ttng • NOWlnt/Ygrd D000lllnt SgrVIC00 • W00d00tlng/ChalnIIWWOrk

• LandSCaPe, Congtrugdonllngtallg • Fgngint S Morel

80nd/Redmond/PowelButte l TIrrebonne/CrookedRiver Ranch 503!gr8VeteranDircgwrr

Bret Stormer

Specializing itt aii Fine attd Finish Carpentry Serving aii sf Central Oregon

Ce!I:(ij03) 302-244ij Omce:(54I) 923-4324 0

Debris Removal

0:

AEEEN REINICH — ProvidingYard Maintenance

Will Havl Away

~ FREE~ For Salvage g '. Any Loeatton ' '

grtaRemoval

Also CleanupsI

t'

44 Cleanottts' ~

& Clean-up, Mowing, Thatching, Plugging & much more!

Providence 2005 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

Z a~<0~ / , . Full Service Landscape 541-390-1466

9 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN HOUSEKEEPING.

Experience Commercial

541-410-0648 541-410-1136 Handyman

I DO THAT!

Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial trIIurll Jobs to Entire RoomRemodels GarageOrganisation

Management

& Residential

Painting/Wall Covering

All American Painting • Interior and Exterior • Family.OWned • Ites>denaat R Commercial • 40 yearsexperience • Senior Discounts • 5.year Wananties

Quality, Honest Work CC00151573BOltkdlbt$0ÃPd

Landscaping/Yard Care

2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Ph. 541-447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineville.

®

NOTICE: Oregon Landscape Contractors Law (ORS 671) requires all businesses that advertise t o pe r form Repaint Landscape ConstrucSpecialist! tion which includes: l anting, deck s , Oregon License ences, arbors, ¹ 1 861 47 LLC water-features, and installation, repair of ir- 541-815-2888 rigation systems to be l icensed w it h th e Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond,insurance and workers compensaWestern tion for their employees. For your protec- Palntlng Co. tion call 503-378-5909 —Richard Hsymanor use our website: a seml-retlred palntlng www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status contractor of 45 years. before contracting with Small jobs welcome. the business. Persons Interior & Exterior doing lan d scape maintenance do not 541-388-B910 r equire an LC B l i - Faxt 5414884787 CCIN6184 cense.

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 www.m new ~ lle robus.com a~ or email trainwater157O gmail.com or call 858-527-8627

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionally winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning seldom used; just add water and it's ready to go! $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174

Keystone Lsredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 541-4947-4805 Komfort 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 t4

Q

12' aluminum fishing boat, t r ailer, motor, fish finder, accessories, $1200. 541-389-7234 FIND IT!

88I Y 87' SELL ITr The Bulletin Classifieds Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

Brake Buddy, $500; Guardian rock shield, $200; Roadmaster 5000 tow bar, $450; OR $900 for ALL. Call 541-548-1422

Zhe Bulleti

~e r vrng Central Oregoraargte 190

875

Watercraft

Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonAdd APicture! Reach thousands of readers! smokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-levelCall 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classif!eds ing jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of stor• -' I Q age, maintained, very clean! Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified Bigfoot 29 2003, sleeps buyers! 541488-7179 5, walk-around queen bed, 57K mi, 7.3L power stroke t urbo d i esel w/Banks power pak incl ~L i e a@ auges, torque lock & ake brakes. Power everything, auto leveling jacks, air ride w/90psi Winnebago Advencompressor, 3.6kw pro- turer 2005 359/2', gas, pane gen set. V e ry less than 20,000 miles, clean, no pets, no smkrs, excellent condition, 2 araged. No s l i des.slide-outs, work horse 36,500. 541-5484985 chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with al l o p tions, $62,000 I negotiable. •

I

Price Reduced! Komfort P a c ific Ridge 27 ' Like NEW deluxe NW des ign, 15 ' Su p e r Slide, private bdrm, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt, led lights, always stored inside. A MU S T see ! $23,500 obo! Call Pam 541-788-6767 or Bill 541-480-7930 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. Call 5 4 1-306-8711or BIG COUNTRY RV email aikistu©bend- Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: cable.com

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652

e•

Winnebago Aspect 2009 - 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. 0 17 Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Desperately s e e kingFleetwood Discovery Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, InRhonda O. I am an old friend who has found it 40' 2003, diesel, w/all verter, Auto Jacks, options 3 slide outs, extremely necessary satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or and imperative on my etc., 32,000 miles. p ets. L i k e ne w , part that I speak with Wintered in h eated $74,900 her. Please, please call Werner (951) shop. $82,000 O.B.O. 54'I -480-6900 541-447-8664 929-4535 or email me wernsocal ©gmail.com Winnebago Sightseer 27' 2002. workhorse Meet singles right now! gas motor, Class A, No paid o perators, 8' slide living rm/dijust real people like nette, new tires. spare you. Browse greettire carrier, HD trailer ings, exchange meshitch, water heater, FLEETWOOD sages and connect micro/oven, generalive. Try it free. Call PACE ARROW, 1999 tor, furn/AC, outside Updated interior, 36', 2 now: 8 7 7-955-5505. slides, 42,600 miles, V10 shower, carbon diox(PNDC) gas, 5000 watt generator, ide & smoke detector, S ingle f e male 65 , hydraulic levelers, auto fiberglas ext., elect. seeking male over 60. steps, back-up camera, step, cruise control, I am a kind and lov- washer/dryer, central vac, CB radio, 60k miles, ing woman. would like ice m aker, l o aded, awning, TV antenna w to meet someone for excellent condition. booster, flat screen companionship and $27,500 541-620-2135 23" TV. AM/FM/CD possible relationship. (SeeCraigslist stereo. $2 7 ,500. Call 541-306-4252 84470374489) 541-546-2554 1994 Yamaha Wave Raider exc. cond, low miles, $2250. 541-480-3937

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809

or place your ad

on-line at bendbulletin.com 882

Fifth Wheels I I

M •t •I 0tt •

'

(j

5th Wheel Transport, 1990 Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition,

Sell for $3500.

Aircraft, Parts & Service

f/3 interestin

Columbia 400,

Financing available.

$150,000

(located © Bend) 541-288-3333

Holiday Rambler Alumascape 28' 2003,1-owner. Self-contained, 13' slide, 80W solar panel, walkaround queen + sofa/bed, loads of storage throughout. Excellent cond., licensed 2015. Must see!$13,700. 541-389-9214

. l'! j0 Kit Companion 1994, good cond. 26' with one slide, Reduced! to $4000. 541-389-5788

Laredo 30' 2009 Q

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

Find It in The Bulletin Classiflsds! 541-385-5809

541-548-5254

16' Old Town Canoe, spruce, cedar & canvas, Lake model, 1 owner, very good cond, w/extras. $1000. 541-388-3386

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat & air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

$25,500

Advertise your car!

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969,was a special order, has all the extras, and is all original. See tobelieve! $1 2,000or best offer. 541-923-6049

908

541-419-3301

$23,995.

00

2013 R-Vision 23RBS Trail-Lite Sportby Monaco - Expedition pkg, Sport Value pkg, convenience pkg, elec. awning, spare tire, LED TV/ent. system, outside shower, a elec. tongue jack, black MONTANA 3585 2008, flush sys, beautiful inteexc. cond., 3 slides, rior, huge galley, great king bed, Irg LR, storate, 1/2-ton towable, Arctic insulation, all al oys, queen bed. $35,000 obo. Likenew, asking $21,500 options 541-420-3250 Gordon, 541-382-5797

TOW EQUIPMENT

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,

541-383-3503

CCBgrtg3rg60

European Professional Painter

I

TIFFINALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP

Allegro31 ft., 2006 original owner, 2 slides, Ford V-10, 28,000 miles, satellite TVs, queen bed, sleeps 6, lots of storage, stored under cover, A/C, electric awning, 5.5 KW generator, auto leveling, no smokers, no pets, $52,900. 541.390.9932

Call 541 337.6149

MARTIN JAMES

trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $28,500 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, Or.

Jayco Jay Feather LGT 25Z 2005 LR slide, central air, micro, AM/FM/CD stereo, TV antenna with booster, queen walk around bed, s l eeps 4-6, outside grill, entertainment center and shower, awning, power hitch, new g a s/elec water heater. All new tires, includes spare. Clean, Great Shape. $1 1,200541-389-8154

541-548-5254

Boats & Accessories

12' Aluminum boat with trailer, 3hp motor, good cond, $1200.. 503-307-8570

; • ~.I I' ll!j

Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel

o

(a~ -e

it0tkaborrr our SUMMER SPECMI,/

HOme /nSPeCtiOII RePairS

Dennis 541.31 7.9768

.

870

Contact Allen,

HOME IS WHERE THE DIRT IS

Call Julie Today!

$27,900

Call Dick at 541-408-2387

Eagle Cap 850, 2005 on the first day it runs with slideout, AC, micro, Peterbilt 359 p otable to make sure it is corfrig, heater, queen bed, water truck, 1 990, rect. 0Spellcheck" and 3200 gal. tank, 5hp wet bath, exlnt cond, human errors do oc- $16 900. 541-388-3477 p ump, 4 - 3 0 hoses, camlocks, $ 25,000. cur. If this happens to leave message. your ad, please con- LEAR CANOPY 2003 541-820-3724 tact us ASAP so that 925 blue, fits Ford F-350 corrections and any s hort b o x , $500. Utility Trailers adjustments can be 541-410-4354. made to your ad. 541 -385-5809 Roamin Chariot Pop-up 16' open bed utility trailer with large gear Camper fits Ranger The Bulletin Classified box, new wheels and Toyota pickups. Int ires, $ 70 0 O B O . cludes jacks, stand. 541-548-3761 No sink, stove, toilet. $500 OBO. 932 541-325-6548 Antique & Classic Autos CrossRoads Cruiser 2005 28RL 5th wheel, 2 slide-outs, nice/clean, 0 0 $13995. 541-604-4073 or 541-604-4074

206-715-7120

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:

I

541-536-1294 541-815-SN

Zaae~ Qua//eI

References 63 rates to fi tyourneeds.

room slide, 48k miles, in good cond. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.

881

Victory TC 2 0 0 2, 40K mi., runs great, s tage 1 kit, n e w tires, rear brakes & more. Health forces Allegro 32' 2007, like s ale. $4,00 0 . new, only 12,600 miles. Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 541-771-0665 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-lev865 eling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, ATVs 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812 Rack for 2 ATVs, fits 8' bed, with ramps. $800 obo. 541-549-4834 or 541-588-0068

I®L

Domestic Services

Ir~

$15,000

LCBgl671

4-647-87O(

2004 with living

Travel Trailers

541-306-9897

C 0 III s T R u C T I 0 ¹ ccsvt7$914

Winnebago Sightseer 30'

The Bulletin

Call 54 I-385-5809

— iI I

The Bulletin 860 To Subscribe call Motorcycles 8 Accessories 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $1 0,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-6684

875

What are you looking for? You'll find it in The Bulletin Classifieds

Corvette Coupe 1964 530 miles since frame off restoration. Runs 541-385-5809 and drives as new. Satin Silver color with black leather interior, mint dash. PS, PB, AC, 4 speed. Knock offs. New tires. Fresh 327 N.O.M. All Cor1/3 interest in wellrestoration parts equipped IFR Beech Bo- vette in & out. Reduced to nanza A36, new 10-550/ $57,950. 541-410-2870 prop, located KBDN. $65 000 541-41 9-9510 www. N4972M.com

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, 1/5th interest in 1973 exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179 Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low MGB 1973 convertible, time on air frame and 4-cyl, 2-barrel carb, new engine, hangared in manifold, new alternator Bend. Exce//ent per& rotor assembly, formance &affordbrilliant red with black able flying! $6,000. top, beautiful little car! 541-410-6007 $3995 obo.

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773

1974 Bel!anca 1730A 2160 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner for 35 years. $60K.

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

WILDERNESS 28' 2000, heat, A/C, shower, queen bed, nice condition. $8775. 541-548-0875

Buick Skylark 1972 17K miles. No rust, no leaks, eyerything works. Amazing originality! Photos at hemmings.com $20,900. 541-323-1898

In Madras, call 541-475-6302 3300 sq.ft. Hangar Prineville Airport 60'wide by 55' deep with 16' bi-fold door.

Upgrades include, T-6 lighting, skylights, windows, 14' side RV door, infra-red heating, and bathroom, $155,000, Call Bill

541-410-9942 Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 933

Pickups

2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

Chevy Ext. Cab 1991

with camper shell, good cond., $1500 OBO. 541-447-5504.

Chevy 0/4ton 1982, built 350 with 450 HP and $1000 tires. $3000 obo. 541-633-8951

541-460-7930

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998

~

Ford F250, 1997 heavy duty 4x4 Supercab, 7.5 L engine, auto, 111K mi, runs g r eat, $ 3 750. 541-848-7295 /389-8690

Ford F250 4x4 1996, x-cab, long wheel base, brush guard, tool box, $3000. 541-771-1667 or 541-633-3607

E P U R LI C

ItICÃFICES

I M P CSRT~

~

An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must ba accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility io citizens who want fo know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go fowwvv.bendbullefin.com and click on "Classi%ed Ads"

OR For Hire

Call for quote Ask for Theo,

541-260-4293

The Bulletin


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JULY 20 2014 G5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 933

Pickups

935

935

Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles

Honda Ridgeline RTL Crew Cab

C J5

1 9 7 8 V-8 , Lockers, new soft top, power steering, oversized h e ater, many extras. $6,000 obo. 541-519-1627

Extra nice 4x4, great

mpg. Only $19,977

(photo for illustration only)

Nissan Murano 2012, AWD, auto, cloth, CD, pw, pdl. Vin ¹229346 Stock ¹83013

$16,979

Vin¹541238

ROBBERSON'L

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

®

(photo for illustration only)

Nissan Frontier 2013, SV model, Crew cab, 4x4, 5 speed trans., pw, pdl. VIN ¹715664 Stock ¹44326A

JEEP WRANGLER

2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

2009 hard top 18,000 miles. automatic, AC, tilt & cruise, power windows, power steering, power locks, alloy wheels and running boards, garaged.

Dlr ¹0354

541-419-5980

$25,979

®

s u a A Ru

Jeep Wrangler 2005, 4 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. cyl. soft top, totally 877-266-3821 gone through by auto Dlr ¹0354 shop. Have papers. $10,400. 541-815-7408 The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting Rn your needs. <CU

s u a A Ru UUDCRUODDURD.OOU

Toyota Highlander 2002

$23,900.

877-266-3821 935

Sport Utility Vehicles

Call on one of the professionals today!

Mazda CX-9Grand Touring2008

940

975

975

975

975

975

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Cadillac Catera 2001 DID YOU KNOW 'I44 100k mi., $1750. Call million U.S. A d ults for info 541-389-5488 read a N e wspaper print copy each week? 13 W ~~<M h * Discover the Power of PRINT N e wspaper Chrysler Town & Nissan 300zx 1993 Advertising in Alaska, (Photo for illustration only) CHECK YOURAD Glass T-tops, Country LXI 1997, Idaho, Montana, Or- HyundaiAccent GL on the first day of pub- egon, U t a h and 1999, auto, CD. 5-speed n/t, 41,000 beautiful inside & lication. If a n e rror Washington with just VIN ¹584982 miles, black with tan, out, one owner, nonmay occur in your ad, one phone call. For a Stock ¹44383B Stillen upgrades, high smoker,. loaded with p lease contact u s performance tires & options! 197,892 mi. FREE ad v e rtising $4,999 battery, excellent Service rec o rds and we will be happy network brochure call condition. For more s u a A Ru available. $4 , 950. to fix it as soon as we 916-288-6011 or © can. Deadlines are: email information go to Call Mike, (541) 8152060 NE Hwy 20, Bend www.buffalois.com/ Weekdays 12:00 noon ceceliaOcnpa.com 8176 after 3:30 p.m. 877-266-3821 for next day, S at. (PNDC) 3~00* . 0 Dlr ¹0354 $20,000 11:00 a.m. for Sun541-318-6368 day; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. 541-385-5809 Oldsmobile 88 LS 1997 4-door, 1 owner, 86K The Bulletin Classified miles, excellent condition. Goldish-beige with (photo for illustration only) USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! leather interior, ali power Toyota Sienna 201 1, (photo for illustration only) options, AC, new shocks, Dodge Avenger 2013, LE model, 7 passen- Door-to-door selling with Hyundai Elantra 2011, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. & battery, tags good Touring, leather, auto, tires ger, stow-n-go seat- fast results! It's the easiest Vin ¹535474 thru 6 /2016. A s king ing, alloy wheels. CD, pw, pdl. way in the world to sell. Stock ¹83015 $4295. 541-390-8386 Vin ¹019106. Vin ¹090677 $14,979 Stock ¹82995 Stock ¹43981A The Bulletin Classified Subaru Impreza $24,999 541-3%-5809 © s u a A Ru $13,979 2.5i 2011 © s u a A Ru S Ua ARU 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. UUDCRUODDRRD.OOU 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Chevy Cavalier 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Dlr ¹0354 877-266-3821 2000 877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354 Dlr ¹0354

®

975

Limited and AWD come see! Vin065241

Inspected & Ready! Bargain Corral

$14,988 ROBBERSON LINCOLN ~

DLR¹0205

BMW X3

2 0 07, 99K

Car of the yeargreat shape!

miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, panoramic moo n roof, Bluetooth, ski bag, Xenon headlights, tan & black leather interior, n ew front & re a r brakes O 76K miles, one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900.

Vin¹126502

$15,977

Toyota Sienna XLE Limited

ROBBERSON'L ~

$3,977

Vin¹239718

I II R K R

541.312.3986

Subaru Outback 2012 3.6R Limited, 6 cyl, auto. trans., AWD, leather heated seats, AWD, power moon r oof, a n d mor e ! 25,600 miles. Below KB O $27 , 500

ROBBERSON LINCOLN ~

II IR K R

Ford Focus Wgn, 2005, 149K, premium sound, auto, alum. wheels, traction control, great vehicle, 25-32 mpq, $3250. 541-848-7295 /389-8670

541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

541.312.3986

541-388-4360

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

2005 AWD Minivan Room for everyone!

Chevrolet Trailblazer The Bulletin Classifieds 2008 4x4 Automatic, 6-cylinder, tilt wheel, power windows, power brakes, air conditioning, keyless entry, 69K miles. Excellent condition; tires have 90% tread. (photo forillustration only) $11,995. MercedesML350 2003, Call 541-598-5111 AWD, moonroof, pw, pdl, power seats. Vin ¹414134 Stock ¹44376A

$6,979

©

s u a A Ru

Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. AWD, 6 cyl, remote entry, 877-266-3821 clean title, 12/15 tags, Dlr ¹0354 $5995. 541-610-6150

Audi A6 Quattro 2008

$19,977 ROBBERSON ~

Fax it to 541-322-7253

Infiniti l30 2001 great condition/ well maintained, 127k miles. $5,900 obo.

©

nsaoa ~

541.312.3986 DLR¹0205

Chrysler 200 LX 2012, pw, pdl, tilt, CD, auto. VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014

AWD, automatic. Ready to go for only $24,977

$14,979 S Ua A R U

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

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

Dlr ¹0354

Vin¹055921

Volkswagen Touareg 2007

~

sRIRa

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205 V6, automatic 6-Spd 67,098 mi. warranty included Vin¹053967

$14,977 ROBBERSON LINcCLN ~

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541.312.3986 DLR¹0205

Honda Civic LX 2010

ROBBERSON'L

Buick LeSabre 1995 w/leather seats, $2,999; also 2002 w/cloth seats, $4695; auto., loaded, 130k miles 541-419-5060

/

Corvette Cpe 2004 two-tops (glass & painted), only 44k mi. pewter/black, CD, tinted windows, local Bend car showroom cond., CD, tires 80%, clear title, everything works!A Fun car fo drive. $21,995 obo 928-210-8323 More photos at www.bendbulletin.com

maaaa ~

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

Well cared for Great on gas! Vin¹076238 $15,998 ROBBERSON ~ maaa ~

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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205

Subaru Outback2006, Limited, leather, 5spd, pw, pdl, tilt. Mazda Miata 1991

fun car, good shape, 5 spd. $3500. 541-410-7282

VIN ¹361575 Stock ¹44255A

®

$12,979 S Ua A R U

UUDCRUODDRRD.OOU

Mercedes Benz e320, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1999 wagon, white 120k mi., incl. studded tires, exc. cond., $4500. 541-318-4502.

877-266-3821

Dlr ¹0354

People Look for Information About Products snd Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classinsffft Subaru Outback 3.6R Limited 2011, moon roof, AWD, pw, pl, leather, Vin ¹381548 Stock ¹44184A Vehicle? Call The Bulletin $23,979 and place an ad © s uUURCRUOUURRO.OOU a A Ru today! Ask about our 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 'Whee/ Deal"! 877-266-3821 l f o r private party l Dlr ¹0354 advertisers Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS

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VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-

ways garaged, all

maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218 VWJeffa GLI 2012

Sporty, Fun and a manual trans. Vin¹108574 $19,977 ROBBERSON ~m

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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

extra caution f I mends when p u rchasing • f products or servicesf from out of the area. f S ending c ash ,f or credit inI checks, formation may be I

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Legal Notices

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fice box address set reference. You may and asphalt placeforth in this notice. also access sale sta- ment. Due to potential con- tus a t ww w . northflicts with federal law, westtrustee.com and Contract Documents persons having no www. USA-Foreclomay be examined at record legal or equi- sure.com. For further the following locatable interest in the information, p l ease tions: subject property will contact: Heather L. •City of Redmond Enonly receive informa- Smith Nort h west gineering Division 243 tion concerning the Trustee Services, Inc. NE Antler Avenue, charges of $0.00 each month begi n ning lender's estimated or P.O. Box 997 Belle- Redmond, Oregon. 01/16/14 until paid; actual bid. Lender bid vue, WA 98009-0997 .www.ciplist.com plus prior accrued late i nformation is a l s o 4 25-586-1900 H a l the brook, Harvey Wade Digital copies of the charges of $190.20; available a t p lus a dvances o f trustee's web s ite, (TS¹ 721 0 .20098) plans, specifications, 1002.269785-File No. and bid proposal, in$0.00; together with www.northwesttitle expense, costs, trustee.com. Notice is cluding any future adLEGAL NOTICE trustee's fees and at- further given that any INVITATION denda or revisions to TO BID torneys fees incurred person named in ORS the bid d ocuments, herein by reason of 86.778 has the right, Sealed bids for the are available by gosaid default; any fur- at any time prior to ing to www.ciplist.com c onstruction of t h e ther sums advanced five days before the City o f and signing up, by Re d mond, Oregon, as by the beneficiary for date last set for the Homestead C a nal going to the Member 2008-47153 and sub- the protection of the s ale, to h av e t h is T rail P roject P K Login (It's f r ee). sequently assigned to above described real foreclosure proceed- 14-01, addressed to General Contractors Guaranty Bank by As- property and its inter- ing dismissed and the the City R e corder, who plan to bid on this signment recorded as est therein; and pre- trust deed reinstated City of Redmond, Or- project are required to by payment to t he 2014-015972, cover- payment cegon will be received r egister for a n aon ing the following de- penalties/premiums, if beneficiary of the en- until 2:00 PM local count scribed real property applicable. WHERE- tire amount then due t ime a t the Cit y www.ciplist.com to be situated in said county FORE, notice hereby (other than such por- Recorder's office, City included in the Plan and state, to wit: Lots is given that the un- tion of the principal as Hall, 716 SW Ever- Holder's list and to reTen (10) and Eleven dersigned trustee will would not then be due green Avenue, Red- ceive email updates of any addenda or revi(11), Block on October 15, 2014 had no default ocmond, Oregon, on t h e bid Ninety-Four (94), De- at the hour of 10:00 curred) and by curing August 19, 2014 and sions t o o'clock, A.M. in acany o t her d e fault documents. No Proschutes River Recrethen publicly opened ation Homesites Unit cord with the stan- complained of herein and read at 2:00 PM posal will be consid8 Part II, recorded dard of time estab- that is capable of be- in Conference Room ered from a General by ORS ing cured by tender- A, City Hall, RedJuly 5, 1967, in Cabi- lished Contractor to whom ing the performance mond, Oregon. First a proposal form has net A, Page 137, De- 187.110, at the folschutes County, Or- lowing place: inside r equired under t h e subcontractor list not been issued by tr u st tier egon. P R OPERTY the main lobby of the o bligation o r is required to be sub- the City of Redmond Deschutes C o u nty deed, and in addition A DDRESS: 15 7 5 0 mitted by 4:00 PM, to registered bidders Lava Drive La Pine, Courthouse, 1164 NW to paying said sums same day (Note: The from www.ciplist.com. Bond, in the City of or tendering the per- first tier subcontractor OR 97739 Both the PUBLISH: beneficiary and the Bend, County of Des- formance necessary list may also be subtrustee have elected chutes, State of Or- to cure the default, by mitted with the sealed Bend Bulletinto sell the real prop- egon, sell at public paying all costs and bid a t c o ntractor'sSunday July 20, 2014 erty to satisfy the obli- auction to the highest expenses actually in- p reference). s LEGAL NOTICE bidder for cash the curred in enforcing the shall be clearlyBid gations secured by la- NOTICE IS HEREBY the trust deed and a i nterest in t h e d e - obligation and t rust beled: Homestead i ven t h a t Lak e notice of default has scribed real property deed, together with Trail Project o unty will hold a and Canal been recorded pursu- which the grantor had trustee's PK 14-01. public auction on Satant to Oregon Re- or had power to con- attorney's fees not August 2, 2014 the No mandatory pre-bid urday, vlsed Statutes vey at the time of the exceeding at 10:00 a.m. at the 86.752(3); the default execution by grantor amounts provided by meeting will be held. Lake County Road for which the foreclo- of the trust deed, to- said OR S 8 6 . 778. N o bid will b e a c - Department located at s ure i s m a d e i s gether with any inter- Requests from per- cepted by a general 95574 Hwy 140 West, grantor's failure to pay est which the grantor sons named in ORS contractor who is not Lakeview, OR. Addiwhen due the follow- or grantor's succes- 86.778 for reinstate- on the plan holders tional information and ing sums: monthly sors in interest ac- ment quotes received list. vehicle listing can be payments of quired after the ex- less than six days on our website $1,119.96 beginning ecution of the trust prior to the date set This is a Public Works found at wwwJakecountyor.org 01/01/14; plus l a te deed, to satisfy the for the trustee's sale Contract and subject Final list of sale items charges of $0.00 each foregoing obligations will be honored only at to the Oregon Bureau will be posted July month beg i nning thereby secured and the discretion of the of Labor and Indus- 25th. 01/16/14; plus prior t he costs and e x - b eneficiary or if r e - tries (BOLI) Wage LEGAL NOTICE accrued late charges penses of sale, in- quired by the terms of Rates, dated July 1, of $190.20; plus ad- cluding a reasonable the loan documents. 2014 an d a m end- NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING vances of $0.00; to- charge by the trustee. In construing this no- ments for region 10 as Desc h utes gether with title ex- Notice is further given tice, the singular in- defined under ORS The County Pla n ning pense, costs, trustee's that for reinstatement cludes the plural, the 279C.800 to "grantor" inCommission will hold fees and attorney's or payoff quotes re- word 279C.870. a Public Hearing on fees incurred herein quested pursuant to cludes any successor Thursday, August 28, by reason of said de- O RS 8 6 .786 a n d i n i nterest t o th e Scope of Work: at 5:30 p.m. in fault; any further sums 86.789 must be timely grantor as well as any Improvements gener- 2014, other person owing an the Deschutes County advanced by the ben- communicated in a ally include installaServices Center, 1300 eficiary for the protec- written request that obligation, the perforapprox. 2800 Lin- NW W a l l Str e et, tion of the above de- c omplies with t h at mance of which is se- tion eal feet of a sphalt scribed real property statute addressed to cured by said trust pathway adjacent to Bend, to take testimony on the following and i ts inte r est the trustee's "Urgent deed, and theNwords COID Canal on item: FILE NUMBER: therein; and prepay- Request Desk" either "trustee" and benefi- the North Canal B l vd. ciary" include their re247-14-000156-ZC. by personal delivery ment penalties/premiservices SUBJECT:Rezone to ums, if applicable. By to the trustee's physi- spective successors Construction include: grading and amend zoning map for reason of said default cal offices (call for ad- in interest, if any. The embank- Bend Airport to identhe beneficiary has dress) or b y f i r st trustee's rules of auc- engineered ment fill, c o ncrete d eclared all s u ms class, certified mail, tion may be accessed flatwork, curb, aggre- tify boundaries of Airw w w .northwestfield Operations (AO), owing on the obliga- r eturn r eceipt r e - at baserock, water Aviation Support (AS), tion secured by the quested, addressed to trustee.com and are gate service i n stallation, and A i rport-Related the trustee's post of- incorporated by this LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE File No. 7210.20098 R e f e rence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made b y Ha r vey Wade Halbrook, as grantor, to Regional Trustee Ser v ices Corp., as trustee, in favor o f M o r tgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for GB Mortgage, LLC, its successors and assigns, as beneficiary, dated 11/19/08, recorded 11/26/08, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County,

trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $128,335.00 with interest thereon at the rate of 7.5 percent per annum be g inning 1 2/01/1 3; plus l a t e

Industrial

(ARID) in 18.76.

Dist r ict ferred to as 1788 C h apter NE Meerkat Ave.,

L O C ATION: Bend, OR 97701).

City of Bend Munici- P ARCEL 3 : Lo t pal Airport. STAFF Thirty-six (36), CONTACT:Peter ROCKRIDGE Russell. Copies of the PHASE 2, recorded staff report, applica- August 2, 1996, in tion, all d ocuments C abinet D, P a g e and evidence sub- 246, Des c hutes mitted by or on behalf County, O r e gon. of the applicant and (Commonly reapplicable criteria are ferred to as 2625 available for inspec- NE Cordata Place, tion at the Planning Bend, OR 97701). Division at no cost C hris Hatfield o f a nd can b e p u r - Hurley Re , P . C ., chased for 25 cents a 747 SW Mill View page. The staff re- W ay, Bend, O R port should be made 9 7702, wa s ap available 7 days prior pointed Successor to the date set for the Trustee by the Benhearing. Documents eficiary on January are also available on- 10, 2014. Both the line a t www . des- Beneficiary and have c hutes.org. Des - Trustee chutes County elected to sell the encourages persons said real property to w ith d i sabilities t o satisfy the obligaparticipate in all pro- tions secured by grams and activities. said Trust Deed and This event/location is a Notice of Default accessible to people has been recorded with disabilities. If you pursuant to Oregon need a c c ommoda- Revised S t a tutes tions to make partici- 86.735(3); the depation poss i ble, fault for which the please call the ADA foreclosure is made Coordinator at (541) is Grantor's failure 330-4640. to pay when due the following sums: InLEGAL NOTICE t erest only p a yT RUSTEE'S N O T ICE O F S A L E. ments of $3,000 beginning January 1, Reference is made 2008 through Januto that certain Trust ary 1, 2014 in the Deed mad e by of Kevin T. S a wyer amount $216,000.00, p l us a nd T a mara L . penalty fees from Sawyer, as tenants J anuary 5, 2 0 0 8 by the entirety, as through January 15, Grantors, to Amerin the amount iTitle, an O r egon 2014 of $44,060.00, and corporation, as any real property Trustee, in favor of taxes due. By reaMichael J. Tennant, of the default, as Ben e f iciary, son the Beneficiary has dated November 30, declared all sums 2007, recorded Noowing on the obligavember 30, 2007, as tion secured by the Instrument No. Trust Deed immedi2007-62046, due and payR ecords of D e s - ately able, those sums chutes County, Orbeing the following, egon, covering the to-wit: As of Janufollowing described ary 15, 2014, unreal property situpaid principal in the ated in Deschutes of County, O r e gon, amount $300,000.00, p l us to-wit: PARCEL 1: interest at Lot T w e nty-three accrued the rate of 12% per (23) SILVER SAGE, a nnum from N o PHASE 2, recorded vember 30, 2007 in J uly 6, 1 9 94, I n the a m ount of Cabinet D, Page 59, $220,832.88, p l us Deschutes County, penalty fees from Oregon. (ComJanuary 5, 2008 in monly referred to as a m ount of 2093 N E H o l low the $ 44,060.00, for a Tree Lane, Bend, t otal a m ount o f OR 97701). PAR$564,892.88, p l us CEL 2: Lot Twenty interest continuing (20), Block One (1), to accrue at the rate STAR BRIGHT ESof $98.63 per day, TATES, PHASE 11, plus penalty fees at recorded July 24, rate of $20.00 per 1979, i n C a b inet day from January B-659, Deschutes 2014, until paid, County, O r e gon. 15, plus an y u n paid (Commonly reproperty taxes, plus

a ttorney's fee s , foreclosure costs, and s u m s advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of said Trust Deed. WHEREFORE, notice is hereby given that t h e un d e rsigned Trustee will on October 6, 2014, at the hour of 11:00 o'clock, A.M., in accord with the standard of time established b y ORS 1 87.110, o n th e front steps of t he Deschutes County Courthouse, 1 100 NW Bond, City of B end, County o f Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to t he highest bidder for cash the interest in the said described real property which the Grantors have or had power to convey at the time of the execution by Grantors of the said T rust D e ed, t o gether with any interest which the obligations th e reby s ecured and t h e costs and expenses of sale, including a reasonable charge by the Trustee. Notice is further given that an y p e rson named i n ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five (5) days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire a mount then d u e (other than s u ch portion of the principal and interest as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any o t her default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the p erformance re quired under the obl igation o r Tr u s t Deed, and in addition to paying said sums or tendering the pe r formance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and T rust D e ed, t o gether with Trustee's and attorney's fees not exceeding the amounts provided by s a i d ORS

f

86.753. In a c cordance with the Fair Debt Col l ection Practices Act, this is an attempt to collect a debt, and any information obtained will be used for that p urpose. This c o mmunication is from a debt c ollector. In c o n struing this Notice, t he s i ngular i n cludes the p lural, the word "Grantor" includes any successor in interest to the Grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said Trust Deed, a nd t h e wor ds "Trustee" and UBeneficary" include its respective successors in interest, if any. DATED: May 13, 2014. Chris Hatfield, Su c cessor Trustee, Hurley Re, P.C., 747 SW Mill View Way, Bend, OR 97702, Telephone: 541-317-5505. FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN

Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace to hangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers of goods and services dobusiness in these pages.Theyknow you can't beat TheBulletin Classified Sectionfor selection andconvenience -every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use.Every item is categorizedandevery cartegoryisindexed onthe section's frontpage. Whether youare lookingfor a home orneeda service, your future is inthepagesof The Bulletin Classified.

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